FINAL SCORE, 31 _ sulted .in two ‘outs. _ewer-a fly ball. Phis efded 19-16. o> Tt was in the sixth inning that Kel- logg made her home run. Palache; with the bases full, made a sacrifice hit that CONTINUED ON-PAGE GO |” pss ae see : ee : js : = ego re | se baics! : yo he. 3 j , 4 : . : ; pas me ‘ : uae sy * : Pe. . 1 ®. Slacaatien Sa hat . : , = : 7 ot 0 co ‘@ ¥ < - ... ce : : a ; . : te he So I le : ' : VOL. XIII.* ‘No. 26. ee BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, TUNE 1, 1927 PRICE, 10 CENTS a ° > The Class of Nineteen Twenty-seven % FACULTY DOWNS | VARSITY BASEBALL Fieser" and Kellogg Make Home Runs in Exciting and Well-Played Game. TO 23 The Faculty beat the Varsity baseball team in a close and exciting game on The final score was 31-23, but until ‘nearly the Monday afternoon, May 30. end the teams were within a few points The high spot in the game was when Dr. Fieser made a home] run with the bases full. Another thrill- ing home run was mange by D. Kellogg, "27. The first inning began calmly enough with Varsity up. When ‘the Faculty came up, Fieser displayed some pretty diving talent. Kellogg’ and Bruere put through a pretty double play which re- The inning closed of one another. at. 2 all. Two out at once in. the second inning and then Seeley hit a _ two-bagger. Bruere hit a mighty one which was neatly caught. Later, with two on bases, Kellogg muffed a ball and then played it wildly, letting two runs come in. The score then stood at 7-2, Faculty leading as. they did throughout. The audience, one of the largest that has turned out for an athletic event this year, was vociferous and encouraging. Pop bottles were luckily missing. The third inning started right off with three runs—Woodward hitting a hefty one with the bases full. _Bruere followed and so confuged the first and second] basemen that she was able to steal in. Kellogg, who was also one ‘of the heavy hitters, was put out at first base after some trick work. by Crenshaw. The second half passed © uneventfully and ended 9-8. The fourth inning was played without incident to a 10-10 finish.. At the fifth inning Varsity-seemed weak, going .down at once. The Faculty were given several bases on balls. Fieser,, provided: -some excitement * by ” throwing himself ‘atthe bases while Bruere and boltided | > Halls Close Saturday All students, graduate and. un- dergraduate, with the exception of the members of the senior class ‘and graduate students taking de- grees, inust leave the Halls of _ Residence not later than Thurs- day afternoon, June 2: Seniors and graduate students taking de- grees may stay until Saturday morning. The last meal served in the college will be breakfast that morning. FAITH GREATEST NEED OF WORLD Complexity and Disillusion of Life Make Youth Test All Theories. EDUCATION TWO-FOLD “By faith Abraham, when he was ‘called to go out into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance, obeyed; and hé went out, not knowing whither he went.” This was the text for the Baccalaureate sefmon: preached by Henry Pitney Van Dusen Sunday eve- ning, May 29, in the Gymnasium. True education as a preparation for life involves a two-fold understanding without which one cannot serve or even live fully. That is, an understanding of the facts, forces and problems that have occurred in different forms all through history and are the facts and problems of the present day. Although the former |is probably the most important, it is the latter which interests youth chiefly. In considering: modern life it is the complexity of it that stands out. And it is not only our practical lives that are complex, but our thought lives and our emotional lives, making our inner ex- perience a tangle like a subway jam. Thus it is that the philosophies of today are pluralistic; instead of being the re- flections of ultimate reality they are the reflections of our actual lives. — : Demand Realism Due partly to the scientific spirit with its, passion for truth, and partly to the post- -war_ disillusionment in which we - dere fs an ever-increasing demand for realism in all departments of modern life. It is futile now to appeal to author- ity, tradition or ‘sentiment; to every conTiNvED ON PAGE 4 1910 WINS AWARD “IN ALUMNA PARADE Mad Hatter and March Hare Head People from ‘‘Alice in Wonderland.” VARSITY DROPS GAME filled the notes of a brass band. Seniors, Sopho- the Report- Excitement the air—and mores, stray husbands, trampled grass in their ardent eagerness. ers peered from Taylor steps, pencils in hand. Then out from the dark mystery ot Pembroke Arch wound the proces- sion. President Park, smiling, led them; next marched the band, faithful as ever to the cause. And then, the cynosure of all eyes, the Class of 1902, their voices their They made a raised in chorus. to celebrate twenty-fifth bright spot of color in their orange reunion. gowns with blue numerals, flaunting blue and orange parasols in giddy unison. Following them were 1910: “Alice at B. M. after twenty years;” there were the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, the White Rabbit: and the others,rall. caper- ing gayly. 1909 added a splash of bright- fess with their red coats and white skirts and hats. Farmerettes and peacock- women, in these we recognized 1907 and. 1908. Living up to their motto, coats forever,” 1926 closed the proces- sion. Down Senior Row and. around the hockey field streamed the parade. When the ranks were broken the judges awarded the prize for the best costumes to 1910's “Alice in Wonder- land.” “coolie Basket-ball Game The Alumnae trimmed the Under- graduates neatly in the basket-ball game which took place immediately afterwards. The use of boys’ rules evidently fitted the Alumnae abilities admirably, the drib- bling of Buchanan and Remak being especially good. ‘Varsity “lacked the skilled teamwork of its opponents, all ‘of whonr are thé possessors of yellow ties. The Guatding 6 Sscamat” atid Huddlés- ton was the outstanding feature. ‘There ‘was more Co-operation in the second half, but still Varsity came out in the little CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 |will be , | sion, Judge Hand to Be Commencement Speaker The Bryn Mawr College will close on Thurs- forty-second academic year of day morning, June 2, with the conferring of Degrees in the Gymnasium, at 11 o'clock. ‘The Commencement Address delivered by Judge Learned Hand, on the subject, “Preservation of Personality.” Judge Hand, whose three daughters are now in Bryn Mawr, re- ceived his A, B. from Harvard in 1893, his M. A. in 1894 and his LL. B. in 1896. He was admitted to the bar in 1897 and | began his practice in New York City the same year. From 1909-24 he was a United States District Judge in the Southern District of New York, and since then has been a United States Cir- cuit Judge. The Academic procession will form at the Library and march down Senior Row into the Gymnasium. Dr. Crenshaw is the Head Faculty Marshal. ‘ Hoods and Gowns The following points of~interest may be noted in connection with the hoods and gowns seen in the academic proces- Hoods lined with yellow crossed by a white chevron indicate a Bryn Mawr degree. Degrees from other American colleges and universities are also indicated by the ‘linings of the hoods; in the case of Harvard, crimson; of Princeton, orange and black; of Johns Hopkins, old gold and black. Degrees CONTINUED ON PAGE 6 Memorial Services Recall Alumnae of Three Classes Memorial services were held in the library cloisters-at half-past five on Sun- day afternoon for Patrina Ely Tiffany, of the Class of 1897; Leila Houghteling, of the Class of 1911, all members of the reuning classes who died during the last year. Miss Park opened the ceremonies with a brief introduction, after which Miss* Mary Moriarty Campbell, ’97, a teacher at the Brearley -school in New York, spoke about Mrs. Tiffany, recalling-her charm and character as. well as her sérvices to the college and her work in New York. Due to, the ,absence of Mrs. Johnston, aniother member: of "Of: made the memorial speech for. Jackson, telling how she came to college older than the usual age, after worki " CONTINUED ON PAGE 6 for Alice Day} Jackson, of the Class of 1902, and for’ 'Mawr in 1912. FACULTY CHANGES ARE ANNOUNCED Dr. Taylor, Head of Vassar Latin Department, Will Teach Here. DR. BROWN TO LEAVE Dr. Carleton Brown, Professor of English, is leaving Bryn Mawr next year to be Professor of English in the Gradu- ate School of New York University. Dr, . Malcolm H. Bissell is resigning as Asso- ciate Professor of Geology to do research work at Clark University. Dr. David Hitchcock, who Kas been an Associate Professor of Physiology and Biochemis- try, will be in the Department of Physi- ology at Yale Medical School next year. Dr. Anna Pell Wheeler has resigned as Professor of Mathematics. Dr. and Mrs. Bullock will be at the University of Chi- cago .next year. Mrs. Louise B. Saun- ders is resigning aS Lecturer in English’ Composition, Miss Marjorie Milne as In- structor in Greek, and Mr. Bailey Brown as Instructor in Mathematics, . Miss Grace Hawk, Instructor in English, will complete the work for her degree next year at Oxford. Leaves of Absence Granted Miss Georgiana Goddard King, Pro- fessor of History of Art, has been granted leave of absence for the year © 1927-28. Dr. Clarence Ferree, Professor of Experimental Psychology, and Dr. Dorothy Sells, Associate in Social Econ- omy and Social Research, have also been granted leave of absence for next year. Dr. Roger Wells,“Associate in Economics and Politics, will study next year in Germany on a Guggertheim Fellowship, Appointments to Faculty Dr. Lily Ross Taylor has been ap- pointed Professor of Latin for next year. Miss Taylor received her A. B. at Wis- consin in 1906, and her Ph. D. at Bryn She was a reader and demonstrator in Archaeology here from 1910-12 and since then has been in the’ Latin Department at Vassar. Charles S. Evans has been siietieis Associate in Geology. He received his B. A. Se. at ‘the University of British Columbia in, 1924, and since then has Gace Nee Paes as, a’ Graduate: egies land Fellow. * Miss Ruth George. who has been aps . [pointed Associate in English, received CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 ’ i bo wp The College News (Founded in 1914) thes _ Published weekly during the College Year in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Maguire. Building, Wayne, Pa. and Bryn Mawr Collese. "ediii-in -Ohiet CORNELIA B. ROSE, '28 ~ F. McKELVEY, ‘28 3 : * , E. H. LINK, '29 ‘ us Assistant Editors 6 C. R. M. SMITH, '28 E. RICE, '30 K. BALCH, ’29 M. RACE, 29 C. HOWE, '30 4 we? Business Manager P. W. McELWAIN, '28 A Subscription Mgnager . « ~. 4 J+ 32. SONMEY "88 : Assistants M. 8. GAILLARD, '28 ° J. BARTH, ‘29 . R. CROSS, '29 M. D. PETTIT, '28 C. PAGE, ’30 ” gubscription, eg Mailing Price, $3.00 SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME Entered as second-class _ matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office. ° REALIZATION Another college year is ended. ‘It seems rather too bad to have to leave just as the campus is at its loveliest. And it really ig lovely. We feel it most of all during this week. Usually we are too busy bustling and “bellering” to feel the beauty and the charm which: - lies about us. This last strangely peaceful week has given many of us a chance to gather our impres- sions together and feel things for the first time. No sooner do we achieve this realization than we have to leave. The gathering to- gether of loose ends into a whole consciousness of our surroundings hardly has time to sink into our minds, a swift feeling of unity with the college, -of wholeness within ourselves, and then we go. FOR THE CHILDREN’S WARD Is there nothing new under the sun? One of the most interesting new things that has happened vlately, after. Lindbergh’s feat, is the competition held. in all the New York Public Schools, for de- signs for the Children’s ward. in ‘the Washington Heights Hospi- tal, The prize winning designs, all the work of children from 10 to 15 years old, were judged on two grounds ; first, they had to pass before artists, then before doctors. This resulted in ruling out a rep- resentation of Miss’ Muffet, be- cause that young lady looks too realistically frightened to be soothing; and ruling in one of Alice in Wonderland and_ the card chorus, which, while it may not be art, is certainly pleasant to look upon. The most impressive thing about the competition, according to the judges, was the high level of excellence in the entries; they all show interesting and effective treatment. The children have a natural feeling for composition and color, combined with a re- freshing/simplicity of treatment, which Made 1000 of the drawings submitted worthy of preservation. The whole competition came about because one enterprising public school teacher had i imagina- tion enough to use the new build- ing as an inspiration for her class. She had them design a window for the hospital. “To make little sick children forget that they were sick.” These sketches, brought to the architects, provided a convinc- ing enough argument so that the project was launched. The results of this teacher’s inspiration will make the Washington Heights _ Hospital a unique and tremen- deusly interesting place for a _ ertat pany. years to come.. OURS BUT TO HUE OR DYE __ We should think that the re- cent. epidemic of yellow shirts on campus would have caused consid- rable worry to the American Le- tc “organ a local post of that c aap that last ‘ - %& i + : it ° * aw! oh 4 x ng a es “oa cc ening a a pe jf be ° Pain 2 sipeaiglic bans, thee ® ey : ee ee Se eet : me & * * at ” - eds Se BG * ie ee x as Ta . : } . i as sie ae . . THE COLLEGE NEWS ae a | et a: ap = : : * a 7 wh 2 y peg - > - ee : a mene ; Fof it on ‘the nation. What are.we Drawings Are ‘High Spots: | Nation Appraises.’ coming.to? Who knows but what we may be wearing pigtails next! Commhnications (The College News is not responsible for opinions expressed in this ¢glumn.). To the¢Editor of the Conese News: Nothing seeffis to ;be, more impossible for an Alumna than: to agcept with any degree of resignation the fact that the College refuses to remain at the exact stage. with which she is familiar. No matter how broad-minded she may or- dinarily ‘be, when she enters Pembroke arch, she bristles with apprehensiveness. She sniffs: suspiciously outside all the smoking Yagooms—she probably smokes herself, but that makes no difference—; she eyes with disgust the latest ‘campus costume ; ‘she eats at the Inn with ill- concealed scorn fdr the loud-voiced throng who sit playing bridge and - |slandering the college while they wait for their costly, suppers. Even we our- selves, who are ‘slightly complacent about .our adaptability, have been roused to passionate indignation at the simple sight of an orchid in a May basket; and have pitied a college generation which could find no pleasure in gamboling on the green. . Why’ do Alumnae behave in_ this fashion? We have no explanation to offer. Yet—we suspect that the very Freshmen who find so little at Bryn Mawr to please their exquisite palates will in 10 years be writing letters to the NEws about the outrageous antics of the Class of 1940. Mort ALUMNAE. Boston Censors “After declaring a number of recent novels to be violating the Massachusetts law, prohibiting the distribution of ob- scene and indecent books, just in time to revive the rather waning sale of cer- tain of these books, the district attor- ney’s office informed the Booksellers’ Committee of Boston that the gentle- men’s agreement which had existed for a number of years concerning the en- forcement of this law was at an end. By this agreement the Booksellers’ Com- mittee and members of the Watch and Ward Society passed on books and the police took no action on books approved. Booksellers were warned of the books not passed and had an opportunity to re- move them from their shelves. The bookseller must now attempt to decide for himself what the district attorney jor his reader will consider indecent. The district attorney refused to give any opinion on some 50 books submitted to him for approval. This leaves the book- seller in the enviable position of never knowing when someone will consider some book indecent and arrest him for selling it. The booksellers have taken no action in this case but have preferred to await the publishers action. Har-. court Brace and Boni and _ Liveright seem preparing to make test cases in the courts to clear the issue and determine the basis for interpreting the law. The whole situation seems more or. less ri- diculous. We do not mean to intimate that there are no obscene books printed. Certain- ly many receut novels are merely rot- ten. Putting aside the question ° of whether suppressing books is effective or merely a form of gratuitous advertis- ing, the absurdity of the situation lies in the lack of system employed in select- ing books for this occasionally appro- priate stigma. The juxtaposition of books on the last list was rather amus- ing. One might as well couple Tess of the d’Urbervilles with Michael Arlen’s latest effort. After all with the lamen- table scarcity of possible plots it is the treatment of the theme which determines its morality or immorality, ‘The question of censorship is one of widespread interest in the country today. Whatever the effect of censorship may be, it ought at least to call attention to the number of ‘rather sloppily biological novels now on. the market. To range ridicule on the side of these - books would be unfortunate. If there must be censorship let it at least be intelligent. Surely some ere suitable group of censors may ‘be imagined than several rerias aa a district attorney who take on the responsibility.”—The~ Blue sub-|@"4 fev = —. The Pillar -* of Salt The Seniors. have ben given back their. Freshman themes—some of. them are a revelation! + This particularly sagacious bit of observation is the early work of a/pProminent member of the graduating class, ~ The Spirit of the Flapper Just as the .train was about to start two young girls entered breathlessly, and took the seat in front of me. There was obviously no other epithet to apply to them but the well-worn and much- criti- cized term “flapper.” wiles es “My dear, was not the Phi Beta dance last night just too wonderful! I have never had more fun in my life!” as the girl with the red hat drew forth ‘her powder puff. . “It was just superb, and what music !” Fluffng ‘her red hair the girl with the leopard-skin coat gave a_ happy little sigh. whether I like Tom Howard, or Jim Hendicks best. I went with Tom Fri- day night, and with Jim last night, and I am still impartial.” “It's a hard question. Tom certainly is stunning-looking ; and, O, how he can dance!” “Yes, he is beautiful, but dumb. Jim has such a good line | that you almost forget that he cannot tango.” “Well, I' have adopted a new policy. I think it is better to have six or eight boys play with you some of the time, rather than to, have one steady swain.” “That 16 a good idea, I think I wall try it. By the way, I have to buy a new evening dress. What color shall I get?” “You ought to wear green with your red hair; and, of course, it is all the rage now.” The inspiring dialogue continued in this fashion for so long that I began tc wonder what the much-abused younger generation was coming to. Then, sud- denly, the conversation changed as thé} little redhead pounced on a book her companion was vainly trying to conceal. “Why, Doris, I did not suppose you: liked poetry. It is Shelley, too. He is my. favorite, next to Keats.” “I do just love it; but ‘of course I do not let on that I like to read because people would call me highbrow, and then I would be a hopeless failure in society.” “Well, here we are and since I dis- covered your secret, I'll tell you mine: I am going to the art exhibit; but please do not tell anyone, because, as you say, one just cannot. get the name of ‘high- brow’ in society.” T gave a.sigh of relief. come out alright in the end. They will .One of the nicest things about having the Alumnae back is the rise in the quality of the college food that accom- panies them. There is dissension in our ranks. You wouldn’t believe how much commotion has been caused by the fact that the News will have an office of its own next year. The great problem is: What color scheme shall we have? Green is a nice conservative color, while if we have red, our policy will immediately become radi-: cal,“so you see what a serious problem it is. The only disadvantage we have yet discovered about having the office is that Cissy Centipede will have to be banned from it; she may visit us in our room, but not at the office—in a nice new building like Goodhart Hall, she would be distinctly out of place. All Hail! twenty-seven! that radical “You know, I never can decide |’ Street, the last of the class plays; are F, Thayer and E. Parker, very love- Class, we can only lament! to show them to our friends,—they will surely make caustic comments. each senior had to approve of her pic- ture before it was put in, 27 must have a very low opinion of its personal them on their consistent humility. 1927’s_ class Cheshire : ay: other humble and Lion. Polyp and and flappers are very finished work. serves high praise. Not perhaps ried out with grace and wit. masculine element. of the faculty strongly ; what they have meant to '27. We like particularly the page devoted to the Porcuping and Lovely Leiler,— we wish there had been more of them. since most of the other features showed a deplorable lack of wit and originality. We don’t like to be critical, but some of the things were totally incomprehensible, and” others evoked only ‘a: weak smile. That our criticism may not be entirely destructive, we suggest that ’28 study the less good ‘parts with an eye to the fu- ture. The ‘photographs in the first part of the book were interesting, reminding: us presently of past pleasures; there is May Day, to spur us on; there is Quality there ly under the Japanese cherry. But when we come? to the pictures of the Senior We tremble Since we feel that pulchritude! We congratulate After perusing the class book we won- der ;—does_ the college at large really know as little as ’27 as it would seem, or is it unfair representation ? they are less cryptic, and better looking than their class book shows them. We hope Chapel Plan Announced The Christian Association has an- nounced that the Sunday evening Chapel arrangement There will be two speakers a month, alternating with musical services. the months in which we have four Sun- days at college, there will be three speak- ers. has been decided upon. On * Sometime ago a vote was taken in the halls on four possible-arrangements that might be made for Chapel next year. The four were: I, The present system. IT, Abolish Chapel altogether. III. Two speakers and two musical services, IV. Three speakers and one musical service a month. The argument, was that two musical services a month would exhaust: the choir. will be busy enough as it is. posed arrangement seems to provide a happy compromise in the eyes of the Christian Association officers. + Next year, being May Day year, The pro- Scholarship in Acting The Gloucester School of the Little in °27's "Thin Class-Book book, dedicated to ° Dr. Prokosch, and resplendent in its green cover, with red and gold’ shield on the lower right hand corner, has arrived! We open the cover to find the Woo- |. zy, on one side supércilious, above the |of the theory that it is no loager possible Mouse, on the before the Dodo, Cockatoo From this point ‘on there is at least 10 minutes worth of entertainment. The original drawings, especially those by Jan Seeley and Grace Hayes are de- lightful. Jan’s quaint. big-headed ,people charming animals ‘have ' distinction and’ character; and Gracie’s collegiate es special features the Hall of Fame” de- an original conception, yet it has been car- We aré interested to discover that ’27 €avors the so and we suppose that profes- sors will be interested in finding out last ip yon Mosieaverl eee age _| But there’s one tradition class! Changing the mode’s their del Jim, too, must pass— are right.) ae their way, ma foi! this May, to bust, ight. As you know, with their going, Sunny (And we're sure, in their way, they These great legend-smashers go- fearless hed the things ine accomplished Not a cent will be ‘spent upon flowers (Not even for chou chat de bois.) we'd like them syPetore they depart with rush— Theater is again offering free scholar- '|ships to two undergraduates of Ameri- jcan colleges and universities, one to a woman and one to a man. This is the eighth successful season of the Gloucester School, which has come to be known as a sort of summer work- shop for college students interested in acting or in production, and which al- ready-counts among-its graduates sev- eral who are on the professional stage. Candidates for these scholarships should have: ee (a) Normal voice and posture. (b) Dramatic abliity. or ability in seme branch of production. (c) They must “present references as. to character.. All applicants for the scticiaiidhain send for further information be- ee ee ee "Mies Florence Cunningham. co-direc- tor, Gloucester School of the Little _| Theater, Sia Sharm ett, ete, Mane | fellowing story is told. | causing t George Brandes, Critic When George. Brandes, the British critic, died recently, The Nation tarried he following appraisal of him and his work. Georg Brandes was a living “refutation for a_ single man to take all literary In an age 2 knowledge as his province. of particular specialization he refused to confine himself withih the limits. of a Be- ginning 60 years ago at Copenhagen as bd . . period, a-school, or a nationality, a. student of French aesthetics, half a dozen years he had’ published his “Main Current¢4in 'Nineteenth-Century Literature,” a monumental work: which dealt with, far broader subjects than aes- thetics—it was in fact an attempt at a history of European thought and emo- tion during half of a great century. Thenceforth his output, at least ‘on its. literary side, was to consist of ‘a long line of monographs, critiques, and ex- tended biographical studies. It is safe to say that no critic has applied himself on within such a scale and at the same time with such intensity. We in England = or America think of his . “Shakespeare,” France thinks of his “Anatole France” and his studies in Voltaire, Germany of his- “Goethe”—all ambitious works, and all valuable. In Scandinavia he will be remembered not only for these but for his many volumes elucidating and eval- uating Northern literature. He dis- cussed Tegner. and Holberg as well as modern authors; he was Ibsen’s* pioneer defender both at home and in Germany. The parallel, incidentally, between his stand on, Ibsen and that of Bernard Shaw had a sequel during the war, when ‘Both men conspicuously .kept _ their heads. : Like Ibsen he lived for many years away from his native country, making himself the center” of intellectual’ activi- ty in whatever capital he chose for his. temporary home; and like Ibsen he bat considered. and proved literature to be a thing of enormous impdrtance. He was a fighter for liberty, reason and nature, who only by chance, perhaps, found his issues on the field of literature. Even then he by no means found them in, belles-lettres merely. The storm which preceded his being refused the profes- sorship of aesthetics at the University of Copenhagen in 1872 was raised over the ideas he had been insinuating into his lectitfes. He was of course a Jew; and it became known quickly enough that he entertained modern, naturalistic notions of morality and art. Doubtless it was well that he aban- doned academic life and became for years a wanderer. As a glorified free- lance he came upon bigger game than he would ever have aimed at in the lecture hall; in search of ideas he learned that ideas have every sort of application— political, social, and practical as well as metaphysical. One of his first tasks had been a translation into Danish of John Stuart Mill’s “The Subjection of Women”; he was -to write books about Disraeli and Ferdinand Lassalle; during the war, in a brilliant controversy with Clemenceau, he stood above the battle, serving with Romain Rolland as spokes- man of the European spirit; and in his essay he sought to interpret the Jesus “myth.” Doubtless at his death he seemed no longer .radical to the’ most ad- vanced Danes, and indeed there had long been a rather futile movement to dis- lodge. him from his eminence as leader. ' He will stand as a critic whose courage and scope demonstrated what always needs to be demonstrated, the exciting significance of the imagination. His faith ins America sg of West- ern civilization gives him peculiar signi- ficance for us. r > The University of Texas reports that for the first time in twenty years a woman has been given permission to en- roll in the civil engineering department. Two reasons for the scarcity of women in this department are the clothing worn by the women and the bashfulness of the in- structors. As an explanation of this, the girls’ were enrolled in the department. While on a surveying trip it was ob-— served that instruments would not work correctly when the girls were near them. The professor said that he had heard that girls had. some. magnetism about them, but surely not enough to affect the _ compass neédle. Further investigation caused the instructor blushingly to inforr: the. girls | : The girls in, 1927 do not have any effect on the compass. oe Tomahowh. (Holy Crois). a Fae: “ In 1905, two - a * enn ah a - mas aime t pennenrer pestis tae: ee —F on - a . 7 yee ; oA ow : ’ ° ene A : : . r : . ag ee a ee ta ‘ i Seuss : : < . so 4 < Sag vas ii ee : oe : ie v - oe rca . ze ee! : , ot . Spee x . Pk ELT See 4y g : ; 4 oe oe a 3 ye 3 oy 4 i : . md : fr fant aes ail : : eS } r ' : ; * ; : . eo : : : a n ' ay : ° f ' goin * “ ; iHE COLLEGE NEWS “ : iy wt s% ‘a Re 3 Fee) 3* : Birth Control Needed needs research, according to. Mrs, Huse. | song mistress. The toastmistress for the : ‘an | Medical ‘schools give fio course oti the} class supper, will be A. Dalziel, and the — to Check Over P opulation subject and doctors. pay no attention to|committee for the sophomore-senior pic- : e bo ee : ‘ fone rite ‘Two of the three scholarships given Hindered by Laws the matter until they begin to practic®nic is B. ‘Freeman, C. Swan and J. “We must break the dastardly silence | When they are inevitably faced with tle PBecket. sd the Studenté International Union to (Have You Seen al which surrounds the . subject of -birth problem. “There is often. the feeling Americans were won by @Bryn Mawr Pitney and Hand Win, |. ! - ¢Geneva Scholarships control,” said Mrs. Robert Huse, of the | that : ne ogg with natural laws. Bryn Mawr Archers " |students,—Beatrice Pitney, 27, and’ this Pen a Birth Control League, speaking in Tay-{ The rst man who rajsed an umbrella ‘ Hold Cham ionshi Mary Hand, “27, The third: was given ; lor Hall; Saturday evening, May oF tid that. Aggivet there ‘18 no way to 4 Bryn Mawr carried off nal honors P to Miss Stoffregen, ’28, of Smith, 4 in Class? a “Things’ are better now. than they were | Study the subject from a practical angle. the Intercollegiate ‘Telegraphic Archery| These scholarships Hae segs ANE ig : - in my day,” Mrs.*Huse went on, “for|” The Birth Control League maintains a Meet, with the score of 252-1392.. an . opportunity to study in Geneva, | - Parker Pens then no girl was taught anything at all.|clinic in.New York City, but dtherwise This annual mee is run on the anique |t#king courses at the Geneva School of in Black and Gold "If she ‘did have any information con-|they can give.no direct contraceptive in- system of having each team shoot at its. {"ternational Studies, founded by °Pro- aes cerning marriage, She regarded .the sub-|formation. Books on. other phases of home field, any time within a- given |fessor,Zimmern. They will concentrate] - f ject with dread and shame, There ‘was|the - subject. by Mrs. Margatet Sanger! week. when the. weather conditions are{0"” International. Relatioris, studying the a conspiracy of silence about anything|are Women and the New Race, which} favorable. On the last day of the week |Dackgrounds. of the. countries in order ; ide) beaytiful in sex. Reproduction was not | gives the background of the demand for the resylts are telegraphed ‘to each col-|t® understand what. has , shaped fheir ad i even mentionéd in the physidlogy bogks.|knowledge, Pillars of Civilisation, apd lege that is taking part. The increase | foreign policies; the recent history of ($3.50 with Nice girls were particularly sexless.">~ |Happiness and Marriage. ¥ The laws on the subject in, this’ coun- jin interest in Archery is shown by the International . relations; and some In- : Point try today are the most restrictive. any- Early Editions in fact,that: six colleges, from’ widely-sepa-|te"mational law. Last year nedrly 600 and Gold B: 1)/ 6 rated localities, participated. Some ‘of {Students from 45 countries and 115 uni-|« f where, ‘a relic of our Puritan ancestry. ’ the Library {them have just taken up thé ‘sport: this sie tg brig igs 2 = : x Anthony Comstock, “rotmdsman of the 7 iL Terten, ; year, which agtounts for the low scores oi on eee paGnG are gomg Lord,” is responsible, for many of them. in some cases. to live at the Student’s International Bryn’ Mawr’s Varsity is: V. Atmore, Union House, where they will act as "98; M. Gregson, ’28; M. Barber, 29, hostesses to other Americans studying and J. Paxson, ’30. The competitors and abroad. The House is .almost a club In his determination to make the nation pure, he had included in-the Federal Penal Code a law which makes it a The Sorgen and qualities which make ok desirable from the point of view of the collector, its age, and its felony to send information about con- al Sead ogg oo their scores are: . ee eae students can. live, or meet traception through the mails. Common Mawr, The immediate academic needs }otv? Mawr.......... gic Oe " val i. nl obo . so, carriers were later included. The State must first -be met and these are ‘eo| Wisconsin: .......600. beeuntas 235- 845 sage yes _ Oe e. Po nie laws vary; in Connecticut anybody’ may | numerous as to preclude the possibility} Swarthmore ..............045. 183- 808 Hts “9 i ~~ — gn tea, give any information anywhere, but) o¢ satisfying those to whom’ the antique|5Mth «+... .seeeee sees eeees 151- 633 8 a oe sss dit it be = te people putting’ such information into|ang the aesthetic make the strongest |Sweet Briar ..............4. . 138- 550 ae ed be bi es gg ed Practice are liable to arrest. In Newlanpeal, From time to time, however, | Northwestern ..,..........000. 199- 441 i. poe ° ee ns road this eee York, physicians may give advice in a examples of the early presses have found : oe i e€ : “ a 0 t . was at Pre case of necessity. Pennsylvania provides |their way here through the generosity of | Athletic Awards Made y te- Student's International Union : ' House. “ 2 a fine for anyone who gives such in-|friends of the college, and so a small]. » . a ; : ; formation. To change these laws there |beginning has been made toward an in-| 28 All-Round Champions Geneva will be particularly interesting is “need of great public pressure, for teresting and representative coHection. After the parade and basket-ball ere oe en OF Lg Te legislatures have a great aversion to|These are treasured not ofily because| Alice Bruere, ’28, newly-elected presi- sg ce ae ie ses te : changing anything.” It is to educate the |they illustrate certain periods in the his-|“ent of the f iitetic . Amosiifion,. gore bi 1 , ed Ne ic. oa a public for such a campaign that the Birth |tory of thé printing art but because of }OUt the trophies for the year. Hockey ae 7 coe | eee OO Control League is working. their typographic and artistic excellence. |W5 won by 1927; lacrosse, gym, archery | M. Hand will be there in September and “People say,” announced Mrs. Huse} Atdus Mantiny ~(Teobalde’ Manz and water polo by 1928; swimming by|expect to watch the League in session. “that everyone knows anyway. That is nucci), after extensive study of Greek 1929, and: basket-ball by 1930. ‘The inter- not so. The well-to-do may be able to/at Ferrara under Guarino de Verona and cians bana bao ne corervent sc _— 14K Gold Point get information from their family physi-/of Latin at Rome under Gasparino de and 7“ beh intranet champions and Rolled Gold cians—when they will give it, but the’ Verona, gathered: a. group of Greek were B. Pitney, 27, in tennis; R. Bryent, H. Z AMSKY Pocket-Clip or Ring- poor have no family physicians and they| scholars and compositors around him} 22 ™ rey tng V. Atmore, = ‘ Gane Pranab pda ae 9 , + are forbidden ‘to seek it in clinics, where|in Venice and the chief Greek |@%chery; H. Caer set, “6, m gym, aod Portraits of distinction betas : they properly should. It is the poor|masterpieces were committed to type. A. Newhall, ’27, in track. 902 CHESTNUT STREET The all-around championship of the Philadelphia, U. S. A. who most need this information—no matter what people say, the rich are no longer having large families. And in order to save the’fit from being swamped by the unfit, the poor must be able to have children only when they want them. Statistics are available on the ignorance of the poor, which is the cause of their Bryn Mawr owns one fifteenth century Greek Aldine, Theophrastus, De historia plantarum, Venice, Jurie, 1497. This folio was printed before the adoption of the anchor and dolphin press device. Later, the Aldine Press printed the Latin Clas- sics. For these a splendid type, which is fsaid to have been copied from Petrarch’s year was awarded to 1928. , unnecessarily large families. Dr. Kahn, | handwriting, was cast under the direction in defiance of the ‘laws, gave every |0f Francesco da Bologna. Bryn Mawr woman who came to him contraceptive |has four examples of this period: Catul- information, and discovered that thirty- |!us, Venice, 1502;"Lucanus, Venice, 1502; ‘eight per cent, of them used no method Lucanus, Venice, 1515; Lucretius, Venice, 1515. at all, while a majority of the rest used crude and unsure methods. All ‘these}. There are five incunabula here besides women came from crowded tenement|the Aldine “Theophrastus mentioned districts where all knowledge is common |@bove, but these are from other presses, property and the most personal things |Some known and some unknown. Jacobus are discussed freely. The poorer class de Varagine, Incipit prologus in legen- of women. are especially prone to preg- das sanctorum, Nuremberg, October, nancy and they thus keep on reproducing 1488. This is in very beautiful type and their miserable kind.” , jit contains ms. notes. Cicero, Orationes Philippicae, Vicentiae, June, 1488. The pages follow the ms. form of having the text»in the center and the notes sur- Even if, as the League hopes, contra- ceptive information will be given in every clinic, the problem of the rural woman : ’ of ts unbentiod A polution will have rounding the text. Durandus, Gulielmus, SOWIE upen a. chanse ia. the Federal Iacipit rationals divinorum officiorum, in P < 8 Venice, Symon Bevilaqua, March 1494. This is still the standard authority for “ : : i i : ‘ I pei ies for birth: control is igre the ritual ‘of the thirteenth century and we a | ahold oe wernt t0 that | for the symbolism of rites and vestments. they were doing a service to their coun- : Printed in black letter on beautiful paper try by having many children—the em- sa sheet _ asi . |which has successfully withstood all Phasis was on, quantity not quality. This vicissitudes except the ravages of the was. Seer because the death rate book worm whose passage here is clearly was high and women were stronger and : Be recorded. Cicero, Orationes in Verrem, more able to bear children. Conditions Venice, Bartholemew of Zanis, 1495. have now changed and there is a real/ Plautus, Comoedia. Ritch dates this be- ‘danger of overproduction.” It has been ‘tween 1495 and 1497; the British Museum proved by the experience of Holland, slightly later. : where there have been free clinics of this sort for many years, that while wide dissemination of knowledge of contra- Rapeheud de Henslores Summula-. ; ceptives means a lower birth rate, it also lower death rate (less infant compendio sacramentorum alta com- eee a oe ie ee plectens mysteria, Argentina, John Knob- mortality) and a sturdier race. louch, July 1504 “Aside from . the economic _qugstion, Aurifaber, Aegidius, Speculam exem-| - there is the problem of. happiness in mar- ; , : ‘VITH the gift, however simple, goes the thought ofthe — _giver—the spirit of the gift! _ : i : Whitman’s.Chocolates in their time bear messages of infinite -— - meanings, Social conventions permit them when costlier —__ gifts are barred. They “speak a various language.” ca In our latest achievement we have enclosed a tich and rare ~ _._ assortment of milk chocolates in a package of quiet beauty _ with the pastoralename of Bonnybrook,. == |, A golden box, with designs by Franklin Booth, suggesting : the excellence of the chocolates. = = = | ~ SS 3 . : ry ~ os A Pduda Dn ead vw aD 2 tt en — r = = P 7 : : EG tay FS he = ] —emersereensoreenaenssensine > ‘ v j ee : ee L, “a ht by La S uy, P ts B % " es ai TTee i aS RUT ee TTT NT TTINE AAU roar e " i = 4 A few. of the interesting sixteenth cen- tury items here are: TAT ATTA ATT TATA S ON San Fr law) Ww Ke ne oe pend é . eae . |plorum,’ Hagenaw, 1505. tinted in a { : ph fe : HOH fied: lite, More eieery” G8: AGONY TW adaittul eke Mieke tine Ta the colo- Whatever your message or spirit of your gift it will be car- Reodial caused by ignorance of. birth control) sion the printer dedicates his work ‘ad ried with grace and « ity by. oe pare Oi than it is possible to estimate. If people laudem et gloriam sempiterne individue, x ee cine r rok pene 4 CS knew that their children would be born |trinitatis, omnium sanctorum et angelo- (UV /pa)pe - atti. ~ when they wanted them, they would bé|rum finitum est hoc Speculum...” able to enter into marriage joyfully. A] Horatius, a Opera,e Antwerp, Plantin, period of adjustment is frequently|1578, This bears the unique compasses needed after marriage which will hardly |device of the Plantin Press with the bear complication with. the advent of a|motto “Labore et Constantia.” eS child. Instead there is too often horror| Holiished, Chronicles of England, on the woman’s part, and fear on the|Scotland and ‘Ireland, London, at The man’s that when thé baby comes he will|Signe of the Starre, 1587. The initials, MA ta ote tetany oe . JS : me oo’ > SE * es, Ww WHITMAN’S FAMOUS CANDIES ARE SOLD BY oN es P & Reynolds | Bryn Mawr Bryn Mawr College Book Store, be unable to provide for it adequately.|head and tail pieces are wood-cuts, and eg Res eid Mawr ne Bryn Mawr This fear’ and ignorance often drives |the titles are within wood-cut borders. Willis Groff 7 Saeee Bryn Mawr College Inn Bryn Mawr women to’ great’lengths—it isnot un-| ~~ ~~ pe ae as ae Beye College Tea Room Bryn Mawr : ee; eh ‘ N. J. Cardamone Bryn Mawr - Bryn Mawr Confectionery. Bryn Mawr common for some to have abortions | _ 1929 Elections | Kindt’s Pharmacy og ig’ g "e : “Na? every year. Though such an opgration is wr Frank W. Prickett §___ Rasemon al A 4 The class of 1929 has elected A. Dal- ££ —e Be with ia ig oe rrayk 6. nn ema aa re t Pa. Fie “{7 forbidden by Jay. there, are" always-com diel head) ushen for, 20°7°°°~ tye éoto =~ | | i Pe “mercial doctors who are willing to per-ing were elected to the committees of| | : Z = 3 form it. This is a sure way to wreck |the Undergraduate Association: R. Wills,| YX COXS CXS CGOXXCE eee eter the health. ees 85 trophy committee; E. Moran, auditing The whole field of contraceptives |Committee. B, Channing was re-clected| = = = aed Sa anne Sane q oe 5 ‘ . pinout, ae? q Be Pape 7 ‘ ae ‘ & st ; | ‘ & ae i : O a o at a arr vo 4 5 mm f : ° ’ ; td - Ge: MER = oe eg hBE: KOLLEGE NEWS’ | % 2 ‘ sess ty ay = ] * Sc a : —= ; BACCALAUREATE — ahead “and may go out into the unknown Instructor in” Biology.. ,, Miss Gardirr 2 ecaieobailade _ CONTINUED FROM PAGB 1 theorys put the test—Does it worl? it self-consistent? We insist that hunggn telationships be grounded on the earth even if the earth be muddy. Religion itself is deprived of its age-old inex- plicability; it too must stand the test or be discarded. We - feel that if ‘ truth courage, heroism and idealism are fig- ments pf. the imagination it is better to know it and be reconciled to it. People froni other lands say that we are like barks. floating rudderless and without: destination on the Surface of the placid sea. We are complacent and sat- isfied, but storms will occur on any sea, and then what of us? Although tmost of us think there is something in ‘religion we do not honestly know what we be- lieye. ‘Religion-is of consequence only when it is*of such absolute conviction that, it directs, unifies, and empowers life. As substitutes for this true religiorf we have turned to, superior — cynicism, Menckenism, to the cult of beauty, to -a shallow optimism, or to cheap sensual emotionalism. _ But all of these are im- practical and socially unproductive. The final and perhaps, dominating ‘ oe . factor in modern life is a restless dis- satisfaction, a sense of frustration and futility. Using every ounce of his energy and, interest man has built a civilization that” is mechanically almost perfect. Now he does not know what to do with it. He is like & boy who has built a perfect toy house and is beginning to grow up. “Relentless realism, intellec- tual shrewdness and moral flabbiness cannot be combined without paying the price—futility. Among the many grad- uating this week the dominating query is—was it worth while? What. is the meaning of it all anyway? We say we want faith in life itself, not religious faith—failing to see that they are the same.” This sense of loss is largely to be ex- plained psychologically; we live in’a fear-dominated .age and trust no. one,’ neither each other nor ourselv es—and of course not God. But in -spite-of-this~ dissatisfaction, or perhaps because of it, there is a tre- mendous aid -growing intérest in re- ligion. ;.“Humanity is on. the march questing something which haunts life like a confused: echo of a. faraway mel- ody.” Most of us choose to :be blind to ‘the nature of ‘modern life, and no two of us see it alike. Seeing the day in which we. live for what it is, we may--take refuge in cynicism or asceticism. Or we may see it as an. adventurous prospect] scaieineniaiens couritry. &. “In asking a man so fear their own age to speak, the Class of .1927 has dpne a thing characteristic of the day,” said| Dr. Van Deusen, . “That, is, they .have sought wisdom from one who faces the world as they do, seeking not a finished philosophy, but a few tested hirits. There are just three words which , should be given to those graduating : a word of hope, a familiar word about the adven-, ture and joy ahead; a word of warning, also familiat, about the disappointment¢ from within as well as without; a word of urgency about our fleeting opportuni- ties and the need for haste.” The world’s most pressing need today’ is for ‘men and women who do not ex- pect to see the fruition’ of their ideals, but who know that to give all of life for them is well worth whife. ‘We need faith, not faith that is the belief in some one or something, but.the courage to do one particular thing because it seems right, regardless of consequences—cour- age to live life on the highest hypothesis we can discover. “We must have people who wmnderstand the world, who are realistic, but who feel the call to go out into an unknown country which may be their heritage, but who go out not know- ing whither they go.” APPOINTMENTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 her A. B. from Cornell University in 1911, She was a reader at Bryn Mawr the following year, and since then has been a teacher of English in secondary schools. The Associate in Italian next year will be. Vito G. Toglia, A. B., Harvard Uni- versity 1912, and M. A. Columbia Uni- versity, 1921. From 1912-20 Mr. Toglia was a teacher of Italian and Spanish in secondary schools in New York City and from 1920-27 a graguate student and part-time instructor in Italian in Colum- bia. ; John Dickinson has been appointed non-resident Lecturer in Economics and Politics for next year. Dr. Dickinson received his A. B. from Johns Hopkins in 1914, his M. A. from Princeton in 1915, his Ph. D. in 1919, and LL. B. from Harvard in 1921. He has been a Tutor and Lecturer at Harvard in 1920-21 and 1924-27, Prentice Duell, of ‘the University of Cincinnati, has been appointed Lecturer in Archaeology, and Nathaniel E. Griffin, editor of Webster’s , International Dic- tionary 1925-27, Lecturer-in English. Wardens to Teach Mary S. Gardiner has ‘been appointed 30.000. in cash prizes Drink received her A. B. from Bryn Mawr in 1918, her M. A..in 1924, and-her Ph. D, in 1927, She has been Warden of Pem- broke West for the, past two years as wed as a graduate student. seclge C. Jennings has been ap- pofhted Instructor in Economics and Politics. She received her A. B. from Bryn Mawr in 1922, her M. A. in 1923, and will receive her Ph, D. this June. Miss Jennings has been ‘tle Warden of Denbigh this year. Katharine Garvin, A. B. Oxford Uni- versity, 1923, and Mary L. White, A. B. Bryn Mawr 1925, and. graduate student at Yale 1925-26, have been appointed Instructors in English, _* Margaret Storrs has also been appointed. Instructor in English. Miss Storrs received her A. B. from Smith College in 1922. She has been a graduate student and fellow in Bryn Mawr in Philosophy since then, |. spending the year 1924-25 in University College, London. Marion Lawrence, A. B. hive Mawr 1923, and M. A. Radcliffe 1924, has been appointed Instructor in History of Art. From 1924-25 Miss: Lawrence was As- sistant in Art at Wellesley. Miriam G. Brown has been appointed Instructor in Italian. Miss. Brown re- ceived her A. ‘B. from Bryn Mawr in 1925 and has been teaching in secondary schools since: ' To Return to » College’ Several members of the Faculty who have been on leave of absence for the past year will return in the autumn. Among them are Dr. Charles W. David, All Campus Gathers “a Pem East Chimney Burns ‘A little before 4 o’clock om Sunday afternoon, E. Stewart, ’28, Denbigh fire}: captain, saw*clouds of smoke coming out df the towers on the Pembroke East side of Pem:arch, and rushed to the telephone Central, stead of connecting her with the power house, gave her the Bryn Mawr fire department, and in less than a iminute after she had stammered the news of fire two fire engines came rolling under the The brave fire fighférs had not even stayed to put on their uniforms, but €ame as they were; some with rub- ber hats and some without. In a moment six. men, were climbing the narrow wooden ‘stairway to’ the tower, past the rooms where the maids were clustered in anxious.-silence. «ilastening out- on the roof they ‘found smoke and cinders pouring from the chimney, which turned’ out to be the source of the conflagration, and without much difficulty extinguished the fire. But’ meanwhile confusion reigned downstairs. Due to the absence of the fire captains in both Pem East and West, and the presence of large numbers of to notify “the authorities, in- arch. Alumnae, none of the usual fire routine was observed. Some, smelling smoke or hearing the noise of the engines, rushed out on the street, and in a short time a crowd had gathered. C. Hardy, finally had the presence of mind to ring the East alarm, which brought out the rest of the hall. campus and the neighborhood shrieking 26, From all over the Professor of Mathematics, Abby Kirk, Instructor in Greek. D cause’ of illness, will also return. tended for two years. Lack Virility and Miss Echo Pepper, who has been absent be-|- The leave of absence of Dr. Rhys Carpenter, Professor of Archaeology, has been ex- “American college songs are inferior . ! ° because they are too sentimeftal,” de- clared Olin Downes, New York Times Professor of European History; Dr. 2 Alec tng a Sch vhs Pisa ta of |OMlookers gathered. The head fire cap- French: Dr. David Widder, Associate tain, with streaming hair (she had been washing it) arrived in great distress of mind. President Park also came to dis- cover the cause of the commotion. As if by magic a policeman appeared to take charge of the extra traffic. An alumna dragged her child to a safe distance. On the roof could be seen the maids in a small group, and the volunteer fire fighters swarming up the chimney, Soon, however, as no more smoke ap- peared, and the triumphant firemen be- gan to come down from the tower, the gathering .became hilarious. An alumna r. music critic and a judge of the recent Intercollegiate Clee Club contest, to a Daily Princetonian reporter. . “For one good one there are half a dozen bad ones. At present they are too lachry- mos; they should be more virile and healthy and symbolic of the true life which undergraduates lead.”—The Stan- ford Daily. Cleaning That Wins Women, critical of style and mode, who could afford to pay higher prices, regularly use, and appreciate the quality of Footer- Cleaning. Dresses, plain .........$2.00 to $2.50 Dresses, 2- and 3-piece ..$2.50 to $3.25 Velvet Dresses ........$2.75 to $3.50 Negligees .............$1.50 to $2.00 Beaded and Pleated Dressés Higher in accordance with work involved. Phone for Service Car FOOTER ‘For More Than Half a Century 36 E. Lancaster Ave. . ARDMORE 3032 RIT. 7792 . THE CHATTERBOX. A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM Evening Dinner Served 6 until 7.30 Special Parties by tment OPEN AT 12.30 NOON COLLEGE TEA HO HOUSE — OPEN WEEK-DAYS— 1 TO 7.30 P. M. ue eka engine, and did so. Cleaners and Dyers k 1707 Chestnut St. | from ’25 secured a fireman’s hat and waved it he air; more alumnae, from ’26, decided to take a ride on the fire The men loaded the hose back on to its chariot and rode away. So swiftly was peace restored to the campus that many doubted there had been a fire at all, and the maids, like peasants on the slopes of Vesuvius, re- turned trustingly to their eyrie in the lee of the smouldering chimney. SAVE YOUR HAIR From Hot Irons The wonderful 5 Minit Steam Stix heat themselves, “New heat process,’ cannot scorch or deaden. No fire! No hot irons! No electricity or combs necessary. Curl and wave your own hair anywhere, any time, in a few minutes. Guaranteed the one safe method for delicate, white, gray, dyed or bleached hair. Brings dead hair back to life and lustre. Keeps your hair soft, healthy and beautifully alive. Gives you natural lasting curls and waves. Next to a Permanent. 5 Minit Steam Stix are harmless, quick, lasting, economical, a time and money saver. Complete home out- fit for long or bobbed hair, $5.00. JOYCE Dept. 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HARRISON 83914 Lancaster Avenue Finery Hosiery Agent for C. B. Slater Shoes The TOGGERY SHOP 831 LANCASTER AVENUE Dresses :: Millinery Lingerie Silk Hosiery Cleaning Dyeing FRANCIS B. HALL TAILOR RIDING HABITS :: BREECHES “ REMODELING :: PRESSING DRY CLEANING 840 Lancaster Avenue Phone Bryn Mawr 824 CARDS and GIFTS -For All Occasions THE GIFT SHOP 814 West Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr ay! re Haverford Pharmacy | HENRY W. PRESS, P. D. PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS Phone: Ardmore: 122 PROMPT DELIVERY SHRVICR - Haverford, Pa. great deal 1 more. -BOBETTE: SHOPPE a _ 1823 Chestnut St., Philadelphia DRESSES OF OUTSTANDING BEAUTY ee LY _.. All at One Price These dresses reflect the most advanced of | an “Parisian style tendencies—a great array of the. - _ finer fabrics, and in. Styles tbat are worth a. - ~~ ~~~ Radcliffe—Elizabeth _ than 40 male students at Hamline Uni- % police as soon as she discovered the we we a 9 * , ec? Ed ene, ~ Youth Tiuahe Over. - Aquatic Old-Timers | The Varsity-Alumpae game on ‘Wednesday, May 31, showed « water polo that the strain of rgcent exams did not hav® a too devastating effect on the Var- sity. team; however, their_victory: Was hard won-and the final score was close, 5-3, . At the opening of the first half the Alumnae claimed the ball with a rush and scored the first goal ‘by a beautiful long shot from Carey. soon taken away from them by Tuttle, who arrived late,¢but made up for this by the extreme punctuality with’ which she , reached. the center each time the ~ whistle blew. During the first half ‘Field, playing a very reliable right forward, succeeded ‘in making three clean goals in spite of Fitzgerald’s valiant defense. Dalziel, emulating the long passes and throws of the Alumnae, made a gorge- ous long distance. shot, and the first half ended with Varsity ahead. The first goal of the second half was also made_by the Alumnae, and was fol- lowed by a second, a throw from Rice, more than half the length of the pool. But just as the Alumnae were creeping up, Field made another goal, and nothing more was done ‘befdre time was called. Most of the playing was scrappy in the middle of the field, and every one was heavily guarded; however, there was not an unusual amount of fouling. Varsity. worked together very well, but the best individual player, M. Carey, was on the ‘ Alumnae team. The line-ups were as follows: Varsity—J. Seeley, 27; K. G@. Field, ‘a8; B. Pimey, 27; E, -Morris, 727; A. Bruere, ’28; A. Dalziel, ’29; V. New- bold; 27... Subs.: HH. ‘Tuttle, 28. for Pitney; M: Brooks, ’27,, for Morris. - Alumnae—D. Lee, '25; H. Rice, ’23; J. Ward,.’23; M. Carey, 20; P, Harris, 26; M. Tatnall, ’26; R. Fitzgerald, ’26. Subs. : for Tatnall; Tatnall for Hitchcock. Twelve Colleges Choose Juniors for Social Work New York will again be the campus and sociological laboratory for twelve college Juniors during the month of July when they attend “Junior Month,”: run by the New York Charity Organization Society. Miss Clare M. Tousley, who has charge of “Junior Month,” announces that the students are to live atthe Women’s University they did last year. The twelve colleges have just selected their representatives to “Junior Month” this year; they are as follows: Barnard—Helen Greenblat, N. J, Bryn Mawr—Margery Saunders, tleton, N. H. Connecticut—Ruth Shultis, Winchester, Mass. Elmira—Mary Rose, Elmira, Ni; YY: Goucher—Madeleine Clay, Jenkintown, Fa, ; Mt. Holyoke—Alice, Kimball, Benzonia, Mich. Club together as Newark, Lit- Belcher, C€Cam- bridge, Mass. Smith—Florence Lyon, home town not known at present. Swarthmore—Emlyn M. Hodge, Royal Oak, Mich. Vassar—Molly Thacher, South Orange, N. J. Wellesley—Florence Hollis, Philadel- phia, Pa. si Wells—Sarah Brown, howe town fat known at present. Our last year’s “Junior Month” was Jessie Hendrick. This will be the eleventh summer of “Junior Month.” All expenses of the students are paid by a board member ofe the Charity Organization Society. During the month the girls hear national leaders in the social work profession and visit places of unusu’l interest. Visits, lectures and field work are co-ordinated through round table discussion. The ‘purpose of “Junior, Month” is to give the undergraduate a panoramic view of mod- * ern ‘social work which she may carry back to her college the following year. representative to ° : Pajamas Startle Ladies ' $T. PAUL, Minn.—(I.’P.)—In spite of faculty orders to the contrary, more versity here staged their customary i spring pajama parade last week. The dean of women put in an alarm for the but the of- This lead was) CONTINUED FROM PAGBP 1 end of a 22-16 score. The Jine- -"p was as follow8: Alumnae—E.. Musselman, ’26; C. Re- mak, ’25; M..Buchanan, ’24; 25; M. Carey, ’20. Varsity—E. Boyd, C. Swan, ’29; J. Huddleston, Freeman, ’29. S. Walker, ’27, substituted for Boyd in the second -half, Varsity Captains , The Athletic Association announces the following people as Varsity captains for rfext year: STIOGNOY- foe H. Tuttle, ’28 Basket-ball «.:.......B. Loines, ’28 TBOTORSE 6 ccc k M. Fowler, ’28 Swimming ..,+.. R. Bryant, ’29 Water Polo’ :..... EK. Boyd, ’29 Archery <...4; M. Gregson, ’28 Fencing .. “A. Paskhurst, 30 on a bs elected in the fall M. Hitchcock, ’20, for Rice ;.Rice |' « OILY SKINS— ENLARGED PORES How to Correct Them By HELENA RUBINSTEIN International Beauty Specialist COMPLEXION beauty depends very largely upon fineness of the pores. This simple treatment corrects oiliness—makes pores invisibly tiny and keeps complexion clear, smooth and unblemished. 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It will be to your interest to think about the new develop- ment, Group I nsurance, which will be a factor of in impor- tance in the rela of your business to its ails Some of you have a decided bent, and are going to follow it. One way of making sure that you will finish the course of life you have chosen is to take advantage of Annuity, Endowment, and Straight Life Insurance. Some of you have worked for your education and must earn as much money as you can, as quickly as poisible, The selling of Life nsurance gives the most and quickest return for hard work; it also offers the greatest freedom for original enterprise. It is not a push-button job. The John Han- cock is looking for men like you and would like fo hear from you. Write to us in regard to any of these points. We shall answer Me inquiries without any ob- igation to you. Address the INQUIRY BUREAU, ZA ae ae LiFe INSURANCE COMPANY oF Bostom, MassacnusarTs 197 Clarendon St., Boston, Mass. If your policy bears the name John Hancock, it is safe and secure in every way. School of Library Science — DREXEL INSTITUTE Philadelphia, Pa. A one-year course for college grad- uates only. Trains librarians for all types of libraries. MODERN LITERATURE First EDITIONS THE CENTAUR BOOK SHOP 1224 Chancellor St. PHILADELPHIA JUST BELOW WALNUT AT 13TH COSTUMES TO RENT FOR PLAYS, Ete. - REASONABLE PRICES Van Horn & Son Theatrical Costumers 12th & Chestnut Sts., Phila., Pa. ' ell pull ail at << pail] sult tities suiTtf li Ie _ ae cD a al ao] Nt 1 TU vuittflfiie ae Try this new number on your Notebook Parker Pens ($3.50 with lad Gols Bend) point and 14K GOLD POINT, extra-flex- tble—a Pen witha GOLD CLIP or rolled GOLD *END, |’ at the price of pens with clips. | ‘SHE PARKER PEN. COMPaNyY — Factory and General Offices PHILADELPHIA SCHOOL OF od iyaead ae L’ORIGAN PARIS JASMIN DE CORSE STYX L’OR One Dollar 6 DO YOU KNOW How LOVELY YOu ARE? 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WOOLWORTH BUILDING NEW YORK CO-EDUCATIONAL Case System—Three-Year Course Two Years of College Work ‘Required for Admission “Morning, Afterneen and Evening Classes WRITE FOR CATALOGUE CHARLES P. DAVIS, Registrar ROOM 2851 sneer OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ° 2200 Delancey Place ~~ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania If you are interested in becoming an Occupational Therapist and in . - the new course 1927-28, please. communicate with Miss — W.. —_— oe: 4 “| tion, Horticulture, and. a _ Estate THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF ~ DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE AND ._. LANDSCAPE :ARCHITECTURE A Professional School for college graduates. The Academic Year for 1927-28 opens Monday October 3, 1927. THE CAMBRIDGE-LOWTHORPE EurRoPpEAN TRAVEL COURSE Sailing from Montreal June 10th. Sailing from Naples Sept. 8th. THE CAMBRIDGE-LOWTHORPE oe at Groton, sachusetts From Wednesday July 6, to Wednesday g 24. 4 1 Henry ATHERTON Frost — Director. : 13 Boylston St., Cambridge, Mass. : At He d Square thins ht 4 4 School of Landecupe Architecture for inane = seventeen acres, Courses in- Landscape ee ee Vv < ce * \e a _ MEMORIAL SERVICES CONTINUED FRQM PAGE 1 = -. and of the influence of her. strong char acter upon her. classmates, Mrs. Alexander Galt Grant, "1, spoke next concerning Leila Houghteling, who * died so tragically just. when _She had re- ceived an appointment to lecture in the School of Social Service Administration of the University of Chicago after tak- ing a Ph. D. last spring.’ She had also worked in the ‘summer, school in the first summer of its existence and done other social work, but her friends re- member her equally for her sense of -hu- mor, her alertness and’ her genius for friendship, . * Tshe musical selections played by Mr. __ Alwyne and Miss Helen Rice added to * the impressiveness and beauty of the services in the quiet cloisters. Mr. Al- wyne played a solo on the piano, and: together tiey played a duet for. violin and piano, BASEBALL CONTINUED FROM PAGH 1 °” netted two runs, Kellogg, again at bat, pelted the ball for a two-bagger, driving, in two mins... Crenshaw was put out. when she tried to bunt a ball and Rice “was put out when Parker neatly caught a long hard hit. Fieser was the hero of the Seventh, making a home ruii with the bases full and two out. This forced the score up to 28-19. oe In the eighth inning the Faculty weren't taking any chances with the heavy hitters and passed Seeley, Bruere, and Kellogg on balls. The rest of this inning provided no excitement, but brought the score up to 31-22., Only one-half of thegninth inning was played as by this time the Kaculty had ‘won the game. Carey made several brilliant stops at second, while Hitchcock could be counted on for hard hits. Throughout the game Seeley, Kellogg. and Palache relieved each other in the pitchers’ box. In the last inning C. Parker, ’29, substitiited for Woodward and H. Taylor, ’30, for M. L. Jones, who was playing for the Faeulty. The linetip: was as follows: Faculty—F, Shrader, c.; L. Fieser, p.; if ‘Crenshaw, 1st; M. Carey, 20, 2d; D. Hitchcock, 3d; H. Rice, ’’23, rf.; M. L, Jones, ’27, HH. a ee Students—N. ‘Woodward, 09, Ope Seeley, 27, p.; A, Palache, ’28, 1st; A. Bruere, 28; 2d; D. Kellogg, ’27, 3d; E. Haines, ’27,. rf, H. Parker, '27, If. Umpire—B. Freeman, ™. Newspaper Service at Students are urged to take advantage of the opportunity, to write. which is af- forded by the United Feature Syindicate of New York, an organization’ owned and operated by the ! United ‘Press As- sociations, which’ proposes an’ Interna- tional Newspaper Sérvicé by’ student writers here and abroad. The purpose of this ‘service is to give the younger generation a chance to ex- press its gratitude toward its world. As this is to be a youthful undertaking ex- clusively, these artieles will be judged by a board of students who will decide which ones metit publication, these to be sent in to the syndicate. This is an especially good time of the year to send in contributions because, due to the mul- “titude of things which always crowd into the last few weeks~of the school year, few articles are being handed in. Only material which is good news- paper copy and is written on*a subject of general interest will be accepted. Car- toons. which tell a story or make a point are just as useful as. articles and are solicited. Both articles and cartoons will be paid for, one-third of the gross : proceeds from the sale of the service to _ go to the student writers, being divided equally between the four or five con- tributors, whose articles have been ac-| cepted for publication, one-third to de- augural address, is designed to recognize couragement for academic irfterest, .and to prevent that interest from being dis- couraged by aSsoefation with mediocrity. —Michigan Bevis %. bd Wellesley Makes Survey of College Curriculum A study of the curriculum as it has been worked out by the other darge women’s colleges, _gempared - in detail with the present’ curriculum at Welles- ley, discloses interesting points of vari- ance. Three of the colleges whose cur- ricufum has attracted our attention, Vassar, Barnard and Smith, are ‘already working out the group system, but in each ‘case it is a different grouping of subjects, and the student: is granted varying degrees of option in her selec- tion from the groups. Vassar and Bar- nard each requires of all students Eng- lish Composition, Spoken English, Hy- giené and Physical Education, but these are >the only subjects in the catalogue for which no alternative may be offered. 3ryn Mawr, which does not use the group system, differs from Wellesley in requiring a reading knowledge of French and German for the Bachelor of Arts degree. Also the following subjects are required: Greek or Latin, six semester hours; English, 12\ semester hours; Philosophy and Pscychology, each four semester hours, and ‘10 hours of sci- ences, ( Bryn, Mawr courses frequently, meet five times a week, it must be re- membered.) Fifty semester hours of the major subject. and allied coursés are re- quired of eath student. ‘ ‘Mount Holyoke is the one other large college which places emphasis upon a’ Bible course, yet even there it is not without an alternative. The definitely re- quired subjects are English, | Spoken English and a year of French, or Ger- man, which may be met by examination. The student is then free to choose seven out’ of the eight following groups: Bib- lical Literature, Chemistry or Physics, English Literature, Greek or Latin, His- tory, Mathematics, Philosophy and Psy- chology. and another science, either Astronomy, Botany, Geology, Physiolo- gy, or Zoology. The college bulletin, in a statement of policy prefixed to the pre- scribed list of courses, justifies the re- quired courses by saying that basic courses in fundamental and representa- tive _subjectsaccomplish..the..orientation of the students’ thinking, and aid in the choice of major and minor subjects. Vassar agrees with the other colleges in not requiring mathematics, but has its own individual plan of prescribing one year of European history. A Vassar student is free to elect five subjects from five of the following six grotips: classi- cal literature, modern foreign literature, third foreign language, mathematics, chemistry or physics, and lastly, the re- maining sciences. t Barnard. has the groupings of subjects narrowed down to the smallest number, allowing ‘the student to choose from the three large groups :—I. Languages, liter- ature and other fine arts. II. Mathematics and the fatural science III. The so- cial sciences. The number of groups in the Smith curriculum has been reduced from ten to four, subjects falling under the group divisions of languages, litera- ture and fine arts, sciences and social sciences,—Wellesley News. Point of Juncture Found | Although the student bodies of Har- vard ang Princeton have been separated on the athletic field, they are now to be united in the field-of art. A joint pub- lication, “Art Studies,” will be produced through a grant of $7500 provided by a Harvard graduate. ‘The donor desires to have his gift emphasize the fact “that friendly rela- tions between great universities should be thought of in terms of co-operative scholarship rather than in the over-em- Phasized field of intercollegiate athlet- ics. ae hs Stanford sen : ability when it is shown, to ‘provide .en- |. | pointed sleeve, and the hood is trimmed -.. “JODGE-HAND : CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 , conferred .by continental universities are indicated by hoods lined. with- the color ofthe Faculty in which mn Ceara is taken (blue for Philosophy, Medicine, purple for Laws,, scarlet for green for taining colors of the country in which the degree is taken. English degrees are variously indicated. The degree of Doc- tor of Science of the University of Lon- don is shown by a crimson gown and a crimson and yellow hood. ° Undergraduates wear a modified form of the Oxford, Scholar’s of black The Bachelor’s gown has a long gown, serge, with fur. The Master’s gown has a long closed sleeve, slit’ toward the top of they arm, while the Master’s hood is trimmed | with white velvet and is’ a foot longer than the Bachelors’. The Doctor’s gown is the only one that may be made of silk. It has bands of velvet down the front and, a round open ‘sleeve with three bars of velvet either black or of the color of the faculty conferring the ‘degree. The Doctor’s hood is made with a panel. Harvard degrees are indicated on each band of the gown, instead of the usual colored facing of the hood. Fellows of Bryn Mawr wear bachelors’ gowns and yellow and white hoods. hs Caps are worn by candidates for de- grees with the tassel on the right; by bolders with the tassel on the left. While. the degree is being conferred the cap is not worn. Women Too Distracting “Of course many of our students be- came engaged on the voyage,” said Mrs. P. M. Fogg, Dean of Women’ on the Holland-American liner “Ryndam,” first American co-educational floating uni- versity, which recently docked in New York after a seven months’ tour of the world. “It was only a perfect natural outgrowth of propinquity and attach- ments formed during the trip. But aside from this—or better, including this—I can state quite positively that the co-educational aspect of the cruise was a success in every way.” The second world tour, which will be- gin in September, will not be co-educa- tional, however. Dr. James Lough, Dean of Men, stated that the girls provide something of a. distraction on a long cruise, and that it was rather difficult to find proper accommodations for the girl’ students on the field excursions.— The Stanford Daily. R Theology): crossed by a chevron ‘con- | a "Seville Theatre Bryn Mawr _. PROGRAMME Week of May 30th | Monday, Tuésday, Wednesday William Haines 4 “in + “Slide, Kelly, Slide” ew: Thursday ‘; Tom Mix d in» : “The Broncho Twister” . Friday and Saturday . Jackie Coogan ‘in “Johnny Get Your Hair Cut” Dry ond Geran Wor ’S most distressing and_etmbarrassing problem is no longer a problem in more than a million homes wid) ~ NONSPI (an antiseptic liquid ) used to gama armpit odors and FL. divert the perspiration to other 7 parts of the oly. Women, formerly victims of ¢ ex- cessive underarm perspira- - tion, now keep their armpits dry and odorless . and save their clothes from destructive _amnwe~, perspiration : » /- stains with a few drops of NONSPI used on an av- erage of twice weekly. These women use NONSPI the year around—spring,summer, fall and winter. NONSPI will keep your under- arms dry and odo ‘lane and save your dresses and lingerie from ctive perspiration stains. | NONSPI, used and endorsed by physicians and nurses is for sale at wil ret and drug stores..We if preferred, send you a bot- tle postpaid for 50 veggen Sng bo cept postage stamps) w last you several mon FREE TESTING SAMPLE SENT ON REQUEST. 6 Send free NONSPI | sample to panel “i 4.50 All. te Buckskin. White Rubber Sole, -A SHOP NOTED FOR DISTINCTIVE SHOES | Claflin— White — Buckskin Sourt and Semi-Sport Sides Catia Settles Chiffon Hove, $1.65, 1606, ‘Chestnut _ . Phone, Bryn Mawr 166 Phone Orders Promptly Delivered WILLIAM GROFF, P. D. a - PRESCRIPTIONIST : Ice Cream and Soda _. Whitman Chocolates — 803 Lancaster Ave., Amite ee Ps. _ xoenioaiateomaersten ns pers BANKSe SBD BP 1832 PHILADELPHIA “THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK’ mailed upon request illustrates and ‘prices JEWELS; WATCHES, CLOCKS,. SILVER, CHINA, GLASS and NOVELTIES from ee may ie selected ‘distinctive WEDDING. BIRTHDAY, GRADUATION AND OWHER GIFTS MAKERS OP THE OFFICIAL BRYN MAWR COLLEGE SEALS AND RINGS COTTAGE TEA ROOM MONTGOMERY AVENUE Bryn Mawr LUNCHEON AF TERNOON TEA . DINNER Special Parties by dines Guest Rooms—Phone, Bryn Mawr 362 JEANNETT’S BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily Corsage. and Floral Baskets Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty Potted Plants ~ Personal Supervision on All Orders Phone: Bryn Mawr 570 823 Lancaster Avenue THE HEATHER | Mrs. M. M. Heath Seville Theatre Arcade ~ Minerva Yarns, Linens, Silks, D. M. O., Sweaters, Beaded Bags, Novelty Jewelry Instructions Given each NAN HERR RAN Telephone: 456 Bryn Mawr ' Michael Talone TAILOR Cleaner’ and Dyer © 1123 Lancaster Avenue CALL FOR AND DELIVERY SERVICH HIGHLAND DAIRIES 758 LANCASTER AVE. Bryn Mawr _ Telephone: BRYN MAWR 882 ISS BEL BN® R IDENCE t Riverside Drive A select Ley 7 a ited where "ihe Pr inaite home are combin th ze advantages of a = in Yap eae. al ‘Shaner + shoes. Cat Peace) Week-end Guests Accepted LINE VALET, SHOP BERNARD J. McRORY i Linike and Sport Clothes Remodeled and Repaired Cleaning and Dyeing Moved to 2a FL. over GAFFNEY’S NOTION STORE Next to Pennsylvania Railroad EXPERT FURRIERS "BRYN wave TRUST co. tia L, $250,000.00 . Fresh Milk & Cream for Spreads | ~ nn ea me taka»