bat -ground ‘and sowing new. seeds, -in the college this year. ,integral part .of the college life, revo- _ addition to honors work, made possible ~ FLUX AND CHANGE Honors Work, the Beyn- Maws League, New Calendar Burst Upon Us. PEACEFUL REvwLUTION “This has been a year of preparing the} We have rooted up the old, and. put.in new plants. We leave it to the class of 1929 to keep the college garden free from weeds and well-wateréd.” These were the words with which K. |. Field, President. of ‘the class. of 1928, handed over to R. Cross, Vice President of ’29, a new symbol, a farmer’s hat, on, the last day of classes. Miss. Field chose these words to express her Sense of the many changes which have taken place Miss -Park said’ in chapel on that same last day-that -be- tween this year and next we weré turning a ‘corner., Honors work, long desired, will at last be begun in at least three departments: English, Economics and History. Goodhart Hall will beeome an |. lutionizing even the character of morning chapel, and the “hours of classes, and tunities for work in dramatics for music, glee club: concerts,- movies and every aspect of the college social life. The Art Club will begin a new life, and even athletics will perhaps be cHanged. Another new .departure Which should not be overlooked is the rearrangement of the calendar. Beginning next - fall, vacations will start on- Fridays instead -otf Wednesdays, and will include three week- |. ends at Chrstimas,- and two at. Easter. It is indeed a kind of peaceful revolution, a “revolt with a purpose,” which has taktn place’in Bryn’ Mawr this year. _ The roots of all these innovations, however, lie, as Miss,-Field pointed out, in 1928. The most Wtartling of. this year’s chatiges, and the most sweéping,| |. “was the substitution pt the Bryn Mawr League, with its wider appeal, and _ itg three departments of worship, discussion and social service for~the--old:. Christian Association; —Though—the-new—plan-will |. be .carried. out -by~ future -classés, the leading spirit of the movement..was a member of ’28. This year Gooslhart Hall was completed and dedicated, and the profits of this year’s May Day will go largely to buying equipment for its stage. This year, also; plays written by the Freshmen were informally presented in the Common room, and next year it is planned to.produce some of the plays written-in Mr- Barrett Clatk’s playwriting class. This year the campaign of the seven Women’s colleges, whjch burst upon us so startlingly last wee with its moving pictures of college life, was in- augtirated: and finally, this year saw the first stockingless legs on the catnpus. In matters more nearly academic there has_been a corresponding _upheaval.__tIn by gifts received this winter, new scholarships were announced. | For. the first time picked members of the Jurtior class will be. given an opportunity ‘to devote a year to study in France, fox which they will be credited as for reguty) ve lar academic work. A very recent gift). has provided for a yearly’ six . weeks lectureship in the Humanities in memory of Miss Mary Flexner. Review of the News First Editor Gives All the Dope to Fourteenth; the “Apple” - @ Pioneer. Tonight is the fourteenth anniversary of the College News. On the day of Garden Party in June, 1914, the idea of founding--a Bryn Mawr newspaper in the following fall first took definite shape. The leading spirits of the project were Miss Applebee; and Miss Isabelle Foster, who was here for reunion this year with the class of 1915. Since graduating she has worked for’ three newspapers, an aimost unique example of an alumna who’ persevered i in the profession for = ahe “CONTINUED “ON ‘PAGE 3 -basketball practice. rain, The Class of 1928 $5000 From May Day The latest approximation of May Day proceeds gives 5020 dol- lars as a safe total. Bills are still dribbling in and so are profits, but the fact that the approximate sum has mounted fram an early “guess. of three or four thousand to af - least five thousand augurs well for. the final reckoning. Even with $5000 the movie camera projector ‘for Goodhart_is-a sure thing. Alumnae Brave Rain to Hold Reunion Parade for their respective reunions last Satur- day : +1891, 1892 in Merion, 1894 and 1895; 1903 in Pembroke East, 1913 inr Pembroke West, 1914 in Denbigh, 1915 in Rockefeller 1926 in Radnor, and 1927 in Wyndham. Class activities began at once , with 1894’s class luncheon at the College Inn. The rest of the day was well-filled with The dedication serv- ices for Goodhart Hall, 1926’s class picnic and Class Suppers jn the various halls: for the Other reunionists at.8 P. M. “Really” feverish activity, however, did not begin. until." Monday, famotis- as. Alumnae’ day. The Alumnae Parade took place with reat hilarity in spite of ‘discouraging Thé“procession started about ten in the snorningled by the jclass of 1903 in “modern dress” accentuated” by é¢nor- mous/ ear-rings’-and a great. quantity of roug¢ and powder. 1912. followed in stunning costume (adjudged; the /best of the lot) consisting of bright; blue smocks, yellow trousers, and-a number of large due balloons. 1913. wore; white smocks y\th their numerals on the back so placed as to: form a rooster, and red hats, Blue skirts and bandannas adorned 1914, 1915 were\ entirely attired jin’ green, and 1927, the gest member, wore green shorts and so: Afters he processidn arrived at the gym, Miss Applebee /was presented with a brown eather suitcase from the col- lege, ‘and aa enormoys basket of flowers from the alimnae> {The applause’ was furious, with ‘tatmpitg, clapping, shout- “ing and sobbing; j-¢ In response to; this /ovation Miss Apple: bee confessed that this was her birthday. ‘But, she added, I’m not so. old ds most of ‘you think!) /She then explained that living with undergraduates makes one feel younger j/every year, In leaving Bryn Mawr, Miss Applebee said that she was leaving | the place” ‘im America, and bperhape in the world, that she loves best. The-Alumnae_of-eleven classesgathered'|” Unemploy ment in 1921. champions’ of practical education. ~ ~GONTINUED ‘ON PAGE 2~ OWEN D. YOUNG TO | International Figx igure Will De- liver Commencement Address. DAUGHTER, “GRADUATE Mr. Owen D. Commencement Hall at 11: Ay M: after the presentation of degrees. to the | : SPEAK ON THURSDAY | Young will deliver the Address on Thursday in “Goodhart morning, gi raduating seniors, among whom will be Mr Young’ s—daughter, Josephine Young, ex-president of the Self-Government As- sociation, Mr. Young is a representative of a new group in public life in this country, a ‘group. which oniy appeared -during the Great War, when the exigencies of the situation called to the service of the nation men who could bring to bear. the krowledge of experts and the experience derived from the direction of great indus- tries, on the political’and economic prob- Jems of the day. He was a member of the First Committee of experts, popu- larly known as the Dawes. Committee, of the Reparations Commission. The re- port.of this Committee, published in 1924, is the basis of the system of “réparations as it is now being worked out if Ger- many. In 1919 Mr. Young was a mem- -ber of President Wilson’s first and sec- ond Industrial Conference, and he’ was on .President Hardirfg’s. Conference. on He was also an unofficial advisor of the’ Premier’s Con4 ference in. 1924. Some of’ the most thrilling industries of the country are under Mr. Young’s direc- tion. He is chairman of the Board of the General Electric Company and of the Radio Corporation of America; as well as a director of. numerous other enter: prises, : Mr. Young was a ‘ graduate of St. Law- rence University, and is the chairman of its Board of Trustees. He holds the de- gree of LL. D. from ten colleges in this country, among them Johns Hopkins, Harvard, Yale, Columbia and Union Col- lege. In return he has not neglected the cause of education. He is the President of the Boatd of Trustees for the estab- lishment of an endowment fund for the proposed Walter Hines Page school of International. Relations, and on the oc- casion of the opening of the new build- ings of the Harvard Business School two years ago he - / delivered an address that will long be remembered by the “1901-'she has Hall Dedicated Miss Park, Dean Manning and /. Mr. Meigs Open Musical Ceremony. The greatest, and presumably. the last, dedication service to- be held in Good- hartsHall_ took place af 5.0’clock- on the afternoon of Saturday, auditorium was June 2, the first time. Various speakers were followed by songs from Glee Club, used for the performance of a violinist, Mr. Naoum Blinder, and Mr. Alwyne’s playing. Mr. Arthur Meigs, ‘the architect of Goodhart, spoke—firstHe-noted-a re- cent newspaper article that gave an en- tirely ertoneous picture of the building, and proceeded to tell of its construction. The chief aim in the building had been, he said, an attempt for truth and punc- tional simplicity, and the-exclusion of all details. Everything must have an honest purpose and make that purpose clear. The great arches .were the keynote of —the—construction,- and around them everything -else--had--been erected; Ornamentation has been as far: as2possible suppressed, and everything is. as simple as possible. Mr.:Meigs added a word of gratitude to those who have made Goodhart Hall possible, saying that the chief means of an artist’s support is not—in—money but int oppor- tunities. unnecessary or prizes, “Twenty-eight years ago,’ said Miss Park in her speech accepting the build- ing from the hands ofthe architects, “the CONTINUED..ON...PAGE 2 Miss Petts. Will Succeed... Miss Applebee in 1929 Miss Josephine Petts will be the djrec- tor of Physical Training at Bryn Mawr next year. After twenty-two years Miss Applebee is leaving us to return to Eng- es | jan. Since she came to this country in made ‘Hockey the geeak sport of women’s colleges, and has given Bryn Mawr many a team’ and many a May Day.of which to be proud. Al- though her place will be a hard one. to fill, it is felt that the new appointee will be the best substitute for Miss Apple- bee that the college could have. ~ Miss Petts is a graduate of the De- partment of Hygiene and Physical educa- tion of Wellesley College, 1914. She has been Instructor in Physical Education at Miss Madeira’s School .in Washington, 1914-19, Instructor at the ‘Central, Sotivol of Hygiene and Physical Education of New. York, 1919-22, and Instructor, in. Physical Education at Teacher’s College, |} Cotumbia” New York, 1922934. | scriptive of the spirit of the tim when tlie CHURCH AND LAW SCORNED BY YOUTH Rabbi Wise "Explains Present Revolt, and Urges. a * Sound Platform. ’ “LIVE BY _THE, SHRINE” Rabbi Stephen S. W S. Wise,- of the: Free Synagogue of New York, gave the Bac- culaureate address to the class of 1928.ja. Goodhart: Hall, Sunday evening, June 3, the first address in many years to escape’, the familiar surroundings of the gym* nasiumi and find an atmosphere really svited to the dignity of such an occasion. Three thousand years ago, he began, the children: of Israel ,were commanded by their.God to break the chains. of their | b: ndage and go forward. If we were asked today. what-is the- greatest phenomenon ‘in the world de- } we might say that Youth is in a. State “of never ceasing movement. This, however, iz not strictly true: - Youth is, -rather, in a state of revolt, There is a differetice between movement. and revolt, which must not be overlooked... Movement is meaningless and without purpose ; ‘but re- volt is deliberative and Has a definite purpose in mind. Protest, Prophecy and Purpose. The .tokens of revolt are threefold: first there is present the spirit of pro- test; secofid there is a touch of prophecy of what may come in the future; and third, there is the purpose in view. The human bondage; against social servitude and iniquity, ferward to a wilderness of new adven- ture and freedom, ‘Their prophecy .was the law which God gave to Moses on Mount Sinai. Is, thén, the protest of to- day touched by these three tokens? Is the revolt of today touchéd with a high purpose, and have we a ptophecy. ‘that the result will-make the world better fer-all-concerned-?—_If-asked-what- Youth is revolting against, we might cite the conventions of the whole social order, but the citation of two cases only affords a suffieient—ilustration: — First, . Youth is revolting again the Church. It looks upon the Church and is repelled; and ‘the reason for this is that it. looks not upon a united religious organzation, but upon religion divided against itself-by continual warring. among the various sects. The seer said: “Blessed are the peacemakers,” CONTINUED ON PAGE 3 Use of: Goodhart Means ~ Changes in Schedules Due to the fact that chapel next year will’ be held in the Music Room in Good- hart Hall the schedule of morning classes has had to be rearranged to allow time to get to Goodhart from the far corners of the campus. Chapel will be probably held only three times a week, arid the extra time used on other days for the holding of- meetings hitherto scheduled after lunch. Milk lunch will probably be served in. Goodhart at eleven. The sug- gestions of the schedule: committee. are as follows: 1.-That. chapel ‘instead of being held between the first and second lecture hours in the morning should be held between the third and fourth lecturéhours. 2, That the interval between classes should be reduced from ten minutes to should be utilized to increase the length of the chapel hour, thus giving the fol- lowing general program for the morning. Proposed Schedule. Bell for First Clase i....%.. 7.55 A. M. First Class Begins ........, 8.00 A. } ’ Bell at close of first class.. 8.50 A. ) Second Class Begins ....... 8.55 A. M. Bell at close of second class 9.45 A. M. Third Class Begins ...,.... 9.50 A. M. Bell at close of third class. /10.40 A. M. OM, ese chante ,..10.45 A.M. Bell for fourth class ..... 11.10 A. M,. Fourth Class Begins ..:..... 11.15 A. M. Bell at close of fourth SMMNET erase tens tous ess 12.05 P. M, Fifth Class Begins ........ 12.10 P. M. Belt-at close of fifth class... children. of Israel revolted first against’ They were bidden to mavye- but the * five minutes, and that the time thus saved PRICE, 10 CENTS~~~~ 1.00 P. < “ ¢ Editor-in-Chief — ET ‘H. LINN, ‘29 Copy Ed Editor MARY Ri GRACE, 29 oe ' Editors %. HOWE, pesamaerc) E. RICE, '30 30 ‘Contributing Editor J. L. PESLER, "28 Assistant ant Editors Wi HOBART, hg "Vv. SHRYOCK, . i, Business M Manager J. BARTH, '29 er ae ion papeast H. J, G tE BALCH, » wiped - * Assistants a“ D. CROSS, 30 E. BAXTER; ‘30 M.E. FROTHINGHAM, 31 D. ASHER, '31. ription, $2.50. Mailing Price. oe IPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIM ores as second-class matter at ‘the Wayne, Pa.; Pos Office. THE PRISM From October to May. Bryn _ Mawr isa single entity ; 400 pairs of -eyes; blue, black, brown -and_ be- spectacled regard the college from the same_general_work-a-day point ef view as they look at the next job to be done, -the next book on the ‘reading list. But in. the first week of June the campus is an altogether’ different _place—many different places. Nor is this due, saving their presence, to the. graduating class&& They are éager to be gone; and who would blame them? A senior who looked backward at Commencement should be-turned to a pillar of stone, at least; the normal graduate, fixing her myopic eyes on the more or less misty future, unfurls her diploma to | the winds of adventure, and sails from the harbour without a glance behind. . It is the alumnae'who give the campus at this time its prism-like character. Dropping down the channel with full cargoes, they have ‘a right to cast fond glances at the familiar landscape, and each one sees exactly what she left behind her. One has the feeling that with- in our small limits it is 1894 dnd 1903 and 1912 and 1927 all at once. Almost palpable-is the golden glow with which the earliest classes. én- ce dow-the very stones of Taylor. The a. sparkles with appreciation...The ~ <=--trees-seemr-to-stand-a little straighter arid the spires draw themselves to their full height. “Now,” they seem to say, “you see what we really are!” and they are right. For who are we to deny it? In a year or five or ten we too will be back, oblivious of the time between, and surrounding every blade of grass with a halo of recol- lection.” ee ae “TO SEE OURSELVES - , The English department has been quietly going about breaking one of its’ ‘best traditions, We feel. that some one shouft-voice a protest be- fore\ it is too late. Can we sit silently by, and allow 1928 to be not only the first class to graduate from ‘ Goodhart Hall, but also the last to recover its freshman themes at the end of senior year ?. Freshman themes "have a quality. all their own, a quality one cannot ’ appreciate, until one has at least . three’ years between the writing of them and the rereading. In the light of those three years one can at last see them witha clear eye, and be faintly amused and often asham- ed of their fatuity. The compari- son,one can make, with the aid of these self-revealings compositions, one’s personality as a freshman and as a senior, is profoundly whole- some: It shows that education has done something permanent, that during the interyal since these atro- ' cities were written one has broaden- ‘ed, and has assimilated a. certain number of thoughts. The chances are that during freshmen year, the writer’ thought very well of her themes, and: felt that she already “had some thoughts; a perusal of —° © her stop to think that i in an- pe ieee “rsa she will have gone |on her-personality as a ‘senior, with] S94 It also} by any means) in “Locomotive,” a one-| ested in Bryn. Mawr above everything | y else.. with’ business of the actress herself would - ALUMNAE DAY whith. she views Her freshman self. “All this. is surely valuable, it puts "| the senior in a, ‘good frame of smirid before graduating. , - And ‘yet; English department has been letting ‘the themes go back to their authors with- the’ greatest carelessness. At no_ other time. can. they..do.so. much: good or be read with.such eager at- .|tention as at ‘the end of the senior year. We hope the English depart- mént takes this to heart, and revives its old policy of hoarding freshman themes for years in the basement of Taylor. Then all future classes about ‘to graduate: will have" the) same salubrious glimpse of” ane wits that was given June.8, 1928. - "WHO CAN EXPLAIN? | - We are taught that waste is wvaste and should. not be. And ‘yet the college. sets us.a very bad example. It afflicts seniors with examinations} in the second semester; and surely ®lthat is a flagrantly bad example of waste. The marks do not count. All the starry seats. in the scholastic firmament have long since been as-' signed. A tradition it must be, but it seems to be a tradition peculiarly lacking in common-sense. It merely means a great deal of unnecessary drudgery for the poor ‘seniors, whose eyes are;-as is fitting, fo- cused on more expanded fields. It merely means a great deal of un- necessary drudgery for the poor professors, who have not even the ascetic consolation of. having per- formed a_ noble duty. Marking these. examinations is’ not, emphati- cally not, a:noble duty, but only a repetition ‘of the — well-known Augean stable episode. What has the voice of authority to say on this matter? We would welcome an ex- planation. Bittt who can explain, who can excuse, this unnecessary and cruel academic custom? ‘WIT’S END AND FINGER: : ENDS The: last two weeks are hectic; an anthem of turbulent confusion that veaches a grand finale in a chorus of /finger-nail chewing. First of all there is, mad preparation for ex- aminations; miles and miles of reading to be done im some miracu- lous fashion and no books tobe had. Thumb gone. At the éleventh hour you begin to cram your notes ; at the very same moment’ your roommate begins. to throw her trunk around in ‘her. furniture... ‘Two. fingers quite gone. After -you have committed yourself on blue-books, . regarding the information you derived from certain courses, 5 o'clock does not have the Longfellow’s Children’s Hour lure that it once had. The hall is crowded; the lists aré post- ‘ed; ‘your friends all know. what your mark is. _How perfectly_jolly. Anothter- finger off. “The man. here for your trunk, Miss.’..Frenzied packing. “Don’t forget to sign out your’ vacation address.” You go back to the signing-out book and discover you’ve signed weeks ago. A..mad- dash through Taylor on your way to the station. Are yeu going to. Russia this summer? Come to Bates. It makes you feel all ~warm and smooth inside to think that you are actually going home. When you get there life will resume its more moderate pace, and, during the first week, a little finger will have its nail completely destroyed on account of* ennui. ~The June Lantern (Specially Contributed by | Mr. Fraser) it seems to the reviewer, up to par. One of the most encouraging features, how- ever, is the fact that half of the con- tributions are by Freshmen. Still it is not within the present reviewer's power te prophesy, and it is certainly not his mtention to patronize. The chief criticism of the number is one directed against a tendency to use too broad a brush.. With several ex- ceptions, one feels that the contributors have been too insistent on making their points—have left no place for sugges- tion. rather than statement. This element is apparent (not glaringly act play. by. M. Shirley—particularly in k | hint is in a a See the |*farcical denouement of a very amusing “extreme. fatuity of the hero of “The McKelvey ; and in the pseudo-naivete or and If’s and Whether’s, grow connected ‘a_playful manner_and_ starts tagging} ‘building has been needed, alumnae and The June issue of the Lantern: is- not, | the asides spoken by the Negro girl, A gets’ an over-emphasis as ‘well, in the pictures of the ludicrous in ,“Immagina- tion,” an essay, by §.- Scott; ‘in the, play, “Doomsday,” by E. Waples; in the Greatest Man That Ever Lived,” by H. “On Being é Poet, mo hy BAY CoOK. “Manny Plaut,” by ,Deirdreg O’Shea; prob- ably the most successful of the ‘prose contributions, and “Night at the Vakzol,” by S. Zeben, show more restraint and subtlety. Of the poetry, “Trees e After Rain” -(B.- Kirk) presents” by far the most vivid} and charming picture. “Plea,” by M. Gellhorn, is very ‘well done—effective without effort.. The last stanza of “The Book” (E. Lewis) is neater than the rest 6{ the poem and entertaining. “Occi- dent,” by M. Palmer, suffers becaust of the grating sound of the’ word “brace- let” and because of a false note in “soon— ah, soon,” an artificiality that Miss Palmer should have discarded: as she did the rose-covered cottage. K. Balch. in “Impotent Evening” ‘succeeds, idSpite oF ambiguity in the first line, by a cer- tain . felicity of epithet and image * in transmitting. an impfession of the world as it looks from-a_ reclining position. But do the sky and the star forever presuppose the mention of “eternity”? V. Buel’s poem, “Old Luggers,” is an interesting commentary on the recent ship ctaze which is at last on the wane, al- though that is, of .course,’ the author’s implication. Miss Buel should be cau- tioned against using such cliches as “sends of gold,” “treasure untold,” and “by-gone day.” ‘I,ament,” by M. Haley, follows ott its ‘title, though one feels that the strain should not continue so. far as to make the search for rhymes obvious. | "Let us hope that the Lante rn’s ‘change of cover, in addition to the inclusion of wood-cuts; persists long enough to make a year’s accumulation of numbers as}.—. colorful as thé rhyme sheets of May Day. The reviewer does not wish ‘to create |. the impression that-the June Lantern is generally infetior in quality, The stand- ard of the Lantern has always been high; possibly the last number ‘of the year falls somewhat short of. the usual standard. The contributors may: with all justice reply :: “Rather with the necessity with which a tree bears its fruit, so do our thoughts, our values, our Yes’s and No’s as to whether these : fruits , of that and interrelated they are to-your taste, ours? But what matters trees? — cae “HALL DEDICATED | CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4 first May Day was given for the ‘benefit of a Students’ building.” Much as the students of the college have again and again had.to lay aside their hopes and subscribe: to more prosaic.,endowment funds, -Four years later, Mr. Rockefeller -gave- room. for-eighty “more™ students: in the dormitories, and ever. since then, Bryn Mawr has labored under the difficulties of inadequate space: Chapel was too small to cont the students, and the only place where they could all ,; be brought together was in the gymnasium, which, said Miss Park, “was-about as good a place for a Commencement as this auditorium. would make for a gym- nasium,” F inally i in 1926, a drive to com- plete the building fund was put through, and the hall was eventually made pos- sible by the gifts in memory of “Marjorie Walker Goodhart.. - Miss Park spoke of the sacrifice the Hall had meant to many of Bryn Mawr’s alumnae and friends, and of the joy which it now was to the Music Depart- ment,*to Self-Government and Athletic Association presidents, and to graduat- ing seniors. Mrs. Marjorie Walker Goodhart, of the class of .1912. Marjorie Walker was the youngest member of her class, coming to college at fifteen, and, she was also one of its must industrious’ members, graduating third. in the class, reading the ‘Times every morning and even taking uf nature study. Sle was very popular at college, for her friendliness, her wide interests, and. her large accumulation of books, which she was always willing to lend to any friend.in need. After she left college, she continued to be“ inter- program followed the en oe to the Manning spoke in, memory of} it all. The Pillar . of Salt ~ We had. meant to be very funny. this week at the expense of the class of 1928 words have been’ taken from our mouths As Brigham Young said when things got too noisy ground - the little home in Salt Lake: “When the first wife speaks, let the sec- ond keep - silence.” by their own class books. So we? will not pre- sume to .add one jot or tittle to the estimate of our revered predecessor in Lot’s affections. Sone ‘ But one objection we must raise. Ts iit |: fair, when we have worked quietly week by week -raising ‘pillar on pillar and column on column, each standing by it- self like a telegraph pole—is it fair, we repeat, to produce a volume which is one solid pillar, or a whole temple of pillars from cover to cover? “Unfair competi- tion” we cry, and point to the by-laws of the amalgamated columnists Union : “Let members int good standing within ' these limits speak : No more than five times ninety words, and only once a week.” Alas for Cissy Centipede! We fear that she is no reposing in some far Elysium with Peggy Manning and Dimba Damba, the vanishing dog. She dared once too often! We were sifting in a Greek exam try- ing to find the proper’ number of feet 1; a chorus of Sophocles. Count as we would, there always seemed to -be too many feet, ‘sever ‘ipstead of six: “We looked. up. in a vain effort to clear our brain, befogged with much coffee and lung vigils, and there, right before us‘on the wall, was a hideous monster ;—not with six feet, or seven, but with a hun- dred, all waving back and forth. “nother chorus!” ‘we cried, and struck out blindly at the horrid thing. It squirmed just like a glyconic or a dactyllo-epitrite—we could feel it going off into dochmiacs and we crushed Jt resoltitely. Too late our. eyes were onened: Too late we realized that this monster, this nightmare, was our ‘own Cissy Centipede. We blotted our little’ gray books with tears. and tried the latest methods of life- saving; but to no avail. Her blood is on our head, and (less figuratively) onthe soles of our shoes. Let this be her epitaph: % “She Died on Her Feet” . Meditations on the Latest—Fad- ‘TT think that I shalt never hock ‘A thing so precious as my sock. rn a My sock: with stripes of apple green, It-is the fairest thing I’ve seen. And as around’ my foot it clings It makes me think my heel. has wings. It keeps my ankle, chastely clad — (For which all spinsters should be glad.) I+ keeps my toes from. sticking through The holes that decorate my shee. * But-most of all it can’t.impede” My: joy in being seen bare-kfeed. Oh! all the world may scoff and mock, But I’m devoted to my sock’ Nature is all very well, arid, we have a certain amount of affection for. all the little creatures that sport and. gambol in this halcyon weather. But Ahere is a place and a time for everything. Espe- cially a time. And five o'clock im the ‘| morning is certainly not the time for a bird. We were afflicted with a particu~ larly loud-mouthed one, who’ sét: up fi interpretation af a greeting to the Tisir’ sun, just five inches from our sengitive ear. We ‘opened one eye, the brazen: thing. was on our\ window’ sill! (“A birdie with a yellow, Hopped: upon imy window J It was bad eno} having to ‘go and wtite..@ | it. “Y ou—bird,” “we | shouted Siecle. “Scraark,” he repplied giviig us a dirty look. ~ oe mn : (“Cocked his shiipingeye and said, ‘Ain’t you ’shamedl, you sleepy head.’”) That was more than we could stand. After three hours jsleep we ‘ere in no mood to be chided; by a bird: Time and again we chased him: away, but always he came back - with | 4 raucous shout,- We to think ‘that, cats were the worst “menace, but . bird has changed ‘“ A. “musical aa ig paces derenmanesnor eg ae hae Lor’s Wives. | ‘in honor of their commencement, but the “CONTINUED FROM ere a ee The enthusiasm. of the audience ex- pressed its affection, and it Was some. _ time before the meeting was allowed 1o continue. with the regular busines® ot wards, -: : *R. Wiils, 29, as Powidens a the Athletic . Association, announced the champions for the -year and distriuted: College Letters. Hockey: 1928, champion; ‘Tuttle, Guiterman, Longstreth,. ‘Loines, -Free- .° man, Hamilton, Brooks, Hirschberg and Brugre. 1930, secon&; 1929, third. Lacrosse: Bethel, Bruere, Field, Hud- dleston, Freeman, Henry, Swan, Hirsch- berg,. Longstreth, Snyder. Tennis: Bethel, Swan, Palache, *Stokes,. Tumphreys. Basketball: 1931, champion ; Loines, Freeman, Humphreys, Baer, Poe, Blanch- afd, Johnson. 1929, second; 1930, third.. Swimming: 1929 champion; Bryant,. Burrows, Field,- Guiterman, Pettus, Stewart, Taylor, Tuttle, Zalesky, 1928, second; 1930, third. Water Polo: 1928 champion; E. Mor- ~ gan, Field, Gaillard, Bruere, Boyd, Pettit, Swan, Huddleston, Burrows, Pettus. 1929, second; 1931, third.- The all-around ° athletic championshi went to 19285 1929 was second, and 1931, third. : 4 The basketball game between the Alumnae and the Varsity which fol- lowed was just another demonss tition of the fact that the prime of youthful vigor comes in the two years just: after grad- uation. The Alumnae won as they did last year, fortunate in being able to draw from the champions of Both 1926 and 1927. Although the Varsity put up a good fight, the outcome was more or. less a foregone conclusion from the start. The final score was 18 to 8. Peridds of rest were enlivened by the cheerful. blaring © of the band,-well trained since its night You Can Safely Order by Telephone For Fruit from Hallowell is always of the finest. selected quality—or you can do as many others, leave A standing order for a weekly selection of our Fruit for delivery - to ‘your hom¢ yer to those away at school. / Free Delivery to Your Home Anywhere in City or Suburbs TELEPHONE. PENNYPACKER 1761 HALLOWELL Broad Street below Chestnut : PHILADELP HE ‘Gifts of Distinction Diamond and precious stone jewelry.. Watches and clocks. Imported and domestic’ nov- -elties. -China-and- glassware. ~~ _Fine stationery. Class rings and pins. Trophies. . A. WIDE SELECTION FAIRLY PRICED J. E. CALDWELL & CO. Chestnut Street at Juniper PHILADELPHIA CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF + | Peemipes ARCHITECTURE AND -ANDSCAPE .. “ ARCHITECTURE ‘A Professional. School for College Graduates. The Abiltuic Year for 192 8-29 opens Monday, October 1, 1928. Tue European TRAVEL Course Sailing from Boston June 10th Sailing from Cherbourg September 15th “Tre SUMMER SCHOOL aT OxForD From Monday, July 9th, ‘to Saturday, September Ist. Te ATHERTON Frost — Diton 13 Boylston Street, Cambridge, Mass. _ At Harvard Square Phone, Bryn Mawr 252 “Say it with Flowers” CONNELLY’S THE LINE’ FLORISTS 1226 Lancaster Ave., Rosemont, ‘Pa. Members of Florists’ “Telelgraph Delivery © ' Association - aoly ea ig e : | pk ge PPE COLLEGE SNEWS. i 7 : . Ys ° ue Wise at b | : Y a : as ; ed hi . . : ‘ +e eee of torment on the eve.of May Day. .The|-they-obeyed-it*as best they could. -Etijah, | urging*the éstablishment of a newspaper : Bryn Mawr line-up was: Boyd, Blanch- Jesus, Spinoza, Florence Nightingale—| which should be for news. pure endl oe y ard, Huddleston, T hompson, Bruere, | these are ‘among the greatest: on earth, |... Yy y simple. She advaneed cogent reasons for ‘ Freeman. and they lived “by the shrine. ; eB 11)! . ; a al For once a “letter to the Times”. bore | oo RABBI WISE SPEAKS NEWS REVIEWED fruit. | The So oer ee ~ TG. WAH.» Te 4 printed this~ cot. oteec PUTT WAS fié day |~ It : Chureh has found: ie “necesbry to bless | began to train herself in cottage: After paper. The letter was received with joy If | the banners of war and strife. The re- | working for a time as social editor for a by Miss Applebee and the heads of some | By volt is not because“the Church demands | paper in New Hampshire, she accepted a of the Associations, who had just deter- | too much of us, but because it demands | position on the Christian Sciences Moni- | Mined to start some sort of organ which | too little. It has become an.- institution | tor, and wrote for that publication for would give space for the activities and 1 I not of the, spiritual but of the’ external | seven years. Just recently she hag-begun | 0P40ns of the Various Associations. a world. writing feature articles for the Hartford | They went to hed Miss Foster, and per- | Do Not Abandon the Church. Courant; one of. the oldest newspapers in| S¥aded her to join with them. On the t, | _ You cannot put away the Church and | thé country. .George Washington was morning of Garden, Party in June; 1914, p i “reject the Altar because’ it has not-ac=| one of its “early subsiribers. they—went-to_see—President-Thomas:— ¥ 1 4 | cepted science, because the Bible is not Miss Applebee, the first business mana-| , “Quite out of the question” was her 7 ‘a text-book of astronomy, anthropology,| ger of the College News, and the only first verdict. “Do” you know that the vit { ‘. or biology; it is the autobiography of a, one who-has ever held that office for six editBrs of most college newspapers end. in 5 N| God-intoxicated ' people. years, described to a News reporter last being expelled?” The prospective editors SSS y| ‘If. you desert the Church’ you leave it} Thursday the founding and early history promised to be careful. . - he 2 | to obscurantism, ecclesiasticism and other | of the publication. This is doubly. in- “What type of paper do-you contem- 4 hy | iniquifles ; by leaving you may leave your-| teresting just now in. view of Miss plate?” was the next question, ? . + |) self shrineless, to’be numbered among| Applebee’s forthcoming departure from4 “Something like the Yale News or the fi N. : , . : ® ” Cw ber —_—_ those wha have no God. : the college for which she has done so| Harvard Crimson. . ; ‘t double size and i The: second revolt of youth today is| much since her arrival in 1906, Everyone “Well, don’t call it the Bryn Mawr y specially shaped to give ex- against Law. The Ten Commandments] in Bryn Mawr now, knows of her ‘in ae the sid et and pose 9). quisite, clear-cut ‘ outlines { and the Sermon on’ the Mount are de-| connection with Athletics and with May | "assured on this .pomt she somewhat clared out-of-date as moral codes fofTDay, but very few know of her re- dubiously gave her consent on’ the condi- to the lips. Thefive radiant | : : today. It is a revolt of individuals| markable journalistic career? tion that ‘every word must be read t Coty shades are a subtle | -< _ against the, validity of anything, and} Jn 1914, the year before the News en by aa OF oe the age pene i glorification of nature’ S \ Bt against the belief of ages in a permanent]. was started,. said Miss Applebee, the| Publication. Eventually even’ this con- moral code. idea of a weekly newspaper was very | dition was removed when the office’ f , colouring, imparting soft, Nt _You may say: “Great wrong had been| unpopular. Isabelle Foster, ’14, the first | Censor was created. } fre sh, satiny beauty vi done under-thig moral-code.” But if you| editor, brought up the idea before the | _ The history of the.Cojlege News, Miss y: in afinal dashing N consider the truly great through the ages| Undergraduate Association and was Applebee said in conclusion, should be a al l ith f is f pride to those who have worked| [IW exclamation - | . you will realize that they are the mystics,| turned down with hoots of derision. Her | Source of pride to those who have worke — the saints, and those who have taken the |‘next step was to_write a letter to Tipyn for it. Since its first inception it has . SHADES point of \ code ‘literally. “Ye shall be holy even| ©’ Bob, the fortnightly ‘publication which | had an unbroken history. Its publica- if LiGhy charm. ; y' as I am holy,” is the Commandment, and| held the ‘journalistic field at that time, | ton has never been suspended, and the Y es age \ ' ‘ : . -. |only changes made irl its make-up have k, CERISE { sD eS SSS SS SS ee ese SE SS ; ria SE . been towards a gradual increase in size. INVISIBLE N] HOLLYWOOD SHOPPING: SERVICE ‘Refills Obtainable Everywhere N © P. O. Box 144, Hollywood, California. Rosamund. Cross,-’29, has. been- elected oN \ i He Buy You What the Stars Buy” Alumnae representative for the college ZASU PITTS’ gold ae lavender cloisonne vanity case ..........1.... aad $28.00, J | for next year. In this capacity she will AT DRUG AND DEPARTMENT STORES | WILLIAM FARNUM'S blood red. ale slasses: mes gabe ses EG 3359 f)| attend the Alumnae Conference in 1929. : | MARIAN NIXON’S lass ice bucket wi ing silver handle .......... .f BUSTER KEATON’S stick reed porch ‘divan [mmm 60.25 SY WE IVE IE Pea SSM ’S ¢ n -drink flask ............ 17.50 oe naar ater es Cleese gy [[tecumining Paints, on ant-Goem ’ Oe iro reeks circ icin ccesar eters 37.50 RICARDO CORTEZ’S engraved red and rock crystal dinner service ............ 125.50 WILLIAM L. HAYDEN THE BLUE BOTTLE THE CHATTERBOX WALLACE sBEERY’S pipe Fee ePe eee eee eee ee eneees i Srreeer Rh ee ee 7.00 BUILDERS and HOUSEKEEPERS SHOP a DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM Correspondence solicited; send for catalogue Hardware * Tanecalin i ee : Satisfaction guaranteed. No charge for service : ancaster. save. Evening dinner served from ; ' : , 838 -Lancaster Avenue “BRYN MAWR. PA 6-until--7.30 BRYN MAWR, PA. “ ? . N ‘ LN HtiHVW“VNWVWt(Hiifiii iT TTT | CHINTZ ANTIQUES OPEN AT TWELVE NOON f Ee — — sega ce NORE | oe: : . | HVipinc t fe- Many Coltr Combinations nee sen Sp Eating chocolates is a Claflin Guaranteed Service Chiffon Hosiery, $1.65 social pleasure. Part of the fun is exploring and di- st ut viding the chocolate con- ine Nl tents of the PLEASURE ‘ ISLAND PACKAGE—real ——====—— treasures from the Spanish | en Main.._In_ the-chest- area John Murray Anderson ~Robert Milton | tray and two bags of loot | oe *4 reminiscent of the days 0 SCHOOL of the ATRE | » be Black Beard and Morgan. ARTHUR HORNBLOW, Dean Dividing the treasure is a e . X | America’s Most Successful School of Acting pie: delight when the o: id chest 1s Eight leading Producers and Directors actively associated with the School. i Dramatic Faculty. . ‘ Instruction in all Branches DANCING OF ALL TYPES : foaae 3 gre ’ | Pecees ta Musial Comedy, Motion Mikhail Mordkin M ) ki i Preray nic an tume ikhail Mor artha Graham a & Design, Stage ion and Manage- ce E - Pantomime, Fencing, adn: Saray PLEASURE ISLAND ¢ | : CHOCOLATES — | Summer Courses in hoe Rivera and Dancing we@S.F.W:& Son, Inc. | | of all types during July, August and September. a WHITMAN’S FAMOUS CANDIES ARE SOLD BY ; i «Ti saiticeathle Siareen dialed ta cebnennigudenl iecenth ates pik Mawr College Inn, Bryn ag Bryn Mawr College Book Store. Pa e Tea Room n Mawr, n Mawr, Pa. — : _ |] _~.. ANDERSON-MILTON SCHOOL, 128 E. 58th St., N. ¥. C. Frank W. Prickett, Rosemont Pa. Powers & Reynolds, Bryn Mawr, Pa Se ‘ is, Stating Course Preference. : _ Plaza 4524 _ _.Moores Pharmacy, - Bryn Mawr,Pa. . H. Bi Wallace, j.- Bryn Mawr, Pa. SRReRRERRRNETAR TS : Myers Drug Company," Bryn Mawr, Pa. ~~. J. Cardamone, Bryn Mawr, Pa. ———s Kindt’s Pharmacy, Bryn Mawr, Pa : — Mawr Confectionery, Bryn ica Led by *! 3 Prokosch sriments in vancing (Specially contributed fy Dance Club) May Day year does not secm a pro- Pitious tiime for additional artistit par- ‘Suits. ‘Nevertteless, itr *Oetbber a group of dance cevotees organized for creative endeavors. The-Wright School and Har- cum Schoo!. hespitably: placed their gym- -. Nasiums at our d’sposal; so tlere ye held weekly sessions. A trained or profes- “sional member always led, but each stu- Exne ‘and dance composition. Occasionally: we: “ met at tea 'n the home of the founder, Gertrude Prokosch; “to ‘discuss past methods and future—plans. non ‘We trantposed into movement subjects like “Labcr Rhythms,” portions *of . Dante’s “inferno,” Kahill Gibran’s “The Prophet.” “The Prophet” was directed ‘by Miss ‘Phoebe Gfithrie and- presented at the church of St.. Mark’s-in-the-Bow- -ery in New York, and at the. Harcum. School for an invited audience. ~ This year. the rush, of "May Day and the illness of Rveral members prevented a final exhibi tion. Next year, we hope, those renzaining in college will devefop something truly constructive. The fcllowing students took active a |: ana ‘ Founders: G. Prokosch, ’2e; N. Pes rera, “28: A. Glover, 29, and L. Hol- lander’, 28. : Charter members: A, -Purrows,.’31; AFTER COLLEGE—WHAT? THE DREXEL INSTITUTE | LIBRARY SCHOOL . : Offers a cne-year course for college graduates.. The degree o; B. S. in L. S. is granted. Philadelphia BRINTON BROS. FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES | Orders Called for and Delivered Bryn Mawr, 28 ’ ; ; season 63 EDW. K. TRYON CO,".8 ‘Complete Sporting Goods Equip- ¢. ment | for Teams & Individuals © © 912:Chestnut Street 4 5 8 Tvinsocahananrenal . “ED. ‘CHALFIN. ee Seville Theatre Arcade DIAMONDS : WATCHES : JEWELRY WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIRING Pens : and Optical Repairing Fancy Watch Crystals Cut, $1.75 | ~. John J. McDevitt : Pencils a Phone, Bryn Mawr 675 & M ¥ Programs sii asta TEER ____ Bill Teads_ eS ET YN Tickets rinting Tener Heads : Itooklets, ete. Ahnouneements 1145 Lancaster Ave., Rosemont, Pa - WILLIAM: T. McINTYRE MAIN LINE STORES VICTUALER Candy, Ice Cream and Fancy Pastry -Hothouse Fruits 23 Faney Groceries 821 Lancaster Avenue BRYN. MAWR* - “JEANNETT BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP i r ee i i i i ai hi ii ii ai adie aid H Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily Corsage and Floral Baskets Old-Fashiéned Bouquets a Specialty Potted Plants Personal Supervision: on All Orders Phone: Bryn Mawr 570 823 Lancaster Avenue ry | ! ‘ . forse éffolnes/ Sport 2 Opera Glasses Makers of Perfect-Fitting _ Eyeglasses and Spectacles PINE TREE CLUB. ad + for Young Women—College or Business of the Poconos—2000 feet above. the sea, Beier Lake. Midway between New York Coaching in land and water Large Club House, en bemaclow ant tape. al Daily program if. desired. by > Lancaster :and Merion Aves. | \ California Paper Curl > T. ‘Coe, *rad.; J. Feslery 28 M. Hess, IQ. 9 %» Palmer, "30, ang M. Salinger, "28." Hionoraty- members: Phoebe Guthri®, teacher of dancing, Harcum . School; Doreen. Bingham, teacher of | Daleroze,|_ Thor Model School. . Varsity Drowned Ott’ by Alumnae in Water Polo Asserting their superiority for the see- ‘ond time iri two days, the Alumnae wa- dentcontriouted ideas, both for technique$ter polo team downed the Varsity yes- terday afternocn by the score of 6-1, Ap- narently it takes more than two years to forget athletic’ skill fostered under the eye—of. Miss Applebee. Besides,—Buck- and Jan- Seeley have an unair advan- cage. z e ¢ Seniors! Seniors! Are you interested in the fate of the Bryn Mawr League and the. fu- ture of Varsity Dramatics? A’ year’s subscription to ‘the College News wil! keep. you in touch with.all these things. Fil out this blank and keep a little cor- ner in your memory for the.life of Bryn Mawr. Mail to J. Garrett, Staten Island, N.Y, The Reporter Around the Campus Dr. Dayid has recovered. so~speedily from his recent illness that he was able to attend the President’s reception. He Haverford Pharmacy HENRY. W.-PRESS, P. D. PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS Phone: Ardmore 122 PROMPT,..DELIVERY SERVICE, + Maverterd, Pa, BRYN MAWR: MARINELLO SALON ' 841% Lancaster Avenue. Second Floor Seiéntific Treatinent of Skin and Scalp Muscle Strapping Electrolysis Permanent Waving Telephone, Bryn Mawr 809 Open Tues. and Fri. Evenings. | Other Evenings by Appointment. LUNCHEON, TEA; DINNER/ Open Sundays 5 ee CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE 835 Morton Road Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 FRANCIS: B. HALL TAILOR RIDING HABITS :: BREECHES °: REMODELING :: PRESSING _DRY CLEANING. ~* | had her tonsils out; es 840 Lancaster Avenue Phone Bryn. Mawr. 824 | COTTAGE TEA ROOM | Montgomery Avenue LUNCHEON AFTERNOON TEA . . DINNER Special Parties “by Arrangement. Guest Rooms THECOLLEGENEWS - ‘has-been tyore fortpnate than. his -col- Smith, who will not be able to come to Commencement. The little Mannings. have. aes all. sorts, of misfortunes ‘this last week. Caroline and Helen lost a small blue and sate doll,- fust’ new, somewhere around the campus, a > The. play wr. ten by Margaret “Ayer Barnes, 1907. which was adapted from a novel by Edih Weartan, has been ae meee een > Rear accepted for .production and will prob- is to be hoped that Miss Swindler’s book will appear even earlier than that. Thus the charge that Bryn Mawr graduates make no cgntributiod’ to literature will | be doubly vindica‘ed. “ Mary, who: has presided over the base- ment of ‘the Gym for sotre years past, is going hack to her farm in Scotland After seven years in this’ this fall. country, she can. no longer delay the mo- ment of -her return home. aires f The Alumnae are rather amused ‘than league in- the History Department, Dr.| ably appear on Broadway next: fall, It | horrified. by our fashion of bare legs, it a” ‘seems, . After the: they were able to look atthe matter philosophically. e™ The roof <: “hte Gymnasium proved-to be a splendid place for “A Faculty Re- ception last Saturday evening. Ilumined by Japanese Lanterns and .a nearly full moon, and lapped in the warm breezes of the second night of June it gave every advantage of setting to’a remark- ably pleasant gathering. ¢ 4-£N ~ What Shahaipenre _ says about Coca- | ola KING RICHARD III Act I, Scene 2 ‘‘Framed th the., prodigality of nature” — When Shakespeare wrote this speech for Richard he must have seen the handwriting on the *- wall—a Coca-Cola ad reading: Good things from nine sunny climes poured into a single ~— The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, Ga. 8 millionaday~1T HAD TO BE GOOD TO.GET WHERE IT_IS ANKSe-By 8 Al yeu bY Silversmiths Station ID ESTABLISHED 1832 Philadelphia Makers of THE OFFICIAL: CLASS RING ~ 4tnd College Seal THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOX illustrates and prices Wedding, « Birthday.and Graduation Gifts mailed Upon request DL j STREET LINDER & |» ~|-PROPERT ~ OPTICIAN 20th and Chestnut Streets Philadelphia. | Phone, Bryn la bn 362 ~ PHILIP” HARRISON — _-..$28.830 Lancaster Avenue —- Bryn Mawr. Walk Over Shoe Shop Agent for GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE SILK STOCKINGS A AE ATR ES ESE SEI TEESE The Peter Pan Tea Room 833 Lancaster Avenue FORDHAM LAW SCHOOL Woolworth Building, , New York : Co-educational Case system — Three-year course. ‘Two years of College work required for Admission. . Morning, afternoon and evening classes Write for catalogue a ete Fer tt son tae | es eer { , Charles P. Davis, Registrar, Room 2851 '| WS DELIVER _ —_ COLLEGE TEA HOUSE OPEN WEEK-DAYS— 1 TO 7.30 P. M. SUNDAYS, 4 TO7 P.M. Evening Parties by Special Arrangement THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. CAPITAL, $250,000.00 Does a General Banking Business Allows Interest on Deposits Hairdressers Permanent Waving Eugene Method PEACOCK BEAUTE SALON Seville Theater Bldg., Bryn Mawr Phone 475 . MISS: BELDEN’S RESIDENCE \ At Riverside Drive A select home for a limited number of ‘girls wheres the luxuries of home are com- bined with the advantages of a winter in New York. Special summer rates. ghap- Cosmeticians Marinello oon e_ elective. Catalog. uehanna 0045)» Si We 80th Street New York Phone, Bryn Mawr 1385 M. Meth Pastry Shop _*. . 1008 Lancaster Ave. French and Daas —. |, The Croted Does Europe... rst start of surprise: * ewo Tell them % French: Line or wrfte direct to 19 State St., New York City fo . ICE CREAM and FANCY CAKES | $197 over and bacr! - ON'T let your dear vieetade friends put any>- . thing overt on you next ye':t, with their “When we were in Patis! ... “exo” When the crowd hit Deauville..." ow “One day when we were down in Monte Cass... . ow3 Niw’s the time to plan to be init, too... from Montmartre to Mont St. Michel, It isn’t as if it costa fortune. e+» You can go and return by the French Jine for $197. e Tourist third class, of course.» There's sure to bea gang , Of boys that broughs ‘their music with them. ev The accommodatiog. is excellent... in the state- rooms, on deck, and for dancing. e+» : As for meals.. well, everybody’ ‘s heard about French Line cooking. To get the money, the best line is. to tell the family your edygation will be a flop without seeing what you've rei about... it’s the truth,by the way. You need finish, polish, savoir faire to be worthy of ex Work the Cathedrals, the . chateaux, ‘the | om your French . .. that’s for mother. 62 Try the international viewpoint, the bbs War, ak necessity of understanding the peanmind ,.. that’s dad.cx» Begin now and work cadiieally. vand they'll think*they thought of Ives, cr Leave it to you! - 1603 Walnut 8t., Phila.