Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
eo
Vouums VI. _No. 21
_BRYN MAWR, PA., TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1920
JUNIORS WIN APPARATUS MEET
ON FIRST AND D SECOND TEAMS
Individual Cup Goes to E. Cecil, ’2,
Captain of Victorious Team
Winning the first team apparatus
championship by a margin of 20.5 points,
and taking first, second and_ fourth
places in the individual contest, 1921 for
the third consecutive year carried off the
gymnasium shield in the final apparatus
meet last Friday. Second place went to
1922 and third place to 1923.
The individual cup was won by E.
Cecil, '21 with 29.5 points; E. Cope, '21
coming a close second with a score of
28 points. Third place went to B. Weaver,
20, and fourth to M. Smith, ’21. Each
competitor offered one vault and one
original exercise on the parallel bars,
which were judged for both form and
difficulty. In speaking of the individual
series, Mr. Bishop, who judged the meet,
said that the exercises were more dif-
ficult than in previous years, and were
“unusually well executed for young
ladies.”
The second team championship also
went to 1921 who secured a lead of 15
points over 1922, the nearest competitor.
The third place was won by 1923.
Results:
: I Team Il Team. ,
IWWeio ec crt es 39 Mee Gas eae 38
IGM ice kins BOD AGRS oo cv ikseys 2
Ieee 5. 15 BUNe 6 chi es 19
Individual:
1 Cee i 29,5
MB Oe Fo eee 28
A eee 0 ri, 24
AM, Se Ce oe 23.5
RED FAR AHEAD IN RACE FOR
ATHLETIC CHAMPIONSHIP
With a total score of 152 points, 1921 has
a long lead in the race for the All-Round
\thletic Championship. The other classes
are running neck-and-neck, 1920 with 30
points, 1922 with 21, and 1923 with 25.
The Juniors’ sudden spurt is the result of
20 points they received for first team water-
polo and 33 points they won in the appa-
ratus meets. The Freshmen’s victory on
the three lower apparatus teams added 16
points to their score. 1920 gained 1 point
from apparatus, and 1922 none.
As second and third team water-polo
games are not over, points for them can
not yet be added to the total.
Summary of apparatus points for all-
round championship :
Team Won by Points
Pirst . co. sess ah. vec... “+ a
mecond ...... es ae 15
pc ee Oe cas 10
le 5
Pi... Wes... cass 3
Individual—
PIM. cisiss ee iss. 5
Seeond .....5 EE sci. 3
TMG ois | Ree 1
Doctor’s Club Secures Dr. George
Vincent for Lecture on April 16th
Dr. Vincent, president of the
Rockefeller Foundation and honorary pres-
ident of the Chatauqua Institution, is com-
ing to Bryn Mawr, April 16, to lecture
under the auspices of the Doctor’s Club.
As the faculties of art, litera-
ture, and science at the University of Chi-
president of the University of Min-
and member of the General Educa-
Dr. Vincent is an authority on
George
Dean of
cago,
nesota,
tion Board,
educational and social questions.
father of L. Vincent
Harper)
‘12 (Mrs.
and E. Vincent ‘23
He is the
Paul Vincent
nouncement that came at noon.
M. R. Brown, M. K. Carey, J. Cochran, C.
with 90.90 per cent passed.
sang on Taylor steps.
of honor on the steps.
The German Oral Committee is:
Prokosch.
NOTED SPEAKERS TO ADDRESS
BIG VOCATIONAL CONFERENCE
Dr. Angell to Speak at Teacher’s
Meeting. Alumnae Tell of Work
Conducted on a larger scale than in any
former year, the Vocational Conference
on Friday, April 9, and Saturday, April
10, will give opportunity to hear
speeches by prominent workers in vari-
ous fields. Noted specialists, including
Dr,-Haven—Emerson,_lecturer—on— Public
Health at the New York School for So-
cial Workers, also many alumnae, will
speak at the divisional meetings to be
held in the hall sitting rooms Friday af- |
icrnoon and Saturday morning.
The mass meeting Friday evening on
teaching, presided over by Dr. Castro,
will emphasize, in connection with the
Endowment drive, the present need for
educators. Dr. Angell, one of the speak-
ers, is head of the Psychology. depart-
ment, University of Chicago; he has
been granted a year’s leave of absence
to fill the position of chairman of the
National Research Committee at Wash-
ington. Speakers and alumnae will have
dinner Friday evening in Pembroke with
the faculty and undergraduate confer-
ence committees.
Although all of the speakers and alum-
nae mentioned have not yet accepted, the
following program is now. arranged:
Friday, April 9, 2-4 O'clock
Business
Presiding, Louise Watson, ‘12;
iness Manager, Bryn Mawr College.
Finance: Margaret Brusstar, '03, Bond
Salesman and Manager of the Women’s
Department, Bonbright & Co., Philadel-
phia. Conferees, Mary H. Ingham, '03;
Marion Kleps, '16; Miss Genevieve Pot-
ter, Miss Mabel Thomas.
Secretarial Work: Bertha Laws, '01,
Secretary the Agnes Irwin School. Con-
Bus-
Seniors Roll Hoops After Third Oral For First Time In Histor
1920 is, the first class in the history of the college to have no fourth orals.
100 per cent passed the third French two weeks ago, and the announcement last
Saturday that 100 per cent had passed German was the signal for the unprece-
dented occasion of hoop rolling after the third oral.
the tradition that blue classes always roll their hoops.
Due to a rumor current on the campus for the last four days of the week
that everyone had passed German, the Seniors had ordered their hoops in advance.
Saturday morning they had waited three hours with their hoops for the an-
Those who passed the third German are:
Park, D. Rogers, K. Tyler '19, F. Uchida, I. Whittier ‘19, and B. Zilker.
only class with a record near 1920's for the third German examination is 1919,
After the hoop rolling from Pembroke Arch down Senior Row, the Seniors
Dr. Prokosch, at the invitation of the Seniors, had the seat
Professor Bascom, Professor Huff, and Dr,
ferees, E, Campbell, ‘01, Agnes M. Irwin,
‘01, Dorothy Macdonald,
Training for Social Work
Presiding, Dr, Susan M. Kingsbury,
Professor of Social Economy, Bryn
Mawr College. Speakers: Mrs. Edith
Shatto King, Manager, National Social
Workers’ Exchange, New York City.
Community Problems
Presiding, Hilda W. Smith, ‘10, Act-
ing Dean of Bryn Mawr College, Anna
King, ‘08, Executive Secretary, Home
Service Section, Boston, A. R. C.; Mrs.
Eva W. White, Head Worker, Eliza-
beth Peabody House, Boston; Mrs. Lau-
rette Eustis Pease, '96, Executive Secre-
tary, Church Mission of Help, New York.
Conferees, Henrietta Additon, Hannah
Carpenter, "98, Helen Barrett, ‘13, Helen
Harris, ‘17.
(Continued on Page 2)
1920 has remained true to
M. Ballou, E. Brace, M. B. Brown,
Keeble, H. Kingsbury, M. Lindsay, V.
The
GI. 296
ST. JOHN ERVINE DESCRIBES
OLDER AUTHORS’ INFLUENCE
Dr: matist Calls ‘eet of Irish
Intolerance Stimulating
“Not until Americans hit each other in
the streets over being Democrat or Re-
publican will they know what it is to
be patriots,” declared St. John Ervine
Friday evening, Mr. Ervine, Irish nov-
elist and dramatist, began his lecture,
“Impressions of My Elders,” by describ-
ing the mental stimulus of Irish intol-
erance. With dry humor he traced his
mental development in bigoted Belfast
and in London under the influence of
Shaw, Wells and Chesterton. The lec-
ture was under the auspices of the Eng-
lish Club.
“Impressed when a young boy by a
copy of the ‘United Irishman,’” said Mr.
Ervine, “I announced my intention of be-
coming a Nationalist, My grandmother
gave me two minutes in which to turn
Unionist again. After that I read the
Nationalist newspaper eagerly in secret
“Nothing is so good for the mind,”
Mr. Ervine commented, “as to be rear-
ed in an atmosphere of intolerance. The
reason no one in America can tell me
the difference between Democrats and
Republicans is because Americans are
too tolerant.”
Tiring of his narrow-minded environ-
ment in Belfast, Mr. Ervine went to
London. He soon came under the influ-
ence of Bernard Shaw, who was able to
voice the profound discontent felt by
Mr. Ervine and other young writers.
Contrasts Shaw With H. G. Wells
“Shaw, although sixty-three,” said Mr.
Ervine, “has the queer youthful flippancy
that always wants to shock old men. We
were drawn to him because he had no
respect for old people or institutions,
but we found after a while we could not
live long on a diet of destructive criti-
cism. We were influenced then by Yeats’
advice to live with our superiors and
avoid our inferiors. The trouble was that
we felt we had few superiors, and those
superiors didn’t want to live with us.
So we lived with their books, and soon
(Continued on Page 5)
places,”
ENDOWMENT RECEIVES $50,000
IN SINGLE DONATION
Total to Date is $404,000
The largest gift which the Endowment
has yet received, $50,000, was the dona-
tion last week of Alice Belin duPont
(Mrs. Pierre. S. duPont), '92.. Mrs. du-
Pont lives in Kennett Square, Pa., and
requested that her contribution be cred-
ited to the Philadelphia district. Her
gift brought the total to date of the En-
dowment to $404,000.
“en
Me BDO POE oocnk ik so eavesckc, M. Holt
Green Griffin Enters Bryn Mawr
CAST.
NE oh pie es -.+.+R. McAneny
Da Ming. ...Som of Heaven ..F. Knox
Kai Shuay, Red Moth Princess,
J. Richards
Tuan Fu, Tiger Princess,
I. Beaudrias
mime Tien i... us: tes H. Humphries
Mystic Figure ........ cea ..J. Ward
ge A. Fitzgerald
PO kc cc cis .E. Page
We ioe eisi cc, S. McDaniel
ee E. Ericson
WS ook cin -A. Smith
iii A. Fraser
PROCUONE! 5.5. is ci ois: M. Macferran
Skit Committee ...... E. Vincent, K.
Raht, F. Knox.
Place: The Forbidden City
h Time: First part of the present dynasty.
Softly chiming temple bells and dimly
glowing lights lured 1922 into the dreamy
atmosphere of old China last Saturday
night when the Freshmen presented
“Fractured Flowers,” a one-act skit, as
a substitute for Freshmen Show.
Most of the music, including the mys-
terious harmonies of the curtain song
which gave the keynote of the perform-
ance, was composed by I. Jacobi, who
added to the Eastern setting by keeping
up a continuous accompaniment of in-
terpretative melodies during the whole
skit.
College Allegory Orientalized
The adventures of Ming Tien in the
Forbidden City, where he was scorned
by Da Ming, the Son of Heaven, advised
by the Red Moth Princess, and trained
by the Blue Tiger Princess, formed the
plot of the skit. His love for the dainty
Tiger Princess refused because of her
previous betrothal to the Son of Heaven,
Ming Tien went for comfort to t he Red
Moth Princess. The class animal, a magni-
ficent green griffin, was brought in just
in time to prevent the death of Ming
Tien, who was to be executed for steal-
ing one of the paper flowers being made
for the Great May Festival.
I, Beaudrias, as the bewitching and
saucy Tuan Fu, was a perfect soubrette
and a fit companion to the majestic Son
Heaven, realistically interpreted by
F. Knox. J. Richards put personality in-
to the rather exacting and nagging char-
acter of the Red Moth Princess, and H.
Humphries created effectively the shrink-
(Continued on Page 5)
Former Ambassador to U. S. Under
Czar Comes to Bryn Mawr
Baron Roman von Rosen, the last Rus-
sian ambassador to the United States under
the Czar, gave a lecture in Taylor Hall this
afternoon under the auspices of the Phila-
delphia Endowment Committee. He dis-
cussed Russian questions which Gregory
Zilboorg, former Secretary in Kerensky’s
ministry, presented here two weeks ago,
treating them from a different viewpoint.
author and diplomat,
was one of the Russian peace envoys to the
Portsmouth Conference after the
Russian-Japanese war. His reminiscences
are being published in the current issues of
of
Baron von Rosen,
Peace
the Saturday Evening Post
Members of the Faculty, and
officers of student organizations met Baron
at tea in Rockefeller Hall after
alumne,
von Rosen
the lecture
ane Wau.cox, 22
Sere GO mare cae
: = rs = $1.50 ne OT ore
Pe pont often Br Ma Po 88) "under
the Act of March 3,
Owing to the Easter vacation there will
be no issue of the News next week. The
next number will appear April 14,
Veni, Vidi, Vici
1920 has broken the spell and shattered
the reality of the master demon of Senior
year, a fourth oral.
_ They may magnanimously hope that 1921
may eradicate the possibility of a third
oral, 1922 roll hoops on the second, and
1923 have an oralless Senior year, but a
place has been won for the blue class in
the annals of the college which will outlast
memories of athletic championships and
dramtic successes,
Persona Non Gratae
Attendance is not required at the college
lectures which distinguished outside speak-
ers are brought to Bryn Mawr to give.
Therefore it is a mystery why those stu-
dents, who have not the common courtesy
to sit through lectures until the end, should
feel called upon to attend them at all. It is
unavoidable that a few outsiders should
have to leave early to catch trains. But
when a retreating phalanx of students
marches out of the hall in such disorder as
to cause the speaker to cut short his talk,
the limits of hospitality have been over-
stepped.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
To the Editor of the College News:
The entire college may well feel proud
of the comment on the College News
made by Mr. Robert MacAlarney of the
Pulitzer School of Journalism, Columbia
Universiity, after his visit to Bryn Mawr
early this: month. Mr. MacAlarney writes:
“What I like about the College News,
and what I liked in my brief glimpse of
the College News Board was the degree
bf. horse earnestness which seems
to be tadiated. There seems to be a gen-
sense
uine newspaper spirit, and this is not| fessor of Biology, Bryn Mawr College.
any too plentiful in college journals. As
a matter of fact I believe that the Col- | Commissioner, New York City, and Lec-
lege News compares very favorably with | turer on Public Health, Teachers’ Col-
any man’s college weekly.”
Mr. MacAlarney was particularly pleas-
ed with the account of his own lecture
at Bryn Mawr.
“The reporter who covered this story,”
he writes, “it seems to me, packed into
what she wrote all that was necessary—
that is the theme of the talk, which was
truly presented as being an exposition
of the grimness of the writing game. I
do not believe that there is any fault to
find with this little story. It was a good
piece of properly compressed work. As
a matter of fact there was not a flaw to
lay hand upon.”
The physical makeup of the News
brought forth considerable adverse criti-
cism. The members of the board agree
with Mr. MacAlarney that typograph-
ical defects exist, and, I believe, they in-
tend to take action immediately on his
suggestions.
What is particularly pleasing to friends
of the News is Mr. MacAlarney’s com-
ment on the editorial page.
“The editorial page | like. It is not
amateurish and the writers as a rule really
have something to say.”
This is high praise from a specialist
and I congratulate the News upon de-
serving it.
ISABEL, FOSTER, "15.
sor of Classical
Presiding, Dr. Rhys Carpenter, Profes-
Archeology, Bryn Mawr
College.
Mary
tect; Mrs. Moncure Biddle, ex-'05, Land-,|
scape Architect; Euphemia Whittredge,
ex-’97,. Consulting Interior Decorator,
New York. Conferees, Dr. Arthur Ed-
win Bye, Lecturer in History of Art;
Miss Helen Fernald, Instructor in His-
tory of Art; Dr. Mary H. Swindler, In-
structor in Classical Archeology. © :
Friday, April 9, 4-6 O’clock
Child Welfare
Presiding, Dr. Neva Deardorff, Assist-
ant to the Director General of A. R. C.,
Department of Civilian Relief, Washing-
ton.
Dr. Haven Emerson, former Health
Commissioner, New York City, and Lec-
turer on Public Health at Teachers’ Col-
lege and the New York School of Social
Work; Dr. Helen Thompson Woolley,
Vocational Bureau, Cincinnati, Ohio;
Ruth Newman, '15, Child Placing Agent
for Superintendent of the Poor, Suffolk
County, New York; Dr. Dorothy Child,
10, of the Division of Child Health,
State Department of Health, Harrisburg,
Penna. Conferees, Mrs. Amy E. Watson,
Margaret Free Stone, °15.
Scientific Research
Presiding, Dr. Roger F. Brunel, Pro-
fessor of Chemistry, Bryn Mawr Col-
lege.
Chemistry: Mr. C. L. Alsberg, Head
of the U. S. Bureau of Chemistry, Wash-
ington.
Physics: Mr: W. C. L. Eglin, Phila-
delphia Electric Company. Conferee,
Sue Avis Blake, '98.
Geology: Eleanora Bliss, 04, Associ-
ate Geologist, U. S. Geological Survey,
Washington. Conferees, Dr. Florence
Bascom, Professor of Geology; Isabel
F. Smith,.'15,
Friday, April 9, 8 o’clock
Teaching (Taylor Hall)
Presiding, Dr. Mathilde Castro, Profes-
sor of Education, Bryn Mawr College,
and Director of the Phebe Anna Thorne
School, Dr,. Stephen S. Colvin, Professor
of Educational Psychology, Brown Uni-
versity; Dr. James R. Angell, Chairman,
National Research Washington,
Mrs, Louise Brownell Saunders "93, former
Associate. Head of Balliol School, Utiea,
and Lecturer in English, Cornell University.
Saturday, April 10, 10-12 O'clock
Medicine
Council,
Presiding, Dr. David H. Tennent, Pro-
Dr. Haven Emerson, formerly Health
lege and New York School for Social
Work;. Dr. Ellen E. Potter, Depart-
ment of Gynaecology, Woman's Medical
College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia:
Josephine C. Goldmark, ‘98, Secretary,
Committee for the Study of Public
Health, Nursing Education; M. Antoi-
nette Cannon, ’07, Director, Social Serv-
ice Department, University Hospital.
Philadelphia. Conferees, Dr. Marianna
Taylor, 03; Dr. Ella Oppenheimer, ‘14;
Mary M. Thomas, '15.
Writing
Presiding, Professor Lucy Martin
Donnelly.
Writing: Mathilde Weil, ‘92, Reader
and Critic of Manuscripts, New York;
Elizabeth Sergeant, '03, Correspondent
for The New Republic; Miss Sophie Kerr
Underwood, Managing Editor, Woman's
Home Companion. Conferees, Grace
Turner, '13; Lucille Davidson, "15; Ruth
Hart, '18.
Publicity: Mrs. Carolyn T. Radnor-
Lewis, ‘99, Publicity Manager, H. R.
Mallinson & Company, New York, Con-
ferees, Isabel Foster, 15: Monica O'Shea,
"17.
Miss Marion Reilly ‘01, former Dean of
the College, will speak in Chapel tomorrow
morning
| Presiding, Miss
a Seca. in
|structor in Social Economy and Social
Research, Bryn Mawr College.
Katharine Huey, ex-'07, Division Em-
ployment Manager, Bell Telephone Com-
‘ining. 109, ‘Sechusnes Archi- | Pany, Pittsburgh; Pauline Goldmark, ’96,
Manager, Women’s Service Section, U.
S. Railroad Administration; Mrs. Bar-
bara Spofford Morgan, '09, Chief Place-
ment Secretary, Y. W. C. A., New York.
Conferee, Mrs. A. Kenyon Franklin, ’15.
Home Economics
Presiding, H. Jean Crawford, 02,
Junior Bursar, Bryn Mawr College, Speak-
ors: Marion Park, ’98, Associate Dean,
Simmonds College, Boston; Agathe Dem-
ing, '13, formerly Instructor in Home Eco-
nomics, Drexel Institute and Director,
Camp Miramichi for Girls.
EXHIBITION OF MAY DAY POSTERS
AT ART ALLIANCE, April 9 AND 10
Exhibition of the 60 posters entered in
the May Day Poster competition will
take place at the Philadelphia Art Al-
liance, 1823 Walnut Street, April 9 and
10. All competitors have been invited
to the exhibition, and M.s. Otis Skinner
will give guest cards to all students
who apply for them before April 9, These
cards will enable students to have lunch
it the Art Alliance for 85 cents.
The Philadelphia Water Colour Socie-
ty is having an exhibition at the same
time in other rooms at the Alliance.
BATES HOUSE SCHEDULE DECIDED.
Clean-up Week in June Opens Season
Final arrangements have been made
for the Bates House summer schedule.
House Cleaning week from June 5-12
will open work for the summer. June 12-
19 is set aside for Missionary Ladies. Kin-
dergarten and Nursery weeks are from
“Bryn Mawr Week” begins April 5.
Bryn Mawr week in the Philadelphia.
shops will begin next Monday. Many of
the important windows in the downtown |
districts have been promised the Endow- .
ment Committee, which will decorate
them with Bryn Mawn colors, and fea-.
ture Bryn Mawr scenes. —
May Pole Dances and Lantern Night
groups will be staged in some windows.
Others will be instructive, and will pic-
ture an office interior, where statistics
are to be presented concerning the num-.
ber of Bryn Mawr graduates in business.
Another window will represent a school
room, where opportunity will be given to
tell the public about scholarships, the
number of Bryn Mawr graduates teach-
ing in Philadelphia schools, etc.
GIFT.
GR
OMMEMORATES FIRST
UATE OF BRYN MAWR
Mary Patterson Only Member of ’88
In memory of Mary Grafton Patter-
son, ’88, the only member of Bryn
Mawr’s first graduating class, a gift of
$25,000 has been given the Endowment by
Miss Patterson’s sister, Mrs. R. C. Camp-
bell (Margaret Patterson, '90). ‘Miss
Mary Patterson,” according to last Sun-
day’s Public Ledger, “had no classmates
when she was awarded the first A. B.
ever conferred by Bryn Mawr, nor did
she have any classroom associates during
the two years that led to her graduation.
_ “Hers was the distinction of being the
only young woman who ever attended
Bryn Mawr and received in all courses
, the individual instruction of internation-
‘ally known scholars, among whom was
| Woodrow Wilson, then occupying his
| first position as a college professor.
“In my _ sister's memorabilia,’ writes
Mrs. Campbell, ‘are many interesting an-
notations. Some of them follow: “Stu-
|
'
|
|
June 19 to July 5. American mothers and dents’ meeting for adopting the Oxford
children have the week of July 7-21. July cap and gown as a college uniform;
73 to August 6 is the week for Italian | meeting to consider the admission of
mothers and children. Sunday School | Greek letter societies to the college—vot-
children week is August 9-23, A special ed down as undemocratic; first German
group of older people come during the {in the gymnasium; only a comb orches-
last week, August 24-31. | tra obtainable, as the trustees objected
Information about Bates House nies | the worldliness of hired violins; first
be obtained from M. Taylor, ’21, M. Lit-| Shakespeare party given by the dean:
tell, °20, -W. Worcester, "21. BR. | first Washington's birthday: party given
Clarke, ’22, by the dean.”’
“In the few all too short years that Mary
| Patterson lived,” continued the Ledger
“s scenes “she led a most active life,
Guided Hess a editorial writer for the Rocky Moun-
of the Pennsylvania League of Women ee gat Wetec capreuk das teenies
[ > % ° ec
Wechers: \the Young Women’s League in Denver
|during the suffrage campaign of 1893,
and
NEWS IN BRIEF
Dean Smith was the princip
last Saturday at the third
as
Caroline Marcial Dorado, Instructor
in Spanish, read a paper on “The Lit-
erature of Spain” at a meeting of the
Browning Society of Philadelphia in th:
New Century Club last Thursday even- |
ing.
General Leonard Wood will speak at
the Potential Donors’
given by the
Dinner, to
Executive Committee
be
of
the Boston Endowment District, at the}
Copley Plaza Hotel, in Boston, on April
14,
The
the meeting last week that a chapter of
Senior class passed a sense of
the Phi Beta Kappa Society be organi- |
zed at Bryn Mawr. A committee was
appointed to consult with members of
the faculty as to the possibility of join-
ing the society.
Eight students took the trip planned
by the social service committee to the
Eastern Penitentiary last Saturday. Miss
Rebecca Davis, of the Philadelphia So-
cial Service Bureau conducted the trip
Among the Alumnae and former stu-
dents at college last week-end for Fresh
man Show were: M. S. Munford, ‘18
F. Howell, °19, B. Sorchan, °19, D.
Griggs, ex-’20, and H. Weist. ex-’21.
The time of the Sunday evening ser-
vice has been changed to seven-thirty,
by a vote of the Christian Association
The Association holds that an earlier
service, breaking up the evening less,
would inerease attendance
which gave Colorado women the vote.
She was one of. the founders and sup-
porters of the first summer camp for
Y. W. C. A. girls, a charter member of
'the Denver Women’s Club, a member
‘and organizer of several literary and
jlanguage clubs and a staunch church
worker.
| “Mrs. Campbell, who has made the gift
|to Bryn Mawr in her sister’s honor, is
|one of the five survivors of the original
‘fourteen members of the class of 1890
| at Bryn Mawr.”
|EASTER SINGING FORYCLOSING DAY
OF MAID’S SUNDAY SCHOOL
Closing exercises for the Maid’s Sunday
School for the year 1919-1920, took place
in the Chapel last Sunday afternoon.
Dorothy Smith '20, head of the Sunday
School, gave a farewell talk on the motto,
“Dare To Be True.” The maids from
Merion gave a recitation. The rest of the
program was a musical one, and included
singing by three students, K. Tyler ‘19, M.
Kirkland '21, C. Mottu ‘21, and guitar se-
lections*by E. Hobdy '22. Maid’s choruses
from. Rockefeller and Pembroke sang
Easter hymns.
WANTED
A Second-hand bicycle,"will buy for $5.00.
| If you have an old one and are willing to sell
Hit notify Cotueak News Agent, Radnor Hall.
4
China this week. She will eg her
home at Pekin where Mr. Emery has
an appointment. in the Pekin Bank.
_ Millicent Pond, ’10, is head of the de-
partment. of female employment at the
Winchester Repeating Arms Co., New
Haven, Conn.
Helen Lautz, ’12, has been elected
Secretary of the California Bryn Mawr
Club.
Consuelo Eastwick, ex-’18, who mar-
ried Sheldon F. Douglas, of Minneapolis
in 1917, is now in Switzerland studying
singing for the operatic stage. ~
Ethel Dunham, ’14, M. D., is Assistan‘
Resident in Medicine at the New Haven
Hospital which is allied with the -Yale
University School of Medicine. There are
five women on the Resident Staff, Vassar,
Mt. Holyoke, and Bryn Mawr being repre-
sented,
Alice Channing, ex-'11, is wigkhis for
the Consumers’ League in New York.
Dorothy North, ’09, is working with
‘the Friends’ War Victim Relief work in
Austria. e
Beatrice Nathans Churchwood, '13, is
an actress with the Scibilii Producing
Company.
VICE PRESIDENT OF SUFFRAGE
ASSOCIATION SPEAKS IN CHAPEL
Convinced that the women of the en-
tire country will vote for President next
November, Mrs. Raymond Brown, vice-
president of the National Suffrage Associa-
tion, in chapel Thursday morning, empha-
sized the duty of all women to study polit-
ical problems.
“The woman who says she isn’t inter-
ested in politics, is saying she is stu-
pid,” asserted Mrs. Brown. “Politics is
the controlling partner in business and
in the home.”
Mrs. Brown is heading a movement
to organize citizenship classes for. wom-
en, and is giving a series of lectures on
problems of citizenship, in the Main
Line suburbs this week.
SOCIAL BETTERMENT STUDENTS
PLAN TRIPS FOR SECOND SEMESTER
Seven trips are to be taken this semes-
ter by the four students taking the So-
cial Betterment course. In some cases
the trips will be open to other students.
Eastern Penitentiary was visited last
Saturday, as the first on the schedule
The trips are:
POOR TROIS ooo es cies ve oed April 12
Manufacturing Plant ........../ April 13
Philadelphia Trade School for Girls,
April 19
Vineland School for the Feebleminded
April 24
Carson College, School for Orphan
ON bc iss .. May 8 or 4
Elywn Home for the Feebleminded
May 10
INSPIRATION OF SILVER BAY
ACCERTUATED AT VESPERS
Silver Bay “is the place of fine fellow-
ship and offers the challenge for real
Christian thinking,” according to Mrs.
Kyle Adams Rodenbeck, Y. W. C. A.
Secretary at Silver Bay for eight years,
who spoke in Vespers on Sunday eve-
ning.
Mrs Rodenbeck sketched the
ties of a day at Silver Bay. varying from
waiting at the country post office for
mail, lectures and conferences, and
from intercollegiate sports to twilight
sings.
Bryn Mawr is allowed to send 26 dele-
gates to the annual conference lasting
June 15-25. The expenses of a delegate
starting either from Boston or from New
York are $45. The Christian Associa-
t'on has reserved a fund to help pay the
expenses of any student unable to meet
The Mawr. dele-
activi-
to
the whole cost. Bryn
gation will he chosen the last of April.
Beatrice Nathans Churchword, '13, is
an actress with the Scibilii Producing
Company.
‘Cromnas Ware Whten Yeti”
The first week of outdoor basketball |
practice brought out a large number of
players from each class. 1920 has mate-
rial for five teams; 1921 for ten; 1922
for nine, and 1923 for sixteen. A defi-
nite schedule for practices cannot be
made until after the May Day rehears-
als are arranged.
Good Freshman material was found i in
M. Macferran, who showed promise of
speed as center, and A. Howell and E.
Bright, who played a fast game as’ for-
wards.
Betty Weaver, the sport manager of
basketball under the Athletic Associa-
tion, has been elected manager of the
Senior first team. The temporary man-
agers of the other classes are: 1921, M
S. Goggin; 1922, E. Anderson; 1923, J
Richards.
Temporary lower team captains and
managers are:
1920—(2) E. Leutkemeyer, T. James;
(3) L. Sloan, H. Zinsser; (4) L. Davis;
(5) A. Rood, A. Coolidge.
1921—(2) K. Walker, H. James: (3)
L. Ward, E. Newell; (4) E. Godwin, C
Mottu; (5) M. Archbald, M. Foot.
1922—(2) K. Stiles, O. Howard; (3)
M. Kennard, M. Tyler; (4) E. Hobdy, P
Norcross; (5) G. Rhoads, M. Voorhees.
1923—(2) V. Corse, M .Adams; (3) K
Strauss. I. Baudrias; (4) F. Knox, E.
Page: (5) FE. Rhoads, A. Smith.
FRESHMEN WIN FIRST GAME OF
THIRD TEAM FINALS, 4 TO |
With a score of 4 to 1 the Fresh-
men defeated 1921 in the first of the
3rd team water-polo finals Tuesday
night. The Freshman team was supe-
rior in speed, H. Pratt and E. Bright
proving particularly aggressive. In the
second half, D. Klenke, ’21, and F. Child,
23, blocked many swift well-aimed goals.
Line-up: 1921, C. Mottu*, M. Arch-
bald, J. Peyton, E. Godwin, E. Collins,
D. Lubin, E. Godwin, D. Klenke.
1923, E. Bright***, E. Matteson, H.
Pratt*, J. Ward, R. Raley, M. Lawrence,
F. Child.
1921S SONG BOOK OUT APRIL 15
1921’s class book, containing all songs
written by members of the class or
handed down by 1919, will be issued on
April 15. Due to the rise in printer's
rates the price of the book will he twice
that of 1920’s last year.
The committee is: I. Lauer, chairman:
C. Garrison and L. Ward.
SOCIAL SERVICE TEAS PROFITABLE
Five dollars are the proceeds netted at
the social service teas held by the Social
Service Committee during the year and
recently discontinued. The teas were
instituted to provide opportunity for
Miss Barrett, head of Community Cen-
ter, to meet the students who worked
for her. Later the Sewing Committee
arranged to attend them and bring sew-
ing.
WATER-BABIES
Thirty-four undergraduates, four
whom are excused because of poor health,
are unauthorized swimmers. Two les-
sons each week are now required of all
unauthorized swimmers, since the swim-
ming season was cut short by the clos-
ing of the pool. Swimming without the
supervision of an instructor does not
count as a lesson.
Unauthorized are:
1921: S. Donaldson, M. Eadie, B. Kel-
lv. J. Latimer, M. Noble, E. Sheppard.
E. L. Shoemaker, L. Wilson.
1922: S. Baron. U. Batchelder,
of
E.
Brush, C Cameron, 0. Floyd, A. Gabel
La- |
Grim, F
M. Tucker.
M. Glasner, 1.
S. Thurlow.
E. Gabell,
bel, F. K. Liu,
FE. Williams.
1922: R. Beardsley, D. Rurr, G. Carson,
D. Fitz. L. Foley. V. Head, Florence
Knox. D. Martin, V. Miller, H. Sherman.
‘Maistiting the ‘success of the pre-
liminaries, 1923 came out victorious in
the finals of the lower team apparatus |
meet last Wednesday afternoon. The
winners held first place in every team
in the final scoring. The judges were
Miss Dowd, K. Townsend, ’20, H. Fer-
ris, 20, Z. Zinsser, 20.
The Sophomore teams gave a more fin-
ished performance than in the first meet.
The Freshman 4th team, captained by
M. Dunn, was particularly noticeable for
its quickness and rhythm.
The Final scores:
III Team IV Team
Oee \+k 6. oss eee Pe gcc 31
COR. .ciicas ce 2814 SORE Siweuss 29
Oe oes 21 ee 19%
V Team
ONO icc 35 AVE 27%
AUREL csi veces 2214
C. A. ELECTIONS APRIL 8 AND 12.
Christian Association. elections will
take place on April 8 and 12. Members
of the Board to be elected are president
and vice-president, from the class of
1921; Tunior member and treasurer from
1922, and secretary from 1923, The Fac-
ulty or Staff advisory members will he
chosen by the new Board.
Bryn Mawr Graduates Form 9 Per Cent of
Phila. Teachers, Says Mrs. Lingelbach
Mrs. Anna Lane Lingelbach, lecturer
in History at Bryn Mawr last year,
and recently appointed the only woman
member of the Board of Education in
Philadelphia, praised Bryn Mawr’s serv-
ice in the education of teachers in a
speech at a special meeting of the Phil-
adelphia Branch of the Association of
Collegiate Alumnae last Thursday after-
noon.
Nine per cent of the women teachers
in the Philadelphia high schools are grad-
uates of Bryn Mawr, stated Mrs. Lin-
belbach. In discussing the Endowment,
she said: “It is of the greatestimport-
ance that Bryn Mawr’s fund be increas-
ed to a point where the college may
still utilize to the fullest extent its un-
usual opportunity for training those
who will set the standard for the next
generation.”
Match Games Sta Start pa 19
_ With tennis matches starting on April
19, class teams will have seven days for
regular practice after Easter vacation.
A new system of assigning courts, adopted
this spring by the tennis captains, aims
to give every class an equal opporunity to
secure courts, and will give preference to
those players who are to compete in the
match games.
- Courts are assigned among the classes
as follows: 1920, Middle court on upper
and lower fields; 1921, right court on up-
per and lower fields; 1922, left courts on
upper and lower fields; 1923, faculty
court and southern single court off the
lower hockey field. The northern court
is unreserved. No player may be put
off a court reserved for another class,
by a member of that class for which the
court is reserved,
Each class will have five teams of
five players each. Players who have
made teams are required to play two
matches of two sets each every week.
Scores of these matches must be handed
in to the class tennis representatives in
each hall, who will revise the tennis lad-
ders each week in accordance with these
scores.
Class captains are:
1921, H. James; 1922,
H. Rice.
1920, Z. Boynton;
J. Palache; 1923,
JUNIORS DOWN 1922 IN FIRST
GAME OF SECOND TEAM FINALS
Playing a clean, fast game, 1921 won
the first lap of the second team finals
last Thursday by defeating the Sopho-
mores, 7-1.
As a result of determined playing on
both sides, the game was slowed up by
many held balls, especially under the
goal posts. The strength of the blue
team lay in the defense, M. Kennard
stubbornly resisting the bombardment of
shots from the red forwards. P. Smith
made the Sophomores’ only goal.
Line-up:
1921, E. Taylor**, E. Kales***, D. Mc-
Bride**,A. Taylor, M. Smith, J. Brown,
i'M. S. Goggin.
1922, M. Crosby, P. Smith*, E. Burns,
D, Dessau, J. Palache, M. Kennard, D.
| Cooke.
NEWPORT CORD
KLIMAX-SATIN
and Class Shops
The name MALLINSON en
the selvage marks the genuine
“*The
New
Silks &
First”’ se
A Net
Madison Ave.— ¥ iy
3let Street — SE
__
NEW YORK
She dances tong and happily who dancesijin
MAGEINEONS
For out-door and in-door occasions,
these are the silk inspirations!
INDESTRUCTIBLE VOILE PUSSY WILLOW DEW-KIST”
In plain colors and new
KUMSI-KUMSA DREAM CREPE
KHAKI-KOOL THISLDU
CHINCHILLA SATIN
ROSHANARA CREPE
(All trade-mark names)
By the yard at the best Silk Departments—tn wearing
apparel at the better Garment Departments
H. R. MALLINSON & Co., INC,
FISHER-MAID
t
Uh
WILLE. 2)
Vr
’
}
To Shop at the Lilla Gown Shop
Is to Keep in Touch With the
_ Newest Creations in
Dresses
) Direct From America’s Fashion Centre!
@_BECAUSE we carry only a limited line,
our stock is moving at all times.
QTHUS you are assured of the fresh: st con-
ceptions of the dressmaker's art. ;
@_NEITHER are you obliged to buy, so don't
hesitate to come often, as you'll ALWAYS see
something new.
Morris Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
‘HE Academy, under new management, has been
thoroughly renovated and is being conducted
for the convenience of the colleges and schools.
- We have twenty-five (25) of the finest horses to
pick from including hunters, saddle, and driving, also
polo ponies. Every one of them gentle and safe.
Best equipment. Competent, courteous and prompt
attention from high class help. Beginners taught
driving and riding in our inside ring (which is being
enlarged), also jumping and polo.
New roomy box stalls for boarders.
Ready to Wear Made to Order
Pupils taught (English style) by instructors of both
sexes. Chaperon always on hand. H. W. DERBY & CO.
: Inspection invited 13th Street at Sansom
‘ : :
. ee ee ener Women’s Shoes and Hosiery
Exclusively
| H. W. DERBY & CO.
Jeane: Seer. 13th Street at Sansom Philadelphia
QS. tes heres
Authors Research Bureau, 500 Fifth Ave., New York
Phone: Walnut 1329
Footer’s Dye Works
1118 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, Pa.
She a ince opt | — Walking Oxfords &
Service in
CLEANING AND DYEING | Brogues in Walk-Overs
FRIENDS ARCH STREET CENTRE
ee Pilladehhia , kK 4 Ain stand supreme.
"Thee: eee ae Son | 7 7 Trimness of fit, smart
tinde. Roome by night or weekiy ; | eo lines, comfort, fine service
arrangements for Class Reunion i og and an extraordinary variety
«Committee Room at the service of all leathers—featuring
Apply | now the new lighter Russia
AMELIA D. FEATHERSTONE ha d
Matron | s es.
J. E. CALDWELL & CO. | Ard to fit you perfectly, here
Chestnut and Juniper Streets & » Va are all the needed heel | heights
Philadelphia a Ia —low, medium or high, to smartly
Goldsmiths Silversmiths NE: dress every foot type.
Jewelers | ! Real economy here
: )
} “University” :
AN UNIQUE STOCK THAT SATISFIES THE y
MOST DISCRIMINATING TASTE 9 Pe) O to 135 0
oO ee ———_—_—_
Prempt and careful attention to purchases by mail
She Narper Shoe Go.
Sampler Sundae Fy ,
5 -Over Shops
Whitmans 1022’ CHESTNUT ST. - 1228 MARKET ST.
Soda Counter
J
BIRTHS
aan Lewin 08, (Mrs. Lincoln
MacVeigh) has a daughter, Margaret,
born this month. —
ENGAGEMENTS
Marion Halle, ’17, has announced her
engagement to Dr. A. Strauss.
_ Emma S. Robertson, ’13, has announc-
ed her engagement to Edward McCarrol,
.of Ridgewood, N. J. Miss Robertson is
- doing reconstruction work in Chateau
Thierry district in France.
MARRIAGES
The wedding of Miss Virginia Deems
'-to Dr. Howard Chaplin will take place].
at New Brighton, Staten Island, on April
17.
Marjorie Young, 08, will be married
Saturday, April 10, at Dorchester, Mass.,
to Mr. Stephen Greg Gifford.
DR. PERCY SILVER LIKENS PRAYER
TO LANGUAGE OF THE SOUL.
“As language is the medium through
which we know a nation, so prayer, the
language of the soul, is the agent by
which we reach God,” said Dr. Percy
Silver, former chaplin of West Point
and rector of the Church of the Incar-
nation, New York, speaking in Chapel
last Sunday night. :
The soul that is asleep and bound to
nursery prayers is unable to live up to
a standard of high character development,
according to Dr. Silver. “Such develop-
ment is not complete if education is re-
garded as a cramming process instead of
a ‘drawing out’, ” he concluded.
SPANISH CLUB GIVES PLAY
A one-act play, “La Felicidad,” was
given by members of the Minor Spanish
class at a meeting of the Spanish Club
this afternoon. M. P. Kirkland, ’21, play-
ed the leading role; the other characters
were M. Lindsay, ’20; E. Stevens, °20;
M. Archbald, ’21; F. Jones, ’21; H. Guth-
rie, ’22, and J. Henning, '23.
Chinese Scene of Freshman Skit Creates §
Unified Action
(Continued from Page 1)
ing attitude of the timid Ming Tien. The
precise, machine-like actions of the at-
tendants brought in an element of humor
which counterbalanced the scarcity of
really witty lines.
The length of the act was broken up
by a series of scenes, cleverly shifted by
the four property men, in imitation of
Chinese plays. Of the other choruses, the
Courtesies were the most attractive, com-
bining grace with originality of costume
and daintiness of appearance.
Considering the unusual difficulties of
production and the fact that there was
only one rehearsal of the cast as a whole,
the performance was remarkably
and unified, and was a tribute to the ability
of the skit committee. The consistent de-
velopment of the Chinese effect in the de-
tails-of costumes, gestures, decorations and
programs was due largely to E. Vincent,
who has lived for a summer in China.
Choruses.
Property men,—E. Vincent, E. Mat-
thews, S. Yarnall, K. Raht.
Attendants,—D. Stewart, F.
K. Strauss, F. Martin, Rk, Geyer, V. Head,
H. Price, M. Schwarz, H. Hagan, D.
Meserve, H. Hoyt, E. Grey, L. Bunch,
V. Corse, R. Raley, M. Lawrence, S.
Archbald, R. Beardsley, A. Fitzgerald,
H. Dunbar.
Courtesies,—A. Hay, M.
igman, H. Pratt, E. Hurd,
lin.
Harem Ladies,—A. Clement, F.
Matteson,
Carey, F. Sel-
C. McLaugh-
Young,
H. Wilson, E. Scott, M. von Hofsten, L.
Mills, G. Carson, G. Drake.
Harem... Dancers,—L. Bennett, H.
Scribner.
Hotel Guests,—E. Wheeler, S. Thomas,
E. Philbrick, E
Egyptian dancer,—-D. Fitz
Orchestra,—1I. Jacobi, leader, H. Rice,
H. Millar, E. Melcher, F. Prentice, A
Howell
Jennings
smooth |
Louis Slade), national endowment
chairman, has been appointed a mem-
ber of a committee of ten women form-
ed at the Hoover National Republican
Club, with headquarters in New York.
This committee is to seek women’s’ sup-
port for Herbert Hoover in the Presi-
dential campaign.
ws
NEW SELF GOVERNMENT OFFICERS
FOR 1920-21 ELECTED.
Will Choose Freshman Member in Fall.
Annual Self-Government elections, clos-
ing last Thursday, returned M. S, Goggin,
21, president, J. Peyton, ’21, vice-president,
M. Kennard, '22, secretary, and K. Strauss,
‘23, treasurer. Members of the Executive
Board are K. Gardner, '22, O. Howard, '22,
and F. Martin, '23, Head proctors will be
elected after Easter and the Freshman
member of the Board in the fall.
NOTICE TO ALUMNAE
Because of the scarcity of accommoda-
tions at May Day, alumnae and former
students wishing to secure rooms in the
halls are asked to make arrangements
immediately. This may be done through
Miss B. S. Ehlers, Alumnae office, Tay-
lor Hall, or through the wardens. The
rate will be $2 a day for room and three
meals, and, owing to the demand, no ar-
rangements for lodging only or for sep-
arate meals can be made.
St. John Ervine Describes Older Authors’
Influence,
(Continued from Page 1)
found ourselves turning from Shaw to
H. G,. Wells.”
Wells’ discontent, according to Mr. Er-
vine, although socialistic, differs from
Shaw’s, because he proposes new things
to replace what he destroys, and because
he believes man is definitely progress-
ing.
Chesterton a Check Against Shaw
A checking influence against the social-
ists, G, K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc,
held some sway over the younger men’s
minds. Chesterton realizes that the Eng-
lish people are wayward, but stakes his
belief on peasant proprietorship, an in-
stitution of the logical French. Shaw
stakes his on French logic, but has lit-
tle faith in small landowners because of
their narrowmindedness. “Between the
two groups we were lost before the
war,” concluded Mr. Ervine. “And now
after the war we are still lost.”
DAFFODILS FOR ENDOWMENT
S| Flowers in Front of Union League
A daffodil sale in the interests of the
Endowment was conducted last week in
front of the Union League in Philadelphia,
by alumnez in caps and gowns.
Mrs. Jacques Vauclain (Myra Elliot Vau-
clain '08) was in charge of the sale,
sisted by Mrs. Griffin Gribbell (Margaret
Latta Gribbel ’09), Olga Tattersfield ’18,
Florence Irish ‘14, Marjorie Childs ’14,
Edith Rondinella ’19.
The sale is the first of a series for the
Endowment. Yellow balloons with “Bryn
in white letters, were sold also, and
Bryn Mawr lanterns decorated the booth.
In Front of the Daffodil Booth
Mary Price, Bryn Mawr British Scholar,
offering daffodils to a prospective male sub-
scriber, “for the Endowment”:
Interested Man.—Smith ?”
Miss ‘Price.—"No,
RT CLUB SECURES JOSEPH PENNELL
as-
and
Mawr”
Price.”
“Billboards" Subject for Lecture
Joseph Pennell, the noted Philadelphia
etcher, will lecture under the auspices
of the Art Club on May 14, on the sub-
ject “Billboards, Artless
Humanity.”
Mr. Pennell is
an insult to
the originator of several
of the popular war posters. Examples
ef his ctchings were on view im the
library with the first series of Mr
Mc Vitty’s collection
MRS. SLADE ON HOOVER COMMITTEE
Caroline McCormick Slade (Mrs. F.|_
THE COLLEGE NEWS —o
of the better kind —
THE GIFT BOOK
GRADUATION AND OTHER GIFTS
PHILADELPHIA
Bei, Puone: Locust 6886
G. F. Ward
_EIGRTEEN Hunprep TEN CuEstNutT STREET
PHILADELPHIA
CUSTOM MADE READY TO WEAR
GOWNS ae WAISTS
UNDERGARMENTS
os ie News’ wishes to announce ial
this ad sale ioe —— students upon eresutadion of
P4RAMO UNT
"1342 CHESTNUT STREET
MILLINERY
BLOUSES
UNDERWEAR
SWEATERS
SESSLER’S BOOKSHOP
1314 —
BOOKS PICTURES
STRAWBRIDGE
and CLOTHIER
Specialists in
FASHIONABLE APPAREL FOR
YOUNG WOMEN
MARKET, EIGHTH and FILBERT STS
PHILADELPHIA
The Margaretta May
Women's and Misses’
TOGGERY SHOP
1600 Chestnut St. Philadelphia
BOOKSELLERS
_ AND
STATIONERS
I)
411 FIFTH AYE:
OPP THE PUBLIC LIBRARY
SEND FOR BARGAIN CATALOG
Opposite
Ritz Carlton
1335-37 Walnut Street
Gowns, Coats and Hats
FOR EVERY OCCASION
REASONABLY PRICED
ne
Specializing in Youthful Models
Tyrol Wool
not affected by dampness.
and Colors
Tailored Suits
36.75
Junior Suits
29.75
| 32.75 46.75
| New Spring Hats
MANN & DILKS
1102 CHESTNUT STREET
Suits and’ Top Coats are ideal!
for early Spring wear. They are
warm without weight and are
New Spring Styles
Ladies’ and Misses’
49.75
Street and Motor Coats
66.75
MANN & DILKS
1182 CHESTNUT STREET
"POINT SYSTEM IN OPER) OPERATION.
oe.
ification of Mt. Welds: Plan
sao at a meeting of the Under-
graduate Association last Thursday, the
point system drawn up by the Associa-
tion eee will On into re ange as soon
as it.can- : gna copies
dietsiteeead & ena "4 e Rade
As stated in a previous lee of the
News, the system is based largely on
that in use at Mt. Holyoke. The high.
est number of points that may be held
by one student is forty. The presidency
of the four Associations counts thirty,
the highest. number given for any one
office. The class presidents count
twenty-five. Temporary offices, such as
team captains, count only during the
season in which they are active.
A committee of five, the chairman to
be appointed by the Undergraduate As-
sociation Board, and the members to be
elected one from each class, will over-
see the running of the system.
a t a.
HEAD OF PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
OF Y. M. C. A. HERE APRIL 10
Wilbert B. Smith Speaker at Des Moines
and at Huntingdon Conferences
Wilbert B. Smith, Executive Secretary
of the Des Moines Conference and head
of the personnel department of the In-
ternational Y. M. C. A., will speak in
chapel the Sunday after Easter at a
morning service at 11 o’clock and in the
evening at 7.30.
Members of the Huntingdon delega-
tion report Mr. Smith, who has lived in
India, an authority on Indian affairs, and
an inspiring speaker. He will be in Bryn
Mawr all day Sunday and part of Mon-
day to talk over questions arising from
the morning talk.
ASSOCIATION OF WOMEN’S COLLEGE
PAPERS TO MEET APRIL 10
Problems which confront the college
papers and news magazines will be
brought before the annual meeting of
the Association of News Magazines of
Women’s Colleges, which will take place
at Radcliffe, April 10.
The object of the organization is to
promote more cordial relations and an
exchange of ideas among the news ma-
gazines of the women’s colleges. The
association was founded at Vassar, in
1917, and met at Wellesley in 1918. The
members are Vassar, Smith Wellesley,
Mt. Holyoke, Barnard, Hunter, Goucher,
Wheaton, and Connecticut College. Bryn
Mawr has been offered membership, and
will join this year.
CALENDAR
Wednesday, March 31.
Easter Vacation begins at 1.00. p. m
Thursday, April 7.
Easter Vacation ends at 9.00. a. m.
Friday, April 9.
4-6 p. m. Faculty tea to the Graduates in
Radnor Hall.
2-10 p. m. Vocational Conference.
Saturday, April 10.
9-12 a. m. Vocational Conference.
8.00 p.m. Concert by the Cheyney Singers
in Taylor Hall, under the auspices of the
Social Service Committee.
Sunday, April |1.
| CHEYNEY es HERE APRIL 10°
—_
Represent School for Negro Teachers
cert at Bryn Mawr April 10, in Taylor
Hall, at 8 o’clock, under the auspices
of the Social Service Committee. The
singing of the Cheyney chorus was one
of the features of the Social Service
party last fall.
reserved seats, 50 cents.
The singers are among the four hun-
dred students of the School for Train-
ing Colored Teachers at Cheyney, Penna.
Mr. Leslie Hill, Phi Beta Kappa, Har-
is run entirely by colored people.
Mr. Hill’s aim is to send out gradu-
ates noteonly capable of teaching, but
also prepared to be the social and in-
dustrial nucleus of the entire colored
community. In addition to regular nor-
mal’ school courses, technical courses,
such as manual training and domestic’
sciences are offered. In the Gumption
course, students learn how to mend
stoves, fix windows, and the like, so that,
in case they must be janitors in their
schools, they may fill both positions
equally well.
The students sing at a convocation
meeting in the chapel of the school daily.
The musical director works on _ the
principle that “spiritual singing” is a
gift peculiar to the negro and must not
be lost by the modern negro.
Bryn Mawr is one of the few places
where the students are allowed to sing
away from their school.
MANUSCRIPT READER TO SPEAK AT
VOCATIONAL CONFERENCE
M. Weil, '92, To Talk On Writing
Reader and critic of manuscripts, Ma
thilde Weil, ’92, is one of the alumnae
who will speak at the Vocational con-
ference April 10, on the subject of writ-
ing as a profession.
Miss Weil was editor of “Book Re-
views” and a reader of manuscript for
the MacMillan Company, 1893-96, and
was sub-editor of the “American His-
torial Review,” 1895-6. From 1905-09,
she held the position of lecturer on pho-
tography at the Drexel Institute, Phila-
delphia, and took up photography as a
profession for a number of years, in ad-
dition to her work with manuscripts.
Always ‘interested in. psychic phenom-
ena, she has an article, “Experiences of
a Medium” in the April “Yale Review.”
PROBABLE CONFERENCE SPEAKER
IS PAULINE GOLDMARK '96.
Noted Social Worker: Had Big War Job.
One of the prominent alumnae who
will probably speak at the Vocational
Conference, April 10, on “Employment
Management and Industrial Work,” is
Pauline Goldmark, '96, manager during
the war of the Woman's Service Section
of the United States Railroad Administra-
tion
Miss Goldmark's war position was one
of the most important held by women in
the United States, according to the bio-
graphical record written for the Endow-
ment Bureau by Mary D. Hopkins, '96.
She had to “adjust workers’ cases, con-
duct goverment hearings and render de-
cisions to be sent out as formal decisions
of the Railroad Administration. She di-
dected inquiries of field agents throug-
out the county, held personal conferences
with railroad officials regarding changes,
and traveled from coast to coast inspect-
ing conditions.”
In college, as undergraduate elector of
the settlement, Miss Goldmark
began her work to better social and in-
dustrial conditions. Since then among her
many positions have been Executive Sec-
retary to the Consumers’ League 1904-
09, director af New York Child Labor
committee 1904-05, Research Secretary
National Consumers’ League 1915-17
and Secretary committee on Women in
college
11.00 a. m. Special service in Taylor Hall.
Speaker, Mr. Wilbert H. Smith.
7.30.,p. m. Chapel. Sermon by Mr Wil-
bert B. Smith
Friday, April (6.
8.00 p. m. Lecture by George E. Vincent,
President of the Rockefcller Foundation,
in Taylor Hall, under the auspices of the
Doctor's. Club
Saturday, April 17
7.30 p. m. Junior-Senior Supper.
Sunday, April (8.
7.30 p. m, Chapel. Sermon by the Rev
Francis Peabody, D.D., of Harvard
Monday, April (9.
415 ». m Inter-class Tennis Matches
begin i
fyo1T
Industry, Council of National Defense
The Cheyney Singers will give a con-|.
Tickets will be 35 cents,
vard, ’07, is head. of the school, which.
Cut Fomers ne Plant Fresh Daily |
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets Specialty.
Phene, Bryn Mawr 570
FRANCIS B. HALL
HABIT AND BREECHES
clay Romans
840 Lancaster Ave., 3 Stores West of Post Office,
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
PHONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TEAS
BRYN MAWR
BRINTON BROTHERS
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES
Lancaster and Merion Avenues,
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Orders Delivered. We aim to please you.
JOHN J. McDEVITT
PRINTING
1011 Lancaster Ave.
Programs
Bill Heads
Tickets
Letter Heads
Announcements
Booklets, etc.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
UNUSUAL
GIFTS
GREETING CARDS
DECORATIVE TREATMENTS
Will Always Be Found at
THE GIFT SHOP
814 W. Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and deliciots
D. N. ROSS (Paste,
Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia
Medica, and Director of the Pharmaceu-
tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital.
EASTMAN’S KEODAKS AND FILMS
; = awe.
ve
PHILIP HARRISON
WALK-OVER BOOT SHOPS
Complete line of}
Ladies’ Shoes and Rubbers
818 Lancaster Ave.
John J. Connelly Estate
The Main Line Florists
1226 LANCASTER AVE., Rosemont, Pa.
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 252W
STORIES, MOVIE PLOTS,
SCENARIOS, PLAYS,
POETRY, LYRICS
We read, type, edit, remodel,
copyright, and sell
MANUSCRIPTS
Moderate rates,
good oppor-
Potted Plants—Personal supervision on all orders |,
807 Lancaster Ave.
“MARY Rvs Dia 7
= of :
pol European nee with Moszow-
cao Mesie ‘Debian we in Mme. ‘iis ‘an
r, _Pasia) 1913 —.
Paris ConservATOIE (S Sorte and
LEscHETIZKY Princivice Toent
Cor. Franklin and Montgomery Aves.
mont
Phone, Brys Mawr 715 W
=
THE HARcUM ScHOOL
FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA.
Free te eek collenstpreparation a thorough
he school offers
pt agg olor m “an Se
Maree oppor i pursue les sulted to
For Girls to {
Cuts Gething ore In Music and Art,
In ae Mawr. the beautiful college
miles from Philadelphia, New geome, buidine
sunny rooms hig ne Gasket Galt riiene” large
ua . EDITH HATCHER HARCUM, B.L.
(Pupil of Leschetizky), Head of the School
Miss M. G. Bartlett, Ph. D. ical
Miss 8. M. Beach, Ph. D. the School
~ DELICIOUS — ANANA
BANANA
SUNDAES | PLITS
The Bryn Mawr C Confectionery
848 Lancaster Avenue
A complete line of Home Made Candies—always fresh
Delicious Home Made Pies
WILLIAM T. McINTYRE
GROCERIES, MEATS AND
PROVISIONS
snon eee ore
BRYN MAWR AVENUE
Phone Connection
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
Builders and Housekeeping
HARDWARE
Paints : Oils, ; Glass
Cutlery Ground ksmithing
Lawn Mowers Repaired and Sharpened
838 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr 170 M. Doyle, Mgr.
THE FRENCH SHOP
-« 814 LANCASTER AVE.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
SMART GOWNS MADE TO ORDER
DISTINCTIVE REMODELING
E. M. FENNER
Ice Cream, Frozen Fruits and Ices
Fine and Fancy Cakes, Confections
Bryn Mawr
(Telephone) Ardmore
Phone, Bryn Mawr 916
Mrs. Hattie W. Moore
Gowns and Blouses
Moderate Prices
16 Elliott Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa,
T. MARY'S LAUNDRY
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO.
CAPITAL, $250,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
CARS TO HIRE
Buick and Paige Telephone Accessories amd
tunity
MAN PUB. CO., Suite 811
{
“18,
1265 Broadway,
N. Y. City
Agency Bryn Mewr Goo Repair Parts
Electrical and Machine Work our Specialty
MADDEN’S GARAGE
an caster Pike, opposite P. A. A. Station Bryo Seew
College news, March 30, 1920
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College
1920-03-30
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 06, No. 21
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914) --https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol6-no21