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Votume VII.» No. 2.
BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1920
Price 10 Cents
REELING AND WRITHING CLUB ©
WILL WORK WITH ROBERT FROST
et ee
Public Reading Will Open Course
_ Robert Lee Frost, Professor at Amherst
and one of America’s leading poets, has
been secured by the Reeling and Writhing
Club to hold a series of informal meetings
with members of the club. A reading by
Mr. Frost, open to the public, will con-
stitute the first meeting of the series, which
will be held some time before the middle
of November. .
“We shall have to get a little more
American literature directly out of the col-
leges or know the reason why,” says Mr.
Frost in a letter to one of the officers of
the Reeling and Writhing Club. “I see no
better way to do it than by laying on our
younger students the obligation to produce
something besides exercises to be blue-
penciled for details by teachers. The col-
leges haven’t dared to expect absolute lit-
erature of mere students. Yet when you
stop to consider, you find that before they
were past the age of being students, nearly
all the real writers that ever wrote had
done something definite of the kind they
-were to be known for all the rest of their
lives. Probably the colleges haven't ex-
pected enough of young writers. But per-
haps it is the country’s fault. A young
country is too easily satisfied with a
mechanical proficiency in the arts that can
at best never be better than amateurish |
The country may not expect enough. And
then again I am not sure the country is to
blame. I don’t know that either the coun-
try or the colleges could expect enough of
young artists. The young artists have to
expect it of themselves, by some miracle,
for it to be enough.”
To Mr. Frost has been attributed a
psychological insight, spiritual veracity, an
artistic simplicity, power and originality
such as no other contributor to American
literature has displayed since Emerson and.
Whitman. He is the author of “North of
Boston,” “Mountain Interval” and “A Boy’s
Will.” The latter is to be found in the
New Book Room,
MISS KING TOURS SPAIN TO STUDY
ART FOR HISPANIC SOCIETY
After a tour of eighteen months in
Spain, Miss King, professor of History of
Art, has returned from making an ex-
haustive study of Spanish art for the His-
panic Society of America. Miss King was
accompanied by Miss H. L. Lowber, who
took photographs which will illustrate the
series of essays which Miss King will
write.
The course of the travel lay for the
most part through out of the way rural
reached by public dili-
In Spain many of the
districts, motor
gences or on mules.
art specimens are scattered throughout the
country, those of each region being kept
at best in collections belonging to the local
churches and monasteries. Miss King vis-
ited many of these, though to do so in the
case of more than one convent she had to
obtain the permission of the Pope. Every |.
opportunity was given her to pursue the
course of her investigations.
Starting with of
paleolithic man at Altamira, Miss King's
the cave paintings
studies included frescoes, carved and col-
ored panels, through the paintings of later
centuries down to the works of Morales,
termed the “divine.” Miss Lowber made a
special study of the architecture of Span-
ish towns and castles
TED
Officier de I’Instruction Publique
The gold academic palms of Officer de
l'Instruction Publique, the highest educa-
tional decoration in France, was awarded
to President Thomas this summer by the
French government. “The decoration was
bestowed,” said President Thomas in
chapel last Wednesday, “not, I am sure, as
an individual award, but because of Bryn
Mawr’s sympathy and love for things
French, and because of the wish which is
also ours that at Bryn Mawr College
French culture and French literature and
learning may continue to be reverenced and
cultivated,”
Bryn Mawr was among the first colleges
in the United States to invite famous
French literary men who visited this coun-
try lecture in French. Among them were
Monsieur Brunetiere, for many years editor
of the Revue du Deux Mondes; M. Henri
de Regnier, the poet, and M. Hugues Le
Roux. “Also,” said President Thomas to a
news reporter, “Bryn Mawr from its open-
ing in 1885 conducted its classes in French
and we believe that we are still the only
college or university in the United States
to conduct all our graduate and under-
Leraduate work inrench.”
MISS IRENE HARMON AWARDED
RED CROSS SCHOLARSHIP
Honor Department of Sociology
The Carola Woerishoffer Department at
Bryn Mawr has been chosen by the Ameri-
can Red Cross as one its centers of
training and has been awarded scholar-
ships which will enable several students
to attend the seminary in Sociology here.
One has already been awarded to Miss
Irene Harmon.
Dr. Neva Deardorff, who gives the semi-
nary, is assistant to the general manager
of the Red Cross in Washington and comes
to Bryn Mawr the first of every week for
this work.
Four of the students will live in the home
of Miss Gertrude Ely, who has consented
to take them in, as the accommodations for
graduate students at college are insuffi-
cient.
ot
SOCIAL SERVICE PARTY TO BE
GIVEN SATURDAY NIGHT
Next Saturday night the Social Service
Committee of the Christian Association
will give a party in the gymnasium at
quarter to eight. Opening speeches will be
made by Dean Smith and Helen Barrett,
13, head of the Bryn Mawr Community
Center.
Margaret Kennard, '22, will speak on
“Junk,” and E. Donnelly, '21, on behalf of
the Sewing Committee. Children’s dresses
made for the committee and posters on
Community Center subjects will be on ex-
hibition. Refreshments and dancing will
he included in the program.
Monsieur Gilli, French Professor
Claude Gilli, B.A., has been appointed
Associate Professor of Old French
Monsieur Gili, of Nice, France, received
the degree of Arts from
London University, First-class
Honours in 1909.. He Rothschild
prizeman in Romance Philology, Univer
sity Colege, and held the lectureship in
Romance Philology at East London Col
lewe, 1910-13, and at Westfield College,
London, 1912-13. He lecturer at
the University of Montpellier from 1917
to 1920
Bachelor of
with
Was
Was
BY THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT
Given High Honor of Gold Palas of
“JINGLE BELLS” UNPARODIED BY
1923 ON PARADE NIGHT
1924 Throws Off Even Hoodoo
Breaking all even records and completely
baflling the Sophomores, 1924 sang their
parade song unparodied under Pembroke
Arch last Wednesday night.
The sleuthing was very quict, and there
was practically no excitement until 6
o'clock Wednesday afternoon, when fifteen
Freshmen collected in B. Pierson’s room
and were taught the song which was
written by B. Price, while their classmates
outside sang popular airs to deceive the
Sophomores. At the class meeting called
that night those who had learned the song
taught it to the others. No written copies
were made. Ih the midst of the meeting
the Sophomores turned the lights out all
over the gymnasium. The Freshmen meet-
ing was immediately adjourned, and they
marched up to the Arch in dead silence.
The Sophomore sleuths under the leader-
ship of A. Smith were tireless. They
shadowed the Freshmen Committee night
and day and several times got possession
of the words of the song but were unable
to discover the tune.
This is the first time that an even class
has kept its Parade song and is only the
third time that it has been done in the his-
tory of Parade night. The other classes
were 191] and 1921,
OFFICERS OF DISCUSSION CLUB
ATTEMPT TO REVIVE DEBATING
' Winning Team Will Debate Publicly
Debating will again enter the ranks of
college activities this Fall, if enough would-
be debators sign the papers to be passed
around Thursday noon.
The debating committee, the officers of
the Discussion Club, will explain the pro-
ject at the undergraduate meeting Wednes-
day night, emphasizing both the advantages
of interest in current topics and ability to
speak publicly and the necessity of serious
work in preparing debates. Only those
students willing to look up a subject and
speak once or twice during the debating
season will be asked to sign.
Meetings closed to all except those who
have signed up to debate, will probably be
held every three weeks. Each time four
people will debate, two on a side, and in-
formal discussions follow. Subjects will
be those of general current interest or con-
nected with some college course or some
policy or activity of the college.
A public debate before the college, with
speakers chosen from those who have de-
bated in the club, will close the season.
OPPORTUNITY FOR STUDENTS TO
VOTE AT COMING ELECTIONS
Students who have attained the age of
twenty-one and will not be twenty-two by
Mawr at. the coming election without fur-
ther registration, if they have in
Bryn Mawr College for a year.
In order to vote such students must be
accompanied by a qualified voter of the
district to make affidavit for them at the
polls; for otherwise, according to the laws
of Pennsylvania, every citizen of twenty-
one must have lived in the state a year and
in the voting districtefor two months pre
ceeding the election. If the citizen
twenty-two or over, she must have paid
.within two years a state or county tax
which shall have been assessed at least two
lived
election.
those students who are over twenty-two
and were unable to register by Septembe:
Ist may still be’ permitted by a special in.
| terpretation of the court
November 2nd, will be able to vote in Bryn |
is |
months and paid one month before the}
There is now the possibility that |
CHAPEL SPEECH BY PRESIDENT
THOMAS OPENS COLLEGE YEAR
Portrait of Susan B. Anthory Given
to College: Unveiled by Her Niece
President Thomas addressed the college
in chapel last Wednesday, opening the
thirty-sixth academic year, and Miss Lucy
Anthony, neice of Susan B. Anthony, un-
veiled a portrait of Miss Anthony, which
has been presented to the college by Miss
Elizabeth Upham Yates, president for
many years of the Rhode Island Suffrage
Association. In her address, President
Thomas said in part:
Students, fellow members of the Fac-
ulty, alumnae, mothers and fathers of
Freshmen, and friends of the College—
again, and at last after so many months
—my dear old Bryn Mawr audience,
Greeting!
How many times in the last fourteen
months have I not wondered what it
would be like to face you again! How
many times when I have been speaking
to little yellow skinned Copt and Egypt-
ian girls, or to little olive brown, yellow
and black skinned Syrians, with their
oval coal black eyes and coal black hair,
have I wondered what a golden, red and
brown haired, blue, gray and brown eyed,
red and pink cheeked audience of Bryn
Mawr. girls would seem like, Now__I
know, and you really are—even seen
against the background of Egyptian
pyramids and Egyptian, Greek and
Roman temples and sphinxes and stat-
ues, cathedrals and castles which have
passed before me in almost endless suc-
cession since I last saw you—the very
most satisfying thing that I have seen
since I left you fourteen months ago.
I have had such a glorious holiday,
the first long holiday that I have ever
had (for I have always worked hard;
indeed I was born with a book in my
hand—one of those prehistoric studious
creatures of which there were so many
in my generation, but which in your gen-
eration seem to be as extinct as the
dodo) that I could not believe that I
wished to come home, but when I drove
up from the Bryn Mawr station and saw
(Continued on Page 2)
GLEE CLUB RE-ELECTS LAST
YEAR’S OFFICERS
Emily Kimbrough, ’21, was unanimously
re-elected leader of the Glee Club, and
Eleanor Boswell, '21, secretary and treas-
urer, at the first meeting held last Friday.
Frances Childs, '23; was elected stage man-
ager. Miss Childs was on the costume
committee for May Day and in charge of
the costumes for 1923's Freshman show.
“Naughty Marietta,” “The Spring Maid”
and several Guilbert and Sullivan plays
are among the operettas which are being
considered .by the club for production in
the Spring. Miss Kimbrough suggested
that meetings of the club be held before
the of the Metropolitan
Opera to go over the motives and score of
the opera and to discuss the structure. A
course of lectures on how to appreciate
music and how to follow the different in-
struments
performances
in a symphony orchestra was
also suggested
No Wednesday Morning Office Hours
Dean Smith's new office hours are: Mon-
day, 11.06 to 1.00; Tuesday, 9.00 to 11.00;
\\ ednesday, 2.00 to 4.30; Thursday, 11,00
to 1.00; Friday, 9.00 to 11.00
\ll- students
pointments during office hours
are asked to sign for ap
Stuglents
who find it impossible to arrange an inter-
view within these office hours may make a
special appomtment at any time through the
| Dean's secretary
oreo ol Neos ee Cece the
| Managing Editor...
m i y Ns repr 0 R
Bumasetu Cecit ‘21 Evizabeta
ASSOCIAIB ED!
22 Sanaa CrLarkge '22
ARIE WiLLcox ‘22 Evizaperu Caitp '23
KELLOGG or
BUSINESS BOARD
Constance M. K. AppLeBEE, M
Dorotuy McBrivg ‘21 Hisaseta Mnzs ‘21
é ASSISTANTS
-Mary Douctas Hay ‘22
Frances Cuiips '23
‘ ~—_—s- Subscriptions may begin at any time
Suewigtions.42590°. Mailing Price, $3.00
Entered as second class matter September 26, 1914 at
the post office at Bryn Mawr, Pa., 1889, under
the Act of March 3.
Barbara Clarke was assistant editor this
week.
Florence Billstein, '21, will report for the
News until new members are elected to
the board.
The record registration at the Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania was 1500 Freshmen,
and not 15,000 students, as was printed in
the News’ last issue.
This Means You
On the second of November many thou-
sands of women in the United States, for
the first time will cast their votes for the
man who will preside, during the next four
years, over the government of which they
are a part. Will some of these put this off
as a tiresome decision to be made as late
as possible while others regard it flippantly
as the plaything of the hour? Or, will
the women of America, educated in the
experience of the past as never before and
facing the present, go to the polls in the
spirit of duty gladly done, not of peculiar
right er favor granted?
They Sat Through the Comedy
The old pioneer spirit that sent women
to college determined to gain an education
at any cost may be absent in the present
generation of college undergraduates, but
the seventy-two graduate students at Bryn
Mawr prove that the desire for knowledge
has not died out.
to the Bryn Mawr movies to see the “main
feature” have much to contribute to com-
Those who have come
munity life, and it depends largely on the
co-operation of the undergraduates whether
it is given or not.
Last Semester’s Cutting Heavy
Cutting for the second semester last
year was exceptionally heavy, according
to the records of the Cut Committee.
and
Student
Fourteen students were warned
eleven students were put on
Probation. No students have been put
on Senate Probation.
PRESIDENT THOMAS DESCRIBES
TRAVELS IN ORIENT
(Continued from Page 1)
two fluffy haired sub-freshmen studying
their entrance examinations on Rocke-
feller steps, I knew that I was delighted
to be home again—and now, face to face
with you, I am absolutely sure of it.
“When I look at you and think what
marvelous, what undreamed of things the
Alumnae have done for the College in my
absence, helped by the Faculty, by you
and by their and your families and the
other friends of the college I feel like the
idle Arabs whom | saw in Morocco and
Algiers and in the oases of the desert sit-
ting in thousands cross legged on the sand
in front of the cafés or in shady arches
vce eee KATHUREN Jounston ‘21
ta Barrp '22 |
the annual yield of dates supports him wm
happy idleness throughout the rest of his
Rie.
Praises Frurtrut “Date Trees” oF
Bryn Mawr
“So, like these fortunate Arabs during
my year of happy idleness my ‘date trees,’
the Alumnae of the College, were working
for us all. I need not tell you that I am
using the word ‘my’ only in the sense that
a gardener uses it in speaking of the flow-
ers and trees under his care in his master’s
garden. We of the Faculty who water and
feed (and sometimes prune) the students
in our academic garden of Bryn Mawr
like to feel that some of the success of
what you do when you leave the College
is due to our fostering care. So in this
sense while I have been as idle as an Arab,
my date trees, the splendid date trees of
Bryn Mawr, have produced an Endowment
Fund of $2,000,000 for their college.
“During the four months I spent in
Palestine, Syria and Greece I found that
the promised League of Nations was a
vivid reality and was already giving new
life and hope to races that had been hor-
ribly oppressed for centuries by the un-
speakable Turk. Thousands of Christians
of many tongues and peoples have been
freed by the victorious armies of Great
Britain from his murderous tyranny. I
found everywhere profound gratitude and
confidence in the British and in the League
of Nations and a trust in the United States
and an idealization of us that I could
scarcely bear to see.
“I can best illustrate this by telling you
of an experience that we had in Damascus,
Syria, which is now the center of fighting
between the French and the Arabs. My
first cousin, Logan Pearsall Smith, and I
were there at the time when Prince Feisul,
the son of the Arab king of the newly
created Arab kingdom of the Hedjas in the
Arabian desert was unlawfully assuming
the crown of French Syria and Palestine.
Many Arabs had come to see him crowned,
and among them in our hotel were twenty-
seven Bedouin sheiks (or chiefs of the
wildest and most untamed Arab tribes liv-
ing in the surrounding deserts and in the
mountains of Lebanon.)
Recetves AuDIENCE OF ARAB SHEIKS
“As soon as they heard that we were
Americans, they asked us for an audience.
The American consul in Damascus begged
us not to see them as he feared trouble, but
we told him that we would not miss the
opportunity of hearing what they wished
to say for anything in the world. When
we entered the room, they were sitting
around the walls in a large circle, dressed
in their shaggy robes with wonderful head-
dresses with gold fillets, bristling with dag-
gers and arms of all kinds, twenty-seven
of them, with only two vacant places for
us on either side of the most magnificent
sheik of all and a seat nearby for our in-
terpreter. The head sheik first asked us
to give President Wilson a message from
the sheiks of the desert. He said they had
written many letters and sent many mes-
sengers to President Wilson, but that they
had never yet received his reply. He begged
us to remind President Wilson that he had
said people could be free and govern them-
selves, and to explain to him that the Be-
douins had never had a chance before, be-
cause for centuries they had been cruelly
oppressed by the Turks, who were now
driven out by the English. He said that
now they begged President Wilson to give
them freedom so that they could show him
how great.a nation they would become, but
that if President Wilson thought that they
were not quite wise enough to take care
of themselves would he not please let the
United States take a mandate and_ help
them, because they. trusted the United
States more than any other country, and
that if President Wilson thought, as they
had been told perhaps he might think, that |
they would fight the French with all their
might. And fighting the French is what
they are doing now.
“You remember that the French have
been given a mandate over this part of
Syria by the League of Nations. I am sure
that the French will win them over in the
end. I traveled for two months in North
Africa through the great French colonial
possessions of Algeria, Tunisia and Mo-
rocco and found the Arabs there very con-
tented and happy under French rule. Their
great desire seemed to be to be like the
French, to learn French and to serve in
the French army. The French seem to
me to be'as a colonizing nation second only
to the British themselves. :
WoMAN Surrrace Most Vitra THING
“While [ have been away from Bryn
Mawr, two mighty reforms have taken
place in the United States, Prohibition and
Woman Suffrage. The very most vital
thing in all the world, because without it
the democracies of our modern world can-
not go forward but must go backward—is
Woman Suffrage. Not only will women’s
present disabilities be removed, but a far
more important change will come. By
women’s interest in, and responsibility for,
state and civic matters the commonwealth
will immeasurably gain, Our great suffrage
leader, Anna Howard Shaw, used to say
that ‘men knew best about some things,
and women knew best about some other
things, but that men and women to-
gether knew all there was to know about
everything in the world.’
U'nveits Portrait or Miss ANTHONY
It is a very great satisfaction to cele-
brate our first formal meeting together
after our enfranchisement by the gift to
the College of the portrait of a great
woman who gave her life to give us the
vote. This portrait of Susan B. Anthony
years old by Miss Sarah J. Eddy, who was
both an artist and her friend. It is one of
three replicas. One, which, however, is full
length, has been placed by the National
American Woman Suffrage Association in
the Smithsonian Institute at Washington,
one is in Rochester, N. Y., Miss Anthony’s
home town, hanging in the library of the
University of Rochester, which she opened
to women by obtaining for the university
the necessary endowment to meet the ad-
ditional expense involved; and now the
third will hang, I hope, forever on. the
walls of the Library reading room of Bryn
Mawr College.
“This splendid portrait. (which represents
Miss Anthony as I knew her in her old
age—“a woman of sorrows and acquainted
with grief”"—but even then her face when
she talked or spoke was lighted up by the
glow of her splendid faith and her radiant
personality. She was not sad as you see
her here) is presented to us by the gen-
erosity of Miss Elizabeth Upham Yates,
was painted in 1902, when she was eighty |
President for many years of the Rhode}
Island Suffrage Association, who writes: |
‘Knowing how much you did to sustain her |
in her great endeavors, and in view of the |
efforts being made by Bryn Mawr College |
to. perpetuate the life work of her great |
comrade and co-worker, Dr. Anna Shaw,
it seems most fitting to give the portrait to|
you with the expectation that it will be per-
manently enshrined in Bryn Mawr Col-|
lege.” I will ask Miss Anthony’s niece, |
Miss Lucy Anthony, Miss Shaw's intimate |
friend and house companion of many years, |
to unveil it for us. On behalf of the Di-|
rectors, Faculty and students of Bryn |
Mawr College it gives me the keenest |
pleasure to accept this portrait.
“As I said at the Liberty Bell Celebra-|
tion of the enfranchisement of the women
of the United States held in Independence
Square last Saturday, at this glorious time
when woman is celebrating her enfranchise- |
ment, Miss Anthony takes her place for all
itime beside the greatest man of America,
| Lincoln, our saviour from fatal partition,
our liberator from human slavery, as the/
| by an unquenchable passion for human lib-
erty, distinguished from all the other men
or women I have known by the quality
of sheer unadulterated greatness that made
of her the heaven-sent leader of our suf-
frage cause.
Enection Day Dr. SHAw MemoriaAc
“We cannot meet in this day of the tri-
umph of our cause without remembering
with joy and .sorrow our dearly loved
friend and leader who more than any
other one person changed public opinion
on woman suffrage in the United States
and gave us our enfranchisement—Anna
Howard Shaw. She was the eloquent and
impassioned trumpet call of our coming
freedom. At first she was a voice crying
in the wilderness as she went up and down
through our land, and then as opinion
changed she became the adored leader of
the women of the United States, the
golden-tongued orator of suffrage. We
loved her dearly at Bryn Mawr and she
dearly loved us. She always said Bryn
Mawr was her college, Bryn Mawr women
were her women, her very best supporters
and helpers wherever she went. As you
know, election day is to be made her
memorial day. At every election booth in
the United States, if possible, women will
solicit gifts of gratitude to her however
small.
“Tt is a satisfaction to us as Bryn Mawr-
ters that the women suffragists of the
United States have determined to found at
two Pennsylvania institutions as a token of
their gratitude to their great champion a
chair of politics in Bryn Mawr College
and a chair of Hygiene in the Woman’s
Medical College of Pennsylvania. Every
suffragist in the country: will be given an
opportunity to make a gift, however small,
to this fitting memorial of a great woman
who spent her life in our service.
Leaprers Neepep. We Pray Too Mucu
Now finally, if these glorious reforms,
Woman Suffrage, Prohibition and a com-
plete change of heart on the mightiest
issue now before the world, international
peace, have come in my lifetime, you need
despair of nothing, however Utopian and
splendid, coming in your lifetime. But in
order to consolidate our gains, and go on
to win new reforms, and above all to re
construct our industrial and economic
world it seems to me that in the old world
of my travels and in our new world of
America in which we live, the one thing
needed more than all the rest is a wider
and more profound education.
“IT wish to appeal to you students of
| Bryn Mawr, as I have never appealed be-
fore. Be worthy of your new citizenship.
Train yourselves for the highest possible
service. Go back into the teaching profes-
sion. Become scholars and teachers again
Become research workers, physicians,
lawyers, architects. Be satisfied only with
the most learned and strenuous profes-
sions. Become stateswomen, _ political
leaders, wise reformers. It is better for
|the world for Bryn Mawr to produce one
great leader than 100,000 average college
women. We need leaders desperately.
“Let us stiffen up our Bryn Mawr ideals
Really and truly, we play too much. Leave
idleness to Arabs sitting in the desert sands
| Become Bryn Mawr women worthy of our
highest hopes. Show your gratitude to
Miss Anthony, Miss Shaw, Mrs. Pank-
hurst, Mrs. Catt, and all those other
women prophets and apostles, inspired with
a vision of what you might be if they could
make you free. Show your appreciation of
Bryn Mawr and the Faculty and of all the
gifts that we have received to educate you
with. Become students of light and leading.
Your effort, your public opinion, your
co-operation can make of Bryn Mawr a
college of leaders. You can restore, build
again and rear higher and higher Bryn
Mawr's ancient ideals of scholarship. You
can add to them the newer and not less
splendid ideals of civic service, of human
justice and liberty, We appeal to you to
do this. We believe that you will, We are
confident that you will carry forward and
the United States and Syria were too far| greatest woman of America, the foremost upward the new Bryn Mawr.”
Vol. Vil, ‘ie. 2, October 6, 1920
ALL-PHILADELPHIA TEAM ‘SHOWS.
WEAKNESS IN VARSITY ©
Defeats Varsity 8-0 in First Game of the
Year at Bryn Mawr
At a practice hockey match last Satur-
. day the All-Philadelphia team which is
practicing for its tour in England defeated
a scratch varsity 8-0.
Varsity played a scrappy game and
showed a lack of team work. The forward
line was particularly weak, time after time
taking the ball down the field only to lose
it within shooting distance of the goal.
The defense was fair, but was entirely un-
able to cope with the fast forward line of
the Philadelphia team.
The game was a forecast of probable
varsity players. In the forward line there
is a nucleus of last year’s team, with C.
Bickley, '21, captain, at center; A. Nicoll,
'22, at left inside, and E. Cecil, °21, right
wing, around which a new line must be
built, K,. Walker, ’21; M. Tyler, ’22, and
A. Smith, ’23, and E. Howe, ’24, are prom-
ising candidates. In the backfield, in which
E. Donahue, ’22, is the only veteran, G.
Rhoads, ’22, at goal and E. Taylor, ’21, at
full back, both played a strong defensive
game, while M. Krech, ’22, was speedy at
half-back.
GRADUATES NUMBER 72
Assigned Rooms on Campus
Sixty resident students, ten non-resi-
dents and two faculty members make up
the Graduate Club of seventy members for
1920-21. The resident graduates have been
assigned to the following halls and houses:
Denbigh: H. R. Adams, C. I. Baechle, C.
Churchill, M. C. Cobb, M. D. Craigville, M.
L._ Dorado, F. Duncan, D, H. Heironimus,
H. Hibbard, A. M. M. Lehr, G. W. Nelson,
A. F. Preston, R. Rehnburg, H. I. Schim-
merhorn, G. H. Vernier, H. F. Wood, A.
S. Woods.
Radnor: M. Bishop, H. B. Brennun, H.
F. Goldstein, K. Huff, S. 1. Kramme, W.
Meyers, V. E. Neece.
Rockefeller: S. A. E. Chambry, N. L.
Early, I. A. Haupt, T. K. Kelly, H. E&
Kingsbury, L. A. Meridith, N. E. Scudder,
I. Whittier.
Pembroke East: J. M. Galland, M. Gil-
man, A. L. Martin, M. G. Melvin, y =
Mercer, M. M. Monroe, H. E. Spalding.
Pembroke West: M. R. Brown, M. L.
Morrow, M. E. Nicolson, N. Z. Dong, M.
E. O’Brien, C. Robinson, L. L. Sloan, M.
Tonge, M. J. Trotain, E. K. Boyce.
Bettswy-Coed: E. Cohen, M. E. Har-
A. H. Morrison, A. Nason, A. M. Pirie, B.
Shanek, V. W. Spence, L. Fulk, G. E. Wil-
liams.
Mrs. Abernethy: L. C. Gabel
Low Buildings: M. J. Guthrie
Sporting Notes
M. O’Brien, ’20, has been elected Hockey
manager of the graduate teams.
1924 has elected M. Russell and K. Elston
temporary Hockey and Swimming repre-
sentatives.
Beginning last Monday, Freshmen are
being tried out for swimming and diving
during the week by halls.
Class Hockey captains and managers are:
1921, E. Cecil and E. Taylor; 1922, E. Don-
ahue and M. Tyler; 1923, V. Corse and A.
Smith.
There are three wearers of yellow ties on
campus this year: E. Cope, ’21, President
of the Athletic Association; E. Taylor,
'21, and A. Nicoll, ’22.
Varsity Hockey Schedule Planned
Sat., Oct. 16th...
Sat., Oct. 23rd, Germantown vs. Bryn Mawr
Sat., Oct. 30th, Philadelphia vs. Bryn Mawr
Sat... Nov. 6th...... Merion vs. Bryn Mawr
Sat., Nov. 13th, St. Martin's vs. Bryn Mawr
Sat., Nov. 20th, Haddonfield vs. Bryn Mawr
.Riverton vs. Bryn Mawr
Dec. 4th,
All-Philadelphia vs. Bryn Mawr |
Games scheduled at 10 A. M
Sat.,
~ NEWS IN BRIEF
Dr. and Mrs. William Roy Smith have
returned to Bryn Mawr after their Sab-
batical year spent abroad.
Dr. Jean Baptiste Beck, formerly asso-}
ciate professor of mediaeval French liter-
ature, has been appointed associate pro-
fessor at the University of Pennsylvania.
The wedding of Marjorie Canby, ’20, to
Mr. Roger Whitall Taylor will take place
next Saturday at four o'clock at the Sum-
mit Presbyterian Church, Westview Ave-
nue, Germantown, Pa. ~
The wedding of Catherine Dimeling,
ex-’21, to Mr. Howard Stuart will take
place on Thursday at Northumberland,
Pa.
No Freshmen are to be allowed to hold
offices or do any committee work (except
Freshmen class committecs) until after the
second quiz, according to a decision made
by the College Council last year. A list
of Freshmen eligible to office will be sent
to presidents of organizations at that time.
The Appointment Bureau still holds po-
sitions open this Fall to alumnae for ex-
perienced and inexperienced teachers.
time positions, such as resident tutors, can
be obtained by communicating with Dean
Smith.
The “Welsh Rarebit,” the Bryn Mawr
fortnightly paper, will publish its first
copy the beginning of next week. Sub-
scriptions for the “Welsh Rarebit” and the
“Lantern” will be $3 a year. Since the
former is only for campus distribution,
alumnae and outsiders may purchase the
“Lantern” for $2 a year.
Helen Hill has been elected chairman of
the oral song committee for ’21.
Denbigh has been chosen by 1921
class meetings this year.
Song leader for 1922 is Loretta Grim
and for 1923 Marian Holt. Betty Howe
is temporary song leader of 1924.
Eleanor Hurd and Margaret Longear,
'23, have not returned to college.
Mabel MacFerran, ’23, is studying Elec-
trical Engineering at the Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology. Instead of .return-
ing to college this Autumn, Sophie Yarnall,
’23, is coming out in Philadelphia.
Temporary secretary for 1924 is Ethel
Teft.
A bus waits outside Pembroke Arch at
10.30 on Sunday mornings to take stu-
dents to the Bryn Mawr. Presbyterian
Church and to the Haverford Meeting
House.
for
#
-~—
LITERATURE PROVES POPULAR
BY “LIBRARY STATISTICS
19,503 Books Drawn Out in Year
Statistics compiled by the librarians
show Literature to be the most popular
subject for the books drawn from the
library during the college year, October,
1919, to June, 1920, inclusive. Of the
19,503 books taken out, 9029 were classed
as Literature, compared with 1923 books
on History, 720 on Sociology, 548 on
Philosophy, 419 on Religion, 282 on Philo-
logy, 264 on Natural Science and 110 on
the useful arts. Reserve Room books
were drawn out 4, 313 times, and peri
odicals 221 times.
October, when 3427 books were taker
out, and February, when 3464 books
were taken, proved the busiest months of
the year. February 2, 1920, was the
busiest day, showing 556 books drawn
by students and 75 by members of the
faculty.
During the year, 8002 volumes were
drawn out by the faculty.
pa yer eS
Sshersamths
HONOR ROLL TABLETS
SMolheners
PHILADELPHIA
PRATERIGTY EMBLEMS ~ RINGS
SEALS
THE GiFT BOOK
Mailed upon request
Iihustrating and pricing
GRADUATION AND OTHER GIFTS
Full |.
TRAINING RULES ARE COMPULSORY |
FOR ALL HOCKEY PLAYERS
Measure Adopted at od at Firet Meeting of
Athletic Association
The introduction of training rules which
will be compulsory for the first four
Hockey teams of each class and optional
for the fifth teams, was the feature of the
first meeting of the Athletic Association
held last Monday night in the gymna-
‘sium.
The rules which were compiled at a
meeting of the Hockey captains and the
Athletic Board are:
1. Be in bed by 10.45 every sila ex-
cept Friday and Saturday. This rule holds
for Varsity players on Friday night also.
2. Eat nothing between meals, except
crackers, toast, fruit and tea, which may
be eaten two hours before meals and be-
fore going to bed. One cup of something
to drink may also be taken before going to
bed.
Note: This rule does not apply Saturday
and Sunday.
3. Drink plenty of water between meals.
4. All players must bring coats or
sweaters to the field.
Any infringement of these rules shall be
reported by the offender to the captain of
her own team.
Penalty: The offender shall be dropped
to a lower team for at least one game.
66 )7 ATHLETIC APPAREL FOR
COLUMBIA GIRLS AND WOMEN
Consumers’ League Endorsement
%
Gymnasium Suits Sport Skirts
Camp Costumes Swimming Suits
Separate Bloomers Athletic Brassiere
Middies nd Garters
COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM SUIT COMPANY
Actual Makers 301 Corgress St., Boston, Mass.
Light Blue Shows Up Well in Hockey
The first week of Hockey practice has
brought to light good material in the Fresh-
man class, and the light blue promises to
provide a clever team for the match games
this year.
According to E Anderson and M. he,
who are coaching the freshmen, forward
line players are particularly strong. M.
Marie at left wing plays a heady game,
while J. Longfellow, M. Russell and B.
Howe all forward line players, show
promise.
ENUS
PENCILS
R the student or
the superb NENUS Ose
rivals all for perfect
degrees
work, 17 blac
3 copying.
COMPLIMENTS OF THE
Bryn Mawr Theatre
OO as of Distinction for
Discriminating People
W. S. HASSINGER, Prop.
Sessler’s Bookshop
BOOKS : PICTURES
1314 Walnut Street, Philade’phia
Will Exh
Bryn Mawr,
MONDAY
October 11
FASH
to Introduce It on Fifth
Bring It to Bryn Mawr.
Sports Clothes
Franklin Simon & Co.
‘A Store of Individual Shops
Fifth Avenue, New York
MONTGOMERY INN
Fifth Avenue
For Young Women
Higher Quality at Lower Prices Is the Very Lat-
est Fashion —Franklin Simon & Co. were First
Dresses Suits Coats
Blouses Shoes Skirts
Negligees Lingerie Sweaters
ibit at the
Pennsylvania
TUESDAY
October 12
IONS
Avenue, and are First to
Riding Habits
a
THE COLLEGE NEWS
1422 WALNUT. STREET
West of Bellevue Stratford Hotel
"Presents a Formal Display of Fashions for Fall and Winter
Introducing an extensive collection of
PARISIAN AND AMERICAN MODELS IN
Street, Afternoon and Evening Dresses, Coats, Wraps,
Tailleurs Suits, Furs and Millinery .
SOLD HERE ONLY
Fall waa Winter
EXHIBIT
| : OF
| Suits and Coats
Modes Love Nest Sundae
at
HOSIERY Furs bats Soda Counter
| GLOVES
| UNDERWEAR
HATS, - ETC. Phone, Walnut 1329 ST R AWB RI D GE
COLLEGE INN Foster a Dy orks | ane Cire
OCTOBER 7TH AND 8TH Philadelphia, Pa.
FASHIONABLE APPAREL
MANN & DILKS Offer their Patrons FOR YOUNG WOMEN
1102 CHESTNUT STREET Superior Service in ML
. . MARKET, EIGHTH & FILBERT STS.
Cleaning and Dyeing PHILADELPHIA
KIEFERLE Co., INC.
Gowns, Suits,
Topcoats, B. Altman & Co.
Wraps and Waists
to order NEW YORK
ready to wear
10 per cent discount to students
133 S. 18th Street, Philadelphia
———" A FASHION EXHIBIT
Philadelphia
GOLDSMITHS SILVERSMITHS
JEWELERS AT THE
College Insignia
Class Rings
Sry Eaten MONTGOMERY INN
STATIONERY WITH SPECIAL
HAVE ARRANGED TO HOLD
MONOGRAMS, CRESTS and SEALS BRYN MAWR, PENN.
ON
H AT S WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY
AND FRIDAY
OCTOBER 6rx, 7ta AND 8tH
PANCOAST The Selections include Frocks, Suits, Coats,
1730 CHESTNUT STREET :
PHILADELPHIA Hats, Blouses and all the essentials of dress
FOR MISSES AND YOUNG WOMEN ,
INSPECTION IS CORDIALLY INVITED
Born
Elizabeth Colt, 14 (Mrs. Howard Shat-
tuck), has a son, Howard Shattuck, it
born in July.
_ Sarah Goldsmith, ’08 Helis: Yobigh Aves
son), has a son, Joseph Aronson, Jr., born
in July.
Engaged
Louise Wilson, ’21, has announced her
engagement to Guy Garling, of Montreal,
Canada.
Enid Dessau, ’15, has announced her en-
gagement to Carl C. Storm, of New York.
The wedding will take place next April.
Jean Sattler, 15, has announced her en-
gagement to Captain Maurice Marmillot.
The wedding will be this Fall. Captain
Marmillot is in the French army.
Margaret Krech, '22, has announced her
engagement to William Sheffield Cowles,
Yale, ’21, of Farmington, Conn.
Married
Frances Riker, ex-’21, was married on
September 18th to William Shippen Davis,
of New York.
Maud Holmes, ’13, was married in Sep-
tember to Dr. Henry McClure Young, of
St. Louis.
The wedding of Margaret Hobart, ’1l,
to the Very Rev. George Boggan Myers,
Dean of Holy Trinity Cathedral, Havana,
took place last Saturday at St. Luke’s
Church, Easthampton, Long Island. Dean
and Mrs. Myers will live in Havana, Cuba.
Died
Mr. Offutt, father of Nancy Offutt, ex-
'20, died at his home in Baltimore in Sep-
tember.
Officers Memorial to Be Built
As a national memorial to the 3500 offi-
cers who died in the war, the Army and
Navy Club of America will build a $3,000,-
000 clubhouse in New York. Leading archi-
tects of the country will be asked to com-
pete with plans for the building.
A committee of noted designers has been
elected to judge the competitive drawings,
but so far only tentative plans have been
decided upon. In the memorial building
will probably be a central court with bronze
panelled walls inscribed with the names of
commissioned men who died.
The new clubhouse will serve not only
as a monument, but as a home for living
officers, active and retired, in all branches
of the service. It will be much larger than
the present clubhouse which was found in-
adequate to accommodate its members dur-
ing the war, for membership has been ex-
tended to include ex-officers, officers of the
allied armies and civilians interested in the
national defense, as associated members.
ALUMNAE NOTES
Annette Gest, ‘18, is teaching at Penn
Hall, Chambersburg, this Winter.
Letitia Windle, '07, is at Miss Beard’s
school in Orange, N. J.
Dr. and Mrs. Woods (Fanny Sinclair)
sailed for China last week. Dr. Woods is
the Director of the Rockefeller Foundation
at Pekin.
Margaret Ballou, ’20, is in charge of the
girls’ clubs at the Reed Street Settlement in
Philadelphia.
Millicent Carey, '20, took a six-week
course under the Y. W. C, A. in New York
this Summer and is assistant secretary at
the South Baltimore Y. W. C. A. She
has charge of the work for the 3250 school
children in that district.
Kathryne Batchelder, ‘16, M.A., ‘17, is
Principal of Fairfax Hall School, Basic,
Va.
Gertrude Hearne, ‘19, sails with the
American Hockey team on October 20th
for England to play in a series of matches
She will play in her usual position, right
wing. Miss Hearne has been elected man-
ager of the team.
Helen Lautx, ‘12, has resigned as assist-
ant burser at Mills College and has a po-
sition as teacher of Latin in Miss Ransom's
school, Piedmont, Cal.
Alice Hill Byrne, Ph.D., is to be Dean of
Women at Western College, Oxford, Ohio
Jane Beardwood, ‘12, is also there as in-
structer in French.
, _—-. COLLEGE NEWS
oR. JOHNSTON To LEAD EVENING
CHAPEL ON OCTOBER 10TH
The Sunday evening service on October
10th will be led by the Rev. Robert Johns-
ton, D.D., D.CL., of the Church of the
Saviour, Philadelphia.
Dr. Johnston was called to Philadelphia
from his former church in Edinburgh in
1909. He has spoken at Bryn Mawr sev-
eral times, and in 1911-12, 1914 and 1915 led
Bible Classes here. The degree of Doctor
of Divinity was awarded him by the Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania in February, 1920.
Dr. Johnston is the father of K. Johnston,
“al.
MANY ADDITIONS TO LIBRARY
During the summer about 300 new
books have been added to the Library.
Many of these from England and France
are in the New Book Room.
“America and the New Epoch,’ by
Charles P. Steinmetz, giving the author’s
observations in this country and his con-
clusions.
“Bolshevism: An International Danger,”
Paul Meliukov, describing its doctrine and
practice through war and revolution.
“The New Germany,” George Young, de-
tailing the stages of its rise from chaos
and the promise for the future.
“The War Garden Victorious,” Charles
Lathrop Pack. An account of the progress
and success of the war gardens.
“The Grand Fleet 1914-16,” by Admiral
Viscount Jellicoe of Scapa, giving its crea-
tion, development and work.
“L’Art de Notre Temps,” two volumes
in French, one on Millet by Paul Leprieur,
the other on Gustave Moreau by Leon Des-
hairs. Both contain reproductions of the
artists’ works.
“Reynolds,” Randall Davies. The story
of the painter and his works with many
colored illustrations.
“Essays, Mock Essays and Character
Sketches,” reprinted from the Journal of
Education, The essays were written for a
prize offered for imitations of Bacon and
other noted essayists.
“Young Adventure,” Stephan Benet,
Yale, 19. A small but notable collection of
poems.
“Pippins and Cheese,” Charles Brooks.
A series of humorous and homely sketches.
“Shell-Shock and Other Neuropsychiatric
Problems,” as presented in 589 case his-
tories from the war literature.
“The Beginnings of Yale,” Edwin Oviatt,
describing the start and progress of the
University from 1701-26.
“Life of Lord Kitchener,” 3 vols., by
Sir George Arthur. An interesting account
of his active life and experiences, showing
the fine character of the man.
“Wessex Tales,” Thomas Hardy, based
on country legends and traditions,
Convict Ship Three Centuries Old
“Success,” the oldest ship afloat and the
only surviving convict ship, was the first
and last of Britain’s penal fleet of 1790.
She has all the old machines of torture,
leaden chambers, cat and nine tails, man-
acles and pillories still intact.
in Philadelphia
MEROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE:
Italian Lyric Federation presenting
“Aida” Thursday evening, and “Carmen”
Saturday afternoon.
GARRICK: “Mary,” musical comedy.
FORREST: Joseph Cawthorn in mu-
sical play, “Half Moon.”
BROAD: Grant Mitchell in “The
Champion.”
ARCADIA: Cecil de Mille’s “Some-
thing to Think About.”
PALACE: Dorothy Dalton in “Half
Hour,” by James Barie.
Convict Ship “Success” at dock, foot
of Market Street
Fe or Thirty Years
We have made a specialty of furnishing a
HIGH-GRADE
COLLEGE
PRINTING
to the various educational institutions
of the country in the form of Class
a Catalogs, Programs, Circu-
te.
Our facilities for 0 i and binding
are unsurpassed, and we solicit your
patronage.
THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY
1006-1016 ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA
Jones, Peterson & Newhall Co.
BOSTON
WILL DISPLAY
SHOES
AT THE COLLEGE INN
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12th
Joseph G. Darlington & Co.,Inc.
1126-1128 Chestnut Street
A Splendid General-wear Suit
for Autumn at $29.75
For a Suit which gives ample warmth for crisp fall
weather without being bulky or heavy, TWEED-O-WOOL
cannot be surpassed. Its tailored lines and finish impart
the comfortable, well-dressed feeling so much desired.
Nor does long wear alter these admirable qualities! The
$29.75 model in all sizes for women and misses is most
becoming to the average figure and the price is exceptional
for such high-grade apparel. Other styles up to $49.75.
Whenever you go to buy a suit of the TWEED-O-
WOOL type, ask if it is made from heavy WORSTED.
A garment may be all-wool and yet be unsatisfactory
because it does not hold its shape well. Worsted used in
TWEED-O-WOOLS is not only all-wool, but is virgin
long-fiber-wool—that is why it keeps its original trim
tailored lines under all conditions and in all weathers. We
can get plenty of Wool Jersey Suits to sell at lower prices
than TWEED-O-WOOL, but they are far inferior and of
varying standards because they come from different manu-
facturers. In TWEED-O-WOOL Coats and Suits one
gets maximum value and a never changing measure of
excellence.
Sa a ag tar 2m
at Pe, Fame pod
- Office and Clinic Practice.
' aT RECEIVES TRIBUTES
r. Rend read
American almological Society,
held at Hot Springs, Va, June 15-17,
entitled “An Illuminated Pitinieier with
Campimeter Features” and “Factors
Which Influence the Determinations of
the Apparent Limits of Color Sensi-
tivity.”
The apparatus ddtribed and demon-
strated by them at this meeting was
devised at ‘the request of the Society,
and was officially adopted by it as the
standard instrument for clinic and office
work. This apparatus was also de-
scribed at the International Congress of
Ophthalmology in London, in July, by
Dr. L. C. Peter, of Philadelphia, chair-
man of the Section on Perimetry in
As the result
of the papers presented by them during
the past three years before the various
societies and sections of Ophthalmology
in America, Dr. Ferree and Dr. Rand
have been requested to present a paper
at the next meeting of the International
Congress of Ophthalmology which will
be held in Washington in 1922. The
apparatus and work presented at the
meeting at Hot Springs is the direct con-
tinuation and development along clinic
lines of the work done by Dr. Rand for
her doctor’s thesis.
The apparatus and method of working
devised make possible an early and pre-
cise diagnosis of some of the most seri-
ous of the eye diseases. The apparatus
will be patented, and the manufacturing
rights reserved for the benefit of the
medical profession.
ATTITUDE TOWARD CHRIST ALL
IMPORTANT, SAYS DR, BARTON
“Judgments condemn or exalt the judges
who pronounce them,” said Dr. George A.
Barton, addressing the first evening chapel
audience of the year in Taylor Hall last
Sunday night.
Germany who condemned Christ and fol-
lowed mere intellectual achievement was
finally defeated by a world united in op-
position. The attitude one takes toward
Christ is the most vital matter in life.
Neither creeds nor the faults of other
Christians should hinder us from choosing
rightly. The unhappiness and restlessness
of the modern world show what a wrong
attitude toward Him it has taken. It is
when we seek duties not rights, and to give
not to get that we find happiness, said Dr.
Barton.
History of Art in New Groups
Two new groups have been an-
nounced. History of Art may now be
combined with English or Philosophy.
The major course will include 17th, 18th,
19th and 20th century painting, and
Chinese and Japanese art.
CALENDAR
Saturday, October 9th
10.00 A. M.—French Examination for Sen-
iors.
11.00 A. M.—Junior Language Examination
in Taylor Hall.
7.45 P. M.—Social
gymnasium.
Sunday, October 10th
6.00 P. M.—Vespers. O. Howard, '22.
7.30 P.M.—Chapel in Taylor Hall. Ser-
mon by Dr. Robert Johnston, Church
of the Saviour, Philadelphia.
Saturday, October 16th
10.00 A.M.—German Examination for
Seniors in Taylor Hall.
800 P. M.—Banner Show
Sunday, October 17th
6.00 P. M.—Vespers. M.
Service Party in
Foote, ‘21,
President of Undergraduate Asso: | :
| lege community.
Rev.
ciation.
7.30 P. M.——-Chapel, Sermon by the
Stuart L. Tyson.
Friday, October 29th
P. M.—Laatern Night.
te Meeting of sae
Cc. A. . RECEPTION IN GYMNASIUM
WELCOMES NEW STUDENTS
Freshmen ‘and new Graduate students
were, formally welcomed to college last
Saturday evening at the Christian Asso-
ciation reception in the Gymnasium.
Speeches were made by President Thomas,
Dean Smith, the Presidents of the Chris-|
tian, Self-Government and Undergraduate
Associations and the Editor of the College
News. E. Cecil, '21, spoke for E. Cope,
'21, President of the Athletic Association,
who has not yet returned to college.
Amy Martin, President of the Graduate
Club, mentioned the saying that a Graduate
student was one who didn’t know enough
to leave when the show was over. Miss
Martin redefined a Graduate as one who
did not want to leave when only the com-
edy of the show was over, but preferred to
stay to see the main feature.
At the conclusion of the speeches re-
freshments were served, and music for
dancing was provided.
SEVEN FRESHMEN MAKE CHOIR
Twelve new members, including seven
Freshmen, were accepted for the 1920-21
Choir at the try-outs last week. Emily
Kimbrough, ‘21, will succeed Louise
Reinhardt, ’21, as leader. The complete
membership is: Sopranos, E. Matteson,
21; M. Smith, ’21; M. Foot, ’21; L. Grim,
‘22; FP. Norcross, ‘22: A. Orbison, '22:
F, Matteson,. ’23; M. Holt, ‘23: M.
Minott, '24; E. Neville, '24. Altos, C.
Mottu, ’21; V. Grace, ’22; R. Geyer, ’23;
H. F. Mills, ’24; B. Murray, ’24; K. Con-
ner, '24; S. Saunders, '24. Basses, C.
Garrison, ’21; D. Stewart, '23; B. Howe,
'24. Substitutes, E. Hall, '22; M. Tyler,
"22. S. Mand, ‘22: K. Strauss. °23: C,
Rhatt, ’23.
WORLD CITIZENSHIP COMMITTEE
PLANS LECTURES AND DISCUSSIONS
Lectures and discussions have been
planned by the World Citizenship Com-
mittee for the Winter. The committee has
arranged its program aiming to keep be-
fore the college the great social and re-
ligious problems of the day here and
abroad.
To encourage an intelligent and com-
prehensive interest in these problems, a
series of student discussions on modern
conditions in foreign countries has been
planned for the first semester. Russia,
Alaska, Africa and the Indians and Moun-
tain Whites of America may be among the
subjects. In the second semester a course
of lectures on modern social problems will
be given by noted authorities.
Foyer teas to get in touch with foreign
students will be continued this year, and
the committee hopes that they may have
something of the success of the foyer at
Geneva.
The committee recently received a letter
from Geneva containing testimonies from
former students as to what the foyer had
meant to them in promoting friendship and
co-operation.
Health Department Notices
Entering Graduate students and all un-
dergraduates must sign at once for medical
examinations in the gymnasium. A charge
of $5 will be imposed for examinations
after November Ist. Students who do not
keep their appointments will be charged for
examination.
Students coming out of the infirmary
after minor illnesses are required to report
to the warden of their hall, but will not be
required to report at the Dean’s Office or
at the gymnasium.
After illness at home, students returning
to college are required to report to their
wardens and the Dean's Office.
Students are urged to report promptly
during the doctor's office hours for incipient
colds or other illness as a preventive meas-
ure in safeguarding the health of the col-
Dr. Jane Sands’
daily except Saturdays. Sundays, 9.00 to
1000 A. M,
atternoon
THE COLLEGE NEWS
ails wi
ofhce hours will be:|
) 800 to 830 A. M. and 4,00 to 530 P. M.
and no office hours in the}
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty .
Potted Plante—Personal supervision on all orders
807 Lancaster Ave.
FRANCIS B. HALL
HABIT AND BREECHES
MAKER
Phone, Bryn Mawr 570
Chaaslan "Waoatsinal Ontieeeee
840; Lancaster i A of Post Office,
PHONF 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.
Programs
Bill Heads
Tickets
Letter Heads
Announcements
Booklets, etc.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Cards and Gifts
for all oceasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
DRESSMAKING
Mrs. Harry Lindsay
Warner Ave., Bryn Mawr
GOWNS SUITS
WAISTS SKIRTS
JOHN J. McDEVITT
PRINTING
1145 Lancaster Ave.
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicious
D. N. ROSS (Phsrmecy
Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia
Medica, and Director of the Pharmaceu-
tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital.
EASTMAN’S KEODAES AND FILMS
) mae
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
Mary G. McCrystal
LAGee tlk
EMBROIDERIES
NOTIONS, ETC.
842 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
ee
eee a nee em ee
or A gs 5mm —t
FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA.
dee ne eins toree
Speen y she aaa
Snir as anrctrs
Lea ee
MRS. ao HATCHER HARCUM, B.L.
(Pupil of Leschetizky), Head of the School
Mies M. G. Bartlett, Ph. D. | Associate Heads of
Mis 8.M.Beach,Ph.D. | the School
Whittendale Riding Academy
Telephone 886
Good Saddle Horses, Hunters and Polo
Ponies for Hire.
Riding taught by competent instructors.
22 N. Merion Ave., Bryn Mawr
ANNE SUPLEE FRrRaNcES Cooper
GOWN SHOP
(Second floor) 32 BRYN MAWR AVE. (al). McIntyre’s)
We stamp your dress creations with the in-
dividuality demanded in the season’s mode.
ose
ee ee Cee
Scan
DELICIOUS ‘’ BANANA
UNDA ES rLeirs
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
coer i
BRYN MAWR AVENUE
Phone Connection
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
Builders and Housekeeping
HARDWARE
Paints : Oils, : cc 9
Cutlery Ground ocksmithing
Lawn Mowers Repaired and eieonaees
838 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr 170 M. Doyle, Mge.
THE FRENCH SHOP
814 LANCASTER AVE.
Bryn Mavwr, Pa.
SMART GOWNS MADE TO ORDER
DISTINCTIVE REMODELING.
E. M. FENNER
Ice Cream, Frozen Fruits and Ices
Fine and Fancy Cakes, Confections
Bryn Mawr Ardmere.
(Telephone)
Phone, Bryn Mawr 9:6 Moderate Prices
Mrs. Hattie W. Moore
Gowns and Blouses
16 Elliott Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa,
ST. MARY’S LAUNDRY
‘THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO.
CAPITAL, $260,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
CARS TO HIRE
Buick and Paige Telephone Accessories and
Agency Bryn Meer doo Repair Parts
Electrical and Machine Werk our Specialty
MADDEN’S GARAGE
| ancaster Pike, eppenite PRR. Station. Bryn Maw
College news, October 6, 1920
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College
1920-10-06
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 07, No. 02
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-vol7-no2