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.
———————————eeV—_Vw
ee connaae duleecagp mn naeabaes ir cua ctatancenthaaiptealadscentslaegiaarchnamiaaeaabaanee AL Sethe
aint 3 _ eae .
vo ey “ on eee ape e TON Minna ea UALaate aR D TSS A ON
me
The College News
Volume I. No. 12 “BRYN MAWR, PA., JANUARY 7, 1915 Price 5 Cents
| rovinded : by high buildings, so old that
| they seem falling to pieces. One girl we
| visited lived at the top of one of these
to her, but the girl flew into a passion.
It is all very’ well in college to
discuss what we “college-trained women”
CALENDAR
FRIDAY, JANUARY 8
8 p. M.—Lecture, under the auspices of the |
Philosophicat Club. by Dr. Charles M. Bake-
well, of Yale. :
®
SATURDAY, JANUARY 9
8 p, M.—Lecture, under the auspices of the
College Equal Suffrage League, by Madame
Rosika Schwimmer, of Budapest.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 10
6 p. M.—Vespers. Speaker, I. Foster, '15.
8 p. M.—Chapel. Preacher, Dr. Anson |
Phelps Stokes, of Yale.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13
4 p.M.—Faculty tea to the Graduates,
Rockefeller Hall.
7.30—Bible Class.. The Rev. C. Deems.
9.30—Mid-week Meeting of the C. A.
Leader, F. Kellogg, '16.
| houses.
| is no plumbing,
rible.
The stairs we clined were
worn to a slant and ‘so slippery that I
wondered if we should ey¢r again reach.
the bottom alive. the top of the
house we had to feel our way along a
lomg dark gallery until we found the door.
The new tenements outside the old city
are not much better, though they have
a little more air. They are barrack-like
buildings, with narrow hallways, so dark
that we had to go downstairs several
_times to borrow matches to find the
doors. The rooms are very small; there
and the dirt is_ ter-
The first need of the students is hous-
; ing, feeding and clothing, though many
FRIDAY, JANUARY 15
8 p. M.—Dramatie Dancing, by E. Dough- |
erty, for the benefit of the Red Cross,
SUNDAY, JANUARY 17
8 p.M.—Chapel. Preacher, Bishop Rhine-
lander.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 20
Mid-year Collegiate Examinations begin.
WORK IN THE GENEVA FOYER OF
WORLD'S STUDENT CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
to the
| their
| people have been good about letting stu- |
dents keep their rooms without paying.
the Rector of the University is very kind
stranded students. They pay
nothing for. tuition, and they can have,
restaurant tickets, which give them two
meals a day of soup, bread and a plate
Miss Grant has collected
some old shoes, and gives them out to
the girls; also some lengths of flannel,
and on Thursday evenings we meet. at
the Foyer for sewing, and the girls make
and make winter hats. of
of vegetables.
waists,
jany old pieces we can scrape up.
Extracts of a letter from a Bryn Mawr.
Graduate
If this horrible war can do any
good, I think it is that it has helped to
bring a spiritual awakening. So many
people are thrown into the position of
the early Christians, persecuted by the}
strong nations which boast of civiliza- |
tion. Everything that makes life in this |
world worth living is taken from them,
and they have only spiritual force to fall
back on. It is true I ought not
to judge Geneva; I never saw it “befare
the war.” It is a very sober place now.
More people willing to help than there |
is call for workers, that is more people
ready to help the Red Cross and the
Belgians. I suppose it is human nature
to’ wish to be a nun and care for the |
wounded on the battlefield, and to over-|
look the starving Swiss children in the|
streets of Geneva.
I don’t suppose people here have heard |
of settlements; but I never saw any city |
in such need of a settlement! The tene- |
ments in the old city are frightful, dark
passages lead out of the streets. into a_
series of courts, and each court is sur-|
Another problem is. the loneliness- and
despondency and_ philosophical doubts,
and the breaking down of standards.
These questions which trouble us at
Bryn Mawr are much more troublesome
here and the temptations to the women
students. to Fam irregular connec-
tions and to try to forget is a very great
one, and only the Foyer here to fight it.
One student, a young Serb, had scraped
together what money she could, and
came to Geneva. She wanted to study
medicine, having nursed the wounded
soldiers in her ‘village ‘schoolhouse dur-
ing the battle with the Turks. She was
not prepared to enter the University, and
in cramming for the en-
trance examinations. She lived on bread
and tea once a day. She entered the
University. Her health had gone; she
could not study for long at a time. Her
money went. She began to steal tea and
sugar from her landlady. Her landlady
turned her out. Her new landlady dis-
covered that'she was leading-an immoral
life and came to the Foyer about it. Miss
Grant gave the girl restaurant tickets
and warm clothes, and later tried to talk}
one year went
ought to do to regenerate the world, but
when the world does not want to be re-
generated and holds its point of view as
firmly as we hold ours, well
“THE IDEAL COLLEGE”
President Thomas’ Closing Address
President Thomas, in Chapel, on Wed-
nesday, December 22d, taking for her
subject, “The Ideal College,” said that a
college is made ideal by those who are
in the college. We think we can create
something ideal, so we like to. think of
a Utopia. College represents the most
ideal period of our lives,—-we are free
and irresponsible; we have the joy of
rapidly growing ideas, and in college we
have a greater number of = congenial
friends than we will éver have again
President. Thomas said that no greater
generation than
the life of an
be given to a
share in
gift can
the helping to
ideal college.
What
First,
Mawr
upervision, to have the campus and the
buildings as harmonious as_ possible.
Then-—there must be order. An orderly
campus and orderly lecture and gexam-
ination rooms are necessary fer orderly
and efficient work. Order includes court-
esy and ceremonies of a beautiful kind.
Ugly traditions, hazing and
cheering in the dining-rooms, have been
done away with, and we retain such cere-
monies as Lantern Night and singing of
Christmas carols. President Thomas
spoke of the. power of suggestion by
which teachers may re-create the senti-
ment of a whole people. She said that
one of the few things we can learn from
the war is the strength of this power of
leadership—how the whole German point
of view has been molded. Then she said
we should learn to hate low moral stand-
ards. Finally, an ideal college has an
intellectual framework, which will spare
friction.
It is a question whether this frame-
work can be regulated best by the fac-
ulty or the students. It would be the
ideal arrangement if the students would
rezulate their attendance at lectures,
and would go regularly to classes drawn
by hunger for knowledge and stern ‘pub-
lic opinion. The highest aim of an ideal
college is to produce an_ intellectual
equipment, an ability to deal with ques-
tions fairly, squarely and honestly.
C. Down, '16
is an ideal college?
it is the college beatitiful. Bryn
architectural
tries’ to exercise
such as
2
The College News
' Published weekly during the college year in the
interests of Bryn Mawr College *
Managing Editor
Ass't Managing Editor .
Business Manager
Ass’t Bus. Mgr. .
ISABEL FOSTER, '15
ADRIENNE KENYON, '15
MARY G. BRANSON, '16
KATHARINE BLODGETT, '17
EDITORS
CONSTANCE M. K. APPLEBEE
RUTH TINKER, '15 ISOLDE ZECKWER, '15 |
FREDRIKA M. KELLOGG, '16 |
Office Hours: Daily, 2-3
Christian Association Library
Subscription $1.50 Mailing Price $2.00 |
|
|
Entered as second-class matter September 26, 1914, at the |
post office at Bryn Mawr, Pa, under the
Act of March 3, 1879 :
EEE —————————
In January, perhaps, more studying is
done by the Bryn Mawr undergraduates
than in any other month of the year.
Mid-years are looming ahead and a vaca-
tion lies behind which has given us en-;
The
than .in
ergy to work. weather is much
more. suitable May, since it is
often stormy and cold. When everyone
A
library, though noisy, is conducive
-is grinding, no one minds doing it.
full
to work. If we were not Anglo-Saxons and,
therefore, reluctant to show any deep and
serious feeling, it is safe to say that most
would acknowledge that
feel
giving us. such
of us before a
long day of work we grateful to
Providence for work. to
, do, and that study really is a joy. Few
of us would seize an opportunity to say
this-at the dinner-table for-instanee, but.
since we feel this way in theory, would
it not be well if we could think it each
day, and often through the day, during
these next hard weeks?
UNDERGRADUATES PETITION
TRUSTEES
The undergraduates in a meeting, held
17th,
to appoint
December voted to empower the
chair a committee to
up a petition to the Board of Directors
in regard to the cut rule. The petition
contained the history of the cut rule up
to date, and asked for the repeal of the
rule and the substitution of a period of
probation, during which the undergradu-
ates might have an opportunity to prove
their ability themselves to. regulate
cutting. The petition was signed by 354
undergraduates and was submitted to
the Directors’ meeting of December 18th.
T HE
| Chapel; and although I personally have
| I am
| Hy. they, or
corps” in
draw |
COLLEGE NE
CORRESPONDENCE COLUMN |
(The editors do not hold themselves
responsible for the opinions expressed in
this column.)
To the Editors:
I wish to thank the “Two Members of
the Christian Association” for their sug- |
gestion as to the Sunday Evening |
sure that the Religious Meeting
anybody else, have any sug-
'vestions to make as to whom they wish
Committee will consider their ‘ny su
on
to hear at Chapel, I am sure the Relig- |
ious Meeting Committee would welcome
such suggestions, especially if accom-
panied. by high recommendations ~ from
|
several sources. ° |
}
e, . |
Now that the ice has been broken, it is |
L
to be hoped that more and more people ¢_.
will send -in their suggestions, not only |
to attendance at Sunday Evening
as
Chapel, but also as to attendance at}
morning Chapel and as to “esprit de
general,
Sincerely,
LecretiA GARFIELD
if there ‘is
speaker
wonder
for
Dear Editors: — I
some good reason the at
vespers standing on the floor where they
cannot be heard-or seen by those sitting;
If there |
reason for it, it seems to
a few seats back in the chapel?
is no sufficient
me, it would be well to change the cus-|
tom. I have heard that when the service
was started, very few people, perhaps a
dozen or twenty attended, and it seemed
unnecessarily formal for the speaker t
stand on the platform... Now
fifty or sixty people present, and every
Sunday numbers of them are forced to sit
If
the speaker has something to say and
0
there are
where they can neither hear nor see.
really wants to impress it on her fellows,
it is a serious drawback not to be able to |
look all realize
that half those present cannot hear. If
the speakers have nothing to say, and are |
upon the faces, and to
shy and nervous, perhaps the floor is the!
best but I
cidedly say the main part of the floor,-a
in ‘the
place for them, should de-
not the
Won't
innovation
it?
H.
and
place of the leader of the service.
bold make
and let the college likes
N.
lace congregation
I
some leader the
see how
us
ie Y | lege News’
/ nothing to do with asking the ministers,
; almost
| superlatively
NEW OPENINGS FOR COLLEGE
WOMEN
Among the positions offered for appli-
cation to Bryn Mawr students, which are
posted outside Dean Reilly's office door,
are:
Civil Service Commission, Philadelphia
Department of Public Safety—One Hose-
man, salary $900 to: $1100; One Fireman,
salary $1100, with promotion.
Evidently the Civil Service Commis-
sion read in the last issue of “The Col-
* the account of our newly
organised svstem for fire drills. Fire
drills ought no longer to be a “bore” or
a “farce.” They lead to great financial
openings. A Bryn Mawr graduate may, if
she is lucky, obtain a teaching position
at $300, but attendance at fire drills and
skill” in handling a hose may raise her
value to $900, Bryn Mawr knows th
there is nothing a Bryn Mawr student
isn't equal to, but we weren’t so sure
that Philadelphia fully appreciated the
fact.
PICTURES AND PRINT
For the present, reading the newspaper
suffices—-and never were dailies
fuller, soberer, more. pleasing, in morn-
}ing, evening and. Sunday appearance.
The
“New
supplementary
York Times”
publications of the
are notable, also its
good Sunday pictorial sec-
tion. It has grasped the importance of
visual presentation. Photographs are, at
the moment, our primary sources; and
nothing indicates: their relative value
more plainly than the results of a com-
parison between them and the written
accounts in the “London Times’—or any
paper. Their subject matter has become
boundless in its dramatic power; superb
in its absolute unartificiality: pomp and
play have gone under along with better
things. The timely weeklies present the
best features: the “Illustrated London
News,” “Die Woche,” “Saturday Maga-
zine of the (N. Y.) Evening Post,” ‘“‘Scien-
tific American,” “Outlook,” “Literary Di-
gest,” “Harper's Weekly,” “Collier's”;
then the monthlies: “Review of Reviews,”
“National Geographic,” “International
Socialist Review,” “Der Tiirmer’; finally,
English “Puneh,” accepting everything,
with a laugh and “honi soit qui mal y
pense,” and the American “Masses,” re-
pudiating all.
Richard Harding Davis’ war articles in
“Scribner's”; Professor Ross’ series
South America in the “Century”; Kip-
ling’s “Swept and Garnished” in the
Christmas number of the same; G. Lowes
Dickinson in the “Atlantic,” and the
poem, “My Mother's House,” reprinted in
the “Independent” and “Literary Digest,”
are among the last month’s contributions.
One does well to follow events with the
“New Republic,” and to learn the tenor of
the “Fatherland.”
on
J
CAMPUS NOTES
The wedding of Dr. James Miller
Leake and Miss Elizabeth Thruston, of
Baltimore, took place on Wednesday, De-
cember 23rd, at Baltimore.
ton is a graduate of Goucher College of
the class of 1910. Dr. and Mrs. Leake
have taken a house in the village.
The wedding of Dr. Chester Kellogg |
and Miss Olive French took place on
Tuesday, December 29th, at Framingham,
Dr. and Mrs. Kellogg, for the pres-
Mass.
ent, are living at Mrs. Abernethy'’s.
Eugenia Jackson, '14, is engaged to Arthur
Cooney, Of Boston, Mass.
We hear that Dr. Beck, who is a great
authority on musical instruments, has
been trying some organs in Philadelphia, |
and that there is every prospect of a new
one, that Mr. Beck will choose, taking the
place of the one now used in Chapel.
Dr. Bakewell, who is. to address
Philosophical . Club, was Professor of
Philasophy at Bryn Mawr, 1898-1899. He
married Miss M. Palmer, A.B., of Bryn
Mawr, 1899; who was President of the
Philosophical Club. Dr. Bakewell
called, in 1900, to thee University of Cali-
fornia, and subsequently to Yale; as full
Professor of Philosophy.
On December 30th, the and
faculty invited the wives of the- Geolo-
gists, who attended the meeting of the
A. A. S. in Philadelphia, to tea on the
campus.
Madame Rosika Schwimmer, of Buda-
Hungary, .who on
Saturday, is the Secretary of the Inter-
national Woman Suffrage Alliance, Ma-
dame Schwimmer was one of the speak-
ers at the Suffrage Convention at
ville, and also gavesan informal address
at the College Equal Suffrage luncheon,
when she spoke in particular of work
among the women students “in Hungary,
Madame
the
was
trustees
pest, is. to lecture
in whi¢h work she is interested.
Schwimmer came to this country before
the outbreak of the war and has_ been
unable to return home. The subject of
her lecture will be ““‘Women and War.”
Dr. Wilm’s translation of Klemm’s His-
tory Psychology, recently published
by Scribner's, among the books
in the library.
We. are very sorry hear
Jeffers’. aecident During the
she had a severe fall and fractured her
right arm and dislocated her wrist.
The following papers were read before
the American Association for the
societies which met in Philadelphia dur-
Section C. Chemistry,
Professor F. H. Getman, “Reproductibil-
ity of the Cadmium Electrode.” Before
the Geological Society of America, Pro-
F. Bascom, “The Pre-Cambrian
Rocks,” “Magmatic Assimila-
of
new
is
of Miss
vacation
to
Science
ing the vacation:
fessor
Igneous
“THE COI
Miss Thrus- |
Nash- |
.
| tion.” Before the Paleontological Soci-
|} ety of America, Dr. T. C.: Brown, “The
ivolution of the Anthezoa and the Sys-
tematic Position. of Palezoic Corals.”
Before the American Psychological
for Musical Sequences.” Before the
' American Philological Association,
| Lily Taylor, “The Chronology of
' the Augustales and Severi.”
Ross
December’ 21st,
revels were held
On Monday evening,
the annual Christmas
in each of the halls. In Radnor choruses
were sung and the Yule log and the
boar's head were brought in, in true old
english style. After the Christmas din-
ner games were played and Miss Ehlers
made a short speech,
In. Merion, 1918 gave a show called
“The Rejuvertion of Merion,” in which
Santa brought the much-needed
new bathtubs and white paint to Mr. and
Mrs. Merion and their family of four
After-this show reat orches
furnished musie for -dancing.
In Denbigh, during dinner time, stunts
given, the most 1917
and. 1918.
The Pembrokes joined in: having
i cabaret, dancing and stunts during din-
ner time,
Claus
ehildren.
“tra
were
elaborate by
two
tinued,
In
music
dancing to
hand
there
by
Rockefeller
furnished
was
a deerepit
organ
At about nine o'clock the choir, in cap
lanterns,
class
and and carrying
made the rounds of the campus singing
Lown,
Christmas carols, whieh -were-egreatly-ap-
preciated by all the dwellers .on the cam-
At the Deanery, President Thomas,
Miss Crandall, en-
pus.
and at Low Buildings,
tertained the singers with real Christmas
cakes and (ginger) ale
NEW APPARATUS FOR RECORDING
SOUND WAVES
During the Christmas vacation an ap-
paratus has been set up in the psycholog-
which will of
The apparatus
ical laboratory he great
general interest, is de-
signed to give a presentation to the eye
of the difference sound
wave for different musical sounds. When
mounted in front of a projection lantern
in the form. of
the sound wave characteristic of the
speaking or singing voice, or of different
instruments be pictured. on
musical may
the screen. The apparatus was built for
the laboratory by the college mechanician
and is similar to the one demonstrated by
D. ©. Miller
Philadelphia
sounds
in his recent lectures: in
on the nature of. musical
~
sLEGE. NEWS
CAMPUS CHRISTMAS CELEBRATIONS |
\fter dinner the dancing con- |
3
LETTER FROM PARIS BY A FORMER
STUDENT OF BRYN MAWR
“
é
Miss Reilly has kindly consented to
have the following letter printed in “The
News":
Dr. |
My Dear Miss Reilly:
Little did I think when I talked with
you last spring about plans for a Bryn
Mawr Club in Paris, how very far away
was the possibility of carrying them out!
| remember, with considerable appreci-
ation, your kind interest that day.
We have come back to our house here
and find ourselves confronted with the
same problem of refugees and war pov-
erty that we met so steadily all the years
in Turkey, during the Adana
and the Balkan Wars.
1 am doing what I never did in Turkey,
Massacres
that is, to write letters to friends begging
work,
sympathy is drawn to little children, and
for money for. relief My special
brand-new war babies whose fathers are
ourdefense to-day!
Of
one
course there are a thousand and
agencies working in this country,
and | have no doubt that many are mak-
diffi-
culty, at times, in adjusting the propor-
But,
there
ing appeals in America. There is
need.
that
thousands
tion of relief to the greatest
for all that, the fact
are literally
remains
thousands upon
that have been reached by no. agency.
With the coming of winter the problem
of clothing and bedding is a pretty seri-
ous one, when we consider that the prob-
of housing has not been solved.
all
Is
lem yet
Practically of Belviunm and one-sixth
of France devastated—-the greatest
calamity that modern civilization has
known.
For example; when I wrote to the Pre-
fect of Tle-et-Vilaine, at: Rennes, concern-
ing some specific refugee work in which
I have been interested, he answered that
he wished | could extend my “initiative”
io some ten thousand refugees he has
irpon his hands who are altogether desti-
tute.
| hope that will tind occasion to
bring before the students of Bryn Mawr
and
you
in France
am
in
(College the great need
Belgium this winter. I
some definite
have on hand some work in Brittany for
beginning which the Princeton Chapter
of the American Red (Cross See
sent me some boxes of clothing and some
money. Later, I should like to call upon
Bryn Mawr girls for support in continu-
ing the work I have undertaken in Paris
organising
relief work Paris, and
Faithfully yours,
Hece~n Davenport Gisnons, £x- 06
4
ae
Public Peace Meetings
AT HAVERFORD GOLLEGE
Auspices of Haverford Friends Bible School
ls “Dances
Sunday, January 10th, at 4 P. M.
“THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OF
THE PEACE IDEAL”
STANLEY R. YARNALL, Chairman Executive Com-
mittee, Pennsylvania Arbitration and Peace Society;
Vice-Pres, Philadelphia Peace Association of Friends.
FRANCIS R. TAYLOR, Member of Philadelphia Bar.
Sunday, January 17th, at 4 P. M.
“THE GREATER ARMAMENTS PRO-
GRAM FOR THE UNITED STATES”
THOMAS RAEBURN WHITE, LL.D.,. President
Pennsylvania Arbitration and Peace Society; Direc-
tor American Peace Society.
“FACTS AND IDEALS”
RUFUS M. JONES, Litt.D., Professor of Philosophy,
Haverford College.
You and your friends are cordially invited
THE CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION
THE COLLEGE : NEWS
success it was, too, in spite of stormy
weather and new rules! The tree was
gorgeous with balls and tinsel, the stock-
ings were bulging with candy, and the
‘F.W. PRICKITT — BRYN MAWR
Is the authorized DRUGGIST to Bryn Mawr
College and students. Messenger calls
11 A. M. at each hall daily (Sunday
guests were in high spirits. We had excepted) for orders
solos and choruses, recitations and fancy wWhitman’s Candies Sold Store, Lcmeaston Avs.
dances, ice cream and cake. At the end -
we danced a tremendous Virginia reel WM. H. RAMSEY & SONS
to the gayest ragtime the old Gymnasium ~~ wih satin oie
piano ever gave forth. Taylor clock
struck all too soon. ‘Merry Christ-
mases” and “Happy New Years” were
called on every side, and the guests left |
the party with their arms full of glitter-
FLOUR, FEED AND
FANCY GROCERIES
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
F. W. CROOK
ing stockings for themselves and their
friends, vowing there had never been
such a Christmas Party since the famous) . | TAILOR AND IMPORTER
1912 affair, and wishing every Saturday Cjeaning Pressing Remodeling
| brought such a festivity.
908 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
‘THE LODGE Phone Bryn Mawr 323-Y
845 Lancaster Avenue
| Tempting Dinners and Dainty Suppers
The College Committee of Mercy has} specially prepared
raised $267.72 during the first two weeks | Sandwiches, Salads, and Cakes made to
of its existence. This has been sent off | order for College Teas
/at once to the National Committee, to|
‘help meét thé present urgent need in|
| Btlgium and elsewhere. -To this fund | BRYN MAWR, PA.
the halls contributed jas follows: Rad- | Capital, $50,000 Surplus, $50,000
| nor, $3.50; Pembroke, West, $10.25; Pem- | Undivided Profits, $27,141.30
| broke, East, $61.69; Denbigh, $26.59; | Pays Interest on Time Certificates
Travelers’ Checks and Letters of Credit Sold
- A Regular Banking Business Transacted
COMMITTEE OF MERCY RAISES
-HASTY FUND
The Bryn Mawr National Bank
=)
o
=
©
=
=
e
wR
—
bo
on
oO
So
=
=
e
~*
>
on
=
e, $3.50;
ithe Red Cross: Pembrok
teller, $0.69. \BRYN MAWR’ HARDWARE CO.
| : : |
This money was raised by voluntary |
is : = HARDWARE, CUTLERY AND
contributions, a large portion of the | :
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS
The Board Prayer Meeting, which is|amount being made up of five or six ex-|-
held in the C. A. Library every morning | ceedingly generous cheques. Some of it Corner of Lancaster and Merion Avenues
at 8.30, is open to all who care to attend.| also was raised in Rockefeller and the |
Schediiles of the “Morning Watch” may | Pembrokes-by-charging-admission-to_the [BRYN MAWR-—FLOWER STORE
be obtained from A. Grabau or E. Dulles.| Christmas parties. The general interest
| shown in the Committee of Mercy has
Federation Committee.—The Federa- | been most encouraging.
tion Class is to be on the work of the}
World’s Student Christian Federation in}
the European universities: The class will |
meet on Wednesdays at 7.30 in Rocke-|
feller, and will have a different leader | Successor to Ellen A. McCurdy
nem Week. _ |LACES, EMBROIDERIES, RUCHINGS,
Miss Rouse’s report of the Christian |
work in the various universities of Swit- |
zerland is on the Federation desk in the 842 Lancaster Avenue
C. A. Library. |
At the last meeting of the Federation |
Committee it was decided that a secre-|
tary should be appointed to keep the at-
tendance and minutes of the committee.
Anne Davis, "17, has been chosen.
We hope that the members of the Fed-
eration Committee will read, with inter- |
MARY G. McCRYSTAL
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER |
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
SILK HANDKERCHIEFS AND NOTIONS Accommodate 18 People
ALFRED H. PIKE, Proprietor
| _ Florists to the late King Edward VII
Cut Flowers and Fresh Plants Daily
Floral Baskets and Corsages
| Phone, Bryn Mawr 570 807 Lancaster Ave.
| RYAN BROS.
|AUTO TRUCKS FOR PICNICS, STRAW
RIDES, ETC.
Rosemont, Pa.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 216-D
TRUNK AND BAG REPAIRING
The Main Lines Headquarters for Trunks,
Bags and Suit Cases of thoroughly reliable makes,
somethor with a fine assortment of Harness,
Saddlery and Automobile Supplies
EDWARD L. POWERS
903-905 Lancaster Ave.‘ Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Phone 373 @
est, the account of the work among the
students in Geneva. The secretary of
the Foyer has been partly supported by
the Christian Association since 1910. Richard Zeckwer
i Camille W. Zeckwer
The Maids’ Christmas Party.—On tne | 46th SEASON
last. Saturday before the holidays came | ay pranches of Music and Theory Taught.
the Maids’ Christmas Party: And a‘great Send for Prospectus.
} Directors
Branches {
ECK WER’ S _ PHILADELPHIA MUSICAL ACADEMY
1617 Spruce Street
6029 MAIN STREET, GERMANTOWN
446 S. 52d STREET, WEST PHILA.
CLASS AND PRIVATE LESSONS
Special Classes for College Students.
J. R. ZECKWER, Business Manager
College news, January 7, 1915
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1915-01-07
serial
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 01, No. 12
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-vol1-no12