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.
Votume V. No. 8
__
BRYN MAWR, PA., NOVEMBER 21, 1918
Price 5 Cents
ROLLER SKATING REVIVED BY :
VOTE OF ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION
Schedule for Winter Exercise
Roller skating, after a lapse of popu-
larity dating since 1913, has been revived
as a general form of exercise. Definite
action to re-introduce it was taken at a
meeting of the Athletic Association last
Thursday. One hour of rolling skating,
under the rules of the Gymnasium De-
partment, counts as one hour of required
exercise.
Conscripted drill, like conscripted war
work, is to be abolished.
Required gymnastic classes will begin
after Thanksgiving. During the winter
four periods of some form of physical
training, which will include outdoor drills,
dancing, apparatus, folk dancing, fencing,
or organized sports, and one period of
other exercise will be required. This
fifth period may be taken in a shortened
period of quick walking. It is planned
to have a college drill on Wednesdays at
4.15 and company or squad drills on other
days at this time.
PIRATE CREW KIDNAPS 1922
FOR SOPHOMORE DANCE
Skull and Cross-bones Over Gym
At the Sign of the Scarlet Moth, where
brown ale flowed from copper casks
among a gory pirate crew, the Freshmen
found lest Satarday that they had been
kidnapped and were many salt leagues
from twentieth century Bryn Mawr. The
Sophomore dance, more elaborately and
ingeniously staged than by previous
classes, proved as colourful a spectacle
to 1922 as Banner Show itself.
Pewter glittered from the long bar at
one end of the gym, where apples were
piled, bright cups clinked, and many a
mariner stopped to broach a cask and
jest with the graceful bar-maid, M. K.
Southall. At the other end logs blazed
with red paper in a huge stone chimney-
piece, lighted by red lanterns, and ringed
with settles, made from gym tables
turned end-wise. Black skins were deep
underfoot around the hearth.
The Skull and Cross-bones, quartered
with ramping lions and galleons sailing
on the Spanish Main, lined the walls.
Through the small panes of the Swedish
ladder hung against the wall could be
seen a distant castle over the blue.
Pirate Passion Wins Applause
In the midst of the revelry, four roister-
ing blades rolled up to the bar and de-
manded, “Come, wench, we want a drink;
we come ashore through a fearful gale.”
With brimming cups they leaned over the
tables, intent on their cards and dice.
Rivalling to express their devotion in ap-
propriate phrases from countless college
songs, M. P. Kirkland and B. Ferguson be-
sought the bar-maid to be theirs. M.
Foot, the cynic, stroked drooping mus-
tachios, and stretching back in his chair,
commented as M. P. Pirkland, snarling in
disappointed rage, cursed, “Hireusousai
soi deine!”
After a mad jig by P. Ostroff, urged on
by hoarse shouts and clapping, the pirates
bade farewell to the Freshmen in a really
memorable song by H. Hill, ending,
“You've seen our canvas reflecting the
moon,
But called it whitecaps, it vanished so
soon:
So now you'll know us, though moon-
down calls each wandering shade,
And to oblivion our black-hulled galleon
then must fade.”
ALUMNAE SUFFER DEFEAT
Eight of Their Eleven Former Varsity_
Play
Having failed to score at all in the first
half Varsity pulled up in the escond and
beat the Alumne 3-0 in their annual
hockey game last Wednesday. The play-
ing throughout was clean and fairly
speedy, but it was not until the second
half that Varsity showed its true fighting
mettle.
P, Branson '16, former Varsity hockey
captain and president of the Athletic As-
sociation, captained the Alumne team.
Other old Varsity players were M. Bacon
‘18, who captained the team last year
through an undefeated season, J. Katzen-
stein ’06, A. Hawkins '07, M. Kirk '10, H.
Kirk ’14, A. W. Vorys '16, and M. Willard
‘17. Miss Katzenstein, who plays on
Lansdowne’s team, and Miss Hawkins, a
member of the Germantown eleven, have
played for several years on All-Philadel-
phia.
No Score in First Half
During the first half the ball was swept
eontinually back and forth between the
two circles. Varsity’s forward line, play-
ing well together and usually on the of-
fensive, made two goals, neither of which
could be counted because of technical
fouls made just before they were shot.
Mrs. Vorys '16, A. Hawkins ’07, and L.
Windle '07 proved a strong defense for
the Alumne, stopping and hitting out
many shots by Varsity.
Varsity Begins to Fight
The second half started well for Var-
sity with a goal by A. Stiles ’19, shot after
M. Tyler ’19 had dribbled up the alley.
Again the ball traveled up toward the
Alumne goal, carried by G. Hearne ‘19,
but no score was made. After an Alum-
nz spurt by M. Willard '17 and J. Katzen-
tein 06, stopped by E. Donohue ’22, Miss
Hearne took the ball down the field again,
and her shot across the circle was shoved
into the goal by Captain Tyler. A period
of uneven fighting followed, during which
Mrs. Vorys made one especially difficult
stop. Then, after a long dribble by Miss
Katzenstein, Varsity took possession of
the ball once more and scored another
goal, made by D. Rogers '20. Time was
called shortly after, with the ball in
Varsity’s hands in the enemy territory.
Line-up:
Varsity Alumne
M. Tyler ’19 (c.)*. L. W. .J. Katzenstein ’06
M. Tyler ’22....... L.I. ...H. Schwartz ’18
Te Te en es Cae Sc caincs M. Kirk ’10
A. Stiles °19*..... RI. ....M. Willard ’17
G. Hearne ’19.... R. W. .......H. Kirk ’14
E. Biddle '19..... L. H. ...A. Hawkins ’07
M. Carey ’20..... Me sien M. Bacon "18
B. Weaver '20..... R.H. ....P. Branson ’16
K. Cauldwell '20.. L. F. .....L. Windle ’07
R. F. .E. Corstvet, Grad
A. M. Vorys "16
E. Donohue "22... .
og. & ce
Referee—Miss Applebee.
Time of halves—20 min.
VARSITY DRAMATICS POSTPONED
The date of Varsity dramatics has been
indefinitely postponed on account of com-
plications in the choice of plays. The
FOUNDER OF “COLLEGE NEWS” GETS
. OUT PEACE EXTRA IN 16 MINUTES
Had Papers on Street by 3.08 A. M.
Just 16 minutes after she had received
the “Flash” telegram, “Armistice signed,”
at 2.52 o’clock, Monday morning, Isabel
Foster '15, telegraph editor of the Water-
bury Republican, had an “extra” for sale
on the streets. This was at 3.08 A. M.,
twenty-three minutes after the news was
announced by the State Department at
Washington.
Miss Foster is the founder and first
managing editor of the College News.
After graduating from Bryn Mawr she at-
tended the Columbia School of Journal-
ism and later took a position on the Re-
porter, Berlin, N. H. She has been on
the Waterbury Republican since last
spring. Miss Foster’s home is in Ports-
mouth, N. H.
HON. P. W. WILSON SPEAKS ON
AMERICA AS LEADER IN YEARS
OF RECONSTRUCTION
Friendship Between Great Britain and
The United States Necessary
“The next few years are to decide how
long the United States and the British
Empire are to be friends,” said Mr. P.
W. Wilson, correspondent of The London
Daily News and Member of Parliament,
who spoke in Taylor last Friday night,
instead of Colonel Evans, who was de-
tained in New York.
The heritage of mistress of the seas
and first world power, according to Mr.
Wilson, seems to have passed from Great
Britain ‘to the United States, who is
richer now than before the war, while
England has spent between one-half and
one-third of her total wealth in this war,
raising forty billion dollars and paying
one out of every three dollars for taxes.
The financial center of the world has
passed from London to New York.
Added to this expenditure, England has
supplied ninety million tons of coal and
ninety-six million tons of explosives and
has felt the tremendous industrial strug-
gle accompanying such an output; she
has lost two thousand merchant vessels,
she has lost one million men and has had
two and three-quarters million casualties;
she has suffered from the pressure of the
food shortage and has still sheltered five
hundred thousand Belgian and French
refugees.
“If England takes these matters with
a cheerful countenance, she hopes to have
the reward of a spiritual friendship with
the United States, which is needed to es-
tablish the common standard of civiliza-
tion,” Mr. Wilson said.
Mr. Wilson’s own home was under air
raids twenty or thirty times, during
which he and his wife put the two young-
est children under the dining-room table
while they “tried to be as funny as pos-
sible.”
Charles Dickens founded the London
Daily News, on which Mr. Wilson is cor-
respondent.
SERVICE CORPS PLEDGES LEAVE
LARGE PROPORTION OF CLASS
QUOTAS STILL TO BE RAISED
The results of the Service Corps pledges
given out last week in relation to the
class quotas are:
Shoes That Danced and Three Pilis in a
Bottle have been given up, and no substi-
tutes selected as yet. Rehearsals for The
Merry Death have Started. The cast of
the play has been chosen, but not yet)
confirmed by the office.
MR. NICHOLS TO INTERPRET
YOUNGER BRITISH POETS —
One of Oxford Elizabethans 4.4
“One of the Three Musketeers” is the
name given in a recent article in the
Literary Digest to Mr. Robert Nichols,
the young British war poet, who will
speak here tomorrow evening.
Though Mr. Nichols had been at col-
lege less than a year when the war broke
out, he was already among the “young
Oxford Elizabethans,” a group of poets
of the younger generation. It is because
he comes as an interpreter of these—
many of whom have fallen in battle—that
Mr. Nichols sometimes alludes to him-
self as an “Ambassador of the Dead.”
The impressiom he creates, according to
the New York Evening Post, is that of “a
Strangely aged boy, walking slowly and
with a cane, referring to notes lest his
memory go back on him, and with that
peculiar shell-shocked look on his face
with which most of us are not yet ac-
quainted.”
Since wounds and shell-shock removed
Mr. Nichols from active service, he has
been working for the British Government
on light duty. He is at present writing a
brief history of the sappers as the result
of a visit to the Ypres salient,
* * * * *
The lecture will be in Taylor at eight
o'clock. The English Club, under whose
auspices Mr. Nichols is speaking. will
charge admission for the benefit cf the
Service Corps, 50 cents and 75 cents for
members of the College, 75 cents and one
dollar for outsiders.
1909’s “SUNNY JIM,” JUST
RETURNED FROM FRANCE,
SPEAKS IN CHAPEL
Task Was to Get News of Missing
IS RETURNING WITH F. BROWNE ‘09,
NEW SERVICE CORPS MEMBER
Speaking in chapel last Thursday, Shir-
ley Putnam '09, one of the first Red
Cross searchers, told of the overseas
work of the Red Cross Casualty Bureau.
Miss Putnam came from France in Au-
gust, and returns this month with more
searchers, recruited during her stay.
Frances Browne '09, President of Self-
Government here her Senior year, will
accompany her as a member of the Serv-
ice Corps. Miss Putnam was 1909's
“Sunny Jim,” President of the English
Club, and winner of the George W. Childs
Essay Prize.
At first a nurses’ aide, she transferred
to the Casualty Bureau in March‘and was
sent to a hospital in Lorraine, while her
companion searcher, M. G. Brownell '15,
went nearer the front to Toul. Miss Put-
nam was to get news of the “missing”
from their wounded comrades and send it
home to anxious relatives. Armed with
lists of missing and the admissions list
of the hospital, she told a mystified C. O.
her intentions, and managed to identify,
on her first round, twelve missing men,
members of a patrol seen before the at-
tack by one of the hospital patients.
It was her duty also to write details to
the parents of the men who had died in
the hospital.
Telling of one of the first reunions of
Bryn Mawr workers abroad, Miss Putnam
said that they sang so hard that they
brought down an air raid.
The canteen run by Cynthia Wessen
‘09 is so fine, Miss Putnam said, that
General Pershing sent for pictures of it
to exhibit as a model canteen
To Be
Quota. Pledged. Raised.
Graduates .... $500 $139.00 $361.00
re 1068.00 468.00
BE sc cuccias a Be 716.50 467.50
1921 . 1872 1169.00 703.00
+1932 1638 1029.88 608.12
BE. Luetemeyer was assistant managing
editor this week.
‘With the news of the signing of the
armistice last week, the thoughts of all
turned back to days before the war, and
all began to think in terms of “back to
normal.” As time passes and it is evi-
dent that the world itself has not re-
turned to “normal,” and may not do so
for many a year to come, the query rises
as to how our position and conduct may
be defined and directed.
Sudden abolition of all war plans will
leave us as much at sea as continued in-
tense pursuit of them. The solution
seems to be to let ourselves move grad-
ually into the carefully preconceived
grooves of a more regular existence, with-
out returning wholly to the indifference
of mind too prevalent before the war.
Everyone has gained a great impetus
to service because of the war, and added
practical experience. These are not
lightly to be set aside, but utilized in
every way in the gradual adaptation to a
peace schedule. Patience will be needed
for the adjustment, but with it opens a
great new vista of practical service and
fellowship to those who stop to consider
what peace time with the codperative en-
ergy released from war purposes can
signify.
“An Apostle in the High Aésthetic Band”
Once there was an undergraduate who
was born esthetic and had been encour-
aged in every way. She wore a purple
robe with the signs of the zodiac around
the hem in green. Her hair floated un-
trammelled except for a fillet of leaves
about the brows. A _ knot of violets
nodded at her throat. She would have
left off her ground-grippers, had it not
been for the rusty hairpins that she could
see squalidly sprawling about the cement
walks. Often you might see her in the
afternoons in winter leaping about the
gym, pretending it was a bosky dell.
As long as she stuck to Taylor, she
managed to get away with everything.
She rarely failed a course, in spite of the
fact that she prepared for quizzes and
examinations by lying solitary beside
some purling brook and taking in the
ozone.
Finally she had a course in Dalton. It
had had to come. Day after day she
would pore over noxious brews that had
been ripening for weeks or old potatoes
with that rich gamey smell. She learned
that water is not limpid until it is dis-
tilled.
For a long while she was cast down,
and wore a black veil floating about her.
The strain seemed to grow unbearable.
She had not reckoned on the unerring
hand of science. Shortly after the mid-
year examinations she was found, ground
grippers upward, lying on the floor of
Dalton with a forceps through her heart.
ROLLER SKATES SUPPLIED BY
CAMPUS FIRM
Believing that many students would
find themselves unequipped for the new
sport of roller skating, 1919 has estab-
lished an agency in every hall to take
orders for skates at the regular retail
prices, all commissions to go to the class
Service Corps Fund. Orders may be
|two offices of Circulation Manager and
Advertising Manager. F. Clarke 19 is
Advertising Manager.
we pe held va ‘Miss tata was
created last spring when the old office of
Business Manager was divided into the
COMPETITION BRINGS OUT
GOOD MATERIAL
4
Eight Sophomores Out for “News” Editor-
ship
Eight Sophomores have entered the
News editorial competition which began
last week. They are V. Evans, H. Farrell,
F. Hollingshead, F. Howard, E. Kales, N.
Porter, F. Riker, and A. Taylor.
In covering the assignments for last
week many of the competitors showed
real initiative and ability. A cut will be
made next week and the new. editor an-
nounced in the last issue before Christ-
mas,
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
(The editors do not hold themselves
responsible for opinions expressed in this
column.)
To the Editors of the College News:
As the writers of the note signed “Con-
scious Objectors,” in the News of October
31st, we wish to retract our statements
made then, and publicly to apologize for
our impetuous communication. We, to-
gether with other members of the class,
have come to understand the significance
of the course and realize the injustice of
our criticism.
To the Editor of the College News:
With the news of peace comes a feeling
of relaxation; we think that all the tasks
of the pastvyears are over. But don’t let
us forget that a large army will be on
duty abroad during the winter and that
sock-making is as vital as ever. A new
and reliable stock of wool has been se-
cured from Philadelphia, so that the
work on the machines should go smoothly
and fast from now on. All we need is
faithful workers. If you don’t intend to
do faithful work come and let me know—
don’t keep the space from someone who
will. Anyone who can help will be wel-
come at any time, but regular times are
preferable.
I should like to ask all those who are
knitting cuffs to machine socks to finish
and return them as soon as possible so
that the old wool may be disposed of be-
fore we start on the new.
Dorothea W. Walton,
Director of the Knitting Machines.
SENIOR STUNT A
MODEL OF SOBRIETY
A stunt, written, cast, and rehearsed
since last Saturday morning, is to be the
focus-point of the Senior Reception to the
Freshmen on Saturday night.
The subject matter of the piece, like its
name, stands unrevealed to the public,
but the Stunt Committee has authorized
the statement that it will prove a quaint
contrast to "19’s Freshman Show, showing
the sobering effect of four years of the
higher education.
K. Cauldwell Strongest Student
With 548 points on the strength list, K.
Cauldwell '20 is the strongest undergrad-
uate in college. Following her, in order,
are M. Warren "21 (457), F. Day "19 (448),
D. Lubin "21 (447), M. Tyler "19 (445), B
Weaver "20 (440), and B. Muriless ‘22
(434).
other,”
‘her vars cats nck os baghd edigh a: think
|that we can go on living in the same old |. _
,| ay as before the war and not have an-|
Dr. Sheldon continued, “just as
the battle line has for all these months
been drawn in Belgium, it is still drawn
between the industrial classes, the races |
and the nations.”
Dr. Sheldon characterized the ‘a
trial situation by declaring that instead
of “doing business to make men, many
of us are doing men to make business.”
Unless we tear down the line and appre-
ciate that the only sacred things in the
world are men and women, the war is not
yet won.
“Profit-sharing is one way to bridge the
gap between the rich and the poor,” Dr.
Sheldon said in an informal discussion in
Denbigh sitting-room after chapel. “Our
business men have brains enough to
work a way out. All we need is the spirit
of willingness.”
The Silver Bay delegation, many of
whom had courses with Dr. Sheldon last
summer, had supper with him in Merion
before the service.
TEA FOR MINISTERS
LAST SATURDAY
About fifty-four undergraduates and
graduates attended the tea for ministers:
of the neighboring churches, given last
Saturday by the C. A. Federation Com-
mittee. The guests of honour were Dr.
Barton, Mrs. Mutch, Dr. and Mrs. Carter
of the Church of the Good Shepherd in
Rosemont, and Dr. and Mrs. Townsend of
the Chureh of the Redeemer.
SIX OUT OF THIRTEEN PASS
UNLUCKY FLU ORAL IN FRENCH
Out of the thirteen Seniors who took
the French oral deferred for influenza pa-
tients last Wednesday (November 13th),
six passed, and seven failed. Three
credits and one merit were added to
1919’s record in French.
The grades are:
Credit—M. Gilman, H. Reid, H. Spald-
ing.
Merit—BE. Biddle.
Passed—A. Ehlers, M. Martin.
Failed—M. France, D. Hill, T. Haynes,
BE. Howe, E. Lanier, A. Warner, R. Wood-
ruff.
MEDICAL SOCIETY
ELECTS OFFICERS
H. Stone '21 has been elected president
of the Medical Society, M. Foot '21, vice-
president and treasurer, and D. Lubin 21,
secretary and press agent. At a supper
last Thursday the following new mem-
bers were admitted: E. Howes ‘19, M.
Janeway '19, S. Taylor ’19, J. Peabody '19,
M. O. Hawkins ‘19, M. Littell ’20, D.
Klenke ’21, H. Riggs '21, M. Morton ’21,
B. Murless ’22, K. Haworth '22, M. Voor-
hees °22.
NEW WORK FOR CONSCRIPTION
BOARD
The first peacetime meeting of the War
Council, held Monday night, decided on
a new program for the Conscription
Board in view of the abolition of Con-
scription, which takes effect after
Thanksgiving.
The Conscription Board, it was voted,
will take over the duties of the Registra-
tion Department, which was abolished. In
this connection it will co-operate with the
College Appointment Bureau in helping
to get students to get positions for the
summer or permanently, and in arranging
a vocational conference similar to that
held last spring.
The ultimate fate of the War Council
was also discussed. This question will be
brought up again later.
‘vidual lecturers to the different colleges.
Professor Casamion will lecture at the
University of Pennsylvania as well as at
Bryn Mawr.
‘Mme. Casamion, who is a daughter of
M. Jusserand, French Ambassador to the
United States, and M. Koechlin, well-
known French musical critic, will accom-
pany Professor Casamion. They will be
entertained at luncheon at-the Deanery.
ARMY OFFICER HAS NOTHING BUT
COMPLIMENTS FOR BRYN MAWR
DRILL
Hopes That It Will Not Be Given Up
An officer in the U. S. Medical Corps,
Lieut. Balduin Lucke, husband of Dr. Rea,
saw the College drill last Wednesday on
the lower hockey field.
“T have nothing but compliments for
the drill,” Dr. Lucke told a News reporter
afterward. “I considered it very nicely
executed, especially the setting-up exer- .
cises, which were as good as in some of
the old established camps. I hope the
College is going to keep them up.”
Speaking of the value of the setting-up
exercises, Dr. Lucke said he had recently
seen pictures taken of soldiers before
they had taken the exercises and after.
The differences, he declared, were unbe-
lievable.
Dr. Lucke has recently been stationed
at Camp Benjamin Harrison and at Camp
Taylor.
COMMUNITY CENTER WORK STARTS .
Certificates Given to Volunteers
Community Center volunteers from col-
lege began work last Monday. Good vol-
unteer assistance will be rewarded this
year with a certificate, according to a
plan of Jane Smith ’10, in charge of the
Center, and E. Williams '20, chairman of
the Social Service Committee. The cer-
tificates will be given for regularity at
jobs, attendance at conferences, and read-
ing done. “They will be valuable to any-
one who wants to continue Social Service
activities after college, or during vaca-
tions,” says Miss Williams.
Conferences for all the workers will
meet at the Center once a month, when
prominent Social Service workers will
speak. Sectional meetings for those in-
terested in some particular branch of
work, such as playgrounds, will be held
every month at the college. The theory
of the work will be discussed, and read-
ing assigned. ‘
| Milestone Needs Furniture
Two rooms at the Milestone, the new
Community Center house, have to be fur-
nished. The Social Service Committee
will be grateful for rugs, pictures, flower-
boxes, or furniture. A boy’s tool-chest,
gym mats, basketball baskets, and library
books are also badly needed.
Anyone with a free hour between 12
and 1, who would help with school
lunches at the Center, is asked to speak
to E. Williams, Liysyfran. The food is
served to the children every day at cost-
price, and offers them something hot to
supplement their cold lunches.
36 O. D. Shirts Patched This Week
Only 36 O. D. shirts were mended in
the Red Cross rooms this week on ac-
count of the difficulty of the patching.
Bach worker is responsible for the gar-
ment she mends, and tags it with her
nare.
The average attendance was 38 people
per day. Fourteen was the average at
this time last year.
=
ik MS tie oven a too Ov) alk
the Freshman forwards showing speed,
but scoring only once, when A. Nicol,
right wing, drove. the ball home. The
half ended with a score of 1-0 in favor of
1922.
In the second, the green team took the
initiative, and carried the ball again and
again into the Freshman circle, only to
crumple before an almost impregnable de-
fense. After a prolonged scrap in front
of the cage, when G. Rhoads, Freshman
goalkeeper, blocked shot after shot, M.
France scored the first point for the
Seniors, M. Tyler '19 pushed the ball
across the line for the next, and in the
last two minutes of play G. Hearne,
Senior center forward, shot in another
with a smashing blow directly before the
goal.
Just before the last whistle F. Robbins
'22 carried the ball down the field for a
final tally by M. Anderson, leaving the
score at 3-2.
Line-up:
1919 1922
H. Johnson...... Me Wiccan *A. Niéoll
A BOS ccs... REL... OR Anderson
@. Hearne (c.)*.. C.F. oii M. Tyler
My BTONOO 6 acess a Eee F. Robbins
MM. Tyr ese es Be Wie cc ves A. Orbison
FP. Clarke. ....... Re baked H. Guthrie
B. Biddie........ Oe osiiis sa P. Smith
B. Lanier ........ LHe ees M. Krech
BH. Hurlock....... R. F. ..E. Donohue (c.)
Wh cs EA Oe ols ccs pas 00s R. Neel
BD, WetmOr neces Re ivan es G. Rhoads
Substitutes—-1922: First half, O. How-
ard for F. Robbins; second half, F. Rob-
bins for O. Howard.
Referee—Miss Applebee.
Time of halves—20 min.
Senior First Team Reaches Finals
1920 Meets Defeat in Splendid Game
The speediest game of the hockey sea-
son was played last Thursday when 1919
eliminated their old rivals, 1920, from the
preliminaries by a score of 6-4. Although
a trifle wild at the beginning the game de-
veloped into a hotly contested and bril-
liant match.
1919’s forwards, especially G. Hearne
and M. Tyler, did unusually dashing and
speedy work. With the exception of E.
Biddle, who played her usual dependable
game at center half, and E. Lanier, the
green defense was negligible, but once
the forwards got the ball they made up
for backfield deficiencies.
On the Junior team there was rather
less teamwork, and more individual stars.
K. Cauldwell at left full covered the en-|°
tire back field, and M. Carey and B.
Weaver played up well against the superb
Senior offensive. D. Rogers, M. Mall, and
H. Zinsser showed good form, but lacked
the hammering perseverance necessary
to win.
Line-up:
1919 1920
Ws BM eaves Bi WES see esae H. Zinsger
OO. 6cks ces L.I. ......*H. Holmes
G. Hearne (c.)°*... C.F... 6305 *D. Rogers
i DE oes ess Maa fecasece L. Sloane
H. Johnson*..... Me asia **M. Mall
ae L. H. ..E. Luetkemeyer
i eae... «5. CG. Ho. .....: ME. Carey (c.)
D. Peters........ Bi ckceess B. Weaver
M. Thurman...... Boe vis K. Cauldwell
E. Hurlock........ R.F. ......A. Moebius
PY were eS acta cans D. Clark
Substitutes—1919: H. Reid for H.
Johnson.
Referee—Miss Applebee.
Time of halves—20 min.
Line-up:
1921 1922
D. McBride...... Le Wee foc *A. Nicoll
+M, Smith*....... La Fe usu. E. Anderson
L. Beckwith...... C.F O. Howard
HE. JOMOS.. 5... R.I. .,.....*F. Robbins
a re BW cosas *A. Orbison
meeeend..... LB. A. Guthrie
me eengeee..... CH oo. P. Smith
mm, werren (c,..;: RIB. ......5. M. Kreck
Bi POPIOP oes. es TE. beenevasen R. Noel
BTA. o.oo. R.F. ..E. Donohue (c.)
K. Woodward..... 5s G. Rhoads
as center half, put up a
t, both offensive and defensive,
gE Seal showed herself a reliable
right wing.
2S Donohue, using her stick expertly,
Played right fullback fairly far up the
field, strongly supported by her half. H.
Guthrie, and the forwards, especially A.
Nicoll, who picked up the passes quickly,
and A. Orbison and F. Robbins, who made
several telling dribbles down the field.
Semi-darkness slowed down an other-
wise speedy game in the last few minutes
of the second half.
Substitutes—1921: E. Newell for M.
Kirkland; 1922: M. Crosby* for F. Rob-
bins.
Referee—Miss Applebee.
Time of halves—35 min.
SOPHOMORE SECOND WINS
FIRST GAME OF FINALS
Individual rather than team-play won
1921 the first game of the Second team
finals from 1920, last Tuesday, by a score
of 2-1.
E. Cope ’21, left full, and B. Ferguson
'21, right half, held ’20’s somewhat broken
line at bay during most of the game. M.
Hardy ’20, left inside, fought hard to
carry the recovered ball down the field
and succeeded in making the Juniors’
only goal.
'21 WINS SECOND
TEAM PRELIMINARIES
Reds Take Rough Game By Score of 3-1
In a rough game last Thursday 1921's
Second team put the Freshmen out of the
preliminaries by defeating them 3-1 in
the second game of the series.
The playing of E. Newell and H. James
for the red was the most conspicuous of
the match. Several sharp scrimmages
around the red goal ended the game with
more snap than it had begun.
Line-up: nents. For ’19 D. Peters and M. Moseley
1920 1921 fought hard, and achieved most.
N. Gookin...... 1 a ee *H.James| Line-up:
G. Hess... ....... Bek hshaa ees *K. Mottu} 1919 1920
M. K. CRG inc os 0 05 Cyd... veer Be ie. cw... N. Gookin
Me eee sc. Tad, kiss R. Marshall | M. Moseley**..... R.I. ........M.K. Cary
ER cs ie la We oes cee E.wegta tha... C.F. .**E. Stevens (c.)
M. Kinard....... R.H. ..... B. Ferguson | §, Macdonald..... L.I. ....... **T. James
H. Kingsbury... C.H. ........E. Newell/ y, Coombs....... BW. vices V. Park
M. Train........, L.H. ......+. E. Goggin | F. Howell........ BM. cc M. Kinard
L. Kellogg. ...... R.F. .... .-E. Cope |p Peters........ C.H. ....H. Kingsbury
ME, BOWE. 68 occ re M. Foot] 7 Peabody,..... ee *M. Train
we, WIKRE... +» Gs senssecest ————] A. Thorndike... . . . Oe csite B. Williams
Substitutes—1920: 1. Arnold ‘21 for H.)p pay........... BP s..46 L. Kellogg
Kingsbury. C. Hollis (c.)..... L.F. .....M. R. Brown
| seniors down to defeat in thelr frst en-
: counter last Wednesday by a score of 4-3. |'
The blue team took the offensive from the |’
beginning and kept it throughout the first
half, scoring 2 goals to '19’s 0.
In the second half the Seniors rallied.
A. Blue, center forward, took the ball
down and made two goals in quick suc-
cession, followed by a third goal for 19
made by I. Coombs. L. Kellogg, fullback,
and E. Williams, goal, showed up well in
’20’s defense. Their hard strokes, resisted
by '19’s halfbacks, kept the ball moving
from one end of the field to the other till
the Junior forward line took the ball out
of the greens’ hands and cancelled '19’s
lead by sweeping it twice more into the
goal.
Line-up:
1919 1920
H, Ret... 55555 BO oii N. Gookin
BM: Chagvourne... B.1...: ...<.. M. K. Cary
AM, Bie kes ec C.F. .**E. Stevens (c.)
BE. Macdonald..... L.I. ........¢¢T. James
V. Coomba*®......: BW. oii V. Park
DD. Peters. . 0563, Po icues M. Kinard
A. Landon....... C.H. ....H. Kingsbury
J. Peabody....... WARE Noe cs eeu M. Train
We si he kicce Me cise, L. Kellogg
C, Hollis (c.)-. ..... BA Riss veces M. Brown
A. Thorndike...... Ce ass E. Williams
Substitute—1920: G. Hess for M. Cary.
Referee—Miss Hammer.
- Time of halves—15 min.
Second Game: 5-2 for 1920
1920's second team gained their second
victory. over 1919 last Friday, 5-2, winning
the right to face 1921 in the finals.
Throughout the game the playing was un-
even, the Senior defense, with the excep-
tion of D. Peters at center half, being ut-
terly unable to check the blue forwards in
their onward sweep.
Captain Stevens, V. Park, M. Train,
T. James, and H. Kingsbury did a large
share of 1920’s work. Usually on the of-
fensive they played all around their oppo-
Substitutes—1919: A. Collins for F.
Howell, S. Taylor for A. Collins, R. Ham-
ilton for F. Day; 1920: A. Rood for M.
Kinard.
Referee-—-Miss Hammer.
Time of halves—15 min.
urday in wie. ‘Varsity ‘defeated ‘ban
downe by a 6-0 score. M. Morgan ex-’15
captained the Lansdowne team.
A disorganized forward line, shooting |
wild and too far ahead, was mainly re-
sponsible for the visitors’ defeat. Their
defense within the circle was excellent, -
but their fullbacks played so far behind
their halves that the field was usually
clear from one 25-yard line to the other
for Varsity’s assaults. Added to this the
fact that B. Weaver '20, Varsity right
half, played back, covering Lansdowne’s
swift left wing, while E. Donohue '22, at
full, passed directly to the forwards,
made for quick advances by the home
team.
For Lansdowne, J. Katzenstein '06
played her usual quick game at left in-
side, and A. Bergen, an All-Philadelphia
player, male many good long shots at
center half.
G. Hearne '19, D. Rogers '20 and M.
Scott '19 dribbled and passed fairly well
for Varsity, and E. Donohue '22 showed
her usual headwork and omnipresence in
the backfield. A spectacular play oc-
curred in the second half when M. Tyler
‘19, after losing the ball twice in the cir-
cle, recovered it and made a goal from a
particularly sharp angle. As goal, D.
Clark '20 made one fine stop the only time
her line was seriously threatened.
Line-up:
Lansdowne Varsity
P. Wheeler....... L. W.**M. Tyler '19 (c.)
J. Katzenstein.... L.I. ......M. France’l9
A. Wallace....... C.F. ....*D, Rogers '20
Te POOR vices. R. 1... +. af, Nigel) "32
M. McMahon..,... R. W. ..**G. Hearne '19
BPO occ cies Lie ides E. Biddle '19
A Pere... ..... Oe cic iss M. Carey '20
K. McLean..:.... R. H. ..B. Weaver '20
Mrs. Donnelly.... L.F. .....K. Cauldwell
A. Maroy... . 6... R. F, ...E. Donohue '22
Mrs: Tuttle.....:;.. MP occ cs D. Clark '20
Substitutes—-Lansdowne: M. Morgan
(c.) for P. Wheeler, M. Morgan (c.) for
E. Weil; Varsity: F. Robbins ’22 for M.
France '19, *M. Scott '19 for A. Nicoll ‘22,
H. Guthrie '22 for E. Biddle ‘19, F. Clarke
"19 for H. Guthrie ’22.
Referee—Miss Applebee.
Time of halves—30 min.
Lansdowne took the place of Haddon-
field, which had been scheduled to face
Varsity last Saturday, but were unable
to keep the engagement.
GRADUATES DEFEAT JUNIOR
SECOND TEAM 83
The Graduate eleven swept 1920’s sec-
ond hockey team off their feet last Satur-
day morning, gaining a decisive victory
with a score of 8 to 3. Miss Feder, grad-
uate athletic manager, starred for her
team, making three of the Graduate
goals.
as
FIFTH TEAM PHILOSOPHY
What matter how balls roll?
We do not seek the goal,
To be upon the field makes us content;
We never strive to play
That we may win some day.
Such paltry aim belies our noble bent.
Where’er upon the field
Our hockey sticks we wield,
We never truly try the ball to hit;
*Tis not for love of art,
But merely to take part
In hockey that we follow after it.
We love trie noble game,
It seems to us a shame
To mar the joy of running o’er the
By care for sticks or fouls,
Or heed of coach’s howls,
Or even thought of how the score be
found.
We seek essential things!
Our spirits can take wings
And after the Ideal Playing soar,
Where spirit forwards race
Through fields of empty space,
Forever heedless of the ball and score.
Then céase, oh coach, to chide!
Our faults we do not hide,
But boldly make parade of every sin;
Like all the good and wise
We thus philosophisze—
We play to play, but never play to win.
Line-up:
1921 1922
Oe gg i veess BW: ....::. 4.268
OW. oni «ss EE ree A. Dunn
F. Billstein**..... C.F. ........0. Howard
B. Marshall....... eo a ike cae J. Burges
OE. 5 ons ees Bee scence *M. Crosby
B. Ferguson...... ee bic wes M. Kennard
B. Newell........ OO, kxkanctces F. Bliss
K. Walker. ...... ee ge L. Grimm
BE cc acess m3... C. Cameron
M. Goggin.. ... cpa Akane enee J. Palache
NC i kines a. . ..V. Liddell
Substitute—1922: B. Murless for L.
Grimm.
et PATEONTIEIWO ADVERTTEERS, FLAASE MENTION “THE CoLLece News”
ground
D. E. P. '20
i seincmn, Wines dna: ees
ae gl , | ROYAL BOOT SHOP .
COATS, WAISTS, —
aa : and MILLINERY. FURS EStAaLee 1839 t MILLINERY
Miss G. F. Ward Mawson’s Furs wee
Announces that she is now
ready ilallorder RICH FURS AND STUNNING MILLINERY
for : : :
Gowns, wraps, BLouses {|5th AVENUE at 46th STREET||| oust Stew Sailors, oy om Lizere, Georgette and
113 So. Sixteenth Street NEW YORK Bryn Mawr girls who seek the utmost in fashion will find this an economical place to shop
Telephone: Locust 6886 Philadelphia Mr. Mawson is nol connected directly or indirectly with any other firm using his name.
MANN 5 DILKs |i “Lionel” MILLARDS F
The Shopping Place of Discriminating Women Who Know
Ladies’ and Misses’ Sport Young women’s cleverly tailored suits of wool jersey
| in heathers and plain colors. For the class-room,
Hyland
field sports and general wear—$25, $27.50. $29.75, $35.
| ‘ 123-127 5S: 13k & Dee
Shirts ta
Collars Attached
Collars Detached
Just a plain tailored shirt.
Made in madras, cheviot,
silks, flannels, etc., etc.
Suits
Smart New Models in Georgette Crepe. STR A W BRIDGE
and CLOTHIER
Specialists in the
FASHIONABLE APPAREL FOR
YOUNG WOMEN
ohe J oAn ... Winst on C 0. ee jesse MARKET, EIGHTH and) FILBERT STS,
Printers and Publishers
1006-16 Arch Street Philadelphia BONWIT _
a cuatart at to= STREET
a
aii en i i
Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases, Small Leather Goods! | Tailormades and Lingeries
No. 705.—Dainty semi-tail-
Hand Bags, Gloves ored Blouse developed in
Repairing Georgette crepe, round pleat-
ed collar, fold-back cuffs.
a
e Collar = cuffs of crepe de
Geo. B. Bains & Son, Inc. | tinea
1028 Chestnut Street Philadelphia | $8.7 5}
~—-
The Little Riding School
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Mr. William Kennedy desires to announce that he has i aq No. Lk cites ail
idi for instruction in H .
one | SL gig. temp i to have you ae on | : Sy % ored Blouse developed in
any time. —— wt crepe de chine, a large in-
’ wo verted cowl pleated back col-
. . : hild ind * Oe lar, daintily trimmed with
ring sabeeitte for riding Io ccdeceee wai or of aati buttons and tucking. Flesh
: ’ » and white.
In connection with the school there will be a training all $8.75
stable for show horse (harness or saddle). NOTE—MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. PARCEL POST PREPAID.
IN PATHONIZING ADYERTIONNS, PLEASE MENTION “THEE COLLECE Baws”
“<< head. The other three of his. detachment
turned back to the Allied lines, signalling
him to follow, but Lieutenant Stiles
missed the signal, and continued forward,
alone against his opponents, until he had
brought down one of them, That he
fought long and valiantly is indicated by
the fact that the dispatch reporting his
death came from Frankfort.
A graduate of Harvard in 1916, Lieu-
tenant Stiles was manager of the Har-
vard baseball team and president of the
Crimson in his Senior year. Before Sep-
tember 16th he had one German plane of-
ficially to his credit.
AIM TO UNIFY NATIONS THROUGH
STUDENTS
World Federation Preparing Countries
for Work of Reconstruction
An account of the work of the World’s
Student Christian Federation in various
countries in Europe, showing its bearing
on war problems and reconstruction in
devastated countries, has been sent to the
Federation Committee of the Bryn Mawr
Christian Association by Miss Ruth
Rouse, a Travelling Secretary among the
women students.
“Our burdens have certainly not grown
less during the, past year,” she writes,
“but what we are doing now is a small
matter compared with what we shall cer-
tainly be asked to do in the near future.
Even before peace, we must be prepared
for the calls that will come to us after
peace. From Belgium and from all the
Balkan States we are already being sum-
moned to develop work as soon as these
countries are opened up. There are two
great services which we can render in
advance.
“First, we can encourage by every
means in our power Christian Movements
amongst students from these countries
at present scattered in other lands. For
example, we are doing all that we can at.
present to unify such movements amongst
Serbian students as are taking place in
Britain, France and Switzerland. In
Britain for example there is a definitely
organized Christian Movement amongst
Serbian students in our universities,
which has a travelling secretary of its
own, and has held a special conference,
besides sending delegates to Swanwick.
“Secondly, we must give those students
who show a capacity for leadership the
chance of training in Christian service,
and provide scholarships for them in
training schools, or in other ways help
them to prepare themselves for work for
the Kingdom of God in their own lands.
Our work amongst foreign students in
different countries has resulted in the
calling of not a few who show a special
capacity and are conscious of such voca-
tion. \
“Of our movement in Russia we know
that it still carries on its work, and that
Russian students are showing more de-
sire than ever to hear the Gospel of Jesus
Christ. Russia is sure to ask much of
us in the future, financially as well as in
other ways. Before the war some of our
largest givers to the Women's Continen-
tal Fund were Russians. In the future
it will be our privilege to give to them
and to their work as they have given to
ours in the past.”
et «
their repeated
- Substitutes—1919: M. " Butler for E.
MacDonald, C. Taussig for K. Tyler.
Referee—Miss Kirk.
Time of halves—15 min.
RED THIRD TIES, THEN BEATS
DARK BLUE IN FIRST TWO
ENCOUNTERS
With good fighting on both sides, 1921's
third team tied 1922 a week ago yester-
day with a goal apiece, and by superior
team-play beat them last Saturday by a
score of 4-0, In Saturday’s game L.
Ward, as fullback, proved excellent de-
fense for '21, covering the field well and
hitting hard. Intelligent passing sped the
forward line to victory, especially good
work being done by N. Porter, left inside,
and BE. Bliss, left wing. M. Morton shot
neatly and scored all four goals.
Line-up (first game):
1921 1922
K. Johnston..... BW ieee eus C. Baird
M. Morton’....... Rf. 3 dis snk eee
RE Be i ccc Ch vviveatenwee N. Jay
Ty COR: bos. vss Cie scetsiens A. Dom
Bh aka Bowe sss *S, Aldrich
W. Worcester.... R.H. . ..J. Yeatman
J. Peyton (6.).. 5. Co cece ees E. Titcomb
H. Bennett....... BE. so eh wvens B. Murless
©: Barton. ...is- Bes EEG M. D. Hay
E. E. Goggin..... TE ARR eA Se Cc. Cameron
M. EB. Southall.....0:G. ss... C, Rhett (c.)
Referee—Miss Keay.
Time of halves—15 min.
(Second Game):
1921 1922
DO. oo chasis TW a ieisoees C. Baird
M. Morton****... R.I. . .. I. Coleman
| fe A Cai eiee wus N, Jay
IU, POPUOE: 6 os acne Tah. Sehickweas A. Dom
Mi TE sein BAW. Cee dcks S. Aldrich
, ME i cece ws Be wa sarees E. Burns
J. Peyton (c.).... CoB ceeses E. Titcomb
H. Bennett........ Eas ic cis V. Wurlitzer
Dy, Wi Gncc es cice WPS cisce ee M. D. Hay
C. Bartom........ ew css sus Cc, Cameron
M. Morrison...... ee tine C. Rhett c.)
Substitute—1921: R. Karns for N.
Porter.
Referee—Miss Applebee.
Time of halves—15 min.
1921’s Fourth Takes First Game from '22
1921’s better teamwork won the first
fourth team game from 1922, last Friday,
with a score of 4-0. The forward line
kept well together, with N. Porter star-
ing in center. The Freshman team was
quick, but lacked organization.
oe end of the the fight-|
was fierce but ‘indecisive, with the
sre unually on ee
= “1919 1920
Malis. ... LW. . coe ne ats ERA
|B. MacDonald.... L. 1. -....“M. B, Brown
: ‘M. Moseley*..... C.F. .......Z. Boynton
As sick bcs ..M. O’Brien
|B. Moores....... R.W. .........D. Allen
A. Dubach....... L. H. ...F. von Hofsten
F. Howell........ Ges iia ciass .M. Dent
A Caten..: 066: RB icc eee
Be Orcs cess Le’. i: Cone
R. Hamilton..... MWe baseagves M. Gregg
Te POEs beds G. ..M. Porritt
Ee ae veces “Ee °98.. 8 98
Mo. of tees... ccc Oa eG ee
No. showing 50 per cent
muscle efficiency ...... 1 1 5 9
No. showing 40 per cent "
muscle efficiency ...... 6 2 4 6
No, showing 30 per cent "
muscle efficiency ...... 17 14 15 4
No. showing 20 per cent
muscle efficiency ...... 22 11 23 23
No. showing 10 per cent
muscle efficiency ...... ee 3 2s
No. below 10 per cent
muscle efficiency ...... 6 6-3. 3
Swimming and track tests will be given
later. It is planned to correlate some of
these results with those of the individual
psychology tests given by Dr. Arlitt.
ARMY CHAPLAIN WILL PREACH
SUNDAY
Chaplain Laurens Seelye, of the U. S.
Army, brother-in-law of D. Chambers ’19,
will speak in chapel Sunday night. He
has been serving as chaplain and work-
ing under the Y. M. C. A. in various
camps in this country and has lately
been stationed with the Coast Defense at
Fort Greble, Newport.
Last year Rev. Seelye, then pastor of
the Congregational Church at Chatham,
N. J., gave one of the lectures. of the
course conducted by his wife, Kate
Chambers Seelye ’11, on Comparative Re-
ligions.
1919 TAKES FOURTH TEAM
PRELIMINARIES FROM 1920
First Game: 2-0 for 1919
Although 1920’s fullback defense was
splendid 1919’s passing broke through
20's weak line with a score of 2-0 in the
first fourth team game last Thursday.
Line-up:
1919 1929
BD, Mawes... i... We sees K. Thomas
H. Taooen. 2... Bike skh cies D. Allen
|G. Pies ss bs is Oy Pecciv anaes M. O’Brien
|C. Taussig®...... Bb 3 ii H. Ferris
BE. Fauvre*...... Fai We ve cake A, Sanford
A COR os oss R.H. ...F. von Hofsten
M. Janeway...... Odes see viecces C, Keeble
M. Rhoads....... La FE actus L. Parsons
BH, Marquand..... RP. ciccses. M. Canby
Pe ck kno ws Lis chee K. Townsend
ROTO... ck ceca cin cen J. Herrick
Referee—Miss Keay.
Time of halves—15 min.
Second Game: 3-1 for 1919
j
In the second game, played on Tuesday,
1919 scored 3 goals to ’20’s 1 in spite of
the good work done by M. Canby, full-
back for '20’s defense. M. Krantz played
up well for '19 as center halfback, and C.
Taussig, in the last moments of the game,
did splendid work in the forward line.
Line-up:
1919 1920
PF, eetts® 2... Bi WE inccseces D. Allen
H. Tappan®...... Be saver sens M. Hoag
G. Baliey......«. GP, a vscceds H. Ferris
GC, THMAGIS? e053 es L.I. ..A. Buttonweiser
BE. Fauvre....... tis Seen *A. Sanford
1B, CORDS... . 00% Be ce dcee A. Coolidge
ME Bees... . ses GBs oe ene L. Parsons
|M. Rhoads....... Ti ecckvens M. Littell
|B. Marquand,.... RP, cikavens M. Canby
| So te, sasckaan J. Herrick
R. Woodruff....... Oy oe H. Humphries
4
Line-up:
1921 1922
Be ks «0 3 + 002 Me Wes. boeeeas E. Rogers
B Collins*...;..... BR. ..M. Voorhees |
N. Porter*........ ican sae B. Clarke |
M. Archbald®*: ... Tad. .6..ccces E. Brush
ey Ti Weep ckes A. Fountain
ae We cS ciscnia eee E. Hall
I, sc sacses C.H. ....W. Wurlitzer |
Ps wav aces Bie. a s0canes .E. Burns
E. Farnsworth... R.F. ...:....- S. Hand |
M. Thompson.... L. F.
M. Morrison... .... G.
Referee—Miss Keay.
Time of halves—15 min..
Referee—Miss Keay.
Time of halves—15 min.
1919 Takes Fourth Team Preliminaries
from 1920
1920’s fourth team met defeat for the
veeeseene V. Grace first time in its history when it was shut
cneeeeis K. Gardner | off from the finals by the Seniors’ taking
‘both of the two preliminary games played
| during the past week.
UN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE NEWS”
f ppg age girder poycoigen
Admission $.75
cussed.
The membership of the club will be
limited to students who are taking (or
have taken) Major Psychology. The
charter members are B. Biddle, P. France,
J. Holmes, M. Rhoads, A. R. Dubach, J.
Herrick and A. Warner.
=—
LIEUT. ROBERT NICHOLS,
English War Poet
will read
His own poems and those of contempo-
rary War Poets .
Under the auspices of
The English Club
Taylor Hall, Bryn Mawr College
Admission $.50 Reserved Seats $.75
for members of the college
Reserved Seats _—
for outsiders
For benefit of the Bryn Mawr Service
Corps
CoroNA
TYPEWRITER
RIBBONS, STANDS, PAPER,
FELT MATS, RUBBER COVERS
On Sale Through the College News
Apply F. C. Clarke, Rockefeller
BOOKS
PICTURES
CHRISTMAS CARDS
SESSLER’S BOOK SHOP
1314 Walnut St. (+: Philadelphia, Pa.
UNUSUAL
GIFTS
GREETING CARDS
DECORATIVE TREATMENTS
Will Always Be Found at
THE GIFT SHOP
814 W. Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
ALICE MAYNARD
announces for the
AUTUMN
a unique assemblage of
GOWNS
BLOUSES
SUITS
SPORT SKIRTS
SPORT SWEATERS
MOTOR COATS
TOP COATS
ART NOVELTIES
WOOLS, SILKS AND COTTONS
FOR FANCY WORK
not to be found elsewhere
16 and 18 West 46 Street
Near Fifth Ave. * New York
faced the problems of a country nearly
one-fourth of whose people are massacred,
whose reserves are mostly used up, and
where means of communication practi-
cally do not exist. Its work has contin-
ued through hottest warfare between Tar-
tars and Armenians.
“The re-establishment of the Armeni-
ans in their own country,” said Dr. Heald,
“is one of the finest opportunities to work
out good ideas of government.” The Ar-
menians are probably one of the highest
orders of the human race, intelligent,
with a live spirit, and an intense desire
for education.
Relief for Armenia must come from vol-
unteer subscriptions from the wealth of
America. Armenia cannot borrow money
as a nation, but she works for her gifts.
Huge industrial plants have been estab-
lished where Armenians manufacture
cloth to dress their orphans. During the
gravest times of fighting with the Tar-
tars, calico was used as exchange for
sorely-needed wheat. With loaded camel
the Tartars brought the grain, guarded by
Armenian horsemen, armed to the teeth.
Now that fighting is over, reconstruc-
tion work can go on more quickly, the
Armenians left from the massacres can
flock back to their country, and industry
and government be established.
Dr. Heald expects to return to the Cau-
casus within a month. His work there is
practically the same as that to be taken
up in Persia by Dr. Post, a member of
the Service Corps.
SCIENCE CLUB ABOLISHED
The Science Club has been definitely
given up, following a vote taken at a
meeting last week. According to M.
France '19, former president, the scope of
the organiaztion was felt to be too gen-
eral to arouse interest, as compared with
the specialized clubs, such as the Philoso-
phy and Doctors’ Clubs.
The Science Club was founded in 1905.
CALENDAR
Thursday, November 21
5.00 p.m.—Lecture by Professor Casa-
mion, Professor of English
Literature at the Sorbonne,
on “The France of Today
and Tomorrow.”
7.30 p.m.—Talk on Current Events by
Dr. Fenwick.
Friday, November 22
8.00 p.m.—Lecture by Lieut. Robert
Nichols on War Poetry, un-
der the auspices of the Eng-
lish Club.
Saturday, November 23
10.00 a. m.—Varsity Hockey vs. All-Phila-
delphia.
7.80p.m.—Senior Reception to the
Freshmen.
Sunday, November 24
6.00 p. m.—Vespers. Speaker, M. L.
Thurman ’19.
8.00 p.m.—Chapel. Sermon by the Rev.
L. H. Seelye, Chaplain U. 8.
Army.
Monday, November 25
7.30 p. m.—Lecture on Social Hygiene by
Dr. Ellen Potter.
Wednesday, November 27
1.00 p.m.—Thanksgiving Vacation bé-
gins.
Monday, December 2
Thanksgiving Vacation ends.
4.00 p. m.—Required Gymnastics Classes
inet: Membership, M. Wilcox; Religious
begin. Meetings, M. Speer; Bible and Mission
Sunday, December 8 Study, O. Howard; Social Service, P.
Vespers, Speaker, K. Stiles/Smith; Sewing, C. Peek; Junk, A. Nich-
"22. ols; Federation, G. Rhoads: Maid's
8.00 p.m.—-Chapel. Sermon by the Rev. / Classes, C. La Boiteaux; Bates, E. Dono-
Shailer Mathews, D.D. of the/hue; Employment Bureau, C. Baird:
| ssi during th past week In pledses for
it, Jalumne and friends of the C. A, have:
bits of the Ark are buried in Noah's
grave, The Red Cross Commission has |
not yet come in, -
Over four hundred dollars was pledged
without designation as to where it should
causes are:
'g0. The amounts pledged to the various tT
Federation Secretary ....... $177.50
MO TO kes vi dec sicecs 163.50
Mees POD ek eccce -.. 180.00
MP oss vice bei vel 357.00
Summer School ......... aces BO00
mates Mouse .......... vcove AeAeOU
Community Center .......... 290.00
OF, MAary JOOS .......<..., 28.00
POUUI, 55 ook eect ccadel. 180.00
CIE ow hick ha ceei ees 463.00
MO i Fo yo ck sv cdi, $3142.00
The contributions by classes. amount
to: 1919, $731.50; 1920, $573.50; 1921,
$851.50; 1922, $949; Graduates, $25.50.
NEWS IN BRIEF
Miss Katharine McGiffert, A.B., Bar-
nard 1916, arrived here last week to be
warden of Denbigh. Miss McGiffert is
the daughter of President McGiffert, of
the Union Theological Seminary.
Dr. James Leuba, Professor of Psychol-
ogy, will speak tomorrow morning in
chapel.
- The Junior Committee on Class Rings
and Seals is: M. Hardy, M. L. Mall, N.
Gookin, E. Stevens, D. Clark.
M. Kinard '20 is Junior member of the
Students’ Building Committee.
The Religious Meetings Committce
hopes to be able to get Gipsy Smith, of
London, to preach here on December
15th.
Clarinda Garrison '21 is not able to re-
turn to college on account of para-typhoid
fever.
“Barbo,” the Boss Italian, has left. Jo-
seph Connelly, who has béen in the em-
ploy of college since it opened in 1884, is
in charge of the men workikg on the Ath-
letic Fields.
The marriage of Lucy Evans ’18 and
Dr. Samuel Chew, Professor of English,
will take place in New rk, December
21st. The ceremony will /e performed in
the Little Church Around the Corner and
will be followed by a small breakfast at
Mr. and Mrs, Evans’s residence, 71 Wash-
ington Square.
Insurance for matriculatijn and colle-
giate conditions, orals, private reading
and mid-years can: be taken \out this se-
mester from L. Sloan '20 and E. Leutke-
meyer ’20.
f
Hinglish Club Tryouts Ne iaaiinis
Tryouts for Hinglish Club will be held
tomorrow morning on the side steps of
Taylor at eight o’clock. Those eligible
for membership are Seniors who have at-
tained a grade between 80 and 84 in re-
quired English Composition or a lower
grade containing the figure eight.
American Lead Pencil Co.
217 Fifth Avenue, N.Y.
Dept. FW32
MARY G. McCRYSTAL
Choice Assortment of WOOLS for Every
Kind of Sweater
Laces, Embroideries, Ruchings, Silk
Handkerchiefs and Notions
842 Lancaster Avenue. Bryn Mawr
THE WHITE GATE STUDIOS
WAR WORK
Preparatory Classes for Occupational Therapy in Basketry,
Pottery a and Modeling, Simple Book a Block Print-
ee Whittling and the making of
‘ours will be arranged to suit the convenence of Col
tudents, Telephone, Bryn Mawr
RADNOR ROAD, BRYN MAWR, PA.
P: ONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TBAS
BRYN MAWR
“COLUMBIA” “mEpaarm®
Consumers’ League Endorsement
Suits
Camp Costum sear Suits
os
Separate Bloomers alee Bente
jes and Garters
COLUMBIA GYMNASIUM SUIT COMPANY
‘Likeaaae Sn Waren Avenues,
4 Bryn Mawr, Pa.
| Orders Delivered. We aim to please you.
MARCEL WAVING | MANICURING
SCALP SPECIALIST |
‘The W. O. Little and M. M. Harper Methods J
8. W.COR. ELLIOTT AND LANCASTER AVES“
BRYN MAWR 307 J
SHAMPOOING FACIAL MASSAGE
BRYN MAWR MASSAGE SHOP
Amifz E. Kenpa.t-
Floyd Bldg., Merion and Lancaster Aves.
MARCEL WAVING MANICURING
_ JEANNETT'S
BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and ries Baskets
Phene, Bryn Mawr S78
E. M. FENNER
Ice Cream, Frozen Fruits and Ices
Fine and Fancy Cakes, Confections
Bryn Mawr ( Telephone) Ardmore
The Bryn Mawr National Bank
BRYN MAWR, PA,
Foreign Exchange and Travelers’ Checks
Sold
3 Per Cent on Saving Fund Accounts.
Safe Deposit Boxes for Rent,
$3, $5 and $8 per Year.
WILLIAM T. McINTYRE
GROCERIES, MEATS AND
PROVISIONS
Am oR DR RSEEETE
Actiunk Waive 301 Congress St., Boston. Mass BRYN MAWR AVENUE
JOHN J. MeDEVITT Bil Hee THE BRYN MAWR TRUST Co.
PRINTING Serer | ccs sccm
eee ES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
101 1 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa. SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
SCHOOLS
THE SHIPLEY SCHOOL
Preparatory to Bryn Mawr College
BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA
Principals
Eleanor O. Brownell Alice G. Howland
One-minute speeches will constitute the
tryout. The subject assigned is: “The
Pathos in Alice in Wonderland.” The
new members will be voted in immedi-
ately and invited to a meeting of the
Club to be held tomorrow afternoon at
4.45.
FRESHMEN MEMBERS OF
Cc. A. CABINET
1922 has elected the following mem-
bers to the committees of the C. A. Cab-
Chicago Divinity School.
Finance, J. Fisher.
THE HARCUM SCHOOL
FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA.
~ : om w wanting, cottons preparation
os tld Et ies cei
offers special opportunities to pursue
studies suited to their tastes and needa.
For Girls desiring to specialize in Music
or Art, there are well known artists as
tneiondbars Catalog on request.
MRS. EDITH HATCHER HARCUM, B.L.
(Pupil of Leschetitky), Head of the School
BRYN MAWR PENNSYLVANIA
D. N. ROSS (Pistmcy) > UusMtav=-
Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia
Medica, and Director of the Pharmaceu-
tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital.
EASTMAN’S KODAKS AND FILMS
'|Afternoon Tea and Luacheos
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicious
TRUNK AND BAG REPAIRING
Trunks, Travelling Good Sovte. of thoroughly
reliable makes
Harness, Saddlery and Automobile Supplies
Phone, 373
EDWARD L. POWERS
903-905 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR, Pa.
M. M. GAFFNEY
LADIES’ AND GENTS’ FURNISHINGS
DRY GOODS AND
NOTIONS
TN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE
MENTION “THE COLLEGE NEWs”
Post OFFICE BLOCK
College news, November 21, 1918
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College
1918-11-21
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 05, No. 08
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-vol5-no8