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8 |. Keep Shield for Second Year
“Living up’ to their reputation of last.
year, 1921 won the annual gymnastic
meet from 1922 last Friday, by a score of;
122-108 points. Thé’ Sophomores. were
superior in every event except the par-
-allel bars. In. this .event .the Freshmen
came out ahead with a score of 24-22.
The work of both classes was excellent
-and the meet probably the best ever seen
.at Bryn Mawr. The judges for the meet
were: Cynthia ‘Wesson ’09, Mr.. Philip
Bishop and Mr., William Cromie.. Dr.
David served for Mr. Cromie during the
-surprise drill.
The surprise drill, given by Mr. Cromie,
-director of gymnastics at the University
-of Pennsylvania, was the most interesting
-event of the afternoon. Dividing each
-class into “crows” and “cranes,” Mr.
‘Cromie put them through a series of
“catch drills” in which the Sophomores
made no mistakes. Mr. Cromie told a
News reporter after the meet, that at
least a third to a tenth of the army men
he had trained made mistakes the first
time they were put through the tests and
that “the Penn men certainly had noth-
ing on the Bryn Mawr girls.”
Under the command of J. Peyton ’21
the Sophomores did a series of compli-
‘cated marches and figures with excellent
form and rhythm. The Freshmen showed
almost professional skill on the parallel
‘bars, going through extremely difficult ex-
ercises in perfect time and form.
The leaders were: Indian clubs, B.
‘Godwin ‘21 and F. Bliss ’22; floor work,
B. Taylor ’21 and J. Burgess ‘22; march-
‘ing, J. Peyton ’21 and A. Orbison '22; ap-
‘paratus, E. Cecil '21 and A. Nicoll '22.
Summary of points won:
1921 1922
Indian clubs . . 26. 19.5
Floor work ...... 25.5 22
Marching ........ 25. 23
SE 23.5 19
Parallel bars .... 22.5 24
E. COPE '21 AWARDED
INDIVIDUAL APPARATUS CUP
Elizabeth Cope '21, after a difficult and
original performance on the parallel bars,
was awarded the individual apparatus
cup at the end of the gym meet last Fri-
day with a total of 283 points as com-
pared to the 278 points of Blizabeth Cecil
21, who was a close second. Third place
was won by Margaret Ladd ’21.
The method of awarding the cup this
year was to call out a number of students
who were unusually good in apparatus
work during the meet and try them out
against each other in additional exercises.
Five students were called out: E. Cope
21, B. Cecil ’21, M. Ladd '21, F. Robbins
722, and A. Nicoll ’22.
Judges for the apparatus cup were
Helen Kirk '14, Annette Stiles ‘19, and
Josephine Herrick ’20. Each of these had
an assistant from some other class. E.
Lanier '19 assisted Miss Kirk; H. Ferris
20, Miss Stiles; A. Blue °19, Miss Her-
rick.
WILL DEBATE PROHIBITION
Dr, William Roy Smith and Dr. Hoppin
will lead a debate on Prohibition at the
Discussion Club next Tuesday. Dr. Smith
will take the affirmative and Dr. Hoppin
the negative. Each side is allowed fifteen
minutes before the general discussion.
The club will meet at 8.45 in Merion.
President Thomas has eiined her
approval of the plan to revivé interest in
the Students’ Building. In a letter to
the président of the Undergraduate
Association she states that it will be pos-
sible to build the auditorium before the
other parts of the building, and that she
is telegraphing for the latest plans from
the college architects. Her letter reads:
“IT am very much pleased to hear that
you are considering plans for reviving
interest in a Students’ Building,—or at
least in an auditorium for plays and en-
tertainments which is so greatly needed.
I wish to assure you of my codéperation.
I shall be glad to help in every way I can.
The college architects, who built the
gymnasium and the 1905 Infirmary have
already prepared plans and I am tele-
graphing for them tonight. The site
selected is below Radnor. The front
faces the Maple Avenue, running parallel
to Radnor above the upper athletic field,
and the auditorium backs on the Gulph
Road with a carriage entrance to the
basement from the Gulph Road. The au-
ditorium can be built of fireproof cinder
concrete and can be finished first. The
plans are so arranged as to permit the
kitchens, clubrooms, etc., and the stone
campus front to be added later. The
plans include a tunnel to the gymnasium
so that food can be served on the main
floor, or on the roof of the gymnasium
when desired. When thrown together in
this way we shall have a delightful enter-
taining space.”
Revolving Seats a Possibility
“As soon as I return to the college I
shall be glad to take over the details with
you. Our architects have given a great
deal of thought to the problems involved
and there are various questions which
must be settled before they can go any
farther. Some of these questions are,—
the number of persons to be seated (500,
750, or 1000); the size of the stage and
green rooms; whether the seats are to
revolve so as to make a flat floor for
dancing,—a very much more expensive
plan than fixed seats—and so on, Will not
your committee think over these and
other details while we are waiting for the
preliminary plans? They must be set-
tled before we can form an estimate of
the cost.”
HOLLOW TILE SUGGESTED FOR
STUDENTS’ BUILDING
Mrs. Francis Will Put Matter Before
The Alumnz
A new plan has been suggested for the
Students’ Building, by which the initial
expenses can be lowered. According to
advice from an architect, it would be pos-
sible to build the central part of the Stu-
dents’ Building—auditorium, stage, dress-
ing-rooms, etc.—of hollow tile, and later
finish up the outside in stone to match
the other college architecture.
Three possible sites for the new build-
ing are under consideration—the land
next to the Deanery, below Radnor, or be-
tween Rockefeller and Penygroes, where
there is space set aside for another dor-
mitory.
Mrs. Francis, president of the Alumn#®
Association, will put the matter of the
Students’ Building before the alumna.
Ernestine Emma Mercer, of Philadel-
phia, has been awarded the Buropean
Fellowship of the Class of 1919 for her
excellent work in the classics, Dean Taft
‘announced in chapel last Friday morning.
Miss Mercer, whose group is Greek and
Latin, was prepared by the Philadelphia
High School. She was matriculation
scholar for Pennsylvania and Trustees’
Philadelphia Girls’ High School Scholar
1915-18. She was last year awarded the
Elizabeth S. Shippen Scholarship for ex-
cellence in languages. With a grade of
87.427, she holds the second highest aver-
age in the Senior Class. The highest
grade was made by Frances Day, Brooke
Hall Memorial Scholar, with an average
of 88.028.
Although the highest average of this
year’s Senior Class is lower than the
89.34 made last year by Margaret Timp-
son, the general average shows the larg-
est number of Seniors with grades above
80 since 1914.
For the second time in two years a rec-
ord has been made in the number of
“magna cum laudes” (given for grades
between 85 and 90). Seven or 8.10 per
cent of the class receive this distinction.
They are: F. Day, E. Mercer, E. Macrum,
G. Woodbury, Mrs. Marguerite Schwartz,
M. Gilman and L. Wood. Fifteen receive
the next distinction ‘cum laude” (for
grades between 80 and 85).
A total number of 22 out of the class of
86 (25.5 per cent) have grades above 80,
as compared with 11 last year and 19 in
1917. This year’s median grade, 76.523,
is slightly better than the 75.316 of last
year.
D. Flather and M. Buchanan Graduate
European Fellows
The two graduate European Fellows
announced at the same time as the Bryn
Mawr or “Senior” Fellow, are Mary Dru-
silla Flather, of Lowell, Mass., Fellow in
Biology, and Margaret Buchanan, of Mor-
gantown, W. Va., fellow in Mathematics.
Miss Flather, who was graduated from
the Women’s College, Brown University,
in 1917, with the degree of Ph.B., was
awarded the Mary B. Garrett European
Fellowship for students who have com-
pleted two years of graduate work at
Bryn Mawr.
Miss Buchanan, A.B. West Virginia
University, 1906, received the President
M. Carey Thomas European Fellowship
for students who have completed one year
of graduate work at Bryn Mawr. This is
the second year that Miss Buchanan has
studied at Bryn Mawr, but her first year
of graduate work here, as her work be-
fore was in undergraduate mathematics.
DEAN TAFT TO PRESIDE AT
LEAGUE OF NATIONS MEETING
Dean Taft will preside at a mass meet-
ing to be held for the League of Nations
in the ballroom of the Bellevue-Stratford
Sunday afternoon. Miss Julia Lathrop,
Chief of the Children’s Bureau, Washing-
ton, and Judge Anderson, of the U. s.
Circuit Court, Boston, will speak, and
there will be community singing.
Reserved seats may be obtained at the
office of the secretary, Taylor Hall, or on
application to Miss Elizabeth Kirkbride
96, president of the Philadelphia College
Club, 1300 Spruce Street. The meeting is
under the auspices of the Association of
Collegiate Alumna, assisted by the Wom-
en’s Trade Union League and the Penn-
sylvania Women Workers’ Clubs.
E MERCER, EUROPEAN FELLOW—F. L DAY — S HMERST caaDe
General Senior Average High—Seven Will Graduate Magna Cun Laude
an earns é oe Siyttan 7S
SENIOR HONOR ROLL
The twenty-two Seniors who will re-
ceive their degrees with distinction are:
Magna Cum Laude
oe
WYONG TAF io. e. ec ccden 88.028
Ernestine Mercer .......... 87.427
ee POPU 66.65 te. eer ne 86.452
Gordon Woodbury ........ - 86.119 S
Marguerite Schwartz ......85.955 | eg
Margaret Gilman .......... 85.757
RING WOON oo ec cece 85.652
Cum Laude e
Cornelia Hayman ..........84.415
Blizabeth Biddle .......... 84.385
Helen Prescott:....5..65.45. 84.295.
Anne RR. Dubach.«..... 6.66. 83.195
Veronica Frazier ...... .». -83.009
Celia Oppenheimer ........ 83.009
Jessie Mebane ............ 82.907
Helen Spalding ............ 82.7407
Adelaide Landon .......... 82.609
Georgia Bailey ........:... 82.076
Muth Woodratl «...< 6s cies 81.552
Enid Macdonald ........... 81.200
Alice Snavely: .. oc. si cccces 80.9904
Marguerite Krantz ........ 80.915
Margaret Rhoads .......... 80.808
The other Seniors in the upper half of
the class are: W. Kaufmann (79.985), H.
Johnson (79.9809), B. Sorchan (79.896),
A. Ehlers (79.716), A. Moore (79.014), M
Lafferty (78.575), M. France (78.714), F.
Clarke (78.655), F. Allison (78.371), H.
Conover (78.338), M. Mackenzie (78.278),
F. Howell (77.957), M. Bloomfield (77.905),
H. Reid (77.815), BE. Lanier (77.800), J.
Wright (77.467), C. Taussig (77.309), H
Karns (77.047), C. Hollis (77.009), M.
Remington (76.752), A. Collins (76.585).
ALICE HARRISON PRESIDENT OF
SELF-GOVERNMENT
Alice Harrison '20 is president of the
Self-Government Association as the re-
sult of a nomination, which was made an
election Monday evening. Miss Harrison,
last year second Junior member of the
executive board, received 228 votes to M.
Carey’s. 42.
Nominations for vice-president, made
Tuesday, had to be taken over again this
afternoon on account of electioneering at
the ballot box. D. Smith ’20 and M. Carey
’20 were the candidates for election.
Sarah Taylor "19, retiring president, in
her report at a meeting Tuesday evening,
urged that proctors be elected with a
view to their responsibility in upholding
the regulations of the Association more
than has been done in the past. Critt-
cizing the attitude of the individual, she
said that students felt little responsibility
for reporting themselves and none for re-
porting other people.
ASK STUDENTS’ HELP IN
FINISHING R. C. GARMENTS
The Bryn Mawr Red Cross, on the cor-
ner of Montgomery and Morris Avenues,
has sent an urgent appeal to college Red
Cross workers to come to their rooms at
any time of the day or evening to help
complete their allotment of garments.
These garments, which are for the desti-
tute women of northern France, must be
finished by May. Since the college has
given up its special work room the Red
Cross Committee hopes for an unusually
large number of volunteers to meet this
need
EE ee ee te en ee
i will be under the auspices French | Louis
Teasnen: “Hollingshead: was 5) ba ouch te er sy Federation | ip, =e th
managing editor for this issue. oe ee
recognized channel by which outside
D. McBride Makes Business Board clergymen could get in touch with the.
Pash McBride '21 has been elected|students and by which students could) ayion of FRENCH SOCIALIST | mR. LESLIE HILL PLEADS FOR
to the business board of the News as the|get. information about their respective]. . the distrust and hatred in the] BETTER CHANCE FOR NEGROES.
result of a competition which began after |< shurehes. For instance, Dr. Mutch i ee ee
midyears. Miss McBride is the first|ways comes straight to this committee Se Leuba, in chapel Monday. | gays Regiments Abroad Were Treated aa
en a he wants to find out anything, such |7°.»2'to14 of the life of Jaun Professor Human Beings
taken on. 1s how many students wish to become as- oak Poouch be . oo pov ot Speaking on behalf of the negro, last
“Flowers That Bloom in the Spring” pene ae dudes See to the |) 1914, was shot by someone who thought | Hill, principal of apt pera
“Sprig time, sweet sprig!” The Sopho- |}, eaiberititi, Coanielstes, we do not in any himself a patriot. Through that whole| Colored Teachers, made a strong plea for
mores come to realize as they never did {way want to diminish it, but to make it day he had been trying to avert the ca- his race:
before that the Seniors need a little lov-|,. essential a part of the Membership lamity of war by bringing pressure upon| “We are not trying to be equal with you
ing and the case of the red and the gree | Committee as the strengthening of mem- Russia. in possession or position. All we ask is.
begins to get really serious. The would-lhership in the C. A. To quote from a biographer, he “be-|that you give us a chance to serve and to:
>
{OR. LEUBA TELLS OF JAURES,
be harbingers of spring wear organdie} ‘Adelaide Landon. ’19, longed to all nationalities. He was more | develop the talents God has given us.”
dresses and white skirts in spite of a cold} Fed than an artist. He was more than the| «
Chairman of the eration Committee. | You are facing the plight of a civiliza-
March wind, Shadowy couples float) scousleniibaplcie Word. He was the Conscience. He was}tion within a civilization,” he declared
around the campus at night admiring the the Editor of the College News: @ moral value.” “There are eueainies million negroes in the
stars as if they had never shone before.| Are people not thoroughly convinced of| “Whether one accepts the doctrines of
Centipede hunts begin and the annual the opinions they express in letters to the | Socialism or not,” concluded Professor — oS geval ae eeeoggwaton
attack of Charley horse heralds in track.| News or are they afraid of criticism? |Leuba, “acquaintance with such a leader | erg then we need and no adequate chaek
The cloisters swarm with people who are From the number of communications |of the movement cannot help influencing | pyiidings. Race prejudice is so stro
under the delusion that they are study-| bearing supposedly facetious or appropri- | powerfully our attitude towards it. Lead-| that the cule fit aia for a n pes cand
ing. Who can say that ate signatures one would judge that the }ers of this sort are prophets of a new and }is in some distant part of a pee which
“The flowers that bloom in the spring | authors wrote for the pleasure of writing ‘better world; they are necessary pre-feyery other human has left. Negroes.
Have nothing to do with the case”? jand not because they firmly believed in|cursors of a successful league of truly?eannot go to the Y. M. C. A. or even to
what they said. Even when the sincerity | democratic nations.” ae
‘aii Never Too Late... ! of the letter is evident a signature like| A biography of Jaurés is in the library. oo. a Sa Se
tter late than never’ may be a good “Mortified” or “Frightfully Furious” is a eon o
“Our negro regiments abroad—in France
and in Pngland—were treated as ordi-
nary human beings, not as a problem.
They were given all the advantages that
axiom for = discouraged, but it becomes | gi.tinct anticlimax to a forceful article. JUNIORS CHOOSE CLASS RING
— as interpreted by the literal-} j¢ one’s ideas are of sufficient value to} Blue Swiss onyx has been chosen by
ded, One trembles for the future of |i. community to be published are they |1920 for their class ring. At a class meet-
those who straggle into Vespers at ten not worth :
y of public acknowledgment? | ing, Thursday, they abandoned the aqua-
. . other soldiers had,
ae) —— at class T. Vinton Liddell 22. marine, which a minority had favored, | task—yet eee ee ae eo
order. It cannot be hoped that future| To the Editor of the College News: and decided on a ring of hand-carved | with a heavy heart. They shall not taste
employers will exhibit the patience of the| (Pittsburgh Protests—Aimed at the gold with a Swiss onyx in a setting ofthe liberty in America which they fought
leaves, The jewelry tax, which will be| for and helped to win abroad.
committee chairman who calls a meeting | Alumneze Quarterly.)
for eight o'clock and then sits down to’ Those folks who run the Quarterly param on April 15, hastened the final| «yoy cannot shoot or legislate race
wait while her committee stroll in at] (I hope it’s but a pose). : prejudice out of the world—it is too
fifteen‘minute intervals. Nor can one| Have gone and taken liberties subtle. But don’t say you should not
hope to meet everywhere the forbearance| With my impassioned prose. IN THE NEW BOOK ROOM serve because your hair has a peculiar
of the public speaker who refrains from| They've divided off my sentences Eyes of Asia, by Rudyard Kipling,—/curl and your face is black. If you don’t
comment as he strives in vain to make| In places never meant, made up of letters written from the front|care about us, all right; but if you don’t
himself heard above the footfalls of the; And gone and placed a period by Indian troops to their people at home.}help us we shall be only a stumbling
late-comers. Where a comma should’ve “went.”* Biology of War, by Dr. G. F. Nicolai,| block in your path.”
REE Te ee They’ve gone and cut off the a professor of physiology at Berlin Univer-| Mr. Hill went on to speak of the Chey-
E. CLARKE EX-’94 DESCRIBES WORK) pom a big long adjective, sity, and leading heart specialist of Ger-|ney School, where about 150 negroes are
AT GENEVA FOYER And made it be a bob-tailed noun many, in which capacity he attended the| being trained for teaching and social
Because thousands of women students| 4. .yre as we both live. German empress. “The most remarkable iservice. He is a graduate of Harvard and
were caught by the war in Swiss univer-| whon 1 was still in college book of the war,” according to its trans-/a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
sities with no resources, foyers were Ss. A. King said to me, lators, Constance and Julian Grand. Its
started by the World Student Christian) «r» you would try to drop your R’s author was imprisoned for writing the NEWS IN BRIEF
Federation, Blizabeth Clarke ex-’94, ge-| = y wa more alluring be.” book, and it would never have been/ ss “rennin Shier Gals tenn Nowe. ohaetad
eral federation secretary, explained in aM| 414 so in blind subservience printed in Germany. Luckily the manu- as oats Dr obs a ie thes
open cabinet meeting of the Christian] 7 giocution’s sway script got smuggled into Switzerland. Written Cemuin at P —
Association Monday night. The Quarterly decrees that I The main contention of the book is that :
The war found many foreign students Spell star, thus—s-t-a— the “Dusk of the War Gods” has come,| Dr. Ferree and Dr. Rand read two pa-
im a desperate situation, with no funds to But worst of all, I frankly state, and there is no biological justification for | pers last Thursday before the New York
carry on their studies. The excitable (I being no coquette), war. Section of the Mluminating Society: “A
temperament led many of them to kill They've gone and had me clip my name America at the Front, by Fullerton| Résumé of Experiments on the Effect of
themselves, and the government feared To giddy Henriett. Waldo, newspaper correspondent for the | Lighting on the Bye” and “Experiments
that a suicide epidemic would break out. Henrietta F. Magoffin ’11. “Public Ledger” and the “London Ob-|on the Bye with Different Illuminants.”
It was the work of the Students’ Federa- *Poetic license. server.” A new catalogue has been instituted in
tion to provide, first of all, any sort of a The Seven That Were Hanged and the/+,. New Book Room of all books that be-
rough shelter, where the students could [Quoted. from the January Quarterly,| Red Laugh, by Leonid Andreyevo, who is long to the permanent New Book collec-
keep warm, and later arrange for rooms Pittsburgh.] among leading Russian story-writers. | tion.
and work for them. The club is now the proud owner of|Here is that “pure and unadulterated
. Was Secretary to President Mazarik {four Liberty Bonds. An addition, one} Russian realism which finds its highest| Dorothy Walter, Gertrude Davie and
Miss Clarke was a champion tennis|having been bought at the last issue./expression in Tolstoi.” Anne Page, all ex-’21, were at college last
player while in college. She had been/ There is another sta on the service flag} Counter Attack and Other Poems, by Friday for the gym neet.
professor of English in the Cape of Good | for Miss Helen Schmidt, who has entered | Siegfried Sassoon. M. Morrison ’21 has been appointed
Hope,—the only American woman teach- the Army Nurses’ Training Corps. Miss| Letters of Algernon Charles Swinburne, | chairman of the committee to investigate
ing English at an English university,—| Mary Breed was appointed by the execu-|—a new edition in two volumes, collected | the question of a temporary theatre. The
and had been called to Switzerland by| tive committee to fill out Miss Schmidt’s|by Edmund Gosse and Thomas James | committee is considering the possibility
Dr. Mott. When President Mazarik, head | unexpired term as president of the or | Wise. of transporting one of the temporary war-
of the new Czeko-Slav republic, was trav-| ganization. The monthly teas have been} Bernard Berenson’s Essays on the Study |worker’s buildings from Washington. .
elling incognito in Britain and France to/rather more largely attended than last/of Sienese Painting, illustrated with re The other members of the committee are:
get help for his rising republic, Miss| year. productions, (New York: Frederic Fair: V. Coombs ‘19, B. Weaver ‘20, and @G.
Clarke was the only other person in Bu- Henriett F. Magoffin, Sec. /child Sherman.) Rhoades ‘22.
_ Marshaled by M. Geott, chairman of the
| nity, the different types were separated”
ee
SPORTING NEWS
Basketball captains and managers that
have been elected are: 1919, J. Peabody,
captain; A. Thorndike, manager. 1920,
M. L. Mall, temporary captain; K. Town-
send, temporary manager. 1921, DH. Tay-
lor, captain. 1922, L. Grim, captain. The
captains of 1921 and 1922 will appoint
their managers later.
M. Tyler '19, D. Rogers '20, E. Cecil ’21,
have been elected class track captains.
Managers are A. Stiles 19, H. Zinsser ’20,
and E. Mills ’21. 1922 has elected R.
Neal temporary captain.
Second team tennis doubles will begin
April 19.
CALLS DEMOCRACY A ROMANTIC
IDEAL, WHICH RELIGION REALIZES
Democracy, in its relation to religion,
was the subject of a sermon by Dr. Ar-
thur Cushman McGiffert last Sunday
night in chapel. “Democracy is an ideal,
imperfectly realized in fact, but never-|'
theless an ideal. This ideal can never
be achieved without faith,” stated Dr.
McGiffert. “Science makes for autocracy,
with the strong on the top and the weak
beneath. Science gives us the ideal of
materialism, of the superman. Democ-
racy is a romantic ideal, which assumes
that which does not exist—that all men
are created equal.”
Dr. McGiffert went on to show how this
ideal is the fruit of an impulse akin to
religion, which sees more meaning in
things than appears on the surface, which
links them up with larger realities. “This
is what democracy demands. If it is to
prevail, the ideal must triumph over brute
fact.”
Democracy also requires good will and
generosity. “To believe in God whom we
have not seen is infinitely easier than to
believe in man whom we have seen,” said
Dr. McGiffert. “Democracy needs the
popular will. It cannot succeed where
there is self-seeking. Religion, too, must
cease to labor for self-interests, must
look forward to the steady progress of
the race, to a juster and better world.
Immortality must not be a substitute for
an improved society here on earth, but
must mean the continued co-operation of
those who have gone before with those
who are left.”
ALUMNA NOTES
Margaret Thompson ‘17 is working in
her father’s office on railroad statistics.
Miriam Hedges ’10 is living at Simla,
India, where her husband is stationed in
the army training camp.
Antoinette Cannon ’07 is Director of
Social Service at the University Hospital
in Philadelphia with seven workers
under her. She is also executive secre-
tary of the American Association of Hos-
pital Social Workers.
Anna Lee ‘16 is teaching English at the
Frankford High School.
Jeanette Ridlon "18 is a laboratory as-
sistant in chemistry at the University of
Chicago.
Ella Oppenheimer ‘14 is resident physi-
cian at the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital
in Boston.
_|into groups and presented a panorama of |
n|# Summer at Bates on the stage which
-}had served as a judging platform for the
gym meet. A chorus, accompanied by the
.| Varsity orchestra, sang appropriate
verses as the “applicants” paraded across
the stage.
Scrub ladies began the day, entering
on all fours at work with the brushes, to
the tune of “The Campbells Are Com-
ing.” Following them in turn came three)
missionaries, a horde of realistically
noisy and pugnacious children, several
Italian families, and a large crowd of
working girls’ with the inevitable ear-
rings, make-up, and chewing gum. Last
and best in point of realism came the
Christies, mother and son, typified by L.
Sloan and Miss Applebee.
. Miss Deems received a prize for the
“most worthy applicant” and P. Ostroff
‘21, dressed as a “business” girl, won the
prize for the most authentic costume. Ice
cream cones and lolly-pops made appro-
priate refreshments. The dancing was
enlivened by Paul Joneses and a lucky
number dance won by E. Donahue and B.
Ferguson.
“I don’t see how you understand so
well just how it is,” said Miss Deems,
speaking to several students who had
never been to Bates. “You really_look
and act as the Bates people do!”
AMUSING AND SERIOUS SIDE OF
BATES DESCRIBED IN VESPERS
“I am going to describe a day at Bates,”
explained Zella Boynton ’20, who spoke
first at the Bates Vespers Sunday eve-
ning. After a brief description of the
house and barn at Long Branch she gave
the daily program for the children. “The
chief aim is to keep them continually
amused,” said Miss Boynton. “They like
to do things to songs and to learn funny
songs, so that all the ones you may know
are an asset. The life is much more in-
teresting than the schedule from break-
fast to bedtime indicates.” “Go with your
friends and see if you don’t have the best
time ever.”
The “serious side,” on which Elizabeth
Williams '20 spoke, dealt with the older
women and the business girls. They are
harder to know than the children, said
Miss Williams, for their hard lives make
them reticent. But there is something
fine and nice about them all and they are
just as fond of a good time and of being
treated to the movies as any of you. “It’s
a great inspiration to find people not
overcome by the sordid surroundings.
You get more from Bates than you give,
for knowing these people broadens you
and makes you more sympathetic.”
NINE FACE FOURTH FRENCH ORAL
Percentage of Failures High
Of the twenty-nine Seniors who took
the third French written examination,
twenty, or 68.96 per cent passed, leaving
nine to face a fourth trial in May. Last
year five failed the third French test and
in 1917 only two.
Passed: V. Anderton, S. Belville, M
Broomfield, R. Chadbourne, F. Clarke, A.
Collins, F. Fuller, D. Hall, G. Hearne, V
Hurlock, H. Johnson, M. Lafferty, M
Mackenzie, M. Moseley, M. Mumford,
Ramsay, R. Reinhardt, A. Stiles, M. Le
Thurman, M. Tyler.
Failed: H. Collins, R. Hamilton, M.
Janeway, E. Lanier, E. Matz, D. Peters,
_|upto-date Fourth—and
Bates Not a Luxury
“Bates is not a luxury but a necessity,”
said Miss Wiggin, “and yet in 1911 Mr.
Bates would have had to give up the
house except for your response to his
appeal. Bryn Mawr has supported Bates
for seven years and this year I was
thrilled to hear that you are raising
$1500.
“But it is of Americanization that I want
to speak just now. You have an oppor-
tunity to make better citizens and Ameri-
cans of these children, girls and women,
‘by helping to alter their hostile attitude
towards the schools, the employers, and
the government. No preaching is neces-
sary, just your friendship is enough. It
and the comfortable open-air life on their
vacation at Long Branch give them the
new courage necessary in order to go on
with the sordid city life.
“America owes these people decent liv-
ing conditions for the development of
their hopes and ideals, which are as high
as our own. If you have any doubt of
this remember the heroism of the fore-
woman of the burning shirt-factory, who
stuck to her job, quieting a panic and
marshaling forty girls out of the building,
until it was too late for her to escape
except by jumping to the pavement.
When you know these people and realize
how they have to live in order that you
may be a little more comfortable, you will
want—_to-do something to be worthy of
their sacrifice—to come down and do
your part in citizenising and Americanis-
ing Spring Street.”
Practical Side
“I needn’t add anything to what Miss
Wiggin has said to prove to you the
worth-whileness of Bates,” said Miss
Deems. “But I should like to tell you
a few practical little things as to where
and what Bates is and what the work is
like. The house is at Long Branch, L. L.,
and can be reached by the New York
Central and Pennsylvania railroads. It is
a nice house in a good neighborhood—in
fact the neighbors are quite fashionable
and rather object to our being there!
The work is hard but you feel rested
when it is over. Don’t think that these
stylishly dressed girls with their superior
air have no need of you or your friend-
ship. They copy you even in little ways of
dress after you are gone, and write me
letters asking about certain ones of you
who have been particularly good friends
to them.”
“Mothers of Men” An Amusing Story of
“Friendship Village”
A book has been put on the Community
Center reserve shelf in the Library which
outstrips, if possible, Mary Roberts
Rhinehart’s “Bab, a Sub-Deb” as a laugh
producer. It is called “Mothers of Men,”
by Zona Gale. The chapters are stories
in themselves and through the whole is a
connecting love theme.
In it we are told, in the words of Cal-
liope Marsh, how the ladies of Friendship
Village run one issue of the town paper
and are forced to sell it surreptitiously or
be jailed; how they ran a “nice, tastey,
cheap. to do;”
how they got around the school board
.}and had the school house open evenings
with dancing and fun; and how the ladies
M.|favored women’s suffrage when the men
were away, but when they were present
they thought that “home and bringing up
children seemed far, far more womanly
than the tobacco smoke and
whiskey of public life!”
C. Taussig, S. Taylor, D. Walton,
te a rege to. the plane, the work, and the lead her
i-] way to go about it. Tomes ly Me or be war ie te ote
noons: ‘Pembroke East, Rockefeller, and
| Radnor coming from 4 to 5; Pembroke
West, Merion, Denbigh, and Liysyfran
from 5 to 6.
A big college sing will be held Thurs-
day and Friday nights. Friday night,
instead of a regular lecture, Mr. Law-
rence has written that he may, “if the
spirit moves him, bring out some interest-
ing points in an extemporaneous way.”
A stereopticon machine will throw the
words of the new songs on a screen.
Mr. Lawrence asked “that a platform
‘be arranged for him, built to be treated
rather roughly; that seats be provided
around the wall for resting purposes;
and that the young ladies in the class
wear either one-piece dresses or bloom-
ers.”
SENIORS EXPERIENCE MERRY
DEATH AT FELLOWSHIP DINNER
Interpretations of Modern Art
Harlequin died merrily again last Fri-
day evening before a large audience at
the Senior fellowship dinner in Rocke-
feller, where the varsity play was local-
ized before the lower classes were “sung
out.” Modern poetry was read, and mod-
ern esthetics interpreted in a dance by
M. Hawkins and E. Moores.
E. Mercer, European Fellow, and E.
Fuller, wielding the hammer as toastmis-
tress, spoke. Other speakers were F.
Beatty, -C. Hayman, J. Holmes, F. Fuller,
L. Wood.
CALLS NEWSPAPER WORK GOOD
TRAINING FOR ANYTHING
Shirley Watkins Speaks on Journalism
“Newspaper writing is the easiest
thing in the world,” said Miss Shirley
Watkins in her talk on Journalism before
the English Club last Wednesday. Miss
Watkins has had four years of “straight
reporting” on the Philadelphia “Press”
and “Evening Ledger.” “The technique
and news sense come quickly,” she went
on. “All you have to do is to have some
intelligence, and if you haven't any, be
an art critic.”
“Reporting is good training for any-
thing,—the stage or banking, and especi-
ally for short story writing. It trains
the mind to organize material quickly,
and to grasp the essential points in a
situation. It teaches the value of sup-
pression of everything but the plain,
unvarnished facts.
“Newspaper experience also gives one
a genuine feeling for democracy. It
gives you a thirsting curiosity to know
what goes on in the souls of elevator
boys and bootblacks. It doesn’t take you
long to find out that every reporter on a
paper is burning with the short-story fire.”
Departmental System in Use on C. A.
In accordance with the new depart-
mental system, by which a closer connec-
tion between the committees and the Ex-
ecutive Board is brought about, the mem-
bers of the board in charge of the
Devotional, Educational, Social Service
and Membership Departments, have been
meeting once a week with the committees
under them and have reported at the
Monday board meetings and at the cabi-
net meetings. (Card catalogues of minis-
ters and vespers speakers, with subject —
and attendance, of the Bible and Mission
classes ever held in college, of the stu-
dent workers at Bates and at the Com-
munity Center and of the work done by
the committees of the ©. A., have been
made by the heads of departments and
are in the (. A. Library for reference.
aia sak a
hae Te
Ee ig oes
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IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE News"
Se er eC
An Armenian girl's story of her wan-|
of a personal letter to Kate Chambers
the story of this girl, Serpouli Berberian,
some time ago in Vespers. She writes: |
“The Turks scattered us and till now
we are wandering around. . . The
day when we were going out of Adana
your father, knowing our condition,
helped us, giving a sum of money, telling
that we will have need of it. So by this
help we reach Aleppo. There we lived
three months, every day in great fear.
Afterwards we were sent to Damascus.
There they took my husband and sent
him away as a soldier. After three and
a half months he returned, being very ill.
There, too, we were always in fear be-
cause every day they were writing out
names to send to other places or to make
us Turcs, so every minute we were in
great fear.
Flee from Damascus on Camels
“Until this time we did not have any
trouble for getting bread, because Miss
Webb was helping us from Adana and
my husband began work a little. After
the time Miss Webb went to America day
by day the troubles took place. Eivery-
thing was doubled—a piece of bread was
a quarter of a Mejid. No help from any-
where and in this time again they began
to gather together all the men as soldiers,
but the soldiers every day were dying by
hundreds from the lack of bread. For
this we were very sad, but what could we
do. One day I went and begged someone
that he may send us to Jebel Deuruez. So
by night he sent us three days from Da-
maseus by camels. At last we reached
there and lived there about six months,
where there was no power of the govern-
ment,
“After six months, by the help of God,
we traveled twelve days through the
desert by camels with a little child who
was five years old, my little son. After
twelve days we reached Akaba (by the
help of God). And from there the British
Government sent us to Cairo (my hus-
band being a preacher he was free from
being a soldier). We had lost our every-
thing. I had lost my sisters and my hus-
band had lost his brothers, so from my
family only I, and from his family only
he, was alive.
Find Work at Port Said
“Almost naked we reached Cairo, but
yet thanks to the Lord that we didn’t die
from starving. Wherever we went He
prepared a table for us. We hoped that
in Cairo too we would find persons like
your father or Miss Webb, who were al-
ways ready to help, but alas! no one
helped us. We couldn’t find any work for
about two months. Now for the present
we found some work on Port Said in the
Armenian Camp. We both of us are
teaching in the school. I am very weak,
cannot work, that is, I am not able to
work, being too weak, but I am obliged
to because we have so many needs that
my husband alone cannot fulfil them. I
am sure that if your father hears of our
condition he will help us.
“Dear Mrs. Kate! Your poor Serpouli
what things saw! In the massacre and
in the war. ‘Que sont soie! Dame Na-
ture pour lui fit tout et pour moi rien.’
ou When I hear from you and know
your address little by little I will write.
Please excuse my mistakes in English
because I have forgotten.
Yours sincerely,
Serpouli Berberian.”
Thorndike’s strong defense was broken
only three times during the game, twice
after scrimmages before the goal and
once by a long well-aimed shot by E.
Anderson. Line-up:
1919 1922
Me POE. ce ices Te i 6 6c Site ae F. Bliss
Es ea Ree tisies E. Anderson
G. Hearne........ Oe ease O. Howard
E. Lanier........ pk a A. Nicoll
MURS osc san oe Bod cen F. Robbins
J. Peabody....... Bees visgnecee M. Krech
A. Thorndike...... Oe sede B. Clarke
Goals—1919, M. Tyler, 6; G. Hearne, 4;
E. Lanier, 1. 1922, E. Anderson, 1; F.
Bliss, 1; B. Clarke, 1.
1921 TAKES SECOND TEAM GAME
Defeat Juniors 3-1
Wild throwing and frequent fouls
marked the first second team game won
by 1921 from 1920 last night by a score
of 3-1
M. R. Brown ’20 was a strong halfback.
J. Spurney ’21 steadied the Sophomores
in the second half by clean stops and
good passing to H. James ’21. Line-up:
1920 1921
MP OINOE . 6 oc ssc Moe ines H. Farrell
Da. ms COPOY... 25 Cee vessel H. James
mM. Brown.......<. L B...°....0, Mebride
iM. R. Brown..... OW. i os ca J. Spurney
OORT... BM vec cenes M. Smith
Me ec eceks dais siccic R. Marshall
Tas MOUOES.. 60-0 000s iain en ce E. Kales
Goals—1920, T. James, 1. 1921, H.
James, 2; D. McBride, 1.
Substitutes—1920, M. Littell for H.
Kingsbury; H. Kingsbury for M. R.
Brown; M. R. Brown for L. Kellogg.
SENIORS VICTORIOUS ON SECOND
Defeat Freshmen 7-2-
Goals made largely through the long,
well-aimed throws of M. Thurman '19 and
the sure catching of M. Tyler "19 gave the
Seniors the first second team game last
night by a score of 7-2 against 1922.
Each half began with a goal in the first
minute by M. Tyler '19, followed by a goal
by P. Smith ’22.
A. Pomerantz & Son
Exclusive], Designs of
_ANNOUNCEMENT| —
ANNIVERSARY ° .
$ “BIRTHDAY - | .
@ 4 TALLYJ
{ 2 CARDS
“FOR |EVERY OCCASION
1525 Chestnut Street, Philada.
ee ee
est record made in last year’s meet. B.
Murless ’22 had good form in hurdling.
The track meets are set for April 26
and May 3.
1920 TIES 1921 IN PRELIMINARY
WATER-POLO MATCH
E. Cope and K. Townsend Star
1921's good offense, marked by 1920's
equally strong defense, resulted in a close
game Monday night, ending with a score
of 2-2.
The Juniors led off with two goals,
made easily in the first half by H. Zinsser.
PB. Cope ’21 was an unusually effective
halfback, getting in some skillful drib-
bling to give the ball to her forwards,
who were unable in the first half to shoot
past K. Townsend's far-reaching defense
at goal.
In the second half the red forwards
scored two goals, putting in the second
just in time to tie the game before the
whistle blew.
BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Teams 4.30 5.10
mon 1,.3,.5..1919: 1920. .1921:1922
OE, xiecces 2, 4,6. .1919:1920. .1921:1922
Wed. ....; 1, 3, 4,5. .1920:1922. .1919:1921
Thurs 1, 2, 3,5. .1920:1921. .1919:1922
Fri. 5 oe 2, 4 6. .1920:1922. .1919:1921
fib Baad? Bee ga ie oeh
‘aee he ill
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| WALNUT 170
L. Stone Co.
MODES—INEXPENSIVELY STYLISH
Toes eer
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Photographs of Distinction
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Special Rates to Students
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New Yor: 507 Fifth’Avenne
Bartiumore: 16 W. Lexington Street
WaAsHINGTON: 1331 F. Street, North
West
Boston: 647 Boylston Street
COLLEGE AND SCHOOL? EMBLEMS
AND NOVELTIES
FRATERNITY EMBLEMS, SEALS, CHARMS
PLAQUES, MEDALS, ETC.
of Superi.r Quality and Design
THE HAND BOOK
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malied upon request
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Pattern
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Spring
1919
Smarter
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Distinctive creations in both
medium and high Louis heels
in white, black and patents.
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Ready at 7.50 and 8.50
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WALK-OVER SHOPS
10@2 CHESTNUT ST. i228 MARKET ST.
“In the first two. years: of. war,” said
M,. Fribourg, “three hundred and forty
writers were killed, and these
represent only a fraction of thesFrench-
men. of intellect who perished. They. paid
with their lives for the splendid example
that ‘they set to the rest of the nation.
ae of them might have been mobilized
in auxiliary forces ‘or in laboratories far
- to the rear, had they so wished, but they
chose the front lines.”
; FRENCH SCHOLARSHIP OFFERED .
; A scholarship. has been given anono-
to the Carola Woerishoffer De-
it of Social _Economy to enable a
French woman to take a graduate course
in Industrial Supervision at Bryn Mawr
College. Mile. Saint ’Exupery, lady in
waiting to the Duchess of Vendome, is
to be responsible for selecting candidates
fn France. The scholarship will be of
the.same vajue,as the other European
Scholarships ($405).
CALENDAR
Thursday, March 27
4.00 p.m.—Community Singing. Hall
groups, conducted by Mr.
Robert Lawrence.
9.00 p.m.—Mass Community Sing in the
gymnasium, conducted by
Mr. Robert Lawrence.
Friday, March 28
8.45 a. m.—Chapel. Special speaker,
President Keyser Edmunds,
of Canton, China.
8.00 p.m.—Lecture on Community Sing-
ing and mass sing, conducted
by Mr. Robert Lawrence.
Saturday, March 29
8.00 p.m.—Sophomore-Senior Dance.
Sunday, March 30
6.00 p.m.—Vespers. Speaker, A. R. Du-
bach '19.
8.00 p.m.—Chapel. Sermon by the Rt.
Rev. Charles Edward Wood-
cock, D.D., Bishop of Ken-
tucky.
Monday, March 31
9.00 a. m.—Meeting of Mr. King’s classes
in English Diction.
7.30 p.m.—Current events. Dr. Fen-
wick.
8.15 p.m.—Social Hygiene Lecture by
Dr. Ellen Potter.
Tuesday, April 1
9.15 p.m.—Meeting of the Discussion
Club.
~ Wednesday, April 2
7.30 p.m.—Bible Class, conducted by
Dr. Chew under the auspices
of the C. A.
8.30 p. m.—Lecture by Dr. Jonathan Day,
Commissioner of Public Mar-
kets, in Room F, Taylor.
Thursday, April 3
7.30 p.m.—Conference on Rural Com-
munity Center Work. Lead-
ers, Hilda Smith '10 and Miss
Compton.
Saturday, April 5
8.00 p.m.—Senior Play.
Sunday, April 6
6.00 p.m.—Silver Bay Vespers. Speak-
ers, Miss LeSoeur, Grace Ty-
ler, Vassar ‘18, and Helen
James ‘21.
febd, wil transfor the books of porte
nent value into its stacks. — Other vol-
'q{umes not worth adding to the college ‘col-
{lection will be sent to the community cen-|
,|ter and to negro’ schools in the South.
Those volumes not worth preserving at
all will go to the Junk Committee to be
sold. At least half of the Denbigh Li-
brary books will be kept.
It is the plan of the college to build up
a library in. the Infirmary of books suit-
able for convalescing students. Many
Fiction Library books will be turned over
to the Infirmary, especially those hia’
cated in the main stacks.
DR. HOPPIN SCORES PACIFISM
AND PACIFISM PROPAGANDA
Warns in Chapel of Its Menace
“Shall exaggerated humanitarianism
have to lose us what we have gained in
the war?” asked Dr. Hoppin in chapel on
Thursday, as he warned the students
against the insidious spread of the paci-
fism that has tinged American colleges.
“I sincerely hope there are no pacifists
in this college,” said Dr. Hoppin, as he
branded the conscientious objector as
identical with the coward.
Germany has been too much pampered,
according to Dr. Hoppin. She must be
put on her own feet so that she can pay
off her damages, but in absolute justice
she must not be let off her deserts, as
much propaganda insinuates.
“Bolshevism and the I. W. W. are close
to the general idea of pacifism,” declared
Dr. Hoppin. “No feature of pacifism is not
to the advantage of Germany. Pacifism
has played into German hands both be-
fore and after the entrance of the United
States into the war. Now after the suc-
cessful military conclusion, when Ger-
many threatens Bolshevism, it is aiding
that movement. Unless Bolshevism is
solved the right way, the war may yet be
lost.”
COMMUNITY CENTER DRIVE FOR
$15,000 COMING
Prize Offered to College Student for Best
Advertising Suggestion
Open house, with exhibits of the handi-
craft, dressmaking, and manual training
classes, will be kept at the Milestone dur-
ing a Community Center drive for $15,000
in the third week of May. Plays will be
given by the various dramatic clubs, and
on the last day Governor Sproul will
speak.
Publicity work will be done largely
through the college. A prize of $3.00 is
offered by the Social Service Committee
in to H. Hill '21, on or before April 5.
The posters should advertise the activi-
ties of the week and provide a slogan and
a heading, which can later be reduced
and used as a letter-head on all Commu-
nity Center announcements.
VACHEL LINDSAY REPRESENTED AT
GRADUATE FELLOWSHIP DINNER
Dr. M. P. Smith Guest of Honor
Dr. Marion Parris Smith was the fac-
ulty guest of honor at the graduate fel-
lowship dinner given in Denbigh dining-
room Friday night. The two newly ap-
pointed European fellows, Miss Mary
Buchanan and Miss Drusilla Plather, were
toasted by three of the foreign graduates,
Mile. Trotain, Mlle. Léredde and Miss
Wilkie.
Most entertaining of the stunts was
Miss Beatrice Allard’s clever take-off on
Vachel Lindsay. Miss Allard, as Mr.
Lindsay, read original parodies, in terms
of London vehicles, on “The Santa Fé
Trail” and the “Calliope Yell.”
Miss Jane Davies arranged the pro
gram.
for the best suggestion for posters handed
17 black
and 3
Trial samples of |}
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free on request.
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MARY G. MecCRYSTAL |
Chotee Assortment of WOOLS for Every
Kind of Sweater
Laces, Embroideries, Ruchings, Silk
Handkerchiefs‘and Notions
842 Lancaster Avenue. Bryn Mawr
HABIT AND BREECHES
—
Cleaning, coment Coctes
; Lancaster A 3 Stores West of Post
840; er Ave., he Office,
FRANCIS B. HALL|
JEANNETT’S
BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plantsp—Personal supervision on all erdese
807 Lancaster Ave.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 570
£ M. FENNER
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Fine and Fancy Cakes, Confections
Bryn Mawr (Telephone) Ardmere
PilONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
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BRYN MAWR
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JOHN J. MeDEVITT —
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SCHOOLS
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Tue HARCUM
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THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO.
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMENT
D. N. ROSS (Pittey) "'yauea¥™
Instructor in Pharmacy and Materia
Medica, and Director of the Pharmaceu-
tical Laboratory at Bryn Mawr Hospital.
BAS TMAR’ S KODAES AnD FILMS
Afternoon Tea and Luncheoa
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicious
TRUNK AND BAG REPAIRING
T Tra
runks, ger hype of thoroughly
Harness, Saddlery and Automobile Supplies
Phone, 373
EDWARD L. POWERS
903-905 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR, Pa.
Bell Telephone, Walnut 3274
MISS IRENE C. MULHOLLAND
TOILET, PREPARATIONS
Marzce. Wavive, Smampoome, Factan Masaaca,
Mantcunmee, Viourr Rar Taxatwenr
ROOM #3, WIDENER BLDG.
N. W. Cor. Juniper and Chestnut Sts. Take Local Elevator
College news, March 26, 1919
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College
1919-03-26
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 05, No. 22
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-no22