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Ae XI, No. 16
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BRYN, MAWR, PA; WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 1925
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1928 GIVES AMUSING —
SHOW ABOUT ALICE
Inhabitants of Wonderland Appear
in the Rabbit Hole and Palace |
Amid Modern Conveniences
COSTUMES ARE: EXCELLENT
“Alice to be Tried for Murder,” present-
ed by 1928 to 1926 in the gymnasium last
Saturday night, was. both a delightful
reunion with-old_friends. -and—an—exciting.
revelation of our dreams. Rarely in all
our years of research in the pages illus-
trated by Tenniel and Rackham, have we
gone so far into Wonderland and grown
so intimate with its people. It was pleas-
ant and: reassuring to find then almost
‘the same as ever, things in just the same
disorganized condition, still no time for
washing up between times, still watches
dipped in tea. “Off with her head” has
evidently had no effect as yet on the crime
wave of Wonderland; for the cook looked
sinister enough for the French Revolution.
The Duchess and the Queen of Hearts
swept about in a really imperious manner
in gorgeous robes and headdresses steep
and stiff enough for Queen Mary herself.
Dormouse, Mad Hatter and March Hare
had their, true. baffling personalities and
were beautifully dressed; the Hatter’s
embroidered white waistcoat and _ the
March Hare’s blue coat with brass but-
tons were only less alluring than the feet
of the Oyster Chorus, the nicest lot of
flippers we have ever segn” In fact, a
great deal of the show was an interesting
study from the knees. down, especially
because one of the most popular dance
stéps wasea kind of qrcular collapse of
the knees. Not that the dancing was
poor; it varied from the fine toe-dancing
of Fan to the mute, vigorous clogging of
CONTINUED ON PAGE a
ARE YOUR REASONS SINCERE
ONES? QUESTIONS MR. HARRIS
Young Minister Fears We Justify Our
Ways by Tortuous Thinking :
z “There is not a single great issue in the.
“ world today on which Christians, as Chris-
tians, do not take opposite sides,” said Mr.
Erdman Harris in chapel last Sunday eve-
ning. * :
““They did not understand what Jesus
said and they were afraid to ask what he
meant.’ Jesus’ early followers did not
understand what He was driving ‘at. But
do we, being so divided on great issues, tn-
derstand any better?
« “In politics; .for example, followers of
‘Davis, Coolidgeand La Follette all believed
that their candidate embodied the principles
for which Christ stood.
“In economics, the capitalist and the
Christian radical both believe that they are
standing for —— to hasten the kingdom
of heaven.
“In the use of money, Christian opinion is
equally divided. Bill Simpson works as an
’ itinerant shoeless carpenter, refusing to take
money for his services, and believing that
in a life of poverty, he is doing the will of
God and expressirig the spirit of Christ.
Other sincere Christian gentlemen feel that
they are doing the will of God by going to
Florida to rest.
“On the matter of war, Dr. Coffin and
Dr. : Fosdick, both Christian ministers, dis-
Two PORTRAITS MAKE TRIP TO
EXHIBITION WORTH WHILE
Portraits Best of Dull Exhibition; Other
Genres Copy Past Success
“Tt has been a long time since anything
has been as dull as the Exhibition of the
Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts,” said
Miss G. G, King, professor of -history of
art at Bryn’,Mawr, speaking in ¢hapel
‘last Wednesday. “Two things which I
-~will mention later are, however, quite
-worth the ineonvenienee-of-the+trip.”
“As a class, the portraits were best. But
portraits bear perhaps somewhat the same
‘elation to other painting as sermons to other
forms in. literature—they are things apart
which do not alter with the style. A portrait
must do three things,” continued Miss King.
“It must give pleasure; it must give an ac-
count of the sitter for those who come
after, and it must give a not ignoble account
or criticism of human nature.”
The portrait of Irvin S. Cobb and his
daughter, Elizabeth, and the portrait. by:
Roy H. Collins both ignore the third re-
quirement. The former is appalling; it is
in the realm of satiric comedy. ‘The lat-
ter approaches intimate vulgarity, not ex-
clusively the painter’s nor yet wholly the
subject’s. Agreeable and expensive were
the portraits of children. In general, how-
ever these must violate the third require-
ment, since they cannot give the cee
of what is to be.
There weye three very good portraits,
all of professional men, fulfilling the first
and second requirements: “Rev.’ Samuel
A. Eliot,” by Charles Hopkinson; “Dr.
William J..Taylor,” by Lazar Raditz, and
“Dr. -A. J: Cohen,” “by Albert Rosenthal.
These help to fix a type to which the pro-
fession always tries to attain.
Aside from the portraits, the paintings
just’ tried to reproduce past-successes or
were of minor types. Catherine Priestly
Richardson’s “Fuchsia,” however, has a
real interest in form and color. “Province-
town in Winter” and “Planting Potatoes,”
by Ross E. Moffet, convey a sense of'
reality and life going on. Jonas~Lie in
“The Strings of the Lute,” “Storm” and
“Dawn,” shows a real feeling for land-
scape, sincerity and depth. Sd
“The two paintings which made the
trip worth while,” said Miss King in con-
cluding, “were Charles W. Hawthorne’s
‘The Captain’s Wife’
Johnson’s ‘Woman and Child.’ In_ its
criticism of life, in its experience, and in
the quality of the painting, ‘The ptain’s
Wife’ sums up all the past. ‘The Woman
and Child’ has the solidity of bronze and,
though pure design, it is tridimensional.
In it is all the future.”
CLASS GYM MEETS APPROACH IN
FIRST TWO WEEKS IN MARCH
Only the first teams will perform this
year in the gym meets which are to be
held on March 6 and 13 at half-past four,
in the gymnasium.
There will be exercises and vaults on
the horse and exercises on the bars by the
class teams, while individuals will do ex-
ercises: and vaults on both, As usual, the
meet will end with the pyramids of each
class, as Miss Applebee has’ decided to
omit the “surprise drill” originally
planned. Mr. Bishop ne Mr. Cromie will
be the judges.
The’ captains of the class teams are:
1925, E. Bradley; 1926, G. Leewitz; 1927,
land varied history.
and Robert Ward!
M. Cruikshank; 1928, H. Tuttle.
ILE DE FRANCE IS ‘BIRTHPLACE '
OF GREAT GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE
History of. Ile de France Is Sharp
Contrast to Peaceful Appearance .
“Ile de France” was fhe ‘subject on
which Miss Parde, Professor of French at
Bryn Mawr, gave an illustratedNecture last
Friday evening, under the auspices of the
French Club.
“This name,” she began, “is used to desig-
nate the country around, Paris, separated
4 from the rest of _France__by__the—Seine,
Marne, Oise and Aisne, which form*a rough
squate. It is a rolling plain, rich in memo-
ries which*are written in its stones.
“Quiet, unspectacular as it seems, it is
from the point*of view of history the cen-
tre of France’s life. The Merovingians and
the Carlovingians had their seats here, and
in the tenth century the Capetians of Paris
succeeded to power. Their descendants
ruled France till the last century, conquering
the rest of the country gradually and unit-
ing it,~*In this portion of Picardy and Nor-
mandy was born the Gothic style of. archi-
tecture,
“A privileged, protected land, it could
develop .at its ease. We find here avery
dense population, not massed in large cities,
but living in innumerable small towns, quiet
now and seemingly dead, but once players
of a great role in history.”
Miss Parde then showed slides of the Ile
de France. Pontoise, a tranquil town, wits
once an important seat of kings. Auvert is
celebrated by many artists, among them
Dupres and Daubigny.
Beauvais is a proud city. Its ‘cathedral,
St. Pierre, is the last word in Gothic bold-
ness, and the last of the great cathedrals.
Built 6n a breath-taking scale, it was to sur-
pass St. Peter’s at Rome. But it was so
vast that it was never completed, and it
stands there as if cut in half, in strange dis-
proportion. The Place Jeanne Hachette,
surrounded by medieval houses, commemo-
rates the heroine of Beauvais, who under
Louis XI saved the town from the Bur-
gundians,
Compiegne was one of the most famous
of the kings’ residences and has had a long
The present chateau
was built by Gabriel for Louis. XV, who
-used to come there. often and hunt in the
great. forest. Napolean I also visited Com-
piegne; but the height of its glory was under
Napoleon III, when the court was held
there. Interesting also was the tower in
which Jeanne d’Arc was imprisoned, and
the old Cistercian abbey in the heart of the
forest.
Noyon was the capital of Charlemagne.
In the heart of the invaded area, it is in
ruins now, but before the war had an inter-
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
HAMPTON SINGERS REAPPEAR
MOTON TO SPEAK
A meeting on Race Relations will be held
in the Academy of Music at-4 P M., Sun-
day, March 8. The Hampton Quartet will
sing Negro spirituals. Dr. Robert R. Mo-
ton, principal of Tuskegee Institute, and Dr.
James E. Gregg, principal of Hampton In-
stitute, will speak.
No cards for admission will be required,
but reserved seats may be secured’ by appli-
cation to the Hampton Tukegee Endow-
ment Fund, Room 415, Stock Exchange.
Building.
On Saturday, March 7, at 8 P. M., a meet-
‘ing will be held in the Bryn Mawr Presby-
terian Church, at. which Robert R. Moton,
successor of Booker T. Washington as prin-
cipal of Tuskegee Institute, will speak, and
the Hampton Quartet will sing.
BRYN MAWR TUNES UP
FOR A SPRING DRIVE
Undergraduates Take a Note In.
Scale; Enthusiastic Meeting |
Agrees to Raise $27,000
VARSITY DRAMATICS ARE VOTED
7s
27
Pledging ,000 for g note in the Tune
Up Bryn Mawr! scaf®“the Undergradu-
ates took their places beside the Alumnae
in the campaign for the Endowment of the
Muisic Department and the Auditorium,
at a mass meeting in Taylor Hall on Mon-
day evening, February 23.
Miss Barber, ’25, president of the Un-
dergraduate Association, who was in the
chair, outlined the students’ part in the
drive. Blanks are to be obtained at the
‘Publicity Office, which are to be filled out
with the names of possible donors; work
under one of the district chairmen can be
done in the spring vacation; and the entire
undergraduate body is to be divided into
districts like the Alumnae regions.
Moré important than these details was
the thrilling spirit of co-operation among
all Bryn Mawrtyrs past and present,
reminiscent of May Day, the union of
forces as everyone prepares for the “spring
offensive,”
At the same mass meeting the college
voted to substitute Varsity Dramatics for
the present system of class plays, keeping,
of course, Freshmen Show and Glee Club
operetta. C. Remak, president of the
Senior class, said that probably Senior
play could be replaced this spring by a
Varsity play given in Roberts Hall at
Haverford College. The profits from this
performance could then be placed in the .
undergraduate quota,for the campaign. A
motion. was passed that a committee of
five should be appointed by the Under-
graduate Board to choose a play.
LIBERALS HEAR FAIRY TALES
- FROM HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS
D. C. Thompson Speaks on Past iad
- Present of Celtic Folk Lore
Speaking before the Liberal Club last
Thursday night, Mr. David Cleghorn
Thompson, of Edinborough, told stories
out of Scottish folk ‘lore, whi¢h, along
with other Irish folk lore, has lately been
revived. :
They are tales and songs of the fisher-
men in the Erishkay. Islands and the outer
Hebrides; some of them are to be found
in the collection of Mrs. Kennedy Fraser, .
Mr. Kenneth MacClough and Mr. W. B.
Yeats. Like the Greek and English legends.
they have been handed down by word of
mouth in the gatherings round the evening
fireside. Lately, since the men have been
off to.the war, and the girls to work in
the world outside, these fairy tales of the
islands have veered from their old tradi-
tions, and sometimes from their old popu-
larity.
But the half-witted village poets eee
managed to keep them still in very famil- —
iar ways. There is the changeling in the
story of “Michael Scot” and “The Priest's _
Lassie,” the keen-witted dancing fairies i in
“The Two Hunchbacks,” and, of course,
the straying kings, the giants who demand
/the first born in return for their services,
and the lovely daughters who outwit
their wicked parents. Mr. Thompson
told three or four of these stories with
their properties peculiar to the nets
and islands.”
oy
THE COLLEGE NEWS.
The College News
[Founded in 1914.) a
p Published weekly during the collége year in the
nie interest of Bryn Mawr Soliegs
Managing Editor,......Jman Lons, '26
CENSO!
B. PIrney,
NEWS EDITOR
27 K. — "27
EDITORS
M. Leary, '27 .
——
ASSISTANT EDITORS
M. Smits, '27 Linn, '26
R. RIcKARY, ‘ay:
¢
BUSINESS BOARD
- MANAGER—ManrGaRet Boyrpen, '25
Marion NaGup, ’25
ASSISTANTS
3 WILBor, '26 N, Bowman, °27 ~
nae ‘27 ELIZABETH TySON, '26
h "Lum, ’ 27 "A. Wriut, '26
n at any tim
Mailing Price, 53. 00
second "sss. dadion ne ene
1914, at the ogg office at Bryn awr, ga
e Act of March 3, 1889. 4.
Subscriptions: may be
Subscription, $2.50 ,
°
under t
CHANGE
Voting unanimously for Varsity Dra-
matics in a mass meeting on Thursday eve-
ning and deciding on Thursday to try a
startling experiment with “The, Lantern,”
the college continues to worship its new god-
dess, Change. “Ancient, outworn” Tradition
has been tottering siftce the abolition of
Freshman Night and Freshman rules. With
the new legislature and the renovation of
the Sunday night chapel system, very. little
seems to be left sacred and untouched. We
seem to be emerging from the grgat collegiate
period. Class rivalries, “odd and even”
demonstrations, and class undertakings, are
disappearing; interest in association matters
and the routine business of the campus: is
waning. This is not the result of an increase
in the practice of the scholar’s life; nor is
it caused by a decrease in the interest in
intellectual things. It is due largely, we be-
lieve, to more wisdom. The undergraduate
mind is getting a little wiser and ceasing to
care for the pettiness of class factions and
the trivial gravity of so many college offices.
The_yalue of leisure and a certain independ-
ence of the frenzied’ hurry of today, are
good.
SPECTACLES
Horn-rimmed spectacles are becoming an
almost invariable accompaniment of the
college student. Owl-eyed we walk about
the campus, peering over our falling glasses
or hastily adjusting them for “perfect. vi-
sion” as we approach a vaguely familiar
form we feel we should call by. name, but
which name? Not being small boys,of the
age who dote on spectacles, (yes, it’s only
window-glass) wearing them to add to their
. small forms the appearance of age, wisdom
or importance (what girl wants any one of
these?), is not this gradual insidious spread
of the horn horror a pity? Especially rapid
is the disease’s attack on the art students,
who most need their eyes, which, through
the gray winter months, daily grows: feebler
as their owners peer anxiously at fine Si-
enese work by the flickering feeble light of
the east corridor. Bryn Mawr has the repu-
tation for being the home of the blue-stock-
ings. Shall we foster this report by sending
out each student, bespectacled, oh homely
insignia of the grind, into the world? For];
the few that live unglassed through the joys
of microscopic work assuredly fall by the
wayside in art. Will no one contribute
lights for the east corridor to save our eyes
‘and thereby our reputations?
The Editors do not hold themselves re-
sponsible fee the opinions expressed in this
column,
, ae the Editor of THe News:
"May I recommend to your attention Vie
: National Intercollegiate Oratorical Con-
e Constitution which is being
held this year under the auspices of the
Tce
final meeting. in Los Angulenton June 5,
1925. The orations must be original, not
require more, than-10 minutes for delivery,
and on any one of the following subjects:
The Constitution. "
Washington and the Constitution.
Hamilton and the Constitution?
Jefferson ahd the Constitution.
Marshall and the Constitution.
Madison and the~Constitution.
Webster and the Constitution.
Lincoln and the Constitution.
Each participating institution ig to
choose its own representative, and a col-
lege may be entered in the contest through
a letter from an official or from a student.
All entries closé March 14.
Since the appointment of a representa-
tive for this contest does not appear to
come ‘within the jurisdiction.of any of
the Bryn Mawr associations, any student
on her own responsibility.
It is hoped by the federation conducting
it that the contest wil be a means of turn-
ing college thought “and enthusiasm to-
ward the business of government, partic-
ularly the form of Constitutional govern-
ment developed in the United States.
Whether or no any Bryn Mawr under-
»graduate wishes to participate, I feel sure
that many will ‘be interested.
Yours very truly,
M. CASTLEMAN, ’25.
a
BRYN MAWR ATTENDS
STUDENT VOLUNTEER PARLEY
(Specially contributed by A. Boross, '25,
and S. Carey, ’25)
At the twentieth annual Student Volun-
teer Conference for fereign missions of
the Eastern Union at Bucknell University,
Lewisburg, Pa, February 20-23, Bryn
Mawr was represented by a delegation
of two, which made itself not only seen,
‘but also heard. Before an audience of 300
people in the Evangelical Church, they
rendered vocal duets at meals in the form
of such lilting tunes as On Varsity and
Like the Wind. Delegations of more
than two were sent by Elizabethtown
College, Dickinson, Juniata, Gettysburg
College and Seminary, Muhlenberg, Mt.
Airy Seminary, Penn State, Princeton
| University and Seminary and Lebanon
College.
create and promote a more intelligent un-
derstanding of the missionary enterprise.
The leading speakers were Dr. Walter
Judd, Dr. Barnes, Rev. Howard Ander-4
son and, Dr. Bred Mabes. Dr. Barnes
presented the question from the point of
view of a medical missionary just returned
from China; Dr. ‘Mabes, from the angle
of a teacher from Shanghai College,
China. Dr. Judd stressed the fundamental
requisites for such work, interpreting the
modern purpose of the movement to be
“the world-wide application of a world-
wide program of Christianity.” Dr. Ander-
son told vivid tales of his experiences as
a missionary in the Punjab, India, He
attributed the religious unrest among the
low caste in India to the fact that al-
though they are trying to find satisfaction
in “seeking the living among the dead,”
they seem to feel a need for something
more than their decadent religious cus-
toms. Rather than antagonism Dr. An-
derson has found an eagerness to hear we
message of Christ._
Every speaker seemed to stress the
fact that the primary desire- of the mis-
sionary, regardless of creed, is to preach
the fundamentals of the Gospel of Christ,
leaving each nation to adapt these to
themselvesaccording to their own culture.
The more comprehensive and far-sighted
policy of the present day is that Christ’s
message can be more extensively con-
veyed through such channels as education.
‘medical work, agriculture, etc. Further-
more, the missionary’s great aim is to
1] supplant as soon as possible his work
| by native work and to withdraw from
>| the foreign field the moment that be cels
ee
desiring to enter would, I presume, do so.
The purpose of the conference was to’
THE FEBRUARY LANTERN
(Specially Contributed by Dr. Walter. Is,
Bullock, Professor of Italian.)
The February number of. the Lantern is
very good,, indeed, critically, fictionally. and
poetically.
It opens with an article by Miss Follans-
bee-on “The New William Blake,” largely
‘an appreciation of Foster Damon’s recent
volume. Mr. Damon, .a$.a romantic aesthete
(when I first met him, he would eloud his
rooms with fumes.of strange exotic incense),
was well fitted psychologically to interpet
Blake; and Miss Follansbee has admirably
mentioning romanticism by name, she yet
succeeds in showing. clearly how the ideas
of Blake were in their essence an artistic
vaporisation of the earlier romantics summed
up in Rousseau. One of. Miss Follansbee’s
excellent characterizations is significantly
“Book Review” that closes this same number
of the Lantern, According to Blake’s inter-
pretation, as Miss Follansbee points out,
“Job had lived-by a moral law rather than
by the.inspiration of his heart”: this was the
source of all his evils. Glenwar Westcott
1 “The Apple of the Eye” (I cannot help
a parenthetical and not wholly pedantic wish
that the Lantern, when it names books in
footnotes or reviews, would give the place
and date of publication) “is preoccupied,”
says:-the Lantern reviewer’s sympathetic but
by no means undiscerning sketch, “with
a vaguely formulated philosophy
which is opposed to conventional ethics.”
The early romantic contempt for established
codes, on the ground that “to be beautiful
and wise one needs only to be exuberant”
and give full vent to the impulsive instincts
of the moment—this ‘attitude, which “was
so powerful an element in Blake, is. still
much with us in a certain school today.
But the Lantern’s critical interest is keep-
ing us too long from its equally absorbing
cannot help wishing that even a lunatic
would not say “back of” when he means
“behind” ).
In verse, Miss Ling has written a mov-
ing, troublous “Prophecy” in pentameter
couplets whose musical variety skillfully
avoids the monotonous. . Miss Blumen-
stock’s “Gaillardiae” is a brief poetic flower-
labic fifth and seventh lines seem, perhaps, a
little too unexpected; but smoothness, of
course, is rather at a discount now-a-days.
PEOPLE DARE NOT
QUESTION THEIR BELIEFS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
“When a gentleman thinks it is right to
spend $10,000 on the coming-out party of
his daughter, ushering her into her world of
| marriagability upon'a wave of luxury, while
a woman on the East’ Side is ‘struggling to
gather $15 for blood infusion for a sick
son, some of us suspect that the gentleman
is kidding himself into believing that he is
carrying out Christian principles.
“The trouble. with many people is not
that they cannot understand what Christ's!
principles would be. if applied to a given
they are afraid to ques-
oss tion themselves about it.”
Riess
summed and interpreted his book, Never.
paralleled by--a~-sentence- in- the unsigned}
impression, beautifully phrased: the octosyl-|
jis fast becoming necessary for hospitals,
NEW WONDERLAND SHOWN
IN FRESHMAN SHOW:
: CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee, -with
very fluent work by the choruses.
The Frog Footman did not dance; but»
he had a subtle,way of expressing his
feelings with every inch of his great body
and every twist of his melancholy mouth,
that was unsurpassed. Though.Sinbad and
his wife #n every port did not quite belong
in Wonderland, they were delightful
enough to pay a visit. -
As for Alice, with her naive charm
and beautiful long white legs, she justi-
fied all our past love of her. And the
more substantial, wise White Rabbit, was
most a attractive hero with undoubtedly
the nicest tail ever seen on the Bryn
Mawr stage.
improvements,” a comfortable - pile of
cushions at the bottom of the dramatical-
ly .précipitous tunnel, a mottled red and
blue “wallpaper” (such as William Mor-
ris would not have included in his 400),
and a remarkable broadcasting horn for
the Herald. The Duchess’ Palace was a
combination, rather typical of the owner
herself, of a country-house with French
windows and a mediaeval banqueting-hall
with its-huge red.table. The little-green
well from which the Cheshire Cat emerged
was just where the White Rabbit would
find something. Thongh we have Sttn
the dramatic moments of: five freshman
shows, the hauling out of the Cheshire
Cat is our favorite.
The program with its picture of Alice
in her academic gown was handsome,
but a little terrifying. Alice was cer-
tainly not quite herself. “The moral of
that is’—don’t Wear your gown too often!
“The cast of Freshman Show ‘was as
follows:
A. Talcott
fiction. Two penetrating character studies Alice—1928 .... se see eeee eee ees
are comprised in “The Widow of Abner White Rabbit—1926 ..........¢. -.C, Field
Dole” and “The Trivial Round.” It is] Duchess—1925 ..........%.+. M. Salinger
something of a surprise, in thé first, to find Cook—1927 ... 0... cess reese es A. Palache
so eminently European a madam establishing Queen of Hearts ........... H. Yandell
herself with such intimate familiarity in a] Herald ...........0.+seeeeeeees J.. Fesler
small New England village;~ but Miss Humpty-Dumpty sateen ee ees ..T. Barbour
Thomas set her stage perfectly, and her] Sinbad ......-.-+:+eeeeeeeeeees FE. Moore
description of how “slowly but surely. the] Elsie ...-..ss+eeeeneeereeeees M. Miller
paralyzed fingers” of the ailing widow “began | Lacy ....+.+.+e+seeseeeeeeees ..E. Klein
to take a clawlike grasp on the soul of } Tweedle Dum ................ A. Bruere
Madam,” and of Madam’s ultimate. release,| Tweedle Dee .......-.+++++5+ M. Fowler
is swiftly and effectively drawn. And Miss[{ Fan .....-.:-0sesseereeeeeeeees L. Haley
Walton’s picture of a farmer’s wife, who] Gryphon ...........s0seeee eens E. Rhett
had once knawn city gaieties and glamours,| Mock Turtle ere ere J. Fenner
with her suppressed revolt against “The] Walrus .............sseeeeeeees M. Coss
Trivial Round”—this, too, is good. A third] Carpenter ~....60..006.....04. M: Hupfel
story, “Jonathan Ivy,” is a tale told by aP’Mad TM oh eus eukka ...J. Young
lunatic quite Poe-like in its horror. In this} March Hare ........-.0..e0e08s E. Havre
Miss Lawrence has performed a difficult] Dormouse .............. ..H. Guiterman
feat with great effectiveness (though one] Frog Footman .............- E. Stewart
HEAD OF JUNIOR. MONTH >
SPEAKS IN VESPERS
“The purpose of Junior Month is to hitch
up the theory and practice of modern social
work,” said Miss Tausley, head of “Junior
Month,” speaking in Vespers on Sunday
night.
“The first one,” she explained, “was held
nine years ago this summer in New York,
with twelve juniors from twelve colleges
asked to send representatives to this four
weeks’ course. The idea is first to hear and
then to see, You spend two and a half days
in lectures, which are the most representa-
tive in the United States, and: in trips, and
thé remainimg three actually visiting fami-
lies under supervision. "The course covers
nsvchiatry to housing. :
“Case work is the study of maladjusted
people in relation to their environments. It
means understanding a person and his dif-
ficulties before acting. Case work, using
accurate information instead of guess work,
workshops and schools. In the Courts now
there is the probation system, which allows
time. for the careful diagnosis and treatment
of the culprit.
ora
represented. Now eight other colleges have ~
The Rabbit Hole had several “modern _
J
all the social problems of a big city, from”
we —-
THE COLLEGE NEWS .
&
3
«
} tow
ITALY
‘$193
round trip
%
in the
Intermedia te Second Class
r
Exclusively devoted to Teach-
ers, Students and professional
people on the .
* Magnificent Oil Burner
Colombo
12,087 Gross Tonnage
21,000 Tons Displacement
New York June 30
Philadelphia July1 °
Returning from GenoaJuly21
Naples July 22 or later
4
One Way Fare---
Intermediate Second Class
One Class Cabin $155
HE ideal season and the ideal
route. Through the Straits of
Gibraltar, across the blue waters of the
Mediterranean to Naples. In Rome for
the Hely Year at a time when the
Eternal City is thronged with pilgrims
from the four quarters of the globe.
Ask for Illustrated Folder R
showing spacious cabins and
social rooms in the above class.
LINE
NAVIGAZIONE GENERALE
ITALIANA
1 State St., New York
i or any authorized Tourist Agent.
Sea 0 WE 0
ITALIAN
ob
COVERING RED FORWARDS WELL
BLUES WIN LAST POLO GAME
Seniors Lack Team Work and Fail to
Rally Until Second“Period
Grappling withthe Seniors for the
water polo championship 1926 won the
final game-last Thursday afternoon by the
bréathless margin. of 4-3.
Fouls slowed up the action. Badly
directed passes flew promiscuously around
the pool. Players were nervously inac-
curate. The ball was butted and’ pushed
about rather than ‘thrown.
Yet the dogged fighting of both sides,
and the neck-to-neck Score gave excite-
ment to the match.
From the first moment the Juniors
played with vigor. W. Dodd, ’26, got the
toss, flipped it back to G. Leewitz, 26,
who dribbled and then passed to V. Cooke,
'26, who then scored.a goal by. a good.
throw to the right of the goal-keeper.
A few minutes later the Juniors scored
again when W. ‘Dodd, 26, pulling the ball
out of a messy skirmish near the goal,
poked it past the posts. A third goal was
made by V. Cooke.
The Seniors seemed hoodooed, A third
long throw by D. Lee, ’25, slanted off the
tips of A. Johnston's vigiliant fingers:
Another attempt bounced against the top
board. The steady work of F. Jay, ’26,
as centre-half kept the redcaps from fur-
ther offiensive attacks.
With the beginning of the second half,
1925 began to improve. A. Johnston, ’26,
at goal, did much active work, but, bom-
barded by the brilliant if. frenzied indi-
vidual playing of E. Glessner, ’25, she let
two balls through. A third goal for the
Seniors was made by E. Lomas, ’25, in
the midst of some splashy scrapping near
the post. A clean shot by W. Dodd, ’
scored the fourth point for the blues.
Racing against time, *the reds fought
madly for another goal to even the score;
.but the whistle blew, and the champion-
ship went to the Juniors.
The line-up’ was as folows:
1925—W. Dodd**, V. Cooke**, E. Har-
- Everyone will be in Paris this Sum
Especially when you can have accommodations on one of the
largest and best ‘ships in the world at a cost which makes a trip
abroad cheaper than staying at home.
“College Specials”
Tourist Third Cabin space of the
S.S. BERENGARIA
SAILING JUNE 17th
has been reserved for the use of women college students and
graduates, with a round- See rate to and from the continent of
$175
Imagine ‘the good time you will have in the congenial company
which is assured by this arrangement. And the ship comforts ,
at a low rate! Staterooms for from one to four persons;
lounge; ibrary ; large’airy dining room; + exellent menus; outdoor ~
swimming pool; three big decks for steamer chairs,walks and games,
Four Weeks in the Latin Quarter at $15 a Week.
Add to that $5 for war tax, $20 for passport and visa and less
Among Cunard’s
you gel
than $10 railroad fare Cher
have a total of only $270 for a six-week vacation, including a-
whole month in Paris!
CUNARD and ANCHOR LINES
a0 S. 16th St., Velledeipkie or Local Agents
. .Why. not you?
this Summer—the entire
to Paris and return, and you
~
ris, G. Leewitz, G. Thomas, F-
Johnston. ,
1925—K, Fowler, E.
Jay, A.
Lomas*, E. Gless-
: ner**, ®. Lee, S. Carey, H. Potts, C. -Re-
mak,
“LANTERN” EXPERIMENT'TO TEST
COLLEGE’S DESIRE TO WRITE
New: “Inclusive”’ Number Will Prove
Value of Less Strict Policy
Change, the “new tradition of the campus,
was the’subject of an informal meeting in
Denbigh sitting room last Thursday evening,
at which the Editorial Board of The Lan-
tern were hostesses to a large group of stu-
dents “interested in writing.” Edith Wal-
ton, ’25, Editor-in-Chief, described the pres-
rent~position of Tie Lantern with the col-
lege’s attitude of indifference and aloofness.
She emphasized the lack of co-operation be-
tween the undergraduates and the editors
of their.own magazine, the scant material
submitted and the large proportion of it
handed in by English readers, not by the
authors themselves, and the absence of
direct criticism. “The Lantern is called
precious, stilted, exclusive; but not to. us.
Publishing a* Lantern is like launching
something into thé “great unknown; we
Miss Walton. “This situation is intolerable;
the magazine belongs to the college, so#if
the college does not want it, why continue
it? Yet we think that abolishing it would
be very unfortunate, not merely for the
obvious reason that Bryn Mawr would then
be the only college without a-literary maga-
zine, but also for the more important rea-
son that all the advantages of such a pw
licatic. would be lost.”
Miss Walton then proposed an’ experi-
ifental number to contain only unsolicited
material and .o include all contributions of
wtthis experiment.
never hear anytling -more, about it,” said |
some degree. of literary merit, but not fiec-
essarily of the hmsh formerly demanded.
The existence ofthis issue would depend
upon the college enirtly; if enough mate-
rial were not submitted by a certain date
there would be no publication. ‘This Lantern
would be not only a test of the interest of
the college, but also a trial of a future
policy.of wider inclusivenes® ‘After discus--
sion, the.‘meeting unanimously.voted to try
B. Ling, ’25, al§o syg-
gested the possibility of an associate editorial
board: of people who had three contribu-
tans published.
All manuscripts. for the next Lantern
must be handed in by March 20. The col-
lege eagerly awaits the result of this inter-
esting experiment. ‘
ILE DE FRANCE DISCUSSED
“ BY MISS PARDEE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
esting cathedral, one of the first to show
Gothic tendencies.
Soissons, now a great centre of commerce,
was once a centre of abbeys. Nearby is the
enormous chateau- of the Sires de Coutcy,
prouder than kings, with a dungeon on
whose walls, more than ten yards thick, re-
sisted the ravages of time, but are now
ruined by shells.
Pierrefonds, also, has_.a—great—.chateau,
restored by Viollet-le-Duc, more like a
prince’s residence than the fortress of Coucy.
Senlis is a charming: old city, peaceful and
aristocratic, with a church which is a tri-
umph of Gothic architecture. Close by, in
the beautiful forest of Chantilly, is the
chateau of Chantilly, built at the time of the
Renaissance by Anne de Montmorency, a
rich and cultivated nobleman. In the reign of
Louis XIV the great Conde was the pos-
sessor, and added glorious gardens, planted
by Lenorte. In this meeting’ place of all
artists and poets Louis loved to. visit.
oe
Take A Weekly Trip Home...Over The Teléphone
ican College Girls who find encourage-
ment and inspiration in weekly telephone
chats with Mother and Dad?,..
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY.
OF PENNSYLVANIA
“Wednesday, January Fifth—telephoned .
home tonight and talked with Mother and
Dad. They both seemed so glad to hear
my voice! I’m going to telephone them ,
regularly hereafter..Mother told me all
This liteie folder has been about"’ . . . bu#f let us peep no further into
distributed on the campus. _ the young lady}s personal memoirs.
It tells you how low the Just this litfle glimpse tells us that here
i rates really are. : is one of thpse College Girls who are
_if Lae pape pai oo so thoroughly modern:in everything they
sole aan hiesiadioes do .. . ever t\their method of keeping in
directory. touch with th® people at home. They |f
The Long Distance Oper- make the most of opportunities and they
ator will give you rates not get the’ most out of college.
shown "there * ” Are ygu one of the thousands of Amer-
i?
+» THE COLLEGE NEWS
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 867
. The Hearthstone
LUNCHEON “TEA
DINNER PARTIES
Open Sundays
wee Merion Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
scone
POWERS & REYNOLDS
‘ MODERN DRUG STORE
837 Lancaster Ave.
Imported Perfumes
_ GANDY SODA
GIFTS
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
Housekeeping Hardware
Paints _ Locksmithing
838 LANCASTER AVE.
PHILIP HARRISON
- 826 LANCASTFY
Walk Over gs «tie
Agen: ior
Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings
Bryn Mawr
al
We-um Lasst Du Deine Blicke in der
Ferne Streiten,~
Wenn Das Gesuchte Liegt Sonah!
peace . —Heine.
No need to go to Philadelphia for aj .
cozy Ladies’ Dining Room.
ROMA CAFE
American, Italian, French. Dishes
Open from 7 A, M. to 12 P. M.
oe
Gift Linens, Wools, Hand Crafts
JUNIOR NEEDS, SPORT ESSENTIALS
Cards and Gifts
for all occasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
AMY'S SHOP
Candies
Gifts —
Novelties |
Cards
857 LANCASTER AVENUE
*. ‘Phone 1058-J Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr| SANDWICHES
Riding Habits
& Breeches
: FRANCIS B. HALL
¥ TAILOR
840 LANCASTER AVE., BRYN MAWR, PA.
3 stores west of P. O.
6
DAINTY. ‘ ICED
DRINKS
* — College
Tea House
Open Daily from 1 to 7
EVENING ‘PARTIES BY
SPECIAL. ARRANGEMENT
JEANNETT'S .
Bryn Mawr Flower Shop
Cut Flowers and Plants F resh
Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
‘Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plante—Personal supervision on all
orders
Phone, Bryn Mawr 570
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 453
THE CHATTERBOX
A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM
Regular Dinners or
Birthday Parties by appointment
‘OPEN FHOM 12 TO 7.80
825 LANCASTER AVENUE
Bryn Mawr Massage Shop
Aimee E. Kendall
Hairdressing in all its branches
A complete stock of toilet requisites
839 Lancaster Ave.
M. M. GAFFNEY -
Dry Goods and Notions
- School Supplies
28 BRYN MAWR AVE.
The Handcraft Shop
Decorations, Linens, Rugs
“Little Nature Frocks,’’ Toys, etc.
30 Bryn Mawr Avenue
DRUGS Phone, ee Mawr 975 GIFTS
M. J. CARDAMONE, Ph. G.
Prescription Druggist
1040 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
SODAS ; CANDIES
PHONE: 758
HENRY B. WALLACE —
CATERER and CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TRASB |
Open Sunday Bryn Mawr and Wayne
-—— CAPETAL, $250,000,
—
Bryn Mawr Night: Bryn Mawr 842
ESTIMATES FURNISHED
WILLIAM G. CUFF & CO.
Electrical Contractors |
INSTALLATION, WIRING, REPAIRING
855 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
LOWTHORPE SCHOOL
A School pe Landscape Architecture for Women
sent bg hg YEAR
Tel.,
“ipa tease
gardens, greenhouses
Phone, Brym Mawr 824 | |
807 Lancaster Ave. |.
MOORE’S PHARMACIES
BRYN MAWR, PA. !
Drugs.” Chemicals| Prescription Drug Store )
Stationeries, . etc. Haverford, Pa.
£.. :
Haverford Pharmacy
Odd Jewelry
Direct Oriental Importations
TREASURE CAVE
RUTH BABETTE
Afternoon Tea Saturday Luncheon
Open Sunday
Chatter-On Tea House
835 Morton Road ;
Dinner by Appointment Bryn Mawr 1185
=F F202 South Fifteenth Street >=
TOGGERY SHOP
831 LANCASTER AVENUE
(Opposite Post Office)
Guniins Hats, Coats,
Sweaters, Blouses, Hosiery
Sole Agents for
VANITY FAIR SILK UNDERWEAR
DRESSMAKING AND ALTERATIONS
E. M. B. Wise. Phone, Bryn Mawr 259
Fancy Groceries * Fruit and Vegetables
_ WILLIAM T. McINTYRE'S
$21 LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWB
Free Delivery Charge Accounts
Confectionery Ice Cream Pastry
‘‘Make Our Store Your Store”
Main Line Drug Store
ARDMORE, PA.
Prescriptions Carefully Compounded by
Registered Pharmacists
Phone, Ardmore 1112
FLOWERS SERVICE SATISFACTION
BAXTER & GREEN, Inc.
FLORISTS :
114 South 17th St., Phila., Pa.
BELL PHONE, SPRUCE 32-62
E. S. McCawley.& Co.
Books
Do you want the latest Book?
while?
We have it or can get it.
HAVERFORD AVE. Haverford, Pa.
Jewelers
serving a distinguished
clientele for many years!
College Morag ee Station-
ery, Wrist atches; gifts
for every occasion.
Visitors are cordially eit:
JEGALDWELL & GO.
, CHESTNUT AND JUNIPER STREETS
Cleaners and Dyers De Luxe
THE MAIN LINE VALET. SHOP |
Bernard McRory, Proprietor
2nd Floor, opposite Post Office, Bryn Mawr
Valet Service by Practical Tatlers
PositivelyNo Machine Pressing
Ten Per Cent. Discount..on All School and
College Work
" Pleating and Hemastitching
Ladies’ Riding Suits to Measure, $40.00 and Up
Breakfast
Luncheons
‘ Dinners
TELEPHONE, ARDMORB 1046
Haverford Ave. & Station Rd. Drive
HAVERFORD STATION, P. R. R.
Are you interested in books worth
ys BAN KSeBDD) p
Jewelers
Silversmuths
Stationers
PHILADELPHIA ie |
THE OFFICIAL SILVER COFFEHEH SPOON
with the
COLLEGE SEAL
OFFICIAL JEWELERS
for the
COLLEGE SEAL RING
THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK
Mailed upon request, illustrates many distinotive
gifts.
»
Afternoon Tea: and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
Montgomery Avenue
Bryn Mawr
Everything Dainty
and Delicious
_ never able to hold any job long, and was‘
.case work being too slow. On the contrary,
Ay
e 4
{ ;
i .
THE COLLEGE NEWS
rt
®
{ ‘“
JUNIOR MONTH AND CASE,
WORK DESCRIBED IN VESPERS
\ CONTINUED FROM ~PAGE 2
; fe es :
“A typical example of* case work is the
story of McClosky.” The man was an il-
literate epileptic, born of drunken parents.
Because ‘of infirmity~or ignorance he was
fast losing afl his morale. He had an un-
deservgqd sense of shame for his drawbacks,
and increasing family complications. © A
case worker got hold of this man and liter-
ally salvaged him by getting him ‘away from
the confusion, and competition of the city
into a small town to work on a truck farm.
The good case worker is not so interested
in dging good for people as quickening their
confidence ia themselves. People are encour-
aged by having the best expected of them.
Case “work. that_does things. for people’-is:
palliative. Case work that° teaches’ people to
adjust their. lives is educational.
“Nowadays you don’t hear so much about
in the tutorial and: personal supervision sys-
tems, you find case work going on in educa-
tion and industry. Dealing with ~ our
stupendous social problems from the indi-
vidual standpoint is something like unsnarl-
ing a great tangle of rope—you begin with
one end.
“Case workers like doctors fiave a two-
fold program. They both realize that pre-
vention and cure are processes that interplay.
The doctor visits his patients one by one,
and on the basis of his discoveries works
out larger health measures. The case
worker visits his McCloskys, and uses, daily
discoveries td work out preventive social
measures—among these the Roosevelt hous-
ing bill and the children’s court.
' “Enthusiasm cannot fight the battles of
social serice single-handed. You must have
a, solid backbone of method and training.
A case worker should have a soft heart and
a hard head.” ;
DRAMA EXHIBITION
An exhibition of drama arts and crafts is
being held at the Art Alliance this week,
open to the public.
‘their water polo games on Monday, Febru-
5
‘
SENIORS SHOOT, AND
SINK TO VICTORY: OVER ’26
While'the onlookers stood up atid cheered,
1925 defeated 1926, 6-5, in the second of
ary 23. ‘ :
The Juniors put up a good defense, S.
Walker, '26, being particularly impassible.
The game moved slowly, and the shooting
was poor. In the second half, W. Dodd,
26, drew C. Remak, ’25, to one side and
then shot over her head. “S. Care i,
sent the ball flying from the centér of the
pool to the goal, and as forward and guard
scrambled the “audience went wild. ‘The
or
25,
climax was reached when S. Walker, ’26, |.
~~
25,
ducked FE. Glessner, with ufnost grace
and technique. Her opponent managed tg
keep the ball above the water, and, coming ¢
to the surface, shot for goal, though she
missed. Then_she-succeeded-a—few-minutes
later, thus ending the tie.
Line-up: c
. 1925—-E. Glessner***, E. L[omas*, H.
Smith, M. M. Dunf, S. Carey**, M. Pierce,
Cy Remak. =
1926—V. Cooke*, W. Dodd**, E. Har-
ris**, F. Jay, G, Macy, S. Walker, A. John-
ston.
SKIT TO BE GIVEN FOR
BENEFIT OF BATES
The Bates House skit will be given
March 14, preceding the drive which will
start March 16.
Posters of. Freshman show, gay scenes
representing various happenings and _ in-
habitants of Wonderland, were auctioned
between the acts of the show on Satur-
day, February 28, by Ruth Elting, ’28,
and Theodora Thorpe, ’28, bringing in
$168 for the benefit of Bates House.
PICTURES MAY BE PROCURED
The circulating art gallery - which
flourished so well last year is again at the
service of the college for the benefit. of the
music endowment fund. Pictures may he
rented by the month at moderate: rates. Give.
yourselves a chance to see many good pic-
tures instead of one; come to Room 5¥ in
Radnor Hall and~consult- Eleanor Follans-
bee,’ 26.
” Europe
($162 Cherbourg)
($175 Hamburg)
Take your own crowd with you
spend Your Vacation
. Special Tourist Third Class
Accommodations on the famous “O” steamers, reserved for
students, teachers, artist's, tourists. Congenial companions, good
food, comfortable airy staterooms, broad promenade decks.
$155
Round Trip
(Southampton)
Special conducted University
erary at inclusive rates, sailing
Tours with extensive itin-
on “ORDUNA”—June 27. :
Write for
n Sailings from
ORDUNA-— May 30, June 27, July 25
ORBITA—June 13, July 11, August 8 .
ORCA—June 20, July 18, August 15
“The Comfort Route” —
ROYAT.
MAIL
_The Royal Mail Steam Packet Company
- SanpErson & Son, Inc., Agents
26 Broadway, New York or Local Agents
Booklet
New York
+ <
April 29, at 2 P. M.
notified, this change will be made.
ANOTHER DATE PROPOSED FOR
JUNIOR LANGUAGE EXAMS
The new date recently announced for
this examination, Saturday, April 25, is
very inconvenient for one member of the
Junior class.
All Juniors who are to take the exami-
nation this spring are asked to report ta
Dean Maddison before Monday, March
9, if they would ‘be seriously inconven-
ienced bya change of this examination |°
from Saturday, April 25, to Wednesday,
Unless Dean Maddison is definitely
NEWS IN BRIEF”
she members of the Committee on Varsity
Dramatics are J. Gregory, '25; E. Watt, ’25;
B: Ling, “28: °K: Morse, '26; M. L. Jones,
"RY,
1926 has ¢lected H. Rogers to the Bates
House Committee to succeed E. Tweddel
resigned; A. Tierney to the Poster Commit-
tee; G. Leewitz as track captain, and W.
Dodd as basketball captain.
The class of 1927, at a meeting held last
Wednesday, elected for archery captain,
A. Sanson; for: basketball captain, C.
Platt; for track captain, A Matthew, and - *
for Poster Committee, M. Wyckoff.
ae
WALDO M.
; ?
Fashion is qn “ge ;
art—one of de . / die
fine arts — to Co {/. »
. be cultivated ) Wa
among other of” :
higher expres- ? :
sions of beauty z
*®
& *
a
2:
@
Erte
we
fs f ; |
. The House of Youth
imparts the spirit of youth-and triumph
: of fashion in__an__ exquisite line — of
COATS, FROCKS and ENSEMBLE SUITS
About each model an originality, dash
and charm that make beautiful fabrics
and lovely colors still more fascinating
Sold with Write us
this label for informa-
in all the tion where
better shops they may
everywhere . be obtained f
SCHULMAN & HAUPTMAN
224 West 35TH St., New YorxK
%
CLAFLIN-
Genuine Alligator
A beautiful shade of brown--a
shoe for the smartest street cos-
tume.
$18
1606 CHESTNUT STREET -
: Philadelphia
a
rx
2° CET TENET I EOE Hi SS EOE OECTA AP ME SECON A
ean re reeeescme moseeserronraees
* chapel.
8.00— Professor Rufus M. Jones, president
of the Board of Trustees and the Board of
Directors, will deliver the Founders’ Lecture
1 “George Fox—Prophet, Mystic and Re-
former.”
Friday, March 6
Cymnasium meet.
Sunday, March 8.
The Rev: Walter Russell Bowie, rector of
Grace Church, New York, will speak in
Thursday, March 12.
4-6—Faculty-graduate tea in- Denbigh.
Friday, March 13.
Gymnasium meet.
8,.00—Yusuki. Tsurmi will speak nder the
auspices of: the Liberal Club on “Present-
DY. Japan.”
I Saturday, March 14
Bates house party.
Sunday, March 15.
The Rev. Robert Johnston, rector of St.
*2
John’s Church, Washington, will speak in}
chapel.
IN PHILADELPHIA
Walnut Street—“Sally, Irene and Mary.”
Garrick—“No, .No. Nanette.”
Forrest—‘“Ziegfeld Follies.”
Broad—“The Best People.”
Shubert—‘“‘Sweet Little Devil.” ;
Chestnut Street-—“Blossom Time.”
Lyric—“Dixie to Broadway.”
Adelphi—“Grounds for Divorce.”
Moving Pictures.
Coming—“St. Joan.”
Fox—Conrad Nagel in “Excuse Me.”
Earle—Madge Bellamy in
Stanton—“Greed.”
Arcadia—“Isn’t Life Wonderful?”
AldineLewis Stone in
World.”
Palace—Doris Kenyon in “A Thief in
Paradise.”
“The Parasite.”
“The Lest}
BARBARA LEE
and :
Fairfield
Two Popular Lines of
Outer Garments for Misses
: fh
Sold Here Exclusively in
Philadelphia “a
Strawbridge, & Clothier
Eighth & Market Streets .
% 2
? » + oe M) fe ’ : e
6 THE COLLEGE NEWS
: “ —-
CALENDAR 8 CONCERT PROGRAM - \
@ Wednesday, ‘March 4. On Friday, March 6, and Saturday, March : te y, |
: Bonwit Geller & CO,
UNPARALLELED . oe Chestnut Steet
i | aad: Puilndetiia 2
- BUROPE
Ask for our Sailing Schedules
7, the Philadelphia, Orchestra will play: the
following program: o
Purcell-—“T'rumpet Prelude”
2
Bach—“Suite in B Minor for Strings and
Flute
Sluck—Excerpts
Rimsky-Korsakow—Symphonic Suite, ,
a)
“Scheherazade.”
Large choice of
itineraries; tours
4 by leading Liners.
Sale of -. Colortdl. .. every few days
Ukrainian Enibroid-
eries.on Clothes that
are Different. Or-
during season
After Exams-
“RATE. fiom3255 | |e"
ders Taken. Tea Misia oti :
& Room of ‘The. Col- ‘: Versailles , Brass, Anta, Lan — Have Dad Reward you:
lege Inn. Wednes- aie ee ; with a new prom’frock
day, March 11th, putation is Your Guatantee! oe
2.30 to 10 P. M. THOS. COOK & SON :
‘ = Fifth Ave. NEW YORK 253 aout BONWIT’S
°
AMERICA'S MOST FAMOUS
BOX OF CANDY .
RB
: STEPHEN F. WHITMAN & SON, Inc., Philadelphia, U. S. A.
Sole makers of Whitman's Instantaneous Chocolate, Cocoa and Marshmallow Whip ;
WHITMAN’S FAMOUS CANDIES ARE SOLD BY 3 8
Bryn Mawr College Book Store, Brvn Mawr
Bryn Mawr Confectionery, Bryn Mawr.
College Tea Room, Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr College Inn, Bryn Mawr
Kindt’s Pharmacy, BrynMawr
Frank W. Prickett, Rosemont
_ Powers & ReynOlds, Bryn Mawr
H. B. Wallace, Bryn Mawr
William Groff, Bryn Mawr
a
College news, March 4, 1925
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1925-03-04
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 11, No. 17
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-vol11-no17