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- crowds,
\ pupils; the subject’ being:
war
Set
2
Voi. XI. Nox 12
BRYN MAWR, PA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1925°
& or a
; , “Price 10 Cents
GAY EASTERN BALL
GIVEN BY CLASS OF °27|
Gymnasium . Transformed By Moving
_ Pageant Of Gorgeous Costumes
_ From Oriental Lands
TWAIN MEET IN SPITE OF KIPLING
~The Arabian Nights” or~at ‘least one~of}
them was revealed at the ddnce given by
1927 to 1928 in the gymnasium on last Satur-
day night. : .
Colored lights shifted over gay, wild
They picked out Orientals of all
kinds. Arabia, broadly. interpreted by. the
undergraduates, produced Greek, goddesses
and Thibetan Ilamas. Caste distinctions
were set aside as sheiks chatted amiably with
camel-drivers during the intermission. The
Far East yielded mandarin coats by the
score, coats which bedecked with equal
grace those whose hair was hidden in.mas-
culine fashion under coolie hats—lamp
shades: in their original state—or coiled over
ears that sported a rose.
Most of the costumes were self-expla
tory, but orle at least was accompanied ogi
caption assuring the spectator that there was,
im six letters, that famous sailor whose ad-
ventures are known to all of us. To make
the meaning clear to the. more obtuse, a
“Man of the Sea” was attached to his back.
Dancing girls were much in evidence and
dancéd as effectively to the strains of “Me
and My Boy Friend” as to their native lute
of samisen. One of these was H. Fitz, ’27,
who gave a solo dance. —
Turkish women celebrated their temporary
escape from the harem while discreetly re-
maining veiled from the chance sight of
their jealous lords. An air of the mosque
was present in the temple lamps whose light
supplemented that of the many-colored spot,
®
which picked out Grand Viziers and Sultans;]_
atid for the weary there were luxurious
divatis in the shadows of the arcade. Costly
Persian rugs draped railings and couches,
and suggested Oriental splendor. The key-
note was ‘strack by the wall painting depict- |,
ing the peacock spreading his fan against
the background of a | flowering magnolia.
BRYN MAWR FRESHMAN WINS
WORLD HONORS WITH ESSAY
meneame
Frances Putnam Awarded: First Prize
Of International Contest
Frances’ Louise. Putnam, a’member of the
Class of 1928, is, according to.an article “in
the. Boston Herald; for. December 14, the
winner of the first prize in an international
coritest for high and secondary: school
“The Organiza-|,
tient of the World :to Prevent War.”
The ptizes’ are given annually by the
“Missés* Seabury, of New Bedford, Mass.,
for the best essays dealing with the move-
mi¢nt for britiging about a better utiderstand-
ing between nations. In other, years the
prizes fave gofie to Europe; last year’s prize | >
. to’ Elsinore, Denmark, the a Ham-
let.
More ida 1000 Sun “ile dipieseilidd
by the éssays submitted this year, and only].
the three best from each ‘school reached
the committee a ee ae te Nee
agiand Alumnae Regiorial Scholarship and
pace ‘mention as having re-
a
ane ahah rg |
pr # which met in New York in 1907. a
COMMUNISM? MUCH MORE
IMPORTANT THAN GREAT WAR
Right Of Free Speech Menaced By
Persecution Of Reds, Says Baldwin
, “Who are the Reds and what do they
want,” was the subject of the lecture of
Roger N. Baldwin, director of the Ameri-
can Civil Liberties Union, who spoke un-
dér the auspices of the Liberal Club’ last
“Thursday evening: .
“The Communist movement is a flaming
challenge to the capitalist system. It
stands for a working class Government to
organize business for service, not for the
profit of a smalk group of capitalists. Its
lifeblood flows out from the heart of Mos-
cow. All branches, comprising about
25,000 people in America alone, take their
orders from ,Moscow, as Catholics from
the Pope. Communism seems to me far
more important than the gréat war, which
was only the result of the effort of nations
to undermine each other’s trade. It ad-
vocates taking away the privileges from
the privileged classes and preaches un-
questioning loyalty to its principles,
“In 1917 a tremendous effort was made
in this country to suppress Communism.
It forced thém, idealists as they were, to
resort to the same underhand and tortu-
ous methods caused in Russia by Czarist
persecutions. In 1922 the Goverment
Leaptured-some-30-Commuuists in a secret
meeting and sentenced’ them to prison for
‘advocating criminal syndicalism.’
theré been any revolutionary change re-
sulting in the trarisfer of property from
one class to another without violence by
CONTINUED ON. PAGE 3
DHAN GOPAL-MUKERJI, INDIAN
NATIONALIST, TO SPEAK FRIDAY
WellKnown Hindu Author Will Talk
On Tagore’ s and es India
“Tage! $s and: Kipliag’s: Ertdia” ‘will be the
subject of the lecture by Dhan Gopal Mu-
-kerji under the auspices of the Liberal
Club, Friday’ evening, January 16.
|. As a lecturer he: bas’ Won. matiy honors
both. hére and abroad. He has lectured at
Oxford and other universities in England
and America, and has talked at -Carnegie
Hall, New York, for five successive seasons.
_A Hindu, born of a family of high caste
Brahmins, he was brought up and educated
as a citizen of the old’ Hindu regime. Gradu-
ating at 18, from Calcutta University, he
went to Tokio and thence to America where
versity in 1914.
In his fout books Dhan Gopal Mukerji
has won a high place for himself in con-
temporary literature. Caste and Outcast, Kari
the Elephant, Jungle Beasts’ and Men and
My Brother's Face, are the’ four. In’ Caste
and Outcast Mr. Mtikerji does two things :
rhe gives the life’ of' India as it has rately
been’ given before, and his comments upon
the. life of _ America with extraordinary
saa
jan elephant an
seresitecersieiacs
penetration.
Kari ‘the Elephant is ‘the story of a boy,
and the’ jungle,” a vivid and
appealing picture.
Mr. Mukerji gives in Jungle” Beasts and
Men a splendid picture of the spirit of the
ungles with all ‘its essexigede activity and
rre complexity.
In My Brother's Face - the’ author has
created a realistic stady of the-tife of a high
caste Brahmin, written with deep sympathy
bg tend neering but‘who
dge Mae Meee we
t experience,
-
“The radicals maintain that never has
he graduated from Leland Stanford Lis
YALE ‘AND WELLESLEY TRIUMPH
Music Department Benefits By Inter-
Collegiate Match In New York
An inter-collegiate cross-word puzzle
contest was held at the Hotel Astor, New
York City, on January 4, for the benefit
of, the Bryn Mawr Music Department and
ithe City Music Fund.’ Wellesley won the
“match which was arranged and oe by
Bryn Mawr alumnae.
Vassar, Smith and Bryn Mawr were the
other women’s colleges which competed.
Yale won the championship for the men's
in the inter-sex match,
According to Frank Sullivan, news-
paper reporter, “It was a momentous oc-
casion. You could tell that because Ray-
mond Hitchcock, the official starter,.and
Heywood Broun, Harvard comeback, both
had their hair parted and slicked down.
“The big event, of course, was the Yale-
Harvard clash. Nobody knew why. Har-
vard was represented by Heywood (Cu-
pid) Broun. and Robert (Shorty) Sher-
wood, Stephen (Vincent) Benet and
(Jack) Thomas were the Yale two.
“Benet and Thomas trotted into the
ball-room at .4.47. A mighty cheer. went
up the room, turned around, came back
‘again and sat. Two minutes earlier at
4.30 P. M., Broun and Sherwood dashed
down the room and tlie mighty cheer
dashed after them.
“In the next quarter Broun tackled a
German poet in five letters. He guessed
Heine. The round was Broun’s.
“Broun tackled a seven-letter word
6
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3°
+
LARGE ASSOCIATION MEETINGS
_ 10 BE ADCLERED TILL MARCH
ie Loetilidhir To Take
Place Of Lost Quorums
“Shall we invest the legislative power of
the undergraduate and the self-govern-
ment associations in a joint representative
legislature,” and “shall we have an in-
depéident graduate self-government
council,” were, the questions asked at a
mass-meeting of the two associations on
Wednesday, December 17, at 7.30.
L. Barber, ’25, president of the Under-
graduate Association, in explanation of
the latter question, H. Hough, ’25, presi-
dent. of Self-Government Association, re-
marked that an independent council for
the graduate students was “obviously
necessary.” ,A motion to have such a
council was passed.
Miss Hough ' also extlained ca plan
for a, joint legislature to take. the. place
of the large, association meetings, for
which quorums can no longer be, obtained.
The legislature is to consist Of the execu-
tive boards: of the two associations, two
non-resident members, and two represen
tatives. from. each class. in_every hall.
| These-halt r representatives are to be elect-
ed in the halls and are to discuss the busi-
ness of the associations with their re-
spective classes; but «they will vote
independently, according to their own
to be elected, in the halls.
Consideration of.business and the pass-
ing of laws are to take place in the meéet-
ings. of this legislature, business being
posted five days beforehand and the presi-
dent of each association. presiding over
“CONTINUED ON PACE 3
IN CROSS-WORD PUZZLE CONTEST|
colleges, but was defeated by Wellesley |
opinions. The ¢xecutive boards are also.
the work of her pacntien: While only
a=
: :
. . re ~
oo :; Oe SARS
aa
«
DR. BRUNEL
Dr. Roger Frederick Brunel, head of the
Department of Chemistry, died December
23 in the Bryn Mawr Hospital.
Dr. Brunel was born in Portland, Me.,
in- 1881. He received his degree of A. B.
from Colby University in 1903, and his doc-
tor’s degree from Johns Hopkins in 1906.
In 1912 Dr. Brunel came to Bryn Mawr
as an associate in chemistry, became asso-
ciate professor in 1914 and received a full
professorship and was made head of the
department in 1917, His specialty was or-
ganic chemistry, and during the war he was
connected with the United States chemical
warfare service.
' He was a member of the Senate and the
Academic Council and was one of the two
faculty representatives on the Joint Adminis-
trative Committee of the Summer School
for Women Workers in Industry,.a school
in which he was much interested. He was
also a violinist of note.
By a Member of the Faculty
It has more than once been said that. the
great teachers are not the leading minds in
their profession,
scholars and the great @xperimentalists can
seldom teach well.
that gifts so distinet are evenly combined ;
but Professor Brunel could claim distinction
almost equally as a thinker and student of
scientific theory, as a skillful laboratory
worker, and as an enthusiastic and success-
ful teacher. Those who knew him in one or
the other of these aspects will be likely to
‘emphasize only a single side of his career;
but to appreciate him at his real value, is
to see how equally baffénced he was and
how broadly endowed with all three quali-
ties. :
Ih teaching, he escaped the routine of
repetition by constantly inventing novel illus-
trations and ingenious devices for making
clear the most -difficult points. With odd
problems, often ‘akin to puzzles,’ he satisfied
himself whether his class had ‘rightly under-
stood; afd none; was more pleased than he,
if ‘his students could solve what ‘hée had set.
In the laboratory (and those who worked
with him will think it superfluous to say
what is so well known) he gave time with-
out considering it and took endless trouble,
being more interested ‘that problem or ex-
periment should succeed than that his own
convenience’ should be courted. Here, ‘as’ in
his own researchés, his methodical accuracy
and: professional dexterity were far beyond
the average of even the trained worker, |
causation. But’ his great delight in specula-
tive theory never led him to accept the pure-
ly: speculative and unproved. At a time
when many fantastic ideas were being ad-
vanced and had gained currency even among
piett of standing, Dr. Logg kaa
©
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2 |
and — that the research -
It is probably very rare .
oe
“ Intellectually, his primary interest was in :
Baek ok
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‘ ; / BDITO
Pa a - J r oem
tert fy ey
The College News
(Founged in > am
Published during e year in the
“ ar ot hee Bryn Mews Co. exe
“Managing Editor. .....Derta Sairu, '26
ceccinte cee
TomEINS, '2
——
&
Ne
Sa a ans Se a
. GEORGE BELLOWS
ie death of George Bellows last week
deprived America of one of her most in-
teresting younger artists, a remarkable
painter and. lithographer, whose works
have been exhibitéd throughout Europe,
in the Kensington Museum, in London, at
National Exposition of Roine,. in Berlin,|
Munich and many other cities, as well as
in the United States. Bellows was born
in Ohio’ ‘in 1882 and became a pupil of
Robert Henri. During his life he re-
ceived many well-known awards for his
pictures, notably the Hallgarten Prize and
Sesnan Medal. Examples of his work are
in the permanent collections of the Metro-
politan Art Museum, of New York, the
Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia,
the Art Institute of Chicago, and many
other important ° collections. As a por-
trait painter Bellows was especially re-
markable in his studies of character, as in
the well-known portrait, “The Three
Annes.” As a lithographer, he produced
work not only beautiful in its craftsman-
ship, but also of great. variety and interest
in its subject matter, from the almost
grotesque quality of his war pictures to
the studies of Irish peasants in his illus:
trations to’ Donn Byrne’s novel, “The Wind
Bloweth,” published in the Century Maga-
zine. Whatever his future reputation as a
painter, Bellow’s fame will stand as a
lithographer of unusual originality, finish
and power.
THE CRITIC ON THE HEARTH
Mr. Robert C. Benchley, dramatic edi-
_tor of “Life,” and the author of various
vastly | entertaining essays, has gone on
the stage.
He does an act in visi: and in so
doing has laid himself open to all kinds
of protest, “What is a critic doing on the
stage?” disapproving voices ask. “A
critic should be watching others act, not
losing his dignity and prestige by trying
to. himself. His place is in the home!”
But i is it? -A critic’s place is to inquire
into the artist’s aims and whether he ful-
fills them, and we for ore cannot see
‘ how some practical knowledge and ex-
perience should in. any way impair his
powers. At all events time arid Mr. Bench-
ey will soon enlighten us.
.
‘ARE WE BEING EDUCATED?
-American college women have little con-
ception of the meaning of a liberal educa-
tion or of intellectual thoroughness. They
do better work in their lessons than college
"men, but they are more eager to get by with
the professor, they are not challenging, and
“they are not apt to go below the: surface
of a subject.
“This is the sabaiiasin of the. accusation
made by a writer in the December American
Mercury. ‘Whether or not hé*had our own
ieee in mind, he could hardly have
activity is as painful as it is fare, We sit
and ‘swallow all that our professors tell us
the books we read. Outside reading in our
courses is almost never undertaker’ unless
there is some prospect of getting “credit”
for it, and our slavish devotion to marks is
revealed by our conversation. The amount
of time we have been studying and our
“terror” at the thought of a quiz tomorrow
}would seem’ to be the only phases of our
academic work which intefest us. The fun-
damental and most serious fault in our at-
titude, however, and it is perfectly typical
of America, is our underlying idea that our
studying tnust have a concrete and immediate
end. “We learn’ things in order to be able
to bring them out in conversation,” as an
Pa. | upper-classman-naively-put it. We want'to}
‘| be charming hostesses, to get.a degree, to
appear cultured, and so we emerge from
college with a bowing acquaintance with
several branches of knowledge and an un-
derstanding of none. Small wonder we are
known as intellectual snobs! With all our
abysmal ignorance, we veshnanti a virtue when
‘we have it not. ;
' But the system is quite as much to bilan.
Required reading, which makes one read
agaiyst time or against the numbers of the
pages, examinations and quizzes that are
given on assignments rather. than on sub-
jects, the consumption of lecture notes and
their return, unchanged by any thought on
the part of the student, on her examination,
all these are cells in the prison’ known as
college educatfon. Apparently, at present,
we cannot change the system. But while
we cannot tear down the walls that surround
us, we may by our own efforts be able to
climb over them. To put understanding be-
fore the mere acquisition of facts, arid intel-
Iectual honesty before a good mark, to pre-
fer to know a subject rather than to pass
a quiz—these are some of the steps which
will help us over.
HEALTH NOTICE
Alumnae, dear, and did ye hear the news
that’s goin’ round?
The shellfish is forbid to die uncooked on
college ground.
They’re teaching us democracy; a rich
.man’s ill’s typhoid, .
So they’re hangin’ undergraduates fas eat-
ing a crustoid.
When law can stop the oyster from de-
‘veloping a shell,
And when the turtle, mock or true, is soft
as a gazelle, f
Then I will change my diet and accept
the’ sea-salt ham,
But till that day, please God, I’ll stick i
eating “of the clam. .
BAYARD TAYLOR’S CENTENARY
Sunday, January 11, was the centenary
of Bayard Taylor, an interesting figure
in-a remarkable period of American litera-
ture. He was born at Kennett Square,
not 30 miles from here; but’ soon wan-
dered far in ‘his zest for travel, almost
anywhere, but especially in the East. With
the money from’ his first book, Ximena,
or the Battle of the Sierra Morena, pub-
lished when he was 19 and a printer's ap-
prentice, Taylor went on his first voyage
to, England, France, Germany. ‘and Italy.
The - account: of this experience in Views
Afoot, or Europe Seen With Knapsack
and Staff, won him a place-on. the New
York Tribune under Horace Greeley. For
this newspaper he went to California it
“the stirring days of '49.” Returning
home through Mexico, he found material.
for El Dorado, or Adventure inthe’ Path
of Empire, which was soon followed by;
books about his travels in the. Nile re-}
complete the tasks assigned, and they pass
‘| their courses, but any original intellectual
with even more placidity than we absorb
gion, India and China. In these. Taylor.
pha mae Son he i
in the original metre and wrote many
poems of his own, a number of which
were set to music, so fluent was their lyric
quality. Of his novels, Hannah Thurs-
ton received high praise ‘from Haw-
thorne for its skilful portrayal of life in
a small town. Another of «them, The
Story of Kennett, deals «with the career
of Sandy Flash, a notorious highwayman
in this region and the hero of more. re-
cent novels. © Another evidence of Tay-
lor’s versatility was his collection of
sketches. He. had’also a remarkable gift
for friendship and at Cedarcroft, his house
at Kennett Square, he entertained many
of the great men’ of his time. He is
buried at Kennett tees
“ FACULTY NOTES
~ Miss. “Margaret -Gilman,-~
French, has just had the dissertation that
she presented for the Ph. D. degree at Bryn
Mawr last year, accepted for publication in
a distinguished French series. The -Bibil-
otheque de la Revue de Litterature Com-
paree, edited by Professors Bacdensperger
and Hazard of the Sorbonne. The subject
of the eres is Othello in French..:
A paper ‘was read before the section on
Ancient History of the American Historical
Association meeting in ‘Richmond, Va., De-
cember 27 to 31; by Dr. Ballou on the sub-
ject: “The Occupations of .Women in
Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt.”
“The Friars as Purveyors of English
Verse” was the title of a lecture given by
Dr. Carleton Brown, professor of English
in the Haverford Union, on Wednesday
evening, December 10. Dr. Brown spoke,
after an introduction by President Comfort,
to a large audience.
®
Dr. Ferree, Professor of Experimental
Psychology, presented a paper at the Thirty-
third Annual Meeting of the American Psy-
chological Association in Washington on
December 29, entitled, “A Spectrum Color-
mixer, an Acuity Apparatus and an Astig-
matism Apparatus.” In the section on men-
tal measurements at the same series of meet-
ings Dr. Rand presented a paper entitled,
“A Discussion of the Quotient Method of
Specifying Test Results.” In this paper er-
‘rors in the present methods of treating re-
sults .were “pointed out and suggestions were
offered for their correction.
TENTATIVE CAST FOR GLEE
CLUB OPERETTA ANNOUNCED
Gilbert and Sullivan’s “Pirates of
Penzance” To Be Given Mayday
Glee Club has announced a tentative
cast for its May Day performance of “The
Pirates of Penzance.” —
They have chosen Gilbert and Sullivan
at their high-water mark in this ‘delightful
story of the young man apprenticed to
Pirates (which was all an absurd mistake
anyway), until the age of 21. He escapes
on his 21st birthday, and fares forth into
the world in search of adventure and love
/—especially love. ;
The Pirates, who are kind to orphans, |,
and obedient to Queen Victoria, start in
pursuit. But the outcome, along with
fouching songs and rollicking choruses,
may all be heard on the ist of May, 1925,
The cast as it now stands is: |
Pirate. King SESS M. Constant, ’25
Samuel oe eae Lomas, ’25
} Frederic Svveasedeertecs,~ de Dani,.’35
“Major Gerieral. Stanley... » E, Parker, °27
cane Saupint § of ae Kk Srey |
: tate ee aee eens eee
his specialized studies,
‘the democracy of the other still grows.”
: #
iy tye ‘ : Pye -
o FE x & . 6 : o iy a4
es oe eee wee ae et cg
, | THE COLLEGE NEWS ‘ |
‘ y & re : 5
|graduates, at least, dd their work well, they| novelist. He -translated Goethe’s Faust DR. BRUNEL a)
8 ¢
, . CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
really wide knowledge of fact, miade him
quick to see the fallacy in many a proposed.
theory. His interest in causes led him far
afield and broadened *the apeciglet into the
man of thorough acquaintance with his sub-
ject. Yet, as always must be the case, his
professional reputation was grounded on
among which his
application of physical and i inorganic chemis-
try to organic problems was responsible
for his most important’ contributions ‘to re-
search.
Such studies, * though they carried his
name fo Europe, were, of course, little un-
derstood by most of those who saw him
daily and knew him only as a teacher or a
colleague. And as such I should best wish
to_dwell:upon his memory, .as.a_teacher.who
had the inborn gift of téaching, and, as.a
colleague whose friendship was of the stuff
which abides. :
By One of His Students.
The more deeply one feels the more dif-
ficult is it to put that feeling into words;
so we find it hard to express the immeasur-
able loss the college has suffered in the
death of Dr. Brunel. We, who have studied
with him, even for a brief time, who have
known his infinfte patience and kindness feel
the loss most keenlyg Dalton is no longer
the Dalton, Bryn Mawr no longer the Bryn
Mawr we have known.
But we cannot claim him as ours alone for
he belonged to the whole college in: the in-
terest that he took in every phase of college
life; and-the many contributions he made to
it. speaking at Science Club, as he did just
before - Christmas, playing his
Wyndham, besides the tireless work less
visible, but more vital to college interests, on
faculty committees.
It has been one of the greatest privileges
of our college life to have known him, to
have had him for a friend whose influence
we shall always feel and to whom we shall
be forever grateful for.all that he has done
for us and the college.
Lectures.
Madame Olga Samaroff will give lec-
tures in the Foyer of the Academy of
Music, January 12, at 3 P. M., on “Beetho-
ven and His Followers,” and January 21,
at 11 A. M., on “After Wagner.” Tickets
at $4 and $2 plus tax, can be obtained at
the Academy box office. They are sold
only for both. talks. ’
CHRIST MORE EFFICIENT THAN
NAPOLEON SAYS DR. PHILLIPPS
Both Trusting And Critical Mind Nec-
essary To Balanced Attitude
“Not to ioe truth t but to watete. ‘our
prejudices is our purpdse.in religious and ,
social matters,” said the Rev. Harold Phil-
lipps, who fed the chapel service last Sun-
day: night. te
“In science all our progress is due to
our open mindedness, but on moral ques-
tions there are many people. who think
that everything is Q. E. D., solved al-
ready, and for all. They know it all, and
they won’t look any: farther.”
. “On the other hand, there are,” he says,
“some people who go to the other ex-
treme, and who haven't sense enough to
take on faith those things which the ex-
perience of the race has proved to be
true beyond a shadow of a doubt.
“Which, in the long stretch of centuries
which prove all things, was more practi-
cally efficient, the Corsican or the Naza-
rean. The empire of the one fell early;
To seek to. prove “Christ's | ‘greatness, he
feels, is just as foolish as if a man were
to Chicago in a stage coach be-
believe that the Twen-
‘is a faster means”
violin at °
a
4 a
be an amendment of, C. Remak’s, ’23, that
; . . a
satin sleeneeleendate Eamets eemmenantiiie sineameniientina
{
ae
—p?
e
; ‘THE COLLEGE ‘NEWS
COMMUNISTS AND SOCIALISTs-
DESCRIBED BY en
i
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 f
&.
the class that wants the property and
history sgems to bear thein out in this.
o
“Professional patriots, like William J.
Burns, are devoting all their oratory to
rousing the country against Communism,
Yet an increasing number of people aré
supporting the workers’ party. It con;
stitutes a strong force in our political
life, and one that makes people think.
|
6 ‘
“Then* there is the old Socialiat ‘purty, 1
the outgrowth of the German movement
of 1858-1870. For. a long: period, similar
to that of the Fabians in England, the
middle class intelligentsia. espoused the
_eause_of. the lower...classes.... Kugene—Debs,
is still: the: greatest protagonist of: Social-
ism, with his intensity. of love for the
masses and for individuals. The Com-
munist movement. does not produce this
human quality ‘or love for fellow men,
Lenin saw only a complicated social prob-
lem, in relation to the peasantry, utiliza-
tion of power and. reorganization of thd
‘life of Russia, .
s
4
_ power.
more heavily on the lower classes, there
"The I. W. W. are the basi ae
of all radical groups, but:as a-matter of
fact they.exist only in the basic industries}
and arise from the need for migratory
labor. They are mainly homeless, prop-
ertyless nomads, exploited by highly cen+
trallized organizations, and persecuted by
the police. They have no opportunities
for normal. social life, and as compensa-
tion for the lives they lead they have
evolved a philosophy. in which they see
‘themselves masters*in the industries of
which they are now slaves. They advo-
cate sticking together and learning the
processes, until they are ready to over-
throw the management by a_ general
strike. Such an attempt in Italy in 1920
failed utterly, and brought about the
White Terror of Fascism. I myself joined
the I. W. W. and worked in basic indus-
tries for four months. They are blazing’
fellows, happy, unlike the Communists
and with dauntless courage. Again and
again the police have tried to repress
them, only to be beaten by their unflinch;
ing, passive resistance.
“People are now serving sentences in
San Quentin prison just for possessing
cards of membership in the I. W. W. And
yet the organization neither preaches nor
practices violence. The California au-
thorities have invented a new charge—
criminal syndicalism= ander which they
can i aaa people. for the ideas in their
heads.
“There is much unorganizéd radicalism
in the labor movement, due to foreign
workers; But the opportunities of getting
-out..of the laboring class. are so great for
the.workers here that the movement lacks
Until our social system weighs
will be no militant and united labor. But
we will be affected by the general drift of
Europe towards. the left, as. shown by the
inéréése in strength of the-Social Demo-
erats. ee
#LEGISLATURE ‘TO. REPLACE
‘ ASSOCIATION MERTINGS|
ae. 4 a
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 \
members of the leciaature ate to vote; at-
tendance and discussion by: other yore
are desired.
A coldest by petition of 25 ‘diate
for a mass-meeting to reconsider baisiness,
"js possible, At. the discretion of the ex-
ecutive boards a mass-meeting may be}
called st any time. The legislature is to
consist of 72 of which 60 is to ‘constitute
a quortim: «*
‘Discussion ‘of this Proposition dies fol-
» lowed. Finally’ a motion” to' try such a
legislature until March was passed, with
F \ i
scspgecasstnalabanse
|| between the two.
‘. RADICAL %
rom the New Student.) ©
At Washington, D. C., on December
30, Professor H. T. Moore, psychologist
and radicalogist, of Dartmouth College,
‘before the American Association for the
Advancement of Science, in convention
assembled, announced the results of a
series of radicalism tests conducted at;
Yale, Columbia and Dartmouth,
‘Professor Moore finds the tadergiadu-|
ates of Columbia the most radical,’ those,
of Yale the most ,conservative, and. those
of Dartmouth. occupying .a meee groun
The definition. of a radical, cmdline Wo
Professor Moore, is one who anezera
“yes” to the questions, “Do you ‘bélieve
in alleviating poverty by social legisla
tion?” and, “Are you sympathetic with th
.political.experiment-now-going-on-in ed
sia?” and in the negative to the question,
“Are you prejudiced against an individual
because of promiscuit® in sex life?” |
Varidus other tests used showed that
Padical students “used their brains more
quickly than conservative students of thei
same intelligence and from the same typ
of family.” Professor Moore also found
‘| that the radicals were able to shake off old
habits more quickly.
Terse, epigrammatical, was the com4
ment of President Nicholas Murray But+
ler, of “most radical” Columbia; “Unim4
portant if true.”
MUSIC ‘DEPARTMENT BENEFITS.
BY CROSS-WORD CONTEST
CONTINUED FROM. PAGE 1
meaning a slight convex curve ‘in the
shaft of a column. He was plainly*ner-'
vous. His footwork was slipping.
“The Yale, Harvard, Princeton and
C. C. N. Y. puzzles were entirely finished
with the exception of the seven-word let-
shaft of a‘column, Sig Spaeth and Jerome,
Swinford, of Prinéeton, had thrée of them!
to wit, s-i-s. Arthur Guiterman and
Montrose Moses, the C.-C: N.-Y., two, had;
e-ta-s. Broun and Sherwood had oné
apiece.
“The crowd roared. Never before in
the famed.;old Roosevelt Bowl had: there
been heard such roaring. Bryn Maw
roared soprano and Vassar roared alto,
and these with the basso profundo of the
worth hearing.
“At Jast! “A shout of triumph from
Benet and Thomas. The judges looked,
There it was, a seven-letter word meaning
a slight convex curve in the shaft of a
column. ENTASIS!: ‘Correct!’ nodded
the judges, and from every corner of the
bowl-room rang the old Eli hymn of vic:
tory. ‘Far above Cayuga’s water, etc’.” 4
,
673 Fifth Av.,
_ New York
~25 Old ‘Bond
oe Pay) - St.,. London
lite 2 rue*de la
vt ret rip Paix, Paris
AnELIZABETH:ARDEN Treatment
is based on three im sg er steps
Cleansing, Toning, ourishing—
“with Elizabeth, Arden’s Cleans-
ing Cream, A
‘Skin Tonic, -
and Orange Skin Food. Ask at |
toilet seavatsite counter for
“The eben of the. Beautiful,” -
Elizabeth Arden’s book on the
care of the skin.
Babani Perfumes add. a. 1 final
touch of ‘charm to pd erny
costume.
Elizabeth Arden’s Toilet Prep-
arations and Babani en:
are on sale at
Powers & Riypalds
zi iy at fs
Bryn Mawr, Pa. >:
2.39 yea el eo
ter meaning a slight convex curve in the ,
Cc. C. N. Y.. made the scene one -well'|
DIAL’S CHOICE OF BEST
” LIVING POETESS IS ALUMNA
“Since the “death of Emily Dickinson,
America’s most distinguished poetess,” is,
according to the Dial, Marianne Moore, |
Bryn Mawr, ’09. “
Her volumes of poems,Observation, which
has just been published, has won her the
$2000 prize awarded each year by the Dial
| Magazine “for , distinguished service to
American letters,”
After graduating from here, Miss Moore,
nd who was born in St. Louis, taught stenog-
't}raphy for three and a half years in the
United States Indian School at Carlisle, Pa.
She is now an assistant in a branch: of the
New York Public Library.
Her poetry first appeared in the Egoist, a -
London magazine, several years ago.
BORN a's
Edith Healea Everétt, '22, (Mrs, Virgil
Everett) a daughter, Mildred Edith Ever-
ett. f
#.
ENGAGED
Frances Briggs, ’25, to Clarence Leuba,
Haverford, 721.
_
EUROPE
And Return
$155
The Cunard College Specials inaug-
urated in 1924 were so successful that
they are offered again to students and
teachers for next summer. Several Cun-
ard ships are scheduled for the use of
men and women students and graduates.
Private staterooms for two, three and
four persons;commodious lounge; smok-
ing room; library; large, airy. dining-
room, with excellent menus; promenade
deck, with steamer chairs; swimming
pool; concerts; dances; deck games.
Plan Now
6 to make thistrip next simmer. Get up your party.
Fare of $155 govers voyage to Europe and return —
a delightful vacation in itself. For $226 there is a
THREE-WEEK TOUR, including voyage over
and back, hotel, railroad and sightseeing in Europe.
" Felix Decides to
Goto Europe!
Watch for the
New Cunard
ries.
ee
More extensive tours of four weeks and longer at
‘correspondingly low rates.
See local college representative now
or write for further particulars to
CUNARD
aD ANCHOR nts
25 Broadway, New York City or Local Agents
Faee -
Cs seer
peycHorocyY—-A
.—the Five Senses
Add just a TOUCH
‘to be in good TASTE
: 3 to please the SIGHT —_.
to hint a dainty FRAGANCE —
to HEAR compliments
es LGA
~ FACE DOWDERS
vinantkes. aaa
cts in.
ar re
E'S. |
. \ 3 -
cases, with or without
Compacs, $1.00.
¢
eee
CELT See aes
te,
_ DRUGS
Agent for
Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings
We-wn WéideDas Deine Bitch ta ‘dor
Ferne Streiten,
Wenn Das Gesuchte Liegt Sonah!
—Heine.
No need to go to Philadelphia for a
cozy Ladies’ Dining Room. .
ROMA. CAFE
American, Italian, French Dishes
Open from 7 A. M. to 12 P. M.
PANDORA’S BOX
a1 RAT LANCASTER PIKE
Gift Linens, Wools, Hand Crafts
JUNIOR NEEDS, SPORT ESSENTIALS
Cards and Gifts.
for all occasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
. dade Connelly Estate
The Main Line Florists |":
1226. Lancaster Avenue
Rosemont, Pa.
Phone, 252 Bryn Mawr
Tel,, Bryn Mawr 823 ee
ESTIMATES FURNISHED
WILLIAM G. CUFF & CO.
Electrical Contractors
"INSTALLATION; WIRING, REPAIRING
855 Lancaster. Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 975 GIFTS.
M. J. CARDAMONE, Ph. G.
Prescription Druggist :
- 1040 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
wot nnn non
—_—_—_—_———
PHONE “758
HENRY B. WALLACE
_ CATERER and CONFECTIONER
%
. LUNCHEONS AND ‘TBAS | Estate of seventecn
rr
BB acura ot 9
_ CAPITAL, saseaee
| FACIAL MASSAGE
Cut Flowers and Plants F resh
Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plante—Personal supervision on alj
Phone, Bryn Mawr 570
807 ‘Lancaster Ave.
!
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 453
THE | CHATTERBOX
A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM
«Regular Dinners or a
Birthday Parties by appointment
OPEN FROM 12 TO 7.30
$25 LANCASTER AVENUE
Bryn Mawr Massage Shop
SHAMPOOING
MAROEL WAVING’... Opposite Post Officd
MANICUBRING
Tel. 882 Bryn Mawt
NOTICE—The bo formerly at the Flo 4
Building, has m ven to lavas y quatters w bare.
we hope to ‘be Panes able to Peunaivar patron
“MM. 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 ~«
FOR A PERFECT LUNCHEON -
__WHITMAN’S
1316 Chestnut Street
LOWTHORPE SCHOOL
; A School of Landscape Architecture for Women
SWE EvoceEe YEAR
Landscape n, Planting Des ome Cénstrue,
“ti ;
Spo aC geventeen | ssn 9 . ,
36 sites, fre p ache owe Boston — t
' GROTON, |
_ THE BRYN MAWR ‘TRUST CO.| Phe
: We have it or can get it.
. 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 |
$821 LAN CASTER AVENUE
BRYN “MAWE
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
FLORISTS |
|114 South 17th St. Phila, Pa.
‘BELL PHONE, SPRUCE 82-62 ;
E. S. McCawley & Co.
Books
| Do you want the latest book?
‘Are you interested in books worth
while?
'\HAVERFORD AVE. . ‘Haverford, ‘Pa.
ae —
Jesoelers
— a distinguished
ele for | many years
meh
Insignia, Station-
ery, fist Watches atches; gifts
for.every taal
Fetes: are cordially welcomed,
i AND JUNIPER STREETS»
ae ae Ot ROk 9hRs
ar 10 PBL & I STs, ie t TE Oe mae ie Sr —— me . o —
Telephone, Baya Mews 897 Ne Riding Habits; MOORE'S PHARMACIES | Vee: et eA
eg The Hearthstone . | & Breeches ., RYN. MAWR PAL. | Haverford Pharmacy
NEE caer} FRANCIS B. HALL, | arent a ' Prescriptién Drug Store
North Merion Ave. Bryn Maw?, Pa.! s49 LANCASTER AVE., be B, Fa, Haverford, Pa.
es 3 stores west of P. 0. Phone, ryn 3 824) ———_—_—_—————————
POWERS & REYNOLDS sj [Aftecoon Tea Saturday Lancheon
MODERN DRUG STORE DAINTY ICED |} U@ Chat te i :
837 Lancaster Ave.. Bryn -_— | SANDWICHES DRINKS}. Direct Oriental Importations ter ea House
.° Imported Perfumes ro : | 2° eee ml ae fried — el rae
CANDY * SODA GIFTS| . a R A ‘
Sai College 3 {202 South Fifteenth Street® aan
~ WILLIAM L. HAYDEN Tea House |* ~~ 7 oe
< Housekeeping Hardware eetrenmaine Os ee TOGGERY SHOP ‘ 2nd Ploor,: dt Post Office, Bryn Mawr
: - ~ Locksmithing Opest Daily from T to:7 881, LANCASTER AVENUE nen Boney Ne. da am
838 ion a AVE. Bryn Mawr] EVENING PARTIES BY (Opposite Post Office) | +. Pieating Yel Benciniaing
: : Ladies’ Riding Suits to Measure, ¥40.00 and Up
: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT Gowns, Hats, Coats, (===
PHILIP HARRISON. aoe ) ) reabieat
826 LANCASTER AVENUE Sweaters, Blouses, Hosiery Luncheons
Walk Over Shoe Shop Dinners.
TELHPHONE, ARDMORD 1946
Haverford Ave. & Station ‘Rd. Drive
tle i STATHON, P. R. R.
BAXTER & GREEN, Inc. |
JECALDWELL & 60. |
po —
| Tan OFFICIAL SILVER COFFE SPOON
with, the
COLLEGE SEAL
OFFICIAL JEWELERS _
for the
COLLEGE SEAL RING
THE GIFT SUGGHSTION BOOK | ‘
Mailed upon request, distrates: many Wietinotive
gifts.
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM °
Montgomery ‘aie
Bryn Mawr —
Everything Dainty
‘Printin
Teter Eleaie..
“Xunouncements—
Booklets; etc.’
HY Eom sePiperr eit Ave, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
&
te
we
THE COLLEGE NEWS
= 6
FIRE. LAWS .MAY- NOT- PREVENT
: PLAYS BEING GIVEN IN GYM
wt ts a Tp
ee Broker Say Says College Is Safe
we
(«Due To-Central Heating .
+ On Wednesday, December 17, Mr. J. B.
Longacre, of the firm of Longacre and
Wing, Insurance Brokers, spoke in morn-
‘tng chapel oni fire risk in the college.
‘ The mumerous school and college fires in
the past few years and the recent State
Legislation agaitist fire and panic have
brought up this quéstion at Bryn Mawr. Mr.
Longacre spoke of the comparative safety
bf the collegé buildings because the central
heating system eliminates separate furnace
fires and because electric lighting involves;
so much less risk than the gas jets or kero-
sene_lamps-with which the halls were origi-
pally equipped.
2 He mentioned electrical. heating appli-
dices as one sotrce of danger. These appli-
ances are often faulty ih’ construction and
the college lighting system isnot organized
to carry the additional ‘current which they
consume, so that a short-citcuiting, which
‘often causes fire, might result.
It no longer appears probable that the
Commencement Exercises of the Class of
#025 will have to be postponed until the
completion of the Students’ Building. A
device has been’ found which clamps to-
gether several rows of ‘chairs and makes
them practically. immovable. This, it is
hoped, will meet the State requirements and
enable ug to use the gymnasium for meet-
ings and plays until the new auditorium is
ready. he e
NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
« | Idea of a University.
No doubt American students, at any
rate those who have seen, felt or really
understood’ the work of the European
Stud@nt ‘Relief, are fairly familiar’ with
the remarkably fair and efficient accom-
plishment of that body in supplying ma-
terial needs of desperate young students
throughout Europe. It is not strange,
therefore, that at its international confer-
ence at Elmau, Germany, this year the }-
European Student Relief and students of
28 countries should face and try to ana-
lyze their idea of a university.
“We, students of 28 lands, assembled in
conference at Elmau, are deeply concern-
ed because of the tendency to turn our
‘universities into specialist or professional
schools, and to consider as science a mere |’
intellectual education out of touch with
life.
“The war and the dash few years dem-
onstrated that the intellectual classes of
the different countries were no more mas-
ters of. the situation than any other class
or group. The regult has been that they
are in no position ‘today to fulfill their
highest furiction and responsibility—that
of leadership in their respective nations.
This state of affairs must be’ changed.
- “We, therefore, urge that our secondary
and higher institutions of learning should
give the students not. only specialized pro-
fessional or vocational training, but also
an education which shall keep them in
vital relation to teality and to’ current
events and affairs; an education. which
shall nurture personalities conscious of
their moral responsibilities in life; person-
alities equipped with qualifications which
will enable them to occupy their place and
fulfill their function in an all-inclusive
world order of humanity with super-na-
tional eternal values.
“Such an order does not mean a shallow
superficial internationalism, but on the
contrary, an order in which expression |
of national character—the pre-requisite
basis for every culture or Civilization—is
possible. °.
“We regard ourselves as spokesmen of
a generation which is called upon to es-
tablish a new. world order of mutual un-
derstanding arid co-operation. In this
_ Spirit we appeal to E. S. R., wherever it]
ia an influence in determining. educa-
ional policies and principles, to adopt this
as xa prigaary: ee | of its work;
and in doing so to render indispensable
service to the spiritual needs of our pres-
ent student generation —New. Student.
Question Whether Venus de Milo Had
* _ *. Arms.
va
Paris, Nov. 12.—It may be some conso-
lation to art lovers throughout the world;
who have wondered in what position were
the missing arms of the famous Venus de
Milo statue in the Louvre, to learn that
feven the ancients themselves were per-
plexed on this point.
Dr. Edde, a French physician, has just
made known that during a recent visit to
A Yellow Slicker
changes one’s
viewpoint of a
rainy day.
Slickers _ cor-
rectly tailored are
rubber - faced in
yellow, $7.50; of .
yellow oiled cloth,
$8.50.
Strawbridge
& Clothier
Market Street,
Eighth Street,
Filbert Street
Egypt he came into possession of a small
bronze statuette of the same period as
the Venus de Milo. This. statuette is an
exact copy of the famous Venus, and like
the original, it has no arms. Dr, Edde
therefore concludes that tfie Venus. de
Milo never at any time. had arms, and
he believes that the sculptor, when he had
carved gut of the stone such a divine
form, gave up all idea of adding arms.
e
e
Travel
Opportunity
A great-steamship company will ap-
pointa very limited number of under-
graduates as its Student Representa-
tives in connection with its Special
College Sailings=Tourist Third Class
~—which will be restricted exclusively
to. college men and women, teachers,
tourists and such congenial persons
to whom Round Trips to Europe
will be offered for as little as $155.
These representatives will be sup-
ported by an aggressive advertising
campaign, furnished with attractive
literature and givendirect leads. They
will find the work profitable as well
as interesting and their association
with this company, which occupies
a commanding position in its field
and has offices and agencies all over
the earth, a very agreeable one.
Applications will be received up to
one week from today, and in strict
confidence. Address P.O. Box 13—
Sta. G, New York City
>
7
DR. BRUNEL’S PLACE TAKEN:
BY DR. BUCK, OF -YALE
Dr. J. S. Buck, who is taking the place
of the late Dr.
Brunel, as Professor of
Chemistry for the rest of the first semes- :-
ter of this year, took his B.S; with honors
at the University of Liverpool in 1920 and
his
in, 1922,
Ph. D. at,the University of Livérpool.
He was Senior 1851 Exhibitioner
at the University of Liverpool in 1922-23,
and at the University of Oxford in 1923-
24,
This year he is Afitoine Chiris Fellow
in Chemistry at Yale University.
@
A VACATION IN THE
NATYON’S CAPITAL
Delightful: parties arranged for col-
lege girls for. vacations or week-
ends. Trips.to places of interest.
Lovely dinners and teas. A vacation
brim full of pléasure. :
Write for illustrated booklet.
“A Week in Washington”
‘GRACE DODGE HOTEL
Washington, D. C.
Powers & Reynolds, Bryn Mawr
HH, B, Wallace, Bryn Mawr
- William Groff, Bryn Mawr
~ Bryn Mawr College Inn, Bryn Mawr
Kindt’s Pharmacy, BrynMawr
Frank W. Prickett, Rosemont -
Bryn Mawr College Book Store, Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr Confectionery, Bryn Mawr
Gollege Tea Room, Bryn Mawr :
z.
oe
®
. ' v7 %
ae ee i‘ w
a THE COLLEGE NEWS EEN:
“ . CALENDAR Rae eae x Se wr
A ¥ ite “Y, % Mi as! a 2h lS
Wednesday, January 14—President f. : > is
Park will be at home to the Senior Class. |. eran Tours UNPARALLELED As it C
’ Thurkday, - January 15—Dhan Gopal For College Men andWomen § - a ae js 5
; Mukerji. wil speak’ in Taylor Hall under ¢ ; l | _ Te BOE Rhiledetibia 5
the. auspices of the Liberal Club. ae 1925 : (Goks =“ 5
Saturday, January 17—The lectures of ; ys iY s
' Monday, January 19, will be given. $395 and up ‘ to EUROPE . ¥ ;
ee Jy Mer wani| J Sale ceiewy weroun | | | a aa le feed
nations begin. ae tea our saning 2 f
Saturday, January $1—Mid- -year exami- For full partioulars addrese A a4 i
natigns end, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Large choice of s 4
Annual Alumnae Association necting 110 East dand Street ‘New York itineraries; tours 4 :
President Park will give a luncheon in oo %
honor of Mrs, Charles Reed Cary, presi- by leading Liners % :
dent of the Association. every few. days : :
Monday, February 2—Vacation. . ‘ i :
Tuesday; February 3—Vacation. AMY’ S SHOP | sduring Season % wer ; *
Wednesday, February 4—New.-semester “Candi : RATE : $255 After Exams-_ :
beginning at 9A. M. an ies” from i :
‘ Row taichs ofl tour, ay. iy
| Gifts gat cles 3 expense sriind Pitt ee Have Dad Reward yet on
REO | ° : at a with a Sew prom frock. . 2
IN PHILADELPHIA Novelties | | Our Repwiiibon ds. Yiaw Guarante!| |8 ¢ : a
Theatres ‘Cards THOS.COOK&SON| |f «© ae
ca The Greenwich Village Fol 857 L ANC ASTER AVENUE R Fifth Ave. NEW YORK rend s BONW Ths :
Chestnut—“The Dream Girl,” with] ‘Phone 1058J Bryn Mawr : EEA
Fay Bainter. — = pare cn
Lyric—“‘The Beggar on Horseback,” : EE r ———
with Roland TQUng. . AS Jit NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW 2QO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT Now DO IT NOW DO i.
Adelphi— “4 All of Us. : li ow
Walnut—“Marjorie.” 3 < “ fi .
Forrest—“Stepping Stones,” with Fred PA a Z
_ Stone. E oe: h l b f &
Garrick—"The Swan,” wih Eva Te] J oe Gish learns about women from :
Gallienne. :
Broad—‘“Rain;” with Jeanne Engels. E '
ce >,
Movies ree & ~ &
Arcadia—“The Sea Hawk.” feo i a. a a i Q
-Aldine—“The Ten Comenieipeinaioys ct. : GRACE Pr
Stanton—Harold a ie “Hot ue ‘ F
Water.” %
Stanley—Mary Pickford” in Dorothy ne ae
Vernon of Haddon Hall.” i oe Ais ae oH La bel Athletie ca
Globe—“The Silent Accuser, ‘with E te ica Bp
Peter the Great. 5 ee = : os Girl 9
Fox—“White Man,” with Alice. Joyce. he sa
Orchestra. a | a . 2
On Friday, January 16, atid. Saturday, z : Ghac ‘ Lefiinewell liv if 4
January 17, the Philadelphia Orchestra mi d € eee a ‘ 1 ed Tro. 9
will play the following program: — Bs: a \ oor to us... but How was i to oF gg
Weber .....-seeee0s Overture, eae 9 ~7 |. ° know that. she would grow up = ; |
Debuss: “T/Apres-midi d’un Faune’ . ae E
Tacilicow sky, Fantasia, “Firancesca da , B.. to, be star perfor mer on the age :
Rimini” ee “All Ainericat girl’s football ; (sous: I i during a scrim= +: 5-9»
- Brahms ...Symphony No..4, ee ino Reo ho and was. penalized. five] yards. for oldi ing She broke my © See cli
TTT t a
ie oa ran, Hoogatraten i *} 3. heart and a rib by her rough’ work, which you might have called 2
Z Ses the cau p de Grace! eee oe et, abt 5) Sg
: x, : &: ties a x f a 9
FAMOUS ARTIST TO SPEAK’ & ‘She came to see me during | m my colivalescence anid’ saw, for the see tans
HERE ON MODERN MUSIC Q filet: time, a copy of Vaake Rais oe t was a gase of love at first ee
Mile. Nadia Boulanger, the distin-] - sig ht. Grace, sayenent of, muscular , hristian: ty» suddenly became: peer
‘guished French organist, ‘pike, com-].. . af ie addict of literature and the lively arts.. The dear girl attacked: ; oi. cell Hs : ee
poser and lecturer, will mag fe Biya ie , them with typical gusto—art exhib tions, first. nights, cafés dan- soit mate seated
ae College on Saturday, February) = 3 _ Sants, dinners’ to visiting Huns, eve! ything 1, Compared to nad niiseat Mamats: here
Program: Modern Music and Its ve. 6 former. reckless: Ways. she is. now quite housesbroken: She can “ oe a 4 ee ue a a
lution. e even wear an evening gown without’ ! showing cleat marks where, fa eh pecs fine
Those students whose tickets: in Row “2 the. opposing team - ‘trampled on. he er Aeck.. Qn: the whole, ift i is: pote ae)
I were confused at. the last concert. are ir safer for her fri et ids. een
asked to stop in Mrs. Collins’ office some B ae
time soon. i Ee
B.
Madame Jeanne de Mare, lecturer-pian- om
ist, will talk on “Present Day, Musical} ; =
Paris,” at the Art Alliance, 1823 Walnut) — .
street, on January 19. ‘Tickets, | i a
each and are on sale at th Publicity yO Ke RS Od
ee
Serb oe Sst fe a ae ae ae
% ; : 6 ; Denise Clut ati : Rove your ma ; re peg i ae
& “uable meet jena find TWO DOLLARS" for
a‘ a mf +) : ; : d ae Seas : ‘ 5 A ae
College news, January 14, 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)
1925-01-14
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 11, No. 12
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol11-no12