Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
College news, February 13, 1924
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1924-02-13
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 10, No. 14
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-vol10-no14
ia ag
~
Stow
THE. COLLEGE NEWS
AMERICAN WOMEN ASKED
TO HELP BUY CROSBY HALL
To Be Used:as Recreational Center
for University Women in London
The American Association of University
Women has voted ‘to raise five thdusand
dollars to help purchase Crosby Hall, in
London, for a headquarters for ‘university
women. This hall. for which the Univer-
sity and City Association of English Uni-
versity Women is trying to raise £10,000;
will be open to the public at stated times
as a refectory and place of assembly, and
will serve aS a meeting place where stu-
dents of different nations may meet each
other. It will also be a place where stu-
dents may live and work, provided with a
residential. wing-and_a library. :
. Miss Margaret Blaine, '13, is the head
of the American committee. She has asked
Bryn Mawr alumnae and undergraduates
to raise two hundred and fifty dollars.
According to the circular about Crosby
Hall-it was built in 1466 as the home of
Sir John Crosby, fnerchant prince, soldier,
diplomat, and leading citizen of his day, ‘it
soon passed into the hands of Richard
Plantaganet, afterwards king of England.
Here he plotted to obtain the throne and
received tidings of the murder of his neph-
ews at the Tower. In Shakespeare’s time
it was the residence of the Countess of
Pembroke, Sir Philip Sidnéy’s sister, and is
mentioned three times
Various lord mayors succeeded in posses-
, sion and one of them entertainéd Katherine
of Aragon’in regal splendor.
More became associated with Crosby Hall
through a short period of ownership and
he added the traditions of scholarship and
international relations. A true son of the
Renaissance, he studied at Louvain and
Paris, and brought scholarship and a liberal
point of view to the office of Lord Chan-
cellor of England.. He was a good father
as well as a statesman and in his daughter
Margaret he enjoyed “the high-minded
sympathy ofa_soul as great as his own.”
She was proficient in Latin, Greek, music
and the sciences, and thus was an early
exponent of the higher education for
women. °
A later tenant, Sir John Spencer, enter-
tained Queen Elizabeth and her train,
which included Raleigh, Grenville, Drake
and Hawkins—a goodly company. indeed.
Beginning with 1666, the date of the Lon-
don fire, Crosby Hall gradually slipped
from its rich estate. \It was usedas a store
house for wines, for \sroceries, as a casual
meeting house and within our memory as a
restaurant. In 1835 Maria Hackett made a
start in restoring its ancient glories by tear-
ing away some of the eighteenth century
additions, but. again in 1907 this beautiful
Gothic building, which for four centuries
had been one of the glories of London,
stood in danger. of demolition until a group
of public spirited merchants organized as
the “University and City Association” came
valiantly to the:rescue. They caused it to
be torn down most reverently piece by
piece and set up again on the Thames em-
bankment at Chelsea in a garden that once
belonged to Sir Thomas More. Then arose
the question of putting the reincarnated
building to its fullest and noblest use.
- Someone was inspired to suggest that it
be dedicated to the growing needs of the
International Federation of University
Women in whose hands some of the glories
of the past might be restored. Surely such
an occupancy would be as an English
Sponsor has said, “in fullest keeping with
its association with international scholar-
ship, its representative character as the
place of entertainment for visitors from
other countries and its association with
’ cultured women through Margaret More
3p Maria Hackett.” : ‘
The Senior Class has elected B. Ling,
A. Shiras, K. Conner, C. Lewis and K.
Gallwey to the Fellowship Dinner Coim-
mittee. =
— 1924 has elected Anne. Shiras, toastmis-
tress for the Fellowship Dinner. ‘3
4
in Richard III."
Sir Thomas |’
ALUMNAE VOTE TO SUPPORT
_ DRIVE FOR MUSIC SCHOOL
Decide to Appoint Committee to Work
for Students’ Building
About ninef¥ Alumnae attended the
Alumnae meeting and supper held here dur-
ing the mid-year vacation.
Two important motions were passed at
the meeting’ in Taylor, on Saturday, Feb-
ruary 2.. These provided that the -Music
Committee should raise money with the
‘co-operation of the Alumnae for.the perma-
nent endowment of the Music Department
and that a committee should. be appointed
to work on the plan suggested by Mrs.
Charles Tiffany, 97, for the endowment
of the Students’ Building. ‘
At the supper at the College Inn, on
Friday night, Mrs. Caroline Miller, 09,
toastmistress, spoké informally. Later in
the evening the Alumnae were entertained
by “Creatures of Impulse,” a farce by W.
S. Gilbert, presented by some of the New
York Alumnae. Parts were taken by -S.
Hand, ’22; K. Peek, ’22; E, Mathews, ’23;
C. Garrison, ’21 and F. Maude Dessay, 713.
Miss: Dessau directed the play.
President Park spoke dt the luncheon,
on Saturday, in Pembroke Hall, and in the
afternoon she and Miss King spoke at the
Alumnae Book Club meeting.
FINAL SWIMMING MEET :
WON BY SOPHOMORES
: >
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
68-Foor BAck
5 Seconds
lM. Woodworth, 2% 33... 7 4/5
aT SE OTe Cy EL? 5 I ag are Pane 17 4/5
S Ge Thomas, 20s... cee ees 18
Be We Rett oo a ab eek 18 4/5 -
136-Foor Front
Seconds
1. By ats, Gis cece bees 31
Sy ERE Wa Pa Fa RY | ce 32
Bs Te BIONGG Ahk criciaes aces 32 4/5
aM. Talcott, 20 cs isc cis chee 33 4/5
PLUNGE
Feet
LO Seaitinw 6s 62.8
Boe ee ee eee 588
Wi Ge MAGY) CO. Sei ic cc cen: 58.5
he ie ois 56.10
DIvING
Points
ie ey See eer 61.3
i PA Bie bp PR ina er e408 60.7
$3. -M, -Weodworth, 724° oe eects 60.4
a. ). Ghee SO Laie ee: 59.23
RELAY
Seconds
j Reed "Je ROO ene Gr nut ire eSne at ac 59
LEWIS PALEN RECOUNTS
STORY OF WHITE DEVILS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
ing the war of 1914 he lost an arm, but
refusing to give up the life of a soldier he
was finally shot through the lung. While
he was recovering in the hospital the over-
throw of the Russian Government took
place. ‘With his wife, a Polish princess,
whom he married during the war, he ‘went
East and became the commander of a Cos-
sack regiment whose duty it was to break
the Bolshevik organizations. This he did
so successfully that the Bolsheviki devel-
oped for him a good and warranted hatred.
‘ He fell into their hands by unwittingly
walking into his city headquarters and
finding them occupied by them. His
sword was taken from him and he was
condemned to death by the Tartars, Mak-
ing his escape, however, he and his wife
went to Paris, where they are now living,
he working as a carpenter and she as a
“masseuse.”
Mr. Palen could not tell how the sword
got to Michigan. It was in the hands of a
Cossack, from- whom he is hoping to
obtain the tale. —
JUNIORS VICTORIOUS IN
FIRST PRELIMINARY
w
Judgment and Tactics Defeat Speed
and Spectacular Throws
With a score of 4-3, the Juniors defeated
the Seniors in water polo on Monday night
in their first-team preliininaries.
Both teams played hard and seemed on
the whole about equal. 1925 showed more
judgment and variety in the passing and
changing of positions, whereas 1924 ex-
celled in long throws and in speed.
A great many personal fouls were called
on the Seniors. .Theit playing was fre-
quently brilliant, but notxso concerte® and
steady as that of the Juniors.
The first half was better played by both
teams, _ the
toward the end, prearranged tactics were
lost in a general melee. One spectacular
goal was thrown by M. Buchanan, ’24,
almost the entire length of the pool, which
brought the score to a tie, 3-3, but before
the end—of .the game B. Voorhees scored
the deciding goal for 1925.
Line-up:
1924 1925
Ue hss ee OA UR ane K. Fowler
BOWE yo sss cides . E. Glasner
CIRO i Ci acers jc gaara: B. Voorhees
SPOOOE ccvis sss Bete. eek -S. Carey
MANOS. cc 55s os as 1 IES 1, CPSP RCE D. Lee
M. BucHanan ..... deelbreed rvs E. Baldwin
m Van ober vc. (Giaccc C. Remak
THIRD TEAM
1924 vs. 1925
Light Blue and Red battled to a 3-3 tie
in the first of the third-team water polo
match games on Monday night.
Fouling and poor shooting marked the
playing of both sides. The Seniors played
abetter-game—as—a_team, ‘although their
long throws were more apt to go over than
between the goal posts. M. Minott, ’24,
excelled at taking the ball up the pool to
the Junior goal, and O. Fountain, ’24, usu-
ally reached the ball before the opposing
center forward, M. Blumenstock, ’25. The
latter was the mainstay of the team, doing
all the scoring and fully making up for
the missing member of the Junior team.
The line-up was:
1924—M. Minott**, O. Fountain*, L. Cof-
fin, M. Woodworth, H. Walker, M. Fer-
guson, M. Fischer.
1925—E. Comer, M. Blumenstock***, N.
Hough, H. Henshaw, P. Gardner, A.
Boross.
| DARK BLUE OVERWHELMS
In_ the second half, especially
GREEN IN FIRST GAME
¥. Newbold, ’27, Makes Good Goal
: Defense
Superior speed and more accurate pass-
overwhelm that of the Freshmen by the
score of 8-2 on Monday night.
From the beginning 1927 was on the de-
fensive,» fighting: to keep the ball away
from their goal-posts. Most of the scor-
ing occurred in the first half; in'the sec-
ond both teams were too tired to do more
than push thg,ball rather futilely from one
to the other. E. Harris, ’26, almost valways
got the ball before the Green center, H.
Stokes, ’27, and her backs usually succeeded
in passing it to one of the forwards fora
goal. M. Talcott, ’26, was especially good
at this, although V. Newbold, '27, as goal,
prevented her from scoring more than
twice. i
half, and V. Newbold would throw the ball
back and forth to each other two or three
times, the result usually being that one: of
G. Macy’s long and powerful throws went
THIRD TEAM
. 1926 vs. 1927
The Sophomores defeated 1927 2-0 in’ the
preliminary third-team game on Monday,
showing superior team work and speed.
ing, with short low shots which were
always intercepted, and lost opportunities
through slowness. G. Leewitz, 26," how-
ever, worked well with her forward line.
The line-up was: -
1926—H. Hopkinson, H. Rogers, A.
Long, M. Parker, G. Leewitz, F. Waite, A.
Wilt. Substitutes—D. Smith for H.
Rogers.
1927—M. L. Jones, J. Hendrick, E. Scott,
M. Cruikshank, G. Noteman, M. B. Sher-
man, M. Smith.
A Shop where. young
ladies can find their
every wish, in
Gowns,
Wraps,
Hats, ©
and.
Sports Wear, .
+
LEWIS
GOWNS—WRAPS—MILLINERY
1519 WALNUT STREET
- PHILADELPHIA, PA.
at most conservative prices.
ing enabled the. Sophomore first team to.
-In both halves G. Macy, ’26, as center —
past the goal-keeper’s hands for a score.
1927 threatened the Sophomore goal more
often in the second half, but poor shooting
prevented more, than one goal.
« Line-up:
1926 1927
ri pew yr, | ee ee E. Morris
5 a se CF........ H. Stokes**
M; Taleott-—..3; REO as E. Brodie
So. WRIMOE ees 3 Oe F. Thayer
G, Macy®™™* 25... "yn Ee E, Quier
FeO ckeesnipecs 1" a Rereergerser K. Adams
A, Jonnstes:... 3... ; G.. vcseice Vi Newbold
Both teams did a lot of ineffectual pass- *
Cd
5