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The College News
%
vote 3. NO: OU
BRYN MAWR, oa TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1923 °°
Price 10 Cents
= -PHILADELPHIA DEFEATS
. VARSITY IN HARD GAME
Last Gaine of the Season Results
in the First Varsity
Defeat, 6-1
M. BUCHANAN, ’24 STRONG BACK
All-Philadelphia defeated Varsity in a
6-1 victory last gases ina hard and very
fast game.
Though the ball was rushed. from one
end to the other with great speéd all dur-
ing thee game, Philadelphia’s attacks were
more. successful than Varsity’s. In’ the
first half Varsity held them to a score of
3-1, but.in the second the morg ageressive
Philadelphia forwards repeatedly . broke
through, the weakened defense, both~out-
distancing and evading them. Although not
as one-sided as the score might seem to
indicate, Philadelphia played a steadier
and surer game than Varsity. ,
Long dribbles on the wing provided a
rather spectacular first half, both teams
taking the ball the length of the field, only
to loge it at the circle. M. Palache, ’24,
and F. Begg, ’24, .both dribbled well and»?
often, but were generally stopped at the
last minute by the well-ordered changing of
positions of the Blue backs. Mrs. Krum-
_ bhaar, the Philadelphia goal, proved imper-
meable to the attacks of the Bryn Mawr
forwards, who failed to rush the goaler.
The Bryn Mawr game was slower and
played more on' the defensive in the second
half. Philadelphia often found a clear field
before them, with Varsity vainly..trying to
keep up the pace, and leaving unfilled gaps.
Miss Wiener, left wing, made several beau-
tiful dribbles ending in a score.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
DR. MOLDENHAUER SPEAKS
ON NEED OF ACTIVE FAITH
Practical Application to Make Faith
Real :
The faith gf the present has a good
chance for survival, only if we take it
seriously, said Dr. J. Valdemar Molden-
hauer, pastor of the Westminster Presby-
terian Church, Albany, New York, in
Chapel last Sunday evening.
A famous example of faith taken auto-
matically is Kipling’s poem of Tomlinson,
who accepted other people’s ideas of God
without thinking, and who is refused en-
trance to both Heaven and Hell on this
ground. Too many, like Tomlinson, are
willing to accept conceptions of this sort
and not verify them. The real value of faith
lies in its being rooted in the actualities of
life, acc qrding to Dr. Moldenhauer. The
difficulty © of the old theologians lay in the
fact that they refused to observe human
.nature.. Even Jonathan Edwards, who as a
youth wrote a paper based on observation
of thé habits of the woodspider, neglected
this when he came to write on theology.
If faith is to be real, it must not only
get contact from life, but dlso have a prac-
tical application and must retain its validity
by the ability to impose its will on the be-
liever. In every great age of the life of
faith, some issue has become the test of
the sincerity of. religion. The period be-
fore the Civit War saw the question of
slavery as the provocation, while now we
-are living through just such another’ time
_- 0f stress induced. by the World War, and
asking the universal question of whether
every Chrisstian, if he intends to take
Christ seriously, can preserve his calloused
eee to the fate of peace.
CHRISTIANITY 1S SUBJECT
OF DR. FITCH’S LECTURE
Atmosphere of Judaism Described
Into Which Jesus was Born
Jesus ne his Judaistic background was
the subject of Dr. Albert Parker Fitch’s
fourth lecture on Comparative Religions in
Taylor -Hall last Wednesday night. |
Continuing his discussion of the essential
characteristics of Judaism of the fifth cen-
tury B. C., Dr. Fitch said that this. spjritual
revival was followed by the quiescent
period of the exile, clarifying and codify-
ing the new religion. “With the gradual
drifting back of small companies to Jeru-
salem Judaism became, as one of its Rabis
said, “the crystallization of the worship
of Jehovah, whose worship is the sacrifice
of the pure life and a just state.’ Theo-
Fetically the > Jews had a clear percéption ot
genuine. “monotheism, a belief in a God who
was willing to become God of all nations
but who had a special interest in Judah, This
God is no longer conceived in terms of
crude power and imperial tyranny- but. in
terms of goodness and wisdom. The great
emphasis is on the ethical life,~for’ moral
distinctions ate more important to the Jews
than to any other race. “It is-from them
that we derive much of the‘ moral self?
consciousness of our modern world, al-
thouglt part of it comes from the strong
esthetic dislike of wrong whigh the Greeks
possessed. The Greeks felt the caricature
of sensual living, but the Jews believed that
they lived under supervision of-a holy God
to whom wrong-doing was an utter. abhor-
rence. Moral passi®n and a sense of the
absoluteness of right were the chief endow-
ment of.the Hebrew race.”
Out—ofthe-ideals-grew_their_conteption
of public morality, “God-fearing politics” ;
which is evident in the humaneness of the
legal code of Judaism, particularly in its |
laws concerning slavery and the treatment
of animals as well as the laws of personal
purity. Furthermore Judaism in its great
period knew the value of a “broken and
contrite heart;’ but in spite of its moral
humility and bitter repentance it has almost
no ascetic note. To the Jews the good life
was delightful because it satisfied God, but.
also, in its less noble -aspects because “it
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3°
WINTER SCHEDULE TO BEGIN
AFTER THANKSGIVING
Monday after Thanksgiving the winter
athletic schedule will begin.
Water polo practice will start then, and
a water polo game will be included in all
swimming lessons, which will be given as
usual, so those who prefer it may. play in
the afternoon.
Gymnasium classes will meet Monday,
Wednesday and Friday. Folk dancing will
be on Tuesday and Thursday, at 3.30 for
Class 1, and 5.30 for the advanced class
taking it regularly twice a week. A gen-
eral class open to anyone will also be
given on Wednesday evening at 9.15.
Playground games for those who want
to know how to teach elementary gym-
nasium_and_ to do club work in games and
dancing will be on Tuesday and Thursday
at 4.50. It will be open to Juniors and
Seniors primarily, and to any Sophomores
and Freshmen interested in this kind of
club work. —
Mr. Terroni’s fencing class will meet
Tuesday evening, at a charge of $15.00 for
the year. Wednesday and Thursday: at
5.30 there will be fencing practice classes.
Bb
‘MAY DAY ANNOUNCEMENT
. Will everyone please make out her lists
of patrons and patronesses, and of those
to whom she wishes information sent,
during vacation =
MISS THOMAS DESCRIBES
‘HER TRAVELS ABROAD
Important For United States to
Enter League of Nations |
(The following statement from Presi-
dent-Emeritus Thomas appeared in ‘the
Philadelphia evening papers:on November
21, and has been widely copied by leading
papers throughout the country in addition
to calling forth much editorial comment.)
. Travelling in- Europe and Asia for six-
teen continuous months gives one: an im-
pression of the world totally different from
that’ we have as. stay-at-home Americans.
It is not only what a globe-trotting Amer-
ican sees of different countries: -it-is- the
‘imaginative conception that somehow comes
of the people of the country. It is the un-
derstanding one gets of their special prob-
lems by. reading their newspapers ‘from
day to day. It is, in short, a kind of first
hand knowledge that makes us _ belitve
surely we are right in seeing things in a
new light.
I have come, for~my
own part, to be
vabsolutely sure that it%s the duty and also
to the profit of the United States to delay
no longer but to use. her great moral and
financial power,.to, the utmost to»help to
7
solve the many pressing problems that must
be solved if the world as we know it is to
go on. It seems to me our first duty to
enter the League of Nations to which fifty-
four nations of the world already belong,
including the Free State of Ireland and
Abyssinia, which joined it this summer, and
tO which there is every reason to believe
Germany and Russia will be admitted as
soon as they apply. In the Council and on
all the League committees a place for the
United States is~ still kept vacant—in-the
hope: that we shall fill it.
In Paris I saw a number of people who
were on their way back from the annual
meeting of the League of Nations held last
September and October at Geneva. . They
one and all told me that the Italian-Greek
difficulty which seefmed to outsiders such a
blow to-the League of Nations was really
a magnificent tribute to its strength and
to the power of public opinion organized
within the League to which even Mussolini
found he must bow.
I was in Constantinople in: the summer
of 1922, living in the villa I had rented on
the Bosphorus, when the British battleships
steamed past my windows as a demonstra-
tion to the victorious,Anatolian Turks that
they could not come back into Europe. If
we had been there to stand by Great Britain,
not a shot need have been fired, but one}
of the greatest and most beautiful cities
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
REASON ESSENTIAL VIRTUE OF THE
FRENCH, EXPLAINS MISS KING
The very spirit of France is found be-
tween the basins of the Loire and the
Seine, said Miss King, professor of His-
tory of Art, speaking to the French Club
last Tuesday afternoon.
In this region are the great’ Gothic ca-
thedrals and northern chateaus. - Here
were born Rorisard, Christine de Pisan;
Verlaine, Rabelais, Moliere, Balzac, Vol-
taire; representing in art and literature
that essentially French quality, reason.
Reason includes the four powers which
govern life, the power of intellect and of
knowledge, that of beauty, and 8f conduct
of social life and mijners, making French
pedantry very rare and resolving French
conduct into rightly ordered relations be-
tween human beings. It is expressed in”
the painting of Chardin, Millet, and the
Barbizon school; in the French novel,
short story, high comedy, and generally in
all great French work where the excellence
is not so much of invention as of adapta-
tion and arrangement.
RECEPTION-T0 JUNIORS © .
GIVEN BY SENIOR CLASS
Brother Dodo Leads Darky Meet-
ing and Chooses Future Cast
For May Day :
HERO SELECTED BY..FORTUNE
The Seniors entertained the Freshmen
with..a. skit and dance— fast Saturday
evening.
The skit burlesqued future May. Day
tryouts for Maid Marian and Robin Hood
in a Darky meeting conducted by the Class
of nineteen twenty-four in the person of
A. Shiras, alias Brother Dodo, dressed in
a cavernous dress suit and a high brown
straw hat tilting on the peak of an ‘enor-:
mous quantity of black wool. Brother
Dodo’s presence as chairman of the meet-
ing and the chief figure on the stage was
matchless, as were‘ his lines and the accent
in which he spoke them.
After “Oh -Susanna,” sung~ in a dark
gymnasium and behind the folding screens
which made up the curtain, the skit opened
with Brother Dodo standing behind a table,
an enormotis minute-book laid before him,
calling the meeting to order with alittle
bell: On his right sat Sistet Park, in cap,
gown and glasses; and Brother Willow
Waley, the Janitor, was standing to one
side, rubbing the palm of one hand with
the fingers of the other. Brother Dodo
then called the roll, and found all present
except Sister Thomas. The first business
before the meeting, in the words of
Brother Dodo, “am de speculation on de
business of de meetin’ what am went be-
foah.” Then affairs proceeded to the mat-
ter in hand, namely, the choosing of char-
acters for “de little classic, Robin Hood,”
to be given in the spring. Brother Willow’
Waley brought in his chorus to the tune
of “The Darktown Strutter’s Ball,” and
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
DELEGATES GO TO STUDENT
GOVERNMENT CONFERENCE
Pamela Coyne, ’24 and E. ReQua, ’24
Represent Bryn Mayr at Oberlin
ee
°
Bryn Mawr delegates to the Sixteenth
collegiate Association for Student Goy-
ernment, held at Oberlin College, Oberlin,
Ohio, last week from Wednesday to Satur-
day, were P. Coyne, ’24, President of the
Self-Government Association, and E. Re-
Qua, .’24, President of the Undergraduate
Association. _
Sixty colleges in “the East and South
were represented by. 110 delegates, and
three delegates from Western colleges at-
tended. Many of the problems discussed,
such as sorority and co-educational ques-
tions, were-not applicable to Bryn Mawr,
but some were of general application. The.
recommendation was passed that next year
the Conference discuss more fundamental -
questions, rather than the smaller rules,
which differ everywhere. It will be held
next year at Vassar. Delegates will be sent
from this Eastern Conference to the next
national one, to be held a-year from next
spring.
Discussion. on extension of the honor
system in schools was voted after Wilmer
Shields, now a graduate student here, was
made secretary~ for this work. A voca-
tional system was also discussed with sug-
gestions ranging from the Dartmouth
method of permanent “vocation guidance”
by a resident dean, to the suggestion that
Alumnae return and speak to the undér-
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
Annual Conference of the Women’s Inter- ’
le aga
+>
s :
Managing Editor....... Fritce Brac, ‘24
EDITORS
Ouivia FountTALN, ‘7
HELEN eran, "25 E, GLESSNER, 25
—_—
ASSISTANT EDITORS x
J..Lorn, ’26
C. CumManes, 725
H. Grayson, ’25
Dexia SMITH, ’26
BUSINESS BOARD
Mawacer— outse How1Tz, 24° ‘
‘MARGARET SMITH, e «
ASSISTAN Ts
Marcaret Boypen, 125 Exizasetu Tyson, ’26
KATHERINE TOMPKINS, ’26
; maperripiiods may begin at any time
Subscriptions, $2.50 Mailing Price, $3. 00
Entered as.second class matter oe 26, 1914,
at the post office at Bryn Mawr, Pa., under
the Act of March 3, 1889.
7
, CAN IT BE DONE?
willie
We who are conscious of a slight con-
tempt for the classics; both because of our
familiarity with them, and the trend of the
times, which decrees non-conformity to ex-
isting ideas, are interested in a serious at-
* tempt to modernize Shakespeare in one of
the popular magazines. ‘The editor ex-
plains it by saying that “Shakespeare bor-
rowed the plots for many of his plays from
the legends of earlier days. .. . Could ‘the
same stories be advanced a few centuries
and told in a present-day setting with only
such changes as the adaptations to modern
conditions would entail? Whether Mac-
beth, played out in a Long Island setting
and adapted as faithfully as conditions to-
day permit, is real and convincing, is for
the reader to decide.”
The obvious failure of the attempt,
though the plot is faithfully adhered to,
should make us stop just’ a moment in the
glibly harsh criticisms found in undergrad-
uate reports, and consider.
Sea
EXAMINATIONS
The undergraduates of Columbia have
approved and intend to submit to the dean
plans for the abolition of mid-year and
final examinations: in certain courses, for
all students maintaining an average of
over eighty per cent. ‘According to the
chairman of the Student Board, the under-
graduates have decided on recommending
this to their faculty because they think
that the college needs to develop a sense
2 gy responsibility towards their work.
To us it would seem that-a compreheri-
sive test should involve as much study, and
probably more, than would the method of
exemption for all those who have an aver-
age of, credit or above. They also seem
-to be worrying on the assumption that an
examination has no valug in co-ordinating
the ideas learned throughout the semester.
However, there is one place where we
might stand with the Columbia undergrad-]-
uates, and even go beyond them in advo-
cating that no examinations be given in
writing. courses.
All the work of the term.
must be done before the final and there]
"seems little to gain in adding a finishing
. touch to something already corhpleted.
na peste et ee oo
as the author of the second part of The
Complegt Angler.
Coleridge considered most of his poems
“replete with every excellence of «thought,
imagé, and passion which we expect or
desire in the poetry of the milder muse,
and yet so, worded that the reader sees no
reason either in the selection or the order
of the words why he might not have said
the very same in an appropriate conversa-
tion, and. cannot conceive how.indeed he
would have expressed such thoughts other-
wise without loss or injury to his meaning.”
“Of all Cotton’s poetry,” continues’ Mr.
Beresford,“‘the- love— lyrics, the odes, the
burlesques, the excellent drinking songs,
the poems on Nature are, perhaps, the
best, certainly the most noteworthy. Among
these poems ‘Winter,’ should make his
name immortal. It consists in all of some
fifty-three stanzas, but despite its. length,
the brilliance of description and of rhyme
is sustained throughout. I do not know
of any poem which so riots with mefa-
phorical excellence or makes one shiver
more from cold.” Extraordinary direct-
ness, a wide range, wit, and humaneness
afe mentioned as the outstanding char-
acteristics of Cotton’s work.
English Diaries; | a review of English
Diaries from the sixteenth to the twentieth
century, with an Introduction on Diary
writing ; by Arthur Ponsonby, M, P.
The author says in his preface that his
object is “to give a -full representation of
all shades of diary-writing, long and short,
historical, public and _ private, good, bad,
and indifferent.” The diaries are treated
“more from the subjectiye point of view
as illustrations of the method, manner, and
character of their authors, than from the
objective point of view; that is to say
the consideration of the subjects about
which they wrote.”
He concludes that “daily writing, powers
of observation and of perception, honesty,
so far as it is possible, a fair quantum of
egotism, no immediate thought of publica-
tion, no pretentious attitudinising and no
hesitation to put down the things that
ruffle and the things that please in the
twelve hours’ that have passed,—a certain
amount of recklessness in fact,—will help
to make a good diary.”
The reviews include: the diaries of Ed-
ward VI, Samuel Pepys, John Wesley,
Fanny Burney, Byron, Queen Victoria,
General Gordon, and less known people
from the sixteenth to the twentieth cen-
tury. |
NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
One hundred ,and sixteen Goucher stu-
dents, working at summer jobs which
yaried from waiting on table to dancing
exhibitions, earned a sum total of $14,585.09.
Dr. John H. Finley, of the New York
Times, and former Dean of City College,
spoke at Barnard on the Student Friend-
ship Fund.
About one hundred Vassar students have
elected to take fencing this winter.
Dean E. H. Wilkins, of the University
of Chicago, has recently stated that the
women students excel the men in the ratio
of three to one in their academic studies.
Mount— Holyoke has introduced soccer
this fall.
Barnard College sends debating teams to
Wellesley and Smith and is considering
a debate with Hunter College: i
According to latest statistics, Wellesley
College girls have the largest~feet in Amer-
ica. Twenty years ago, they had the small-
est. The owner of Wellesley’s chief shoe
civilization. Also all our American schools
and ‘missions to which the lives of Amer-
ican teachers and American dollars have
been given for half## century could have
Pcarried on their beneficial educational work.
Now it will, in my opinion, soon all come}
to an end.
I have spent four of the sixteen months
in Pgris and. in motoring through the lovely |
French country, during which time I read
thé French papers, including the speeches
made by leading French. politicians - and
literary men. I also’ saw a great many
French plays. I am corwinced that if we
had stood with, Great Britain in guarantee-
ing France from attack All that we so much
regret that has happened since the Armis-
tice need. not have happened. France is
‘terribly frightened and as a consequence
she is row arming to the teeth. She needs
us badly nd. still we stand aloof.
I spent six of my sixteen months in
Asia ‘sailing back and forth across the
equator visiting Ceylon, Java, French Indo-
China, with the splendid ruins of Angkor,
and India, where I was for three -months.
In other years I have been twice to Egypt
and twice to Japan, and in 1919-20 I visited
Greece for the third time, Spain for the.
second time, North Africa, Palestine and
Syria. We are as badly needed in the Near
and Far East as in Europe. Great Britain,
France and Italy cannot act alone. We must
be there to help. All our future civiliza~
tion depends on whether We can save these
millions upon millions of helpless people.
We cannot leave them to be the prey of
predatory commercial exploitation, and to
become a menace to the world.
I have come home more anxious than
ever before to ‘help in every way that I
can to get the United States to take the
position that belongs to her at the head of
the peaceful economic and industrial re-
construction, of the world. She. can no
longer stand aloof. It is all right to feed
the starving children of the world, but it
would be still more right to grapple with
the causes of war and of starvation, and to
pour out our millions to build up an en-
during economic prosperity ane lasting
peace. -
I expect to spend. at least half of every
year at my house, The Deanery, on the
Bryn Mawr College grounds and from
four to six months in seeing the rest of
the world and trying to understand it. I
hope to write the history of Bryn Mawr
College which I have known from its firgt}
béginnings, as I was, appointed Dean of the
Faculty and Professor of English in 1884,
before there was any Faculty or before
there were any students.
I hope also to write my autobiography.
No woman who was, not born before the
Civil War knows out of what Egyptian
darkness women came into the promised
land of political equality and educational
opportunity. I shall also do some writing
on educational subjects and I shall read
some of the many books I have never had
time to read in my busy life and see some
of the friends I have never had time for.
I hope never voluntarily to serve on an-
other new committee ; never to eat another
public dinner or make another public
speech. _My life for thirty-eight years has
been spent on these things.
it has to put through. “Eider statesmen”
are a great mistake. I believe that if the
men in control of affairs in this country
and abroad. were under: forty. instead of .
over sixty, the world would not be in its
present condition, and as far as I am con-
cerned I am going to try to confine my
activities to oa and backing up the
inger _ It is foraitte: that I
I believe in}
the present generation planning the things |-
“immoral,” to others where the only regu-
lation. is by :public Gpinion. All sorts of
Freshman. questions were discussed. At
} Utah each Senior has a group of four or
five Freshmen that she sees every day,
keeping it up throughout the year. In some
colleges the, Junior President-acts as Fresh-
man Chairman for the first few weeks.
Freshman questionnaires are sometimes
used, which inquire the individual’s inter-
ests, with a view to what they may do in
college. .At Newcomb-a_ one-hour course
for six weeks is required, in Studént Gov-
ernment, after which an examination must
be passed. The Freshman are held for
the rules, “however, even before passing
the examination.
A blanket tax covering all dues is used
at some colleges. At Oberlin there is a
Student Chest, for voluntary, contributions,
but with a fixed quota, from which all
subscriptions asked for are paid,’ avoiding
the necessity of drives. No college has a
student banking system. 2 :
Even whispering in the Library is often
prohibited, and the rule enforced by the
librarians. If a student is spoken to by
the librarian three times, her Library privi- '
leges are supended for a semester. Lights
out rules are also common. Chapel is com-
pulsory in about forty of the colleges rep-
resented. : :
Radcliffe has no. point system. At some
other colleges it is thought better to have
class committees to consider the individuals’
capacity, rather than to have set point rules.
. NEWS IN BRIEF
The Science: Club elected E. Baldwin, 2,
president, and M. Gardiner, ’25, to. suc-
ceed her as secretary, at a meeting last
Tuesday.
‘The Art Club has a shelf in the newest
book section of the New Book Rdéom, on)
which will be found books of inte a
connection with current exhibitions in
Philadelphia and the neighbourhood. The
Club would be grateful if anyone who has
new books or periodicals of special interest
would give them to Miss Terrien to be put
on the shelf for a time. At present it con-
tains two publications, the study of which
the Barnes Foundation requires as a
preparation to visiting. their collection of
modern pictures.
The straw vote from 1925 for second
Junior member for the Christian . Associa-
tion Board is: H. Chisolm, 16; E. Mallett,
14; E. Hinkley, 11; H. Henshaw, 7.
The Graduate members of May Day
Committees are: Business Committee, H.
Jennings; Dancing, M. Perkins ; Casting,
K. Raht; Costumes, M. E.” Gantenbein.
1926 has elected K. Morse, D. Lefferts,
and M. Parker “for the Sophomore Dance
Committee. -
CALENDAR
Wednesday, November 28
12.45 P.M.—Thanksgiving Vacation be-
gins: :
Monday, December 3
9.00 A. M.—Thanksgiving Vacation ends.
‘Tuesday, December 4:
8.00 P. M—French Club—Recital by M.
Ferrariin Taylor Hall. :
Wednesday, December 5
7.30 P. M.—Lecture on Christianity, by ,
Dr.- Albert Parker Fitch, fifth of a
= : : ry . “as
ee oAe: THE COLLEGE NEWS j
' mer are THE NEW BOOK ROOM MISS THOMAS: DESCRIBES DELEGATES GO TO STUDENST : .
The College ‘News The Poems of Charles Cotton; edited by HER TRAVELS ABROAD j GOVERNMENT CONFERENC
[Founded in 4914.] John Beresford. .
or Lae ee ig gs cj pe Although immensely popular in his own CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 * CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
day, writes Mr. Beresford, Cotton is now | Brother Indigo. Blue, Nineteen-T wenty-six, graduates about vocations according to
overlooked as a poet and considered only | of the world could have been’ saved for | their own experience. — ,
\
series of lectures on Comparative
Religions, in Taylor Hall.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
assistance to President Marion Edwards
Park in backing up her educational policies
“jas a loyal , Trustee should, It is a very
| great’ happiness -and-satisfaction to me: to
‘be able to feel, as I do, that Bryn Mawr
| College is safe in the hands of her new.
President and will under her grow and de-
‘the future in a way that will re-
ee
THE COLLE se NEWS
\ CHRISTIANITY IS SUBJECT |
OF DR. FITCH’S LECTURE
6
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
‘paid in this world.” Out of this sense of
the material reward of éthical and spiritual
excellence arose .the expectation -of ‘the
Messiah, who was to restore Judah to
political supremacy. The vague predictiorts
of the prophets to this effect spoke of a
.coming Golden Age and: a great leader.
The Jews felt that since they were a great
people there must be some escape for them >
from the ‘yoke of their oppressors, anda
_tenacious belief in Yahweh’s power and
the memory of the golden age of David's
, reign encouraged this. Finally they lacked
* any belief in life after death but expected
that-the state and their children would go
on, Into the atmosphere of this .thought
Jesus was born. Sjnce ‘the Hebrews could
not conceive of evolution they thought that
their kingdom would come, by a cataclysmic
iorce, that God would impose it.from with-
*out. The Messiah was to be a supernatural
figure, not deity, but Lae representative of
* deity,
By the time Jesus appeared Yahweh had
‘ become to the common people a ‘legalized
absentee God, who had no- personal in-
terest in ple. Judaism was tending to
“ritualism and that moral naiveté which as-
sumes that it has kept the commandments
in keeping the letter of the law.
“There are two Jesuses,” Said Dr. Fitch,
“the Jesus of history, who is the Jesus of |
the gospels, and the Jesus of experience,
who is the*moral and religious ideals which
many faiths and countless human beings
have read into Him.” From the gospels,
chiefly the first three, comes almost all
of our historical knowledge. The infancy:
stories, inconsistent: in the gospels of Luke
and Matthew, the only ones which give
them, are extraordinarily beautiful, and in-
valuable evidence of the approach to Jesus
of the early Christian church. They are
eternally precious possessions because they
show the quality of His life, but are of
course factually unimportant. The denial
or affirmation of the theory of the Virgin
birth of Jesus cannot make Him less or
more solitary in the perfection of His life.
This doctrine is based on very slight New
Testament grounds, since ‘neither John, nor
_ Mark, whose gospel was the first, nor Paul,
-make any mention of it. Even in Luke and
Matthew His genealogy is traced through
His human father back to David.
Jesus must have been born in 2 or 3 B.C.
at Nazareth. He had four older brothers
and two sisters, and was well brought up.
Probably He spoke Aramaic, as Hebrew
was then a -dead ‘ecclesiastical language.
His trade was that of His father, who was
a builder. When He was about thirty,
John, a rough, provocative reformer, came,
preaching that the Kingdom of Heaven
was at hand and exhorting men to repent-
ance. The shock of meeting such a man
awoke Jesus to the full sense of His mis-
sion, and He faced the temptation, which
genius always meets, of. whether or not
He would believe in His own power and
ission.
mIssiOn.
,ALL-PHILADELPHIA DEFEATS
VARSITY IN HARD GAME
CONTINUED FROM PAGE. 1
~Line-up:
All- Philadelphia Varsity
Miss Wiener* F. Begg ’24
Miss Taylor** E. Tuttle 24 _.
Miss Cheston* M. Faries ’24
Miss Goodman** D.Lee’25
Miss Norris M. Palache ’24
Miss Rollin M. Buchanan ’24
Miss Morgan E. Harris ’26
Miss Townsend Sylvia Walker ’27
Miss Marcy E. Howe ’24
Miss McLean Susan “Walker ’26
Mrs. Krumbhaar E. Pearson ’24
_> Team*
' Substitutes—K. Gallwey ’24, for E. Har-
--ris ’24;-F,-Jay ’26, for D, Lee ’25.
The above line-up is the Varsity chosen
for the year. First substitutes with B. M.’s
are: K. Gallwey ’24, E. Glessner ’25, F.
Jay ’26. Other substitutes are: W-_Dodd
26, and E. Scott ’27.
THIRD TEAM
1924 vs..1926 .
Light Blue’s third team overwhelmed
1926 last Thursday by the score of 6-2.
The Senior team began the game with a
rush that scored goals for them in the first
few minutes of play. They were prevented
from further scoring in the first half by
E, Spackman’s closé guarding of the Soph- |
omore goal, 1926 seemed completely un-
able to keep the ball away from their goal
posts until*the end of the half, when they
suddenly woke up and made two goals, tie-
ing the score. In the second half D.
Litchfield, 24; as-center~and~E.-Ives,- 24;
as inside, ran away from their opponents
for four more goals. 1924 played a steady,
tinspectacular game, with which their op-
ponents, playing as individuals rather than
a team, were unable to cope.
Line-up:
1G-—-B Liteheld™*. 2 Braun: Mi.
Cooke, E. Ives***,-O. Fountain, G. Ander-
son, L. Howitz, R. Mutray, E. Crowell,
M. Rodney, B. Ling. -
1926—E.:Clinch* F. Gietn, A. Tadawloak
A: Long, L. Adams, B. Linn, K. Hendrick,
M. Wylie, A. Tierney, E. Musselman, B.
Spackman.
g
FOURTH TEAMS
1925 vs. 1927
The second game of the: finals’ between
the fourth teams of 1925 and 1927 resulted
in a I-1 tie last Saturday morning.
The Junior backs were steady and hard
hitters, frequently giving their ‘ fofward§
the ball in yain, for it was lost at the circle.
1927 fought with spirit, but showed less
team work, playing a more individual game.
H. Henshaw, ’25, was the backlone of the,
® Junior defense.
Line-up:
1925—A; Parker, C. Stolzenbach, H.
Chisolm, M. Pierce*, D. Sollers, D, Shipley,
A. Woodworth, H. Henshaw, M. Constant,
.E.: Matts,, H, Smith.
1927—R. Rickaby, A. Newhall*, C. Jones,
R. Miller, S. Peet, D, Kellogg, S. Posey,
J: Lee, H. McLenahan, E. Sullivan, E.
Henschen. »
e
_—__-
Pt 1925 vs. 1927
‘Generally characterized by ‘a'lack of team
work, the fourth team game last Tuesday
resulfed in a 3- -() victory for the Freshmen.
Through the efforts of their defense the
ball was repeatedly passed to the Junior
forwards, who lost it at the edge of the
circle. Although the same thing happened
frequently with 1927, they proved in the
rend more effectual in shooting goals and
more speedy in ——
Line-up: ’ a
1925—R. Foster, C. Stolzenbach,—.H.
Chisolm, M. Pierce,’ M. Whitcomb, E.
Watts, M. Constant, F. Briggs, M. Hale,
M. Boyden, H. Smith.
1927—R. Rickaby*, J. Hollister**, C:
Jones, C. Vanderlip, A. Newhall, H. Mc-
Lenahan, S. ~ Posey, J. Lee, P. Dodge, J.
ae z
Sullivan, E. Henschen. »
SIXTH TEAM
1926 vs. 1927
Sixth team championship goes to 1927,
who defeated 1926 for the second time last
Tuesday, with a score of 5-3.
The Freshman forward line co-operkted,
passing back and_ forth easily, and evading
1926’s_ backs, who were too*slow to keep
up with them. V. Newbold, ’27, and E.
Gibson, '27, took the ball down repeatedly .
in long dribbles, while H. Hopkinson, ’26,
was the strongest player on the Sophomore+
back line.
of
1926—D. Lefferts, A. Parmelee**, E, Fol- ©
lansbee, V. -Carey*, ‘E. Silvius, E. Tyson,
C. Quinn, H. Hopkinson, A. Adams, K.
Morse, M. Huber. i
1927—U. Squier, M. Chamberlain*, V,
Newbold****, E. Gibson*, D. Igwin, B.
Simcox, S. Peet, M. Brooks, F. Chrystie,
G. Noteman, L. Norton.
ANTOINE LAURENT LAVOISIER
1743-1794
Born in Paris, son,of a wealthy
“ tradesman. As a student won
a prize for an essay on lighting
the streets of Paris. Held vari-
ous Government posts. A mar-
tyr of the Reign of Terror.
Founder of modern chemistry.
' Thisisthe mark of the
~~ General Electric Com-
_ pany, an organization
of 100,000 men and
women e in pro-
ducing the tools by
which electricity —
man’s great servant—
is m the world a
better place to live in.
They couldn’t destroy ~
the work he did
“The Republic has no need for savants,”
sneered a tool of Robespierre as he sent |
Lavoisier, founder of modern chemistry, to
the guillotine. A century later the French
Government -collected all the scientific
studies of this great citizen of Paris and
published them, that the record of his re-
searches might be preserved for all time.
' Lavoisier showed the errors of the theory
of phlogiston—that hypothetical, material -
substance which was believed to be an ele-
ment of all combustible compounds and to
produce fire when liberated. He proved
fire to be the union of other elements with
a gas which he named oxygen. °
Lavoisier’s work goes on. In the Research
Laboratories of the General Electric Com-
pany the determination of the effects of ©
atmospheric air onlamp filaments, on metals
and on delicate instruments is possible be-
cause of the discoveries of Lavoisier and
his contemporaries.
«
ELECT
S
Ved
.
3G ES Seren hes Ss
THE
COLLEGE NEWS
nit ‘
4 a
4
At your favorite toilet goods counter, $1.00 to $10.00
NEW YORK »
COLGATE & co. ‘
Golgate Perfumes 3
The vivacious woman likes Florient . .
Its fragrance adds greater sparkle to her brilliance.
all Colgate Perfumes—owes its quality to rare imported essences.
. Flowers of the Orient.
Florient —like :
PARIS
Phone, Bryn Mawr 166 Phone Orders Promptly Delivered
WILLIAM GROFF, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONIST
Whitman Chocolates
803 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
PHONE 758 |
HENRY 8B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TEAS
BRYN MAWR
Telephone, Bryn Maur 867
The Hearthstone
LUNCHEON TEA
DINNER PARTIES
Open Sundays
25 No. Merion Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
COMPLIMENTS OF THE
Bryn Mawr Theatre .
Photoplays of Distinction for
Discriminating People
W. S. HASSINGER, Prop.
Natural Muskrat (oat
With a “Deep ‘Beaver (ollar
The college ‘gitl has been particularly partial to coats in ©
this fur—an evidence of good fur judgment as well as good
&
‘GifthToenue at BOSireet eres
taste. Gunther is now showing a splendid selection of
youthful models in Muskrat—priced moderately, of course.
The model featured, 48 inches long, is develo
ral Muskrat and is enhanced by a Beaver collar
in Natu-~
Seiad 73
her —
Bese, a : = Furriers For More Than a Century
Jewelers
Silversmths
‘pil ys BAN KS BDO, |
Stationers
THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK
Mailed upon request
illustrates and prices
Watches, Clocks, Silver, China,
Glass: and Novelties
The Distinctive’ Productions and Importations
of this Establishment
ETIQUETTE OF WEDDING STATIONERY
A Book mailed upon request which describes
in detail the corrett use of Wedding
Stationery and Visiting Cards
BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE CO. .
Diamond Merchants, Jewelers, Silversmiths
nd Stationers
PHI
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116 South 18th"S¢reet
~~~ Pihiladelphia
Katharine 8, Leiper Helene Girvin
Books Prints
Display and Sale
ORIENTAL AND
ODD JEWELRY
Direct and Latest Importations
College Inn
FRIDAY, DECEMBER .7
Don’t miss it - - One day only
TREASURE CAVE
202 S. 15th St.
Phila.
} E; CALDWELL. & CO.
Chestnut and Juniper Streets
Philadelphia
GOLDSMITHS SILVERSMITHS
JEWELERS.__
iio
College Insignia
Class Rings
Sorority Emblems
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STATIONERY WITH SPECIAL
MONOGRAMS, CRESTS and-SEALS
STRAWBRIDGE
and CLOTHIER
FASHIONABLE APPAREL
FOR YOUNG ‘WOMEN
6
MARKET, EIGHTH & FILBERT STS.
PHILADELPHIA
TELEPHONE CONNECTION
CHAS. H.. FALLER
LADIES’ HAIRDRESSING PARLORS
Permanent Wave (Nestle Method) ‘' Marcel Wave
Facial Massage Shampooing Scalp Treatment
> HAIR GOODS .
122 SOUTH 16TH STREET
PHILADELPHIA
‘‘ Make our Store your Store ”’
MAIN LINE DRUG STORE
ARDMORE, PA.
Prescriptions carefully
Compounded by Diane
Registered Pharmacists Ardmore 1112
M. M. GAFFNEY:
Dry Goods and Notions
- School ‘Supplies
28 BRYN MAWR. AVE.
FLOWERS SERVICE SATISFACTION
3 BAXTER & GREEN, Inc.
FLORISTS
129 S. Sixteenth St., Phila., Pa.
BELL PHONE, SPRUCE 32-62
\BRINTON BROS.
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES
Orders Called For and Delivered
LANCASTER AND MERION AVENUES
Telephone 63 BRYN MAWR, PA.
JOHN J. McDEVITT pan reat
: ae teas
PRINTING serccce.
1145 Lancaster Ave. |
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
. Telephone: Bryn Mawr 823
MOORE’S PHARMACIES
. BRYN MAWR, PA.
Drugs | Chemicals
“ Stationeries, Etc. _
x?
Phone, Ardmore 12 ve
GEORGE F. KEMPEN
Caterer
27 W. LANCASTER AVE.
ARDMORE, PA.
Night: Bryn Mawr 942
ESTIMATES FURNISHED
WILLIAM G. CUFF & CO.
Electrical Contractors
INSTALLATION, WIRING, REPAIRING
855 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
(Bae an Acceptable
| Silk $2.00 up
Chiffon 2.85
Silk-and-wool 2.50 up
dicey Wor, i sali Wool 7 2.25up ® a
: CLAFLIN, 1107 Chestnut Street
HOSIERY
Gift
»
®
}
. - thn COLEEoS News
PEN vt grits
5
po
RECEPTION TO FRESHMEN
GIVEN BY SENIOR CLASS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE ]
entered in the person of E. Pearson dressed
in blue overalls, a blue checked shirt and a
yellow straw hat. He announced himself
as going to try out for the part of Robin
* Hood, and did some delightful clogging to
the songs of the chorus, in:which he was
. at the end joined by Sister Park, not quite
so finished a performer perhaps, but cer-
tainly one as enchanting to the spectator.
When asked ‘what he intended to do besides
clog in the play, Brother Indigo Blue de-
scribed himself as dancing over the mead-
‘OWS, a basket over one arm, With eggs and
butter for his Grandmother. “Ain’t Ah
Little Red Robin. Hood?” he queried. “Not
Dodo, and he was shown the door. Rufus
Red and Mandy Green (M. L. Freeman
and A, Anderson), the Junior and Fresh-
man class respectively, then came in, to try.
out for Robin Hood and Maid Marian. A
twentieth century Maid Marian, dancing in
a most ultra-twentieth-century manner, to
the tune of “Ain’t Nobody’s Business,” was
indeed a surprising spectacle. When Maid
Marian pulled coils and coils of yellow hair
from benéath her dress her fitness for the
part was conclusively proved, and Brother
Dodo advanced to try for Robin Hood.
He recited “Come out to the garden,
Maud,” by “Brother Tennyson,” and when
he reached “She’s comin’ ma own, ma
sweetheart; ah hears her airy tread,” Sis-
ter Thomas‘entered, in the person of B.
Constant. The results of the try-outs were |:
announced to her, Brother Dodo claiming
the part of Robin Hood, to the indign#ton
of Brother Rufus Red. They decided to
throw up a coin to see who should get the
part. “Weleaves it to Fo’tune,” said
Brother Dodo; “if it comes down ah wins;
Substitutes :°: E. Follansbee, 26, for A.J
Lingelbach, ’26; M. Chamberlain, ’27*, for
V. Capron, '27.
SECOND TEAMS
on,
1924 vs. 1926
By ag score of 6-2 the Senior second
team defeated the Sophomores:in the sec-
ond game of. the finals—pfayed last Tues-
day afternoon. News
The game was fought hard by both sides,
but the Seniors gained through the team
play and shooting of. M. Smith, J. Palmer
and E, Sullivan on the forward line; who
that *the
—to~-blotk
goal was |
worked so efficiently together
Sophomore backs were unable
their plays. The first dramatic
made when J. Wiles, ’26, made a long
dribble down the field and scored for her
team... The next. goal, made on the Light
Blue side, was scored only after scrappy
playing in the Sophomore circle. V. Cooke,
26, by neatly dodging the opposing backs
and a well directed shot made the prettiest |”
goal of the game.
Line-up: Kos
1924—E. Molitor, M. Smith***, J. Palm-
er*, E. Sullivan**, M. Minott, M. Angell,
V.-Miller,. Ml. Woodworth, A. Bingeman,
S. Wood, K. Neilson. —
1926—G. Leewitz, J. Wiles*, T. Dudley,
M. Cooke*, H. Rodgers, M. Tatnall, E.
Wilbur, B. Jeffries, G. Schuder, M, Waller,
A. Wilt. {
. Ye é
a cs 1924 vs, 1926
: ied yt
A-hard won victory of 3-1 gave the sec-
ond team championship to 1924 in the third
game of the finals, played against 1926 on
Wednesday afternoon.
‘ Elsa Molitor,:’24, started the game with
a rush and a goal for Light Blue. This
was followed by another Senior goal made
by j. Palmer, after M. Minott and—E.
Sullivan” inter-passed” the ball down the
field. Though the Sophomores ‘fought
hard, their weakness lay in their inability to
rush the ball into the goal once it. was
inside the circle.
During the second-half the Sophomores
played a faster; more spirited game, with
the result that the Senior team’s playing
grew wild and unorganized. :
Liné-up:
1924—E. Molitor*, M. Smith, J: Palmer**
E, Sullivan, M. Minott, M. Angell, V. Mil-
ler, M. Woodworth, A. Bingeman, S. Wood,
K. Neilson.
1926—G. Leewitz, J. Wiles, T. Dudley*,
V, Cooke, H. Rodgers, F. Green, E. ‘Wil-
bur, B. Jeffries, G. Schuder, M. Waller, A.
Wilt.
SWIMMING POOL RULES AND CLASS
REQUIREMENTS CHANGED ©
a Regulations about swimming classes and
potnts have been changed @y ‘the Athletic
Board, and a decision taken that’ anyone
who enters the pool with a cold will. be
brought before.the Board and dealt with
severely. :
Every .individual making a higher class
will count..points.on.the All-Round _Ath-
letic Championship for her class: first
class will count two points; second, one
point; third, one-half; and fourth, one-
third:—Anyone-already—in—first-class—may—
try out again, but will be awarded one
point instead of two. First-class require-
ments have been changed, and now are:
2 lengths in 40 seconds, 150 yards in 3
minutes,-5--strokes,.9 points on.each,. the
Red Cross Life Saving Test, and dives
totalling 50 points. Form dives, standing,
swan, back, and jack, must total«at least
32 points, and fancy dives must get at
least 6 points each, out of a possible 10,
®
DG@ *® OW DO IT NOW DO Ii NOW
)
I
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DO. IT. NOW DO-iIf NOW DO
NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW ‘po rw Now
Love Set —
It is the Junior Prom.
%
for Jacqueline
a
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& ° °
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if it don’t come down, you wins. Am dat : Joe Gish has run off with f
fair?” After an interminable flight the ; g your Car, so you are at a loss 6
coin falls with a deafening crash behind a h Y litt] a
the scenes, and Brother Dodo and Mandy FS z wnat to suggest. Our—_ittic g
Green dance: off, leading the chorus to the a : artner, Jac ueline, has tired Zz
>
tune of “Come Along My Mandy.” >} : é “ &
a 2 8 of dancing, and silence is run- 6
e cast was: : : é
: z ‘
ReMi G80. aco cas cexnsesas: A. Shiras 3 2 ning rampant through the
te URCIRG DING 6 occ ci ke iseseereges B. Pearson & : * conversation. « Zz
ee ROO oe eee esas M. L. Freeman . ‘ - &
Wianidy GREEN <4
JUUROS ho diwe e's 5 S :
M. L: White : ae E
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B. Constant & Ag s 3
Janitor C. Lewis © DOITNOW DO IT Now DO IT Now DO IT Now Do IT NowDo IT Now & E
ene Poe . In another moment the ¢
: SK fleisch, B. Howe, S. Lee- . ; ‘5 . : ‘
Fe Pg Me ed fe Gatlivan z last sip of the sixth limeade will have trickled down her lovely throat. é
? ‘J y ¢ ’ i] ’ a : : . 7,
K. Connor, R. Murray, J. Palmer. ; Love set for Jacqueline. She will stare innocently at you for a moment, E
: . A e °
tice aieaibie i iiinieil aw dicrenlad 00 . and then—and then—-start popping those deadly “do-you-knows’’. Howto, *
3 : pone
will be the Rev. Joseph Fort Newton, D. D., . forestall them, how to parry them, how to stop them, you will know when = 3
f ly pastor of the City Temple, Lon- ad ‘ é ‘ ; . ; hts
a ag eae" hk ating Manele 2 you study Vanity Fair, the most delightful and enlightening outside reading
Royden. He has been a™contributor to z course offered in any university.— sk the man with the perfect line.
; S : z
several magazines, notably the Alflantic Z : E
Monthly, aie >} e :
a ) ° “ ~
FIFTH TEAM ; | Just Try Ten Issues °
° ae ‘ 4 e
; ae As In each issue you find: s
& 4
baad Ves SAE s © THE STAGE: Photographs of the on this amusing world, is mir- MOTORS, and DANCING—all you =
beautiful and the unique; re- rored in Vanity Fair. ail know, recklessly illus- 3
eer ee ee. i ‘and storm warnings; ; trated. _- “
lier t be- 5 views «and s ee
oe omy gt wag rahdea wie the = symposiums on theatrical as- = THE SPORTS: All of them—mias- ~“s4e coupon wit SAVE YOU $1: i
tween = bdo av ‘ ; i. tronomy. culine, feminine and neuter— Fill it : = i ots
‘Sophafhore’s fifth team won with a score + . Stitt 4 ‘vores ot photographs, news iféms; and , : " — —just rs
of 7-5,Yast Thursday. a peels A ‘Ae Petey ine methods of: play. —— - ¢
The defense was good on both teams, |. z SRST se eaveneoue—GRe-—-tae-—Seie : * ps ae ee
* : 4 ee ts banned. ; : al
“ and several times goals were averted .by ” eee eee Suents THE ARTS, AS SUCH: The best j o x gs
desperate fighting in the circle. Though in - HumoR: Works of poets and works of the new artists and a ta a ak.
other respects evenly matched with their 8 other tragedians ; res noves with the new works of the best ones; e s — rm a
opponents, the Sophomores had two out- es _ a futuristic favoring ; pa - exhibition gossip an 4 TEPLQe & ~ @ Sn, Z
tanding £ rds, E. Harrison and A ° ments of intellectual notables ductions of the most di d .” eS Fi
pga yen ldap gary tcotte of thel ; " and notable intellectuals; the masterpieces: of the season. Pi ar Rae og eS
a who made the majority of their a modernistic philosophies. ee er s” Ros CoP 2
oals, va a ° vs > e =
B GRAVAMEN: Cream of humour fru yy (te ~ the — and ao al ee S ae
Line-up: E and créme de. menthe; the anes OW SO" Bet the most ge a Ee eee % i
* > Aa re out of your college educa- Fe Qo .® ‘ E
1926—L. Andrews*, A. Parmelee***, E A whimsical; the satirical; andall . ti @ SP ee 4
y ’ * , ° a ‘ : = 10n, . 9 SS RY “ ull
Harrison™*, A. Lingelbach,. H™ McVicker, g other forms of variegated gro & *% RS a 9 : % ’
? : i éri ao oe ° te) S a
A. Adams, M. Parker*, H. Hopkinson, A. g hi. tanta OR AND IN ADDITION: o Rg ee : 3 i
4 Linn, E. Porter, R. Fitzgerald > WORLD OF IDEAS: Every new All the latest notes e. ay S & tek Wee ‘ :
q Ste ane eer S movement, every revolutionary’ —_in MUSIC, MEN’S $ we 9 Sage Se g 4
ce 1927—C. = garantie V. New- ae # viewpoint, every unique slant FASHIONS, Pes Oa? ~~ Soe z ;
bold*, V. Capron*, U. Squier, A. Speed, : a”, 2 iC ry Ss S <= 4
_D. Kellogg, M. Hall,.E. Gibson, E. Cun- gg \ i. eer : = _
: a po 4
yr NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW. DO IT NOW DO IT NOW PILL IT IN VILL IT IN FILL IT IN PILL IT IN FILL }
~
&
THE COLL
4
r
EGE NEWS
3
CALENDAR
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2'
Saturday, December 8
10,00.A.M:—~Varsity hockey game against
Alumnae. se
8.00 P.M.—Freshman Skit in the Gym-
nasium, ¢
Sunday, December 9 ,
7.30 P, M.—Chapel, led by the Rev. Joseph
Fort Newton, formerly Pastor of the
City Temple, London.
Wednesday, December 12
7.30 P. M.—Lecture on Mohammedanism,
by: Dr. Albert Parker Fitch, last of
a series of lectures on Comparative
Religions, in Taylor Hall.
Friday, December 14
8.00, P.M.—Glee Club Concert in Taylor
Hall.
INTER-CITY HOCKEY TOURNAMENT
BEGINS TODAY
The Inter-City Field Hockey Tourna-
ment will be held at the Philadelphia
Cricket Club, “St. Martins, beginning on
“Tuesday, November 27. The All-United
States team will be chosen Saturday, and
will play a team of English coaéhes that
afternoon.
Bryn Mawr. players who will play on the
-“Etceteras” team, which does not belong
to any city, are: E. Tuttle ’24, M. Bu-
chanan '24, M. Faries ’24, E. Pearson ’24,
and E. Harris ’26. Thé English Overseas
Team will be chosen from the~ English
~—~coaches- here. —Miss~-Trevelyan, assistant
athletic < director at Bryn Mawr,..is among
2
| of the Senior goal during almost all of the
FACULTY HOCKEY TEAM
OVERWHELMS SENIORS 9-0
Miss Trevelyan and Miss Gilman
Score Many Goals
eee
* The game played by the Faculty hockey
team defeated the Seniors 9-0 last Saturday
afternoon.
« For the first half the game was evenly
fouskt The Faculty showed co-operation
and baffled the Senior defense by their
spirited attacks. Mr. Leuba, right wing,
made a remarkable run down the field fol-
lowed by a more remarkable shot which
passed over the top of the goal cage. Miss
Foster; aided by, Dr, Bullock, who played
with both hand and stick, kept the Seniors
from crossing ‘their goal. Dr, Brunel. did
spirited attacks. Mr. Leuba, right wing,
evading the attacks of M. Russell, "24, by.
a scoop’ stroke.
The Faculty.team kept the ball in front
second half and, although showing a~tend-
ency to collect in little groups; played a
surer game. Miss Leuba kept her brother
supplied with the ball which he passed to
the insides, who made repeated goals, in
spite of the good playing of E. Pearson,
Lew
Philadelphia 1st vs. Baltimore---3.00 P. M.
11.00:A. M.
New York 2nd vs.
12.30 P.M.
Chicago vs. New York Ist—2.30 P. M.
Friday, November 30
Philadélphia 1st vs. Boston—9.30 A. M.
Chicago vs. Etceteras—11.00 A. M.
Philadelphia 2nd—
e
'24. All the attempts of the Seniors for-
ward line-to rush the ball weré blocked
b¥ the Faculty backs.
Lifie-up : bh
Faculty: Dr. Brunel, Miss Trevelyan***,
Dr. Crenshaw*, Miss Gilman***,-- Mr.
Leuba*, Dr. David, Dr. Owen, Dr. Bul-
lock*, Miss Leuba, Miss Fostery~ Dr.
Schrader.
1924: E. Molitor, M. Smith¥K. Elston,
J. Palmer, E. Sullivan, M. Woodworth, S.
Leewitz, K. Gallwey, E. Howe, M. Russell,
E.- Pearson.
“Substitutes: S. Wood for E. Howe.
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST Co
CAPITAL, $250,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
, ALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMEN
——_
, ino ee &
loo Envelopes }
Printed with
Your NAME
Your College
Your Co.ttece Town
Beautifally ited Soyideal stationery with your full name
and your paper and envelopes; co! t style,
aie ptr eet ie Bes opt fashionable note size sheets,
th envelopes to match; all printed in dark blue ink. Only
Ee 00. Westof the so iand in foreign countries $1.10.
pomneee Wo loney back guarantee of satis-
feotne fn aerate ey wanted.
Pee sais Seailan Compan
eer onery pany
60 Exchange Street N.Y.
v Bryn Mawr Massage Shop
Opposite Post Office
Telephone, 832 Btyn Mawr
MARCEL WAVING
MANICURING
FACIAL MASSAGE
NOTICE—The above, formerly at the Floyd Build-
ing, has moved to larger quarters where we hope to
be better able to serve our patrons.
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM
‘Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr
Everything dainty and delicious
i the number. _« Baltimore vs. New York 2nd—12.30 P. M.
4 The schedule of games will be: English Overseas vs. New York 1st—
7 : Tuesday, November 27 2.30 P.M. ;
| Boston vs, Philadelphia 2nd—11 A. M. Saturday, December 1
i Chicago vs. Philadelphia 1st—2.30 P. M. Philadelphia 1st vs. New York I1st—
iH Wednesday, November 28 - 9.00 A.M.
i} : English Overseas vs. Philadelphia 2nd—| Philadelphia All-School vs. Baltimore
: 10.00 A. M. All-School—10.30 A. M.
Chicago vs. Boston—11.30 A. M. Boston vs. Etceteras—12.00 M.
Philadelphia 1st vs. Baltimore—3.00 P. M.| Chicago vs. Baltimore—1.30 P. M.
Thursday, November 29 All-United States vs. English Overseas—
: Baltimore vs. Boston—9.30 A. M. 3.00 P.M.
doe haa na,
A
The Home of Fine
y iat
Uy
J. J. Connelly Estate
The Main Line Florists
1226 Lancaster Avenue
Rosemont, Pa.
Phone, 252 Bryn Mawr
DRUGS. CANDY
Perfumes and Gifts
POWERS & REYNOLDS
837 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
Riding Habits
- & Breeches
FRANCIS B. HALL
TAILOR
840 LANCASTER ‘AVE., BRYN MAWR, PA.
3 stores west of Post Office Phone, Bryn Mawr 824
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
HOUSEKEEPING HARDWARE
PAINTS LOCKSMITHING.
838 LANCASTER AVE.
*
BRYN MAWR
PHILIP HARRISON
826 LANCASTER AVENUE
Walk Over Shoe Shop
Agent for
Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings
Only Two Good Places to Eat
THE ROMA
and
YOUR HOME
PHONE, 125
Pandora’s Box
31 EAST LANCASTER AVE., ARDMORE
Xmas Suggestions
LINGERIE CHOKER NECKLACES BABY GIFTS
PORTO RICAN HANDKERCHIEFS {
XMAS CARDS UNUSUAL NOVELTIES. BOOK ENDS
Cards and Gifts
for all occasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
DAINTY’ ICED
SANDWICHES DRINKS
College
Tea House
Open Daily from 1 to 7
EVENING PARTIES BY
SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
.
Attractive Underwear
Corsets —
Mrs. E. S. Tomlinson
Lancaster Avenue, Devon, Pa.
Phone Wayne 862 Orders taken in Alumnex Room
Fancy Groceries Fruit and Vegetables
Wm. T. MclIntyre’s
821 LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWR
Charge Accounts
Ice Cream Pastry
=
Free Delivery
Confecti
and Expert
~
We offer the seretons of our Skilled’ Labor, Modern Equip-
ment, Large Facilities, At Reasonable Prices
5 ne we !
| __ Write for Prices on Any Kind of Printing
— C. WINSTON Co.
Tes,
|Printers Engravers Stationers
Bouquets
a dainty little flavor at
1316 CHESTNUT STREET.
S, A. WILSON
COMPANY
Imported and Domestic Stationery
Gifts—Seasonable Cards —
SPECIAL DISCOUNT UNTIL DECEMBER 1 ON
MOWBREY CHRISTMAS CARDS
ETHEL LARCONB‘S
FAMOUS ENGLISH CALENARS
HANDCRAFTS SHOP
NEAR BRYNMAWR: STATION
JEANNETT’S
Bryn Mawr A ‘Wayne Flower Shop
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
_ Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty =
Pn ae tone anne reese
i10 meorson crs Sait, Philadelphia
{eT Lament hee.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 50
College news, November 27, 1923
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1923-11-27
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 10, No. 09
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-no9