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BRYN MAWR, PA:, TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1924
Price 10 Cents
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KATHERINE VAN BIBBER AND VIRGINIA MILLAR ARE AWARDED EUROPEAN FELLOWSHIP
European, Fellowship Awarded
V. F. Millar and K. VanBibber
For-the first time in the history of
the college the undergraduate European
fellowship was awarded to two students,
V. F. Millar and K. VanBibber,
Miss Millar was prepared by the High
School, Newark, Ohio, and’ the Abbot
Academy, Andover. She will graduate
from college Magna cum laude, with
270 honor points. Miss VanBibber
graduated from the Bryn Mawr School,
Baltimore, and receives a cum laude
with 259 honor points. Both majored
in Mathematics and Chemistry.
MR. W. G. SIMPSON WILL
SPEAK AT BRYN MAWR
Endeavors to Live Out Own Social
Doctrine
“If we are to have a better world, we
must have better people,” says Mr. Wil-
liam G. Simpson, individualist and pacifist,
who will speak under the auspices of the
Christian Association, on April 9th, at 7.30
o'clock, in Taylor Hall.
Mr. Simpson maintains that each indi-
vidual should live according to his own
‘standards of right. He, himself, is against
the possession of private property, and
considers war to be contrary to the funda-
mental principles of Christ. He feels that
instead of resisting evil, we should search
out and—emphasize the good. Only when
every one loves his neighbor as himself
will the “community of love” or the ideal
world be able to exist.. Mr. Simpson after
graduating from Union Seminary went to
-a small church in one of the worst indus-
trial districts of New Jersey. In the fall
of 1918 he was formed to-resign from his
church on account of his pacifism. He says
moreoever that even had there been no
war, he no longer felt able to preach, “to
make a sale of what had been, God’s free
gift,” or “to serve an institution acquiescing
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 __
—_—_—
All names of tose wishing to return
- to the Summer Suhool must be. given to
M. Woodworth, ’24# before Friday, April 4.
MISS PARK SPEAKS AT
FELLOWSHIP: DINNER
Stresses Graduate School and Its
Great Contribution to Bryn Mawr
_ President ‘Park addressed the graduates]
at their dinner in Pembroke, given in honor
of the recipients of the Eurapean Fellow-
ships, Friday evening. :
“My speech,” she said, “must begin with
renewed and yet warmer congratulations to
the three new graduate European Fellows
on the year that lies ahead of them. | think
with delight of their happy. journeys by
Fsea’ and land, of their long adventurous
days, in the new lecture rooms and libraries,
of their experiences, their discoveries and
their rewards. When my own mind: dwells
on a winter in Athens brokén with voyages
through blue Aegean islands and journeys
on foot, on bicycle or on horseback through
he mountains and uplands of inland Greece,
| feel almost sorry to know of their stern
determination to stay in workaday England
or France, but I realize honestly that their
memories have every. chance of being as
glowing as mine.
_ “When at the instance of President
Thomas the graduate school was established
simultaneously with the undergraduate col-
lege at Bryn Mawr, she made what seems
to me perhaps her wisest contribution to
women’s education in America Adequate
undergraduate education for women was
hard enough to get in 1885; graduate in-
struction was impossible. The mature
woman. student could neither work -in the
lecture room or laboratory where she
wanted to work nor be supervised by the
professor whose instruction she wished to
follow. With her own experiences of
graduate work in Germany and in Paris
fresh in her mind, experiences which seem
to us now almost romantic, Miss Thomas
threw open to the college graduate an op-
portunity for ‘graduate work solid and at
the same time stirring. She saw. the need
in women’s education for immediate con-
tact with scientific accuracy, with intellec-
tual truth. _And—in_the.years that have
seen increasing undergraduate opportuni-
ties open to women we have many of us
felt that in:the graduate seminary or the
’ CONTINUED. ON PAGE 3
FRENCH PROFESSOR EXPLAINS
ART OF MARCEL PROUST
—_——
Novelist. Completes _Sub-Conscious
Tendency in Frerch Literature
auspices of : the
Marguerite
Speaking “under — the
French Club, Mademoiselle
Clément, of the Lycée Victor Duruy, lec-
cured the Marcel Proust in
Taylor Hall, Saturday evening.
Marcel Proust, she began, is certainly
one of the most ‘far-reaching minds French
literature has -known. For twenty years
he contented himself with the admiration
of a small group, making no effort to reach
greater fame. He lived and wrotesat night,
shunning the daylight in a room hung in
black and lined with— cork keep) out
kound. His work shows concentrated study
of a few characters in limited sfrroundings
and he stands as an example of seclusion
and concentration very rare in our times of
noisy movement and scattered attention.
One may take exception: to an absence
of morality in his work which is based on
the conviction that. mere existence renders
anything legitimate. and worthy of study.
Marcel Proust,-unlike Anatole France, who
describes life with irony, or Alphonse Dau-
det, who describes ,it with pity, looks on
and refuses to pass judgment. Although a
bitter enemy of sham he-Conflicts with our
ingrained sense that vice shatters the soul,
and his art is so powerful that he shakes
our conviction.
Proust himself was not immoral and
won__ardent and admiring friends. He
shows in his books that he detests malice,
baseness, and snobbery.
The general. title of his-work: A la
Recherche du Temps Perdu, has a wigle
significance. It implies that time, lost in
being passed and lived through, may be
found again, held, and, if one is an artist,
expressed as more vivid than it seémed_in
actuality, through imagination, memory and
on work of
to
reflection. Life emerges: from this process
freed of what is unecessary, and more
intense. :
Marcel Proust, unlike .other writers,
chooses to note every Uay life in its full
complexity and continuity. He would ex-
press his whole mental activity at a given
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
=
EUROPEAN FELLOWSHIPS
AWARDED ON FRIDAY
Three Graduate and Two Under-
graduate Fellowships and Sen‘or
. Honor Points Announced
UPPER’ TEN
IS -READ’
Graduate _and Undergraduate European
fellowships, the Seniors graduating -with
honors and-the upper half of the Senior
class were announced in Chapel last. Fri-
day morning.
The Helene and Cecil Rubel Foundation
Fellowship, value $1500, for “ofduate gtu-
dent, was awarded to E.G. Clark, of Ober- <>
lin, Ohio. R. L. Anderson, of Jamestown,
N. Y., received the Mary E. Garrett Euro-
pean Fellowship, value $500, while the M.
Carey eHow, value
$500, went Dillingham, of Mill-
burn, N. J.
Students whose number of honor points
Thomas
tO LL.
kuropean
LB.
places them in the upper half of the class.
Virginia leek Millar is the only Senior
graduating Summa:Cum Laude with 270
honor points (271 on 106 hours).
Graduating Magna Cum Laude ares K; ~
Van Bibber, 259 honor points, M. L. Fischer
258, L. Ford 220 (231 on 113 hours).
Those in the Upper ten graduating Cum
Laude are: K. B. Neilson 216, P. H. Fans-
ler 205, B: T. Constant 192 (202 on “110
hours), E. K. Henderson .188, R. Murray
184, R. Godefrey 178 (180 on 109 hours).
Not in the Upper ten but graduating
Cum Laude are: M. Minott 177, P. Gard- ©.
ner Sharpe 177, E. T..Pearson 175, M. K.
Woodworth 171 (181 on 115 hours), E. Lb.
Rhoads 170,
In the Upper kalf are:.M.. W. C. Anget
169, 1. A. Wallace 16014 (160% on 107
hours), S. E. Leewitz 160 (161 on 109
hours), K. M. Elston ‘157%, F. M. Begg
157 (165 on 113 hours), K. Gallwey 157,
S. Wood 155, R. Allen 154, O. Caldwell:
Fountain 153, K. Brauns 152%, E. Hale
147, A. Pratt 146 (149 on 118 hours), J: T.
“ CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
VARSITY DEFEATS TEMPLE
IN SEASON’S FASTEST GAME .
Sweeping Victory Due to Scientific
Teamwork of Bryn Mawr
Varsity triumphed overwhelmingly with
a score 41-18 in the basketball game
against Temple University Saturday
afternoon.
Both teams. played a fast-game during
the first half ,and the ball passed rapidly
up and down the field with little fouling.
Bryn Mawr used short low passes, which
proved more effective than the longer ones |
of the opposing team, but was outjumped
in the center where Temple got the hall
nearly every time. C. Remak, ’25, and F.
Jay, '26,. were an invincible combination as
forwards, the latter shooting ‘several bril-
liant goals from difficult positions while the
unerring placement. of Cc. Remak rolled
the score steadily higher. :
Fhe second half started with a snap and
Temple playing with speed made_a desper-
ate effort to even the score. While they
made spectacular individual plays the
evener teamwork of Bryn Mawr kept the
ball steadily heading toward the home bas-
ket, and S. Leewitz, '24, as guard success-
fully blocked her forward from scoring.
Both teams fumbled frequently and the ball
rolling along the ground proved an incen-
tive for an indiscriminate roughhouse. As
the end approached the shooting and play-
ing increased in wildness, though the Bryn
CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
of
on
A en
Ss
or
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Ihe, College News
[Founded in 1914.]
7
Published weekly during the college year in the
interest of Bryn Mawr College
Managing Editor.” iatia ca Fevice Bec "24
® EDITORS niwe
Deva SmitTH, '26 6 E. GLEssner,
e Cc. Cummines, ’25
25
&S en
ASSISTANT EDITORS 5
K. ToMPKINS, '26 J. Logs, ’26
K, Simonps, ’27 XM. Leary, ’27
BUSINES? BOARD
Mawacer— Louiss How!7z, '24 Saha
Manrcaret Samiti, ’24 ? ‘
ASSISTANTS
Manrcaret Boypen, 25. - Evizaneti Tyson, ’26-
Marion NAGLE, ’25
Eoheorntig™ may begin at any time
Suoscriptions, Mailing Price, $3.00
Entered as second class matter September 2
st
ryii Mawr, Pa.) un $e
,
at the post office ag Bryf
the Act of March 3, 1889,
AN ECONOMIC LABORATORY
The full extent of the opportunity off-
ered to undergraduates returning to help
with athletics and music at the Summer
School, for Women Workers in Industry
is hard to judge accurately. It is one re-
served specially for Bryn Mawr, although
interest has been shown by other college
students to attend the school in any ca-
pacity whatsoever. The labor- movement,
with its many difficulties, which we can
only approach in the winter from an -aca-
* demic standpoint, becomes for those at the
Summer School, what it-really is, a living
the world
_ leaders gathered on
factor in today. Industrial
the college campus
» from all over the country form a unique
- group which can be found in no other
place. Studies and readfhg are allied with
By the
personal contact with women whose life
very varied practical experiences.
has been almost exactly opposite to ours,
by enabling them to spend a month in the
midst of an unrestrained interchange of
ideas, the Summer School offers to return-
ing undergr&duates a gift out of all: pro-
portion to any help that they can be as
recreation leaders.
MISS THOMAS’ PEACE PLAN
* ’ for international peace submitted for the
i Bok Peace Award and chosen by Charles
Scribner’s Sons to be published under the
a title of IVays to Peace; there appears one,
: according to’ the New York Times, by
| ——s«#President Emeritus Thomas,
President Thomas proposes A Declara-
tion” of Interdependence which would pro-
a ee claim all aggressive warfare an interna-
Re, \ tional crime and any attacking nation an
. outlaw, and which would depend on Inter-
national Law as arbiter in international
disputes. She also suggests two additional
international bodies; a Permanent Council
of Vigilance and Inquiry and a Comanis-
' sion of Jurists to discover causes of inter-
national misunderstanding and to: correct
them before a acenatty, occurs for resort
—t6-arms:————*-- -
The plan is directly constructive al
: i while, starting from the League of Nations
_ while relying on itself to take a further
and more conclusive step towards world
-. peate.
security is-
‘| Philadelphians,
oe , Among the twenty representative plans.
asa foyndation, would co-operate with it |
Of
cdutse it is pleasantly exciting to find that
crom making our own slight comment.
we come to college near such a den of
iniquity—of ‘which our found fathers
would have been properly ashamed. ‘Never-
‘theless any feeling we might have of -in-
by the
At
2
last we can be proud that a man of firm
completely dispelled
benign attitude of Mayor Kendrick,
and lofty principles has come into office.
Virtue is being recognized. With the -bull-
dog fighting instincts of law abiding masses
behind him, not to mention General Butler,
Mr.
criminal forces leagued against him.
Kendrick rides rough shod’ over the
our national efforts, the world was “made
safe for democracy,” now, with the return
of the good old spirit a small portion of it
at least is being made-safe for,God-fearing-
Those of us however who
are serjous-mifiled political students feel
slightly skeptical of the ultimate value of
raids, and searchlights,
Being red-bloeded_ young Americans we
love a fight-as much as anybody, but the
tranquil judgment of “our -legally-trained
minds” suggests that the dramatic sense of
Mayor Kendrick is getting the better of
him. We have no doubt that his motives
are both lofty and. public-spirited,-but-pos-
sibly more subtle methods would in the
end, be. more effective. _ Spectacular at-
tempts at clean-ups while affording vivid
literary opportunities for an eager press,
fail woefully in any lasting results. But
Mayor Kendrick .seems to think, rather }
guilelessly, that if he ean only raise enough
hell the criminally-minded will depart for
more peaceful camping grounds. In. the
meantime we can only enjoy the scrap and
utter our tentative political opinton.
SY
UPHOLD THE—1DOL
Catch phrases cover a multitude of -sins.
Every year questions, sometimes minor,
sometimes more important, come up and
are met by the cry that they should be
- This
year there has appeared a rather minor
“regulated by public opinion alone.”
one, but one which can nevertheless test
the power of this beautifully force, namely,
the question whether the coaches will find
it necessary to impose fines for imprompt-
ness at--rehearsals. _Today when every
member of the college community is work-
ing for a successful May Day, public opin-
ion should, be unusually strong. Thus,
should it be found insufficient to insure
promptness its defeat would be undeniable.
Yet such a defeat is inevitable unless every
individual in the casts assumes the respon-
sihility for her own prompt and_ regular
~~ oe
attendance.
THE LIBRARY FIRES
Now that spring is officially here and
the occasional snowstorm is more out of
place than a robin, it is rather pleasant to
And _as_ we think
comfortably of cold and sleet, we remem-
ber also the institution which contributed
most foward making them endurable for
look. back_.on winter.
us, the Library fires. We, who have shared
their warmth, are very glad of an oppor-
| tunity to express our gratitude to the gen-
J erosity’ and consideration of Miss Thomas,
who. icin the fuel
By.
’ Editors do not hold themselves respon-
sible for opinions expressed in this .colann.
To the Editor of ‘THE’ CoLi wa Wwe.
Sunday evening service in Chapel is the
occasion for ‘all Students ,in Brya Mawr
to hear very well-known religious speakers,
a French student here has appreciated it
very much. But is it not a pity when one
of these speakers does not speak with im-
partiality on the political questions of the
day? That has happened on Sunday, the
16th, with Dr. Steiner, professor of applied
Christianity at Grinnell College. This seems
painful .to a French student, especially
when during five months here’ she .has
found the nicest hospitality and: under-
standing of the French people. It is really
to be deplored that a speaker from the out-
side, like Dr. Steiner, should come. and
preach hatred against France and what.he
calls the “militarism of France.” Profes-
sor Steiner must not forget that itis -ciff=}
cult “‘to be fair in hatred” as he says, espe-
cially when this hatred is directed against
France, who, always felt such sympathy for
the Americans.
So let us hope that the speakers who will
come in Chapel the next: Sundays will all
know the beauty of love and friendship and
-that they will not allow their personal feel-
ings to be shown in the very middle of a
religious service, in a college which-is so
considerate toward its guests concerning
such difficult questions. ae
S.-DucHEMIN.
STUDENT FORUM TO RUN
INTERCOLLEGIATE CAMP
Labor and College Delegates Will
Discuss Present-Day Problems
Students. “at Bryn Mawr, Dartmouth.
Yale, Swarthmore and Northwestegn will
co-operate next summer in maintaining an
Intercollegiate Camp at Woodstock, New
York, July 1 to.September 17. . These stu-
dents have assumed joint management of:
the camp with a committee: of The Na-
tional Student Forum which organized the
enterprise last summer.
One hundred and fifty students from col-
leges, universities and labor: schools are ex-
pected to visit the camp during the summer.
Twenty-five scholarships are available to
pay the expenses of: labor delegates. A
number of educators, churchmen, business
men, labor leaders and social workers will
visit the camp during the summer. Among
those who are already expected are Dr
Stephen P.. Duggan, Director, Institute of
International Education; Rev. John Haynes
Holmes, Community Church, New York;
Professor William Heard Kilpatrick, De-
partment of Philosophy of Education,
Teachers’ College; Professor William
Fielding Ogburn, Department of Economics
and Sociology, Barnard College, and Rabbi
Stephen S. Wise, Free. Synagogue, New
York.
There will be five’ conference secioae of
two weeks each beginning July 1st, during
each of which the camp committee will be
limited to forty students. Each confer-
ence will consider, with individual differ-
ences, international, industrial, racial and
educational questions. The camp will be
equipped with a small. theatre and work-
shop in which students may on. occasion
present one-act plays. :
Woodstock, N.-¥.,-is in the Catskill
Mountains, fourteen miles from Kingston,
Owing to the limited accommodations of
the. camp, delegates from any one college
-will number from four to eight. Colleges
desiring to send delegates should apply im-
mediately for quotas to The National Stu-
dent Forum, 2929 Broadway, New York
City, reconinending at the time of appli-
cation a local student, agency which will
elect. or appoint delegates. Students may
register from April 1 to May 1, but only
the first 150 registrants can be svesicaed
y r ha Wate, formerly Director of the
‘IN. THE NEW BOOK ROOM
Henry Brocken; Walter de la Mare.
Fhe youth Henry Brocken, journeys as
in“a reverie to the land of writers’ imagi-
nation; the land from which a’ writer leads
characters into his books and to which the
characters return after the book is ended.
There we find figures and scenes in earthly
forms, yet so combined or glorified ,or
veiled in the mist of a poet’s vision that
we do not-know whether we have attained
regions above earthly level or sunk to the
hazes of confused and unconscious dreams.
Lucy Gray, Jane Eyre, Herrick’s loves,
Gulliver, the knights-at-arms of La Belle
Dame sans Merci, the nameless doctor in
Macbeth, Annabel Lee, and finally Criseyde
are some of the characters we meet with
the traveller in his wanderings ;’ reaching
them sometimes “at unrecorded moments of
their existence in a book, sometimes’ in
their after-life when the book has closed.
~ Through the course of these encounters,
Mr. de la Mare weaves a beauty of even
richness and mellowness that cloys at-last
for lack of occasional vigor. Though his
languor lightens as in the scene which dis-
covers Macbeth’s doctor leading an incon-
sequent and reminiscent bachelor’s life,
and as in Criseyde’s whimsical words gn
faithfulness: “It is,” she said, “to rise and
never set, O sun of utter weariness. It
is to kindle and never be quenched, O
fretting fire of midsummer! It is to be
snared and always sing, O shrilling bird
of dullness. It is to come, not go; smile
not sigh; wake never sleep: Could’st thou
love so many nots in a silken string ?”
yet his mood falls again to. the wearying
'sweetness of heavily-scented flowers.
For unspoiled pleasure this book should
be tasted at intervals, not absorbed in one
extended feast. Then the unbounded con-
ceptions of a-poet- held by the poet’s power
in words that form strong, though invisible
bars, impress with their full strength. “As
I leaned on ‘my oars in the midst of the
deep sea I seemed to hear as it were the
mighty shout of space.” Then such per-
fection as the chapter on Criseyde glows
undimmed. A perfection of earthly beauty
becomes glusive because spun as the thread
of a poct’s musing.
Tulips and Chinneys; E. E. Cummings.
The Life of Mrs. Humphry Ward; Janet
Penrose Trevelyan.
The daughter of the authoress has writ-
ten a detailed and comprehensive biography
that includes her activities and connections
with such eminent contemporaries as Glad-
stone, in an almost public life.
The New Poetry; an anthology of Twen-
tieth Century verse in English; edited bv
Harriet Monroe and Alice Corbin Hen-
derson.
This collection proves as ‘comprehensive
as its sub-title engages it-to-bé. The poets
appear in alphabetical order; Rupert Brook
following cn Maxwell Bodenheim, Thomas
Hardy on Robert Frost, and William But>
ler Yeats cn Elinor Wylie.
ee DEFEATS TEMPLE
IN SEASON’S FASTEST GAME
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Mawr. forwards scored steadily to the final
moment.
Temple Bryn Mawr.
Miss Kohler ..-... L:F C."Remak, ’25
Miss Coster ....... Rob en F. Jay, -’26
Miss Shato v......: C..., 3, MeAdeo, 20
‘Miss Margerum ...S.C...-M. Palache, ’24
Miss Willcox ..... R.G... G. Leewitz, ’26
Miss Thurston ....L.G......S. Leewitz, ’24
Field Goals—Temple: 8, ‘Bryn Mawr:
C. Remak, #25, 14; F. Jay, ’26, 6.
Foul Goals—Temple: 2. Bryn Mawr: 1.
Substitutes :
ter; Miss Davis for Miss Wilcox.
ba) .
‘EUROPEAN FELLOWSHIPS ~~
AWARDED ON FRIDAY
_ CONTINUED FROM PAGE a
ny 2
a
a Palmer 146, F. P. Coyne,145, E. E. Crowelt
144, M. Palache 143%, \E. G. ReQua 141
(143 on 109° hours), \ ES Rodney 139"
on 106 hours), M. V. Smith 7“
Miss Miller for Miss Cos-'
Sieve, vag, OSS Free
i
a =
Vol. X.No. 20. March 25, 1924. -
¢
THE COLLEGE NEWS en
9 up-hill climb. There have always
been and there always will be places
for improvement
work. We must always look for bet-
ter and. better students. We. must
make’ their conditions of working
*more and more satisfactory. We
must never: drop jhe standard of the
graduate degrees but we can perhaps
find adaptations to the individual in
the working out of their routine.
We must try to establish more re-
search fellowships and we must try
to increase the:stipend of our travel-
ing fellows so that they will not need
to dig so deep into their own pockets
when .they sail out as our ambassa-
dors. In other words, we must work
continuously for a higher standard
in our graduate |].
° se Bg
“6S ae
we
of an
_ Additional Shoe Store
at
SATURDAY, MARCH’ 29th ©
1107
1606 Chestnut Street’
a
A complete stock, and service at both stores °
ANNOUNCE THE OPENING
2 - = =
We must direct ourselves with a
bolder aim and we must rest con-
2 —~E LAFLIN
igog Chestnut
Miss E. CLarke Wins FELLOWSHIP
, 3
tented only with a more honorable accom-
MISS PARK SPEAKS AT
os ; plishment.”
wv
FELLOWSHIP DINNER
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
advanced laboratory that contact first came.
“Another contact Miss Thomas made
from the’ very beginning for the graduate]. ,
student, the contact with a. wider culture,
with a different type of education. The
direct connection of the Bryn Mawr grad-
uate school with the training given in the
European university existed from the be-
ginning of the college. Almost every mem-
ber of the faculty has had his-year or years*
of foreign study. With the graduation of
the first class at Bryn Mawr its ablest stu-
dent was chosen to continue her work
abroad, and-its thirty-sixth European Fel-
low was named today. Within five years
the Mary E. Garrett Graduate European
Fellowship twas founded and within eight
years the President M. Carey Thomas
Gradiate European Fellowship. Much
more recently the Rubel Foundation Fel-
lowship has added anotherand_freer_op-
portunity for the advanced student. The
current was set flowing in the other direc-
tion.. Since 1909 a fraction of the gradu-
ate school itself has’ been yearly made up
F of the Bryn Mawr foreign.scholars. These
two fundamentals of advanced education in
America, solid and independent work and
first-hand tonnection with European intel-
lectual standards are strengthened yearly,
we trust, in the Bryn Mawr _ graduate
school.
“So much President Thomas did for the
American woman graduate student and in
our. gratitude for the opening of many
other doors since then, none of us can for-
get or for an instant minimize her gift to
us. The Graduate School with its unique
and honorable record is a reminder of her
acumen and. wisdom, but in establishing: it
she did at the same time an equally great
service for undergraduate education. She
laid: down as a principle that undergrad-
uates should be taught by a faculty keen
®on its own research work and able to in-
struct and actually instructing maturer than
the most mature Senior, that the library
used by undergraduates should contain the
books and journals of, research and ad-
vanced study, that they should never be
without the stimulus of contact with older
students working on subjects in which they
themselves were already interested, usually
working harder and using other and freer
methods, set loose a little from the bondage
of the beginner. __
“T believe in nothing more whole-heart-
edly than in the value of graduate work
per se for women, but if I disbelieved that
I should still. believe in it asa necessary
part of a college: from the undergraduate
point of view. The graduate school is Tiké
the eyes of the college through which we
all look at learning or it is like the hands
of the college feeling the way in our steep
The. Freshmen elected M. Z. Pease and
C. Platt joint song-mistresses to replace 13.
Schieffelin, who has resigned on account of
her health. _ * : ‘
%
&
® &
)
DG a mOoOW DO IT Now DO-IT NOW bo IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT’ NOW bo It NOW bdo If Now bo Iv NOW DO rT NOW,
‘ s °
$ 4
- : £
° °
: Love Set
; for Jacqueline ?
‘ ‘
A a
. It is the Junior Prom.
S . z ee
& Joe Gish has run off with
g your car, so¢you are at a loss
: what to suggest. Your little
« partner, Jacqueline, has tired
2 of dancing, and silence is.run-
4
°
THE STAGE: Photographs of the
beautiful :and the unique; re-
-views and storm warnings;
symposiums. on theatrical as-
tronomy. .
movies: Stills and stories of
the meritorious and the un-
usual. Press agents banned.
HUMOR: Works of poets and
other tragedians; res noves with
‘a futuristic flavoring; achieve-
ments of -intellectual--notables
and notable intellectuals; the
modernistic philosophies.
¢
g Do ™ NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW. DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT Now DO IT NOW DO IT NOW. DO IT NOW
GRAVAMEN: Cream of humour
and créme de menthe;_ the
whimsical ; the satirical; and all
other forms of variegated gro-
tesquérie.
" WORLD OF IDEAS: Every new
viewpoint, every unique slant
2
movement, every revolutionary -
DO ITNOW DOTIT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOWDO IT Now
last sip of the sixth limeade will have trickled down her lovely throat.
Love set for Jacqueline. She wil] stare innocently at you for a moment,
and then—and then—-start popping those deadly “do-you-knows’’. How to
forestall them, how to parry them, how to stop them, you will know when
you study Vanity Fair, the most delightful and enlightening outside reading
course offered in any university.~—
Just Try iad: Taeine
In each issue you find:
med
ning rampant through the
conversation.
What is she thinking—if
anything?
bO IT NOW DO IT NOW
In another moment. the
s
on this amusing world, is mir-
rored in Vanity Fair.
MOTORS, and’ DANCING—all you
need to know, recklessly illus-
trated,
THE SPORTS: All: of them—mas-
culine, feminine and neuter— Te CouPOm WiLL save se SS
photographs, news items, and eel it in now—and—just s :
watch your line.
BUCKS PIN TWO. BUCKS. DO IT NOW DO IT NOW po IT Now po IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW PO IT NOW bo IT Now
méthods of play. a ae
i Miron
THE ARTS, AS SUCH: The best a
works of the new artists and Pet ae _
the new works of the best ones ; ya oe
exhibition gossip and_repro- & - iat
ductions of the most discussed el ay
masterpieces of the season. - of Sp eo" Se ‘
: Z Pa ro xe ok 2 i]
BRIDGE, ETC.: All the tricks and ” > o craad 7
turns; how to. get the most : ce Se ee
out of your college educa- a” Ph Ko vie q
tion. we hE 8 og cee ere
Ps xy de os — oe
AND IN ADDITION: $ ” Sh oo ea
All the latest notes 2°. & ha os RS “ i eo
in MUSIC,MEN’S = _« se 9 Sage x St laa ll
FASHIONS, . =. © -@& eo ae E
AP FS ee Rates se E
. on * .
@
rf NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW Do IT Now FILL IT IN FILL IT IN FILL i IN PILL IP IN PILL Ie
' ‘ ¢ f ‘a s i *
-
%
THE COLLEGE
NEWS
Phone, B. ‘M. 1079 .
MISS M. SHERIDAN
812 MONTGOMERY AVENUE
Exclusive Made-to-Order Gowns
AT MODERATE PRICES
DRUGS CANDY
- Perfumes and Gifts
POWERS & REYNOLDS
837 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
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
PF
TWO GOOD PLACES TO EAT
The Roma Cafe- and Your Home
FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE B. M. 125
PARTIES CATERED FOR
PANDORA'S BOX
Linens, Wools, Hand Crafts
JUNIOR NEEDS, SPORT ESSENTIALS
Gi
IN|
Riding Habits
_& Breeches
FRANCIS B. HALL
TAILOR
840 LANCASTER AVE.,
3 stores west of Post Office
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 834
ICED
DRINKS
. DAINTY
SANDWICHES
College.
Tea House
Open Daily from 1 to 7
EVENING PARTIES BY
SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
-JEANNETT’S
Bryn Mawr s Wayne Flower Shop
Cut'Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
Potted Plants—Personal supervision on all orders
807 Lancaster Ave.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 570
Cards and Gifts
for all occasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
LARRAINE
MAKES YOUTHFUL DRESSES OF UNUSUAL
CHARM TO SUIT YOUR INDIVIDUAL TASTE
223 SOUTH 5ist STREET
2__WEST PHILADELPHIA
J. J. Connelly Estate
The Main Line Florists
1226 Lancaster Avenue
. Rosemont, Pa.
Phone, 252 Bryn Mawr
—
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO
CAPITAL, $250,000
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS
ggALLOWS INTEREST ON DEPOSITS
SAFE DEPOSIT DEPARTMEN
oon
s Py
Bryn Maur 823 Night: ‘Bryn Mawr 942
ESTIMATES FURNISHED e
WILLIAM G. CUFF & CO.
Electrical Contractors
INSTALLATION, WIRING, REPAIRING
855 Lancaster Ave.
Telephone,
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr Massage Shop
BAMEOQING Oppo Pst Ofc
PATiAk GA DsAGE Telephone, 832 Bryn Mawr |
aS a ae above, formerly at the Floyd Build-
ing, has moved to larger quarters where we hope to
oe better able to serve our patrons.
Phone, Ardmore 12
GEORGE F. KEMPEN
Caterer -
27 W. LANCASTER AVE.
ARDMORE, PA.
MOORE’S PHARMACIES
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Drugs © Chanticals
Stationeries, Etc.
Bouquets
a dainty little flavor at
1316 CHESTNUT STREET.
—a AT THE
HANDCRAFT SHOP
, 30 BRYN MAWR AVENUE
a Many New Girts ARE Arrivinc’ DaILy
. We are now eerving our famous old fashioned
: Strawbetry Shortcake
ne a Telephone, Bryn Mawr 867
The Hearthstone
‘LUNCHEON TEA
_ DINNER PARTIES
; Open Sundays
- 25 No, Mesioa Ave. _ Bryn Mawr, Pa.
5. A. WILSON
COMPANY
Printers Engravers Stationers
Imported and Domestic Stationery
Gifts—Seasonable Cards
"110 South 18th Street, Piledelpia
«
th
TO@GERY SHOP
831 LANCASTER AVE.
opposite Post Office
Gowns, Hats, Coats,
Sweaters, Blouses, Hosiery
Sole Agents for.
VANITY FAIR SILK UNDERWEAR
.®
DRESSMAKING AND ALTERATIONS
E. M. B. Wise
%-
nO
Phone, Bryn Mawr, 259.
J.E. CALDWELL &. CO.
Chestnut and Juniper Streets
Philadelphia
GOLDSMITHS, SILVERSMITHS of
JEWELERS
_ College Insignia
“ Class Rings
Sorority Emblems
- STATIONERY WITH SPECIAL
MONOGRAMS, CRESTS and SEALS
Jewelers
Silversmiths
Stationers
yet ae
PHILADELPHIA
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 correct use of Wedding
Stationery dnd Visiting Cards
Jewels,
PHONE 758 ‘
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER AND CONFECTIONER
LUNCHEONS AND TEAS
BRYN MAWR
Phone, Bryn Mawr 166 Phone Orders Promptly Delivered
WILLIAM GROFF, P. D. ‘
PRESCRIPTIONIST
Whitman Chocolates
803 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Fancy Groceries _ Fruit and Vegetables = 4. MeDEVITT Bill Heads
Wm. T. Mclntyre’s PR | N T IN ¢ Letter Heads
: 821 LANCASTER AVENUE Announcements
Free Delivery ware wr Bini A t ee
Confectionery” Ice Cream ~ Pastry | 1145 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
=
‘‘ Make our Seaas your Store ’’
MAIN LINE DRUG STORE
ARDMORE, PA.
Prescriptions carefully
Compounded by
Ph
Registered Pharmacists Avdmere 1112
BRINTON BROS.
FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES
Orders Called For and Delivered
LANCASTER AND MERION AVENUES
Telephone 63 BRYN MAWR, PA.
FLOWERS SERVICE SATISFACTION
BAXTER & GREEN, Inc.
FLORISTS
129 S. Sixteenth St., Phila., Pa.
BELL PHONE, SPRUCE 32-62
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon
COTTAGE TEA ROOM |
Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr . |
Everything dainty and delicious
Both
Monotype
and
Linotype
Composition
WINSTON BUILDING
The Home of Fine
oO
QO .
We offer the services of our Skilled Labor, Modern Equip-
. ment, Large Facilities, At Reasonable Prices
——aeaeaeaeaea—SswOOoana—'™
and Expert Supervision :
Write for Prices on Any Kind of Printing
THE JOHN'C. WINSTQNCGO.
1006-1016 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA
e*
THE “COLLEGE -NEWS
°
§
5
2
FRENCH PROFESSOR EXPLAINS
ART.OF MARCEL PROUST
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
moment and his mental tendency or move-
‘ment from that moment tp the next. At
the same time he is most keenly interested
in the sub-conscious charactérjgtics of his
mind and achieves a consciousness of sub-
consciousness by studying objeqgively his
own subjectivity. He presents his results
to us, steeped in philosophy. ne
This method, depending on the ‘confusion
nattiral to’-states of mind, ignores the in-
tellectual ardor achieved by centuries and
explains ‘Marcel Proust's lengthy para-
graphs and sentences that sometimes fill a
page before reachifg a full stop. Accord-
ing to him, paragraphs are made by art
not life.
This absolute refusal to make any kind
of choice in his subject matter and treat-
ment ‘finally holds the reader spellbound.
One suspects. him of having discovered the
actual workings of the mind. The reality
of the states of mind he sets forth is con-
vincing in that he himself the
artist’s privilege to interfere with the life
of the mind. Nevertheless thiAbsencé of
choice is probably only a very new, rare,
and subtle choice.
Marcel Proust restricted
chiefly to characters from the aristocracy
and haute bourgeoisie; these people suit
his method because they have the leisure
to study and be conscious of their minds
and souls. This unfortunately completes
the separation between literature and the
lower classes which began in French litera-
ture during the middle ages, so that Marcel
Proust’s readers aré narrowly restricted to
those capable of understanding the highest
refinement of literary intellectuality.
This writer seems destined to a lasting
influence and fame... His subject matter,
reaching through the sub-conScious states
of mind to the unconscious, is essentially
French and, suggested at its earliest by
occasioned words in Racine’s plays, appears
at its fullest development in Proust’s work.
His manner or treatment is foreign, ap-
proaching the English manner but most
characteristically modern. We recognize
it in Bergson’s philosophy of “le devenir de
lame” and in Rodin’s injunction. against
definite contours. ‘
Because he has achieved an intimate con-
nection with contemporary thought Marcel
Proust will be read, studied and loved in-
creasingly as time goes on,
refuses
has himself
BRYN MAWR TO. GO TO
EAGLESMERE THIS SUMMER
Change From Silver Bay Offers New
Opportunities
Specially Contributed
The Christian Association has been urged
to send delegates this year to the confer-
ence at Eaglesmere, Pa.,*to be held the
latter part of June. Formerly we have al-
ways gone to Silver Bay and although our
associations are well established there, the
Christian Association considers this a wel-
come opportunity to meet with colleges in
our own immediate neighborhood such as
Goucher, ~ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania an‘
Wilson.
This is an advantage, for it enables us
to meet on the friendliest grottgds colleges
of our own size but having different and
often more advanced ideas from our own.
In a way it is a challenge to us, for while
we had made a place for ourselves at Sil-
ver Bay, this will mean breaking new
ground and meeting a totally different.
group with whom as yet we have had little
or no direct contact. Since we are judged
entirely by the delegation we Send, it is
specially important this year to have the
delegation qwell chosen and as_representa~
tive as possible. -
Eaglesmere is not as large as‘Silver Bay,
but the program is formed on the same
general lines. During the first few days
the conference, leaders will give three
courses on subjects of general interest.
These will be followed by Bible study
grotips in which it is hoped much construc-
tive work will be .dene... The last ‘days of
the conference will be devoted to discus-
sions in the so-called technical groups of
self-government, athletic and undergradu-
ate representatives. -Afternoons of all. the
days of the conference will be kept free
for individual discussions, athletics and in-
tercollegiate singing.
While the conférence is held under the
auspices. of the ¥...W. C. A:, it. is
primarily religious in its purpose, but aims
to provide. as geff€rab an opportunity as
possible for the exchgnge of ideas on all
subjects. It is the only way we come in
contact with the World Student Christian
Association, the Student Volunteers and thc
Student Friendship Fund,
which wide “field of
not
organizations
represent a interests
NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
The Honor-Committée of Mille College,
according to the Mills College Weekly of
February’ 21, has reported that the honor
system has proved a failure. This com-
mittee is composed of representatives from
the. faculty. and. from -sthe upper
classes and its functions are to carry out
the regulations stated in the Honor Code.
Girls
reported to this committee, but the stu-
three
seen cheating are supposed to be
dent body seems to have the idea that re-
porting another girl is’the height of dis-
loyalty. ; C °
The latest vote on the Bok
Peace Plan
‘
in ‘Wellesley is 827-yes and 117-no.. The
total number .of votes received Jast.manth
was 514,318 of which 64,750 were against
the plan and 449,568 are for it. This is
13 per cent. against and 87.per cent. for
the plan.
Following the example of a number of
colleges Wellesley, if enough interest is
shown among the students, will start a
Coolidge: Club. To aid in the election of
Calvin Coolidge’ for President, of — the
United States*would be the purpose of such
an organization,
According to the ‘HWheaton News, two
‘annual prizes t§ere established last year
for a general information examination and
one in general literature,
A debate on the question of marks, held
at Vassar College, resulted in a vote of
twenty-three for the affirmative, and-thirty-
four for the negative. The points stressed
by-the-negative-were+first,that-marks—are
unfair, on account of unavoidable inequal-
ity in professor’s marking ;. second, good
marks foster self-conceit and laziness;
third, the excitement of receiving them’ and
the ensuing discussion are disadvantageous,
and fourth, it fosters working solely for
The affirmative argued that there
are awards in non-academic work, so why
Also it
least the
passing and failing, so there might as well
Students have not the ability of
marks.
not in academic. would be neces-
sary-to have at two marks: of
be six.
accurately judging theniselves, and if there
were no matks, the conscientious student
would.overwork. Graduate. workwand_ the
professions require some accurate knowl-
edge of the grade of the students’ wérk.
MR. W. G. SIMPSON WILL
SPEAK AT BRYN MAWR
CONTINUED.FROM PAGE 1
in crying injustice against the common
people.” .
‘He next decided to experience for him-
self the trials of # laboring man, and for
six weeks worked in mines, railroad gangs,
and labor camps. During this time he
went to Socialistic and I. W. W. meetings
and came back according to his statements,
an opposer to capitalism, but assured that
only class war would result from the
workers’ materialistic methods.
In an attempt to be Sincerely consistent
in living out his ideals he'gave up all. his
private property, working with his hands
who wished help, making a
gift of his labor. Last fall he moved to
Wallingford, an almost entirely foreign
district on the edge of
built houses. for poor. people.
‘for anyone
Passaic, where he
— tere
Jean Leonard, '27, and E. Nelson, ’27, _
won’ the Freshman competition for the
Lantern Board.
Carol Platt was elected Freshman basket-
hall captain at a class meeting a week ago
last Friday.
H. B. WALLACE
ea
WHITMAN’S- FAMOUS CANDIES Are Sold by
POWERS & REYNOLDS WM. GROFP
BRYN MAWR CONFECTIONERY
FRANK W. PRICKETT (ROSEMONT)
eprint eke es Nan
e*
THE “COLLEGE -NEWS
°
§
5
2
FRENCH PROFESSOR EXPLAINS
ART.OF MARCEL PROUST
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
moment and his mental tendency or move-
‘ment from that moment tp the next. At
the same time he is most keenly interested
in the sub-conscious charactérjgtics of his
mind and achieves a consciousness of sub-
consciousness by studying objeqgively his
own subjectivity. He presents his results
to us, steeped in philosophy. ne
This method, depending on the ‘confusion
nattiral to’-states of mind, ignores the in-
tellectual ardor achieved by centuries and
explains ‘Marcel Proust's lengthy para-
graphs and sentences that sometimes fill a
page before reachifg a full stop. Accord-
ing to him, paragraphs are made by art
not life.
This absolute refusal to make any kind
of choice in his subject matter and treat-
ment ‘finally holds the reader spellbound.
One suspects. him of having discovered the
actual workings of the mind. The reality
of the states of mind he sets forth is con-
vincing in that he himself the
artist’s privilege to interfere with the life
of the mind. Nevertheless thiAbsencé of
choice is probably only a very new, rare,
and subtle choice.
Marcel Proust restricted
chiefly to characters from the aristocracy
and haute bourgeoisie; these people suit
his method because they have the leisure
to study and be conscious of their minds
and souls. This unfortunately completes
the separation between literature and the
lower classes which began in French litera-
ture during the middle ages, so that Marcel
Proust’s readers aré narrowly restricted to
those capable of understanding the highest
refinement of literary intellectuality.
This writer seems destined to a lasting
influence and fame... His subject matter,
reaching through the sub-conScious states
of mind to the unconscious, is essentially
French and, suggested at its earliest by
occasioned words in Racine’s plays, appears
at its fullest development in Proust’s work.
His manner or treatment is foreign, ap-
proaching the English manner but most
characteristically modern. We recognize
it in Bergson’s philosophy of “le devenir de
lame” and in Rodin’s injunction. against
definite contours. ‘
Because he has achieved an intimate con-
nection with contemporary thought Marcel
Proust will be read, studied and loved in-
creasingly as time goes on,
refuses
has himself
BRYN MAWR TO. GO TO
EAGLESMERE THIS SUMMER
Change From Silver Bay Offers New
Opportunities
Specially Contributed
The Christian Association has been urged
to send delegates this year to the confer-
ence at Eaglesmere, Pa.,*to be held the
latter part of June. Formerly we have al-
ways gone to Silver Bay and although our
associations are well established there, the
Christian Association considers this a wel-
come opportunity to meet with colleges in
our own immediate neighborhood such as
Goucher, ~ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania an‘
Wilson.
This is an advantage, for it enables us
to meet on the friendliest grottgds colleges
of our own size but having different and
often more advanced ideas from our own.
In a way it is a challenge to us, for while
we had made a place for ourselves at Sil-
ver Bay, this will mean breaking new
ground and meeting a totally different.
group with whom as yet we have had little
or no direct contact. Since we are judged
entirely by the delegation we Send, it is
specially important this year to have the
delegation qwell chosen and as_representa~
tive as possible. -
Eaglesmere is not as large as‘Silver Bay,
but the program is formed on the same
general lines. During the first few days
the conference, leaders will give three
courses on subjects of general interest.
These will be followed by Bible study
grotips in which it is hoped much construc-
tive work will be .dene... The last ‘days of
the conference will be devoted to discus-
sions in the so-called technical groups of
self-government, athletic and undergradu-
ate representatives. -Afternoons of all. the
days of the conference will be kept free
for individual discussions, athletics and in-
tercollegiate singing.
While the conférence is held under the
auspices. of the ¥...W. C. A:, it. is
primarily religious in its purpose, but aims
to provide. as geff€rab an opportunity as
possible for the exchgnge of ideas on all
subjects. It is the only way we come in
contact with the World Student Christian
Association, the Student Volunteers and thc
Student Friendship Fund,
which wide “field of
not
organizations
represent a interests
NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
The Honor-Committée of Mille College,
according to the Mills College Weekly of
February’ 21, has reported that the honor
system has proved a failure. This com-
mittee is composed of representatives from
the. faculty. and. from -sthe upper
classes and its functions are to carry out
the regulations stated in the Honor Code.
Girls
reported to this committee, but the stu-
three
seen cheating are supposed to be
dent body seems to have the idea that re-
porting another girl is’the height of dis-
loyalty. ; C °
The latest vote on the Bok
Peace Plan
‘
in ‘Wellesley is 827-yes and 117-no.. The
total number .of votes received Jast.manth
was 514,318 of which 64,750 were against
the plan and 449,568 are for it. This is
13 per cent. against and 87.per cent. for
the plan.
Following the example of a number of
colleges Wellesley, if enough interest is
shown among the students, will start a
Coolidge: Club. To aid in the election of
Calvin Coolidge’ for President, of — the
United States*would be the purpose of such
an organization,
According to the ‘HWheaton News, two
‘annual prizes t§ere established last year
for a general information examination and
one in general literature,
A debate on the question of marks, held
at Vassar College, resulted in a vote of
twenty-three for the affirmative, and-thirty-
four for the negative. The points stressed
by-the-negative-were+first,that-marks—are
unfair, on account of unavoidable inequal-
ity in professor’s marking ;. second, good
marks foster self-conceit and laziness;
third, the excitement of receiving them’ and
the ensuing discussion are disadvantageous,
and fourth, it fosters working solely for
The affirmative argued that there
are awards in non-academic work, so why
Also it
least the
passing and failing, so there might as well
Students have not the ability of
marks.
not in academic. would be neces-
sary-to have at two marks: of
be six.
accurately judging theniselves, and if there
were no matks, the conscientious student
would.overwork. Graduate. workwand_ the
professions require some accurate knowl-
edge of the grade of the students’ wérk.
MR. W. G. SIMPSON WILL
SPEAK AT BRYN MAWR
CONTINUED.FROM PAGE 1
in crying injustice against the common
people.” .
‘He next decided to experience for him-
self the trials of # laboring man, and for
six weeks worked in mines, railroad gangs,
and labor camps. During this time he
went to Socialistic and I. W. W. meetings
and came back according to his statements,
an opposer to capitalism, but assured that
only class war would result from the
workers’ materialistic methods.
In an attempt to be Sincerely consistent
in living out his ideals he'gave up all. his
private property, working with his hands
who wished help, making a
gift of his labor. Last fall he moved to
Wallingford, an almost entirely foreign
district on the edge of
built houses. for poor. people.
‘for anyone
Passaic, where he
— tere
Jean Leonard, '27, and E. Nelson, ’27, _
won’ the Freshman competition for the
Lantern Board.
Carol Platt was elected Freshman basket-
hall captain at a class meeting a week ago
last Friday.
H. B. WALLACE
ea
WHITMAN’S- FAMOUS CANDIES Are Sold by
POWERS & REYNOLDS WM. GROFP
BRYN MAWR CONFECTIONERY
FRANK W. PRICKETT (ROSEMONT)
eprint eke es Nan
College news, March 25, 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)
1924-03-25
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 10, No. 20
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-no20