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VoLuME X.- No. 23
BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23. 1924
e
Price 10 Cents
CONGRESS OF C. 1. E. T0
‘BE HELD AT WARSAW
American Student Delegate to Be
_ «Elected at a Conference
in New York
INVITE BRYN MAWR TO ATTEND]
An invitation to a meeting of Student
Presidents and other representatiygs to dis-
cuss the securing of a suitable representa-
tion of American students at the Triennial
Congress of the Confédération--Interna-
tionale des Etudiants, in Warsaw, was re
by E. Requa 24’, President of the Under-
graduate Association, at a meeting, Mon-
day, April 14. The letter ran:
' “At a meeting of Student Presidents
and other representatives of nine of the
leading men’s and women’s colleges, held in
New York, on Friday, March 28, we were
instructed to draw your attention to the
activities of the Confédération Interna-
tionale des Etudiants (C. I. E.), with a
view to securing suitable representation of
American Students at the Triennial Con-
gress of that body to. be held in Warsaw
this summer.
“We invite your éoliéxe to send the
President-elect. of its Student Government
Association, or a representative junior, to
a meeting, in New York, on May 3 and 4,
1924. The possibility of creating a Student
Federation of the United States of America
will be considered. The object of this or-
ganization will be:
“1, To promote international intercourse
and understanding between students and
for_this purpose to co-operate with the oF
We
“2. To promote the educational and so-
cial interests of students regardless of
political and religious affiliations.
“A provisional committee will “be elected
to appoint suitable American sttidents who
are visiting Europe this summer as dele-
gates to the Warsaw meeting, to keep the
colleges informed on developments in Eu-
rope and to provide a link with the Col, Be
during the summer vacation.
“Very. sincerely yours,
SALT. HALLIDAY.”
BATES HOUSE TO OPEN
DAY AFT ER COMMENCEMENT
tenner
List Is Posted in Taylor Hall for
Volunteer Workers to Sign
(Specially contributed )
To many people in college Bates House
is not much more than a name, represent-
ing some vague institutional home to which
they contribute yearly almost as. a’ matter
of habit. Others know it to be a worthy
object because it is on the Christian Asso-
ciation. Budget: Only .a remaining few,
who have been to Long Branch, have a
vivid picture of Rosie and Dominic romp-
| ing —in~the-waves, -or~-Angelo—Laborio-
silently consuming the ice cream which was
the crowning - glory of his first birthday
party.
This vacation home for slum ‘hides
which Bryn Mawr runs js situated at Long
Branch, New. Jersey. - Mrs. J. Roswell,
Bates,. who for long has co-operated with
Brym Mawr in running Bates, has bought
the cottage which she hitherto rented. So
it is Bryn Mawr’s responsibility, having
been given the cottage to‘make the sum-
mer a success. -
uate
J ingham,
PRIZES AND SCHOLARSHIPS
‘TO BE ANNOUNCED MAY 1
“Sunny Jim” Is Chosen by Faculty
and Student Committee
“Sunny Jim,” the winner of the Mary
Helen. Ritchie Memorial Prize, undergrad-
scholarships and graduate scholars
and fellows will be announced in Chapel on
Thursday, May 1.
The qualities for the winner of the “Sun-
ny Jim” prize are: “that she be a good stu-
dent, who shows interest in her work, but
need not necessarily be in the upper half;
that she possess the qualities of courage,
cheerfulness, fair-mindedness, good sports-
manship; that her influence be widely f@t,
and that she have the courage to live up
to her own convictions and be respected
by all.” She is chosen by a committee ot
the president, the deans, the secretary and
registrar, the professor of English, a war-
den, and the retiring presidents of the
Self-government, Undergraduate and Ath-
letic Associations, guided by a secret bal-
lot from the Senior class.
This prize was won last year by Flor-
ence Martin, president of the Undergradu-
ate Association. Miss A. Stiles, warden. of
Merion Hall won it in 1919 and Miss Dill-
warden of Rockefeller Hall, in
1916.
The Sheelah Kilroy memorial scholar-
ship is awarded on the recommendation ot
the English department to the student who
does the best work in the advanced Eng-
lish courses. This prize was won last year
by R. Murray, 24. A second Sheelah Kil-
roy scholarship is awarded on the. recom-
mendation of the Department of English to
the student who does the best work in the
required English,courses. This went last
year. to E, Watts, ’25. @
A gold watch, the George W. Childs Ks-
say prize, gocs t6 the best writer in the
Senior class. This was won last year by
Be nee, aoe
The Brocke ‘Hall Scholarship,
the student holding the highest average at
the end of the first semestet of her Junior
year was held last year by V. Miller, ’24.
The scholarship was held in 1913 by Deag |
Bontecou.
The Charles H. Hinchman
scholarship, value $500, is awarded for ex-
cellence in one or more group subjects. It
was won last year by K. VanBibher, °24.
Given for excellence of work in science,
the Elizabeth S. Shippen scholarship was
won by V. Miller, ’24. The Elizabeth S.
Shippen scholarship in foreign languages is
awarded for excellence of work in foreign
languages. It was won last year by R.
Godefroy, ’24
All other” graduate and undergraduate
scholarships, with the exception of those
awarded to next year’s-entering F reshmen,
will be announced.
given to
Memorial
The Student Government Board at Vas-
sar has recently resigned, following the
lead of — their president, Anne Halliday.
According to Miss Halliday, this action
was taken in order to change the students’
irresponsible attitude toward student gov-
ernment. For some’ time there has béen
a small attendance at meetings and the
council has been unable to enforce a code
of rules for personal conduct passed some
years ago.
a
MARGARET STEWARDSON tS
ELECTED AS PRESIDENT OF C. A.
The sresident of the Christian ‘i
ciation for. the coming year will be Mar-
garet Stewardson, who was elected last
Monday to succeed Kathleen Gallwey.
Miss Stewardson was on the Editorial
Board of THE News and on the Chris-
tian Association Board her: Freshman
year. She was on.the Advisory Board
of the Self-Government Association
Sophomore year, and this year was
again the Christian Association
Board.
on
MR. ALWYNE TALKS ON CAM-
PAIGN FOR MUSIC ENDOWMENT
$400,000 Is Asked for to Provide
Adequately for Department
On Monday, April 7, Mr. Alwyne gave
a recital in the ballroom of the Colony
Club in New York for the benef&t of the
Bryn Mawr Music Endowment and_ for
the Auditorium of the Students’ Building.
The program was:
E, Bach
Chromatic Fantasie and Fugue
Prelude in B-flat minor
Bach-Busoni
Chorale Prelude:
uns die Stimme”
2. Brahms
Ballade in D minor (“Edward”)
Intermezzo in E flat (Scotch Cradle
Song) ;
Intermezzo in B flat minor
Khapsodie in E flat
G. lise
Sonnet of Petrarca No, 2°
Legende: “St. Francis preaching t«
the birds”
Ravel
Minuet
Debussy
Prelude in
4. Scriabin
Poeme
Sorodin
Serenade
Rachmaninow
Prelude in B minor
Kimsky-Korsakogh
Noveleite ~
After the recital Mr. Alwyne spoke at a
“Wachet aut, ruft
A minor
luncheon concerning the. campaign for the J
englowment which, according to the pro-
eram, is to provide :
“1, An Adequate Teaching Staff.
“2 Lecture Rooms and Practice Facili-
ties.
“3. A Music Library.
“4 An Auditorium to serve not only the
Department of Music but the whole
student hody.”
Next week Mr. Alwyne will
similar talk in Chicago at a luncheon by the
Chicago Committee of Alumnae.
The Advisory Committee for the whole
campaign consists of Mr. Frank Damrosch,
Mr. Walter Damrosch, Dr. Archibald T.
Davison, _Mr._.Robert W. deForest, Dr.
John H. “Finley, Mr.’ Ossip Gabrilovitch,
Judge Learned Hand, Madame- Loutse
Homer, Mr. Otto H. Kahn, Dr. Eugene A.
Noble, Mr. Franklin W. Robinson, Mr. Ed-
win T, Rive, Mr. Ernest Schelling, Dr. Leo-
pold Stokowski,’ Mr, Thomas Whitney
Surette, Miss Marion E. Park, Miss M.
Carey Thomas, Mr. Asa S. Wing.
give a
as next year’ s managing editor.
man year, ue
- to the Business- “Board. ate
DELIA SMITH, ’26, IS NEW MANAGING EDITOR
Tue News takes great pleasure in announcing the election of Delia Smith, '26,
Miss aa en has been on the hoard since her Fresh-
Margaret Boyden, 25, will take the lads of L. Beats, 24, as business and
advertising manager. ~ The iew circulating manager is M. Nagle, '25.
Wilbur, ’26; M. Cruikshank, ike Bowmen, 2. and J. hee ’27, have been elected
Elizabeth
SUMMER SCHOOL .OF 1924
TO HAVE ABLE STUDENTS
Alumnae in All Sections of the
Country Maintain Interest and
Support School
BENEFIT TO BE PLANNED
(Specially contributed-by Miss Hilda Smith,
director of the Bryn Mawr Summer
School for Women Workers in Industry.)
The sélection of the new students for
the School at the meeting of the Admis-
sions Committee last week, makes the sum-
‘mer. term. seem very near. Although 120
students were. chosen, it is the expectation
of the Committee that as in previous years,
at least fifteen of the candidates will have
2.
to“ withdraw before the School actually
opens. The fact that each local committee
this year has emphasized the question of
preparatory classes for each applicant
should mean that the group of students this
summer will be able to make the change
from factory work te school classes more
promptly and without: the severe strain of
adjustment which has meant in the past a
delay in work and much nervous anxiety.
In order to, hasten this adjustment and
simplify if possible the very difficult prob-
lem of grouping the students for class
work and tutoring sections, the first week
of the school term this year pill be re-
garded as a registration period. Although
class work will begin promptly as usual,
the various sections in each department
will discuss the same material during the
first week, so that at the end of this time
a final groping of the students may be
made, on the basis of psychological tests,
silent reading tests, and personal interviews.
The curriculum this summer will’ include
as before, required courses in Economics,
and English Composition, with electives in
History, Lijerature, Science and Music,
For second fear students, a course in Psy-
chology andf work in more advanced eco-
i iWbe offered. Fourteen “of these
ar students will -be included. in
group this summer, an encouraging
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
the
COMPLETE CAST OF GREEN
PERFORMERS ANNOUNCED
cement pn
Tumblers, Fools, Mcrris / Dancers,
. Sweeps, Milk Maid Chosen
Characters and parts ‘on the Green for
May Day have been assigned as follows:
agri Dancers—M.. Faries, ’24; F. Begg;
eS Bensberg, ‘24; K. Gallwey, 24: Vis
bots r 247 S, Leewitx; arson,
24° HA. “Hough, ’25;""'H: Corals ‘ao
W.-Dunn, ’25; F. Jay, ’26; V. Cooke, ’26;
B. Jeffries, G. Leewitz, ’26; M. Spalding,
126+ E-—Scott,—’27;...M.-Leary, 27; —H.
Stokes, 27; MC ruikshank,27,-and_A.
Mathews, ’27.
William Kemp—M. Buchanan, ’24.
Heralds—-A. Bingeman, ’24; M. Slaughter,
27: D. Kellogg, ’27; E. MAllspaugh, ’26;
“dl Tweddell, ’26; E. Hess, ’26; V. Nor-.
, 26, and A. Wilt, ’26.
tort Dancers—Men—F. Waite, ’26;
M. Parker, ’26; E. Qijier, ’27; C. Cham-
ber's;:’27:°C. Cone: ‘25: -C. Platt; -’27+-E.
Sullivan, ‘26; V. Capron, '27; D. Hole,
'27, ‘and E. Bradley, ’25. Women—H.-
McVicker, ’26; E. Winchester, '27; A.
. Speed, ’27; E. Newbegin, ’27; C. Jones,
'27; E. Bostock, '26; U. Squier, ’27; D.
H. Pierce, '27; E. varies, "27, and M.
Weaver, '26..
~~ CoNTINUED ON PAGE 6
.
we
~ Subscriptions, $2.50
“concerning them.”
THE COLL
EX
EGE NEWS. »
The College “News
[Founded in 1914.]
Published weekly during. the college year in the
interest'of Bryn Mawr College
Managing Editor....... Frericrk Beco, ’24
EDITORS eae
H. Grayson, ’25
C: Cummines, '25
E. Giessner, ’25
Dexia Situ, '26
ASSISTANT EDITORS
3 TomPkKINs, ’26
J. Logs, ’26
. S1monps, 507
.M. Leary, '27
BUSINESS BOARD . .
Manacer—Louise Howitz, 24
MARGARET SMITH, ’24
"te
ASSISTANTS
MArGareT Boyben, ’25 ELIZABETH, Tyson, ’26
Marion. Bacsz, 25
cl may heii at any time
i cweesiind Price; $3.00
Entered as second class matter, September 26, 1914,
at the post office at Bryn Mawr, Pa., under
the Act of March. 3, 1889.
Beene eee a,
- BRYN MAWR TO WARSAW
One chorus and one refrain are continu-
“Broaden your in-
of world affairs!
ally being sung to us:
terests! Heep track
Form intelligent and personal opinions
There is probably not
one member of this college who, admitting
the necessity. for such urging; does not
heartily approve it, One would expect the
feeling of a representative institution to
“be prevalent beyond its limits and, dealing
with proportionately greater outside in-
terests, to include the whole country. But,
prompted by political. expediency, many
‘urge national isolation. Others maintain
that co-operation with foreign: countries in
the solution of world problems is a duty
that will lead to greater national welfare
because it will be founded on more general,
comprehensive, therefore , stronger
principles.
The matter touches us as a college very
and
nearly when we are faced by an oppor-
tunity Much as that offered by the Con-
fédération Internationale des Etudiants.
Should we join this league whose motive
is international understanding through stu-
dent intercourse, we «would become a link
in the chain that leads from united insti-
tutions to the country itself, thence through
a connection with similar foreign institu-
tions, to an intertiational league of greater
significance.
The advocates of such an international
league would approve this link as an un-
questionable step toward a greater end;
‘while its opponents could not quarrel with
an association that defines itself as based
on personal intercourse and as strictly inde-
pendent of political concerns.
PROGRESS?
Before the last war we, prided ourselves
on our civilization; we beamed compla-
cently at our advancement and progress
over our barbarous ancestors who indulged
“in fighting. On our entrance into the
Great War our ideas were temporarily up-
had previously professed. We comforted
ourselves by propping up our shaking illu-
sions with the earnest assurance that “this
‘is a war to end war.” Yet those who now
_ publicly announce themselves against fight-
ing. earn little but. criticism. The eighty-
eight students: from the Northwestern Uni-
_yersity and’ the Garrett Biblical Institute
affiliated with it, who have declared their
: ness to participate in another war,
‘have brought a storm of abuse upon their
the proposed domination:
for defense, reads like a fairy tale.
set, We. were bewildered. just how_to}.
reconcile our stand with the principles we
the Peoples of 1 the world toward independ-
students, inflamed with patriotic rage,
caused a riot at a meeting of those against
war, addressed by Mr. John Fletcher, of
the English Society of Friends. Are our
sympathies to be Sieh these zg@glous young
reactionaries, who seemingly B isi believe
in free speech, or shall we support those
against war, agreeing with the article in
the Nation, which ‘says in telling of the
enormous amounts spent in armament, “If
appropriations are further to be cut, public
sentiment will have to bring it about, and
it is high time that it’ expressed itself”?
A STUDENT INSURGENT
To us, whose chief pre-occupations are
perhaps an unexpected quiz or an equally
unex xpected cut; it is almost impossible to
conceive of conditions. in Peru, where stu-
dents, led by.an almost superhuman person,
Haya dela Torre, rebelled against domina-
tion by the Chureh in its determination to
cénsecrate’ the country to “The Sacred
Heart of Jesus.” De'La Torre, a man of
barely oyer Uniwersity age, has been feach-
ing in the schools of Peru and was inflamed
to organize the students as a protest against
There was ac-
with De la
Torre speaking in public places, though a
tual rioting and blood-shed,
warrant was out for him. His hair-breath
escapes, by swimming rivers and barricad-
ing himself with other students in the uni-
itself, with laboratory explosives
The
general strike of the students was. success-
versity
ful in-that the government gave up their
plans, but Haya was too dangerous to be
left at large. He was deported, without
money or extra clothing to Germany, but
Here his
and he foynd
managed to disembark ‘at Colon.
fame had preceded him,
offers from the student ‘federation of Cuba,
and_the Minister of Education of Mexico
to help their educational projects. He was
elected honorary president of the Cuban
Student Federation, and started the found
ing of a popular university—all in the time
that it takes to tell of it, practically, and
then went to accept the position of liason
officer between Mexico and the other Latin-
American student bodies. A recent revolu-
tion in Mexico, has disrupted this, for, al-
though it has been suppressed, the govern-
ment is bankrupt and it is not known what
The
fate of such an aggressive and interesting
will happen in the coming elections.
personality cannot but be watched with
great interest by all students.
*BYRON AND GREEK FREEDOM
Tt is fitting that the month which marks
the centenary of Byron’s death at Misso-
longhi should mark also the resurrection
of the republic of Greece, the latest achieve-
ment of that love of liberty for which he
laid down his life. Lord Byron is, in point
of fact, less memorable to us fof his poetfy
than for the manner of his passing. He
gave his own blood to cement the structure4
of sympathy with the Greek struggle which
he had long striven to rear. With a ges-
ture, the greatest and most gallant it is
granted a man to make, he aroused the
conscience of Europe from a slumber al-
ready uneasy and won for his chosen coun-
try the intervention which gave her free-
dom when hope had nearly failed her. ;
That his sacrifice was not in vain, that
the cause of human liberty which he cham-
pioned lives after him, has been proven
and proven again by the steady march of | _
SE ie Sacha
(Edors do not hold. themselves respon-
sible for opinions expressed in this column.)
To the Editor of Tue Coutece News:
This year, under the auspices of the
Christian Association, we have had a
chance to estimate the value of discugsion
groups as a means “for developing gur
initiative in thinking fo® ourselves.. We
have talked at length with Dr.. Fitch, Mr.
Fearne, Mr. Simpson and various Sunday
evening speakers, and haye often been so
confused with the successive interpreta-
tions of different points of view, that the
discussion groups, as. a whole, - have ~not
been quite as satisfactory as’we had hoped.
Many have found that they are too apt to
be swayed-by the last speaker, because of
their, inability to assemble the ideas which
they have thought out in connection with
previous speakers. ;
As a partial solutior to this problem
whieh the discussion groups have created,
the ‘Christian Association Board suggests
the following plan, and hopes that members
of the Association will express their opin-
ions regarding it, to next year’s Board:
That the week-end conference be led by
two or three persons representing very
different points’ of view on whatever sub-
ject be chosen for thé conference. Each
leader should have a chance to present his
Lopinions, and then there should be general
debate in which both students and leaders
should take part. (We do not believe this
would turn into an argument between the
leaders alone.) In this way we should be
arguments, and to form ideas, and per-
haps reach conclusions, in the presence of
many more facts than formerly.
As an example: there seem tobe, at
present, two types of people who are think-
ing and working for. the betterment gf all
social conditions ; those who work through
groups and institutions, -and who believe |
that by changing conditions, people will
improve; and those who believe that the
individual should first be made stronger,
and“ that conditions, customs and _ institu-
tions will, of necessity, follow suit. The
first. type of person is sometimes repre-
sented by the “intellectuals,” those inter-
ested in economics, workers education, and
the Labor Movement; the second type, by
ministers and people who are engaged in
religious work. + '
With leaders representing some such
types of. thought as these, the members of
the Christian Association might discover
that they have common ‘grounds for dis-
cussion in spite of the difference in point
of view.
EvizABetH HALE, ’24.
CONFERENCE TO BE AT EAGLES-
MERE INSTEAD OF SILVER BAY
A Bryn Mawr delegation will attend the
Y. W. C. A. Conference at Eaglesmere
this summer instead of Silver Bay. The
two conferences are of the same general
character.
The. following people have all been to
Silver Bay and can tell anyone interested
about it:
M. Tyler ’22, G. Carson ’23, L. Sanford
'24, O. Fountain ’24, M. Smith ’24, R. Mur-
ray ’24, F. Begg ’24, H. D. Potts ’25, M.
Buchanan ’24, E. Bradley ’25, E. Hinkley
25, A. Parmelee ’26, R. McAneny ’23, M.
L. White ’24, A. Bingeman ’24, A. Clement
23, M. Stewardson ’25, T. Fugita ’25, S.
Carey ’25, E. Boross ’25, E. Evans ’25; E.
Lawrence ’25, B. Tuttle 24, E. Hess ’26, E.
Rhoads ’23, E. Hale ’24, H. Walker ’24, E.
‘Smith ’25, D. Shipley ’25, K. Nielson '24,
H. Henshaw ’25, H. Hough ’25, M. Rodney
24, M. Nagle ’24, S. Wood ’24, M. Gard-
iner ‘25.
CHAPEL SPEAKER ANNOUNCED
The~ Reverend Harold Cook, Phillips,
pastor of the First Baptist Church, Mount,
Vernon, New York, will speak in chapel,
next Sunday evening. Mr. Phillips has
led “ehapel here before.
De. i. P. Jacks, Principal of aaandoester
‘College, Oxford, since 1915, and Professor
| of Philosophy at Manchester College since
plas Mseecass
better able to keep track of conflicting:
INTERCOLLEGIATE SPEAKERS
BUREAU IS PLANNED
Speakers on Economic’ and Sociologic
Tcpics to Be Available ~
Plans for an Intercollegiate Speakers’:
Bureau, through which it. will be possible
for undergraduate organizations to secure
speakers for all their meetings with little
effort and at low cost, are being devised by
a committee representing four different col-
leges and universities.
The Bureau will probably cofifine its
efforts to the field of economic and soci-
ologic topics for the first year of its exis-
tence. Prominent speakerse and leadérs
representing all parties and all schools of
thought will be available through the Bu-
reau. ‘These men will be furnished at un-—
usually low figures, transportation being
the only charge in many cases, as the Bu-
reau will be conducted on a co-dperative
basis. :
t—Fhe Bureau will be definitely formed at
a conference of delegates from colleges in-
terested in the project, which will be held
at the Student Forum Headquarters, 2929
Broadway, New York City, on Saturday,
April 26. The committee has issued an |
open invitation to all organizations who
might userthis bureau to send delegates to
this conference.
The committee which is working on plans
for the bureau consists of W. R. Sassa-
man, Haverford College, Chairman; Mar-
jorie Marston, Vassar College; Bernice
Sanford, Barnard; William Fink, Colum;
bia University and Raymond Sanford,
Union Theological Seminary.
BATES HOUSE TO OPEN
DAY AFTER COMMENCEMENT
_ CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
running expenses for the two months. — It
now remains to get a sufficient number of
volunteer workers” and all should ~~ run
smoothly,
This summer Bates is to open on Friday,
June 6, the day after commencement exer-
cises. The first week is to be clean-up
week. In this time the house will be
cleaned and swept, curtains put up and the
rooms: made ready for the first group of
children who come on June 16. These are
the Kindergarten children ranging from
six to eight years of age. The children
come in groups of forty, each group stay-
ing for two weeks. The next group will
be half nursery, aged three to five, and half
six to eight year children. The last. group
coming from July 16 to August 31, will be
nine to twelve year old children, but this
year no boys over ten and no girls over
twelve are coming, which considerably
simplifies the problem of disciplining the
older children.
Everyone who is able to go to Bates
House this summer is urged to sign up.
For the more workers there the less work
for each individual worker. A few peo-
ple have misunderstood about volunteer
work at Bates House and thought that
some kindergarten or .child training was
necessary. But this is not so. Anyone
who wants: to go to Bates House is priv-
‘ileged to sign up. Workers are urged to
go for two weeks if possible, as this en-
--ables them-to-get to-know-the-children,-and-
gives the children time to know: theri
Those who only stay a week or less
scarcely get acquainted with the individual
children and the daily routine before they
leave, and so miss half the pleasure whi
Bates House can afford. a
r .A slip is pogted in Taylor Hall on the
Christian Association Bulletin Board. Vol-
unteers are asked to sign as soon as pos-
sible. For further information, see M. |
Faries, Radnor ae ae e
Rooms will be available during the sum-_
mer months to women visiting Wisco
at the Madison Branch of the Assoc
of University. Women.
&
Vol. X., No. 23. April 23, 1924.
.
a oe
me .
THE .COLLEGE. NEWS
UNDERGRADUATE MEETING
'_ @HANGES ELECTION RULES
Voting to Be in Halls After Three
Unsuccessful Ballots at a Meeting
“The election rules of the Undergraduate
Association were changed at a meeting last
Wednesday to provide for voting in the
halls after a meeting of the Association,
at which three ballots have been cast with-
out securing:the required majority for any
one candidate to be elected to the office in
question.
The motion that Article VI, Section la,
of the.election rules of the Undergraduate
Association, which reads, “If after the vote
has been taken for the third. time at one
meeting no candidate has received the re-
quired plurality of twenty, the vote shall
be retaken_at-a-subsequent-meeting not less
than two days later until one of the candi-
dates receives théggrequired plurality,” be
amended to read, “If after the vote has
been taken for the third time at one meet-
ing no candidate receives the required
plurality of twenty, the.voting shall be con-
tinued in the halls not more than two days
later, until one of the candidates receives
the required plurality,’ was carried. .
«
ALL FOUR CLASSES TO HAVE MAY-
POLES ON LITTLE MAYDAY
The question of abolishing May-poles for
the three lower classes on Little Mayday,
was discussed at a mass meeting of the
Graduates and Undergraduates on Wednes-
day, April 16.
The question had previously been con-
sidered by each class separately. E. Requa,
'24, President of the Undergraduate Asso-
ciation, reported that the Graduates had
said that they did not care whether they
had a Maypole or not, that the Juniors did
not wish to have one; that the Sophomores
voted to keep theirs, while the the Fresh-
men had voted to do as the Senior class
wanted. -<
The motion that the three lower classes
should keep their May-poles was voted upon
by the classes in question and_carried.
NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
Lehigh
The old claim that “this hurts me as
much as it does you” has been applied to
education-by Lehigh University professors
who have inaugurated methods inténded to
eliminate the necessity of giving “zeros”
for recitations. An investigation into the
causes of poor préparation for recitations
by apparently conscientious students ~ has
convinced the faculty that in many cases,
“students are conscious that the methods
they employ in studying and their habits
of work and attention are not satisfactory
to themselves and*do not secure the results
which they desire.’ In an announcement
posted recently the Lehigh faculty “ap-
proves the action of the Department of
Psychology and Education in setting apart
hours when students may consult with
members of that department in regard to
methods of study and habits of -work.”
Dartmouth
_ The Dartmouth Educational Committee
is. very obviously not an honorary body
created to let students think they are hav-
ing a hand in their education. The men
on it are taking the thing quite seriously
and-have commenced.their work. “Eleven
_’ members of the undergraduate committee
for the discussion of educational problems
left Hanover to visit various eastern col-
leges” reports The Dartmouth. “Groups
have been sent to Yale, Princeton, Swarth-
more, Cornell, Columbia, C. C. N. Y., and
Barnard, and a group will visit Harvard at
the end of their vacation. The purpose of |:
these trips is to discuss and exchange ideas
with the officers of the institutions visited,
and more especially with undergraduates
who are interested in these problems.
j University of Michigan
The University of Michigan is probably
the first college to adopt the unique plan of
distributing no grades. This system arises
from a desire that students pay less atten-
tion to subjects treated in the course. It
was passed at a meeting of the faculty of
the School of Law, and. will take effect
immediately in that school: By ‘the new
plan, unless a failure is recorded, studen®
ceived in any particular course. They will
will not knoW what: grades they have re-
be.informed only of the number of hours
of each grade which they received during
the semester.
University of Chicago
' The faculty of the University of Chicago
took alarm recently by,, discovery that a
corporation had sent circulars to thousands
of students offering to do their thinking.
All students must write term papers in
their courses and theses in the studies in
which they specialize before receiving de-J
grees. The term papers and theses are, of
course, the big things in the work of under-
graduates-and~aré~supposed to be resiilts
of individual research,
“Give us your subject and $10—we'll do
the rest,” says the corporation.
“We relieve you of all annoying detail.
Just tell us the subject, the length of the
. CONTINUED ON .PAGE 5
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Se
THE COLLEGE NEWS
IN THE NEW BOOK, ROOM
Tatterdemalion; John Galsworthy.
This collection of stories published in
1920 and reflecting the’ war in tone and
subject, depend for what effectiveness they
may have on a keen sense of pathos. Apart
from this they present no characteristic
that arrests the attention, but in general
wind themselves out at length and give the
impression of having been written in spite
of themselves, They lack trenchancy and
terseness. To avoid an effect of monotony
and to give them what appreciation“'s due
them, one should read the stories sep-
arately. — d
Best Short Stories of 1923; and the Year
Book of the American Short Story, edited
By Edward J. O’Brien. ‘
In his. introduction Mr. O’Brien longs
for “a little less tension and ,earnestness in
our (American) short stories and a little
more ease.” He suspects our sense of
. strain of being “chiefly machinery for ma-
chinery’s sake. .. . Why cannot we culti-
vate the loafabilities a bit more, . .. and
stop striking attitudes? The American
short-story Avriter is so _ self-conscious
about structure and so stiff in his mental
attitude towards his gospel that his reader
can seldom relax.» <
In this collection the editor has set him-
self the task of disengaging the essential
numan qualities in our contemporary fic-
tion which, when chronicled conscientiously
by our literary artists, may fairly be called
a criticism of life.”
The present record covers the period
from October, 1922, to September, 1923, in-
clusive. “In this period,” says Mr..O’Brien,
“I have sought to select from the stpries
published in American magazines those
which have rendered life imaginatively in
organic substance and artistic form. Sub-
stance is something achieved by the artist
in every act of creation rather than some-
thing already present; therefore, a fact or
group of facts in a story can only attain
substantial embodiment when the artist’s
power of compelling imaginative persuasion
transforms them into a living truth. The
first step in a short story, therefore; is to
report upon how vitally compelling the
writer makes his selected facts or incidents
This may be called the test of substance.
“But a second test is. necessary if the
story is to take rank above other stories.
The true artist will seck to shape this liv-
ing substance into the most beautiful and
satisfying form by skilful selection and
arrangement of his materials and by the
most direct and appealing presentation of
it in portrayal and characterization.”
Among the writers represented in this
collection are Sherwood Anderson, Irvin
S. Cobb, Theodore Dreiser, Edna_ Ferber,
Fannie Hurst, Jean’Toomer, Mary Heaton
Vorse, and "Harry Leon Wilson.
' Marcel Proust, an English Tribute; col-
lected by C. K. Scott Moncrieff.
The translator of Du Coté de chez Swann
has gathered together “‘a body of critical
opinion similar to that which was collected
by the editor of La Nouvelle Revue Fran-
caisg.” Mr. Moncrieff found willing con-
tributors in nearly all the writers and crit-
ics™he approached exceptikg, he admits, in
George Moore, who “expressed inability to
stomach Proust.” On the other hand,
Joseph Conrad, Arnold Bennett, Arthur
Symons, Clive Bell, George Saintsbury, L.
Pearsall Smith, A. B. Walkley, J. Middle-
'“No Englishman .. .
‘ton Merry, S. S. Street, and Francis Birrel
are among the writers who contributed to
this book,
To Mr. Joseph. Conrad the distinction of
Proust lies in the fact that his creative
power is exclusively based on an unparal-
leled power of analysis. “He is a writer
who has pushed analysis to the point where
it becomes creative,” eliminating the need
of description. “To take an example from
each end of the scale: - Francoise, the de-
voted servant and the Baron de Charlus, a
consunimate portrait, how many descriptive
lines have they got to themselves in the
whole body of that immense work? Per-
haps, counting the lines, half a page each.
And yet no intelligent person can doubt
for a moment their plastic and colored
existence. . . . The intellectual pleasure
never flags, because one has the feeling
that the last word is being said upon a
subject studied, much written -about, and of
human interest—the last word of its time.”
The admiration of Mr. Arnold Bennet
is more qualified. He finds “the. ongueurs
of-Du Coté de chez Swann insupportable ;
the clumsy centipedalian; crawling of the
interminable sentences inexcusable. The
lack ‘of form or construgtion may disclose
artlessness, but it signifies effrontery, too.”
But he considers Proust a master at the
freatment of “the minutiae of social man-
ners, the rendering ridiculous of a million
varieties. of snob. Happily he does not con-
ceal that, with the rest of mankind, he
loves ancient blood and distinguished con-
nections.”
Mr. Clive Bell concludes of Proust that
he -has a power of realizing - character
shared only by Shakespeare. Says Mr.
Bell: “If the Faubourg above all things
fascinated Proust, that, I suspect, was be-
cause in it Proust saw a subject proper
only to the touch of a master psychologist.
... ‘Society,’ he saw, is a hierarchy with-
out official grades or badges. .,. It re-
sembles a public school or small college.
It is a microcosm in which people are
moved up and down, in and out, by mis-
terious and insensible powers; in which
they are promoted or degraded by a breath
of fashion blowing they know not whence.
Powers these, none of which they them-
selves can apprehend, but of which some
‘can be surprised by sensibilities, in their
way as delicate and subtle as those which
know when a lady changes her sachets and
can distinguish between the bouquet of
Léoville and Larose.
“One word more,” continues Mr, Bell,
writing in English,
would be allowed to publish in England so
complete a picttire of life... . Today our
subtlest and most active “minds, affected it
may be consciously or unconsciously by
modern psychological discoveries, are con-
cerned, so far as they are concerned with
life at all, with certain aspects of jt, with
certain relations, of which they’ may not
treat freely. . .. Proust moves in a.world
unknown almost to the intellectual slums,
or to those intellectual lower middle classes
from which are drawn so many .of our
magistrates, judges and legislators.”
According to Mr. Saintsbury, Proust
blends the qualities of Stendhal and De
Quincey. Of the former he has the analyt-
ical and introspective power, and relieves it
from any sense of aridity with the dream
quality of the latter. !
John C.
Winston Co.
Printers
and Publishers
SCHOOL, CHURCH,
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PRINTING OF THE HIGHEST POSSIBLE GRADE
Manufacturers of Books and Bibles
te]
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For fult information apply-to—
Student Third-Class Ass'n |
Student Travel Bureau
111 College St., New Haven, Conn.
a
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- When classes are over
—see Europe!
1S summer in Europe! The Olympic
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Ts ore ee
1319 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA
or Any Authorized Steamship Agency
AMERICAN LINE
THE COLLEGE NEWS
-Whiffers=B.~ Voorhees,
~ Fools—G. Macy,-
SUMMER SCHOOL OF~ 1924
TO HAVE ABLE STUDENTS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
* addition to the six or seven of each previ-
&
ous year.
’ As before, Merion and Denbigh Halls
will be used for the School, witha wing
of Pembroke East for instructors. Den-
bigh will be used for dining room space
for the whole School, ‘as this proved a
fairly practical plan last year, and saved
the expense of operating two kitchens.
Each mail brings interesting news from
every section of the country as to the char-
acter and ability of our new students, and
of the loyal support of Summer School f
Alumnae. Two former students of ‘the
School working in a southern mill town,
have interested. ten workers in their fac-
tory in an economics class which has met
all winter. In addition. each member’ of
the class has pledged herself to raise ten
dollars toward the scholarship find, and
has succeeded in doing this by selling candy
and: cake. From this small group a check
for $100, which came in the other day, has
proved a welcome addition to our treasury.
The former students in the Philadelphia
district have arranged with the Dramatic
Club of the University of Pennsylvania for
a benefit performance of the play “R. Uz
R.” to be given at the Little Theatre on,
the evening of May 5. If the theatre seats
are all sold, the Summer School students
will seqre an entire scholarship of $200.
Eight industrial workers fron’ Wisconsin
will probably be admitted to summer
courses at the University of Wisconstimthis
year, carrying on their work in a special
group with a number of tutors.
in this country from Australia tells of
plans under way for a similar school for
industrial workers, under the auspices of
the intercollegiate organization of Alum-
nae, this prospective school inspired by
the Bryn Mawr School, of which they have
been receiving reports for three years and
to be modeled on the Bryn Mawr plan.
COMPLETE CAST OF GREEN
PERFORMERS ANNOUNCED
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
Marshals—K. Harris, 27; M. Martin, grad-
uate; B. Hall, graduate; J. Luden, 27,
and E. Henderson, ’24.
1253--H. hacici
graduate, and E. Woolley, ’27.
Maypole Dancers—F. Christie, 27; L. An-
drews, ’26; R. Fitzgerald, ’26; E. Morris,
'27; D. Shipley, ’25; L. Adams, ’26; B.
Taylor, '26; R. Winthrop, ’25; L. Norton,
27; D. Sherman, ’27; A. Bryan, '26, and
L. Smith, ’26. :
Milk Maids and Men—Head Milk Maid—
J. Stockholm, graduate. Men—M. Tat-
nall, ’26; D. Meeker, ’27; R. Allen, 24;
--§, Pinkerton, ’27; L. Austin, ’27; M.
Kennedy, 27; E. Musselman, ’26;K-.
Simonds, ’27; K: Tomkins, ’26, and E.
Evans, '25. Maids—H. Fitz, ’27; F.
Briggs, '25; E. Cushman, ’26; H. Parker,
27. J. Preston, ’26;E.. Porter, 26; F.
Day, ’27; M. Pierce, ’26; S. Jay, ’27, and
E. Apple.
- Boy and Girl Maypole Dance—E. Stilz, '26;
K. Gessner, ’25; B. D. Deeneen, ’27; A.
D. Ames, ’27; M. Hall, ’27; R. Miller,
27; N. Longfellow, ’27; P. Sharp, ’24;
N. Roberts, ’25; D. Litchfield, ’24; F.
Henderson, ’26; L. Shoe, ’27; A. Rogers,
26; E. Young, ’26; E. Haines, ’27, and
-E. Crowell, ’24. .
26; B.- Pitney, 197: K.
Adams, ’27; J. Seeley, ’27, and B. Sindall,
"26. :
Tumblers—S. Malate: 25; E, Harris,
- '26; J. Hollister, ’27; H. Rodgers, 26; O:
- Fountain, ’24; M. Blumenstock, ’25; M.
~'V. Smith, °24; H. Coolidge, '26; K. Van-
Bibber, "24; S. Archbald, '23, and T.
Fujita, ’25.
Beef Eaters—M. Ryan, graduate ; E. Bald-
_ win, "255. “K. Muckenhaupt, ’26; D.
- O'Shea, '26; L. Guggenbuhl, graduate, and |
is — PLay
A visitor | ~
Music Man—M. Wyckoff, ’27.
Blue Breeches—P; Dodge, ’2Z,
Pepper Rreeches—J. Schoonover, ’25.
Ginger Breeches—E. Parker, ’27.
Piekled Herring—L. Blair, ’27. »
Allspice—Y. Bonnel, ’25. ;
Worm—E. Norton,’ 27.
‘Gicely—E. ‘Lippincott, eg
Hobby Horse—M. Huber, ’26.
Strolling Singers—B. Murray, ’24; P. Fans-
ler, '24; M. Steele, graduate; H. Ald-
croft, ’27, and K. Raht, '23.
GREEN CHARACTERS
Mistress—D. Lee, ’25.
Town Crier—E. Howe, ’24.
Watchman—Miss C.-M. K. Applebee. *
Attendants on Mistress—P. Wright, Model
Schodl), E. A. Waples (Model School),
B. Paxson (model school), and E. Clay
(Model School). ‘
Hobby Horses—M. Hamrhond, '24, and N.
Dupont, ’25:
Man—FE. Harrison, ’20.
Beqree> 285-4
Jester—K. Adams. ‘Zhi
Old Women—J. Homer, ’26; E. Burroughs,
’26, R, Morton, ’26,-and F, Rosenkoff, ’24.
Chimney, Sweeps—S. Carey, . ’25;-G,. Rich-
man, “27; D. Irwin, ’27; J. Wiles, 26; E.
Gibson, ’27; E. Wilson, ’25; L. Greene,
'27;.J. Hendrick, ’27; D. Smith, ’26; E.
Robbins, ’24; E. Hampton, ’25; E. Clinch,
’26; E. Tyson, ’26; M. L. Jones, ’27; A.
Pearce, ’27; E. Chamberlaine, ’27; H.
Klopfer, ’27; E. Jennett, 727; M. Chester,
’27, and G. Batchelder, ’27. ~
Revellers and Pedlars—W. Dodd, '26; H.
Jennings, ’22, M. D. Hausel, ’27; M.
Compton, ’24; K. Kalbfleisch, '24; C.
Elliott, ’26; E. Stubbs, ’26; M. Holcombe,
274 M. Lewis, ’27, and.C. Hinton, 26.
IN PHILADELPHIA
: Music
Academy of Music: Philadelphia Or-
lchestra. Program for. Friday, April 25,
at 2.30, and Saturday at 8.15:
Pe Symphony in D minor
. Lento: Allegro non tropo
A Allegretto j ¥
3. Allegro non tropo
Sibelius, Tone Poem, “Finlandia”
Rimsky-Korsakow, Symphonic” Suite,
“Scheherazade” |
1. The Sea and the Vessel of Sinbad.
2. The Tale of thé Prince: Kalender.
3. The Young Prince and the Young
Princess. tO
4. Feast at- Bagdad. The Sea. The
Vessel is wrecked of a rock on
which is mounted a warrior of brass.
Conclusion.
4
: Theaters *%
' Adelphi:
‘Jane Cowl in “Romeo and
Juliet.” :
Garrick: “Keep Kool” with. Hazel
Dawn.
Lyric: “Sally, Irene and Mary.”
Walnut: Bertha Kalich in ‘The
Kreutzer*Sonata.”
' Moving Pictures
Chestnut Street Opera House: D. W.
Griffith’s “America.”
Forrest: Beginning binds: evening:
Douglas. Fairbanks in “The Thief of
Bagdad.”
Karlton: “A Lady of Quality” with
Virginia Valli and Milton Sills.
Stanley: Thomas Meighan in “The
Confidence Man.” :
Stanton: Pola Negri in “Shadows of
Paris.”
e
NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES
» 8
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3
article required and credit you will receive -
for it. Our work is satisfactory. Many
professors have complimented. our clients
on the masterly way they write. We in-
tend no insult, but’ believe our work will
-probablyreceive. better consideration than .
your own.” : »
es Hood College ’
The “Father and Daughter” baseball
game is going to be featured as the event
on May Day morning at Hood College.
Cléaners and Dyers De Luxe.
THE MAIN LINE VALET SHOP
Bernard McRory, Proprietor
2nd Floor, opposite Pos: Office, Bryn Mawr
Valet Service by Practical Ten Per Cent Discount
or Se Pallons All School and College
Positively No Machine Dp .. Work '
Pressing : Pleating and Hemstitching
Ladies’ Riding Suits to Measure, $40.00 and Up
\
>.
YY Yh Yj Wy Y ff Yj
f ae! WY fj Y
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Wy
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Hf);
EDMUND HALLEY
1656-1742
Son of a London soap-boiler
who became Astronomer-
Royal. At the age of 20 headed
an expedition to chart the stars
of the Southern hemisphere.
Financéd and handled the
printing of Newton’s immortal
Principia.
bei)
2 As spectacular as a
comet has been the
world’s electrical devel-
opment, By continuous
scientific research the
General Electric Com-
pany has accelerated.
é this development and
has te ied a leader in
~K. Hendrick, 26; H. Herrman, |
The comet came back
The great comet that was seen by William
of Normandy returned to our skies in 1910
on its eleventh visit since the Conquest.
Astronomers knew when it would appear,
and the exact spot in the sky where it
would first be visible.
Edmund Halley’ s mathematical calctila-
tion of the great orbit of this 76-year vis-
itor—his scientific proof that comets are
part of our solar. system—was a brilliant
application of the then unpublished Prin- —
cipia of his friend Sir Isaac Newton.
The laws of motion that Newton nits
Halley proved to govern the movements
of a comet are used by scientists in the
Research Laboratories of the Géneral Elec-
tric Company to determine the orbit of
electrons in vacuum call
College news, April 23, 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)
1924-04-23
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 10, No. 23
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-no23