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Association pledge, was changed.
’ association
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Me
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ey XI. No. 22
“er
WAYNE ‘AND BRYN ‘MAWR, “PA, W ¥ DN ESD: AY; APRIL 15, 1925
Price 10 Cents_
C. A. BOARD FOR NEXT
_ YEAR IS ELECTED
President's Report re ‘Aim of:
C. A. is to Give Opportunities _
for Working Out Religion
POLICY IS MADE MORE DEFINITE
Elections of members to the C. A.
Board for next year were held on Tues-
day and Wednesday of last week.
Senior.-members-—-G.—Thomas—and E i
*
Musselman, °26.
er members—C. Platt and B. Pit-
ney, ’2
ss als octal Crosby, 28:
Seca Young, ’28.
Before giving over the chair to W.
Dodd, ’26, M. Stewardson, ’25, the retir-
ing President, read her report. :
“In the spring of 1923 the Christian
The
Association felt that a pledge based on a
definite belief was not suited to the Col-
lege and the present pledge was adopted
which reads, as you know: ‘The aim of
the association is to unite its members in
thought and Christian work. Each mem-
ber pledges herself to live after the exam-
ple of Christ as she understands it.’
“When the board was elected last year
it took office not knowing what its policy
should be or how to interpret the pledge.
Cc. A. was rather vague and undefined as
a result of the changes of the year be-
fore. During last year the policy of the
board was simply to be as broad and in-
clusive as possible. This was obviously
too vague to mean much, and the new
board—finally-realizedthat-C. A. must
have a definite purpose and a definite
policy. .
“During this year the board and cabi-
net have been trying to work out a policy
which would .be both inclusive and defi-
nite. The policy which they adopted was
a simple one.
members are
religion in its theoretical and practical as-
pects, but that the majority are not sure
of their own beliefs. Therefore its policy
is to present to its members as many
“Opportunities” as possible for finding out
and thinking about various aspects of re-
ligion-so that they may be more able to
find their. own. The board has tried to
work this out through speakers, discus-
religious (services and practical
work. , -
“The board feels that it has failed by
not co-ordinating the work of the com-
mittees one with another, and not coms
ing sooner to a realizatiun of the function
of the association so that they might have
been more consistent, especially with re-
gard to outside speakers, The board feels
that the past two years have been a tran-
sitional period. It feels that it has at last
come to an understanding of the place and
aim of the association and. by so com-
pleting and summarizing its work that the
new board can go straight on and build
up concretely, .
“While it is impossible for the board to
have any other policy than simply to stim-
Sc sy Scere
They assume that all*the}-
interested in]:
GOSSIP, MALICE AND INTRIGUE
ENLIVEN “SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL”
First Vareity Dramatics Sxsiorlanet
to be 18th Century Play
“Bumpers, you rogues, bumpers,” cries
a spisited and slightly tipsy Charles Sur-
face, toasting his ladylove at an exceed-
ingly jolly banquet. His rollicking
joviality dominates ond’ of the most spir-
ited scenes in “A School.for Scandal,”
the Varsity Dramatics play to be given on
April 17 and 18.
young blood are most of. the other charac-
ters in the familiar old play, a contempti-
ble crew ‘of malicious scandal’ mongers
who tear his reputation, and that of every-
one else, into fragments. However dis-
tressing their activities to the world of
Sheridan, they give us considerable
amusement, from lady Teazle, the saucy,
coquettish jade, who marries an old hus-
band for his money, and ‘flirts with a
more youthful and attractive friend, to
the deceitful sycophant, Snake.
Under the coaching of J. Gregory, ’25,
the cast is reproducing this world. of
sophisticated gossip in the quaint. and
mannered fashion of the 18th. century.
Miss Schenk has attended several re-
hearsals to contribute helpful advice.
Several changes have been made in the
cast, which iS now as follows:
Sir Peter Teazle.........A. Petrasch, ’28
Sir Oliver surface .........- B. Linn, ’26
Joseph Surface .........:. V. Lomas, 25
Charlies Surtace ..+5...45+5 C. Swift, ’27
EOE abs aes cha edie es os oy Shiras, ’25
Sir Benjamin Backbite.,... K. Morse, ’26
EC A ee er ‘: Ling, "96
POW A ciciieligsias E.. Walton, ’25
WOES ries O. Saunders, 725
CAYeICSE Cociv ie cee A. Matthew, ’27
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
“WOMEN’S UNIVERSITY GLEE
CLUB” INCLUDES B. M. TALENT
‘Modern Music and Primitive Music Con-
trast on April Program.
The “Women’s University Glee Club,”
of New York, will give its fourth concert
‘in the Engineering Building on April 24.
The; program is entirely’ of American
music,
Virgil. Thompson, the youngest mem-
ber of the Harvard musical faculty; Aaron
Copland, whose symphony for organ and
orchéstra was so well received when it
was played in New York and Boston this
winter; Blair Fairchild, whose collection
of Persian folk songs is so delightful, and
Ward Lewis, an organist and composer
of ‘some note, have all contributed ex-
tremely modérn music to this program.
Mr. Gerald Reynolds, the conductor of
the club, searched through the archives
of the Explorers’. Club for primitive music
and found a Piute Indian. song and an
Eskirho song which the club will sing as
nearly like ‘the original as possible.
Miss Loraine Wyman, the
the evening, will give a group of Ameri-
can folk songs, including negro spirituals
and Kentucky mountain songs.
Ta contrast to this a generous | *
soloist of}:
-|C.A. CABINET DISCUSSES i.
- PAST WORK OF COMMITTEES
Theoretical and Practical Sides of C.
A. Are Not Incompatible
‘At a meeting of the cabinet of the
Christian Association last Tuesday, the
work and aims and failures of the past
year were thrashed out and disctissed.
In times past,.some said, the associa-
tion stood for differegt things. The spir-
itual sidé was emphasized. Perhaps we
are not mystically inclined. T. Fugita,
735, said ‘that CA, should find some way
of giving people a fecling of quiet, of
sweetness and mutual help. Other mem-
bers felt that it was a beautiful idea, but
that it could not be carried* out sponta-
neously.
M. Stewardson, ’25, Président of C. A,
declared that: these arguments all come
back to the question of how each person
is to interpret the pledge for herself. She
feels that the connectipn of social service
with religious thought! is not artificial and
that under-C.-A, fall the, practical intellec-
tual and the spiritual side of religion.
It was agreed that the aim of the asso-
ciation is to present as many opportunities
as possible to the members for finding out
and thinking. about various aspects of
religion so that’they may be able to find
their
Committee chairmen made ports of
the work their committees had done.
Shall the experiment of substituting lec-
tures for Sunday evening chapel be con-
tinued? The greater number of the cabi-
net voted: Yes. Dr.g John Haynes
Holmes, famous New York radical, and
Dr. Tyson are the two men who -will carry
out the .plan.
The maids’ committee report
that the work of the committee has been
own,
showed
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
MODEL REFORMATORY OFFERS
OPPORTUNITY TO STUDENTS
First-Hand Experience Can Be Had at
George Junior Republic.
What Sleighton Farms is for girls, the
George ‘Junior Republic at Freeville, New
York; is for boys. An attractive, scien-
tifically-run reformatory, it seeks not to
imprison, but to educate the: young delin-
quents.
To undergraduates from Certain col-
leges, including Bryn Mawr, the Republic
is offering tht opportunity to do volun-
teer work, there for any two months
during the summer.
The following are some of the aspects
of the Republic work into which the can-
didates may enter, with the chance to
study first-hand the way the idea of self-
government and’ responsibility. work’ in
the training youth: 5
Training of youth in municipal govern-
ment by actual study in near cities.
Recreation, including introducing addi-
tional sports.
. Emphasizing
usage.
Practical religious instruction.
and establishing social
ulate ‘interest: in all*sides~of-religion;-yet
othe association has. a’ spiritual basis, since
each member pledges herself to live after
‘the example of Christ’ as she understands
it. The board,' 4s a board, does not and
cannot stand for any definite belief. Each
board member interprets the pledge for
herself as does every other member of
the association. Their interpretations are
all very different. But they are united as
a board and with the association by work>
. ing in common ‘for an ideal.”
If you tune in your radio on station
WJZ or WGY you may be able to pick
out the voices of some of your alumnae.
The Bryn Mawr-members of the club are:
Clarinda Garrisom,;’21; Anne Taylor, 91;
Mrs.’ Philip Steimsom, ’14; Dorothy Stew-
art, 22; Helen et Weist, ’21; Mrs.
Harry H. Weist, 9
123.
Rehearsals are held Monday night from
7; Katherine Strauss, |:
Landscaping and gardening
Housekeeping.
Teaching in grade and high school.
Publicity, including publications, ‘news
2
writing.
No one of these ives of work need be
followed. continuously during the entire
period of the volunteer worker in the
Junior Republic.,
Those who are interested should speak
7.45 until 9.30, daring the winter months. | to A. Pantzer, ’25, in Pembroke, East.
.26, won
1926 VICTORY OPENS
B. Pitney Overcomes C. Remak:
M. L. Jones Defeats E. Boross
in 1927-25 Matches
DAVIS-DODD MATCH IS CLOSE
The tennis season opened Monday
very auspiciously for 1926. Only three
fixst-team matches were played off, and in
+eachr case 1926 defeated 1928. W. Dodd, —
A, Davis, '28, by the
F. Jay, ‘26, overcame
against
score of 10-8, 6-2.
By far the most interésting of the three
was the Davis-Dodd match. Both played
with sureness, speed and force, placing
the ball with accuracy. Their game was
mostly back-court and . both players
stroked the balls frequently with great
precision’ and showed very good form.
The first set was a long, gruelling, hard-
fought battle.
At the start, F. Jay, ’26, and C. Dyer,
28, seemed to be very evenly matched,
too. Their game was also back-court, but
in the end the even, sure playing of F.
Jay, ’26, told on the very strong back-
hatid and at times accurate placing by C,
Dyer, 28
The Musselman-Ferguson match was
over-cautious with long, easy rallies.
1927 WINS TWO
MATCHES AGAINST 1925
1927 is in the lead With its frst team
matches.
B. Pitney, ’27, defeating C. Remak, 25, in
a very spirited game, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1, became
Tuesday afternoon champion of the college.
ln the first set and the*beginning of the
second, C. Remak, ’25, led. Her great reach,
strong serve and infallible steady shots were
too much for B. Pitney, who, though her
strokes were pretty, seemed to lack initiative.
Picking up amazingly in the second set, she
threw herself into the match and. playing
placing them even beyond the reach of C.
Remak, ‘who did not run much for the balls.
B. Pitney’s fighting energy and deteymina-
tion to win, added to her swift drive and
powerful serve, won her ‘the victory,
Minna Lee Jones, ’27, defeated E. Boross,
‘95, in a steady, uninteresting match with
the score of 6-3, 6-2. The game played
consisted of long unvarying shots, landing -
each time a few feet from the. back line,
M.. L. Jones took the offensive from the
start and drove her shots hard, but E. Boross
seemed, to play more of a pushing -game.
There was little placing and practically no
net play.
Playing a. pretty game, M. Brown, "28,
defeated M. Hand, ’27, 4-6, 6-1, 6-0. In the
beginning the pair seemed fairly evenly -
matched, although: M. Hand, ’27, who played
with very pretty form ‘throughout, was in
thg lead.” In the next two sets her physi-
cal strength seemed to desert her and M.
Brown, .’25, won the victory, making her
points sometimes with pretty long drives
and often with clever placing.”
Whe News takes great pleasure in
announcing the election of Julia Lee,
27, as business manager for next year
and of E. Tyson, ’26, as subscription
manager.
C. Dyer, ’28, 6-4, 5-7, 6-3, and E. Mussel-
man, ’26, conquered M. Ferguson, ’28—
6-2, 6-4, is
a fast offensive game, drove her shots home, ~
—-FIRST TEAM GAMES.
6
te
)
&
THE COLLEGE NEWS
The College N ews
[Founded. in 1914.)
padlliiae weekly during the college year in ee
interest of Bryn Mawr College,,at the Maguire
Building, Wayne Pa,, and Bryn, Mawr College.
BI
Managing Editor... ....JBAN Lows, '26
CENSOR NEWS EDITOR
B. Prtnny, '27 M. Leary, ’27
EDITORS ¥
K. SimMonps, '27
ASSISTANT EDITORS
M. SMITH, ’27 B. Linn, '26
R. RickaBy, ’27 J. Fesumr, '28
» M, Fow.ar, ’28
‘
SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER
BR, Tyson, ’26
atten tera
ASSISTANTS
WILBoR, ’26 N. BOWMAN, 27
M. CRUIKSHANK, '27 A. WILT, '2
. Jones, '28 a McELWwaIN, 28
BUSINESS MANAGER
J. Lmn, ’27
Subscription, $2.50 Mailing Price, $3.00
Subscriptions may begin at any time __
Entered ‘as second-class matter at the Wayne,
Pa. Post Office. a
WARNING TO CIVILIZATION
Like the sphiyx and the centaur and the
griffin, hybrid forms evolved from the
horrors of beast art, Felix and his fellows
of the Krazy Kat Ballet represent man’s
primitive tendencies in art today.
Strangely we take pleasure in these half-
humanized creatures who jig before” us,
and in their relatives.of the cinema, Aesop
* and his crew. Love, battle and sudden
death, flash past on the screen to the tune
of Aesop’s moralizing; and Felix’s cousins
woo and fight with all the violence of the
cave-man and a good ‘deal of insidious
‘modern equipment. Likewise, in music,
we applaud the famous “Mammy” songs
of today, perhaps degenerate descendants
of the rule and ritual of: primitive matri-
archal communities, like the Sarmatians
on the Black Sea. Are the eager listeners
of the singer bawling for Virginia and
his Mammy, surviving worshippers at a
festival of Demeter, or Mother Earth?
But today we laugh. Though the
black-faced comedian undoubtedly _re-
minds many of his hearers to send white
carnations on Mother’s Day, we hum his
latest in the morning bath. And after
seeing “Why Girls Leave Home” or
melancholy episodes of Gishes, we glee-
fully relax at the appearance of a Fable.
Certain philosophers must be right;
laughter is inactivity, leisure from the
struggle for existence. Amid decadent
civilization and frightful refinement we
nvock the symbols of our mighty ances-
tors’ joy and terror. And as the history
books of childhood taught, arrogance and
luxury made Rome fall!
UP-TO-THE-MINUTE MEN
Equal rights for men!—this seems the
slogan of the Easter season. Women
have usurped more and more of the pre-
rogatives of men, from balloting to
breeches, and the balance is in_ their
favour. So it is up to the oppressed
masses of men to readjust the scales.
-———-Witness, then, the Easter _parade—many
more men than women—and such men!
Decked out in creations of London lav-
endar and powder blue and father of pearl
gray! We are surprised to note that}.
none of them have taken to wearing red
‘as a symbol of their revolt. Doubtless
“that will come in time, when they recover
from their initial timidity.
We look forward to such items in the
society columns: “Mr. and Mrs. Bourbon
Stuart arrived this morning at Hope
Springs. Mr. Stuart was wearing a smart
sport suit of Liberty red pongee, with a
dashing felt hat to match. Mrs. Stuart
wore the conventional ensemble.”
*
A VOCATIONAL OPENING
Spring, with the: opening _ Of the
“Mikado” in New York Saturday night,
brings again the return of the delightful
operettas of Gilbert’ and Sullivan, who
by Jury” fifty years ago,
, type of light opera. Its
success N
doners soon hummed its®* airs. Gilbert,
who wrote the vivacious libretto, had been
a Government servant, a. militia captain
and a barrister, while, Sullivan, his part-'
ner, and the composer of the sparkling
tunes that caught the fancy of the world,
had been a chorister at the Chapel Roya,
London, and had studied at Leipsic.
Operetta followed eretta. from the
gifted pair in rapid successful suc-
cession. “The Pirates. of Penzance,’
which our Glee Club is to produce this
spring, was first given in this country at
the Fifth Avenue Theatre on December
31, 1879.: With its rollicking songs and
satiric take-off on the piratical melodrama
of the time, it took London by storm
three months later.
The training, in light opera, received by
the members of the Glee Club could have
far-reaching _ effegts. Mr. Alexander
Woolcott, in speaking of the present New
4-Y ork-production-of-the“Mikado;*~which
had not then opened, regret¢ed that Gil-
bert and Sullivan operettas are always
done by a company, hastily gathered to-
gether forthe occasion, soon to disperse.
Mr. Woolcott feels strongly that a cer-
tain company should be established, just
to produce, and therefore probably more
perfectly to produce, Gilbert and Sulli-
van’s immortal operettas. Here is another
opening for the Bryn Mawr girl, if any
light opera stars lie hidden among the
Glee Club’s still private rehearsals of the
“Pirates of Penzance.” Trained nightly
to sitg Gilbert and Sullivan (have our
ears not rung all spring with the gay
tunes of the “Pirates” that float daily
from the chapel?) perhaps some one of
Mr. Woolcott’s idea to
fruition. Surely if not the instigator of
the new company to give us always “the
Office. boy,” “Pooh Bah” and the “Ruler
of the Queen’s Navee,” one of. us can per-
haps join the company that shall preserve
the light opera tradition. and give us
yearly the “haunting lyrical) music, the
amusing lines of Gilbert and Sullivan.
us will bring
“THE BEAUTY THAT
WAS GREECE”
There’s something depressing enough
about your ink-stained, mussed tweed
coat, of faded hue and thinning elbow;
or the ancient scuffed up brogue that
hasn’t seen a Whittemore can for years.
But for real pathos they can’t touch the
cast-off finery of former years, sas
to the uses of the campus.
After all, tweeds and brogues are of
the earth earthy, and there’s something.
| natural, even distinguished, in their down
hill path. . There isnt that utter abandon
to misery you see in-the €hipped patent
leather slipper, its heel run over and its
sharp toe blunted, forced to guide wool-
clad feet through icy slush. Poor slippers
made for hardwood floors and White-
man’s music! And who has not forced
grimy desks and dreary lectures upon the
laced and beaded taffeta and duveteen of
two seasons back? It is so sad to see
their elegance become absurdity, framed
by. Taylor’s stern uncompromising style.
Last and saddest of all these decayed
gentlefolk is the old fur coat-pelts once
the summit of nature’s good and Gunth-
er’s arty how acnitied dreary strips in the
wailing wind.
In all our babveutae life, this habit
of “wearing out good clothes” seems one
cross we might avoid! Let’s leave an-
tique gowns and slippers quietly in the
back closets, and forget, in our woolens
and leather, that symbolical sombre con-
trast-gay’ memory with austere reality.
REVIEW OF THE LANTERN
Vol. 5, April, 1925, No.3.
It is my misfortune not to have made the
aequaintance of the Lantern before today, so
that I can offer no helpful opinion as to the
relative merits and resultant character of
this April’s number, which as the editorial
advises is tentative and experimental, in con-
trast to the more definite and stricter lit-
erary policy. pursued in the past. But this
introduction has been to my exceeding good
pleasure, for the last offering of the Lan-
*
tern, contains entertaining observations, in-
teresting ideas and much good writing. ~
Out of a consideration for my own com-
fort | feel that | must pronounce that the
following remarks are ‘intended to have
about them nothing of the authoritative nor
the dogmatic, but are ‘merely the expressions
ot my own tastes and reactions.
This Lantern’s dajnty corpus presents, for
the most part and aside from the single ar-
Pticle and the book reviews, a collection of
impressions, none so completely succinct as
an hokku nor of quite the extent of Kath-
erine Manstield’s shorter stories. In, the
development ‘of their several ideas they lie,
in a. general way, between the two. It is
‘no disparagement to say that they lack the
intellectual and artistic finality of both, The
term “impressions” I use intentionally be-
cause the various contributions show an in-
terest in varied little aspects_of life, absorb-
ing .in themseives, not given to thorough, in-4
Ltellectual—comment-or—the-elaboration
essay, btit tPeated simply as something ob-
served, causing interest or delight, and. for
their literary potentialities.
The honors between the prose and the
poetry are almost equally divided with the
credit perhaps slightly in favor of the prose.
Space disallows comment upon each piece
and | must therefore confine myself to those
which seem to me to be superior, .
To remark of the prose first, Miss O’Shea
in “Isla” has most cleverly suggested the
character of a friend who transmutes the
casual fragments of everyday life into an
episode of her own life, at once very ac-
tual and the unusual. The two elements of
the actual and the imaginary are skillfully
echoed by the setting in the narrator's own
room, where a fanciful tale is being read.
These form the ready background from
which the peculiar genius of the character
stands forth. ‘The masculine mind deems
the conversation of Isla’s friends to show a
markedly credulous frame of -mind, but ap-
plauds the desmriptive portions and the skill
with which the whole idea is carried out.
“The Chaperone,” by Miss (Alice Whiting,
certainly deserves particular mention among
the prose pieces.*‘Its brevity only vivifies
the malcontent of the three young ladies
traveling abroad in the inescapable clutches
of an officious and entirely self-adequate
chaperone, while their peculiar misery is
deftly fixed by the allusion to “David Cop-
pertield” of the concluding’ sentence. In
sharp contrast to this observation, more than
likely from actual life, is Miss Follansbee’s
“The Boy from Olympus.” Its sti¢cess is due,
it seems to me, to the definiteness of the
overtone which lingers after the story is
done. The beatity.of Greek sculpture. ap-
pears in reincarnation in the god-like fea-
tures of the young boy, who is discovered
as a bootblack, inspires a sculptor, is per-
petuated in marble, and then mysteriously
departs. The conception of the combination
of the abstract beauty of Greek sculpture
with a human being remains with consider-
able force. The story is noteworthy for
its maturity of style.
There are no more able contributions in
the number than “Ariel,” the biography of
Shelley, by M. du Maurois, discussed: by
Miss Fesler and the book reviews. In both
cases, by their sympathetic treatment they
stir one’s enthusiasm to want to read’ the
-books; the character and merits of the books
are amply brought out, and, lastly, one feels
the critical judgment displayed to be sound.
In my opinion, the best poem offered is
Miss Petrasch’s “Hilarion.” At once on
reading the opening lines—
“The good folk of the village came to -me
and: said,
Ring the bell gently, Hilarion is dead . . .
—the impression is created and further
established, especially in the stanza—
“I climbed up in the belfry,” s
Up the creaking stair; =~
Just the bell and I and—
The dead man’s soul—were there . . .
—that the author’s acquaintance with -the
style of Edna St. Vincent Millay is more
than a casual one. Indeed Miss Millay’s
style seems to permeate the whole poem. It
it rather high praise to say that the quoted.
verses might have come from her pen; In
the spirit of quaintness and delicate ey
”
Py
”
an
characteristic of Miss: Millay’s work ae
poem succeeds admirably.
In “Epithalamium” Miss Barbara ‘ha ta
given excellent” expression to a passionate
mood; if the phrases are a little general it
is no doubt because the mood seeks music
as its” most suitable “medium for utterance.
There is indeed a true lyric quality felt in
this poem, suitable for and reminding one
of musical transcription. ,Miss Walton’s
“Period Gown” should be praised for its
daintiness and charm, though one suspects
that the qyaintness of the picture which in-
spired it is not sufficiently, brought out. In
“Billy” Miss Bruere has avoided. perhaps the
two chief difficulties in writing a little boy’s
poem—the tendency to make it a nonsense
rhyme and to miss the child’s point of view.
Miss Mitchell’s “The Prehistoric Hunt” is
thoroughly good fun, It recalls Lewis Car-
roll’s more purely nonsensical.” The Hunt-
ing of the Snark, but more particularly Ar-
metre lacks his lilt and security.
Whatever may have been the fruits of
-\the past policy this present Lantern has cer-
tainly produced. good things. There is no
concern with contemporary matters of great
importance, no cofitroversy, no solid essay
the product of careful intellectualization, but
there is, to my mind, a distinct success in
what was attempted. And that, I take it,
was the artistic rendering of a given theme ;
the attempt to give suitable and even per-
fected literary form to the idea, In the
art of letters, then,*the Lantern performs ob-
viously. a most important function in the
life of the campus. If the contents are
modest they have nonetheless the dignity of
painstaking effort and good work. That is
my final and most gratified impression—
many of the prose pieces and the poems, and
not necessarily merely those I have men-
tioned, are good, they ‘possess some literary
value, they partake of aft.
Epwarp S. Kine.
To the editors of the Cortecek News.
The enclosed clipping from the Christian
Science Monitor may have some _ interest
for the students. Many, perhaps on the
strength of the advertisements in the News,
may intend to take a students’ trip to
Europe. A warning might not be amiss—
not to prevent their going—but to pre-
pare them or to enlist their help against
a manifest abuse.
Sincerely,
oe _ J. B Guet.
(From the Christian Science Monitor)
Undemocratic, and humiliating—these
are the terms used by.Dr. J. T. Miller,
editor of “Character Building,” to ‘char-
acterize the discriminations employed by
the Public Heakh Service: of the: United
States Government in conducting exami-
nations at Southampton of passengers
traytling in students’ third-class quarters
on the United States Lines.
Third-class passengers at Southampton
are examined for vermin, forced to bare
their arms to show vaccination marks,
which, if not of recent date, necessitate
vaccination. The heads of American citi-
zens are also searched.
First and second-class passengers are
not subject to this examination, nor are
those who board. the ships at Cherbourg.
By payment of $35 extra, therefore,’ aliens
may travel second-class and escape the
humiliations of inspection which Ameri-
cans traveling third-class must undergo.
NEWS IN BRIEF
Julia Peyton, ’21, was married to Mr.
Howard V. Phillips in Washington,
D. C., on March’ 28.
At the invitation of the Archaeological
Institute of America Miss Swindler, Pro-
fessor of Latin at, Bryn Mawr, has re-
cently lectured on “‘Landscape in Ancient
Art” at Columbia University, Yale Uni-’
versity, Wesleyan, Hartford, re pyar
University.
The News takes great pleasure in an-
nouncing the re-election pf J. Loeb, ’26,
as managing editor, and of B- Pitney, ’27,
as censor, M, Leary, ’27, has been elected
arr editor.
\
ate
[thur Guiterman’s delightful stylé, though the——
. ‘
all
“THE COLLEGE NEWS.
To the Editors of the News:
.There’ are so many things at college
that live to “blush. unseen;’’ and quite
often most valuable.-opportunities are
overlooked, dr merely chanced upon by
one or two fortunate souls. Often it is
a proposition that is hard to “get before
the college.” But in the following case
®
A orida
anitie
on Loose Powder
t’s Convenient — |
: is always ready to serve
you. You may carry it in
your purse, pocket or shop-
ping bag — at the office or
for evening use. It will al-
ways be an ever-ready com-
panion—a beauty aid that
you will always appreciate.
Buy a.Norida today. The
price is $1.50, in gilt or silver
finishes. Comes filled with
Fleur chiapas (Wildflower)
Poudre, a fragrant French
At All Toilet Goods
Counters
the college has been apathetic, not bez,
cause it was not interested, but -because |
it was never fully understood just what
was offered.
\ scholarship of eight hundred dollars
is given. evéry year by the I. C. S.A.
This is to be used for graduate work in
the Sociology Department. The recipient
is allowed a wide choice of
She ‘may, in connection with courses in
the Sociology Department, do settlement
work and may, if. she prefers, live right
in the settlement the entire year; or she
may do. field work connection with
the juvenile court or prison reform or
some other line. Anyone interested in
“Junior Month” or in the Summer School,
anyone sincerely interested in any kind
of social work, would by the very nature
of the thing be interested in this scholar-
It is estimated that only 4 hundred
in
ship.
| dollars -more_is_necessary—te—eover—the
expenses of the year; that means that
* &
673 Fifth Av.,
New York
25
St., London
2 rue dela
Paix, Paris
AnELIZABETH ARDEN Treatment
is based on three important steps
Cleansing, Toning, Nourishing—
with Elizabeth Arden’s Cleans-
ing Cream, Ardena Skin Tonic,.
and Orange Skin’Food. Ask at
toilet ‘preparations counter fdr
“The Quest of the Beautiful,”
Elizabeth Arden’s book on the
care of the skin.
Babani. Perfumes add a final
touch of charm to your, every
costume.
Elizabeth Arden’s Toilet Prep-
arations and Babani Perfumes
are on sale at
Powers & Reynolds
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
9
im Europe
and spacious public rooms.
it inerary ac incl usive rates,
spend Your Vacation
Take your own crowd with you. Special Tourist Third Class
Accommodations on the famous “O” steamers, reserved for
stude nts, teachers, artists, tourists. Congenial companions, good
food comfortable airy staterooms, broad promenade decks
Conducted ori n dependent University Tours with extensive
$155 up
Round Trip
' Sailing on OHIO
cial Educat sicreat Tour, under. auspices of New York
us aeday, personally conducted by Dean James E. Lough
- July 2nd
Wee wiy dailiuys
' ROS
The Royal
by OHIO, ORCA, ORBITA, ORDUNA to
Cherbourg - Southampton
Write for Illustrated Booklet : se
. 2 ae OY. Route”
il Steam MAIL Company
Sanpkrson & Son, Inc., Agents
26 Broadway, New York or Local Agents
AL
activities. |,
Old Bond}.
a hundred dollars, a whole year of
invaluable study and experience: is open
to whichever applicant for this scholar-
ship is chosen. ,T’he award is made the
first of May through Dr. Susan Kings-
bury, of the Sociology »Department. The
qualifications for it could be met by many,
Those interested should speak with Dr.
Kingsbury .and make application soon,
This is an- enormous scholarship and an
unusual opportunity. It should- interest
not only members of the Senior Class
who could use ‘it next year, but also all
those in” college who may in one, two
or three years wish to avail themselves
such an offer, Competition for this
scholarship will, I know, increase in a
‘way similar to the growing competition
for “Junior Month” and. Summer School.
It will be classed as an opportunity which
is rightly. called “the chance of a
ADELE PANTZER, '25
Retiring Chairman of the C. A. Secial
Service Committee,
[lor
of
°
INTERESTING JUNE CONFERENCE
TO MEET AT EAGLESMERE
Prominent Speakers and Discussions
: included of
To the annual Student Conference to
be-held-at~ Eaglesinere, Pa., from June
19 to 29, the Christian Association will
send a delegation.
| The leader of the delegation will be
W. Dodd, ’26,’newly elected president of
CA. me
Bryn Mawr has. for many years sent
girls to the Silver Bay branch of this
conference. This year we have been as-
signed to the Eaglesmere division be-
cause it is the one fo which we belong
territorially. C. A. feels that this con-
ference will be every bit as interesting
as Silver Bay.
different types of people from other col-
leges, a-chance~to- hear picked speakers
from all over the country. -This,is what
the Eaglesmere conference is expected
to be.
life
A chance to meet and talk with many
Though it inclides chiefly smaller col-
leges (not Smith and Vassar), still it
has the same good speakers as Silver
Bay. Dr. Fosdick, Dr. Caffin and Dr.
Gilkey are among the men who have
given é@vering talks in the past. .
This year’s program, thoweh not yet
definitely worked out, will probably in-
clude a wide variety of discussions and
talks. FW¥ndamental modern religious
questions, industrial problems, social serv-
ice questions, lectures on comparative
religions have been part of the schedule
in the past.
The Lighter Side.
To fill. up the whole day. with brain ‘
splitting religious controversy is not the
aim’ of the conference. The lectures and
discussions usually are concentrated into
the mornings and evenings, leaving the
whole afternoon free. a = ae pea
“Ainusing intefcollegiate tennis, basket-
ball afid baseball take place, also a
pageant and singing.
The expense for all ten days is only
twenty-five dollars.
Foreign studeifts are to be admitted
this year without registration fees.
For those girls who feelsthat they can-
not afford the twenty-five dollars C, A.
will try to’ make special arrangements.
LOWER TENNIS TEAM MATCHES .
Second Teams ™
leads, 2-1, “against- 1925,
Cruikshank, ’27, beat §. Anderson,
1927
M.
=
M. Cruikshank,
I. Bradley, '25, beat H.
1926 still ties with 1928,
E. Betchel, ’28, beat FE. Nichols,- ’26.
V. Cooke, ’26, beat S. Armstrong, ’28.
Third Teams.
ue defeated 1927. «
M. Gardiner, ’25, -beat C. Swift,
mi Gehring, beat G. Hays, ’27.
A: Speed, ‘27, beat H. Grayson, '25.
D. Lee, , beat R. Rickaby,
1928 detonated 1926.
M. Merrill, ’28, beat K. Tomkins,
M...Gray,’28, beat_E,,-Nowell,
Fourth Teams
1927 defeated 1925. sad
Fach green player won her match.
ION
wl,
beat A. Boross, '25. ),
Stokes,
IO”
Ign
ws.
2!
-
125;
"9! 5
is
27%,
% .
26;
bd
Ghe NEW YORK SCHQOL o
INTERIOR DECORATION of 4
441 MADISON AVE-NEW YORK
SHERRILL WHITON, Director
Intensive Practical Training and Professional Courses
Six Weeks SUMMER COURSE Starts July 7th. Send for Catalog 52 S.
Regular WINTER COURSES Start October and February. Send forCatalog 52 R. .
«HOME STUDY COURSES Start at Once. Send for Catalog §2 c.
hod Ey,
—is like radio broadcasting
which is delivered to an unseen
audience, and the “broadcaster”
knows nothing of the message
registration unless responses are
sent in.
pl Decemberthe John Hancock
in this paper an advertise-
ment headed “Do College Stu-
’ dents Read Advertisements?”
Here are some of the responses:.
“Your advertisement in the
Dartmouth was an unusual
one, and I want to express
my. approval.”
“If there were more ads like
=
women
oe Sixty er in
jusiness. Now wyae f
Quver Two Billion Dol-'»
lars on 3,500,000 Lives
PAPO
OVS ea,
k Mutual is particularly i emened ts
The John Hancock, Mutual is particulary intrested
CI D> CDA? =e Oe J
ARTIS IE in College Papers
the one you ran in the Ee
Princetonian this morning it f
would be a pleasure to read
a paper of nothing but ads.”
“The students here in Han-
over not only read the ad-
vertisements but also patron-
ize the advertisers.”
“The advertisement in the
Illini is written from the col-
lege students’ point of view.
I believe in insurance
cause of the sound economic
rinciples which underlie it.
There remains then only the
kind of oy and the com- 2)
pany. have you ate 7. ‘
tepomacl a ts fll ah
838 LANCASTER AVE.
‘wh
$
®
2e
m THE COLLEGE NEWS
._ Chas. Snyder
Die he
Tédlephone, Bryn Mawr 807
The Hearthstone
J
LUNCHEON TEA’
DINNER PARTIES
Open Sundays
North Merion Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
BRINTON BROS.
Orders Called for and Delivered
Lancaster and Merion Aves.
- Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Telephone 63
FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES |*
MOORE’S PHARMACIES
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Drugs Chemicals
Stationeries, etc.
‘Haverford Pharmacy
Prescription Drug Store
ry e
id Haverford, Pa,
POWERS & REYNOLDS
MODERN DRUG STORE
837 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
e mported Perfumes
CANDY SODA GIFTS
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
Housekeeping Hardware
Paints - Locksmithing
PHILIP HARRISON
826 LANCASTFrY ‘VENUE
Walk Over Shoe Shop
Agem tor
Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings
Wer-um Laest Du Deine Blicke in der
Ferne Streiten,
Wenn Das Gesuchte Liegt Sonah!
—Heine.
No need to go to Philadelphia for a
cozy Ladies’ Dining Room.
ROMA CAFE
American, Italian, French Dishes
Open from 7 A. M. to 12 P. M.
Programs
Bill Heads
Tickets
Letter Heads
Announcements
Booklets, etc,
John J. McDevitt
Printing
1145 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Cards and Gifts
for all occasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 Lancaster, Ave.
4
——
AMY'S SHOP
Candies
Gifts
Novelties
Cards,
857 LANCASTER AVENUE:
‘Phone 1058-J
~ Bryn Mawr
‘THE TOGGERY SHOP
831 LANCASTER AVENUE
Gowns, Hats, Coats,
Sweaters, Blouses, Hosiery
Sole Agents for
VANITY FAIR SILK UNDERWEAR
Phone, Bryn Mawr 131
Phone, Bryn Mawr 494
&
PHONE 758
HENRY B. WALLACE
CATERER and CONFECTIONER © :
sessed a pd oe es ‘TRAB
qnateanenienieiniinannn — ne
— a
CAPITAL, $250,000
ieiss dGiianesl Reston testones. :
Bryn Mawr|
Bryn Mawr, Pa.|
THE BRYN MAWR TRUST CO.
-ICED-
DRINKS
DAINTY: .
SANDWICHES ©
College
Tea House
being Daily fens 1 to 7
" EVENING. PARTIES BY
SPECIAL . ARRANGEMENT |
.
JEANNETT’S
Bryn Mawr Flower Shop
Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh
Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets
Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty |
Potted Plants—Personal supervision on all
orders
Phone, Bryn Mawr 570
807 Lancaster Ave.
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 453
THE CHATTERBOX.
A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM
Regular Dinners or
Birthday Parties by appointment
OPEN FROM 12 TO 7.30
825 LANCASTER AVENUE
Bryn Mawr Massage Shop
‘ Aimec I’. Kendall
_ Hairdressing in all its branches
A complete stock of toilet requisites
839 Lancaster Ave.
J Since 1806
MICHAEL
Ladies’ Tailor Cleaner and Dyer
1123 Lancaster Ave, Bryn Mawr, Pa,
Our French cleaning and dyeing departinent
does most excellent work for many students.
Call Bryn Mawr 456—Today
TALONE
The Handcraft Shas
Decorations, Linens, Rugs
“Little Nature Frocks,” Toys, etc.
30 Bryn Mawr Avenue
‘ Z
27 W.
BARBARA LEE
| and
Fairfield e
Outer Garments for Misses
Sold Here Exclusively in
Philadelphia
Strawbridge & Clothier
Eighth & Market Streets
: Jj. TRONCELLITI
e 4
Practical Cleaner & Dyer
¥ Goods called, for and Delivered
039 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
Afternton Tea
nomen |
Saturday Luncheon
Open Sunday
Chatter-On Tea House
- 835 Morton Road :
Dinner by Appujntment Bryn Mawr 1185
SARAH L. THORNBURY
‘ “HARPER METHOD”
130 EAST LANCASTER AVENUE
Wayne, Pa.
Shampoving and Scalp Treatments
Manicuring” “Water W aving”
Telephone: ' Wayne § 827-3
Be
Cleaners and Dyers De Luxe
THE MAIN LINE VALET SHOP.
Bernard McRory, Proprietor.
2nd Floor, opposite Post Office, Bryn Mawr
Valet Service lg ag Tallers
Positively No Machine Pressing
Ten Per Cent. Discount on All School and
College Work
Pleating and Hematitching
Ladies’ Riding Sults’to Measure, $40.00-and Up
s CONNELLY ESTATE
THE MAIN LINE FLORISTS
1226 Lancaster Avenue
Rosemont, Pa,
Phone, 252 Bryn Mawr
LOWTHORPE SCHOOL
A School of Landscape Architecture for Women
TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR
i Courses in ‘4
Landscape Design, Planting Design, Construc-
tion, Horticulture and kindred subjects
Estate of seventeen acres, gardens, greenhouses
36 Miles from Boston
GROTON, MASSACHUSETTS
. 1€
Phone, Bryn Mawr 166
Phone Orders Promptly Delivered
WILLIAM GROFF; P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONIST
Whitman Chocolates
803 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Table Delicacies
Frozen Dainties
KEMPEN
and CONFECTIONER
Phone, Ardmore 12
Bryn Mawr 1221
GEORGE F.
CATERER
Lancaster Ave, So) Lancaster Ave,
Ardmore Bryn Mawr
E. s. MoCawky & Co.
Books |
Do you want the latest book?
Are you interested in books worth
while ?
We have it or can get it.
HAVERFORD AVE.
Jewelers
serving a distinguished
clientele for tbapy years
College Insignia, ' Station-
ery, Wrist atches; gifts
for every occasion.
Visitors are cordigily welcomed.
J. ECALDWELL & 0.
-CHESTNUT AND JUNIPER STREETS
lange ‘ °
* f, aa
B&G.
Cleaners and Dyers
Gloves Cleaned at. Short Notice
DELIVERY SEEVIOB
Prsaktast
Luncheons _
Dinners
TELEPHONE, ARDMORB 1946
Haverford Ave. & Station Rd. Drive
HAVERFORD STATION, P. R. R.
ev BANKSeBippy p me
Jewelers
Silversmths
Stationers
PHILADELPHIA
THE OFFICIAL SILVER COFFRE SPOON
with the :
COLLEGE SEAL ©
OFFICIAL JEWELERS
for the
COLLEGE SEAL RING
THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOOK
Mailed upon request, a many distinctive
gifts.
Luncheon Afternoon ‘Tea Dinner
An attractively different place for College
people
THE MILESTONE INN
Italian Restaurant
845 LANCASTER AVE,
Catering for Dinner and Birthday Parties
“At the Ninth Milestone” Tel. Bryn Mawr 1218
a)
Haverford, Pa.| >
Bonmit Geller & Ca
Chestnut Street ©
Philadelphia
“Bryn Mawr :
Cleaning and Dyeing of the Better Kind .
Enhance the Beauty
of Your Eyes with
KURLASH
Windows of the soul, your eyes reflect your personality.
Make them look larger and more attractive. Give their
lashes a beautiful, natural upward curve without using
sticky cosmetics. Curled lashes make bright eyes sparkle
with greater brilliancy—soft eyes appear softer, Kurlash
curls lashes WITHOUT heat or cosmetics. Nothing to
put ON or INTO your eyes. Simply apply gentle pressure
»an instant with soft rubber pads and you have a beautiful
curl that lasts one to three days. Nothing extra to buy or
replace. $1, postpaid or you can pay postman $1 plus
postage. Money bck guarantee. Beauty information free,
The Stickel Co., 142 N. Clinton Bldg., Rochester, N.Y. 9
a Tew Seek ba
Paris
% After Exams-
Have Dad Reward you *
with anew prom frock
from : fee
<
BONWIT'S
- - “8
a ot ©.
° sd ry
a * ‘ ] ry
: - THE COLLEGE. NEWS 2
CONFERENCE ‘OF tion that China, Japan, Korea and the] He felt‘that to attain understanding of} quite successful. Sixty out of the ninety-
FOREIGN STUDENTS|otlfer Oriental countries are gaining] each other, the nations must acquire] five maids of. the college are enrolled
(Specially contributed by Winifted has made the Western nations. of} mutual -espect and master all the facts of] either in the might school or in the Sun-
Dodd, ’26) the. Pacific all the more anxious and de-| the variois situations.” This respect-and day School,
Last Friday I attended a conference at| termined to maintain their rights. knowledge would do away..with the pre- The Social: Service Committee has
the Y.:W. C. A. in New York. The ob-
ject of the meeting was to get a group
of students—American and foreign (and
for foreign one must substitute Oriental)
—together to discuss their mutual rela-
tionships. The chairman of the meeting
was Mr. T, Z. Koo, who opened the dis
cussion by giving a general outline of the
situation,
He saw that we felt very strongly that
the. Orient and the Occident had distinct
contributions to give to each other, but’
he felt that there was a “gathering storm.”
The Oriental peoples of the Pacific coast
are developing a strong spirit of national-
ism tlfat is purely anti-foreign. The rela-
. points.
Mr. Koo, in analyzing the philosophy
of the situations in» which these: two
groups of people find themselves—a group
of nations who;on the one hand have cer-
tain reputations to keep, and on the other
certain reputations to attain—took up four
First, that fear was apparent;
intense fear of the encroachment of one
race upon another. Secondly, - that
“white” domination was necessary fer
supremacy. Thirdly, that a difference in
thought and customs does not: necessarily |
prove the Orient: to be inferior to. the
Occident; and lastly, that one nation does
not have to raise itself upon: the ruins of
another nation.
at the root of the difh-
cilities and would perhaps make us see
the true value of the ‘souls of men
clothed in skins of different colours than
our @wn,”
judices which lie
A great many questions were asked in
the morning and afternoon, but we: found
that the-two biggest topics concerned
prejudice and lack of understanding, for
both of which ignorance seemed largely
responsible.
*
SOCIAL SERVICE
@
CONTINUED FROM ‘PAGE 1
branched out and broadened its outlook.
Next year $190 is to bé spent in securing
substitutes to take the place of wunder-
graduate workers at the “¢étitér during
vacations so that the centers will intrust
us. with more important and hence more
The
has steadily stressed the wide
e
interesting work there. committee
this year
application of the work done at all the
centers, When you teach English to a
class of foreigners or when you do kin-
dergarten work, you are doing something
which is tied uy with. very. significant
‘world-wide attempts at social adjustment,
®
If you are thinking of a trip to
EUROPE this Summer
Write for illustrated booklets and
complete information about our
COLLEGE SPECIALS
tad ;
Tourist Third Cabin—Entire Third Cabin
accommodations reserved exclusively for
, students, teachers, professional men and
women and similar congenial people.
Round Trip Rates as low as 155
It costs only a trifle more to reavel on such
great steamers as
Majestic (56,551 tons)
World’s Largest{Ship «
Homeric (34,359 tons)
World’s Sixth Largest Ship
Minnekahda
Entire ship reserved exclusively for Tourist Third Cabin.
No other passengers carried. You have free run of all decks.
Wo
Attractive sailings, convenient to the close of college.
To Antwerp via Plymouth and Cherbourg
Pittsburgh, June 18
Belgeniland, June 25
Address Teurist Third Cabin Department, J. McCarson, Pass.
’ Mgr., Southeast Cor. 14th & Locust St., Philadelphia, Pa., or
any authorized steamship agent.
WHITE STAR LINE
ATLANTIC TRANSPORT LINE-RED S7ar LinE
INTERNATIONAL MERCANTILE
MARINE COMPANY.
EUROPE and Return
$155 andup |
Students — Teachers — Artists
was
Bela,
This special 1925 excursion. rate, offered to travelers in our
improved third class {Tourist Section}, New York to South-
ampton and return, places an enjoyable and profitable trip to
Europe within the reach of all. For a few dollars additional,
Pamsoete may proceed via Cherbourg or Hamburg. Person-
conducted tours in England, Ireland, France, Germany,
‘Holland, Switzerland and Italy at on rates.
$325 upward may be arranged, ,
Investigate now! Make your reservations ais
* For further information apply to
230. ‘South }5th St. Esagechi, Pa.
This little folder has been
distributed on the campus.
It tells you how low the
rates really are. a
If your home town is not
included in the list, see the
front pages of the telephone
directory.
The Long Distance Oper-
ator will give you rates not
shown there
Take of Weekly Tip Home...Over The ee
“Wednesday, January Fifth—telephoned
home tonight and talked with Mother and
Dad. They both seemed so’ glad to hear
my voice! I’m going to telephone them
regularly hereafter. Mother told. me all
about”
the young ladyss personal menioirs;
Are you one of the thousands of Amer-
ican College Girls who find encourage-
‘ment and inspiration ih weekly telephone
chats with Mother and Dad?...
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
OF PENNSYLVANIA |
?
*
. but let us peep no further into
Just this little glimpse tells us that here ¥
is one of those College Girls who are
so thoroughly modern in everything they
do ....
touch with the pe
make the most of opportunities and they
get the most out of college.
. even to their method of keeping in
le at home. They
WALDO M.
CLAFLIN
°
SPORT OXFORDS
Tan calfskin with saddle of real
alligator. »
_ Crepe rubber sole.
Comfortable as it is smart.
11 gear
$14
1606 CHESTNUT STREET
Philadelphia
d
q
~ anemne Wes | £. *
6 : THE COLLEGE NEWS : f
® . 44 :
ORCHESTRA PROGRAM “A SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL” IN PHILADELPHIA 10.00 A. M.—Track meet. .
Me — oT ; —— Walnut—“Simon Called Peter.” 8.00—Marsity play will. be given in the
The third Wagner program of the sea- CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Chestnut Street—‘“ Moonlight,” with gymnasium,
son will be played by the Philadelphia} Sir Harry Bumper ’......... S. Posey, ’274 Julia Sanderson. Sunday, April f9
Orchestra on Friday and Saturday of this’) Lady Teazle ...........M. L. White, ’25 Lyric—Balieff’s “Chauve Souris.” 6.00—Vespers, led by J. C. Heney, ’27.
week: : NS ete alegre ag a eM M. Adams, ’28 Shubert—“The Student Prince.” \ 7.30—The Rev.,A. Ray Petty, pastor. of
March, “Eine feste Burg ist unser Gott.” Lady-Sneerwell..-cssvsns .H. Grayson, ’25 Adelphi—"She Had ,to Know.” the Judson Memorial Church, New York,
Hanst Ouverture. . Mrs. Candour ..... Wiis P, Burr, ’28 Garrick—"'No, No, pacette. will speak in chapel, |
ie es i oe a ere , Broad—‘New Brooms. Tuesday, April. 21
Tannhauser, Overture atid Venusberg V. Newbold, 27; C. Chambers, ’27 Forrest—The Mask and Wig Club in] ©7.30—The General Literature examina-
Mgnt Servant to Joseph Surface..E. Lomas, ’28 “Joan of Arkansas.” tion will be given in Room F.
“Die Meistersinger,” Preludes to Acts 1] Servant to Lady Sneerwell...B. Dean, ’25 Coming—"Little Jessie James.” Wednesday, April. 22 e
and 3. a EC J. Fesler, ’28 Movies 7.30«-Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick will
“Die Meistersinger,” Prelude to Act 3. ‘ Stanton—“Charley’s Aunt.” speak in chapel on “Building Worthwhile
“Die Meistersinger,” Vorspiel.. CARNEGIE CORPORATION Aldine—"The Lost World.” Christian Character.” : i
“Tristan und Isolde,” Prelude to Act 3. $10,080 has been granted to the college anna’ Jacl Fhnreday, April 98
wT rist 4. ‘de v. Voraniel 1 Li by the Carnegie Corporation to defray the Stanley—Buster Keaton in “Seven The General Information examination
aucu ee ee expenses of the Department of Music this Chances.” St a ee ‘will be given in’ Taylor at 7.30.
vitae! eg year. The money, approximately $11,000, |. Fox—Richard Dix in “Men and Friday, April 24
which had been raised for this purpose, can Women,” Mr. John A. Lomax, of the University
therefore: be transferred to the Endowment Palace—Richard Barthelmess in “New4of ‘Texas, twice president of the Ameri- ’
iy Fund, To quote Mrs. Dickerman: in the Toys.” can Folklore Society, will give a lecture
Afternoon Tea and Luncheon} jaiest Tune Up, “Much as this means in| son recital cn See
ithe way of financial help, yet it means far CALENDAR itn Burda, Abe ee
COTTAGE TEA ROOM more to us all that the Carnegie Corpora- Friday, April 17 M. Edmond ~ Esteve, professor of
x ' tiey, haviyg carefully looked into the work} 4-00-6.00—Faculty graduate tea in Mer-| French. Literature at the University of
Montgomery Avenue which the Music Department is doing, has ion. Nancy, and this year exchange professor :
in these generous and heartening terms 8.00—Varsity play, “The School for} of Harvard, will speak under the aus-
Bryn Mawr given to the Department the stamp of ‘its Scandal,” will be given in the gymnasium. | pices of the French Club on “Byron et le
approval.” : Saturday, seta 18 romanticisme francais.”
. ‘ a
Everything Dainty '
. and Delicious
—_——_——
FORDHAM LAW SCHOOL
WOOLWORTH BUILDING
NEW YORK
CO-EDUCATIONAL
Case System—Three-Year Course My
One Year. of College Work Required
for Admission
Morning, Afternoon and Evening Classes
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
CHARLES P. DAVIS, Registrar
ROOM 2851
* the left of this group is Lieut. J. A.
; - ereac::, U.S. A., former holder of the
rld’- A'titude record. Just behind the
propeller you can sce the G-E turbine
supercharger which kept the Liberty
motor running in tic tkia air, six miles
high. :
a “
o * pf A
apd address pinted Sona>
tm ¢ * i
* q : :
5 oI O h in b il
100 Emrelones » OO} ver the mountain by a.mue
— nrelopes {j— ae
Deliveredin10days . ie
| Tula of the convene of tee ars one i Yecr after year, plucky explorers try to climb
Srna eh vit isimomleto nes be Mount Everest, the werlc’s highest peak,
ter paper ice. agpee : :
| Scidona Money Back Guaraniee, 29,141 fect high.
: orrint your pamne an tige West of Hockies or owaiseU- 83 :
Your sent postage prepaid. G CO. ne : ‘
Desk A ahd nae tho With a G-E supercharger feeding air at sea~
) f . level pressure to the engine, an airplane pilot
‘ . can go far higher. Lieut. Macready has .
reached 34,509 feet over Dayton, Ohio. He
would have soared over Mount Everest with
ten more than a mile to spare!
it -
AS ; vce ‘ * :
haps. ee ila ba The tasks attempted for centuries in almost
pap ees ethan every form of human endeavor have been
the highest speed ever conquered with the aid of electricity, with
eve a commer- ‘
lel siectiitic. Tt ie. de- more than a mile to spare.
sxened. ane made my. the :
ener lectric Com- . . . gegen .
pany, which ‘also ullds The impossible today will be accomplished
e urbines tha’ *
supply electric light and by men and women now in college. The
legos scientist and engineer are doing theirshare. ___ |
RS aia ea It remains for men and women entering : a
Berio ops eget upon their life’s work to profit by the new |
for Reprint No. AR3O1 opportunities that are constantly appearing
cont ‘a complete set : s s s
of Geer Wivertiousahtn. in every profession and vocation in the land. a
. 6-11DH
College news, April 15, 1925
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1925-04-15
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 11, No. 22
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol11-no22