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‘the seventh big May Day.
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VOL. XIV. No: 24? | BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1928 ~ PRICE, “}0 CENTS
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SEVENTH MAY DAY CROWNS COMPLETION OF
-STUDENTS’ HALL AFTER 28 YEARS’ EFFORTS
Miss Applebee, Mrs. Collins‘
~~ and Mr. King Direct *}
Festivities.
HISTORY IS) RECALLED,
On Friday and Saturday of this week
Bryn Mawr College will celebrate its
seventh, and perhaps its greatest, big
May Day. Two things contribute to its
special impostance—first, it coigcides with
the completion of the Students’ Build-
ing, Goodhart. Hall, the raising of, a fund
for which was the original raison d’etre
of the festival; and second, it is the last
in which Miss Constance Applebee, who
has become in her years at Bryn Mawr
the very spirit, the driving force, of May
Day, takes an activé part.
In* other years other directors have
produced magnificent May Days, but w
of the present one are persuaded tthe
there has never. been leadership to equal
the triumphant triumvirate of Miss
Applebee,* the Manager, Mrs. Collins,
the Director, and Mr. King, the director
of plays. May Day this year has re-
ceived no outside direction. Everything
has been done by the students of’ the
college, and by its permanent staff. The
aim has-been to make the present Cele-
‘bration as simple as possible, without sac-
rificing any of its character or beauty,
and without neglecting a single detail.
Goodhart Proof Against Rain.
As for Goodhart Hall, its inaugura-
tion coincides almost miraculously with
If it rains,
there is some con$olation in the thought
that the new red plush seats in the audi-
toritim, “given by™~ the” Classes “of 1929,
-1930, and 1931,will be used for the first
time; that the rest of the building, so
largely contributed to by all the other
classes which have graduated from Bryn
Mawr, appears for the first time in its
full glory, rising from slopes. at last
cleared and smoothed and sown with
grass; and that the whole edifice is com-
plete to the topmost of the six dressing-
rooms which speak so eloquently of great
dramatic’ productions of thé future.
. Already proud parents from North
and-South-and-West-are journeying. to-
wards the Main Line. ‘Do they realize
' that for their benefit the great proces-
sion rehearses its spacing, and deep laid
Art Club Exhibition
The Bryn Mawr Art Club invites.
you _to visit its annual exhibition |
“to. be held. in “Rockefeller Hail”
‘during May Day and ‘the! week of}
: following. detente Ay
plans are evolved at all night sessions
to make it certain that “every mother
shall’ sée every child?”, At any rate
every conceivable hotel room and board-
ing house wil] be as filled with travel-
ers as were the English inns in April in
Chaucer’s. day,.. when. folk. longed. to.“go.}
on. pilgrimages.”
New Programme Designs. 2
“The programmes, for which the -de-
signs* were made by Elizabeth Shippen
Green Elliott, are ready for distribution.
The delightful drawings with their sharp.
outlines, of whicly not the least charming
are a map of the college, and a sketch
of the Green, in: which we can recognize
more than one familiar. face, and the
gay red and black lettering make this
perhaps the most attractive of all. the,
May Day. programmes, And yet .the
first. one, the cover of which was de-'
signed by Miss Violet Oakley, was long
considered the most beautiful that could
be imagined, and was used in 1900, 1906,
1910,-and-1914. The price of each pro-
gramme will be. one dollar.
The plays, of which there are six,
counting the one which will be presented
by students of the Phoebe Anna Thorne
Model School, and the. dancing, are de-
scribed in other parts of this issue. But
the procession and the pageant, and in-
deed the whole. celebration which will
take form on fhe day after tomorrow
will be immeasurably superior to any
journalistic description. Those who. see
will not’ care to-read, and those who
read will have only. a faint inkling of
what they have missed. But since the
tradition of May Day, practically unique
ip this country, is almost as important as
the thing itself, it is well to know some-
thing of the history of our celebration.
It is a history, of course, which indi-
rectly goes back to the days of Queen
Elizabeth, farther even than that to the
slopes" of Sicily’ when Theocritus was
writing his pastorals; but May Day at
Bryn Mawr has a special. history of its
own, which is best told in the. words of |
its original founder, Evangeline Walker
Andrews, of the class of 1893. The fol-
lowing are excerpts aes news article
published in 1924:
“History of May Day.
“One afternoon~in March, 1900, a
group of students, maitily.seniors, came
to my house to discuss the possibilities
of. giving an outdoor entertainment by
means of which a substantial stm of
money might be raised towards a Stu-
dents’ Building, needed almost as much
‘then as. now. For: two. hours ‘or: more
-we— discussed _plan$__without producing
amy that seemeth to express .what.we liked |
to’ call the spirit-of- Bryn. Mawr; and
‘ration.
‘green,
fand his band,
the meeting broke up, all.of us promis-
ing that we would try to think of some-
thing concrete and: entertaining to pre-
sent at the Mass Meeting to be held the;
following ‘evening,
“Then. while -I stood. watching my;
guests, as” talking’ and” latighing they |.
crossed. the athletic field, ‘clitnbed the
steps on the opposite -side, and‘ drifted—'
a~-charming little procession—across~ the
campus towards Denbigh and The Peni-
brokes—at: that very moment the inspi-
came, literally out-of the blue
sky..of Bryn Mawr.._Of course!
an English setting: all made for us, roll-
ing hills and well-tilled fields; grey stone,
ivy-covered building of
architecture, with spring and May com
ing over the hills, and youth, almost: five |”
hundred strong, waiting merely for the
word—why not an Elizabethan May
Day? Not -the gambols of the court
with which every one was familiar, but
those-of-the common people with their
planting of the May Pole on the village
their country dances, games and
and pageants, with Robin Hood
Maid Marian, the hobby
horses, the Worthies “Nine, and all the
gay grotesque and charming festivities
and characters beloved by the. rustics of
Elizabethan England? It was entirely
suitable that the May Day sports and
pastimes, suppressed by Puritan Old
England as well as by Puritan New Eng-
land, should be revived without its evils
by the adventurous and talented young
Elizabethans of Bryn Mawr. Such was
the idea that took possession of me as
plays,
T stood enjoying the color and rhythm
of ,that little pfocession of students
acrégs the-campus ona bleak afternoon
“The suggestion that: we should revive
an. Elizabethan May Day on the Bryn
Mawr campus was received by cheers
that made the gymnasium ring. with an
enthusiasm that promised success from
the start; and from that momertt: until
May. 1—six short weeks, one.of them
a college holiday—every undergraduate,
and ‘many Alumnae, both in New York
and Philadelphia, worked incessantly,
giving most generously of ‘time, interest
and labor, Having the idea was a sim-
ple enough matter, and more %r/ less
| familiarity with the period made not too
difficult the necessary research work and
the arrangement of the programme; but
had it not been for the fine spirit of co-
operatjon the, part. of groups and
individuals, ~who. subordinated / personal
preferences -and-.worked for the glory
of the whole, the task of casting, train-
,ing and costuming almost.five hundred
| persons. in_so. short, a -time would have
“* CONTINUED ON’ PAGE SIX
>
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With}
Elizabethan ¥
Athletic Elections
Rebecca Wills, 29, .has. been
elected President of the Athletic
Association for next year, Miss
Wills is the most all around ath-
lete of her class. Besides having
been on the Varsity hockey team,
she has been captain of the 1929
swimming team, a member of ’29’s
gym team; and is ‘one of the cham-
‘pion tumblers on the ‘green in May
Day. ;
Helen Louise Taylor, .’30,° was
chosen Vice President. Miss Tay-
lor is a swimmer and -hockey
player, “but most famous as a win-
) ter sport’s champion, and as Hall
President of Pembroke—East:
Louisg Littlehale, '30, has been
elected Treasurer; M. E. Froth-
ingham, ’31, Secretary, and Elea-
nor Totten, ’31, Sophomore mem-
ber, for 1928-29. aang
BASIS OF MODERN
SCIENCE IN PAST
Millikan Tells of Most Signific
cant Work of Physi-
, cists.
LESSON. TO
Dr, Robert .Millikan,
of the” Univer-
Prize in 1923 for work on the elec-!
tronic charge, and co-author of Milli-
kan and Gale’s ‘famous text-book of
physics, appealed to the younger gen-
eration, through~the students of Bryn
Mawr who gathered to hear him speak
in Taylor Hall last ‘Wednesday —eve-
ning, not to reject too sweepingly the
discoveries of the past. Although the
new ‘conceptions of physics. have
wrought many changes, much of what
we believe today is based’on the re;
searches. of our prédecessors; we
should hesitate to. withdraw a _ stone
from. the foundations till we know that
we have a better one to take its place.
Yet a startling change has come
over the world in the last twenty years.
There was really very little difference
in the pictures of two hundred years
ago and in those of the 1890's, but those
of the latter. period were very. differ-
ent from those of today. As the limits
of change are set by zero and infinity,
however,’ we really can not go much
farther, at least, in the length of skirts.
Physicists are in a sense responsible
for this metamorphgsis; physics is the
basis of differentiation of modern civ-
ilization.
OONTINUED: ON PAGE .FOUR
YOUTH|
sity of California, winner of the Nobel}
It. makes it inspiring to be} }
alive because we are-still reshaping the}
SCHOLARS AND*:
FELLOWS FOR 28-29
Auneonehe of Awards
for Distinguished Aca-
dernic Work.
CUM ‘LAUDE PROSPECTS °
In morning chapel on “Friday, April
Park to - the ©
usti@@Panting crowd of Little May Day
celebrants the Graduate Fellowships and
27, President announced
Schelarships, the Undergraduate Scholar-
ships, and various other Honor Awards;
A-list of the students in the three lower
classes who have laude ‘average
in their academic work was addeg to the
usual annouricements, Special prizés, of
which the winners were made public, are:
The Essay Prize, awarded to J. Fes-
ler, “28, with. honorable. mention to P:
a cum
Burr, “28; and *
The Currétit Events” Prize, “won. by”
M; Perty, ’28; F. Bethel,—’28, -second;
B. Rose, ’28, third.
The other announcements follow :
SCHOLARS AND FELLOWS
: FOR /28-'29 :
RESIDENT FELLOWSHIPS CON-
FERRED FOR 1928-1929
GREEK:
Virginia Fits os Grace, of New
York City. A. B., Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, 1922. Teacher of English,
- Wadleigh - School, New York. ,
City, 1923-25, and- of ‘ Mathematics
and icon History, Brearley
School, New ‘York City, 1926. Stu-
dent, American School of Classical
Studies, Athens, Greece, 1927-28.
LATIN :
Ruth Elizabeth peblade. of Amherst,
Mass. A. B., Mount Holyoke Col-
lege, 1927. Scholar in Latin, .Bryn
Mawr. -College;-1927-28.
°M.-- As to
be conferred, 1927-28 ;
ENGLISH:
Rebeéca Garrett Rhoads, of Wilming-
ton, Delaware——A.—®:; Bryn Mawr
College, 1918. B. Litt.> Oxford (St.
Hugh’s College), 1927. Scholar in
English, Bryn Mawr College; 1927-
“20.
ROMANCE . LANGUAGES
(French) Jean Gray Wright, of Lin-
coln University, Penna, A. B., Bryn
Mawr College, 1919, and M:A., Uni-
versity of Pennsylvania, 1926. Stu-
dent at the. Sorbonne, 1928-24,
Teacher’ of French and German,
Wilmington Friends’ School, :1919-
Teacher of French; Holman
School, 1924-25. \ Scholar’ in French,
Bryn Mawr College, Sem. I, and
Scholars of the: Society of Pennsyl-
vania Women in New York, Sem.
II, 1926-27, and“year 1927-28. .
(Spanish) Edith Fishtine, of Dorches-
ter,~Mass.""A. B., Boston Univer-
sity, 1925. Student at the University
of Paris and Madrid, 1925-26, and
at Radcliffe College, Sem. II, 1926-
54
u35
,CONTINUED ON PAGE SEVEN
V. HOBART, '31
ALES STEes ae eae cai
- The College News *
(Founded in 1914).
ee
*
llege Year
eae mice *Wilsne Pa., ona’ “ rye
a Editor-in-Chief
“"" SLIZABBTH H. LINN, '29 ,
MARY R. GRACE, ‘29
Editors
&. BALCH, ‘29 E.
C. HOWE, ’30
Contributing Editor”
J. bs '28
Assistant I Editors
V. SHRYOCK, '31
E ‘LEWI8, 8t
Busitiéss 8 Manager a
J. BARTH, '29
RICE,. ‘30
™
~
. x) ween s
a Oey GARRETT,
o-
oe?
: ‘no Anne re -
CROSS, . BAXTER, '30
Pease, ’$1 D. ASHER, '31
jon, $2.50. Price, $3.00.
NS MAY BEGIN AT ANY ANY TIME
preier at
=
BE.
$u
Enter
Wayne.
as second-class the
. Post Office.
| MAY DAY
Our s, ring festival is, of course,
somewhat. renowned throughout
the -territories of . Pennsylvania
and outlying lands. It is more
than flattering, however, to. find
ourselves aos A into. metro pol-
itan print, and being announced
to the great outside world through
the pages of the New York Times
~Sanday™ a ~~ yon. _ Deir-
dre O’Shea, ’26, has written an
article, and it is s been printed in
a place of importance. We note
-'that May Day is an. American
tradition brought Over by the Pil-
grims and celebrated in New
England as early as: 1628. We are
responsible-.to_a__tradition-loving
past, then, to uphold this old cer-
emony. It is not merely a little
institution, performed-every four.
_yeats by a group of school girls;
_it is, rather, a thing of compara-
; at that college.
‘cance we remember
2
tivel large significance. “Think
of Siva Mawr,” writes Miss
O’Shea, “and you will likely think
of the famous May festivals held
This quaint ob-
servance persists in the. world by
dint of its sheer loveliness when
most of the. popular customs of
the long ago have passed away.’
We take it upon otrselves to
wonder how much of ‘its signifi-
when we
dash from one rehearsal to an-
other in the rush of preparing for
May Day. Surely we should not
let dro» the idea which has made
oF May. Day..a.celebration which
the college chooses to repeat.
OUR RADICALISM
Several years ago a nearby post
of the American Legion listed the
Bryn. Mawr Liberal Club as a
dangerous radical . organization.
Now, on the recently published
blacklist of the D. A. R., it is
given a place with similar organi-
zations. in Barnard, Harvard,
Yale, Vassar and other colleges
as being “dangeftously radical.”
In a speech, under the auspices of
the D. A. .R.,’ Edward Hunter
said:
ment is one of the most insidi-
ously dangereus in the coun-
7 eee These people (radi-
cals) have planted in more than
200 of our educational institu-
tions so called ‘liberal’ and social-
“istic” forums, the real- purpose of
which is to corrupt existing stand-
ards of government and sociology
among those who are destined by
their educational equipment to be
the leaders of tomorrow.” And
he also places Bryn Mawr on his
‘list. We do not resent being
ken of in this way, nor are we
ecially proud of it. But we
~ cannot help wondering how these
‘ fists-are made. When we con-
sider our own example of radi-
calism we are forced to the con-
clusion that the selection must be
- Apology |
“- Two chapel write-ups which ap-
’ peared in last week’s issue of the.
“CoL.ece..Ngws made certain state--
ments purporting to be direct quo- |
tations from members of the Fac-
ulty. The News wishes to state
that these quotations were not in
Tt a he
L itself full re-
teeta ter -
Paeen “4 Cy E .
{made py name alone.
“Tie whole youth move-|.
ce ee
- .
No one
who had inyestigated its purpose
Liberal Club “dangerous. It is
"2! foolish -and childish enough § to
make_ blacklists; but if they must
be made it should be done on an
dom or: socialism appears in ‘the
name of. the organization,
EX LIBRIS
We are very fortunate in our li?
brary. But there is one demand
library's: book buyers. It-is only,
occasionally that some new book
of particular note can be pur-
chased. The students themselves
seldom have enough allowance to
novels as
would like, or even as rapidly as
the “press turns out contemporary
fiction. But there area great
many people who buy new books,
tead them once and encumber their
‘shelves with these seldom immor-
‘tal publications.
How appreviative we would be
if people. who~ have finished Bad
Girl or the Great American Band
Wagon or other new books, would
contribute them to grateful girls,
via the library. The shelves in
the Common Room are. still
empty and we could collect a cir-
culating library... angdsmake a com-
fortable reading room of’ its elegance
coziness. So may” books are
bought, read and laid aside by our
elders, our: families .and our alum-
nae that it seems" a shame they
are not brought again into active
service. at Bryn Mawr.
In Other Colleges
From College to Jail
University of Wisconsin students are
reported to be raising funds for an ap-
peal for a pardon for David Gordon, 18,
holder of a, Zona Gale scholarship at the
University, who is serving an. inde-
terininate sentence in the New York re-
formatory for his authorship of a poem
which the court has ‘termed “indecent.”
Gordon’s ,poém, entitled America, which
referred in manner uncomplimentary to
capitalism, was published in the Daily
Worker, communist newspaper. © Gordon
entered the University of Wisconsin
while his case was on appeal. When the
court’s” sentence was upheld he left. to
enter the reformatory.—New ‘Student.
Walking Out.
college which prohibited men and women
students walking together on Sunday has
beén lifted by the faculty this year. The
faculty's decision ends a festrictive rule
as old as Oberlin college itself, it is said.
In the “olden days” men and co-eds
were never allowed to walk together
under “any circumstances” except, ac-
¢ording to the “law book,” “by some ac-
cident a young man and woman happen
to be going im the same direction, it is
raining and the young gentleman has with
him an umbrella with which to shelter
the young lady.”
The “walking ‘rule” was later amended
somewhat and co-eds were allowed to.
walk to church with their “boy friends”
of to or from classes. in the daytime.
Long years after this, young men and
wothen students were allowed to “swing
hands together down the lane” after
dark.
This restriction, it is said, was
heglected as modern ideas and. modern
sidewalks appeared onathe Oberlin cam-
pus until one rule remained on the col-
lege statute book relative to “walking”—
that of forbidding college youths. and
young fair co-eds from walking together
between 2 and 4.30 o’clock on Sunday
aftertroon.
Students declared no one knew why
the rule was on the books or why it was
enforced. Finally, the: students of Ober-
lin collegé weré pleasantly surprised when
the faculty anonunced that the last of the
Sunday restrictions had been removed.—
New Jersey College News.
Introspection.
_A__ questionnaire that will _examtine
thoroughly into__courses, exathinations,
compulsory class attendance, student-
faculty relationships and similar prob-
lems has been distributed fo students of
the Massachusetts Institute of Technol-
ogy. When compilations aré completed
s for Hiberalizing the cur-
and procedure cowd think the}
: intelligent basis and not because.
{something about liberty or free-
indulge in the buying of modern
frequently as_ they]
. | Fetch, it!
The “Ancient Blue Law” of Oberlin |
. - a4 ‘ ; 4
‘THE’ COLLEGE NEWS a ae
, si te
re oes e Lantern Review 2 No Apology ol
ey): (Specially contributed by .a wamber te
£ The Pillar Pood *.. of 28) « We made many mistakes lass
of Salt -
We apologize ‘for the ideas in this
pillar; or rather for our use of them.
|We borrowed them off our superiors,
who little-knew what they were shaping
in Our. untutored mind, But we have no
time for originality this week. We
are immersed in rehearsals,.and Cissy
which can not well be met by theCentipede is busy teaching the tumblers
thow--to—do—a—handastand,-without—bring-
ing down the grandstand.
Puck at Work Again
Mourn, mourn for the first of May
Menaced with measles and pains in
heads -
Queered by quarantine; what a day,
When Kings and Collinses take to pheir
beds!
Scarlet fever in ’24 © ns oy
Put a red sign on the Collins’ door
Mrs. Collins, we must confess,
Was at last let out in-a brand-new dress.
German measles in ’28
Little Kings met a, similar fate ;
Suspect the work of the foul fiend
When Oberon is quarantined !
.
The _Bishop Takes Hjs Place in.
The Music Walk.
(With profound apologies
ana Society
Dignity, saith the architect, dignity !
to the
"Tis lost? .Methinks I left it on the bed.
"Tis well,
*to.
Where’s’ that ?
In the umbrella stand,
say you? :
Tat looking” well, I hope?
‘Draw near, son’s mine, and say .
how sits this cope?.
I would not have my mitre on awry
For all the motes within a sinner’s eye.
Have I my beads? My parchment pray-
ers bring in;
O!d Gandolf with his paltry onion-skin
hall not compete with me. For oti this
day
The great “event for which I long did
pr,
Is come to pass; in bishop’s robe I'll stalk
Beneath the arches of the Music Walk.
That’s Goodhart -Hall, you know. In-
. .d¢ed, I fought
With tooth and nail to get the place T
~~gought:
And yet ’twas meant for me. No other
sort: z
Could fill its spaces with such stately
port.
Cram saw it first; he eee I should be
there, ;
Half in a church, half-in the opén_air.
One sees the chapel o’ the Collin’s side,
And somewhat of the common room be-
side ; :
And up into the aery dome, the sky,
Whére sunbeams lurk, and where the
angels fly.
He knew.no. beggar in a mouldy gown
Could with true dignity go-up and down
Those graded steps, to that small resting
place,
Which bishophood alone could
grace.
truly
stone, :
Or stumble up, or hobble like a crone,
Or merely run or strut or pace or prance
Or slip or stagger or perform a dance.
But this place does | some nobler thing
demand.
The ease of an ecclesiastic hand;
None but a bishop could, with solemn.
Sswmuk.
No perfect justice to the Music Walk.
Misunderstood May Day
May Day, they tell us, is an Old Eng-
lish custom. But we know it is even
older than that. Long before the little
golden-haired Angles danced around the
first sapling of a-May Pole, the early,
early Greeks and the tattooed savages of
darkest Affica were weaving magic cir-
cles itt the spring around the first budded
tree, and beating relentlessly on tom-
toms, while the priest of Demeter, or
Dionysius,
deity ptayed earnestly for rain. (Our
principles are right-if our anthropology is
foulty, .and for that we réfer you to
volume No. 98634 of the Golden. Bough.)
The fact remains that these original
ceremonies were the cry of the primitive
thirsty earth for rain. rain, and more
fain; and when it came, the crude culti-
#ators-were- grateful, and- put -up-stat-
tiés and offeririgs of thanks. No one
‘lthought of anythihg else till the English
i... ea a trip, and
“ -reveda? ‘Tealistie-—-tragedy,
Bring on my mitre: set it on my head. |
My golden croaked crozier, |
or some ‘other bootlegging |
One of, the-stories in the May Humber
|of The Lantern. is “headed by
““T am the slow merger:
_ Patience, and Wait for me.”
which may be. aptly applied to the whole.
The Lantern leaves one with a feeling
of slow emergence—very slow. There is
nothing im it which has its wings free
from the \chrysalis, nothing completely
accomplished. .This may be due in part
to the fact that two-thirds of the con-
tributors to this -fumber are freshmen,
from whom we must not expect finished
should have it presented to us in a pub-
lication whose -past standard of literary
value justifies our expectation of more
worth-while reading? The percentage
of really perfected writing in an under-
graduate magazine is\ of course never
very large; it is not» natural or at alt
necessary that it should be large. But
surely there is in this college more per-
fection of style and .execution, more in-
spiration of idea. andseimagination, than
weé can see in this Lantern.
Yet, though the emergence is slow, and
irritating in jts imperfection, , there’ is
something to emerge. The story, The
Rival Brothers, shows this, for it has -a
fundamental ‘originality, much beclouded
by the confusion of mood and the incom-
pleteness which ‘destroy its effect. We
could wish for more in the style of the
dachshund incident, which leaves noth-
} ing to be desired, and less of the inef-
|
{must always have death and great pas-
sion at every turn in undergraduate
: work?
Misunderstanding gives a realistic im-
; pression of some of those vivid. memo-
iries of childhood which we all retain:
and in it is a note of intense tragedy and
pathos that just fails of being convinc-
ing. The story ia another piece of work
that’ should be-good, but falls sHort of
accomplishment; it is uncertain in style,
but has a germ of power and insight that
causes hope for something better from
the author in the future.
Forced: Laughter and The Chalk Line
achieve a more finished effect than any
of the other stories, The first is a bold
attempt at portraiture, set in a common-:
place story; the style is sufficiently good
and the presentation better managed in
brevity and distinctness than is*tsual in
the undergraduate short story. But the
central figure of Imogen does not stand
out as it should, nor are we much ‘af-
fected by the climax of the tale: The
Chalk Line suffers from being too long;
the psychological ‘style, especially when
lit pictures a. strange and intensified state
| of. mind, is nét..bearable for many. pages
unless done by the hand of a master. It
gains in effect by the careful selection
of particular impressions, and loses when
it gives the impression of photography.
With this exception, the picture of a
state of mind in The Chalk Line is fairly
convincing. The denounement is care-
fully foreshadowed from the beginning
and relieves the psychological” picture.
The style is perhaps the best of any in
the isstie:
or finish, but moves directly and with
vitality to the point.
The tywo—shall we call them tables? i
| The First. of April and The. Half- Gods|
Others might patter on those steps of | | and the High Gods would seem to prove |
that a finish is more easily: secured in
light satire than‘in the realism and semi-
realism of the -short story: The story
of the penguin who was elected Presi-
dent of the United States is particularly
fair to contrast it with the more serious
efforts, we are of the private opinion
that we will remember it when all the
rest are forgotten.
Aunt Sara Sturdevant isa pleasant
enough portrait of an old lady traveling
took up. this quaint custom along with
the rest of the White Man’s burden.
They didn’t understand it,: but: they
shipped it home and had it instituted in
England, which was quite rainy enough
already. So the climate has. been ex-
tremely damp ever since.
Can, we wonder, then, that it always
rains on May Day? The gods are only
trying to be helpful and obliging.
Imagine those poor bewildered divinities
confronted- with one May Day after an-
other on successive Fridays, and doing
their best to fill the orders on ‘time. THe
lookout on Mount Olympus reports an-
other May Pole dance, ot a hoop-rolling.
“Turn on the faticet,” says Dionysius.
“We have hot and cold rttining water
in_all_countriés, even if we are primitive
and anti-social.” And hé lets loose a
swamping torrént, just to show.
his. natural. good nature and dmiability.
work. But is that any reason-why—we}-}—
Why is it we}. een cage
: disappointing—it snow be better to-sup?*
it- Has no pretentions to-beauty.|
week, but there is one for which
we will make rio apology. We an- |,
- nounced to the eager and expect- -!'
ant student body ‘that creamed
.. chipped beef and strawberries |
wotild be served for breakfast on
r fittle May -Day~ morning... We
never dreamed of doubting the re-
~ liability and faithfulness to~tradi-
tion of the commissariat’-depart-
ment. - And what happened? Rav-
enous maidens, arising from. rosy
» dreams of strawberries and chip-
ped beef, were confronted with
scrambled eges : and PRUNES.
Our appetite was taken away. We
were even obliged to turn down a
third muffin.
from Philadelphia to New. York and
back again, but there is little init either
to praise,or condemn.
The poetry in this issue of The Yan-
tern, with “the single exception of the
which is. full of
beauty, is singularly ‘ uninteresting and
There good
Chinese translation,
uninspired. are several’
and some examples of felicity of expres-
sion. Evolation has a unity of mood
ar a-simplicity-that- would-be beneficial
in the author’s prose. The
lines of Afterthought, and the little twist
at the end, make the rest of the poem
port them. ‘The picture of the fern is
a slight moment of beauty. But for the
most part, the themes are unbearably
threadbare, and the verse itself merely
decent imitation of imaginative prose.
ing Lantern,
sibilities in the work, and much evidence
of honest effort. With this to build on,
we should have in the future work from
these very same contributors that will
show a higher standard than this issue
can prove.
The woodcuts are a pleasing addition,
especially that of the penguin, which is
delightfully suited to the.spirit of the
story. | : ; we
In Philadelphia
Broad: In Abraham’s Bosom, the
Pulitzer Prize play for 1927 by Paul
Green. A vivid drama of negro life.
Walnut Street: A-.remarkable group
of -players_in Galsworthy’s interesting
play, Escape.
“Chestnut Street Opeta House: Ok
Kay! if you want a reaction to’an Eliza-
bethan May Day.
Adelphi: Claimed to be the last week
of The Road to Rome...Have you-seen
it?
New Eorest: Opening of, The Red
Rose; a new musical comedy:
Lyric: Irene Bordoni says, “Good-bye
Philadelphia.” Last week of Paris.
Movies
Aldine: Gary Cooper in The Legion
of the Condemned—companion picture
to-Wings.
Stanley: The Private Life of Hélen of
Troy. “Not historical, but hysterical.”
| Karlton: Lon Chaney shows us_ the.
underworld of a Big City.
Fox Locust: Street Angel.
lto get. seats:
Just try
Stanton: Harold Lloyd in Speed If
you’re a back seat driver don’t go!
Coming.
Lyric: Walter Hampden .in Capon-
delightful, and though perhaps it is un-!sacchi, dn Enemy of the People, Ham-
let.
Garrick: Porgy.
New Association Elects
Officers for Next Year
The reorganized Association, which was
the Christian Association (we feel sure
we will not long be. kept waiting for a
more significant. name) has cotnpleted
its elections. After electing Ruth Bid-
dle, ’29, by a latge majority to the posi-
tion of director of the tiew Association
at-a meeting on last Wednesday evening,
three’ departmental heads were chosen
on Sunday. These are: Catherine Col-
lins, 29, head of Social Service; S. Brad-
ley, 29, head-of Worship, and O. Stokes,
{'30, head 6f Discussion, These officers
were elected by the people interested
in the sepatate departmertts.
dle, who earlier this sprifg was chosen
President of the Christian” Association
meeting of all those interested in the
new association as a whole. Plans for
[next y year’s work, based on study of the
questionnaires, and on thé deliberation
next week.
ideas, such as the death of the seagull,.
‘first. two:
It is, on the whole, a very disappoint-°
But there are many pos- —
Miss Bid- ?
which is now defunct, was elected at a-
of the four heads, will be snimemeed =
‘ cae : ee Loe : : Fs : Le tc righ ee
THE*COLLEGE NEWS ke Z
dance is_ usually -very long. The music
a | tsed on May Day will be that for “Kirk-
Tracitional English Morris and | >Y Malzeard,” ‘although that dance will - |
Sword Dancing to * j not be given in its entirety. A shortened: . _
. Ba Givari- | Version Will be preseyted with. two locks :
: pea ie (stars made by the interweaving of the
; | swords ) from other dances put in.
| ? > .
Ninth street. What would her bréthers
think. if they knew where she was, ‘right
Dancing on the Green
»
%
down there fi. the slums!” As befits the
advanced young college woman, she is
; a
‘
E submits an essay ehtitled North
|
|
‘half-afraid, ‘and yet intensely‘ inter-!/ SS ees ee ae
: |. Country dancing is so old in Englanc
ested.” Yet where does her journey end?
: 4 | that it. is almost impvwssible to face its - by
| At the: establishiiient of ““Van Horn & origin, It was the form of dancing used FROM OTHER COLLEGES
Son, Costumers and Outfitters.” To at all. social events even bt the better Mara peal 5
think that in 1898 Van Horn already had classes of people; one might almost’ call e The Politica} ‘W hirl.
ok , Four hundred students from political
it a forerunner. of the Virginia Reel gata la at the Ua it of Chi
ea erie mags Te ee” Cee eee rea : science classes 1e Universi#® of Chi-
The Fortnightly Philistine is very type of dances. The steps are the same | _ : :
|cago, about one-thiaal of them women.
'
i
|
jmach engrossedin basketball,. The ‘sea- —skipping® running and Slipping, but! , “5 :
| served as watchers at the polls’ during
son bate ty Gx months at least, and only ‘there is'a chorus which is characteristic Ee: Lae : ‘
the digs, the most conscientious stu-!| of redeh damoe-and—thetearée. difevent |” NCago s primary ¢,.ections, in which the
cata waclat ; ey era ore : a a FE at poets “(forces of Big Bill Thompson we ‘a
dents, resisted the lure of the basketball versions of each dance in different parts |. si g pson were de
field in spring. The style was. still Pre- of Hawtend feated. The students were deputized, lec-
| Raphaelite, but. becoming trim- and thas- | al aaa a a a tured to, and then sent out to preserve
culine. “The :Philistine : sf | the sanctity gf the ballot box. They have
line. The Philistine May Day. They are all so old that they | +: ae ais, Seale ee =
done this in Chicago for four yearsy
:-frivolous-young-woman—-for-the—exces- | ....% ,
pS oti S . ExCES™ | Were done the same way all over Eng- “The Bxperi 0 ;
's.ve’ brilliance of. her neck-tie. We. find ne sts The “experience gives. them an idea of
i. : : ~ | tend. Newcastle” is four | é ENR
' mention ° of Munsey’s : “ ‘; ; the. operation of election laws, as well
: : ; : ” >| couples ina square, “Old Mole” .by three ! i :
; magazine, debating cluds, and anti-matri- | as a knowledge of frauds that creep 1n,
'monial sogieties, the latter not too séri- from
said Jerome’ G, Kerwin, pro-
4 a]
reproaches one
|
done by
Banjo clubs, of
couples in a regular Morris set forma- |
: ; } such as
| tton, :
are suddenly startled to] ‘ @ spe
. a : itwo couples in’ a square. ~The
come upon a mention of the war, and to | eee ‘ :
, : ; ., | dance, “Confess,”’. is very unusual, as it
| realize after .some thcught that it is the!. ‘ ‘
Hovecemeaa ages ‘is done by four women and two men, in
| Spanish-American war, :
| It is reassuring to find The Philistine |
| getting out a red issue’ and urging one
|and all to lock their history’.notes and|
t 5 3 $ ‘ . . = |
| their private reading hst~in the drawer
for’the next weeks. We have so
often been compared unfavorably with! Performed with arms.
they =could ‘not réceive
and ‘“Parson’s Farewell’ by -only ree
i 00KS,
fourth | .e ; ie ‘
i fessor of political sciences who was iti =
charge of the stugent watchers.—New
: 3 | Student,
two lines. of three each. :
Sword. Dancing. ‘s Student Labor
University. of Wisconsin students~wha
fous; and we
8 ‘ =
Sword dancing was done all over Eu- :
help pay their way through céllege by
their spare tinte «have
-handed together ‘nto the Student Work-
rope, -and_is believed»to-have come dow,
from the old Greek and Roman. dances
working during
two
7 ESL eS ee ee : coe pee me | these students of the nineties who took Even~today—-in—England—there—are oe — or mon ae 8 iC re
Midsummer’s : TUT bo eee esis E. Cohoe, 28 their education seriously. They took|teams of six men who go about the | 77S" oT ee ee ee
Night Dream = hoot ect in eee R. oer a enough time off fronf study at least to| country giving exhibitions in sword me ie i aw ad
: spice: Soe oan oe ee N, Perera, A as woke a number of genial verses, of} dancing. They..are usually quite old} ~"” i ned ie tin ary * ¥
Short aman et Helena ei pene lea, JA. Bonnewitz, “8° hicht the best is entitled: “After-Moche | since when a man is
Place in the Hol- Gentleman of the Court ....J. Barth, ’29 Ps : Junior teams are worked up constantly, | thirty-five cents ai hour.—Blue and Gray.
low. Guards—F, Dana, ’28; A. Parkhurst,’ 30,) « Unlike Us. . and the young go from these into the Compulsory Chapel
2 y ; Ye . e rr - - was
and B. Worthington, ‘31, - real ones when the older ones are forced I'he board of trustees of the Univer-
se
A short version of Shakespeare’s Mid-
summer's Night Dream has ' been
presented in the course of every ~Bryn+
Mawr May Day, under the title of The
Tragicall ~Enterlude of Pyramis and
Thisbe. In this way the five acts of the
original play have been made to conform
to the hour allotted to the production,
and- the most essential elements of the
entire romantic comedy have been _re-
tained.
“This . version. opens with Titania
asleep in the forest.» Oberon, angry with
her because she refuses to give him one
of her attendants, weaves around her a
spell, so that, upon awakening, she will
love the first thing she-sees. While she
sleeps. five rustic enter, and. plan to
act the play of Pyramis and Thisbe,-in
honor_of the marriage of Theseus, Duke
ot Athens. : ee “
“Puck, the fairy sefvant of Oberon,
sees their rehearsal, calls aside the weav-
er, Bottom, and claps an as head on his
shoulders.. _When_ the rusties see this
apparition, they run away in terror, Ti-
tania awakes,-and;. seeing Bottom first,
falls in love with him. The. last scene
in the hall of Theseus’ palaee, where
Theseus sits surrounded by his court. The
rustics enter and give their play. Be-
cause it is ‘so incredibly )absurd the Duke
is delighted, and the’court revels end
only at midnight.”
Stands Not Grand. Enough
“The spirit was, willing, but the Wayne-
Iron Works gave out,” said Mrs. Chad- |
wick. Collins in ‘explanation of the~ex-
May Day. According to the ofigiiial’
plan only 1000.seats wefe reserved on the
grandstafid, corresponding to the 1000
seats in Goodhart Hall, which were to
be occupied in case of rain. By the 21st
ot April orders had come in for all of
these... The 500 ‘grandstand seats which
had at first been held’ unreserved,.had to
be reserved, with alternate places in Tay-
lor Hall. Wheh this had beén done it
was found that more than 400 unfilled
orders were still on hand. Herculean la-
bors resulted in the collection of suffi-
cient scraps of iron 'to add 500 more seats
to the grandstand. All these were re-
served and still the demands swamped’
the Director’s office. Mrs. Collins, al-
-though anxious to satisfy every request,
was unable to reserve the maple trees and
the clouds. Failing this, no one neéd’
doubt that everything that could have
been done .to fill all the demands. for
seats has been done :two-fo'd. |
Character of Ancient
Campus Is Rediscovered
Thirty ears ago a remarkable char-
A Midsummer’s Night Dream was first |
acted by the Lord Chamberlaine’s cori}
pany of players, and it is mentioned in
Francis Meres’ Palladis Tamia, of 1598:
“As Platus and Terence are aceounted
the best for-Comedy and Tragedy among
the Latines, so Shakespeare among ye
English is most excellent’ in both kinds
for the stage; for Comedy, witness” his
Midsummer’s Night Dreame . . .” The
play is entered in the Stationers’ Regis-
ter on October 8th, 1600; the -first quarto
edition appeared in the same year, with
acter flourished’ on this campus. . He
made his appearance every two weeks in
a publication named for him, “The Fort-
nightly Philistine” (for private circula-
tion only). Some copies of this small
magazine have recently been put into
our “hands; Each- issue--has--a-cover_of
la different color, and boasts the. spirited
motto:' Donec Virenti Canities abest
morosa. Paradoxically the editors pro-
‘claim their youth in Latin. The Philis-
tine,- we take it, after a short perusal,
represented the advanced spirits in that
college of 1898 Which seems so distant
haustion of reserved seats a week before...‘
- Ability’ to swim will no longer be a
graduation requirement for students at
the University of Pittsburgh... This new
rule_is effective only with students en- |,
tering the university in February, 1928,
or thereafter—New Jersey College
News. ms :
by age to give up dancing.
The teams are always accompanied by |
their fools, and they .do different dances
on each day of the week, though they
do not all perform every day. “The step
is a walk adapted ‘to marching, and the | Blue and Gray.
sity of Rochester has abolished compul-.
sory chapel. In its place will be two
meetings a week, one a religious service
and-the-other-for-college business. ._The.
ra
\N
D
\
fs.
\%
me.
3 Se SZ @,
When Dad was a “Modern Youth”.
YICYCLES, stereopticon lectures,
and the “‘gilded” youths with
their horses and carts; at, night the
street lighting sheds its friendly
. glow over the campus.
Without electricity we would
«
Seer ise Darts fhe soutee OF i text from the qne we know. Yet,. fot 40 midnight oil burning in student . have none of these improve-
The text of the play as, it appeared in| gistant after all. The most startling ‘ - a —
the first folio edition is from the second thing about The Philistine is his evidence lamps while the gas lights glared and ments. To-day S marvel of eléctrical
ee | Mt toe lie We have chunged flickered across the campus—the° invention becomes to-morrdWw’s
has always been one of the most popular) 1. ‘his. bi-weekl ar : ,
' ; « bi- y editorial utterance, . z : . * ;
of the May Day productions. the Philistine was much given to good gay nineties when Dad was iff accepted utility. In the coming
In 1906 Miss Schenck was cast for the
part of Bottom, but did nof play it;
- Cornelia Otis Skinner, ex-22, took the
part of Moth in 1910; Im 1914 Freder-
icka de Laguna, ’27, Audrey Sanders,
,ex-27, and Gladys Leuba took the parts
‘of the fairies. This year they are to be
taken by the childhen of Mrs. Manning,
Mrs. Chadwick-Collins and Mr. King.
The play is being directed’ by H. McKel-
adyice. He considered that it was bet-
iter to get up early than.to go to bed
late; that basketball players’should keep
training rules, and that students put up
window boxes to decorate the exterior |
of college buildings. As a proof of the
futility of the press we regret to find
him urging that class dinners be given
in March; but on the other hand we
feel a- little superior when we -find him
college seem primitive to us to-day.
Now it’s sport roadsters, the
movies, and radios. At night
the MAZDA lamp replaces
the midnight oil in
tory rooms, ‘while modern
4
dormi-
years, by taking advantage of new
uses of electricity you - will be
able to go so much farther
that the “tearing twenties”
will seem just as primitive
as the “gay nineties”.
vey, ’28. advocating the speedy construction of a é wen as
The ast is to be as follows: library, and encouraging his readers with Scientists in the research laboratorics of the General Electric
Thesus tee e eee ees ...R. Lawrence, bee fond dreams like this: “If the Philistine Company keep. G.E. a leader in the feld of electrical »
aon Le eNP GES eas ~ oe = =_— indalge m ‘propaecy me would progress. Skilled G-E engineers develop each latest invention.
- Seer Smt ee EH eres" M.- Fowler, fai try to picture to his friends the new. The GE factories carry siee—ahhi engineers’ designs aiteh
Ml Gio ces cas chee H. L.- Taylor, ’30 library building of gray stone, adorned 3 ep ‘ “
ee ates H. McKelvey, ’28| without with’ flowering shrubs, . and high-quality material and expert workmanship. :
in van cnesenes E. Dyers, ’31 | within with white busts on yellow pedes- : : a
et ee M. Jenkins, '31| tals, among whom one might even rec- :
SN oer: eee pe hy K. Lord, ’31| ognize such friends as Pan or George
Titania. ......+.+++2:++++++-Nora King | Washington, or even. Jupiter himself.” |.
SUE chess oveestennsanens Eloise Collins | Other items “sound strange in our |
‘twentieth century-ears. One bold, brave
we
l attendance for both, will be optional.—-
. in the Moon was written about 1591 or
«
printed form until 1597,
The .Two Gentlemen from Verona and
~Grumio in The Taming of the Shrew;
~again- Pandora’smistaken. love for Gun-
.Luna somewhat resembles the love of
“quently addressed by the flattering poets
“has been arranged ih three short acts and
”
Bead tee i
YHE COLLEGE NEWS
Woman in the Moon
Forerunner of . Shakespeare’s
Comedy Has Full Musical ~
Accompaniment.
(Speci contributed by. Dr. Furness)
William Lyllie’s: comedy The Woman
not issued in
Its title-page
describes it as having béen lately acted
before Queen Elizabeth, but we have no
actual date of that or any other perform-
ance of the play.
Compared to .the other comedies by”
Lyllie The Woman in the Moon may well
be assigned to first rank. Its verse and
poetic fancy are. of unfailing charm. It
is interesting to’ note that the Comedy,
being a forerunner of some of Shakes-
peare’s comedies, has: certain points in
common. Thus Gunophilus, Pandora’s
servant, is the prototype of ‘he comic
servingman as porttayed in several of
Shakespeare’s plays, notably Launec in
1592. It .was,
ophilus under. the malignant influence of
Titania for Bottom while under the
magic spell of the drug squeezed upon
her eyes by Puck. In Pandora’s choos-
ing to abide with Luna above all the
other’ planets we may detect a_ veiled
compliment to Elizabeth, who. was __fre-.
as Cynthia and Diana, the goddess of the
Moon: 3
In its gtiginal form the Comedy is in’!
five acts with only one or two directions
for incidental music; the present version
seventeen musical. accompaniments,. the |
last selected for the most part from old
English and French tures and
songs.
“For us and for our comedy
Here. stooping for your clemency,
We beg your hearing patiently.”
Cast :
dance
Ee aa RS K. Hepburn, ’28
CHO oS Cio sa ca cas H.°Curdy, ’31!
JORMA -vigdaiecin-nncithicsa Al SIA 20
MORNE hae stew ,V. Gendell, 29
TOES ei iseess B. George, ’31
CMON teh ess boise V. Fain, °29
ia eens sn’ vil A. Bruere, 29
ae ae oe Thay Asplund, ’28
NMG i. a cies ...+.G. Sampson, ’28
TE chika na sca hdar cas i Bateman, ’29'
Gunophilus .:............M. Drake, ’31
Bee gis aa PeRnin ORS E. Fry, '’29
re es res vas C. Crosby, ’28
NS caucus tied A. Learned, ’29
Se ee, Wis, 80
CNN ocd vee des M: McDermott, ’29
oS US ae erin ard we E. Overton, ’31
BN phy wate oa sayN AW I L; Sears, ’30
BN cite cekenss C. Farquhar, °30
Prologue asa pamper mae E. Fehrer, ’30
' said that all the great discoveries had
ss yest .on Christmas Eve in 1895, Roent-
|
Millikan on Science
CONTINUED FROM: PAGE 1
We’
must not pull down the knowledge of
world, and it is also dangerous.
the past before we have other knowl-
We
edge with which to replace it,
‘are not any better endowed than were],
‘the ancients, nor do we use larger
brain power.in our modern inventions.
Our progress is due “to the slow ac-
cumulation, of knowledge. which is
passed on'from one generation-to the
next. . What: one.
really insignificant.
Millikan Has Seen Change.
Prof, Millikan then told how he had
faken up the’ study of Physics five
years before the introduction of twen-
tieth century modes of thought, and
thus had been in contact, with, the
physicists of the nineteenth century.
Up to 1894, Physics was based entirely
on seventeenth century foundations;
even the mechanics.of Galileo and
Newton -are..essential to. the structure-|,
of our civilization. The automobile
and--the steam engine must use Galli-
leo’s principle tHat Force is equal to
Mass times Acceleration.
Recent Important Discoveries.
Celestial Physics was founded about
1800, and soomr after that the principle
of the conservation of energy was
established. Young...was...responsible
for the Physics of ether. Light waves
and electro-dynamic waves were: soon
quite fundamental... A lecturer reviewed
all this ita lecture-which -Prof;-Mibi-
kan: heard. -This lecturer: also..stated
that these were fixed and .eternal. ele-
ments, and that all future phenomena |
would have to fit into that frame. He!
undoubtedly been made and that_only
the details were left to be fitted in.
But this lecturer. was very wrong,
gen announced that he had discovered
a way to photograph the bores of te
human hand. The Physicists began to
see that: they had been taking them-
selves too seriously, and that they had
not sounded the depths,at all.
In 1896, with the discovery of-Radio-
activity, all the eternal elements of
the world seemed gone. >» The world
-had changed over night; radium had
was’ now;:known that radium was
created out of uranium, but the ques-
tion of where uranium came from has
jiow arisen. The whole idea of sev-
‘enty “odd underlying elements was
zone,
of the electron theory of matter;-that
inertia. is made up of proportions of
positive and negative electtical, charges.
Kauffman then found that the speed
of electrons was close to the velocity.
of light. The measuring of light-fotnd
its mass to be variable and_ this
knocked out, the principle of ahe con-4
servation. of” energy.” Then in 1905
PYesident M. Casey
Prize ($100). to" Jéan |
» Honorable Mention—Pamels) Burr.”
ee i
| Einstein déclared t
. sana a Hae
at matter was con-
as matter and
“lSoing on as radiant enerty:” He then|
generation adds is}
fixed the lifetime of an element: It]
The next great discovery was that}
put ‘forth. his famous ‘theory of rela-
tivity? aoa
. Binstein Theory of Gravitation.
Just lately, from the . applied rela-
tions between mass and energy, we
can know what kind of radiations go
‘off, and that they cdnnot go “off with-
out a certain kind of matter. In 1910
‘Einstein replaced and disproved the
laws of gravity, dropping out what had
always been a very sound base. Fhe
results of photo-electricity, in which
light is all wed to interplay with elec- |
irreconcilable
trons of matter, were
with the electro-magnetic theory of the
nineteenth century. The .laws of me-
-| chanics were then denied, and so the
Physicists had knocked out the foun-
dations of* old conventions.
, New Constructive Work. -
It now remains to see what. has
done constructively. The elé-
ments of nineteenth century Physics
were definite units, of chemical com-
bination, which are just as useful now
as they were then, It is jonly the
description tht .has changed. Al-
though the law of the conservation of
matter has- really disappeared, for in-
stance, it still holds for the pheriomena
which give rise to it. With the law
of -gravitation, the theor¥ of relativity
only corrects the term, and limits gen-
éralizations. In the same way, the
laws of mechanics and the electro-
dynamic Jaws are. still useful, though
in a more restricted manner, Just be-
cause Einstein has disproved some
of ‘the laws_of gravity it does not
mean that we step’ off. a skyscraper
more readily than we did before.
_ What is true of Physics is also true
in aesthetic fields. It is dangerous to
be ‘destructive without knowing the
theories. of the nineteenth century.
Physicists now know that future prog-
ress must. conform to what is true
today.. Perpetual motion. cranks ‘should
be kept in psychopathic wards, Man-
been
1
kind
‘ithpossible without an active, permeat-
ing sense of social responsibility, and
yet modern, expressionists deny this.
Profy Millikan then gave a humorous
illustration of his statement.
that as he was coming through Death
Valley from Pasadena he -saw a sign
on a soft drink stand saying, “We
can't: find Maw, but we've. got Pop on
ice.” He: then advised us’ to take
“Pop” .off the ioe, for one generation
cannot do. without the previous one.
Unity in All Things. |
Physics used to be divided into dif-
ferent departments: mechanics, heat,
electricity,
they are all a part of one another.
Heat is made of locomotion, and the
same in other fields, so the distinctions
are kept only for convenience,
Modern. Physics ‘has’ emphasized
things that. we knew before; the
symme. of the world, for example.
There is a> certain unity abdut exist-
Bacon said, “I should rather
believe the legends of Alkoran than
suppose that the universe was a frame
withoyt a mind,” and the Physicists of
today force us ‘to this point of wiew.
There is a God of Science and rational
order. The growth of Stience has not
taken aw ay from the value of religion
as Science conceives it. Thus the pres-
entatign of the recent history of the
field-of; Physies-is-not- withous- signifi-
cance for the youth of foday in other
fields.
ence,
Art Club Luncheon
Students are. reminded that
tickets for the Art Club Luncheon,
to be held on Friday and *Satur-:
day, May 4th and 5th, at the home
of Mrs.’ Henry Collins, on Yarrow.
road, may: be obtdined not late;
than Thursday.
. : ~ F . . qe “ .
has learned that civilfzation is
,
He said}
sound, and tight, but now |
|
‘Gifts oe:
of Distinction.
Diamond and precious stone
jewelry. Watches and clocks.
Imported and domestic nov-
eltiés.
China ‘and glassware.
auonery,
@.
- Cld%s rings and pins. Trophies.. ~
A WIDE SELECTION 2
FAIRLY PRICED
J. E. CALDWELL. & CO.
Chestnut Street at Juniper
PHILADELPHIA
THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF
DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE AND
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
A Professional .School for College
Graduates.
The Academic Year for-1928-29 opens
Monday, October 1, 1928.
THE EUROPEAN TRAVEL Counst
Eating fso=.-Doton=June-Pery
Sailing from Cherbourg September 15th
THe SUMMER SCHOOL AT OXFORD
‘From Monday, July 9th, to Saturday,
September Ist.
Henry ATHERTON Frost — Director
13 Boylston Street,-Cambridge, Mass.
At Harvard Square
—— . ew
A Crisis for Womeh’s Colleges
. ; CS
THE CHANGING COLLEGE GIRL.
‘HOW THE COLLEGES ARE MEETING | :
THE CHALLENGE OF THE NEW |
~ -S'PUDENT.
HOW THE COLLEGES ARE FITTING
WOMEN FOR LIFE.
- Four important, interesting articles to.
appear in The New York Times Magazine _
_~on four’ successive Sundays, beginning
next Sunday.
° N THE FIRST ARTICLE the Presidents of seven important
women’s colleges join in a statement on the present crisis in such
institutions.
tion is a financial one. ‘The Presidents regard the situation as a chal-
lenge to the American people to support women’s colleges, relatively
neglected in endowment as compared with institutions for men.
‘In three succeeding articles a special correspondent of The New
York Times takes up all phases of changing student life. The writer
visited Wellesley, Vassar, Bryn Mawr, Mount Holyoke, Smith; Rad-
cliffe, Goucher, Barnard and Sweet Briar.
pictures between the graduates and the undergraduates of today is a
colorful, absorbing first-hand report of the situation.
pf The New York Times
a
é
FIRST ARTICLE, BuNDAY, MAY 6
. ORDER THE NEW YORK TIMES IN ADVANCE
ate
|
{
A EL NS
The crisis from the point of view of college administra-
"MAGAZINE —
The contrast the writer
Ngpiee
“
Set ea
8
a
Hs .% ‘a cm ; sca £. - ag . - * &.
— J ' : - te
‘ hg % ° . Eo} : ri
“iy x % . + ey ; ges - : a
mr or i 2 VE ee De ee eo °
eo 4 os: a : i 4 cue NR ARES: Sg, SE S : : 5
itself is far from conenwirited on one
- idea, but Madge*supplies unity to the
play, as Peele, with his original craft-
manship, has her comment on _ the
story as it progresses. Another’ intér-
esting element in the originality of this
predecessor of Shakespeare is “his Way
of presenting the play from the stand-.
point of the old woman, rather than
from that of the noble class about
whom the- story is woven. It is a fairy
fale, such a one as Peele doubtless
heard at. the’ .knees...of..his- nurse; but
the characters are real and drawn from
all types of people whom one would
know in those days.
Delia has been spirited away by the
sorcerer Sacrapant. Her brothers ‘go
on a quest. for her, as does her lover,
Eumenides, A
the search’ of two boors supposedly for
the same maiden, who, however, find
wives in the daughters of a villager
and abandon the hunt. The sorcerer
casts spells on the two brothers and
on the crude fellows, but Eumenides,
who has been: prompted to give money
for the burial of a dead man, is aided
in his quest for fair Delia by the spirit
of the deceased. This spirit finally
causes the undoing of Sacrapant, who
falls dead. His spells*are no longer
potent. The lovers and the: brothers
are reunited, and the old wife ends her
tale. -
“The director of the cast is M. Bar-
ker, 730
The cast is as follows:
MAGORUBND fis on sod *.M. Barker, ’30
First Brother,:Calypha...M: Coss,.’28 !
Second Brother, Thelea, :
: R.. Morrison, °30'
Eumenides .......4...M. Turtier, 31
Erestes . . ti. a M. Salinger,’ ’28
Lampriscus .K.» Shepherd,
Huanebango ia) a Ste Wart; 28
ROOM is Cri eres C. Hamilton, Grad.
Vee. oa. I: Garrett, ’29
Church Warden —..,... S. Shebly, ’30
ONCOH oer ya aes eres Macatee, 731
Csnoet oF yack 2). .A. Glover, ’29
Delia, sister to Calypha and Thelea,
G. De Roo, ’29
Venelia, betrothed fo Erestus,
M. Tuttle, ’28
Zantippa, daughter to Lampriscus;
C. Sullivan,.’30
Celanta, Baugnter to Lampriscus,
E. Zalesky, ’
are
mee, |
sub-story. deals with}.
required athletic periods,
enthusiasm made up for smaller num-
Play Performed at First May
Day to Be Given on |
' ‘the Green.
For the-first- time in the history of
.
Bryn Mawr May Days the’ play of
St.
the festivities on the village green in-
by itself. The
players, collecting “the ~peneé of “the
crowd as they go,-come wandering in
among the dancers, and are aided in
their performance by the Morris Men.
St. George was given at the first
May Day and the costumes used now
are, in some instances, the original
ones worn at that time. The first writ-
ten text of the play comes to us from
the. hand of the Reverend ~ Frederick
George Lee, who obtained it from the
lips of one of the performers ‘in 1853.
This man had Jearned it from his own
father, who‘had acted in it during the
latter part of the eighteenth century.
The performer himself had been act-
ing in the play since 1809. Dr. Lee
neither changed nor added anything
to the text. The play is an €xtraordi-
nary mixture of miracle play, popular
satire, English history, and rough and
tumble comedy.
The cast is:
King: Alfred,
George will be given as a part of
stead of wandering
B. Loines, ’28, or G, Bancroft, ’30
His Queen .......B. Humphreys; ’29
Dts Ameren iiss a okes FS V. Smith, 31
| King William '.......M. Edwards, ’30
The Drag E. Chestnut, ’28
siant- Blunderbore ...M. Lambert, ’29
ENE JRO 2 B. Baker, ’30
Captain Slasher ......P. Wiegand, .’30
Turkish Champion ~.E. Horton, ’29
A/Noble Doctor svii54 P, Burr, ’28
St
Experimental Year for Athletics
At a meeting of the Athletic Associa-
tion on Monday, April 30th, A. Bruere,
28, read the president’s report for the
year, and turned over the chait to the
newly-elected president, R. Wills, ’29,
Miss Bruere reported the year to have
been a great success.. It was an experi-
mental year, she said, with the absence of
but. unusual
0 | bers.
the Ambassador from Italy and Madame
deMartino, theg¢Ambassador from Japan
and Madame Masudeira, the Ambassador
from Germany and Countess von Phitt-
witz-Gaffroh, the Chief Justice and Mrs.
William Howard Taft; the Minister from
Switzerland and Madame Peter, the Min-
| ister from Austria and Madame Proch-
rnik, the Minister from China and Ma-
| dame Szes the Minister from the Nether-
!1ands and Madame Van Royen, the Min-
ister from
Mrs. Gifford Pinchet, Mr. ‘and Mrs.
James M. Beck, Miss Mabel Boardman,
Associate Justice-and Mrs. Brandeis, As-
sociate Justice and Mrs. Holmes, the
Right Rev. and Mrs. Philip M. Rhine-
lander, Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, Senator
and Mrs. Thomas F. Bayard, Senator
and Mrs. Hiram: Bingham, Senator and
Mrs. William E. Borah, Sir John Joyce
Broderick. and Lady Broderick, Senator
and Mrs. C. §. Deneen, Senator and
Mrs. Peter Goélet-Gerry, Senator Carter
Glass, the Minister from Great Britain
and Mrs. Chilton.
New Book Room Note
“The Spirit of the Garden,’ by Martha
3rookes Hutchéson, jhas been put in the
New Book Room. This book is one of
the best known text “books ‘bn
planning and is delightfully: written
illustrated.
garden
and
VERY LITTLE (3
The SPECIAL > of
$.S. “ESTONIA" €9 S.S. “LITUANIA"
ONLY rov IR IST PA
IST PASSENGERS
IN—PORMER ’
Cabin and Second Class Space .
aT woe see THIRD CABUN RATES
SAILING DA DATES
JUNE 16--JUNE 30—from NEW YORK
to CHER BOURG & COPENHAGEN
AUG, 15— AUG. 24— from CORENHAGEN
AUG. 16—-AUG. 27—from CHERBOURG &
*
Orchestra—Dancing—Sports . “
Suelaamine Pool
" All Expense Student and University Tours
with College Credit if Desired
CHOOL OF FOREIGN TRAVEL,
Mgrs. University Tours :
10 Rest 42d ferect New York, N. ¥,
Arraignment of Paris
Model School C hildren
Peele’s Court
Play.
Present
~
_ The Arraignment of Paris was written
by George Peele for presentation at court
and given before the Queen in 1581. The
source.o£.the, play ig the story of Paris
|and the awarding of the golden ‘apple,
which caused so much trouble tga great
many people in after years. » Peele, how-
ever, gaye to this old story the twist of
. | novelty. After Paris has awarded the
appl to “Vents, Juno, whose pride is
| deeply wounded, demands that he be
brought to trial by~a tribunal of al) the
Olympian gods. After much discussion
and dissention over the matter, the gods
Ldecide to leave the question fer Diana to
settie. -Diana, instead of awarding~the
apple to either Qfthe other contestants.
|gives the: prize to a wondrous nymph
“whose name Eliza is.2. Peele, | 1
cleverly madé over the play to please and
compliment the Queen.
The play
scholars of the
‘ranged by Mary
Class of .19%4,
The cast in order of appearance is as
follows:
Thorne School was
Kk.
Pre ia Barbara Vail
1 Seer e ebemeeres Cetilia~ Drinker
PO ise cis aise Isabelle Seltzer
Pomona Seen aneee Pala. Wright.
PS ok eri er Helen Galey
VOUNE sc vscapaage ‘..+.Elizabeth Payne
: MONE ian Louise Vauclain
: : ‘ : eae J. Fesler ‘on! Disti eA a gd ag Sylvanus: 4.5.33. ..i...Barba’ Canby
Old Wives Tale - - Ee er eee ee . oer - | Vistinguishe ay May Patrons | paris grlepanrag cere Eunice Holland
27, ket BIOUL Oi. hee deseo vere B. Yerkes, ’29/- Mrs, Calvin Coolidge heads a list of 7Ate (EASA EMV ba GOO Cw Florence Bell
Peele’s Early Comedy Has Good | Fantastic .......+.. R. Kreutzberg, ’31 distinguished patrons for the Elizabethan [Jupiter .........0.6.. Gertrude Leighton
“Craftsmanship and Clunch, a smith....K, Hirschberg, '30 May= Day to be given at Bryn Mawr oa RSI n eben Ao
: : ve a ae aaa itty oS mthia Wattles
é Plot. Madge, his wife,..."... ‘A. Putnam, ’28 Ccllege-on-May 4th and. 5th.~This.-fete, \ 7. : £ hee ib aleanind
sc laity: : ‘A ‘4 ag SRL Gabrielle. Evans
path lea + : 8iven only every tour years, will present | Saturn .................. Patricia Vail
Old Wwiwes’ Tale, by George Peele, is 3 194. er > %9Q: . he :
"te ba 3 aj ; . no tas H. McKelvy, 31; H, Skidmore, °30; a pageant, five Elizabethan plays and |Diana ...............: Elizabeth Talwell
o be acted here, as: it was in the tim 3 eg Re er *y;
é Ade E. Lewis, '31 old English dances ‘and other revels on | Elizabeth ................. Hope Henry
of Good’ Queen Bess on May Day! Harvesters and per the Green in‘an accurate reproduction of |Rhanus %....0....... 6.04 Agnes Allinson
just above. the varsity hockey field in E. Smith, ’30; M.* DeVaux:> ’31::M MAES cicuthexTies Peceie-iest Sarah Garson
as ; : Huet J aL Cocoa oa ast ‘la 16th century May Day. The patrons’ |.- é :
the second hollow. It 1S a winter tale ae 91: Burdick 197% Py: Asher, ss ; pie - : * Vulcan Tre CCC a eee ek Alice Meredith
. . : : i ( ee 5 list includes the following : | Ganymede wx... ress on Margaret Collins
told by the old wife of a smith to three -V. Buel, 29; B. Alling, ’28; K
reaeateth lest TRANS" Wood aiid “as Seana Mrs... Calvin Coolidge, the..Vicg. Presic Helen -vs0vv+- Sarah..Ann- Fultz
Madge, . th aged ae man ey her Ther we. Corbett, '30; Doak, dent and Mrs, Charles G. Dawes, the | Woodcutters, Warriors, Nymphs.
Madge e aged womat ells
’ ba) 9s ‘94 P oo tee
‘ : Ambassador f G Brit and tl
story, its characters appeat and help |-piqper H. Snyder, ’31 pion? es ith vs a vi Faculty in May Day
a RSP see Mer Ga ec eee CaO Gc rear oc cite ce EN MM a ae gto g a OU A usa eno% wey (tl monte SE my Mg : the/ ass
her with ‘the tale. a a ae Ke cm — a ae Courties—Dr. Cadbury, Dr. David, Dr.
Most ENzabethan drama ha§ ittle Saint George fom erance ane * dqdame Claudel, . the lL: rnst- Diez; Dr, -Max Diez; Dre. Fraser,
: Ambassador’ from Belgium. and Her | Dr. Hart: '
unity, The story of the old ,Wife’s tale | d th D ; m,
an e ragon Highness the Princess Albert deLigne,? Scholars—Mrs. Max Diez, Dr: Evans,
Mw Fraser, Dr. Gillet,
Ladies of the Court—Miss ‘Fishtine.
Mrs. Forest, Miss Hofrichter, Miss Laur-
ence, Miss .Lehr, Miss. Parde, Miss
Smith. —
Gypsies— Miss”
Mrs. White.
GarViti, “Miss. ~ Sloan,
Lantern Election&
The Lantern takes in an-
nouncing that Barbara Channing, ’29, will
be its editor next year, and that Celia
Darlington and Emily Lewis will be the
members of the editorial board for ’31.
THE BLUE BOTTLE
SHOP
Lancaster Ave.
. BRYN MAWR, PA.
CHINTZ ae ANTIQUES
FRANCIS B. HALL
TAILOR
RIDING HABITS :: BREECHES
REMODELING :: PRESSING
, DRY CLEANING
840 Lancaster Avenue
ee Bryn Mawr 824
pleasure
°
Phone, Bryn Mawr 1385
M. Meth Pastry Shop
1008 Lancaster Ave.
ICE CREAM and FANCY CAKES
French and Danish Pastry
WE DELIVER
BRINTON BROS.
FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES
Orders Called for and Delivered
Lancaster and Merion Aves.
~ Bryn Mawr, Pa,
Telephone 63
EDW. K. TRYON COMPANY
Complete Sporting -Goods Equipment
*for Teams gnd Individuals
912 Chestnut Street,
: Philadelphia
s
a TTS
thus, very
|
as given this year by thé
ar-,
Woodworth, of the |
ED. CHALFIN
Seville Theatre Arcade
DIAMONDS : WATCHES : JEWELRY.
WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIRING
Pens : Pencils
: and Optical Repairing»
Fancy Watch. Crystals Cut, $1.75.
55iF TiFTH A
S. E. Cor. 15th & Kocust Sts.,
delphia, or an
agent.
pal
Seni a
EUROPE
“gt
then
to Work/
1842
FORTHE ROUND TRIP
ET out your ‘ail and
pencil, count your |
savings, figure the cost—
and off you go to Europe via
our Tourist Third Cabin.
Specially reserved quarters.
for TOURIST passengers on
such famous, liners as
Majestic, world’s largest
ship, Olympic, Homeric,
Belgenland, and others,
We offer the only steam-
ers_in the world devoted
entirely to TOURIST pas-
sengers, Minnekadha,
Minnesota, Winifre-
dian and Devonian. No
other class carried. You
have the freedom of all
decks. No class distinc-
tions.
4
ma pens eA A eS
Let us send you literaturé
describing our unusual
valiiesin economical travel,
WHITE JTAR LINE
RED STAR LINE QEYLAND ain
. ATLANTIC TRANSPORT GENE.
ON VTERMATIONAL MEQCANTIE MARINE COMPANM
Phila-
authorized steamship
Je ewele s. Silversmiths Station
ESTABLISHED 1832 SkQ.,
Philadelphia,
Makers of
THE. OFFICIAL CLASS RING
and College Seal
THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOX
illustrates and prices Wedding,
Birthday and Graduation Gifts
mailed upon request
#
SERVICE ABROAD
e NEW YORK City
The Peter Pan.
Tea Room
833 Lancaster Avenue
Luncheon, ee
Dinner, $1.00
‘ - ; . ‘ ' a . ‘ : eS Osa te Saag nae ® ’
aa) a 4 ad - Ke . € *,
oe fe ae ¥ e ! eee Jane ‘ Ba tar om . aay . ee pes "a a
2, ST : * . tHE--COLLEGE-NEWS.”...-: Tce eae Dhl
ae = re a 4s ss ; i:
; y . * CHE 0 $e ” : . SB
most daring of them, such as Robin| next fall, will never know that where ments. In fhe past the stairs up to the
Hood and his*Merry Men, wore leather’ they hold their classes and ‘interview
smccks att cloaks helped greatly at this, their* teachers, there was cnce a chasel
lexgings and garments coming well to, large enough, or afmost large enough,
the -knee. However, many ‘were the} to accommcdate the entire college.
hours sent ove> the troublesome ques-|
tion. as to whether girls should wear | and two new classrooms, which will be
men’s costumes at all to appear in pub-, equipped with long tables and chairs, in-
lic—fortunately the period that offered stead \-of ‘those _wibbly-wobbly.. desks.
point ;. whether materials were too gaudy, Dean, Manrfhg’s secretary wi.) <= an
gr -too dfaphanous, and whether the office i the northwest corner, with a
s-epherds and rustics should. wear their small ante-chamber- outside for the con-
© . e | ’. a +? .
smoecks one inch or four below the knee.’ venience Of ‘people waiting: for appoint-
And even trough all the costumes had ‘
9 saa: a , {
The space. will be oc-upied by cffices,
thifd floir-have been extensively used for
this purpose... ce a
M.ss Carey will also have one of the
new cffices
» A eiling will-be put in on a level With
the present «third floor,,and, the upper
‘rcathes ofthe chapel will thus be trans- ~
‘ermed into a ‘convenient
storeroom, ~
Morning , chapel, thus ousted from
Taylor, wi® probably be held. in some’ -
form..in_the. Music Room _of~Goodhart..
Hall. ;
6
®
been designed with great discretion and |
st
jas7ed upcen in every instance by an
C@ient and wise ccstumings committee, | “
i: was possible for a* Philadelphia critic | ©
to say th€t the. Elizabethan. crowd. at | i :
DBrwn Mawr “was:.as leggy as young
colts and for the delightful old farmer |
vrho caire’ all the way from Lancaster |
"> drive ‘his handsome belted oxen in,
the pogeant, to exclaim, as the procession |
cwarted, “never again will I allow nrty|
cxen to sze such a*sight’ yy
Oxen Present Problem. so
These oxen, and’ other four-‘ooted :
rrimitive beasts .aree always a problem. | ae
11. £924 Mrs. Collins reseived the fol- |
lwing letter not long before May Day:
Lear Madain: = |
We feceived your. letter with check |
for the same. We thank you very much; | ‘
we have two white men to send with | :
the cattle, but to be candid adout the
matter we do not think it advisable to
Seu ewe young toa’ wehave been“ p===— —
using them with our spring work, but |
tolay, the 26th; while using them to a/| ;
roller, they ggt away from our man |
and.broke the ¥dller up completely; will |
have to get another roller and to send
tiem to Bryn Mawr before a crowd of |
people as you say you will have will)
Si naturally excite them, and I think it, a —e
: — unsafe. The red cattle will drive wher- | en Sal a
° r : “lever you see fit to put them with our} : : ;
Robin Hood May Day driver. We are “very sorry about. the Wh — G .
oe pe eee Ra young cattle, but if you could see them O S ot $] 7?
Play Adapted by Elizabeth Daly eee Fae Tae 2 perform we:do think you would not © ; :
Given Since May been impossible. The great danger that! want them.
Day, 1910. college work might suffer and the oppo-| We will likely be at the May Day Fete It'll take you to Europe and back !
ns gage sition of the faeulty and authorities} on Friday the 9th. ;
The famous story of Robitt- Hood and = ee :
Maid Marian was adapted by Elizabeth thereby. justly incurred was gninimized Yours very cordially, ae ene spending a lot on your educa-_
Daly, ‘01, from plays written by Anthony | by the wndergraduates, who, as a body, J. FRANK THOMPSON. tion. e+ But it’s all outof books. . .yet you
Munday in 1597 and Robert Greene in| agreed not to cut classes for any cause| May Day Spirit Does Not Change. © a know you can get as much from three months’ 4
1587, these plays’ being “based principally | except illness, and the available Alumnae| _ Some of the costumes. used in the first | : seeing things as you can from three years’
or old ballads. ‘nl the 1910 May Day this - tery : . | May. Day are actually still_in use now, reading ce athe Temple of Diana at Nimes
ore ; Bi nlp | assumed the responsibility of costumes, ll 2 : Pe ¢ hi al d ith : :
version of the outlaw’s merry life in : ; : notably some of the ones in St. George -.-ancient historyin large doses, without pain
Sherwood: Forest- was” acted at.-Bryn. properties, rehearsals, business, and-finan- i and the Dragon. Thé Dragon, for all : cee Chateau Country, Bris itself, the :
Mawrfor the first time, and has been | cial arrangements.” | his crawling on the ground, has reap- Cathedrals . . . the Middle Ages come alive, : oS
most. successfully repeated at every May | That was indeed a brilliant°chapter in | peared time and again. From the 1906 never to dieagain. ov» Yougeta short course in oN
Day since then. The cast in order of | the history of Bryn” Mawr. Without, | May Date date the Elizabethan Banners, architecture and decoration, too...and it sticks.
appearance is: perhaps, the heroic. spirit of earlier days,| and the’ practice of giving a court play To Deauville, Biarritz, Cannes...you can
Little John .............R. Kitchen, ’29 | we have learned from experience. The! in the cloisters. Thus. each successive read Vogue without getting a superiority com-
Robert, Ear] of Huntington, Robin routine work: of May Day, thea selection ! May. Day makes some addition to the | plex about mother and_her crowd. e+ Eve
a “Jr Stetsoiy "28 of Casts for the plays, and~so- forth, was} tradition “without—-changing its: spirit. whereyou brush up your French, pick-up gifts ~ ~
Will-Scarlet........... C. Thompson, ’31 | begun this year in the first semester; and| The productions of 1910 and 1914 were ... ana it’s all charged up to education! +o The
Friae Tuck. . 0.06055 J. Huddleston, ’28 | distributed over at least four months, in-| most ably directed by the Miss Elizabeth | French Line makes this possible with their
Maids:Marian ...cec. cee. M. Nukols, ’31 | stead of six weeks. It is also surprising | Daly, of the class of 1901, and the fifth $197 round trip, their newly-arranged tourist
AllaawDals.....o A~ Burrows, ’31-+to-read_of the attitude of our. predeces- | and sixth productions owed their splen- |’ third class, whete the pleasures of Paris afloat
Sir Stephen of Trent ....:. C. Swan, ’29 | sors toward pieblicity, * | did direction to Mrs. Otis Skinner. The get you ready for those on shore. te
The Bishop of Hereford .E. Bigelow, ’30 Publicity in 1900. History of the Seventh is yet to be} ,
Pairien 663s M.. Pitts, ’3 “Bryn Mawr,” the article continues, written.
Fair. Ellen’s Father .....E. Houck, '30 | “was about. to appear in,a netv and pub-| * Are r\ eh ) :
King R PURPA... cccccer ee Ue RONEN, “28 lic. way, and it: was for the May Day Old Chapel to Be Lost in : {ine
Prince John etre des ves M. Hupfel, ate Committees to see “that nothing was Rebuilding of Taylor | ltiformation from any authorized French Line
PUSGN: oes tine E. Amram, '28 | done that was not highly creditable to ‘a ! . Agent, or write direct to 19 State St., New York
The ‘Sheriff*or Nottingham, ter Newspaper revorters’ who appeared The spit of change and renewal, haere
J. Young, ’28) on the campus—during the last days of whieh has stirted the Christian Associa- |
The Eatlof Leicester-.+ >. .0C> Rose>'28-} fehearsals were told that they~could-not Hon, 1s now. BboMt 30 cisturh the chapel |
Sir Richard of the Lea ..N. Mitchell, "28 | take photograpls, but that they might “ well. The central pert of Taylor/Hall
Merry men—V.-Atmore, ’28; J. Beck- | yse some of-the official photographs, pro-| '® to be entirely rebuilt ‘daring. thesum-
et, 29; H. Bell, ’31; D. Blumenthal, ’29; | vided that every plate be returned to the GFsd thatthe CiNGs OF ae, ne
J. Dickerman, 30;#C. Field, ’28; M. Gess- ' committee, and that students taking part ee —_ HF = = —=— F
ner, 29; M. Gregson, ’28; H. Hook, ’28;]in the plays. etc, should not be identi- - >
R. Holloway, ’28; E. Latane, ’30; V.| fied by name. in the printed accounts.
Lodnis, 30; A. Merrill, ’30; J. Paxson, ; Personal publicity, they were told, . was 4
30; P. Parker, ’31; A. Palache, ’28; C.1:to.be scrupulously avoided; and. what What Shakespeare segue |
Peckman, '30; M. Pettit, '28; E. Rhett, | seems most extraordinary, considered ? Ff. }
28; L. Richardson, 29; S. Slingluff, ’30; | fromi the angle of today is that both re- b t Co Sle Col D:
M. Stevenson, ’30; E. Thoriias, °31; Uns! porters and photographers promised to says a Ou : €a a ”
angst, ’31; Webster, 31; S. Zeben, "31 rerard the wishes of the committee, and “iso ed
: kept their word. ? a A rf cA at ; 3
i; “Today. when we are accustomed to : :
women of all ages wearing street Delicious and Refreshing |
1 gowns fourteen or more itiches from the
\ ground; or dres-ed for sport in bloom-
ers or~ breeches; . or «dancing . rhythmic
‘yarfd ballroom dances in the scantiest of ; ae 4
clothing—it: is. dificult to realize that as “Your name 18 great ‘
Igte as 1900-such things were not only | in mouths of wisest
‘not done,’ but that storms of criticism ”
| were aroused because collegé “girls even censure ~ oe
| ventured to wear their sport skirts an Othello had his faults. But we can
lin h above their shoetops. At that time forgive him everything because he j
Bryn Mawr students playing men’s parts gave us a perfect caption for an |
in men’s costumes: were not allowed to opinion the United States Supreme
|go out on the campus to have their Court was one day to hand down on
photographs taken; and ‘at Vassar the Coca-Cola: . —S
students met the various prohibitions by | The name now characterizes a bev-
wearing men’s coats and vests with their erage to be had ut almost any soda
.own long dark skirts, or by masking the |. : 2 fountain. It means a single thing .
| unmentionable trousers by means of | Be: ‘coming from a single source, and
|smallblack aprons.” .. & well known to the community.”
As we look over the photographs of . : 414
ars _{ the first May Day -we find that the Bryn a ke Nee , The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, Ga.
| Mawr Elizabethans were, if anything, 8 million @ tay ~ 11 HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT 18
| overburdened with clothes: even the — mer
= j or , eae eens es re
CHE COLLEGE NEM)*
ba ©
Buck aha Bartle to Do Jigs in
‘Thr ee: Regular Morris .
Dances.
ey a
"Morris dances will be given at iner-
vals during the May Day performances
ou. the green this Friday and Saturday.
remains a moot question. However, au-
thorities on the’ subject suggest that the
9
Morris was either an adaptation of the.
Moriso, a Moorish dance yintroduced by |:
John of Gaunt, or that it Was a part of
the celebration of a pagan festival eH
was ,made an observance .in_primiti
communities,
In Elizabethan times ech village had
its typical Morris danices.
with the old ‘pagan tradition bells to
scare off evil demons wére worn on the
legs.of the dancers. The dances them-
selves yery much resembled sword
dances, and. since handkerchiefs were
. used like wooden swords: in some figures
* the theory that’ Morris dances gradually |
evolved from sword dances has been pro-
posed. More characteristic of the Mor-
ris than the handkerchiefs *is the stick
which each dancer éarries and clashes |
tent that of his partner--in. time-to the
: rhythm of the music.
Lightness of Movement Requisite.
On account of the extraordinary char- |
GERMAN:
acter of the dance Morris daneers were
_required tobe exceedingly light upon
beauty of body movement in the execu-
tion’.of the various capers. This light-
néss of movement is particularly stressed
in the Morris Jigs, These are solo dances
frequently performed by two dancers.
This year M. Buchanan and C. Bartle
will dance two’jigs: Old Mother Oxford
and None So Pretty, a Field Town Mor-
ris. The two will impersonate William
- Kemp and his partner. William Kemp
has been given the title of the Nine Daies
Wonder on account of his nine ‘days of
Morris dancing from London to Norwich
in 1600.
In addition to the jigs three regular
Morris dances will be presented on the
green; two in which sticks are used:
Lads-a-Bunchum, a Sherborne. Morris
and Bean Setting a Headington Morris;
one.in which handkerchiefs ate employe:
Leap Frog, a Bledington_ tradition?
o
Scholarships .
Gell.
CONTINUED ——, PAGE 1
Part time Instructor in Spanish
Bryn Mawr
27.
and graduate student,
College, 1927-28.
GERMAN:
Karola’ Geiger, of-“Bonsheim, - Hessen,
‘cago, 1926. "Teacher, Frances
Parker School,. Chicago, 1925-27.
Fellow in German, Bryn Mawr Col-
‘ lege, 1927-28.
HISTORY :
Elizabeth Kissam Henderson, of Stam-
ford, Conn. A. B., Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, 1924. M. A., 1925. Teacher,
Great Barrington School, Massachu-
2 setts, 1925-28.
SOCIAL ECONOMY AND SOCIAL
RESEARCH:
~ Priscilla Bache, of Waban, ~ Mass.
A. B, Smith College, 1927. Carola
Woerishoffer Scholar in Social, Econ-
_ omry and Social Research, Bryn-
Mawr. College, 1927-28.
Frances Ethel Michie, of. Seattle,
Wash. A. B., University of Wash-
The origin of this form of dancing still
In accordance.
{
Germany. M..A., University of chill
” Morris Dancing *
—thetrr-feet;-thus—was—achieved-grace-and.|
College," 1922-24, and Instructor in
_. Geology, 1924-27, Fellow in Geol-
_ ogy, Bryn. Mawr “College,” 1927-28.
BIOLOGY :
Katharine Rosetta: Jeffers, of Colum-
-bia;,Mo. A. B, Unliversity of ‘Mis- |
souri, 1927, and M. A. to be con-
ferred, 1928.
GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS
AWARDED FOR" 1928-29"
LATIN:
Aline Louise Abaccherli of Cincinnati,
Ohio. A. B, University of Cincin-
‘nati, 1927. Scholar. in Latin, Bryn
Mawr College, 1927-28,
ENGLISH:
Helen Pennock—South,-of—Philadelphia.|-
A. B., Wellesley College, 1913;
M. A., Bryn Mawr College, 1926.
* fellow in English, Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, 1927-28. :
Elizabeth Norris, of Santa Cruz, Calif,
A. B,,. Mills College, 1927. Appren-
tice Teacher at the Phebe Anna
Thorne School, . Bryn Mawr,
graduate student, Bryn Mawr Col-
lege. 1927-28.
FRENCH:
Mary Lane Charles, of Richmond, In-
diana. A. B,‘Earlham College, 1927.
Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr Col-|:
lege, 1927-28.
Edith Katharine-Cumings, of Bloom-
‘ington, Indiana. A. B., Indiana’ Uni-.
versity, 1927. Scholar in French,
Bryn Mawr College, 1927- 28,
#.
Grace Nealy Martin, of Corydon, In-
-liana.—A._B,.._Indiana.. University,}
19°8; M. A., 1923. Scholar in Ger-
man Bryn Mawr College, 1927-28.
Margaret Jeffrey, of. Hawthorne, New
Jersey. A. B., Wellesley College,
1927. Student in+Germany, 1927-28.
SPANISH: »
Mary Elisabeth Fox,
North Dakota.
of Jamestown,
A. B., Lincoln Col-
lege, 1925; B.S. Colorado State
Agricultural College, 1926. Student,
Colorado . University Graduate
S ~ School, 1927. is
iT ALIAN: ae
Elizabeth Brand, of Wesf Hartford,
Connecticut. A. B. to be conferred,
Mount Holyoke College, 1928.
ECONOMICS AND POLITICS:
Phyllis Marie Gregory, of Rossland,
British Columbia, Canada. A. B.,
University of British» Columbia,
1925; M. A., Bryn Mawr College, .
1927. Mary E, Garrett European
Fellow, 1927-28. :
- ington, 1925; M.°A. to be conferred, |
1928, High School Teacher for: two
years. oF
Mareella White, of Stockton, Calif.
~ A. B., College of ‘the Pacific, :1927.
Grace H. Dodge Scholar in Social
Economy and Social Research, Bryn
Mawr .College, 1927-28.
““PHILOSOrnY *
Margaret Bell “Rawlings, of Tacoma,
_ Washington. A. B, Mills College,
© 4927. Graduate Scholar in. Philos-
ophy, Bryn Mawr College, 1927-28:
- ARCHAEOLOGY:
Lucy Taxis Shoe, of Austin, Texas.
A. B., Bryn’ Mawr College, 1927;
M. A. to be conterred, 1928.'-Scholar
in Archaeology, Bryn Mawr College,
1927-28.
MATHEMATICS: :
Olive Margaret Hughes, of Maidstone,
Saskatchewan; Canada. A. B., Uni-
versity of Saskatchewan, 1925;
M. A., 1926. Student, University
of Chicago, summers of 1925 and
1927. At present, part time Instruc-
tor and part time-Graduate Student,
University of Saskatchewan.
GEOLOGY :
Louise Kingsley, of icine N. Y.
a3 B., Smith College, 1922; M. A,,
Ww:
“3924. Assistant in Geology, nev
aca
Emily.Gra
fernia. A. B., University of Cali-
fornia, 1927. Scholar in Economics
“and Politics, Bryn Mawr College,
1927-28.
SOCIAL ECONOMY AND SOCIAL
RESEARCH:
Frieda Elisabeth. Wild¥,.. of. Boulder,
Colorado. A. .B. to be conferred,
University of Colorado, 1928.
Rosalie Williams, of Stockton, Cali+
fornia. A: B. to be conferred, Col-
lege of the Pacific, 1928.
Grace Dodge Scholarships: ;
Jessie Bloodworth, of Arkansas. Ay B.,
University of Oklahoma, and Social
Service Certificate, 1920. Student at
Searritt College and Teachers’ Col-
lege.
Abba Colburn Fernald, of Winterport,
Maine. A. B.,. University of Maine,
February, 1927. Susan B. Anthony
Scholar in “Social Economy, Bryn
Mawr College, 1927-28.
Julia® Ann Bishop, of Abilene, Texas.
B.
1926.. Teacher of English and His-
tory, Abilene High School, 1926-28.
Florence S. Herman, of Brooklyn,
New York. A. B. to be conferred,
Hunter College; 1928:
PHILOSOPHY:
Bernice Hamilton Wallace, of Los An-
=
geles, California. A. B. to be con-
ferred, University of California,
1928.
ARCHAEOLOGY:
Sarah Elizabeth Freeman, of Blairs-
town, .New Jersey. A. B. to be con-
ferred, ~Mount Holyoke College,
1928. i
_ Katharine Shepard, of New York City.
A. B. to be conferred, Bryn Mawr
College, 1928.
ROBERT G. VALENTINE MEMO-|.
RIAL SCHOLARSHIP IN SOCIAL
ECONOMY’ AND SOCIAL RE-
SEARCH:
Josephine Van Fleet, of Monte Vista,
Colorado. A. B., Colorado College,
to be conferred, 1928. é
aA COLLEGE SCHOLAR-|
fo ae ae
- SHIP:
~Mary Gilbert, of Sttaughn, Indiana.
A. B. to be conferred, Earlham Col-
lege, 1928.
SCHOLARSHIP OF THE SOCIETY
OF PENNSYLVANIA WOMEN IN
| SHIPS AT BRYN. MAWR C@OL-
and!:
4 Marion F, O’Donnell, ot TatSdowne,
Pennsylvania. B. S., University of
‘Pennsylvania, 1925; M. A:,. 1926.
| AWARDS OF FOREIGN SCHOLAR-
LEGE FOR THE* YEAR 1928-29
' Benile MFarie- Marti, of Renens, Switzer
land. Licenciee .es' Lettres, Univer- |
sity of. ‘Lausanne, 1925; M. A., Bryn »
. Mawr College; 1926" “Teacher if fhe
__ Phebe Anna Thorne School and grad-
uate student, Bryn Mawr College,
* 1926-28, =e
Helen Marion Kintear’ Young, of Ex-;
mouth, England. Licenciee es Sciences,
University of Lausanne, -1924. British
Scholar; Bryn-Mawr-€ollege, -1927-28:;-———
year
Marta Backstrom, of- Stockholm,
Sweden, Juris carid., University of |
. Upsala, 1924. Employed in the Dee
partment of Organized- Charities of
the. City of Stockholm, 1925-28. |
One scholarship reserved :for a French OHIO:
candidate.
ACADEMIC WORK, 1928-29;
MARIA. LL. EASTMAN” BROOKE] 42gelyn Lowise Burrows, of* ‘New = : meters
HALL .MEMORIAL~ SCHOLAR- York City, Prepared by the Shipley. Evening Parties by Special
SHIP, of the value of * $150.00. School, Bryn Mawr, Alumnae Re- Arrangement.
awarded each year on the ground of gional Scholar, 1927-28. _ Honor j ~ —_
scholarship to the member of the Jun- ste Twenty on fifteen hours. |. : THE
ior Class with the highest record; and Major: fase :
CHARDES “4 HINGHMAN- MEMO Frances Swift-Tatnall, of. Wilmington. BRYN MAWR TRUST CO.
RIAL SCHOLARSHIP, of the value hie ati no a= = CAPITAL,— $259,000.00 aa
of $500.00, awarded to the student ‘ : :
whose record shows the greatest abil- beat sh Marion Simpson | ‘Does ‘a General Banking Business
ty tn Her_aidos sablect+ sui Scholar, 1927-28, Major: History. Allows Interest’ on ee
THE SHERLAN KILROY MEMO," (SNE | Smet +t enirnne O89 Cosmeticians Hairdressers |
Q : i : arinello ermanent. Way!
af $12800, awarded each, year on the| EEANQIS? -~ -ixsaa
aos Sarah Elisabeth Bradley, ef Camden, PEACOCK
recommendation of the Department of Shiba -Bipaeliied hea .
English to the student. who does -the ici Cc a is ws : oe BEAUTE SALON
best work in the advanced English ee sie ee vig Seville Theater Bldg., Bryn Mawr
_ courses, . * CONTINUED ON PAGE EIGHT Phone 475 ;
Barbara Channing, of Sherborn: aR C
Massachusetts. _ Prepared by . the
i Winsor School, Boston, Massachu-
setts. Matriculation Scholar for the
New England States, 1924. Major:
English. Honor” Points: ° two hun-
dred .and_ eleven on_ seventy-five
yy of . Les Angeles, # Cali-}-~
hours and eighteen on nine hours’
advanced standing.
ELIZABETH DUANE GILLESPIE
SCHOLARSHIP in American His-
tory, of the value of. $60.00, awarded
for excellence in scholarship:
“Frances Elisabeth Fry, of ‘Burnham,
Pennsylvania.
ELIZABETH S. SHIPPEN SCHOL-
ARSHIP in Foreign Languages, of
the. value of $160.00, awarded -for ex-
cellence of work in Foreign Languages.
Marion . Elizabeth Bailey, of Philadel-
‘phia.
ELIZABETH S. SHIPPEN SCHOL-
ARSHIP IN SCIENCE, of the value
~of -$100:00, awarded for excellence of
‘4work in Science.
Doris Blumenthal, of New York City.
Prepared by the Ethical Culture
School, New York. Major:: Chem-
istry. Honor Points: One hundred
and thirty-nine on seventy-six hours
and four on four hours’ advanced
standing.
GEORGE-.BATES HOPKINS ME:
.MORIAL SCHOLARSHIP IN
MUSIC, of the value of $400.00.
Elinor Latane, of Baltimore, Mary-
land. Prepared by the Bryn Mawr
School, Baltimore, Md. ° George
Bates Hopkins Memorial Scholar-
ship, 1927-28; Bryn Mawr. School
Scholarship, 1926-27. Major: Honor
Points: Eighty-three on forty-seven
—————y
> ’ .
hours and four on four hours’. ad-
~ vanced . standing.
THE.
* RIAL SCHOLARSHIP in English!
‘af the value of $ 25,00, awarded each
. Department of English to the student
who does the best work i in the required ¥
, English courses.
‘Lorine-Carpenter. Sears, of Chillicothe,
Ohio.
SECOND GEORGE BATES
KINS MEMORIAL
SHIP IN MUSIC, of the: value of
$400.00.
Sadie Sylvia Zeben,
Prepated—by—the Hig Schoot—for +
Elnith Roselle Griffiths, of Swansea, Girls, . Philadelphia, Philadelphia Streets
South Wales. By #A., University of High School Service: Club Scholar, : 5 ;
Wales, 1925; M. Az 1927. 5 *1927-28. ° Major: .Honor:. Points: Philadelphia
Sixteen on fifteen hours.
NOMINATIONS FOR UNDER-
GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS
Alumnae Regional Scholarships
Katherine
EASTERN PENNSYLVANIA:
crea MULL UM
; Phone, Bryn Mawr 252 :
“Say # with Flowers” |
. CONNELLY’S
SAEELAH KILROY MEMO-|
-on the recommendation of the
Associaiion
€
. THE MAIN LINE FLORISTS
1226 Lancaster Ave. Rosemont,
is Memberi of Fiorists’ Telelaraph Delivery _
¢ °
Pa.”
‘STREET
LINDER &
PROPERT
HOP-
SCHOLAR.
of Philadelphia.
)PTICIANS
ey “free oe
i scniisisiisicielaiaisathiiameiaial
seen
FOR 1928-29 COLLECE.
TEA HOUSE
y
, ©
‘Lena ‘Sixt, of Cleveland
One scholarship reserved for a orn Ohio. Prepared by the Shaw Highy
candidate: | School, Cleveland, Ohio, + Major: OPEN WEFK-DAYS—
SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED ! French. Honor Points: Twent¥*one’ , 1 TO 7.30 P. M.
PURELY FOR DISTINCTION. IN | on sixteen fours,
| ‘SUNDAYS, 4 TO 7 P. M. °
Seen A MTN
A FITTING FINALE TO THE MATINEE
IS AFTERNOON TEA OR AN ICE-AT
_ THE “ARCADIA CAF E.
(CHESTNU T STREET NEAR BROAD)
ASHOP NOTED FOR DISTINCTIVE SHOES
Claflin— —
RING LIZARD....
GRAY OR WINE COLOR
The model illustrated is made exclusively for Waldo
M. Claflin and is an innovation in genuine lizard.
e
The extremely high arch
lends a smart slender ap-
pearance. to. the. foot; so
much appreciated by the
. ‘well-dressed woman,
Possesses. unusual wearing
qualities.
Claflin Guaranteed Service Hosiery, $1.65
1606 Chestnut 3
_colored posters
: ANEW. YORE
BRYN MAWR’S notable MAY DAY, always
lar, ever worth while, sets a high standa
fluencing every detail connected with the enterprise
_The advertising, from little yellow stamp with its
Heralds proclaiming the coming event to beautiful
‘elaborate Programm itself — all forming a vital part
of May Day, have been entrusted again bb :
The JOHN C. WINSTON co.
1010 Arch. Street...
ypu-
in-
and Announcement Booklet — the
Philadelphia
es:
»
a
a
he i te ih
~ Printing
w
[HE “COLLZGE
NEW
———
and by flayes Court; |
Alumnaé : Regional Scio! ar) 1925-28 ;
Abby “Brayton. Durfee Scholar,
1926-27. Major:~ Mathematics.
Honor Points: One hundred and
twenty on seventy-five hours,
‘Up ‘to the present time the following
“members of, the Classes of 1929 » £1930
and 1931 have maintained a “cum laude”
rating. in their academjc work:
-\ *1929
Marion Elizabeth Bailey *
Doris Blumenthal ,
— Ba-bara Channing | ch Sis ver
Rosam@nd. Cross ’
Gra:¢ Isabel De ‘Reo
Caroiine Virginia Fain
Bettie Charter. Freemap
Frances. Elizabeth Fry
: Mar ha Résalie Humphrey
\ Ruth Kitchen ; :
3 Elizabeth Howland tii
' ‘Beatrice Shipley
Elizabeth Hazard: Ufford
Hilda Emily: Wright
1930
Elizabeth Robison Baker
Gertrudé Baitcroft |
Margaret -Taylor Barker
.. Elizabeth Perkins Btfelow:.
"Margaret lary ‘Cook
Dorothea, Crosse"
-« Marjorie Deane=
' Frances Frenaye
; Martha, ‘Ellis Gellhorn :
Sarah Stanley Gordon .
Cor sstayice Hand
~ omnes ARS Katherine Hamma y= on fns
_. Mary Preston Hulse
‘Agnes Kirsopp Lake
Elinor’ Latane .
Charlotte. Orr
*)
‘ Lorine ‘Carpenter Sears
Nina Sturgis Skidmore
Constance Seager Sullivan
*#% Helen Lotiise Taylor
Edith Blainche Thrush
Z s S 2 LN
GR am" z
[Bonschitr & Holmes yy
Founded 1889 Nh? Oh ine 1920
arate
ty
ee |
jai Gloskes
Opera Glasses :
Makers of Perfect-Fitting:
Eyeglasses and Spectacles
John J. McDevitt
Phone, ~~ Mawr 675
lrograms
al Pe oa
eis
Booklets ete.
Announcements
1145 Lancaster Ave., Rosemont, Pa
WILLIAM T. MoE.
MAIN LINE STORES VICTUALER
Candy, Ive Cream an ney Pastry
Hothouse Firtits* 4, any A
_ $21 Lahcestet Avenue
BRYN MAWR~
Cornell. University
Summier’ Session |
in, LAW. ©. 37
First Term, June 25 to August 1
CONTRACT, Professor Thomp-
son, Cornell University:
PROPERTY, Professor Wilson,
Cornell University.
SURETYSHIP, Professor Llew-
ellyn; Columbia University.
a Whaat Professor- Llew-
PARTNERSHIP, Professor
Crane, Univ. of Pittsburgh.
TRUSTS, . Professor Maggs,
Univ. of Southern California.
INSURANCE, Assistant Pro-.
~-fessor- Farnham, Cornell. Uni-.
versity.
Second Term, Aug. 2 to Sept. 7
CONTRACT, Professor White-
side, Cornéll University.
AGENCY, Assistant Professor
Merrill, University of - Ne-
“TAXATION, Professor Magill,
Columbia’ University.
SALES, Professor Goble, Uni-
~ versity of Illinois. :
WILLS, Professor Schnebly,
University of Missouri. -
DAMAGES, Professor Lavery,
U ity of Cincinnati. .
BANKRUPTCY, Professor Hil-
_key, ary Unie University.
4|, Students the study of
Liars Se os maps
an
For pare aaa the
_ Cornet Law School ~~
, N. Y. :
| ee :
SONTINUED, FROM PAGE SEVEN ;
England. de
| ’ Margaret Ruth Unangst-
Pes Ee eas Ex
’ THE GHATTEREOS &
ik A’ DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM
« Evening dinner served from |
6 until.7.30
OPEN AT TWELVE E NOON |
- a a a i a a ae
See ee rw www vi
~—S EOSOoSsess S € OSS eS fam
Phy'llis ‘Dorothea Ww aint
fitizabeth Wilson to ae es
Janet Florence ‘Wise
Anne Elizabeth Wood
Marina’ Yung-Kwai
. 1931
- Helen Graham of ae
Elizabeth. La@son Cook
Enid Appo €ook
‘Celia Gause Darlington
‘Myftle de Vaux - ?
Mary: Eliot Frothingham
Clara Dorothea Jenkins
Gertrude Paxton , Macatee
Betty Thomson Overton
Pauline Stockton. Parker,
Margaret Shaughnessy
|_____Helen Louise Snyder +
. Blanche’ Worthington
NOMINATIONS FOR UNDER-
GRADUATE, SCHOLARSHIPS
; FOR 1928-29
a
Scholarships fo be held in th® Senior
Year
CONSTANCE. LEWIS * MEMORI
SCHOLARSHIP:
Frances Elizabeth: Fry, of Burnham,
Pennsylvania... Prepared by High-
land - Hall,, Hollidaysburg, Pennsyl-
vania; -by the Agries Irwin School;
Philadelphia, and hy private tuition.
Matriculation Scholar for~ Pennsyl-
~vania and. the Souther States, 1925 +
Constance Lewis Memorial Scholar,
1927-2 8 ' Major: History. Honor
Points: One hundred and fifty- “seven
on seventy-seven. hours. ;
AMELIA RICHARDS. MEMORIAL
SCHOLARSHIP (awarded
President), and
by
So aeneiy
HENRY W. PRESS, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS
Phone: Ardmore 122
PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE
Haverford, Pa.
MARINELLO SALON
8414 Lancaster Avenue
Second Floor
Scientific Treatment of Skin and Scalp
California Paper Curl - Muscle Strapping
Electrolysis’
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 809
Open Tues. and Fri. Evenings.
Other ene? cad a enc
LUNCHEON, TEA, DINNER
Open Sundays
- CHATTER-ON TEA: HOUSE +
835 Morton Road
Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185
t
4
COTTAGE TE ROOM
Montgomery Avenue
LUNCHEON
AFTERNOON, TEA
& DINNER
Special Par , by Arggngement, :
Gued Rooms ate:
828-830 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr
Walk Over: Shoe Shop
' Agent for
GOTHAM
GOLD: STRIPE ‘SILK STOCKINGS
8
Guests at Bryn Mawr Day
are seated on a safe. -
WAYNE STEEL
GRAND STAND
4 “inadé by. the:
WAYNE ARON WORKS.
_ Wayne, Pa.
-M. M.:GAFFNEY
DRY GOODS and NOTIONS
_ SCHOOL SUPPLIES ~
the.
BRYN MAWR:: :-
Permanent Waving
ib
\ n)
LL BRANCES Seciioy. ~ SIMPSON
SCHOL ARSH IP, and
AW ARD: Which can
Hilda Emily Wright, of Porfland,
" "Oregon. Prepared by ’Misses- Kirk's
School, Bryn Mawr.. Frances Mar-
ion. Simpson Scholar, 1925-28;
‘ ‘James %&. Rhoads Scholar, 1926-28:
1926-28. © Major’ English, Honor
: Points: One hundred and. fifty-five
on seventy-five hours. ~
You Can Safely Order by
Telephone
—-For--Frutt~ trom ‘Haltowell- ts always” of}
| the finest selected quality—or you can‘
do..as many others,- leave a standing
for “delivery to your home or to those
away at.school.
Free Delivery to Your Home
_ Anywhere in City er Suburbs.
TELEPHONE PENNYPACKER 1761
HALLOWELL
Broad Street below Chestnut
PHILADELPHIA
Locksmithing Paints, Oils and Glas:
| WILLIAM .L. HAYDEN
_ BUILDERS and HOUSEKEEPERS
‘Hardware
838 Lancaster Avenue
| ; a
Al. ICE FERREE: ‘HAYS ‘MEMORI ALT
Alive Ferree Hayt Memorial Award, |
kuext week.)
ord fo: a weekly selection of oir Fruit |
ib
BRYN MAWR, PA. -_- 4
ELIZABETH WILSON WHITE ME- | THE’ PHILADELPHIA a tt
MORI AL SCHOLARSHIP (awarded _ OCCUPATIONAL THBR:!
by the President) : “MEMBER OF WELFARE repenAtiok
Marion Elisabeth Bailey, of. Philadet+| 2200 Delancey. _ mi
phia. “Prepared by the High, School Philadelphia -
for Girls, Philadelphia. Trustees’
Scholar, 1925-28; Fred Gowing Me-
,morial « Scholar, 1925-26. Group:
Greek and Latin. Honor. Points:
»» One hundred and forty- one .on sev-
‘enty-five. hours.
Lor.
- The course covers cousin ‘ °
bookbinding, jewelry, weaving, sil
ing, carving; basketry, lace-ma
other crafts, with lectures on
psychology and general medical condi--
tions, followed by hospital practice.
A diploma“is awarded to students
successfully completing the coufse.. -
(Other selrogrscipe will be announced |
Samuel Hollingsworth Paul,
Dean oe
Mrs.
HOLLYWOOD SHOPPING SERVICE
PO; Box 144, “Hollywood, California a
“We Buy You What the Stars Buy”
Ar LD,
SALLY Cera OWT WPOMET BON iil ci Dei ee ids so he we ppeecenenseeees $15.00 .
MARY ASTOR’S afternoon tea set of square cups, etc. .......6..-:e ese eee ened 17.50
LEATRICE JOY’s early American quilt, in rose and white ............ peeseces 50.00
_ DOLORES DEL RIO’S Spanish shawl, with deep fringe ...........++.++++2+++ 95.00
MONTAGU LOVE’S briar pipe, with long stem, ... 0.2.0.0... 60. e ees eee 15.00
OLIVE BORDEN’S black Spanish lace underwWear ..!, 0.2... .%.--5..-eece eens 15.00
ADOLPHE MENJOU’S dress shirts of French pique smrere vues eceeyy betes Seeees 15.00
VIRGINIA VALLI’S blouse of crepe .......2...%....- | SA ae ye ree 10.00
COLLEEN MOORE’S zipper bag of black and red leather .................055: 25.00
JESSE LASKY’S cigars (big and black); "apiece eck Sis BERETS bu ned yo ate Fes 1.25
Correspondence solicited; send for catalogue
Satisfaction guaranteed. No charge for ‘service
’
—
Haverford Pharmacy ||| ~~ JEANNETT’S 4} =
-BRYN MAWR
FLOWER SHOP
.
~ Cut F loweis and
Plants Fresh Daily
Corsage and Floral Baskets |
Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty
. Potted Plante
Personal Supervision on “Alle Orders
Phone: Bryn Mawr 570
823 Lancaster Avenue
Order Flowers: Early
for Garden. Party... and-
- Commencement.
2
«
inti 00 Aen
Off for Europe. Six days on the Atlantic.
Deck games—dancing. in the moonlight—
big Fourth of July celebration in London—
beach parties galore at Ostend—then Brus-
sels, and at last, Paris! The entire trip
' costs only $375 which includes everything.
Reservations may still be.availab‘e if you
write or wire immediately.
FORDHAM LAW SCHOOL
Woolworth Building, ‘ Over the Bounding Main—Virginia,
New York the university, and ten other big fea-.
Co-educational tures i in the brilliant June issue of
Case system — Three-year course.
Two years of College work required
for Admission,
Morning, afternoon and evening =
classes —
Write for catalo 1oe- --X sees Chicago.
Charles P21 Daye, cake 02851 : " 8 .
MRE ML TTT AeA
Coolie > y Inthe Village
et RAFELD’S . 2%
too! Seville Theater
--- in the Bryn Mawr Manner ---
Velveteen Coats . ot
Flannel Coats ............
White: and other Sport Dresses
. One- and two-piece.
White Sweaters...
Tene
Blue, green, red, black.
OO 6° 448 Ge 0 ee
White and pastel shades.
. $15
Pa sleeveless.
Felts.
tase hair hats.
$2.98
New and Vee
CGS LO ORL ee 6 ee 8: Oe ee
College news, May 2, 1928
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1928-05-02
serial
Weekly
8 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 14, 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-vol14-no23