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“VOL. XIV. No.3
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HEADS OF COLLEGES |
URGE FAIR PLAY
Women’s Education Should
Not Be Handicapped by
‘Lack fF Funds.
PROFESSIONS | SUF F ER
‘| Woodward’s élection is hailed with en-
The Presidents of the seven .eastern
‘women’s colleges, Barnard, Bryn Mawr;
Mount Holyoke, Radcliffe, Smith, Vas-
sar, and Wellesley, have joined forces
in an article in the November issue of
the Atlantic Monthly. It states the back-
ground of these institutions and tells of
the work they must do and the problems
that confront them.
The first point made is the similarity
of these colleges in geographick! situa-
tion, age—none are far from fifty, either
way, “and as they all of them represent
the same period of American educational
history in their foundings they arose
from not dissimilar conditions and dealt
with the same difficulties.”
The early struggles of them all are
sketched efforts to induce schools to give’
adequate preparatory work and to create
a sympathetic attitude in the community.
The personnel and the methods of
selection and housing are described.
Then it goes on to say:
“With the students once admitted
the women’s colleges have tried
to see that the work was well directed,
With blood and sweat, presidents or
faculty committees have tried to select
for their faculties proved -or potential
scholars, and an effort has been made to
make sure at the same time that these
men and women are good teachers—
that they have both the dream and ‘the
interpretation. On the whole the strug-
gle has availed. The teaching staff holds
a dignified and important part in the gov-
ernment of the college, in the devising
of the curriculum, and in establishing
the experiments in learning and teaching
by which the college is to grow in wis-
dom. :
Curricula are of late years forever in
the melting pot. From the time of the
great original experiment which was to
prove that a woman could actually take a
man’s education, the women’s colleges
have never been afraid-to experiment,
though they have often had to look to
their scanty resources and turn away
from some tempting venture.”
Here follows a survey of the more
important experiments such as the Bryn
Mawr Summer School, that have been
actually attempted.
Women Are Serious Students
“The libraries and laboratories of the
women’s colleges are equal to those of
many ‘colleges for men, and in some
cases superior in their resources. The
work of the students is not seasonal;
the steady routine of the year is not
broken in on by feverish periods of in-
tercollegiate athletics. But beyond and
above all in importance, both to the in-
dividual college and tothe whole group
of women’s colleges in the country, is
the fact that, with all individual excep-
tions allowed for, there is a general
understanding between the women’ s col-
- lege and the student that she has come
to work seriously at a long and arduous
task which is important for her as an
individual, but also important because
she % to be later a member of a commu-
nity to which she must make serious
contribution. The undergraduates now
CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Business Board Try-
The try-outs for the Business
Board of News will. be con- ‘
tinued for another week. - Any-
: Broere, 36.
male
“ BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), es WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26,1927 <=
ces
Woodward, Cross and Collins .
Elected Juiior C lass Officers\\
————
Aaa Woodward was aide to the
shigh office of Junior Class President. on
a wave of enthusiasm at’a meeting held
last Wednesday in the businesslike mist
of the Merion smoking room. Miss
thusiasm by all political parties of the
class. As chairman of the Glee Club
scenery committee last year she showed
her ability. All.those who recognized
the artistic and engineéring triumph of
a gondola which actually floated on and
off the stage will always admire the tal-
ented adaptor of roller skates as a stage
device. Miss Woodward also scored a
great hit as Call-boy in Varsity Dra-
matics, while as an Athlete—but no more
need be said.
The election of Rosamond Cross as
Vice President also pleased all factions.
Everyone who knows Miss Cross knows
how much time and real interest she
has given to work for the class and the
college. The wheels on many commit-
tees have gone around more easily arftl
more energetically, on gccount of her.
This year she was’ on the. Membership
Board of.C.
in welcoming/ the freshmen and’ seeing
that things rat Smoothly during the first
rather hectic week. Besides this it is to
her that we all’ owe our C. A. girls—
she spent the summer sorting and deal-
ing them out. Miss Cross has been
Captain of the second-class hockey team
for two years and is manager of her hall
team, This year she is a Junior member
of the Executiye Board of Self-Gov.
“Kit” Collins was elected secretary
almost unanimously. In her short week
as temporary Keeper of the Minutes and
Poster of Notices she amply proved her
capacity for the job. Miss Collins was
class archery captain in her freshman
year and has always acted as a prime
promoter of the sandwich industry. Var-
sity dramatics practically owes its exist-
ence to her heroic and persistent efforts
in their behalf.
VARSITY DEFEATED
IN SECOND GAME
Germantown, with Three All-
American Backs, Shows Up
Our Weaknesses.
NECK & NECK CONTEST
Although Varsity received its first de-
feat Saturday, October 22, so near the
the the
occasion was not entirely one for regret.
The Germantown Cricket Club has an
unusually strong team, including three
members of the All American Hockey
|
beginning - of hockey season,
team, which might almost make us proud
of holding them to a final score of 6-5.
The first half began badly for Bryn
Mawr. The team was constantly
bunched, or out of position, and after a
few minutes, Germantown scored its first
goal. Things did not improve, although
the ball was worried somehow down the
field; thereewas a scrimmage in front
of the goal, and Guiterman, with quick
action at a critical moment, managed to
shoot it in. After that Betty Cadbury,
who was the youngest player to go
abroad with the All American team in
1923, took possession of the ball, ran
down the field with it, and shot it into
the goal, over Al’s head, and out of
her reach. :
Lena Ball, Germantown’s center for-
ward, is a new member of their team,
and an invaluable one—three of their
goals are to her credit. In the backfield
were three All Americans, or ex-All
American members, Kitty McLean, Mary
Morgan, and Helen Ferguson, besides
Dot Schoell, who is captain of the Penn.
team. It is, therefore, a matter of pride
that our forwards were able to crash
through this strong defense as often as
they did. Tuttle, especially, outplayed
herself; and Longstreth was particularly
wily in evading the fullbacks. Guiterman
as usual played a very good game, and
was also as usual dependable in the
shooting circle. _.
Our team, howeyer, handicapped itself
by fouling rather more than might have
been expected, their favorite failing, that
of being offside at crucial moments. In
the beginning of the second half the
team rallied, and for a time it seemed as
though the game would end in a tie.
However, we were outplayed, and our
weakness shown up for, we Rope, our
future benefit. :
The line-ups were: a
, Varsity: B. Loines, ’28; S. Long-
streth, ’30*;/E. Stix, 30; H. Guiterman,
ee H. Tuttle, ’28*; E. Freeman, ’29;
C. Hamilton, Grad.; J. Stetson, ’28; R.
Wills, ’29; K. Hirschberg, ’30; A, jand
eng yr mtg > SS
Sharp, L. Brown, E, West, K. McLean,
‘|D. Bepoetl | 3-Mocees, A. Boardman,
sequently ~
nip tiphiactease.
May Day Costuming
Prizes Offered for
Materials May Be Had
Now.
Costuming for May Day is always, of
course, a large- order which must be
filled ;
of this year has been added the design-
ing of costumes, which should be done
by people directly associated: with the
college. -The sooner this part of the
general plan is completed, the better will
be the organization in the not so dis-
tant future.
the
first of these is to be given to the person
Three prizes have.been offered;
who makes the best drawing for the
“toutensemble” of a- play. This, of
course, must be appropriately done ac-
cording to the date and the manner of
the action, and it must furnish a fairly
adequate idea of the costuming of the
individual characters.
Interesting.Old Document Found
The second of the, prizes is offered to
the designer of the best standard, to be
carried in the procession of the pageant ;
until now standards have only been
flown from the buildings, so a great
many more will have to be made this
year than ever before. Each band of
players will represent a noble house, as
that of the Earl of Pembroke, and each
must have its own flag to fly. The fol-
lowing is an excerpt from an old docu-
ment in the Dulwich Museum, and it
gives an interesting idea of how the
players of old were given a kind of in-
formal charter:
“Friday the sixth of March certain
players came before Mr. Mayor at High
Hall there very present and Mr.
John Tate and Mr. Worship, who sayed
they were the Earl of Worcester’s men.
The Earl of Worcester
hath by his writings dated 14 January,
anno. Elizabeth, licensed his
servantes Robt. Browne, James Turn-
stall, Edward Alleyne, ete. to play
and go abroad, usinge themselves orderly,
ete, These are therefore to re-
quire all suche her Highnes officers to
whom these presents shall come quietly
and friendly, within your several per-
cints,. and Corporacions to permit and
adie them to pass with your further-
ance, usinge. and demeanynge themselves
honestlye, and to give them the rather
for my sake. such entertaiyment as other
noblemen’s players have.” There is still
a picture of | ward Alleyne, who sub-
C quite a well-known
actor, in the museum. . Stand-
ards are to be bérn by groups of arch-
Ree aie ont Soom spt sik be Sega
The\third of phe obese
ee paeky wee
——
y)
A, and had a large share’
Designs.
to our efficiently early beginnings |
; PRICES} 10 CENTS —*
Changes in Contest
Current Events Examination to
Be on Different Plan and
Made Shorter.
legiate Current Events Contest was held
last Monday, ‘October 17. Some impor-
tant modifications were muide in the ar-
rangements for’the examinations,
- Hereafter the local examinations in-
stead of .being set independently by the
separate colleges and universities as has
been the practice in the past will be set,
by the Executive Committee of the coun-
cil and will be the samme for all the col-
leges. This plan obviates the need for
a second examination to determine_ the
The best paper
in each individual unit will be forwarded
intercollegiate winner.
to the Executive Committee which will
then submit the twenty selections thus
arrived at to the judges appointed by
them to make the final award.
The date for the examinations this
year hgy been set for the last Friday in
April, the 27th.
aminations was cut, after much discus-
sion, In 1926 the period was four hours,
in 1927 five hours. This year it will
be three. This change was due to the
general impression of the members of
the cotincil that the difficulty of the test
was frightening away some of the best
undergraduate material. and defeating the
purpose of the contest which is to en-
courage a general interest in vital news,
and not to create a competition confined
to grinds and specialists in history, and
politics.
The time of the: ex-
Three Prizes Offered
A change_waés made in the local prize
arrangements as the result of the sug-
gestion from several men who have had
practical experience in handling the con-
test in the colleges, the idea being to
extend the interest to a large number
of students. Instead of one prize in
each institution, the new plan provides
for three prizes equal to the total of the
original money value of the single prize
There will be a first prize of $150, a
second of $75, and a third of $25. The
first prize-winner in each institution will
CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
FLAWS AND FLASHES
IN LANTERN NIGHT
Effectiveness of Singing
Marred by Unruliness
of Audience.
SOPHS WELL TRAINED
Lantern Night was Friday, October 22,
in spite of the gloomy aspect of the sky
which threatened to postpone it until
Saturday.
The ceremony this year was marred
by three unfortunate occurrences. In
|the period of silence before the Sopho-
mores begin to sing outside the library,
people insisted upon talking and giggling.
No amount of shshing could stop them
though some very good ex-proctors
were numbered among those present.
Then, oh horror of horrors, somebody
tried every light on the library switch-
board, illuminating now this spot, now
that, most distractingly and quite spoil-
ing the atmosphere for the ceremony.
waiting for. the Freshmen to go out
singing “Sofias,” they mioved about and
even seemed, to be trying to “beat their
neighbor to the exit.” This was very
disturbing. :
The singing of “Pallas” was unusually
excellent. The mutes were scattered
this year instead of being grouped on
Lbetter. The Freshmen sang well, until,
a
the, gah of the’ proces:
‘sion ¢ no keep in unison. |
Oe ihies we wid des wees Ble
swung faster than on the other. :
‘CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
\ Se : ‘
\
The third annual meeting of the gov-|
etning ¢ouncil of the Times Intercol-"
Thirdly, while the Sophomores were :
the end as last, and the effect was far!
SUMMER SCHOOL
Actual Experiences Become
Part of. Required Economics
P Course. _
HEAD WORKS MIRACLE
. g
(Specially contributed by ‘E. Stewart,
and H., McKelvey, 98.)
On the fifteenth of June, 1927, two
energetic “undergraduates” in an ancient
Franklin met twenty-two érains. Their
object was to gather together the one
hundred and one Summer School. Stu-
dents who were arriving in Bryn Mawr
that day.
These girls, of every nationality, and
every. sort of occupation, came from
places as widely separated as York, Eng-
land, and Seattle; Washington. Their
ideas were as varied as their home
towns; heated arguments would arise on
any subject from Socialism to stew
recipes. But from the time they were
brought through Pembroke Arch, they
became, not merely one hundred and one
individual” factory girls, but a unit, a
whole—the Bryn Mawr Summer School
for Industrial Workers, Class of 1927.
It was Miss Smith, the executive head
of the school, who wrought the miracle
of unification. Besides being so impor-
tant an official, she managed to know
every student personally, to know all
about her, what she thought and why
she thought it, and what her particular
difficulties were. She adapted herself
to every occasion, and was indispensable
to the organizers of—skits, where she
was equally popular as ‘a street car con-
ductor (in the night watchman’s brass-
buttoned coat), or a railroad train, or
even as Pembroke Arch.
President Hiker from Chicago
As for the girls who belonged to the
class, each one should be described in-
dividually, before you can form any idea -
of what the Summer School was. The
class president, Alma Polkoff, came from
Chicago on foot. She was a tall, raw-
boned girl, with sandy hair really boy-
cut, and when she strode into the regis-
tration office in her hiking clothes no
one suspected that she was of the
feminine gender. Her masculine appear-
ance won for her the nickname of “Mr.
Miss,” and as such she was the re-
spected leader of the school. Her good
sense and infinite, patience made the
class meetings, which were apt to be-
come stormy sessions, orderly and fruit-
ful affairs. ~
Helen Meltzer, the editor of the school
paper, was one of the best educated stu-
dents. we bad. Although foreign-born,
she had gone to school in this country,
and had continued studyifig with her
husband, who is a lawyer. The two
issues of the Bryn Mawr Echo, which
she supervised, are particularly interest-
ing; they contain many accounts of
actual experiences that the girls had gone
through, such as first-hand accounts of
the war, and tales of youth spent in
making broom handles,
Some one gave as her conception of a
Radical “one with strange ideas ex-
pressing every time which is con-
venient.” Such was Sylvia Zwerin. She
was a Russian girl, made cynical and
bitter by her experiéhces, and ready with
an opinion on any subject. She nearly
broke -up one class at which the
question of whether students should wear
'28,
t
oe
°
CONTINUED ON’ PAGH S -.
Mann Twins to Visit Here
On Monday, October 3ist, a
P. M. f
be held in Rockefeller at
Klaus and Erica gre
daughter of the _
Mann, of Munich, who way
The Magic Mountain,
lish, but Klaus, although he
a book of plays and two novels, does nc
One'of hie: hooks bae heen, translated i
REPRESENTATIVE,
knickers Ko the village was’ tinder dis- ~~
Reo
‘2
7]
nea
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een
: Bar goer. Ser
: Editor-in,Chiet Hace
i. CORNELIA B. ROSE, 28
Cop’ Eaiéor
HELEN F. err. 28
oa CAROLINE BM. SMI i, "28 *
Assistant Battors ie
GRACE, "2 29° C. "80
ne
peli an
E. ‘R. JONES, '28
M. 8. G. mut M. D. ene, 28
J. BARTH, R. CROSS, '29
arr oe MAY BEGIN AT ANY! tin
‘Entered as second-class matter at the
Wayne, Pa., Post Office.
THE PROBLEM OF BATES
A new experiment was made at
Bates House this summer: instead
of devoting the entire two months
to children from the New York
Spring Street Settlement, the
second month was given over to the
children from St. Martha’s Home,
Philadelphia. Aside from the sub-
ject of financial mismanagement,
the summer was, on the whole, very
-successful. There seems, however,
to be some controversy as to which
of the two groups is most worthy
of our attention.
The objection to having children
from the Spring Street Settlement in
New York isa rather definite one.
The Settlement is at present so
poorly managed that we are not at
all sure of getting the children who
are most in need of our aid. Several |
children were sent back for a second
period, taking the time of others
who had not been away from New
York and needed the country air far
more. Also, the Settlement work-
ers, in spite of careful directions, |”
sent down more children than could
be accommodated, and in some cases
it was found necessary to send one
or two back. On the other hand,
however, Mrs. Bates and the com-
mittee prefer New York children,
as it was for them that the institu-
tion was originally planned.
The children from Philadelphia
were found to be easier to control
and in more pressing need: of our
attention. They were, on the whole,
a more attractive group. St.
Martha’s Hou8e is an efficiently run
organization ; not only do the work-
ers select the children with care,
.but they also keep track of their]
peogrens during the winter months.
inally, Bryn Mawr, as a suburb
of Philadelphia, has more responsi-
bility towards that city than to New
York; we owe a certain amount to
the community in which we live.
Far more interest is shown in New
York slum children than in Phila-
delphia ones, but surely Philadel-
phia has its slums as well, and de-
serves our aid.
THE ANTI-BRITISH |
Out in Chicago just now they
are making a great pother about
British propaganda in school text-
books and schools generally Edi-
torially the New York World sug-
gests that the original inspiration
for the charge may have come from
someone with a textbook to sell.
Be that as it may, the controversy
has gone beyond that now. The
amount of high feeling being dis-
played is marvelous. These are
aes oe statements made. red
anti-British as reported in t
World : BL bl Sigg ago"
¥
“in the Sees ostegs reggie En,
Maguire
Se oe
and, ‘at once feel resentment toward.
England; ©
Ata tinse wine ‘ilaieas with,
and are ae da delicate be-
Brmjcause of any number of Teasohs
such murmurings and shoutings cat.
’
4do inealculable harm, ‘Something
should be done to counteract . this
attitude,
oe DIGGING IN ATHENS:
_ Bryn Mawr interest should be
particu ¥ keen in the recent an-
nouncemeft’ that. an anonymous
American has devgted two million,
five hundred thou dollars to the
purpose of excavati
in the ancient
market place of Athens. Our con’
‘tact with ancient “Gfeecé is ‘close
through the association of Dr. Rhys
Carpenter and several students with
the American Schoo} at Athens..
But our interest should be aroused
fot only as Bryn: Mawrters. but as
individuals. For surely “nowhere
can more satisfying results be ¢x-
pected from the liberal expenditure
,of skill and money than in Athens.”
An editorial in the New York
World says that “the region to be
explored lies * northeast from the
Harbor of Pireaius, north of the
Acropolis, and well to the westward
of the modern center of the city.
It is still devoted to markets ert
kindred purposes, but the. buildings
upon the site are for the most part
neither tall nor costly.” Money,
however, must be spent for con-
demnation proceedings and as sev-
eral thousand people must be re-
moved, expropriation powers, with-
out which the work would be i impos-
sible, have been promised.
Fortunately, the modern city has
been planned away from those parts
of interest to the archaeologist.
We wish those who have the job
in hand well, and envy our friends
who can be on the spot’ watching the
progress of the work.
“CO-ED”
“Co-ed” is a much abused word.
Often it seems to be used in a way
that completely loses sight of its
original sense. Beginning with the
one-sided meaning: of a girl whois
educated with boys—why boys are
not co-educated is a.mystery for
there must obviously be two sides
to the situation—it row seems to
stand for any woman who is asso-
ciated with men in any enterprise
whatsoever.
Take for instance, this . headline
from our friend and stand-by, the
New York World:
“CO-ED JURY GETS
LAWYERS’ PLEAS |
IN TEAPOT TRIAL”
When you read further, you dis-
cover that what is. meant is, not
“ndergraduettes” as they call them
at Oxford, but a superintendent in
a telephone office and a clerk.
Such an example of the mean-
ings to which the term co-ed is
being stretched, illustrates how fool-
ish it is. It is a silly word, neither
accurate nor dignified. Some sub-
#
| stitute should be found for it.
- IL DUCE AND THE POPE!
The only man of our day whom
we may indisputably cite as a “mod-
ern Roman” has once more become
the focus of a good. many fore-
sighted eyes, and, strange to relate,
this time the brilliant glow of the
public spotlight is shared by no less
a per than Pope Pius the
eleventh. The “Roman asnana
the temporal power of the ope, has
always been one of extreme impér-
tance, and it has always held its
place, in the back of every. Italian’s
m'nd. Recently there have been sev-
(eral unconventional and si
b
: Mussolini himself is in at
%
f the restoration of the rights of
Catholie Church. -(Inei- |
here :
.
before him; too, it seems|_
°
»
ci ss : = rae sete
: Fede cg ald Se aan
} yale Sn ee rs
* e «
os HE COLL EGE NEWS:
‘emotion cand * sentiment. and belief
that is affected, a realm non-Catho-
lic as well as Catholic, irreligious as
well as religious, negative as well-as
positive in conviction and sym-
pathy. ‘The emergence of the, Rope
as a. temporal sovereign with a de-
fined kingdom is one of those asser- '
tions which it is not possib for any
thoughtful st&dent of
ignore.’
on
rf
A Miaponesptish C ted
While we ‘are flattered t find that.
many people consider usuthe authors of
the article in last .week’s. News, qescrib-
ing Bryn Mawr as seen by an Austrian
| visitor, wé are forcedy to° refuse the
‘credit. Qur_ masterly® translation was
made after a careful study of the origi-
nal, 4vhich was discovered in the Neues
Wiener Journal, and presented to us.
The native- home of that Journal, for
v
is Vienna, and has nothing to do with
hot dogs. This should help to prove that
the article is authentic, if the quality. of
the translation alone will not suffice. For
the ideas expressed, and the bucolic pic-
ture drawn, you must, therefore, thank
Herr Arnoldo Fracarolli; and not
“Two -Who Have Passed Their Orals.”
COMMUNICATIONS
(The Editors of ‘the Coueck News
are not responsible. for opinions cx-
pressed in this column.)
To the Editor of the Cortecr News:
Here is a suggestion. It seems to me
that the system of C. A. girls ought to
be changed. Last year only one hundred
and twenty-five people out of. the whole
college applied for C. A. girls and of
these ten did not return to college. Of
the remaining one hundred and _ fifteen
only five were graduate students. . This
necessitated many - undergraduates tak-
ing two new graduate students as well
as a freshman. This put all at a disad-
vantage. It ig difficult to be one of
several who are being “looked after”
and it is difficult to “look after” more
than one. Of the one hundred and fifty-
five new graduates and freshmen whose
names were enrolled (before September
15th, one hundred and fifty-two received.
letters. This good record does not show
a general ifiterest throughout the college,
but emphasizes the work and interest of
a_small minority. Still fwrther, a great
part of the C, A. girl’s former work is
done now by the welcoming committee
for by the time the upper-classman ar-
rives the freshman knows almost as
much about the campus and the college
at large as does her C. A. girl.
‘The work of the membership com-
mittee has changed dnd grown with the
institution of freshman week. Their
work could be made simpler if the fol-
lowing plan (or ‘ one Bropcnsle were
adopted :
1. Let every member of the ‘college
who returns in the fall feel her respon-
sibility towards the incoming freshmen
and graduates and be willing to offer her
services to them.
2. Let the. membership committee
send out handbooks and a , Short wel-
coming form letter telling each fresh-
man that there will be a welcoming com-
mittee to receive. her.when she arrives.
etc., and ‘télling every graduate about
the graduate club. : ‘
3. Let the membership committee
deal out arbitrarily the freshmen to the
returning upper-classmen and leave a
note for each upper-classman during
freshman week telling her for whom she
is responsible. In this way all would
be accounted for and each person would
have only one C, A. girl.
This plan is not by any means per-
fected, but it seems to me simpler and
irore direct than the older one. .
‘I should be pleased if anyone who has
ideas would express them either in the
at | News or to any member of the mem-
e | Pop Prot actions of the pat bership seo a
“which crept be . Josepning. S. Srerson,
Chairman Membership Committee.)
ee
those who have not yet tried their’ oral, |
had: in Queen Elizabeth’s time.
de Editors ¢ = “ COLLEGE Henle ;
. The Pillar
ok Salt
3.
Friday's performance of “the lowing
herd” has provided much food for
“ thought. One Would hardly suspect that
_ |there wére so many angles: to it.
Here
‘is one: . es
; Meditations of a Lantern-Swinger
I feel just like a little thing
That was not madg ‘by God to swing
Because my ‘tittle light .wdn’t shine—
{ know that’s just because it’s mine..
Well, I don’t care—at any rate
I'll try again, because I hate.
To swing and swing and swing and
swing,
And never edme to anything.
| ines : :
And another :
: The Campus.
Bee
Time) Lantern Night.
(A freshman is showing her mother
around the campus; they have just come
to the library.)
“We call this the cloisters, and “have
is the fountain that plays night and day.”
“Yes, ‘it does look sort of like a
medieval castle, but the Pembroke West
Arch: is really awfully medieval.”
“No, we can’t walk on the grass. They
are keeping it for May Day.”
“Tt’s a big festival, sort of, like they
We all
have to practice making faces, in ortler
to be in it;”
“Oh, everybody’s in it.
Hood, or anyone you want to be.
else you do Morris Dancing.” =
“T don’t know whether William Mor-
ris made it up or not. I'll ask Miss
Applebee if he did. I guess he did
though, if he’s Elizabethan.”
You are Robin
Or
(She turns her mother over to an
upper-classman, and the scene shifts to
the top of the Lib.) ‘
“Tt is cold, isn’t it?”
“Oh, it takes them some time to get
gtarted, they are gathering now, the
freshmen. [--mean.”
“No, I don’t think I could find her.
It’s sort of dark, Oh, maybe that’s. her,
waving.”
“The Sophomores sing first. I guess
they are singing now, outside, only the
wind is going the wrong way, so we
can’t hear them.”
“Yes, it is cold.” (Pause.)
“It’s always cold on lantern night, and
it never rains—that’s tradition.”
“We have to have traditions,
couldn’t get along ° without them.”
“It couldn’t rain. It’s a tradition that
it never does.” (Pausg.)
“Oh, here they come.
with all the lanterns?”
“Yes, I think it’s one of the prettiest
traditions we have.”
“The blue ones?
They keep time.”
“The green ones are the ones they
give to the Freshmen.”
“Their class color is green.”
“No, not because they are Freshmen.”
“Tt’s handed down from the last senior
class. They always do that, the fresh-
men get the coldr of the. old iors
Like next year it will be light sy It’s
tradition.”
“There are dark blue, and red.”
“The words? Oh, they are Greek.”
“No, -they use the same songs every
year. ‘That’s tradition, too.”
“It's a hymn to Athena. Yes, I guess
it goes back pretty far.” (Pause.)
we
Isn’t it pfetty,
They are Seniors.
++ “Now they are giving the lanterns.
It’s symbolic.” “(Pause.)
“No, it’s not as pretty as the other.
It doesn’t go back so far’”
“Something about Lovers of wisdom.
It’s Greek, too.” —
“Yes, we even have Greek cheers.”
“T think you will find her under the
Arch. oma going to sing some
more.”
dalways is. It’s tra—
ing gS
Finlodiiaily, we don’t set to
*Tt’s too bad it was so cold, but. it’
ee
{his cart ‘drawn, by an aged goat, but the
Inew patrol wagon | is too fast for him. ~~
.. Play Reviews .
“Coquette By George Abbott: and Ann *.
‘| Preston Britiges, starring, Helen Hayes.
» Son¥ehoW one always expects to see
Helen Hayes in a comedy—lingering
‘memories: of ,Caesar’ and Cleopatra and
What Every Woman Knows! -As if in
confirmition of this theory, Coquette is a
comedy, . with afew hints. of seriousness,
for one and a half acts. Then-it is quite»
defifitely a tragedy. ° The story. is that of
a Southern girl, Norma Besant; she is
attractive, prettily flirtatious, interested in
little but herself.- Suddenly slie falls in
love. with a man of whom her father
strongly disapprdéves: Her father is a
Southern gentleman, and ‘a doctor, yet
filled with the idea of the helpless purity -'
‘of womanhood. Charles Waldron plays
the part of Dr. Besanf with dignity and
sincerity. The part of Norma is perfectly
and powerfully played by Helen Hayes.
This was clearly shown by the sodden
state of the audience between the acts.
Indeed, all the characters are so well cast
that it is difficult to’select any for par-
ticular comments However, Una Merkle’s
part as Betty Lee, the visiting girl, should
be favorably spoken of. She wanders
vaguely in and out of the play, providing
comic relief at tense moments.
The one criticism to be made of Co-
quette.is that the tragic end is not sufh--
ciently foreshadowed in the first half. :
Consequently the audience is spot prepared
for it. It seems for the moment in-
credible. The problem of the play, once
it has been introduced, is well presented
and carried out. True fo life, it has no
solution. ry
M. FR. S.
“Porgy” Well Dramatized
Porgy, the present production of the
Theater Guild in New York is a drama-
tization of the novel of the same name
made by the author and his wife. The
following criticism of this play, which
is acted by a company of Neggpes and
_|directed bya Rumanian, was written by
Stark Young, and appears in the Novem-
ber issue of McCalls.
“When the Theater Guild shipeniped
that it would open the new season with
Porgy, by Du Bose Heyward, it delighted
many péople who already knew and
loved this story of the cripple who begs
all day on Charleston streets and, lives
by night with his friends in Catfish Row
near the harbor. ‘Porgy is gentle and
touching, with something about him too
that ‘makes him a born genius among
beggars. Where the others get nothing
he brings home every night a goodly
store of small coins.
“Of these coins Porgy counts out
enough for his living, such as 4t is; the
lrest goes on craps; the passion of his:
life is thé dice. In a Saturday night
game one of the dwellers: in Catfish
Row is killed. Crown, the killer, runs.
a d his ‘Sweetheart, Bess, takes
shelter with Porgy. She is degraded, a
drunkard and drug eater, a victim of
that “happy dus’” that issecretly ped-
dled along with the liquor. Something
about Porgy changes her; with him she
goes straight.
- “On a pienic in one of the islands off
she meets Crown again, and feels his old
power over her. He swears that in the
cotton season he will return, for her.
Bess has come to love Porgy, but fears
Crown’s return and: knows that she is
lost if he exerts his will again upon her.
Later Crown keeps his oath and returns.
He steals into Porgy’s ‘house at mid-
night while Bess is asleep. Porgy kills
him in. the dark and with the help of a ©
woman who runs the cook-shop next
door, drags the body to. the watef’s ellge.
“The officers do not suspect Porgy of
the deed, but he is summoned to the ~
coroner’s* inquest to identify” the enh
The thought of looking on the «
him. ‘He tries to run vaclegs
He gets ten days in jail for contempt of
Court. When Porgy comes home again —
ithe shore, among the palmetto jungles,
+ Fort Sumpter against the skyline. ©
* recently -
bf Plain Talk and.found it:
caw CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
taitied’; that vivid court that has’ seén
‘naw these,negro lodgers; the wild“island
rfinely preserved that same division be-
comes as a friend. . We feel constantly
- If any reader completely agrees with us
- we shall ask him to give up his sub-
: cheer.
Pen Rae
- @ Se 4"
golden days in*its time, aristocratic. balls
where ambassadors danced,. family, tradi-
tion, a delicate and lovely Ijfe long.| .
passgd from its“Old walls, which’ shélter
with its tidegfand jungles and ‘humming
sands) the panelled m with its great
bay window looking on the sea with
’ The fine: sense dialect, with traces
of the South Carélina “Gullah, %y shows
even more in the play than it does in the
hook. And, above all, the gentle feel-
ing, the humanity of sentiment of Porgy |
has not been lost, nor that loving under-
standing of the sweetness and childish-:
ness arid emotional richness of the negro
nature. And ‘in their dramatization’
Dorothy and Du Bose Heyward have
tween the two races;.so well conveyed
all through the book and especially in
the scene where Archdale comes to the
court ‘to inquire for Porgy and nobady
there has ever heard of him or. heard
his naime,. till they learn that* Archdale
this gulf between white and black, so
poignant, vivid and dramatic.
é
ox
New Magazine
EOS Pushes to Fore
In these days of overproduction of
magazines, a new entry in the field must
be very gdod to attract any notice A
y- born enterprise—just two
months old—Plain
make a permanent. place for itself.
The first issue appeared in October
and contained snappy articles on Prohi-
bition, a Catholic for “President, gang
warfare in Chicago, American aviation
and a number of other interesting sub-
jects. Some of the.authors were Clar-
ence Darrow, Will Durant, Emil L,ud-
wig, Silas Bent and Don Seitz.
In the editorial section the policy of
the magazine is outlined in the follow-
ing words:
A magazine with a mission, dedicated
within the limits of human fallibilities
and prejudices, to tolerance, and nat-
urally to locking horns with intolerance.
To this end it will be inconsistent, fool-
ish, incongruous, unreasonable, good-
humored, bad-humored and even hodge-
podge, but never dull. It will be even
more an aim with. us to be interesting
than to be tolprant—and our muttered
prayer is that liveliness won't conflict
with tolerance. We have never’ liked
double funerals.
“We shall sincerely try to male you
laugh over one article, grow thoughtful
over another and denounce us with a
thousand damns at the third. .The edi-
tor issties a standing invitation for you
to come up and shoot him, and says that
if you mistake one of the publishers for
the editor, so much the better—one less
boss. The publishers say that if you
shoot the editor—well, there are lots of
editors without jobs, some of them pretty
good.
We promise one thing only, that we
shall never be flannel-mouthed or insipid.
We shall trickle to. no advertisers, kiss
no political toe, walk no fences, boost
no friends, fear no enemies,
We hope that no reader will ever
completely agree with us or with our
writers. God forbid! For that way lies
either niediocrity or. deserved extinction.
scription and take his money back. You
are cordially asked to send iff your com-
plaints, for which we shall reserve space.
If we don’t catch the devil ‘at least a
hundred times each month from our
readers, it will be no case of the readers
‘shooting the editor, but the editor and
publishers shooting each other. Send
your objections and sign: your name.
Not that we are crotchety, bad-tem-
pered, unfriendly. We merely Pe that
to say as Voltaire said means a path
hardly free from troubles and that the
crowd listening is not always going. to
What Voltaire said has been re-
peated a million times, but it will do no
harm to say it again:
I-do not agree with a. word you say,
but I will defend to the death your
right to say: it.
_ With the Novémber issue, we have a
better chance to judge if the magazine is
keeping to its high standard... Harry
Hansen, in the New York World, sum-
marizes its contents thus:
“I picked up the November napiber
outspoken magazine, filled with “cr
sketches about the coldness of American
- women, the “backwardness of the South,
Talk bids fair tof
t
: Book Review ° -
__ James Branch Cabell ‘_
*Something About Eve - ds veritably a
komedy of Fig Lea es, ” Without, a
doubt, it is one of the best. satires that
any modern writer has thus, Ae st
tempted. & «
_ The theme is- an ‘intensely ” interesting
one. A Southern gentféman of the early
niygéteenth century leaves his’ natural
Pbody and proceeds upon the Silver Stal-
lion to the home of all the gods. His
fobject is to rid himself of “the impending
over-amorous advances of his. mistress;
but the journey proves futile as an
rescape from womankind: He is waylaid
incessantly by.women, “less plurally than
singularly.” Two truths alone does he
find to be enduring; and his ultimate
and unfortunately happy marriage forces
him to collapse into an honorable career.
The ‘supporting characters are inter-
esting and stimulating. God and- other
notables. such as Nero, King Solomon,
Satan, and Tannhauser are present and
never boring. And present also—rather
pré-eminently—is Eve.
OR
In Philadelphia *
P The Theater
Adelphi: Helen Hayes comes from the
whimsy of Barrie into the tragedy ‘of
Coquette. .
Broad: An older Glenn Hunter comes
back in Behold This Dreamer. .
Walnut: The Connecticut Yankee, an
unusually catchy and clever musical
‘| comedy,
Shubert: Another good musical com-
edy, with the addition of the Astaires,
Smarty,
Erlanger: .The clever Stones
clever show, Criss Cross.
Lyric: Broadway, a very excellent and
thoroughly popular portrayal of life be-
hind the scenes of a night club.
Chestnut: This is the last _week of
My Maryland.
Garrick: A John Golden presentation,
Two Girls Wanted.
Coming
Broad: The Merry Wives of Wieder,
with Mrs. Fiske and Otis Skinner; opens
October 31.
Adelphi: Ain't Love Grand?;
October 31. .
_ Walnut: Bye, Bye, Bonnie; opens Oc-
tober 31.
in -@
opens
Shubert: Golden Dawn;. opens Oc-
tober 31.
Chestnut: The Student Prince; opens
October 31. <
The Movies
Stanley: The Road to Romance, with
Ramon Navarro as a Spanish courtier.
Stanton: We still have the movie ver-
sion of The Big Parade among those
present.
Aldine: The King ° of Kings is ex-
tremely well portrayed.
. Fox Locust: The tearful Seventh
Hedven still harrasses an enthusiastic
public.
Fox: We are show the real Man-
hattan in East Side West Side.
=
Orchestra Program
The Philadelphia Orchestra will give
the following concert’ on the afternoon
of Friday, ‘October the 28th, and on-the
evenings of Saturday, October 29th, and
Monday, October 31st. Friz Reiner will
again be the guest conductor, and Bea-
trice Harrison will be the soloist on the
Violoncello.
Schubert—Symphiony in C Major.
Delius—Concerto for Violoncello and
Orchestra.
Carpenter—“Skyscrapers.”
“Beatrice Harrison. was born at Roor-
kee, in a valley on the Himalayas, where
her father, a Colonel in the British
Army, was stationed. She~showed an
early predilection for the ‘cello, and at
the age of ten won: the gold medal of the
Associated Board against four thousand
competitors. After studying af the Royal
College of Music she went to Berlin for
instruction from Hugo Becker. There
she won the Mendelssohn Prize, and had
the distinction of being the first ‘cellist
jand the youngest student to secure it.
After a recital debut ‘in Berlin, she
toured in Germany, Austria, Hungary,
Holland and Scanditlavia. Among the
composers who have foundyinspiration i in
|Miss Harrison’s playing ahd who have
dedicated compositions to her are Zoltan |.
Kodaly, Arnold Bax, John Ireland and
Frederick Delius, who wrote the ’cello
concerto on this program especially for.
ow Beats haiwertts. first American
, SP|formance at these concerts, at which
Miss’ Harrison will be heard as soloist |ers
a
1s : «
firat time.” .
gus . BES iF Kee peer
a ESO ar
rey ~
\ $ 4
Ps a
"came Isa yaa:
_—_—-
Disartaainealt Probleni Noi One}
: of: Ratio, but of Getting
. Mutual Confidence. . ,.
“Hearing about the League. of Nations
each year is like hearing - the same
phonograph record,” said Dr. Fenwick
in Chafigl Friday morning, — “It —
seemsgto be the same thing... This .
however, has-been taken up chiefly with
a discussion of the disastrous disarma-
ment conference of ‘last summer,
“Seven, years ago the greatest experi-
ment of the world was born. Since the
unsuccessful Holy Roman Empire one
thousand two hundred years ago, it is
the first attempt to unite all nations:.and
make each responsible for the general |*
peace, '
“At first the League was, merely a
number of paper promises ; people* won-
dered if it were possible. -Now that it
is an established fact for all nations as’
a forum for discussion, the question is
how to make-it work. The non-co-
operation of the United States is no
longer ,important; the experiment is
working without us.
No Decisive Action
“When the Assembly met on Septem-
ber 1 it was amid gloomy auspices; the
disarmament conference called by the
United States had failed. ‘The League
saw that disarmament is necessary, but
that it is not so much a question of
ratio as of securing mutual confidence in
freedom from ‘attack and. agreement of
the nations to’arbitrate their difficulties,
“This subject was discussed for a
month and nothing definite was done.
‘Two resolutions, however, .were passed.
Poland introduced one of them con-
demning aggressive war, which all the
nations signed; this doesn’t mean very
much—any war*may.be called defensive.
“The other resolution called on. the
nations to study arbitration as a local
problem between small groups. These
groups, having successfully established
the principles of arbitration, will go on
to a | world: wide agreement to outlaw
war.’
&
Barnes Lectures in Philly
“Brave, honest and interesting” is_ the
description most’ often applied to Harry
Elmer Barnes, the young Professor of
History at Smith College, whose lectures
and books have done so much to impress
the thinking public with the profundity
of his studies and the justice of his
viewpoint.
In addition to his position of Professor
of History and Sociology at Smith Col-
lege, Prof. Barnes was Statistician~ in
the War Department in 1918, and is an
author of note. His works include
Sociology and Political Theory, The
New History and the Social Studies and
the Genesis of the World War.
Prof. Barnes is to sondiuct a series of
discussions on “Living in the Twentieth
Century,” under the auspices of the
Women’s International League for Peace
and Freedom. The soriferences will be
held in the auditorium of the Young
eMen’s Christian Association, 1425 Arch
street, directly across from City Hall
Plaza, on six cofisecutive Tuesday after-
noons at 3.30 o’clock, beginning Novem-
ber first, and will include the following
subjects :
1. ‘The Period of Coolidge vs: : the
Period of Liitcoln.
2. The Rise and Fall of Democracy
—Bolshevism and Fascism.
3. The International Problem of War
and Peace.
4. Morals ‘in the New Order, Crime
and ‘Prevention.
5. Essentials of Education for Con-
temporary Life.
6. The Case for Open-Mindedness.
Each conference will include ample
opportunity for questions and discussion.
Prof. Barnes’ articles on above subjects
have received most enthusiastic com-
ments. from historians and critics, both
here and abroad. , The originality and
clarity of his writings and his spirit of
intellectual honesty . have brought con-
gratulatory messages from such celebri-
ties as H. G. Wells, John Haynes
Holes James” Harvey Robinson, and
ores of other equally representative
authorities.
The Women’s International League
Coftsiders itself very fortunate in having
securéd so gifted a leader as Prof.
ards f s._couree.”~ The lectures
“cost $5. Pets cow course of six. A
special rate of $4.50 is offered to teach-
, students and groups. taking ten or
mire course Aickets. Guest’ tickets at
$1.25. f <
a
-
a.”
»
\ ‘ ‘ : 6
Dean Considers ‘Youth.
Dogile and Conservative
Dean _ Manning, ° writing in the No-
vember McCalls aboitt youth specifi-,
cally refutes the. charge of irresporisj-
bility an& immorality which is so oftén.
laid at its She says that under- #,,
graduates are “quite as docile “and as
,/Simple in their mental processes today
as they ever were” and that the. blame
is to Be laid on the graduates of the
years from 1900 to 1910.
The articles follows:
oors.
~”
We ‘have become so accustomed to
talk about Youth Movemerts and wild
young people that it may seem super-
fluous to ask whether the members of
our. younger generation really are as
much inclined to shake off the leader-
ship ‘of: their elders as is commanly
supposed. But middle-aged critics
might well consider the convention for
the fourteeri college newspapers recéntly
held at Amherst College.
. These young men, who: we may”as-
sme are representative of undergrad-
uate thought -at the present moment,
deplored certain tendencies in modern
collegiate life including the drinking
and the overemphasis on athletic prow-
ess. But they went on to assert their
belief that these evils did not originate
on the college campus but were
brought there from without. It is from
the older members of the family or
community that the boys (and often
the girls) learn to drink and it is from
the alumni rather than from the under-
totally exaggerated attention to ath-
letics. y
I cannot believe that these college
boys at Amherst were merely “pass-
ing the buck.” I feel convinced that
they were looking deeper into the
causes of things than many of their
glib critics. We are constantly. hearing
criticism of the present day undergrad-
uate from the alumnae of the women’s
college. She is accused of being utterly
irresponsible, glacking in public spirit,
and guilty in individual cases of all
sorts of misconduct presumably un-
known in happier, purer days. '
Now it is true that college gixls
smoke more cigarettes, wear less cloth-
ing and go on more late parties in au-
tomobiles than their predecesors in
1910. But for the most part college
girls have been very little discouraged
in these practices at home. The in-
crease in divorce, the disregard of law,
the high tension un@er which we all
live is not the work of this famous
“Younger Generation” but of the gen-
eration which graduated between 1900
and 1910, and it is they who are refus-
ing to recognize their responsibility in
the matter. My own impression is that
the boys and girls now in college are,
for the most part, bewildered and troub-
led over the lack of definite standards
of right and wrong which they find on
every side, and that the more conscien-
tious are asking for more guidance and
more restrictions rather than for more
freedom.
The young men and women are quite
as docile and as simple in their mental
processes today as they ever were, and
they take the world very much as they
find it. They are not trying to work
out a new philosophy of life nor to up-
set old creeds. They find themselves in
a restless, changing world -with most
bof the old creeds questioned and many
of the old moral shibboleths under-
mined. Having more energy to ex-
pend than the rest of us, they do tend
to become more restless and perhaps
more destructive than their middle-aged
parents, but the initiative fs not theirs.
College teachers. are often annoyed
when undergraduates frankly criticize
the courses and regulations prescribed
for them. But none should know better
than they that the students reflect rath-
er than create the mddern tendency to
frank speech and franker criticism. No
advice from a parent will impress a
child of 10 as much as the example of
a child of 15; no faculty can mean as
‘much to the undergraduate of 1927 as
the graduates of 10 and 20 years ago.
In many respects the college stu-
dent of today, far from being rebellious,
is the most hopelessly conservative
of individuals, and his teachers de-
spair in their efforts to keep him
from taking the precedent of his
elders (which may be a_ prece-
resents but. often fails to make clear is
that these young people’s conversag
tism is based not on his standards but |
on those of the generation between ned §
graduates that the demand comes for a |
dent of callow criticism) for unques-| -
tionable” tauth>, Werdtet'<. cert ne
leather, "Se: imitation Teather, Son
LIfS AND HERALD, ‘Yohnson a: N. Y.
Why God Made Hell -
feo you know ‘why? If you.don’t,. you should
learn NOW—at once. One reviewer has said:
“When Dante went to Hell he must have
steered ar of the. roasting apparatus ., .
it remai for Dr. Sauabran to interéstingly
and fearsomely describe the nether regions.”
Over 2,000,000 ‘have read it. Why not you?
$1.00, postpaid. *
LIFE AND HERALD, Johison City, N. Y¥.
YOU KNOW ONLY
You Learns: Your, mind ‘ will
Obey you porapiag in proportion to the require-
ments you place upon it if you give it a
chance. You can always remember if you
train your mind to serve you when and. as
you want it to serve. You can think and talk
better and clearer with training that will take
but a few minutes of your ag 3 Prof. M. V.
Atwood, formerly of the N. Y. College of
Agriculture, at Ithaca, now editor of Utica
Herald-Dispatch, wrote:. “I haye all memory
courses and yours is best of lot. You owe it
to the public to publish it in book form.” In
response to this and other demands this
course has been issued in a handy little vol-
he to it ber og and the cost is but
postpa un ecemper, when 00
will be the price. we
LIFE AND HERALD, Johnson Ciiy, N. ¥.
——eEE—E==—EEE&E_—_—_—E
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Personal Supervision on All Orders:
Phone: Bryn Mawr 570
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The Old Drug Store at Its New Location
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853 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
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Phone, Bryn Mawr 675
Programs
Bill yous
Tickets *
Letter Heads
Booklets, ete:
e J
Printing
Announcements
1145, Lancaster Ave., Rosemont, Pa.
THE BLUE BOTTLE
Haverford Pharmacy.
- HENRY W. PRESS, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS
’ Phone: Ardmore 122
70 MERE TOR PLATS Be
. Theatrical Costumers
o
: Ih Chetna St, Fl Pa
g
rit. avert Pa
12 Pencils With alae |
Printed -in- Gol C
assorted —. 7 foe grade No. 2 hes lead,
postpaid, » $1;
No Matter How Much
MUCH AS YOU REMEM.
Phone, Bryn Mawr 166 ~
SHOP ‘a
Lancaster Ave. ;
_: BRYN MAWR, PA. 7
CHINTZ ANTIQUES
Van Horn & Son _
' eS RO eum ——n —
Foon ‘ee Ge nares 2 (oe ae oe oie Oates a 2 ara _ ere & ey
a . y . * g net : a TH E b CQ a L EGE ; NE ws i “ . | “hi " " ™ : sb . . : . 6 f Ope
; : COLLEGES PLEA experience come the: largest proportion PCAMPUS FIGURE. DIES x LANTERN : NIGHT : a
hie oy |of good minds. . We need them to main- : oe -
a 3 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
AFTER LONG SERVICE, - cONTENUED nal pack 1 - | ue.
; tain the intellectual quality of the col- i ‘ iy 4 Th } § -
leges, and sit would be a great loss to the William. Ne em HD WARE janitor 0 . We; ‘were quité surprised to ‘find that! |. . oa :
“yd Distinction a
‘at work in the women’s gplleges are a m ‘1
country if these. girls Gould not be given Taylor Hall from the foundation of the the ndses of 1931 were normal thé next
eee and precigus stone «
‘good gamble educationally.
College Graduajes of Value
; hey make’ so excellent a use.
“Bhat is know n. best by ene who seb
them most. The community knows more
directly through, its experience of their
7 others ar sisters, of the many thou-
‘ “* . 3 ae |
| the ‘educational opportunities *of which college until the spring of nY Prva nt
Thursday, October 20°. : During » the
thirty-eight years that he worked here,
his small, delicate figure, in its brass+
buttoned blue coat,
much a part of the college as Taylor
morning for they seemed to be possessed
by: a. ’satiable curiosity.” fter, “they
received Aheir lanterns, the lights bobbed
up and "down as the elephant children’
tried to read the names on their cards.
In spite
of all our efforts the proportion of stu-
jewelry. ‘Watches and clocks.
dents from public high schools is stead- :
became almogt as
ily declining ; ‘and a relaxing of those: —Impor e| and domestic novel- ‘
ler
de of ies bees: ; efforts would speedily bring us to a situa- oH ai 4 Lantern Night was not as poor as this ~ ties. China and ¢ glassware. Fine | ‘| *
sands of a'umnae who have been trainec ‘ : ;
ands of a! : tion in which ninety per cent. of ou” toner ite a eee squnds. The Freshmen came in very t cetimen. r
where the few thousands of undergrad- pressed itself on evefyone who came into ; bye eo ¥
students would come .from expensive quietly, the green “lights were most ef-
that: the new fective, andthe marclring heightened the
' generations dre in their gturn to. be an
_wates are studying . now, contact with hint eyen visitors, - “whom
v es
private schools. Such a result. would
: Cla: rings and pins. Trophies
he escorted around, had something to
; ' be a calamity, for all concerned. general impression with its geometrical sical seas e »
rtant group: for the country at ; ; : : : A WIDE $ 10 ‘
_ ime : ene: y f say about him afterwards.” lines. . The design of the’ lanterns is FAIRLY PRICED
large. The day of these alumnae, even ‘Economy Predicates Restrictions
~~ im the oldest women’s colleges, has, not] “Greater economy of operation may? place, near Monticello, as duslave in the
, heen a long one. But, in- spite of its{not sound like pure loss, but it is neces- | Nelson family, A‘ggr the Civil War he
brevity, the record of the graduate has remained with,them for some time, until
Nelson’ was born on the old: Jefferson extremely simple and. harmonious.
At Senior’ Singing afterwards there |
were numbers of -recent alurhnae. back.
1931’s class song isto the tune of the
], E. CALDWELL & CO.
sary- to see what it involves. Among Chestnut Street at Juniper
proved her intelligence, persistence, and|the minor implications are restrictions on |he got a job on a therchant vessel which “Recessi Lied” Chix’ sedan‘ onets an emi- PHILADELPHIA
public spirit.” library ‘and laborator i i il ia. Here h :
: reer y equipment, less|brought him to Philadelphia. ere he
Ls In the fields of teaching and medicine eine ue on : nently suitable tune that it is surprising Ly : q
; i as ; opportunity for legitimate athletics, | met Mr. Rhoades, the first President of]; 1,, not been used bef Tae ott oo 0
the alumnae are especially prominent. | | poorer apparatus, and less leisure for it. has. not been used betore, fhe orfly |. 6 :
een aaa -
Bryn Maws,. who Have him the post of untoward happening was that 1928 tried ae z =
Phone, Bryn Mawr 252
to pitch its songs too high—which re-
. ‘ “Say it with Flowers”
sulted in a solo from the Song Mistress, :
CONNELLY’S
lovely but not to the’ purpose of Senior
4 mu THE MAIN LINE FLORISTS
1226 Lancaster Ave., Rosemont, Pa. —
Members of Florists’ Teleleraph Delivery
Association
BRINTON BROS.
FANCY and STAPDE~GROCERIES
Orders Called for and Delivered
Lancaster ‘and Merion Aves. .
: Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr was represented at the| Telephone 63: :
a ceremony, and his memory for namesmeeting by Dr. Charles G. Fenwick, Pro- | :
and faces was unusual, and gratifying. ED. CHALFIN
In the village he had a great deal of Aektite Phaaiee asense
influence among the negroes; here, too, WATOHES : JEWELBY
Sa » DIAMONDS : CHES : JEWE
his quiet refinement won respect and WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIRING
good feeling. Pens : Pencils : and Optical Repairing
In speaking of this at the funeral, one “ Bancy Watch Crystals Cut, $1.76
of his friends said that Nelson “was .
born among the ‘transplanted aristocracy
of England, and lived among the best
| The services of the alumnae to their
- communities, whether: formal or in-
~~-formal,- whether through raising a pro-
fession or.a éamily, are constant. There
is no longer a cleavage between thc
married who have gone into the home
and the unmarried who have gone into
the ‘professions, for the liney of separa-
tion no longer coincide. Among the
women doing active and useful profes-
} sional work are many who marry and
haye children, ‘and an increasing number
} are still carrying on part or whole-time
"jobs outside their own homes, One may
say im passing that the: proportion of
married graduates of, the colleges for
women steadily increases. It has passed
fifty per cent. in almost all of the
” women’s colleges and its trend is still
upward. Whether she is married or not,
| whether she is closely tied to a profes-
sion. er not, the interest of the college
graduate in the community is a keen |i
cautiously making: their way into politics |nust be money enough’ to retain our-
and serving in Legislatures and on State
research on the part of the faculty. But
the major implication is a smaller salary
budget; involving a lower scale of~sal-
aries or fewer teachers or both. For the
last ten years salaries in the men’s col- One
leges have been steadily rising, and the of his sons is a lawyer in Philadelphia, ef
supply of able teachers being limited, oot and another, after a very distinguished cad
means more and more severe competi- ‘ ;
CURRENT EVENTS -
tion. The women’s colleges havg also
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
janitor in Taylor Hall, as soon as it was
completed... And he was faithful to that
post until he retired in 1923, with a
pension for the rest of his life. Singing.
record as a ‘inedical student, is’ one of
increased salaries, partly by means of |the best negro doctors in New York.
funds raised by alumnae and a few gen-
erous outside friends and foundations,
partly by means, as has been said, of
higher fees. But the alumnae are ex-
hausted by their efforts, and the limit of
higher fees has been reached for pres-
ent economic conditions. We must
therefore expect more and more to have
our, hest men drawn from us by our
wealthier brothers.
“What we are most concerned about is
the quality of the intellectual life of our
Everyone who was- here during any
part of his stay looks back on him with |receive the Times medal as formerly.
The intercollegiate prize of $500 will re-
he was dignified, polite and cheerful;|main the same.
great kindliness and affection. Always
when he opened the door it was almost
fessor of Politics. The local prize-win-
ner last year was Fredrika De Laguna,
20 ~“Oyher colleges whose students com-
pete are Amherst, wn, Chicago, Cor-
Dartmouth, Mount
Holyoke, Pennsylvania, Princeton, whose
nell, Columbia,
entry won the intercollegiate contest last ; Phone, Bryn Mawr 125
good scholars, to give them reasonab'e
and. national committees. They are good working schedules, to afford them time |educators in America.” year, Smith, West Poist, Annapolis, ROMA CAF E
and responsible citizens. and resources for research and writing. Vassar, Virginia; Wellesley, Williams, .
is sae : : % ‘ : 835 Lancaster Ave.
Women's Galleon Should Rank Positions ift the women’s colleges must ale and ‘Harvard. =
. with Men’s be made positively’ as well as negatively - PLAIN TALK Bryn Mawr, Pa.
ae _ lattractive, and this to first-rate women as ‘ r Luncheon, 50 and 75: cts. |
> + #To those who “have been-closely con-|well as to men. ‘ ‘ : Dinner a la Roma; $1.00
cerned with the education of eis it - Tyson Calls Christ . Special Sunday a $1.25
is natura? that these colleges, which for S Greatest Liberal We Cater to Banquettes and Parties
fifty years have sent out such inteligent “To do justly, love mercy, and walk MUSIC DURING DINNER
humbly with God” sums up «in a ggn*
CONTINUED FROM’ PAGE 3
Men Have the Money the uselessness of college education, the
foolishness of Chautauquas, the vileness
of Prohibition and the funny sayings of
American statesmen.
As a. confirmed reader of the Ameri-
“It is easy enough to see how the
situation has come about. Most of the
money of the country is in the hands of
men and those disposed to give or be-
and ‘socially minded graduates, should
, yield in importance to no other insti-
tutions or group of institutions. If
LUNCHEON, TEA, DINNER
‘The Reverend {Stuart L. Tyson, D. D,
‘women, the mothers and-teachers-of the
next generation, are to have as good an
education as their brothers,.as solid, as
intelligent, as far-seeing, then that educa-
queath large sums to educational nat-
urally think first of their own colleges.
Even when their fortunes are at the dis-
posal of their widows, the alma mater
to my liking. Here were G. D. Eaton,
Morris Fishbein, James Stevens, Hen-
drik Van Loon, Hugh Kent—in fact,
can Mercury I found Plain Talk much |
President of the Tyson lecture founda-
tion, who spoke in the chapel Sunday
evening, October 23d, used the above
tence the whole ae of true. religion.
Open Sundays <
CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE
885 Morton Road
tion must be established so that it can- Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185
uot slip backward. Further, than that,
it must be given every chance to advance
without rigidity or restriction. The
women’s colleges must parallel the edu-
cation offered, not by the mediocre col-
i fezes for men, but by the colleges which
| train men most efficiently, for, unless
women are to be less seriously trained
than men, the first rank must be the
same for each.
many of the old friends. ‘It is no longer
necessary to wait thirty days for their
utterances. Of ‘course, Eaton is down
as editor, but, then, we all know that} “The ordinary person thinks of the]
he is the most devoted Menckenian of | prophets as men who were endowed with
the whole clan.” a remarkable ability to ‘foretell the
Here we have a new and ‘stimulating |future. In reality, the prophets were
magazine that all who enjoy the Ameri-|liberals; and the greatest was Christ.
can Mercury—and many who don’t—|As_ liberals, the prophets evolved for
would do well to read. themselves a ‘philosophy so permeated
with the Spirit of God, that they felt
statement to-prove that church-going and
church activities are not, in themselves,
marks of Christianity.
of a husband or son is much more likely
to, benefit than a college for women.”
The article then summarizes the prob-
lem and sets it forth clearly: “The ques-
tion which we wish to raise is one of
fair play. We have sketched the history
and achi@vements of the colleges for
women. They invite scrutiny and they
can stand comparison. They are eager
to go on, to develop, to experiment. The
material which is being sent them in C. BR.
HENRY B. WALLACE
Caterer and. Confectioner
22 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr
Breakfast Served Dally
Business Lunch, 60c—11 to 2.30
Dinner, $1.00
Phone B. M. 758 Open Sundays
Locksmithing Paints, Oils and Glass
“It -is precisely ‘at this point that we|great n rs consists of the daughters . they must impart their discoveries to WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
meet the crux of the question con-|of met o hold them as their dearest their contemporaries. , BUILDERS and HOUSEKEEPERS
fronting the women’s colleges today.| possessions. For their physical welfare MAY DAY Hardware : 4
Are we in America prepared to admit Outward Godliness Not Enough
the right of women to the same quality
of educational opportunity as men? If
and for their pleasures they lavish their :
means. For the training of their minds CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
and the development of their personali-
838 Lancaster Avenue
- BRYN MAWR, PA.
“The situation which presented itself
then strongly. resembles the situation of
beggars,
$ + M4 : é oe . 3 . h 1 ’ - acme -
i we are, it follows that the institutions ties the provision they make, in compari- dei ils A “farmers, hile, al te Christianity today. Tao many people Phone, Bryn Mawr 1385
for women should receive financial sup-|son with that made for their brothers, is fotth, § : feel that church-going and engaging in M: Meth Pastry Shop
-‘ port in proportion to the tasks laid upon| meager and grudging. Do Americans , .
church activities is the surest and most
wi 1008 Lancaster Ave.
direct route to the ‘heavenly abode’.” :
In the age of the prophets the method ICE CREAM and FANCY CAKES
French and Danish Pastry *
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 ~<_ | WE DELIVER
. them. Such support has not been given.|pelieve in educating women or do they
¥f Discrepancy pport not? If they do the question is one of
i ae in Paeeel Be justice rather than of chivalry,
: “It would not, of course, be just to
compare the endowment of colleges
whose work is mainly undergraduate
with those of universities which give
graduate and professional training and
undertake research on a large scale. But
a comparison of the women’s with the
men’s undergraduate college shows a
large disproportion in invested funds.
” The largest of the women’s colleges, for
example, has endowments yielding an-}
less than one hundred and twenty
per
Art Club and Individuals Help
Those who have already submitted de-
signs, on the strength of the plea for
summer research and drawing, -are L.
Daughters of ex-Vestals
in Freshman Class
Nineteen of this year’s Freshmen ‘are
the daughters of Alumnae. This is a
larger number than ever before. The
list of Freshmen with their mother’s
name and class follows:
~C. Beecher;~Ethel Stratton Bullock,
‘06; H. Bell, Nathalie Fairbank, ’05;
A. Butler, Alice Eleanor Mason, be
Blonde
Hollander, wart, J. Paxton, and
eae eae can J . A SHOP wc lasitidag FOR DISTINCTIVE SHOES
The Art Club has offered to co-operate} : °
and to help in sketching the costumes,
and its members will be given expert ial in- ese
advice and help at their weekly meetings. .
From nine until one, on Monday and vt
Friday mornings, J. Seely, ’27, will be in (eee els
the gymnasium office to give out mate-| mee ees
rials to those people who want to start -
making head dresses, ruffs, shoes, and
Rich blonde satin,
enjoyed by its nearest}E. Clark, Elizabeth Conway Bent, ’95; costumes of all kinds.
+ among the men’s “Phe |C. Darlington, Rebecca Taylor Mattson, | daintily trimmed with :
made up by i ’96; M. Findley, Elisa Dean, '00; L. Fry, pastel i Aw impor-
EE | ><
Day ridle Song by Gregorio Martines| wardrobe.
ie or ef re
’ ee
‘ .
e
@
‘
*\" SUMMER SCHOOL
«
¢
; teh hye
CONPINUBD FROM PAGE 1
cussion. Syfvia thought ‘they should, and
-. argued the ‘point with herself even after
"the meetiyg had adjourned with.a deci-
sion:in the negative. W - ,
Second Year Girls Useful
Among the students there were sev-.
eral “sécond year girls,” who were par-
ticularly &eful in acclimating the ‘others-
These -Were. girls
cial ability when ake before, and had
been in a positisn to. come back. Peggy
* Walsh was one; a New England girl,
who is ecniitiyell in a publishing house.
She can best be described ‘as “all-
round.” ‘Her sportsmanship in general,
and her sense of humor in particular,
were indispensable. © « Z
We could go on indefinitely. There
was Mary Weiss, the anti-Union laundry
worker; Irene Pickup, the»Efiglish fac-
tory girl, and Gertrude Tweeton, the
opinionated Southerner, and all the one
hundred and one others.
something to the pleasure, and problems
of the school, and all were eager and
enthusiastic about the Classes.-
Science was about the most popular
course offered. It included everything
from the observation of silk-worms and
monkeys in Room E, to a study of the
stars*from the roof of the gym, At all
hours strange bugs were presented to
Miss Brown for interpretation, or pur-
sued to be treasured for the rest of the
summer,
Project Course Given in Ecdhomics
Special attention was given to Eco-
nofics, a required course, which was
considered practical and necessary. The
most advanced students were put in a
project class, where each girl gave an
oral report on some problem of interest
in the industrial world. This gave an
opportunity to learn from the experience
of others, as wéll as from books.
Almost as important as the oppor-
tunities for study offered by the school
were the opportunities for play. The
swimming pool, the gym, and the athletic
fields were in constant use.~ Tennis was
a great favorite; almost everyone had
brought a racquet and an ardent desire
to learn. The rythmic dancing was also
“extremely popular; that and folk dancing’
were held on Radnor green, with the aid
of the gym Victrola.. Parties of every
type were held, from informal evening
song meetings, where the Russians
starred, to carefully planned perform-
ances stich as the Trade Party, or the
closing Pageant.
The two months passed all too rap-
idly, and finally the fifteenth of August
arrived. At this point the dilapidated
Franklin, such an essential part of the
“school, broke down from the strain of
parting, and a Ford had to be substi-
tuted to take the one hundred and one
students back to the twenty-two trains
as the last official act of the Bryn Mawr
Summer School for Industrial Workers,
Class of 1927.
SUNDAY CHAPEL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 4
was one of sacrificial ceremony; lambs
- and bullocks were offered up in a spec-
tacular manner to atone ‘for the most | March 29, Jewels of the Madonna.
practice evolved a |
a person’s out- |
ward life might appear Godly when his |
deadly sins. — This
very modern situation:
morals were of the most odious type.
“Religion is not a ready-made article.
It must be sought by the individual in
an individual way. The superficiality of
mere church-going is not enough. Actual
conduct, which according to Matthew
Arnold “is nine-tenths of Life,” must
be ‘seriously and rigidly. considered.”
13 Freshmen Scholarships.
Scholarships of various kinds have
been awarded to 13 Freshmen.
Regional scholars are Angelyn Bur-
rows, of New York: Celia Qarlington,
of -Brookline, Mass.; Virginia Burdick,
of Hartford, Conn.; Rebecca Warfield
of Baltimore; Elinor Totten, of Wash-
ington D. C.; Margaret Ould Nuckols.
sof Albany. N. Y., and Elizabeth Blanch-
ard, of Balticnore.
The Matriculati larship for the
New England States went to Lucy San-
~ born, of Andover Mass.; while Rhys
Caparn, of. New York City, won that
from aad Dest New Jersey and a
~~aware. ~ : oe
Elizabeth’ Cocke of Towson, Md., is
the Matriculation | Scholar for -
vania and the Southern * ‘States, a
- Helen Curdy, of Kansas City, ome ‘for 5
| Among C. A. Menthers
‘tian Association is varied as to denomina-
-| Episcopalian eee 5
‘Presbyterian’‘ - .« . bo
-Jewish--- «>» fawn pindy
o “lad shown spe-:
All contributed | ~
Tiliiepltaan Lead
This year’s “membership in the Chris-
tion: @
_
ar
Friends wie cas :
Congregational teu
©
a
Baptists
Unitarians Oe
Roman Catholic ;
Universalists *
Methodists
Methodist Episcopal ee
Ethical Culturists
Christians
Christian Scientists
Truth Students 3
United Churck of Canada
Reformed ee
Agnostic . .
No denomination
eee ee ee ee Oe
J
Ww
Total. 221
The opportunity of joining the Chris-
tian Association is still open, C. A.
would be glad to welcome many more
new members.
¢ ¢
Interesting Season for.
’ Philadelphia Music-Lovers
There will be plenty of music in Phila-
delphia this coming winter. The Chamber
Music Association has just announced the
plans for its eleventh season. There will
be eighty Sunday afternoon cogcerts in
the ballroom of the Penn Athletic Club.
The organizations to be presented include
some ensembles already well and favor-
able known, as well as some newcomers
itt this special field of music. Among the
latter are the Curtis Quartet comprising
some of the famous musicians on the
staff of the Curtis Institute of _Music,
and the Musical Art Quartet, which made
its debut in New York last season under
distinguished auspices and with outstand-
ing success.
The dates of the concerts are as fol-
lows: October 30, Philadelphia Chamber
String Simfonietta; November 27, Cur-
tis Quartet; December 18, Flonzaley
Quartet; January 8, Musical Art Quar-
tet; January 29, Philadelphia Trio; Feb-
ruary 19, London String Quartet; March
11, Philadelphia Orchestra Ensemble;
March 25, New York String Quartet.
Tickets for the season are $6.50 and
may be obtained from Mrs. Har
Yarnall, 811 Packard Building.
The Philadelphia Civic Opera Com-
pany also announces its program for this”
winter with the following dates and
operas: November 17, Carmen; Decem-
ber 1, Queen of the May and Feuersnot;
December 8, Cavalleria Rusticana and
Secret of Susanne; December 15, La
Boheme; January 5, Traviata; January
12, Samson and DPelila;; January 26,
Lohingrin; February 2, Madame ‘Butter-
fly; February 16, Aida; February 23,
Walkure; March 1, Orpheus.and L’En-
fant Prodigue; March 15, Pagliacci and
Ring of Polykrates; March 22, Tosca;
New Yale Department.
New Haven, Conn., June 9.—The
establishment of a department for per-
sonnel- study at Yale University, made
possible by a gift of $300,000 from C. H.
Ludington, '87, of ‘Philadelphia* was an-
nounced today by” President James Row-
land Agel. “~ |
The new ‘department will have two
divisions, one the Bureau of Appoint-
ments largely as constituted at present
and the other devoted to ass‘sting the
orientation of Freslimen in the choi-e of
their upper school, discussing with stu-‘
dents in Yale College. and the Sheffield
Scientific School the election of courses
and careers, collecting data to aid the
Board of Admissions in problems re-
lated to methods of selecting students.
jand in general assembling information
‘hat will be helpful in educational and
vocational guidance and in. the place-
ment of graduating Setiiérs. The estab- |
lishment of the new department now
made possible by Mr. Ludington’s gift
reflects the keen, interest shown in prob-|
lems of personnel stin
and students alike.
by the alumni
"Faculty when the number grows too
Harvard Crimson. +
j to Be Discussed
‘A series of . Lecture-Confergnces on
“Teaching and Parenthood in Modern
Education” is to be held in Taylor this
fall, under the auspices .of thé Parents’
Association of The Thorne School,’ ‘The
program is as. follows:
1, Monday, October 17:, Dr. Agnes
Rogers—Changes in Modern Education.
Seg Marion E. Park;*presidiig. .
' Monday, October 24! Dr. Harold
x Ruge—Changes in the Teaching of
the Social Sciences (History, Geography,
etch? Miss Frances Browne, presiding.
3. Monday, October 31:* Dr. Agnes
Rogers—Development of the Esthetic: Ap-
preciation. Miss Elizabeth’ Forrest ‘John-
son,. presiding, ;
4. Tuesday November 8: Miss Patty
Smith Hill—Understanding Pagents. Dr
Agnes L,. Rogers, presiding. ia
5. Monday, November 14: Dr. Agnes
L. Rogers—Desirable Attitudes in Hu-
man Relationships. Miss E. O. Brownell,
presiding.
6. Monday, November 21: Dr. Agnes
L. Rogers—Mathematics in Elementagy
and Secondary Schools. Miss Lelia M.
Wright, presiding.
Tickets for the series,
mission, at the door, $1.
$4; single ad-
No. More Excuses
For Cutting Classes
Attendance at classes was the subject
ot Mrs. Manning’s address in Chapel on
Friday morning, October 7. There is
no compulsory attendance, she ex-
plained; it is left to the individual pro-
fessor to decide what he shall do. But
the Faculty and Senate have handed over
to the undergraduates the business of
keeping track of the numbers of cuts
taken by the students and notifying the
large. An allowance of 15 cuts a sem-
and count as a two or. three hour course,
4once a year, and eliooses the scholars
ester is considered plenty to cover all
The student is therefore .asked not to
go to the Dean, or. Dr. _ Wagoner for
trifling excuses, ‘tiut to leave plenty of
cuts to, cover whatever occasion may ar-
rive. Cuts are allowéd. tor.” hence
not for pleasu¥e.
Mrs. Manning also announced two
hew courses; one in. Labor Movements,
undef Dr. A. McCheney, to* meet at 13
and one in drama-w riting, given by Mr.
Barrett Clark at three on Thursday.’
&
2.
9 r)
Monet Subject of Lecture
On the evening of November 10 we are
to have the pleasure of hearing a lecture
by M. Desclos, assistant direetor. of :the
French Bureau-of National Universities.
In his official capacity M. Desclos. visits
the American colleges and_ universities
U
who ave to be sent to them from France ;
too, M. Jegcols recammends French pro- |
fessors for positiong on / American facul-
ties.
“Tf. Desclos is a stident of modern
French art, and the subject of his lecture,
which will be, illustrated with lantern
slides, is Claude Monet. Among: the
slides are to be’ pictures of the new Mo-
net Musem, which awas opened in the
Tuillefies Gardens last June.
rated against,
es i hea e' ‘ * ¢ . : ‘ e ’ 2 vy r a % > : % C ee . eee
2 : 2 f a : Soa ee ee 5 a a pies seed . " ied 4 '
coriter ‘ ™ = hey so X é: atx / ° is ‘ : ‘ ‘ a ; a c , Wee ee ® “ 4
, We bl Sand . as SOLE LAPEER ED gh ESLER ee oe Pama, ACY é S: me gE 2. =
a va PS . , 13 é dak ‘COLLESG GE NEWS: : . 56
eet ; Aer Oe! | ; ee ey cae r ‘ i: eS : ae a & a ‘
: Semester : aconesiemnepiasa masse - s— = : = Cr
Modern Education ee ae ee laieita’ and most unavoidable absences. ipo Princeton, Voters oe
Princeton students were up in. arms
recently -as a result of refusal of the.
locat election board’ to permit them to ”
register. for the. comifig’ electivi®’ :
Students are . plamiing- a_ test ere ;
against, the board, and contend that when
they reach the age of twenty-one they
are legally entitled to designate Princes’
ton as their residence. ,
Party.-politics are alleged tw be the
reason for the action of’ the board. The
students charge they are being discrimi-
for other residents of ©
Princeton who are away during the sum-
mer months are allowed to register with-,
out question—New York ,World.
THE HEATHER feo
Mrs. M. M. Heath
Seville Theatre Arcade
Minerva Yarns, Linens, Binks, D. M. Ow
Sweaters, Beaded Bags, Novelty Jewelry
Instructions Given
——aed
Telephone : 456 Bryn Mawr
Michael Talone
4 TAILOR
Cleaner and Dyer
_ 4123 Lancaster Avenue .
CALL FOR AND DELIVERY SERVICB
ae
*
eee
———
H. ZAMSKY
Portraits of distinction
- $902 CHESTNUT STREET
Philadelphia, U. & A.
@
We take Portraits at the Col-
lege as well as in our Studio.
When you are in need of a good
one call Walnut 3987. .
ae
SS
—
HIGHLAND DAIRIES
Fresh Milk & Cream for Spreads
. 758 LANCASTER AVE.
Bryn Mawr
Telephone: BRYN MAWR 882
———
MAIN LINE VALET SHOP
BERNARD J. McRORY
Riding and Sport Clothes Remodeled, |
and Repaired Cleaning and Dyeing
Moved to
2d FL. over GAFFNEY’S NOTION STORE
Next to Pennsylvania Railroad e
EXPERT FURRIERS
esr
The Sweets.
for
In the very ceoter of the
giving Warm “ %
is ~~ chosen box of * a,
Let us yest the Fussy Pa
age for the Hallowe'en tbials.
And, as a fiusny P propriate
ift, th e in its
Erg orange orange and spe-
r. Whitman
sgoucies Pebe mail it to
°
. WHITMAN’S FAMOUS CANDIES ARE SOLD BY ties
: ; Powers & Reyndlds, ae Mawr, Pa. Bryn Mawr College Inn, Bryn Mawr, Pa. nae
; _H. B. Wallace, ‘Mawr, Pa. College Tea Reom, Sere Haw, Pe:
William Groff, m Mawr, Pa. Bryn Mawr Confectionery, ; é
Hallowe'en/?
your friends at a_ distance
The Fussy Package has a
peculiar place in the regard
of thousands of candy lovers.
It is their assortment. Rich
chocolate, favored with real:
vanilla beans, with centers of
- futs and nut combinations.
Every piece a firm, or “chewy”
chocolate.:
© s. F. Ww. & Son, Inc.
“Pussy
Chocolates
et
o
&
e
ae
ste maine i eae ae oe ro ~ * - = apres r Ks
ee bf Fs : armenia —s « * tase 3 . beet i See fi
e meee ” sh 5 ee yon jae a x ; ; o s * s ; - en Sonat mn eae tre OER cr tt
- vi ey hers ‘ : ‘ 4 » a < . : : gas
: : : : oe og * — ‘ car 6 oa ae haa : a : eg ee ' of : e “e os Pes a < cog oe
sae “we ¢ ¢ 8 a, # Bone, Ho ea : : ere ete : ; : ‘., . a ‘aa es ‘ e &% - ; ben cy,
Se ee ae Anns : 1 hae, tts ae — aa , Jee a : a L : . ao ite -s : ; ve : a.
a sper ‘ane ay as a ences = a ‘ E ae des ae. NEWS a ei oan Pe MABE OES BRN es te aN <™ ‘ ;
oo — ———— = ——r a = ——$—$—;—- : — ——— ee,
-, News from Other Colleges “#}mfolgsted, and that the s udent ‘trade has oF "260 Candlepower. “|. .-§¢hedule Changes -, | -. Women Cricketers in 1827 .,
|bétome ‘so. vigorous d¢ to’ inspire - -sharp “In that part of her speech on‘ fhe open-.| a aie : ‘y eat fs
“Vase ir ‘Opens Nutsery School : ‘copipetition. Advocating a check ’on| ing day of ‘college devoted.to the grad- | The ‘Scheduje Committee of the]. An old paper reveals that one hundred
The stone building, near-the astheriies npr in isbtera: houses it urges] uate school, Miss Park ‘said: * | Faculty last year decided that the class | Years. ago a. vast-concourse of spectator’s ‘
_ Laboratory ,and behind Cushing, opened or the good of fornell and of the in-| “At a time when ‘Americas is being. ig gathered’ at Stoney. Fields, Halnaker,
5 Ng ry v! 7
4 Monday jor'use. It is the new nursery dividuals” . that® it would be better ¢“to bitterly accused of. indifférence and worse fit’ Second Yar Psychalogy should’ be ‘England,«by invitation of the town crier,
school, where actual children are to be shut the fraternity ‘doors” than to St the | in its international. relations it is neverthe- }moved from the eleven o'clock ‘hour to]to witness a cricket ,match between:
imported’ for victims of ‘study. Con- ofganiaations © thrive as homes for} less true that the faculties gfttd students ee bids Wolack honk Mie. move. will eleven eMcried and eleven unmarried -
«with the co-operation of six other W. Scripps, found and build. up what 1910, were found. evenly divided in the
struction was started less than a ‘year “chroflic alcoholics.” '—New omen. - |of many universities and colleges in ie ’ ladies. The unmarried ladies won the
pot AO. On. the: first floor. are the ‘offices, PMOMN SV Porth inn oR Europe and America are trying togkeep take wre in the year 192§-29.. match.—Equal Rights. :
f the sun room, dining roont, kitchen, and. Unique College — ~ [open the” channels between. - Seeing | Students planning ‘to major it” Psy= | ‘ cassia raceietis
$-veral smaller rooms occupy the second Ellen Browning Scripps, newspaper through President Thomas’ wise eyes holog : oe z
ee : poe aaa ’ ’ : zy shoul ‘
floor, The third floor is given over to|\woman and philanthropist of La Jolla, Bryn Mawr long ago get the doulje. cur- ee nee - rainaie wigheauaa? RUKOFF | =
a nursery, offices, and -other rooms for California, ‘in eudoeled x wearnen's cookie in motion.» The college has had}a change in their proposéd schedule and
: which 1 special assignment has been lege of an unusual: sort in California, | ™@"Y “Voys from Europe and sent many report as soom as possible to the’ Office etna GOWNS | si
~ e made. The roads and grounds are not ‘giving one million dollars to start the in return, In the last five years alone f site D 4 & flict hidh* minh : of
‘ ee nes ‘“ a ; i ated fe) 1 ean any ,conticts A : ; 8
sue _ finished as_yet, work being halted until {coflege. Fifty young women are enter- —_ from the British Afes, Gasman?) : | éOnflicts which’ mig Te wintlaaa dele leek leas |
‘ the Euthenics Building 18 completed.— ing - Scripps College for Women this rance, Switzeriand, Denmark, ‘Italy, 1 gape xo ; ‘Nov. 2 and 3 105 S. 22d St.
= Vassar Miscellany News. Pech lfall, at Claremont, California, ‘Out of Holla nd, CzePoslovakis, Hungary,.. Ba- ne ~— 4 sah —
ee : Ss, these Afly yoting “women; “five. will: che thonia and Finland have held foreign | 77 ee es ws cit Be , meneuennaccireraceaal
Industry. Students Meet given free scholarships. Ultimately there Siaegpb ges poi ttc hag ioe ; Fi or, Street, for C ollege,
. A group of seventy-five students, mem will be three hundred students, one out é : Lae :
sk coadeai, y- tneet ‘at Swarthmore fof each ten stu Dinas cle 4 tree. ucholee~ poh been bi shan gear gibi a , for Campus,.f. or Service
from Friday, 8 P. M., November 4, to ship and the rest paying a flat fee of Pie d ae song ce ra : ee yr te : eres y
‘Sunday ‘Yfoon, November 6. The stu-|one tltousand dollars per annum, which) | sd Sa " B a — ‘ vibes bi I ncomparable at
dents ‘attending are to be selected from: will include board, room, gage all ee ee iii ce ¢
: ; é ? = ‘
ce te ee eee .
- 2 . ‘ 9 . * 8 \
ously. The fundamental principle of the|* Every student will live inf the dormi- pdhig: Degustation tie: ‘er cahaie ce
conference will fe the discussion of in-|tory, and the idea on which the -college thousands of careless, hurrying tourists:” In the I mmensely P opular |
dustrial problems based on the actual is based is, that each student shall be . i ; + :
experiences of the delegates. A. J. given individual attention, with all the i. ; : Realm of Tailored Dresses
Muste, Dean of Brookwood Labor Col- {advantages of a great university, since ope for Intellectuals. Wal
lege, will preside over the ‘conference. |the system of colleges is to consist of al Women who have, spurned member- In wool Georgette, 9
Among the expert industrial advisers |group of colleges of small units. Scripps ship in Phi Beta Kappa because of its ther’s Seafoam, voila crepe, -
who are expected to attend are Henry College is the second of the group built | "eputation as a bar to matrimony, need twill cords—sizes 14 to 42.
‘reinall Sic Seman. Yeoona, Pow. (00 Oxford plan, the first of the group | t? Teconsider. Two professors. at the
ers Hapgood and Israel Mufson. The of “Claremont Colleges” being Pomona University. of California have compkted 1. J
conference is being sponsored _ by the | College, a co-educational institution now | @ study which shows the grades of the |}. be In powder, apple green, :
National Student Councils of the Y. M.|forty years old. married students to be a shade higher Havana brown, American ,
.C. A. and Y. W. C, A. and by the| Miss Scripps, who is ninety-one years than of the unmarried. ‘Women Phi Beta Beauty, old rose, etc. |
American Friends’ Service Committee, old, helped her brother, the late Edward Kappas at the University, from 1874 to he , \
|
fk
organizations.—Stwarthmore -Phoenix. — \is today the Scripps-Howard League of married and single groups. fe dust Good looking, serviceable
Newspapers. _ Since attaining wealth : one of and incomparable at ‘$35.
Swarthmore Driving Rules through’ these newspapers and the allied _ An Unusual School aoa fi Embick made.
news ‘service, Mi§s Scripps has giver'} ‘In all probability you have graduated
millions to philanthropy and education, | from a well-known school, but do you
including Knox College, the Scripps | feel you have acquired all the information
Biological Institute, Science News Serv- | you need, especially if one or both of
ice, and many — projects.—Equal | your parents should suddenly leave you
Rights. and the necessity arose for -you to take
an active part in the management and re-
sponsibilities of their estate?
At a short meeting. of the Women’s
Student Government Association held
. last, Thursday in Collection Hall it was
‘announced that in. the future women
must be careful to obey the Student
Government rule that no women are to
return to college in automobiles after
Philadelphia’s Show Place of
Favored Fashions
EMBICK’S —
1620 Chestnut St.
a ns anne a
six o’clock at night. An exception was COMMUNICATIONS Webber College has been organized to
made to this rule in order to permit e —_ @ meet: the demand for a specialized train-
women going to’ the Lehigh game on CONTINUED FROM PAGH 2 ing of young women who are looking i)
: Saturday to return to college by auto- punctuated with giggles. This does pre- forward to inheriting property. Individual ; .
mobile before nine-thirty, provided they | vent the proper frame of mind. instruction is given in the fundamental ’
were signed up in the dean’s office—| 92 That the long and deadly wait be- laws of Finance, Economics, Investing, |
Swarthmore Phoenix. tween the time the Freshmen enter and | Accounting, Income Tax Procedure and
: the Sophomores begin singing outside the Business Law. Stydents are Siown how |
See ... Unlimited Cuts __ Library, be eliminated. The singing out- | these laws apply in actual business and a
Haverford is giving its year-old un- | side is practically a waste of time anyhow. investment practice.
limited cut system for upper-classmen And the period of silence will be there Beginning January 4, 1928, the course
another trial, despite strong faculty oppo-|tnder: the most advantageous circum- ices antl e four-months term of intens-
sition. Success“for the plan is predicted | stances. ive work although opportunities will be
by Dean Frederic Palmer, who believes] 3. That something be done to shorten avaiable each afternoon for the enjoy-
that an increasing sense of responsibil- |the length of time that the Freshmen | ™ent of outdoor eports such as boating,
ity amiong the students ‘will gradually |have to_ sing ~“Sofias.” Too frequent |S¥i™ming, golf, tennis and riding which
overcome the evils of excess absence. | repetition is wearisome, afid the result as are available at Babson Park.
Wholesale cutting of a class by a major-|far as good singing goes is disastrous.
ity of the students enrolled and indi- | No class can help dragging toward the Married ?
vidual cutting of one particular class by | end. Margaret Whitehead, ex-’29, to Louis
particular students are the two points} None of these suggestions are new B. Dommerich. :
about which faculty protest centered. | ideas. But perhaps if they are reiterated Katherine Johnston, ’22, to Theodore
Little or no ill effect on grades was noted | often enough, something may be done | Morrison, of the Atlantic” Monthly.
during the first year under the plan, | about them. _ Engaged
said Dean Palmer, who added, “per- Yours very truly, ey Eleanor Sullivan, "24, to James Pome-
sonally, I’d hate to go back to the old z. s,m, [Toy Hendrick.
system.” May Merrill, ex-’28, to Armitage ; / es
-At the University of North Carolina Barnard Mysteries Waser, Yate, me. eers * i
the faculty has given evidence of its| A+ Barnard: the Freshmen are hazed in Yildiz Phillips, ’28, to John Carey Van ; a :
? Hulsteyn. Johns Hopkins, ’15.
the following manner: The Sophomores - Edith Harris, 96 to W. Nelson West
unlimited cut system instituted last year. : : : ! :
’ greet the Freshmen on Mysteries Night. ord. iy PP. oe
The reform was advocated by Dean|-ppe Freshmen must wear middies and r ae | ERFECT footba:l weather —the
right team winning—your hero
Addison Yibbard, of the College of Lib-
faith in the students by continuing the
I.
bloomers, sneakeys, goggles, ties and
4 sass po Malis of a bows ; or rolled and held up by red scoring a touchdown—AND—
oe ee » eee “nc | garters. They assemble in a certain room :
9 _ ance as opposed to accomplishment. His |inq there undergo the mysteries, which = your new Gunther =——-,
4 point evidently was well taken by the | qiffer each year and are inscribed in a STREET . scoring a hit! ye
= students, the Tar Heel pointing to the | beautifully bound and kept Mystery : = Th % weekend begins che
grades for the experimental spring quar-| Rook, This procedure, in spite of long LINDER & € 100% Wweeken gt
*ter as on a par with those of peony discussion, ‘has been a tradition for thirty- PROPERT : week before—with a trip to the
* a Sado and in some cases higher.—New seven years. . : , 4 PTICIAN ; : Gunther salon to find the model
i ) | : Sle . that seems to have been created |
_ The Drys s Are Coming ~ Calege Rogers: Gallery ; fed ol ae gett - especially to express your saucy, t
Five hundred colleges east of the : bh gach “ _— is — ae s treets : | | piquant personality. J
Rocky Mountains .are in imminent ogues’ gallery “all for itself. has)
‘danger at ‘going dry. The Intercolle- collected the pictures of: the incoming Philadephia
' giate Prohibition Assdciation is making Freshmen and keeps | them in a long ee : : Sports Furs ps
‘ready to’ send ..five field secretaries. 40 string-like arrangement, so that they may : ae a
- . Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois, | °° referred to at any time. This seems a ; ; Muskrat = Raccoon Beamer
Lo Ae ER ECL | ‘useful innovation, as it will enable — Barun Duki Grey Krimmer
| faculty members to recognize students | sak ect dees ical ; ' Russian Pony
|when they meet in unexpected plaes| PRILIP HARKIDUI ae .
(though there is a doubt in the minds "996 LANCASTER AVENUE . : ech Gunther S
| of the latter as to whether they want that wee \.... Ch... Ch ; s Furs range
neds seq However, there is a serious | ho iyghngecse gir ae é ‘ price from
Nutria
College news, October 26, 1927
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1927-10-26
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 14, No. 03
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-no3