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¢ and traveling,”
formance cover
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VOL. XIII. - No. 18, ;.”
BRYN MAWR. (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1927
, PRICE, 10 CENTS
RUSSIA THRIVES
UNDER COMMUNISM
Asa Miner i in Four Countries,
Powers Hapgood Stud- —
ied Europe.
GERMANS F RIENDLY
* “T shall try to téll you my impressions
of European conditions: while working
said Powers Hapgood,
in his lecture Around th 1e World Under-
ground, given in Chapel, on Wednesday,
March 2.
The first country that Mr. Hapgood
visited was Great Britain. There he
worked in an anthracite mine, living with
the miners themselves. The intelligence
and education of the workers was. the
most striking featute; they were up on
all topics of current interest, the theatre,
literature and politics. Mr. Hapgood at-
tended a class in Geographic Economics,
which, he said, was typical of many
other classes held i that district and in
others. These classes are taught by
young men miners who had studied with
scholarships from their union at Ruskin
College, Oxford, or at the London Labor
College. This interest in education is
having a profound effect on the working
classes; it is making them equal to the
intellectual classes. if
Learns German in a Week.
In order to obtain work-in Germany,
you must speak the language. Mr. Hap-
good knew no German when he entered
the Ruhr valley. But this was only a
temporary obstacle; after living with a
German family for a week during which
he was tutored intensively, he applied
for work equipped with the ‘answers to
such questions as “How old are you?”
He got the job! His main impression of
the people was their friendliness towards
him, a citizen of a country which had
so lately been their enemy. The other
miners helped him in his work and
taught him the language. With one in
particular, he formed a partnership, and
they became firm friends. He and this
_ man, Willy, ‘were working together once
’ when Willy
said suddenly, - “Powers,
would you kill me?” “Certainly not,”
was his reply, but Willy went on, “But
that is exactly what might have hap-
pened. if you had been on one side of the
front, and I on the other. It is wrong
that working people of one country
should kill those of another.” This il-
lustrates the general feeling of the min-
ers about. War. Many of them have
signed a pledge ‘not to take part, in any
future war, becatrseiithey understand that
‘CONTINUED, ON PAGE 3
A Landslide for May Day
Revealed by Hall Voting
The college*ig overwhelmingly in favor
of having May Day next year. This was
revealed by the vote taken in groups by
the Undergraduate Association last week.
Two hundred and thirty-four want. May
Day. Only eight, and these eight scat-
tered among the. halls, are -opposed.
There was a general feeling that May.
Day ought to be simplified. The con-
-sensus’of opinion was that plays should
-be reduced from eight to five, four, or
even three, while the green ought to be
at least maintained’ at its present elabo-
rateness.
A majority of about twenty desired to
raise money for some benefit instead of
just covering expenses. Most people be-
lieved that it was better to have the per-
-two. days, excluding
dress rehearsal. Ape.
It was strongly felt that the choosing |”
and casting of plays ought ‘to be done
.in the first semester, but that rehearsal
for. plays and the green should not “begin
until the second semester. :
Many valuable’ suggestions were made.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
“Business. Board Pa
th Business Board’
+» elds starting, Tit
cae Wate ae an ©: Mc-
Elwain, '19, Pembroke. East, on
Thursday, from 130 to 3 and:1-8.
Caitans Salvemini
—
, Fascist Opponent,
Will Speak on ‘Dante and His Times’
Gaetano Salvemini, dicinusdina Ttal-
ian Scholar, and now ari exile because he
openly opposed Fascism, will speak in
Taylor on the evening of March 11. His
subject will be’“Dante and His Times.’
A professor of modern history at
the University of Florence for ,many
years, he was a_ liberal before the
Fascisti marched on Rome, and he con-
tinued to be a liberal after the Fascisti
shad canonized’ a new: autocracy. Prof.
Salvemini was a distinguished scholar,
with a reputation in every capital of
Europe, but he did not hold his peace.
He attacked ‘Fascism with as much spirit
as if Italy under Mussolini were still a
free country. And at the time of the
Matteotti murder he: struck out fear-
lessly. As a result he was brought to
trial in the summer of 1925, not for hav-
ing’ had the courage to speak his mind
about the Government, but on a trumped-
up charge of having anonymously vili-
"J fied the King in a periodical circulated
secretly. He is an exile now, deprived of
his civil rights and property. King’s
College and Oxford have given refuge
to him. He comes to this country now
to lecture on “Italy Today,” and. deserves
a welcome as a brave man, a liberal who
believes in liberalism and one of the most
distinguished scholars of ,his generation.
Professor Salvemini will speak in
Philadelphia at a luncheon given by the
Foreign Relations Club Saturday, March
12, on “Fascism” and Miss Park urges
evéryone to avail herself of the oppor-
tunity of hearing him.
McNARY-HAUGEN
‘BILL DISCUSSED
Mrs. Smith Says It Stabilizes
Markets and Lessens Evils
of High Tariff.
VETO FOR FREE TRADE
What is the present.condition of the,
farmers in:the United States, and what
the McNary-Haugen bill could do to
afford them relief, were the two. ques-
tions taken up by Dr. Marion Parris
Smith, Professor of Economics, in two
sessions of morning chapel last week,
Wednesday, March 2, and Friday the
4th.
The prosperity which the soit is
at present supposed to be enjoying is
not nation-wide; it is chiefly restricted to
certain industries and the stock market.
Farming, especially, is at a very low
ebb, although it has improved a little
since the period of acute depression in
1919-1920. There are four outstanding
reasons for this depression: first, the
crash in foreign prices since the war
makes the sale of excess staple crops
abroad comparatively unprofitable; sec-
ond, the quick revival of agriculture
abroad far surpassing the reconstruction
of industry and finance, and therefore of
purchasing power, curtails the. market;
in the third place, France and Belgivgp
have cut down strenuously on imports,
in order to improve their financial situa-
tion; and finally Australia, Canada, Ar-
and Russia, are all beginning to compete
with us on the foreign market.
Statistics Show Depression.
The figures show how bad the esult-
ing depression is. The purchasing power
of a certain amount of the farmer’s,
goods sank from $826 in 1918 to $210 in
1920, while his dollar, which was worth
the full dollar before the war, is now
valued at only 87 cents.. In 1920 a
farmer: was only able to make a yearly
profit of .6 of one per cent. on his -in-
vestment; this is. now a little better, the
‘average profit being 3.8 per cent. « All
this‘ is. aggravated by a considerable
shrinkage i in the value of farm land since
CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Cast Is Announced For.
Varsity Dramatics’ Play’
The cast for -The Truth About Blayds,
the next play-to be produced by Varsity,
Dramatics, has. been chosen, and re-
hearsals are starting this week: : The play’
will-be given at Bryn Mawr on the 8th’
and 9th of April, and: will be presented :
in New York at the Colony Club on the
16th for the benefit of- the New: York’
Alumnae Regional Scholarship.
The cast is as follows:
Oliver Blayds aes M. Villard, att
Le Een ets altos M, Adams, ’28
Maton |. ieee E. « Latane, '30
ORS AROS oe ...K. Hepburn, ’28
Oe ick was ....-M. Barker, ’30
ROYCE oo evecessteacoo sy . +++, undecided
POON Ses ivcv nce cticee .»M, Park, ’29
A professional © “couch; “Mr. Walter
Greenough, director and producer of the
Plateau Theatre at Bellemount Mansions
in Fairmount Park, Pa., has’ consented to |
: direct the production. —
gentine,. and to a less extent, Germany |
| fice.
NEW YORK QUARTET
IN LAST CONCERT
Audience Revels in Program
With Vitality and Emo-
tional Appeal.
BEETHOVEN HONORED
The third and last of the concerts in
Taylor Hall this season was given on
Monday night by the New York String
Quartet, founded by Mr. Pullexer, The
program was an exceptionally happy one
for the audience, one which required con-
siderable exertion on the part of the mu-
sicians.’ All the selections had vitality
and great tunefulness, varied by slower,
more moving passages. The abstract, in-
tellectual quality which..many lovers of
symphony music are in the habit of
ascribing to a good deal of chamber
music as a reason for liking it less was
lacking in this program. Its direct emo-
tional appeal was beyond the usual scope
of a string quartet.
«
In memory of Beethoven’s death, a
hundred years ago—March 26, 1827—his
String. Quartet in F Major headed the
program, The quick excitement of the
Allegro con brio, the plaintiveness of: the
Adagio were admirably . brought out.
Beethoven, in writing the second move-
ment, Adagio, Affetuoso ed appassionato,
CONTINUED ON PAGE 6
Jokes for the Dartmouth
Jack-o’-Lantern Desired
Are you interested in writing for the
Dartmouth Jagk O’Lantern? The fol-
lowing gallanf offer has just been re-
ceived : '
‘Hanover, N. H.
The Studegt Council,
awr College,
Bryn’ Méwr, Pa.
“Jack O’Lantern,” the comic monthly
of Dartmouth College, is eager to give
Justice her due and so plans for a House
Party issue in which there will be pages
devoted to material from the more
promising colleges for younger ladies.
Jacko wishes original drawings, short
paragraphs, and jokes from the under-
| graduates of Bryn Mawr to feature in
‘Tthis special number,
Would: you turn: this letter. over to
those ‘who would-be’ interested, or give
it. otherwise suitable - publicity, in order
that Bryn Mawr may be adequately rep-
resented? .. Jacko will greatly appreciate
your help and feels’ sure that at least one-
magazine page of! very; creditable, and
forthcoming: if. ‘this letter is brought to
the’ ‘attention of interested persons.“
The: reward for: contributing will ‘ be
te complimentary copy. of ‘this: ‘issue, auto-
graphed-if- “necessary. ° - This offer is guar-
anteed:- On: - request, ‘Jacko. will put’
names and addresses on file in this of-
It is: suggested that photograplis
accompany this request, if made. House
Party will. be May 13 and 14.
‘The contributions should be sent be-
fore April 5. Please let me know, how-
ever, whether to expect contributions
before this date.
Beseechi
ane K.N.
F YERCORD,
Editor.
{
. sien Soetgtee Seem
_|us.
“| Freeman.
need I, add, humorous “material will bé}
&
Competition Starts
The following freshmen are now
‘in the competition for the editorial
board of the Co.tece News: Con-
tent Peckham, Catherine Howe,
Erna Rice, Eliabeth Stix, Con-
stange Jones, Edith Herb, Ruth
Lawfence, Fhomasia Hancock,
Constance. Cole, Edith Baxter,
Anne Wood and Eliabeth Fehrer.
VARSITY CLIMBS
TO HARD VICTORY
Bryn Mawr Comes From Be-
hind to Beat Baltimore in
Best Game of Season.
NECK AND NECK FINISH
Varsity’ managed to pul] out ahead
of Baltimore by 22-18 in the most
exciting game of the season so far
on Saturday. It was a hard™pull too,
for Baltimore had a very good team
and kept the lead up until the last
quarter.
In the first half Sin was de-
cidedly ahead of us. Starting off with
a rush, they left Varsity standing at
the. post, and popped in four goals
before we had recovered from the
shock. Their teamwork was good and
their passing clean. The passing of
our forwards, on the other hand, was
noticeably poor by contrast: Dean, at
center, was completely off form and
never bothered to move after she. had
passed the ball. Our guards were as
good as possible under the © circum-
stances. At the end of the half, Bal-
timore was in the lead 13-8...
Matters looked brighter for us in
the second half. Varsity came out of
its coma and began really to “play
ball.” ‘Everyone’s ‘passing was much
improved and the forwards were
warmed up to their job. Our guards,
especially Huddleston, were brilliant.
Every point was hotly contested and
Baltimore gradually lost its edge on
For several thrilling moments the
score was. even, 18-18, and then Varsity
scored two triumphant goals in quick
succession and the game ended 22-18
in our favor. The line-up was:
Bryn Mawr: Loines, 21122222; Wint-
er, 2222; Dean, Walker, Huddleston,
Sub:. Poe.
Baltimore: Tyson, 222221; Gardner
11; Dobbin, 221; Hammon, Carring-
ton, Boehm. :
M. Champion Still Recalls
Bryn Mawr with Pleasure
M. Edmund Champiori, Paris pub-
lisher, who lectured at Bryn Mawr last
fall, is still thinking of America with
pleasure, and particularly of Bryn Mawr.
In a recent interview in a Paris news-
paper, he says:
“My happiest recollections of America
are.of my talks in girls’ colleges—C’est
la que je voudrais vivre, as the song
says. The American girl is certainly the
best thing there is in America. You
can’t imagine what a pleasant sight such
an assemblage, moving in its beauty, can
be. All those. eyes, blue, black, grey,
green, Which. follow you, all those light
dresses, that’ look of. health. The teach-
ing of the ‘girls is, moreover, per fect.
One. day, at Bryn. Mawr College, in
Pennsylvania, I went into a class. The};
professor was giving a lesson in Jan-|-
senism and the theory of grace. I saw,
to my complete astonishment, that these
young -* gts. understood | the question
perfectly.
> Alegee Kiang Recital
Mr. Horace Alwyne, of the.- Bryn
Mawr Music Department, and Mr. Sam-
uel Arthur King are to give a joint
recital of Enoch Arden in Columbus,
give solos.
t
se cain
Ohio, Monday, March 14. Each oe
M. VILLARD STARS AS AUTHOR _
AND AS ACTRESS IN PLAYERS
Two: Original Pla Plays and Aria
da Capo Combine to Make
a Good Program.
|M. BARKER IS PIERROT
hi ie re emees @é
By Mary Louise White, 24.
As a charter member of Players, your
reviewer must be allowed an offensively
Proprietary pride in Friday evening’s de-
lightful entertainment. For it ‘was a
three-act comedy by Mariquita Villard
which introduced Bryn Mawr’s original
dramatic talent to the world through.the
medium of fhe Players, over three years
ago; and to one ghost from the past it
was Mariquita Villard who was the
bright star of Wyndham’s latest contri-
bution to the theatre.
The earlier play will be remembered as
a rambling narrative about an artist and
a girl, enlivened by occasional lines
which popped out of the surprised actors’
mouths to everyone’s vociferotis delight.
“The Gift” revealed a distinct tightening
'of technique and a new spirit of inspired
verity, but the direct approach to its
subject and the frequently unbelievable
lines casually thrown out by one char-
acter or another proved that- Miss Vil-
lard’s debut had been all respects a
worthy one, and that the Players have
justified themselves, if only in fostering
her talent.
Miss Villard as actress too must be
mentioned with praise, Her all too brief
appearances in “The .Triumph” were
greeted with sufficient warmth by Fri-
day’s audience to mark its appreciation
of her: geriuineness both as a player and
as Yvonne of “ze gallerie.” For it wag
not her acting alone which led one to
prefer Yvonne to the other characters in
“The Triumph.” They were well deline-
ated, if you like—the piece was bien faite
—but they lacked reality, conviction, im-
port, as did the play.
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
National Student Fed-
eration States Aims
aims of the National Student Federa-
tion of America have been clearly
stated in a recent bulletin issued to
college papers.
The N. S. F. A. grew out of the
National Collegiate World Court Con-
gress which met at, Princeton in De-
cember, 1925. Organization of the stuf
dents of America along the lines of the
National Unions of Students. in Eu-
cers: were elected for the ensuing year
with Lewis Fox, of Princeton Univer-
sity, as president. Committees were
appointed to preparé a permanent
constitution, to work on International
Relations and Student Travel, and to
establish a News Bureau.
Permanent Constitution.
manent constitution was adopted at
the Second Annual Congress of the
Federation which was held at the Uni-
versity of Michigan in December,
1926. This constitution was signed by
175 colleges and universities, which
thereupon became full members, and.
by 19 colleges which, because they are
not accredited, are ineligible for full
membership and therefore became as-
sociate members. These colleges and
universities represent over 410,035 stu-
dents in 40 States. The country was
divided into six regions, a representa-
tive being elected from each region to
act on the National Executive Com-
Lmittee. The following national of-
ers were elected:
* President, Fredriks D. cian Uni-
versity of Cincinnati.
-Vice President, Marvin Breckin-
ridge, Vassar College.
Secretary-Treasurer, Jeseph T.
These officers, with the regional
representatives, the ex-president, and
two” delegates-at-large, compose the
Execytive Committee.
‘CONTINUED ON PAGE ¢
The composition; constitution and ~
rope was begun at that time and offi- |
After a year of experimenting, a per-
Owens, Kansas Wesleyan University.
é
e
=!
pressing oneself other
. The College News
{Founded in 1914)
r in
anes Met ae
#8 and Bryn
‘Published weekly Pe taer
« the interest of Bryn
Maguire Building, Wayne, Pa.
Mawr College.
’ Keitor-in-Chief, KaTHaRine SIMONDS, "27
CENSOR:
R. D. RickaBy, '27
% EDITOR
wf Cc 8. Ross, "28
ASSISTANT pee :
y, MoRBNES. "28 a een 20
H. Linn, °29 Cc. RB. M. SMITH, "28
CONTRIBUTING EDITOR
M. S. Viivarp, °27
BUSINESS MANAGER
Cc. Bowman, '27
SUBSCRIPTION
P,
MANAGER
W. McELwaln, '28
ASSISTANTS
BEB. R. J , 28 J.
M. 8. GI ferad 28.UML
R. Cross, '29
Subscription, $2.50 Mailing Price, $3.00
‘Subscription may begin at any time.
RTH, 29°
Prttrit, ’'28
Entered as second-class
matter at the
Wayne, Pa., Post Office. . ‘
(Cernelia Rose, ’2
tssue,) ~
8, in charge of this
A CREATIVE COLLEGE
Bryn Mawr has rather suddenly
” made the discovery, or suddenly
begun to act upon it, that absorption
is only half of education, that the|_
process is incomplete without a cor-
responding amount of output or
creative effort of some kind. Of
course one always wrote reports,
but. the héart, we fear, was not in
it. Besides there are ways of. ex-
than by
words,, quite as valuable, and quite
as important to an education, how-
ever. general, which are only just
beginning to receive a proper share
of attention, But this year all sorts
-of forms of expression have been
starting up spontaneously, or ac-
quifing a new vitality. The art club,
founded by student initiative, flour-
‘ishes on sandwiches; and with three
separate dramatic organizations pro-
ducing five plays, one of thefn
written by a member of the college,
within two months, we are well on
the, way to developing a department
like the one conducted by Mr.
George Baker at Yale; or the one
at the University of Chicago, where
the students write, produce; and act
their own. plays, designing — the
scenery and putting on the perform-
ances in an up-to-date theatre—be-
longing tothe department. While
as to music, although interest began
several years ago with the founding
of the music department, its impor-
tarice is steadily growing, and while
it is chiefly appreciative, classes in
harmony, and music lessons, pro-
claim the creative impulse. Even ‘in
the writing line, the publication: of
the recent pamphlet shows a néw
energy: ‘In fact, all we need now
is a department of sculpture and
architecture, so that the next gener-
ation-may build its own Goodhart |"! : , :
jindeed admirable; we can imagine
Hall, and carve its own Juno.
IL DUCE DICTATES
“Know thyself,” said: Socrates.
Not too easy a job this in these days
of higher education for the female
of the human species. One is often:
appalled at coming face-to-face with
the highly-trained intricacies and
super-educated convolutions of the
college-bred cerebrum. And now
‘we have an aide in this task. "The
great; the only, Mussolini has con-
descendeg
- No longer need we search ourselves :
I} Duce puts us in our place and
Jeaves no trailing shreds of illusion.
“Women are the agreeable or pleas-
ant parentheses of life, and corisid-
ered as such they play a very im-
portant part in man’s kaa
. .» -Women cannot create.
- ‘The power behind the throne? ‘No.
Woman is not that. No’ gr
animals,” “indeed! Il Dtice goes 6n
he-men: “Flirtations should. be in-
dulged in as frequently as possible
up to the age of forty, then a man
should settle dowm to more ‘stable
amusements, . . . What. more
charming, thrilling than the first
kiss; what brings a more proféund
sigh of ,relief than the last? :
Women are inferior to men. But
then, of course, they are decorative.
Left in their proper relation to man
they are all that is delicious, ador-
able, sensuous. . Women are
to men what men desire them to: be,
agreeable parentheses‘ in busy lives.”
Thus does the Dictator of all Italy
dictate to Woman her trifling place
in the sun. It gives us that cozy,
feminine feeling of being submeérged
in. a Caveman’s personality. ‘Again,
for the first time since the” Victori-
ans, a Lord and Master has dared to
say his say. No longer need we try
to live up to the arduous motto set
by Socrates.. Now, at last after
many years of bondage to the intel-
lectual ideal, we can resume the rap-
‘sturous’ role of ivy clinging to the.
sturdy oak. And, at least, Il Duce|,
deigns .to admit that we are; deco-
rative.
WHAT TO WEAR?
The , Spring Clothes matter has
come up on its annual round; the
very first sign of it was evinced as
long ago as the first of February,
when the dogfish brought forth last
summer’s demoded frocks and set
our minds working on our ward-
robe. Far more important than
scheduled quizzes ‘or sixty-page re-
ports now looms the question of
whether blue or green will be the
best color for a new suit, if last
and shall we have tub silks made at
home or buy them on Forty-second
street.
So we sigh sadly and. philoso-
phize: “Life. is just one. worn-out
dress after another.” Why bother
to buy clothes at all when they will
they will really only differ in unes-
sential detail.
The Paris fashions say that
trousers are really coming in; now
there is a thought of interest; if we
could only contemplate the buying
of several pairs of trousers for
summer wardrobe, the matter would
be worth considering. Can you not
see the charming girl graduate with
white satin “collegiates” under her
academic gown? Or the debutante
with slim brocaded legs? How at-
tractive the sporting miss would
look in pleated plus-fours, and the
busines woman in severe blue serge
high- water pants!
‘A BETTER IDEA
The Idea of a college as outlined
in. the recent pamphlet seems to us
nothing more soothing than to have
a serf stationed behind our own
chair in the smoking room to light
our cigarettes for us. But there is
one serious aspect that she seems
to. have: overlooked: what will be
the result, ir after-life, of the stu-
dent's’ rapid rise from serfdom to
aristocragy in four short years?
Will she not become so dependent
one else to do the dirty
to tell us what we are.
#hat her husband will have to
‘serf himself? She will have
forgotten her own years of servi-
tude after having Tamed ‘the delights
of independence.
Rather we suggest ‘that the ‘last’
the one in which she learns to attend
‘to another’s needs. And who has
more needs than the incoming Fresh-
man? . Young, inexperienced, in-
competent, she is the one who needs
an older person to darn her stock-
ings, pack “her suitcase, run her
woman’s unseen oe
vision ar a preieh ie baths. And the effect on the Senior
in his soul, “No woman after Performing these petty duties
hes es ‘to the soul of a man, |for be of utmost value
said to the con-
more virile and
"throng her life. Whatever hard-|_
ships she has to endure, they will
cates, Bee compared. to this. -
current opinion now, is that
he te is far too supe-
or ao his or her hss wily be
to advise flirtations for red-blgaded) =
.|limerick- forms for us.
year’s coat can be made to do ‘ again, |
be so soon out of fashion, and when |.
year instead of the. first should be}
be Let ws then be op and doing
per si what
one ite
The Pillar.
- of Salt
M. D. Fi OG discovered sina aa
The first, the
Inverted form, is forcible, and exclama-
‘tory. ‘ oO
Dangerous curve—
Don’t count on nerve—
Stop! if your brake’s good or pot.
Fifty have died on this spot. * .
Kindly observe.
e
@
The second is not the usual unrhymed
form; study it. yourself and see ‘what a
complicated construction it has. — -
Lo the poor Indian advances.
So does the :Ofal, in sooth.
Boast if you will, -.. %°'
Mos® people.-fail. «
Ho! for majority rule! ,
' Our’interest in’ clocks was moré than
timely. Now -all--the~—official—-clocks—in
Paris have gone and quit. After forty
‘vears of faithful service they just lay
idown on the job, and won't run for ‘two
-weeks. Of course they explain it by
some conttfact, but it looks pretty Sus-
Picious to us. After what happened to
Taylor, and to .Big Ben? we cannot but
think that there is some conspiracy on
hand, Or perhaps it can all be attributed,
to sun spots. We should hate to think
that the clocks are really malicious.
Spurred on by the article on the Sat-
urday Review Literary contest, two’ of
our fost valued contributors have col-
laborated to produce this rare literary
gem. ;
Soliloquy of a High-strung Goldfish.
Although “my ,hide is golden bright,
My heart is black—as black as night.
Forever inthe public eye,
I am allowed no privacy.
The people passing stare at me
Like some strange curiosity.
You cannot know, the pangs I ‘feel,
When dining on a fish-food meal,
Oh, for a steak so juicy brown!
How I would smile as it went down!
When nibbling on a splintery spar:
Oh how I long for caviar!
If on my bowl my nose I bump —
I give a loud marinal grump. _
And when I neck beneath the moon
T_am_abashed_ to see that soon
A gathering hag gathered round,
And I+can hear the merry sound
Of saxophone and loud bassoon
And all the cacophonic tune -
Fills and refills my watery cave :
When privacy is all I crave!
And if I want to blow my nose
My modest heart in misery glows.
But they insult me most of all
When each to each I hear them call,
“Although he boasts a golden hide
He has a heart like ours inside!”
SopHRONISBA and Mosy Dick.
The Balm of. Life.
(need we apologize?) —
Tell us not in hopeful numbers,
Marriage is a pleagant dream.
Funny papers spoil our slumbers—
Can things be the way they seem?
Strife is real, strife is earnest,
In these homes of wedded bliss.
“Struck, the other cheek thou turnest,”’ ’|°
aoe was .elected by the association
Was not said of scenes like this.
Jeff is long, and Mutt is fleeting,
And our hearts have sadly bled.
Krazy Kat with bricks is beating
Little Ignatz on the head.
Father has his nightly. battle,
In the bivouac of life.
They are like dumb-driven cattle,
All — heroes of the strife.
Trust no lait. howe’er pleasant ;
‘Rosie’s. ‘Beau is pretty dumb;
Harold Teen won’t buy:a sirebent:
‘ Hairbreadth Harry chews his gum. |
‘Lives of these men all remind’ us;
Marriage isn’t so sublime—
We may leave some dents penied us,
On the sia pins of time.
. : “
v - oe ie! :
&
; ; A ”
agccetN PHILADELPHIA
‘ . ‘Theatres.
| Broad+-George Jessel in The Jazz
Singer. ; i ae ;
Adelphi—The Crown ‘Princes Basil
‘Sidney and Mary Ellis. in old _ style
romantic tragedye
Chestnut—Greenwich Village Follies.
Lyric—My Maryland. Tuneful ro-
|inance of the Civil War. ;
_Shubert—Vagabonid King. -Lots of
Adelphi—Pygmalion. Opens April 4.
Theatre Guild production.
Adelphi—Loose Ankles.
4. Comedy of, the gigolos.
Movies.
_Aldine—Old Tronsides, _
Beautiful ships in a-dull picture.
Stanley—Corinne Griffith in Lady in
Ermine.
Arcadia—Flesh -and the Devil’ with
John Gilbert and Greta Garbo.
Palace—Clara Bow.'in It.
Victoria—The Third Degree.
‘Stamton—Tell it to the Marines.
Chaney in an amusing picture.
Fox—John Gilbert in Count of Monte
Cristo.
Opens April
Lon
Coming.
Stanley—Sorrows of Satan.
March 14.
Arcadia—John Barrymore
Juan with Vitaphone.:
Stanton—Wallace Beery in Casey at
the Bat.
Opens |
; ORCHESTRA PROGRAM
The Philadelphia: Orchestra will play
the following program on Friday after-
noon, March 11, and Saturday evening,
March 12, and also on Monday evening,
March 44: erry | aa 8
-! Stéenhammar—Midwinter.
Peterson-Berger—Symphony No. °
(Lapland).
Atterberg—Symphony No. 4, in G
‘minor (composed on Swedish National
Melodies).
Alfven—Midsommarvaka. .
Shall We Support Chapel
For Rest of the Year?
(Specially contributed by Beatrice Pit-
ney, °27:)
Attendance at chapel has reached an
ebb which even for Bryn Mawr is low.
This raises a problem that has been
raised several times in-the past few. years.’
“8
| The C. A. Board feels no desire to deal
in general platitudes on the subject.
Neither does it wish to resort to any
artificial methods of boosting chapel: or
to the impressement of unwilling students
en route from the lib.
The board does, however, think that
the situation would be improved if a few
of the facts of the case were laid before
the members of the association.
The facts are as follows:
(1) The question as to whether Sune)
should be abolished or not has been voted
on by, the members of C. A. several
times in the last few years. Each year
an almost unanimous vote has been cast
in favor of it continuing it.
(2) In accordance with the wishes of
the association as expressed in this vote
chapel speakers were last summer invited
for this year. . ‘
' (3) The committee which pe the
and js therefore representative of the de-
sires of the association.
(4) The speakers were chosen with
the greatest possible thought and care.
(5) Only a small proportion of the
people who supported chapel in theory
are supporting it in practice. They are
assuming none of the responsibility which
they voted to have the association carry.
(6) Whatever the association may de-
cide this spring as to the future fate of
chapel the fact remains that ministers
have ‘already been = an the rest
of this semester. .
(7) So slight an | sietation at chapel
naturally means a gesture of extreme
rudeness to the speaker. Posibly, too, the
good name of the college is not meee
thereby.
The Board’s Conclusions.
color. we
‘Walnut—Pickevick. Ouaine and J
charming. om
Garrick—Lucky, New musical ’gom-]}
dy, :
Coming.
Shubert—Great Temptations, ~ Opens
March 2 i
Chestnut—Hi it the: . Deck. Opens
March 28: Lew. Fields’ musical comedy.
Last _ week. |:
in Don
In this. importai nt matter the board is fs
support not to the -— sti %
tain desive te: thitik muy —c
philosophy of fi fe, or a code “of ethics.
The board, of course, recognizes that no
sitigle chapel speaker, and ingléed no
single person ¢an sum up: all of at
But it does feel that most of the ch
. speakers can contribute ‘something, at
least to those’ who are not entirely sat-
isfied to remain static, aid can start them.
thinking along, lines ich without such
stimulus they would not follow.
In other words, chapel is one expres-
sion of the kind of thing in which girls -
by becoming members of C. A. have °
their. interest.
The argument “hat instead of going
in Latin, dy in History of Art bviously
beside the point since there is no-clear_
reason why that particular hour should |
be set aside for study .rather than one
earlier, in. the day or week.
Ag | have said, the question of the
fate of chapel for next year can be voted
upon this spring. The board at present
merely asks the support of the C. A.
members for the rest of the year...
Habima Players Here -
The Habima Players, the Hebrew the-
atrical ensemble, will give a repertoire of
plays at the Garden Theatre, Eighth
street near Race, for the entire week of
March 7. On Monday and Tuesday they ©
will hd the famous play, “The Dyb-
buk;” on Wednesday, “Jacob’s Dream;”
on “Thursday, “The Golemy” on Friday,
they will repeat “Jacob’s Dream;” on
Saturday matinee, “The Golem,” and on
Saturday evening, “The Dybbuk.”
We reprint the following from The
Philadelphia Public Ledger :
Recently at the Metropolitan Opera
House, in. Philadelphia, the Habima was
given: possibly the greatest ovation ever
accorded a Jewish theatre company
there. The play presented was “The
Golem,” by L. Levick. Hundreds were
turned away and curtain after curtain
call interrupted the action.
The Moscow Theatre Habima came
into being “during . the early period of*
the. revolution of: 1907. Its first per-
formance took place on a tiny stage,
before an’ audience of one hundred per-
sons in a little private house on one of
the narrow cross streets of Moscow.
Today it is known in all the capitals of
Europe.
Czarist. persecution became so severe
in 1913 that the Habima could not ap-
pear in public. The Habima had an-
other period of trouble, however, when
the Soviets decided that performances
given in a language not understood by:
the-masses are prejudicial, The greatest
intellectuals in Russia sprang in the de-
fense of the Habima and overcame this
objection. s
TWO ARE CHOSEN
Dorothea Shipley, ’25, and Agnes Mon-
gan, ’27, have been accepted as graduate
students to work under the’ direction of
Prof. Clarence Kennedy, of Smith Col-
lege, in Italy and France next winter.
®
|The group will meet in Florence Septem-
ber 1 and study art under his personal
instruction. December 1 they will go to’
Paris and study there under the best
masters at the Louvre and the Sorbonne.
ince the group is very small and care-
fully selected jt is a great honor for
Bryn Mawr to have two representatives.
Nine Deans Graduate.
The January issue of the Bryn Mawr
Bulletin, devoted to the Academic Com-
mittee’s report on the Graduate School, is
especially interesting. After outlining
nad
.| to chapel a girl must do Mon ay’s lesson.
the history and functions of the school ,
the report goes on to give data on the
members of the school before and after
‘graduation. Ten hundred and eighty-
eight students, chiefly foreign, have at-
tended it since its foundation. About
half of these have’ become teachers after
receiving their degrees; nine of them are.
now deans. Their average salaries ap-
pear to be about $2000 to $2500.
*s
Dr. Chew Asks Another. ©
Oe,
Mawr. as an artist in settling questions,
has transferred his talents to Vanity.
Fair. He has sent in, and had accepted,
two hundred questions to the “Ask Me
Another” Contest. It is said:that a mem-
ber of the department of English was
‘able to answer correctly twenty-five of -
them. ae sr
a at ap 38
see
Chew, long recognized in Bryn”
Pant
s
*:in. such rapid’ succession.
-credit to his: profession.
. Mrs. Tripp a “memorable character; and
Started must now step aside for a more
‘you are having as much fun, may you
Jbut. for. the’ great. French.
ala: ¥™1ARD STARS.
. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1°. .
Miss Palache had “a strenuous eve-
ning, with one lover succeeding another
Her “Joseph”
was certainly the more sympathetic role,
for all. his Biblical upbringing, and a
Miss Humph-
rey’s “Carmelo” was charming in every
way; it was a pleasure to watch her, to
listen to her; she held her audienee
throughout. Miss Ling, too, made of
more than'-passing notice ought to be
accorded Marigold, the invisible but por-
tentous cook.
As for the professional play, Edna, St.
Vincent Millay’s Aria da Capo, offered
perhaps in contrast, perhaps in recon-
ciliation—it suffered of course most
notably from insufficient rehearsal. Miss
Millay’s lines demand a perfection in
production, a complete synthesis of ‘in-
terpretation, voice, gesture, and move-
ment, which only long training can pro-4
duce. Much of the spirit of the Aria
was indeed conveyed, but except for Miss
Barker’s. “Pierrot” one felt that it was
scarcely realized. .In her as in Miss
hreys the Players have a talent
which will add much of grace and beaut)
to their productions.
The pride with which this review
fitting humility. While it was ‘with
some regret that one noted the absence
of the burlap curtain strung between
badminton poles which the indomitable
spirit of the Players’ Mistress and
Mother, Jean Gregory, conveyed by roll-
ing or prayer, from the gym; neverthe-
less, the attitude of a charter member of
the Players should be one of whole-
hearted admiration and _ respect. .- We
never ewere so good as you. If only
prosper and flourish.
McNARY-HAUGEN BILL
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
the chief cause is the economic rivalry
of capitalists. The Trade Unions are
holding a campaign of “War Against
War,” by issuing pamphlets showing the
fundamental wrongness of it.
In France, the same feelings are prev-
alent. The coal mine region was on the
front, and ‘suffered more than any other
district, yet it was interesting to note
that in all the towns the place of honor
was reserved not for some military hero,
lif the environment and education is right
=
a so LbakS ae — = e"
° €
1 Maas ~
: ce
”. THE. COLLEGE NEWS
secant
—————
—=
Jaures, who had opposed entering ‘the
war and had been assassinated three days
after it commenced. An International
Miners’ Federation has been formed,
planning, as one of its chief. planks, an
international strike:in the event of future
war. : -
Working Conditions Godd in Russia.
Soviet Russia was the most. ifiterest-
ing country visited The, working con-
ditions there, said Mr. Hapgood, were
better ‘there than in any other country|
A miner spends only sjx hours 4 day
underground; he gets a month’s vaca-
tion with full pay every year; and in
case of accident or sickness, » he gets
full pay, and—medical treatment, or if
he is permanently disabled his family
receives seventy-five’ per cent. of his
wages. . The conditions. for women are
the same, except that married women
get two months with pay, before and
after childbirth.
The living conditions are not so good
as the working. There is a great deal of
poverty, but wages are good in propor-
tion to the cost of living. The standard
of living is about the same as in this
country and is coming up, because pro-
duction is increasing.
The Communist Patty is in control in
Russia, although only five hundred thou-
sand out of one hundred and twenty-five
million people belong to «it. The reason
for this small proportion is that a mem-
ber of the party may not take a wage
exceeding one hundred and ninety-five
rubles ($100) a month. Also, there can
be no graft among members. A private
citizen is only lightly punished, but a
party member must die for it. Hypoc-
risy is the crime of crimes.
Russia is in a transitional period.
Real communism will not come during
this generation, but it will come. They
cannot hope to convert older people who
have grown up with such different theo-
ries, but it is the youth of the country
that they feel they can give the right
sense of values. It will not be necessary
to change human nature; they think that
the child will react well. Their educa-
tional system is based on the fundamental
principle that success does not mean
making a great deal of money, but being
of most service, that will mean .belong-
ing to the ruling party. Their motto is
“From each in accordance to his pow-
ers: To eAch in accordance to his needs.”
Young Russia Is Athletic.
Mr. Hapgood told of meeting a group
of young people who were on their vaca-
tion. It was a typical group of miners
°30,000.
in cash prizes.
Watch for Coca-Cola a
You'll find this contest
A total of 635
- $30,000 Coca-Cola prize contest — beginning the
first week in May and continuing for three months.
In a number of leading national magazines, in
___ many newspapers, in posters, outdoor signs, soda__}
. fountain and refreshment stand decorations. ‘i
s 1st E PERE By eh eee na 4
2n OBES Ss ORE EN te Pe -
por aod Bo geiko ees 2,500
Ns 5 Vii been neces es 1,000
Sth prize........... Pipes ek 500
10 sixth prizes ( Bir resi
. 200 eighth prizes (each) ...... 25
us 400 ninth prizes (each)....... 10
<7
‘Drink
dvertising, presenting the
Socialist,
simple and interesting.
tee Rewer Wee
a — iced
a workeg, in, the. mine of-
fices;. and-during their vacation * they
spent “their timeghikihg, and exercising.
He accompanied them to their athletic
fields, and watched th®m playing foot-
ball, “basketball, and other games, In
the evening they matched back: to the
-|old town, singing folk songs and Party
They .were all members of the
Yotihg Corimunist “League, andy could
join the party when they are twenty-one.
Below this»group, which ranges in age
from sixteen to twenty-oite, are the Pho-
neers, similar to our. Boy and Girl
Scouts. Almost all children belong to
this, which means that they are getting
the Communist point of view, and will
greatly gwell the numbers of the Party
when they grow up.
“IN OTHER COLLEGES
Harvard Orals.
At Harvard the language requirement
of a “reading knowledge” of French,
German or Latin may now be satisfied by
getting certain grades in various:¢ourses.
The old reading examinations awvill. be
held as usual. ’
songs.
a
Rioters Will Appeal.
Twenty-five of the students at Harvard
who were held in connection with the
“riot” have been released on the grounds
that there was no evidence against them.
Four students were given a $25 fine and
ten days in the house of correction. |.
Lesser sentences were given to six
others. All those convicted will appeal
and in the meantime President Lowel
has gone their bail.
Hockey at McGill.
In repofting a woman’s hockey match
at McGill between the Home team and
another Canadian one, the McGill Daily
used the following:
One feature of. the match was the very
high standard of hockey shown by both
teams. It surprised the great majority
of those present. The girls were not a
bit ladylike either, and body-checked,
tripped, antl used their sticks against
—_ re — ‘
each other jn a most professional: man-
: 8
ner.
>
Our Minds Are ‘Not Your Minds.
“There are -two kinds of minds, ‘the
hynian and the undergraduate, and they
have no connection with each other;”
this is the dictum of Dr. Johh Smith
Kendatf’ of Taylane Universit We
always knew. we were supefior !
Of Rags.
With commendable forethought, the
Daily Nebraskan is printing. four copies
of each edition on paper made from rags
for its files. It also hopes that this will
prove a stimulus to reporters and edi-
tors to “fill these papers with something
worth while to preserve.”
How .the West Feels.
“It (the movement which started: the
McNary-Haugen bill) will _ probably
smoulder away now until the next Presi-
dential election when it may become a
burning question ranking with the free-
silver and populist movements which
shook the country thirty years ago.”—
Daily Nebraskan,
. What the Press Thinks.
“When the Board of Trustees arro-
gates to itself the power of issuing a
pontifical prohibition on such a subjéct,
it gives the impression that Princeton
University is a sort of orphan asylum,
composed of children incompetent to
handle the minor problems of community
life."—Baltimore Sun.
COTTAGE TEA ROOM"
MONTGOMERY AVENUE
Bryn Mawr
LUNCHEON
AFTERNOON TEA
bd DINNER
Special Parties by Arrangement
Guest Rooms—Phone, Bryn Mawr 362
5 a ‘
: New Swim Deviséd.
Cross-channel swim, conducted in a
. . » ‘ - Mg .
sWimiming pool, is- tle latest effort of
* Coach Abercrombie, of the University
of Oregon, to develop varsity material.
The contestants enter the pool each day
and swim for twenty minutes, until the
distance of twenty-one miles, the ap-
proximate width of the English Chan-
nel, is covered.—Nebraska Daily.
COSTUMES
_ TO RENT FOR PLAYS, Ete.
' REASONABLE PRICES
Van Horn & Son -
Theatrical Costumers
12th & Chestnut Sts., Phila., Pa.
Masks Make-Up
4
Wigs
Powers & Reynolds
MODERN DRUG STORE
837 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
Imported Perfumes
CANDY SODA GIFTS
' PHILIP HARRISON .
28 LANCASTER AVENUE
Walk Over Shoe Shop
Agent for
Gotham
Gold Stripe Silk Stockings
COLLEGE
| TEA HOUSE
OPEN WEEK-DAYS—
1 TO 7.30 P. M.
SUNDAYS, 4 TO 7 P. M.
>
a
Evening Parties by Special
Arrangement —
FRENCH BOOK SHOP
1527 LOCUST STREET
Philadelphia
| & Powers & Reynolds
H. B. Wallace
William Groff
N. J. Cardamone
Kindt’s Pharmacy
Pieces of Eight
Exact copies of the old Spanish coin, -
molded in chocolate and wrap
ver foil—add to the charm an
of that delightful treasure trove of sweets
—Whitman’s Pleasure Island Chocolates.
A package that invites the imagination
to tropic isles of adventure, while its
contents please the palate with the ut-
most in chocolate fineness and flavor.
In one pound and two pound packages.
in sil-
romance
Chocolates
Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr
‘ Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr College Inn
College Tea Room ....
frank W. Prickett
Bryn Mawr Confectionery
WHITMAN’S FAMOUS CANDIES ARE SOLD BY
Bryn Mawr College Book Store, Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr
_ Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr
Rosemont, Pa.
THE 2
Honsaity Was sent
to Christ, Says Dr. Boon
Christ should mean more to the true’
Christian than .simply what we learn
from His life and ‘teachings, we were
told by the, Reverend Harold 0. Boon,
who spoke in Chapel on Sunday, March
—@.. To Christ: humanity was everything
and He understood its importance as
being greater than the difference in race,
color or sex; He is an example to us
to love every man because He is a man.
Paul—or a follower of Paul—in the
Book of the Ephesians voices this
prayer, that Christ may come to dwell
in our hearts by Faith. What does that
mean? What He. means by our hearts
—affections, understanding, anything but
intelligence—i¢ easily grasped, but the|*
other two are more important... ,
To what aspect of Christ was Paul
referring? .Sutely not the Jesus of his-
tory’ Paul never refers to Christ as
“Jesus of Nazareth;” he does not think
of Him as a person. Nor is it essen-
tially Christ as a_ teacher. - Paul has
‘something else in mind.
Christ is the substance of Christianity.
It is well for us to study what He meant
to the early Christians. Three thousand
years ago the world was not so pros-
rerous and happy as it is today. Al-
though Palestine had native rulers they
were worse than foreigners would have
béen; men wondered if life was worth
living, but after Christ came the deep-
est thinkers worked out the idea of the,
”
“perfectibility of man;” if this world: is
not perfect there is another to look for-
ward to. ‘
Christ Is Closest Approach to God.
Christ is the closest we can get to
jod; He is what St. John meant by the
divine word. We do not mean to trans-
late “logos” to understand that Christ
is God’s word Incarnate, the key to the
problems of humanity.
When one considers the Jewish back-
ground from which Christ rose, He
&
To the Tew,
seems the more unique,
standards ate very different’ from what
they are to Christians. In thes Jewish
home, the most. aged person -is the’ most
important. * The child is kept in his place.
We se@ this in the subways of New
York; .pegple don’t stand up for ladies
any more; ‘they stand up-for old meh or
‘women—for so the Jews have taught us.
But Christ said “a little child -shall
lead . them. ane
The chief character of the Jewish re-
ligion is righteousness, conformity to Taw.
They have little appreciation of dutf to-
wards one who has sinned. We see this
in the fact that there are no Jewish
homes for fallen women, in spite of their
many charities. Christ was quite differ-
nt; He called the sinners to Him.
So in the relations of the sexe ; to
the Jews a‘wife is a piece of adkecty
with no rights of her own. ’Christ re-
versed that standard as well as every
other one connected with people.
Christ Interested in Humanity.
It was people He was primarily inter-
ested in; He judged—and taught us to
judge—not by what He seems to be, but
because He is human.’
“The trouble with Christianity,” said
Mr. Chesterton, “is not that it has been
tried and found wanting, but that it has
been found difficult and not tried.” Few
peoplé really understand St. Paul and
St. John, but.one cannot really under-
stand Christianity if one omits the mys-
tical element that these two Apostles
dwell on. °
Paul is not peculiar ; there are other
witnesses to the supernatural side of the
Christian religion. Faith might be called
the ability to be sure about something
you can’t see; but Paul saw it and we
can accept his testimony.
To try to put Christ, the “image of
the invisible God,” in our hearts by faith
is what is really intended we should do
in Lent. The easiest way to do it is by
prayer; after a few minutes’ prayer in
Not a chance of
that lead-like, loggy
feeling even during
early Spring—if you
make a daily habit
of Shredded Wheat.
That’s one reason |
why this prince of
whole wheat cereals
graces the training
tables of so many
colleges and schools.
Carefully separated, com-
pletely cleaned, perfectly
shredded, and thoroughly
cooked whole wheat grains
— that’s all there is to
ah
DED
Oe i aaa See tick te
taste -inviting
crispness, its- Nature-
«piven, retres ing, tonic benefits. ~
a.
rf y, Ice Cream and Fancy
ws
‘
4.
“THE, COLLEGE, NEWS
ate ac eee ed
ttestmonning we Catr go out to our daily
task with Christ in us to~help us. We
will find that humagity js perfectible. —
_ RUSSIA THRIVES
Cc ONTINE ED
me
79 a
FROM. ‘PAGE -
1920,-and an increase in taxes. Farmers
who paid three per cent, of their cash
income in taxes before the war now have
to pay from seven to fifty per cent. of
their cash incomes. As a natural result
of all this has come discouragement, de-
cline in morale, the evér-increasing drift’
to-the city; so that while the population
of the United States as a whole has in-'
creased eight per ‘tent. in the last seven
years, the farm population has decreased
seven per cent.
Since 1920 various, measures have been
proposed for the relief of this distress:
an emergency tariff was naturally unsuc-
c&ssful since it is not. a matter of home
competition with foreign’ goods. The
formation in Congress of the farm bloc,
made up of representatives of farming
districts without regard to party, stimu-
lated farm legislation. In 1921 the first
direct financial aid was voted to help
bring the goods to market, while at the
same time the old Finance Corporation
was reconstituted with the special object
of dealing with the farmer’s problem.
Transportation improvements, , however,
GRACE DODGE HOTEL
Washington, D.C.
a “aelightful Hotel conveniently
located for sight-seeing in ‘the
Nation’s Capital. Open to Men
and Women. No Tipping.
* Write for Booklet
Mee eee ee eee eee ose eeeeeeaeae!
Philadelphia’s Show Place
of Favored Fashions
EMBICK’S
for things worth while
COATS, DRESSES, HATS
“UNDERWEAR,
HOSIERY
1620 Chestnut St.
HAHA bE Wt Be eet
Be ee ee
2
t. ° ; 5
+ ee a -» -
é oe
wert no use if there was no*market for
the produce;. and the adininistration,
“) when appealed to, had only two sugges-
Reduce your acreage and. increase |
tions :
co-operative marketing. The last. sug-
gestion has been.¢aken uprand developed
to a. large extent, but it is obvious that
some more, drastic measures ‘must be
taken, The McNary-Haugen bill, first
| Proposed in 1923 and defeated -in 1924,
was designed to meet this need. For a
time it was thought to be dead, but this
year it was revived and, contrary to the
expectations of all, log-rolled ‘ through
both Houses of Congress. President
Coolidge vetoed it on February 27, but
it may come’up again in December, when
it has some slight chance of passing. o
Outline of the Bill.
The bill provides for an Agricultura!
export corporation, - aBpointed by the
President from a list nominated by the
farm organizations. This method is con-
sidered by some to be an unconstitutional
limitation of executive power. Two
hundred and fifty million dollars, ad-
vanced by the Government, is to used to
fix a MRatio” price, based on the average
purchasing power of a certain quantity of
farm produce in the years from 1905 to
1914. The corporation is.then to,market
the surplus in foreign markets at the best
possible price, later recouping the Gov-
" CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
scabiieamenniiemmmintl
THE CHATTERBOX
A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM
Evening Dinner Served from 6 until 7.30
Special Sunday Dinner Served from 5 until 7
Spectal Parties by. Appointment
OPEN AT 12.30 NOON
a
-H. ZAMSKY
Portraits of distinction 5
$02 CHESTNUT STREET
—
Philadelphia, U. S. A.
We take Portraits at the Col-
lege as well as in our Studio.
When you are in need of a good
ene-eall Walnut 3987.
SAVE YOUR HAIR
From Hot Irons
The wonderful 5 Minit Steam Stix heat
themselves. “New heat process,’ cannot
scorch or deaden. No fire! No hot irons!
No electricity or combs necessary. Curl and
wave your own hair anywhere, any time, in a
few minutes. Guaranteed the one safe method
for delicate, white, gray, dyed or bleached
hair. Brings dead hair back to life and lustre.
Keeps your hair soft, healthy and beautifully
alive, _Gives you natural lasting curls and
waves. Next to a Permanent. 5 Minit Steam
Stix are harmless, quick, lasting, economical,
a-time and money saver. Complete home out-
fit for long or bobbed hair, $5.00.
JOYCE
Dept. .G, 522 Fifth Avenue, New York City
JA SHOP NOTED FOR
; tat
e
= 1606 C
Telephone : 456 Bryn Mawr
Michael Talone
TAILOR
_ Cleaner and Dyer
1123 Lancaster Avenue
ED. CHALFIN
_ Seville Theatre Arcade |
DIAMONDS : WATCHES : JEWELRY
WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIRING
Pens : Pencils : and Optical Repairing
‘Fancy Watch Crystals Cut, $1.75
MAIN LINE STORES VIOTUALER
Pastry
Genuine Lizard
with high arch and
Perfect All-Si
CALL FOR AND DELIVERY SERVICE 4
Groceries
DISTINCTIVE SHOES,
lin—
A perfect-fitting model
Lid
medium heel.
Black or Beige
lk Hose, $1.85
hestnut
C
“HENRY B. WALLACE
Caterer and * Confectioner: .
22 Bryn Mawr Ave. ‘ Bryn Mawr
Breakfast Served Dally.
Business Lunch, 60c—11 to ‘2.20
Dinner, $1.00
Phone B. M. 758 Open Sundays
2 eee
BARBARA LEE _*
ue Say )
Fairfield co,
Outer Garments for Misses
Sold Here Exclusively in
_ Philadelphia aS
Strawbridge & Clothier
.Eighth and Market Streets
*
| 4
™
s
Invariable Quality
and
Greatest Value
J. E.CALDWELL & 60.
Jewelry, Silver, Watches
Stafionery, Class Rings
Insignia and Trophies
PHILADELPHIA
John J ‘ McDevitt
Programs
Billy Heads
Tickets
Letter Heads
Booklets, ete.
Announcements
1145 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa.
BRINTON BROS.
FANCY ‘and STAPLE GROCERIES
Orders Called for.and Delivered
Lancaster and Merion Aves.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Telephone 63
Printing
New Harrison Store
ABRAM I. HARRISON
83914, Lancaster Avenue
Finery
Hosiery
Agent for
Cc. B. Slater Shoes
The TOGGERY SHOP
831. LANCASTER AVENUE
Dresses :: Millinery :: Lingerie
Silk Hosiery
Dyeing
Cleaning
FRANCIS B. HALL
TAILOR
RIDING HABITS :: BREECHES
REMODELING :: PRESSING
DRY CLEANING
840 Lancaster Avenue
Phone Bryn Mawr 824
CARDS and GIFTS
For All Occasions
THE GIFT SHOP
814 West Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
Haverford’ Pharmacy
HENRY W. PRESS, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS
Phone: Ardmore 122
PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICB
Haverford, Pa. ° Bee
great deal more.
BOBETTE SHOPPE:
1823. Chestnut St., Philadelphia _.
_ DRESSES OF OUTSTANDING BEAUTY |
at $14.75
All at One Price,
These dresses reflect the most advanced of
Parisian style tendencies—a great array of the
finer fabrics, and in styles that are worth a
| HATS |
4 _ of charming designs to sell ah
wt
”
‘
assistance —in reconstruction,
.muéh real relief in
‘Rosemont College Beaten —
her own opponent in a very admirable
_ OMNARY BILL = ¢
CONTINUED EROM me. THIRD PAGE
ernment for its expenditure by an equali-
zation fee tharged on every domestic gale.
‘The obvious disadvantages to this sys-
tem are: that the “Ratio” price would.
appreciably raise the cost of living,
benefiting one group at the expense of
the rest of society; that the increased
cost, of raw materialg would subject
American manufacturers to adverse com-
petition in neutral markets; and that the
collection .of the eqt alization * fee wotld
be difficult, and offer a fair field for
graft. But all these disadvantages are
found to an even greater degree in the
high tariff system, one of the chief poli-
cies of the Republican Government; and
President Coolidge when he advanced
these” same arguments in’ his veto mes-
sage on the bill, was writing ‘the best
,free- trade document since the administra-
‘tod of Woodrow Wilson. ’
The bill, moreover, has great advan-
tages in that. it would not only stabilize:
the home marketing system, by a method
similar~te—that employed in transporta-
tion ‘by the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission, but it would also provide central
control of foreign marketing, by ma-
chinery such as is used in Brazil and
the Scandinavian countries to stabilize
exports.
If the bill were passed, however, Dr.
Smith said, it would probably not bring
. the long run; it
would be meeting a world problem by
domestic mgans. The only way really
to meet the situation would be either to
make a drastic change in our recon-
struction policy, such. that by better
terms on the foreign debt and material
the—market
abroad could be built up again; or by a
therough revision of the-tariff to reduce
the cost of living not only for the farm-
ers, but for all other consumers. It is
unlikely, however, that any Republican
administration will ever adopt either of
these policies; so that we must fall back
of necessity to raising ourselves by our
own boot-straps.
by Second Varsity, 25-15
Second Varsity fumbled slightly less
than Rosemont and so came out ahead}
25-15 in the rather
Saturday morning.
messy game on
In the first half our passing and
teamwork were better’ than theirs, but
no one on our team was outstanding.
The half ended 12-5 for. us. In the
second half the Rosemont team came
up a great deal. They had good pass-
ing and made several quick successive
goals.
A hint for: us: each of them stuck to
manner. Altogether Rosemont is to
be congratulated for getting out such
a presentable team in their first sea-
sar
———
THE CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF
DOMESTIC :-ARCHITECTURE AND
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
A Professional School for college
graduates. a
The Academic Year for 1927-28
opens Monday October 3, 1927.
THE CAMBRIDGE-LOWTHORPE
EUROPEAN TRAVEL COURSE
Sailing from Montreal June 10th.
Sailing from Naples Sept. 8th.
THe CAMBRIDGE-LOWTHORPE
SUMMER SCHOOL
at Groton, Massachusetts
From Wednesday July 6,
Wednesday August 24.
to
HENRY ATHERTON Frost — Director.
13 Boylston St., Cambridge, Mass.
* 4t Harvard Square
—————————
LOWTHORPE
4 School of Landscape Architecture for
Women ‘
_ Courses in. Landseape Design, Construc- |
tion, Horticulture. and kindred subjects.
Estate of seventeen acres,
greenhouses.
Twenty-sixth year.
36 miles from Bogton.
Groton, Masses.
gardens, |:
gon of basketball. Our forwards
showed an uncanny ability to make
free throws successfully. Not ore
thance was missed. The line-up was:
Bryn Mawr: Boyd, 21222; Bruere,
2211122122;. Dalziel; Poe, Swan, Platt.
Subs:. Martin, Bethel. F
Horstman, 221222; Mol-
Reily, Butler, Heiz-
_ Rosemont:
loyy Ruae, 1112;
man, €orgon.
_MAY DAY
»
It was thought that money might be
raised for the benefit of the Art “Club,
the Summer ‘School, the Students Build-
ing Iajgishing Several people camel
the Re¥by Sword Play omitted. Many
thought that there ought to be an under-
graduate casting committee to help’ Mr,
True.
The McGill Mind.
A column called the “Goose-Step” in
the McGill Daily was recently discontin®
ued at the request of the Editor. The
column had been criticized by readers
because. it refused to be always agree-
able and made’ fun of established insti-
tutions.- A second reason seems to have
been that it referred to modern literature
with which the readers were unacquainted.
The Editor of the column resigned in
protest, and the Daily, it is only fair to
state, printed his letter of resignation
with its expressions of disgust at the
act of suppression,
This incident would seem to indicate
that the McGill mind is in the Dark Ages.
This is not so. Almost all college edi-
tors seem to find it necessary to. print
only what appeals, never anything that
criticizes or which might be suspected
of being “highbrow.”
NEWS RATES. HIGH
The National College Press Congress
which met in December at Urbana, IIli-
nois, has sent the News a certificate
awarding it a distinguished rating in the
1926-27 National College Press Congress
Publication Contest.
Cleaning That Wins
Women, critical of style and
mode, who could ‘afford to. pay
higher prices, regularly use, and
appreciate the quality of Footer-
Cleaning.
Dresses, plain ......... $2.00 to $2.50
Dresses, 2- and 3-piece . .$2.50 to $3.25
Velvet Dresses ........ $2.75 to $3.50
Negligees ........0000% $1.50 to $2.00
Beaded and Pleated Dresses Higher in
accordance with work involved.
bd
Phone for Ser vice Car
FOOTER’
Cleaners and Dyers
S
may at their own discretion discontinue
*s g rs . . . ‘ we ee
me - ‘ a A. t ca “ es aos hg
yt Papa eit cara a’ 5 ome * : : : : :
Ve See ne ee Cp ols HEC LY EGE: NEWS,
: ; x8 ‘ * : ; o , ‘ we
——————— EE <= Se
. Lectures Before Exams
Harvard, has taken another step «in the
direction of better educational methods
With the provision recently voted by the
Boatd of Directors calling for a cessation
of lectures and tutoring during a period
previOus to éxaminations.
The Crimson states the new rule?
“With the passage of this innovation,¢
the various departments in the University
lectures, and other classroom exercises
during the two and a half weeks between
the end of the Christmas recess and the
midyear examinations, and’ the three’ and
a half weeks preceding the final examina-
tions. . In the case of elementary courses
including all courses open to Freshmen
this recess will not apply.”
The reason given -is that “the long
period of continuous teaching lessens the
opportunity for maximum accomplish-
rents on the part of the student, and for
writing and research on the part. of the
teacher.
“In an endeavor to remedy .this, and
to secure two desired ends, the partial
continuous supervision of their studies,
and the relief of teachers from part of
their’ excessive burden of instruction,
lectures and tutoring will be suspended
during the two periods mentioned.”
Here we see again the new principle
that is actuating the experiment. under
Meiklejohn at Wisconsin. and the various
schemes for honor courses in other places,
notably at Swarthmore. All these permit
of a greater unity in the educational
process a§ well as giving greater freedom
to the student.
» This. is a step in the right direction
and we hope that it will prove successful.
sicnemeeoeny
Sener
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
SUMMER QUARTER
The Summer Quarter is an integral
part of the University year, the
courses being the same in character
and in credit value as in the other
quarters of the year.
Degrees are conferred upon men
and women for summer work.
Each year more and more ‘etnne
students come to the University from
colleges in the North, East and West
as well as from the South. In 1926
there were 2107 students registered in
the Summer Quarter from 32 States
and: six foreign countries.
The Master’s Degree may be ob-
tained by properly qualified students
in three Summer Quarters.
Several hundred different courses
are offered.
Courses are offered meeting all
pre-medical requirements.
Courses in first year medicine are
given.
Full year courses in most subjects,
including modern languages.
The most beautiful and unique
campus in America.
Pleasant summer. climate.
Comfortable accommodations
reasonable rates,
Tuition for non-Virginians,
low.
Por. illustrated folder
nouncement, write to
SECRETARY OF SUMMER
at
very
and an-
armen.
$8170 ©
. Round Trip ~~
Tourist Third Cabin
Specials —
+ The Best Time
| To Go—
if Before Mid-June |
Fo after Mid-July
e FREY, ra)
For More Than Half a Century QUARTERS
36 E. Lancaster Ave. 1707 Chestnut St. University of Virginia
ARDMORE 3032 RIT, 7792 Box 149-C
Co :
ILLY has discovered that a fellow
passenger is traveling with an |
— female relative (word of six
Paani Amenities are now being °
TO $190 $2: : aad soon their conversation
_will be sparkling like the dancing sun
rays on the deep‘ Atlantic. That's ,
the thing about these: Cunard College
birds of a feather flock to-.
Harvard to Suspend Its |
free'ng of students from a minute and |.
Linn te tar ee Lantern. . on
English litéPature and comppsition at the
University of Chicago, and conductor of
a column in the Chicago Herald and
Examiner, has consented to review. the
LECE News. Professor. Linn is well
know:t to Chicago’ aluminae as a lecturer
on Dreadful Youth who has made large
contributions to the Alumnae Regional
Scholarship Fund.
~
[a —,
AL
a,
>
AEA
Individual
soe
aD
L'ORIGAN
CHYPRE-
SS Se SS
Dr. Sines” Weber Linn, professor of :
recent issue of The Lantern. for the Co1-
, =e
LES POUDRES
Ory |
MORE individual love-
liness is achieved with
.Coty Face Powders.
vidual in ‘the tone which
idealizes the natural colouring.
which repeats the fragrance of
the supreme Coty odeurs.
LA ROSE JACQUEMINOT
JASMIN DE CORSE
AND ALL OTHER
COTY ODEURS
Or
"aod p= to. Speaks
the Rocky Mout
will be the subject” on which Dr.
J. Monroe Thorington will speak to-
night at 8 P. M. in Room.G; Taylor Hall.
The lecture is. illustrated and is spon-
sored by the Science Club. _It is thought...
‘Ex plorations in
tains”
_that this will -be a most interesting eve-
ning’*entertainment, as Dr. Thorington
boasts an enviable record as a mountain
explorer.
4
Indi-
aS ee ee ey
in the perfume
EOE DI IGF PO BF
STYX PARIS
EMERAUDE
:
Pri rice
uy me Dollar
OE WUE
MINNEKAHDA
' MINNESOTA
DEVONIAN |
MAJESTIC
BELGENLAND
rope this year, _
a s to Eur
only for college pe. pie, .
and
a 9 (up)
» World's Anrgest ship.
ones AeEANT menecantitg BAGtns conuPpant
S denedie:-| amg
TOURIST
THIRD CABIN.
The only exclusively Tourist
Third Cabin linerggn the world.
WENIPEEDIAN ix, o other a nA sc.
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nh
Fs
ert ade "finest ships to Ant-
we (Belgium). bps
‘ mart Ze
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gap
’ Largest Tauciss Third” carriers
» CEDRIC to Liverpool (convenient port for’:
‘CELTIC: Shakespeare country and English
Ke ae District). ye
DORIC REGINA Largest “Tourist Third” carriers ™
’ MEGANTIC over the short, scenic St. Law: ~
LAURENTIC.: rence River route.
or others of our steamers which will provide many Tourist Third Cabin —
yp ea ent re of course, are reserved —
pro! men and women: and
oe es
®
. we
<2
Te
er a
aT RARE eA Te
~
te
ee
°
f
>" ¥ 3 .
tHE COLLEGE
a
®
2 oF
Taxi-Driver Wins ee
~-dert Worker Prize
oe winner. of. the Student: Wotker
‘prize of $100 offered by The Nation for
the best account by an American college
studént of summer work in industry or
“agriculture has beer awarded’ to Sol
| Auerbach, of. Philadelphia, a senidr in
the University of Pennsylvania. The
prize-winning “essay, “Tayi, Mister?” is
printed in the current issue of The Na-
tion, (dated March 9). Alfhild, John-
son, of Oberlin, was awarded the sec-
ond prize for an account of her éx-
perience in a hardware factory and Wil-
liam C. Putnam, ‘of Stanford University,
received a third prize for his essay,“Serfs
of te Ga": *."
The jidges in the contest were Jerome
Davis, head of the Department of
Social Service. at Yale, Pierrepont B
Noyes, president of the Oneida Com’
munity, eo Wolman, head of the Re-
search Department of: the Amalgamated
- Clothing Workers of America; Wlorerice
Kelley, general secretary of the National
Consumers’ League, and Oswald Garri-
son Villard, editor of Phe Nation.
Students from Yale, Harvard, Michi-
gan, Wisconsin, * Johhs* Hopkins, Bryn
Mawr Oberlin, North Dakota, Nor.h-
western, Stanford and the University of
Pennsylvania took part in the contest.
Railroading, mining, tanning, dyeing and
printing were soime of the industries in
which the students wed Several
were employed by the Fowl Motor Com-
pany.
iMr. Auerbach, who drove a taxi for
the Yellow Cab Company of Philadel-
phia, says that during his three months
of work he has learned as much as in
his three years of college and that he is
“tickled to death when a page of The
History of Aesthetics ‘catches on a cal-
lous.”
Cement Mixer.
“They gave me what was officially
_known as an 03 cab, The drivers called
them ‘boilers’ or ‘cement mixers.’ The
cab is clumsy and difficult to steer. The
gears are as hard to shift as those of a
five-ton truck. The car cafnot go up
the slightest grade on high. It has no
self-starter, and since we were not al-
lowed to leave the motor rtififing, our
hands from cranking became. as_ cal-
loused as a pine cone.
Sesqui Helped.
“We were paid on a purely commis-
sion basis of 331-3 per cent. The cab
people had the Sesquicentennial hysteria.
There were twice’as many Yellow Cabs
on the street as in a normal summer.
The average pay was about $20 a week
to. which can be added $10 in tips.
“When I received. my first few tips I
felt uncomfortable. It is an awkward
moment when you are counting out the
change with the question in your mind,
‘What will he give me? Shall I give
him a quarter, two dimes and a nickel, or
ae :
jgive you a cheap cigar or 10 cents.
‘kinds of people.
‘two quarters?” . The .passenger at the
same ‘moment asks himself, ‘What shall
1 give eS eee Wo Is coMfit-
inf the Olanee with an idea.’ Sooner or
later the awkward moment becomes a
part of the ‘racket, Tips are figured in
as part of the earnings and the driver
looks upon them as his rightful wages.
A. quarter is a satisfactory tip. More
‘often we got, 10 or 15 cents, and many}
times we were ‘left: flat.’
Biggest Tippers Gangsters.
“Gangsters and gamblers are the most
liberal tippers.
class, are very liberal. The usual ‘run of j
Stratford and the Ritz ride short and
Once:
I got a $5 tip from a man out of one of
the big hotels—and he wasn’t drunk.
That is called a lucky break. It is.a
lifetime.
Things a Cab-Driver Must. Not See.
“People who, have used cabs tell me
that a cab-driver looks so unapproach-
ab‘'e and strdight-faced that phey are
afraid to speak to him. To look that
way is a part of his business. There are
many things that a cab-driver must not
see. Strange happenings in the back of
his cab, Mysterious night journeys. All
.But those very people
should hear their straight-laced, eyes-
front driver talk to his buddies ‘in his.
moments of idle waiting. He has seen
everything. And there is hardly any-
thing new that happens. One runs the
whole: gamut of such affairs in a few
weeks’ time.”
ra
N.S. F. A.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
At the Michigan Congress six stand-
ing committees were appointed which
may be described briefly as follows:
1. International Relations. The sec-
retary for International Relations car-
1ies on all correspondence with foreign
|student bodies, such as the Confedera-
tion Internationale des Etudiants, the
individual National Unions of Stu-
dents, and the National Unions of
Latin’ America, Canada and Soviet
Russia and also with interested for-
jeigners who wish to get in touch with
he -N. S. F. A.
2. Travel. It has its headquarters at
2 West Forty-sixth street, New York
City. The plans for the summer of
1927 are the following: the C.. I. E.
Department of the N. S. F. A. Travel
Committee is sending 100 students as
a special delegation to the C. I. E. in
Europe. Through the Open Road,
Inc., 2 West Forty-sixth street, New
York, the Travel Committee is send-
ing 600 students, grouped according to
colleges,: to Europe ‘to the Interna-
tional Student Hospitality Association.
a
; i] 6 ia
wy 4
in the fragrant lend of
dress, blossom-trimmed.
ning. No wonder its
/ \ _ SPEND A GAY SPRING
VACATION IN PINEHURST
acon during gage at Pinehurst. Sports
leafed pines ature
mpanionship.
pleasures attract eyer-increasing numbers of
in her ha ope
Gayety, day and eve-
young men and women for their Spring vacations.
me aot
rifle ch es lcavaieatne,
45, 16. The Horseshow
d 4-5,
: 3), April il, 12,
cig from everywhere will be at Pinehurst with their
on oe famous 18-hole courses, designed and
J. Ross; tennis, archery, riding,
e races and other sports.
Spring tournaments for women include the Twenty-
|. United North and South Amateur Golf Championship
24, 25, 26, 28, 29; the Ninth Annual United
ourna-
It is also,
ss 3 c~ A
The Committee looks fotward. to
prospects
South Africa in December, 1927,
_to the ‘Orient and to South America in
of sending students
the summer of 1928.
in
people that we pick out of the Bellevue- |,
cabmaf’s dream andghappens once in a
in
changes in their
3. The Foreign Student in America.
Questions
and the reception of foreign students
of
immigration,
America are being investigated.
4, The
News: Bureau,. ‘a
5. The Speakers Bureau. ”
. The Curriculum,
which * students have
all the colleges of the country.
interpretaiion of
took entire advantage of the opportunity
offered for
the
full of an artistic bravado, they played
with the necessary precision;
THIRD CONCERT
CONTINUED..FROM.. PAGE J
-the- musicians.
rich, full,
eir stringed instruments
singing tones o1
Te Scherzo,
the
molto with effortless facility.
Melody,
The second selection’ was .4n Irish
by Frank Bridge.
through the ‘Open” | Road,
sending about 60. ‘students- to Russia.
to
and
housing
bureau
which distributes news of the Federa-
A workingman with his. tion as well as general articles ‘by emi-
family of six once a- month follows atnent men to the student papers of the
close second. Jews, no matter of what! country.
a committee in-
Ghat Pies the methods and manner
effected
rricula and is plac-
ing this informatfon at the service of
They
Allegro
This is a
1Wely orchestration of the Londonderry’
7
: i dll sgh The-pound-
eS Harts: *
the: ridiculous speed, the |*
ing pizzicato,
. * . .
tributed to its extreme gaiety.
The audience now demanded an encore.
Beethoven was again honored ‘with an
"exquisite performance of his Minuet,
always a welcome choice.
Minor concluded the program. Mr. Al-
wyne’s playing in this was excellent. His
control of the pedal and his powerful
chords were particularly to be ‘com-
mended. And in, the second movement,
Lento, con molto sentimento, the first
violin outdid himself in smoothness of
finish. The passages wheré the tempo
the appropriate suspense and energy.
Then the peaceful aftermath, quieting the
feelings. so masterfully’ roused,. .was
played with confidence and power.
{ SEVILLE THEATRE
is said to have been inspired by verge BRYN MAWR
well scene @f Romeo and Juliet ih the
tomb. This dramatic inspiration re- Programme
flected in t'e music was stressed by the Week of Maych 7
- Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday -
| “The Flaming Forest”
WITH ,
Antonio Moreno ‘and. Renee Adore.
Thursday and ‘Friday
; “West of Broadway”
WITH
Priscilla Dean, Arneld Grey and
Air, which is played in full only at the Majel Coleman
very end. Starting out qtrietly enough, Saturday
the Irish Melody ris€§ to a climax of “
passionate melanch to which the Pals of P aradise
familiar Air is a fitting conclusion. The WITH
artistic handling of the different voices
makes.of it a beautiful piece of work.
Rudolph Schildkraut and
' Marguerite De La Motte
Selected Comedy ‘Current News
LLL
THE TWICKENHAM
BOOK SHOP
Edna St. Vincent Millay
The King’s Henchman, $2.00
Louis Untermeyer
Modern British Poetry, $2. 50
CRICKET AVENUE, ARDMORE-
Two Doors From Lancaster Pike
*
4
THE BLUE BOTTLE
SHOP:
| Lancaster ‘Ave.
BRYN MAWR, PA.
CHINTZ ANTIQUES
a
355 eSesese
;
College news, March 9, 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)
1927-03-09
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 13, No. 18
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-vol13-no18