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VOL. XV. No.1
® HIGH AVERAGES ©
|
a
\
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tage
HAIL FRESHMEN.
‘Twenty - “Of —Entering— Class}+
— Rating Abov. ove
Eighty ye
ONY, TEN TERM 9 EST
t anit) an Pes cattant physical speci-
on-¢qithough it is my guardians,
Gragental or tutorial, who have watch-
pee “ed my bed hour, my morning milk, my
eTubbérs), an Episcopalian and an only
child”—These , were.the words. which
President Park put into the mouth of
the average incoming freshman. of the-
class of 1932.
“So: far,”
student. of 1928—by and large—comes
‘from a-city, is a*month or ‘two over
- in private. sch
“Pleads the school list with 14.
_ most entirely private schools.
-1: the
eighteen..and. trained“for ‘the most part
s,. that is, along with
and sex,
stock,
her own. kin
called, ‘American transplanted
“. sere time since from the British Isles
or Germany.”
The: statistics, not yet compiled at
the time of this speech, are now ‘avail-
able in full): There are 127 freshmen
representing 22 States.and the District
of Columbia. For the first time in
some -years. Pentisylyania heads the
list with’ 34 to New York’s 25. For
once a prophet ‘has ain his own
country. Of. the"82 States 7 are west
.wh—the Mississippi, but they furnished
‘only 10 students in all.
_Fourteen..fronr- ‘Miss Kirk’s School
Seventy-nine- _schools have contrib-
uted to the training of the class of ’32,
Only
15. of the, <
by.» public schools, and seven partially.
Miss Kirk’s School in Bryn Mawr
Next
comes Miss Walker’s with 8, and the
Bryn Mawr School in- Baltimore with
6. Bee ;
Scholastically the average is high.
‘'wenty freshmen_have .ayerages_ over
— 30. and only 8 fall below. .69.
In the domain. of léss formal statis-
‘tics, “has been ndted during Fresh-
‘man’ week that the’ clzss of, 1932. is
quiet, well-behaved and/,nthiugiastic.
They passed their self-goverfiment,
tests with a hi
failures, although few know the mega |
ing of the word jurisdiction, and some
startling statements weperntttade. A stu-
dent it seems, must sign her “destiny”
..._u¢fore going..out—in—the eventing, and
‘must frequent only certain“ ‘Broscpbsd
places.” Above all she must n9¢/go
out in a car unless chaperonéd by a
inother over 18! .
‘Some of the statistics follow ‘in dé-
tail: ce
Stdtistics of the Freshntan Class
Denominational Affiliations é
Percentages
FMisCOpAlans: ..4605.. 61 48.0 7
Presoveerians .......+- 23 18.1
TMONOIRNES Aces 7 5.8
Society of Friends ... 6 4.7
CBEBONGS on os os cots od 5 3.9
Blac y ch. EOC EWE arn Re 4 PT
Methadist’-o..ci55505 3 3 2.4]
TREO oc.) 5a ss 3 2.41
Congregationalists ..... 2 7”
Christian Sciéntists fk
Re os 5s tk new ess’ 1 8)
No aiiliation <...... a 7.8
Totals seca 197
States
3 Percentages
Pénngylvania ..... 006.4 34 26.7
ew Or eee ee 25 19.7
Massachueetts.......s. sss 9 ve
DEAR TOL BEY ox 3.5 «oo e's o's 9 = i
- CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Lantern Tea
The Lantern Board cordially <|/
invites all Freshmen interested |
in writing or in drawing to a téa
to be given on Monday, October
fifteenth, from 4.30 to 6
o'clock in Hilda Wright’s room, -
- No. 21, Pembroke. West. =~
"President Park added, “I
have noted only ‘that the: Bryn’ Mawr
She ‘is’ of')so-':
average and only. tw9)
an
> =e
ort
BR pret bae (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, cB Tiss
: 4
Passed a |
In the,snidst of life we are in [
death. We had been asked to.
announce the arrival in” Mert6n™
of a full-blooded young Florida
alligator, who was delivered to
/ Misé Lucy Fry, ’31, last. Friday
4 \f/noon. But jnst as we were going
' to press with a glowing descrip-
tion of his charms, and of the
rusty rat trap in which he was
housed, we rereived the tragic
thews that he-is dead. A _ blast
of hot-air from our too efficient
heating system proved too much
‘for even a tropically educated.
alligator, and he prematurely
4+ shrivéled away. «
| News for Athletes
Three Periods of Exercisé In-
stead of the Usual «
Four.
=
An exhaustive probe of the athletic
situation, carried on by the News -in be-
half of-its public, shews no very drastic
upheavals. The new director, Miss
Josephine Petts, late of Teachers College,
Columbia . University, received our rep-
resentative with smiling frankness.
“What I am aiming for is a program
that will give each person three hours of
exercise, three hours that she will en-
joy, suited to her, temperamentally and
physically. For the fall months we are
planning three hours a week of required
instruction in. ‘any of the following
sports: hockey, tennis, archery, fenging,
swimming and sunbaths, p The-tégular
schedule of varsity hockey’ and_ basket-
Kall games will be carried on exactly a
before and there will also be interbill
and interclass first team games. The
winter schedule has not yet been fully de-
termined, but we do know that swimming
will ‘be the big feature in every way.
Possibly we shall be able to have indoor
tennis.”
Other innovations mentioned were a
tennis instructor from the Merion
Cricket Club, and,a freshman course in
good_body.mechanics. Miss. Petts.closed
the interview by saying that she hoped
to talk to the students herself very
shortly about future plans. There will
be no check-up on the students, but each
apdividual is #xpected to complete her
frvd periods’ as a ‘matyer of honor.
How Will 40 a
ake ‘a Look at Gs
If the Average age of 425) Aare
class fs 18, something ‘mefe than a
fifth of the stugonits of Bryn Mawr
must be of Ating age. -Of -these as
many-as can’ Will probably cast a vote
—a least they ought to. And even the
non- Pctee withythe radio dinning in
their ears. and unresembling photo-
phs levity at them in,the streets
ape ee ia, can~take -an interest
n-the eich bn. Withthis in mind we
are pyinting il Meek the following
material abo ye the two big ean-
didates. Bert 5 eek we will give the
other sidé ya
Owen I). Young, Father of a Recent
J
Bryn Mawr Graduate, Defends
Smith
“Thin of the degradation, the
humiliation which touches all of us
when such .a fine spirited, straightfor-
ward, clean-minded man as Governor
Smith is called a drunkard and politi-
cal crook.
“What: are we coming to in {this
country when a man’s religion F apc
test of whether he can: hold public
office and when churches are mobilized
for political action? If the American
people are wise they will, in their own
interest, end this religious issue now.
Let every solicitation for a vote on re-
ligious’ grounds, whether it be made
openly or secretly, be a reason for
voting the other way, because the fact
of such solicitation makes the issue
itself one of prime importance. ~
“IT am supporting Governor Smith
because I believe in his willingness an
| his capacity to put the farms of this
country on an equality with its indus-
._ CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
English history, was carrying -on her
tries.) I am- tired of -hearing of farm
_A Musical Service
Large Attendance Indicates
Popularity of New . -
2a”. Hama
Anyone whowattended the service of |
th: Bryn Mawr League on’ Sunday eve- |
ning (and- we assume from casual ob- |...
‘servation that most of. fhe college did
attend) will agree that the initial servieg |
of the new organization was-aSuccess.
The League plans to have, during the
coming year, eight: similar musical serv-
ices in which Mr. Willoughby, now per-
yenent and official organist of the col-
lege, will play various orgath numbers;
the choir will sing several anthems, and
at times chorales in which the congrega-
ton may join. Any, other talented people
among the undergraduates and graduates
will be invited to take part in order that
tnese services’ may be of interest to the
college as. a whole and may, therefore,
be a success,
There will also be, during the year,
five services similar to those of the
Christian, Association last year. » The
speakers which the League-has obtained
ser these special meetings are: Dr. Cof--
ie président of Union Theological Semi-
nary in New York, March; Pitney Van
Dusen,. February. 10; Dr. Schlater, of
Toronto, November 25; Dr. Kirsopp
Lake, of Harvard University,, October 28,
and one other on April : 28 to be decided
upon later in the year. “
The League has made every effort7in
ciloosing these speakers to obtain those
whose, popularity has been general in
tke cdllege in past years. In most cases
the speaker will remain. at the college
until Monday in. order-that he may talk
"n more secular subjects, or may be ques-
Sp by the students. The League has
so made arrangements for a_ special
shelf in the- New Book Room on which
the hooks these speakers will be kept
for anyone \who is interested.
Informality am Object
The remaining services will be lead by
CONTINUED ON PAGE 23
Faculty and Graduates
~ Pursue Summer Labors
BTyn Mawr may moulder during the
summer, but.its spirit goes-marching
on. Whérever learning flourishes, 1s
representatives gather dike buncheés— of
i’on filings in areas of magnetism, In
the sacred Round Room of the Record
Office .in London no less than seven
cf the graduates and Faculty of Bryn
Mawr. were pursuing the fruits of
erudition through the pipe-rolls” of
ancient manuscripts. Anyone who_has
seen the seating arrangements-in the
Round Room will realize that seven
people easily constitute a majority of
its devotees. Chief among the group
was._Dr,.Gray who was making a
study of royal finance in England. at
the end’ of the 100° year’s war. The
general subject of royal finanee“in the
fifteenth century also occupied the at-
tention of threé. graduate students in
the department of history: Miss Isa-
tel Abbot, Miss Margaret Harper and
Miss Julia Ward.- Miss Alice Beard-
wood, a graduate of Bryn Mawr, was
also there making a study of Italian
merchants in the fourteenth century.
Historical Researches
Miss Nellie Neilson and Miss Bertha
Putnam, two more Bryn Mawr grad-
uaztes who are now in the History De-
partment of Mt. Holyoke, complete the
list. Miss Neilson is head of the Mt.
Holyoke department, and a distinguish-
ed scholar, This summer she was en-
gaged on the very difficult work “Of
editing a year-book, a kind of semi-offi-
cial record of legal cases, with philoso-
phical comments attached, which used
to be made in England at the endeof
the year, as: ‘a: guide to future legal
decisions. Miss Neilson was. asked to
edit this year book (for the year. 1470-
71) by the Selden Society, a learned
English legal society. That she should
be chosen to do this wa§ a great com-|
pliment .to her scholastic ability. Miss
Putnam, who published a year ago a
book on the Justices of the Peace in
investigations in this field by research
into the records of session of Justices
of the Peace in the four’ecen:': century
a nh ey
Schaft
slightly better claim to recognition. When
PRICE, 10 CENTS
COLLEGE MUST- BRIDGE THE
.___. GAPS IN OUR EDUCATION
«We Silas
‘Tue Coniece* News won an All-
Mea teks: Honor. Rating in the compe-
summer, with a score of 811 out of a
possible 1000. ‘The following note ac-
companied the award:
page could be made to. [60k more at-
tractive. You lost first-place by your
poor make-up.” The News was given 90
cut of a possible 100° for its news writ-
ing; 183 out of 225 for {ts news content;
71 out of 90 for its editorial services, and,
toe the glory of thé Business Board, 49
out of 50 for its advertising... Although
we would like to have done better, -we
aie pleased in view -of' the heavy compe-
tition of larger and busier colegés to
have done as well as we did, and will en-
dcavor to the best of our ability to eor-
rect the faults indicated...
: &
International Student
, Conference a-Success
The tenth Congress of the C. I. E.
(the - Confederation -
Etudiants) met in Paris on the 10th ‘of
August, 1928. After a grand opening
in the great hall of the Sorbonne, the
Congress settled down for more than two
weeks at the Cite Universitaire, that mag-
nificent foundation for- foreign students
in Paris, which has risen -so suddenly
from the once: dreary vacant spaces be-
hind the. Pare Montsouris.
Unfortunately for the C, I. E., the two
most commented-on events of its ses-
sions were in the nature of misforttines.
“. . At the finals of the football
championship at St. Ouen, in-the middle
of a grandstand full of Fascist Italians
delirious’ with enthusiasm, a véry small
group of working men, obviously anti-
fascist Italians, protested, A. scuffle. en-
sued. The police broke in roughly. Theré
were wounded, especially among ° the
Italian. students who were in the ma-
jority.” ;
The Ttalians were diSsatisfied by the:
defeat of many of their motions in the
Congress itself.”
In: the-second-week,of the Congress-the-
chiefs of the delegation were summoned
home -by-an official telegram from Rome.
The unfortunate effect- of this first inci-
dent was heightened by the subsequent
departure of the German delegation.
There were two delegations from Ger-
many, one representing the Deutschstu-
denschaft, a. powerful conservative asso-
ciation among German students, and one
representing the Verband, equally devoted
to national interests, but much more dem-
ocratic and open-minded. Apparently
everyone..liked the Verband, but the
was. older and. larger, with a
the Congress, voted that the two pou.
ion for school ‘newspapers held this.
“Your editorial |-
Internationale des.
+ the new class of ’
-undérgraduates,
impor of Link ition:
Childhood and Maturity
Is Stressed.
A FRESHMAN’S FUTURE
Bryn Mawr College, diminished by
the passing of the class of ’28, but
more. than correspondingly increased
32, gathered in
Goodhart Hall last’ Tuesday morning:
for the first chapel of the year. Miss
Park’s opening address, the first of its
rkind to be delivered from that plat-
form, admirably expressed the feelings -
which the -occas¢pn aroused.
“It comes to me with a start of sur-
prise that, some—many of the students
who have-hurried here under the crisp
rustle of the treesthis morning will”
ncver know that opening days of the
college began anywhere else—will take
for granted that this building existed
in the ice age and that dinosaurs play- .
ed around its buttresses. But many
of us.though we cannot quite go back
to the first day of the first year, to
October of 1885, have nevertheless live-
ly. niemories of the annual calls to arms
from the platform. in Taylor Hall
when the college year was an infant
and prodigies of progress seemed pos-
sip and Tikely. ‘Once more into the
breach, dear friends, -once more |” For
the forty-third time summer . has
slipped by, the campus is silent, with-
cut the songsparrows and thrushes of
June, the vines begin to turn red, we
havegtorn up our daylight saving time-
tables: and the moon of the last eve-
rings looks chilly rather than tender.
A sterner. season is upon us. . ‘Once
more into the breach, dear friends, once
more! gaia st ae
Centripetal Force Is Strong
“One hundred-and twenty-seven new
forty new full time
graduate ‘students enter Bryn Mawr
officially today. é‘
“So much for Bryn Maiwr’s centri-
petal._tarce.
raany .of its Students as fellows and
scholars to Europe.
“The college -has this year -once
more had more students completing
all its entrance requirements than it
could admit into residence and the
number of girls presenting a first di- -
vision of examinations this year is half
again as large as the number in June,
1927. Whether this is due to our na-
tive charm, to May Day or to the
change in the French requirement. for
eutrance is debatable.
“What .will the entering-student go
CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
should be received on an equal footing, | | Freshmen and Sonhoreies
the delegates from the Schaft, cold siletit |
and as if on parade, rose and quitted the
hall.
These two incidents created
stir in the Paris ~ papers.
Enjoyed Despite . Disputes
The,* students - themselves, however,
were less pessimistic. Somehow, in the
general atmosphere of the Congress, these
scholars to Europe: © Friedricka de
incidents. were dwarfed to insignificance.
For two. weeks, in the. delightful grounds
of the Cite Universitaire with its green
squares surrounded by pleasant red
brick pavillions, students from 33 na-,
tions walked and talked and discussed
with each other. One would see an Eng-
lish boy taking a picture of four grin-
ning German_students from Heidelberg,
or a Roumanian girl: deep in discussion
with an American. —
quite a
\
The Congress, moreover, has practical! |
aims in addition to the spreading of in-
ternational good-will. It is trying in
every way to lessen. the difficulties of
studying in a foreign country.
The next international congress will be
eld in Budapest. The German ques-
tion, more complex than ever, will again
be discussed. nh
Perhaps on the banks of the Danube
some sort of definite international accord
can be reached, - If students cannot ac-
complish. it, who can?
Vie on Parade Night
Confident Freshmen massing around
the exciting band in the arch; Juniors
with red. and green torches; Sopho-
mores in the traditional circle around
the traditional fire on the lower tennis
court, the procession of Juniors and
Freshmen toward the tennis court to
the tune of.“We’re in the Arrhy Now”
with the words
“Hurrah for the Freshman blue,
There’s nothing they carinot .do.
They’re young, but they're wise,
So don’t try to advise
The class of thirty- two;’
thus began Parade night on the * open-
ing night-“of college. After- an ex-.
haustiwe amount of. hilarious snake
dancing around the fire, the college re-
turned to“the arch and sang-as usual
the Parade: night songs“of preceding
years. At the appropriate time, the
Sophomores triumphantly broke into
their parody, =
“We went to the animal fair,
There were only Freshman there,
They thought they were sly,
But they went far awry,
Poor class: of thirty-two.”
Some of the Sophomores seemed to
find a curious resemblance between
“We're in the Army Now” and “We
Went to thé Animal Fair.”
Its centrifugal has. sent-.-
FER rc si ON pe EP
woh
t ©
mee
Lag
Pige 2 .
The! e News
\ (Founded in 1914)
eat the
Eins Wie hota oe
- moral obligation.
~_tion,
ing milk;
Editor-in-Chief
_ ELIZABETH H. LINN, ‘29
: Copy Editor
PARE B. GR R. GRACE, . °29
Editors
‘ E. RICE, '30
*0. HOWE, '30 *
Contributing: Editor \
J. L. FESLER, '28
Assistant Editors
V. HOBART, '31 V. SHRYOCK, '31
~" §, LEWIS, °31
Business Manager
J. BARTH, '29
Subscription Manager
H. J. GARRETT, ‘29
Assistants
D. CROSS, '30_ E. BAXTER, ‘30
M.E. PROTHINGHAM, ’°31 D. ASHER, ’31
SUBSGRIBAIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY ‘TIME
as second-class matter. at the
Wayne, Pa., Post Office.
OVERBURDENED .
CONSCIENCES
‘A freshman, questioned ~@s- to.
the most important Tule of selfs |
government, says it is that one
which vests power, in the execu-
tive board, “thus” relieving the
students as a whole from an un-)
due burden of responsibility.” |
Obviously she misunderstands the
idea of self-government; and yet
there might be something’‘to what
she" says. Our sense of responsi=
bility and ouf sense of honor
should not be restrained too far;
else they will be wéakened in all
their relationships. [t is not too
much to, put us on’ our honor to
keep the rules of self-government
e
K. BALOR, ©
-
- a mat -
eo.
ONE ASPECT OF. ~
In-many celleges time, energy,
land even ‘some money, is spent
for the purpose of marking: off a
part of. the undergraduate © body
as freshmen. ‘ At the University
of Nebraska, for example,* the
entering Class is: made to wear
green caps in order to“ ‘maintain
a class unity. and develop a true.
| NeBraska spirit.” At Bryn Mawr,
on the other.hand, there is less
and less class unity, fewer ahd,
fewer class distinctions each year.
Freshman Week has done much
to accomplish this. -Before it was
established;-when~all-classes—re-|
turned to college ‘simultaneously,
the freshmen hung together in
self defense menaced by hordes
of upperclassmen, They had to
hold on to soniething. Now, for
almost a week they have the col-
lege quite to themselves, and
there is no necessity for. their
holding’ together. _ And by the
ume the upperclassmen have re-
turned they are entirely at home,
any possible.,defensive attitude
gone. Aside from an increased
efficiency, Freshman Week
accomplished something funda-
mental..for college life in helping |
to abolish class diatincHons,
“WHERE ORIGIN - i
IS KNOWN, :
CREDIT IS‘ GIVEN”,
The. new. organization which |
nas replaced the Bryn Mawr:
Christian Asssociation of preced- |
ing years has found itself sud-
denly confronted with .a novel |
problem; the Music Room in
Goodhart Hall is not- large etiough
to hold. the Sunday | evening
and report when we break them; |
but why must be.put.on our honor)
to attend gym three times a week, :
as is now “suggested. Bryn. Mawr
_as a primarily intellectual institu- |
~, tion. has always avoided putting |
an undue stress on athletics; and
yet now we are expected to re-
gard our daily dozey as’ a high
Why suppos-
edly mature Seniors and juniors
cannot keep themselves in good |
health by walking and general ex-
ercise has, not yet been demon-
strated. But that is another ques:
Lf it is-considered-necessary
for our health to part®ipate in
organized sport, as it consid-
ered necessary for our intellectual
training to study psychology, let
—gym_be put on the same_
as a required course, with cuts
and attendance and the other par-
aphernalia of such courses’ But
for our_souls sake, let us keep ex-
ercise off the mortal plane. If pro-
hibition’ weakens respect for the
is
law in general, athletics’ on = an\
honor basis will undermine the
whole honor system, There isla
limit to the capacity for
conscience,
a guilty
GONE—THE
OLD ORDER
Jn the old-days those who came,
to morning chapel were few and
oj a finer ‘stuff than ordinary
mortals. bravely, —in the gloom
e res e ¥ Pad °
of Taylor—this small minority |
sing the morning hymn—feebly
accompanied by a-. volumeless
jiano—and then: filed) out some
ten’ nfinutes later to tell their
fellows what they had learned. of
the Campus World or of the Great
World outside. .
All this is changed. Now, in
the beginning, they swarm in
numbers that.
Music Room.
colored beetles they crawl down
the hill towards Goodhart. First
the lean, who stop for their morn-
oevercrowd the
reduce - them,—sooner or later
then the ten o’clock-scholars who
are certain to be there, since all
the sleep has been rubbed out of
‘their eyes ‘by ten. minutes
eleven; and Jastly the music lov-
ers, who feed their souls on organ |
preludes.
It’s a big tinprovement =and
perhaps if the bait in the trap con-
“tinues to be as alluring through-
out the year, chapel may come to
be an indispensable source ‘of the
“spiritual nutriment” which ought
to balance our graham crackers |
same milk. .
footing
shave
Like so many vari- |
then the fat, plunging |
by with strides that are bound to!
of |
chapel congregations. °,
An innovation in college rou-
tine is always the source of some
interest.
ticated will try
Its future success depends upon
Ixven the most sophis- |
T ‘Theaters:
ret,
has |
|
THE.COLLEGENEWS ere
ae
‘ In Philadelphia
” ~ mo
branches are invited to sign up. this
week, The work at the. Haverford
= ene ¥
best informed on’ the business” ‘of the —
State of New York.” :
A sden lateideeincks we Roland Pert-
wee and Harold Dearden. “A melodrama
of the upperworld.” Comple of pas-
sioft, but . well. acted. a
» Adelphi—The Squealer and a melo»
aed
drama of the underworld. 90... 4
row)
Shubert—Animal Crackers.
Otro
comedy antl catching musicy the Four’
Marx -Brothers are really funny.:
Garrick—Mr. Moneypenny, by Chan-
ning Pollock. A triumph of staging.
New Forrest—Heéllo Yourself with
Waring’s Pennsylvanians. The. adver-
tiscments call it a Rah! Rah! Musical
Comedy of Youth.
Broad—=AHarm Dinehart-in-Girl Frouble,
C&ming Next Week:
Shubert—Gertrude Lawrence in Treas:
ure Girl:
*Walnut—Grand Street Follies. .
Broad—Frank Craven .in The Nine;
teenth Hole.
Movies:
* Karlton—Emil Jannings*in The Pat-
in the movies. : er
Erlanger—Submarines.
Stanton—Buster Keaton in The Cam-
evaman. For those who like to laugh till
it hurts.
. Stanley—King of Kings.
Aldine—Al Jolson in The Singing F sal
Musical Service
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
various members of the faculty and-.stu~
hdent body, and will be informal as the
vesper services of last year, On the 14th
of this ‘month a service of this kind wil
be helt in which Dr. Hart will talk on
lene’ of the subjects ‘especially requested
in last year’s questionnaire.
system of -Sunday evening meet-
Lig’s. s
|
a new thing once. |
its ability to offer something
which is different from anything |
which has’ been offered .to us|
before.
The initial service of the Bryn.
Mawr League has certainly been,
“weighed in the balance.”
~. Few |
who attended the meeting Sunday |
“found wanting.” It was different.
which is what we wanted it tobe;
and yet-it maintainéd a- certain
amount: of the spirit in which a
Sunday everting service should be
“evening Wold assert that it WAS |
Plea for. Social Workers
|
He is one of the few real actors |°
| Gottes.” “
‘and Bryn Mawr Community Centers, |-
‘of which Gertrude Bancreft has:
charge, includes courses ‘in “ Americani-
zation ‘and, library work, at. the Bryn
Mawr Center; handcraft classes, gym,
kindergarten classes, and heacl clubs
“I WHlaverfort i ree
‘Mary Grace has charge of ‘Blind
oe
School work, M. L. Williams is direct-|.
ing maids’ tutoring, and F. Lee the
maids’ Sunday school. "
‘~. The Orchestra
The Philadelphia Orchestra will give
its second concert of. the season on
Friday and Saturday of this week. The
program will be as follows:
°
Mozart—Overture, “Le Nozze di|
Figaro.”
Brahms—Symphony i, Sino
major,
I. Allegro con bfio.
II. Andante con moto.
III. Poco allegretto.
IV. Allegro. -. ge
Knipper—"Marchen eines
Gyps-.
I. Introduction.
Plaster God.
II. Dance.
IlI. Wail of. the People —, the
Dance of the Gods:
IV. The People’s Curse.
V. Overthrow of the God.
VI. Epilogue.
mom Wagoner
Music.from. ‘
Overture. and: Venusberg |
“‘Tannhauser.”. aca %
fx
fe Take a Look at Al
a wee
FROM
CONTINUED PAGE 1
i relief..as though the farmers-Of this
t | country, a class to w
The Leagué\asks that the students and | laneed
faculty offer any, suggestions which they |... Pare
think would be worth trying out in this
i new
| stand with
are the:kind of
their Hats in their hands |
begging alms in the shape, of Govern-|
| ment doles,
| Three Republicans of Importance on
Alfred E. Smith
Hons Elihu Root in 1915:
Legend of a}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
men who|
Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler iioae.
is! Since manhood a. constant
and eager public servant in posts of
steadily growing importance and
authority, alert, effective, .public-spir-
ited and courageous; constantly speak:
jing the true Voice of the people, . .. 4
Won. Charles Evans ‘Hughes i in 1928:
“He long since became a member
of high distinction of Whe fine aristoc-
racy of public service—the American,
peerage. We have watched him, some
of us carefully, all with fascination:
The title that he holds is the proudest
title that any American can hold be-
cause ‘it is a title to the.esteem and
affection of ‘his’ ‘fellow- Ccitizens—Gov-.
ernor Smith.”° * ee
% ‘
Calendar
Friday, October 12—Lantern Night
in the c]oisters.
Sunday, Octofer 14—Bryn. Mawr
League Service. Dr. Hart will speak.
Wednesday, October 17, 8.00 P. M.
—Goodhart Hall. Dr. . Edward
Strecker on “The History and*Develop-
ment of Ortho-psychiatry.
Friday, October 19—Y.. C. James
Yen will speak.at‘'8.15 in \Goodhart
Hall.
Gifts
of Distinction
Diamond and precious stone
jewelry. Watches and clocks,
. Imported and domestic nov-
- elties.. China and glassware.
Fime stationery.
Class rings and pins. Trophies.
A WIDE SELECTION
FAURLY PRICED
fe E. CALDWELL & Co.
Chestnut Street at Juniper
All upper classmen: who are. inter- “Of all men in the Constitutional
eine : Pras lag ; ha ye | * PHILADELPHIA ‘
ested, in social work in any of its Convention, Alfréd E. gaaith is) the ;
ao
conducted, “We could
too many musical . services
throughout the year, Musicales,
in general, have been all too-few
in past vears, ; :
\Ve should like to congratulate
the League on its attempt to pre-
sent a chapel service which will
appeal «to the college as a- whole,
and to suggest an immediate en-
largement of the .Music Room
which will withstand. its” popu
larity.
A Challenge to ite ‘Art Club
The apparent suecess of th€ woodcuts
Scarcely |.
printed for the first. time in ‘the spring |
issues Ot the Lantern has
emboldened |
Lits editors to adopt them permanently |
Py . . |
as a means of decoration, and-we hope |
enlivenment in
of
of
however,
its pages. Aware,
its Own, inadequacy in
managing that part of the magazine.
the Board. has decided to
|
|
announce |
|
|
|
tr\-outs for the Lost Art Editor.
Linoleum cuts and pen and_ ink |
sketches, either for cover designs- or |
tor page decorations are espécially de-
sirable. For further informdtion speak |
to Barbara Channing or Hilda Wright. |
first week
of the
the
name
‘The contest
in
new
wil close
November,: and_ the
Art
the November issue of the Lantern.
Freshmen, in accordance with
college rules, may ‘not compete » thi:
sc mester.
Miss King Returns
Miss. King has returned to
campus and the Department of Art
after a year’s absence, bringing —with
her the fruits of her labor in the shape
of a book on the Marejar Architecture
of Spain, published by
Green. This book is one of a series
of monographs on literature and art
by ~members~—of> the Bryn ~~ Mawr
Faculty, provided for by a gift from
the Hispanic Society.
the |
. . ‘4 4 .
Editor will be annouticed in|
the
|
|
Lomgmans |
rae |
F:
el
‘
F)
ST aR is oo OREM FEISS Hm
Se pce
4
Ad
x , KE
Called Prestige becaus€ this new pack-
age’ of chocolates arrives sharing the -
laurels and fame of~such successful
favorites as the Sampler, Pleasure Island,
Salmagundi, Bonnybrook—all made and
guaranteed by Whitman’s.
We could not buy any better mate-
rials for making the Prestige assortment.
9
WHITMAN’S FAMOUS
er & Rey nolds, Bryn Mawr, Pa,
H.'B. Wallace, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
N, J. Cardamone, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Kindt’s Pharmacy, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr College Book Store, Bryn
Mawr, Pa.
A
Those who critically examine it will
understand that the slightly higher
retail price ($2 a pound) is due to the
many new pieces in costly combinations
and addéd hand labor, with the artistic
and substantial nature of the metal
‘chest. A notable gift, in one-pound
or two-pound chests.
PRESTIGE
CHOCOLATES
CANDIES ARE SOLD BY
Bryn Mawr €ollege Inn, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
College Tea Room, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Bryn Mawr Confectionery, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Moores Pharmacy, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
- My ers Drug Company, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Frank W. Prickett, Rosemont, Pa.
=
ag
a
”
ae ; es ‘s i THE COLLEGE NEWS. “ oe Page 3
: ee = ~- = + SS
aah ARR fe College Must Bridge Gaps a ; .
The Pillar > CONTINUBD FROM PAGE 1 : : ANSE
Me a out into in June, 1982? Can one ities | :
‘ot S alt a roughly Correct picture of her in , .
por ee “ or ten. years: based on what the |" : :
Es e fe eon ree knows of.oldes; 9 sters? ..The-+. 2 a eee Caceres ; *
nse 5, 56 hates are that sKe® will not ‘return
> Can the Pillar of Salt remain erect permanently to her old habitat, There a
‘ when all the old* landmarks are fall-| are more than even chances that she SS
ing? It scarcely seems possible. With will marry and bring up a small family
milk lunch in bottles in Rockefeller ‘cf children. There are ‘even ‘chances,
through. straws, with Chapel in’ *Good-| and the figure is rising, ‘that whether ,
hart in‘the mtiddle 6f the morning, with]. she marriés or not shé will have an in- SHUN
Taylor transformed into a one-way! dependent profession—she will go into . i
street (no - left turns), and with the teaching, medicine, business or some : Hii Se i
C. A. reception with its receiving line] Jess. easily. classified: job, act#“Write or ‘ Hit ol FA i
. and its speeches, transformed into an! farm, At any rate she will be in a ‘ = i}
—S.--Ar-teception- -with neither,it-seéfhs position to-make“out~a> tax return on ff 3
as if the last bulwark of tradition must| earned income and be independent of ‘
fall. True enough, -we are only a year] financial obligation and hence. of those - ane
“or two old; but in these days of change) other more subtle obligations which Z S
an institution. appears to have but the hang on taking one’s money from ; =
“life of a butterfly. Is it, perhaps, time} parents. or husbands or even inherited Bos : —
_ to crumble the old Pillar, toss a pinch bank accounts. She will vote, ve liable
of salt over our left shoulder for good} tg jury duty, take part in some way in :
luck, and turn to newer ventures? the direction of the. city or village
- where she lives, its schools and courts,
i In the course of our travels we came! its theaters and museums. She may
upon a plane tree in Kew Bardens, climb the ladder in national or inter- is bei
bearing this . inscription: English] pational complications. In. short, she —_—_——_—= iN i i
d : lane. Has rcecbeid been found. STOW! jeaves a carefully planned childhood, = ——— z :
ing wild. A sababrti shade tree in Lon-} shout which other people -have been ;
don squares.” The next time we saw constantly” con¢erned, and turps up ; ti -
~a plane. tree in. a quiet corner of Lon- anywhere to meet anything—health,
don we thought we could distinguish sickness, riches, poverty, excitement, *
a song in its plaintive rustlings and and tedium, responsibility, life, death.
mene a old ane “Bryn Mawr—any. other- liberal col-
a ee aay 4 ; le ge—is a deliberately planned, four
rears’ bridge between these two un- 2
Fee never een foun-growing "sre betwee ens a new e ie ocean tr avel- Os
mics sats - wil " Tike ives.” Tt is “well to remind our- |. = ra a a .
Vinge tame da tare selves, however familiar. the idea may
And I’m full of shame te, that the period of training «give Miraculously quiet and vibration- siaalblic found in the finest hotels.
’ For I’m only a gutter-fed child, .°- by the liberal college is no end in it 1 lias cad wale Wak sone oo : ;
Hf I were a pine in a northern wood ni shire it may mt vata a : bad S. Calif Complete electrification makes the:
. : e. : end to .th irl whose attention has 1 was HitOor- . . a : °
DOr a yet Jn. tie desert vast, been dir eeoe its’ ent idee gate f : si a —— i : a California an engineering marvel
Or a rugged oak sp ale sine I oho is nia, largest’ American-built pas- - pcan ae
= AT sided pth aencka so long by her family’ or her school hi h 4 and.a commercial- success; it 1s
; istress, or ’ pare nger shi oO ene a new er 4 : . oe
And bent by a windy blast, agian 6 - sh opie ae senger Ss ra Co ip a booked far in advarice, a sister
With ¢ wilt wild heart: dad: a-Howley COMM OTIeDy As the Anal
, pa 4 | ga Je ee { > kil Tr Qe , The ee . 4 “ ° . ra a t {
Towing ny leafy mane, ">" en Wate the Mega, The Electricity drives the Californiaso ° cnother is under construction,
Then I would be proud, | 3 , Be, 8 . - ; ‘
“But my head.is baw: : to live, must always maintain its con- efficiently that the fuel bill for the Cn sea or land, in every walk o
For-I'm.only.a plain old plane. nection with either side, what comes initial coast-to-coast trip was life, electricity is im the van
before it and what comes’ after -it. It |
a ee - om . | cane AReT OR itell ta-anctinbridestd even less than the Canal tolls. of progress. Undreamed of
‘But I’m good:as golc : : ‘ Ber : : Aes
For I don’t know howsto be bad, | ke way and return to the neargr | Electricity mans the winches, yesterday, the electric ship 1S
And I'm only good Bead * ait = icwaae diet bakes the bread, makes the ‘ asymbol of the electrical in-
For kindlin’. wood ; and. gnaivete. My heure has recome | : : : ° st
‘Now wouldn’t that make you sad? | dangerous and J will put.it that for | ice, polishes the silver. And dustry’s part in modern civil
ae sins Fidtereuts Ge PR nta}-1: Americais, the years. between gix- | electri city cools the ihe pasion is found a sia ization and a prophecy ~~
i ssage | ~ ai é ttors that drive California, bed *,
«Mid the paving stones ; a teen and twent:-two form a passage | cabins and provides Bi gait iy malitale af cece of even greater ac- "
“:, And I weeps. in\the drippin” rain, | petween dependence and independeitce, | = _ “uppitunces whivir-sontribute-to-the - ; peeves San
Vm: a slum-born child : immaturity and maturity. The | zl passengers With-="the een "a stan atlantis ’ complishment.
And. I’ve-never been wild Fraajority of them make this passag€ | . si d nigh manufacturing quality.“ a
And ‘they cal] me\ a Bloomrsbury| @@y Way thy can—pitch-torked “usu= . ‘ 627DH
plane. }ally into the ‘Mey situation, tlre in- |
swe ‘ | finitely coniplicate@life of the sas
—_We-are offering tree ‘of charge aq iiethcontuey Lt. ~ a only fora.) = [ae
ae can n ot 61 “Thinner to any one whot Tyrirute tracton— Americans soe! — —— — el — : + - i c i J Te se ue? ep Se 7 aa atin:
will discover a cure for the fierce paint, tenth’ of one per cent, if | am tot| GSNERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, SCHENECTADY .,NEW FP8 K
ae ( : ma . fl
fever now. raging. on the campus, The | Wwistaken, to spend these years ia aan co eee eo a cen perm ners gm cones ea
_disease is_very winiléat antl extremely | ©rgatized preparation for it in -col- LUNCHEON, TEA, DINNER
BRYN MAWR
|
catching, likely to be accompanied, by | Ices anid universities, good, bad and | Open Sundays MARINELLO SALON
violent ‘paints in the. head, hands, and | tadifferent, all ener the countey.,: | “ tof your family | ‘CHATTER. ON TEA HOUSE a: ; geo
feet, _ Ingits’ earlier stages it is harmy| that one-tenth of one per cent. you are | v te a gift of | 841 , Lancaster Avenue =
less and even beneficial. It crops,out}\@gain a microscopic part. Tt is about ‘BOWS.-ARROWS ee : 835 Morton Road Second Ffoor acetic :
as a mild desire to touch up a chair | Your bridge that. we are concerned to- | i ccesworlen relephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 : .Scientifie Treatment of Skin and Scalp
or two, or decorate a lampshade. But | da for a. splendi lid quality, and THE CHATTERBOX ' California Paper Curl Muscle Strapping
it should be nipped in the-bud,- Once | A Complex Civilization Wirike tov trae Getalon NO. 22. A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM Electrolysis rerenen Waving
fairly started in its course tt is almost | “Wihat can a moderate-mindcd wom Box 2%, Queenb Villese, Ni. x. ! Evening dinner. served from Teléphone, Bryn Mawr 809
incurable.’ The patient will be found | “4 sav of the: civilization in whiek«vou eee] 6 until 7.30 Open’ Tues. and. Fri. Evenings:
“+ raving and half naked, dipping gnetys | are to live? ‘More at least than | aves FRANCIS B. HALL.
T_A-I-L-O-8
RIDING HABITS %: BREECHES
_REMODELING. ::: PRESSING
‘ - DRY CLEANING | |
840 Lancaster Avenue |
|
|
_OPEN AT TWELVE NOON
Other Evenings_by. Anpaintment..
~ Haverford Pharmacy
HENRY W. PRESS, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS
Phone: Ardmore 122
PROMPT..DELIVERY SERVICE
treme}
Ag ( rk |
landscape |
—thite-nresight in-a-flamboyant-shade*ot} ustally~said.
pea green, while alcoholic fumes pene- | 4
. trate the room and: vicinity. Once the | 3
, furniture is exhausted, desks, bureaus, | »f
wastebaskets, bookeases and notebooks | Cc.
looking as though they -had fallen into |
‘Phe--dtreet--passage
New
irror to thé elegance of the
; Phone, Bryn. ‘Mawr 138:
M. Meth Pastry Shop
_ 1008 Laneaster Ave.
E CREAM and FANCY CAKES
French and Danish Pastry
- Hobokenwharf and. tie
middle.France and its rich yet-sober
the“direct return from that |
that subordina- |-
vilization,= } Br M: 824
pies ; one Bryn Ywr 7
‘arity of atmosphere, ie :
the pea soup, _ the patient’s attention] ::o1 of no‘sy detail 10. quiet harmony, | y Cc Scfelu Orde E WE DELIVER ‘ : Haverford, Pa.
= turns _to more subtle effects. At this} hat lucid rapid speech’ to the smoke | ou an arely e y e See ——=3
'.stage, shoes, dresses, hats, and walls! of Hoboken and:the yells of the news- ' Telephone
a lik , > Bar} : > of ey | pa PCa NEE Boer Wha ¢ . Me
are likely to be thé victims of every | boy is. provocative. - “What that man} por: Fruit from Hallowell is always of -
sort of artistic scheme.- Sometimes -at} needs, what that man needs,’ said, old! the finest selected «yuality—or you auld Saat
i i : i poe eee > others, leav standing 4:
this point the fires are spent. But rm: Jeeche a fellow par-|/40. 43, many others, leave a § :
¢ : ih By cape Reecher of 4 felon i “a order for a weekly selection of our Fruit Pe,
worse may follow. It has occasionally | son in Connecticut, ‘is a dose of bum-} gor delivery to” your home or to those} . LA
ae . ‘ bes : . ol ae 3 pe Bs
ow happened in particularly severe cases! |j!ebees.’ And a dose of bumble. bees | away at school. ‘ Ae \e
. : ee ee : \ f, \
that the unfortunate sufferer is found) js perhaps what an American can bes* | Free Delivery to Your Home o \\ a ae All set
by friends trying out the effect of pea- | bring -back from the “most~ tranquil = Anywhere in City or Suburbs bYy/ A
green eyebrows -or finger-nails, or |
|
at- | countryside in Europe. |
tempting to paint permanent-’ shoes. -and | “Stung by this summer’ s acquisition |
|
stockings on her hands and. feet in} and trying to apply mv uneasy cogit a- A O W : Naa < 1
“order to avoid the carking necessity | tions to my own job I have gone back | Sate \ |
TELEPHONE PENNYPACKER 1761 |
to go!
Lookifig right is the
ard feeli
of tying shoélacegsand mending runs. | to’a paper of Dr. Abraham Flexner s| Broad Street below Chestnut ey Se pinay (rte a
id se eS
Vanderbilt
LOT’S WIFE presented at
~...cfa....cfie...cfie....2ie. POR te Pe ae ae ee eee ee ee ee ee ee ee Oe ee ee ahe,..athe,.
University | - PHILADELPHIA a —smart, swagger and
absolutely waterproof.
—you can always 4
through with your plans no matter how bad
a break you get on the weather. Take a
look at the smart Alligator models, Alligator
Balloon Cloth Coats—Alligator College
Slickers—Alligator Jap Silk Coats. Ailiga-
tors are sold only at the best stores and retail
from $7,50-to $25.00. See the new Alligator
ate stn.ttn..tthr...ttllr..tellin...eltin...tallin,..allen,
_ College Inn and Tea Room _ '
Caters especially for you, 5 Cee 30 week days and a Cmpan ee
“Sundays. , : 2 oy : ‘
| Saturday open at 12 for early luncheon. - : a ALL GATOR |
pian ee si oe A eas See "
lmao
yt
cares Seer ~ - Freshman Statistics «| California :............ ee weer. Se : THE. --".- .
_.__since- I read- it three years ago. It is vaguely heat, climbed the last of the} - it .— Colorado... i OT 8-|- BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. =:
~~ €alled “Purpose in the American Col-| yet urftlimbed Aiguilles of Mont Blanc. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 LAURER sb es ous ya oh 8 -” CAMbAL. ‘eatininodao °
lege” Dr. Flexner’s thesis is briefly| But their bridge from immaturity of Weviiitina 8 6.3. Kentucky: .......: wor cee | ‘8 er
this: The purpose, the raison d’etre of| maturity, from the freshman. of one} 7...” . Cg ee og : Maine 1 8° :
' : : ; Daag ip ‘ J iy liek eee oe : ANN ey 6a os b0 B68 40 ae j
the Euvropeah lycee or gyinnasium he] October to the graduate of four years ea : . ya Mining ciccccceo. ss , - ron a yore ns ag ve
~ whoo rans~may- reads. <<" _otitutions: °°" =" shad anevintelts “~~ Wgunder- | eye Sy sad dale imino: SO 8 : ows Interest on Deposits
select,’ equip and train capable ‘ininds,| pinning. If this is pomposity, make],;;....: Se nr g +l: ' =s
so 3 eae i ane F POIMMOUNT vg chs ashes os 3 2.4 » s : Cosmeticians Hairdressers
utilizing in the ‘process the accump-| the most of it. It is at least the truth. Saath farniing 3 2.4 —— Marinello Permanent Waving
lated and accumulating intellectual and| '“This year a step indicated by the] Delaware ............. 2 1:6 Talat. «.... sa bapniies 127 ‘ Ravens: Soiney
oo oF er race,. In £ Curriculum gommitteé of the Under-| District of Columbia ... 2 1.6. | In-all, 22°States, and the District of PEACOCK
word, the selection and traiming ‘OT| graduate Association as long ago as : : Columbia ure represented.“ ; °
brains. The purpose of the American] 1933, the 1 ttesductt LOWS Feces ieee vies Fes 64 1.6 P es BEAUTE SALON ‘
.1923, the general introduction of the] Rhode Island .........° 2 4-86 (Due to lack of e, further statistics ille Th Bldc.. B
collége on the other hand can not be] honors. courses, illustrates what I have] yisconsin nee cé.. llemenak he’ actnend tae weal: Seville a pc ryn Mawr
readily defined by any one. Wha®| been saying. The arrangement of the RRO COTS: - ars yet ; . pean ;
would the observers from ,Mars gather} new ‘classrooms in Taylor is again a = == = ——— ey
from studying-the kind of students ad-| hope, a summons for the give and take ’ poms ’
-. miitted all over:the.country; the courses|of argument, the’ battle between in-| * as ee
demanded-or suggested for a degree in} siructor and, instructed which began ‘ ay t AN ; S ye
‘a college catalogue, the scattered in-| farther back than Socrates. The gifts} < da ‘ a a peare
terests and activities of the students, | making ‘possible ‘the’ brilliant addition}- -£ ; t
- the emphasis of the presidents in their! to the college year of the’ visiting lec- Sa \ S a ou ca-Co a 5
__commencement and @pening speeches turers on the Mary Flexner Founda- ‘ Ie
cn good character and good citizen-| tion and the> Anna Héward Shaw : ; ¢ d
ship. A purpose may run through gll| Memorial, the annual gift coming first ' SEG #t > ae
the ages but it does not run through} this summer .of $500 to the library in i” a | Delicious and Refreshing, t
these. facts. - : ~ . {memory of Marion Reilly by one of Af : = .
“Obviously if Dr, Flexner'is right we | ber friends, the stirring toward an en-|
need all our pleasant naive optimism to| cowment gift in the breasts of far away .
believe we shall get. anywhere in four alumnae—outward signs,.alHl of them
c: in’ forty. years. ‘cf the inward purpose of Bryn Mawr. ~ ecu
“Where lies the iand to which the| , To the new facilty-student body, oe ft tes ners fe ;
ship must go?’ a fresh permutation of the figures in the reverberate At S;
“Far far away’ is all the sailors know, the ~pageant always” moving through as and make the babbling -
‘Where lies the land slie hastens from?’ | the college, I once more intrust the Ss gossip of the air cry out”:
- “Away, : Palladium—a repository far safer than : "
Far, far behind” is all that thy ecan| 4"y official sanctuary.” ¢ The Bard of Avon are much
p23 ne good advice. And this plore cer-
say.” : ; : tainly has been followed b
“(A curious nautical situation. this ~ Tas Sort of Hygiene é Ree Fe y
paints in Clough’s poem, but a En A MEOH EE te SPP sore 8 Aerie =
good illustration: for-me). : of lectures on subjects relating ‘to ’ The drink you read about, And ae, f
Aim to Train Intelligence Ortho-psychiatry and mental hygiene the little red sign brightens the : .
“Tf we can not define the purpose of | which ‘will be held on Wednesday eve-} streets and corners~ of ‘cities and-~- Ear
the American college in general, can| nings in Goodhart ‘Hall at 8 P..'M.,’ ae - towns everywhere, ats mame more
we—and it is our main concern in this| the exact dates and speakers to be < oe familiar than the names of the
whole confusion, define Bryn. Mawr’s’| announced later. The’ first lecture’ is $-CN Gen tm : pc ny ha org streets themselves.
I believe we can—thanks pre-eminent-| Scheduled for ,\October 17, when Dr. * , “ re i ; “The Coca-Cola Company, Atlaata, Ga.. : ‘s
‘ Ly to Miss Thomas, to faculties of these| Edward Strecker, professor of 4 a . rn aes % ‘ . 4
forty-four years, and among them to| psychiatry and mental hygiene at Jef- 8 million a day wit BAD TO. BE; GOOD T0: C2871. WeRSER Ft 6
certain individuals we all know, to stu-| ferson Medical College. and medical . _e :
idk aad. slemiacfor they have | director : of the Pennsylvania Hospital ene tar acme aac e+ lame,
worked with extraordinary unity. Be-| for nervous and mental diseases, will EY BANKS:-Bip z Ready with Everything Smart to’ Wear
hind occasional false starts, conces-| Speak on the History: and Develop- all " elers Silversmiths Sta. Dir = G F Coats for t G '
sions here and accidents. there, momen- | ment of Ortho-psychiatry. The meet- B Je 7 ner 2 orgeous Fur Coats for the Game. ;
try bowings of the knee in the house indy will be opp to ve public,. and Mideast = Stunning Shoes—from the active sportswear types to
ci Rammon, behind blurrings and con-| all students of the college are urged ‘ : ‘ 2 :
fusions and mistakes, Bryn Mawr has|to come. The-¢omplete series will THE OFFICIAL CLASS RING shimmering satins for function wear.
contimed to equip itself to train in-|Probably consist of five .or six lec- and College Seal Coats and Dresses for every need.
telligence, and to believe it was not] tures. = OTA ; °
_ cape a agate ep < a : THE GIFT SUGGESTION BOX ,— Millinery, Sheer Hosiery and Gloves.
«enartered for anything else. Its stu- | a ———— 4 Market "
dents are selected, its faculty are called, lf COTTAGE TEA ROOM. |[|| « Wustrates and prices Wedding, [A a hth ‘LIT BROTHERS oe
its buildings are built for that purpose. “Montgomery Avenue f Birthday and Graduation Gifts = 18 Seventh =
Sree, Manes. ate~added to us. Bryn . LUNCHEON mailed. upon request a Philadelphia ic abel _-
a graduates have, Pore pore eaercnta oS : Fn
the civic virtues any president might is
pray for in the midst of her ‘anxiety Special Parties by Arrangement. oe 4 |
for the standard of General English. Guest Rooms’ 54 STREET.
‘hey have not lacked spiritual power, | _ Phone, Bryn Mawr 862 LINDER &
They have been fairly happy and have|~— KK .
n_their time added to the mirth of| PHILIP HARRISON. _|. PROPERT..|_—
nations. They have been athletic and 828-830 Lancaster Avenue : OPTICIANS.
- Bryn Mawr ‘A Nh
—=WILLIAM T. McINTYRE Walk Over Shoe Shop. ani and
a ee Agent for estnut
ae Streets — |
Hothouse” Fruits 4 Fancy Groceries GOLD STRIPE SILK STOCKINGS Philadelphia
821 Lancaster Avenue PPP ESLER ECE TED EEE SEES —— :
BRYN MAWR :
: : : The Peter Pan =}! John J. McDevitt
: Phone, Bryn Mawr 675 .
JEANNETT’ S Tea Room be Programs
: 1|f . 833 Lancaster A pgs Tickets
ckets —
} BRYN MAWR ancaster Avenue P ri nt in g Leiter Heads
; 5. sooklets, ete.
j FLOWER SHOP Announcements
‘4 Pe eee ae Locksmithing Weinih Cilin eink ieee 1145 Lancaster Ave., Rosemont, Pa...
Nn .
¢.-j| WILLIAM L. HAYDEN: ED. CHALFIN
( Plants Fresh Daily }| BUILDERS and HOUSEKEEPERS Seville Theatre Arcade
/ ee ] Hardware DIAMONDS : WATCHES : JEWELRY
{ Corsage and Floral Baskets ) 838 Lancaster Avenue hoa 9 = ee noe ae
‘2a BRYN MAWR, PA. ens : enclis :; and Op ca epairing
d Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty : : Fancy Watch Crystals Cut, $1.75
Potted Plants } =
Personal Supervision. on All: Orders ! | WES s
ase : : > Gp ; au
§ Phone: Bryn scaueee 570 ] f Recommended }
823 Lancaster Avenue / < by the English Departme Y -
( “3 ) iN 7 _ partment of S A NEW sports fur coat from Gunther’s—
SSS y Bryn Maur College a with you inside it—will bring the
S ° N . NG . .
Sell Christmas Cards N : 9 \ peeves yaa , huddle. quicker than the
: ' ‘Here is your chance to om big * R' * L coach's signal: .
time. rience S ‘ . < = : re :
necessary selling newest thing in. per- 3 Ss It’s good strategy to pick one out now—" =o
tor- the aret time Assortment of ‘2 LLEGIATE. < for all Gunther hag are on ‘
t desig r stee e - . . D> . . . ‘
different, designed cards ail steel die ‘Phe Best Abridged Dictionary ae Z it would be tragic if someone else chose
name plate engraved to match. Box : the very one designed for you!
of 20 cards eeunits ior $2.26, at which NY WEBSTER’S NEW INTERN ONAI 4
75e is yours. asy to se rom our = :
beautiful felling | display furnished (| A Short Cut to Accurate Information. Here is a companion N Sports Furs from $375 upwards
free. rite ay. € for your hours of reading and study that will prove its real Z
Personal Stationery Corp. Y, value every time you consult it. A wealth of ready information Q ee Se “EEE ils ss
of N. Y. NS mon words, people, places, is instantly yours. K B Duki Rese Ral N —
Dept. C-85 106,000 words with definitions, etymologies, & — . a ees SS
pt.C-85. . pronunciations and use in its 1,256 pages. {§ Russian Pony
503 5TH AVE., NEW YORK CITY 1,700 illustrations, Includes dictionaries of >
ae biography and geography and other special fl
BRINTON BROS Senne features. Printed on Bible Paper. y] ree
. See It at Your College Bookstore or Write K : : ,
FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES for Information 10 the Publiohers, ” Y | u nt 7 t r
: Orders Called for and Delivered G. & C. MERRIAM CO. WA ib ‘| a es
z Bryn awr, wad : NEW YORK . - -
A
which had been in the -back of my mind.
a
Miriam O’Brien has this, summer, I
wasions: _JUMR COLLEGENS Ws. 2) fy:
me /
4
College news, October 10, 1928
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1928-10-10
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 15, No. 01
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-vol15-no1