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1927-1928 Student Newspapers

3-17-1928 Connecticut College News Vol. 13 No. 18 Connecticut College

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Recommended Citation Connecticut College, "Connecticut College News Vol. 13 No. 18" (1928). 1927-1928. Paper 22. http://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1927_1928/22

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1927-1928 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author. :n11 d'C,ft ~~ ~}«7':t onnectIcnt~14>n>~on.. • College News

VOL. 13, No, 18 XEW LONDOC\', CONNECTICUT, MARCil ];, 1928 PRICE 5 CENTS Mount Holyoke Debating Important Offices Filled Indoor Gym Meet Well Heifetz Returns to Here Saturday In Recent Elections Attended America

Xc~alh'c 'L'cnm Going (0 Snutf r \Vinifrcd Pi'lIk-Chicf .Jnsttcc of Nnturnt Dancing' Most ..lUI'acth·c To Ctvc COlH;CI·t]\[ul'ch 28th Honor- Oou"1. l<'eaLlll'c Saturday night OUl" a ttu-rnattve Jascba Heifetz, arter an absence of team will meet a team [rom Mount '1'0 the office of Chief Justice of An unusually large audience at- two years. has returned this season for Hotycke to debate: "Resolved, that Honor- Court, 'Vinlf'rcd Fink h:1.Sbeen tC'nded the Indoor- gym meet Satur- his longest American tour,-one which a tutortnt system srmnar to the one erected fOI' the year 1928-29. In se- day evening. The meet opened with will take him rrom coast to coast and nt Hn rva t-d be adopted by every lecting one for this position, it was a g-t-a n d march, in which all the American Liberal Ar-ts college." At necessary that a girl should be chosen classes participated. Following this, from Canada to Cuba and l\Iexico. the same time our negative team will who had a high sense of duty and Martha Webb conducted the march- During the past eighteen months he be debating the same question at integrity. 'wtntn-ed Fink was chosen ing and formal gym class. 'I'he next has been giving concerts in sixteen Smith. They will be accompanied as being one well fitted because of feature was the apparatus work, counu-tea, crossing the Atlantic six there by nine delegates. Arr-ange- her own personal qualities and her which was very well done, and which times and the Medtterrnnean three merits have been made sl milur to urcvtous experience. She has been gained a great deal of applause from times. His retur-n to America for this those or last yea I', to have two cal's this past year vice president of her the on-lookers. 'I'he ctog-dnnctng was year's tour marks his fifth' journey hired to take the delegation to Smith. class, assistant business manager of one of the most enjoyable features of across the Pacific. The Mount Holyoke team, accom- the Sell's and a house junior. the evening. A very large squad No longer the boy prodigy who panied by six delegates and a chap- Owendotrn 'Phomon-c-Spea kcr of tJ1C demonstrated the latest steps, after came to us out of the World 'war, er-one, will stay at Knowlton while House of JlclH'CScntaU"cs which three short; amusing numbers Heifetz, at twenty-six, is today a they are net-e. The teams debating were given, the first a dance by Gwendolyn Thomen has been elect- mature artist whose place among the here will be: Eleanor 'wood and Jeanette Bradley, ed speaker of the House of Repre- great is fu-mly established. In the two Affirmative (C. C.)-Dorothy Bay- imitating an old Iu.rme r nnd his wife; sentatives for 1928-2D. Last year she ley '28, Mar-forte Disbro '31, Achsah the second a dark ey imitation by years he has been abroad he has won was nresrdent of her- house, and this Roberts '31 (alternate). Margaret Bell and Itun-tet Htckok. the plaudits of London, Paris, Berlin, past veer has been prestdent of her Neguttve (Mt. Holyoke)-Rut.h and the third a dance I)y Adelaide and the gr-eu.t rn-ovtnctat cities of class. \\"ith this experience she is Penny '29. Helen Sheldon '2D,Mal'- Asadarta n. Followtng this, ,l per- France, England, Scandinavia and well qualified to fill the position. caret Hall '29 (alternate), Aseneth rorrnance was given by the ctuss in Ausu-auu. GI'aves '29 (alternat.e). :I\lal')' Sca.llel'good-Vicc :Pl'csiden1. fundamentals and tumbling. 'fhis His Amel'ican tOUI' opened in San of St.udCllt. GO"Cl'llItlCllt class, which was just instituted this Francisco the middle of Octo bet'. PHYSICAL EDUCATION Mal·Y Scattergood has been elected year, showed great ability and PI'OW- FI'om there he proceeded to Southern DEPARTMENT PLAYS Vice President of Student Govern- ess. However, the most striking fea- California and !Jack to the Northwest SENIORS ment fOl' the year 1928-29. She was tUI'e of the evening was the pageant of Oregon and Canada. His tOllt' in chosen as one eminently well fitted given by the class in natm'al dancing. the east began in New YOI'k, Janual'Y for the position. She has served on A colorful scene of King Cole and 4th, and from thel'e he went south and SeniOl'SWill 34-25 his court was pOI·tl'[\,yed, with a great A. A. Council, anci has been nn Honol' then again to the north and middle (leni of dancing, of which the do11 Coun judge this year. \\"est, where he will finish about the On ,Vednesday 11ight, :Mal'ch 7th, dance was most enjoyable. The I'e- end of April. During this extended t.he Physical Education Department AUTHORITY ON LABOR suits of the meet in the different accepted the challenge of the Senior events are: informal gym and ap- journey he will be heard in sixty cities. basl{etball team, and played with QUESTIONS TO SPEAK pal'atus WOI'!{, first place was won by them one of the fastest games of the AT VESPERS the Juniors, second~ by the Seniol's The college is bl'inging him to New season. The fact that the depart- nr,d third by the Freshmen. The London fOr the last concert in the ment ,\"el'e not used to playing to- ('lulI'les Stclzle to He ][el'c Sunda;r Seniors won fil'St place in clogging, cUITent sel'ies, l\Jurch 28th. gether did not prevent them from do- the Freshmen second, and the Sopho- ing some very fine passwork. The Charles Stclzle, one of the foremost mores third. First place in (unda- DEAN BROWN DISCUSSES }1'(>n1aI8 and tumbling was won by game was noticeably fast, the ball authorities on labor subjects in Amer- THE GOSPEL FOR MAIN ica, will be the guest of the college on Li1e Freshman class, second by the seldom touching the floor. During ~0ph0mores, while the Seniors and STREET Sunday when he will speak at the the first half, the score kept about Jun'iors tied for third place. In na-' Vesper Service. even, but in the second half the facl tur ...d dancing the Juniol's won first COuyoeutlon Leoturc of Unusual A pioneer in the field or Church and that the SeniOl's had had so many pl&ce, Seniors second, and Sopho- ]ntcl'C$t. Labor, 1\11'. Stelzle organized and con- practices together began to tell in mCI'es third. their favor, and the score at the end ducted the famous Labor Temple in The clogging teams as announced The greater part of the world's was 34-25 in favor of the Seniors. one of the most congested districts on are: first team: Asadorian, Bell, work is done by the people on Main Street, rather than by the few on Line-up: New York's lower East Side. For Bradley, Hickok, Hunt, Katz, I.,iebling, eight years he was pastor of work- Lincoln, Link, Williams, 'Voocl: sec- campus, said Dean Brown of Yale in Department Seniol's the inten:;;ely interesting Convocation Brett. .f . Owens ingmen's churches in Minneapolis, St. ond team: Bixler, Durkee, Gardner, Olsen' varsity team: A:;;adorian, Bell, lecture, "The Gospel for Main Street". Burdick. f. Gallup Louis, and New Yorlc Recently he HiCko'k, Wood, Katz. The teams in These two sections of the world are Tapley. c. Coe was elected President of the Church dancing are: first team: Blake, Boyd, out of touch with each other and fail Peterson Advertising Department of the Inter- Stanwood (\Vood)g. Cook, Fountain, Kennedy, Otten- to understand eaeh other. The aca- national Advertising Association. He Lincks. g. Cloyes heimer, Pratt, Reaske, Shultis, Tay- demic "patois" sUDPosed to indicate organized, and was for ten years Su- advance-is sometimes even naively lor, Whitehead; second team: Abram- !Jerintendent of the Department of son, Briggs, Peacock, "Vheeler; var- treated with awe and respect by those BASKETBALL BANQUET AT Church and Labor of the National sity team: Fountain, Reaske, White- who do not understand it; as, for Presbyterian Church. "Labor Sun- instance, the uneducated man who LIGHTHOUSE INN head. day," now observed annually in was proud of his son for having SeniOl'S Entel'tl.lin PlJrslcal Education United States Churches, was also an gmduated "mil'abile dictu". DCI)artment innovation of his. STRAW VOTE TO BE Whel'evel' there is an attitudJe to- ward a higher being and an expres- MI'. Stelzle is the author of numer- TAKEN OF PRESIDENTIAL sion of this attitude, there is religion, On Monday night the Senior ous books on various aspects of the PREFERENCE continued Dean Brown, and this Basketball Squad gave a banquet for econoT(lic problem, and has made sense of contact between the human the Physical Education Department, studies of economic questions in many A.malgamation Meeting \Vedncsdn)" and divine has been the wOI'ld's at "Lighthouse Inn." There were large cities, with the idea of future gl'eatest factor in the development of present the twenty-one members of betterment of conditions. He has also The Independent is taking a poll of ideals and of character. The lan- the squad, the manager and the six served as an arbitrator of labor dis- student and faculty presidential pref- guage of religion is often made ob- members of the department. Mar- I)utes in the TUechanical Departments erences, and has asked Connecticut scure by technical phrasing, obscur- garet Crofoot, non-playing manager, of several large Xe\v York papers. College to participate in the balloting. ing its truths, but Jesus' teaching was and Elizabeth Gallup, Captain of the His autobiography, "A Son of the At the Amalgamation meeting to be in simple, direct style and the com- team which played the challenge Bowery," is the fascinating story of an held next Vi'ednesday night, a straw mon people heard him gladly. Main Street is everywhere; it is a game with the Dej)artment, were East Side immigrant's son who, after vote will be taken and all students are cross-section of life from the highest hostesses, with Miss Stanwood as the a youth spent in machine shops and urged to be considering which presi- to the 10,;\,es1.. In Jerusalem also guest of hondt'. The dinner was night schools, rose to a position of dential candidate they will support. there was a l\lain Street, which had served in the private dining room and eminence not only in this country, The faculty vote will be taken next three different sections; the upper at each place was a clever place- but all over the world. He has done week also. The candidates 'which end, was the residential section, of (Continued on pave S, column. 5) (Continued on page 4.1 column 2) (Continued on page 3, column 3) (Oontinued on pave 4, col'urnn2)

• 2 CONNECTICUT COLLEGE NEWS

WHILE OTHER STATION CC ON HT BY S Connecticut College News COLLEGES- Slim Brolldcasting ESTABLISIlED 1916 jjuftmtted Cuts Published by the students of Connecticut Dear ",,'imp: In those prehistoric The class of 1928 at Princeton has College every Saturday throughout the days when camels were something college year from October to June, except been given unlimited lecture cuts un- during mid-years and vacations. til commencement. This step was bigger and better than a popular taken at the suggestion or: the Un- brand of cigarettes, I wandel" if our Entered as second class matter August cave- man ancestors suffered half as 5, 1919, at the Post Office at New Lon- dergraduate Council "as an experi- don, Connecticut. under the Act of August ment 10 determine the possibility of many agonies in choosing their old 24, 1912. success which might reside in a uni- caves, as Blin and I have endured in THE GREAT AMERICAN versity policy of voluntary lecture at- choosing our rooms for next year. BAND WAGON STAFF tendance. The Council is convinced You know, every year when good old that this end is a desirable one, if it EDITOR-IN-CIIIEF Spring comes popping around and the By Charles Mei-z can be shown that the undergradu- latest models are in and you just be- Louise Towne '28 ates will avail themselves of the vol- gin to feel really happy, then-piop! Although Charles Mei-z has been untary attendance in - NEWS EDITOR prtvnege a comes this bother of room-drawing. isfactory manner, and use it as a writing In magazines and newspapers Josephine Henderson '28 The system Is to get yOUI"mind, soul means tor eliminating waste time and for some time, "The Great American SENIOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR efforts in their daily schedules." and body all set on a big ark of a room Band 'wagon" is his first book. Oba.rtes Grace Bigelow '28 -Daily Prineetcniun, with four windows and a balcony, to Merz has now been hailed by critics draw number 179 on the fatal day with enth ustasm. hailed as a new JUNIOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR The women Rise and to spend the next year in a care- member of the small school of Ameri- Phyllis Heintz '29 women dormitory residents at the fully concealed closet in some attic. can critics of America. Like all other REPORTERS University of North Dakota have en- Well, Blin and I decided that our critics who bewail the American lack Anna Lundgren '28 tered protests against pledges prom- temperaments could stand another year of culture, he mocks our present-day Muriel Ewing '29 ising no drinking, smoking, or bois- together, in spite of the fact that she Nita Leslie '29 traditions and pastimes, with sharp Priscilla Clark '29 terous conduct, demanded of them by is all for a dazzling orange room, very but Intet-estl ng satire, a-nd we Ameri- Elizabeth Glass '30 Mtss :M. Beatrice Olsen, dean of modernistic and I am rooting for a cans hail him for it. Louisa Kent '30 women. The students resented! the symphony in mauve and rose. We The full name of this new book is Ruth Canty '31 pledges, and called them "insulting". Elizabeth cio '31 sort of decided that we were both "The Great American Band Wagon- Signatures, they said, wfl l not stop Gwendolyn Macfarren '31 enough alike and yet different-oh, A Study of Exaggerations," and it Margaret Marvin '31 smokers, while d erna.nded promises well, you know what I mean. She Mellicent Wilcox '31 merely antagonize non-smokers. The obviously is a study of exaggerations. likes them blonde and I simply can't dean of women answered that smok- Of course the m088 in Amertca take up MANAGING EDITon bear blondes but like them dark and ing among women students is increas- every new fad, idolize Lindbergh, Ellzabeth Sweet '28 beautifuliy villainous, but we both like ing, and becoming a fire as well as a eagerly eat up the news of the latest them and that's the point-if you can CIRCULATION MANAGER social menace. A committee of six murders. Hence, Americans in gen- Ellzabeth Kane '29 will consider the case.-Nclo Student. see it. eral are conceded to breath and have 'wen. any how, Blin and I picked a their being, intellectually speaking, in ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS Harvard on ChlnUo duck of a room in the two closets and scandals and fads. Helen Roeber '29 a divine view and well, you know the VirgInia WIlliams '30 Harvar-d University is about to write However, people who delight in IsabeIla SnIffen '30 herself down In history in a new [ash- kind. My dear, we even had it all criticism of present-day America, Jeanette Greenough '31 ion-or rather by the revival of an f'u rnlah ed, in our mind's eye, so to agree, I think, with Dean Lnge who Mary Reed '31 old fashion. She is to picture her- speak, when along came a mob of Eleanor Tulloch '31 seems to believe that England is the self on China. Early next spring the bristling big brutes and persuaded incarnation of all culture. Yet, does nUSINESS MANAGER upon our humanitarian impulses first of the new sets of Harvard din- England not have its 1/)(/88 which Esther Taylor ',28 ner plates, now being made for the against our Yankee common sense to rushes wildly at any opportunity to University at the 'wedgwood pottery relinquish the precious thing that they ASSISTANT nUSINESS i\lANAGER catch a view of the Prince of Wales? In England, will ar-rtve in this coun- might stick together. Winifred LInk '29 Does not England have its own pe . try. The plate" are to be a repro- Dorothy Quigley '30 So with OUl' dreams all neatly e uliu.r characters-sleepy-eyed old duction of the famous blue and white shattered we trudged forth and an- AIlT EDITOR people who live on pensions and dr-i nk Staffordshire ware of a century ago. nexed ourselves to a perfect lamb of Elizabeth Moise '30 Old time borders of fr-u it and flowers tea which are just as much examples a gang. But we found ourselves surround views of the tjnrversttv, the of their country as our Babbit is of :FACULTY ADVISOlt dumped on the third floor, my dear, stalwart brick buildtngu of the eight- his? But England is recognized as a Dr. Gerard E. Jensen in two minute microscopic cubbies- eenth century and the new dormi- c ult ui-ed nation, in spite of the fact can you feature it? So very tactfully tories of the twentieth.-lI'c/ft,sfcy Col- that her m{(S8 too is a seeker of fads lrye "]I.Teu:S. we withdrew from our treaty or what and fancies. ROOM-DRAWING have you, and carefree women Decidedly, Mr. Mara's book is in- The room-drawing period is one of again but itt/liS a prospective pillow for Humuntsulc Education teresting and valuable, but let us not startling demonstrations every year, our heads or a parking space for our Discussing the gr-owth of the etec- forget in reading it that America has and yet no steps seem to be taken to mules. tive system, and pointing the need her cultured people, too, and that relieve the situation. Does it seem Blin, then, conceived the brilliant logical that three-fourths of the stu- for definition of education along hu- Babbit is a not-to-be-ashamed-of manistic lines, professor Rand of but inevitable idea of laying our fates dent body should every year antici- American institution. said: on the knees of the gods as praying. pate with horror the turmoil which "The elective system in college And it is' from that precarious and pervades the atmosphere at such a education seemed inevitable. But tottering position that I bid you, shot to pieces a little later. Another time? Isn't ther-e some way whereby the democratic principle of admitting adieu. SLIM. rule maintains in such institutions as room-drawtng might be made a fairly all subjects as of equal educational this, that until the approximate age peaceable and har-montous event as value, this universal extension of the of twenty-one, men and women should is a utilitarian program, for it is of acceptable as other class functions? citizenship in the domain of intellec- take more Inter-est in their books than inestimable utility, whatever one's It is true that the method of chance is tual inquiry, resulted for the lazy in one another. This latter regula- trade. Wf t h ou t it we are nothing the only impartial way of choosing in the search for what was not hard lion seems to have come into direct but tradesmen, whether our trade is rooms, but must it be, in this environ- and for the Industrious in the search conflict with an old English tradi- cobbling, ch emtstry, Latin or Greek." tion of long standing, commonly ment where the association of the for what they could do best" -\'01111(/" ,lfiscdlally known as the "date", from the old group means so much, entirely a sys- "The .da.ng er Is not so gr-eat to the former class, the poor in spirit whom Anglo-Saxon word "date" meaning tem of single chances? \Vouldn't it Br-rn lUan"!' Discusses College "date". The tradition, it would seem, be a much happier plan if the risk we always have with us; they will always enjoy their wits, which are Education for all pur-noses of dis- has come off sufficiently well in the were distributed over a whole group, often constderabte, in per-ror-mtng the cussion may be assumed to mean any fray. However, to return to the point thereby making personal disappoint- minimum of their teacher's exuecta- predetermined soh erne of mental any system tends to crystallize after ments less? There are colleges where ttons. '1'he da ng er is to the serious training fOI"the young. 'I'hts. despite a time, and to endeavor to preserve this system of having a flxed number students, who no less than their all modern provisions for freedom of itself against the encroachment of of girls choose their rooms together leisurely brethren pursue the path of thought, choice of "Major" and the outside influences. And it is a mat- produces good results. '1'his elimi- least resistance; for them the lure is like, for in the last analysis, the ter for discussion whether this crys- nates that dreaded and really tragic proficiency in some special subject for course that carries a boy or gid tallization does not take utace more misfortune of being the only girl in their future career in life. It is not through several years of preparatory l·apidly and more unfortunate.ly in the the crowd who fails to get in a cer- reprehensible early to lay plans for school and four years of college Is a educational sy~tem in a small college tain dormitory, and consequently feels a career-quite the contrary. Spe- Vel"y nalTOW one Indeed. where the effort is made to preserve cheated of the more intimate assoc!a- cialization is not an evil, but a neces- For a man or a woman to come by a residential tradition and insofar as ba:'ning and experience naturally, to is possible isolate its scholastic com- tions \\'hich have grown to mean so sity for one who would advance In acqui e knowledge and skill as it is munity periodically from most of its much to her. his profession and benefit mankind. "But not to question the useful- needed, this is certainly not educa- contacts with the outside wOl"ld. The Let us consider the present system ness, or rather the indispensability, of tion as now conceived. We have then residential tradition in America has as lacking in some elements of effi- vocational schools and schools for an educational "system". Education its bil'th in the diffiCUlty of trans- ciency, and seek for a means of im- graduate research, the four years of does not mean mental development, portation. It has disappeared. But provement. Let us have room-draw- college life should be consecrated to but only development according to the residential theOlY remains, but- ings in the future which will result the attainment of a liberal or aris- certain l"ules. One of the generally tressed now not so rrltch by the force in the making and strengthening of tocratic education. accepted rules seems to be that a which gave it being, but by the new friendships rather than the breaking "It is a vocational program for one "childish (aith" should be established conception of the quiet of the aca- of them. whose vocation is the al"t of life" It in the earlier years of the pl"ocess and (Continued on page 4, column 2) 3 ______CONNECTICUT COLLEGE NEWS

ARE YOU BANKING WITH USl REVEREND J. BEVERIDGE WHY NOTI LEE ADDRESSES VESPERS THE S. A. GOLDSMITH CO. ohe 131-143 STATE STREET Butldjng roe the Puun-e, His Theme National Bank of Commerce The preparation and edlt1catlon or NEW LONDON, CONN. THE BEE HIVE the world today was the theme of the Btnl. A. Ar.drlfl'. Pra. Gq. 8, Pr"l. VICI.!"." Will. H. Ren". YI,..Pres. . Vesper service presented by Reverend Earl. W. Stamm, Yln_P,H.·Cuhler J. Beveridge Lee of the Second Con- DRY GOODS gregational Church of New London Bf\SI{E'T"BAT.JJJ R1XQrE'l' _\'1' 'fhe Revel-end Mr. Lee drew a parallei LICllTHOL'SE lXN between the preparation and build- (Concluded from page 1, column 1) QUALITY MERCHANDISE ing of the temple as presented in the text which was taken from the 29th card with a cartoon aod verse de- chapter of I Chronicles and the t st signed and written by Honey Lou Plus Service chapter of If Chronicles, and the Owens. After the meal e\'e"yone world of today. Solomon built the stayed at the table telling jokes and temple but David had the desire tor anecdotes. By request Miss Stan- it; it was he who dreamed and who wood told her traditional etorv of planned the temple. The things we Daniel in the lion's den and xrtae dream, the things we undertake, rath- Burdick gave a very amusing piece in er than what we effect, are what Swedish dialect. While telling the r-enlty determine our character. Due story, Miss Burdick wore a costume Fine Leather Goods, Stationery "GET IT" credit must be given to David for the improvised by Miss Brett. It was a temple, and for the wor-ld of today Gift Articles in Great Variety -AT- delightful end to OUI' basketball days. due credit must be given to those 138 State Street NEW LONDON men of a nest generation who pre- nat-eel and dr-eamed and planned OUI' S'I'Hf\\V \TOTE TO HE TAliEX OF' STARR BROS. wor-ld. PH,ESIDEX'J'IAIJ PHEFEREXC1<:, RUDDY & COSTELLO As the edification of the temple was (Concluded from page 1, column 3) Incorporated INC. left to Solomon's generation, so the 'I'hl' J"dl'pcudult suggests are: edification of the world today, pre- UCJlubllcans jjcmocruts JEWELERS and OPTICIANS pared but unfinished, is left to us. CUI.tlS Donahey 52 State Street All that the people of yesterday ask DRUGGISTS Dawes Reed (Mtsscu rf) NEW LONDON, CONNECTICUT of those of today Is to beautify and to build. All the wealth and resource Hoover Ritchie of America's past genel'atlon is given Lowden Smith to the t-Iaing' generation for the tusk 'NUlls Walsh (Montana) or building a temple. Rev. Lee de- The Woman's Shoppe fines a temple as a gr-eat house where 236 State Street, New London people can specially serve God and t.h el r- fellowmen, In order to build The Smartest and Best in Compliments THE COLONIAL SHOPPE Women's Wear 305 State St., New London, Conn. GOWNS, COATS THE HOME PORT LINGERIE, HATS of Opposite Knowlton on State Road Restaurant and Grill Brunch LUNCH The Mariners CATERING Mohican Hotel SUPPER and SNACKS Savings Bank FOR ANY OCCASION COLONIAL New London, Conn. DOUGHNUT SHOP 35 MA IN STREE'J.' THE MAYFLOWER TEA ROOM STATE STREET WOMEN'S SHOES SI)CcJallzlng In 14 Meridian Street DOUGH:'JU'J.'S Next to Post Office -AND- THE HOME OF HOME COOKING ,VAFFLES and SANDWICHES SPORT HOSE LUNCH, TEA, SUPPER "The Bank of Cheerful POWDER PUFF Open Every Sunday Evening Service" Davis & Savard BEAUTY SALON 134 STATE STREET Arthur Building, 38 Green Street ALL FORMS OF BEAUTY CULTURE Compliments of \Vhe" You Say it ,,·itli Flowers Competent Operators "-h;y xoe Try Ours? Phonc 6740 ncu- ..eric8 to College )'roJUI)tly Wentworth Bakery Connecticut College Flowers For ,\11 Occasions FELLMAN & CLARK Bookstore THE FLORIST KINNEY SHOES CR.ocnER I-lOUSE BLOCH 53 Bank Street, xcw London, Conn, Flower 'phone 5588 DRESS COLLEGE ,COMPLIMENTS OF NOVELTY l Edward S. Doton SPORT STYLES SUPPLIES DISTRICT MANAGEK SERVICE \ THE MUTUAL $2.98 to $4.98 LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY SUNDAES of New York SODAS Full-Fashioned Hose EDWARD W. CLARK PLANT BUILDING, New London, ConDo CANDIES Pure Silk FRUITERER Chiffon and Service Weight, $1.29 PUTNAM FURNITURE CO. LAMPS Lamp Attachments 234 STATE STREET Established 1881 SHADES, BOOK ENDS, FLATIRONS THE FINE FEATHER, INC. New London, Conn. CURLING IRONS, ETC. MERIDIAN STREET FURNITURE, RUGS Sportswear and Dressy Frocks Knit Suits, Sweaters HOUSEHOLD RANGES The J. Warren Gay Electrical Co. "If It's Made of Rubber We Have It" GIFTS and NOVELTIES 300 BANK ST., NEW LONDON, CT. 19 Union Street, New London, Conn. Everything For the Gym Phone 9350 MIDDY BLOUSES, BLOOMERS BOOKS CREPE SOLED SHOES THE TEA HOUSE ZEPP'S ELASTIC ANKLETS, KNEE CAPS BAKERY and PASTRY SHOP AT THE BOOK SHOP, INC. SPORTING GOODS 133 Mohegan Avenue THE HOME OF EVERYTHING GOOD THAT'S BAKED Cards, Gifts, Stationery Alling Rubber Co. NEW LONDON Telephone 6057 25 Main Street MERIDIAN and CHURCH STREETS 158 State Street 4 CONNI'CTICt1T COLLI'GE NI'WS

DEA....1\'"BROWN DISCUSSES THE SCIENTIFIC METHODS GOS·PEL FOR MAIX STREET APPLIED TO THE JOB FULL FASHIONED CALENDAR (Concluded from page 1, column 4) OF HOME-MAKING which Simon the Pharisee was typi- SHEEREST Saturday. Mru-ch 1i-Tnter- cal; then the business section where An unusual point of view toward collegi.ue Debate. self-made men pursued methods that the management of the home is that OF SILK $1 .35 Pro would not always bear the light of detailed by Mrs. Lillian M, Gilbreth HOSIERY Sunday. M a r- chIS-Rev. day; and the lowest, ugliest part in her book 'J'11