1 Vouume IV oe 7 Price 5 Cents BIG INTERNATIONAL WAR WORK OF Y.M. C. A. TOLD BY MR. EDDY Need of Money and Trained Women to Carry on Work at the Front What the Y. M. C. A: huts, fronted with their red triangles, mean to the men of the Allied armies, and to those in the Allied and enemy prison camps, was viv- idly told by Mr. Sherwood Eddy, the noted Y. M. «. A. preacher, at a meeting in Taylor Monday afternoon. Mr. Eddy has just returned from a tour of the Western battte front, and is already on his way to Russia. The speaker described the Student Friendship Fund, which is being raised by American students to benefit men in the Allied armiés and the European prison camps through the Y. M.:C. A. and to aid the Hostess Houses of the training camps at home and abroad through the ¥.W. CG. A. Trained women, well rounded pbhys- ically, mentaily and morally, are needed by the Y. M. C. A. abroad, according to Mr. Eddy. Over $1,000,000 of this fund has already been raised, Vassar giving $15,000 and Wellesley $16,900. “If I don’t win another battle I'll win a moral one”, General Pershing is quoted as saying to Mr. Eddy when they were mapping out the war work of the Y. M. C. A. together. French Poet Due in December M. Vatar Was Once His Pupil M. Antoine Lebraz, poet and novelist, will speak on ‘“‘Le Genie Francais”, under the auspices of the French Club next Tuesday, December 4th, at four-fifteen, in | Taylor Hall. M. Lebraz has spoken here several times before and feels that he knows Bryn Mawr thoroughly. Having married an American, M. Le- braz spends much of his time in this country. He was born in Brittany and many of his novels deal with that section of France. M. Vatar, Associate Professor in Italian, was formerly his pupil at a French university. Mass Meeting Posted for Monday BIG DRIVE PASSES WAR COUNCIL A mass meting is called for next Mon- day evening by vote of the War Council. The council’s decision to begin a drive at once for the Students’ Friendship War Fund, which closes December 15th, will be brought up for ratification, and sum- maries of the work done so far by the executive departments given. An account of the Students’ Fund, de- scribed Monday by Mr. Sherwood Eddy, is given on this page of the News. Thrift certificates of two and four- BRYN MAWR, PA., NOVEMBER 238, 1917 VARSITY UNDEFEATED 10-4 VICTORY OVER ALL—PHILA- DELPHIA ENDS TRIUMPHANT SEASON—CAPTAIN BACON’S | TEAM ACHIEVES BESTCO- OPERATION OF YEAR VARSITY SCORE FOR SEASON 36 Varsity hus won every game this season with the exception of the 5-5 tie with Germantown two weeks ago. The record of goals for and against Varsity in the series stands 36 for, 18 against. The scores for the nine years in which Varsity has met All- Philadelphia are: : All-Philadelphia Bryn Mawr For the second time in the history of | Bryn Mawr hockey, Varsity defeated All- Philadelphia when it overwhelmed: the | all-star team, 10-4, last Saturday. = _ goals goals score more than tripled that of Bryn ne 6 1 Mawr's first victory, won last year, 3-0. 6 q | Except for E. Biddle ‘19, left half,and A.| i910 ........... 5 4 Stiles '19, left inside, a full Varsity team | 191; Weather prevented the game lined up when the whistle blew. The| j932.........., 4 4 1917 Varsity, with the first substitutes.| j9)3 .......... 5 1 | is: ca 3 3 Varsity—G, Hearne ‘19, r.w.; M. Wil-| 1915 ........... 6 2 | lard "17, -ri.;-M.-Garey~’20,-¢.f.:-A; Stiles | | 19, Li.; M. Tyler ’19, l.w.; B. Weaver ’20, oy AER an NE 4 10 ir.h.; M. Bacon ‘18 (Capt.), c.h.; E. Biddle | "19, Lh.; M. Peacock '19, r.f.; M. Strauss "18: if.: BR. Gating 19, z.. ( ‘First substitutes—P. Turle '18, K.\Bick- ley ’21, B. Schurman ’21. All the first substitutes won B.M.’s, | since they have played in two games. | Best Team Work of Season Wins Game Saturday’s victory showed the work of / coach and captain in the best team-work |of the season. Varsity for the first time |this year achieved the co-ordination of eleven players working as one. Both teams fought till the last minute. The | weakest part of the All-Philadelphia team A slippery field made the game slow. | was their forward line, in spite of the | 1920 owed their scoreless defeat to the in- | good playing of Miss Cheston, captain, | effectiveness of their forward line. M. ‘and J. Katzenstein 06; the wings trusted |S. Cary at left wing time after time took | to hard center passing rather than to /|the ball down the field skilfully, but al- | dribbling to get the ball down the field, | ways failed to shoot. Every player on | but Bryn Mawr’s defense was too strong | their defense put up a hard fight, espe. | for these tactics. | cially B. Weaver, who was the star of the | The Game in Detail | game. In the first two minutes of play the ball| 1919's forwards played a strenuous de- _~ oO _ JUNIORS WIN HOCKEY TITLE 4 to 0 Defeat for Sophomores Due to Weak Line—Mud Slows Game The green banner of 1919 was hung on the gymnasium for the first time when the Juniors beat the Sophomores, 4-0, in the second game of the hockey finals last Thursday. 1917 has held the title for the last three years. dollar denominations, to be sold from De-| was rushed down on the All-Philadelphia | fensive game, but were unable to pene- cember ist to January Ist, will stave off | left for a goal, shoved in by J. Katzen- the next Liberty Loan until April, accord- | stein after the ball had rebounded from 'trate the blue defense for a goal until toward the end of the first half, when M. ing to Mrs. W. R. Smith, head of the Lib- | the stick of R. Gatling "19, Varsity goal'| France ‘19 brought the ball down the field erty Loan Department, which will sell | keeper. ) them after vacation. (These are redeem-| carried the fight into the visitors’ terri- | threatened several times in the second the circle. The Junior goal was After the bully, M. Tyler, ‘19, | into able from Federal Reserve banks with in-| tory, a corner resulting, and a few sec- | half from the right side of the oem terest on ten days’ notice. Twenty-five | onds later she scored Varsity’s first goal | line, by L. Sloan and D. Rogers, but ‘19's cent stamps, as in England, will be sold| from the edge of the circle. A second | defense was more than equal to the situa- at banks and stores to be turned in as shot from her, this time directly before tion. payment for certificates.) | the goal, put Varsity in the lead. 1919 1920 The farm ean count on a steady aver-| Bryn Mawr worked both wings hard Be cic cs ech eb ikiaces D. Rogers age of fifteen workers next summer, ac-| throughout the game. The fullbacks | M. France....... R.I L. Sloan cording to the preliminary canvass made | played far up the field, M. Peacock ‘19 G. Hearne....... a cues cis - = ead cd Bebe oes « saa u GREEN BANNER HANGS ON GYM. last week, said Miss Ehlers, head of Food | often stopping just at the end of the | A. Stiles... Production. i (Continued on page 3, column 1.) (Continued on page 6, column 2) OWN ADAPTATION OF SCOTCH SONGS ON WARLICH’S PROGRAM Artist Born in Russia and a United LIEDER SINGER’S REFERTOIRE HAS RANGE OF FIVE TONGUES A number of stirring Scotch folk songs which he has adapted to modernized har- monjc settings will mark the climax of Reinhold Warlich’s concert in Taylor Friday evening, December 7. Mr. War- lich worked out these adaptations during the past summer in collaboration with his friend and associate, Fritz Kreisler. His skillful re-creation and sympathetic interpretation of the old ballads have at- tracted a great deal of favorable com- ment. Writing of his political and civil status, Mr. Warlich says: “Having a German sounding name, and through my friendship and close artistic affiliation with the Austrian vio- linist, Fritz Kreisler, people thought I was a German. I was born in Pet- rograd, Russia, as the son of the Director of the Imperial Russian Court music, now of the ‘Orchestre Nationale;’ my father is a Russian citizen and a general, and I have two half-brothers, one an officer in the Russian navy and another a pris- oner in Germany who was, before the outbreak of the war attached to the Rus- sian Consul General in Berlin as consult- | ing civil engineer and taken prisoner by | the Germans after outbreak of hostilities. | “I came to this country as quite a | young man and became a citizen in 1901, dividing my time between this country |and Europe. I was chauffeur for the French Red Cross during practically the first 14 months of the war and returned to this country in November, 1915, to take up my concert work again and raise + money for different charities in France. “Mr. Elmer Zoller will play the accom- (Continued on page 6, column 1) \“LASH OF POWER” TAKES IN $100 Next Movie Scheduled for January * An audience of 309 students applauded the second of the Bryn Mawr movies in the gymnasium Saturday night. One hundred dollars was taken in, and $30 netted, for war relief. The acrostic, Possession, Oppression, Wealth, Energy and Ruin. spelt the | Stages in the “Lash of Power.” Goaded | by visions of Napoleon to “wield the lash of power over a cringing humanity,” John Rand rises by war profits to finan- cial prominence. Mad with power, he stampedes Wall Street. Varsity a corner, a. Héamns, right wing, hitting in instead of the halfback. After the ball had been rushed down the field and back again she scored the third Bryn Mawr goal. B. Schurman went in here for M. Bacon at center half. _ The All-Philadelphia right wing, Miss Zimmerman, worried the defense, but passed into center, where a hard stroke by M. Strauss "18 checked the visitors’ advance. The fourth Varsity goal, shot by M. - 20, center forward, fol- lowed good interference by B. Weaver 20, right half. ll-Philadelphia then turned the tables and scored their second goal toward the end of the first half, leaving Bryn Mawr ahead, 4-2. Score Mounts in Second Half Varsity shot six goals in the second half to the visitors’ two, M. Willard ’17 promptly starting, tie drive after a long shot by B. Schurman ’21. The Bryn Mawr goal was now repeatedly threatened, but the defense played up and M. Tyler scored again for Varsity. An All-Phila- delphia goal and another for Bryn Mawr, shot by K. Bickley ’21, came in quick suc- cession, Here A. Hawkins ’07 was put in at left half for Philadelphia. After a long run, M. Carey hit in the eighth Var- sity goal and fell flat after it into the cage. K. Bickley scored another almost immediately. ; Gatling Shows Head Work The most breathless moment of the game came a few moments later. Miss Cheston manoeuvred the ball past both half and fullbacks and rushed down on the goal. R. Gatling took the one pos- sible chance, and stepped out ten’ feet from the goal to meet the attack; Miss Cheston was blocked, but Miss Zimmer- man, catching up, struck the ball on the rebound and put it in the goal. This was All-Philadelphia’s last point. M. Ty- ler added the tenth goal to Varsity’s count and time was called with All-Phila- delphia bearing down on-the-Bryn Mawr circle. Line-up: All-Philadelphia Varsity Zimmerman ....R.W....G. Hearne ’19* (Haddonfield) * Cheston (Capt.).R.I....M. Willard °17* (Philadelphia) Townsend ..,.... ie eis M. Carey ’20** (Merion) Katzenstein .....L.I..K. Bickley ’21*** (Lansdowne) *** Wee einciaccs L.W..M. Tyler ’19**** (Germantown) MERCER—MOORE Exclusive GOWNS, SUITS, BLOUSES, HATS 1702 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA ne: oe ‘Gymnasium classes for the Soph and fencing for ‘the two'upper cleanse : will begin the Monday after Thanks- _ giving. The classes for Sophomores and Freshmen will take place Mon- age Weliiainw and ‘Widess: those _ for the. Juniors and Seniors, Tues-— days, Thursdays and Fridays. ~ _ New costumes for the Junior-Senior dancing classes are’ being designed by M. Mackenzie 18 and E. Fuller ’19. The Trophy Club has undertaken to mend 1917’s banner before it is_ hung out on the gym again for water polo. McLean .........R.H.....B. Weaver ’20 _ (Germantown) TOYIO?: i006 0535s 00.H...... Mc: Bacon. °18 (Haddonfield) (Capt.) Mre, Disaton.;...i4H..... - P. Turle ‘18 (Philadelphia) Mrs. Murphy....R.F....M. Peacock ’19 (Germantown) MG ic vices eeedd + css M. Strauss ‘18 MOOD see ics 66 0s icc ds R. Gatling ’19 (Haddonfield) Substitutes: All-Philadelphia—Second half, Miss Thomas, Germantown, for Miss Taylor, Miss Irons for Miss Weiner, Mrs. Halbach for Miss Bowden, A. Haw- kins ’07, Germantown, for J. Katzen- stein ‘06. Bryn Mawr—first half, B. Schurman ’21 for M. Bacon ’18. Referee—Miss Applebee. Time of halves—30 minutes, FOURTH TEAM TITLE WITH FIVE POINTS GOES TO SOPHOMORES 1820 won the fourth team series, count- ing five points, by beating 1919, 3-0, in the decisive game last Friday. M. Train, '20, at right wing, starred for the winners, taking the ball down for long gains, and scoring two of the Blue’s three goals. 1919 1920 ic OE cas Si. aac cuns M. Train Wei VOUNBIR. ok eke jG ee G. Hess . Mesey....s..; isis ease D. Griggs ad, PIONS... 0555. Pils sha eis ci M. Brown Wy ss ka sg Bae ok vb ica M. Ferrls A. Colina... Bk A. Coolidge De POE 6 ino oe RD ccc ecceces M. Dent A. DGORCh....... eS Z. Boynton R. Woodruff..... ee K. Townsend D. Chambers..... PO ike L. Williamson W.. Perkins, ... <.:. ei isucncvs D. Jenkins 1920 COMES BACK 6-1 ON THIRD Juniors Lose Second Game of Finals 1920's splendid teamwork easily broke up the Junior defense in the second match of the third team finals last Thursday. 1919 scored the first goal, but all their later attempts were blocked. The Sopho- mores played a steady game, piling up a score of 6-1. V. Turrish Postpones Wedding The marriage of V. Turrish ex-’19, an- nounced in last week’s News as taking place today, has been postponed indefi- nitely. “COLUMBIA” ATHLETIC APPAREL FOR GIRLS a nn Costum Suits Separate Hocmess a rassiere endorserrent Consumers’ COLUMBIA GYMNA SUIT COMPANY Actual Makers 301 Congress St., Boston, Mase Back Riding and will be any time. The Little Riding School BRYN MAWR, PA. TELEPHONE: 686 BRYN MAWR Mr. William Kennedy desires to announce that he has opened a Riding School for = instruction in Horse Especial attention given to children. A large indoor ring, suitable for riding in inclement weather. In connection with the school there will be a training stable for show horses (harness or saddle). eased to have you call at M. S. CARY GUARDS TENNIS CHAM. - PIONSHIP IN LIGHT BLUE MATCH Hard Driving Beats Z. Boynton, 6-1, 6-1 M. 8. Cary '20 defended her title as in- dividual college tennis champion last Fri- individual interclass straight sets, 6-1, 6-1. The strong drives of her opponent were too much for Z. Boynton, who, playing on the left to avoid her weak back-hand, was passed time after time on the fore- hand. M, S. Cary played the boundary lines with accuracy. Neither contestant played up at the net, tournament, in U. OF P. MAY ADMIT WOMEN Professional Schools Have Already Re- cognized Them Admission of women students to the de- partments of the University of Pennsyl- vania on an equal basis with men has been recommended by Provost Edgar F. Smith of the University. Women are now admitted on a parity with men to the Medical, Dental and Law schools, the College Course for Teach- ers, and the special courses, such as bi- ology, zoology and music, but not to the Towne Scientific School, the Wharton School of Business, the Veterinary School and the Arts and Science departments. VICTORY FOR 1919'S FIFTH With J. Holmes, center forward, as in- dividual star, 1919’s fifth team over- whelmed the Freshmen, 4-1, in a scrappy game last Saturday morning. shot each of the Green's four goals. stubbornness of the Junior defense, FE. Fuller and W. Perkins, fullbacks, and H Karns, goal, repeatedly kept the ball out of the goal, in spite of the strength of the Red forward line. 1921 Comes Back The Freshmen, Monday, took game of fifth team finals from 1919 with second they were defeated in the first game. JUNK COLLECTORS APPOINTED held on Monday evening to pack the articles which had been collected the week before, and to send them to the colored schools of the south and to France, Artists’ and Water Colors Artists’ Materi Brushes, Canvases, Easels Sketching Umbre'las. Fine Drawing and Water Color Paper. Waterproof Drawing Ink. Modeling Material F. WEBER & CO. 1125 CHESTNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA PENNOCK BROS. Choice Flowers Daily Free Delivery along the Main Line 1514 CHESTNUT STREET Smart New Models in Georgette Crepe 1120 CHESTNUT STREET | Next Door to Keith's Second Floor IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE NEWS" day, beating Z. Boynton ’20, winner of the. J. Holmes | The | Land the oke War Relief Fund. a seore of 4-1, the same count by which | A meeting of the Junk Committee was | -onleeyonaoiaeeaaiag ’ ene "the Sophomores 20 last Mondays os “ afternoon. The game was ragged, with poor passing and little team- . work, A. Blue starred for 1919, shoot-_ ing both of the Junior goals, and M. Canby '20 formed the backbone of the Sophomore defense. The second team chainetcaealy counts 15 points, FIRM DEFENSE WINS FOR 1920 Green Loses Close Match on Second In spite of the weakness of their for- ward line, 1920’s second team secured a 1-0 score over the Juniors last Friday afternoon. The game was won by the strong Sophomore defense, which turned back repeated attacks from the Junior forwards. M. Canby '20 at right fullback played a dependable game throughout, and the Sophomore goal, BE. Williams, blocked shot after shot. M. Scott, center forward, did the best work for 1919 on the offensive, and J. Peabody °19, right half, made several good stops in front of the/Junior goal. Not till the last minute of play did. 1920’s forward line succeed in penetrating the Junior defense for a point scored by FE. Stevens, right inside. The line-up: 1919 1920 H. Johnson...... BOW ince H. Zinsser Dy Pe ies Re as EB. Stevens* M. SCOtt. ...<..: OP ects N. Offutt Fe CMR OGINS. ale ee seks T. James V. COONS da We. ee ok. H. Holmes J. Peabody....... ee M. Kinard Mi COM 56 ies RE ceva M. R. Brown A, LAMGOR. .. 1.43 Lie ces H. Wortman E. Branson.._... ae M. Canby M. L.. Thurman..L.F'. ; ;.;:: H. Kingsbury A. Warner...) 5... a E. Williams Substitutes: Second half—1919, A. Blue for D. Hall. MOUNT HOLYOKE LUNCHEON HOO- VERIZED “Because of the food situation, the alum- nae of Mount Holyoke College,” says the New York Times, “brought their own food | from their homes to their annual lunch- eon.” The lunch. boxes were auctioned off, receipts given to the Mount Holy- SCHOOLS THE SHIPLEY SCHOOL Preparatory to Bryn Mawr College BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA Principals Eleanor 0, Brownell Alice G. Howland THE HARcUM SCHOOL FOR GIRLS—BRYN MAWR, PA. For Girls wanting college preparation a thorough course is offered, For Girls not going to college the school offers special opportunities to pursue studies suited to their tastes and needs. For Girls desiring to specialize in Music or Art, there are well known artists as instructors. Catalog on request. MRS. EDITH HATCHER HARCUM, B.L. (Pupil of Leschetizky), Head of the School BRYN MAWR PENNSYLVANIA THE MISSES KIRK’S COLLEGE PREPARATORY SCHOOL Bryn Mawr Avenue and Old Lancaster Road BRYN MAWR, PA. Number of boarders limited. Combines advantages of school life with private instruction. Individual schedule arranged for each pupil. Gymnastics and outdoor games. TYPEWRITING. Toes, Eve. ypewsitten oo short notice, 1 page, 12 cente ; HELEN HANSELL carbon copy, 5 cents. “ MAVERFORD, PA. Phone, Ardmore 185 J THE COLLEGE NEWS oo _—_—, COLLEGE AND SCHOOL EMBLEMS ee Ar WALNUT. ‘STREET | : AND NOVELTIES a = _ PHILADELPHIA ae m2 < FRATERNITY emsLens, eeais, CHARMS Display PLAQUES, MEDALS, ETC. of Superior Quality and Gunten ‘THE HANO BOOK illustrated and Priced. mailed upon request ¢ BAILEY, BANKS & BIDDLE CO, PHILADELPHIA ro Smart Sua, Top Coats and Wraps Reasonable Prices L. P. HOLLANDER & CO. Enchantment ie at SODA COUNTER BOOKS OF ALL PUBLISHERS Can be had at the DAYLIGHT BOOKSHOP 1701 CHESTNUT STREET Philadelphia - GOWNS, SUITS, COATS, WAISTS, and MILLINERY. yor tps ina i et from oe | THE. 3 eeatinaax HAMMOND Two sets of type in each machine. “Just Tarn the Sage Piveite, sae ow the other Beautiful work—beyond compare. If not inclined to a new machine, ~— for our Factory Rebuilts. e Rent Machines of high quality. th AVENUE at 46th STREET NEW YORK | Suits also all Colleges and Universities Our special terms to collegians will interest you. Catalog for the asking. Hammond Typewriter Co, f | 1314 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa, Nor YerkCiy.NY. | BOOKS PICTURES 208 South 11th Street, SESSLER’S BOOKSHOP Philadelphia Christmas Cards ALICE MAYNARD announces for the Autumn a unique assemblage of the GOWNS BLOUSES SUITS SPORT SKIRTS SPORT SWEATERS MOTOR COATS TOP COATS Distinctive Fur Coats and Novelty Fur Sets. Also ART NOVELTIES not to be found elsewhere 546 Fifth Avenue Corner 45th Street New York Developing and Finishing K As it should be done " HAWORTH’S 4 Eastman Kodak Co. K 1020 Chestnut St. PHILADELPHIA S Blouses G. F. Ward | One Hundred Thirteen South Sixteenth Philadelphia The Corset | Is the Foundation Your college outfit starts with a MOT Eret Your figure will be graceful, and you will have distinc: style, irrespective of simplicity in dress, and your healih as- sured. Moreover, a Refern Model is so ideally com- fortable, fitting so natur- ally that its wearer may do any athletic stunt as easily as she dances, rides or walks, in her corset. Be sure to have your Redfern Corset properly fitted before you ¢c your suits and frocks—then their correct appearance is assured. $3.50 up At all high class stores af nd IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE NEWS" Gowns, Coats, Sport Suits, Waists For Every Occasion Specializing in Youthful Models--- Reasonably Priced WALNUT 5300 1335-1337 Walnut Stree ™ Opposite Ritz-Carlton Ondulation Marcel Hair Dyeing Tinting Permanent Wave Hair Goods ALBERT L. WAGNER Ladies’ Hair Dresser 16th St. above Walnut Philadelphia Phone, Spruce 3746 Facial Massage Violet Hot-Oil poo HAIRDRESSING MANICURING DENNEY & DENNEY 1513 WALNUT STREET BELL PHONES Spruce 4658 Locust 3219 DIM~A-LITE Will give you FIVE degrees of light from ONE electric lamp. You can attach it in a moment, Ask your favorite dealer to show it to you JANE BLANEY 516— FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK ed DESIGNER AND MAKER OF GOWNS, FROCKS, WRAPS, SUITS and HATS ROYAL BOOT SHOP FOR LADIES with its inexpensive upstairs rental and immense outlet saves you from $3 to $5 a pair 1208-10 CHESTNUT STREET | ss |THE, GREEN DRAGON TEA HOUSE On Seuth Fifteenth Street at Number Two-Fourteen Where the Highest Standards ar. followed in Service and Cuisine LUNCHEON :: TEA DINNER OR SUPPER Table d'Hote andala Carte 11 a.m, to 7,30 p.m. [No. 9—November 28, 1917 atin a “The best war work you can do is to ‘stay in college and train yourselves to meet the problems that will arise after _ the war,” was the advice given to Bryn Mawr. by Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, who spoke in Taylor last Friday evening on “Woman Suffrage and the World War.” “It is impossible to talk of women’s pa- triotic service,” said the famous suffrage leader, “without speaking of woman suf- frage. Our soldiers abroad are struggling for the same principle that we ure. They are going to Berlin to fight for democracy. We are going to Washington for it. We will get it together.” Need for “Four-Minute” Women “Not a woman capable of rendering any line of service has a right to occupy space in this country if she is not giving back value for the space occupied. College women with trained minds and well- poised characters will be needed to help in the reconstruction that is bound to come in this country after the war. One of the immediate needs, to fill which we expect to draw on the colleges, is for ‘four-minute women’ to give short public talks on patriotic subjects.” Touching on the recent successful cam- paign in New York, Doctor Shaw con- tinued: “If we had given up our efforts at the beginning of the war, we would have had no such victory. But although the suf- fragists in New York have won now after eight years of steady work, they are not going to give up. They are going to work for the Federal Amendment. I have no doubt that it will go through this winter, and if*that is the case, the women of Pennsylvania will vote for the next Presi- dent of the United States. “It is not true that all women are nat- urally pacifists. Women voters have no- where weakened the Government. In Can- ada the only province to oppose conscrip- tion was the one where the women did not vote on the question. Women are ready to do their part and do it loyally.” URGES INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM Dr. Leuba Speaks in Chapel Taking Patrick Henry’s famous phrase, “Give me liberty or give me death,” as a point of departure, Dr. Leuba, Professor of Psychology, spoke in chapel last Wednesday morning on the value and meaning of intellectual freedom. People are so bound by convention they cannot even dress in the most beau- tiful or the most economical way, he maintained. To break away from hard and fast tradition and really think for themselves was the goal he set for hon est and intelligent college students. FREEDOM NOT ALWAYS VALUABLE Work for Big Issues, Says Dean Taft “In many things it is not worth while to have freedom,” said Dean Taft in chapel Thursday morning, qualifying the statements of Doctor Leuba the day be- fore. “If you dressed as you liked, you would probably have to fight about it all your life,” she continued. “Even if you were allowed to have your way, it would cost you too much time. should think about the things most worth while and not try to develop individual- ity along every line. “The early suffragists insisted on wear- ing bloomers, and consequently did a great deal of harm to their cause. If women of this generation are to be leaders of thought, as women have not been in the past, they must give up contention for small points and bring forward points in- teresting both to men and women.” HOW “SAMMEE” ORIGINATED A French officer's version of how “Sam- mee” originated says that when the Yankees arrived in France the French soldiers cried out, “Voici nos amis”, but the Americans took it for “Voici nos Sam- mees!" eae: * PROBLEM OF COLLEGE STUDENTS By Hon. Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War . (From the Patriotic News Service of the National Committee of Patriotic So- cieties, Washington, D. When the call to national service arose, spirited young men everywhere of course wanted to be employed in a patriotic way, and I suppose there is scarcely a young man in any college in the country who has not very anxiously addressed to him- self the question, “What can I do”? I think that there is no general answer to this question. * * * To the extent that the men in college are physically disqualified, or to the ex- tent that they are too young to meet the requirements of the department, it seems quite clear that in the present state of the emergency their major usefulness lies in remaining in the college, going for- ward with their academic work. The knowledge that the students will acquire at college will equip them for subsequent usefulness if the emergency lasts until their call comes. But we do not want to kill enthusiasm. We want to preserve enthusiasm and cul- tivate it and use it; but we do want to be discriminating in our enthusiasm, and prevent people getting the notion that they are not helping the country unless they do something different. * * * The largest usefulness may come from doing the same thing. * * * Our colleges can exercise a steadying influence in this regard. We are going to have losses on the sea; we are going to have losses in battle; our communities are going to be subjected to the rigid discipline of multiplied per- sonal griefs, bg s ° and we are going to search the cause of those back to their foundation, and our feelings are going to be_ torn and our nerves made raw. There is a place for physicians of public opinion to exercise a curative impulse. The young men who are in our colleges, who go to their homes from our colleges and make up a very large part of the direction of public opinion, can exercise a curative influence by preaching the doctrine of tolerance, by exemplifying the fact that it is not necessary for a nation like the United States, which is fighting for the vindication of a great ideal, to discolor its purpose by hatreds or by the entertain- ment of any unworthy emotion. PARIS MAY HAVE BRYN MAWR CLUB Herbert Adams Gibbons Gives Lunch for Workers in France Fourteen relief workers, representing classes from 1899 to 1917, met at an in- formal Bryn Mawr lunch given by Mrs. Herbert Adams Gibbons (Helen Daven- port Brown ex-06) in her Paris studio on October 2ist. Each person described Mrs. Women especially | what she had done since leaving college and what she is doing now. It is probable that some restaurant will be chosen as a Bryn Mawr rendezvous, to which the workers may come whenever possible without adding a definite engage- ment to their overcrowded time. Dr. Ferree and Dr. Rand have an article | on “The Power of the Eye to Sustain Clear Seeing under Different Conditions | of Lighting” in the October number of the | Journal of Educational Psychology, and another on “Radiometric Apparatus for Use in Psychological and Physiological Optics” in Series No. 103 of the Psycho- logical Monographs. Seniors! Notice! Help for Orals Mile Pourésy and Mile. Fabin (35 and 51 Radnor), French scholars, would like to spend the Christmas va- cation in the same or different fam- ilies. They offer French conversation or reading in return for board, resi- dence and traveling expenses. Tae. COLLEGE NEWS 5 NO AMERICAN FILLEULS, SAYS WAR DEPARTMENT “Gansta ‘Siebert tlaapeieres oan No personal godmothering of American soldiers with whom one is not acquainted, the War Department and the Woman’s Committee of the Council of National Defense has decreed. The Department will not furnish names, as is often re- quested, says the Public Ledger. “While the War Department appreci- — ately deeply”, explains Mrs. Philip Moore, chairman of the Health and Recreation Department of the Woman’s Committee, — “the fine spirit in which the women are — offering to write to the soldiers at thé front, the experiences of France and Eng- land have proved that the plan ultimately works more harm than good. General Siebert, an American officer under Persh- ing, has recently issued a statement from France to this effect, showing his marked disapproval of the idea”. Top Coats and Dressy Frocks and sequins, MILLARDS® The Shopping Place DRESS Discriminating oer rai Who Know Our high grade Coats, per‘ectly tai’ored of smart coatings, are very necessary to wear with dressy after- noon and evening frocks. Our coats are all lined and interlined. Afternoon frocks exquisitely beaded and embroidered. Dinner gowns of nets, velvets, soft silks, jets 125-127 S. 13th St. All attractively priced. The Shop of Sensible Prices Afternoon Dresses win a wide coutourieres. Just Below Chestnut of Striking Design the season's newest materials, colorings and trim- variety of original recognized the importations of Jenny, Lanvin and other famous 29.50 to 225.00 models in which will be New Yorx Srupio 624 Fifth Avenue 160 Tremont Street | Marceau PHOTOGRAPHER Bosrox Srvi0 | FORREST FLOWER SHOP 131 South Broad Street 1118 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. Offers their patrons superior service in CORSAGES CUT FLOWERS 1609 Chestnut Street Philadelphia | DECORATIONS Footer’s Dye Works | J. £. CALDWELL & CO. PHILADELPHIA Design and Make CLASS RINGS AND PINS OF DISTINCTION Jewels—Silverware—Watches Stationery Cleaning and Dyeing | seaman . $24.75 $26.75 $28.75 here only. occasions and wear. MANN & DILKS 1102 CHESTNUT ST. Ladies’ and Misses | Suits and Coats Models that are exclusive and Tyrol tailored suits and coats are adaptable for any and all outdoor MANN & DILKS 1102 CHESTNUT ST. ( $33.75 IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE NEWS” “The best war work you can do is to ‘stay in college and train yourselves to meet the problems that will arise after _ the war,” was the advice given to Bryn Mawr. by Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, who spoke in Taylor last Friday evening on “Woman Suffrage and the World War.” “It is impossible to talk of women’s pa- triotic service,” said the famous suffrage leader, “without speaking of woman suf- frage. Our soldiers abroad are struggling for the same principle that we ure. They are going to Berlin to fight for democracy. We are going to Washington for it. We will get it together.” Need for “Four-Minute” Women “Not a woman capable of rendering any line of service has a right to occupy space in this country if she is not giving back value for the space occupied. College women with trained minds and well- poised characters will be needed to help in the reconstruction that is bound to come in this country after the war. One of the immediate needs, to fill which we expect to draw on the colleges, is for ‘four-minute women’ to give short public talks on patriotic subjects.” Touching on the recent successful cam- paign in New York, Doctor Shaw con- tinued: “If we had given up our efforts at the beginning of the war, we would have had no such victory. But although the suf- fragists in New York have won now after eight years of steady work, they are not going to give up. They are going to work for the Federal Amendment. I have no doubt that it will go through this winter, and if*that is the case, the women of Pennsylvania will vote for the next Presi- dent of the United States. “It is not true that all women are nat- urally pacifists. Women voters have no- where weakened the Government. In Can- ada the only province to oppose conscrip- tion was the one where the women did not vote on the question. Women are ready to do their part and do it loyally.” URGES INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM Dr. Leuba Speaks in Chapel Taking Patrick Henry’s famous phrase, “Give me liberty or give me death,” as a point of departure, Dr. Leuba, Professor of Psychology, spoke in chapel last Wednesday morning on the value and meaning of intellectual freedom. People are so bound by convention they cannot even dress in the most beau- tiful or the most economical way, he maintained. To break away from hard and fast tradition and really think for themselves was the goal he set for hon est and intelligent college students. FREEDOM NOT ALWAYS VALUABLE Work for Big Issues, Says Dean Taft “In many things it is not worth while to have freedom,” said Dean Taft in chapel Thursday morning, qualifying the statements of Doctor Leuba the day be- fore. “If you dressed as you liked, you would probably have to fight about it all your life,” she continued. “Even if you were allowed to have your way, it would cost you too much time. should think about the things most worth while and not try to develop individual- ity along every line. “The early suffragists insisted on wear- ing bloomers, and consequently did a great deal of harm to their cause. If women of this generation are to be leaders of thought, as women have not been in the past, they must give up contention for small points and bring forward points in- teresting both to men and women.” HOW “SAMMEE” ORIGINATED A French officer's version of how “Sam- mee” originated says that when the Yankees arrived in France the French soldiers cried out, “Voici nos amis”, but the Americans took it for “Voici nos Sam- mees!" eae: * PROBLEM OF COLLEGE STUDENTS By Hon. Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War . (From the Patriotic News Service of the National Committee of Patriotic So- cieties, Washington, D. When the call to national service arose, spirited young men everywhere of course wanted to be employed in a patriotic way, and I suppose there is scarcely a young man in any college in the country who has not very anxiously addressed to him- self the question, “What can I do”? I think that there is no general answer to this question. * * * To the extent that the men in college are physically disqualified, or to the ex- tent that they are too young to meet the requirements of the department, it seems quite clear that in the present state of the emergency their major usefulness lies in remaining in the college, going for- ward with their academic work. The knowledge that the students will acquire at college will equip them for subsequent usefulness if the emergency lasts until their call comes. But we do not want to kill enthusiasm. We want to preserve enthusiasm and cul- tivate it and use it; but we do want to be discriminating in our enthusiasm, and prevent people getting the notion that they are not helping the country unless they do something different. * * * The largest usefulness may come from doing the same thing. * * * Our colleges can exercise a steadying influence in this regard. We are going to have losses on the sea; we are going to have losses in battle; our communities are going to be subjected to the rigid discipline of multiplied per- sonal griefs, bg s ° and we are going to search the cause of those back to their foundation, and our feelings are going to be_ torn and our nerves made raw. There is a place for physicians of public opinion to exercise a curative impulse. The young men who are in our colleges, who go to their homes from our colleges and make up a very large part of the direction of public opinion, can exercise a curative influence by preaching the doctrine of tolerance, by exemplifying the fact that it is not necessary for a nation like the United States, which is fighting for the vindication of a great ideal, to discolor its purpose by hatreds or by the entertain- ment of any unworthy emotion. PARIS MAY HAVE BRYN MAWR CLUB Herbert Adams Gibbons Gives Lunch for Workers in France Fourteen relief workers, representing classes from 1899 to 1917, met at an in- formal Bryn Mawr lunch given by Mrs. Herbert Adams Gibbons (Helen Daven- port Brown ex-06) in her Paris studio on October 2ist. Each person described Mrs. Women especially | what she had done since leaving college and what she is doing now. It is probable that some restaurant will be chosen as a Bryn Mawr rendezvous, to which the workers may come whenever possible without adding a definite engage- ment to their overcrowded time. Dr. Ferree and Dr. Rand have an article | on “The Power of the Eye to Sustain Clear Seeing under Different Conditions | of Lighting” in the October number of the | Journal of Educational Psychology, and another on “Radiometric Apparatus for Use in Psychological and Physiological Optics” in Series No. 103 of the Psycho- logical Monographs. Seniors! Notice! Help for Orals Mile Pourésy and Mile. Fabin (35 and 51 Radnor), French scholars, would like to spend the Christmas va- cation in the same or different fam- ilies. They offer French conversation or reading in return for board, resi- dence and traveling expenses. Tae. COLLEGE NEWS 5 NO AMERICAN FILLEULS, SAYS WAR DEPARTMENT “Gansta ‘Siebert tlaapeieres oan No personal godmothering of American soldiers with whom one is not acquainted, the War Department and the Woman’s Committee of the Council of National Defense has decreed. The Department will not furnish names, as is often re- quested, says the Public Ledger. “While the War Department appreci- — ately deeply”, explains Mrs. Philip Moore, chairman of the Health and Recreation Department of the Woman’s Committee, — “the fine spirit in which the women are — offering to write to the soldiers at thé front, the experiences of France and Eng- land have proved that the plan ultimately works more harm than good. General Siebert, an American officer under Persh- ing, has recently issued a statement from France to this effect, showing his marked disapproval of the idea”. Top Coats and Dressy Frocks and sequins, MILLARDS® The Shopping Place DRESS Discriminating oer rai Who Know Our high grade Coats, per‘ectly tai’ored of smart coatings, are very necessary to wear with dressy after- noon and evening frocks. Our coats are all lined and interlined. Afternoon frocks exquisitely beaded and embroidered. Dinner gowns of nets, velvets, soft silks, jets 125-127 S. 13th St. All attractively priced. The Shop of Sensible Prices Afternoon Dresses win a wide coutourieres. Just Below Chestnut of Striking Design the season's newest materials, colorings and trim- variety of original recognized the importations of Jenny, Lanvin and other famous 29.50 to 225.00 models in which will be New Yorx Srupio 624 Fifth Avenue 160 Tremont Street | Marceau PHOTOGRAPHER Bosrox Srvi0 | FORREST FLOWER SHOP 131 South Broad Street 1118 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. Offers their patrons superior service in CORSAGES CUT FLOWERS 1609 Chestnut Street Philadelphia | DECORATIONS Footer’s Dye Works | J. £. CALDWELL & CO. PHILADELPHIA Design and Make CLASS RINGS AND PINS OF DISTINCTION Jewels—Silverware—Watches Stationery Cleaning and Dyeing | seaman . $24.75 $26.75 $28.75 here only. occasions and wear. MANN & DILKS 1102 CHESTNUT ST. Ladies’ and Misses | Suits and Coats Models that are exclusive and Tyrol tailored suits and coats are adaptable for any and all outdoor MANN & DILKS 1102 CHESTNUT ST. ( $33.75 IN PATRONIZING ADVERTISERS, PLEASE MENTION “THE COLLEGE NEWS”