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.