& ‘ “VOL. XI No. 7. BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), PA.., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1925 PRICE, 10 CENTS ~ WINS HOCKEY GAME “Alb ‘Ireland Sweeps: to Victory Over _ Bryn Mawr Varsity by Over- whelming Score KEENING- HEARD ON CAMPUS ; ____A small, bewildered. Irishman_ with his | ~ bit of green tied round his stove pipe hat was the mascot of thé Irish, leading them to an 8-0 defeat of Varsity, Saturday morning, November 7, in a fast, if one- sided game. i Playing more in the old formation with the fullbacks seldom éncroaching beyond the center line, ‘the good stick work, hard hitting, swift running, and superior en- durance of the Irish téam soon succeeded -in-wresting a decisive victory. from Var- sity, despite tHe valiant -efforts of the backs. Strongest on the defensive, the Varsity. forwards were so closely and forcefully guarded that their offensive was | considerably weaker than their guarding play. The Irish were older and had ob- _ viously had mote experience. In contrast to their hard decisive hitting on every pass, the Varsity backs seemed .to play more of a dribbling game, culminating in short- er passes than the long half-the-field-ahead shots of the Irish. . Bryn Mawr got the ball in the first quick, tense bully of the game, and W. Dodd, ’26, with beautiful stickwork and speed, flew down«the wing only to be stopped by the whole weight of the oppos- ing Irish back in a strong lunge. For the first fifteen minutes Varsity held the «Iskanders to no score, but they soon broke _through and, with swift, hard passes, rush- ed the ball to goal several times. The Brown backs played far ahead of thém- selves, but were powefless against the Irish rush; W. Dodd’s continued excel- lence was uncuccessful ih pushing | a goal ‘through. Starting the second half with renewed vigor, Varsity kept the Irish from scor- ing, until the last 15 minutes. B. Loines, 28, was the heto of the half in two spec- tacular runs from centre field, completely eluding backs and halves, but. she was stopped at the goal, The Irish centre half, playing all over the field, was mar- velous in her speed and dexterity, and} ‘intercepted mahy passes from D. Lee, ‘25, to R. Wills, ’29. ‘In a beautiful run and dribble Miss Dil- worth, right wing, tore down. the field and »". shot a quick goal. Using their heads quickly, the Irish backs would pass straight across the field to an unguarded forward on the opposite side. In the last} . 40 minutes two more goals were Guaten "and the day ended 8-0. iiss | God’s revelation could not tor 5 God did not stop speaking wher | went to press, So a new type of revelation | - Miss Humphrey was Presideht before. 5 Died two > years, and ‘President of the ao A SIC e FRESHMAN CLASS ELECTS MARTHA HUMPHREY, . BARBARA HUMPHREYS@ND ALEXANDRA DALZIEL 1929 has chosen Martha Humphrey as President, Barbara Humphreys as Vice President, and Alexandra Dalziel as Secretary for this year. School in New York last year, and Secretary of Self-Government the ‘year Miss Humphreys was Vice resident of her class at Miss Shipley's School, and Secretary of the Athletic Association last yeay. Miss “Dalziel was. President of her class at Brearley School, in New York, of Self-Government at Miss Chapin’s Athletic Association last year. LABOUR MOVEMENT PERFECTS MECHANISM OF DEMOCRACY Workmen to be Citizens in Industry, Says Rennie Smith, Labor M. P. “Small as members go, the English labor movement has momentous consequences,” said Rennie Smith, a member of Parliament for the Labor party, a. delegate of the In- ternational Printer’s Union, and a member of the Workman’s . Educational Association “Like so many other institutions and aspects of British life, the Labor movement is fundamentally old.. But in its relations with the modern industrial situation, its development is the matter of only a century. “It has endeavored first of all to work out the idea of political democracy. The Parlia- ment. of today is much’ more representative than that of a century ago. Thirty years ago, Baldwin, sking Parliament what to do with the nation’s mines, would have heard only from directors and royalty swners Today he would learn not only their point of view, but that of the men who have worked since childhood in the mines. If the business of Parliament ~is to gather up the mind of the nation in its sericus pur- poses, the group of today is far superior to 30 years ago. It was formerly a place of rhetoric, and is now a place of debate. Under Toryism and Liberalism it is impossible to get these vast changes and conflicting points of view. Future historians will emphasize the labor movement as improving the ma- chinery of political democracy. “We have become increasingly conscious that a formal conception of freedom: is en- CONTINUED ON PAGE 5 PAUL WAS ENEMY OF DOGMAS, MYSTIC, APOSTLE OF FREEDOM hilicete sf Apsmnil: Naitis’ to plained by Dr. Stuart Tyson Saint Paul and the Apocalyptic books were the subject of discussion by Dr. Stuart Tyson in the third of his lectures on the Bible, given November 3, in Taylor Hall. “The first part of the Bible. the Law and the prophets, were brought by the scholar | Court of appeal. Yet people Realized that arose, the Apocalyptic books, Daniel and the B.| revelation of Saint John the Divine, which 27;| form a link between the old and the new Ezra as a completed product to Jerusalem. ' Jand immediately treated as an_ infallible FIRST OF CONCERTS IN TAYLOR ANNOUNCED FOR NOV. 16 Chamber Music Society. to Play New ‘Quartette by Fritz Kreisler The Chamber Music Society of San Francisco, will play at the first concert of the series under the auspices of the Department of Music, in Taylor Hall, on Monday evening, November 16, at 8.15. Founded in 1916 by Elias Hecht, the group consists of Louis Ford, violin; -Nathan Firestone, viola; Walter pees ay violincello; Lous Persinger, violin, and Elias Hecht, flute. Mr. Persinger, director of the organization, is well known both as soloist and chamber music direc- tor, in Europe and America. Mr. Ferner was for many years solo ’cellist of the Philharmonic Orchestra of Berlin. Thé Chamber Music Society of San Francisco -has, during the last nine years, given recitals throughout the country, including appearances in Néw York, Boston, Phila- delphia and Pittsfield, where the great music festival is held. The program of the Bryn Mawr concert will be as follows: Schumann—Quartet in 41. No. 3; Agitato assai; Allegro, molto Vivace. : Arthur Foote—Nocturne and Scherzo, for flute and strings. (Specially written for The Chamber Music Society.) Kreisler—Quaftet in A minor; F antasia ; Scherzo; Romance; Finale. Hans Kindler, cellist; and Horatio Con- nell, baritone, will appear ina joint recital; ‘ e CONTINUED ON PAGE 4 TALK ON CHINA TO BE GIVEN FOR LIBERAL CLUB ON FRIDAY Member of League for Industrial Dem- ocracy Will Address Group Paul Blanshard, field secretary of the League for Industrial ‘Democracy, will speak ‘under the auspices of the Liberal. Club on Friday evening, November 13;°in Taylor Hall, about his recent trip around the world, with special emphasis on his experi- es in China. No, subject could be more esting than China, j Jn view of the pres- ent coriferences of the Great Powers, ‘and the discussion of treaties for the settlement of tariff, and other questions of international in * Mr. Blanchard, graduate Phi Beta Kappa of the University of Michigan, and graduate student at Harvard ‘and Columbia," entered the labor movement, after serving as pastor of a Congregational Church in Boston. He A major, Op. Adagio molto; |/FIRST THREE LECTURES . ONE. A. ROBINSON GIVEN Survei F ears With Talks on Lyrical and Arthurian Poems MODERN TURN oe srenhaeae snihity of the last 70 years,” said M. Charles Cestre, of the Soibonne, in, the irst of his lectures on Edwin Arlington Robinson, given in Taylor Hall last Tuesday, afternoon. The-new school extols American energy and buoyancy, but there is a distrust of old-fashioned reserve and prudence, and they brand as un-American the standard forms and conventions. “Edwin Arlington Robinson belongs here in the line of the great masters of, English literature. One wonders if his universality debars him from native appreciation. “He has peculiarities which trouble his readers. when he treats situations not his own—the passionate utterance is not his In the margin outside passion .his lot finds its place. With a keen eye and a fine sympathy, he can regard the soul in repose after the tremor of a crisis. He walks in the steps of the great dramatists, discovering, with per- fect understanding of joy and sorrow, the meaning of human felations, and of human hopes and failures. ‘ “He found his supreme subject in Merlin. His meditations on the forcés battling in the human heart stood him in good stead here, and he created a Merlin of his own. a masterpiece unique in American poetry. Pre-eminently a poet of human strength of « will, and of human help!essness to avoid calamity, he has bravely espoused the mod- ern spirit—the spirit of observation —and scientific curiosity. “His early poems are distinctly Christian. “Calvary” is a perfect sonnet, but also a hymn where the poet’s sombre descant on the ways of the world have the tone of the prophetic book, or the hopeful: severity of the Pilgrim fathers. The metaphysics of his later poems ‘is not orthodox, but still true to the Christian spirit. The mystery of in tellectual growth, and the sobering of spirit- ual experience, replaces mysticism in him. “In Lancelot he shows color and pathos, and passion with a glamour of romance. “Mastery of form appears in full in him, and the magnetic faculty of throwing con- crete vision over things of the mind, The common words of the language, marshalle:! with inborn ease, assume poetical utterance’ without losing their homely familiarity. “Humor is an essential component of his style. In the full length: portraits of Shakespeare and Ben Jonson, there is struck. a quiet note of mirth that enhances the uni- versal humanity of. both. “From the first he has endeavored to ex- ‘press man. He eschewed none of the things that have ever touched the human heart- love, death, aspirations to the ideal, thwarted ambition, stringency of wordly rivalry. His ‘htmor breeds thoughful assent or pennant sympathy. “He is not always a ‘highbrow’ in h's choice of subjects. Often they are the sui- cides, the di the maiden aunts, of — haftegioon ¢ tea. gisaly and the daily head- has been associated ie one of the leading | lines. He only hints at the details, that he may not divert our attention from the e: Workers, as organizer and educational di- | psychological~ meaning. He is an analyst. . Ts nigga oso Silber diese) and a story-teller. “His philosophical comment is often viven lin the shape of large allegorical s'ru tr’ ‘such as Merlin, and eoThe Man Aga'nst the ee Sky.” A keen-sympathy, anda nage oe b mil hecked Ldek seneaing ao > RHE COLLEGE NEWS “ The College News (Foypded in 1914) Published weekly during tiie college pene in the interest, of Bryn Mawr College at th e College, Building, Wayne, Pa., and Bryn Mawr Coll Mexeging 1 | dea ea Juan Lozs, 26 ad CENSOR : NEWS EDITOR K. SIMONDB, '27 . M. Lmary, '27 - EDITORS 14 RICKABY, "27. M. SmitH, '27 - ASSISTANT B. LINN, '26 EDITORS M. Fow.nr, ’28 BUSINESS MANAGER SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER Lup, ’27 BE. Tyson, '26 ASSISTANTS A. Writ, '26 a ONES, ’28 P, McELWAIN WMAN, ’27 E. N. wf Subscription, $2.50. Mailing Price, $3.00. Subscription may begin at any time. ‘Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post: Office. sh VARSITY peimanes TRAINING Varsity Dramatics, the effort to produce plays more interesting to act, direct, and stage, and to produce them with higher standards of acting and directing, than under the old system of class plays, is this year, we hope, to justify its inception. The School for Scandal, hastily presented last spring for the Students’ Building Drive, is soon to be followed by Icebound, a drama of a small New England town .of today. In4 the-spring of 1926 there will be another play. Already one great objection to the experi- ment has been answered. To the complaint that parts would” be concentrated in the upper classes, we point to the program of Feebound: Six roles out of twelve are be- ing taken by Sophomores, one by a grad- uate, three by Juniors, and only two (and ‘ ’ both very small parts) by Seniors. For the Freshmen there is Freshman Show and ‘ the spring production. Likewise on the Scenery and Costume Committees Sopho- mors and Juniors are in the majority. Most important of all, the Varsity Dra ‘matic group this autumn has the privilege of studying with Miss Robertson. Though busy coaching the Plays and Players So- ciety of Philadelphia, she has been so kind as to come out to Bryn Mawr and work tirelessly with our cast. One of the few women directors in. New York, she brings her knowledge and energy to the use of the college. For her service to Varsity Dra- matics we ate much indebted to her. tse WHY EVER DO WE DO IT? Parade Ni ight of course is an institution, and in itself quite adequate to satisfy the more primitive side of our collegiate char- acter. ; As for the rest of he casual hops and skits that occasionally. int@rrupt our Sat- urday ‘nights—is the. game. worth the andie? When, clad in tennis shoes and a smple gingham, you walk for two hours round a bare and brightly lit gymnasium Smates, you are then neither a social success, but rather, the drawbacks of both tinguished, and not too en- lass gatherings always cost orry and effort and time. we are pretending that it omatically and suddenly to lesale intimacies _ between ‘ Actors’ "Rockefeller ‘the right to independence. ‘ier as Ophelia, ‘Advieune Morrison as the| Queen, and Charles Waldron as the King. Other plays beginning is week are as follows: dhe Last of Mrs. Cheyney—at the Ful- ton Theatre, by Frederick Lonsdale, author of Aren't We All, and Spring Cleaning. Ina ‘Claire is the star, with A. E. Matthews and Roland Young. Rha? 5 The Last Night of Don Biecar the Greenwich Village Theatre, by Rostand, In the cast are Stanley Logan, Augustine Dun- can and Violet Kemble Cooper. It «will be preceded by a one-act comedy, Le Pelerin, by Charles Vildrac. Naughty Cinderella—at the Lyceum :The- atre, a French farce apted by Avery,Hop- wood. Irene Bordoni is starred. It is “a comedy of the ey pajama beach life at the Lido.” Candida—at ihe Comedy, a return of the Theatre production, with Peggy. Wood again. The new members of the cast are Morgan Farley, who made his name in Fata Morgana, as Marchbanks, and Harry C. Browne as Morel. The Bells—at, the Manhattan Opera House, a revival by Butler Davenport. The Master Builder—at the Maxine EI- liott; This production is an Ibsen revival for Tuesday and Friday matinees, with Eva Le Gallienne and Egon Brecher. The Charlot Revue of 1926—at the Sel- wyn, with Beatrice Lillie, Gertrude Law- rence, Jack Buchanan and Herbert Mundin. BOOKS, ATHLETICS AND ACTIVITY LATELY WON FOR FRENCH GIRLS M. Cestre Describes Change and Sympathetic Plays and Novels At a tea given by the French Club in last Monday afternoon, M. Charles Cestre talked about the past and present position of the average woman in France, and suggested several novels and plays by such feminists as Marcel Prevost and les freres Marguerite for further light un the subject. He said that there had been a great change iv thé condition of women in France in the last thirty years. Here in America very suc- cessful efforts have been made to give women But in France, less than a generation ago, Marcel Prevost was writing Les Lettres de Francoise to plead a girl’s right to read,-to think, to havea personality. Young girls could keep still, or occasionally murmur. polite nothings. Other-. wise nothing was expected—or wanted—of them, Now, living senditiias are becoming more and more difficult. There ate too many people in France, especially in the profes- sions. Salaries are small as a consequence; it is therefore necessarily allowable for women to earn money, but even twenty years ago, a middle class woman was ashamed of the necessity of earning money. Ladies in ‘reduced circumstances did fine sewing at home, and took it out to sell only under cover of the night. Women who taught| were -not received in society—not because they were not appreciated, but just because women did not work. In Les Vierges Fortes Marcel Prevost has studied types of French women and the effect upon them -of the hampering conventions just described. One would scarcely count divorce. among | phe: beeen of the century, but, in certain new woman is the heroine of La Fille Nou- welle by les freres Marguerite-the story of a girl who demands the right to spend her own money, spends if to make an intérest- ing life for herself, and finally marries a man because she loves him. The faste word in’ the triumph of young girls in France is said in Les Nouvelles Lettres de Fran- coise written since the war. Now that French girls are allowed to read, to go to the universities, to play games, to meet men of their own age, their conditions of living are no longer so different from the American. Their conventions have changed, the temperaments which observe them have not. 2 : # ; SKIT AND DANCING ACCOMPANY PRESENTATION OF RED BANNER On Saturday night the Juniors gave the Freshmen their banner. Class history was first présented in a skit in the gymnasium. Constance Jones, as a well ¢voluted class, stood in” front of Eleanor Morris and plead her case for the enefit of Kathrine Adams, gartered and gallused as the. shade of Mr. Bryan. She began with fresh- man show, and Mary Dufour did the Oz Clog. Then Mayday—Janet Seeley— tumbled in, and was followed )by two cyncal Morris dancers in slickers and galoshes, Marion Leary and Carol Pratt. That was the past history. Then this year’s Charleston cohort clattered on, ieaturing Minna Lee Jones, Elizabeth Lippincott and Carol Platt, Mr. Bryan fanned himself and collapsed—i927 was acquited as a case for evolution. Dancing and doughnuts followed. At 9.30 the banner was presented with the usual ceremony, and the Freshmen were guided down Senior row to end the eve- ning. CHURCH MUST CREATE SPIRIT TO BRING ABOUT WORLD PEACE Sacrifice National Sovereignty, Join League, Says Rev. Speers “Shall the sword devour forever? How long shall it be before thou bid thy people return from following after their breth- ren?” This was the text of the Reverend Guthrie Speers, assistant at the First Pres- byterian Church, New York City speak- ing in chapel on November 8. “In view of the fact that this is the Sun- . day before Armistice Day, and that most of us call ourselves Christians, I want to talk to you about real religion as the only basis for permanent peace. In 1925 A. D., with sad reason to know what we are talk- ing about, we are still asking the question ‘Shall the sword devour forever?’ Do we understand that the achievement of “peace depends.on a fundamental change in our own motives and purposes; and have we enough courage to follow out the implications of our prayer for its ac- complishment? _ “There is no peace without -penitence. We have tried war and found it both’ dangerous and. unprofitable. Like Abner, who wanted peace for the time being, to save his own skin, are our motives insin- cere and selfish? Have we realized that war is a sin against God in heaven, in our- selves, and in other men? Now that we have the instruments: of peace. at hand,| leagues, courts, and tribunals, we have no _| excuse. for amine that ‘destruction | We should listen to the appeal of the most recent plan, a united program of im- mediate entrance of the United States into the world court, with a provision for her withdrawal if, after five years, a treaty has not been ratified “extending the court’s jurisdiction and making it compulsory. ° “But we must remember that we have’ been talking about mere instruments, the value of which rises and falls with ‘the sp.r.t actuating them, The task of Chris- tians is the creation of the spirit of Christ which will embody itself in concrete fact, and be translated into international activ- ity. The church must lead. the work of making present-day institutions: an incar-. nation of this spirit, to save us from physical: and spiritual destruction. The world expects this of the church. How long shall it be till -we Christians call the people back from following after their brothers ?” Dr. Lucke will speak on Tuesday, Novem- ber: 17, at 7.30 -P.-M., in Taylor: Hall. on oe a Local Organism of De- fense.” ~ AMERICA’S ENTRANCE’IN THE WORLD COURT A NECESSITY “cetaamnronerimnics (Courtesy of the Yale Daily News) The political disputes over the World confused the issue by discussion of details that the fundamental reasons why America should join have been too often overlooked. That ancient institution which we call a tion. of all civilization. It is the only device which has been found to work to prevent war when quarrels became acute. Before the institution of the Court was devised even individuals settled their dis- putes as Cain and Abel settled theirs. When a dispute becomes acute and cannot be settled diplomatically, there remain just two ways of settling it. One is to fight it out, in which case the stronger man wins irre- spective of the justice of his case. The other is to referee it,; that is, to put it into the hands of a disinterested third party, who. is not so excited or prejudiced and who is ‘more likely to make a just decision. That is the fundamental idea of a Court. The first Court was the patriarch, who kept the peace within the family. The fam- ily was the first “peace group.” But to keep peace within the family was not enough. As population grew and families crowded each other it was necessary to keep peace between the families in order that clusters of families might live together in a community or vil- lage. The justice of peace, or his equivalent in ancient civiligation, was tlie second step. But it was not enough to keep the peace within @ village. Inter-village war was still possible, and in primitive regions, such as the Philippines before the United States entered, there was no peaceful method of settling disputes between villages. The next step was to cluster the villages into a State, as Massachusetts grew from its town meetings; and to institute State Courts to keep the peace between communities, The next step was to cluster the States together into a ‘nation and to settle the disputes. ‘between the States by a Supreme Court. is ‘The record of the Court thus far is Pooh gt ‘It already has more authority than Supneme Court acquired in the same space i “mecessary to argue the question of the League of Nations, to dis- i includ- Vv ™, au Court and the League of Nations have so court is really the supreme and basic inven- t 4 a ® THE SObERES NEWS ' SATURDAY MORNING CLUB TEAM DEFEATED BY SECOND VARSITY Returning ,Aluminae Play But Lose to College Players. Opening the season on Saturday, No- vember 7, Second Varsity won a 4-1: vic- tory from the Saturday Morning Club before the Varsity-Irish game. - The event seemed more one of pleasure than hard effort. Despite constant. shift- ing and the fact that they had never before played together, the Saturday Morning Club guarded Second Varsity well and kept the score down. The game was a little ragged, however, and there was a good deal of hard hitting on one another’s ankles and unnecessary messing with the ball. J. Wiles, 26, was the star of Second Varsity and three times flew down the field to shoot a quick goal, running’ ap- ‘parently through her backs around whom she cleverly dodged the ball. For the Saturday Morning Club, Miss Thompson especially shone, passing well and conffffg within an ace of goal many more times than the one she shot. The lineup was: * The Saturday Morning Club—M, E. Howe, 24, Miss Fitzpatrick, Miss Thomp- son*, Miss Compton, Miss Myers, Miss Newcomb, Miss Rugle, Miss Maris, M. Woodworth, ’24, for S .Carey, '25, Miss Avery for M. Woodworth, ’24. Second Varsity—E. Cushman, °'26; ia Rodgers, 26*; J. Wiles, ; K. Me- Vitty, ’28;-A: Newhall, 27; E. Brodie, "27: E. Haines, 27, for K. MeVitty, 728. JUNIORS DEFEAT LIGHT BLUE '27; A. Bruereg’28; J. Hend- rick, ’27, for A. Newhall, ’27. M. Leary ‘ IN HOCKEY MATCH GAME Superior Team Play Wins Victory for - the Green by Large Margin. 1927 defeated 1928 in a game closer than the score of 7-3 would indicate, on Wednesday, November 4. although th®&Greens were clearly in the Plead from thé start. They eed with tated and determination to win; their orwards were strong on the attack and their backs, through whom the ball rarely slipped to the Blue forwards, seemed, despite their excellent guarding, free for the offensive, The Blue team seemed to lack co-ordination. Shooting the first goal, S. Walker, ’27, started the Green score. In a spectaculat run down the field, A Newhall, ’27, brought the ball to the circle and passed in for a shot off E. Winchester’s stick. Repeating the manoeuvre, the Greens continued ahead despite the good play- ing of B. Loines, '28, the otcasional swift, rushes and good stick work of: E. the field, and a good swift goal from E. Dikeman, ’28. “ The lineup was: 1927—A. Newhall, N. Bowman, E. Win- chestet*****,.B. Pitney*, J. Hendrick, E. Brodie, J. Seeley, S. Walker*, E. Haines, H. Stokes, F. Thayer. 1928—R. Creighton, H. McKelvey, B. Loines**, H. Tuttle*, R. Elting, C. Field, E. Brooks, J. Stetson, H. Guiterman, F. Bethel, A. Bruere. Substitutions: E. Dikeman, for R. Creighton; J, Hoddle- ston, for FE. Brooks. LIGHT BLUE TRIUMPHS OVER RED TEAM IN SECOND GAME Sophomores Down 1929 by One Point In Spite of Red’s Good Playing. The Light Blue team saved its reputa- tion last Monday afternoon by. outscoring the Reds 5 to 4 in their second Hockey match together. Since 1929 beat 1928 in the last game the Sophomore victory was by no means sure. On the whole, the Freshmen played a better, cleaner game than 1928, whose back line, with the ex- ception of J. Stetson was rather ineffec- tive. Nineteen hundred twenty-eight had a hard time clearing their shots--and Both teams played well in the fast game} seemed unable to avoid muddli , but —_—_—_———— = a — . = e 34 7 “We . believe that the dress | j that shows taste a ae and sentiment is elevating to the home, and is one of | the most feminine meéane of beautifying the world.” The House of Youth _.—presents the Costume Suit, the a - Separate Coat and the Tailored nae _ Frock with an unusual charm and | 3 in a diversity of original modes _ whose youthful cachet will appeal he she pia im the smart ieee miss, __ : Write us gee pe abielasd Tuttle, 28, who played .too much over, 2.00. a did have the push ‘ne willpower necessary to win. A. Dalziel, 29, made two beautiful runs Yown the full length of the field with the ball and scored a spectacular goal. B. Loines and H. Tuttle upheld 1928's forward line. The lineup was as follows: 1928—B. Loines, (captain)*, M. Fow- ler*, H, Tuttle**, H McKelvey, R. Elting*, c. Field, E. Jones, J..Stetson, H. Guiter- man, F. Bethel, A. Bruere. ® 1929—-A. " Dalziel*, G. Quimby, R. Wills**, C, Parker*, E. Boyd, K. Balsch, J. Porter, N. Woodward, C. Swan, B. Freeman, B. Humphrey. ° EDITH NICHOLS IS “RED GRANGE” OF BLUE TEAM The first half df the game played last Wednesday between the first teams of 1926 and 1929 was undistinguishable from social hockey. The teams wrangled amiably in a lady like fashion in the center of the field, seeming to lack all energy. Great was the surprise of the onlookers then, at the change in the second half. Poth sides woké up, and fought heroically. On the freshman team, Wills was one of- the most tenacious of backs, while Freeman, de- fended the goal with energy and skill. S McAdoo, ’26, darted like a stag from one end of the field to the other, keeping the ball well ahead of her. The star of the game was, however, E. Nichols, ’26.. Playing center ferward, she kept her team well together, meanwhile scoring heavily for her side in individual play. The score ended 6 to 1 in favor of the Seniors, The line-up was: 1926—J. Wiles, F. Jay,* E. Nichols,**** H, Rodgers,**E. Cushman, B. Sindall, K. Hendrick, V. Cooke, E. Harris, S. McAdoo, E. Musselman. 1929—B. Humphreys, C. Parker,* R. Wills, K. McVitty, A. Dalziel, C. Swan, K. Haines, J. Porter, K. Balch, E, Boyd, E. Freeman. INEXPENSIVE PRETTY LINENS MAKE GOOD CHRISTMAS GIFTS Dainty linens, hand-embroidered by Chi- nese women, are being sold‘ by D. Smith, 26, Pembroke West. The prices are very low, ranging from $1 for tray and table covers to $11.50 for com- plete luncheon sets. There are several de- signs, including peacocks, hanging baskets of flowers and festoons. They are being sold for the benefit of a Chinese school and are made by the. mothers of the children who attend it. Do your Christmas shop- ping early any week-day between 1.30 and HANAN SHOES “They. are Hanan Shoes,” The remark, fixes . a woman’s smart standing in the eyes of a fash- ionable world.: The “Wisp” Witt Be Enhanced in Beauty by Just the Right Hose. Thew’re Hera ‘A person. ROBINSON IS SUBJECT CONTINUBD FROM PAGE 1 springs of human action, makes Robinson. a’ master of psychoanalysis, Supreme workman- ship serves his ‘observation and substanial thought. Treating of the. seamen and mill- hands and pines of his native New England, Mr. Robinson is modern wih a* general American character; American in his rest- less self questioning haste to pursue happi- ness. He stands astride the modern atid the classical schools. His influence on Frost and Masters. is apparant. But this sowing of seeds was but a wayside diversion, in the creation of these psychoepics, leavened with quiet humor, and enhanced by their lyrical beauty.” Professor Cestre on Wednesday after- noon spoke of Edwin Arlington Robinson’s poetry of emotion and reflection, of which the greater part is lyrical. »ln its intensitty of feeling,” Professor Cestre went on, “sense of beauty, and genius for melody, his poetry is lyrical. Mr. Rob- inson invests with harmony the substance that’ is usually considered the sphere of the psychologist. Although a songster in unusual degree, he occasionally becomes so engrossed in thoughts that he- neglects: the order forms, and fails. to reach that perfect balance between matter and man- ner. He des not always remain on the summit Jine between intellect and melody, but who does? “His view of man’s estate is a grave and sombre one, even his humour is sad. He uses Nature for his imagery and his scope is only limited within the realm of human emotion and activity. Mr. Robinson improves the op- portunities given him by temperament, and the rich field of experience. Most lyric poetry is dominated by self. Mr. Robinson’s - soul is in his poems: they are glowing with emotion and sincerity.. He tells of the vicissitudes of life and of human anguish, but he is very little of an egoist. He writes of some experiences of his own; many are disillusions. Sympathy and acumen give him an insight into the human soul.” American critics. have been harsh with -him. A’ little’ unjustly Professor Cestre thinks, they consider his.motrnfulness due to the spirit of self-repression and miss his acuténess and artistry. He has a forceful personality and is distinctly American in his way, as Walt Whitman in his He sees as clearly as any other into the Puritan precise New England village burdened “with, its theological prejudices, impenetrated by are and literature. He expresses his variance with this.in Tillbury Village. While deny- ” -|ing nothing. of the legacy of tradition, atthe crossing of the road, he steps firmly into the path of modern interests. He retains, neverthe'ess, his grave attitude toward man, and -his relation to his social surroundings. He breaks down the barriers of self. The passions are barred from his outlook, although they find themselves in his life scheme. He dées not complacently deal with sex expressions, and gains in in- tellectuality: what he loses in sensuality. “Having mastered the technique of verse.” Professor Cestre, went on, “Mr. Robinson re- tains the humanistic workmanship, and cul- ture of an American classicist. His avoid- ance of redundaricy is very marked, and no- where more clearly than in his admirable — comes ——e THE KERN—Washington, D. C. For holidays the delightful guest rooms with private bath suites and handsome parlors ‘lin ‘the “Chain of Charming Homes” df Edith ‘Kingman Kern, 1912 “GQ”: Street, Northwest, are the most popular assembling headquar- ters ‘in the Capital. Single rooms or small groups, $250 a person. Large groups, $2.00 Write for illustrated folders. Lo- cation same block with George Washington | University; two squares of new Auditorium ; oe House. 3 ia SN RARER NS. oo RERUN eas Re a ‘ sil Ey Se a OTE TOE cg Se ae rican . 4 le Satatss ¥ opine eee “6 . b) * s i : e + , ? ' ‘ ° ‘ ni ‘ e e 4 TH *, COLLEGE NEWS : SASSER CR A ANSE en can: RSTRNT creeper ncaa we « Motes 4 ! E ' handling of the sonnet. He has accomplished the feat of being original, yet keeps a con- nection with, the cultured poets of the past.” His poems of émotion and reflection deal mostly with the three great lyrical subjects, love, death and the ideal. In 1897 at the age of twenty-eight he published Children of the Night, which con- tains much smooth melodic verse. Mr Rob- inson attains ,, perfection, Professor Cestre avers, in the sonnet and the English ballad where his faultless design and drama are seen, He treats of psychological scenes and meditative thoughts. Love is not subjective but objective when it appears Disappointed life haunts him with its pathos.. His char- acters may not- wail, they endure with the fortitude of the strong. Mr. Robinson does not indulge in mere story-telling. He never goes into horrible or bloodcurdling details— nor lapses into the sensational. The sad- ness of feeling hearts, soul’s perplexities or tumults are portrayed. Mr. Robinson's complexity of meaning in simplicity of phrase Professor Cestre pointed out and explained that Mr. Robinson felt that the effort required in interpretation added to the reader’s joy. In the range of poems read some slight idea of the versatility of Mr. Robinson appeared—though in the » man he was pre-occupied in philosophical questions. The richness of coloring counter- acts the didactiscism that might appear and prevents his poetry from ever being dry or cold. In his later octaves and sonnets he unites tints and the purity of sculpture with -attic precision of style an elasticity of thought. “Edwin. Arlington Robinson's Treatment ot the Arthurian Legends” was the subject of M. Charles Cestre’s third lecture of the series on Robinson last Thursday afternoon. “Did Robinson when writing his two Arthurian poéms think of Walt Whitman’s interdict?” asked M. Cestre at the start. This will always be a matter for conjecture. At any rate Robinson realized the value of treading on ggound trod by Spenser and the Victorians, ahd abstracted himself from what had been done. As in all his poems, the strength of Robinson’s renderings lies -in their psychological insight and dramatic force, which precludes neither logical in- tensity nor sensuous opulence. Of his two Arthurian poems, Merlin is the least tainted. “Criticism is dissolved,” said M. Cestre, “before the felicity, of the phrase- ology and the imaginative creations.” Neither Tennyson nor Swinburne equal Robinson's vigor and depth of thought. Tennyson’s [dylls of the King have decora- tive grace in the plastic details, but lack the human quality.. His “pure maidens and vir- gin knights do well as church windows,” but are not flesh and blood. “At temptation, they turn aside with a shudder.” Terfnyson does not search the human soul. Furthermore he employs a weak, allegorical treatment, and the epic style detracts from the charm of the story. M. Cestre then criticized Tennyson’s Mer- lin and Vivian; Swinburne’s Tristram and [seult and Robinson’s Merlin in detail, since these three poems are comparable in subject matter. : Merlin and Vivian contajns no psychologi- cal truth; Tennyson is absorbed in the con- ventional theme of Virtue versus Vice. He endows Vivian with no dignity, no shrewd- ness, no reserve. Although the love scene between Merlin and. Vivian is prettily said, the situation remains vulgar. In Tristram and Iseult, Swinburne does justice to theesubject, although he wanders a little from the track. The best parts of the poem are glorious hymns. of passion, but too often these are diluted by a deluge of sweetness. Frequently the poem lacks a sense of yneasure or even common sense. Swinburne remains too much a slave of the original tale. Moreover the love of Tristram and Iseult is static. The poem ought there- fore to have been written in one thousand lines instead of six thousand; for static love deserves light theatment. Robinson, in dealing with the Arthurian material, chose the episodes for the thoughi and the intellectual insight into character. These guide his symbols. Time and Fate, rather than imagination, direct the theme. Robinson is “the first poet to’ express the virtualities of the Arthurian legends in sym- bols of truth.” They rise above the average human rather by their heroic use of intel- lectual powers than by the use of magic as in ,Tennyson’s rendering. Merlin and Lancelot are human stories giving an impression of grandeur. They are dramatic narratives in which the externals are subordinated and the true values brought to the fore. The physical facts of the story compose~ the background; while the core’ is the inner drama, the tragedy of the cliief characters, Like dramas, the poems have an exposi- tion and a denouement built up of narrative and dialogue. But they are epics in their rich imagery; lyrical poems in their soul ecstacy and stormy passions; and philosophi- cal poems in their spiritual idealism. In Merlin, Robinson, by transmuting things from the realm of fact to the .realm of values, has created the essence of poetry, the supreme achievement of the poetic mind, At ——_ AN seeanmnnemnes Friday and Saturday = ti, |. ,in the Verdi Requiem and the Beethoven ‘William Kincaid, first flutist of the Phil- the end, the poem is almost purely a drama of ideas. ‘In this linking of love with ideas, Robinson follows Shelley. But Robinson knows man’s limitations and makes allow- ances. “Out of this fall of heroes and ruin of empires, he sees.a ray of light to guide men to happiness.” tains an elaboration of details, but for the most part is a “penetrating expression of the eternal truth of the human heart.” obinson’s style abounds in beauty and finish, but is essentially original, His chief characteristic _is a “subtle involution of thought and mastery of effect. He renders pathos and woader by plain, short clauses; his is not the rhetoric of the romantic poets,” RIRST OF CONCERTS. IN TAYLOR HALL CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 - assisigd by Horace Alwyne, .pianist, and Ellis Clark Hammann,* accompanist, on the evening of December 14, in Taylor Hall.’ -’ Harold Bauer, internationally famous pianist, will give the third concert in this series, a Schumann and Brahms recital, on Thursday, January 7. Attention is called to the fact that on account of Mr. Bauer’s ~chedule of engagements, this concert will he held o a Thursday, instead of a Mon- day, evening. f The fourth program, on Monday, Feb- ruary 15, will include several very beauti- ful but rarely heard works for flute, piano and string quartette, and unusual songs with accompaniments of wind and stringed instruments. The musicians will be Madame Irene Wilder, contralto, who appeared last season with the Philhar- monic Orchestra, of New York, as soloist Ninth Symphony under Mengelberg; adelphia Orchestra; Horace Alwyne, pianist, and the Russian String Quartette, of Philadelphia. Tickets can be obtained at the office of the Publicity Director in Taylor Hall. ee Te MANN & DILKS 1102 CHESTNUT STREET TOPCOATS SUITS DRESSES SPORT HATS Lancelot is more fimited in scope. It con-| THE FRENCH BOOK ‘SHOP «1527. Locust Street * pHILASHLPHIA French C hristmas Cards a RARE BOOKS for Yourself or for Gifts ADELINE ROBERTS 51 West 49th St., New York CATALOGUE ON REQUEST Partial Payments if Desired Telephone, Bryn Mawr 807 The Hearthstone LUNCHEON TEA DINNER PARTIES. Open Sundays North Merion Ave. _ Bryn Mawr, Pa. POWERS & REYNOLDS MODERN DRUG STORE 837 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr Imported Perfumes SODA CANDY GIFTS WILLIAM L. HAYDEN. Housekeeping Hardware Locksmithing - 838 aes AVE. Bryn Mawr . PHILIP _HARRISON 826 LANOASTF' ‘VENUE Walk Over Ciyee! Shop Foe for Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Stockings We-um Lasst Du Deine Blicke in der Ferne Streiten, Wenn Das Gesuchte Liegt Sonah! —Heine. No need to go to ee for a cozy Ladies’ Dining Room. ROMA CAFE American, Italian, French Dishes Open from 7 A. M. to 12 P. M. John J. McDevitt Bi" Heads Printing Siewenin | 1145 Lancaster Ave. © Bryn Mawr, Pa. J. J. CONNELLY: ESTATE The Main Line Florists 1226 Lancaster Avenue . ROSEMONT, PA. ‘ "Phone: Bryn Mawr 252 TSA EES RS EOE mel ee i 1832 ps PHILADELPHIA The Quality — * commensurate with | , the importance of ae /BANKSe i TES RS 4 ae THE COLLEGE NEWS bY pas 5 F BROWN SISTERS | _ Outfitters to the School Girl ‘invite you to stop in and look over their dresses, mil* — _linery. hosiery and under- wear. You. are welcome in our shop even though you. do not wish to buy. A visit -will help us get. acquainted. 115-17 South 19th Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. a - « i Ca \ ‘BRINTON BROS. FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES Orders Called for and Delivered Lancaster and Merion Aves. Bryn Mawr, Pa.. tes ts COLLEGE TEA HOUSE e Od Telephone 63 OPEN WEEKDAYS—1 TO 7 P. M. SUNDAYS 4TO7 P.M. : Evening Parties by Special Arrangement JEANNETT’S ‘ Cut Flowers and Plants Fresh Daily — Corsage and Floral Baskets Old-Fashioned Bouquets a Specialty "Potted _Plante—-Personal supervision on all , orders Phone, Bryn Maws 6T0_ 807. Lancaster Ave. ome Telephone: BRYN MAWR 453 THE CHATTERBOX A Delightful Tea Room _ Dinners Served from 6 Until 7.30 Special Parties by Appointment. . OPEN AT 12 NOON sec a ccsmnmeaaal a ae Telephone 456, Bryn Mawr MICHAEL TALONE 1128 LANCASTER AVENUE We Clean or Dye SUITS, DRESSES, GOWNS, WAISTS GLOVES, CURTAINS, ROBES, DRAPERIES CALL FOR AND DELIVERY SERVIOE WE WISH TO ANNOUNCE. ed, | COMPLETE SHOWING OF - : - CHOICE GIFTS Personally Belected. onion Our Recent Trip THE HANDCRAFT SHOP —_—_—_—_—X!___ BARBARA LEE and = od {commanding the workers; give them some ywith bankruptcy in the mines. |should fight its own battles, and when he ing down, he finally agreed that for eight “lah efficient political and industrial mind to LABOUR M. P. SPEAKS CONTINUED FROM PAGBE 1 a tirely ynsatisfactory, that there is no real working -out of the idea of political de- mocracy without paying: attention to eco- nomic ‘institutions, that thousands of people are still not necessarily free in the expression of their own minds, Industrial, conditions are the largest single experience ‘man has ‘in society, and ‘we must watch them if ‘we are to avoid erecting political democracy to a religious formula. ‘ “Political tyranny has- beert abolished, but economic tyranny, divine ’right in business, still exists. We must work out the idea, ot citizenship in industry, instead. of arbitrarily sort’ of ecohomic charter. “The problem of the relation between the nation and industry has arisen in connection ‘More work and less pay,’ according to mine owners, was the only way. The workers replied that they were not prepared to argue or discuss; their wages were rock bottom, and could not be lowered. “At first Baldwin said capital and labor was forced to enter the controversy, he 1s- sued a statement that colliers, and indeed all wage earners, must accustom themselves to a still lower standard of living. Acceptirig the statement thatthe industry was break- months the State would subsidize every owner for his entire royalties, so that the wage-earners might receive their usual pay. Thus the State has entered into a definite association with industry. The. solution is now pending. Baldwin may continue this method, subsidizing all industries, and end- ing in national bankruptcy. If trade im- proves by spring, he may pull out, leaving capital and labor to fight their own battles. Qr he may decide that the community shall make its influence felt in some from in industry, considering industrial disagreements not as a conflict of private interests, but in terms of national unity, co-operation, and industrial democracy. “It is increasingly cléar that the succéss of these exercises in citizenship depends on adapt the workers to industrial democracy. “This is the third problem of the Labor movement—to work out an adequate, crea- tive. conception of education of workers, to WA KK ww i))hq Hy FEQ KCN FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS, Do You “*HOW TO STUDY” }when nations shape their institutions, make sure of intelligence, social understand- ing, and mpral responsibility. ‘This concep- tion of education of workers to make sure ‘of intelligence, ° social understanding ‘and moral responsibility. “This conception of education must. be larger than voca- tional—it must be liberal and. humane, pro- ducing original and independent men, ccm- bating the process of mechanization. which is growing from machines into the structure of human minds, This: process “is all too apparent in listening to ‘the output of minds jin an English railway. After ten minutes, one can-say with certainty, ‘yes, that man reads the Daily Mail. When we speak ot education, we do not mean impressing cer tain values and conceptions on an entire racé but the treation of men and women who aré not snowed under by institutions and’ con- ventional relations, who want to see to the bottom of life. “The Labor government has realized the 4 tesponsibility of the State for what happens to its men and women, and has dealt. with the problems of post-war unemployment, of pensions, of inadequate secondary education “We of the twentieth century are con- fronted with the problem of using our vas: extension of industrial capacities and scienti- fic power for the purposes of human welfare. Must we engage in conflict and war over fhe question ? Certainly we’ should be cautious, solemn, educated, disciplined by the history of ourselves. But we may qualify the solemn admonitions. of strife by considering that this is the first age in which whole na- tions are engaged in the experiment of. pay- ing attention to human minds. “Our minds are not static, but continually being transposed and transformed, changing their energy and plane. This gives nations an opportunity to become creative artists, and help a whole race to richer, deeper forms of social harmony. We already know the mechanical energies lately summoned out of natural forces. When we know ourselves, we will surprise mankind itself with its own possibilities.” DR. STUART: TYSON CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 help the Jews, and knowing that preaching was useless, decided to write pseudony- mously in the name of some Jew living be- fore the Law was made. He chose Daniel, who, according to tradition, had been made QM * SS LG" "E*™°"° SENIORS, ATHLETES Know? ° The Students’ Hand-Book of Practical Hints on the Technique of Effective Study by WILLIAM ALLAN BROOKS hundreds of practical hints and short cuts.in the economy A GUIDE containin of learning, to assist students in securing oe cost of time, energy and fatigue. PECIALLY R scholastic achievement. - Some of the Topics Covered: Sclentifie Shortcuts in Effective Study. _ Preparing for Examinations. , Writing Good Examinations. Brain and Digestion in Relation to How to Take Lecture and Reading Notes,. Advantages and Disadvantages f Cram- ming. . Why You Need This Guide : wnorttgs.oate,to sey that fatlure to guide and hole educational machine.” Prot. G are bedcteme ee tle ECOMMENDED for overworked students and athletes engaged in extra gor nt activities and for average and honor students who are working for hig - After College, What? eager, Se ag Me be visy haney: Most of them, Bie oaths Bas a Yale. anni lead fe an mt. Lag ut Prof. ode P. Swa . e tines for the atudent ip lara i learnt to St A see bare are many oe te mp a HOW. STUDY” will show you how to avoid sit miiedivected effort. . WOO WOAH WAAAY MAXIMUM SCHOLASTIC RESULTS at a The Athlete and His Studies. Diet During Athletic Training. How to Study Modern Languages. How to Study Science, Literature, ete, Why Go to College? iin VW OQAQ AA Develop’ Concentration and Effici peggy Ay ete., ete., ete. ae ditect stud is the weak point in the pple, U. of ichigan, ition’ vrs ee Prof. A A. Inglis, = er ee aoe a sending for * t Assistance Oe 3 ee captive by peebacetncaras, and had kept his religion. “This was. the taaaiiag of the idea that the prophet is a foreteller of events. The apacalyptic writers traced the history of |the past as if it were in the future, and so led up to the crisis of the moment, convey- ing the lesson ‘Stand firm. .. If -you hold fast, this will be your last persecution.’ “The fact that language must: be used for hone but the initiated to understand has* made these books the happy hunting-ground of emotional preachers. You can make a passage mean anything on earth if you dy vorce it from its historical content. “Book after book of this nature was written, going under the name of everyone: « from Enoch to Adam and Eve. Curiously enough, -it was the Apocalypse which gave the, Hebrew his conception: of immortality. _ | Beéfore 300 B. © he believed that the shade of a dead man, the nerveless shadow ‘of his former self, descended to regions beneath the earth, staying forever, and experienc- ing neither pleasure nor pain. Although the Apocalyptical writers originated the eida of the soul’s blessed immortality with God, they could not conceive of the survival of personality without the resurrection of a semi-spiritualized body. “St. Paul is the greatest Christian that our religion has so far produced. He real- ized that if the Christian religion were ever to become a world religion, it must be trans- lated from:the Aramaic dialect which was Christ’s’ medium of speech into a world language. So he translated Christ’s mes- sage into Greek, and taught his ideas as far .east as Rome, and possibly Spain. “At first he was convinced that the Law contained God’s final work, that Christ was an imposter, and tried to discourage the new religion by torturing and imprisioning its followers, But a bitter conflict began in his spirit. ‘I consent to God in my inner man, but I feel another law in my mem- bers, warring with the law of my mind, and bringing me into subjection.’ This cul- minated in Paul’s vision, on the road to Damascus, of ‘the living spirit of Christ’ After his conversion, he went into the desert to be alone wtih God, and returned with his philosophy of religion, a pure mysticism. ‘I live, yet no longer I, but Christ liveth in ie.” “Where the spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. ...Stand fast in the liberty where- with Christ hath made you free, and en- tangle yourself not again in the yoke of bondage.’ Paul was an apostle of liberty and also of intelligence. To the millions of devout Christians, who conceived it their duty to slay their reason and offer it to God, he replied, ‘My brothers, be not chil- dren in mind; in malice be as babes, but in mind full-grown men.’ He realized that this was a universal religion, not one, for the Jews alone. © “Although he was not technically a clergy- man, he founded churches in every city, drawing from the slaves and the oppressed, for none could transmit the vision of hope as well as he; But when he left the churches, often> Christians fro Jerusalem would enter it, saying that he was an im- poster, creating doubts as to his apostolic state, trying to win his people back tog formalistic réligion. In his rage ,and sor- row at hearing that those whom he loved were being brought back to ecclesiastical - bondage, he dictated the Epistle to the Gal- icians and the first letter to the Thessalon- ians. Repudiatings any connection with the Church of Jerusalem, he proclaimed him- self ‘Paul, apostle not from men, neither through human means, but thro Jesus Christ and God who raised him from the dead.” He set his face as flint” % ~s 3 Las THE COLLEGE NEWS .,, . . ‘CONCERT PROGRAM : On Friday and Saturday, Noyember 13 and 14, the Philadelphia Orchéstra will play the folléwing. program : Gokdmark—Overture, “In the Spring.” Beethoven—Symphony No*5 in C minor. Tschaikowsky—Concerto in B flat minor, for Piano and Orchestra—Ossip ' Gabrilow- itsch. . Weber—Invitation a la Valse. | Wagner—Entrance of the Gods into Wal- halla, from “Das Rheingold.” <3 3 The Philharmonic Society of New York will give a concert at the Academy of Mu- sic on Monday evening, November 30. Wil- lem Mengelberg will conduct. _IN PHILADELPHIA, ~~Music iaimmactainiegiaiaicaibiliti pinta of Music—Thursday evening, No- vember 12, New York Symphony. Orchestra. Theatres — Forrest—Lady Be Good with Fred -and Adele Astaire and Walter Catlett. Pe Broad—The Harem, ; Garrick—The Winner Loses. Chestnut Street Opera House—Willie How- ard in Sky High. te Lyric—Dancing Mothers. Adelphi—The Fall Guy with Ernest Truex. —c Shubert—Rose Marie. 4 Walnut—Aloma of .the South Seas. p Coming Garrick—The Show-Of. Lyric—The Gorilla: — 4 ‘Movies Aldine—The Phantom of Deas Opera with Lon Chaney, Stariley—Rudolph Valentino in The Eagle. Stanton—Harold Lloyd-in The Freshman. Fox—Tom Mix in The Everlasting Whis- per. CALENDAR Wednesday, ‘November 11: ° President Park will be at home ‘to the Senior class. Thursday, November 12: Professor Cestre on The erycnology of Edwin Arlington Robinson. Friday, November 13: Paul Blanshard will speak on. China, under the auspices of the Liberal -Club. | Monday, November 16: - First concert of “Chamber Music” in ‘Taylor—The San Francisco Chamber Music Society. » ‘ CONTINENTAL ACADEMICS . FREER, SAYS SPEAKER Descr Bing tie difference between American and Continental methods of learning, Miss Louise Dillingham, ‘16, poke in Chapel last Wednesday, on her eleven months experience of study 2t the Sorbonne. ™ Scheduled work does not begin there ill November, and courses are selected yn the trial and error method. Lectures ‘nd reséarch are scattered over a large arei in Paris. Miss Dillingham, who we doing research in the French Literature of 1830, went in Paris to the Sorbonne, to the “Ecole Normale Superieur,” to the “College de France” ’ for psychology coutses, and for Philology, to the. “Ecole de Chartres” at.Chartres. The method of working, and the amourit of work done, } are left entirely to the student. You go to the professors for discussion, not for information, although they are very will- ing to help the foreign students. The librarians give students @xcellent advice, and Miss Dillingham said that other re- search fellows had been very helpful. INDIAN MISSIONARY TO SPEAK IN CHAPEL NEXT SUNDAY Dr. Samuel Higginbottom, of the Alla- habad Institute in India, will speak in “chapeliext “Sunday, November 15, at} half past seven o’clock. In the course of his. organizing work he has done a great ‘deal towards the aid of lepers and the blind. Dr. Higginbottom has lectured through- out the United States and India. He is a persona! friend of Ghandi and as head of the Allahabad Agricultural In- stitute has been working with the people oo) to help them free theniselves from their ex'stence of starving poverty; therefore, | he is considered an authority on the mod- ern movement in India. Dr. Higginbottom will speak to Bryn Mawr on the “Cause of Poverty in India; Religion; Imperial- ism.” CHOCOLATE TREASURE IN y_ PLEASURE ISLAND ! S ‘Sees Island is a real whi henna ie Whitman’s Pleasure Isl. ay to this de. ectable land, aed e Afternoon ‘Tea Saturday Luncheon Open Sunday Chatter-On Tea House 885 Morton Road = Dinner by Appointment Bryn Mawr 1185 q 1224 Chancallor St. Philadelphia nn “ MAIN LINE VALET SHOP BERNARD J. McRORY re’ & ees Clothes Remodeled & nde cuties 2D FL. over GAFFNEY’S NOTION STORE Next to Pennsylvania Railroad — : “EXPERT FURRIERS” Smtr Breakfast Luncheons Dinners TELEPHONE. ARDMORE 1946 ‘Haverford Ave. & Station Rd. Drive HAVERFORD STATION, P. R. R. Luncheon ' Afternoon Tea Dinner An attractively different place for Collepe people THE MILESTONE INN Italian Restaurant 845 LANCASTER AVE. Catering for ‘Ditiner and Birthday Ttier “At the Ninth Milestone” Tel. Bryn Mawr 121% ————— LOWTHORPE SCHOOL A School of Lahdscape Architecture for Women TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR Courses in Lendomns Design. Planting Design, Conatruc- tion, Horticulture and kindred subjects : Estate of seventeen acres. gardens, greenhouses 36° Milea from Boston GROTON,. MASSACHUSETTS r Phone, Ardmore 12 Bryn Mawr 1221 Table Delicacies Frozen Dainties ~GEORGE F. KEMPEN ' GATERER and CONFECTIONER 27 W. Lancaster Ave. 859 Lancaster: Ave. Ardmore, Bryn Mawr E. S. McCawley & | Co. Books want the latest book? Are you. interested in books Gi while? We have it or.can st it. HAVERFORD AVE. Do you u Haverford, Pa. Engraved Cards Designed and M ade by the sa af.