a h mi - ——— VOL. XX, No. 8 BRYN MAWR AND WAYNE, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1933 . Jopyright BRYN. MAWR COLLEGE NEWS, 1933 PRICE 10 CENTS James Stephens Sees Renaissance Ahead Change Is Manifestation — of Mind, Not Brain; Amer- ica Leads Movement JAZZ ERA HAS ENDED Mr. James Stephens, speaking on “Our Overdue Renaissance,” Tues- day, November 27, prophesied, specu- lated upon, and gave reasons for the occurrence of a general renaissance at this time, centering in this coun- try, and made manifest in new lit- erary forms and ideas. ’ The Greeks had great power both as manipulators of the humap form in ‘marble and Shakespeare had a comparable. degree of facility in his art. ‘In contradis- tinction to this ease of expression we find the pre-war artists turning to violence for expression: Nietzsche’s philosophy, Rodin’s sculptures, the imagists, the cubists, the dadajsts paralleled in art the violence of the suffragettes and the struggles of la- bor and capital. The community felt itself deficient somewhere so it adopt- ed a spirit of violence, which inevit- ably culminated in the World War. From 1914 the world was growing self-conscious: it realized its lack. The social order was evolving so that it might carry on.. Violent forms of dancing and of music alone typify the jazz era, a movement introduced first in America, the only country left with energy enough to evolve and export. James Stephens in a broadcast on December 31, 1931, said that that day was’ the last of the jazz era and that with 1932 was coming a new epoch, dependent upon mind instead of upon brain. From, 1914 to..1932 there was a sort of lapse‘not fulfilling normal- ly, im which: living was not as it should be. 1982 had outlived the strange Victorianymanner. Writers had attacked the Victorian manner with singular rage in an attempt to destroy it. But their premeditated destruction was only pretense; in reality it’ was a destruction of the horse age, of the age of peasantry, and was attributable to progress in the mechanical sciences. America’s work was precisely this: the inven- tion of such things as the car, the ra- dio, and the wireless destroyed the peasantry, a class which exists only upon ‘isolation. The change is not merely an external manifestation of speeds; this new world is built by the mind and the new era is a mani- festation of mind. The former world—a world of ani- mal creation—is not present today. Our world environment is a sense only of other human beings. We seek no longer after solidarity, but rather af- ter this sense of ourselves and others (Continued on Page Three) as _ philosophers. Dr. H. Flanders Dunbar To Lead Sunday Chapel (Especially Contributed by Sarah E. Flanders, °’35) The Bryn Mawr League is most fortunate in being able to get Dr. Helen Flanders Dunbar to speak in chapel, Sunday, December 10. Dr. Dunbar is a graduate of Bryn. Mawr, and since leaving here has been awarded an M.A. and a Ph.D. by Co- lumbia University, a B.D. by Union Theological Seminary, and, an. M.D. by Yale School of Medicine. She is now connected with the medical and psychiatric staffs of the Columbia Medical Center, New York, and is an instructor at the College of Physi-. cians and Surgeons. Dr. Dunbar has chosen for her tenic—‘Psyche and Health—Based on Observations Made at Lourdes.” She spent seven weeks at Lourdes. last summer and had an opportunity to study its significance both from the medical and religious aspects. Dr. Dunbar is staying after the service and everyone is invited to meet her... Coffee will be served in the Common Room. CALENDAR ba Thurs., Dec, 7. Shaw lecture conference. Deanery, 2-4 P. M. Fri, Dec. 8. The Varsity Players present The Knight of the Burning Pestle, by Beau- mont. and Fletcher. “Goodhart,: 8.30 P. M: Tickets are on sale” at the Publications Office. Sat., Dec, 9. Varsity Hockey Team vs. __ All-Philadelphia. 10.00 A. M. . Sat., Dec. 9. The Varsity Players present The Knight of the Burrttng Pestle, by Beau- mont‘and Fletcher. Gogdhart, 830 P..M. The performance will be followed by a dance in the gym until 2.00 A. M. Tick- ets for the dance are obtain- able from the committee. Sun., Dec. 10. -Katherine Garrison Chapin (Mrs. Frances Biddle) will read her Christmas play, The Lady gf the Inn, and the College Choir, under the di- rection of Mr. Willoughby, will sing carols. Deanery, 5.00 P. M. Sun., Dec. 10. Chapel. Dr. H. Fletcher Dunbar will deliver the address on “Psyche and Health.”” Music Room, 7.30 P.M Tues., Dec. 12. Mr. Alexan- der Woollcott will speak on “Confessions of.a Dying News- paper Man.” Goodhart, 8.20 Cy Ms Wed., Dec. 18. French Club Meeting. Common Room, 7.30 P. M. James Stephens Discusses Poetry at Informal Tea At an informal tea given by Mrs. Chadwick-Collins for James -: Steph- ens, the poet entered into discussion with a few students on many subjects, including ghosts, criticism, college poetry, methods of composition, and dbseurity in modern works. In speaking of ghosts and spirits, the poet declared it would be an un- interesting world if there were only the elements of good, and that he be- 1ieves in reincarnation,—that, in fact, he has a definite feeling that in his next reincarnation he will be a female and will in that case be able to come to Bryn Mawr. The prospect pleases, it seems, because he considers this campus, with its atmosphere of quiet sseclusion, one of the most beautiful campuses he has -ever visited, Serious discussion got under way with his being asked the difference between poetry and prose. He said the two had nothing in common. The style of each differs in accordance with its different purpose: prose re- quires an argumentative style and a form providing a beginning, a mid- dle, and an end, whereas poetry de- mands a thought complete unto it- self. After the reading of original po- etry by several students in the group, Mr. Stephens gave his views on @rit!- cism. He said: “All real criticism 's destructive, for that is the essence of criticism. A thing which is com- plete and good is to be complimented, not to be ‘criticized.” He stopped, apropos of this, to remark upon the perfect technique, the flowing quality and the depth of thought in the poet- ry read, and, reverting to explana- tion of his terms, he, stated his be- lief that only lesser poets. display emotion, and that the great poets speak with passionate utterance, neither human nor personal, but rath- er anonymous and universal. The words themselves must come’ to the poet’s drunken mind unconsciously. “An aspiring poet must practice Yogi exercises_and fast and pray.” Steph- ens himself has an exercise which he lic speech. Five minutes before he is going on the’stage he spends entirely alone, emptying his mind, and medi- tating. The fact that the art of poetry re- quires no conscious preparation he illustrated by his*own start in writ- ing. He wrote no poetry until after he was twenty-one years old. e One (Continued on Page Three) always uses before giving any pub- Miss King Reviews N ovember Lantern Editorial Challenges Students to Attempt Self-Expression in Literature FORMAT IS APPROVED (Especially Contributed by Miss Georgiana Goddard King) One who served nearly six years on the Lantern—the last of them, frank- ly; because no one else could be found willing to carry on the job—must of necessity year by year take up the autumn issue with acute interest in everything: format, typography, ta- ble of contents, the color of the cov- er and the color of the contents. Ob- jectively, the» November number of 1933. is peculiarly pleasant: the page, the paper, and, above all, the print. Subjectively, it is surprising. Not just that apparently the whole magazine is written by the editors, with, the ex- ception of a book review and the poem Respite, though indeed these two pieces haye most the air of inevita- bility, of being spontaneously compos- ed to get something off one’s mind: one an opinion, the other a feeling. The Sonnet and The River have both the aspect of being selected for publication out of a private portfolio, as-though the writer had the habit of writing; the one is grave, concern- ed with inward things, the other fan- ciful, descriptive, moody. But all three pieces of verse are loyal to the here and now, in sincerity of the best sort. The two pieces, while not in } the Jeast old-fashioned, are more ten- tative, Writing courses, which are necessary dangers when they are not heaven-sent opportunities, tend to en- courage this kind. They are, never- theless, neatly done; the choice of sub- ject is significant, and all to the good. The one-act play is an ingenious mur- der-mystery, solved by the so-called French system of reconstructing the event. As everyone reads the Lan- tern there is no need to relate the plot. The opening dialogue which un- folds it and places the figures might perhaps be shorter, but the piece is stage-thought, the mystery is sustain- ed, and the personages. are sympa- thetic. The editorial is what amazes. Very well written, it reads a burial service over “pure literature,” Among 497 students, of whom only a few. may adopt writing as a profession, is there not enough creative impulse—of the bubbling well, of the upward-leaping flames — which is normal to human youth, to carry a quarterly of forty pages? The word, written and spoken, is the one certain means of self-ex- pression common to mankind. If the student of economics has taken a problem and: shaken it and made a so- lution or at least a conclusion, no matter how tentative or temporary, what she writes with fire will be read with enthusiasm. ‘Let instruction go to the dogs. If the other student has really enjoyed and understood some music strictly modern, a written page, while telling the world, can enhance her own private pleasure. Away with edification! Not mutal self-improve- ment, but communicated feeling, is the function of art, and to the art of discourse we were all born, nor can any calamity rob us of its exercise. In short, the recommendation of the editorial is all admirable except the alleged motive and method. The sec- tion on Questions and- Comments would be a goodly gift to the College News, where conceivably such matter belongs, yet it does very nicely where: it_is. rai The Lantern, then, is serious, rep- resentative, and well-written. If in the present state of the nation and of the world, and in consequence of the: lectures and conferences on the Shaw Foundation, the, trend of thought and feeling is as here deter- mined, so. much the worse for the world and the better for the Founda- tion. Surprisingly free from unreali- ties and throw-backs, it is sincere, it is re dern. ay P “ Art Exhibit ~ There is to be an exhibition and sale of etchings by Andre Smith, loaned. by: The . Print Corner, Hingham Center, Mass. The etchings will be on view in the Sduth Corridor of the Li- brary, December 6"'to 20. Greek Newspaper Likens Bryn Mawr to Monastery (The following artiéle, discovered and. translated from a Greek news- paper by Dorothy Burr, ’23, is re- printed from the ALUMNAE BUL- LETIN.) In the United States, where man can find all he can desire, there he will find something. unique in the world—the antithesis of our absolute- ly male democracy of Athos: the fe- male university of Bryn Mawr, Not far from Philadelphia, in a place of almost incredible beauty, in the foothills of the Alleghany moun- tein (ALEGKANY), there is a most charming as well as a strange settle- ment. In the centre is a colossal, nevertheless not an ungraceful build- ing, before which stretch flowery lawns several meters in length and breadth. Right and left of the two smatHer“buildings above are the other buildings, each of which include about 200 public and private rooms. Be- hind the three central buildings and in a wood which covers the side of the foothills of the Alleghanies—are charming little villas, little single dolls’ houses, with three, four, or ai the most five rooms. The whole place is surrounded and divided off by lawns, small artificial lakes, gardens, tennis courts, grounds for gymnastics and athletics, for golf or cricket and all such activities, which are necessary to the life of a well-brought-up Anglo-Saxon. The region of the settlement helds something magic, something not of the world; it is, you think, when you (Continued -on Page Two) Faculty Hockey Game Is Uproarious Affair Polo and Golf Techniques Are Major Threat in Faculty’s Performance CONTEST END$ IN DRAW Varsity came up against a stiff for- ward line with Dr. Blanchard and Mr. Carlson making full use of their one- handed polo-playing technique, Dr. Watson’s bea-utiful stickwork, Dr. Nahm’s steady plunges which result- ed in two goals, and Dr. E. Diez’s neat chip-shots in the wing position. The Faculty backfield proved to be Varsity’s Waterloo. Dr. M. Diez, Dr. Turner, and Dr. Metzger offered a stolid defense wall, which was back- ed by Dr. Broughton with his tricky dodges and by Dr. Richtmeyer who proved himself an excellent mashie shot, to say nothing of Dr. Dryden, who defended his cage nobly-in the well-known attitude of an ice hockey goalie. All in all, the game provided plen- ty of thrills and excitement for the spectators and much amusement for the players of both teams. Basket- ball is next on the schedule and it’s a good team that can beat any Fac- ulty quintet in this sport. Until then —Cheerio. The line-up was as follows: Faculty Varsity DE Wen... tes cas Taggart Mr. Carlson ....¥.-i. «sis. s.¥ aeth Dy, Blanchard: it. ft. 6 cc ciis Kent Py Warn i Larned | Dr; E. Diez.:... Wiser vicars Brown De, My Viet. Bee Evans De Taner... tes Bright Dr. Richtmeyer.L h. .:%%. Bridgman Dy, Mewees 2. ot a Bishop Dr.. Broughton il. f. ..:.; Rothermel Dr. Dryden-<.... Oy vada es Smith Goals—Faculty: Dr. Nahm, 2; Dr. Blanchard, 1. Varsity: Faeth, 3. Substitutions» — Faculty: Miss Brady for Dr. E. Diez, Dr. Welles for Dr. M. Diez. Jane Addams Finishes. Shaw Lecture Series — Efficacy of Non-Resistance Is Demonstrated .by Ghandi Policy in India NATIONALISM IS THREAT “ Copy Editor Nancy Hart, °34 Sports Editor SALLY. Howey °*35 Editors . CLARA Frances GRANT, ‘34 GERALDINE Ruoaps, ‘35 ELIZABETH MACKENZIE, ‘34 CoNSTANCE RoBIngon, °34 FRANCES PorCHER, °36 DIANA TATE-SMITH, °35 FRANCES VAN KEUREN, ‘35 Business Manager Subscription Manager BaRBARA Lewis, °35 DorotHy KALBACH, °34 Assistant tine MARGARET BEROLZHEIMER, °35 Doreen Canapay, °36 SUBSCRIPTION, $2.50 MAILING. PRICE, $3.00 SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BEGIN AT ANY TIME Entered as second-class matter at the Wayne, Pa., Post Office We Come of Age ‘It is with satisfaction that the supporters of self-government greet - the revised set of rules laid down for the college by the elected board and subject to the approval of the student body. The new rules repre- . sent a much-needed step in the direction of liberalism, and will do : bs wo rh. Bef. » ES a) had their being only in the fact that they were broken openly and boarding houses at which students were permitted to stay, and with and not on those of the college, and no constant threatening on. the much to strengthen the position of the student jurisdiction. The secret of the success which any self-government organization can hope to attain must rest not on the terror which it inspires in the students, but on the cooperation which it promotes. And cooperation cannot be propagated by rules whose one distinguishing characteristic is strict- ness. In the past there have existed several rules at Bryn Mawr which frequently by all and sundry. These had to do with the hotels and the places to which we were permitted to go in a spirit of fun and frolic. The rules limited the establishments of this sort to the dullest and most moribund spots to be found in the East, and consequently no one ever considered going to them. Instead we have all been sign- ing out to the home of a forewarned friend, and then going off gaily to the ends ofthe earth and whatever hotel pleased our plans and to whatever den of iniquity pleased our escorts. : The habit of breaking rules is a very bad one as far as its effects on the standing of the student body is concerned, and if the new rules are going to make cooperation possible within the bounds of ordinary life.they should receive the support of the entire college. The rank! and file of Bryn Mawr undergraduates would prefer to tell the truth about their activities, and if they can be encouraged to do so by the inauguration of a more liberal attitude toward where they spend their carefree hours it would mark a great advance in the evolution of Bryn Mawr student government. There are those who feel that by relaxing the rules and allowing more freedom to the students they will be subjecting the college to the criticism of the moralists who consider that no young woman is either capable or desirous of looking after herself until she has attained the ripe old age of thirty. To their arguments there can be but one answer —that the position of the college suffers much more from the flagrant breaking of impossible rules than it ever could from an open removal of those rules. Further, if the object of the many books and signing out paraphernalia is to enable the college authorities to locate a girl in case of emergency, would it not be more effective if the girl signed out her actual destination instead of giving the address of a kind and understanding friend living some hundred miles from the scene of operations? Again, if the object of the rules is to protect our manners and morals, they are seeking to operate jar a field where they have no real power. The behavior of every student depends on her own standards part of the powers that be will keep a girl out of trouble if she would rather be in. What the rules can do is encourage girls to admit where they are going, and if thither lies trouble, at least the college will know they are there. We have all been told by our families at one time or another that they would rather we kept out of the scandal sheéts, but that if we must misbehave they would rather know about it| from us than from the public at large. In a sense this same principle applies to the college, for it likes to think of itself as our foster parent (at least in the case of those who turn out to be the pride and joy of the nation). If the authorities know where we intend to stay in New York, they can reply to the outraged queries of the moralists as to| _.T0 THE DOGS And oh the joy of walking a dog! To feel oneself a minor cog In the great scheme of nature’s , creation However himble éne’s*own menial station, As, stopping by every stone and tree One has amplest opportunity, To gaze at the birds and admire the sky, Till doggie decides it’s time to pass. by with a cheer As if ’twere the first. he had seen in a year, And thus, intermittently, and startikg, - Till the hour’s up angith sme for the parting, _—_——* On hot days and. cold a "yg in’ rain and in snow, The observer can see the Bryn Mawr Dog Co., Distinctly the opposite from agog, Walking but cursing the whole race of dog. stopping —Dying Duck. (Long After Carl Sandburg). The fog comes like a little black pussy cat _ It creeps softly and drips on the boardwalk, But when I come hurrying to Goodhart I slide the slippery darkness and skid To the gravel With a thud. Damn the black pussy cat! —Tom Cat. THE LAST LEAF A turkey sat on the barnyard fence Whence all but he had fled. Once brother fowl had filled the pen. Now all but he were dead. “Alas,” he cried, “How hard my lot, I’m left here quite forlorn, On Thursday others graced the pot, They’ll be in hash this morn. On Thursday night_ they were cold cut, ; They may be soup tomorrow, My life is getting in a rut. ’Tis cause enough for sorrow. Ah, they are gone, the hero dead. They passed with parsley flying, But I must wait till Christmas Day, Then I’ll in state be lying.” \ —Tom Cat. SCHOLARLY REFLECTION After extremely festive Fridays, Sat- urdays and Sundays, passes dismally ungregarious Mondays; One Mourning the dear dead Fridays, Sat-) urdays, and Sundays, And wondering why there always have to be Mondays. —Lone Goose: STODGY “—OGIES” I shall not indulge in biology For I do not care for anatomy. I’d rather put time on me-ology. To others I leave the dead-cat-omy. I cannot abide archeology, Psychology nor this philosophy. I don’t care to know of geology, Of law cases and of will-osophy. So chanteth the innocent moron Who longs but for alleviation, And what is to this place quite foreign, where we are and why—‘“Of course, we know,” whereas the only reply | Her studying’s abbreviation. open to them in the past when a bit of information leaked through | was “Oh.” Because we feel that the student body is essentially a law-abiding group, and because we feel that in the interests of the college the object of the rules should be to promote cooperation instead of antagonism, and because we feel that we will not behave as though we are two unless we are encouraged in that belief by paternalism, we welcome the change in the rules and hope that the students will realize that to keep the advantages that they have gained will call for a justification of the confidence which the new regulations places in their good judgment | ..and intelligence. “ _ If a student is caught drinking at| If a person wished to take every the University of Colorado, he is forc-| course offered by the University of to attend Sunday’ Schoo] for a| Wisconsin, it would take him ninety-|- period of three years. — nine years to complete his education. h —Pitter-Patter. TURNABOUT The flowers growing on the bars, The horizontal enes, we mean, Are not the blooms that other years Left blushing there alone, unseen; The buds that deck the farther wall Present a new and different guise, A change of garb in austere mood— To black and white all topped with ties; And even handsome doesn’t do ~ As he is wont: he has no drag With her of:silk and satin clothes,— Since Bryn Mawr Eve herself goes —Snoop-on-the-Losse. To the next bush, which he greets] - SIGNS OF THE ,TIMES From a speakeasy:* ‘Paul White- man’s Orchestra; Harriet Hoctor, and the Flea Circus.” *A place for refreshment, now sel- dom to be found except in out-of-the- way places. WHERE TO GO IN PHILA. “Once you have eaten here you will never go elsewhere.” “BEAUTY FOR SALE, Also Bar- bara Stanwyck.” men! Line forms to the right. Or as Mae West would say—“Do I make myself clear?” _ Cheero— —THE: MAD HATTER. Greek Newspaper Likens Bryn Mawr to Monastery Continued from Page One approach, when you see it open before. you, such a place as most of the ro- manticists write about in their uni- versal Utopias. The mythica! and fantastic character of the whole place is given by the character of. the liv- ing beings who infuse life‘and move- ment into their incredible colony. There are about 500 girls, girls but From a _ restaurant near Penn: | Pa Bose. : Step up, gentle | which her admirers never fail to pay - not in uniform, the prettiest of little’ | IN PHILADELPHIA TT oI | Chestnut St. Opera House: Cornélia _ Otis Skinner comes back with an ever- increasing repertoire of her own orig- inal character sketches and dramatic sequences. Mon., Tues.,- Wed., night and Thurs. matinee and both per- formances. Saturday, The Loves of | Charles II. Thurs, night, The Em- press Eugenie. Wives of Henry VIII. She has al- | ways had a charm all her own, .to ; tribute. Walnut: S. N. Behrman’s new- world. It is entitled Love Story .and is the fitst serious play this noted writer of comedies has ever tackled, which should be enough to damn it eternally. Frank Conroy, Leona ,Ho- garth and Jane Wyatt are the main- stays. : 69th St. - Playhouse: The stock company goes on gaily with a farce about golf and bridge known as Don’t Wake. the Wife. The cast is more than one would expect and you can get your theatre tickets for anything between 30 and 60 cents. Philadelphia Orchestra, Friday, Dec. 8, at 2.30 P. M.; Sat., Dec. 9, at Friday. night, The est. play will open its ¢yes to the. Academy of Music - American creatures, who play tennis| 8,30 P. M., and Mon., Dec. 11, at 8.30 or cricket, or do rhythmic gymnast-}P, M. Eugene Ormandy will conduct. ics, or two, three, four together walk' Program: among the gardens and parks, or sit; Glinka ....“Russian and Ludmilla” in a corner, in the shade of a tree @| Prokofieff ...... Classical Symphony century old, or read. A sight not for | Prokofieff.. “Love of Three Oranges” mortals! Tschaikowsky, We are dealing with the largest Symphony No. 5 in E Minor woman’s university in the World, the Movies 7 College of Bryn Mawr in the United | Sianens The te wate Miia: wi States. But because we are dealing with a college, not a university, with the education of the rich girls of the United States, who stay ten months in Bryn Mawr, they are taught — whatever they want. From couking to higher mathematics, surveys of all the branches of knowledge in such a way that young girls or their par- ents have nothing to do but choose what they want to study. The teachers number 100, those ‘who have undertaken to teach these 500 girls, that is—but why quibble? —they are women! Because—no male may enter Bryn Mawr as no female foot may enter Athos. With one ex- ception! Witly the exception of the “Prenuptian Chambers.” are, in other words, in the central building several rooms, “parlours,” into which at their request with the permission of the parents, and of the administration, the young charges of Bryn Mawr may receive the visits of gentlemen — who, nevertheless, in most cases—there is scarcely an excep- tion with the high approval of the family—are chosen to unite their lives with the charges of Bryn Mawr whom they visit. Once a week such visits are arranged, which, nevertheless, cannot be stretched beyond a half hour. The unhappy-happy inhabi- tants of the paradise of Bryn Mawr have no-more than half an hour a week to exchange oaths of. eternal faith and love with their chosen mates. The austerely limited charac- ter of the visitors and the significance of the visits give to the rooms of Bryn Mawr where these visits take place the characterizing name: ‘“Pre- nuptial chambers!” LETTERS (The News is not responsible for opinions expressed in this column.) To the Editor of the College News: In saying I will not tolerate such a criticism of “Heartbreak House” as was printed in the last number of the News, I am voicing the opinion of many other people in the college. C ty in criticism turns the reader nh indignation against the critic rath- er than against the piece criticized. “Without go6d breeding truth is disapproved.” Of course, personal opinion must enter into criticism, but it should be expressed with some de- gree of courtesy. Moreover, in such a.statement as the opening sentence, there is room for questioning the truth of it. I believe some of our short of the ideal than did this pro- duction of “Heartbreak House.” We should prefer to be told the endeav- ors of the Hedgerow group; we should rather be guided to their par- tial successes than be stunned by the over-emphasis of their failures.’ EVELYN THOMPSON, ’35. a year and three years in syccession, | A i¢ For they | own attempts have fallen further’ Claude Rains. A movie which one should see only on very sedate occa- sions because it has terrible.effects on the nerves and leads one to doubt one- All about a man which no one could see—at least not all of him all of the time. Very ‘swell. Karlton: Richard Dix goes dra- matic and gloomy on us in Day of _ Earle: Constance Bennett and Gil- bert Roland add more proof to the movie Maxim that spies inevitably fall in love and tell each other all they know and catch it all around for the sake of the tender passion. This is not much better than its predeces- sors and is called appropriately After Tonight. Boyd: Paul Muni does another dis- tinguished piece of work in The World Changes. The story follows a man through this charming world from his youth to his old age, and the end finds him a bitter, disappoint- ed individual. Excellent. 0 Europa: Sergei Hisenstein’s Mexi- can masterpiece, Thunder Over Mex- ico, in which he pleads his communis- tic cause with fervor, and in which appears some of the best of all mod- ern photography. And also a great deal of blood and gore. See it. Stanley: The Four Marx Broth- ers are back in Duck Soup, which in- volves a mythical kingdom, a revolu- tion and Groucho as dictator. Per- sonally we think they are very damp, but they have their public among many better minds than ours. S Aldine: Charles Laughton and his five visible wives go on being funny and also romantic in The Private Life of Henry the VIII. Mr. Laughton creates a portrait of the monarch that have existed in our minds since Freshman English. Keith’s: Lillian Harvey and John Boles in My Lips Betray. It’s one |of those musica] romances and a little on the moth-eaten side. Local Movies Ardmore: Wed., Thurs., Fri., and Sat., Footlight Parade, with Dick Powell, Ruby Keeler, and James Cag- ney. Mon. and Tues., Maurice Che- valier and To Love. ed. and Thurs., Jack Holt in The Wrecker. Fri. and Sat., My Lips Betray, with John Boles and Lil- lian Harvey. Mon. and Tues., Tar- zan, The Fearless, with Buster Crabbe. _Wed. and Thurs., Jimmy and Sally, with James Dunn and Claire Trevor. Wayne. Wed. and Thurs., Brief Moment, with Carole Lombard. ~ Fri. and Sat., Night Flight, with Lionel Barrymore, Helen Hayes and John Barrymore. Mon. and Tues., Too Much Harmony, with Bing Crosby. : Le There’s something in the adver- tisements this week. Read them. Reckoning, and it is pretty terrible. . answered a lot of questions which. nn Dvorak in The Way. 2) rami mos ascees atc is ae ee THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Three Varsity Overcomes William and Mary, 3-0 First Southern Hockey Team to Invade North Proves Unsuccessful % -B.-M. TAKES OFFENSIVE. On Friday afternoon, Varsity de- feated the William and Mary hockey team, the first Southern women’s. hoc- key team to be. sent North, by the score 3-0. Although William and Mary boast- ed an excellent backfield, which of- fered a compact barrier to the con- tinuous attack of the Bryn Mawr line, the forwards were noticeably lacking in any united effort to get the ball into scoring position. The Bryn Mawr forwards started the game with a speedy offensive drive backed up by a strong defense, which allowed the ball to get into Bryn Mawr territory only a few times. The forwards, for the most part, played better than we dared hope for, had excellent control of the ball, passed cleanly and accurately, and, but for the stubborn resistance of. the opposing backfield, would have scored again and again. Varsity ended its season with a type of hockey that we have Aong wished to see, played hard agafnst an excel- lent team, and reaped its reward. If the good work continués, there should be plenty of opposition in the game with the All-Philadelphia team on ecember 9. "The line-up was as: follows: William and Mary Bryn Moewr Chammings: 63h We Gees Taggart HOWAEG (so iccues Pol eases Larned HONORING Ghai Kent Holladay. \ hue" a voerer ember er Faeth Dunleavy....... WOW 4 alsievee Brown BIOWN occ. HW. ise Jackson SOCK: ep ck cea Ge De sia Wines Bright 1 8 5g Ps a Lone aa Evans WO ern | ae gare ETE ETEOS Bishop Cummings ..... l. f. 2....Rothermel Berger i. a eos Bee E. Smith Goals—Bryn Mawr: Kent, 2; Tag- wort, i. Substitutions—W. and M.: for Brown. Bryn Mawr: Mann ‘for Jackson. Time of halves—25 minutes. Umpires—Miss Flannery and Miss Ferguson. James Stephens Discusses Poetry at Informal Tea (Continued from Page One) morning he went to awaken a friend who didn’t like to. get up in the morn- ing, and while he: was waiting for his friend to arise he picked up a small book lying nearby; but when he saw it was poetry, he put it back. He waited longer, and finally picked the book up again and read one verse. His first inward comment—was,“My God! The sense! of it!” So he read the second verse. Now, at that time he was the champion gymnast of Ire- land, and he had formed the habit, “on observing acrobatics, of accurate- ly judging his own ability to do a particular stunt. His reaction to the second verse was a realization of his competence to write poetry, and thereupon ‘he went home that night and wrote twenty-four poems. “Poets are akin to unwieldy wooers who win by strength and ignorance, not | displaying the intellect, but creating | unconsciously~’ His theory of poetic composition | naturally brought forth questions re- garding the obscurity in much mod-| poetry, and, especially, objection t6 ‘Hopkins’ obscure poetry. “There is a value in obscurity,” said Mr. +3 Stephens, “and if there is so-called obscurity the blame is to be put on . the poet or the reader, but in regard -who is incompetent.” to Hopkins’ poetry it is the reader Hopkins’ verse has two- subjects: the thought and the music, which provides a back-! ground for the first.- The words are not merely strung together; they are designed to give a feeling of melody. Mr. Stephens remarked that he is now engaged in writing twelve son- nets, which he hopes will be utterly incomprehensible to anyone but him- self, “for only those who understand can understand.” - He also read some - of his own poems in this connection, notably The Universe, which he de- scribes as pure vacuity, and Love. Bridgman | | | | | | historical fact. Hi | | I Engagement Martha~Jane~Tipton, ’*83,-to” Joseph Lemuel Johnson, gradu- ate of West Point. Art Class Hears Alumna Lecture on Iconography m Continued from Page One ebrred,—at fwilight on the*first day of the Passion, One of the earliest sources for the theme of the Vesper- bild is a twelfth century poem in which the desire of the Virgin to once more hold Christ in ‘her arms is ex- pressed. Then at the end of the thir- teenth century, the Mirror of Con- stance describes her wish as fulfilled; Christ lies in her arms and she is content. The greatest Vesperbild of Italian art and*probably the greatest in the world is that of Michaelan- gelo in St. Peter’s at Rome. The second motif,” that of the Throne of Grace, shows the Virgin and St. John, or God the Father, sup- porting Christ after his crucifixion. Sometimes this receives the generic name of the Trinity when a dove is included; but the wide. range of rep. resentations of the Trinity makes this label too inaccurate in the naming of the Throne of Grace and it is bet- ter to use the narrower term. A pic. ture attributed to El Greco and rep- resenting God the Father supporting His Son, as the holy Dove hovers over- head has the same purely spiritual and unhistorical significance as the Vesperbild. Both of these subjects, therefore, are sublimations of events in the Passion, and represent a mys- tical and religious idea detached from Advertisers in this paper are reli- able merchants. Deal with them. % James Stephens Sees Renaissance. Ahead. Continued from Page One like ‘us. The values of the horse age cannot be replaced:. artistic emigra- tions to find an impetus and a revivi- fication are’useless. The United States, one of a very few countries in which energy is re- surgent, has no need to apply for ma- terial to an old Europe, weary artis- tically and materially. The time for sleep has.come in Europe. America and Russia will probably be the two poles for international affairs which England ‘and France have been so long. Similarly, as England was a wealthy and poetic nation, so the United States will be; .as France’s preoccupations were with war and criticism, so will Italy turn to these; and as Germany was engrossed in so- cial organization and music, so Rus- sia will be occupied. This transfer of energy is'only normal, although this is the first time in’ history in which energy is being taken up by countries with an idealistic rather than a materialistic background. This break from tradition is quite recent. Until thirty or forty years ago America was still following Eng- land. So far as literary aspirations were concerned,. Lowell, Whittier, Poe, Emerson, Hawthorne and Mark Twain were all getting in step with the English tradition. Then came a wave of immigration which forced the United States to rest until the di- gestive process was finished. Today the United States is again upon its feet, not following England this time, but a little in advance. The earlier American writings show that their authors attained technique but not content (with the possible exception of Poe’s Helen), which was perfect in Isn°t An THIRTY-FIVE CENTS Much? Most college allowances go only so far. But even at that you can probably spare 35 cents once a week. It isn’t much—35 cents—hardly the price of a movie or shampoo. Yet for 35 cents, if you know the ropes, you can telephone as far as 100 miles. That probably means you can telephone “home! Can 35 cents buy more pleasure than that? You can pick up a budget of family news... talk over your problems . . . share your interests. There’s nothing like a “voice visit” with the folks back home to brighten your whole week—and theirs. TO TAKE ADVANTAGE a the LOW NIGHT RATES... person. £ W—2. | : Call after 8:30 P. M. Standard Time, and be sure to make a Station to Station call. That means, ask the Operator for your home telephone, but P for any specific If you’ve fixed a date in advance, ii family will be sure to be there. 35 cents at night will pay for’ a 3-minute Station to Station call to anywhere within 100. miles. “~~ a ee ee ee eae its sheer completeness. Between the time of these writers. and: the present, America was busy with legislation and acquisition. of wealth.. Then Frost, Robinson, and Lindsay captur- ed the content of poetry in addition to the form. This country is now, as a result, almost entirely alone in its production of a native literature of imaginative ‘adventure. With this came a renaissance in criticism as well: America started working on problems; indigenously and_ writing readable, valuable, and original criti- cism. ‘ This renaissance involves all of us, either as readers or writers. We are outgrowing the age of jazz that made us live from week to week to sustain a feeling that all was not denuded, and we are now being trained to think on many and: different problems, that our mind and wills may be capable in many directions, Thus is art being sta- bilized by’ a naming process that di- lates the mind. The’ sense of beginning in us is not manifest until it is identi- recognize its existence and give us a previous sense of reality. Mr. Stephens concluded his lecture by reading illustrative poems from his own works. He read A Minuet to show his means of conveying the sense of a dance, and a piece on water de- signed to convey, an elemental feel- ing of the abstractness of the subject. Lonéliness also gave an extraordinary sense of rhythm, emotional and with an underlying sensuous mood that made’ the piece seem all the purer poetry for the absence of intellectual substance. Colonel H. Edmond Bullis, execu- tive secretary of the National Com- mittee for Mental Hygiene, believes that thousands of jobless graduates of colleges and: universities are be- coming a menace to the recent order of American society because of the discontent rife among them. BEST'S » ARDMORE New! THE HARRIS TWEED ; r COAT WITH DETACHABLE, PLAID SHAWL LINING ; (2-3 anor | Bi < | \ a \\\} 3 li} | | he wt 4 Rie) Be crofters in the cally weather-proof about coat for this and many seasons lining that buttons ‘sports events. of Harris and Lewis. the unmistakable peat smell. character and distinction that only real Harris has. Tough, sturdy, and practi- 38.00 EAL Harris, hand-woven by the primitive little island Real Harris, with And the it is a grand knock- season, next season, to come. Besides its silk crepe lining it has a plaid wool shaw! in and is completely \ detachable so that you may dispense-with it when the weather grows warmer, or use it as a lap robe at current-outdoor =< Best & Co. Monegomert and Anderson Avenues, Ardmore, Pa. Ardmore 4840 fied_.with .a-. word that.-.will_make us_ =e J Page Four THE COLLEGE NEWS Setapuioedoned-amilcalainercenne tenant none NEGOTIATION IS URGED . future, not in the past,’ said Miss Jane Addams Talks on Peace Movement Women’s International League - Nearly Managed to End World War “Any orthodox lecture on peace) goes back to Isaiah, for Isaiah first was bold enough to put peace in the Jane Addams, speaking in Goodhart Auditorium, Monday night, November 27, on The Hopes We Inherit. For three centuries the early Christians would have nothing to do with war, until Saint Augustine vindicated just, as distinct from «unjust, fighting. Sul- ly, Grotius, Quakers like Fox and Penn, and, in our own day, Count Tolstoi, made efforts to recapture the early Christian attitude, without widespread success. When the Age of Enlightenment was ready to con- demn war as opposed to reason, a series of nationalistic, revolutionafy struggles once more ennobled the con- cept of war. . In the Victorian era, projects were set on foot toward peace. Though the peace methods pursued before the Great. War failed to avert that con- flict, there is something to be said for them as laying the foundation for later and more successful post-war plans. In the late nineteenth century, peo- ple talked of the gradual abandon- ment of war by a triple international process, corresponding in its three parts to~the three” branches~ of~ the United States Government. The first is the judicial method. The _Court at The Hague, opened in 1899, seem- ed the consummation of long effort. The United States led the way by first using the Court when Roose- velt appealed to its judgment over the trouble with Mexico about lands in Southern California. Roosevelt ap- pealed to it again in connection with fisheries, confirming American . ap- proval of arbitration methods as made possible through the Court. The second peace method was the legislative. An _ Interparliamentary Union, composed of two representa- tives each from nations with parlia- mentary government, was established in 1888, to discuss together matters of international interest, and then to uphold the views of the Union before the legislatures of their own coun- tries. This Union was able to effect such a world-wide reform as the use of white phosphorus for the protec- tion of the workers in the match-in- dustry. : The third of the peace methods was the executive. This branch of en-' deavor worked through commissions, of which there have been listed as many as 375, among them the Inter- national Postal Union. Concerning themselves with shipping, manufac- turing, health, and other matters, and they did their work so well that peo- ple soon recognized their usefulness. In the midst of the apparent prog- ress toward peace came the Great War. These first steps did not per- manently fall. to pieces, - however; many of the commissioners, for in- stance, reorganized promptly and effi- ciently at the elose of the war. With the horrors of war fresh in their minds, men- were more than ever ready to work for peace. Out of the war grew the League of Nations and the International Court, the latter unlike and superior to the earlier ‘World Court at The Hague. The League Assembly Room is often the scene of striking incidents, Dur- ing one session, a black man from Haiti rose to protest against the con- duct of certain British soldiers in bombing African villages. to collect taxes. To this man, challenging on a purely moral issue, representatives of the British Empire excused their countrymens’ conduct and explained that reparations had been made. On another occasion, the great French minister, Briand, in reply to a speech of the German Chancellor, declared that—for good political and economic reasons French and Ger- mans had fought ever since they’ were called Teutons and Gauls, but pre- dicted that war should never happen again, that another method of settling disputes was now provided in the Council and Assembly of the League. A type of peace society sprang up after the war, like the League for Democratic Control in England and in Germany the Band of the New Fatherland. The former believed that if the situation in the British For- eign Office “were submitted to ‘the House of Commons year by year for discussion; “it “‘would-make* for better foreign relations. vie In May, 1915, the Women’s Inter- national League was established. A group of American women was invited to meet a group of Europeans in The Hague. Most of them were suf- fragettes of the International Suf- fragette Association. Twelve coun- tries were represented, and they sat for three and a half days. They hop- ed, not to stop war like a traffic po- liceman, but to get together various national efforts and present to their countries a feasible peace program. They advocated a system of contin- uous mediation, devised by (Grace Wales, of the English Department of the University of Wisconsin. The idea was that if a group of educated people from the neutral countries ‘met in a neutral capital to consider. the fortunes of the war,-it might make suggestions which would lead to nego- tiation. To make the plan known, groups of women set out, one to the Scandinavian countries and. the other to Central Europe. They boldly took the scheme to the Prime Minister and to the Minister for Foreign Affairs in every country, who, having already gone through one winter of the war, with expense, terror, and loss of life, were ready to hear the, proposition. There was an amazing response to the plan. The Hungarian minister applauded the women for taking such two} a step, and declared that it was the first sensible. proposition that had come to him since the war _ began. Lloyd George, then Minister of Muni- tions, confessed to occasional misgiv- ings@s to the rightness of war. The Women’s International League met at the close of the war in Zurich, with twenty-three countries represent- ed. Later meetings were held at Vi- enna, and in Ireland. The League,. like all other peace societies, pinned its faith on negotiation, as a means of avoiding war. American peace societies, started as far back as 1826, as the peace exhib- it in the present World Fair will prove, culminated in the widespread post-war longing for peace. War is an anachronism, and, whether or not we are at present down in the trough of peace, there is a determination in the hearts of the people and of groups to bring war permanently to an end. “There is nothing like a strike to dodge examinations,” say Chinese stu- dents. They. have used it so often that administrations now take spe- cial care to see that there are no grounds for friction between’ faculty and students immediately preceding the examinations. Because of the increasing nuisance caused by’ skunks in the vicinity of State College, Pennsylvania, the State Game Commissioners have ruled that students may kill the animals without the necessity of a hunting license. ons: tie to win the ‘ a MATCHLESS BLEND ° SHOOTING FROM SCRATCH, 25 yards behind the traps, Walter Beaver pulled out of an exciting time it has been won by a limit contestant! He has been a steady smoker of Camels for years, and says: ‘“‘During,all these years I’ve been smoking Camels because I like their taste and mildness...they never jangle my nerves.” 34th Grand American—the first ° ee ER ee ee EC ae ee ee ae WALTER BEAVER, holder of the coveted Grand American I‘andicap, says: ‘‘Winning a trap-shooting champion- ship is partly a matter of luck, partly the result of practice and partly healthy nerves. I’m a steady smoker. People kid me about it at the tournanients. They say I never have a cigarette out of my mouth. During all these years . I’ve been smoking Camels, not only TRAP SHOOTER HOW ARE YOUR NERVES? If you smoke a lot...inside...outdoors .-swherever you are... join the swing to Camels. You’ll find them milder, better tasting, and they never get on your nerves. TO BE THE CHAMPION .- because J like their taste and their mildness, but also because they never jangle my nerves.’’ It’s no fun to feel that your nerves are ragged—and to wonder why. Check up on your eating...your sleep...your cigarettes. Switch to Camels. Your nerves and your taste will tell you that Camels are a more likable cigarette— and that they don’t upset your nerves, Copyright, 1933, _ B. J. Beynolds Tobacco Company “challenge to all Christians to: prac- > connected with war. THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Five Jané Addams Finishes joyfully went to prison for civil dis- , | obedience; others gave up their. posi- Shaw Lecture Series on in English-employment; Tagore _jgave back his knighthood. => In the midst of this progress, un- fortunately,’riots occurred. The peo- ple were not sufficiently disciplined to carry through the principle of non- resistance. Ghandi, distressed, call- ed off the whole movement, preferring Continued from Page One since the war must dwell for nia | time on the figure of Mahatma Ghan- di, for he first applied the principle of non-resistance to a national situ- ation. Coercion had been gradually disappearing from daily life — in ee : schools, in courts, in politics; in the|‘t? fail in one instance rather than eighties and nineties of last ~century|t® have his -doctrine deserted. He Count Tolstoi ‘ad boldly sent outa realized that the man who practices " non-violence must be drilled to con- trol the instinct of anger and demon- stration of animosity; on the other’ hand, the onlooker must not confuse non-resistance with cowardice, Ghandj’s effort to put the new peace method into practice stands to repre- sent the functional goodwill which is gradually appearing in the world. This love of mankirid has always ex- isted, but has never been brought together and disciplined sas a social tice their doctrine, “Resist not evil,” and though the world at large re- plied that the time had not yet’ come, groups of Russian youth flung back the answer, “The time has come for ts.” The time had to come, too, for Ma- hatma Ghandi, to whom Tolstoi him- self had drawn attention for the suc- cess with’ which he had been prac- ticing the non-resistance method as a young lawyer in South Africa in sup. | force. port of his own. countrymen there. Peace movements before the war Ghandi returned after the war to a| lacked three things of which postwar bellicose, nationalistic India. “All na-| methods could avail themselves. Tech- tional movements had hitherto been| nical aids to peace have ‘increased To convince his} with the growth of communication, by people of the efficacy of peaceful|sea and aid. Psychological under- methods was the difficult task ‘he set | standing is supplied in the new reali- i FANSLOW Ardent, convinced, quick to seize the moral initiative, quicker to act Distinctive Sportswear Stetson Hats for Women than to talk, Ghandi by 1922 had en- rolled millions of followers, and the situation in India was near the break- ing point. Thirty thousand Indians ARDMORE Phone 570 2 —> _JEANNETT’S CECELIA’S YARN __ |} BRYN MAWR FLOWER _ |‘ O SHOP } SHOP, Inc. { “—— d Mrs. N. S. T. Grammer { Seville Arcade 823 Lancaster Avenue j BRYN MAWR .- PA. } BRYN MAWR, PA. Sw ~~ | wise disappear. Peace efforts will have zation that there will be peace only if men are determined to have it, if they will love peace and ‘pursue it. Politica] backing has béen given in such institutions as the ‘League and the World Court. It does not seem as if it should be so difficult for the present young gen- eration to secure a peaceful world. Slavery was once the twin curse with war, and if has been abolished. The day must come--when war will —like- need of the scholar, to furnish _his- toric perspective, to link the mind which. experiences with the mind which remembers: Hitherto nations have ‘had a. selfish attitude toward each other, but with closer economic and social ties, they-may come into a fairer and broader land, and utilize the opportunities of the new day. KITTY McLEAN The Sportswoman’s Shop Specializing in College Clothes BRYN MAWR, PA. Meet your friends at the Bryn Mawr Confectionery (Next to Seville Theater Bldg.) The Rendezvous ‘of the College Girls Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Stindaes, Superior Soda Service Music—Dancing for girls only All sorts of Christmas cards ’n’ things. RICHARD STOCKTON . Bryn Mawr Editors The current issue of the intercol- legiate magazine, the Student Inter- nationalist, was edited by the Bryn Mawr members of the _ editorial Board: Eleanor Fabian, Nancy Hart, and Vung-Yuin Ting. Four Bryn Mawr students contributed arti- cles: Margar ackel]l “Eine Floss- fahrt;”’ Myra Little, “Madame Chair- man. . .!;” Tweet Kimball, “French Provincials;” Pauline Reed, “Hitler- ism By Night.” The Student Internationalist is is- sued four times a year by represen- tatives of Bryn Mawr, Connecticut, Mount Holyoke, Smith, Vassar, and Wellesley, in order to give students a chance to express their own ideas on subjects of international interest. icidiiniaahlinnashestiniaiediaemensedi ine iiamemeenanieitiamaneie aamaeaineatnetaseeeee coma | REWARD $100.00 } LOST—Pearl Necklace, grad- uated pearls, Friday, Novem- ber 10, 1933, in Pembroke Hall, West, Bryn Mawr: Col- lege. W. E. G. MILLER 400 Walnut Street _ PHILADELPHIA, PA. ’"PHONE—LOMBARD 1650 Luncheon 40c - 50c - 75c Meals a la carte arid table d’hote Daily and Sunday 8.30 A. M. to 7.30 P. M. Afternoon ‘Teas BRIDGE, DINNER PARTIES AND TEAS ‘MAY BE ARRANGED MEALS SERVED ON THE TERRACE WHEN WEATHER PERMITS THE PUBLIC IS INVITED Telephone: Bryn Mawr 386 The editing is done by each college in rotation. Committee in the Y. W, C. A. head- lisher. Football, which gained popularity in the United States only after the Yale-Princeton game in 1873, is an ex- tremely old game and has been trac- ed back as far as the ancient Greeks and Romans and also.to the Eskimos j and the Polynesian Islands. PHILIP HARRISON STORE BRYN MAWR, PA. Gotham Gold Stripe” Silk Hosiery, $1.00 Best Quality Shoes in Bryn Mawr NEXT DOOR TO THE MOVIES GREEN HILL FARMS City..Line and Lancaster Ave. Overbrook-Philadelphia A reminder that we would like to take care of your parents and friends, whenever they come to visit you. L. E. METCALF, Manager. Dinner 85c - $1.25 Miss Sarah Davis, Manager ry Not so long ago practically all cigarettes were made by hand Now, Chesterfields are made by high-speed machines that turn out 750 cigarettes a minute, and the cigarettes are practically not touched by hand. Y the use of long steel ovens in any way —drying machines of the Chesterfields are made and in the manufacture. © 1933, Liccerr & Mygrs Tosacco Co, most modern type—and by age- ing the leaf tobacco for 30 months—like wine is aged— Chesterfield tobacco is milder and tastes better. ane Only pure cigarette. paper— the best made—is used for Chesterfield. And.to make sure that every- thing that goes into Chesterfield is just right, expert chemists test all materials that are used oo packed in clean, up-to-date fac- tories, where the air is changed every 4% minutes. The mois- ture-proof package, wrapped in Du Pont’s No. 300 Cellophane _—the best made—reaches you just as if you went by the fac- tory door. In a letter to us, an emi- nent scientist says: “Chesterfield Cigarettes are just as pure as the water ‘you drink.” - hestertield cigarettes are just pure as the water you drink” The International Student . quarters in New York serves as pub- ee 4 CRE ina* - eae eee Ba gh dene: Ss Se: #8; ‘+ ton eri ibe igs :* PBL ERIE WR. pie Pian eee CRTy SAMUI ST at ibe a iii i ia td EY Tice CS se DRE Ve Page Six THE COLI-EGE NEWS A ” Self-Gov Introduces More Liberal Rules “Board No Longer Prescribes' “Places to Which Students May Sign Out AIM IS CO-OPERATION, The Self-Government rules which have been prescribed under the revis- ed system adopted by. the represent. a liberal departure from the more strict regulations now in) force, and have been drawn up by the ‘Board as part of its policy to en- courage co-operation with Self-Gov- ernment. The jurisdiction of self-government is interpreted as follows: During the College year, including all holi-| days, students staying in the College | shall be under all rules of the Asso-| ciation. Students staying away from |" Bryn Mawr shall be~ responsible for | not bringing criticism on the College by their conduct. Any cases which | the Executive Board consider to have; brought discredit on the College shall be severely dealt with. ALUMNAE Kvery alumna or former student or guest is under Self-Government regu- lations. EXECUTIVE AND ADVISORY ' BOARDS I. The President shall have pow- er to use any means she sees fit to make the rules known to the associa- tion. II. A week before any meeting of the association, a notice of said meet- ing shall be posted on the students’ bulletin boards in the halls, and for- ty-eight hours previous to the meet- ings a complete list of subjects to be discussed be likewise posted and no subject be acted on in said meeting yin exceptional cases to ask for testi-| (2) student» body are reprinted below. These rules, ‘that has not been acted on in said | emergency telephone-listed under her list. In cases oe immediate | name. or private action this regulation may | B—Special Permission | be set aside by the President. : | (i); Weeskinen must alwabe have | III. That the « Executive Board, | special permission to -be out after sitting as a court, may be empowered | |.10. 30. “Al students. ‘must have spe- _ | mony’ from any member of the Asso- | ‘cial permission to motor after dark | ciation. | and must sign out “motoring.” After Wardens may, at their ‘discretion, | 10.30 destination must be registered. give. information to the Board, and | ‘Special permission is not necessary if the Board, at its discretion, may act) motoring with families. or in taxis. upon such information. | (8) Special permission to. beaut (Agreement between Executive) after 10.30 may be obtained for the Board..and the Wardens.) | following: IV. The Executive Board shall | (a) If escorted, a. 15 permission have the power to fix penalties for in- | for eating in the village. ' fractions of rules. : A ‘(b) If unescorted, three-quarters Vv. Only the Junior and Senior of an hour permission for eat- | members of the Executive Board and ing in the village after eve- 'the Hall Presidents may. give special | ning. entertainments in “Good- | permission and deputies approved by hart. ! | the Executive Board. (11.15 the latest.) VI. (1) Hall Presidents shall be | (c) If escorted, 11.80 permission responsible for the execution of hall “for movies on the Main Line. regulations. (d) 12.15 permission for movies, | (2) Hall Presidents shall be sub- | theatres, and concerts in Phil- | ject, on election, to the approval of ' adelphia, if returning by mo- | the Executive Board, and to removal tor. If returning by train, no iby it at any time, if deemed ineffi- permission necessary. cient in the performance of their section VIII, Freshmen rule.) duties. (e) Two o’clock permission for pri- RESPONSIBILITY OF vate parties. A _ MEMBERS .(£) Two o'clock permission for in- ' VIL. Each member~of-the—Asso-+ ciation is responsible for seeing that the rules of the Association are Bellevue, obeyed. Pierre’s. ABSENCE AFTER TEN-THIRTY (zg) Three o’clock permission for VIII. Students must be inside the formal dances. halls by 10.30 unless they have com- (h) If a student after leaving the plied with the following registration hall, finds out before 10.30 and permission rules: P.M, that she wishes special A—Registration permission, she must telephone (1) Students returning a college to a member of the Board for after 10.30 must in all cases register formal dancing at any reput- Walton Roof, return, and upon return, actual hour. (2) If -a student after 10.30 finds that she is unavoidably delayed, she must notify the warden, who has. an (See* able place, such as Mayfair, |' it and have herself signed out. | in full, name, destination, means of (i) Students must not go*off cam-| Board: pus after dark in parties of; less than three, except to the| right to act in all cases where the village by way of the station|dress of students is such as to cause and to the movies on the Main) unfavorable criticism of the esi the supposed crash. Line when only two are neces- sary. (j). Students must have special permission for spending the night unchaperoned at any _reputable hotel. or boarding house. IX. -For’ an overnight absence aj} student shall register the following | before 10.30 P. M.: (1) Name, (2) address, signifying if home address or giving full name of her hostess, etc. (3) Purpose of absence, i. e., social, etc. (4). Date of departure and on return actual-hour of arrival. If not herself able to reg- ister, the student.must send her ad- dress to the Hall President or warden of the Hall. (5) If spending the night in another hall, students shall register in the guestbook of that hall. SMOKING AND’ DRINKING X. Smoking is allowed: A—On campus: (1) In hall smoking rooms. In hall sitting rooms when _ receiving guests. (2) By the varsity tennis courts and on the lower campus, the triangle of land drawn between the President’s house, the northwest corner of the Deanery, and the Powerhouse. — (3) In the - Students’ Wing, the foyer and Music Walk of Goodhart, not-in-the music room or on the stage. B—Off campus everywhere except: (1) When walking on Main thor- oughfares near Bryn Mawr. (2) Stations or railroad trains on| the Main Line. XI. No. fermented beverages shall | be allowed on campus. toxication shall with. Cases of in- be severely dealt DRESS XII. Decision of the Executive The Executive Board reserves the db A’°’— Athletic: costumes and. men’s clothing may be worn: (1) At college infirmary (2) At College Inn (3) In Psychology laboratory (4) In Dalton. laboratories, B — Athletic costumes and men’s | clothing may not be worn: | (1) Off campus (2) To classes (8) To dinner in the halls. HALL REGULATIONS XIII. Quiet Hours. A—There shal] be quiet in the dors mitories after 10.30 every night. In the library there shall be quiet throughout the day and evening. B—Up to 10.30 the extent and en- forcement of quiet hours shall be de- termined in each hall by the Hall President in consultation with the hall. Each student shall feel herself responsible for the enforcement of such regulations. . C—These regulations alone may be suspended during. the College vaca- tions. XIV. Students may receive men in their rooms without a chaperon be- tween 2 and 6 P. M. Before 2 P, M. special permission must. be obtained. After 6 P. M. no men shall be in the corridors except fathers who may be received until 9 P. M. “XV. The hours during which the hall ‘victrolas may be played shall be regulated in accordance.with the quiet hours in each hall. ~* | Special permission to play the vic- trola in private rooms will be given at the discretion of the Hall Presi- dent. The students of Glasgow Univer- sity in Scotland upset the whole of Great Britain by publishing a ficti- tious yarn concerning the crash of a trans-Atlantic aviatrix and then took up a collection for their charity fund when a crowd appeared at the scene Te Siggest user ~ OF FINE TURKISH TOBACCOS Aways the finest tohaccos ALWwaAYs the finest workmanship Aways Luchies please! examined, leaf by tobaccos. For these ao why Luchies taste better, smoother On certain mountains in the Near East is a limited collar of earth —called in Turkish, **Yacca.’? Tobaccos grown there cost as high as $1.00 a pound. Carefully they are leaves are blended. leaf. Often it takes a man a whole day to select two pounds of certain of these fine tobaccos. Lucky Strike is the world’s biggest user of fine Turkish ee tender, delicate Turkish with choice tobaccos from our own Southland —to make your Lucky Strike a cigarette that is fully packed —round and firm—free from loose ends. That’s why Luckies taste better, smoother. h . “its toasted”: ae FOR THROAT PROTECTION—FOR BETTER TASTE i! _ and in the back of the head. THE COLLEGE NEWS S _Page Seven Fellowes Tells Story ' of Flight Over Everest (Continued from Page One) sciousness following upon natisea and severe pains particularly in the knees Thus provision had to be made to pipe oxy- gen to the pilots and observers from tanks. The supply needed for the men and for the engines amounted to three thousand liters. The exceeding pres- sure causesa dropped-sheet of- paper to fall like a brick, and therefore parachutes had to be abandoned as possible safety devices. And at the altitude jingling coins make no hi _ perceptible noise, so. that arrange- ments for telephone communication were necessarily more complicated. Also, at this height, serious difficul- ties were encountered in regulating temperature, which ran usually from 80 to 50 degrees below zero. The men’s suits, gloves, boots, and goggles’ had.to be kept heated by an intricate system—of~-wires;~ the “oxygen pipes had to be kept warm lest water freez- ing in the pipes should stop the sup- ply, and the cameras had to’ be heat- ed at an even temperature to - pre- vent the films and rubberized shut- ters from cracking and to keep the metals in the machines from contract- ing unevenly with the cold, After-much-experimenting’ with the equipment, and scientific tests applied to men and machines to see if they could stand the extremes of tempera- tures and pressure they would encoun- ter in their flight, the members of the expedition had to bide their time for the flight. Among the party were included the excellent pilots,, McIn- tyre and Clydesdale, who in order that the photographers, Bonnet and Fisher, might get a straight survey strip of photographs to map the-ter- : ritory | covered in the flight, had--to fly apart and fhen close in as they came toward the peak—all this in-dif- ficult flying conditions. Finally, however, the meteorolo- gists forecast fairly good flying weather for April 2: the wind was blowing only about 55 miles an hour. The members of the expedition rose early so that they might get into the ‘air by eight or ten A. M. when there are comparatively few clouds te ob-: scure photographs. The observer and pilot in each plane put on their heat- ed suits, adjusted their telephone, their test mikes, their masks, their oxygen pipes and closed the cockpits preparatory to taking off. As they rose above the checkered plains of Nepal the dust haze made the fields drift away beneath them, dissolving -nto a purplish monochrome with no horizon visible, ‘The snowline passed at-18,000-feet,-and“at 19,000 feet they suddenly emerged from the dust haze to see the great Kinchinjunga loom- ing before them, rising sheer white in the dark blue basin of the sky, while to the left Everest rose high ubove the foothills, flanked by Maka- lu and the sweep of peaks all twenty to twenty-five thousand feet in height. . Beyond Kinchinjunga, Everest, fly- ing-a white snow plume sometimes” as long as 20 miles, rose sharp in front of the plane. But first they had to fly Makalu, during which an oxygen pipe broke and the pilot had to repair it temporarily with his handkerchief. They flew the remaining seven or eight: miles to the peak of Everest, passing above the pyramidal summit from the snow-covered southeastern . side, never seen before, to the barren north side. The excitement of achieving their goal -was short-lived, however. They had little spare time to appreciate the breath-taking beauty of the sum- mit while they were passing over it, and, further, they were anxious con- cerning thgir photographs. These not only constituted the explorers’ sole . proofe& cheir achievement, but also were to represent the contribu- lion of the expedition to scientific knowledge; and if they were not suic- cessful the expedition had really failed. When the films were developed they found that many of them were spoil- ed, thereby leaving their records of the territory patched and fragmen- tary at most.- So the men were in- sistent upon making a second flight. —— Time, ae American Tobacco Company Direct from the Metropolitan Opera House Saturday at 1:45 -P. M., Eastern Standard over Red and Blue Networks of NBC, LUCKY STRIKE will broadcast the Metropolitan Opera Company of = York in the complete Opera, “FAUST ‘ Luckies’ finer smoother taste comes from the finest Turkishand domestic and only the Center Leavis \C GOOD TASTE—YOU CAN’T MISS IT leaves for they are the mildest, most tender leaves. Arid every Lucky is tobaccos. We use only the' center so round, so firm, so fully packed. NOT the top leaves—they’re under- "! dieaalapadsthay are harsh! <4 The Cream of the Crop “The tenderest, mildest, smoothest tobacco” 6 Ms. Wary