a, & ) * yy OL.-XV, NO! 4 > ai ' cast, consisting . = PRICE.° 10 CENTS WEEK PROVIDES EVERY EXCITEMENT) Beggar's Opera Straight From London...Opens..Good- hart Program. MORE, POLITICS COMING What a week! Monday night, the Rev. Lake; Wednesday night, politics, and Thursday Tuesday night, orthopsychiatry ; night, the crowning glory: The Beggar's Opera, With our souls, our bodies and our dutiés as citizens disposed of what could be more in line than an evening of .And what could be better- entertainment—than” The. Beggar's Pure entertainment. Opera, direct from the Lyric Theater in London halting within our very gates on lis. bicentennial tour of Amefica to give us the charms of the world’s greatest. history and its oldest musical .comedy without the trouble. of he Mw street. The curtain. will go up in Goodhart Hall‘ at 8.15 (or thereabouts) ‘on Thurs- diay evening, November 1, 1928. The mainly of the original ‘actors who appeared at the Lyric Theater on May 12, 1920, when this opera was re- Vvived by Sir Nigel Playfair, is as fol- lows: * Deachin <6 4) Ses Charles Magrath BOOM Cis «..Norman Williams MeaGheael iiss oe ive ee Clive’ Carey PRON ear ch OFS ee Alfred ‘Heather “The Beggar ui ee ..George Gregson PGWOr 6k cst eens Georf@>Gregson “ine; Peachtm ©) 03.55 5056 Lena Maitland Polly Peachum ....... pyre Sylvia Nelis TAG OGM hs bi es Celia’ Turill ‘Diana. Drapes ..........+. Hefen Arden Ladies of the town,, and members: of -‘Macheath’s : gang. ¢ tae Period, 1728,’ Act--1—Peachunr's: Hotse.—----—---—- Act ‘2, scene 1—A tavern, riear New- “Sate. = spirit of the original work, ‘which’ was ‘Yesentations of the early nineteenth cen- ;-; Scene 2—Newgate. ‘Act 3, Scené 1—A Gaming House. *’Scene 2—Newegate. Sceneé-3—The Condethn’d Hotel. a” -" in this version of Mr. Gay’s famous “English Ballad Opera every possible ef- made to recapture the much of ‘in the rep- fort’ has’ been “improved away” “tury. Unfortunately in an age which lacks the leisure of the eighteenth cen- ‘tury the opera cannot be given in its en- tirety; in the work of curtailment and selection, the producer has been much helped by Mr. Arnold Bennett. New settings have been provided for the _songs,.and_ the music. in general has been rearranged and supplemented where necessary by Mr. Frederic Austin. The versions. of the tunes have been taken ' from -contemporary eighteenth century editions, and many beautiful and char- acteristic numbers omitted in later times have been restored. ; The costumes were designed by the late C. Lovat. Fraser. ‘The story of the. play is too long to repeat here, and will certainly be clear :u all who attend. Suffice it to say, that it, is presented. by the. Beggar himself, and concerns the merry: highwayman | .Macheath, who gets himself into terrible cifficulties by his unfortunate choice of “: latylaves (one the daughter of a gaoler, and the other-the daughter of a spy), and is only rescued from the” gallows at the very last ‘moment as a concession to the fevlings of the audience. To Meet Al Ella’. Horton, ’29,ahid'E. ‘Linn, ' °29, the officers of the Bryn Mawr Branch of the Collegé League: for Alfred E,. Smith, will’ d€ave: on . Thursday. ‘morning for: New York to attend a meeting at, the Smith Headquarters. where, the candidate himself. will speak toa large gath- ering of college students delegated from. the Smith Clubs. in. ‘all-the* colleges and.” siniversities “at - country. . : alld ca ar | | | | The Prison Scene, Act II, of “The Beggar’s Opera.” \ Insets, left to rights Lavinia Fenton (the origin al Polly Peachum), John Gay and Sylvia Nelis. : | Smith Swamped MERION TEAM. Debate. Proves Successful for ‘BOWS TO VARSITY Supporters of Mr. Hoover, ‘Second Varsiiges Wins F rom, The historic -dehate is over. Like a Rosemont by Better tion it came in, and_like-aton-itawenrt: Score, | for lambs were not in order last Wednesday evening. To tell the truth) TWO TYPES OF OF HOCKEY } nothing much was. in order, A turbu-| aniaianiiaidi | lent occasion. was. enjoyed by All’; rat} _The—varsity—wen—from-—~a-~-depleted+} |least ‘all the outward signs indicated | Wesiois teain on Saturday by the score enjaym@at. A fever,.a very. deliriffim of »3- 1. The outstanding feature of our of enthusiasm, possessed both parties, | Playing was. the improvement ‘in our Perhaps the Smithites Were the- most) tushing. Wills played center half, ang delirious; they certainly were the most Proved herself a person very worthy noisy. Put then they had the of that pq@gition, though in the. sécond so comparisons are a bit’ unfair. The| half she was put back as cente? for?) Land, the indespenSabl@ baftd; what | Ward, and : on rs out of the theater and found people -= } = lined up six feet deep along the ‘streets, for Al Smith to drive thousand ‘faces. . But we stopped, and elbowed our way, up to the front Jine, and made the acquaintance of the thin. | “worried man on our left, boisterous-old woman to our right, and settled down for the, evening. busses ran over our toes, and the fat . woman flapped a ‘ten-cent flag in our. ‘faces and the policemen looked at us it off one’s. coat collar, but we. were | not. be balked. A woman dashed out | into the: street and sriatched Hoover’s | puffy face from the windshield of a! passing car, and we cheered with the | rest.’ cries like a seagull following an ocean. ' liner: “Ray for Al. -Dhis is Al’s flag! | Come on, Al! You and I were born} urider this flag!’ And we echoed HRAY.. “At last, he came, sitting up con-| sciousty in the back seat of an open car, with his hat pushed back just a by ‘in’ and the fat , - The | The fat.one Kept emitting ‘sharp Ee Macbeth | Play Opens in:Philadelphia With -Settings, by Gordon Craig. This week and next Re G. Tyler is” puttmg’ ‘on «Waebeth-.at .the. Broad Street *Theater, with smite cos- tumes designed by Gordon Craig. Sometime in ‘the near future,’ before Maobeth. has ‘left Philadelphia, Mr. Craig’s drawings for the entire produc- tion will be sent out to Bryn Mawr and ‘exhibited at Wyndham*for the little, and his’ face much nicer than! benefit of the students of the college. we expected, and a tired smile as though so many faces all the way from Camden had made him. slightly dizzy. We shouted and pushed and fought, and braved six mounted policemen in row, and understood why people found it so easy to die in revolutions, and why nervous soldiers fired on the a | But noone was firing..then. We (The above photograph, a design of a cloak for Macbeth’s attendants, is an example of the kind of drawing which will be exhibited.) In connection with boththese artistic events the follow- ing article on Gordon Craig, by Clara R.-Mason, Secretary of the Philadel; phia Art Alliance, will be of interest: GORDON CRAIG By Clara R. Mason. On Monday* evening, October the twenty- “ninth, when “George C? Tyler’s “Macbeth” opens at the | were effective though. Then it was all over, except for the | little boys and the stenographers tear- | lively and intelligent interest in the world | img by to do it all over again at the | The triumphal.car dis- i next corner, | appeared around City Hall and the roar from South Broad street would have drowned: out twenty football games Well: Ai went into the Bellevue to havé his dinner, and. we went into Child’s next door fo have ours, and he finished his, just as we finished ours, and he came out as we came out and then we parted, or so we. thought. But Presidential campaigns jaté nat so easily left behind. We destended from the Paoli Local, and as we came along by Rock in the wet and empty street we heard ag4in, as. in a dream, the Broad Street Theater under the~-aus- pices of the Philadelphia Art Alliance, America will see\for the’ first time, a play designment Gordon Craig. Although Gordon Craig is the ac- | knowledged master of the modern ' movement in ‘the theater, none of jhis work has ever been. seen in this coun- try. Although his. reputation on the stage -has preceded him in theatrical eircles until his name has become a t®adition and, he is known through the work of two of his most famous dis- ciples, Max Reinhardt and Constantine Stanislavsky, the general public, if it knows him-at all, thinks of-him as the son: of Ellen’ Terry ‘and one -of the! features of Isadore Duncan's biog- raphy. & Mr. Craig’s personality, as revealed) i | The working on | Italy. eniphagize this conception. {feels that scenery should be felt and -Inot seen,.that it should be used ‘to | create an atmosphere and stir the im- agination until it. rises to the height new designs Craig has beew all summer in Genoa, He of Shakespeare himself. Perhaps the ‘best way;to explain. what ‘he is after is to quote his own words from’ “Scene.” ““No scene tft: I ever College through the courtesy of the Philadelphia Art Alliance and -man- ‘agement of Macbeth. Philadelphia is the only city which iS to have the privilege of exhibition, and Bryn Mawr College is one of the few chosen for a~presentation-of-thes€~ most amazing designs. One of the things that make them particularly interesting-is that they are working’ drawings with. mar- ginal before us Craig’s method of design, of the actual building of the scénes and of the directing. These sketches will have, fortunately, one of the’most im- portant elements of designment, the handling of color through light, in ‘which Craig is unsurpassed. This scheme is based on primary, Celtic colors, reds, greens, blues and browns, the sombered tones veiled and -shad- owed to. the key. of tragedy. — The production of . Macbeth - will “be-directed by Douglas Ross, former director of: the Dramatic Association at Yale, who has spent the summer in Genoa with Mr. Craig, assisting him | and absorbing his ideas. Margaret Anglin has been selected to play Lady Macbeth and Lyn Harding, Macbeth; ‘William Farnum, Banquo, and™ Basil Gill, MacDuff. With this ‘combina- roar like twenty football games. Then! i” his letters, is energetic, aloof, un- ition of all the arts of thé™theater, it is in a pause, Al’s voice seeming to come from a tree by the roadside: “And what did Hoover say in 1918 about the breweries?” » Phantoms, we wondered? ‘Twas Miss Ely’s Radio. But, no. - Biological Mystery \ triskit, a trasket, _ \ simple market basket: We sent a cat to Dalton Hall, The basket was his casket. - What happened in that basket, We would not care to ask it, jsut: there arrived at Dalton Hall 7 wo cats, within one casket. — What happened'I know not at all, Between my house and, Dalton Hall It left as one, as two arrived; In precincts biological. Do ¢ats divide and multiply? - Biology knows more tHan I, cannot explain, How a Cat cut himself in. twain. > Ser ME | compromising, highly dynamic and of! the theater always. His whole mind centers around the theater and _its problems. The great tragedies and: dramas of all centuries are what he: lives, sleeps, eats and breathes. For years Gordon Craig has been, flirting with the idea of Macbeth, 4 steeping himself in what—to him—-is ene of the greatest of all plays. He : | has written many profound and bril- | fiant pages setting forth his ideas about it: He says, “Come now, we take! Macbeth, we know. the play well, | how does it look, first of all, to das | 'mind’s eyes and, secondly, to our eye?) [ see two things; I see a lofty, steep p| rock andft see a moist cloud. which envelops the head of the rock | a place for fierce and war-like men.to inhabit, a place for phantoms to nest in,” beth’ is , supernatural, metaphysical, “thick with mystery.” We are held by ‘| an invisible power, a play of mysteri- | ous. beauty, of almost unfathomable LOT'S WIFF.. ae ~ pages ead To Craig the tragedy of Mac-/ ‘not surprising that the eyes of the | world are on the .production, and the Art Alliance feels gratified at being | able to introduce it to Philadelphia, and 4 “f . ‘ i bia a ds = ae a as vo see ads g 2 yi oa ¢ ae ’ 1 spears no 's = . a : sas Tee COLLEGeNE We... ig : | vealing” as we ‘Limes puts it “new | a "The Glee News 'scenes-of always increasing and suf- Bye ee asses 8 ee Bice sig ipecenpemetetenres =. | ficiently -rewarditig— sptendor* wilt} The Pillar ~~ a : Hae ie hers Gee Splere, be the more lasting contribution of | re alge gel Wayne,” Pa. and _Bryo) ‘he two-any way you look at it. ‘Phe Le ey P ‘ ' t € « * a _of- Salt worked at was worked at for its own -sake. I thought solely of the move- ment of the Drama of the actors of the dramatic mo- ments.” : : The - original. ske:ches | for .. Jd/ae- beth. will, be shown at’ Bryn Mawr, notations as notes that bring to enable Bryn Mawr College to have - /one of the first views of the original | designs by Gordon Craig. Calendar Wednesday evening, October 31— ‘Grand Political Rally. Visiting speakers ‘will present the case for Hoover, Smith jand Thomas. ~ * Thursday -evening, November 1 At 8.15 in Gopdhart Hall. “The Beggar's 'Onera,” direct from the Lyric Theater, Hammersmith, London. Friday morning Chapel—R. Biddle, ’29 ‘and E. Baxter, ’30, will open the Bryn | Mawr League’s Annual Drive. Saturday, November 3, 10. A. M. at B. M. C.—Hockey: Bryn Mawr vs. Ger-- tantown. : Sunday. evening, Nevember 4, 7.30— “Miss Hilda, Smith will speak in the Com- rion Room on the Summer School. » is Congai, 4 play by Harry Hervey and | . Carleton Hildreth, with Helen - Menken, Congai, now: playing at the Adelphi "heater, is a.very effective dramatiza- tion of the clash of East and West, arising ‘from the subjection, of yellow races by European nations. The scene is laid in the French Colony. of Indo-, China, -which gives a magnificent oppor- tunity for staging to a man who has al- ready shown his talent in the production of Marco Millions and Porgy. All. the color of the bazaaf, the mystery of the jungle, the fascination. of weird chants and strange instruments is introduced to the advantage'of the play as a whole. he acting is vivid; and the plot, which rags the gamut of emotions from mother love ‘to murder, is exciting. Without Helen Menken and .her able supporters, George. Baxter, Ara Gerald and Felix Keeee, without the oriental music and the effective lighting, it may be that the thought behind the plot would not suffice. As presented, it is impressive. ‘The aetion arises logically and dra- matically from its original premise. This premise .is, that a Congai, the native mistress of a long succession of French officers, can retain to. the end of her career an untarnished moral code, and an essential purity of spirit. There are ex- tenuating: circumstances, but that. isthe core of the matter. -If you accept that, you accept the whole, and the play is a success. It seems to us that with Helen Mehken as the Congai, you do accept it; at least while you are in your seat. Only afterwards: the doubts creep in. . Where would the daughter of an unprin- cipled old woman and a gay French |. cfficer get such standards? But until the curtain falls, such heresies. do not sug- gest themselves. With bitter emphasis, the native nobility of the yellow woman | contrasted -with the white-skinned champions of a falsé civilization. They - come, they love and they sail away, leav- ‘ing behind them ruined girls and half- |- bréed’ children, predestined to tragedy, cast out by their own race and despised: by. their fathers. - The scene in which the cowardly officer, who has_ hae “himself transferred to avoid being sent to war, watches thé “niggers” go off to France to fight the white man’s: battle is mag- nificent melodrama. For staging, for acting, for dramatic clifhax, we could { 3 ie .Y aig. a 8 ake ner * "i THE COLLEGE NEWS oe “oO MC seeetnmpmeny * & KS ba Sis returning from the ee never fail to babble of the marvelous echoes that re- the globe. verberate so obligingly from peak to peak. But no-such phenomenon matches a certdin— echo that keeps circling this whole mundane sphere. It is the best-known cigarette slogan ever coined —the Chesterfield phrase “They Satisfy.” Originated to ‘describe a unique coupling of ve —— “ts . re $ RIC : = wie. that circles” » qualities seemingly opposed—“they’ re mild, and. yet they satisfy”—its descriptive accuracy was instantly perceived. Today it echoes and re- “Satisfacen ... ils satis ont echoes wherever cigarettes are smoked : . THEY SATISEY!” Pa And rightly enough, for Chesterfields are mild e —and they DO satisfy .. any cigarette "offer? CHESTERFIELD and what more can _ ~~ ask no better. if Wa remain intellectually MILD enough for anybody..and yet.. RHEY SATISFY ‘unconvinced, perhaps it is that we have | c ‘ = — et been .too long at college. ie . LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. Miss Schenck Tells Merit bers of college staff and 18 : versities represented by the graduate}. Demonstrators .........seeeeees 2) efficient rushing. After a both , teachers from T. S. and. students: TE Gg cacheeiechecenwer a 2] as large as they ought to : of the Graduate School other schools) ....:....:. 32 47 are co-educational bgt’ 11 aR CEI CHO aE Ee Ce 6! The Merion team was: Smith, Ma- The treasures the college has ni a See 12. are_-women's colleges Research: Work=s. ee wives 2+ diera, Page; Bailey, Townsend; Flan-" hoarded in. the Gfaduate Schéol- were ER erererererrrrt els are wamen’s colleges affiliated with. SE See ae PELE DRED ° nery, Colcist, J. Page Jeffreys, Goal revealed by Miss Schenck in Chapel “te men’s colleges TOOT Cin svvi reste mae ieee ' 1! Jeffreys, ‘ on Friday morning. Bryn Mawr has 108} a a G wy dward: .the largest resident Graduate School GEOGRAPHICAL 62 : a1] ay: ri ~~ ores Mee ee for women in the country. It ranks DISTRIBUTION OF si But though there, are almost four CONTINUED ON PAGE 6 ladies per Stnien "Sleaihane sixth in the number of Ph. D.’s granted GRADUATE STUDENTS times as many co-educational univer- aul ttivations McCull ae pa each year, following five much,larger| One hundred and eight students from | cities the number of students from co- French Club Starts New Life | Goa1s_witle Resi "Paseherd universities: Chicago. Columbia, Yale, | twenty-four states in the United States! educational colleges is about the same Wig Decal al ads 4 Sakon in| ee iin Cornell and Pennsylvania, These| and seven foreigy countries: as the number from women’s colleges, | ctfectual attenipt to hold its first meet-| The second varsity proved itself Bryn Mawr. Ph. D.’s are found upon| Pennsylvania .........-.eeeeeees 29| owing the part to Bryn Mawr’s large ing last week, and succeeded despite | quite superior to Rosemont by defeat- examination to be good Ph. D.’s in that New York AS arr re eranrere 9] quota of twenty-seven. : its: lack* of pee fn unuhimntily |e thees'@2: —Gaebeen: ee aaa the holders of these degrees are ac- California Son Ar roebe gene Sl Wiceicen of ‘the sixty-two universi-| electing E, Stix, '30, as its President sulslied for he’ tpeed, Vase hs ae tively working in colleges all over the] New Jersey .........t..seeeeeees 6|ties from which the graduate students Since this happy choice the prospects lost the ball at the goal. The playing countrys Strongholds . which have] Massachusetts. ..........+..se0e0: 5! hold degrees are foreign universities: | of: the club, in the past few years on the whole verged towards rough- previously been closed to women—}Indiana .........:...s.000- assess 5! 3 Canadian . universities (British | -tiys (2 - | $08-dmalh GRADUATE STUDENT Boo in the last minute of play. all the latest fiction without having Full-time Graduate Students: 4° The students in the Graduate School; Thirty-nine of the graduate studen Our team was essentially better than to buy the books. ; Part-time Graduate. Students this year hold degrees from sixty-two | hold positions at present. last week, but it still excels on the ee j (including 6°: readers, in- colleges or universities. At Bryn Mawr College: = © defensive, rather than the offensive, Join right away!! structors and other mem- Of ‘the fei colleges and uni-| Instructors ........... seeeeeeees 6] and the scores of our victories are not en > PEE ONCE ER TRS Te : a, THE COLLEGENEWS : eee rage — aca RD, = = a == ~~ ‘The Straw oe ar e* | the Donkey’ s Back-Bone ae Hoover won the, » Hoover won the debate; and now, true _ te form, straw . wote. ) thé vdcal dynamic?.of the Smith supporters cannot conquer the comparatively inarticulate (this does “set refer to M. Larbert on the debat-. of the Republi- coinpiled from a bisshow game; Hoover. has won the ig platform) inertia -eans. The results, aa poll takev in each of days fast iveek, were as fallows: . Heever _..... pa yh Kee db v0 Hee orale 188 PE wacacees SU RI 114 ~~ F homas Sg ERT ARRAY i SRR ARE a Mire ile +324 Of these( ‘however, only a few are actually going to regtster a vote on Wovember 6. The statistics are: test vote: “was” cast in-Virginia- and- the lightest vote .in Arkansas. Of the central States, Hoover” car- ried every one of.them. The west- central States (North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, -Missouri, Nebraska and Kansas) alf went Republican by a total] of three to'one. Hoover carried every western State (Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, Nevada, New Mex- ico, Washington, Oregon: and Calif- 4 Mcrnia). ° the halls on two! ioover Seer Pree eee 38 Smith i aia re +. 90 he RR Se ee ES s anew 9 af WE ist Se aC eek 67 The relative strength of the two! ‘ e@hief candidates is almost unchanged since the nominations held. at Bryn «. Slawr last spring. Hloovér received 114 votes, Smith * and the remainder of the 298 votes cast | by the student body divided “among minor Republicans and ‘Démo- «rats Only the: socialist candidate, | . therefore, inade, any appreciable gain. votes to Hoover's 38 and Smith’s 20; as almost startling, and, considering , ‘sw Mr. Thomas’s chances in the campaign; seems to indicate a certain strain of fatalism among the college voters. Another startling revelation is the- paltry handful of people over 21; only | 67 out of nearly 400 students. _ The faculty statistics last year were | 935° were has 4a for Hoover, 13 tor Smith and 13:| scattered. This year we were unable a. collect the informatjon, owing to | | ,. the short space between classes. The results of the Cotlege Humor -epoll, just out this” that | * Hoover -will--get a similar majority | * em students all over the country. ‘4 “+ heyvhave issued the following state- ehh an s Ps week, show Students: 2. to 1 for Hoover. i In the first American college straw | wote ever taken by College Humor: anagazine and the college «dailies Hoover received a two to. one vote. At -the~ September registration this year there were. 892,808 students in the | 1104 American golleges, of which 544,- €85 were men“and 348,123 girls. This army of young voters (most of cen | ~. dhad never.liad —any.experience-at—the- Pous) ‘have been termed by Democrats and Republicans. as the hope of Amert- ea. The two parties should be interest- ed in figures obtained. : The co-operation of the college wewspapérs was secured,. the: majority | ae — It is—hard-to. imagine living in the same house. with forty- five of them—engaging and attractive ‘as they.are—and not being interested, + resides this enjoyment, if-you make ‘any effort at all you are sure to learn « great deal about. handling them and bringing out. the. best. that is in--them, One way of- another children are great fousers of enthusiasm, because Ooniyv’ too mothers, Fung Kei, ’22, Has Hard Row to Hoe in China This is an extract froma letter of Tiu Fung Kei’s, giving some idea of the struggle which she -is bravely facing’ in carrying on her school. Fung Kei, | has lived right here for four-years, lov- ing college life with all its work and fun. Now,.she_ is trying, in the thick of. po- litieal confusion in China, to. pass on the education she received at Bryn Mawr. We have been proud to’ adopt her school as a child of ours, let us help.t her cevelop’ it. A Letter From China. (The following letter has. been re- ceived from Fung Kei Liu, ‘22, who was the first scholar to be brought to Bryn 9909 Wh, Ps ‘| Mawr by the Chinese Scholarship Com- mittee. ‘After a year in the Shipley | School .and four years at Bryn Mawr, Fung Kei Liu returned to China and started the work described\ in this | fetter.) : fe Yuet Wah Middle School 14, Sin Lun/Hong, Wai Folk Sai Lo, ‘Canton, China: August 2, 1927. j Editor, The Lantern: | “My pupils now are .very much | cited. by their newly formed student as- sociation, .At the very beginning of its organization the servants in the school showed very poor spirit. The students zt once got themselves. organized. to-take over all the work. .Thus the school was | able to dismiss all but two of the servants | | before they could do us much harm. | two months the student body did ali the ! Le ooking, cleaning and even heavy buckets of water from wells for te whole school. “Jn spite of their in- ‘experience and failure at times, not let their work ‘interfere with | toapene much. | “Many. students now “their service next fall. - | contriving convenient tools and better system for their work. A: service club has been suggested which only admits “vlling and efficient members. The club is to be paid for all service. And the | ivoriey thus earned is to be subsidized to the members of the club who need finan- cial assistance. ‘ “Indeed,. the association is trying in every way to help, the school. You should sve how well they managed to decorate for commencement.. They just beautified ‘the almost impossible hall in just two snort days and with very.little expense. Just before school closed they elected ‘a committee and got. some capital for a co-operative society. Their aim ig to- * CX 1 | | lL their wait to continue So they are now convenient ‘themselves and to lighten, the “ For | supplying | they did | Foreign | . e Contrevoutions nn Sa RO PUER? roy {work of the sehool. I appreciate that For J generally had to take cave | mdeed. Mi the school articles, at least, getting tl« | right kind of books for the students. But | the student association now has | aw ay the list and is ordertg them now. i Unlike other student associat jons which are now so prevailing in Canton the or- ganization wants better discipline. {t: has helped me: a great deal in mak‘ne everybody behave. They demand no holt- | cays, as, others’ do. In fact, they express | their opinion from time to time about im- | proving their scholarship. Tf you should in Canton for a what all this imeans. | live would year, you realize CONTINUERD ON PAGE 6 | a | Summer eo ' Russian Girl Writes Good Sketch | for the 1928 “Echo.” The following sketch from the Bryn Mawr Summer School paper is written by a Russian girl who has been work- ing in California for two years. Com- pare your ambitions with hers. Con- sider that you are here for thirty-two right. to at least two-months of Bryn, Mawr. Day-Dreaming. Buz-z-z-z hums the electric motor; tat- tat- tat-tat swiftly fall the tiny quick taps of the sewing machines. Sun- shine strays into the factory window. It dances gaily in myriads of d particles, up and down