ae _ Junior Month Lectures, Figld ‘Trips and Minor _ Duties: ‘Teach. Social Service. ce “The Charity ae nhaticl ‘Society of New Yorke felt the need of a new interest "in, social work,” said M.. Saurtders, Speaking in chapel: on Wedneiday, De- cember 6. : “Therefore, the idea of Junior’ Month was: conceived: a member of the Junior class. of several inearby. colleges shoyld} be given the chance to observe the con- * ditions in New York. We aii, gathered at the University Club on July 3, and in a few. days were all'very good friends. « “The first day Miss Touseley took . us down to.the C, O. S. offices, telling. us thaf ve were there not“for training but for observation.”In-the following ‘month’ we ‘spent two and. a thalf days a week hearing lectutes and, three days in the district office. We were given some minor duties such as taking patients’ to clinics. We. were taken to. see many in- stitutions. such’ as the reformatory, the]. insane asylum, and the children’s hos- pital. ' “As a special problem, I. was given charge of a little girl named Gracie. She was just out of a convent 4nd seemed unable to keep any kind of a job. It seemed to be part of my job to: go to the places where Gracie had- unsitccess- fully held a job and attempt to find out from the typical “accented” New York employer just why.she had proved al. failure. This is only one of, the many » interesting experiences which one may have in connection with the work. °.. “Various outings and amusements were planned for us during the course of the time spent there. At the end a big picnic crowned a month full of: the greatest imaginable amount of real interest.” _ SOCIAL WORK CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 dregs of society die. Why try to keep | them afive?” The difficulty with this is that chance in the form of accidents in the street, or society in the form of sea- sonal occupations may force into a tight place a person .who would otherwise shrink from the idea of accepting charity. It is not necessarily the “dregs” of so- ciety who accept charity, and if help is withheld from those who need it they will not eliminate themselves, but will continue to grow unfit and anti-social, thus playing a big part in lowering the level of society. For me the greatest experience from “Junior Month” was the conviction that..from certain indi- viduals who have the same interests, de- sires and potentialities that I have, so- ciety. makés great demands-without pro- viding. sufficient margins. against | such calamities as may come to anyone at any time. So. social work looked at not with the emotions, but with.the intellect, be- comes not charity but justice. - BERTRAND RUSSELL ..| CONTINUED FROM PAGE 3. ‘as it looks,” said Mr. Russell. believe there is more in knowledge than behavorism.” There .must be ething of which -you are. conscious in your head, while the consciousness, is in your head, ‘with a certain relation between these two events. Thinking Is Only Talk. The second part of the theory, that “the, essence of mind is to think,” is also disputed by Watson. He says tliat there isn’t any mind, that it is all talk. Thinking consists of talking>to yourself or to others, “you think with. _ your larynx” as can be proved by try- ing to think of a bubble: with your mouth open. The emotions, too, are only “visceral behavior.” Another theory, the Psyctiology of Configuration has been worked out by two Germans, who maintain: that the _ essential thing is the perception’ of a ~ pattern. You learn things by perceiv-- . ing patterns; Théy have made tests} with animals to prove this. An inter- esting thing about testing animals,| said Mr. Russell, is that “they always: ican animals, tested by Thorndike, to} Prove the correctness of the “trial and | error’\ theory, always ran about in} ’28, | ‘| proved by* mathematics. "but display national characteristics.” Amet- |: lo a banana, cafled “the objective,” hang-' ing from the ceiling. it they have to pile up boxes that:are. left, around, ‘a solution: that. could ‘not. possibly. come by the: trial’ and ‘error method. This test supports the pat bh tern theory, “you apprehend a’ whole, | of which a part is given.” : It is no longer possible to reduce: mental operations to ngatter i in Motion, ~when the Physicists: ‘hve proved that: there is no such thing. But if mat- ter, is no longer sd material, so. too, thind is no longer so mental. These two, once differentiatéd substances, can be put together. The easiest Way to do this is to imagine events instead. of either; “events are the crude’ stuff’ out of which the world is made..“The actual stuff perceived is neither ‘mind nor matter, but a neutral stuff. out of whieh both are made. Every event is connected with two places—where it is, and where the observer is. The first, matter, is the place from which ‘the “light rays emanate; the other, mind, is the place to which they travel. DR.MUTCH CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1° motorman and think nothing of it. - “The ‘Christian religion is betting one’: life that there is a God. There is'a grea risk involved. God cannot be demon- strated as the component parts of a rock. Nor can the Truth be reached by de- manding this explanation. God can no “more be. ‘proved mechanically, than «can the beauty of Raphael’s Madonna be Lord Calvin once said to his class at the University of Glasgow : ‘There came a point in my. scientific discoveries when I had to Ye tat a leap in the dark.’ : To: commit our lives to Christ is t tale a leap in the dark. The a however, is light and life.. Faith.in Jes Christ has been proved: by the ages ‘and not found wanting. . In our present-day attitude toward religion we may rightly be compared to a drowning wretch who foolishly quarrels with his life belt. Our business is to stop quarreling with the life belt: and put it on without demanding explanations.” /, ¢ New Rule. Mount Holyoke has passed a rule re- quiring all freshmen to be in bed every evening at 10 o’clock with the exception of two extra hours a week. —Hood College Paper. Tel.: Murray Hill 0519" D LA NE -For Every ili, -~} EAST wth ‘ST., NEW YORK Cosmeticians Hairdressers Marinello Permanent Waving Eugene Method PEACOCK »BEAUTE SALON Seville Theater Bldg., Bryn Mawr “~~ phone 475 j Cleaning That Wins Women, critical of style and mode, who could afford to pay higher prices, regularly use, and appreciate the quality of Footer- Cleaning. 4 Dresses, plain Kas + ++ S200 G2.50 Dresses, 2- . $2.50 to $3.25 ‘Velvet. ‘Dresses. ........§2.5 to $8.50 Negtaeen seeeeeeeee es $150 to $2.00 Beaded and Plested Dresses Higher in _ accordance with ‘werk involved. Phone for Broce Oar FE 00 T ER’ S _Gleaners and Dyers Lec Bete ie + Onn "1707 Chestnut St. other hand, are placed in a room with] In order to get | | nounced to the world that we would give fHE COLLEGE NEWS - ? MIRS. MANNING CONTINUED. FROM PAGE 1 the situation. Wood prescribed a pra: gtam of general reconstruction ‘which proved successful, “Ina perusal of the situation last sum- mer, President Coolidge was inclined to take the administration of the- islands out ofthe hands 6f. the War: Departmerit and appoint a Governor who would stress the idea of civil government rather than military discipline. “Personally,” said .Mrs. Manning, “I am not in favor of Philippino self-gov- ernment. It is problematical whether or not the natives would support their own officials if they had them. A trojical life always makes a democratic government more difficult, because the people are naturally lazy and indifferent: Further- more, the people of the a are very disunited. ¥ “If we wish to alow” “the Phtinesinees to return to a tropical ‘mode of life, very well; Tf we would civilize them ana develop their possibilities we canpot give them up. In either case we have an- them their independence, and if we have no intention of so doing, we must ‘defi- hitely make up our minds on some other course of. procedure.” . 7 yB27 (EX Iiiigecamas7 Founded * Rage Ws By inc 1920 Sport Glasses Opera Glasses Makers of Perfect-Fitting yeglasses and Spectacles fe THE TWICKENHAM BOOK SHOP Here one may spend a. quiet. A hour aniong books. ORDERS RECEIVED BY MAIL OR TELEPHONE Cricket Avenue, Ardmore \ Unustal Exhibition BRYN MAWR TRUST CO. . : - CAPITAL, .-$250,000.00 3 ‘Short.’ Dresses and Pajamas rae ie . cae : Does a, General Designed by Foreign Artists. Allows if ‘ Clever Novel , Russian Cigarett oa, aur en ot toes | Ce BLUE BOTTLE Flavor. ‘SHOP So RUSSIAN ART EXCHANGE ? College Inn _ December 15 and 16 .- COLLEGE | TEA HOUSE ‘OPEN WEEK-DAYS— 1 TO 7.30 P. M; SUNDAYS, 4 TO 7 P. M. Evening Parties by Special Arrangement WILLIAM T. McINTYRE MAIN LINE STORES VICTUALER Candy, ls Cream and Fancy Pastry Hothouse Fruits ay Fancy Groceries 821 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR Three Doors From Lancaster Pike COSTUMES TO RENT FOR PLAYS, Ete. Van Horn & Son Theatrical Costumers 12th &- Chestnut Sts., Phila., Pa. The Old Drug Store at Its New Location WILLIAM GROFF, P. D. PRESCRIPTIONIST Ice Cream and Soda Whitman Chocolates 4\ 8538 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. We Déliver Phone, Bryn Mawr’ 166 Haverford Pharmacy HENRY W. PRESS, P. D. PRESCRIPTIONS, DRUGS, GIFTS Phone: Ardmore 122 PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE Haverford, Pa. | . j . _ young people On, Wisconsin vivid picture of Wis- | All ‘about its students, fraternities, problems, its _ Great and Hear-great. Jack McGrath gives .a 3 consin in the January College Humor. | Othintvpaetel fenton includ Bio to Mother il _ by Wallace Irwin, a complete novelette of two ; | which shows all the Sendinieaniy and dismay of the first year of marriage. _ . Peter. B. Kyne’s first story for this cnkeaiitie 3 - appears. Grantland Rice writes on All-Amer- — Pine, and: thieae Sie aninn thar. $2,000 art contest closes Jan. 15, 1928. yeaa ment e-Hhy2 Humor cian a — aioe. =I} eee Lancaster Ave. BRYN MAWR, PA. CHINTZ ANTIQUES ED. CHALFIN Bevilld Theatre Arcade DIAMONDS : WATCHES : JEWELRY WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIRING Pens : Pencils : and Optical Repairing Fancy Watch Crystals Cut, $1.75 FRANCIS B. HALL TAILOR RIDING HABITS :: BREECHES REMODELING :: PRESSING DRY CLEANING 840 Lancaster Avenue Phone Bryn Mawr 824 PHILIP HARRISON - 828-830 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr Walk Over Shoe Shop Agent for GOTHAM GOLD STRIPE SILK STOCKINGS he o Locksmithing Paints, Oils and Glass WILLIAM L. HAYDEN BUILDERS and HOUSEKEEPERS B Hardware 838 Lancaster Avenue ’ a BRYN MAWR, PA. John J. McDevitt Phone, Bryn Mawr 675 bg Programs : Rill Heads P @ ti : rin ing Booklets, ete. Announcements Tickets Letter Heads 1145 Lancaster bikes Rosemont, Pa. Phone, Bryn Mawr 125 ROMA CAFE > 835 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa. Lunchegn, 50 and 75 cts. Dinner a la Roma, $1.00 Special Sunday Dinner, $1.25 We Cater to Banquettes and Parties MUSIC. DURING DINNER LUNCHEON, TEA, DINNER Open Sundays CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE . 835 Morton Road Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 THE CHATTERBOX A DELIGHTFUL TEA ROOM Evening dinner served from 6 until 7.30 OPEN AT TWELVE NOON COTTAGE TEA ROOM Montgomery Avenue LUNCHEON AFTERNOON TEA DINNER Special Parties by Arrangement. Guest Rooms Phone, Bryn Mawr 362 The Peter Pan Tea Room | 833 Lancaster Avenue ( HENRY B. WALLACE Caterer and Confectioner ~— 22 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr Breakfast Served Daily Business Lunch, 60c——-11 to 2.30 : Dinner, $1.00 Phone B. M. 758 Open Sundays Phone, Bryn Mawr 1388 ’ M. Meth Pastry Shop — uae 1008 Lancaster Ave. ae ICE CREAM and FANCY CAKES: French and Danish, Pastry ee 2 ee ee vena as mee nen | RANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES — - Onlin, Solita sue Senne?