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VOL. XIL. No. 10.
BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9, |
925
PRICE, 10 CENTS
~ ENTER. THE WORLD
COURT, SAYS BRYN MAWR.
Ballot Taken i iin Halls on Tuesday
For “New Student” Survey Shows
Majority Favor Entrance
TWELVE AGAINST PARTICIPATION
Two hundred -and’ sixty-five students
of Bryn Mawr College voted on Tuesday
for the entrance of the United States
into the World Court. Only twelve votes
were cast against the tarticipation of
the United States. The total. balloting
was not large, since there are over four
hundred members, counting graduate
students.
The ballot submitted was the follow-
ing:
1,
<
For U. S, participation in the World
Court under the “Harding-Hughes-
Coolidge Terms”:
(The U. S. not to be connected with
the League of Nations or bound to any
obligations under the League Cove-
nant; not to be bound by advisory
* opinions of the Court on questions not
voluntarily submitted by the U.S.)
For U. S.. participation under. the
“Harmony Plan” of thirty peace
- leaders:
(The. U. S. to join the Court under
the. “Harding-Hughes-Coolidge Terms”
but to withdraw after five years unless
a code of international law hasbeen
adopted outlawing war and the Court
given jurisdiction.)
For U. S. participation under the
“Borah Terms”: |
(The U. S. not to join the World
__ Court until international law. has-been
codified outlawing war, and the Court
given jurisdiction; the U. S. not to be
thereby connected with the League of
Nations.)
4. Against U.S. participation in the
World Court:
One hundred and ninety-three votes
chose the first proposal; sixty-one the
Seconds and eleven the third.
a
3.
the country on’ the subject of the World
Court, and to provide for a permanent
organization to consider such. questions
arising in the future,” is the purpose of
the National Collegiate World Court Con-
ference, to beheld’ in Princeton on Fri-
day and Saturday, December 11 and 12,
under the auspices of an Intercollegiate
. . Executive Committee.
: _ Fifty acceptances have been received to
a the invitations sent out to every college
and university in the country, as the first
of the replies appear. A definite program
for the two days has been announced by
the Executive Committee, including
speeches by John W. Davis, George R.
_ Vincent and Raymond’ Fosdick, with
; others ‘still to come. A second group,
prominent among whom are Ivy L. Lee
and Vernon Kellogg, will lead round-
table discussions of fifteen or twenty dele-
gates on Saturday: morning. A number.
ients have been received
e present, such as
: wes, Charles
Wil i
.| delightful recital to the college last Monday
“To crystallize the student opinion of ||
Rachmaninoff
CHAMBER MUSIC CONCERT GIVEN
TO COLLEGE BY MRS. E. S. COOLIDGE
Sascha Jacobson Quartet Plays German
and Russian Music
The Sacha Jacobson Quartet gave a very
evening, the gift of Mrs. Elizabeth Shurt-
leff Coolidge. Last year Mrs. Coolidge pre-
sented Bryn Mawr with a concert of Bach,
by Mr. Harold Samuel, the famous English
pianist and student ‘of Bach, For her great
generosity to us we are much _ indebted.
A concert of chamber music was a special-
ly appropriate gift from Mrs. Coolidge, who
has done magnificent work for the appre-
ciation of chamber music in. this country,
as founder of the Berkshire and Washing-
ton Festivals: It was a great pleasure to
have Mrs. Coolidge come to Bryn Mawr for
the recital.
Beginning with Mozart’s quartet in G,
charming and subtle with the subtlety of
simplicity, the programa reached a_ splendid
climax in the ‘last .number, the Brahms
quartet in C minor.’ Interesting and beauti-
ful-in subject and development, the Brahms
was finely played; the most_ thrilling ‘per-
formance -we have yet. had.
Second on the program was a group of
shorter piecés, of which the [nterludium in
modo antico, by Glazounoff, was particular-
ly interesting harmonically,
The members of the Sacha Jacobson
Quartet are: Sacha Jacobson, first violin;
Edwin Bachman, second violin; Louis Kauf-
man, viola; Marie Roemaet Rosanoff,
CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
BRAHMS SONATA’ TO OPEN
PROGRAM OF SECOND CONCERT
Cellist and Baritone to Give Recital
in Taylor December 14
Hans Kindler, ’cellist, and Horatio Con-
nell, baritone, assisted by Horace Alwyne,
pianist, and Ellis Clark Hammann, at: the
pines bo ane the second concert of the
Divicinils in Taylor Hall on Scales 14,
at 8.15, o'clock.
The program will be as follows:
Brahms—$onata for: ’cello and piano in F.
minor. '- Op! 38. -
Allegro non troppo.
Allegretto quasi Menuetto.
Allegro, Fugato.
Mr. Kindler-and- Mr. Alwyne.
Schubert—
(a) Geheimes (The Secret).
“(b) Aufenthalt (My Abode).
(c) Der Lindenbaum © (The
Linden
Tree). :
(d) Die Pos® (The Post). ;
} Mr. Connell.
Valentini bit Ratti 2. Adagio and Allegro
May Mayer" > ee
(a) Dirge in Woods.
(b) Raindrops. :
(Dedicated to Mr: Connell, )
Franz—
(a) ‘Sweetheart is There,
(b) The Rose Conpslaiad:
‘Floods of Spring
Co ee es
Mr. Connell,
sui) MRR CS eee res ice Cloches
bite ben take cog eaa ti -.. Habanera
Se RN dan danse Tarantella
Teen ewes
parged..us.to.cultivate -in--our--lives~ the}
-|says, “It was too paitful for me until I
Jest expression of the cuca capacity of
‘the solvent for our enigmas as the Psalm-
|to God, and in letting the mood of reverent
| and expectant worship be ours. It may be that
‘even without’ a solution our burden wilt
“FAREWELL THE KERSEY COAT”
BY ANNE SHIRAS,
Players Present Delightful Comedy With
Bernard Shaw’s “Dark Lady”
The Players, a group of undergraduates
interested in writing, acting and producing
plays, gave The Dark Lady of the Sonnets,
by Bernard Shaw, and Farewell the Kersey
Coat, by Anne Shiras, ’25, in Wyndham last
Saturday evening for a small audience of
their friendé@ . Of course. the productions
suffered from lack of time, Having had
scarcely a week of rehearsal, and lack of
space and facilities; but they showed in-
uity, spirit and some delightful acting.
Kis. Shiras’ comedy of the eighteenth
century, presenting Jonas Hanway, who in-
troduced the umbrella into England, making
the umbrella fashionable “from Cheapside
to St. Giles,” and at the same time removing
all the objections to: his ‘niece’s marriage
held by that elegant social climber, Lord
Pethersham, was charming and witty. Com-
ing after Shaw’s Dark Lady, it suffered not
at all in contrast, but shone by the keen wit
of its dialogue and the remarkable kill of
its characterization. We shall not forget
the remark of Lord Sandwich, the inventor
of his namesake, “I doubt it is more diffi-
cult:to protect an Englishman than to feed
him”; and Lord Pethersham’s ejaculation,
“I hope I am still Englishman enough to
thank God for the Channel.”
To the cries of the delighted -audience
Miss Shiras answered, “I don’t really think
it is fair for me to’ “appear since Mr, Shaw
‘can't be here.”
THROUGH AFFLICTION MANKIND
MAY REACH HIGHEST LEVEL
Cultivation of Habit of Worship Leads
to Sense of God
Dr. Augustus Taber Murray, Profes-
sor of Classical’ Literature, Stanford Uni-
versity, California, in his sermon in
Chapel, Sunday night, December 6,
habit of worship, and to enter into the
expectant mood of prayer.
i ee
After reading a selection from the
Psalms, Dr. Murray explained that in the
Psalms we have the outpourings of men
who thought theré was something wrong
in the world. They saw evildoers trium-
phant all about them, and righteous men
downtrodden. They did not see how God
could permit such things, yet they were
full of loyalty to Him: The Psalmist
entered into the sanctuary of God.”
Through worship he found a means of
lifting the veil, and throwing light on his
problems.
_ “When we see the wickedness trium-
phant,” says Dr. Murray, “let us remem-
ber that through affliction mankind often
reaches, its highest. level. Acts of self-|;
sacrificing love, which seem to lead to
destruction and death, may be the great-
ie human soul, _
~ “There may be not one he is ; fom
Nao has no unsolvable eni weighing
on his heart, which ‘checks his joyous
development. The lesson that the
Psalms. brings us is that we should find
ist found his—in conscious drawing near
ete: bik sci says tin ——
24, GIVEN|
y
SLIDES: SHOW BEAUTY
OF LABRADOR'S COAST
Dr. Grenfell Traces Experiment in.
Education and Health on Poverty
Stricken. English Stock
%
SELF - RESPECT NOW POSSIBLE
“Life gives to us. what we give to it;
that has been my idea in all my Labrador.
work,” said Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell,
C. M.-G., head ‘of the Grenfell Mission in
Labrador, while speaking under the aus-
pices of the Christian Association in Tay-
lor Hall last Thursday evening, December
3.. “The divine joy of life is being able
to do for others, and this is especially
true in the medical profession.”
When Dr, Grenfell first went to Labra-
dow, in 1889 no country could have been
more in need of the aid of this same medi-
cal profession. The native people were
a. poverty-stricken, seafaring race who
had originally come from England; like
‘the “poor whites” of Kentucky, overcome
‘by their surroundings, they had found
themselves unable to either rise above or
even maintain their level of civilization.
Prosperity. was lacking; starvation was a
national menace.
“The whole spirit of this backwardness
can be seen in one of Dr. Grenfell’s first
cases, a man who came to the ship’s hos-
pital dragging a fractured leg which had
been broken ten years before. Living
conditions. were unhealthy; children were :
poorly cared for, with the result that
malnutrition and consumption of the
bones, were prevalent evils.
“But nothing is as educational as ex-
periment. Gradually everything ‘from
nursing stations to village stores were
started to help these people use those tal-
ents which might be dormant in them.”
It is this Christian motive which redeems
nations as well as individuals. ~~~...
Dr, Grenfell’s slides of Labrador were
most realistically colorful. The wild,
rock-bound seacoast and heavily wooded
inland, with its deep canyons, high water-
falls and. winter snows, provide the in-
habitants with their two main sources of
subsistence: Fishing and trapping. Al-
most every animal from ermine to rein-
deer can be found, especially the reindeer,
whose use of the grazing fields shows
Labrador’s possibilities as a future feed-
ing land.
There are now four central hospitals
situated at the chief harbors. Here, lame-
ness and blindness are among the princi-
pal cases treated: and an organized Child
Welfare Committee, under the direction
of two Bryn Mawr graduates, has set out
to rebuild the youth. The children have
gone so far.as to form a troop of boy
scouts.
Industrial schools have been organized
where workers are taught to make toys
and model ships. Civilization has also put
in its appearance in the form of radios
and phonographs. As far as sports go,
dog-racing and skiing are the chief forms
of amusement,
Morally. speaking, the Labrador peaple
are excellent examples. In this land of
so few material pleasures there has rarely
or ever been such a thing as a murder, a
divorce or a nervous breakdown. And,
furthermore, they will do absolutely no
work, whatsoever on Sunday. The very
fact that they have shown such marked
improvement recently, combined .with the .
proof that they are fundamentally made
of good stuff, shows how worthy they ~
are of nk Se ep som be |
eae to — 7
&
bide COLLEGE NEWS
The. College News
(Founded in 1914) .
Published weekly during the co tee pots in the
interest of Bryn Mawr ah Po the Maguire
Building, were, Pa., and n Mawr Co
Ma naging Raitor ee eer ey
Iwan Lop, ’26 :
CENSOR
iia K. Fiteones. 27
EDITORS
‘ R. Rickasy, °27 M. SmirH, ’27
» ASSISTANT EDITORS :
B. Linn, .’26 M. Fow mr, ’28
BUSINESS MANAGER SUBSCRIPTION MANAGER
J. Les, ’27 BR. Tyson, '26
w
ASSISTANTS
- A. Win, '26
"OT P. McELWAIN
E.: Morris, '27
Subscription, $2.50. Mailing Prite, $3.00.
Subscription may begin at any time.
: Rntered_as second-class matter at the Wayne,
Pa., Post Office.
B. Jonnus, '28
N. Bowman,
AN “ICH” IN TIME
If, as we are so often assured, this
gollege life of ours is overorganized, con-
“fused and wearing—why do our last and
feeblest mental efforts go to the simpler
and somewhat manageable details of that
life?
Why, for instance, do Juniors and
Sophomores in Bryn Mawr struggle hec-
tically through the mazes of German
Grammar for an oral in the spring? It’s
no fun to do it that way, certainly; often,
we hear, no use. The college doesn’t
spring German on students as a happy
surprise. Everybody is quite frank about
it—German is required. So is French.
Why can’t we come prepared in German
as well as in French?
“FLIRTING WITH
BLOOD POISON”
Just as the results achieved by the World
Court have called for definite action on the
part of the American people, so the effects
of the prohibition experiment are demand-
ing clear thought and decision. However
ES incongruous a constitutional attempt to regu-
late personal habits may be, the Eighteenth
Amendment cannot, probably, be repealed.
‘The question is, what can be done to better
the present conditions, where we find an
apparent increase in drunkenness during the
past three years, and an easy disregard of
law? As there arose a need for a question-
naire concerning the World Court, so here
it seems necessary to avoid loose talk.by
crystallizing the issues. Leading questions
such as the following have arisen w
ever prohibition is discussed :
Should the Eighteenth Amendment be
amended to apply only to distilled liquors?
Should Congress define intoxicating bever-
ages as those containing 4 per cent. or more
of alcohol? ,
- Should more Federal judges be created
to aid prohibition enforcement?
Should the legalizing of pre-Volstead law
‘stocks of wines and liquors ‘be'repealed?
Should the purchase -of alcoholic bever-
_ages be made illegal?
Should the possession of alcoholic ‘bever-
“ages be made illegal?
If these were answered by all in eee
sentative groups in the country, such as
Tabor unions, Chambers of Commerce, etc.,
*| phases of American life that have long
‘Amerjgan youth, and although he is not
‘| still finds fayor in Europe. But Cooper’s
| retica’
| ing to devote itself exclusively to advanced
| non-profession work might after the man-
bit ner of many law anid, medical schools cease
a ‘giving the A. B. degree pale eosin
“NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES ,
Yale is honoring’ one’ of her famous
soris—the - novelist, James Fenimore
Cooper, who found .his. atmosphere in.
since: passed’ into memory. Cooper’s ro-
mances thrilled several generations of
now read widely,in his native land, he
presence is felf again in what is to ‘be
called the Cooper Room of the Sterling
Memorial Library at Yale University, and
it is possible that interest in his life and
works will be revived in America. by the
memorabilia which Yale has lately ac-
quired by gift from James Fenimore
Cooper of Cooperstown, N. Y., grandson
of the novelist.
Mr. Cooper’s gift includes the manu-
script of the “Leatherstocking Tales” and
other Cooper stories, the three extant
diaries of the author, portraits, letters
and a marble bust by David. The letters
include some written by Cooper to mem-
with. such distinguished contemporaries
as Sir Walter Scott, Lafayette, Washing-
ton Irving and Samuel Morse. Most of
these documents have beén kept private
heretofore, in conformity with Cooper’s
desire that such biographical material
should not be published during the lives
of his descendants who were living at the
time of his death.
In the presence of delegates from a
score of Eastern colleges and universities
at Wesleyan University in the intercol-
legiate conference on education, President
Frank Goodnow of Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity suggested regulating the first. two
years of college work to the secondary
schools and combining the last two years
of the undergraduate course with work
in the graduate department. —
He added that the cdlleges might omit
the bachelor’s degree and merely award
the advanced degrees.
Dr. Goodnow said in part:
“The line of cleavage between secon-
dary and advanced work is drawn at
the improper place, so that the use of
secondary methods is unduly prolonged
and the use of methods best suited to
advanced work is unduly postponed.
“The cleavage is a purely historical one
and is no longer justified.
of these considerations that I have pro-
posed that Johns Hopkins University shall
at some time in the near future abandon
the existing work of the first two years’
of college and shall consolidate what is
now, roughly speaking, ‘the work of the
last two years of college,’ with its present
graduate work applying to all the ad-
vanced work, essentially the methods and
standards that are applicable to our pres-
ent graduate work.
“The question of degrees, while theo-
not supremely important, is
practically significant.. The bachelor’s degree
has had a varied history in different coun-
tries. If we could adopt the French prac-
tice and give this degree at the end of the
secondary period the degree would be-
‘come a junior college degree. The higher
degrees of Master and Doctor would then
be reserved for advanced work.
“It is conceivable that an institution wish-
bers of his family and his correspondence |. °
It is in view
The Anat library is limited to the odiahe,
serving as a museum and research depart-
ment for the adult agricultural students
and the farmers, ‘and experts will demon-
strate the latest ideas in- scientific farming.
The fact that the paper factory at Saw-
‘ston will share in the scheme, which owes
its financial backing to the county and the
Carnegie Trust, indicates a state of co-
operation that is likely to commend itself
to other business enterprises situated in
remote rural districts of England. It is
suggested that if “village colleges” be-
come universal in the British’Isles, the hith-
erto haphazard and cultural character of
university extension lectures will be en-
abled to include a more practical and
scientific syllabus and reach a _ wider
audience. But it has remained for Saw-
ston and its neighbors to provide the
plant and organize into a study unit to
effectuate co-operation between the insti-
tutions for higher education and the rural
students —(From The New York Times.)
BOOK REVIEW
Three Cheers for the Rollo \Boys, by
Corey Ford. George Doran, New York.
We're ready to hand over one first
hand copy of “Three Cheérs for the
Rollo Boys” to any one who can prove
that Mr. Corey Ford is not long, dark
and lanky, and the owner of a blazer
and a pair of*tortoise-shell spectacles. On
the dafice floor he- would be snaky; while
he was at Dartmouth (supposing, just to
jump to conclusions, that he is no longer
there) he was quite a fraternity man.
' ‘The book is his own little take-off on
the Rollo Boys, and, after all, people
have thought ‘they were funny for quite
a long time now. Too long a time, any-
how, for two hundred and sixty-seven
more pages of fun. In “Ljfe” they were
funny, week by week, as they came out.
“Foiled again, Dan Baxter,” got to be
those who smiled when they read about
the “brown-haired, curly-eyed hero.” To
be fair to Mr. Ford, here’s ‘a passage:
“Then while whistles tooted frantically,
and sirens shrieked madly, on tub-boats
and battleships in the river, the two shells
sped down a lane of waving color and
cheering spectators toward the finish
line, when ‘Snap’ «went Dick’s oar, just
as the sentence came to an end.
itrout a moment’s hesitation Dick
rose, buckled a life preserver around his
waist, shook hands solemnly with each
of the men in the boat, and pausing only
to select_a few pimento sandwiches from
the wicker hamper in the hold, and to
stow them in the rear pocket of his row-
ing trunks, he poised and dove grace-
fully over the side, turning in mid-air to
exhort his men once more.”
But after two hundred and sixty-seven
pages William Blake’s observation is no
longer mystical. “Nothing,” he remarked,
“is so dreary as continual fun.”
LIBERAL CLUB IS OPEN-MINDED
World Court questions were discussed at
a tea given by the Liberal Club for its
Pembroke sitting-room. Katharine Tom-
kins, '26, president of the club, presented
the case against the entrance of the United
States into the World Court, emphasizing
the League of Nations, ‘the threat to the
Constitution as the supreme law of the
quite a household word, and there were}
—GIVES BOTH SIDES ON COURT
members last Wednesday afternoon in the |
the intimate relationship of the Court, and
Statet aud. the general hostiicy of
HARPER'S MAGAZINE OFFERS |
PRIZES FOR COLLEGE PENS
“Harper's Magazine” has offered prizes
of $500, $300 and $200 for the best pieces
of English prose written by undergradu-
ate college students between’ November 1
and May 1. The competition is open to
fiction, essays and articles.
The colleges and*universities to whose
students the competition is open are
those on the accepted list approved by the
Association of American Universities,
omitting the technological
The manuscripts. shall not be more than
four thousand words in length. They are
to be entered in the contest by the heads
of English departments, each of whom
has been invited to select for the contest
not more than three manuscripts from the
material submitted to him by his students.
_ The awards will be made by Christo-
Fee,
DIARY OF STUDY TO
BE KEPT DURING WEEK
FOR INFORMATION
At the request of the Faculty: Curricu-
lum Committee, the Undergraduate Curricu-
lum Committee is asking every under-
graduate to keep a record this week, .on
a given chart, of the amount of time spent
daily on each subject. These records are
absolutely anonymous. The results will
be given to the Faculty Committee, in
some tabulated form. Probably they will
be utilized in the planning and arranging
of courses in the future.. Anyone who
wants information on the subject should
consult B. Linn, ’26, Chairman of the Cur-
riculum Committee of the Undergradu-
ate Association.
WORLD COURT BALLOT
AND CONFERENCE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
groups on various related subjects, to
which delegates will have been. admitted
before they arrive. Previous study on his
particular phase of problem of the World
Court is expected from each delegate, so
that everyone may derive appreciable
benefit from conversation with leaders of
international relationships.
Saturday afternoon will be devoted to
developing resolutions in open forum
which may appear advisable from the
mortiing discussions. In the evening at
the final meeting, after speeches by Dr.
Vincent and Mr. Fosdick, these resolu-
tions embodying not only a decision on
the subject of the United States’ entrance
into the Court, but the sentiment of the
Conference on all related questions, will
be formally passed and sent to Washing-
ton in care of a delegation.
‘LAY, ON, MacDUFF!
sport seems to have turned along even
Basketball and Water Polo completely
have a dangerous rival: Fencing. one
institutions. .
pher Morley, Zona Gale and William Mc- -
Instedd of crying, “A -horse, a horse,
my kingdom for a horse,” our taste for.
more. romantic lines. .No longer can —
sway our winter program, for lo, they.
As
|| during 1925 and why?
@
« THE COLLEGE NEWS.
3 ,
“PROS AND CONS OF U. S.
ENTRANCE INTO WORLD COURT
Noted Politicians and Educators Voice
Opinions
°
(Courtesy of The Yale Daily News)
We are informed by the advocates of
our “joining” the Court that the new in-
ternatiofial Court is a cherished Ameri-
can ideal; that it substitutes a judicial
Court. for ephemeral’ and temporary ar-
bitral tribunals; that it substitutes adju-
dication by law for adjudication by force
and decision by law for decision by com-
promise; that the issue is. between those
“who want to set up machinery for ‘the
settlement of international disputes ac-
cording to law, and those who in disdain
of all effort would continue the present
anarchic state; that the: new International
Court is urgently needed if peace is to be
assured, and that by. staying out.we are
blocking the world’s efforts for peace;
that it is either this World Court or none;
that we would be‘under no obligation to
to submit to the Court any dispute we
desired to keep from it; that the Court
has no serious connection with the League
T HEAT AE
MAGHZINE’S
GOLLEGE PRUE
CONTEST
si
WN PRES. |
is offered by THEATRE
MAGAZINE for the _ best
answers't6 the following ques-
tions: “4
Who is your favorite actress
and why?
‘Who is your favorite actor and
why?
What .was your favorite play
Theatre Magazine’s readers are
dy)
[Em |
interested in college students’
opinions on the drama. We want
to know what YOU think. College
men and women will surely have
interesting ideas on these subjects,
a © our pages will result
bay ae
|
a :
> .
of Nations; and that we would make res-
ervations expressly entering a caveat
against any association with the League.
The opponents of our “joifing” the
Court assert that the Court is the child of the
League and the step proposed would in-
tvitably draw us into other commitments
to the League; that it is intended by some
of its, proponents as. an entering wedge
to the League; that the jurisdiction of the
Court is not obligatory; and that the
strongest> nations wete the first to. de-
nounce the obligatory clause; that there
is no provision for the enforcement of its
decisions; that other nations can numeri-
cally outvote us in the assembly in: the
election of Judges; and that to visualize
the Court as an agency for “peace is an
illusion.
The arguments thus advanced on both
sides indicate that the issue*has become
political in nature. While that, is neither
avoidable nor to be deprecated in a de-
mocracy, it has a tendency to becloud
the issue by generating waves of emo-
tional morality which confuse rather. than
enlighten. It is believed that an analysis
of the problem in the light of the profes-
sions. of both sides may serve a useful
purpose.
Underlying the arguments of the: pro-
ponents of our “joining” the so-called
World Court runs the thajor assumption
thatthe Court would furnish a substitute
for war, at least in part; that nations
desire a Court of this kind for the settle-
ment of their disputes, and that the crea-
Ition of the new Court invites the nations
to’ submit their differences to peaceful
adjudication.
On the issue whether the Court will
furnish a substitute for war, it is well to
examine the actual jurisdiction of the
Court, as provided in its statute. As is
well known, its jurisdiction is limited
exclusively to legal questions; over poli-
tical questions the Court has no jurisdic-
tion. It is also. well to remember that
the’ Council of the League, when they
received the report of the Committee of
Jurists which recommended — obligatory
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ers were still unwilling to submit auto-
matically the most legal of questions to
judicial determination. The obligation
to submit was left optional, and fortun-
ately some fifteen smaller nations on
condition of reciprocity, have ratified the
optional “clause. ’ It may be hdped that
the practice wifl prove contagious. Thus
far the clause has not yet been invoked in
a practical case.
But more important still is the fact
that the--issues that have led to war be-
tween: nations are rarely purely legal in
character. They are political and eco-
nomic, of a type which law cannot yet
reach, and it precisely these questions
over which the Court has no jurisdiction.
Professor “Hudson, one of the most
ardent advocates of the League and the
Court, admits in his recent book that
“It is chiefly with reference to non-
juridical questions that‘nations are likely
to fight. For the most part, the kind of
case that comes before the Courts, the
kind of case that has come before the
Permanent Court of Arbitration, for in-
stance, is not the kind of case which
leads to war;” and again, “It is true that
the larger political questions about which
nations might go to war will not generally
come before the Court.” The assertion
sometimes hedrd that the opponents of
America’s “joining” the Court are ob-
structing the “world’s peace” deserves re-
examination.
In view of the limited jurisdiction of
the Court, consisting of what have been
termed justiciable or strictly legal ques-
tions, the reluctance of the larger Pow-
ers to make’ jurisdiction in these cases
obligatory is to be regretted. It is an
indication of the fact that we are still
a long way from the substitute of
amicable for belligerent methods in the
settlement of international disputes. One
of the necessary weaknesses of the Court
consists in the very fact that it is not
likelyto prove an effectivé agency in
removing for a long time to come the
bane of war from the recognized institu-
tions of international relations. — This
weakness goes to the very root of inter-
national relations*in what I venture to call
this socially backward age. No mere
addition of machinery can create that
necessary will to peace which is the best
guaranty of the efficacy of an Interna-
tional Court. Perhaps Locarno is a sym-
bol of the realizations of this fact. The
ment is conditioned by underlying factors
inherent in the existing internatjonal sys-
‘tem, which persuades nations to decline
to submit what they consider important.
issues to the arbitration of impartial
Judges. Note the almost universal ex-
ception of questions of natiqnal honor,
independence and vital interests, from
¥
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Katharine S. Leiper * Hedene Girvin
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e
arbitration treaties. The judicial process
is weakened’ by a stipulation’ that there —
shall be no submission of anything im-
portant.
On the other hand, it must be said that
the Permanent Court has thus far done
its work well. While confined almost
entirely to the interpretation of the .treat-
ies of peace and the arrangements effected
under them, and while occupied princi- .
pally with advisory opinions, it neverthe-
less has demonstrated its usefulness. The
advisory opinion,:‘though not involving
strictly a judicial*function, has been ar-
rived at with all the thoroughness and
technique of a judicial proceeding.
Though there still seem to be some sup-
port in the Court for the secret opinion
and the decision of cases where the de-
fendant is absent, it is believed that the
Court-will hardly think of adopting these
objectionable practices.
Unfortunately the common assumption
that the nations seriously desire ‘an In-
unwillingness to submit to judicial settle-
ternational Court for the settlement of
their disputes, is not altogether well
founded. Nations desire an International
Tribunal and have had’ no difficulty in
establishing one ad hoc when the occasion
arises, when the dispute is unimportant or
would not justify the expense of war, or
when political considerations dictate sub-
mission to arbitration rather than recourse
to war—in short, when they feel that they
have more to gain by arbitration or other
forms of peaceful settlement, such as
mediation, than by. war. The hundreds
of arbitrations that have been held illus-
trate this fact. But when the issue is
such that peaceful adjustment seems in-
appropriate or inadvisable, the peaceful
method is not chosen, not because there
is’ no machinery for peace, but because
there is no will to peace,
If I judge correctly the temper of the -
world—at least down to Locarno—there
is probably less disposition to adopt the
civilized methods of adjusting conflict-
ing interests than there has been for
some time. Few people realize or are
willing to contemplate the fact that eleven
years of devasting war and disintegrat-
ing pace have undermined the moral
foundations of many densely populated
areas of the world, and that there is more
faith in the afficacy of force—unaccom-
panied by a growing contempt for law—
as a solution for international differences
than there has been since the days of
Napoleon. The forces of disintegration,
unless soon checked, may ultimately over-
power the forces of reconstruction, due
primarily, I believe, to the shortsighted
policy of the present managers of Euro-
pean political affairs.
In the light of the fact that the so-
called Worll Court can have but little
relation to the problem of peace, the
issue as to whether the United States
should now “join”. it or not can hardly
be placed on the ground that peace will
thereby either be promoted or retarded.
That issue, I believe, is unreal and fan-
ciful. Perhaps we ought to aid any
movement that even looks to the judicial
settlement of disputes, but when one of
the announced inducements: for our join-
ing the Court is that we would never
have to submit a case to it, encouraging
an inference that probably we never
would, one may properly question the
purpose that it is intended that our
joining shall subserve. Is it merely to
encourage others to submit to the Court?
Is it just a sentimental question without
possibility of any tangible effect on us?
Is this the cherislted American ideal?
Persons having a serious desire to gov-
as Mr.
4
®
o
-'THE. COLLEGE NEWS
ern their actions by intelligence rather
than emotion have. a right to ask such
questions. Can it be that the political
platform which so long dedicated a plank
’ to the econception of an International
* Court contemplated, a Court to which we’
would never have to submit a case? We
have such a Court now in the Permanent
Court of Arbitration, and to it we have
“submitted four substantial controversies.
Would we.submit any more: cases to a
Court over whose composition for years
to come we would probably have no say?
If this is not likely, as is believed, just |.
what important function is our joining the
Court designed to subserve? df it will
not bring to the-Court any more cases,
is it intended merely as‘a friendly gesture,’
as an evidence of our moral support to
nations having greater. desire or courage
to submit disputes?
Or is the charge of the more vigorous
opponents of our “joining” the Court
sustainable, namely, that it constitutes,
Hoover intimated and President
Harding, denied, a first step toward the
League of Nations? If it does involve
such a possibility, at least there is here
a genuine issue as to policy. Although
the Court is the direct creation of the
League and depends upon the League
budget for its support, it may be that it
is so far disassociated from its organiza-
tion that adhering to the protocol creat-
ing the Court, as the administration
spokesmen have asserted will involve no
other commitments to the League. Yet
the- fact that so many professional and
~ non-professional advocates of the League
are so ardently enthusiastic for our
“joining” the World Court, of whose real
functions some of them appear to have
only vague information, may afford some
ground to the opponents of the League
to support that the advocates of the
Court are mainly concerned with its
function as a oor to the League. Unless
it has some “such significance, the issue
‘is most unimportant; and many earnest
students of foreign affairs, men like
Senator Borah, have expressed the firm]
conviction that our adhering to the
protocol creating the Court can have no
other purpose or effect than affording
an entrance to the League. It is -doubt-
less partly on that very account that the
proposed step has had such wide support
as well as opposition. If Senator Borah’s
view is justified in fact, the proposed
[ES .
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? a
policy, deserves more profound considera-
tion from American citizens that it has
yet received. It is then more than a mere
sentimental question, but one involving
the political relations of this country to
Europe. On that question men may well
differ. But if that is the issue it is at
least a real one, justifying the most ex-
haustive éxamination and. discussion in
order that the national judgment may be
sound and considered.
EDWIN Me BORCHARD,
Ai ti ta le Bo PR De I. i. DB:
(Professor of law at Yale University
Law School, 1917-1925. Expert on In-
Law School, 1917-1925.)
On: November 19 the House of Com-
mons, by an overwhelming majority, ap-
proved the Rhineland Pact—treaty of mu-
tual guarantees. This was the most ini-
portant of all the Locarno treaties. . This
action is in marked contrast with the re-
jection of the Geneva Protocol a year ago.
This indicates conclusively that ‘Great Brit-
ain is not yet ready for the outlawry of ‘war
by statute, but evolutionary processes.
The most urgent question before the
nations of the world today is the estab-
lishment of universal peace. This js cer-
tainly the paramount issue in America, For
the fitst time in the world’s history it seems
possible that Victor Hugo’s saying: “There
is one thing stronger than armies, and that
is an idea whose time has come,” may bde-
come a reality. As the war was hastened to
a victorious end because of our participation,
so I believe that America can do more than
any other nation at the present hour to es-
tablish world peace.
The most ardent opponent of America’s
entrance into the World Court is Senator
William E. Borah, Chairman of the Seriate :
Committee on Foreign Relations. His place
as Chairman attracts attention to his opin-
ions and requires that his arguments should
be fairly met. .
Senator Borah declared that, ‘the Diem
nent Court of International Justice is not a
World Court, but is a League of Nations
Court. I agree with the Senator that it is a
League of Nations Court. It is a depart-
ment of the League and an instrument creat-
ed by it. However, the members of the
League declare that they are willing to have
us join this Court with reservations of ouf
own making and without our becoming a
member of the League, thus indicating that
to be a member of the World Court is not
synonymous with League membership.
Senator Borah would have us believe that
the people have already passed upon the
question of our entrance into the World
Court. This is not the case, however, be-
cause the World Court. reservations were
suggested after the Senate had refused to
| ratify the Versailles Treaty and President
Harding. had been elected on a platform
which promised to keep us out of the
League. It is certainty not correct in any
sense, to say that the people have ever
voted on the World Court issue.
A brief history of the World Court will
show the weakness of Senator Borah’s ob-
jection that the World Court. is*a League
Court. In 1907 Elihu Root, who had long
advocated a World Court, drafted a plan
for such a Court and it was presented for
adoption by The Hague Court of Arbitra-
tion. This failed because there was no
satisfactory way provided for the election
of judges. In 1920 Mr. Root, then a mem-
ber of the Advisory Committee of Jurists,
to which the League of Nations had com-
>
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a
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THR COLLEGE NRWS,
mitted the work of drafting a plan for a
World Court, again brought forward his
plan and it was adopted with slight amend-
ments. The seat of the World” Court is
The Hague. The Court -consists: of (11
judges and ‘four deputies. The judges are
nominated by. the national groups compos-
ing the old Hague Permanent Court of
Arbitration. Each national group may
name four persons, only two of whom may
be of their own nationality. Since 43 na-1
tions are members of the Permanent Court
of Arbitration and each sation may make
four nominations, it is possible for the list
of nominations for judges of the World
Court to consist of 172 names. The statute
of the Court provides that the Court niust
consist of men possessing certain outstand-
ing qualifications and that the whole body
shall represent “the main forms of civiliza-
‘tion” and “the principal legal systems. of
the world.” — I call particular. attention. ts
the fact that The Hague Court of Arbitra-
tion makes these nominations and this Court
is wholly independent of the League of Na-
tions. The Assembly and the Council of the
League vote separately, but an absolute
majority in each is necessary for election.
Not more than one judge may come from
any one nation. Every means has been
taken to secure competent judges and to
safeguard the interests of all the members
Presidents Harding and Coolidge and Secre-
tary Hughes, reads as follows:
“The United States shall be ‘permitted to
participate through representatives desig-
nated for the.purpose and upon an equality
with other States, members, respectively,
of the Council and Assembly of the League
of Nations, in any and “all proogedings of
either the Council or the. Assembly, for the
election of judges or deputy*judges of the |.
Permanent Court of International Justice
or for the filling of vacancies.”
As a further safeguard, resérvation num-
ber four, reads as follows: °
“That ‘the statute for the Permanent
Court of International Justice dajoined to
the Protocol shall not be amended without
the consent of the United States.”
{ submit that in view of the method of
electing judges to the World-Court and in
the light of the reservatiow’s which Americ3
demands as a condition of our joining the
Court, it is of very little consequence
whether or not the Court is a part of the
League of Nations. Can an American
statesman be so obsessed with the isolation-
ist spirit that he would object to joining the
World Court because it is part of the League
of Nations, which League we :at one time
refused to join?
HON. WILLIAM E, SWEET, A.B.
(Governor of Colorado, 192%, 1924; Direc-
4
DR. MURRAY SPEAKS .
‘CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
comes to the human spirit through ‘the
expectant silences of prayer.’ When men
enter into the spirit of worship, they often
receive ati unexpected- clarity of vision.
“Cultivate in your lives the habit of
worship... Await expectantly a new mani-
festation of God in yourself. ‘The sense
of having found Him will give you
strength where weakness: was, joyous
cheer where darkness was.*
‘ *May- I beg you, if doubt troubles your
faith, to enter into the sanctuary of God,
and in communion and fellowship with
Him, find the help and peace which He
alone .can give.”
JACOBSON QUARTETTE
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
cello.
The program was as follows:
OOMOreee MA ry veces vee
Allegro vivace assai.
Menuetto.
Andante cantabile.
Molto allegro.
(a) Canzonetta Mendelssohn
(b) Interludium in modo antico, Glazounoft
Mozart
ee reese eee sens
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COLLEGE TEA HOUSE |
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o
THE COLLEGE. NEWS
@
ORCHESTRA PROGRAM
On Friday and Saturday, December 11
and 12, the Philadelphia “Orchestra will
play the following program: ©
HANDEL—Overture in D Minor
BEETHOVEN—Concerto in D Major,
for Violin and Orchestra
. Allegro ma non troppo.
. Larghetto. ‘eee
. Rondo.
JOSEPH SZIGETI
MOUSSORGSK Y—“Khowantchina”
(a) Prelude. _
(b) Entr’acte. ~ .
STRAWINSKY—“L’Oiseau de Feu.”
Introduction. i
L’Oiseat: de Feu et sa danse.
Ronde des Princesses enchantees.
Danse Infernale du Roi Kastchei.
Barceusé de I’Oiseau de Feu.
Finale.
(Repeated by Request)
JOSEPH SZIGETI, Violinist.
Joseph Szigeti, who makes his Ameri-
can debut at these concerts, was born
in Budapest and studied with Hubay.
His debut was made at the age of thir-
teen in Budapest, Dresden and London.
His career has been a séries of successes,
and.in the last two years he has ap-
peared with every important orchestra
in Europe. Famous as a player of clas-
sics, Szigeti is also renowned as the vio-
owe
eer
oe
linist who has ‘introduéed many of the
new works of the violin repertoire. Ham-
ilton Harty’s violin concerto ‘ie dedicated
to him, as is likewise Busoni’s. Bloch’s
violin ‘sonata and Prokofieff’s violin con-
certo are a few of the modern composi-
tions which he has played at their pre-
mieres. Eugene Yraye’s sonta for solo
violin, just published, is another work
which bears a dedication to Szigeti.
IN PHILADELPHIA
Chestnut Street Opera House—My Girl.
Adelphi—Robert Lorraine in The Master of
the Inn.
Lyric—The Gorilla,” &
Shubert—Rose-Marie,
Walnut—Aloma of the South Seas.
Forrest—Tip-T oes.
Garrick—The Show-Of. ;
Broad—Richard Bennett and Pauline Lord
' in They Knew What They Wanted.
Moving Pictures:
Fox—The Fool:
Aldine—The Merry Widow.
Stanely—Addlphe Menjou in The King of
Main Street. oe
Stanton—Douglas Fairbanks in’ Don Q.
Arcadia—The Unguarded Hour.
Music: |
Thursday, December 10, Academy of Music,
New York Symphony. Walter Damrosch,
conductor ; George Gershwin, soloist.
&
CALENDAR ..
Friday, Decémber 11—Swimming meet. }
‘Saturday, December 12—Senior Recep-
tion to. Freshmen..
Sunday, December 18—Rev. Henry P.
Yan Dusen will speak in chapel.
Monday, December 14—Kindler and Con-
nell concert in Taylor Hall.
e - a
CONCERTS IN PHILADELPHIA
On Thursday evening, December 10, in
the Academy of Music, the Damrosch Syni-
phony Orchestra will play the Egmont Over-
ture of Beethoven, orchestral arrangements
of Schybert’s Mament Musical and Spinning
Song, and a symphony by Kallinikoff, The
soloist will be George Gershwin, playing
his new New York Concerto. Mr. Gersh-
win.is well known as the composer of the |
Rhapsody “in Blue, the music of Lady Be
Good and many other musical comedies.
Paderewski will give a’ recital on Monday
evening, December 14, in the Academy of
Music.
”
BRAHMS SONATA TO OPEN PROGRAM
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
(Cello Obbligato, Mr. Kindler.)
Hans Kindler, ’Cello
Horace Alwyne, Piano
Horatio Connell, Baritone
Ellis Clarke Hammann at the Piano
= ousnillteies Ere
ee
C
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+: A a rie 7 ci
4 :
LUNCHEON « TEA-: DINNER-
‘ Open Sundays
CHATTER-ON TEA HOUSE
835 Morton Road ~
Telephone, Bryn Mawr 1185 | ‘
noe
MAIN LINE VALET SHOP
BERNARD J. McRORY’ © :
‘Riding & Sport Clothes Remodeled & Repaired
Cleaning and Dyeing
a Moved to
2D FL. over GAFFNEY’S NOTION STORE
Next to Pennsylvania Railroad
“EXPERT FURRIERS”
ores
Breakfast
Luncheons .
Dinners
TELEPHONE, ARDMORE 1946
Haverford Ave. & Station Rd. Drive
HAVERFORD STATION, P. R. R. |
An Unusual Collection of
FLORENTINE GIFTS
now on display at
THE MILESTONE INN
‘845 Lancaster Avenue
Bryn Mawr
LOWTHORPE SCHOOL
A& ‘School of Landscape Architecture for Women
TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR
Courses in
“| Landscape Design, rigennnig Sonie®: Construc-
n
tion, Horticulture and subjects
te of seventeen acres, gardens, greenhouses
38 Miles from Boston
“GROTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Phone, Ardmore 12
Bryn Mawr 1221
GEORGE F. KEMPEN
CATERER and CONFECTIONER
27 W. Lancaster Ave, 859 Lancaster Ave.
Ardmore Bryn Mawr
Table Delicacies
Frozen Dainties”
Mi bio .
mate ceieieinaniaaiaaasaniniaadiiaal
sconnnecnnemgininnntieeren
Phone, Bryn Maw? 166- ae
Phone Orders: Promptly Delivered
_ WILLIAM GROFF, P. D.
~. PRESCRIPTIONIST
Whitman Chocolates
R08 Lancaster Ave. © Bryn Mawr. Pa.
E. S. McCawley & Co.
Books
Do you want the latest book?
Are you interested in books worth
while? rs :
We have it or can get it.
HAVERFORD AVE. Haverford, Pa.
QUALITY
Jewels
: Silver’
. Watches
Stationery
¥
@
College news, December 9, 1925
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1925-12-09
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 12, No. 10
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol12-no10