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VOL. M41. No. 5.
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BRYN MAWR (AND WAYNE), PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28,
PRICE, 1Q CENTS
=
3 LANTERN NIGHT 1
Methods of Singing .
Changed ie
1929's tadenien: Wis yooh In Design: |
MOON APPROVES CEREMONY |
NAMES its a TO SPORT AND
8
@
and captain of the class team in 1924.
committee for “Quality Street,” and on
laden torrie nner
experimentgy
aaa abe <<
no wind to blow: out the lanterns. Also
ened. Instead of beginning “Pallas
Athene Thea” at Pentbroke Arch, as in
past years, 1928 only sang one stanza,
directly outside the Library;
Freshmen only one stanza of “Sofias”
after leaving the Cloisters. Doubtless
“considerable dramatic effect was lost by
not having the Freshmen, in caps and
gowns for the first time, new lanterns
swinging at their sides, sing all the way
from:the Library to the Arch; but there
long line on the beat.
Another change was in the singing of
“Safias.”. New parts were written to the
difficult Russian music, the tenor being
omitted altogether.
first line was ‘also altered slightly. In
ae spite of some discrepancy between the
_ two lines of the Sophomores entering the
Cloisters, the singing was up to the usual
standard.
1929’s lanterns are very different from
those of recent years: they are smaller,
round, and have opaque glass. The de-
sign, remarkably complicated, represents.
a-girl giving another a lantern.
‘Insthe era of changing tradition it is
e - noteworthy that the historic Lantern
: Night moon did not fail.
a -PORTITUDE 15 GREATEST OF
SAYS REV. BUTZER
a Backend Gaisiation Refuses to
- Tackle and Finish Hard Job
RR as a Christian ‘elktoen was em-
phasized by the Reverend Albert Butzer,
pastor of the Westside Presbyterian
Church, Ridgewood, New Jersey, speak-
ing. in. chapel on Sunday, October 27.
“You remember in Saint Joan,” he said, | ,
when the Maid is trying to jam a
down the jellylike backbone of
hin ‘he says, ‘I don't want cour-
be left in peace.’ We pd
ise such @ man, yety™
Lantern Night last: Friday was held in}
the traditional manner, except.for’a few
changes in the singing and |
a quite untraditional speed and efficiency. |
Though damp and misty, the night was}
not too cold for comfort, and there was |
the ginging. outside the ,Library by both |’
Sophomores and Freshmen was short-|:
SPEND WAGES, NOT ALLOWANCES
and the}:
has always been difficulty in keeping the].
The rhythm of the]!
}even had to dead the singing. once at a
‘than any other nationality except Ameti-
‘dan, and, together with some
vn oe be = sa
: “They ee
4—of the Athletic Association—this-year._—___--—- -
Miss Cruikshank was on the Scenery Committee for Sophomore play last
year, a member of the Undergraduate
and-a member of the Business Board o
The Class of 1927 has elected Sylvia Walker President, Dorothy Meeker,
Vice President, and Mary Cruikshank Secretary.
Miss" Walker was on the casting committee of May day, on Varsity Hockey
Sophomore year she was on the casting
DRAMA
REPRESENT 1927 THIS YEAR
Varsity Hockey. She is Vice President
MANKIND ISTOOLAZY
T0 SEARCH FOR TRUTH
Jesus Teaches That That Infallible Court
of Appeal is Within Ourselves
says Dr. Tyson
j|BIBLE 1S.° WHOLE LIBRARY
Committee for the Students’ Building,
{ The News.
?
SPEAKER TELLS OF STUDENTS WHO
K. Simonds, ’27, Describes Friends
_ and Experiences at Summer School
“I think it’s probably useless for me to
try to give you an adequate impréssion
‘of the Summer School, but I can tell you
what I saw of the girls, what I did there,
and what I learned about. their. lives,”.
said Katherine Simonds, ’27, speaking in
Vespers last Sunday “evening.
“It’s a thing that can’t very well be
described. Before I went there, I talked
to a lot of people who had been there
and I thought about it a lot, but when 1
got there I found it entirely different
from anything: that I had been able to
imagine.
! “As you. probably know, the three
undergraduates who are there each month
do all the odd jobs that no one else does.
Two of them are assigned to help the
director of athletics, help with the music,
take care of the livestock—mostly rabbits
—and that sort of thing. The third one
works in the office that is set up in the
Ghew room, and distributes the mail.
That was my job, and it spread to include
anything from burying the cats that were
disemboweled by the Science class, to
¢haperoning girls into Philadelphia. I
baseball game.
: “Each of us went regularly to one of
the classes. And then we lived in the
same | hall with the girls, and. ate our
meals with them and after meals we used
to gather outside of Denbigh and talk
flor ‘hours about everything on earth. So
that in one way or another we saw a great
deal of them, and had many chances
really to, know them,
! “The Russian girls were as a ele the g
} most interesting. people there,
much more
aert and vehement than the others. There
were twenty-three of them this year—more
pert ‘me frightfully
| dohamed: of how little I knew. Prac-
a all the Russians knew Tolstoi and
backwards and forwards. And
0 to concerts all the time, and man-_
ans something. to do that, after}
) eight or 5 hours a
see most. of the good ‘plays. It tak
CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATIONS LEND —
SUPPORT TO WORLD COURT
Influence May Affect Senate Debate
* on December 17
In twelve conferences held in various
parts of the country over the last two
week-ends, students from every type ot
college and university studied the World
Court. Plans “for, campus _ investigation
on the subject were set up’ and the work
is already under“.way in a number of
sehools. Approximately 450 of the keen-
‘est student minds decided that the educa-
tional campaign which is being sponsored
by the Council of Christian Agsociations
during the fall months is a worthy enter-
prise and that they will give their fullest
co-operation.
The special World Court conferences
of the past week-end included two in
Nebraska, 4one in Oklahoma City, one in
Galesburg, Illinois, and one in Sioux Falls,
South Dakota. An average of fifty stu-
dents attended each of these regional and
State gatherings. and considered the World
Court. During the latter part of October
and the first half of November, between
thirty-five and fifty similar conferences
are planned in line with the accelerated
interest. in international - affairs focusing
on the opening of the Senate debate on
December 17th.
_ During the first two ‘weeks of Decem-
ber, a national poll will be conducted by
the New Student and the Council of Chris-
tian Associations’ World Court Commit-
tee which will be the culmination of
gtudy and discussion. ‘In the poll, Sstu-
dents. will ‘express their approval or dis-
approval of the entrance of the United
States ‘into the Court.
: This intensive series of meetings has
rown out of the resolutions passed at
the recent annual meeting of the Council
of Christian Associations in’ which the
student leaders from campuses from. alJ
quarters ‘of the country expressed the
ae that the United States should enter
‘orld Court at the earliest,
sh This conviction resulted —
"toate of the situation as it exists ‘ot was
*, | folléwed by a plan whereby students all
ever the country may have a chance to
educate themselves on the issue and to
tnobilize whatever thought may result
from the stuly done on local campuses
and in conferences.
The conviction that ‘students should | envi
© a continuous interest in things inter-
‘national and that they should exert a
should be. only the first step
a toward the continuous influence of an in-
student opinion on all
cag wy
‘tart
:|vital force in shaping of policies led to}
: | the purpose that the intensive educational
“Modern youth reads the Bible so little -
‘that it is unable to get even a bird’s eye
view of the opinions of Western schof€rs. :
, There is really nothing magical or super-
natural about the Bible,” said Dr. Stew-
Tyson, ‘speaking last Wednesday
night in ‘the first of his four * lectures
under the auspices of the Christian Asso-
ciation on tht “Old and New Testaments
from a Critical Standpoint.”
“Nor is the Bible to be considered as
just one book, but rather as a library of
religion made up of sixty-six volumes of
the most varied type of literature.”
instance, the thirty-nine Hebrew scrip--
turbot the Old Testament treat of every
creed from the fatalistic sadness of
Ecclesiastics to the teachings of the Gos-
pel according to St. John, which ‘is reli-
gious experience into the Nth degree;
moreover these include every form of
writing from the beginnings of Hebrew
philosophy to the Oriental idea of poetry.
What madness to judge this wide scope.
of composition in the light of a single
book!
“Early Christians believed God had
created the revelation of himself in the
Old Testament scriptures. These they
considered complete, and any attempt at-
addition was held as no less than_blas-
phemy.” Then gradually a new set of
writings grew up. Disciples of Christ
wrote letters to their followers, precious
letters which after their deaths were care-
fully collected and treasured. Peter’s
sermons were copied and recopied, each
new reviser adding a touch of his own .
CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
WEIGHT OF FOREIGN POLICY
IN SWITZERLAND DESCRIBED
Dr. Schopfer Contrasts League of
_ Dr. Sidney Schopfer speaking before
the Liberal and French Clubs last Mon-
day evening, reviewed the place of Switz-
erland, past and present, among the
nations of Europe.
“Tq situation internationale de la
Suisse,” he said, “est une fonction directe
de- la situation Européenne.” Her. his-
tory must.be considered along with cur-
rent diplomatic tendencies in Eutope. A
a| democracy founded upon: rights sented.
nd the United States, her government to
internal revolution.
- Modern Switzerland was born “dune -
grande. mouvement commune.” Tn 1291
the Everlasting League was made by the
free towns of Switzerland, with their
irons. Under the terms of . the
gue, the towns promised mutual aid in
case. of attack, and agreed . to combine
judgment in serious cases. In 1315 the
stadence of the “cantons” reafirmed. — :
_ These cantons separately ned, in-
ror |
League was renewed and the interde-, —
a
ce
2
*
THE COLLEGE NEWS
ld
Ti “College News
he: in 1914.)
irublished weekly during the college
interest of Bryn Mawr College, at t
Building, Wayne Pa., and Bryn Mawr», Co
J
pry
lege.
Masaging Editor.......JmaN Loxs, 26
e
CENSOR NEWS EDITOR
B.. Prrney, ’27.¢ M. Lmary, ’27
a
EDITORS
K. SIMONDS, 27
ASSISTANT EDITORS
M. Smits, '27 1s. LINN, °26
R. RIcKaByY, as J. Faster, '28
M. Fowumr,’28
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‘Entered 4 4 ond diame matter at the Wayne,
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—_ fs
Gis
“WAIT—YOU MAY LOSE”
Probably the Greeks were right in ‘the
beginning. They at least have a very
romantic explanation of their offensive—
the favorite officer shot down in cold
blood, the impossibility of restraining the
_ outraged soldiery (outnumbering the
Bulgarians five to one, incidentally, in
their outrage), etc., etc.
The offensive proper has not been so
romantic. Villages have been bombed
and destroyed, and civilians killed to no
purpose. .Artillery gunfire is trained on
the defenseless Bulgarian garrisons and
three separate times the Greek Staff has
failed to keep appointments with the Bul-
garians for conference.
If they had waited to arbitrate, they
would have saved themselves considerable
expense, it seems, the independence which
they will undoubtedly lose; and the re-
spect of the outside world. But t
hasty vengeance has turned the tables at
Athens—they have firmly established the
Bulgarians whom they accused, as their
accusers today, ,
4
THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL
Perfection of detail ‘giving an impres-
sion of true classic simplicity character-
izes the production of The School for
Scandal which opened Monday night at
ct the Broad Theatre, To view it was a rare
delight.
Not only the parents but also the
very soul and spirit of this play by Sheri-
dan have been reproduced. The specta-|
tor all but forgets the twentieth century,
so convincing is this production. It is a
revival in the fullest meaning of the word.
The truth of Mr. Eaton’s statement in his
address of a fortnight ago before the
Liberal that Sheridan. has written
‘plays which live today as well as in their
epoch—is here illustrated with peculiar
force.
ie this effect could ne have been pro-
duced had. the presentation been in any
way unsympathetic. Everything has
been k ndary to the play itself.
aS been mastered to such a
nowhere emphasizes itself
continuity of the whole. It
“of a few principals and a
daries. Each actor had a
jowledge. and conceptiot of
ie
is due to the cia as a
SS eerwell’s soiree—Act I,
which are the reverse of one another.
oseph, the suave villain, wears a coat of |
luminous black lined with cream, whereas |.
Clfarles, the open and hearty hero, dons
a coat .of cream with black merely for
trimming,
the matter of scenery.
the following note which appears in the
program:
old Theatre Royal Drury Lane in the
year 1777; under the fitful light- of- oil
lamps and candles, without the aid of
doors, ceilings, and the usual accompani-
ments of ‘modern stage realism; with
beaux and belles seated almost amidst the
factors themselves and frequently “making
audible interruptions, the success of this
classic of English Comedy was first ob-
tained. Therefore, believing that the play
calls for some of that breadth of treat-
ment to which dramatists of .the day were
accustomed, we Have endeavored to re-
produce in. some measure the simplicity
and atmosphere of the Eighteenth Cen-
tury stage.
pected, while Miss Mary Collins gives a
satisfying though unexpectedly modern
wife.
especially from England to play the part
of Charles, is ‘all that a hero ought to be.
Julia Hayt gaye a splendid character
x well, while Miss Henrietta Crosman, who
‘must Sir Benjamin and his laugh, por-
‘VIOLINIST TO PLAY
Great praise is due Mr. Basil Dean in
He has written
“Note-Upon the vast bare stage of the
“BASIL DEAN.”
It is far frome exaggeration to say that
his hopes have been realized.
Mr: O. P. Heggie is superb as Sir
Peter Teazle, as was to have been ex-
interpretation of his youthful and wilful
Mr. Ian Hunter, who has come
The portrayal of Joseph, by Mr. James
Dale, is also to be commended. Miss
study as the supremely feline Lady Sneer-
insists that this is her last role, never
failed to.bring’ down the house as_ the
bustling busybody, Mrs. Candour. Nor
trayed by Mr. Neil Martin, be forgotten.
FORTITUDE MAN’S GREATEST
QUALITY
"y
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
away with, if the church is to be rid of
petty quibblings and dissensions we must
have the courage to tackle a hard job.”
This is a backboneless period in which
young people are swayed too easily by
passing fancies. “We are so afraid of
being called queer, or rabid, or revolu-
tionary, that we lock-step with the gang.”
Our excuse of a multitude of doubtful
actions is: “Oh, everybody does it!”
“It is so easy to get off with a great
noise, and set the dust flying; but it isn’t
quite so easy to go through to a fine
finish.”. Many ‘college people have fine
ideals which do not wear, which they
drop after a few years’ contact with the
world. They lack fortitude, the finest
quality a man can have, the ability to
stick to a thing when he has neither heart
nor hope left in him, like the explorer
Scott, who wrote as he was dying, “We
shall stick it out!”
a
»
AT WYNDHAM ON NEXT
Moneet EVENING
*
:| Chamber Music Concert Announced for
| ! ‘eh _____|berton, prominent Broadway producer;|
‘national
DISCUSSION OF WORLD COURT
TO BE HELD AT WYNDHAM
Talks by Miss Ely and Dr. Fenwick to
Be Given This Week. .
Miss Gertrude Ely, and Dr.. Fénwick,
Professor of Political Science, will talk
on the World Court, at a meeting of the
college at Wyndham, on the evening ot
October 29, Thursday. During the week-
end following this Thursday, a confer-
ence will be held in Philadelphia, under
the auspices of the Y. W. C. A., on the
subject of the Locarno Conference.
COLLEGE DRAMATIC |
ASSOCIATIONS TO HOLD
__ NATIONAL CONFERENCE
WORLD COURT TO BE :
DISCUSSED. BY STUDENTS
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
ment has taken on the” World Court
issue, and are lecturing’ and supplying
expert help in the regional and State con-
ferences, The full-time speakers for the
campaign include Kirby Page, Mrs.
Laura Puffer Morgan, Chairman of the
Women’s National World Court Com-
mittee; Alden Alley, Frederick Snyder,
J. Nevin Sayre and: George Collins.
Those who have observed the interest
springing up immediately among students
wherever The World Court has been men-
tioned attribute it to the fact that this is
the first great national issue that has pre-
sented itself since the présidential elec-
tion and that it carries a more vital inter-
Student dramatic organizations that
give serious splays have been invited to
participate prominently in the first,
Conference on the American
Theatre to be held at the Carnegie In-
stitute of Technology in Pittsburgh on
November 2% and 28 of this, year.
Announcement of the conference is
considered as.a recognition of the chang-
the this
country, especially with regard to the
the
ing condjtions in theatre
growth of community playhouse
college theatricals.
Whether the movies and other forms
of light entertainment have _ really
“killed” the commercial theatre, particu-
larly the “road business,” and whether
the new movement in community play-
house activities and in the colleges can
elevate standards in American drama,
are questions that will be carefully dis-
cussed at the conference. One of the
chief purposes of the meeting is to study
the potential influence of the community
playhouse movement and to ascertain,
‘also, the nature and extent of the move-
ment now going on in American colleges
for the promotion of interest in the
serious drama,
The invitation list, according to Dr.
Thomas S. Baker, President of Carnegie
Institute of Technology, and author of
the plan of the conference, includes all
of the American universities and col-
leges and the community playhouses. As
far as it is possible, informal student
organizations which give serious plays
are being invited to send delegates. In
addition, the list includes theatrical crit-
ics, and representatives of those theatri-
cal groups that include producers, play-
wrights, actors, and artists.
“The program,” according to President
Baker, “will be so arranged as to bring
out not only the nature of the work done
at the colleges, but also to show the sig-
nificance of the community theatres: It
is felt that the relation between the col-
lege. theatricals and the community
theatres is very close. The representa-
tives of the colleges will. be given an
opportunity to tell what their institutions are
doing for the cultivation of the drama.
Such questions as the purpose of the
work, the financial support, collegé cred-
its, etc., will be considered during the
| sessions.”
Among ‘those who have alteaily acs
cepted invitations to speak are Otto
Kahn, New York banker, whose name
is identified so often with progressive}
movements in art education; Brock’ Pem-
movement and the widespread interest in
rest since the presidential election was a
more or less foregone conclusion. Stu-
dent interest is increased by the fact that
the outcome % the Senate debate may
result in definite and far-reaching action
on the part of the United States Govern-
ment toward the assumption of greater
international responsibility—(The World
Court Committee of the Council of Chris-
tian Associations.)
LIBERAL CLUB AND FRENCH
CLUB HEAR DR. SCHOPFER
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 |
square. Beside the independent cantons;
there were the “cantons sujets,” “cantons
allies,” and “zone d’états neutrales.” The
Swiss states, bound together for foreign
defense and, domestic order, were guar-
anteed their independence and neutrality
by the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648.
More than a century earlier the League
had entered an alliance with France for.
mutual neutrality after the wars of Fran-
cis the First. This was the beginning of
French interference, which increased
under Louis Quatorze and the annexing
of the Franche Comte, and culminated
with the triumph of the French Revolu-
tion and the attempt to establish a cen-:
tral government in Swijzerland. The
Unitary and Federal factions were bit-
terly opposed; Napoleon effected a suc-
cessful ten-year compromise; finally in
1815, by the Congress of Vienna the Con-
deration was re-established along with
its ancient guaranties of neutrality and
independence.
This neutrality protected a territory of
the utmost importance, strategically and
diplomatically. On the. military side,
Switzerland, with the Alpine passes, is a
key to the European system. Mer heu-~-
trality in the Great War was of consid-
erable advantage to France. Commer-
cially, she is, and has been since the
Middle Ages, one of the thoroughfares
for Continental trade.
The questions of the Swiss League, its
status, and the tariff difficulties, are re-
ferred now to the League of Nations. It
is inaccurate to consider the Swiss
League a League of Nations in minia-
ture. From the Swiss League there is
no withdrawal.- Unlike the League of
Nations, the cantons have an army to
defend their position. The League of
Nations is not a super state, but an or-
ganism. Switzerland, though divided in
territory, government and nationality, is
a state, resting on an historical, not a
theoretical, basis.
. and 31, the Philadelphia Orchestra will
-—. York City, Saturday, October 24.-——
THE COLLEGE NEWS
ORCHESTRA PROGRAM
On’ Friday and Saturday, October -30
play the following program: ?
SELLE ARES ae Islamey
Rachmaninoff—Concerto No. 2 ae
minor for Piano and Orchestra
Lester Donahue ‘
Peni Senohony No. 5 in E minors
', “From the New World”
The new piano invention of John Hays
Hammond, Jr., will be exhibited at these
concerts.
*
: MARRIED
Elizabeth Mosle, ’24, to Charles Wight
at St. George’s Church, New York City,
Monday, October 26.
Martha Talcott, ’26, to Marshall Blank-
arn, at St. Bartholomew’s Church, New
PAPER PRESENTED BY
DRS. FERREE AND RAND
[S@ Ferree and Dr. Rand presented a
| paper at the Nineteenth Annual Conven-
tion of © the Illuminating Engineering
Society. held in Detroit from September
15th to 19th, entitled “The Effect of .Mix-
ring Artificial Light with Daylight qn
Important Function§ of the Eye.” Dur-
ing the. past- summer Dr. Ferree and Dr.
Rand have’ done consultation and re-
search work on the tiling and lighting of
the new vehicular tunnel which is being
constructed under the Hudgon River at
New York City. _All their recommenda-
tions for the tiling and the recommenda-
tions for the lighting so far as the work
has progressed have been accepted by the
Bridge and Tunnel Commission of the
State of New,York and of the State of
o
THE FRENCH BOOK SHOP
1527 Locust Street
PHILADELPHIA
French C hristmas Cards
Miss Marinobel Smith will
‘be at College Inn, Tues-
day, November 3, with her
choice collection of old
Chinese and European
Jewelry Hand-
tooled Leather and Hand
- Weavings from Morroco.
Many Xmas. suggestions
of Unique Craftsmanship.
Also will take ord-
ers for made-to-order
New Jersey and will be embodied in the|
construction of the tunnel. It is planned
that the tunnel will be opened for use in
the autumn of 1926.
IN PHILADELPHIA
Theattes.
Broad—School for Scandal.
Shubert—Rose-Marie.
Forrest—Ziegfeld Follies.
Lyric—Dancing Mothers.
Chestnut Street Opera House—Artists and
Models,
Adelphi— The
Truex.
Walnut—Aloma of the South Seas.
Garrick—The Wealf at the Door.
Keith’s—Olga Petrova.
Movies.
Aldine—The Phantom of the Opera.
Stanton—The Pony Express.
Stanley—Ramon Novarro in The Mid-
shipman.
Fall Guy with Ernest
Coming.
‘6c 3 Academy of Music, Tuesday evening, No-
coats of all wool at vember 3rd—Rachmaninoff.
$1 8.50 Garrick—The Winner Loses.
Stanton—Harold Lloyd in The Freshman.
“ee
“We believe
that the dress
that shows taste
and sentiment:
is elevating
to the home,
and is one of
the most feminine
means of beautifying
the world.”
in a diversity of
Hk vey
presents the Costume Suit, the
Separate Coat and the Tailored
Frock with an unusual charm and
whose youthful cachet will appeal
en to the ‘smart college miss.
original modes
~
Write us
forinfor.
“mation
obtained.
| Sophomores Outplayed by a Score of
bers of the Bryn Mawr Co-operative So-
ciety should take notice of the fact that.
s
becomes
- Jon all purchases since September _ thir-
only receive dividends on purchases made |
after joining.
RED BACKS TO MUCH FOR
LIGHT BLUE FORWARDS
9
‘4 to 3
The Freshmen walked away with the
honors in the first team hockey match
against the Sophomores last Tuesday
afternoon. ? J
The score of 4 to 3 shows that the vic-
tory’ was not uninterestingly easy, for 1928
put up a good fight against 1929’s superior
playing. During. the first half 1928 led due
to two neat goals made by B. Loines, the
mainstay of 1928's forward line. The Soph-
omores, however, lost courage in the second
half ‘and found it eee * to oe ‘through
the_red_backs.—
The pecan ‘anes remarkable co-
ordination and very good individual play-
ing; their forwards wrens fast and their
backs capable. Wills, ’29, starred by her
excellent stick work, and F, Bethel, ’28,
was the most efficient point on the Soph-
omore defense.
The teams were as follows:
1928: H. Yandell, M. Fowler, B.
Loines (captain)**, H. Tuttle*, R. El-
ting, E. Brooks, C. Field, E. Jones, A.
Bruere, H. Guiterman, F. Bethel.
1929: J. Porter (captain), C. Parker, C.
Swan, E. Boyd, K. Balch, K. Haines, A.
Dalziel, R. Wills, G. Quimby, B. Humph-
rey, E. Freeman.
Subs: E. Dikeman, ’28, for H. Yandell,
'28; K. McVitty, ’29, for G. Quimby, 29
Bryn Mawr Co-optrative Society.
All those interested in becoming mem:
$2.00 fee deposited before November first
retroactive, yielding dividends
tieth. Those who join afterward will
MANN & DILKS
1102 CHESTNUT STREET
TOPCOATS
SUITS
DRESSES
SPORT HATS
tion is as follows:
V. Norris, Business Manager.
|1927 AND 1926 HOCKEY
GAME ENDS IN TIE
Evenly Matched Teams Unable to
- Break Enemy’s Defense
Hotly-contested, the first’ team hockey
match game between 1926 and 1927 re-
sulted in a 5-5 tie on Wednesday, Oc-
‘|tober 21,
From the start the outcome was uncer-
tain; the teams were very evenly matched
and .each seemed full of the driving force
of a winner.
“Take those lemons off the field” in
the umpire’s voice, as the game started,
seemed to cause a slight halt as the teams
eyed one, another still standing’ in place,
%
~~) but soon the ball was “traveling between
the 25-yard lines. No one apparently
|had the power to send it to the goal.
Starting from the middle line, A. New-
hall, '27, twice. carried the ball down: the
wing, completely outstripping both teams
and shooting two successive goals which
were followed by some hard fighting and
goals for ’26, whose left wing, W. Dodd’s
dextrous handling of the ball and quick
cuts in at the circle were Dark Blue’s
strongest offense.
“Nip and Tuck”, the score fluctuated
till nearly the end of the half when 1926
was in the lead 5-3. 1927’s forwards
overlapped badly and did, not seem to
have properly co-ordinated team play,
especially at the circle. B. Pitney, '27,
shot a goal after a cross field pass and
1927 played harder, although the brilliant
defense of the Blue backs kept the ball
near the ’27 goal. By quick passing be-
tween E. Winchester, 27, and R. Miller, ’27,
the ball traveled up to ’26’s goal and was
pushed in by B. Pitney, ’27, falling head- .
long in a little mélee around the goal-
keeper as the whistle blew, ending the game
with the score a tie.
1926: E. Cushman, H. Hodgers*, E.
Nichols***, F. Jay*, W. Dodd, M. Tatnall,
B. Sindall, V. Cooke, E. Harris, S. McAdoo,
E. Musselman.
1927: M. Leary, R. Miller, E. Winches-
ter, B, Pitney***, A, Newhall**, M.
Ciuikshank, J. Reeiey: S. Walker, .. E.
&..
‘Haines, E. Brodie, F. Thayer.
News in Brief.
1926 has’ elected H. Rodgers business,
manager of their class-book, to succeed
C. Hardy, resigned.
The Skit Committee for Senior Recep-
O. Saunders, B. Linn,
tire: may be
where
ee House of
o3 oe At.
ae $13.50
T he_ Fashionable
Campus this autumn
will exhibit no smart-
er walking shoe than
“The Edna”—an un- -
usually popular mod- |
el in Tan or Black
Boarded Calf, un-
usually priced.
Nor smarter hose.
The newest in silk
and fancy lisles.
HANAN & SON
1818 Chestnut §
‘ t.
Bo at ae
“quence, denouncing a plan by which the
ae
a
oe oe
a a % - ‘
: oa ee ; @ Pe
THE COLLEGE NEWS -
Tee ~ ° é ° : 4
K. StMONDS, '27, TELLS ~ fe each other what they have to be glad for.|- BIBLE AND ORIGIN - Telephone, Bryn Mawr 867
OF SUMMER SCHOOL t sounds awfully silly, but when you
— think of Jenny, with twenty years in the CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 The Hearthstone
CONTINUED FROM PAGD 1
was fascinating to me to watch the clash
of their points of view. I remember once
in economics class they wtre discussing
whether the company union was better
than the trade union. A girl who worked
in the Tydol plant at Bayonne described
her company union there: he mutual
benefit organizations, the company news-
paper, the company entertainments, the
splendid working conditions, the houses
provided by the compariy, and the gen-
eral esprit de corps of the whole place.
‘Then one of the Polish girls who had
been getting more and more excited while
she’ spoke, burst into a torrent of elo-
employé has to look to the company not
only for wages, but for housing, amuse-
ments, for all of his life. She cried, ‘In
this way, the very walls that shelter you,
the very cradle your child sleeps in, be-
longs to your employer, and is yours only
as long as you have’his good will. It
means serfdom, nothing more.’ It was a
splendid explosion, and the sort of thing
you were always getting’
“I thought that you might like to hear
about the lives of some of the girls whom
I met and liked very. much. It may make
you see how. very human they are, and
why their points of view differ so from
those of people like us, who are sheltered
so carefully and who have credit and pull
if we ever get into difficulties.
“Frances was one of the girls I liked
best. She lived in a small town in Massa-
chusetts. When she’ was eighteen she
had passed off her college board exams
and was all read¥ for college. That sum-
mer both: her father and her mother died,
within a month of each other, and she
was left with a younger’ brother to sup-
‘ port. She went to stay with an aunt in
Chicago, and started work in a printing
office. After she had been there some
time she decided that she was going to
join the printers’ union. That is very
much easier said than done, because it is
one of the oldest, most strongly organ-
ized, and most skilled trades in the coun-
try. It requiges four years’ apprentice-
ship, and the apprentice during this time
has to do night work, and carry heavy
eforms—things that women don’t often
want to do. They are opposed to having
women in the union, so they put all pos-
sible barriers in their way, But Frances
decided she simply had to get into the
union, So she started in doing night
work—at eight she used to work on a
night shift that did not end until two in
the morning. , Then she had to go home
to the Loop Y, where she lived.
“By the time she’ got to Summer|Z
‘School she had fulfilled all the require-
ments, and if she had been a man she
would have been admitted out of hand.
But the union refused to give her a card|7
until she had done spy work for them in
an unorganized shop. She hated the job,
but it was the only hope they gave her|Z
and getting in meant she'd get $50 a week g
instead of the $25 she was getting then. |
_ Of course, she had to be very quiet about!
it, for although she did nothing but h niyo”
the poregcak list of the people in the shop]. per
the possibility of organizing them,}
‘it’s a penal offense, and she’s pretty}
ss if she gets found out.
‘| work for twenty weeks in the year.
mills behind her, still able to find lots to
be genuinely glad dhout, it’s amazing.
The only thing she really wants on earth
is that her child shan’t have to go into the
mills as she did.
“Then ‘there was Sonya, who is a hat-
maker in Brooklyn. She’s practically the
only support of her mother and brother.
She adores this brother, and when he
wanted to be a doctor, and she knew that
he wouldn’t have time to earn money
while -he was studying, she decided she’d
pay his way through school. While the
season holds, she makes about fifty dol-
lars a week, but it’s a very uncertain
trade, and sometimes she can only get
So]:
during the off season they are sometimes
desperate for money.
“I don’t in the least want to give you
the impression that there’s a deep pall
of gloom’ over the Summer School, or
that the girls are unhappy. It isn’t so at
all. They have a beautiful time here.
But I want to make you see that the ex-
periences they have are individual and
interesting. You may or may not be
interested in industry; incidentally, nearly
all of them hate their jobs and long to get
out of industry, but you can’t help being
interested in them as people. And I cer-
tainly couldn’t help admiring their cour-
age, their straightforwardnéss, and their
independence.”
SERVICES OF COACH
OBTAINED FOR VARSITY PLAY
“Icebound” has obtained for at least
three rehearsals the services of Miss Rob-
ertson, who coached “Paolo and Fran-
cesca” last year in New York, gave M.
Hupfel, ’28, dramatic training this sum-
mer, and is now supervising the produc-
tion of a Philadelphia play.
JUNIOR MEMBER OF CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION ELECTED
The Christian Association meeting of
Thursday, October 22, elected H. Stokes,
"27, third Junior member of the C. A.
Board, and discussed the feasibility of
holding services in the old chapel on
Gulph road. The chapel is now unused,
but might be available in the spring.
personality to his particular copy. Within
a few centuries a mass of Christian lit-
erature had accrted. - From this were
selected twenty-seven scriptures as being
especially worthy to rank with the thirty-
nine Hebréw scriptures. These new
Christian writings made up the New
Testament,
“ ‘Biblia’ is the Greek word for ‘scroll,’
this was the word used by early Chris-
tians to denote the Old and New Testa-
ments. - But gradually Latin began to
supplant Greek as the language of the
church, and in 400 A. D. Jerome trans-
lated both the new Greek scriptures and
}the_old Hebrew—seriptures into—Latin.— It}
is- dificult to translate literally without
losing some of the strength of the origi-
nal; therefore, the primary meaning of a
phrase was often utterly changed by an
effort to translate freely. For instance,
take the word ‘Calvary.’ Christ was cru-
fied on Golgotha,. ‘the hill of the skull’
Jerome took this Greek word and trans-
lated it into the Latin word for sk
‘Calveria,’ which : centuries later Johh
Wycliffe, in his translation of the Bible
into English, merely transliterated to the
word Calvary. Much the same thing
happened to the word ‘Biblia.’ ~ From its
original plural meaning ‘the books’ it was
translated into the Latin ‘Biblia Sacra,’
which, in turn, Wycliffe transliterated,
mistaking the final ‘a’ for a feminine
singular, into ‘The Bible.’
“Mankind has always craved a substi-
tute for thought. They found it easier in
religion to have _everything ready made,
but Christ upset this theory. He taught
that one should love God: not with the
emotions but with the mind, that above
all eke one should search for truth.
Coming to a people. who thought they
had the whole truth he tried to instill
into them that the kingdom of God is
within us, that there is no_ infallible
court of appeal for truth outside of our
own selves. After his death man’s in-
satiable need for something tangible in
which to place his trust centered in the
bishops of the church, who lodged it in
the Bible. Since then the Bible has been
treated as an infallible book.”
sehen
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; ‘Open Sundays
North Merion Ave: Bryn Mawr, Pa.
POWERS & REYNOLDS
MODERN DRUG STORE |
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¥ Imported Perfumes
CANDY SODA GIFTS
WILLIAM L. HAYDEN
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American, Italian, French Dishes
Open from 7 A, M. to 12 P. M.
Bryn Mawr
John J. McDevitt § Bill wrreads
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1145 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pa.
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‘THE COLLEGE NEWS
z
»
8 5
ANEW CONCEPTION OF
: “A MODERN UNIVEQSITY
7 ~ By Abraham Flexner
From the Atlantic Monthly for October.
CONTINUED FROM OCTOBER 21°
Between the two attitudes involved there
is an inherent incompatibility, with the re-
sult that, compélled to choose, the teacher
as a—rule—not always—selects or drops
into the lower role; that is, he is apt to
fall into a stride befitting an- instructor
rather than to strike the pace befitting a
fearless pioneer. Meanwhile the material
used or presented, despite the mechanical
type of school organization, smacks of
the graduate interest. The teachers are
university heads conducting seminars, or
recent Ph:D,’s looking forward to. uni-
—-versity~ promotion, Scholarship in tech-¢
nical form and aspect has thus invaded
the college years—witness the highly spe-
cialized character of the “courses” of-
fered. Thus, while school organization
and school responsibility have crept into
the graduate departments, specialization
has seeped down from above into the
secondary period.
Not infrequently in the strongest uni-
versities able scientists and scholars find
* themselves crushed by the uninteresting
routine connected either with undergrad-
uate teaching or, what may be more irk-
some, with graduate teaching organized
in the undergraduate spirit.: Some men
do both well, spending themselves con-
scientiously much of the time on under-
graduate routine, and then, in carefully
hoarded minutes, forgetting themselves in
the quest for truth and in irresponsible
. intercourse with a small number of work-
ers really worth their while. Finally, a
few workers, as I have already stated,
succeed in making special terms which
protect them against the irrelevancies by
which their colleagues are distracted in
the effort to lead successfully a double in-
tellectual life. The resulting situation
was neatly summed up recently in an
after-dinner talk by the dean of one of
the most populous of graduate schools:
“The college is a high school and. the
graduate school has ‘become a college.”
Thus, at a timeghen scholarly and scien-
|tific work has become of greater impor-
tance than ever before, the’ career» of
scholar and scientist is, by the pressure
of numbers and organization, being made
in some ways more difficult and less at-
tractive.
V.
I suspect I can anticipate the first objec-
tion that will be made to the foregoing
argument: I shall be told that I am
pleading for the transformation of the
graduate school into a research institute,
which, if accomplished, wilt leave a large
hiatus immediately after the college.
“That is not, “however, the form in w hich
I visualize the situation, Research is, to
be sure, a main function of the graduate
school; but teaching as well as research
is the business of the university professor.
He is, however, the same kind of pérson,
both as teacher and investigator. He ‘does
not stand in one attitude as teacher and
in another as investigator—as he must,
if he is to be at one moment a college
teacher, shepherding boys, and_subse-
quently © a university professor, stimulat-
ing men. Alike as teacher and investiga-
tor, the university professor is. relentlessly
and irresponsibly critical—of himself as he
is of others. His students.-are*presum-
ably mature men and women released
from the control of family, school and
college. All that precept, regulation and
example can do to form. character and
purpose has been done. Henceforth they
| pains to present matefial coherently And.
‘university professor would handle these.
a
are responsible for themselves. Teaching
Students at this stage imposes no pa-
rental or pedagogical responsibility upon
the university professor; he is there to
offer the student opportunity to learn,
opportunity to develop himself and his
chosen subject. Such teaching is no
easy undertaking; it is no mere. incident
to a life of research. The university
teacher. must master his field and keep
abreast of it; in lectures, seminars, or
otherwise, he must present this material
so as to orient and stimulate his hearers:
he must to a reasonable extent be acces-
sible for conference to students who are
competent and serious. But while in “
sense it is his responsibility to teach,
is. the student’s sole responsibility to
learn., When a professor has been at
to stimulate inquiry,
end;
he
his responsibilities
the student takes it or leaves it as
can and. will.
Let. us try to be concrete. Hebrew,
history, chemistry -and-- mathemiatics—it
is not ‘difficult to conceive how a real
He is himself primarily interested in
Semitic lore, in historical or chemical
investigation, in mathematieal specula-
tion and research; if he have not such
interest and capacity, he is no proper
university professor at all. His students,
however broadly grounded in high school
and college in general history, general
science and modern languages, cannot at
once participate at his highest level. It
is, therefore, his business as teacher to
give them such guidance and inspiration
as will enable them ‘by their efforts—not
his—to attain the upper level. He offers
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lecture courses, practical exercises, and
the like, in ‘the process of which they :
can acquire technique, become familiar
with‘ literature, get some Sense of the
problems ahead, If they: -have capacity
and industry, they will accomplish some-
thing! if they lack capacity. or industry,
they will fail. “He would like them to
succeed; he will in one or another way
help those who try; but he will be neither
nurse nor policeman, As they succeed,
——— -
BRINTON BROS.
FANCY and STAPLE GROCERIES
Orders Called for and Delivered
Lancaster and Merion Aves.
Bryn Mawr, Pa.
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We Clean or Dye: :
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THE COLLEGE NEWS
y
a
"Set,
2
they progressively undertake more fun-
damental and independent tasks.
So much for gubjects in the field of4
mere scholarship or mere science. But
the point I am making—namely, that
the university professor, is a~ teacher in
the highest sense as -well ‘as an investi-
gator—comes out most clearly in con-
nection with the professional faculties,
medicine, law Or theology. Here, ob-
viously, jnstruction. has also a practical
end—the making of doctors, lawyers and
preachers. But the university attitude
and function remain essentially the same.
A ceftain grouping and ordering of stud-
ies mist, to be sure, be effected; and,
as art is long and time-is fleeting, a
limited amount of arrangemént with refer-|.
ence to practical ends must be introduced.
But the amount of oversight required is it
America greatly exaggerated. If the stt-
dent is really mature, trained, capable and
industrious—and, he never Will be, unless
some institution treats him as if he were!—
he needs only the same sort of guidance and
stimulus that his fellow si tudent gets in
Semitics or history or mathematics. The
Wifacu.cy advises him as to the general ar-
ent and progress of his legal or med-
| Seal studies; offers him facilities, opportuni-
ts and counsel in the laboratories, the
Delinics ‘and the library—and there its duty.
and responsibility cease. It is his business
to profit or not, as he will and can. Having
doné $0 much for him—and it is no mean
contribution of time and thought which the
professor thus makes to the student—the
professor goes back to his reading, his re-
searches, and the company of those who
have. won the privilege of intimate associa-
tion; he must not be asked or expected to
lead as teacher a life that destroys or seri-
ously impairs his life as thinker and investi-
gator. Under the most favorable circum~
stances, the needs of schools, colleges and
industry for highly trained teachers and in-
‘vestigators will bear heavily upon the uni-
versity ;-the burden can be lightened, first, by
elimination of the college, next, by throwing
upon the advanced student himself a much
larger share of responsibility than he is wont
to carry under our present mixed system.
Thus, both in, theory and in practice, the
university must offer sound, effective and
devoted teaching; on the-other-hand,-neither.
in theory nor in practice ought the university
‘to adopt a coddling or parental attitude,
whether the student be aiming at a Ph. D.
in order to teach, an M. D. in order to be-
come a practitioner of medicine, or at a re-
search career. Allalike have outgrown, or
at any rate should be treated as if they had
outgrown, the discipline of the secondary
«school and college with their pedagogical
technique and devices; for, as I have urged,
secondary school and college are are delib-
erately attempting within certain limits to’
mould personalities in connection with the
teaching of subjects, while the university
looks beyond ‘persons to objective ends—
‘college will do well to be .as critical as it
skill; knowledge and truth. I repeat that the
may, for there should be no abrupt break
between college and university, between col-
lege and life. But at best the college works
under certain limitations and employs cer-
tain calculated procedures to which the grad-
uate school should be more than indifferent.
VI
If the argument is up to this point sound,’
certain inferences respecting the organization
of higher education in the United States may
other hand, it tends both to ‘draw the col-
lege now overlap. Unquestionably this over-
lapping may to some extent stimulate college
faculty and college students.
ties. The two institutions should not there-
fore be merged, either educationally or even
geographically—just as little as a Continental
Gymnasium or lycée should be prefixed to
a Continental yiniversity.
merging inVolves, perhaps insidiously, the
common use of staff and facilities. And the
moment the university thus lends itself in
part to the disciplinary and directive busi-
ness of the secondary school, the university
itself suffers. No matter how resolutely the
American graduate school intertwined with
a ¢ollege should determine tO preserve its
own proper attitude, sooner or later con-
venience, economy. or good nature would
lead to trespassing.
because of its
paper in : e
occasion.
meaty
ete and f
one of the older members of
ae a
:
& was made for those who
~ and“ chew-y”” chocolates. Nu.
Was quale
Whitman’s.
Philadelphia, U.S. A.
Sos" 1 New York “| Chicago
* Frbabi 2 the first special acsortment of
to individual taste of
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—— and nut ndugat, hidden in a heavy
as of that delicious Whitman’s vanilla
Package, with or with-
allowe’en wrap, in those
Re cr a in almost every neighbor-
in the land, that are agencies for
“""< |. STEPHEN F, WHITMAN & SON, Inc.,
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special holiday wrapper on the favorite
Fussy Chocolates
is a welcome gift at
~The Fussy Package
any rig A Sop a y good for Hallowe’en
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#ful pictured wrap, to make :
Whitman’s
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San Francisco
Che:
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porsplcane
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Rie Betta Almond
porno hag ae pg 6 malig ret
x ee
Rodeos coniaine apni’ :
monds, Walnuts, Fil-
Brazil Nuts, a tte
r
at, Nut
ram Daten, Double
ete
But, on the}
other hand, it tends both to drawn the col-|
lege away from its proper function and tof
lower the plane of* graduate-school activi-|j
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%
LOWTHORPE SCHOOL
A School of Landscape Architecture for Women
TWENTY-FOURTH YEAR
Courses in
Landscape Design, Planting Design. Construc-
tion, Horticulture and kindred subjects
e gardens, greenhouses
36 Miles from Boston
GROTON, MASSACHUSETTS
4
Phone,. Bryn Mawr 146.
‘Phone “Orders Promptly Delivered
- WILLIAM GROFF, P. D.
PRESCRIPTIONIST |
Whitman Chocolates
Rrvn Mawr. Pa.
27 Ww. Lancaster Ave,
Do you want the latest book?
Are you interested in books worth
HAVERFORD AVE.
Table Delicacies
Frozen Dainties
Phone, Ardmore 12
Bryn Mawr 1221
GEORGE F. KEMPEN
CATERER and CONFECTIONER
859 Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr
——
E. S. McCawley & Co.
Books
-Ardmore
Fj
while?
We have it or can get it.
‘Haverford, Pa.
Engraved
Christmas
College news, October 28, 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)
1925-10-28
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 12, No. 05
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-no5