HAVERFORD, PA. S 1933 HAVERFORD NEWS VOLUME 25—NO 6 ARDMORE (AND HAVERFORD), PA., MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1933 $2.00 A YEAR
Observation Planned of, OR, CHANT PICTURES New Athletic Coach Fractional Centenaries THIRTY MEN CHOSEN ROY E. Milli TO According to Henry S. Drinker. Jr.. representative of the elate of GLAMOUR OF ORIENT 1905 on the Alumni Centenary Committee, the class will cele- TO SING IN FRIDAY'S GUIDE THREE TEAMS brate the completion of one-third of a century as part of the Hay- erford alumni group at the time IN NOTE FROM SAID of the Centenary In October. Mr. Drinker observed that thirty-three GLEE CLUB CONTEST FOR 1933-34 SEASON and one-third years almost to a Haverford Professor Stops day will have elapsed since the class left College. "Parsif al" Production. Home in Egypt on Way to The class of 1925 will celebrate Former All-American Will the completion of one-twelfth of and Harcum Concerts Beth Shemesh a century, and the clefs of 1930. Succeed Geiges as of one-thirtieth of a century, as Will End Season part of the College's alumni. Other Football Mentor EAGER TO BEGIN WORK classes will observe the passing of various fractions of one hun- FACE FOUR OPPONENTS TO LIVE ON CAMPUS Dr. Mimi Grant, Professor of dred years since their college days. Biblical Literature, recently wrote Rehearsing almost daily, the Glee the following letter to D. D. Dunn. Roe E ilandee. fmeN- All-Amer- 95. Dr. Orant is absent on special Club, under the direction of William 'can qur-terback a-8 member of the leave as head of the Haverford Bents, coach, is completing its prep- ramous Prawn Inn-Men tease has Archeological Expedition, and wrote aration for the annual intercollegiate been selected as next year's football from Port Said, Egypt. on his way to Glee Club contest. which will be held Beth Shemesh. BANK CRISIS OBIS coat" at F-ne'rferd College. succeed- Dear Havertord: on Frieley night at the Academy of Ray E. Randall ing Ellwood A. Ogges who resigned I wonder if Fve found a place Music. The competition, In which Fenner Brown athlete, now coach- the poet last fall. As a deviation which no Haverfordlan has seen be- there will be four other participants. ing at Virginia, who will meanie com- from the established tradition, FL fore. Yet It is near the sea, In typi- is being given under the auspices of plete charge of football, basketba.I cal delta country, a strong city of CHARITY PAYMENTS and baseball next year. Tatnall Brown. Jr.. Director of Ath- many tens of thousands of popula- the Philadelphia Forum. letics at Haverford, announced that on, with every modern improve- On Monday afternoon tryouts were Randall would also coach basketball ment and the centre of a teeming Needy Groups Receive Funds toeldeterzine ,whatehmmemberseeemh of and baseball beginning next year. country population. whose rich black To the alluvium raises riches abundant for Contributed by Chest local A graduate of Brown University, man and beast. Cranes with their nest Haverford In the contest, and Randall is at present Director of DEBATERS MEET Freshman Athletics at the University a Platelet curving wings lift snowy whiteness flom Collections eight men were choseri of Virginia. where he coaches foot- among the vivid green crops. He- from each of the four sections. Mr. svinTHmilFiEco xane.% cotton. beans, alfalfa, date _Eos ball, baseball and basketball. He was In the face of the Immediate hin- Dente stated that the selection was palms. gorgeous flowers. smiling peo- basketball coach at Virginia Poly- drance of a national banking boll- difficult because of 'the fact Last in technic Institute et Biacasbtmg In ple, mud villages and striving ales day. and the general obstacle of the connected by roads along the dykes, a large number of cases the quality isiga and during 1929 and 1930 was financial stress of the past year, the varsity backfield coach at railroads also In places. Charity .Chest Drive. headed by E. of tale was almost the same and that V1110018 Here centers Mansurah, and leav- under Earl Abell, former Colgate Craig. Jr., '39, has collected all but ry little difference existed between Juniors to Uphold Negative mentor. ing It by auto we were hemmed in 0175.00 of $795.00 which was pledged. by thousands corning to the weekly the voices as a whole. Four hundred dollars have already of "Coeducation Is Called Signals for Brown market along the road which we took been turned over to the United Bentz Names Contestants to one of the greatest ruin mounds Cam- He Is a grad tate of Brockton High eingn, $25.00 to the Bedford Street The following were ehoten to take in the East. Ancient Mendes was our Mission. and $20.00 to the Main Line School and A.-dover Academy where objective, center of the cult of the part In the compethion Swarthmore canes to Haverford he participated in three moor sports. rem-god. whose Naos, cut from a Branch of the Needle-Work Guild. Two hundred and Ilfteen students Fleet tenors. Clough. Dewier. Du- Inc the third theittet of this year on Continuing in the same lines of ath- solid block of red granite. 20 feet letics at Brown, he played vanity have pledged donations and the laney. L. Green, Guthrie. 'Llnaberri Friday night. Boxer and basketball tall. stands on a base already 25 feet comixditee announces theLli will re- and C. G. Smith; second tenors, Cad- football and baseball for three years. high, mownitig -the' hill.' ReaMet, hest* left things-all even and the de- ceive new pledges at any Ohne. Just tury, Ducdale Locking raesche, Me- ang-tweetty baekatball far one year. sticking out of The ground. are single- Oinley, P. Truex, Stayer, and Snyder bate beteeen the Swarthmore wo- being captain of football In block sarcophagi of the sacred rams. see Craig or a member of the com- his sen- mittee. es an alternate; first basses. Duffield men and Haverford men will tem- ior year. Thus did the humble, useful, wooly Fulls He achieved his greatest fame theep of antiquity come Into his own The amount pledged this year falls , Greif. Hogoauer, Kerslake, porarily disturb the balance. below the $1000.00 mark. which was Rohrer, W. B. Smith, Stoddard and signal caller for the Brown's unde- after all be had done for man. And Yearsley; second basses. Atmore. Hor- Haver ord. upholding the negative feated team of 1926. In that year lid underneath are the relies of a civili- not In 1932, by over 9900.00. Craig attributes this to financial conditions. ton. Howard, Knight Page. Sargent. of the q itstion. "ffasolved: that Co- won the quarterback berth on the of- sation that went farther In some re- ficial All-American team selected spects than we've ever done. There gating that the committee realizes Tatem, Vining. and Bachman as an education Is beneficial to both men by the difficulty which stands In the alternate. and women," will be represented by Reckee. Warner and Jones. "Tug" are factors for an increasing respect McLaughry, head coach at Brown, for human personality locked In the way of many payments, but that the Aittaugh it has not been definitely three Juniors. F. II. Downey, J. L. mystery of these ruins. officials of the drive hope the pledges decided, It seems reasonably certain stated that when "Roy" graduated. will be fulfilled with all possible that "The Broken Melody," by Sibei. Dusseau and B. S. Lowenstein are he krew more football than any man Valle Biblical Sites speed, since the money is urgently to deliver ten-minute speeches, with he (McLaughey) had ever coached. Besides the above excursion we Ms. will be the minket song. while needed to alleviate poverty and -Ave Maria," by Jac. Areadelt, and Lowenstein presenting the rebuttal. coat. ea Peer a. CM- I have visited the two sites, Pithom and hunger. Succoth, mentioned In the story of "Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal." by The Swarthmore debate x., properly the experiences of the Biblical He- From the balance at hand and the Mark Andrews, will be swag in unison IDLE money yet to be collected, the Chest by the five clubs. In addition, each chaperoned. intend to arrive In time ACCEPT OPPORTUNITY brews as they eoiouened in bondage for supper. The debate will start at In this delta before going up to must provide for the American participating organization will sing FOR STUDY AT HAVERFORD Canaan. I am reeking light on the Friends' Service Committee, the its college song and one optional B o'clock In the Union. Dr. William connections between Egypt and South Robert Simpkin Fund, the American number. The tickets are controlled Raze!. asaistant professor of Eng. Entrants Include Large Number of Palestine in former days. Red Cross. the Hampton Institute. ty the Forum under Its regular sub- College Men and several other charities, lab, will act as chairman. In these preliminary explorations, ten. oe I' e, ma. T In addition to the Swarthmore Concluding the first week of the related to my proper field. I tun contest, Haverford has several other offer of free tuition to the unemploy- helped by expert assistance from the debates scheduled for the near fu- ed of the Main Line, Haverford has University of Pennsylvania. ture. On March 22 the debaters op- accepted le out of about 30 men who Anilelege. Beth Shemeah Haverford Club to Celebrate Its pose a team from the University of have applied. Others are still eolutid- Soon I hope to go on 10 our WI Maine, and on the 1th of April they ering their courses, and Dean FL Tat- el ancient Beth Shemesh in Pales- Tenth Anniversary on April 27th meet the Davidson College speakers. nall Brown. Jr., said that there would tine, of which you must have heard 'Me Haverfordiana will uphold the probably be at least double the num- to decide whether to pursue, as ou affirmative of the question: "Re- ber enrolled before Match 15, the main work this spring, the excava- Organisation Originated From Resolution Of solved, that the United States should final date for application. tion of another part that stun agree to the cancellation of Inter-al- Varied courses are in demand, mound. This s of humanit Founders Club; Has Changed lied debts." Economics and English particularly. Mai more fascina • There are no -Ir. I Location Twice The Freshmen debate with Newark Six men have requested Economies. Vest er Pe.* e, Cel. Preparatory School which was sched- 3, while Economics 6 and English 3b uled for Friday has been postponed (Public Speaking) will be attended On April 27th next the Haverford by four men. In bursement or encouragement upon again. all. eighteen chasm Club will celebrate the tenth anni- making Its final report. will have auditors. versary of opening its doors. Some of the members of the com- The Sixth The history of this organisation be- mittee then proceeded badependently gins with the adoption of a resolu- to organize a club. The property at 31 Record Board tion by Pounders Club on February 1227 Spruce street. Philadelphia. was Cotillion Club 11. 1921, appointing a committee to purchased on October 2. 1922, and COLLEGE CALENDAR investigate the feasibility of estab- Elternations and Improvements made Elected At Noon lishing such a club in Philadelphia. to It; application was made for a March 13-19 This committee reported favorably charter, which was granted April 29. ItOTAD1 TY-Ifeetlar of the ; on April 11, 1921, and Its report was 1923; and on April 27. 1929. the doom Today By Class .....01Reer• Is the forwarded by Pounders Club to the were opened and the first meal Eitturr Haverford Parliament, held April served. T7E"laTecT314beld air B. S. Loewenstein, '34, was elected Cob 1521. As a result, a committee of five During Its early years the club was hok, et T.114 was appointed by J. Magda Stokes, prospenour. in 1921 an operating editor of next year's "Record" at a WEDISTADAT-Rhlate.SoCoentee teak AT THE then President of the Alumni Asso- profit of over $3000 was shown, and meeting of the Junior Class held at meet •ba 30. Lee et be kr. Areeldmers la the Vol.. et ciation, to conaider the proposal and the second mortgage was reduced by noon today. P. B. Richardson, '34. report to the next meeting of the that amount. In the boom days which was made Business Manager while F110AT-Var325olotte meth reeth• Merlon Crirlut Club Alumni Association. This commit- followed, however, the club's atten- W. H. Haines, 3d, was elected Ad- tee consisted of froward Burtt. 'OM TrX1 at S. Int=ltrata eel dance and income declined. Members vertleing Manager. Obtle 5...teft at am lalldaaa7 Ot ON John L. Scull, '05; Emmett R. Tat- wanted more elaborate lunches. bet- Loewenstein at present is Manag- Yoe* Pleladatelea. nan, '07; George A. Kerbaugh, '10. ter furnishings and accommodations. 1311/113AY- casette tea is Inaloa at 4- and E. Nelson Edwards, '10. Some- ing Editor of the News, having been So on June 2, 1930. the club moved Make-Up Editor and News Editor Mareb 20-15 Saturday, March 18th what later It was Increased by the to the seventh floor of the new tint- 15011135T-NeetlaL of Neve Heard addition of C. Russell Hindman, on previous boards. He is also man- la ere. rd tensity Club Building, at Ilith and ager of next year's basketball team. 500te at T. Jams M. Stokes, Jr., Edward R. Locust eta., at a rental of $5000 a rffE3PAT-111aoll. r W. wales Moon and Loring Dam. Richardson has been a member Deere is Ite Used at T6.1ereee Nine-Thirty to One year. Attendance doubled, but ex- nettle.. of • itala• The committee spent Its own mon- penses tripled. Various emergency of the varsity soccer team for three hoberts at a. ey and a great deal of time inter- measures were resorted to, but after years and is on the varsity track WIDERDX.;;V:7111.,471117...1112 viewing Alumni personally and by a year and a half of increasing defi- squad. He has been president of Votes at IL + questionnaires, inspecting real estate cit the club moved beck to its old his claw, and a member of the Cus- 5111DAY-5.oter• be S. 5. =at. for a suitable Manion, investigating home, much to the satisfaction of toms Committee and is on the Stud- eitaelp53kt Mare testae other clubs with respect to costa of many of the old members and the &ahem e.1, dahloetNtfealer 11.50 COUPLE $1.00 STAG operation and maintenance and se- ents' Council. pleasant surprise of the new. The Haines Is on this year's Junior punt ai lbaltemeare CA ohm. curing pledges of life memberships; dues were reduced from $40 to $25. 5.51.17125,1Vories Tracehtem Nola& only to be discharged without reim- Prom Committee and is Assistant Coal. as rase e. Cot. 0 Manager of the Musical Cluhs. HAVERFORD NEWS Monday, March 13, 1933 PAGE TWO
HAVERFORD NEWS CROW'S NEST LIBERALISM AND COLLEGE WORLD Fttonded Fe' roar' 12. 1500 DICTATORSHIP Attention, Please: Lents II. Molten, .51. Hark Yed Ye blessede evente is aboute toe take By Dr. DOUGLAS V. STEERS PAPP,: Wean,. '34. Ping Pang at Pitt .t.uoneer: William. J. place. Ye Haverfordianne cometh outte. Oure owns Assoc. Profeasor of Philosophy Aloaopira hodo.1 Lek/oat. S. I...v.11411, '34 In a recent editorial, the policy of representative of the "Oh, God, the pain of it" schoole. Arp005.1 P cu 1m .71,. Zd, '34. subsidized athlete. at Pitt was con- LIIITOIIIAL STAYS Atte inne olds Englishe. Ye Editors decyded thatte Editor's Note: Next week's article demned, but no mention was made erie', Kunkle, • Ne:re Ed .1.,, William IL Bowden. '35. E. Ch theye woulde-take thatte means of crackinge wise will he loritten by Dr. Rene Teeple, of the ping pang team which defeat- Jerome II. Ueda, '95. Alimni Alexander WOW, 3d, aboute pure collegium. We suspect, thatte theye wills FlUnt B. Juno, '24. aseistent professor of French. ed Carnegie Tech last week. 133. Hate-or Editor! 140hert take esse ande Ye Newse fore a ride. (Let us not slip 1•1111.16 It. kap, 30. Ilartha P. ',cud., es. Sydney Ilellondor. Comets and Collegians '35. William II. Totem, Arthur It. Sega, 35. Jeuallen A -tope tilde Englishe to Chinese.) Anaae sayse thacte John Morley writing his "Recol- 11,4:e I li 1. mf. '313. Jos•hlt :Al alle of itte is goinge toe be anonymeme. Of course lections" at the close of the war al- It costa New York State as much omn,1 Geae4c n. Llooktoau. S Ann. maye be wrologe, butte we shoulde notte be ready mooed that the day of Lib- to keep a man In prison as it coats 14POSTS STAFF shade toe clatme sure owns creations. We think, Ye eralism had gone: "The world is a father to send his son to college. This was revealed In o recent sur- Arri•P ■st Sporlr Etlikanl J. Ilalleelt. '35. Oman Haverfordianne is peachye! traveling fast under formidable 14:Conn. '35. Seth llonemond, 2t1, '53. Ellolterly 0, Itobeele. 133. vey undertaken by the State prison How about an edition of Ye Newse in early Hindus- omens Into a new era, very unlike Ben T. t'oolea, 93. hurry N. [leaver, '50, W11111110 E. Shep- the theses In which my lot was cast." board. pard, 'Sit, Mai, Mr. Editor? Sample: " Stel tag of spirg htiw May /Gag NENINESS STAFF ytilaer." Fifteen years later the remnant of Rowland 0, Skinner, '35. Set- political Liberals are faced with a Because of a dispute over the elec- .4 ** ** mot 111...• .11,assprr: ■ Anna's grandmother sald that on Friday she heard rriSrri Malt. 1Y. 1,1trairy, 34. AI.ille(111 err lure: Clifton r. drift toward dictatorship that has tion of a May Queen at Westminster Boehm., ,wept.efflon Moton.terrt T. Perlman Morgan, groans coming from Founder's Hall at sunrise and already swept over natant, Italy. College. It was decided to aubsteute C1101101111“ slmostr: Robert S. '9.11, livery D. Wellington. 'I). again at sunset. She was climbing up the flagpole. Hungary, Poland. Germany and Or- for her the King of the May. ereessis. Mired II, Steer,. Jr.. a5. Frederick E. Fu-rdtsr. She` mid that at the sunset orgy one person emerged '35. Robert W. Intird. '00. Juneph Barton. Jr.. 3ti, John 1... Palle Japan. Even an American Winter Sports muttering that life was at steak within. Another per- Parker. :Ia. John S. Postlese, '36. President-elect receives triumphal The Winter Carnival at Bates son growled something about why didn't they either 1410TOGNAP/IT STAFF applause at the announcement of University Is featured by a baseball I..onard 4,. SCI-If. Jr.. '31. ltobert W. IlelKee. '94. lake out the rivets or take off the harness before they hla determination to exercise dicta- game on snowshoes between the put it on the table. And with tears in her eyes she torial powers. faculty and the undergraduates. The NEWS lo ',abashed weeklr In Ike college sear. ears,l told how one poor celebrator at the morning ritual had Men everywhere seem ready to Embryo Teacher lotion racialism and C722111.14009 periods. at 49 altteehoese come out with hie mouth full of splintere. Perhaps it is cast aside the dearly bought testa- Flee, Artiste, Pa. Telephone. Ardmore 1118. Thirteen different professions were Anneal sabeerlothm. tearable In wham, 91.00: steak eopy, an instance of that Beaver attitude all the College boys ment of Liberalism which asserts lee. nehserlollosta ease begin nt say thee. Entered Ile ereond• are taking. the Inalienable rights of the in- listed by Susquehanna students in a doss molter et the postoffler at Ardmore, 1.a. Fee, Fie, Double Fo and Fum! dividual against the dictatorial pow- questionnaire recently. One hundred Member of Ihe Intervener/In a Newspaper Assoelmlos of the and sixty-five men, over one-half of Middle Attend. siste.. Itemiser at the National College Frees Holy Smoke and other mild epithets suitable for us ers of the State. Weary Democracy cries out for some strong authority the student body, Intend to follow and Ye Olde Haverfordianne. The press exposed the teaching as their =men pretend= College twice last week. on whom It may lay its burdens. Tilt: NEVI, EltIT0111.14. POLICY "Once upon an" evening after supper "dreary," The Is pot an entirely new phe- Freak Bodyguard. Edllortals In the NEWS do u. neveraerlly represent the nomenon in Liberal Democracy. In Sophomores at Wake Feint went .115 the college. Cordell:on- there was a pounding of hoofs, and a terrific collision eplelom of any Krems et...4.d times of war it has shown a not un- on a hair-cutting spree at the ex- Ilene to the Is,.the-fdell column are ueleumed. Thar must he without our door. W. M. W. dove in blowing like a paralleled willingness to collapse In alb but signature ton, n. Inhale from ppbtleatlets If whale, pard. He thrust something before US. We were pense of the freshmen. Seniors, need- .writer dealre. favor of an authority that proceeds a ghost, aghast. "Can You Answer Them," Question ing a little pin money, served as with ruthless disregard of any in- bodyguards for 50 cents. 6, What was known es the 'kissing station' in the last dividual rights that may block the half of the lest century?" Guess friend, guess. Immediate objective. Freshmen Madero Harmful Negligence You couldn't gums, you couldn't. Answer to Quest. This readiness of Liberalism to ab- The Freshman English elms at 6 "The railway platform at Haverford College depot, dicate in favor of some vigorous au- Creighton University was told. ”Tou upon your college because so many wives met their husbands there." And thority in the presence of an emer- men, now en Lectures by outside authorities have been neglected this has been kept from us all this time. gency throws a searching light on its career, are the Meer of American manhood." A bright student replied, this year as has intercollegiate debating. Both of these Then the, patrician New York Times quoted the character. It marks out its genius "Yes, blooming Idiots." phases of college life are about to come Sete their own. Bryn Mawr Athletic Director as saying that Haver- as essentially a party of opposition. One of the very few lectures scheduled for this year ford beat Bryn Mawr only "by sheer length of limb." a Borah-like Watch dog of indivIduel A Popular Drag will be given on March 24 by T. S. Eliot, eminent En- She probably did say that if, as people say, the mind rights To tome It would even ap- We'll clone today with the copy glish poet and critic, on the "Developement of Shakes- is still an unknown factor to many in distant parts pear that Its passion for reform was from a ball-page add appearing in of the globe. Petty 'stuff to crime from the Queen of of the fair-weather form praying the undergraduate daily at Prince- pearean Criticism." Then, this Friday night, the var- 1.11, an Ignorant practitioner "Ill but American Colleges for Womeq. ton: sity debaters meet a teem of Swarthmore coeds in the not too III." For Liberalism's very Haverford Union. Both these things just go to prove that the new 000D NEWS struggle to secure and maintain in- ALKA-SELTZER No matter how noted the lecturer' is. nor how im- dogs knonsallthe old tricks. dividual rights of freedom of speech. R. C. Atmore, '34. will fix that portant and pressing his topic, it is a foregone conclu- press, pulpit and economic action HANGOVER sion that the college authorities will be embarrassed 11. e. =limited competioni all seems may be obtained at when they present him to a mere handful of mildly to presuppose thieenstence of an op- the University Store erative political and economic struc- enthusiastic students. It would take a person like Ben STUDENT OPINION Robert B. Wolf. "16 Bernie or Jean Harlow to get a full house here. Any- ture that is at least coherent enough to provide essential civil protection one with a more intellectual message will fail if size WHAT'S IN A NAME and at least a mbilmurn economic of audience is the only thing taken into consideration. "Anything Like That" security for the people- Music Debates are in the same class as lectures at Haver- Those well-informed gentlemen who write the If the atornistic Individualism of ford, being extremely unpopular. In fact, the faculty "Notes and Comments" department of "The New the Liberal's quest for personal free- Ed Andrews Is hard at work this has under consideration a plan to drop forensic aches- Yorker," related an incident several weeks ago which I dom finds that the very political week putting the finishing touches, in /ties altogether, because of the fact that there Is no die- has shall cite from memory as best I can. One at them coherence of the State itself the numbers which the lasvetiord ten:sable interest in them among the student body. In- been dissolved sway. that taxes are was an acquaintance of a young Russian lady who Giee Club will be prepared to sing terest concerning Friday's debate ought to be mime- no longer paid, that laws are not wanted to take out citizenship papers, and asked this at the Pennsylvania Intercollegiate what higher since the subject is co-education discus- obeyed and that the State becomes particular gentleman to come with her and serve an Glee Club competition this Friday Mon, of which is bound to centre about the sex ques- isocapabEe of performing the casentler witness. They eventually found their way to the evening at the Academy. Although tion. civil services, then Liberalism's re- we've never heard the other clubs proper official, -and the usual interrogation of the seundinw peclamation of a bill of which will participate that evening. If attendance at Eliore lecture in not a van im- would-be citizenfensued. In the course of this cate- individual rights brings only a hol- the we have the utmost confidence in provement over that at similar occasions this and last chism, the New Yorker was eurtaised to hear tie fol- low echo-for these rights presuppose group to make a splendid year, the faculty will have ample reason to deaf the Haverford lowing question put to the lady:. "Do you solemnly an organic political structure that ahowIng-al Indeed It has done to same with lectureships as they may deal with debating. -intents swear that you don't believe in pacifism, bigamy, an- has now become non-ex the concerts to date. Action eliminating lectures and debating from Haver- archy, or-I here he hesitated)-or anything like that ?" The sorry plight of the tree-sur- ford would be forced upon the authorities by the stu- And while the gentleman of the press wan wondering mon who has sawed off the limb upon which he was gasbag. should Serge flachmaniroff, noted pianist dents' criminal negligence of those features of college last exactly what might be mean by "anything like and mummer, will present an inter- life. ft would be a crime against future Haverfordians do," received her papers become even more apparent to Lib- that," the lady answered "I by esting program Saturday afteroose Wm which we should think twice before perpetrating. eralism when It recognizes that in due time, and all ended happily. the exercise of Its sacred maxim or at the Academe. Included are his This is more than an amusing incident of an imder- freedom from Government restrict, own arrangements of Bach's Eunice clerk of the Government trying to juggle big words; lions on bustaem initiative and corn- sonata far violin, and of the sr.berzo THE SINO-JAPANESE CONFLICT I it is typical of a common and unfortunate mistake made petition the economic structure of to Xeadelawahnh well-known -mid- by most Americans-even educated Americans-when the comstry has collapsed. In the summer Nights Dream", the thirty- From a Chinese Student's Viewpoint discuming politics. They have a distressing Writ of midst of such an economic breakdown two variatimaa 1n C minor of Denbo- I ;steeping and labeling concepts which. they don't un- that we out the economic :seem- yen, three preludes by Mr. Rachman- Moll. two LI= pieces, a number be derstand and then promptly dim:aiming them team im- tty of ewe third of the population By GEORGE ICE-YI RAO Schumann, Schubert's le minor tan agination and comereation. and threatens the rest. the spectacle (The following is the first of a aeries of arti- of a hod-voiced Liberal demand for tomatille. and the popular "Invitatiou cles written by students of Yenching University, The Gold Standard the rights of the individual seemeal-r to the Waltz," by Weber. Peiping, China, as part of the work of an Inter- Another phrase which has recently appealed on the most downright mockery. national Correspondence Committee, one of the dead list is "Going off the gold standard." Those who It Is at this point that dictator- Rather an odd program Is sched- uled for this week's Philadelphia Or. patriotic organs recently formed in that institution. claim the right to know about such matters seem to ship of Fascist., Industrial-Capital- - These articles attempt to represent the Chinese think that President Roosevelt's action in the present ist. Socialist or Communist character ebestra concerts. It Includes Rash student's attitude toward various phases of the crisis was correct from nearly all angles. And those looms Into the pialdre and demands mane:inn *Isle of the Dead," a gro.P of three dances from a /Undo opens Sino-Japanese conflict.) same people state with an understanding calmness that that it shall undertake the recon- by Joseph Le Monaca. second flutist People everywhere are more or less acquainted with it means a technical abandonment of the gold standard. stractims. Each insists =on wide powers and rigorous Mecipilne at of the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Sino-Japanese conflict which began in September. I. there anything terrifying in that? There shouldn't three selections nom Wagner'. "Got- 1931, with the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, and be; but no great Is the "unreasoning fear' of that whatever cost 1.0 the Liberal's de- mands In order to attempt the re- terdammerung" - Filegfried'e Rhin! has since resulted in various further complications. phrase that with the annoys:eminent of the President's building of a political and economic Journey, Siegfried's Death see action clime a statement from Secretary Women say- The daily papers have been reporting the Far Eastern fabric that can guarantee economic Brunnhilde's Immolation. This will hituation as it developed from time to time-the lap- ing that we hadn't gone off the gold standard, a state- and civil security to all who will be broadcast Saturday evening know military occupation of Manchuria, the Shanghai ment technically untrue. but deemed entirely necessary work. Maims Liberal Democracy 8-20. War, the establishment and recognition of "Manchu- in the light of the paralysis caused by these words. reveals some unforeseen resources. It Sorry we misinformed you as to kuo" by Japan, and, latest, the capture of Shanhaikuan Do I advocate that we should all go off the gold is not likely that she can resist the lost week's Philadelphia Orchestra and the Invasion of Jebel. standard or that, we should all become Socialists? I appeal of some one of them groups. program-but It was changed after While up to the present nothing has as yet been do not. I think that each one of us should form his For In Melt a work of fundamental our colyum had been written and wisely handed in. As It was, we hadn't accomplished that will effect a real solution of the opinion In the direction that he Webs is right. a -econetniction, as Dean Inge but matter what his view is, he will doubtless end worthy ebsertm, "no one Can govern who planned on going to the concert; problem (or rather, a final cessation of armed aggres- - sion on the part of Japan), there are a number of facto grounds and worthy support. I only salt that we de not cannot afford to be unpopular." If when we saw the revised program. le which cannot escape the world's notice. First, thou- clutter up our minds with words that have become mere the economic and political situation chiding Brahma' 4th Symphony and three Bach numbers, we knew that sands of innocent civilian. have been killed and a murk symbols for the vague, abysmal unknown. In short, becomes more acute, tomorrow would seem to be in their hands, and the soothing could prevent us from ere larger number rendered homeless and destitute and let on try to know what we are talking about. ing. Thanks to a generous friend. we Sydney Hollander. '35. vice Liberal will recognise this - their properties destroyed as a result of Japan's mill- destiny. were able to go Friday afternoon tax-y operations in Chinese territories during the past and, since we liked the concert to fifteen months. Second, China has not been able to But the day after tomorrow? It Is - would be certain: World Peace, the rose-tinted illusion there again that the outlawed party much then, we went Saturday me offer armed resistance against her aggressors except carefully nurtured by all nations since the World War, t°hear It again. Yes. was of Liberal apposition will become in- In the Shanghai incident, which began on January 28, would be completely shattered. Does the world wish to dispensable. For dictatomhIps have ningwelle worth it. Toscani/Ts farewell concert sal 1932. Because she was inferior to Japan in military see enacted once more the ugly drama of hell on earth short memories. They readily forget the New York Philharmonic Orches- strength she, at the very beginning, submitted the from which Europe suffered when the Allies success- that they woo accepted by a bleeds case to the League of Nations-depending all along on fully resisted Germany's military away? The last war hog people merely as an auspice of tra Monday evening WAX truly ewe this international organization to right her wrongs and has taught us the lesson that when war is used to end transition In order to establLsh the of the best we've ever heard. Ti "Eroica" symphony of Beethoven leo to redress her grievances. win. the resulting peace cannot be permanent. Thin bens of some new human right. The China is undeniably the weaker of the two oppoe- Liberal must go on crusade nate, to breathless. and the Wagner ex-nr may be why Japan now believes she can indulge her- cerpts were unsurpassable. As ing parties; that is why she doe. not dare to accept self in military aggression without material protest and the multitude will once more be remarked last week, It's certainly re' on his side. Perhaps it is a part of Japan's repeated challenge to an open war. But let us from the disinterested Powers; but it is exactly why grettahle that this orchestra len% It- suppose that China were Japan's equal in arms-what the world should shrink to see China engaged in a war, the genius of political Liberalism to turning to Philadelphia next prof. know when to strike and when to would happen? The result would only be a deadly even of self-defense. Hunt B. Jones, 'M. war of Japanese imperialistic interests against Chimee Cont. on Page 6, Col. 2 withdraw. self-defense. Whichever emerged victorious one thing •