The Bates Student - volume 59 number 20 - January 13, 1932

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1 Bates College SCRB The Bates Student rchves and Specal Collectons The Bates Student - volume 59 number 20 - January 13, 1932 Bates College Follow ths and addtonal works at: Recommended Ctaton Bates College, "The Bates Student - volume 59 number 20 - January 13, 1932" (1932). The Bates Student Ths Newspaper s brought to you for free and open access by the rchves and Specal Collectons at SCRB. t has been accepted for ncluson n The Bates Student by an authorzed admnstrator of SCRB. For more nformaton, please contact batesscarab@bates.edu.

2 71' FOUNDD N 1873 OL. L. No. 20 LSTON. MN. WDNSDY, JNURY 13, 1S32 Faculty Grants Permsson for Sunday Skatng Garcelon Rnk to B<> Open 2-5 P. M. Sundays The Faculty at a meetng on Mon- : v..lanuary 1, gave approval of the use ol the new skatng rnk on Gar- celon Feld. Sundays from 2:00 un- tl 5:00 P. M. Ths decson was mads afler alery Burat. wth the unoffcal but moral support of the Outng Chl, asked permsson from Presdent Gray to allow Sunday skatng, lo be replaced by tenns durng the sprng months, and to le supplemented by uee of the to- boggan chute. Outng Club n Charge ll responsblty of the cane or the new rnk has been placed n the t nds of the Outng Club. Ths organsaton wll erect sgns ds- playng the rules, some of whch arc: The rnk shall be used on Sun- days from 2:00 to 5:00 P. M. only. On week days t wll be open all day. Then,.hall be no hockey playng or rough play of any knd on the rnk, especally on Sunday.;. local polceman wll probably be hred to keep order on Sundays. The rnk shall be open only to Hat., College student-* and ther guests. They wll be admtted upon dsplay of coupon books or some other means of dentfcaton. The Faculty wll keep watch of the actvty for a tme, and may re- voke ther decson f nocusary. The Outng Club has secured the co- operaton of the Student Councl, and any troublesome cases wll be pro- secuted. sk t'cop call >n r Students The cooperaton of the student body s requested n order tha the new.nk wll be a success and pro- vde wholesome dverson for Sunday afternoons, f bs works well, the tenns courts wh probably l>e> opened on Sundays n the sprng. The ques- ton of openng the toboggan chule was deferred untl student demand may call for another decson. The fact that the slde s n an open space n?ar a man thoroughfare mght make Us use a nusance on.sunday;. Pr..co.-ml Mss Ubtoey Faculty Clupcl ttendance Sat.. Jan.». 98S Mr. Bertocc Mr. Labouve Mr. Whtberk* Prof. Bokolua- Prof. Hovey Dr. Wrght Prof. Qunby Poof. Chase x Mr. Stewart Prof. BoMasoa Prof. Myrmann Dean Clark Of. Harms Prof. Glbert 'Takes attendance. Sxteen present n.ll. ght Delegates ttend Buffalo Student Meetng Student olunteer Move- ment Conference Gves Great nspraton By Honxso.v JOHNSTON ght enthusastc students re- turned lo the Bates campus early last week, eager to carry out som defnte plans and some less defnte deas whch were revolvng n ther mnds. They had jus! come from Buffalo, where they had re- presented Hates at the leventh Quadrennal Conventon of the Btu- dent olunteer Movement, meetng from Pec. 30 to Jan. 3. n sendng these delegates to Buffalo. Burat to dt Garnet n 1932 Plans lumn Secton- One Spofford ssue alery Burat '?,> was elected edtor-n-chef ol the Garnet at the recent meetng of the nomnat- ng commttee of the Publshng Board. Plans are already beng formulated for the frst ssue whch wll appear shortly after md-years. s edtor-n-chef of ths publ- caton Burat has the responsblty of makng the magazne pay. Last year nsuffcent fnancal means necesstated holdng up the fourth ssue. s ; result the followng sug- gestons are beng consdered, and wth possble alteratons one wll doubtlessly be accepted.. One ssue lo be conducted by He Spofford Club. ' endowments solcted from those nterested " the college, both townspeople and lumn. ;. The Garnet to come off the press nstead ol the Student for, tha partcular week. lthough no one of these plans ' may materalze, some alternatve must be reached to reduce expenses and to arouse more nterest, es- ' pecally.n the student body. novel dea has been suggested, almost smultaneously. by alery, Burat and an lumnus. The plan awatng consderaton s that two pages shall be reserved for contr-! buttons from the lumn. f ths s Bates accepted t wll doubtlessly brng to' exhbted the fact that there s on t,,,ubl, campus, along wth a healthy n! no,.. ;W, Cabnet Spends Senor R ecept j on Sunday at Leonards Farm and^plans Year Last venng at Presdent Gray's materal from people Of Smth Receves Charmanshp n L..D. lecton terest n sports and socal actv- tes, a real concern n relgon and world-wde problems. Those makng the trp, for the most part, traveled by auto. Cars ware furnshed by Dr. Malce and Mr. Frost, who accompaned the delegates; They were dth Lerrgo. Helen Foss, Polly Grover, lden Oarduer, George Drscoll, Robert Frost, Robert Johnston and Mldred Moyer. On Sunday afternoon. Jan. :t. there came to a close one of the] most successful and effectve con- voltons n the hstory of the Stu- dent olunteer Movement. The! number enrolled was somewhat ' smaller than tha orgnally ant) cpated, due n large to the present, economc stuaton; but t was ponted out that the sgnfcance of 1 numbers alone n judgng the value of any movement s neglgble. The ; whole Chrstan movement began wth a mere handful! of men. and though t has so vtally affected the hstory of the world, t s stll a mnorty group. But the delegates to the leventh Quadrennal Conventon of the Stu- dent olunteer Movement, number- ng approxmately were n- terested n other thngs Man the sze of ther conventon and ts re- laton wth the past. They were deeply concerned wth the meanng of the conventon and s relaton wth the present and the mmedate future. Comng from all parts of the Unted States and Canada, as well as from several foregn conn tres, these students were gathered together at Buffalo. N. Y. rnu Dec. 30 to Jan. 3 for the purpose of se- rously facng the pressng problems of the world today and of dscover- ng what answer Chrstan mssons could offer to these perplexng questons. Postve Chrstanty.stressed t was recognzed early n the conventon sessons that the scope of the mssonary enterprse hal been tar too narrow n the past that there had been blndness to the needs of the lmes and that t was necessary lo take a postve forward step f ths conventon Wat to realze to the fullest extent ts opportuntes and have any slgnlfl cant response to the challenge wth whch t was faced. The general theme of the conventon was "The lvng Chrst n the world of to- day". The breadth of ths theme s (Contnued on page. column S) Donald. Smth '33 of Methuen. Mass., was elected lo the offce Of ce Charman of the ntercolleg- ate Councl of the League for n- dustral Democracy at a meetng held by the League n New- York durng the Chrstmas holdays. The electon comes as a resull of Smth's effcent work for the or- ganzaton, and le assumes hs dutes n prl when he Wll succeed Rlna Stocker of assar and Char- lotte Tuttle. daughter of a Repu- blcan canddate for governor n New York. The Bates Junor gave three ad- desses durng the three-day con- ference perod. He spoke at. an L. 1. D. drector's meetng and lunch- eon n the Unversty Club on the topc of "The alue of Labor Chau- :;:>':- to Student. Members" n the course of whch he relates hs summer experences wth worker's educaton classes. "Socal Plannng" was the subject of hs conference speech. Smth's thrd talk was of an nformal nature n the home of Norman Thomas where he dscussed student experences n Lewston and Hopewell, rgna. x Sacrfce Prayer Bates jj By CL KNOWLS 1 2 How tmes have changed! To most of us at. Bates college x B s a place where we get thngs... ducaton... Frendshps.. S x Good Tmes... Few of us really gve anythng to the nsttuton x g that meant so much to ts founders. Few pause to realze le g fj sacrfce aud sufferng that they went through n order th:,t «Bates College mght n some degree Wtan to the deal tha thej g had set up for t. jj g Durng the depresson of 'h t seemed that the future ol 6 H the college was wrecked. "Thngs were n an unfnshed state, jj 9 The second floor of Hathorn Hall was unfnshed... 1 atko f $ Hall was roofless. Then a blow sudden, heavy, and detal- threatenng struck us. Words fal to descrbe the suttenn-- ol g» the country n the panc of '57. We were no excepton,.. t- 3 9 sands of dollars of our subcrptons became worthless.,lom x 8 even at twelve percent was not to be had for ts own sake.-n. g onlv for love, so far as the nsttuton was concerned. school Q ust opened on our hands! Contractors, workmen, aud teach; ers to be pad! What was to be. done? To all human appeal x 6 ances the nsttuton must fal. few of us spent an entre j nght n consultaton_and prayer n the room n Parker Hall S now used by the Chrstan ss r n. s the mornng dawned He 5 path of duty seemed clear." Then these men. trustees, and presdent of'the college, went but and rased the money even at the rsk of mperllng ther own fnancal future. s a result g the college was carred through the greatest crss of ts hs'ory. There s somethng nsprng n the thought of men prayng g H all nght a roofless Parker Hal! for the future of that nfant 3 nsttuton whch was to become the Bates College of today g 1:<^KOO SQ&>^^ Members of all classes are urged to submt any lterary attempt. Choce of subject matter s almost unlmted. Poems, essays, short stores; crtcsms of modern or post mercan. nglsh or foregn lterature; dramas, human nterest stores; treatses on psychology, ethcs, phlosophy or scence practcally any type or form of wrtng wll be acceptable. -:o: Bates Receves Bequest n Wll of Lndley Webb bequest to the College ol 10,000 dollars s contaned n the wn of Lndley M, Webb,a gradu- ate of Bytes n the class of 1870 who ded January t n Portland. Mr. Well Was always keenly u- torabted n bs lms Mater. He was a member of the Hoard of Over seers of Bates from 1878 to sm and was Presdent of the organza- ton for several years, snce S:H he has been a member of the Board n Fellows He had been a lawyer n Portland sne hs graduaton front Bates. n; wn contans a smlar be- quest la H" mmanuel Baptst Church n Portland; the remander of the estate goes lo hs son Phlp Webb '17 and other relatves. :o: Dr. Gray Gves Frst Talk of Rado Programs Presdent Clfton f). Gray, speak- ng on "Colleges am [freedom", opened a seres of rado broadcast enttled "Reflexons of the College Professor", to "' gven every Wed- nesday afternoon at 4:1R. over sta- ton WCSH " Portland. Presdent Gray dscussed the matter ot college and the freedom they ental, or should emal. em- phaszng the fac that college s tle place where one should have freedom of thought and of expres- son ot" tha thought. n respect to college professors. he slated tha they'also, should be able to state ther opnons wthout fear of be- ng crtczed. Talk by Dr. Leonard soon Ths week's talk wll he gven by Dr. Leonard who wll speak on the "Goethe Centenary". The reman- der of the programme s as follows: Jan. 20 -"Mane s t Looks to (he Geologst." Dr. Lloyd W. Fsher. Professor of Geology..an. 27 "Why Should Women Go to College." Haael M. Clark., Dean of Women. b. :: "The Place of Relgon n the College Currcnlum." D Raymond L». Zerby, nstructor n Bblcal Lterature. Feb 10 "Physcal Health and Monta Success". C. Ray Thompson, Drector of Track thletcs. F.vb. 17 -"Oar Lves as They Seem to the t'hemst" Dr. Walter. Lawrence, Professor of Chems- Feb. -4 "The World of Today vewed bv the Socologst" nders M. Myhrman, Professor of cono- mcs and Socology. March 2 "Lterature and Lfe Dr. Kdwn M. Wrght. Professor of nglsh. March 9 "What s Happenng n Our Schools Dr. Robert. F. Mc- Donald Professor of ducaton. March 16 "Psych-logy, What s t?" M. Howell Lews, Professor of Psychology. n each of these dscussons the speaker wll answer fve questons of nterest and n connecton wth the subject. These rado programs are t>eng arranged and wll be drected by The Y W C.. cabnet held a retreat at Dr. Leonard's farm last Sunday. Ths retreat was held to formulate a polcy for the new year and to try to dscover how ll cabnet can help to lead the stu- dens a Bates to carry out the pur- pose of the Y. W. C..; '"to unte n the desre to realse B full and creatve lfe through a growng knowledge of God." The members of the cabnet shared the probems of ther varous commttees, and through these com- mttees the cabnet hopes to reach more of the students. Two Bat ; men spoke about the mportance of the "" n Y. W. C.. Through some experence they have come l: realze how much meanng ths let- ; ter should have for all the mem hers of both our Y. M. C.. and our Y. W. ('.. Then the grls ds- eased practcal means of lvng a hgher lfe and brngng ths nto ther Y work. The grls want to thank Dr and -Mrs. Leonard for the use of ther farm and for ther assstance n creatng an atmosphere n whch the grls could receve a renewed nspraton for ther work of the new year. Sx Bates Women to be Guests at j Colby Play Day On the weokan o* January N Bates women "ll be the guesln of the Colby W... at a Play Daj to ". held at the uohege. '"! cue s wll le enl rlanel at the dormtores, and the program wll consst of sports and ram. whch wll probably nclude baakel ball, volleyball. and Other slml 14 recreatons, and wll concluda wth a bafqnel Saturday evenng. Other o leg< w: h w.l be rep set wll nclude the Unversty of Malm and the 'nve- rttj of New ll <nt p hre. Sn e the wnter of '29-'30, when Bates naugurated the Brsl Play y Ml Mn ', Colfa). Uofl'll ' tj of! t<. and New Hampt b Unl ver - : y have as. rec t lo take t urn ea h yt, n lnl lng H P y Day to whch the other hree colleges ar< m to ee e :'"'- The (ll" Play Daj wan < g eal n. the ol : keepl ng up be ard of fren lly dpnl lon and "play for ley's ake." Last j e r, Mane dd t he ho u r «t M a fall Play Day. an neul year, New llanr -hre s to OlUcrtatl lb- tll Y. lne s -hoole. The sjy grls who have been > lecled lo go to Watrv ar "Bn" Fnn ".".L'. "Bscky" Cousns ' " '. "" Howe '."'.2 "Fran" Bracketl ':'.:'. "Dot" Penney '33, an "Toby" Zahn ":: l x x 5 NOTC TO S BSCRBKRS 3 ^ ll S3 C TN CNTS Lambda lpha Grls Hold Tea Dance s lx;ap Year Functon ' le Lambda lpha sponsored a Leap Y r tea dance last Frday af tcrnoor from t to 6 n Chase H'' Tr w.- the r.-t one n < reart ''ll were and nvht.1 guest.; pre sent, nnety cbaples. Musc wa frn'dr by t' Clappu ton and hs Bob.us. The guests were Dean Hazel OLark, Presl ml an Mrs. Clfton ). Gray, Dr. and Mr. rthur N. Leo- nard, Prof!' au. Mrs, Fred, Knapp, Prof, and Mrs. Basnuel '" Harms. The commttee n charge con '. nf Prances. Stevens '32, charman, Betty Mann ':!:;. Dorothy O'Hara '33. Mary d,. O'Nell '33, Mu- rel M. MacLeod '32 and M s tn Wheeler. n'y pnn ":;:: and Hram Wheeler poured. R"gna fatln '35, Charlotte. MvKenney '3B, Florence..arrab" '34, aud Martha P. Har- rs '33 served. Currer and Smpson of uburn were the caterers. Noted Lecturer to Dscuss Balkans n February Meetng Professor R. ll. N. Could, a of the Poltcs Clubs, announced yesterday that C. Douglas Booth, traveler, publcst, lecturer, and authorty on Balkan affars, wll speak n Hathorn Hall on Tuesday. February 9. at S P. M. Mr. Bodth K a member "t the Royal nsttute of nternatonal ffars n ngland. fter hs early educaton was completed, at St. n- drew,; College, Toronto, and Loyola Unversty, he became a Major n the Brtsh forces durng the war: later he -tuded at the cademy of nternatonal Law, at the Hague, spent some tme at the Balkans, dd poltcal work for the Natonal Lberal Party n ngland. He ha! also worked n favor of the Lberty Loan movement, and the Red Cross, and has wrtten several artcles on astern uropean affars., Hs topc H to be "Balkan Con- soldaton Necessty to uropean Peace." The Poltcs Clubs were able to secure hs servces for ths lecture through the Carnege ndowment for nternatona! Peace o: whch Ncho- las Murray Btttts: drector. Tt one hundred and Bfty-four m r :> of the class of l<- por! hems) - -t evenng at 256 Colleg street as the gneste of g ulal Pr -:.: nl an 1 Mrs. Gray. The Senore were well nl rtaned by a lvely program and expressed themselves as beng anprsfatlve of the dvers efforts of ther fellow la -ms ' number ol.... selectons, rendered by a quartel consstng of Marj r Brlggs, Dors Moone-y, Ma- ron Blake and MureJ Cower, and ac ompaned by Betty Mann, were pleadng and well receved. HM- Blly act. made U p of Borne of "Roger Bll's'" Bnest, was accepted wth en- thusasm, and - generally beleved the 4- Players are mssng a great -t thej do not add these talented Hate; men to ther number. Ss e DO party s complete, even for college Senors, wthout refresh- ment!, the dass of 1932 round the afore-mentoned "goodes" playng an mportant and acceptable part n the program, The busness depart nent 1 realzes that, due to the ab- seme of records; from the pro- y t ceedng admnstraton. ms- 5j takc.u may luvr been mude n 0 the blls rendered at the frst Of le year. We ask that such mstakes be reported to ths y department so that records may be completed to dale, l"u- S tne mstakes avoded, and the exstng emrs corrected. SNKSS MNGR D 8 BS STUDNT dtors Outlne Work to Date on Bates Year Book :<> : Muscal Clubs' Pop Concert s Next Thursday The Pop Concert, the formal dance and concert gven by the combned muscal clubs of Bal s College, s to be held n the lumn! Gymnasum dung the evenng of Januarj 21. The concert wll begn at eght o'clock wth orchestral lectons by the Orphc Socety. the e n d of a half-hour's program the tme Wll be gven over to danc- ng untl aln.nl ten o'clock when a muscal nterlude wll take place for tn.nn o. urther en joj men) T "d nclude songs by the a m WMe :. t'. re ClUDS, by the Darnel Revellers, and also man] noveltes no to be announced be fore he affa j e the n n not been defnte!} d cded upon btt Profe or 5eldon T Crjt 11 rtor ol Mu c al Bates, who workng lo make the Pop the most promnent socal..ph.: ' -. ear, states 'hal t wll soon n- l" ad j lter hs sec ottl perod n entertanment the dauc;g wll contnue untl 11:45 P. M..Sm B th t le only occason of the when such a program s open o Bates students wth ther) n to the townspeople of Lewston and uburn, t s expected tha great uccess wll attend the a flal Tckel can be procured n Coram, Lbrary, the College Book Store. and from members of the commt- tee Bates People Go to Oxford Group Party at Poland everal preaettatvee t om the Bates ' m us al tend a Mouse Party al Poland Sprngs from p. lan r 30 n January, Ths af- far was conducted by the Oxford MOW ml ncnh :. who W 'e re oently on canuus, aud members of many of the '' ' - n the Unted Stat - v..... n attend. Those from Bates who were present were t lv Knowles, Horace Turner,tBoad ', j. Profe taor Lew. and R t 1-11-!. rn The plan nt the boa e party wau much the wme as the management el' the vst <jr the Oxford group here... Bates, except tha the work was more m, enl rat d and covered a longer pe t of tfms n ths way the -upportem of B..huan-m ware able tn.leal wth lh.se peape attendng, n ndvdual conferences and thus preaenl ther vews more specfcally. Ther prncples, Confdences, Con- [eeson. OonvcWoh, Converson am Contnuance, were explaned as fny a c able, an, the personal.meet- ngs wth ndvduals tended to gve a better understandng of the move- ment whch has as t's am to re- l jcover b am freedom of Chrst an experence The speakers were all those who poke on the '.' Campus, among whom w W. Cleveland Hcks, who offcated at he meetngs at Bates, Lee roonan, Dean of the nter- natonal College, Syrna. Turkey; Mr. dward T. Parry, a former msson- ary n Turkey; Fred Thompson from the nvct ly of Mane; Howard Blake from Prnceton; lbert Camp- bell from Hamlton, and John and Sterlng Laner, grandsons of the southern poet. Sdney Laner. n addton, -Professor Maynard of Tofts, and Professor Brown who teaches nternatonal Relatons at Prnceton and who s a member of th? nsttute of Poltc* n Wllams- town, were speakers. Professor Brown plans to conduct a House party, smlar to the one held at Po- land Sprngs, at Geneva, sometme ur-.r [», 6 -prteg c «9< : Have Developed Mane Woods Theme n "Mrror" The busness and edtoral hoards ot the Bates Year Book, the "Mr- ror"' met Frday at one o'clock n the hstory room n Hathorn. t ths general meetng lden Dust n - ::2. edtor, and Robert Manson '32. busness manager, gave a summary nl be work on the "Mrror" to dale. Mane woods theme The theme las been developed nearly as planned early n the se- mester; the Mane Woods note wll be mantaned n the cover desgn. ttl and foreword pages. headng and portrat panel desgns, and n the ntroductory pages to the va- rous sect nns of the book. The per- sonal senor portrats havo been collected and are on ther way to the engravers, the data blanks for personal senor wrte-ups have been gven out,nd smlar nformaton blanks for organzaton secretares to use n gvng data concernng her groups tre tlled out and col- lected. The pctures of grl's athle- tc groups are beng taken by Stan- ley verett, and work on the general pronp photographs s art eel on Mon- day when Photographer Plnmmer took photos of the 1932 class off- cers and the men's and women's Poltcs Club n the Men's Qymna- sum. The edtors have arranged wth Mr Plummer lo have all these photographs made n the Gym thus dong away wth the 'rp to the down.«; 'udo whch was necessary up untl last year. schedule for the takng of these photographs 's publshed elsewhere n the Student. The department heads are workng on the wrte- ups necessary lo make complete the hstory told n the pctures of ther ".Mnor" secton. Manson outlnes plans Manson, ts consderng the bus- ness aspect Of the publcaton, was optmstc as to the number of sub- scrptons receved as a result, of the Student ssembly campagn, and outlned further plans n ths lne ncludng a system of alumn solctaton. personal follow-up work, and another Student ssem- bly appeal. The prntng and en- gravng s beng taken n charge by M'trll and Webber Co. of uburn and Howard-Wesson Co. of Wor- cester. Mass. respectvely. Great ef- fort has been made lo secure ar- rangements whch wll guarantee harmony n type of paper used. prnt tug methods, and engravng bs makng for a fne reprodur- tlon of photographs and drawngs.! n effort wll be made ths year to follow the suggeston of the Faculty Publshng Commttee to nter- sperse some "Mrror" feature pages j r the advertsng secton so that the advertsers can have some con- fdence hat ther advertsements wll get more al tent on than n the past. y Sextet beats Bowdon- Has Seres Lead Garnet Gets 3-1 ctory Whte, Soba, and Svvett Score The (cly-coached Bates hockey- sextet jumped nto the lead n the scramble for state honors by slappng a decsve.1-1 defeat on Bowdoln Monday afternoon. The Garnet show- ed a flashy offense and a defense whch permtted the Polar Bears on- lv ten shots at Flynn 1n the goal, u'.l but one of whch he succ&^fully turned away. Ben Whte.scored mdway through the M'st perod wth a backhand shot from outsde the defense. Solo flghts down the ce was the method of attack used by both olubs untl la second perod when Bob Swett sent one home from a face-off drectly n front of the Bowdoln not. Soba com- pleted the scorng late n the game by hookng the puck away from a concentrated attack of the Bruns- wck sextet and salng the length of the rnk to put t to rest through Ha kell. Mcl/chen talled for Bowdon n the (second perod wth a hgh chot from md-ce. Haskcll had "9 slo,ps throughout the game and wth Blodeau and R- chardson made the bent showng for the Polar Rear. Both forward lnes for the Garnet seemed to clck but wth the defense play of the t2am as a whole featurng the gam?. Summary: BTS BOWDON Secor. lw rw. Robbng Murphy, c c, Roseufeld Ray McCluskey, rw... lw, Godfrey Whte. d rd. Blodeau Soba. rd d. Rchardson Flynn. g g. Haskell Berry, spare spare. McLachan Swett. spare spare. Da kn Rugg, spare spare. Dowlng Ralph McCluskey. spare spare, Hubbard Frst Perod Whte. Bates Second Perod M, Lubln. Rowdon Swpt, Bates Thrd Perod Soba. Bates, ft.15. Penaltes. Murphy, checkng, Rch- ardson, checkng. Dowlng, checkng, Rchardson, checkng, Secor, check- ng. Dowlng. checkng. Berry, broad check, Rosenfeld, llegal stfckwortt."" Daku. llegal oheck. Murphy, llegal check.,.juv.pby. llegal check],. Ralph Mc('r-key. llegal eh*eck. Stops, Haskell 38, Flynn 10. Referees. Fee- ney and 'Ljndqjust. Tme: three twen- ty jnnte perods. - :o: 1 Bates Debates Mane Monday R< olved, "Tha Congress enac legslaton provdng for the cen- tralzed control of ndustry" s to be the subject under dscusson h the annual Bates-Mane debate to be held n the Lt He Theatre, Monday January 18th. The affrmatve wll be upheld by dth Lerrgo '32 and v a Sonstroem '33 of Bates. Both gtls have proved ther ablty n prevous varsty debates. Mane wll le represented by Ruth Walenta and v a Bsbee. t s nterestng to note that Mss Lerrgo and Mss Bsbee opposed each other n last year's debate at Mane. The debate s under the able management of Helen Hamln '33 of the Debatng Councl. Judges are to be Prof. bramson of Bow- don, Prof. Newall of Tufts and Judge Herbert Foster. Mrs. Fred Ma..-, wll be the presdng offcer. Letters of lumnus Show Lastng nterest n Bates John Fuller, '31, now a student' n the graduate school of M.. T., contnung hs study n the realm of Bology, s one of the many alumn who retan nterest n the, affars of the college, and n knd, frendly letters, wrte to ther' frends on campus, makng recom- mendatlone, crtcsms, or gvng en- ' eouragement. Whle at. Bates. Mr. Fuller was one of he outstandng fgures n< hs class. He played varsty football, was selected for an ll-mane pos- ton ; was a contrbutor and edtor of The Garnet: busness manager of The Mrror; the campus' outstand- ng wrter of poetry; and other ac- tvtes too numerous to menton. The Student s more than glad to welcome letters from ts alumn, and speaks for the entre student body, n expressng the pleasure of each student n hearng from some- one who preceded hm or her n the affars ot ths college. The followng excerpts were tak- en from a recent letter from Mr. Fuller, who s now dong graduate work at M.. T. n Boston, Massa- chusetts: "fter all we alumn don't run the college any more, but we do! retan nterest n t an,d want to help where we can. "The sancton of Sunday Sports wll be n keepng wth the lberal- zaton of Hae s n other ways. Somehow feel that durng my four years at college beheld a cr- ss n ts affars. valutos s s. co=- tnuous process,but t has ts pe«rods of maxmum and mnmum actvty. Bates «now n a mttmam perod and t s mportant that the work does not slacken. fter all there are n each class only a few able to buld anythng new, though many may be capable of handlng routne. f Bates can retan a few good mnds n student body and faculty she wll progress." The followng notes are taken from an earler letter from Mr. Fuller, showng that he has not lost nterest n the actvtes n whch he was so nterested durng hs_ undergraduate days: " was glad to see the Outng Club get off on the rght foot wth a seres of hkes for the grls and the Thorncrag pcnc. Those on the Board of Drectors have the res- ponsblty of keepng the Club vrle and not allowng t to dege- nerate as t dd a few years ago. Personally. beleve that the Out- ng Club can exert a wholesome n- fluence on campus, such as no other body could. "f t s true, as have heard that Bates wll play two large col- leges n 1933, the ncrement n the athletc fund mght be suffcent so that the wnter, sports team could be under the thletc ssocaton, where t belongs, and not dran the club treasury. The team s a good tlng, t would be dsgraceful to gve t up, but t should have more fnancal support and a coach who cc-a!d devote ~ors tre to t."

3 So ft f P4.G TWO TH BTS STTDNT. WDNSDY^ JUBT TH BTS STUDNT BDTOS N - CHF tlary buratl, '32 (Tel. 1056) vblulng offce T.l. tuu MNGNG DTOR lder. H. Dujtn. '32 (TeL 1882) General News dtor Wllam Dunham. '32 (Tel ) Sports dtor 'mrker M»nn. '88 (Tel. 763) ntercollegate dtor arj Hoag. '32 Margarel Bateumn, '32 Murel Blsa, '32 aata Brown. '32 uguata.... '32 Bertha W. Crtckell. '82 PnrUor J. Dexter. 32 Robert Manson. '32 Kog&moud Nchol.*. '32 Llaketh Segel, '32 Randolph Weatherbea, "32 Helen ahe, '88 Ruth Beham, '88 BUSNSS Ul'KTMNt. J. Latham. Jl fcdward Wln...!. :: '. Harold. Smth, -~ Charlea WbJpple, * DTORL ST Frank Byron, 'S3 Roger Derby. '33 d red Hollywood. '33 u.ee rsh. '33 Luclle Jack. '33 P.-nee.Uues, '33 ' alma Kttredge. '33 t.l.,0 Knowled, '33 l. olhy O'lara. '88 )a '. o.cut '33 lce Purtrton. '33 Mafc«l KkOletl, '33 FCULY DSR MD UDllOt u. Wlkns BUSNSS MNGR Robert LtBoyUaux, '32 (Tel ) Women'a dtor Dorothy Fuge. '32 (Tel. 8207) Dtlwtt dtor Khlrlaj Ca<e, '32 (Tel. 82.P7..-.U.C...- tl.oleln.s ll.cj lu.c, '32 Samuel Scolnk, '33 Dorothy Staples. '33 lnor Wllams, M3 Kcuucth Wood, '83 Marore Bennett. '34 Nancy Crockett. '34 Dors.". alcllater. '34 Frank Jdurray. '34 Thorn** Musgrave, '34 lbert Olver, '34 Theodore &cu*>, '34 M. u.,u DPRTMNT UCJU Beleau. '33.Nathan Mlhury. *S4 Johu lluney. '31 bdore rk '34 Jamea Balano, '34 l'o(. l'ercj Subscrpton. *8 00 per year n advance. Sngle Copes. Ten Cents. Wrtten.s'olcc of change uf address should be n the hand* of the luauena Manager one week before the ssue n whch the OMng* n to occur. 'll.t talor l raapopable f«-r the Htoral column and the general polcy of the paper and the Managng dtor.. all the artcles n the News Columns. Member ol Sen ngland ntercollegate Newapaper uocauoa. '.blshed Wednesdays durng the College Year by Students of ll.t. College. Mend as tecond clasa matter ol the post offce at Lewtton,.Mane. Prnted by L Meaangev Pablahng Company. Lewblon, Mane. Crusader Wthout Crusade The evasve, artful, am pervertng tactcs of Mr. Percval 1. Baxter, who wthout ntendne. slander to Mane -we term as her former-governo, makes mpossble to use ether kndlness or n- tellgence n any attempl to controvert the unreasone! am nnfound- pl defamaton he las gven the name of Bates College Hs tactcs, n tlt- poorest sens.- H the term, wth ln-r auggestveness rather than ther proof, have tamed lps <>!' slander toward Bates from all Corners of Mane. ; state n whch M. Baxter s regstered as lx tngoshed ctzen. m yet ths dstngushed ctzen las had no qualms at unjustly and covertlj damagng an nsttuton whch. one- of Mane's greatest assets. Nor Ss t surprsng tha Mr. Baxter should 11«1«- behnd a cloal. of ndefnteness and ambguty. When he accused n Portland church of sponsorng Communstc nn--^s ; when he accused Mane sum mer camps as beng dsgused unts of Sovel educaton ; u-b-n under the nfluence of the phantasmagora of hs magnaton, he accused a Mane college n partcular, and Portland schools n general, of harborng Communstc and Socalstc nstructors, dd be have the moral convcton to name those whom he accused.' Pressed ror reasons to hs contentons, hs answers have been jrj substance, "Be eftuse." Stngng under Presdenl (fray's reply, he wlrfned tha Pre- sdent Gray was abusve, nstead ol provng tha n Hales College there wen those who laugh Socalst r and nol Captalstc pro paganda. Mr. Baxte by hese methods s presentng hmself as a father naloral canddate t mght feqnsarva eneray and'ftypng for all ecu eerned f he would sel the flag Q hs desre at half-ast. '. snce he so assaredly wshes to dctate what should be taught n tptllege _ sod school, he s presentng hmself as choce for Commssoner ol df.11 on. then there are smle students who are thankful fhej " ll graduate n June. Mr. Baxter throughout ds controversy has been defnng JJtssn nstead of ethesthe deals of ConMnsm or Socalsm. pelf-adnt- tedly Russa s not today CojtBnu*te, am perhn >ps! hejer wll be. We are tolerant to M. Baxter's opnons on Russa, but we do nol respect hs dctaton tha certan deals, as n pre-war Germany, Mould he drlled nto ns. s students, confronted wth a sck socety that Mr. Baxter and hs generaton have done but lttle to make better, we demand the rght to seek our own deals from the raw materals of truth. There are a few students at Bates actvely engaged n Socal- te actvtes. What of t.' They are moved by a wsh to allevate the Bufferng of manknd, to curb explotaton of man by an nade- quate socal system : by deals of socal securty, love, anl effcency] Bu the number of those students, although augmented by one or two snce Mr. Baxter began to speak, s small. f he knew how many Bates students were opposed to Socalsm. Mr. Baxter would be more temperate n hs ndctng effusons. We deny that nstructors n the classrooms of Bates College are Socalst or Communst propagandsts. Many "youths comng here to study socology, economes, and government have found ther deals for socal rghteousness leavened and somewhat dscouraged when confronted by the tactual materal presented n those classes. Before agan attemptng to deprve a college of ts good-wll. t. potental endowments from those who mght see hs accusatons through the sanu magnfyng glass, ts enrollment of students from New ngland ; before agan attemptng, by wslhr to render less secure the postons of professors n all Mane colleges, to suppress the freedom ol the classroom, mght be well for Mr. Baxter to judge less hastly, for although "'e number who do not take hm serously stjarge, hs nfluence, for good or bad- s extensve. We would covet for ourselves as for hm the rght "to study and understand, thus makng hmself the stronger and more able to oppose doctrnes tha he beleves to he both false and dangerous" words whch Mr. Baxter cabled from Moscow n 9s?9. Whether those doctrnes be of Socalsm or Captalsm, we demand freedom of study and dscusson. The Student's Planks The Student here tabulates a lst of practcal recommendatons t shall press durng the perod from now untl the present admns- traton leaves offce n March. Wll the New Year already under way, tme n whch to present these matters fully shall be lmted, and sonc may not be touched at all. The edtor would welcome at any tme, letters or suggestons on any of the followng topcs: 1. Compulsory Chapel: The elmnaton of sx compulsory Jt- lendanees a week at chapel; the present system to be substtuted by a program of three compulsory attendances a week at assembles n whch secular rather Hum relgous topcs shall be Stressed, and voluntary attendance at three weekly relgous servces, one of these to be under the control of The Councl on Relgon. 2". Freshman ntaton: The abolshment of the Darnel Bay and organzed ntaton of Freshmen by the Sophomore Class. ntaton henceforth to be djeatly controlled by Student Councl; penaltes devsed by Student Councl o be nflcted upon convcton by Councl n sttng. nfractons of rules by Freshmen to be reported by any pperclassman. but there must be at least two wtnesses to these nfractons. 3. Women's Rules:. x suggeston s made to the Student. Gov- ernment Board to codfy and smplfy rules governng the women of the college. 4. Consoldaton of Clubs: The combnaton of the vao:, scattered clubs nto s? or seven larger,"more nclusve, less spe- calzed clubs wth defnte treasures, deals, and programs: or. as an alternatve, the lmtng of membershps by the present clubs. The meetng of club delegates n a conventon to settle ths matter. 5. Commons: Permsson to eat off-campus to extend to Junors as well as Senors. ach student takng meals at the Commons or at 1 [Fsake Duup Hall to be gven a nomnal number of free meals each!-eester for the purpose of entertanng frends or of takng euta ; from dnng halls. <. Sunday Sports: ljm.sson to use tenns courts n summer, and perhaps toboggan chute n wnter. Sunday afternoons from 2 o'clock to ( o'clock, n addton to recent skatng permsson. 7. Student Comnuttees: The establshment of a commttee of students n each class of any course wlmf ever to present grevances, recommendatons, or pleas to the nstructor or professor of "that class. Members of the commttee to lected by the class at large two weeks after the frst meetng n each sejn.es.ter. The commttee shall have the power o present crtcsms of the professor's methods, or recommendaton n wrtng, or to confer wth hm n person. K. Councl on thletcs: Councl to be reorgansed to nclude l.elty members, student members, all head coaches, and only one alumn delegate not a member of the faculty. Presdent of the Col- lege to nvestgate feasblty of combnng academc and athletc budgets, 9. Publshng ssocaton: Reorganzaton of Publshng sso- caton Hoard of Drectors to nclude lve student representatves and four faculty members, nstead of three faculty members. The addtonal faculty representatve to be the ssstant to the Presdent, the Bursar, or the Charman of-udt Commttee, who shall -crve x-.offco. The Faculty Commttee on Publcatons to be enttled and oblgated to st. wthout vote, wth the Board of Drectors of the Publshng ssocaton. 10. The Mrror: defnte organzaton to be made for The Mrror, and emt rd to be under the Publshng ssocaton, whose Drectors shall choose dtor and Busness Manager from competent members of the Senor Class. The dtor and Busness Manager shall choose ther assstants from the Junor Class, and these assstants shall compete for tre two hgher postons. n ths way contnuty of experence and records, and audt and supervson of busness by the Drectorate wll be assured. 11. The Garnet: When the present admnstraton of The Stu- dent goes out of offce n March, t wll be able to make recommenda- tons for dsposton of The Garnet. Current opnon s that wth re- duced costs n prntng, and The Student on a stable bass follow- ng ths year's experence and efforta, a part of the subscrpton prce of The Student may be dverted nto a specal fund whch shall be used to ssue two numbers yearly of The Garnet. The Garnet shall have ts own-dtor and Busness Manager, both to be apponted by the Publshng ssocaton. 12. Publcty: The establshment of a Press Bureau along the lnes of recommendatons made n The Student of November S Hdtoral: To establsh a custom whereby the out-gong edtor, alter hs gradual on. wll be nvted by hs successor to wrt' one edtoral durng the frst year of hs alumnshp. Ths s to gve each edtor an opporl unty to express any dea whch as an under graduate he fell constraned to suppress. Tradtons: Steps to be taken by the Student Councl and nterested students to substtute u holesome radl ons for certan un wholesome ones now exstng, am whch need nol be named. 15. The Lbrary: That efforts be taken to ncrease lbrary en- dowments, and that the lbrary stall' be enlarged as proposed n prevous edtora s. H. Rado Broadcasts: That the admnstraton set asde funds lo fnance broadcasts of musc by the musc chls. 17. Sex ducaton: The establshment of a one-semester, three hours course n the educaton of every detal of sex. ncluson m the.-helves of the lbrary of a specal secton devoted to the subject. 18. Musc: ppearance of the musc organzatons before the student body ; regular concerts whch wll gve as much beneft and pleasure to the students as s now gven to outlyng communtes. KK::K ',,,,;,!.,, a *,.,,., ll;:l, sl ahv t~. JL " nr l»lg:-up or ;u- tel.ls am lepar. C ^TLOCnl 5 lo " s "'"' ''xarnaroent, as no o»l g-- cal dtegotea tron Unted Stal The World :-: tv OtM Ma l><> l,l> The extent lo whch we have be- come nvolved n foregn nterests and oblgatons eyotd the seas s h.ouut nto ntense hghlght, by tlte fuel that a specal message on foregn relatons was retnred by the Presdent o nform, nstruct, and chde congress. The delvery ol ths message l'ormed an almost j hstorc epsode, ts chef precedent «a s the World Court message gven the last congress, but that dealt ex- clusvely wth one phase of foregn polcy: ths messare of the Pres- dent concerned our foregn relatons around the world. The one woman who wll be pre- sent at l he World Dsarmament Conference n February s an me- rcan, the Presdent of Mt. Holyoke College. n the postons of honor, and dstncton, as well as of res- ponsblty whch t accords to wo- men, He Unted States government s far n advance of other natons. Ths partcular appontment of a woman to the conference n Fe- bruary s a recognton by Presdent Hoover of the actve and powerful agtaton by femnne organzatons here n ths country for world ds- armament. t may be also that our Presdent regards bs appontment as a master stroke, a compellng bd for the women's vote the co- mng natonal electons. wll attend the world econojnc con leence soon to "-, held. Ths - falure lo send delegate* td a *or«]..*.- - RurdSpean na- lerence may fcl ' lons to wonder.hew dlgent. w. are,nt JH-'l.^re-l t,, skfe world prohlefnfe.*- HlretnttTonal' suspcon s rampant n urope. Germany de- mands treaty revson. taly for rea- sons o a poltcal nature sdes "wth her. France and Poland deny ny pause for revson. Fnally wll la- rff conflcts and cc:onom- unrest abroad, the atmosphere of brother- ly affecton and desre to ad hu- manty n general wn be sadly clouded. f anythng substantal n the way of armament reducton s accomplshed n February, wll be a splendd addton o the world's remarkable happenngs. RCOLbGWT (fl WS CWCJ OPN x" dtor of the Student: Hv Mt no.<; Happy Now Year everybody! We wsh you all the success n md- years and n BSCUrtng tha coveted poston. t ths lnn- we an- pleased to, To the Bdltor of The Student. Sr. w'e, the students who attended the Uuatj emal studen oluntee (' uwaf at Buffalo, wsh ),,. students of Bates to gel an dea ts mportance am what t,, meant to. a t brought lo us a new deter ml naton to Hv,- n obedence to n. sprt of Chrst. Ths calls for dy nanc lvng, lor the way of Ghra s the way of the cross. t tc-an To the Sr: t was wlh some nterest that read the ndependent opnons of the members of the Student Conn-1 jorgettpjt" personal ambtons, and le] as regards whether or not fresh- : l0 sprt of Jesus enterng nto man ntaton should be contnued tne sufferngs of humanty and mn- at Hates. t was Wth regret that (storng to the needs of the world read the stand taken by Kdward only by sacrfcal lvng can He Terney, the Freshman member. wor"], he redeemed from ts cond- The electon ol" Mr. Terney to the on of,, naos an, str fo and uncer- t'ouml was a popular one for one tarty'. The way of love must lead acknowledge two new publcat ons reason, and tha was because hs t() Calvary before t can lead to whch have been added to our ex-. la.-smates thought hm an W1U-, Resurrecton. change lst They are The Kng's standng opponent of ths custom j Not only dd the conventon gv- College tc cord of the Unversty of that has caused much trouble. TW y ths determnaton, but t sup Kngs College, Halfax, Nova Sco- hud every reason to beleve tns la. and cada theneam. of before the electon. thnk can cada Unversty, Wol'vlle, Nova even go as far as to truthfully say Seoa. Both are publcatons of that.mr. Terney dd not appear on mert: the former havng well wrt- the campus wth a freshman cap or cn tems on local and world pro- te durng the entre ntaton pe- blems. besdes accounts of college rod. nd yet he recommends, as le actvtes. The lheneam. besdes beng a record of college affars, has a very good lterary secton. Mr. Harold Frtz Spprell. formerly of The Hates College lactlly. s now a member of the cada fa- elllty. Speakng of exams! The under- graduates of Brown Unversty and Pembroke Cortege have won the pt., [or a revew purod days leot the begnntuu of the cvan perod. Durng these two days then- wn be no college exer- cses. Ths s surely a worthwhle ;... nuplslncnt. What dfferent deas some col- leges have! the Cnversty Of North Carolna tlte rmball team adopted the skunk as ts offcal mascot. tres to play between the two ds- tnct groups that make up the rest of the Councl, these requrements for the future. Certanly one that does not obey or respect laws or rules s not capable of layng th same laws or rules down for others. say wthout any hestaton that sncerely beleve that a vote of the Class of lll.tr> would go over- whelmngly n favor of the entre of two abolshng of all phases bf the old and foolsh custom of freshman n- taton. hope that -Mr. Terney wll consder the serousness of the matter, realze that a true repre- sentatve s but the voce of hs consttuents, and at le least de- mand that a vote of the Freshman Glass, f not of the entre College, be taken upon ths queston. Kespectl'ully..'.'H WORCSTR l ble nversy of 'ee yl va n:: ' a model Kepucan am Democratc nomnatng conventon w-as held.. The delegates were- represented by the students who came from the dfferent stales represented at the Unversty. Roosevel was nomnat- ed as the next Democratc candd- ate. lve weeks senor gudance course s gven at Syracuse Un etsty. -s s gven to the Se- nors to Mn out llev know the rules and tradtons of tn- oolleg". Here are suggestons for those who jare wonderng when- the money s comng from for the next term bll. verythng from "/danc- ng wh fa women at 54 cents an hour" l-lle,l. money. le... llhel' 8, To H Klor of Tll-: STUDNT: H Throughout the pawl eght weeks H. o school. have been watch- ng and watng rather hopefully tor.n anuoueue to be made callng.o materal to be used n the llrs publcaton of -'ll' College lt-ony magazne, "The Garnet". However, pled us wth the courage and lb power to undertake the task Through tho sprt of unty am fellowshp t brought us nspraton and a sense of the presence of th- lvng Chrst. Wth the determnaton to lve n obedence to the sprt of Chr came also a new concepton of world problems, and a new convc- ton of the adequacy of the Gospel Of Chrst. When frankly faced, tn- world presents today a black pc- ture. Hnt the Chrstan message s suffcent for all ts perplexng df- fcultes. No great prncple of Jesus has ever been nvaldatetl: m he other hand, the way of love has been found to work. "Chrstan ty has never been tred and found waulng. t has been found dffoub and not tred." Respectfully, GORG DRSCOL. KF.K FOss ROBRT PROS'!.DF. GSD ol.lf GROl; DTH LKRRTGn M.DUKD MOY1J Dr. Ncholas.Murray Under. Pre sklent ol Columba Unversty. n hs address at the Nobel Prze Ce- remony ov.-r N. B. C. predcted that the Pac of Pars would b- regarded n the future as "the su preme act of the age". was recently announce/ tba' Dr. Butler and Mss ddams of Hull J louse. Chcago, were awarded te lo vbn e.. for one. would lk know the reason why. understand tha n past yearn th publcaton of "The Garnet" has sen fnanced by the euhacrpttona taken tor the weekly paper. "The Student". ''ll -- year the matter of be- came a pretrem whch faced the bu-',- lena nt.'t ol he paper. The solaton resorted to n rasng - tn-.pc-e of th-- subscrpton has...eeme.-l to settle tha matter for tn mesent. Obvously, f there 1 w-a- a hortage 'of mb'ney tor bhe pub- lcaton Of "The S ll v.ll" alnlle, the Tn- t.tbe.1,1 ll.uh a1 ' SynacHsf added ( xpen.e',,f ano; ln-'r puhlcal on. 'nves.t c(tdus' jts mlelgsl lt o he prnted from the same ''old no ucl a Mnm, n ; has a,< vet been Nohe, '.,.j Z e for!l.'!. toth al- to operatng elevators, turn-'fnancng ths latter publcaton nne.. students wth uat no.., Senor beng rated low- er than a Kcshnun. Ths s t fhct accordng 'nln Jon n a Carnege repdr Hopkns Unversty. the college'lbrary. sk any member H Women's Poltcs-Ctab f such a re.-l/m js fgj'a^tud ojjus campus. Tn- depresson s even blamed tot the tact that l.fy Freshmen re- ported tor the class team al the Unversty of Pennsylvana. The- Dean of Women al Hunter College satl recently tha college grls don't go to enough partes, don't go out enough and Bpeqd too much tme studyng. s a part of ther class work, students of lt-gll Unversty, Montreal, vsted the largest brew- ery n merca. c'ack-d- -; -n> " was out of the trnaston. However, then- was no move-ma-t'' to lar! ml whether- o no: fe desre for thej prntng'of "Th* Garnet" wafe great enough to warren) any acton n ts canoe, nor W.J any statement made showng the >vys and wherefore of the dscont- nuance of the paper. Whole pages of the weekly paper have been devoted at tme- to the answens of the n- qurng reporter concernng the moth-eaten and thread-bare subject of Fshman ntaton, whle no at- actve educators, socal workers an. pacfsts. Recently at Columba some stu- dents hred slenographers t) attend classes wth hem lo copy the pro- fessors' leeures verham. The pur- pose was to dscover bow many -er- rors n Knvlsh they made. M-allus n an artcle on eco- nomcs publshed n The Lyre Tree, n s. Stephen's College reads, "tmes an- tougher than Common., College fellows? ' "They're lne when so'ber", de- clared dde Cantor when nter- vewed by a Temple tuvebty student. t assnr College. 171 Freshmen onl of lff. admtted that they ns'ed each other's notes, or papers of former years on a thess supposed to be orgnal. They explaned tha ths was so because t was tho only way they could set that unfar amount of work done. These grls are to be prased for gvng the true reason. en. n ha- been pad to a cause 5T x whch wll uot ouy beneft the col-'h QROCT* MlOTtKUl'H*. FOG lege's "nner-eelf" but w.ll add an- x TH: "MKKO S By.41, HOW For once, Senator Borah strkes an opnon assentng to that of the majorty of Congress. Borah s most emphatc n hs belef that Unted States should not consder further reducton and cancellaton Of war debts. fter all. what fur- ther acton s warranted on our Part? We have already camelled, forgven, and foregone two-thrds of he war debts. urope seems lo regard the problem of settlng ther debts as ours. Why can't they as- sume some responsblty them- selves? The sums of money they owe to us are but a mere fracton of he money they see fl to spend On armaments. fter all. n justce to our own ctzens, our congress s swayed by the thought that for every dollar of cancellaton, a dol- lar of taxes cones out of he me- rcan la.-payer's pocket. Wth the new year and a new- season the best thng to do rghl now s to revew the rules govern- ng partcpaton n the two current spols wnter sports and basket- ball. The rules lor basketball arc- th same as for hockey. Bach class s enttled to two teams a pece one Game) and one Hlack. lgblty for tn- teams s based on health. sportsmanshp, ablty and attend- ance at 86% of the practces. The teams are chosen by a comnllee consst n s of the captans of Un- learns, coaches, student coach, and three members of he W... board apponted by (he manager of the spot. the end of each sea-» son, the two teams n each class shall compete agttlnsl each other..the team wnnng two out of three ; games contrbutes one pont to ts ] sde. n wnter sports, trals lor ea.l event shall be held two weeks be- fore the season s over. 'onls fur the Garnet and Black team shall be decded as follows: decde on the events ol the season, say, sx or seven (may vary number); mow a number Of events wthn the events decded upon, say four lve out of the total number: grl decdes ror herself the she wll enter. keepng a other set of laurel.- to the collecton she has already garnered from her lst! nsttutons. frmly beleve that there s ugh ntense! n the college to start "The Garnet" gong agan and PUt t on an ndvdual bass f neceesary. "The Student". "The Mr- ror", and other college publcatons have ther respectve board-; why can't "The Garnet" lk-w. e have one? have not gone nto the matter on. "' '[throughly enough to quote >anv exa- of encouragement to -he bad- 1)roPS nep()ed **J Z^SStSS, but feel that a Mrs. Jula 'hllps Kuopp. wfe of a B. P. professor. questoned over 8M junor and senor women at a mdwestern coeducatonal col- lege and found out that "college women as a whole are wllng to share expenses wth the men they love, n order that hey may get marred at an early age and stll obtan the necessary educaton. Just a ly smtten plannng to get an M.. From "The Beacon". Kngston, K.. a remedy for he depresson s found. t s by Bruce Barton. who clams we should all qut work, go to bed. and sleep t off. Suts us perfectly! To be physcally lt and scholas- tcally excellent are he qualfca- tons that co-eds at Stanford Un- versty must meet before they can be allowed out untl 12 o'clock. t Wtleburg Unversty, hree blond co-eds recently debated wth three dark-hared grls of tn- same unversty on the subject hal bru- nettes are more ntellgent than blonds.the decson favored the brunettes. Mr. Warren Benson of the Place- ment Bureau at the School of du- caton a l. U. sressed he neces- sty for the students to realze that thers s a held of much compet- ton, and they must strve to pos- sess somethng besde scholastc ablty, namely personalty. good resoluton for the new year. or each events The Dsarmament Conference of score,;,! by Whch ablty may be l. WOl-,1 whn!, r,,,!,,,.,!!.'..!,.....,l,. J.. >,u ' l - v " c the world whch opens n February Wll do so n an almosplere of ds- couragement. Just when the world outlook for peace was brghtenng and a poverful factor for the gua- rantee of arbtraton of poltcal dsputes, the League of Natons, judged: at the end of the season decde whch s the best score n each eve,,, and whch s the poor- est: then classfy players accordng to ther records. Tranng must be kept the la3t two weeks before the games and was apparently n successful opera-, durng the prelmnares for wn- uon, a seres of events had to beset, ter sports the conference wth great dfflcul- <; 0 f tes. Undoubtedly,, the setback re- Mr. Tom Lamey has qute a task ceved fcy the League of Natons n ven and on Frday at Heads up when you attempt to enter Hand 't>u at these hours. Bg; Week-em for.. toy d Members.Saturday s gong to be a bg day for several members on the Board. Frday tose Lamhcrtson, Ronny Mel,her and Dggs ugustns are havng for Northampton to attend the conventon sponsored by he Smth Outng Club. On the same, day Colby s holdng a Play Day the bulletn board for delegates from the Unversty of Mane and New Hampshre and Bates. W e are to be represented bv m Fnn. Becky Cousus. l Howe. solctaton for sub- scrptons for the paper the -same as s done for "The Studen" would not only prove r ynwnlw but practcal as well. n that way the cost coujd he mnmzed and the crculaton be lmted only to those who apprecated and wanted he paper. n leavng bs thought w.th you humbly suggest that yon consder the matter. There s no need for allowng the lterary talent that has n the pa.st made tself manfest, now le dormant because of "the deprrn- aon.'j sk a tew questons by means of your "nqurng Reporter" f ne- cessary, or brng the matter to lght at the next Student ssembly and enter a plea for the mwur-rton of Bates' lteral y endowment so that c he may he on an equal wlh her fellows n lhat department as well an n those n whch she al present excelte. Respectfully. LSTR P. GROSS, '34. photo- jj sched- classes S To the dtor of the Student Sr: Through my connecton wth "The Student" have he prvlege of replyng offcally n ths ssue to tho letter prnted above. meetng of the Publshng s- socaton was called just before the Chrstmas recess. Wth the earue- hope tha ways could be found to fnance one or more ssues of "The Garnet" ths current year Mr Rn- rat was elected edtor. Consequently, a notce callng for materal for the frst ssue of The Garnet" s already posted on t s gratfyng to the Publshng!'' n g -Tr. s',? ped *»"»n" letter" h,, C tu4ml "»* t «hoped that the frozen credt of the de- presson mentoned above wll not coagulate the flow of creatve nk Respectfully vours WLLM DUNHM Presdent of the Publshng ssocaton. p Followng s te schedule of 9 be nklng of group graphs for ho "Mrror**. B was dope lust year, all pc- tares wll «> takea n the Men's tynnasun. ttendance at tjne SC ulel, and tardness to 0 cannot be evcused. 9 Wednesday,.lanuarv ftbmw P. M. Chor S 1:05 l M. McKalane ( lub Thursday, January p :>:».-> P. M. Bales Lttle Symphony l:t».-» l M. Men's Glee Club Women's Glee Club Frday,.nnav l." S:OJB P. M. 'l'l-hellenc g -or, t*. M. Lawrence Chew- cal Jordan Scentfc Saturday, -lauary H 12:0.-, p. M. Junor exhbton ((lass ol l«>:j2) 1:05 P. M. (lass Offcers, H :!:{ (lass Offlceva, 111:11 Class Offcers, OH.-, Monday, -lauua-y s g UtrM P. M. m. c.. Calk no( S :(5 P. M. Women's thletc ssocaton 8 ; K '"«leu (.nermen :.: eslay. January :05 P. M. Student Councl :o., p. M. Garnet Key Sons and Daughters 1.»f Bates edneeday,.lanuarv 80! * '* * Honor Students :«P. M. La Pette.ade- n e l'h Syna lola hur-sday, January 21 a-.«5 M.,an«lHla lpha l:05..p. M. Heutsofter eren Dela Ph lpha Ftjday, January 22 18:08 P. M. Spoffotl (lub 1:05 p. M. lclbea Kansdell flnlnnlhl lter, mdyears (cule st l<«tl- to he arranuml la.-r. lnng Club ursl) Club '.an-s Studen ^ Sotlaltas.alna '- Plajors ars«j Play 6 tluctlc Couucl Mtrror Bou-d Publshng ssocaton j( Men Debaters Mnm Dchaters H Debatng; Councl v xxxxxxxxxx>acx>^-:xxxxxxx :-: :< :< ] xxxx ;

4 91 Bates Wrter xtols Frank tttude on Matters of Sex Charles?. Packard dvocates Wholesome Um, ^ ^flb& Made " n "The Chrstan Leader" (Wm's Kane: The artcle whch,l»pe:'ofl n the ftofh. 18, J!»aj jsp f "l»e taufatu U«<lc'- 4y J»pof. (harlm B. l**okj»wl s cm -d "(The Mn <o<l Marto." SH,. Stuh-t rt>. prnts t n port. THe frst nstall- out ncludes foot. Packard's outlne at the maler of MS through the l.ol<»k<'l world to man. Hs treat- Blent or *e n man wll ftpfmb next cpuon of, M1 alumnus a!ul a LT.' ****** ' Ksl, and fllnd Cm- l't-f. >a< ka-d's wholntunte MMSftde on a < ueston uleh stll.needs..-., n-^u. b-lc..- n cones cjtvely separated from ts >ast, perncous, mooted qualtes.) n the great eerest -of human documents whch make up the Old and New Testaments there s one venae whch s of much Blgbf&oanee from -an eaabryalogcal.standpont. When the -author, or author.-!, of the Hook of Geness wrote. "So God cated man n hts own mage, n the mago of God created he hm; male : ml fcnrale created he them," some ftal truths came nto expresson. The frst part of thn twenty-seventh verse or the lnt chapter s a drect statement, namely, that the creature man was made.n the lkeness of (od. t does not say whether that r producton was a physcal, mental, socal or sprtual one. or all or beae. The nterpretaton s for ns to make. But the dea was so strong n the -mnd of the wrter that he waned to make t doubly of phrasng. Knally, to make hmself entrely dear he specfcally names not only man, that s, the male human, but ho mentons hs complement, woman, le female, as co-sharer n ths pre-.-ntalon of Hs lkeness. God then an not be thought of smply as.1-.nk-hjy Father of manknd, but le must be seen as lmghty Mother as well, a BWHaK who combnes all qualtes of ua'lhry parents. What a dfference t would make n our hogbls about men and women f we could always have n mnd a concept o ther common hertage from Col. Takng ths statement of a mghty, throbbng human heart at Us evdent value, therefore, let us tor a tme seek out what scence has bad to say n regard to Creaton. The physcsts tell us that all space s permeated by the ether. Ths s the warp and woof or the unverse. Wthn -throughout all the reaches or stellar space are numerous ml. - ol" varous knds, such as stars and planets, comets and nebulae, organzed nto systems or whch our solar system s but one. The glob.' called the earth s merely an 1 nf n t cs Una 1 part or One ol' these mmense group.' or heuv.-n.v bauson, nrrnjtftf to one teachng of astronomy. What a sublme thought t s. ths vew that shows our relaton to the vastok-' pause ot a lnrtlews Nature reachng out and out trllon-,- or mles nto realms that ajgc eu-lless. The chejust can take up another phase of flae study o,f.nature. From hm.we learn tha the aeral envelope s.composed of mnute partcles whch never cease bombardng each other vgorously. The worlds are found to be made of weghable. lfeloss matter, of elemental substances, of extremely fne molecules, atom, electrons, all n a state of very slow moton. n the.last analyss we can reduce much, f not all. of the -natural world to a large number of energy complexes, heat, lght, electrcty and so forth, condensatons of whch gve us the norganc bodes of the unverse. ll ths and every other fact about the phenomena ol Nature gleaned n astronomy, geology, chemstry and physcs, are tremendously nterestng. Scentsts n these and alled felds have Corner.pnons of consderable weght con-.-rnvg the orgn of ths stuff called :organc. t s a marvelous story taken all n all. but t s not the only vent of great sgnfcance n evolutonary tme. Here we mark the ad- ent of a new prncple n cosmc story. somethng whch had been rmed "lfe". way back n the msts of our world's begnnngs somethng hap'-ned. we do not know how, whch -fned an epoch of tremendous m- 'Mtanee. Out of fornxles*. nert materal was fashoned a bt of stltnce unlke anythng ever created..fore. Ths was protoplasm. Some p^us ew angle chem«t.mxed carbon, hvdro- Ben. ntroken. oxygen, sulphur, -phosphorus, calcum. Beaton, ron, polan.-mun, HC n such an orrnul way that a dfferent.product appeared upon the earth. Here was change ndeed! glassy, vud, sem-sold bt or matter wth numerous chemcal and physcal.-propertes poswsed n flome degree by as wdely dfferent cryetals, but.n such combnaton and arrangement that t was none of these. t was qute unque, qute n. a place by tteelf. alone. t was -organc matter, vbrant wth energes, thng. t 'had the capablty of nherent.moton. One could see t move «U1 by tself, unaded. grew by addng food partcles to ts mass, whch t made over nto tself n a perfectly astonshng manner. t was not lke.the crystal whch Just added on and on those fragments whch made for mere ncrease,m sze, much j as one ncreases te volume of an ce-cake by pourng freezng water over t. t tore down complex mole- cular lood aggregates and bult them up agan, makng use of ther stored energy for ts power supply. t responded to outsde stmul, the sun as heat and lght, the cool freshness of he wnd, the pressure of the ran nd fnally t dd somethng more startlng, more unconventonal than any of the foregong unusual actvtes t reproduced. t formed other protoplasm lke tself, new unts, new ndvduals whch carred on ths process of lvng, and thus became mmortal, for protoplasm has never ded, has never dsappeared from the face of the earth snce ts creaton, though some BnMaplasme have dssolved and dsspated themselvt.s nto the elements of whch,they are made countless tmes. t frst these hts of a lvng creaton were sngle unts wth lmtng membranes, called cells. They could multply by breakng up nto several ndvduals or by havng emal portons pnched off the parent mass, these assumng an ndependent exstence. Then a new step was nterpolated, and. nstead of one cell contnung to ncrease n nunhers. two TH BTS STTBhyr, TO5SSDY, J>HTT?T portng varous body parts, or n protectng them, and we l.ave connectve tssues, bmes. lgamentl l.'ldons, or the SBStfcltffl U tssues whch cover surfaces outsde and n- :ne the body. Specalzaton or parts and dfferentaton of form and funelon coukl not help but lead to or-: gau development,, and anmals had hearts, stomaohb. lvers, eyes, kdnew. The grow to snrh conrplcxtv and such dependence upon one another that a whole unfed apparatus was nf^ssary n the performance or a partcular work. So t came about that dgestve and muscular, cr- 'latory. excretory, and nervous svsterms or hgh organzaton were needed to carry on the actvtes of lre. nd each one 01" these co-ordnatng wth all the rest produced a harmonous whole, a complex multcelular organsm. Kalt-s-WoWl Ho.y<»ke To Debate Quest*! of Women mergence The second trangle of the astern ntercollegate League debates wll be held February nneteenth and twenteth. Bates' affrmatve team s meetng 1 Mount Holyoke here, whle the negatve group wll oppose mherst College n Massa- " O!, - - a. - t c- j-m* n BKUU «.%~ _ j a a u. «lke cells lused ther content nto a h 0 r,.. n common whole prevous to dvson. t wa.; a.stmulatve act. ly t a renewed.base of lte was obtaned. Ths was fertlzaton. The phenomenon of SO began, perfectly smply, normally, naturally. Reproducton Wtae no longer asexual, no longer an ndvdual 'nutter solely. t nvolved two unt-s. ery soon.afterward a dfference could be noted h some of the fusng cells. They were no.longer alke n form and sze. <»ne was noteeahly larger, less motle. (Hed wth nourshment. t wan the egg, or female cell. The other was n drect cottj u.-l to ths, very tny, hghly actve,; strpped of ts excess protoplasm, n spermatozoon or male cell. ts functon was to swm and seek out the egg, borng lute t and losng tt. dentty wth the larger teody. n -some way there had come.about a dfferentaton of the «>x cells. bout ths tme assocatons of cells were formed. t fnst these were all alke and were called body or soma cells. Thus arose a multcellular anmal and plant, an aggregate of parts very loosely held together. To-day mnute water-lvng organsms of the protozoan group. such as volvox, stll sustan a relatonshp of thfc knd n the adult condton. Jnet vsble to the naked eye, these lttle spheres of lfe unts roo about n.the water through the whppng of thread-lke flagellae. n a creature of th.s knd we fnd what s known as the dvson of labor, because some of these celus whch make up the mass are set asde for one purpose alone, reproducton. They never 'do anythng else n the economy of ths household, and they are of two knds, male and female. t s not.long before we have the process of cellular dfferentaton carred very far. Certan cells contract, j others carry on feedng actvtes, others protect. Then some of them come together n groups to form ; fusclee. Ther am s to brng about progressve movement, and to that end they always work. Dfferent cell*; have as ther specfc duty the response to stmul. Nerve tssues appear. Others act n holdng and sup- The Best College Record 5- Bates Year Book To Keep lve Memores of Your College Days The 1932 "Mrror» you have not yet subscrbed for ths Year Book, you may do so at C^pr Lbrary where contracts are t avalable at the desk. 'They may also be procured from LD Pt T STL. ROBRT ^r^ SO^'. LTJ HOW. and BRNRD SPRJ^. (To be contnued l <ay's baccalaureate and last chapel addresses. Ths would tremely nterestng for any student plshed very much and were portrayed asleep on a bench. "Serentat". Horace Hamper, W8, however, relates great thngs n hs class hstory: "Darng the past year the Faculty have been accustomed to come 'to members of our class for commune together upon ye steps of ye Chapel, as t s an unseemly sght ror ye youthes and ye damsels thus to congregate and sparkle, one wth ye other. Per order. Ye Facultle". Possbly that's the reason we advce and general nformaton (seelhare such brght lghts around below), all of whch we gave as campus nowadays. Who knows? far as was not detrmental to the t the very end of ther "fne nterests of the Kv] One. tade example of lterary style" the edwhose auspces we have ths year tors of the Garnet wroe a short strven to labor". The "below" n rhytned prayer for ther work and that case meant «pcture of a Pro-! especally for themselves whch lessor holdng one student by the later experences proved had been ear whle all that could be seen o, qute a propos. wn USe n, Hn-.,.,T,, T.J!,l. e8!. (,n l. ' r, el,al ' several others were retreatng legs. "nd t all ended." Our duty s rt«m m ' v e beeu u 1 ",', ';The Freshmen of >:) sad when done.!,, submttng ths work of but Mount Holyoke, j 0,»J e rted. n. es. "^fon- uncertan mert, we ask vour ndu!- «ed. They were plannng <1all<,p! der f all ths world was made fo.-.gence. gan we say-- after the debate and wanted mc". The Sophomores Of '92, tv- Farewell' some subject whch would be suff- pca! of all that cruel, heartless cently nterestng to draw a crowd: ccordngly. the subject of the emergence of women was chosen. Who's Who" Recognzes Four of Bates Faculty fttf«dra Pm-nton, Brtan, McDonald and.. "".e' Pre*. Gray re uthors Pres. Gray ctve n Relgous Feld u..,. ^, RR1 srael, whch was publshed!l nao O,,..l?.'? l '" d '"rough the last The wrtng of fve books n ".,.,?,. " w l">* Who n mer- four years, when one has other re- t. t mght he n- gular dutes to perform, s no small terestng to do so. However, for te task beneft of those whose tme s al- One of the nterestng accomready overfull wth study preparaplshments of Professor Brtan s ton and socal functons, some of hs translaton or Spnoza's Desthe hghlghts of nterest from the cartes. Ths s a very splendd pece publcaton have been collected. or work and a standard book. He s Bates College s honored by ha na also the author ol The tlnvoply the names of four of ts faculty of Musc, thus addng one more to lsted among the emnent men of Hates' lst or authors, or whch she today n merca. Thev are- Pres- s very proud. dent Clfton Dagget Gray, 'rol Prof, McDonald s author Herbert Ronelle Purnton, Prof. Professor McDonald has wrtten Halbert Brtan, and Prof. Robert lexander Fle McDonald. Preatden Gray actve n relgon Presdent Cray, who has been publcaton he sets forth explct the executve head of Bates College and helpful provsons for the v.- snce 1«20. has been very actve, rous dffcult types or students not only n the educatonal world, whch would perforce be found n bn also n that of relgon. He s the author of a book enttled Nlamash Relgons Texts, whch was wrtten before he came to Hale- College. later book, oml on he Manh, j s n collecton of ): (Jur beloved Professor Purnton s shown to he an author of aome note. Resdes bs regular dutes as professor of Hblcal Lterature and Relgon, be has found tme to wrte fve books pertanng to hs subjects. Hs earlest was tllcjl Lteral lre, wrtten n 1923, Then came Ld-raturc of the DM Testenl, Lterature of the New Testament, chevement <>f the Master, and fnally. ehlevenen of : race, showed them t was not, but the Freshmen fare for the entre term contnued to consst o "socety receptons and eats" regardless of the Sophomores. t least. so the respectve class hstores prnted n tn (lamet nform one. t s up to the reader 'o beleve t or not dependng upon how foolsh! he feels at the tme. 'vd" gymnasum scene most humorous tea- d Carnet was the art-work. specal artcle about the artst states that be had already receved hs degree from the College or Fne rts and for four years had been studyng along the banks of the Yang-tse-Kang Rvet to get deas for the Garnet. Hs specal torte (so t sad was the portrayal Of the effects ol emotons: as llustrated n "The nspraton".' depctng the pleasures of macna- lon as found n the laces or the tour men sttng on the table and lookng l.lankh around the drt v.; rat-flled room: and n "Fns'. snowng the effects of fear and ds- may as the edtors n ther dgn- ted tall hats stalk towards the talroad staton. Hs msterp.. ; was the "vvd*' gymnasum scene Whch has been greatly admred by!,-, very nterestng book called d-j devotees of art. t s "true to lf, jslnen of School Organzaton ee and shows that the doctrnes of arous Populaton troups. n ths ].] l<>s Republc' are approachng realzaton". "Our Grls" s an especally expressve pcture of certan 8M co-eds. What beautes they bad n those days! Why Couldn't we have lved then?. huge naton lke ours. Hf gv provsons for deaf, crppled, back-1 other "of bs great ward, and unruly chldren, as well as for those who speak lttle or no Kelsh. n addton to hs regular poston as professor of ducaton, Professor McDonald has had be ex- charge of the Bates Bummer School sesson for several years. t s also nterestng 10 Mae tha all of the hooks wrtlen by these four faculty members are n the Hales Lbrary. There s al-o another Look l.y Presdent Cray, on. (!. Staples, whch was not lsted n the latest "Who's Who n nl. a'. t mght be well to become ntmately acquanted wth the contents of some of these, or at least (0 know that there are some note-1true"lofrtr worthy authors among our faculty. works was "Ye lumnus", a port ral of an old gentleman holdng two souawhngj babes, prseuaaahl} twns. Hs later productons are mtatons ot photographs; one s of very nlra.'- machne for makng frankfnrts and,.., reversng the lever, tor makng bash, from wl..l cam. the "ugon/. np mew of cal and lerled : <.;. ol dog" on workng days; he other s ot ; football scrmmage n whch the players wrestle wth each ether. fter the publcaton of the (lan'- the artst ntended to retre to a monastery for sx months to prepare for. the followng Garnet whch', however, ddn't follow. The Passng of nna" l>>.e. sad Devo.-d fnehl Was a noetc descrpton of the crematon Of "nna" wjlh "fttng" llustratons. The crematon bad taken plaee on the lop of ML Davd as the lrst a. n, the drama:, the rt Masterpece n Qarnet Dspleased 1890 tacuty» -" M»J»W 9 U-j J J ~1 OZ~W a" 1 1, second had Botn the couruoom * w -^v * aawaa-nww^ ;.,,, prgaftent Cheney n che-yttdgea-f _. *-»* r Z ' char. The sentence was deferred rcturt Uf Young- Lades Of ssorted Szes n ; ""> * penalty has not >,., been Gym Suts nd Usng Dumb-bells Caused Bannng- Of Publcaton By C t'rotkktt marne! n exclusve Bates publcaton banned' Yet, that's what happened to the second ssue of the Carnet secretly prepared and publshed by four members of the Class of 1S90. Copes of t appeared on campus one Frday afternoon, the same afternoon, by some queer concdence, that four members of the senor class mysterously dsappeared untl the followng Monday T*4e Ot?»felNL realzed that even such" constructve crtcsm as thers was more or less doomed before t was gven and Snce they themselves were not perfect (magne ther admttng t! ther crtcsm would probablv be taken wth a sran of salt. ( wonder how they felt when t was taken to the furnace). The Faculty of 1890 conssted of only sxteen nstructors, a man and a woman doctor, and four sym d- p m moruun when they were called be-1 vson leftdswa, lore the Faculty. W. F. (arcelon n Professors act n hs ntroducton to the bound copy! Regstrar. TC Be 0W>p wth two of the as Lbraran and now n the Coram Lbrary, the only Senors wore tall hats copy n jyusencc at the present Freshmen don't seem to change tme, by "he way, speaks of ths, at all. ven the Class of 1S90 n "vst" as qute entertanng: "f- j whch there were only forty-two of tor serous reprmands from the them, altogether had as ts man at- Presdent and more or lean mental ( trbutes (accordng to he Class of angush the edtors, then Senors, 1890, of course), "Greenness, were allowed to reman n Col-! Freshness. Hayseed, Concet, Bashlege". ll tha fuss over one pc- fulness, and Beauty" of wh.-h lure! For t s supposedly upon the Beauty alone survved as the nr?- slngle sketch of he Cynscaus domnatng feature of the class ae- Club that the suppresson was cause of water poured from wnba.-ed. Ths sketch. spoken of aa dows, a baseball vctory over the "suggested from a bas-relef n Sophomores, the "dscolorng off a thens executed by Phdas, the few vsonary organs", and tlugreat Grecan artst" s smply a "swellng of several proboscdes" pcure of young ladles of assorted caused by the then tradtonal "Hat KZOS n gym suts (especally bloo- Rush". The "Hat" waa qute a mers) stuated n varous fantastc thng n those days; the taller the. postons usng dumb-bells, weghts,; hat the more "collegate" you were, "u rngs and punchng bags. ; The evoluton of the hat was mse The Garnet was publshed by; mportant than Darwn'a theory» "We-L'ns for You-Uns" and ded- would have been. Freshmen wore cut-d to " vr Future Sweethearts, flat, squashed-n hats: the Soafeeu BtcpaUou of our Weddng mores' were slghtly hgher bu» Tours". Those lour Senors certan- stll had that squashen-n look ~y were {.ptbjstel Tagy prep, statr: whch the Junors elmnated wthes) n the BtrodttCtorj' e'dtpral that out addng any more heght, hgwr the "gentle, just, an <l HJndly crtc- ever; and" then, at the heghts ef sm" n the Garnet was for the. gnorance, the Senors appeared ole purpose of mprovng the Col-' wth tall, straght, dgnfed "Hata". lege, ts students, and faculty. The; Cupd had beep the dol o[ the edtors sad that of course, they-class of '91 so ney had not accom- exacted but the Sophomores wev exhorted to hold no move t bural servces tor "nna Lytlcs". 'll" U.n.-ton bv faculty n 1890 the co-eds were just begnnng to be notced so that ths proclamaton was (perhaps) ssued bj the Faculty: "Ye youthes and ye madens of ye college shall nether st nor School of Nursng o/yale Unversty Professon for lh» College Woman 1 nterested n the modern, scentfc * agences of socal servce. The thrty months course, provnf an ntensve and vared experenc* through the < a v study method, leads to the degree ot BCHLOR OF NURSNG Present student body ncludes graduates of leadng coueges. Two or more years of approved college work requred for admsson. few scholarshps avalable for students wth advanced qualfcatons. for catalog and nformaton address: ^ The Dean The SCHOOL o NURSNG of * YL UNRSTY KW HN CONNCTCUT. ~ 1 Nous nvtons les Ltul.ms du Francas au College Bates a s'abonncr au Journal Francas * <*. * * * L MSSGR De Lewston % Taux Specal: $1.50 pour d'c a la 'w de l'annee «coare * 0* The oldest unversty n contnental Kurope s the 'nversty of 'ava. founded by the son of Charlemagne n MB. Frocks for D; PG Women's Banquet Tomorrow Nght The Women's thletc oocaton wll hold t>-' annual banquet n Fdke Dnng M Jnnnary 14. The dnng room wll he artstcally decorated n a color scheme of green and whte lnts Thorpe. Clyde HoMbronk and Norman DeMajco wll furnsh musc durng the evenng. mly Fnn wll act as -towrt-mterress for th' evenng and toa-sts w.ll be Rven by Jtl- Ma BrggH. Thelma Kttredge, rlene Skllns and Grare Gearng. n nvocaton fe to be offe-ed by Presdent Gray. John Davd wll play a flute solo'. Presdent and Mrs. Gray. Dean.Clark. Ms.- Kathlene Sanders, and Professor Wahsley are to be guest* «te- hathtuet. ( T M QNPPY * K N 3 PORTS W R CKFFON (JOTHS FOH MN clurg- ccount Serv.-o Lsbon St., COR.TLL, 'S Lewlston. Mane. Hecker-Franson Needlecraft Shop W SPCLZ N Lades' Furnshng Gfts rt Needlework nstructons rre«79 LSBON ST., LWSTON, MN. Say t wth lee Cream QORQ. ROSS Bales 1904 LM STRT C D M Y t 'o lenls of FRST NTONL BNK LWSTON Man Street CTLOGS YR BOOKS PROGRMS NNOUNCMNTS Rp..l.t... be!'..hclm : Merrll & Webber Co. rnters C o L L G Paper Rulers r...t.kl.n(les Offce and Plant 9S-99.MN STBttBT, CBUBN, MK. FLOORS OF MODRN Kyt'l'MF.NT) QO,. TURQON & CO. gents for the beautful Gruen Watches DMONDS - - WTCHS 80 LSBON STRT. LWSTON MN. TTNTON, S T 1" J) NTS! xcel CLNRS ND DYRS 10% Dscount to ll Bales Students romphmetr nf New Method Dye Works Baal Carpentrr 11 Wfst 'ark.t Cl.C and PB 3S9NG TL. 3C20 MOST COMPLT ND UP-TO-HTr. Luggage Store ast of Boston Fogg's Leather Store 123 T.-l MN ST., LWSTON. MN Upholstery Draperes, Wndow Shades J. K. CMPBLL '17, SaUll.e ^172 Bltaet.KWlHTo.N For GOOD CLOTHS and FURNSHNGS WHLR CLOTHNG CO. Cor. MN and MDDL STS. Specal tlteout jven to colleje studans. G. LN, Mgr. Sates. '2s DSTNCT fhlotog^phy m/tft Studenf HRRTL PLUMMR TnF. BST N TOWN TOR WOMN' ND MN HLL, The Barber CHS HLL Two l«>st Places To Kat at BLL WHT'S and Home Steaks, Chops and Hous Made pm lt Spurt K'e»s,y Ral.an U'1,;1«: Y.u at Bates Street, Lewlstsa, Malas. CRONN & ROOT SLL GOOD CLOTHS 140 LSSOM STRT. LWSTON /. d

5 1 p.,» + prf FOUR, TT BTS STUDNT. WDNSDY. JNURY ?: f'* SPORTS y^ l for ll' 1 lyng score. Bales bad a decded advantage from then, but; Bates and Colby could not score. Garnet Gets 3-2 oletle Stan By THOMS MCSGBB n le overtme olette. a form- Open Seres Wth er Bates student, ganed a good Hockey Wn Over l the end of a week's tranng n deal of respect for hs fne work n the wnter campagn tha ncludes le net. and the Garnet forward n: : competton wth Mane and 1 Deadlock Set-to lne for ts offensve power n pep-, Portland Outft relay rac - al the B.. games and terng hm contnually. Ray Mcwhere, Coach, Kay Thompson Clusky crcled the net twce. und ; took n account of stock of some of CraCk Wlto^ C r. nl. n Thrd " '«! to slp"the puck past ts guard- f.. f, r.[ r, n. flamo Fvhlltx' "'" l"^k,< Monday after- + Frequent Practce Meets for ndoor Track Work-Outs Several eterans Left Coach Plans Mle Relav Team WnleS OCOre mnu jn. d j^ M ' ul. ply Bearly S.. Upenng uane lulb noo, M,,. srtb, He began a system Perod Tes Hockey ncounter prsed hm Wth a vcous drve, but le survved the perod, although be had to smother the puck no less Good Play McCluskej s Outstandng- than fve tmes. Colby scored n the frst perod T Garnet bockej team pre ol when 1'omerleau snared a loos* d of the l932 season agantsl By THOMS Ml St.ltK puck after a Bates sally and raced the Portland thletc Olub and up the ce. Trapped n a corner by emerged the wnner. 3-2, n a rough Ben Whte's spectacular goal Soba he passed out to Wlson who. and tumble encounter al the arena. wth only four mnutes to plav standng uncovered lve feet n Both teams were pretty gave a determned Bates sextet a front of the net. easly beat Plynn. matched and dsplayed fne brand 1-1 deadlock wth a smart Colby Condtons bad ol bockej for so earl3 n the team n a game tha wear to over- The bad condtons prevented ef- and wth comparatvely lttle practme at St. bora a rena last Sa- fectve team play by Bates, but a tce. t tmes [>ny was very slow on turday afternoon and opened the fne Forward lne was mpressve account of the poor condton of the State champonshp race. Boor ce and the defense was partcularly tee whch allowed verj lttle st < covered by water and slush slowed strong wth Flynn, Soba, and Whte, handlng. up the play, but added roughness to who s also a slashng scorng Joe Murphy, stellar center for a game that was marked by clean, threat. Hates, played a Bae game usng bs hard body contact, and dd not n The Watervlle men bustled stck wth a dexterty and -kll whch the least detract from 'he One throughout, but could not duplcate (popped man;, ol the vstor's attacks. play of the btterly fought encoun-j the aggressve play of the Bobcat Dck Secor and Captan Ray M< ter. Pomerleau who played so well late n the game. Wlson and Po- key both played. ly wll for Colby n the early stages was merleau were outstandng. forced to retre n the second perod) The summary: by a severe cut on hs nose that requred several Sttches at the hosptal. Startng fast, Colby forced the play for the frst few mnutes and scored early. The Mates team, prodded to acton, carred the attack to tbe Colby no:. Ther efforts were futle and the vstor's narrow lead looked more and more lke the wnnng margn when the Colby forwards started up the ce agan late n the thrd perod. The veteran Whte poke-checked the puck and rushed down the center. He shot from just nsde the blue lne as he came to the defense, and the shot, less powerful than hs prevous attempts, eluded Bob oletle Bates Lneup Ray Mddusky, Ralph McClusky. 1. w. Murphy. Swett c. c. Secor, Hugg r. w. Whte 1. d. Soba. d. Flynn g. Colby lneup Robtale, MacDonald r. w. Pomerleau. Wlson, c. c. Brogdon, Wlson.. w. Hlton r. d. Hucke 1. d. olette g. Frst perod Colby Wlson Pass from lean) Penaltes none ' * Pom t McOluskey scorng two goals n the fnal perod to wn the game. Frank Flynn solved me Of Coarl Cel'.y'.s bg problems by bs fln< play n front of the nets, and ths tm kj Junor showed promse of beng one nf the best goalk n be bate. Second perod No scorng Penaltes Hlton. McClusky Thrd perod Bales Whle ' unasssted Penaltes Soba Overtme N'o scornc Penaltes none Referee. Smpson (. S. D.). Umpre, Cutter H. v C. Tme 3-15 mnute perods and."> mnute overtme. SZ Rv " :.;. ' *' --. s wh b he ntend.- to nsttute ths ol conductng frequent practce tha serve as a compettve workout for the regular performers and requre greater effort and thus ad the development of the others.., res of relay races were the order wth team runnng both one and two mles. Wth no desre for balanced teams the coach mxed the men ndtscrmlnanfly and was ed- wth the results. Not n the best of shape due to the short tme out the men dd nol try for tme, but two mle squad of several men stood ut. He of the smooth strde. rnold dams, of last year's fne two nrtle team and the medley that forced Penn to new world fgures. has jumped back to the half and 1* ea ly for a One season. Norman Cole was only a few seconds over two early season tme. Wth the Penn relay champons two years ago and last year'.; welllled two mle quartet, he s a ran Captan Norman Whten found the drop to the short dstance none too hard and wll double wth the two mle. Clayton Hall, a junor, who ran some good rates last year gave ndcatons that he wll run a good half. Russell Jell- son. the former Northeastern str-r. who s well known around the bg 'M for he two mle ablty. found the half to he lkng. Hs experence wfll help hm a good.leal. John My and Donald Smth, a phomore, also earned places. Law two mnutes n a dual meet lasl sprng and Smth ran 8 Strong leg on the freshman two ml e team n the New BnglandS. Others mak- r { M' -4«^==a l S :/ hsm *wg: M r Copr.. 1*12. Th* n-ncaa Tobctw Co. M Ml = PCBBD UP SJMUNQ *Pb Montgomery hn*m?»n «n ron worker, deck hand, ralroad mechanc nnd a boo^d-al nxlrn n Hollywood... He oom«h to the lop n nose-reels because the gol* were cuh-rozy over h* grn... nd they'll go completely zeoey whn they see hm n h* lare«r M-G-M, 'TRT LS"... He's stuck to UCKS these last 7 years... Not a buffalo nckel was pad for hs statement... He gave t just for a pleasant "Thank You.'' ** uw? /Q*f. > ro Slfe. There are no better cgarettes "1 have always used LUCK1S as far as am concerned there are no better cgarettes congratulatons also on your mproved Cellophane wrapper wth that lttle tah that opens your package so easly.".- TT PJC3TUU>'T - "t's toasted" Your Throct Protecton cgonst rrtaton aganst cough ;»v. M* Mosture-Proof Cellophane Keeps that "Toasted" Flavor ver Fratth TUN N ON LUCKY $TRRB 60 mod~ mfettef wth tke world's fnest dance orchestras and Waller Wnched, whosegossp of today becomes the news of totnorrous every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evenng over N. B. C. networks. ft g the squad are the freshman Hammond, a newcomer to track. Clarence Sampson. '32. Butle and vmren. '34. and Molloy and Barney Olds. '35. Molloy wll probably be used only n the mle run. vanty m'le team la unlkely ae the matenaj docs not justfy t. Plans mle team Wth sx fne quarter mlers, Coach Thompson has plans for a mle team. Ther performances ndcate t wll rank wth the beet. team to le sent to the B... must he sfted from the followng men; d Terney who ran here two years ato wth the Brooklyn Y team, and who bee the O. K. of Max Wakely. a former captan here. Frank Pondleton. Bll Prcher. who ba«run a 300 u 35 seconds ths year. unnally. a New York team-mate of Terney, Bernard Sherdan, who led Monday hy a wde margn n fast lme, and Harry O'Connor. The men wll le gven ther frst real test aganst Deerng Hgh Saturday n a dual meet.. ;o:- arsty Club ntates New Bates Lettermen The ntal on to the arsty Club was held Monday nght, December 13, n tbe lumn gymnasum. The members of the Student body to receve tbe admontons of the paddles were: Waldo Clapp '32, Paul Brogg '32, Robert LaBoyteaux '32, ugene Jakanosk '32, Mashe Lghtman '32, Charles Wng '32. Dana Wllams '32. Frankln Maybury 32. Bernard Sprafke '32, rnold dams "33, Bertram ntne '33, James demons '33. John Dobravolsky "88. Walter Kng '33, John Lary '33. Samuel Scolnk '33, Frankln Wood '33. John Hall '34. Russell.lellson "84, Howard aflllett '34. Joseph Murphy "34, Lous Meager '31. Francs Soba '34, Rchard Secor '35. Charles Toomey "34. -;o: Buffalo Conference Contnued from page 1 ndcatve of the broadness of the new concepton of the mssonary program, whch ncludes not ODly the old emphass of foregu mssons, hut also the task of Chrstanzng the homeland and of establshng rght relatons between the natons of the earth. The man sessons of the conventon wore organzed about four dvsons of the general theme: 1. crtcal analyss of the world today. 2. ffectve mssons n the. world today..'!. Dsarmament. 4. Mssons of the lulurc. Krby Page spoke on ' Humanty Uprooted". declarng the great dangers n the presentday world to be the contrast between pl-nly and poverty, the menaoe " class war, the race between war and peace, and the apparent mpotence of governments n dealng wth the stuatons wth whch lny are taced. Hs address was a all for thnkng students to -res- pond " "' 1 challenge to make a better wjorw. Dr. T. Z. Koo. ol Chna, and Dr. Oscar M. Buck, of Drew Semnary, also gavo ther nterpretaton of the world today n ts relaton to the mssonary enterprse. Other outstandng speaker^ were: D. D. T. Jabavu, a natve leader of South frca, who spoke llumnatngly on the great achcv'nls ol" mssons on that contnent. Dr. John. MacKey, who descrbed the outlook for mssons n Latn merca: Dr. Paul Harrson, of raba: Ralph Barlow, who delvered ; vgorous attack on war and offered some concrete sugge?- lons a3 to how to promote world peace; Dr. James ndcott. whose message was permeated hy a profound sense of humor; and Dr. Waller Judd. a young mssonary from Chna, who brought back wth hm thrllng tales of servce, adventure, and herosm. Dr. John R. Mott. one of the orgnators of the Student olunteer Movement, addressed the conventon on "Mssons of the future", expressng conldee n the present generaton, dscussng the magntude of the task, and pontng out what he fell to be the problems "demandng our best bran power and concentraton." Dr. Robert. Speer brought the seres of addresses to a close. Takng as hs subject the conventon theme, "The lvng Chrst n the world of today", he character/-d the world as "un-chrstlke", but showed how the sprt of the lvng Chrst s workng everywhere thru Hs followers, n order to brng the kngdom of rghteousness upon the earth. Round Table s Feature One of the nterestng features of the conventon was the "Round Table". The delegates were gven ther choce as to whch of about 30 topcs they would lke to dscuss, and each was assgned to a group whch consdered that topc for four sessons. The range of subjects was broad, able leaders were n charge of the groups, and the opportunty of thnkng thru these problems was of mutual beneft. The varous afternoon actvtes, ncludng a grppng pageant, a oneact play, denomnatonal teas, all contrbuted to the value of the conventon. The student olunteer Movement hogan n 1886 wth a small group of college students who pledged themselves to become foregn mssonares. From that nucleus has grown- the present enterprse wth ts vast nfluence thruou-t the world. ts man objectves: 1. "To provde and carry out an adequate program of mssonary educaton." 2. "To challenge Chrstan students to choose ther vocatoas n lne wth the purpose of God n the lfe of the world and the wll of God for ther own lves". 3. "To recrut from among students well-qualfed men and women for Chrstan servce abroad". 4. "To relate such recruts to the varous mssonary sendng agences." 5. "To provde a fellowshp desgned to crystallse mssonary nterest nto an ever deepenng convcton whch wll fnd expresson ether n servce abroad or n ntellgent nterest n and support of the sssccs-y e-- ;er3t=.- CHNY GRLS' OPN HOUS S SUCCSS Cheney Hotkse co-eds gave the men an anual "break" last Thursday nght when they had open house. The charman of the commttee WBB 'Jda Osano, "!3. and oler commttee members were: erna Brackett '3 1. refreshments, Ruth Johnson "t. chaperones. and rgna Lews '33, musc. The frst hour was spent n gong about the house and the rest of the j evenng was devoted to dancng and' brdge n the Rand Hall gym where jome of Gl Clapperton' orchestral furnshed the musc. specal fea-: ture was a balloon elmnaton dan-j co. Those attendng the open house affar were: Chaperones: Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Thompson. Professor Waumaloy, and Dr. Wrght. Dean Clark and Mss Metealfe were specal j guests. The others present were: ; C'-leste Carver. Mldred Mover. Constance Conanl. rgna Lewe, Norma Hnds. du Osano, rgna M,- ally. lce Heller. Margaret Hoxe. Dorothy Kmball. Thelna Kng, erna Brackett. Ruth Johnson, Ruth Good Clothng Good Furnshng POPULR PRCS Haskell & Hopkns 27 LSBON STRT SRLL LUNCH 11 Bates St. Geo. Scln.!! The Blue Lne r,owlstou B'Dford Farmng ton l.ew-on 7.45 M.. 12.:t."> P.M P.M. tnforl 7.35.M., P.M., 4.15 P.M - ;"rn^tol 7.30.M, P.M 'M STNDRD TM Fred C. McKenney + Gl Sablls Street CTH ork : QSOUNB and LUBRCTNG OLS WSHNG.-.nl GRSTNG Ne.n-e.- Gasolne Staton to OOPP. Frv? Helen Dean, Marjor Matrjore Red. Ruth Bowm Jru.lc Dggery, Mlleen Bage, rjjj" rlson. Rose Galnar. PraoS Webb. Mran Dggery. Thesm. p 0 Jn. Deborah Thompson, M* Chck. Olve Grover. lbert o-,- e. George Drscoll. George T,,- n ' Frank O'NOll, Russell Lynch. u 0n -,j Smth. Walter Rauto. Kenneth Wood. Rchard Stetson. Paul «, eons, Robert Kramer. ncent K, v Merrll Rchardson, John an K,,',' Gorden Jones. Norman Grefn. al ; M rrtu, -Clfford Jordan..v. nur. Thorpe. Dana Wllam's. Bruce p tson. Mlton Lndholm. John > ly, Harold O'Conner. Charles 'n-. Robert Carter. Norman Ra-nv Lloyd George. The Preach government 1;, gven francs to Harvard to be used n "strengthenng. frendshp between ths countrj and France by spreadng knowledg. of the French language." OT TOSTD SNDWCHS Psty and Hot C"Tcn nt our fountan Jordan's Drug Store ON TH CONK 51 COLLG STRT Wo can show you a vared selecton ol PRZ FOUNTN CUPS PNS of all standard malta LDS' SLK UMBRLLS LDS' LTHR HNDBGS LTHR BLLFOLDS BOOK CLOCKS NDS BRNSTON^SGOOD COMPNY Jewelers 60 LSBON STRT tacwlsrott, Mnlm TH COLLG STOR LWYS WLCOM JGSKfl FLNDRS (llege Men pprecate Our Clothes COURT STPTW Ml BURN. MJ.N; RUBBR and OL CLOTHNG and all knds of Canvas and Rubber Footwear LWS! ON RUBBR COMPNY LLWSTON tlnt ' GU! - ' Unraatn NSURD CBS j UGUST..j. srael Wnner T CLL 4040 T M Hour Servce Tor Real Courteous Servce 2S Cents Local Rale UNON SQUR T CO., 171 Man Street LWSTON MN Brng Your Flms To Us For Developng and Fnshng HOUR ;; R 1 C "THL QULTY SHOP" 3 Mnutes from the Campus W POPLS SHO SHOP Tho Muccasn Hou,e 33 SBTTUS STRT - lfclr N HGH QRD HO C TBNN8 SHOS ND.'BBM SHOS KrtlRD ND RCONDTOND Tn LOOK LK NJ3W RW CT RK Mstered Druggst»' lj ll p r e Drugs and Modtcnes PRSCRPTONS K'CLTY lso, POO CHOCOLTS Corner Bates und Man Street LWSTON. MN " Complete Bankng Servce" Lewston Trust Company Lewston, Mane We Solct the Busness of Bates Students Complments of J. W. Whte Co. GOOGN FOL CO COL and WOOD LWSTON MONUMNTL WORKS RTSTC MMORLS James r. Murphy Co. 6 to 10 Bates St., LWSTON. Telephone 4634-R Lewston Shoe Hosptul 7 SBTTUS ST. We Specalze n RPRNG LOTUS SHOS 1801 Phones Bates Street 67 lm Street j :-.t, Plotka and H.'d.: LWSZOS TJSTT 11 Rogex. Ulams + /

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