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1 Wellesley College Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve The Wellesley News Archves The Wellesley News ( ) Wellesley College Follow ths and addtonal works at: Recommended Ctaton Wellesley College, "The Wellesley News ( )" (1939). The Wellesley News. Book Ths s brought to you for free and open access by the Archves at Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve. t has been accepted for ncluson n The Wellesley News by an authorzed admnstrator of Wellesley College Dgtal Scholarshp and Archve. For more nformaton, please contact r@wellesley.edu.

2 mergency n sponsored Wellesley College Wellesley College Lbrary toelkde olkat XLV Z311 WELLESLEY, MASS., NOVEMBER 23, 1939 No. 9 Dplomat To Dscvss Her Experences Sra. de Palenca to Speak On Place of Women n Foregn Servces Senora sabel 0. de Palenca, one of the three women dplomats n the world's captals today, wll speak n Pendleton Hall, November 24, at 7:30 p.m., on "Women n Dplomacy." Gvng a general descrpton of the poston women hold n modern dplomacy, Senora de Palenca wll tell how she herself became a dplomat. Senora de Palenca names Mrs. Harrman n Sweden and Madame Kollantay n Moscow as the other two women dplomats n Europe's captals. Senora de Palenca was Mnster to Sweden and Fnland after she left Span when the Cvl War broke out there. She was also a delegate to the League of Natons. When she leaves Wellesley, December 1, Senora de Palenca wll return to New York. She plans to spend Chrstmas n Mexco, and wll return n January to speak at Smth. Alter that, she wll tour the South and Mddle West, speakng at several colleges and unverstes. Senora de Palenca s just fnshng a book, The Woman Dplomat, descrbng her lfe n Stockholm and Sweden, whch she expects to publsh sometme n the sprng. Lecturer to Talk On Poltcal, Economc Aspects of Autarchy Dr. Mchael A. Helpern, nternatonally known economst, wll dscuss the "Economc and Poltcal Aspects of Autarchy," December 4 at 4:40 p.m. n Pendleton Hall. The Departments of Hstory, Poltcal Scence, and Economcs are jontly sponsorng the lecture. Dr. Helpern was Vstng Lecturer n Economcs durng the sprng semester of 1939 at the Unversty of Calforna at Berkeley. Durng the past summer he acted as expert to the 12th Sesson of the nternatonal Studes Conference at Bergen, Norway. He was also Professor at the Academe du Drot nternatonal at the Hague, where he gave a course on "Collectve Securty and nternatonal Economc Cooperaton." Before comng to the Unted States ths year, Dr. Helpern was Assstant Professor n nternatonal Economc Relatons at the Graduate nsttute of nternatonal Studes n Geneva. He had prevously been a Fellow of the Rockefeller Foundaton here. Dr. Helpern s author of three books and numerous pamphlets on nternatonal monetary problems. College Regrets Death Of Mr. Rchard Tatlam Members of the college extend ther sympathy to the famly of Mr. Rchard Tatham, Tower Court Chef who ded of a heart attack n hs home on Hanly road, Wellesley, November 15, about noon. Mr. Tatham had served the college loyally for ten years prevous to hs death, frst as Assstant Chef, and then as Head Chef at Tower Court. He always took great prde n hs work and was one of the most dependable members of the staff. Rders Wll Show Skll At A. A. Show n Weston The Athletc Assocaton Horse Show wll take place Saturday, December 2 from 8-11:30 p.m. at the Weston Saddle and Brdle Club. Students and ther guests are nvted to attend. Those who wsh transportaton should sgn up on the Rdng Board n Founders Hall. Mr. Rce to Vew Mental Readness For Marred Lfe Consderng the "Psychologcal Preparaton for Marrage," Ots R. Rce wll be the thrd speaker n the seres of marrage lectures for Senors, Monday afternoon, November 27, at 4:40 n Pendleton Hall. Mr. Rce s an experenced lecturer and worker wth psychologcal problems, as well as beng especally nterested n the feld of gudance before marrage. He s Rector of a church n rvngtonon-hudson, teacher of Psychatry at General Theologcal Semnary n New York, and a member of the Psychatrc staff at St. Luke's Hosptal. Mr. Rce has studed n Germany under the famed psychologst and psychoanalst, Jung. There wll be a dscusson n Munger after dnner for those who wsh to ask Mr. Rce further questons. Dr. Menolph L. Kappus of Boston wll gve the fourth n the seres of marrage lectures for Senors on problems of prenatal care Wednesday, December 6, at 4:40 p.m. n Pendleton Hall. Concert Wll Feature Wellesley Orchestra And Campus Solosts Wth Professor Joseph Haroutunan and Maron Gbby '41 as solosts, the Wellesley College Orchestra wll present ther fall concert n Alumnae Hall, December 6, at 8:15 p. m. Mr. Haroutunan wll sng two selectons from 18th century opera, a "patter" song from The Town-Barber by Schenk and an ara from Handel's Acs and Galatea. Mss Gbby s to perform the Bach voln concerto n E- major. Drected by Mr. Malcolm H. Holmes, the orchestra wll demonstrate both serous and humorous phases of nstrumental musc. The more serous porton of the program wll nclude the Overture to l he Seed Marrage by Domenco Cmarosa, and a sute of old Englsh dances enttled Caprol whch have been set to a background of modern harmony by Peter Warlock. A satrc composton by Mozart called A Muscal Joke wll carry out the lghter sde of the program. n ths work Mozart pokes fun at the poor composers of hs day. The musc contans the trtest tunes he could conceve, an absurd fugue, and concludes n four dfferent keys smultaneously, a real nnovaton for the 18th century. Wellesley Approves Yale Anxous To Appear at Dance The reputaton of all-college dances has even reached New Haven! News s the recpent of a unque petton from twentyfve members of the Yale Unversty band. "Mesdames: "Whereas, we the undersgned, members of the Yale Unversty Band, wll be n the vcnty of Wellesley the evenng of the Yale- Harvard game; whereas, Yale men weep for Wellesley women; whereas, no Wellesley grl should date a Harvard man (?) when she can get a Yale man at no extra cost; whereas, we, the undersgned, are models of Yale perfecton (guaranteed no wolves); resolved therefore, that the Wellesley College News should support a movement to have us, the undersgned, nvted to the Wellesley All College Dance." The letter has been passed on to the all-college dance commttee. For further detals see the All College Dance. Lecturer Surveys Germany n Crss Mss Louse Holborn, nstructor n the Department of Hstory, wll dscuss Germany's part n the present European crss from a hstorcal pont of vew December 5. n Pendleton Hall at 4:40 p. m. The lecture wll be the next n the seres on the hstorcal and poltcal background of the European War whch the Department of Hstory and Poltcal Scence s presentng n conjuncton wth Forum. New Members Wll Jon Eta of Ph Beta Kappa Newly elected members of the Eta of Massachusetts Chapter of Ph Beta Kappa wll be ntated at the Presdent's House, November 27, at 8:30 p.m. After the ntaton ceremony, whch s to follow dnner at Oakwoods wth Dean Wlson at 6:30 p.m., the ntates wll receve ther keys. Mss Helen French, Professor of Chemstry, wll be the speaker of the evenng. The ntates from the class of 1940 are: Carolyn Elley, Marlyn Evans, Margaret Glkey, Natale Grow, Carol Lews, Jeanette Lowe, Lucle Sheppard, Susan Swartz, Constance Tuttle, and Nancy Wate. Thanksgvngs Despte Havoc Throughout Amerca By Elsabeth Green nvestgatng a report from relable Washngton sources that the Unted States Government was plannng to change Chrstmas from December 25 to March 25 n order to releve the pressure before New Year's Day and acheve a more symmetrcal arrangement of natonal holdays, the News found the rumor substantally untrue. Enough havoc, however, has been wrought by the presdental decree mprovng on the date set by the Plgrm fathers for the celebraton of Thanksgvng ths year. Turkeys whch were not scheduled for ther prme tll November 30 wll have to be consumed November 23. Calendars have had to be scrapped except for those of one chmed Texas frm who ht the rght date through a prnter's error. Thanksgvng Day football games rrevocably slated for the thrteth wll become mere Thursday afternoon workouts, mnus cheerng crowds of Thanksgvng revelers. Stern college professors, plottng quzzes to styme cuts for Thanksgvng weekends n New York, have been unkndly thwarted. Worse than all ths, though, there has been a defnte breach between those states rejectng the decree and those crassly acceptng t. Massachusetts, wth ts Plgrm background, had no choce but to clng to tradton. Mane (as Mane goes, so goes the naton) n ts conservatve way, also rejected the plan. Ths state expressed ts sentments n a movng declaraton by Governor Lews Barrows, mentonng Washngton, Lncoln, and other assorted heroes, and mplyng that to shft ths holday up a week was to shak. ously the foundaton of freedom and democracy. The Wellesley atttude towards the dual holday s on the whole heartly approvng. One belle can now work two Thanksgvng dances nto her datebook. The general femnne hope, wstfully but unversally expressed, s that now we have two Thanksgvngs, the next step wll be that's rght two Clrstmases! Mr. Magoun Talks On Progress Of Psychology Taste Professor F. Alexander Magoun of M.. T. wll dscuss the development of "condtonng" n chldren and anmals durng a lecture sponsored by the Psychology Department, Frday, November 24, at 4:40 p.m. n Alumnae Hall. Professor Magoun wll llustrate hs lecture wth flms taken n Russa whch deal wth the experments of Pavlov and other wellknown scentsts. The moves wll demonstrate the reactons of monkeys and dogs to mechancal stmul such as a bell and a metronome. The capactes for learnng of normal chldren contrasted wth dots wll also be explaned. Professor Magoun s to brng wth hm a machne known as "the cogtatng cogwheel" whch shows how condtonng s a mechancal process, snce ths machne may be taught the same sort of thngs as one may teach to anmals. Professor Magoun, who spoke at Wellesley last year n connecton wth the marrage course offered to Senors, s a lecturer on humancs at the Massachusetts nsttute of Technology. November Pledges Swell Total of Servce Fund Drve of '39-'40 Season Reports on the results of the Servce Fund Drve for the year of reveal that up to November 18 a number of addtonal pledges have come n, rasng the total for the year almost to the level of last year's fund. Present statstcs for ths year show that 1307 pledges have been receved for the amount of $8,561.68, of whch 3, has been pad n cash. Of these pledges, 1131 are students, and 180 members of the faculty. The correspondng fgures for last year arc 1359 pledge: totalng $8,961.80, of whch 1170 were students, and 189 faculty. Last year's average pledge was $6.59 and ths year's s $6.55. Contrbutng to rase ths average has been the fact that Servce Fund has had more hgh student pledges ths year, some over $20, and others up to the amount of $50. Forty-three contrbutors to Servce Fund avaled themselves of the opportuntes to ndcate preferences concernng the cause to whch ther rnoney should go. 21 wsh ther pledges to go towards relef n Europe. 10 specfed the cause of Amercan nsttutons. 6 persons desred ther money to go towards German and Jewsh refugees, four asked that thers go towards emergency relef n Chna, and two for educatonal work n Chna and nda, respectvely. '43 Wll Meet to Elect Major Class Offcals The class of 1943 wll hold an mportant meetng today for the purpose of electng major offcers for the comng year, at 3:40 p.m. n Pendleton Hall. The Class Presdent, the Freshman Member of Senate, and the Freshman Member of Court wll be announced on the steps outsde the Sophomore Transept, followng a shortened chapel servce Frday mornng, November 24. Dr. Glkey Wll Lead C. A. Sunday Vespers Dr. Charles W. Glkey of the Unversty of Chcago wll speak at a vesper servce ths Sunday, November 26. Vespers wll be at 7:30 p.m. n Ph Sgma. Artsts Wll Perform n Dual Rectal Messrs. Busrh and Serkn Jon to Play Sonatas At Second Concert The second concet n the Well -t -v College Concert Seres wll present Adolph Busch, volnst, and Rudolph Serkn, panst, n a jont rectal at Alumnae Hall, Thursday, November 23, at 8:30 p. m. The program ncludees Beethoven's Sonata m C mnor. Opus 30, number J; Brahm'.- S-maln n D major; Bach's Partta '"< / ' major for voln alone, Schumann's Varatons, Opus 1, on the name Abegg, and Mendelssohn's Rondo Caprccoso, Opus l',. The latter two numbers wll he pano solos. Bdsch, founder of the Busch Quartet, s : nalve of Segen, Westphala, and studed musc <> Cologne Conservatory, le became head of the voln departmenl al the Berln Hochschule tn Musk and later, n 1922, drecto of the conservatory. He s well-known, not only as a voln solost, but also as composer, havng wrtten vom and pano concert, songs, chamber musc, and orchestra compostons. Serkn, who s Mr. Busch 's sonn-law, was born of Russan parents n Czechoslovaka. He made hs debut wth the Venna Symphony Orchestra at the age of twelve, but studed for several years after that before undertakng a formal career. For the past few ;ears these two artsts have appeared before European audences, but not untl last season dd Amercan audences hear the renowned jont concerts. Red Cross Drve Totals for Students, faculty, and admnstraton contrbuted a total of $ to the Amercan Red Cross ths year, an ncrease of $80.92 over last year. The varous hou es gave the followng amounts: Beebe, $41.45; Cazenove, $44; Pomeroy, $46.40; Shafer, $54.45; Munger, $46.15; Norumbeu-a, $30.80; Severance, $54.85; Tower, $87.17; Clafln, $5:5.40; Stone, ' $48.25; Davs, $30.01; Dower. $23.50; Homestead, $29.97; Elot, $35.50; Elms, $9.40; Noanett, $56.75; Lttle, $21.70; Washngton, $34.83; Crofton, $8.50; Fske, $11. Commuters contrbuted $4.20, and Faculty and Admnstraton gave $286. Mrs. Fsher Wll Speak To Wellesley Students Mrs. Dorothy Canfeld Fsher, well-known novelst, wll delver Sophe Hart lecture, 8 p.m., Monday evenng, Decembe L, at Pendleton Hall. The Sophe Hart e by alumnae le n honor of Mss Hart, Professor Emertus, md former Head of the Department of Englsh Composton. Some of the novels for whch Mrs. Fsher a famous the The /;. n Twg, \ r nd* rstood B< t&y, H< r Son's Wfe, flu Brmmng < up, and Bonfre, College Wll Dance To Rand Smth's Orchestra Couples wll whrl to the musc of Rand Smth's orchestra at the second all-college dance of the season, Saturday evenng, November 25, n Alumnae Ballroom. '40 and '41 Junor Show songs wll be featured. Stag nvtatons may be procured at the Tcket Booth n Green Hall all day Frday and Saturday mornng.

3 Janot. Susan : ;»lesep College J^eUs! Member Assocated Go0e6ae Press Dstrbutor of Golle6ae D6est..PHBNTO POH NATONAL ADVB-TBNO» Natonal Advertsng Servce, nc. (nl-,:, Publsher* Rtpreuntatn* 420 MADSON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. cmco BO.TO- LO AH.H $«" FMPCHCO WELLESLEY, MASS., NOVEMBER 23, 1939 Mdtor-n-Chlof Managng Edtor Ha/TT Edtor... Assstant Mfr-w* Edtor Feature Edtor Make-up Edtor Lterary Edtor Exchange Edtor Forum Edtor UUu Edtor. Helene Kazanjlan "40 Jane Strahan 40 Vrgna Hotchner "40 Carol Lews 40 Dorothy Blum '40 Elzabeth Potterton '40 Constance St. Onge 40 sabel Cummlng 40 Martha Schwanke 40 ^K&VSSS; Heporter. ^artvfrtvht U '41. Beverly Andrews AMl.to.1 Reporter. Vrgna Horn '"^alne^kaplan Ml Swartz '40 Art Crtle,... Wlllye Whte 41 A. A. EepresentatlTe E Glora Hlne '41 SAfVSSZ " Bet.yB.erer '40, " B.atr.«WaKgHJ- ^ So'SgSSSe 5 - Grace Horner '42, Eleanor Webster '42 Katharne Edwards '40 llnslnesb Manuger " Barbarn Cohen '40 Advertsng Manager. Chase '10 (rrnlutlon Manager \,-latde de Beor '41 Assstant Advertsng Managers o?ralne Stanley '41 Courtnev Prettyman "40 Credt Manager..- - Glora Bossettl '42, Busness Edtors ^"csss '42, Vrgna Re.d ;«, Elzabeth Ttus '42. Anne Tomasello 42. a ««g»s. r«r, 42, Carol Stelner '43. Mare Llset 43, Adelne Hall '42. at the latest, and should be addressed to Helene K "* "j'" n All advertsng matter should be n the '' u^s c e b f)p n t t0 200 P M Monday. All alumnae news should be sent to The Alumnae Offce, Wellesley Mass All busness communlcatlons and subscrptons should be sent to the Welles ley College News, Wellesley. Mass red as second-class matter, October 10, at ue fflce at Welesley Branch, Boston. Mass under the not of March Acceptance tor malng at specal,;,;,,"of postage provded for n secton 1103, Act of October 3, 1917, authorzed October 30, What Wll Become of 1940 The queston of what has become of 1939 s answered ths week n the artcle on Page 6 reportng the actvtes of '39. Members of '39 are holdng a varety of jobs out from ther dreams and theores. These jobs cover all aspc s of the secretaral and teachng felds, socal servce work, department store nternshp, lbrary and museum work, laboratory studes, and photography employment. Other members of the class are contnung ther studes n graduate schools ths year. But what of 1940? t s not too soon to begn to do constructve thnkng n regard to postons next year. The Personnel Bureau s ready to gve nformaton on work for alumnae as well as on tranng schools where there s specalzed work for the applcants n ther felds of nterest. n assstng students to choose ther vocatons, the Personnel Bureau emphaszes the students' nterests and capabltes as a gude n selecton. The conferences for Senors culmnate the seres of personal conferences the Bureau has held wth each student durng the past four years. Although the Senor conferences are held by house the Personnel Bureau s always open to students. The servces of the Personnel Bureau to the class of 1940 wll not end next June. Often alumnae may be placed by the Bureau n postons. Those members of the class who take advantage of Senor Regstraton at the Bureau wll have the prvlege of applyng to the Personnel Bureau for ratngs and recommendatons on all jobs they have held after leavng Wellesley. Thus, f a member of the class regstered at the Personnel Bureau desres recommendatons for a poston any tme n the future, the Bureau wll have on record all recommendatons gathered by the Bureau from prevous employers of the grl. t s mportant that not only members of 1940 who desre postons next year regster, but also that those who expect to do graduate work for some years, or who plan to get marred regster n ths manner also, that they may aval themselves of ths servce, n case of need. Academc Fnale Student demonstratons and outbreaks n Jzechoslovaka culmnated last week n the arrest of an estmated 2000 students, the executon of nne of them, and the closng of the unverstes for a perod of three years. German authortes clamed that the nstgators of the rots were to be found n the small groups of "ntellectuals" n the nsttutons of hgher learnng. They justfed the closng of the unverstes wth the clam that especally strct precautons aganst further outbreaks centered n the colleges were necessary because of wartme condtons. The fght for freedom s of vtal nterest to Amercan college students rased on the Declaraton of ndependence and democratc deals. But t must be conceded that t was necessary for the Naz authortes to take some measure to restrct the uprsngs and control the nstgators. Whether the supreme penalty of death should have been gven s questonable. The facts n the case are not fully before us. But the major queston seems to be the closng of the unverstes as a precautonary wartme measure. t s doubtful whether such acton would be effectve n stoppng such demonstratons and outbreaks. As long as Htler can convnce hs people that Germany wll wn the war, ther fanatcsm wll help them to endure hardshps, but f the army suffers serous defeat, the forces of dsllusonment wthn the state may combne wth aroused Czech and Polsh ambtons aganst Htler. Awareness of ths potental threat must le behnd Htler's hestancy to attack. He knows he must not lose. The German people, however, must grow mpatent when the army can show no vctores to justfy ther lmted supples of food and clothng and ther abstnence from "luxures." The queston Brtan, France, and the neutral countres are askng s: How long can Htler resst the pressure of nternal unrest before he wll be forced to attack? Queston : Thanks By A. B. 'h Depresson, sadness, peace, or war, Thanksgvng hour comes 'round each year. Some wonder what we're thankful for, Today n tme of stress and fear. Answer: We have our peace, our homes, our lves, And, more than that, we know we're free; We've stll the rght to vote and speak. Thank God for lfe and lberty! Free Press All contrbutons for ths column must be sgned wth the full name of the author. ntals or numerals wll be used f the wrter so desres. The Edtors do not hold themselves responsble for statements n ths column. Contrbutons should be n the hands of the Edtors by 11 A. M. on Monday. Freshman Electons To the Wellesley College News: Recently w.e have been dsturbed by students who nsst upon chewng gum durng classes, or loudly "crackng t" n the lbrary. Ths shows a decded lack of courtesy that one s surprsed to fnd at Wellesley. f students vust chew gum, we urge them to do t n some secluded corner where the nose and the spectacle wll not dstract other people. 19UO Class 1943 Meetng Pendleton Hall 3:40 p.m. Today To Elect Offcers Caps and Frowns Number, Please Local and long-dstance swans wll be pleased to know that some day n the dm, dm future they may not have to hang on the 'phone for hours n order to reach ther beloved. ndvdual telephone servce s beng consdered by the college! Snce the Quadrangle houses would be easest to wre, the grls there have been chosen as gunea pgs, to see how many would want the servce. Once the Telephone Company gets an dea of the response, t wll be able to decde f nstallng servce would be feasble. many of the requests are So far for party lnes. Whatever wll become of bull sessons, when there wll be nothng to tell, as everyone already knows? But there's some consolaton for the grl who doesn't get her own calls; The closng of the unverstes wll brng the The fnal electon for the Presdent of the class of 1943 and for she can get the well-known vcarous experence from other peo- closng of cultural lfe. Even durng the war the Freshman members of the ples'. there s a need for hgher educaton, for the Senate and of Superor Court wll passng on of knowledge, of scence. Once be held n a class meetng on Practcal Fne Arts Thursday, November 23, n the closed, the student body and academc staff dspersed, t s questonable whether the unvers- 3:40. The electon wll culmnate "Mchael Angelo dd t, so why lecture room of Pendleton Hall at can't we?" s the theme of junor tes wll be able to re-open, and f so, under what a seres of three teas whch have and Senor art majors at the Texas been held at Washngton, Davs, State College for Women. These condtons and standards. The academc and and Tower Court at whch the college artsts are creatng ther socal tradtons of unverstes are not trflng canddates for these offces were own stan glass panels for a new ntroduced to the thngs. Long years of research, a background members of college chapel whch s soon to ther be dedcated. The grls do all the class. of work and study have bult 300 of them up. Ths year a new system of work from sketchng the desgn to Ther closng n Czechoslovaka s another step countng the votes n the makng up the wndow out of lttle fnal electon wll be used. Rather than peces of colored glass, ftted together. n the gradual dsappearance of freedom of havng each grl vote for merely Better stll the work s speech and thought whch we n Amerca beleve one canddate for each offce as graded as an actual course, and to be such an ntegral part of modern cvlzed has been the custom n the the students are gven credt for past, t. the sngle transferable vote wll lfe. be used. Because many are not acquanted wth ths method Flustered Frosh of proportonal representaton, 1 At Skdmore t seems that nternal Resstance should lke to gve a bref explanaton: Each grl wll vote for Freshmen are qute as much n a "We wll teach the Poles how to work," Naz daze as at Wellesley. Ther favorte two grls out of the three nomnated for each offce leaders n Berln have declared. Through the story s the tale about a certan markng them member of the class of '43 who n the order of her preference. When the votes are count- fog of German censorshp comes the story of the went to the nfrmary. She had new Naz labor polcy. The her pajamas and bathrobe tastefully draped over her arm, wth vctors are replacng German agrcultural and unsklled ed, they wll be dvded nto three groups ndustral accordng to the frst her toothbrush and some exhausted lookng slppers n her hand. choces. The grl who receves workers wth Poles. Thus, more men can be the least number of votes as frst She trpped up the steps and n drafted nto the army. n many nstances, ths choce wll be elmnated from the the door. But no nurse appeared; forced labor amounts runnng. The ballots whch marked her as frst choce wll then be to slavery, accordng to no whff of dsnfectant reached neutral observers. Great German land-owners her nose. There weren't even any taken and appled to the other scales n sght. t was the Dean's must provde food, shelter, and clothng for ther two canddates stll remanng accordng to the house. workers, but pay wages are at ther dscreton. second choces ndcated on these ballots. The Polsh peasant, ted to the land for centures, By ths means we are n realty Cncnnat College Talk may fnd hs new masters no worse than the gvng those grls whose frst Polsh arstocracy but he s an ntense natonalst. How choce was elmnated a chance to The News Record of the Unversty of Cncnnat s ncessantly vote agan between the other two long hs usual docle atttude wll canddates. The system also assures that a mnorty choce wll explanatons of words. Ther lat- on the search for new and better preval may depend on hs estmate of chances for success n revolt. not be elected because of a splt est contrbuton to the feld of n the votes of the nomnees. f Englsh grammar s the defnton The proud Czechs, however, resst assmlaton nto the Thrd Rech electon we feel that the results of ths of cvlzaton as a collecton of economc prove the hoped-for superorty of the sngle transferable to them swng s organzed-ds- modern nconvenences. Accordng system. n the words of Jan Masaryk, Henrch Hmmler vote over the old method, we wll organzaton. And a bachelor s a has turned Bohema and Morava nto "Htler's then keep the system n the electon of the fellow who ddn't have a car when bggest concentraton camp." remanng Freshman he was young. Student demonstratons have subsded under martal law n ous to know the opnon of the Exams Are Fun class offcers. We are very anx- Prague. The reacton to volent, suppressve class concernng our nnovaton n From the West Ponter comes measures wll electon procedure. probably force the Nazs to extend martal law to most of Czecha. mpartal Charman of Vllage Junors. lke an exam, ths lttle Anne Lneberger, dtty: commentators doubt that the Nazs can crush thnk they're fun; Czech natonalsm by enforcng law Gum Chewers, Beware! and never cram, order. never flunk one. ('m the professor.) Bag Knocks Out Puncher Keepng n trm has ts dangerous sde as a thrd year medcal student at Harvard dscovered recently. The student, a star athlete n hs college days, was clmaxng hs daly work-out wth a punchng bag n the gymnasum. Just as he had gven the 40-pound bag a prodgous wallop, a frend spoke to hm. He turned to answer the frend and the bag rebounded, httng hm on the chn, and knockng hm out. X-rays n a hosptal revealed a spraned back. At present the medcal student s gettng hs hosptal tranng from a less professonal pont of vew.

4 ! THE PEREGRNATNG PRESS ^t%erry's favorte story ths.^pj week s about the class at Harvard n whch a professor noted a great deal of confuson. "Wll you fellows n the back please stop passng those notes?" he demanded. "These aren't notes, sr," answered a student. "They're cards. We're playng brdge." "Oh," sad the professor, "Excuse me." Wellesley s certanly gong modern, thought Perry the other day, as he sat down to wrte a phlosophy quz on the concept of "Roots," only to fnd that the resourceful typst had changed the queston to "Analyse the concept of Toots!" VERY now and then Perry s amazed n these begnnng Geology classes. After a long dssertaton on the nature of the meanderngs of an old rver the other day, some brght student remarked, "Oh, see, when a rver gets old, t wanders." A frend of Perry's has a habt of answerng knocks on her door wth "Well, f you want to take the chance, come n!" Warned that she would do ths some tme to the head of house, she repled that she knew her knock, t was very soft and gentle. As she was gettng dressed one day a loud knock came. She answered wth her usual challenge. n walked the head of house! A certan dstngushed lookng member of the faculty told Perry Verse Club to Perform At Women's Cty Club The Verse Speakng Club under the drecton of Mss Cecle de- Banke, wll perform at the Women's Cty Club n Boston n a specal Chrstmas Rectal Sunday, December 3. The program, asde from the Chrstmas selectons, wll nclude a demonstraton of the outstandng characterstcs of poetry. TJhe Verse Speakng Club s a group of sxteen grls who have taken the year choral course offered by the college and who wsh to contnue ths partcular feld of work. The members meet once a week. The Verse Speakng Chor started at Wellesley as an extra-currcular actvty n 1933 and became a credted course n the Department of Speech n Snce then, the club has performed n servces at chapel, n New York cty, and over natonal hook-ups. The group of sxteen wll be heard later n the year n a program called "Amercan Background," n whch t wll try new and darng rectals. The chor tself wll broadcast over a natonal hook-up on Sunday, December 10, at 7:30 p.m. she had been qute happy about her sster's attractve baby. "Oh, she won't be beautful when she grows up," was the resgned reply. "She looks just the way you dd when you were a beautful baby!" 3ft EAL sacrlege, the Art De- JA- partment mght call t, but Perry was much amused when he heard Bottcell's famous pantng, the "Brth of Venus," famlarly termed "Venus on the Half- Shell." y<\ ECENTLY Perry was watch- JC\ np a freshman, vctm of the current knttng craze, try on a whte angora sweater she had just fnshed. The angora was very thck and fluffy, so much so that one of her admrng frends remarked, "We'll have to put a book-mark n to show where Maron s!" Perry overheard an ardent Freshman, ravng about a recent date, conclude her tale wth ths startlng observaton, "... and two orchds are nothng to sneeze at unless you happen to be allergc!" Jf>ES, Perry sometmes wonders g}^ how some "Wellesley Women" ever managed to get n ths noble nsttuton. The other day n the lbrary, he heard one grl say, " have twenty-sx sonnets to read." Her frend promptly nqured, "Well, how long are they?" Perry the Pressman General Publc to Hold Dscusson of Refugees The problem of the refugees wll be dscussed at a publc meetng, under the auspces of the Boston Commttee for Chrstan Refugees, n the audtorum of the Hunnewell School n Wellesley, Tuesday, November 28, at 8 p. m. Speakers of the evenng wll be the Reverend N. D. Goehrng, Mrs. Watstll Sharp, and Professor Herbert Gezork of Wellesley's Department of Bblcal Hstory. Followng the comment of the speakers, the audence wll partcpate n questons and general dscusson. The meetng s open to the publc. NOW OPEN Elzabeth Romer Studo 31 CENTRAL STREET Artstc Portrat Photographs nt Specal Prces for Wellesley Students Untl Xmas JftSpfyver :» «S Scholar Dscusses Mss Wllams Revews Senor Announces Letters of A. Pope ^ ^011 Prom Commttees Consderng "The Problem of Edtng Pope's Letters" n an nformal lecture for faculty and students n the Department of Englsh Lterature at Pomeroy Hall at 7:30 p. m. on November 20, Professor George Sherburn, dstngushed Pope scholar, stated that revsons and manpulatons of the orgnal manuscrpts by the author hmself, together wth the carelessness of the nneteenth century edtors, have made the letters extant today subject to crtcal suspcon. Pope, plannng as early as 1730 to edt hs own letters, was aded and abetted by hs frend, the Earl of Oxford. As he dd not wsh t known that he was preservng hs own letters for posterty, Pope deposted the letters n the Harlean Lbrary, and had them sent from there to a publsher by the Earl. As letter wrtng n the eghteenth century took the form of essays, often freghted wth moralsms, Pope saw ft to revse many of hs orgnal manuscrpts n an attempt to make them lterary gems. Pope often amalgamated paragraphs of moralsms from dfferent letters nto a new composton, thereby addng to the confuson of hstorans. Statng that some beleved Pope publshed hs letters wth the dea of blackenng the characters of hs enemes and elevatng hs own, Mr. Sherburn observed that the satrst sometmes made slght changes n the wordng of letters wrtten to one man n one year to make them applcable to an entrely dfferent man at a later date. n accordance wth the genteel fashon of hs day, Pope seldom dated hs letters defntvely. Ths led to a bunglng of dates by the nneteenth century edtors. These same edtors, feelng that the letters had been deprecated by Pope's omssons and revsons, and, moreover, that they were too formal to be of real nterest, added to the present day edtor's problems by allowng more errors to creep nto the letters through ther carelessness n publcaton. SK GOODS Tme to prepare for wnter sports! Come and see our... SKS $4.95 up POLES Enameled Alumnum Bamboo WAX Sk Glss Lund. GOGGLES EAR MUFFS $2.98 ea $2.49 ea $1.98 ea 75c 25c 59c-65c 50c pr P. B. CORKUM, NC. 587 WASHNGTON ST. WELLESLEY, MASS. «"-* Stressng geography and hstorcal tradton as "the keys whch underly both Brtsh and French foregn polcy," Mss Judth B. Wllams of the Departng n of Hstory revewed the for- «gn polcy of these two natons n the post-war perod, at Pendleton Hall, November 20, n the fourth of the seres of lectures on the background of the present war. Mss Wllams frst dscussed the geographcal stuatons of the two empres. France, self-sutncent, and less accustomed to thnkng n terms of Empre, had a foregn polcy whch centered around securty, prmarly n 'Tns of securty aganst Germany. Great Brtan, on the other hand, has always thought n terms of the rreat empre whch she depends, and n the post-war perod dd not worry so serously about contnental securty. French polcy and Brtsh polcy n geneal, then, often dverged, although both came together n the perod of conclaton durng the era of MacDonald, Brand, and Stresemann. When the economc crss and depresson of the early 1930's ushered n a perod of ntense nternatonal rvalres, falure at full cooperaton gave opportunty for the rse of a strong Germany, fear of the domnance of whch brought the two powers together agan n unted resstance. The concluson of the post-war dplomacy shows that "England and Fance have come round a full cycle." Ths perod, although chaotc, had a defnte pattern. RECUPERATE FASTER Rest md convalesce n glorous Tn. hurst, N. C. Two months the sun. Warm, dry ar tnged wth the energzng sconl of pnes. Restful green farways to please the eye. Excellent nns moderate rates. G->lf, rdng, shootng and tenns for your famly. Thru Pullman va Seaboard R.R. leaves N. Y. G:15 P.M., stoppng at Phladelpha, Baltmore and Washngton. For detals wrte Plnehurst, nc., 1C3& Dogwood Road, Plnehurst, N. C. (Above) Two - toned Porko wth detachable hood, $5.95. (Below) Classc wndbreaker wth snug hps, $5.98. "nstructor" s k trousers, $7.95. N Myra Ann Graf '40, Charman of the Senor Prom Commttee, announces the lsts of commttees and ther members. Members of the nvtatons and Programs Commttee, of whch Margaret Blatherwck s Charman, are Elzabeth Storck and Mary Gaylord. The Charman of the Decoratons Commttee s Jeanne Nutter, asssted by Jean Smson, Gene Mac- Donald, and Mare-Louse Gartsde. Mary Hayes, Charman, Louse Jordan and Lla Breckenrdgs comprse the Orchestra Commttee. Elzabeth Darlngton, Charman, Mary Dooley, and Ruth Burchmore are n charge of Refreshments. House Representaon the General Management Commttee, of whch Rebecca Jackson s Charman are Alce Wrght, Pomeroy; Leonore Sacks, Cazenove; Judth Alexander, Beebe; Janet Qunn, Shafer; Patrca Hambrght, Munger; Carol Parftt, and Sarah Ann Ott, Tower Court East and West; Hope Barnfeld, Severance; Carolne Couch, Clafln; Mary Lamb, Stone; Anne Hendrcks, Davs. Helen Hbbs s the Secretary, aded by Edna Vogt and Mary Van Hagan. The Treasurer's poston s flled by Mary Wallng. Margaret Bowman Wns Rado n Pen Contest.Ms- Margaret Bowman '12 has been announced as the wnner of a recent contest sponsored by the Sheaffer Pen Company. Ms- Bowman wll receve a portable General Electrc rado. SOQCOSOS'SCCOSOSOSeOSCOO'S? Joseph-Vncent Hardressers 85 Central Street Wellesley 2787 WELLESLEY Four Weeks 'Tl Vacaton! Buy. Your CHRSTMAS GFTS E_a r 1 y GREETNG CARDS * MTTENS BRACELETS SCARVES NECKLACES 1 : LAURA TOLET ACCESSORES STEVENS 63 Central Street FLY HOME ON UNTED AR LNES Enjoy extra vacaton days Spend all your vacaton days at home ths Chrstmas On Unted t s only overnght, coast-to-coast. Fares compare wth frst-class surface travel and nclude all costs. 10% reducton n round-trp rates. Frequent schedules n Unted's luxurous Manlners. For reservatons call travel agents, hotels, telegraph offces, or your campus arlne representatve. L. TYLER BARNES Wellesley Agency for Travel Wellesley Square Telephone 146 Above) Qulted "Tral Cloth" Hp Jacket, $5.98. Corduroy skotng skrt, $3. Vsor cap, $2.25. (Center) "St. Anton Cloth" Porka wth wolf trmmed hood, $8.95 lon ml Trp Tckets 9 from our "Snow Tran Shop" The "Snow Tron Shop" opens ths week wth select "uppers" and "lowers" to carry you cozly and colorfully worm through skatng, skng, tobogganng or just tumblng nto the snow. Wnd-proof, water-repellent, snow resstant snow clothes n colors to sut your taste. Come n and choose eorly! Accessores 50c to snow suts, $17.95 "Snow Tron Shop" Street Floor Flene's, Wellesley

5 Martha Ellott "43 defeated Nancy Edmondson MM n an ex- fnal sngles match of the tng Munger ndex Program Meetngs The sx socetes wll hold ther second program meetngs of the year on Saturday, December 2, at 7:30 p.m. n the socety houses. Bble Department The Bble Department had ts frst dnner at Horton House on Thursday evenng, November 16. Ths was followed by a meetng at Tower Court at whch Dr. Gezork spoke about the fath whch s held by the German people today. Freshman Teas A tea was held for the freshmen of Homestead and Dower n Davs Hall on Thursday, November 16, at 4:30, n order that they mght meet the freshman canddates for offces. The Vllage Junors for that group, Mary Tebout and Edth Fsher, asssted Anne Lneberger, Charman. A second tea was held n Tower Court on Wednesday, November 22, for the freshmen of Severance, Tower, Norumbega, and Commuters. Vllage Junors of ths group who asssted Mss Lneberger were Maron Ede, Ruth Buckley, Anne Davson, and Chrstne Corey. Spansh Department A Spansh Department Dnner was held at Horton House on Monday, November 20, at 6:15 p.m. The speaker was Senora sabel de Palenca, who was nvted by the college to vst the campus for two weeks. The next dnner, at whch S?nora de Palenca wll also speak, wll take place Frday, December 1, at 6:30 p.m. n Tower Court. Elot Freshman Anass Most Tournament Ponts Fall Tenns Tournament. n the doubles dvson Carolne Elley '40 and Marva Peterson '40 won over Ellen Nolan '42 and Rachel Carr '42. Dormtores receved ponts each tme one of ts members won a match. The dormtory results are: Elot 18 ponts, Shafer 15, Cazenove 13, Tower 12, Beebe 10, an. 9. Coe Awards Honorary LL.D. Degree to H. P. E. Alumnae Mss Mabel Lee. H.P.E. '10, receved the honorary degree of LL. D. from Coe College, June, t was the frst tme snce Coe was chartered n 1881 that a woman was so honored. Snce 1924 she has been professor and drector of the Department of Physcal Educaton for Women at the Unversty of Nebraska. She s an honor award fellow of the Amercan Assocaton for Health, Physcal Educaton, and Recreaton, and s now actng presdent of the Amercan Academy of Physcal Educaton. Dr. Aydelotte to Talk On Bsmark Polcy n New German Expanson Dr. Wolfe Speaks Mr. J. Dunn Dscusses Chrstan On Possblty Of Alumnae Hall Dscoverng Truth Dr. Wllam 0. Aydelotte, Professor of Modern European Hstory at Trnty College, wll talk on "What s Truth?" was the text "The Urge for German Colonal of the sermon delvered by Dr. Expanson; Bsmarck and Hs Paul A. Wolfe of the Brck Presbyteran Church n New York, on Successors" at the frst Hstory Department dnner of the season, Sunday, November 19, n the Tuesday evenng, November 28, at Houghton Memoral Chapel. Dr. 6:30 p.m. n the small dnng room Wolfe elaborated on three ponts: at Tower Court. Guests wll that truth s the thng the ntellect dscovers; t s what your gather n the Great Hall of Tower Court between 6:15 and 6:30 p.m. conscence tells you; and t s the The department nvtes Graduate lfe that streams from the face of Students and Senor and Junor Jesus Chrst. There s a need for majors to attend, but wll gve sceptcsm, he sad, yet wthout preference to Senor majors. Students who wsh to attend should tal convctons one s lost. Fath root deas and certan fundamen- sgn on the bulletn board outsde s mportant as "t s the verdcts the Hstory Offce, 118 Founders of the conscence that sometmes Hall, not later than Monday, November 27. Hstory majors unable tons of ntellect." Dr. Wolfe em- are more sgnfcant than specula- to reserve places, may come after dnner to hear the talk. Mss Onderdouk To Talk On Humansm at C. A. Tea Mss Vrgna Onderdonk, Assstant Professor of Phlosophy, wll speak on Humansm ths afternoon at 4:30 p.m. n the C. A. Lounge. Ths s the thrd n the seres of Chrstan Assocaton teas on trends n modern fath. Tea wll be served at 4:00 p.m. before the talk. Students Wll Conduct Daly Squash Classes Voluntary squash classes begn ths week and wll be held every week day afternoon at 4:40 p.m. except Thursdays when t wll be held at 2:40 p.m. The followng grls are conductng the classes: Grace Person '40, Carol Wysor '40, Rebecca Jackson '40, Katherne Snow '41, and Marva Peterson '40. Army Asks College Men To Start Ar Tranng (ACP) n another effort to buld the naton's ar force to new strength and power, the U. S. Army has begun a gant drve to enlst hundreds of college youth n the regular army's ar tranng program. Army representatves are makng tours of colleges n the several corps areas, and applcatons are beng taken for those who wsh to enter regular army ar servce. Students are not beng urged to abandon ther present college courses to take up tranng at the army's ar schools. Ths program s n addton to the gant ncollege tranng course beng gven to undergraduates by the Cvl Aeronautcs Authorty. (ACP) Average monthly employment of college students n the Natonal Youth Admnstraton student-ad program wll reach a record hgh level of 130,000, Admnstrator Aubrey Wllams estmates. Ths s 20,000 above the monthly average for the last school year. phaszed the fact that truth s attanable n ths unverse and "to dscern that truth elevates the mnd and enrches the soul of man." Voluntary Sports Begn Wnter Class Schedules The Department of Hygene and Physcal Educaton announces oportuntes for voluntary nstructon n the followng wnter actvtes: badmnton, fencng, gymnastcs, rdng, squash, swmmng, tap dancng, modern dance. Choce of hours are avalable wth Mss Jaques, the Hygene Recorder. Announcements of nterdormtory tournaments are posted n the Recreaton Buldng as well as on the A. A. board. Ths nstructon s avalable to all students, faculty, and members of the admnstraton. Publshers Gve Przes n Rubensten Contest For the best letter of not more than 300 words on "How dd the grantng of the ttle of 'Free Artst' affect the lves of Anton and Ncholas Rubnsten and of ther pupls?" or on the subject, "Compare Anton and Ncholas Rubnsten as men and muscans," Random Publshng House s offerng several przes. Frst prze conssts of a new RCA Vctor Rado Phonograph, or a year's scholarshp at an accredted musc school. Second prze wll be an album of recordngs of the compostons of Anton Rubnsten, as well as some compostons of Tschakowsky. Thrd prze wll also be a specal album of records. All entres must be submtted by February 1, 1940, and should be addressed to Rubnsten Contest Department, Random House, nc., 20 East 57th street, New York Cty. The judges are dstngushed fgures n the musc world: Mme. Lotte Lehmann, Mme. Olga Samaroff-Stokowsk, Jascha Hefetz, Leonard Leblng, and Deems Taylor. Announcement of the wnners wll be made on March 15, Scence n Lecture Mr. John Randall Dunn consdered "Chrstan Scence: The Remedy for Fear," n a lecture n Alumnae Hall Sunday afternoon, November 19. Mr. Dunn s a member of the Board of Lectureshp of The Mother Church, The Frst Church of Chrst, Scentst, n Boston, Massachusetts. Mr. Dunn showed how Chrstan Scence enables mortals to escape from the prson-house of sckness and dscord. One of the quotatons from the text-book, Scence and Health, wth Key to the Scrptures, by Mary Baker Eddy, was: "Chrstan scentfc practce begns wth Chrst's keynote of harmony, 'Be not afrad!'" "From frst to last," Mr. Dunn sad, "the Chrstan Scence textbook turns mortals from a fnte, materal sense of God to the beautful, comfortable realzaton that the Great Frst Cause must be and s Love tself, Love nfntely good, and eternally gvng, gvng, gvng of Hs creaton. Men suffer and de because of ther gnorance of that dvne Love, that dvne Prncple or cause, whose law s Lfe and unfoldng harmony." Mr. Dunn contnued, quotng from Scence and Health, " 'The way to extract error from mortal mnd s to pour n truth through flood-tdes of Love.' Then surely shall we wtness the fulfllment of Malach's beautful promse that dvne Love wll open the wndows of heaven and pour out a blessng, 'that there shall not be room enough to receve " t.' Moderns Show Swelled Pedatrc Proportons (ACP) Plenty of evdence has been brought out to prove that the sze of women's feet has ncreased a full sze n two generatons, but now comes an ndcaton that men's feet are on the up and up. When the R. O. T. C. supply department at Massachusetts State College n Amherst came to unformng the freshmen, they found that all the larger szes of shoes were quckly exhausted and 50 freshmen couldn't be shod. The supply department s quck to pont out, however, that ths doesn't mean that the freshmen have unusually large feet, merely that more of them wore the larger szes than s usual. Shoes are furnshed the mltary department n a range of szes presumed to outft an average group of men. But these men aren't average. Out From Dreams And Theores Student Conference An announcement has been receved by the Personnel Bureau from the Charman of the Seventh Amerca-Japan Student Conference, nvtng one or more Wellesley students to take part n the conference, as delegates, n Japan from July 1 to September 1, The delegates pay ther own way to and from Japan, but wll be entertaned by the Japanese whle there. f any students are nterested and wsh fuller nformaton, they should come to the Personnel Bureau as soon as possble so that they may be put nto touch wth the Commttee. Cvl Servce Examnatons The Massachusetts Cvl Servce announces two examnatons whch may be of nterest to alumnae who can offer the requste tranng and experence and resdent requrement. n the frst place, there s to be an examnaton for a laboratory techncan to fll a vacancy at the present tme at the State Prson Colony at Norfolk. Requrements nclude bo-chemcal and bacterologcal technques. n the second place, there s to be an examnaton for a psychartrc socal worker, the present vacancy beng at the Worcester State Hosptal Chld Gudance Clnc. Saturday, December 2, s the last date for flng applcaton for these examnatons, whch are to be gven on December 16. Desgn Contest A large department store n Pttsburgh s sponsorng a "Desgn-Your-Own" College Contest and offers przes for the best desgns for blouses and dresses. The przes wll be awarded durng the Chrstmas holdays. Students nterested n enterng ths contest should secure blanks at once at the Personnel Bureau, snce the contest closes on December 6, Students must be resdents n the Pttsburgh area. We Specalze n Cleansng - Talorng - Dyeng Of All Knds We Call For and Delver Free of Charge A. GAN 14 Church St. WELLESLEY NN OLD NEW ENGLAND THANKSGVNG DNNER Served from Noon to 8 P.M. Prce $2.00 Make Your Reservaton Now SCENCE AND HEALTH wth Key to the Scrptures by MARY BAKER EDDY Deck the hall wth boughs of holly 'Ts the season to be jolly. Don we now oar new apparel, Troll the old-tme Yule-tde carol. (old Welsh carol) * you Knew Mat. k The BKmore mokes specal room rates for college students and faculty. s the orgnal, standard and only Textbook on Chrstan Scence Mnd-healng. Publshed n cloth and morocco bndngs and n Bralle, Grade One and a Half, for use of the blnd. The Textbook, other works by Mrs. Eddy, and all other authorzed Chrstan Scence lterature may be read, borrowed or purchased at the Chrstan Scence Readng Room, 39 Grove St., Wellesley Square, open to the publc daly from, 12:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., exceptng holdays and to 8:30 on Saturdays. FRST CHURCH OF CHRST, SCENTST Rockland St., Wellesley Hlls You are cordally nvted to vst the Readng Room Lngere Neglgee Bed Jackets House Coats Travel and Boudor Accessores Too many UlUj to Too many to talk about. sketch, mports are hard to get and no repeats, of course, so do come n soon. To see s to buy. for as lttle as 50 cents or as much as you wsh. No Charge for Xmos Gfr Wrappng Lesu re Modes Trousseaux WELLESLEY "k The BKmore has a School and College Department for your convenence. k The Bltmore Clock, n the Lobby, s the favorte meetng place of college students n New York. "k The Bltmore connects drectly wth Grand Central both by elevator and starway. X The Bowman noom s open for Dancng and Entertanment at Dnner and Supper. * Ccorge Olsen and hs Musc ol Tomorrow ar«the current attracton n the Bowman noom. Please wrte for llustrated brochure THE BLTMORE 'ULLGAN PHCSDCr MADSON AVENUE AT 43RD STREET, NEW YORK Adjonng Grand Central

6 Edwn Rolfe Depcts Spansh War Annals Edwn Rolfe, The Lncoln Battalon. Random House, pages. $2.50. The Lncoln Battalon was the Amercan secton of the nternatonal Brgade whch fought for the Spansh Loyalsts from the Sprng of 1936 untl the League of Natons Non-nterventon Commsson forced repatraton of the foregn volunteers fghtng n Span. 2,800 Amercans joned the Battalon; 61 lved to return to the Unted States. Edwn Rolfe, one of the 86 orgnal solder-members of the Battalon, here sets down a newspaper chroncle of hs comrades' fght aganst Fascsm. The bref pctures of those volunteers whch the author weaves nto detaled accounts of mltary operatons lven a book otherwse dull to cvlan readers. Anyone unfamlar wth the hstory of the Spansh War cannot gauge the accuracy of Rolfe's.estmate of the strategc mportance of the nternatonal Brgade to the Loyalst Cause. Hs matter-of-fact exposton attempts no poltcal or psychologcal analyss of the forces n the conflct. The most nterestng queston Rolfe rases s left unanswered. What was the mpulse whch drove these young men, none of them over thrty, to cross the Atlantc for a war n Span? Most of the volunteers were Communsts; few had any mltary tranng. These college professors, trade unonsts, poets, whte collar workers, doctors, laborers, engneers, and students knew, or thought they knew, that they were fghtng to save democracy from the Fascst nvason. No love of glory or adventure but an deal drove these men to break off ther accustomed exstences. Wll that deal send thousands of Amercan young men to Europe wthn a few years? Watchng those men vansh one by one from the narratve, one s struck by the futlty of the sacrfce of lfe and talents hardly developed for a lost cause. Rolfe's descrptons show clearly why the Loyalsts could wn battles but could not defeat the nsurgents. Although the Loyalsts could command two-thrds of the people, they were ptfully under-anned. Brtsh and French non-nterventon polcy forced these men to fght wthout artllery or arplanes aganst the most modlern weapons Germany and taly could manufacture. M. S. 'UO Forum Organzes Debate Squad for Competton So that Wellesley can accept nvtatons to debate wth nearby colleges, Forum has organzed a debate squad. Dorothy Jane Keyser '41, who receved tranng n debate at owa Unversty, wll coach the debaters n the speakng technque. No experence s necessary. Students who wsh to jon the squad may sgn on the Forum Board or house boards. Mss Chase Descrbes Her Lfe of Teachng A Goodly Fellowshp, Mary Ellen Chase, MacMllan Company pages, $2.50. The people who make up Mary Ellen Chase's A Goodly Fellowshp range from ex-presdent Nelson of Smth, to Sster Noba of St. Catherne's College at St. Paul, to Mrs. Blodgett who ran a boardng house n West Brooksvlle, Mane. Through ths company and her reactons to them, the reader comes to know and apprecate Mary Ellen Chase from her chldhood at home n Mane to her professorshp at Smth. A Goodly Fellowshp begns where A Goodly Hertage left off. Together they present a realstc, humorous, and extremely delghtful pcture of a lfe well lved n Mane coast towns, German ctes, mddle western schools, and Smth College. COMPLMENTS Mss Chase began her teachng career at Bucks Harbor at the age of nneteen when she faced fortyfve chldren rangng from fve to sxteen. She confned the chldren from two to four n a "large, low tub wth whch the vllage cooper provded me and from whch the babes used to stare n delghted wonder at our furous educatonal progress." The educatonal progress contnued, takng Mss Chase as a student to the Unversty of Mane, and as a teacher, n the days when young lades remaned close at home, to Chcago. t was, as she says, wth certan msgvngs that she consdered a poston n Mason Cty, owa. The fault wth owa, she explaned to the manager who offered her the poston, s ts locaton. "t's only that my mother would prefer me not to go beyond the Msssspp unless t's really necessary." But the paths of teachng and studyng took Mary Ellen Chase not only across the Msssspp to Mnnesota, but also across the Atlantc to Germany. Later she taught n Chcago, n Mrs. Moffat's school, and helped mantan t's purpose "to rear and tran Chrstan gentlewomen." There Mss Chase's teachng schedule ncluded nature study, begnnng algebra, German, geography, cvcs, and Englsh grammar. Ex-presdent Nelson of Smth s largely responsble for the wrtng of A Goodly Fellowshp, and t s wth a descrpton of hm and Smth under hm that Mss Chase ends her book. She speaks of Dr. Nelson as f he were stll alve at Smth, for, "he s forever present n those realtes whch he has made abdng and secure n the mnds of all those who have lved and worked wth hm." /. K. C. 'UO Mss Chase to Lecture On Producton of Novel Mary Ellen Chase, speaker at one of the three Lterary Evenngs sponsored by the Boston Smth College Club, wll consder "The Readng and the Wrtng of a Novel" at 8:30 p.m. on December 1 at John Hancock Hall n Boston. Born and educated n Mane, Mss Chase has been professor of Englsh at Smth College snce of the WELLESLEY NATONAL BANK Member Federal Depost nsurance Corporaton < Mary Ellen Chase A. G. Holmes Gves Shaw's "Pygmalon" P a f/m a l on Cast of Characters Henrj Hgglns Krh.n Gage Elza Dollttle Vo. Blakely Alfred Doollttle Wendell < torey Colonel Pckerng.Wllam Phelps Mrs Hgglns Katharne Cosgrlff Ars. Pearce Alce \v.-> Alan Gray Holmes' Pygmalon s an unnspred producton wth occasonal but only occasonal near brllant moments, wth the result that the play falls rather dully nto the rank of the amateur. Obvously, ths s not the fault of the play tself. t les rather wth a general lack of the enthusasm whch kndles lfe nto an actor's role. To be sure, certan characterzatons rse above medocrty but not consstently so. The outcome s an unsustaned. almost unclmactc play, whose better moments do not lft the whole above ts brand of the ordnary. By far the best characterzaton s that of Wendell Corey as Alfred Doolttle, the Welsh dustman. Vola Blakely s better as the cockney flower-grl than the synthetc duchess n the patter part of the play. Colonel Pckerng, played by Wllam Phelps, s a ncely jocund Englshman, wth a consstent sort of absent-mnded charm. Erford Gage plays the professor wth more rant than grace, and wth a knd of unscholarly bluster that makes one long for Lesle Howard. Many of the best Shawan touches fall flat because they have not been properly bult up. The costumng s rather hap-hazard and mscellaneous, and the sets unpretentous. Not that unpretentousness s a fault, but rather that t s a trat from whch the entre (Contnued on page 6, col. 1) COLONAL NATCK Week of November 20 Sun. - Men. Tncs. - Wed. Mckey tconey - Judy Garland "BABES N Ylt.MS" Hubert llnrr'm - Nouh Hecrj HAD LANDS" Thnrs. - Frl. - Sat. Anna N'engle George Sunders Jr. "NURSE EDTH ( AVKLL" Glora Jean - V. Aubrey Smth "THE UXDEK-PUP" Somethng to! > thankful for A boot: about Wellesley that makes «perfect gft. Wellesley College A Chroncle of the Years by Florence Converse 1.75) HATHAWAY HOUSE Mme. Leszna Descrbes Hungaran Peasant Arts By Susan Su art t "t was out of love for lfe and fear of death that frst began to pant." repled Madame Anna Loszna when asked how she happened to become an artst. "As a chld drew the bunches of flowers n my room wth colored crayons lest they fade and be forgotten." Madame Leszna s gvng nstructon to the voluntary sketch class durng the frst semester. t s not strange that for a woman whose response as a chld was so senstve to the beauty around her, art should be realzed n "a lovng memory of the past and a knd of magc whch revves the long past chldhood." "1 have always tred m my pantng," contnued Madame Leszna, "to render my chldhood mpressons of the small Hungaran vllage " whch was brought up, a vllage whch led an old-fashoned, fary- tale lfe full of odd supersttons and tradtonal festvals." Madame Leszna's prmary concern n her work les n desgn and the decoratve aspect of art. Ths nterest also derves from her chldhood experences and may be traced drectly to needlework and pattern desgnng. "1 learned the fust elements of needlework, an art greatly apprecated n Hunfrom my mother," sad Madame Leszna. "n some manor houses tradtonal patterns stll survved whch were made pecally for the noblty. rhe were strongly nfluenced by talan and Turksh embrodery. The peasants followed ther own natonal tradtons n lnn d< embroderng n black and whte cross-sttch and weavng red and whte patterns." Harvest season was one of Madame Leszna's specal delghts for t brought wth t a group of workmen from a small vllage n the north of Hungary. Smlng as f seeng them agan before her, Madame Leszna descrbed the "splendd costumes wth colorful and orental desgns whch betrayed the Tartar orgn of these people." t was largely from the women of (Contnued on page 6, col. 1) THE WELLESLEY PCTORAL GFT CALENDAR for 1940 s on sale at the CAMPUS EXCHANGE and the WELL for FFTY cents "Key Largo" wth Paul Mun Last week "Dubarry vas a Lady" Last week Chor Dsplays Tonal Qualtes at Servces The Wellesley College Chor presented ts frst concert of the year Sunday, November 19, n Houghton Memoral Chapel under the drecton of Mr. Edward Barry Greene. n ts nterpretaton of the musc and qualty of tone the chor showed great promse for the comng year. Partcularly well done were the openng Bach chorale, ttled Grant Me True Courage, Lord, n whch was expressed the composer's deep relgous feelng, and the Old German Melody arranged by Mr. Greene ttled Prase t» tn- Lmd, the Almghty whch was brllantly sung. n the Haydn work, Lo, My Sh pherd'a Hand Dvm from the Mass n G Major, the mood of tenderness was sustaned throughout the composton. The chor succeeded n attanng a remote, other-worldly effect n Fame's ethereal n Paradsum, from hs Requem, although the mood of hs Sanctua was not so completely realzed. Both of Gbbon's compostons were satsfactorly performed. The frst, Oh Lord. ncrease My Fath was eloquently and appealngly sung. The second, The Kyre Eleson, was sung wth a rch, full-boded tone qualty whch enhanced the muha monc beauty. As an organ prelude, Mr, Greene played Allegro Vvace and Ah from the Water Musc by Handel, '" hs frst organ nterlude he played two chorale-preludes by Bach, Herzlch Thu Mch lagen and n Dr Freud Hs econd organ nterlude was Bach' Prelude and Fugm n <; Major. Especally well done wa th post- n..', Allegro Mat sto <o agan rom the Water Mus,-. DWGHT R. L. j: CLEMENT DENTST Room No. 8 Morton Block (over Seder's) 572 Washngton Street Wellesley Sq. We 'Nm Mn mlum mnmum m j COMMUNTY PLAYHOUSE 1 Thursday, Frday and Saturday November 23, 24, 25 1 Wllam Barbara Adolphe \ Holden Stanwyck Menjou = n "GOLDEN BOY" 1 Also 1 Randolph Frances Ralph Scott Dee Bellamy n "COAST GUARD" Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday 1 1 Nov. 27, 28, 29 Bette Mram George Davs Hopkns Brent [ n "THE OLD MAD" Also George Joel Bancroft n McCrea j "ESPONAGE AGENT" J jtmumtmmmmm mln lllllll mm ><^ STAGE "Tobacco Road" Lmted engagement. Thanksgvng matnee San Carlo Opera Company November 24-December 3. COLONAL SHUBERT PLYMOUTH BOSTON OPERA HOUSE Thanksgvng matnee n prospect "Three after Three" wth Smone Smon, Mtz Green, Mary Bran, Art Jarrett. Openng November 27 through December 9. Thanksgvng matnee. Don Cassocks December 3 Levtzk December 6 Flagstad December 11 WELLESLEY THEATRE TCKET AGENCY Wellesley Thrft Shop 34 Church Street, Wellesley Tckets for all Boston theatres, Symphony Hall, Jordan Hall, and the Boston Opera House. Servce charge of 25c. a tcket Hours: to 5:30.

7 . Promote Colleges U. S. Peace Front A.C.P.) An all-college peace front, wth "We Don't Want to Fght n Europe" as ts slogan, has been organzed by the student newspaper of Northwestern Unversty, and s slowly assumng sgnfcance as college edtors n all sectons of the country jon n the movement. n the east, Prnceton Unversty students have organzed the Amercan ndependence League, whch ncludes 23 of the leadng eastern unverstes, and ths group s workng as one autonomous organzaton under the natonal All-College Peace Front. n the far west, UCLA s now soundng out colleges on the coast, as Donn Brown, last year's presdent of UCLA student body and son of move comedan Joe E. Brown, has been travelng throughout the western states n the capacty of Organzng Secretary for the western states as a thrd autonomous unt workng for a common goal. The purpose of ths Peace Front s to keep ths naton out of war. Through campus newspapers t wants to propagandze for peace, pontng out to the 1,350,000 college students that the present war s none of ther busness, that democracy's dangers le n ths hemsphere, and that they have nothng to gan by fghtng. The Peace Front ams at convncng college students that they wll be called upon to fght n case of a war, that strong and unted publc opnon s the best weapon aganst nvolvement, and that the college student should have an mportant hand n moldng that opnon. Mme. Leszna Descrbes Hungaran Peasant Arts (Contnued from page 5, col. 4) ths vllage that she learned to desgn patterns. "Peter Breughel and Gotto are my favorte artsts," confessed Madame Leszna. "Prmtve and peasant art nterest me very much, for these seem to contan the common factor or magc, as lke to call t, that's behnd true art." Madame Leszna fnds modern art also nterestng n ths respect. "t dffers, however," she says, "from prmtve art n that the prmtves were concerned wth the 'why' behnd the form patterns they used, whereas the moderns are prmarly devoted to the 'how' n renderng these same patterns." Madame Leszna, therefore, beleves that the modern perod s transtonal. n gong back to dscover form problems, we are on the rght track. Only "content today s too ndvdualzed; t s understandable to but a few." There wll come a day, she beleves, when a unversal feelng wll underle our art and thus brng t to fruton. " lke your country and your sprt," remarked Madame Leszna. "You are so knd. n many ways your cvlzaton s comparable to that of pre-war Europe. My only crtcsm s that you leave not enough tme for the lesure wthout whch there can exst no real creatve work or thought." A. C. Holmes Gves Shaw's Pygmalon (Contnued from page 5, col. S) producton suffered altogether too much. One rather feels that not even frst nght lack of pose excuses the uncertanty and almost dffdent presentaton. Perhaps t s unfar, n a way, that the move s so fresh n most people's mnds, and that anythng less than techncal perfecton would fall rather flat, n comparson. Ths s usually not the case, however. Wth competence, t never would have happened. B. B. 'J t DR. FRANCS D. GODDARD Osteopathc Phycan (over Seller's) W«l W. N W Hours: 1-5, 7-9 Class of '39 Obtans nterestng Postons n Teachng, Socal Servce, Merchandsng Every fall the Personnel Bureau sends a questonnare to each member of the class most recently graduated. The members of 193!) report a varety of actvtes, ncludng these appontments n the teachng feld: Constance Brown s an apprentce n Latn at the Baldwn School. Kathryn Canfeld s assstng n the kndergarten and nursery groups of the Lggett School n Detrot. Joanne Clare s teachng Scence at the Mount da Junor College n Newton. Ruth Coleman s an apprentce n the fourth grade at the Shady Hll School n Cambrdge. Jane Dawes s at the Buckngham School, also n Cambrdge. Maran Colwell s combnng an apprentceshp at the Beaver Country Day School n Chestnut Hll wth her part-tme work at Jeanne d'arc Academy. Nancy Jackson and Ellen Lbby are also at Beaver Country Day School. Ruth Hawkes s assstant teacher n Mathematcs and Scence at the Columbus School for Grls n Oho. Glora Maulsby s teachng and assstng n the offce of Rogers Hall School n Lowell, Massachusetts. Jean Merrll s teachng Scence at the Ogontz School n Pennsylvana. Jean Parads s teachng French at Andrebrook n Tarrytown-on- Hudson. Marjore Parmenter s combnng apprentce teachng at the Perkns nsttute for the Blnd wth a specal course of professonal study at Harvard Graduate School of Educaton. Mary Randall s an apprentce n Englsh and Hstory and a tutor n French at the Grls' Latn School of Chcago. Glora Sharp s apprentce n Mathematcs and Physcal Educaton at the Harley School n Rochester, New York. Jane Wagoner s assstant teacher and laboratory assstant at Montcello College n Godfrey, llnos. Gertrude Whttemore s teachng Englsh and Hstory at the Dedham Country Day School. Betty Wunderle s teachng Musc at Mlton Academy. Margaret Wyckoff s assstng n Musc and n the frst grade at the Brch-Wathen School n New York. Elnor Young s combnng the teachng of Englsh at the Skowhegan Hgh School wth graduate study n Educaton at Colby College. Ruth Adams s workng as an assstant n the Extenson Dvson of the Boston Museum of Fne Arts. Louse Ahrens s wth the Refugee Secton of the Amercan Frends' Servce Commttee. Marjore Ashcroft s dong socal work ntervewng for the W P. A. n Dallas. Dorothy Barrow s assstant n the Hstory Department here at Wellesley. Maron Thomson s n the Musc Department as assstant and Ellen Wldng s n the Zoology Department. Mary Margaret Lohman s n the Department of Bblcal Hstory. Audrey Broad s workng wth the Edwn Gould Foundaton, a socal agency n New York. Betty Burnqust has been an attendant n one of the exhbts at the San Francsco far. Margaret Clayton s workng n the offce of the Clayton Lumber Company. Atkns Dressmakng Shop For your college roompllows, couch covers, draperes made to order Also specalzng n 85 Central St. Wellesley 1392-M cleanng, pressng, all alteratons Carolne Conkln s n the School Servce Department of the New York Tmes. Alce Corcoran and Prsclla Davs are n the tranng group at Jordan Marsh Company n Boston. Betty Jane Crawford s a techncan n Department of Physology at the New York Unversty College of Medcne. Vrgna Doulberry s workng wth the group nsurance department of the Equtable Assurance Socety, n New York. Jean Fox s combnng work as assstant n Psychology at Brown Unversty wth graduate work n the same department. Edna Goldng s on the staff of the mmanuel Congregatonal Church n Hartford as parsh vstor. Alce Hayden s takng professonal tranng for socal work at the Unversty of Chcago of Socal Servce Admnstraton and dong her feld work as famly case worker at the nternatonal House n Chcago. Lucy Katt s workng wth an nteror decorator n New York Cty. Marjore Kellogg has been workng n the Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company n New York. Ellen Kerl s secretary to the Dean of Women at the Unversty of daho. Margaret Lynch s takng the tranng offered for laboratory techncans at the Mercy Hosptal n Sprngfeld, Massachusetts. Jeanne MacNaught s on the tranng squad at the R. H. Whte store n Boston. Margaret Martn s house counselor at the New England Home for Lttle Wanderers n Boston. Ruth Nesbtt s dong statstcal work wth George Buck, nc., a frm of consultng actuares n New York. Martha Parkhurst and Betty Parks are both workng at the Plgrm Press, n Boston. Marguerte Partrdge s an apprentce n the Akron Publc Lbrary. Mary Pearson s a secretary wth the New York, New Haven and Hartford Ralroad. Frances Postel s one of the group of young women takng nternshps n busness n New York. Amy Sper s workng as a laboratory techncan n New York. Helen Tarns s assstng a photographer, workng n the Parker Studo n Summt. Vrgna Tuttle s n the Chldren's Museum of Hartford as Club Secretary. Hlda Warshaw s on the executve tranng squad at Flene's n Boston. Janet Waters s secretary to the Headmaster of the Stevens School for Boys n Swansea, Massachusetts. Ann Wemple s a "feld fler", a member of the contngent sellng squad, n Marshall Feld's store n Chcago. Mram Wse s workng as an apprentce n the Newark Museum, n New Jersey.! BOWLADROME, START Buyng Chrstmas Gfts For Men NOW! THE WGWAM 41 Grove St. (nr. Seller's) Mare Wolfs s workng at Bamberger's, also n Newark. Members of last year's graduatng class n the Department of Hygene and Physcal Educaton have been placed as follows: Cornne Crogen, Tusculum College, Greenevlle, Tenn.; Nelle Davd, Smth College, Northampton, Mass.; Marjore Denns, Unversty of Rochester, Rochester, N. Y.; Dorothy Doerres, Antoch College, Yellow Sprngs, Oho; Jenne Dyke (Granger), Montcello College, Godfrey, 111.; Ruth Ferguson, Hope Farm School, Hope Farm, N. Y.; Barbara Gll, Bradford Jr. College, Bradford, Mass.; Theda Hagenah, Barstow School, Kansas Cty, Mo.; Marjory Morgan, George School, Pa.; Sret Nedjat, Amercan College, stanbul, Turkey; Vctora Summers, Y. W. C. A., New Haven, Conn.; Margery Taylor, Unversty of Mchgan, Ann Arbor, Mch.; Dora Walton, Stephens College, Columba, Mo. Peace Councl Offers Suggestons for Books On Poltcal Scence Peace Councl calls attenton to the followng recent publcatons on the nternatonal stuaton: "Fnal Vctory Goes to Character," by Vncent Sheean, n November Cosmopoltan; "Staln, Htler's New Ally," n November Cosmopoltan; "Duty of a Pacfst," n November Atlantc Monthly; "Common Sense of Amercan Neutralty," n November "Render's Dgest; "More Mnortes, More Pawns," n November Survey Graphc; "The Whtes of Ther Eyes," and "An mmgrant Ame - - can Speaks Out," n November Fo~um. The followng books are also recommended: nformaton Department Papers, No. 23, Germany's Clam to Colones; H. D. Lasswell, / ropaganda Technque n the World War; B. A. Arneson, The Democratc Monarches of Scandnava; C. E. Merram, The New Democracy and the New Despotsm; J. J. Spengler, France Faces Depopulaton; G. S. Ford, Dctatorshp n the Modern World; W. Brown, War and Peace; F. C. Wrght, Populaton and Peace; Earl Browder, Fghtng for Democracy, Sttn ' Prettv! Collegans Favor Alles n Combat (A.C.P.) Wth all elements of the naton ardently campagnng for one sde or another n the current debate over the Unted States' poston n the current world stuaton, college students are strongly assertng ther vews on just what should be done to clarfy ther country's stand on nternatonal poltcs. Neos presents a summary of most recent polls: A lttle more than 58 per cent of the college youth favor the move of the U. S. senate n votng repeal of the embargo aganst shpment of arms to foregn natons. When t comes to the queston of furnshng mltary ad to the alles, Brtan and France, f they face defeat, collegans vote 68 per cent aganst sendng our men and machnes across the Atlantc. Ths vote s despte the fact that 91 per cent of the undergraduates votng favor the cause of the alles aganst the totaltaran allance. n keepng wth the expressons gven above, 96 per cent voted n the "no" column when asked f they thought U. S. should enter the present European war. n fact, 78 per cent ndcated that they would not volunteer for servce f the U. S. went to war on the sde of the alles. On the other hand, 55 per cent ndcated that they would fght n the U. S. army f we are attacked. The surprsng fact here s the large number (45 per cent) who ndcated that they would not fght even f our naton or ts terrtores were nvaded. Women Fnd Employment n Adng Farm Groups New opportuntes for women n the professonal agrcultural servces are stressed by the U. S. Department of Agrculture. Recent years have brought an ncreasng demand for workers n the program of assstance to the low ncome farm groups, admnstered by the Farm Securty Admnstraton. Not only n actually rehabltatng desttute farm famles, but also n the executve, legal, and educatonal felds related to ths work, women today are fndng a varety of jobs, payng from $4,000 to $6,000 a year. Corsages Potted Plants Gay Bouquets RCE'S FLOWER SHOP 95 Central St. Tel'. We Gross Strauss fashons are beng- prased to the skes.. for ther sparklng sprts, ther gay personalty. GROSS STRAUSS WELLESLEY NC Central St Wellesley NC TELEPHONE WELLESLEY 1028-M 10 NEW STREAMLNED ALLEYS Fluorescent lghtng and mechancally ventlated for healthful bowlng For Your Convenence and Pleasure COLONAL BULDNG 5 CREST ROAD Modernstc equpment and sound proof- ng throughout for your enjoyment

8 muff C. G. Comment Of the several student bodes organzed under College Government, one of the less well-known but nevertheless potentally mportant s the Cabnet. t meets but nfrequently, s lttle publczed, and up to now has had no specfc problems wth whch to deal. Yet at a recent meetng t became.evdent that, f used by the organzatons whch are represented by ther presdents, Cabnet mght be a useful organ of College Government. Members of the Cabnet are the Presdent and the Senor and Junor Vce-Presdents of College Government, the Chef Justce, the Charman of House Presdents' Councl, the Presdents of Barnswallows and the Athletc Assocaton, the Edtor-n-Chef of Nevs, and the presdents of the four classes. Cabnet s the only organzaton n college whch represents all of the major extracurrcular nterests. The members of the body as a whole may advse specfc organzatons on problems nvolvng outsde factors; they may con-elate actvtes of several organzatons; and they may nfluence legslaton by advsng Senate through ther charman. At the last meetng, for example, a new plan of organzng Servce Fund was dscussed. News could nform the Cabnet about publcty methods, C. A. about theores of charty n general, and the other organzatons, whle not drectly concerned, could advse from a broadmnded standpont. The Cabnet should be fully utlzed by students through ther representatves, the heads of organzatons, n ts capacty as an advsory group to the Presdent of College Government and through her to the Senate. The Cabnet also serves as a unfyng element of major organzatons. Boston Wll Hear Alfred Duff Cooper The Rght Honorable Alfred Duff Cooper, D.S.O., M.P., former frst Lord of the Brtsh Admralty, and one of the most brllant speakers n the Englsh Parlament, wll speak on "Savng The Democraces" at Symphony Hall, November 28, at 8:30 p.m. Because he felt unable to support Mr. Chamberlan's "peace at any prce" settlement of the Czechoslovakan crss, Mr. Cooper resgned hs Cabnet Post n October, Educated at Eton and Oxford, Mr. Cooper served n the crack Grenader Guards durng the World War, and won the Dstngushed Servce Order. He s the author of Tallyrand, Hag, and House of Lords or Senate? HELENA RUBNSTEN Town and Country Week-ender 5.00 CO Member Talks On Unon Progress Mss Lnscomb Emphaszes Need of Whte Collar Workers For Unons Explanng the growth of the Commttee of ndustral Organzaton and the need for unonzaton of whte collar workers, Mss Florence Luscomb, offcer of the Boston chapter of Unted Offce and Professonal Workers of Amerca, spoke on " Jon the C..O." at the Forum dnner - dscusson Wednesday, November 22, n Beebe Hall at 6:15 p. m. Craft unonsm, accordng to Mss Luscomb, left the bulk of Amercan laborers at the mercy of vast corporatons n mass producton ndustres. Only wth ndustral unons can such workers bargan collectvely wth ther employers. Mass producton methods have created 12,000,000 salared workers, 22 per cent of those recorded as ganfully employed n the last census. Half of them work n "letter and record factores," stated Mss Luscomb, wth lttle opportunty for promoton to responsble jobs. "When once the whte collar and professonal worker analyzed hs status and realzed that he was a worker threatened lke any other worker, by low pay, long hours, unemployment, health hazards and dsplacement by machnes, he began to conclude that the soluton for hm as for the other workers was unon organzaton," declared the speaker. Mss Luscomb cted the rapd organzaton of the Amercan Federaton of Muscans, the Assocated Actors and Artsts of Amerca, the Amercan Communcatons Assocaton, and the Newspaper Guld. "The Unted Offce and Professonal Workers of Amerca," she contnued, "jumped ts membershp from 8,000 to 45,000 n the frst year of ts exstence." Democracy, Mss Luscomb sad, s somethng bgger than the ballot. "Democracy s the rght of the whole mass of the common people to seek and acheve ever hgher welfare for themselves through havng all laws and socal nsttutons subject to control and change at ther wll rather than at the wll of a prvleged few." The labor unon she consdered to be an essental factor n democracy. Mss Luscomb nssted that the unon's ncreased strength caused the recent enactment of labor legslaton, and housng and socal nsurance programs. (ACP) Here's somethng new the democrats are beng blamed for these days. The edtor of the Wheaton College Record receved a letter whch sad: "Dear Edtor (You Democrat) : We never froze at homecomng when Cooldge and Hoover were presdents." One of the best lookng, most practcal gfts for the grl who makes the most of her weekends. Eght beauty essentals superbly tucked oway n a smart handbag. Black or brown allgator graned fabrcod. For dry, normal or oly skn. SlatteryS Near the Wellesley nn Faculty Members Dscuss Research Work on Leaves of Absence Senorta Anta "Oyarzabal, of the Spansh Department, spent last By Jane Strahan year studyng for her Ph.D. degree at Johns Hopkns Unversty. Her courses there were a "conglomeraton" n foregn lterature all entalng detaled work wth sources and frst hand materal. Among her most nterestng work were courses n French studyng the talan players n France n the 16th century, and the 19th century "roman sauvage," and an talan course n the art and lterature of Renassance taly wth especal emphass on Petro Aretno and Machavell. Spansh lterature was not neglected n Senorta's currculum as she made a study, chefly phlologcal, of La Celestna, Tragcomeda de Calxte y Melbea n 21 acts. But the "gem" of her courses, Senorta says, was a course n Spansh lterature whch she took under Senor Pedro Salnas, "so good* because t was a product of Wellesley." Senorta s now kept busy workng on her thess on the subject of Reappearng Characters n the Work of Galdos, an especally sutable topc snce all the research for t can be done here, "for Wellesley has one of the fnest Spansh lbrares n the country." Senorta dd, however, fnd tme amdst all her work to mss Wellesley, "teachng and the grls," very much, and s happy to be back agan. Mss Mary L. Cooldge, Professor of Phlosophy and former Dean of the College, also spent a year away from Wellesley studyng phlosophy at Columba Unversty. Durng the summer she travelled n Norway, Sweden, and reland. " ddn't have any adventures," sad Mss Cooldge, "and got home before the war scare." Mss Helen S. French, of the Chemstry Department, dd research work at the Calforna nsttute of Technology n Pasadena durng her second semester leave of absence. Mss French studed a new method for determnng molecular structure, by means of the magnetc susceptblty of molecules. "t was a stmulatng atmosphere for any scentst," found Mss French, "as the nsttute s the outstandng nsttuton for scentfc study n ths country." Mss Anne K. Tuell, Professor of Englsh Lterature, after a trp to the South, travelled n England and France durng her sabbatcal leave last semester. Mss Tuell s workng on a study of John Sterlng, an early Vctoran of whom Thomas Carlyle wrote a bography. Sterlng was a man typcal of hs age and as such s extremely nterestng. He was a man full of deas and enthusasms, a sort of "recevng staton" absorbng contemporary deas and opnons, and * DancE * LEGHTON NOBLE AND HS ORCHESTRA Featurng "Chck" Floyd, Panst; Edth Caldwell, and the Noble Tro DNNER DANCNG every nght except Sunday SUPPER DANCNG Frday and Saturday Cover Charge $1.00 TERRACE DNNG ROOM HOTEL STATLER O. B. STANBRO, Manager through sortng of them came to acheve hs own ndvdual freedom of thought. Mss Tuell dd some work n the Brtsh Museum, but the most exctng and valuable part of her work was on a prvate collecton of Sterlng's leters owned by hs granddaughter, to whch she was allowed access. Mss Judth B. Wllams of Wellesley's Hstory Department went abroad prncpally to check on references for a book on whch she has been workng, now n rough draft. The book, enttled England's Search for Markets, s a study of the perod of the ndustral revoluton n England from 1750 to Mss Wllams' most nterestng experence was an nvtaton from Lady Pnney to work on some books n her hstorc home, "Racedown" n Dorset, where Wordsworth and hs sster Dorothy once lved. Mss Wllams' work also took her to France, taly, and Germany. The tenson before war, Mss Wllams found, was much more notceable n England than n other European countres for the Englsh seemed* to have decded "that somethng had to be done" and so were less surprsed at the outbreak of war than were the Germans. Delegates Wll Gather At N. Y. Peace Meetng Students and teachers from New England and New York colleges wll exchange opnons on "The Bases of a Durable Peace" at nternatonal House, 500 Rversde Drve, New York Cty, December S and 9. The occason wll be a regonal conference sponsored by the nternatonal Student Servce, whose Amercan commttee has for the last sx years coordnated work n ths country for European student exles. One hundred and ffty delegates are expected t«> attend, ncludng forepn students now n Amerca. Only fve delegates from any One College may attend. Dr. Clyde Eagleton, leadng authorty n nternatonal rel and professor at New York Unv.sry. wll lead the conference, wnch wll open wth a luncheon on Frday, December 8, at nternatonal House. Dr. Arnold VVolfers of Yale, Dr. Hans Smons, Dr. Frederck V. Feld, and Dr. James T. Shotwell are among the jpcakers who have been nvted to address the conference. Dr. Walter Kotschng of Smth wll help to sum up the dscusson. The WELL FUDGE CAKE ce Cream on Fudge Cake wth Chocolate & Marshmallow -, Sauce 20 c Nov. 23 Nov. 29 Mr. Gezork Speaks On Nordc Relgon Voluntary Exle Comments On German Fath Today And ts Dual Roots "Nordc relgon accepts conflct as the great creatve prncple of lfe," sad Mr. Herbert Gezork of the Bble Department as he lectured on "The Nordc Fath n Germany" at Tower Court, Thursday evenng, November 16. Mr. Gezork, a voluntary exle from the Naz state, ponted out that ths rsng German theology consders the power whch only conflct can brng as necessary for "the hghest good of the Nordc race." The Nordc fath centers around three contemporary leaders. Erch Ludendorf and hs followers attack Chrstanty drectly, attrbutng the Bble to "ndan sources permeated wth Jewsh sprt." Takng a more academc approach, a group about Wlhelm Hauer consder that "Chrstanty wll never get rd of ts Semtc trats." Htler's close frend, Alfred Rosenberg, meanwhle, urges a modfed Chrstanty, "purged of ts Old Testament lterature and the wrtngs of Paul." Mr. Gezork sees n ths Naz relgous fath the deas of two phlosophers, Frederch Netzche and Houston Stewart Chamberlan. Netzche contrbuted the deal of a "superman" who scorns the weakes of ascetc Chrstanty. t was Chamberlan who furnshed the prncple of race dstnctons. He consdered the Nordc group as the most superor wth a moral duty not to ntermngle «th any nferor races. Although Chrstan servces seem outwardly to contnue < many, Mr. Gezork sad, " am convnced almost all leaders of Htler youth are neo-pagans and Nordc belevers. Nordc fath must have a great future unless complete poltcal changes come to Germany." For Grnd tnners FRASER'S FLOWERS! 58 Central St. Telephone 0700 Wellesley WELLES LEY Adorable New Daytme and Evenng Clothes begnnng- $14.90 tnummmf 1 Charge Accounts Opened j Ehmubbhh V^VVWMrW^ArWWWVWVW^WWrWJV.%^ THE CLEMENT DRUG COMPANY The tz new thadt* n chtch PrrUM* UP TONE t pre-cntrd art utterly d College Pharmacy - mmutubuumnag LQUD 'LPSTCK'... can't come off!... can't smear!... protects lps! JCUjjUcLJuplbm. Here, at last, s a dream come true. Completely transparent lp color that s nether paste nor grease; color that just refuses to come off untl you purposely remove t. Apply LP TONE before dnner and you'll dscover at dawn that not even n mte of ts rch redness and shmmerng luster s gone. We smply can't wat untl you try ths heavenly new beauty ad. Belvedere Pharmacy wwwyw..vw^%^wy^^^wwwav^ar^^ <

9 exhlbt L., earlj Un ollege D) n!< '. ( pen a Calendar Thursday, Nor. 28: '8:16 a.m. ( Mornng Chapel. Katharne R, Buchanan m wll lead. 3:40 p.".. Pendleton Hall class m 00 p.m., b'aoultj Assembly R Green Hall. Academc Councl.»4:30 p.m., Room 130 Green Hall. Mss nd rdonk of the Department "f Phlosophy and '.-v, -h.h.gv wll talk on ' Humansm. Ten ' 4:00 (Chrstan Assocaton.; Alumna Hall. Busch nd 10,,.,,,., Serkln, voln and pano rectal. Ths the Becon ncerl n the Wellesle3 Concert Fund seres. sngle s tckets al F2.00 are on sale at the Com erl Pun Bee, Bllngs Hall. Frday, Nov. 24: "8:15 a.m., Mornl nn Chapel. Mrs. Bwlnc»' ' '" 1-8:00 p.m., Pendleton Hall. Sra. '- bel O. de Palencla, Spansh & ste n Stockholm, , wll lecture n Englsh on "Women n Dplomacy. (Department "f Spansh.) «lo n.m.. Morn- Saturday, Nov. B5: ng rhap.-l. M:-.- -M. Al. ;vh le'.l. 8:00-12:00 p.m., Alumnae Hall, nformal all allege dance. 1, couple, J.76 grl slag, wll DO on sale at the tcket booth, h Hall,. M,, Nov. 24, S :40 a.m. :40 p.m., - and Saturday, Nov. 26, 8:40 a.m, - 2:40 p.m. (All College Dance Com- '"NM-ohn. Soy. B6: a.m., Meal Chapel P Charles, W Gllk. Dean ol nlversltj ' hapel, [Jnlversltj o( Chcago. ' '"< P.m., Ph Sgma lons., a college vespers. Dr. Gllkej wll be the Bpenker. K hrlstlan Vs o l.) Jlondny, Soy. 7: 8:16 a.m.. Mornng Chapel. -M'ss McAfee wll lead 4:40,,.,. Pendleton Hall. Rev, Ots. N -. ;.,. [rvlng-on-huds wll speafc on "Psychologcal Preparaton for.marrage." Open to senors only. (Marrage Lecture ommlttee 7 : oo - 7 :30 p.m., Munger Hall. French ncludng Chrstmas carols. (L/Ale Franca e.) Tuesday, Nov. 88: - 15 a m., -Morn- ng Chapel. Mss Co.- wll lead. Wednesday, Nov. 2«:»8:16 a.m., Mornng Chapel, Mr. Haroulunlan wll lend. 8:00-12:00 p.m., T.Z.B. House. tfon-resldents' Dance, Thursday, Nov. 80: B :1B a.m., -No Mornng Chapel. NOTES: Wellesley UDrarj South Hall. Through November, exhbtons of frst edton " t"» o ol w lllam Blake Through Novemb t autographed lette and flrsl edtons ol Alexander Pope. North Hull. Through November L'., exhlb edtons ond nanu- Wellesley Guest House 9 Abbott Street Rooms for overnght guests Breokfost served Tel. We Mrs. Hughes Colleges Express Dfferent Vews On Recent Repeal of Embargo Law (ACP) n connecton wth News' recent survey of campus opnon toward war, t s nterestng to notce the opnons of varous colleges on the repeal of the embargo The mportant thng to guard act. n the ssue of September 23, News argued, "Snce whatever Amerca does wll help one sde aganst the other, the only way to escape war les n gvng materal ad to the Alles. But f Amercan shps carry muntons to Brtan and France, under nternatonal law, German submarnes can snk them. Bellgerents can seze all contraband goods. A cash and carry system whereby foregn purchasers take ttle on Amercan shores and assume responsblty for transportaton s the only alternatve." Soundng a warnng note for the future, the Dartmouth College Daly Dartmouth says: "The cash and carry law s the product of two Amercan ams, frst that we should have legslaton whch would help keep us out of war, second that we should have legslaton whch would help the Alles. aganst now s that we do not allow the latter to grow n mportance at the expense of the frst." Prasng the new neutralty act, the Harvard Unversty Crmson scrpts of the works of Petrarch, from h, Plmpton Collecton. Wellesley College Art Museum. Through November 24, exhbton of reproduc ol drawngs by Degas, selected from "Lea Desslns de Degas," edted by <;.,T. Demotte. to the publc. cautons those who wll admnster t n these words: "The man burden of enforcng the act s placed upon the Presdent. He t s who must defne the areas of combat from whch our shps are to be excluded, and declare what. countres are bellgerents. The remanng detals fall n the provnce of the state department. t s rght that these dutes should be placed n the executve branch of the government, for that s ts functon. However, the record of ths branch durng the past few months ndcates that t wll bear close watchng." The Unversty of Mnnesota Daly hals the act as beng the preventer of further ncdents lke that whch engulfed the Cty of Flnt, and mantaned that "what s rght and proper accordng to nternatonal law n ths case wll be a subject for controversy among experts for years to come. t s a problem whch wll never recur so long 'as the new neutralty law of the Unted States s n force. Henceforth there wll be no Amercan vessels plyng n bellgerent waters, threatenng Amercan peace and brngng consternaton to the world's experts n nternatonal law." Come to THE UNCORN BOOK SHOP for your Chrstmas Cards 28 Grove St., Wellesley, Mass. Wellesley 1561 RAE'S VANTY SHOPPE 67 CENTRAL STREET WELLESLEY, MASS. Campus Crer LOST: One book: Plays of Lcschylus. Fnder pes e ommunh t. wth ; '. n. Tower Court. Alumn Notes Marred Dorothy Becker R. Aronoff. '38 to Herbert Sylva Callendar Ex-'38 to James B. Bragaw. Dorothy Devoe Ex-'38 to Robert Roy Endeler. Mary Everett '38 to Rchard A. Houseley. Frances O. Graham '38 to Paul L. Newberry. Jane Kornblth '38 to Segel Hess. Janet Woodsum '38 to Rodney C. Larcom, Jr. Engaged Margaret Kate Johnson '38 to George D. Culler. Sylva H. Cohen '39 to Herome Seymore Goldsmth. VL FRESHMAN how about an evenng snack frut, crackers, jam Glenvew Market Farm DR. STANLEY E. HALL DENTST Wobon Blk. Wellesley Square Tel. We W Bg 3 Holds Majorty n State Department ACP) The U. S. state department n Washngton may be the representatve to the world of the entre naton, but t's a Harvard- Yale-Prnceton delegaton so far as the country's colleges are concerned. A recent study of the approxmately 700 members of ths partcular governmental unt reveals that almost 25 per cent are from the bg three unverstes of the east, wth Harvard rankng frst, Yale second, and Prnceton thrd. Next n rank come Cornell, Dartmouth, Stanford, Calforna, Mchgan, and Mnnesota. All told, there are 150 alma maters represented. TOURANE carres a complete stock of GOTHAM GOLD STRPE HOSERY 85c to $1.35 Always a wse choce for Economy, Durablty and Good Looks 60 Central St Wellesley (joette X)avd/ ttmma Mdness am Better Taste Wth Chesterfeld's Rght Combnaton of the world's best Amercan and Turksh tobaccos he great combnaton of BETTE DAVS and ERROL FLYNN, shown above n costume and nformally, gves mllons a lot of pleasure n Warner Bros, current release, "The PrvateLves ofelzabeth & Essex" The great combnaton oftobaccos n Chesterfeld gves mllons real smokng pleasure because they're cooler, better- tastng and defntely mlder. Jllakeyour nextjtack When you ask for Chesterfelds you're buyng somethng no other cgarette can gve you at any prce... a cooler, better-tastng and defntely mlder smoke. Make your next pack Chesterfeld. You can't buy a better cgarette. Lght up a Chesterfeld and you're all set to enjoy Real Smokng Pleasure wth the best cgarette money can buy... THEY SATSFY. esterfeld Copyrght 19J9. Lggett «j Myers Tobacco Co.

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