Show BENNETT AT HARVARD Cu The ted or Harvard te Is nicely calHon cal cal- to heighten tile te material splendor ot of the plate place Thus It III Ii etiquette for tor the prid mik ig dut-ig his term of 0 to ment ot of a building or so 50 to the Now buildings at Harvard hive y ad the excellent habIt of 1 lire than about half hal a million Hon never dol dol- ver t i II to th the tte the gina oh ob university from old st dent shall a there therel twin IUm they thew touch It IlOa on a no architectural All tho buildings are aUy sa modest eat many are beautiful Nj d I one t that at With will the sober t att NOwhere of ot the whole IB s. the eye offend offend- ed fd One 00 looks locks upon tho the crimson facades with the same came lenient love lore as M marks ones one's attitude toward those quaint and lovely English houses no so familiar to American visitors to our isle that are all aU sequences and no bathroom That Is IB tho the external external- effect erred Assuredly entering some of 0 t those ope storied doorways one would anticipate an nn- te Inconveniences and what Is 16 called I old world charm within But Dut within one OM discovers simply naught but the very latest tho the Ver very dearest tho the very best of everything that Is luxurious I 1 wan wa-is ushered Into a a. most princely apartment apart apart- ment grandiose In dimensions superbly furnished and anti decorated lighted with nc rich discretion heated d to a Portraits by John S hung on the va vast t walls and anda a a. score of other manifestations of ot art rivalled these In the attention of the stranger tranger No club In London could match this chamber It was wu I t b believe lIeve a sort eort of ot lounge lounce for tho the Anyhow a few fow students w were ro lounging ng In It only a few t th ero ro was Wa no rush for the privilege And I Ithe the few loungers were really J lounging un lpg In Inthe inthe I the wonderfully postures or of youth They might tJ have ve been lounging In a a. railway rail raU- way station or a a. barn bam Inte instead d of ot amid portraits by John Sargent The fb u h racket court wa was an ex et cx- j ample of or another kind of ot luxury v very ry dif dlf ferent brent from tho the cunning combinations of ot pictured walls wall books carved wood and deep piled carpets carpels hut but not less authentic The dining hall hail seating a n thousand simul imul- M was as another Hero Here I witnessed tho the laying laing of dinner tables table by negroes I noted that the sudden sight of or me In In- sta-nU sta convinced 1 ono one negro engaged in tho the manipulation of ot pats pata of butter a fork would be more In keeping with the Harvard Hat tradition than his fingers rl and I was waa humanly glad thus to learn that the secret reality of ot table laying l is the tho same in two continents I saw not th the dining of the thousand In fact I doubt whether I in iii all aU I saw of the tho students They had mysteriously vanished d from all the resorts of 0 p perfect rt ct l luxury ury provided for tor them Possibly th they y were withdrawn Into the privacies of the thousands of suites suites- each containing bedroom sitting room bathroom and telephone which I 1 understood under stood are aro allotted to ie them for lairs I left lett Harvard with a IS very clear Impression of Its frank welcoming hospitality ond ot of Its lii extraordinary luxury Arnold Arnold Bennett in Harpers Harper's Magazine for October 1 |