ail THE COLLEGE NEWS Page Three Experimental Writing Answers Serious Need | Course “Enables Student to Choose Her Particular Field in Writing The cry of a great many ‘Bryn Mawr students has been most happily answered this year by the addition to the college curriculum of a class We have had _ up to. this time, instruction in in experimental writing. e various specialized fields, criticism, poetry, short stories,. and in “some years plays, but. never before has the immature but aspiring writer, who has not yet found her particular field, had the opportunity to experiment, to compare, and. eventually to discover the nature.of her especial talent. Miss Cornelia Meigs, who is so well- known from her delightful children’s stories, is giving the course this year known as Experimental Writing. The class meets once a week, taking up at each discussion a different type of writing, essays formal and informal, description, biography, historical nar- rative, short story and novel construc- tion. -Reading--from-—contemporary authors in these varying types of prose is assigned for each week, and each student turns in a composition of her own in prose or in poetry as she chooses. Both the original pa- pers and the reading are discussed in class for the purpose of formulating aencaensn fsesssisatsnnnenbsininnsaianisnpnsehiininassinaptasaatail the requirements necessary for each type of writing. The purpose of this course is three- | fold,..to give the student practice, to awaken her to thoughtful criticism, and, above all,:to enable her to find that.field of writing for which she is best suited. The requirement of a pap_r every week in an assigned form trains the student to write facilely 'and with whatever material she may have at hand, and. prepares. for a journalistic career or for the day whcn her publishér may tell the pdp- ular author what-her next book must be in order to satisfy the demand of her public. Critical reading and dis- cussion of popular contemporary au- thors helps one more than anything else to discover what one likes,yor dis- likes in current literature and for what tangible reasons. Finally, by uncurbed experiment and by compar- ing the results, the writer finds her limitations and her ability, and starts herself in the field where she is most likely to succeed. In this experiment- ing and first venture the student is _ helped by the actual experience and impartial judgment of Miss > Meigs, who corrects the papers and discusses with each student her progress arid her failures in frequent interviews. The class, although new. this_year, is attended by twelve students. It is encouraging to know that so many people who have the definite inten- tion of writing, will have gained valu- able experience and training by the end of the second semester, when each student has completed a long pieces of work in that field in which she ‘has chosen to specialize. We can- not voice loudly enough our appreci- ation to the college for initiating this course, and to Mi-.s Meigs for con- senting to struggle with such eager but untrained material. Miss Park is Guest of Honor President Park will be the guest of. honor at a dinner to be given by the Bryn Mawr Club in New York on Wednesday evening, January 25th, in the private dining rooms’ of the Park Lane. About one hundred mem- bers of the club and their guests are expected: at the dinner. ’ The Bryn Mawr Club moved in Oc- tober from the club house at 213 East 61st street, to its present lo- cation. at the Park Lane, 299 Park avenue, New York. Board of. governors.of the Bryn Mawr Club, 299 Park avenue, N. Y.: Mrs. Bolt Lowry, president; Mrs. Howard T. Oliver, vice-president; Miss Katharine Van Bibber, treas- urer; Miss: Alice Newlin, secretary; Miss Jean Palmer; assistant secre- tary; Mrs. Louis Ellinger, Mrs. David Goodnow, Mrs. William S..: Hardie, Miss Caroline F. Lerow, Mrs. Fred- erick .:A. Dewey, Mrs. John C. Juh- ring, Jr, PHILIP HARRISON STORE BRYN MAWR, PA. Gotham Gold Stripe Silk Hosiery, $1.00 Best Quality Shoes in Bryn Mawr ~ NEXT DOOR TO THE MOVIES IN PHILADELPHIA Sn (Continued from Page Two) in Handle With Care; Friday, Nancy Carroll and George Raft in Under Cover Man; Saturday, Richard Dix in Hell’s Highway; Monday and Tues- day, Central Park, with Joan Blon- dell and Wallace Ford; Wednesday and Thursday, Clark Gable and Jean Harlow in Red Dyst; Friday, Rob- ber’s Roost, with George O’Brien; Saturday, Silver Dollar, with Ed- ward G. Robinson. Seville: Wednesday and Thursday, Scarlet Dawn, with Douglas Fair- banks, Jr., and Nancy Carroll; Fri- day,. Three on a Match, with Joan Blondell and Warren William; Sat- urday, Little Orphan Annie, with Mitzie Green and Buster Phelps; Monday and Tuesday, Me and My Gal, with Joan. Bennett and Spencer Tracy; Wednesday and Thirteen Women, with Ricardo Cor- tez, Myrna Loy and Irene Dunne; Friday, Men Are Such Fools, : with Leo Carillo, Vivienne Osborn and Una Merkel; Saturday, Age of Consent, with Eric Linden and Dorothy Wil- sor. : Wayne: Thursday and Friday, Ann Harding and Richard Dix in The Country Bookshop 30 Bryn Mawr Avenue Bryn Mawg,. Pa. Lending Library— First Editions Thursday, | | The Conquerors; Saturday, Heritage of the Desert, with Randolph Scott ; and Sally Blane; Monday and Tues- day, John Barrymore, Billie Burke and Katherine Hepburn in A Bill of Di- vorcement; Wednesday anfl Thursday, Herbert Marshall, Kay Francis and Miriam Hopkins in Trouble in Para- dise;; Friday and Saturday, James Dunn and Boots Mallory in Handle With Care. A school to teach girls how to be- come ideal wives has recently been opened in Tokyo, Japan. It is known as the brides’ school and is trying to counteract the widespread movement in Japan to bring women into «the various professions.—(NSFA.) nena ain an an ana Aan atin afin 4 LUNCHEON, TEA, DINNER Open Sundays Chatter-On Tea House 918 Old Lancaster Road Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1185 GREEN HILL. FARMS City Line and Lancaster Ave. Overbrook-Philadelphia Luncheon Dinner Shore Dinner every Friday $1.50 No increase in price on Sundays or holidays | THEY TASTE BETTER © 1933, Liccert & Myers Topacco THEY’RE: MILDER = Co, So we’re going that way. That’s why we age that satisfies. Chesterfields are Milder HEN -you ask a Chesterfield smoker why that’s his brand — he generally comes right out flat-footed and says...‘‘It’s because They’re Milder!’ to keep on doing everything we know how to keep them That’s why we look for and buy the mildest and ripest tobaccos we can get. them in our ware- ” houses till they’re mellow and sweet. We believe that even the shredding of the tobacco...and the quality of the - paper it’s rolled in, have’ a lot to do ’ with the even-drawing, mild smoke that people enjoy in Chesterfields. 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