o THE COLLEGE NEWS 3 Page Five |\'Mathematic’s Growth | Drive Distributions - rrent 1 ee : | To Date Announced | Blood ponerse ee | “ Traced by Miss Lehr | The American Red Cross, To Speak on French Southeastern Pennsylvania : Chapter, Main Line Branch Interaction Between Natural payday 500 dollars out of its total|]| No. 1, is asking for Volun- Sciences and Mathematics | 1300 dollars. In a meeting of the|j/ teer Blood Donors as part of Continuea trom Page One _ Tuesdby, November ‘ba! spite the fact that Congress has had to change ‘quarters,” said Miss M. Pierre De Lanux, author, war correspondent and historian,’ will speak at four o’clock in the Dean- : Reid at Current Events, “the Sen- Described by Lehr presidents of. all college organiza. as rosie ac oa esa |lery December, 5 on Les Frangais.. ee ee = Re hea oa ‘he Walter-Logan Dal N cea if tions this fund was decide upd fe iterated eo ssn. De TM. De banux was co-fbiitder*oEe ~~” ill, 27-25.” She pointed out won alton, November —In the y * ||Nouvelle Revue Frangais 1909. He Q jand later. the Undergraduate As- Leary who will make the nec- although this is not a large enough! sixth Science Club lecture, Miss ae <4 ; sociation Board decided that since essary arrangements. majority to override a probable); ehr discussed the development of Presidential veto, it was by no Pp one of these German refugee schol- means a full roll of the Senate. maphemintics to Sn, exact MROGRED | avs has been ill, the money raised Miss Reid believes that the recent | Science and described the give and: for her would be saved until she is Greek conquest of Koritza seems to| take ‘between the natural sciences able,to return to Bryn Mawr. This indicate not only Greek victory but'!and the abstract science of mathe-| Student, Toni Stern, known to most) turn ie —— - oe =a The Young People’s Forum, that Britain has given more aid) matics. Words change their mean-| °* UR ne WEEE ete Ne ee ialawne le aulled trem Ui sponsored by. Bryn Mawr College, than was supposed. Germany’s ! — letter: Haverford, and the Ardmore Y. ; ; : i h tural sci eee : Z diplomatic move of enlarging the| ings se tie napural sciences become iof Mars’ orbit. ' I wish I could tell you in person| y. ¢, A., is giving a series of panel axis to a six-power alliance will! abstract and_Miss Lehr described In Greek geometry a line-had al-| what it means to me to have Bryn| discussions on the U. S. in the prove useful in the future in case; how the name geometry in contrast ways been uséd as a finite segment| Mawr ‘saved.’ I read your letter present war. The first one will be, the central European countries|to the Greek interpretation has between two points. At the begin-| over and over, because it did not|“The position of the U. S. after should rebel. Miss Reid also stated| heen given to some mathematical ning of the 17th century, Descartes | Seem possible that all of you really] she joins the war,” by Mr. Charles was war correspondent to the Bal- kans in 1912. Undergraduate Association thanlf- ing it for making possible her“fre- Young | Peoples’ Forum that Bulgaria’s refusal to.join in-| science because “it was good on applied algebraic symbols to geo-| want to have me back. Miller, of the Bryn Mawr History dicates strong Russian backing and! emotional grounds to a sufficient metric problems. Descartes needed| “This must mean that from now| Department, on Thursday, Decem- coercion. Because Bulgaria failed! gmount of competent people.” lcnly two symbols—z, y for un-|on Tl get well very fast, because per 5, at 8 p. m., at the Y. M. C. A. to cooperate with Der Fuhrer, Ger-, gixteenth century mathemati- knowns — to form an equation|it seems impossible to keep away ions was wegen step down int0| cians made use of many Greek representing a geometric curve injfrom Bryn. Mawr any longer. It reece to aid Italy. theorems about space. In observing the plane.. Using equations like|sounds so nice and comforting that 1d Ge » Miss Reid concluded by com- | physical space, coe saw that rr ax + by — ce to describe the line,|I have friends who ask for me. After the Ball 1S Over € menting on the appointment of Ad-} un and planets seemed to move he broke away from the limited “It was wonderful to hear miral Leahy, as ambassador to the! spout the earth and they tried to line segment and using more com-|you talk about what is going on “THE GREEKS” Vichy Government to replace Bul- Facacribe these motions by circles plicated equations he had new|-- - I was very much interested in litt. around the earth. Copernicus later curves. what the Peace Council is doing.” suggested the sun as center of Newton used the knowledge he | WUCHseeeieCouisenesesiCOUstNeNeNNPCOUNGEAAELANDOCONNNAAAEAAAGOCONALAONOANACONNANNONEECOULNEN NER: ™ these circles. had garnered from a study of From these early observations| astronomy in trying to *explain hed Kepler in: the 17th century tried} Kepler’s law of orbits and, in 1664, . (ORD to figure out the orbits encircling|he developed pure mathematical \Y the sun. Up* to 1609 it had on concepts, discovering differential SUNDAY MORNING REVIVAL cl {been supposed that use could be/calculus and _ integral | calculus. 'made of conic sections—the ellipse,| From the 17th century on more the parabola, and the hyperbola;|and more geometry was expressed but at this time Kepler applied|algebraically. In 1843 Cayley made BOOKS GIFTS these sections to astronomy demon-|the language of n—dimensional STATIONERY strating their ability. Using the| geometry for equations in-a num- sun as a foci, he computed an el-|ber of variables no longer limited lipse that checked the observations; to three. RICHARD STOCKTON’S BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN ee liiTiitenniiiiiin IN A CIGARETTE . THE SMOKES me me! 1E SM SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVES YOU EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, EXTRA FLAVOR, AND : )f LESS NICOTINE | than the average of the 4 other of the largest-selling cigarettes tested__less BRON eM en eli OL O LITO LIeLUTel eri ett etiih : than any of them__according to indepen- dent scientific tests of the smoke itself HEN you get right down to it, a cigarette is only as flavorful— only as cool—only as mild—as it smokes. The smoke's the thing! Obvious—yes, but important —all-important because what you get in the smoke of your cigarette depends so much on the way your cigarette burns. “ Science has pointed out that Camels are definitely slower-burning (see left). That means a smoke with more mildness, more.coolness, and more flavor. Now-—Science confirms another important advantage of slower burning... of Camels. Less nicotine—in the smoke! Less than any of the 4 other of the largest-selling brands tested—28% less than the average! Light up a Camel... a s-l-o-w-burning Camel...and smoke out the facts for yourself. The smoke’s the thing! By burning 25% slower . than the average of the 4 other of the largest-selling brands tested—slower than any of thém—Camels also give you a smoking p/us equal, on the average, to ._.. 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! “SMOKING OUT” THE FACTS about nicotine. Experts, chemists analyze the smoke of 5 of the largest-selling . brands... find that the smoke of slower-burning Camels \ contains less nicotine than any of the other brands tested. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina mm 4¢ 4 -«s« THE SLOWER-BURNING. = ecu CIGARETTE | bs j ia