y f THE COLLEGE NEWS NUTS and BOLTS - BACH AND HANDEL Student: Jobs By Isabel Martin, ’42 Getting through college is a big financial problem for a great many students. In the large universities and in most men’s colleges, stu- dent employment bureaus have been established to make it possible for the poorer student to pay his necessary college expenses. The directors of universities welcome these ageneies, since they cut down the scholarship demand and enable more-students to attend college. The amount paid out by these agencies and the amount earned by students through other campus jébs astounds the undergraduate_/who flies through college with no great financial care. For instance, in Williams College last year 400 stu- dents earned 68 thousand dollars in 676 jobs on campus, represent- ing 99 different ways of earning money. Undergraduates there, as well as at other colleges, also work over the summer to’help make ends meet in the winter. In the summer + member not, Lord, Purcell; Come | both ’42, will sing solos from Han> CHAPEL FEATURES The Choir on Sunday next will give the following program: Re- dearest Lord, Bach; Nune. Dimittis, Tallis; O bone Jesu and Cruci- fixus,, Palestrina; and Look down, O Lord, Byrde. Louise Allen and Ann Updegraff, del’s Messiah, and Mendelssohn’s Praise thou the Lord willbe sung by five members of the Choir. Miss Helen. Rice, -Athleen Jacobs, and Harriet Case’ will be heard in a trio for violin, flute and piano and will play the Andante from the E flat Sonata of Bach. ; coHege expenses through agencies. A manager of’a laundry or food agency’ can earn. anywhere. from 900 to.1000 dollars a year, while a salesman of one agency may earn anywhere from 40 to 200 dollars a year by salary and commissions. According to a poll .taken at Swarthmore, a coeducational col- lege, students are financed chiefly by parents, scholarships, and sum- Page Five Varsity Basketball : Overcomes Beaver Ligon and Squibb Skyrocket Score as Opponents Fail - To Block Passes Monday, March 11.—The Var- sity pulled out of a preliminary slump to win against Beaver Col- lege, 47-25. Beaver’s game was marked by an incredible number of fouls, by frequent shooting and by less accurate passing than Bryn Mawr has: heretofore encountered. The Varsity found it hard at first to adjust to their tactics and were not sure of.each other’s positions. However, Bryn Mawr led 2-16 at the start of the second half and with, sharp shooting both Ligon, 40, and Squibb, ’41, sent the score skyward. Our passes were good and: the forwards noticeably quick to tackle back on their guards. With the Rosemont College game looming ahead as the last stepping stone to an undefeated season,. it is a comfortable feeling to know that although the Beaver game was lacking in vitality, it provides firm footing for_the last leap to -grew Frank Discusses Greek And Christian Thought Continued from Pare ay) skeptical of visibl¥ phe- nomena and became primarily in- terested in the human soul. Its firmness, calmness,’ and serenity became their ultimate aim. The growth of mystic cults met the general demand for salvation and agnosticism attempted to reconcile mysticism with the rationalism of early Greek philosophy. Mr. Frank pointed out that- men who had come within the Greek or Ro- man orbit were thus prepared for the Christian faith. - Augustine himself passed through all the phases of Greek philosophy before finding peace in the Christian doc- trine. For Augustine, the principle of reason sufficed so long as_ this world existed as the sole object of understanding. When-~ man could no longer find the ultimate aim of life in this world, then rea- son, “thrown back on its own re- sources,” led, of necessity, to a skeptical despair ‘of attaining any solution. ; To the early philosophers, God the Christian faith. “The human mind, when transgressing the lim- its of reality, needs a practical faith upon which to base its pre- suppositions.” To Augustine faith prevails over reason, but reason is: indispensable to faith. Although Augustine accepted the truth of Greek rational thinking, he infused into it a new conscious- ness of the form of reality. Also the idea of creation out of noth- ingness as opposed to Plato’s idea of creation out of chaos necessi- tates a new concept of the soul. Augustine conceived the soul or ego as a Christian one elucidated by reason. Since the individual soul springs from the creative will .of God, its essence remains an in- comprehensible mystery to Augus- tine. : The Augustinian conception of personality is correlative to the conception of moral will. The evil in man does not result from his ~ body but from his will: he is free to make his own decisions. Free- dom of will is a serious danger to man, but it is at the same time the presupposition of his personality. Augustine’s conceptions of time and history were entirely new and are listed among the. greatest is ‘ victory! was easily understood through rea-| achievements of philosophy.: He of ’38, about half the Williams men|mer jobs. Here stydent-managed BRYN MAWR BEAVER | Son. But as soon as He is placed| held that the past and the future who worked reported that alto- projects are comparatively unim- Ligon teerereyaey , DERE rar ne Patten beyond this world we cannot know] exist solely in the consciousness of gether they earned almost 26 thou-} portant. Six students- reported that Squibb trite poise yetisten | atm: Augustine found his answer} the ego. ~The history- of -individ- sand ‘dollars. The college bureau} they were financially independent, | Martin (c.) ....... tierce. “arin | to this problemi in the teachings] ual life in which everything is new ‘ found that the total earning power) the money being obtained from’jobs| Meyer ....... Pine sepag Hill | of St. Paul: “We are always con-| and never before created -is there- t) of the student body for a whole} outside college. The summer earn- Bryn Saws: Uaon, 34: Norris, 9; | fident for we walk by faith and|fore fraught with metaphysical year was more than 100 thousand|ings for girls average 125 dollars | Squibb, 14. not by sight.” We can believe in| meaning. In the first attempt at a dollars. Besides this money earned, Williams college gave almost 55 thousand dollars in scholarships, endowment loans and annual gifts. In a larger university, such as Princeton, about_one third of the student body earns part of their LLL La! THEY’RE OFF! Streaking down the mile-long icy trough of the Mt. Van Hoevenberg run at Lake Placid, N. Y. with “Bucky” Wells driving. Fifteen breath-taking turns to go. Fifteen chances to taste the supreme thrills of speed. But in smoking it’s different, very , different. “It’s slow burning that makes a cigarette tick with me,” ' “Bucky” Wells says. And he means what he says, because slow-burn- ing Camels have been his cigarette for ten years. per person, though one girl re- ported clearing 700 dollars running’) a beach stand. For men, the aver- age summer wage is 140 dollars, obtained by working as anything from a ditchdigger to a ship’s pur- ser. Beaver: Patten, 4; Williston, 21, es women’s colleges, the demand for financial aid is so much less than in men’s that tne employment bureau is a rare thing. In most women’s colleges there is a self- Continued on Page Six FOR THE THRILLS EXTRA MILDONESS EXTRA COOLNESS AND EXTRAS IN SMOKING — EXTRA FLAVOR the love of God only if we act in accordance with it. In this doctrine of a faith which works through love alone, Augus- tine found the metaphysical basis of reason. For him the task. of reason was to élucidate and clarify general philosophy of history, he maintained that the real subject of history was mankind and the comprehension of it as a_ unity. The ultimate aim of history is the realization of the kingdom of God on earth. come «ee CAMEL AND EXTRA SMOKING—I PICK THE SLOW-BURNING CIGARETTE aa F you want to know how it feels to go 80 miles an hour on a racing bob-sled, “Bucky” Wells of Keene Valley, N. Y. can tell you. He’s done it plenty of times. He likes those. speed-thrills on a racing bob. But when it comes to cigarettes, “Bucky” Wells is on the slow side...the slow-burning side. That means Camels! “I’ve smoked Camels for years, and I know they burn slower,” “Bucky” says. “There’s cool comfort in a Camel. Mild- ness — more flavor. And — slow burning means extra smoking. Yes, penny for penny, Camels are the best cigarette buy. ‘I’d walk a mile for a Camel!’” Why would anybody feel that way about his cigarette? Try a Camel and see. Camels are a matchless blend of costlier tobaccos...slow-burning. They give more pleasure per puff, more puffs per pack. SS In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25% slower than the average of % the 15 other of the largest-selling brands tested—slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus “ONE-TWO-BOB! ONE-TWO-BOB!” And, as the crew bobs, “Bucky” picks up speed ...60—70—80 miles an hour, driving high on the glassy wall of ice as he swings the quarter-ton steel sled around the curve. But in the field of cigarettes, this daring speedster gives the laurels to the quality of ‘slow burning that he finds in Camels. You can tell by their mild, mellow taste that Camels burn cooler, slower~and scientists have confirmed this. (See panel, right.)