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College news, December 17, 1924
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1924-12-17
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 11, No. 11
College news (Bryn Mawr College : 1914)--
https://tripod.brynmawr.edu/permalink/01TRI_INST/26mktb/alma991001620579...
Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation.
BMC-News-vol11-no11
‘ae
for their views.’
“Ss
6 THE COLLEGE NEWS
LAWS RESTRICTING TEACHING CALENDAR : per arya
AND ACTIVITIES INVESTIGATED Tuesday, December 16—Christmas is :
‘meeting of German Conversation Club,in] . 4
Denbigh at 8 P. M. : YW. . iy
Civil Liberties Union Protests Against tharcday, December: 18—Maids’ party 20% of f
' Interference
Interf ce by college authorities with
' the Ng of students to hear radical
speakers will be fought by a national
committee on American Freedom just or-
ganized by the ‘American Civil Liberties
Union.
Efforts to promote debates on free}
speech in colleges and, high schools have
been started by the .American Civil
Liberties- Union in sending out circulars
to over .a thousand debating societies
throughout the country offering the or-
ganization’s help. in preparing _ them.
Specific subjects proposed for debate cover
the Ku Klux Klan, the exclusion of aliens
for their opinions, injunctions. curbing rights |
during strikes, the abolition of laws punish-
ing -utterances, censorship on:plays and mov-
ing pictures and freedom to meet without
interference by public officials.
The committee is headed by Dr. Clar-
ence R. Tufts Skinner, of Tufts College,
Massachusetts, and includes among its mem-
- bers Paul Blanshard, New York; Prof.
Felix Frankfurter, Cambridge; Rev. John
Haynes Holmes, New York; Norman
Thomas, New York; Prof. Thorstein
Veblen, New York, and Prof. David
Starr Jordan, Stanford University, and
Prof, Vida D, Scudder, Wellesley.
The. committee will not duplicate work
done by other organizations, “primarily
concerned with restrictions on classroom
work teaching and discharge of teachers
It will deal with “laws
restricting teaching, such as those at-
tempting to prohibit the teaching of
evolution, of pacifism and of certain
concepts of history; with college and
school rules restricting student liberal and
radical activities; and with interference
with freedom of opinion of individual
students and teachers outside the class- |
room.”
IN PHILADELPHIA .
Garrick—“Be Yourself.”
Forrest—‘“Sally, Irene and Mary.”
Lyric—“The Beggar on Horseback.”
Walnut—“In the Next Room.”
Shubert—“Charlot’s Revue.”
Broad—“The Haunted House,” with
Wallace Eddinger.
-~Chestnut—=“The —-Dream- — Girl,” — with} -
Fay Bainter.
Coming—“The Buccaneer,” “Express-
ing Willie.” .
«Movies. —
Stanley—“Tongues of Flame.”
Stanton—“Forbidden Paradise.”
Aldine—“Ten Commandments.”
Arcadia—“Find Your Man.”
Globe—“Sahara.”
Academy of Music.
On Friday, December 19, the Phila-
delphia Orchestra will play the following
program:
Vaughn Williams ei
Lalo—Concerto in D minor, for Violon-
cello and Orchestra ....Michel Penha
Saint-Saens—“Danse mated ‘Sym-
phonic Poem. :
: CHILD LABOR SORE
_ TO BE DISCUSSED
‘Dr; Dorothy Sells, Associate in Social |.
Economy, will speak in chapel on Friday
about the Child Labor Amendment. Dr.
Sells is at present giving a course in the
Steen Movement.
~
ee ee
in gymnasium,
Friday,
Movement in
Friday, December 19—Christmas party
and carols; 7.30 P. M., Professor Yusuka
Tsurumi ‘will
auspices of the Liberal Club.
Saturday, December 20—Christmas va-
cation begins at 12.45.
December
Sells will speak on
19—Dr. Dorothy
the Child Labor
Chapel.
, speak in Chapel under the
Pastoral Symphony
NEWS IN BRIEF
AMY’S SHOP
: Candies me ,
aa Cee , es
Novelties :
y, Caras =,
857 LANCASTER AVENUE
‘Phone 1058-J Bryn Mawr
at 1107 Chestnut Street
ay . A Store Full of the Finest Shoes in the
-Newest Styles |
WALDO M. CLAFLIN
Ait ‘Nuais uid “Wonisilé- Mii
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T fell for Sidonie when I was fifteen and she
was twenty-three. Now that I am twenty-
one, and she is twenty-six, I love her still.
How can it be that Sidonie remains thus
perennially young; sought for at every
prom and house’ party; the delight of every
hostess and guest; not of our generation
and yet with us in everything? Every
other debutante of her vintage is by now a
more or less stayed matron. Her twin
sister Coralie is the proud mother of two
divorces. But Sidonie is with us. still,
unmarried by choice, charming and ever
young. At the last house party, I asked
her how she did it. She answered: “Joe, I
havé known you so long that I can be
?
»
7
Joe Gish learns about women from
the
‘frank. Youth, I have always believed, is a “e
question of information rather than of
income. So I try to keep abreast of every-
body else, and perhaps a lap ahead, on the
theatre, sports, literature, dancing—all the
pleasant things that make proms and
house parties worth while. That’s whyI
am dated up a season in advance. And it’s
all so simple. Any girl could do it—even
as dumb a cluck as Coralie. Any man
could do it—even you, dear Joe. You only ©
have to read Vanity Fair.”
If it does this for Sidonie, what wouldn’t
it do for you? eae
Cee Mcel_.
- 10 issues fe $2
VANITY FAIR,
Dear Vinies Fair, Greenwich, Conn.: |
eing a Freshman, I haven’t met Sidonie
broth ext werk end She wil be the
next week en will shies.
OLLARS, for y which: send me TEN
BAR IT OUT TEAR IT ha ta TEAR ‘IT OUT. ,TEAR IT ain pe rLL IT IN ee IT IN FILL IT IN FILL IT sac
O86} W608. 6 a6 0% F808 0 Od W Oe te. 6 we Oho. be 6-4 40 6 wie he. oy sm te
SIDONIE
professional
prom-trotter
aoe née bow
H
,
4
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-DO If Now DO'IT NOW
6