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College news, March 25, 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)
1924-03-25
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 10, No. 20
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-vol10-no20
Vol. X.No. 20. March 25, 1924. -
¢
THE COLLEGE NEWS en
9 up-hill climb. There have always
been and there always will be places
for improvement
work. We must always look for bet-
ter and. better students. We. must
make’ their conditions of working
*more and more satisfactory. We
must never: drop jhe standard of the
graduate degrees but we can perhaps
find adaptations to the individual in
the working out of their routine.
We must try to establish more re-
search fellowships and we must try
to increase the:stipend of our travel-
ing fellows so that they will not need
to dig so deep into their own pockets
when .they sail out as our ambassa-
dors. In other words, we must work
continuously for a higher standard
in our graduate |].
° se Bg
“6S ae
we
of an
_ Additional Shoe Store
at
SATURDAY, MARCH’ 29th ©
1107
1606 Chestnut Street’
a
A complete stock, and service at both stores °
ANNOUNCE THE OPENING
2 - = =
We must direct ourselves with a
bolder aim and we must rest con-
2 —~E LAFLIN
igog Chestnut
Miss E. CLarke Wins FELLOWSHIP
, 3
tented only with a more honorable accom-
MISS PARK SPEAKS AT
os ; plishment.”
wv
FELLOWSHIP DINNER
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1
advanced laboratory that contact first came.
“Another contact Miss Thomas made
from the’ very beginning for the graduate]. ,
student, the contact with a. wider culture,
with a different type of education. The
direct connection of the Bryn Mawr grad-
uate school with the training given in the
European university existed from the be-
ginning of the college. Almost every mem-
ber of the faculty has had his-year or years*
of foreign study. With the graduation of
the first class at Bryn Mawr its ablest stu-
dent was chosen to continue her work
abroad, and-its thirty-sixth European Fel-
low was named today. Within five years
the Mary E. Garrett Graduate European
Fellowship twas founded and within eight
years the President M. Carey Thomas
Gradiate European Fellowship. Much
more recently the Rubel Foundation Fel-
lowship has added anotherand_freer_op-
portunity for the advanced student. The
current was set flowing in the other direc-
tion.. Since 1909 a fraction of the gradu-
ate school itself has’ been yearly made up
F of the Bryn Mawr foreign.scholars. These
two fundamentals of advanced education in
America, solid and independent work and
first-hand tonnection with European intel-
lectual standards are strengthened yearly,
we trust, in the Bryn Mawr _ graduate
school.
“So much President Thomas did for the
American woman graduate student and in
our. gratitude for the opening of many
other doors since then, none of us can for-
get or for an instant minimize her gift to
us. The Graduate School with its unique
and honorable record is a reminder of her
acumen and. wisdom, but in establishing: it
she did at the same time an equally great
service for undergraduate education. She
laid: down as a principle that undergrad-
uates should be taught by a faculty keen
®on its own research work and able to in-
struct and actually instructing maturer than
the most mature Senior, that the library
used by undergraduates should contain the
books and journals of, research and ad-
vanced study, that they should never be
without the stimulus of contact with older
students working on subjects in which they
themselves were already interested, usually
working harder and using other and freer
methods, set loose a little from the bondage
of the beginner. __
“T believe in nothing more whole-heart-
edly than in the value of graduate work
per se for women, but if I disbelieved that
I should still. believe in it asa necessary
part of a college: from the undergraduate
point of view. The graduate school is Tiké
the eyes of the college through which we
all look at learning or it is like the hands
of the college feeling the way in our steep
The. Freshmen elected M. Z. Pease and
C. Platt joint song-mistresses to replace 13.
Schieffelin, who has resigned on account of
her health. _ * : ‘
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DG a mOoOW DO IT Now DO-IT NOW bo IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT’ NOW bo It NOW bdo If Now bo Iv NOW DO rT NOW,
‘ s °
$ 4
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° °
: Love Set
; for Jacqueline ?
‘ ‘
A a
. It is the Junior Prom.
S . z ee
& Joe Gish has run off with
g your car, so¢you are at a loss
: what to suggest. Your little
« partner, Jacqueline, has tired
2 of dancing, and silence is.run-
4
°
THE STAGE: Photographs of the
beautiful :and the unique; re-
-views and storm warnings;
symposiums. on theatrical as-
tronomy. .
movies: Stills and stories of
the meritorious and the un-
usual. Press agents banned.
HUMOR: Works of poets and
other tragedians; res noves with
‘a futuristic flavoring; achieve-
ments of -intellectual--notables
and notable intellectuals; the
modernistic philosophies.
¢
g Do ™ NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW. DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT Now DO IT NOW DO IT NOW. DO IT NOW
GRAVAMEN: Cream of humour
and créme de menthe;_ the
whimsical ; the satirical; and all
other forms of variegated gro-
tesquérie.
" WORLD OF IDEAS: Every new
viewpoint, every unique slant
2
movement, every revolutionary -
DO ITNOW DOTIT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOWDO IT Now
last sip of the sixth limeade will have trickled down her lovely throat.
Love set for Jacqueline. She wil] stare innocently at you for a moment,
and then—and then—-start popping those deadly “do-you-knows’’. How to
forestall them, how to parry them, how to stop them, you will know when
you study Vanity Fair, the most delightful and enlightening outside reading
course offered in any university.~—
Just Try iad: Taeine
In each issue you find:
med
ning rampant through the
conversation.
What is she thinking—if
anything?
bO IT NOW DO IT NOW
In another moment. the
s
on this amusing world, is mir-
rored in Vanity Fair.
MOTORS, and’ DANCING—all you
need to know, recklessly illus-
trated,
THE SPORTS: All: of them—mas-
culine, feminine and neuter— Te CouPOm WiLL save se SS
photographs, news items, and eel it in now—and—just s :
watch your line.
BUCKS PIN TWO. BUCKS. DO IT NOW DO IT NOW po IT Now po IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW PO IT NOW bo IT Now
méthods of play. a ae
i Miron
THE ARTS, AS SUCH: The best a
works of the new artists and Pet ae _
the new works of the best ones ; ya oe
exhibition gossip and_repro- & - iat
ductions of the most discussed el ay
masterpieces of the season. - of Sp eo" Se ‘
: Z Pa ro xe ok 2 i]
BRIDGE, ETC.: All the tricks and ” > o craad 7
turns; how to. get the most : ce Se ee
out of your college educa- a” Ph Ko vie q
tion. we hE 8 og cee ere
Ps xy de os — oe
AND IN ADDITION: $ ” Sh oo ea
All the latest notes 2°. & ha os RS “ i eo
in MUSIC,MEN’S = _« se 9 Sage x St laa ll
FASHIONS, . =. © -@& eo ae E
AP FS ee Rates se E
. on * .
@
rf NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW DO IT NOW Do IT Now FILL IT IN FILL IT IN FILL i IN PILL IP IN PILL Ie
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