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College news, December 6, 1933
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1933-12-06
serial
Weekly
8 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 20, No. 08
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-vol20-no8
“challenge to all Christians to: prac-
> connected with war.
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five
Jané Addams Finishes joyfully went to prison for civil dis-
, | obedience; others gave up their. posi-
Shaw Lecture Series on in English-employment; Tagore
_jgave back his knighthood. =>
In the midst of this progress, un-
fortunately,’riots occurred. The peo-
ple were not sufficiently disciplined to
carry through the principle of non-
resistance. Ghandi, distressed, call-
ed off the whole movement, preferring
Continued from Page One
since the war must dwell for nia |
time on the figure of Mahatma Ghan-
di, for he first applied the principle
of non-resistance to a national situ-
ation. Coercion had been gradually
disappearing from daily life — in ee :
schools, in courts, in politics; in the|‘t? fail in one instance rather than
eighties and nineties of last ~century|t® have his -doctrine deserted. He
Count Tolstoi ‘ad boldly sent outa realized that the man who practices
" non-violence must be drilled to con-
trol the instinct of anger and demon-
stration of animosity; on the other’
hand, the onlooker must not confuse
non-resistance with cowardice,
Ghandj’s effort to put the new peace
method into practice stands to repre-
sent the functional goodwill which
is gradually appearing in the world.
This love of mankirid has always ex-
isted, but has never been brought
together and disciplined sas a social
tice their doctrine, “Resist not evil,”
and though the world at large re-
plied that the time had not yet’ come,
groups of Russian youth flung back
the answer, “The time has come for
ts.”
The time had to come, too, for Ma-
hatma Ghandi, to whom Tolstoi him-
self had drawn attention for the suc-
cess with’ which he had been prac-
ticing the non-resistance method as a
young lawyer in South Africa in sup. | force.
port of his own. countrymen there. Peace movements before the war
Ghandi returned after the war to a| lacked three things of which postwar
bellicose, nationalistic India. “All na-| methods could avail themselves. Tech-
tional movements had hitherto been| nical aids to peace have ‘increased
To convince his} with the growth of communication, by
people of the efficacy of peaceful|sea and aid. Psychological under-
methods was the difficult task ‘he set | standing is supplied in the new reali-
i FANSLOW
Ardent, convinced, quick to seize
the moral initiative, quicker to act
Distinctive Sportswear
Stetson Hats for Women
than to talk, Ghandi by 1922 had en-
rolled millions of followers, and the
situation in India was near the break-
ing point. Thirty thousand Indians ARDMORE
Phone 570 2 —>
_JEANNETT’S CECELIA’S YARN __ |}
BRYN MAWR FLOWER _ |‘ O
SHOP }
SHOP, Inc. { “—— d
Mrs. N. S. T. Grammer { Seville Arcade
823 Lancaster Avenue j BRYN MAWR .- PA. }
BRYN MAWR, PA. Sw ~~
| wise disappear. Peace efforts will have
zation that there will be peace only
if men are determined to have it,
if they will love peace and ‘pursue
it. Politica] backing has béen given
in such institutions as the ‘League
and the World Court.
It does not seem as if it should be
so difficult for the present young gen-
eration to secure a peaceful world.
Slavery was once the twin curse with
war, and if has been abolished. The
day must come--when war will —like-
need of the scholar, to furnish _his-
toric perspective, to link the mind
which. experiences with the mind
which remembers: Hitherto nations
have ‘had a. selfish attitude toward
each other, but with closer economic
and social ties, they-may come into
a fairer and broader land, and utilize
the opportunities of the new day.
KITTY McLEAN
The Sportswoman’s Shop
Specializing in College Clothes
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Meet your friends at the
Bryn Mawr Confectionery
(Next to Seville Theater Bldg.)
The Rendezvous ‘of the College Girls
Tasty Sandwiches, Delicious Stindaes,
Superior Soda Service
Music—Dancing for girls only
All sorts of Christmas cards
’n’ things.
RICHARD STOCKTON .
Bryn Mawr Editors
The current issue of the intercol-
legiate magazine, the Student Inter-
nationalist, was edited by the Bryn
Mawr members of the _ editorial
Board: Eleanor Fabian, Nancy
Hart, and Vung-Yuin Ting. Four
Bryn Mawr students contributed arti-
cles: Margar ackel]l “Eine Floss-
fahrt;”’ Myra Little, “Madame Chair-
man. . .!;” Tweet Kimball, “French
Provincials;” Pauline Reed, “Hitler-
ism By Night.”
The Student Internationalist is is-
sued four times a year by represen-
tatives of Bryn Mawr, Connecticut,
Mount Holyoke, Smith, Vassar, and
Wellesley, in order to give students a
chance to express their own ideas on
subjects of international interest.
icidiiniaahlinnashestiniaiediaemensedi ine iiamemeenanieitiamaneie aamaeaineatnetaseeeee coma
| REWARD $100.00
} LOST—Pearl Necklace, grad-
uated pearls, Friday, Novem-
ber 10, 1933, in Pembroke
Hall, West, Bryn Mawr: Col-
lege.
W. E. G. MILLER
400 Walnut Street
_ PHILADELPHIA, PA.
’"PHONE—LOMBARD 1650
Luncheon 40c - 50c - 75c
Meals a la carte arid table d’hote
Daily and Sunday 8.30 A. M. to 7.30 P. M.
Afternoon ‘Teas
BRIDGE, DINNER PARTIES AND TEAS ‘MAY BE ARRANGED
MEALS SERVED ON THE TERRACE WHEN WEATHER PERMITS
THE PUBLIC IS INVITED
Telephone: Bryn Mawr 386
The editing is done by each college in
rotation.
Committee in the Y. W, C. A. head-
lisher.
Football, which gained popularity
in the United States only after the
Yale-Princeton game in 1873, is an ex-
tremely old game and has been trac-
ed back as far as the ancient Greeks
and Romans and also.to the Eskimos
j and the Polynesian Islands.
PHILIP HARRISON STORE
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Gotham Gold Stripe”
Silk Hosiery, $1.00
Best Quality Shoes
in Bryn Mawr
NEXT DOOR TO THE MOVIES
GREEN HILL FARMS
City..Line and Lancaster Ave.
Overbrook-Philadelphia
A reminder that we would like to
take care of your parents and
friends, whenever they come to
visit you.
L. E. METCALF,
Manager.
Dinner 85c - $1.25
Miss Sarah Davis, Manager
ry
Not so long ago practically all
cigarettes were made by hand
Now, Chesterfields are made by high-speed machines
that turn out 750 cigarettes a minute, and the
cigarettes are practically not touched by hand.
Y the use of long steel ovens in any way
—drying machines of the
Chesterfields are made and
in the manufacture.
© 1933, Liccerr & Mygrs Tosacco Co,
most modern type—and by age-
ing the leaf tobacco for 30
months—like wine is aged—
Chesterfield tobacco is milder
and tastes better. ane
Only pure cigarette. paper—
the best made—is used for
Chesterfield.
And.to make sure that every-
thing that goes into Chesterfield
is just right, expert chemists
test all materials that are used
oo
packed in clean, up-to-date fac-
tories, where the air is changed
every 4% minutes. The mois-
ture-proof package, wrapped in
Du Pont’s No. 300 Cellophane
_—the best made—reaches you
just as if you went by the fac-
tory door.
In a letter to us, an emi-
nent scientist says:
“Chesterfield Cigarettes
are just as pure as the
water ‘you drink.” -
hestertield cigarettes are just
pure as the water you drink”
The International Student .
quarters in New York serves as pub-
ee 4
CRE ina*
-
eae eee
5