Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
College news, November 3, 1943
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1943-11-03
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 30, No. 06
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-vol30-no6
q
Page Four Soe e THE COLLEGE NEWS
foo ; = Sn
43-44 War Bond Drive , . Freshmen to Present ‘Letters to Lucerne’
Spanish ‘Tew Plays This Weekend|| HAV Schedule | Cass by Players Club
Opens Under Alliance
The War Bond\and Stamp Drive
for 1943-44 officially opened in the
halls last. Monday. Mary Kay
Snyder, ’46, chairman of the
Drive, hopes to get a minimum
of $2.00 per person, which will
bring the monthly total up to last
year’s standard of $1,000. The
Drive will last one week, during
which every one will be asked to
sign a card pledging a definite
amount each month.
The Alliance’s plan for the pay-
ment and collection of stamps and
bonds will be the same as last
year, the money being collected
the first Mondays and Tuesdays of
each month, except in November
when it will be collected on the 8th
and 9th. The bonds and stamps
will be delivered a week after the
collection of the morey. Money
must be paid id cash or check
since it will not be put on pay days.
The managers are as follows:
Helen Reed for Pembroke -East,
Constance Chester for Pembroke
West, Ellen Douglas Brooks for
Rockefeller, Ruth Hendrickson
for Rhoads North, and Nancy
Crawford for Rhoads South. The
Radnor freshmen have Barbara
Stix for their representative, the
Spanish House, Amanda Eggert;
the graduates, Frances Jean Bond-
hus; the French House, Alice Fish-
er; Merion, Jean Blum; Denbigh,
Betty Hoffman; the German House,
Caro Shugg; and the Non-Resi-
dents, Jean Albert.
A Spanish Club tea will be
held in the Spanish House,
Radnor, on Thursday, Novem-
ber 4th at 4:00 o’clock. Mr. Gil-
let will discuss the “Good
Neighbor Policy.” All members
are cordially invited.
Chan Discusses China’s
Scientific Development
Continued from Page 1
Instead of treating natural phe-
nomena as natural phenomena,
China regarded them as abstract,
and set apart from human affairs.
She lacked an interest in “knowl-
edge for knowledge’s sake”, and
it is this interest which Mr. Chan
claims to be the basis of Western
science. At one point in their
philosophy, the Mohists did devel-
op a scientific method of reasoning
involving hypothesis,
Today, however, China has real-
ized the importance of applied
science. Since 1800, her standard
of living has been on a steady de-
cline, as Western scientific meth-
ods rose in importance. Today,
the annual income of the average
Chinese is $132, and their average
life expectancy is forty-five years.
There is no longer any question
of China’s wanting science, but
rather, as Mr. Chan put it, “of her
having too much, and getting
RENE MARCEL
French Hairdressers
853 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
Bryn Mawr 2060
Continued from Page 1
The title of the Pem West pro-
duction is in itself sufficiently in-
triguing. Director Eleanor Bor-
den, ’46 spelled it out, but the -re-
sult is still questionable. We'll
leave it with Eleanor and Nancy
Bierwith at “The Six Who Pass
While the Lentils Boil”. Lord Dun-
sany has fans in both Denbigh
and Radnor, who are playing his
“Night in an Inn” and “The Lost
Silk Hat”, with Edith Rhoads, ’44
and Caroline Seamans, and Estelle
Morrison, ’45, and Marilyn Roab as
their respective directors. Rad-
nor, by the way, enters the contest
for the first time this year.
sick.” . Although many Chinese
after World War I condemned
science as the cause of unheard of
destruction, the New Renaissance
in China brought with it a whole
movement of Westernization or
“scientification”,
Dresses, Suits, Coats
also a full line of
ACCESSORIES
38-52
. Sizes 9-1%; 12-20;
Reasonably Priced
THE STYLE
WEDNESDAY (3rd)
Invitation to the Waltz
Short Stories
Faculty Board of Ex-
perts—Professors Post
and Sargent
8:30
9:45
10:30
THURSDAY (4th)
8:30 Music Festival—Selec-
tions from “H. M. 8.
Pinafore”
Oral Spanish
Oral French
Oral German
Oral Italian
Le Jazz Hot
Weekly News Review
9:00
9:15
9:30
9:45
10:00
10:15
Continued from Page 1
con. :
N. Richard Nusbaum, who di-
rected “Hotel Universe” for the
Players Club last fall, will direct
“Letters to Lucerne.” The stage
manager is Estelle Morrison.
Department of Cliches
Do your Christmas
Shopping Early
Richard Stockton
BRYN MAWR~
SUBURBAN
THEATRE ARDMORE
Now thru Sat.
“DESTROYER”
‘Sun. thru next Wed.
“MY KINGDOM .
FOR A COOK” 1
SEVILLE
THEATRE BRYN MAWR
Fri. & Sat.
“ABOVE SUSPICION”
For a supper that’s really
A gourmande’s delight
Come to the Inn
On Sunday night!
reathless |
as per ume that
spins a moment
into a memory
1.75* 3.50*
*plus tax
°
eS“ M AIL OR PHONE AMOR ORDERS TO
eS eee Chestnut Street yee
La
6.75%
‘
eee |
EWEES, PHILADELPHIA
D
Pennypacker
6700
4