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THE COLLEGE NEW
J
VOL. XLI, NO. 10
Collective Security
Essential to Peace
End of War Means Start
Of More Important
Struggle
Goodhart, November 23. Mrs.
Vera Micheles Dean, in, her speech,
On the Threshold of World Order,
stressed that the end of the war
“means only the beginning of the
more important struggle to solve
the problems which caused this
“war.
There are two ways of obtaining
security, pointed out Mrs. Dean.
"The first is an unaided effort by
‘tthe large nations which results
only in an extension of territory.
Each nation will declare that it
needs such and such a colony or is-
land to safeguard its interests,
‘which procedure will only result in
further war.
The alternative method is one of
collective -security, which, Mrs.
Dean emphasized, was not realized
in the League of Nations. There
must be some international organ-
ization that enables continuous con-
sultation about day-to-day affairs,
and this organization must have
at its disposal immediate force.
‘However, it cannot be expected to
abolish all differences, as perfect
order “exists only in prisons and
«wemeteries,” but it must seek to
solve these conflicts by peaceful
means. Mrs. Dean declared that
‘we are now in the feudal period of
international affairs, but as there
are civilized solutions in families
‘and nations, there must also be
Continued on Page 4
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1944
rs
Mrs. Dean Declares:
B. M.-Princeton, Choir
Will Sing in Service
Of Christmas Carols
The Princeton Choir~of._50
voices, directed by Carl Weinrictr
will join the Bryn Mawr Choir
supplemented by part of the Glee
Club in a (Christmas Service on
December 10 in Goodhart. The
Reverend Andrew Mutch will
preach. ‘ .
Bach Cantata
The musie will include To Us A
Child Is Born, a Bach cantata sung
by the combined choirs.. The men
alone will sing Eccard’s Presenta-
tion of Christ in Temple, Buxte-
hude’s Zion Hort die Wachter Sin-
gen, and an old French carol, An-
gels O’er the Fields were Flying,
arranged by A. J. Davison,
Solo
For its solo part Bryn Mawr
will do four carols from different
countries. The English one will be
Dreams of Christmas by Holst:
The French, Spanish and Hungar-
ian, all arranged by K. K. Davis,
will ‘be respectively Now Leave
Your Flocks, Rouse Good Folks,
and Wake, Gentle Shepherd.
Coventry Carol
To end the program the men
and women will give Coventry
Carol arranged by K. K. Davis and
Handel’s Then Round About Thy
Starry Throne. There will be an
orchestra jprelude and postlude.
The men will arriye here early
Sunday to rehearse and will be en-
tertained by the |Choir at dinner in
Rhoads preceding the service. On
Sunday, December 5, the same
program will be given at Prince-
ton Chapel Services.
“Title” Successfully Carries Out Initial Aims,
Presenting Works of Maturity and Merit
Specially Contributed by
Lucy Hall 45
As fall passes into winter we
have before us another publication
of the Title. Still in its early in-
fancy this relatively new magazine
presents an exceedingly refreshing
and interesting appearance. The
makeup itself is simple and at-
tractive and the line drawings add
a touch of distinction.
The content is small, but in re-
fusing to pad with pages of second
rate material the editorial board
has kept with its resolution to pre-
sent only work of some merit. The
variety both of the sources-of the
material and the different fields of
writing presented give it a broader
outlook than most such magazines
can boast, and certainly add to the
pleasure of reading~it-as a whole.
To be more specific there are
two sonnets by Sylvia Stallings
that were conceived with a deal of
balance and maturity. They are
indeed a part of the essence of the
‘Title, for the whole work seems to
show an_ unself-consciousness of
purpose and an honesty of crafts-
manship that are really amazing
in a college magazine.
To take another example, Patsy
Von Kienbusch’s English compo-
sition, Everyman’s a Madman,
which won the Sheelah Kilroy
Memorial Scholarship last year, is
a work of criticism which is in
' some ways quite extraordinary. It
is a study of Andre Malraux’s
works which combines great ob-
jectivity with equal _ sensitivity.
Man’s failure or success to adjust
his inner world to the world
around him, and his discovery of
complete fraternity in death are
the themes with which Malraux is
preoccypied. Even to a person who
had read little or nothing of his
work there would perhaps be a
rather striking feeling that here
was a critic who had gone to the
core of the subject and who had
really absorbed and assimilated
the very essence of the books.
The opening poem, His Shield,
by Marianne Moore represents a
contribution from a mature and ex-
cellent artist. It shows cool work-
manship and_ skilled‘ choice of
words. The theme, to be armored
with insensibility, and free by giv-
ing wp what one most wishes to
preserve, is admirably brought
home through the long series of
images of toothed and_ spiny
beasts.
“The sketch which follows it, The
Glory and the Dream by Rosamund
Kent, although smoothly written
lacks somewhat the three dimen-
sional quality and the true which
would have given it vividness.
For the rest’ there is a_ short
story, The Last Harvest by Ellen
Robbin, which manages to be very
real and rather moving, achieving
‘the maximum result with the min-|
imum of means. The excerpt from
Dr. Oppenheimer’s book has some
very interesting material but suf-
fers from being out of its proper
context.. As for the two remain-
ing poems, they are perhaps not
up to the standard of the others.
On the whole the Title seems to
be carrying out its aims of last
year with a great deal of success.
Copyright, Trustees of
Bryn Mawr College, 1944
PRICE 10 CENTS
——
—
“Ladies in Retirement” to Feature Corpses,
Murders, Lunatics, in Mid-Victorian Setting
_ by Patricia Platt ’45
Any night now, on the stage of
Goodhart, one may plunge into an
Latmosphere of dire doings. Ladies
in Retitement, forging along in-
to its last week of rehearsal, gives
all actors plenty of chance to air
any morbid feelings with unbrid-
led relish. Dealing largely with
spinsters, murder, and lunacy, the
cast has to practice hardest on
hysterics voluble enough to suit
the occasion.
Even minus the Victorian bric-
a-brac, the madonna shrine, and
other objects which will adorn
the finished product, an evil aura
already exudes. Sadly warbling
“willow, tit willow’, Leonora Fiske
(Kate Rand ’45) meet” doom in
the form of a bathrobe belt wield-
ed by Ellen Creed (Jessica Levy
’48), who in turn runs amuck of
her blackmailing nephew (John
Stone). Embellishing and prompt-
ing all this are Ellen’s two nit-
wit sisters (Martha Gross ’47 and
Carol McGovern ’48). It seems
that Ellen regards them as her
children (cosy thought!). At pres-
ent on of development they
wander around with ectoplasmic
telescopes, or fondle equally ether-
eal dead birds.
Friday and Saturday night au-
diences had best prepare to feel
their spines tingle. They will en-
counter corpses in'the oven, table-
polishing mania, crooks both pro-
fessional and amateur each work-
ing out their own warped destiny.
If horror can abound when Leon-
Irench Club to Give
Annual Nativity Play
The Frefich Mystere de la Na-
tivite, presented annually in Wynd-
ham by the French House and the
French Club, is scheduled for Sat-
urday, December 9 at 8 p. m.
This Nativity is the most ancient
known to exist in the French ver-
nacular. ‘Attributed to the four-
teenth century, before the general
dominance of cyclic thought, it is
composed of a short prologue. fol-
lowed by a series of unconnected
scenes. In contrast to other plays
of the period, no comic elements
are introduced, and the very hum-
an and almost popular adoration of
the eternal’ Mother and _ divine
Child is presented free of pedantry
and theology.
The whole is essentially charac-
Cantinne’ on page 4
Calendar
Friday, December 1
Varsity Hockey Game _ with
Drexel. Hockey Field, 4:00.
Varsity Players. Ladies
Retirement. Goodhart, 8:30.
Saturday, December 2
Varsity’ Hockey Game _ with
Swarthmore. Swarthmore, 9:30
a. m.
Rhoads Tea Dance, 4 to 6:30.
Varsity Players, Ladies in Re-
tirement. _Goodhart, 8:30.
College Dance, Gym, 11 to 2.
Monday, December 4
Science Club Lecture: Dr. Max
M. Strumia. Blood Derivatives
and their Substitutes. Dalton,
4:00.
Tuesday, December 5
Spanish Club Play. La Zapa-
tera Prodigiosa. Gym, 8:30.
Wednesday, December 6
Summer Camp Christmas Par-
ty, Common Room, 8 to 5.
Bible Discussion Group, Alan
McCrae. Common Room, 8:00.
Main Line Forum. Paul G.
Hoffman. Maximum Employ-
ment in a Free Economy. Rob-
erts Hall. Haverford, 8:15.
in
ora stages an entrance clutching
a bottle of furniture polish
(which will metamorphosize into
a vase of flowers by the week-
end), greater things to come can
safely be predicted.
Props, the eternal bugbear of
anxious amateurs, rear their ugly
heads in the form of Victorian
headgear and mountains of drift-
wood, not to mention tombs adapt-
ed to the front parlor. All this
makes excitement for Mrs. Wein-
berg, the director, and her co-
horts. Not that it is probable
that. anyone would doze off while
connected with Ladies in Retire-
ment.
een: |
Common Arguments
For God’s Existence
Considered by Weiss
“Common Room, November 22.
“Religion is the art of seeking
God; theology is a rational inquiry
into the nature and_ existence of
God,” declared Mr. ‘Weiss in a talk
on Philosophy and Theology _ be-
fore the Philosephy Club. Pointing
out the two are not necessarily
connected, Mr. Weiss said that the
aim of theology is to prove the
existence of God by reason. Three
main arguments are traditionally
used.
The first and most popular is
the teleological argument which
holds that the universe has such
a character that it cannot be ex-
plained except by assumption of a
God. Even if this argument were
valid Mr. Weiss declared, it would
Continued on page 3
Dollar Contribution
Sought for Louvain
The Drive for the Louvain Li-
brary Book Fund ‘is in progress
this week from Monday, November
27 to Friday, December 1. Under
the direction of a committee head-
ed by Harji Malik ’45 and Miss
Marguerite Lehr, the Drive asks
one dollar or any other contribu-
tion from each member of the fac-
ulty and the undergraduate body.
Any books which are purchased
for the Louvain Library with the
money contributed here will bear
a book plate stating that the book
was contributed by Bryn Mawr
College. It is hoped that through
such contributions the Library may
be rebuilt, as it was after the
Germans destroyed it during World
War I.
The committee, appointed by the
Undergraduate Board, consists of
Judith Bailey ’48, Radnor Fresh-
men; Chloe Walker °45, Spanish
House; Nicole Herrmann, Gradu-
ate Students; Jane Manthorne ’46,
Merion; Nina Montgomery 745 and
Amorette Bissell ’48, Denbigh;
Betsy Schweppe ’46, German House;
Jennifer Wedgwood ’48 and Jean
Potter ’45, Pem East; Emily Ev-
| arts ’47 and Carol Ballard ’45, Pem
West; Ada Klein ’48, Amy Camp-
bell 48 and Nan Peiker ’48, Rock;
‘M. L. Blakely ’47, Betty Coleman
"48 and Betsy Day ’47, Rhoads
North; Nancy Niles ’47, Mary Bar-
ton ’46 and Lindsay Harper ’48,
Rhoads South; Joanne Mott ’47,
Wyndham; Emily Evarts ’47, Ada
Klein ’48, Elizabeth Boudreau ’45,
and Mary Virginia More ’45, Fac-
ulty. ,
Test Week .Shows
120 Hours Lacking
From UVAP Pledge
Two Halls Exceed Pledges;
Others Fulfill Portion
Of Work
During a test week in Novem-
ber, a survey conducted by the War
Alliance on the response to the
UVAP program revealed 781 hours
of actual work completed as com-
pared with 891 hours pledged. The
survey reached 401 students, with
no report having been received as
yet from the Non-Residents, the
Spanish and French Houses, and
one corridor each in Pembroke
West and Rockefeller.
A hall breakdown shows that
only’ two halls exceeded their
pledge, the Radnor Freshnien with
25 hours worked to 20 pledged, and
Pembroke East, with 106 hours
pledged and 160 worked. German
House pledged 27, worked 34, Pem-
broke West pledged 98, worked 77,
Rhoads South pledged 107, worked
91, Rhoads North pledged 135,
worked 100, Rockefeller pledged
161, worked 87, Denbigh pledged
180, worked 87, and Merion work-
ed 50 out of 112 pledged.
63 of the students approached
did not sign up, and 152 students
failed to do any work. However,
a fair number of hours were con-
tributed in campaign work in the
O’Rourke election, and the remov-
al of this item from. the total hours
worked would decrease that figure
considerably.
Excuses ranged from “personal
reasons” to unwillingness owing to
summer defense work, but the em-
phasis was on lack of time. Com-
menting on. the program, many
students complained about the
lack of cooperation in such activ-
ities as farming, while others ask-
ed for different arrangements to
relieve the glare and eye-strain in
bandage rolling. One student pro-
tested against the pressure used on
those who really did not have time.
Campus Contributes
$1084.55 in Nov. Drive
$1084.45 was the total amount
contributed by the campus for the
November War Bond Drive. Pem
West gave $209, Pem East, $146, .
Rockefeller, $111.85, Rhoads
North, $141.85, Rhoads South,
$103.50, Spanish House, $17.10,
Radnor Freshmen, $1.00, Merion,
$106.35, Denbigh, $163.35, Non
Resident, $43.50, Wyndham, $25.50
and the German House gave $16.
Special Campaign
All the colleges in the country
are now running a_ special cam-
paign in their bond drives in
which they buy specific units of
war equipment. At Bryn Mawr,
the October and November drives
are purchasing a % ton field am-
bulance which wil go _ overseas
with a Bryn Mawr sticker.
Every. month except December
there will be bond drives on the
campus. The actual amounts of
money given so far are adequate
but the percentage of students
contributing is not high. Helen
Reed, ’46, Chairman of War Bonds
and Stamps, says “There are more
people who could and should
give.”
+
Pege Twe
ae
=
—_——
THE COLLEGE NEWS © .,
nen
cone ger co rnn n
THE COLLEGE NEWS
(Founded in 1914)
Bryn Mawr College.
Published weekly dur, the College Year (except during Thanksgiving,
Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination weeks) in the interest
of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore Printing’ Company, Ardmore, Pa., and
Editor-in-Chief.
The College News is fully protécted by copyright.
in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part
Nothing that appears
without permission of the
APRIL OURSLER, "46
Naney Morenouse, 47
MarGARET Rupp, 47
THELMA BALDASSARR2, '47
Marcia DEemMBow, °47
Cecit1a ROSENBLUM, °47
EizaABETH Day, °47
Mary LEE BLAKELY, °47
Harriet Warp, *48
BETTINA KLUEPFEL, °48 |
Sports
- Barpara WILLIAMS,
SarAH G. BECKWITH, '46 \
ANN W
CHARLOTTE BINGER, ’45
Lovina BRENDLINGER, '46
BaRBARA COTINS, °47
HELEN GILBERT, °46
Editorial Board
ALISON MERRILL, °45, Editor-in-Chief
Mary Vircinia More, 45, Copy Patricia Piatt, *45, News
Editorial Staff
Carou BALLARD, 45 CYNTHIA Haynes, ’48
Photographer
HANNAH KAUFMANN, *46
Business Board
Mita AsHODIAN, ’46, Business Manager
6, Advertising Manager
Subscription Board
MarGareT Loup, *46, Manager
SUSAN OULAHAN, 746, News
PATRICIA BEHRENS, °46
LANIER DuNN, °47
Darst Hyatt, 47
MONNIE BELLOw, 747
Rostna BATESON, °47
Emity EvartTs, ’47
Laura Dimonp, °47
Joan ZIMMERMAN, 748
ANNE Nystrom, ’48
Cartoons
ANNE KrincsBury, *47
*47
EuisE Krart, °46
ELIZABETH MANNING, 46
NANcy STRICKLER, *47
BARBARA YOUNG, °47
Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa.,
5 Under Act of Congress August 24, 1912
Post Office
Education and Peace
Among the many questions brought to the fore by the
Dumbarton Oaks conference is that of the role of education
in world peacé. The Universities Committee on. Post-War
International Problems, an endowed private organization, has
been making a special study of t
a report based on the opinions of
which Bryn Mawr is included.
is matter and has prepared
university groups, among
In this report it is stated that all the groups concerned
favor unanimously the use of educational means to achieve
and support a world security
organization. All the groups
but one approve the-establishment of an international com-
mission to plan 1) for international cooperation in the reha-
bilitation of educational institutions in. devastated countries,
2) for the organization of some form of permanent interna-
, tional cooperation for education after the war.
It is felt that
this commission should be advisory and informative but
should not have power of control over national education pol-
icies.
However, the report further states, raising these educa-
tional questions now involves
danger; the acceptance of an
international organization for peace and security might be
imperiled (Senate approval withheld) by proposing at this
time that it be given educational functions to perform.
With this exception, all the groups agree that such a
commission should be established as soon as possible to take
over from the military authorities at the earliest practicable
moment the tasks involved in educational rehabilitation in
each of the conquered and liberated countries, and to under-
take immediately a study of property and personnel losses in
schools, libraries, and museums, and plan for the necessary
replacements.
Among the duties of the new commission
would be to prepare in advance a store of study materials
from which the'native educational authorities who are estab-
lished after the war can select as best suits their needs.
In considering questions such as these and in outlining
tentative details of organization, the Universites Committee
is taking the first step towards the practical acceptance ‘of
the post-war world.
—_ <7
WITS
Men may come and men may go,
but they always come when I wish
they were going and vice versa,
which is the vice that caused four
flat flunks on quizzes, and why I
‘shake brass knuckles at the driz-
zling sky, while what was an ele-
gant coiffeur descends like lava
down Vesuvius.
This above all but is not all so
terrifying gs the prospect of light
chatter and hashed browned toes.
When the stampede of predatory
END.
beasts descends to prey I pray that
I may be caught in a grapevine
clad in G. I. shoes. When I affirm
the already confirmed and infirm
statute that the Absolute is the in-
effable more than which is like the
‘squashing of a ripe tomato, I mean
that I feel unequal to the strain of
pretending that I am stupider than
I am, the culminating richochet of
which must be to exercise my wan-
ing charms on my best friend’s
man.
>
Theatre
Billy Rose’s Musical Revue
Features Showmanship, ’
Fine Talent
by Marcia Dembow ’47
Billy Rose’s new musical revue,
The Seven Lively Arts, will un-
doubtedly class Rose as one of
the greatest showmen since Flor-
enz Ziegfeld. Combining the fin-
est talent obtainable on Broadway
and the most extravagant set-
tings and costuming yet to appear
on th@%stage, The Seven Lively
Arts ftomises to keep its specta-
tors awe-stricken for three hours.
Although there is little contin-
uity of plot, Doc Rockwell, acting
as the average playgoer, manages
to keep the individual acts intact
by his caustic comments. Pre-
sumably he reflects what the av-
erage man likes to see when he
goes to the theatre, and in the
event that the average theatre-
goer.doesn’t see what he likes,
Rockwell maintains that “I’ll take
two on the aisle’.
The cast features Beatrice
Lillie, the English actress who
has consistently been able to put
over risque humour better than
any American to date; Bert Lahr
who has just as much fun acting
as his audience has watching, es-
pecially when he almost succeeds
in getting drunk while singing,
even though he is inclined to mug
to a certain extent, and Benny
Goodman, the man with the horn.
In true Broadway fashion, this
show also has a ballet, but, steer-
ing clear of the ordinary, Billy
Rose had Stravinsky compose a
special composition, Scene du Bal-
let, with choreography done by
Anton Dolin. Dolin and Markova
dance in the scene, accompanied
by the Corps de-~Ballet. Although
this is more effectivé’than the re-
cent ballet that has suddenly ap-
peared in the musical comedy, it
lacks the inspiration that Strav-
Continued on Page 3
Philosophic Problem
Reviewed by Singer
Music Room, November 27. Un-
der the auspices of the philosophy
department Dr. Edgar A. Singer
spoke on Mechanism, Vitalism, and
Naturalism, reviewing the age old
conflict between the mechanistic
and vitalistic schools .of experi-
mental science.
Dealing with this methodogical
problem by means of | jthe logical-
historical method, Dr. Singer stat-
ed that the basic proposition is the
Democritean contention: every-
thing in Nature is mechanical; and
everything mechanical in Nature
is structural. He said the basic
‘proposition of the Vitalists is the
Aristotelian premise: some things
in Nature are functional; and
everything functional is non-struc-
tural.
Pioosdtine to explain the rela-
tion of these propositions in a for-
mal way, Dr. Singer pointed out a
third alternative: some things in
Nature are structural and non-
structural, an alternative recog-
nized by Kent.
In 1847 was born a new idea
without which the Naturalist po-
sition never- could have advanced,
said Dy. Singer, Augustus de Mor-
gan in his book, A Formal Logic,
introduced the idea of a universe
of discourse in ‘which objects in
Nature might be either referred-to
on a functional, vitalistic plane,
making the objects susceptible to
analysis in terms of probability
and consequently statistically, or
on the other hand on a structural,
mechanistic plane allowing the ob-|
jec& to be analysed in terms. of
causation, and consequently of cer-
Continued on Page 4
‘| bluff Russian landowner
Revived by LeGallienne
With Skill
by Thelma _ Baldassarre ’47
Trying to discuss the’ script of
the Cherry Orchard in a review is
like considering Macbeth as a
murder mystery. Perhaps the
most to be said is that Chekhov
on the stage is as superb as Chek-
ov between covers.
In the hand of clever actors, the
artist’s terse completeness is viv-
idly demonstrated; not a word or
a gesture is without significance
in the total pattern. Another ei-
ement too often absent from the
contemporary drama which wés
conspicuous in the Chekhov’ re-
vival is the presence of real char-
acters, rather than neatly drawn
types.
In the main, The Cherry Or-
chard is a social drama _ which
symbolizes the reluctant yielding
of a decadent and futile aristoc-
racy to insurgent peasants batter-
ing at the walls of the feudal
afraid to allow his decadent aris-
tocrats some endearing traits, or
to reveal his prophet of the new
dawn as an occasionally pompous
young man. Such _ verisimilitude
only, develops the theme
convincingly.
The level of the acting in the
LeGallienne production is extreme-
ly high. Miss LeGallienne _her-
self is beautifully at ease in the
role of Lyubov Andreyevna, the
gracious lady who cannot realize
that the world is not her oyster.
Joseph Schildkraut interprets his
role as her sentimental “gentle-
man” brother - perfectly; while
John Bleifer gives a sensitive per-
formance as a confused peasant
who finds himself the purchaser
of an estate on which his fathers
were serfs.
Samuel Goldenberg portrays a
who is
shocked at the toppling of the old
structure, though not much _ af-
fected by it himself; and Horace
Sinclair plays Firs, the ancient
valet whose death at the curtain
symbolizes the passing of an era.
The “eternal student” played by
Hugh Franklin, verbalizes
democratic ideal latent in the en-
;tire work with skillful natural-
ness. ‘
The minor parts are all _ well
handled—the eccentric governess;
the Varya whose love affair is the
Continued on Page 3
Chekoy’s “Cherry Orchard” @
class system. But Chekhov is not|j
mére |:
the
IN PRINT
In “How Dear to My Heart”
Kimbrough Recounts
Childhood
by Patricia Platt °45
How Dear to My Heart gives
evidence that Emily Kimbrou$h
began being “Emily” from the
cradle. Still gay, but seldom silly,,
her latest book tells with humor-
and some/pathos the major crises.
of her life in Muncie, Indiana, up
to the arrival of her little brother
—the greatest crisis of all. The
account is warm and amusing,
and should be loaded with nostal-
gia for those who, like Emily, liv-.
ed through the advent of the first.
automobile in a small town, and
had to stand on chairs to reach
the wall telephone.
The. book consists largely of in-
cidents. Emily started - pulling:
boners almost as soon as she could
do anything. Furthermore, when
she had,an idea, she had an idea,.
and there was no gainsaying it.
Such a situation was bound to be:
productive of the following kind
Continued on Page 4
(ceil a vents
wi
Common. Room, November 27.
Speaking on Wartime China, Mrs.
Manning pointed out that the sit-
uation in China is grave, for not.
only is it the one country in which:
the United Nations are steadily
losing ground, but disunity be-
tween Generalissimo Chiang Kai~
shek’s regime and the Communists.
in Northwestern China inhibits ef~
fective resistance to the Japanese
armies. In fact, there are pros-.
pects of years of internal turmoih
ment can be instituted.
The Japanese in controlling the
have cut ‘China in two and soon
will be able to “strangle Chung-.
king.” Buta unified Chinese front.
is missing because Chiang opposes.
‘the Communists, despite their suc-
cessful’ guerrilla warfare against
the invaders. The division is wid-
ened because the propertied class-
es, who do not want a reform pro-
up of their lands, are opposed by
the peasants, represented by the
‘Communists.
There have been two_ recent.
changes in the leaders of China. A
month ago General Stillwell was.
replaced by ‘General Wedemeyer,
Continued on Page 3
INCIDENTALLY
Sports registration being so
near at hand, we would like to re-
count a lovely legend, which has
an unfortunate ring of truth, for
the benefit of upperclassmen who
have not managed to put them-
selves through the minimum -con-
tortional requirements for grady-
ation. Miss Petts was telling us
the other day about a \procrastin-
ating Senior of five years ago who
spent seven hours (time out for
lunch) ‘ walking her prescribed
Hike up ‘and down Senior Row—
reading a French . dictionary for
the coming ‘oral.! ‘Miss Petts grin-
ned a little ominiously as she asked
us if we would like her to look up
our Sports Record Card.
Mr. Veltman tells the story of
the time he was branded a revolu-
tionary at Princeton. | One of his
students there filed a complaint
with the Dean’s Office because Mr.
Veltman referred to God as “It”,
in a lecture on Aristotle. Mr. Velt-
Tai en oe
‘nerve—”,
man claims he is not really a rev-
olutionary.
Finding she had expressed , all
her knowledge’ of first year Psy-
chology in half a blue book and —
twenty-three minutes, a Junior we
know resorted’ to creativity to
while away the rest of the hour.
Reduced to the lowest of states she.
poured her soul into a Wit’s End
in the same blue book, beginning-
the opus with the immortal words:
“Jane, Jane, tall as a _ cranial
The exam was returned
with the heart-warming comment,
‘I wish I could give you éxtra
credit for this.’ The Junior does.
And incidentally, we heard des-
ultory. talk in the Inn yesterday
about a vague dream for another
campus magazine, comic and satir-
ical in nature. Searching for a
source of material, they ‘could
thing only of reprinting the mis-
prints in the News. We don’t know-
what they mean, wincidentally.
pe :
foe bid
a
before an effective central govern~
route from Shanghai to Singapore
gram necessitating the breaking-. '
ie ary r Sr ay
oi oe aR ln ie al lr ee Bahai ills lalla deel) a
pie yh oss 2s
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Dr. Strumia Will Talk
On Blood Derivates
Dr. Max M. Strumia, of the
Bryn Mawr Hospital, will speak on
Blood Derivatives and Their Sub-
‘stitutes in the Biology Lecture
room at 4 o’clock, Monday, Decem-
ber 4, under the auspices of the
Science Club.
Dr. Strumia was the first man
to realize the value of blood plas-
_ma and to use it successfully on
human beings, thereby furthering
the work of French scientists who
previously had experimented with
animals only. His theory on the
preservation of plasma was ac-
cepted by the Army and the Navy
and is the system employed today
by the National Red Cross to ex-
tract and preserve blood plasma.
Dr. Strumia attended the Royal
University of Purin and did grad-}
uate work at the University of
Pennsylvania.
the National Research ‘Council and
gives courses to Bryn Mawr grad-
uate students at the Bryn Mawr
Hospital.
Rose’s Musical Revue
Features Fine Talent
Continued from Page 2
insky has shown in some of his
other works.
One of the most dynamic scenes
comes at the finale of the first
act, “Bill Rose buys the Metropol-
itan Opera House,” and it tells of
the revolution that Rose waged
on Broadway with his production
of Carmen Jones, the Aquacade,
the Hippodrome and others. The
entire cast is clad in silver and
black sequins for this scene, with
Benny ‘Goodman wearing a black
sequin tuxedo with silver stripes,
and that is quite a bit of sequins.
Nuts and Bolts
Villanova makes mention of
Bryn Mawr’s dance for the Fresh-
men on November 11 a8 an “annual
Grab Yourself a Mah, Tea, and
Cider. Dance,” and igoes—on to de-
scribe the exploits of some of the
more enterprising V-12’s.
* * *
The college laundry at Vassar}
has been forced to cut down on the
number of items that it may do,
and the students are now confront-
ed with doing their own laundry
or sending it home to Mother ‘with
the fear that the laundry may be
returned in its soiled state, or with
a note attached saying “Please sew
on your own buttons.”
* * *
The Three Year Plan’ Forum at
Vassar is still debating the prob-
lem with the current qyestion be-
ing, does the present three year
plan* interfere. with extra-curric-
ular activities. Almost all chair-
men of extra-curricular commit-
tees reported that the three year
plan has increased their member-
ship and participation. The school
physician announced that less girls
had been admitted to the infirmary
in this year than in past years.
* * * .
Months of though and discussion
have finally rewarded Haverford
students with a trial period for a
new honor system. The entire fac-
ulty is supporting it and is now
up to the students to make it work.
Initial Aims of “‘Title’’
Carried out in Issue
Continued from page 1
It could be wished that there was
more evidence of humor or satire
and it also might be wished that
there could be a wider contribution
from other than the Freshman
class, but these may come later. In
the meantime the Title without
any fuss or pretension is doing an
admirable job of providing a show-
window for the display of creative
talent on campus.
ee
He is a member of!
| fa
WHAY-WBMC SCHEDULE
(750 on’ your dial)
Wednesday, November 29
8:30 Opera
9:55 Campus News
10:00 American Humor
. 10:15 Popular Music
Thursday, November 30
8:30 Classical Hour
9:40 Popular’ Music
9:55 Campus News
10:00 Play Parade
Monday, December 4
8:30 Classical Hour .
9:30 Piano by Hanser
9:55 Haverford News
10:00 Popular Music
Tuesday, December, 5
« 8:30 (Classical Hour
9:30 Bryn Mawr. Variety
9:55 Campus News
10:00 Popular Music
Arguments for God
Considered by Weiss
Continued from page 1
establish God only as an artisan,
not as a creator. But it fails to
prove even that much, he felt,
since it cites only the good in the
world and ignores the evil; and
since it gives no-reason for as-
suming that the order of the uni-
verse must have been created by
some outside power rather than
be inherent in the universe it-
self.
Cosmological
The second or cosmological ar-
gument Mr. Weiss ~~ the
one most appealing to philoso-
phers. It has\ greater breadth
since it considerg the whole of ex-
istence. If valid, it might estab-
lish God as a creatar, though not
necessarily a beneficent_one, en-
dowed with any values or _ inter-
ests in man. But all it really es-
tablishes, Mr. Weiss felt, was a
necessity of an ultimate ground
for contingent existences. It can-
not prove that the ground is
something more than a_ totality,
relation, and order of the contin-
gencies—i.e., that it would not be
natural rather than supernatural.
Ontological {
Mr. Weiss characterized the
third argument, the ontological
one, as perhaps the strongest of
the three. According to this
theory, God includes all reality
and all power, so he must include
the vital power to exist. If valid,
this would only prove that God is
perfect in himself, and would es-
tablish no relations between God
and the world. But Mr. Weiss re-
futed its validity by showing that
its basic assumption is that the
perfect exists. The argument
cannot be valid for anyone who
recognizes any reality other than
God, and if one does not, one has
not an argume_t but a conclusion
or affirmation.
No Rational. Proof
Because of the deficiencies in
these arguments, considered sep-
arately and together, Mr. Weiss
concluded that no rational proof
of God is tenable of those which
have been advancéd so far,
Attributes
He also demonstrated that if
God should exist, He could not
have the attributes we commonly
assign him. If God were omnis-
cient, the future would be prede-
tePmined, and there could be no
free will; hence no personal re-
sponsibility, sin, ete. Again, God
cannot be omnipotent for he can-
not annihilate himself, do evil,
or perform acts characteristic of
the finite.
Annual German Play
Scheduled for Dec 8
The German Club. will present
its annual Deutsches Weihnachts
spiel on December 8 at 8:00 in
sthe Common Room. There ywill
be refreshments’ served , at | the
German House aftér the play!
Written in the medieval period,
‘the play is the story of the Na-
tivity. The familiar narrative
has been adapted to the middle
ages. Costumes and _ characters
are all of that period, and ‘the
Christ-child has already been born
when Mary and Joseph come to
the Inn.
The innkeeper and his wife add
a comic element, as he is the ‘hen-
pecked husband. \The choir sings
Christma carols between the
scenes.
Cast
Directed by Betsy Schweppe,
46, the play has the following
cast:
Evangelist... Barbara Williams, ’46
Wirt... .. Audrey Wallner, ;’46
Ab aa bs Perepererrr Patricia Webster, ’45
Hirtin..............Meredith Moffitt, ’48
Georgie Wiebenson, ’46
Sylvia Taylor, ’48
Engel............Esterlee Hutzler, 45
1. Konig....Anna-Stina Ericson, ’48
Bc MONG. ....ccscg DECla Lal, 40
3. Konig.........J0an Huyssoon, ’48
WHAT TO DO
WHO ARE YOU?
A girl who likes to work with
people?
One who prefers a job with
plenty of variety?
A born leader, who can help oth-
ers do their jobs well?
Someone with plenty of resource-
fulness—and what it takes to have
and put over your own ideas?
Patriotic, with a real concern for
the future of your country and a
yen to have a hand in making that
future a good one?
If this is you, there may be an
important executive job for which
you qualify. You may become one
of the trained professional work-
ers who help to ‘guide the Girl
Scout organization nationally and
locally.
The Girl Scout organization, with
a national membership of. more
than a million, is the largest and
fastest growing organization for
girls in the world. Today’s oppor-
tunity will be tomorrow’s, too.
‘Mrs. Donald D. Van Vliet, of the
Girl Scout National Staff, will be
glad to tell you more about Post-
war opportunities for a real, dyed-
in-the-wool career (not a mere
job) in Girl Scouting. She will be at
Girl Scouts of Philadelphia
811 South Juniper: Street
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Pennypacker 9427
November 27-28-29-30 from 9 to 5
Phone for an Appointment
tT
Ardmore 5833
JOSEPH’S
HAIR DRESSING
25 COULTER AVE.
ARDMORE
+
Dances
An undergraduate Dance will
be held in the Gym on December
2 from 11 to 2 o’clock.. The tic-
kets, now on sale in the halls,
are $2.50 per couple and $1.50
for stags. Music will be -pro-
vided by the Debonnaires.
The same afternoon a victy, {
dance will be held in the syfok-
ing room of Rhoads from/4:30
to 6:30. Students from all halls
are invited to attend.
Current Events
Continued from page 2
and last week Chiang reorganized
his cabinet. He put General Chen,
a man of renowed military ability,
in place of the-reactionary War
Minister, Ho Ying-chin, who had
been “ising large numbers of Chin-
ese troops to blockade the Com-
munists in the Northwest. Chiang’s
brother-in-law, Kung, was relieved
of his position as Finance Minister
and the ‘Ministers of Education and
Censorship were replaced.
_— inions |
(Diverse opinions have been ex-
pressed as to how these changes
will affect the relations between
the Chungking regime and _ the
Chinese Communists. In the Unit-
ed ‘States there is a group to which
the war correspondents belong
favorable to the Communists. Op-
posing them are those with the
“Republican point of view’ who
consider ‘that any connection with
th unists is wrong. They
beli®@ve that President Roosevelt
favors the Communists and is try-
ing to oust the Generalissimo.
Other people say that the reorgan-
ization means nothing and the
blockade will not be lifted.
The situation is one of prophecy
rather than knowledge, said Mrs.
Manning, but some valid informa-
tion can be culled from an article
in the November 11 issue of The
Nation which she recommends to
all. It states that the purpose of
the recent mission of Nelson, Hur-
ley, and Wallace to Chungking was
to present Mr. Roosevelt’s message
to the Generalissimo announcing
that he was anxious to see China
emerge as the leading Asiatic na-
tion, but that (Chiang must modern-
ize Chinese industry. Chiang was
amazed by this message but made
Nelson the Chief of the Chinese
War Production Board. One can
therefore take a hopeful view of
the constructive work of Ameri-
cans in China, but the Chinese’
fighting forces still must be saved.
lla tse dap ese
Delicious Teas |
Community Kitchen
LANCASTER AVENUE
Open Every Week-day
Invisible
Mending Shop
Pearl Restringing |
Zippers Fixed
41 W. Lancaster Ave.
ARDMORE, PA.
erly of Suburban Square
Form
War Chest Pledges c
Now Total $3160.07
As a result of further soliciting
ie ne eerpregpen for the United
iar Chest, the total amount pledg-
ed by the College as a whole has
arisen to $3160.07, with a total of
$1919.25 collected. This means
that 98% of the ‘College has con-
tributed to the Drive.
The undergraduates, have made
a further contribution of $36.72,
which: takes the total of their
pledge to $733.57. Of 541 students,
532 have made a 98% contribution.
Remaining Changes
The remaining changes in the
returns to the War Chest within —
the past week include a rise in thé
faeulty pledge to $1769.00, with a
97% contribution. Also making a
97% contribution is the Office Per-
sonnel, with g $126.00 contribution.
The Maids and Porters total pledge
is now $100.30, while the Hall
Managers and Infirmary Staff 92%
pledge has risen to $90.00. All
other group reports were complete
as of last week.
LeGallienne Revives
Play, “‘Cherry Orchard’? :
Continued from page 1
epitome of all frustration, the
cleverly drawn servants, the love-
ly young Anya—and there are
many beautiful, passages incident-
al to the main plot. But some-
how despite the masterly insight
into the failings of human nature,
Chekhov declares throughout a
belief in progress that is sorely
lacking today.
‘Wi ry 8 he’s a
Nasty Chap.
These days, “Wintry Blast’’ is ec
his worst, so take care! His chilly
salute brings discomfort to sensi-
tive lips . . . and makes them so
unsightly.
_ Be ready for him. Keep a handy
tube of Roger & Gallet original
Lip Pomade in your pocket. And
whenever you step out-of-doors
smooth its invisible, healing film
over lip membranes.
For both men and women, Roger
& Gallet Lip Pomade has long.
been the accepted relief for chap-
ped, cracked lips. Pick up a tube-
today at any drug store.
“ROGER & GALLET
500 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK 18, N.Y.
FINE. FOODS
Luncheon * Teas Di
11 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Closed Wednesday
Orders taken for
TEA SANDWICHES
PIES and CAKES
Parker House, Inc.
849 Lancaster Avenue
‘BRYN MAWR
(Next to Florentine Shop)
Christmas and
| STOCKTON’S
are just around |
1 3
the corner!
BRYN MAWR
THE
Pleasures ‘tome ny. two: and two
Now, with Mid-Semester through
Tea is twice as good at four
When you come at five for more!
= t
-
aove
INN
7
7
be
a
ae
eH
ot
_ ie rs
Page Four
THE cpnere®
«
NEWS
———
Pay Day Mistresses
For Each Hall Listed
In order to eradicate the confu-
‘sion which’ arises monthly over
Pay Day, when bills. are often lost
or late in reaching the proper pet-
son, the Ne.s prints a list of the
Pay Day mistresses_in each hall.
These are the students to whom
bills intended for Pay Day should
be sent, well ahead of the appoint-
ed date.
Head Pay Day Mistress;
Britta Ericson
Pembroke East:
Margaret Loud, Britta Ericsen
Pembroke West:
Celia Rosenblum, Marian Holland
Rhoads North: Sage
Titid Hoven, Shirley’ Goldberg
Rhoads ‘South:
Ann Werner, Margaret McLean
Denbigh: ies
Elizabeth Mercer, Eva. -Krafft
Merion:
Margaret Bloomfield, Hannah
Kaufmann
Rockefeller:
(Doris Braman, Margaret Weaver
Radnor: ae
Chloe Walker, Clay Adams
Non-Residents:
Patricia Taggert, Monnie Bellow
Spanish Club to Give
Play by Lorca, Dec. 5
On December 5 in the gym, the
Spanish Club will present La Zap-
atera Prodigiosa, directed by Miss
Nepper. This play, written by
Frederico Garcia Lorca, relates the
engaging tale of the hot-tempered
wife of Zapatero, the shoemaker.
The 17-year-old Zapatera (Mar-
guerite Frost ’46) engages in vio-
lent quarreling with her ‘58-year-
old husband (‘Chloe Walker ’45),
who leaves her, in anger, to her
own devices. The charming and
attractive girl, forced to support
herself, opens a tavern, to which
flock the town’s crop of gallants.
Courted by innumerable admirers,
among whom are included the ma-
yor and the very aristocratic don
Mirlo{ played by Amanda Eggert
’45 and Lois Post ’45, respectively),
Zapatera refuses every passionate
advance, remaining unutterably
true to her deserting husband.
In spite of her devotion to duty,
jealous neighbors circulate vicious
gossip and compose maligning
verses about her, until the inno-
cent Zapatera becomes the scandal
of the village. Her only comfort
is in the friendship of a bright
young boy (‘Micky Malaret ’46), on
whom she expends her sparse fits
of good temper.
One day, there appears in the
village a wandering troubadour,
who sings a history so like that of
Zapatera that she becomes great-
ly excited and dismayed. In a tete-
_4-tete with the lovely senorita, the
‘troubadour becomes convinced of
her good and faithful life, and he
whisks off his beard to reveal him-
self as the long-lost Zapatero.
NANCY BROWN
LEWIS. HANDBAGS
$6.95—$15.00
(20% tax)
At Bryn Mawr Station
/Kimbrough’s Book
be interesting.
.turned the garden hose on
ae
Elections
The Senior class takes pleas-
ure in announcing the election
of Sue Coleman as President.
The Freshman class takes
pleasure in announcitig the ‘elec-
tion as Freshmen members ‘of
the following organizations:,
JessicasLevy, Self-Government
Ada Klein, Undergrad
Bettina Kluepfel, League
S
Recounts Childhood
Continued from Page 2
of incident. Emily, convinced
that only grandparents - lived in
big houses, that all little children
lived in little ones and progressed
to bigger ones as they grew up,
spent much time-and energy. tell-
ing her friends’ who lived in big
houses that they must either be
adopted or living with their grand-
parents. In like’ manner, when
told’ that going to ‘school .. would
“make her different”, she decided
that this implied’a’ change from
her then “square” shape to slend-
er. blond loveliness.
just left an idea as an idéa, and
the follow-through never’ failed to
How Dear to My Heart depicts
the Kimbrough family in glowing
colors. The most skillful portrait
is Emily’s Grandmother Wiles, a
spirited and outspoken lady, who
cele-
brated neighbors, and fell down-
stairs to meet the bishop: .Also
prominent are. her Kimbrough
grandparents, embodying ‘the sim-
plicity and dignity .of Muncie’s
leading citizens, Through such
characters a_ vivid. picture of a
small town in the ‘Middle-West
comes into focus.
Emily Kimbrough has accom-
plished more than a colléction of | ¥
heart-warming anecdotes. Con-
tinuity comes through @ central
theme—how Emily figured things
out and became wiser, but not
sadder. This'is represented by
her “score-board” (a neigthbor’s
fence),on--which—she tallied the
“good things” and “bad things”
which happened to her. From it
she could predict the future on
the simple assumption that a “bad
thing” was always followed by a
“good thing”. The book is not a
chronological account of daily
events, but the history of these
tallies.
Al s delightful and occasion-
ally A oy How Dear to My
Heart achieves a difficult goal in
bouyant style. Emily Kimbrough
has succeeded in reconstructing
an ordinary, happy childhood with-
out any sentimentality. She has
made both herself and her sur-
roundings real and vastly enter-
taining.
m_m
Puerta De Mexico
Margaret Paul
69 St. James Place, Ardmore
For Christmas
Unusual handmade
Mexican Jewelry
He loves me not, he loves me
A daisy’s never wrong —
So try your luck with flowers
_That have measured love so long.
- JEANNETT’S
BRYN MAWR, PA.
Emily never ''«
David Discusses Plan
For Post-War Library}
Mr. David, Marjorie Walter
Goodhart professor of history here
and director of libraries at the
University of. Pennsylvania, was
a speaker at the annual Thanks-
giving conference of Eastern Col-
lege Librarians at Columbia Uni-
versity last Saturday.
In speaking on Post-War Plans
for a University Library,-Mr:° Da-
vid referred to the concrete plans
which are being made for a new
library at the University of Penn-
sylvania. Mr. David has been do-
ing intensified work on this pro-
ject for the past six or eight
months,
‘Although no exact time has been
set and funds have not yet been
raised, the specifications have gone
to the architects and the library
will be built sometime after the
war. It will ibe erected on the site
of the present building in Phila-
delphia' and will have a capacity
of. two million volumes.
Two Sessions
The conference, which discussed
the role which must be played by
college libraries to meet the chang-
ing requirements of: higher edu:
cation after the war, was divided
into two sessions, ‘presided over by:
* Curriculum Staff
The Curriculum Committee
takes pleasure in announcing
the following elections:
Helen Reed ’46, History
Lucretia Duncan ’46 Psychology
Lois MacMurray Starkey ’46,
1 English
French Club to Give
Annual Nativity Play
Continued from Page 1
terized by its Simplicity, sincerity,
absence of rhythmic ornament and
comic farce. The reasons for this
moderation are the antiquity of the
play, its nearness to the altar, and
its connection with liturgical dra-
ma, which is follows scrupulously.
The cast is as follows:
Moneur de Jeu ..Elizabeth Dowling
PONE Siscilk Elizabeth Horrax
(Marie Elizabeth Zychlinski
Anges....Ann ‘Matlack, Nancy Bier-
wirth, Doris Emerson
Bergers...Janine Daudon, Joanne
Mott, Nancy Strickler
Rois....Lucy Hall, Lucy ‘Hoffman,
_Barbara Coffey
‘Herode ot ee Doreen Hurwitz
nes Jane Hadas
Chevaliers... Eleanor Borden, Deb-
orah Heyl
‘Directing the play is Mary Vir-
‘gitlia More. Marilyn Wellemeyer
is in ‘charge of costumes.
¢ !
Vera Micheles Dean
Speaks on Security
Continued from page 1
civilized solutions among nations.
Mrs. Dean sees great hope in the
efforts made in the Dumbarton Oaks
Conference. She emphasized that
it is only a tentative program and
that not everyone has agreed upon
every point. It does provide; how-
ever, for immediate action in cases
of aggression lby nations, and pro-
vides further an Economie and So-
cial Council that will meet fre-
quently. The effectiveness of this
council will depend on, the degree
of security attained by jthe organ-
ization.
Mrs. Dean stressed the danger of
the domination by the great pow-
ers which can only be checked by
their own sense of responsibility.
The smaller nations do not have
the military power of the indus-
trial. potential.to make that power,
and therefore they will not have
equal representation in the coun-
cil, .
Philosophic Problem
Reviewed by Singer
Continued from page 2
tainty. An object may have both
structural and non-structural prop-
erties which allow it to be classi-
fied as both structural and ‘func-
Stephen A. McCarthy, assistant |{{ }| tional at the ne time, a Dr.
director of libraries at’ Columbia Singer. The idea of mechanism
University, and Humphrey G. RENE MARCEL and of vitalism are not’ mutually
Bousfield, Brooklyn College librar- French. Hairdressers exclusive, but compatible once it
ian. Other speakers were: Herman|||853 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawri| | is recognized that they “ete. con»
B. Anstaett, Franklin land Marshall Bryn Mawr 2060 cerned with different universes of
College; ‘Daniel Brop , director|&= J) | discourse.
of the Veterans’ Rehabilitation (= =>):
Screéning Unit, City College; Har-
rison R. Steeves, Columbia Col-
lege; Miss Hazel Johnson, Conhnec- ¢ G a 0 a
ticut College; and Keyes D. Met- ARMAN IFT SH 4
calf,.Harvard University. enc
MEET AT THE GREEK’S : eo
Tasty Sandwiches Christmas Gifts
Refresh
— 48 W. LANCASTER AVENUE ARDMORE
Lunches - Dinner
zall| 3
Philadelphia Lawyer You'll be a Pin-up Girl |
G. W. Pepper : roe oe
In our
Green Years : : “
A. J. Cronin Gabardine and Wool Pinafores
Hard Facts all shades—$6.95-10.95
0 Howard Spring *
E. S, MeCawley Books THE TRES CHIC SHOPPE
HAVERFORD SEVILLE THEATRE ARCADE BRYN MAWR
it swift and sure. Instead
UN IPED BTATES SAU
THE UNITED STATES Op,
With Victory cBmin’ our way let’s make
now, above all, is the time to give out—
_ with extra dollars, extra effort. Let’s back
_ PHILADELPHIA COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY € ,
ES
\ ONE RUNDRED pg
y : MR. AND MRs.
: ~ U.S.
yy \ : Seca
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YY N WAR SAVIN
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“Buy an Extra Bond today”
up our fighting men by keeping in there
pitching till the thing is cinched. Victory
takes something extra to win. Make it an
Extra War Bond ... Today. . . Now!
e
Dicitieiiluslselecdc.:
College news, November 29, 1944
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1944-11-29
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 31, No. 10
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-vol31-no10