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College news, January 16, 1946
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1946-01-16
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 32, 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-vol32-no11
Page fesmur
THE
COLLEGE NEWS
\
UNC News
Distribution of the reprint from
“True (Comics Magazine” among
the children of Philadelphia by the
Intercultural Committee of the
Philadelphia United Nations Coun-
cil has already produced results in
the form of demands fof the or-
gatiization of children’s
These “Builders
groups are now being planned by
the UNC, which is currently col-
the
Bryn Mawr
groups.
of Democracy”
lecting necessary statistics.
students have helped
distribute the comics pamphlets.
Writing in the “United Nations
Councilor,” Justice Owen J. Rob-
erts urges the regulation of the
world’s’ armaments by an_ inter-
national organization, preferably a
world government receiving some
delegation of national sovereignty
on which to base its powers. He!
emphasized the necessity which the
atomic bomb and other destructive
inventions impose on the nations of
the world to find some answer to
the armaments issue.
\Also on the record is an, organi-
zation of veterans called the Speak-
ers Panel, which includes among its
officers Mrs. James A. Sutton, as-
sistant in Public Relations at Bryn
Mawr, as vice-chairman. The Panel
plans to organize small groups
which will conduct panel discus-
sions for schools, clubs and local
councils after a period of concen-
trated study of the problem at
hand.
The “Councilor” also offers a
plea for better reporting of legis-
lative news to permit American
professors of self-government to
become a working reality. Con-
trasting the Germans’ lack of in-
terest in democratic methods with
violent American assertions of pub-
lic over government actions, the
article demands that we prove our
statements by showing our public
interest.
As part of official Council policy,
the “Councilor” presents a demand
for trusteeship rule, under the
UNO, of Japanese mandates in the
Pacific captured by the Allies.
Three suggestions as to the proced-
ure of disposing of these islands
were offered by the Committee to
Study the Organization of the
Peace: United States’
on trusteeship terms, transfer di-
rectly to UNO trusteeship, or for-
mation of a regional organization
such as the Anglo-American Car-
ribean Commission.
Action is urged through the ne-
cessity .of proving American | re-
jection ‘of the “grab policy” prac-
ticed by Russia and which has re-
ceived so much criticism in the
United States. The Council feels
it is up to Americans to prove they
mean what they say when they ask
for a new international viewpoint. |
occupation | -
Stearns Clarifies
Meaning of Time
“The nature of time cannet be
understood apart from its motion,”
said Dr. Stearns in her paper on
“Time” at the Philosophy Club tea
on January*11, in the Common
After the reading of the
paper, members 6f the club dis-
Room.
cussed the paper and the ideas pre-
sented in it.
Miss Stearns spoke of the double
nature of the past, present, and fu-
ture series. Ir.a narrow sense, she
said, “time” Yefers to the passage
of time, which cannot explain itself
unless related to the past, present,
future series.
The present never fails; rather
a new present is substituted for
the old. No future is ever a new
future, as the question of it is old.
The present appears to be contin-
uous and successive at once. It is
continually being actualized. The
present is a sense of motion to be
found in each individual; it moves
through them; it both ends and en-
dures. The present is neither time-
less nor is it a period of duration;
it is the gradfal transition from
future to past.
The past has a double nature. It
is not absolute. It is imminent in
the present and can be a source of
something; it is at once both dead
and alive. The past is timeless;
the temporal connects with it... The
timeless quality of the past is seen
in the present, illustrated by such
an example as Proust’s “Remem-
brance of Things Past,” in whicli
the past is again re-lived.
If we can’t fix it,
throw it away.
YEARSLEY’S Service
Locksmithing
Bicycles Repaired
Trunks Repaired |
Ice Skates Sharpened
| 50 W. Lancaster Ave.
| A
rdmore, Pa. Ardmore 2262
he
oo
~
The Bryn Mawr
Trust Co.
‘Bryn Mawr, Pa.
Offers every banking facility
Open a checking account in
our bank
Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Co.
t
a
THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH
=
Built for two or one,
Come to the Inn
For a sticky-bun.
COLLEGE INN
n a Bicycle
Broughton, D. Nepper
Share Dean’s Duties -
Continued from Page |
Seniors will consult with Mrs.
Broughton for the rest of this year. !
In addition, she will function as
the Dean of the —College at all
committee - meetings.
Sophomores and Juniors will con-
sult Miss Nepper as their Dean,
and she-will also work with Miss
Mary Gardiner on_ scholarships.
Miss Nepper has been Assistant to
the Dean of the Graduate School,
and Head of the Spanish House
during the past'year. As Assistant
Professor of Spanish she plans to
continue her course in the Spanish
novel.
The new permanent Dean will be
chosen by a committee of trustees,
directors and faculty sometime in
the future.
Daideauis Will Form
‘Model United Nations
Continued from. Page 1
ome stabilization, trade, tariffs,
| and commodity ‘arrangements. The
work of the Political Commission
will include prevention of renewed
Axis aggression, armaments, min-
orities, and trusteeships, while the
Social Commission will consider
refugees, health’and nutrition, the
control of narcotic drugs, and edu-
cation. The wofle of these Com-
missions will consist of discus-
sions of the Various topics, and
they will report to the final plen-
ary ession where each report will
be put to a formal vote.
Students are urged by the United;
Nations Council and the Alliance)
to follow this meeting ¢losely.
' BE CASUAL
the Mexican Way |
ESPADRILLES
SKIRTS
Mexican Shop
ARDMORE
H|
A tea at the
COMMUNITY
KITCHEN
se
isa
College tradition
LANCASTER AVENUE |
Suburban Square
S
—_ —_
site tnt SelM g)
‘Lute Song’ Features
| Chinese Atmosphere
Continued from Page 3
After the elders have died of star-
vation and heartbreak, Mary Mar-
tin seeks her spouse, never having”
lost faith in him in spite of his
Fortunately for all
silence. con-
|
cerned, Tsui-Yong’s “other wife”
was a nice girl and released him
when she realized where his true
love lay.
The pageantry of the show was
a;-masterpiece of staging. Espec-
ially notable was a processional of
{palace guards in which color and
The value of these student model | ¢horeography are well carried out.
assemblies has been fully and con- | Although the music is not. Hit
clusively demonstrated in the past. | | Parade material, it is delightfully
| adapted to the Chinese motif of the
baa
f= —
!
Moth holes, tears, burns woven
Hose repaired
Pearls restrung
Z'ppers fixed
Gloves cleaned, repaired
Invisible Mending Shop
\41 W. Lancaster Ave.
| ARDMORE, PA.
Ardmore 6151
he
A\ ALWAYS MILDER
3 BETTER TASTING
© cooLer SMOKING .
All the Benefits of
4