Liberal Club Conference on Status of Negro
Dublin Core
Title
Liberal Club Conference on Status of Negro
Subject
Bryn Mawr College; 1931 Conference; Liberal Club
Description
Newspaper article advertising the 1931 conference to be hosted by Bryn Mawr's Liberal Club. The article urges students to attend the free conference and states that the best speakers and entertainers have been invited.
Source
The College News, 1931-04-22, Vol. 17, No. 19
Publisher
Bryn Mawr College
Date
1931-04-22
Contributor
This item has been edited from its original form for clarity by the '24 '31 Students Study Race team.
Rights
Image courtesy Bryn Mawr College Special Collections
Language
English
Type
Text
Identifier
0000420.jp2
Coverage
Bryn Mawr, PA
1931
1931
Text Item Type Metadata
Text
Economic Status of Negroes
The College News, we will have you know, is a venerable and respectable paper. It is far from our aim to lead our readers into ruddy, radical ways. We are sensible that we could not if we would. We desire only to awake in the Bryn Mawr breast the old intellectual curiosity. We urge that an opportunity to investigate one of the most important political, economic and sociological problems of the day be not passed over. In short, we urge you to attend the Liberal Club conference on the economic status of negroes. To this conference, in Goodhart on Saturday, liberal thinkers are coming from all over the East. We who are here at Bryn Mawr should not because our opportunities are greater appreciate them less. This year some of the best musicians, dancers and speakers have been brought to Bryn Mawr only to be unhonored and unsung except by the few. Has the college become poor in taste, we wonder - or only in purse?
N.B. - The conference is free!
The College News, we will have you know, is a venerable and respectable paper. It is far from our aim to lead our readers into ruddy, radical ways. We are sensible that we could not if we would. We desire only to awake in the Bryn Mawr breast the old intellectual curiosity. We urge that an opportunity to investigate one of the most important political, economic and sociological problems of the day be not passed over. In short, we urge you to attend the Liberal Club conference on the economic status of negroes. To this conference, in Goodhart on Saturday, liberal thinkers are coming from all over the East. We who are here at Bryn Mawr should not because our opportunities are greater appreciate them less. This year some of the best musicians, dancers and speakers have been brought to Bryn Mawr only to be unhonored and unsung except by the few. Has the college become poor in taste, we wonder - or only in purse?
N.B. - The conference is free!
Original Format
Paper
Files
Reference
1931, Liberal Club Conference on Status of Negro, Bryn Mawr College