Women's Colleges
Dean Smith of Barnard makes a etrong point in behalf of such women's colleges as are connected with men 's colleges, where, she says in her recent animal report of the institution over whioh she presides, "constant comparison of progress atBarnard with progress at Colnmbia sets a pace by no iiieans so likely to kill as that of the isolated college for women. Girls, being as yet nouveaux riches in learning, are extravagant in it, and I connt it one of the great advautages of connaction with a college for men that it establishes a more reasonable ideal of attainment than girls by thewselves are willing to put up with. "
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Ann Arbor Argus
Old News