THe COLLEGE NEWS. VOL. XLII, NO. 25 ARDMORE and ‘BRYN MAWR, PA.. TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1947 Gopiyriaht Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1945 PRICE 10 CENTS c Leila Ann Dragonette Wins European Fellowship Slade Reports Million Passed In College Fund $155,327.65 is Raised Toward Next Year’s Drive Quota Gocdhart, June 3.—“The Alum- nae of Bryn Mawr College have the honor of announcing that the first million has been raised for the Fund,” reported Mrs. Caroline McCormick Slade, chairman of the Bryn Mawr College Fund 1946—, to President McBride and the Col- lege at the Commencement exer- cises. Not only has this year’s quota been filled, but $155,327.65 has already been collected toward the second million, Mrs. Slade re- vealed. The chairman commended the devotion and work of Bryn Mawr alumnae, graduate students and undergraduates toward this two- year drive, the principal purpose of which is to raise the scale of faculty salaries. The which has been roused in Bryn Mawr by undergraduates through- out the country was. particularly cited by Mrs. Slade. Venturi Analyzes Origin of Trends In Modern Art Goodhart, May 16.—“To_ under- stand what is modern in art, we must know the moral endeavor of modern times,” stated Dr. Lionello Venturi, professor of Art History in Rome, in a discussion of the “Origins of Modern Painting.” In this first of two illustrated lec- tures, sponsored by Bryn Mawr in conjunction with the University of Pennsylvania. Mr. Venturi analyz- ed the origins of modern art and the relations between painting and the main trends of civilization. The two revolutions from which modern art springs occurred from 1880 to 1890 and from 1905 to 1914, declared Mr. Venturi. The first revolution was a crisis of Im- pressionism, a complicated phe- nomenon which emphasized the sensibilities rather than the imag- ination. The post-Impressionists - subjected the subject matter ‘ their work to “motive.” This schéol is represented by Cezanne, Seurat, Gaugin, Van Gogh and the earliest work of Toulouse-Lautrec. Cezanne.was the master of the whole trend, detaching the world of art from that, of. nature, which developed into current abstract art. Gaugin, Mr. Venturi pointed out, revolted against Impressionism, wanting to paint: from memory tather. than from a model. His images become symbolic. Also, he represents the kind of Primitivism that follows the art not of distant ages, but of distant countries, Mr. Venturi added. Van Gogh subdued Continued ont Page 2. interest . Engagement Franités Drexel Cheston, "48, to 2 Whitags one: New hembers Of Faculty, Staff Named for Fall New appointments to the Fac- ed for next year, as well as the names of seven Faculty members who have been,igranted leaves of absence. Dr. Paul Schrecker, member of the New School for Social Re- search 1940-46, has been named Visiting Professor in Philosophy on a joint appointment with Hav- erford and Swarthmore CoClleges. On a joint appointment with Hav- erford College, Dr. Frances de Graaf will be Assistant Professor in Russian. She is now teaching at Wells College. Dr. Delight Tolles has been appointed Lecturer in Greek. New Instructors include Dr. Wil- liam E. Norris, Jr., and Miss Phyl- lis Plyler Perkins, Biology; Mr. Kernan B. Whitworth, French; Mrs. Jean Oxtoby, Mathematics; and Mr. Murray Gordon de Jersey, Psychology. Miss Janet Agnew, B. L. S., Mc- Gill University and Librarian at Sweet Briar College since 1942, has been appointed head Librarian. Dr. Elizabeth Humeston, Acting Col- lege Physician, has been named College Physician. New instruc- tor in Physical Education will be Miss Emelia Louise Kilby. New Wardens include Miss Anne Colcord and Miss Lois Post. Miss Elfride Friese has been appointed Head of German House, while Miss Lisette Nigot will head the French House. Members of the Faculty on leave of absence for 1947-48 include Dr. Helen Taft Manning, Professor of History; Dr. Isabel Stearns, Asso- ciate Professor of Philosophy; Dr. George Cuttino, Assistant Profes- sor of History, and Dr. Mabel Lang, Assistant Professor of Greek. Miss Laurence Stapleton, Associate Professor in English and holder of. a Guggenheim. Fellow- ship, will be on leave for semester I, while Dr. Eunice M. Schenck, Professor of French, will continue leave during that term. ulty and Staff have been announc- | Robert L. Calhoun Delivers Sermon At Baccalaureate Goodhart, Sunday, June “Man needs a spiritual sense for continuing his direction and mean- ing,” said Dr. Robert L. Calhoun tonight in the Baccalaureate Serv- ice for the graduating class of 1947. Dr. Calhoun posed the ques- tion, “What does it mean to be hu- man?” and quoted from the fa- mous letter of St. Paul.’ However, said Dr. Calhoun, we are God’s farmland as well as the tillers of that farmland and it is we who must bring about a new order by fully comprehending our present pattern of life. One of the characteristics which distin- guishes man from the animal is his ability to work, Man’s initial needs were simple and his primary need is still for a place where he can work, learn, express himself and seek to better his life. Work done, however, for glorification, is irrelevant and wasted; a moral integrity is neces- sary. Another prime without which there can be no last- ing accomplishment, is the quality of “love” on the part of the work- man for his materials, his job and his employers. Technical skill and _ intellectual advance are compatible, said Dr. Calhoun, where there is an under- standing of others, a love for one’s fellow human and a standard for human action. Harriman’s Paper Wins Dante Prize The Italian Department an- nounces that Ellen Harriman, ’48, has been awarded a special prize by the Dante Society of Cam- bridge, Massachusetts, for a paper on “The Angels in Dante’s Divina Commedia.” Miss Harriman illustrated her work with original drawings. It was written in connection with the course, Dante in English Transla- tion. By Judy daSilva, ’49 There comes a time in the life of every senior when she arrives at last at that oasis between the deserts of classes and comprehen- sives which is known-as Class Day. On this festive occasion, certain carefully-selected members of the graduating class are given an op- portunity to display to the other members of the student body the fruits of four years of diligence and research in their respective fields and to attempt to prove that these fruits are, despite superficial appearances, peaches and not lem- ons. The mrst speaker was Liz Dow- ling, attired in a rather familiar- promptly announced that she was a famous Russian daticer and that she “vas born on da banks uf da Nepper Reever.” Miss Dowling, a Latin major, decided to restrict her talk to classical subjects. She began with a brief resume of the course known as Sex 202, “which is followed by Sex 302, The Fam- looking white ballet costume, who. Class Day Features Ballerina On Banks “‘Uf Nepper Reever’’ ily:” ‘Most of her lecture was de- voted to “men, those peculiar phe- nomena who look as though they belong in their pants.” She em- bellished the discussion with vari- ous quotations from her wide read- ing in Latin literature, discussing at some length “fato profugis, or love at first sight,” and, “the the- ory of E Pluribus Unum, or, does he have a friend for my room- mate.” She concluded her address with “a. few practical suggestions not included in the hygiene read- ing” on the subject of how to en- snare the male animal. The distance between Latin and science may seem great to the un- initiated, but the experienced Bryn Mawrter knows that its really as short as that between Taylor and Dalton. At this latter stronghold ‘of knowledge and bacteria the stu- a| dent body’ assembled to the second Class Day speeech delivered with proper solemnity by Jackie Miller. Miss Miller announced that she would report on the “glowing ‘won- Continved on Page 2 1—. necessity, ‘her major subject. ; prepared by the Lansdowne High Barbara Hamilton ig LEILA ANN DRAGONETTE _ Leila Dragonette Plans to Continue. Her Math Study Leila Ann Dragonette, winner of the European. Fellowship, is a Physics and Math major. This year she did Honors work on the Construction of a Beta-Ray Spec- trometer. Last year Leila was awarded the Charles S. Hinchman Memorial Prize, which is given to the Jun- ior who has done the best work in She also won the Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall Memorial Scholarship, which goes to the Junior with the highest average. She has held a Trustees’ Scholarship for four years. Previous to winning the Fellow- ship, Leila had intended to study Math next year at the Graduate School of the University of Penn- sylvania. Her plans are now un- certain. Her outside interests at college! have included the Orchestra and Miss Petts’ dance group. She was School, Lansdewne, Pennsylvania, and has beet. a Non-Res. Students Exceed 1947 Fund Quota The Undergraduates have ex- ceeded the quota of $7,500 set for them ‘by collecting $9,612.73 through the year for the Bryn Mawr College Fund 1946-. In addition to individual bolici- tation, money was raised in the halls by auctions, errand running, the sale of apples and lemonade and similar activities. Profits from Freshman Show, the Faculty-Student basketball game and the Faculty Show are also included in the Undergraduate total. $195.96 was raised for the Bryn Mawr College Fund by the 5%. plan in the Vill over a two-week period. : The money received is classified as follows. — Pembroke West $691.00 Pembroke East 742.05 Rockefeller — 687.25 Rhoads N. and S. 1,664.25 Bunce Named Alternate, for Work in Chemistry Margaret Rudd Awarded M. Carey Thomas Essay Prize Goodhart, June 3.—Leila Ann Dragonette was named by Presi- dent McBride as the winner of the 62nd Commencement _ exercises here today. This scholarship, the highest undergraduate honor the college gives, goes to Miss Drag- onette for her work in Physics and Mathematics. Barbara Hamilton Bunce was named as alternate to Miss Dragonette for her work in Chemistry. Margaret Rudd was awarded the M. Carey Thomas Essay Prize for the best critical or creative paper submitted by a Senior. The list of Seniors receiving their A. B. degrees and of those receiving graduate degrees fol- lows: BACHELOR OF ARTS Biology Emily Conover Evarts, of Mas- sachusetts. With honors. Catherine Bryson Fowler, of Pennsylvania, in absentia. Rosemary Therese Gilmartin, of Barbara Hamilton Bunce, of Pennsylvania. Magna cum laude with honors. Ellen Brooks Cary, of Pennsyl- vania. Cum laude. Ruby Li-Kun Chen, of China. Mary G. Conroy, of New Jersey. Rose Gordon Johnson, of Mary- land. Cum laude with honors. Elizabeth Brooks Kaltenthaler, of Pennsylvania. Magna cum laude with honors. : Nancy Heath Kraffert, of Penn- sylvania. Joy Levin, of California. laude. Mary Rodgers Pinch, of Illinois. Margaret Josephine Quinn, of Pennsylvania. Cum laude with honors. Sibyl Pleasaunce Straub, of Mas- sachusetts. Nancy Cupper Pennsylvania. Kathryn Welker Weiss, of Penn- sylvania. Classical Archaeology Marian Rupert Holland, of Penn- sylvania. Cum laude with honors. Charlotte Deborah Rider, of Con- necticut. Magna cum laude with honors. Economics and Politics Economics Elizabeth Ann Houck, of Penn- sylvania. Dorothy Wilton Jones, of Mary- land. With honors. ° Helen Belle Poland, of Massa- chusetts. With honors. Politics Edith Lord Annin, of Massachu- setts. Cum laude. Marcia Inez Dembow, of Penn- sylvania. Laura Agoos Dimond, of Massa- chusetts. Jacqueline W. Heberling, of Pennsylvania. Cum Strickler, of sachusetts. Gerry Pattison, of New York. Continued on Page 2 Continued on Page 2 1947 European Fellowship at the Pennsylvania. Magna cum laude with honors. Eva Krafft, of Illinois. Magna cum laude. Chemistry Mildred Frafices Nelson, of Mas- Louise Ringwalt, of the District — a eke Page Two THE COLLEGE NEWS i THE COLLEGE NEWS (FoUNDED IN 1914) ¢ H Published weekly during 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 - Bryn Mawr College. The College News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that appears in it may be reprinted either wholly or in part without permission of the Editor-in-Chief. Editorial Board Harriet Warp, °48, Editor-in-Chief BarBARA BETTMAN, °49, Copy BETTY-BRIGHT Pace, *49, Makeup H&LEN ANDERTON, .”°49 EmiLy TOWNSEND, ’50, Makeup Louise Ervin, ’49 Katrina THomas, ’49 HELEN Martin, ’49, Sports Editorial Staff BARBARA ZIEGLER, *48 JupyrH Da Siva, °49 Jean ELLs, ’49 MarIAN Epwarps, ’50 CECELIA MAccaBE, ’50 Betty DEMPwWOLF, ’50 IrtINA NELIDOW ’50 Photegrapher ROSAMOND Kane, 48 Business Board Mary BETTLESTONE °49, Business Manager Caroy BakER, °48, Advertising Manager Rosin Rav, ’50 Joan Rossins, *49 Betty Mutcn, ’50 HELEN COLEMAN, ’50 Subscription Board ANNA-STIN« ERICSON, *48, Manager Naney Kunnwarpt, °48 SALLY BEAMAN, °49 EpyTHe La GRANDE, °49 SuE KELLY, *49 Auice Louise Hackney, 49 Epre Mason Ham, ’50 BarBARA LIGHTFOOT ’50 Betty Lypine, grad. HELEN Hate, 49 HELEN GOLDBERG, *49 Groria WHITE, °48 MELANIE Hewitt, ’50 GWYNNE WILLIAMS, ’50 ANNE GREET 50 Pat NicHo. ’50 Subscription, $2.75 Mailing Price, $3.00 Subscriptions may begin at any time Enterted as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office Under Act of Congress August 24, 1912 4 June, 1947 With comprehensives safely behind them, the Seniors have already begun to enjoy Life. We are pleased to note that sunburns have replaced library pallors and that a few days in the World have served to erase harassed looks. But, on a more serious level, the adaptability of this class has been seen before. The class of 1947 entered Bryn Mawr during the blackest part of the war years. They are being graduated into.a world which, although technically at peace, offers no one an immediate clue to its confusion, a world in many ways more difficult to face than a world at war, in which the issues seem, at least, to be clear-cut. This class successfully combined academic work with a variety of volunteer services. Although their range of in- terests has changed since then, they have continued to show originality and enthusiasm in their work and outside activ- ities. _ Whatever they do, they go on from Bryn Mawr to try, each in her own way, to put into practice the knowledge and ideals they have learned here. Now, as they are graduated, we are confident of their abilities. We wish them all good luck and a reluctant farewell. et | The | Half-Wa ark Bryn Mawr undergraduates, who have collected nearly a third again of their quota for the Bryn Mawr College Fund 1946—, are to be congratulated, not only for the actual money collected, but for the continued interest and enthusiasm _ shown throughout the year. ! Halls and students, not to mention an enterprising fac- ulty which went to work on the assumption that God helps those who help themselves, devised various methods of money raising, besides individual solicitation. From the Freshman Show, the Sophomore Carnival, the Junior Show, to hall auc- tions, lemonade-selling, and errand-running, almost every- one did her bit—if occasionally because there was nothing else to do, in most cases willingly and ingeniously. Although the students have reached their quota for the year, the Drive itself is only half over. Next year’s final ef- ' fort will be difficult: individual solicitations will probably net Jess, so that it will be necessary to plan more ways to reach _ the new goal. Let this year’s two thousand dollar over-sub- see — set ee 1947-48! Undergrad Degrees Conferred on 129 Continued from Page of Columbia. Caryl sachusetts. Mary Harding Nagle Schaefer, of Pennsylvania. . English Thelma Baldassarre, of Pennsyl- vania. Cum laude. Mary Lee Hickman Blakely, of Kentucky. Catherine Pierce Clark, of Min- nesota. Mary Newbold Cross, of New Jersey. Cum laude with honors. Velma Low Dougherty, of New York. , Joan Carol Gould, of New York. Magna cum laude. Alice Lindsey ‘Hart, of aniee: see. Cum laude with honors. Darst Hyatt, of North Carolina. (Marjory Holt Johnson, of Penn- sylvania. Nancy Ann LaFollette Knettle, of Washington. Janine Landau, of New York. Elizabeth Grant Lilly, of Con- necticut. Cum laude. Elizabeth Courtney McKown, of Pennsylvania. With honors. Jacquelyn Miller, of New York. Alaine Rae Moog, of Missouri. Dorothy Deutsch Rosenberg, of Ohio, i entia. Cum laude with hono Margaret Elizabeth Rudd, of New York. Cum laude with honors. Ellen Williams Shepherd, of Massachusetts. Miriam R. Steinhardt, of New York. Margaret Dumont Stephens, of Virginia. Cum laude. Barbara Stix, of New York. Katherine Tanner, of North Car- olina. Marietta Prewitt Taylor, of Ken- tucky. Marian Elizabeth - Thomas, Alabama, in absentia. Carol Hopkins Vejvoda, of New York.. Patsy von Kienbusch, of New York. “Magna cum laude with hon- ors. Barbara Rubin Weiner, of Penn- sylvania. Ross, of Mas- of French Doreen Hurwitz, of the District of Columbia. Cum laude. Martha Anne MacDonald, Massachusetts. Joanne Holloway Mott, of Penn- bsylvania. Avis wiciwites Reynick, of Louisi- ana. of Geology Lois Linn Killough, of Texas. Elizabeth Gertrude Frost Wil- lard, of New York. German Marilyn Jean Behner, of Ohio. Elizabeth Bready, of Pennsyl- vania. Cum laude. History Nancy Elizabeth Bierwirth, of New York. Cum laude. _.Joan Ann Black, of New York. Anne Elizabéth Borum, of Penn- sylvania. Magna cum laude. Betty Ann Byfield, of New York. Helen Patricia Cowles, of Con- necticut. Elizabeth Jane Davis, of Penn-! sylvania. Cum laude with honors: Elizabeth-Hilbert Day, of Mas- sachusetts. Cum laude. Shirley G. Goldberg, of Pennsy]- vania, Cum laude. ; ; Louise A. Gorham, of New York. Cecilia Rosenblum Gross, of Pennsylvania. Cum laude. Mary Virginia Johnson, of the District of Columbia. With honors. Anne Finley Ludington, of Penn- sylvania. - : Nancy Anderson Morehouse, of New Jersey. Magna Cum laude with honors. . Ann Orlov, yof Massachusetts. Cum laude. Constance Lacaoes Rothschild, of New York. Magna cum laude with honors. Mary Hoyt ‘Sherman, ot Vene- | ae “Continued ‘on pare 8 B. M. Announces Foreign, Grants Bryn Mawr College has an- nounced the -following fellowships and scholarships to be awarded to foreign women for the year 1947- 48. Alternates have also been named for each grant. RESIDENT GRADUATE SCHOL- ARSHIP FOR A BRITISH WOMAN (Supplementary grant awarded by The English-Speaking Union) me Daniel, of Ton Pentre, Rhondda, South Wales — Depart- ment of Economics. B. A. Univer- sity. College of Wales, Aberyst- wyth, to be conferred, 1947. RESIDENT GRADUATE SCHOL- ARSHIPS FOR FOREIGN WOMEN: Ch’ih Chi Shang, of Hupei Anlu, China—Department of Geology, A. B. National Tsing Hua University, 1941; M. A. to be conferred, Bryn Mawr College, 1947. Barbara Margaret Bell, of Auck- land, New Zealand—Departments of Greek and French, B. A. Uni- versity of New Zeatand 1945 and M. A. 1946. Wadad Habib Said, of Cairo, Egypt—Department of English, B. A., American University of Cairo, 1946. Rose-Mary Kunzli, of Wettingen, Switzerland—Department of Chemistry. Candidate for Diploma, Swiss Federal Institute of Technol- ogy, 1947. TEACHING FELLOWSHIP IN GERMAN Ursula Elizabeth Eder, of Zu- rich, Switzerland—Department of English. University of “Zurich, 1944-47, TEACHING FELLOWSHIP IN SPANISH Leonie Garcia Olano de Larre- guy, of Buenos Aires, Argentina— Department of English. Profesar- ado de literatura, er of Buenos Aires, 1941. ; TEACHING FELLOWSHIP IN ITALIAN Serena Fonda, of Trieste—De- partment of Politics. Doctor in Political Science, Trieste Univer- sity, 1945. MARCELLE PARDE TEACHING FELLOWSHIP IN FRENCH Francine Zoe De Taeye, of Bag- neres de Bigorre, France—Depart- ment of English. Diplome d’etudes superieures, Faculte des Lettres, Toulouse, 1943. Origins of Mod. Art Shown by Venturi Continued from Page 1 form to pure color, which gave a religious and social content to his painting. The intervening period was the refinement of the first revolution, Mr. Venturi explained. At the end of it, in the place of symbol- ism, the Expressionist, the Cubists and the “Fauves” sprang up.: The trend was now away from abstrac- tion to completeness, represented by Matisse, Roualt® Picasso and Bracque. With Matisse there came an-even_more radical subjection of form to color. The Cubists em- phasized the physical side of form, while the Surrealists were more interested in the psychological side. All the origins of modern art can be found in the trends before 1914, Mr. Venturi declared. Students Exceed "46-47 Drive Quota Continued from Page 1 Radnor 215.50 Merion 506.86 Denbigh 559.50 Spanish House 93.00 ‘East House 128.50 ~“Wyndam 85.00 - Non-Resident 218.00 Faculty Show 1 408.81 -Unclassfied 2,613.01 Total $9,612.73 Class Day Features Scientist, Athlete Continued from Page 1 ders of the scientific world. It is customary for a science major to give such a speech and Miss Mil- ler’s major is English, but she ex- plained away this slight discrep- ancy by stating, “I think I may safely assume that I’ve taken more science courses for less credit than_/” any other Bryn Mawr undergradu-. ate.” The long saga entitled “Sci-. €nce Marches on, with Miller Limping Slowly Behind,” began. four years ago, when Mrs. Brough-. ton learned that Jackie owned a nail file, an old cuticle scissor and a slightly used razor blade and de-. duced, naturally enough, that she: and biology were just made for- each other. During this course: Miss Miller gave vent. to her liter-. ary abilities by endlessly washing her hands and crying “Out; out. damned formaldehyde!” Having decided that life with a dogfish was not for her, Miss Miller then attempted geology. But here, once more, she stated sadly, “though. my heart was in the highlands, my grade was again in the low 50’s.” Having shed many tears over this sad saga, the students next trotted down to the gym, where they were greeted by Peggy Oneil, who had chosen for her subject the athletic requirement at. Bryn Mawr. She reminisced brief- ly about her freshman year—“It. was an all girls’. college then, that’s why I came.” In her first year here she learned that she could chose anything she wanted to fill her athletic requirement— “So naturally I chose bridge.” (In her senior year she switched to knitting argyles.) One require- ment she did not have to worry about, however, was the orals, for, as Miss Oneil stated with justifi- able pride, “I was always good at talking.” The Freshman swimming test was, however, a bit more of a trial, although she fared better than-a number of her friends, one of who was last seen floundering helplessly in the swimming pool while her harassed father shouted at her from the edge, “I’ve spent $5,000 on your education—now swim, damn it, swim!” The quartet of addresses was then completed by Libo Steinert’s discussion of her life in the li- brary. She related that her ac- quaintance with this venerable building began in freshman year when she took the customary tour and matters remained in this state until her junior year when she was surprised to discover that there were things in it—books. \ Miss Steinert also discussed the” approved methods of choosing a major, including such well-known procedures as tossing a ‘catalogue down a flight of stairs to see at what page it opens and throwing darts at a college bulletin which has been.tacked to the wall. tried all these herself and having reached no _ satisfactory ‘ answer, she adopted a method which was all her own: “I saw something ir the distance that I liked the looks of, so I followed _it. Poor Dr. Broughton didn’t have a chance’” She ended her discussion with a brief dissertation on the senti- ments of the parents of the gradu- ates as ‘the long-awaited occasion draws near—“Well, dear, now that you’ve learned to sing, what do we do, send you to business school?” — Broadcast “A Lady of Distinction,” a program based on the life of President M. Carey Thomas, of Bryn Mawr, will be broadcast by Cavaleade of America, Mon- day -evening, June 9th. The script is a tribute to Dr.. Thom- as’ career, as well as to her pioneer work in apie of edu- cation for women, with special | emphasis on sins Maen: Pol lege. | Hav- | THE COLLEGE NEWS s Fasee-t bret Graduate and _ Continued from Page 2 Mary Stewart, of New Hamp- shire. Barbara Dorn Young, of New York. History of Art Iris Nadine Cherner, of the Dis- trict of Colombia. With honors. Margaret Amelie Mechlin, of the District of Columbia,. Mary Mossman, of Massachu- setts. : sa : “Caroline Elizabeth Seamans, of New Hampshire. Norma Evelyn Ulian, of Massa- chusetts. Cum laude with honors. Latin Elizabeth Molloy Dowling, New York. Anne Evelyn Kingsbury, of New York. Cum laude with honors. Cornelia Stanton Pickens, of Vir- ginia. Elizabeth Steinert ,of Massachu- setts. of Mathematics Eleanor Howland Colwell, Connecticut. Virginia Haws, of Pennsylvania, in absentia. Ruth Heinsheimer, of New York. Magna cum laude. Marghrita Larimer Pennsylvania. Clare Partridge, of New York. Cum laude. : Philosophy Anne Gertrude Biddle, of Penn- sylvania. of Oneil, . of Undergraduate Degrees are Conferred Judith Anshen Brodsky, of New York... Marilyn R. Cooper, of Penmsyl:| vania. Frances Lanier Dunn, of the Dis- trict of Columbia. Marilyn Zelda Raab, of Pennsy)- vania. Esther J. Smith, of Massachu- setts. Cum laude with honors. Margaret Hodge Urban, of Con- necticut. ‘Cum laude. Frances Kimbrough Watts, of Virginia, in absentia. Physics Jean Albert, of Pennsylvania. Magna cum laude with honors. Ann Stirling Gregory, of Illinois. Cum laude with honors. Martha Bailey Gross, of Penn- sylvania. Cum laude. Ann Sanford Werner, of New Hampshire. Physics and Mathematics Leila Ann Dragonette, of Penn- sylvania. Summa cum laude with honors. Psychology Joan Auerbach, of New York. Ann Francis Coward, of Penn- sylvania. Cum laude. Helen R. Dyson, of Pennsyl- vania. . Ann Dudley Edwards, of Penn- sylvania. Shirley Heckheé Heinemann, of Pennsylvania. M cum laude with honors. Margaret A igan. Cum laude. cLean, of Mich- “ll Connelly’s Flower Shop 12Z6 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr 1515 -wnecnwansawnaam—~ Lois Edith Reichard, York. of New Sociology Ns Louise Kendall Brownlow, Pennsylvania, in absentia. Elizabeth Koch Fenstemacher, of Pennsylvania. Patricia Rippold Henne, of Penn- sylvania. Mary Levin, Cum laude. Martha Bowman McFadden, of Pennsylvania. of of Pennsylvania. Joan Erna Polakoff, of New | York. Jeanne Boyer Salas, of Pennsyl- vania. Cum laude. Spanzsh Monnie Lyndall Bellow, of Penn- sylvania. Barbara Bennett, of Pennsyl- vania. Nanette Claire Emery, of Mich- i igan. Rosalie Bockilus Scott, of Penn- sylvania. Candidates for Certificates Carola Woerishoffer Graduate De- partment of Social Economy and Social Research Marion Oliver Kurfess, of Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, in absentia. A. B. Temple University 1934. Esther Starr Marshall, of Har- risburg, Pennsylvania, in absentia. A. B. Elmira College 1943. Margaret Virginia Murta, of West Caldwell, New Jersey. A. B. University of Pennsylvania 1940. Master of Social Service Dorothy L. Anderson, of Down- ingtown, Pennsylvania. A. B. El- mira College 1932. Rosemary Morrow Burnham, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A .B. Earlham College 1943. Esther Ridpath Delaplaine, of r fr aw me oe ae vanaae wand) WIN THRILLING DAYS IN NEW YORK ALL EXPENSES PAID EXCITING MUSICAL QUIZ Listen | THE TREASURE HOUR OF SONG «Stars of the Metropolitan Opera, Radio’s Outstanding Program of Fine Music Presented by CONTI CASTILE SHAMPOO Every Thursday Night WIP ° 9:30 P.M. Congratulations to the Class of 1947 joyce lewis Lancaster Ave... Bryn Mawr Best Washes to the Class of 1947! Country Book , Shop Bryn Mawr THE COUNTRY BOOKSHOP Bryn Mawr Swarthmore; Pennsylvania. Swarthmore College 1944. Mildred Greenberger Gittelson, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A. B. Pennsylvania State College oe, * Irene M. Hayne, of Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania, in absentia. Politics and Economics Ruth Catharine Lawson, of Ba- tavia, New York, in absentia: A. B. Mount Holyoke College 1933; M. A. Bryti Mawr College 1934. Dissertation: The Compromis in International Arbitration and Ju- dicial Settlement: A Study in the Evolution of the International Ju- dicial Process. Presented by Pro- fessor Mildred B. Northrop. Experimental, Abnormal! and Social Psychology Ruth Virginia Higbee, of Llan- erch, Pennsylvania. A. B. Univer- sity of Pennsylvania 1940 and M. A. 1941. Dissertation: Hue and Saturation of Aperture Colors as a Function of the Composition and Luminance of the Surrounding Field. Presented by Professor Har- ry Helson. Social Economy and Abnormal Psychology Florence Hollis, of New York City. A. B. Wellesley College 1928; M. S. S. Smith College 1931. Dis- sertation: Casework in Marital Disharmony: _with Emphasis on the Part of the Wife in this Dis- harmony. Presented by Professor Hertha Kraus. MAYO and PAYNE Cards Gifts RADIO Parts Repairs 821 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR Nothing Can Beat the Haverford Platter | THE LAST STRAW Haverford Compliments of the Haverford Pharmacy Haverferd Spanish Literature and French Literature Eleanor Seraphim O’Kane, of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. A. B. Trinity College 1927; M. A. Uni- versity of Pennsylvania 1933. Dis- sertation: A Dictionary of Medie- val Spanish Proverbs and Proverb- ial Phrases. Presented by Profes- sor Joseph Eugene Gillet. Spanish Literature, Old French Philology, and History of Art Mary Stedman Sweeney, of An- dover, Massachusetts. A. B. Rad- ‘eliffe College 1917 and M. A. 1922. Dissertation: Victoria de Cristo by Bartholome Palau. Presented by Professor Joseph Eugene Gillet. RESIDENT FELLOWSHIPS Geology Judith Vera Weiss. A. B: Tem- ple University 1934; M. A. Bryn Mawr College 1945. Feilow in Geology, Bryn Mawr, 1946-47. Greek Margaret Elaine Reesor, B. A. University of Toronto, 1945, and M. A. 1946. Graduate Scholar in Greek, Bryn Mawr Coilege, 1946- Ati. ss Physics Louise Gaus, A. B. Vassar Col- lege 1944; Part-time Demonstrator in Physics and Graduate Student, Bryn Mawr College, Semester II 1945-46 and 1946-47. RESIDENT GRADUATE SCHOL- ARSHIPS FOR 1947-48 Chemistry Elizabeth Carmichael, A. B. Bryn Mawr College 1946 and M. A. candidate 1947; Graduate Schol- ar in Chemistry, 1946-47. Margaret Josephine Quinn, A. B, to be conferred. Bryn Mawr College, 1947. Social Economy ‘Carola Woerishoffer Scholarship Helen Barbara Sloane, A. B. Leb- anon Valley College 1938; Gradu- ate Student in Social Economy, Bryn Mawr College, 1946-47. Manja Muenz, A. B. Hunter Col- lege 1946; Graduate Student in Sa- cial Economy, Bryn Mawr College, Semester II, 1945-47. LLOYD MANGRUM Congratulations to the Class of 1947 DINAH FROST’S Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr A clever young Senior is Jane. She's famous for using ber brain. ‘SBES always well dressed, Her bose is the best— Of swains she can claim quite a train! SHE ALWAYS WEARS HOSIERY U. S. NATIONAL OPEN CHAMPION , -