oe Pepe 4 Degrees Awarded to Graduates (continued from page 2) MARK JOSEPH GALLAGHER of Pennsylvania STEPHEN F. GOLD of Pennsyl- vania PATRICIA A, HERRITY of Penn- sylvania LEANNA KAY HOFFMAN of Penn- sylvania MILDRED P, JACOBS of Pennsyl- vania CORINNE F, KALODNER of Penn- sylvania WINIFRED K, KEMPTON of Pennsylvania MARY T. KLEINBARD of Pennsyl- vania ANITA D. LICHTENSTEIN of Pennsylvania EMILY. MARIAN MAST of Penn- sylvania ANNE THERESA McsaDEN of Pennsylvania BARBARA H, MESCHTER of Penn- sylvania DONALD DEAN MOYER of Penn- sylvania ELAINE RUTH QUILITZSCH of Pennsylvania ~ . JEANNE BOYER SALAS of Penn- sylvania A MARTIN I. SCHERR of Pennsyl- vania ELIZABETH SCHOENFELD of Pennsylvania WILLIAM JOHN SHOEMAKER, Jr. of Pennsylvania BARBARA 8S, SHOULSON of Penn- sylvania SUSAN DISHLER SHUBIN of Penn- sylvania DEBORAH S, SMITH of Pennsyl- vania DEBORAH STEINBERG of Penn- sylvania James P. Kerchner Pharmacist R “re Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr Pa, SUMMER SUBLET PHILA lovely 234 eme apte in Powelton Villoge 15 mine walk from U.of P. Excellent public transpe $50, Call Meg Porter, °64,. EV2-31448 Main Line Photo Service 830 LANCASTER AVE. BRYN MAWR, PA. LA 5-4440 FREE FILM for every roti left for develop- ing and printing. Kodaecolor or nm white. Sizes 620-127- Comeres - Projectors - Screens Sale and Renta's Photestats - Comera Repair Derk Reem Supplies We develap our own black and white file. HANDBLOCKED COTTON SHIFTS MANY DESIGNS MODEST PRICE PEASANT GARB de IN LANCASTER AVE., BRYN MAWR 1602 SPRUCE ST., PHILA. oe _ a H HAZEL WELLS STOOPS of Penn- sylvania FRANCES K, TSUI of Hong Kong BRONNIE TUCHMAN of Arizona GERTRUDE WILEY of Pennsyl- vania JEROME LANE WILSON of Okla- homa JOAN KAY YASUI of Oregon HERBERT LEIB ZITT of New Jersey Jane Walton, ’66 Is Guest Editor Of “Mademoiselle” Jane Walton, co-editor of the 1966 Akoué, has been named a 1966 Guest Editor of MADEMOISELLE magazine. She is one of 20 chosen from 1500 con- testants. Her duties will include a seven-day trip to Denmark, a **beauty makeover’’ at Charles of the Ritz, and modelling in MADEM- OISELLE’s Back-- to - College fashion show in June, Primarily she will be learning about how fashion magazines. operate and what the publishing business in New York is like. Jane is a Latin major who hopes someday to teach. However, MADEMOISELLE’s Guest Editors get priority consideration for per - manent positions with the magazine: as well as the other publications of the same company. She will be staying in the Bar- bizon Hotel for Women during June, and will be helping to edit the August college issue. She will receive a salary and will edit, write, illustrate and layeout pages. She has entered the competition twice and according to one of the editors, is ‘‘full of ideas, energy and homor (sic).’’ Callie McNair, of the class of 1965, was a Guest Editor last summer. PAMAAMAMAAAAAAAAAAADARAAADAMA For a complete holidayain thé scuba diving. : most beautif Tahiti, Yu dancing and beac AAMAAAA ea - they get away from it all — holiday y villages ar free Seecvatien, or for just plain’ oat fin COLLEGE NEWS May 30, 1966 Improved, Iconoclastic Akoue During Commencement. Program Trades Triteness For Creativity by Anne Lovgren AKOUE °66 provided a new first in Bryn Mawr yearbooks -- it was all that it was cracked up to be, for a change. It really was new and improved, and it did it in an artistically iconoclastic way. But then, there was ample room for improvement over past products. Take the senior section, for instance, a BIG for instance; it replaced the 150-girls-and-one. drape format of yesteryear with the professional candid approach, The prologue may well be the most professional looking part of the book. The pictures are good, the quotations amusing. ‘And taking quotations about Mawrters from various types of literature,-rather than sogging along with the-Bryn- Mawr - as - I - remember ap- proach, relieves the book of tepid, ephemeral triteness, while pro- viding it with its wry, graphic continuity. As for the faculty section, the professors appear as pleasant, intelligent and interesting people. _ It’s about time somebody gave them a break. The activities section avoids the familiar pitfall of 25 Future- Farmers - of - America - in - one - picture. It is good, but not as good as the rest of the book. The pictures are imaginative and fairly representative of the various groups, but the captions strive to- ward contemporary cleverness, often miss, and descend toward the ‘‘insy”” and the “‘cutesy.”’ The photographs on the section dividers tend toward real artistic excellence, the nude stage of “extra-curricula’? and the trash cans of ‘ads and addenda”’ serving as prime examples. And of course the combination of editors Jane Walton - Mary Daubenspeck with the library’s collegiate Gothit is unforgettable. The ads were formed on *‘contemporary clever’’ motif too, but somehow they managed to get away with it. The criticisms which one can level at AKOUE ’66 are few and rather picayune. The printing was annoyingly spastic. Depending on the mood of the presses, the same pages were either undercooked, bleeding into oblivion, or over cooked, glowering swarthily. few more names under wales might have been nice. Old what’s-her-face in the madras bermudas will remain eternally anonymous. But perhaps it’s better that way. . On the whole, it’s the best yet-- this time said with feeling. Next year’s editor’s will have aneasier time selling yearbooks, but a predecessor stiff to top. HE: First time | ever made the Dean’s List. SHE: You gonna call your folks? HE: The shock might kill them. y gv ry Risk it. Good news—however startling—is always welcome. Besides, your parents look forward to hearing from you. Call home often. The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania za | do the rest. ININIA differe t below or send us your puk AAAAA VOY VVYVYYYVYYYYVYYYVYYYYY VYYVYVYYVYVV YYW a AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAS VYVV \ Q