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THE COLLEGE NEWS
VOL. XLIV, NO. 25
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1948
Copyright, Trustees of
Bryn Mawr College,1945
PRICE 10 CENTS
arriet Walden Ward Wins European Fellowship
BM Fund 1946
Approaches End
With $1,600,000
Donations to Continue
Throughout Winter;
For Chairs
The Bryn Mawr Fund 1946—
has now reached $1,600,000 of its
$200,000,000 goal. This money will
be used towards faculty salaries,
building improvements, and _ to-
wards endowments. Donations will
be accepted throughout the winter
of 1948-49.
Now that the million and a half
mark is passed, Mrs. Manning, Ex-
ecutive Director of the Drive,
points out that it is especially dif-
ficult to raise sums for endow-
ments today, since most founda-
tions prefer special projects.
There are certain parts of the
drive program which will suffer
greatly from a deficit of funds. For
instance, Mrs. Manning cited the
faculty salaries. “We have to ask
alumnae and parents to feel it their
responsibility to complete the en-
dowment for faculty salaries in or-
der to maintain the high standard
of faculty here,’ she explained.
About $200,000 further is needed
to complete this part of the Fund.
The newly founded Rufus M.
Jones Chair of Philosophy and Re-
ligion and the Theresa Helburn
chair are other important parts of
the Fund program which will con-
tinue through next winter.
Schenck Chair
According to the Bryn Mawr
College Fund _ Drive . office,
$125,000 has been raised towards
the Eunice Morgan Schenck 1907
Chair of French. This new chair
was started when the Class of
1907 decided to change its name
from the Class of 1907 Chair of
French to the above, in Miss
Schenck’s honor. Miss Schenck
was head of the French depart-
ment for many years, as well as
being the Dean of the Graduate
School.
The goal of the endowment is
$200,000.
Eighteen Members of ’98 Class
Return For Fiftieth Anniversary
By Emily Townsend, ’50
The Class of 1898 held its fifty-
year reunion this last week-end,
and 18 members of the class were
able to attend; 11 are planning to
march in the Commencement pro-
cession, Distinguished members of
the class who came to the reunion
were Marion Edwards Park, and
Alice Gannett. Highlights of the
week-end for ’98 were the filets
mignon served at the Class Dinner,
Saturday night, and the picnic at
Wyndham, Sunday. On Monday,
Dept. of English
Names Stallings
For Essay Prize
Sylvia Stallings has been award-
ed the M. Carey Thomas Essay
Prize. This prize is given by the
department of English to a senior
for distinction in writing. Sylvia
submitted a paper on a group of
poems. There were ten other en-
tries.
In the past Sylvia has contrib-
uted articles to Harpers and this
spring won second prize in the
Vogue Prix de Paris contest. In
her freshman year she received
the Sheelah Kilroy Memorial Schol-
arship. As a freshman, she held
the Alice Day Jackson Scholarship
and the Anne Dunn (Brearley
School) Scholarship, and in her
sophomore year she was holder of
the James E. Rhoads Memorial
Sophomore Scholarship. In her
junior year, she held the James E.
Rhoads Memorial Junior Scholar-
ship and in her senior year the
Amelia Richards Memorial Schol-
arship.
Sylvia has been editor of the
Title and a member of the chorus.
1948 Class Officers
The class of 1948 has elected
the following permanent of-
ficers: President, Ada Klein;
Secretary, Harriet Ward;
Treasurer, Anna-Stina Ericson;
and Reunion Manager, Betty
Coleman. Please send all class
news to the secretary in Cornor,
Bedford Hills, New York.
Harriman Gives.Out G. I. Recipe
In Class Day Speech at Taylor,
By Pat Nichol, 50
The toots of Ellen Harriman’s
bucolic toy horn banged out the
beginning of Class Day, at 12:45,
May 14. Students poured out of
classes to listen to the speeches of
encouragement and _ enthusiasm
which Ellen began. Wearing a sol-
dier’s cap decorated with medals
she told us of her various careers,
at Bryn Mawr and in the Army.
She pointed out that her Bryn
Mawr career had been a long and
hard one, and Miss Nepper thought
so, too. In speaking of her Army
experiences, Ellen revealed a se-
cret Army recipe for chow. “Take
anything, drop it, pick it up, don” t |
dust it off, place it in a shallow pan
with lukewarm water, raisins and
saltpeter,” she advised. _ She dis-
cussed good conduct medals in con-
nection with convertibles, and men-
tioned that there was a certain
driver on campus who was "aren
“galanter” than ever. By the time
he became a senior, she added, he
might even be “lawless.” Stripping
to a very chic dress, or lack of it,
Ellen parted with the song “Target
for Tonight,” which was dedicated
to the veterans at Haverford, since
only they would appreciate it!
As the crowd progressed to Dal-
ton, Betty Coleman greeted it from
the second story ledge, where she
sat clad in black bathing cap, dun-
garees, white shirt and red beard.
“Today I see that ‘I’m among
friends, if not my own,” she cheer-
i fully anounced. She spoke tender-
ily of her colleague, Schlitzt von
Beer. “Nothing I wouldn’t do for
him, nothing he wouldn’t do for
me.” In fact, she added surrepti-,
tiously, we have spent the last four
years doing nothing. Betty decid-
Continued on Page 2
a. wie
Elsie Andrews gave the class a
luncheon in memory of her sister| “™
who was a member of ’98, and Mr.
Bancroft and his daughter gave a
tea in memory of ‘Mrs. Bancroft,
who was Class President until her
death in March of this year.
Mrs. John J. Boericke, who man-| +
aged the reunion, was pleased at
the number of members of ’98, who
came to the affair. Grace Park
Wright came back from a trip
abroad with her daughter just to
attend it, and other members came
from as far as Cleveland and Port-
land. At the Alumnae Dinner on: :
Sunday, Miss Park gave a speech
representing the class, and Miss
Gannett was toastmistress at the
Class Dinner.
Marion Edwards Park
Miss Park, who was President of
Bryn Mawr from 1922 until 1942,
has been living, since her retire-
ment, at her home, Slowly Fields,
in Plymouth, Massachusetts. She
holds LLD degrees from Smith and
Mount Holyoke, is on the Board of
Trustees of Bryn Mawr, Radcliffe
and Simmons College, is second
vice-president of the American As-
sociation of University Women and
received the fourth M. Carey
Thomas Award at her retirement
in 1942.
Miss Gannett retired last “year
from her position as head of the
Goodrich Settlement House, in
Cleveland, which she had held for
25 years; her retirement was-mark-
ed by “an enormous party,” Mrs.
Boericke declared. Mrs. Boericke
also mentioned Alice Hood, ’98,
with admiration: she is now spend-
ing her time by taking a course in
astronomy at Columbia Univer-
sity. Most members of the reun-
ing class came in time for Miss
McBride’s luncheon, on Saturday,
Continued on Page é
Lehr Discusses
Math. Probability
In the final Sigma Xi lecture
for the year given on Tuesday,
May 11, Miss Marguerite Lehr,
Associate Professor of Mathe-
matics, discussed the problem of
“Probability and Plausibility.”
Statistics, in the sense of mathe-
matical theory useful for the
analysis of observation, presents
not only the difficulties inherent
in relating theory to practice, but
faces as well a difficulty rooted
in the “non-mathematician’s” idea
of mathematics,” said Miss Lehr.
Much of the mistrust of statis-
tical analysis comes from a failure
to understand the notion of
mathematical probability in appli-
cation to actual occurrences, she
continued. To make clear the
cause of these misunderstandings,
the formulation of the elementary
probability notion was studied in
early examples of Galileo and Pas-
cal culminating in the work of
‘Bernoulli and Laplace.
Here then, stated Miss Lehr,
the basis of extension to continu-
ous distributions was _ indicated,
and the nature of statistical tests
of hypothesis was briefly outlin-
ed. Such tests state evidence in
a mathematical vocabulary that
evidence must be evaluated in the
particular situation, she concluded.
e
3 5 ze <
eRe ae Oe eal
HARRIET WALDEN WARD
Harriet VW. Ward
Plans to Continue
Study in English
Harriet Walden Ward, winner of
the European Fellowship, is an
English Major. She has done hon-
ors this year, the subject of her
paper being Richard ITE and Mac-
beth. Denny comes from Bedford
Hills, New York, and was prepar-
ed by the Westover School in Mid-
dlebury, Connecticut.
Denny was awarded the Sheelah
Kilroy Memorial Scholarship in
English for advanced courses last
year, as well as the Maria L. East-
man Brooke Hall Memorial Schol-
arship for the highest average in
the junior class.
This year Denny was Editor-in-
Chief of the College NEWS and as
such a member of the Undergrad-
uate and College Councils. She
has just been elected Permanent
Secretary of the Class of 1948.
Alternate: McGovern
Carol Montgomery McGovern,
alternate for the European Fellow-
ship, comes from Evanston, Illinois
and was prepared by the Woodrow
Wilson High School in Washington
D. C. A Politics Major, Carol
wrote her honors paper on “Eli-
tism, the (Riile of the Select Few,
However Chosen.”
Carol has held the George W.
Yeatman Scholarship for the past
two years. She was Alumnae Re-
gional Scholar from 1944-1946,
| Scholar of the Women’s Club of
Chevy Chase in 1944 and Maria
Hopper Scholar in 1945.
McClure Awarded
New Fellowship
Today Bryn Mawr College
awards a new fellowship for the
first time. This fellowship for
study in England has been given
by Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Burch
of Henley-on-Thames, Oxford, Eng-
land in honor of Bryn Mawr Col-
lege, Professor Mary S. Gardiner,
and their daughter Helen Burch,
a member of this year’s graduat-
‘ing class. The fellowship will be
given in 1948-49 and 1949-50 for
study at Oxford or Cambridge or
at another university of the stud-
Continued on Page 2
Carol Montgomery McGovern
Named Alternate for Politics Work
E. McClure Receives
Fellowship for Study
In England
Goodhart, June 1.—Harriet Wal-
den Ward was named by President
McBride as the wirfner of the 1948
European Fellowship, at the 63rd
Commencement exercises here to-
day. This scholarship, the highest
undergraduate honor ,the college
gives, goes to Miss Ward for her
work in English. Carol Montgom-
ery McGovern was named as alter-
nate to Miss Ward for her work
in Politics.
Elizabeth Anne McClure was
granted the new fellowship for
study in England. Miss McClure
received the new award for her
work in History.
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Biology
Mary Ann Brady,
vania.
Esther Essayag-Benacerraf, of
New York.
Rosamond Kane, of New York.
Nelly Jane Keffer, of Pennsyl-
vania. Cum laude with honors.
Anita Mol, of New Jersey. Mag-
na cum laude.
ot Pennsyl-
Ecatherine Fanita Revici, of
New York.
Chemistry
Elizabeth Henderson Bagley, of
Maryland.
Sara Berman, of New York. Cum
laude.
Ethelwyn Clark, of Pennsylvania.
Cum laude.
Kathleen Holliday Jensen,
Maryland.
Consuelo Houseworth Kuhn, of
New Jersey.
Alina Elisabeth Surmacka, of
New York. Magna cum laude
with honors.
Edith Ellen Woolever, of Penn-
sylvania. Cum laude.
- Classical Archaeology
Susan Brimmer Inches, of Mas-
sachusetts. Cum laude.
Elisabeth Washburn Young, of
Minnesota.
of
Economics and Politics
Economics
Jane Lee Ettelson, of Pennsyl-
vania. Magna cum laude with
honors.
Barbara LeMay, of New York.
Evelyn Van Westerborg, of New
York.
Politics
Margaret Ann Baish, of Penn-
‘sylvania.
Mary Ann Brumbaugh, of Con-
necticut.
Elizabeth Brooke
Maryland.
Elizabeth Cameron,
chusetts.
Sybil Ullman Conn, of Pennsyl-
vania.
Coleman, of
of Massa-
Anna-Stina Louise Ericson, of
Pennsylvania.
Nancy May Garton, of New
York.
Katherine Gregory, of Connecti-
eut.
Lucy Elaine Hoffman, of the Dis-
trict of Columbia. |
Sahika Suna Kili, of Turkey.
Cum laude,
Indra Kirpalani, of New York.
Cum laude with -honors-
Lucile Bricker Lewis, of Penn-
Continued on Page 2
Page Two :
THE COLLEGE NEWS
"apspeapunenas te
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
giving, 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 per-
mission of the Editor-in-Chief.
Editorial Board
Betty-BricHT Pace, °49, Editor-in-Chief
Jean Exuis, ’49, Copy Emity TOWNSEND, ’50, Makeup
Louise Ervin, °49 IntNA NE LIDow, 50, Makeup
HELEN MarrTIN, *49 MariAN Epwarps, ’50
Editorial Staff
Cecetia MaccaBe, ’50 MELANIE HeEwiTT, ’50
GWYNNE WiiuiaMs, 50 Nina Cave, ’50
ANNE GREET, ’50 Pat NicHoL, ’50
BLaIki£E ForsyTH, ’51 Hanna Ho.sorn, ’50
CATHERINE MERRITT, ’51 ELISABETH NELIDow, ’51
RapHa WATUMULL, ’51
Staff Photographers
Lynn Lewis, ’50, Chief
EpyTHE La GRANDE, °49 Marcie SHAw, ’50
JosEPHINE RAsKIND, ’50 Laura WINsLow, ’50
Business Board
Mary BEETLESTONE, °49, Business Manager
Joan Rossins, °49, Advertising Manager
Betry Mutcn, ’50 MADELINE BLOuNT, ’51
Mary Lov Price, ’51 fLEANOR OTTO, ’51
Subscription Board
Atty Lou Hackney, °49, Manager
Epre Mason Ham, ’50 Sue Keirey, ’49
ANNA-STINA ERICSON ’48 EpYTHE LAGRANDE, "49
Ivy Borow ’50 SALLY CATLIN ’50
BARBARA LIGHTFOOT, '50 MaRJORIE PETERSON, 51
~_—
Subscription, $2.75 Mailing price, $3.50
Subscriptions may begin at any time
Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office
Under Act of Congress August 24, 1912
Ave Atque Vale
Each year in these columns we bid Godspeed to the
departing Senior class, we laud them and their four years
of achievement, we leave them some choice bits of moral
and ethical advice to carry away with them from “the
ivory tower.”
Sufficient and more worthy moral and ethical advice
has been given them at Baccalaureate and Commencement;
moreover, they and their achievements cannot be recorded
_in one short column. Their contribution to the campus,
their part in the college is something we cannot define. We
have felt it as they disappeared from active participation
in our activities with the approach of comprehensives; we
will feel it more when their faces disappear from the Inn.
We will remember them as more than “Tart Art,” Junior
Show; as more than the class that sang best under Pem
Arch.
What the future may bring we cannot say. But we
know that the Class of 1948 is prepared to meet it with the
same enthusiasm they have shown here. Aind so we simply
say to them—ave atque vale.
The Rufus Jones Chair
The establishment of the Rufus M. Jones Chair in Phil-
osophy and Religion which has just been approved by the
Board of Directors of the College marks the recognition of
the great increase of interest on campus-in- the study of
philosophy and religion. The chair will be held by a mem-
ber of the Philosophy Department, who will continue the
wonderful work Dr. Frank has done this year in his course
on Philosophy and Religion.
It is fitting that this chair should be named in honor
of Rufus Jones, now in his fifty-first year as a member of
the Bryn Mawr Board of Trustees. Dr. Jones has been a
source of inspiration both to the faculty and to those stu-
dents who have had the opportunity to work with him for
the increase of religious interest on campus. The establish-
ment of this chair gives Bryn Mawr the chance to show its
appreciation and gratitude to Dr. Jones by continuing the
work to which he has devoted so much of his life.
_ ». The sum necssary for the endowment of the chair will
be taken from the proceeds of the Alumnae Drive, and all
_contributions will be welcomed. Bryn Mawr is indeed for-
tunate to be able to take such a step forward in the ad-|
vaneement of —e education.
6
a eR A i a
Opinion
Altruistic Senior Gives
Vital Information
About Pens
To the Editor:
Parting admonishment: Okay, so
this is trivial. But it took me three
years to discover that a penful of
ink will last: five times as long if
you dip the point all the way in,
leave it there long enough to get
‘ink instead of air, and on a plung-
er type keep plunging until it
stops blowing bubbles. Succeeding
generations’ should not be denied
this information.
Theo Holland
E. McClure Named
New Burch Fellow
-Continued from Page 1
ent’s own choice. It is equal in
amount to the European Fellow-
ship.
A committee composed of Miss
McBride, Miss Nepper, and Miss
Gardiner have named Elizabeth
Anne McClure as this year’s re-
cipient of the award.
Class Day Speeches
Reveal “Alter Egos”’
Continued from Page 1
ed to inform us of some of the
characteristics of the Phylum Col-
legium which consists of all wom-
en except those who were men and
children. This Phylum has a voice
like the mating call of a lamb-skin
bicycle seat, and when it gets up in
the morning it usually takes on
the appearance of well-preserved
animal skin. As a final admoni-
tion, she told us that this Phylum
exercises daily; in fact, Daily
wouldn’t make a move without it.
Ettelson and Gregory Speaking
in the Gym
The crowd then moved towards
the gym to watch the antics of
Kay Gregory and Winky Ettelson,
who were dressed in 1920’s gym
clothes and claimed that they were
dead sober this time. They inform-
ed us that in their day “A.A.”
stood for “abnormal activity” (and
that the hockey field was really an
elephants’ burial ground). Their
battle cry, they added, had been
“You'll Win Over My Dead Body,”
and the power plant was a crema-
tory. One could work off gym
credits by following in the wake,
explained Gregory and Ettelson.
Snowman
A snowman gave the last of the
Class Day- speeches on the library
steps:
the snowman and Henny Burch
was “Purely.” He wondered about
many things and told us that he
had considered talking about the
niches in the Lib, or about Dr. Her-
ben, but everyone always talked
about Dr. Herben. He mentioned
the fertility rites we have in the
spring, but decided that they, too,
have already been a topic of much
conversation and turned instead to
speak of June 3rd: “D-day.”
~Any--coincidence between
On 133 Members of the
Continuea from Page 1
sylvania.
Jeanne Lutz, of Pennsylvania.
Magna cum laude.
farol Montgomery McGovern, of
Illinois. Summa cum laude with
honors.
Ruth-Lee Perlman, of New York.
Magna cum laude.
Elizabeth Wilcox Smith, of Con-
necticut.
Olive Bagley Van Dyke, of Wis-
consin.
Harriet Morse Vitkin, of Massa-
chusetts. Cum laude.
Shirley Merriweather Wood, of
Pennsylvania.
Betty Ann Wortham, of North
Carolina.
Joan Ruth Zimmerman, of Penn-
sylvania. Cumelaude with honors.
English
Caroline Nichols Baker, of Con-
necticut. Cum laude with honors.
Mary S. Blabon, of Pennsylvania.
Joan Libby Brest, of Massachu-
setts. Magna cum laude with hon-
ors.
Winifred Cadbury, of Massachu-
setts. Magna cum laude.
Janice Elaine Fernstrom, of
Pennsylvania.
Priscilla Troth Gross, of Mary-
land. Cum laude.
Ellen Harriman, of Connecticut.
Cum laude with honors.
Anne Willard Henry, of Massa-
chusetts. Cum laude with honors.
Nancy Kunhardt, of New Jersey.
Jessica Levy, of New York.
Theresa Trail Mathias, of Mary-
land.
Eleanor Rose Speer, of Pennsyl-
vania.
Sylvia Poteat Stallings, of North
Carolina. Magna cum laude with
honors. :
Claude Natalie Valabregue, of
California. Magna cum laude.
Harriet Walden Ward, of New
York. Summa cum laude with|§
honors.
Gypsy
Tennessee.
McDaniel Warfield, of
French
Janine Gisele Daudon, of Penn-
sylvania.
Ellen Mary Cassatt Hare, of
Pennsylvania.
Geology
Doris Haynes Blackman, of Ala-
}| bama.
German
Kendall Hosmer Ankeny, of Min-
nesota. Magna cum laude with
honors.
- Jean Myra Bishop, of Connecti-
cut. Magna cum laude.
New York. Cum laude.
Joan Wilson Huyssoon, of New
York. Cum laude.
Jeanne Redrow, of7 Ohio.
Bernice Robinson, of New York.
Louise Roberts Sheldon, of Con-
necticut cum laude.
Marcia Taff, of Wisconsin. Mag-
na cum laude.
Greek
Patricia Elizabeth Neils, of Min-
nesota. Cum- laude with honors.
History
Helen Alison Barbour, of New
York. Cum laude.
Joan Toutant Beauregard, of the
District of Columbia.
Helen Harvey Burch, of Pennsyl-
vania. Cum laude.
°98 Well Entertained
By Reunion Program
Continued from Page 1
and most of them planned to stay
for Commencement itself; all the
class of ’98 who were able to come
enjoyed staying in Pembroke West
and Rhoads, and looking over the
additions to the campus since their
time.
In Memoriam
CAROLINE MORROW CHADWICK-COLLINS
May 20, 1948
Elizabeth Olmstead Cushing, of |
Degree of Bachelor of Arts Conferred
Class of 1948
Julie Crawford ponent at
New Hampshire.
Barbara Louise Coffey, of New
Jersey.
Elizabeth Copeland, of Pennsyl-
vania.
Nancy E1ist Dwyer, of New Jer-
sey. Cum laude,
Margaret Bradford English, of
New York.
Jean Sumner Ford, of New York.
Cum laude.
Joan Hitchcock, of New York.
Cum laude.
Patricia Hochschild, of New
York. Magna cum laude with hon-
ors.
Leila Dean Jackson, of Minne-
sota. Cum laude with honors.
Margery Hanna Krueger,
Minnesota. Magna cum laude.
. Katherine Griffith Landreth, of
of
California. Cum laude.
Elizabeth Anne McClure, of
Pennsylvania. Magna cum laude
with honors.
Rotraud Anne-Else Mezger, of
Pennsylvania.
Barbara Ruth Nugent, of New
York. Magna cum laude with hon-
ors.
Rosalind Oates, of Illinois.
Phillis Ogan Ripley, of New
Hampshire. Magna cum laude with
honors.
Lucia Rogers, of Massachusetts.
Nancy Elinor Schwartz, of New
York. Cum laude.
Gloria Millicent White,
District of Columbia.
History of Art
Amoret Chapman Bissell,
New York.
Carolyn King, of Massachusetts.
Cum laude with honors.
Thekla Pauline Wurlitzer, of Cal-
ifornia.
of the
of
Italian
Ann Appleton Storrow, of Mas-
sachusetts, in absentia. Cum laude
with honars.
Mary Arline Strumia, of Penn-
sylvania, in absentia. Cum laude
‘| with honors.
Latin
Pollyanna Bruch, of Pennsyl-
vania. Cum laude with honors.
Elizabeth Muir Focardi, of Del-
aware. Cum laude.
‘(Anne Wood, of New Jersey,
Magna cum laude with honors.
Mathematics
Joann Cohen, of Illinois.
cum laude.
Patricia Anne Edwards, of Penn-
sylvania. Cum laude.
Ann Montague Field, of Massa-
chusetts. Cum laude.
Jane Gertrude Hadas, of New
York. Cum laude with honors.
Ruth Jane Kevin, of Virginia.
Vera Marie Tozzer, of Ohio. Cum
Magna
‘| laude.
Philosophy
Elizabeth Blau, of Ohio.
Margaret Elizabeth Miller, of the
District of Columbia. Magna cum
laude with honors.
Sheila Margaret Parker, of Min-
nesota.
Elizabeth Catesby Spears,
Kentucky. Cum laude.
Jean Marjorie Switendick, of
New York. Magna cum laude with
honors.
Alice Wolff, of New York. Cum
Jaude.
of
Physics
Frances Louise Nafe, of Indiana.
Psychology
Frances Sorchan Binger, of New
York.
Charlotte H. Edlin, of Connecti-
cut. Magna cum laude with hon-
ors.
Elaine.France, of New Jersey.
Elizabeth Langdale Hamilton, of
Pennsylvania.
Lucy Page Hart, of Tennessee.
Cum laude.
Theodora Cuyler Holland, of Cal- -
iférnia. Cum laude.
Alma Ide, of New York.
laude with honors.
- Carol Van Loan Pitt, of New
York.
| Althea - Robillard,
vania.
Continged mm Page 8 ,
Cum
of Race
i THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Giadiiaee And Undergraduate Degrees Are Conferred
Continued from Page 2
Margaret Louise Shiney, of Kan-
sas. Cum laude.
Sarah Fléek Smucker, of Ohio.
Hilma Unterberger, of Pennsyl-
vania.
Sociology
Gisha_ Linchis Berkowitz, of
Pennsylvania. Magna cum laude
with honors.
Barbara Zoe Cotins, of New
York.
Jean Lorita MacAllister, of New
Jersey.
Mary Ann Mills, of Pennsyl-
vania.
Hazel Irene Nelson, of Massa-
chusetts.
Rosalie Bryant Parker, of New
York.
Barbara Jean Ziegler, of Penn-
sylvania. Cum laude.
Spanish
Lindsay Harper, of Illinois. Cum
jaude.
Hope Kaufmann, of New Yorks
Cum laude with honors.
Ada Clayton Klein, of Connecti-
cut. Cum laude.
Ruth Diamond Shapiro, of Penn-
sylvania with honors.
MASTER OF ARTS
Biology
Julie Neil Calvert, of Plainfield,
New Jersey, A. B. Wilson College
1946,
Robert Walter Starr, 3rd, of
| Bryn Mawr College 1944.
a Mawr College 1947,
Elizabeth Anne Roulston, of Fol-
croft, Pennsylvania.. B. S. Dickin-
son College 1947.
Mary Phyllis Vipond, of New
York City. A. B. Barnard College
1946.
Economics
Jean Margaret Derus, of Kau-
kauna, Wisconsin. A. B. Lawrence
College 1947,
‘Frances Elizabeth Johnson, of
Glen Ridge, New Jersey. A. B.
English
Ursula Elizabeth Eder, of Zurich,
Switzerland. Zurich University
1944-47,
Diana Eleanor Goldsborough, of
St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada.
B. A. University of Toronto 1947.
Herminia Carmen Malaret, of
Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico. A. B.
Bryn Mawr College 1946.
Olga Alice Westland, of Toronto,
Ontario, Canada.
of Toronto 1947.
French and Italian
Dénise Nina Martin, of New
York City. A. B. Barnard College
1947.
Geology
Cynthia Elizabeth Boudreau, of
Woodstock, New York. A. B. Bryn
Mawr College 1945.
Katharine Lutz, of Lansdowne,
B. A. University |
1933-37.
History
Elizabeth Hoffman Alexander, of
Villanova, Pennsylvania. A. B.
Bryn Mawr College 1941,
History and English
Naomi Helen Churgin, of New
York City. A. B. Hunter College
1947,
History of Art
Barbara Adams Crawford, of
Lake City, Minesota. A. B. Carle-
ton College 1944.
Latin
Anne Evelyn’ Kingsbury, of
Skaneateles, New York. A. B.
Bryn Mawr College 1947.
Mathematics
Josephine Jeannette Carr, of Ar-
lington, Massachusetts. A. B.
Wheaton College 1946.
Philosophy
Wadad Habib, of Cairo, Egypt.
B. A. American University at Cai-
ro 1946.
Rosamond Kent Sprague, of
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. A. B.
Bryn Mawr College 1945,
Physics
Louise Gaus, of Albany, New
York. A. B. Vassar Colege 1944.
Physics and Geology
Selma Weil Greenwald, of New
York City. A. B. Hunter College
1941.
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. B. S.|Pennsylvania. A. B. Bryn Mawr
Haverford College 1942. College 1945. :
Chemistry Greek and Classical Archeology Compliments
Margaret Josephine Quinn, of| Calliope Stavraki, of Athens,|| “3
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A. B.|Greece. University of Athens of the
GONGRATULATIONS Haverford Pharmacy
- Gane and Snyder
joyce lewis Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr
; = =
GOOD-BYE! ATTENTION, °48 — FLOWERS
GOOD LUCK! for
for a
to the Your
FAREWELL FAVORITE
CLASS OF 48 :
4 SNACK — GRADUATE
Richard Stockton’s From
' | :
Bryn Mawr | HAMBURG HEARTH J EANNETT S
|
i \
With Best Wishes
Best Wishes for
SUCCESS To the Class of ’48
a DINAH FROST
Class of ’48
| : Bryn Mawr
Tres Chic Shoppe
Campus
Favorites
; SEAV-FREE
NYLONS
WITH PATENTED HEEL
fl Smart college girls
everywhere are pam-
pering their legs with
these sleek, seam-free
““heauties—the nylons identified
- the Seal of the Dancinc Twins.
Their exclusive, patented - RY Wy,
Gussetoe is designed for
comfort. No twisting seams!
Look for them under leading
~~-brand names at your-
favorite college shop or store. fe “mo hn
#U. 8. Pat. No. 2388649
Classes in all important
phases of the theatre plus
acting with Professional
Equity A Co.
NO TUITION — Pay for
For further information address:
GREENBUSH SUMMER THEATRE
SPONSORSHIP OF BROADWAY PRODUCER
Will accept a limited number of apprentices to study and act before
paying audiences with the only professional stock company within
22 miles of Times Square with living quarters on hess promises. :
3-month season; new classes
begin weekly. Beautiful
country, excellent food, and
all recreation activities
available.
Room and Board Only!
HARRY ROSEN, Blauvelt, New York
To
"48
Best of Luck
from
‘THE COLLEGE INN |
Physics and Mathematics
more, Pennsylvania. A. B. Welles-
ley College 1942.
Politics
Betty Elaine Schaal, of Lans-
downe, Pennsylvania, in absentia.
A. B. Lawrence College 1947.
Politics and History
Joan Estelle Carroll, of Salem,
Massachusetts. A. B. Radcliffe Col-
lege 1946. oh
Politics and Social Economy
Serena Fonda, of Trieste. Doc-
tor in Political Science, University
of Trieste 1945.
Politics, Economics and History
Dora Elisabeth Wilen-Ingman, of
Abo, Finland. Swedish University
of Abo, 1945-47."
MASTER OF SOCIAL SERVICE
Sylvia Endis, of Philadelphia
Pennsylvania, in absentia. B. S.
Temple University 1934.
Esther Duke Redding, of Swarth- :
Elfriede Friese, of Lancaster,
Pennsylvania. Certificate, Nieder-
rheinische Frauen-Akadamie, Dus-
seldorf \1928.
A. Patricia Goepp, of Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania. A. B. Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania 1942.
Mary Jean Harnish, of Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania. A. B. Lebanon
Valley College 1937.
Eleanor Stark Jaqua, of Cottage
Grove, Oregon. A. B. Pomona Col-
lege 1937.
Lucille R. Jenkins, of Chester,
Pennsylvania. A. B. Ohio . State
University 1924.
Margaret Rhoads Ladd; of Bryn
Mawr, Pennsylvania, in absentia.
A. B. Bryn Mawr College 1921;
M. A. University of Pennsylvania
1925; Ph. D. Columbia University
1933.
Barbara Baker Louden, of Cen-
Continued on Page 4
Before Saying Farewell,
"48
Bring Family and Friends
for a Delicious Dinner at
THE CHATTERBOX
Getting
telephone system.
your home town.
telephone is installed .. .
repaid.
lowest possible cost.
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
OF PENNSYLVANIA
Down to
Fundamentals
"Turse PEOPLE ARE TELEPHONE EMPLOYEES, building a
Not a real one, it’s true, but a table-top replica that
illustrates the fundamental problems which management
meets every day in planning, financing, developing, and
expanding a telephone system such as the one that serves
They raise ‘miniature telephone poles. They string mini-
ature telephone lines between homes and stores and the
central office. They plot the changes required when a new
when a subscriber moves . . .
when additional lines are needed in outlying sections of \
town. And they keep representative records of the money
involved: where it comes from, how it is used, and how
Such training in the fundamentals of the business, as
well as in technical matters, is part and parcel of a tele-
phone career. It is background for good management . . .
and good management, by trained and ex-
perienced employees, helps provide you with
the best possible telephone seryice at the \
Page Four
tHE COLLEGE NEWS
Graduate Students
Presented Degrees
Continued from Page 3
tre Square, Pennsylvania. A. B.
Earlham College 1935.
Lenore Stone Meffley, of Harris-
burg, Pennsylvania, in absentia.
A. B. University of Toledo 1925.
Faith Myers, of Lemoyne, Penn-
sylvania. A.B. Wilson College
1944,
Jean Parry Napier, of Decatur,
Georgia. B.S. University of Penn-
sylvania 1946.
Charles Perry, of Haverford,
Pennsylvania. A. B. Haverford
College 1936.
Gertrude Kary Pollak, of Bryn
Mawr, Pennsylvania. Ph. D. Uni-
versity of Vienna 1928 and Doctor
ef Law 1932.
Jacob Rubin, of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, in absentia. B. S. in
Ed, Temple University 1930.
Virginia M. Shirtz, of Drexel
Hill, Pennsylvania. A. B. Ursinus
College 1941.
Jerome Gerald Siskind, of Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania. A. B. Brook-
lyn College 1942,
Marjorie Hisako Takishita, of
Paia, Maui, Hawaii. A. B. Univer-
sity of Hawaii 1943.
Catherine Anne Thomas, of
Ukiah, California, in absentia.
A. B. Stanford University 1945.
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Physical Chemistry and
Phyisal Biochemistry
June Fern Zimmerman, of Mil-
waukee, Wisconsin, B. S. A. S. Illi-
nois Institute of Technology 1943
and M. S. in Chemistry 1945. Dis-
sertation: The Kinetics of Respira-
tion of Onion Roots. Presented
by Professor James Llewellyn
| Crenshaw.
History of Art and
Mediaevel Archeology
Mary Elisabeth Puckett, of Le-
onia, New Jersey. A. B. Barnard
College 1987; M. A. New York Uni-
versity 1940. Dissertation: The
Symbolist Criticism of Painting,
France 1880-1895. Presented by
Professor Joseph Curtis Sloane.
Systematic and
Historical Philosophy
Lenore Bloom Munitz, of New
York City. A. B. New York Uni-
versity 1940 and M. A. 1941. Dis-
sertation: A Prologue to a Theory
of Value.
Milton Charles Nahm.
Physics and Mathematics
Beatrice Schwartz Magdoff, of
GOOD LUCK — 748
from
The Greek’s
MAYO and PAYNE
Cards Gifts
RADIO
BEST WISHES
and
FAREWELL
to the
CLASS OF °48
Miss Noirot
The
Country Bookshop
Bryn Mawr
Parts Repairs
821 LANCASTER AVE. Dresses
BRYN MAWR Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr
Sincere FOR THAT
Wishes
for ‘
Success! Sp ecial
To the
GRADUATION
CLASS OF ’48
GIFT
|
Presented by Professor |
Mexican Shop
Ardmore
NOTICES
Summer Theatre
Mr. Frederick Thon, Director of
the Bryn Mawr Summer Theatre,
announces that there is full en-
rollment for this summer. This
coeducational project aims at de-
veloping original scripts, and fur-
thering theatre experience. Many
prominent speakers from New
York will act as guest lecturers.
New York City. A. B. Hunter Col-
lege 1942; M. A. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1948. Dissertation: An X-ray
Investigation of the Structure of
Para-di-tertiary-butyl Benzene.
Presented by Professor Walter C.
Michels.
S aneeneeetioenaattieianal
Revolutionary History
Dr. John Chester Miller, Assoc-
iate ‘Profesor of History at Bryn
Mawr, has just published Triumph
of Freedom, a sequel to his last
book, Origins of the American
Revolution. The new history cov-
ers various aspects of the period
from 1775-1783 in America and
has been chosen as the September
selection by the History Book
Club.
Dante Lecture
Miss Angeline Lograsso, Asso-
ciate Professor of Italian at Bryn
Mawr, read the paper at the meet-
ing of the ‘Dante Society in Cam-
bridge, Massachusetts on May 18.
The subject of Mis Lograsso’s pa-
per was Love in the Vita Nuovo.
LEAGUE ELECTIONS
The Bryn Mawr College
League takes pleasure in an-
nouncing the election of Louise
Earle as Chairman of next fall’s
United Services Fund. The
League also announces the fol-
lowing committee heads for
next year: Lois Maconi, ’50,
Maids and Porters; Priscilla
Johnson, 50, Activities Drive;
and Libby Grey, ’50, Weekend
Work Camp.
Engagement
Barbara Zoe Cotins, ’48
to
Richard H. Tourin
| LIKE CHESTERFIELDS
BETTER—THEY GIVE ME
COLUMBIA'S FORTHCOMING COMEDY
MORE SMOKING PLEASURE.”
3 IN
“THE FULLER BRUSH MAN”
A GREAT CATALYSER
Specialized preparation accelerates the practical application of
college training
Administrative positions of challenge and reward beckon the college
graduate possessing sure skills in modern secretarial techniques.
SUMMER TERM —9 WEEKS, BEGINNING JUNE 14
FALL TERM — DAY, SEPT. 7— EVENING, SEPT. 20
“ Early Enrollment Advisable
PEIRCE SCHOOL
of Business Administration
Peirce School Building, Pine St. West of Broad, Philadelphia 2, Pa.
Call, write or ’phone PE 5-2100 for catalog and detailed information
HARVARD SUMMER SCHOOL
; OF ARTS, SCIENCES AND EDUCATION
June 28 to August 21, 1948
Graduate and Undergraduate Courses
Veterans May Enroll Under G. I. Bill |
Dormitory Accommodations and Cafeteria Service
(Engineering Courses Available in Graduate School of Engineering
Summer Term)
Address: Department R, 9 Wadsworth House, Harvard
University, Cambridge 38, Massachusetts
WHY... I smoke Chesterfield
( FROM A SERIES OF STATEMENTS BY PROMINENT TOBACCO FARMERS )
“Liggett & Myers buy the bright, good cigarette
tobacco that is mild and ripe, and pay the price
to get it. Nobody buys better tobacco.
“Tl am a Chesterfield smoker. It is a
good cigarette and I like it.’’ B Fi; 2
TOBACCO FARMER, BAILEY, N. C.
Coeducational
American Cleaner and Dyer
For Quality Work
Call Bryn Mawr 0494.
JOSEPH TRONCELLITI Proprietor
880 LANCASTER AVENUE
ACROSS FROM THE FIRE HOUSE
oust i‘ > peng oe |
Crass camer ete Rest SES
College news, June 1, 1948
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1948-06-01
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 34, No. 25
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-vol34-no25