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VOL. XLVII, NO. 24
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 1951
Copyright, Trustees of
Bryn Mawr College, 1951
PRICE 15 CENTS
‘aubes Wins European Fellowship; Catherwood Grant
Awarded to H. Smith; V. C. Nash Gets Thomas Prize
51 Graduates
Win Distinction
With Degrees
Senior Class Members
Get Cum Laude
Averages
The following’ Seniors will re-
ceive their degrees with distinc-
tion:
Summa Cum Laude
Elsa Wells Kormann.
Magna Cum Laude
Miriam Bernheim.
Margaret Ruth Carlson
Lolah Mary Egan.
Pamela Pearsall Field.
Elizabeth J. Goldblatt.
Claire Hirshfield.
Estelle Hassid.
Joy Louise Joslyn.
(Mildred Doris Kreis.
Marjorie Clayland Mullikin.
Esther Arnold Smith.
Harriet Elaine Smith.
Sophia Sonne.
Susan Feldman Taubes.
Janice Taylor.
Edith Valentine.
Joan Virginia Williams.
Cum Laude
Joan Hone Auerbach.
(Ellen Alsted Bacon, II.
Doris Caspar Balant.
Irene Bennett.
Nancy Ellen Blackwood.
Margaret Rea Blodgett.
Kathleen Rowley Bott.
-.Joan Mary Brinton.
Nancy Carothers Burdick.
_ Peggy Purnell -Chesser.
,: Sherrill Cowgill.
- Patricia Ann Donoho.
Sarah Louise Dsterline.
.' Helen Ruth Finkel.
> Blaikie Forsyth, -
, © \Gertraud M. (Gerstner.
‘Diana Goss.
_ Eleanor Head Gundersen.
_ Ellen Louise Hanlon.
Marion Havas.
. Alice Loomis Hendrick.
-- Ann Hinman.
~ Patricia Winston Hirsch.
». Jane Hinman Horner,
‘ ‘Barbara Marx (Hubbard.
Memee Hien-Koven King.
Liela Kirpalani.
‘Jane Roller Loube.
Eleanor Mackubin Lyman.
(Anne Bingham McKenzie.
‘Valery Crafts Nash.
Elizabeth Hollowell Parker.
Deborah Putnam.
Jeanne Delano Richmond.
SUSAN FELDMAN TAUBES
ial SR
VALERY CRAFTS NASH
Susan F’. Taubes
Wins Fellowship
For Philos. Work
Susan Feldman Taubes, a phi-
losophy mdjor who is at present
studying at the University of
Jerusalem, has been awarded the
European Fellowship for the year
1951-1952.
Mrs. Taubes was originally a
member of the class of 1949. After
studying at Bryn Mawr for two
Contniued on Page 5, Col. 3
Stillwell Explains
Incunabula Group
Miss Marjorie Bingham Still-
well, curator of the Annmary
Brown Library at Providence, ad-
dressed the alumnae, faculty, and
friends of Bryn Mawr in the
Deanery on June first at 8:30. In-
troduced by Miss McBride, she
spoke on “Incunabula as Couriers
of Learning.” Incunabula from
the collection given to the college
\by Howard L, Goodhart in mem-
yory of Marjorie Walter Goodhart
are on exhibition in the Rare
Book Room of the library.
"Miss Stillwell stated that there
is a cooperative spirit among the
owners of incunabula. Librarians
and collectors manifest, a great en-
thusiasm and altruism. “It is a
pleasure to greet Bryn Mawr into,
‘|the fold of the Goodhart Incuna-
bula.”
She greeted Mr. Robert Good-
hart who was representing the
| donor and stated that Mr. Howard
Continued on Page 5, Col. 2
“Susan Savage.
Eritha von der Goltz.
Frieda Suppes Wagoner.
(Marilie Gould Wallace.
Joan Taliaferro Woodworth.
Rare Book Room Displays Selections
From Goodhart Incunabula Collection
‘by Diana Gammie, ’53
A. selection of ‘representative
books ‘fromthe Incunabula of the
Marjorie /Walter Goodhart Med-
ieval Library is on display in the
Rare Book Room: As is usual]
with rare books they cast awe
over those who view them and
these cast a particular spell when
one realizes that most of them
were the text books for medieval
V. C. Nash Given
M. Thomas Prize
For Best Essay
Valery Crafts Nash, who is
majoring in English, is the re-
cipient of the M. Carey Thomas
Essay Prize which is awarded an-
nually for the best paper written
by a member of its graduating
class in the course of her studies,
Mrs. Nash’s paper entitled “The
Enigma of Bolingbroke”, which
was submitted to Mr. Sprague as
the year paper in the Shakespeare
course, is the winning essay. In
the opinion of one of the members
of the committee which decided
the ward, it is “an essay of unus-
ual excellency, balanced and inde-
pendent in its interpretation, eusy
and engaging in its style.”
Semel Presented
H. Corner Award
Joanna Semel, a member of the
class of 1952, majoring in English,
has been awarded the Hester Ann
Corner prize . This prize for dis-
tinction in Literature was estab-
lished in 1950 in memory of Hester
Ann Corner, of the class of 1042,
by her classmates and friends. The
award-is to. be made every second
year in the amount of $150.00 to a
junior or senior on the recommend-
ation of a committe composed of
the chairmen of the Departments
of Classics, English and Modern
Foreign Languages.
Joanna won the Maria L. East-
man Brooke Hall Memorial Schol-
arship for having the highest av-
‘erage in her class. Her excellence
in English advanced courses also
earned her the Sheelah Kilroy
‘|Memorial Scholarship, while her
ability in creative writing was the
\basis for the presentation to her
of-the Katherine Fullerton Gerould
prize: These awards were
nounced at Mayday.
touring Engiand, Scotland and Ire-
land, and will study at the Univer-
sity of Birmingham with its sum-
‘mer session at Stratford.
an-:
Harriet E. Smith
Gets Catherwood
Foundation Grant
Harriet Elaine Smith, a biology
major in the class of 1951, has
been awarded the Catherwood
Foundation Scholarship for the
year 1951-1952.
She is planning to attend med-
ical school, and is enrolled in the
College of Physicians and Surg-
eons _at___Columbia _ University.
Kinsolving Shows
Need For Unity
In Bae. Address
_ Last Sunday night, June 3, the
Reverend Arthur Lee Kinsolving,
rector of St. James Church in New
York City, delivered the Bacca-
laureate address. The keynote of
his address was taken from the
Scripture lesson—“that they all
may ibe one”. Reverend Kinsolv-
ing emphasized that God is the un-
ifying force in the life of free men.
The Soviets have a power formid-
able in its threat to the world, “but
free men have many disunities
within themselves. They are un-
certain of their relationship to
those convictions of the Christian
religion that made our civilization
what it is today. Men are diverse
and always will be. The common
Continued on Page 5, Col. 1
Service Gives
Final Tributes
‘To Mrs. Slade
Leach, Hand, McBride
Join to Eulogize
Alumna
The fifty-fifth reunion of the
class of 1896 provided a most fit-
ting time to pay tribute to Mrs.
Caroline McCormick Slade, who
died last January.
Mrs. Henry Leach spoke of Mrs.
Slade’s interests in other fields,
and her contagious enthusiasm.
Her main interest, however, was
Bryn Mawr, of which she was a
director, for she wanted young
women to take their place in tha
world,
Mrs. Leach introduced Mrs..
Learned Hand, one of the women
who had known Mrs. Slade best.
Mrs. Hand told of the gay resi-
dent of Denbigh who, fired by
Miss Thomas’ teaching, had the
optimism and ability to turn ideas
into actions, Though she left col-
lege in 1896, was married, and
travelled extensively, she . was
steadfast.in her love of Bryn
Mawr, and returned to head the
two million dollar alumnae fund
drive of 1919. A natural leader,
never really discouraged, she rais-
ed over six million dollars in thir-
ty years, and was a truly con-
structive and triumphant spirit.
Miss McBride agreed, and add-
ed that Mrs. Slade was a person
who attempted the impossible and
carried others with her. Her
cause was women’s education, and
though she was infiuenced by Miss
Thomas, she remained independ-
ent, guided by the best interests
of the college. She listened to all
opinions, but would contradict ahd
be contradicted for the welfare of
Bryn Mawr. With her wealth of
friends and wide interests, Mrs.
Slade made the wants of one
group fill the needs of another.
Hers were wisdom, courage, and
service, but most of all, she had
faith, and in her faith was the
strength to go forward, overcom-
ing all difficulties.
by Jane Augustine, 52
An uncut version of Julius
Caesar by William Shakespeare
was added to the repertory of the
Hedgerow Theatre at Moylan, Pa.,
last. March. It. was very interest-
ing to see a play which is per-
formed so rarely; this production
| has ‘several conspicuous flaws —
Joanna will spend the summer
yet in the Orchard Scene and the
scene of Antony’s funeral oration,
fit was brilliant. The lighting—
‘with the vibrant’ blue backdrop,
| darkening and changing to red oc-|
Hedgerow Produces “Julius Caesar”; .
Play Proves Successful Despite Flaws
casionally — muffled the faces of
the ordinary soldiers that domin-
ated the last act, and of all char-
acters whose facial expressions
had nothing to convey to the audi-
ence. 1,
The contrast between the two
women, Calpurnia, Caesar’s wife
and Portia, the wife of. Brutus,
was heightened by two very dif-
ferent types of acting; the actress
playing Calpurnia gave as real-
istic a performance as could be
. Continued on Page 5, Col..1.-
rey
Page Two
THE
COLLEGE
NEWS
- Tuesday, June 5, 1951
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanke-
giving, Christmas and Haster holidays, and during examination weeks)
in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Ardmore Printing Company,
Ardmore, Pa., and Bryn Mawr College.
The Colle News is fully protected by copyright. Nothing that
a pears in it +e be reprinted either wholiy or in part without permission
of the tor-in-Chief.
? Editor-in-Chief.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Jane Augustine, ‘52, Editor-in-chief
Julie Ann Johnson, ‘52, Copy Frances Shirley, ‘53, Make-up
Helen Katz, ‘53 Margie Cohn, ‘52, Make-up
Sheila Atkinson, ‘53 Claire Robinson, ‘54
Beth Davis, ‘54
EDITORIAL STAFF
Betty-Jeanne Yorshis, ‘52
Lucy Batten, ‘54
Mary Alice Drinkle, ‘53
Louise Kennedy, ‘54 Margaret McCabe, ‘54
Anne Phipps, ‘54 Cynthia Sorrick, ‘54
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS
Sue Bramann, ‘52 Judy Leopold, ‘53
BUSINESS MANAGERS
Tama Schenk, ‘52 — Sue Press, ‘53
BUSINESS BOARD
Barbara Goldman, ‘53 Evelyn Fuller, ‘53
Margi Partridge, ‘52 Vicki Kraver, ‘54
SUBSCRIPTION BOARD»
Barbara Goldman, ‘53, Manager
Lee Sedgwick, ‘53 Jo Case, ‘54
Bobbie Olsen, ‘54 Suki Webb, ‘54
Marilyn Dew, ‘54 Molly Plunkett, ‘54
Liz Simpson, ‘54 Joy Fox, ‘54
Barbara Rasnick, ‘53 Karen Hansen, ‘54
Nena McBee, ‘53
Diana Gammie, ‘53
Ann McGregor, ‘54
Mary Lou Bianchi, ‘52
Subscription, $3.00 Mailing price, $3.50
Subscriptions may begin at any time
Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Pust Office
Under the Act of March 3, 1879
Goodbye, And Thank You, *51
Once again, as June days come with imminent thunder-
storms, another class prepares to leave Bryn Mawr, and to go
-into the world at large to pursue a great many different occu-
pations. The class of 1951 is small, but its members are unit-
ed, enthusiastic, and understanding of one another. We who
are not in this class have watched them with admiration—
perhaps concealed—as they took, and passed, their last dif-
ficult examinations. We admired them for their stamina and
spirit, whose quality made up for the dearth of quantity in
class numbers.
a little what it will be like next year without them—without
the special combination of courage and character that four
years of training in the methods of right thinking has pro-
duced.
We sense their achievement a great deal lately; it is less
tangible than a cum laude honor, but in the private life of the
individual graduate, and her family, it will perhaps be more
influential. The value of any Bryn Mawr graduate’s life is
rarely determined by lessons learned from library books; it
Now, as they are about to leave, we wonder
seems, however, to be true that the whole social and intellec-
tual experience revolving around the pursuit of truth has a
special value which an education with less emphasis on the
particular goals set up at Bryn Mawr can not provide.
With the departure of the class of 1951, we experience
a feeling of great loss; we will miss them not only for their
excellent qualities of leadership, but for their friendship as
well. They have sympathized with us, helped us, and laughed
with us; the problems which we have had as individuals and
as a.college have been theirs also. We will be sorry that they
are gone, but we are grateful to them for their help in show-
ris how to achiéve our own goals, individually and as a
Am. Chem. Soe.
Honors J. Taylor
Janice Taylor, a member of the
graduating class of 1951, has been
given an award by the Philadel-
phia section of the American
Chemical Society. This award is
a new one; it is given to the most
outstanding senior whose major
subject is chemistry for “out-
standing scholastic achievement in
chemistry”, in those colleges in
the Philadelphia area whose de-
partments of chemistry are ac-
credited by the American Chem-
ical Society. The award consists
of a diploma and a plaque.
Janice has done her honrs work
this year in the field of organic
chemistry. She is a member of
the Science Club, and has been in
charge of the Lost and Found for
the past two semesters. She plans
to be married shortly after Com-
mencement,
2001 Seepage Sees Alum Immortality,
Savagely Fights Off Money Collector
by Jane Augustine, ’52
As the last word on Class Day,
remembrance of things past was
staged in Dismal Seepage, Ar-
kansas, in the year 2001, by two
old ladies (who might have, with
a third old lady, just emerged
from being locked in from Mon-
day till Saturday — casting no
doubts or aspersions-on the preva-
lence of weekends taken away
from Bryn Mawr). A _ certain
prominent president of a certain
well-known campus organization
handling matters of conduct, and
the president of a dormitory lo-
cated on the south side of the
campus facing Miss. Ely’s were
seen fifty years after their gradu-
ation: they were garbed in well-
fitting fashionably wrinkled cot-
ton gowns, with aprons hand-
painted in grease (imported, you
say?) and were occupied in ail
Big Bennett Mayday Puns and Funs,
Making “Profs” Rhyme With “Laughs”
by Frankie Shirley, °53
Patsy Bennett blew reveille from
Dalton, and from the depths there
rose a ghost (aided by Sherry
Cowgill, who was hauling on a
rope around the sheet’s neck).
There spirit of Big May Day had
come up again, and Bennett, the
spirit personified, was seeking an-
swers to the question of why she
had been so rudely dropped into
the grave in 1936 and never more
than partially resurrected since
then. What was there about Bryn
Mawr that was making life so
difficult for her?
Intellectual curiosity aroused,
she was making a study of the
situation, and the answer was un-
doubtedly PROBLEMS. Problems
about ivory or Gothic towers, tele-
vision, cornering the campus, and
students beset the college. The
students are the worst problem,
it would seem, foreach problema-
tic student is burdened with prob-
lems of her own,
A senior can still be off bal-
ance as a result of flunking fresh-
man physics and mistaking her-
self for the brass ball in a dem-
onstration of the law of gravity
from the roof of Dalton. The dis-
possessed possessor of the three
hundred thousand books in the li-
brary is justified in weeping bit-
terly; how would you feelif grubby
little people were carting off your
library piecemeal? Or perhaps
Marian had the answer, as she
crawled into the library woodwork
to escape the fall midsemesters.
At least it seems more sensible
than flipping noisily through a
book and disturbing the other in-
dustriously sleeping inmates of
the library, and easier than be-
coming a senior and having to
learn the right words to the alma
mater after four years of parody.
Others have problems, too.
Freshmen wonder about the psy-
chology department. Some flip
slugs to decide whether to go on
Watsonion field trips and head for
houseparties. One tried to shorten
her week-middles to Wednesdays,
but that meant sacrificing her bas-
ketweaving major. Problems.
Problems. Problems. Rock uses
too much of Mr. Smedley’s elec-
tricity. Worse yet, the physiol-
ogists can’t seem to get a human
still that will circumvent the cam-
pus rules for alcohol.
So it is. Everywhere there are
problems. And Big May Day her-
self, loath to die, has her own
problem, for she “keeps coming
up again and again and again.. .”
the little homely household tasks
that all Bryn’ Mawr graduates
dream of doing in their homes.
This halcyon existence, however,
had one flaw; no — hush, hush,
whisper who dares—husband. But
what difference does it make,
they said when they started out
from college to go and live in an
apartment and make bright ca-
reers for themselves. And here
we are, fifty years later, same
apartment, plus knitting needles
and lovely washed-out rags hung
on the clothesline (which, it must
be explained, even if the dramatic
illusion is shattered, was hung
between the iron lamps on the
front of the library, where this
home in the wasteland was
staged) . Still...
“Old alumnae never die, never
die, never die,
They just fade away .. .”
Of course, the audience loved
all this, but they weren’t convinc-
ed at all. Because really, no Bryn
Mawr graduate would ever com-
mit the faux pas of drinking
whiskey from a beermug. And
the class collectors aren’t such
beasts about money (but then,
your attitude depends on whether
the $75 is your first money, or
your last) and when a certain
well-known chorus soloist and star
of Thor With Angels came on,
everyone knew that she wore
dark glasses because her eyes
hurt her, not because she was an
embezzler going incognito. 8
But despite these minor sole-
cisms, it was felt that on the
whole a realistic picture of the
bright new world, and the next
turn of the century had been pre
sented. The qymbol of Tomorrow
is the bright red step-on can, past
and present blending happily as a
foot comes down on the lever, the
lid rises with dignity to the tune
of “To the Maypole” and the sym-
bol of the bygone age of manual
labor and household drudgery—a
broken egg—is deposited therein,
a monument to the ages.
Red-hot Torrence Katches All Ayes,
Converts Scroll-Rolling Sally Howells
by Anne Phipps, ’54
As overture to the third speech,
there were further verses of
“Goodnight Ladies”, applied to
another bevy of professors. Then
on with the show—
There is absolutely no doubt
about it. The Senior class has a
split personality. Purely for the
purposes of dramatic art, and
with absolutely no reflection on
their own leanings, two Seniors
stood on the steps of the gym to
demonstrate. Sally Howells was
garbed in cap, gown, glasses, and
Glutz (Kramer) Tries Kicking Bucket, |
Only Pulls Taylor Shade & ’51’s Leg
by Helen Katz, ’53
“Don’t jump, Effie! Think of the
professors!” Effie decided to jump.
“Don’t jump, Effie! Think of the
College.” Anguish and pain cross-
ed Effie’s face. “Don’t jump, Ef-
fie. Think of men!” That clinched
it. Effie’s face was refulgent as
memories forced a saccharine smile
to her lips. She shook her head.
The floppy green hat bobbed. She
twisted the long red scarf tortu-
ously through her hands, and lean-
ed out Taylor window.
Suzie Kramer was a beautiful
Effie, telling her sad tale of four
years at Bryn Mawr. Now she
was ready for the world; she was
hardened to men, professors ,and
college. ‘Would she jump? Tear-
fully she told the onlookers, some
of them professors, of the awe-
some trials she had been through
in her young life. She could have
gone on for fourteen hours. But
no, Suzie had suffered too much to
heed the shouts from those gath-
ered below her—how could she be
expected to endure any longer?
The most hilarious of her adven-
tures since she had come to Col-
lege was her escapade with a blind
date that a room-mate had gotten
her. She thought it was a man.
But disillusionment always knew
where to find Effiie. It was a crea-
ture from Haverford...
Suzie went on, leaning further
and further out the window, lean-
ing closer and closer to the pre-
carious position that would spell
splattered steps. Her expressive
face revealed waves of emotion as
she besought the crowd to under-
stand.
. Sympathy went out to her in the
eyes of the multitude witnessing
the first of the Class Day speech-
es,and Suzie Kramer est a wonder-
ful pace for the rest of the events
of the day! Q
not garbed in lipstick; she carried
an unfurled scroll and sang a mod-
ernized Gregorian chant. Katchy
Torrence wore the red satin, skin-
tight, side-slit sex symbol of Bryn
Mawr, and sang a light patter. It
started out antiphonally. Sally
praised the friendly spirit of the
college and the importance of stu-
dent government. Katchy won-
dered about what could happen in
the dark of lantern night and was
interested not in MHaverford’s
Ginko trees but in its men. But
the antiphony lost balance: a con-
Version was taking place. The
dress looked at the gown and said,
“You know, Honey, I could do
wonders for you ... lipstick...
curl in the hair...” The gown
kept Gregorian, but her heart
wasn’t in rulebooks. She stopped
reading from the scroll. Katchy
tottered about in high heels and
fluttered her long eyelashes. The
two personalities became one. It
wouldn’t have been surprising to
have seen that Sally had on red
silk under her gown, Together,
they sang the catchy “We Will
Come Back”, slightly altered for
the occasion. They will come back
when the orals have cars, when
they can major in bed and how to
get wed, or so they say.
Jane Caster and Freddie Kol-
ker will be Bryn Mawr’s dele-
gates to the National NSA Con-
ference in Michigan in August,
and Evelyn Jones, Freddie Kol-
ker, and Bohuslawa Zabko-Po-
tapowich will represent the col-
lege at the Regional Conference
in Pennsylvania this month.
Tuesday, June 5, 1951
&
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Permanent Officers...
Pres.: Sue Savage
Collector: Di Goss
Over Half of Class of 51 Majors
In Fields from Biology to History
GROUP 1
Biology
Memee Hien-Kouen King of
China.
Ruth Millicent LaPlace of New
Jersey.
Anne Sims McIntyre of Ohio.
Jane Howard McIntyre of Ohio.
Harriet Elaine Smith of New
York.
Eritha von der Goltz of New
York.
Jane Harrison Walker of New
York.
Chemistry
Barbara Ann Grant
Hampshire.
Marion Havas of New York.
Janice Taylor of New York.
Classical Archaeology
Esther Arnold Smith of Canada.
Economics
Nadine
of New
‘(Michele
France.
Patricia Winston Hirsch of New
York.
Viola Wai Sheng Li of China,
in absentia.
Deborah Putnam
vania.
Cahen of
of Pennsyl-
English
Joan Mary Brinton of Pennsyl-
ania.
Nancy Carothers Burdick of the
District of Columbia.
GROUP II
English
Sherrill Cowgill of California.
Jean Duval Culbert of Pennsyl-
vania.
Lolah Mary Egan of Texas.
Annie-Lawrie Fabens of Massa-
chusetts.
Pamela Pearsall Field of New
York.
Eleanor Head Gundersen of Wis-
consin.
Alice Loomis Hendrick of Vir-
ginia.
Ann Hinman of Connecticut.
Jeanne Florence Hoenig of New
York.
Marianne Klein of New York.
Suzanne Enid Kramer of North
‘Carolina.
Mary Kay Lackritz of Illinois.
Jane Roller Loube of Matyland.
Eleanor Mackubin Lyman o
Maine.
Course in Novels
Given Next Year
An interdepartmental course,
The Contemporary European
Novel, will be offered next year.
It is an advanced elective course
open to juniors and seniors who
have completed two literature
courses, one of these at the two-
hundred level.
There will be a required sum-
mer reading list for all who
register. The reading will be
available in English, but lan-
guage majors must read tthe
originals in their own: fields.
Anne Bingham McKenzie of
California.
Valery Crafts Nash of New
York.
GROUP III
English
Simone L. Pelloux of France.
Elizabeth-Anne Schoen of New
Jersey.
Sophia Sonne of New York.
Mary Norton Starkweather of
‘Delaware.
Katharine Ridgely Torrence of
Ohio.
French
Mary Morehead Cluett of New
York.
Patricia Ann Donoho of Mary-
land.
Helen Ruth Finkel of New York.
(Marjorie Clayland Mullikin of
‘Maryland.
Winifred Sexton of New York
Cynthia Ann Sheaffer of Maine
Alice Elizabeth Taylor of Mas
sachusettss, in absentia.
Geology
Nancy Bolton of Texas.
German
Doris Caspar Balant of Pennsyl-
vania.
Gertraud M. Gerstner of Aus-
tria. f
Ellen
York.
Jane Hinman Horner, of Mas-
sachusetts.
GROUP IV
German
Joslyn of Massa-
Louise Hanlon of New
Joy Louise
chusetts.
Mildred Doris Kreis of Connecti-
cut.
History
Ellen Alsted Bacon, II, of the
District of Columbia.
Margaret Rea Blodgett of Mas-
sachusetts.
Madeleine Douglas Blount of
New York.
Claire Hirshfield of Pennsyl-
Vania.
Anne Calhoun Iglehart of Mary-
aand.
Elsa (Wells
sylvania.
Margery Betty Petérson of New
York.
Susan Savage of New Jersey.
‘Frieda Suppes Wagoner of
Pennsylvania.
Marilie Gould Wallace of Mas-
sachusetts.
MARRIAGES
Clara, Fahnestock, ’49 to Thomas
Chew Moorhead.
Patricia Ann Richardson, ’52 te
Edgar M. Jamison.
Jane ‘Roller, ’51 to Jan Loube.
The course will be limited to
15 students. Those who wish to
take the course should report to
the Dean’s Office as soon as
possible. Further information
may be obtained from Miss
Bree, Mr. Politzer or Mrs.
Marshall.
Kormann of Penn-
|
49 Obtain M.A’s,
Soc. Ser. Degrees
MASTER OF SOCIAL SERVICE
Robert Munch .Bauers of Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania, A. B. Muh-
lenberg College 1948; B. D. Phila-
delphia Theological Seminary 1945.
Roger W. Craven of Norristown,
Pennsylvania, in absentia, A. B.
American
Eleanor Davis Culin of Wynne-
i . wood, Pennsylvania, B. S. Univer-
‘| sity of Pennsylvania 1927.
Selma Segal Frechie of Phila-| |
delphia, Pennsylvania, in absentia,
A. B. University of Pennsylvania
1941.
Tina Claire Jacobs of New York
City, A. B. Hunter College 1948.
Katherine Abigail Linton of Phil
adelphia, Pennsylvania, A. B. Wil-
son College 1947.
Jane H. Marshall of West Ches-
ter, Pennsylvania, A. B. University
of Pennsylvania 1946.
Goetz Mayer of Willow Grove,
Pennsylvania, A. B. Haverford
College 1949.
Janice Ruth Oltman of Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania, A. B. Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania 1949.
Lanious Keiper Reighard of
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, A. B.
Franklin and Marshall College
1947.
Mildred Meyer Rosenstein of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, A. B.
Goucher College 1981.
Dulcine M. Schwartz of Drexel
Hill, Pennsylvania, A. B. Univer.
sity of Pennsylvania 1942.
Rosa Lee Spencer Smith of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, A. B
West Virginia State College 1943.
Irene Friderica Tugent of Los
Angeles, California, in absentia
University of Berlin 1917-18; Bryn
Mawr College 1939-41.
Sarah Coffin Webb of Hartsville
Pennsylvania, A. ‘B. University of
Delaware 1928. ~
Charlotte Kelly Wingfield of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, A. B.
Trinity College 1935.
Fay Zelitch of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, A. B. Pennsylvania
State College 1949.
MASTER OF ARTS
Biology
Evelyn Sclufer of Upper Darby,
Pennsylvania, in absentia, A. B.
Temple University 1947.
Chemistry
Marjorie Constance Beckett of
London, England, B. Sc. Chelsea
Polytechnic, University of London,
1950.
Isabel Burchuk of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, A. B. Bryn Mawr
College 1950.
(Marianna Cherry of Toledo,
Ohio, in absentia, A. B. ‘Wheaton
College 1946.
Christel Kappes of. Wynnewood,
Pennsylvania, A. B. Bryn. Mawr
College 1949 .
Frances Katharine Putney of
Delaware, Ohio, A. B. Bryn Mawr
College 1950.
Muriel Snyder of Charleroi,
Pennsylvania, A. B. University of
Pennsylvania 1950.
Chemistry and Biology
Elizabeth Christina Travaglini
of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, A. B.
University of Pennsylvania 1948.
Classical Archaeology
Maria Zoe Komis of Athens,
Greece, diploma, University of
Athens, 1950.
English
Elaine Hurwitz Greenstone of
Brooklyn, New York, A. B, New
York University, 1950.
Frances Parker Matthai of Gar-
rison, Maryland, A. B., Bryn Mawr
College 1948.
Thelma~Anne McLeod of Regina,
Saskatchewan, Canada, A. B.
Queen’s University 1950.
Eleanor Talcott Rubsam of
Princeton, New Jersey, A. B. Bryn
Continued on Page 4, Col. 1
University 1931 and|f
i|M. A. 1984. -
zt aa
Editor: Ellen Bacon
..- Of the Class of *51
Ist Reunion Megr.:
Nancy Blackwood
History of Art
Jacqueline Patricia Esmerian of
New York.
Alys Farnsworth of Rhode Is-
land.
Blaikie Forsyth of New Jersey.
Joyce Rachel Medwed of Massa-
chusetts.
GROUP V
History of Art
Anne (Gouverneur Simonds of
Massachusetts.
Jane ‘Slocum Stone of Pennsyl-
vania.
Joan Taliaferro Woodworth of
Maryland.
Latin
Sarah Louise Esterline of Penn-
sylania.
Philosophy
Helen Livingston
California.
(Miriam Bernheim of New York.
Mary McAllister Brown of Mas-
sachusetts, in absentia.
Margaret Ruth Carlson of Miss-
ouri.
Miralotte
Ohio.
Sally Justine Howells of Con-
necticut.
Liela Kirpalani of India.
Susan Feldman Taubes of New
York, in absentia.
Physics
Delano Richmond of
Armsby of
Jane DeArmond of
Jeanne
Maryland.
Margaret Turner of Illinois.
Political Science.
Joan Hone Auerbach of New
York.
Nancy Ellen Blackwood of Penn-
sylvania.
Kathleen Rowley Bott of Massa-
chusetts, in absentia.
Suzanne Thelma Brody of Mas-
sachusetts.
Elizabeth J. Goldblatt of New
York.
GROUP VI
Political Science
Barbara Marx Hubbard of Con-
necticut, in absentia.
Patsy Anne Matthes of Ohio.
Elisabeth Nelidow of New York.
(Marlyn Joan Piwosky of Penn-
sylvania.
Mary Louise Price of California.
Betsy Lee Repenning of New
York.
Linnie Lee Warren of Maryland.
12 Polit. Sci. Majors to Graduate,
I Each in Latin, Anthro., Sociology
-
Psychology
Irene Bennett of Maryland.
Estelle Hassid of New York.
Mary Louise Littlefield of New
York.
Elizabeth Hollowell Parker of
Maryland.
Caroline Harris Taggart Penny-
packer of Pennsylvania.
Joan Virginia Williams of Mich-
igan.
Sociology
Yvonne Marie-Louise Spiegelberg
of New York, in absentia.
Anthropology
Edith Valentine of (Pennsylvania.
Spanish
Peggy Purnell Chesser of West
Virginia.
Diana Goss of Connecticut.
Doris Zimmerman of Michigan.
Seniors Awarded
Honors in Majors
The following Seniors will re-
ceive their degrees with Honors in
special subjects:
Biology {
Harriet Elaine Smith.
Chemistry
Marion Havas.
Janice Taylor.
Economics
Patricia Winston Hirsch.
Deborah \Putnam.
English
Joan Mary Brinton.
Lolah Mary Egan.
Alice Loomis Hendrick.
French
Patricia Ann Donoho.
Alice Elizabeth Taylor.
German
Doris Caspar Balant.
Ellen Louise Hanlon.
Mildred Doris Kreis.
History
Claire Hirschfield.
Frieda Suppes Wagoner.
Philosophy
Margaret Ruth Carlson.
Liela Kirpalani.
Susan Feldman Taubes.
Political Science
Elizabeth J. Goldblatt.
Psychology
Estelle Hassid.
Elizabeth Hollowell Parker.
Joan Virginia Williams.
A midsummer dance for
southern Californians going
East to college, as freshmen or
upperclassmen, will be held on
August 15 at the Beverly Hills
Hotel in Los Angeles. In honor-
ing these students the oppor-
tunity will be provided them
to widen their acquaintance
among fellow Californians in
other Eastern colleges, and a
Southern Californian Students’ Dance
Given to Benefit Those Coming East
gay evening is anticipated. The
dance held last summer was so
successful as to inaugurate the
custom as an annual affair.
The Ivy League and the Seven
College Council of Southern
California sponsors the affair,
and invitations will be issued to
all students enrolled in eastern
colleges, both men’s and wom-
en’s colleges. Please save the
date, all southern Californians!
/Page Four
\
THE
COLLEGE
NEWS
Tuesday, June 5, 1951
More Candidates For Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy Degrees
Continued from Page 3
Mawr College 1949.
English and Spanish
Carmen Esteva Zuniga of Mex-
ico City, Mexico, Bachelor in Phil-
osophy and Social Sciences, Na-
tional University of Mexico, 1946.
French
Avriel Horwitz Goldberger of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, A. B.
University of Pennsylvania 1949.
Yvonne Marie Jeanne Guers of
Thonon, France, Licence-es-lettres,
University of Aix-Marseille 1944.
History
Heinz Eric Bondy of Lenox, Mas-
sachusetts, A. B. Swarthmore Col-
lege 1948.
Ruth Elizabeth Grun of King-
ston, Pennsylvania, A. B. Wellesley
College 1943.
; History of Art
‘Helen Jeannette Dow of Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada, B. A. University
of Toronto 1949.
Marion Alice Veals of Toronto,
Ontario, Canada, B. A. University
of Toronto 1949.
Latin
Mary Ayer Taylor of Highland
Park, New Jersey, A. B. Mount
Holyoke College 1950.
Mathematics
Padmini Rangaswamy Iyengar
of Poona, India, in absentia, B. A.
Fergusson College, University of
Bombay 1947, and M.A. 1949.
Philosophy
Marianne Bella Lehmann of
Paris, France, Licence-es-lettres,
University of Paris, 1949.
Annette Leisten of Newark, New
Philosophy and English
Martha Lee (Pennebaker of
Cookeville, Tennessee, A. B. Uni-
versity of Kentucky 1950.
Physics
Elizabeth Ann Farrelly of Edge-
wood, Rhode Island, B. S. Pem-
broke College 1949.
Physics and Mathematics
Esther Rennert Zucker of Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania, A. B. Brook
lyn College 1949,
Political Science and History
Margaret McBride of Bryn
Mawr, Pennsylvania, A. B. Bryn
Mawr College 1946.
Psychology
Enid Hobart Garver of Spring-
field, Pennsylvania, A. B. Swarth-
more College 1948,
Spanish
Carmen Hernandez-Borch of
Santurce, Puerto Rico, in absentia,
B. S. Johns Hopkins University
1937.
Spanish and English
Arline Ebert of Brooklyn, New
York, A. B. Brooklyn College 1950.
Spanish and French
Mary Lou Hale of Hayward,
California, A. B. Mills (College
1950.
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Organic (Chemistry and Physical
Chemistry ‘
Lucille Holljes Altschul of Bronx-
ville, New York, A. B. Bryn Mawr
College 1946 and M. A. 1947. Dis-
sertation: Kinetic Studies of the
Hydrolysis of Substituted Benjoic
Anhydrides. Presented by Profes-
sor Ernst Berliner.
West Virginia University 1942 and
M. S. 1944. Dissertation: Nucleo-
philic Displacement in the Benzene
Series. Presented, by Professor
Ernst Berliner.
English and Germanic Philology
Renate Christine Wolff of Wash-
ington, D. C., A. B. Goucher Col-
lege 1941; M. E. Smith College
1942; M. A. Bryn Mawr College
1947. Dissertation: Currents in
Naturalistic English Fiction 1880-
1900, with special emphasis on
“Mark Rutherford.”
Professor Samuel Clagett Chew.
Greek and Latin
Margaret Elaine Reesor of Tor-
Presented by
B. C. to 37 A.D. Presented by
Professor Thomas Robert Shannon
Broughton.
Systematic Philosophy, and
History of Philosophy
Wadad Habib Said of Cairo,
Egypt, A. B. American University
at Cairo 1946; M. A. Bryn Mawr
College 1948. Dissertation: The
Uniqueness and, Intelligibility of
Value. Presented by Professor
Milton Charles Nahm.
Systematic Philosophy and History
of Philosophy
Elizabeth Glenn Ramsden of} |!
Toronto, Ontario, Canada, in ab-
sentia, B. A. University of Toronto
1943 and M. A. 1944. Dissertation:
A Discussion of the Issues in the
Theory of Knowledge Involved in
the Controversy between John
Dewey and Bertrand Russell. Pre-
sented by Professor Isabel Scrib-
ner Stearns.
=>
From JOYCE LEWIS|
To ’5l
EVERY BEST WISH FOR A
HUGE SUCCESS!
Compliments of
the
HAVERFORD
PHARMACY
onto, Ontario, Canada, B. A. Uni-
versity of Toronto 1945 and M. A.
1946. Dissertation: The Political James de Braun
Theory of the Old and Middle Stoa.
Presented by Professor Richmond Insurance
Lattimore.
Latin and Greek 225 Broadway
‘ New York 7, N.Y.
Martha Wilson Hoffman of Ber- BEekman 3.6543
keley, California, A. B. University
of California 1948; M. A. Bryn Woodcliff Lake,
Mawr College 1949. Dissertation: New Jersey
The Membership of the Four Ma- Park Ridge 6-0672
jor Colleges of Priests from 44
f ( 7
For Gifts in Good Taste
“Bears in the Caviar”
by
Charles W. Thayer
“Dominations & Powers”
by
George Santayana
to
The Class of ’°51
“Good-bye
and
Good Luck’’
Fresh Flowers
Complement
Fair Ladies
gl A. B. University of Illinois Organic Chemistry and Physical Country Book Store JEANNETT’S i
os Chemistry Haverford, Pa. BRYN MAWR
Louise Charlotte Monack of Bryn Mawr
P >| Charleroi, Pennsylvania,
for ,
M’Lady’s Bright Smile Compliments of
Compliments of
CONNELLY’S Smyth,
Flower Shop Sanford,
1226 Lancaster Avenue HECLA P R ESS Gerard,
Phones:
Bryn Mawr 1515 - 3362 Inc.
e ! ‘
Have a Nee ante }/|k|SOh my dear you should have seen
DONT hcg AR TAKE|!|{/°51°s charm, their eyes’ sparkling gleam. Benjamin, Hastings & Shaw, Inc.
on rNe \ACATION! |i They’re all coming now for a farewell dinner Insurance
DINAH FROST’S || |/To a favoite haunt, an oldtime winner.” io
‘“‘Where the Main Line THE COLLEGE INN | New York City
Buys Its Yarn | an
a ne -> ~ ~.
Home you go!
To look just SO...
Take One Last Shot
Martie’s on the spot.
MARTIE’S
DIN? .
NOW BRING THE FAMILY
i oN
SHOW THEM WHERE YOU
SPENT THE LAST 4 YEARS}
WITH YOU ALL — THE |
HEARTH
BRIN MAWE-
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CORPORATION
HIGH PRESSURE BOILERS
Oswego, N. Y.
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GLOBE LIGHTING
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Electric Lighting Fxtures
7th Avenue at 12th Street
Brooklyn 15, New York -
Tuesday, June 5, 1951
THE
COLLEGE
NEWS
Page Five
-Kinsolving Addresses
Baccalaureate Service
Continued from Page 1
element in human life is that we
are all potential members of one
human family unified by the power
that came to us with the announce-
ment of “peace on earth, good will
to men.” St. Paul saw that Jesus
had somehow “broken down all
barriers betwen all men”—Jew or
Greek, rich or poor. The increas-
ing secularism of our life is the
reason for the “terrible disunity
today”, Reverend Kinsolving con-
tinued. The job of all churches is
to join forces and combat the dis-
unity of modern society. Religion
can be either crude, selfish, and
intolerant or, in the manner of
Jesus, a “generous, mature cement
between men.” We have the oppor-
tunity to- rise above secondary
emotions and apply ourselves to a
‘unity of love. ‘How much of this
‘hate from the other side of the
‘world are we allowing in our-
‘selves?” Reverend Kinsolving ask-
ed. The qualities man needs in or-
der to rise above petty prejudices
and personal hates are absolute in-
tegrity, patience, a Christ-like for-
giving spirit, pure candor, humil-
ity, unselfishness and love. Most
of all, man needs God in his life as
a steady reality. Unity is also
needed on the political level. We
must have a purpose as we go out
into life, and that purpose should
be a unity which draws us nearer
and nearer to God.
Dr. ‘Sprague has received a
Fulbright Teaching Grant and
will teach the fall and winter
terms at the royal University
of Malta, and the spring term
at Cambridge. The Broughtons,
also on a Fulbright Grant, will
spend the year in Italy.
Hedgerow’s ‘J. Caesar’
Successful Production
Continued from Page 1
managed, while Portia was done
more formally, with poses and
very wide gestures of the arms,
a technique not employed usually
on the present stage, but not un-
affective nor unappealing.
Antony was superb; his unc-
tiousness sometimes seemed obvi-
ous, but not in the great scene of
the oration at Caesar’s funeral.
The audience was included in ‘the
crowd whom he seemed to be ad-
dressing, swaying to his own end.
Actors .representing the plebians
shouted uninhibitedly from posi-
tions in the aisles of the house.
All fighting and sword play were
excellently handled; the stair-set
made the struggling and violence
seem more real (aside from the
practical consideration that the
important moments could be scen
by the entire audience because
they were staged high on those
steps.)
Brutus was played with great
‘sympathy and understanding; he}
knew what the real issues between
himself and Caesar were supposed
to be—the director seems not to
have had the full understanding
that this particular actor had. Of
the conspirators, Casca was the}
best—cynical, sarcastic, jesting,
but with a deadly seriousness be-
neath his humor. Despite flaws,
Julius Caesar was very successful,
and it is to be hoped this group of |'
very fine actors and producers will
continue to add to their repertory
more plays which are little done,
and have a great deal in them
which has been peculiarly over-
looked by other companies.
Incunabula Featured
In Book Room Exhibit
Continued from Page 1
scholars. In the gothic Bryn Mawr
setting they seem to be at home.
Boethius’ De Consultatione
Philosophiae, printed in Nurem-
berg in 1486 is an edition written
by one of the most chronologically
remote authors. Boethius lived
from 480 until 524 A.D. and wrote
this book while he was in prison
awaiting execution for treason.
In Cologne, in 1495, Repertorium
Auctoritatum Aristotelis Et Alior-
ium Philosophorum, by Venerable
Bede (673-738 A.D.) was publish-
ed in the incunabula edition. Bede
has been called the first English-
man whose historical vision en-
abled him to transcend his age
and Dante placed him in Heaven
among the great teachers of the
world,
All of the books are amazingly
well preserved, most of them seem-
ing to prove that medieval and
other more modern scholars can
use a book for five hundred years
and do it less damage than a Bryn
Mawr student in one year! The
collection should certainly prove
most interesting to scholars of the
medieval period and also to those
who simply wish to commune with
the past.
H. Goodhart Presents
Incunabula to College
Continued from Page 1
Goodhart has little
printers, presses, and previous
owners of books. He restricts his
study to the medieval writers
themselves. The collection of 1872
books is arranged chronologically
beginning with Boethius, 480-524
A.D.
After commenting on individual
writers, Miss Stillwell declared
that the books on display show the
depth of the collection which in-
cludes writers whose works ‘have
never been reprinted and offers
a great opportunity for research
and translation.
The volumes must be analyzed
and catalogued. Medieval printers
were interested in anthologies
which merit notice. At first collec-
tors were only interested in de-
tails, but now they realize that
incunabula are a source of learn-
ing. Each of the 35,000 editions
of these early books tells people
something, Miss Stillwell conclud-
ed. The early printers were busi-
ness men and were interested in
books that would sell. Why those
books sold is the vitally interesting
question presented to the student.
interest in
Discover what
countiess thous
sands already
know: the true
delight of Lucille
Garden's won-
S. F. Taubes Awarded
European Fellowship
Continued from Page 1
years, she went to the University
of Geneva. She also spent some-
time studying at Barnard, but
after her marriage, she went with
her husband to the University of
Jerusalem where he is on a fel-
lowship. Last year she returned
to Bryn Mawr and took examina-
tions on the work she had done
abroad.
She has done honors work un-
der Miss Stearns; her special field
of investigation has been “Exist-
entialigm and Gnoticism”, an en-
tirely new area never before treat-
ed in which she has made progress
which is of great importance to
philosophy as a whole. Mrs.
Taubes, besides being able to read
eight languages including Greek
H. E. Smith Receives
°51 Catherwood Grant
Continued from Page 1
Earlier this year she won a med-
ical school scholarship from Bryn
Mawr College to help her continue
her studies. Her honors project
was conducted under the super-
vision of Mr. Berry, who stated
that very few honors students un-
der him in the past have worked
with the same independence, and
and Hebrew, is a very fine mathe-
matician, having a true insight
into the subject. She plans to
make philosophy her career; she
will take a doctor’s degree. Her
special interests are in. epistemol-
ogy and metaphysics. Her bril-
liance borders on genius and her
abilities cover an extraordinarily
wide range, She is in every way
felt deserving of this award.
critical and thoughtful evaluation
of experimental work, that Har-
riet has employed. Perseverance
and stability of effort characterize
her work, and these are the qual-
ities which should enable her to
make a valuable contribution to
science.
Harriet’s honors problem was
concerned with the investigation
of two genetically different strains
of mice—one resistant to mouse
typhoid, the other susceptible—
proving first, that there was no
difference in their ubility to pro-
duce antibodies, and second, that
when injected, the resistant mice
seemed to be found with the dis-
ease in fewer organs and to a
lesser degree than the susceptible
strain of mice. Results of the ex-
periment were not dramatically
conclusive, but it was nevertheless
a piece of important and necessary
contributory research.
es Our easy-going, big-billed friend has learned to say “No” #734
Number 21...
THE PELICAN
\o Wey
gunk! call
Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests
ewallow?
Oger
to these hurry-up, one-puff, one-sniff cigarette tests! “Why”, says he,
“they don’t even give you time to finish the cigarette before you’re supposed
—there’s just one real way to test the flavor and mildness of a cigarette!
It’s the sensible test . . . the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test,
which simply asks you to try Camels as a steady smoke—
on a pack-after-pack, day-after-day basis. No snap judgments
_needed! After you’ve enjoyed Camels—and only
Camels—for 30 days in your “T-Zone”
-(T for Throat, T for Taste), we believe you’ll know why...
More People Smoke Camels
than any other cigarette!
to decide which is mildest!’’ Millions of smokers have come to the same conclusion
Ray c
Page Six THE COLLEGE NEWS Fabian donk. by atals
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College news, June 5, 1951
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1951-06-05
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 37, No. 24
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-vol37-no24