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The GULLEGE NEWS
VOL. XLV, NO. 25
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., TUESDAY, MAY 31, 1949
Copyright, Trustees of
Bryn Mawr College,1945
PRICE 15 CENTS
Beverly
m Levin Awarded European
Fellowship
Dr. Machregor
Named to Hold
R. Jones Chair
Philosopher, Minister_
To Offer Three
New Courses
The announcement of the ap-
pointment of Dr. ‘Geddes Mac-
Gregor to the Rufus M. Jones
Chair in Philosophy and Religion
was made by Miss McBride this
morning, during the course of the
Commencement ceremonies. Mr.
MacGregor, who holds the degrees
of B.D. and L.L.B. from the Uni-
versity of Edinburgh, and D. Phil.
from Oxford, is a Minister of the
Church of Scotland, and has, at
present, his own church in Glas-
gow. At the same time he holds
an appointment as Assistant in
Philosophy. and Religion at the
University of Edinburgh.
Mr. MacGregor will give three
full courses, or the equivalent, next
year. He is scheduled to take on
one section of the first year course
in History of Philosophy, which
will be given in five sections for
the first time. He will give two
semester courses in the second
year group: Philosophy and Re-
ligion in the first semester, and
Comparative Religion in the sec-
ond. The third course Mr. Mac-
Gregor will give will probably al-
ternate from year to year between
a seminary and an advanced
course: next year, he will give an
advanced course in Mediaeval Phil-
osophy.
Mr. MacGregor has studied at
the Sorbonne as well as at Ox-
ford and Edinburgh, and is ac-
quainted with the leading French
Philosophers of the day. Earlier
this year, he was flown from Scot-
land to Bryn Mawr between Sun-
day services, to interview the ad-
ministration. The NEWS hopes to
publish a-full interview with Mr.
MacGregor in its first fall issue.
Beverly Ann Levin, European Fellow
Jean Helene Ellis, Catherwood Fellow
a yy SBS eae
Nancy Martin, Burch Fellow
3-Year Drive Reaches $2,200,400;
Slade Announces Succesfui
The news that the Drive has not
only been completed but overrun
by the welcome margin of ten per-
cent, bringing the total to $2,20,-
000, was announced by Mrs. F.
Louis Slade, Chairman of the
Alumnae Fund for the primary
purpose of increasing academic
salaries and also for the increase
of scholarships and certain special
projects.
Of the 4712 contributors 3816
or over 81% are alumnae.
The Fiftieth Reunion Class, 1899,
has contributed through the Fund
$29,700.
The districts into which the
alumnae are divided made contvi-
butions as follows:
District I, .$247,800; District II,
$1,331,400; _District_ITI, $91,400;
District IV, $87,700; District V,
$259,000; District VI, $27,000; Dis-
trict VII, $31,300; District VIII,
$15,100; Foreign, $6,600; and Un-
allocated, $102,700.
The first two gifts to the Fund
were: $26,000 for the Paul Shorey
Chair of Greek collected by Evan-
geline Walker Andrews and Susan
Walker Fitz Gerald of the Class of
1893, and $30,000 from Mr. and
Mrs. Gerard Swope for the in-
crease of academic salaries.
Mrs. Slade also announced the
Dachshund, Trunk, Bibulous Bird
Brighten B. M.’s Fond Farewells
by Paula Strawhecker, °52
and Emily Townsend, ’50
Across from a huge, extremely
attractive, red balloon dachshund
swaying elegantly between the li-
brary towers, the round of senior
humor and_nostalgic singing which
make up the annual Class Day pro-
gram began. Even the dachshund
admirers were forced to pay atten-
tion as the seniors sank down in
front of a large red trunk repos-
ing mysteriously on the top step.
_ Bumpings and scratchings gave
way to the eventual emergence cf
Gale ‘Minton, in a surprisingly im-
maculate state. One of ,the few
people to look even semi-decent in
a Bryn Mawr tank suit, Gale was
also chicly accoutred in a pocket
comb and a cigarette. The high
point of her speech was the auction
of her bicycle, which she refused
to sell to her sister but finally got
rid of for thirteen dollars. On: the
way, however; she managed to slip
in enough disrespectful references
ito Freshman Comp to keep the
audience satisfied, and furnished
a useful topic sentence for future
essayists: “Last summer several
friends of mine and I went on a
picnic...” From there, she claim-
ed, politics, religion, sex, anything
could be worked in. A politics
major, Gale explained the two
kinds-of. courses. offered by-her-de-
partment: theory and practice, and
“The higher level—the third floor
of Taylor.” Offering a few ex-
planations of the presence of the
Library Dog, Gale suggested a
man with an autogyro and retreat-
ed, with some difficulty, into her
trunk once more. |
* Kathy Geib. dunking her head
rhythmically and abstractedly into
an-enormous bucket of suds on an
upper window sill of Dalton wel-
comed the audience that persisted
in the round instead of waiting un-
der the Library tree for the last
speech. Her resemblance to Welles
a la Martin was, of course, entire-
ly unintentional. Discussing Su-
perstition at Bryn Mawr, the
“bibulous bird who burped” men-
tioned briefly the red lanterns in
the cloisters—an ancient custom
Continued on Page 3
n
present standings and _ various
academic projects: the
Rufus M. Jones Chair of
Philosophy and Religion, which
will be inaugurated in September,
now has $154,000; the Theresa Hel-
burn Chair of the Drama _ will
continuing Bryn Mawr’s work in
that field and for which funds will
be further collected; the Eunice
Morgan Schenck Chair in French
has received an addition of $17,-
900; the Georgiana Goddard King
Fund in the Department of Art
and Archaeology, $59,200; the
Eloise Ruthven Tremain Instruc*
Continued on Page 5
Warburg Receives
M. Thomas Prize
Geraldine Warburg won the an-
nual M. Carey Thomas Essay
prize, awarded to a senior for the’
best creative or critical work sub-
mitted for the contest. Gerry’s
paper was a critical essay entitled
“Charles Lamb and Sir Thomas
Browne,” and was chosen as the
best entry by unanimous decision
of the three English Department
judges, Professors Linn, Meigs,
and Stapleton.
Past Activities
Gerry has done a good deal of
writing during her college career,
joining the board of the Title last
spring and being the first Editor in
Chief of the new Counterpoint. She
has also been active in the Drama
Guild, of which she was Vice-
President this year; her sophomore
year she played in The Skin of Our
Teeth, her junior year in The Sea
Gull, and this year she played the
title. role in Anouilh’s. Antigone.
President of her class her fresh-
man year, she was also a member
of the Chorus, and received a var-
sity owl for riding. This year she
has been active on the Chapel
Committee. Gerry is an English
major, graduating magna cum
laude.
Permanent Officers of 1949
The permanent officers of the
Class ,of 1949 were recently
elected. Nancy Martin was chos-
en as the class president, Ally
Lou Hackney as collector and
treasurer, Edie La Grande as
secretary and class editor for
the Alumnae Bulletin, and Mary
Rose Beetlestone as reunion
manager for next year.
Jean H. Ellis Wins
Catherwood Award
Jean Helene Ellis was awarded
the Catherwood Foundation Fel-
lowship, awarded by the college
for the first time this year; she
plans to use it for further study at
Oxford, where she has already
been accepted. She is a history
major and plans to continue in
Mediaeval History. She did honors
this year with Dr. Cuttino, on “The
Process of Perigueux.” She has
been very active extra-curricularly,
as Copy Editor of the NEWS ani
Chairman of the Curriculum Com-
mittee; she was business manager
of the Junior Prom, and a member
of the French and Philosophy
Clubs; she took one comprehensive
in French.
N. Martin Gets
Burch Fellowship
(Nancy Martin has been awarded
the Burch Fellowship for study in
England, given last year for tw?
years by Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Burch, whose daughter Helen
graduated last year. Nancy is a
politics major, graduating cum
laude; she has held the Alumnae
Regional Scholarship and the Ed-
win Gould Foundation Scholarship
Continued on Page 5
5 New Members
To Join Faculty
Miss McBride and the Board of
Directors have announced several
additional appointments to the fac-
ulty for the academic year 1949-
50.
In English, Miss Isabel Gamble
has ben appointed instructor; she
is now an-assistant-in.English--at
Radcliffe, and tok her A. B. at
Swarthmore.
Mr. John Pruett, M.S. and Ph.D.
at Indiana, will be an Assistant
Professor in Physics; during the
war he did experimental research
for the Manhattan Project.
In Chemistry, Mr. Harold Kwart,
Ph.D. Harvard,.will become an
Assistant Professor; he, too, work-
ed on the Manhattan Project and
has been Research Fellow at Har-
vard since 1947.
‘Mrs. Maxine Woolston, a mem-
ber of the City Planning Commis-
sion, has been appointed part-time
lecturer in Economics; Miss Cyn-
thia Gee, B. A. University of Bris-
tol and graduate student at Bryn
Mawr, will be part-time lecturer
in Greek.
putes ss gor a Bi i
Faculty Name Bachner
As Alternate
Fellow
The award to Beverly Ann Levin
of the European Fellowship, the
highest honor in the gift of the
college, was announced this morn-
ing during the Commencement Ex-
ercises. Beverly is a philosophy
graduating summa cum
laude, who plans to take her M.A.
major,
degree at the University of Penn-
sylvania next year. Her academic
career at Bryn Mawr has been
noteworthy: last year she received
the Hinchman Memorial Scholar-
ship, in conjunction with Anne
Hunt Thomas, for work of special
excellance in her major field. Bev-
erly was Ann Hallowell Memorial
Scholar-in 1946-47; last year, apart
from the Hinchman, she held the
Anna Margaret and Mary Sloan
Scholarship. She was prepared by
the High School in
Charleston, West Virginia.
Beverly wrote her honors paper
in philosophy on “The Connexity
of Experience,” dealing with Kant
and Hume; the method of handling
was an explation of various prob-
lems to be discovered in Hume, and
an attempt at their solution
through an interpretation of Kant.
She worked with Dr. Nahm.
Beverly is being married in June
to Leon Robbins, Haverford ’48
and now a graduate student at the
University of Pennsylvania; she
hopes to live in Bryn Mawr next
year while attending Penn. Her
chief interests in philosophy are
British Epiricism and Logical Pos-
itivism: she plans to work in the
Logical Positivist School in the
future:
Jackson
Sue Bachner Alternate
~ Suzanne Bachner, named ‘the al-
ternate to the European Fellow-
ship, is a history major who did
honors with Dr. Gilbert in Russian
History: the subject of her paper
was the Russian Decembrist Rev-
olution.of 1925. She has completed
her college course in three years,
accelerating from the sophomore
to the senior class; her average at
every point has been summa cum
laude. She comes from New York,
where she was prepared by the
Hunter College High School; she
plans to be married soon, and do
graduate work at Columbia.
ENGAGEMENT
Gale Minton, ’49 to Francis
Xavier Critchlow.
Page Two
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Tuesday, May 31, 1949
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
EMILY TowNsEND, ’50, Editor-in-chief
ANNE GREET, *50, Copy .
Irina NELIvow, °50, Make-up
ELISABETH NELIDow, ’51 Hanna Ho porn, '50, Make-up
GwYNNE WILLIAMS, ’50 BLAIKIE ForsyTH, 51, Make-up
Joan McBripg, ’52
Editorial Staff
FRANCINE DUPLEssIx, ’52
Jane Rotter, ’51
JANE AUGUSTINE, ’52
Linpa BETTMAN, 752
Betry LEE, ’52
Nina Cave, *50
ANN ANTHONY, ’51
» Betty BEImeRFELD, ’51
JOANNA SEMEL, ’52
JACQUELINE EsMERIAN, ’51
Crame LiacHow!Tz, ’52 BARBARA JOELSON, ’52
EMMY CADWALADER, ’52 CAROLINE SMITH, ’52
PAULA STRAWHECKER, "$2
Staff Photographers
Laura WINsLow, ’50, Chief
JOsEPHINE RAsKIND, 750
Business Board
ELEANOR OTTO, ’51, Advertising Manager
MADELEINE BLouNT, ’51, Business Manager
TAMA SCHENK, ’52 Mary Lov Price, ’51
GRACE FRIEDMAN, ’52 Mary Kay Lackritz, ’51
Subscription Board
BarBara LIGHTFOOT, ’50, Manager
Epre Mason Ham, ’50 Suz Kezuzy, °49
Atty Lou Hackney, ’49 EpyTHE LaGRANDE, °49
Marjori£ PETERSON, °51 PENNY GREENOUGH, ’50
Mary Kay Lakritz, ’51 GRETCHEN GAEBELEIN, ’56
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
The Drive
After three years of unremitting work on the part of
rs. Slade and the alumnae, the Drive has not only reached
its two million dollar goal but topped it by more than
$200,000. Top honors _for her intelligent and ener-
getic leadership go to Mrs. Slade, who has now raised over
‘six million dollars in all for the college, in four different
drives; without her, this present success would have been im-
possible. ie
The whole college must be aware of the effort the entire
Bryn Mawr alumnae group has made to reach the quota set
in 1946. They have themselves contributed over three-
fourths of all the money raised, and they have further given
freely of their time in organizing theatre benefits, fashion
shows, auctions, and all the many local projects which assur-
ed the success of the Drive. This interest is not merely a per-
iodic phenomenon, of course: the continuing creative support
the alumnae have always given has developed Bryn Mawr’s
uniquely national, even international, character.
Now that the Drive is over, undergraduates who have
felt harassed by its importunities may turn to reflect on its
immediate, practical significance for Bryn Mawr. Faculty
salaries have already been raised; the Rufus Jones Chair has
been filled and the curriculum correspondingly expanded; the
Theresa Helburn Chair is nearing completion. We are deep-
ly grateful to those whose energy and perseverance have op-
ened new fields and offered us new opportunities.
"4.9
The one hundred and one seniors who just received their
A.B. degrees will leave behind them an assorted number of
_things for—us.to-remember.
They..need..never.-worry--about-|—
being forgotten—certainly not for the next three years,
while this year’s undergraduates are still at Bryn Mawr. As
we all become the old-timers, we will undoubtedly reminisce
nostalgically about the figures in the niche, and the gigantic
red dachshund that adorned the library on Class Day.
Creative art seems to have been the forte of ’49. It was
‘their class that produced the Octangle, and made the ar-
~rangements for its continuation.
“They also started the tra-
dition of the Sophomore Carnival, which has flourished ever
since, in spite of invariable adverse weather conditions.
’49’s biggest contribution to the College was undoubted-
dy their tireless work on the Alumnae Drive. On this score
they deserve endless thanks. The Drive ends this year, with
the goal far surpassed, and '49 has earned much appre-
ciation for their efforts. In everything from dogs to dollars,
initiative has been their major trait, and achievement has}
ary
‘marked their endeavors. A rasene Sagan eum: sa to seca
101 Members of Class of "49 Receive Degrees
BACHELOR OF ARTS
Biology
Jean Alexander Broadfoot.y. of
New Jersey, cum laude.
Alice Louise Hackney, of Mary-
land, cum laude.
Janet Ann Houze, of Connecti-
cut.
Eleanor Rose Wixom, of New
Jersey, cum laude.
Chemistry
Mary Moore Austin, of Missouri,
cum laude.
Mary Rose Beetlestone, of Mary-
land, Magna cum laude, with
honors, Pa
‘Christel Kappes,- of Pennsyl
vania, cum laude, with honors.
Lucile Bailey Mahieu, of Kansas,
cum laude.
Classical Archaeology
Sarah Wisner Loomis, of New
York, cum laude, with honors.
Diane Huszagh, of Illinois.
..(Willa..Marie.Whyburn,.of North
Carolina.
Economics and Politics
Economics
Grace Voorhis Dillingham, of
New York, cum laude with honors.
Patricia Helen Keller, of Ohio.
Zoe Lund, of Rhode Island.
Cristobel Locke Von Hemert, of
New York, in absentia.
‘Bertha Wexler, of Pennsylvania,
cum laude, with honors.
Politics
Anna Sybil Cameron, of North
Carolina.
Cornelia Crawford Claxton, of
Pennsylvania.
Elisabeth Marie Guth De Leval
Jezierski, of Argentina, Magna
cum laude, with honors.
Ann Van Arsdale Eberstadt, of
New York.
Frances Brodhead Harris Ed-
wars ,of Pennsylvania.
Shirley Fish, of Massachusetts,
cum laude.
Kathryn Fisher Gieb, of New
Jersey, cum laude.
Susan Kelley, of Connecticut.
Edythe Georgia LaGrande, of
New Jersey, cum laude.
Dorothy Lynn Lewis, of Chile,
cum laude.
Nancy Martin, of the District of
Columbia, cum laude.
Gale Dinsmore Minton, of New
Jersey, cum laude.
Mary-Elizabeth
Massachusetts.
Evelyn Patricia Ransom, of New
York.
Sheila Tatnall, of Pennsylvania.
Mueller, of
” English
Norma Jane Bernstein, of North
farolina, cum laude. ‘
Phyllis Lilian Bolton, of Massa-
chusetts, cum laude.
Brenda Winthrop ‘ Bowman, of
Washington. _ nee
Virginia Blair Brooke, of Penn-
sylvania, magna cum laude.
Suzanne Elizabeth Henderson, of
New York, cum laude.
Vivian Irwin Johnson, of New
York. :
‘Helen “Huntington Ofertin,
Ohio, cum laude.
‘Sally Virginia McIntyre, of New
York.
(Marcia Morris, of Connecticut.
Eleanor Talaleott Rubsam, of
New York, cunt laude, with honors.
Ellen Graves Smith, of Illinois.
“Katrina Thomas, of Maryland.
Geraldine Alice ‘Warburg,
New York, magna cum laude.
French
Barbara Bentley, ta Illinois, cum
laude.
Lucile Elizabeth Pike, of Penn-
sylvania, cum laude, with honors.
(Mary Eve Tsrael ,of New York,
of
of
BOUTE —~--~-+ ve
Ellen Tan, of China.
German
Sarah=-Béaman, of Massachu-
setts, cum laude.
Barbara Boas, of Connecticut.
‘Jane Emmet Macatee, of the
District of Columbia.
Jean Lowry Pearson, of Massa-
chusetts.
Marie Leslie Weel, of New York,
cum laude.
Greek
Louise Spencer Ervin, of Penn-
sylvania, cum laude, with honors.
History
‘Suzanne Bachner, of New York,
summa cum laude, with honors.
Martha Dorris Barber, of Mary-
land.
Andrea Brigit Newell Bell,
Canada.
Rose Blakely, of Kentucky, cum
laude, with honors.
Elizabeth Anne Curran, of Mis-
of
(Martha Davline, of Alaasantie
setts.
Sarah Darling, of Massachusetts.
Yolande Mascia ©Momville, of
New York.
Ulla Edsten, of Sweden.
Jane Ellis, of Massachusetts.
Jean Helene Ellis, of New York,
thagna cum laude, with honors.
Jackie J. Gawan, of Colorado.
Elizabeth Duffy Kennard,
Louisiana, cum laude.
Katherine Barbara Knaplund, of
Wisconsin, cum laude.
Lois Elizabeth Sherman, of Ohio.
History of Art
Louise Belknap, of New York.
Ann Corcoran, of Massachusetts.
Cynthia Ann Hinsdale, of New
York.
Emilie Baker Hughes, of Penn-
sylvania, magna cum laude.
Clarissa Platt, of New York,
cum laude.
Dorothy Joan (Sunderland,
New York.
Ann Martin Chase Twichell, of
Missouri, in absentia.
Margo Vorys, of Ohio, cum laude.
Latin
Mary Edith Lutley, of Pennsyl-
vania, cum laude,
Mathematics
Mary Elizabeth Abernethy, of
Pennsylvania.
Philosophy
Lane Bette Kolker, of Maryland,
cum laude, with honors.
Beverly Levin, of California,
summa cum laude, with honors.
_ Frankie Scherl Marvin, of Ohio.
Eve Janet Osler, of Canada.
Physics
Marion (Moseley Harvey, of
Pennsylvania, magna cum laude,
with honors.
Ann Fontaine Schmidt, of New
York.
of
of
Paveioleny
Harriet Taylor Caulkins, of Ten-
nessee, cum laude, with honors.
Marilyn Ruth Peters, of Penn-
sylvania, cum laude.
Joan Roslyn Harriet. Robbins, of
New Jersey. :
cum laude, with honors.
Marjorie Helen aeanes,. of Wis-
consin.
Mary Jane Work, of New York.
Sally Dorsey Worthington, of
Maryland,
Sociology
Helen Barbara Singer, of New
York.
Spanish
_.Clare. H. Fahnestock, of Rhode
Island, cum laude, with honors.
Marian Clifford John, of the Dis-
trict. of ° Columbia,
laude, with honors.
cum laude, with honors.
Margaret Thomure Morris, of
the District of Columbia.
Betty-Bright Page, of Louisiana,
cum laude.
Louise Twaddell Pope, of Illinois.
Anne Hunt Thomas, of New
York, magna cum laude, with hon-
ors,
Geology
Ann Mason McKee, of
Richard Logan, of Pennsylvania.
MASTER OF SOCIAL SERVICE
Bessie M. Boggs, of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, B.S. University of
Pennsylvania 1982.
~ Jean} h Campbell, of Glen-
view, Mlinois, AB. Hunter College
1947.
Manja M. Davis, of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, A.B. Hunter College
yl- | 1946. ©
Ann Seideman, of Pennsylvania, |
magna cum |
Pénnsylvania, in absentia, A.B..
University of Pennsylvania 1934.
Burton I. Gordon, of Philadel-
phia, - Pennsylvania, A.B. Temple:
University 1941.
Norman W. Hamilton, of Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania, A.B. Syra-
cuse University 1946 and M.A.
‘1947,
Julia Ann Mayo, of Philadelphiay
Pennsylvania, A.B. University of
Pennsylvania 1947.
Alice 'C. Miles, .of Philadelphia.,.:
Pennsylvania, in absentia, A.B.
University of North Carolina 1941.
Shirley Milner, of Philadelphia,
iPennsylvdnia, A.B. Pennsylvania.
State College 1946,
Marie Baird Mohler, of Lancas-
ter, Pennsylvania, A.B. Dickinson
College 1941; M.Ed. Smith College
1942.
‘Margaret Susan Nelson, of Ard-.
more, Pennsylvania, in. absentia,,
| B.S. Belhaven College 1943,
Catherine Elizabeth Neuhardt,
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
B.S. Temple University 1946.
Gertrude Jane O’Connell, of
Narberth, Pennsylvania, A.B. Rose-
mont College 1943.
Rosalyn Shapiro, of Bronx, Nevr
York, A.B. Hunter College 1947.
Helen Barbara Sloane, of Har-
risburg, Pennsylvania, in absentia,
A.B. Lebanon Valley College 19388.
Carolyn Reed Toothman, of Glen--
ville, West Virginia, B/S. West
Virginia University 1946.
MASTERS OF ART
Biology
Evelyn Esther Russo, of Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania, A.B. Rose-
mont College 1947.
Chemistry
Trene A. Sekely, of New York
City, A.B. Barnard College 1948.
Economics
Shang May Kwan, of Peiping,
China, B.A. Catholic University,
|Peiping, 1946
English
Anne English Colcord, of New
York City, A.B. Wellesley College
1945.
Marjorie Vashon ‘McGhee, of
Cleveland, Ohio, A.B, Howard Uni-.
versity 1948.
Virginia Ruland, of White:
Plains, New York, A.B. Randolph-
Macon Woman’s College 1947.
French
Stella Grunder, of Toronto, Can--
ada, .B.A# University of Toronto
1948.
Madelyn Gutwirth, of Haverford,.
Pennsylvania, A.B. Brooklyn Col-
lege 1947,
Jeanne Alice Theis, of Le Cham-
bon-sur-Lignon, France, A.B.
Swarthmore College 1946.
French and Italian
Ruth Fuchs, of Swarthmore,
Pennsylvania, A.B. Brooklyn Col-
lege 1940.
French and Philosophy
Marlou Hyatt, of Indianapolis,
Indiana, A.B. Barnard College
1948. ,
Geology
_ Cyrus Klingsberg, of Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania, A.B, Univer-
sity. of Pennsylvania 1948.
Edward Shippen Willing, Jr., of
West Chester, Pennsylvania, A.B.
Williams College 1938.
Greek and Classical Archaeology
Elizabeth Patricia Neils, of Min-
neapolis, Minnesota, AJB. Bryn
Mawr Wollege 1948.
History
Aileen Gertrude Cramer, of
South Hadley, Massachusetts, A.B.
Mount Holyoke College 1947.
Eleanor Mae Zelliot, of Des:
College 1948.
Latin and Greek
Cynthia Gee, of Weston-super-
Mare, England, B.A. University of
Bristol 1947.
Martha Wilson Hoffman, of
Berkeley, ‘California, A.B. Univer-
sity of California 1943,
_ Philosophy
Shannon DuBose, of Camden,
South Carolina, A.B. University of
i Ephraim Glass, of Melrose Park, |
Continued on Pae 5
“—Moliere.
apa
Tuesday, May 31, 1949
~
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Incunabula, James, Pigmy Cicero
Now Shown in Rare Book Room
by Joan McBride, ’52 ~
The Rare Book Room exhibit
now consists of recent gifts from
alumnae and friends of the library.
Among the books displayed are a
collection of first editions by
Henry James, contributed by Mary
Miller Buckminster, and two vol-
umes of La Sainte Bible, heav-
ily bound in richly embossed
leather, given by Mrs. Ethel J. E.
Hadas. Howard Lv Goodhart do-
nated from his private collection
two inctinabula of medieval manu-
scripts, and two of several Japan-
ese books given by Miss Anne Vau-
clain are exhibited.
Several French books were con-
tributed by Miss Margaret Gilman,
and ‘Mary Winsor donated a leath-
er-bound edition of the works of
ten by authors closely connected
with the college are Swans and
Amber, a free translation of Greek
“Among” the ‘books writ-|
lyric poetry by Dorothy Burr
Thompson, an alumnae; The Boy
Jesus and His Companions, by
Rufus M. Jones; and Party Poli-
tics in the Age of Caesar, by Miss
Taylor, Dean of the Graduate
School.
One of the most interesting of
the contributions to the Rare Book
Room is a minute volume of
Cicero’s works, scarcely more than
three inches high: De Officiis, De
Senectute, and De Amicitia, given
by Mrs. Henry Bonnell. An edition
of Goethe was donated to the li-
brary by Fraulein Friede Horst-
hemke, “in gratitude for a pair of
shoes given her by a Bryn Mawr
alumna.”
Also in the exhibit are Volume
I of a set of Mrs. Humphrey Ward,
given by Mrs. John J. Boericke;
‘Princeton Portraits, contributed by
Mrs. A. Marquand; and Indian Art
in the United States, contributed
by Mrs. Thomas E. Drake.
Class Day Speeches Reveal Inner Meaning
Of Selfus Governum, Bryn Mawr Chastity
Continued from Page 1
which has caused many a mama to
raise her eyebrow—and the re-
sponsibilities attached to the post
of vestal virgin. She referred in
awed accents to the high priestess
of Selfus Governum, and the initia-
tory fire of chastity which is
known euphemistically to the ad-
ministration as Parade Night.
Translating the words to the soph-
omore lantern night hymn as
meaning: “Make us look twenty-
one,” she fell back into her bucket
of suds to avoid the malignant ten-
dencies of Friday the thirteenth.
At the Gym, Jane Ellis, looking
more buxom than usual, proceeded
to classify Bryn Mawr products,
not by their minds as Life has al-
ready done, but by their Bodies.
Jane distinguished four categories:
the nobody, the somebody, the all-
body, and the sublimated body. The
nobody, a synonym for the Bryn
Mawr Intellectual Body, is shape-
less and flabby, with remarkable
hip development, and is to be
found in the library; “she will
always be an asset in her local
library.” The somebody has
“muscles where they count’’—ade-
quately illustrated by Jane who
had reached the gym-tunic stage
in her progressive strip-tease from
gown to leotard—the somebody,
she declared, is destined to end up,
on the Planned Parenthood Board
of her community. “The all-body,
on the other hand, is more adapt-
able: she loves both Ford’s and
the Rumpus Room, she takes arch-
ery to develop herself where it
does the most good, and she is
always “handy around the home.”
The sublimated body is the soul of
Bryn Mawr—she loves art and
clinging leotards; she is also a
SALE!
All_wool_ gabardine
suits
Tres Chie Shop
BRYN MAWR
Compliments
of the
Haverford Pharmacy
Haverford
thorough realist: she accepts her
body as part of her.
At the Library, the last and
most amusing stop, after the Good-
bye Song had made the rounds of
the faculty, Margo Vorys discussed
the serious problem facing every
modern Bryn Mawr undergradu-
ate: whether to be co-ed or sterile.
Men or Professors—Which? cried
Margo—Haverford was defined as
}a species of its own, created by
God, not out of dust, but out of the
flower-bed. Professors can give us
satisfaction, but they never let us
at them. Immediate remedies: do
away with that silly old five dol-
lar fine, and review the curricu-
lum. Free hours common to both
student and professor must be
Mr.
Bachrach must be allowed his beer
and Mr.
more carefully worked out,
Broughton his tennis
Between the Leaves
Visitors Find Theatres,
Pandas, Wallabies
In Guidebook
by Irina Nelidow, ’50
Good and ,inexpensive restau-
rants in New York are “like love,
something you must find out for
yourself and then don’t tell more
than 40 or 50 of your closest
friends.” So maintains Carl Maas,
author of How to Know and En-
joy New York, a handbook of in-
side information on what to do and
where to do it in New York City.
Mr. Maas is bursting with help-
ful advice to those as yet uniniti-
ated into New York night life. He
reveals to the out-of-towmer ail
the artful tricks and dodges of
maitres d’hotel and waiters in the
various night clubs, warning that
“many gilded. saloons have assum-
ed the status of private clubs ‘and
the welcome mat is rarely set out
for strangers.”
Music, the theater, the dance,
art, sports, hobbies, transportation,
and shopping are only a few of
the topics on which Mr. Maas prof-
fers suggestions. He takes the
shopping question lightly, for as
he says, “some character has fig-
ured out that New York has a
store for every 66 inhabitants, so
the problem of taking something
nice and unusual to the folks back
home is a cinch—that is, unless
you’re shopping for a live giant
panda or a wallaby.”” The author
even suggests where the latter
purchases might be made.
‘While enlightening the prospec-
tive theater goer on how to get
tickets, ‘Mr. Maas advises him not
to use inside pull; even “if you
shorts, Mr. Goodale must be made
to take out a different freshman
every night to relieve the tension
in chorus, and women are to be un-
conditionally abolished from the
faculty. Liberal education, with
professors, not co-education with
men, must be the happy theme-
song of the future.
cram
Pause That Refreshes
Is Part of the Party
Plus 1¢
State Tax
Ask for it either way ... both
trade-marks mean the same thing.
UNDER AUTHORITY, OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY
The Philadelphia Coca Cola Bottling Company
Geraldine Warburg, winner
of the M. Carey Thomas Essay
Prize.
know a girl in the chorus of Annie
Get Your Gun, or even Annie, don’t
ask the impossible.” However, “if
anyone tries to sell you tickets for
a-radio-show;-spit-in his eye. They,
unlike ‘some of the other best
things in life, are really free.”
Of real value to all who may
visit New York, and indeed to all
New Yorkers also, is a chart which
explains how to determine the
street location of numbers on the
avenues. —Mr. Maas’ explanation
of the mysteries of New York sub-
ways is likewise excellent, and his
description’ of the geographical
layout of Manhattan Island is as
illuminating to native islanders as
to visitors.
1899 Congregates
For 50th Reunion
The 50-year Class, the class of
1899, held its reunion at Rhoads
North during the weekend of May
28 to 31.
Forty-six members of the orig-
/ inal sixty-nine took their A.B.s at
Bryn Mawr. Of this number, ap-
proximately twenty-five alumnae
from all over the United States re-
turned this weekend.
Among the outstanding members
of this 50-year class is Cora Hardy
Jarrett, author of The Ginko Tree
and The Silver String. Mrs. Jar-
ret is currently working on an-
other novel.
One physician, a few Ph.D.s, and
several M.A.s are included among
1899’s alumnae. Other graduates
are occupied in teaching, writing,
politics and public speaking, lec-
turing.and—-book-reviewing;--and-
the class was well represented by
a large share of former suffrage
workers, members of the League
of Women Voters, Garden Club
Presidents, and American Red
Cross Volunteers.
Miss McBride entertained the class
at a luncheon at her home on Sat-
urday, May 28; and that evening
the 50th Reunion Dinner was held
at the home of Miss Gertrude Ely.
With other reunion classes, '99
attended a picnic in the Deanery
Garden on Sunday afternoon.
© 1949, The Coca-Cola Company
ial
~«‘DANCE PARADES”’ by these bands
HARRY, JAMES LES BROWN BENNY GOODMAN
FRANKIE CARLE GENE KRUPA WOODY HERMAN
XAVIER CUGAT. DUKE ELLINGTON CLAUDE THORNHILL
See Your Deoter Today! COLUMBIA RECORDS
Trade Marks “Columbia” and @ Reg. U. S. Pat. Of.
Page Four
a
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Tuesday, May 31, 1949
The Observer
“Oh come out for dinner with
us,” ’they say. They are dressed
up and their hair has just been
combed out.
“T don’t think so,” you say, look-
ing at the toe of your loafer.
“Come on, you don’t finish exams
every day of your life.”
“No,” you say with spirit as the
truth is that you just do not feel
like jaunting off. “No, it doesn’t
happen every day but it happens
eight times in four years and
that’s plenty.”
So off they go jaunting and there
you are. There you are indeed.
The boxes are too high in your
room to go there and there is
pressure in the hall. “Oh misery,
I sent my trunk without locking
it.’ “I haven’t time to pay my
Inn bill.” “Where is some rope?”
Soon they will be wanting you-and
you, as one~-who ~has~four™days”
left, will have to spend the hou”
in tying knots and returning books.
So out you go, out the window.
Head toward the Library. That is
safe. Everyone who goes to the
Library has Business. You walk
leisurely and the chorus of those
pressed for time fades from your
ears.
Two Seniors pass you in their
sawed-off jeans and some sort of
ancient crew cap. Four days and
they will be gone too:—no more
jeans, no more crew caps. At
Grips with Life. You will be At
Grips also. But it will only be for
four months. You are brave in
your security but in your mind you
cower against the grey walls,
‘watching Seniors, adult, poised,
troop out to conquer.
Amazing that in the hollowness
of the empty Library a handful of
people can sustain the atmosphere
that five hundred people created a
week ago. The ten who study for
Theory and Practice or for Latia
301 give full illustration of the
desperation, the doggedness, the
desire for one cigarette that one
might suppose only a full Reading
Room could give. You gather the
books you have left there and skip
out. They are an ungainly bunch.
No one will ask you to tie up
boxes when you are carrying
these.
Again you think of summer.
Why can’t you go and live in a
house by the sea with a large
porch and hammocks and huge
chairs, do nothing but swim and
play tennis? It is this being At
Grips, this grappling that we will
have to do after college that will
make us turn sour. ‘When you
think of all the things that must
be done, next winter seems like one
last holiday and maybe when we
are seventy we will go to the
house by the sea.
But it’s not that bad. You go
back to the hall amd fill your pen
with coffee and smoke two ¢igar-
ettes at once, always keeping that
ungainly pile beside you so that
those pressed for time will think
you are Organizing. You think of
the lovely things that are beyond
the campus. Yes, afterall, you
are glad vacation is coming but—
but—it is not unpleasant to know
that you are coming back.
the results of their try-outs for
next year’s group. The mem-
bers will be Anne Newbold, ’50,
Trudy Donath, ’51, Pam Field,
’b1, Eleanor Gunderson, ’61,
Alice Hendrick, ’51, Susan Sav-
age, ’51l, Clare Minton, ’62, and
‘(Caroline Price, ’52.
The 1949 Octangle announces },
NOTICES
League Appointments
The League and ‘Alliance take
pleasure in announcing the ap-
pointment of Irina Nelidow as
manager of the United Service
Fund for next year, and Elisabeth
Nelidow as head of the Activities
Drive
Tickets for Bunche
Dr. Ralph J. Bunche, United Na-
tions Acting Mediator for Pales-
tine, is speaking at the Academy
of Music on June 6th; his subject
will be “Palestine.” “ There are
special student rates for this per-
formance, and anyone who will be
around Philadelphia at that time
and wants to hear him, may obtain
information from the NEWS or
the Public Relations Office.
World Youth Festival
If you are interested in spending
two..weeks..in-Budapest..this..sum-
mer, you may attend the World
Youth and Student Festival which
is scheduled to last from August
14 to 28 and will provide a com-
plete program for becoming ac-
quainted with students from all
other countries. You may obtain
details from the project’s United
States Office, 144 Bleecker Street,
New York.
Atomic Fellowships
The National Research Council
has announced that it will, for the
first time, offer fifty major fellow-
ships to. recent graduates for
training in radiological physics.
Applications are due by June 10th.
The basic annual stipend is $1500.
Necessary qualifications and appli-
Celebrate the great day
For breakfast, lunch, or dinner
In the best possible way
at the
COLLEGE INN
For Next Year:
Seniors who expect to be look-
ing for jobs in the autumn: Write
to the Bureau of Recommendations
about a month before you are
ready and ask us what we-have on
hand. Tell us what you want and
let us help you. Remember that
your recommendations are here ‘to
be sent out whenever and wher-
ever you want them to go. Best
wishes for interesting positions.
* * *
Summer Jobs Still Open:
With Families:
Wood’s Hole, Cape Cod. July
and August.. Three children. No
housework or cooking. $25 a week
or more.
West Dover, Vermont. June 19
middle of September. Companion
to elderly lady (but active both
housework and cooking. $15 a
week,
Merion, Pennsylvania. Two or
three months. Car at your dis-
posal. Boy, five years old. $15
a week.
Bryn Mawr. Part-time for June
and July. Three children. Baby-
cation regulations may be had hy
writing the Council, 2101 Constitu-
tion Avenue, Washington, D. C.
CONGRATULATIONS
TO THE
GRADUATES
FROM
Joyce Lewis
merftally and physically." Many in-
terests,..especially..painting)..Share-}
What to Do
sitting in afternoons regularly. No
housework or cooking.
Upper New York State on the
Hudson. June 9th to 19th. Two
children. Light housework. Farm
life. $25 a week.
Lansdowne, Pennsylvania. Au-
gust 13th to 26th. Two children,
four and two. $25 a week.
Maine or Bryn Mawr. August.
One child of four. Help with
housework. $25 a week.
Rosemont, Pennsylvania. June
and possibly September. Two chil-
dren, seven and eleven. Children
away most of the day. Light house-
work. $25 a week.
Frontier Nursing Service, Wen-
dover, Kentucky. Stenographers to
substitute for staff away on vaca-
tions. $125 a month. (Cost of room
and board, about $40.
Estate —-in---Villanova,~-Pennsyl-
vania, Supervise children’s play,
9:30 to 12:30 five days a week.
Will be paid by mothers, so much
per child per week. Eight chil-
dren already signed up. See Mrs.
Vietor before noon on Tuesday.
Congratulate
the graduate
with flowers
from
Jeannett’s
BRYN MAWR
For your summer project, knit a white tennis
sweater striped with club or college color
DINAH FROST’S
Bryn Mawr
has Minerva yarn for all combinations
ee er
‘
For Lilt and Lyrics tll singing
IM GLAD | p
MADE THE 30-DAY he : -
4 f)
mane Fe PAULA-FOR TASTE
° I
cae CRANE AND MILDNESS!
“Johnny Get Your Girl”
(A COLUMBIA RECORD)
@ Paula Kelly, rave-fave vocalist
with the star rhythm group, “The
Modernaires”, go
rhythm in a song. And for smoking
pleasure, Paula says: “It’s Camels
with me! I like their cool mildness
and that rich Camel flavor.”
for rollicking
In a recent coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and
women who smoked Camels, and only Camels, for
30 days; noted throat specialists, making weekly ex-
aminations, reported :
NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF
THROAT IRRITATION due to
smoking CAMELS!
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem. N. C.
Tuesday, May 31, 1949
List of Degrees
Continued from Page 2
South Carolina 1947.
Elizabeth Lee Freygang, of Es-
sex Fells, New Jersey, A.B. Ran-
dolph-Macon Woman’s_ College
1947,
Physics
Barbara Joubert Palm, of Phil-
adelphia, Pennsylvania, A.B. Ober-
lin College 1946. ox
Physics and Mathematics
Sylvia Greenwald, of Bronx,
New York, A.B. Hunter College
1948,
Politics
Sahika Suna Kili, of Instanbul,
Turkey, A.B. Bryn Mawr College
1948, -
Psychology
Frances Loretta Crofts, of Cleve-
land Heigths, Ohio, A.B. Radcliffe
College 1947,
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Organic Chemistry and Physical
--Chemistry
William Freeman Newhall, of
Haverford, Pennsylvania, A.B.
Haverford College 1941 and M.S,
1942, Dissertation: The Synthesis
of Ring Systems Related to Mor-
phine. Presented by Professor
Marshall DeMotte Gates, Jr.
English and Latin
Shirley Seifried .Allen, of East
Haven, Connecticut, A.B. Carleton
College 1942; M.A. Bryn Mawr
College 1944. Dissertation: Samuel
Phelps and his Management of
Sadler’s Wells Theatre. Presented
by Professor Arthur Colby Spra-
gue. :
French and German
Barbara Mary St. George Craig,
of Kingston, Ontario Canada, in
absentia, B.A. Queen’s University
1987 and M.A. 1939. Dissertation:
L’Estoyre de Griseldis; a Critical
Edition. Presented Professor Grace
Frank.
SPRING IS HERE !
'
see peasant
blouses
\. skirts
shoes
at the
Mexican Shop
ARDMORE
MISS
NOIROT
Distinctive
Clothes
Lancaster Ave.
Pryn Mawr
All Sorts Of
Books
at the
COUNTRY BOOK
SHOP
BRYN MAWR
: a
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five
Structural Geology, Metamorphism
and Petrology
Ch’th Chi Shang, of Peiping,
China, B.A. National Tsing Hua
University 1941; M.A. Bryn Mawr
College 1947. Dissertation: Struc-
tural Petrology of the Wissahickon
Schist near -Philadelphia, with
Special Reference to Granitization.
Presented by Professor Dorothy
Wyckoff.
Petrology and Structural Geology
Judith V. Weiss, of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, A.B. Temple Uni-
versity 1934; M.A. Bryn Mawr
College 1945. Dissertation: The
Wissahickon Schist at _ Philadel-
phia. Presented by Professor Ed-
ward H. Watson.
Greek and Latin
Elizabeth Lyding, of Santa Bar-
bara, California, A.B. Miami Uni-
versity 1944; M.A. Bryn Mawr
College 1945. Dissertation: Hom-
eric Enjambement. Presented by
Professor Mabel Louise Lang.
History..of _Philosophy..and. Theory
of Value
Barbara Entenberg Gimbel, of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, A.B.
Swarthmore College 1939. Disser-
tation: Freud’s Theory of Mind
and Meaning. Presented by Pro-
fessor Milton Charles Nahm.
FOREIGN: SCHOLARSHIPS
Special Foreign Scholarship for
German
Susanne Jungbauer, of Vienna,
Austria, Candidate for Ph.D., Uni-
versity of Vienna, 1949.
Special Foreign Scholarship for
Italian
Vera D’Onofrio, of Rome Italy,
Laurea, University of Rome, 1947.
Marcelle Parde Scholarship for
French
Marie-Odile. Gauny, of Verdur,
France, Licence es lettres, Nanty
University, 1944,
Resident Graduate Scholarship for
a British Woman
Gwenith Margaret Teresa
Thomas, of Leicester, England,
B.A. St. Hilda College, Oxford
University, to be conferred, 1949;
English-Speaking Union Fellow
for 1949-50.
Resident Graduate Scholarships
for Foreign Women
Biserka Krnjevic, of’ London,
England, B.A. Newnham College,
Cambridge University, 1947.
_ Dhairyabala Chhaganlal Parekh,
of Bhavnagar, India, B.A. Samal-
das College 1945 and M.A. 1947.
Laila Shukry of Orman, Egypt,
B.A. American University at Cairo
1946.
Renee Wegge, of Antwerp; Bel-
Drive Passes 2 Million;
SladesAnnounces End
Continued from Page 1
torship in History stands at $100,
000; the Caroline Morrow Chad-
wick-Collins Fund in the Depart-
ment of Music has $28,100; the
Lucy Martin Donnellly Research
Fellowship $51,200; the E. W. and
M. G. Coffin Fund is $25,000 con-
tributed in their memory by their
daughter Miriam Coffin Canaday;
the Gertrude Howard McCormick
Honor Scholarship Fund of $25,-
000; and the Jessie Ball duPont
Scholarship of $1,000 annually to
be awarded the next three years.
Two special scholarships in hon-
or of Regina Crandall and Mary
Hamilton Swindler are now being
raised.
Scholarships are also being
raised in memory of Jeannette
Peabody Cannon and Hester Ann
gium, Licence en philosphie et
lettres, University of Brussels,
1941, ee or
Incidentally
Edie Mason Ham, who was Bryn
Mawr’s delegate to The Radcliffe
Inter-arts Conference, reports that. °
by audience vote it was decided
“that intelligiability is not a re-
sponsibility of the artist.”
Nancy Martin Receives
2nd. Burch Fellowship
-_Continued from Page 1
for all four college years. She is
permanent president of her class.
and was president of it this year;
she was also head of the Drive for
undergraduates, and chairman of
the Vocational Committee.
Corner.
Although the drive was an alum-
nae one, Mrs. Slade congratulated
the undergrates on their interest
and enthusiasm; they raised a
total of $17,840.
This Fund has been raised at a
cost of Yess than 4%.
Good Luck
and
Good Bye
to the
Class of °49
Richard Stockton’s
BRYN MAWR
SIX - WEEK COURSES:
Address: Department R,
HARVARD SUMMER SCHOOL
of Arts, Sciences, and Education
1948
EIGHT - WEEK COURSES: JULY 5 — AUGUST 27
Co-educational — Graduate and Undergraduate Courses
Veterans may enroll under G.I. Bill :
Dormitory Accommodations and Cafeteria Service
Harvard University
Cambridge 38, Mass.
JULY 5 — AUGUST 13
9 Wadsworth House
Career-minded girls from 209
colleges enrolled last year for
Gibbs secretarial training.
Write College Course Dean for
placement report booklet,
“Gibbs Girls at Work.”
KATHARINE GIBBS
230 Park Ave., NEW YORK 17 90 Marlborough St, BOSTON 16
Sl E Superior St,CHICAGO 11 155 Angell St, PROVIDENCE 6
ne eam eet ae tee a, a
5 1
“if you want a Milder Cigarette
it’s CHESTERFIELD
That’s why it’s
Anus baxter
STARRING IN
“YOU‘RE MY EVERYTHING”
A 20™ CENTURY-FOX TECHNICOLOR
PRODUCTION
My Cigarette”
nen «ler
ttn chtibis aaa had,
TOPS WITH THE Top Stars IN HOLLYWOOD AND WITH COLLEGES TOO—
R TWO thrilling weeks, Elizabeth Arden is
devoting her country estate—Maine Chance
Farm—at Belgrade Lakes in Maine, to a Seminar
of Beauty for under-graduates and recent alumnae.
Here, in the gracious atmosphere that is Maine
Ask yourself these questions, honestly. The beautiful, right answers are all waiting for
you at Maine Chance.
Are you “slim as an arrow where you ought to be narrow”?
Can you enter a room with distinction?
Can you sit with poise?
Does an “ugly duckling” neck and throat veer you away from
the prettiest evening clothes?
Wouldn’t you love to learn to ¢ook froma fabulous French chef?
Does your tennis stroke embarrass you? Do you dare a dive in
public?
And wouldn’t you give a pretty penny to learn a make-up...
radiant, young, sophisticated—neither theatrical nor timid but
just naturally beautiful?
Chance, is your capsule course in beauty! High _lay the platform for your whole beautiful future
adventure awaits you... your own dream that’ ...eyes sparkle, hair grows shinier, skins grow
you, yourself, make very much alive! For being _ clear and bodies spare while you learn grace in
lovely is largely a matter of knowing how. rhythmic exercise and sports. You learn for keeps
In two exciting, filled-to-the-brim weeks, you at Maine Chance a gracious way of life and living.
Maine Chance offers you a concentrated plan for beauty created by Miss Arden
herself. Staffed by experts, it is scaled and suited to the special requirements
of young women — similar to the Maine Chance regime women come to enjoy
from all over the world ....a plan for a beautiful future. )
All perfection is here for you in this two weeks’ Beauty Seminar.
Everything inclusive. If you’d like a. private room, $150. per week;
if you share it with one, $100. each. Only 30 applications may be
accepted, so act quickly. All reservations are made through the
Elizabeth Arden Salon, 691 Fifth Avenue, New York 22. —
rva
for one week in advance must accompany a confirmed reservation.
College news, May 31, 1949
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1949-05-31
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 35, 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-vol35-no25