Some items in the TriCollege Libraries Digital Collections may be under copyright. Copyright information may be available in the Rights Status field listed in this item record (below). Ultimate responsibility for assessing copyright status and for securing any necessary permission rests exclusively with the user. Please see the Reproductions and Access page for more information.
“ Henrie Jo Rubenstein Barth
~Naomi Bograd
cision hei is not certain to carry out
VOL. XLIII—-NO. 23
Anomons and BRYN MAWR, PA., TUESDAY, JUNE 3, 1958
© Trustees of Bryn aiewe College, 1958
PRICE 20 CENTS
Graduate Degrees, 144 A. B’s Granted By Bryn Mawr:
Senator Fulbright Addresses Commencement Audience
Degrees With Distinction
The following Seniors will re-
ceive their degrees with distinc-
tion:
Summa cum Laude
Martha Sylvia Bridge
Magna cum laude
Elinor Newlin Amram
Constance Ludington Brown
Margaret Ruth Carter
Laura Rockefeller Case
Anne Barnard Chalfant
Naomi Elaine Cooks -
Eliza Middleton Cope
Susan Mary Fox
Margaret Luttrell Goodman
Leona Graff
Ruth Kaiser
Anne Keller
Judith Folger Kneen
Maxine Lazarus
Katherine Milmine
Zoja Pavlovskis
Julia Elisabeth Ramberg
Eleanor Ann Attianese Sorrentino
Catharine Roslyn Stimpson
Katharine Hereford Bowie
Stoddert
Sarah Lynne Sykes
Cornelia Anne Thomas
Mary Adrian Tinsley
Helen Elizabeth Valabregue
Elizabeth Grace Vermey
Sybille von Bulow
Marianne McDonald Weissenberg
Cum laude
Effie Ambler
Helen Sagmaster Barr
Lois Elizabeth Callahan
Donna Elizabeth Cochrane
Marjorie Armstrong Colvin
Elena Talcott Constantinople
Giselle DeNiie
Paula Diamond
Elizabeth Musser Dixon —
Ghida Moussa Shabandar
Paula Pond Dunaway
Barbara Orlinger Einhorn
Rochelle Marcia Eskin
Avis Lou Fleming
Marilyn Frankel
Pauline Kleinbard Goldstein
Elizabeth Carr Gott
Frances Ann Haffner
Eila Aulikki Hanni
Susan Stokes Jones
Leslie Mary .Kandell
Anna Kisselgoff
Grace Anita Labouchere
Ann Ellen Lackritz
Ellen Russell Lewis
Deborah Palmer Flint Longmaid
Leora Ann Luders
Anita Luise
Helen Francis Law McAlpine
Jennifer McShane
Cicely Anne Hicks Meaker
Judith Clare Meinhardt
Suzanne Myers
Elizabeth Purcell Nelson
Patricia Louise Page
Ottilie Marguerite Pattison
Eve Pell
Marion Dibert Perret
Barbara Eloise Pinney
Jeannette Newton Rider
Judith Robertson ae
Susan Safier,
Joyce Howard Sargent
Leigh Elka Scott
f
Nan VanKuren Sheehy
Joan Aiko Shigekawa
Mariellen Smith ue
Marthe Fillman Smith
Anne Helen Sprague
Tawn Janice Stokes
Margot Merrel Torbert
Anne Parker Wake
Susan Opstad White
Gita Zabarkes Wilder
Madlyn Wolfe
Prizes and Awards
Announced Today
Scholarships and prizes for dis-
tinction in academic work were
awarded at this morning’s Com-
mencement exercises to four mem-
bers of the _ senior class.
Europe Fellowship, awarded an-
nually since the first class was
graduated in 1858 and designated
for the expenses of a year’s study
at some foreign university -has
been given this year to Martha
Sylvia Bridge.
Other prizes awarded were the
M. Carey Thomas Essay prize,
given to Paula Dunaway, and the
Helen Taft Manning Prize, for an
Continued on Page 4, Col. 5
The.
J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT
Bachelor of Arts Degrees
Biology
Susan Toby Band
Marjorie Armstrong Colvin
Madonna Cleopatra Kasope
Faulkner
Leona Graff
Llynda M. Hinds
Camilla Delores Jones
Anne Keller
Maxine Friedman Lewis
Judith Wilder Malm
Judith Patricia Mercuri
Parvaneh Modaber
Sara Ann White
‘Madlyn Wolfe
Ann Deborah Zimskind
Chemistry
Lois Elizabeth Callahan
Eloise Frances Clymer
Gwen Phyllis Gentile
Maxine Lazarus
Need To Pursue Well Made Decisions
Have we, in the decisions which |
we’make, the capacity to use our
best judgment, to focus the mind
and direct the spirit to accomplish
that which is best, asked Dr. a
ry Joel Cadbury in his baccalau-
reate sermon Sunday
June 10-in Goodhart Hall. ra |
Dr. Cadbury, accepting the con- |
vention that a sermon called for |
the use of texts, chose for his two '
incidents from the New Testament :
concerning opposite reactions to’
he demand to relinquish posses-
sions, The first was the rich young
ruler who asked how to win eternal
life, and the second was the mer-
chant who sold all his goods to
obtain the pearl of great price. The
former could not, and the second
did, answer the challenge. Both
reactions were made instantly and
unconsciously; they depended on
the different thoughts and condi-
tioning of the two men, and to-
‘gether form a sort of companion
piece, a comment on the making
of choices.
In choosing between two alter-
natives, Dr. Cadbury noted, it is
necesary to face two sides equally.
Even when one is faced with the
issue resultant from a careful de-
evening, | ;
Stressed By Cadbury In Baccalaureate
tice Douglas on the attitude of un-
committed nations toward Com-
munism, “When we in America
think of communism we think of
what we would lose; the Asians
think of what they would gain, es-
pecially if they have nothing to
# | lose.”
As an aid to our ability to follow
d|through our decisions we need a
wi | gadget like power steering to keep
DR. HENRY JOEL CADBURY
his intent. ‘Both decision and ac-
tion depend on emotional mood
and on the power of concentrated
.
attention.
“The rich man’s face fell” when
he heard the demand he must ans-
wer, and “for joy” the other sold
all, A contrast of attention is
indicated in these choices. Dr. Cad-
bury quoted a statement _by Jos |
-iiiaiatadbenieiall
us in the way we have determined;
so that we can answer to the re-
sponsibility we have already taken
in our decision,
“We must,” said Dr. Cadbury,
“look with joy on what we have de-
cided, and even after counting the
cost, go through with it. There is
no crime or sin in choosing the
best and having a good time pur-
suing it.”
Dr. Henry Joel Cadbury is chair-
man of the Bryn Mawr College
Board of Directors. Formerly he
held the chair of Hollis Professor
of Divinity at Harvard University,
and he is a professor emeritus of
Harvard. He has published many
books on Biblical literature and
was a member of the committee to
prepare the’ Revised Standard.
Edition of the Bible.
Anita Luise
Eleanor Ann Attianese Sorrentino
Catherine Westervelt
Classical Archaeology
Margaret Ruth Carter
Economics
Kila- Aulikki Hanni
Susan Abby Levin
Mary Joan Griffith Meyers
English
Estill’ Winfree Barksdale
Helen Sagmaster Barr
Anne Barnard Chalfant
Naomi Elaine Cooks
Paula Diamond
Myra Becker Fein, in absentia
Elizabeth Carr Gott
Linda Iredell Hampton
Gretchen Van Schaick Jessup
Anna Kisselgoff
Ottilie Marguerite Pattison
Marion Dibert Perret
Jeannette Newton Rider
Cornelia Hand Starks
Catharine Roslyn Stimpson
Tawn Janice Stokes
Patricia Ann Sugrue
Sarah Lynne Sykes
French
Constance Ludington Brown
Leslie Ruth Burgiel
Helen Francis Law McAlpine
Continued on on Tae 8, Col 3
Wilson Sehc Scholars,
Fulbright Winners
Are In ‘58 Class
Three Fulbright Grants for For-
eign Study have been awarded this
year to members of the graduat-
ing class. One scholarship for
study at the American School of
Classical Studies in Athens was
given to Susan Fox, a Greek
major, Adrian Tinsley, a psychol-
ogy major and 1958 president of
Bryn Mawr College Theatre re-
ceived a grant to study drama at
the University of Bristol, England.
Catherine Stimpson, an English
major will study contemporary
literature at’ Newnham College
Cambridge University,
Nine Woodrow Wilson Awards
for graduate study leading to
teaching on the college level were
also made to members of the class
of 1958: They are: Donna Cochrane,
political science, Columbia; Giselle
Guest Speaker Former
College President
The 73rd academic year of Bryn
Mawr College closed this morning
with the annual Commencement
Exercises and the awarding by
President McBride of 144 Bach-
elor of Arts Degrees. In addition
23 degrees of the Master of Arts,
17 Master of Social Service de-
grees and 13 Doctors of Philo-
sophy were awarded in the Gradu-
ate School.
The Commencement Address
was given by Senator J. William
Fulbright, Democrat, of Arkan-
sas. Senator Fulbright was a
Rhoads Scholar at Oxford and
studied law at George Washington
University. He taught law at
George Washington and at the
University of Arkansas, and was
at one time president of the lat-
ter institution,
At present, Senator Fulbright
is Chairman of the Senate Com-
mittee on Banking and Currency
and a member of the Committee
on Foreign Relations. He has serv-
ed in the Senate since 1945.
Honors
of
The following Seniors will re-
ceive their degrees with Honors
in special subjects:
Biology
Leona Graff
Anne Keller
Chemistry
Maxine Lazarus
Anita Luise
Eleanor Ann Attianese Sorrentino
English
Jeanette Newton Rider
Catharine Roslyn Stimpson
Tawn Janice Stokes
Sarah Lynne Sykes
Geology
Katherine Milmine
Greek
Susan Mary Fox
History
Giselle DeNie
Patricia Louise Page
Eve Pell
History of Art
Elizabeth Purcell Nelson
Italian
Julia Elisabeth Ramberg
Latin
Zoja Pavlovskis
Mathematics
Naomi Bograd
Judith Folger Kneen
Music
Marianne McDonald Weissenberg
Philosophy
Martha Sylvia Bridge
Grace Anita Labouchere
Susan Opstad White
Physics
Suzanne Myers
Political Science
Donna Elizabeth Cochrane
Margaret Luttrell Goodman
Barbara Eloise Pinney
Mariellen Smith
Notice |;
The Maids and Porters’ Com-
mittee and the League are
happy to announce the election
of Sue Harris ’60 as next years’
chairman. —
_.Continued_on Page 3, Col...3-—'
SS
a aa Si i
2)
os
f
ania eer — ws
Page Two
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Tuesday, June 3, 1958
Miss Margaret Gilman
Respect and affection are personal sentiments.
cannot be otherwise. Impersonalized they become autocratic.
A public tribute to a person esteemed is an attempt in vain
to render into a single forntula the results of individual ex-
periments. This tribute is not to be mathematical. It is sen-
timental and personal—it asks to be recognized only as an
affirmation of admiration by one person for another and it
aspires to sound a chord of echo in those who share that
admiration.
‘Margaret Gilman commanded a circle of academic re-
spect of ever-widening circumference. She had done under-
graduate and graduate work at Bryn Mawr and had taught
at Harvard and Columbia. She had served.as vice-president
of. the Modern Language Association of America, of the Inter-
Sew
national Federation for Modern Language and Literature |.
and was a member of the Committee of Sections of the Amer-
ican Council of Learned Societies. She had taught at Bryn
Mawr since 1923 and had been chairman of the French de-
partment since 1948. Her critical work and great admira-
tion for the nineteenth century poet, Charles Baudelaire are
familiar to many of us. Her most recent work, entitled The
Idea of Poetry, based on research done in 1954 when she held
a Guggenheim Fellowship, will be published early next year.
The affection Miss Gilman engendered among her stu-
dents is the result of a role played largely behind the scene.
As a senior in her department and as president of the French
Club, I have had occasion to realize her deep and personal
concern for each of her students and her peculiar aptitude
for manoeuvering chance in their direction.
She leaves many close friends among the Bryn Mawr
faculty and in the academic world at large. And as a mem-
ber of the teaching profession, she leaves many students who
regret the loss of a person they greatly admired.
Those of us who are leaving are proud to have shared her
last year and those who remain will feel the absence of a
friend and mentor.
Marthe Fillman Smith, ’58
Good Luck 1958
Strange as it may seem, incredible as it may be, the
Class of 1958 now stands with diplomas clutched in hot little
-hands onthe threshold of LIFE, papers and comps safely
behind and memories of orals and hygiene exams fast fading.
Expectations about the future vary, but each Bryn Mawrter
feels she is well-equipped to handle whatever situation may
arise. Things have changed a bit, though, since M. Carey
Thomas’ classic statement that “only our failures. marry”,
and current expectations about alumnae’s marital status
seem to center around the hope that the Alumnae Office will
be notified about each change of name, as husbands drop by
the wayside, victims of a pursuit for the “higher things” of
life.
_Looking back on four years, the seniors remember the
menus, the lectures, professors, bridge games, knitting and
us; while we cannot recall a time when we were not here.
Their place will be impossible to fill — not numerically, of
course; the incoming freshmen will remedy that — since
the loss is one of individuals—and what individuals! We will
miss them and their helpful hints on everything from knit-
ting and bridge to. what courses to take and how to pass
them. We,:of the News, would like to také™ this opportunity
to say good-bye—and good luck!
THE COLLEGE —
FOUNDED IN 1914 ;
Published weekly during the College Year (except during
Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examina-
tion 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 wholly or in part witnout permission of the Editor-in-Chiet.
j EDITORIAL BOARD .
OSI CD OR En rae rar ere Toa Pura Eleanor Winsor, ‘59
Copy ea eve ede Obes bocce eee ehies Gretchen Jessup, ‘58
EE OE EEE PE Ay eae + Syean Schapiro, ‘60
occ cn ascites Ee tT eee ee «Miriam Beames, ‘59
Member-at-Large — 0. eee eet eee eee vies. Betsy Levering, “61
EDITORIAL STAFF
Barbara Broome, 40; Sue Goodman, ‘60; Frederica. Koller, ‘61; Gail Lasdon, ‘61;
Lynne Levick, ‘60; Lois Potter, ‘61; Judy Stulberg, ‘61; Alex van Wessem, ‘61;
Gail Beckman, ‘59, (Alliance Reporter).
BUSINESS STAFF
Elizabeth Cox, ‘60; Sybil Cohen, ‘61; Jane Lewis, ‘59. :
NE iii ines beh n cara oie cen bares eens Holly Miller, 59
NS Bo ooo iss os sess bisa cs cenecsbbecae cece Jane Levy, ‘59
‘Associate Business Manager .............. 0... cee eee eeeees Ruth Levin, ‘59
Subscription Manager .-.............. 0c cc ceeeeeeweees ‘Elise Cummings, ‘59
' Subseription Board: Alice Casciato; ‘60; Barbara Christy, ‘59; Susan Crossett, ‘60;
Elise Cummings, ‘59; Toni Ellis, ‘60; Sandy Korff, ‘60; Gail n, ‘61;
Danna Pearson, ‘59; Lois Potter, ‘61; Loretta ‘Ben. ‘60; Diane Taylor, ‘59;
Carol Waller, ‘61.
Subscription, $2.50. Mailing price, 5600. _Subectotion may begin et ony time.
They
¥,
ae
bei
MARGARET GILMAN
Graduate Degrees
DOCTOR OF, PHILOSOPHY
Biology
ELENORE SCHEWE
Chemistry
EDITH HIMELFARB WINICOV
Classical, Archaeology and Latin
ELLEN LUCILE KOHLER
Classical Archaeology
BRUNILDE MARIE SISMONDO
French
MADELYN KATZ GUTWIRTH
Geology
DORITA ANNE NORTON
WILLIAM CHARLES
RASMUSSEN
RICHARD FLOYD W:ARD
Germanic Philology and
Comparative Philology
KATHARINE OLINE ASTON
German Literature and German
Philology
MARY B. CORCORAN
JOSEPH PETER KOWACIC, JR.
Latin and Greek
LYDIA HALLE
in absentia
Philosophy
LOUISA SHANNON DU BOSE
MASTER OF ARTS
Chemistry
JANICE TAYLOR GORDON
MEYER SHEA SILVERMAN
PATRICIA ENID ROSE SMITH
Classical Archaeology
JOAN VANCE RAE
Economics
LOLA GIRDHARLAL |
ROLANDE PICCIOTTO
Education
MAXINE PHYLLIS BROWN,
in absentia
English ;
MARGARET HAWES LaSALA
KATHERINE VANCE
MacMULLAN
ANA D. MONNER SANS
French and Mediaeval Latin
CAROL EATON CLEMEAU
History
BETTY JANE WILDER ANDER-
SON, in absentia
MARY CONWAY HENDRICK-
SON
CHARLOTTE IRENE HALL
JANE JACKSON MARTIN
History of Art
MARGARET GRANGER HOW-
LAND
Latin .
JEAN ELIZABETH ALLISON
Mathematics
MIRIAM RUTH GORN
Music
ARTHUR PARRIS
Physics
STEPHEN ROSEN
Psychology
LEMABEL DRANGA
CAMBPELL
Sociolgy-Anthropology
AUDREY MARY FIELD
KYTJA KERWYN SCOTT,
“in “absentia
MASTER OF SOCIAL SERVICE
BEVELY A, ANZALONE
A. MAXINE BAUMHETER
SOLOMON MYER BROWN-
STEIN
NINA CHAIKEN
SYDNEY DICTOR
SISTER MILLICENT J. DRAKE
NOREEN ELIZABETH HALL
HAL BURTON HEATHERS
ROBERT N. KERBEL :
SALLY LYON
ROSE CAROLINE NIXON
MIDDLETON
ALBERT JOHN MOLITOR
_|mineteen authors?
|volume as a whole, pick out five
J}or six individuals or pieces, and
-|So does
by Richmond Lattimore
How can anyone review an issue
of a periodical containing thirty-
three items of verse and prose by
Describe the
let the rest be? Such is the fash-
ion in the quarterlies. Say some-
thing about everyone? It gives a
stringier. review, but seems more
honest. So:
Verse: Gretchen Jessup has a
wonderful ear, and when she can
arrange her images or..statements
in series, as in “Indéfinition,” the
result is an altogether successful
poem, “Mirage” is not nearly so
good, because cluttered in the mid-
dle with conflicting images. All
three of her poems have fine lines,
but there are unnecessary obscur-
ities. Helene Valabregue’s transla-
tions from Pushkin and Apollin-
aire seem competent but unexcited.
“Salt Water” has an attractive
central idea but can not be visual-
ized -in one picture. The same
might be said of Ottilie Pattison’s
“-Hope.” Jonathan Z. Smith has a
bold imagination, vigor and cour-
age, but the imagination gives out
when it comes to placing words.
It is not only a matter of too
many adjectives, but of arrang-
ing them; in “Sanctity,” seven of
the last eleven lines end in such
combinations as “mottled couch.”
“iridescent bird,’’ “grasping
bush”; in “Entrance,” they tend
to come two attributives to one
noun, like “haunted silver crow,”
“black defiling boar,” and, while
my tearing-out-of-context is ad-
mittedly unfair, the rhetorical
monotony does take away much
of the force the adjectives were
meant. to bestow. The same fault
(as I think of it) diminishes Joan
Caplan’s “Song of the Silent
Woman,” attractive though this is.
Cynthia Lovelace \ has made
“Grandfather’s Song” clear and
interesting from beginning to end,
but the end has lost the question-
ing urgency of the beginning
after an intractable image half
way down. It seems to be a first
draft of a quite exceptional poem.
Paula Dunaway’s “In
Africa.” The concept is very big,
but the catastrophe is not quite
seen, and the four-line repeat lacks
metrical force, so fails to help the
whole. “Today, Great Snow” shows
‘more of this poet’s accomplish-
|ment, but less of her true, un-
questioned, talent. Susan Fox has
made one poem which is, as far
as—tI__know, -entirely different in
kind from any other poem ever
made. There are four stanzas.
Each contains exactly the same
words as every other, and (except
for one word transferred from end
to beginning in the last stanza)
they are in exactly the same order.
By varying punctuation and cap-
italization she has produced four
different (propositions. It works.
In Joanne Field’s “Two Voices
under Omar’s Bough,” the sense
seems a bit beguiled by the fine
cadence in the lines themselves.
|The better of Elizabeth Nelson’s
Successful Spring ‘Revue’ Offers
~'Admirable Variety And Sincerity
two is “Anger,” a simple innocent
statement which comes out almost
all’ in one piece. “Squash,” by
Lorri MacPike, has no metrical
qualities whatever that I can de-
tect, but a good theme clearly
stated. The first of Barbara Kaye’s
two poems is too slight to recover
from both “turquoise sea” and
“golden coin,” but the second does
make a scene glimmer. “Fore-
Spring,” by Michael Roloff, is the
clearest case of a piece more _in-
telligent than expressive; he tells
us what to see and ‘feel, but he
doesn’t make us see and feel it.
All in all, the verse is an interest-
ing collection, not too traditional,
not too secondary, though some-
times, a bit too often in truth, the
effort shows through, and the
metre is (with a few exceptions)
uncertain.
Prose: The quality of the stor-
ies runs more even, the approach
to complete success is closer, than
in the verse. Three I find disting-
uished but not satisfying. Nancy
Dyér’s “In the Garden” seems in-
complete, not because it is badly
written, for it certainly is not,
but because it raises more char-
acters and issues than are ever
disposed of in two pages. Two be-
long to that most difficult and exas-
perating form, fantasy. These are
“Pierrot,” by Elizabeth Nelson,
and “A Night in the Jungle,” by
Elizabeth Carr. But they are quite
different. “Pierrot,” the sentiment-
al piece, written with simple com-
petence, yet seems a little affect-
ed. “A Night in the Jungle” some-
how disarms the charge that it is
over-writen by the fact that over-
writing is its whole component
nature, and there are a couple of
moments of sheer brilliance, but
not enough to bring the whole
thing off. The rest are successes.
“The General’s Horse,” by Frances
Hargrave, is a reminiscence of
childhood, quite imaginary, per-
haps, but the sound plain writing
and crystalline emotion make it
a very fine simple story. “The
Marshall Plan,” by Susan Gold, is
an engaging tale of the ordinary
family with its one screwball. All
it lacks is climax, but it does seem
to be life. The two remaining
pieces are closer to the conven-
tional short story, and they were
probably harder to do. “A Bunch
of Flowers,’ by Alexandra van
Wessem, shows the difficulties. It
is a little sentimental, and a little
cluttered with German phrases. It
is also very moving, and puts the
theme of “not by bread alone”
with some grace, if not with final
authority. Finally, in “Compas-
sion,” Jane Phillips not only tells
how a student in the hall got news
of her fiance’s fatal accident just
as if it had all happened, but also
pins down, very shrewdly and per-
end’s pleasure in taking and show-
ing pity, and doing it right.
Then there is the Revue, admir-
ably various, expert in assorted
degrees and successful with all
kinds of qualifications, but unpre-
dictably sincere, and full of life.
Class of ‘58 Exposes Various Plans
Marriage, Teaching, Travel and Work
Radnor Senior Plans
Peggy Carter will be married
this summer. Next year she’ll be
working and also taking a course
in archaeology at Columbia.
Donna Cochrane, too, plans to
be at Columbia, where she’ll use
her Wilson award studying under
the Russian and East Asian In-
stitutes in the Public Law and
Government School.
Naomi Cooks will do graduate].
work in contemporary literature
and art at Northwestern.
Connie Demis’s immediate
future includes a June wedding.
_|This summer she will study edu-
o of March 3, 1879.
“Continued on Page 3, Col. 3
cation in Conecticut under a “Spe
cial program which will prepare
her to teach first grade in New
London, Conn., in the fall.
Peter Dyer is looking forward
to..a_double academic life next
year: education courses at Har-
vard, history teaching in the
eighth grade of Brookline Junior
High School.
Lee Ellis’s wedding is set for
July. She’ll do graduate work in
history of art next year, and live
in Bryn Mawr.
Judy Kneen and her Wilson
award are headed for graduate
work in math at Radcliffe, after
a summer in the ionosphere lab
= --€ontinued on Page 4, Col.
haps not too obviously, her fri-
wet
deat
q
}
{
dn Year 1958-59
CES «Sanne eae a
Tuesday, June 3, 1958
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Three
Faculty Changes
To Be Effective
RESIGNATIONS
Joseph C. Sloane
University of North Carolina,
Juan Marichal (Semester TI)
Harvard University
Robert A. Rupen
University of North Carolina
APPOINTMENTS
Chemistry
Isabel Echikson
Reappoint._part-timeAssistant
Janice Gordon
Reappoint part-time Assistant
Adelaide Mauck
Reappoint part-time Assistant
Suzanne Peterson
Wilson College, A.B., 1958
Appoint part-time Assistant
Priscilla Carney
Wheaton College, A.B., 1958
Appoint part-time Assistant
Education
Mary Louise Lloyd
Reappoint part-time Assistant
English
Robert A. Wallace
Reappoint Instructor
German
Hertha Stephenson
Reappoint part-time Instructor
History of Art
Marianne Martin
Appoint part-time Instructor
Philosophy
Patricia Crowsley
St. Hugh’s College,
England
Appoint part-time Assistant
Helene Williams
Fanny Bullock Workman
Traveling Fellow
Appoint part-time Assistant
Social Work and Social Research
Bernard Ross, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor at Michigan
State University
Appoint Associate Professor of
Social Work
Oxford,
Congratulations
To The Graduates
From
RICHARD
STOCKTON
Bryn Mawr
Fashion M agazine
Cites M. Goodman
Miss Margaret Goodman of
Knoxville, Tennessee, a member of
the class of 1958, has been declar-
ed winner of an Honorable Men-
tion Award in Vogue’s 28rd an-
nual Prix de Paris, according to
Miss Jessica Daves, editor-in-chief
of Vogue.
Miss Goodman, who attended
St. Anne’s School in Charlottes-
ville, Virginia, has majored in Po-
litical Science. As winner of an
Honorable Mention Award in
Vogue’s contest for college sen-
iors, she will receive $25 cash and
top consideration for a job on one
of the Condé Nast publeations—
Vogue, Glamour, House & Garden,
Vogue Pattern Book, or Vogue
Knitting Book.
Vogue’s Prix de Paris, which
was begun in 1935, is the maga-
zine’s annual search for potential
editorial talent. among college
seniors. Participants completed
two quizzes of four questions
each, based on actual editorial
problems, Students who naswered
| both quizzes satisfactorily were
eligible to write a 1500 word
thesis on one of several topics
which appeared in the February 1
issue of Vogue,
M.S.S. Degrees
Continued from Page 2, Col. 3
KATHARINE SNYDER SASSE
ISABELLE LATORRE SCARAN
MARJORIE BENSON SULLIVAN
STELLA K. TRYKA
NAOMI TUMARKIN
Octangle Singers
Produce Record
The 1958 version of Bryn
Mawr’s nine-voiced “Octangle” has
this past month produced a re-
cording of eleven traditional songs
ranging from the standard “Come
Cheer For Our College” to an
impressive “Sophias” and “Pallas”;
from their perenniel and individu-
alistic “Anything Goes” to the
durable lyrics, “I Know Where [’m
Going” and “The Lily Reeds.”
If the greatest disappointment
in the majority of show song and
other small scale recordings pro-
duced in the past has been poor
quality and tone, Cynthia- Lovelace
is certainly to be commended for
excellent use of the tape recorder
in recording Octangle. The har-
mony, itself practically flawless,
is clearly captured on the record;
the effect is almost that of one
voice,
Members of the octangle this
year include Nina Thomas, Carol
Porter, Carolyn Morant, Cynthia
Grieg, Janis Wineberg, Jan Asch-
enbrenner, Angie Wishnack, Nancy
Renner and Linda Hampton.
The recording, a 45 r.p.m. disc,
is on sale at the Office of Public
Information for fifty cents.
Wilson Awards
Continued from Page 1, Col. 3
De Nie, Harvard, history; Susan
Fox, Harvard, Greek; Judith
Kneen, Harvard, mathematics;
Zoja Pavlovskis, Cornell, Greek
Seniors Present
Represent Varying BMC Attitudes:
by Freddy Koller
Class Day which was celebrated
last Friday noon, featured “The
Shade of M. Carey Thomas,” at
Taylor, a “scientific” operation at
Dalton, an authentic Bryn Mawr
Fire Drill at the Gym, and “The
Ghost of Bryn Mawr Past” and
“The Flesh of Bryn Mawr Pre-
sent” at the Library.
The program began anpraytt-
ately .enough, with a history of
Bryn Mawr College as told by the
“Shade of M. Carey Thomas” with
some assistance from her Guard-
ian Angel. The “shade” traced her
background and life before Bryn
Mawr (“Before Bryn Mawr was,
I am’), and her later plans for
the “emancipation of women.” A
few examples of different stages
in female evolution appeared, and
finally the last and highest evolved
—the May Basket toting, skipping
male May pole dancer of 1958.
At Dalton a more scientific ap-
proach to the problem was taken,
since the audience obs#rved an op-
eration in progress. This ‘unique
operation make use of the talents
of a surgon, equipped with a fen-
cing foil, a physicist, a mathema-
tician, a geologist, and some lab-
and Latin; Barbara Pinney,
Columbia, political science; Jean-
Class Day Skits:
oratory technicians, It was point-
ed out that this was even more
of a special*occasion for the Bio-
logists since it was the last day
that the Biology Department
would inhabit the “pre-historic
building” of Dalton Hall.
A Bryn Mawr fire drill, featur-
ing male runners, a fire engine,
and firemen was next on the pro-
was efficiently extinguished ‘ with
water guns, buckets, and sponges
This activity was accomplaned by
a trumpet solo of “To The May-
pole.’
The program of skits was cli-
maxed by the meeting of “The
Spirit of Bryn Mawr Past” with
the “Flesh of Bryn Mawr Pre-
sent.” The spirits exchanged views
on school life then and now; the
“Flesh” confided that Bryn
Mawrtyers are now known as
‘Bryn Morons.” The “spirit of the
past” spoke of all the traditions
and the scholarship for which
Bryn Mawr women were noted.
She bemoaned the unfortunate
change which had come over the
student of 1958 who majored in
matrimony. After the two spirits
compared Bryn Mawr Past and
Bryn Mawr Present and became
dissatisfied, the skit ended with
both trying to outsing each other,
nette Rider, Catherine Stimpson,
Helene Valebrague, Yale, French.
each praising the “virtues” of
their respective eras.
Continued "from Page 1, Col. 3
Marthe Fillman Smith
Eva Felicitas Sonnenberg
Geology
Judith Ann Dillenberg
Linda Vashti Jett
Katherine Milmine
Anne Pendleton Schaefer
_ German
Sarah Lark Twigger
Greek
Susan Mary Fox
Suzanne Stokes Jones
History
Effie Ambler
Henrie Jo Rubenstein Barth
Rhoda Simone Becker
Carol Ann Cannon
Elena Talcott Constantinople
Eliza -Middleton Cope
Atlantic States and Canada.
are available.
-———C AMP COUNSELLOR OPENINGS
_ — for Faculty, Students and Graduates —
THE ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS
. . - comprising of 250 outstanding Boys, Girls, Brother-Sister
and Co-Ed Camps, located throughout the New England, Middle
..- INVITE YOUR INQUIRES concerning summer employment
-as Counsellors, Instructors or Administrators. : os
', .. POSITIONS in children’s campus, in all areas of activities,
WRITE, OR CALL IN PERSON:
ASSOCIATION OF PRIVATE CAMPS Dept. C
55 West 42nd Street, Room 743
New York 36, N. Y.
wer ew rr rw wwwwvwwwww
will
rT wewewrwewewewewrewrewrwrelweeweoe
DODO PPP LDP LP LP LP PLP LDL re,
World-Famous
DDD DDD DDB
}
}
ESPECIALLY FOR...
June Graduates
i, A jewel from Van Cleef & Arpels
hyp is the ideal gift to receive at grad-
uation. Its beauty and significance
jewels at our“Paris Jewel Boutique” _
are priced from $100 to $1,000.
VAN CLEEF « ARPELS
a“ oy _ n.,
3 Penis Jewel Bouh (aa
Our new gift departments
New York at Bergdorf Goodman « Palm Beach, 249 Worth Avenue « Paris
~~
_wTwwwuevrevevuvvwvevwvevwvwvwvwvww",
live with you forever. Precious
‘_wTwrvwTvrryrwTww
OD PEP PP POPPI PAPA ABDP-
French Jewelers
OOD DIP PD PPD
Giselle DeNie
Nancy Corinne Dyer
Martha Fuller
Anne Theresa Furey
Frances Ann Haffner
Elizabeth Ann Hill
Ann Hudson
Ann Ellen Lackritz
Deborah Palmer Flint Longmaid
Judith Clare Meinhardt
Patricia Louise Page
Eve Pell
Joan Aiko Shigekawa
Virginia Ione Stewart
Anne Harrison Van Arkel
Anne Parker Wake
Sara Jane Weinstein, in absentia
History of Art
Laura Rockefeller Case
Maxine Meyer DeSchauensee
Paula Pond Dunaway
I
JOYCE LEWIS
Goodbye & Good Luck '
To The Class Of ‘58
Anna Scott Farnum
Elizabeth Williams Fulbright
Marisa Josephine Gori
Ellen Russell Lewis
Leora Ann Luders
Elizabeth Purcell Nelson
Denckla Sheffield
Leigh Elka Scott
Katharine Hereford Bowie
Stoddert
Elizabeth DeSabato Swinton
Cornelia Anne Thomas
Italian
Julia Elisabeth Ramberg
Latin
Zoja Pavlovskis
Mathematics
Naomi Bograd
Lee Clafin Ellis
Judith Folger Kneen
Jennifer McShane
: Music
Marjolyn DeBeus
Leslie Mary Kandell
‘Rosemarie Janet Said
Anne Helene Sprague
Marianne McDonald Weissenberg,
in absentia
BRYN MAWR
Breakfast
Luncheon
Afternoon Tea
Dinner
Sunday Dinner
SPECIAL PARTIES AND
Telephone
LAwrence 5-0386
‘COLLEGE INN
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY
9:00-11:00 A.M.
12:00 - 2:00 P.M.
3:30 - 5:00- P.M.
5:30 - 7:30. P.M.
12:00 - 7:30 P.M.
BANQUETS ARRANGED
Lombaert St. and Morris Ave.
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania
EUROPE BOUND THIS SUMMER
EUROPE BY CAR OFFERS FOUR PLANS ENABLING YOU
TO HAVE A CAR ABROAD THIS SUMMER:
1. Purchase-Repurchase
Buy any new foreign car with repurchase guaran-
teed in dollars.
2. Unlimited Milage Rental:
Pay only a monthly fee, no milage charge or limita-
tion.
3. Regular Rental:
Pay the usual daily or weekly fee. ve
4. Buy any new foreign car at FACTORY price and bring
it home with you...
at a great savings.
For information, call or write:
RICHARD WATTS ‘59
423 Cuyler Hall
WA 1-9468
Princeton University
ALAN BENDELIUS WA 4-4908
Bachelor of Arts Degrees; Class of 1958
Philosophy
Martha Sylvia Bridge
Elizabeth Musser’ Dixon,
in absentia
Avis Lou Fleming
Sylvia Margrit Jacoby
Ruth Kaiser
Grace Anita Labouchere
Susan Safier
Helene Elizabeth Valabregue
Grace Gibson van Hulsteyn
Elizabeth Grace Vermey
Susan Opstad White
Physics
Suzanne Myers
Nancy Sherman Rosenberg
Political Science
Donna Elizabeth Cochrane
Barbara Orlinger Einhorn |
Marilyn Frankel
Margaret Luttrell Goodman
Virginia Alban Mills
Barbara Eloise Pinney .
Ghida Moussa Shabandar
Mariellen Smith __
Margery Schuyler Wolcott
Mary Skinner Woodward
Psychology
Rochelle Marcia Eskin
Judith Robertson
Jane Dodd Rouillion
Mary Adrian Tinsley
Russian
Elinor Newlin Amram
Pauline Kleinbard Goldstein
Margot Merrel Torbert
Sybille von Bulow, in absentia
Sociology-Anthropefogy
Constance Demis
Sandra Elisabeth Grant
Caren Sue Meyer
Barbara Louise Mitnick
Joyce Howard Sargent
Lucia F. B.. Sowers
Gita Zabarkes Wilder
Spanish
‘Nancy English
Cicely Ann Hicks Meaker
Nan VanKuren Sheey
gram at the Gym. The “blaze” .
Congratulations
and
The Best Of Luck
i. ae
From :
DINAH
; FROST
See eee
go pcg gee eat tag he
irre
Page Four
THE COLLEGE NEWS
1958 Seniors
Continued from Page 2, Col. 5
at Penn State.
Kitty Milmine will also be at
Radcliffe, studying for her M.A.
in vetebrate paleontology. Her
summer plans, appropriately
enough, include field work in
western United States, in verte-
brate paleontology. Judy and
Kitty, incidentally, are already
planning the May Day festivities
which they hope to hold next year
in Harvard Yard, and to which all
dedicated Bryn Mawrters_ are
cordially invited. Please wear
white and bring your own stream-
er.
Sue Myers will further her phy-
sies education at Brandeis Univer-
sity.
Lucia Sowers plans to study for
a M.A. in anthropology at Uni-
versity College there in London,
Debby Zimskind is transferring
her vast joke (7?) collection to
Women’s Medical College of Penn-
sylvania,
Pem West Seniors
Elinor Amram—Job in Philadel-
phia.
Lois Callahan — Graduate stu-
dent at Bryn Mawr, teaching job
at Baldwin. :
Eliza Cope—Undecided.
Madonna Faulkner — Graduate
student in Biology in London.
Margaret Goodman—Job in a
TV station in Knoxville, Tnnessee.
Frances Haffner Traveling
around world.
Ann Hudson—Will be married.
Suzanne Jones—Student at Uni-
versity of Chicago Theological
Seminary.
Caren Meyers—Job in Chicago.
Ottilie Pattison — Job some-
where.
Eve Pell—May model or get a
job in Washington.
Marian - Perret—Graduate ~ Stu-
dent in English at Yale.
Julia Ramberg — Assistant to
the Dean of Sophomores and
Freshmen at Radcliffe.
Denckla Sheffield—Undecided.
Anne Sprague—Job hunting in
New York.
Nina Thomas—Europe for the
summer.
Anne Wake—Will be married in
September.
Katy Westervelt — Job as a
chemist in the Mellon Institute
in Pittsburgh.
Leslie Burgiel—Studying langu-
ages or political science at the
University of Geneva,
Elena Constantinople — Living
and probably working in Washing-
ton, D. C.
Deborah Longmaid—Joining her
husband in Bangkok,
Grace Van Hulsteyn — “In the
market for something interesting.”
Betsy Nelson—Curator of photo-
graphs at Yale University.
Patricia Page—M.A. from Har-
vard teacher training program.
Linda Jett—Living in Washing-
ton, D. C., hoping to get a job
there.
Ayako Hasabe — Studying ad-
vanced Russian during the summer
at Colby College, Maine, then
travelling and visiting friends be-
fore returning to Tokyo in Sep-
tember. In the winter, she will
either teach English at Case En-
gineering College, act as an Eng-
lish and Russian interpreter at the
Embassy, or study philosophy at
the International Christian Uni-
versity.
Ghida Shabandar—With Leslie
Burgiel, at the University of
Geneva. Like Leslie, she is waver-
ing between languages and poli-
tical. science,
Ellen Lewis—Hoping to get a
job, but isn’t sure what.
Grace Labouchere Getting
married, and wants to get a job
too.
Eleanora Sorrentino — Harvard
Medical School.
Virginia Stewart
teaching. at Wesleyan.
Elizabeth Vermey—Undecided.
Estill Barksdale—Undecided.
Rock Seniors
Anna Kisselgoff — summer in
Russia with the Experiment in
International Living; year in Paris
at School of Oriental Languages.
Dodie Stimpson — summer at
Stratford on Avon School of Eliz-
abethan Drama; year in Newnham
College Cambridge on Fulbright.
Susie Safier—summer in Austria
with Experiment’ in International
M.A. in
Reveal
Living.
Anne Lackritz — summer at
Aspen Music Festival in Colorado;
next year Harvard Teaching pro-
gram.
Phyllis Sonnenberg — return to
Argentina this summer; next year
work in New York.
Anne Keller—will teach music
in summer camp, next year Yale
Graduate School in Microbiology.
Judy——Meinhardt—summer __ job;
next year Yale M.A.T. program.
Marty Fuller — German School
at Middlebury, next year may go
abroad.
Parvaneh Modaber — Women’s
Medical ‘College in Philadelphia.
Rhoda Becker — married and
teaching.
Liz Hill—maygied.
Tulsa Kaiser Pmarried
Judy Mercuri—job in New York
Center for cancer research.
Zola Pavlovskis—will take her
Wilson Fellowship in Latin and
Greek at Cornell.
Wyndham
Corrie Starks—Graduate school
in London.
Ginny Mills—plans to find a job.
Kitty Stoddert—will find a job.
Paula Dunaway—Yale Graduate
School.
Ann Farnum — plans to work
next year.
Helene Valabrague—will take her
Wilson Fellowship in French at
Yale.
Rhoads South
Sue Band has been awarded a
fellowship to Brandeis where she
will be doing graduate work in
Biology.
Martha Bridge will be in Har-
vard Medical School.
Ellie Clymer will be attending
the Medical College’ of* Virginia.
Maxine de Schauensee will be
working at the Philadelphia Mu-
seum of Art.
Marisa Gori will be in. fashion
retailing executive training for
either a New York or Boston
store.
Betsy Gott will be in Europe for
the summer after which her plans
are uncertain,
Leslie Kandell will be doing hos-
pital work in New York.
rise Tuesday, June 3, 1958 |
Future Plans
Maxine Lazarus will have a
graduate assistantship in Chem-
istry at M.I.T.
Sue Levin will be married and
working in New York.
Barbara Mitnick will be doing
social work in a Philadelphia hos-
pital.
Jane Rouillion will be a research
assistant in a Biology laboratory
in the American Museum of Nat-
ural History in New York.
Anne Schaefer will be spending
the summer in Europe after which
her plans are uncertain.
Pat Sugrue’s plans are -uncer-
tain.
Sara White will’ be married and
teaching in the region of Ann
Arbor, Michigan.
Maddie Wolfe is being married
in June after wihch she will be a
research assistant at the Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania * Medical
School and will attend graduate
schoo Ithere in General Physiology.
Merion
Leone Graff is getting married.
Judy Dillenburg has no definite
plans.
Sylvia Jacoby has no definite
plans.
Joyce Sargent has no definite
plans.
Naomi .Bograd is going to do
graduate work in Math at Cornell.
Anita Luise is going to do grad-
uate work in Chemistry at Colum-
bia.
Non-Resident
Gwen Gentile—Temple Univer-
sity Medical School.
Laura Case—Bryn Mawr grad-
uate school.
Rochelle Eskin — Bryn Mawr
graduate school.
Marthe Smith—Columbia grad-
uate school.
Barbara Einhorn—teaching.
Sybille von Bulow—yYale gradu-
ate school.
Llynda Hinds—Women’s Medical
School.
Marjorie Colvin— summer lab.
assistant for Dd. Conner in Bio-
logy. :
Nancy English—married.
Maxine Lewis—teaching public
school.
Denbigh
Effie Ambler—No definite plans.
Carol Cannon — Working for
M.A. in Education at Wesleyan
University (Ohio) for two years.
Marjolyn DeBeus—Working. in
the music field in New York and
saving for’a trip to Moscow the
following year.
Giselle DeNie—Working toward
Ph.D. in medieval history at Rad-
cliffe on a Wodrow Wilson Fellow-
ship.
Avis Fleming — Attending the
Rhode Island School of Design this
summer and may continue there
in the fall.
Sue Fox—Studying clasiscs at
Radcliffe, working toward an M.A,
on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship
Linda’ Hampton—travelling.
Eila Hanni — Working toward
Ph.D. in economics at Yale on a
fellowship to qualify for economic
research in Europe.
Leora Luders — Teaching dance
at Pembroke College while taking
courses at the Rhode Island School
of Design or working as executive
trainee at Bonwit Teller, New
York,
Judy Malm—Probably teaching
biology in private schoo] using her
own system of teaching, then go-
ing to medical school the mext
year.
Jennifer McShafie — Working
toward M.A. at Radcliffe in field
of mathematics.
Judy Robertson — Exchanging
last name for Cressy and may be
teaching psychology in Boston.
Adrian Tinsley—Studying drama
at the University of Bristol in
England on a Fulbright grant.
Sally Twiggar—Teaching Ger-
man and English in the Jr.-Sr.
High Schoo] in Ridley Park, Pa.
Senior Prizes
Continued from Page 1, Col. 3
egsay in European or World His-
tory presented to Giselle de Nie.
Patricia Page received the Eliza-
beth Duane Gillespie Prize in
American History. Miss Page was
the winner of the Gillespie Under-
graduate American History Prize
on May Day 1956.
Salem refreshes your taste
A new idea in smoking...
, yl «menthol fresh ‘
we e rich tobacco taste |
aos tt ke
arctic timitnsenin tie pnp
a
Created by B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company
«Refreshing! Yes, the smoke of a Salem is as refreshing to your taste as a dew- ie
sparkled Spring morning is to you! Now get the rich tobacco taste you love, with
a new surprise so
ae
filter low the freshest taste in cigarettes. You take a puff... it’s Springtime!
ftness and easy comfort. Through Salem’s pure-white modern
» most modern filter
ide nS da
Smoke refreshed... Smoke Salem
EE pe Aan A Ra RN EE cee se
College news, June 3, 1958
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1958-06-03
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 44, 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-vol44-no24