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“ward Band, come on weekends,-so-
- last month when she had to talk
~ every 17th room im the new dorm.
DME ME trvcem,, Be
VOL. XLV—NO. 21
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR, PA., MONDAY, MAY 2, 1960
© Trustees of Bryn Muwr College, 1960
PRICE 20 CENTS
~~ Year’s
Top Academic Awards Honor Two Physics Majors;
- Melinda Flory Wins Brooke Hall, Hinchman To Jean Hebb
May Queen’s Speech
Chessman Alias Reveals
“Dope on
never quite so thrilling.
this. .place.
took a taxi.
I’m here now and, having eaten a
frustrating breakfast at the Col-
lege Inn, “one of the better eating
places on the Main Line” (better
than what, I wonder?) it’s time to
get on with the show.
Folks, for its year of celebration
Bryn Mawr has been abnormally
active..In fact, the students have
been so busy with affairs of a
political nature that the Deans
have granted a year’s leave of
absence to all those wishing to
catch up on current events. As
for (Miss McBride, ‘she’s been mak-
ing so many speeches lately that
at two different functions on the
same day, she told a Senate com-
mittee she needed white oxen and:
told Bryn Mawr’s Board of Trus-
tees to support Radcliffe. The price
of fame, I guess. ‘As for the fac-
ulty, their activity has centered
around avoiding the students’
pleas for a faculty show.
Oh, say, there goes a girl that
looks familiar. (Where have I seen
her before? ‘Why, yes, of course
—on television. Oh (Miss, what.
ever became of the money you
won on that show? What’s that
you say? It’s gone for the protec-
tion of the student body? Protec-
tion from what? Oh, prowlers—
and they’re getting younger and
handsomer every time, huh?
What’s Miss Biba’s solution? Oh,
I see—you can be sure if it’s
Westinghouse. Well, thank you
very much,
There’s plenty of building and
maintenance activity too. I under-
stand it looked like God’s little
acre in front of the library this
fall and now they’re working on a
do-it-yourself stacked underworld.
(Miss Howe just got back from a
trip to Alaska to inspect their re-
frigeration solutions. She’s think-
ing of installing deep freezes in
Even though it’s never been done
before,
It’s surprising how many young
men JI can see today from where
I’m standing. Maybe this campus
isn’t as bad off as Life magazine
led ys to believe. Of course, though,
I have a friend who came to Phil-
adelphia last weekend only to dis-
cover it was closed. But, while
Haverford boys are only five-day
lovers, men groups, such as Har-
life can’t be too difficult. The stu-
dents who aren’t engaged or mar-
ried by the time they’re sopho-
mores have formed a group known
Campus Activity |
Good morning, Ladies and Gentlemen, Misters and Mistresses.
This is your roving reporter Miss Carol Chessman, and I’ve decided at
last to tell the truth. Today the program is coming to you from the
Bryn Mawr campus, an isolated prairie of eccentricity and quaint
charm, where this morning the students are holding a mass demon-
stration in support of ‘Mother Nature.
I had somewhat of a difficult time finding
I drove first into the Presbyterian Church, but it wasn’t
until a hearse pulled up that I realized the Converse House wasn’t a
language dorm, Then when I arrived here there wasn’t a place to park,
the students having filled all the places, so I left the car in town and
What a harrowing experience that was.
Continued on Page 4, Col. 2
Mayday in Red Square was
Well, anyway,
Graduates Receive
BMC Fellowships
Each year the Coilege awards, | |
on the basis of academic excel-
lence, about sixty grants for grad-
uate study to women who are
graduates of accredited colleges
or universities. Some awards are
open to men on the same basis.
Those awards which have gone to
women who have completed work
at Bryn Mawr are:
Samuel 8S. Fels Fellowship (value
$3000), Hsio-Yen Shih of Chicago, IIl.,
for the study of History of Art (A.B.
Wellesley College 1955; M.A, Univer-
sity of Chicago 1958; Bryn Maw)
College 1958-).
The Fanny Bulock Workman Trav-
elling Fellowship, (value $2000), Anne
Coftin Garson, of Bryn Mawr, Pa., for
the study of History of Art (B.F.A.
University of Southern California
1943; Bryn Mawr College 1958-).
Graduate Fellowships (value $2300),
Barbara Landry of -St. Davids, Pa
—in Chemistry, (A.B. University of
Pennsylvania 1957; M.A. candidate,
Bryn Mawr College’ 1960).
Celia Zavitz of Bryn Mawr, Pa.—
in Chemistry, (A.B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1959;.M.A. candidate 1960).
Adele Johnson of Aurora, Ill—in
English, - (A.B. University of Illinois
1958; M.A. Bryn Mawr College 1959).
Ann Fagan of Naperville, lil—in
History, (A.B. Carleton College 1959 ;
it v ). candidate, Bryn Mawr College
Ljubica Popovich of Washington,
D.C.—in History of Art, (University
of Belgrade 1950-55; Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1958-).
Carol Clemeau of Glen Ellyn, ee
in -Latin, (A‘B: Oberlin College 1957;
M.A. Bryn Mawr College 1958).
JoAnn McDonald of Columbus, Ohio
—in Latin, (A.B. Bryn Mawr College
1953; M.A. Ohio State University
1955; B.A, Oxford University 1958).
Maureen Fennell of New York City
—in Mediaeval Studies, (A.B. Hunter
College 1958; M.A. candidate, Bryn
Mawr College 1960), (Howard L. Good-
hart Fellowship).
Milnor Alexander.of.Camp_ Hill, Pa.
—in Political Science, (A.B. University
of Pennsylvania 1946; M.A. 1950),
(Justus C, Strawbridge Fallewahtp).
Barbara Hornum of Philadelphia
Pa.—in Sociology and Anthropology,
(A.B. Bryn Mawr College 1956; M.A.
candidate 1960).
Mary Ann Robbins of White Plains,
N. Y:—in Latin, (A.B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1959; M.A, candidate, University
of North Carolina 1960).
Madoline Stone of Amarillo, Texas
—in Philosophy, (A.B. Newcomb Col-
lege 1957; M.A. Bryn Mawr College
1959
i Germen of Istanbul, Turkey
—in Sociology and Anthropology, (A.B.
to be confered, Bryn Mawr College
1960).
Deborah Zuckert of Brooklyn, N, Y.
—in Spanish, (A.B. Brooklyn College
1958; M.A. Bryn Mawr College 1959).
Tuition Scholarships—(value $1000)
Gita Z. Wilder of Camden, N.
in Education, (A.B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1958; M.A, niaiaatn Brown Uni-
versity 1960).
Emily Wallace of Bryn Mawr, Pa.—
in English. (A.B. Southeast Missouri
State College 1958; M.A. Bryn Mawr
College 1959).
Lynne L. Gelber of Philadelphia, Pa.
—in French, (A.B. to be conferred,
Mawr College 1960).
of. re, Pa.
—in German, e con erred,
Bryn Mawr Co lege 1960).
Priscilla Cohn of ‘Wayne, Pa.—in
Philosophy, (A.B. to be conferred,
Bryn Mawr College 1960).
Janet Hoopes of Lansdowne, Pa.—
‘|tainment was Arts Council’s pres-
Physicist Handled
Work In Bell Labs’
“Melinda Flory, winner of the
Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall
Memorial (Scholarship for the
highest average in the junior class,
is a physics major planning grad-
uate work and, eventaully, a ca-
reer in physics.
Though she has not yet shaken
any special area of concentration
MELINDA FLORY
in the field, she has already had
some ‘practical experience.
summer she held a job in the Bell
Laboratory—an unusual feat for
a sophomore—and worked on a
Bell commuters.
the Bell labs again this summer.
burgh, Pa., is not the only scien-
chemistry and her sister (Susan
Last | j
project concerned wtih the large}:
She will work in|.
Melinda, who hails from Pitts-
tific member of her family; her|:
father is a professor of physical]
Flory ’59), a student of mathe-
matics.
Winner Practiced
Research Methods
Winner of the Hinchman award
for special excellence in her major
subject, Jean Hebb approaches a
career in physics with a back-
ground of a summer’s experience
in research methods. She was last
year the only Bryn Mawr sopho-
more to take part in the program
of the National Science Founda-
tion whose grant enabled her to
assist Dr. (Michaels and a grad
student in a project on the behav-
ior of ions,
Jean, holder of an honorary
General Motors National Scholar-
ship, is a graduate of the Bryn
Mawr ‘School in Baltimore, Mary-
land, \She is a member (appropri-
ately enough) of the Science Club
and a former hall-rep to Inter-
faith. Her scientific talents not
confined to the lab, Jean has oc-
casionally covered lectures on sub-
jects in her field for the News.
JEAN HEBB
by Krist’ne Gilmartin
An aesthetic evening’s enter-
entation of Robert Bagg, “A love-
ly young poet”, reading his poems,
published and unpublished, in the
Common Room on April 27. Mr.
Bagg, a graduate of Amherst, is
the youngest recipient of the Prix
de Rome.
He first read “my only poem on
coming into a new town.” This
revealed his marrative style, lush
and full of--images. His witty
sense of humor flashed out in his
amusing comment on Robert
Bridges and Ezra Pound,
Descriptions of nature in the
poems were especially striking:
about a thrush plummeting “like
a dead ball that wouldn’t bounce,”
a deer with “muscles eddying at
cross purposes” before leaping. A
classical flavor was also mnotice-
(“Apollo ahd Daphnis” with a neat
crack about knocking on wood, and
‘(Nausicaa and Venus”) and in his
in Psychology, (A.B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1944; * Clin. Psych. University
of Michigan, 1948). :
st seh ho EAE CELE Toe ea Tea aN ee
Catullus-like erotic quality.
‘ “The Tandem Ride”, which Mr.
pins cans Seertarnatanaet ecaomerr to Sarat nsea tee eae cerce eee
Critic Notes Bagg’s Imagery,
Praises ‘Lovely Young Poet’
Bagg wrote to read at Amherst
and read here because “they said
‘you might like to know what goes
on up there,” concerned a “fairy
child”, a witch of a girl, and her
two admirers, the poet and his
friend, Its comments on frater-
nity life — “his mouth il, a
with potato chips”—elicited latigh-
ter and its whole-hearted enjoy-
ment of youth and life pleased.
A phrase from the poem which he
read next, “the casua] pleasure
and sunny confusion of her life”,
also expressed this feeling.
Mr. Bagg concluded with an
elegy for a friend who died, very
young, of cancer. _ After quoting
from Greek epitaphs, he described
their friendship; both liked “three-
pound symposiums of grapes and
plums.” He would “drink palmfuls
;| of -fity-friend’s life” in the future,
he said. Certainly this future
holds great promise for Mr, Bagg
and a welcome freshness and
beauty for his auditors and read-
ers.
Announcement of scholarship
awards for the/coming year to 148
undergraduates was made at this
morning’s assembly by President
McBride. Fellowships for medical
study and special prizes were also
announced.
The two top awards this year
both went to students majoring in
physics. (Melinda Susan Flory
winning the Brooke Hall Memorial
Scholarship for the highest aver-
age. The Hinchman Scholarship,
awarded for excellence of work in
‘the major subject went to Jean
Hebb,
The Elizabeth S. Shippen Schol-
arship in ‘Science was divided be-
tween Sandra Chook, a biology ma-
jor, and Carole Loeb for chem-
istry; the Elizabeth S. Shippen
Scholarship in Language went to
Marilyn May, a Russian major.
The Sheelah Kilroy Memorial
Scholarship in English, awarded
for excellence of work in second-
ary or advanced courses in Eng-
lish was received by Lois Potter.
Mary Johnson received the Kilroy
prize for the best egsay written
in Freshman composition,
The Elizabeth Duane Gillespie
Prize in American History was
awarded to Nan Jamieson. The
Academy of American Poets Prize
and the Bain-Swigget Poetry
»| Prize, were both received by Joanne
;| Field, who also received them last
year.
Honorable mention for the
Bain-Swigget Poetry Prize was
awarded to Jane Hess. Toby Lan-
gen was awarded the Katharine
Fullerton Gerould Memorial Prize.
The list of Scholarship recipients
follows:
Scholarships to be held in the
Senior Year
Maria L. Eastman Brooke Hall Me-
morial Scholarship, awarded to the
member of the junior class with the
highest average, Melinda Ann Flory
of Pittsburgh, Bin ge hs ay (Ithaca
High School. Ithaca, N. Y.)
Charles 8. Hinchman Memorial
cial excellence in the major subject,
andGeneral Motors National Scholar-
ship (Honorary) Mathilde Jeannette
Hebb of Butler, Maryland. (Bryn
Mawr School, Baltimore,) Bryn Mawr
School Scholar, 1957-58; General Mo-
tour _— Scholar (Honorary),
4 -60.
Elizabeth 8. Shippen Scholarship
in Science, awarded for excellence of
work in science, (divided) between
Sandra Ann Chook of Newton, Mas-
(Newton High School,)
Ann Loeb of Rockaway
Park, New York, (Far Rockaway
High School.)
Bryn Mawr Club of Southern Cal-
ifornia Scholarship, Diana Marie Bur-
gess of Pasadena, California. (John
Muir High School,) Lillia Babbitt
Hyde Foundation Scholar, 1957-58;
Special Scholar, 1958-59; Special
Southern California Scholar, 1959-
60; Bryn Mawr Club of Southern
California Scholar, 1957-60.
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, Catherine Lee Clarke of York,
Nebraska, (York: High School,) Seven
College Conference Scholar, 1957-60.
Chinese Scholarship and Special
Cassandra C
sachusetts.
and Carol
Scholarship, Amy
of Hong Kong, China. (Diocesan
Girl’s School, Hong Kong,) Chinese
Scholar, 1957-60; James E. Rhoads
Memorial Junior mT etl 1959-60;
Special Scholar, 1957-59.
Florence and Dorothy Child Me-
morial Scholarship, Roberta Lee Pi-
zor of Merion, Pennsylvania, (Lower
Merion High School.)
Proctor and Gamble Scholarship
and ‘Anna M. Powers Memorial Scho-
larship, Kathleen Ann Livezey of
Norman,. Oklahoma. (Norman. High
School,) District VI. Alumnae Re-
gianal Scholar and Evelyn and Car-
oline Warram - Bryn. Mawr Scholar,
1957-58; Mary Anna Lo reth Me-
morial Scholar, 1958-5 George
Bates Hopkins Memorial Scholar and
Procter and Gamble Scholar, 1959-60.
Marguerite N. Farley Sehotaceniy,
Maria Dolores.
ico City, Mexico. (Liceo Franco Mex-
icano,) Marguerite N. Farley Scholar,
1959-60.
French Government
Brearley School,) Anne Dunn (Brear-
ley School) Scholar, 1957-58.
ued on Page 4, Col. 1
Scholarship, awarded for work of spe-.
Lana Deviak of New ey City. (The_.
took top place in the junior class, -
e
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Monday, May 2, 1960
THE COLLEGE NEWS
FOUNDED IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during
Tganksgiving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examina-
tidn weeks) in tne 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 whoily or/in part without permission of the Editor-in-Chief.
EDITORIAL BOARD
Editor-in-Chief
Copy Editor
Associate Editor
Make-up Editor
News Editor
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Marion Coen,
Susan Nelson,
"Isa Brannon,
Susan Szekley,
‘ Judy. Stuart,
Alison Baker,
|
eee eee eee ere reeenens
Sree eeeresteeessece
EDITORIAL STAFF
Mary Ann Amdur, ‘63; Janice Copen, ‘63; Kristine Gilmartin, ‘63; Bonnie
Miller, “63; Suzy Spain, ‘63; Helen Angelo, ‘63; Helen Davis, ‘63; Berna
Landsman, ‘63.
Business Manager ................00;
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Entered as second class matter at the Ardmore, Pa., Post Office, under the Act
of March 3, 1879,
Intoxication —- Self-Goy-Sanctioned
One-two-three-hop. There’s no mistaking what's back.
Seasonal intoxication finally acknowledged. Feeling fertile?
Feeling nostalgic? Lively, sprightly, gay? Here is'a chance
to vent it in hallowed form.
Progress hasn’t entirely bypassed our merrie olde Eng-
land with Welsh and Classical overtones.
action and reaction.
It sweeps with
While the undergraduates broad-mind-
edly sanction constructive brotherly participation, since par-.
ticipation has proved itself inevitable, and therefore con
seems preferable to de, the graduates revert to a strict inter-
pretation of this delightfully motley festivity and ban their
men from the Maypole. In fact they seem to have banned
their women as well.
Maybe in a more ¢asual year, with
courage, they will unwind from cobwebbed corners with the
rest of us, to trip, whether in modern clumsiness or Eliza-
bethan gaiety, and curtsey on the grass.
Mayday trips in every year, bringing with it baskets of
flowers, song, dance, scholarship awards, and pageantry. But
it comes only every seventy-five years or so with hopes of
whitewashed cows, with plays performed on terrain which
triumphantly ignores the prerogatives of gravity, a date
which triumphantly ignores the laws of divided time, and a
few extra bursts of foot and vocal work.
Whether the manifestation is more or less, the roots
remain the same. As Marie Antoinette milked her cows, so
we dance around our Maypoles. With a happily conglomerate
ritual of classical and Elizabethan praise; entered into in
spirits ranging from aloof amusement to exultant abandon,
Bryn Mawr will trip through another Mayday with its usual
dignity.
A. B,
Geological Invasion Provides
‘Eminently’ Tangible Souvenirs
by Alison Baker
“This place is lousy with wom-
en,” commented a little boy, look-
ing on as dusty hordes of Geology
101 went at his cliff with hammers
bared, Later one of his friends,
im justified alarm, added, “They’re
invading us!”
Reactions to this invasion var-
ied according to point of attack.
In Easton, college welcomed col-
lege, with precedent-breaking re-
sults. In Hazleton, church-goers
stared speechless at the begrimed
diggers lounging expansively be-
tween bus and hotel door.
As for the invaders, most of
them went at their work with hap-
py tolerance, some with excite-
ment, some with desperate resig-
nation, Armed with picks, for
self-defense, attack and a variety
of subsidiary uses, we folled
through miles of beautiful country
in the buses. Then, just as the
road narrowed into some dusty old
sand pit, the buses would grind to
a stop and, with instructions of
“take everything this time,” we
would collect everything within
reach, including reluctant seat-
mates, and get out to charge across
the road under the~-wheels—of
speeding trucks. a
The results of the jaunt were
many, and some eminently tan-
gible. For Mr. Watson, a severe
case of pneumonia, for Mr. Dry-
den undoubtedly symptoms of ner-
vous prostration, for the rank and
file a few crumbling fossils, a
bruised thumb where someone
stepped on it or hit it with a pick,
a stomach ache from the Pennsyl-
vania Dutch dinner, and night-
mares for a week of anticlines
plunging just like a canoe, of rocks
slipping, dipping, folding and
crushing packs of helpless geol-
ogists.
Cy
Mayday Events
THE ANTIPODES, this year’s May Day Play will be presented
on Monday evening in back of Goodhart. It will follow the exhibition
of Morris dancing which will be given at 6:45, The English farce was
written in 16388 by Brome, and deals with a young man, played by
“Mary Johnson, who has
married for three years but has mever
slept with his wife. He is a dreamer, and one of the places he dreams
of is the Antopodes. A doctor (Joan Paddock) dopes him and makes
him believe he is in the Antipodes although he is still in the house of
LeToy (Arlene Beberman). The play is being directed by Bebe Kipp
_with the aid of Mary Johnson and Annette Eustis.
by Helen Davis
There will be neither lads nor
grads dancing around the May
Pole this year. In spite of the
two-year-old tradition of white-
colored, yellow-sashed young men
participating in the dances, this
year’s graduate students have vot-
ed. against inviting their male
colleagues to join them. The feel-
ing is that it would be inappro-
priate, indeed a travesty of the
ceremony, to have males dancing
around the May Pole. Since there
are not enough graduate females
to make up a dance group, this
year’s May Day will be sadly
without graduate representatives.
Lads ands Grads Demur:
Farewell, Five-Pole Fete
In 1958, there was also a short-
age of female dancers. At that
time, it was suggested that the
male graduate students supplement
the group. This idea was executed
with notable success, There seems,
however, to be a reactionary wind
adrift on the graduate center hill,
for a two years’ precedent has been
deemed insufficient to amend an
ancient fertility rite.
Alas, we shall miss the yellow
socks and sashes; but those who
insist upon the traditional signifi-
cance and symbolism of the May
Pole will surely be aesthetically
relieved.
Hans Gal Flies Here from Scotland
by Kristine Gilmartin
A musical visitor with an in-
ternational flavor spent a few
days at Bryn (Mawr last week.
Hans Gal is the composer of “A
Clarion Call,” which the college
chorus premiered at the dinner on
April 20 honoring Miss McBride.
Mr. Gal and I talked briefly in
the Music Room where remnants
of the chorus were having a final
rehearsal, Small and thin with
grey hair and a gentle smile, he
seemed slightly bewildered—an
understandable result of a first
visit to the United States. His
adjective for America was “tremen-
dous.” (Born and educated —in
Vienna, (Mr. ;Gal has been teach-
ing music at the University of
Edinburgh since 1988. He flew
back to Scotland on Friday and
mentioned no specific future plans,
for “one never knows) if they
~will work out.”
Instrumental Music
Although Mr. Gal confessed that
female choir is his favorite med-
ium, he has composed as much in-
strumental as vocal music. In
comparing the two he said, “One
is a relief from the other. They
require two different styles of
writing. It is a disaster to write
instrumentally for voices.”
Musical Tradition
In respect to musical tradition,
Mr. ‘Gal feels that while naturally
he has been influenced by the past,
“after more than half a century
of composing, one is on one’s own
track.” (Mr, Gal has also been a
pianist and conductor as well as a
composer and teacher.
The chorus won the praise,
“most excellent” from. its distin-
guished visitor, who also mention-
ed its “nice, bright, beautiful
tone.” The experience of hearing
his work sung for the first time
NOTICE
| For the students’ benefit,
charging privileges will be ex-
tended to May 21 at the Main .
2 FROGS, ,a new translation by
, in Skinner.
Book Shop.
Students are requested to
settle up and clear their ac-
For Chorus’s Rendition of His Work
was thrilling, Mr. Gal said, and it
is certain we had many justifiable
pauses in our conversation to lis-
ten to his lovely music.
He described Bryn Mawr as “a
lovely place” with “real atmos-
phere.” (A university professor
himself, Mr. Gal said of the stu-
dents, “They are delightful girls.
My heart goes out to young ipeo-
ple—in Scotland or in America.”
Evening Features
Classical Comedy
A special feature of May Day
this, year will be the Arts Council
prodt&tion of ‘Aristophanes’ The
FrogS,*translated by Richmond
Lattimore. Alice Turner, the di-
rector, heard Mr. Lattimore give a
reading of the play ‘at Haverford
and was intrigued by the idea of
producing it. Her interest has been
the spark that has kept her stars
as well as the Skinner lights burn-
ing of an evening for rehearsals.
Only the first half of the play
is being given, with Ted Hauri as
Dionysus, Mike Kohn as Herakles,
Leighton Scott as Aiakos, and
Bark Sharp as the Corpse. Trudy
Hoffman will portray the Hostess,
Cisca Duran-Reynals Plathane,
and Alice Turner the Maid. The
‘|‘Strong Men and Stretcher Bearers
are Danny Turner, Adam Spiegel,
and Harry Saint.
One of the most outstanding
parts (and one of the most diffi-
cult to work out) in The Frogs is,
logically enough, the Frog Chorus
which will dance to music compos-
ed by Johm Davison and perform-
ed -by Marion Davis, ’cello, Nina
Greenberg, clarinet, and Dave Ro-
senbaum, bongos.- The choreog-
raphy is being done by Joan Cha-
pin, and the frogs in question are
Jane Phillips, Alice Davison, Katy
Yablonsky, Betsy Jones, Sue Ste-
venson, and Sally Moment.
The Frogs is Aristophanes’ mas-
terpiece and the best-known of the
Greek comedies. This will be the
Letter Disapproves
| Action, Coverage
To the Editor:
of some Bryn Mawr undergradu-
ates have focused totally and with
such intensity on Civil Rights for
‘Negroes only. This is possibly an
overemphasis on too narrow an
aspect of a complex problem. The
problem is how to bring about a
lasting change in the attitudes
and way of life of Negroes and
whites both. Within the South
itself there are many who, work-
ing close to the problem, feel that
there is more to be gained by. us-
‘ing unobtrusive means in the pro-.
cess of furthering Civil Liberties.
The alienation of this group will
do considerable damage, particu-
larly if ‘'Northerners use means
which might antagonize the ma-
jority of the South. Is it not poss-
ible that Northern picketing and
demonstrations. could antagonize
Southern moderates -and : drive
them into the conservative camp?
Do we really want to sacrifice the
end for the means?
(We recognize the editorial right
to take a stand. BUT is it not also
the duty of any responsible news-
paper to try to cover all sides of
an issue in the form of ‘news ar-
ticles?’ The College News has
certainly covered one side of this
issue thoroughly. If the report-
ers of this staff are concerned be-
cause they have printed only one
side, have they not forgotten their
ability as reporters to seek out all
points of view? ‘The News has
stated that it knows of the exist-
ence of an “OPPOSITION” imply-
ing that the “OPPOSITION” has
been in hiding. It is imeconceiv-
able that the News should depend
upon LETERS. TO THE EDITOR
for the coverage of so complex an
issue.
Renny Darden ’60
Susan Harris ’60
(Marilyn McKinney ’60
Suzanne Swan ’60-
Marcy Tench ’60
Student Criticizes
Review Of Seeger
To the Editor:
Perhaps it is uncalled for, but I
fee] that a small defense of Mike
Seeger is necessary after the re-
view of his concert which appear-
ed last week in the News,
It is not the fault of the re-
porter that the article is unjust
and incomplete—anyone whose ear
was untrained in this kind of folk
music (“country music”, “South-
ern Mt. style” or whatever you
want to call it) might make the
mistakes she made. If she had
proclaimed her dislikes of the style
and based it on some knowledge of
folk music I would have no quib- -
ble, but she makes judgments on
it which damn it unthinkingly and
unwisely. |So I just want to clar-
ify,
To criticize Mike for a nasal
twang and a tapping foot is exact-
ly like saying “the trouble ‘with
Alexander Pope is that he writes
in rhymed couplets” — a nasal
twang and, foot, tapping are indig-
enous to the kind of singing he
does, like them or not. With South-
ern Mountain singers the accent
is one of their native speech—
they sound the same when they
talk; criticize Mike for affecting
it if you want—I wouldn’t. There
is something in the music which
demands it. The tapping foot is
not mere exuberance of spirit—
it keeps the beat and is, in a way,
as much an instrument as the one
the singer holds in his hands. Mike
is not being quaint. He is sincere-
ly attempting to capture the flav-
or of the music he plays, and he
succeeds admirably, _
‘first performance of Mr. Latti-
more’s new translation which is in
free verse. The play is a broad,
low comedy full of satirical digs
counts ibefore leaving. _
L aE seern ere
ts.
A isa, on Cae
é %
not art, and yet it does not lack
that artistic quality common to
all music, even the most elemen-
_ Continued on Page 4, Col. 3
It is unfortunate that the efforts : :
‘Country music is entertainment,
posed on Soviet writers.
Monday, May 2, 1960
.
THE COLLEGE NEWS
~"
Page Three
Professor Traces Recent Rise
Of Soviet Literary Censorship
Russian literature is severely
regimented, but Russia. still has
some excellent writers. This was
the gist of an informal talk on
“Soviet Literature” given by Mr.
Simmons, Professor of Russian
Literature at Columbia University,
on Tuesday: morning in the Ely
Room. .
Mr. (Simmons traced the history
of Soviet literature since the Rev-
olutién, Although Lenin was con-
servative in his views on litera-
ture, after 1920 there was an up-
surge in all of the arts.. Several
opposing factions and _ writers
were struggling for the best new
form to overshadow the work of
the 19th century.
However, at about the time of
the first five-year plan, a regi-
mentation of literature was im-
The for-
mation of a Writers’ Union in
1984 abolished all thought of com-
petition. Novelists were forced
to turn out five-year plan books
9
BMC, H’ford Act
hq 9 66 99
Wilde’s “Earnest
The critic Max Beerbohm ob-
served, the second time the play
The Importance of Being Earnest
by Oscar Wilde was performed;
it was twice as effective as the
first time because of what I call
‘unction’, This means that the
characters are not laughing at the
play with the audience but are
taking themselves absolutely ser-
iously,
Bob Butman, director of this
latest endeavor of Bryn Mawr’s
Coilege Theatre and’ Haverford’s
Drama Club, wants to produce
just such an effect. He says “real
comedy, depends on the situation
—not just the lines;” the situation,
then, must be real to the actors,
to intensify the comedy for the
‘watcher.
Butman considers all the char-
acters nice, sincere, honest people;
everyone has found a way of get-
Continued page 4, column 4
SUMMER SCHOOL
Students comtemplating sum>
mer school work for which they
wish college credit should keep
in mind the basis on which
transfer credit is granted: 1)
the institution must be accredit-
ed by its regional acrediting
agency; 2) the courses must be
comparable to work given at
Bryn (Mawr College; 3) the
courses must not repeat or du-
plicate work offered for admis-
sion or taken at Bryn Mawr
College.
Hour-for-hour credit will be
given for acceptable courses
taken at acceptable institutions;
the institution’s own evaluation
of the hour-value of its course
will be taken. No credit will be
given for less than one-half unit
of work (four semester hours
“with about as much differentia-
tion as a row of telephone poles.”
a brief-respite to the writers, but.
on August 14, 1946 the Commun-
ist Party issued a decree imposing
a greater regimentation of liter-
ature than that before the war.
The change was particularly ap-
parent in the empty theatres.
_“The Implementation of a Cen-
tral\\Plan: India” was the topic of
The Second World War brought Pts cae held on April 21
ommon Room in conjunc-
tion with the 75th Anniversary
Year./ celgb¥ation. Mr. Wilcox,
Professof of Political Economy at
Swarthmore, introduced the three
speakers: (Wilfred Malenbaum,
Professor of South Asian Regional
Studies at the University of Penn-
sylvania; John Hitchcock, Assist-
ant Professor of Anthropology,
University of (California at Los
Angeles; and Norman Palmer,
Professor of South Asian Regional
Studies, University of Pennsyl-
vania,
“It is commonplace,” began Mr.
Malenbaum, “that this is a world
People aren’t interested in poor,
hackneyed plays, but every novel
is at ne a sold to the libraries.
After (Stalin’s death, there was
a revolt by some writers against
those who had accepted the party’
line and who had turned out regi-
mented’ novels. (Many of their
critical articles were published in
1956 in the second volume of the
Moscow Almanac. According to
Mr..Simmons, this-iperiod-of-com=
parative thaw ended with the rev-
olutions in ‘Hungary and Poland.
Intellectuals aré ‘“Khrushchev’s
whipping boys.”
-In the Soviet Union a writer
who writes what the party decrees
is primarily interested in earning
his living. The commercial spirit
is the same among most of our
writers. The American writer
answers to his publisher; the Rus-
sian to the Writers’ Union, which
reads everything published, and
to the board of the magazine which
will serialize his novel or publish
his article. A Communist faction
sits on each board.
There are, however, some writ-
ers who are more dedicated to
their art. Here they can usually
get their works: published, if _at
times with difficulty. In Russia,
they usually do not see their work
in print. This is the difference
between our literary freedom and
the regimentation in the Soviet
Union. ,
cabularies.
Mlle. Bree Doubts Value
Of Recent Art Criticism
“Literature has become. the fav-
orite hunting ground. of philosoph-
er, aesthetician, alchemist, oc-
cultist,-social philosopher and
psychologist,” stated Mlle. Ger-
maine Brée in her first lecture
for the Seminar in Criticism on
Wednesday, April 20. In her
search to discover whether or not
there is such a thing as an aes-
thetic of literary criticism, Mlle.
Brée discussed many of the ap-
proaches to literature which claim
to be literary criticism but which
in actuality fail to provide any in-
sight into the essentially literary
elements of a work.
“Much of our criticism today
is descriptive rather than evalu-
atory,” continued Mile. Brée. “Lit-
erary description has reached a
state of extraordinary complexity.
Criticism consists of borrowed vo-
(Critics have used the
vocabulary of (Darwin, then the
Symbolists borrowed that of mu-
sic, later critics used the vocabu-
laries of art, psychology and sci-
ence,
trend and her objection to it by
discussing specific. examples.
”
Mlle. Brée illustrated this
Songs “Reclass
by Berna Landsman
Maybe the Bryn Mawrters of
the past weren’t as intellectually
one-sided, as “bookwormish” as we
tend to picture them. A careful
look at one of the “rare historical
Bryn Mawr Types,” Pages 82 to
84.) At any rate these songbooks,
recently uncovered in a cleaning
of the Pem East attic, will prove
as interesting to the sociologist
as to the musician,
ify” Forebears
documents” which remain as: last-
or 5 quarter hours). ~~ e
To be sure that these require-
ments are met, the student must
consult the Dean concerning her
plan of summer work. If the
courses are in the major or al-
lied fields, or are to meet Bryn
Mawr requirements, they must
be specifically approved in ad-
vance by the corresponding de-
‘partment here. Forms for Ap-
proval of Transfer Credit are
available in the Dean’s Office,
and must be ‘filled out in detail
and signed by the Dean and
the instructor concerned, and
turned in at the Recorder’s Of-
fice,
The student must arrange to
have an official Aranscript sent
ing relics of their life at Bryn
Mawr( available for the unbeliev-
ably low price of 25¢ at the Book
Store), a very close look, reveals
an unexpectedly rebellious, if la-
tent, spirit.
In Songs of Bryn Mawr College,
published way back in 1903 by the
Students’ Association we find,
among the many more “intellec-
tual” songs, a few which hint at
“regular” (though hidden) human
qualities. Take, for instance, “We
Doubt It”, which ends:
“There are some that can
grind like the. very old Nick;
in exams, they will know all
about it. As for us, we’re afraid
we’re not up to that trick; we
_all hope to pass, but. we doubt
r
Notice
Members of the senior class
may wish to submit manuscripts
for the M. Carey Thomas Essay
Prize. Open only to seniors,
this is the oldest writing prize
now given at Bryn Mawr, and
the one for which the widest
range of papers may be submit-
ted. Like the Katherine Fuller-
ton Gerould Prize, the Thomas
award may be given for “creat-
ive writing,” either poetry or
prose? and it may also, in con-
trast to the Gerould, be given
for a term paper or an Honors
paper. (Seniors who wish to
compete for the prize are asked |
to note the variety of forms
“The Thirties,” Mlle. Brée said,
“tended to equate literature and
politics. However, why choose the
work of Shakespeare rather than
that of the Hearst press if you
want to study the written text
from the point of view of the
Marxist?
“Since the Twenties,” she con-
tinued, “there has been a tremén-
dous use of the vocabulary of
psychoanalysis and the symbols it
has brought into circulation. In
the Forties and Fifties, the critics
have concentrated on a study of
surface language with such tech-
niques as semantics, phonetics,
Stylistics and linguistics, Why
not,” Mile. Brée again asked, “use
other texts than those of litera-
ture for these purposes?”
Mile. Brée spoke of New Criti-
cism as “the most valuable form
of criticism in a long time.” She
approved this technique of consid-
ering each work in itself and by
itself as a total entity because,
she said, “Which of us can follow
all these other disciplines and de-
velopments in them? Where will
we find our unity in a plurality
of approach?”
Mile. ‘Brée in further support of
her point quoted Mr. Nahm in say-
ing that “to abstract a vocabulary
| from the system which gives it its
meaning is absurd. This technique
is absurd,” she continued, “be-
cause it brings with it its own
preestablished conclusions, It gives
rise to a circularity in criticism
which has been constant in our
way of speaking of literature.”
(Mlle. Brée stressed the point
that the vocabularies of varied
disciplines could be applied to lit-
erature successfully if they were
-only used figuratively. ~She con-
cluded by summing up the position
of the critic. “For ithe literary.
critic, faced with a wide range of
tools and choice of approaches,
great care is necessary, All these
tools poorly applied make poor
criticism and are an obstruction
to understanding. They give par-
tial light but no criteria for evalu-
ation. The critic must build on a
vocabulary which is useful in dis-
cussion, one in which he does not
have to define and redefine. How-
ever, this vocabulary must operate
for a purely. aesthetic end.”
Symposium On India Presents Three Problems:
Experts Analuze Planning Commission’s Results
of inequalities.” Speaking of In-
dia in particular, he analyzed the
Central Plan now in effect there
as a means of eliminating the
problems resulting from this “dis-
equilibrium.” “It is terribly un-
realistic,” he added, “to leave a
country’s economic development to
laissez-faire.”
The Planning Commission, at
work since 1951, has tackled fair-
ly successfully the mammoth
task of guiding the inter-relation-
ship of public and private sectors
of the economy with a “unique,
and mature ‘boldness, flexibility,
and humility.” :
ress has been made but, im the very
important field of, agriculture, the
overall output has-been disappoint-
ing. “India has tremendous scope
for the increase of agricultural
output which can absorb many mil-
lions of people,” said Mr, Malen-
baum but, unfortunately, discrep-
ancies ‘between plan and perform-
ance have, most economically and
non-economically, led to the plan’s
failure in many areas,
Mr. Malenbaum questioned that
India’s persistence in the freedom
of choice might be impractical for
it and other Asian countries. This
point, he feels, should be one of
the major considerations in dis-
cussing what lesson we of the
Western world can take from In-
dia’s experiment.
Mr. Hitchcock presented the
opinions of two authorities on In-
dia today, Albert Meyer and Dan-
iel Thorner, supplementing their
views with information on _ his
own experiences in the typical
community development program
at Calapor, a village 90 miles west
of New Delhi, where 42% of the
population own 90% of the land.
Although the “persuasive ap-
proach” of the V.LJW.’s (Village
Level ;Workers, who are repre-
sentatives of the government) in-
fluences the people to cooperate in
rapid programs of expansion, the
“moral support” of the masses is
not behind the program, according
to (Mr. Thorner. Mr. Hitchcock
agreed with this evaluation of the
situation, and concluded that be-
fore the plan can become com-
pletely effective “the initiative of
the villagers themselves must be
of a much higher order.”
The last speaker, Mr. Palmer,
broke down the problem of orien-
tation to a plan such as India’s
into three aspects: administrative
problems, problems for the politi-
cal system itself, and the need of
enlisting the voluntary coopera-
tion of the people. He acknowl-
edged the existence of these diffi-
culties but, quoting Dr. Paul
Appleby, said “India has solved:
better than any other country the
problem of national planning.”
Mr. Palmer also suggested that,
at this point, the people’s initiative
Continued on Page 6, Col. 5
__Lectures_in Prospect.
R. D. Barnett, Keeper, Department of Western Asiatic Antiques
of the British Museum, will speak on ANCLENT IVORIBS on Wednes-
day, May 4, at 8:30 in the Common Room. ‘ ;
A Symposium on the USE AND MISUSE OF BAROQUE AS A
CRITICAL TERM will be presented as part of the Seventy-fifth Anni-'
versary Celebration. Speakers will
be Rudolf Wittkower and John H. |
Randall, Jr., of Columbia University and Helmut A. Hatzfeld of Cath-
olic University of America. Mr. Ferrater Mora will be the moderator
at the program on Thursday, May 5, at 11:00 a.m. in the Common Room.
Richard C. Gonzalez, Department of Psychology, will give the
Sigma Xi Lecture on Tuesday, May
10 at 8:30 in the Biology Lecture
Room. His topic will be A sc ga IN ANIMAL LEARNING.
Richmond Lattimore, Professor of Greek, will give a vending of
his poetry, while Fritz Janschka, Resident Artist will give an exhibi- _
After a decade, sufficient reg"
a
~The deadline
to Bryn Mawr College«at—the
close of the summer session.
A minimum grade of C is re-
required for credit.
i gd
From evidence of the book it
seems we have classified our sis-
date is May 9. ‘Manuscripts
should be left in the president’s.
office.
ton-of his paintings on Thusday, May 12.
Eric Hawkins, di
| will give a lecture at Bryn Mawr on
ters unjustly, (‘Read “Song of the
es, Ae
Fe tes ec,
Performance at Haverford.
* ie
Me Eh ie tote oe ae
‘group from New York
Friday, May 13 at 4:00
p.m. That
Page Four’
if
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Monday, May 2, 1960
AA Recompenses
Athletes’ Efforts
Twenty-eight Bryn Mawrters
were given awards for their par-
ticipation in athletic events by
Helen Cohen, President of A.A.,
on Monday evening at Awards
Night.
The awards are given to those
who attain a specific number of
points by playing for J. V. and
varsity teams and participating in
Play Days and intramural sports.
A. A. seals, to be worn on blazers,
were awarded to Margie MacHenry
and Barbara Janney who amass-
ed 4,000 points.
~’ Jane Bullard, Edie McKeon, Edie
Murphy, Mag (Parlin, and Barbara
Reid were presented with pins es-
pecially designed for B.M.C. They
had each attained 2,500 points.
Owls went to the following who
achieved 1,000 (points; Glenda
Boyd, ‘Ellen Corcoran, Marion Da-
vis, Linda Fish, Betsy Frantz,
Carolyn Goldmark, Nancy Hankin,
Jeannette Haines, Mary Irvine,
Fran Krauskopf, Gail 'Lasdon, Sue
Lassersohn, Sue McCord, Kate
Niles, Ellen Ober, Bea. Preyer,
Anne Rassiga, Liz Reid, Pixie
Schiefflien, Anne Stebbins, Joey
Underwood, and Melanie Yaggy.
The~freshman class won intra-
mural hockey and badminton and
‘Were ipresented with cups which
will be on display in the Gym.
Sally Davis was awarded the Div-
ing Cup for the fourth straight
year, and the swimming cup went
Avhat ?”
May Queen Reveals Truth
Continued from Page 1, Col. 1
as the “We didn’t want to any-
way, so there” group. It’s too bad
there wasn’t a panty raid here this
year. That would really be top
wrote a new novel cailed I’ll Nev-
er Be the Same Again After That
Last. Field Trip When the Students
Called Me Ed. Mrs. McCaffrey has
gone into the book bag manufac-
turing business. And Dr. Leblanc
drawer, posed for the Viceroy ad.
There’s Marcy Tench and Sue
Harris over there under a tree.
Hello there, what are you doing?
Working on a new reorganization
plan—and it’s for the world? Who
are those two men with you? Oh,
and Bachrach thinks he’s God and
Nahm keeps saying. “relative to
‘Well, lotsa luck.
This was also a great year for
playing: jokes, I’m told. Instead of
picketing’ the students built a
picket pe gee Frost came
but wag-Asked not to read his
work on the grounds that it might
incriminate someone. The pool at
Batten House dried up from lack
of general use, All the animals
on campus, such as the birds,
ducks, chicks, and rabbits began}
to propagate furiously, just. like
the faculty. The biggest joke of
all is yet to come and it will be
on the Dean’s office, for every sin-
gle senior, by hook or crook, is
going to graduate.
Several individual faculty mem-
bers, I’ve heard, have also not
been idle lately. Dr. MacGregor
created his own graduate theo-
logical school just so he could leave
Well, I can see the festivities are
about to begin. There’s Dr. Hume-
ston checking the dancers in so
it won't be long now. This pro-
gram has been brought to you
with the compliments of L.F.O.A.-
H.T.S., the Let’s Further Our
American Hallowed Traditions So-
ciety, who regret they were forced
by the college to be sponsors. And
this is Carol, signing off with
thesé -words—don’t send money,
send washing’ machines. They’re
badly needed down here. Thank
you.
Mike Seeger
Continued from Page 2, Col. 5
tary. Ut is meant to*be enjoyed.
Sometimes it is gay and rhythmic
and sometimes hauntingly beauti-
ful, and both of these qualities
were present in Mike’s playing if
anyone cared to notice.
The banjo—the five string ban-
jo, that is—is the most character-
istic instrument of this style, and
is played in two ways, by plucking
the strings or by “beating” them
Bryn ‘Mawr. Dr. Sprague and
have formed a_ touring
Shakespearean Club, the only re-
to Fran Krauskopf.
quirement for membership being
a strong, stout and hardy body.
Jolly decent of them. Dr. Watson
More Scholarships . . .
Continued from Page 1, Col. 5
Regina Katherine Crandall Scholar-
ship and Foundation Scholarship, Eli-
zabeth Farson Levering of Ararat,
Virginia. (Westtown School, West-
town, Pennsylvania.) Foundation
Scholar and Westtown School Schol-
ar, 1957-60; First Alice Ferree Hayt
Award, 1958-59; Second Alice Fer-
ree Hayt Award, 1959-60.
District III (Washington, D. C.)
Alumnae Regional Scholarship, Car-
ole Frances Watts of Kensington,
Maryland, Entered on transfer from
Trinity College, Washington, D. C.
Entrance Scholar, 1958-59; District
III (Washington, D. C.) Alumnae Re-
gional Scholar, 1958-60.
General Motors National Scholar-
ship (Honorary), Sarah Elizabeth
Bosworth of Needham, Massachu-
sets. (Needham High School,) Gene-
ral Motors National Scholar (Honor-
* ary), 1957-60.
Elizabeth 8. Shippen Scholarship’
in. , awarded for excellence
of work in a foreign language, Mar-
ilyn May of San Francisco, Califor-
nia, (Katherine Delmar Burke
School, California.)
Edwin Gould Foundation National
Scholarship and Special Scholarship,
Anne Linda Reisch of Staten Island,
New York. ‘ers Schurz High School,
Chicago, Illinois.) Entrance Scholar,
1957-58; Edwin Gould Foundation
National Scholar, 1957-60; Edith A.
ore cre Foundation Scholar, 1959-
Thomas H, Power Memorial Schol-
arship and Jane Lilley Iréson Schol-
arship, Irene Jane Kwitter of River-
dale, New York. (Bronx High School
of Science,) Target Rock Foundation
Scholar, 1958-59; Mary E. Stevens
Scholar, 1959-60.
District IV Alumnae’ Regional
pho as ene Pm La — me
olarship, Cary We ank oO ‘o-
ledo, Ohio. (Maumee Valley Country
Day School,) District IV Alumnae
Regional Scholar, 1957-60.
Frances Marion Simpson Scholar-
ship, Betsy. Ann Frantz of Chambers-
burg, Pennsylvania (St. Mary’s
School, Peekskill, New York.) Fran-
ces Marion Simpson Scholar, 1957-60,
dane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Ar-
leen Beberman of Mattapan, Massa-
chusetts. (Girl’s Latin School, Dor-
chester, Massachusetts.)
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Susan Szekely of Tucson, Ari-
zona. (Riverdale Country School for
Girls,) New York Alumnae Regional
Seholar, 1957-60; Alice Perkins Coville
Scholar, 1959-60.
Special Scholarship, Jacquelyn Kay
Goad of Towson, Maryland, (Towson
High Schéol,) Bryn Mawr Club of
‘Baltimore Schalar, 1957-59; Edward
Christman Scholar, 1958-60.
Jane Ireson Scholarship,
Ethel A Sussman of New York
City. (Bronx High School-of- Science.)
New England Alumnae Regional
Scholarship and Anna Margaret Sloan
and Mary Sloan Scholarship and Spe-
celal Scholarship, Matina Souretis of
Dorchester, sachusetts. (Girls’
Latin School) Entrance Scholar,
1957-58; New England Alumnae Re-
gional Scholar, © 1957-60; William
Franklin Scholar, 1958-59; Mary Mc-
Lean and Ellen A. Murter Memorial
Scholar, and Edith A. Gorsuch Foun-
dation Scholar, 1959-60.
General Motors National Scholar-
, Hanna wahont Houston Woods
of Little og Mee gig Little Rock
Central + General Motors
Nee amiiamaeres: ph ed Eliza-
ers
beth Piorence H of Bilerson,
ar, 1958-60.
Scholar, 1957-60.
Florence and Dorothy Child Me-
morial Scholarship, Susannah Mc-
Cord of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
(Germantown Friends School,) Lil-
lia Babbitt Hyde Foundation Scholar,
1957-58; Florence and Dorothy ‘Child
Memorial Scholar, 1958-60.
Constance Lewis and Martha Rock-
well Moorhouse Class of 1904 Me-
morial Scholarship, Barbara Victoria
Zajac of Trenton, New Jersey. (Ham-
ilton High School,) Entrance Scholar
and Hamilton Township Teachers’
Scholar, 1957-58; Maria
Scholar and Special Scholar
ern New .Jersey Alumnae) 1958-59;
Constance Lewis and Martha Rock-
well Moorhouse Class of 1904 Mem-
orial Scholar, and Christian R. and
Mary F. Lindback Foundation Schol-
ar, 1959-60.
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship and
Special Scholarships, Deborah Louise
Smith of Andover, Massachusetts.
(Abbot Academy,) Special Scholar,
1958-59; Edward Christman Scholar,
1958-60; Edith A. Gorsuch Founda-
tion Scholar, 1959-60.
Evelyn Flower Morris Cope and
Jacqueline Pascal Morris Evans
Scholarship, Minnie Frances Har-
grave of Orlando, Florida, (Margaret
Hall School, |
District III (Washington, D, C.)
Alumnae onal Scholarship and
cee | Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Jane
Rutherford ‘Taylor of McLean, Vir-
ginia. (Falls Church High School,)
Entrance Scholar, 1957-58; District
IIL (Washington, D. C.) Alumnae Re-
gional Scholar, 1957-60.
Evelyn Hunt Scholarship and Jane
Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Brenda Lea
Tillberg of Proctor, Vermont. (Proc-
tor High School,) Class of 1920 Me-
morial Scholar, 1958-59; Anna Mar-
garet Sloan and Mary Sloan Scholar,
1959-60.
~ Seven College Conference Scholar
ship and Bryn Mawr Club of North-
ern California Scholarship, Patricia
Lee Jacobsen of Eureka, California.
(Eureka High School,) California La-
bor Council Scholar, 1957-58; Bryn
Mawr Club of Northern California
Scholar and Seven College Confer-
ence Scholar, 1957-60. .
Anna Margaret Sloan and Mary
Sloan Scholarship and Jane Lilley
Ireson Scholarship, Anne Brenda Da-
vis of Brookline, Massachusetts.
(Chapel Hill School, Waltham, Mas-
sachusetts). Anna Margaret Sloan
and(c ySloan. Scholar, 1959-60.
Abby Slade Brayton Durfee Schol-
arship, Barbara Joan Reid of Orange,
Virginia, (Orange County. High
School), Interfoundation for Econom-
ies Scholar, 1957-58; Second Alice
Ferree Hayt Memorial Award, 1958-
a. do Pace Huidekoper’ Scholar,
George Bates Hopkins Memorial
Scholarship and Special Scholarship,
Marcia Ellen Leigh of South Nor-
walk, Connecticut. (The Thomas
School, Rowayton, Connécticut.)
Presser Foundation Scholar, 1959-60.
New Alumnae ;
Scholarship,
of Waban Massachusetts. (Newton,
High School), Waban Women’s Club
Scholar and National Honor Society
Award, 1957-58; New England Alum
nae Regional Scholar, 1957-59. :
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, Artemisa Rubio of povsins, Ari-
zona. (Douglas Senior High School,)
College Conference Scholar,
ginia.
tional Merit Award, 1958-60.
some” 8
Fanny R,
60.
in a highly controlled strum which
I am at a loss to explain without
an instrument in my hands, but
which results in the familiar bum-
tiddy-bum-tiddy rhythm of the
banjo. Both styles are capable
of infinite variation, and Mike is
“Importance of Being Earnest”
Continued from page 3, column 1
ting on in this vicious, cruel world.
All the characters, in order ‘to
get—on’, have developed masks
which they have worn for so long
that they believe in them them-
selves. The older people, like
Lady Bracknell, have produced
permanent personalities while the
younger ones are still slipping in
and out of character.
The mask analogy has been car-
ried through in the sets. The
rooms are complete in every de-
tail of furniture (hopefully exact-
ly 1895—as the costumes) but they
are all transparent. The walls
will be just sheets with boards «for
woodwork. The audience is aware
of the wumrealness of the stage
while the characters.remaim in ig-
norance of it, as they remain un-
aware of the total ridiculousness
of their positions.
The reasons for choosing Wilde’s
a highly accomplished banjist.
He also plays, and plays well, the
guitar, the mandolin, the harmon-
ica, the fiddle and the autoharp
(which he affectionately terms an
“idiot zither”, working, as it does,
upon an ‘Arthur Godfrey ukelele
push-a-button-get-a-chord principle
and is, nonetheless, a difficult in-
strument to play well). Mike is
a fine musician and he does not
have trouble keeping on pitch.
I found the concert highly en-
joyable and I hope the next time
you hear Southern Mountain
singing ‘you will like it better.
Dee Wheelwright
60,
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Char-
lotee Ann Pretty of Ardmore, Okla-
homa. (Ardmore Senior High School,)
District VI Alumnae Regional Schol-
ar, 1957-58; Ruth. Fletcher Memorial
Scholar, 1958-59.
Scholarships to be held in the
Junior Year
National Merit Award, Christine
McRae Whitehead of Chatham, Vir-
(Chatham, Hall School,) Na-
Anna Hallowell Memorial Scholar-
ship and Jane Lilley Ireson Scholar-
ship,
Eleanor Sophia Snouck Hurg-
ronje of Berne, Switzerland. (St.
George’s School, Clarens, Vaud,
Switzerland.) Entrance Scholar, 1958-
9; James E. Rhoads Memorial
Sophomore Scholar, 1959-60.
Fanny R, 8. Peabody Scholarship,
Robin Gay Berman of San Mateo,
California. (Hillsdale High School,)
Interfoundation Committee for Eco-
nomics Scholar (Honorary), 1958 59;
S. Peabody Scholar, 1959-
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship and The Misses Kirk Scholar-
ship, Barbara Helene Paul of Great
Neck, New York. (Great Neck High
School,) Bryn Mawr Club of Long Is-
land, New York, Scholar, 1958-59;
New York Alumnae Regional Scholar,
1959-60. .
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, (Honorary), Elizabeth Jane Way-
Versailles,, Kentucky.) |land of Pasadena, California. (West-
ridge School,) Seven College Confer-
ence Scholar, 1958-60. :
The Anna and °Ethel Powers Me-
morial Scholafship, Susan Elizabeth
Nelson of Leonia, New Jersey.
(Fieldston School, New York City.)
National Merit Award (Honorary),
Jane Ann Hess of Waynesboro, Penn-
sylvania. (Waynesboro Area High
School,) National Merit Award (Hon-
orary), 1958-60.
National Merit Award, Harriet
Cocke Whitehead of Chatham, Vir-
ginia. (Chatham Hall School,) Na-
tional Merit Award, 1958-60. ;
District V Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Faith Gretchen Halfter of
Elmhur: Illinois, (York Community
High School,) District V Alumnae
Regional Scholar, 1958-60.
mn Pennsylvania Alumnae ‘Re-
gional Scholarship and Jacob Fussell
Byrnes and Mary Byrnes Scholarship,
Marita Viglione of Upper Darby,
Pennsylvania. (Upper Darby High
School,) Eastern Pennsylvania Alum-
nae Regional Scholar, and Jacob
Fussell Byrnes and Mary Byrnes
Scholar, 1958-60.
Northern New Jersey Alumnae Re-
gional Scholarship, Jane Carol Ward
of South Orange, New. Jersey. (Col-
umbia . School,) Northern New
Jersey Alumnae Regional Scholar,
1958-60; * Special James E. Rhoads
Memorial Scholar, 1959-60.
‘Trustees’ Scholarship, Susan Meryl
Lazar of Havertown, Pennsylvania.
(Haverford High School,) Trustees’
Scholar, 1958-60.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Valerie Diana Schoenfeldt of
Chevy Chase, Maryland. (South High
School, Valley Stream,) New York
Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1958-60.
Chinese Scholarship and James E.
nal | Rhoads Memorial Junior Scholarship,
Shirley Seung of Hong Kong, China.
transfer. from the University of
ong Kong,) Chinese Scholar, 1959-
60,
| District IV Alumnae_ Regional
Scholarship and Amelia Richards
Scholarship, Barker Jones
of Shaker Heights, Ohio. (Shaker
Heights High School,) Entrance
Scholar, 1958-59; District IV Alum-
1957-60, nae Regional Scholar, 1958-60; Eve-
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Eli-|lyn Hunt Scholar, 1959-60.
zabeth ay eh ee Acton, | pees collese. Conference Seboien
ol) ew adana ~ Alumnae ae Pe of Ban’ . re (Ala-
Jane Ireson ee: Scholar (Honorary),
Penna Bakhsh ba fo aa Bo i iedainin soe
Little Aldrich Alumnae _ Regional
Scholar (New England), 1958-60.
National Merit Award, Pamela
Rundlt Sharp of Seattle, Washing-
ton. (Lincoln High School,) Nation-
al Merit Award, 1958-60.
Lidie C. B. Saul Scholarship and
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Sandra Carole Goldberg
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Phil-
adelphia High School for Girls,) Lid-
ie C. B, Saul Scholar and Philadel-
re oe of Education Scholar,
1 -60.
Jane Lilley Ireson and _ Special
Scholarship, Carole Katherine Lemon
of Kalamazoo, Michigan. (Western
University High School,) Edward
Christman. Scholar and Summerfield
Foundation Scholar, 1959-60...
Bryn Mawr Club of Princeton, New
Jersey, Scholarship and Jane Lilley
Ireson Scholarship, Margaret Jane
Kersey of Pennington, New Jersey.
(Central High School,) Bryn Mawr
Club of Princeton, New Jersey;
Scholar, 1958-60.
Leila Houghteling Memorial Schol-
arship and George Bates Hopkins
Memorial Scholarship, Josephine
Campbell Donovan of Heidelberg,
Germany. (Carlisle High School, Car-
lisle,Pa.,) Entrance Scholar; 1958-59;
vee oenteling Memorial Scholar,
1959-60. :
Evelyn Hunt Scholarship and Jane
Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Cynthia C.
Maisel of Norwood, Pennsylvania.
(transfer from John Hopkins Univer-
sity.) az
New England Alumnae Regional
Scholarship and Jane Lilley Ireson
Scholarship, Arlene Phyllis Belkin of
Brookline, Massachusetts, (Brookline
High School,) New England Alum-
nae Regional Scholar, 1958-60.
Mary McClean and Ellen A. Mur-
ter Memorial Scholarship, Anne Lou-
ise Rassiga of Long Beach, New
York. (Long Beach High School.)
National Merit Award, Nancy El-
len Watson Evans of Bryn Mawr, Pa.
(Central Bucks High School, Doyles-
rtf Pa.) National Merit Award,
1958-60,
The Elizabeth Duane Gillespie
Prize in American History, awarded
annually on nomination by the De-
partment of History, for work of dis-
tinction in American History, and
Frank L. Neall and Mina W. Neall
Scholarship, Nan Kathryn Jamieson
of Chagrin Falls, Ohio. (Chagrin
Falls High School,) Louise Hyman
Pollak Scholar, 1958-59; Mary Anna
ae Memorial Scholar, 1959-
6
Seven Co . Conference Scholar-
ship, Diana ound Campuzano of
San Pedrp, California. (Northeast
High School, Kansas City; M0.) Dis-
trict VIII Alumnae Regional Scholar,
1958-59; Seven College Conference
Scholar, and Ma Hamilton Swind-
ler Scholar, 1959-60.
Jeannette Peabody Cannon Memor-
ial Scholarship, . ise
an of Brookline Massachusetts.
(Brookline High School,) Elgie Clu-
cas. eee 4 Fund Award (Brook-
line High School), 1958-59; Jean-
nette Peabody Cannon Memorial
Scholar, 1959-60.
Serena Hand Savage Memorial
Scholarship, Vi Rae Sitz of
Barrington, Illinois. (Barrington Con-
solidated ret ae School,) Evelyn Hunt
Scholar, 1959-60.
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Barbara Lynne Kevles
of Philadeiphi Pennsylvania. (Ol-
ney High School,) Philadelphia Board
of Education Scholar, 1958-60.
Mary E,. Stevens Scholarship. and
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Betsy
Lavere Krumrine of Glen Head, New
York. (North Shore High School,)
Nassau County, Community Scholar,
1958-59; Mary Peabody Williamson
Scholar, 1959-60,
Frances
Marion Simpson Scholar-
~of— Green
Lane, Pennsylvania, (St. Mary’s
School, Peekskill, N. Y.) Frances
Marion Simpson Scholar, 1958-60.
wit and Gamble Scholarship,
Barber of Springfiel Ohio,
igfield B School ) anes
lar, 1958-59; Procter and Gam-
Earnest are twofold. First, both
the campus and College Theatre
wanted a modern comedy (a rela-
tive tenm);. dsoueae this play,
besides being very funny, is an ex-
cellent social farce. Declares
Nancy Myers, College Theatre’s
new president: “This time College
Theatre is going to do a comedy
—a comedy that will be funny but
which at the same time has a
great deal of literary merit.”
_ The play will be given on May
6 and 7 at 8:30 in Roberts Hall at
Haverford, Student tickets ($1.00)
will be available in Goodhart box
office and at the door.
The cast includes four women’s
parts: (Lady Bracknell, played by
BarbaraNorthrop; GwendolynFair-
fax, by Rob Colby; Cecily Cardew,
iby ‘Debbie Goldberg; and - Miss
Prism by Nina Southerland, The
men’s roles will be played by John
Roberts as John Worthing, Linn
Allen as~ Algernon Moncrieff, Bill
Learned as Rev. Canon Chasuble,
Beau Chamberlain as Merriman,
and Ed Hartman as Lane.
ble Scholar, 1958-60.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Gail Bernice Fischer of Lew-
istown, New York. (Niagara Falls
High School,) New York Alumnae Re-
gional Scholar, 1958-60.
Eastern Pennsylvania Alumnae Re-
gional. Scholarship and Foundation
Scholarship and Shippen Huidekoper
‘Scholarship, Elizabeth Ross Balder-
ston of Glen Mills, Pennsylvania.
(Westtown School,) Eastern Penn-
sylvania Alumnae. Regional Scholar,
and Foundation Scholar, 1958-60.
Bryn Mawr Club of Southern Calif-
ornia Scholarship and Mary Williams
Sherman Memorial Scholarship, Dia-
na Craig Meyer of Santa Barbara,
California. (Santa Barabra High
School,) Amy Sussman _ Steinhart
Scholar, 1958-59; Bryn Mawr Club
of Southern California Scholar, 1958-
Willima Franklin Scholarship,
nes Tallulah Moncey of Winchester,
Massachusetts. (Winchester High
School,) Herbert Goff Scholar (Win-
chester Scholarship Foundation),
1958-60; First Alice Ferree Hayt
Memorial Award, 1959-60.
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Norma Sue Cohen Lef-
kovitz of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
(Overbrook High |School,) Philadel-
phia Board of ucation Scholar,
1958-60.
Jane Lilley LIreson Scholarship and
Simon Muhr Foundation Scholarship,
Sondra Avis Weinberg of Bryn Mawr,
Pennsylvania. (Germantown High
School,) Simon Muhr Foundation
Scholar, 1958-60.
District III (Washington, D. C.)
Alumnae Regional Scholarship and
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Joan
Heles Simpson of Burke, Virginia.
(Annandale High School,) .- District
III CyWashington, D. C.) Alumnae Re-
gional Scholar, 1958-60,
Jane Lilley _Ireson Scholarship,
School,) District III (Washington, D.
vy Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1958-
Alice Perkins Coville Scholarship
and Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship,
Judith Elizabeth Stuart of Arlington,
Virginia. Carlisle High School,) En-
trance Scholar, 1958-59; Phillip B.
Woodworth Scholar, 1958-60. :
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship
Ruth Krastins of New Brunswick,
New. Jersey. (New Brunswcik High
School.)
Eastern Pennsylvania Alumnae Re-
gional Scholarship, Joelle Marie Ber-
tolet of Reading, Pennsylvania. (Rea-
ding High School,) Eastern Pennsyl-
vania Alumnae Regional Scholar,
1958-60,
District Ill (The South): ‘Alumnae
Regional Scholarship, Judith Ann
Walton of Burlington, Kentucky.
(Boone County High School,) En-
trance Scholar, 1958-59; District III
(The South) Alumnae Regional
Scholar, 1958-60; Maria Hopper
Scholar, 1959-60. :
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship and
Special Scholarship, Martha Ann
Fruit of Falls |Church, Virginia.
(Falls Church High School,) Fred A.
Rogers Scholar, 1958-60. :
Bristol Brass Foundation, Incorp-
orated, Scholarship, Dayle Frances
Benson of Bristol, Connecticut. (Bris-
tol High School,) Bristol Brass Foun-
dation, Incorporated, Scholar, 1958-
60; George Bates Hopkins Memorial
Scholar, 1959-60.
Edwin Gould Foundation National
Scholarship, Nancy Dabney Gardner
‘of Tupelo, Mississippi. (Tupelo High
School,) Entrance Scholar, 1958-59;
Edwin Gould Foundation National
Scholar; 1958-60. . c
Scholarships to be held in the
Sophomore Year .
Eastern Pennsylvania Alumnae Re-
gional Scholarship and The Christian
R. and Mary F. Lindback Founda-
tion Scholarship, Lou Leavitt
of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, (The
Baldwin School,) Eastern Pennsylva-
nia Alumnae Regional Scholar, En-
trance Scholar and Lila M. Wright
Memorial Scholar, 1959-60..
National Newark and; Essex Bank-
ing Company Scholarship, Barbara
Ann Viventi of Nutley, New Jersey.
(Nutley Senior High School,) Nation-
= haa ap — Fyne Com-
any ts) an a ‘ances
Nunns Scholar, 1959-60. gs
National Merit Award, Ellen Lou-
ise Magaziner of Philadelphia, Penn-
sylvania. (Philadelphia igh School
for Girls,) National Merit Scholar,
1959-60.
Harold M. Pitman C
arship, Rachel Tucelarone of
City, N
Ag-
°
Cc ew Jersey. (William L.
nson High School,) Harold M.
man Company Scholar, 1959-60.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
Pp, Marion Stanton Davis of New
Jacob Fussell Byrnes and
| Byrnes Scholar _ Carol Vi aa
Ay cp Rig te Ai
adelphia H
Continued on Page 5, Col. 1
—
arshi
Hocpe = New York. (New _Ro elie...
00! ew Yor umnae Re- ae
gional Scholar, 1959-60.
-Monday, May 2, 1960
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Page Five
Scholarship List Continued
Continued from page 5, column 5
ob Fussell Byrnes and Mary Byrnes
Scholar, 1959-60.
Charles E. Ellis Scholarship and
Jacob Orie and Elizabeth 8S. M.
Clarke Memorial Scholarship, Donna
Mildvan of Philadelphia, Pennsylva-
nia. “(Philadelphia High School for
Girls,) Charles E. Ellis Scholar, 1959-
60.
National Merit Award (Honorary),
Janice Lee Smith of Hingham, Mas-
sachusetts. (Hingham. High School,)
National Merit Scholar (Honorary),
1959-60, ;
Susan Shober Carey Award, Eliza-
beth Folger Boardman of Acton Cen-
fer, |Massachusetts. (Concord Aca-
demy,) Clara Bertram Little Memor-
ial Scholar, 1959-60.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Eva Jean Burdick of Ken-
more, New York, (Kenmore. ..High
School,) Alumnae Regional Scholar
and Mary Frances Nunns_ Scholar,
1959-60.
District III] (Washington, D. C.)
Alumnae Regional Scholarship; Mar-
garet Ann Pabst of Washington, D.
C. Sidewell Friends School, Washing-
ton, D. C.) Alumnae Regional Scholar,
Jeanne Crawford Hislop Memorial
Plain, Minnesota. (Northrop Collegi-
ate School, Mineapolis.)
Katherine Hepburn Scholarship,
clair, New Jersey.
CRISIS IN
COLLEGE
e“The university in
America is not a community
of scholars, but an enormous
service station ... where one
can be born, go to kinder-
garten, lower school, high
school, meet the girl friend
and get married...”
e “If students were limited
to those who were interested
in learning to think for
themselves... approximately
fifty per cent of our college
and. university students
would disappear.”
You can’t afford to miss the
shocking report from which
these statements are taken.
It is written by a famous
educator in the new issue of
McCall’s. It may be the
most important—and damn-
ing—article ever published
on the subject, and every
student concerned with her
future will want to read it.
May McCall’s, on sale now.
School,) Lillia Babbitt Hyde Founda-
tion Scholar, 1959-60.
gional
Scholarship, Karen Mellinger of Mor-
ristown, New - Jersey.
,| High School,) Northern New Jersey
Gibbs-trained college women are in
demand to assist executives in every
field. Write College Dean about Special
Course for College Women. Ask for
Grpss Girts aT Work.
BOSTON 16, MASS. . . 21 Marlborough St.
“NEW YORK 17, N.Y. . . 230 Park Ave.
MONTCLAIR, N. J. « » « 33 Plymouth St.
PROVIDENCE 6, R. I. « » 155 Angell St.
1959-60, *
Scholarship, Sarah Pattison of Maple
Mary Monica Johnson of Upper Mont-
(Montclair High
“ Northern New Jersey Alumnae Re-
Scholarship and Anna C. Lee
(Morristown
|Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1959-60.
Florence Morse Palmer Scholarship
jand Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship,
Johanna Elizabeth ‘Smith of Roches-
ter, New York. (Jolin Marshall High
School.)
Jane Lilley Ireson Schplarship and
Special Scholarship Silvine Slingluff
Marbury of Ruxton, Maryland, (Bryn
Mawr School,) District III (Balti-
more) Alumnae Regional Scholar,
1959-60.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Alice Longobardi of Brooklyn,
New York. (Brooklyn Friends
School,) New York Alumnae Regional
Scholar, 1959-60,
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Ka-
therine Watson Middleton of Jersey
Shore, Pennsylvania. (The Shipley
School,) Class of 1920' Memorial
Scholar, 1959-60,
Julia Cope Collins Scholarship and
Foundation Scholarship and Special
Scholarship, Susan McLean Erskine
of Allentown, Pennsylvania. (George
School,) Foundation Scholar and Ab-
by Slade Brayton Durfee Scholar,
1959-60.
James E. Rhoads Memorial Sopho-
more Scholarship and Jane Lilley
Ireson Scholarship, Susan Grace
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| Schroder of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
(Northlands. .School,. Buenos Aires,)
Special Trustees’ Scholar, 1959-60.
Eastern Pennsylvania Alumnae Re-
gional Scholarship, Diane Marie Fal-
cione of Kingston, Pennsylvania.
(Kingston “High School,) ®astern
Pennsylvania Alumnae Regional
Scholar, The Misses Kirk Scholar, and
West Side Women’s Club’ Scholar
(Kingston; Pennsylvania), 1959-60.
Special Scholarship, Nina Alice
'Wade-Dalton of Oklahoma City, Ok-
lahoma. (Casady School,) Evelyn and
Caroline Warram - Bryn Mawr
Scholar, 1959-60.
Mary Anna Longstreth Memorial
Scholarship and Lila M. Wright Me-
morial Stholarship, Shirley Mae Da-
niel of Twin Falls, Idaho. (Twin Falls
High School,) Elks’ National Foun-
dation Scholar, 1959-60,
Lillia Babbitt) Hyde Foundation
Scholarship, and Jane Lilley Ireson
Scholarship, Sally Church Smith of
Ross, California. (The Katherine
Branson School,) Lillia Babbitt Hyde
Foundation Scholar, 1959-60.
Elizabeth Wilson White Memorial
Scholarship and Jane Lilley Ireson
Scholarship, Barbara Ann “Hein of
Denver, Colorado. (East High
School,) -District VI Alumnae Re-
gional Scholar, Entrance Scholar and
Alice Day Jackson Scholar, 1959-60.
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Betsy-. Dorothy Zubrow
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Phil-
adelphia High School for Girls,) Phil-
adelphia _Board of Education Schol-
ar, 1959-60.
Mary McClean and Ellen A. Murter
JEANNETT’S
Bryn Mawr Flower* Shop
823 Lancaster Avenue
Flowers For All Occasions
Member Florists Telegraph
Delivery Ass‘n
Make Your
SUMMER STOLE
With Yarn
from
DINAH
FROST
Lancaster Ave.
Bryn Mawr
SUBURBAN
HARDWARE
Waste Baskets
Clothes Racks
ALL GADGETS
836 LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWR, PA.
| Memorial Scholarship and Jane Lil-
j ley Ireson Scholarship, Louise Burl-
ant of Brooklyn, New. York. (Eras-
mus Hall High School.)
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Nanecy—Jane~ Culley of ‘West
bury, New York. (Carle Place High
School,) New York Alumnae Region-
al Scholar, 1959-60,
District IV Alumnae _ Regional
Scholarship and Jane Lilley ireson
Scholarship, Lynda Joan Gaynor of
South LEuclid, Ohio. (Charles | F.
Brush High School,) District IV
Alumnae Regional Scholar and Lou-
ise Hyman Pollak Scholar, 1969-60.
Florence and Dorothy Child Me-
morial Scholarship, Suzanne Spain of
Elkins Park, Pennsylvania. (Chelt-
enham High School.)
Gertrude Howard McCormick
Scholarship and Jane Lilley Ireson
Scholarship, Enid Greenberg of Lake-
wood, New Jerse¥. (Lakewood High
School,) Entrance Scholar and Gert-
rude Howard McCormick Scholar,
1959-60,
New England Alumnae Regional
Scholarship
and Jane Lilley Ireson
Scholarship,
Margaret Jane Inglis of
Middletown, Connecticut. (Woodrow
Wilson High School,) New England
Alumnae. Regional Scholar, 1959-60.
Maria Hopper Scholarship, Marga-
ret Randolph Cardwell of St. Louis,
Missouri, (Mary ‘Institute,) District
Vill Alumnae Regional Scholar, 1959-
60.
New York Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship and Jane Lilley Ireson Schol-
arship, Juliana Maria Kasius of Ros-
lyn, New York, (Cathedral School of
Saint Mary, Garden City, N, Y.,) New
York Alumnae Regional Scholar,
1959-60. :
New England Alumnae Regional
Scholarship and-— Jane— Lilley. Ireson
Scholarship, Valentina Golondzowski
of Sommerville, Massachusetts. (Cam-
bridge High and Latin School,) New
England Alumnae Regional Scholar
and Cambridge School Award, 1959-
60.
E. Merrick Dodd and Winifred H.
Dodd Scholarship, Clothilde Camille
Jacxsens of Washington, D. C. (Stone
Ridge Country Day School of the.
Sacred Heart,) District III (Wash-
ington, D. C.) Alumnae Regional
Scholar, 1959-60.
Bryn Mawr Club of Seattle Scholar-
ship and Maria Hopper Scholarship
and Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship,
Cornelia Randolph Spring of Bellevue,
Washington. (Bellevue High School,)
Bryn Mawr Club of Seattle Scholar,
Entrance Scholar and Amy Sussman
Steinhart Scholar, 1959-60,
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship and Special Scholarship, Carol
Joan Swift of Lakewood, Colorado.
(Lakewood High School,) Edith A.
Gorsuch Foundation - Seven College
Conference Scholar, 1959-60.
Continued on page 6, column 1
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: going for? Coca-Cola! So take a leaf
+-out of their Ivy League book and do the
same! Enjoy the good taste of Coke!
BE REALLY REFRESHED
“<
2.
COCA-COLA BOTTLING. COMP. ANY
(¥
Page Six
THE COLLEGE NEWS
Monday, May 2, 1960
7
Continued from Page 5, Col. 5
District V Alumnae Regional Schol-
arship, Karin Louise Carlson of Chi- |
cago, Illinois. (University of Chicago ,
Aigh School,) District V Alumnae Re-
‘gional Scholar, 1959-60.
Philadelphia Board of Education,
Scholarship, Roberta Meryle Feldman |
of Oreland, Pennsylvania.
town High School,) Philadelphia Board |
of Education Scholar, 1959-60,
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Juliet Jeanette Good-
friend of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
(Olney High School,) Philadelphia
Board of Education Scholar, 1959-60.
Priscilla Hunt Scholarship, Mary
Beth Schaub of Fort Wayne, Indiana.
| Scholarship List Continued |
2
Hunt Scholar, 1959-60: |
William Franklin Scholarship: and
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Judith
Frances Deutsch of Winthrop, Massa- ,
Florence and Dorothy Child Memor-
fal Scholarship, Susan Deborah Orr of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Philadel-
phia High School for Girls,) Florence
rite Dorothy Child Memorial Scholar,
1 -60.
Florence and Dorothy Child Memor- |
Scholarship, Lisbeth Alice Larsen of ;
Denver, Colorado. (East High School,)
| Edwin™ Gould Foundation National
Scholar, 1959-60.
Philadelphia Board. of Education
Scholarship, Marjorie” Esther Green-
wald of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
chusetts, (Winthrop High School,) Wil- ial Scholarship, Lennie Beatrice Ben-| (Germantown High School,) Philadel-
liam Franklin Scholar and Winthrop
ner of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
phia Board of Education Scholar, 1959-
(Massachusetts) Rotary Club Scholar, (Germantown High School,) Florence’ 60.
1959-60.
District III (The South) Alumnae |
(German-;| Regional Scholarship and Jane Lilley |
Anne |
Ireson Scholarship, Christine
Hunter of Gainesville, Florida. (Gain-
esville High School,) District III (The
South) Alumnae Regional Scholar and
Entrance Scholar, 1959-60,
National Merit Award (Honorary)
Ann Louise Witman of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, (Mount Lebanon High
School,) National Merit Award (Hon-
v
tf Me Tekno semana ee Coben OREO AE. PE Te SORE oe TY WaPo
(North Side High School,) Priscilla‘ orary), 1959-60.
AMERICA’S ~MOST~ POPULAR. FOLK. SINGERS
The WEAVERS
“FOLK SONGS AROUND THE WORLD”
FRIDAY EVE. MAY 13, 8:30 P. M.
Irvine Auditorium, Univ. of Penn.
Tickets Now $2.50, $2.00, $1.50
Houston Hall — 34th & Spruce
Reservations — Call EV 6-0100 Ext 581
LOW-COST
STUDENT
TOURS
*
ABROAD BY
JET CLIPPER
New York to Europe as low as $876... 46 days
Pan Am offers you a fabulous series of special student
tours to areas throughout the world. ‘
To make your tour even more rewarding, you will fly
aboard Pan Am’s huge new Jet Clippers*—the largest,
fastest airliners in the world. On Pan Am Jets you can fly
to Europe, South America, the Caribbean, Nassau, Ber-
muda, Hawaii,.the Orient and ‘round the world—faster
than ever before. That means you'll have more time to
spend seeing the places that interest you.
~~~Consider Evirope. There are literally dozens of tours to
choose from—featuring a fascinating and adventurous
type of travel suited to your interests. Many offer
academic credit. And there’s always plenty of free time to
roam about on your own. Call. your Travel Agent or
Pan American, or send in the coupon below for full
information. ~ a ©Trade-Mark, Reg. U. 8. Pat. Off.
re
Send to: George Gardner, Educational Director
Pan American, Box 1908, N.Y. 17, N.Y.
Please send me a free copy of “Adventures
in Education,” a student's guide to travel
fun and study abroad.
a
+ cy. a
[ee AINKINGasSa asec
pete Alay ‘ S es . 7
{and Dorothy Child Memorial Scholar, |
1959-60,
Florence and Dorothy Child Memor-
ial Scholarship, Mary Jurbala of
Springfield, ..Pennsylvania (Poitiers
American High School, France, )
BASEC Wives’ Clubs Scholarship
Fund Scholar, 1959-60.
Undergraduate Association Scholar-
ship, Geeti Sen of London, England.
(Burgess Hill P, N. E. U. School, Sus-
sex, England, and Whiteman-Gaylord
School, Colorado,) Undergraduate As-
sociation Scholar, 1959-60.
Edwin Gould Foundation National
MAKE
YOUR PARTY
A SUCCESS!
Now Available For
All Social Occasions
THE GREAT MARCO
MAGICIAN-HYPNOTIST
240 Rivington Street
New York
Bryn Mawr Club of Northern Calif-
| ornia \Scholarship and Seven College
| Conference Scholarship, Sela Ann Con-
do of El Cerrito, California. (El Cerrito
High School,) Seven College Confer-
ence Scholar and Bryn Mawr Club of
Northern California Scholar, 1959-60.
Jane Lilley Ireson Scholarship, Al-
exandra Margaret Utgoff of Stratford,
Connecticut, (Coronado High School.)
Minnie Murdoch Kendrick Scholar-
ship, Bonnie Toby Horen of Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania. (Philadelphia High
School for Girls,) Minnie Murdoch
Kendrick Scholar, 1959-60,
Ford Motor Company Scholarship,
Linda Kay Koki of Bedford, Ohio.
(John Adams High School, Cleveland,
Ohio,) Ford Motor Company Scholar,
1959-60.
Seven College Conference Scholar-
ship, Constance Eleanor Schaar of
Fort Worth, Texas. (R. L. Paschal
High School,) Seven College Confer-
ence Scholar, 1959-60,
Philadelphia Board of Education
Scholarship, Elizabeth Theresa Wake-
|}ley of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
| (West Philadelphia High School,) Phil-
adelphia Board of Education Scholar,
1959-60.
Medical School Scholarships
Hannah E. Longshore Memorial
Medical Scholarships
|. Blair Spencer Dissette-of Bethesda,
eae ne A. B. Bryn Mawr College
11969, :
Sue Young Sook Kimm of Gambrills,
Maryland A. B. Bryn Mawr College,
to be conferred 1960.
Jane V. Myers Memorial
Medical Scholarships
Arleen Sheila Brenner of New York
City A. B. Bryn Mawr College, to be
conferred 1960.
MarJeanne Collins of Lansdowne,
Pennsylvania A. B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege 1957.
Judith Miriam Rubenstein of New
York City A, B.’ Bryn Mawr College,
to be conferred 1960.
- Harriet Judd Sartain
Memorial Scholarship
Gwen Phyllis Gentile of Lansdowne,
Pennsylvania A. B. Bryn Mawr Col-
lege .1958.
Eleanor Ann Sorrentino of Brooklyn,
py hird York A. B, Bryn Mawr College
1958,
Marguerite Odette Stein of Jackson
Heights, New York A. B. Bryn Mawr
College 1957.
Continued from Page 3, Col. 5
may ‘be lacking due to a desire not
to modernize, although that
what the current plan aims for.
Until such cooperation and initia-
India: National Planning
es exist on a national scale, no
central plan or even new plan such
as the recently proposed “de-cen-
tralization of industry” scheme,
willbe more successful than the
plan now in effect.
The 1 out of 20
that didn't get smoked
ie a lot of satisfaction in pointing out something good to a friend. That’s why
it often happens that one cigarette out of a pack of Dual Filter Tareytons never gi
get smoked.
People break it open to demonstrate its unique Dual Filter containing Activated
Charcoal. They may not know why it works so well, but they do know this: It delivers
far more than high filtration . . . it brings out the-best taste of the best tobaccos—as.
no single filter can!
Try a pack of Tareytons. We believe the extra pleasure they bring will soon have
you passing the good word to your friends.
XA bitte
and smooth..
2. with an efficient pure
you the real thing in mildness
NEW DUAL FILTER
Produ f J Haminan Sew Caypeny
»
HERE’S HOW THE DUAL FILTER DOES IT: '
ombines a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL
definitely proved to make the smoke of a cigarette mild
ure white outer filter. Together they bring
and fine tobacco taste!
College news, May 2, 1960
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1960-05-02
serial
Weekly
6 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 46, No. 21
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-vol46-no21