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——Jane-Ward—Newhall ~-
VOL. ee 22.
ae Mawr Grants 159 , ae
Graduate Degrees This Mornin
ARDMORE and BRYN MAWR,
PA., — JUNE 5, 1962
oo @y Trustees of-Bryn Mawr College, 1962
oe Price 20° CENTS.
pee Graduate With Honors, Distinction
‘The following: Seniors will receive
their degrees with distinction:
Summa Cum Laude
Susan Becker Broughton ;
: Magna Cum Laude
Shelby Louise Berger ~~
Jane Elizabeth: Bradley
“Marion Coen
Rosalind N. Conn
~ Linda Marie Fish
Marcia Sue Gencher-— ~~~
Andrea Gerson Good |
Faith Gretchen Halfter
Jane Ann Hess
Valerie Ward Hollis °
Mary Elizabeth Irvine
~ Judith Elizabeth Jacobs
Susan -Eleanor Johnson
Elizabeth Barker Jones
Bernice Katz
Susan M. Lazar
Stisan° Elizabeth Nelson
Barbara Helene Paul
Priscilla Croswell Perkins
-Janice Merle Richman
Shirley. Seung
Eleanor Sophia Maria Snouck .
. Hurgronje
Elizabeth Jane. Wayland
Christine Whitehead
Harriet .Whitehead
Katherine Yablonsky
Cum Laude
Alison Baker
Elizabeth Ross Balderston
Barbara Ann Bauman
Arlene Phyllis Belkin
Judith Walton Belsley
Martha Birnbaum
‘Brenda Vaughan Bouchard
Glenda Fay. Boyd.
Marlene B. Bronstein
Anne MerrittCase
Noel Clairborne Clark
Ellen Corcoran |
Elaine Beverly Cottler
Joanne Ford D’Arcy ( *
“Alice Louise .Davison ‘
Joan Elizabeth Dolan
Josephine Campbell Donovan
Judith Lenore Ellenbogen
Helen Fairbank
Gail Bernice Fischer
Deborah Dooling Fitzgerald
Lanie: Flora Fleischer
Sandra \Carole Goldberg. 4
Ellen Louise Gorman
Carol Ann Rabbett Grant
Elizabeth -Keays Green
Nancy Ellen Watson ‘Graves
Evalyn ‘Ann Gutman
JRebecca Lippincott Hazen ,
Martha Whitney Horsley
Nan Kathryn Jamieson ©
Margaret Jane Kersey
'-Marilyh “Ottenberg Krause -
Betsy -Lavere Krumrine
Carole Katherine Lemon’
Lynne Carole Lipton
Ann Bannon Marbut
‘Bethany Reed Mendenhall
~ Diana. Craig Meyer
Gay. Es Mitnick ~~
Agnes Tallulah Moncy
Dorothy. Elisa Moore
%
Joan Susan--Oberwager =o cad
Sherry’ Beth Ortner
Marianna Pinchot —
Jean Grace Porfer, ~~
Beatrix Elise eyer
Anne Louise Rassiga ‘as
Abigail L’Hommedieu Reynolds
Mary-Margaret -Roche ©
Rachelle Ann Roth ,... .
’ Marian Hill Sagan ©
. | subjects:
Martha Webb
‘Barbara Jay Schieffelin
The following Seniors will receive
their degrees with Honors in special
Biology
Shelby Louise Berger
Rebecca Hazen F
Marilyn Ottenberg Krause ~*
Lynne Carole Lipton
oe
Pamela Rundle Sharp
“Chemistry © _
Janice Merle Richman epee
|Shirley Seung .
Classical and Near Sastcia:
Archaeology
Charlotte Alice Brodkey
Jean Grace Porter
Marian Hill Sagan
Economics
‘Marlene B. Bronstein
al FS
.| Faith Gretchen Halfter
Judith, Ann Samuelson
English
Anne Merritt Case
'| Andrea Gerson Good
More Cum Laudes ~
Valerie Diana Schoenfeldt
Diana C. Schramm
‘Pamela’ Rundle Sharp
Barbara Haight Shoemaker
‘| Virginia Rae Sitz
Belinda F, Sutherland
Emilie Jane Tanner
Stefanie Sarkis Tashjian
Nancy Rotenberg Torop
Susan Crawford Tracy -
Abigail Trafford —
Marita Viglione
Helen Augusta Gisella
van Cortlandt. von Raits
“| Martha Webb
Karen Ruth Willner
Louise Sobler Wollman. .
Marilyh Jean Kilburn ae ane
Ellen Zetzel
Marianna Pinchot ~ “itd
_ | Linda “Davis
Valerie Ward Hollis”
Elizabeth Barker Jones
Katherine Yablonsky
Ellen Zetzel~
French
Judith Hlizabeth Jacob®
> German.
Margaret Jane Kersey-
Greek
Susan, Becker Broughton
i oman Jane Se aaa
nian History =
Alison Baker
Evalyn Ann Gutman
Nan Kathryn Jamieson ,
History of Art —
Belinda F: Sutherland ~
Music ©
Jane ‘Ann Hess
Philosophy
Phyllis Barbara Andler
Eleanor Sophia Maria
Snouck Hurgronje
Stefanie Sarkis» Tashjian
Political Science
Brenda : Vaughan Bouchard
Marion Coen .
a
Ann Bannon Marbut
‘| Barbara Helene Paul
Psychology
Barbara Ann Bauman
Jané Ward Newhall
Virginia Rae’ Sitz
Nancy Rotenberg Torop
Susan Peters Zebley
Russian
Sandra Carole Goldberg
Sociology and Anthropology
: . Anthropology
Glenda Fay Boyd
Sherry Beth Ortner
Diana €. Schramm
Harriet Whitehead
Sociology
Susan Eleanor Johnson
Spanish...
Ss
'| Agnes Tuallulah Moncy
\ther was not certain at
-|¥ain, we will merely fill in “the other
"| degrees, and™1{. Doetors -of Phil-
|awarded to Susan Becker Broughton
‘|ner Prize for- distinction in literature
. Bs,
Senator Clark Addresses Class of 1962,"
- Miss McBride Announces Awards’.
Sirice the Tuesday morning wea-
is. time
and we were sure that if we an-
nounced that the Class of 1962 was
the first to have an outdoor’ com-
mencement, it would nadaubtediy
, ~ Senator Joseph S$. Clark
facts. This morning Miss McBride.
confered 159 Bachelor of Arts’ de-
grees, 38 degrees of the Master of
Arts, 29 Master of Social Serviced
osophy.
Miss .McBride also announced the
gift to the new residence hall and
several. prizes. The European Fel-
lowship which has been awarded an-
nually since the first class graduatéd.
in 1888 and the Elizabeth Shippen
Scholarship for Foreign Study were.
of Havertown, Pennsylvania who is
a Greek-major. The Hester Ann Cor-
was given to Helen Fairbank of
Cambridge, Massachusetts. The sen-
ior: Elizabeth Duane Gillespie Prize
Bryn Mawr College will receive
a gift of $1,000,000 for, a residence
hall, The announcement. of this and
other gifts for the new building was
made this morning at the College’s
commencement exercises, marking
the close of the 77th academic year,
by Miss Katherine E. McBride, Pres-
ident. :
, The gift is being made by ‘Dr. C.
Pardee Erdman of Santa -Barbara;
California, in memory of his wife
1921) and a formér member. of the
Board of Directors of the College.
Mrs. Erdman died in December, 1959.
Additional gifts,.toward the com-
pletion of the building, Miss Mc-
Bride said, are being made by Mrs.
|Erdman’s two sons, C. Pardee Erd-
and her two daughters, who also at-
|tended Bryn Mawr, Mrs. Ralph N.
Peter (Classof 1951) and=Mrs; An-
tonio de Almeida (Class\of 1956).
Louis Kahn, the. Philadelphia ar-
situated on the eastern edge of the
campus “bordering Morris Avenue in
Judith*Ann Samuelson
>
ape enaiy are
the late Eleanor: Donnelley Erdman, |
‘lam alumna of Bryn Mawr (Class of
sman,.Jr. and R,. Donnelley. _Erdman, [7
chitect, is designing . the residence |
-+hall-for-the--college, which. will be.
‘The Familu-of an Alumna, Eleanor Donnelly Erdman,
Gives Gift of One Million Dollars For Residence Hal
ted to cost about $1,500,000. The hall
will accommodate 130 students; with
50 non-resident. students who com-
mute to Bryn Mawr from Philadel-
phia and nearby suburban towns.
Mrs. Erdman
As Miss’ McBride said this morn-
ing: “The tribute to-Eleanor Donnel-
ley Erdrnan made by her family. is one
in which everyone closely associated
with Bryn Mawr would like to join.
Eleanor was~one’ of the leading’ stu-
dents of her time and surely one of
the leading alumnae of any ‘time.
She was from 1951 to 1956 Alumnae
Direcfor- ofthe College and a. very
forceful member of the Board. She
was for the much longer period. of
her adult life an effective public ser-
vartt, working not only for Bryn
problem — whether it was in Bryn
Mawr. or Pasadena.— she asked. the
questions which~ threw some. light on
it, interested the people who should
be working on it and saw ‘that a
reasonable answer was found. No
better representative ¥ the® Age of
Reasén has ever iv than the
Bryn Mawr. Thé building is estima-
twentieth century Eleanor Donnel~
.
study ‘and dining facilities for about.
- | giving mbral,
n, | Mawr but for education more gener-.
rally. Whenever. there was’ a” difficult |.
ley Erdman. a
“Reason ‘was never | “far removed
from feeling “in Beancr Erdman’s
life, Shé was generous to a degree,
support ,to a great
number of ‘friends who depended
heavily upon her and thinking of
wonderful things to do for friends
and: for. many others’ as well. She
enjoyed not letting the left . hand
know what the right hand was doing,
and she would often nave accomplish-
ed some fine new benefaction before
anyone else had recoigrriged the: need
that existed.
“T wish that -students in the pre-
sent College could ‘have known Elea-
nor Erdman, * They would have de-
lighted in her; ds did her fellow stu-
dents of the 1920’s. They can know
her-a little through the reminiscen-
ces of Ker friends; the ‘books of Emily”
Kimbrough and the admiration which |
the..present members of the Board
ef Directors have for her. t think
that the beaut’ of the new halt will,
be_a beauty she would have liked
and that “present and’ future Bryn
Mawr students will-be-closest to her
through their enjoyment of the = hall
in- her name.’
°
in American History, ‘was won by
Evalyn Ann Gutman of ‘New York
City while the Helen Taft Manning
Prize in European or World History
was awarded to Nan Kathryn Jamie- «
son of Chagrin Falls,» Ohio. ‘Faith
_|Gretgban Halfter took the Jeanne
Quistgaard Memorial Prize in Eco-
homics. and. Susan Broughton won
the M. Carey Thomas Essay Prize ,.
awarded to a mémber of the senior
class for distinction in writing.
Also announced at. the commence-
ment was the Christian R. and Marty
F. Lindbach Award for Distinguished
Teaching which was conferred upon
Professor Alwyne of the Music De-
partment, The “first ‘two awards
from this Foundation were giv
last. year to Professors ‘Cored
rand Taylor. = ° | :
Senator Joseph sin Clarke dl
| Pennsylvania) delivered the’ ‘Cont
mencement address. Sunday evening,
Dr. George M. Docherty of the New
York ~“Avenite- “Presbyterian * Chureh
in - Washington, D. G. .gavg. the. paq-
moi, at the Baccalaureate services in
Goodhart. A
Further Education
Jobs Or Marriage
Ahead For Seniors |
As Mrs. Dorthy Nepper Marshall,
Dean of the College, said in an inter-
view last week: “The percentage of
Bryn Mawr students who go onto |
graduate school has always, been -
high throughout its history and has
been getting higher. Ten years ago —
35% would have been typical, now
it is 55-60%... This seems tobe
part of a nation-wide ‘trend, but for
a _woman’s college, the number of
Bryn ‘seniors who do gradu-
ate wokk is} exceptionally high.
At the mpment; sixty-eight of the
159 graduating seniors have’ indicat-
time’ graduate “students either work-
ing or. keeping house in the remain-
ing hours, Past experience has also
shown that many will go on to grad-
uate. work after. being’ out of. school
for a year or so.
Six seniors received Woodtow
Wilson* Fellowships this. year, but
two, Harriet Whitehead and Faith
Halfter, -will-defer these grants to
use their Fulbright Scholarships, in
‘England. Pamela Sharp is giving up -
both a Wilson and a Fulbright Scho-
larship, to read biology at; Newnham
College, “Cambridge on Marshall
grant. Betsy Jones and. Betehan
Weyland will both use their Wilsons
at Yalé while Susan Broughton’ will-~
probably spend her European Fellgw-
ship money first. : .
* Besides ‘the three’ seniors” en
to England, three others ‘have’
cated plans to study abroad: "yeidith
Ellenbogen ar tne ‘Universizy: “Of Ma
drid, and Bea. Preyer and: Helen‘#on ,
Raits_at the American School in
Athens.
Nine members of the Class of 1962
will go on. to Medical Sehool in'Sep-
tember. Among them afe Ann. Ras-
siga who. will-attend- Harvatd Med-
ical School on the. Jane. V., Myers
“ Continued on Page 4, Col: 1.
\f¥
o*
©
me
‘a
a
Page Two
&
THE: COLLEGE NEWS
“voudiay, June Pvc 1962
To the Seniors:
It is no good devolling on
_ goodbyes, It is not the
being together that it.
‘- prolongs but the parting.
Elizabeth A. Bibesco
« LHE
‘Commencement Day, by its very nature, is
FIR AND THE PALM
a time of
parting; but perhaps in the editorial column of the. News we
can, for a moment;-at least; dweli-a little longer on “being
together.”
Every individual in the Class of 1962 has ex-
perienced, in her four years, relationships with various enti-
ties: with the other individuals in her class, with the class in
its.own right, with her fellow- Bryn Mawrters, and, finally,
with the College itself.
In any experience there are many levels on which such
a relationship may exist. There is love, and there.is hatred;
there is indifference, and there is care which is “probably the
‘most fundamentai of all, in both its presence and its absence.
Yet, all experience; no matter on which level it takes place,
has an effect on the individual;
2)
and although the relationship
in each case may move from one level to another in. the
course of time, there will always be-a “‘being together”
in
some sense between the members of the Senior Class, be-
tween each individual and the.class as an entity and between
Bryn Mawr and them.
We too (each member of the editorial board and s
as well as The College News) exist in a relationship
type with the Seniors and the Senior Class.
ff
is
We extend our
congratulations to each member. of the class and wish the
~ best of luck to all who are graduating today. Collectively,
we will notice you are gone ; Individually, we will miss you.
= “COMPU
“The Academic °
- ging system.
members and candidates for de
Center, established last Novem
with Haverford College. The
ER PROGRAMS CEREMONY.
ession for the Bryn Mawr College’ Com-
mencement this year was organized by an electronic data proces-
Cards on which were listed the names and rank of faculty
puter. The computer then made
person would march in the morning’s exercises, marking the: close
of the 77th academie year at. Bryn Mawr College.
Miss Julia O. Day, a graduate student in classical archae-
ology at Bryn Mawr, programmed the procession under the
direction of Professor John R. Pruett, a physicist on the faculty.
The processing of the cards was done at the Computing
enter is one’ of. the first. in the
country jointly owned by liberal arts colleges. It is being used
by faculty and advanced students from the two colleges.
s were fed into an IBM com-
he decision-as to where each,
by Bryn Mawr in cooperation
—
|3 Seniors Explain
Secrets of Comps,
Conf, Trees, Skits
by Chris Whitehead, Harriet
Whitehead, and Isa Brannon ’62
Finally having put Senior year
behind us, we suddenly realize how
many traditions and events we have
placidly. taken_into_stride_which be-
fore this year were a complete mys-
tery. What Underclassman, for ex-
ample, has any good picture of what
is variously termed “Comp Conf”: or
“The Senior Conference for the
Final Examination in the Major
Subject?” The uninitiate, who only
hears panicked remarks like “I still
have three weeks of Comp Confer-
ence reading!” may well- imagine
higher spheres of intellectual endea-
vor where massive assignments play
a large part and where one’s accu-
mulated experience in the major sub-
ject is treated as merely the first
stepping stone in a.steep path. This
illusion is soon dispelled. Professors
as well as students are still as hu-
man as they ever were and the ma-
terial» covered smacks faintly of
what-you-never-got-around-to - read -
ing-in-101.
. The tradition that Seniors. swim
around the Cloisters: pool before their
first comps, is one in which we have
all participated — our Freshman,
Sophomore, and Junior years. (How
‘many Seniors do you ever find there?
Just count them sometime.) Not
much need to expand further on this
bit of seniorama; it’s debatable
whether such a.rite can be included
under the heading of mysteries.
-+}—Comps ofcourse dre the biggest
mystery of. all. Not even Seniors
seem to be clear about how much
significance to attach to them (the
trend is to attach too much) and
the belief is. widespread that a bad
day at the Comps can smash up four
years of hard work. - This is exag-
~ Mr. Herben, Professor of Old English,
Miss Krause, To Retire from Bryn Mawr
The end of the 77th academic
year at Bryn Mawr brings with it
the retirement of Stephen Joseph
Herben, Professor of English Phil-
’ ology. Mr. Herben, who has -taught
at Bryn Mawr since 1928, studied at
Rutgers University-and received his
Ph.D. degree from Princeton. ,
Before coming to Bryn Mawr, Mr.
‘Herben spent a year in Copenhagen
and was Special Goach in Old Eng-
lish at Oxford. He has.also been a
guest lecturer in Paris, Bonn, Copen-
hagen” and Stanford. ‘Mr, Herben
worked with such“ famous scholars
as (Professors H. H. Bender, W.
Craigie, Jespersen. and Brusendorff.
At Bryn Mawr, he taught courses in
English Literature. of the Middle
Ages and History of the English
- Language.
Miss Krause
‘Miss Hertha Krause, Carola Woes:
shoffer Associate Professor of Social
Economy, will retire next year after
her sabbatical leave: She was. hon-
ored by a dinner in the| Deanery on
May 15.
Miss Krause, whois listed in
Who’s ‘Who in America, received her
Ph.D. from the University of Frank-
fort and was director of public wel-.
fare for the City of Cologne before
coming to America in 1933. She
has been at Bryn Mawr since 1936.
Much of ‘her work has been with
refugees and relief including hold-
ing the position of- senior faculty
member of the UN Relief and Re-
habilitation Administration Training
Center of the UNRRA from. 1944-
1946. Among Miss Krause’s books
are: Community Chests and Councils
in America, Aiding the Unemployed
(a survey of “methods and trends inh
24 -foreign countries), and. Casework
in the USA, which she edited.
Besides Mr. Herben and. Miss
Krause, three other professors are
leaving Bryn Mawr this year. Mr.
Gilbert will be Professor of History
at the Institute of Advanced Studies
in Princeton; Mr, Ayala will be Pro-
fessor of Spanish at N.Y.U., and
Mr. Soper will be Prgfessor of Ori-
ental Art at the Art Institute of
New York University. ~
THE COLLEGE NEWS.
FOUNDED "IN 1914
Published weekly during the College Year (except during |
Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during exemina-
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 without permission of the Editor-in-Chief.
EDITORIAL BOARD
eogldivorinChie€ . 26... eee eee eee ee eeee sesso sens ‘Janice Copen, . 63. am
‘Copy Eder... ... Give teeeeee tes eecsisegpanes:: “Sa “Josie Donovan, ‘62
Mapociate Editor 2.0... . cece cece eine ceeeeeeeeuins Ellen Rothenberg, ‘64
"| Make-up Editor ....).....,. bss antec eerceetecese beret ‘Charlene. Sutin, '64
Members-et-Large ..... pein ateceae bs Brooks Robards, ‘64—Susan Weisberg, ‘65
‘63
Contributing Editors ...... ‘seeeeeee Pixie Schieffelin, ‘62; Pauline Dubkin,
= Eee aed cae
65; — = ‘65.
—-Neniey Culley, ‘63; Dede Harder, °65.
» Cynthia. ‘Brown, ‘64; Judy Zinsser, -
EDITORIAL
“milan, ‘65; Ronni Iselin, ‘65; Sue-Jane Kerbin, ‘65; “ Condtarics Rosenblum, ~
Juli Kasius, ‘63; Miranda Marvin, ‘63.
He | oe
gerated. But equally exaggerated is
into -the- examination room one .will
be handed a drink and. told “Wel-
come to Bryn Mawr’s best kept sec-
ret.”---The drinking comes .later—
that’s no mystery:~ One Senior this
year was rather sharply -rebuked
as she reached longingly for a drink
after only having had two Comps.
“No you don’t,” said an Anthro ma-
jor, “you're stilf in a state of ritual
impurity.”
Another thing ‘a be cleared up—
has any Underclassman ever mar-
velled” to: hear, on a warm spring
night, a chorus of maidenly. voices
outside the windows of the dorm,
(but not. very well) lyric songs?
Although the resemblance is vague,
this: is known as’ Tree Planting. The
tree is. already planted before the
singing begins; as a matter of fact,
it’s usually planted before the sing-
ers even find out about the tradi-
tion. The Class President does have
cause to use a shovel, however; we
won't tell-you how.
The election.of Permanent Class
Officers is another pleasant duty
that falls to ‘the Senior Class. Want
to know what we always thought
these officers -were? Well, we
thought they were. the four people
who had made the neatest Class
President, Vice-President, Secre-
tary, and Song Mistress during the
past four years. Nope.
ally only a Class President plus va-
rious officers such as... uh, well,
| it -has to do with alumnae stuff, like,
00 tell, the truth; we still don’t
. ‘pices what Permanent Cigas Officers
}are.
- One last: tradition, that inet’s wind
the whole thing -up~-with~a~ bang”
tradition, namely Class : Day, - was
this year moreof a mystery than
ever, We'll leave it to text year’s
Senior Glass to clear that ‘one up.
“‘Allce ‘longobardi, “
AFF .
Business STAFF
SUBSCRIPTION BOARD :
Anne Lo, ‘64; Jody Green, ‘64; Bay Alexander, ‘63; Jane Kennison, 163; Janet
/ Tribe, ‘62; Juli Kasivs, ‘63; Barbara Viventi; ‘63; Celia Coates, ‘64; ecinet
"Davis, ‘63; Bates. Buckner, ‘64; Nancy Geiger, ‘64.
Subscription $3.75. Mailing price $4.00. Subscription. may begin at any time.
_ Entered as second class matier at the -Ardmote, Pa., Post Office, under the Act
= of March 2, 1079. =
Jane Hess has ‘added another
laurel to her well-bedecked brow.
}- Her story The Butchering which
originally appeared in The Review
won . first. prize in the Mademoi-
selle College Fiction Contest.
Jane will receive $500 for the
story which will be printed ‘in the
- August Colege issue of - ‘Mademoi-
selle.
> zt , :
> aa = dn
sh
the_convictionthat—when--one--walks |
singing a_ selection :of well-known/
It’s actu-|,
Critic Deplores
Chioice of Plays”
In “Two By Shaw” Production
by Pauline Dubkin ’63
al dramatic production of the year,
“Two by Shaw,” demonstrated
once more our exemplary médio-
crity. in.-non-academic matters.
Never bad enough really to pan,
never good enough ‘really to
praise is where many of our ef-
forts. at creativity stand, and
these Shaw one-acts were no ex-
ception.
Choice of - Plays
A great deal of what was wrong
with this production lay in ‘the
choice of plays. There is good
Shaw and there are good one-
acts. Why choose’ plays that are
neither? The first play, “The
Shewing-up of Blanco Posnet”, i
indeed “crude melodrama,’ and
knowirig that Shaw intended it be
such does not make it any less
dated and absurdly sentimental. In
the second, “Village Wooing,” the
humor is more subtle,.the lines are
fmore: witty, the Shavian touch-is
more’ noticeable—but these very
qualities pall on us the fastest, and
half way through the play we be-
gin wishing for a good steak in-
stead of all this crepe: suzette.
Unfortunately, the production
did not more than make up for the
poor choice of plays. In fact, in
general, it made it more evident
Again, none of the actors were
conspicuously “bad;” but _ none,
with the exception of Jane Rob-.
bins and, at times, Bob Nolte, did
enough to bring out the. poten-
tial (very. potential) sparkle in
even this mediocre Shaw. ae
“The Shewing Up of. Blanco
Posnet” was by far ‘the worse of |;
the two. The image of the Ameri-
can West .that Shaw gives is a
deliberate stereotype, but the soap-
opera Western accents of some of
the biddies at the opening of the
play (played by.Susan Viguers,.
Nancy McAdams, Nancy Milner,
Catherine McCauliff, and Wenda
Wardell, gid little" to bring the
stereotypes to life. The~ accents,
however, improved as the biddies’
self-consciousness left them, and
some of the characterisations grew
to be quite fine. '
Joe Schulze, -who played the
title role, captured the ‘imagina-
tion of the audience ‘as soon as ‘he
walked onto the stage.“In looks,
costumes, and gestures, he was the
perfect Blanco, but,-I am afraid,
not a very well-directed one. His
intonation throughout was stilted
and unchanging, and while this
a
Alumnae Reunions
Held This:-Weekend
Next weekend will bring back’ to
Bryn Mawr eleven reunion classes:
1902, 1907, 1912, 1915, 1916, 1937,
1958, 1954, 1955, 1956, and 1961. The
main feature of ‘the weekend will be
the Annual Meeting of the Alumnae
Association, Saturday . afternoon.
Miss McBride will speak about, new
developments at the College.
- Also plannéd for next weekend are
faculty programs and a luncheon
with the faculty. Friday evening,
alumnae will hear Miss-de Laguna
on “An Anthtopologist Looks at the
Campus.” -Mr.- Brown will offer “A
Study of Value Change in College
Women,” and Mr. ‘Kline will discuss
“Women, in the Soviet .Union.”
Saturday morning, Mrs. Marshall
and Mr. Baratz will give _alumnae
apreview “or the “interdep:
occasionally led to a desired com-
ever it was the play: had to say,
and) made some speeches sourid
,xather like a reading of “The Con-
go,” adding to the stiltedness of
the play itself, When he did vary
his voice he was effective, but
these’ monfents came too infre-
quently. :
Peter Moskovitz, as Elder Dan- __
iels, was the best of the men in
the play. With declamatory style .
and twitching moustache he main-
tained an excellent characterisation
throughout,
character. The contrast between
him and his brother, Blanco, was
amusing, and foreshadowed ano-
ther striking contrast,, to come,
thdét between Feemy Evans and
The Woman.
The two latter characters, play-
ed. respectively by Caroline Mac-
Nair and Gabriélle Schupf; are
the most interesting in the play,
and: -the--actress’
lived up to their potential of their
characters; Feemy~-was a brash
and~ brassy painted woman;
perhaps a bit too brash to have
broken down in the end, and inei-
dentally, a bit slow to pick up
her eues; but, in general, she gave
a polished. performance. The Wo-
man’s ormance was so power-
ful ast
place in such ‘vapid surroundings.
With a’vacant look of grief,’a soft
and -sorrowing voice, she alone’
commanded an secede quite
audience.
Mino? ‘Chasasians
The minor characters, Ion You-
man.as Strapper, Bill Learned ‘as
the sheriff, Bob Toan as the fore-
man, and George Nichols as Nes-
tor, were neither good nor bad;
they’ did nothing wrong except td.
be rather dull, as if they, like
their audience, were caught up ‘in
a silly and unpromising play.
“Village Wooing” did much to
remove the bad ttaste from the au-
dience’s -mouth. Jane Robbins as
A. and Bob Nolte as Z. were as
adept with their patter as Fred
Astaire is with his feet;
the play seemed rather like a
charming and complicated : tap
dance. . Character - was revealed
gracefully, through a look, a fa-
éial expression, a flutter of the
hand, or a single word, and both
actors managed to stay delicately
poised at that precarious point be-
tween oversubtlety and overbroad-
ness of characterisation. The lines
helped too.
A play-such as this one ‘is an
interesting study in theatre. Here,
there is little plot, less action, and
virtually nothing for the actors. to
rely on but their and the play-
wright’s ingenuity. They must.
strike. a pose when -the’ curtain
goes up and hold it, so to speak,
till the curtain call is over. Jane =
and Bob did just that and did it
very well, so well,. in fact, that
their voices, which never once
dropped to the level of everyday
speech, became tiresome. by the
end of the play. But this fault, if it
is a fault, lies in the play, which ~
is, after -all, very long to contain.
only two characters who have very
little to do.
“Village Wooing,” ‘due to the
wit of. the lines and the polish of
the actors, presented us with’
Shavian genius. in embryonic
form. “Blaneo: Posnet” presented
us with almost nothing substantial, —
TWith the best actors in ‘the world,
limited only by his
interpretations -
make her almost. out.of—
indeed
Biyn Mewi and Hawetfords fin-4° effect, in general it stifled what-
’
ough ~~~
course they are giving next year:
“Political and Economic Problems -in
Latin America.” Dinners and meet-
ings for the Reunion Classes are also
scheduled for the weekend. On Sun-
day Miss McBride and ‘Representa-
tives. of the--Reunion Classes will
speak. Miss. McBride Will also enter-
tain each of the reunion classes ‘at
Pen y Groes sometime. — the
weekend.
which Bryn Mawr: and Haverford
do not have, ‘these plays. -could’ pro- -
vide. an audience with little more-
than an evening’s diversion, to be
found almost as easily on television
and more easily at the. movies,
With actors who have term papers
and cricket matches to get done :
between rehearsals, WHY perform
plays that have so little potential
on. paper, much less on stage?
= : 3 Ric »-. ~%
@
ad
4
Tuesday, June s, 1962
THE COLLEGE NEWS.
Page ee
A. B. and Graduate Degrees
* BACHELOR OF ARTS
Biology
Shelby Louise Berger
Carol Ann Rabbett Grant
Elizabeth Keays Green . “
Ellen Ann, Greenberg
Rebecca Hazen
Mary Elizabeth Irvine
Bernice Katz
Marilyn Ottenberg Krause
Janet Lamborghini
Lynne Carole Lipton
Gay E. Mitnick a
Marianna Pinchot
~~Pamela Rundle Sharp
Joan Helen - Simpson
Janet, Valerie Tribe
Martha Webb
Chemistry
Arlene Phyllis Belkin
Jane Elizabeth Bradley
Daryl Ann Hansen
Janet Louise Herman °
-Anne Louise Rassiga. .
Thyra Elizabeth Reed
Janice Merle Ric
Shirley Seung
~~ Gail Joyce Shindell
Classical and. Near Eastern
Archaeology
. Charlotte Alice Brodkey
Hester Laning (Pepper
Jean Grdce Porter
~~ Beatrix: Elise Preyer —
Marian Hill Sagafi
Helen Augusta Gisella van
Cortlandt von Raits
Economics:
. Joelle Bertolet Blair
Marlene B. Bronstein:
--Faith-Gretehen- Halfter
Christine Barbara ‘Netishen
Judith Ann Samuelson
English
Anne Merritt Case
Elaine Beverly Cottler
Jeanne Ford D’Arcy
Martha Ann Fruit
Andrea Gerson Good
Valerie Ward Hollis
Elizabeth Barker Jones
Barbara Lynne Kevles
Margaret Weeks Pierce
Margaret Randolph Schiele
- Patricia Anne Thorne
Alice Kennedy Turner
- Katherine Yablonsky
Ellen Zetzel
French
Alice Louise Davison
Helen Fairbank
Martha, Whitney Horsley
Judith Elizabeth Jacobs
‘Betsy Lavere Krumrine
Joan Susan. Oberwager
| Abigail L’Hommedieu Reynolds
“Rachelle Ann Roth
Atleast Trafford..." -:
Geology
Many Dabney Gardner
~ Priscilla Croswell Perkins
German *
Martha Joy Birnbaum .
Joan Elizabeth Dolan
Margaret Jane Kersey
Mary-Margaret Roche
Valerie Diana Schoenfeldt
~~. Susanna Sheffield
Christine Whitehead
Greek -
_, Susah Becker Broughton
Greek and Classical and Near .
Eastern Archaeology
_Elizabeth. Jane Wayland-—--.
... History
Alison Baker
Elizabeth. Ross Balderston
Isabel Caroline Brannon
Linda Ann Bryson
_ Hetty Stephanie Condon
Josephine Campbell Donovan
. Gail Bernice Fischer
Jane Melville Furth
’ Evalyn Ann Gutman
Louise- Munson Herring“
Nan Kathryn Jamieson
-Ruta. Krastins
Bethany Reed Mende nhall
'Helen:E. Rodnite -
Barbara Jay Schieffelin
. — ee “Morris” ‘Stu 2a
Patricia Ballance ‘Wood
. ~ History of Art
Mary Evalyn Armstrong - .
Katharine: Elizabeth’ Cushman
Susan Elizabeth Nelson
Belinda F. Sutherland
Susan Crawford Tracy,
Louise Ann Weingarten
Judith Walton Belsley ~ ~
Barbara Haight Shoemaker
Phyllis Barbara Andler’
| Rosalind N. Conn
"| Abigail Jane Wootten ° sie
-|Brenda Vaughan Bouchard
| Diana Craig Meyer -
-| Emilie Jane Tanner
| Julie Ellen Tarachow
: Louise. Sobler= Wollman:
: ihavhaze Ann Bauman*
»| Yvorine Lenora Chan
‘|Susan° Odell Gladeck
| Lester Goodman
-Marian Anne Gray
1 Jane-Smith Mills’
a Ann: Carter Swayne
_| Walter. Lorenzo ‘Walker~
Jane Ann Hess. wy nen
Monica MacGaffey é.
Philosophy
Noel Claiborne Clark
Deborah Dooling Fitzgerald:
Lanie Flora Fleischer
Nancy Ellen Watson Graves _
Mary Eliot Jackson -
Dorothy Elisa Moore
Eleanor Sophia Maria
Snouck Hurgronje
Stefanie Sarkis Tashjian
Karen Ruth Willner —
: Political Science
Elizabeth Barber
Barbara Ann. Bates
Marion Coen
Ellen Corcoran
Linda Davis
Yvonne Karen’ Erickson
Marcia Sue Gencher
Jane Wilda -Gladson:;
Ellen. Louise Gorman
Margaret Ann Hartley —
Ann Bannon Marbut
Katharine Neely
Barbara Helene Paul
Imogene Lee Radeker ~
Deanne Sheila Rosenberg
Alexandra Siemel
Carolyn Leckie Smith
Judith Elizabeth Stuart
Psychology
Anne Brenda Davis ;
Norma Cohen Lefkovitz
Jane’ Ward Newhall
Virginia Rae Sitz-
Nancy Rotenberg Torop
Marita Viglione ©
Marilyn Jean Kilburn Wright
Susan Peters : Zebley
Russian
Sandra Carole Goldberg
Susan M;-Lagar-- ~
Carole Katherine Lemon
Zina Pisarko j
Sociology and ‘aiiveuiaes
Anthropology
Dayle Frances.-Benson
Glenda Fay Boyd
Margaret Ann Norman’
Sherry Beth Ortner
Diana C. Schramm
Harriet Whitehead
Sociology
Mary Livingstone Beebe
Susan Eleanor Johnson
Katharine -Niles McLean
Spanish
Judith Lenore Ellenbogen
Linda Marie Fish
Agnes Tallulah Moncy .
MASTER OF SOCIAL SERVICE |
Thelma Falk Baily :
Manon Bamberger
Angela Brett,
William F. Bussiere 4“
Alexnadra Farnham Ehret
Agatha Maverick Fairbanks
Janie Wall Freeman
Joan Miner Freeman. — _ ‘
si Cynthia Stone Klinman
~~~ MASTER OF ARTS
Anthropology
Gulbun Coker
Biology
Enoch D.. Houser ©
Wanda Lee Springer -
Chemistry |
Charles Wesley Evers, Jr.
Alice Carroll Swift
_ Classical and Near Eastern__
Archaeology
Nancy Bookidis ~~
Mary Coutroubaki
Elizabeth Chalfant MacNeil ‘ones
Economics
Helen T. Farr
Education and Child Development
Corazon Vergara
English
Elizabeth L. Carrow
Joan Dorothy Whitehead Crowther
Mary ‘Louise Hawkins
Argyro Sylvia Kartsonis -
Katherine Kohlhas Knight
Jay Richardson Massey
Mary Kathryn Stoker
French
Lynne Levick Gelber
= Geology
Robert R. Jordan
Greek —
: Mary Louise _Tich
History 4
~/Sarah Anne Rubin
History. and Political Science-
Mary Hilles Hayman
_ History of Art
Janice A. Levine
Patricia Joan Sonneborn
Italian
‘fGay Alice Marie Lofgren ‘|
Latin
Elizabeth Wrede McCracken
Mathematics
Deborah Ann Boyd
James H. Reill ‘
Music
Diawa Fackenthal
Philosophy
Priscilla N. Cohn
Physics
| Richard Shoichi Sakurai
Political Science
Linde. Jo McDaniel
Psychology
William Albert’ Roberts
Russian
Joan W. Gettig
Natalia M. Kolb-Seletski
“__ Seciology
Marie P. Dohan- ;
Spanish -
Lynne Summers Morris
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Department of. Biology
- Physiology and Embryology:
Anne E. Scarborough Hudock _
~ " Biochertlistry, Cytology and
Embryology
Phoebe Starfield Leboy
Physiology, ' Cytology and
Embryology
Joseph J. Previte
’ Department of Classical and Near
Eastern Archaeology :
Near Eastern Archaeology, Classical
- Archaeology and Ancient History
Theresa Howard Carter.
‘+ Department of Geology
*Paleontology and Stratigraphy
Joyce I. Mumby
Department. of Greek \--
62’s Varied Political Views -
Called Conservative-Liberai ~
_ by Marion Coen .’62
As the picketing, protesting, reso-
lution-making: and tradition-loving
{Class of 1962 prepares to make its
leap into “the real world,” it is in-
teresting to look for patterns in “its
real-world political behavior over the
past-four years. ie
The Class of ’62 was in on both
the initiation of action for Civil
Rights and the instigation of a cam-
paign™ for™ library purchase of the
Wall Street Journal and National}
Review. _ It. was. the class. which en-
tered Bryn Mawr to find a wave’ of
concern over the National Defense
Education Act’s Loyalty. Oath and
which leaves bequeathing the ques-
tion, “Can. man survive?”. We
spent four years in the interim pic-
keting in support of sit-ins, storm-
ing over shelters, and creating the
nucleus of a hard-core of Young
‘| Conservatives: In 1960, the Class
of ’62 led the student body ‘in’ sup-
| port of the Kennedy-Johnson’ ticket
| (55% for Kennedy, 37% for. Nixon;
8% undecided) and-in 1962 joined-in:
welcoming John--'Fowers, the first
| Conservative’ Senator in-many years
to speak at Bryn Mawr, _
The label-defying character of its
activities vis -A vis the outside- world
“Greek and Latin
Emily Marie Spence
Department of History
_Modern., European—Historyand==
American \History
Edward C. Carter, II
Department of the Histroy of Art
Renaissance Art and Modern «Art
Anne Coffin Hanson
Modern Art. and Mediaeval Art
Marianne Winter. Martin
Department of Latin °
Latin and Greek
Bettie Forte—
Latin’ and Greek
Katharine Allston Geffcken
Latin and Greek
Ursula Heibges :
Department of Philosophy
Systematic Philosophy and Histor-
ical Philosophy
Martha Jane Cauvel
Systematic Philosophy and Histori-
cal. Philosophy
Beatrice Takiko Yamasaki
Department of Physics
Physics and Mathematics
Lawrence Rozier Holland -
Physics. and Mathematics ~
Kenneth Lee Laws :
' Department of Spanish
Spanish Literature and French
Literature
Caroline Reinero Kemmerer oa
FACULTY SHOW
The final tally of the proceeds
of the Faculty Show yields a to-
tal of $1500 which has been put
into the President’s Fund.
was in contrast to a consistently
ing Bryn Mawr as it found it. The
driving rule was changed and hall
doors were kept open later on Fri-
day nights, but major changes,
| whether -in- the ~dress rules, Hell
Week or NSA membership were con-
sistently voted down, There were
new adventures (the College Bowl)
‘}and- modifications. of traditions (mad-—
rigals on May Day, a balloon tree
changes» in tone or purpose were
{avoided and strong student govern-
ment positions (on ldst name ad-
dress for staff members or campus
polls) were frowned upon.
The paradoxical nature of politi-
cal behavior on ‘a “conservative”
campus; with “liberal” ideas was
well illustrated by 1962’s debate over
participation. inthe National. Stu-
dent Association. ,
Ali over the country ‘student
—_— were discussing the merits
of NSA involvement. For: the most
and defended by ‘student liberals who
approved its stands, On the Bryn
| Mawr campus, however, the debate
took a somewhat different turn.
NSA was challenged by Conserva-
tives but also by Liberal reformers
of Bryn Mawr membership) and de-
fended. by Liberals, but also- by oc-
casional conservatives who favored
the staus quo -(Bryn Mawr mem-,
bership). The campus split did *not
parallel the’ Conservative-Libéral
factionalism on the national scale,
dergrad (pro-NSA). and those-in fa-
vor of decentralization. (anti-NSA),
, As it turned out, the campus vot-
ed to maintain NSA membership (a
“Liberal” victory in national terms)
and then proceeded to elect a staunch
and articulate Conservative to fill
the. post. of NSA _ representative.
Paradoxically, while most of the “lib-
erals”. were delighted with ‘the way
the NSA question was resolved, ‘the
victory really belonged. . to campus
Conservatives.
If the activities of the Class of
1962 can be categorized
be by a conservative instinct about
traditions and practices - (including
such liberal institutions as the
NSA) and a liberal ear for dissi-
Conserva-
in fact, the
Young Conservatives).
tive-liberalism .. seems,
ing, protesting, resolution-making,
Kennedy-supporting, tradition-loving
the Class of- 1962,
Vivian L, Grove :
Sandta Marian Ann Grymes
Harry -W. Halbersleben
ie Duncan Ingles
Michal Kane.
Charles Q. MacDonough, ITI
Georgia Louisa McMurray
Richard. H. Miller.
William Henry Moyer
Jirina Sladek Polivka
Anthony Frank Bantore.
|] Available 1 June or 1 Sept.
| tion will assure you of a place’
UL EFF...
a oe
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MASS. _
a choice of modern = apart-
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Leonard Toplin ©
Anne Emilie MacDonald Wagner :
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EVERYTHING IN FLOWERS & PLANTS |
Jeannett’s Bryn Mawr.
Flower Shop —_—-
823 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa.
LAwrence 5-0326 tAwrence 5-0570
room ‘apts. either.. furnished
or unfurnished, children ac: |
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Ave or Call 864-4717 or write
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ments _all ‘with tile baths..and-}
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SENI
Parade Night
..» Faculty Lectures...
Changed at Bryn Mawr?~. .
Week ..
Skits...
~~
Commencement.
‘hart Hall, Bryn Mawr College,
|
COP TO CR ee wee e ee meee ee ee eee
OF Please bill me in ‘September.
.. » Freshman Hall Plays.
Junior Show... Wi
. Freshman Weekend. .
.. Campus “Elections . . .
WHY LOSE TOUCH? ‘STAY INTHE NEWS. STAY ae.
The: College News
Order your subscription for next year now. Just fill out the fol-
lowing’ and_mail to;_Subscription- Manager, College News, Good- |
ORS:
. . Lantern Night
Will Exams be ©
o« Hell.
May Day... Class Day |.
Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.
. You_will. receive. an-issue-a- Week: beginning” Oewper’ 3; 1962
ceoeeFC eres ees esas eee ees GS ebhesesiia
Oe ee ee
0 Encldied. is $5.00 i in check, cash or money: order. —- ‘iceiiatiaiaalls
conservative.approach to “domestic” .
issues—the class apparently. approv-
instead of Class Day skits) and even .
revivals - (faculty show); but major .
part; NSA~was denounced by Young -
Conservatives: as- “ungepresentative”~
in..search _of--Change--(cancellation ~~
but was, rather, a debate between —
.|those- who favored a stronger Un-—
it must .
dence (even When it comes from -
only tag that could be..safely at-- ~
tached to the activities of the picket-
and label-defying collective which is
sale ia cancanitpane eat iter aon 0
te...
eget SD ‘=
ae ere
? -
;
Page Four
¥
ca
of ‘ } ; Pe y ‘
THE COLLEGE NEWS Tuesday, June 5, 1962
oe e -
Senior Plans
of Continued from Page 1, Col, 5 —
Memorial Medical Scholarship; Ja-
vice. Richman and. Marilyn. Krause,
who will ‘both have Harriet Judd
Sartain Memorial Scholarships for
medical studies (the former at Har-
vard, the latter at the U. of P.);
ee Jane Bradley, who will also study
A
ee
‘at Harvard Medical School;
East Africa.
Mari-
anna Pinchot at Johns Hopkins and
Elizabeth Webb at Dartmouth. .
‘Law School has so far attracted
‘four seniors: Marion “Coen will be
at Harvard, Barbara Paul at Yale,
Evalyn Gutman at Cornell, and Bar-
_ bara Bates is still undecided. One
“member of the class, Priscilla Per-
kins, has an NSF grant to study ge-
ology at the’ University of . Califor-
nia, .
Shirley Seung will have a teaching
fellowship at Harvard And Christine
Netisheii the same at the University] .
of Illinois. Gail Fisher, Ellen Gor-
man and Marilyn Wright are enrgJl-
ed. in- Harvard’s MAT program.
These are only a few of the many
plans for graduate study held by the
individual seniors.
Many of the seniors will be hold-
ing paid jobs. The. Peace Corps has
accepted Ellen Corcoran and Brenda
. Bouchard. who - will be teaching. in|
Ghana and Columbia “respectively.
Pixie Schieffelin. hopes to teach in
for the USIA. Severat members of
the class will be teaching in public
or private schools next year, but
few plan to be as far away as. Jane
Hess, who will be working in Puna-
hou, Honolulu.
Thirty-six members of the Class |’
of 1962 are married or engaged.
Nancy Graves is going to Europe
for a year with her husband, . and
Peggy. Kersey. will work in. Paris
oo = @ =>
PA. ® Se 2 5 e - &
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‘Now, vacationing -students and
faculty members can enjoy summer
accommodations at Sheraton Hotels
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Thanks to Sheraton'’s Student 1.D, or
Faculty Guest Cards, you'll have a
better vacation this summer for less”
money! Sheraton Hotels get straight
A's in every department: Comfort,
convenience, and cuisine. And if
~ you're traveling by car, there's Free
‘Parking at most Sheraton Hotelsand - | “
ee
discounts -at any of Sheraton’s:61_
hotels in. the U.S.A., Hawaii and
Canada by presenting your Card. To
“get. Sheraton 1,0. Card or Faculty
Guest Card with credit privileges,
write us. Please state where you are
pull tinve faculty member or student. :
_ Mp. Patrick Green
College Relations Dept.
470 Atlantic
——
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Alison- Baker- willbe}. .
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seen ‘
while Steve is at the Sorbonne. Nine so cae
of the married: or engaged-seniors}q- \,__BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN
plan further studies; sixteen plan to a
work, Several are > beginning fam- we Be AM heres B OPEN TO THE PUBLIC:
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ae ora seniors with exciting Pe p OPEN ‘7 DAYS WEEKLY .°
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ed on their futures or had not let] TELEPHONE *..“LOMBAERT ST. AND MORRIS AVE.::
anyone know-of--their-plans. ~< a == LAWRENCE. _5-0886: --— BRYN MAWR,. PENNSYLVANIA |
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‘Tareyton
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DVAL FILTER DOES 1?!
AN :
LY aade
uN Bhd
| *Tareyton’ 's Dual Filter j in duas partes « divisa est!”
“ says Virgilius ( Vinegar Virgil) Cassius, noble. Praetorian — .
ne ATasman; ashe prepares for another~giorious™ parade.” e 7
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College news, June 5, 1962
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1962-06-05
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 48, No. 22
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-vol48-no22