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COLLEGE NEWS
Vol. Li, No. 21] BRYN MAWR, PA. May 30,. 1966 © Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1966 25 Cents
~ Graduates Hear Robert Goheen
At 66 Commencement Program
Bryn Mawr College today con-
ferred the degree of Bachelor of
Arts on 156 candidates at the first
commencement ceremony held on
Wyndham Green.
President McBride also awarded
Master of Arts degrees, Master
of Social Service degrees, and Doc-
tor of Philosophy degrees.
The commencement address was
delivered by Robert Goheen,
President of Princeton and father
of Trudie Goheen, ’66, Miss Mc-
Bride spoke to the graduates and
announced the academic awards
for work of distinction.
Robert Goheen
At the Baccalaureate service
in Goodhart Sunday evening, the
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, head
of the Southern Christian Leader-
ship Conference and Nobel Peace
Prize winner, delivered the ser-
mon.
Henry J. Cadbury, Chairman of
the Board of Directors of Bryn
Mawr College, offered the
invecation, A psalm was read by
College Appoints
Edmund Spaeth
To Trustee Post
Announcement has been made by
Miss. Katharine E. McBride,
President of Bryn Mawr College,
of the appointment of Judge Edmund
B. Spaeth, Jr. of Philadelphia as
a trustee and director of the Col-
lege.
Judge Spaeth is a judge of the
Court of Common Pleas No. 8
of the First Judicial District of
Pennsylvania and is aformer part-
ner in the law firm of MacCoy,
Evans and Lewis of Philadelphia.
Judge Spaeth was graduated from
Harvard College with the Class of
1942 and from the Harvard Law
School in 1948. He served in the
United States Navy from 1942 until
_, 1946 and in the U. S.. Naval Re-
serve until 1963,.presently holding
the rank. of commander. He has
been active in affairs of the
Germantown Friends School, of
which he is an alumnus, and in
the Germantown Monthly Meeting
of Friends.
Cantor Frank B. Ruben, Executive
Director, Central States Region,
Zionist. Organization of America
and father of Marjorie Ruben,
66. Following Dr. King’s sermon,
a benediction was said by the
Right Rev. Beverley D. Tucker, °
retired Bishop of Ohio and grand-
father of Tollie Drane, ’66.
Chemistry Professor Joseph
Varimby served as the Faculty
Chairman of Commencement,
starting his term of office this
year. ——
The following students received
their degrees with distinction:
~ Summa Cum Laude
Linda Devereux
Mo gna Com Laude
Paula Frances Alexander
Virginia Stafford Brodhead
Cynthia Smith Caldwell
. Susan Mildred Capling
Florence Elaine Castelle
+ Rhonda Toby-Zoe Copelon
Mary Teresita Currie
Cissie Catherine Fairchilds
Madeline Leah Feldman
Jacqueline Rose Giuliano
Eren Hostetter Givan
\ Katharine Burdell Gresham
Laurel Gail Haag
Bonita Marie Hanes
Eve Joan Hitchman
Linda Horner Hochberg
Jeanne Kann Krieger
Sandra Joan Magil
Myra Ann Mayman
| Kathleen Thomits Merkin
Martha Jane Morgan
Patricia Anne Ohl
Merrily Pittman
Alexis Esther Pogorelskin
Ann Loftin Robinson a
Elizabeth Molin Roueche
Celia Dana Rumsey
Elaine Fredlyn Surick
Ann Chilton Williams
Sylvia Margaret Young
Cum Laude
Susan Barbara Anderson
Eve-Marie Madeleine Balfe
Jacqueline Mary Batten
Patricia Stuart Bauer
Jane Ellen Berezin
Johanna Gwinn Birnbaum
Gretchen Anne Blair
Joyce Elizabeth Blair
Elizabeth Jennifer Bogen
Susan Burkhardt
Carol Lynn Cain
Elizabeth Stark Cameron
Alice Ely Chapman
Jih Jen Chiang
Elizabeth Earle Cobey
Leslie Coen
Marilyn Edith Craft
Sheila Mae Dowling
Eleanor Lile Drane
Karen Lee Durbin
Ellen Carol Eliasoff
Sarah Lee Ewer
Norma Jeanne Ford
Nancy Ruth Geist
Gertrude McFarland Goheen
Harriet Michelle Goldman
Wilma Shirley Goodman
Judith Lippincott Goodwin
Pamela Leslie Goold
Victoria Grafstrom
Stephanie Ann Habel
.Marynelle Hall
Madeleine Ingalls Henderson
Mary Porter Johns
Ann Frances Johnson
Virginia Kerr
Patricia Klein
Marilyn Lazareva Lazarevich
Anita Polishuk Lockett
Anne Louise Lovgren
Donna Lynn Macek
Lois Marie Magnusson
Catherine deGrazia Matelli _
Melissa Brownell McCarty -
Janet Williamson Meeks
Marie-Louise Nickerson
Edith Mildred Novack
Ellen Clifton Patterson
Edna Brush Perkins
Leslie Elizabeth Prestor. *
Carolyn Joy Quill
Barbara Schaefer Quinn |
Maria del Pilar Alexandra Hope
Richardson
Anne Newton Rorimer
Marjorie Wilma Ruben
Donna Daitzman Rubens
Barbara D. Sachs
Diane Holly Sampson
Elien Susan Segal
Jean Andrea Seligmann
Sharon Rosemary Shelton
Carole Anne Slatkin
Marianne Hendee Smith
Elizabeth Jean Stamm
Susan Linda Stannard
Sue Ellen Terrill
Mary Lynn Thom
Margaret Jeanne Trubek
Susan Yarnall Urban
Carolyn Ann Wade
Sheila Suzanne Walker
Viola Burden Wathen
Batsheva Wingate
Valerie Winston
Jane Elizabeth Zucker
Emerson Leaves
For Penn Post
Mrs. Alice Emerson, Political
Science professor, has accepted
the post of acting Dean of Women
at the University of Pennsylvania,
effective/July 1.
Mrs. Emerson was graduated
from Radnor High School and Vas-
sar College, and received her
Ph.D, from Bryn Mawr. She also
was issued a secondary school
teacher’s certificate in 1956 from
the University of Pennsylvania’s
School of Education,
She succeeds Constanee Dent
who will be teaching psychology
at Kutztown State Cellege in Penn-
sylvania,
Graduating class marches to commencement.
Scholarships, Prizes Recognize
Scholarships and prizes for dis-
tinction in academic work were
awarded at this morning’s com-
mencement exercises,
Myra Ann Mayman, a German
major, was the recipient of the
Hester Ann Corner Prize for dis-
tinction in literature,
The Elizabeth Duane Gillespie
Prizes in American History,
awarded annually on nomination by
the Department of History for work
of distinction in American History,
was presented to Nancy Joan Gell-
man and Melissa Brownell—Mc-
Carty. A
Mary Teresita Currie was the
winner of the Helen Taft Manning
Essay Prize in European History
or World History.
In the graduate Department of
Social Work and Social Research,
three awards were also announced
at this morning’s assembly.
The Hertha Kraus Award for
the best paper on a subject re-
lating to Community Organ-
ization, History of Social Wel-
fare, International Social Work, or
Social Work Administration was
presented to Barbara Hertwig
Meschter of Glenside, ‘ Penn-
sylvania.
Donald Dean Moyer of Phila-
delphia won the Joseph D. Gibbon
'. Award, given by the Pennsylvania
Grads Receive Awards
Of Medical Scholarships
Scholarships for medical study
have been awarded to eight Bryn
Mawr graduates by the College,
and five undergraduates have also
received scholarships for summer
study abroad.
The winners of the medical
scholarships are:
Hannah E. Longshore
Memorial Scholarships
Mary Jurbala of Springfield, Penn-
sylvania. A.B, 1963
Rowena Lichtenstein of New Roch-
elle, New York. A.B, 1965.
Donna Mildvan of ‘Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, A.B, 1963,
Jane V. Myers
~-Memorial Scholarships
Jane V. Hnilicka of Concord, Mas-
sachusetts. A.B, 1963.
Harriet Judd Sartain
Memorial Scholarships
Eileen A. Ferrin of Baltimore,
Maryland. A.B, 1965.
Anna Y. Lo of Philadelphia, Penn-
sylvania. A.B. 1964
Barbara Meyer Meyers of Wash-
ington, D.C, A.B, 1961.
Deena Klein Stolzberg.of Passaic,
New Jersey. A.B, 1964.
Students who have received
grants for summer study abroad
are:
Frances Day Lukens
Scholarships
Robin Wendy Kadison of Forty
Fort, Pennsylvania
Patricia Lynne Moody of Miami,
Florida
Thomas Raeburn White
Scholarships
Suzanne’ Fedunok of Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania
Helen Lee Feldman of Rochester,
Minnesota
Jean Mason Miller of Roanoke,
Virginia
Distinction in Academic Work
United Fund to a graduating stu-
dent for excellence in Community
Organization.
The Helen Harbison Award to a
graduating student for excellence
in Casework also went to Barbara
Hertwig Meschter.
Trustees Approve —
Controversial Rule
Of Men in Rooms
The Boardof Directors has voted
} to approve the current rules on men
in the rooms, making them
provisional for another year. Next
fall they have called for written
reports from Self-Gov on the
general application of the rules
and they reserve the right to vote
on them again next spring.
As at the beginning of this year,
votes will be taken in each hall
as to whether and for what hours
the rules should go into effect.
The votes will again be by secret
ballot to insure full expression
of opinion.
The vote followed discussion
among Self-Gov and the Ad-
ministration on the application of
the rules this year and specifically
on the results of the questionnaires
circulated by Self-Gov to soundout
general attitudes regarding the
student’s responsibility, if any, to
the campus community.
The overwhelming majority of
those responding to the question-
naires (about 350 in all) Gd feel
that the individual student has a
responsibility toward the college
community, emphasizing the im-
portance of ‘‘mutual respect’? and
consideratidh for other members
of this community. As to the
specific role of Self-Gov, Sec-
retary Beth Chadwick said that a
general attitude was that Self-Gov
should function as a body not only
for publicizing rules, but also for
gathering and discussing campus
opinions on them,
Beth said that next year Self-
Gov would focus attention on
making the implications of rules
clear to the freshman, and would
generally make efforts to stress
student responsibilities and, she
said, ‘‘part of the responsibility
is keeping the issue alive.’’ They
will also stress that the proper
channel for airing complaints per -
taining to-such rules is through
Self-Gov, especially through the.
hall presidents.
Page 2
THE COLLEGE NEWS
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Office filed October Ist, 1963.
Second Class Postage paid at Bryn Mawr, Pa, ;
FOUNDED IN 1914 :
Published weekly during the College Year (except during Thanks-
giving, Christmas and Easter holidays, and during examination
weeks in the interest of Bryn Mawr College at the Regional Printing
Company, Inc., Bryn Mawr, 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 .
EditoreineChief ecccccccccccccccccccccscccccs Nanette Holben °68
Associate Editor, .eccccscccscccceseccseecoes Laure Krugman ’67
Managing Editor ecvenecrcccscceeccnccocsccsccccs Kit Bakke °68
Cc
che p Editor eecrccccceseccccocescccceccs Datione Preisaler
| MembereateLarge wcccccscccccccccesscvesecece Robin J ohnson °68
Contributing Editor ee ecorcescorereercereose Lynne Lackenbach °66
‘Business Manager, ...0: oo eocccccccccccescccscccFem Hunt °69
Subscription Managers .....+ Madeleine Sloane, ’68, Mary Ann Spreigel °68
Advertising Manager ec cerce soeccccscreecece co o Diane Ostheim °69
EDITORIAL STAFF
Anne Lovgren, °66, Lois Magnusson, °66, Joan Cavallaro, °67, Marilyn Williams,
Kong a i a Emily McDermott, '68, Marcia Ringel, °68, Peggy Thomas,
ra zea, Nancy Miller, °69, Kathy Murph °69, R N ®
Cookie Poplin, 69, Ann Shelnutt, °69. . iy aac lt ice
Looking Backward
It was a long four years ago when the Class of ’66 opened’'a Freshman
handbook with these words from Miss McBride:
“The members of the Faculty welcome you to Bryn Mawr. They look
forward to meeting you in September and to talking with you about your
work and your plans,
**Many of you will come to college having done advanced work tn
school. You will want to consider which advanced college course or
courses will be right for you. Many more of you -- and not necessarily
those who have already done work of college level in school -- will want
to discuss how you can best in the short period of four years establish
the foundations of a strong liberal education and at the same time prepare
for later graduate or professional work. :
‘«We have the resources to help you -- the instruction, the libraries,
the laboratories, You will be BUILDING IN your own education, calling
on these resources as you do so. Remind yourself from time to time
that while nobody but you can create your education, still there are
many ways in which members of the Faculty and Staff can help -- and
they are very ready to help. :
‘*It is important that no talent, no valuable interest and no determina-
tion, be wasted, In this context I think of your own satisfaction and also
of your potential contribution. In a world that depends so heavily on the
highly educated person, each contribution is important.
‘*Your contribution may be through your family, your community or on
some larger national or international scene. The likelihood is that it
will be made in several different ways. You have of course already
begun to. shape this contribution, Your four years at Bryn Mawr should
mean great advances in its development.’’
The four years are at an end. Whatever great advances Bryn Mawr
. has made in the development of the potential contribution of each mem-
ber of the graduating class, we are certain that these four years have
not been without meaning, ‘
Hopefully (a word that a Bryn Mawr education seems to implant in
us), the coming years will witness the realization of these potential
contributions, and we anticipate news of your success.
Congratulations and good luck.
Progress Is...
Throughout the past four years, while the intellects, personalities,
and -- as evidenced by the class picture book -- even the outward
appearances of the present seniors have been developing and changing,
the college has by no means stood still and watched them pass from year
to year. Bryn Mawr itself has progressed considerably in that time, in
aspects from buildings to the private life of its students.
Some of the most noticeable changes are the result of the Ford
Foundation Grant, In Miss McBride’s words, the grant of $2,500,000
and the work of 1,500 alumnae to equal and surpass it have given Bryn
Mawr ‘‘the most stimulating time in the recent history of the College
and made way for more rapid progress in the future.’’ The funds have
already provided for the construction of two buildings -- the one for
Physical. Science and Mathematics and the other a dormitory, Louis
Kahn’s ‘Scottish castle’’ -- and will partly finance the extension of
the Library. In addition, the grant gave new strength to the faculty in
the form of increased salaries and new appointments. For the students,
more graduate and tindergraduate scholarships are available.
The academic functionings of the college have experienced change
in the remodeling of the curriculum. Beginning with the class of 1969,
required subjects will no longer be exactly what they have been in years
past. To comply with expanding programs in secondary school education
and with the increasing desire to attend graduate school, the college
revised its curriculum to allow the entering freshman to begin college
work wherever her ability and preparation permit and provide the
graduating senior with the highest level of work she can achieve to
prepare her for advanced study.
Within the student body, changes have been made by the Self-Govern-
ment Association. Girls may now entertain male guests in their rooms
until 10 p.m., the exact hours being decided in each individual hall by
a vote each fall, The new driving rule permits not only driving on campus
but keeping cars off-campus in the Bryn Mawr area, In the fire-safe
dormitories -- Rhoads and Erdman -- smoking is allowed in student
rooms, And minor changes such as the 2 a.m. unescorted sign-out
have been instituted.
Several of the revisions, and additional. ones now being proposed,
. lave occurred in cooperation with Haverford; the two schools have co-
take courses at the other; there is one Russian Department to serve
both, and the Economics Departments have confederated in the last
year. Most of the social activities are coordinated.
Bryn Mawr is changing with both its immediate and its general
environments to provide incoming freshmen with the same standards
and conveniences as the graduating seniors have experienced.
ccccccceccececccceoccc eee cee oHleanor yon Auw °68 A
Editor eecseve fr
COLLEGE NEWS
May 30, 1966
22 Are Awarded Ph. D. Degrees
By Miss McBride at Graduation.
Graduate degrees were awarded
this morning to 22 Ph.D. can-
didates, 33 Master: of Arts can-
didates and 40 Master of Social
Service candidates.
Doctor of Philosophy
Department of Biology--
Physiology, Cytology and Em-
bryology:
RY ANN FRITZ of Penn-
sylvania.
Embryology, Physiology and
Bio-chemistry:
DAVID S. McDEVITT of Penn-
sylvania.
Department of Chemistry--
Organic Chemistry and Physical
Chemistry:
LILI ALTSCHULER of Penn-
sylvania.
Department of Education and Child
Development--
Education and Child Develop-
ment:
HELEN GROSS FIRST of Penn-
sylvania.
Department of English--
English Literature;
VALERIE WARD HOLLIS of Penn-
sylvania. 5
English Literature and American
Literature: ‘
BEVERLEY CHADWICK SHERRY
of Australia,
Department of ,;CGeology and
Physics--
Physic?! Geology and Physics:
LEE C, BENNETT, JR, of Mas-
sachusetts,
Department of History--
European History and American
History:
FRANCIS COGHLAN of Penn-
sylvania.
European History and Mediaeval
Latin:
MAUREEN FENNELL MAZZAOUI
of Canada, ;
Mediaeval History and Modern
European History:
BERNARD F, REILLY of Penn-
sylvania.
Modern European: History and
American History:
DERK VISSER of Pennsylvania.
Department of History of Art--
History of Art:
DIANE M. KELDER of New York,
SELMA PFEIFFENBERGER of
New York.
Department of Philosophy--
History of Philosophy and
Systematic Philosophy:
WILLIAM A, WISDOM of Penn-
sylvania,
Department of Physics--
Physics and Mathematics:
PRISCILLA’ LAWS of Pennsyl-
vania,
Department of Political Science--
Political Science:
LYNNE IGLITZIN
sylvania.
Department of Russian--
Russian Literature and History
of the Russian Language:
of Penn-
LUBA HALAT KOWALSKI of New ©
Jersey.
Department of Social Work and
Social Research--
Community Organizati
Social Research:
EDITH A, LEOPOLD of Penn-
sylvania.
Research in Social Work and
Social Science Concepts in Social
Work;
AINA O, NUCHO
sylvania.
Community Organization and
Social Work Research;
ELIZABETH LUCIA PINNER of
Pennsylvania.
Department of Spanish--
Spanish Literature and French
Literature:
SOLITA SALINAS MARICHAL of
Massashusetts,
Spanish Language and Literature
and
of Penn-
and Mediaeval Spanish Literature:
WILLIAM M. ROSENTHAL of New
Jersey. :
Master of Arts
Subject, Biology and Chemistry:
JANE JSING WU of Taiwan.
Subject, Classical and Near
Eastern Archaeology:
ANNE GREENWALD BONN of
Pennsylvania,
‘STELLA GROBEL of Tennessee,
ARLENE PEARL KRIMGOLD of
Maryland.
Subject, Education and Child
Development:
CAROL. HATCH .ROBERTS of
Pennsylvania,
ISABEL BALLA WESTFRIED of
Pennsylvania,
Subject, English:
MARGARET ELAINE BELL of
Maryland,
SANDRA IGER KOHLER of Penn-
sylvania.
Subject, French:
PATRICIA ANN PYLE of Penn-
sylvania,
Subject, Geology:
MARY EMMA WAGNER of Penn-
: sylvania,
Subject, German:
KATE CLAUDIA BARCUS of Penn-
sylvania,
VERONIQUE.._LA.GIRODAY__ of
Pennsylvania,
HELGA PILLWEIN of Penn-
sylvania,
Subject, History of Art:
ANNE INGERSOLL GLENDINNING
of Pennsylvania.
Subject, Italian:
MARY. KAY STEVENSON SUL-
LIVAN of Arkansas,
Subject, Latin: :
CAROL FROST of Massachusetts,
EDWARD F, JAWOROWSKI of
Pennsylvania,
ALBA CLAUDIA ROMANO of Ar-
gentina,
Subjects, Latin and Greek:
SHEILA KATHRYN DICKISON of
Canada,
CATHERINE S,. PEARSON of New
Jersey.
Subject, Music
SARAH BANKS SUTTON of Mis-
souri.
Subject, Physics:
GEORGE J. UNTERKOFLER of
Connecticut,
Subject, Political Science:
EPSEY COOKE FARRELL of Mis-
sissippi,
RAZELLE SHERR FRANKL of
Pennsylvania,
JOAN F, HOMER of Pennsylvania,
Subject, Psychology:
JOHN CALVIN BAREFOOT of
North Carolina,
SUSAN JANE BASS of Penn-
sylvania,
DENNIS PAUL GALLAGHER of
Colorado.
Subject, Russian:
PAULINE K, GOLDSTEIN of Penn-
sylvania,
Subject, Sociology:
AYSE ERCETIN of Turkey,
LEONARD GLICKof Pennsylvania,
Subject, Spanish:
JOAN LYNNE PATAKY KOSOVE
of Pennsylvania,
LOURDES MARTINEZ of Florida.
Master of Social Service
DONNA MARIE ANDERSON of Ohio
PHYLLIS KROLL ARNOW of Penn-
sylvania
EDWARD EUGENE BAUM of Penn-
sylvania
ELIZABETH ELLEN BERGER of
Pennsylvania
MARY LEE BLACKBURN of Penn-
sylvania
ALICE FOX BOARDMAN of Penn-
sylvania .
ROBERT ELWOOD COLEMAN of
Pennsylvania
KATHLEEN BERNADETTE DOR-
WART of Pennsylvania
ELIZABETH L, ERSLEV of Penn-
sylvania
FELICIA FORSYTHE FOULKES
of Pennsylvania
SHIRLEY J. FUNK of Pennsylvania
(continued on page 4)
aaa ne
...the direction of
the education from iol
whence one starts is |
likely to determine the .
quality of what follows
1 Plato's Republic
| Book IV, 425b
|
|
and Welcome
to the
Alumnae Association
May 30, 1966
COLLEGE NEWS
Page 3
156 In C lass Of 66 Earn Bachelor of Arts Degrees
Eve Joan Hitchman of Maryland* Susan Yarnall Urban of Vermont*
One hundred fifty-six students
are receiving their A.B, degrees
this morning. Those girls grad-
uating with honors in their majors
are denoted with an asterisk.
Biology
Johanna Gwinn Birnbaum of West
Virginia*
Pauline Hsiao Chen Chu of Switz-
erland
Anna Frances Ciarochi of Alaska
Stephanie Ann Habel of New York*
Diana Hamilton of California
Christina Carroll Howard of Penn-
sylvania*
Ann Frances Johnson of New York
Martha Jane Morgan of North Car-
olina
Helen Louise Robinson of Connecti-
cut*
Donna Daitzman Rubens of Penn-
sylvania
Chemistry :
Jih Jen Chiang of Taiwan, the
Republic of China*
Madeline Leah Feldman of Con-—
necticut
Jeanne Kann Krieger of Connecti -
cut*
Lynne Frisch Lackenbach of New
York
Chemistry and Physics
Elaine Fredlyn Surick of Pennsyl-
vania
Classical and Near Eastem
Archaeology
Victoria Grafstrom of Canada
Catherine deGrazia Matelli of New
York*
Leslie ‘Elizabeth Preston of Mea:
‘ tana*
Harriet Christine Thompson of
. Colorado.
Classical and Near Eastem
Archaeology and Greek —
Marilyn Lazareva Lazarevichn ot
Pennsylvania*
Economics
Claudia Kempf Charles of Illinois
Grace Smith Hamilton of Penn-
sylvania
Merrily Pittman of Oregon
Mary Catherine Wolfe of Pennsyl-
vania
English:
Sarah Rob Colby Allen of Illinois
Paula Frances Alexander _ of
Massachusetts
Eve-Marie Madeleine Balfe of
France
Patricia Stuart Bauer of New Jer-
sey
Jane Ellen Berezin of Massachu-
setts*
Elizabeth Ann Bielski of California
Elizabeth Jennifer Bogen of New
York
Virginia Stafford Brodhead of
Pennsylvania
Susan Burkhardt of New York
Caroline Louise Burlingham of
New York
Carol Lynn Cain of Ohio
Patricia Collins of New Jersey
Mary Eleanor Daubenspeck of
Connecticut
Sarah Virginia Dunlap of Massa-
chusetts
Karen Lee Durbin of Indiana’
Eren Hostetter Givan of California
Jacqueline Rose Guiliano of New
York
Harriet Michelle Goldman of Penn-
sylvania
Pamela Leslie Goold of New York
Patricia Aline Gordon-Mann of
North Carolina
Hope Stuart Green of Massachu-
setts
Bonita Marie Hanes of Maryland
Dorothy Knox Howe of Texas
Charlotte Huntley of Texas
Joanna Miller Lewis of New York
Mary Alice McDowell of Connecti-
cut
Janet Williamson Meeks of Penn-
sylvania
Barbara Kaye Moran of Virginia
Marie-Louise Nickerson of New
York
Maria del Pilar Alexandra Hope
Jersey
Leslie Coen of:New Jersey
Eleanor Lile Drane of Ohio
Gertrude McFarland Goheen of
New Jersey
Phyllis Wright King of Florida
Patricia Klein of New York
Judith Lovering Roland of Rhode
Island
Elizabeth Molin Roueche of Mary- ..
land
Diane Holly Sampson of [Illinois
Susannah Ellen Sard of New York
Sharon. Rosemary Shelton of
Illinois
French and Latin
Linda Devereux of Pennsylvania
German.
Gretchen Anne Blair of Pennsyl-
vania
Sarah Lee Ewer of Massachusetts
Myra Ann Mayman of Massachu-
setts*
Barbara Schaefer Quinn of Virginia
Greek
Mary Porter Johns of Virginia
Jean Andrea Seligmann of New
York
Caroline Claire Willis of North
Carolina
“History
Rhonda Toby-Zoe Copelon of Con-
necticut
Mary Teresita Currie of New
York*
Carole Denton of Georgia
Cissie Catherine Fairchilds of
Pennsylvania
Nancy Ruth Geist of New York
Katharine Burdell Gresham of
Maryland
Virginia Kerr of Indiana
Dorianne Lewis Low of Maryland
Melissa Brownell McCarty of
Maryland*
Ann Loftin Robinson of North Car -
olina
Heather Andrea Stilwell of New
Jersey
Jo Ann Strom of New York
Mary Lynn Thom of Ohio*
Ann Chilton Williams of Massa-
chusetts
Valerie Winston of New Jersey
History of Art
Susan Barbara Anderson of Illinois
Elizabeth Stark Cameron of Ohio
Beverly Kathleen Carter of New
York
Norma Jeanne Ford of Pennsyl-
vania
Judi
necticu
Vicki Ann May of New York
Anne Newton Rorimer of New York
Celia Dana Rumsey of New York
Carole Anne Slatkin of New York
Italian
Jacqueline Mary Batten of Italy
Daria Gortchacow of Uruguay
Jane Elizabeth Zucker of New York
Latin
Anne Louise Lovgren of Indiana
Sandra Joan Magil of the District
of Columbia
Jane Walton of Ohio
Mathematics »
Wilma Shirley Goodman of Penn-
sylvania
Marynelle Hall of Pennsylvania
Kathleen Thomits Merkin of New
’ Hampshire
Margaret Jeanne Trubek of New
cott Goodwin of Con-
Jersey
Mary Christine Turnquist of
Colorado
Sylvia Margaret Young of Wis-
ennsin*
Mathematics and Philosophy
Sheila Mae Dowling of Pennsyl-
vania
Mu sic :
Alice Ely Chapman of Pennsylvania:
«nna Helena Norberg of Oklahoma
Philosophy
June Yuet Boey of New York
Jill Anne Dunnell of Maryland
Laurel Gail Haag of Pennsylvania*
Anita Polishuk Lockett of Texas
Patricia Anne Ohlof Pennsylvania*
Physics
Jean Leslie Hiles of Florida
Political Science
Gladys Maria Bucaram of Ecuador
Elizabeth Earle Cobey of the
District of Columbia
thin
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Eudora Ebitimi Kombo of Nigeria .
Donna Lynn Macek of Pennsylvania
Lois Marie Magnusson of Mary-
land :
Edith Mildred Novack of Penn-
sylvania
Edna Brush Perkins of “Massa-
chusetts
Sandra Shapiro of Rhode Island
Susan Linda Stannard of Connecti-
cut
Sue Ellen Terrill of North Carolina
Carolyn Ann Wade of New York’
Sheila Suzanne Walker of New
Jersey
Batsheva Wingate of New York
Masako Yamanouchi of Japan
Psychology
Joyce Elizabeth Blair of Pennsyl-
vania*
Phebe Lee Knox of Massachusetts
Carolyn Joy Quill of Pennsylvania*
Barbara D. Sachs of New Jersey »
Elien Susan Segal of Maine
We seek college duates to
fill many challenging positions
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For mathematics majors, or lib-
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In addition, we have challeng-
You may be our kind of woman
Russian
‘Alexis Esther Pogorelskin of
Maryland
Sociology and Anthropology
Anthropology
Ellen Clifton Patterson of Con-
necticut t
Sandra .L’Hommedieu Phillips of
New Jersey
Susan Pana Slivka of Pennsylvania
Elizabeth Jean Stamm of New
York*
Sociology .
Marilyn Edith Craft of New Jersey*
Ellen Carol Eliasoff of New York
Linda Horner Hochberg of Penn-
sylvania
Madeleine Ingalls Henderson of
Alabama
Penelope Gorton Peirce of Maine
Spanish
Nancy Elaine Anderson of Mexico
Florence Elaine Castelle of New
York
Barbara Ann Lovece of Delaware
ing openings in the administra-
tive and technological areas of
our company. These positions
also offer excellent opportuni-
ties for advancement and added
responsibilities.
Prudential offers an excellent
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4
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THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA
an equal i employer
OUR WOMEN’S EXCLUSIVE SHIRTS
made by us with button-down collar
in attractive materials for Summer
(left) New cotton oxford shirt
in bold British stripings. Blue, pink or
yellow on white, $10.50
(center) Our classic cotton oxford shirts.
White, $9; yarn-dyed pink, blue,
yellow, green, stone or peach, $9.50
(right) New shirt of an unusually porous
cotton shirting from France. Attracteve blue or
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Mail orders filled.
Bole Bidens
Newark, N. J.
CC@ELOTHINGS)
Mes CESK Furnishings. Rats: Shoes
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Cynthia Smith Caldwell of Mary- Gi peers GREER GARSON a
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Pepe 4
Degrees Awarded to Graduates
(continued from page 2)
MARK JOSEPH GALLAGHER of
Pennsylvania
STEPHEN F. GOLD of Pennsyl-
vania
PATRICIA A, HERRITY of Penn-
sylvania
LEANNA KAY HOFFMAN of Penn-
sylvania
MILDRED P, JACOBS of Pennsyl-
vania
CORINNE F, KALODNER of Penn-
sylvania
WINIFRED K, KEMPTON of
Pennsylvania
MARY T. KLEINBARD of Pennsyl-
vania
ANITA D. LICHTENSTEIN of
Pennsylvania
EMILY. MARIAN MAST of Penn-
sylvania
ANNE THERESA McsaDEN of
Pennsylvania
BARBARA H, MESCHTER of Penn-
sylvania
DONALD DEAN MOYER of Penn-
sylvania
ELAINE RUTH QUILITZSCH of
Pennsylvania ~ .
JEANNE BOYER SALAS of Penn-
sylvania A
MARTIN I. SCHERR of Pennsyl-
vania
ELIZABETH SCHOENFELD of
Pennsylvania
WILLIAM JOHN SHOEMAKER, Jr.
of Pennsylvania
BARBARA 8S, SHOULSON of Penn-
sylvania
SUSAN DISHLER SHUBIN of Penn-
sylvania
DEBORAH S, SMITH of Pennsyl-
vania
DEBORAH STEINBERG of Penn-
sylvania
James P. Kerchner Pharmacist
R “re Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr Pa,
SUMMER SUBLET PHILA
lovely 234 eme apte in
Powelton Villoge
15 mine walk from U.of P.
Excellent public transpe $50,
Call Meg Porter, °64,. EV2-31448
Main Line Photo Service
830 LANCASTER AVE.
BRYN MAWR, PA.
LA 5-4440
FREE FILM
for every roti left for develop-
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Comeres - Projectors - Screens
Sale and Renta's
Photestats - Comera Repair
Derk Reem Supplies
We develap our own black
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a H
HAZEL WELLS STOOPS of Penn-
sylvania
FRANCES K, TSUI of Hong Kong
BRONNIE TUCHMAN of Arizona
GERTRUDE WILEY of Pennsyl-
vania
JEROME LANE WILSON of Okla-
homa
JOAN KAY YASUI of Oregon
HERBERT LEIB ZITT of New
Jersey
Jane Walton, ’66
Is Guest Editor
Of “Mademoiselle”
Jane Walton, co-editor of the
1966 Akoué, has been named a
1966 Guest Editor of
MADEMOISELLE magazine. She is
one of 20 chosen from 1500 con-
testants. Her duties will include
a seven-day trip to Denmark, a
**beauty makeover’’ at Charles of
the Ritz, and modelling in MADEM-
OISELLE’s Back-- to - College
fashion show in June, Primarily
she will be learning about how
fashion magazines. operate and
what the publishing business in
New York is like.
Jane is a Latin major who hopes
someday to teach. However,
MADEMOISELLE’s Guest Editors
get priority consideration for per -
manent positions with the magazine:
as well as the other publications
of the same company.
She will be staying in the Bar-
bizon Hotel for Women during
June, and will be helping to edit
the August college issue. She will
receive a salary and will edit,
write, illustrate and layeout pages.
She has entered the competition
twice and according to one of the
editors, is ‘‘full of ideas, energy
and homor (sic).’’ Callie McNair,
of the class of 1965, was a Guest
Editor last summer.
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COLLEGE NEWS
May 30, 1966
Improved, Iconoclastic Akoue
During Commencement. Program Trades Triteness For Creativity
by Anne Lovgren
AKOUE °66 provided a new first
in Bryn Mawr yearbooks -- it was
all that it was cracked up to be,
for a change. It really was new
and improved, and it did it in an
artistically iconoclastic way.
But then, there was ample room
for improvement over past
products. Take the senior section,
for instance, a BIG for instance;
it replaced the 150-girls-and-one.
drape format of yesteryear with
the professional candid approach,
The prologue may well be the
most professional looking part of
the book. The pictures are good,
the quotations amusing. ‘And taking
quotations about Mawrters from
various types of literature,-rather
than sogging along with the-Bryn-
Mawr - as - I - remember ap-
proach, relieves the book of tepid,
ephemeral triteness, while pro-
viding it with its wry, graphic
continuity.
As for the faculty section, the
professors appear as pleasant,
intelligent and interesting people. _
It’s about time somebody gave them
a break.
The activities section avoids
the familiar pitfall of 25 Future-
Farmers - of - America - in -
one - picture. It is good, but not
as good as the rest of the book.
The pictures are imaginative and
fairly representative of the various
groups, but the captions strive to-
ward contemporary cleverness,
often miss, and descend toward the
‘‘insy”” and the “‘cutesy.”’
The photographs on the section
dividers tend toward real artistic
excellence, the nude stage of
“extra-curricula’? and the trash
cans of ‘ads and addenda”’ serving
as prime examples. And of course
the combination of editors Jane
Walton - Mary Daubenspeck with
the library’s collegiate Gothit is
unforgettable. The ads were
formed on *‘contemporary clever’’
motif too, but somehow they
managed to get away with it.
The criticisms which one can
level at AKOUE ’66 are few and
rather picayune. The printing was
annoyingly spastic. Depending on
the mood of the presses, the same
pages were either undercooked,
bleeding into oblivion, or over
cooked, glowering swarthily.
few more names under
wales might have been nice.
Old what’s-her-face in the
madras bermudas will remain
eternally anonymous. But perhaps
it’s better that way.
. On the whole, it’s the best yet--
this time said with feeling. Next
year’s editor’s will have aneasier
time selling yearbooks, but a
predecessor stiff to top.
HE: First time | ever made the Dean’s List.
SHE: You gonna call your folks?
HE: The shock might kill them.
y gv
ry
Risk it. Good news—however startling—is always
welcome. Besides, your parents look forward to
hearing from you. Call home often.
The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania za |
do the rest.
ININIA
differe t
below or send us your
puk
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College news, May 30, 1966
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1966-05-30
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 52, No. 23
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-vol52-no23