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1968 COMMENCEMENT EXTRA
THE: COLLEGE NEWS
Vol. Lil, No. 19
"BRYN MAWR, PA,
MONDAY, MAY 27, 1968
© Trustees of Bryn Mawr College, 1967
25 Cents
College Announces
“Academic Awards
"At this morning’s commence-
“ment Miss McBride annov~- éd the
recipients
the year 1967-1968,
The Maria L, Eastman Brooke
Hall Memorial Scholarship, awar-
ded annually to a member of the
junior class with highest gen-
eral average, was given-to-Betsy -
Sargent Alvord, :
Ramona. Hilary Daniel and Nan-
‘ette Marie Holben received the
Hester Ann Corner Prize for dis-
tinction in literature, __
Margaret Anne Weiss received
the Katherine Fullerton Gerould
Memorial Prize in English,
awarded by a special committee .
to a student who shows evidence of
creative ability in the fields of in-
formal essay, short story, longer
narrative or. verse,
Sharon Ann Bogerty and Cath-
erine Drew Gilpin received the
*Elizabeth Duane Gillespie Prizes .
in American History, awarded
Coliege Initiates
Investment Plan
“This -
year the college has
initiated a new investment
system, similar to the type -
now used by Yale University.
The Finance Committee studied
, the systems of several other uni-
x
versities and colleges and pre-
sented to the Board of Directors
an investment procedure which
will provide 4 1/2% interest on a
five-year average for the portfolio
of common stock. The Board
passed on the Committee’s sugges-
tion in October 1967.
Miss McBride indicated that
there were two reasons that the
college sought to change its in-
vestment system and decided to
accept the one which is presently
in use:
**First, we think that.it is fair
to pay ourselves 4 1/2% on that
portion in common stocks. We are
paying a little more, but feel that
the companies in which we are in-
vesting will put more capital back
into development and we are coun-
ting on an appreciation in the
stocks, The new system will hope-
fully mean an additional $100,000
a year in the college income.
‘Secondly, we felt that itis nec-
essary to leave the investment
committee a little freer to invest
in low-yield securities. The new
system prevents worry about the
exact income and puts the emp-
asis on the EVENTUAL capital
increase.’’
The total budget for the college
in 1967-68 was $6,000,000 and will
be approximately the same in 1968-
69. The endowment income is now
$1,200,000 and will hopefully be
augmented: by an additional $100,
000 next year. Students pay in total
fées (tuition, room and board, etc)
$1,700,000, about $500,000 more
than the endowment income,
With the college fiscal year end-
ing on June 30, the new investments
will affect the closing of the books.
The, 4 1/2 is calculated on the
common stock portfolio at market
value, Bonds are still included in
the budget-at +the-actual rate of re=-—-
_turn.
annually on nomination by the De-
partment of History for work of
distinction in American History,
The Charles S, Hinchman Mem-
orial Scholarship, awarded. an-
nually to a member of the junior
class for work of special excel-
lence in her major subject, was
“Ziven this year to Mary Clare Fed-
arko,
Two Sheelah Kilroy Memorial
Scholarships are awarded annually °
on the recommendation of the De-
partment of English:
In the second-year or advanced
courses in English the award was
given. to Lydia Frances Dittler,
In the first-year course in Eng-
ligh the award was given to Myra
Frances Marx,
Martha Ann Campbell and Judith
Elaine’ Liskin were awarded the
Elizabeth S, Shippen Scholarship
in Language, given for excellence
in a foreign language,
Harriet Fay Coblentz received
the Elizabeth S, Shippen Scholar- _
ship in Science awarded for excel-
_ lence of work in science,
Catherine Drew Gilpin, a His-
tory major, was awarded the M,
Carey Thomas Essay Prize, given
to a member of the senior class
for distinction in writing.
The Helen Taft Manning Essay
- Prize in History, awarded in Eur-
opean or World History, was given
to Myra Louise Skulth,
Margaret Barclay Jordan re-
ceived the Academy of American
Poets Prize, awarded annually to
the student who submits to the De-
partment of English the best poem
or group of poems,
Ruth Michael Gais was awarded
the Bain-Swiggett Poetry Prize,
awarded annually by a committee
of the faculty on the basis of work
submitted for the award,
Pass-Fail Has. Problems
May Pass Next Fall
In the balloting for. pos-
sible changes in the grading
system at Bryn Mawr, a majority
of students were in favor of the
system which contained three cat-
egories; honors, pass and
fail in all subjects outside the
major field.
The results) were brought
before the f y by the Student
Curriculum Qommittee, Although
as a whole the faculty was re-
ceptive to the ‘philosophy behind
a.pass-fail system, they pointed
out several flaws in the dual grad-
ing system.
The~ most obvious flaw in a
system which advocates two dif-
ferent kinds of grading systems
is that a freshman, as Miss Mc-
Pherson pointed out, will not
be able to decide which system to
use. Since she does not know what
her major field of study is, the
possibility of choosing between two
grading systems will be a source
of additional confusion in the fresh-
man year.
The faculty felt that having
an optional pass-fail system was
not a good idea, In addition to the
problems of deciding about which
subjects in which to take pass-
fail, ~~ and whether - one should.
(Continued on page 2)
President McBride Confers Degrees ~
At ‘68 Commencement
Bryn Mawr College today
conferred Bachelor of Arts
degrees upon 167 candidates dur-
ing .Commencement exercises.
Thirty-seven Master of Arts de-
grees, 41 Master of Social
‘Service degrees, and 33 Doctor
of Philosophy degrees were
also conferred, (For complete list
of A,B, and graduate degrees see
pages 3 and 4,)
Dr, Joseph Beaven Platt,
President of Harvey Mudd Col-
lege in Claremont, California,
and father of Ann Platt ’68 de-
livered. the Commencement ad-
dress,
At the Baccalaureate Service
on Sunday, Whitney M, Young, Ex-
ecutive Director of the National
Urban League gave the address,
One hundred twenty-two seniors
graduated with distinction, Joyce
Anne Monard received the A,B,
degree summa cum laude, Eighteen
candidates received their degrees
magna cum laude and- 103 candi-
dates the cum_ laude distinction,
The following students received
their degrees with distinction:
Summa Cum Laude
Joyce Anne Monard
‘Magna Cum Laude
Joan Susan Baizer
Anne Brownlee
Elizabeth Chadwick
Lorraine Taylor Cottrell
Doleth Marian Evans
Susanna Barbara Gaertner
Anne Elizabeth Gero
Catharine Drew Gilpin
Nanette Marie Holben
Lauren Taylor Levy
_ Andrea Meryl Marks
Barbara Jo Oppenheim
Patrice Evelyn Pastore
Susan Irene Rotroff
Roberta Hendee Smith
Laura Steinberg
Matilda A, Tomaryn ......
Marjorie Lee Westerman
Cum Laude
Martha Lynn Ahwesh
Vicki Ann Ashley
Lucinda Avery Ayers
Judith Abbott Baer
Christopher Lynn F.akke
Jacqueline Claire Barillet
Barbara Doris Beck
Amy Lee Bell
Pamela Susan Blanford
Joan Marian Bloom
Judith Frances Bloom
Patricia Ann Bonham
Susan Rebecca Brown
Ann Carmellino
“Wendy Ann Chambers
Carol Cherkis
Galen Pinckard Clark
Carole Joyce Lippincott Collins
Edith Elizabeth Cox
Donna Merriman Cross
Isabel Cunningham
Ramona Hilary Daniel
Margreta de Grazia
Laurie Susan Deutsch
Amy Thorp Dickinson
Caroline Verna Dudeck
Elizabeth Lewis Duke
Marianne May Emerson
Wendy Iris Fein
Carolyn Ruth Ferris
Felicia Sharon Folk
Katharine Stuart Ford
Ruth Michael Gais
Carol Beth Garten
Martha Esther Gellman
_Margaret Anne George
Virginia J, Gerhart
Suzanne Helene Goldblatt
Josefina Bertha Gomez Piza
Susan Christine Greanoff
Anita Susan Grossman
Jeanne Penman Harvey
Barbara Caroll Hicks
Vivian Louise Holzer
Dorothy Hudig
Deborah Jackson
Deborah Anne Jones
Karen Ruth Judd
Celeste Ann Klein
Janet Stephanie Kole
Susan F, Kottler
ae é
é7cises
a ys
Elizabeth Rose Kreeger
Karen Jane Laffey
Alice S, Leib
Margaret Anne Levi
Joyce LeFevre Lincoln
Mary Bowen Little
Andrea Rose Lurie
Barbara Lee Mann
Judith Ann Masur
Emily Ann McDermott
Carolyn Elizabeth Meadow
Jean Brana Miller
Patricia Ellen Monnington
Mary Elizabeth Moody
Ellen Douglas Nelson
Andra-Nan Oakes
Karen Marie Olsen
Despina Papzoglou
Nina Gumpert Parris
Priscilla Stanton Pedersen
Ethel Byrne Peirce
Paulena Suzanne Phinney
Katherine Pitcoff
Ann Ferguson Platt
Martha June Plummer
Pamela Elizabeth Port
Lois Jonnie Portnoy ;
Susan Cree Powers
Darlene Joan Preissler
Bonnie Greenfield Reagan
Sylvia Resch
Priscilla Ann Robbins
Dana Rosen
Ruth Frances Rosner
Ellen Evangeline Seery Ryan
Elizabeth Merle Schneider
Jacqueline Golomb Siegel
Catherine Keith Sims
‘Katherine Barns Soffer
Barbara Jean Southack
Mary Ann Spriegel
Helen Haskell Stewart
Patricia Diane Sullivan
Elizabeth Coverdale Thacher
Margaret Lucie Thomas
Mary Crimora Thrift
Nancy Lee Tither
Eleanor Hall Totten
Lucinda Ann Vandervort
Candice Rose Vultaggio
Diana Wilkens _..
Helena Elizabeth Wright
: Page Two
feat
THE-COLLEGE NEWS.
Managing Editor
Robin Brantley °69
March 3, 1879.
~~ THE COLLEGE NEWS
Editor-in-Chief
Nancy Miller '69
Photographic Editor
Associate Editors
Maggie Crosby '70, Cathy Hoskins '71
~ Kathy Murphey '69
Founded in 1914
Published weekly during the college year except during
vacationg and exam. periods.
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.
COLLEGE NEWS is entered as second class matter
at the Wayne, Penna. Post Office under the act of
Offices in The College Inn
LA 5-9458 .
Mary Yee ’70
-
Additions And Corrections
There are several additions
and corrections to last month’s
article concerning professors who
will be absent from _ the
ceflege next year. Mrs. Isabel
G. MacCaffrey will be on
leave with her husband in England,
and Mrs. Catherine Myers
has resigned. Mrs. Anne Hanson
is also on leave for next year,
Three people have - been
awarded Junior. Faculty Research
awards. They are Robert L, Pat-.
ten, Charles Brand and Miss
Audrey Barnett. These awards
give the younger faculty a year’s
opportunity to continue their
present research or to enter into
another area of research.
Patten has also
a National
the
has *,
received
Endowment _ for
Humanities award. Brand
*Gennadeion Fellowship to
jus Library in Athens.
“Migs” 'Jane Goodale will
returp next year from New Guinea,
where she has been conducting
anthropological research on a
grant from the National Science
- Foundation.
Many: of ‘the | teachers’ listed
._ Morton §.
in the other article as going on
one-year sabbaticals either will
be taking only one semester off
or will be on leave of absénce.
Mrs. Jeanne C. Pollock and
Baratz will be
absent from the college only in
the “first semester; Richard B,
DuBoff will be absent in the second
semester.
Mrs. :Agnes K., Michels has
accepted the Oberlin College Mar-
tin lectureship. Mrs. Jane
C. Kronick will be on sab-
batical for the year to finish
a book and to continue her re-
search on families receiving
public assistance.
Robert L, Connor is taking
his sabbatical leave to do work
in regulation of sterol biosynthe-
sis at the Wistar Institute
under. a. Public. Health Service
Fellowship. Arain Silvera has re-
ceived a Fulbright Fellowship,
Jay M. Anderson will be
leaving for: the year to’ teach
‘and do research and writing in
nuclear magnetic resonance at the
University of Illinois.
Letter to the Editor
To the Editor:
In order to clarify apparent mis-
understandings, I would like to pre-
sent further information concern-
ing the Faculty-Student_ Curric-
ulum Committee meeting on Tues-
day, April 9th,
Although the preliminary study
presented at that meeting was con-
ducted under the aegis of the Stu-
dent Curriculum Committee, most
of the information was researched
by the two girls who hadexpressed
the initial interest. -Indeed, they
were the only ones who seemed
willing to devote ALL their time
to accomplish something positive.
At the April 9th meeting, they .
reported the results of the work
completed SO FAR, including the
responses to the questionnaire,
This was intended to serve merely
as a study of the attitudes of both
Bryn Mawr students and faculty
members. The results were not
represented as final, particularly
since only 178 students and 34fac-
ulty members replied. Indeed,
, the figures were quoted directly
several times.
In addition, the girls were spec-
ifically asked as chairmen to give
their own proposal after relating
the results of the preliminary
questionnaire. This was suggested
since they had done the major part
of the research for the study and
were familiar with the current ine
formation. They distinguished, at
least to my satisfaction, between
their own opinions and those rep-
resented by the responses to the
questionnaire. It is unfortunate
that once again imperfect commun-
ication might further delay or
hinder progress,
Hopefully, in the future, any
questions and differences that
might arise will be voiced first to
those most directly involved who
can reply most accurately,
Pat Rosenfield,
Chairman, — Student Curriculum
Committee
Pat Rosenfield
Chairman, Student
Curriculum Committee
-——_—_ — — — oe = as
SENIORS:
WHY LOSE TOUCH? STAY IN THE:NEWS. STAY WITH
The College News
Order your subscription Zor next year now. Just fill out the fol-
lowirg and mail to: Subscription Manager, College ty
Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.
SOTHO CHEC OSHC OEE EES
to the tune of ‘«to-rah-rah-booms
it’s graduation day
it’s graduation day
let’s all go out and play
it’s graduation day
it’s time for real life
it’s time for real life
let’s go and face the strife
it’s time for real life
it?s much too short you know
it?s much too’ short you know
let’s have another show
it?s much too short you know
we’ll all come back some day
we’ll all come back some day
but that’s too far away
let’s have a blast today!
(to the tune of *‘cameélot”’:;
remember from the start
that just because you’re smart
there’ll always be a college
known as bryn mawr in your heart
-
courtesy of radnor, especially
mcc_ and els)
congratulations
and lots of love
applebee
The Pisisal Doubt
Education, they say, is an excellent
thing,
That one can’t very well do without
it-
Just grind for a while and the song
that you'll sing
Will be, ‘maybe it is, but I
doubt it.”
They say it is well to pole hard at
Greek,
That there’s nothing at all bad about
it. ¥
You may do it: they’ll take you for
any old freak!
it.
We’ve heard if by. chance you se-
cure an A,B.
With a ‘‘Summa cum laude’ about
it
You can get a position of any
degree.
Well, maybe you can, but we doubt
it.
There are some that can grindlike
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 topass, but we doubt it,
E. A.-Andrews 1899
from “*Songs of Bryn
Mawr College”’
P
‘Mama,
can this really be the end?
nrm
rab
mcc .
> Miss McBride and Seniors begin May. Day festivities with the
traditional walk from the President’s house to Rockefeller. *
p a Ss Pt F a a system will not have changed any-=-
thing.
(Continued from page 1) The faculty felt that in
use the old grading system for
applying to graduate’ schools, a
difficult classroom situation may
arise. In a class in which stu-
dents have selected both systems,
the professor will be unsure about
the fairness of his grading, and in
many cases, pass-fail will become
only a translation of regular grad-
ing. If this occurs, then the
institution of a pass-fail grading
any case, the system could not
be changed for next year and
asked that the subject be brought
up again in the fall for further
discussion.
As a final attempt, before -
abandoning work until the fall,
the students asked the faculty to
consider instituting a pass-'
fail system second semester next
year for at least Freshman Comp.
Miss McBride Considers
President Katharine McBride,
along with President John Cole-
man of Haverford ‘College, will
‘be studying the problem of each
college’s stockholding involvement
in the University City Science
Center, this summer and next
fall, they stated at an open campus
meeting sponsored by Bryn Mawr-
Haverford Students for a Dem-
ocratic Society held this spring.
The purpose of the meeting
was to bring forth all sides of
the problem; to find out more
about the nature of the Science
Center, and to reach an under-
standing about -the feelings
of the two college presidents, who
sit on the Board of Directors,
about the Science Center.
Speakers at the meeting
were Presidents McBride and.
Coleman, Carl Davison, Inter-
Organizational Secretary of Stu-
dents for a Democratic Society,
and a member of the Community
Development“ Office in Phila-
delphia which is working with
people that the Science Center’s
expansion program has displaced.
Vice President Jean Paul
Mather,
the. Science Center was invited,
but refused to speak on the grounds |
volved in controversy.” 2
administrative head of .
It may be some good, but we doubt College Role In UCSC
S.D.S. is concerned about the
Science Center for two reasons.
UCSC currently houses _ five
military contracts. One contractis
with the Air Force and is directly
connected to the war (its research
manager; a Swarthmore pRCReEnOr
emeritus, is in Saigon).
The Science Center staff
speak openly about their lack of
discretion in taking on military
contracts. A resolution of the UCSC
Executive Committee states that
the purpose of the center is to
work on research projects that
universities, for moral or secur-
ity reasons, reject, such as
the chemical and biological war-
fare contracts that Penn almost
transferred to the Science
Center last year. Yet the UCSC
uses staff from the faculties of
member institutions, such as
Swarthmore, Temple, and Penn,
and perhaps eventually Bryn Mawr
and Haverford, to ree on these
projects.
The second area of concern
with the UCSC lies in its displace-
ment of over a hund
families from the West
delphia area. These
in many cases have not been pro>
vided with housing adequate. to.
their financial or . human needs.
\
oe May 27, 1968
THE COLLEGE. NEWS |
ies Three. 4
167, Seniors Receive a B. Peon
One. hundred sixty seven
members of the class of 1968
received Bachelor of Arts degrees
—this -morning.-Those seniors who---
received their degrees with honors
work in special fields are
designated by an asterisk.
-- Anthropology
Susan Rebecca Brown of New York
Barbara Jane Carey of New York
Ann Carmellino of New York
Michaela Metcalf Farber ere
‘mont
Anne ‘Elizabeth Gero of Penn-
~sylvania
Andrea Rose Lurie of California .
Margaret Lucie Thomas of Nir-
ginia
Margaret Holmes Williamson of ©
Delaware
Classical and Near Eastern
Archaeology
Margaret Anne George of Oregon
Classical and Near Eastern
Archaeology and Greek
Lauren Taylor Levy of New York
Susan Irene Rotroff of New _—er
Biology
Jacqueline Claire Barillet of New
York
Barbara Doris Beck of Rhode
Island
Carol Cherkis of Connecticut
Marianne May Emerson of Wash-
ington * :
Jean Lynn Farny of Pennsylvania ~
Virginia J. Gerhart of Penn-
sylvania
Dorothy Hudig of Texas
Andrea~Meryl Marks of New York
Anp Ferguson Platt of California
Sandya Slade of Pennsylvania
Mary, Crimora ‘Thrift of Virginia .
Chemistry
Susan Christine Greanoff of Ohio
Karen Ruth Judd of Virginia .
Celeste Ann Klein of Mass-
achusetts
Elizabeth Rose Kreeger of New
York
Karen Jane Laffey of Sieciivivania
Jacqueline Golomb Siegel of New
York
. Patricia Diane Sullivan of New
Jersey
Constance Ann Newhouse of Penn-
sylvania
Barbara Jo Oppenheim of New
York
‘Despina Papazoglou of Greece
Patrice Evelyn Pastore of New
Jersey *
_ Ethel Byrne Peirce of the Dis-
trict of Columbia
Bonnie Greenfield Reagan of Penn-
sylvania
Ruth Frances Rosner of Mass-
achusetts
Victoria Steele Wilson of the Dis-
trict of Columbia
York
Chemistry and Physics
Doletha Marian Evans of Mass-
achusetts *
Economics
Joan -Marian Bloom of Mass-
achusetts
Ellen Evangeline Seery Ryan of
Connecticut
Frances Gaylor Welson of Mass-
achusetts
English
Elizabeth Ross Bennett of New
York .
Elizabeth Chadwick of New Hamp-
shire *
Margaret Klevan Dearnley of
Pennsylvania
Margreta de Grazia 2! the Dis-
trict of Columbia*
Anita Susan Rossman of “New
Jersey
Janet Stephanie Kole of New
Jersey
Judith Ann Masur of New York
Susan Louisa McGlennan of New
| English and Philosophy
- Lucinda Ann Vandervort of Ohio* Philosophy
Marjorie Lee Westerman of Penn-
*
French
Barra me Avery Ayers of New York
it crmsreal ‘of New York ~
35 Graduate With Honors
Josefina Bertha Gomez Piza of
_Puerto Rico
fenskcs Bertha ludersiien of New
~-¥ork —
Susan F, Kottler of Maine
Carolyn Elizabeth Meadow ofC-qn-
necticut
Paulena Suzanne Phittines of Ver-
mont
Laura Laylin Smith of Virginia
Barbara Jean Southack of Con-
necticut
Laura ‘Barbara Sullivan. pt Gon-
..». necticut . _
Matilda A, Tomaryn of New Jersey.
French and German
_ Martha June Plummer of Penn-
sylvania
German
Vicki Ann Ashley of Virginia
Susanna Barbara Gaertner of
Pennsylvania *
* Kendra Kalan Ho of Hawaii
Nanette Marie Holben of Penn-
sylvania *
« Sylvia Resch of Virginia —
Greek
Martha Lynn Ahwesh of Penn-
sylvania
Greek and Latin
‘Ruth Michael Gais of New York”
History ;
Margaret Genevieve Atwood of
Utah .
Pamela Susan
California
Deborah. Reynolds Brown of New
York
Galen Pinckard Clark of New York
Kathleen Pauley Coleman of Ken-
. tucky
Carolyn Ruth Ferris of New York
Katharine Stuart Ford of Con-
necticut ‘ioe
Catharine Drew Gilpin of Virginia*
Jeanne Penman Harvey of Illinois
Barbara Carroll Hicks of Con-
: necticut
Mary Elizabeth Moody of Wis-
consin
Ellen Douglas Nelson of Maryland
Blanford of
» Pamela Elizabeth Port of Cali-
fornia
Catherine Keith Sims of Virginia*
Myra L, Skluth of Connecticut*
Elizabeth Coverdale Thacher of
New York
Candice Rose Vultaggio of New
Hampshire
*. Winifred Safford Wallace,of Texas
Mary Jean Wilson of Illinois
Patricia Louise Winter of New
York ;
Helena Elizabeth Wright of Wis-
consin
History of Art
Linda Seyburn Anderson of Con-
necticut
Amy Lee Bell of Massachusetts
Catherine Winslow Euster of New
York
Wendy Iris Fein of New Jersey
Suzanne Helene Goldblatt of
Florida
Deborah Anne Jones of the Dis-
trict of Columbia
Nina Gumpert Parris of Penn-
sylvania
Priscilla Ann Robbins of Mass-
achusetts
‘Dana Rosen of New York
Roberta Hendee Smith of New
Jersey
Rita Ines Yriart of Brazil
Latin
Elizabeth Lewis Duke of Virginia
Emily Ann McDermott of New York
Madeleine Edison Sloane of New
Jersey
Mathematics
Donna ‘Merriman Cross of New
Jersey
Haydee Diaz-Camacho of Florida
Amy Thorp Dickinson of Ilinois
Anne Louise Wihera Donaker of
Massachusetts
Jeanne La Sala of New York
Mana Sarabhai of India —
Patricia Ann Bonham of Florida
Caroline Verna Dudeck of New
Jersey
Priscilla Stanton Pedersen ofC on-
3 cut Mit Lis
~-Physics
Joyce Anne Monard of New Tereei*
Mary Ann Spriegel of Ohio
. Eleanor Hall Totten of Virginia
Laura Steinberg of Pennsylvania* Diana Wilkens of Illinois.*
Helen Haskell Stewart obit York
OE
Susan Cree Powers of New York
Political Science
Judith Abbott Baer of Georgia*
Christopher Lynn Bakke of Wash-*
ington
. Sarah Vaughan Boy of New Hamp-
shire
Carole Joyce Lippincott Collins
of New Jersey *
Laurie Susan Deutsch of New York
Felicia Sharon Folk of Canada
Phyllis Taylor Forman of Penn-
. sylvania :
Martha Esther Gellman of New
Jersey
Erica Lis Hahan of Ohio
Nancy Nichols Hardenbergh of
Minnesota 0
Deborah Jackson of Massachusetts *
Alice S, Leib of Pennsylvania
_ Margaret Anne Levi of Maryland* -
* Joyce LeFevre Lincolen of New
York
Mary Bowen Little of South Caro-
lina °
Jean Brana Miller of Georgia
Patricia Ellen Monnington of Vir-
ginia
Susan. Catherine Nosco of New
York
Andra Nan Oakes of New York
Lois Jonnie Portnoy of New York *
Elizabeth Merle Schneider of New*
Jersey
Katherine Barns Soffer of New
York
Russian
Se Sasa on Frances -Bloom..-of--Mass=
achusetts
Wendy Ann Chambers of New York
Lorraine Taylor Cottrell of Penn-
sylvania *
‘Judith Lyn Furness of New York
Darlene Joan Preissler - of Con-
necticut *
Sociology
Valerie -Hermoine
Georgia
Susan Bayard Kemble of New York*
Barbara Lee Mann of Minnesota
Anita Rico-Castillo of Columbia
Judith Manning Thomas of Rhode
Island
Sociology and Spanish
Vivian Louise Holzer of Mexico
Spanish
Fisher of
Ramona Hilary Daniel .of Con-.
necticut*
Karen- Marie Olsen of Illinois
Barbara Jean Webb of New. York
Many Seniors Plan
Graduate Studies
About 60 per cent of the#167-
member senior class will attend
next year.
Mrs. Marshall estimated the
percentage. On 69 questionnaires
filled in by seniors 41 students
indicated they would goon to school
in the fall while 28 students said
Esther Jacqueline Williams of they planned to work.
Florida
Wonza .Elizabeth Williamson of
New York
Marcia Elaine Young of New Pa
Psychology
Joan Susan Baizer of Missouri*
“Anne Brownlee of Arizona*
Edith Elizabeth Cox of Penn-
sylvania
Carol Beth Garten of New York
Lucy Ellen Jennings ofC onnecticut
Katherine Pitcoff of New Jersey*
Nancy Lee Tither of Pennsylvania
, seniors will
Of the 28 students who plan to
work next, year, many indicated
* they wanted to go to graduate
school later,
Many students were uncertain
about their job plans. However,
a substantial number of students
said they wanted to teach. Two
be working with
VISTA and the Peace Corps, and
,one girl plans to work as
a parole officer.
| Curriculum Includes |
History of Science
Courses in the History of Bi-
ology and the . History of
‘Chemistry have been made pos-
sible at . Bryn Mawr. next
year ‘by grants from the Josiah
Macy, Jr. Foundation. =
Charles Culotta of Ohio will
join Bryn Mawr’s biology faculty
as. assistant professor: to teach
the History of Biology course. A
native of Ohio, Culotta received
his B.S. at John Carroll University
and his M.A, at the Univer sity of
Cincinnatti.
Arnold. Thackray will be based
next year at the University of
Pennsylvania, but -will-come~ to
Bryn Mawr to hold the seminar
in ‘History of Chemistry. Cur-
rently at -Harvard,. Thackray
received his PhD from Cambridge
University. :
Bryn _Mawr’s grant is held
jointly With e University of Penn-
sylvania d___.the ...American
Philosophical..Society of Phila-
, delphia. The three institutions
*will share faculties and research
resources in a program which will
stress the non-laboratory and non-
empirical approach to science,
The _Josiah Macy, Jr. Foun-
dation is a philanthropic. or-
ganization interested in_ the
medical sciences, which has spon-
sored: several programs in
the past to further their study.
, graduate or professional schools Previous grants in history of sci-
ence courses have been awarded
to Harvard and Columbia.
>ee ® ©2284 2288888
> ee ®] ® > ©2228 88288288 DOS4
‘UNUSUAL AND LARGE
SELECTION
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TOE SATE eae caren
e Page Four =
THE COLLEGE NEWS
honda. May 27, 1968
Advanced Degrees Awarded
To 111 Graduate Candidates
Bryn Mawr today awarded ad-
vanced degrees to 111 candidates,
7 37 M.A, and
41 M.S.S, degrees. Graduate de-
_ Srees. ,were awarded. as follows;
Doctor of Philosophy.
' Department of Biology
Embryology. and Cytology:
University of Pennsylvania 1963
and M.A, Bryn Mawr College 1965.
Physiology and Microbiology:
JOYCE M. GREEN of Pennsyl-
vanic, A.". Bryn Mawr College
1957 “end 3k. A. — ine
1960, :
THELMA F; SHTASEL of en:
sylvania, B.S, University of Chi-
cago 1945 and M.S, University of
Illinois 1947,
Department of Chemistry
Organic Chemistry and Phys-
ical Chemistry: MICHAEL KEVIN
HOFFMAN of Pennsylvania, B.S.
University of Pennsylvania 1963.
JEAN B, KIM of Pennsylvania,
A.B, Eastern Baptist College 1961.
JOHN WALTER RANISESKI of
New York, B.S, St. Joseph’s Col-
lege 1962 and M.S, 1964.
Organic Chemistry and Bio-
chemistry; CHUNG WHA LEE IY-
ENGAR ofPennsylvania,B.S.Chat-
ham College 1956 and M.S Univer-
sity of Pittsburgh 1959.
Department of Classical and Near
- Eastern Archaeology
Classical Archaeology and An-.
cient History; SUSAN HANDLER
of Michigan, A.B, Swarthmore
College 1960, M.A, University of
Michigan 1961.
Classical Archaeology: IONE
MYLONAS SHEAR of New Jer-
sey, A.B, Wellesley College 1958,
M.A, Bryn Mawr College 1961.
Department of Education and Child '
Development
Child Development ond Child
Clinical Psychology: CORINA K,
MONGCAL of the Philippines, B.A,
University of the Philippines 1955,
M.A, Bryn Mawr® College 1965.
Education and Child Develop-
ment; MERILYN B, WOODS of
Pennsylvania, B.S, Cornell Uni-
versity 1948; M. Ed. Temple
University 1987,
Department of English
English Literature and Anglo-
Saxon: SANDRA M, BERWIND of
Pennsylvania, A,B, Wheaton Col-
ped 1954, M.A. Bryn Mawr College
Department of French
Modern French Literature and
Old French. Philology and Litera-
ture; LOUIS E, AULD of Massachu-
setts, A.B, Oberlin College 1957,
M.A, University of California, Los
Angeles, 1959.
MARGARET SIMPSON MAURIN
of Pennsylvania, A,B. Bryn Mawr
College 1960.
«Department of German
German Literature and German
Philology: MARION IVES of ‘New
York, A.B, Vassar College 1955.
_ Department of Greek
Greek and Latin: PATRICIA PA-~
DEN MATSEN of South Carolina,
A.B. Agnes Scott College 1955,
M -A, University of Mississippi
1957,
Greek and Classical Archae-
ology: ALESANDRA M. SCHMIDT
of Connecticut, A.B. Pembroke
College, Brown University, 1957,
M.A, University of Pennsylvania
« 1959,
‘Department of History -
Modern European History and
American History; CHARLOTTE
SYLVIA MARIE GIRARD of Brit-
‘ish Columbia, Canada, B,A, (Hons.)
University of British Columbia
1958, M.A, Bryn Mawr College
1960,
Department of History of Art
History of Art; MARGARET
ENGLISH FRAZER of the District
_ of Columbia, B.A. (Hons.) Univer-
sity of Toronto 1962, M. A. Bryn
Mawr College 1964,
SADJA HERZOG of’ Ohio, A,B.
Carleton College 1961, M.A, Bryn
Nee cia tateagee OMe eee ee
Mawr College 1963.
Department of Latin
Latin and Greek: VALERIE
‘ANNE BROEGE of Ohio, A,B,
Vassar.-College 1963, M,A, Bryw
Mawr College 1964.
JANE MERRIAM CODY of Cal-
ifornia, A.B. ‘Randolph-Macon
, Woman’s College 1963, M.A, Bryn
' LINDA FAGAN of California, A.B, -
Mawr College 1964.
THEODORA STILLWELL Mac-
KAY of Washington, A,B, Bryn
Mawr College 1959.
MARY ANN §, ROBBINS of New .
York A,B, Bryn Mawr College
1959;--M;A, -University -of North
Carolina-1962. S.
FANNIE JOHN LE MOINE of
* Georgia. A.B, State University of
Iowa 1961 and M.A, 1962.
Department of Philosophy
Systematic Philosophy and His-
tory of Philosophy: JOHN D, CAP-
UTO of Pennsylvania, A,B, La-
Salle College 1962, M.A, Villanova
University 1964,
Historical Philosophy and Se-
mantic Philosophy: JOSPEH J, RO-
MANO of Pennsylvania, A,B, St.
Charles Seminary 1959, M.A, Vil-
lanova University 1962.
Department of Physics
Physics and Mathematics: J,
RICHARD HOUSTON of Pennsyl-
vania, B.S, St. .Joseph’s College
1957, M.S, University of Pennsyl-’
vania 1960.
FATHER A, J. MULLEN, O.S,
A., of Pennsylvania, B,S,. Villan-
ova University 1949, M.S, Catholic
University of America, 1954,
DAVID C, SCOTT of Maryland,
B.E. Yale University 1959 and M.E,
1960.
Department of psychology
Physiological Psychology and
Psychopharmacology: BARRY D.
BERGER of Pennsylvania, B.S,
University of Maryland 1962, M.A,
Bryn Mawr College 1964,
Human Learning and Animal
Learning; -WALENA COOKE
MORSE of Pennsylvania, A,B, Duke
University 1955, M,A, Bryn Mawr
College 1965.
Department of Social Work and So-
cial Research:
Community Organization and So-
cial Research; FRANK S, SEEVER
of Pennsylvania, B.S, Washington
University 1952 and M.S,W, 1954.
Master of Arts
CHEMISTRY
Jane Samuels of Conniounet
Agnes Chung-Fung Wu of Taiwan
CLASSICAL AND NEAREASTERN
ARCHAEOLOGY
Diane Grossman Sheldon of Penn-
sylvania
Mary Carol Sturgeon of Pennsyl-
vania
EDUCATION AND CHILD DE-
VELOPMENT
Claire Ann Hangen of Pennsylvania
Katharine Downing Heisler of
Pennsylvania
Jean Gries Homeier of Pennsyl-
vania
Myra Elizabeth Pottash of Penn-
sylvania
Beth M. Riser of Pennsylvania
Mary. Morriss Gibbs Smith of
Pennsylvania
ENGLISH
Frederica Wolf Brind of ian:
sylvania
Phebe Warren Cooke of Pennsyl-
vania
Susan Randolph Day Dean of Penn-
sylvania
Susan Gamer of New York
Eleanor Jane Hedley of British
_’ Columbia, Canada
Betty Harris Jones of New Jersey
Philip Myron Keith of Pennsyl-
vania
Anne Colleen Nesslage of New
York
Jeanne Marie
FRENCH
Paula Cole Brown of Massachu-
setts
GEOLOGY
Peter Gibson Robelen of Delaware
Francis Herbert Roberts of Penn-
sylvania
Young of Oregon
HISTORY
Mary Gayle Foley Bitterman of
Pennsylvania
Truman Ross Clark of Porat it
~ vania- =
Barbara Liebleih Frank ot Illinois
Gibson Bell Smith of Pennsylvania
HISTORY OF ART
Karalann Rose Marling of Ontario, °
, Canada
Susan Saward of Oregon
Joel Morgan Upton of New Jersey
LATIN AND GREEK
John Mortimer Hunt, Jr. of Penn-
-sylvania
PHILOSOPHY
Lynn Aulick of Kentucky
Eleanor Whitney Dorman of New
York
Carol Louise High of Idaho
Janet Roberts Lewis of Pennsyl-
vania
POLITICAL SCIENCE
Sana Hassan of Egypt
PSYCHOLOGY
David Eugene Bresler of the Dis~
trict of Columbia
Alcine E. Potts of Pennsylvania
’ oat
Master of Social Service
Octavia Allis of Pennsylvania
Jeffrey Norman Ball of Pennsyl-
‘vania
Darlene L. Bayuk of Pennsylvania
Paul Edward Becker of New Jersey
Warren Gerald Billings of Indiana
Karen M. Blyden of Pennsylvania
Margaret Leslie Bullington of Vir-
ginia
Susan Burkhardt of New York
“Louise F. Carey of Maryland
Sandra Sidford Cornelius of Penn-
sylvania
Louis E. Crown of Pennsylvania
Janice Myjack Cunningham of Con-
necticut
Susan Lynn Davis of New York
William Derringer of Pennsylvania
Marjorie V. Edwards of Pennsyl-
vania
Lillian K. Eshbach of Pennsylvania
Ruth Fromm of New York
Susan Gadiel Goldstein of Pennsyl-
vania
Patricia Russell. Haines of New
York
Ray Howard Hartman of Pennsyl-
vania :
William Harold Henderson, Jr. of
Pennsylvania
Harvey S. Hersh of Pennsylvania
Edward Hearne Hitchcock of Penn-
sylvania
Hobart Calvin Jackson of Pennsyi-
vania
Dorothy Owen Kester of Pennsyl-
vania
Marilyn Kay Larsen. of Pennsyl-
vania
Marla S. Levin of Pennsylvania
Gail Blender Loeb of Pennsylvania
Thaddeus Paul Mathis of Pennsyl-
vania "
Cora H. Myers of Pennsylvania
Ruth Ann Myers of Pennsylvania
John Tyler Poor of Pennsylvania
Rosalind Rodman of New Jersey
Joseph Lawrence Spear of Penn-
sylvania
Carol A. Spector of New seneery
Jo Stern of Pennsylvania
Daniel Matthew Stone of Virginia
Martha Elizabeth Tamm of Ar-
kansas
Carolyn Ambler Walter of Penn-
sylvania,
Melissa Trommer Weiss of Penn-
sylvania. - ’
STUDENT ECONOMY EURO-
PEAN TOUR $499 Complete. -
Visiting London, Paris, Zurich,
Amsterdam, Frankfort. Write for
brochure c/o Box 202, Wayne,
Pa. 19088.
DISCOUNT RECORDS
9 W. Lancaster Ave.
Ardmore:
MI 2-0764 =,
Lb st Selection Folk’ Music
‘op - Classics - Jazz
x
oi ee ae
-Patricia Ann Lenox of New Jersey .
~ Students Take Year Off
At Home and Abroad
Thirty-nine students will be
spending their junior year away
from Bryn Mawr next year. Many
are participating in the study pro-
grams abroad sponsored by other
American universities,~but many
are also involved in independent
programs or- taking leaves of ab-
sence,
Barbara Archer, Sharon Burk-
ley, Renee Levy and Carolyn Mon-
ka will be’ studying at 1?Academie
in Paris, and also in Paris under
the Sweet Briar program will be
Andrea Heaps, Betsy Lehr and
Paula Roberts.
Freshmen to Arrives
ee Exit
The freshman class for next
year will number about 200 stu-
dents. Although the students vary,
many were editors of high school
newspapers, . literary magazines,
and_yearbooks,
Among: the students with more
unusual experiences its a girl who
travelled alone to India when she
was 16, staying with friends and
families, After she returned home,
she wrote a book about her .ex-
periences, which has been sent out
to several publishers; Harper and
Row has taken it under considera-
tion,
Several girls have indicated a
strong interestin archaeology. One
of the most serious students, who
has lived in Turkey for four years,
spent last summer on a dig spon-
sored by the British Institute of
Archaeology; this
helped her to decide about her pro-
bable major field of study,
Two-science students. have won
Westinghouse awards for their pro-
jects, One girl did a project
on Three-valued logic and pre-
sented her paper to societies in
Philadelphia and in Washington,
The other girl received her award
for a study of timing mechanisms
in plants and animals,
In next year’s class will be six
students who applied for Early Ad-
mission after their junior years in
high school; twelve students had ~
applied for this program, These
were the greatest numbers of both
applicants and acceptances since
the program was instituted,
In regard to geographical dis-
tribution, most students, or 46%,
will be coming from the Middle
Atlantic States; New England will
send 13%; the South, 12%; and the
Mid-West, 10%. Seven per cent each
will be from the Far Westand from
foreign territories and posses-
sions, and 5% from the Soucnwest.
experience .
Mona Dick and Barbara Guss
will be studying in Geneva with
the Smith program and Mary Laura
Gibbs and Sharon Zimmer will be
on.the Smith program in Florence.
Nancy Witting will also be study-
ing in Geneva, but with Sarah
Lawrence.
Two students will be studying —
at McGill University in Canada:-
Diane Jordan and Elizabeth Rudd.
Sandra Foa and Deborah Wein-
berger wif& study in Madrid with
Mary Baldwin College.
Other students spending their
junior year abroad are; _ Judith
DeWitt, Manchester College, Eng-
land; Lucy Gordan, Intercollegiate
Center for Classical Studies; Mar-
garet Ross, University of London;
Marian Scheuer, Israel; and Nancy
Van Broekhoven, Paris.
Participating in programs of
‘Wayne State gre Jane Dahlgren, ©
Ruth Garms .and Claudia Resch.
Many. others are spending the
year at other American univer-
sities. Among the schools the stu-
dents have selected are Prince-
ton, the University of Michigan,
Indiana University, and the Uni-
versity of Colorado. Those study-
ing at domestic universities are:
Janice Barnard, Irene Brockert,
Sheila Dolan, Randy Hyman, Carol
Curtiss, Emily Matson, Laurel
Miller and Mary Yee.
Also spending a year away from
Bryn Mawr will-be- Debbie Dick-
stein, Alix Ginsburg, Judy Meyer
and Laura Starr.
Three students are transferring
to other schools. They are: Grethe
Holby, MIT; Joanne May, Middle-
bury; and Carol Eddy, Indiana,
ee
BEADS, BEADS, BEADS
A BOX OF DELIGHTS FROM
FOUR CONTINENTS.
ABONANZA,. OVER,30 INDIVIDUAL
PACKETS. A DOZEN SHAPES AND
SIZES. A SCORE OF TRIPPY COLORS,
Plus EARRINGS, KICKY BELLS,
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HURRY, BEFORE | COME TO
MY SENSES
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(add 55¢ for shipping)
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we ry a@
BEADS,
Name:.
College Relations Director.
c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
- Pléase send mea free Sheraton Student |.D. Card:
Ps
' Address:
good place. '
We're holding
|. the cards.
Get one. Rooms are now up to. 20% off with a
Sheraton Student |.D. How much depends on
where and when you stay.
And the Student |.D. card is free to begin with.
Send in the coupon. It’s a good deal. And ata
Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns S
155 Hotels and Motor Inns in major cities.
‘Free Gift Wrapping
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SE REE PORES O08, SE ESR ries
Come to HELEN’S |
for gifts and jewelry Rr ee
Earritfgs, earrings and earrings, $1. 00 ‘wt
/ the little shop with a big heart and small prices
Bryn Mawr Theater Arcade
Lay-a-Way Plan
LA 5-2393
College news, May 27, 1968
Bryn Mawr College student newspaper. Merged with Haverford News, News (Bryn Mawr College); Published weekly (except holidays) during academic year.
Bryn Mawr College (creator)
1968-05-27
serial
Weekly
4 pages
digitized microfilm
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Montgomery--Bryn Mawr
Vol. 54, No. 19
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-vol54-no19