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Connecticut College Digital Commons @ College

1965-1966 Student Newspapers

5-9-1966

ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 47

Connecticut College

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Recommended Citation Connecticut College, "ConnCensus Vol. 50 No. 47" (1966). 1965-1966. 1. https://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/ccnews_1965_1966/1

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. It has been accepted for inclusion in 1965-1966 by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Connecticut College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The views expressed in this paper are solely those of the author. • CONNCENSUS CONNECTICUT COLLEGE

Vol, 50, No, 47 New London, Connecticut, Monday May 9, 1966 Price 10 cents BREWSTER, MYERS TO Pop Hop, Junior and Faculty Panel SPEAK AT GRADUATION To Highlight Fathers' Weekend Festivities Commencement Baccalaureate By Joyce Todd p.m. Phyllis Ray, "C" Synchers ready for surprises: "Who's the Father's Weekend '66, May 13, President, said, "The group will woman heneath the knapsack? Dr. Kingman Brewster, [r., Presi- The Rt. Rev. C. Kilmer Myers, 14, 15, will be the "greatest ever" perform eight numbers, taking a What lies beneath those brown dent of , will speak second Suffragan Bishop of the Di- in the history of Connecticut Col- poem or a painting and interpreting oxfords? Who is the black sheep at Connecticut's 1966 Commence- ocese of Michigan will speak at lege, say Pat McMurray, Junior it. Pictures or slides of paintings or of the Reds and why does caviar ment exercises on Sunday, June 5. Connecticut Baccalaureate services Show Director, and Jane Ranallo, woodcuts, all done by Connecticut curdle in her hands?" on Saturday, June 4. '68 Social Chairman who is in students, will be shown over the On Saturday morning, May 14, Rev. Myers was elected to be- charge of the Pop Hop. pool." She added, ''The finale will from 8:30-11:00 a.m. there will be come Suffragan Bishop in May, All dads are invited to accom- be an all in-the-water performance coffee and registration in the 1964, at St. [ohn's Church, Detroit. pany their daughters to classes, to set to the music of last year's daughter's dormitory. The morn- In assuming the responsibilities of attend the President's Assembly, to junior Show kickline. ing will take on a more academic this office he became the twelfth meet members of the faculty, the Junior Show will premiere Fri- and educational aspect this year Bishop in the history of the Epis- administration, their daughter's day night, May 13, at 9:30 p.m. since fathers are invited to classes copal Church to be consecrated for friends and their friends' fathers. in Palmer. Pat McMurray said, and because there will be faculty the Diocese of Michigan. Miss Warrine Eastburn, secretary 'The plot is just too great to let and student discussions. Bishop Myers entered Rutgers of the college and assistant to the out of the bag." However, in a There will be a faculty panel University in 1934, majoring in so- President, stressed the invitations recent interview, Pat and leading discussion, entitled "Updating the ciology. He received his B.A. in to fathers this year and added that actress Marian Coates, did reveal Sciences" in Hale Laboratory from 1937 and entered the Berkley Di- only the mothers of juniors would its name - 'Would Hugh Believe 9:15-10:15 a.m. The moderator vinity School to study theology. He be officially invited to attend the It?" which has been top secret up will be Miss julia Bower, chair- received the degree of S.T.B. in luncheon, but other class mothers until now. They said, "Irs the man of the mathematics depart- ]940 and was ordained Priest in are invited to participate in the voice of the sixties and dads will ment. Other faculty members In- December of this same year. After weekend festivities. be interested in knowing that the elude: Mr. Gordon S. Christiansen. Kingman Brewster, Jr. Ordination, Rev. Myers remained A preview of the weekend's kikkline outdoes any father's ex- professor of chemistry, Mr. Wil- at Yale to pursue graduate study happenings begins with a swim pectations." They proceeded to ask liam Niering, professor of botany, At the time of his election to the and teach Church History at Berk- show by "C" Synchers in the the following questions which and director of the , and presidency at Yale in October, ley. In 1957, he received the S.T.D. Crozier-Williams pool at 8:30 should keep lIS all in suspense and Miss Dorothy Richardson, chair- 1963, Mr. Brewster was Provost of degree from Berkley and the de- man of the zoology department. Yale, the University's chief educa- gree of L.H.D., in 1962, from Rut- Honors, Awards and Fellowships At the same time, 9:15-10:15 tional officer directly under the gers. a.m. in Palmer Auditorium, there President. During World War II, Bishop Presented at Annual Prize Chapel will be another faculty panel dis- A graduate of Yale in 1941, Dr. Myers was on active duty as a cussion entitled, "Forces' in Con- lence in English Speech; Susan C. Brewster is a lawyer by training. Chaplain aboard a Navy cruiser in Deanna B. Stein, '66, Jane Stern, temporary East Asia." George K. Worley, '66, The janet Clissold He served on the faculty at M.LT. the Atlantic and Mediterranean '66, and Marie Manca ,'66, 'Were Romoser of the government de- in 1949-50 and at Harvard Law theatres. He later joined the fac·f presented with graduate study fel- Prize in Music; Janis A. Thomas, partment will act as moderator. '68, The Joan Connell Prize for School in 1950-60 before returning ulty of the General Theological lowships by President Charles E. Other participants include: Mr. Outstanding Ability and Artistry in to Yale on his appointment in 1960. Seminary of the Episcopal Church Shain at the annual Prize Chapel Charles Chu, assistant professor of Dance; and Cynthia F. Miller, '66, In the fall of 1941, MI'. Brewster in . In 1949, he was on Wednesday, May 4 at7:0Q p.m. Chinese, Mr. Lloyd Eastman, The Louise M. Dieckmann Prize was Special Assistant to the Co- The guest speaker at the event assistant professor of history, and for Excellence in Organ Playing. ordinator of Inter-American Affairs was Cecelia Holland, '65, author Mr. John Perry, assistant professor Sandra Turner, '69, and Joan in Washington, and then served as of a recently published historical 1. of history. B. Hosmer, '69, Honorable Men- a Naval Aviator during World War novel, The F'iredrake. Following this, from 10:30- tion, The French Department Prize II. He then' enrolled in the Har- Deanna Stein was awarded the ll:00 a.m. in Palmer Auditorium, for Excellence in Oral French; Sue vard Law School where he received Rosemary Par k Fellowship for there will be a student discussion Ann Bristol, '68, jan E. Macdon- his Bachelor of Laws degree in Teaching. Jane Stern was the re- concerning the Honors Study Pro- ald, '69, and Dorothee Duehlmeier, 1948 "magna cum laude." In 1948- cipient of the Grad- gram. Mary Ellen Daley, '66, will '69, The G e r man Department 49 he served as Assistant Counsel uate Fellowship and Marie Manca speak on her independent study Prize; and Eleanor A. Weiss, '66, in the Office of the U.S. Special was presented with the Phi Beta prefect. Her topic is "The Survival The Alice B. Hangen Prize for Ex- Representative in Europe (Mar- Kappa Scholarship Award. of the Dollar in the International cellence in Classics. shall Plan). Undergraduate awards present- M 0 net a r y System." Katherine Also: Cynthia Wise, '66, The Dr. Brewster joined the Harvard ed at the Prize Chapel included: Hooper, '66, will speak on "Svna- Louise W. Hclbom Prize for Ex- Law School faculty and in 1953, judith A. Stickel, '66, The Ameri- non, A Possible Cure for Drug cellence in Government; Laurie E. at the age of 34, was appointed to can Association of University Worn- Addicts." Elizabeth Deane's topic, Cameron, '69, and Janis A. Thorn- '67, be "A Study of the Tis- a full Professor of Law. During en Citizenship Award; Patricia Ann will as, '68, The Dance this period at Harvard, he also Cohen, '66, The American Chem- sues of Mountain Laurel Seed- teal- Society, Connecticut Valley Scholarship; Susan E. Lincoln, '66, lings." Kathy Hooper, one of the served as a consultant for the U.S. The Svetlana Kasern-beg Prize for State Department and Internation- Section Award; Laura L. Ingraham, participants, said that by having Excellence in Russian; Susan L. al Cooperation Administration, a Rt. Rev. C. Kilmer Myers '66, The Lyman Allyn Museum this program she hoped that "It Prize in Art History; and Jayne B. Kennedy, '68, The Mahan Memo- would give parents an idea of the consultant and participant at the rial Prize for Excellence in Music; assigned to the Associate Mission Maloof, '66, The Mary Coleman academic structure at Connecticut Center for International Affairs at and julie Baumgold, '66, The Ben- Harvard and at the Center for In- of Grace Church, jersey City, N.j. Armstrong Prize in History. College which allows for inde- jamin T. Marshall Prize for the pendent study and for the oppor- ternational Studies at M.I.T. In 1963, Rev. Myers was called Also: Lindley T. Beetz, '67, The Art Department Prize for Superior Best Original Poem. tunity to make the academic ex- His particular field of interest is as the Director of the Urban Train- Also: Francee Rakatansky, '67, reflected in the two books he has ing Center for Christian Mission Achievement by an Undergradu- The Sarah Nichols Cup for the (Continued on Page 5, Col. 3) written: Antitrust and American in Chicago, which prepares other. ate; Rae E. Downes, '67, The The- Business A b r 0 a d, published in clergymen to meet and solve the Also: Barbara A. Lytton, '66, The 1958, and Cases and Materials on parish problems of ministering to Hannah Grace Roach Prize in His- the Law of International Transac- the needs of slum dwellers in Chi- tory; Barbara Salamon Rudolph, tions and Relations, co-authored cago. He met and solved such prob- '66, and Mary-Louise Meyer, '67, with Milton Katz, in 1960. lems in New York. Honorable Mention, The Savard Prize for Excellence in Spoken International Nickel Gives $2000 Grant French; Rill A. Bellantone, '66, The Paul Abel Schwartz Prize in (Connecticut College News Office) In accepting the grant, Presi- Chemistry; and Deborah Green- An unrestricted grant of $2,000 dent Shain noted that independ- stein, '67, The Teachers College from The International Nickel ent, privately endowed colleges (Columbia) Book Prize in Educa- Company, Inc. has made possible such as Connecticut are dependent tion. the acquisition of new instruc- upon this kind of private support Also: Andrea C. Storer, '66, The tional equipment for the zoology from foundations and corporations Elizabeth Travis Prize for Original department at Connecticut Col- in order to maintain the excellence Composition in Music; Maria C. lege. of academic programs. Marie Manca, Jane Stem, Deanna Stein Pellegrini, '69, and Rae E. Downes, Photo hy: Philip A. Biscuiti According to an announcement Two earlier grants totaling '67, and Madelon Boeye, F. S., made' last week by President $2,000 were awarded the College odore Bodenwein Prize for English Greatest Contribution to the Musi- Honorable Mention, The Unity Charles E. Shain, the gift will be by International Nickel under 'the Composition in the Field of News- cal Life of the Campus; Marcia L. Club Prize for Excellence in Ital- used to purchase 11 compound company's broad program of con- ian; julie Baumgold, '66, The john microscopes with condensers and paper Writing; and Diana M. Hall, Geyer, '66, Mary K. Hageboeck, tinuing aid to higher education in Edwin Wells Memorial Prize in three binocular dissecting micro- '66, The Business and Professional '66, and Diane E. Horsburgh, '68, the United States. These were Women's Club Prize for Outstand- The Personal Library Prize; and English; and Lynn A. Kastner, '66, scopes. These will be used pri- The Wig and Candle Prize for the marily by students working in the used to extend equipment in the ing Work in Economics. Marjorie A. Schimel, '66, and Asia College's radiation biology labora- Also: P. jill McKelvie, '67, The j. Rial, '66, The Antonio Rebolledo Greatest Contribution to the Dra- laboratory sections of courses in matic Club. ecology. tory. Sarah Ensign Cady Prize for Excel- Memorial Prize in Spanish. Monday, May 9, 1966 Page Two Conn Census :t"VOC<1 ~,i>", q ConnCensus Letters to the Editor ;[.\ ,!J}" Tk"t JC1JM" , Estahlished 1916 'Ir:;J (0'" .i,p'" ~~ds,,"'''j Published by the students of Connecticut College every Monday through- To the Editor: Equally unforgettable is Laura ~ Why dot 5 ;of t..1d out the college rear from September to June, except during mid-years and Thank you, all of you, for your DeKoven's overblown le~e~ ~n- I. hA( k So lO'"'j ? vacations. enthusiastic support of the Faculty ceming the infamous painting ID- ~ _• _.£ Second class entry authorized at New London, Connecticut. Auction. If you haven't already cident: "It has occurred; the act j,0 rf , -H.t It yes f or heard, it was an overwhelming suc- has heen done," Ifl,\ I;f~ tU~V"~';O -/."';d Reprnented for Nltional Advertilinc by Member cess. Community Fund made over am only happy that there a~e ational Advertising Service, Inc, I {t" Wk"+ ,ovid be $1000 in this project, and this mon- such truly important campus CoUege Publishers Representative Associated CoUegiate Press IS- I"> h 'b"t ree" ey will be a great help in reaching sues as the car petition. and com- ITJ 'V QO' 9 18 East 50 St. New York, N. Y. our goal of having an additional prehensives to occupy at least a _.J{b _ "pp Ie s ,,;. v" p Iv .....5, Chingo- Botton - LoS' Angdes _San FrancUt'O IntercoUegiate Press foreign student on campus next small portion of our college news- hQ .. J w h ea t, '"...d Editor-In-Chief Managing Editor year. paper, .' J ., Rae E. Downes '67 Jane M. Gullong '67 I would particularly like to thank Mandy Vernaglia '67 h,d&e" "",,,,,5, Editorial StaH the faculty and administration who Wh..t w.vlJ ~" ;'~l~ To the Editor: News Editor...... Barbara A. Brinton '68 offered their "services;" the house I-""fP''' b Feature Editor .'._.. Nancy R. Finn '68 presidents who publicized the At least two things need to be vf ~"It- - 1\ Copy Editor . Brooke juram '68 event in their dorms; my teriffic said about the contradictory and \,Qk,J e"'''+S a"d Assistant Copy Editor B. Ann Kibling '69 ifl Makeup Editor Janet Ives '68 committee: Peggy Rifkin, Leslie uninformed letter (Conn Census, (J v-f.+'1 s.f-o .. "" s . • ~. Advertising Midge Au werter '68 Asmuth, Marcia Hunter, Barbi April 25) by Miss Leavitt ('69). Fran Wattenberg '68 Goff, Ronnie Daniels, and Carol First, actions speak louder than \1// A",J, ',f +(..es~;;'- Business Manager Marcia 'Valker '67 Robinson, and a very special thank words. Anyone hearing Miss Leav- Circulation . Dinsmore Fulton '68 • we're scay,d 0" Exchanges ...... Wendy Casman '67 you to ?-.fr. Mayhew, our auction- itt's pretentious performance at the tt-e. d ... k ". 7 Cartoonists ...... Susan Freiberg '66, Cathy Hull '68 eer. slide-lecture on Cuba could only Subscription Manager . Wendy 'Yilson '67 Again, thank you all for your en- conclude that her mind is anything ~ ., God J you F,.",.f Photography...... Enid Groeneveld '66 thusiasm and support which made but open. But her letter is proof Staff the Faculty Auction a great suc- enough: In spite of the overwhehn- .f~/;r(}~ I, Y.u'''~s/.wed Phyllis Benson, Marjorie Berman, Julie Boone, Sara Busch, Karen Dorras ing factual evidence that living ol.w", , Naomi Fatt, Gail Goldstein, Wendy Green, Anne Hutchinson, Lynn Kinsell: cess! Ruth Kunstadt, Ellen McCreery, Maria Pellegrini, Barbara Pite, Kathy Riley, Sincerely, conditions for a great number of you '1eed .. sh.+ Susan Sigal, Kathy Spendlove, Joyce Todd. Diane Cole, '68 people have improved in Cuba, -~-- i" sky I '\ To the Editor: Miss Leavitt would discount this +l.. ~ as "Marxist-Leninist" propaganda. Prissy, pressed, proper prudes kick '''' ~"It ea.'r~ I Q Respectful, righteous, repressed How can discussion be free and s,i t ..V\ +l-, e S .ItCl ~';I, " Editorial ... regurgitators open if the boundaries are limited Confonning, chaste, correct a priori? CI bas l, 0 ....+ It e It,,:! creatures Second, Dr. Sack's remark about Saintly, smug, spineless sycophants the need for revolution in America keCltl, ~~l View From The Wall That's what Miss Gullong wants was made in response to a taunt by 0<1":'", . - -_ Us to be Miss Leavitt herself and should be The year 1965-66 is drawing to a dose. Lake past years it ends Too bad, it is not for me. understood in that context. "If you f." ~"ol "fwd. of with the resounding bang of hourlies, papers, camps, exams, all- Margie Dressler '67 liked it there so much," she asked, ql~ hvbr;s. nighters and bloodshot eyes that set the tone of the remaining weeks. "why did you come back?" One has to make time to throw her glasses on the desk and avaluate To the Editor: Miss Leavitt can rest assured Jl her successes and failures, for it is an unfortunate fact that we seem I am disturbed by the article, that she need not fear mental cor- to enjoy college in retrospec. We never can feel secure. There are "Ministry of Disturbance." For ruption by invidious foreign ideas. too many variables, too many contingencies. We can't bask in the years I've been picking up tons of John David Ober NEWS NOTES glory of a B hourly, for there is another test tomorrow and a paper due beer cans, cases of vodka bottles, To the Editor: the next day. Our emotions, our grades, our social lives, the world cigarette butts and candy wrap- It is undoubtedly the case that Participants in the 1966 summer around us, are in a headspinning state of flux. pers strewn on the lawn. My only our society is preserving the rights program of the Experiment in In- gripe is that they are always emp- of the Blakeslee Trucking Com- ternational Living have been an- If we try for a moment to become flies on the wall observing our- ty. So come on kids ... if you pany over those of Mrs. Christian- nounced by Dean M. Gertrude Mc- solves, we may ask why we are incurring ulcers when we could be are good enough to contribute to sen. But it is regrettable that after Keon. leading tranquil, predicable lives holding routine jobs. The fly on the campus, the least you could four years of liberal arts education, They include: Mary J, Kirsch- the wall suppLes the answer. Our lives would not be tranquil and do is to share the wealth. MIles. fuller and Goodman regard man, '68, Great Britain; Susan predictable at all. We'd create correspondingly vexing problems for Lenore Fanner '66 this "manifestation of private free Morgan, '68, France; Jean M. Ro- ouselves. Our thinking, reading, writing and participation in the ex- enterprise" as some kind of free- vetti, '68, Italy; Jade Schapp.ls, perience of learning, both in and out of the classroom, are truly worth- To the Editor: dom and the refusal of the Chris- '68, Switzerland; Sally Foskett, '68, while. The unpredictability of our lives as students is what makes Conn. Census has outdone it- tiansens to pay taxes as a form of Italy; Elizabeth Gay nor, '67, college interesting. The daily hurdles are challenges which keep our sell again. I failed to believe that "self-righteous tyranny of the indi- France; Jane Harkness, '67, New mental wheels turning continually. the mediocrity of recent issues vidual." Is this not the language of Zealand, and Nita Kalish, '68, could be surpassed, but the May totalitarianism? Are we bound fo J Every semester brings new challenges. We are challenged to Spain. 2nd issue of Conn. Census was by tolerate free enterprise as it be- develop an understanding of a different aspect of economics, to culti- •• • far the worst yet. clouds our constitutional rights? vate an appreciation of medieval literature, to improve the campus Lyman Allyn Museum has re- Perhaps the most petty and un- The Johnson administration has newspaper, to avaluate student government, to make new friends, to cently purchased an Andrew Wy- important 509 words I have ever tried to convince us that the war in observe and understand other people. In short, we are challenged to eth £ainting entitled "West Win- Tead were written by Jane Gul- Vietnam is just a "temporary in- size up the available materials of our surroundings and to decide how dow. long. Her column reflects the convenience" and that all those we are going to use them for our benefit as individuals and for the • • • sophistication of a devotee of who protest it are asserting their benefit of that intangible and controversial entity, the community. "Ikiru" a Japanese film directed Keene, Lawrence Welk, and Nor- own "individual tyranny." To re- by Kurosawa will be sponsored by Assessment of the value of the past year should be made by man Vincente Peale, and a pre- fuse to support the war through the Fihn Society on Wednesday, veighing our individual recognition and treatment of these challenges, occupation with minutiae incon- non-payment of taxes (almost three- May 11, in Palmer Auditorium. our ability to strike the proper balance between concentration on "self" gruent with the implied intellec- quarters of which goes into the The time for the showing will be and contribution to the world outside "self'. The person who has tual level of a Connecticut College making of a War Machine) is to op- announced. achieved this balance has recognized the need, in the words of Sandy Junior. pose real tyranny. • • Aside from Miss Gullong's col- Those who regard the Christian- '. Holland, to "stick her neck out," to make a commitment, to assess her President Charles E. Shain will umn, I trunk that I shall never for~ personal values and to stick by them. She gets excited about things. sens' action as «admirable spirit preside at a workshop session of get Dr. Batley's chilling summa- She does something constructive about what's bothering her. If she . . . not directed . . . constructive. a Connecticut state conference on tion statement, "Life is full of disagrees with a professor she says so. If she thinks something needs Jy, are the victims of a misguided school segregation at the Holiday risks. A girl is a girl, but a cigar- education. improvement, she pitches into make it better. Inn in Meriden on May 24. ette is a smoke:' nor that entire Leon Bresloff We have been accused of being apathetic. A look at the achieve- The theme of the conference, boring article for that matter. I Philip A. Goldberg ments of the past year shows that a good many of us are not. The sponsored by the State Board of many and diversified talents and interests of the senior Phi Betes erase Education and State Commission the image of the bespectacled, brown oxford-shod bookworm. \Ve Orchestra To Perform For Spril\g on Civil Rights, is "Eqnality and Quality in the Public Schools." Mr. have organized CONN QUEST, held symposiums on Viet Nam, put The Connecticut College two cellos featuring Francee Rak- Shain's workshop will deal with forward a car petition, conducted a spirited student government elec- Orchestra, conducted by Mrs. antansI...-y and Anita Shapiro, and "Desegregation, Integration and tion, organized creative activities in dance, art and music, and, un- Margaret "Viles, will give its ninth Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No. Quality Education." characteristically, voted down at Amalgo a motion to give a judicial annual spring concert Tuesday, 4 \vith Maria Lewis, violin, and function to house councils. Letters to the editor of CONN CENSUS May 10, at 8:00 p.m. in the dance Susan Flynn and Nancy Brush, •• • have ranged intopic from disagreement with the opinions of a visiting studio in Croziel,"-Williams. flutes. The concert will conclude Mr. James Armstrong, instructor lecturer to a fre.'ihman's «disillusionment" with our academic atmosphere. Selections \vil1 include a Pre- with the first moveIlJent of the in music, will direct an outdoor lude and Fugue by Handel, Unfinished Symphony by Shubert. Students involved in these pursuits are sticking their necks out. concert by the Connecticut College Mozart's Oboe Concerto in C Oy disrupting potentially routine "skirts to breakfast" lives, they are The orchestra began with 18 Chorus on the steps of Harkness major with David Best as soloist, naking a commitmment, be it to a thorough and active understanding players and now has 50 members. Chapel at noon, Sunday, May IS. TartinCs Violin Concerto in D Approximately half are from the of a field, an opinion, or the success of an extracurricular project. There Susan Kennedy, '68, will be the minor with soloist Carolyn Wenk, are, of course, others who fit into this category. They may not have college and the other half from the accompanist. Vivaldi's Concerto in A minor for surrounding community. keys 01' be presidents of organizations, but they are • • • thinkers and doers. Roberta Ward, '68, has the only Music Dept. To Hold Final Concert female role in the movie, Bladder· Those who personify apathy are almost too boring to discuss. ball, a take-off of James Bond mov- They are the myopic mouchers sitting in a back seat '\.vithout glasses, "Music For Spring," a concert bethan Era, including works by ies. The movie' was premiered on for they are missing most of the action. They never go away mad. featuring Anita TeHennepe, so- Handel, Purcell, Mozart, Mendels- Saturday, May 7, at Yale's Silliman They're merely bench warmers. Their B.A. will stand for "Brains prano, Sally Armstrong, soprano, sohn, and Prokofiev, the concert College. Absent." and Peter Kern, flute, \vill be held will featur~ Prokofiev's Sonata for Yale students and faculty includ- Sunday, May 15, at 8:30 p.m. in \Ve all can recall successes and failures during 1965-66. On the Flute and Piano, Op. 95, and the ing President Kingman Brewster Holmes Hall. vhoJe, however, it was a good year. \Ye wish the best of luck to the duet cantata, "Ahi, nelle sorti make up the cast of the silent IiIm F ran c e e Rakatansky, cello, umane," by Handel. Class of 1966, bid farewell to the resigning and retiring faculty mem- written, produced and directed by Claire Dale, piano, and James hers, and express hopes for a pleasant summer to everyone at the The concert, which is the final six Yale students. Almstrong, hmpsichord, will assist Department of Music presentation CnlJep;e. The movie is to be shown as part the three principal artists. for this season, is open to the R.E.D. Presenting music of the Eliza- general public without charge. , (Continued on Page 6, Col. 5) Monday, May 9, 1966 ConnCensus Pa~e Three 1966 Washington Interns Are Chosen To Work With Government Officials Professors Smyser, Thomas To Retire (Connecticut College News Office) VISTA in the Office of Economic Five members of the class of Opportunities. Her duties will be (Connecticut College ews Office) 1967 at Connecticut College will varied but she hopes to aid in the Prof. Hamilton M. Smyser, a be welcomed in Washington, D.C., planning of new VISTA projects. distinguished scholar in the field this summer as participants in the Miss Elizabeth Martin of Hing- of medieval literature, will re- summer intern program. ham, Massachusetts, will get a tire in June as chairman of the They will join other students taste of legislative activity in the Connecticut College English de- from Mt. Holyoke and Wheaton office of the House Minority Lead- partment but has been appointed Colleges in gaining first hand prac- er, Gerald R. Ford. Her position by the College's Board of Trustees tical experience in various federal will enable her to follow some leg- to remain on the faculty next year agencies. Although no remunera- islation closely and to aid in vari- as a Teaching Scholar in English. tion is received by the participants ous research projects for the con- At the close of the current aca- in this program, the students do gressman. demic year, Miss Ruth Thomas gain valuable experience in various Research will also constitute the will retire at assistant professor of fields and are often able to make main portion of .\1iss Christine physical education after 24 years contacts for post-graduate employ- Miller's summer. Miss Miller, of on the Connecticut College facul- ment. This year's five interns from River Forest, Illinois, will enter the ty. Connecticut College are all gov- realm of information in a division Prof. Smyser is the author of ernment majors. of the United States Information three books and many professional Miss Nancy Ford of Norton, Agency. articles in scholarly journals. His Massachusetts, will join the staff The Department of Health, Edu- two most recent works wiII be of the Foreign Training Division cation and Welfare will welcome published within the year, One of the Department of Agriculture Miss Marcia Soast of Philadelphia is a chapter on ''English Charle- Ruth Thomas Hamilton M. Smyser for her twelve week stay in Wash. to their staff this summer. She will magne Romances" with bibliog- ington. Included in her duties will work closely with the Congression- raphy soon to be published by summer sessions at Connecticut ciation for Physical Education of be assisting with a Public Admin- al Liaison in the Office of Educa- for the Con- College, Miss Thomas was Dean CoUege Women, and holds both istration Program at the University tion and like the other interns, will necticut Academy of Arts and Sci- of Students. She is a past chair- national and honorary ratings as a of Wisconsin for men from devel- be engaged in some research activ- ences. The second is a Chaucerian man of the Connecticut state offi- basketball official. For a number oping countries. ity. study to appear in the january cials rating committee, has served of years she has been advisor to Miss Leslie Freidin of New York At the end of the summer the 1967 issue of Speculum, the quar- on several committees of the Asso- the Connecticut sailing club. City looks forward to an interest- interns will write an analysis of terly publication of the Medieval ing and exciting summer as a mem- their part in the intern program to Academy of America. ber of the Projects Division of aid in future placement of interns. In 1958 Prof. Smyser was elect- ed a Fellow of the Medieval Acad- Committee Updates, Clarifies C Book emy, an honor held by only 50 American scholars of the Middle Revised 1966 Edition Goes To Press Ages. He is currently a member of that Academy's executive com- By Naomi Fatt Information, and Student Govern- mittee and assistant editor of its The revised C Book will go to ment. In this way material that journal. He also serves on the pub- press on the 15th of May. had been scattered throughout the 1~JI;~J($ lications committee of the Ameri- This ,represents the results of a book in past years will now be to- can-Scandinavian Foundation. project which began first semester gether under one heading. SU5f,tDVt A graduate of. Ohio Wesleyan to update, clarify, and condense Several sections now found in University, .Mr. Smyser holds an the college's official information the book have been shortened to hooklet. M.A. from The Ohio State Uni- allow for new condensed and clart- versity and received his doctorate At that time, a committee was fied explanations. formed, comprising the members from . Before JAr ."tlAtC{ r Pat said that the task was "frus- of the House of Representatives coming to Connecticut College in trating, because everything we plus several other students who 1934, he taught at Ohio State, wanted to c han g e had to go were asked to aid in the prelim- The State University of Ohio, and through so many channels." She al- inary revision of the C Book. at Harvard. He was named chair- so thinks that this is only the be- One of these students, Pat Gay- man of the Connecticut College ginning. There are so many peti- English department in 1961. nor, was asked to head a new com- tions and suggestions that are be- mittee charged with doing the real Miss Thomas holds a B.S. from ing considered in student govern- editing of the book. Pat and her Simmons College and an M.A. ment and within the administration from Teachers College, Columbia editing committee conferred with that this revision could not be the Miss Frances Brett and Mrs. Sally final one." University. She has done addi- FAR EAST' HOUSE Trippe while considering necessary tional graduate study at CornellI - revisions. "Hopefully," she commented, University and The Bouve School. - ORIENTAL GIFTS Consequently, the new C Book "next year the committee will have Before joining the Connecticut 15 Green Street something more concrete to work will be quite different from the old College faculty in 1942, Miss New London, Conn. with. I think that someone should one. For one thing, it will be short- Thomas taught at Mississippi State I~;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;~ er, as the committee set to work to he picked now for sophomore year, College for Women, Cornell Uni- revise and edit much of the ex- and I plan to make up some refer- versity, and at The Fermata ence sheets, so that it will be easier KLINGERMAN TRAVEL AGENCY traneous and irrelevant material School, Aiken, South Carolina. local agents for which clogged past C Books. The for next year's editor." During the 1945, '46, and '47 American Express Co. Five·Dollar-A-Day Toun: American Travel Abroad Gateway TOUr! layout was changed so that the Arista Student Travel Assoc. Global Tours book would be easier to use. Ask Mr. Foster Travel Service Hilton Tours Bachelor Party Tours Male Travel Bureau, IDc. It wiII be organized in approxi- Brownell Tours Marsh Toun, Inc. 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He is co-editor of "Econom- Several seniors have acquired in- Sue is a European History major Dr. Abram Bergson, professor of ic Trends in the ." teresting jobs for next year. here and her home is in New economics at Harvard' University, Professor Bergson was awarded Judy Licht is headed for Broad- Hampshire. will speak on "Trends in the Sovi- a fellowship at the Center for Ad- wav as assistant to the director of City planning has attracted Ter- et Economy" Monday, May 9, at "h~ hem," a new musical comedv ry McNab, a sociology major from 4:20 p.m. in Palmer Auditorium. vanced Study in the Behavioral Sci- opening at the George Abbott Schenectady, lew York. Terry has An authority on the economy of ences, Stanford, California, for Theater on November 29. done a study for the 'ew London Soviet Russia, Professor Bergson 1963-64. city council on the relocation of Judy's «break" grew out of a conducts research on Soviet eco- He served as chief of the eco- paper on Chinese Jews which she senior citizens. She will work for nomic growth and planning, and nomic sub-division on the U.S.S.R. did for her East Asian history ma- a private consulting finn in Roches- analyzes the Soviet-type economics in the Office of Strategic Services jor. he read in the Times a notice tel' as a research assistant and re- for students in the Department of of the play which is about the first ceive training in graphs and de- during World war II, and contin- Jew in China. She contacted the sign. She will be the only woman Asia at Brown and Sue at Yale. ued his teaching and research on producer, shared the information in the fi6rm. Asia, a Spanish major who has Soviet economics at Columbia un- she had obtained for her paper Sally Havill, a government ma- taken government courses also, will til 1956. with him, and was given the job. jor from New York, will be on the be an intern in a leadership insti- Earlier, he taught at the Uni- Judy has been active in theater staff of Congressman Samuel Strat- tute at Brown, sponsored by the here at Connecticut and plans a ton (D.-N.Y.) of the 35th district. Overseas Education Fund of the versity of Texas and at Harvard, career on the stage or in television. She was a summer intern in Wash- League of Women Voters. Asia re- A native of Baltimore, he received Also in ew York will be Sue ington last year. ceives a stipend for her commit- his A.B. from the Johns Hopkins Leiser. Sue has been hired as a Two zoology majors, Mary Mo- ment rather than a salary. She is University in 1933 and his Ph.D. junior executive trainee by a Mad- ershel and Ginny Turner, will be interested in working abroad for from Harvard in 1940. He is a ison Ave Public relations firm. Sue working at Boston hospitals next the League as a field consultant. Fellow of the Econometrics Soci- Dr. Abram Bergson is one of three girls among the year. Sue, a child development major ety and a member of the board of eight trainees chosen. Her job Mary will be a research assist- from New York, will assist in teach- directors of the Social Science Re- Economics and the Regional Stud- came from her challenge to the ant in immunology, working on ing three and four year-olds at the search Council. He is a consultant kidney transplants in dogs, at Peter Nursery school at Yale's Child ies Program. committee which was choosing the with the RAND Corporation, San- trainees strictly from eastern Uni- Bent Brigham Hospital. She spent Study Center. Last summer she His recent work centers on the ta Monica, California, and he is a versities. She defended the idea of last summer working a private worked with Head Start in New organization and functioning of the a liberal arts education, was grant- pathology laboratory at home in London, and she has done an in- Russian economy. He has recently member of the American Academy ed an interview and eventually giv- Cedar Rapids, Iowa. dividual study of a group of three published "The Economy of Social of Arts and Sciences and of the en a job. Ginny, from Exeter, New Hamp- year-olds. Planning." He also has analyzed American Philosophical Society. Sue Harrigan, who spent her shire, will be in a training program junior year at Princeton studying in medical technology at Faulkner Slavonic languages, will work on Hospital In lieu of monetary re- the Russian news desk of Time- imbursement, Ginny receives ex- Life. Sue has travelled in Russia penses and a degree in medical and is postponing a fellowship for technology after one year. graduate study in the Slavonic Asia Rial and Sue Martin have areas at either Harvard or Yale. jobs within the academic world, Takeyour good time 443-7395 GARDE OTTO AIMETTI THEATRE Ladies' and Gentlemell's going home. BEST ACTRESS Custom Tailoring JULIE CHRISTIE 86 State Street in DARLING BEST ACTOR PENNELLA'S LEE MARVIN BAKERY & RESTAURANT in CAT BALLOU 119 Broad Street Wed. May 11 - Tues. May 17 New London, Connecticut

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I Monday, May 9, 1966 ConnCensus Page Five Meredith To Head Summer Program; (Continued from Page 1, Col. 5) perience a creative one and one Seniors Pursue Graduate Studies which is meaningful to the indi- Counselor Evaluates Past Experience vidual." More seniors have made definite of the philosophy club here and is At ILI5 a.m. in Palmer Audi- plans for graduate study next year from Massachusetts. By Sara Busch lege. In the course of the summer, torium, President Shain will greet and here follows a list intended to Boston draws many Connecticut Connecticut College will again ,and during the follow-up some be- guests and show slides of long- complement that published last graduates this year as in past years. sponsor a summer humanities pro- gan to consider seriously the pos- range campus planning which will week in Conn Census. It should Among these are Alice Daghlian, gram for underprivileged girls, un- sibility of continuing their educa- include the plans for the new Fine be noted, however, that this is still Alice Karmel, Dani Dana, and der the directorship of Mr. Wil- tion. Arts building. a partial list, for Dean oyes re- Gayle Sanders. ham Meredith, professor of Eng- Liza said that before participat- Luncheon for all fathers will be ports that "Some of our best girls Alice Daghlian will study library lish. ing in the program, cultural edu- in their daughter's dormitory at are still choosing.": science part-time at Simmons while The program is designed to offer cation and college had no place in 12:45 p.m. and a luncheon for Two students, Jean Squeri and working in the Harvard University teen-age girls the type of cultural their lives, The program, she said, Junior mothers will take place at Laura Whitefield, are pursuing library. An European history ma- exposure they could never gain in enabled them to enlarge their out- the same time in their daughter's their interest in medieval studies. jor from Indiana, she has worked their own environments. looks on life and afforded them dormitory. Jean, a classics major from New regularly in the library here. Four of last year's student coun- new opportunities with which to Many things are scheduled for Jersey, has studied Italian and Alice Karmel, a French major selors, Susan Ell del, '67, Liza work. Saturday afternoon, including a spent her junior year in Florence. from New York City, will be en- Chase, '66, Barbara Walker, '66, The program will remain basic- performance by the Conn Chords She traces her interest in the Mid- rolled in the M.A.T. program at and Ellen Hofheimer, '66, are re- ally the same, Liza commented. and Shwiffs in Crozier from 2:30- dle Ages to Miss Monaco's Dante Harvard, She has received an in- turning to work in this summer's English, music, art (painting and 3:30 p,m. Recreational activities course here and to her year abroad. ternship which allows her to study program. sculpture), modern dan c e, and are provided, such as bowling, At University of Chicago, where for one summer and one semester Liza Chase said that Mr. Mere- sports will be offered. swimming, tennis, and a softball she has received a fellowship, she and teach one semester. Her class dith was at first reluctant to allow The four new counselors, as well game at 3:00 p.m. at the Play- will work toward an M.A. in me- will be in the ninth grade in a Bos- the seniors to work as counselors as the returning workers, were field West Gate. There will also dieval studies within the classics ton high school. While a senior because they will not be able to chosen in the same manner as last be a lawn party from 3:30-5:00 department, here at Connecticut ollege, she has participate in the all-important fol- year's group, Liza said each wrote pm- which President Shain and Laura, an European History ma- taught French to fourth graders low-up program, This follow-up letters stating her qualifications and the faculty will attend. The Madri- jor, will go to Poi tiers, France, a twice a week. is an essential part of evaluation, reasons for wanting to work in the gal Singers, the Russian Chorus, renowned center of medieval stud- Dani Dana, a sociology major continuation and preservation of program. The applicants were in- and the Dance Group will perform ies. Her program there lasts for who has assisted in child guidance the efforts and achievements of the tervtewed by Mr. Meredith and and there will be a student Art two semesters, She is from Penn- in New London, will enter the summer program. Mr. Philip Jordan, assistant pro- Show. sylvania. Boston University School of Social Its purpose is to maintain con- fessor of history. The second performance of Philosophy major Deanne Stein Work From Massachusetts, she tact with the participants and to According to Liza, the 1966 pro- "Would Hugh Believe ItP" will will enter a three year doctoral will work in a settlement house continue their motivation, instead gram is better prepared to deal begin at 9:00 p.m. on Saturday program in Philosophy at the Uni- near Boston this summer, of allowing them to return to the with any disciplinary problems that evening in Palmer Auditorium. versity of Wisconsin. A future col- Gayle Sanders, a government old patterns of their culturally de- might arise. She believes that last The annual Pop Hop will occur in lege teacher, Deanna has received major from Dover, Delaware, will prived environments, year the girls were given too much Crozier from 10:00-12:30 a.m. a National Defense Education Act enter the Boston University Law Lisa's follow-up pro g ram in freedom, Consequently, this year featuring an orchestra, surprise en- fellowship. She has been president School in the fall. Last summer Bridgeport is typical of the efforts there will be more rules, including tertainment, favors and refresh- vided by the Connecticut College Cayle was an intern in Washington of the counselors. She spends an required study halls. ments, Jane Ranallo, '68, said, Chorus and they will also give an and this year she will work for Sen- hour after school with nine girls Liza thinks that most of last "There will be red carpet treat- informal concert at noon on the from three high schools, In the fall, summer's counselors entered the ment for dads." The theme of the steps of Harkness Chapel. (Continued on Page 6, Col. 1) Liza said, the counselors assigned program with "a rosy picture" and Pop Hop is "King For A Night." reading with the hope of conduct- high goals for accomplishments. One father will be chosen to reign ing informal discussions. Most of 'They failed to realize," she said, for the evening. Jane says, "Al- Compliments of the girls, however, did not do the "that the girls with whom they though there may only be one reading, and the hour became an would work had been hardened to King at the Hop, all dads are go- Informal visiting session. the core by their environments," ing to be visiting royalty for the GENUNG'S She also found it interesting to At first, Liza commented, the whole evening." Department Store note that those girls who had been girls seemed oblivious to the efforts Mr, Richard C. Wiles, assistant conscientious during the summer of the counselors. Even by the end professor of economics, will speak Now we are two- were the ones who benefitted most of the summer, only the most at the chapel service on Sunday, from the hour. subtle changes were noticeable. May 15, at 11:00 a-m. in Hark- DOWNTOWN NEW LONDON When the girls, 15 and 16 years Liza believes that with a more ness Chapel. Music will be pro- WATERFALL AT WATERFORP old, came to Conn, last summer, realistic approach and a set of none of them had ever considered guiding rules, the pitfalls, prob- summer's program perhaps will be CHARGE ACCOUNTS continuing their education in col- lems and disappointments of last avoided,

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troll dolls Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New London, Inc., New London, Conn. Page Six ConnCensus Monday, May 9, 1966 (Continued from Page 2, Col. 5) (Continued from Page 5, Col. 5) scholar and has received the Phi Arboretum Invites Dads' Inspection Beta Kappa Scholarship award and of the college's 25th anniversary "tor Boggs (R.-Del.). She has been celebration last wee k. Roberta active in political groups on cam- a fellowship from Yale. Marie's Dr. \ViUiam Niering, Director of Black Botanical Gardens on Mo- program, which leads to a Ph.D. in the Connecticut Arboretum, will hegan Avenue. plays the blond secretary of Dr. pus (including Young Democrats) Bladderball whose monster-power- and she plans a career in politics. comparative literature, calls for two conduct an interpretive walk Sun- The tour wiII begin at 2 p.m., years of courses and one year pre- day, May 15, to introduce Arbore- at the Williams Street entrance to ful son is refused admission to Heading for midwestern schools Yale. are Mary Hamilton and Takaka paring a dissertation. Marie usually tum Association members, stu- the Arboretum. ••• Tanaka. travels in Europe in the summer dents, fathers, and other guests to This is the second of two walks and she speaks Italian, French, the spring Bora. to be conducted for the Connecti- Kay Morgan, '67, has been se- Mary, a St. Louis native, has a lected as this year's summer intern fellowship for a two-year program English, Spanish, and has a bad ..· The flowering dogwoods, azel- cut Arb 0 ret u m Association, a in the Information Center of the in social work at Washington Uni- ground in Russian. This summer eas and hawthornes are expected group of organizations and indi- City of West Berlin. Kay will work versity. An American History ma- she will study German which she to be the highlights of the stroll viduals interested in supporting needs for entrance into Yale Grad- through the woody plantings in the Arboretum and its program. for two months in various divisions jor here, her interest in social wel- of the Information Center. The fare developed from high school uate School. She is considering a the front of the Arboretum. the Dr. Goodwin will take a group program is designed for students volunteer work and summer jobs career in college teaching. She is Edna Edgerton Wildflower Area, to the Arboretum to view and lis- the daughter of Mrs. Pasqualirm the Bolleswood Natural Area, and ten to migratory birds, Tuesday, interested in careers in the public in the city recreation department. service or further advanced study This summer she wiU be an intern Mance of the Italian department if time permits, the Caroline May 10 at 7 p.m. of Political science. ut the Jewish Home for the Aged here. ----.:...--.-:.------~~--~~------in St. Louis. Other Ivy Leaguers will he Lou- • • • DeFrancis Speaks On .'Whither Chinese" "The Season for Brides," an ex- Takaka Tanaka, a studio art ma- ise Fay, at Brown, and Janie Stern hibit of bridal gowns and wedding jor from Japan, will enter a pro- at olumbia. John DeFrancis, research pro- Dr. DeFrancis is editor of the customs from 1800 to the present, gram at the University of hicago Louise has been named a fellow fessor of Chinese at Seton Hall Journal of the Chinese Language will be on display in Lyman Allyn which leads to an :M.A.at the end in the M.A.T. program at , will present the lee- Teachers Association. The cover Museum, beginning Saturday after- of one year and gives preparation where she will study French and turc "whither Chinese Language," of the Journal's first edition, Feb- noon of Parents' weekend and for the Ph.D. program if she wish- education for one year and one sponsored by the Sophomore Sym- ruary 1966, was des i g ned by continuing through July 10. Susie es to continue. Takako plans to summer. Last summer she studied posium, on May 11 at 7:30 p.m. Charles Chu, associate professor of Terrell, Linden Tucker, and Cindy teach or work in a museum. music and French at the Fontaine- in Palmer Library. Chinese at Connecticut College. Sorensen are directing the show Rill Bellantcne, a three year stu- bleau School of Music (L'Ecole A native of Bridgeport, Con- The Journal contains a paper, under the guidance of Miss Jane dent here, wiII enter a doctoral pro- Americaine de Beaux Arts), a necticut, Dr. DeFrancis graduated "Why johnny Can't Read Chi- gram in bio-chemistry at Yale. She school her father attended in the from Yale University and spent nese," written by Dr. DeFrancis Hayward, assistant professor of Art. The twenty-one gowns and acces- has received a U.S. Public Health department of architecture, when the next three years studying and which was first presented at a sories to be exhibited are part of tmineeship, and she plans a career he was a young man. traveling in China. He returned to paper at the Modem Language the Museum's fine costume collec- in university teaching and research. Janie Stern, editor of the Psy- the States and received his Ph.D. Association's annual meeting dn Her summers are spent in re- chology Journal here, will enter a from Columbia. His doctoral thesis December in Chicago. tion. search, last year at Syracuse Uni- four year doctoral program in clin- was "Nationalism and Language I;:::======; versity with Dr. Henry \Virth and ical psychology at olumbia. One Reform in China." this summer at Brookhaven Nation- year will be spent working at a After working for the United CONNECTICUT COLLEGE ANTIQUES FAIR al Laboratory on Long Island. New York clinic. Janie plans even- States Department and the OSS Marie Manca also will study in tually to work on a team in a men- in Chinese Politics, he taught at SUNDAY, JUNE 5, 1966 New Haven next year. A French tal institution. She is from Penn- Johns Hopkins and then went to major here, she is a Winthrop sylvania. Seton Hall University. 10:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m., RAIN ,OR SHINE

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