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Barnard Bulletin from New York, New York • Page 2

Publication:
Barnard Bulletini
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BHI BARNARD BULLETIN On Campus Menorah-Seixas will hold open house today from 4-6 Sholom Newman, leader of the Inter- University Federation of Great Britain, will speak on "American Jewry A Visitor's View Collegium Musician will meet today at 8 p.m. in the College Parlor for a program of secular Italian vocal music of the Renaissance and Baroque periods Madrigals and Monodies will be performed by the Misses Shirlee Emmons and Zena Gabnele with a madrigal group of Barnard and Columbia "students IZFA will hear Mr Shlomo speak on "'Chasidism" tomorrow in Barnard Hall from 12 to 1 p.m. Colombia Pre-Med Society will meet on Wednesday in room 309 Havemeyer at 4 p.m. to see a film about Thoracic Surgery. John L.

Thomas of the English Department will lead a discussion concerning the tragic view in Shakespearean a American drama at 4 p.m. in room 404 on Wednesday. Tea will be served. Earl Hall Interfaith Society will hear Father George B. Ford of Corpus Christi Church speak on "Realms of Faith Today and Yesterday" on Wednesday from 4-6 p.m.

Math Club Lecture-Tea will hear Professor Henry A. Boorse, chairman of the Physics Department, on Wednesday at 4 p.m, in room 239 Milbank. Professor Boorse will talk about the properties of matter at very low temperatures. Refreshments will be served. Radio, Television Institute Gives Program for Summer The Barnard-NBC Summer Institute of Radio and Television is offering four professional courses this summei to be taught in the NBC studios No academic credit will be given, but a certificate will be awarded by Barnard College and NBC to candidates who fulfill the requirements of the Institute Enrollment is limited to men and women college graduates, as well as to non-degree holders who have had some professional experience in radio and television Students will take all four courses at a fee of 140 dollars for the entire In one course, as an introduction to radio and television, students will monitor and evaluate radio and television broadcasts and report on interviews with people employed in the industry.

It will be conducted by Doris Corwith, supervisor of talks and religious programs at NBC. Patrick Kelly, NBC supervisor of announcers, will teach a course on announcing. A course on production, to be taught by William C. Hodapp, executive director of Teleprograms, will cover radio and television production and programming techniques. Lee- Jungle Opens Late For Belles, Beans The jungle is now open to Barnard students and their guests in the evening until 1 a.m., Miss Harriet Benson, Director of the Residence Halls, has announced.

It is suggested that students have identification with them at all times, since the watchmen will be checking to see that the jungle is used only by Barnard students and their guests. Another announcement has been made in reference to the campus. There is to be sunbathing on the North Lawn only, Joan Afferica, Undergraduate Vice-President and Chairman of the Senior Board of Proctors, has announced. There is to be no sunning on the Milbank and South Lawns. Students should always be appropriately dressed when sunning, Miss Afferica added, since professors and Columbia students are always walking through the campus.

Treasury Hours Lois Bingham '54, Undergraduate Treasurer, has announced that future Undergraduate Treasury hours will be Monday and 12 to 1 p.m. Rep Assembly (Cont. from Page 1, Col. 3) field or a more advanced one in the same field as was their first year science, was suggested. The Comimttee also asked for a revision of the exit examination.

The group felt that the exit should test comprehension of a foreign language on the ability to answer questions in the language, as well as on the ability to translate into good idiomatic English. Towards this end they suggested the inclusion of a question-answer passage in the exam. The question of- introducing a humanities course similar to the two year Contemporary Civilization course given at Columbia was considered. The Committee felt that such a course was designed for larger classes than are those at Barnard and also that Jhey are designed as a substitute for a major field of study. Placement tests, which would determine the extent of a student's knowledge in history, were suggested by Curric Committee.

These tests would make it possible for qualified freshmen to substitute other- more advanced courses for the present history requirements. 578 women from 224 colleges taking secretarial training at Gibbs F1Y KLM TO EUROPE NEW LOW AIR TOURIST RATES Effective May 1st. ROUND UIP NEW YORK TO SHANNON $433.80 Only 486.00 PARIS Only 522.00 FRANKFORT Prestwick or Shannon (Faret to government approval. Good low-cost on plant.) SEE YOUI TRAVEL AGENT NOW Special Course for College Women Fne-otj personal plact. nuit service Wnte ollepe Dran for nttaloe A 4 I I BOSTON 16 90 Marlborough St NEW YORK 17 230 Park Ave i CHICAGO 11 51 Superior St MONTCLAIR 33 Plymouth SI KLM Royal Dutch Airlines 572 Fifth Avenue, New York 19, N.

Y. Please send full Information pn new KLM Air Tourist Rates to Europe. 7 AME ADDRESS SfECIAL OCCASION A. G. PAPADEM CO.

FLORISTS MEMBERS OF FLORIST TELEGRAPH DELIVERY 2fS3 BROADWAY MOnnment 2-2241 2-2262 Bet. 115th and 116th Sts. tures, demonstrations and class projects in the field of programming land producing radio and television programs at the local and network levels have been planed. Ross Donaldson, NBC supervisor of literary rights and stories, will conduct a course on writing. The course will be a workshop with discussion based upon material submitted by members of the class.

The deadline for submitting applications for the summer program is June 1. Further information may be obtained in the Placement Office. Give Held Bonime, Shapiro Win Grants Dr Julius S. Held, Associate Professor of Fine Arts, and Hortense Calisher '32, have been awarded Guggenheim Fellowships for the coming year, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation has announced. Professor Held will use his fellowship to do research, on drawings of the Flemish painters.

Miss Calisher, who is the author of "In Absence of Angels," was awarded a fellowship for creative writing. Abby Bonime and Miriam Sha- piro both '52, have been awarded graduate fellowships by the National Science Foundation. Miss Bonime will do graduate work in psychology, and Miss Shapiro in mathematics, Dorothea Bennett '51, was also awarded a fellowship in zoology by the- Foundation. The fellowships cover tuition, laboratory expenses and some travel costs plus a basic $1400 for first-year students and $1600 for, second-year From the 3,000 who applied for the fellowships, 624 were chosen. Of these, $8 "were women.

Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No 41 THE MAGPIE I DONT GET SOME OF THE CHATTER!" lie's a chatterbox himself--outclassed by no one! But the fancy double-talk of cigarette tests was too fast for him! He knew --before the garbled gobbledygook started--a true test of cigarette mildness is steady smoking. Millions of smokers agree there's a thorough test of cigarette mildness. It 9 8 the sensible 30-day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to Camels as your steady smoke --on a day-after-day, pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments. Once you're tried Camels in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat, for Taste), you'll see why After all the Mildness Tests Camd leads all other brands.

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About Barnard Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
8,255
Years Available:
1901-1977