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Humor taken seriously, heavy stress on the arts and freedom from conventional college restraints are characteristic of Bennington. The notion of all this "rather disturbed me," admits Edward J. Bloustein, 40. Then Bloustein, who holds degrees in philosophy from N.Y.U. and Oxford, plus a Ph.D. and an LL.B. from Cornell, and who has lately been teaching law at N.Y.U., examined the school closely and his doubts dissolved. So on Aug. 1, he becomes Bennington's president, replacing the late William C. Pels...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: Pie in the in a Face, Tree Poetry | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

Tweaking Noses. Bennington's 360 students-all girls except for a few men, mostly in dance and drama-enjoy uncommon freedom (at a cost of $3,450 a year) on their airy 381 acres of rolling greenery. They are not formally graded. No specific courses or credits are required. With the guidance of a faculty counselor they can map their own path toward a degree. They have social freedom as well: they can leave their white clapboard houses any evening, stay out overnight, keep liquor in their cabinets, have men in their rooms until 11 p.m. on weekends...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: Pie in the in a Face, Tree Poetry | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

That kind of freedom inspires a spirit of independence in which, says Bennington Dean Harry Pearson, the girls "take great pleasure in tweaking the noses of the middle classes." To celebrate the 700th anniversary of the birth of Dante (see BOOKS) this spring, the girls donned costumes and reconstructed the campus according to the Divine Comedy-Hell was the college dump, Heaven a hilltop garden. Men at nearby colleges are prone to gossip about Bennington students as "rather bohemian girls of a sexually compliant nature," which sometimes leads the girls to answer requests for dates with an icy "I have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: Pie in the in a Face, Tree Poetry | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

...Bennington's freewheeling pursuit of culture imposes a self-respecting discipline of its own. The girls are under intense pressure to prove their talents. "When you get in a class with ten people," says one student, "everything is pretty well laid bare after an hour and a half. If all you've done is read a pony, everyone knows it, and it's the most humiliating feeling in the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: Pie in the in a Face, Tree Poetry | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

...Bennington can be tough. About half of the girls who enter as freshmen have dropped out, transferred, or been gently "counseled out" before graduation. For the survivors, learning can be exciting. Bennington girls have, in fact, been spotted reading poetry by flashlight while perched in a tree. Philosopher-Lawyer Bloustein, who in his own education tended toward the "interdisciplinary development that John Dewey suggested," looks forward to presiding over a school where "an individual can involve himself in two or more distinct disciplines." He will teach at least one course himself. "Ideas are the thing," he says. "At Bennington, even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: Pie in the in a Face, Tree Poetry | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

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