In this interview, Ancelin M. Vogt discusses her parents’ backgrounds as intellectuals and graduates of Harvard University and Radcliffe College. She notes that Radcliffe was her first-choice school but after being denied there it was a scholarship to Pembroke College that influenced her decision to attend. She explains the lack of support she felt from Pembroke administrators when her mother died during her sophomore year, and the general inequality she witnessed between services and activities offered to female versus male students. Vogt identifies the Sock and Buskin theatre group as the only place she experienced fair gender integration and equal treatment between Pembroke and Brown students. She goes on to recall the strictly regulated social lives of students but fondly remembers her academic experience, reminiscing about professors Gregory Polletta, John Shroeder, Elmer Blistein, Edwin Honig, Reginald Archambault, and William Jordy who influenced her decision to work for the Rhode Island State Historical Preservation Commission.
Vogt also shares the late-1960s stigmas surrounding sex on campus and in a wider cultural setting. She recalls getting the birth control pill in her junior year from a private doctor as well as the experience of a friend who traveled to Puerto Rico for an illegal abortion prior to the passage of Roe v. Wade. In the middle of her interview, Vogt explains that she disapproved of the Pembroke-Brown merger because Pembroke lost its identity and dissolved. She concludes the interview with details about her life after graduation including her near-immediate marriage and the proliferation of post-graduation marriages during that time. Vogt also details her position as Assistant Director for University Relations at Brown and the changes she observes on the campus.
The narrator's home