Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1974

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1974 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 272 of the 1974 volume:

And the phantom was a woman, and when I came to know her better I called her after the heroine of a famous poem, The Angel in the House. It was she who used to come between me and my paper when I was writing reviews. It was she who bothered me and wasted my time and so tormented me that at last I killed her. You who come of a younger and happier generation may not have heard of her — you may not know what I mean by the Angel in the House. I will describe her as shortly as I can. She was in- tensely sympathetic. She was immensely charming. She was utterly unselfish. She excelled in the difficult arts of family life. She sacrificed herself daily. If there was chicken, she took the leg; if there was a draught she sat in it — in short she was so constituted that she never had a mind or a wish of her own, but preferred to sympathize always with the minds and wishes of others. Above all — I need not say it — she was pure. Her pur- ity was supposed to be her chief beauty — her blushes, her great grace. In those days — the last of Queen Victoria — every house had its Angel. And when I came to write I encountered her with every page; I heard the rustling of her skirts in the room. Directly, that is to say, I took my pen in my hand to review that novel by a famous man, she slipped behind me and whispered: My dear, you are a young woman. You are writing about a book that has been written by a man. Be sympathetic; be tender; flatter; deceive; use all the arts and wiles of our sex. Never let anybody guess that you have a mind of your own. Above all, be Pure. And she made as if to guide my pen . . . Had I not killed her, she would have killed me. She would have plucked the heart out of my writing. Virginia Woolf The Death of the Moth, 1942 BA R C HA R D 03O RGA R BOA c R D 1974 Martha Peterson, President To the Members of the Class of 1974: Now as you graduate from Barnard will you stop for a few minutes to recall with me some of the events that have marked these past four years: the opening of the Women ' s Center and a new awareness of Barnard as a woman ' s college, the Program in the Arts and a new appreciation of the Minor Latham Theatre, the Barnard- Columbia Chorus, the Spring Festival, the Barndard- Columbia agreement with open access to Columbia and all the responsibilities that accompany such an agreement, a revitalized Bulletin, the election of students to sit with the Trustees, Gildersleeve Professors such as Mr. Levi Straus, Dame Veronica Wedgewood and Mr. Xenaki a major in Environmental Conservation and Management, a constantly increasing number of pre-meds and pre-laws, and this year the loss we all shared in the death of Professor King. I n my first letter to you on August 4, 1 970, 1 asked what will you give to Barnard and how can Barnard most stimulate, encourage, strengthen you? Those questions are partially answered now. I hope you are as satisfied with the results as all of us are. These have been good years for Barnard and I hope for you as a vital part of Barnard. With sincere good wishes to each of you, Martha Peterson President 8 nowY l Katherine Caso Ellen Bronzo 15 19 Susan C. Schachner 25 Joan Stavropoulos 26 27 Randi Jaffe 29 Susan Slovin 33 37 41 Donna Felsenstein 44 Arlene Rubenstein i 45 Rebecca Fogel 49 Jacqueline Dalton 52 59 Julianne Perry Karen Jackson 63 64 65 66 67 74 7b 76 M. Kim Horn 77 Barbara Tarasaka 82 84 86 87 Stephanie Bialick Priscilla A. Konecky 92 Felice Lesser 95 97 Ellen Wong 98 99 Elizabeth White Ligija Ercius Betsy Shapiro Harriet Lazer Sheila Dugan Tina Doud 104 Karen Mooney Mary Jo Malone 108 1 14 Yumi Shitoto 1 18 Diana Fosha Linda Schartup 122 Susan Moskowitz Barbara Rumain Heidi Abrams 126 Rochelle Dauber Elaine Frezza C 5 4) o I— o 132 Margaret Friedrich 137 138 139 140 141 142 Bonnie Ginzburg Marion Stout Yagman Barbara Toby Davis 144 Helen E. Sweetland 151 152 153 154 SAm) PA PE R age 18 — hey honkey — you notice one sauntering in a slinky chi-pao . . . reflex takes over you think link the chink . . . your jack-knife simile springs forward ready for this docile imbecile . . . to your surprise she sprays you with hai karate chops . . . bingo! age 19 Where do we go from here, dear? I had visions of you making fiery love to me — in the aphrodisiac presence of a pulsating red, through one another we reached ourselves, or perhaps — but everytime we see each other we talk and talk and talk and sometimes when my throat is dry and my vocal cords become exhausted you talk and dabble (or is it babble) into the abstruse while I devise ways of seducing you — should I gently sigh breaths of tiny zephyrs through your straight black strands of hair and work up to unbuttoning your shirt as I taste your earlobes and — but where is that courage and therefore I wait for your hoped-for advances, and I claim to be a feminist. 158 corns by Marina Yu age 20 the radio groans a rhyming loneliness only a teeny bopper could be moved popsicle blues tongue massaging tongue gliding I peruse the mirror the summer bronze almost completely scraped off so also our epidermal cells which had so often chafed each other ' s topography you laughed at my calligraphic mesh glazed black unusually straight you said naive I noted and I grinned at your own tangled gossamers spiral filaments I force a smile into the mirror epicanthus felinity survival in smiles the mirror shatters to shards tumbling from crescent eyes age 21 a Caucasian man: caution; an Asian man: paranoia; a man who is compassionate but passionless: disinterest and guilt; a man who is cold but consupiscent: conflict; a man who is kind and erotic: cowardice concerning love. (adapted from Ingrid Bengis) 159 160 E X E I C CD O E C G E A 6 £ E The Experimental College, born of the dramatic events of 1968 at Co- lumbia, is celebrating its fifth year of turbulent existence, having sur- vived and transcended yet another crisis. The eviction brought against the E.C. by Columbia, its landlord at 523 West 1 13th Street, has been postponed until Commencement Day — no small achievement, and testimony to the remarkable upsurge of support for the Experimental College, even from those who find its philosophy hard to swallow. Clearly the E.C. is more than the sum of its parts: forty students, two courses, a residence, a faculty-student committee, a coordinator. The independent projects are part of it: a student playing and analyzing chess games with her sponsor every week; three students performing a Mozart piano trio; four students giving 8 to 10 hours a week in parale- gal aid to the Harlem community. The weekly meetings provide a structure. And the house with its 16 residents provides a center, a meet- ing-place, a psychological home and safe place for residents and non- residents alike. 162 But the E.C. is also an idea: that individuals draw their strength and autonomy from the sense of belonging to a group, and the group draws its strength from the loyalty and cooperation of the individuals who form it. This dialectic operates in time of crisis, but it flourishes in times of peace and growth. Perhaps next year, in a new residence — our fourth! — the Experimental College will have a chance to prove its contention that confidence, not anxiety and stress, is the best source of energy and change. Hester Eisenstein IDOCDETTS CBTOB R THE WOMEN ' S CENTER For many of us at Barnard, the Women ' s Center is the realization of a dream. It was three years ago that a small determined group of students, faculty, administrators, and alumnae, including two Bar- nard trustees, chaired by Catharine Stimpson, be- gan to meet regularly to bring the Center into being. After months of discussion, that committee pro- duced a report which became the basis for the Women ' s Center. We believed then as we believe now that Barnard had an important pioneering role to play in helping women raise their aspirations and develop a height- ened sense of their own identity and independence so that they might realize their full potential. We be- lieved that women ' s center can supplement Bar- nard ' s rich academic program by creating an atmo- sphere and developing programs which would has- ten these goals. The Center opened in the fall of 1971 with one tiny office on the first floor of Barnard Hall. Now, three years later, we have burst out of that little room into larger quarters, added many activities and services, and have become an integral and necessary part of Barnard College. As we were conceived, so are we governed by an equal representation of all our con- stituencies. Policies and decisions are made by an executive committee composed of students, faculty, administrators, and alumnae. What have we accomplished? What do we do? We have realized one of our original goals — to become a resource center and a clearinghouse of informa- tion about women ' s groups and feminist activities. We have collected and catalogued books, articles, clippings, papers, pamphlets, and special issues of journals, and have subscriptions to over thirty-five newsletters and periodicals covering a wide range of subject areas. An important part of our resource collection is the growing number of research papers on women by Barnard students, many of whom have used our collection for their own research. In order to ensure the broadest use of our collection among students and faculty, a duplicate card cata- logue is maintained in the Barnard library. The material is in almost constant use by members of the Barnard-Columbia community as well as by re- searchers, journalists, and feminists. We prepare general reading lists on feminism in answer to popular demand; an annual interdiscipli- nary bibliography, Women ' s Work and Women ' s Studies, which includes students among its editors; and most recently we revised and expanded HELP: A Resource Booklet for Women, containing infor- mation on a wide range of national and local organi- zations that provide services for women. All of these activities have fed into and reinforced each other and have resulted in a remarkably comprehensive up-to-date collection of research on women ' s issues and files of services for women. In a number of ways, the Center concentrates on developing projects which complement or coincide with Barnard ' s distinctive strengths in women ' s studies. In May 1974 we are holding a one-day aca- demic conference called The Scholar and the Femin- ist which will examine some of the basic assump- tions of feminist scholarship. Last year we held a major regional conference, Women Learn from Women, in cooperation with women ' s groups (most of whom were involved in women ' s studies courses or programs) from seven colleges in the metropoli- tan area. The conference explored some of the cen- tral issues of the women ' s movement through a format of provocative workshops. Over nine 164 hundred women of different ages, backgrounds, and points of view attended, including a large number of Barnard students, many of whom worked on the conference and served as guides and workshop coor- dinators. In addition, the Center has sparked the organization of the Feminist Scholars, a group of women with or without formal academic affiliation who find it productive to meet together at Barnard from time to time to exchange ideas about the wom- en ' s movement and the relationship between social movements and scholarship. We recognize our responsibility to those women who too often tend to think of themselves primarily as wives and mothers and who when they return to school require a supportive atmosphere. Thus, in the spring of 1973 we initiated a noncredit course for adult women, Explorations in Feminism. This se- mester we have added a writing workshop called Our Voices, Ourselves and an eight-week series of career workshops designed to help women learn to develop appropriate career goals and to gain useful insights for combatting fears of failure, success, and assertiveness that many women unfortunately share. We sponsor and co-sponsor meetings, coffee hours, forums, and speakers on a variety of topics and is- sues. These have included weekly poetry readings, a theatre festival, a self-defense demonstration, and such feminist speakers as Laura X of the Women ' s History Library in Berkeley, Juliet Mitchell, and Caroline Birl, We cooperated with the Political Sci- ence Department in a panel discussion on Feminism and Politics: Will it Work? with Judith Hole, Jo Freeman, and Letty Pogrebin. Throughout this year we have worked closely with the Office of Placement and Career Planning and the Preprofessional Adviser, Esther Rowland, on a regular series of self-help workshops on post gradu- ate plans called A fter Barnard, What? For the most part, these have been informal weekly meetings at the Center where students are encouraged to come with their questions. Where interest is strong in a particular field and we have been able to find out- standing alumnae, special programs have been ar- ranged as in the case of The Writing Option where five Barnard Authors, Nona Balakian, Vicki Cobb, Ellen Frankfort, Erica Jong, and Norma Klein talked together and with students and others about how they got started in their writing careers and what problems they faced as women in their profession. Students become alumnae quickly and alumnae come into the Center frequently to tell us they wish there had been a Women ' s Center when they were at Barnard or that they wish they had known we were here. Perhaps it is true that for students we can pro- vide a sense of continuity between their present strivings and future fulfillments. Or as the three stu- dent members of our Executive Committee (Ann Caplan-Weltman, Allegra Haynes, and Liz Neiditz) said in a flyer they wrote about the Center: The Women ' s Center serves to bring together the litera- ture, the information, and the spirit of the women ' s movement which affects each of our lives as women and human beings. Jane S. Gould Director 165 EUE R SO Residence Hall Life When an entering freshman is accepted to Barnard as a resident student she comes to New York (if only from New Jersey or Westchester County) with an added degree of apprehension. Anxieties about living away from home, potentially incompatible roommates and indigestable meals preoccupied most of us as much, if not more, than our fears of academic inadequacy or lack of the proper degree of sophistication befitting a cosmopolitan New Yorker. With bags unpacked and classes begun we found our anxieties, to greater or lesser degrees, born out by experience. Accommodating ourselves to daily dissi- lusionment, we discovered that we could live, often happily, with someone who squeezed the toothpaste from the wrong end of the tube and never replaced the cap, someone who would secretly invade our wardrobe before she ' d do her laundry, who slept until noon, partied until dawn and still wound up with a better cum in May than we did. Those of us who resided in the Reid ' s antiseptic halls were reinforced by the traumas of our class- mates and soon found a soul sister, if not in our roommate, then in any one of the many personali- ties who made up the primary freshmen social unit . . . the floor. The studious yet attractively zany girl down the hall, the only one to read all the books on all of her reading lists, twice; the social butterfly who, in her most characteristic pose, clutched a hair- brush in one hand and a telephone receiver in the other; the aesthete with whom one could read poetry aloud without embarrassment; the girl who was a step ahead of the housing administration and took up residency in Livingston a year before Columbia and Barnard officially began its experiment in co-ed living. Contrary to the prevailing Columbia mythology that depicts Barnard women as consistently serious, intellectual types, freshmen antics are not the exclu- sive realm of Carman Hall residents. Even accept- ing the dubious assumption that upperclassmen have a modifying influence on their younger class- mates, the freshmen contingent on a certain floor in Brooks never missed an opportunity, when over- work or the pressure of exams overpowered them, to let loose. In response to a curtain of tea bags hung outside a door, the perpetrator could expect her door to be gift wrapped in Christmas paper or rendered useless by an unscrewed doorknob. In the years to follow, Reid floors and freshmen en- claves scattered, some to Plimpton and 1 16th Street, more to Hewitt, and those first thirty adven- turous souls who brought a civilizing influence to the Columbia dorms. Blue doors in BHR gave way to pastel portals and the moral authority, house mother figure of Mrs. Morosoff was replaced by a vital, more actively involved Residence Director in the person of Phylis Zadra. Either the tone of the building became friendlier or, as upperclassmen, we simply had more friends. Despite sign in procedures, early morning fire drills and institutional food at its worst, BHR took on the appearance of home as one-room interior decorating challenged the Bar- nardians imagination each September. Dormitory living on either side of Broadway re- quires a high degree of adaptability and community spirit, if not commitment, that surpasses a desire for privacy and seclusion. Perhaps that became even more evident when Columbia men and Barnard women became next door neighbors. At Barnard, the absence of lounges turned the corridor itself into a public meeting place. Cafeteria conversations were enlivened by hotly debated arguments with Colum- bia exponents of merger. Romances blossomed but, despite media publicity to the contrary, few in- stances of abiding love emerged solely from the proximity of the opposite sex. The same arrangement that brought a lack of re- spect for the daily register and hall frizbee games to Brooks-Hewitt-Reid, expanded the number of rooms available to women in the Columbia dorms. Less well maintained than the Barnard dorms, Har- ley, Livingston, and Furnald have, nonetheless, a peculiar aesthetic appeal. Carpeted corridors absorb the din of blaring stereos. Floor lounges serve a dual function. A dining room and living room for many, the lounge also serves as a catalyst for making ac- quaintances, solidifying friendships. A place to relax before the television for a quiet night of entertain- ment, the lounge is also the function room for that notorious dormitory social gathering, the floor party. Louder and more obstreperous than single-sexed housing arrangements, co-ed floors at Columbia and Barnard have their sedate moments as well. Pot luck dinners that take an entire evening to prepare and digest and usually involve a considerable per- centage of the floor, reinforce the feeling of com- munity and friendship that attracts students to dor- mitory living. An hour set aside each week for the public reading of floor members ' favorite prose selections entertained residents of 9 Hartley for an entire semester, discrediting the misconception of many that co-ed housing fosters a more social than intellectual spirit. Although many of the graduating seniors opted out of dormitory living for the comfort and spacious- ness of apartment-styled buildings owned by the col- lege or for less expensive apartments in the Morn- ingside Heights neighborhood, a considerable num- ber have consistently chosen floor living since their matriculation at Barnard. One such woman, a three year veteran of BHR and now the resident of a co- ed floor in Livingston Hall explains, Aside from the obvious convenience of living on campus, I de- cided to remain in the dorms as a sort of guarantee that during my four years here I would be totally involved in college life, inside and outside the class- room. I can ' t say I regret that decision. If anything, dorm life has made my stay here more rewarding in terms of the people I ' ve met and the experiences we ' ve shared. OU£ R AGAHl Annually, Barnard admits between one hundred and fifty and two hundred transfer students to the soph- omore and junior classes. Coming to Barnard for a variety of reasons, these students share a certain in- sight into the college, the university and the city. Their comparative perspective, gained by their ex- posure to other academic environments, allows them to view the college more critically than those who have been at Barnard for four years. Contrary to popular belief, most students do not transfer to Barnard solely because they are disen- chanted with their former colleges. A graduating senior noted that she came to Barnard for positive reasons, for the city as well as for the academic rep- utation of the school. That New York City serves as a major force in drawing students to Barnard is evident from other respondants. It wasn ' t only the excitement of living in the city that attracted me to Barnard , contended a former Skidmore student, there was also the great cultural advantages in- volved in studying in New York. Academics also plays a major role in the high trans- fer rate to Barnard. Students who were dissatisfied with the classroom instruction at other institutions and who seek a more personal approach to their own education, have found the student faculty rela- tionship at Barnard, if not always completely satis- fying, at least less strained. A transfer from Boston University remarked, I came to Barnard from a college where classes were so overcrowded that there was no opportunity to get to know professors on a personal basis. At Barnard classes are substantially smaller and less formal and on the whole professors are more than willing to get to know kids outside the classroom. The reputation of several departments lured many students to the college. One French major, a junior transfer from Wheaton, maintained that having heard good reports about the calibre of the depart- ment, she was prompted to apply. Additionally, many students transfer to Barnard in order to re- ceive what they feel is a substantial pre-medical undergraduate education. The women surveyed, all biology or chemistry majors, praised the rigor- ous requirements exacted by those departments. As one senior noted, I have killed myself studying for the last two years. But with Barnard ' s reputation my chances are greatly improved for getting in to a good medical school. After all, that ' s what I trans- ferred here for. There are, however, some whose disenchantment with their previous schools brought them to Morn- ingside Heights. I transferred from Smith, con- fided one junior, because I couldn ' t be happy. For this young woman, Barnard offered an unsheltered and less inhibited way of life. Everyone at Smith was either beautiful or pampered. There is a gutsy quality to people here that was unknown on that campus. The same student noted that the ethnic diversity of a university results in more stimulating class discussions than is usually present in a more homogeneous student body. The women who entered Barnard after their fresh- man year have found it difficult but not impossible to integrate themselves into the social life of the campus. With standard remarks about the social tension between Columbia and Barnard one student noted, It is nearly impossible to meet anyone here without resorting to mixers and floor parties and even then, you have to count on a lot of luck. Get- ting to know other women has apparently presented less problems. The social climate in Brooks and Hewitt is very conducive to making friends. Sharing meals and rapping in the halls after midnight, we ' ve been able to solidify friendships made during trans- fer orientation. Other respondants suggest that social success is not a complete impossibility for the transfer student. Socially I think this place is much better than my first college. I have found people very receptive; made many good friends on both sides of the street and, on the whole, I don ' t think I could have made a better choice than Barnard. 170 FROCD GJtE OT A $ RE-CDE D, ftEftOtflE... Maureen Killackey PROSPECTIVE MAJOR: PRE-LAW PRE-MED Without a second thought in April of 1970, I checked the pre-med box, unaware that my Sup- plemental Information card would join the pile of nearly ninety other prospective pre-meds, the other women also just accepted to Barnard ' s Class of 1974. Proud of my ambitious career goals and con- vinced that as a future woman doctor I would en- deed be a rare creature at Barnard, I boldly asked the Housing Office for a single room, pleading the anticipated pressures and rigors of a pre-med curric- ulum, determined that my non-study habits of high school would soon change with my maturity as a serious college woman. Apparently I seemed neu- rotic enough to convince Ms. Lawton et al. of the necessity of a Hewitt single for this ardent humani- tarian. So, replete with misconceptions about my own abilities, my classmates, and Barnard I com- menced the Barnard-Columbia pre-med experience. The ramifications of becoming pre-med are many and every aspect of college life is affected by the choice of medicine. The motivations of the members of the Class of ' 74 are just as varied and each one ' s drives are reflected in a pre-med ' s outlook, response to pressure and interaction with other students, es- pecially other pre-meds. The commuter whose activ- ities and performances are closely scrutinized by parents all too well-aware of their investment of emotion and cold cash in their daughter, emerges from the subway daily, fortified by her parents ' admonitions and intent with ten-pound textbooks crammed into her travel bag. The young prodigy, 171 child of physician parents, by her very presence in the BHR cafeteria at 8:00 A.M. and her manic dis- cussion of the impending organic test intimidates even an English major. Every pre-med insecurity of an innocent freshman bystander, already having experienced the gamut of nausea and high blood pressure, with only ten days into the semester, is evoked by this Einstein ' s conversation. This fresh- man, naive and idealistic with her hopes to amelio- rate the conditions of life, comes equipped only with the determination to show the people back home that she will succeed, believing that good intentions and assiduous study are enough to make it. At Bar- nard — forget it!! The saddest part of being pre-med is the encroach- ment of studies on one ' s social life and the personal- ity distortions that the guilt feelings from wasting a free hour at the Lion ' s Den may bring. One never feels completely free to spend spare time and engage in the spontaneous activities of college that are often the highlights of the Barnard-Columbia Social sea- son. A snowball fight on South Field must be es- chewed if one has a calculus recitation at 8:00 the next morning. The fire drills in BHR with their so- cial function enhanced by the accompaniment of the Columbia Band must be regarded as a nuisance if one ' s performance in organic lab is critically ham- pered by lack of sleep. And how often is the pre-med labelled as the floor Scrooge when a floor bull ses- sion must be silenced for the sake of tomorrow ' s Physics hour exam. At times, it seems that the pre- med just can ' t win. There is certainly little encouragement of any solace to be found for the disillusioned, confused or falter- ing pre-medical student in the office hours of a chemistry professor, biology lecturer, freshman ad- visor, and worst of all, with her other pre-med class- mates. Competition of the most unhealthy and grue- some kind is built into the curve grading system and fostered by the oversized, de-personalizing lec- ture halls. A pre-medical student must look for re- lief and that 17:1 student teacher ratio that Barnard boasts about, in the small, more intimate offerings of Barnard ' s English A after experiencing the hu- miliating vortex of Biology 1-2 in Lehman Amphi- theater. But surely the most disheartening and stomach sinking experience of all was the baptism of fire in Jackie Kroschwitz ' Organic Chemistry. A course which has the most potentially interesting and enjoyable information of all the pre-med cours- es, orgo was turned into a nightmare of lab reports, problem sets and ten pages of notes per class. The scramble for the front-row seats, the billows of ciga- rette smoke obscuring those little C ' s and O ' s pour- ing across the blackboard and the selfish hoarding of answers to problem sets and past examinations contributed to the most cut-throat rivalry. The scene is an ugly, but realistic one and the horror is further enhanced by the incongruity of this class of students ' future claim on medical school applications that they pursued medicine in order to help their fellow man. Alea jacta est ... The die is cast. The class of ' 74 has now made it through 3 V2 years at Barnard and those stalwart pre-meds have begun the application process. With grade reports received, incompletes finished, MCAT scores reported and, with good for- tune, the Barnard Pre-Medical Committee ' s luke- warm recommendation forwarded to her choice of schools, the pre-med woman ' s fate is sealed, to be decided by the gods of the Admissions Office. But have faith for Barnard women have always done well with their medical school acceptances and later performance in medical school. But even the most successful pre-med student can not help but wonder at the end of her pre-medical trials and tribulations, and must ask herself, Was It All Really Worth It? 173 A VIEW £ ROCD XsKE XX P by DervalC. Walsh The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet. Aristotle In writing to friends about his ecstasy and delight at being a student at Cambridge University, the eminent and somewhat eccentric Victorian biogra- pher, Lytton Strachey, noted that everyone here is the pique of politeness and kindness. Although written during his undergraduate years, Strachey ' s evaluation of Cambridge gives the immediate im- pression of having been written by someone not yet exposed to the realities of college existence. Although I persoanlly enjoyed my years at Barnard, I am quite certain that one of the few memories I will not have, is of the kindness and politeness ,, exuded by individuals on the campus. Indeed, one of the ' virtues ' I gained here was an ability to deal pa- tiently with a various array of frequently uncongeni- al administrators, and the much needed longanimity to wait endlessly for committees, sub-committees, and caucuses to act on some seemingly simple peti- tion. Yet, I am convinced that after a student solves all the administration-related difficulties pertaining to college life (this is not as easy as it may sound, the student must find the Assistant Dean, Associate Dean, Assistant to the Associate Dean, or Associate to the Assistant Dean etc. who can answer her ques- tions) she can settle down to a normal college existence. Once a comfortable distance has been placed be- tween the Barnard graduate and her last examina- tion, how will she evaluate her college years? Will she muse pensively about her learning experiences, seeing college as an ordeal of the past, or is there something more vital and enduring to be gained from the four years spent here? Surely, many of us will leave Barnard hoping that we have acquired at least a small morsel of that abstract quality Mat- thew Arnold called culture. One of the advan- tages of a liberal arts education is that we are intro- duced to all the best that has been said and thought in the world. The college experience encompasses far more than just classroom learning. Four years of living and studying and communicating with other people must broaden the perspectives of any thinking indi- 174 vidual. But, by virtue of the very fact that we are individuals, each students experiences will be unique. Several seniors have expressed their views on what Barnard has meant, and what they hope to take with them in the future. The following evalua- tions were deemed the most representative: DIA NE: Until I came to Barnard, I had never lived away from home before. My first year here was terrible. I felt lonely, and the freshman scene was a real mess. Freshman girls haven ' t really outgrown their high school years and they tend to cluster together and look for the good times they came to college to have. As sophomores, they become more integrated with the college community and more concerned with their work. For me, Barnard has been great since my freshman year. I have achieved an inde- pendence of thought and action that I could never have gotten anywhere else. The classroom education hasn ' t really meant that much to me. I ' m sure that I ' ve learned a lot, but when I leave here the things that filled a large part of my life — all those French tenses, plant cells — they will be forgotten in a few months. I ' m going to work after I graduate. I hope that when I ' m no longer on the college scene I will still be able to go on learning - - wanting to learn. Otherwise, much of my time here will really have been wasted. FRAN: When I look back in years to come I hope that I will not have a soppy and falsely sentimental view of Barnard. It has been a lot of hard work for me here. My first year here I was a commuter, and when I compare the experiences I have had as a resident to those I had as a commuter, I am shocked. I hope that in the future Barnard will do something to try and integrate commuters into the college communi- ty. The social experiences I have had as a resident - and I don ' t mean that in a frivolous sort of way - are what I will have gained the most from. Another thing I will appreciate about having been here is something that was certainly not planned by any- one. This year, for example, the worker ' s strike has given me exposure to the kind of thing I would never have seen at home. You really had to take a stand during the strike. You really had to look beyond yourself and try and understand the problems of others. It ' s the kind of thing that we always talk about in a very theoretical way in Political Science classes, but never see first hand. So many small ex- periences like this one are the things I will look back to in later years and note as being important to my development as a person. J A NE: I hope to remember Barnard not only as the college where I achieved various intellectual attainments, but also as the place where I learned to accept my- self as a woman in the modern world. Before col- lege, I felt that there were certain fields open to me, but essentially I was here I get that degree, I had no definitive plans. Now, however, from my exposure to other women, and to various women ' s organiza- tions, I feel more self-assured, more determined to fulfill any kind of goals I have set up for myself. 175 That is the most important thing - - to go away from here with an acquired confidence and knowl- edge of my abilities. My exposure to other women has done this for me. I will remember Barnard as the place where I found myself. SHARON: I think that my experiences at Barnard will be very beneficial to me in the future. I have learned a great deal in all my classes - - I guess that being a pre- medical student has made my classes the most im- portant thing for me here. Although I do not feel that I could have received as good an education else- where as I have at Barnard, I do think that the pre- med grind can be a bit gruelling. Despite the com- petition, though, there is a distinctive ' closeness ' between the pre-med students and their advisors and professors. I really do think that of all the depart- ments here at Barnard, Biology and Chemistry are the friendliest towards their students. The profes- sors seem to make a concerted effort to know their students, and they really seem to care about their projects, and where the students are going from here. I don ' t know, maybe it is just the nature of those particular departments — the experiments, and the independent research work - - but there really is a friendly atmosphere. However, the rela- tionship between students is a completely different matter!! Everything you have ever heard about pre- medical students is absolutely true. But, even the heavy competition is bearable. Most students have friends in their own particular department, and these friends are always anxious to help you with your own problems. It is a good arrangement be- cause at some point you will always be in a similar position. Somewhere along the way, you will always be in a similar position to help them with some as- pect of Biology or Chemistry or Physics that they cannot fathom. When I look back I will remember a lot of hard work, but I know it will all have been worth it. I ' ve already been accepted at the medical school of my choice so of course, even now I am becoming some- what nostalgic. I know I am going on to something much bigger — what I have been preparing myself for these four years at Barnard — what it has given to me, and the many friends I have made here will always be a part of me. PATRICIA: I transferred to Barnard after my freshman year so that I could feel that I was more a part of a college community. I felt that a small college would offer me this advantage. I transferred from a very large university, and frankly, I feel that I was more a part of that school than I was a part of the Barnard community. I must admit that I made many friends here, friends that I hope to keep even after I gradu- ate. But, I didn ' t come to college, invest four good years and some twenty thousand dollars just so that I could make new friends. I came here because I felt that Barnard could give me a unique educational experience . . . one that I could not receive any- where else. I do feel that I have grown intellectually while I have been here. I guess that in the long run what I 176 will remember the most about this school is the handful of really good and stimulating classes I have had here. I have also made several good contacts - with professors — and these will stand me in good stead in the future. Another thing that I will remember, and it is some- thing that is not so complimentary, is the fact that for such a small school we as students, are not ex- posed very often to the people that run the college. I have been here for three years and I find it amazing, and somewhat embarrassing to admit that I have only seen President Peterson twice in all that time. Friends of mine who attend other women ' s colleges tell me that their Presidents are more visible to the students, that sometimes their Presidents even teach courses. I think the President ' s attitude, which seems to be quite apathetic, has influenced the entire campus. The professors here are not overly accessi- ble, I have even had professors who have refused to have office hours. Obviously, despite its size, Bar- nard is not a very close community. So, what will I remember? A lot of good times, some excellent classes, some not so good. But on the whole I have found Barnard devoid of any human feeling or interest. I will remember a small college with a very large gap between the students and the faculty, and the students and the President of the College. It is apparent that for every student, the Barnard experience will mean something completely differ- ent. Each graduate will leave here better equipped to face the future, and well prepared both intellectually and socially to achieve those goals she may seek to attain. What we have all gained from our experi- ences here at Barnard should not be considered the end of our education, but just the beginning. All that we have been exposed to here should keep us always anxious to acquire knowledge, to make us want to learn as Diane noted. Perhaps Ralph Waldo Emer- son summed it up best when he wrote, The things taught in schools and colleges are not an education, but the means of education. Dedicated to my sisters and brothers in Africa now engaged in struggles for liberation; your strug- gles have made you an inspiration to Black children in the streets of harlem, detroit, accra, lagos; grow strong, grow beautiful, grow righteous, and never, but never be afriad to be the kings and queens you are; to my sisters at barnard who know that you can ' t be Black and Ivy, too; and to Inez Smith Reid, may you help other Black women as you have helped us. The sixties were a decisive turning point for most young African-Americans. The period encom- passed a decade of hopes, desires and dreams of a tired and oppressed Black nation. The Black women of the class of 1974 emerged from this decade, which included the Black Panther Party, Angela Davis, the assisinations of malcolm and martin and african liberation day demonstrations. It was a period of redefining our values and reassessing our roles as Black women. It was the time when objectivity became subjectivity, and subjectively we decided that Black people would have to be free. Many of the Black women in this class decided that the classroom in Harlem was as impor- tant as Milbank (but teachers just couldn ' t understand when you told them that you missed their class to attend a memorial for Adam Clayton Powell). Nevertheless, it took the love and strength of all the sisters to remain at Barnard in oftentimes unbearable situations. The Barnard Organization of Soul Sisters, the resilient organization of Black women that always pulled us together in times of tragedy, struggle, and reading week; seven Brooks and Hewitt, the notorious Black floors, were all a part of the challenge of the past four years at barnard. As Black women we have involuntarily faced a hostile european society almost entirely alone. Our love and sense of responsibility has borne a whole nation. Today in 1974, we educated Black women are faced with entering a white competitive business world, one which will challenge our cul- tural identity as well as our responsibility to Black people children. Upon graduating from barnard, it is clear to us that we must only use our Blackness to obtain truth, dignity, and liberation. A world ' s attention is focused on our actions or inactions, and in large part the liberation of the Afri- can continent will depend on how much we love ourselves. With the skills we have learned at bar- nard and the wisdom we have obtained by just being Black women, our graduation from barnard is only the first of many larger steps to determine our own destiny. Marsha Coleman (Ngozi) 178 £ESS IDE K RGEG Lest We Forget by Julianne D. Perry Our Fathers, the old men, have warned us in many voices. We have heard our thun ' drous freedom fighters, Bearing the mark of the leopard on their chests. They storm through our dreams. And we saw the warm dark bodies hang from limbs, And Bessie and Magalene came to carry them home. We woke quickly, afraid to face the day, The shadows echoing in our mind. In the Motherland, our Fathers, the witchdoctors Have sanctified the genius of our being. In the Motherland, our Fathers, the witchdoctors Made rain to bless the eternity of the masks. And now the cavemen come to steal our gold And jewel-thieves call our villages in foreign tongues. In the Motherland, our Fathers, the Kabakas Raised Mali from a pastureland. In the Motherland, our Fathers, the Kabakas Built pyramids at Giza to our greatness. They say, Listen to things more often than beings, The warnings of the dead not really dead. Come, we will never fit this puzzle, the American Way. They must always have their poor, their oppressed. Come, we must share the faith to fight this humility - We, the Sons of Mandingo, Daughters of Kush. Here within the cities, We are dozed to insanity with many passions. And we forget that our Fathers have warned us Of the blood that must flow — If there will be peace, there must be death. And Zimbabwe must be free of the jewel-thieves, And South of the Limpopo must be free of the jewel-thieves, And the jewel-thieves must be given no mercy. Their cold slim bodies must sway in the night. We have seen the pale gray bodies, swaying in the nights Of our dreams, and the trees squeaking a final dirge. The Fathers have warned us that the jewel-thieves must have no mercy. Their cold slim bodies must sway in the night, Their cold slim bodies must sway in the night. And the trees must squeak a final dirge, And the freedom fighters bearing the mark of the leopard Will rest forever in the Motherland. 0DOKGh c R$OA c R£ Maybe the satisfaction of the moment and the hope for the future, along with a sense of personal integrity is all we have a right to ask for. Both the thought and tone of this opening inscription in last year ' s Mortarboard sug- gest a mood and disposition that has come to prevail at Barnard, especially since the demise of political protest movements. This mood is set even with the first word, maybe. If anything is taken for granted anymore, it is that our lives are long on maybes and exceedingly short on certainties. Less than a century ago, William James welcomed our era of uncertainty with uncommon enthusiasm, commending the vir- tues of indeterminism in a universe of chance. For him, life appeared as an excit- ing series of serendipities. Today, the air of uncertainty remains, but it is sometimes so suffocating that all element of surprise is lost. After a recent discussion of Water- gate ' s revelations, I mused on what might come next. A student replied, not cynically but matter-of-factly, Whatever it is, it can ' t be surprising. I am incapable of being surprised anymore. Mortarboard ' 73 contained a long scholarly article by A.T. Mason on the right of dis- sent. Written shortly after Nixon ' s landslide, it noted how the President had inter- preted his fresh mandate as encouragement to make war on permissiveness. Mason predicted that the struggle would involve Nixon turning anger and resentment to- ward those who disagree with him and there existed the real danger that the country would succumb to the peace of a dictator ' s prison. A prophetic comment, evenmo- reso if Nixon had not aborted his own moral crusade with extraordinary moral ob- tuseness. Yet, however astounding the Administration ' s blunders seemed when seen in the context of American history, they caused relatively little stir on this campus. Among political events, the Middle East war, for example, had here a more dramatic and demonstrable impact in 1 973 . The nature of the student response to Watergate might have been predicted not from Mason ' s article, but from a report of interviews with a dozen Barnard seniors by Der- val Walsh. In a section called Politics on Campus of this article, a perspective on politics is presented that stands in sharp contrast to Mason ' s. Whereas Mason had reacted to Nixon ' s re-election with strong concern over authoritarian rule, the seniors despaired over the total absence of political concern within the student body. Those interviewed agreed that the feeling of 1968 had disappeared, and for some the pro- tests of ' 70 and ' 72 had proved fruitless , empty rhetoric. One person believed that an attitude of frivolity and complacency has taken over the campus . . . Two years ago we were activists, now we ignore issues and are tending to become a campus isolated from political issues. We accept things too peacefully — we ' ve given up. 180 Watergate seems to have reinforced rather than reversed this view of campus poli- tics. Recently two Barnard seniors, both political science majors, observed that the White House Horrors have effectively transformed any traces of political idealism at Barnard into a pervasive mass cynicism. Yet, if it is true that cynicism has overtak- en direct political activism here, it has not undermined intellectual motivation, social concern, or career commitments among the students that I have encountered. For example, both of the two seniors just mentioned are fired with a dynamic sense of so- cial purpose and are intent on careers in law or teaching to bring about basic change. Consciousness of wider opportunities for women in the professions continues to in- crease, especially in the fields of law and medicine. But these are not the only areas of opportunity. Last year ' s Mortarboard featured a forceful article by Stephanie Bialick which challenged her classmates to explore the field of journalism. The article reflect- ed Ms. Bialick ' s own cultivated flair for journalism, and citing an example of a suc- cessful Barnard alumna, argued persuasively that women must approach professional careers with a greater degree of determined independence. Whether active in the Women ' s Movement or not; alienated from the political scene or not; terrorized in interviews for medical school or depersonalized by law board exams, the prospect of entering one of the professions continues to turn students on here, whatever its anxie- ties and abundant uncertainties. However, to return to our opening inscription, while hope for the future among students may often relate to professional careers, the main preoccupation I have found at Barnard lies rather in coming to terms with a sense of personal integrity. The word integrity means, of course, not only honesty but unity, especially a unity of the persoanlity. Those seniors interviewed a year ago by Derval Walsh believed that their college experience here did at its best contribute to this process: Here at Barnard, I gained a sense of my own identity and importance. The word persoanl recurs throughout their explanation of Barnard ' s significance, whether in terms of the personal quality of classes and student-faculty relationships, or the task of getting it all together in order to maintain my sense of personal identity. At times, students personalize their subjects, applying them to their search for integri- ty. In my political thought courses, for example, it is clear that the turning away from political activism has sometimes meant turning toward unresolved theoretical issues, such as the meaning of freedom and authority, the right relation of the individual to society, and the discovery of a better method of political and social change. When students turn to theory in this manner, they are consciously trying to use it for their own development of an integral world view. An intensely introspective and personal search thus joins with a vigorous pursuit of abstract and universal theoretical concerns. The quest for personal integrity is not uniquely for students, or any special group, but the object of human experience and the subject of an ongoing process of growth. In her contribution to Mortarboard ' 73, Annette Baxter captured the kind of student- faculty interaction that has enhanced her experience at Barnard. She described her relationships with students not in terms of dichotomous or exclusive spheres of inter- est, but rather in the context of an inclusive striving together for mutual integrity and respect. The intricate intimacy of this sort of relationship is exceptionally difficult to convey, and this is perhaps why, in our attempts to capture and retain it, the many pages of Mortarboard photographs are so welcome. What else can lead us to recall so much so quickly: a class in which a particular question sparked a certain train of thought; a let- ter from a student after class with an unexpected observation; a colleague ' s response to a student ' s question from which one learned how to handle a complex issue; a stu- dent ' s comment in a colloquium and later a song — one song — that she sang — at the Furnald Folk Festival. Photos work in such ways sometimes. At best they may lead us to personalize and concretize in an increasingly depersonal- ized and stereotyped existence. Or to grasp for a moment the essential truth of our everyday reality, that the high peaks of our being sometimes occur in the depths of interpersonal relationships. When we tend to do violence to that truth, we usually vio- late not only our relationship with others, but our own ongoing struggle for personal integrity. The size and quality of Barnard College place this kind of educational expe- rience within reach of us all. But in this era of uncertainty, only the commitment of its members can make it work. Professor Dennis Dalton GEOTITCG GftE RE IS WhCT GftE ' P ' RO ' BCECD The life of a commuting Barnard student has its advantages, but then so does suicide. You may well ask if Barnard College serves as a suffi- cient incentive to rise at 7:30 A.M. If, however, you do, it is quite evi- dent that you are not a Barnard student. How strenuous that subway ride to Morningside Heights is, particularly when, coming from the Island , the urge to discontinue the journey at 125th Street is overwhelming. By the same token, commuting is beneficial. For instance . . . well, you don ' t have to eat Hewitt food, and you don ' t have to sign your mother in so she can use the bathroom. You also do not in any way, shape, from or fashion constantly have to contend with extraneous individu- als, especially those beings known as streakers . Best of all though, if asked by someone along the way where you attend shcool, the response Columbia flows readily. Don ' t get me wrong. I ' m as eager for my degree as any student at Bar- nard, and many commuters undoubtedly may hold a completely oppos- ite opinion. But let me say to those of you (commuters or not) who have made it: I ' m jealous! And I salute you, Class of ' 74. LaBrena Jones Virginia Shaw Faculty Secretary 186 187 188 192 Elizabeth Corbett Librarian 195 197 199 Dorothea Nyberg 201 Dr. Edward J. King In Memoriam CH£CDISG R y 203 204 206 C. Lowell Harriss Columbia zcotloodics {Catherine Wilcox Patricia Graham Chairman Susan Sacks Eleanor Rosenberg Howard Teichmann Anne Prescott 209 FRENCH Tatiana Greene John E. Sanders, Chairman Elizabeth McLaughlin Gertrud Sakrawa Brigitte Bradley, Chairman Frederick Peters Ann Sheffield Vassilios Christides Darline Levy Joseph Malone, Chairman cmeuismcs Lars-Alvar Jacobson I 1 David Gieseker John Wood Columbia Ellis Kolchin Columbia Edgar Lorch Columbia Joan Birman Chairman CD A Z CD A I C S 223 Bona Kostka CD£DIEUA£ hTL D RETlAISShTlCE STUDIES Thomas White John Meskill STUDIES Barbara Miller, Chairman 226 Richard Youtz, Chairman Sandra Stingle George Kelling Thomas Perera Zoya Trifunovich ' RUSSIA ' )! Marina Ledkovsky, Chairman Marianna Sapronow ■ Julia Makarushka Amitai Etzioni Columbia socftxoe ' y Bernard Barber Chairman Ethna Lehman Gladys Meyer LEFT TO RIGHT: Helen Hayes, Janet Soares, Dennis Parichy, Luz Castanos, Kenneth Janes, Kathy Armstrong. Learning is expansion of the mind - a form of growing. It involves more than the academia. We learn considerably through involvement with people. It is this aspect of my years at Barnard which enables me to leave with this feeling . . . I have grown. 241 mm (S|| k 8l M mmm X ii I Pi X U ARABESQUE CABRIOT F f -T SCUSSUS PAS DE F JRISEEMBO ENDF  A§ D]r PPE EPE 1AT FT.F 5LE KRI ' JE RELKVF MB LAI | AT TIT ET1 5TT EVT C-HE CLASS OT- 1974 Ann Marie Abenavoli 18 446 Westchester Avenue Port Chester, N.Y. 10573 Berdine Isa Abler 25 4525 Henry Hudson Parkway Bronx, N.Y. 10471 Heidi Ann Abrams 126 1236 Virginia Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10473 Jane Ellen Adamo 622 Avenue H Brooklyn, N.Y. 11230 Jeannette M. Adams 3713 Sioux Glendale, Ariz. 85307 Regina Diane Aifer 27 Lyon Road Chestnut Hill, Mass 02167 Joanna Ajdukiewicz 133 Tom Hall Road Durham, N.H. 03824 Christine A. Ajello 50 120 Redman Avenue Haddonfield, N.J. 08033 Diane Francis Ajl 1 3 1 2296 Bryn Mawr Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. 19131 Karen Lee Akamine 88 316 West 93 Street, Apt. 5B New York, N.Y. 10025 Zandrina Alexander 775 East 52 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11213 Grace L. Alhades 130 58-35 210 Street Bayside,N.Y. 11364 Barbara Ann Allis 116 199 Ford Hill Road Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Karen Aleen Altman 2856 Elmwood Avenue Rochester, N.Y. 14618 Leah Sarah Altman 152 84 Beaconsfield Road Brookline, Mass. 02146 Patricia C. Altmayer 55 South McGregor Avenue Mobile, Ala. 36608 Lauren C. Anderson 153 Centerbrook Road Hamden, Conn. 06518 Kristina E. Appel 60 West 10 Street New York, N.Y. 10011 Jacqueline Ardrey 139 Ashland Avenue Pleasantville, N. Y. 10570 Alice B. Attie 28 Merrivale Road Great Neck, N.Y. 1 1020 Pilar Azze 83 635 Riverside Drive, Apt. 8C New York, N.Y. 10031 Susan Truss Bacon 1020 Kent Road Wilmington, Del. 19807 Cynthia S. Bagby 90 3187 Bradway Boulevard Birmingham, Mich. 48010 Gail Baker 3777 Wheatsheaf Road Huntingdon VLY, Pa. 19006 Dorothy Helen Banish 72 32-20 78 Street Jackson Heights, NY 1 1370 Sylvine S. Barer 240 West 98 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Elisa A. Barnes 10019 Oak Park Northridge, Calif. 91324 Sharona S. Barzilay 14 258 Riverside Drive New York, N.Y. 10025 Susan Ellen Bass 96 1709 Meadowbrook Road Abington, Pa. 19001 Patricia T. Bayer 138 75 Tryon Street Middletown, Conn. 06457 Karen Beecher 74 1180 Napoli Drive Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 Amy S. Begel 5550 North Kent Avenue Milwaukee, Wise. 53217 Monica D. Bernell 630 Fort Washington Avenue New York, N.Y. 10040 Linda R. Bernstein 40 3 Waconah Road Worcester, Mass. 01609 Ann M. Biafore-Bloom 600 West 111 Street, Apt. 1 ID New York, N.Y. 10025 Stephanie F. Bialick 91 102-03 65 Road Forest Hills, N. Y. 11375 Hassidah Nancy Bigman 137 25960 Raine Oak Park, Mich. 48237 Suzanne Blanc 471 Walnut Lane Princeton, N.Y. 08540 Catherine Ann Blank 14 420 Brooklawn Avenue Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 Jocelyn Hani Block 88 6 Roger Drive Port Washington, N.Y. 10050 Celia B. Blumenthal 40 East 83 Street New York, N.Y. 10028 M. Suzanne Boorse 338 Summit Avenue Leonia, N.J. 07605 Karen A. Borowik 41 211 West 106 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Maria del Carmen Boza 434 SW 5 Avenue, 1 Miami, Fla. 33130 Ave Maria Brennan 32 137 71 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209 Anne Carol Brink 18224 Hermitage Way Minnetonka, Minn. 55343 Ellen F. Bronzo 1 5 60 Haven Avenue New York, N.Y. 10032 Shirley D. Brotman 48 377 Avenue C Bayonne, N.J. 07002 Rachelle V. Browne 19 Howe Street Dorchester, Mass. 02125 Barbara Bruckenstein 115 Foxpoint West Williamsvile, N.Y. 14221 Janina Bura 43 52-15 65 Place, Apt.4B Maspeth, N.Y. 11378 Linnea M. Burnette 111 1083 Willow Road Winnetka, 111. 60093 Patricia L. Burns 19 7 Prospect Street Dedham, Mass. 02026 Deborah E. Burton 85 Cherry Lane Teaneck, N.J. 07666 Mary V. Bush 1000 South Main Street Findlay, Ohio 45840 Karen C. Butler 1248 Washington Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10456 Barbara Cain 80 160Cabrini Boulevard New York, N.Y. 10033 Rena Calafati Ioulianou 42-46 244 Athens, Greece Leslie J. Caiman 24 1 12 Folsom Avenue Huntington Sta., N.Y. 11746 Lourdes Capella P.O. Box 846 Aquadilla, P. R. 00603 Patricia M. Carey 107 414 Grand Avenue Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411 Marilyn N. Carol 15 Lindon Street Great Neck, N.Y. 1 1021 Carol L. Carothers 6410 Brinton Road Fork, Md. 21051 Cathy L. Carothers 104 6410 Brinton Road Fork, Md. 21051 Ellen J. Carry 107 761 Ridgewood Road Oradell, N.J. 07649 Katherine A. Caso 12 78 Rose Avenue Woodcliff Lake, N.J. 08780 Francoise M. Caste 737 Park Avenue New York, N.Y. 10021 Janet L. Castleman 323 B. 146 Street Rockaway Park, N.Y. 1 1694 LinlinChan 152 41 Pleasant Street Stamford, Conn. 06902 Pamela J. Chanitz 641 1 January St. Louis, Mo. 63109 Georgeanne Chapin 87 220 Alumni Circle Wilmington, Ohio 45177 Cynthia D. Chapman 1514 Webster Street, NW Washington, D.C. 2001 1 Yanick H. Chaumin 54 379 Rockaway Parkway Brooklyn, N.Y. 11212 Beverly Ann Chen 51 1 West 1 12 Street, Apt. 15 New York, N.Y. 10025 Maraget A. Chernack 399 June Place West Hempstead, N.Y. 1 1552 Rosita Cheung 123 1616 Larkin San Francisco, Calif. 94109 Celeste Chin 52 143-27 Rose Avenue Flushing, N.Y. 1 1355 Marilyn Chin 84 1 1 5 West 86 Street New York, N.Y. 10024 Letitia L. Chow 87 24 Beech Drive Morris Plains, N.J. 07950 Nancy P. Christatos 109 42-28 Elbertson Street Elmhurst, N.Y. 11373 Thaleia Christidis 315 West 57 Street, Apt. 3C New York, N.Y. 10019 Kathy Jane Citron 113 142 East 16 Street New York, N.Y. 10003 Deborah R. Coen 128 1425 Flag Avenue South St. Louis Park, Minn. 55426 Ellen M.Cohen 120 64 Firtree Road Levittown, Pa. 19056 Marcy P. Cohen Meadow Wood Drive South Deerfield, MA 01373 Pamela S. Cohen 124 639 Stelton Street Teaneck, N.J. 07666 Sara Jane Cohen 23 Rotherwood Rtad Newton, Mass. 02159 Zori Beth Cohen 141 590 West End Avenue New York, N.Y. 10024 Andrea E. Cole 3535 Pacific Avenue San Francisco, Calif. 941 18 Michele A. Cole 1 1455 Frederick Road Ellicott City, Md. 21043 Marsha Coleman 20467 Ohio Street Detroit, Michigan 4822 1 Pamela T. Colthup 69 East Hamilton Avenue Englewood, N.J. 07631 Kathleen F. Conklin 13974 Woodmont Road Detroit, Mich. 48227 Diane S. Cooperman 47 650 Park Avenue New York, N.Y. 10021 Anne Marie Cornell 98 Grove Street Yonkers, N.Y. 10701 Susan Anne Costine 32 Hickory Road Wellesley, Mass. 02181 Susan E. Coven 90 Fir Drive Roslyn, N.Y. 11576 Lorie Cowen 1 Battery Park Plaza New York, N.Y. 10004 Kathleen A. Crafts 3 Teapot Lane Smithtown, N.Y. 11787 Sarrae G. Crane 55 2499 Hyacinth Court Westbury, N.Y. 11590 Victoria J. Cross 735 Embee Crescent Westfield, N.J. 07090 Marcia Courtney Culver 717 East New Lenox Road Pittsfield, Mass. 01201 Alice Mary Cumba 1485 Park Avenue New York, N.Y. 10029 Jane Tara Currie 65 West 70 Street New York, N.Y. 10023 Amy Daiuta 139 R.D. 1 Kennett Square, Pa. 19348 Jacqueline T. Dalton 52 335 85 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209 Patricia M. Daly 5 Heritage Court Cold Spg. Harbor, N.Y. 11724 Rochelle A. Dauber 127 659 East 84 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 1 1236 Edith Y. Davilla Dr. Quiones Cardona, CJ23 Levittown, P.R. 00632 Barbara T. Davis 144 726 Murray Street Elizabeth, N.J. 07202 Bridget M. Deale 5027 Van Ness Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20016 Renee J. Deall 416 Edgewood Clayton, Mo. 63105 Hilda M. de Bara 40 Jackson Street New Rochelle, N.Y. 10801 Jane M. Delli Priscoli 1 5 Fuane Circle West Newton, Mass. 02165 M. L. M. del Rosario 46 80-15 165 Street Jamaica, N.Y. 1 1432 Rose Dembo 153 Vermilyea Avenue, Apt. 5D New York, N.Y. 10034 Jean Mac Rae Dewar 163 West 79 Street New York, N.Y. 10024 245 Carol H. Diamond 153 1 524 Boulevard New Haven, Conn. 065 1 1 Susan E. Diamond 131-72 Francis Lewis Blvd. Laurelton, N.Y. 11413 Rose M. Diana 900-2 CoOp City Boulevard Bronx, N.Y. 10475 Patricia Ann Dickey 1 12 Cornwall Drive Dewitt, N.Y. 13214 Jane J. Dickson 97 41 1 East Frederick Street Rhinelander, Wise. 54501 Cynthia Dickinson 149 1405 5th Avenue Fort Knox, Ky. 40121 Rose Eve Doundoulakis 67 2498 Kayron Lane North Bellmore, N.Y. 11710 Susan H. Doverman 195 Mill Rock Road Hamden, Conn. 0651 1 Christina T. Doud 102 230-48 146 Avenue Jamaica, N.Y. 11413 Rosemary G. Dubroff 224 Lincoln Place Brooklyn, N.Y. 11217 Sheila B. Dugan 102 1525 Cherry Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19102 Abigail Dworetsky 139 810 East 51 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11203 Samuela M. Eckstut South Albany Avenue Bdwk. Atlantic City, N.Y. 08401 Barbara L. Edelman 127 Old Short Hills Road West Orange, N.J. 07052 Jill S. Eden 53 31 1 Woodland Drive Brightwaters, N.Y. 11718 Monica R. Edinger 85 83 Lefurgy Avenue Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. 10522 Arlene J . Eisenberg 1 1 7 7512 Buccaneer North Bay VLG, Fl 33141 Barbara Elovic 6 Fordham Road Livingston, N.J. 07039 Ligija E. Ercius 100 249-47 Rushmore Terrace Little Neck, N.Y. 11362 Kathleen L. Erlandson 92 Route 3 Devils Lake, N.D. 58301 Alison Estabrook 146 8 East 96 Street New York, N.Y. 10028 Andrea B. Estes 75 Commonwealth Park, West Newton Centre, Mass. 02159 Mary C. Evans 7480 North Illinois Street Indianapolis, Ind. 46260 Deborah Fabricant P.O. Box 506, Forest Road Monroe, N.Y. 10950 Iris Masha Fass 76 2521 East 27 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11235 Shirley V. Feggans 60 115-1 16 225 Street Cambria Heights, N.Y. 11411 Donna Felsenstein 42 1602 West 10 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11223 Diane L. Fenner 79 469 Lisa Lane West Hempstead, N.Y. 1 1 552 Miriam Hya Fine 2532 West Estates Chicago, 111. 60645 Mollie D. Fintushel 341 Wilkins Street Rochester, N.Y. 14621 Leora Fishman 83 c o F. Block 210 West 101 Street, Apt. 12B New York, N.Y. 10025 Eva S. Fleisher 43 Grandview Street Huntington, N.Y. 11743 Margaret M. Flint 7704 Meadow Lane Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 Patricia A. Florio 119 57 Westview Road Short Hills, N.J. 07078 Rebecca J. Fogel 49 812 Triphammer Road Ithaca, N.Y. 14850 Lindsey Folson 44 1 165 Park Avenue, Apt. 3D New York, N.Y. Maria L. Fonseca 51 Codman Park, Apt. H Roxbury, Mass. 021 19 Anna E. Ford 65 522 West 158 Street, 63 New York, N.Y. 10032 Claudia J. Ford 8 N. Mary Francis Street Orangeburg, N.Y. 10962 Reka C. Forizs RR 2, Box 690-A Tarpon Springs, Fla. 33589 Diana Fosha 122 1 15 De Haven Drive Yonkers, N.Y. 10703 Athena Fouraris 97 60 Thayer Street New York, N.Y. 10040 Debbie L. Frakes 736 North 3 Lawrence, Kans. 66044 Wendy N. Franco 131 Lakeside Drive Rockville Centre, N.Y. 11570 Miriam J. Frank 28 3751 Warrendale South Euclid, Ohio 441 18 Rosalie Frazier 26 Thatcher Road Tenafly, N.J. 07670 Deborah A. Freeman 882 Whiteside Road Pittsburgh, Pa. 15219 Elaine A. Frezza 127 640 Java Road Cocoa Beach, Fla. 32931 Susan K. Fried Chicken Valley Road Glen Head, N.Y. 11545 Valerie Friedlander 1 10 Triphammer Road Ithaca, N.Y. 14850 Amy Friedman 129 15520 Aldersyde Drive Shaker Heights, Ohio Emily Friedman 441 West End Avenue New York, N.Y. 10024 Jacqueline E. Friedman 0-18 30 Street Fair Lawn, N.J. 07410 Jessica D. Friedman 390 First Avenue New York, N.Y. 10010 Michelle E. Friedman 142 35-10 Berdan Avenue Fair Lawn, N.J. 07410 Pamela S. Friedman 222 Bay Drive Massapequa, N.Y. 1 1758 Margaret E. Friedrich 134 P.O. Box 569 (Bayville Rd.) Locust Valley, N.Y. 11560 Louise I. Frishwasser 74 219 Fox Meadow Road Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Donna C. Futterman 57 Cornwells Beach Road Sands Point, N.Y. 11050 Amy Susan Galen 560 Riverside Drive, Apt. 17K New York, N.Y. 10027 246 Antonina Galletta 23 150-40 59 Avenue Flushing, N.Y. 11355 Susanne R. Garfinkel 558 East 81 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11236 Karen Garnevicus 162 Abbey Street Massapequa Park, N.Y. 1 1762 Sibylle C. Gaussen 934 5 Avenue New York, N.Y. 1104 Jill E.Gay 65 Seaview Avenue New Rochelle, N.J. 10801 Alexis Lynn Gelber 12 Kemswick Drive Stony Brook, N.Y. 11790 Augusta Gelber 2369 West 1 1 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11223 Miriam Geller 290 Parkhill Avenue Yonkers, N.Y. 10705 Rochelle B. Gershuni 1666 East 7 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11230 Tina M. Gewolb 182-22 Dalny Road Jamaica, N.Y. 11432 Toyomi L. Gibson 533 Humboldt Parkway Buffalo, N.Y. 14208 Martha F.Ginn 105 3275 Ingleside Road Shaker Heights, Ohio 44122 Sheila D. Ginsburg 101 Hemlock Drive North Wales, Pa. 19154 Bonnie Ginzburg 143 40 West 67 Street New York, N.Y. 10023 Elyse W. Glaser 271 1 Henry Hudson Parkway Bronx, N.Y. 10463 Barbara E. Glass 942 Edgewood Road Elizabeth, N.J. 07208 Robin D. Glatt 1518 East 8 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11230 liana R. A. Glickman 106 515 West 110 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Carol A. Goldberg 37 21 Concord Street Haverhill, Mass. 01830 Patricia Golin 42 Ashwood Drive Blauvelt, N.Y. 10913 Ellen Susan Goodman 775 Concourse Village East Bronx, N.Y. 10451 Susan B. Goodman 154 57 Park Terrace East New York, N.Y. 10034 {Catherine J. Gormley 15 Winter Street Plymouth, Mass. 2360 Maria A. Gorordo 31 6713 6 Avenue Brooklyn, N.Y. 11220 Felicia B. Graham 2646 South 1 1 Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19148 Deborah Ann Green 153 481 Woodhill Road Wayne, Pa. 19087 Ilene G. Greenberg 90 Oak Avenue Metuchen, N.J. 08840 Irene Grewcew 141 20-64 25 Street Long Island City, N.Y. 11105 Laureen A. Griffin 1 3 1 26 Ridgeway Circle Springfield, Mass. 01 1 18 Judy A. Groner 113 8701 Jones Mill Road Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 IdelleM. Gross 151 721 Greenwood Avenue Trenton, N.J. 08609 Deedie C. Gurnee 213 Lafayette Avenue Hawthorne, N.J. 07506 June L. Gurry 69-21 165 Street Flushing, N.Y. 1 1365 Debbie B. Gutman 116 East 91 Street New York, N.Y. 10028 Margaret E. Gutman 222 Madison Road Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Barbara Haffes 577 Avenue Y Brooklyn, N.Y. 1 1235 Elizabeth A. Hage 3021 Fillmore Street Minneapolis, Minn. 55418 Shanna L. Halpern 1057 Kingsley Road Jenkintown, Pa. 19046 Shereen K. Hamdy 225 East 57 Street New York, N.Y. 10022 Myrna C. Hardy 60 5 Jaymie Drive Westbury, N.Y. 11590 Kay L. E. Harkleroad 26 Glen Goin Alpine, N.J. 07620 Ellen L. Harrison 182 Menands Road Loudonville, N.Y. 12211 Mary E. Hatch 41 10 Crooked Creek Overlook Indianapolis, Ind. 46208 Elizabeth B. Hatcher 2717 Kendale Drive Toledo, Ohio 43606 Brenda F. Hauther 8237 Russell Road, Apt. 301 Alexandria, Va. 22309 Vicki C. Hayes 331 Arleta Drive Defiance, Ohio 43512 EveE. Hecht 120 1 75 West 93 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Rachel M. Hendrickson 1 164 Sherwood Avenue Baltimore, Md. 21212 Gail Ivy Hessol 46 37 West 12 Street New York, N.Y. 1001 1 Marilyn P. Hett 36 Edgerton Street Darien, Conn. 06820 IdaJ.Heyman 48 1 1 Brookview Drive Woodcliff Lake, N.J. 07675 Elizabeth Hickey 158 East 66 Street New York, N.Y. 10021 Katherine M. Hieatt East Middle Patent Road, RD2 Bedford, N.Y. 10506 Louise M. Hildebrand 51804 Lilac Road South Bend, Ind. 46628 Martha Himmelfarb 294 Fisher Avenue White Plains, N.Y. 10606 Amy L. Hittner 3 Cornell Street West Orange, N.J. 07052 Suzanne Melanie Hoell 900 Wilder Avenue Helena, Mont. 59601 Ellen T. Holder 56 178-48 Leslie Road Springfield GDNS, N.Y. 11434 Eva Lynn Hollander 47 1 Arbor Road Stamford, Conn. 06903 April A. Holm 7 Southland Drive Glen Cove, N.Y. 1 1542 Melanie L. Holmberg 96 York Street Canton, Mass. 02021 Marjorie Kim Horn 77 Box 116, R.D. 2 Englishtown, N.J. 07726 Mary Hood Hoskinson 52 Old Farm Road Wilton, Conn. 06896 Candace Howes 129 351 Lake Park Drive Birmingham, Mich. 48009 Jane C. Hsiung 35-50 90 Street Jackson Heights, N.Y. 1 1372 Joan H. Humphreys 1435 Lexington Avenue New York, N.Y. 10028 Karen M. Hurvitz 28 8 Locust Lane Roslyn Heights, N.Y. 11577 Cheryl Sue Hutt 2732 East 64 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11234 Betty-Ann Hyman 148 3 Fern Avenue Falmouth Foreside, Me. 04105 Patricia A. Hynes 109 Palisade Avenue Cresskill, N.J. 07626 Elissa H. Ichiyasu 1300 East Madison Park Chicago, 111. 60615 Susan Ide 38 1416 N. 25th Street St. Joseph, Mo. 64506 Gloria In 926 5 Avenue New York, N.Y. 10021 Karen I. Jackson 63 1917 Drexmore Avenue Greensboro, N.C. 27406 Rachel A. Jacky 1802 SW Elm Portland, Ore. 97201 Claire S. Jacobs 915 Quincy Avenue Scranton, Pa. 18510 Fran M.Jacobs 70 9 Wasson Drive Poughkeepsie, N.Y. 12603 Jann B. Jacobs 2922 Sheridan Road Chicago, 111. 60657 Gail L. Jaffe 242 Beverly Road Brookline, Mass. 02167 RandiJ.Jaffe 29 32-20 89 Street Jackson Heights, N.Y. 1 1369 Yanick Jean-Julien 99-51 211 Place Queens Village, N.Y. 11429 Patrice D. Johnson 59 2129 Edenwald Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10466 Jill Jonnes 1922 Belmont Road Washington, D.C. 20009 GeorginaJui 73 138 Division Street New York, N.Y. 10002 Joanne Kadish 13855 Superior Road Cleveland, Ohio 441 18 Jacqueline A. Kapelman 55 East 87 Street New York, N.Y. 10028 Sandra F. Kaplan 815 Lancaster Avenue Syracuse, N.Y. 13210 Ruth P. Kappel 72 1201 Ocean Parkway Brooklyn, N.Y. 11230 Linda R. Kartoz 34 7 Plymouth Road Glen Rock, N.J. 07452 Florence G. Katz 120 Haven Avenue New York, N.Y. 10032 Susan E. C. Katz 425 Riverside Drive New York, N.Y. 10025 Barbara L. Kaufman 85 9 Kingston Road Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Silvia Blumenfeld Kay (Lenard) 5710 Fieldston Road Bronx, N.Y. 10471 Despina Kaymenakis 600 West 169 Street New York, N.Y. 10032 Hindy Kellerman 36 1485 S. Cardiff Avenue Los Angels, Ca. 90035 Margaret A. Kennedy U.S. Steel International (NY) Albany House, Petty France London S.W. 1, England Joan A. Kiely 21 20 Jermain Street Albany, N.Y. 12206 Maureen A. Killackey 69 Friendly Road Brewster, N.Y. 10509 Diana K. Kiozpeoplou 43 427 Windmill Way Somerville, N.J. 08876 Ilze M. Klavins 5 Broadmoor Road Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Suzanne Klein 135 Maple Street Norwich, Conn. 06360 Celia Knight 1 64 Bennett Avenue Hempstead, N.Y. 11550 Theresa Knight 65 Hopkins Street Woodbury, N.J. 08096 Janet L. Knott 28 River Street So. Natick, Mass. 01760 Joanne Koeller 36 10 Lehn Farm Road Westport, Conn. 06880 Rita J. Kollar 1034 Elk Street Franklin, Pa. 16323 Elizabeth Konecky 89 51 Fifth Avenue New York, N.Y. 10003 Priscilla A. Konecky 91 51 Fifth Avenue New York, N.Y. 10003 Andrea A. S. Kovacs 1 17 Onslow Place Kew Gardens, N.Y. 11415 Barbara Krespan 2705 Point Breeze Drive Wilmington, Dela. 19803 Mary T. Krueger 75 4 Ridge Road Hanover, N.H. 03755 Peggy D. Kutzen Purchase Street Purchase, N.Y. 10577 Prudence M. Kwiecien Box 76, Main Street Thompson, Conn. 06277 Lisa Laden 9 Glencliffe Circle Brooklandville, Md. 21022 Myra Ladenheim 48 900 West 190 Street New York, N.Y. 10040 Donna M. LaFlamme 106 Russell Street Lewiston, Me. 04240 Elizabeth A. L. Lascerity 500 West End Avenue New York, N.Y. 10024 Betsy E. Lasson 24 6001 Wallis Avenue Baltimore, Md. 21215 Harriet L. Lazer 101 267 High Street Passaic, N.J. 07055 Jane E. Leavy 53 Spring Hill Road 248 Roslyn Heights, N.Y. 1 1577 New York, N.Y. 10027 Ning Lee 103 130 Third Avenue Brooklyn, N.Y. 11217 Rita Lee 249 Broome Street New York, N.Y. 10002 SylviaS. Lee 106 40 East Broadway New York, N.Y. 10002 Ying Lee 30-43 38 Street Astoria, N.Y. 11103 Felice Lesser 94 14 Esquire Road Norwalk, Conn. 06851 Ida M. Leung 2021 16 Avenue Oakland, Calif. 94606 Martha K. Levin 158Willard Road Brookline, Mass. 02146 Faye D. Levine 137 84 Bristow Street Saugus, Mass. 01906 Nina D. Lewandowska 300 East 40 Street, Apt. 18B New York, N.Y. 10016 Nancy H. Lewis 29 Old Field Lane Great Neck, N.Y. 1 1020 LydiaC. N. Li 170 Parkway Drive Plainview, N.Y. 11803 Penny Liberatos 93 110-38 55 Avenue Flushing, N.Y. 11368 Harriet L. Lightman 608 Lamberton Drive Silver Spring, Md. 20902 Millicent I. Lim Korean Embassy 181 South Sathom Road Bangkok, Thailand Karin M. Link 600 West 116 Street Gail S. L. Lock University Manor, Apt. 161 Hershey, Pa. 17033 Edwina Joyce Losey 61 2409 Barracks Road Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Marian Louis 53 163-26 Willets Point Blvd. Whitestone, N.Y. 11357 Mary A. Lublin 2 1 Bayside Drive Great Neck, N.Y. 11023 Abigail S. Luttrell 4630 Rockwood Avenue Indianapolis, Ind. 46208 Pamela Macdonald 165 Franklin Street Denver, Colo. 80218 Susanna R. Mach 1 55 238 Reese Street Scranton, Pa. 18508 Charlotte Y. Mack 9535 Forest Chicago, 111. 60628 Mary Mackiernan 121 515 West 111 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Maureen P. Mahoney 80 Maplewood Avenue Pittsfield, Mass. 01201 MaryJoMalone 108 Deborah E. Marks 322 Central Park West New York, N.Y. 10025 Robin B. Matlin 135 1641 Surrey Lane Havertown, Pa. 19083 Linda Matsuuchi 104 333 East 80 Street New York, N.Y. 10021 Shawn C. Matteson 107 7159 Ferstler Road Kirkville, N.Y. 13082 Sharon B. Mattlin 126 East 96 Street New York, N.Y. 10028 Angela Dea Maurizi 27 North Maryland Avenue Port Washington, N.Y. 1 1050 Margaret H. Mayo 240 West 102 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Coralie B. McDonnell 58 West 8 Street New York, N.Y. 1001 1 Susan L. McEwen 2160 Massachusetts Avenue Lexington, Mass. 021 73 Catherine C. McGee 25-33 36 Avenue Long Island City, N.Y. 11103 Donna J. McKinnon 89 1112 Highland Street Holliston, Mass. 01746 Susan V. McNally 99 14 Fairway Drive Old Bethpage, N.Y. 1 1804 Eileen T. McNamara 68 53 Creighton Street Cambridge, Mass. 02 140 Marilyn E. McWilliams 30 Dongan Hills Avenue Staten Island, N.Y. 10306 MaryJoMelone 108 59 Sonia Lane Broomall, Pa. 19008 Rebecca S. Mermelstein 1222 55 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 1 1219 Louise A. Merriam Charles Patten Drive Sterling, Mass. 01 564 Florence A. Milch 8 1 140-50 Burden Crescent Jamaica, N.Y. 1 1435 Marie Ann Mirabile 85 Knob Hill Glastonbury, Conn. 06033 Heidi R. Mittleman 568 Grand Street New York, N.Y. 10002 Gloria R. Mizrahi 320 Central Park West New York, N.Y. 10025 Sheila J. Moar 65 West 92 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Peggy J. Moberly 7813 Farnsworth Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19152 Miriam Montero 70 Pitt Street New York, N.Y. 10002 Karen L. Mooney 108 724 Eastwood Circle Webster, N.Y. 14580 Laurie R. Moroz 70 South State Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. 10510 Sandra G. Moskovits 2443 Warrensville Center Rd. University Hts., Ohio 441 18 Susan R. Moskowitz 125 3573 Nostrand Avenue Brooklyn, N.Y. 11229 Helen G. Muhlbauer 50 417 Grand Street New York, N.Y. 10002 Karen J. Nardi 350 Sharon Park Dr., Apt. A24 Menlo Park, Calif. 94025 Diane T. Niegel 1 7 100 Thornbury Avenue Glen Rock, N.J. 07452 Lynn Neumann 154 169 Audubon Jersey City, N.J. 07305 Miriam Newman 2406 Golf Road Philadelphia, Pa. 19131 Judy N. Nishikawa 22-1, 2-chome Nishi Tsutsujigaoka Chofu, Tokyo, Japan 182 249 MaryT. O ' Dea 114 1 16 Roseland Avenue Waterbury, Conn. 06710 Lauren A. Olshin 582 1 Bay view Drive Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 33308 Karen O ' Neal 66 1047 East 218 Street Bronx, N.Y. 10469 Elizabeth M. O ' Neill 1834 Narragansett Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10461 Ai Hwa Ong 32 36, Phuah Hin Leong Road Georgetown, Penang Malaysia Lindsay T. Osborn 27 Dunbar Street Chatham, N.J. 07928 Ellen M. Otkiss 11328 Willow Brook Drive Potomac, Md. 20854 Linda T-Y. Pan 39 42-20 Hampton Street Elmhurst, N.Y. 11373 Lorraine M. Paola 45 Southern Boulevard Danbury, Conn. 06810 Saehyang Park 21 186-09 80 Drive Jamaica, N.Y. 1 1432 Joanne E. Parnes 1 165 Park Avenue New York, N.Y. 10028 Mildred L. Patterson 56 186 West 180 Street Bronx, N.Y. 10453 Robin Pedowitz 285 Old Short Hills Road Short Hills, N.J. 07078 Beverly Pelzner 35 410 East 53 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 1 1203 Abigail T. Perez Bo. Higuillar P16 Dorado, P. R. 00646 Mary Ann Perle 50 Overlook Terrace New York, N.Y. 10033 Elizabeth M. Perlman 55 63 I. U. Willets Road Albertson, N.Y. 11507 Julianne D. Perry 62 905 Sedgefield Street Durham, N.C. 27705 Lynne F. Phillips 60 Meadowbrook Drive Princeton, N.J. 08540 Christine A. Piatrowska 110 221 7 Spruce Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19103 Haratia J. Pitts 61 1307 Dean Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11216 Miranda Pluchenik 95 Beverly Jean Plummer 4411 West 23 Place Gary, Ind. 46407 Emily M. Plutchok 23 103 Hampton Court Lexington, Ky. 40508 Linda J. Pohs 650 Park Avenue New York, N.Y. 10021 Vivian L. Polak 138 Lakeside Drive Lawrence, N.Y. 1 1559 Mina M. Polemi Dinokratus 93 Athens 601, Greece FanetteM. Pollack 78 51 Lanfair Road Cheltenham, Pa. 19012 Carole Post 146 24 Lexington Road New City, N.Y. 10956 Elisabeth E. Post 147 24 Lexington Road New City, N.Y. 10956 Delia Price 17 King Street New York, N.Y. 10014 Katherine L. Puder 18 Beverly Road West Orange, N.J. 07052 Helen K. Pushchin 123 122 Glenlawn Avenue Sea Cliff, N.Y. 11579 Susan L. Putterman 96 Killdeer Road Hamden, Conn. 06517 Robin M. Quimby 140 80 Bailey Road Watertown, Mass. 02 1 72 Judith Rabinovitz 208 La Pier Glencoe, 111. 60022 Valeria P. Rasines 340 East 64 Street New York, N.Y. 10021 Sherrie A. Rawdon 1 1 Park Street West Shrewsbury, Mass. 01 545 Donna C. Redel 51 Sycamore Road Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Kathryn A. Rehwaldt 34 Hartwood Ranch, Route 1 Glenwood City, Wise. 54013 Carol J. Reif 32 Sally Lane Plainview, N.Y. 11803 Jo-Ann Reif 82 716 Pittston Avenue Scranton, Pa. 18505 Elen J. Reifler 4 Ansara Road Wappingers Falls, N.Y. 12590 Laura Reiner 135 1 3 Pine Tree Drive Great Neck, N.Y. 11024, Sheila Reines 10 1 A Traphagen Road Wayne, N.J. 07470 Susan E. Resneck 1129 Jeffras Avenue Marion, Ind. 46952 Virginie A. Reynaud 9 23 5 Avenue New York, N.Y. 10021 Margaret Ricks 128 Cynthia A. Rider 417 West Ellet Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19119 Linda H. Ripstein 16 1 5 Birch Street Great Neck, N.Y. 11023 Stephanie J. Roberg Lake Street Litchfield, Conn. 06759 Gail N. Robinson 604 Hermleigh Road Silver Spring, Md. 20902 Sonia Rodriguez 39 619 Academy Street, Apt. A-Y New York, N.Y. 10034 Mary J. Roman 4914 Laurel Hall Drive Indianapolis, Ind. 46226 Gillian G. Rosen 650 West End Avenue New York, N.Y. 10025 Rena C. Rosen 225 Eisenhower Street Princeton, N.J. 08540 Judy Rosenbaum 16 3007 N. Second Street Harrisburg, Pa. 17110 Mona R. Rosenstock 31 238 Ft. Washington Avenue New York, N.Y. 10032 Beth B. Rosenthal 531 West Briar Place Chicago, 111. 60657 Sarah Rossbach 5040 Arlington Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10471 Theresa R. Rostkowski 541 West Lake Avenue Rahway, N.J. 07065 Suzanne C. Rowen 209 Salem Street 250 Andover, Mass. 01810 Linda S. Rubenstein 490 Goodrich Avenue North Babylon, N.Y. 11703 Roberta S. Ruberti 554 Woodland Avenue Mountainside, N.J. 07092 ArleneJ. Rubinstein 45 332 East 18 Street New York, N.Y. 10010 Barbara T. Rumain 125 26 Clinton Place Bronx, N.Y. 10453 Linelle Russ 1 10 Hearn Lane Hamden, Conn. 06514 Ellen S. Russak 5199 South Spencer Seattle, Wash. 98118 Sheila C. Russian 86 64 Mill Street Cranston, R.I. 02905 Lea M. Rutmanowitz 116 825 West 187 Street New York, N.Y. 10033 Brenda R. Ryan Way Hollow Road Sewickley, Pa. 1 5143 Barbara A. St. Michel 23 Sheffield Road Winchester, Mass. 01890 A. M. Salas-Porras P.O. Box 482 Chihauhua, Chih, Mexico Martha J. Salper 174 West 89 Street New York, N.Y. 10024 Marilyn E. Sanders 64 123 1 Herman Street Akron, Ohio 44307 Ellen J. Savette 3784 10 Avenue New York, N.Y. 10034 Forest Hills, N.Y. 1 1375 Janet Scharf 149 1430 51 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11219 Linda K. Schartup 122 1646 Union Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11213 Ellen J. Scherl 114 28 Saldo Circle New Rochelle, N.Y. 10804 Marilyn B. Schneider 983 East 78 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 1 1236 Nancy J. Schneider 233 North Roberts Road Bryn Mawr, Pa. 19010 Beatrice F. Schreiber 76 Pinehurst Avenue Albany, N.Y. 12203 Sue E. Schwartz 90 La Salle Street New York, N.Y. 10027 Consuelo H. Schorr-Thoss 1 1 Plow Lane Greenwich, Conn. 06830 Jacqueline A. Shadko 110 3655 Paddington Troy, Mich. 48084 Carla Shanahan 132 140 Cherry Street Katonah, N.Y. 10536 Elizabeth K. Shapiro 101 3111 Broadway, Apt. 6-K New York, N.Y. 10027 Katherine A. Sharp 57 Beacon Street Boston, Mass. 02108 Leyli Shayegan 333 Kinderkamack Road River Edge, N.J. 07661 Laura J. Shea 14 Orchard Road Scituate, Mass. 02066 Chicago, 111.60637 Nancy R. Sherman 115 40 Ocean Parkway Brooklyn, N.Y. 11218 Katherine A. Shick 308 North Gay Street Mt. Vernon, Ohio 43050 YumiShitoto 118 6171 North Sheridan Chicago, 111. 60626 Barbara Geller Shmagin 1 8 67-15 Dartmouth Street, 3-A Forest Hills, N.Y. 1 1375 Meryl Silverman 22 Rebecca Simmons 3015 SE 25 Avenue Portland, Ore. 97202 Marsha E. Simms 65 5118 Ashland Avenue St. Louis, Mo. 631 15 Cynthia R. Singer 200 West 93 Street New York, N.Y. 10025 Marilyn Singer 1 Elizabeth Street Port Jervis, N.Y. 12771 Cynthia A. Siwulec 70 126 Chestnut Avenue Jersey City, N.J. 07306 Lory A. Skwerer 50 Plaza Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 1 1238 Susan F. Slovin 30 102-30 66 Road Forest Hills, N.Y. 1 1375 Margaret A. Slyper 119 355 Riverside Drive New York, N.Y. 10025 Theresa E. Smith 240 First Avenue, 4H New York, N.Y. 10009 Susan R. Solomon 608 Lincoln Boulevard Long Beach, N.Y. 1 1561 Carole A. Sorensen 128 53 Gladstone Street North Quincy, Mass. 02171 Linda F. Spiegel 93 25 Wayne Avenue River Edge, N.J. 07661 Irit Spierer 5 1 7 Riverdale Avenue Yonkers, N.Y. 10705 Joan E. Spignesi 509 Carriage Drive Orange, Conn. 06477 Jody D. Spiro 8855 Bay Parkway Brooklyn, N.Y. 1 1214 Naomi Stamler 33 650 Ocean Avenue 3rooklyn, N.Y. 1 1226 Joan Stavropoulos 26 600 West 183 Street New York, N.Y. 10033 Marilyn L. Steinberg 90 454 West Park Avenue Long Beach, N.Y. 1 1561 Arlene L. S. Stern 1261 Central Avenue Far Rockaway, N.Y. 1 1691 Janet B. Stroup 13 Rochambeau Road Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 Andrea J. Strumpf 620-7 Baychester Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10475 Marlene Stulbach 35 1740 Ocean Avenue Brooklyn, N.Y. I 1230 Denise M. Swartz 722 Birchwood Drive Westbury, N.Y. 1 1590 Helen E. Sweetland 145 105 Harris Street Rochester, N.Y. 14621 Debra M. Szybinski 75 33-33 149 Street Flushing, N.Y. 1 1354 Susan C. Schachner 22 Vikki Sheatsley 73-37 Austin Street 1 700 East 56 Street 251 Miwako Tanaka 124 2428 Kida-cho Suzuka-shi Mie, Japan Susan Tangen 35 Pleasant Street South Dartmouth, Mass. 02748 Debra A. Tanklow 1266 East 58 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11234 Sheryl L. Tattelman 8 Wentworth Road Canton, Mass. 02021 Barbara M. Terasaka 79 1115 Avon Road Pine Beach, N.J. 08741 Patricia L. Testamark 379 West 125 Street New York, N.Y. 10027 Constance B. Thompson 1701 York Avenue New York, N.Y. 10028 Dora W. Ting 25 Bloomfield Avenue Iselin, N.J. 08830 Kim E. Tolley 86 179 82 Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209 Linda M. Toner 63 Cardinal Drive Toms River, N.J. 08753 Shuli Tor 75 Overlook Road Hastings-on-HDSN, N.Y. 10706 Xenia Trifunovich 90 Morningside Drive New York, N.Y. 10027 Cynthia M. Tucker 101 Rider Avenue Patchogue, N.Y. 11772 Alexandra Creel Tufo 164 East 72 Street New York, N.Y. 10021 Sheila A. Turner 57 1 108 K Street, SE Washington, D.C. 20003 Laura H. Twersky 27 1064 Carrol Place Bronx, N.Y. 10456 Doris M. Ulmer 574 President Street Brooklyn, N.Y. 11215 Nelvis C. Velazquez 266 East 12 Street Hialeah, Fla. 33010 Judy C. Voelker 81 724 East Grinnell Burbank, Calif. 91501 Margaret T. Vogt 1701 York Avenue New York, N.Y. 10028 Janet von Briesen 40 30 East 62 Street New York, N.Y. 10021 Cynthia L. Wagner 136 38 Mohawk Road Short Hills, N.J. 07078 Frances P. Walfish 44 300 17 Avenue Paterson, N.J. 07504 Derval C. Walsh 71 865 Fifth Avenue N.Y.C.,N.Y. 10021 Pamela S. Walton 140 West Lanvale Street Baltimore, Md. 21217 Joan B. Wan 80 174 Canal Street New York, N.Y. 10013 Rachel Warner 601 West 1 13 Street, Apt. 4G New York, N.Y. 10025 Joan P. Warrington 6800 Sherwood Road Baltimore, Md. 21239 Suzanne F. Wasser 41 1508 Oakview Drive Silver Spring, Md. 20903 Rebecca R. Waters 78 96 3 Cevdet Pasa Cadesi Bebek, Istanbul, Turkey Lisa S. Waxman 112 1 1 19 Avenue I Brooklyn, N.Y. 11230 Susan L. Weiss 5 1 7 Griffin Lane East Williston, N.Y. 11596 Renee Welner 68-26 Exeter Street Forest Hills, N.Y. 11375 Elizabeth A. White 100 21-20 79 Street Jackson Heights, N.Y. 1 1370 Deirdre M. Whiteside 90 Morningside Drive New York, N.Y. 10027 Margaret J. Wiener 17 63-33 98 Place Rego Park, N.Y. 1 1374 Sheila L. Williams 58 978 Adee Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10469 Barbara R. Winkler 99 5210 Broadway Bronx, N.Y. 10463 Martha G. Wiseman 382 Central Park West New York, N.Y. 10025 Ellen Wong 98 1223 Commonwealth Avenue Bronx, N.Y. 10472 Suk C. Wong 610 West 141 Street, Apt. 6J New York, N.Y. 10031 Martha E. Woodman 150 18 Woodridge Court Rochester, N.Y. 14622 Jill L. Woolman 1 18 Fleetwood Avenue Albany, N.Y. 12209 Marion S. Yagman 143 277 Avenue C New York, N.Y. 10009 Carolyn M. Yalkut 148 90-50 Union Turnpike Glendale, N.Y. 11227 Chuen Y. Yee 64 Rutgers Street, 13G New York, N.Y. 10002 Sharon L. Yost 27 26-20 141 Street Flushing, N.Y. 11354 Doreen Young 112 203 West 107 Street, Apt. 5B New York, N.Y. 10025 Jacqueline Y. Yu 39 Allison Drive Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 07632 Marina Yu 103 21 16 Stratford Drive Westbirry,N.Y. 11590 Elizabeth Y-K Yung 160 Claremont Avenue New York, N.Y. 10027 IleneZafron 140 373 Harvard Street Brookline, Mass. 02146 Lois D. Zoller 76 Elmwood Drive Livingston, N.J. 07039 Carolyn Zuk P.O. Box 505 Old Lyme, Conn. 06371 Iris A. Zweifler 2907 Kings Highway Brooklyn, N.Y. 11229 Gloria U. Zwerling 80 Garner Lane Bay Shore, N.Y. 11706 252 PATRONS Congratulations to our daughters Priscilla and Elizabeth Konecky Love, Mother and Dad Sidney Cooperman Dr. Mrs. Stanley Fried Mr. Mrs. John DeLee Kiely Mr. Mrs. Lazer Mr. Mrs. Roy Matsuuchi Congratulations to our daughter Stephanie Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Bialick and brother Richard Kathleen A. Crafts Shoshana Ginzburg Jean Philip Krueger Mr. Mrs. Arthur A. Levin Dr. Mrs. Eugene V. Schneider BOOSTERS Mr. Mrs. Nissim Alhades Mr. Mrs. John K. Bagby The Barzilays Prof. Mrs. Henry A. Boorse Valete Et Plaudite Dr. Mrs. Theodore B. Eden Mrs. B. Fine Mr. Mrs. Thos. J. Green Dr. Mrs. William B. Greenberg Mr. Mrs. Lawrence Griffin Mr. Mrs. Stanley Heyman Jorge and Olga Jui Mr. Mrs. S. Katz Mr. Mrs. Joseph Koeller Mr. Mrs. John Liberatos Mr. Mrs. Carl Melone Mr. Mrs. Alex Moskowitz Dr. Mrs. Edwin X. O ' Dea Heliane Reynaud Mr. Mrs. Paul B. Sheatsley Mr. Mrs. Samuel W. Sherman Mr. Mrs. Ernest Simms Phillip Mr. Mrs. Rubin E. Spiegel Aaron W. Warner Mr. Mrs. Philip Yost FRIENDS Congratulation C.A.A. Congratulations to Miriam Frank Congratulations to our Daughter, Tina Dr. Mrs. S. F. Abenavoli Dr. Mrs. Charles Abler Mr. Mrs. Nathan Abrams Alison Ajdukiewicz Dr. Mrs. Samuel J. Ajl Mr. Mrs. Joseph H. Altman Rabbi Mrs. Milton Arm Mr. Mrs. Keith D. Beecher Mr. Mrs. Nicholas J. Biafore Dr. Mrs. Oscar Bigman Mr. Mrs. William Bokser Mr. Mrs. P. Bush Mr. Mrs. Joshua Caiman Mr. Mrs. Y.S.Chow Mr. Mrs. Jack Cohen family Congratulations Zori — Love Mom, Dad Ginette Michele Cohen Dr. Mrs. Melvin Cohen Mr. Mrs. Robert A. Costine Mr. Mrs. Fred Davis Mrs. Louis Deall Mrs. G. M. del Rosario Annette and William Diamond Mrs. Art Frezza Miquelina Garcia In memory of Macduff Shearman Mrs. Bernice Gelber Mr. Mrs. Irwin Geller Mr. Mrs. Ralph Glaser Mr. Mrs. Myer L. Goldberg Mrs. H. Robert Hendrickson Mr. Mrs. S. Holder Dr. Mrs. Martin Hurvitz Mr. Mrs. Carl Hutt Plum Hill Farm Mr. Mrs. Joseph Killackey Dr. Mrs. Janis Klavins Dr. Joseph Kovacs Mr. B. G. Kramer Mr. Mrs. W. Frank Kraemer Mr. Mrs. A. Ladenheim Mr. Mrs. H. Milton Lasson Mr. Mrs. Henry C. Lee Mr. Mrs. Nat Louis Mr. Mrs. Howard Lublin Mr. Mrs. L. J. Mahoney Dr. Mrs. E. K. Pierson, Jr. Dr. Mrs. Zygmunt A. Piotrowski M. Mrs. Richard K. Puder Mr. Mrs. Oleg A. Pushchin Mr. Mrs. Marc Ratzersdorfer Mr. Mrs. Jules Reiner Elinor D. Shea Shitoto Mr. Mrs. Arthur Sorensen Dr. Mrs. Edward L. Steinberg Mr. Mrs. Carl Voelker Robert and Carol Weiss Estelle G. Wiener Joseph Wiseman Mr. Mrs. Stanley Woolman Mr. Mrs. Max Zafron 254 16,000 members of THEASSO CIA TEALL UMNA E OF BARNARD COLLEGE welcome the Class of 1974 to membership This association links together the graduates and women who have completed at least one year of study. Its purpose is to promote the interests of Barnard College and to further a spirit of fellowship among its members. You become a member automatically, and there are no dues. Best Wishes to the CLASS of 74 from the Classes of 75, ' 76, ' 77 and Vndergrad 255 Congratulations to the Class of 1974 Compliments of AMERICAN YEARBOOK COMPANY 256 GO WEST PResident 3-4044 WEST LUMBER COMPANY, Inc. 153 MORNINGSIDE AVENUE Two Blocks West of Eighth Avenue Corner 126th Street, New York 27 NED MOORE Phones: MOnument 2-4220 4221 ABALON EXTERMINATING COMPANY INC. Pest Control Specialists Since 1929 EXECUTIVE OFFICES 600 NEW YORK AVENUE BROOKLYN, N.Y. 11203 Fl_ 7-8820 Power Tool Rental Paints - plumbing - Electrical Supplies Licensed Locksmith JERE HEALY 194-03-05 NORTHERN BLVD. Flushing, N. Y. 11358 TRafalgar 7-6003-4 WALLPAPERS Town Painting Decorating Co., Inc. PAINTERS, DECORATORS, CONTRACTORS CONSUMERS ENVELOPE CORP. 534 Washington Street New York, N.Y. 10014 DESIGNERS MANUFACTURERS OF WINDOW TREATMENTS £Aade. Company 306 EAST 61ST STREET • NEW YORK N Y 10021 • 212 751 1420 for 36 years . . . CON FOR T CO INC 309 LAFAYETTE STREET, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10012 (212)226-7800-01-02 LETTERPRESS OFFSET WEB-OFFSET PRINTERS AND LITHOGRAPHERS Cleopatra Hues on the upper West Side. And dines in licr mys- terious palace of earth-red and sky-blue. Dines in the splendour of Middle List (and Ameri- can) cuisine, personally prepared by Attiah Mohammed. Attiah: The famed international chef who has made Cleopatra his slave. Attiah Creator of exotic Slush Kebab, Falafcl, Hommos, Kmc, s Palace Dessert and other Middle East qoodies. Join Cleopatra amid the arch ' . ' , that reflect the .elorics of an ancient past, and of a world as yet unborn Cleopatra Tl c pharaohs never had it so qood. Broadway at 94th 865-3000 • 749-9980. Eberhart Brothers Inc. 312 East 82nd Street New York, New York 10028 Engineers and Builders Serving Barnard Community for 64 years . i 1 i i i i , i i : i i i i Ee i i i i i i i i i r • 1 PAPADEM FLORIST rjyn t ) n ' 2953 BROADWA Y I • I Li M nr 10% DISCOUNT STUDENTS (Purchases over $3.00) 258 212 MO 2-2261-2 Karen O ' Neal Senior Vice President Rose Doundoulakis Treasurer Under gr ad Association Officers 1974 Maureen Killackey President Not Shown: Marsha Coleman Vice President at Large MORTARBOARD 74 Georgina Jui, Co-Editor-in-Chief Marsha E. Simms, Co-Editor-in-Chief Eileen McNamara, Assistant Editor Karen O ' Neal, Senior Class Photography Editor Penny Liberatos, Faculty Photography Editor Derval Walsh, Literary Editor Linda Spiegel, Advertising Manager Shirley Feggans, Business Manager LAYOUT STAFF ADVISORS TO MORTARBOARD Ning Lee Rita Lee Diane Neigel Karen O ' Neal Barbara Wolff Ellen Wong Marina Yu Berdine Abler Mona Bergen Gwendolyn Blaylock Sonia Day Betty-Ann Hyman Maureen Killackey Betty-Ann Hyman Kim Horn Richard Restiano Ron Weinman 263 THE EDITORS AND STAFF OF MORTARBOARD 74 WISH TO EXPRESS THANKS AND APPRECIATION TO THE FOLLOWING PERSONS, WITHOUT WHOSE HELP THIS YEARBOOK WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN MADE POSSIBLE . . . Undergrad Association The Barnard Bulletin The Columbia Spectator Jane Moorman Sarah Johnson Dennis Dalton Hester Eisenstein Jane Gould Marsha Coleman (Ngozi) Julianne Perry Maureen Killackey Marina Yu The staff of the College Activities Office: Claire Fay , Peter Simonds, Helen Rinde Paula, Linda, Sheila, Rohyn, Sarah, Leslie and Judy . ART WORK Terry Gotthelf Sarah Mckins Ann Abenauoli Enid Rosa PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS NEW YORK PHOTO GRAPHIC Richard A. Restiano 91 Fletcher Avenue Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 10552 914 — 664-1249 senior class photography Anthony Christopher faculty photographer Vincent G. Wilson, II Corky Lee contributing photographers


Suggestions in the Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

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Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977


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