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Digitized by tlie Internet Arcliive in 2014 littps: arcliive.org details nnortarboard8819barn MORTARBOARD 1982 Vol. 88 BARNARD COLLEGE NEW YORK CITY We dedicate this book to President Ellen V. Putter in appreciation of her commitment to Barnard since her undergraduate days. We wish her the best of luck and a long and prosperous tenure. Mortarboard 1982 TO THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1982: When you came to Barnard in 1978 the College was already in the process of reassessing its relationship with Columbia University, and there were many who feared that Barnard ' s special mission and iden tity would be lost to a merger with Columbia. As you graduate in 1982, you should leave confident in the knowledge that Barnard will not be merged with Columbia, but rather that it will continue as a distinguished undergraduate college for women affiliated with a major research university. You may be confident too that the College will proceed in a strong, active and exciting manner which will keep faith with the excellence and distinction of its past and which will permit the generations of young women who follow to enjoy the superb education with which you were blessed. As you go forward with your own lives, you may be assured that your Barnard education will serve you well. You have been prepared to handle whatever intellectual challenges your lives and careers may offer, and the reputation of the College ' s rigorous academic program engenders immediate respect that will redound to your personal and professional benefit. We cannot predict what the years ahead will bring for each of you personally or for the world at large. We hope that the basic human values and standards which characterize the Barnard community, together with the intellectual training which you have received, will assist you in coping with whatever the future may hold and that you, like the Barnard alumnae who have preceeded you, will be good citizens of the world. We hope too, that you will maintain your interest in Barnard . We are a small and caring community, and the ongoing participation and interest of our alumnae not only enriches our day to day life at the College, but also supports the essence of what we are and contributes to a tradition of nearly a century. With all best wishes for lives of peace, happiness, good health, and personal fulfillment. Sincerely, Ellen V. Futter President Barnard College. . The institution justifiably takes pride in the quality education it provides for ' its students. But talking about the Barnard education also means appreciating the V history of the college that made such an education possible — a history of dreams and struggles, and of dreams realized. Barnard College opened at 343 Madison Avenue on October 7, 1889, a day of celebration, but one that classes in recent years — having heard the clamor for more o-education within the university — can look back on with irony. The College had been named after Frederick Augustus Porter Barnard, president of Columbia Uni- versity from 1864 to 1889. He vigorously campaigned for equal opportunity in higher education for both sexes, seeking the admission of women to Columbia. Coeducation found little sympathy in University Trustees meetings. Only after a decade of continual effort by proponents of higher education for women could Barnard start receiving applications f6r its first class. Though Dr. Barnard felt the formation of Barnard College was but a compromise, he was nevertheless pleased about the birth of this women ' s college. Barnard ' s first dean was Emily James Smith, a member of Bryn Mawr ' s first graduating class, and a distinguished scholar in Greek at the University of Chicago. Her administration was marked by her drive to build up the College ' s curriculum. Just as everyone was settling down to a long, successful administration under Smith ' s guidance, she announced her engagement to publisher George Haven Putnam. The Trustees were alarmed. Would not the College suffer, some asked, if it had to compete for her attention with her duties as wife and housekeeper? After much debate, Barnard finally decided the Dean was capable of doing justice to both positions. In her History of Barnard College, Marian Churchill White ' 29, conceded the magnanimity of this decision: At a time when the tradition of scholarly women was still a celibate one, this decision showed courage and enlightenment. Un- doubtedly, the sight of a woman successfully combining a happy marriage with a notable career was a wholesome example for the undergraduates. When Dean Smith Putnam became pregnant, however, it led to her February 1, 1900 resignation. Many Trustees agreed that if a woman shows she could be a devoted wife and still be active in affairs outside her household, she could certainly continue to do so as a mother. But the weight of opinion at the turn of the century as against it, White says. Events must be judged against the background of their own times, not of ours. Just as the great outcry against sending females to college is understandable if we study the nineteenth century, so we can reluctantly see the viewpoint of the harassed Trustees when it became known that Mrs. Putnam was pregnant. They could not risk the charge that Home and Motherhood were slighted for Homer and Miltiades. % On December 13, 1910, Nicholas Murray Butler, then president of Columbia University, named Virginia Crocheron Guildersleeve as the new Dean of Barnard College. A Barnard graduate, alumna officer, and member of the faculty, Guil- dersleeve was the position of knowing, through her own experience, the con- SI IBKIIIIIliP cerns of the Barnard community as a whole. As a result. Dean Guildersleeve was able to deal sensitively and effectively with all parties in her thirty-six years of office. Aware that instructors were a vital influence on the students, often serving as role models, Dean Guildersleeve noted that it was necessary to appoint en- couraging, successful, dynamic women to the faculty. Under her direction, Barnard emerged front the Depression and both world wars, strong in its own right, devoted to the education of women. . By 1947 when Barnard appointed her fourth dean, Millicent Gary Mcintosh (who changed her title and became Barnard ' s first president because corporation heads wanted to speak to the president of Barnard, not the dean) it marked a departure from conventional academic practice. None of the other Seven Sister colleges had appointed a married woman for its head and no other women ' s college in the country had a mother for its leader, much less one with five children. Mcintosh also strove to prepare Barnard ' s graduates to bridge the gap between learning and living. Within this concept, the curriculum continued to increase in diversity, and Barnard started sponsoring conferences on topics ranging from philosophy to physics, whereby Barnard faculty and students could share with other scholars discussions of important problems and ideas in their own fields and relating to the community. By the time Dr. Jacquelyn Mattfeld was inaugurated as president of Barnard on November 5, 1976, the College was no longer the poor sibling it started as within the Columbia University system. With its own departments and administrators, it stood tall as a proud advocate of women ' s education, not only because of the quality education it provides, but also by virtue of its successful — though arduous — struggle to survive. Society ' s attitude towards female students and scholars had been fluctuating between disdain and accolades. But with the proven advantages of women ' s education — 70% of women listed in this year ' s ' Who ' s Who graduated from women ' s colleges instead of coeducational schools — the intellectual capacity of women should no longer be doubted. At Columbia, the drive towards admitting women had gathered full force, marking Dr. MattfeM ' s administration with her strong efforts to articulate the need for women ' s colleges, institutions whose pri- mary purpose is to nurture women scholars. Barnard College ' s evolutionary — even revolutionary — history draws a full circle this year with the inauguration of her newest president, Ellen V. Futter. President Futter was a 1971 Barnard graduate before receiving her J.D. from Co- lumbia ' s School of Law. She is married to Mr. John Shutkin, also an attorney, and their first child, Anne Victoria, was born this academic year. Unlike with Barnard ' s first dean, in the eyes of the community it is clear that President Putter ' s positions as wife and mother will not detract from her capacity to lead Barnard in the coming years. In this. President Futter and other and future women scholars benefit from the legacy left by the perseverance and success of Barnard and other women ' s colleges ' graduates. Barnard: Truly a women ' s college 91 «o (0 3 C n 0.) o Nineteen eighty-two was an exciting and eventful year for Barnard, one that will be remembered for many joyous reasons. One of these reasons is the culmination of years of negotiations regarding the relationship between Barnard and Columbia University. A lot has ' changed since the trustees of Columbia rejected President Frederick Barnard ' s proposal to admit women at their college. A compromise was reached in the form of a separate, affiliated women ' s institution, but this arrangement has been under fire ever since. In 1962, both schools began to offer courses jointly without further financial arrangements. It became quite obvious, however, that many more Barnard students were taking Columbia courses than vice versa, and that translated into a loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars peryear for the University. The University proposed a merger of Barnard and Columbia colleges in order to cut costs and increase enrollment. Barnard refused. In 1973, both schools signed an intercorporate agreement to increase cooperation in the use of physical facilities and faculty appointments, among other things. Columbia continued to seek a merger for financial reasons and because its all-male status was beginning to adversely affect its applicant pool, especially in relation to the other coed Ivies. By 1977, Columbia concluded that its only sensible solution was a merger, and again Barnard refused. The following three years brought many heated debates and few solutions. Barnard ' s faculty was seriously affected by the University ' s virtual control of tenuring procedures. Negotiations broke down completely in 1979, due to the clashing personalities of Barnard ' s president Jacquelyn Mattfeld and Columbia ' s William McGill. By 1981, negotiations resumed under the new leadership of Barnard ' s Ellen V. Futter and Columbia ' s Michael I. Sovern. Over the summer, the two schools reached a series of agreements in principle designed to bring about de facto coeducation. What President Sovern had in mind was the same level of coeducation of the Ivy League average; what it meant for Barnard was a revised tenuring procedure, the adoption of Columbia ' s core curriculum, and open housing and dining facilities. Negotiations reached a stalemate when President Futter realized that to achieve Columbia ' s minimum level of coeducation, we would have had to send 79 to 81 percent of our registrations across the street, which she considered not a tenable solution. X X 1 A rmr; Alums Pledge Support By Mary Witherell The first indication that Barnard has gotten that its agreement with Columbia is being positively received is that the college is now $50,000 richer. Just like that. Within twenty-four hours of President Putter ' s announcement of the new agree- ment with Columbia at the January 22nd faculty meeting, volunteers were on the phone informing approximately 300 alum- nae of the news. The reaction, according to Irma Moore, Director of Alumnae Affairs, was more than favorable. I would say that they were aU very pleased that we had not lost our identity, said Moore, and pleased that we still had the relationship with Columbia. They all felt very keenly that it is important for Barnard to remain a college for women but with a tie to the university. BARNARD Signor Michaele! Signor Michaele! Si, Renaldo. Mtchaele, it ' s the agree- ment! Si, Renaldo. All the original terms, Michaele! Si, Renaldo. Elena accepts them! The women, the enrollments, everything. She won ' t interfere. We give her the tenure conces- sion, and she gives us a free market in girls. We coeducate! It ' s amazing. . . The new agreement will permit Columbia to admit women in the fall of 1983, thereby ameliorating the quality of its applicant pool and its students ' social life. Tenuring procedures for Barnard will include a panel of two Columbia professors, two Barnard professors (as opposed to the former 3-2 arrangement), and one outside scholar, to be approved by Barnard ' s Dean of the Faculty. The agreement will be in effect until 1989, thus ensuring both schools a certain degree of stability. Cross-registration and access to facilities will remain as they are until then. On January 25, 1982, over 800 students, faculty, and administrators crowded into the Barnard gym for an all-college assembly. President Futter presented the major points of the new agreement, and representatives from other interested parties gave their views. Although many people fear that Barnard will not be able to survive Columbia ' s competition, the majority of the Barnard community was relieved to hear there will be no merger, and confident in the school ' s future. Undergrad president Nancy Poundstone pointed out that with each new discus- sion we were losing another piece of Barnard. Now we can pursue our own goals. Senior Class president Rosa Alonso observed that Columbia University chose to keep us in their unison of schools. In this affiliation, Columbia University has given prestige to Barnard, but it has been more than proven that Barnard has brought prestige to Columbia University. Our identity and excellence is not threatened by the decision of Columbia College to admit women. Barnard competes with the top Ivy League coeducational institutions, and the fact that one more should come into the competition does not mean we are ' finished ' . Until now, the speculation got in the way of the daily program at both schools, according to JoeTolliver, Director of College Activities. The political science department ' s Leslie Caiman said that the key to Barnard ' s future seems to be future admissions, but warned that high school women are not as aware of the problems of being women and the virtues of an all-women ' s education. Christine Royer, Director of Admissions, expects a lot of hard work, but believes that things are going to be happening at Barnard in a very positive way. In the weeks that followed. President Futter met with students in the dorms and in Mcintosh to discuss the agreement and answer their questions. Bulletin and Spectator published stories and letters on every aspect of the issue until both campuses were saturated with it. The staff of Mortarboard believes this is a great opportunity for Barnard to grow and prosper, and looks forward to many more years of feuding with The Columbian, confident that — like our school and her students — we will shine. 7 The memorable 1981-82 academic year has marked a new era for the Barnard community and President Putter in more ways than one. On Sep- tember 21, 1981, an anxiously awaited stork landed on the Milbank steps to announce the birth of Anne Victoria Shutkin. Thus, President Putter becomes the first Barnard president to remain in office after pregnancy, proving that Home and Motherhood can be effectively combined with Homer and Mil- tiades. We wish Annie a happy and prosperous life, and we proudly welcome her to the Barnard Class of 1999. 8 11 Theme from New York, New York Lyrics by Fred Ebb Start spreadin ' the news, I ' m leaving today, I wanna be a part of it New York, New York. These vagabond shoes are longing to stray, and step around the heart of it New York, New York. I wanna wake up in the city that doesn ' t sleep to find I ' m king of the hill, top of the heap. My little town blues are melting away, I ' ll make a brand new start of it in old New York. If I can make it there, I ' d make it anywhere, it ' s up to you. New York, New York. P  ' I r I t t f 1 f If t 1 i 1 ' ft 12 At Columbia University, when someone says, the steps, those on College Walk in front of Low Library immediately come to mind. Those are not the only steps here! Students use steps for getting to classes, going to dormrooms, to BHR and downtown, whether by bus or subway. Steps are not only an integral part of Morningside Heights; they are essential to Manhattan as well. Steps on this great island are a necessity in homes, public buildings and various means of transportation. Look outside, go downtown, or just think about steps in Manhattan. Cultural steps — the Metropolitan Opera House, the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Culinary steps — Au Grenier, the Four Seasons, Wo Hop (located at 17 Mott Street and the many other underground restaurants in that neighborhood). Corporate steps — Rockefeller Center. Commuter steps — Times Square, the Port Authority, Grand Central Station. Cus- tomer steps — Bloomingdale ' s, Ann Taylor, Kron Chocolatier. Manhattan is a vertical city. One easily discerns such by examining the image of the Manhattan skyline. It is composed of tall buildings, all of which stairs are a part. There is a constant surge upward through these buildings. In the same way, the Barnard woman constantly strives up- wards and beyond her limitations. VANESSA BARAN Manhattan Steps 14 22 26 27 THE JOY OF COMMUTING 6:30 a.m. — The alarm sounds . . . My right eyelid struggles to glance at the clock sitting on top of the closet. Damn! I say every morning as 1 stumble on my homework on the way over. Clocks in the vicinity of a bed are a commuter ' s nightmare. The blaring of the morning sirens stop. Five more minutes . . . 7:00 a.m. — 1 am lying in the warm sand of a Caribbean beach when suddenly I feel something crawling up my arm and locking me between its teeth . . . only it isn ' t a crab but someone tugging at me. It ' s late! 7:05 a.m. — I train for the NYC Morning Marathon: a 60-yard dash from bedroom to bathroom, a hurdle from bathroom to closet, a quick jog from bedroom to kitchen, and a sprint from house to subway. 8:00 a.m. — I read yesterday ' s assignments as five trains go by — none of them mine. There is the faint sound of a distant train which quickly becomes the unbearable screeching of metal against metal on the opposite track. 8:15 a.m. — My train arrives. I squeeze in and stand between a man who smells like he hasn ' t left the train since freshman year and a sadistic woman who places her large handbag between herself and my spine . . . with the sharp edge conveniently protecting her private space. 8:20 a.m. — A woman seating in front of me stands to catch her stop, but I don ' t dare take her seat. Experience teaches commuters to respect seniority on trains . . . especially from armed senior citizens and bag peo- ple. 8:40 a.m. — I swear to never take another 9:00 a.m. class. 8:45 a.m. — The woman who has paralyzed me with her handbag for the last half-hour finishes the job as she rushes to leave the train before the doors close. A man with dirty jeans and no shirt walks into my train yelling something about music. There is suddenly a painful whine from an old trumpet he had concealed in a Macy ' s bag. He laughs hysterically as he walks past us into the next train. 8:46 a.m. — The day of Judgement is upon you! God forgive all your sins! Lord be merciful . . . God bless you . . . Thank you . . . thank you . . . echoes the faint sound of coins being dropped into an empty coffee can. 8:55 a.m. — I try look at my watch as I balance my books, my bag, my notes and highligter, and myself. I can already see a dark, hot lecture hall with wall-to-wall students . . . and no room for me. 9:05 a.m. — The train stops, and the blue station tiles remind me of my beach. One hundred sixteenth street, Co- lumbia University. I hesitate for a moment and then rcedize it ' s my station. Sorry, but I get off at Barnard. 9:10 a.m. — I reach the finish line with my fantastic kick, ten minutes late, but thankful that residents always oversleep. 34 36 the easy way to commute 41 42 43 44 Suites, At Best Suites are Barnard ' s solution to family life. A family? The B-52 ' s blaring from one room. A girl blocking the hallway, her ear pressed to the black receiver, her mouth moving. Popcorn popping on the gas range. Crumbs on the stained formica table, a roach approaching. The odd man out — the live-in boyfriend from across the street. ZBT dwellers yell obscenities which evoke a chorus of shut-ups. A filthy bathroom. And a sign by the elevator proclaiming, No hot water until tomorrow. The fire alarm sounds, for the third time in two weeks. Voices in the air-shaft, Amelia, is that you? An Olivetti Lexicon humming into the early morning, the keys are hit with seconds between them, then minutes, then . . . Lights out and all is quiet for the night. Suite life. The 600 ' s, Plimpton, Livingston, Hartley and now Claremont. Like them. Love them. But leave them in May ' 82. 47 . . . friendly staff . . . cheerful rooms . . . soap opera addicts . . . privacy . . . company . . . video game freaks . . . piano room. . . Sunday brunch . . . softball games . . .TV junkies. . . Dorm Council meetings . . .laughter. . .tears. . .house cleaning . . . home cooking . . . Hewitt Cafeteria Blues ... no hot w ater . . . pizza . . . hi-fi stereos . . . parties . . . mm All NlCrHT Asian Journal The Asian Journal, an annual publication, provides a medium of expression for the Asian community. Headed by co-editors Jane Lew and Alex Moy, the staff strives to increase the Journal ' s reputation throughout the country. The Asian Student Union, unlike other clubs on campus that represent a specific ethnic or national group, attempts to represent all Asians. Recognized by both Ferris Booth Hall and Undergrad, the ASU is an integral part of the University ' s efforts to improve the quality of student life on campus. The ASU has always met the challenge of providing services, informa- tion, and programming which would interest Asian students in general by providing social, cultural, and academic events that have brought Asian students together, fostering an aware- ness of the Asian identity and heritage on campus. Our career counseling workshops provide graduates with career guidance and make them aware of their options. Aside from sponsoring activities, the ASU also serves as a clearinghouse of information. Our programming provides many activities for the Asian student to escape the drudgery of school. Moreover, we provide a means whereby interested students can actively play a role in planning and executing events. Biology Club The Barnard Biology Club was formed in 1978 to help Biology students. Many science majors are undecided or confused about their future careers, unaware of the different careers available to them: The Barnard Biology Club provides information concerning career opportunities in all biology-related fields through guest lectures given by our faculty members and specialists from outside who discuss their area of speciality, their research, as well as the career opportunities available in their respective areas of science. The club also sponsors films on topics ranging from bioengineering and open-heart surgery to cell biology and wild life. Barnard-Columbia Gospel Choir To express God ' s Word and the bound- less love and joy for it in song is the raison d ' etre of the Barnard-Columbia Gospel Choir. Conceived four years ago by a Bar- nard student, the choir has grown consid- erably from the original 10 members to forty, with prayers that even more will join. In our aims to bring Gospel music to the Barnard-Columbia community, the choir has planned major events like the Ivy League Gospel Jubilee for the spring as well as our annual spring festival in the Haitian refugees ' honor. The Barnard Literary Magazine The Barnard Literary Magazine provides the opportunity for a student to explore her creative potential and develop critical faculties through an anonymous reading of all submissions and group discussions on the works she submits. Each magazine, published in the spring, has presented since 1941 a variety of fictional forms by the Barnard community. During the year, the Barnard Literary Magazine sponsors readings of poetry and prose by students, recent graduates, and well-respected alumni authors. Barnard-Columbia Science Fiction Society The Society begins a new era this year as the last of the founding members have graduated, however, the Leonard Library still continued to grow under the management of librarian Ted Bell, reaching 5000 items by the end of De- cember. Under the leadership of Mark Binder as president, and Akiko Inouye, business manager, during the year sev- eral writing workshops were held, and authors spoke be- fore the group. We took trips to places of science fiction interest. Victor McNeil took over the editorship of Cusfus- sing, the newsletter of the Society and produced a number of issues during the year. Apricon IV, with Mike Trauisano as chairman and Thomas Disch as guest of honor, went successfully. B.O.B.W Barnard Organization of Black Women, now in its fourteenth year, is a child of Black student activism of the late 60s . It serves as a general meeting ground for all Black women of Columbia University, and strives to educate its members through social, political, and community events. This year, one of the organization ' s main goals is to dedicate its office (located in BHR) to Barnard ' s first Black graduate, writer and an- thropologist Zora Neale Hurston. Also planned are a tutoring program with the public school students in the area ' s housing project, the trips to Broadway, as well as the eighth annual Sadie Hawkins Dance and our three day Celebration of Black Womanhood. 52 The Barnard Bulletin is a nonprofit, student-run weekly newspaper (circulation 7,000) serving the University community. Although we focus on news, sports and issues of interest to Barnard students, we also cover the arts and pertinent political issues on campus. Bulletin 1981 Left to Right: Renata Pompa — Sports Editor Sherry Jetter — Associate Features Editor Linda Peteanu — Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Wishnick — Features Not Pictured: Mary Witherell — News Editor Amelia Hart — Reviews Editor Lisa Bachana — Business Manager 53 The Chinese Student ' s Club of Barnard and Columbia was founded in the 1940s to foster goodwill among the diverse Chinese students and promoting the Chinese cul- ture. They believed that to achieve peace and harmony between different peoples, a thorough understanding of the peoples and their cultures is essential. We still share the same views and beliefs as our predecessors and have accepted the responsibility of carrying out these objec- tives to the fullest extent. The past year has been extremely enjoyable with 400 mem- bers participating in various events and activities. The C.S.C. started off this year with a Welcome Fest to introduce the new students to varied social and cultural ad- vantages offered by the club. Deans were invited to join the students in enjoying a Peking Duck dinner and culture show fol- lowed by a Sunrise Disco. Our members also enjoyed Bruce Lee movies, sports tournaments and bowling hours, not to mention commuter hours and other parties and activities. Our year ' s biggest event, the Chinese New Year Festival, consisted of exhibitions, shows and an eight-course banquet of exotic culinary feats augmented by Chinese roast pigs . All of this would not be possible if not for our active members — we ' ll miss the ones that are leaving. Chinese Student ' s Club Circle K 54 Common Ground Common Ground is a coalition of var- ious groups on the Columbia University campus that have formed to print an al- ternative newspaper. Our main goal is to promote a dialogue among organiza- tions concerned with current social, po- litical, economic and environmental is- sues. Common Ground was formed in the spring of 1981 as an independent newspaper and has published two is- sues. In the fall of 1981, we continued publication and gained status as an Undergrad club. Common Ground is now an integral part of the campus and is located in 101 Macintosh. The Education Confrontation Club The Education Club ' s activities the past two years have provided inspiration to students and participating alumni. We have distinguished ourselves as a group which tackles the theoretical issues presented in our texts as they relate to the real-life situations in city schools. Forums this past year have included: Mainstreaming the Handicapped, Al- ternate Careers in Education, and Arts in Education, among several others. Active Coordinators Members: Elizabeth Droz: Chairperson Carl Wessel Alice Hom: Secretary Joan Poveromo Cathy Francis: Financial Secretary Isabel Nieves Louisa Gilbert: Advertising Andrew Alexander Also, all T.C. G.S. participants and Education Progra Faculty. The Greek- American Organization was established in September 1978, to enable Greeks, Americans of Greek descent and Phil-Hellenes to meet and disseminate the Greek heritage. Our first three years included events like two community dances in As- toria, lectures by prominent Greek academicians, a trip to St. Basil ' s Or- phanage and a ski trip. This year with Steven Georgeson (president), John P. Getsos (vice-president), Basil Mit- rofanis (treasurer), and Polyxene Gazetas (secretary) we are planning a Souvlaki Barbeque, a Greek Kafenio night, a club trip to the Greek Theater of New York, and our second Greek Ball with a live band and dancing. Greek- American Organization Barnard Photography Club The Barnard Photography Club pro- vides members of the Columbia Univer- sity community with an opportunity to pursue photographic interests. The new Grace Gold Darkroom, located in Macin- tosh Center, is available for club mem- bers ' use. It is fully equipped for black and white developing and printing. The club provides instruction for members in various areas of photography as well as exhibitions, films, seminars, and field trips pertaining to photography. The 1981-82 officers are: Shari Pallet: President Vicky Maizes: Vice President Gary McCready: Treasurer Andre DeLaFuente: Secretary 56 The Mcintosh Activities Council (McAC) When the Millicent Mcintosh Center was dedicated twelve years ago, there arose a need for active student representation. The Mcintosh Activities Council was formed in answer to that need. McAC grew from a small, central planning board to a council consisting of an executive board and seven standing committees. It is an organization run by and for the students. McAC pro- vides students of the Barnard community with a mul- titude of diverse social events and as a sounding board for student input concerning affairs of academic and social life. The McAC board officers and its seven standing committee chairpersons are: President: Esther Diamant Vice President: Maria Sakalis Treasurer: John P. Getsos Secretary: Luisa Liriano Commuter Actio: Lisa Maxwell Cultural Events: Anne Palestroni Ski Recreation: Raquel Rosenfeld Social Committee: Corinne Nicholas Student Faculty: Kavitha Subrhamanium Theater Goers Guild: David DeMar Zooprax: Eric Larson McAC 1971: Even Presidents commute! Ellen Putter, center front 57 Pre-Law Society The Elizabeth Cady Stanton Pre-Law Society was founded in the Spring of 1981 by Beatrice Krain, taking its name from an American reformer and a leader of the Woman-Suffrage movement. The club provides direction and focus for prospective law students. Forums feature guest speakers and discussions. Russian Club If you can ' t think of the Russian equivalent for supercalafragilisticexpealidocious, don ' t feel bad; neither can most of the members of the Barnard Columbia Russian Club. Such obstacles do not deter the devoted group of Russophiles from meeting every week and conversing in Russian. Often laughter is heard at these meetings as attempts are made to russify words such as Rolling Stones or Burger King. Other times, silence reigns for a moment as a concentrated group effort is required to find the right Russian word to finish a thought. But whether the members are making, Tolstoy cringe in his grave with dubious transliterations or are making their professors very proud with their fluency in the language, the meetings provide a good opportunity to practice the language outside the classroom. Besides the weekly meetings, the club organizes various events that range from scholarly lectures on the beauties of Leningrad to festive dinners in one of New York City ' s many Russian restaurants. A traditional weekend trip to Jordanville, N.Y. is also held, where the members get together to visit a Russian Monastary and talk to the holy men who live there. The club brings Russian culture a little closer to the inhabitants of Morningside Heights and has fun while doing so. S.A.B.O.R. Spanish American Barnard Organiza- tion (SABOR) was founded two and a half years ago, dedicated to the advancement of our Latin American heritage as Barnard women. Our goals are to expand our inter- ests by sponsoring events that reflect our Latin Culture. Our membership consists of 34 students. The present steering commit- tee officers are Mildred Caban, Odette St. Paul, and Diana Punales. 58 Students Against Militarism Students Against Militarism has its roots in an organization called The Barnard Columbia Ad Hoc Committee Against Registration for the Draft. This committee, which initially boasted 200 participants, was created in January 1980 after Carter announced reinstatement of draft registration . A week later the Ad Hoc Committee organized the first student demonstration against the draft. Throughout the spring of 1980, the Ad Hoc Committee worked intensively to foster debate within the Columbia community over the draft and military issues. Since that time, S.A.M. has continued a wide range of educational activities, and has taken as active interest in the recent wave of protest over U.S. involvement in El Salvador and the Women ' s Pentagon Action in Washington. S.A.M. ' s most recent activities have included forums on nuclear war, the House Un-American Activities, the horror of apartheid in South Africa, and the re-writing of the Vietnam War. Ukranian Club The Barnard Columbia Ukranian Club unites people of a common interest and heritage and informs others in the Columbia University and Momingside communities of Ukranian culture. The members of the club, under the leadership of President Ulana Kekish, Vice President Ivan Lozowy, Treasurer Olec Kruzyszyn, and Secretary Slawka Korduba engage in a wide variety of social and cultural events. Among the most successful of such events is the annual Fall Concert Dance A Day in Columbia, A Night in Ukraine, held in Mcintosh Center, and attended by a consistently large group of both on-campus and off-campus students. Other events sponsored by the club include a Spring Dance, participation in the Barnard Winter Festival, an Easter egg coloring demonstration and workshop, art exhibits in Ferris Booth Hall, a club ski trip, volleyball and soccer teams, lectures and films. Meetings are held on a weekly basis, every Wednesday to which both Ukranian and non-Ukranian students are invited, as the club is already composed of a substantial number of non-Ukranian students. The Barnard Columbia Ukranian club provides a stimulating, valuable asset to Barnard College, building upon a successful past, with the hope of increased growth in the future. BARNARD COLLEGE • COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY NEW YORK NY 10027 Judy Yee, Vice President for Student Activities Nancy Poundstone, President Carolyn Oscar, Officer of the Board Rosemary leda. Vice President for Student Govemn:ient Michele Sivilli, Treasurer What is Undergrad? The Undergraduate Association of Barnard College consists of all registered students at Barnard, and is coordinated by an executive board of five officers. Undergrad promotes student interaction and aw areness through extracurricular activities, and guarantees students ' rights by expressing their opinions and ideas at the Representative Council meetings, and to the administration. Undergrad also oversees and funds all student clubs, organizations, and publications at Barnard. Do you remember . . . Clubs Carnival Rep Council The baby shower for Anne Victoria Shutkin The Undergrad Newsletter Forums on current issues (co-education) Student opinion polls Winter Festival The Student- Alumnae Dinner Bear Pin Awards Spring Festival Bulletin Mortarboard and clubs . . . clubs . . . clubs . . . Well, Undergrad sponsored all this and more! P Women in Health Careers The club was founded to make available to Barnard women information about all different health careers. The club sponsors several Lecture Luncheon series every semester with a special guest lecturer from a different health related career present. Among those careers represented were: Podiatry, Optometry, Medicine and Public Health. Clubs Not Pictured: Black Heights Magazine Catholic Students ' Organization Center for World Affairs Clay Collective Barnard-Columbia Chorus CISPES Community Youth Program Dance Ensemble Barnard-Columbia Debate Council The Flame Gilbert and Sullivan Society Barnard-Columbia Glee Club Jester Korean Students ' Association La Societe Francaise Lesbian Activists at Barnard Reelpolitik The Roundtable Sounds of China Spanish Club Upstart Magazine Young Social Democrats Young Socialist Alliance THE WOMEN ' S CENTER TENTH A center for feminist activities with a large collection of books and periodicals concerning women ' s issues, the Bar- nard Women ' s Center is a vital part of the Barnard community and a service to women everywhere. It is a meeting space for feminist organizations, a special library, and the sponsor of many special events concerned with women ' s issues, includ- ing the Reid Lecture series, the annual The Scholar and the Feminist conference, The Women ' s Video and Film Festi- val, and the Women ' s Issues Luncheons, which attract stu- dents, scholars, and feminists from within the Barnard com- munity and without. The Women ' s Center was established in 1971 with a be- quest from Helen Rogers Reid ' 03. On November 16 and 17, 1981, the Center elaborately celebrated its tenth anniversary, beginning with a public lecture by Mirra Komarovsky, this year ' s Reid Lecturer, and Professor Emeritus of Sociology at Barnard, titled Women Then and Now: A Journey of De- tachment and Engagement. The celebration also featured a Women ' s Issues Luncheon panel discussion with Elizabeth Janeway, noted author and strong supporter of the Center since its founding, Catharine Stimpson, founder and first director of the Center, and Nancy Miller, chairperson of the Women ' s Studies Program. The Luncheon was moderated by Jane Gould, director of the Center since 1972. Student groups held an open dialogue on the issues of abortion, the minority experience at Barnard, and Barnard and Columbia relations. Evening performances honoring the Center included a per- formance featuring Program in the Arts dancers and writers under the direction of Deborah Loomis, and an hour of origi- nal songs, stories and skits by women focusing on women ' s experiences and perceptions. ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION o 9. y y o -3 8 Q «Q ft) fi Q) g Q 8 a 8 S I E CO CD E O I- o ■D O § CO This celebration will be remembered for hon- oring the Women ' s Center, and as a tribute to all women. FOR THE FIRST TIME IN HISTORY, THE FUTURE OF THE WOMEN ' S MOVEMENT IS IN WOMEN ' S HANDS ELIZABETH JANEWAY 64 Playing the Game The season ended . At each regrouping of the team, we are disgustingly affectionate and obviously glad to see each other. The ritualistic, almost continental style of the kisses and embraces we exchange perhaps seems exaggerated to others, but to us it is, by now, natural. We, thirteen women (twelve players and our coach), had managed in a little more than two months to establish an intimate relationship that is hard for outsiders to fathom. In these two months we traveled, practiced, laughed, ate, argued, slept, cried and competed always together. Each of us sharing a part of herself, a part that for some had been kept cloistered inside for years. We faced together things that otherwise would have remained shut away. I would be stretching the truth and the reader ' s credulity if I said that we have all become the best of friends. Personalities clashed, as they are bound to in such proximity, but the love of volleyball, a sealing, healing, cohesive love, acted as a bonding agent for potential cracks in the framework of the team. Though inauspicious may sound trite, it aptly describes our beginnings in early September when team tryouts began. With a new coach, even those of us returning from the previous year had no idea what to expect. The days prior to official tryouts were primarily for conditioning. Conditioning, a deceptively benign term, actually meant the calculated torture of summer-soft bodies at the hands of a merciless coach. Evidence for the thinning effect of conditioning was offered in the rapid decline of the number of women turning out during these practices. Of those still surviving at the end of four days, all but twelve were eliminated — the Barnard Varsity Volleyball Team. Unsuspecting, we naively advanced eagerly into the fray. Certain incidents from the season have. special clarity in my mind, particularly the road trips: The Mansfield Tournament — My first autumn trip through upstate New York, I suffered a severe Catskill Mountain High . There were colors swirling across the hills that I would swear I ' d never seen before. The Colgate Tournament — Upon arrival at the nearby motel we discovered that, coincidentally, two male track teams were being housed there that very same weekend. We women became girls (and foolish ones at that) with amazing alacrity. The Temple Tournament — Actually, for awhile we couldn ' t find it. We circled South Philly (not really the better side of town) for approximately 20 minutes before reaching our destination. Temple was our largest tournament, and the site of our first team-encounter session. Like any other competitive sport, volleyball operates on emotional as well as physical energy. After suffering two consecutive defeats on the first morning of play, the coach diagnosed our problem as a lack of trust and communication, and sat us down, forcing us to talk. And we did. We talked about our families, people we care about, our fears, loves, and how it all comes together in each of our lives. A catharsis, it was a painful, moving time for us as individuals as well as a team. Breaking down walls from which that point were impossible to rebuild, we found openness and honesty the hard way. Our season record read like the printout from a conman ' s lie detector test. We had fought oul selves through every match we played. The coach was confounded by the fear of winning that we apparently all held in common . We lost to teams when we were the superior squad on the floor. In more common terms, we cracked under the pressure (in some cases after holding the initial lead) and defeated ourselves. The Ivy League Championship, however, was a whole new ball game. Competition began Friday morning. Not scheduled for play until 1p.m., we sat and watched two other matches. As I considered the action taking place in the courts, the realization started seeping through me like a trickle through the Dutchboy ' s dike. We could win . . . everything. I exchanged glances with one of my teammates . It was there on her face too. She knew our capacities, what we had trained all season for — to play the game, play it well, and win. It would be nice to report, with fairy tale succintness, that we all lived happily ever after. It didn ' t work out that way. But oh, we played matches that were fast, synchronized and pure joy to be part of. We didn ' t bring home the Ivy trophy, but we did come home vindicated. We had demanded of ourselves the extra effort that winning (and losing well) requires. Better still, we witnessed each other reaching for, finding, and giving more than ever before. We were a team, through and through. Diane Barrans ' 82 Archery coaches: Al Lizzw and Peter Dtllard Date Opponent Loc. Nov. 21 Reading Collegiate Invitational A (Reading, Pa,) Nov, 28 Nassau Bowman Tournament A Dec, 2 Brooklyn H Feb, 6 Eastern U,S, Indoor FITA A (East Stroudsburg, Pa.) Feb, 20 New York State Collegiate H Championship Mar, 20 Mid-Atlantic Indoor Championship A (Reading, Pa,) Apr, 3-4 Atlantic City Invitational A Apr, 24 Philadelphia Invitational A May 12-15 U,S, Intercollegiate Championship A (Mays Landing, N,J.) Additional meets to be announced. Front row: Susan Song, Fanny Chan, Jane Yo, Diane Giordano. Back row: Rosa Haritos, Les- lie Lau, Petra Hubbard (co-captain), Chris Cronin (co-captain). Not pictured: Ellen Knox, Sara Lipton, Lynne Nygaard, Melita Rines, Coach Al Lizzio, Coach Peter Dillard. Archery co-captains Petra Hubbard and Chris Cronin, after outstanding personal performances last year, returned to welcome a team composed largely of newcomers. Coaches Al Lizzio and Peter Dillard developed the team into one of the leading squads in the East. Archers Pin NY Titles; Hubbard Sets New Mark dLSkeibSill Front row: Sansi Sussman (co-captain), Nora Beck (co-captain). Middle row: Cindy Tin, Suzanne Broffman, Sally Persico, Arielle Orlow, Mathilde Sanson, Regina Asaro. Back row: Helen Doyle, Vikki Jackson, Doreen Hennep, Susan Lancoon, Yvonne Serres, Trainer Abby Herzog, and Coach Nancy Kalafus. Basketball Coach: Nancy Kalafus Date Nov. 16 Nov. 18 Nov. 24 Dec. 1 Dec. 4-5 Dec. 7 Dec. 11 Jan. 20 Jan. 22 Jan. 23 Jan. 26 Jan. 29-30 Feb. 2 Feb. 5 Feb. 9 Feb. 13 Feb. 16 Feb. 19 Feb. 20 Feb. 22 Feb. 26-28 Opponent St. Thomas Aquinas (Scrimmage) Alumnae Scrimmage CCNY John Jay Tip-Off Tourney {Smith, Mt. Holyoke, Wellesley, Vassar, Bryn Mawr, Skidmore, Swarthmore) Mt. St. Vincent ' s U.S. Merchant Marine Academy St, Joseph Manhattanville Cornell College of New Rochelle Binghamton Tourney with Russel Sage Keuka Brooklyn College of Staten Island Stony Brook York Lehman New Paltz Vassar NYU NYSAIAW Championship (Manhattanville) Loc. H H A A H H H H H H H A H A H H A A A H A Time 6:00pm 00pm 00pm 30pm 00pm 30pm 00pm 00pm 00pm 30pm 00pm TSA 7:00pm 7:00pm 6:00pm 2:00pm 6:00pm 6:00pm 1:00pm 6:00pm TBA 70 Some Tip-off Tourney games and the Cornell game will be played in the Columbia Gymnasium. All other home events will be held in the Barnard Gymnasium. Cagers Finish Season with 3-Game Win Srreak SECOND AMIHUM. RD INVITATIONAL :-OFF TOURNAMENT Nancy Kalafus has been building up the Barnard Basketball Team through training and recruiting, and her efforts produced this year ' s talented team. Co- captains Nora Beck and Sansi Sussman provided leadership as well as points in the team ' s successful season, which included the Barnard-hosted Tip-Off Tournament in December. x-muHTRy Top row: Theresa Cagliostro, Gopa Kwandala, Coach Kate Moore, Judith McMahon (co-captain), Maria Desloge, Lorna Pier. Bottom row: Theresa Costello, Rebecca Wallach, Ylonka Wills (co-captain), Lisa Ngavatis. Indoor Track and Field Coach: Kate Moore Date Opponent Loc Dec. 6 Farmingdale (Scrimmage) A Jan. 20 Metropolitan Relay Championship A {Pratt University) Jan. 31 Yale Invitational A Feb. 6 Farmingdale A Feb. 7 Princeton Relays A Feb. 13 West Point Invitational A Feb. 21 Metropolitan Athletic Congress Championship (Princeton) A Feb. 27 Ivy Championship A (Harvard) Mar. 6-7 EAIAW Championship A (West Virginia) Mar, 13-14 AIAW Championship A (Uruversity of Northern Iowa) 72 Running in the City mcK The Track and Cross Court try Squads recorded another successful season in 1981-82. In September, the Cross Country team hosted the Barnard Invitational at Van Cortlandt Park, and finished their sea- son with co-captain Ylonka Wills ' competing in the National Championships in Idaho. Coach Kate Moore, and co-captains Judy McMahon and Liz Macomb led a team of mostly juniors and freshmen through both indoor and outdoor seasons highlighted by some impressive individual performances and team victories. 73 FENCTN Fencing Coach: Sharon Everson Date Opponent Loc. Dec. 2 NYU A Dec. 4 Wm. Paterson Stevens A Jan. 23 Cornell H Jan. 26 F.D.U. A Jan. 30 Yale A Feb. 6 Navy, Pace, SUNY Purchase H (T) Feb. 18 Brooklyn H Feb. 20 Harvard, Brandeis, Wellesley A Feb. 23 Penn. H Feb. 27 Princeton, St. John ' s, Hofstra H Mar. 6 Qualifying Round A Mar. 13-14 EAIAW Championship (MIT) A Mar. 27-28 NIWFA Championship A (Wm. Paterson) Apr. 1-3 AlAVV Championship A (Univ. of Wisconsin) Time 6:00pm 00pm 00pm 00pm 00pm 00am 00pm 00am 00pm 00am TBA TBA TBA TBA These meets will be held in the Columbia Gymnasium. All other home events will be held in the Barnard Gymnasium. (T) = Tentative Left to right, along curve: Donna Gaston, Jen- nifer Brown, Laura SiegeL Eve Jochnowitz, Beth McCoy, Susan Marks, Adina Green (co- captain), Makiko Takayama, Tricia Tazuk, Lisa Piazza. Not pictured: Tracy Burton (co- captain). Coach Sharon Everson. 74 Foils End Season 12-5 This year ' s Fencing Team saw the return of Tracy Bur- ton, as well as fine perfor- mances by co-captain Adina Green and the rest of the squad. In a season lasting from December through Ap- ril, the Fencing Bears were a credit to new coach Sharon Everson. Et la! 75 Swimming Diving Coaches: Lynda Calkins- McKenna and Jim Stillson Date Opponent Loc. Time Nov 14 Metro. Relay Carnival at St Peters (Scrimmage) A TBA Nov, 23 Queens A 4 00pm Dec, 5 Penn, A 2 00pm Dec. 6 Metro. Diving Invitational H 8 00am Dec, 7 Stony Brook H 6 00pm Jan, 19 William Paterson A 7 00pm )an 23 Cornel! H 5 00pm Ian, 27 Fordham H 7 00pm Ian 30 Seven Sister Invit, at Vassar A 1 00pm Feb 5-7 Metro. Championships at Fordham A TBA Feb 12 Brooklyn H 7:00pm Feb, 15 New Paltz NYU A 6:00pm Feb. 19-21 Ivy Championships at Brown A TBA Feb. 25-27 NYSAIAW Championship at Cortland A TBA Mar, 4-6 EAIAW Championship at Harvard A TBA Mar. 17-20 AIAW Championship at U. of Texas, Austin A TBA Front row: Lynn Foden, Lisa Gavin, Jean Golden, Lori Miller, Cindy Kaplan, Fran Mattone, Leyn Kawasaki. Back row: Yas- min Houssein, Ilissa Rothschild, Rebecca Owen, Sheryl Eli- kan. Amy Applebaum, Dominique Lorang, Brenda Duffy, Sally Hsu, Marianne Cunningham (co-captain), Helena Meiri, Coach Lynda Calkins-McKenna. Not pictured: Angela Babin, Liz Crawford, Jennifer Deutsch, Diane Dougherty (co- captain), Nicky Einhorn, Laura Garner, Debbi Katzenstein, Maureen MacDonald, Elliza McGrand, Amy Morishima, Pat Noonan, Stephanie Prey, Edith Shine. ■All home meets are held at the Columbia Pool. The Barnard Swimming and Diving Teams endured early-morning practices, and emerged with the best win-loss record in the history of the team. Co-captains Maryanne Cunningham and Diane Dougherty, and coaches Lynda Calkins-McKenna guided the Bears to a second-place finish in the Metropolitan Cham- pionships at Brown, on to the State Championships where Diane Dougherty, Maureen MacDonald, Lori Miller and Pat Noonan, Laura Gabbe, Elliza Mc- Grand, Debbie Katzenstein, and Nicole Einhom set the pace with outstanding swimming and diving. Swim Season Ends Well V©ti EYB A L L On floor: Lesia Haliv. Top row: Coach Mary Curtis, Marianna Huryn, Felice Mueller, Diane Barrans (captain), Michele Boudignon, Nora Beck, Slawka Korduba, Linda Marinaro. Not pic- tured: Naomi Barrell, Valentina Ortiz. The Volleyball team, with veteran coach Mary Curtis, hosted the Barnard Invitational Tournament in October, as well as competing in various other tournaments this fall, high- lighted by the Ivy Championships at Har- vard. Captain Diane Barrans and seniors Linda Marinaro and Michele Boudignon wel- comed the freshmen and returning players who formed one of Barnard ' s strongest vol- leyball squads. Curtis ' SpiUer. TVu-ash NYU V, pre-Season Play 79 TENNK Tennis-Spring Coach: Debra Abshire Date Opponent Mar. 27 Cornell Apr. 2 Fordham Apr. 3 Lafayette Apr. 6 lona Apr. 16-18 Middle States Tournament Apr. 20 St. Jotin ' s Apr. 23-25 Seven Sister Tournament May 12-15 EAIAVV Championship May 26-June 2 AIAW Championship All home matches will be held at Baker Field. Loc. Time A 10:00am A 3:30pm A 10:00am TBA 3:00pm A H A A A TBA 3:00pm TBA TBA TBA Front row: Amy Briguglio, Karen Claxton (co-captain). Amy Landers (co-captain). Back row: Maria Celedonio, Kay Diaz, Minna Ferziger, Kathy Sevalla, Karen Panton, Coach Debra Abshire. Not pictured: Ellen Cassidy, Jennifer Deutsch, Laura Lau, Kris Piirimae, Leesa Shapiro. Tennis 81-82 Features Balanced Offense 80 The 1981-82 Tennis Team, led by senior co-captains Karen Claxton and Amy Landers, completed the fall season with a 2-4 record. A strong combination of returning players and newcomers, the Ten- nis Bears made strong showings at Eastern and New York State Championships in the fall, and took part in three spring tourna- ments including the traditional rivalry of the Seven Sisters Tour- nament. With the leadership of new coach Debra Abshire, the Barnard Tennis Team completed its most ambitious and strenuous year ever. COL, THt TRUSTEES AND FACULTY OF BARNARD COLLEGE REQUEST THE HONOR OF YOUR PRESENCE AT THE INAUGURATION OF ELLEN V. PUTTER AS PRESIDENT OF THE COLLlGE ON SUNDAY. THE TWENTY-SECOND OF NOVEMBER NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHTY ONE AT THREE-THIRTY O ' CLOCK THE RIVERSIDE CHURCH IN NEW YORK CITY AND AT THE RECEPTION IN BARNARD HALL FOLLOWING THE INAUGURAL CEREMONY With full academic pageantry and a clarion of trumpets, Barnard welcomed home one of its own on Sunday, November 22, when Ellen V. Putter was inaugurated as the College ' s fifth president. President Putter, a 1971 magna cum laude graduate of Barnard, is the first alumna of the College to return as its head since Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve took office in 1911. The inaugural ceremonies were held amid the pomp and splen- dor of Riverside Church. A trumpet fanfare introduced an academic procession of 300 — dressed in brilliant robes of blue, scarlet, purple, and gold. The marchers included students, faculty and administrators, as well as representatives of more than 90 other colleges and universities. Barnard Reporter, December 1981 82 CHARLES S. OLTON Dean of Faculty MICHAEL L SOVERN President of Columbia University The following excerpts are from President Putter ' s inaugural address: Thomas Wolfe was wrong: you can go home again — and for me returning to Barnard is just that. I could not be more pleased and proud about anything than serving as President of this grand and important institution. The fact that I say this after having served as the College ' s acting president for a year is testimony either to the blind loyalties of an adoring Barnard daughter or to the considered opinion of an otherwise rational woman who appreciates excellence when she sees it. It is really a bit of both. American education, and in particular undergraduate education, has always represented an individual ' s and the country ' s best chance. Whether you believe that it is the role of higher education to facilitate social mobility for individuals, to prepare future leaders, or to create an educated and humane citizenry, the fact is that we look to higher education to per- form one or more of those tasks. As John Stuart Mill stated, Men are men before they are lawyers or physicians or merchants or manu- facturers; and if you make them capable and sensible men, they will make themselves capable and sensible lawyers or physicians. I need hardly pause to add that the same is true for women. What we are talking about here is providing our young with edu- cational skills which will train them to think, to learn, and to communicate. We are talking about providing them with knowl- edge and pure intellectual stimula- tion, and an appreciation of the value of what is good and true and lovely — a kind of connoiseurship of ethics and human qualities upon which they can draw as they go forth and confront the world. We are talking about maintaining the integrity of higher education by providing a balanced exposure to different fields of study which may not be so obviously valuable, but which in the end is ever so much more so. In short, we are talking about preserving our best chance. We at Barnard . . . stand today with a founda- tion that consists of a clear and long-standing mission, a reputation for excellence, an estab- lished record of success, a superb faculty and student body, a love affair with New York City, and a driving, proud spirit. Throughout its 92 year history, Barnard has been affiliated with Columbia University in one way or another. And as the phrase goes, ours has been a strange and wonderful relationship — with the emphasis on strange or wonderful depending upon the moment in history. The issues at stake, although of primary con- cern to those of us at Barnard and Columbia, also have repercussions for the world of higher edu- cation as a whole. That world should be watch- ing these discussions not, as has sometimes been the case in the past, from the standpoint of observing two warring Balkan states, but rather from the vantage of monitoring important edu- cational outcomes. The Barnard-Columbia relation- ship is a cooperative enterprise which links two separate, very different and equally excellent undergraduate in- stitutions — one which is female and has as its backbone a faculty of scholars who are devoted to teach- ing undergraduates, as well as to their own important research; the other, which is male and has as its backbone a faculty of scholars who are leaders in the world of graduate study and research, as well as being engaged in undergraduate teaching. The Barnard-Columbia relationship makes available to undergraduates at each exposure to two different philosophies and approaches to un- dergraduate education, providing them with the full and unusually rich curricular offerings of each. Ours is precisely the type of unique alternative in undergraduate educa- tion which should be preserved — not only for the benefit of Barnard and Columbia students, but also in the interest of promoting pluralism in American higher education today. Let this day mark a new era for Barnard College. Let us return to focusing on what is our fundamental business — providing a first- rate liberal arts education to our students. The mission of Barnard College has been and shall continue to be the provision of undergraduate educa- tion of the highest quadity in an envi- ronment which is particularly sensi- tive to the intellectual and personal needs of its students, and in which women ' s abilities and aspirations flourish through their full representa- tion and participation in the Col- lege. Young women still benefit from in- stitutions which are geared to their particular needs. And this is not true merely for our students, but also for our women faculty members and for our alumnae. It is equally important for young men, who benefit not merely from social and intellectual in- teraction with our women students, but also from exposure to female leadership such as that which they will experience after they graduate. 85 After 25 years at Barnard . . . A fitter Dean Schmitter! This poem ' s for one of our deans Who has helped us with all of her means. Her humor has cheered us. Her kindness endeared us. Her charm fills our school ' til it teems. She ' s celebrating her twenty-fifth. And we don ' t want her to become a myth. So with chuckles and titters We ' ll say, Hey, Dean Schmitter Please stay for your seventy-fifth! 86 ADMINISTRATION i N K f?I£D D ■RILO J -RIED S ' R I E C V R Y K L U N ' U N G EL ■U R M A N 3 A L L W A A ? J T A N 3 A R N E R 3ARRIS0 3 A U T T E R : A VR IC 3EIoER ?EIS IN 3 E R G S S i f T R S n N Y 3 I A C C I C 3ILL ME 3 I V E N S 3 1. A T 7 F R 3LECKMA 3 L I C K A 3 L I C K E P 3LU CK P 3LUECK 30ERL Y A IDEN -QLOBERu Vilma Bomemann, Dean of Academic Services i A u n 1 K 3 OLDEN JEAN M GOLDENBEPG EDITH 30LjSTEIN ' DOREEN 3 3LnSTFTN PrNTNA 30N ' ZALEZ SANDRA M 3000IS TRACY A 3 0RCE ISABELLE J 30? HON ;[J AMMF jOULD VICTORIA ANN I3RABER SARAh R 3RADI PAOLA GREAVES JACjUFLINE I GREENBERG KATHERINE GREENBERG SJSAN M GREENFIELD uINA E 3REENWALD ShARI L GREGORY i3 R I F F I S G R S S M A GROSZ G U I R A G C 3ULL0 G U T M A N GUZMAN MABEP MAFFES HA I LP AP MALAGA HALPERN HAM MAP HA ILTC HANDELS HANOMA H A J K W I T H A N N A G HAR ARI HARDIM HARRIS HA VDAL HFDTN P HEISLEP HE NIG C HERRING HIERHOL HOBRECK MILDRED E Grace King, Dean of Seniors 88 Charles Olton, Dean of Faculty Virginia Shaw, Registrar iima name card ±f_ you have not ii message from the Senior Clasi k:ted forms to the person desijj (n your program form (list of ;ide.) BARNARD IDENTIFICATION CARD— Linda McCann, Bursar GENE RAL (6 courses from the following): 1 ) Art history, music, dance 65-66 2) Literature (not in translation) 3) Philosophy, religion (except history of religion courses), oriental humanities, readings in the humanities, Mumanitics CI00I-C1002 4) History, history of religion courses, oriental civilization 5) Mathematics 6) Anthropology, economics, geography, linguistics, political science, sociology MAJOR (8 courses minimum): PHY C1002Y E POS V3313V A PE 60 B ECO GEO GEO 35 PE 90X Jane Gould, Director of Women ' s Center CHftRNOFF TINA CHIN WAI WAN CHOI EUMI L CHU SHIRLEY CIRASUOLO ANNE CLAFFY KATHLEEN A CLARKE P BECCA D CLAXTON KAPt-N CLEMETT SARA COHEN JOYCE CAROL CDHFN RHONHA J CONN ELIZABETH CONRAD NANCY C0R8ELLI LAJREN A roPRAnn ii7annf a COSTA DANIELA M COSTELLO TERESA MARIE COTTER MARIl E COVINGTON SALLY CRAwLEY JENNIFER creatupa chkis crum alberta cunningham maryannf c ' jrran pamela curtis karen l dapice denise louise MAinFN - MAkTTN CEITSCH LISA M DEKOVEN SIMQNE F PELf AN BETH nrMATTrn rAKni l Esther Rowland, Assistant Dean of Studies, Pre- Professional Advisor 89 Career Services Staff, Back row. Left to right: Clare Cornelia, Mary Walsh, Maisy Houghton, Judy Pierce. Front row. Left to right: Frances Unsell, Providence Rodrigues, Martha Green Director, Kim Healey Assoc. Director, Mary Ahem Stewart, Katherine Piermont. Not pictured: Dianne Leach. Elizabeth Corbett, Director of Library Services Library Staff, Standing, Left to right: Georgia Costalas, Larysa Ziclyk, Gareth Hughes, Elizabeth Baez, Meryl Schneider, Tatiana Keis, Nancy Leonard, Stephanie Krstulovic, Mary Jo Rhodes, Andrea Scofield, Patricia Ballou, Ruth Lilienstein, Mary Giunta. Seated, Left to right: Mary Ellen Tucker, Elizabeth Corbett, Natalie Sonevytsky. Prof. Barbara Novak ANCIENT STUDIES Assoc. Prof. Lydia Lenaghan Mot Pictured: Helene P. Foley ARCHITECTURE Asst. Prof. Waltraude Woods Not Pictured: Visiting Prof. Robert Wirine ART HISTORY Assoc. Prof. Jane Rosenthal, Chair Not Pictured: Adj. Prof. Brian Dougherty, Asst. Prof. Anne Lowen- thal. Visiting Asst. Prof. Judith Bemstock. Asst. Prof. Joseph Masheck Assoc. Prof. Dorothea Nyberg Prof. Barbara Novak 95 96 Visiting Prof. Donald Rogers Not Pictured: Lecturer Clar Wu DANCE Assoc. Prof. Sandra Center ECONOMICS Asst. Prof. Andre Burgstaller Instructor Ronnie Lowenstein 101 EDUCATION Asst. Prof. Janice Thaddeus Not Pictured: Adj. Assoc. Prof. Diana Chang, Adj. Assoc. Prof. Albert Murray, Adj. Asst. Prof. Wendy Fairey, Associate Marjorie Dobkin. Asst. Prof. Alfred Bendixen 104 Prof. Kenneth Janes Associate Florian Stuber 110 Prof. Brigitte Bradley, Chair Prof. Elaine Pagels 113 ITALIAN Visiting Prof. Ricardo Bruscayli, Prof. Maristella de Panizza Lorch. LINGUISTICS Instructor Robert May MATHEMATICS Prof. Joan Birman Prof. Joseph Malone, Chair Not Pictured: Asst. Prof. John Harer 114 Maristella de Panizza Lorch, Chair 115 MUSIC Asst. Prof. James Baker 117 ORIENTAL STUDIES Prof. John Meskill, Chair Asst. Prof. Jeffrey Blustein Not Pictured: Lecturer David Gitomer Prof. Barbara Miller PHILOSOPHY Not Pictured: Visiting Prof. Marshall Cohen, Asst. Prof. Re- becca Goldstein. Prof. Mary Mothersill, Chair Prof. Sue Larson POLITICAL SCIENCE Asst. Prof. Debra Miller 122 Asst. Prof. Robert Remez Asst. Prof. Stanley E. Nyberg nando Alverez, Adj. Asst. Prof. Howard Andrews, Adj. Asst. Prof. Wendy McKenna, Adj. Asst. Prof. Barbara Schecter. 125 RELIGION 127 SOCIOLOGY Prof. Mirella Servedidio, Chair 128 Lecturer Theresa Rogers Not Pictured: Prof. Mirra Komarovsky, Asst. Prof. Mary Ruggie, Asst. Prof. Viviana Zelizer, Lecturer Shulamith Staussier. SPANISH Not Pictured: Instructor Perla Rosencwaig Asst. Prof. Helen Farberde Aguilar THEATRE Prof. Kenneth Janes, Director of Minor Latham Playhouse. Not Pictured: Instructor June Ekman, As- sociate Shirley Kaplan, Instructor Dennis Parichy. Associate Luz Castanos 130 URBAN STUDIES i Prof. Demetrios Caraley, Chair Asst. Prof. Ester Fuchs, Coordinator Prof. Bernard Barber Prof. Paula Rubel Prof. Leonard Zobler Prof. Deborah Milenkowitch WOMEN ' S STUDIES Not Pictured: Adj. Asst. Prof. Assoc. Prof. Nancy Miller, Chair Johanna Lessinger, Prof. Lila Braine, Asst. Prof. Julia Chase, Lecturer Joan Dulchin, Asst. Prof. Helene Foley, Prof. Mirra Koma- rovsky. Prof. Maire Kurrik, As- sociate Cynthia Novack, Lecturer Susan R. Sacks, Assoc. Prof. Mar- 132 Prof. Tatiana Greene Reflections of a Pre-Professional Grub Pre-: My sixth course Requirement: Applications Suggested: An independent study teaching conformity with a lab down at Kaplan ' s. Learn a new alphabet: LSAT, MCAT, DAT, GRE, GMAT, etc. Art lesson: Master the technique of quickly and neatly filling in little dots. Cost: A lot, but I would pay any amount to those schools who so graciously judge me Pre-work. Pre- is a popular course. A friend and I meet daily as we submit our work to the corner mailbox and together we pray that our full envelopes will reach their destinations safely and on time. Why be a part of the Pre- program? Why go to grad school? A desire for credentials, scholarly development, a love of ivory, to serve humanity. During finals I wonder if I want more than this. No . . . but I do want a particular professional definition to direct my abilities. Number of this book Total number of books handed in Date ■BARNARD COLLEGE xaminations at Barnard College are given under the Honor e which states the students do not ask for, give, or receive in examinations and do not use papers or books in a manner I uthorized by the instructor. Any student or member of the ty who has first-hand knowledge of a violation has an obliga- te report the case to the Chairperson of the Honor Board. 135 136 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS ROSA V. ALONSO PATRICIA KING President Vice-President MICHELLE LYNN NANCY TUTTLE Treasurer Secretary m in the beginning . . . Profile of ' 82 The members of the Class of 1982 who arrived on campus this fall represent one of the largest classes in its history to enter Barnard. A singularly able group of wom- en, they were selected from a pool of 1816 applicants. In addition to the dramatic in- crease in the total number of freshman ap- plications, early decision applications from students who applied to Barnard as their first-choice college last fall increased by 35%, underlining strong interest in Bar- nard and New York City. The increasing positive perception of New York City may in part account for the dramatic 24% increase in applications from beyond the commuting area. This increase in resident applications is reflected in the class which includes 258 residents and 253 commuters, of whom approximately 328 will be housed in campus residence halls. The strong interest students have in en- viromental, social, and political issues is evident in their future plans. 375 freshmen (73.4% of the class) have defined career goals, and while we know that many will reconsider these goals, they are reflective of their commitment. For the first time in the last several years, law has edged out medicine as the most popular vocational choice. Seventy-eight students (15% of the class, up from 11% last year) hope to enter law school and 77 wish to enter the health professions (15%, down from 19% last year). Journalism continues to be the third most frequent choice (up to 9% this year from 6% last). Interest in journalism is fol- lowed by business (5.3%), international re- lations (4.5%), education (4.3%, up from 1.9% last year), and creative writing (4.1%). In addition, the class includes would-be politicians, psychologists, ac- tresses, musicians, conservationists, and science researchers. In a dramatic shift from last year, the class of 1982 has most frequently chosen English as a probable major. 115 students (22.5%) wish to major in English, more than twice last year ' s 11%. Biology has dropped from first choice last year with 14%, to 63 students or 12% this year. The next choices, political science (10%) and psychology (8%), are the same as last year. orientation 1978 139 The wine and cheese event is one of Barnard ' s best-loved traditions. From Orientation to Senior Week, members of the Class of 1982 have been exposed to scores of wine and cheese-s. They have learned to appreciate the civilized pleasures of a midday chablis in the familiar plastic cup, an after-class muenster, an early evening Ritz cracker, often in the merry com- pany of faculty members and administrators. The Senior Class Board and the staff of Mortar- board, recognizing the merits of the wine and cheese, proudly co-sponsored two such events for members of the graduating class, on November 11, 1981, and February 16, 1982. We hope this page brings you pleasant memories of that basic Barnard experience: the wine and cheese. As we close our textbooks and walk through the Barnard gates for the last time, most of our thoughts are consumed with the future. Some of us will be continuing our education in graduate school, others in the work-force, and some by traveling. While it is hard at this time not to focus our attentions on ourselves, we must also think of responsibility. Not just of the responsibility of fulfilling the dreams and aspirations we may have acquired over these four years, but responsi bility to the institution that gave us the confidence to have those dreams and aspirations in the first place. It is not by paying homage to Barnard that we fulfill that responsibility, but by having the courage to pursue our goals in the face of barriers without compromising our integrity. Let Barnard College serve as an example. Its strength lies not in brick and mortar, but in the people it has brought together. It is upon the courage of the administration, the professors, and above all the students that Barnard must rely on. As we leave Barnard College most of us will be facing a vast unknown; it will take courage to persevere. Let us never forget the importance of integrity. For no worthy goal can ever be accomplished by the loss of dignity. AMERICAN STUDIES Nancy Katrina Poundstone ANCIENT STUDIES Lauren K. Taaffee English Erika Spongberg Amelia Zalcman Amelia Zalcman ANTHROPOLOGY Rebecca Clarke Sandrina Givens 147 Terri Levine Rosenblum Karen O. Claxton Gina Hassen Margaret Meskill Carol Abramowitz Lori Jane Marsden Naomi Vogelfanger Joan Bernstein Tina Charnoff ART HISTORY Louise Marie Cannavo Valerie M. Galmes De Esteve 151 152 Andrea Patrice DiVemiera Irene E. Draga Beth Hillelsohn J. Yasmin Houssein Tracy LaFond Barrie Ellen Langer 1 Madeline R. LoDuca Lubin Hajar + Psychology 167 Jocelyn L. Villaruz Yvette C. Yamcek BIOCHEMISTRY CHEMISTRY CLASSICS Julia Ellenberg Linda Peteanu + Biochemistry COMPUTER SCIENCE Shirley Chu Ella Fung 173 Mary Lam 1 ECONOMICS A Wonda Liu Niki Mangos Ellen Villamill Grace Wang 185 Valerie Lena Cercone Eumi Choi 186 Elizabeth Conn + Political Science Carol Ann Dematteo Donya Fahmy + Art History Jayne Fargnoli 188 Marilyn Feit Miriam Haber Nachama Halpern Laura Ingber Teresa A. Jackson Eve Keller Sari Kolatch Dolores Kong Sylvia Lavin 195 197 Juliet Whitcomb Jan A. Ancker Lisa Kirsten Backe Carol Ruth Bouchner Marie Cotter Dina Greenfield Laura loachim Eve Maxine Jacob son Elana Kanter Ellen Kelly Ritchie Debra Weiss ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT Ellen Drucker Claire Garrison 200 Marisa Lomanto FOREIGN AREA STUDIES Wai Wan Chin Christine S. Herring East Asian Studies Italian Studies 201 E. Michele Honick Middle Eastern Studies Elizabeth Kemble French Area Studies Sato Nobuko East Asian Studies Julie Pantelick Catherine Caplin East Asian Studies Judith Kari French Area Studies Cynthia Peters Miller African Studies Lisa Wolfe Middle Eastern Studies FRENCH Ruth Lazor Giuliana Musilli + History Cynthia Rotell Martine Thurim Andrea L. Click Lysa Hochroth + Spanish GEOCRAPHY Laurie Baker Ileanna Tsamas 204 GERMAN HEALTH STUDIES Victoria Maizes HISTORY Rosa Victoria Alonso Lisa P. Bambino 206 Maryanne Cunningham Bimbla Dindial 212 Erica Z olberg + Art History ITALIAN Laura Grossman LATIN Barbara Stearns LINGUISTICS MATHEMATICS 215 MUSIC Lisa Ferretti Yolanda Navarro-Guerl Dorothy Jean Papadakos Emily Phillips 217 liana Weisel PHILOSOPHY Anne Aghion Julia Boaz + English Eleanor Imster Ottilie Jarmel Kathryn Korstanje Nehama Dresner 218 PHYSICS Vivian Glueck POLITICAL SCIENCE Laura Amman n Alyssa Avidor 219 Joy Bejasa Lisa Belzberg 220 224 Michele Lynn Elise McKay Caroline Hanshe Noe 225 Paula Rubenstein Meredith Savitt Deborah Schick Elizabeth Wright Kathleen Wu Olivia King Canter Susan B. DiPaola Elhabashi Hala Miriam Lopez Laura Miklos Nasrin Nini Ordoubadi Daphne Anne Pinkerson Robin Seigerman Martha Von Conta Heimi Yoon 230 PROGRAM IN THE ARTS Vanessa Baran Simone DeKoven Writing 232 Eileen McManus Creative Writing Julia Nordlund Theatre Wanda Phipps Theatre Sarah E. Wrench Theatre Dorothy Dale Wilson Writing Deborah Beshaw Theatre Jane Dorian Susan G. Cebulatone Theatre Maria Anna Zimmerman Music Lisa Jennifer Selzman Creative Writing Rebecca Siegel Dance 233 PSYCHOLOGY Romilla Anwar Bonnie Aronowitz Amy Baker 234 Lucia Chan + Education Alberta M. Crum Cathiyn Ann Julie Devons Laurie Dien Barbara Gluck Troy Robbin Hailpam Alice Horn Mindy Horowitz Tamar Sara Kahane Pamela Koslyn Donna Henig Kravetz Paula Lee Marlene Noveck Donna Marie Pevney Susanne Rosen Janie Rudolph 243 RELIGION Kathleen Margaret Allen Brunilda Veronica Alvarado 249 Hewon Kim Anne Lipsitz Barbara Saperstein Anna Maria Bouza Susan Meryl Greenberg Ziva Simon Sheila Lieberman Elida Rivas URBAN STUDIES 253 Janis L. Hardiman + Economics Martha McCorkle Lisa Rosenweig 254 WOMEN ' S STUDIES Marilyn Yvette Scott + Anthropology Lisa Abelow 955 Park Ave. New York, NY 10028 Jill B. Baum 945 Fifth Ave. New York, NY 10021 Kathleen Ann Claffy 107 Woodhaven Lane Seabrook, TX 77586 Carol Abramowitz 58 Rochester Rd. Newton, MA 02158 ' Barbara W. Berkman 1686 Greenway Blvd. Valley Stream, NY 11580 Karen O. Claxton 523 West 121st St. New York, NY 10027 Jill Abramson 827 Peninsula Blvd. Woodmere, NY 11598 Joan Bernstein 315 E. 72nd St., Apt. 9E New York, NY 10021 Rhonda J. Cohen 12 Friebel Rd. Albany, NY 12208 Kathleen M. Allen 1900 Lilac N.W. Albuq., NM 87104 Sibel Bessim 24 Mountain View Drive Thiells, NY 10984 Elizabeth Conn 10 Brooklands 1E BronxviUe, NY 10708 Rosa Victoria Alonso 5129 Bergenline Avenue, Apt. West New York, NJ 07903 6 Verna Adair Bigger 2223 Poplar Grove St. Baltimore, MD 21216 Nancy Dean Conrad 4 De Ronde Rd. Monsey, NY 10952 Brunilda Veronica Alvarado 139-51 87th Road Jamaica, NY 11435 Adrienne Birnbaum 26 Norwood Rd. Yonkers, NY 10710 Suzanne A. Corrado 22-19 126 St. College Point, NY 11356 Elena Mary Alvarez 511 West 232nd St., Apt. Riverdale, NY 10463 E22 Barri-Sue Black 136 Bellingham Road Chestnut Hill, MA 02167 Terri Costello 20-70 28th St. New York, NY 11105 Laura Ammann King George Drive Boxford, MA 01921 Julia Elizabeth Boaz 8122 Throeau Dr. Bethesda, MD 20034 Marie Cotter 35 Nowick Lane Smithtown, NY 11787 Romilla Anwar 25-49 86th St. Jackson Heights, NY 11369 Annamaria Bonza 138 Sycamore Dr. New Hyde Park, NY 11040 Chris Creatura 2785 Broadway, Apt. 3-L New York, NY 10025 Georgiamarie Arvanitis 147 Manhattan Terrace Dumont, NJ 07628 Carol Ruth Bouchner 333 W. 57th St., 507 New York, NY 10019 Maryanne Cunningham 65 Park Terrace West New York, NY 10034 Elpida Athanasatos 752 W. 178th St., Apt. New York, NY 10033 lA Adena Burnstein 2245 E. 65th St. Brooklyn, NY Carol Ann DeMatteo 18 Strathmore Dr. Loudonville, NY 12211 Alyssa Avidor 9373 Byron Ave. Surfside, FL 33154 Nina Bramhall 7 Gates Farm RED Tisbury, MA 02568 Helen Demetrakopoulos 40-23 67th St. Woodside, NY 11377 Muna Azzo 144-03 Bayside Ave. Flushing, NY 11354 Olivia King Canter 920 Redding Rd. Fairfield, CT 06430 Cathryn Ann Julie Devons Lewis Road Irvington, NY 10533 Lisa Kirsten Backe 107 West Aliens Lane Philadelphia, PA 19119 Christine Louise Cardinale 147 Trinity Place West Hempstead, NY 11552 Laurie R. Dien 6 Dumbarton St. Louis, MO 63132 Laurie Baker 65188 Park Heights Ave. Baltimore, MD 21215 Valerie Lena Cercone 211-10 33rd Road Bayside, NY 11361 Susan B. DiPaola 940 Park Ave. Manhasset, L.I., NY 11030 Lisa Rose Bambino 115 South Barry Ave. Mamaroneck, NY 10543 Angela Mei Chan 140 Nassau St., Apt. 4C New York, NY 10038 Andrea Patrice DiVernieri 22 Hilltop Terrace Staten Island, NY 10304 Carolyn Band 167 Woodward St. Newton Highlands, MA 02161 Lucia Chan 41-02 58th St. Woodside, NY 11377 Gordana N. Djordjevic 30-60 Crescent St., Apt. 5M Astoria, NY 11102 Colleen Barr 6 Ledge Rd. Hanover, NH 03755 Tina Lynn Charnoff 805 Lamberton Dr. Silver Spring, MD 20902 Grace M. Dodier 1840 Lancaster Dr., NE Salem, OR 97305 Diane Marie Barrans P.O. Box 3156 Juneau, AK 99803 Ava Chien 239 East 51st St. New York, NY 10022 Lourdes Margarita Dominguez 5001 Park Avenue 16E West New York, NJ 07093 256 Jane E. Dorian 85 East End Ave. New York, NY 10028 Irene E. Draga 10-14 141st St. Malba, NY 11357 Phyllis Furman 325 Brentwood Ave. Cherry Hill, NJ 08002 Ann Gardner zuD loaKum i kwy. lzzj Alexandria, VA 22304 Ariane Greep Susser Weg 213 6213 NE Maastricht The Netherlands Laura Grossman 21 Pilgrim Rd. Waban, MA Nehama Dresner lis Fi ctiA nnH Or Deerfield, IL 60015 Lori Garjian 12 Jefferson Ave. Tenafly, NJ 07670 Michelle A. Grosz i-M Yellowstone diva. Forest Hills, NY 11375 Elizabeth Droz 7(1-11 88t-h Ave Woodhaven, NY 11421 Glaire Garrison 69 Keegan ' s Lane Staten Island, NY 10308 Helen A. Guiragossian 5355 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale, NY 10471 Ellen Ruth Drucker 46 Lorijean Lane E. Northport, NY 11731 Guadalupe Gautier 382 W;iHswnrth Avp New York, NY Antonina M. Gullo jJUiD KOL erts Ave. Bronx, NY 10461 Sharen Ivy Duke ID Vinrpnt RH Spring Valley, NY 10977 Ingrid M. Geis New York, NY 10025 Maria Guzman 6038 Highland Place West New York, NJ Julia Eilenberg 4909 Sangamore Rd. Bethesda, MD 20016 Maria Anna Georgsson 1Q ShnrpHalp Dr Manhasset, NY 11030 Caroline Halama DOX ZOZ Shoreham, NY 11786 Deborah Russell Ellwood 12 Auldwood Lane Rumson, NJ 07760 Evelyn Giaccio 150-35 28th Ave. Flushing, NY 11354 Nachama Y. Halpem lU iz woousaaie ur. Silver Spring, MD 20901 Marina E. Elser Tuxedo Park, NY 10987 Sandrina Givens 79 F;i ;t 119th St Ant 6 New York, NY 10035 Mary Patricia Ham Calvert Circle Kennet Square, Pennsylvania Sharon B. Epstein _JiO VVlIltlCllC lJI . East Meadow, NY 11554 Stephanie Glass AC Pino RiHrro 1? H 1 ine ixiuge i u. Fairfield, CT 06432 Janis L. Hardiman 4301 E. 29th Ave. Denver, CO 80207 Susana Escalante-Escobar OiU LJail I Ul lU i£c Ave., TT-J Bronx, NY 10467 liana Glatzer 1 in ?f ARth Dr Flushing, NY 11367 Randi-Jean Guthrie Hedin loss W TnHi n Hillc PI Phoenix, AZ 85023 Valeria M. Galmes De Esteve 71 Fact 74th Ant on New York, NY 10021 Emilie F. Gleckman 91 Rampir Hill IJrl zi ixamey mil i a. Wayland, MA 01778 Rachel A. Heisler rlr 77 ? Rparh IIQth t L U L. D DcdCn l.J in J . BeUe Harbor, NY 11694 Shari Pallet 81 S Rprklpv t New Milford, NJ 02646 Andrea L. Glick 71 Sherwood Lane Norwich, CT 06360 Christine Herring 777 Wawprlv PI IF Z.Z. vvdvciiy 1 1. jc New York, NY 10074 Jayne Fargnoli TTT Dal VJala jX. Providence, RI 02909 Cheryl dicker zu Durrey ljt. New RocheUe, NY 10804 Michele Hierholzer joj L- ' Udiie o . ■Los Angeles, CA 90039 Katherine Munro Fergusson IQfl Plarc rr r r f A j= JfKC i U Idrtrlllwllt AVtr. , rrO New York, NY 10027 Vivian Rose Glueck DUiion I lace journ New York, NY 10022 Beth Hillelsohn oou r I , VV as nint lU n we., r pi. New York, NY 10040 Lisa Ferretti North Reading, MA 01864 Jean Marie Golden 7R William Qt iLD VVlllldlTl Jl . Lincoln Park, NJ 07035 Lysa Hockroth HQ? Pirct- A o Ar f tf R 1 1 z nrbi aVc-, pi. ttod New York, NY 10021 Ruth Fischbein Maplewood, N] 07040 Doreen Goldstein 51 Rockaway Ave. Marblehead, MA 01945 E. Michele Honick oo 1 7 VV 1 iiid iiibu ii ve • Baltimore, MD 21215 Marie Christine Fontanel 00 ± VVcbl CllU Ave:. New York, NY 10025 Susanne Gordan zo vauey iviiu jv. Worcester, MA 01642 Alice Fong Horn 7U DurKe ve. Bronx, NY 10469 Rena R. Fredman 4819 N. Idlewood Court Peoria, IL 61614 Sarah Graber 734 Vill;i CAnri St St. Louis, MO 63132 J. Yasmin Houssein 409 Wp ;t 44th t New York, NY 10036 Judith A. Pried 1063 Pinebrook Blvd. New Rochelle, NY 10804 Paola Cristina Gradi I 1 a Ac m a ra 1 A Rome, Italy Petra K. Hubbard f ' Fnrp ;t C, pr RH ui ? ruicbi vj fell i u . Valley Cottage, NY 10989 Vivian A. Pried 64-77 Alderton St. Forest Hills, NY 11375 Mindy Gregory 3711 Hamilton St. Philadelphia, PA 19104 Kathlyn Hufnagel 19 Ritch Drive Ridgefield, CT 06877 Ella Fung 2954 Brighton First St. Brooklyn, NY 11235 Susan Meryl Greenberg 35 Winter Lane Watchung, NJ 07060 Nancy Hulett 70 Browning Road Short Hills, NJ 07078 Judith E. Ilberman 314 W. 105th St., Apt. IB New York, NY 10025 Oksana Kurowycky 75 East 7th St. New York, NY 10003 Idalia Lopez 4489 Broadway New York, NY 10040 Eleanor Dodson Imster 6202 Westminster St. Louis, MO 63130 Wendy Lee Kutlaw 180 Chadotte Place Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632 Mariam Lopez 1701 Wa-Kee ' Na Drive Miami, Florida Kathy-Ann Irish 115-19 225th St. Queens, NY 11411 Pamela Laber 257 W. 86th St. New York, NY 10024 Michele Lynn 8 Edward Lane Spring Valley, NY 10977 Olena Jacenko 715 W. 175th St. New York, NY 10033 Chong Mi Lah 98-40 57th Ave. Corona, NY 11368 Katherine M. Maatsch 84 Garfield St. Dumont, NJ 07628 Teresa A. Jackson 364 Orange Road, Apt. C-8 Montclair, N] 07042 Sharon M. Landman 230 Oak Knoll Rd. Lakewood, NJ 08701 Helen Ann Maclsaac 412 East Capitol St. NE Washington, DC 20003 Ottilie L. Jarmel 41 West 86th St. 9K New York, NY 10024 Anna W. Lee 48-35 92nd St. Elmhurst, NY 11373 Angela Marie Macropoulos 2 Lucille Court Massapequa, NY 11758 LaDonna Jung 1502 Martingale Place North Tustin Hills, CA 92705 Paula Lee 957 Coney Island Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11230 Niki Mangos 184 Bay Ridge Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11220 Tamar Z. Kahane 3755 Henry Hudson Pkwy. Riverdale, NY 10463 Winnie Y. Lee 8604 Montpelier Dr. Laurel, MD 20708 Sandhya Malhotra 59-21 Calloway St., Apt. 5-S New York, NY 11368 Susan Kahn 371 Woodbridge Rd. Rockville Centre, NY 11570 Helen Leibler 69-39 Yellowstone Blvd. Forest Hills, NY 11375 Lori Marsden 967 Jefferis Bridge Rd, West Chester, PA 19380 Julie Lawton Kalberer 145 Pound Hill Rd. North Smithfield, RI Heidi Lynn Lewis 53 Parlin Lane Watchung, NJ 07060 Linda L. Marshall R. D. 3 Northfield Rd. Waldon, NY 13856 Judy E. Katz 5511 Shady Grove Rd. Memphis, TN 38119 Sheila Lieberman 37 Mayflower Rd. Chestnut Hill, MA 02167 Arlene T. McCarthy 2236 D ' Abadie St. New Orleans, LA 70119 Cindy E. Kaye 32-22 92nd St. Jackson Hts., NY 11369 Joan K. Lieser 1048 Coolidge Road Elizabeth, NJ 07208 Sandra L. Mickiewicz 31 Crestview Dr. Pittsford, NY 14534 Eve Keller 38 Beverly Rd. Great Neck, NY 10021 Susan A. Lifsey 8802 Curtis Terrace Wyndmoore, PA 19118 Laura A. Miklos 12 Ridge Rd. Mt. Kisco, NY 10549 Elizabeth Kemble 39 Garden PI. Edgewater, NJ 07020 Phoebe Lin 32-32 76th St. Jackson Heights, NY 11370 Aimi Minakami 499 Grandview Terrace Leonia, NJ 07605 Jennifer K. Kim 43-16 Burling St. Flushing, NY 11355 Ina E. Lipkowitz 11 Dorset Road Great Neck, NY 11020 Josephine W. Miou 90 LaSalle St. 11F New York, NY 10027 Shin Hae Kim Highwood Place Alpine, NJ 07620 Anne Lipsitz 416 Westwood Dr. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 Susan E. Mirkinson 2 Pine Dr. S. Roslyn, NY 11576 Renee Bryna Klausner 73 Corbin PI. Brooklyn, NY 11235 Betty Liu 176 Broadway Apt. IID New York, NY 10038 Maria Christina Mirth 37-60 88th St. Jackson Heights, NY 11372 Sari E. Kolatch 141-13 68th Drive Flushing, NY 11367 Vicky Liu 176 Broadway 11-D New York, NY 10038 Dina Morello 421 Woodland PI. Leonia, NJ 07605 Dolores Kong 424 Foster Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11230 Wonda Liu 45 Ash St. Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632 Margaret Seay Morton 39 Hampton Oval New Rochelle, NY 10805 Kathryn S. Korstanje 321 S. Englewood Rd. Hungtinton, WV 25701 Ying-Ying Liu 1787 Tenbroeck Ave. Bronx, NY 10461 Lauren Muller 1933 Cleveland Ave. Abington, PA 19001 Pannela Koslyn do 2495 Buckhurst Dr. Beachwood, OH 44122 iVidi lad L-Uiiidiiivj 11 Iron Mine Drive Staten Island, NY 10304 Giuliana Musilli 208 Van Cortlandt Park Ave Yonkers, NY 10705 Kim Kressel 529 Riverdale Drive Elizabeth, NJ 07208 Beatrice Alice Loos 6400 Garnett Dr. Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Maude Muto 1199 Park Ave. Apt. 17A New York, NY 10028 258 Marina Nander 61 Lexington Ave., Apt. 4A New York, NY 10010 Nasrin (Nini) Ordoubadi 1579 Rhinelander Ave., Apt. 5V Bronx, NY 10461 Haya R. Pomrenze 1904 Spruce Dr. Washington, DC 20012 Nancy Katrina Poundstone 1 Perry Lane Upper Nyack, NY 10960 Susanne Rosen 4475 SW Fairview Circus Portland, OR 97221 Terri Levine Rosenblum 3030 Ocean Avenue, Apt. 2A Brooklyn, NY 11235 Emily B. Newman Joan Poveromo Janice Roven 121 Intervale Rd. 1938 67th St. 68 Marlborough Rd. Chestnut Hill, MA 02167 Brooklyn, NY 11204 Brooklyn, NY 11226 Isabel (Izzy) Nieves 1770 Bruckner Blvd. Bronx, NY 10473 Chui Wa Ng 113 Division St. Apt. IB New York, NY 10002 Elizabeth Prata RD 1, Pleasant View Drive Hudson, NY 12534 Soula Priovolos 147-92 Grand Central Parkway Jamaica, NY 11435 Margo Beth Rowles Riverview Rd. Gates Mills, Ohio 44040 Louisa J. Rubenstein 706 River Rd. Schodack Landing, NY 12156 Paula S. Ng 78-05 166th St. Flushing, NY 11366 Francoise Nouaille-Degorce 28 Rue du Chatelet 74240-Gaillard, France Barbara B. Puplampo P.O. Box 0238 Osu, Accra Ghana, West Africa Marina Rabinovich 527 W. 110th St., Apt. 6 New York, NY 10025 Janie Rudolph 54 55 SW 95 Terr. Miami, FL 33156 Maryanne G. Ruggiero 2377 Cropsey Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11214 Barbara O ' Dair 219 East 11th St. New York, NY 10003 Laura S. Okamura 3222 Hunts Point Rd. Bellevue, WA Leah Pappas 95 Malba Dr. Whitestone, NY 11357 Sharon Parella 118 Overlook Terrace Roslyn, NY 11577 Paula L. Pasko 171 E. 89th St. 4B New York, NY 10028 Michelle Perez 4240-12 Hutchinson River Parkway East Bronx, NY 10475 Joan K. Ramanauskas 36 Powers Street Brooklyn, NY 11211 Susan Randel 5 Oak Brook Lane Merrick, NY 11566 Adrienne Raphael 117 Deerpath East Hills, NY 11577 Fia Lynn Reavis 2980 West 28th St. Brooklyn, NY 11224 Paula Rene Redick 1404 West Boulevard Rapid City, SD Mary Anne Regan 6141 Delafield Ave. Riverdale, NY 10471 Maria Saketos 78-04 21st Ave. Jackson Hts., NY 11370 Jessica A. Salles 605 West 113th St. New York, NY 10025 Marian Samelson 150-09 Horace Harding Blvd. Flushing, NY 11367 Barbara C. Saperstein 32 Suncrest Dr. Dix Hills, NY 11746 Nobuko Sato 42-08 Cosgrove Court Fair Lawn, NJ 07410 Meredith Savitt 71 Grace Ave., Apt. 2H Great Neck, NY 11021 Linda Peteanu 771 West End Ave. New York, NY 10025 Donna Marie Pevney 922 Ostrander Ave. Riverhead, NY 11901 Emily Phillips 504 W. 110th St. 8C New York, NY 10025 Maria Martha Pignataro 61 Chapin Ave. North Merrick, NY 11566 Daphne Anne Pinkerson 4330 Klingle St. NW Washington, DC 20016 Lisa Fitzmaurice Pino 111 Grand St. Croton-on-Hudson, NY 10520 Carol Nicole Pinsky 860 Riverside Dr. New York, NY 10032 Linda R. Pinsky 924 Harvard Court Woodmere, NY 11598 Dorothy Poll 580 W. 176th St. New York, NY 10033 Luisa C armen Reichardt 104 Greenbush Rd., South Blauvelt, NY 10913 Alise S. Reicin 9102 Pottawattami Skokie, IL 60076 Maureen Reisman 143-38 84th Rd. New York, NY 11435 Marian A. Reiss 175 West 93rd St. New York, NY 10025 Rhonda Rigrodsky 12 York Dr. New York, NY 10956 Melita Lee Rines 29 Carolina Ave. Hempstead, NY 11550 Ellen Kelly Ritchie 2850 Broadway 1E New York, NY 10025 Alissa Dawn Rivin 35 Oak Knoll Rd. Natick, MA 01760 Concetta Rizzo 526 Graham Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11222 Sharon Lynn Schallamach 7 Locust Dr. Great Neck, NY 11021 Helen L. Schleimer 70-24 65 St. Glendale, NY 11385 Angela Scicutella 149-42 117th St. South Ozone Park, NY 11420 Marilyn Y. Scott 1767 Bedford Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11225 Robin Seigerman 60 Harlan Drive New Rochelle, NY 10804 Lisa Jennifer Selzman 311 Shasta Houston, TX 77024 Elizabeth Serra 1825 Riverside Dr. 6C New York, NY 10034 Katharine Sevalla 1855 Ditmars Blvd. Long Island City, NY 11105 Kathryn Shallman Boston Post Rd. Amherst, NH 03031 259 Emily Gila Shapiro 322 Central Park West New York, NY 10025 Lila Tarmin 474 Ocean Ave. Lynbrook, NY 11563 Brooke Marie Wentz z813 bcott St. San Francisco, CA 94123 Sandar Shuiamith Shulman 120 West 37th St. Bayonne, N] 07002 Ene Liis Tombak 46 Greylawn Crescent Scarborough, Ontario, Canada Juliet Whitcomb 131 Cliff Road Wellesley Hills, MA Rebecca Siegel 124 Thompson St. New York, NY 10012 Kathryn Triantis 33-04 31st Avenue Astoria, NY 11106 Charmaine Wilkerson 501 West 123rd St. Apt. 14-B New York, NY 10027 Marjorie Silver Rego Park, NY 11374 Sirike Truumees 40 Gilmore Ave. Cresskill, NJ 07626 Wendy Williams 2727 Palisade Ave. Riverdale, NY 10463 Renee G. Silverman Valley Stream, NY 11580 Ileanna Tsarnas 2 Leighton St. Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632 Catherine Winks 312 Maple St. San Francisco, CA 94118 Ziva Y. Simon 740 W;ishhiirn St Tea neck, NJ 07666 Jujo P. Utleg 510 2nd Ave. New York, NY 10016 Elizabeth Wishnick 924 West End Avenue New York, NY 10025 Elisabeth B. Simpson 76 Brook Hill Rd. Milton, MA 02187 Linda T. Vahdat 131-76th St. Brooklyn, NY 11209 Lisa Wolfe 182 Wexford Cres. Montreal, Quebec H3X-1E2, Canada Sabrina Kim Scares 10 Hollywood Drive Hastmgs, NY 10706 Susan M. Valenta 948 Balcom Ave. Bronx, NY 10465 Lisa Christine Wyatt 144 Buckingham Rd. Montclair, NJ 07043 Pamela A. Spence 100 Indian Cave R d. Ridgefield, CT 06877 Penny F. Spiera 1701 Avenue I Brooklyn, NY 11230 Ellen ViUamil 26 Werner Ave. Florida, NY 10921 Jocelyn L. Villaruz 86-15 Midland Parkway Jamaica Estates, NY 11432 Heimi Yoon 1102 Tower Mansion Apt. 302-28 Doi Yi Chun Dong Yong SanKu Seoul, Korea Erika Spongberg 184 Vincent Dr. East Meadow, NY 11554 Lucy Vivante Box 817 Wellfleet, MA 02667 Theresa H. Yoon Schouwweg 29 Wassenaar, Netherlands Nancellen Stahl 9 Stone Fence Lane Newtown, CT 06470 Doreen Vomero 16 Erita Lane Smithtown, NY 11787 Sophia B. Young 30 North Manheim Blvd. New Paltz, NY 12561 Barbara Stearns 7 Fairfield Ave. Old Greenwich, CT 06870 Martha von Conta 161 Sherwood Drive Southport, CT 06490 Kim Young-Sook 1045 Brighton Bch. Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11235 Katherine E. Stern Chestnut Hill Rd. Woodstock, NY 12498 Grace Wang 55 Schoharie St. Staten Island, NY 10301 Noel Yount 4 Ridge Ave. Spring Valley, NY 10977 Lauren K. Taaffe z.Dyj iNonoiK Koaa Cleveland Heights, OH 44106 Amy Waring 3413 Lugard Road The Peak, Hong Kong Amelia Zalchas 894 Commonwealth Ave. Newton, MA Eileen R. Tabios 17638 Rainsburg Ave. Carson, CA 90746 Beverly Lynn Weintraub 5 Crystal Lane East Northport, NY 11731 Maria-Anna Zimmerman 131 8th Ave. Sea Cliff, NY 11579 Beth E. Talansky 81-28 255th St. Flora! Park, NY 11004 liana Weisel 18 Tecumseh Road West Hartford, CT 06117 Debra Zwiebel 374 Yale Ave. Woodmere, NY 11598 Carla Francesca Tarenzi RD 3, Box 230 Greene, NY 13778 Tamara Verstandig-Weiss 70-22 Groton St. Forest Hills, NY 11375 260 ROSA V. ALONSO EVELYN GIACCIO Associate Editor Associate Editor ANDREW CYTROEN JUDITH FRIED Art Editor Literary Editor 262 L=_ SECTION EDITORS ANDREA MERCADO SOULA PRIOVOLOS CONNIE VASILAS Academic Calligraphy Campus Life MICHELLE GROSZ ROBERT BENSKO Gabby gags Clubs Copy 263 NANCY HULETT Dorms GEORGIA PESTANA Faculty SIMONE DE KOVEN New York EVELYN MARIPERISENA New York Layout ANGELA WORTCHE Seniors REBECCA OWEN Sports PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Mary Frances Campbell Nancy Chen Gabby Hanna Gary McCready Dagmar Santiago Renee Silverman Tricia Tazuk Mary Witherell Allen Yu Lulu Yu Leslie Yulkowski LITERARY STAFF Diane Barrans Amy Chin Gabby Hanna Mir a Mine is Eileen Tabios LAYOUT STAFF Athena Chin Gabby Hanna Soula Priovolos Kirs tin Svenson 264 Special thanks to George Ling, Allen Yu, Gabby Hanna, Georgia Pestana, The Barnard Bulletin , The Barnard Reporter , The Barnard Alumnae Magazine , The Columbia Daily Spectator , the Barnard Physical Education Department and Sports Information Office, the Women ' s Center, Ed Thornton and his staff, Don Quigley, Mary Witherell, Dean Schmitter, and very special thanks to Joe ToUiver and Doris Miller for their patience and support. 265 BARNARD COLLEGE COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY NEW YORK NY 1002 7 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1982 NANCY POUNDSTONE JUDY YEE President Vice President for Student Activities MICHELE SIVILLI ROSEMARIE lEDA Treasurer Vice President for Student Government CAROLYN OSCAR Officer of the Board Best Wishes from the Office of College Activities! 267 BEST WISHES AND GOOD LUCK TO THE CLASS OF 1982 268 23,500 Members of The Associate Alumnae of Barnard College Welcome the Class of 1982 to Membership The Associate Alumnae of Barnard College links together Barnard students and the alumnae community throughout the United States and in countries abroad. Our purpose is to promote the interests of the College and to foster a spirit of friendship and support among our members. There are no dues. Everyone who has attended Barnard for one year or more is a member. One of the ways we accomplish our purpose is through our quarterly magazine, Barnard Alumnae, which regularly reports news from all of the classes as well as the latest developments on campus. As alumnae, you will be receiving the magazine as well as other news from the College if you keep the Alumnae Office informed of your address. If you plan to travel or move to another community, the office will be glad to help you contact alumnae in the area. Alumnae groups throughout the United States and abroad are happy to welcome newcomers and travelers. Be sure to keep in touch with Barnard through our office and send your class correspondent news of yourself and your current activities. Congratulations to all of you! Quite Simply . . . Congratulations Class of 1982! The Hyman Family 269 CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES THORNTON ' S CLASSIC STUDIOS Official Photograpliers of Mortarboard 1982 18 West 27th Street, New york City (212) 685-1725 270 Congratulations Boo GEORGE BOYS Classic Footwear for Men and Women 2957 Broadway 865-1700 Best Wishes For Our Barnard Graduates PAPADEM FLORIST INC. Since 1910 2953 Broadway (116 St.) MO2-0280 Retail Wholesale i j | freezer Orders eatsj RAINBOW MEAT CO., INC. PACKAGING FOR THE TRADE MEAT - Fish - Poultry 1239 AMSTERDAM AVENUE CORNER 121ST STREET NEW YORK. N. Y, 10027 (212) 662-6630 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1982: We did it all for you! THE STAFF OF MORTARBOARD 1982 271 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1982 MR. MRS. EUGEN GLUCK
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