Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)
- Class of 1964
Page 1 of 176
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1964 volume:
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[.... mi ii nil to ■' I H CORNERSTONE 1964 CHATHAM COLLEGE PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA . ' }► - ■L. ' WL A quest to the college on the hill winds up Woodland Road, past Mellon Pond, the chapel, to the academic Quad, hub of Chatham Col- lege. Obstacles tempt the quester from his path . . . axle-breaking bumps, mud splotches lying in ambush for white sneakers, a belli- gerant mongrel squatting on the macadam. Nv- 1 - ■V f ' ■kM ' ICY «MH i«v ir - • j r ' B Sfc ' j „■]: - - cttci L ,; 1V ,,I ' mental patic Many Chatham customs ure not listed in the Handbook . . . college sings that break into Walking Along, hours do- nated to Dixmont, a revitalizing cup of Mary ' s coffee. That jaunty September bace retards to sedentary concentration in January, ierhaps to accelerate by May, often to methodical- y pedal through the days. And after four formative years, years of contact with others, that epitome of poise — the Chatham Senior — evolves to greet freshmen at Mellon s Open House. m Fluid chronicle of thought and emotion, a student ' s face best records her reactions to college experiences. Over these features pass her inner responses to a speaker, a con- cept, another student. Her spontaneous ex- pression is the flashbulb of her mind. 10 I A 12 Part of the liberal arts tradition is challenging tradition itself, but a few customs remain . . . Tug of War, Color Day, Christmas parties and caroling. Learning to expect the unexpected, anticipate reversal, accelerates a stu- dent ' s adjustment to the college en- vironment . . . the fire drill that dis- rupts a leisurely midnight bath, new facts uncovered in the snackbar be- fore an exam, a prayer and song while preparing ethylene. 16 17 ■m 4W - 3 1 ■1 1 18 I ■imiiniiiiiiiiiii Satisfaction often comes in small ways. Perhaps it is an effective make-up job, a synchronized dance pattern, a controlled tap of the mal- let. 19 Academic leadership requires the leader to direct and stim- ulate, the follower to absorb and challenge. 20 A national leader too must direct and stimulate the youth of his nation, and this John Fitzgerald Kennedy did. In President Eddy ' s words, It would have been beyond his comprehension that youth, in whom he be- lieved so deeply, would despair over one man ' s death. But beyond grief, what shall be the form of our praise? Study to garner wisdom without which a man of knowledge has no power for good. Study to show al- ternatives to hatred and bigotry; do not merely con- demn and despair. Study to show that force alone can never quell the fears of men nor fulfill their hopes. Study to prepare thyself to serve. ' Let us now praise famous men . . . honored in their generations . . . and a glory in their days. ' A great man is dead, but a great nation lives. -- — —••-, iiiiii I!iK!S • I 22 f Progressing from girl to woman, from student to scholar, seems an endless journey. The faces record fathomless dejection, introspection, exultation, concentration. K (-, ■- 23 1 ' - - The qaester has reached the college on the hill, asked her questions, and received many answers during her four year visit. She must sort these answers, testing some immediately, discarding some, and filing many away for use as she winds down the hill into the world beyond. 24 25 Poised on the crest of a ski slope, it hap- pens: an idea comes, one that will crystal- lize the thesis of her whole tutorial, force the massive welter of her information into a coherent pattern. Fourteen sitzmarks and five minutes later, the senior is scribbling frantically on the back of her lift ticket. Thus spake Zarathrustra! Or it might hap- pen on a Fifth Avenue streetcar, on the tennis courts, half-asleep in Mellon at 3 a.m., in a Benedum bathtub ... or not at all. Usually, intense involvement in anything from Sartre to the Berlin Wall to the intri- cacies of Urdu sentence construction pre- cedes a sudden irrational revolt against the whole system , a lapse back into a limbo of cigarette-smoke gloom and a loss of the perspective that four years have brought. Unexpectedly, the ability to laugh at her- self returns, and the whole cycle begins over again. And somewhere between the autumn round of Community Government meet- ings, traying on Chapel Hill, grad record exams, between Song Contest, a new Pre- sident and a surprise bouquet of yellow roses . . . and April ' s deadline, the pattern slowly emerges. After four years of spora- dic intellectual excitement and bourbon, community spirit and private tears, 1964 ' s Senior manages a balance of introspection and a spirited commitment to the challenge of a chaotic world, the vagaries of human nature, and an almost deliberately stubborn tutorial topic. 26 27 JUDITH ANDERSON Snyder, New York Chemistry The Solvent Separation of Oleic and Stearic Acids MARY CHARLOTTE AUGUST Grove City, Pennsylvania Biology Laboratory Manual for the Dissec- tion of the Pigeon JOAN BAILEY Wheeling, West Virginia Philosophy Sartre ' s Concept of Being-with- Others and Being-in-the-World as explained in his Major Work, Be- ing and Nothingness: The Implica- cations of this Concept for an Eth- ical Social Theory 28 CAROL E. BAKER Belmont, Massachusetts Psychology The Effect of Electroconvulsive Shock on Positively and Nega- tively Reinforced Learning Be- havior in Rats LINDA WASSON BARDONNER Scituate, Massachusetts Art John Singleton Copley: A Colonial American Portrait Painter HARRIET C. BASS Washington, District of Columbia English A Comparative Study of Chil- dren ' s Literature, together with Three Original Stories 29 BARBARA E. BAUMAN Westfield, New Jersey English The Breakdown and Disintegration of a Noble Ideal and an Empire through Infidelity and the Gathering of Evil — A Study of the Social, Moral, and Political Themes in Al- fred Lord Tennyson ' s Idylls of the King NANCY BEAL Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Art Composition in Representational Subject Matter KAREN ANN BLOMQUIST Jamestown, New York Sociology Ecological Theory and Socio-Cultur- al Influences: A Study of Land Val- ues in the Pittsburgh Community :;ii JANET L. BOYDA Carnegie, Pennsylvania Economics The Role of Organized Labor in British East and West Africa BARBARA R. CAPLAN Ellwood City, Pennsylvania Art The Pieta in the Works of Michel- angelo JOYCE CORDELLA CHEW Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania English The Problem of the Faulkner Hero -« ■31 SUZANNE FRITCH CLEWELL Bethlehem, Pennsylvania German Disjointed Humanity as Re- flected in the Selected Works of Thomas Mann, Hermann Hesse, and Franz Kafka BARBARA COE Washington, District of Columbia Biology A Study of the Effects of Vision on Hearing RUTH IBBOTSON CONNELL Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Drama A Study of Four Selected Wom- en Characters from the Plays of Henrik Ibsen 32 CAROLE DelaMOTTE Painesville, Ohio Music The Problems of Rhythmic Inven- tion in the Music of Igor Stravinsky DIANE L. DelBELLO Hamburg, New York Political Science The Problem of Labor Lmion Lead- ership: A Study of the First, Second, and Third Generation Leadership in Five Selected Unions CAROL ANN DOUGHERTY Wvomissing, Pennsylvania Music The Inevitable Disappearance of the Castrato Virtuoso and Gioac- chino Rossini ' s Popularization of the Female Mezzo Soprano and Contralto in Opera 33 DOROTHY ANN DRISCOLL Warren, Ohio Spanish Don Quijote: Symbol or Being COLETTE DUERRE Tenafly, New Jersey French Montherlant ' s Views of Women: Study of his Anti-feminism A GRACE SEILER EMLEY New Castle, Pennsylvania Psychology The Use of Spreading Cortical De- pression in One-Trial Interhemi- spheric Transfer of Memory Traces in the Rat 34 ELEANOR MARIE FINGER SCOTTDALE, PENNSYLVANIA Spanish A Translation of a Contemporary Spanish Play by Antonio Buero Vallejo with Critical Introduction and Notes PHYLLIS FOX Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania English Evil be Thou My Good . . . Mil- ton ' s Satan: Concept and Character- ization NANCY McBRIDE FRENCH Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Art Sculpture — the Expression of Hu- man Emotion in Abstract Figure Terms 35 BEVERLY FRETZ Telford, Pennsylvania Political Science The Relationship of Nationalism to Totalitarianism in the Political De- velopment of Ghana MARIAN SHEILA FRIEDMAN Butler, Pennsylvania French Visual Images and Metaphors in the Plays of Samuel Beckett and Eugene Ionesco MARGARET LOUISE FRYE Ridgewood, New Jersey History Rasputin ' s Reactionary Role During the Death Throes of the Russian Monarchy :;o DOROTHY EVANS FULTON Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Philosophy — Psychology Humor in the Structure of Human Existence MARGARET ANN FULWILER Arlington, Virginia Sociology Cultural Factors Underlying Revival- ism in America as Exemplified in the Second Great Awakening KAREN GEMASSMER Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania French — Political Science DeGaulle ' s Vision of Europe 37 JUDITH GERMAUX Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Political Science Political Attitudes toward Metro- politan Government in the Pitts- burgh Region JULIANNE GIVNER Amityville, New York Biology The Nutritional Needs of Droso- phila melanogaster as the Basis for Selection of Diet for Use in Labo- ratory Experiments RACHEL GOLDBERG Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Political Science Foundations of Political Integra- tion in the Northern and Southern Sudan 3S MERLE GOTTHELF Baltimore, Maryland History Impact of the French Revolution on Agitation for Reform of Parlia- ment in England NANCYANN GRECO Milford, Connecticut French Religious Symbolism in the World of Paul Claudel CLAUDIA ELLEN GROGAN Coraopolis, Pennsylvania English A Study of the Influence of Gerard Manley Hopkins on Brother An- toninus, a Contemporary Poet 39 GWEN GURNACK Short Hills, New Jersey Music The Music of Charles Edward Ives as an Expression of the American Transcen- dental Ideal ANTONIA ANN HARTUNG Hatboro, Pennsylvania Political Science Berlin, the Blockade and the Wall: An Analysis of United States ' Attitudes in 1948 and 1961 SUSAN BORN HASKELL Shaker Heights, Ohio Psychology The Construction and Validation of a Symbol Reproduction Test 40 WENDY AYLESWORTH HASKELL Elmira, New York History The 1936 Purge Trial of the Old Bolsheviks SANDRA HEISLER Wyomissing, Pennsylvania Psychology A Study of the Relationship between Denotative and Connotative Meanings of Words LUCILLE HILLMAN Glen Falls, New York History Loyalist Thought during the Amer- ican Revolution 11 VIRGINIA LEE HOST Bridgeville, Pennsylvania Psychology Assessment of and Cognitive Simi- larity in Prejudice SUE JOHNSON Wayne, Pennsylvania History The North American Phalanx: An Experiment in Communitarian Socialism, 1843-1856 JANET KESSLING McKeesport, Pennsylvania Chemistry The Synthesis and Characteriza- tion of Ferric, Aluminum, and Chromic Salts of Diphenic Acid 42 JUDI KRASNER Woodmere, New York French Baudelaire and Painting: The Role of Art in his Criticism and Poetry NATALIE SELKOVITS LUSTIG Aliquippa, Pennsylvania Spanish The Don Juan Figure in Selected Works of Romantic Spanish Litera- ture MARY FRANCES MagCONNELL Chickasaw, Alabama English A Consideration of Laurence Sterne ' s Treatment of Time in The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shanty, Gentleman 43 MARY ANN McCORMICK Irwin, Pennsylvania Spanish A Study of the Works of Martin Luis Guzman as the Portrayal of the Mexican Revolution and as the Development of his Literary Tal- ents MARIANNE McGUIRE Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Spanish An Analysis and Comparison of Se- lected Novels of Jose Maria Giro- nella and Arturo Barea as Reflec- tions of Particular Effects of the 20th Century Civil War on the Spanish Nation GARLAND MacROTH Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania History The Cumaean Sibyl 44 RUTH ANNE MAIER Wyomissing, Pennsylvania Music The Organ Chorale— 1650-1963 MARCIA MANN Upper Montclair, New Jersey History Andrew Mellon: Appearance and Reality BARBARA MORRIS Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania English Aesthetic Depth; What Does it Mean: A Comparative Study of George Eliot ' s Middlemarch and Fedor M. Dostoevsky ' s The Brothers Karamazov 45 MARTHA JANE MULLIGAN Jackson, Michigan Sociology A Comparative Study of Acculturation among Selected Groups of the Philip- pine Igorots NANCY MUNSON Upper Saddle River, New Jersey History Lenin ' s Death and Stalin ' s Tri- umph in the Struggle for Succes- sion in the Light of Available Doc- umentation MARGARET MYLANDER Arnold, Maryland French A Comparative Study of the Theme of Love-Passion in the Plays of Racine and Porto-Riche 46 LINDA McRAE NEVIN Westfield, New Jersey Psychology A Disguised Multidimensional Instrument for the Assessment of Religious Attitudes SUSAN SHERWOOD OFFILL Danbury, Connecticut English William Shakespeare ' s King Lear: A Survey of the Sources from which it Evolved and of the Critical Trends in the Interpretation of Lear ' s Madness GERALDINE PALKOVITZ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Psychology Connotation of Concepts as a Function of Orthodox Jewish, Conservative Jewish, and Re- form Jewish Affiliation t. ' ' 47 CATHERINE E. PARRISH Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Psychology An Investigation of Anti-Negro Prej- udice within other Minority Groups ANGELA PATRIZIO Leechburg, Pennsylvania History Garihaldi and the Crisis of Italian Unification 1859-1860 NANCY LOUISE PIERSON Montclair, New Jersey Economics Factors in White Collar Unioniza- tion 48 SUANNE POLLACK SINGER Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania French Moliere ' s Heroines DOROTHY GOHN PORPER Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania History The Role of the Jacohins in the French Revolution PATRICIA LOU PRYCL New Stanton, Pennsylvania Art A Study of the Figure with the Emphasis on Color 49 NANCY QUARRY Greenlawn, New York Political Science The Causes of Political Instability in Brazil NANCY REDMOND Barneveld, New York Art An Exploration of Painting through Works Based on Personal Contacts with People MARTHA RICHARDS Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania History The Contribution of the Bracken- ridge Family to Pittsburgh Life and Letters ■■i 50 REBECCA RIFE Waynesboro, Pennsylvania Psychology A Study of Language Usage in the Best-Selling Novel Written in the English Lan- guage RONNIE ANN RITTMASTER Woodmere, New York Spanish Naturalism in Leopoldo Ala ' s La Regenta and Emilia Pardo Bazan ' s Los Pazos de Ulloa and La Madre Naturaleza ELLEN ROSENTHAL Woodmere, New York English Translation of a Play by Ar- mand Salacrou 51 JO ANN RYMER Blairsville, Pennsylvania English The Theme of Progression through Contraries in the Poetry of Wil- liam Blake JANET E. SAPERSTEIN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania English Faulkner ' s Women: A Critical Examination TOBA PAT SCHWABER Baltimore, Maryland Sociology Culturally Constituted Stress, Con- fusion and Anomie in the Role of the Educated American Female 52 JOAN FONTAINE SCOTT Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Sociology The Structural and Functional Relationships between Political and Economic Institutions in Three Non-industrial Societies BARBARA ISABEL SILVERMAN Pittsfihld, Massachusetts English Characterization in Selected Plays by George Bernard Shaw LINDA H. SIMMONS Charlestown, West Virginia History The Origin of the Etruscans: Indigenous or Non-indigenous to Italy? 53 LAURA ELLEN SMITH Moorestown, New Jersey Political Science The Kennedy Administration and Negro Voting: Enforcement of the Voting Provisions of the 1957 and 1960 Civil Rights Acts BARBARA W. STEIN Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Political Science The Role of the Intellectual in East Africa CAROLYN JANE TAMPLIN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania English The Effect of England ' s Industrial Conditions on the Major Character in Selected Twentieth Century Novels 54 BONNIE TASCHLER Bradford, Pennsylvania Drama A Study in the Comparison be- tween the Classic and Contempo- rary Uses of the Chorus SARAH JANE TERBUSH Brecksville, Ohio Chemistry Study of the Effect of Solvent Vari- ation on the Paper Chromatogra- phic Behavior of Selected and Binary Mixtures of Transition Metal Cations CARROLL TERRY Chagrin Falls, Ohio Philosophy A Philosophic View of Some Ele- ments of Contemporary Man: What he is, What he is Doing, Where he is Going; Stated and Developed in a Literary Form 55 SUSAN HART UPTEGRAFF ScOTTDALE, PENNSYLVANIA Economy The 1959 Steel Strike VALERIE VALENTINE Oak Park, Illinois Political Science The Adequacy of United States Policy in South Viet Nam from 1954 to 1963 ELIZABETH JOAN WATSON Mount Vernon, New York History A Study of the Racial Concept in Pan-Africanism as Seen in the Phil- osophies of Marcus Aurelius Gar- vey, W.E.B. DuBois and Kuame Nkrumah ;,i; LINDA LOU WEINBERG Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania History The Contributions of John Lil- burne and the Leveller Movement to the Evolution of English Politi- cal Democracy GRACE WILSON Elkins, West Virginia English Growth of Determinism in Se- lected Writings of Mark Twain SUSAN WOLPERT Amityville, New York Psychology Predicting Academic Achievement by Personality Measures 57 MARY ANN WRIGLEY Grosse Point, Michigan Sociology A Study of the Factors in the Back- ground of the Court Cases of Seven- ty-Four Middle Class Delinquents in Suburban Areas during the Year 1962 in Comparison with Factors in a Control Group of Rank and File Juvenile Court Cases LINDA YOUNG Stamford, Connecticut French A Comparative Study of Chil- dren ' s Literature in France MILLICENT GROSSMAN ZACHER Melrose Park, Pennsylvania Biology The Physiological Nature of Invol- utional Depression in the Human Female :,s JOANNE ZWEIG Morton Grove, Illinois English A Study of the Use of Symbolism in Selected Early Novels of Joseph Conrad PATRICIA HAMMERSTEIN New York, New York Psychology JANUARY, 1965 59 FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION Chatham College is cited as a community of individuals; this individuality extends to faculty and administration as well as stu- dent body. Instead of being a vague amor- phous elite of educated visionaries, the col- lege faculty are distinct individuals. Some guffaw at Torn Jones, some sing, ski, play football with their sons on the Quad. Some drink coffee with students, some digest volumes in the seclusion of their offices. All attempt to meet the students ' indivi- dual interests and needs as well as cover the basic academic material. CN 60 61 Ideally, the liberally educated person — and especially the liberally educated woman — has sense. In fact, she ought to have what I ' d call the three senses of education. The first is a sense of the complexity of man and his problems. One great lesson we learn from the liberal arts is that no man ever has all the answers. The second sense of the liberally educated is compassion. How can one study history without feeling a sense of an impact of individual man on the chronicles of men? Finally, the re- sult of liberal education is a sense of connection — connection with the times in which one happens by chance to be living. If one wishes to be involved in mankind, he cannot momentarily set himself apart. He cannot think that any act, no matter how personally it be viewed, is a moment, a gesture in itself. The liberal man must commit himself to continuous involvement, rather than participation by whim when and where one decrees. Excerpts from The Results of a Lib- eral Education by Dr. Eddy DR. EDWARD D. EDDY, JR. President of the College 62 DR. DAVID HENDERSON Executive Dean DORIS CROZIER Special Assistant to the President DR. LILY DETCHEN Director of Evaluation Services PEGGY DONALDSON Director of Admissions MARY RITA TASCKETTA Director of Placement 64 REINALD McCRUM Secretary of the College MARY L. RIEFER Resident Nurse HANNA GUNDERMAN Bursar SARA STUMP Director of Residence Halls « 65 CHATHAM COLLEGE NEWS RELEASE Woodland Road Pittsburgh 32, Pennsylvania HIland 1-8200 FOR RELEASE. RUTH H. SWISSHELM Director of Alumnae Affairs FLORIENE C. EMERICK Executive Housekeeper 68 WILLIAM J. BROCK Manager of Food Service MICHAEL BURIK Director of Food Service DAVID S. HOBURG Bookstore Manager 69 JERRY L. GAPLAN Chairman of Art Department Instructor in Art FLORENCE S. KOSSOFF Assistant Professor of Art VAINO T. KOLA Instructor in Art MILDRED EV ANSON Assistant Professor of Drama DR. PHYLLIS M. FERGUSON Chairman of Drama Department Professor of Drama DR. JEROME S. WENNEKER Assistant Professor of Drama 71 HENRY SPINELLI Lecturer in Music RUSSELL G. WICHMANN Professor of Music LOUIS P. COYNER Instructor in Music LORENZO MALFATTI Instructor in Music 72 DR. EARL K. WALLACE Chairman of Chemistry Department Professor of Chemistry DR. WILLIS DALE RICHEY Assistant Professor of Chemistry DR. PATRICIA R. MOHILNER Assistant Professor of Chemistry 73 DR. NATALIE BARISH Chairman of Biology Department Associate Professor of Biology LYNETTE H. DOEG Lecturer in Biology 74 DR. WILLIAM A. BECK Chairman of Mathematics Department Associate Professor of Mathematics DR. J. KIEWIET de JONGE Lecturer in Astronomy 75 DR. MABEL A. ELLIOTT Chairman of Sociology Department Given Professor of Sociology DR. ALBERT FRIEDMAN Instructor in Sociology DR. FRED ADELMAN Associate Professor of Anthropology 76 DR. FRANK M. LACKNER Assistant Professor of Psychology DR. WILLIAM R. HOOD Chairman of Psychology Department Associate Professor of Psychology DR. ROBERT H. LOISELLE Assistant Professor of Psychology 77 DR. OAKLEY S. RAY Lecturer in Psychology DR. DAVID J. REYNOLDS Assistant Professor of Psychology 78 DR. ALBERT OSSMAN, JR. Assistant Professor of Economics, Political Science DR. WILLIAM J. KEEFE Chairman of Political Science Department Professor of Political Science DOREEN E. BOYCE Instructor in Economics J. DALE CHASTAIN Assistant Professor of Political Science 79 DR. WILLARD E. ARNETT Chairman of Philosophy Department Associate Professor of Philosophy DR. FRANK A. HAYES Assistant Professor of Philosophy THELMA TAYLOR Instructor in Philosophy Ml — ■p — l ™ — 1 1 1 L DR. FRANCES ELDREDGE Chairman of English Department Professor of English DR. MARY A. McGUIRE Assistant Professor of English JOHN W. CUMMINS Assistant Professor of English SI FRANCES MORROW Lecturer in English CAROL BROWN Instructor in English STANLEY J. SOLOMON Instructor in English 82 ||m s M 1  pp M ' m 5f DR. JAMES C. McLAREN Chairman of Language Department Professor of French DR. VINCENT LoCICERO Assistant Professor of German LEONARD FRIEDMAN Instructor in French PATRICIA COOPER Instructor in French S3 DR. HUGH A. HARTER Associate Professor of Spanish Chairman of Spanish Department SARA LEHRMAN Lecturer in Russian JOSEPHINE G. BOURGEOIS Lecturer in Spanish 84 DR. WILLIAM R. SAVAGE, JR. Assistant Professor of History DR. J. CUTLER ANDREWS Chairman of History Department Professor of History DR. STEPHEN BORSODY Professor of History 85 DR. RENE LEMARCHAND Visiting Instructor in African Studies DR. ANN FREEMAN Assistant Professor of History MARGARET K. HILL Associate Professor of Education HELEN S. WEINBERG Lecturer in Secretarial Studies DR. LAWRENCE M. KNOLLE Chairman of Education Department Assistant Professor of Education 87 SARA M. McGRATH Instructor in Physical Education PATIENCE T. BLAYDEN Associate Professor of Physical Education Chairman of Physical Education Department MARGARET P. DUGGAR Lecturer in Dance 89 Four spades ... I pass. HA he wrote! But that wasn ' t even in the textbook; how could he ask . . . will you please s tart put- ting the cap back on the toothpaste at night. How can I, you know I don ' t drink . . . But that part isn ' t important; you ' ve missed Camus ' whole point. In that case, let ' s go skiing this weekend. How about London, there ' s a program at Oxford, and . . . oh, stop taking yourself so seriouslv . . . QUIET HOURS, I ' m trying to study. And eight dormitories full of restless femininity gradually darken, leaving the Nightguard and their chronically overdue papers to deal with the effects of Benza- drine and three-day stretches of frantic work. Crystal chandeliers at Mellon, career- girl atmosphere of the Fifth Avenue apart- ments, and the excited din of Woodland-on- the-hill; each dorm has its distinctive per- sonality, and from the windows of these vantage points a microcosm is in full view, a world of rose gardens and Brand Blansh- ard surrounded by students, of a dinnertime flood of kilted girls and a horde of fratern- ity men throwing a newly-pinned brother into Mellon Pond some spring evening. And the single portrait: framed in any window is an individual; tears and a glass shattered against the wall; papers and books piled high at 4 a.m.; the sound of Stravinsky and a typewriter. And one winter ' s evening a girl in a fourth floor window leans out and pensively chews on an icicle. •iSJ L-f • 90 ' .II WOODLAND Becky Mark, Karen Goff, Hannah Gilman, Marjorie Morrison, Louise DeCarl, Naomie Waterston, Miss Stump, Ann Greenhouse, Jane Trader, Sheila Sadin. Caroline Culpepper, Naomi Waterston, Ruthe Klein, Heather Martin, Carol Beth Levin. Donna Rittelman, Pat Bandomer, Nancy Russell, Made- Ion Rose, Andra Sandson, Di Wirsig. 92 Kathy McNamara, Kristin Jellison, Mar- jorie Morrison, Betsy Pincus, Georgia Moscovitis, Lynn Greenly, Kathy Hoo- ver, Sandy Killion. Alice Harriman, Diana Piekos, Carol Getrost, Lauren Nagler, Leigh Cluthe, Louise Farmer, Bev Blazey. Inta Gale, Jane Trader, Gail Thompson, Ellen Holsten, Nancy Scott, Irene Fraser, Adair Douglass. Tina Poulleys, Rebecca Mark, Penny Langston, Sheila Sadin, Karen Goff, Barbara Wallace. : ;: Rachel Stein, Lynnette Burley, Sue Cope, Pam Armstrong, Louise DeCarl, Linda Marpet. Susan Griffith, Susan Schnapf, Judy Siegal, Rose Chasanov, Peggy Higgins, Marty Sebastian, Cookie Schiffman, Lee Macey. Vivian Lowery, Jane Friedman, Kammy McCleery, Carol Pusin, Bobbie Subow, Willie Ritter, Lynn Baere, Judy Gilbert. Carol Corell, Andy Moss, Lenore Fellner, Janet Forbush, Judy Light. Judy Fletcher, Margi McKay, Leslie Popper, Carol Swenson, Kate Plant, Kathy Ames, Nat Osgood, Peggy Ernst. 94 Donna Mrock, Ann Greenhouse, Jo Messersmith, Emmy Hill, Pat Jalo- wick, Pat Hannon, Hannah Gilman, Gini Gold, Jane Ross, Linda Van Doren. Trudy Levin, Georgia Canellos, Audrey Smith, Marilyn Gelardi, Bunny Generalovitch, Beverly Malen, Nora Levy, Barbara Blodorn. Joan Saglio, Joan Stahlbrodt, Marcia Webb, Leslie Caplan, Gail Hillard. Barbara Newman, Emy Young, Lucy Hilmer, Jean- lie Sour, Mimi Doeller, Judy Howland, Eve Rubin, Debbie Little. 95 % FICKES Trudy Randall, Judy Godfrey, Sue Doerr, Kathy Laemmle, Jan Loser, Jane Birmingham. Ingrid von Datton, Jinny Powell, Joan Montgomery, Judy Mueb, Linda Lanius, Karen Fried, Ginny Fisher, Maxine Ruter. House Gouncil: Karen Fried, Claudia Mil- ler, Jane Lannigan, Martha Wilson, Mrs. Woods, Janie Ziskind, Nancy Ruehl, Jan- ice Patterson, Karen Sherriff, Jane Coul- ter, Judi Fellows. Patti Papp, Janice Patterson, Dorothy Raymond, Joan Bretz, Sandra Ellis, Lynn Schreiber, Claudia Miller, Sue Haas, Jane Tobey. 97 Linda Wickett, Alexis Mashuta, Suzanne Hershey, Whit- ney Shearer, Kathy Osage, Phyllis Malls, Becky Griffith, Jackie Gibbs, L. J. Weltchek, Pam Zerwick, Joanne Locurcio. Ellen Daily, Carol Porter, Judy Millis, Judy Footer, Ellen Stein, Linda McDonnough, June Linowitz, Susan B. Davis. Pam Kipp, Sue H. Davis, Janie Ziskind, Anne Clark, Tryna Van Dusen, Mary Ellen Goodwill, Nancy Freudenthal, Cary Cadman, Nancy Lynch, Mary Vanderwart. Judy Fellows, Jane Lannigan, Jane Coult- er, Karen Sheriff, M. J. Schilling, Pam Davis. Joan Reisner, Connie Jones, Mary Lou Patrick, Betsy O ' Hara Madelyn Gorchoff, Mary Reynolds, Lynn Bonner, Carol Sim- mons, Joan Kirschbaum, Alice Hunter. Enid Berthanthal, Ceci Paape, Lynn Hill- man, Natalie Dingle, Heather Bastow, Nina Miller. Louise Royster, Mary Ruddele, Karen Hamp- ton, Penny Pickering, Lolita Dawson. mi 100 BERRY Nancy Johnson, Cindy Curll, Mary Ann Mc- Cormick, Elaine Hillman, Julie Mamolen, Deb- bie Potter, liss Haberle, Tracy Quarry. Nancy Johnson, Barb Zitko, Pam Proksa, Julie Mamolen, Carol Hart- man, Debbie Potter, Elaine Hillman. Lois Welch, Allie Graham, Cindy Curll, Bonnie Markey, Helen Scofield, Clare Stebbins, Mary Bruce McCulloch, Debbie Lee, Berry Marshall. 101 PELLETREAU Sue Ward, Connie Morey, Ellie Radin, Merry Mastronardi Rina Sigal, Diane Browarsky, Ellen Davidson, Karen Schweig, Ellen Tilles, Myra Mensh House Council: Ellen Davidson, Barbara Crick, Paula Mysell, Mar- sha Richards, Jackie Smythe, Nancy Greco, Ellen Rosenthal, Mrs. Bau- man, Patty Williamson 102 FRENCH SUITE: Margaret Paulson, Barbara Crick, Linda Marsh, Barbara Brenman, Barrie Karp, Betsy Vandervoort, Linda Diamond, Monique Werner SPANISH SUITE: Rachel Halty, Ronnie Ritt- master, Nancy Dechter, Linda Breitel Sheila Bennett, Sidney Hudig, Mary Shaker, Janine Zimmerman, Jill Squire, Pam Stirba, Susie Newton, Barbara Schneider Betsy McGregor, Becky Blasingame, Sherry Smith, Bar- bara Wyckoff, Jen Piehler, Jeff Potter, Pat Turcotte, Mona Mulligan 103 Julie Calvert, Nan Persson, Jarene Frances, Paula Mysell, Bonnie Marks, Carlie White, Carole Scarito, Deanna Hickox Peggy Whiting, Judy Wetlaufer, Jackie Smythe, Heather Johnston, Linda Kates, Marsha Richards, Martha Repman, Susie Vansant Linda Whitmyre, Bobbie Hewitt, Marty Coyne, Patty Williamson, Carole Early, Beth Marty, Ann Quenin Jean Wiest, Evie Kinast, Doris D amour, Helen Read, Bonnie Dallas KM r Pat Orleans, Diane Brutout, Jan Simpson, Penny Embry, Peggy Redmond. L05 BENEDUM House Council: Mary Brown, Carole Sheldon, Susi Soule, Pat Baisler, Sally Hendon, Rosemary Cesarone Judy Goslee, Jenia Royster, Ann McClure, Sally Hen- don, Susi Soule, Shannon Smith, Pat Baisler, Barbara Brubaker, Backy Bennett, Nikki Neese Rosemary Cesarone, Lory King, Marne Elder, Carole Sheldon, Mary Brown, Mad- eline Teviotdale Beverly Miller, Bridget Kumutat, Sue Atherton, Sandy Small, Nancy Speck, Anne Smith, Betsy Unangst, Elaine Wenger, Mary Krein 106 MELLON Sandy Geldman, Carol Graven, Katie McCann, Pat Scarry. HOUSE COUNCIL: Barb Caplan, Valerie Val- entine, Carol Craven, Sandy Geldman, Janet Kess- ling, Wendy Haskell. DILWORTH Sue Callas, Lynn Williamson, Mrs. MacGregor, Donna Kwall, Sue Coleman, Pickle Prouty, Portia Yon, Brenda Hilken, Ann Plummer. Nancy McNabb, Judy Parry, Donna Kwall, Doe Adamson, Sue Casey, Gail Fabricius, katln Hopkins. Kaylin Canning, Janice Thomas, Rennie Mazo, Bren- da Hilken, Linda McPhilliamy, Sandi Smith, Arlene Layton. 108 Lynn Williamson, Sue Coleman, Ann Plummer, Carole Lincoln, Sue Taylor, Portia Yon, Barb LeFevre, Pickle Prouty, Sue Callas. Sarah Leuthy, Gretchen Gray, Cookie Mason, Evi Tamm, Carol Pogash, Jane Weigel, Tonya Hines, Chris Laguerela. Polka Dotts, Sue Whitfield, Kathy Marchant, Marty Speer, Sandy Stewart, Liz Howard, Lin- da Floyd, Sheila McAteer. fi € $ r£ Jan Washburn, Dianne Smith, Cathy Cole, Rozzie Ran- dolph, Margaret McDonald, Maggie Berman, Mary Borez, Donna Beiswinger, Dael Keisler. 1011 Bonnie Birks, JoAnn Eustace, Mary Rosen- berger, Iris Raskin, Judy Graytock, Penny Anderson, Sylvia Woods. Sandra Korman, Diane DuBois, Phyllis Epstein, Jo Ann Greenfield, Judy London, Joann Aaron, Pat Strong, Janet Walker, Joan Lessing, Marty Robards. BEATTY Gail Phillips, Barbara Ramsey, Ginny Andrew, Sue Slagle, Ann Barnsley, Ilka Minter, Andrea Frohmader Karen Feinstein, Carolyn Luciani, Cordis Heard, Binky Wu, Liz Schaye, Lucille Finger, Bonnie Goebert, Laura Oliva House Council: Lucille Finger, Sarah Corwin, Ilka Minter, Ginny Andrew, Miss McGrath, Laura Oliver, Ann Barnsley Dianne Terschan, Judi Murray, Suzi Marcoux, Jill Haas, Dara Murphy Brook Enos, Sarah Corwin, Trina Shelburne, Ann Wachtel, Phyllis Berman, Ellen Goldbloom, Debbie Shiel 111 Kathy Birris, Judy Howard, Beverly Hamilton, Sandy Kretz, Ronya Sallade, Vivian Lazur. Headed by Beverly Ham- ilton, the Day Student Association integrates the commuting student with the community. Newly lo- cated in their Dilworth apartment, the day stu- dents hold parties and sup- ply dorm residents with home cooking at bake sales. Kathy Birris, Nancy Lippman, Carol Heinz, Lynn Swartz, Judy Howard, Vivian Lazur, Beverly Hamilton. 112 DAY STUDENTS Catherine St. Clair, Maureen Th omas, Connie Yankura, Elaine Levitt, Marty Friday. 113 ACTIVITIES Although the primary emphasis at Chat- ham is academic, many students find the time and desire to return service to the community. The opportunities are varied, ranging from college publications to House, Honor and Social Boards. Stu- dents ' reasons for participating in the ac- tivities are equally as varied: perhaps for self-gratification, perhaps in connection with academic studies, a few perhaps for prestige, many simply because in these areas they find self-expression. 114 115 CHATHAM VISITORS When a lecturer visits a college campus, he often is expected to condense his doctoral dissertation, asso- ciates ' opinions, travel experiences, and philosophy of life into a 50 minute jet-set missive. Anticipating the lecturer ' s inevitable failure, Chatham instituted a Visitors Program to give the community more leisurely contact with the individual. During his several days on campus, the visitor talks informally with students, attends classes, and participates in the normal community life. Among this year ' s visitors were Sherman Adams, Dr. Douglas Morgan, Dr. Nevitt Sanford, Edwin and Mary Scheier and Helen Hayes. 116 MR. AND MRS. SHERMAN ADAMS December 2-4, 1963 117 EDWIN AND MARY SCHEIER November 3-7, 1963 118 1ELEN HAYES ebruary 10-12, 1964 119 DR. AND MRS. DOUGLAS MORGAN October 21-23, 1963 120 Et. NEVITT SANFORD March 9-11, 1964 121 PERSPECTIVES IN MORALITY THE REVEREND MARTIN D ' ARGY Through a grant from the Vira I. Heinz Fund of The Pittshurgh Foundation, lead- ing philosophers and theologians visited Chatham to speak on questions of morality in their broader context. DR. BRAND BLANSHARD DR. KENNETH W. UNDERWOOD 123 AFRICAN SERIES For decades, Africa had been merely one of seven con- tinents laboriously memorized in grade school. How- ever, as its infant countries began to question the wis- dom of their parental protectors, Africa assumed an adult role on the international political stage. American educators only recently have begun to study this dark actor ' s techniques. Chatham College conducted an intellectual march to Pretoria as diverse authorities on African politics and cultures lectured on campus. Among these were James S. Coleman, Robert Lystad, Ben J. Marais, and His Excellency Chief S. O. Adebox. Dr. Rene Lemarchand, visiting lecturer on African Studies, the J. C. Leff Col- lection of African Art, and documentary films supple- mented the speakers 124 DR. RUPERT EMERSON :■.■■..■■■.■■■DR. BEN J. MARAIS FRANCES S. HERSKOVITS 126 CONTEMPORARY ARTS So often a liberal arts education is absorbed through near-sighted perusal of a book; one experiences through reading rather than read- ing through experience. Attempt- ing to expand these cultural hori- zons the College provided a wide range of productions in the per- forming arts. Among the many programs were The Circle -in-the- Square production of Six Charac- ters in Search of an Author, Frans Reynders ' concert in mime, and the Royal Shakespeare Company ' s The Hollow Crown. Community contributions included the faculty collectors ' art exhibit, Henry Spin- elli ' s recitals, and the production of A Far Country, The Trojan Women, and Take Her, She ' s Mine. 127 FRANS REYNDERS, MIME 128 KIMIO ETO-SUZUSHI HANAYAGI, JAPANESE CONCERT L29 ART AND COFFEE W w 130 S$ te HE TROJAN WOMEN A FAR COUNTRY 131 The hub of campus activities is Chat- ham Community Government, com- prised of elected representatives from student body, faculty and administra- tion. Ann McClure heads this central communications board. 132 Honor Board, led by Margaret Fulwiler, functions to set honor code policy in both academic and social areas as well as direct stu- dents in reappraisal of the Honor System. Budget Board regulates and distributes the student activity fee. Financial ap- peals come to this board, headed by Sheila Bennett, all-school treasurer. Social Board, led by Pam Proksa, plans and organizes those vital social activities on and off campus. During the past year, Social Board directed its efforts toward Song Contest and the inevitable mixers, as well as try- ing to promote the wider social con- tacts so necessary to student morale. 134 House Board, presided over by Julie Givner, serves to enrich the activities of resi- dent students within the framework of dorm life, and functions also as a board of appeals from House Coun- cils. Problems of dorm life are discussed and new poli- cies established, such as ex- tention of Friday hours, spe- cial late hours for cultural events, and a more efficient system for handling the des- parate problems of room drawing. Editors of the four campus publications and their faculty advisors form a Pub- lications Board to determine joint pol- icy. Headed by Bonnie Dallas, this year ' s board drafted a permanent pro- cedure for selecting editors, and studied means of recruiting staff members. I I f$ • ' - ..... ■- , STUDENT HANDBOOK Rosemary Ceserone, Editor MINOR BIRD Joanne Zweig, Myra Hull, Doris Damour, Editors 136 Residing somewhere between their Braun basement office and a cauldron of boiling water, the ARROW staff challenges, lauds and derides campus issues and innovations. Edited by Gin- ny Fisher and Linda Lanius, the news- paper is a weekly means of all-campus communication, reflecting student, fac- ulty, and administrative concerns. CORNERSTONE 13S This group of students visits high schools in the Pittsburgh area. Work- ing under the assumption that college students are closer to high school stu- dents than are admissions representa- tives, the High School Visitations com- mittee tries to promote the importance of a college education and answer ques- tions about college life. Prospective students become acquainted with Chatham ' s campus through tours con- ducted by the Campus Keys. Chosen for their ability to remain enthusiastic about the college, not to mention character and responsibility, the Campus Keys both give and receive valuable first impressions. 139 The National Student Association is a liaison group between the national or- ganization and the student body to en- courage participation in programs of local, national and international con- cern. Sponsoring the tutoring service, Hampton Institute exchange, Dilworth Armchair Series, and Fast for Free- dom, NSA, headed by Judy Germaux, has stimulated campus awareness. The Student Peace Union, commanded by Linda Watts, is concerned with the discussion and subsequent alternative so- lutions of both domestic and international issues of peace and freedom. Maintaining its position on the struggle for peace and civil liberties, SPU has sponsored such speakers as John Lewis, Henry Smith, Frank Wilkinson and Chico Neblett. INTERCOLLEGIATE CONFERENCE ON GOVERNMENTS 140 Among recent sociological phenomena witnessed in the liberal arts college is the decline and fall of strenuous physical ac- tivity. Chatham Recreation Association, attempting to thwart this trend, sponsors intra-class swim meets, student-faculty volley ball and tennis tournaments, a syn- chronized swimming group, interscholas- tic contests, and the annual Tug of War. President of the board is Joan Scott. CRA BOARD Sophomore and junior student counselors, led by freshmen advisor Carol Hartman, initi- ate incoming freshmen to the joys of purple dinks, campus regulations, mixers, and those stimulating blind dates. 144 The Chatham Film Society is a small but in- fluential group of faculty and students deter- mined to bring significant cinema to the cam- pus. This year, with such films as The Seventh Seal, Roshomon, M, The Bicycle Thief and La Strada, the society ' s emphasis was on the enjoyable aesthetic experience through an ex- citing and stimulating art medium. on out rtu (V ? KHMv 6HO.CXH bit eotw n ri J Mti7a i  i r« aiW 7 fw f  ft vn n c oil  « ii Ormo t n a m I1H4.T i«r   w uier.rM Ifcrtntf? 145 SPANISH CLUB In addition to formal classes, foreign language students may participate in the Pelletreau lan- guage apartments, language clubs and dining tables, and informal conversation laboratories with native speakers. Chatham ' s chapter of the American Chemical Society primarily is geared to the sen- ior chemistry major and stu- dents in related sciences. The Society brings speakers to campus, awards a scholarship to an incoming senior chem- istry major, and conducts a Buhl Hall safety campaign. AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY 147 Under the leadership of Sally Ter- Bush and the direction of Lorenzo Malfatti, the 45-member Chatham Touring Choir is one of the more notable groups on campus. This year the Choir sang with the Pittsburgh Symphony, Case Institute of Tech- nology, Princeton University Glee Club, Washington and Jefferson Choir, Johns Hopkins University, and Hamilton College, as well as in- vading Washington, D. C. in April as part of its annual tour. 148 LORENZO MALFATTI Choir Director 149 PHI BETA KAPPA BEVERLY FRETZ Class of 1964 Elected 1963 LINDA KATES Class of 1965 RUTH JONES Class of 1962 DOROTHY PORPER Class of 1964 NANCYANN GRECO Class of 1964 RONYA SALLAD: Class of 1965 LINDA WEINBERG TOBA SCHWABER BARBARA MORRIS MERLE GOTTHELF MARGARET FRY Class of 1964 Class of 1964 Class of 1964 Class of 1964 Class of 1964 150 Mortar Board, national women ' s honorary society, annually taps outstanding Chatham seniors for membership. Selected for su- perior service, scholarship and leadership, the members this year held a book sale to establish a graduate scholarship and tutored academically anemic students. 151 SENIORS Liberally educated and headed for liberal arts degrees, the senior class turns from the gaslights to face that mad mad world. Behind them are the sanities of trips to the zoo, Sodini ' s, victorious Song Con- tests, and bound tutorials. Now let us drink to the Seniors . . . , for this is their song. CLASS OFFICERS 152 JUNIORS Ranks narrowed by marriage and transfer, the juniors prepare to embark on their glorious tutorials while wrapping up the boards and organizations they traditionally head durin g the year. k, - . CLASS OFFICERS SOPHOMORES Sophomores emerge unscathed from dinks and blind dates to collide with campaigning for political can- didates, Arts diagrams of Chartres, and the sopho- more prom, this year a swinging safari through the Webster Hall jungle. CLASS OFFICERS 156 FRESHMEN An amorphous blob classified as fresh- men when they enter Chatham, the class soon develops individual identi- ties. En masse, however, the freshmen toured Pittsburgh by trolley, met their male counterparts, threw their grimy dinks to the winds, and boarded the S.S. Chastity for a polished freshmen entertainment. CLASS OFFICERS 158 159 TRADITIONS Chatham ' s traditions are a curious mixture of formal ceremonies and casual customs. After the annual chaos of registration red tape, freshmen officially enter the com- munity as they receive class colors and abandon dinks. 160 161 ..- Hockey shoes and leather gloves dig in as classes tug for singing positions in the annual Song Contest. And while waiting for the judges ' decision, tense students are soothed by Lorenzo Bernstein and his fiddling faculty . . . not acceptable for Arts credit. 162 The aesthetic experience leaves the classroom to enter the dining hall as students don Hal- loween costumes, decorate tables for Valen- tine ' s Day, and create head finery for Spring Dinner. HALLOWEEN DINNER 163 Competing with blue books at Christmas are caroling, the Fickes eggnog party, Candlelight service, and inevitable six o ' - clock fire drill. Dormitory traditions include studying, Christmas parties for area children tutored by the students, and watching stimulating television programs. L65 Frustration was the topic Of literature of yore. Grendel lost to Beowulf, Camelot was no more. Ancient heroes met their match By myriad of foes. But never trying to edit A yearbook ' s mundane prose. Or cropping pictures n ' er to fit The space allotted them, Or losing pages, losing staff, Mismeasuring en and em. Perhaps this missive should expound The great creative flood. But as old heroes early learned. The price is sweat and blood. TOBA SCHWABER Co-Editor BONNIE DALLAS Co-Editor 166 PATTY WILLIAMSON Art Editor MARTY WILSON Photography Editor DIANA WIRSIG Literary Editor ANN GREENHOUSE Business Manager 167
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