Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)

 - Class of 1966

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Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1966 volume:

fBH $? Homecoming was — well, it depended on whose side you were on: Notre Dame-69, Pitt-13; West- ern Reserve-2, W J-O; Harvard-13, Yale-0 . . . thread of continuity supplied in the arts course by syllabus staple . . . meager excitement generated by Mr. Rovitto for APP when compared with Mr. Goldwater ' s effect the year before . . . Harold Bet- ters and his group swinging in Woodland for the NSA fund drive dinner — one of the year ' s high spots and a revelation for all the under twenty- oners barred from the Encore . . . that first shat- tering college exam — Western Civ, wasn ' t it? — and the uneasy night preceding it . . . acquiring handsome Rea House as another elegant dormi- tory . . . the demure gray-and-white cat who at- tended Honors Convocation and all the students who didn ' t ... all those hours spent standing in line in the business office waiting to have a check cashed . . . upon viewing Jean Erdman ' s The Coach with the Six Insides — Do you really think it will make any difference if we stay for the third act? I haven ' t been able to figure out the program notes yet! . . . the tired satisfaction of knowing you did well on a final that took all three hours and more — or the grim ache when you know you didn ' t . . . Get up for breakfast? Are you seri- ous? . . . changing the scene from the snack bar to the chapel lounge and formalizing that grand old student pastime, the gripe session ... the zest and excitement generated by the choir auction, amiably and energetically presided over by Mr. Ossman . . . The Shaft . . . those many frenetic and secretive rehearsals which culminated in an- other night of Freshman Entertainment ... ex- tending class hours in an attempt to escape the necessity for Saturday classes — resulted in some people programing out lunch for a semester, sometimes two . . . arriving at the decision to raise the activities fee ten dollars after another year of financial strait-jacketing for several cam- pus organizations . . . Atco, Juguna, Mihma, Mou- dar, and Tadac — and so the battle lines formed during Mr. Chastain ' s simulation experiment . . . a dearth of ski weekends this season, owing to either no snow or too much . . . bridge games on Woodland sun porch — before lunch, after lunch, before dinner, after dinner, ad infinitum . . . mix- ers — bane or boon of any college girl ' s life, de- pending on whom she met, didn ' t meet, or both . . . the soaring joy of having something in your mailbox and the crashing despair when it turns out to be inter-school . . . orientation and the crush of attendant feelings it generates for the freshman — hectic activity, too much together- ness, too much aloneness, and finally the con- tented middle ground of familiarity . . . hurried cups of morning coffee in the snack bar and lei- surely ones in the afternoon while chatting with friends — professors and students . . . psych ma- jors continually spiriting people away to serve as subjects — Honest, it will just take a few min- utes! . . . the new station wagon for student use in community service projects . . . opinion board ' s innovation and some of the spirited dialogues car- ried on in it . . . the excitement and happiness generated by each pinning and engagement and the silence surrounding the broken ones . . . senior key dorms were finally approved and excitement reigns regarding their trial innovation next year . . . Honor Board and the Honor Code — what they stand for, what they are based on, do they work — these questions continued to be subjected to close scrutiny . . . student voting participation in all- school elections improved while the number of people willing to accept responsibility, give up time, and run for such offices declined . . . the academic freedom issue was a compelling one for perhaps five or ten per cent of Chatham stu- dents — it is true this was the year of Berkeley but Berkeley and Chatham are eons apart . . . the off- campus scholarship job program went into its sec- ond year and provided rewarding experiences for some students, frustration for others . . . amidst the even heavier than usual pre-vacation crush of work, Christmas parties for faculty children, for the Kingsley House children turned some of the cynics back into humans, at least momentarily . . . quick naps on the quad . . . never-ending searches i - ' nirl for that never-ending stream of missing library books . . . continued frustration as physical edu- cation continued to be figured into one ' s cumula- tive average . . . continued refinement of that au- tomated miracle — registration by computer . . . the curious mixture of feelings upon arriving in September, slightly different but again curiously mixed feelings on that last day in May — and the difference in these feelings for a freshman, and for a senior . . . the grim tenseness of study week and finals . . . finally a Parents ' Weekend and it was worth waiting for a year — hopefully there won ' t be any further schedule mix-ups that will necessitate it being cancelled again ... the delight with which Once Upon a Mattress was received by the audience and the scintillating zest with which it was put on by the cast . . . participation between Chatham and Alabama ' s Tuskegee Insti- tute in a student-exchange program . . . choir trips and bus break-downs and What do you mean you forgot your black dress and pearls? . . . plans for renovating Buhl resulted in shortened semesters, a shortened spring break, and feelings that time was passing even more quickly than usual . . . caroling at Christmas-time, ending with cocoa and doughnuts at the Eddys ' ... Mr. Eddy ' s Hum- bug button . . . the pitfalls of computerized ro- mance as evidenced by Operation Match and the edgy embarrassment of getting the names of two other Chatham girls and your roommate . . . that disturbing feeling of nakedness for those first few hours after dedinking . . . perpetual thought and frenetic activity going, as always, into lining up that summer job . . . exam schedules made their usual late appearances . . . inevitably, when pack- ing for vacations, books were the first items to go into suitcases, followed by more books and then by more books . . . airlines announced their half- fare student rate plans and the number of hours Chatham girls spent in airports soared . . . trans- fers both to and from ... the grim battles waged with those infallible tapes in language labs . . . streetcars continued to rattle past Pelletreau on their way downtown . . . Do you know? — that pastime which is the special preserve of the col- lege student was played enthusiastically whenever an opportunity presented itself . . . the momentary panic and frustration present upon stepping into the shower, thoroughly lathering your hair, and then hearing the undeniable gonging of the fire alarm . . . Rent-a-cop was always around to pro- tect us . . . motor scooters caught on in a big way and Chatham girls leaped aboard, usually as riders . . . the anxious feelings generated in rat lab when you become convinced that your rat was mentally retarded and would never learn to depress the lever ... as did everyone and everything, Murray Hill steps became a year older, only they showed it more . . . the cacophonous riot of colors and patterns that passed redecoration in the private dining rooms . . . participating in the telephone hook-up on Vietnam sponsored by Yale and find- ing one ' s private thoughts wondering about how many friends would be directly involved there . . . Gateway ' s house-father . . . the large number of students that attended Dr. Alan Guttmacher ' s lec- tures on sex and the attentiveness with which they were received . . . pretty much the same old crowd continued to show up every Friday for Mr. Eddy ' s roundtable discussions ... if only the weather had cooperated. Activities Fair might have been more of a success but it didn ' t — it rained . . . people in Mellon and Dilworth watched the changing sea- sons reflected in Mellon Pond — winter is ice- skating for the children and fast footwork for the dogs; spring and fall the fraternity crowd takes over . . . tennis courts received their usual work- out from faculty and students alike and the faculty proved they could still move . . . buying books at the start of each new semester aroused interest and trepidation regarding courses, also depleted checkbooks . . . some of the big and little sisters clicked — some didn ' t . . . pleasure, pride, excite- ment, disappointment — Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kappa tappings evoked all of these at the formal spring induction . . . any hour of the day or night, chances were that there was a radio or a typewriter going in several otherwise intensely quiet rooms . . . patiently biding one ' s time for days, weeks, and months, waiting for the Shady- side Theatre to get a new feature . . . visiting the dinosaurs at Carnegie Museum . . . wondering, sometimes, when the cumulative pressure from reading assignments, papers, and exams became almost too much if Chatham was really worth it— and then deciding that it was . . . This was Chatham College, 1965-1966.  ;. THE CORNERSTONE 1965-1966 Chatham College Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania TABLE OF CONTENTS ADMINISTRATION and FACULTY ... 9 SENIORS 36 DORMITORIES 79 ORGANIZATIONS 128 ACTIVITIES 146 mi n • ■- « - :• «•■  « ■ •• ■ rN hit Mi W 9t9 ma ' Hi irfi - MM Mi H0 wS 4(G 1 V MM Another amiably quiet year ... no pitched battles between students, faculty, or administration . . . there were some quiet ones, though . . . and some spirited exchanges were heard in the snack bar regarding whose turn it was to pay for coffee . . . owing to their superior financial position, profs usually gave in first and paid . . . there were the usual opportunities to talk personally with a pro- fessor regarding difficulties with a course, one ' s tutorial, or perhaps just some thought that had particularly captivated . . . even if such a chat took place in the professor ' s office, and perhaps more didn ' t than did, it almost always wound up in some conversational ramblings over some pretty varied topics ... of course there were some changes in the faculty and administration ... a number of professors on sabbatical . . . the new members seemed, for the most part, to quickly become a part of Chatham and friends of the students . . . and although there were changes, still many fa- miliar things remained . . . things like — Mr. Cum- mins ' commodious ashtray . . . Hamilton Beagle and friends . . . Miss Kossoff ' s alliterative lectures on curvilinear elements . . . Mr. Smith ' s fondness for the 3:40 p.m. Western Civ hour . . . Miss Mc- Grath ' s persuading her golf classes to keep their eyes on the ball . . . Mr. Lackner ' s perching Buddha-like on the table, delivering his zesty psych lectures . . . Miss Donaldson ' s unerring abil- ity to remember everyone ' s name . . . Mrs. Dug- gar ' s 1-2-3, 1-2-3, 1-2-3 ... Mr. Keefe ' s talk about his golf, his tennis, or both . . . one of the best things about a small school is the ever- present occasion to talk with a professor, inform- ally, without having to make an appointment, and knowing that he knows you, and the quality of your work ... the atmosphere is congenial and relaxed . . . and in such an environment, a lot of learning occurs . . . ' . 10 Involvement means caring. Students to- day do care and care deeply. Involving them in the total work of the academic community is one important way for the American college to prove its faith in a generation in which, frankly, we certainly had better believe. EDWARD D. EDDY, JR. President of the College I fear that today ' s education is too apt to stress per- sonal involvement for its own sake. Instead, we need to learn the depths of pity and compassion arising from a sense of justice, the power of hate coming from an under- standing of life, and the importance of saving hate for issues which really matter. The American nation became strong because it valued a sense of responsibility for the condition of all men rather than those of a particular and privileged class. The keystone, therefore, is that precious, surprisingly unique assumption that in this nation one happens to be, in fact, his brother ' s keeper. The object of life is not to pursue security for its own sake — but, if se- curity must be pursued, it is only because then we can bet- ter speak to the whole human potential. 11 DAVID HENDERSON Executive Dean BARBARA J. LEWIS Dean of Students 12 DORIS CROZIER Special Assistant to the President Assistant Professor of Sociology REINALD McCRUM Secretary of the College AMELIA J. BOTSARIS Registrar 13 RUTH H. SWISSHELM Director of Alumnae Affairs BURT E. ASHMAN Business Manager HANNA GUNDERMAN Bursar 14 LILY DETCHEN Director of Evaluation Services MARY RITA TASCKETTA Director of Placement PEGGY DONALDSON Director of Admissions 15 CAROL ANN CAREW Coordinator of Residence Halls FRANK D. SKINNER Director of Public Relations JOAN BECKER AND DONNA FENNER Assistant Librarians BENJAMIN B. RICHARDS Librarian 16 ' ■ ' ; ' ■:-■ .: lie DARRELL E. WESTFALL Food Manager CLYDE MOON Chef ROWLAND ASTON Superintendent of Maintenance CARLTON E. WOOD Director of Food Services 17 CHARLES RICHARD WILSON School Physician JACK O ' NEIL Bookstore Manager FLORIENE C. EMERICK Executive Housekeeper MARY LOUISE RIEFER Resident Nurse JERRY L. CAPLAN Chairman of Art Department Assistant Professor of Art JOSEPH C. NICHOLSON Instructor in Art FLORENCE S. KOSSOFF Assistant Professor of Art 19 WILLIAM A. BECK Associate Professor of Mathematics HELEN B. CHUN Instructor in Mathematics f ntt i£ :• ' ...;;-- DONALD H. TRAHAN Chairman of Mathematics Department Assistant Professor of Mathematics 2 s JOOST KIEWIET DE JONGE Lecturer in Astronomy DONNA W. DALTON Laboratory Associate in Biology NORMAN W. CHMURA Chairman of Biology Department Associate Professor of Biology CONRAD M. HESS Assistant Professor of Biology IRENE P. LOWE Lecturer in Biology 21 ? . J £ W. D. RICHEY Assistant Professor of Chemistry I MARK C. PAULSON Chairman of Chemistry Department Professor of Chemistry DOROTHY J. BEARCROFT Assistant Professor of Chemistry 22 JACK H. NEESON Associate Professor of Drama CARVER COLLINS Instructor in Drama JEROME S. WENNEKER Assistant Professor of Drama PHYLLIS M. FERGUSON Chairman of Drama Department Professor of Drama 23 FRANCES ELDREDGE Professor of English CAROL R. BROWN Instructor in English WILLIAM JUNGELS Instructor in English MARY McGUIRE Chairman of English Department Associate Professor of English 24 CHARLES EVERETT Mary Helen Marks Professor of English JOHN W. CUMMINS Associate Professor of English BARBARA J. PAGE Instructor in English FRANCES MORROW Instructor in English • 1 1 fij ML 1 ME B .1 ■ - k_j yBt f ■ 5 $? $ ' ■ £ - ' ' : ZJKk 25 LAWRENCE M. KNOLLE Chairman of Education Department Associate Professor of Education RUTH W. STONE Visiting Assistant Professor of Education DOREEN E. BOYCE Instructor in Economics HELEN WEINBERG Lecturer in Secretarial Studies 26 J. CUTLER ANDREWS Chairman of History Department Professor of History ARTHUR G. SMITH Instructor in History STEPHEN BORSODY Professor of History ANN FREEMAN Associate Professor of History 27 MARVIN BRAGG Instructor in German LEONARD M. FRIEDMAN Assistant Professor of French HARRY GOLDBY Associate Professor of French JACK E. TOMLINS Chairman of Language Department Associate Professor of Spanish 28 NASARIO GARCIA Instructor in Spanish SARA LEHRMAN Lecturer in Russian ALBERTINE WICHER Instructor in French KLAUS JONAS Lecturer in German 29 LORENZO MALFATTI Professor in Music HENRY SPINELLI Instructor in Music LOUIS P. COYNER Assistant Professor of Music RUSSEL G. WICKMANN Chairman of Music Department Professor of Music 30 FRANK A. HAYES Assistant Professor of Philosophy THELMA W. TAYLOR Instructor in Philosophy HUGH K. WRIGHT Instructor in Religion i WILLARD E. ARNETT Chairman of Philosophy Department Buhl Professor of Philosophy 31 SARA M. McGRATH Instructor in Physical Education PATIENCE T. BLAYDEN Chairman of Physical Education Department Associate Professor of Physical Education MARGARET P. DUGGAR Lecturer in Dance 32 WILLIAM J. KEEFE Chairman of Political Science Department Irene Heinz Given Professor J. DALE CHASTAIN Assistant Professor of Political Science ALBERT OSSMAN Chairman of Economics Department Associate Professor of Political Science FRANKLIN G. BONN Assistant Professor of Political Science 33 ROBERT H. LOISELLE Assistant Professor of Psychology FRANK M. LACKNER Chairman of Psychology Department Associate Professor of Psychology 1 ; EVA D. VAUGHAN Instructor in Psychology OAKLEY S. RAY Lecturer in Psychology GEORGE WOODWARD Visiting Lecturer in Psychology FRED ADELMAN Associate Professor of Anthropology ROBERT H. MAST Instructor in Sociology ' • £€ NAHUM Z. MEDALIA Chairman of Sociology Department Professor of Sociology 35 The Chatham girl found that life senior year was lived on a unique basis . . . revolved about the tutorial and the related fact that the rough draft was due Monday, February 28th ... As the time drew near and then nearer, seniors ' attendance in class became noticeably sparse . . . Friendships of some three and a half years duration between seniors and faculty became a bit frayed . . . halls containing faculty offices were amiably referred to as murderers ' row . . . The usual friendly banter ceased . . . sometimes all communications ceased . . . The game of good-grief-there ' s-my-tutor- where-can-l-hide? was played in earnest ... it was an easier out than possibly being questioned regarding the condition of one ' s tutorial . . . Final- ly, practically anti-climactically, tutorials were turned in, boards were faced, and the senior class returned to some semblance of normal, and real- ized that graduation was upon them, and then it was all over . . . Exit the undergrad years . . . exit Chatham . . . Senior year 1965-1966 saw: — bermuda shorts worn under those coveted black academic gowns to formal convoca- tions. — some serious thought as to what comes now? — some grad school applications, acceptances. — some very good fellowships . . . — more engagements . . . — Mr. Robert McNamara as commencement speaker . . . — almost everyone turning twenty-one . . . — only seniors having reserved tables . . . — a crushing defeat administered to the juniors in the pre-song contest tug-of-war . . . — but only a third in song contest . . . — some jubilantly happy moments . . . — some distressingly sad ones . . . — many very quiet, thoughtful moments . . . This is my senior year, and now it ' s over . . . 36 rC DOLORES C. ADAMSON Newington, Connecticut GERMAN The Literary Tendencies of Theodore Storm: Is He Romanticist or Realist? PAMELA ANN ARMSTRONG Sewickley, Pennsylvania POLITICAL SCIENCE and GERMAN The Reunification Issue and its Affect on the Formu- lation of German Foreign Policy CHRISTINE BENANITO Perth Amboy, New Jersey ENGLISH Ford Madox Ford, The World of his Novels 38 KATHERINE BIRRIS Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania MATHEMATICS The Teaching of an Elementary Algebra Concept by Programmed Materials BARBARA LECLAIRE BRENMAN Izmir, Turkey SPANISH The Well-Planned Web of Maria Luisa Bombal LYNN DIANE BURKHOUSE Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania HISTORY A Study of the Attitudes toward Reconstruction of the Radical Republican Members of the Thirty- ninth and the Fortieth Congresses of the United States of America 39 LYNNETTE BURLEY Ardmore, Pennsylvania BIOLOGY A Study of Planarian Response to Specific Wave- Lengths of Light within the White Light Spectrum JACQUELINE ANN CAIN Tacoma, Washington ENGLISH The Role of the Anglican Clergyman in Eighteenth Century English Literature SUZANNE M. CALLAS Kittanning, Pennsylvania SOCIOLOGY The War on Poverty: Some Sociological Observations 40 LESLIE RONNA CAPLAN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ENGLISH Some Major Trends of Criticism in Relation to Moby-Dick SUSAN JANE COHN Hazleton, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY The effects of Teacher Attitudes on the Anxiety Level and Problem Solving Ability of Fifth and Sixth Grade Children DIANE COLE Lexington, Massachusetts MUSIC Tradition and Innovation in Twentieth Century Italian Solo Song 41 SUSAN JANE COLEMAN Huntington, West Virginia HISTORY The Effect of Student Participation in the Populist Movement in Russia: 1856-1881 OSIRIS MERCEDES CORNEJO Panama, Republic of Panama FRENCH The Maximes of La Rochefoucauld: An Expression of a Man and His Time NANCY JANE COULTER Wilmington, Delaware ENGLISH Introductory Poetry Anthology and Analysis 42 MARTHA JANE COYNE Allentown, Pennsylvania SOCIOLOGY Leadership Perception in Orthopedically Handi- capped Children as it Reflects Awareness of Their Disabilities BARBARA STILES CRICK Oradell, New Jersey FRENCH Paul Valery et la Creation Poe ' tique LOUISE C. T. DECARL Skokie, Illinois POLITICAL SCIENCE and ECONOMICS Federal Government Stockpiling: National Interest versus Special Interest 43 NANCY DECHTER East McKeesport, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY Differences in Self-Conception and Ideal Role Be- havior among Male and Female Mexican-Americans and Anglo-Americans Measured by the Semantic Differential JERILYN ALICE DONAHOE Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania POLITICAL SCIENCE The Right to Counsel in State Criminal Procedure ADAIR HARRISON DOUGLASS Philadelphia, Pennsylvania HISTORY Philip de Commines: Medieval Historian 44 EMiLY EVA DOYLE Greensburg, Pennsylvania FRENCH The Concept of Love in the Writings of Madame de La Fayette CAROLE DIANNE EARLY Kalamazoo, Michigan PSYCHOLOGY Connotative Meanings and Emotionality of Response to Dimensions of Negatively Relevant Stimuli MARNIE ELDER Williamsport, Pennsylvania ENGLISH Dylan Thomas: A Study of Selected Short Stories 45 JUDITH PIERCE FELLOWS Waban, Massachusetts MATHEMATICS An Exploration on a Formula for Sp where S,= l p + 2 p + 3 p ...n p . JARENE FRANCES Armonk, New York PSYCHOLOGY Generalization of Conditioned Suppression Under Two Drive Levels IRENE FRAZER Glenshaw, Pennsylvania POLITICAL SCIENCE and SPANISH The Survival and Re-emergence of Pre-Revolutionary Power Contenders in Mexico 46 MARJORIE CASEY FRIDAY Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY The Religious Concepts of Irish and American Roman Catholic High School Students as a Function of Encultu ration INTA SOLVITA GALE Indianapolis, Indiana SOCIOLOGY Ideological Reaction to Role Strain: An Application to Contemporary Negro Novelists HANNAH GILMAN Hartford, Connecticut ENGLISH Innocence and the Characters of J. D. Salinger 47 KAREN JUNE GOFF Ellwood City, Pennsylvania ENGLISH A Study of Mark Twain ' s Increasing Pessimism as Seen through His Satire on Human Nature ALICE DIETZ GRAHAM Somerset, Pennsylvania ENGLISH Robert Frost: His Theory of the Sound of Sense as a Working Theory of Poetry ANN JOAN GREENHOUSE Miami, Florida HISTORY The War Policy of the Russian ment (March to November States Diplomacy Provisional Govern- 1917) and United 48 BONNIE L HAGAN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY A Comparative Study of Teachers ' and Students ' titudes toward Education At- RAQUEL MARIA HALTY Montevideo, Uruguay SPANISH and FRENCH An Introduction to the Classical Dramas of Spain and France ISABEL DEBORAH HAUSNER White Plains, New York POLITICAL SCIENCE A comparison of the Decision-Makers ' Perceptions of the Foreign-Policy Formulation Process and the Analytic Scholars ' 49 ART CAROL HEINZ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania BARBARA-LEE HEWITT Geneva, New York SOCIOLOGY The Wet-Dry Controversy: The Discovery of a Domi- nant Drinking Pattern BRENDA MARIE HILKEN Toms River, New Jersey SPANISH Juan Ruiz de Alarcon and the Thesis Comedy 50 E. GAIL HILLARD Lancaster, Pennsylvania HISTORY An Analytical Biography of Heinrich Schliemann KATHERINE STAFFORD HOOVER Wilmington, Delaware HISTORY I Am A Southron: William Gilmore Simms and the Defense of Slavery KATHERYN ANN HOPKINS Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ENGLISH and DRAMA Didacticism in George Bernard Shaw 51 ANITA CADWALLADER HOROWITZ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania SPANISH A Comprehensive Study of the Spanish Poet Jose Gorostiza and his Poem Muerte Sin Fin JUDITH LYNNE HOWARD Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ENGLISH The Theme of Courtly Love: A Study of the Troilus and Criseyde by Geoffrey Chaucer KRISTIN GAEL JELLISON Salem, Massachusetts MATHEMATICS Reassessment of Russell ' s Thesis that Logic is the Basis of Math 52 PATRICIA ELLEN KANE West Hartford, Connecticut HISTORY Problems of the Biographer MALLORY KING Baltimore, Maryland ENGLISH Form and Content in the Poetry of Theodore Roethke RUTHE M. KLEIN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY Connotative Meanings of Religious and Out-group Relations Concepts as a Function of the Jewish Affiliation of Parents and their Children 53 SANDRA ELAINE KRETZ Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania POLITICAL SCIENCE The Growth of the Republican Party in the South, 1952-1964 DONNA SUE KWALL Ellwood City, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY Academic Success and Level of Aspiration as Func- tions of Parent-Child Relationships and Socio- metric Variables CRISTINA MARIA LAGUERUELA Miami, Florida POLITICAL SCIENCE and SPANISH American Editorial Policy and the Cuban Revolution 54 PENELOPE LANGSTON Grosse Pointe, Michigan ENGLISH The Supernatural in Selected Tales of Nathaniel Hawthorne VIVIAN ANN LAZUR Munhall, Pennsylvania BIOLOGY The Relation of the Tumor-Inducing Principle to the Bean Plant CAROL BETH LEVIN Philipsburg, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY A Developmental Study in the Retention of Sensory Experience 55 BETSY LOUISE McGREGOR Indiana, Pennsylvania ENGLISH A Comparative Study in Contemporary Literary Criti- cism NANCY McNABB Burnham, Pennsylvania CHEMISTRY Ether Extractable Esters of Ripening Bananas KATHLEEN McNAMARA Washington, D. C. ANTHROPOLOGY Extra Processual Events in theTiv Society 56 REBECCA RAY MARK Baltimore, Maryland POLITICAL SCIENCE The Development of the Federalist Principle in Nigeria BONNIE LOU MARKEY Shaker Heights, Ohio ART HISTORY El Greco and the Evolution of His Style as Seen through Five Versions of his Cleansing of the Temple BONNIE BETH MARKS New York, New York GERMAN The Attainment of Self-lndividuation in Specific Works of Hermann Hesse as Influenced by Carl Jung 57 EMILY BERRY MARSHALL Baltimore, Maryland HISTORY The Role of Franz von Papen in Negotiating the Concordat of 1933 between Hitler and the Vatican ELIZABETH ANN MARTY East Grand Rapids, Michigan ENGLISH The Post-Classical Development of the God, Pan, Selected English Literature in MARJORIE RUTH MORRISON Darien, Connecticut HISTORY The Growth of the Assertiveness in the House of Commons during the Reign of Elizabeth I, 1558- 1603 58 GEORGIA MOSCOVITIS Farrell, Pennsylvania CHEMISTRY The Synthesis of the Metallic Salts of Norcamphoric Acid PAULA LESLIE MYSELL Belmont, Massachusetts FRENCH line Etude de la Trage ' die — Conception et Forme — dans le Theatre d ' Albert Camus et de Samuel Beckett LAURA ESTES OLIVA Darien, Connecticut ENGLISH The Development of the Critical Voice in Selected Novels of Henry James 59 JUDITH LYNN PARRY Elmira, New York HISTORY Munich: The Climax of Appeasement CELIA A. PAUL New York, New York SOCIOLOGY Alternative Approaches to Social Change in the Urban Community MARGARET FRANCES PAULSON Arlington, Virginia ANTHROPOLOGY and SOCIOLOGY Changing Family Patterns among the Serbs in Pitts- burgh 60 NANCY CAROLINE PERSSON Huntington, New York PSYCHOLOGY The Effect of d-Lysergic Acid Diethylamide. Psilocy- bin, Mescaline and Ditran on Animal Behavior ELIZABETH ANN PINCUS Waynesburg, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY Attitudes of Delinquent and Nondeliquent Girls Toward Certain People in Their Environment as Measured by the Semantic Differential ANN ELIZABETH PLUMMER Newark, Ohio MUSIC Federal Subsidization of American Art: An Evalua- tion of its History and Prospects 61 JENNIFER TISDELL POTTER Washington, D. C. POLITICAL SCIENCE The Effect of the Military in Thailand on the Process of Political Development HILARY JENKINS PROUTY Holden, Massachusetts ENGLISH An Analysis of William Faulkner ' s Treatment of the Negro Characters in Selected Works ANN STEWART QUENIN Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ENGLISH The Place of the Heroic Concept in Selected Writings of Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill 62 nra HELEN READ Tamworth, New Hampshire CHEMISTRY The Spectrophotometry of Ammonium Tetrathio- cyanatocobaltate MADELON LOIS ROSE Chicago, Illinois FRENCH A Portrait of Mme. De Sevigne as Revealed in her Correspondences NANCY BOUTON ROSS Darien, Connecticut FRENCH Humanism and Moderation in Selected Plays by Pierre Corneille: A New Interpretation 63 NANCY MARIE RUEHL Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY Correlations of Sociometric Status NANCY JEAN RUSSELL Evanston, Illinois GERMAN The Political Philosophy of Heinrich von Kleist CATHERINE ANNE ST. CLAIR Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania FRENCH The Role of the Traitor in Four Selected Racinian Tragedies: Andromaque, Bajazet, Mithridate, and Ester SHEILA MARILYN SADIN Lawrence, New York HISTORY The Educational Activities of the Freedmen ' s Bureau 1865-1870— A Study in Depth JOAN LORRAINE SAGLIO Glastonbury, Connecticut POLITICAL SCIENCE and ECONOMICS A Study of Young Democrats and Young Republicans in Connecticut ANDRA SANDSON Jeannette, Pennsylvania MATHEMATICS Programmed Learning in Mathematics: An Attempt to Construct a Program for the Teaching of a Basic Algebraic Concept 65 SUSAN STITH SAUNDERS Portland, Maine HISTORY Palmerston and his Appeal to the Middle Classes HELEN MARY SCOFIELD East Norwalk, Connecticut HISTORY The Development of Racial Nativism in the United States as Revealed in Selected Periodicals from 1905-1924 CAROL LESLIE SHELDON Washington, D. C. POLITICAL SCIENCE The Czechoslovak-American Intellectual: A Study of the Political Behavior of a Select Group 66 LESLEY ELLEN SMITH Claremont, California ENGLISH The Function of the Hero in Henry Fielding ' s Tom Jones and Joseph Andrews SANDRA JEAN SMITH Park Ridge, Illinois HISTORY Political Legacy: A Discussion of Three Political As- sociations in the Gold Coast SHARON SMITH Lexington, Massachusetts ART Drawing as a Media of Expression 67 CAROLYN MARIE SMYSER York, Pennsylvania SOCIOLOGY Youth Culture: A Theoretical Study of the Crisis of Change ANN SPARKS Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY The Differentiation of the Hypothalmus in Males and Females as Manifested in the Behavior of Rats CLARE STEBBINS Quincy, Illinois ENGLISH Henry James ' Fictional Treatment of the American Woman in Daisy Miller, The Portrait of a Lady, and The Golden Bowl 68 RACHEL ROSE STEIN Windsor, Connecticut POLITICAL ECONOMY A Case Study of the Relationship of Government and Industry: Collective Bargaining in the Basic Steel Industry, 1946-1966 JUDITH JOY STONE Maplewood, New Jersey ENGLISH The Poetry of Thomas Hardy in Light of the Tradi- tional English Ballad SUSAN FAVILLE TAYLOR Briarcliff Manor, New York ENGLISH A Comparative Analysis of the Three Major Phases of Eugene O ' Neill ' s Playwrighting Career 69 JANICE JEAN THOMAS Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania MUSIC Theobald Boehm: His Influences on and Contribu- tions to the Modern Flute MAUREEN THOMAS Monroeville, Pennsylvania PSYCHOLOGY Self Concept and Identification with Parents in Up- wardly Mobile and Non-Mobile College Women SAGE BAILEY TOWER Darien, Connecticut CHEMISTRY A Preparative Study of Carbonatotetraammine Co- balt (III) 70 JANE MILLER TRADER Sewickley, Pennsylvania BIOLOGY Histochemical Studies on Developing Tissues PATRICIA STE WART TURCOTTE Lakewood, New York ENGLISH The Artist ' s Search for Identity as Seen Through the Primary Characters in Lawrence Durell ' s Alexandria Quartet BETSY VAN der VOORT Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania MUSIC A Translation of Marcel Dupre ' s Cours de Contre- point with Original Music Illustrations of his Pre- cepts 71 BARBARA ANN WALLACE Snyder, New York SOCIOLOGY Juvenile Delinquency — Utilitarian or Non-utilitarian: A Study of Selected Cases from Allegheny County Juvenile Court Records SUSAN ANN WARD Auburn, Maine MUSIC The Baroque Dance Suite: A Stylization of Physical Form NAOMI WATERSTON Bethesda, Maryland ENGLISH A Study of Morality and Convention in three Novels by Edith Wharton 72 LOIS ANNE WELSH West Chester, Pennsylvania SOCIOLOGY A Study Concerned with the Attachment to the Ex- ternal Environment of Fifteen Delinquent Girls Confined to the Canonsburg Development Center CARLIE WHITE New Kensington, Pennsylvania BIOLOGY The Morphogenesis of Certain Nematode Capturing Fungi LINDA MAREE WHITMYRE Mars, Pennsylvania MATHEMATICS Geometry in the Visual Arts 73 JEAN WIEST Pittsburgh Pennsylvania HISTORY Significant Developments at the Court of Amenhotep III: How They Led to the Amarna Revolution and Their Effect on the Empire LYNN TRAVIS WILLIAMSON Ridgewood, New Jersey PSYCHOLOGY The Existence of Perceptual Defense and its Relation- ship to Anxiety-Provoking Stimuli PATRICE CLAIRE WILLIAMSON Charleston, West Virginia ART Studies of the Figure in Painting 74 MARY E. FOSTER Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ENGLISH A Long Poem Titled City Collage 75 76 77 T BEATTYHALL %g 8Sia.a Miss Sara McGrath Head Resident of Beatty Hall OFFICERS OF BEATTY HALL President: Alice Graham Secretary: Barbara Crick Treasurer: Janet Washburn Social Chairman: Dara Murphy Seated: Nancy Persson, Carlie White. Standing: Jolie Blauvelt, Marsha Otterman, Sabra Burdick, Sandy Hochhauser. Seated: Mary Schlitt, Linda Whitmeyer, Barb Crick. Standing: Alice Graham, Louise DeCarl. Seated: Dara Murphy, Carol Swenson, Margo McKay, Kathy Marchant, Marty Speer, Donna Beiswenger. Standing: Sheila McAteer, Janet Washburn, Audrey Smith. — ' v.. u F « - DILWORTH HALL Mrs. Lee McGregor Head Resident of Dilworth Hall OFFICERS OF DILWORTH HALL President: Laurel Weiss Secretary: Nancy LeVasseur Treasurer: Connie Swjantek Social Chairman: Sandy Hoch 84 Seated: Nance Jacobson, JoAnn Greenfield, Mar- sha Weiss, Amy Bender, Phyllis Epstein. Stand- ing: Connie Weiss, Dael Kiesler, Gini Gold. Seated: Debbie Gage, Barbara Obenauer, Betty Chiafullo. Standing: Barbara Bohne, Nancy Nesbit, Kay Perkins, Susan Trees. Seated: Kathy Perrone, Ann Rosch, Beri Fay. Sarah Bornstein, Janice Gary. Stand- ing: Sally Jones, Martha Mann. Seated: Ann Berne, DeAnn Beach. Standing: Leslie Miller, Candy Saly, Pat Elio. 85 Seated: Dixie Dixon, Paula Rhodes, Ellen Newman, Fern Weinstein, Lois Kramer, Alice Cihat. Standing: Beverly Hardy, Karen Miller. Seated: Lee Snyder, Kathy Macreery, Cory Dautlick. Standing: Audrey Pysh, Sally Barnett, Beckey Conrad. Seated: Edna Bergman, Suzanne Sausedo, Joanne Fidler. Standing: Laurie Weiss, Connie Swjantek, Marcia Mount, Caroline Roth. Seated: Diane Himes, Sandy Guest, Ida Gonzalez. Standing: Cheryl Rogers, Mary Hood, Jackie Emery, Mimi Majewski. 86 Seated: Sue Clifford, Sam Hoch, Nancy Le Vasseur. Standing: Carol Pusin, Barbara Subow, Alice Ireland, Ellen Lehn. 87 DAY STUDENTS Sitting: Sandra Kretz, Kathy Birds, Connie Yankura, Linda Hauser, Carol Heinz. Standing: Marty Friday, Vivian Lazur, Ruth Klein. Sitting: Andy Grezmak, Sue Brewer. Kneeling: Karen Curto, Ricki Shore. Standing: Barbara Van Sciver, Shad Mirza. Sitting: Marcia Binstock, JoAnn Watson, Arlene Gunther, Vivian Garbuny, Helen Sparks. Kneeling: Vera Birkowitz, Katie Hennings, Carolyn Rose. FICKES HALL Mrs. Virlea H. Woods Head Resident Fickes Hall OFFICERS OF FICKES HALL President: Deborah Little Vice President: Mary Louise Vanderwart Secretary: Karen Hampton Treasurer: Emily Greenaway Social Chairman: Meryl Berman 90 Seated: Patricia Pronovost, Suzie Price, Marfa Beaire, Gail Fishberg, Linda Geldman. Stand- ing: Sharon Litchfield, Susan Sheppard, Gail Young, Kathy Carlson. First Row: Lynda Newman, Holly Meek, Claire Weinstein, Evi Karba. Sec- ond Row: Judy Cooper, Jennifer Sumner, Karen Polinsky. First Row: Judy Gilbert, Donna Mrock, Natalie Dingle. Second Row: Alexis Gen- eralovich, Eileen Richey, Ellen Daley, Pat- r icia Jalowick. Third Row: Jill Haas, Jackie Flynn, Nancy Freudenthal. Seated: Marise Hausner, Jody Drooz, Linda Scholle, Susan Porter, Beth Shapiro, Sally Kulber. Standing: Jean Robinson, Nancy Best, Debbie Carpenter, Priscilla Stevens. 91 Front: Holly Lanigan. Kneeling: Mary Holland, Gail Brooks, Jane Grisell away, Jenny Jessop. Emily Green- First Row: Candy Atkinson, Trudi Gamerman. Second Row: Ann Judson, Ann Nelson, Helen Pollock. Third Row: Josie Campbell, Dale Cohen. First Row: Emily Doyle, Mary Vanderwart, Mary Ellen Good- will, Judy Murray. Second Row: Phyllis Malls, Heather Bas- tow, Ellen Goldbloom, Carol Mason, Meryl Berman, Barbara Brenman. Top to Bottom: Kathy Smith, Lynne Osterloh, Polly Fritz, Ginger Getman, Barbara Willis, Nancy White, Penny Lowe, Kay Gamage, Sarah Hamilton. Clockwise: Susan Roller, Bonnie Lombardo, Carol Zurheide, Ann Posner, Carolyn Hooton, Janine Snyder, Betti Wallenhorst, Dianne Bachman, Linda Richman. First Row: Karin Hampton, Linda Wickett. Second Row: Linda Van- Doren, Betsy Crone. Third Row: Ann McCall, Lolita Dawson, Jean Sour, Debbie Little. First Row: Isabel Mizrack, Ann Turnock, Linda Dawidowicz. Second Row: Paige Churchman, Sandy Scofield, Loretta Bonazzo. Third Row: Barbara Christie, Betsey Clemens, Penny Prudden. First Row: Wendy Grahm, Gail Hart, Betsey Clemens, Marjory Kaplan, Sarah Olmstead. Second Row: Marcia Seeler, Janet Burkhiser, Marty Hughes, Susan Brown. 93 Seated: Suzie Callas, Carolyn Smyser, Sue Taylor. Standing: Pat Turcotte, Lesley Smith. 94 y c ci 3 i •o a ll L L l -ML X J V •: =-,? -.  «. % i c ; • i == % l l e • ' w4 . GATEWAY HOUSE D k ■ ' J i v. ' . --._ r. Mr. and Mrs. Donald French Graduate Residents of Gateway House OFFICERS OF GATEWAY HOUSE President: Sarah Sumner Secretary-Treasurer: Cindy Martin Social Chairman: Kathleen Cochrane 96 Seated: Audrey Young, Cherie Stanglein, Cindy Martin. Standing: Kathy Cochrane, Carolyn Taylor, Merle Pol- lack. Terry Dech, Sarah Sumner, Faith Yoho, Lois Murphey, Joyce Berman. 97 98 KfM AtcMEaraBTO ElIt 1 = t w B ' -- jn gji a _ r Jfl m 1 PELLETREAU HALL Mrs. Winifred Bauman Head Resident of Pelletreau Hall OFFICERS OF PELLETREAU HALL President: Susan Whitfield Vice-president: Rose Chasanov Secretary: JaneWeigel Treasurer: Linda McPhilliamy Social Chairman: Elizabeth Bosson 100 Front Row: Ann Robinson, Barbara Bramble, Amanda Timney, Meg Sandridge, Carole Kuhn. Second Row: Linda Taft, Judy Graytock, Nancy Ross, Sage Tower, Kammy McCleery, Susan Hake, Ann Joseph. Seated: Alice Kessler, Goldie Jaffe, Sue Esterman. Standing: Elaine Scarry, Friedel Laaff, Barbara Stern, Bobbie Livingstone, Cynthia Ashley, Sherie Lindquist. Seated: Susan Whitfield, Cookie Chasanov, Leslie Tarr, Elinor Marks. Standing: Judy L ondon, Lynn Hillman, Susan Schnapf. 101 Seated: Linda McPhilliamy, Mary Rosenburger, Karen Lake, Penny Anderson. Standing: Bonnie Birks, JoAnn Eustace, Martha King, Sylvia Woods. Seated: Cathy Gross, Shelly Israel, Marianne Schlittler, Karen Mobsby, Dorothy Strang. Standing: Barbara Miller, Molly Day, Diane Savage, Mary Ann Denning, Victoria Rellich. Seated: Merry White, Sue Thomas, Meg McDonald, Susan Schmerer, Yvette Bourgeois, Kate Edmonston. Standing: Pat Edwards, Mary Boresz. Seated: Betty Adams, Ellie Wait, Linda Whitlock. Standing: Pat Taylor, Jackie Yates, Suzanne Brown. Seated: Betsy Davis, Naomi Waterston, Raquel Halty, Ann Kessler, Sally Stebbins. Standing: Nancy Dechter, Barbara Morgan, Louise Black, Betty Schapiro. Seated: Dawn Schaefer, Kathy Kratt, Gisela Krueger, Karen Frick. Standing: Mariann Williams, Evi Tamm, Iris Raskin. Top to Bottom: Greta Gunia, Georgia McKee, Kathy Laemmle, Alice Hunter, Carol Corell, Andy Moss, Barbara Morgan, Sue Davis, Leigh Cluthe, Mimi Doeller, Kathy Osage. 103 r WOODLAN! i Miss Carol Carew Head Resident of Woodland Hall OFFICERS OF WOODLAND HALL President: Jill Dworkin Vice-president: Cass Spears Secretary: Gretchen Gray Treasurer: Ellen Witt Social Chairman: Christine Joyce 106 Seated: Eleanor Selling, Alice Harriman, Mary Clark, Emily Barclay, Suzanne Boucek. Standing: Janet Walk- er, Dorothy Zorn, Karen Melquist. Clockwise: Pam Matthias, Oifan Chan, Judy Bachrach, Sue Burke, Cass Spears, Pat McBride. Seated: Harriet Dye, Kit Lindsay, Pennie Mastantuono, Cheryl Tow, Kelley Maclssacs, Betsy Bosson. Standing: Ann Getman, Kathy Pratt. 107 Kneeling: Nancy Hoist, Debbie Dobski, Marianna Mayer, Susan Priest, Jane DeLucia. Seated: Bobara DeCaulp, Marilyn Hunt, Susan Rhodes, Susan Pompeo, Carroll Kieckhefer. Seated: Marion LeFebre, Harriet Hudson, Nina Talalay, Evelyn Goldsmith, Kathy Romanski. Standing: Carol Einstein, Liz Brill. First Row: Nancy Cohen, Thayer Cory, Cornelia Kennedy. Second Row: Laura Gould, Mary Silton, Rosemary Spierer, Mary Alice Brannin. Third Row: Peggy Rosenthal, Adrienne Babb. 108 First Row: Judy Lam pert, Alene Love. Second Row: Laurie Gordon, Jill Dworkin, Pam Poch, Jessi Mandell. Third Row: Cathy Horowitz, Marty Bennett, Judy Herbst. Nina Miller, Lynn Monnie, Karen Feinstein. Mary Lou Hutchins, Polka Dotts, Gretchen Gray, Lucille Finger, Linda Weltcheck, Mary Knipmeyer. 4i 109 Seated: Zelda Lipshutz. Standing: Davida Tunis, Rene Kay, Nancy Banchiere, Nancy Blaisdell, Jean Swartz, Marty Larkin, Debby Rosch, Jody Tilghman, Charlene Van Thof, Judy Hormats. Seated: Sarah Llewellyn, Ellen Witt, Jan Miller, Sherri Conklin, Leslie Greene. Standing: Carol Sherman, Kacey Shotmeyer. First Row: Laura Weill, Kathy Williams, Penny Lowe, Marybelle Finger, Joy Waddell. Second Row: Allyson Paulus, Holly Gunts. : .-::-: :: v : ■ : ?5; 110 First Row: Nancy Gintoff, Diane Stein. Second Row: Christine Saku- moto, Jill Edwards, Betsy Home, Vicki Seitz, Sue Pasley. Third Row: Patty Johnston, Bobbie Franklin, Susan Farr, Marybelle Sammel, Joanna Curry. Seated: Susan Elliott, Judy Rogoff, Anne Damrosch, Alison Oakes, Kathy Wright. Standing: Lynn Staley, Carol Birming- ham, Joyce Kass. First Row: Barbara Miller, Christine Andrews, Harriet Katz. Second Row: Eleanore Beale, Risa Ellovich, Faye Singer, Rhonda Nichols, Jane de la Garza. Ill 112 BENEDUM HALL Mrs. Bertha Treasure Head Resident of Benedum Hall OFFICERS OF BENEDUM HALL President: Susan Cohn Secretary-Treasurer: Nancy Ruehl Social Chairman: Betsy McGregor 114 Clockwise: Nancy Ruehl, Suie Conn, Jackie Cain, Ann Quenin, Margaret Paulson, Judy Stone, Jeff Potter, Betsy McGregor, Sherry Smith. First Row: Louise Royster, Nancy Lippmann, Carol Pogash, Pam Zerwick. Second Row: Pam Kipp, Trina Shelburne, Cristina Lagueruela, Connie Jones. First Row: Bonnie Markey, Susie Coleman, Lois Welsh, Helen Scofield, Rebecca Mark. Second Row: Ann Greenhouse, Judy Parry, Kathy Hoover, Marjorie Morrison. 115 116 - w % -« 3 ?7 J O- BERRY HALL Miss Rhea Rose Head Resident of Berry Hall OFFICERS OF BERRY HALL President: Lynn Williamson Secretary-Treasurer: Barbara Hewitt Social Chairman: Barbara Blodorn 118 First Row: Lynn Williamson, Lee Macey. Second Row: Betsy Van Der Voort, Sandy Lafe, Barbara Blodorn, Jane Trader, Ann Plummer. 119 120 MELLON HALL Miss Carol Chambers Head Resident of Mellon Hall OFFICERS OF MELLON HALL President: Patrice Williamson Secretary-Treasurer: Mary Ruddell Social Chairman: Andra Sandson 122 First Row: Penny Langston, Jane Birmingham, Karen Goff, Beth Marty, Judy Fellows. Second Row: Barbara Wallace, Sheila Sadin, Carole Early, Jane Coulter. First Row: Jarene Frances, Donna Kwall. Second Row: Andra Sandson, Bonnie Marks, Madelon Rose. First Row: Patty Williamson, Kathy Hopkins, Clare Stebbins. Second Row: Carol Sheldon, Marnie Elder, f Kay Harbach. 123 Frist Row: Judy Siegal, Nora Levy, Cookie Schiffmann, Jo Messersmith, Sandy Stewart. Second Row: Anne Clarke, Vivian Lowery, Eve Rubin, Cary Cadman, Emmy Hill, Jane Ziskind, Mary Lou Patrick. 124 125 126 - 127 128 129 CHATHAM COMMUNITY GOVERNMENT In its efforts to consider matters of community concern, C.C.G. initiated the now famous gripe-in. More constructive than the name would imply, this session has provided a basis from which new pro- grams and re-evaluation of the old have evolved. The increased activities fee is felt to be a neces sary adjustment to permit greater quantity in campus activities. Again in the area of quality the traditions committee had been established to evaluate tradi- tions in terms of meaningfulness. Chatham girls will have little trouble justifying the meaning of a new tradition — Toe Dabbling Day. C.C.G. ' s attempts, to encourage student expression are seen in the crea- tion of an opinion board and such groups as poetry and sculpture workshops. Under president Debbie Little, the C.C.G. has ex- panded its role. As the year neared its end the vitality of the board continued to increase. Now the organiza- tion is considering student I.D. ' s and student par- ticipation in admission and financial aid committees. ■ Standing: Mr. Hugh K. Wright, Debbie Little, Dean Lewis, Emmy Hill, Dr. Willard E. Arnett. Sitting: Pam Poch, Heather Bastow, Trina Shelburne, Karen Miller, Patty McBride. Sitting: Helen Read. Missing: Sarah Bornstein, Marcia Seeler, Jan Miller. BUDGET BOARD Budget Board allocates student activity fees among the various organizations and presents this budget to C.C.G. for approval. In hopes of enabling organizations to foresee financial difficulties by examining their past spendings and future plans on a more regular basis. Alice Ireland, Carol Sherman, Jennifer Lewis, Jennifer Jessop, Ann Greenhouse, Janet Walker, Holly Lanigan, Cheryl Gambrell, Susan Coleman, Mary Holland, Becky Conrad, Lesle Tarr. 130 Top Row: Chris Joyce, Dara Murphy, Betsy McGregor, Lenore Felner, Andra Sandson, Betsy Bosson, Barbara Blodorn, Sandy Hoch, Susan Coleman. Bottom Row: Kathy Cochrane, LoLita Dawson. SOCIAL BOARD Co-ordinating all social activities on campus with those of other colleges is a primary goal of Chatham ' s Social Board. This year, the scope was enlarged to include not only colleges in western Pennsylvania but also those in Ohio and eastern Penn- sylvania. Lolita Dawson and her staff were responsible for several all-college mixers, a weekend at Kenyon, dinner-dances in various dorms, and combos in the Snack Bar. Despite mild mid-February weather, the ski day at Laurel Mountain was a successful event. HOUSE BOARD House Board, composed of dormi- tory presidents and other elected officers, co-ordinates activities and formulates the policies concerning dormitory life. This year a special committee of two board members, two professors, two members of the administration, and a trustee sub- mitted a proposal for key dormitories, an arrangement under which seniors are given extensive personal discre- tion regarding their hours. The pro- posal has been approved and the coming academic year will serve as an experimental period. Carol Pogash did an admirable job as president. Standing: Susan Coleman, Susie Cohn, Alice Graham, Patty Williamson, Laurel Weiss, Sue Whitfield, Sarah Summer, Jill Dworkin, Debbie Little. Sitting: Jean Sour, Carol Pogash, Anne Clark. 131 HONOR BOARD Seeking an increased understanding of the intricacies of the Honor Policy, member of Honor Board devoted much time to freshmen and new faculty orientation. Emphasis was placed on the personal aspect of dual reporting, resolution of the problem between offender and witness. Under Doe Adamson, two constitu- tional changes, concerning class representation and eligibility for presidency, were made. MORTAR BOARD Not only scholarship but also community leadership and service are considered in select- ing members for the Hood and Tassel chapter of Mortar Board, the only national senior women ' s honor society. Its successful Septem- ber book sale was followed by another in Febru- ary; proceeds went for graduate scholarships. To benefit the entire student body, tutoring services were arranged, and following Dr. Gutt- macher ' s visit, a questionnaire on the need for sex education administered through the college was devised and distributed. Standing: Vivian Lowery, Judy Stone, Carole Early, Judy Parry, Sage Tower. Sitting: Chris Lagueruela, Sue Burke, Doe Adamson. Standing: Isabel Hausner, Ann Greenhouse, Celia Paul, Sandy Kretz. Sitting: Doe Adamson, Judy Parry, Jennifer Potter, Patty Williamson. 132 PHI BETA KAPPA Dolores Adamson Diana Cole Irene Fraser Marjorie Friday Ann Greenhouse Marjorie Morrison Paula Mysell J Margaret Paulson Annalisa Tooker PSYCHOLOGY CLUB Quitting the oral stage, the two year old Psychology Club experienced an organizational change, its membership opening to the student body. The pri- mary function of its monthly meeting is the provision of speakers to broaden the psychological knowledge of interested girls. Among the speakers were Mr. Steven Coles, who spoke on computer programming, and Dr. I. A. Gladstone, whose visit was hosted by the club. Our own Dr. Loiselle discussed drugs and alcohol. In May, an overwhelming response was stimulated by the appearance of Dr. B. F. Skinner. Throughout all this, the Psych Club ' s libido has been ultimately directed towa rd membership in Psi Chi. Standing: Kathy Kratt, Nancy McNabb, Helen Read, Greta Gunia. Sitting: Jane Ziskind, Jean Sour, Georgia Moscovitis, Ann Berne. Kneeling: Pat Elio. AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY The American Chemical Society, encour- aging the advancement of all fields in chemistry, is the world ' s largest organiza- tion devoted to a single science. Although membership is limited to majors and pro- spective majors, the student body may benefit from the lectures of outside speak- ers. This fall, a panel of four women dis- cussed Careers for Women in Chemis- try. Later in the year, Dr. James Carter spoke on Boron Hydrides and the topic of Dr. Richard Hein, of Mellon Institute, was Chemistry of Odors and Tastes. In the spring, the chapter presented an award to the senior major with the highest aver- age. 134 Sitting: Kathy Beard, Cl air Stebbins, Jane Coulter, Betsy McGregor, Jackie Cain. Kneeling: Harriet Katz, Nancy Lippman, Shannon McGuire, Berry Marshall. MINOR BIRD Though many an outburst on campus is heard, It ' s expressed as art in the Minor Bird. Student Contributions entered for selection, By Marshall, McGregor et al, often end in rejection. But superior poetry, prose, drawings, etc. appear In the Minor Bird ' s edition published each year. (This poem, for some reason, sorry to say, By the Minor Bird, was turned away.) CAMPUS KEYS At it once again, the Campus Keys continued to squire prospective students, their parents, and other guests of the college about the campus. New keys were initiated into the intricacies of that most delicate problem, i.e., putting the fathers of prospective students at ease. This is no small thing and hinges on the fact that a father ' s sense of etiquette obliges him to handles the door- opening chores, a major diplomatic endeavor at a women ' s college. Junior Penny Anderson, never apart from her well-worn appointment book, headed the Keys this year and did an admirable job of tracking down guides for each of the 600 plus tours given. In addition to their tour duties, the Keys also served as hostesses at several college functions, among them conferences for area secondary school English teachers and guidance counselors from sev- eral states. 135 Standing: Mr. Jungles, Mr. Knolle, Mr. Richy, Mr. Thomlins. Sitting: Carol Sheldon, Pam Armstrong, Kathy Marchant, Mary Eaton, Lynette Burley, Margaret Paulson, Kathy Birris. CHATHAM FILM SOCIETY For those with a yen for the eclectic, there exists the Chatham Film Society. Periodically throughout the year, it provides noted foreign films, giving students the opportunity to pick up a film they missed or tangle again with their favorite Bergman or Fellini. One knows she is in dire straits when a film by one of the latter becomes more understandable than some of her course work. Although in the past a theme has guided the choice of movies, this year ' s emphasis was simply on obtaining the best available films. Among these were the Russian Ballad of a Soldier; the Italian L ' Avventura; and the French Last Year at Marienbad. Selected shorts accompanied each feature. Students and professors were given the opportunity to haggle about the films during a coffee hour following each presentation. HOSPITALITY COMMITTEE Pleased with the new Sunday meal ar- rangement. Then thank Gretchen Grey and her cohorts. The enlargement of Hospi- tality Committee to include dormitory rep- resentation increased its ability to perform a somewhat formidable task: coordination of the ideas of Saga, the Administration, and the student body. The committee ' s activities included the hosting of special events, among them the Russian Sym- posium. Standing: Marsha Mount, Helen Scofield, Nancy Banchiere, Chris Lagueruela, Evi Tamm, Susan Coleman. Sit- ting: Marty Coyne, Gretchen Gray, Barb Crick, Carolyn Taylor. Sitting: Anne Clark, Sherrie Smith, Marty Coyne, Jane Trader, Mary Schlitt, Carol Sherman. Kneeling: Jo Messersmith, Sandy Hochhauser, Sue Davis, Mimi Doeller, Sabre Burdick. CHATHAM RECREATION ASSOCIATION Built on the premise that there are harmless outlets for mid-year tensions, the Chatham Rec- reation Association has once more provided the campus population with balls, bats, and hockey sticks. The potential danger in arming Chatham girls thusly is mitigated by the organization ' s guidance and direction in the use of such weapons. Purple and White teams were again given the opportunity of meeting each other in the alley (bowling, that is), courts, and in Mellon pool. For those preferring more than a sporadic sam- pling of the physical arts, there were the varsity teams led by CRA president Sandy Hoch- hauser and sponsor, Miss Sarah McGrath. Clad in new tunics, the basketball team continued last year ' s innovation — area competition with near-by colleges and high schools. CRA also sponsored off-campus activities, such as the Lake Pymatuning boating trips. If one may take bedraggled appearance as indication of ex- hausting fun, the participants more than en- joyed themselves. Standing: Sherrie Smith, Carole Early, Judy Stone. Kneeling: Lynn Wil- liamson, Hilary Prouty, Nancy Ruehl. SKI CLUB The number of limpers on campus each winter makes skiing ' s contribution to physi- cal fitness questionable but at the same time evidences the Chatham girl ' s enthusiasm for the sport. Unpredictable weather conditions lamentably prevented many organized excur- sions to the area slopes but through the Ski Club, students finding Chatham hills too gentle could obtain rides to more challeng- ing ones — when weather permitted. 137 f§ © CHOIR A walk across campus on a Monday or a Wednesday evening reveals the sound of the earnest voices of the Chatham Choir. Only a hint of their ability, these practices culminate in the busy schedule of programs and joint concerts with other colleges. Songs must be chosen and learned, trips arranged, and even an auc- tion is held in which second-hand objects will hopefully produce the funds for choir projects. Despite hurried departures and bus breakdowns, the touring choir carried its talent to the campuses of Lehigh, Hamilton, and Franklin and Marshall; Bowdoin, Washington and Jefferson and the Franklin and Marshall boys came to Chatham. The various concerts included the opera Dido and Aeneas, and Vaughan William ' s Five Mystical Songs. Certainly one of the high points of the year ' s campus activities was the parents ' weekend production, Once Upon a Mattress. The choir not only sang the choral parts but provided a pool of talent from which several of the musical ' s leads were chosen. The voices of the Choir also graced the various holi- day programs. The Christmas candlelight services, in which the choir always participates, doubtless are among a Chatham girl ' s store of her lovliest memories. Standing: Marsha Otterman, Mariann Wil- liams, Dorothy Zorn, Pam Matthias, Bar- bara Krause. Sitting: Mary Ann Majewski, Evi Tamm, Georgia McKee, Greta Gunia, Sue Brewer, Karen Hampton. YOUNG REPUBLICANS Spirit, not size, marks the Chatham branch of the Young Republicans. Their banner held by president Georgia McKee, they marched staunchly into local politics. Busy stuffing envelops, passing out literature, and canvassing during the fall elections, the Young Republicans feel their support helped elect Judge Maurice Cohill and Dr. Richard Hunt. Not content to rest on these two laurels, however, they have extended their efforts into the less politically-colored winter and spring months. A program of bringing speakers, such as Ted Humes, sena- torial candidate, and state senators Jack McGregor and Edwin Ewing, was initiated, in hopes of arousing spirited debate and clarifying the Republican position. Amid the mumble of the many democrats on campus, the minority party speaks with a loud voice. Isabel Hausner, Betsy Home. Suzanne Martin, Mary Clark, Dorothy Zorn, Susan Fair, COLLEGIATE COUNCIL FOR THE UNITED NATIONS Chatham ' s chapter of the Collegiate Coun- cil for the United Nations, whose aim is to provide a wider and deeper understanding of the workings of this world body, was char- tered this fall. CCUN ' s activities cover a wide range, in- cluding teas with interested students of nearby-colleges and high schools. Coopera- tion with local colleges made possible, among other things, inter-school discussions con- cerning contemporary world problems. Real experience came for its members in the 1966 National Model General Assembly, where Chatham ' s chapter represented Saudi Arabia. Isabel Hausner, president of the chapter, also acts as Pennsylvania state chairman. 139 Sitting: Eleanor Marks, Natalie Dingle, Celia Paul, Carol Sheldon, Becky Mark. Kneeling: Eve Ruben, Lesle Tarr. NATIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIATION Insisting that there is a world beyond the Chatham campus, the National Student Association sponsored vari- ous speakers, the Russian Symposium, and community action projects. In February, NSA invited leaders from Southern Negro colleges and civil rights organizations to discuss the salient American race issue. The annual fund drive yielded a threefold increase over last year, and addi- tional money was raised for the professors dismissed from St. John ' s University. The new opinion board was further evidence of greater NSA activity under Celia Paul ' s leader- ship, and attracted a varied collection of messages. FUND DRIVE COMMITTEE— Sitting: Barbara New- man, Jane Ziskind, Mary Vanderwart. Standing: Leigh Cluthe, Sally Stebbins. Sitting: Linda McPhilliamy, Ann Greenhouse, Evi Tamm, Gretchen Gray. Kneeling: Carol Sheldon, Celia Paul, Susan Schnapf. RUSSIAN SYMPOSIUM COMMITTEE Go East, young woman — for a knowledge of Western civilization is no longer adequate. The NSA-sponsored Russian Symposium ena- bled students from eighty-five schools to discuss, question, and analyze the subject matter pre- sented in pertinent lectures and seminars. The large number of students and Chatham organiza- tions involved was evidence of the Symposium ' s impact on the campus this spring. Through essen- tially a student organized conference, much guid- ance was received from Mr. Eddy, Mr. McCrum, Mr. Skinner, Mr. Chastain, and Miss Crozier. Evi Tamm and Ann Greenhouse did a commendable job as the busy co-chairmen. Standing: Mary Ellen Goodwill, Audrey Pysh, Patti McBride, Judy Herbst, Pam Matthias, Jenny Jessop, Sandy Hoch, Susan Price, Pam Poch, Cherie Stanglein, Sally Barnett, Fern Weiner, Marsha Binstock. Sitting: Renie Kay, Jan Miller, Sue Burke, Sue Clifford, Carol Mason, Mary Holland, Kathy Macreery, Sharon Litchfield, Faith Yoho. STUDENT COUNSELORS The period between the frantic freshmen march on Chapel Hill and the orderly Color Day procession is labeled orientation. The term means that some 200 girls, green in the folkways of Chatham, will be- come acquainted with the ways of college life. For freshman advisor Carol Mason and her stu- dent counselors, those first days were more than busy. Demands on the counselors were often unpre- dictable: describe a W J boy in five words . . . give a brief rundown on the best courses and professors . . . console the freshmen whose new pink wardrobe clashes with her dink. Freshmen schedules included board presentations, picnics, a library tour, Chap- lain ' s reception, and possibly even a placement test or two. This year also saw an increased number of mixers held. A student-faculty picnic and informal discussions with upper-classmen eased the some- what uncertain atmosphere. Color Day found fresh- men wondering if all this was a preparation for col- lege life, or if the remaining years were a recupera- tion period from the dizzy days of orientation. ORIENTATION COMMITTEE — Cary Cadman, Marsha Mount, Cookie Mason, Vivian Lowery, Gretchen Gray. 141 Sitting: Berry Marshall, Jo Messersmith, Patty Williamson, Cookie Chasanov. Standing: Mary Borez, Jo Ann Eustace. Missing: Mary Vanderwart. PUBLICATIONS BOARD The editors-in-chief of all campus publications, along with a president elected from last year ' s board representatives and two faculty advisors, comprise the membership of Publications Board. Its functions are mainly two — serving as an official channel for selecting new editors and as a sounding board for ideas and criticism of the involved publications. Patti Williamson presided over this year ' s meeting of the minds. HANDBOOK Sitting: Judy Gilbert, Mary Vanderwart, Sage Tower. Standing: Phyllis Malls, Susan Brown. 142 Standing: Dael Kiesler, Susan Schnapf, Lynn Hillman, Karen Feinstein, Patty McBride, Judy London, Connie Yankura, Nora Levy, Gini Gold. Sitting: Linda McPhilliamy, Jo Messersmith (co-editor), Judy Siegel, Cookie Chasanov (co-editor), Faith Yoho. ARROW Operating under the motto all the news that filters, prints, The Arrow staff continues its strug- gle to keep the community informed. Issued every week, the paper is the only communication which reaches the entire campus. Striving this year to maintain its staff, The Arrow has left world politics to those organizations with stability, such as the U.S. government. With the appearance of the third annual Shaft, the staff once again had the opportunity to offer criticism in the form of satire. The Arrow maintains that next year ' s motto will be: Who is so deaf or so blind as is he That willfully will neither hear nor see? 143 CORNERSTONE Cherie Stanglein, Bonnie Birks, Jo Ann Eustace, Elaine Scarry, Mary Boresz. 144 SENIOR OFFICERS: Patty Williamson, Vice-President; Helen Read, President; Claire Stebbins, Treasurer; Bonnie Markey, Secretary. M JUNIOR OFFICERS: Evi Tamm, Secretary; Mary Schlitt, Trea- surer; Cary Cadman, President; Vivian Lowery, Vice-President. SOPHOMORE OFFICERS: Audrey Pysh, Secretary; Cherie Stanglein, Vice-President; Sabre Burdick, President; Faith Yoho, Treasurer. FRESHMAN OFFICERS: Marjy Caplan, President; Nancy Best, Treasurer; Ricki Shore, Vice-Presi- dent; Penny Lowe, Secretary. 146 ..r. t , - « ' rr Arriving , wR KHHp ' ;.iv Touring the Campus A DAY WITH RUBY DEE AND OSSIE DAVIS Mr. Davis talking to the Drama Criticism Class Mr. Davis viewing the Chapel m Informal Readings Ruby De 8 a X UESDAY ' Lor 148 it CHATHAM VISITORS Miss Dee preparing for the performance Lunching with students h . r ! 7 , I The performance Talking with students after the performance 149 Dr. Alan E. Guttmacher CHATHAM VISITOR jj0jflpp)M8SlWBwyil Wi« n ' i 1 Miss Yoti Lane DRAMA GUEST 150 Miss Patricia Blake CHATHAM VISITOR— SOVIET SERIES Dr. Peter H. Juviler SOVIET SERIES SPEAKER Dr. Harold J. Berman SOVIET SERIES SPEAKER Dr. George Bereday SOVIET SERIES SPEAKER MORALITY SERIES Dr. Langdon B. Gilkey Dr. William D. Hamilton Dr. Wing-tsit Chan Dr. Albert Levi 152 THE TROJAN WOMEN THE COACH WITH THE SIX INSIDES 153 ONCE UPON A MATTRESS DIDO AND ANEAS 154 SONG CONTEST BHr t jQ ■ V.- xal ' tfBV ' M ■• ' - ' I • . ■ ■■ ■ . ■ . i H l I ■ n A ,x jJ9 155 COLOR DAY .. ' « ' . ' ji v ■a- r ?mr - - v m! ' • J - Wk ,• -■ ' ■ I .1 Jo Ann Eustace CO-EDITOR Cherie Stanglein BUSINESS MANAGER Mary Boresz CO-EDITOR Bonnie Birks ART EDITOR Elaine Scarry LITERARY EDITOR


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Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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