Wilson College - Conococheague Yearbook (Chambersburg, PA)
- Class of 1969
Page 1 of 216
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 216 of the 1969 volume:
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1 E 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 COM ONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEACUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAG fOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 19 CUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CO .9 CONQCOCH .' fiiii.,;rE19619z CONQCOCHEACUE1969 CONOCO ' Wlisom mawcmcwgga - TABLE OF CONTENTS Dedication . . . . ; ..... .......... 4 A Day in the Life ............... 6 Faculty and Administration ....... 44 Activities ..................... 84 Classes ....................... 1 10 J uniors ....................... 128 Patrons ....................... 1 94 Advertisements . ., ............... 196 Sumn .lonlun Cclinc ' alto: Dinah Davidsonkk Suc Kopcnhmcr . Chrixtinc Long Qurlu Mikcll N Nmu K09 ,, C ris,.R6hrig HuITy White Nuncyg'NRalston CREDITS s Editm-in-C'lhc Amixlunt EdK-S?w Btlxincss Manager! Advertising liditer a Literary E 6LWHUI'N Photography Faitor chhniczll Editor It? i: xi? 2 $ '? hGoalW . . fBasketP . hTouch! . . . hHOMERUNV, . . . The rewards of A College Education sometimes do seem depressingly distant, but she practically delivers tangible victories into our very hands. Thaths because shes a coach and a Phys Ed teacher and keeps our muscles toned, our limbs coordinated, and our spirits up. Sixty-nine is her first graduating class, and she knows all of our nameseeven those of us who just hclod aroundh on the field. Wherefore and hence, in returning the enthusiasm which she has spread among us for three years, we dedicate the 69 Con to Miss J oan Carole Cooper. In Memoriam MARY ELEANOR MAULE Professor of Spanish tT he authort tells us about Godard . in the same way that Godard himself, in his hlms, tells us about love, modern life, and despair: by indiscriminately mixing things seen and things heard, quotations, personal reflections, Hashbacks, testimonials, extracts from scripts, puns, etc . Harperts Bazaar May our Father in Heaven, the untiring amateur who each Sunday snaps us from above, at an unfortunate angle that makes for hideous foreshortening, and pastes our pictures, properly developed or not, in his photograph album, guide me safely through this album of mine. Giinter Grass All about them the golden girls . . . Freshly covered notebooks from the campus store, slide rules dangling in leather . . . blue eyes bobbing everywhere, stunned by the android synthesis of one-a-day vitamins, Tropicana orange juice, fresh country eggs, Kraft homogenized cheese, tetrapacks of fortified milk, Cheerios with sun- ripened bananas, corn-tiake-breaded chicken, hot fudge sundaes, Dairy Queen root beer floats, cheeseburgers, hybrid creamed corn, riboflavin extract, brewerts yeast, crunchy peanut butter, tuna flsh casseroles, pancakes and imitation maple syrup, chuck steaks, occasional Maine lobster, Social Tea biscuits, defatted wheat germ, Kelloggts Concentrate, chopped string beans, Wonderbread, Bosco, Birds Eye frozen peas, shredded spinach, French-fried onion rings, escarole salads, lentil stews, sundry fowl innards, Pecan Sandies, Almond J oys, aureomycin, penicillin, anti-tetanus toxoid, smallpox vaccine, Alka-Seltzer, Empirin, Vicks Vapo-Rub, Ania with chlorophyll, Super Anahist nose spray, Dristan decongestant, billions of cubic feet of wholesome, reconditioned breathing air, and the more wholesome breeds of fraternal exercise available to Western man. Richard F ariria llWhy do men dieTl ltI donlt know? llWhat good are all your damn books then? If they cant tell you that, what do they tell you? llThey tell me of the anguish of men who canlt answer questions like yours? Nikos Kazantzakis 12 But you see its like this: the greatest adventure of man is science, the adventure of penetrating into matter, into the material universe. But the adventure is our property, a human property, and the best description of us is the humanities . . . Robert F rost 15 nun. We do not want to live as the wind may blow. We will understand our wherefores. Greatness calls. Let us think. Let us be equal to it. Yevgeny Yevtushenko 19 21 Et les vitres redeviennent sable Pencre redevient eau les pupitres redeviennent arbres la craie redevient falaise la porte-plume redevient oiseau. Jacques Prefvert nu: Ann-Zn... .runhui gnu .. o .. .nmm ha... a v4 n : m .u 9-5 '5 IDS W mm M31. W mama. w-un, mam u Mn, man u m mm: c mm .a mrbg RMDX SSS 9 ,. 4,, Iv W m1! ,m4 3M? mama ' I! my. fa ' . ML. ruu ' .vz Al . m- ug WV. .v. M n kw J 0'; 344m :hvu'l nIM' huh xm cu. A 90 y ' g 0 00 59' Qa! 4 5 bwst. .v 8 Pa The prosaic, out of the very depths of its want of soul, attained to the romantic and morbid. Sir Osbert Sitwell The angel who presided der my birth Said, hLittle creature formed of J oy and Mirth Go love without the help Of anything on Earth? William Blake myrrml um h 5y mv snummn a: K 3O You re hung up, shot down, shattered. 68 Con Lord, look at me Pm rooted like a tree Pve got those sit-down, can,t cry Oh Lord Fm goin to die blues. Richie Havens 32 33 Now when the light of reason fails And fires burn on the sea, Now in this time of confusion I Have need of your company . . . For we are the children of darkness and The prey of a foul command. Richard F ariria 36 The existential questions are asked far more intensively in aesthetic expressionein the graphic and plastic arts, in literature, in poetryethan in formal philosophy. Paul T illich I may not believe in the order of the universe, but I love the sticky little buds that open in the spring. Dostoevsky I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together . . . The Beatles O chestnut tree, great-rooted blossom Are you the leaf, the blossom, or the bole? Oh body swayed by music, oh brightening glance, How can we know the dancer from the dance? W. B. Yeats mmmm 42 Strawberry fields, Nothing is real, And nothing to get hung about . . . Strawberry fields forever. The Beatles She maintains or even sets the pace . . . 67 Con Aware, progressive, openminded . . . 68 Con And then thereis Mrs. Prexy, the very model of the modern college presidenfs lady. Her taste and graciousness provide a standard seldom talked about but extremely influential just the same. Sheis something to live up to, complete with a sense of humor, a lovely garden, and, of course, Prexy. . . more like J ackie only HER feet are smaller . . . l67 Con Elegantly genteel . . . 68 Con Wilson hasnlt abolished the generation gap, but after all thatls part of the funefinding out ta talk with Prexy, a joke with Dean Church, a smile from Mrs. Havensl that Theyil are real people after all . . . not an earthshaking discovery, but nice to know. tlThem . . fl iiBeware the pedagogic gerontocracyji read the signs of the demonstrators at the London School of Economics, but at Wilson the student body is on amiable terms, for the most part, with the ruling older generation. President Havens, an Anglo-American scholar of the classic type, is referred to with grand-daughterly nonchalance as Prexy, although not all grandfathers are quite on his level. He possesses awesome but gentle authority, not to speak of a famous pipe and a beret at Christmas carol time. Hels the man in my life . . . 67 Con An Oxonian Aura . . . 68 Con Dean Church, being a woman, is naturally regarded with more objectivity by a community of females. Dean Church, however, being Dean Church, comes in for her own share of respect, friendly regard, and twhy be coyl general adulation. Things are changing, and Miss Church is at the center of things. President and Mrs. Paul Swain Havens t. 5 g a w E 91$ 53 vk H; ing Martha Eleanor Church, Dean of the College w? 45 M5 QM ' Phyllis Ruth Gansz, Dean of Freshmen, Foreign Student Advisor, and Assistant Professor of Mathematics Mabel Houk King, Dean of Sophomores and Director of Placement 46 Catharine Luella Hicks, Dean of Residence Here we have more of iiThemfl still charming, helpful, and real. The first lady ton this page, that isl is Miss Gansz. Shels one of those people who can do anything, and with quiet friendliness she does it. IT is dealing with freshmen and math students, and sending them away a lot happier with their situation than theyive ever been before. Everyone needs her at some time in their lives, and everyone likes her anytime. Then there,s Miss Boyd, which is always a good thing to say because it cheers you up immediately. She cant be dealt with in less than 5,000 words, so suffice to say that she possesses complete integrity, complete openness of mind, and one of the most generous tin the real sense of the wordl characters you have ever encountered. And thatis not all, not even a beginning, but thereis also Mrs. Leitch to deal with, and you canlt leave her out. No indeed, because if she werenit around its possible that no more students would come to Wilson, and if no more students came there wouldnit be any more college tor at least that,s what you like to believel. So Mrs. Leitch is definitely in, and so is Miss Hicks. The last half of that sentence is an understatement. Miss Hicks is in charge of social activities and living accomodations tor in other words all that makes existence worthwhilel. You might expect somebody like that to be vital and funny and infinitely charming, and strangely enough thatls exactly what she is. You like to visit her just to look at her office, which is filled with bright colors and paintings, as well as Efficient Steel Filing Cabinets. Mrs. Kingis office is like that too, only itls also exactly like Mrs. King. You know, warm, homey, cheerful, COMFORTABLE. Exactly the kind of place where sophomores and job-hunting seniors and almost anybody is likely to come and sit and talk and stay for HOURS. After that, they usually skip downstairs and get a candy cane or something equally enjoyable off her amazing bulletin board. Shels not just anybody, sheis SPECIALebut then they all are. All diEerentaMiss Gansz calm and genial, Miss Boyd steadfast yet splendidly nonconforming, Mrs. Leitch always interested in YOU, Miss Hicks vivid and lively, Mrs. King compassionate and talmostl shy . . . all encouraging to deal with . . . all NECESSARY, both to the school and to you. Oh yes-in case anyone hasnlt yet noticed, this is a paean, because a paean is just what they happen to deserve. Speaking of paeans, you could very easily sail into another one on this page, but rave notices can get monotonous, so you try to keep your admiration for Mr. Halliwell, Mr. Burch, Mr. Stout, and the rest down to subdued praise. You TRngut when your father mentions that Mr. Halliwell really knows what heis doing, and Mr. Burch makes you a present of some of the old pictures in his files, and Mr. Stout has such interesting things to say on the subject of finance in general and your clubs budget in particulareitis hard not to slip into superlatives. Why try? There are lots of superlative people around. Even when youlre sick you cant help appreciating themein fact, when youire sick is when you really appreciate Dr. Manges and the inlirmary staff. They understand, and they DO SOMETHING about it. Not unlike Mrs. B. and the ladies in the PO. Now, Mrs. B. is a campus legend, maybe THE campus legend, and for years now youlve been grinning like a hyena when you buy stamps, just to Get Her On Your Side, and of course she sees through you and doesnit have time for all thatebut you think she kind of likes you anyhow. Itls worth smiling, even at quarter to nine in the morning. The library staff, on the other hand, doesnit care if you smile as long as you do it QUIETLY. The last time you went into the libe you tripped over a freshman in the reserve section and fifteen minutes later dropped a Petit Larousse when you fell off your chair getting up from your carrell, but as long as you donlt yell and scream and keep overnight books for live weeks theylll stand by you, and if thereis any group whom itls vital to have standing by you its the library staff. Of course there are others who are just as vitalaso many that you cant name them alleMr. Cipolla, Mr. Price, Belle Campbell, the housemothers, and a cast of thousands . John Paul Manges, M.D. John Halliwell, Vice President for Development and Public Relations Charles Henry Burch, Director of Public Information College Physician Alfred Doane Stout, Business Manager Biesecker, Postmistress Ruth V an a t. S y r a r m L More Latin students should be encouraged to write Latin, not as some kind of a chore to be got through as quickly as possible, but as an exercise in creative writing in a foreign language. Cicerols personal power arose from his ability to persuade, an art that is as important to acquire in our day, especially for a politician or advertiser. For an English writer, Latin devices skillfully adapted to our language and used with a sense of proportion will assist in enabling him not only to achieve an artistic style but also to give him the diiiicult power of enthralling his reader, the chief goal of the Roman orator. Christina Gasparro, Instructor in Classics No matter what kind of games you play, or if you play none at all, for that matter, you wish Mrs. Heinze could still be around all year. But she still comes in the spring to teach lacrosse talso charm, good grooming, and English Englishl. She adds Health to the credo. You couldnlt possibly play lacrosse? J ust seeing her coach is enough to make you decide to wash your hair after all and maybe even try wearing a gym tunic to the next mixer . Today there is a crisis as to what exactly is meant by a liberal arts education. Traditional objectives seem to be eroded by professional educators who find education a means to express meaningless jargon. Education today is a study of technique rather than of bodies of knowledge, and to a historian this is a sin, for in history, content is everything. A womanls college is an anachronism. It is an ivory tower set upon the evasion of reality. But in the long run the future of any liberal arts college is a matter of finance. Without knowledge of the past one cannot know his place in the present. In studying history one can keep in touch with the real world, where ever it is-on the other side of the mountains, or on the other side of the ones after them. The Wilson graduate should be aware that thereis more to the real world than what goes on in the classroom, and history helps in showing the life out there, and the people. For example, students overlook the arts, especially the cinema. The selection of films shown on campus is very bad. W. C. Fields and the Marx Brothers are fine examples of comedy in cinema, and today Europe is producing the finest hlms. ttWhols Afraid of Virginia Woolf was superb, but ttThe Sound of Musicll was repulsive. With a four year liberal arts education the student should be able to see the dilference between them, and if she canlt either she has failed her college or her college has failed her. Howard F. McMains, Instructor in History Kathleen de la Mare Heinze Instructor in Physical Education Christina Gasparro Instructor in Classics Howard F. McMains, Instructor in History 50 Richard Oehling, Assistant Professor of History Andree Isabelle Bergens. Professor of French Individual personalities in the history department make it one of the most exciting and popular on campus. Mr. Oehling, new addition to this department, arrived armed with a formidable syllabus and a wry sense of humor, potent weapons for combating apathy and dull winter days. He calls his initiation period at W. C. tithe Hower of enjoymentit especially when he speaks of the itinwardness and small classes that make this a real community in itself? Hear! Hear! Madame Bergens is the kind of professor you work your way up to. Sheis head of the French department and she teaches 20th century French Literature which is one of the things on which she is an Authority. And if you cant get all the way up to 20th Century you can take Phonetics and Conversation and spend three hours a week talking about various Franco-American tnot the spaghettii phenomenons. Communication is the essence of teaching and Madame Bergens communicates with the drama of directness. Mr. Nichols typifies the iiNew BreedW-not only at Wilson, but all over the place. He drives a truck because itls ttmore fun,l, grows a backyard full of Howers, and is doing his best to fill in some of the major gaps around here: specifically, films, which have long been the ttlni, thing, but never so much as right now. Through the Fine Arts department he has helped to sponsor ttThe Film as an Art Form, which is something that Michelangelo Antonioni thinks about occasionally: tiToday we no longer know what to call art, what its function is and even less what its function will be in the future. We only know that it is something dynamica unlike many of the ideas that have governed us? In the confusion and excitement of the contemporary art scene Mr. Nichols has the rare distinction of being part of the emotive avant-garde. As a teacher and an artist he has the astonishing ability to sidestep all fads and fancies and elude all manner of popular classilication. He,s not hip or camp, op or pop, in or outeheis simply in touch with whats happening and just a gas at making it all happen at once. In the field of sociology, Miss Zeleny, too, deals with the contemporary scene. Sheis most involved with the current conHict theory as applied to the urgent problems connected with ethnic groups. She has done research in India and has been studying its untouchable program in relation to the racial coniiicts in America. Think about it. Then thereis also the international approach of east- west conflict, and local ethnic conflict with, say, migrant workers. Itls about how everything connects . . . If you took soc. along with poli sci and comparative religion youid have the whole thing wrapped up! But not quite, because thereis still cultural geography and history to think about . . . And also psychology, which is another of those useful and conveniently overlapping social sciences. That,s where you meet Mr. Porter. Mr. Porter has had experience teaching in two very different divisions of the outside academic world; he comes from the large urban universities, American and Howard. Wilson is a pretty radical change after places like that, which says something about being adaptable and well adjusted Walter H. Nichols, Jr., Instructor in Fine Arts Charles R. Porter Associate Professor of Psychology Carolyn Zeleny, Professor of Sociology 52 William Richard Shirk Visiting Instructor in Geography Richard Ezell, Instructor in English Once upon a time a very long time ago, there lived a box turtle named Harold. Other animals never can tell one box turtle from another you know, and Harold was utterly unremarkable in appearance. But he was different from his fellows all the same. For, while other box turtles gloried in their boxiness and glanced disdainfully down over their pectoral drawbridges at regular turtles, Harold yearned to be a regular turtle. Could he have been a plain, rounded, llattish mud turtly sort of turtle he would have been the happiest turtle in the kingdom. At least that is what he always said. To learn the rest of the story of Harold you must take English 101-102 with Richard Ezell. Richard Ezell, Instructor in English Mr. Shirk taside from geography, which well get to in a minutel represents progress and cooperation. Hels in the Earth Science department at Shippensburg and taught first semester at Wilson. Now, geography is something that more people should think about more often. In the first place you never 1 can tell when it might be useful to know 1 something about aerial photography, and in the second place, geography is one of the things that separates us from D. C., Baltimore, and Philadelphia, and you might like to know how it so tiresomely got to be there. as J on Edward Updike Assistant Professor of History Mrs. MacDonald is one of several new lady profs on campus. She has, with nothing less than awesome composure, settled in among the petrie dishes, microscopes, and formaldehyded frogs of the bio. department. You,re a better man than I am, Gunga Din . On the other side of the campus is Thomson Hall, making a somewhat sad but valiant effort to sport a genuine turret. Science centers, sputniks and 20th century technology aside tfor the momeno, there is something about piano lessons and old music manuscripts that do things for your sense of tradition. And aside from Dummy Rush and other longstanding aberrations of propriety and good taste, there is something to be said for tradition. And when it comes to music therets even something to be said for good taste. Miss Barndt, of Thomson Turret, is there to say it. A few overheard bars of Mozart on your way to Warfield is something which may give you that extra sense of perspective before bracing yourself for an hour of Russian military tactics. Enter the AIl-Wilson Military strategists led and commanded by J on Updike tno, no, not John Updike, stupid, THE Jon Updikey Now the Crimean War was a very important feature of Russian History and seeing that Wilson is a Liberal Arts school, you are perfectly entitled to consider it, tin between left Eve Lapeyrouse MacDonald, Assistant Professor of Biology Miriam Wagoner Barndt, Assistant Professor of Music Hanks and frontal artillery charges, or whatever they called those things back them, as a Romantic Enterprise, involving Florence Nightingale, how Tennyson led the charge, and how Byron died in it and so forth, and chances are you wont be any less confused than the next person. 54 Emlyn Reese Edwards, Associate Professor of Fine Arts Linda Huston, Instructor in Biology 55 A studio course with Mr. Edwards is also slightly confusing. It doesnit involve guns to theleft of them guns to the right of them, but it has its own pitfallswthe aesthetic kind. Mr. E. is both generous and exacting-deeply convinced of the value of creative art, even to those of us who arenit exactly artists. And so we take paintbrush in hand . . . Miss Huston is involved in the same kind of thing as Mrs. MacDonald. She injects humane and feminine light- heartedness into Baby Bio labs, thus making them bearable, and will continue to stop and speak to you even after you have passed, or not passed, as the case may be, that particular ordeal. When you think of Ancient Greece, you think of wine-dark seas, of golden coins and perfect statues, of philosophical booze parties, the ringing plains of windy Troy, laurel wreaths, masks and buskins, the Parthenon bathed in lucid light, and Miss Hicks. She fills you in on the gossip about the House of Atreus, J ason and Medea, or Zeusls latest amour, all with an enchanting combination of absent-mindedness and absolute control. Miss Bortner, you think to yourself while struggling with That Language, must be one of the Immortal Wilson Scholars of all time. Well, shels managed to satisfy That Department as to her competence, or possibly GENIUS, hasnlt she? And sooner or later shelll go up on your mental wall to join Those other immortalsaMadame C., Madame B., Mademoiselle, and the late lamented Blaise . . . and meanwhile, you sigh as you return to the passe compose, shels certainly putting you through llenfer . The one who looks like Tommy Smothers is Mr. Puhrmann. If that doesnlt help, look for the one who most identifies with you. Mr. Puhrmann is the new import from the outside world of business who believes he has finally fulfilled the lldesire to do something satisfying with his life by entering the teaching profession. We canlt overemphasize youthful; he truly enjoys the opportunity for communication with young people-yet does not approve of using a position to press ideas upon students. llI love a church, I love a cowU I love a prophet of the soul . . . ,l These less- than-felicitous words of Emersonls somehow remind you of Dr. J amiesoneperhaps because his eyes are the eyes of a prophet of the soul . . . Besides being head of the Department of Bible and Religion, he is deeply involved with aestheticseand listen to what Aldous Huxley has to say about all THA T: . . . In spite of all the horrors of modern religious art, religion in all its aspects from the fetishistic to the contemplative continues to Hourish and to produce its good or evil fruits. Man and society are, doubtless, whole; but then are wholes divided, like ships, into watertight compartments. On one side of a bulkhead is art; on the other is religion. Leonard Elmer Puhrmann Instructor in German The level may be high in one compartment, low in the other. The connection between the two is not below the water line, but only from above, only for the overseeing intellect that looks down and can see both simultaneously and recognize them as belonging by juxtaposition rather than by fusion, to the same individual or social whole. Aldous Huxley 0n Art and Artists And since welre speaking of art, its only fair to tell you about its state at Wilson. Fine Arts is the only department which conducts all the classes with the lights off. In this situation, Miss Harris is amused by the mass of heads bobbing up and down simultaneously from notebook to the projected slide. She would prefer no note taking at all, just observation. This is the way she learned . . . In fact Miss Harris was a classicist long before she became an art historian. With Miss Harris as department head, Fine Arts has become the most popular major in the Class of l69emaybe in all Wilson. So great has been the expansion that Miss Harrisl dream of a Fine Arts-Theatre building is finally becoming a reality. Graham Moffatt Jamieson. Professor of Bible and Religion Josephine Marie Harris. Professor of Fine Arts 57 ttThe liberal maniiethis is not to be confused with the generous manf, for the liberal man, though he is necessarily open minded, can be very far from generous, but, then, he does not ask for generosity in his pursuit of truth; rather he asks for understanding, thoroughness, and responsibility, qualities which he stands ready to observe in his own actions. How can a person be liberally educated without understanding the institution of education, a major enterprise of society? Contemporary trends and issues in education are focused on giving proper recognition to the individual in a mass culture confronted with rapid technological advance, a knowledge eXplosion and a population explosiom-these dimensions must be reconciled in the education scheme. Teaching is a marvelous profession for finding personal satisfaction and for making a social contributioneno matter how small it may seem. Harry F . Garner, Professor of Education Instead of thinking of the shorter work week, with our increasing release from work, as leisure to be spent, we may need to develop a concept of a higher level of living through emphasis on the arts and greater service to others and the community. The traditional method of teaching by assign-study-recite from a single textbook toften out of datei is totally inadequate today. A wave of change has swept American education in the past ten years since the first sputnik. There is a new approach to teaching in the elementary school known as the discovery approach in which the teacher acts as an observer and guide. The newer teaching strategy is helping children itlearn to learn? In this approach we must have a richness of resources not found in most schools today. These resources include a wide variety of books and teaching materials, programmed materials, films, film strips, tape recorders, overhead projector, radio, T. V., etc. A well-equipped school library as the resource center is a necessity in every elementary school. Innovations designed to make better use of the multi-media resources include team-teaching, individualized instruction, and non-graded elementary schools. The elementary school in the next decade should become a more effective learning center where young people acquire the skills and habits to prepare them for the life-long learning process. Ralph Stanley, Professor of Education Harry F. Garner, Professor of Education The student finds no means of involvement for himself and cannot discover how the educational scheme relates to his mythic world of electronically processed data that his clear and direct responses report . Education must shift from instruction, from the imposing of stencils, to discoveryeto probing and exploration and to the recognition of the language of forms. Marshall McLuhan The Medium is the Massage 58 Ralph Stanley Professor of Education through the wonderful land called Physics. Along the way she is sure to be enchanted by the ellipses of Kepler, fascinated by the figures of Lissajous, and surprised by the spiral of Cornu. She should make it a point not to miss the rings of Newton or the spots of Laue, and she should be certain to take a boatride over the waves of Maxwell. As her guide she should take along the delightfully schizophrenic light. Since the land is so vast and bustling, she should take care to conserve her energy, and observe all the laws. She should visit all the major cities like Mechanics, Optics, Electromagnetism and Quantum Mechanics. However, she should not be timid to explore little known paths and byways, for these may lead to startling surprises. Many others have made the trip before and have returned vastly richer from the experience. You will find as your fellow travellers such well known personalities as Einstein, Schroedinger, Bohr, Planck, Dirac, Curie and Goppert-Mayer. For those of you who are daring enough, the trip might be so exciting that you may want to remain there. Fung Yen Yap, Assistant Professor of Physics Miss Coopereaha . . . If you want to know about Miss Cooper, go back and look at pages 4 and 5 of our bookfilm. Wetll excuse you for a moment . . . Nowaany questions? Thought not. And now onwardebut hark! Melodious strains are, as usual, wafting from i Thomson Turret, only this time the music isewell-deeper, more tremulous and l timbrous, or however you describe the sound of an organ. Like the ocean, anyway. And who is the Master Organist of Wilson? None other than Mr. Charles J . Farris, thatts who. Like many dedicated musicians, he is retiring and quiet, yet always ready to talk to you about bells, chimes, campanile, and all the other lovely words in the organistls vocabulary. Let every Wilson girl take a trip l Joan Carole Cooper Fung Yen Yap Instructor in Physical Education Assistant Professor of Physics Charles Jacob Farris. Assistant Professor of Music At the first encounter you sensed something different about Miss Nutting. Perhaps it was the fact that she diant terrify you, or laugh at your naive strugglings. Yet from the beginning you glimpsed in that unorthodox kaleidoscope of ideas a precision of thought and a refinement of interpretation that made you see the dimensions of her contributionaa personality breaking through barriers, releasing in its flood a torrent of liberated minds. The Education of Women is a handy topic, ever apt for pontihcation upon. One wouldnit dare pronounce about Women, but the Education of Same is in open season. Since this is my third womenis collegeawithouten oother compaignye in youtheaand since I keep house with an Educated Woman, I suppose my pontification credentials are as good as the next fellows and maybe even worse. The Education of Women. Pm for it. For about the same reasons that I am for the Education of People. Women are People. Fm for that too. tThough I confess, sotto voce, that there are times when it comes as blessed relief that People arenit WomenJ I am not going to get into the question of why I am for the Education of People except to say that, although it is dihicult to put your finger on a clear advantage that the Educated have over the Uneducated, on balance the Educated seem to be better 0E. Because they at least know who they are. The knowledge sometimes drives them up the wall, to be sure, but thatis the chance you take. Knowing who you are is a special problem for women. Especially women who are or have every intention of being Married Women. Here we digress for a distinction between the two categories of women, equal but separate. Contrary to the tendency to think of Unmarried as a temporary or accidental condition for women, the temporaries or accidentals do not really belong in the Unmarried Women category, which should be limited to those who make a rational decision tas rational as any other irrational decisioni to say No to the blighter, dear-sweet boy though he istwastwill be. The Unmarried Woman, then, has the advantage of not getting herself confused with someone else, though she still has the problem that, whereas she may think she knows who she is, she has to keep convincing the world that she isntt just temporarily or accidentally so tsee abovei. The Married Woman, on the other hand, is so busy playing Follow the James Applegate, Professor of English 60 Leader that she has trouble convincing even herself that she is anything distinct from the Family Identity. The point is that Identity is not something that grows organically like your toenails but is something cultivated and achieved, like the color of your hair. It is the product of where you have been and what you have seen and what you have read and what you have thought and what you have accomplished by your own powers. That is where Education serves: to give you a chance to go somewhere and see something and read something and think something. Then, for heavenls sake, do something. J ames Applegate, Professor of English The Andersons are so well adjusted they can teach together in the same school, to say nothing of the same department, about which we will say nothing because you all know which one it is. Itls the one that has more interesting visual aids than any other. To say nothing of animals, which we really should mention because they include all sorts of rats, a crazy monkey, and gerbils. tWhat are gerbils anyway?l To say nothing of students, of which there are many, and by the way, what are students anyway? Who are you, and if so, why? Talk to the Andersons about it; they have lots of experiments you can use and all sorts of graphs to plot yourself out on. When you get to the why part, you might try checking with the Philosophy Department . . . Unlike most quadrupeds who have instinctive ability to swim, man is handicapped by his own body structure. tIf he had shorter legs and a longer neck he could probably jump right in and swiml. While it is true that amphibia, fish, and some mammals surpass man in the depths to which they can descend and the length of time they can remain underwater, man excels in his ability to perform a wide range of movements in the water. He can swim both forward and backward, on his side, in prone or supine positions and at the surface or beneath it. Manls swimming is an art which makes him the most versatile of all living creatures in the water. Ann Canedy Armstrong, Assistant Professor of Physical Education Sarah Ferrall Anderson Edward Eric Anderson Associate Professor of Psychology Professor of Psychology Ann Canedy Armstrong, Assistant Professor of Physical Education 61 Without a doubt, the first thing that a freshman notices tafter her roommatei is what is known as the Biology Situation. It is explained to her that, unless she wants to try chemistry or math or physics tand not just everybody doesi, she will have to take Bio. Now, the biology department is one of the most demanding and thorough anywhere, and Miss Allen is the head of it. And if that sounds a little like a prayer to Allah, itis not entirely a coincidence. When you think back to freshman year, all you can really remember VIVIDLY is the smell of formaldehyde, and the exasperation of trying to pin down an earthworm which wouldnlt stay pinned, and those WRITTENS and those LAB PRACTICALS and how awful you felt when you got an F on the first semester final, and how great you felt when you finally made sense out of the phylogenetic tree . . . and, of course, you remember Miss Allen, calm and omniscient and tyou noticed with amazementi quietly amused by it all. The major issue in the field of Bible today is that the field has divided into two groups-one bases its study on archeology and the other on the history of tradition. At present, these appear to be irreconcilable. It is necessary now to seek some kind of a Viable synthesis between the two groups since the conclusions reached by both diverge greatly. The field of religion is Vital to a liberal arts education because every culture has, as part of its identity, a form of religious identity. Through the study of religion it is possible to discover one major aspect of the thought pattern of a group of people. Religion is therefore integrated with the study of a whole culture. One can never know a culture fully until he knows something about its religion. J ohn Briggs Curtis, Assistant Professor of Bible and Religion Now everybody knows what sociology is all about: minority groups and social units, and well, come to think of it that covers an awful lot of ground. And you think of it right away with Miss Brumbaugh in command. She really must spend all her time in the library finding millions of pertinent extraneous facts, and its discouraging when you realize that youlll never be able to read as much as she does. But then, just when you expect her to bring a professional journal to class, she shows up with a Golden Book. Like her subject she breaks through old systems of classification and supports new ones . . . Everything interesting, and everything delivered with curt, unorthodox eliiciency. M. Jean Allen, Professor of Biology John Briggs Curtis. Assistant Professor of Bible and Religion 62 Alice Martin Brumbaugh Assistant Professor of Sociology The hard part of English literature, as L , g a an ex erienced En lish student will tell ,, I a -15 .Jl l i iu J yoii, dges not end with the 18th century. W tW There is more to Romantic and Victorian literature than you might think. In fact there is so much more that it occasionally becomes difficult to think at all. But Miss McCrosson is there to see you through, ever-ready with clarification and humor, and confusion when thatls necessary twhich it sometimes really isl, and pretty soon youire thinking again. Then you get to take modern British lit. which is when you absolutely decide to write The Great Romantic didactic social protest comic novel all about the American army stranded in a medieval castle and rescued by a shepherd with a club foot who has just arrived from the African jungles bringing with him the answer to the Christian dilemmas of evolution and the atom bomb. Youlre going to write it all in stream-of-consciousness, and then make a movie of it with a hand-held I camera. It has been brought to your attention that Miss Fry is the only professor tin fact the only PERSONl you know who has a poster of Margaret Rutherford in her ofhce. But you are not at all surprised, because you have been hearing about her tMiss Fry, not Dame Margareti since, say, the second week of freshman year. Make that the first week; Miss Fry always stands out in Opening Convo, too. Anyhow, you have learned that she is one of those magnihcent intellectuals who possesses the genuine inner spark so necessary for a teacher to set her students on fire. In fact, if therels another Burning of Chambersburg one of these years, it will probably be Miss Fry Nenah Elinor Fry. Associate Professor of History Who sets it Off- She makes hismry a spontaneous combustion of facts, ideas, concepts, people, UNDERSTANDING. Doris Ross McCrosson, Associate Professor of English 63 Without music, life Would be a mistake. Nietzsche Mr. Zolas is one of a very rarified breed of professors here, and without them life at Wilson would be a mistake. Mr. Zolas, in fact, is the person you go to when its no good talking about it, or reading about it, or writing about it, and when you get down to what, in the end, itis really all aboutawhen you sit down at the piano and try to play it. The artist, among pseudo scholars and hopeful critics, has always been a lonely man, but he couldnlt be more essential. So with admiration and amazement you hear him say it with melody, tempo, and all the rest, and you discover that the day has indeed come when you regret having given up piano lessons in the 8th grade. A short time ago, while on the dance Hoor at a non-academic gathering, I was called upon to explain my profession. In attempting a succinct answer to itWhat is anthropology anyway?,, I said with all the confidence at my disposal, uAnthropology is the study of primitive man? With this remark my partner winked, took a step back and with a sheepish grin replied, thy dear, all men are primitive? Needless to say, since that time I have refined my delinition of anthropology. Charlene J ames, Instructor in Anthropology Through American literature Mrs. Mattes focuses on the contemporary scene. The liberal man could be The American Scholar, Puddlnhead Wilson, or The Invisible Man; and his college either 3. Hazard of New F orlunes, or a Long Dayis Journey into Night. Among some of her students A Good Man Is Hard to F ind, and among others The Violent Bear It Away. As for those of them who question the importance of the fieldaLook Homeward Angel. From several points of view Whats A fraid of Virginia Woolf represents a major trend in the field of American lit, and isnit it true that in the tumult of the contemporary world Everything That Rises Must Converge. And as to her profession, The Heart is a Lonely H unter ..... Edward Zolas Assistant Professor of Music Charlene Anne J ames, Instructor in Anthropology Eleanore Bustin Mattes, Associate Professor of English 64 Robert James Epley, Instructor in Sociology w Roger Frank Nordquist, Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Reli gion Television is the medium of entertainment which permits millions of people to listen to the same joke at the same time and yet remain lonesome. T. S. Eliot That happens to be another of the things that sociology has to do with. Itls this very modern subject which deals with very modern things like the effects of mass communication and where the Great Society is really at. Then you discover that underneath all of that it also deals with nitty gritty Human Problems, and, by the way, Mr. Epley, being not only consistently human twhich is more than you can say for some peoplei but noticeably modem, is just the perfect person to be teaching it. Among Mr. Nordquistls lesser distinctions is the fact that he is noted in the winter for a klondike hat and in the spring for walking to class whistling Ecclesiastes CtTurn, Turn, TurnKU Reputed to be the only prof who does a soft shoe about eschatology, his lectures are of a more serious nature; he divides his time between logic and Christian thought. Challenged by your confusion, he strives to elucidate the compatibility of the two by involving you with questions that no one can answer. He is the most sympathetic of professors, and like a true philosopher, he is the first to admit a possible impasse in his thought. You cant remember a time when he didnit manage to say something erudite and it really didnlt matter if you didnit understand because it sounded so RIGHT. What excuse is there for being a biologist today, at a time when social upheaval, international peril, and space probes vie with each other daily for our attention? There is every excuse. Biology, after all, is the study of plants and animalseliving organisms. As long as some sections of our country produce ttflowerll children, as long as our national population consists of lthawksl, and tidovesll, and as long as there are ltbugsh in our space systems, the biologist will enjoy both an opportunity to serve and an obligation to make himself heard. Besides, in his spare time he can give his attention to the ttLionsll, ttBearle and ttOriolesll that infest our athletic stadiums, the llturkeysll that bring agony to our theaters, and the tlwallllowersll that crop up at social functions. Can any other discipline offer so varied a prospect? Davison Greenawalt Grove, Associate Professor of Biology The word is that Miss Strouse can even make 8 olclocks interesting. After all, therels nothing like a demand for class preparation and meticulous grammar to jolt you awake, and when itis followed by anecdotes about travel in France and bun certain jeune hommef, your eyes may very well stay open. Especially if youlre in the 202 class, where the added attraction is Miss Strouse,s own rendition of the Rhinoceros dance. Mr. Ganley is the author of a brilliant one-act play called Dial M for Martha, which was going to have been printed right here in Black and White, Folks, but unscrupulous literary agents got the rights, and it is now playing off- Broadway, and being raided once a week by the police. Therefore you will have to go to New York to see it, but if you want to see the author, just hop over to Lortz and enroll in a physics course. They do need majors, and maybe you could even get a part in Mr. Ganleyls next play. For each X there exists a Y such that Y-X, or as George Orwell says in Animal Farm, itAll animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others? College is the best arena for the establishment of onels superiorities and of course the surest way of becoming most unequal is via the pursuit of mathematics. Charles Wright, Instructor in Mathematics Last week when Christopher Robin said to me, tWhat about that story you were going to tell me about what happened to Pooh when-l I happened to say very quickly, iWhat about 9 times 107'? And when we had done that over we had one about cows going through a gate at two a minute, and there are 300 in the field, so how many are left after an hour and a half? We find these very exciting, and when we have been excited quite enough, we curl up and go to sleep A. A. Milne Davison Greenawalt Grove, Associate Professor of Biology 66 Adeline Katharine Strouse Instructor in French W. Paul Ganley, Associate Professor of Physics There are times when you feel the need tin fact the Absolute Necessityy of having a Stout and Helpful Person along in your Expedition. And the stout-and- helpfulest person around here is Miss Parker. She talks to you, counsels you, enlightens you, makes you whole, and just generally keeps you GOING during those times when you are in danger of STOPPING. Of course she isntt really a Pooh image, since no one could ever accuse her of having Very Little Brain, but tsince you seem to be trapped in a Milnean metaphon it occurs to you that she IS a bit like Christopher Robin, to wit: ents Christopher Robin? Pooh said. t ttOh, then itts all rightf said Piglet. t ttYoutll be quite safe with HIM? And we are. Verna Elizabeth Parker Associate Professor chological Counselor ?;zggsge AM A V 'MA A , mm x. t 'hx of Psychology and Psy- 4 Frances Arnold Bowden, Associate Professor of Physical Education ttDancing is . . . the loftiest, the most moving, the most beautiful of the arts, because it is no mere translation or abstraction from life; it is life itself? Havelock E llz's Modern dance is a point of view, an attitude toward modern society, with movement as its base. As society changes, modern dance changes with it. It is a series of changing symbols which gears itself to the times. When the symbol is accepted it no longer has the same power; it is no longer uncovering hidden realities, so that for modern dance to stay alive and be a real contemporary art form one of two things has to happena-the old symbols must be recharged, revitalized, perhaps extended; or they must be totally replaced with new ones which have the power again to shock an audience into awareness. Frances Arnold Bowden, Associate Professor of Physical Education Mr. Gould is very popular and on top of that hes very serious about music. The Wilson College Choir used to be known as the Wilson College Choir but now they call themselves itGouldts Girlsii which has ever so much more FLAIR to it. Most of the time Mr. Gould works very hard at getting them to sing well, making arrangements for them to sing with ments choirs, and discouraging their urge to call him Uncle Glen. Glen Hibbard Gould, Professor of Music 68 Godfrey Leonard Gattiker, Associate Professor of English , Wm- Marcia S. Lewis, Instructor in Spanish Mr. Gattiker is the English departmentis Man in Early Britain, and is in love with runes, kennings, and poems about the unpredictable whims of dragons: ttI shall swallow you humans regardless, the lete- yet some I might spare: others, not? Some sage once said, or else I dreamed that: if you can chuckle kindly at their surprise on discovering that the medieval cleric-poet who wrote in antique, slightly creaky Spanish really had a sense of humor; if you can keep selling its sparkle when the Golden Age appears slightly tarnished to the cold eye of the twentieth-century twenty-year-old; if you can suppress a sigh when the tempestuous tales of the dashing romantic are received with gales of giggles; and if you can keep your cool when they yawn over that Nobel Prize- winning genius of the contemporary Spanish theater on whom you like to think you are Chambersburgk leading authority, then perhaps your armor won,t weigh too heavily while clanking up the down staircase. Marcia S. Lewis, Instructor in Spanish In the field of history, two areas dominate my interest: a focus on the doctorate level has been colonial New Englandethe 17th century beginnings of our nation; also of great concern to me is contemporary American life. In my job with the American civilization seminar, I deal heavily with the contemporary American scene. Of great interest are the values and attitudes that our society lives byewhy and in what respect do they change. The state of the current student population is nationally unsettled. More and more students are actively participating in current affairs. Such activism, however, is not as evident here at Wilson as in large universities, of course, and there even seems to be less defiance of the status quo now than a few years ago. Allan Brasier J udson, Assistant Professor of History Two hundred million people . . . what is that? Can you truly conceive of two hundred million people living in our country? We are being subjected to an orderly and organized existence today which is growing steadily in importance. We are required now and will be more so each year, to order our lives. To do this, each of us has to have a concept of mathematical principles. What will you do in a few years when you are summoned by your computer to justify your continued existence? If you cannot answer Ezmc2 youire a goner! Jackson Benton Lackey, Assistant Professor of Mathematics Mr. Holzman is cool. He cares about his students and always finds time for them. And of course his enthusiasms are well-known: microbiology and genetics. ttWhen we did genetics in micro last week he just went wild . . 3, Mr. Holzman is also famous for his participation in student government theis pro-change-and progressi and for the fact that hes genuinely liked by kids who think biology should have been banned by the Geneva Convention. llEvery prayer reduces to this: Great God, grant that twice two be not fourW ilHorrorsV cries the math department, ilTwice two is always four and one plus one is two, unless of course youire speaking of base three and then things are quite different, you see? Maybe we don,t, but Mr. Portmann does-JtHe really knows what heis doing? But you feel convinced that he knows more than mathematical concepts, because he smiles and smiles, and as a student remarked, ilI think he thinks all the rest of us are MADW Jackson Benton Lackey, Assistant Professor of Mathematics 70 Howard Eugene Holzrnan Assistant Professor of Biology Julia Megyer, Assistant Professor of French Walter Oddo Portmann Professor of Mathematics 71 French as a language is a necessity in a college curriculum. It has a spiritual culture which science lacks. The scientist by specializing becomes a technician. Humanities are there to open his mind, to broaden his field of knowledgee science alone narrows his being . . . The new French novel, the anti-novel, has no future because it narrows its public. Relatively few people read and understand these novels; one needs to be Tipreparedi, to find the aesthetic contents Teaching is a mission. The teacher must be interested in his pupils. The more interest he has in them, the more respect and willingness to learn will be shown on their part. The teacher should be dedicated to his students and not to himself. It is a noble occupation-an inspiration. The teacher gives more than knowledge to the student, he gives himself. Julia Megyer, Assistant Professor of French Nancy Y. Yamall, Assistant Professor of Eng- lish 72 Viva Chile! Sefiora Cortes-Hwang is a lively and vibrant lady who, with her husband, presides over the Spanish scholars of Wilson. She is full of enthusiasm for contemporary writing and creative work by students, and when she tells you that a course will be hardeshe means it. tAnd it is NOT true that the first time she came into Warfield she planted a Hag on the stairs and said, iiI claim this land for Spain . . 35 Mrs. Yarnall is the Top Executive Director and most indispensable member of K. P., which should be enough responsibility for anyone, but actually she spends her days presiding over the creative writing class and the Novel and Drama classes, projecting Scholarship and Learning . . . Everything from Defoe to Lowell delivered with clarity and elegance. Helen M. Osborne, Assistant Professor of French Louise C. Monack, Professor of Chemistry Science is the poetry of the intellect, and poetry is the science of the hearts affections. Lawrence Durrell The Alexandria Quartet One of the many MANY things you learn in chemistry is to distinguish between the written and the hour quiz. Then after you learn that, you have to learn how to get through them. This is where Miss Monack is a very great help, because besides being calm and sympathetic, she wears sneakers to lab and annually demonstrates the effect of ethyl alcohol on the body, and she is, according to at least one student, tiThe greatest teacher live ever had? Let us humbly thank the fates for such aid in time of need . . . Miss Osborne is part of the new Wilson program of building and innovation. To be more specific, she is the added vitality to the French department, that venerable institution tdynastyrD of such long and formidable standing. Miss Osborne, who had never heard of W. C. before her arrival, was somehow under the wild and lovely impression that Wilson was a finishing school with a predominant SOCIAL life . She is now resting quietly in Warheld, administering The Language to the ignorant masses, a sadder tpossiblyi and a wiser woman . Raymond Anderson, Assistant Professor of Bible and Religion I am; therefore I think . . . I think . . . I am . . .therefore. . . As I think, I am. . . Am I yet however as I think? Hands wave and ask me why I am And then Iim all unthunk. Raymond Anderson, Assistant Professor of Bible and Religion If we mean by a liberal arts education one that provides an understanding of our world, then economics is surely a basic part of it. Economics is wrapped up in such elemental problems as how we may be free and yet be served by our economy, what can be done when we are unemployed, poverty-stricken, or old and threatened by infiation, how we may hnd creative work in an age of affluence, how should government provide for us, how should we tax the rich and the poor, what are unions and corporations doing 'to us, what kind of economic system do we want for ourselves, and what should we do about underdeveloped countries, an international currency, and other world economic problems, Even to read a newspaper today every man must be his own economist! Roswell G. Townsend, Professor of Economics Mr. Blumberg is a member of the new generation of professors, and as such is a pleasant addition to Warfield crowds and classrooms, and more specifically to the fourth Hoorapsych territory. He believes that tithe weary reader deserves a pleasant blank space where he can rest his eyesaor perhaps practice seeing visual after-effectsf and so you will find a discreet white space directly to your right, where you are to proceed as indicated. Mr. Blumberg is also one of the few professors in the world to ever ask students, on a written, to identify Roger Daltrey and Noel Redding. You Roswell G. Townsend, Professor of Economics say you couldnlt possibly identify Roger Daltrey and Noel Redding? Then youive never Experienced ttMy Generation? tSorryJ The advantages of travel abroad and exposure to different ideas is obvious. In philosophy there is much to be learned by exposure to European and Oriental thought. But you can also have the experience of searching the whole world over for what lies in your own back yard. These remarks are occasioned by reliections on contacts and study I had on two recent trips to Europe, and by my work since. Europe has of course produced the great classics of the Western philosophical tradition and the Orient has been the home of several of the great world religions and has also produced much acute philosophical thought. But there are also peculiar drawbacks. European thought, while often profound, is frequently expressed in a language of frightening obscurity with barbarous technical jargon. Oriental thought, for the most part, seems to be exclusively concerned with the problems of mysticism and religion. 74 Herbert Haskell Blumberg Instructor in Psychology David Platt, Professor of Philosophy 'tskxliCVINIHN'K .43 3?anan $m$35w5 James W. Flosdorf, Assistant Professor of English 75 All of this leads up to the point that American philosophy, while drawing on other cultures, has produced its own distinctive thought which should become more well known as part of our heritage. As might be expected it is closely allied with science and also values precision and clarity of expression. And in the work of its major thinkers it has produced philosophy of scope and vision which can stand with the best that has been produced elsewhere. David Platt, Professor of Philosophy Does Truth inhere within our grasp, And may we weigh it, Calculate it, And include it in a book And trust That it will stay there, Always to withstand Vicissitude? Does Truth in nothing lie, Forever changing its Protean shape and pattern To conform to present whim; Must it be rearranging Itself Anew To lie within the norm? Does Truth abide on a far forbidding hill, A mountain, cragged and steep, which round and round We all must slowly climb and toil Until the glacial whirlwinds Throw us to the Ground? 15 Truth No plant that mortal climate knows? Or Yet again, Is Truth Simply A rose? J ames W. Flosdorf, Assistant Professor of English Art makes us use our eyes . . . We look, but do we really see what is around us? The artistic experience is not simply a means of expression, it is a reflection of our world: Ripples on the Conococheague make placid reHections spring into animated images of life . The rough bark of a twisted tree seen against a distant meadow contrasts in visual harmony, light and dark, the rough and the soft, the old and the young . . . Studentsl hands nod or bounce about like seed pods blown by a breezeaa breeze of thoughts and feelings . . . the imprint of a finger in soft clay gives shape to idea . . . a brush stroke embodies all the nuances of meaning. The delight of perception-if only we would look and if only we would see. Helen-Lee Jones, Assistant Professor of F ine Arts Robert Curtis, Associate Professor of Political Science Political Science is necessary to a liberal education. It promotes citizenship, but more important it broadens concepts about other political systems. Student involvement has increased in recent years. In an academic, liberal arts situation this should be encouraged, but the idea of Student Power can be overdone. Robert Curtis, Associate Professor of Political Science ilDer Lehrer ist kein Zauberkiinstler, sondern ein Gartner. Er kann und wird euch hegen und pflegen, aber wachsen miisst ihr selberPi Erich Kiz'stner Vern Buckles, Assistant Professor of German Vern Buckles Assistant Professor of German 76 Three great modern religious systems venerate the Hebrew scriptures as their own. Jews, Christians, and Muslims all look upon this collection as canonical literature, trustworthy in learning of the ways of God; but each group proceeds from a diiTerent set of assumptions regarding it. Our story, therefore, cannot be complete in itself, and the serious student should go on to study the effects of this literature in the ongoing life of at least one of these three major traditions, preferably in all three of them. But if he would be truly wise, he would not stop there, certainly not with a simple exposition of this own faithh; rather, he would view his own tradition in the light of the varied religious systems throughout the world. Harry M. Buck, Associate Professor of Bible and Religion People of the Lord When the new science center is ready for occupancy life is going to be a lot easier! We are all anxiously awaiting the move. J. L i , , We will have a proper place to use our f, - i L, , , g , equipment. Actually, we have a lot of ' I L a good laboratory facilities even now, but Harry M. Buck, Associate Professor of Bible and Religion they are too cramped. Our approach in teaching wonit change, only the labs will be more efficient and everything made simpler. Finally, we are attaining better working conditions-Hurrahll J ane T. J udge, Assistant Professor of Chemistry The motifs which recur throughout religious history and the relative importance they have in the lives of the people concerned must be investigated. The student must feel at ease with the various symbols as they occur in religious rituals and tlEverydayll life, and have a sense of the pervasive nature of symbolism. The extent to which a person is aware of the symbols and myths in his life says a great deal about his religion. Repeating, it is important to keep in mind that the customs under study are more than just characteristics which undergo refinement and succeed one another in an organic fashion. This may have validity on a superficial level, but the underlying motive for producing myths, performing rituals, and choosing symbols requires a more sensitive approach. In adopting an evolutionist view of these customs, there is the danger of placing more significance on their order and classification than on the customs themselves. The order into which one places them must not be mistaken for a preexistent order, according to which religions developed, anymore than the laws of Physics should be regarded as a preexistent blueprint for the organization of the physical world. Katharine Tatman, 1969, Methodology paper, Blble 213 Jane T. Judge. Assistant Professor of Chemistry 77 Although he is stuck on bluebooks and pushes notetaking to a breakneck speed, Mr. Galie has proved to be a valuable addition to the faculty this year. As Poli Scils own Grecophile, he will tell you that the Romans really didntt contribute anything original. Furthermore, ttGrass roots in the polis, girls shows the connection between ancient political thought and iistate-and-localfi Never be afraid to ask Mr. Galie for an opinion because he takes a stand on everything from Leo Strauss to Vietnam, and whether your sources are Time magazine or The East Village Other, youill have your chance to win a place in the political noonday sun, and maybe even get to really understand your oppositets point of view for a change. For the first few weeks you watched her swinging tennis rackets and chasing stray hockey balls, and then you encountered her in her otiice, feet propped on the desk, as she coped with a constant stream of girls, half of whom had hockey sticks and eager expressions, and the other half terrible diseases which would certainly finish them off if they set foot on the field that day. It was then that you began to get to know Miss Brickeresomeone quick to become interested and involved with almost everything, including athletics, international relations, Terrible Diseases, and people in general tand that DOES include students, believe it or notJ Herr Kellinger is the kind of professor every student tlike youl secretly wants, and has wanted ever since that day in high school study hall when he tor Shel started imagining what college was really going to be like. Heis brilliant, of course, and has a grave dignilied manner which is leavened by that very real responsiveness that means so much to the struggling scholar. Therels just something about him, perhaps the air of the European university which he brings to Chambersburg, which is invaluable to your attainment of intellectual maturity . . . Besides which, the Kellingers are famous for their great punch, and hobnobbing over it with the intelligentsia tyour roommatei is also an ultimate Fulfillment of your high school dreams. Miss Hinckley is a young professor-you can tell because a she can still talk about Intellectual Atmosphere Conducive to Good Discussions, and bl she BLUSHES. On the other hand, though, these things arenlt necessarily attributes of youthful professorship. Theylre actually very appealing qualities, and you can easily imagine Miss Hinckley at ninety-eight, Peter J . Galie, Instructor in Political Science Beth J ohnston Bricker, Instructor in Physical Education still sincere, still blushing, still just as challenging in the classroom and out of it, still right in the middle of the 10 am. snackie furor . . . If there is any intellectual atmosphere around this place, people like Miss Hinckley supply it. 78 ;$?i.oekiy? ,5 iii: . viii c 253.. n S a w m w a .m G C f o m r W O s t s m h H m m DI I r, v,. e 8 .w n k H C d m K H d m .m m .m ma M V m. m J A On one of those days when you,re absolutely fed up tprobably in and about Februaryl, you feel completely GRIMY, and you start wondering for the 100th time that week just WHAT you are doing here in all this snoweyou come upon Miss Lutz. Just the fact of looking at her and talking to her seems to improve the situation, whether you are discussing Sophocles or just asking the way to Mr. Flosdorfls office. It doesnit matter which. The thing that matters is that you are suddenly confronted with a person of the highest stature, both academic and personal, and all of a sudden you decide to be a little more graceful under pressureubecause grace rubs off. Now if youlre a French major, or even if you know just enough French to talk things over with Mademoiselle from time to time, you realize the value of a sympathetic and competent teacher. There are several such gems in That department, and the one with the loveliest name is Mme. Suzanne Gilliotte- Blumenthal. And once you can pronounce that with the necessary savoir faire, youire on your way to Montaigne, Rabelais, Baudelaire, Camus, de Vigny tyes, de Vignyl, and all the rest in the panth60n of F rench immortals. As the mad scientist in ttHelpPl remarked when he cornered Ringo, ttWith a ring like this, I couldedare I say it?erule the worldHll THATlS the right attitude for a French major, and that,s the attitude Mme. Gilliotte-Blumenthal instills, with all kinds of rigor and precision, as befits a member of the Wilson Pantheon. Mr. Gondal left India to teach chemistry in Chambersburg. Each week he takes his life in his hands and supervises 101 chem. labs, where he zips through logistic tables while the introductory students stand about groping for their smelling salts. Namaste! Oh, happiness is a warm bluebird, happiness is a porpoise mouth, happiness is treallyy a course with Mr. Blair. If you feel a little lyrical about the whole thing, its only natural, since Mr. Blair is one of those legendary professors who can make economics an un-do- withoutable experienceefor those of us who have the capacity, that is. tItls these little qualifications that mess you upJ Of course therels a long and honorable precedent for teddybears in the political- economic-governmental area . anybody remember Teddy Roosevelt? Senor Hwang is a Korean teaching a Spanish culture and literature in which one can recognize a part of Spain itself. ttIndividualista, contradictorio, apasionado, orgulloso, catolico, Suzanne Gilliotte-Blumenthal, Assistant Professor of French dramatico, heroico, estoico. Un hombre de lucha y de contradiccion segun e1 filosofo. Unamuno. Un perpetuo tumulto de pasiones opuestas, segun e1 estilista Azorin. Asies e1 hispano? tMargenes: Historia Intima del Pueblo Hispano by Zenia Sacks DaSilval 80 Surinder Kumar Gondal, Instructor in Chemistry Johng Eun Hwang, Instructor in Spanish Calvin Hobson Blair, Assistant Professor of Economics and Political Science 81 :aolsmy JUDICIAL BOARD. FIRST ROW: P. Peard, A. DeNormandie, E. Hough. SECOND ROW: B. Fletcher, M. Lydecker, D. Shay, J. Myers, P. Sage, B. Taylor, Mrs. Armstrong. There are a good many activities for you to get involved with around here, but one of the most prestigious and vital is student government. After several years of hard work and planning, Wilson now has a Senate system, with representatives elected from each dorm. P. P0 is in charge of it all, being president of CGA in her capacity as Miss Peard. Therels also JB, presided over by Alice, which tries various infractions of college rules and the Honor Principle, and IDB, made up of all the house presidents, which is in charge of dorm affairs tlike devising a fitting punishment for you after you cut phone duty for the tenth timel. There are innumerable committees attached to CGA, and they do lots of important work-everything from planning May Day to writing the bluebook. One of the more well-known committees is Academic Affairs. They discuss your future scholastic situation with the faculty and administration, and thus are deserving of thanks for their part in organizing the curriculum change which will be coming next year. All in all, CGA and Senate are two of Wilsonis finest accomplishments, concerned not so much with Propriety and Good Taste as with the efficient and progressive governing and service of the Student Body, its various antic limbs and faculties. CGA people know everything in the bluebook, catalogue, last weeks Billboard, all their textbooks, and some i v A - r- - of them play pretty good hockey, too, ACADEMIC AFFAIRS. K. Tatman, M. Taxis, K. Bartoletti, J. Chatfield, K. Keenan, B. tThatis not a requirementJ DiBernard, J. Blood, P. Hicks. '3; ' ,.t,t. . oV'y 84 IDB. FIRST ROW: N. Crawford, L. Forbes, J. Campbell, M. Elder, J. Purdy, J. Puskas. E. Felton. SECOND ROW: L. Shrader, M. Rowland, M. Brasuell. - 1.- -g CGA EXECUTIVE COUNCIL. FIRST ROW: A. DeNormandie, P. Peard, C. Sachs, S. Fahlund. SECOND ROW: L. Roseman, C. Sandford, Mr. Judson, C. Paynter, M. Baum, M. Peel. Missing: M. Hatch. 85 KP. J. McConnell, C. Fluman, J. Gallagher. This year the Kittochtinny Players tsorry, KPl, put on a production of The Heiress, using BOYS for the first time. Opinion varied as to the result of that particular experiment talthough everyone said it was Refreshingl, but you thought the production itself was tremendous, especially Pam and Mimi, who were SPECTACULAR . . . KPls two annual plays excite fanatic interest, and after every opening night personal opinion waxes hot and violent. The only person the actresses really care about, though, is Mrs. Yarnall, and anybody who has had her in class knows just how formidable her opinions and standards are. She and the whole KP crew work like dogs or professionals for weeks and weeks, and the process as it has been described to you sounds rather like artistic boot camp under an extremely demanding sergeant with a caustic, if reiined, tongue . . . but somehow they do it and do it with passion and skill, and all the old KP watchers in the audience are re-aflirmed in their admiration, and new converts are made, and then they start getting ready for the next production . . . 86 KP PRESIDENT: P. Kempf. W .n' w o r , v Wyn , ,x ;, 3. LIGHTING FORUM. B. Corwin, S. Hershey, D. Dooling, C. STAGE SET FORUM. P. Hoberg, P. Rueckert, B. Gustafson. C. Rigali. B. Ashby, S. Franklin, J. Gire, E. Gaston, N. Wilson. Hardy, S. McNeil, J. Duncan. KP BOARD. C. Hardy, B. Wentz. P. Kempf, N. West, J. Emler, L. Baker, S. Franklin, E. Phillips. 88 KP. J. Emler, N. Dragonette, C. Wartmann, S. Veach, J. Jewett. MAKE-UP FORUM. B. Wentz, S. Savafi, B. Cillo. L. Guerrant. S. Hobart, C. Dumeld. ACTING FORUM. FIRST ROW: B. Schmidt, E. C06, R. Ludeke. SECOND ROW: S. Schofield, M. Walsh, P. Kempf, N. West, S. Shearman. THIRD ROW: M. Jenks, S. Durand, G. Taylor, J. Edwards. O chestnut tree, great-rooted blossomer . . . Dance is the music of the body, sculpture come to life, poetry without words. tThe spoken word finally become redundantJ Dance is the cosmic metaphor, Shiva Nataraja dancing the universe into being, maintaining and destroying it, performing his dance in the center of the universe, which is the human heart . . . The Spirit playing, The Spirit longing, The Spirit with fancy creating all, Surrenders himself to the bliss of love . . . He rushes, he frolics, he dances, he whirls . . And the universe resounds with the joyful cry I am. Skryabin Dance is an art which is actual joyous human life in itself, and even Snoopy knows it CtTo dance is to live, to live is to dance . . 3? Dance at Wilson is Orchesis-president, Ladan Moghadam; advisor, teacher and guiding light, Miss Bowden. When they give concerts they dance in Laird, when they rehearse they dance in the gym practice room, but youive never given up hope of seeing them dance someday in a flowery meadow with a herd of daisy-eyed cows, or down a Chambersburg street, followed by children and firemen and housewives and policemen and dogs and cats and the mayor and council . . . How shall we know the dancer from the dance? BILLBOARD. FIRST ROW: P. Cordwell, L. Comm, L. Davis, K. Howard, A. Emshwiller, F. Ralston, C. Primus, D. Humphreys, L. Harbach, J. Behler. SECOND ROW: M. Miners, K. Bartoletti. BILLBOARD EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: P. Cordwell. BILLBOARD EDITORIAL BOARD: B. Ryan, P. Cordwell, T. Cader, K. Keenan, J. Foster, C. Gundel, P. Sage. 92 GADFLY EDITORIAL BOARD. FIRST ROW: D. Reverand, S. Safavi, G. Palmer, B. Schabacker. SECOND ROW: T. Cader, L. Collenburg, C. Mikell. CULTURAL AFFAIRS. FIRST ROW: K. Moe, M. L. Stevens, L. Guerrant, C. Berdecio, S. Otto, M. Domke. SECOND ROW: B. Woods, B. Patterson, A. Cranston, C. McIntyre. Senate Okays Midnight Curfew; Faculty Approves Exam Choice Otlicials Review College Drug Policy At NSA Conference Billboard is the official voice of the community, and as such keeps you up-to- date with happenings which affect you, here and elsewhere. Every Monday night harried journalistic types descend on the tlcity room off snackie and then as if by magic tbut actually by HARD WORKl, a new Billboard, smelling of fresh printeris ink and this weeks news, appears in your PO. box on Friday night. Gadfiy is headed by Bets and Nigel Forefather with a little help from their friends, which includes anyone who can 1 write a fairly acceptable poem or draw nice artsy things. When they aren,t in the snackie you may possibly see them wandering about in the general region of Warfield, dorms, and grocery stores where they look over the Vegetables of Absolute Reality and listen to Nigelis stories about the fly who forgot his motorcycle boots. Cultural Affairs Committee is in league with Gadfly and makes sure that aesthetics doesnit become a completely lost cause. They arrange Cultural Phenomena, like a bulletin board which tells you about all the wonderful things you cant afford to go away and see. m. ander. SECOND ROW: K. Williams, J. VanMeter, Mrs. Epley, D. Banchiere, M. Hart, A. Venable. SOCIOLOGY CLUB. FIRST ROW: S. Ernest, G. Steimle, G. Alfson, B. Brindley, A. Lau. SECOND ROW: S. Sucas, B. Bryant, J. Brundage, C. Washburn, D. Nelson, A. Patterson, K. Williams. THIRD ROW: B. Jaggard, M. J. Neugebauer, K. White, A. Rossin, L. Gutekunst, B. Johnson, C. Carlson, S. Fowler, P. Reiche. FOURTH ROW: J. Taylor, M. Woods, J. Gardner. SSA CABINET. FIRST ROW: L. Farnsworth, R. Ludeke, E. Beyer, H. Alex- Some people around here are just nice girls, and then there are some who are really CONCERNED. Take SSA for instance. Theytre big sisters to any Chambersburg child who needs them, and not on any kind of part-time basis either. A lot of present and past SSA members also belong to the Sociology Club, soc majors being the kind of people who are liable to feel concerned and then take action. While most people tlike bio majors, English majors, fine arts majors, and the resD have to wait until theytre out and working before they really feel professional and involved, soc majors have plenty of Real Life work to do HERE and NOW. And they do it well. International relations being what they are, itts nice to know that therets a group around to talk to about the whole thing. IRC makes a point of knowing whats going on, and theytll fill you in on it either in personal discussion or in more official seminar form. tEverybody knows that the only Wilson girls who read the newspapers are poli sci majors and people in IRCJ PSEA stands for Pennsylvania State Educatorts Association, in case you,ve been wondering. Itts brand new here, and going strong, with lots of speakers and movies and magazines. There are PTAS- full of aspiring teachers on campus, and PSEA is preparing them for the blackboard jungle of lunch money, malfunctioning visual aids, pay raise strikes and recalcitrant first graders on rainy afternoons. IRC. FIRST ROW: M. Marshall, R. Filaseta, N. Wilson, G. McIntyre, M. Warke, Fairbanks, B. Olson, M. Fulton, C. Fluman, A. Lau. SECOND ROW: M. Jackson, J. Parsons, L. Roseman, S. Bliss, K. Howard, K. Carpenter, J. Tanger, S. Strong. I PSEA CABINET. FIRST ROW: J. Shallcross, C. Stoner, B. Braund, D. Huminik, L. Gute- kunst. SECOND ROW: B. Johns, G. Mackey, J Parsons, L. Kennedy, L. Farnsworth. R OUTING CLUB. FIRST ROW: B. Ashby, L. Zuryk, D. Dooling, C. Craft. SECOND ROW: J. McConnell, B. Morse, B. Corwin, S. Ort, S. Mahlum, G. Wong, J. Conroy. THIRD ROW: S. Bliss, N. Brownell. i , RADIO CLUB. FIRST ROW: B. Olson. SECOND ROW: C. RADIO CLUB. FIRST ROW: D. Banchiere. SECOND ROW: J. Tully, A. Markwood, B. Oerhig, P. Spear. Bolte, S. Wahlburg, N. Sheppe, M. J. Fisher. mewawd ,, SCIENCE CLUB. FIRST ROW: Miss Huston, P. Day, D. Davidson, D. Schilling, K. Gogolin, L. Chamberlin, G. Sahler, A. Henninger, L. E. Randall, J. Blood, E. Coe, J. Potus. SECOND ROW: D. Stubbe, Roseman, M. Warke, S. Roland. You cant just walk up to a scientist and say tlHello there! Good morning! Whatls electricity? F landers and Swarm Science Club does a good job of mediating between Scientists and the Layman. For instance, they sponsor turtle races on May Day and arrange forums all through the year which even the uninitiated may attend, and where youive picked up what little you know about electricity. Radio Club is even more of a public service. After a good start last year, they are broadcasting like mad, even featuring special programs like tiPeoples of Africa? Turn them on, tune them in, and youive got genuine Wilson background tor foregroundl music right on hand. When you get tired of sitting around in your room and your radio is broken so you canlt even listen to WLCL, thereis nothing else to do but take your life in your hands and go for an Outing with the appropriate group. Outing Club is made up of people who thrive on pine-needle beds, campfire-building and exploring dark caves. Itls fun to go out with them and be wood craftsy, and its especially fun because all the menls colleges have outing clubs too. x AA CABINET. FIRST ROW: J. Austin, M. Baum, B. Patterson, N. Huntington. SECOND ROW: K. Culbertson, M. Whitehead, R. Beyers, D. Stubbe. Johnston, J. Chamberlain, L. Moghadam. SECOND ROW: B. Wentz, M. Swartz, M. Baum, B. Patterson, N. Huntington, J. Myers, D. Stubbe, D. Vitez, N. Lowe, G. DlOnofrio. THIRD ROW: J. Austin, M. White, P. Sage, K. Culbertson, J. Smith, D. Palser. M. Whitehead. AA. is the group that regulates the athletic side of life around here, and they are, consequently, very athletic. In the fall they play hockey, in the winter, basketball, and in spring lacrosse or softball or both. In between they sandwich in such things as fencing, swimming, archery, dance, canoeing, badminton-volleyball, bowling, golf, and an infinite number of activities that give you fresh air, muscles, physical fitness, a sportsman-like outlook, and bruised toes. Everybody gets involved in at least one team sport and one individual sport, plus freshman dance-body mechanics-AND everybody has to pass a swimming test right away freshman year OR ELSE, the else being that you get to take beginning swimming. Wilson likes you to be ready for anything when you graduate; you leave here able to discuss bacteria or Milton or Giotto or child labor laws at parties held on yachts, and when the host sinks the yacht to make his guests go home, thanks to the Wilson Plan you can tread water and save your own life. And besides, its fun. Itis fun to get all wet and maybe even get so good you can qualify for Nereids. Itls fun to be initiated into hockey, which is a Way of Life in itself, and to go out for the class team and run hither and thither on the autumn field while everybody yells or groans on the sidelines. Itls fun to learn fencing and play at being the Scarlet Pimpernel or archery and pretend youire Will Scarlet tno relationl. Itls fun to play in the faculty-student basketball game, or any basketball game for that matter, and sit on the floor with the other jocks, eating orange slices and hoping that you arentt going to foul out. Itis fun to stand on the pitchers mound on Thomson green and feel the spring breeze and then strike somebody out. Its fun even if they get to walk three times in a row. And by the time youive been playing something for a few seasons, you start thinking about games in your spare time, and planning moves in your head, and thatis when you start to really get to know whatls going on and people respect your skill, and you can finally appreciate theirs, and at the end of the season you feel good because youlve been doing the right things to your bodyHeven though you may never turn out like P. Po and Bonnie and share Pentathlon honors. Even so, you can always play in the gym lobby with Tinkerbell and Coccoa Bowden . . . you cant lose. The denizens of La Posada and their friends make up La Tertulia Espaiiola, and if you don : quite understand that, its what youlve got coming to you for having taken Mandarin Chinese or Pig Latin instead. Anyhow, La Posada is that interesting white house next to Sharpe House, stockpiled to the ceilings with pifzatas and sombreros, and La Tertulia is the group of young ladies who are all amigas and also Don Quixoteis and the Spanish departmentls most fervent admirers. Imported local color is also noticeable in another area of campus, next to the infirmary this time. This is La Maison F rangaise, and it too is stockpiled with hibous, impressionist prints, posters of Carcassonne, and Mademoiselle Megyer. Thereis no cigarette machine, true, but then Mademoiselle doesnit approve. Le Cercle F rangais is noted for Christmas caroling tof course all the other language clubs are tool and for extensive hights of stairs and the most colorful windows on campus. FRENCH CLUB. J . Young, L. Lee, M. Alfson. u: a. SPANISH CLUB. FIRST ROW: N. Kyte, J. Shallcross. SECOND ROW: Mr. Hwang, M. Hart, T. Stanheld. Marton, J. Chatfield, J. Bertolette, P. Baroudi, E. Felton, L. Robihson, J. Zarfos, C. McIntyre, L. Lefferts, M. Walsh, B. Hicks, E. Gaston, G. t x CLASSICS CLUB. FIRST ROW: A. Hertzler, C. Stoehr, J. Van Hazmuka. SECOND ROW: S. Dowler, B. Thomas, H. Reid, L. Meter, J. Draper, M. Krieger, C. Jones, B. Lawser, M. Jahnes, V. Corum, M. Zarfos, L. Hewitt, A. Freyss. Now, the Deutsche Verein is a different story, and so is German House. The German people may not have Mademoiselle or Don Quixote, but they have Herr Kellinger and Herr Buckles and Herr Puhrmann, which is as much as any one group needs, or even deserves. They go carolling too, and end up with PUNCH instead of hot chocolate, and some of them live in the most off-campus and attractive of dorms, even if they do have to cross Route 1 1 to get to it. Of course Classics Club doesnlt have a dorm. Just imagine trying to light for the shampoo with your roommate in Latin or Greek . . . Of course the ancients did it, but that was long ago, and they all had old-fashioned classical educations anyway. Still, the ladies of Classics Club could no doubt manage to adapt, and would probably develop genuine slang and rejuvenate the language, as the Israelis have rejuvenated Hebrew. Classicists of the World Unite! Latin Lives! GERMAN CLUB: M. Swartz, S. Kopenhaver, R. Grosnick. S. Kothe, K. Tatman, D. David- son. 103 E k : CON EDITORIAL STAFF. FIRST ROW: Chris, Capricorn; Norma, Aries; Fiammetta, Libra; Carla, Scorpio. SECOND ROW: Muffy, Aquarius; Sue, Pisces. THIRD ROW: Dinah, Capricorn; Rancid, Saggitarius; Celine, Saggitarius; Zahvtik, Aquarius. 104 We would like to thank Sarah Wilson, Michaelangelo Antonioni, J ohn, Paul, George, Ringo, Gnossos Pappadopoulis, WCGA, Ludwig Pursewarden, Frodo Baggins, Jim Kweskin, Sister Mary Corita, the Royal Ballet, the Wm. J . Keller Inc., Seymour Glass, Joan Baez, Sebastian Dangerfield, Flanders and Swann, Pablo and the Magic Theatre, J oseph Crilley, Bill Keinzel, Nina Simone, Albion Moonlight, Hassan- Sabah, Baron de Charlus, the editorls mother, Audrey Beardsley, Ingmar Bergman, the San Francisco Mime Troupe, Anthony Powell, the Vultures, Bob Dylan, The Flying Wallendas, Arlo Guthrie, W.B. Yeats, the author of The Sins of Wanda, the diggers, Nijinsky, Jean Genet, Edith Piaf, Smoky Robinson and the Miracles, J ean-Luc Godard, Nancy, Mick J agger, Giinter Grass, Tristan Tzara, Buffy St. Marie, Baudelaire, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, the author of The Harrad Experiment, Provincetown tMassl, WC. Fields, Ravi Shankar, Rod McKuen, Monhegon Island tMeJ, Bill Cosby, A.A. Bushko, Jacques, the Keystone Motel, Tom Rush, Dr. Spock, Patrick Sky, William F. Buckley tthe Thinking Manls Arthur Godfreyl, the Eggplant That Ate Chicago, Lord Shiva, and the board of admissions, all of whom contributed directly or indirectly to our bookfilm. CHAPEL COMMITTEE. J. Borsay, E. Rasi, A. Henninger, N. Jacobs, K. Maiorana, M. Jenks. SOCIAL COMMITTEE. FIRST ROW: G. Steimle, P. Baroudi. SECOND ROW: D. Nelson, B. Wentz, M. Herting, M. Hart, C. Berdecio, M. Waldron. For man does not live by bread alone. Wilson Catalogue Although we now have voluntary chapel, that doesnt mean that NOBODY goes, and for the regulars things have to be better than ever before. Thatls why Chapel Committee is around, planning services of all kinds, which include special ones like dissertations on folk singing and readings of ttA Christmas Memory by Truman Capote. Church-on- Campus, twith fascinating speakers coming from afar like the Three Wise Menl, is also an important part of Thomson programs, as is Orr Forum, the annual three-day religion symposium. And shelll have fun fun fun Till her daddy takes her T-bird away The Beach Boys Social Committee attends to different, more worldly matters, which nonetheless assume a certain degree of importance in the eyes of the college student. They have to be lively outgoing sociable types, not only because their job calls for it, but also because they have to keep up with Miss Hicks twhich they do, remarkably enoughl. Silver Key is also a remarkable organization. It is entirely made up of people who like Wilson so well that they feel no qualms about persuading other people to come here. In order to do this, they give guided tours of the campus to potential students and their parents, showing them high points like the library and the snackie, and trying to think of a room that has been cleaned within the past five weeks so that the visitors can experience a dorm without becoming overly distraught. Silver Key-ers are the unsung heroes of Wilson, not only for their tours, but also for the booklet they put out on every freshman class. Without it, you could never remember anybodyls name for the first two weeks of freshman year, and after that yould miss all kinds of retrospective tand fairly cattyl fun. SILVER K E Y OFFICERS. C. Steiner, C. Gundel, M. Mirsch. WILSON COLLEGE CHOIR. FIRST ROW: A. Harwood, C. Car- Koons. FIFTH ROW: A. Mohn, M. Fulton, H. Alexander, S. penter, N. Ralston, S. Franklin, J. Elder, L. Thomas. SECOND ROW: Swisher, S. Lucas, M. Heller, C. Rehrig, M. Domke, T. Bennett, D. L. Rasi, D. Jennings, E. Randall, N. Dragonette, L. Letson, S.Hershey, Ryan, C. Scott. SIXTH ROW: P. Peters, B. Yeomans, J. Terry, J. D. Palser, M. A. Rowland, T. Stanfield. THIRD ROW: S. Bliss, N. Coleman. Mr. Gould, J. Chamberlain, B. Johnson, S. Sahler, K. Van Jacobs, E. Weren, N. Huntington, S. Hankey. FOURTH ROW: M. Brakle, C. Von Bulow, J. Browu. Plumb, D. Schubel, L. Sweetser, B. Morse, A. Freyss, J. Irish, N. TEN TONES. FIRST ROW: C. Carlson. SECOND ROW: J. Taylor, B. Johnson, G. Shank, L. Corbin, J. Hobson, D. Schubel. THIRD ' ROW: C. Hauptfuhrer, J. Flemming, M. Jenks. If mUSIC really be the fOOd 0f love, the choir knows all about it, because they spend almost as much time having mixers with menls choirs as they do singing. Well, ALMOST. They rehearse for three hours a week, not counting chapels, concerts, and bathtub. You go to all their performances, listen in on practices from your room twhich is right next to Thomsonl, and several choir members share your bathroom, so therels not much you miss except mixers. Another group you never miss is Tentones. They sing at Christmas parties, businessments lunches, and even in churches, where they belt out a folk mass like J oan Baez, Mary Travers, and Barbra Streisand combined. And that,s just about what you have to be to get in Of course, the best way to get into choir or Tentones is to start early- preferably freshman year. All the freshmen who had the talent and the nerve to audition are in F reshman . Chorus. They are verylmuch a part of Wilson life, since they fill in for choir, give concerts, and only practice one hour a week. Play on! m5 . PAINT SHOPPE. FIRST ROW: J. Gire, L. Guerrant. SECOND ROW: B. McCandless, L. Halstead, L. Gutekunst, K. Schall, J. Parsons, S. Kauffman, N. Wilson. 9a As a YOUNG REPUBLICANS. FIRST ROW: M. Warke, S. Bogart, S. Burich, K. Howard, B. Brindley, C. Stoehr, E. Coe. SECOND ROW: K. Kane, L. Farnsworth, B. McCandless, D. Schilling, S. Stevenson, A. Thompson, C. Straight, D. Gille, L. Grilli. If there were any traditional politician- type candidates running for something at Wilson, they would definitely hire Painte Shoppe to do their campaign posters. From the number of posters that cover bulletin boards and walls around here, youid think that the Painte Shoppe members sat in a studio 24 hours a day, huddled over painte pottes. In reality though, they lead normal lives, and the only way you can tell who they are is by smudges of poster paint on their noses and hands. Now here you have the Young Republicans, an institution of great Wilsonian tradition. They have a well- looked-after bulletin board which is constantly filling you in on numerous GOP activities. Itis a strange thing, but even when their party is out of omce, Republicans always seem powerful, organized and well-established. At Wilson, anyhow, they are more established than the Young Democrats, who must be iioating around somewhere, but not in organizational form. And yes, Lyndon, there is a revolutionary SDS-type element, which is currently operating in a sort of guerrilla underground. They all manage to co-exist without too much rancor, but of course there is an election year coming up . . . When I was younger, So much younger than today, I never needed anybody,s Help in any way . . . The Beatles Freshman year . . . you either get very nostalgic about it, or else repress the entire experience very firmly. All of a sudden, one sweltering September day, you were here, and whatever happened after that has mercifully vanished in a haze of placement tests, orientation meetings, Physical Fitness, and your first encounter with whatever it was that passed for dessert under the unlikely name of Baker,s Delight. And there were all those New People . When youire strange Faces come out of the rain When youire strange Nobody knows your name . The Doors Much of it is very Mickey Mouse and confusing. There is more extrania in freshman year than any other, or at least youire not equipped to deal with it yet. There are so many meetings, so much phone duty, and which floor is the registrar on? You start to wonder how anyone could possibly survive at a university. On second thought, how does anyone survive who is NOT at a university? And then, once youive been oriented and placed and have attended your first week of classesahow does anyone survive? Freshman year you learned about the multi-faceted Wilson Way. Being in college is not, it turns out, sitting alone in your cubicle drinking coffee and translating Schiller until the wee hours; itis staying up every OTHER nightaall night-nurturing your tuberculosis, reading a paragraph every half hour, and FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS. FIRST ROW: N. Kerivan, L. Nesbitt, D. Zaferiou, M. Colangelo, B. Gustafson, P. Rueckert, L. Sargent. t treasurer; C. Gray, secretary. SECOND ROW: G. Warner, vice-president; W. Eberhardt, president. plotting the revolutionizing 0f the American Educational System. You come in for occasional Unpleasant Moments when the life cycle of the Chinese liver fluke deserts you in the middle of a written, and occasional Pleasant Moments when, after you thought all year that Mr. Gattiker didnlt even know your name, he joins you for coffee in the snackie tthereby conferring on you a distinction equal to that of a translator of Schiller or anybody else for that matterJ Freshman year was the year you threw firecrackers down the elevator shaft in Prentis and got exceedingly inebriated and passed out on Thompson Green, and EVERYBODY on your hall carried you upstairs and into the shower so you would be in a condition to sign FIRST ROW: J. Crenshaw, C. Williams, S. Valuch. SECOND ROW: K. Clark, C. Betty, A. Du, L. Burgard, C. Hill. 111 in . . . Freshman year was the year you announced that you werenlt going to let academic requirements interfere with your EDUCATION, and after Miss Boyd jilst.barely forgave you for cutting five times the number of classes you were supposed to, you decided that it might be better to transfer after sophomore year. But then you discovered that your grades were not exactly transferable, and that you were burning your bridges at both ends, so you might as well reconcile yourself to four years of Wilsonensis, if they would let you stay. But it will come as a surprise to no one that, after an invigorating year of mixers, roommate roulette, and J , E, D, and P tthey wrote the Bible, if you remember correctlyl, most of you made it after all tin fact, thake Itll became your general philosophyJ For reasons best known to your parents and yourself, you decided that Education was indeed proving Meaningful, and so you pulled out in June with a feeling of accomplishment, confident that you had everything twith maybe a few minor exceptions like bioy pretty well psyched out . . . But the fun, as Abraham Lincoln or Bob Dylan or somebody once remarked, was just beginning. FIRST ROW: K. Hume, M. Lee, S. Burton, L. Coletta. SECOND ROW: S. Strong, C. Erickson, L. Reed, K. Scholl, P. Spozza, K. Anthony, S. Speer, C. Sunderland. THIRD ROW: C. Haldeman, D. Shields, S. Smith, D. Barnes, S. Indriello, J. Shive. FIRST ROW: C. Cushion, N. Naumann. SECOND ROW: A. MacFarlane, S. Bressler, K. Seitz, L. Johnson, R. Campbell, R. Filaseta. THIRD ROW: M. Brown, D. Scesny, C. Weaver, W. Eberhardt, S. Ovemeld, M. Lydecker, K. Shannon, L. Zarfos, D. Sayer. FOURTH ROW: D. Bertsch, N. Wells, A. Kirschner, M. Saltyman, M. Henderson, C. Ettinger, S. Croft, C. Heroy. FIRST ROW: P. Spahr, M. Flasher, J. Davis, P. McCleary, L. Johnson, .I. Brozdowski, M. Ruhl. SECOND ROW: M. Altman, T. Gregory, J. Cumming, B. Kuser, D. Mack, D. Chase, N. Rich, J. Memo. J. Dankelmann. FIRST ROW: Z. Green, B. Bird, F. Jennings, S. Slabonik, P. Clarke. SECOND ROW: C. Atkins, P. Cole, L. Biaggi, E. Hurley, C. Crans, C. Gray, B. Engle, L. Woodruf. L. Maxwell. FIRST ROW: C. McCoy, J. Berry. SECOND ROW: D. Del- Noce, J. Prange, S. Bunting. THIRD ROW: B. Noble, A. Bronson, S. Vercollone. FOURTH ROW: D. Gille, S. Lung- quist, P. Doran. FIFTH ROW: A. Thompson, J. Stafford, R. Klacik. SIXTH ROW: B. Jaquish, K. Kane, L. Johnson. SEVENTH ROW: B. Williams, S. Breault, S. Sibble, G. Har- wood, A. Bosca. FIRST ROW: B. Branion, R. Byers, L. Tallon, G. Warner, D. Charles, N. Coste, A. Rock, S. Sena, M. Morgan. SECOND ROW: E. Marlatt. C. Groff, J. Peterson, M. L. Allen, S. Andersen, N. Sheppe, S. Cordes, P. Barker, A. Smith. 114 FIRST ROW: J. Bennett, S. Larimer, C. Etzoed, L. Quigley, S. Ranck. SECOND ROW: M. Jordan, L. Shoemaker, K. Price, C. Scannell, C. Hankins, D. Smith, R. Kennedy. THIRD ROW: D. Culbertson, E. Pipkin, A. L. Ball, K. Mack, K. Wyckoff. H. Basseler, J. Warren, C. Wright. S. Polivka, L. Smith, J. Graham, C. Hammond, D. Bortner, M. Pobotsky, S. Neale, J. Zwirek, B. Jackson, L. Dietrich, B. Donaldson, B. White, F. Chapman, J. Brava. Help! I need somebody Help! Not just anybody Help! You know I need someone HELP! So youlve spent the summer giving guided tours in a wax museum, and now youlre back at Wilson as a SOPHOMORE, ready to find out about Plato and the Upanishads and Mary Queen of Scots and dependent variables and allusive periphrasis and the subtler aspects of hockey and college men . . . and youlre also going to join KP and re- organize NSA and win Dummy Rush if it kills you tor sleep through it if it kills you, depending on what kind of OdthVen you arel, and then . . . and then . . . and then you look around your room and discover that you are SURROUNDED by FOUR. . . GREEN . . . STUCCO . . . WALLS . . and all youlre interested in is smoking cigarettes and watching the RIDES OUT bulletin board, and the only thing you really want to do is run away and join the raggle-taggle gypsies- O, and if you hear another word about Mary Queen of Scots youlll SCREAM. And that, baby, is the Sophomore Blues, although it has been known to strike juniors and freshmen and even seniors on occasion, and there are several things you can do about it, namely: a go to see Miss Parker bl attack your roommate with a rolled- up copy of the catalogue cl fall in love dl have a huge chocolate ice cream soda, and then go to Barneys and buy a bubble pipe and soap cl run away and join the raggle-taggle gypsies-O. But if you do manage to stick it out and are left with a fairly charitable memory of Mary Q of S, and you get into KP but not NSA, and nothing else goes too wrong, then its second semester, and second semester of sophomore year is a Whole Other Thing. By this time you Derrie Ryan, secretary; Peg Diffenderfer, president: Judy Smith; Sally Otto. treasurer. MISSING: Bev Olson, vice-president. 116 are getting to be an established member of the community, and profs know your name, and you pick flowers in Mr. Nicholsl backyard, and you know all the fraternity houses at Dickinson and F8tM from attic to cellar, and you have also been to Yale and Princeton for weekends, and once you had lunch in the private dining room with a Celebrity, and you hear people muttering as you go by, ltTherefs the kid who passed out on Thomson Green last year? and everything is so much more HOMEY. And one day, youlre sitting in snackie with your best friend, and youtre both drinking black coffee, and it occurs to you both that in a few months it will FIRST ROW: M. Jenks, S. Collins, S. Smith, S. Popp, R. Ludeke. SECOND ROW: H. Goering, L. Hickland, M. Fulton, A. Harwood, L. Corum, S. Durand. 117 J. Bolte, H. Alexander, E. Wood, S. Morese, S. Abel, E. Gaston, D. Banchiere. FIRST ROW: J. Breuninger, C. Steohr, 1. Harper, M. Plumb, B. Johns, J. Scholey, L. Grilli. SECOND ROW: K. Cobden. E. Kerfoot, B. Steiner, J. Brown, T. Robbins, P. Schmuck, J. Lohse, D. Ryan. FIRST ROW: E. Bouregy, C. Steinen, H. Reid, W. Hoag. SECOND ROW: M. Jahnes, G. D'Onofrio, C. Baum, C. Staniford, B. Edgerton, J. Hobson, E. Bender, J. Garvin, C. Primus. THIRD ROW: M. Miners, K. Culbertson, J. Barber, M. Diggs, K. Rummel, J. Reel. 118 be time to choose a major. Now your best friend has absolutely no idea of what she wants to major in, but you have ALWAYS KNOWN that it has to be fine arts tor history or English or bio or whatever it isl, so your best friend thinks a moment, and then she says that what she has REALLY always wanted is to major in fine arts tor history or English or biol. Then you are both filled with exultation and over the black coffee you pledge that you will both Carve Out Honorable Careers in the Fine Arts Department tor History or English or BioJ And the great day comes, and you go in to see your future department head with starry eyes and trembling catalogues, and you sign away the next two years and let yourself in for heaven- knows-what in the way of labs and papers and comps, but ignorance is bliss and bliss is the opposite of Sophomore Blues and also the only thing that makes sophomore year worthwhile, because it can be such an awful year REALLY. G. Alfson. E. Gaston, B. Hicks. E. Moore. J. Barton, G. Venable, P. Betzt M. B. Marshall. C. Casey, N. Dragonette. S. Hershey. FIRST ROW: A. Markwood, E. Beyer, R. Stokes, S. Jung. J. Bauer. SECOND ROW: C. Cordonnier. J. Keur, P. Stoner, T. Stanfield, I. Eek, G. Taylor. S. Swisher, M. Wood. FIRST ROW: C. Ringland, B. Schmidt, M. Overhoff, P. Diffenderfer, B. Thomas. SECOND ROW: B. Kuhns, J. Tres- selt, C. Cosgrove, A. Johnston. FIRST ROW: G. Shank, K. Huppuch, T. Bowman, D. Thomson, B. Cillo, N. Blood, B. D. Bernard, C. Kenyon, S. Helm, J. Rylke. SECOND ROW: B. Oehrig, C. Duffield, G. Bamford, C. Hazmuka. FIRST ROW: B. Yeomans, E. Phillips, M. Manor. SECOND ROW: C. Mansi, B. Allen, M. Longacre, P. Sage, N. Lowe. 120 E. Randall, S. Vauthier, G. Watson, S. Jepson. S. Woodworth, L. Pfriem, M. Domke, C. Davis, N. Jacobs. Now say that junior year has passed tweill get to juniors in a momentl, and youlre back here after spending the summer as a deck hand on a tramp steamer in the Mediterranean, and now you are a SENIOR. That is a rather chilling thing to be in some ways, because you will have to start girding your loins or whatever for the REAL battle of trying to survive out there on what Richard F arifia called the asphalt seas . . . Now, girding your loins doesnlt just mean getting a job or getting into grad school; it means growing accustomed to the idea of wearing heels and a girdle all day, or of being shot down on the post-graduate level for a change. But all this seems very far away in September of your senior year. The thing that really interests you tbesides new things like seminarsl is your brand- new second-hand car, Princess, which tor whol means that this year you will be so much less ENMESHED, as it were, in Wilson Life. You can just take 0E whenever you want to, schedules and gas money permitting, but tand here is the paradox of the senior experiencel, you find yourself so much more enmeshed, but in subtler ways. So you get into the a . . v . Wilson Thing again, and you enter the SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS. K. Keenan, treasurer; M. Taxis, vice-president; pumpkin-carving contest for the first A. Henninger, president; M. Behler, secretary. time, and Mr. Ezell pronounces you Grand Champion, and you find yourself walking Christopher all over campus and you go to snackie more often, and one weekend you take off for New York and have a wonderful time and even get your chart done tyouire Libral, but you find that ifs perfectly all right with you when itls time to come back. You certainly don,t want to get SOPPY or anything tnot muchl, but a wedding shower is such a lovely thing, and you go to about 15 of them, including one held out in the quarry, and if youtre lucky you get to be guest-of-honor at one. Then you notice that there are TREES on campus, and you get Mr. Groveis tree pamphlet and read it all the way through. And you do a r; 3 u CANDLE CLUB. C. Sachs, S. Fahlund, P. Peard, E. Hough, P. Kempf, M. Taxis, J . Foster, A. DeNormandie, A. Henninger. 122 things you never had time for, like taking the sculpture course, and everybody is doing their thing, and even you are finally head of something tNSA at lasti. And there are various marks of accomplishment, like actually making deanis list, and conducting yourself well in seminar, and maybe even writing an honors paper. Underclassmen come to you for DISCUSSIONS, and you have to bite your tongue to keep from sounding like a grandmother. And of course there are little things like appreciating roommates and Peanut Night and your little sister, who is developing into a very good hockey player . . . Oh, it all depends on your temperament, of course. You can either be terribly cynical or terribly mellow about the whole thing, and sometimes both in the space of an hour. But, as Mr. Applegate remarked, you are on the way at least to understanding yourself roh, awesome fruit of the educating process, in school or out of i0, and whether you are going to be a Ph.D. or a Married Woman or a deck hand again, you,ve got a little more to bring to it than you had four years ago. FIRST ROW: M. Zarfos, N. Gault, C. Cressler, S. Knox. SECOND ROW: K. White, A. Rosin, M. Elder, J. Terry, D. Turner, J. Crawford. FIRST ROW: G. Steimle, M. Gale, K. Moe. SECOND ROW: S. Home, M. Brasuell, J. Marton, J. Foster. FIRST ROW: M. Taxis, J. Duncan, B. Hake. SECOND ROW: S. Kothe, S. Miller, B. Hartzell, J. Irish, A. Hertzler. THIRD ROW: B. Rhodes, J. Bergmann, P. Cordwell, J. Purdy, M. L. Pohl. 123 s rwmnnm' xmmd n 3 S. Bliss, J. Puskas, J. Parsons, M. Floumoy, S. Gutekunst, S. Rowland, L. Roseman, M. Warke. FIRST ROW: C. Sachs, C. Hardy, S. Ort, B. Corwin, J. Conroy. SECOND ROW: S. Fugate, K. Van Brakle, J. Emler, A. Cranston, M. A. Rowland, A. Henninger. THIRD ROW: N. Schenk, N. Huntingdon, C. McFarland, J . Sollenberger, C. Center, E. Bowden. 124 FIRST ROW: M. Herting, J. Folberth, S. Collins, K. Kramer. SECOND ROW: S. de Neergaard, L. Lawson, S. Fowler, P. Reiche, C. Gundel, P. Cochrane, H. Lawrence. THIRD ROW: L. Shrader, D. Stubbe, B. Braund, D. Huminik. C. McIntyre. J. Young, L. Robinson, E. Felton. Living Arrangements III think you are a Taurush solemnly as he took sight down The barrel of his pencil. So I was already beginning to be true, and to feel Completely otherwise. I eyed the reversing galaxies of his hands, and pawed the Ground. His Absolutes suck to vacuity soul-phrasings that do not derive from the heavens. ttAs the stars wheel, so move their seed, and in the fixed metaphor, the sun upon its course . . 3, He persisted, to the accompaniment of the clanging positions of time. WFhese are not blind birthsf he said, seated on two dictionaries and an almanac so that he could just see over the table. uPerformed to pulse I am Cap- ricorn, and destined for great things? N igel F orefather, I 968 FIRST ROW: M. Handsman, S. Beard, B. Dugan, K. Keenan, G. Weber, C. Shaffer, J. Behler. SECOND ROW: M. Hatch, D. Jennings, J. Campbell, S. Frith, E. Zimmerman, M. Behler. FIRST ROW: S. Safavi, F. Ralston, L. Moghadam. SECOND ROW: C. Carlson, J. Van Meter, B. Johnson. M. Neugebauer. FIRST ROW: P. Day, T. Bennett, C. Francisco, K. Gogolin. SECOND ROW: J. Draper. A. Van Sam, L. Forbes. THIRD ROW: P. Hoberg, G. Sahler, J. Blood. FIRST ROW: K. Schultz, E. Huff, N. Miller. SECOND ROW: P. Peard. B. Patterson, S. Fahlund, A. de Normandie. 127 Where black is the color Where none is the number. Bob Dylan I was hung down brung down run down and all kinds of mean nasty terrible things . Arlo Guthrie Here we are, friends, the notorious black-sheet class of 1969, bloody but unbowed. Aye, when the wind blows cold and the alumnae are clustered around the fire on a winterts night, ltis of the class of 1969 that they speak, but always in whispers, for the shadows press blacker against the pane at the mention of that dreaded name . . . Oh well. Anyhow, it IS true that we enjoy aAOW shall we say itaunusual reputation on campus. It all started when about 256 of us descended on Wilson freshman year, and stepped on everybodyis toes. Then a whole bunch of us left, vanished into the miasmal fog that wavers on the edge of campus, and were never seen again. And then there was Dummy Rush . . . but this is becoming boring, a bit passe as it were. The thing is, were not all firebrands and not all apatheticaweire just a group of Distinct Individuals Oust like every other classl, and tunlike every other classl, we all manage to go our own ways, breaking tradition or fostering L j: ; it as seems necessary, and usually 'i keeping our cool. Actually we like to think that by our very nonconformity we symbolize the essence of the ODDS . . . But whatever we are, youlll find us here, peering from behind trees or reclining in Laird, still schoolgirls but also rapidly becoming WOMEN. What have we learned after three years? Well, weive learned of course that learning cant be measured, and that welve got a long LONG way to go if we want to end up, say, as a Miss Nutting or a Miss Allen or a Mrs. Yarnall in 1989 . . . Welve learned about each other Uacie and Muffy and Celine and Marge and Mimi and Wench and Mary Lee and everybody elsel . . . And then there are the little things weive picked up at ODD moments, like how to beat Mr. Lackey at snackie bridge; how to get from fourth floor Thomson to fourth floor Warfleld in live minutes, stopping to get our mail and throw repartee at Mrs. B. on the way; how to get around libe regulations and drunken fraternity boys, and how to tell 368 different kinds of weather in which to cut class. were unabridged thesaurus- almanacs of Wilsonia, and we rather like it. Because no matter how much we may protest the fact, we are part of the Wilson scene, and the Wilson scene is part of US. Onward, yes? Mary Lee Stevens, treasurer; Jacie Elder, president; Kathy Seiverling, vice-president; Laura Thomas, secretary. 128 129 She looks demure, but sometimes you see her walking through the landscape of one of your Kafka-esque terror nightmares. Betsy has all the appearance of Little Red Riding Hood abut a Little Red Riding Hood who is se- cretly in league with the wolf. If you go look- ing for her twhen youlre awakel, youill proba- bly find her in her room listening to Richard Farifxals songs and staring up at the ceiling. If the junior class ever held a Most-Dy- namic-History-Major-Whon-Also-A-Basketball Star-and-GGA-Offtcial-Contest, Marty would definitely win it. She is a leader type who likes to poke holes in the ltnice girl image some people have of her. Of course, she IS a nice girl, but Higglety Pigglety Pop, there's more to her than that. For instance, thereis her fond- ness for Wild Nights, and cows and elephants, and her capacity for getting involved with the people she encounters in history. All of which goes to show SOMETHING profound about basketball playing CGA-type history majors Judy is a curious speciman of the Wilson student: she has actually managed to organize her time, and has done so in such a way that it is divided between the Psych lab and Mrs. Baxterls cozy little sitting room. Like most of us she enjoys watching television, but unlike most of us, she has found the time to do so. Her other spare hours are divided between the delights of music and writing. Ruth just smiles at any catastrophe, from three writtens the day before vacation to a rainy Saturday afternoon. She always comes through and the handy thing about it is, she always does it just in time to jump into Judy Folberthls car on Fridays and take off for Lafayette. You know her on weekdays as a hardworking waitress clad in a khaki smock, which she trades in for a long velvet evening suit on weekends-one she sewed herself, of course. tThe suit, not the weekendJ Youlre in an English spy movie, and as you enter the Hofbrauhaus in Germany, you im- mediately spot Ronne, sitting at a table and talking to several sinister types. The scene shifts to an airport, where she studies the pass- ing facesethen all of a sudden, enter the Vienna Boys Choir, pursued by agents from F.L.U.S.H. tFederation for the Lowering of Universal Standards of Hygienel. She rescues all the choirboys and takes them back to her chalet in the Bavarian Alps where . . . but thatis Ronne. Elizabeth Marion Adams Sociology Martha Ann Baum 130 History 1th Rance Baucino Psychology Ruth Lawrence Barker Ronne Adams History Jeanne Bertolette Fine Arts Bonnie Lou Brindley Sociology h Esther Borsay Classics 132 Regina Cecelia Brown Nancy Alioe Brownell French French BonBon is a sociologist and a socializer. Nothing is nicer than a good fraternity party; nothing is worse than being BORED. Of course she also loves to just curl up and read, and then indulge in the Wilson mystique of the extended cigarette break. Bonnie calls herself lljust a plain old Joe? a characterization which will probably bring incredulous laughter from all of her Friends-and-Relations. llI want to hear the scream of the butterlly. ill beg your pardon? You heard her, mister. Thatls Jeanne, also known as Fox, salvaging a dull moment with a few laughs. A spontaneous creator, tdancer, mimic, and artistl, she has few dull moments to deal with, but when one turns up she can take care of it. Jeanne is one of the studio- oriented Fine Arts people, which means that shels more involved with the texture and form and REALITY of things than most of us. Someday when you feel like a little mental exercise, go look for Judy. Youlll get it by trying to follow her train of thought as it jumps ta train jumpingiU from subject to sub- ject. For instance: poetry-jumpaexpensive china-jump-her baby Fine Arts coursea jump-MEN . . . well, you get the idea. Of course, even though they do jump, her thoughts are always entirely disciplined. What else would you expect of a Latin Classicist who has set her heart on the immediate acqui- sition of a diploma of her very own? Jeanie can be motherly in bell-bottom pants, green fingernails, and bells. C1 rebel, therefore I ami? On certain days shels liable to lock her- self up with a Lateef album and an easel and canvas, and paint furiously until lured away by the seductive appeal of a French lit class. Jeanie is serene, regal and seems gently aloof -but you can tell she CARES. In olden times young ladies who studied French wore white muslin gowns and carried ruffled parasols and sat on the porch of La Maison reclining on the swings. Nan is proba- bly a more astute French student and as an Outing Club enthusiast we picture her climbing trees, exploring caves, and scaling mountain- sides . . . But she would do just as well with the parasol thing. The best of both worlds, as it were. J udith Ann Bumgardner French Jane Rust Brundage History Elizabeth Josephine Bryan History Susan Dix Buehler German Kathleen Carpenter Jennifer Abby Butler Political Science At present, Judy is our valiant emissary to France, battling the deGaullists on their home territory. Which is to say that she is abroad. In Paris, which is, as you all know, a Movable Feast. And when she returns we all owe her not only deference and respect for having been in contact with the Real Outside World, but also for having acquired un vrai accent. Sometimes she isn't around very muchashe spends a good deal of time running the circuit from Chambersburg to Washington DC. to U.Va. 'and, inevitably, back again. And then sheis here a whole lot, bounding and bouncing to where ever she wants to go, which is gen- erally in the direction of a party. She's pro- pelled by Mysterious Superhuman Energy, al- ways uninhibited, but always with style- anyhow, thatls Jenny. BJ seems to know somebody in every major world city, and she always knows her way around, too. She's in herelement when guiding you through Colorful Places of tnaturallyl His- torical Interest, especially in the British Isles. Even though shes a trustworthy and responsi- ble kind of person, she does possess a definite exuberance. BJls moment is the moment of calm just before the hurricane. Bunky is the itMoby Dix of the beginning swimming class. Shels also a paradox: a dreamy romantic who sits worrying and count- ing on her fingers over the YWCA ledger. Being the eldest of six children has made her quite conscientious, so she faithfully does her push-ups every night--but someday shels going to tlee back to Switzerland and sit around with all that good Swiss chocolate, reminiscing about her strenuous Wilson days. Kathi came to Wilson straight from Hawaii, and having said that, there isnlt much more one can say about her perseverance and strength of character. She is against too much Planning Ahead, and prefers to live the active life, or as active a life as is possible in a region where surfing and climbing palm trees are pretty much out of the question. Of course intellectual activities of a sort are definitely available, and Kathi, who is a Fry fan and very observant to boot, takes care of that end too. What do childrenis camps in castles and old Rolls Royces and barns converted into living quarters and temples in Thailand remind you of? If you said llWhy, of course! J.J.! youire right. She could very well float through any one of those environments, dressed in black exotic gowns, jumpsuits, dirndls, or whatever the occasion called for, and always looking GLAMOURous. Her most immediate need is for a competent secretary to help organize all her appointments and activities, and later on to serve as her assistant when sheis editor of the African Vogue. Teresa Diana Cader English Norma Jean Chatfield Bible and Religion Janet Ann Chamberlain Spanish - Linda Diane Chamberlin Biology 136 . Want to spend a weekend with Terri? Well, youlll go to New York, DC, or Boston, and then run at top speed to: a French or Chinese restaurantaa blues concert tButterheldHn art gallery4 few dusty bookstoreHsome wild boutiqueHnd a good bar, where you will discuss: tilmeerae-Middlearth4utch- ZZaLBJ-plastic peopleeMatisseeGeorgian mansioand Doc Watson. By this time you should be ready to dash back to Wilson. where you will watch Terri write an editorial attacking Wilson traditionalism, and then do all her work for the next day . . . Jean is one of those religion majors who is there because she has fallen in love with India. What with Sanskrit and Tamil and all that its no wonder that she can look weary and witty over coffee in the snackie better than anyone you know. When youlre feeling buddy-buddy, you call her Chats, but shes not basically a buddy type at all. In fact she is one of the most unfathomable and intriguing people on campand thatis the kind of person who usually goes for India. There she is, Jan Chamberlain, somersaulting down the hockey field, tripping along the basketball courtaenergyaconsist- ently bright smile4nd you can never guess exactly what sheis really thinking4specially when she does splits into third base. Off the field, though sheis actually a very self possessed person. Sheis a Spanish major, right? So what is she doing with a tarantula in her room? ltBig C has spent her years at Wilson trying to find a cadaver with which to fulfill her wildest dreamthe dissection of a human. When sheis not searching for her corpse, sheis deciding whether to run away to the West Indies, doing exercises, and enjoying herself at mixers. You are very grateful that Lindais around, or else you would have no one to explain the anatomy of invertebrates to you on those rare afternoons when you feel like hearing something erudite and esoteric. Celine 01d bean . . . Sheis down-home Italian, a mod muse, a truly monumental chick, The Girl with Kaleidoscope Eyes . . . Groove with her in her poison-green-and-pink environment, complete with cellophane flowers of yellow and green towering over your head . . . Watch her sketch and sculpt, swoop and snodge, watch her boogaloo down Broadway. The medium is the message, and the message is Celine. Youire wandering down a beach in a Claude Lelouch film, and there under a ruffled parasol is Casey, having an afternoon tea of strawberries and champagne . . . In reality Ol Casey is the person you go to when you want to just sit quietly around and think . . . And Phoebe rode around and around on the carousel, and then it started to rain . . . Cynthia Kathleen Chivvis 137 Fine Arts Celine Linda Cavallo F ine Arts Katherine MacFarlane Cole English Leslie Lawrence Durgin Philosophy Sara Ruth Currie English Madelyn Louise Clark Fine Arts Esther Ethel Coe Diane West Davidson When Leslie finally leaves these hallowed halls. sheill be able to embark on her chosen occupation-writing Double Bubble Fortunes. CtWe must laugh and philosophize and . . . look after our own interests all at the same time? IEpicurusD Oh, Leslie is so many things; shes a French horn in a Beethoven symphony, a trumpet in Handells Messiah, and the only Wilson girl in history to be the deity of a new religion. Katie is a Holy Terror-the enfant terrible of ground Hoor McElwain. Totally perverse, Katie is responsible for about 80922 of the mis- chief that goes on around here, and what can you say about her except for the basic facts: she has marmalade hair and a mathematical mind, tends bar, hitched to Istanbul, heads a secret snake cult, can explain the animal-and- wound motifs in the Alexandria Quartet, is fas- ter than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive and able to leap tall buildings at a single bound. Sarais sensitive, especially to nature and lit- erature and the roots of the English tradition. With Marvell, she is aware of tlTimeis winged chariot hurrying near, so shels careful to make use of every moment: the red ones, the yellow ones, the silvery ones, the alligator-skin ones and even the black ones. Her friends sus- pect that she is an enigmae-ltif so, this is beau- tiful. Lab courses, popcorn and ttEel are a ttreal mother bearfUBut of course, who says a bioloe gist can't be small and delicate and blonde? She commutes to the Dolce Vita of Phi Psi, Gettysburg where she is the favorite weekend housemother thousemother bear'h Occasionally you are called into action to rescue her when she gets into a severe state of twit, but in general Esther is well able to cope. Everybody knows Madelyn which makes her rather difhcult to talk about, but because sheis so very super, there are a few important things to keep in mind about her: she talks with her eyebrows, she has the remarkable eccentricity of typing out the rough drafts to her papers tbecause she canit read her own handwritingl, shels tall and graceful, and her style is a kind of instant impact. Shels the kind of person we need more of. Last time she hitchhiked to the Mennonite Church, Dinah took you along, and you were able to verify the rumor that she actually can throw peanuts three stories in the air. Sheis determined and responsible except when shels determined not to be, and lleffortlesslyll keeps Con finances on an even keel. Dinah has over- tones of Charlie Brown and undertones of Mother Courage, and you have already de- cided to ask her to take you along when she hitches to North Carolina. Jacqueline Ruth Elder Political Science Gloria Sharon Downin Spanish Jake must be the only Wilson class president to play organ in a rock-tn-roll band during vacations and shes got to be the only class president in Wilson HISTORY who digs the Fugs and whose favorite author is HKing Coralii Life is a farce, an encounter between Joan of Arc and the Three Stooges, life is an ODD proposition. Master of informal parlia- mentary procedure, Poli Sci profundities and the double entendre, Jacie is obviously one of the few people qualified to preside over 69. G-L-O-R-I-A Gloria! Them Itls lucky that Gloria was hymned by ttThem since Theylre Irish and so is she. Nat- urally, this being the case, she loves the color green, and not quite so naturally, shels major- ing in Spanish. Gloria likes to make merry by playing pinochle and paying visits to Gettys- burg Seminary. She can get lost almost any- where, but not there. Or if she DOES, at least itls more entertaining than getting lost some- where between Chambersburg and second floor Warfield. . . If Prexy wanted to make Arlene really happy, held give her Norland Hall for her birthday. There would be a big party in the parlor with chocolate cake and ice cream ther favoritel, and then she would get busy with plans to turn the whole campus into a complex of gardens and parks. All of this may not happen for a while yet, unfortunately, but when it does Arlene will be ready. She sails through her days emanating drive, organization, ideas, imagination, and a Arlene Helen Emshwiller Fine Arts faint aura of Ma Griffe. 140 mamaeme wage, :- Barbara Dove Mathematics Karen Ann DuMars Philosophy 141 Susan Dowler Sitting on a sundial, who should it be but Barb, the Dove, whose only desire in life is to get all that black leather gear and join the C- burg Cycle Club. She does have aesthetic in- terests, like piano and painted windows, but in general shels resigned to joining the ranks of the ttsilly scientists? At least shetll be the only Peter Pan image in the corporation, as any- body who really KNOWS her could predict. Shels the kind of person who can be fully relied on not to scribble up her notebooks. You can tell that by how collected she looks and how elfeciently she does things like declin- ing words in weird languages and working around the library. There's nothing wishy- washy about Kareneher intellect is almost formidable and her opinions are delivered em- phatically. Toynbee is not someone of whom you can speak lightly. This is because she is more of a kinetic phenomenon than most people are, and moreover, she is impossible to classify, cate- gorize, pigeonhole, fathom or describe. She al- ways speaks her mind and her opinions are not always gentle. Master of the Undercut, the Great Dehator, she is our own appointed pre- server of sanity and perspective-determined to make people see things the way they really are . . . a humorous cynic, and more of a social asset than any purveyor of propriety and good taste could ever be. Latin Marianne Farley Fine Arts Linda Ellen F arnsworth American Civilization 1 tr ' .3; ., LL . V m , , y. y not! wm;e! Syd $iW is $ $ $1? Susan May Fairbanks History 7 . k , . . ,. . : ::::: igz'i'. tuthrl ' 'M ewmw ? 1.. gm... . r u Hill: ; .MU 1.; Jun :153 ? i325 . b .4- Joyce Elinor Englert An occupational hazard of being a Fine Arts major is the lust you develop for beautiful things. Marianne, to be more specific, covets onyx eggs and original Brancusis and elegant objects imported from Spain. Its nice to dream about, anywayebut Marianne is the kind of person who usually puts her dreams into real- ity. Therefore she will no doubt fulfill her more MODEST desires tlearning to weave, running an artsy-craftsy shop, raising an un- conventional familyl without too much trouble, and the Brancusis and Picassos will come later Lynn likes to be alone once in a while to listen to Simon and Garfunkel or Johnny Mathis tdepending on her moodl, and do a little independent thinking, tand maybe a little independent dreamingl. What does she think about? Oh, things like the past told lettersl; the present tbooks and parties and going shop- pingl; the future ttravelling, teaching, and who knows what0elseJ And as for her dreams, that's harder to say. Maybe she's just meditat- ing on pleasant things like a wooden German music box, flowers, and an ounce of Joy . . . Sue is very serious, understand, and attacks the history of western civilization with passion- ate enthusiasm. Her energy in this field is sec- onded only by her efficiency in the library- but actually sheis very easily diverted by any kind of chatty conversation or academic gossip. The thing she misses second most is Vermont, and the thing she misses first most is . . . Ask her! When M! the DJ is on the air, you can expect groovy sounds like the Rolling Stones and Ravi Shankar. Sheld like to be operating in a big city, but since sheis with WLCL, her broadcasts are confined pretty much to cam- pus. When not cavorting about in that little cubby hole off Mrs. Yarnallls office, she can be found in her room, drawing with a Crayola crayon on the only patch of wall that isnt covered with posters. You hear a sudden, loud, delighted lth, helLO! and a small person comes into view, BOUNCING like Tigger, but looking exactly like Joyce. Her awe-inspiring energy gives her a walk and a talk which are absolutely inimi- table, at least by anybody you know. She bounces to Rutgers, she bounces to art class, and she bounces around campus with Silver Key tours, ever-excited, ever-changing, and ever-ready to DO things-especially things that are fun. If any Dr. Seuss books are ever made into movies, Joyce will be immediately discov- ered and signed for a leading part. Shirley Ann Franklin Mathematics Whenever you go to a KP performance, you look very carefully at the set, because ifs a Shirley Franklin product, and any Shirley Franklin product is bound to be effective. The thing is, Shirl is rather effective herself. She can do more and do it better than almost any- body, whether its calculus or trying to cadge Prexyts desk for KP. Responsibility, discipline . theytre such lovely virtues . . . uFour, 400, 4000 dreams may decay into indigo dust that covers Acquarius . . . and still the voice will say tLove' . . . Annique is a barefoot free spirit, who spends her time on the beaches of Cape Cod, in New York and in Chambersburg, where she is kept busy re- arranging the old bottles and colorful things that fill her room. She,d probably turn up in a wild, moody Victorian love story made into a film in the 193005 or as a governess in an ultra- unconventional family. Anne Elizabeth Freyss English Gretchen F isher Candace Lee Fluman English Political Science Judith Ellen Gardner Sociology You can easily picture Gretchen sitting in a tree during a violent storm, rather like Odin when he hung from a tree for five days and nights, wounded with a spear, in order to gain wisdom. tHe became very wise and decided never to do it againJ Gretchen herself would make a good Norse kind of person, since she passionately adores ANYTHING connected with Anglo-Saxon times. All she really wants texcept maybe a husbandl is to learn Old Eng- lish. Either grad school or the tree ordeal is bound to do it eventually. It never rains on Candyls parade, mainly because she leads it; sometimes through cities, sometimes through the woods or down a long beach Shels the kind of kid who sits around reading or playing hearts, maintaining quiet hours with all her might, and trying to decide whether it might not be simpler to move to the North Woods where its AL- WAYS quiet . . . but like many laconic types, when its time to swing, she swings. This is a subversive sociology major. As if sociology didnit already encompass enough things, Judy wants to get music into the big picture too. Her big plan is to do social work in the slums and use iimusic therapy as an aid. tThe Pied Piper plays Chicago Blues . . .l Before she turns her talents to social service, her main ambition is to clean up the pinochle racket on campus. That's real subversion. o JUdith Ann Gire Fine Arts Carol Ann Goidich Psychology Sharyn Diane Griffith Economics Carol Ann Grove Economics Roxanne Grosnick Judy is a gingham-and-gumdrops Kate Greenaway kind of person. She loved her American Lit course and wants to be a children's librarian and illustrate their books, too. Whenever you think of her you see her wandering across a prairie with huge white clouds running across the sky and just enough daisies in the grass. Shels Squeaky Clean and neat as a pineher Alf Landon llLoser pin, for instance. Carol is the kind of personsa very specific individual, in factqn which many astonishing things intersect: shes a psych major with an interest ttheory and practicel in Martin Buber Cllethoulll; talks about things like uresponseeability'l; always wears makequen to breakfast4nd lives in Riddle where she doubles as Amateur Psychotherapist and Jewish Mother in Residence, depending on which you need most. Sometimes you need both at once, and thats her forte. Sharyn is one of the Mad Bridge Players of Alumnae. However, her indulgence in this time- consuming indoor sport will not prevent her from attaining her ultimate goals, i.e. marrying Neil and becoming chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. This is demonstrated by the fact that bridge and constant trips to Dickinson and eating pizza and smashing alarm clocks and all her other activities never stop her from getting her work done. Shels the only person you know who reads economics books for pleasure. Sometimes its hard to tell whether Carol is going to Wilson or Penn State, and you were only reassured the other day when you found her coloring in a bunch of charts which she claimed were for Statistics. tYou suspect that she just likes to colorJ Anyhow, all the windows were open and Fresh Air was blowing in, so you sat down and started coloring too. There are several inscrutable people in your class, one of the inscrutable-est being Roxanne. Rox wants no part of the Great Society, and prefers living in her little Erewhon, with linden trees and horses and a few close friends. Literature, particularly German literature. gives her her clearest perspective of human emotions, and throwing snowballs at trains helps her release them. Everytime you see Carol, shels either just climbing out of the pool or sitting down at the piano, except at 6 p.m., when she's rehearsing with the Tentones. When she isnlt wet or sing- ing sheis just not Carol. Shels sincere, inter- ested, and enthusiastic about ANYTHING tex- cept math, that isl and her devotion to music is impressive indeed. Tentones today, Philhar- monic tomorrow, and thatis the way it goes. iTherek a lot of difference between sloppi- ness and unneatnessn says Laura, somewhat defenSively. But you know that she has nothing to be defensive about. Her individual brand of iiunneatness has redeeming artistic qualities, and she provides Wilson with a taste of Bohe- mianism ta quality with which it is not other- wise over-endowed . . J Her great hero is, naturally, Lionel Tarditf, and she's very much what you would expect to find lurking in the vicinity of a Chagall painting, floating casually past the Eiffel Tower. Activities and involvements are what Steph is up toeand she has the rare ability to relate to children, which, of course, means she has the rare ability to relate to just about every- one. And considering all of those qualities it's important to mention something which is im- portant to Steph-her ambition to work in a recreation department of a childrenls rehabili- tation center. As of right now shels willing to rehabilitate Wilson students just by being her- self, which is also Important. Laura Elizabeth Guerrant Fine Arts Carol Ann Hauptfuhrer 148 Music Stephanie Hamilton Sociology Susan Laird Hankey Political Science Rosalind Halstead 149 Fine Arts Linda haunts museums, swings around sub- way poles, and tells Funny Jokes, complete with a detailed explanation of WHY theytre funny. She also does lots of sewing tin order to have something to wear, you seeL pats her hair to encourage growth, and maintains, in the face of overwhelming opposition, a dogged faith in the existence of Santa Claus. Her friends call her Linda Lion, but as SHE would say, tTm the normal one around here ii Well, thatts probably true, but it is the abnor- mal kind of normalcy which avoids the dull yet creates a pleasant stability. If you donit already know, you should be informed that Sue has a Rare and Awesome Talent for fitting many many many things tas opposed to the bare necessitiesi into a Main single. She might very well be the Official Room Organization Consultant of the class, and if you make an appointment with her right now, she may be able to help you out next year. Sueis ever friendly and helpful, and a visit with her promises anything from guitar playing to a condensed electronics course. Creativity is not dead, as witness llOde to the Cowli, by Janice Haynes. Whereever the groovy sounds and people are, Janice is. 01 don't like to be outside? She's a carefree flower girl who laughs, dances and probably talks to the spirits . . . If she'd been born in the 16th century she would have searched for the Northwest Passage, and even now shes a discoverer, an Explorer of the world inside a crystal teardrOp. While most people are analyzing and intro- specting and discussing and projecting, Pat is dissecting and combining. She does all of those other things too, of course, its just that she does them better. Hers is an experience of life with no superhuous philosophies attached. From the laboratory to the breakfast table-a direct experience in detail, a happening; every- thing ordered and systematic, challenges met with a clear and open mind. Sandy's majoring in philosophy and she canit wait to get out in the world and try it out. Right now shels exhausting all the possibilities around here, such things as classes, long talks and outside reading. After graduation she may try Vermont, which is llAbsolutely FANtasticf, It's all about rehections in an Open mind . . . Extroverts are great companions, and Tina is the relaxing kind of extrovertenot noisy, just sociable and talkative. She transferred to Wil- son and has already planned her next movee Alaska. What could be more appropriate for an adventurous American Civ major than ex- periencing the closest thing to a real wilderness frontier? She'll be a civilizing inliuence, any- way. Music! Music! Music! Meridy is mad about music, an enthusiasm which aptly characterizes her. Sheis also very talented when it comes to performing. When she's not completely and totally absorbed in tempo and melody, she diverts herself with sundry pleasures involving popcorn, licorice, and excursions to Barney's in search of the ultimate ice cream cone. Janice Elizabeth Haynes 150 Sociology Patricia Margaret Hicks Chemistry Sandra Antoinette Hawks Philosophy Bettina Anne Heffner American Civilization Meredith Ann Heller 151 1F Ann Louise Hopkins Nicole Hird Bible 8L Religion Biology Crayons, construction paper, and library pastFthe not-so-simplilied world of an elementary school classroom is where Ann is at her best. Of course, she doesnlt have her own classroom yet, but shes working toward it. She has a certain clearsightedness: she understands some of the essential things, like young children, coloring and pasting, making things and learning. Hooood is the only college girl you know who cant tell time or add, but thatis OK because she spends her time doing Other Things. After all, some things matter and some things dent and among the latter Carol includes TRADITIONALISM, along with the aforementioned adding and time-telling. Sheis all Wordsworthian ideals and Shalimaraand look at her reclining on that sofa. Doesnit she look just like Eustacia Vye? When she starts teaching English sheill be able to illustrate Thomas Hardy just by standing there. You sat next to Karen in baby Poli Sci class, and watched with astonishment all semester, as she slowly and deliberately filled up one after another of her three notebooks. Karen is a natural blonde who spends most of her out-of-class time at Dickinson, when she isnit fencing, playing the piano, talking and carrying on in general around here. You work out your horoscopes together faithfully, and she has promised to take you on the rounds of all the good fortune-tellers in Philadelphia. Hunter Bird has a major stuffed-animal collection which features frogs of all shapes and sizes. Come to think of it, she collects other things too, like cards, toys, cartoons, Rick-souvenirs, week-ends and Experiences. And she has other hobbies, like dancing and seeing how many different things texcept studyingl she can do at the same time. Sheis happy when shels with The Group, and, in fact, sheis HAPPY. Niki is one of the top scientific experts in your class and whenever you need the latest information on biological phenomena, you call on her. You also find her very helpful when it comes to studies: she always gets her work done tand usually itls spectacularl and is always neat and organized. There ought to be some kind of award for that at graduatioHome to think ofit, there is, and Niki will probably get it. Karen Howard Political Science Barbara Hunter German 153 Cher is constantly helping people, Doing Her Best, and never complaining or feeling sorry for herself except every once in a while when she throws a FIT. Ahem. Her very favorite thing is New York City, and the thing she hates most is being accident prone and covered with a tasteful arrangement of black and blue marks. Sheid like to visit the Roman ruins, where sheld probably settle down in the Coliseum for a nice LONG talk with the ghost of Caesar. Lynn was one of the first people you remember meeting during the first week of freshman year, and thatis odd because she has a tendency to keep calm and quiet. Maybe thatis what stood out in the hustle and bustle-or maybe it was those little comments she kept makinHr maybe it was the way she responded to youwr maybe . . Ever since she got here Barbls been preoccupied with trying to get more snow in Chambersburgaeither that or trying to get out of Chambersburg to get to the snow so that she can do her favorite thing: ski. Eventually, she wants to be a social worker tsomewhere where therels lots of snow-Iceland, maybe'n And of course shels keeping an eye out for movingobjects tmalel over six feet tall and preferably with skis on. uMonday nothing, Tuesday nothing . . It does seem like that sometimes but some people manage to rise above it, like Meritt, for instance. Occasionally, sheill start calling herself a usuicidal undereachieveril and life turns into a round of sleep, work and libe duty-but sheis got a lot on her side, like Yeats, dandelions, Giacommetti, Bartok, Stephen Dedalus, LOVE. . . Shels Supergirl and so its simple. An hour with Thea and even the snackie starts to look strange and exciting. Thatls because she has an ability to transform the everyday into the unusual, and promptly make it her own. Everybody around her is inextricable from the work-a-day rut but not Thea. Shels one of that breed of people with quiet smiles and elusive personalities, who, in a previous existence, no doubt lived on the moon. Cheryl Lynne Jones 154 Classics Lynn J efferis Psychology Barbara Jaggard Sociology Theodora Neil Jenkins Biology Mary Connor Jackson Psychology 155 Brenda Webb Kirkland Fine Arts Dorothy Florence Kirkpatrick Political Science Rosemary Teresa Kinlin Psychology Linda Kay Kennedy English Susan Harriet Jordan English One way to love Wilson is to have so many dates that you never see the place. Thatls more or less Brendals situation. Ideally sheld be liv- ing in Rome, but art books and especially her car keep her happy here. Shels one of the few doctorls daughters who can watch their fathers perform surgery and not faint, and she as- suages her mother instinct by pretending that her nephew is really HERS. Deedie is classic. She's the kind of person whom you wonder how you ever get along without. That doesnit make a lot of grammati- cal sense, but its true. She has already been elected our representative to South America, and this year shels off having intellectual fun in Bologna, Italy. When she gets back here, shels going to head a seminar entitled How to be Involved in Everything and Still Stay Ahead in Your Work? uMental stability is dependent on adequate contact with the outside worldll-thatls what she says, and lithe outside world is composed primarily of New York City. Rosemary also says shels headed for a mental institution, but as a clinical psychologist, not as a patient. Now, one would think that a person in that profession would be given to excessive rational- ity, but not R0; she expounds upon the theo- retical possibilities of extremesafor example: tlSkirts should be worn seven inches above the knee or else down to the ankles. New York will love her . . . The very apotheosis, so to speak, of good nature, Linda fulfills the exacting demands of life as an English major and an Education minor and is always cheerful about it. Not only that, but instead of rolling out of bed and into Warlield in a matter of hours she drives to school every morning in a matter of minu- tes, racing her little blue bomb into the Wilson parking lot by 8 am. and confounding all the poor suckers who are trudging through the dew. Sitting in an English garden waiting for the sun The Beatles This is not just some ordinary kid in the class to whom you are about to turn your attention. This is Fiammetta Bananafish, illus- trious, exhausted and woebegone editor of the Con tthis is being transcribed in DecemberJ You know her as head of non-violent guerilla warfare, an underground student organization of uncertain components, whose principal objec- tive is survival by hand to hand combat, as it were, in a terrorizing academic milieu. Our compliments, etc . . . Mary is a psych major with all the normal tropismeositive for lifesavers, negative for bugs. She spends a fantastic amount of time sewing, talking, shopping tfrequently for other peoplel and worrying about her latest PROBLEM which is usually how to get home to Millersville faster than she did last time. Louisa May Alcott should have written about Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy and Mary. Suels feminine ideal is Mrs. Kellinger, and her masculine ideal is Jimmy Clark, so right away you know that shes a German major with a Secret Urge to race a Lotus on the Grand Prix circuit. If she doesnlt get the Lotus it will still be alright, though, because she can always hitch when she wants to get to Germany. Sheis a reserved but whimsical person who loves quiet things like maple trees and LOUD things like tambourines and thunderstorms. Norma is SUCH a nice person to have around. She s: constantly cheerful, ever-helpful, responsive to every mood, tolerant, affectionate, sensitive, happy, up with the lark, gone with the wind, and barefoot in the park. You can just imagine her in a few years, surrounded by hordes of rosy-cheeked children and the things she loves, like flowers and classical music. The only thing she is eccentric about is NIGHTGOWNS which she hates with an intensity usually reserved for algebra, trips to the dentist and cod-liver oil. Something serene and compelling about the red hair and pale skin and mediaeval-madonna expression . . . Something wry about her sense of humor tshels the kind of girl who plays cribbage and tells you deadpan that she wants to be an aviatrixJ Also, something rather intriguing about her passion for art, the south of France, and even Bible papers . . . Thereis just something about Sueaand you wish you had a little more of it yourself. Some people hate it, but Nancy loves itayoulre talking about Researchahard core, academic, scholastic, methodical research. She's always talking about ticatching up on her work. Ha! Shcls always doing extra work because she enjoys it. And let us hasten to add, she has sporadic attacks of delightful nonsense which makes her an all around Healthy InHuence. Susan Jean Kopenhaver 158 German Mary Margaret Krieger Psychology m Norma Georgia Koons Psychology Susan Jane Lantz English Nancy Sherwood Kyte Spanish Most of the time shels relatively quiet and conscientious, but underneath that collected ex- terior lies a frustrated linguist. If she could major in Spench or Franish sheid be happy. Periodically, however, Linda provides one of the more charming diversions at Wilson: she builds the snowman who presides over the campus from the roof of French House. 016 and magnifique! Linda is a very wondrous type of person who might be described as having strong ele- ments of the exotic tChinese water pipe, ginger, and scented teal and the down home tjazz, hamburgers, and Americanal. Shels be- coming an amateur authority twhich is mostly the only kind of authority you get to be around here until after you graduatel on the subtleties of French literature and the iiute. The truth about Sam is that her two greatest goals in life are to discover the lost continent of Atlantis and to meet the Loch Ness mon- ster, in preparation for which she leads an episodic existence in the company of bizarre but fascinating individuals, makes frequent and extended trips out of state, and fortities herself on Pall Malls and ilreally goodlt black coffee. The remarkable thing is that on such a pro- gram she remains serene and charming, the last word in discretion, and is honored with the enviable trust of shy sea serpents and all housemothers. Toini is an American who is really tries Deutsche, and that makes her a cultural mix- ture and very international besides. What this adds up to is that she gets to live in the splendour and comfortable seclusion of Ger- man House tsince freshman year, no lessl, and also gets to go to French classes. She also is permitted to hold opinions on Goethe, Mon- taigne, Racine and Rilke, said opinions being as clever and funny as most of Toiniis disser- tations on things in general. Bets, in another age, would have been a Pioneer Housewife, but since she was born in this era of big cities and window shopping, she likes to stay as close as possible to civilization. Shels one of these very Determined people who Gets Things Done, be it school work, sewing, or planning her future as an elemen- tary school teacher and Modern Suburban Housewife twhich may not be as exacting as pioneer life, but does call for a certain amount of Determinationl. Linda Newell Lefferts Linda Yin Lee 160 Spanish French Samantha Martin Leary MrsJ Fine Arts Betsy Ann Lawser Psychology 161 Toini Gertrude Lehmann German Suzanne Ruth Lucas Sociology American Civilization Linda Mae Letson English The little boy cut out a colored leaf all by himself, then picked it up, said llHello Leaf! and kissed it. Thatls the kind of thing that absolutely determines onels future as a first grade teacher, especially if one has those tendencies in the first place, and Sue dehnitely did. She prepares for life among the erasers and crayons by hitching to HoJols for ICE CREAM, staying up talking till 4 a.m., serving as belly dancer for the Salvation Army, and in general going through the things every teacher should experience at least once. There you are, some Wednesday afternoon, having collapsed from total exhaustion in the snackie, and in comes Kix--some kind of supercharged human dynamitFnonstop energy . . . it radiates . . . if youlre lucky youlll pick up enough to keep you going till after dinner. Life in New York requires a lot of stamina and thatls probably where she got it. Harriet-Janels a Good Thing. Come home with me. My mother and I are establishing a Society for the Suppression of Virtue. Jane Anne Liddell French Oscar Wilde Its a gray-blue day, and Lindals gazing out her window tletls say itls the day after shels handed a big paper inl, but she probably wont sit still very long, especially if therels a guy somewhere on the horizon. A MANlS WOMAN, Linda takes social and scholastic hang-ups in her stride, convinced that Wilson is just one aspect of a world made to be conquered. J ane Eyre was quiet and unassuming and had Hidden Strength, and so is and has our own Jane. The latter trots about campus with her loads of books and nobody knows texcept YOUl that shels really as determined and romantic as that other Jane . . . Its nice to be living on the same campus with a real Heroine of the Bronte-Austen variety Uanie also has certain connotations of Sense and Sensibilityj When people were looking through Silver Key freshman year, they stopped short when they came to Steenls picture. Film is her natural medium, whether as a photographerls model or Antonioni heroine tone of the Smaller Animals plays tennis without rackets and ballsJ Any Christine-documentary would have to start out in her room, filled with people, books, and jug-and-soul sounds, followed by flashbacks to Hong Kong, Switzerland, Philadelphia, Florida and everywhere else . . . Then the final image: Christophonic on the Road Again in her old hat, waiting impatiently for the Sixth Dimension Express. ' Christine Evelyn Long English 163 This accidental meeting of possibilities calls itself I. Dag Hammarskjold Out on the jetty is a kid with short hair and a cigarette and a book. You can talk to her about philosophy and poetry and things like that, but she can also tell you all about football and how her typewriter eats M8cMs, and she's very funny. Her name is Betsy. There she goes walking down the beach in the rain. llHappiness is the good way we feel when we talk to someone and they want to listen and don't tell us to go away and be quiet, and happiness is also talking to Sue, alias SlLuc, because that's just the way it iHhe listens. She also talks tabout art and cabbages and kings and whether its going to SNOW before vacationJ Thatls nice too. Her two great problems are sleep and procrastination. What shels really interested in is Indian Art, but she keeps foiling her own best intentions and getting away with itJ First of all, right after dinner, Beth will announce very firmly to all her friends tand herselD, uO.K. Tonight I'm really, really going to work! And fifteen minutes later she pokes her head in your room, uHi! Mind ifI come in and have a cigarette? Nonetheless, shels doing better than you are. Some people can de-foil, some canlt. . . g 53 an: Elizabeth Carney McKee Philosophy Susan Todd Luccock Fine Arts 164 Sarah Elizabeth McCandless Fine Arts Julia Anne McConnell 165 Pamela McEver English Pam loves uncluttered surroundings but has a tendency to disrupt all sense of order in any living space. Sheis unmathematical, unscientific, unathletiwbut you should hear her on comparative literature. Itis downright intimidating. She's one of those persons who is always gently friendly but is actually close to very few people. Pam has stature and a rare, unassuming dignity, and one of the greatest smiles anywhere. The main reason you appreciate Julie so much is that she shares your old and shameless passion for Yul Brynner. Of course there are other reasons, like the fact that Julie is understanding and amusing without being VOCAL about it. When sheis out roaming in the Pa. gleaming looking for botanical specimens and creeping crawling things, what sheid really like to be doing is roaming 0n the English moors. And once she makes it to Bronte country, sheill be wishing that she were really roaming around on Mars, and-where will all this end? Biology Antique shops, old attics, stone farmhouses, Amish schoolhouses, the rolling fields and clean air of Lancaster county, Pennsylvania Dutch, twhich isnlt so much Dutch as it is GermanHll of it is redolent of what Sue is made of. Shels awfully good at taking care of people tlike you, for instanceJ She collects, cherishes, and saves things . . . a good, comfortable, intelligent type of person, Sue. Somewhere between the reserve desk, the dance studio and backstage in Laird you can find Susan, enthusiastically pursuing her fourth favorite activity-avoiding work. As you know. one of the worst times to avoid work is on Suriday evening, because it comes right before the Monday morning tTll get it done, Am I going to get it done, Illl never get it done, Oh God, I didnlt get it donell count down. So Susan is going to start the Sunday Evening Work Avoidance Forum twhich means shelll probably have to get it all done during the weekl. Youlve heard about those very feminine types who are secretly geniuses at Money and Banking? Right. Heather is in full control of her emotions and has a definite executive future planned outamostlyabut Clark Gable and newborn puppiesjust KILL her . . . It all has something to do with ambitions and ability and maybe a little sentimentalityaand its all Heather. The loudest voice reverberating from the day students room has to be Gretchen's. Shels an Enthusiastic history major, whose enthusiasm extends to teaching, little kids, and working in the bookstore, where she sorts Charlie Brown, Jung, Aristotle, Joyce, and Wilson nightshirts all year long. Gretchen is pleasingly effervescent tthat means bubblyl, and anybody who can keep up with that schedule and still bubble has all your admiration. Mary is one of the few remaining English majors who has managed somehow to retain enough energy to be witty about the student condition. Even as a J unior, a veteran of the worst, as it were, she can still talk about a ustimulating approach to a course, and naesthetic enjoyment of a subject, and mean what she says. Shels busy synthesizing while the rest of us are still numbly counting pages. Kathryn Sue McLanachan Susan Patricia McNeil 166 American Civilization Economics Heather Louise MacDonald English k a n a M S e c n a r. F y r a M H istory Gretchen Elaine Mackey Jean Elizabeth Marshall Marilyn C. Merchant Political Science Its the eyes. You focus first on the eyes, which are noticeably Large, Winsome, and Brown tsounds like a law firmi, and then you notice the rest of Jeanniemppery hair, freckles, shy smile, English Novel novel tucked under the arm, and so forth and so on. Jeannie is MADLY ROMANTIC, intensely feminine, and ready for anything that comes alongayearbook work, plain old course work, fencing, long walks, love, and even Strange Photographs tsheis the one in the long black skim. All this and shes dependable too . They say that sea air does good things for the temperament. Thatis certainly true for Lynnasheis never depressedwr at least she never shows it. tAnd that IS a remarkable thingJ Besides sailing, it could be that one of the things that keeps her from getting depressed is the fact that she very rarely has to survive a Wilson weekend. So far this year she seems to have made it to every major menis college or university on the east coast. I Carla Ann Mikell English Christine Annette Mengel Fine Arts 169 Every single time you see Carla, youire shocked again into complete awe by her elegance, the way she knowsjust what looks best and takes advantage of it. She's like that in other ways towher taste extends to her studies and her thoughts and her manner. And once youive recovered from your visual shock, she does it again tunconsciouslyl with some little remark which breaks you up and gets, but exactly, to the point. ltls sophistication, reserve, and original charm . . . all rare, all very much hers. Chris has a great many crosses to bear. among them curly hair and movies that make her cry. She has a taste for the elegant and elite, which is a good thing for a Fine Arts major to have. and shes also one of the lucky people who can adopt a nonchalant attitude toward work and still survive, and thatis good too. Besides, she can tell you the plot of any romantic movie that was ever filmed, whether it made her cry or not. Ginny just LOVES pierogies and root beer, and always looks as if shelsjust going off to some great party somewhere. Almost everytime you go to the movies, Ginny is there, and since you go OFTEN, you have a sneaking suspicion that she goes EVERY NlGHTwr would like to. Ginny is an archetypal Groovy American Kid, whose distinguishing traits are jeans and sweatshirts, blue eyes, and a smile like both of the Katzenjammer Kids put together. Virginia Carol Merwin Psychology Music Margaret Beverly Morse Bible 8L Religion Judith Anne Myers Psychology Jo-ann Murray Fine Arts Mary Linda Petz Deborah Nelson Mary Ruth Mirsch Sociology Psychology Only a true religion major could love John Calvin. Judy is, and does, but shes a lot more too. For instance, if she were packing for a trip to New Mexico ta not impossible situa- tionl, sheld take along a copy of Van Goghls letters, the Book of John, a camera, a guitar, and a Sketchpad, which may give you some idea of the variety of her interests. Once there, sheld probably sit on a mountain, smoke a pipe, and have a tangled theological discussion with a couple of coyotes and the spirits of the Navajo. Jo-ann-thatts the tall, black-haired attrac- tive girl you saw at Dickinson last weekend. She spends nearly every weekend there. You know when she is here because you can hear the Simon and Garfunkel music oozing out of her room. Jo-ann is the always well dressed, every-hair-in-place girl that you tend to hate as you romp across campus in your own wrinkled wranglers. She is so straight forward and pleasant when she talks to you that you cant nurture kthis feeling very long. The impressive thing about being a music major tor one of them anywayl is that when asked for an opinion or philosophy of life, you can quote Handel instead of Abraham Lincoln or your boyfriendls father. Bev, at least, al- ways quotes Handel, and occasionally the Ani- mals tas in ttWelve got to get out of this placeXU What she loves best is doing some- thing WILDLY EXCITING, like touring with a folksinging group, but at the moment shels stuck in C-burg, where she works relentlessly and dreams of a future devoted to program- ming computors to play Bach suites for unac- companied cello. Petzy appears very quiet until you learn that she's the one rattling around in the kitchen at three or four in the morning fixing herself canned chow mein and rice. She does most of her work during the nightethe last night, that is,-and sleeps during the day. This well trav- elled girl loves the Nutcracker Suite and Beardsley. A staunch conservative all the way; don't mention such blasphemous institutions as Social Security or FDR to her without expect- ing a verbal clobbering. Theres a certain kind of girl who likes baked Indian pudding with vanilla ice cream better than chocolate cake . . . who loves New England summers but wants to travel every- where, THIS MINUTE . . . who worries about getting old but wont plan the future because therels too much to live for right now . who likes to wander down lonely beaches after a storm as much as she likes to search through the shops and galleries of Back Bay Boston . . . and you suppose everybody's guessed by now that That Kind of Girl is Deb- bie. 1967-68 has been unanimously declared an- other tlDump On Mirschl, year. Actually everybody just kids her because she takes it so much better than anyone else. She's constantly twitting around, deploring the fact that there are only 24 hours in a day, but you notice that she always has her work done before youive even started. Mirsch has funny elbows, the smallest feet and biggest smile on campus, and always blows her nose loud enough for her grandmother to hear her in Philadelphia. Sara Rutherford Nichols F ine Arts Pramerudee Pantapa Economics 172 If anybody even mentions Swiss chalets or snowy mountain trails, you get a vivid picture of Sallyeor Sara, as she prefers to be calleHailing down a slope or sitting by the lire drinking glogg or gliigg or whatever you drink after a hard day on skis. She has lots of other interests, like photography and guitar and sculpture and sewing, and in all of them is revealed her charm, her cynical wit and a perfectionistls flair. Pram maintains that she is perfectly normal, in spite of the facts that she leaves the lights on 24 hours a day, and trying to ask her Sensible Questions is like trying to talk to the Cheshire Cat. Shels an economist, dancer, art enthusiast tPost-Impressionist and Indian especiallyl and one of the foremost chicken connoisseurs of either hemisphere. Somebody sighed the other day, llPram is such a beautiful girl. That she iHelicate, tranquil and full of impish, lth, Pramllljokes. Whats a person like whols Very New England? A little reserved? Crisp? Conservative? WRONG. In real life Chrisl tastes mark her as something they used to call Radical. She hates the Viet Nam war. She hates Richard Nixon. She hates Ronald Reagan. She hates the army. AND she digs D. H. Lawrence and the Blues Project. It really is comforting to know that somebody in Senate lespecially somebody from New Englandy hates Ronald Reagan and digs the Blues Project . . After all, variety is the spice of politics. Amy wants to do an independent study project dealing with urban renewal in the Baltimore area, and she wants to use her own photographic essay to supplement it. Thatls a good idea. Amy is full of good ideas. llWe should always examine the optimum and forget about feasibility. It will compromise us soon enough. Letls look at what might be and be envigorated by it. Uames W. Rousel Thatls why she turns her good ideas into projects. Shels sold on optimismthe workable kind. Merryls the kind of kid who decides her route by the flip of a coin, but you'd never guess that unless you knew her. She really is Punctual and Efficient and all of those good and necessary things, but she has a lively mind and a great sense of whats FUN. She can always tell whatls superfluous and what isnlt, and acts accordingly. Christelle Kuen Paynter English Amy Partridge Patterson Sociology 31. -e Meredith Ann Peel Political Science 173 Karen agrees with Linus that There Is No Heavier Burden Than a Great Potential tand lets face ' . anybody whois at her best at 7 a.m. has lots of potentialJ You are going to get together with her and form a movement: Frustrated Potential-Possessors of the World Unite! We have nothing to lose but our security blankets! Life is composed ofa simple cycle of good and bad luck; when sheis lucky the coffee is real and the alarm clock is broken: when sheis unlucky the coffee is instant and the alarm clock works. On good days, Lorna ventures enthusiastically into the world of labor and management. and on bad days she pulls a depression special and seeks the comfort and solace of love comics. Such is life. Have another cup of coffee, Lorna. This is Mondo Nuevo. Fade in on one of the Poti twins, scientific research and a bio lab, the academic community and a dozen red roses . . . Heroine puts away lab coat, gets in car and drives to seaside . . . flashback to party, strains of funky broadway . . . cut. return to present: the wind blows . . . a blond head . . . the sun goes down. Orange. Close-up of Jackie. Karen Lee Pehrson Lorna Jean Peterson Political Science H istory Jacqueline Elaine Potus Biology 174 Jane Louisa Probasco Nancy Lillian Ralston Psychology English Most of the people around here are not that orderly, but JANE IS. She likes things to be neat and clean and even her thoughts are orderly and well-regulated, but that doesntt mean she doesntt have a certain panache. Shets a dancer, for one thing, and she takes real delight in such phenomena as pianos, organs, Mediterranean islands and modern British literature. ttOnly connect . . as Forster said in Howardiv End. Jane does. Rancid spends most of her time holed up with Stegret and Jake, complaining about all the work she has to do and making ingenious plans for getting to Hanover, NH. Even so, the work gets done, in spite of the fact that she has just spent five straight CD months typing for the Con, thus acquiring muscular fingers and a cynical outlook on extracurricular madness She's also in choirJ Nance leads a healthy decadent life and whafs more, shes a Damn Funny Kid. llSaturnls musician plays as written-and in the end, people listen . . . Chris is a room Hickering With candlelight, gingerbread Victo- rian mansions, a mildly distracted maiden who just stepped off a magic pinnacle bound for Camelot. Of course therels another part of her too: the funny, artsy Modern Girl side, and when shels like that she reminds you of some- body in 3 Richard Lester mm, sitting on a rusty bed frame in the middle of a meadow overgrown with weeds. llIn reaching, I touched her hand and knew we should live where llow- ers are important . P Its really something, you know, to be known as an Individual-that weighty and pre- possessing appelationaand to have gained that kind of reputation without being eccentric or avant-guard, or just plain weird. But those who know, know that Randy is Individual just be- cause she IS, without contrivance or device. She understates, and you listen twice or several times . . . carefully. Diane can wander through the Museum of Modern Art, listen to Tim Buckley, read Cervantes, and dash 0E a 26-page term paper, all with a singleness of purpose: to attain lla new and rational approach to my existence? Her solution to all problems is llHead West? which usually means San Francisco. Shels out- standing at everything she does, from compre- hending Plato to practicing white magic, but she approaches it all with understated sophisti- cation, avoiding any form of pretense. A newspaper woman is not usually por- trayed as a quiet, ultra-feminine romantic, but thatls what her ambition is, and thatls what Betsyls like. Her recurring daydream is to be far away from here in time and space, amongst many vague pastel-colored castles in the air But an afternoon on the swings at the local playground will do as well. Sydney will inform you, not NECES- SARILY meaning it, that her favorite occupa- tion is pulling the wings off flies. Besides cruelty to animals, she has many other endear- ing hobbies, like brooding, attaining Nirvana, and graduating from Wilson. She is an arrest- ing figure, with her burning Bergmanesque eyes and her black suede overcoat, and you can easily imagine her strolling through Cocytus, kicking idly at any heads that remain above the ice. Winnie is another one of those enviable people who gets to spend an enviable year abroad. To be exact, she is presently located in Marburg, Germany, where she is no doubt doing well. She always did well here, which is why sheis in Marburg . . . Her friends hope that Wilson wont be an anticlimax after Eu- rope, but thatls the paradox of Winnie-a far- ranging intellect, but always close in heart to home. Christine Barbara Rehrig Fine Arts Randy Gooderl Saint 176 History Diane Marie Reverand English Winnifred Louise Rosenthal German Elizabeth Ann Ryan American Civilization Sydney Frost Repplier Sociology 177 Kathryn J ane Seiverling English Lucinda Sanford History Some of you might not know Kathyeshels a partitime student at Dartmouth whose llweek- endsll begin on Wednesday. And whenever she is around she spends most of her time in the bathtub, or so her friends say. Actually, of course, therels no one who doesnit know her, because her good-humored hard work as class vice-president mot to speak of her amazing wardrobel have made her an outstanding figure, even among all her COLORFUL class- mates. The time will come, and itls inevitable, when magazines like Redbook will start talking about the Lady Ambassador to some place in the Far East. She is one of those collected, efficient and stylish types who handles husa band, Children, community guilds and an inter- national career with peerless skill. Shels doing everything you wish you could do and shes doing it graciously and diligently. tActually, though, sheis a grown-up Bobbsey Twin in par- tial disguise. Actually, shels CindyJ Helen Constance Schell Music Dene Schilling Biology The scene is the Rugged West, Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Enter The Heroine on her horse. physiology textbook in handbphysiol- ogy textbook? Its got to be Dene. She's an active and athletic biologist who dreams about teaching school or knowing the joys of the veterinariants life or just possibly going to Nebraska and getting snowed in there with SOMEONE. Win a few. lose a few, and some days it rains. Thatts Helents attitude toward things in general, and it seems to serve her wellbshe never seems to get into a btwit , as we say, in spite of her many activities and interests. Sometimes ifs sailing, sometimes itts her Brownie Troop, and even when it rains, ifs still a good time for listening to music and having good talk with good friends. Stumbling into one of the cells of Rosie- Disert, you behold a small figure, crosslegged on the bed and surrounded by notebooks. note cards, sketched notes and noted sketches, text- books. library books opened at color plate il- lustrations, scraps of paper and ten different colors of magic marker. You have walked into a time machine and that's Linda, lost some- where in the world of Renaissance art. Shut the door and leave her to her conversation with Raphael. Linda Jean Schultz Fine Arts 1:; ' MWMH mgs-h. ,, 1:5? 'rw ; Donna Elizabeth Shay English Lisabeth Ann Sheppard F ine Arts Jo Ellen Shotwell German The Famous Friend of Lost Freshmen and Stray Dogs rides again in the person of Donna, a hardheaded sentimentalist ta what'D Well, she iHheis soft sweaters and rocking chairs and schmaltz songs by the Letterman; at the same time, though, she's very much in the real world of academics and extracurricular projects, and her friends say that she's a very conscientious worker, which is considerably more than most peopleis friends will say about them! See Beth. See the water balloon. Good grief. tBad aim thereJ You spend a lot of time watching Beth twarilyl as she zaps about, hying off the esplanade and away in an airplane. She creates a moveable feast of pranks and happy distraction, which is as absorbing in its way as a corrida or the l Storming of the Winter Palace. Lets face it, she's Wenchls roommate, and you can just imagine. Barbara Ann Shailor Classics Last year Jo danced, aced German and went to Gettysburg; this year sheis dancing, studying in Germany and making the scene all over Europe. And on top of all this, she sews all her own clothes and has enough will power to skip lunch, and it didn't take much acumen to predict that anybody who can do all that would make good sooner or later, and even remember to send you postcards, too. Odi et amo; quare id fuciam, fortasse requiris. Nescio, sed fieri semis et excrucior. Camllus Barb is the would-be originator of 4 olclocks on weekends, and is presently working on the production of water-tight bagels. An Antigone with a sense of humor, she is repelled by beautiful-but-dumb broads and by a conservative and intolerant middle class. The thing sheld really like to do is pack a few hundred suit cases and take off for Greece, but failing that, she can be content with a ltgood, old-fashioned date. J anie is one of the few Wilson girls who can actually manage a-letter-a-day. In her capacity as Wilson girl, she wants to be a wife and mother, but in her capacity as Spanish major sheld like to do it in an Argentine hacienda. Also, in both of these capacities, she has an equal affection for Snoopy and Sancho Panzaand thatls not at all strange if you think about it. Jane Ellen Shallcross Spanish Carol Anne Steuerwald Psychology Anita Marie Smith Psychology Mary Carol Smillie English Itls such a shame that after Steuie has gone to all the trouble of setting her hair twith three pieces of Scotch tapel, it gets all pulled by that monkey in her 8 oiclock motivation class. G'he monkey is in a cage; none of her friends would DREAM of pulling her hair . . J Somehow, though, Steuie always rallies in time to go to a party or visit the llFive Flies? CtGo where you want to go and do what you want to do . . . l A good one-word definition of Smillie is AMBIVALENT. That means that you donlt just come bouncing up to her and slap her on the back and start talking about the weather, not as a general rule, that is. tShe likes trivia but not that kindJ Naturally, therefore, she spends most of her time digging one-cent stamps Ccause theylre greenl; refining her imitation of William Buckley, and exchanging random onomatopoeia with figments of her imagination, in rooms with windows but no daylight. Sue's definitely the little kid type , especially since she makes popcorn EVERY night, never eats vegetables, and doesnit think its snowed until its at least four feet deep. No little kid, however, could be as mathematically advanced as she is. She starts studying at 1 am. and gets it all out of the way, leaving the rest of the night for dreaming about Boston rockers, antique china and the Monaco Grand Prix. When thereis absolutely nobody around to talk to, Nita takes a nap. But thats a last resort. Usually she is busy Living Dangerously by learning how to solder texperimental psychl, correcting peoples grammar, and RUNNING up and down the stairs. Even if she were sleepwalking, sheld still run. At this point she has probably worn out more loafers than anybody else at Wilson. Susan Eileen Smiley Mathematics Shut your eyes and off we go: Stegret can belch at will tyes, indeedyl; she talks to her plants every day to help them grow; wants to meet-a-man-with-a-moustache tand brainsl; is uExtremely Jubilant especially on Balloon Days. After 40 years spent illustrating love comics, she intends to come back as Dean of Residence. Sheis also eccentric: she goes to all her classes. Meanwhile, back at Wilson College, 700 girls, cleverly disguised as sheep Margaret Ann Stevens Fine Arts 183 Gentle is the word, and you might find her someday in a Renoir painting, pink and blond and surrounded by daisies and daffodils. Actually, though, Mary Lee's intellectual iwhich means, in this case, very smart and gets her work donei and nobody should be allowed to be so much of both those things. Revision: you might find her sitting in an impressionist garden, finishing up her grad thesis on Joseph Conrad. Pam is a staunch member of the history department. This is a very fortunate taste to acquire, and Pam has acquired it with all the fervor of a convert. Non-academic points of interest include a passion for uequipmentii; like, she has the most incredible collection of make up deviceka whole nouveau art form in itself. And you might say the same for Pam. Candy is a member of the Legion of Miss Fry devotees. She always seems to spend her days playing tennis under sunny skies, followed by a cherry diet pepsi, and tideallyy an evening at the theatre. Nobody is really sure what she does on those days when thereis a blizzard or a monsoon over the tennis courts and the nearest play is in Washington, DC. You suppose thatis the time when she does her history. You were introduced to her sophomore year and she made you feel like you had your loafers on backwards or something. As if it isnit enough for her to always look so very matching skirt and sweater and tttogether , she manages to look great even when sheisjust come out of the swimming pool, and that means every day. Marcy has inspired a new Wilson coiff-mermaid-wet hair. There is one dominant and recurring factor in Nancyis life. Hereis how it goes: Art history, Edward, 19th century French lit, Edward, Frank Lloyd Wright, Edward, telephone calls, Edward, crunchy peanut butter, Edwaand so forth. But sheis never silly about it, shes a very un-silly type of person: refined, efficient, impeccably dressedeand she has good taste. She must have good taste. All those Edwards, to say nothing of Art History, make that much imperative. Mary Lee Stevens English Pamela Margaret Syme 184 History History Candace Lee Straight Nancy Jane Swinston Fine Arts a W. Marcie Lynne Swartz German 185 Katherine Bates Tatman Bible 81. Religion Margie Ann Truax Classics Sharon Amelia Veach History Judith Ellen aylor Sociology Laura Jean Thomas Jamielee Tanger Psychology Political Science The first time you met Margie, she said that she came from iithe sticks? but if you sus- pected her of being shy or humble, it was only for about 15 seconds. She has an extremely wild, extremely sarcastic, extremely unobtru- sive sense of humor, which has an effect rather like someone creeping up behind you and pop- ping a blown-up paper bag. Donlt turn your back on her unless you like that sort of thing tand a lot of us doJ Kathy is a refugee from the chem lab who is now involved with methodology, singing Hindu saints, research on the Society of Friends, and all the rest of the absorbing things you get into in the religion department. CiBe gentle with yourself. You are as much a part of the universe as the sky and the trees. Whether it is clear to you or not, the universe is unfolding as it should. l She has an intellect fed by everything she does, from solitary guitar-playing to conversations with stray spir- its of the Ouija. Aside from the fact that she uses Chauce- rian spelling tspellynge'n, Sharon's major dis- tinction is the fact that she is absolutely hung up on history. She just sits around watching everybody else waving their hands, wearing this quizzical smile, then with one or two sen- tences, she answers the question, makes a point and raises a whole new issue. The professor heaves a sigh of relief and everybody else tries to scribble down verbatim whatever it was she said. People tend to congregate in Taylorls room, even during work hours 02 to 3 a.m.l. But she doesn't mind; after all there are certain states inherent in being a soc major, one of which is a compulsion to understand the various case studies walking around campus. What Judy really wants to do is be a rock in roll star tshe plays guitar like nobody youlve ever heardl and live in a treehouse in Big Sur . . . but what shelll PROBABLY do is go in for child welfare work, with a little 12 meter sailboat racing on the side. Jamielee keeps things in proper perspective, and just watching her helps you do the same. For instance, she sews and cooks and makes things like paper Howers, and likes being alone with waterfalls and leaves . . . Enthusiasm is contagious, and so is lack of it, and Jamielee is always enthusiastic. Quietly. Can an aspiring English teacher from Jim Thorpe, Pa., find happiness as a psych major at Wilson? The answer is yes, but only if there are compensating factors, such as Annapolis, Le- high, Lafayette, and others in the same cate- gory. Laura manages to function capably in all of her roles-student, potential teacher, class secretary, choir member and party person. Her closet is packed with great clothes, and she looks as though she has just landed or is just about to land the president of something BIG. Then thereas that old French saying to the effect that red-headed women are all passionate, imaginative, and full of laughter . . . Actually itls not that old because you just made it up to lit Mimi. Sheis all those things, plus the fact that her conversation is a treat all by itself. The last time you saw her she recapitulated the last KP play she was in, playing all the parts and giving a running critical commentary at the same time. She appears to be at Wilson, but actually she spends most of her time in a chalk garden somewhere, watching the giant butterflies. Nancy communicates in a language all her own, never sits still, and is absolutely INFLEX- IBLE about things like hairstyles and ignoring alarm clocks. One evening you Were at a party together and you watched her in action: after 15 minutes she knew EVERYBODY, and in another 15 she was telling them all how much she loved them. They reciprocated-most people do. Cindy is a soc major who is never going to quite recover from not having been a Spanish major. Nobody knows how she was seduced away from Spanish poetry and Segovia-to say nothing of chile con carneato join the ranks of the social scientists. Spanish may eventually win out, however, and shelsjust the person yould be likely to run into in Mallorca tassuming YOUlD be likely to be in MallorcaFHey! I went to college with that girlaand off she goes clinging to the back of a motor scooter . Marilyn Elizabeth Walsh French Nancy Cofer Wagner Fine Arts Cynthia Willett Washburne Sociology 188 Charlotte Elaine Wartman History Elizabeth Ann Ward History Charlotte collects stationery but never writes letters because of her terrible handwriting. Everything else is cool. Shels a quiet cynic in a mini-dress who is going to live an Exciting Life and then settle down in a Washington townhouse and raise mod children, to be followed by a brood of mod grandchildren, or whatever passes for mod in 2000. Meanwhile, somebody please get her a typewriter. This is the story of how Sitta, the Admiralls Daughter, came to Wilson and majored in history, and then went off to spend her junior year abroad-Very far abroad-in Tokyo as a matter of fact. Sitta is quite independent and also lucky iwhich helpsl, and iexcept for the prosaic fact that she hates to get up in the morningl, she is an Extraordinary Phenomenon. After all, shels into all kinds of fabulous things in Japan, and here you are sitting in Chambersburg, looking up Shinto scrolls in your Far Eastern Art book . . . Elnora West Bible, Religion Things like public transportation are great problems for Nonie. She never makes a bus or train on time and always ends up stranded someplace positively horribleelike the famous and all too familiar Harrisburg bus station . She'sjust a little absent minded, quiet, changeablHut most of all an actress. Any anecdote or misadventure is turned into a little skit. You try to tell it later at a dinner party but it never works so well, somehow or other A sharp eye and a sharp tongue . . . Karen knows what she wants and how to get it. ClBlack is backU Sheis a leader with a purpose and has done at least some things to keep at least some of you on your toes tone of her best numbers so far was the Prep l67 program; A raised eyebrow, and a warm rapport just when you least expect it . Karen moves. It was 20 years ago today Sgt. Pepper taught the band to play . . . Melissa is a philosopher and an athlete tnot ajocki who owns a magic quilt and a Magical Mystery car, and is the source of tangible compassion and coffee in green-and-blue cups. Shels the summer. shes the sunlight, shels more than you can say . The Magical Mystery Tour is waiting to take you away, the band begins at 10 to six and all you need is love. Karen Mari Williams Sociology Melissa Whitehead Philosophy Muffy likes being involved, and she is. In the first place shets involved with being a tgaspt bio major, and in between labs she somehow finds time to take care of Con photography, be hockey manager. serve on class council-oh. nobody really knows how she does it all. They just depend on her. In her spare time tthis occurs every three weeksL she makes up peculiar song lyrics, laughs a lot, and reads Eliot and Montaigne. Shetd make the perfect first woman astronautwthat is, if she lives through graduation. Katharine White Biology Wench is exactly the kind of person the Beatles would have loved to take on the bus for the Magical Mystery Tourt if shetd happened to have been in England at the time. She was probably in Rome or Munich, followed by her entourage of favorite menJ The thing is, Barb can be silly better than anybody else. and you can always make her laugh even when shets depressed, and even when she blows it, as she does very infrequently, shehs more adorable than ever, and thafs what she is. whether it grosses her out or notwADORABLE. Barbara Gail Wentz Fine Arts 191 Nancy Gail Williams Margaret Louise Woods Sociology Nancy Ann Wilson Political Science Linda Ellen Zuryk Psychology .,. Barbara Ellen Woods Economies Jane Louise Wilson History Little Nance is a Silly Dragon, and also a seamstress of the designer-creator genus. Shels often suspected of being Quiet, but ifs only fair to warn the world that she doesnt let work get in the way of living, and, as Edith Piaf would say tor singl: ltNon, rien de rien, non, je ne regrette rien . . You happen to like Marge very much. Most of the pebple who know her do. She's one of the rare people who are aiming for something immediate, tangible and vital, and she intends to devote all of her time to itaworking with her people in the struggle for black identity. She's determined to confront oppression and hypocrisy and effect some changes nd maybe it's her strong sense of purpose thaw'es her that inner strength and compassion and humor. Wherever she gets it, youlre glad of it. Linda is one of the pillars of the Outing Club and knows all about rocks and minerals and canoeing and song fests. Shels a real Baby Cakes who explores and hitches to Montreal the way the rest of us go to Barneyls. ClHitchhike a hundred miles, Pm a ragamuffin child with a fingerpainted smile . . 33 Linda wants to be F REE. Pretty Jane: a practical romantic. Right now shels in a practical phase, gets her work done quickly and gets to bed by l 1. But she dreams of a romantic future, involving Bavarian castles and long-haired dukes . . . As it happens, however, there is a distinct shortage of those things these days, and she may have to settle for a Cape Cod house and a station- wagon. No matter, she'll go right on being pretty and mostly practical most of the time and partly romantic part of the time. Barb has been known to cut class or leave the dining room before dessert and go off on a long walk. Close your dreams and you will lose your mind . . fl She may be thinking about Tolstoy, trying to find the parallels in Gospel Parallels tthatls impossible for her even after three yearsl or else dreaming up a fool- proof way to make Mr. Townsend PROUD of her. Woooods is one of the few people who is REALLY delighted when wakened at 3 am. by a phone call. You donit meet them very often nowadays, but Nancy tFemurN is an absolute and emphatic camping enthusiast. Not only that, shes a 3rd generation Wilson girl, which makes her somewhat of a conversation piece. Give her a mountaiHny old mountaiHnd she'll climb it. And when she has a daughter, shelll probably send her down the mountain to Wilson. Patrons of the 1969 Conococheague Mrs. Ruth B. Barker Dr. . and Mrs. R. M. Baucino . and Mrs. Carlton U. Baum . and Mrs. William DeB. Bertolette . and Mrs. Robert E. Brindley . and Mrs. Wayne J . Brownell and Mrs. Charles H. Bryan Capt. M. J. Carpenter, USN Dr. and Mrs. J oseph M. Chamberlain Rev. and Mrs. Arden W. Coe . and Mrs. Byron T. Currie . and Mrs. Thomas Davidson . and Mrs. Edwin W. Elder, Jr. . and Mrs. Adelbert Fischer, Jr. . and Mrs. Richard C. Franklin . and Mrs. J ohn L. Guerrant . and Mrs. Douglas L. Hamilton . Donald Laird Hankey . Thomas H. Hawks . and Mrs. Sylvester A. Haynes . and Mrs. Charles Hicks . and Mrs. J ohn M. Howard . and Mrs. Hilger Perry J enkins . William R. J ones . and Mrs. Norman George Koons . and Mrs. F. H. Kopenhaver Mr. William G. Lantz Mrs. Dorothy C. Lee Mr. Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Lefferts and Mrs. H. N. Loomis and Mrs. Richard Lucas 194 . and Mrs. Robert E. Luccock . and Mrs. H. Dean McCandless Mr. and Mrs. George R. McConnell . and Mrs. Richard MacDonald . and Mrs. J erome T. McEver Mrs. Eleanor F. Martin Theodore H. Mengel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Merwin Mr. and Mrs. John W. Mirsch Rev. and Mrs. Harold L. Myers Mr. and Mrs. William E. Peel Mr. and Mrs. George H. Potus Mrs. George C. Probasco Mr. and Mrs. J ohn S. Reverand Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Ryan Mr. Webster Sanford Dr. and Mrs. William J .- Schilling Mrs. Wilson Shallcross Mr. and Mrs. Frank F. Stevens Mr. and Mrs. Glenn R. Stevens Mr. George C. Syme Mrs. Gertrude G. Tanger Mrs. Catherine C. Walsh R. Adm. and Mrs. Norvell G. Ward Mrs. Patricia W. Washburne Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Wentz Mr. and Mrs. J ohn White Mrs. Doris Whitehead Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Weston P. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Francis J . Woods Let the Priests of the Raven of the dawn no longer, in deadly black, with hoarse note curse the sons ofjoy . . . For everything that lives is Holy. 195 William Blake Best Wishes to the Class of 1969 from the I WILSON COLLEGE FATHER'S CLUB The F irst Organization of its Kind Organized in 1 94 7 FIRST ROW: The Rev. John H. Scott, secretary; D. Dyson THIRD ROW: Charles J. Stoner, John Halliwell, Douglas L. Herting, president; Clay F. Henninger, treasurer. SECOND Hamilton, H. Rushton Harwood, Jr., Ernest S. Erickson, Jr., ROW: Charles C. Hershey, The Rev. Theodore T. Johnson, J . Richard A. Lydecker. Herman Daves, Jr., Theodore C. Fisher, Prentice C. Horne. 196 HI WAY PIZZA 123 s. 2nd St. Pizza, Hoagies Open Evenings Free Delivery 263-2520 uFor the best rest east or west-P stay at 565 Lincoln Way East Chambersburg, Penna. 734 V! 0065 and Sirloin Room Tel: 264-4181 Co-Owners, Managers: J 06 and Louise Taylor All Occasions Call for Flowers From BYER BROS. FLORISTS Penncraft Avenue Chambersburg Avenue Chambersburg, Pennsylvania We telegraph flowers anywhere Complete Travel Service Cruises and Tours Independent Tours Airline Tickets SOUTH PENN MOTOR CLUB 230 Lincoln Way East Chambersburg, Penna. Telephone 264-4191 TIP TOP CLEANERS 337 Wayne Avenue Chambersburg, Pennsylvania Phone: 264-7319 H. A. WEISS 82 SONS, INC. Restaurant Equipment- J anitor Supplies Hagerstown, Maryland WALTER N. GLASGOW 1650 Lincoln Way East Chambersburg, Penna. A most unusual fabric center New and used sewing machines and service Camping and Travel Trailers and Camping Supplies H. E. COOK BUS LINES Scotland, Pennsylvania 264-7595 Compliments of JOIN THE Y.M.C.A. Compliments of ROBSON 8 KAYE INC. KESSINGERS GROCERIES PRINTERS Chambersburg, Pa. 401 Philadelphia Avenue Chambersburg, Pennsylvania LYONS Main at Queen Chambersburglv F avorite Store for Men Compliments of a FRIEND Compliments of T. B. WOOD'S COMPANY Chambersburg, Pennsylvania 198 Wallpaper Paints Artist Supplies Picture Framing Hardware Barnharf's Wallpaper and Paints 55 N. MAIN ST. CHAMBERSBURG, PA. PHONE 264-5431 Good Service and Quality Supplies LEWIS W. BARNHART 653 Stauffer Ave. Chambersburg, Pa. Compliments of Chambersburg New Car Dealers Association LU DWIGWS JEWELERS Since 1877 Member of the American Gem Society FRANK B. LESHER CO. EDMUND T. LESHER, Mgr. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 8L SUPPLIES 1680 EDGAR AVENUE PHONE CHAMBERSBURG, PA. 263-9248 17201 PLASTERER'S FLORISTS Cut Flowers-Corsages-Plants 990 Lincoln Way East Phone 264-6188 Chambersburg, Pa. At the Sign of the Blinking Red Rose HAPPINESS IS GRADUATING CLASS OF 170 HAGERSTOWN CANTEEN SERVICE, INC. 2373 Pennsylvania Ave. 4Rea0 Hagerstown, Maryland Compliments of H. B. Dissinger, Inc. MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 6115 LINCOLN WAY SHOPPING CENTER CHAMBERSBURG, PA. Phone 264-41 15 Mon., Thurs., Fri., 9:30 A.M.-9:00 P.M. Tues., Wed., Sat., 9:30 A.M.-5:3O P.M. Telephone co 4-7131 The Chambersburg Laundry Quality Drycleaners Dry Cleaning, fur cleaning, moth proofing, fur and woolen storage LOEHWING'S BEAUTY SALON European-American Styles 1322 Wilson Ave. Chambersburg, Penna. Virginia Loehwing, Prop. COlony 3-2141 200 WARREN'S 29 s. MAIN Capezids Old Main Trotters Town 8L Country, Datebook A happy memory Is on earth perhaps truer Than happiness A. de M usset May you always remember your days at Wilson and be glad. Your Little Sisters 1C1ass of ,711 WALTER'S TAXI For Prompt Courteous Service Ca11263-4161 ! Compliments of EYSTER s FASHIONS BY THE YARD COPPER KETTLE 47 North Main Street Chambersburg, Pennsylvania A. G. CRUNKLETON ELECTRICAL COMPANY, INC. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS Greencastle, Pennsylvania 201 Compliments of KEYSTONE MOTEL 1620 Lincoln Way East On Route 302Two Miles East of Chambersburg, Penna. 17201 Phone: 264-4180 FASHION FOOTWEAR SINCE 1878 2yunt54erry ,5 47 South Main Street Chambersburg, Pennsylvania 264-93 1 6 Compliments of F. W. WOOLWORTH CO. w00Lw0RT0$ 2 er47 on non Mm 71 South Main Street Chambersburg, Pennsylvania CAPITOL THEATRE CHAMBERSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA Phone 263-2311 FARMERS AND MERCHANTS TRUST COMPANY OF CHAMBERSBURG Drive-up Windows Free Parking for Customers A Good Place To Do Your Banking Member of F ederal Deposit Insurance Corporation GREETINGS TO THE CLASS OF 1969 from The Alumnae Association THE LITTLE SHOP 115 North Main Street Chambersburg, Pa. WILLIAM1S Corner of Queen and Main Streets Headquarters for Ready to Wear Dresses by: Jonathon Logan Sue Brett Country Miss Sportswear by: Rose Crest Wardrobe Maker 202 RITTER BROS., INC. General Contractors P. O. Box 1577 151 1 N. Cameron Street HARRISBURG, PA. 17105 Telephone 234-3061 1Area Code 7171 PRYOWS TIRE SERVICE, INC. 700 East King St. Firestone Tires, Tubes 8L Batteries Delco 8L Philco Products W. D. WEAVER, INC. 129 Commerce St. Chambersburg, Pa. Specialists in the distribution of MEATS PROVISIONS FROZEN FOODS t0 HOTELS RESTAURANTS INSTITUTIONS 264-5197 Dry C leaning that Satisfies Ideal Cleaning 8: Laundry Center 783 Broad Street Chambersburg, Pennsylvania Call 263-4164 Hours: 7 AM. to Midnight-7 Days a Week Compliments of MERLETTI BROS. 110 Orchard Ave. Chambersburg, Pa. PARK AVENUE PHARMACY 220 Park Avenue Thomas S. Stonesifer, R.Ph., Prop. Prescriptions 0ur Pride Dolly Madison Ice Cream Full line of Cosmetics Hallmark Cards Candies Free Film Given on Developing Service For Your Every Need WEST EN D TAVE RN 696 Lincoln Way West Home of uPeanut NighW and the W. E. T. Group Compliments of OSTERMAN HOUSE FINE FOOD and COCKTAILS 800 South Fourth Street Chambersburg, Pennsylvania z L1,; ?am- ' 1 w 313112513131 '1 2:1 156,141 '9! , 9 1 W11. 1 6: 1.151611; m .. gr 5 , 1. x 4R1 w NATIONAL VALLEY BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Established 1809 Serving Wilson College Philadelphia Avenue OITice 1750 Philadelphia Avenue Two Offices on Memorial Square Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Waterproofing Spoudng BONDED APPLICATORS INC. 68 E. Main St. PH: 762-1155 Flashings Building Cleaning Waynesboro Pa. 17628 VICTOR O'NEIL STUDIOS 405 Lexington Avenue New York, New York PORTRAITS FOR THE 1969 CONOCOCHEAQUE Chambersburg Implement Company, Inc. 449 Lincoln Way East General Electrical Appliances Hardware and Gas Ranges Bruning and Lowe Brothers Paint Phone: COlony 4-6177 MODERN DRY CLEANERS 130 Lincoln Way West Chambersburg, Pa. 263-1 1 13 F ree Pick U p and Delivery Nationally Famous For Its Uniqueness and Good Things to Eat MOLLY PITCHER WAFFLE SHOP Try Our F amous Wajiles See Largest Menu of Waffles 1 Block South of Square Chambersburg, Pa. Nick Balafoutas, Prop. COLONY PHOTO SUPPLY 130 Lincoln Way East Chambersburg, Pa. HERTZ RENT-A-CAR LICENSEE WEEKEND RATES PEIPEWS SUNOCO SERVICE 427 LINCOLN WAY WEST CHAMBERSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA PHONE COLONY 4-7211 JOHN C. MCDOWELL 8: SON, INC. 252 L.W.E., Chambersburg, Pa. EPPINGER-McDOWELL INS. 230 L.W.E., Chambersburg, Pa. ANTRIM INSURANCE ASSOC. 27 E. Baltimore Street Greencastle, Pa. 206 CHAMBERSBURG TRUST COMPANY Strong and Dependable Organized 1 901 Member of F ederal Deposit Insurance Corporation Compliments of R. E. HAFER and SON General Contractors and Builders Office: 366 Wayne Avenue Phone COlony 3-1812 Chambersburg, Pa. THE ORIENTAL SHOP 67 Lincoln Way West Chambersburg, Pa. Featuring Oriental Imports 8; Gifts of Distinction FRAVEWS SHOE STORE Robert L. Armstrong Owner and Manager 127 South Main Street Chambersburg, Pa. Airstep 2 Miss America 8L Life Stride 207 The men and women of H. J. Heinz Company in Chambersburg salute the young women of Wilson '68 and Wish for them a future full of learning and doing. H. J. HEINZ COMPANY M alters of the a Varieties This book printed by VELVATONE, a special process of lithOv graphic printing. Sole producers: Wm. J. Keller Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. No other printing firm is authorized to use the Velvatone method. 208 gb- . 4-Cy 1' u- .2 Iv! m7 .7 4:11- C- E n 5 A E! 1 a i CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHE ' CHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEACUE 1969 CONOCOCHEACUE 196'- 3 E 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE1969 CONw '1 D OCOCHEACUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUEE . CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE1969 CONOCOC m l I ; l us 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE1969 CON ; ONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHE L OCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1 ' i GUE1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 c. :.o CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCOCHEAGUE 1969 CONOCO
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