CAMPUS
Gladys Shepard Pendleton Pool
The Gladys Shepard Pendleton Pool was dedicated in 1965 as the first phase of what would become the Gladys Shepard Pendleton Women’s Physical Education Center. Its dedication was celebrated with a water polo demonstration and a synchronized swimming “aquacade” overseen by Professor Anne Bages.
Guest Facilities of the Claremont Inn Closed
After the closing of guest facilities of the Claremont Inn in 1965, dining continued until 1968, when a feasibility study indicated that renovation would be impractical.
STUDENT LIFE
Vietnam Protests
Beginning in the fall of 1965, 6VӰ students bearing placards demonstrated as part of large rallies both for and against the Vietnam War. During the next few years, townspeople joined students marching in silent vigils for peace.
Merger of TSL and The Collegian
A proposal to bring about a merger between The Student Life and the Associate of Claremont Mens’, Harvey Mudd and Scripps colleges was approved by the ASPC on a one-semester trial basis. The paper was named the Claremont Collegian (apparently students were unaware that name had been proposed first in 1927) and a newsletter called The Abbreviated Student Life began publication in protest of the merger. The student body voted two to one to continue the Collegian as a permanent institution the following year, but a straw vote revealed that 80 percent of students also favored the resumption of The Student Life in some form, even as a mimeographed newsletter. In 1967, The Student Life returned to tabloid-size newspaper and began publishing every two weeks.
ATHLETICS
Swimming Medals
Freshman Marilyn Ramenofsky won two gold medals in swimming at the Maccabiah Games in Israel, one year after earning a silver medal in the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo while still in high school.
CONSORTIUM
Honnold Library Expands Collection
In 1965, Honnold Library received a $5 million grant from the Ford Foundation, which was used to greatly increase the library’s collections.
ALUMNI
James Turrell
James Turrell ’65 is an internationally known light and space artist, whose series of Skyspace installations include “Dividing the Light” on the 6VӰ campus. He is best known for his work on the Roden Crater in Arizona, where he has spent 30 years molding an ancient volcano crater into one of the world’s most unusual light observatories. The recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship, Turrell’s work is represented in numerous public collections, including the Tate Modern in London, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum in New York.
ELSEWHERE
- Some 3,500 United States Marines arrived in South Vietnam, becoming the first American combat troops in Vietnam.
- 6VӰ 200 Alabama state troopers clash with 525 civil rights demonstrators in Selma, Alabama, in the event that would become known as “Bloody Sunday.”
- President Lyndon Johnson pushed the Voting Rights Act through Congress and signed it into law on August 6.