Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA)

 - Class of 1976

Page 1 of 344

 

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 344 of the 1976 volume:

v -_i 1 in memory of tom caldwell 1 — O 2 Well, we ' re finished with another yearbook. As usual we asked for help and no one came, outside a small group of friends. You are probably wondering what to do with a yearbook. It is true many people treat it as anachronism, but there is more that can be said. It is not meant to be nostalgic, not a last glance at the good times. Tufts is an on going experience. This also means that preserving more than a few pictures or pieces of writing would be holding on to something which is at best a blurred memory. This isn ' t meant to say the yearbook is a waste, it is some¬ thing to help us remember what it was like . . . but don ' t compare it to what you are doing five years from now. Just be happy you were here. This is necessary, because everyone ' s past makes up their present. Look at the book, and try to understand what Tufts meant to you. Good Luck The Editor. 3 Calendar, or what did you miss? Sept. 12 to 19 THE HARDER THEY COME, CLAUDINE, YOM KIPPUR, CUP AND SAUCER (beings) MAMMALS by Polinsky, LES MISTONS by Truffaut, OH DREAMLAND by Anderson, SEYMOUR HERSH. Sept. 19 to 26 HERRY AND TONTO, DUDDY AND KRAVITZ, QUAL DES BRUMES. Sept. 26 to Oct. 3 THE JAMES COTTON BAND, WILLIE NININGER, TUFTS MEETS UNION (Jum¬ bos kicking off 100th year of football), TOM JONES, CHARLIE BUBLES, HOW TO STUDY SEMINAR, DICK GREGORY. Oct. 3 to 10 DR. GEORGE SMALL (biologist), THE BEELZEBUBS AND JACKSON JILLS, DEWICK SNACK BAR, TUFTS vs. HARVARD RUGBY, ANIMAL CRACKERS, MONTY PYTHON ' S AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT, TUFTS SYMPHONIC BAND, TUFTS (flying Jumbos), B.U. FRISBEE MATCH, PINBALL TOURNAMENT, TUFTS MEDITATION GROUP (begins), C. S. A PHOENIX TOO FREQUENT, WOMEN ' S CENTER MASSAGE CLASSES, ALSO, HEALTH AND SEXUALITY COUNSELING, (Bergman ' s) THE SILENCE, EX COL¬ LEGE GAS PRICES AND GUMDROPS . Oct. 10 to 17 MORE HEALTH AND SEXUALITY COUNSELING FOR THE WOMEN ' S CENTER, FLYING JUMBOS MEET ARCH RIVAL HAMPSHIRE, C. S. SOMETHING I ' LL TELL YOU TUESDAY, BOSTON RED SOCKS AND 1975 WORLD SERIES (begins), FLYING JUMBOS AND COLUMBIA, FOOTBALL ... TUFTS AT NOR¬ WICH, PSYCH. DEPT. ... DR. CUTLER ' S THE RISE AND FALL OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND WHAT IT CAN DO FOR YOU , TUFTS PRE-LEGAL SOCIETY, HELEN GLIKMAN, DUPLICATE BRIDGE, MARLENE DIETRICH IN JOSEF von STERNBERG ' S THE BLUE ANGEL T.F.S., TUFTS MEDITATION SOCIETY PRINCIPLES OF EFFORTLESS MEDITATION . Oct. 17 to 24 ARENA THEATRE ' S RICHARD III, THREE ARTISTS FROM GALLERY 11: ADELE SCHECHTMAN, ROSE MILLER AND JAN EHRENWORTH, JOHN CRIGHTON SPEAKS ON PROBLEMS OF EVIL FOR A NEWMAN HOUSE DINNER, SHABBAT SERVICES AND KOSHER CHINESE DINNER, CHINATOWN FROM T.F.S., LATIN AMERICAN SOCIETY GIVES DANCING AND SANGRIA PARTY, CHINESE STUDENTS CLUB HAS A TEN-TEN CELEBRATION, FOOTBALL ... TUFTS AT BATES COLLEGE, RED SOCKS AND CINCINNATI REDS, ALUMNI LOUNGE ... NEPOMU, WIND ENSEMBLE, SPRECHEN SIE DEUTSCH (weekly coffee hour by German dept.), BAROQUE CHESS ENTHUSIASTS ... TUFTS CHESS CLUB, HEBREW YIDDISH CULTURE HOUSE ... SOL GITTLEMAN ' S OPEN-MINDEDNESS AND CLOSED-MINDEDNESS IN JUDAISM ' , THE TUFTS COMMUNITY CHORUS SINGS, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE COLLEGE ORGANIZA¬ TION MEETING, P. J. O ' ROURKE OF THE NATIONAL LAMPOON, IS SCIENCE FICTION RELEVANT ... EX COLLEGE COLLOQUIA, SOL GITTLEMAN IN¬ TRODUCES FRITZ LANG ' S M , ENGLISH DEPT. SPONSORS WILLIAM NO¬ VAK ON KAFKA ' S LIFE . Oct. 24 to 31 BIG RED MACHINE INVADES COUSENS, WOMEN ' S CENTER ... HEALTH AND SEXUALITY COUNSELING, TUFTS INVITATIONAL FRISBEE TOURNA¬ MENT, THE GERMAN HOUSE ... OKTOBERFEST, INTERNATIONAL CLUB 4 PRESENT A DISCO, ALUMNAE LOUNGE ... WORKS FOR THE VIOLIN AND PIANO, DR. HELEN ROSEVEARE; MEDICAL MISSIONARY WORK IN THE CONGO, HOMECOMING FOOTBALL ... TUFTS-WILLIAMS, TUFTS ARME¬ NIAN CLUB . . . GALA EXTRAVAGANZA AND BACCHANAL, FINE ARTS DEPT. OPEN HOUSE, THE TUFTS ENVIRONMENTAL AND CONSUMER ACTION GROUP HOLDS ITS FIRST MEETING, WOMEN ' S CENTER ... RAPE AT TUFTS, COLLEGE WITHIN ... ALTERNATIVES TO TRADITIONAL EDUCATION, ARE¬ NA THEATRE . .. THE TYPISTS, SCUBA CLUB MEETING, MACPHIE RIB ROOM PRESENTED BY THE DINING SERVICES AND ODIKON, ALUMNAE LOUNGE ... JOHN P. ROCHE, WOMEN ' S CENTER ... PATRICIA MOLLOWY PRE¬ PARING YOURSELF FOR A CAREER , LATIN AMERICAN SOCIETY SPONSORS A CAUSE DINNER FOR THE UNITED FARM WORKERS, T.F.S. FILM OF THREE PENNY OPERA . Oct. 31 to Nov. 7 ARENA THEATRE ... THE MAROWITZ MEASURE FOR MEASURE, THE TUFTS FILM SERIES MYSTERY OF THE WAX MUSEUM, WEST HALL .. . HALLOWEEN PARTY, HODGON LOUNGE ... HALLOWEEN MASQUE BALL, TUFTS HILLEL ... ISRAEL AWARENESS WEEK , T.M. SOCIETY ... MEDITATION AND PREVENTIVE MEDICINE , ROMANCE LANGUAGE DEPT. ... XALA, DIS¬ CUSSION ON LAW SCHOOLS AND CAREER OPPORTUNITIES, COLLEGE DEMOCRATS FOR MASSACHUSETTS, RIB ROOM ... MITCH SILVER AND ED BAUMAN SERENADE, SEYMOUR SIMCHES ... JUNG ' S VIEW OF MAN ' S SUFFERING , DEAN BERNARD HARLESTON ... PSYCHOLOGY AND THE CHALLENGE OF SOCIAL ETHICAL RESPONSIBILITY , THE COLLEGE VEN¬ TURE PROGRAM (you could have left school here), DR. RONALD GOLDNER . . . A SELECTIVE ABSORBER FOR SOLAR ENERGY CONSERVATION , MASS TALK ... WHAT KIND OF PRESIDENT DOES TUFTS NEED? Nov. 7 to 14 ALUMNAE LOUNGE . .. JUMBO V FAIR AND AUCTION, LA MAISON FRAN- CAISE ... WINE AND CHEESE PARTY, DISCUSSION OF U.N. ANTI-ZIONIST RESOLUTION, JACKSON GYM .. . HARVEST HUSTLE, FANTASIA, TGC ... THE GY UNIVERSITY - 1975, TGC . . . SECOND ANNUAL FALL DANCE, PSI CHI . .. PSYCHOLOGY AND CAREER OPPORTUNITIES, BACKGAMMON CLUB (first meeting), CARMICHAEL ' S BAGEL BAR (first meeting), NANCY FLUNKS HER FIRST MATH TEST, ROMANCE LANGUAGE LA NORIRE DE , CHRIS MOUS- TAKIS AT THE RIB ROOM, TUFTS FILM SERIES .. . WHAT ' S UP TIGER LILY? , LARRY KETCHEN ... RECONSTRUCTION OF BARNUM , PSYCH COLLO¬ QUIUM ... DAVID SWINNEY, DAVIES HOUSE ... GILLA TRIBISCH SLIDES ON ISRAEL , ELLEN BURSTYN (best actress of the year) AT COHEN, EX COLLEGE ... BBC FILN4 WAR GAME , FREE CONCERT ... NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY JAZZ ENSEMBLE. Nov. 14 to 21 CHILD STUDY LIBRARY ... TUFTS IN ENGLAND PRIMARY SCHOOL PRO¬ GRAM, TUFTS FILM SERIES ... THE BEST OF THE N.Y. FESTIVAL OF WOMEN ' S FILMS AND VONNEGUT ' S BETWEEN TIME AND TIMBUKTU , THE TUFTS SYMPHONIC BAND, WOMEN ' S CENTER ... AN EVENING TO RELAX, CARMICHAEL DISCO. Nov. 21 to 28 LEO WELL, HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL, RAPS ON NEGOTIATIONS BE¬ TWEEN MULTINATIONALS AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES ... TUFTS ARE¬ NA THREATRE PRESENTS THE GOLDEN FLEECE ... THE GREEN MACHINE MEETS THE KNICKS ... ROBERG KLEIN IN COHEN AND ... BUNUEL ' S DISCREET CHARM OF THE BOURGEOISIE ... FELLINI ' S AMARCORD ... 5 DANNY DELTA AND THE UPSILONS GREASER PARTY ... PROF. GOLD¬ STEIN RAPS PALESTINIAN NATIONALISM - JEWISH AND ARAB AT HILLEL BRUNCH ... BRUINS vs. MAPLE LEAFS ... PORTLAND SYMPHONY STRIG QUARTET IN GODDARD CHAPEL . . . BULLINS ' CLARS ' S OLE MAN AT THE TUFTS ARENA THEATRE ... POETRY READINGS BY ALAN DUGAN ... EX COLL. COLLOQ. YOU AND THE T.U. BLUES ... SEATTLE vs. CELTS ... POETRY READING BY OCTAVIO PAZ . . . TUFTS FILM SERIES HEARTS AND MINDS . .. Dec. 5 to 13 MACHPHIE COFFEEHOUSE, BILL GOEBEL ... TUFTS ARTS COMMISSION THE PROPOSITION IN COHEN ... GONE WITH THE WIND IN COHEN ... BUBS, JILLS AND TUFTS STAGE BAND PERFORM IN MACPHIE COFFEE¬ HOUSE ... BAY OF PIGS , LATIN AMERICAN SOCIETY ... DISCUSSION ... ZEN: THE MOST PERFECT SYSTEM OF PSYCHOANALYSIS ... ODIKON PRESENTS BRITISH MUSIC HALL , MACPHIE ... JIMMY CARTER, CANDI¬ DATE FOR PRESIDENT, SPEAKS IN COHEN ... IBSEN ' S GHOSTS IN THE ARENA THEATRE ... CELTS vs. MILWAUKEE ... COLLEGE REPRESENTATIVE (leave here and get a job) AT BROWN HOUSE ... BRUINS vs. RANGERS (get your yah-yah ' s out) ... IS THERE SEX AFTER DEATH? EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT SEX . . . Dec. 13 to 18 SYMPHONIC BAND ' S CHRISTMAS CONCERT IN GODDARD ... GREEN MACHINE vs. WASHINGTON . .. BREAKFAST WITH THE TCU SENATE (some¬ thing for your money) ... ZEX IN CARMICHAEL LOUNGE ... GOLDEN OLDIES ODIKONCERT IN FREEFER . . . UNIVERSITY ' S CHORALE ' S CHRISTMAS CONCERT ... TUFTS ' OWN WILLIE NININGER PERFORMS AT PASSIM ' S ... SQUID-INK PUBLISHES FIRST ISSUE (it ' s a new monthly student magazine) . . . CELTS vs. KNICKS . . . CAFE CORRINA AT WHITFIELD. PROF. JEFF TITON SINGIN AND PLAYING GUITAR, CHRISTMAS BLUES AND SANITY CLAUS IS COMIN. Jan. 23 to 29 TUFTS FILM SERIES PRESENTS THREE MUSKETEERS MAE WEST W. C. FIELDS IN MY LITTLE CHICKADE IN COHEN ... VONNEGUT ' S BETWEEN TIME AND TIMBUKTU: A SPACE FANTASY IN COHEN WITH 2 SHORT ANIMATIONS: PIANO-FORTE THE DOODLE FILM ... TRANSCEN¬ DENTAL MEDITATION LECTURES IN ROBINSON ' EATON . . . BENEFIT CON¬ CERT FOR ELIOT PEARSON CHILDREN ' S SCHOOL IN ALUMNAE LOUNGE ... WOMEN ' S CENTER LECTURE SERIES PRESENTS FIRESTICKS , A WOMEN ' S AWARENESS COMEDY GROUP IN ARENA THEATRE. Jan. 30 to Feb. 4 PHANTOM OF PARADISE STEPPENWOLF IN COHEN ... CHINESE CULTURAL CENTER CELEBRATES YEAR OF THE DRAGON 4674 ... BOB SHRIVER, SON OF DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SARGENT SHRIVER, EATS DINNER WITH TUFTS STUDENTS IN THE DINING HALLS (to show how human he really is) ... ROBERT TAYLOR OF HISTORY DEPT. SPEAKS ON ABIGAIL JOHN ADAMS: PORTRAIT OF A REVOLUTIONARY FAMILY SPONSORED BY THE EX COLL ... STORY READING BY CARTER WILSON, NOVELIST ... EX COLL. COLLOQUIUM EXPLORING CAREER OPTIONS (in the caves of Mercury) ... BOSTON ' S 1 STREET SINGER STEVE BAIRD PERFORMS IN FRONT OF THE FRED HARRIS FOR PRESIDENT OFFICE IN SOMERVILLE ... SCI-FI FILM SERIES PRESENTS METROPOLIS ... IRISH DRINKING SONGS AT ODIKON CONCERT ... TUFTS CAMPUS MINISTRIES PRESENT SYMPOSIUM ON RAPE IN GODDARD CHAPEL ... EX COLL. 6 COLLOQ. “YOU AND YOUR HOUSE PLANTS . Feb. 6 to 12 PEN, PAINT, PRETZELS PRESENTS “BAREFOOT IN THE PARK AT THE ARENA THEATRE ... “GREETINGS “MEAN STREETS IN COHEN ... CAR¬ MICHAEL DISCO ... BASEBALL TEAM SPONSORS “MONTE CARLO NIGHT GAMBLING IN MACPHIE ... EVERYBODY GETS SICK ... POET-WRITER DANNY SIEGEL AT HILLEL ' S WEEKLY BRUNCH ... EX COLL. COLLOQ. BICENTENNIAL SERIES: “MIDWIFERY . . . TUFTS CHAPTER OF THE COLLEGE DEMOCRATS OF MASS. IN FREEFER ... MASS TALK CANDIDATES TALK NIGHT FOR TCU CANDIDATES ... AKIDO JAPANESE MARTIAL ARTS PER¬ FORMED IN JACKSON GYM ... SCI-FI FILM SERIES PRESENTS “ISLAND OF LOST SOULS ... DANIEL MOYNIHAN IN FANEUIL HALL, BOSTON ... TUFTS HUNGER ACTION PROJECT PRESENTS “3900 MILLION AND ONE ABOUT THE INDIAN CASTE SYSTEM (or any caste system). Feb. 13 to 19 TUFTS RUSSIAN HOUSE PRESENTS THE FILM “PIROSMANI , FIRST SHOW¬ ING OF THE U.S. . . . HUB ' S PUB THEATRE OPENS WITH A TUFTS STUDENT ' S INDEPENDENT PERFORMANCE, “THE APPLE TREE WITH THE WORKS OF MARK TWAIN, FRANK STOCKTON, AND JULES FEIFFER . . . TUFTS POLITICAL ACTION GROUP PICKETS STAR MARKET ... TUFTS BASKETBALL vs. CLARK ... FACULTY CONCERT SPONSORED BY TUFTS MUSIC DEPT. ... TCU ELECTIONS ... WOMEN ' S CENTER ' S DISCUSSION “ANGER AND FEAR ABOUT RAPE ... STUDENT RESOURCE CENTER TO BE OPENED ... SCUBA CLUB COURSE BEGINS ... EX COLL. BICENTENNIAL PROGRAM BEINGS WITH DR. P AULINE MAIER, PROF. OF HISTORY AT U. MASS. RAPPING “THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION: HOW COULD IT HAVE HAPPENED? ... TORN TICKET COFFEEHOUSE: AN EVENING WITH ROGERS HAMMERSTEIN IN MACPHIE .. . PYRAMID ZEN SOCIETY IN HARVARD . . . “LOVING RELATION¬ SHIPS WITH MEN AT THE WOMEN ' S CENTER. Feb. 20 to 26 TUFTS TRUSTEES OK NEW PRESIDENT WOOLF ... TUFTS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP SPONSORS “DEALING WITH PERSONAL SIN ... “BLACK STUDENT IN 1976: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS WITH GEORGE COX OF T.U. IN ALUMNAE LOUNGE ... GUATEMALA RELIEF FUND DISCO PARTY BENEFIT . . . MUSIC OF HENRY F. GILBERT, FREE CONCERT BY MUSIC DEPT. ... TUFTS BASKETBALL vs. NORWICH ... NATIONAL BLACK STUDENT CONFERENCE, “AT THE CROSSROADS OF SURVIVAL IN GODDARD CHAP¬ EL ... T.U. CONCERT OF BRAZILIAN JAZZ AND REGGAE IN COHEN . . . L.C.S. BLOODMOBILE ... EX. COLL. COLLOQ. BICENTENNIAL PRESENTS LINDA SCHATZ, RAPPING ABOUT “COLONIAL WORLD ... KARL SPRINGER, DI¬ RECTOR OF NAROPA INSTITUTE IN BALLOU ... EX. COLL COLLOQ. “PER¬ SONAL GROWTH WITHIN THE ART EXPERIENCE . . . TUFTS BASKETBALL vs. TRINITY . . . TUFTS YEARBOOK IS LATE . . . PATRICK MCCARTHY RAPS “WHY CONGRESS DOESN ' T WORK ... EX. COLL. COLLOQ. “SIGN LANGUAGE .. . SCI-FI FILM SERIES PRESENTS “DR. STRANGELOVE .. . CHICO ' S BONGO ROOM PRESENTS “GANGSTER NIGHT . May 23 SAY GOOD-BYE. IT ' S ALL OVER. 7 8 YEAR OF THE FESTER (Want-Ad Blues) The doors of East Hall closed with a sigh, and Norman Squid stood for a while on the asphalt, in a spot of peachy sunlight, hearing a far distant sound of a twanging electric guitar running up and down scales of vibrant rock; the music seems to cause the puffy white clouds to roll across the windy blue March sky, the campus to come alive thinking of Spring, and its people to venture forth like nervous groundhogs in the first warm sunlight. Norman s cratched his unshaven beard, disgruntled from his talk with Professor Braintree of the English Department. Under his arm was a short-story, a poem, and a 2-page something or other entitled The One-Hundred Inevitables. Braintree was a fat man with frosty hair and spectacles, whose smile looked as if he ' d be more at home in a barber shop. With a Ph.D. in Psychology besides, he ' s a potential threat if the conversation becomes too personal. He ' s been known to use his psychological scissors on personal writings of poor misguided fools like Norman who scribble and type up for Writing Class all the crazy mixed-up dreams they have after a good Saturday night. Your stories, Norman, show some fantastic imagination, but you ' re out in the clouds with it. Come back to earth. Write about real people with wild imaginations. Write about myself? My life on this boring campus? Why do you think I need fantasy? Try it. Let me see something every two weeks. The campus is boring because you, my friend, are boring. I ' ll write about writing, about being a writer, thought Norman, which is an awful hard thing to do walking down the steps to the Library when classes everywhere are letting out for lunch. Writing about being a writer is hard, too, if you don ' t know how to be one. Norman pondered this and walked it almost into the ground by the time he reached the steps to his house on Whiteplains Circle. On the front lawn Limping Crowe, an Indian friend who lived in Norman ' s house, was showing a few kids how to tie knots, and Bad-News Drizzle was reading Economics on the front porch, smoking a cigarette. Howdy-do said Bad-News. Looks like rain and more inflation. Bad news is no news to me. I ' m gonna go write a story about myself. And Norman bounded up the stairs to the third floor, to his peculiar little room next to the john. Dorothy ' s been here, the room ' s clean, the bed ' s made, and there ' s a fucking resume on the typewriter. A note says Norman — remember what your father said — no more money in june. You have to finish your resume. I ' ve typed your name and address, you do the rest. I also left a copy of the Help-Wanted Ads on your bed. See you ... And sure enough, it is typed, neatly Norman Q. Squid, 25 Whiteplains Circle, Slumberville, Ass. 02144 Norman felt inclined to add more biographical data, and he ended up adding paragraphs: 9 u— f —vi I came to this fraternity house looking for comfortable seclusion. Dorm life had made me quite hung-up about my personal bodily functions. I found a house of total strangers led by a strange fat man masquerading as a student and a fraternity president. His name was Leopold, and he ruled with an iron skillet and a constantly smoking cigar, until one day the house was mysteriously fire-bombed. Now it was quite a known thing that Leopold was some sort of magician. The smell of his room was peculiar, and it wasn ' t all coming from the dead frogs he kept in his closet for experiments. Rumor has it that he sat for a solid year masturbating at the tender feet of the Great Phaedrus, teacher of the Mystical Arts at the University of Transylvania. A respected and credible witness had testified that Leopold had made lightning appear in a closed room. When the fire-bombing occurred, Leopold was working in the restaurant where he was head chef. Leopold loved food. Living next to the john, I ' ve had the misfortune of smelling wafts of a mixed aroma of pizza, diarrhea and mouldy fish. The smell would follow him into his gloomy third floor room like Peter Lorre following Sydney Greenstreeet. Two days after the fire-bombing (which caught me asleep with my favorite person, and we made a break naked down the fire-escape), Leopold packed his bags into his ' 44 Nash and headed south, rumor has him in South America, yage country. As he slammed the door he yelled something about shrinking our heads. All of the fraternity rituals and initiation materials and frat robes went with him, packed away in a steamer trunk. Within moments after Leopold ' s departure, the house suddenly came alive. Doors opened, stereos blared, people shouted about the Curse of Leopold and the Death of the Fraternity. We became a close- knit group, all integrating our activities, doing them out in the open instead of in seclusion. There was Limping Crowe, sitting cross-legged in candle light reading ancient philosophical texts; Bad News reading Time Magazine in his easy chair; Bartholomew Martin, a guitar-pickin ' New Englander who ' d travelled far and wide searching for the legendary Blind Umo Mundah, reading William Blake while listening to Bob Dylan; Zukie Bundy, reading Zap Comix while listening to the Supremes; Nelson and Marchetti playing Parchese while Ichabod Osbourne and Leo Di Genero passed joints and beers, waiting their turn. We were known for a while as the Freak Frat until we allowed women in the house for the first time, and we changed the name to Opium Acres , and Spacy with her Dog Jarvis moved in along with Jude and Spotts the tops, and finally a girl nobody knew, a quiet, beautiful brown-haired co-ed named Janis, who in time became my lover... There was a knock on the door. Lover? Can I come in? It was Dorothy. No! You unplugged my stereo to plug in this wretched typewriter, you hid my dope and my Morrocan bongo drums, and you probably threw out my roaches! Oh Norman, you look so pathetic, are you tearing out your long lovely hair at the typewriter? She ' d come in anyway, retrieving Norman ' s dope from behind a copy of Moby Dick on the bookshelf, a book she knew he ' d never pull out. She held the meticulously packaged dope out to him, and then snatched it away. Dorothy, don ' t be difficult. Why do you need dope? She was angry now. It ' s this fucking resume, I can ' t write it . . . Depriving me of dope is like depriving a man dying of thirst in the desert a last mirage. I can ' t write this, I gotta write a story instead. Is that what you wrote so far? How can you answer a Want-Ad with that?! She pointed to the paragraphs he wrote after his affress, transcribed above. C ' mon, be serious. Start again, and this time think about ' Career Objective. ' Stupid bitch, Norman thought, doesn ' t know art when she sees it, majoring in Art History turned her into an intellectual elitist snob. However, Norman obediently fed the machine and started a new page, typing his name very slowly, typing his address, thinking about Zukie ' s favorite expression, I ' m in love for the 1,999th time, don ' t you know it ' s gonna last! Then he stopped typing, hooked up a three-way plug and plugged in the stereo, sunny California psychedelic music, and got to thinking about the house and its structure. It ' s built like the people who live in it. All single rooms, yet close together, and everyone gathers at the fireplace. And there ' s a fire-es cape for every room in case of real emergency. Norman would climb out on his fire-escape and watch the sunset over Slumberville. Norman in the last few years has lived in almost every room, including this one, and even one summer he lived on the front porch, with a dirty mattress and a sleeping bag. One morning waking at dawn after a long day of peyote and tapping the power of Pine Hill, rolling out of bed naked in the orange glow with a subterranean Jungian nightmare fading, and searching for his glasses, he walked jauntily naked down the street when the Slumberville Police found him and, after insulting him indecently, dragged his ass homeward and asked to search the room, which was, of course, the porch, and he had to wake somebody to vouch for him and nobody would, and then in the last moment (after giggling for a while) Janis came to his rescue. Janis was a frequent 3 AM visitor when Norman lived on the porch. Bizarre, thought Norman, but wild and satisfying it is to make love in the open air, our groans in tune to the alleycats, snug in my sleeping bags creaking the floor boards or sprawled in the moonlight on the front lawn or upright against the iron train switch or even (once) thumping the shingles on the porch roof. Janis loved the warm outdoors almost as much as she loved, yes really loved, Norman. Dumb I was, thought Norman, all summer loving someone who would change in winter. Janis and Norman would wake together, their long brown hair immersed in their warmth, their bodies smelling of peaceful sleepy cupidity, for a 10 AM summer-school course out on the Library hill. They ' d hold hands under the tree learning about Thoreau and Whitman and Melville, transcending ordinary critical discussions, finding a continuation of those chapters needed to be written about our own lives. 12 “Norman? Are you dreaming? Dorothy ' s perfumed breast pressed against his ear. Aren ' t you gonna type your age? Okay, put on another record, I can ' t function without music. And he typed, neatly, 21 and sat back in despair. Jefferson Airplane filled the air with a hopeful compromise. Dorothy went downstairs to make coffee, and Norman lit a curiously thin joint. He began to type Career Objective when he heard the song Volunteers and tore out the paper and stuffed the machine and began to write on his own. He wanted to add a chapter to the Fester P. Gazotsky legend he ' d been keeping for the last two years. Last year the campus boasted about the First Annual Fester P. Gazotsky Spring Festival, and most everybody wondered who Fester P. Gazotsky was, since he hadn ' t shown up for the festival in his honor. Norman, who ' d organized the whole thing as a joke on the campus and as a special project for Folklore Class - to create one ' s own folklore (He got an A for it), sheepishly denied that he ' d made the character up. I ' ve been receiving letters, he ' d claim, and add more chapters to the biography that he wanted to put in the Archives. (The truth is that Norman and Bartholomew had dreamed up the name while sitting for hours in the extraterrestrial energy of Mescalito perched high atop Pine Hill.) This chapter, titled with a bizarre philosophical statement by P. T. Barnum: There ' s a Sucker Born Every Minute! — tells of Fester introducing Barnum to laughing gas at the turn of the century. Fester P. Gazotsky had experimented with the gas for some time, comparing notes with his friend William James, diving into the unknown depths of the mind, finding a brilliant array of organisms evolving in patterns living off pure light in the depths where Reason sees only deep, incomprehendable water. Fester dived too deep - and P. T. Barnum seized the opportunity to sell trips to would-be mind divers — Laughing gas, the eighth wonder of the world! Laugh at the world, laught at yourselves! And laugh they did, and many laughed at their silly selves all the way to the funny farm. And they laughed at Fester, who, when demonstrating the gas, dived too deep and forgot to come back, and spectators told of how he wandered off into the crowds, showing all the symptoms of amnesia, and never to be seen again. And they laughed when Barnum, then a trustee of a small-time college, paid the college a lot of money to change its name to Fester P. Gazotsky ' s middle name: Pufts University. Norman was typing and Fester, thirty-five years old amnesiac Zen lunatic that he was, found himself pounding at the gates of American Literature — when Dorothy burst in giggling with steaming coffee. What ' s so funny about a cup of coffee? Norman asked, annoyed. Nothing, she said, straight-faced, and then started giggling again. Marchetti and Nelson were having a shaving cream fight, and Jarvis got covered! Jarvis yapped at Jude, and her cat Witney started eating it, and Spotts joined the fight and Limping Crowe hooked up a hose to the hot water and sprayed everybody, and the downstairs is all wet, and then they all decided to take a bath at once, and they all are cramped into the tub, and they ' re all having an orgy, I think. 13 Norman lit another joint and started typing again, but Dorothy had now stopped and was holding Norman ' s resume - C ' mon, finish it. You once told me you could do anything, she said, looking at him with cold eyes. If you could do anything, you could get this resume right and get yourself a job. Her look was defiant, victorius, not a look he knew in summertime, a definitely winter look. Norman looked away, remembering that time on the hill, when he told Janis he could do anything — Anything! I can write a novel. I ' m gonna write a novel! I ' m gonna publish a few short-stories, you ' ll see. And I can write poetry. I won ' t run away again. No more in the wilds of Utah, Montana . . . I ' m gonna write you a poem right now — and he did, one of his best, entitled Anything! I can do . . . Well, Norman? Dorothy had softened, but he hated it when she used that tone of voice. Is that part of your Fester book? Yes. That was all. Good, she resumed, Now you can do your resume. And she stiffly sat on the bed, taking out a textbook. Don ' t you wanna read it? asked Norman, pensively. Maybe later. I gotta finish this Art History. Norman turned away, feeling sorry for himself. There was a time when janis couldn ' t wait to read something he ' d written. I love this, she ' d say while she read, It ' s your own fantasy, yet it ' s somehow true, and it ' s funny, even ... And Norman would keep writing, all night long on dexedrine and then stumble into a morning class red-eyed and stubbled. All day he ' d rewrite the scenes, finding new dialogue at parties, in hallways, in class, and his writing talked to some people. It ' s a Chautauqua, something a traveling teacher of Indian myths would preach throughout the countryside, sometimes they were the only messengers to carry information to remote tribes, Limping Crowe would say. Norman! Dorothy ' s angry again. Okay, okay, meek lamb that he was, and he lined the print to the inescapable rule of the typewriter. CAREER OBJECTIVE he typed in block letters, underlined for dramatic effect. Then he stopped to think, and he freaked. For the first time in a long while he noticed his image in the mirror as he sat at the typewriter. What do I really want to do with my life? Who shall I be? What shall I write, ' freelance writer ' or ' bum in the park ' ? (Back to a time before Janis, before Fester, when questions had to be answered and you got off your ass and quit your factory job, running from city lights and confusion, running down highways and up moun¬ tains to camp like a hermit naked in the wilderness, living on peanut butter and visions of nirvana, and running away again, this time from solitude, and searching the highway for signs of the Lost Hobo of Rte. 30, last seen in Wyoming several years ago. Three cases reported a hitchhiker claiming to be the Savior and then vanishing before their eyes in their back seat, and all drivers now are wary of hitchhikers especially ragged freaky Christ-looking geeks. And you reached the city and found delight, lived on the street filled with love and wonder and no impulse or direction — just a lateral drift. 14 4 k Indulging in the scenery, digging up jobs when needed, floating ... A month later running away again, this time from obnoxious religions and abject poverty into the hills again, back across Amer ica to Slumberville, to a fall semester of meditation and a winter of hard luck and a spring with no sex life - and a dip in the freezing Atlantic, diving deep, feeling the suck and pull of the last long breath. I ' m gonna skip ' Career Objective ' for a while, and go on to ' Educa¬ tion, ' said Norman to Dorothy, who nodded her approval and smiled, looking a bit like Janis. Now I create the impressive facade, thought Norman, as he typed: Pufts University, Mudfill, Ass. B.A. in English, June 1976. Now what? Five courses in Creative Writing? (What ' s your specialty, asked the prospec¬ tive employer. Writing what comes to my head, answered the prospec¬ tive employee, smiling. Sorry, you aren ' t disciplined. We need people who have a definite idea as to what you want. We don ' t need artists, there are plenty around, roaming the streets.) Professor Braintree, of the English Department, once said to Norman, You can be whatever you like. Norman thought he meant in manners of dress and peculiarity of sex. You must, however, bring an eagerness to your education. If you nurse your knowledge, it will grow, grow ten¬ thousandfold! Norman agreed. He had brought with him to college a light-weight limited teen-age confusion, and he going to graduate with a beautiful branching tree rooted in that confusion. Norman remembered a conversation over pin-ball last week with Bad-News Drizzle. You have to coax the ball with your flippers, he cautioned Norman, and Norman thought of college education in that perspective: I had five courses, five important courses in the last four years, and they were just like the pin-balls in the last game. The first ball was a course in Philosophy. I was new to the machine, saw how flimsy the rules were, found out where the most points will be scored, and I watched the lights glow. I was fascinated. Then the ball hit a snag I didn ' t know about. The ball dropped straight down to my flippers, and I let it slip. Ha! Y ' mean when it was your turn to explain your theory to the class, you blew it! Bad-News blew smoke rings. Yep, mumbled Norman, mortified. The next ball I took careful aim. Psychology. Hit the slot for the mind! And the ball plunked around for a while, not scoring anything worth my quarter, the lights and blinkers began to bore me. I saw an easy shot, muffed it, thought bad about it, and instantly the ball was drawn to that magnetic snag and the ball, again, was lost. But I realized, this time, that a slight push to the machine would change the ball ' s course after hitting the snag. Bad-News took a long pull from his cigarette, unimpressed. 16 17 My third ball I decided not to aim, decided instead to be spon¬ taneous. It steared itself into a Seminar on Kerouac. A beautiful ball. Responding delicately, racking up the brownie-points, then it began to fall, and my flippers masterfully saved shot after shot, seemingly to learn a new discipline: the flippers would naturally flip each other in succession spontaneously, without a calculated destination. It was my greatest ball. I thought I was on the verge of a free game. After a brilliant array of pin-ball fantasy, and a recognition of my unique pin¬ ball skill, (and after a few quick pushes for a save from the snag,) I almost cheerfully let the ball take its course down a lost slot that multiplied my score three times. I was very close. My fourth ball was a flash in the pan. Creative Writing, a superb experiment in drawing attention to my game. I gathered an audience, screaming and shouting, coaxing the ball and so forth, persuading the ball to forget about the snag, exhibiting fast flipper action, putting on a fine dramatic performance in Pin Minor for the crowds. Then, at the last minute, to the ooh ' s and aahh ' s of the crowd, I dropped my fourth ball, inches away from a free game. Confident, I logically assumed my last ball would have to be the one to break through. A theory lay like a stagnant pool in my mind, a theory that needed a spark to create life. So I took careful aim, and I shot the ball into the groove of a course in Logic. I had to find the flaw in this machine, exploit it. The problem did not stem from my inability to play; however, the flaw was there, hidden within the basic structure of the game. The snag. I flipped furiously, almost nearing the mark, when I discovered and pursued the flaw. I needed the points, and I needed the snag, but I had to save the ball afterwards. I knew I was risking suicide. The Drama of it all overwhelmed me, and I tried for the snag, and prepared to give it the push. Ding ding ding Free Game! and I pushed and TILT!! And there I was, devastated, with my free game tilted out of the machine, and no more quarters. Good story, mused Drizzle. But what was the snag? Norman arched his eyebrows and said, The Question Why. The very next day Norman had gone to talk to another English professor, one who was being denied tenure because he had been too busy being a good teacher to do any research or publish a novel. One thing you have to remember, he told Norman confidentially, and that is how to con your professor. Most of them are set in their views because they ' ve done so much research in a certain field. They don ' t want to see new things, just what is already standard knowledge and reasonable opinions, and whether you understand them. And you can find this information and polish it up, regurgitate, only you could rephrase it better. You can show him a portrait of himself instead of just holding up a mirror. Try it and you ' ll see. Norman pondered these things as he typed his college information. For an hour he played mental solitaire with an uneven deck, all unimpressive college courses, all unimpressive grades. Nothing to show for years of anguish. 18 Dorothy had woken up. She was beautiful in her sleep-smelling clothes. No, Norman, she yawned, looking goofy-beautiful, pushing aside Norman ' s impressive bulge. Not until you finish your resume. There was a time when you would stop the world for a ball, mused Norman, smiling at recurring visions of Janis running through fields. She did not answer. He returned to his typewriter and typed ACTIVITIES, and sat back in thoughtful wisps of smoke. Activities like playing the harmonica on the quad on wintry after¬ noons? Like doing LSD on the Library hill discussing the Diamond Sutra? Like running for student class president with a campaign entirely consisting of bathroom graffiti? Remember the dream about the campus party, about a guy who comes to a frat party and sits in a corner all night while strippers dance and a band plays and everyone has a good time, except him, and at the end of the party he goes home and hangs himself. Norman, psyched out to write this story, asked Zukie and Leo Di Genero and others in and out of his room to describe parties on campus, and recorded the two hour symposium and wrote its transcript, of which an exerpt follows: Norman: Zukie: Leo: Zukie: Norman: Zukie: Nelson: Bartholomew Leo: Janis: Nelson: Spacy: Nelson: Norman: Zukie: Janis: Norman: Zukie: This story ' s gotta be fluid, I gotta use real characters, like you guys. How would you act when you ' re partying? First of all, I wouldn ' t show up until 10:30. He ' d be fashionably late! And I ' d bring my own pot, cause everybody ' s cheap at Pufts. And I ' d probably bring my own booze, I hate the guilt-trip of drinkin ' up somebody else ' s. Yeh, but what about the people you meet? All different, man. Some nice, some unfriendly bastards, some wild, some indifferent, some downright pathetic, depressing, even! OOhh! How poetic! :Some geeks! Some get drunk, some smoke pot, some eat out their assholes! Some just lookin ' to jerk off their desire for a mother. And a lotta Princesses from Scarsdale! Hey, Nels - You ' re from Scarsdale! I know! And I ' m ... I ' m the exception that proves the rule! Wait a minute. Don ' t we have fun at parties? YEH, Man! It ' s the dance of life! We need more parties. We ' re just a bunch a wild orangutans lost in the jungle. And sex — I knew this guy who wanted to do a survey about promiscuity on campus, y ' know, how many women would say yes to a guy without hesitating. He walked around, ask ing women if they wanted to fuck. He got four no ' s, two maybe ' s but not right now, and one positively yes! and he stopped his survey and a year later they were married! Shit! He shoulda asked me. What about parties? Aren ' t we — Yeh! Let ' s have one! Break out the wine! Got any papers? 20 ACTIVITIES stared back at Norman like an empty beer can, and he noticed that during his recollections he ' d mysteriously typed a sentence on his resume next to ACTIVITES: Life is just a game, you fly your paper plane, there is no end. Dorothy read it over his shoulder. What ' s it mean? Did I do it? Of course you did it. What ' s it mean? It means I don ' t know anything worth writing for this resume. What about the magazine you started on campus? Y ' mean Pigeon-Ink? That sloppy thing? That ' s ridiculous. I tried to get on the staff of the Sightseer but they only wanted typists. I submitted countless poems and stories to the Pufts Lit Magazine but I heard nothing and I never got the copies back. Shit, I didn ' t do anything here. You organized Fester Enterprises, cooed Dorothy, stroking his hair. Yeh, a group of maniacs putting together a gigantic party. An affair that lasted all day and all night and we gave away eleven kegs of beer and fell into debt. And the campus cops closed it down, people complaining about drunken students pissing on nearby cars — Shhh! cooed Dorothy. Now you ' re complaining, and that ' s not right. But what shall I write for ' ACTIVITIES ' ? Don ' t write anything. Come and sit down on the bed. A century of passionate flowers rained on their upturned faces, an hour of bliss floated slowly by. Janis you are everywhere Janis you are everything Janis . . . I love it when you call me Janis, whispered Dorothy, her eyes moaning. You are Janis. But you are also Dorothy. I don ' t understand. Norman yawned, snuggled close to her, feeling the warmth of her eternal flesh. I ' m me. Your mind plays these games. But I feel it, replied Norman, muffled voice coming out of soft flesh. To you I ' m Janis when I ' m running wild and free, and I ' m Dorothy when I wanna stay at home, in my own room. To me, they ' re just a variety of attitudes in my life. But before you were free, loving, and now you ' re a drag, pushing — You need pushing. You cannot wallow in my love and feel sorry for yourself. You gotta stand up and do something. I push because . .. because I love you. Norman was perplexed. He couldn ' t respond. He couldn ' t say I love you, because he meant it too deeply. Words would shake him up, distort the image, turn real love into Hollywood romance. Real love cannot be uttered, Norman had no words. Someone actually loves me, thought Norman in a trance, someone actually tries to help me and I only get mad and she still tries, she actually digs my being! 22 And for a time without end they snuggled together, Dorothy and Norman united and living in tune to his fantasy, Janis. Leo Di Genero burst in with a Leo ' s here, where ' s the beer, every¬ body stand and cheer! Tell me, is the coast clear? Is the Law drawing near? Your marijuana crops failed this year, you cannot even shed a tear? And this is your loved one you hold so dear? Dorothy and Norman quickly put on clothes while Leo caressed his pencil-thin mustache and Van Dyke beard. Sorry to rush you people, but I came to ask King Fester here, said Leo, pointing to Norman, what ' s happening on this lazy campus tonight? Everybody went into Beantown to watch the riots, Dorothy remark¬ ed, sounding more like Janis every minute. And you two stayed home to make your own riot! Leo shouted, gesticulating wildly to some unkown example across the room, wearing that Pachuco grin, using his Radio YUFO announcer ' s voice, courtesy of the Genero School of Broadcasting. He was well known for his snazzy sport coat and brown derby, a laugh like a hyena and the subtle wit of a horny necromaniac undertaker. Leo, watcha been doin ' since you graduate? Well, Norm, I ' ll tell ya, he drawled. I been shoveling into people ' s ears that donkey shit those guys at WXPE call music. It ' s been a lesson how bad it is to work for lousy pay and mediocre people. But I heard you on YUFO last night. Yeh, once in a while I do my thing, Leo sneered, using his hands to pantomime someone who ' s jerking-off. Well, least you got a job. I ' m trying to live off my Fester fantasies, Norman said with a pout. Dorothy who became more like Janis touched his hand gently and began to give him her famous one-finger massage. Yeh, well, replied Leo, I ' d rather have a woman than a job. And he glared suspiciously at Dorothy turned Janis. Perhaps he hadn ' t seen the change, only a fleeting glimpse of what was, and now Janis. I don ' t believe you ' d be happy with just a woman, said Janis to Leo. It startled him, he didn ' t know what to say for a moment, and he turned his back to her and spoke only to Norman: Why the blues? What ' s the use, takin ' abuse? I don ' t know, man. It ' s this fucking resume. Splattered indecently across that page is my sweat and blood, my thoughts about life, my progress towards death. It ' s all there in black and white hieroglyphics. Hey, Norm, you got pretty far, but you left out ' CAREER OBJEC¬ TIVE. ' Yeh, I ' m saving that for last, the final showdown. An ' all you got left is ' WORK EXPERIENCE ' AND ' REFERENCES. ' Shit, that ' d be easy. I ' ll give you a hand. What jobs have you held? Norman got a record for the turntable, one about mystical rambling ex-slaves in Mississippi, from Bartholomew ' s collection. 24 Let ' s see ... last summer I was a cab driver for a month, I got robbed twice so I quit and went to Panama with Janis. And before that I worked for a restaurant washing dishes until I realized there were more cockroaches in that kitchen than humans, and I split for the West Coast. Before that I was a janitor, a truck packer, and — oh yes! A Nurf-Ball maker! 2500 + nurf-balls a day! A working-class hero is something to be! And tell me Norman — would you say you ' re from a middle-class background with grounded in middle-class values? I was born with my father ' s silver stethoscope in my mouth, and power-hungry brothers breathing down my neck. And what was it that led you into a life of crime? I replaced the stethoscope with a harmonica. I told my brothers to go to hell. Y ' know, I had that problem, too, when I was a kid. My father wanted me to be a used-car salesman like himself. I wanted to change my name and become a priest. We both mutually agreed on a college education. See what happened? Leo, your problem seems to stem from your ignorance of proper etiquette, your indecent sarcasm, your inane desire to be famous, your inability to get laid whenever you want, and your insatiable appetite for cheesecake. Norman Squid, with a name like yours you ' d clean up as a psy¬ chiatrist. Or even a novelist. Y ' mean if I can ' t beat ' em, join ' em? Wasn ' t the immortal Fester P. Gazotsky once a psychiatrist? Yes, before he discovered laughing gas in Vienna. Also a novelist. He wrote accounts of patients like Nietzsche, Freud, all when they were old, and Adolph Hitler even. An elaborate fantasia, I must admit, Norman. Have you added any new chapters to the Fester Bible? Yes! Norman beamed. A new one, I haven ' t finished it yet, called Take a Fantasy to Lunch! and it ' s about lunch last week in Jay ' s Deli — Enough! screamed Dorothy. Why don ' t you write a real story? Huh? Norman blinked hard. Fester P. Gazotsky ' s not real! I think I better leave ' said Leo nervously. Wait! yelled Norman, let me ask you something, Leo. Let ' s say you ' re a student with a good idea, a brilliant one, yet you couldn ' t find a course in which you could express it. What would you do? Teach my own course, said Leo, defiantly. Ahh, yes. And if you didn ' t like the Literary Magazine? Start my own. And if you couldn ' t stand paying money to go to a lousy meat- market Stonewall Gym party, to hear greasy ear-splitting Dirk and the Driven Insane destroy their musical instruments, gawking at fresh-out- of-puberty boys and girls caught in the grip of social paranoia? 26 I ' d start a Festerval ' Leo chuckled, catching the drift of the conver¬ sation. And if you nearly died of claustrophobia getting on the Green Line every morning and evening so ' s you could make a few lousy bucks? I ' d quit working and deal dope. Leo grabbed his hat and coat. And if you thought, added Norman, catching Leo at the front door, You were the only one in the entire world who knew too much, ' but who could say too little, make up too few excuses for living in such a lonely, terrifying insane world, what would you do? I ' d just start my own world. A deeper, more intriguing one. Later! And tipping his derby he hurried out of Norman ' s room. Norman sighed. What now? You better stop talking and start doing what you should be doing, said Dorothy, who ' d changed back, unseen. ' CAREER OBJECTIVE ' . You have to finish it. And you can finish it without me! And she slammed the door so hard it shook the whole house, leaving a pale Norman shivering on his bed, alone. A blistery cold weekend in March, a pilgrimmage to a secluded beach on Cape Cod, a group of beer-drinking frat types surrounding a campfire, sometimes adding wood, sometimes pissing on the blaze. Downwind Limping Crowe stared intensely at the group, saying to Bartholomew, Why? Why a fire in broad daylight? Senseless idiots, agreed Bartholomew, chewing on a stalk. Let ' s move farther down, I don ' t want a constant reminder of the life we escaped from. Ambling barefoot in the cold moist sand, Limping Crowe and Bartholomew followed the tracks left by the ice-cream man who ' d long been there and had gone. Leo Di Genero was arranging joints in the sand to look like a fortress, Bad-News was experimenting with the weather, Zukie wandered off in the dunes, and Norman appeared to be meditating, pondering the wild unleashed fury of each wave . . . Hey, Norman ' s out cold! Zukie had wandered back to find Norman sitting in sand moist with his own urine, eyes closed but focused on the ocean. Unmoved and unmoving, each friend taking a turn to give Norman ' s lifeless body a poke. He looks like Blind Umo Mundah! yelled Bartholomew, plucking light as a feather blues riffs from his weather-beaten guitar. Is he on acid? asked Leo, looking up and down the beach for signs of the Law. Nooo! He ' s naturally stoned! said Limping Crowe. I think he went on a cosmic search for Fester, said Bad-News. Or maybe the ice-cream man, said Zukie, sadly. All fell silent for a while, feeling a sense of guilt for leaving Norman all alone on the sand, the shiftless sands that can be too hot or too cold to sit still on.them. And they sat for a long time, listening to the roars from the drunken crowd around the bend, trying to forget they exist, and watching the ever changing tide. 28 For a long time Norman kept an eye on them, the statues that look real, made only of wax. Not even breathing, Norman crept on all fours through the soft sand to the first statue. Zukie, frozen in time with mouth agape and eyes aflame, trapped in his own fantasy of an early sixties Beach Boy romance, horny without even knowing why, without even seeing that his hard-on is made of wax. Leo, lodged in his world that remembers with a passion Lenny Bruce, an austere, subtle smile that masks his lonely frustration and sexual perversion, unable to look at himself and laugh, staring tightlipped with waxen eyes at the fathomless ocean of sky. Limping Crowe, proud of Indian culture that is a museum of wax, aware of the forces which bind him, unaware of those that free, engaging headstrong and fierce the complexities of philosophy, all structures in wax, yet smiling a waxen smile. Bad-News, waxed in irrelevancy, trying to understand weather with pin-ball logic. Bartholo¬ mew ' s waxed eyes searching the horizon for a sign, strumming drops of wax in the void, primordial impulses that look without for what ' s within. Norman left the wax people, wandering south into the past, where a six-year old learned of conch shells and sandcrabs and the pull of the ocean .. . and innocently he followed the tracks of the ice-cream man, not knowing there wasn ' t an ice-cream man, and suddenly he bumps into a giant mirror, reflecting an endless composition of earth and sky and water. And Norman saw himself. In a daze he stumbled back, years later reaching his wax friends. He noticed they ' d slightly changed, their features were taut, their faces tense in the wind. Some had clenched fists, and Bartholomew seemed to be in pain, strumming a hard-to finger chord, an irrational note. Norman headed north, into the future, where the beach was lined all the way with a breakwater and a cyclone fence with barbed wire at the top, starting where the f rat boys were living it up in wax. At high tide Norman could be trapped. Norman plodded through the late-morning mist, following the slowly eroding footsteps of the ice-cream man, when he came upon what appeared to be a real live girl, beautiful, running (or is it a mirage? Can she really be at this speed?) and hair blowing in the wind, and she ran away from him, and he pursued and finally, as she stumbled, he touched her ... she ' s real! And, for a while, they gaze into each other ' s eyes, and suddenly she slips away again and running off, giggling, disappearing around the bend ... When Norman finally caught her again, huffing and puffing, it was too late. Her cold, waxen face upturned with a look of serenity, admiring the beauty of the sun at its zenith. Her look was far-reaching, her life unreachable. There, up ahead, Norman saw the ice-cream man, handing a choco¬ late cone to a small boy, laughing and jiggling his coins, smiling at all the little kids who come far and wide to hear his jingle, and giving them all ice-cream and telling them stories about the ocean and the lands far and wide, and Norman, running to meet him for the first time, reaching him, holding out his hand — and finding wax. 31 Bewildered, determined to go all the way and discover the end, Norman plodded onward, through mirages of life and statues of wax, until he found the other mirror, reflecting endless beach and sky, and Norman saw himself, and that there is no difference, birth or death, north or south is only a joke, just endless beach of wild ocean and fence, wild furious waves beckoning and fence mocking any fear, any attempt to escape. And Norman ran crazy down the beach towards his friends in wax, as the high tide began to creep upon us all. And Norman stripped naked and ran for all eternity into the freezing March Atlantic. And Norman dived deep, looking for a breakthrough, wanting to flow to the ends of the void, to search out the meaning of the last breath .. . Hey! Where ' s Norman?! shouted Zukie. I saw him a second ago His clothes — Look! Norman, completed naked save for a look of tremendous fright, running like a full-blown idiot, arms flaling, screaming something about help, or wax . . . and collapsing finally on the sand dune. An hour later he ' d warmed up in the sun with his clothes on, and his head cleared. He looked like he ' d just come back from the dead. Nobody said anything, too afraid to ask, and Norman was silent for a long time. A year later, Norman is walking uphill in a blue afternoon sunshine, music for the day is a mellow Frank Zappa polyrythmn, Twenty Small Cigars . In the crock of his arm was a forty-five page manuscript. And neatly, on the cover, he ' d typed resume. His name and address were neatly typed underneath. CAREER OBJECTIVE started on page one and ended thirty pages later. He was going to show it to his advisor and ask him for a recommendation. Then he was going to place his 45 page resume on file at the Career Guidance Office. Can you, uh, at least sum up what field you are primarily interested in? Professor Braintree was visibly annoyed. Reading this idiot ' s book isn ' t in the contract for his job. I ' m interested in becoming famous for my artistic talent, and for writing myself to death. Norman smiled as Professor Braintree pulled out the standard forms and filled them out quickly, mentioning Nor¬ man ' s creativity twice and his imagination three times. Norman wandered out on this funky-blue jazz colored sunshine, and the campus was alive and well, bristling with new-born activity, and sitting on the steps of burnt-out Barnum Hall is an old man in a white uniform, smiling like the ice-cream man, not made of wax. Is he? Is he Fester P. Gazotsky at last!? — No, he ' s the reconstruction foreman. Fester vanished, leaving no trace. Even the bathroom graffiti was erased. And Norman set out looking for Janis. — Tony Bove A76 32 There once was a poet who lived in West Hall Who used to take baths in alcohol And wrote his poems on the shithouse wall, And cursing in his southern drawl Scribbled till the day he fell in the s tall. And died a drunkard in spite of us all. 34 TUFTS GRADUATION I looked up to this hill from city streets swarming with people whose faces were cold without love, without any hope of learning, and resolved to climb to its top. Arriving, I found a flame like that of a god ' s hidden deep in the temple away from people worshipping outside. The walls of the temple were thick, almost impenetrable, as if the flame would die without such walls which love will build when it fears the motives of others, or fear alone, jealously guarding a treasure. I searched the faces of those in the temple for some consciousness of the ritual, the passing of the flame to the chosen ones, and was jarred by the acceptance in some people ' s eye s of their own worthiness, complacent as the resigned faces of those who were kept outside. Leaving now, having paid my tribute, my homage, to the keepers of the light, I take my own flame with me. Hoping someday, it will spark words which will singe the pages of books kept locked in glass bookcases, and brand on the walls: Thou shalt not withhold knowledge For thine own profit. — jeanne Kelley, J76 35 1 «M ibb|! 40 42 ' r • m y. j( 1 i j ' . ®£§®§; ilmu f dim lr k. L ' • . NN NSS • ■ ? ' . 1 ' ■ ■ niH fe ' v jnp wf ' M $ SB v$h --;• . 2 . •• : j ■■:■ v.; M ' • :-■ -■• ' ■ ! 1 k • .. Air of December morning, cut by Buzzing saws of chain. Ano ther Elm tree Down the Drain. - H.P. 49 2 ' syi• ■ Vla Jk T Jfck- | | ry V T yHfTi %.! :, bSj il jf I lfl f -f f s 1 3®Dt jBr . | i |“. vjSfflj J P y .„ - 1 [j y y 1 iv 1 r 1 v 1 s 1 ' 1 ji ■ V• W 1 ■ Ai V 1 H p ' ' f rimrt ' - 1 : S _ __ aagjl -tM r 1 TUFTS UNIVERSITY MIDFORD MASSACHUSETTS 02155 VaitdwrttMt ■ 54 - -C is Nt, « 4 ' - v ‘ ’£ V ' ■ . ' « ■ ' • ■. , , x - ?V; ►%. • • stA • 3 e.r ; v ' •VV -’ ” 4k ' Sw-J ■ £ V • 58 59 POM + - • t 60 63 The jaws of fate are closing around me! 66 ■i The cap twists on again off in frustrated attempt to dream away this pen, this clock, this arrogant blue-book! - t.b. r- jp ■« jj T X. v -uiT. 73 ft ;My a . TE jffl j(JW wWK ftVpj m% i hp - v f nR 1 n y . ■ ' ■ ' 1 {nUtUi - H; ’ , m,. Ji jm Kwh : w- iMifflB WSI ‘ ' HL;. _fg Fiti - P fTMif111 76 77 78 79 vn%r n 81 82 TMC More than anything, the Tufts Mountain Club means weekends at the lodge in Woodstock, New Hampshire. The 15 room lodge used to be a tourist trap, Grampa ' s Farm — now, converted, it ' s ours. People go up every weekend. Communal cooking . .. beef stew of chicken steaming out of pots .. . the serving line . . . scrunching together on benches to eat . . . sitting around the potbellied stove with friends, a guitar or two and maybe a copy of OFF BELAY, A climbers magazine ... a rocking chair on a wooden floor .. . beer. .. . and then creaking upstairs (as quietly as possible in oversized hiking boots) to scrounge around for an extra foam pad to sleep on . . . triple-decker wooden bunks ... freezing ... dammit, somebody in this room snores .. . groping through the dark with a sleeping bag in hand (oops — sorry I stepped on your — where ' s the flashlight). Oh, God, seven o ' clock in the morning NO don ' t wake me — go away . .. French toast ... warmth floating up from downstairs . . . voices and laughter . .. okay, okay, I ' ll get up ... newspaper and catalogues ... orange juice .. . maybe a brief stop at Merrill ' s General Store and then getting into groups for the day. Some weekends are special — for cross country skiing of longer outings. In late January, there ' s an annual Thanksgiving weekend, when lots of old regulars and newer members shake a tail feather and party, kid around, and polish off 75 pounds of turkey in a day and a half. Every spring and fall, a work weekend is set aside, when people earn their room and board at the lodge by puttying and puttering, gardening, chopping wood, painting, and plumbing to keep the house and barn in good repair. Also, there are trips each year to other states for canoeing, speluning, sledding in contests with trays, or doing anything else that looks interesting. The point is to try things to see if you can do them, to say you climbed that mountain or got across that stream. Waddle around on snowshoes; scale the ice with metal crampons; play ball games while on skis. It ' s impossible to surprise TMC-ers, ever. They ' ve seen streakers, put bricks in each others backpacks for a joke, and had fights with water pistols. Even the monthly meetings are fun — all apple cider and doughnuts and tricks from the club magician. Everyone and everything is accepted as is — whether you ' re male or female or whether your hair is combed is totally irrelevant. For its 250 or so members, the Mountain Club means natural people in natural settings — so you always go home feeling good. 83 84 Don ' t you remember Elsie S.? She had an office, but she used to work out of her house, coordinating our volunteer service jobs. Elsie who? LCS, the Leonard Carmichael Society. The vampires come twice a year to suck your blood (for the Red Cross, that is) and needle you to give at the office. That ' s in Curtis. In a lighter vein, a special April Saturday is reserved for the annual destruction of the quad (just kidding). About 2,000 community kids trampling back and forth, dropping hot dogs and soda all over the place — what a mess! And, inevitably, it rains the day before. But future scientists trade in ferrous wheels for Ferris wheels; and mathematicians, calculator buttons for Kids ' Day buttons. Thousands of feet kicking, running, and skipping, and the dust going up in swirling clouds .. . everything coated with dust . .. happy cotton-candied faces and sticky-handed grins ... clowns circulating ... group leaders being led by their groups .. . children in droves . . . walking around and around . .. kids jumping up on the hay wagon . . . balloons . . . bustle and excitement . .. paintings done on and by kids ... a little boy too scared to climb past the first floor of Dana, swinging on the rope ... chaos, . .. lit-up expressions .. . There are also dozens of regular on-going programs that meet every week or so, using scheduled cars and facilities. Big Sisters and Big Brothers . .. rusty doors in the projects ... old drunkards groping and leering in the pale sunlight ... a ghetto six-year-old ' s first sight of a wide open space ... racing through the grass .. . too many uncles to count ... no daddy seen for a year . .. just a child, and you ... Dirty faces . .. piggy back rides . .. griffiti on grimy brick . .. basketball with some neighborhood boys, sweating it out in the gym ... broken fences ... tutors ... a failing third grader smiles, finally understanding why three times five isn ' t eight .. . Hugs after a vacation absence ... popcorn in the activities center .. . singing around the piano . .. playing cards with prison inmates .. . drinking coffee ... the wrinkled intensity of an elderly person Out of the ivory tower (and the library) . . . down the earth . .. the real world ... a ground-level perspective . .. touched and touching ... one of the best experiences I ' ve had at Tufts ... human and humane ... Once a semester, the organizational meetings, with huge painted signs like Fernald (School for the Retarded) and Perkins (School for the Blind), South Boston (Big Brother Big Sister and tutoring) and Metropolitan State (Hospital) set up as if on a boardwalk — a smovgasbovd of needs . .. Ask questions and pick one or two. Like a squealing puppy who plunges into a lake on all fours and shakes and shivers in the physical ecstasy of experiencing totality, depth, and unity — that ' s what getting involved is like, only on a mental kind of gut level. It ' s a mutual emotional commitment with another human being. 85 IHt °L A C mm r ' : m JA m $ 04 ARENA By M.T.S. 88 And down there, behind the chemistry building, is the Tufts Arena Theatre. They do a lot of student productions there; there are major productions directed by faculty members, and what they call Cup and Saucers are done in the afternoon and there is a critique with the director and cast afterwards. The productions down there are supposed to be excellent, from what I hear. This next building is Jackson Gym. When we were freshmen, everybody and his brother was lined up to try out for productions. Now we have to scrounge for a cast of three. Everyone is off studying for their MCAT and LSAT ' s. They ' re too busy learning how to make money to pay any attention to the arts. Hell! We can ' t get credit for Torn Ticket of any other outside work. They ' re just trying to keep a corner on the market, keep their jobs safe. What can they teach us that we can ' t learn in a theatre? I want to do plays! Find the dramatic action and base your production on that. You can ' t jump to the finished product. Go back and read the script again. What is the play about? Why was it written? What do the characters do to each other? Stage what ' s in the script. Read it again and again and again. Find verbs to describe what is happening each step of the way. What are the polar attitudes? What are the objectives? The playwright could have made anything happen; why this? GO BACK AND READ THE SCRIPT. You say the play is stylized. What the hell does that mean? The play is about truth? I ' d like to see you act out truth! How do you stage it? You can stage truthfully, but you can ' t stage truth, and if you ' re going to stage truthfully, you have to know your material inside-out. Go read the script again. The Greeks looked at the moment and drew conclusions for eternity. Medieval man looked at eternity and drew conclusions for the moment. Theatre history works in cycles; everything that is new now has been done before. You have to know where you ' re coming from before you can see where you ' re going. How has it been done in the past? Why do it now? That damn bubble collapsed again. When is the school going to get rid of those things and give us a proper place to work? They ' re either too hot or too cold, and when you finally get the temperature right, the heater runs out of fuel and it drops to fifty below in there. Then they put in some fuel and the next day the thing gets destroyed in a storm. And for this I pay six grand a year? Common sense would tell them that those bubbles wouldn ' t work in this kind of climate. Where else would I rather have gone? Friends of mine are studying elsewhere and aren ' t learning more than I am. People can be taught all the facts there are to know about theatre, but it doesn ' t make them good at it. What matters is learning how to think about theatre. Technical know-how is easy to come by, understanding isn ' t. What are you doing next year? I don ' t know. I want to try to work for a while, if I can find a theatre that will hire me. I ' m, tired of school; college kids and department politics. They say they ' re teaching us, but I don ' t know ... Maybe I ' ll end up going to grad school and getting a masters. That ' s all they prepare you for anyway. I suppose in the end, if you ' re going to make it, you have to do it on your own steam. 89 jSk PWfPi 90 The deck of the S.S. America, the streets of New York, a view of Ancient Rome, the offices of the World Wide Wicket Com¬ pany, the Fandango Ballroom, and the Kit Kat Club are just some of the scenes transformed onto the Cohen Auditorium stage by the miracles of Torn Ticket magic. Since its inception in 1971, Torn Ticket has brought to the Cohen stage: Man of La Macha, Guys and Dolls, Cabaret, Forum, Company, Follies, How to Succeed in Business, Anything Goes, and Sweet Charity. Since 1971, Torn Ticket has been bringing musical theater to the Tufts campus and has provided an outlet for those with musical theater in their blood. Whether one ' s abilities lay in acting, directing, designing, production work or technical skills, a place could always be found for them in the Torn Ticket organi¬ zation. Only hard and dedicated workers could put together a full-scale musical production such as has been seen on the Cohen stage. Weeks of long, hard rehearsals listening to the director and the choreographer yell are all part of theater life. This, put together with weeks of work by the production staff to assemble a playbill, make posters, and make house and ticket ar¬ rangements, helps to make a production look and feel as profes¬ sional as a Broadway show. Finally, a show would still be nothing without the technical staff that spends many all-nighters making the Cohen stage not look like the Cohen stage. Setting up this fantasy world requires people knowledgable in lighting and sound design, set design, carpentry, electrical work, scenic painting, costume design and construction, and many other skills. On tech weekend before the show, even the actors and production people chip in to help the technical staff realize their design. When it comes to Torn Ticket, nothing is considered impossible; some things just take an extra all-nighter. Torn Ticket, not satisfied with transformations of merely the Cohen stage, has worked wonders in MacPhie Hall, too. Jacques Brel, Oliver, The Miser, Rodgers and Hammerstein ' s review and several coffeehouses in MacPhie have brought musical theater into a new dimension. Torn Ticket in an effort to keep musical theater alive on campus has tried attacks from all angles, and, in the futre, will continue with many innovative ideas to keep the Cohen stage alive. 91 MB! fA PRHI5 AS TIC .MUSIC PI ODUCTIUX 257 xu. bucib sthcct BRIGHT OX . ' USS. 95 1 L W w r i r , v [w ' ' V 1 | L Jf? , ,. 100 102 105 106 107 109 110 REFLECTIONS FROM BARNUM Commencement always brings with it a sense of renewal, coming as it does on the heels of spring with its re-awakening of the natural world in a rising crescendo of buds, blossoms and new green leaves wherever one looks on the campus. For departing seniors, it signifies both the end of an academic period which seems to have gone all too fast, and the beginning of a different life. For we faculty, it also signifies the beginning of yet a new cycle, coming on the heels of visits by prospective students, another ending round of finals, and a time without classes to get ready for that new group sure to be here in the fall. Institutions have a way of outlasting individuals, even though it is the individuals within it that direct that institution at any one interval in time. We no longer have an elephant to epitomize the Tufts spirit to visitor, student, and alumnus alike; he was lost in that fire of April 14, 1975. Much of Barnum Museum, as well as the life work of two members of the Biology Departm ent, were destroyed at the same time. Fortunately, no-one was hurt. Happily, the educations of our undergraduates, which several of us consider to be Tuft ' s most valuable asset, were not seriously damaged. However, all that is worth saving of the imposing structure erected in 1888 by P. T. Barnum, Jumbo ' s owner, is the facade, with its letters, BARNUM FECIT MDCCCLXXXVIII . This inscription has been viewed most curiously by parents and prospective stu¬ dents, rather than Biology seniors who daily walked in and out of the building for the past 4 years. Well, the wings have now been redone in excellent fashion, and classes returned to them early in the spring semester. The new Barnum, though its center section is not yet complete, will continue to be the place of excitement in biological knowledge that the old one was to generations of students. And that, after all, is the way it should be. Buildings do not educate; people using them do. Those of us priviledged to work with young people find we too are being continually educated, even while we try to do our job of producing rational and exceptional human beings out of conventional boys and girls. We never really know the measure of how well we have succeeded, because the minds we do succeed in exciting never stop inquiring, never stop learning, and are generally too busy helping others to come back to see us in any sort of regular pattern. Proper education challenges the individual to live up to his or her in¬ tellectual capacity; the real measure of individual success is found in the degree of individual satisfaction attained. Life lived cannot be relived, nor can the future be anticipated. Our goal in teaching biology in Barnum has been to outfit our students to the best of our ability in as many ways as possible, to equip them to solve problems which today have most likely not even been framed. Preservation of the biosphere ' s life-support systems will be foremost among these. A quality environment will not exist in a crowded world unless there are aware, educated, ever-vigilant, articulate, dedicated citizens willing to work for it. So to each Senior, Bon Voyage, good luck and best wishes as you get on with your next adventure in our marvelous universe. Norton H. Nickerson Department of Biology ill 112 A DEBT What ' s the main role of teachers? They ' re supposed to collect facts, organize them coherently, and present them to students. Or, if you prefer grandiose language, they are supposed to accumulate and pass along mankind ' s often fumbling steps through history. But what else? Among other things, they should spot talent and help that young man or woman along the way. This is often very easy. It takes little skill to notice the proverbial straight -A student — the outgoing types who write exceptional exams and who have it all together. There are, however, a large number of sleepers who can be easily bypassed unless someone takes note of them. Some of them are simply shy or modest or don ' t realize their own talents. Others have a flawed capability. For example, they work hard, have fine minds, but express themselves poorly. When you ' ve spotted talent, what then? How do you best convey this to the student? By a note? By personal conversation? Perhaps their career goals should be redirected. At this point you pause, because playing God is always tricky business. A leisurely conversation is usually helpful, because you probably need a better overall sense of the student ' s larger dimensions and aspirations. This inevitably leads to further conversations. Just as inevitably, students (being human) are flattered by this process and most feel a sense of indebtedness. Indeed, they should feel grateful and they should be prepared to pay off their debts. But how? And to whom? Teachers (also being human) like a word of thanks. Yet, in the nature of things, students can ' t discharge these debts to their teachers any more than they can to their parents. But at some time in the future — perhaps a year from now, perhaps ten years — someone will stumble across your path. He or she will have talent or a flawed talent, but may need a pat on the back, a word of encouragement, or a quickly-written letter of recommendation. You will, of course, be very busy with important matters. But at that golden moment you ' ve somehow got to find that extra 10 minutes of 10 hours to offer the helping hand. That is how talent is nurtured from generation to generation. This simple idea, I believe, also demolishes much of the nonsense about generation gap, elit¬ ism, and other faddish phrases as yet unborn. Don Klein Political Science 113 114 Both the Class of 1976 and myself will have spent about 36 months in and around Tufts by this June. It has been an eventful few years we have spent here. External affairs have impinged on campus life in a way that even the 1960 ' s did not see. As many others have said, students now seem content to study and compete for grades and jobs. If there is dissatisfaction, it is not expressed in violent or obvious means of protest. Does this mean that the Bicentennial Class has turned utterly inward, concerned only with professional studies and jobs? I don ' t think so, al¬ though students do realize that ivory towers nowadays are not all that isolated, cost quite a bit, and do not furnish guaranteed access to the better positions in life as they once did. The outside world has become more competitive, and this has led to grade consciousness and a nearly universal desire by just about every¬ one to have better than average grades. There has been a well publicized nationwide response by faculty to accommodate this desire. However, a justifiable concern about the value and useful¬ ness of their education does not mean that students have let their critical facilities atrophy. I find a strong undercurrent of concern, skepticism, and even cynicism about present in¬ stitutions. If these feelings are not often made public, it may be because of real uncertainty about the value of such actions. Indeed, the last few years have cast doubt upon most of the public institutions that Americans have turned to in the past. Watergate made us fear overpowerful executives. The CIA-FBI excesses suggest that not too much reliance can be placed on secret or semi-legal activities. The Congress seems unable to act in a unified or consistent manner. Our larger cities seem unable to manage their own affairs. Meanwhile, most Americans overeat while others go hungry. There are growing doubts about the adequacy of our energy or capital supplies. There is a widespread feeling that if we had adequate leadership, these problems would be soluble - but such leadership is not in evidence. It is the lack of direction coupled with the complexity of the problems that accounts for the unsatisfied and confused quiet on campus, as much as a fear of unemployment. But time is not waiting, and some decisions have to be made. This is true for Tufts as well as nationally. Inflation, grant cut¬ backs, changing enrollment patterns and different pressures on and reasons for education all demand that choices soon be made. We will probably not look back upon the next few years as ones noted for their tranquility or stability. We will all need to combine intelligence, wisdom, flexibility and humor to get through these next years successfully. We will also have to remember that we are in the same boat — and for that reason alone, I wish the class of 76 a great deal of luck. David Dapice Department of Economics 115 116 TO THE CLASS OF 1976 Hi The concept of a class is a peculiar convention, blurring an apparent accidental grouping of individuals into a corporate personality. As a member of this year ' s fortieth reunion class at Tufts, I can testify to the durability and to the continuing rewards of that fortuitous conjunction of persons. Of all the voluntary associations that make up one ' s life, the college class is the most permanent, the most inescapable; there is no discharge, no divorce. Since yours is the last class I will see from application through matriculation to Commencement, I am provoked to reflect on your composaite personality as a realization of those aspirations we in admissions have long held. Although you were evaluated and admitted as individuals, you were selected to embody, as our twin goals, superior academic performance combined with the widest personal diversity we can discover. And selected you were — from the 7700 who knocked on our gat e. In September 940 of you came; the following January, sixty more joined your class. In the succeeding 3 semesters additional num¬ bers of you who had started your college work elsewhere, transferred and became, to Tufts considerable credit, indistinguishable but enrich¬ ing threads in the fabric of the class. In my report to the Dean of the Faculty in July, 1972, I described the class of 1976 as slighty more affluent, more widely dispersed, and better prepared. Although you were in the middle of the much advertised ten-year decline in College Board scores, yours were still averaging in the low to middle 600 ' s; your secondary school records were excellent. We — our computer, the staff and I predicted you would do well; in point of fact, in your first year and in each succeeding year, you have outrun our statistical prediction by a full half grade. You came initially from 39 different states, and from a dozen foreign countries, a geographic distribution widened further by the infusion of transfer students. 70% of you were public-school educated; 30% private. Each of the quarters into which we conventionally divide family income seems to have been almost equally represented; 12% of you are mem¬ bers of minority groups; 15% had other members of the immediate family precede you at Tufts. Your academic interests were principally divided among engineering, the social sciences, and the natural science, with a lesser, but significant allegiance to the arts and humanities. During the last four years, some of you have surrendered your original commitment to the sciences, but the over-all curricular balance we intended has persisted. On entrance, you displayed a dazzling array of talents and achievements in the arts, in athletics and in leadership; at Tufts, regretfully we have seen somewhat less of these skills and talents in public than we might have expected. Beyond any quantified evidence of diversity, I am most pleased by your endless human variety, and by the resoluteness with which you have defended and enhanced your individual uniqueness as a central quality of the Tufts experience. I know you have provoked, charmed, stimulated, angered and, in that larger sense, educated one another. Bringing you together as the class of 1976 required an enormous effort. In retrospect and prospect, I hope you find it as rewarding as I now do. John C. Palmer Dean of Undergraduate Admissions 117 118 Yesterday ' s ballgame is over. We won ' t learn all the lessons it taught for many years. I still re-evaluate my own experience as an undergraduate. Each year, a new thought pops up. But it may be helpful to know what I think now. There were few jobs available when I graduated and there hadn ' t been during all my college years. Consequently, there was great pressure to do well academically and improve one ' s chances in the competition. I worked hard, was single-minded academically and thought my academic record and awards would serve me well. They did. But soon after graduation, I realized that my single-mindedness academically had minimized other considerations which were equally important to my future. Besides facts, measurements, skill, objective reasoning and analysis, I realized that I valued beauty, kindliness, love, tolerance, responsibility, justice, respect of man for man and integrity. Conscious sensitivity and to these considerations provided a unity for my rationality, feelings and conscience. This enriched my personal, social, and economic life. Without impairing my competitive accomplishments, I could have developed this consciousness much earlier. This generation is probably more sensitive to these considerations than mine, but as you attempt to put it all together — to unite your rationality, feelings and conscience in ways which give you a feeling of wholeness — may I venture a few suggestions. First, most any form of work or profession will raise questions for you concerning accountability, responsibility and moral issues. There is no niche a thinking person can find which is free of dealing with these questions. Politicians, bureaucrats, businessmen, lawyers, physicians, journalists, clergymen all confront these issues. Secondly, there is no good way of handling these matters except to have some standards and values yourself. Watergate involved the careers, hopes and expectations of some young able lawyers who were swept up by the glamour of events in such fashion as to forget the principles they lived by, if they had any. No moral questions were asked. No ultimate responsibility was assumed. It isn ' t true that we are always the captives of events and that the guilt is diffused among many. It is worth fighting for what we believe is right. We also must expect and accept the penalties and human costs when we do this. If you haven ' t figured out the standards and values you believe in, you probably won ' t have much to offer when the tough decisions come. Thirdly, what we believe in and will stand by do not come to us all at once from on high. It takes conscious effort, trial and error. Then, too, while it is dangerous not to have any values, it is equally dangerous to be so arrogant with respect to them that we can ' t reconsider whether they are right or wrong. Only by keeping an open mind in this regard, by seeing all the consequences of following a course of action, by exploring all the options can we determine in a particular case whether the action meets our tests or is such as to require us to alter what we believe. We never are too old to see things in a new light. Perhaps you knew all this before you came to Tufts. Perhaps you realized these things here. Perhaps you haven ' t thought it through yet. In any case, shouldn ' t you keep working on it wherever you are? Burton C. Hallowell President Tufts University 119 The sea wind When it comes A fine taste on the tongue Of nothing to do. - H P. 120 Laurel Zollars |hL Hp, .a « SwPwflA , fl Carolyn Zacarian BI Marc Yagjian •VI Tony Woo 126 Stephen Andre Williams Rick White ■ , MsMtm, ' ' :. Bruce Wilkinson Nancy Wolozin John Frederick Wilson, Jr. Wendy Witt Eileen Wolf Indy Williams 4 IMMM ' mmu vi je ‘— a® Daniel Walter Lisa Weiner Beth Hope Woodland Debora ). Wuttke lames M. Weiss 133 Joanne Vaccaro Gary Vacone Michael Viola 134 David Vlach Bob Vallis Federico Vegas Susan-Jayne Trainor Steven Turnamian Roseann Tully « Ernest Thrope Janis P. Thomas m Cynthias R. Thomas Beverly lane Terzian Michael W. Tomasso This Compost Michael G. Travers Mike Taylor, Bob Veiga Hong Lok Tam Stacey Temple Nancy Talner 140 Pete Clinton, Steve Shapiro, Rick Oliver Eric Dwight Sunderland Su van Stolk Susan Jean Sullivan 4 143 Victor Sordillo Kathy Sullivan Chester B. Smith I 1 4 V i Lyn Snuffer Margie Ehrich 145 146 ; ; Tjgf r r] i f ] Robert ). Slattery 147 « ■ Chuck Sherman Steven Singer Barbara Silberstein 1 MM Iff? [l| f Va ff ' ■ f. i i ■ ' LfL ’• k ; h iSE f. Hr , — 1 n ' 1 IlnTT V Claudia Northington Jonathan Nizel Deborah Nordwall, Claire Tulp Wendell A. Cross Bob Dorian William A. Tyrrel Dick Duncan Michael Jonathan Steinhauer Robert B. Tarquinio Donna Toto Seth David Ammerman 156 Lissa Abrams Beth Hartnett Debbie Krouse Karen Theodosopolis )oe Adlman •| i Lynette E. Aznavourian 159 David C. Albert 160 Debbie Adler Ralph Agritelley 161 Robert E. Baker )r. Mary Adams 162 Glen Ackerman Sheila Merritt Cyd Reider David Stevens Nancy Badian Eileen Aptel 163 Jacqueline Barnham v V - „ % •• ’ fcV - y Harriet Ballard 166 Tom Bassett 167 168 Carl W. C. Beckman Scott Bearman Merri Besder Kim DeAndrade Hillard C. Berry)r. 170 Douglas M. Bergengren 171 172 Ioanna Birsky Ronda Bixon Bill Boak Mary Wang 173 Alison Bernstein Beth-Ann Bloom John P. Bigelow 174 176 Mark Bresler Joy E. Bright William P. Braun III Barbie Butler Cheryl R. Burruss Brenda Calobrisi Miguel Angel Castillo Anne Charm lane Debevoise, Duke Finn, Libby Haight, )ohn Grossman, Kevin Dubay, Carol Fischer, locunda, Andy Saffron Daniel Cerundolo B. Victor Cariri Susan Doe 188 76 Chemical Engineers i 189 Arleen Chin Leslie Chester Yee Kuen Cho Antonia Chion John Chrusciel 192 Betsy Compton, Cinny luckman, Lenore Richardson, Joan Thurneyssen Sandy Cooper, John Tumolo, Rich Fischbein, Ted Cronin w k Bob Citrin Laura Chung Dan Colangelo, Doug Bencks, Ed Cichon, Tom McNulty, Don Harris, Peter Tetrault Susan Crockin Marlena G. Corcoran W ” Claudia Analia Costanzo Roger Clapp . Leslie Cooper Bill Cosseboom, John C. 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Holly 240 241 Ed Hay dock Barbara Heitman IBt JF • v . i % 7r • 4 : Its M ' W ' NK ' Libby Haynes 242 Nanette Healy 243 Barbara L. Hempstead Margaret Hopkins Joanne Amy Horn 244 Elizabeth Marie Hewlett Alice Henner 245 Peter Hayes k Dale Janes, Chris Phillips, Doug Tase Joseph Ippolito Tenley-Ann )ackson David Albert Irone 249 250 Christine Kandianis Jim Kaddaras 251 Seth Kogan 252 Bernice Kraft John Kitchener harvard LAW SCHOOL (GANNETT HOUSE T harvard law revie HARVARD LEGAL AID BU 253 John ). Klein, Jr. Bruce S. Klafter ■ -—— ' WW Dean Klemes 256 Richard L. Littlefield A ft 259 Michael C. Loulakis Connie Day, Bette Burton, Jeffery Lawrence, Buffy Bondy, Howard Entin, Robert Kann, Ronnie Sanders, Steven Koltai Pasquale Lombardo Charles Lovejoy Alberto Larcada lane Lebeau 264 Robert N. Levin Jeanne Haverbeck 265 Erik Lindgren Jonathan Leder Phoebe Lawrence 267 Allison I. Lewis Mark Latina Peter Manak Susan Marchand William H. McLean, )r., Michael C. Perry, Steven Phillips, Jeff Rock, Harlod S. Weiner, Steve Karol, Bill Dunn, jack Doyle Kevin Louie Alan Langburd Linda Lerner Carl Leto Cynthia Gail Lewiton Steve MacDaniel, James McAuliffe, Arnold Miller, Robert Frederick, Steve Demoraes Tanzy 272 Andres Morales Candace McDonnell 273 Beth Maxfield Robert A. McGill Catharine Marenghi Tom McManus Robert Mass Frank Marchese fill llll Hit! ■ Ill Vicki Moran Sandi Michaelson, Jeff Warren Matt Miller Kenneth Robert Moser Andrea Mobilia James T. McMahon Christine McHugh Patricia Morris Pamela ). Morre 282 Julia Michaels Joan Mathews Thomas J. McCarthy Steve MacDaniel, Jim McAuliffe, Bob Frederick, Rick Candels, Steve deMoraes Arnie Miller Norino A. Mirra Andy Mohr ' , Anne Mulcahy 289 Robert Nichols 291 Heidi Noun Lawrence H. Oshin Steve O ' Kane lane E. Olivieri Martha Osborne Suzanne O ' Neill Eduardo Poma Vicky Anne Papadeas Robert Panora 2 % Robert C. Post Anne Pomerantz Charles ). Patti Chris Pan Carol A. Palmiotto Nancy Phillips Carol Padula, Joy Collins, B lle Gross, and Susan Shepherd at Pha Corner 300 Paula Procopion Eric Podietz, lean Stewart ■ 2 w Linda Paul Jayne Pollack Alicia Peller Kathryn M. Pierce David Pleet 302 Nancy Pettitt John Robert Penta Janet Pegues 303 Anthony R. Riccio UJj Susan Resnick Michael Resnicow 304 Mark Rhodes Bob Quinn Betsy Pierce 305 Chris Rice, Robin Clark Carol Lynn Rosegg 307 Cora Rosa I Susan Russell Charlie Roome Ted Schachter Cindy Rice Brenda Scales Andy Russell April Saber Marina Sagramoso 75 Scopelos Ave. Edward L. Quinn, )r. Mark Sawoski John A. Sanford Cynthia Sacks Jeremy H. Savage David William Schulz Mark Schneider Robin Selig Susan Shansky )oy Shaih Melissa Shaak Steven ). Shapiro Carol Sheats Randy Shedlin Suzanne Sherman Jill Sher RICHARD ABRAMS 65 Chatham St Brookline MA 02146 DAVID ACHESON III 1632 Sturges Highway Westport CT 06880 GLEN N ACKERMAN 5703 Blueberry Ct Lauderhill FL 33313 CHARLOTTE C ADAMS 61 Eaton Rd Needham MA 01292 ROBERT W ADAMS 41 Lake Road Uppr Saddl Riv N) 07458 DEBORA A ADIR 64-32 212th St Bayside NY 11364 DEBORAH L ADLER 8 Kings S Gate Rd Suffern NY 10901 ROBERT A ADLER 871 Webster St Needham MA 02192 JOSEPH M ADLMAN 33 Dante Street Larchmont NY 10538 RALPH J AGRITELLEY 184 Hillcrest Avenue New Britain CT 06053 CLAIRE AHEARNE 4291 Stonleigh Bloomfield Hills Ml 48013 STEPHEN F AHERN 266 Fieldboro Circle Lawrenceville NJ 08648 MUBARAK F AL DOWAILAH c o N Ashton 4301 Conn Av 158 NW Washington DC 20008 DAVID C ALBERT 92 Varick Rd Newton MA 02168 GARY A ALEXION 66 Varnum Drive East Greenwich Rl 02818 CATHERINE A ALGUIRE 19 W 364 86th Street Downers Grove IL 60515 MARY P ALLEN 9817 Singleton Drive Bethesda MD 20034 BETH ALSON 312 S Bobbin Mill Lane Broomall PA 19008 ROGER W ALTREUTER 31 Lockwood Place Fair Haven NJ 07701 PETER R ALTROGGEN 6720 Tennyson Drive McLean VA 22101 STEPHEN POTTER AMBERG 1346 Cornell Ave SE E Grand Rapids Ml 49506 DALE L AMES 130 Soundriew Terrace Northport NY 11768 SETH D AMMERMAN 5511 Uppingham Street Chevy Chase MD 20015 DOROTHY ANN ANDERSON Route 2 Box 126 A Hollandale Ml 38748 ROBERT LAWRENCE ANDERSON 322 Stillwell Place Ridgewood NJ 07450 EILEEN R APFEL 82-55 210th Street Jamaica NY 11427 AHMET R ARGON 16 Wildwood Drive Bedford, MA 01730 JANET N ARNO Irene Drive Monroe NY 10950 JAMES F ARSENEAUX Oak Knoll St Burlington MA 01803 ELIZABETH ATKINS 90 Kings Grant Rd Weston MA 02193 MICHAEL B ATKINS 6656 North Atwahl Dr Milwaukee Wl 53209 CHRISTOPHER A AUSTIN 23 Sycamore Lane Farmington Woods Grille CT 06085 LYNETTE E AZNAVOURIAN 134 Ridge St Arlington MA 02174 NANCY M BADIAN 569 Standish Road Teaneck NJ 07666 JANET E BAER 161 Paseo De Gold Green Valley AZ 85614 RAMSEY ALI BAHRAWY 84 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Street Ogdensburg NY 13669 JANET C FOSTER 53 Farrell Road Weston CT 06880 DEBORAH GARFUNKEL 220 Groveland Circle Savannah GA 31405 JAN GLEYSTEEN 3110 1 Ave NW Washington DC 20008 RUTH ELLEN GORDON 205 Crandon Way Rochester NY 618 PAMELA C FOSTER 30 Bergen Street Brooklyn NY 11213 DEBORAH GARR 15 Faunce Drive Providence Rl 02906 MARK A GLOVER 31 Braddock Park Boston MA 02116 JOSEPH THOMAS GORMAN 75 Pierce Street Greenfield MA 01301 ROBERT W FREDERICK 31 Circle Rd Scarsdale NY 10583 STEPHEN R GATES 182 Greenwood Rd Norway ME 04268 ERIC S GLUCK 630 West Englewood Ave Teaneck N) 07666 JOHN R GOTH 161 Rochdale Road Roughkeepsie NY 12603 ROBERT M FREEDMAN 4 Pinehill Terr North Adams MA 01247 MARY ANNE GAUTHIER 87 Harvard St Winchester MA 01890 RICHARD C GLUCK 20553 Reid Lane Saratoga CA 95070 LAWRENCE K GOTTLIEB 303 Lorimer Drive Wyncote PA 19095 ANDREW N FRENCH 122 Hill Hall Tufts University Medford MA 02155 NANCY E GEHR 20 Marshfield Road Newton Centre MA 02159 LYNNE M GODFREY 180 Jerome Street Medford MA 02155 LORI A GRADINGER 800 Columbia Drive San Mateo CA 94402 JACKSON L FRENCH 761 New Road Avon CT 06001 MARK S GEORGE RFD 2 Mountain View Dr Barre VT 05641 SUSAN M GODFREY 374A Piute La Stratford CT 06880 ELLEN GRAHAM 6042 S 2230 East Salt Lake City UT 84121 CHRISTOPH R FREY 49 W Brother Greenwich CT 08630 JOEL G GERBINO 51 Altoona Road Dedham MA 02026 JAMES D GOLD III High Spring Lumberville PA 18933 PETER B GRANNIS 242 Midland Avenue Montclair NJ 07042 ROBERT R FRICKE 71 East Cliff Road Colonia NJ 07067 ELLYN R GEREMONTE 63 Mott St Arlington MA 02174 HOWARD M GOLD 1853 Central Park Ave Yonkers NY 10710 DOUGLAS W GRANT 29 Reiners Road Little Falls NJ 07424 DONALD JEROME FRIGON 165 Warde Ter Apt 2B Fairfield CT 06430 DAVID M GERONEMUS 711 Washington St Hollywood FL 33020 CRAIG J GOLDBERG Beaver Hill Apts 424N Jenkintown PA 19046 JONATHAN GRAY 52 Ball Terrace Maplewood NJ 07040 RICHARD S GREELEY ELIZABETH S HAIGHT 20 Livingston Circle 55 E Church St Needham MA 02192 Bethlehem PA 18018 DEBORA L GREEN KIM HALE 38 Winston Road 58 Pennock Terrace Newton MA 02159 Lansdowne PA 19050 WILLIAM G GREEN ERIC L HALEY 5 Campo Beach Box 182 RFD 3 Westport CT 06880 Dexter ME 04930 NEIL DAVID GREENSTEIN DENIS D HAMBOYAN 79 Wheeler Road 32 Crescent St Newton Centre MA 02159 Wakefield MA 01880 LINDA E GREER BENNY M HAMLETT 447 Albany Street 233 Haskell Hall Fall River MA 02720 Tufts University Medford MA 02155 ARTHUR W GREIG 90 Lasalle St PETER B HAMMOND New York NY 10027 17 Crescent St Rockland MA 02370 MICHAEL FELIX GRENDAL 39 Stony Brook Lane Apt 9 SHARON (SAM) HANDLER Millis MA 02054 7 Wheelock Road Scarsdale NY 10583 CARLOTTA L GRIFFIN 196 Holland Street CHARLES T HANLIN Rochester NY 605 3025 Fairmount Avenue Atlantic City NJ 08401 AMIT GRILL 115 Kennedy Drive DEBRA A HANNAFIN Bridgeport CT 06606 27 Thomas Road So Weymouth MA 02190 DONNA L GRINDY 311 Hurlburt Rd JEFFREY R HARE Syracuse NY 13224 465 Forest St Marshfield MA 02050 BELLE R GROSS 54-03 252 St DAVID 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Puumele Place Honolulu HI %817 WILLIAM H McBEE III 238 Armington St Cranston Rl 02905 JAMES J MERCURIO 23 Old Forge Lane Sudbury MA 01776 SALLY MLAVSKY Todd Pond Road Lincoln MA 01773 BARBARA L MURRAY 54 Sutherland Rd No Attleboro MA 02760 thomas j McCarthy jr 51 Liberty Avenue Somerville MA 024 M SHEILA MERRITT 555 Larsen Drive Bountiful UT 84010 ANDREA L MOBILIA 12 Windmill Lane Arlington MA 02174 SUSAN T MURRAY 51 Dunns Pond Road Hyannis MA 02601 mary t McCarthy 1200 Riverview Drive Brielle NJ 08730 DORIS L MEYER 8 Turner Road Framingham MA 01701 ANDREW J MOHR 45 Sutton Place South New York NY 10022 DAVID F MYERS 5 Country Club Rd Tabor NJ 07878 ANN M McCLOREY 20 Girard Road Stoneham MA 02180 ROBERT M MEYER 12 Woodhaven Drive New City NY 10956 SCOTT W MOHR 1241 Edgewood Road Lake Forest IL 60045 Jan K Myers 270 Convent Ave New York NY 10031 CANDACE M McDONNELL 3S Pine Ridge Rd Greenwich CT 06830 SANDRA R MICHAELSON 17 Craigemore Road Bloomfield CT 06002 MARIANNE T MONAHAN 757 West 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01867 ANDREW G RUSSELL 86 Windsor Rd Kensington CT 06037 RICHARD L SAVAGE JR 56 Valentine Rd Arlington MA 02174 JANE F REYNOLDS 26 Samuel Road Chelmsford MA 01824 DINO ROMANO 124 Lowell St Lexington MA 02173 LINDA T RUSSELL 86 Brooks Street Medford MA 02155 JEREMY H SAVAGE 1780 East 9th St Brooklyn NY 11223 MARK A RHODES 205 Glenwood Avenue Wilmington DE 19803 JOHN P ROSA 58 Valleyfield Street Lexington MA 02173 SUSAN H RUSSELL 495 Brimfield Rd Wethersfield CT 06109 RAYMOND SCANLON 43 Ellis Circle South Weymouth MA 02190 ANTHONY ROBERT RICCIO 14 Grand View Ave Somerville MA 02143 CORA ROSAL 1 Peggy Lane Norwich CT 06360 EDWARD S RUTHERFORD 62 Ludlowe Rd New Canaan CT 06840 JENNIFER A SCHAAFSMA 918 Twyckenham Rd Media PA 19063 CHRISTINE L RICE 44 Prospect St Foxborough MA 02035 CAROL L ROSEGG 7700 Chadwick Street Shawnee MSN KS 66208 ANN P RYAN 2826 Roscomare Rd Los Angeles CA 90024 THEODORE L SCHACHTER 28 Mayflower Parkway Westport CT 06880 JOHN F SCHAETTLER Pettit Lane Pound Ridge NY 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20034 CALVIN J SING PO Box 4392 Takoma Park MD 20012 STEVEN D SINGER 328 Cross Street Fort Lee NJ 07024 PETER L SKEIRIK 302 Central Street Georgetown MA 01833 ELIZABETH A SKINNER 840 East Broadway South Boston MA 02127 SUSAN KAREN SKLOVER 1912 South Ocean Drive Apt 8B Hallandale FL 33009 SPYROS S SKOURAS JR East Middle Patent Rd Greenwich CT 06830 GEORGE A SKOURAS East Middle Patent Rd Greenwich CT 06830 ROBERT ) SLATTERY 68 Electric Ave Somerville MA 02144 ANTHONY M SMEGUN 44 Springdale St Dorchester MA 02125 BARBARA C SMITH 2424 Tracy Place Washington DC 20008 BARBARA JEAN SMITH 275 Spring St Ext Glastonbury CT 06033 BRIAN L SMITH RD 1 Fultonville NY 12072 CAROLYN SMITH 1370 Walnut St Newton Highlands MA 02161 CHESTER B SMITH PO Box 119 Elizabeth MS 38742 DOUGLAS D SMITH 320 Echo Valley Lane Newtown Sq PA 19073 GARY K SMITH 59 Colony Road Westport CT 06880 JOHN BARTLETT K SMITH 6320 Mad River Road Dayton OH 45459 LYNN M SNUFFER 225 Autumn St Manchester Ct 06040 ESTHER M SOLTERO Ga-1 Ramirez Arellno Golden Hills Guaynabo PR 00615 KENNETH R SONENCLAR 317 Grange Street Franklin Sq NY 11010 MAY PING SOO HOO 33 Stearns Ave Apt 2 Medford MA 02155 VICTOR JOSEPH SORDILLO 18 Shirley St Everett MA 029 OLIVER SPALDING 6 Banks St Somerville MA 02144 ELLEN L SPIGEL 4 Clyde Place Lexington MA 02173 CONSTANCE D SPIROS 50 Elm Avenue Brockton MA 02401 KENNETH W STADTMAN 25 Randlett Park West Newton MA 02165 JENNI FER L STAHURA RFD Reading VT 05062 DANIEL W STANFORD 427 Somers Rd Ellington CT 06029 REBECCA C STEARNS 381 Boston Rd Billerica MA 01821 MICHAEL J STEINHAUER 42 Middle Neck Rd Roslyn NY 11576 MATTHEW T STERNBERG 9604 Falls Bridge Lane Potomac MD 20854 DAVID K STEVENS 5550 State Line Shawnee MSN KS 06208 ELIZABETH L STEWART 4017 S Hermitage Lane Kokomo IN 46901 ELLEN M STEWART 144 Nashoba Road Concord MA 01742 JEAN CAMPBELL STEWART 112 Glendale Dr Chapel Hill NC 275 FRANK STITT III 500 Se 11th Ave Cullman AL 35055 SUSAN E STONE Farmers Row Groton MA 01450 JANET E STORK 459 Next Day Hill Dr Englewood N) 07631 DAVID W TAYLOR 235 Vernon St Wakefield MA 01880 MARTHA D STRAUS 63 Collinwood Road Maplewood NJ 07040 JENNIFER TAYLOR 2302 Napoleon Ave New Orleans LA 70115 WALTER P SULLIVAN JR 18 Harmon Ave Springfield MA 01118 DAVID A TEMPLE 11 Slocumb Place Medway MA 02053 KAREN SULLIVAN 29 Aldridge St Needham MA 02192 STACEY L TEMPLE 616 E Quincy Avenue Englewood CO 80110 KATHLEEN A SULLIVAN 17 Miedama Place Midland Park N) 07432 RICHARD W THAL 22 Country Ridge Rd Danbury CT 06810 SUSAN J SULLIVAN 86 Wakefield St Rochester NH 03867 CYNTHIA R THOMAS 8 Old Road White Plains NY 10607 EDWARD D SUMMERS 559 Prospect Street Maplewood NJ 07040 JANIS P THOMAS 3 Herford Place Yeadon PA 19050 ERIC D SUNDERLAND 20 Nettlecreek Road Fairport NY 450 DOROTHY THOMPSON 14 Everett Ave Winchester MA 01890 ROSANNE SUNDSTROM 66 Allerton Road Milton MA 02187 VICTORIA M THOMPSON 7 Harbour Lane Apt 6A Oyster Bay NY 11771 ELLEN K SUSSMAN 1 Highgate Drive Apt 113 Trenton NJ 08618 ERNEST THROPE 53 Maple Avenue Hyannis MA 02601 FRANCIS EDMUND SVIOKLA 560 Ocean St Ocean Bluff Marshfield MA 02065 JOAN L THURNEYSSEN 86 Front St Exeter NH 03833 SUSAN SWIG 130 West Adams St Somerville MA 024 RICHARD S THYPIN 153 Beach 135 Street Belle Harbor NY 11694 Karen L Swindler 2234 47th St Washington DC 20007 JONATHAN B TILOVE 156 Brookside Ave Roosevelt NY 11575 NANCY L TALNER 426 Miles Road Orange CT 06477 JONATHAN M TISCH 5 Timber Trail Rye NY 10580 HONG L TAM 31 Brainerd Rd Apt 5 Boston MA 02134 MICHAEL W TOMASSO 132 Roslyn Drive New Britain CT 06052 MICHAEL A TARCZALI 311 Harvester Road Fairfield CT 06430 HENRY TORRES 1381 Sterling Place Brooklyn NY 11213 ROBERT BERNARD TARQUINIO 6 Glen Ave Methuen MA 01844 DONNA T TOTO 501 Mountain Ave Revere MA 02151 DOUGLAS S TASE 109 N Valley Forge Road Devon PA 19333 MICHAEL G TRAVERS 70 Lawson RD Scituate MA 02066 MICHAEL F TAUB 121 Fifth Avenue Saratoga Spgs NY 12866 ROSE P. TSE 197 E-Woodcrest Dr Melrose MA 02176 CHRIS CTSOUROS 36 Chevy Chase Road Worcester MA 01606 ROBERT J VEIGA 78 Baltimore Avenue Lowell MA 01851 BETTY RAE TUCKER 109 Rumford St Concord NH 03301 ERICA VERRILLO 6311 Westerley Terrace Apt 4 Jamesville NY 13078 PATRICIA A TUCKER 37 Tallwood Dr Vernon CT 06066 MICHAEL S VIOLA 17 Bonner Avenue Somerville MA 02143 VIRGINIA S TUCKMAN Box 281 RD6 Flemington NJ 08822 SCOTT R VIVIAN 41 Royal Crest Dr Apt 9 No Andover MA 01845 ROSEANN TULLY 110 Ellis Farm Lane Melrose MA 02176 DAVID F VLACH 12 Frost Lane Amherst MA 01002 CLAIRE S TULP 152 Black Point Road Rumson NJ 07760 KRISTIN VOLK 168 Edmond Drive Warwick Rl 02886 JOHN M TUMOLO 4 Oriole Drive Milford MA 01757 STEPHEN P WADE 255 Montoe Road Waterbury CT 06704 STEVEN G TURNAMIAN Bayview Avenue Englewood Clfs NJ 07632 RICHARD L WALSH III 140 Tamarack Drive East Greenwich Rl 02818 WILLIAM A TYRELL 326 Central Avenue Milton MA 02187 DANIEL T WALTER 123 Dorchester Street North Quincy MA 02171 LYNN ANN TYTLA 220 NIANTIC RIVER ROAD Waterford CT 06385 SARA E WARE 1256 Audubon Road Covington KY 41011 JOHN C TZAVARAS 18 Hodgkins Drive Ipswich CT 01938 JEFFREY C WARREN 65 Emmet Avenue East Rockaway NY 11518 LINDA ANN UGELOW 272 Crabapple Road Manhasset NY 11030 ERIC T WASHINGTON 21 Lewis Drive Maplewood NJ 07040 JOANNE VACCARO 58 Main Street Somerville MA 02145 JUDITH A WATERS 20 Glendale Road West Hartford CT 06107 GARY V VACON 1 Standish Road Stoneham MA 02180 PENELOPE L WATKINS 5495 Ashford Road Dublin OH 43017 PAUL S VAKY American Embassy APO New York NY 09895 ANNA C WEI Old Somerset Rd Watchung NJ 07060 ROBERT C VALLIS 109 Lowell Street Lynnfield MA 01940 GARY A WEIL 1439 Timberland Dr Birmingham AL 35213 LAURIE VAN BUSKIRK Wheeler Road Marston Mills MA 02648 LISA ) WEINER 24 Rockingham Place Glen Rock NJ 07452 SUSANE VAN STOLK 13 Bakkersdreef 2180 Kalmthout Belgium FEDERICO L VEGAS Apt 35-32 Caracas Venezuela South America JAMES M WEINROTT 1030 Bryn Mawr Avenue Penn Valley PA 19072 JAMES M WEISS 203 Nimitz Road Paramus NJ 07652 KATHRYN ANN WELDON 115 Central Park West New York NY 10023 JOHN F WILSON JR 1001 E Durham St Philadelphia PA 19150 ROBERT L WONG 130 Glenville Ave Allston MA 02134 JAMES S YOUNG RFD 1 Concord NH 03301 JEFFREY MICHAEL WERTHAN 2 Judith Place Bergenfield NJ 07621 PETER H WILSON 179 Wassuc Road SO Glastonbury CT 06073 THLUEY H WOOD 40 Weld Hill St Jamaica Plain MA 02130 LAWRENCE H YOUNG 66 Cypress Road Milton MA 02186 SUSAN K WHEELER 181 Boulder Trail Bronxville NY 10708 RAYMOND P WILSON 369 Wood Lane North Andover MA 01845 THERESAS WRIGHT 106 Park gavenue East Orange NJ 07017 SHELLEY E YOUNG 12 Jules-Terrace Newton Centre MA 02159 RICHARD D WHITE 92 Rushfield Lane Valley Stream NY 11581 KATHLEEN A WINN 59 Andover Rd Billerica MA 01821 JANICE R WURZBURG 40 Melrose Avenue Needham MA 02192 EVE F YOUNGERMAN Stonehaven Farm Limekiln PA 19535 MADELINE HILL WHITEHEAD 352 Riverway Apt 20 Boston MA 02115 SHERMAN L WISSINGER 3301 Windingway Kettering OH 45419 DEBORAH J WUTTKE 60 Edbert Dr Holyoke MA 01040 ALBERT CHAN YU 18 Strathmore Road Brookline MA 02146 GAIL B WHITMAN 1454 Hudson Road Teaneck NJ 07666 WENDY ANN WITT 29 Indian Hill Road Winnetka IL 60093 LESLIE A WYMAN Baldwin Farms North Greenwich CT 06830 CAROLYN A ZACARIAN 154 Colony Rd Longmeadow MA 01106 WENDY C WHITMAN 54 Hudson Road Teaneck NJ 07666 RONALD WOHL 19 Irving Street Winchester MA 01890 ALAN H WYSOCKI 62 Windsor Rd Medford MA 02155 ANDREA ZALESKI Baycrest Ave Westhampton NY 11977 BRUCE M WILE Babcock Hill Road S Coventry CT 06238 EILEEN F WOLF 20 Westlake Road Natick MA 01760 ROBERT E YAFFEE 4 Cotter Rd Newton MA 02168 VERONICA LYNN ZANETTI 49 Livingston Road East Hartford CT 06108 RITA M WILES PO Box 2404 Monrovia Liberia West Africa JEFFREY S WOLFSON 33 Oak Hill Rd Worcester MA 01609 MARC YAGJIAN 47 Wedgemere Ave Winchester MA 01890 NANCY R ZARZYCKI 360 Worcester Street Southbridge MA 01550 ANNE C WILLIAMS 28 Prince St West Newton MA 02165 NANCY WOLOZIN 26 Westwood Ave Brockton MA 02401 EILEEN M YANG 811 Gregorio Drive Silver Spring MD 20901 HOWARD M ZETLEY 8969 North Mohawk Rd Milwaukee Wl 53217 STEPHEN A WILLIAMS 137-33 Bedell St Springfield Gn NY 11413 MARK FRANKLIN WONG 916 Crest Park Drive Silver Spring MD 02903 RICHARD M YANOFSKY 29 Elizabeth Circle West Newton MA 02165 LAUREL E ZOLLARS 952 Via Rincon Palos Verdes Esta CA 90274 DAVID H WILLIAMSON 218 Russet Road Stamford CT 06903 RICHARD WONG 924 State Road N Dartmouth MA 02747 RONALD C YEN 436 Louella Ave Wayne PA 19087 ERIC 1 ZUCKER 31 Overlook Road Dobbs Ferry NY 10522 331 UNIVERSITY DINING SERVICES Congratulates the Class of 1976 Carmichael Dewick-MacPhie Dewick Evening Snack Bar Curtis Snack Bar Hodgdon Faculty Graduate Center JAMES F. BRINE INC 29 BRATTLE STREET Congratulations to the Class of 1976 HARVARD SQUARE JAY ' S DELI 876-4218 Fine Food Subs — Hot Meals — Clubs Sports equipment and apparel for the entire family. 340 Boston Ave., Medford Hillside HILLSIDE AQUARIUM HILLSIDE HARDWARE PAINT CO. Fine Wallpaper 50% Off Thousands of Colors of Paints For rapid service call 395-0712 “Where everyone at Tufts buys saves. . 319 Boston Ave. °«(Medford Hillside) Medford, Massachusetts yH Tropical Marine Fish rWj Exotic Birds ' Pet Supplies Store Hours: Mon. — Fri. — 10-9 Sun. — 12-6 Sat. - 10-6 395-9540 332 Whv pay Boston prices when the same quality nairstyling can be found on the Hillside? IT _TL o Not a Sexist Establishment MEN AND WOMEN ' S STYLING AT THE SAME LOW PRICE Specializing iri haircutting and shapine Perms. Mon, Tues, Wed. Sat 9-5 PM Thurs, Fri 9-9 PM Relaxers Telephone: 395-8496 Come in and meet Urban. George, Claude and friends HAlRPHENALIA 320 Boston Ave Medford-Hillside FERRANTI-DEGE STORES HARVARD SQUARE Omega B600 Condenser Enlarger FOR FILM FROM x 2 ' A to 110 FASTER PRINTING EVEN ILLUMINATION COMPACT DESIGN FOR EASY STORAGE WITH FILTER DRAWER FOR COLOR PRINTING FERRANTI-DEGE 1252 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, 547-8600 FERRANTI-DEGE, too 1300 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, 547-8700 In Store — Black White Lab-Repairs Same Day — Ektachrome Fugichrome Processing Both in Harvard Square ■ - Middlesex 321 BOSTON AVE. TRY SOMERVILLE HOUSE OF PIZZA Small and Large Pizzas Grinders and Sandwiches Buy 5 Pizzas at Once, Get One Free! Delivery to all campus dorms 666-8232 1167 Broadway Teele Sq. Somerville A Rl IUAN A ALERS w hoi net cc seed, I Ovb Avenge C tambcj [ ■ ; 333 BENEFACTORS Herbert Abrams, Esq. Mr. Mrs. Irving Librett Mr. Mrs. Richard Butler Mr. Mrs. M. S. Marshall Dr. Mrs. Orlando Salichs Mr. Mrs. Hugh R. Roome Dr. Mrs. MacPherson PATRONS Mr. Mrs. Thomas Ahern Mr. Mrs. Atkins Mr. Mrs. Henri B. Atkins Dr. Mrs. Ibrahim Bahrawy Mr. Mrs. William P. Braun, Jr. Mr. Mrs. J. L. Brewer, Jr. Mr. Mrs. James J. Byrnes Mr. Mrs. Yale Citrin Mr. Mrs. Paul Y. Clinton Mr. Mrs. Crockin Mr. Mrs. Melville P. Dickenson, Jr. Mr. Mrs. DeGimmis, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Joseph Ezratty Mr. Mrs. Austin L. Geremonte Mr. Mrs. Fruchter Mrs. Ruth Haberman Dr. Mrs. Hennessy Mr. Mrs. C. G. Hurlimann Mr. Mrs. Joseph Yanofsky Mr. Mrs. William C. Keller Mr. Mrs. Spencer Kellogg II Rose Krones Mr. Mrs. Jaime Lelental Mr. Mrs. Robert E. Lewis Mr. Mrs. Norman Oshin Mr. Mrs. Richard A. Phillips Mrs. Marjory B. Price Mr. Mrs. Frederic J. Schaettler Mr. Mrs. A. R. Sherwood Mrs. Priscilla K. Shields Mr. Mrs. Melvin J. Shure Ms. Olga Sloan Mr. Mrs. Arthur D. Stevens Ms. Rita C. Thai Mr. Mrs. Angelo Tomasso, Jr. Mr. T. T. Wang Mr. Mrs. Robert J. Witt Mr. Mrs. Ernest Weiner SPONSORS Mr. Mrs. Monroe Adlman Dr. Mrs. Harvey H. Ammerman Mr. Mrs. G. S. Baldacci, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Bergengren Mr. Mrs. George J. Bulgarelli Mr. Burnham Dr. Mrs. Lothar R. Candels Mrs. Sarah Cinelli Dr. Mrs. Alvin M. Fischbein Dr. Mrs. Howard Carl Gold Mr. Mrs. Haskel R. Gordon Mr. Mrs. Allan D. Gulliver Mr. Mrs. Clifford A. Hammond Mr. Mrs. Haight, Jr. Mr. Mrs. George Wong Mr. Mrs. Earl F. Hannafin Mr. Mrs. Edward Haydock Mr. Mrs. Harold Kolodney Mr. Mrs. Herbert S. Moser Mr. Mrs. Alfred Natkin Mr. Mrs. Robert A. Panora Mr. Mrs. Sol Pomerantz Mr. Mrs. Leon Resnicow Mr. Mrs. Cletus E. Schmitz Mr. Mrs. Paul W. Shaak Mr. Mrs. James A. Smith 334 Editor in Chief Charles Ross Roome Managing Editor Photographic Editor Literary Editor Layout Editor Art Editor Staff Writer Writers Photographers Barbara Butler Eduardo Poma Anthony L. Bove Lynn Rowe Andrea Lawrence Susan Haverson Larry Ralph Mathew Sternber Ham Amer Rick Celia Joy Collins David Kahn Hans Li Mark MacLaren Leonard Y. Nasson Joe Paradiso Artists Poets Tom Hawk Lauren Lieberwitz Jean Kelley Henry Platt Special Thanks Professors: Klein, Dapice Nickerson Dean Palmer President Hollowell Rose Tse for Typing their stuff Credits Observer dates and pictures Senior Informal — Amer, Poma, Li, Roome, Butler Layout — Dave, Henry, Frank 336 FOR REFERENCE Do Not Take From This Room ifrrMM ililiiMSl™! - |n| m JBIIi lH ; 11 If 1 i:.j: iiu;j}! ‘fir. liiisyJi fflm figiMB • «• • ' nf3-• ' i;u!•JnlrJJc rijuHifiswyj KJfJtv H Jl ; :: : r: i!ifl 11 ■Pi iitd!nrnftr4fPi HI ..Im- pills HH


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Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Page 1

1978

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979


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