University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI)

 - Class of 1971

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University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) online collection, 1971 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 318 of the 1971 volume:

3CJL 2 3 mm pern Vrt «n 12 ;aa p f ba yy 13 14 litors-in-Chief Janet Halligan J. Greg Ozar JNIVERSITY OF RHODE ISLAND 1971 GRIST I want to offer the 1971 graduating class a message on the theme The Student. My most meaningful learnings about students have come from personal and direct relationships with students as a friend, parent, teacher, and now university president. Accordingly, I find it difficult to make profound generalizations about young people; they are far more unique and individualistic than they are uniform and categorizable. I am sometimes amazed and always sad- dened by the occasionally blatant disregard by some persons of the extreme heterogeneity of students at the Univer- sity of Rhode Island. Students do not talk alike, dress alike, study and play alike any more than do faculty, administra- tors, or other groups of persons in the community at large. It is a rare day when students agree on a single issue; and almost never do all students agree on the same issue at the same time. Consequently, I must also raise my eyebrows when any person, be a student leader or one of the so-called silent majority attempts to speak for students en masse. Our students come from diverse backgrounds. They are individuals apart from any summary characteristics except, perhaps, the commitment to complete certain academic requirements. However, we can speculate on how students in the Class of 1971 are statistically different from students of perhaps ten years ago. As a group, you are differ- ent sociologically in that you represent a broader spectrum of the social and economic structure of the United States. Due to the broadening base of participation in higher education, we have obtained an extremely complex amalgamation of personalities, interests, and abilities in our student population at the University of Rhode Island. Faculty are agreed that the student of today has been exposed to many more experiences and discussions than those of past generations. I have found students to be more worldly and broadly knowledgeable than students of past gen- erations. There have been strong social reasons or pressures for students to attend college since World War II. The goals of these students are not always directed toward intellectual enrichment. Too many students have attended and are at- tending the University because they are sold on the idea they can make more money as a college graduate. I am hopeful that the learning for earning philosophy will become secondary to the goal of intellectual fulfillment. We seem to be experiencing a trend toward higher wages for persons in the technical and specialized labor areas which could help young people increasingly make non-college educational and career decisions. The most obvious change in students has been in the psychological areas of new awarenesses and expectations around the youth culture as separate from the rest of society. It goes without saying that youth and more particularly college-age youth are making distinctive, confronting, and shockingly controversial contributions to our forms of dress, language, and manners of relating and using our leisure. College-age youth seem generally satisfied to create and perpetuate their culture quite apart from what is traditional and acceptable to their parents — of whom I am one. I am often asked why in the world I would want to be a university president under prevailing circumstances. Let me tell you why, in terms of two recent, meaningful experiences with students. The first was a comical greeting card sent anonymously by a group of students during semester break. The students were on a skiing vacation in Vermont and wrote a thinking of you message as they were unwinding and relaxing after a trying Fall semester; that doesn ' t happen often in. a modern American university. Then there was the tiny box of candy left on our doorstep in mid-Feb- ruary by a sorority with a Valentine message for Shirley and me. These are the experiences which cause me to look warmly and enthusiastically toward you and the University of Rhode Island. As students graduating this Spring, you have probably spent much time in both looking back and looking forward. I will not attempt at this point in time to influence your dreams and hopes for the future. I would only hope that you will always look back on your years at the University of Rhode Island as a time when you gained intellectual and moral strength for the long road ahead. Werner A. Baum If we don ' t know what the young are thinking about, we don ' t know anything. Margaret Mead Margaret Mead, world renowned anthropologist, graciously spent the fall semester lecturing at the University of Rhode Island. Although generally well received, Dr. Mead was the object of some criticism. Dr. Mead was criticized by some members of the out- side community for her controversial views on con- temporary society. Rare and somewhat erroneously, Dr. Mead was also criticized by members of the col- lege community. Dr. Mead was brought to URI by the Alumni Associa- tion ' s Distinguished Professorship Award to lecture the pre-arranged Sociology course: Cultural Behavior and the Environment. Investigation revealed that Dr. Mead was not satisfied with the course structure or the reading, (not to mention the rented limousine and chauffeur). Students legitimately complained that inf ormal con- tact with Dr. Mead outside the classroom was rare. Most of Dr. Mead ' s free time had been scheduled by her employers for luncheons and public relation ap- pearances. Phillip Leis, Sociology Department Chair- man at Brown, stated the situation quite aptly; Hav- ing her at URI is a stroke of genius . . . Dr. Mead attracted the public attention and interest URI desperately needs. Unfortunately, the students were left with the bitter-sweet taste of what URI could be and what it is today . . . 21 The grill in the Ram ' s Den closes at 5:30 because no one likes to eat after that hour; the Pub opens at 6:00 because everyone likes to drink after six or so: there is a half-hour break to allow rest from these favorite pastimes. Tuitions and education taxes support military instruction on campus, and indirectly, the war effort; these tuitions arid taxes also help sup- port radic-lib professors and students, radi- cal-list guest speakers, and bus rides to Wash- ington, and directly the anti-war effort; they also pay university administrators to insure the above’s continuance. As always, it is the unsuspecting student who loses. And why shouldn ' t he? He is saturated with inconsistencies, yet persists in absorbing more. It is he who reads the shock-statistics Barry Solomon employed in drawing state- wide attention to the abortion and venereal disease problems at URI; and, it is the same he who reads with but minor discomfort Dr. Baum’s observation that the statistics are about right for a university of our size. On the one hand, Dr. Baum, if you will remember, de- manded that Solomon substantiate the fig- ures; on the other, he himself does so. Baum ' s demand betrayed the statistic ' s significance; his observation implied their insignificance. 22 It is he again, while we have him about the neck, who allows the Off-ROTC faction to argue that classes in the likes of Military Science are incompatible with the university ' s academic purposes (in essence, that such courses exceed the domain of academic free- dom); and, who allows the same faction to claim the would-be cancellation of a course on revolution as a violation of academic free- dom. He then may have read SMC president Zarchen, the football team, and a selfish sense of priorities. It was in the face, and ap- parently at the expense, of an imperative $500 need of our tennis team that the foot- ball team was housed in a motel the night be- fore a home game for $400. In another in- stance, athletic-related priorities were ques- tioned by the meager demonstration which met the dedication ceremony of the Tootell gymnasium. Though we need more classrooms Paul Crowley ' s reported opinion that ROTC was retained in the fall referendum due to the pro-ROTC campaign — evidently believing the presentation of both sides to be unfair. Enough. Neither the issues nor our student is of much consequence so far, you will say; (I will say that everything contributes). In fact, that was the point of former Beacon editor Bruce Daniels ' swan-essay entitled Nothing- ness — You Deserve It. Nothingness indeed! We are not so fortu- nate. We have the packaged comedy of and dining halls, we build swimming pools. In addition to the financial is the academic immunity of the athletic department. Last year the department paid an hourly wage for a tutor to help two or three basketball players through Math 7. Amusing in itself (they rarely showed for the sessions), it is not at all the point. Anyone may enter URI with sufficient I) academic record, or 2) athletic ability; the second category is the more stringent. And, the classroom becomes the facade, a formali- ty guising another priority. 23 An experiment to discover the effects of overcrowding was performed on a group of rats. It was revealed that a break- down in normative behavior occurred. An increase in enrollment without an increase in facilities and instructors results in an overcrowding. The similarity of students and rats is debatable but the desirability of overcrowding is absurd. Obviously boredom and disinterest has to be the result of overcrowding because the last ineffec- tive instructor has been released . However, the serious student has little trouble concentrating on the subject matter. ‘See Clough Case pg. I 14 29 Mood Indigo If anything sums up this year on campus, it is a change of mood. The enthusiasm of last spring, the new era of community, the almost crusade mentality dissipated in the haze of the summer. Most everybody returned in September feeling tired, apprehensive maybe, and a bit confused. By November, I overheard one university dean commenting that if you weren ' t confused, you just were not well informed. True there were some problems particular to this campus of 10,000: overcrowding in the classrooms and dormitory construction delays. Howev- er these were not of themselves sufficient to explain the general malaise. It was like continuing to bowl with a new ball — one with no holes. Those that wanted to play couldn ' t pick it up. Some were just too tired of trying. Others, in particular the incoming freshmen, either didn ' t know the rules or weren ' t interested in the game. And so the action stopped. It was the same across the nation. The New York Times in a November survey spoke of the quietness on the cam- puses, of the American uni-campus blanketed by a coast-to-coast calm. But lest you think this change was at- tributable to the fickleness of youth, or to a Burger Chef political mentality (quick, cheap, and around the cor- ner), I refer you to the remarks of Bill Moyers on assignment for Harpers Magazine. He reported on the fa- tigued, worrisome, isolationist attitude of adults in every state he visited. So I asked myself, something has hap- pened but what? I believe the answer is found to a great extent in three areas of our lives: the political, person- al, and economic. The roaring sixties came to a close last spring with an expenditure of emotional energy over Cambodia and a physical release climaxed by the shootings at Kent State, and the bombing of the physics lab at Wisconsin. The overwhelming majority of the people in this country were shocked and dismayed. With all good intentions it seemed that the political journey of the sixties had arrived at the crossroads of violence. To continue was insane, to go back was impossible. Thus the journey came to a halt. The college youth returned still not old enough to vote, still refusing to adopt violence but suspecting little could be gained by rallies, demonstrations and hand- bills. The result was a sort of political quietism this year on campus. I fear that cynicism and frustration are more to blame than apathy. For example, most colleges voted to continue with classes during election time. True, . there are plans afoot for a march on Washington on April 24 and May I . But it remains to be seen if people just have the strength for it. This outgoing expenditure of energy in the sixties also exerted a psychic centrifugal force, pushing each of us farther away from the center of ourselves and holding us there. Continued activism finally resulted in self loss which can only be overcome by an identity crisis. Erik Erikson who coined the term identity crisis wrote in a re- cent book that it does not mean to ask in a morbid fashion Who am I? . Rather it implies a dynamic process of questioning like What do I want to make of myself? and What do I have to work with? . Identity crisis then is an occasional event in our lives implying growth and constructive change. During the sixties the constant ener- gy discharge had diffused the question and the inquiring subject. Consequently, this search for the center characterizes much of the apparent calm or quiet on campus. Yet it is not a do-nothing calm, but has all the seeds, I feel, of a very fruitful regrowth of the person. No longer is one surprised to hear of students taking a year off from school to find out what they really can do. Sad to say for many the university experience has not answered this question or even assured that the answer arrived at would be respected later on. I also think it explains why more students are now living off campus, not for the big parties, but for the quiet and the privacy necessary to get one ' s head together. This curisis is also at the root of the widespread internal dissension of many student organizations, from the peace groups like S.M.C. to the staid and traditional student senates. One final example of note is the dormitory situation. The extension in parietals, the developement of coed living plans, counterbalanced by cries of invasion of privacy and lack of proper direction reflect more an attempt to discover the full potential of community living on a modern campus than permissiveness on the part of the stu- dents or authoritarianism on the part of the university. Alumni, administration and students alike should remem- ber that permissiveness and authoritarianism are of the same fabric since both positions do not allow a sense of responsibility to develope. But how to develope it is the question facing all colleges and universities today. Some are asking an even more interesting question: should a university even be in housing? Something else happened last spring and continued through the summer. Seniors left college and lo and behold — no jobs. The divine college diploma had lost it’s power. Economics for perhaps the first time in this genera- tion became a factor of daily living. Previously, college guaranteed the job, now it can ' t; but perhaps the best student in the class can. However even the best students are uneasy. Study harder, be quiet, yes but job inter- views are down 30% and jobs available are off 50% and everybody knows it. The grad students were affected no less severely. Many will tell you frankly they are staying in college to wait out the recession. Being a bit poor and student go together; being graduated and unemployed do not! Not all are working hard! , you say? That is true. Two years ago Kingman Brewster of Yale spoke of the unwill- ing student on campus. Students in college due to parental pressure or social acceptability are examples. To these I add the draft. Their interest in study and college life is minimum. If they draw a high draft number they often drop out of college; if not, they remain. While their contribution to the classroom is questionable, they certainly don ' t make a lot of noise lest they jeopardize their draft deferment. For many the job of student is preferable to the job of soldier in an unpopular and as yet unproven war. Yes, the mood is indigo — quiet-blue. The blue is the uneasiness, the frustration, the tendency to cynicism and isolation. The critical return to self and the courage to come to grips anew with the dynamic process of life in education. Reverend David A. InrVian, PhD Catholic Center U.R.I. 31 Strike? As these words are being written, late in December, 1970, speculation on the whatever-became-of-last- spring-? question has become almost a national indoor sport. Learned articles are cropping up lushly like weeds in a vacant lot. I notice that a conference to discuss student apathy , of all things, is to be held soon at a sister institution. Who’d of thunk it? Boldly I reply: I ' d of. The question is all about what happened in the Fall of 1970 — since no one seems to argue that it is missing — to last Spring ' s enthusiasm, a word that I use at the risk of begging the question. Because I welcomed and supported — whatever that may mean — the Student Strike, I could not but be dis- appointed by the apparent dissipation of its energies. Disappointed but hardly astonished. I saw in the spirit, the enthusiasm and the excitement of the students last May and June one of those finest hours ' ' about which orators like to orate. The strike seemed to me to have forced briefly to the surface a right- ness of instinct that social encrustations usually manage to surpress. You may contrive your own volcano meta- phor, if you like. There is also your very popular emotional orgasm ' ' label and, for those more gastro- than geni- to-oriented, your giant catharisis . In point of fact, though, the Student Strikes in toto may well have had some as-yet-unmeasured effect for the better upon their participants and possibly (though I am more skeptical of this) some salutary effect on public policy, so called,- toward the war in Southeast Asia. The reason that I was not amazed at the quick dissipation of that explosively unleashed energy of May and June or, to put it another way, at the very evident let-down in the stop-the-war drive, has nothing to do with that too-handy comparison with post-orgasmic lassitude. Rather I believe that the let-down was inevitable given the nature of the Student Strike as an emotional rather than an intellectual experience for most of its partici- pants. For the strike to have produced any substantial, solid residue of politicization, to use the in word of last May, it would have had to be based on a reasoned conviction that the war in South-East Asia is not some . unique phenomenon existing in a socio-politico-economic vacuum but is, in fact, an aspect of a continuing, world-wide struggle constantly involving and enmeshing all peoples of all classes. Regrettably, appeals to end THE war tend to perpetuate myths to the contrary, such as that ending THE war will bring about peace. Such appeals, while emotionally attractive, tend to shunt aside reason. For reason would tell us that absent some fundamental changes in society, war is inevitable and that the only real solution to the war in Southeast Asia is to find and eradicate the cause of ALL war through an understanding of the physical, material reasons for armed conflict between men and nations. Reason would tell us to apply to the solution not slogans and incant ations but methods at least as scientifically sound as we might apply, say, to curing brown patches on a putting green. Freshly painted posters, their wet ink still glistening in the Spring unshine, red rags of armbands, slogans painted on walls and sidewalks, bullhorn rhetoric, guerilla theater — all these are fine and romantic and useful to supplement reason, not to supplant it. Real change will be brought about by a convinced majority. Until then, I suppose, there will be other Spring Strikes: to bring the troops home from Amman, from Santi- ago, from Dar es Salaam, from the Ussuri, from Athens, from hell and gone. Until then, I suppose, other pedants and pundits will be explaining what happened to last Spring ' s enthusiasm. Wilbur Doctor Ass ' t Dean Arts and Sciences I ' de rather wake up in the middle of nowhere Than in any city on earth. ' ' — Steve McQueen 34 Activities of URIans in 1970 in Maintaining a Quality Environment Without being overly dramatic — and without exaggeration — it is safe to say that in 1970, from nearly every quarter of the U.R.I. Campus Community, the realization has been advanced that our personal, academic, and business lives will be undergoing constant and far reaching changes if we are to survive in a town, state, country and world that we are on the point of de- stroying by the thoughtless abuse of our environment and our natural resources. A variety of ac- tion programs stemming from many corners of the University has been aimed at solving environ- mental crises in Kingston, South Kingstown and Rhode Island. It has obviously become evident that URIans are establishing concensus that we must overhaul our life style or slip into the twilight world of air that chokes, water that smells, species that dis- appear, noises that are deafening, land that erodes, marshes that are being filled, coasts that become more industrialized, ever decreasing recreation acreage, darkening ghettos, dying for- ests, contaminated food and dead fish. Campus organizations as H.E.E.D. (Humans for Ending Environmental Deterioration), also known as Ecology Action for Southern R. I., have been very active in sponsoring lectures, promoting work programs and arousing campus community interest in the areas of overpopulation, food production, natural resources conservation, maintainance of environmental quality, government and industry involvement, civic planning and education, and communication. Many of the local chapters of social fraternities and sororities have joined forces on several projects. On occasion, help has been given these student groups by larger organizations as The Audubon Society of R. U the R. I. Environmental Council, The R. I. TB and Respiratory Disease Association, Ecology Action of R. I., and the National Wildlife Federation. Individual members of the faculties of many Departments across the board have become in- volved in a variety of ways. For example, at the G.S.O., Dr. Smayda heads the Narrow River Preservation Association, and Drs. Jeffries, Marshall and Pratt have been active in advisory capacities on a variety of Narragansett Bay projects; in Engineering, Mr. Wilson, Dr. Middleton and others have been involved in The Tiverton Oil Refinery case; in Plant Pathology-Entomolo- gy, Dr. Tarzwell has helped in an advisory capacity in many pollution problems; in Food and Re- source Chemistry, Drs. Salomon, Felbeck and Owens have published important papers and have been working members of regional pesticide commissions; in Sociology, Dr. Bouvier has given countless outstanding lectures on the population problem; in History, Dr. Weisbord has been similarly involved and has pursued the question of Black American attitudes on birth control; Dr. Hindle in Horticulture and Dr. Croasdale, Ass ' t to the President, have set up nature trails for the school systems of the state; in Forestry, Drs. Kupa, Gould and Brown are heading the new curriculum in Natural Resources; and in Botony, Dr. Palmatier, and in Zoology, Drs. Clough, Heppner, Shoop and Zinn have given numerous lectures to student, lay and professional audi- ences on many aspects of current environmental problems. It should also be noted that students, faculty and staff have been working profitably together in several areas as The Arboretum Committee, (Dr. Lepper, Chairman), The Campus Beautifica- tion Committee, and so on. Many faculty members are also contributing through active mem- bership in local civic organizations as The Association for the Orderly Improvement of South Kingstown, and are on the environmental committees of such professional organizations as The Ecological Society of America. In this year of ecological crisis, there can be no doubt that URIans are vitally and actively concerned about the grave threat to human life posed by man ' s carelessness with his environ- ment; and they have put their collective shoulders to the wheel. by Donald J. Zinn Department of Zoology 38 Think of her new. An unspoiled country living open to the sun. Think of oceans of beauty, instead of scattered puddles, muddy and drying up. — Russell 39 SUNDAY, APRIL 18, 1971 — POLLUTION DRIVE — U.R.I. Diving Club MONDAY, APRIL 19, 1971 12:00 Noon KICK-OFF RALLY Quadrangle, URI Campus 7:30 P.M. ENVIRONMENTAL SYMPOSIUM Pla net Earth: Do You Have a Future? Edwards Auditorium Sociology — Dr. Leon Bouvier Economics — Dr. William Haller Politics - — Dr. Walter Heilman Psychology — Dr. James Prochaska RAP SESSION TO FOLLOW Rooms 208, 209, 213 and 219 Independence Hall TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1971 ZERO POPULATION GROWTH presents The Overpopulation Crisis: Child and the Family 8:00 A.M. INFORMATION BOOTH Room 211, Memorial Union 12:00 ENVIRONMENTAL FILMS to Rooms 300 and 331, Mem. 5:00 P.M. Union OVERPOPULATION CRISIS WORKSHOPS Browsing Room, Memorial Union 12:30 Population Growth and to Community Planning 2:00 P.M. Dr. Howard Foster Dr. Richard O. Brooks Community Planning Dept. 40 Earth Week 2:00 Adoption to Charlotte MacLean, 3:00 P.M. Adoption Supervisor, Sophia Little Home in Providence 3:00 Planned Parenthood to Mrs. Ann Weis 5:00 P.M. (Providence Office) 7:30 P.M. PANEL DISCUSSION Room 103, Quinn Hall The Overpopulation Crisis: Child and the Family RAP SESSIONS TO FOLLOW Rooms 213, 214, Quinn Hall WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1971 9:00 A.M. H.E.E.D. Information Booth Room 211, Memorial Union 12:00 FILM FESTIVAL to Rooms 300, 331, Mem. Union 5:00 P.M. ENVIRONMENTAL WORKSHOPS Browsing Room, Memorial Union 12:00 Ecology” to Dr. Jan Prager, U.S. Environmental 1:15 P.M. Protection Agency 1:30 Economics to Jack Donnan 2:45 P.M. Resource Economics Dept. 3:00 Religion to Rev. Kenneth B. Wentzel 4:15 P.M. 4:30 Politics Martin Needleman 5:30 P.M. Sociology Dept. 971 EARTH WEEK 71 SPEAKER STEWART UDALL Former U.S. Secretary of Interior Edwards Auditorium 8:00 P.M. 9:30 P.M. FOLK SING North Ram ' s Den, Mem. Union FRIDAY, APRIL 23, 1971 8:00 A.M. H.E.E.D. Information Booth Room 211, Memorial Union ENVIRONMENTAL DISPLAYS Browsing Room, Memorial Union THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1971 (National Earth Day) 9:00 A.M. H.E.E.D. Information Booth Room 211, Memorial Union 12:00 FILM FESTIVAL to Room 331, Mem. Union 5:00 P.M. 12:00 Noon RESOURCE SYMPOSIUM Power and the Environment James Roney, Ocean Engr. Dept. Ballroom, Memorial Union 4:00 P.M. ECOLOGY FILMS William McEneaney Room 124, Pastore Hall Water Pollution Air Pollution ENVIRONMENTAL DISPLAYS Browsing Room, Memorial Union ENVIRONMENTAL WORKSHOPS Room 330, Memorial Union 12:00 Re-cycle to Dr. Stanley Barnette 1:15 P.M. Chemical Engineering Dept. 1 :30 Land Use to Dr. John Fisher 2:45 P.M. Geology Dept. 3:00 P.M. LAND USE FIELD TRIP with Dr. John Fisher SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1971 Ecology Action of Rhode Island presents CONFERENCE ON THE ENVIRONMENT — Population — Household Ecology — Atomic Energy For Time Place, Call Ecology Action of R. I. in Providence 2749429 3:00 P.M. RE CYCLE RALLY CONTEST WINNERS Quadrangle, URI Campus 7:00 P.M. MOVIE — Silent Spring 8:30 P.M. CANDLE-LIGHT MARCH Both at Quadrangle, Campus — COMING SOON - RE-CYCLING CENTERS HOUSEHOLD ECOLOGY GUIDE For More Information Write H.E.E.D. P.O. Box 9 Kingston, R. I. 02881 41 Now I see the secret of making the best persons; It is to grow in open air and to eat and sleep With the earth. — Walt Whitman 42 45 We have learned how to control the Earth, But will we ever learn to respect her. — ■ Liz Banks 47 URI in 1971 attained a record enrollment and simultane- ously suffered from an unprecedented low in student in- volvement. Student organizations either floundered or folded from the deficiency of interested members. The reasons for student ' s reluctance to join group activi- ties has already been explained, I would rather relate its effects on student music tastes. Students preferred indi- vidual performers to the big name rock groups. Livingston Taylor, Melanie, B. B. King and the rest charac- terized the 71 music scene at URI. Although groups were well received . . . Chicago, Poco, and Sea Train, everyone was singing Fire and Rain. 48 Livingston Taylor 49 Melanie Jonathon Edwards CO CO S3 Pot Is ' As Easy to Get as Beer’ at URI By LEE DYKAS Last Monday, Detective William J. Robertson of the South Kingstown Police Department told the town’s Lions Club that South County has a drug problem.” He said it could not be classified as a large problem” but is a growing problem,” and that most of the persons involved with drugs are University of Rhode Island students, both on and off campus. The simple truth about drug use at URI is that no one knows for sure. All that exists is a body of opinion. But there is one opinion that is shared by everyone at the university — marijuana is easily obtained by- students. It’s as easy to get as beer,” according to a number of students questioned. Estimates of how many students use marijuana vary from about half the student body” to nearly all of The lowest estimate is 47 per cent. That is the opinion of Barry Solomon, newly appointed director of health services at the university. Mr. Solomon shares with other fac- ulty members and administrators the opinion that the university’s problem is no different from that of any other campus in the United States. He quickly points out that he has no hard” information on the situa- tion at URI, but uses figures reported recently in a national magazine that were derived from questionnaires re- turned by 7,300 students at 200 col- leges and universities in the nation. He adds that the figures may be inac- curate because the magazine did not say how many questionnaires were sent out. But Mr. Solomon empha- sizes that until a survey of URI stu- dents is completed this semester he will continue to use the magazine’s figures.” The magazine, he explains, states that 53 per cent of the students have never used marijuana, 34 per cent use it occasionally and only 13 per cent use it frequently. Several students laughed at the suggestion that more than half the students have not tried marijuana. Mike (that’s not his real name), a sophomore who says he attended a conservative” high school in nearby Massachusetts and who admits he smokes marijuana once every week or two — sometimes more often,” said that nearly every student has at least tried marijuana once. Pressed on that opinion, he said firmly, at least 80 per cent have smoked at least Other students are even more as- sertive. Paul (not his name), a hitch- hiker picked up, near the campus, where he is a freshman, said be- tween half and three-quarters of the students turn on” regularly. The Rev. John Hall, Episcopal chaplain at the university, said, I think it is a significant percentage — more than half’ that uses marijuana. Last Wednesday five students sat with a reporter and discussed drug use on campus for about an hour and a half, during which time they agreed that the 80 per cent figure was accu- rate. Later in the conversation the re- porter asked each student if he had smoked marijuana. Four said yes, one said no, but added that she intends to — perhaps only coincidentally that proved” their contention that 80 per cent use marijuana now and maybe more will in the future. I have never smoked marijuana but I will. I want to try it. I don’t think my education will be complete until I know what it’s like. All the kids smoke it and they say it’s great — there’s nothing wrong with it.” — a University of Rhode Island coed and junior. At least 80 percent of the kids on campus have tried pot at least once.” — a junior who says he smokes marijuana regularly and once tried a stronger narcot- ic. Pot? It’s all over the campus. Anyone who wants it can get it.” — student consensus. The problem at URI is the same as it is on every other campus as well as in the general community.” — a university chaplain. Our drug problem is no better and no worse than that of the student’s peer community in the state.” — Dr. Werner A. Baum, URI president. Reprinted from: Providence Journal Bulletin Two U.R.I. students turn on . . . Police outraged Smoke-in protests pot laws A small group of concerned students staged a “smoke-in” last Thursday afternoon on the URI quadrangle while nearly 200 people looked on with anger, disbelief or sympathy, mostly sympathy. The next day the head of the State Police, Col. Walter Stone, called the action “outrageous.” URI attained instant notoriety nationwide. Paul W. Brubacher, dean of students, was among the on- lookers. So were a number of his staff, Stephen B. Wood, assistant vice president for academic affairs, a half dozen or so faculty members and the Providence Journal. Brubacher knew about the plans to smoke marijuana en masse and in public before the “smoke-in” began. The organizers of the movement had advertised on WRIU radio and leaflets were passed out in front of the Memorial Union. The dean of students office had a prepared statement to be delivered when it was evident that the law was being broken. The statement warned that the police would be called. Brubacher had arranged for a sound truck to deliver tflfe statement. It was never read. The dean said he was not sure the law was being broken. He could not tell if the smokers were really puffing on marijuana or if the whole thing was a hoax. Brubacher apparently consulted with higher administration of- ficials before making the decision qot to call police. He was seen walking into the administration building about halfway through the protest. Top level administrators were seen gathering on the top floor of the building. The State Police have promised an investigation. Brubacher said Monday two officers contacted him about the “smoke-in.” “They asked if I knew who the leaders were,” the dean said. “I didn’t.” Interviews with participants and such circumstantial evidence as the appearance of the cigarets being smoked, the smell of the smoke and the mood of the smokers, indicate that marijuana was being used in the demon- stration. According to some spokesmen and the literature handed out, the action was a protest against the harsh marijuana laws. The spokesmen have promised further smoke-ins. Brubacher said after the meeting with the State Police of- ficers that the next time such an incident occurs on the campus his “hands will be tied.” “We’ll have to call the police,” the dean added. Brubacher warned that “once the police are on the campus, we have lost control.” The dean said he wasn’t sure at the time of the “smoke-in what the protesters were trying to accomplish. “If they wanted a confrontation, they could have been more apparent about what Jhey were doing,” he said. Reprinted From The Good 5c Cigar 3 31 71 55 • Many Attended . . . But Few Took POT 59 The Pub 60 Still Drink 61 Let school-masters puzzle their brain With grammar, and nonsense and learning; Good liquor, I stoutly maintain Gives genius a better discerning. — Oliver Goldsmith In December of 1969 history was made on the cam- pus of the University of Rhode Island. Students were allowed to drink on the college grounds. The R.l. Me- morial Union marked the spot. Those responsible for the organizing of this newly established drinking spot gathered behind the bar and quaffed the first mugs of beer drawn. Pictures were taken, good spirits pre- vailed, happiness surrounded all and the next day there they were — on the center fold of the New York Daily News. History had been written. For the first time drinking was allowed on a Land Grant Col- lege in New England. Everything was wonderful! But alas! All that glitters is not gold. Behind the scenes there were cries of anguish from the local surrounding townspeople, the local police and even some campus authorities who were all quite certain that this type of freedom for the students would lead to beaucoup trouble. At this time there were prob- ably only a handful of people who really believed that this venture would not only succeed but would even prove to be an asset. I was one — I was the manager. The students themselves had a hand in my hiring and I was quite sure that they would not let me down, and of course, I was certain that I would not let them down. My greatest concern was discipline during business hours. Remembering my own college days I realized that no one likes to be TOLD so I decided to use the power of suggestion. It worked like magic! It was un- believeable how the students responded! The deco- rum was maintained at a high level and their attitude was splendid. I really marveled at the bearded won- ders, the moustached bad actors, the long-haired trouble makers, and the mini-skirted hip swinging Co-eds. Upon entering the Pub they all acted like the ladies and gentlemen that they really are. I have found that if the so-called adults of today would try to remember their own youth they would understand today ' s youth better for today ' s youth are no differ- ent from the youths of 10, 15, 20, or 30 years ago. The only actual difference is the circumstances which surround their lives today. I have often said, The biggest lie that was ever told is ' I never did that when I was your age! ' My final task was the acceptance by those who objected and those who were skeptical at the start. Never once had there been an altercation; never once had there been a disorder of any kind even dur- ing the nation wide student strike; never once had the students given anyone cause to gripe about the Pub; never once did the police have to be called. In- deed one would hardly believe that the place existed at all from this point of view. I constantly invited peo- ple to visit the Pub and see for themselves and they have — much to their satisfaction, I urged the June graduates to bring their parents to visit the Pub on Commencement Day and they did — the parents were gratified and some were even envious, for they were URI graduates. During the summer session a course was offered by URI to Officers of the Law and they came from all over the state. They spent many happy hours in the Pub themselves as summer stu- dents. I am positive that they were satisfied that this was a move in the right direction. Needless to say, the Pub is now a success and has been accepted by the majority as a good thing. This has been a major breakthrough in student rela- tions and the students have no one to thank other than themselves. They drink less, enjoy it more and even get better grades in some instances. The vast majority are thankful for this new found privilege and they guard it carefully. Happiness to me is a thing called appreciation. An example: On April 12, 1970 I opened the Pub as usual. I received a phone call from the business office on the first floor requesting my assistance in solving a slight problem which they felt I could help. Since there were only 2 or 3 students in the Pub at the time I decided to leave for a few minutes and help if I could. I hadn ' t been gone for more than 5 minutes when I received an emergency call to return to the Pub. My first reaction was My God!, The first time I leave for 5 minutes and there ' s trouble — all our hard work gone up in smoke! Down the sta irs I ran and jerked open the doors of the Pub. There was a group of students blowing horns, throwing streamers, and acting as if it were New Year ' s Eve. I immediate- ly decided that the best way to handle this situation would be to join them and then suggest that we cool it. So, I yelled out Happy New Year and entered the Pub. Much to my surprise they stopped their horn blowing etc. and began to sing Happy Birthday. You see, April 12th is my birthday. The students had arranged a surprise birthday party for me and sur- prise me they did. I will never forget or appreciate anything quite so much again as long as I may live. Compassion and giving can sometimes bring on the most personal gratification that one can imagine. This is the most I receive from my job. Personal satis- faction that comes when I am able to help one of the students solve a problem and they do have many. It is my opinion that today ' s students are more know- ledgeable, more receptive, more capable than ever before in history and we must help them shape the fu- ture of America, for the future is truly theirs. Their major drawback is lack of experience. Why not give them the benefit of ours? So, as the song goes What’s the matter with kids today? — I say, Noth- ing!! Thomas E. Reilly 63 INDOOR fli ST , .-AMfiAKE [08ST£R STEAMERS L+HeMECKS «? CH0WHE D Ilf he DR AFT R EEK youmdrink qSO , , BAX DECQJW 12 NOO H TO 7P.n. Requiem for the Masses All things must come to an end . . . for some too soon and for others not soon enough. The Beachcomber Happy Hour has seen its last in this the year 1971. For many Happy Hour marked the beginning of every week-end. This not so holy weekly pilgrimage will be brought to an end as a result of Urban Renewal ' s plans to tear down ocean-front Narragan- sett. 64 To the down-the-liners, Iggy ' s and Giro ' s can mean a night free from cooking meals and washing dishes. To the on-campus resident they are places to go when the dining hall serves the same old left-overs. 66 (ilifiilBli Food Stamps ... A Way of Life Down-the-line living became synonymous with the word food stamp as many a resident ate their dinner courtesy of the state of Rhode Island. zstt mzr i L. i . v- ' DO NOT spindle d f °o n l s t m C 24538957 A Agricultural Abundance SH2P Healthier Families NON -TRANSFERABLE EXCEPT UNDER CONDITIONS PRESCRIBED BY THE SECRETARY OF AGRlCUL 68 FOOD STAMPS! 69 72 73 74 V 76 77 THE MEMORIAL UNION 78 The Rams Den 81 This place bums me right out. 82 Friday Afternoon: Exodus Friday afternoon ' s mass exodus from the dorms has contributed greatly to U R I s nickname suitcase campus . This exodus, however, leaves the seven day resident to enjoy concerts and lectures which might otherwise be overcrowded were these peo- ple to stay. 83 3 0 Q- s t u t Women ' s Dorms Jeanne Basl Melita Carwane Kathie McNulty Lynda Rocereta Susan Shaw Mary Szalkowski Sororities Sandy Belknap Gail McCurry Marge Sawinski Women ' s Commuters Anne Vieira President: Tony Robinson V. President: Bob Hicks Student Body Treasurer: Thomas Howard Student Senate Treasurer: Les Rich Men ' s Commuters Alan Cook Charles Knowles Richard McLeod Evans Ralston Fraternities Stu Abrams Lance Dickinson Tom Mailhot Steve Masuck Seth Perlmutter George Thomas Men ' s Dorms Normand Beauregard George Bradley Steven DelGiuidice Bob Egelson Steve Hopkins Jeff Lees William McKenna Les Rich John Tarasevich s e n a t e 1 I This page is donated by Perspective to be used creatively. PERSPECTIVE — the people who brought you student music albums I and 2, poetry, and comics . . . all carrying the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval. Professors question exams more X£7nd“i him’ a hr demonstrators Shi s 3 ™ Hi i’ §C Joel? ' m ■■§ = ?? w So, . ' ' - w h : e e s -§■ Devlin urges revolution :iplinarian to that Tony? The dean stated that ner ...... as to listen to what the disciplinarian to that ot udents have to say and find out ow they feel about certain roblems. “I want to promote degree of succe ' communicating with hopes to impre- i the lilies ' rate student collects parking ickets worth $675 ' , . W -4 O V V ul have the opportunity ftoy iY v .egrate academic programs I 5 lonstr $ S durir • «g . - time of the URI vs. BC g with game, a groeo of te jjj t for paraded Keane sign ' ‘heir c «■. - “ ming ft bow ft S ed 0 8 III II ¥3 Dean Scarfpin said she would also be willing to promote — satisfactory conditio ' - fraternities and soro fgs-sia-- - , ■g s rvU e _ p % 3 g « Dean Scarf ' a need typ- mpete for ..on while th -iree year old cl Y -W doing their routin floor. The group . . , ’Serto students 1 in 7 en ely out ' in Hartford protest Rogue, £ §“ 2 g URI students arrested I iff! if. :! ! ,«£ ap-aS e-So s w 1 8 1 ' 5° oSlsS., - .i-?rt|S|g S 3 li 8 V v, 1r w -aaESs: I $ Loone y Tunes % spe. a community 01 •««• .. 1 - SCtiOx- A n r r. rpu;„ w.f n .nl tUn Tho ’ nnlp linifpH hv the . m ■ 0,00 ,. This referral to the Th® y g ople united by the ■nr A a tr % iook-up with “Together,” a cei ting t ihe Student S g E S 3 eg IF If l = - h. -I V) r M- f.o. 1 ■ ' ' ?e. Senate’s future depends on Feb. referendum | 2«g gS e 8.3$ -g; SQ s I? c« a s !li mi iifr “l Po yin •ing hardei ,e arncie concerning Nate Adger a Moll ' suspended fro. C - ' ous. The story f drug information cen fa ble to all tear C - ' ous. The story ot k 4 - evidence of the stuo Q f discuss ttu. Ot.. - ere suspe the Hv. will appear drug ?d at the when in.. HD f ' opep he would J Sopening of a Cath, will be wording somev.. C( O Staffe, unteers, Rich said that Sq Ute umveretty X N«gSouthem which lded is .n D lawyer, and that v f s motional literal jsv S Awm r re ” 3 . . - sa . 0- 1 adnu - X lo c. VJVs VWlcompanj Q V s e- 0 - Bogue Dr. Wemfe V . _ , ident, said jr t V| : otend to Rhody Ra.. ° f - my way lands, t ,ve on College, hoping V .tory. Their plans fell -ough, as the tall and fjj-. il Eagles overpowered College’s favt fTm. ' he lead for th, ' Jy • .n. imetimeshel a © a to a a a. 4 e e e ■ cts •srsrm ' i «... of HEED, how the envi. people, how the environment, ople are again affe lew environment, iski has instituted ne £ inform is .by ministrar did not sh , arm0( |y s armed cam ° n Hants ' st 0fe ™zvy Co,lJ p£unt c-se. and snnnsoi ‘ c o fhere wii M D plans __ r month and sponso. . r workshop. Zelenski le URI group needs and plans 1 . 0 and that it shou.v vj j that no statement made oe several sei on fact.” re presently nt . d tha -nts. In addition t . -ythint s during weet . tori beopenunt 21 lhat ■ Saturday U V S un an Q vo1 plat « v c °“. CL .CV A - %, B. C. 37, e beginni ed Rhody ards. Oi ts of th S ' ft o ath th a.- r • mgs clear advantage, the within striking “ -mostly Nate Adger ifeO 9“ , « ec llut. s vf09 e 1 that only _ mksp ' — uays are alotted to drop • courses, and 14 days to add a __ fuiED Newsletter offers course - following suggestions: The Senate is urging all students tFV ... . ■„ U,o E’ _..U„ Cannla CSiaDK V .Qt ..ter the Fa ' 1 case necessa- Use cloth, not paper, to attend the F — u y Senate Wiley re?V aC °t4 ' e P resi dent holders. Fix brokge don’t b«v P 03 -culty % .ulty may revii Faculty Senate .emonstratiorT present ievel and not higher. Th registrativ. lemonstrauon. opposition to the reso i ution stat£ devised to a.. Rams get first win Just what this country really neet STAFF John Pantalone Richard Raquier Anne Foster John Levesque Cath Winters Lucia Droby Carol Cioe Sandy Hazlett Alan Green Harvey Kohn Rosalie Targonski Susan Shaw Ron Ellish John Silva Bill Solomon Steve Cheslow Have A Cigar What this country needs is a good five-cent cigar.” Thomas Riley Marshall, vice president under Wood- row Wilson, said it first, but W. C. Fields, the actor and biting social critic, made it popular. Well, here it is at last. Just what the country needs. This cigar will leave a bad taste in some people’s mouths. Others will get a chuckle out of the new campus paper’s name. Hopefully, Cigar will provide some of what the country needs. The staff intends to try. Even before the publication of its first issue. Cigar has engendered controversy. Critics have lashed out against the new name. Fans cherish it. Let the controversy rage. Cigar hopes to stimulate a great deal of it in the months to come. The pages of this newspaper are open to anyone inter- ested in the workings of the university community. The staff is open to anyone willing to work. The policy of the paper is not locked into any ideological perspective. We intend to tell it like it is, ask people to tell it like they see it, and make readers feel it up and down the length of this cigar. When the Cigar starts to get stale, butt it out. It’s your newspaper. RAR Temporary staff begins publishing new UR I paper The resignation of Bruce Daniel, editor of the Beacon, paved the way for a new campus newspaper now known as “The Good Five- Cent Cigar.” Daniel resigned Feb. 15 after publishing a 16-page farewell issue. Only one page had text. The rest were blank. Daniel called his parting shot “Nothingness. You Deserve It.” The Student Senate shortly thereafter approved a constitution for a new organization and ap- pointed three members of a board of directors. The new directors are Thomas Howard, student body treasurer; John McKee, a junior English major; and Richard Raquier, a former Beacon news editor. The six-member board was filled out with the appointment of Spencer Gelband, former president of the Graduate Student Association; Lawrence Kahn, former business manager of the Beacon; and Anne Foster, former managing editor of the Beacon. The board is in the process of selecting a permanent staff A temporary staff appointed by Raquier, chairman of the board, is publishing the paper until a new staff can be selected. Many applicants for editorial positions have agreed to work on the temporary staff. Both can- didates for editor, John Levesque and John Pantalone, are working on the Cigar staff. Larry Kahn Jeff Klein man Bruce Compaine 87 “Some men see things as they are . . ' ECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! SPECIA Barry Solomon fired • • and ask WHY? . Editorial Missing the Point Christmas vacation extended until Jan. 11 College leaders try pot ■Atm adv o i q -7 , Godard ' s new film Sympathy lor the Devil ( I + 1 ) JMnUMnT o, lU l ■ g starring The Rolling Stones . EDWARDS AUDITORIUM 7:30 p.m. “ 1 + 1 ” Admission $1.00 10:00 p.m. Sympathy for the Devil 89 . . . I see things that never were . . The URI BEACON December 16, 1970 3 Project ’70 Margaret Mead leads intimate discussion group Major Carlton W. Berg win tree decorating contest INSIGHTS by MICHAEL and say So What?” 4 The URI BEACON December 18, 1970 SPORTS Nate Adger, Ed Molloy suspended S1NJ- INSIGHTS by MICHtfL - ' ufo ” “ MAXSE WE ErtouEO have ALLOTTED tto E FUNDS Public Service Announcement Black Power Rape Murder Fascism Acid :: STUDENT LECTURE SERIES Pornography PRESENTS Sex BILL RUSSELL Gore 8:15 PM Brutality FEB. 4 and all the other things that make hie worth living. EDWARDS AUD. Don’t Miss It! Union Board sponsors 1st Annual Sex Games reveal WRIU GENERAL MANAGER CHIEF ENGINEER AM PROGRAM DIRECTOR FM PROGRAM DIRECTOR NEWS DIRECTOR BUSINESS MANAGER PRODUCTION MANAGER . . . Eliot Asser Robert Zucker . . . Saul Spivak Don Boas .Steve Schock . . . Bruce Paris . .John Zoglio S.E.C. Year of Disaster $ 1 0,000 — Temptations $ 7,700 — Chicago $ 5,438 — Melanie $ 5,000 — B. B. King $ 4,750 — Little Richard $ 3,000 — Seatrain $ 2,500 — New York Rock Ensemble $ 2,000 — Poco $ 1 ,500 — Seals and Crofts $ 1,000 — Jaime Brockett $ 1 ,000 — J. Geils Band $ 1,000 — McKendree Spring $ 1 ,000 — Alex Taylor $ 1 ,000 — Dreams $ 1 ,000 — Kate Taylor $ ,850 — Boz Scaggs $ ,750 — Livingston Taylor $ ,750 — Uncle Dirty $ ,500 — Jon Edwards $ ,500 — Happy and Arte Traum $ ,500 — Chase $ ,500 — Cowboy $ ,450 — Park St. Under $ ,400 — Don Cooper $ ,300 — Jon Edwards $ ,300 — Alive ' n Kickin $ ,300 — Schooner Vestre $ ,250 — A Roomful of Blues $ ,250 — Benefit Street (Also Rans) $15000. The Fifthe Dimension $7500 vs % The Grateful Dead $10,000 vs % Elton John $750 Edgar Winter $5000 vs % John Sebastian unable to meet contractual obligations, ILLNESS and other misc. bull. Gordon Crane — Treasurer Gary Bogue: Major Events Coordinator S.E.C. Advisor Stu Weintraub — Chairman S.E.C. MEMBERS Stu Weintraub Gordon Crane Bruce Compaine Dede Greenwald Rosemary Rainier Mark Hodash Chicago Uncle Dirty My first deadline for this article was January; my second, March; my third, April. I know the Greek System. I know Greeks. And yet, it is now the end of May and I am still not sure what to write. Explanation? Persuasion? Justification? Information? Is it to be explanation? Why does a student go Greek? For what reasons does an individual become a member of a social, greek letter society? How do I know? The Greek System is made up of twenty-seven different houses and nearly two thousand individuals. Must two thousand in- dividuals have a common reason for being involved? I cannot lump two thousand individuals under a label — Greek. I can ' t give one Personality to so many different people. How then can I explain? Is it to be persuasion? Am I suppose to sell Greek in twenty-five words or less? I can ' t sell Greek. I will not try. I can offer new direction, new involvement, a new situation, but I can ' t sell it. Too many people have already been sold on a crest or on a blazer instead of a conviction. If you are this kind of sold-Greek, leave. We don ' t need you. Is it to be a justification? It will not be a justification. I will not search for a dispassionate jus- tification for the individual involvement of two thousand Greeks. They don ' t need it. Is it to be informative? Maybe I could supply that. I could write of brothers involved with cerebral palsy drives, boy scout troops of lost cause kids, big brothers, food drives for the hungry. I could write about sisters involved in Ladd School, tutoring, Meeting Street School. Then I could write about parties, about Greek Week, about just all around fun for two thou- sand. Then I could write about responsibility, about running a house, about existing as individu- als in a unit. Maybe I would if I thought anyone was listening except Greeks. Barbara Burns, 1971. The Greek Way of Life Responsibility Fun Lambda Chi Alpha Second Annual Sorority President Kidnap Food is obtained tor the needy of the community as sorority sisters reclaim their kidnapped presidents. Sigma Chi Derby Week All ' s fair when it ' s a question of gaining that derby! 102 103 Greek Week GREEK SING PIE-EATING CONTEST ROLLER DERBY Greek Week Co-ordinators Warren Fischer — Phi Sigma Delta Fred Conte — Sigma Phi Epsilon Penny Baker — Delta Zeta Mary-Anne Witkowski — Kappa Alpha Theta I 10S .. - ' ■ ' ■ ' ' ' ' . ' ? . • in. r j ....- • ' Saturday Placing in a lmost every event, Phi Sigma Delta — Lambda Delta Phi emerged victorious; cap- turing first place in Greek Week 71. 106 The medley was a test of skill and endur- ance, as was the traditional chariot race. Greek Week 71 came to a close with the awarding of trophies to the winners which in turn signaled the start of individ- ual house celebrations lasting long into the evening. Saturday was the highlight of a week of hard competition between the Greek houses. There was the colorful parade of chariots, charioteers, pretty girls, and of course TKE ' s added attraction of a horse-drawn vehicle. IX X t IN AXA I DE 0 rA TKE PKa DMA 0X OIA 0AX OIK IAE Greek Sing 390 715 297 175 541 900 268 711 223 686 718 667 580 Pie Eating 300 100 200 Roller Skating 400 300 200 Chariot App. 800 500 600 Chariot Race 800 600 500 Medley 1200 400 600 1000 500 300 900 200 800 700 Tug 600 400 500 300 Total 2390 1715 897 1575 2241 2100 568 211 1 1023 200 2586 1218 667 1280 Place 2nd 3rd 5th 4th 1st GREEK WEEK SCORES AXQ AAn XO IK IAT AIA AAA AA0 KA0 AZ Greek Sing 720 937 810 670 647 802 772 608 580 752 Tricycle Race 300 200 400 Pie Eating 300 200 100 Medley 300 900 1000 400 600 500 1200 800 200 Chariot Appearance 300 500 600 Tug 500 600 400 800 300 Greek Goddess 300 200 100 Total 1320 2937 1810 1670 1247 2502 2972 3108 780 952 Place 3rd 2nd 1st 112 Werner and Shirley Dine Out 113 It has been said by many that students are more concerned now, that they are more aware of the problems facing them. Why is it then that many students still go on asking What is the Garrett Clough case? The case itself dates back to January of 1968, when Clough ' s letter of recommendation for promotion and tenure was withdrawn without an explanation. There have been many rea- sons given for this and it is hard to say who is correct. The administration, the present chair- man of the Zoology Department and others say that he is an ineffective teacher. Many others feel that the denial of tenure is a result of his often-voiced opinion against the use of chemical warfare, genocide, military and war- related research within the University and his stand on the student role on campus. were denied, and the fourth he was told to rewrite. When it came time for the Board to hear his rewritten fourth charge, they refused to hear it. The four charges deal with Clough ' s failure to obtain tenure, his being denied due process of the law and his being an ineffective teacher. Although the Student Senate and the Stu- dents Rights Committee have publicly given their support to Clough and the Senate has voted to raise money to hire him as a Student Senate Interdisciplinary Professor for 1971- 72, the Faculty Appeals Board has maintained a deaf ear — to student opinion. Clough maintains that he will bring his case to civil court if necessary for he feels his con- stitutional rights are being denied. After his recommendation was denied by the Board of Review of which President Werner Baum is a member, he decided to take his case to the Faculty Appeals Board. He pre- sented to them four charges, three of which His case should not be forgotten by the U.R.I. community, but rather should serve as an I example of what is happening, not just at j URI, but throughout the country, with regard to people ' s personal freedoms. 114 Professor Clough and Alton Wiley, attorney at law. 115 “I Would Like to See a Lawyer” Samuel M. Fleisig, a Providence attorney, was chosen this year to represent the URI student body. The appointment was made upon the completion of interviews by the Student Senate Executive Committee. As the student body lawyer, Sam serves as an advisor for students requesting legal counsel and when called upon, represents the student body as a whole in all legal matters; the most recent being the alleged police brutality which occurred in May. I ' m not so old that I have lost interest in students. Samuel Fleisig Attorney at Law 116 Bookstore Burgle or Work your own way through college, BUDDY 117 119 120 • Jil 122 1 J3 125 The work of producing The Roar of the Greasepaint, The Smell of the Crowd began in early March after a weekend of auditions. Chorus music rehearsals began the next day. Don ' t underestimate the ' ooohs and aahs ' in the chorus part, Brad Smoker, the director, told the Musical Director. Chorus rehearsals began in Quinn Auditorium but moved around campus wherever a decent piano was available. Two sororities offered the use of their pianos and were soon treat- ed to thirteen kids singing measures of music over and over and over . . . Finally, even the ' ooohs and aahs ' were perfect. The leads then began to learn their songs even before they learned the scripts. Rehearsals began in Quinn and moved to G Studio in the new Fine Arts complex where the set for the show was being built. The leads learned their lines and rehearsed eve- nings during March and April. There was no Easter vacation for the chorus and Musical Di- rector. Sally Lee, a choreographer from New York had been hired to stage dances for the show. Dressed in black rehearsal tights, with flaming red hair and a dynamic personality, Sally faced the chorus, many of whom had never danced before. Dear children, she breathed, Let’s exercise a bit. So began a week of grueling, exhausting and sometimes irritat- ing dance rehearsals. Sally taped the musical sequences and experimented with different dance segments. Wait, go back again, she would stop the chorus mid-way in a song. We ' ve got a few more measures left over for some more steps. While we ' re stopped, the Musical Director would yell, Don’t forget to sing while you’re dancing! Lead dance rehearsals began the following week. Don ' t worry guys, I ' ll think of a way to get you off-stage! Sally would say. Two weeks before opening night, the cast began work- throughs at Quinn. The play began to take shape. Scenes and dances were practiced constantly and changed to fit the confines of the stage. Every day a new prop or lighting de- vice was tried out. The orchestra practiced staying together, trying not to drown out the singers on stage. The cast was ready days before the dress r ehearsal. This first performance and last rehearsal became the final testing ground for the actors, musicians and stage crew. Tomorrow was Opening Night! Opening night — this was it! Break a Leg. Anxious cast members practiced dance steps backstage. Musicians warmed up before the audience en- tered the auditorium. The director gave last minute instruc- tions. Sally Lee received roses from the cast and told every- one. I ' ll be standing in the back. Don ' t forget to SMILE!! One member of the chorus passed out lollipops. Five min- utes, the stage manager warned. The musicians sat down. The house lights dimmed. The overture began. The months of rehearsals were over and the URI production of Greasepaint began. 129 University Health Services 130 The University of Rhode Island Health Services Center is located in the Potter Building and boasts the most modern of clinical equipment. 131 132 BARRY SOLOMON — DIRECTOR OF HEALTH SERVICES Barry has tried to make the campus community aware of its health problems. He believes that the Health Services is not solely an institution for curing the sick, but rather has the primary purpose of preventing the occurrence of disease and illness. A unique feature of the Health Services operations is the creation of a Health Services Advisory Council initiated by Barry Solomon. It is composed primarily of interested students and meets bi-monthly for informal meetings at the Faculty Center. Perhaps a few of the more noticeable achievements of the Health Advisory Council have been the visitation policy at the Potter Building and the publica- tion of a booklet on Birth Control which was done in cooperation with the Stu- dent Senate and distributed free of charge to students at registration. CO Univ Drug Drop-In URI ' s first Drug Drop-In center opened in Novem- ber with its headquarters in the Catholic Center. It is staffed with student volunteers who undergo a six week course dealing primarily with role playing. The center operates in close conjunction with the university health services personnel, Psychologists from Together, a drug crisis group, and various other counseling agencies. 135 Campus Observing campus dress today is like experiencing a costume party of the past. Today the ethnic look is extremely popular. Mexican serapes or ponchos are in evidence along with shaggy coats from Afghanistan; Indian and Pakistanian bedspreads made into dresses; the Afro look in dashikis; and jewelry and accessories from all over the world. All of these items are often combined with the uniquely American levis or jeans. These jeans, so commonly worn by college men and women have become an accepted uniform. Lest they be labeled conformists, stu- dents are exhibiting their individuality by decorating their jeans with trims and patches and even creating patterns by tie dyeing. Other indications of the costume look have appeared with the re-in- troduction of clothes from the 30 ' s and 40 ' s. Second-hand and thrift shops as well as attics are being raided in the search for old fur coats and military uniforms of the past. As a Textiles and Clothing specialist, I am enjoying watching this dress parade, but even more I am interested in what is being communicated today in dress. Are these students telling us that they are as impecuni- ous as their blue jeans work clothes and used clothes might indicate or are they telling us that expensive clothing and extensive wardrobes are not used for status today? Indeed, have status items in dress com- pletely disappeared? The evidence seems to say not disappeared but shifted. Gone are the large collections of cashmere sweaters and eve- ning gowns and in their stead are expensive leather items such as boots and suede jackets. We might guess that college dress shows a student ' s political and so- cial sympathies. The wearing of blue jeans and work shoes might indi- 136 Dress cate identification with Caesar Chavez and his cause and the wearing of freaky, hippie dress an identification with a communal way of living and a rejection of the establishment. Research indicates, however, that we should be cautious about reading too much into campus dress and its meaning. It is apparent that a style rebellion exists and much of this rebellion may be pure experimentation for the sake of enjoyment. Doing one’s own thing and expressing some individuality in a mass so- ciety where students may often feel like IBM cards may become in- creasingly important. Mrs. Patricia Weeden Textiles and Clothing 137 Blue Key Bazaar Gerry Scialla AXQ International Ball Queen Diane Azarian IAT 138 Miss Grist 1971 Sigma Kau Mu Concert Chorus is composed of students who simply love to sing. Under the direction of Ward Abusambra, they performed for vari- ous high schools about the state and ap- peared on Channel 6 at Christmas time. 142 Concert Chorus Foreign Student In October 1970, the International students on campus formed a new organization to deal with the problem of hous- ing and the creation of an international lounge area. The Foreign Student Association (FSA) at present does not concern itself with social functions of the group. This is the purpose of the All Nations Club. Following a period of struggle between the Administration officials and the Executive Board of the All Nations Club, an international house has been granted. It will operate under the direction of a governing board of both foreign and American representation. International House Governing Board Norman Lyon Ahmet Senocak Gabriel Ramirez Edward Yang Satish Velankar Janet Halligan Ira Rosenberg Lance Dickenson Dr. Gielisse 144 Robert Sherwin Student Submissions 145 Destination Perhaps it is the struggle to succeed to conquer all who cross the paths to life ' s ambitions which hides within the mind and soul of every human being. not only the chance to be known but to be worthy of being known. Perhaps it is the struggle against time to fulfill all desire before the sands of time slip away sands which lead to the final destination: death. of every human being. of those who seem to be well known only a few are worthy. captured within this soul, the potential and desire for both. Denice Vlachos A Visit to Fort Getty Fort Getty crouches, Bold, In Jamestown. Winter water seeps the empty chambers, And, freezing, causes casual cracks That summer fills with silent moss And winter widens ' till a staircase falls To crumble into dust, and rust And be lost. Stop them on the beaches. And Getty was born to guard the horizon, And guards it now, Mutely staring, toothless, At foreign flags Who daily rape her charge. Beavertai! Lt. 38.181 Stenciled in the O.P. For empty beer cans, The wind, Spent leaves. Come, Fire a practice round with the waves. Fran Fowler F — 348-7516 Black crayoned in the white tiled caverns For silent loaders, The clinching, gasping summer lovers. But I love you, But I love you In the bowels of concrete. Fort Getty huddles, barren, in Jamestown, Infertile and gray in Jamestown, While boys smoke joints in tunnels, Grow high in the womb of graffitti, And cycle away with the sunlight, As Getty stands cold And solitary old In the wind. ‘Observation Post 147 Mother Chastizing Daughter Peter Panangotis 148 Elizabeth Banks Lucille Noss 149 I Bob Emerson 150 Greg Ozar 1 ■’ by Nicholas Scholera 154 Frank Marfinelli Joe Norris 155 Midnight Cowboy — Joe Norris 156 Joe Norris 157 r y 158 Bob Sherwin Shahrokh Dowlatshahi Ramettes 160 “That Ram Band” That Ram Band earned its title of The best band in the East in its spectacular perform- ance before a crowd of over 60,000 at Shea Stadium on November 22. Along with the crowd in the stadium, the band was watched by a vast television audience over NBC. Under the direction of Donald B. Burns, the band performed such numbers as The Horse , El Cumbanchero and Head Medley , un- daunted by the wind and swirls of dust encir- cling them. Some special dance steps including the Soul Step and the congo step were part of the numbers. Reaction to That Ram Band was most favorable both at the stadium and back home. The fans at the game showed their approval by their enthu- siastic response. Upon the band ' s return to Kingston, they were greeted by many letters and telegrams congratulating them on their performance. Track Pete Wilkens (not pictured) scored a double win in the New England ' s in the 440 intermediate and the 120 high hurdles. 164 Wayne Findeisen set three records with a 16 foot vault in the New England ' s. John Aldred and Henry Santangini were individual winners in the New England ' s in the long jump and javelin respectively. 165 167 168 Tennis 171 FOOTBALL Coach — Jack Gregory URI OPPONENT URI OPPONENT 14 21 Brown 74 96 Hawaii 23 6 Univ. of Maine 80 86 Boston College 40 13 Univ. of Vermont 93 84 U. of Vermont 14 7 Univ. of Mass. 73 1 10 Holy Cross 0 21 Boston Univ. 87 109 Fordham 7 59 Univ. of New Hampshire 69 75 Canisius 15 18 Temple Univ. 95 1 16 Duquesne 12 33 Univ. of Conn. 64 81 Providence 71 83 U. of Mass. 86 78 U. of N. H. 96 78 U. of Conn. 95 60 U. of Vermont SOCCER 1 16 78 U. of Maine Coach — Geza Henni 78 95 Brown The soccer team won six and lost three and tied two to finish second in the Yankee Con- ference. CROSS COUNTRY Coach — Tom Russell The cross country team had no wins and six losses and finished fifth in the Yankee Con- ference. SAILING The sailing team won the Ulmstead Trophy, the Boston Dinghy Club Cup, the Sharpe Trophy and the New England Intercollegiate Sailing Association Dinghy Championship. They tied for first place for the Friis Trophy and came in second in the Admiral Moore Trophy Competition. WRESTLING Coach — Mr. Leathers The team finished with nine wins, three losses and one tie. They finished fourth in New England and second in the Yankee Conference. HOCKEY Coach — Ir Relevant The team finished with an undefeated and unscored upon season. BASKETBALL BASEBALL Coach — Tom Ca rmody Coach — John Norris URI OPPONENT URI OPPONENT 94 88 Brown 1 6 Univ. of Mass. 86 73 Univ. of New Hampshire 8 9 Univ. of Mass. 1 10 82 Univ. of Maine 7 6 Univ. of Mass. 76 80 Univ. of Mass. 6 1 Univ. of Vermont 82 84 Manhattan 6 7 Univ. of Vermont 71 77 St. John ' s 1 0 Univ. of Vermont 102 71 Richmond 2 4 Univ. of Maine 92 98 Providence 1 8 Univ. of Maine 82 92 Univ. of Hawaii 14 8 Univ. of Maine 75 67 Univ. of Conn. 0 4 Univ. of Conn. 90 107 Univ. of W. Virginia 0 9 Univ. of Conn. 89 90 Pepperdine 0 5 Univ. of New Hampshii 67 97 Univ. of Hawaii GOLF Coach — James E. Irwin The golf team won seven and lost one to capture third place in the conference. In the New England Championships URI placed fifth. TENNIS Coach — Ted Norris Due to a lack of funds the team was unable to play a fall schedule. In the Spring the team won five and lost one to place second in the conference. URI settled for a tie for sixth in the New England meet. TRACK Coach — Tom Russell Despite brilliant individual performances the track team only had two wins and 3 losses. The team was third in the conference and in the New England Championships. It is only fair to mention that the track team also suffered from a very meager budget. SURFING The team won the Fall and Winter New England meets. 174 Wrestling This past season, the URI wrestling team finished with their best record ever with a 9-3-1 record. They had a fourth place rating in New England this past year and finished in second place in the Yankee Conference. They also placed four wrestlers in the New England finals. The only other time that URI has placed a wrestler in the New England finals was in 1 967. The four wrestlers that placed were: Rich Adham, Charlie Catania, Joe Savino and Mike Mckenna. The future of the team looks bright with all four New England finalists coming back and many good lettermen coming back. Dick Narcessian — all ECAC September 26: Jack Gregory makes his debut as U R I coach as the Rams face Brown in their opening game in Providence. Fumbles hurt URI on offense with the young Ram defense having trouble containing Brown runners Gary Bonner and Gerry Hart. URI comes back in the second half and looks impressive in the 21-14 loss. Soph flanker Grant Buddy ' ' Denniston stars for the Rams and is named ECAC Sophomore Back of the Week. October 3: The Rams bounce back with 349 yards, beating Maine 23-6 at Orono. It ' s Rhody ' s first road win since 1967. Fullback Dick Narcessian gains 95 yards and Denniston scores on a 48-yard pass play. Kurt Wicks and Bob Ehrhardt lead a new rollout of- fense, lending encitement to the Ram attack. October 10: URI comes home to face Vermont and wins big — 40- 1 3. The defense is fantastic, intercept- ing three Catamount passes and recovering two fumbles. Wicks is virtually flawless, completing six of eleven passes for 142 yards and gaining 55 yards rushing. Denniston, with three touchdowns and Nar- cessian, with 147 yards rushing in 16 carries, led the romp. Dick scores twice, once on a 26 yard run. October 17: A capacity Homecoming Day crowd at Meade Field watches the Rams topple Yankee Con- ference favorite U Mass. Despite the freezing and un- certain weather conditions, including snow, the Rams star all-around. Defensively, the Rams allow U Mass just 32 yards rushing and 126 yards passing. URI gains all but 20 of its 297 yards on the ground in win- ning its third consecutive game, 14-7. Narcessian runs wild, gaining I 54 yards rushing, and is named Yankee Conference player of the week, making the All-Con- ference team for the third time in four weeks. Ram fans swarm joyously onto the field to celebrate the victory. URI now has a 3-0 conference mark and is a contender for the title. October 24: URI faces Boston University, ranked fifth in New England, in its final home game, but loses 21- 0. The Rams send four BU players to the hospital, but the offense fumbled seven times, with the Terriers re- covering four Ram miscues. October 3 I : Nothing goes right for the Rams as they are massacred by New Hampshire at Cowell Stadi- um, Durham. The Rams turnover the ball to the Wild- cats eight times, and the potent UNH offense takes advantage, punishing U R I 59-7 in Rhody’s worst de- feat in seven years. November 7: Coach Gregory returns home to Phil- adelphia to face powerful Temple University with URI a three-touchdown underdog. Wicks and Nar- cessian (113 yards rushing) pick the highly touted Owl defense apart, only to lose 18-15 after leading most of the way, as Paul Loughran of Temple returns a URI kick 84 yards for the winning TD. November 14: URI enters the game at Connecticut with a 3-1 Conference mark and will gain at least a tie for the title by beating U Conn. Two touchdown drives engineered by sub QB Bob Ehrhardt are too little and too late for the Rams, who lose 33-12 to Rick Robustelli and company. The Rams finish with a 3-2 conference slate, and are 3-5 overall. When I was first exposed to the complexities of Rhode Island football, I weighed all the factors and decided that the time and place was such that we could have winning, exciting football at URL My new staff, my squad, and those in the university directly associated with us faced many problems; some of these problems were very serious since they were as- sociated with a preconceived losing image. Other problems were the normal technical problems relat- ing to preparing a team for a difficult schedule. Then, of course, there was the favorite topic of many of our staff discussions — How do we make football impor- tant and enjoyable for all of Rhode Island? Every challenge has its own unique personality that marks it as an experience to remember. Little Rhody ' s football fortunes were usually measured in a relative sense; my dream is to have success over the biggest and the best, to make a RAM winning team a tradition at this university. It will take the resolution of many prob- lems, the sorting out of many complexities. However, the 1970 season, I sincerely feel, will be remembered as the year that the RAMo began this fight. Coach Gregory 181 Surfer by Peter Pan U.R.I. Hockey URI ' s first hockey team produced an undefeated and unscored- upon season. Coach Ir Relevant attributed his success to long hours of practice and excellent facilities. 183 T ? Basketball The 1970-71 URI basketball team faced one of the roughest sched- ules in the school ' s hoop history, finishing with a disappointing IQ- 17 overall record. The Rams did better against their conference ri- vals. finishing second with an 8-2 record. Coach Tom Carmody s club trailed only the University of Massachusetts in the Yankee Con- ference standings. URI began the season as if they were going to literally run their opponents off the court. They took to the road for a triumphant weekend swing to New Hamp- shire and Maine. The Rams played sluggish ball in the first half of the Friday night contest at New Hampshire, with the Wild- cats confusing the Rams by shift- ing defenses. However, the Rams took charge in the second half running, shooting accurately, fast- breaking and playing good de- fense. Rhody raced to an 86-73 victory. Bud Hazard, who had 17 points in the second half, paced the Rams with 20 points and I I rebounds. Against the Black Bears of Maine Saturday night, the Rams as- sumed an early lead which they held throughout the game. Molloy and Tolliver passed and maneu- vered like magicians. Nate Adger contributed 27 points and 13 re- bounds to romp Maine I 10-82. The Rams then faced Yankee Conference rival Massachusetts, led by 6 6 Julius Erving, a force in himself. The Rams and Redmen battled on even terms throughout most of the contest, but the visi- tors from Amherst prevailed in overtime, 80-76. The Rams bounced back from de- feat at the Storrs Field House of the University of Connecticut. The visitors jumped to an early lead, but the game was alWAYS close, usually with URI on top. The Rams spent most of the final mo- ments freezing the ball, as a re- minder to UConn of how the Rams were defeated in the infa- mous stall game the year be- m fore. The slowdown employed by Connecticut in that game cost the Rams the Yankee Conference crown. Tom Carmody and the URI forces led by Hazards 16 points got revenge this time, win- ning 75-67. Rhode Island, led by Rowell, who scored 29 points, and Adger. who grabbed a season ' s high of 16 re- bounds, came back to beat Yan- kee Conference foe Vermont, but it was not easy. Both teams played on fairly even terms, espe- cially in the second half, but the Rams came out on top, 93-84. 188 Providence College proved a much tougher foe at Keaney than they were in Providence. Led by the scoring of Donnie Lewis and the generalship of Ernie DiGrego- rio, the Friars had an easy time in defeating URI, 81-64. Rowell ' s 19 points and I I rebounds led the Rams. Massachusetts was again foe for the Rams, who did not envy the task of meeting Julius Erving and company in their Amherst snake pit. With Erving’s scoring and rebounding making the differ- ence, the Redmen defeated the Rams 83-71 and thus clinched the Yankee Conference crown. Tolliv- er led i the URI scorers with 20 points. The Rams breezed through their next four conference games de- feating New ' Hampshire, Ver- mont, Connecticut, and Maine only to be crushed in their final game of the season. At tiny Marvel Gym in Provi- dence the Rams ran into a redhot Brown guard named Rusty Tyler, who bombed them out of conten- tion with 46 points. Tyler ' s team- mates didn ' t do too badly either, as they sent the Rams reeling to a 95-78 defeat. Despite the disappointment of a 10-17 record, there was some consolation as Tolliver and Adger were named to the all-Yankee Conference first team. Rowell and Hickson were second-team selections, while Molloy was an honorable-mention choice at one of the guard spots. 189 s a i I i n 9 190 Ironically the sailing team is probably the least known and praised group in the Keaney-Zarchen complex but undoubtably the most successful team in uri ' s shoddy history. The sailing team has been rated as the num- ber two team in the nation, easily captured the New England Champion- ship, and has placed two members on the All American roster. TEAM Skip Whyte — Captain, All American Henry Bossett — All American Clay Evans Mike Fenton John Hayes Bob Hicks Steve Lirakas John Telfeyan Norman Windus Chris Wells 191 R a m C s I a a y r k Dec. 2, 1970 Violence, racism, and selfishness must be purged from the American Society — America must make profound institutional and attitudinal changes to cope with the realities and challenges of today ' s world. Students became the new niggers and Indians at Kent State last May. Even the most blatant idiot can understand that America is a racist country that oppresses people. Young people have the power to change things, but they can ' t do it with guns. Dick Gregory March 17, 1971 194 “All the soldiers in England could not crush the Spirit of the Irish People” Bernadette Devlin Feb. 7, 1971 You will only end religious prejudice, racial prejudice, and national prejudice when you end the system that created them. ... It makes little difference to me who stands on my throat, whether he is a British Imperialist or an Irish Capital- ist. 195 Mohammed Ali April 15, 1971 The greatest discovery of all is to find the purpose of life. ' 196 We ll issue our own ultimatum to Nixon from our guts. If the government of the United States won ' t stop the war, then we will stop the government of the United States. Rennie Davis March 29, 1971 197 Jerry Rubin — May 12, 1971 i We re already planning for 1972, we re going to both conventions. They call a party, we call a party! We re going to put LSD in the water supply of what- ever city they hold them in. 198 Page for Peace This page is donated by the staff in an effort to motivate you the stu- dent, to take a positive action. If you really are sincere about your con- victions and want to go on record as such, sign your name and mail this page. Mr. President, This letter is to make you aware that I am opposed to the American in- volvement in Viet Nam. The majority is not silent, the government is deaf. Respectfully, Pres. Richard M. Nixon 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. Washington, D.C. 20005 Washington d.c. STOP Baum Pledges to Maintain Order at URI Dr. Werner A. Baum, president of the University of Rhode Island, yesterday warned all members of the university community that in- terruptions or disturbances at campus events will lead to disci- plinary ' action, including suspen- The firm notice, mailed to fac- ulty members and administrators and distributed to students, was is- sued in anticipation of possible student demonstrations tomorrow in memory of the 1970 killings of students at Kent State and Jack- son State Universities. Last night, the URI student senate reaffirmed its request that no classes he held tomorrow. The Faculty Senate, which must approve a change in the school calendar if the classes are to be postponed, will meet in a special session today to consider rescheduling Wednesday’s classes to a later date. The university manual at URI contains no specific regulations dealing with disruption of lawful functions at the university except when a campus visitor, such as a controversial speaker, is involved. While an amendment to plug the loophole in regulations was being studied, the Faculty Senate last fall adopted a resolution re- questing the responsible authori- ty to take all appropriate action necessary” in connection with dis- ruptive activity. The amendment revision study was completed re- cently and the senate is scheduled to debate on Thursday an amend- ment to the manual ' s regulations concerning interference with cam- pus functions. In the absence of a final deci- sion on the disciplinary matter. Dr. Baum said he was issuing the statement in keeping with recent court decisions that when there is a possibility of campus disrup- tion, it is essential that there be no misunderstanding about what could happen to those who inter- fere with the functions of the uni- versity. The URI president told stu- dents and others that an individu- al’s status at URI will not be changed by something, such as suspension, until charges have been brought against him and have been adjudicated. He added, however, that in instances when in my opinion his continued presence on the campus consti- tutes an immediate threat to mem- bers of the university community or to the property or orderly func- tion of the university, he shall be immediately suspended subject to a prompt but later hearing on the charges.” Dr. Baum also noted that the campus is state property and its roads are public, making those at the university subject to civil and criminal statutes of the state. Even if I wished to do so, and I do not, I have neither authority to suspend these statutes nor to ameliorate the penalties for their violation, he said. Thus, those who engage in dis- ruptive conduct may leave them- selves open not only to university discipline, but to civil and crimi- nal actions as well,” he conclud- ed. The statement follows action last Friday in which Dr. Baum re- jected a student senate resolution calling for cancellation of classes tomorrow in memory of the anni- versary of the student deaths. The URI president offered a number of alternative actions, in- cluding a dialogue Saturday on the killings or a temporary cancel- lation of classes tomorrow while a 1 p.m. memorial service is held. He noted at the lime that the student senate resolution reached him Friday, the day after the Fac- ulty Senate, which is responsible for changes in the school calendar had met. Anthony Robinson, stu- dent senate president, failed to bring up the resolution at the fac- ulty session so no action on the matter was taken. ■Students hav e predicted sponta- neous demonstrations and large- scale cutting of classes tomorrow. On that issue. Dr. Baum said yesterday, If. some students de- cide to boycott classes to deprive themselves of the very educational . opportunity for which they have come here, and to risk the result- ing impact on their academic rec- ord, the university cannot compel their physical attendance.” However, he said the university can take steps to make sure that others do have the chance to pur- sue studies and activities on cam- pus as planned. The student senate, meeting be- fore 600 students last night, de- feated a resolution stipulating that class time missed could not be re- scheduled. The student senate action ap- peared to be a compromise with the administration, since the reso- lution which it passed last week and reaffirmed last night called for classes to be canceled, not postponed. Dr. Baum, who attended the meeting, said he did not object to the student senate’s action. The student senate voted to es- tablish a bail fund of $500 for about 30 URI students arrested in antiwar demonstrations in Wash- ington. An amount of additional bail fund money was collected from the students who attended the meeting. Meanwhile, an unofficial stu- dent group held a day-long refer- endum yesterday and will con- tinue the referendum today. Spokesmen for the group said more than 1,600 students voted yesterday on two questions, which were: 1. I support a moratorium on classes Wednesday May 5, in honor of those killed in Jackson State;” and 2. I believe that the war in Vietnam and in America is a war against the people and that it can only be stopped by the peo- ple. Therefore, I declare that I will, through a strike, call on the President to stop this war.” A spokesman for the group said the strike referred to is a strike on the university” for the rest of the year. Results yesterday were 1,040 to 629 in favor of the strike question and 1,429 to 238 in favor of the other question, the spokesman Spring ' s our big season, but we ' re expecting a small cancellation from URI this week . . . Monday Night — May 3, 1971 204 Wednesday Demands of Black Students We, the black students at the University of Rhode Island, because of an increased lack of respect from the racist administration and the Student Senate (Tax Committee), plus a lack of Black representation, hereby de- clare a takeover in effect until the following demands arc met. If these de- mands are not met, we, the Black students see no need to furthering our education under these racist handicapped circumstances. 1) We demand that before any of our demands are considered that for all our present class amnesty be given to each student involved. If, at this time, a student has a C, then he should get that C, for his final mark. 2) We demand that the Special Programs for the Talent Development be given the money which was requested plus enough money to increase their enrollment of students for Pre-Matric to 150. 3) We demand that all of the 123 eligible applications for Pre-Matric be accepted for the summer of ’71. 4) We demand that the freshman enrollment for fall ’71 contain 300 Black students. 5) We demand that every incoming freshman class contain the minimum of 10% Black students. 6) We demand that the application fee of $10 be waived for all applying Black students due to the fact that many Black people don’t apply because their financial position prevents them from doing so. 7) We demand that a bus be provided for us so that we can increase our tutoring program for our younger brothers and sisters in the community and so we can continue to be involved with the Black community and with our brothers and sisters in the Adult Correctional Institute. 8) We demand that an admission board be developed in conjunction with the Afro-American Society. 9) We demand that the University have an on-going recruitment program with a Black recruiter in the field recruiting in every capacity. 10) We demand that there be Black professors on each and every depart- ment. 11) We demand Black Administrators. 12) We demand Black Counselors. 13) We demand that the University appoint a committee approved by the Afro-American Society to develop a Black Studies Program to be imple- mented in the fall of ’72. May 5, 1971 The importance of the day was one of individual interest and committ- ment. Wednesday Night Photos by Rob Shorwin Thursday May 6, 1971 President Werner Baum meets with the Afro-American socie- ty- 208 After awhile they become part of the scenery, like seasonal flowers . . . They bloom in Spring and fade away by summer. Friday May 7, 1971 209 210 211 SENIOR SURVEY 1937 URI Five greatest men of all time: Lincoln, Washington, Christ, Caesar, FDR. What do you estimate the approximate cost of your college education? $2512. Average age upon graduation: 22 years, 4 months, 17 days. Greatest thing acquired in your college education: Friendships Hardest year: Sophomore: Easiest year: Freshman; Most pleasant year: Senior. Would you enter Rhode Island State College if you were to become a Freshman aga Yes 70% No 30% Most valuable course: Public Speaking Does R.I.S.C. emphasize athletics too strongly? Yes 1% No 99% Are you in favor of offering athletic scholarships at R.I.S.C.? Yes 46% No 54% Favorite sport: Equal division between Football and Basketball. Would you prefer a varsity letter to a Scholastic award? Yes 46% No 54% Do you prefer financial success to intellectual success? Yes 75% No 25% Have you decided upon your future occupation? Yes 48% No 52% Weekly wage expected at first job after graduation: $20-$25. Do you believe in the social security law? Yes 67% No 33% Do you prefer the 21st amendment to the 18th? Yes 83% No 17% Are you in favor of having beer served on campus? Yes 27% No 73% Has your religion strengthened or weakened at R.I.S.C.? strengthened 15% weakened 16% unchanged 69% What quality would you desire the greatest in a marriage mate? Understanding Have you ever gone co-eding? Yes 67% No 33% Are you in favor of canceling classes after a major dance? Yes 93% No 7% Most common subject in bull sessions: Sex Average cost of a date: $2.00 Description of Dream Girl: Eyes; Blue Hair; Brown Height 5 ' 5 Weight; I 18 doesn ' t smoke and doesn ' t drink. Description of Dream Boy: Eyes; Brown Hair; Brown Height 6 ' I Weight 170 smokes and drinks some. 34 Years Later URI 1971 Five greatest men of all time (prior to 1938): Jesus Christ, Lincoln, Shakespeare, Marx, Aristotle. What do you estimate the approximate cost of your college education? $8,817. Average age upon graduation: 22 years, 4 months. Greatest thing acquired in your college education: Emotional Maturity Hardest year: Freshman Easiest year: Senior Most pleasant year: Junior Would you enter URI if you were to become a freshman again? Yes 47% No 53 Q Most valuable course: Psychology 103 Towards self-understanding. Does URI emphasize athletics too strongly? Yes 43% No 57% Are you in favor of offering athletic scholarships at URI? Yes 50% No 50% Favorite sport: Basketball 37% Football 19% Would you prefer a varsity letter to a scholastic award? Yes 1% No 99% Do you prefer financial success to intellectual success? Yes 38% No 62% Have you decided upon your future occupation? Yes 52% No 48% Weekly wage expected at first job after graduation. $140-$ I 50 per week. Do you believe in the social security law? Yes 98% No 2% Do you prefer the 21st amendment to the 18th? Yes 53% No 8% Undecided 39% Are you in favor of having beer served on campus? Yes 99% No 1% Has your religion strengthened or weakened at URI? strengthened 22% weakened 56% unchanged 22% What quality would you desire the greatest in a marriage mate? Understanding Have you ever gone co-eding? Yes 40% No 30 j 0 Undecided 30 Q Are you in favor of abolishing classes after a major concert? Yes 24% No 76% Most common subject in bull sessions: SEX (Overwhelmingly) Average cost of a date? $8.25. Description of Dream Girl: Eyes; Hazel Hair; Brown Height 5 ' 6 Weight; I 15 does not smoke but definitely drinks. Description of Dream Boy: Eyes; Blue Hair; Brown Height 6 ' 0 Weight 180 does not smoke but definitely drinks. 213 HOW DO YOU LIKE YOUR FUTURE? SUNNY-SIDE UP OR SCRAMBLED? Take a minute: When have you last thought about what you are going to do after your college days? What are the new careers in the 70 s. — or, Where are college grads applying their talents? And. did you realize that career planning is not just for seniors? Or. that jobs are rea y scarce. You may be alarmed at the limits today for direct use of your college degree. However, there is much to be considered. It is a Valuable Key. And, since no one can take it away from you, you must make it work for you. particularly while you are getting it. Your future order is being ta en. It seems to me that one of your most exciting and worthwhile courses in college could be simply one of your very own design, such as areer x ploring and Planning 101 (There is no limit to advanced courses in this subject.) This could be quite a research project. Your campus has so many resources. A great place to start — The Career Information or Placement Center. Add your faculty, deans, counselors, advisors, friends, work experiences, libraries and so forth. Self-evaluation or having yourself for homework, is not easy. But, what better time to as sess your own developement, attitudes, interests, talents, program of studies, knowledge of career alternatives, and the interrelationship ot all or present and future use. By working toward more real goals, you likely will find your enthusiasm returning for your studies in general. You deserve to know the scene, just where the graduates of college programs are finding their first jobs, and where they are not; and, what are t e possible training programs, further study required, or ways to get involved in that very crowded job market. Consider one fact, that on the average, 100,000 hours of your lives will be spent in the world of work. It seems less than wise not to invest time now in study of the possible areas best suited to you. _ r-rikxc A With this kind of preparing to be done, there is simply no substitute for planning early. By this I mean to give yourself the advantage ot I IMt and knowledge. You should be planning alternatives in two ways: (a) remembering there is more than one job area in which you could be effective and happy, (b) the kind of work you choose may present other limits of location, training, and so forth. Such efforts in planning can make the difference in your future order, and certainly reduce confusion and disappointment. Why not do your best: you have much to give. It is a new and demanding world. And, may I say (like the Carpenters) you ve only just begun. Marie MacDonald URI Career Planning and Placement 215 , .« i i m V I 217 ■i ?sm Bob Hicks — Student Speaker . m Patricia A. Beagan Nursing Chi Omega Geography Lambda Chi Alpha Jeffrey Cross Zoology Diane DiQuinzio Barbara A. Bebby English Margaret Capalbo Elementary Education Sigma Kappa Gerald L. Deroy Mechanical Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon Stephen Dressier Finance Alpha Epsilon Pi H. David Boococlc Political Science Phi Kappa Psi William Caragher Political Science Richard Desilets Virginia Drew Child Development Chi Omega Walter Y. Brokaw Agriculture Science Theta Chi Linda Ann Chircop Chemistry Alpha Xi Delta Dorothy L. Dickinson French Harlan M. Ellis Political Science Patricia A. Calista Elementary Ed. Sigma Delta Tau Charles Connery Physical Education Phi Mu Delta Louis P. DiNola Mechanical Engineering 4 . Pamela Ennis Nursing Alpha Delta Pi Phillip G. Campbell 222 Ernest C. Ephraimson Economics Theta Chi Donald Fargnoli Biology Theta Delta Chi Bernice E. Gerstein Child Development Kappa Alpha Theta Kenneth J. Hoyt History Rosanne Giard Child Development Alpha Xi Delta John E. Hutchinson Marketing Theta Chi Edward Garabedian Pharmacy Phi Kappa Psi Kenneth E. Ford Electrical Engineering Alpha Epsilon Pi Carl Farrington Civil Engineering Mark R. Grey Management Phi Mu Delta Philip Gruber Accounting Phi Sigma Delta Linda A. Hogan Elementary Education Aries enjoy obstacles . . . relish competition . . . and get immense pleasure in winning out over long odds. Julia A. Jones Sociology Elizabeth P. Lamberton Child Development George J. Ketinos English Barry Lewis Political Science Donald C. Keyes Chemical Engineering Susanne L. Manosh Nursing Dennis Martin History Sigma Phi Epsilon Joan McKenney English Education Chi Omega Michael C. Medici Political Science Phi Sigma Kappa Linda Ann Migneault Zoology Lois A. Migneault Physics Patricia Anne Nadeau Business Admin. Lambda Delta Phi 224 Paula Paccasassi Elementary Education Carl H. Rosen Marketing Management Diane Parenteau Dental Hygiene Carol Leigh Scott Elementary Education Sigma Kappa Margaret S. Raymond Food and Nutrition Anne Shadford Nursing You have little or no ability to judge people nor are you gifted with insight . . . Peter V. Rivelli Teacher Education Theta Delta Chi 225 Frank B. Stevenson John Telfeyan Civil Engineering Engineering Wan Chi Woo Chemical Engineering Carol A. Young Research Develop. Agricultural Tech. You are the adventuresome pioneer . . . the original self-starter . . . independent and high spirited. Irene Shread Mathematics Education Douglas Westcott Electrical Engineering Shayna Zisserson Psychology Sigma Kappa Susan K. Skaradowski Child Development Marilyn R. Whitney Nursing Linda Steere Zoology Susan Wolff Speech Pathology Sigma Delta Tau Sandra J. Auclair Secondary Education Corinne M. Budlong Music Education Ellen-Ann Corry Secondary Education English Jane Drechsler Biology Barry M. Barovick General Business Ad. Barry Burden General Business Ad. Lambda Chi Alpha Robert D. Dee Accounting Phi Gamma Delta Lucia Droby Journalism Rory D. Billig Math Andrea R. Cahoon English Delta Delta Delta Geraldine A. DeMello Elementary Education Delta Zeta Frances Ducharme Dental Hygiene Linda Briden Education Sus an Dyer Sociology Richard H. Brooks Accounting Phi Sigma Delta Jan Paul Eckhart Business Ad. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sharon Campbell Elementary Education Alpha Delta Pi 228 John W. Etter Chemical Engineering Chi Phi Richard Fleischer Advertising Patricia Gardner Bacteriology Lola A. Ferraro Secondary Educatior Italian Keith B. Finck Management Arthur Fiore Physical Education Tau Kappa Epsilon Douglas O. Fisher Pharmacy Lambda Chi Alpha Susan Flynn Charles F. Ganem Nursing General Business Ad. Taureans are very physical creatures with a down to earth sense of pleasure . . . They think with their hands. Katherine L. Garvey Physical Education Barbara Gilkes Home Economics Chi Omega David M. Greene Zoology Richard Green Jr. Insurance Sigma Chi Laurie J. Gurdin Secondary Education French 229 Kevin A. Hackman Political Science Theta Chi Clinton R. Holland, Jr. Chemical Engineering Lawrence Kahn Accounting Alpha Epsilon Pi Richard Lepore Music Education Ronald J. Hamel Political Science Kathleen Howell Child Development Thomas J. Kipphut Management Lambda Chi Alpha Margaret M. Lonardo Biology Brenda J. Harris Child Development Delta Zeta Barbara E. Hughes Textiles and Clothing Elton H. Kling Pharmacy David S. Luther Political Science Phi Kappa Psi Sandra Heilman Home Economics Sigma Delta Tau Robert H. Hunter Pharmacy Virginia Lacey General Business Barbara Lynch English Janice Hillman Education Lambda Delta Phi Judith Joyce Textiles and Clothing Alpha Delta Pi Jo-Anne. Lancellotti Secondary Education Delta Delta Delta Douglas W. Maiko Psychology 230 Mary Ann Mamakos French Alpha Delta Pi Ronald D. Nass Mechanical Engineering James McNiff Sociology Lambda Chi Alpha Agnes Natale Nursing Beverly Papitto Secondary Education Delta Zeta Patricia Rishe Psychology Lora J. Pasquarelli Home Economics Maureen Ross Dental Hygiene Susan L. Mehalko Nursing Susan Nichola Education Delta Zeta Gail E. Potter Bacteriology Alan Santaniello Industrial Engineering Theta Delta Chi Sandra Lee Milewicz Secondary Education Delta Zeta Catherine Oqrodnik Art Charlene Quinn Philosophy Nicky J. Scalera Insurance Tau Kappa Epsilon Kenneth B. Miner Marketing Management Frederick Pampel Physical Education Phi Sigma Kappa Donna Reynolds English John L. Scanlon Physical Ed. Phi Mu Delta 231 Eric Stein Political Science Theta Chi John Tarasovich Accounting Suzanne Tillinghast Home Economics Education Delta Delta Delta Salvatore Vitrand Industrial Engineering Tau Epsilon Phi Jeffrey Spring History Tau Kappa Epsilon Barbara VonVillas English Dennis F. Walsh Math Phi Gamma Delta Linda Waters Spanish Margaret Woodward Food and Nutrition Mark E. Young Political Science Lambda Chi Alpha Dennis Welch Pharmacy Lambda Chi Alpha Adelle A. White Nursing You are naturally cautious . . . you don’t believe in luck nor in the whims of fate. 232 Suzanne L. Beaujean Biology Lambda Delta Phi Alexander Calenda Biology Sigma Nu Benedict Cramer Agronomy Sigma Chi Diane M. Paella Child Developement Robert L. Beauregard Civil Engineering Pi Lambda Phi Michael S. Chmura Secondary Education Phi Kappa Psi Walter J. Dandrow Jr. Business Education Jeanne M. Feeley English Stephen Benjamin Industrial Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa Mary Lou Clarice Physical Education Susan E. Daulcsys General Home Economics Delta Delta Delta Earl W. Fenstermacher Electrical Engineering Sigma Chi Karen Palazio Blouin Elementary Education Lambda Delta Phi Joseph R. Colan Advertising Jeanine Deragon Textiles and Clothing Fredrick S. Gaschen Jr. Management Sigma Pi Robert Bradway Chemical Engineering Randi S. Conley Psychology Delta Zeta John Drapala Marketing Phi Mu Delta Robert W. Gilstein Economics Phi Sigma Delta 234 Joseph Goodman Pharmacy Carol Jacobsson Child Developement John M. Haile Physical Education Phi Mu Delta Jerry Jorge General Business Roberta Harvey Art Sandra Kent Elementary Education Richard Herman Sociology Phi Sigma Delta Cynthia J. Landers English Susan M. Hoffman Dental Hygiene David Leung Chemical Engineering James E. Magee Phi Gamma Delta £ Robert Marquis Economics Sigma Chi Gemini: the sign of the twins . . . ever-changing, unpredictable personality . . . They are seldom happy in one place very long. 235 James A. Metcalfe Theatre Gail Amanda Morgan Elementary Education English Alan P. Nielsen Agronom y Sigma Pi John G. Ozar Journalism James M. Milbery Jr. History Marilyn Morris Textiles and Clothing David T. Norris Agriculture Technology Phi Gamma Delta Jeanne M. Miska Sociology Thomas F. Mitchell History Rachele Modliszewski Art Delta Zeta W. Gregory Morrison English Lambda Chi Alpha Katharine E. Nelson Sociology Sigma Kappa Angelo P. Neri Psychology You are gifted with an alert receptive mentality and the most adaptable of signs . . . no situation leaves you Unnerved . . . Elizabeth C. Payne Elementary Education Delta Delta Delta Lois Pazienza Business Education Delta Zeta Thomas M. Petronio Richard Price Political Science Economics 236 SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEM ORDER TO REPORT FOR INDUCTION Approval Not Required. The President of the United States, To JOHN G. OZAR, JR. RHODE ISLAND LOCAL BOARD NO I POST OFFICE BUILDING WARREN. R. | 02885 (Local Boars Stamp) JANUARY 1971 (Dat. of m SELECTIVE SERVICE NO. 37 II 1 hi l 1711 Greeting: You are hereby ordered for induction into the Armed Forces of the United States, and to report LOCAL BOARD NO. I, WARREN, R. I. (Place of reporting) on .. . JANUARY 19, 1971 at 7 :OO. a, m. (Date) (Hour) for forwarding to an Armed Forces Induction Station. ( Memb er or clerlobf Local Board) IMPORTANT NOTICE (Read Each Paragraph Carefully) IF YOU HAVE HAD PREVIOUS MILITARY SERVICE, OR ARE NOW A MEMBER OF THE NATIONAL GUARD OR A RESERVE COMPONENT OF THE ARMED FORCES, BRING EVIDENCE WITH YOU. IF YOU WEAR GLASSES, BRING THEM. IF MARRIED, BRING PROOF OF YOUR MARRIAGE. IF JOU HAVE ANY PHYSICAL OR MENTAL CONDITION WHICH, IN YOUR OPINION, MAY DISQUALIFY YOU FOR SERVICE IN THE ARMED FORCES, BRING A PHYSICIAN’S CERTIFICATE DESCRIBING THAT CONDITION, IF NOT ALREADY FURNISHED TO YOUR LOCAL BOARD. Valid documents are required to substantiate dependency claims in order to receive basic allowance for quarters. Be sure to take the following with you when reporting to the induction station. The documents will be returned to you. (a) FOR LAWFUL WIFE OR LEGITIMATE CHILD UNDER 21 YEARS OF AGE— original, certified copy or photostat of a certified copy of marriage certificate, child’s birth certificate, or a public or church record of marriage issued over the sig- nature and seal of the custodian of the church or public records; (6) FOR LEGALLY ADOPTED CHILD — certified court order of adoption; (c) FOR CHILD OF DIVORCED SERVICE MEMBER (Child in custody of person other than claim- an t) (1) Certified or photostatic copies of receipts from custodian of child evidencing serviceman’s contributions for sup- port, and (2) Divorce decree, court support order or separation order; (d) FOR DEPENDENT PARENT — affidavits establishing that dependency. Bring your Social Security Account Number Card. If you do not have one, apply at nearest Social Security Adminis- tration Office. If you have life insurance, bring a record of the insurance company’s address and your policy number. Bring enough clean clothes for 3 days. Bring enough money to last 1 month for personal purchases. This Local Board will furnish transportation, and meals and lodging when necessary, from the place of reporting to the induction station where you will be examined. If found qualified, you will be inducted into the Armed Forces. If found not qualified, return transportation and meals and lodging when necessary, will be furnished to the place of reporting. You may be found not qualified for induction. Keep this in mind in arranging your affairs, to prevent any undue hard- ship if you are not inducted. If employed, inform your employer of this possibility. Your employer can then be prepared to continue your employment if you are not inducted. To protect your right to return to your job if you are not inducted, you must report for work as soon as possible after the completion of your induction examination. You may jeopardize your reemployment rights if you do not report for work at the beginning of your next regularly scheduled working period after you have returned to your place of employment. Willful failure to report at the place and hour of the day named in this Order subjects the violator to fine and impris- onment. Bring this Order with you when you report. If you are so far from your own local board that reporting in compliance with this Order will be a serious hardship, go immediately to any locil board and make written request for transfer of your delivery for induction, taking this Order with you. SSS Form 252 (Revised 4-28-S5) (Previous printings 237 Lillian Rolcoski Textiles and Clothing Laura Scheinberg Child Developement Ruth Snegg Art Marion L. Spaulding Nursing Rocco A. Vallande Management James Winterbottom Secondary Education Sigma Alpha Epsilon Judith Anne Vaughn Elementary Education Alpha Delta Pi Nathalie Yaghoobian Business Education Evita Dereath Schjang Pharmacy Susan Spero Journalism Lambda Delta Phi James Clinton Wardle Secondary Education Phi Gamma Delta Daryl Sherman Secondary Education Spanish Thomas Stolarz Fisheries and Marine Technology Stuart Weintraub Political Science Suzanne Shyab Art Lynn T. Toothill Textiles and Clothing Delta Zeta Douglas A. Wilcox Zoology 238 Zaid Abdul-Raheem Civil Engineering Peter Bradley Agriculture Education George Champlin Biology Louise Cooney Home Economics Kappa Alpha Theta 240 Ronald P. Abrams Sociology Phi Sigma Delta Joseph Broccoli French Phi Sigma Kappa Merrill A. Choper Child Developement Barbara E. Aldrich Dental Hygiene Thomas M. Bruzzese Psychology Theta Delta Chi Robert Beaudoin Finance Lambda Chi Alpha Deborah Bustin Physical Education John C. Boyle Engineering Science Garret Gaffrey Physical Education Sigma Chi Carol Ciesynski Home Economics Carmella Colantonio Biology-Education Alpha Chi Omega Elinor M. Collins Nursing Beverlee-Ann Crowther Donna Cunard Child Developement Secondary Education Edward Dart Geology Richard Davids Psychology Sigma Nu Claire DeLuca Speech Patricia Dillon Theatre Shahrokh D. Dowlatshahi Electrical Engineering Gail A. Etzold Nursing Alpha Chi Omega G loria Gamble Math Stephen E. Hackett Secondary Education Phi Kappa Psi Mary Hashway Sociology Delta Zeta John R. Gordon Agriculture Education John Henehan English Phi Sigma Kappa Alan Dyl Psychology Sigma Phi Epsilon William F. Greene Economics Sigma Chi Barbara Ann Integlia Biology Hugh A. Ebbitt Sociology Sigma Alpha Epsilon John Guglielmino Math Theta Delta Chi Susan A. Jackson Home Economics Sigma Kappa Brent Jones Geology Rhea Jones English Cancer — sign of the “crab” They may be moody, changeable, and hypersensitive . . . but they are sympathetic and capable of showing much understanding. 241 Kathleen Sheridan Kimble Nursing Elizabeth LaFlamme Textiles and Clothing R. Michael Kingsbury Political Science Richard Lapierre Insurance Kristine Kleist Anne Koteen Susan Kullberg English Marketing Management French Sigma Kappa You have great depth of feeling, but you are extremely sensitive, and your feelings can be easily hurt . . . Robert P. Maine Dana Reed Masdan Mechanical Engineering Gvil Engineering Louis T. Meschino Industrial Engineering Theta Chi Edwin Molloy Political Science Sigma Chi 242 Barbara Mowry English Sigma Kappa Janice Ouimette Nursing Bessie Palmisciano Psychology Betty Mumford Home Economics — Ed. Charlene Pacelt Physical Education Alpha Xi Delta Marcella Paquette Dental Hygiene Joan Piascik French Alpha Chi Omega Paul R. Picard Management Sigma Phi Epsilon Paula Norton Sociology Raymond Palanola Education David Payton Industrial Engineering Pi Lambda Phi Richard L. Porri Pharmacy Sigma Chi 243 Nicholas C. Procaccini Management Patricia E. Schwarti Mathematics Margaret Sowinski Biology Deborah Ventrone Sociology Geraldine M. Scialla Elementary Education Alpha Chi Omega Sandra Stickney Political Science William T. Reilly Agricultural Science Arnold H. Silverman Marketing Management Sigma Chi George Teixeira Jr. Zoology Sigma Phi Epsilon John Salmon Insurance Lambda Chi Alpha Linda Kay Smith Sociology Michele Tessier Dental Hygiene Lindsay Ann Schauman Home Economics Educ. Alpha Xi Delta Rosalind Solinger Art Thomas Turano Physics You have very expressive features and very secretive natures . . . Eduardo Villagran Resource Economics 244 Jill Sandy Votta Political Science Jeffrey M. Wainger Math Phi Sigma Kappa Judith K. Winther Roy Yenoli Textiles and Clothing Electrical Engineering Delta Delta Delta Susan Zarick Home Economics Delta Delta Delta 245 Cheryl Lee Abiiaid Sociology Thoma s M. Belisle Geography William G. Alberg Mechanical Engineering Anthony Better Physical Education Theta Chi Linda J. Anderson Robert A. Ashton Child Development Physics Alpha Delta Pi Elliot Asser Political Science Pi Sigma Alpha Leos are supremely conscious of their social role . . . They are very proud and generally individualistic. Martha L. Bradley Music Education Marcia Lee Cardin Nursing Susan Bradley Sociology James Carroll Electrical Engineering Kathleen Candon Secondary Education French Joyce Patricia Cascio Home Economics Pamela N. Capece Child Development Delta Delta Delta Peggy Ann Catto Sociology Sigma Delta Tau Claudio A. Caprio Chemical Engineering Sigma Alpha Epsilon Robert Cecchini Industrial Engineering Sigma Phi Epsilon 247 William B. Chan Zoology Phi Kappa Psi Kenneth Cole Accounting Joseph M. DeLillo Management Theta Delta Chi You are the sign of the true extrovert . . . The overdeveloped ego . . . The inherently imperious and self-assured. Brian Donnelly Management Sigma Phi Epsilon Wayne I. Farrington Economics Sigma Phi Epsilon Marilyn Duxbury Sociology Maryanne Finclt Sociology Marjorie Finneran Elementary Education Elaine M. Gordon English Education Alpha Chi Omega 248 Ellen Sue Freedman Food and Nutrition Science Kappa Alpha Theta Christine Graves Food and Nutrition Alpha Chi Omega Pamela Jane Goodsell English Merton E. Greene Agriculture Linda Hagenaier Gregory J. Hagopian Home Economics Engineering Science Pi Lambda Phi Allan A. Hale Mechanical Engineering Lambda Chi Alpha Larry E. Hanan Finance Sigma Alpha Epsilon Carl Hitchcock Ernest Wilfred Jones Jr. History Charles T. Knowles Political Science Joseph A. Lombardo Finance Theta Chi Donna M. Holden Psychology Sigma Kappa Kathleen A. Jones Zoology Patricia H. Lepper English Delta Zeta Linda Lupo Bacteriology Robert Jeffrey Economics Marek Keller Theta Chi Richard A. Lister Industrial Engineering Phi Kappa Psi Thomas A. Maguire Jr. Management Science Sigma Phi Epsilon 249 John Gary Medeiros Pharmacy Lambda Chi Alpha Edward Melenkivitz Accounting Phi Sigma Kappa Cathy Pavalock Nursing Alpha Chi Omega Elizabeth A. Peckham Textiles and Clothing Mary McDonald Pharmacy Aline F. Miller Brian Francis O ' Connor Physical Education Sigma Nu Ronald C. Pellerin Business Patricia E. McGauran Sociology Alpha Delta Pi Stephanie Moore Sociology Maritta Ojanpera Dental Hygiene Maria McGowan Elementary Education Joy A. Myles Food Nutrition Alpha Chi Omega Pamela Paden Nursing Alpha Xi Delta Marvin M. Pelser, Jr. Accounting Paula Pennine Child Developement Delta Zeta 250 Sharon Reynolds English Arthur R. Richardson Marketing Lambda Chi Alpha Brian Robert Engineering Tech. Theta Chi You radiate magnetism and optimism . . . you are happiest when you are running the show. Angel S. Rodriguez English Richard Rydberg Mechanical Engineering Phi Kappa Psi 251 Patricia Sabatini Textiles and Clothing Alpha Xi Delta Ruth Ann Sugerman Art Barbara I. Ulles Secondary Education You and Kenneth C. Silvestro Electrical Engineering Sigma Nu Cynthia Swain English Denise Unda Nursing John M. Skaradowski Mechanical Engineering Donna Tabakin Nursing Donnalee Villani Zoology Warren Stewart Q.B.A. Ronald Strijek Political Science Dorothy Taylor Art Kappa Alpha Theta Jean Wagner Art Alpha Delta Phi Cheryl Terry Business Education Robert S. Wood Finance Lambda Chi Alpha need to love be loved. 252 Janet Caito Italian Linda Campbell Child Developement Alpha Xi Delta Kurt Carlson Math Phi Sigma Kappa Virgo is the sign of service; dependable . . . Quick to assume responsibility You are happiest when you can be of service to others . . . Marie Bursie Secondary Education Alpha Xi Delta James E. Carr Jr. Sociology Anthony P. Cabral Secondary Education Sigma Phi Epsilon Patricia Ann Casey Secondary Education 254 Claudia Chaves Social Sciences Alpha Xi Delta Fely C. Coleman Sociology Chi Omega Anne L. Crone n Sociology Janice M. DeSantis English David P. Feeney Pharmacy Sarah Funk Nursing Mertll M. Frost Jr. Electrical Engineering Lambda Chi Alpha Thomas D. Gammino Civil Engineering Kathleen A. Giebler Art Jayne Giusti Landscape Design Helen Graves Psychology Roger W. Guilmain Jr. Animal Pathology Pi Lambda Phi Katherine Hallock Food and Nutrition Alpha Xi Delta 255 You are perceptual and analytical; intelligent and a good conversationalist . . . Gail Harper Dental Hygiene Patricia Hughes Biology Frank R. lannucci Business Education Diane M. Kaskewslry Secondary Education Alpha Chi Omega Marie Kelly English Education Delta Delta Delta Paul W. Konove Jane E. Kraemer Mechanical Engineering English Marilyn B. LaLonde Secondary Education J. T. Kimball Math Martin Leibowitz Animal Science Phi Sigma Delta Joanne Kizirian Susan Lindequist Psychology Karen McLaughlin Child Development Chi Omega Maureen Martin Elementary Education Michael S. Luzzi Stephen R. Mandell English Economics Phi Mu Delta 256 Michael Mendes Mechanical Engineering Theta Delta Chi Elaine Miller Art Harold Najarian Philosophy Theta Chi Kathleen N. Osborne Pharmacy Chi Omega Charles Pantelakis Psychology Marie J. Montgomery Management Marcia E. Perry Sociology Alpha Chi Omega Jeffrey A. Poulton Psychology Kathleen Reinke Nursing Hormazd Naficy Economics Judith M. Papa Child Development Julian Petrangelo Francis J. Quetta Horticulture 257 Sandra Reynolds Ann Rosen Janet C Ry | e Physical Education Political Science Biology Sigma Delta Tau You are more mental than emotional and your innate reserve often prevents you from being able to express your true feelings. Donna E. Sanford Elementary Ed. Alpha Delta Pi Michele Selden Bacteriology Alpha Delta Pi Marsha A. Simmons Frank Twarog Jr. Physical Education Lawrence R. Snyder Spanish Mary K. Stewart Child Development Chi Omega Stuart Warwick Betsy Weiner Electrical Engineering Art Chi Phi May J. Tow History Sigma Kappa Bonnie Wiener Elementary Education Sigma Delta Tau Sandra Schaufler Psychology Michael C. Shannon Pharmacy Deborah Tryder Dental Hygiene Gregory J. Young Business Administration 258 Denise Anderson Zoology Russell Archibald Jr. Sociology Joan Baker Nursing Lambda Delta Phi Stephen Brod History Deborah Burkhardt Child Developement Chi Omega Barbara Ann Burns Secondary Ed. Lambda Delta Phi Louis J. Demicco Jr. Accounting Lambda Chi Alpha Mary Jane Cullen Math Arthur Degraetano Jr. Industrial Engineering 260 Carol Denisewich Nursing John Desforges Chemical Engineering Pi Lambda Phi Robert J. DeSista Geography Chi Phi Albert Fedorko Horticulture Ken Gozdowski Art Bruce M. Harrison Electrical Engineering Edward Drechsler Botany Phi Kappa Psi Meredith Hathaway Psychology Eric C. Eskelund Mechanical Engineering Glenn A. Holland Philosophy William J. Hunt Business Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon Heather D. Hyde Horticulture Delta Zeta Kathleen Jennings Education Chi Omega William A. Johnson Agriculture As a Libran you enjoy social affairs, and you will go out of your way to meet people and ex- tend to them the little courtesies that make life more pleasant. Judy Kaestner Donald Katz Gaston Langlois Accounting Engineering Science Finance 261 Linda Lorenz Charles F. Marshall II Carol McCarthy Home Economics Theatre Child Development Peter Moy Chemical Engineering Marjorie T. Plourde English Education Hussain Qabazard Ronald Rainer Agriculture Management Justine R. Robinson Textiles and Clothing Delta Zeta Marilyn McEleney Dental Hygiene Robert McTammany Journalism Barbara Novak English Janet I. Murphy English Education Alpha Xi Delta Jonathan R. Potter Management Sigma Nu Melanie A. Rocchio Sally Rosenfeld Nursing Art 262 Marjorie Steadman Elementary Education Gerald P. Sullivan Psychology Sheryl Swan Child Developement Jean Walter Child Developement Eileen R. Weiner Business Education Steven Williamson General Business Ad. Jean F. Zabilslci Elementary Education Robert Zartarian Agriculture Business Phi Sigma Kappa 263 John M. Aldred Zoology Phi Mu Delta Jane Bernstein History Education Sigma Delta Tau Arne Bugely English Phi Sigma Kappa Richard Crocker General Business Administration Doris Arlen Joanne Blount Home Economics Education Susan G. Cafferty Marketing Susan Curlee Distributive Education Stephen N. Aschettino Accounting Theta Delta Chi Glenn Boyles Pharmacy Jane E. Carmody Sociology Crandall W. Dimock Zoology Chi Phi Stephen Bartlett Mechanical Engineering Chi Phi Barbara Brindle Dental Hygiene William M. Cicchelli Chemical Engineering Chi Phi Alfred DiPrete Management Thomas Bates Music Education Richard A. Brown Industrial Engineering Paul Colarusso History Theta Chi Diane M. Donilon Child Development Chi Omega 265 Jo Ann Duarte Elementary Education Sigma Kappa Maureen E. Ford Physical Education Madeline Gerardi William Dupre Business Management Charles B. Frost Pharmacy Phi Kappa Psi Kenneth Goldblatt Management Phi Sigma Delta Marilyn Faiola Italian Mary Jane Fuller Child Development Alpha Chi Omega Suzanne S. Groet Botany Delta Zeta Elizabeth Fitzpatrick English Sigma Kappa Keith A. Gebler Political Science David N. Hammerstrum Management Scorpio: Intuitive, determined, and secretive. You rely on first impressions and you are not an easy person to fool . . . Marc Hazebrouck Zoology Rosemary Fitzsimmons Home Economics Alpha Xi Delta Nancy Gentili Political Science James W. Hayes Phi Gamma Delta Mary F. Healy English Kappa Alpha Theta 266 Leslie A. Heywood Cynthia Hosley Home Economics Christine L. Jones Medical Technology Arthur Kravetz Insurance Phi Sigma Delta Debra Lee Child Developement Nancy Levine English Sigma Delta Tau Elizabeth A. Imperatore English Barbara V. Kayser Home Economics Education William S. Maiorano Biology Beth Horman Pharmacy Chi Omega Michael J. Infantolino Physical Education Phi Gamma Delta Janet Kelly Biology Education Alpha Xi Delta Barbara J. Mattson Child Developement 267 William R. McCarthy Horticulture Karen Morse Elementary Education Kathryn Murray Textiles and Clothing Alpha Xi Delta Frank A. Parenti Business Administration Theta Chi Charlene Nicholls Textiles and Clothing Arthur B. Pitterman Pharmacy Jeff Regan Electrical Engineering Dianne M. Norris Sociology Deborah Rampino English Delta Zeta William Robertson Mechanical Engineering Anthony Palmieri III Pharmacy Kappa Psi You have a tendency to seek new and stimulating experiences. You have a fine sense of sportsmanship. Joseph Scallin Management Susan J. Sherman Biology Allen M. Shore Finance Alpha Epsilon Pi Joseph Siegel English Education Wendy Silverberg Music Education 268 Thomas S. Squiers Jr. Zoology Dennis Sullivan Industrial Engineering Bob White Biology Neil Young Political Science Joel E. Thomson Insurance Sigma Pi Carole J. Amore Pharmacy Jean Marie Brady Maureen Archambault Math Alpha Xi Delta Glenn W. Buckley Social Studies Pi Lambda Phi Sandra L. Avedisian Nursing Carol A. Buonocore Secondary Education Alpha Xi Delta Nancy Bickel Political Science Delta Zeta Daniel R. Balser English Melanie Cahill Robert Caswell Agriculture Math Peter Chase Education Karen Christensen Everett 1. Cornell Linda Coupe Kathleen Ann Crescenio Secondary Education Agriculture Business Home Economics Secondary Education Alpha Xi Delta Lambda Chi Alpha Alpha Xi Delta William J. Cummings Journalism Barbara H. Dee Elementary Education Alpha Chi Omega Patricia DiMartino Marketing Nancy Lee Dodge English Kappa Alpha Theta Alberta DelPrete Education Lambda Delta Phi 271 Janice Dumont LeRoy Edwards Textiles and Clothing Psychology You want to leave your imprint on time; to make a contribution to society . . . Anne L. Goldstein Speech Science Linda Goodwin Child Development Allen H. Gorin Speech Alpha Epsilon Pi Nancy Hauserman English Kappa Kappa Gamma Frank T. Geiselman III Physical Education Sigma Chi Melissa J. Hempstead Education 272 Ronald Z. Kaplan Advertising Joseph H. Henry Bacteriology Alpha Epsilon Pi Susan E. Hersey Sociology Lambda Delta Phi You have a strong need for independence. Your mind is never closed to viewpoints of others. Millie R. Madrick English Sigma Kappa Marianne Messina Nursing Pamela J. Mason Barbara Matteucci Dental Hygiene Textiles and Clothing Virginia A. Neubold John O ' Brien Child Development Psychology Alpha Xi Delta Marsha Kazlow History Anthony Lukasiewicz Management Sigma Nu Susan McCraw English Sigma Kappa Frank R. Papa Insurance Marcia Langer Sociology Education Alan F. Lynch Electrical Engineering Lambda Chi Alpha Marjorie L. Merdinyan Child Development Raymond F. Parker Jr. Accounting 273 Sharon Reiser Sociology Randall M. Pillsbury Journalism Mary Ann Sceery English Education Delta Delta Delta Irene Svagan Business Administration Donna M. Pytel Bacteriology Donald Rosenthal Zoology Marcia L. Sahagian Physical Education Russell J. Saucier English Elizabeth A. Silbert Math Sigma Delta Tau Susan J. Taber Journalism Carl J. Tabor Agricultural Technology Phi Gamma Delta Alfred Testa, Jr. Political Science Sigma Alpha Epsilon Adele M. Thompson Secondary Education 274 Salim A. Valimahomed Civil Engineering Kathie Waterman Nursing Rollin Whyte, Jr. Chemistry Education Lambda Chi Alpha You meet people easily . . . You can be flattered into doing something, but you rebel at direct orders. 275 Patricia L. Baker English Emily Barrett Child Development Lianne Armstrong Art Nancy Arnold Elementary Education Sigma Kappa Donna ARusso Home Economics Educ. Capricorn: Constructive and practical in all you do. Carol Belmore Dental Hygiene Thomas M. Cataldo Physical Education Phi Mu Delta John A. Bencivenga Economics Phi Mu Delta June G. Chaters Nursing Bridget R. Bennett Sociology Christine Cook Marketing Lois Bianchi Elementary Education Alpha Delta Pi Elsie V. Corbridge Jo-Ann C. Butler Dental Hygiene John F. Curran, Jr. Marketing Phi Kappa Psi 277 Anthony P. DelGrande Mathematics Linda E. Esposito English Herbert D ' Errico Education Eileen M. Falcone English Sigma Kappa Guenther H. Der Manelian Management Barbara Foote Child Development Delta Delta Delta You are extremely conservative . . . David W. Galipeau Electrical Engineering Sigma Pi Michael Gautreaux Industrial Engineering Sigma Chi Christine Geiselman Home Economics Education Alpha Chi Omega Peggy Dorn Nursing Alpha Xi Delta Terri Duhamel Art Education 278 You are a born organizer . . . You can visualize the possible outcome of any project. Maureen Greene Psychology Margaret Gross Food and Nutritional Science Mailt B. Hodosh Political Science Douglas P. Holmes Management Ronald W. Kresch Business Administration David Jeffrey Sociology Carol A. Lapham English Judith Kane English Alpha Chi Omega Cynthia Lentz Nursing Chi Omega Edward Keenaghan Sociology Phi Sigma Delta Thomas Luckenbaugh Mechanical Engineering Joanne Kohn Home Economics Kathleen Luprik English 279 Jacquelyn Lynch Physical Education Chi Omega Anne G. Markowitz English ft Vanessa Lynn Art History Susan Marron Child Developement Drew Magee Finance Phi Mu Delta Christine Martin Art Kimberley Malcomson Home Economics Education Candice Mentlik Dental Hygiene Barbara Mandell Education Joan Montaquila Psychology Alpha Chi Omega Lawrence R. Morrow Botany Ralph I. Nathan Tau Kappa Epsilon Paula Neumann Dental Hygiene Jocelyn A. O ' Brien Richard B. Ofstie Political Science Phi Gamma Delta You have a deep need for love and companionship You respond to the needs of others. Antonio Palazzo Agronomy Chi Phi 280 I Anthony Robinson Sociology Sigma Chi Deborah J. Shepard History Kenneth J. Robinson Pharmacy Phi Sigma Delta Lucille Swider Business Education William Plum General Business Administration Jane M. Schenck Textiles and Clothing Naomi Wagner Zoology Jess H. Whitten Marlene C. Zachok Zoology Helaine Zim ' an English Aquarians have a tendency to identify themselves with abstract ideas or group movements . . . Elizabeth Anderson History Robert E. Ahlschlager Electrical Engineering Phi Gamma Delta Lucille Berube Elementary Education Sigma Delta Tau Roney R. Brunetti Physics Pi Lambda Phi Douglas Campbell Roberta S. Blum Theater Karen A. Burton Nursing Michael P. Cavallaro General Business Administration Phi Gamma Delta Donald Arrigan Industrial Engineering Chi Phi Martha Callan Psychology 283 Ardell Covill Food and Nutrition Thomas DiPaola Physical Education Phi Mu Delta Susan Frost Zoology Chi Omega Thomas Howard Accounting You encourage any idea, advocate any cause that you feel will benefit humanity — Linda M. Crowley Nursing Chi Omega Carmine DiSano Italian William Gaulin English Beryl Johnston Physical Education Jane M. Dobra Bacteriology Sheryl I. Genser Advertising Arthur Jones Management Thompson E. Drake Gen. Business Administration Sigma Nu Deborah S. Haber Secondary Education Sigma Delta Tau Nancy E. Eddy Nursing Terry Hamer Nursing Kathleen B. Kelly Foods and Nutrition Chi Omega David Kenney Accounting Sigma Phi Epsilon 284 Dennis J. Kenney Accounting Sigma Phi Epsilon Russell T. Kopp Mechanical Engineering Mary MacDonald Graphic Arts Delta Zeta Patricia Maclc Math Gail M. Martin English Roger F. Muller Randi Olsen Business Management English Education Lambda Chi Alpha Ann Orner Nursing Delta Delta Delta Peter Panagiotis John V. Pantalone Graphic Arts Journalism Sigma Chi Mary Alexis Pawlowski Accounting Sigma Kappa Bernard Roderick Jr. Fisheries Ronald Shaver Sociology Arthur J. Watson General Business James R. Plante Civil Engineering Thomas G. Rotella Pharmacy Veronica Powell English Alpha Delta Pi David Prince General Business Lambda Chi Alpha Marianne Ryan History Eugene Rivard Jr. Agriculture Technology Sigma Nu Joan Stigliano Spanish Alpha Delta Pi Katherine Vieira Sociology Sigma Kappa Elizabeth Weisman English Barbara Winsor Child Development Roberta Weiner Political Science Sigma Delta Tau Joseph R. Amaral Political Science Glenn Bowman Electrical Engineering Michael P. Balogh English Carolyn Boyd Psychology Janice Bargamian Nursing Chi Omega Patricia Brady Nursing Alpha Delta Pi Richard Bell Mechanical Engineering Dennis A. Breitner Political Science Alpha Epsilon Pi Carla A. Buckley Psychology Pisces are sentimental, sociable, and companionable. With an innate sense of obligation . . . John Boulmetis Sociology Phi Sigma Delta Cynthia Brown Nursing John Burdette Marketing Management Jeanne L. Bursley Sue Bursley Child Development Textiles and Clothing Sigma Kappa Sigma Kappa Dawn Camp bell Food and Nutrition Nola Carosi English Alpha Xi Delta Curt Cohen Finance 288 Alfred J. Craig Horticulture Carlo V. DelBonis Agricultural Technology John Devaney Economics William M. Dolan Jr. Political Science Sigma Nu Joseph Franchina Civil Engineering Theta Delta Chi Albert Gesualdi Educ. English Theta Delta Chi Stephen Drucker Alpha Epsilon Pi Justin Michael Frankis Mechanical Engineering Richard E. Godfroy General Administration Sigma Phi Epsilon Nona Ellison Nursing Steven P. Friedman Accounting Alpha Epsilon Pi Richard M. Grabbert Art Michael A. Ferrucci Political Science Susan Geffner Psychology Sigma Delta Tau Pamela Graham Child Development Fredda Lynne Field Psychology E. Ed Donna L. Gens Psychology Patricia Grant Child Development Kappa Alpha Theta 289 Howard M. Greenberg Larry Guerke Civil Engineering Pharmacy Phi Sigma Delta Pi Lambda Phi The activities of the world often confuse you . . . You should associate with positive-minded and socially adjusted individuals. Cheryl Jones Sociology Delta Delta Delta Donald Krzan Spanish Jeanne E. Jordan Theatre Richard P. LaMothe Jr. English Patrick Heron Sociology Mary E. Kellner Nursing Lambda Delta Phi Joseph A. Lopes Sociology William Hillier Physics Lee Howarth Mathematics Alpha Xi Delta Carl Koussa Business Administration John Krawiec Civil Engineering Sigma Chi Nancy E. LaPierre Christine Lataille Sociology Elementary Education Alpha Delta Phi 290 Robert Lonardo Finance Chi Phi Patricia A. Lyons Journalism Donna Moretti Food and Nutrition Alpha Chi Omega Anne M. Moriarty English Karen Morrison Zoology William Mullin Civil Engineering Lambda Chi Alpha Patricia Narcessian Child Development Sigma Delta Tau Elyse Olsen Alpha Chi Omega Susan D. Peters Secondary Education Barbara L. Quill Jean Reimer Art Chi Omega Russell Rezendes Management Sigma Nu Steven M. Rubin Finance Alpha Epsilon Pi Neil N. Somberg History John L. Terra nova Physical Education Mary Watson Sociology Chris Stevens Industrial Engineering Phi Sigma Kappa Timothy C. Thresher Marketing Management Celine Welch Physical Education Kathleen Stevenson Education Richard J. Toole Forestry Sigma Alpha Epsilon Daniel A. Wise Sec. Ed. Biology Freda L. Stone English Elem. Ed. Lambda Delta Phi Janice Troll Horticulture Sigma Kappa Dennis M. Woljan Geology Paul A. Shawver Secondary Education Phi Kappa Psi Michael Sweeney Mechanical Engineering Stephen F. Vincent Physical Education Theta Chi 292 Madeleine F. Allaire Robert E. Barletta Political Science Chemistry Valorie Capwell Secondary Education Lee Anne Chenevert Elementary Education Dorothy Brown English Carolyn Ann Butler Nursing Orion: The hunter at times you are found under different signs . . . David Chiaverini Shirley T. Denison Psychology Gail E. Crawford Psychology Stephen Crawford Wildlife Alpha Zeta Ruth Daniels English Jane Lynn Dean Education Janice M. DeQuattro English Barbara Eisenstadt English Mark J. Faiola Sociology Rita Farrissey English 294 Susan Orr Gilbert Home Economics Doris Greenberg English Ralph F. Guarnieri Physical Eduation Ronald Guarnieri Physical Education Mrs. Edward Goldin Psychology Jeanne M. Hannon Elementary Education Sociology Bruce Harrington Finance Janice Heffernan Psychology Bruce M. Guthrie Industrial Engineering Linda J. Kilguss Janet Kosch Elementary Education Home Economics Albert LaFrance Management Theta Delta Chi Delores Leinhos English William J. Hoffman Political Science Marion Kaufman Robert Lemeshka Biology 295 Marea E. Lewis Elementary Education Psychology John T. McGannon Marketing Harriet F. Linn English Francis McLocklin Geography Elizabeth Mak Biology Rosemary Martelli French Alpha Chi Omega William McComb Civil Engineering Cecilia Mendes Psychology Stephen P. Messineo Food Technology Sigma Nu Frances G. Miller Nursing You are often times an unknown among a sea of names . . . John Minidier Jr. Julie Morris Management Nursing Catherine Mullen Math Education John B. Occaso Jr. Agriculture Technology Mark Oravec Mechanical Engineering Marjorie B. Peek Charlotte Pennington Psychology Elementary Education Phylis Penston Peranteau Nursing Alpha Xi Delta Jeanne T. Nelson English George S. Nonis Math Jetty-Ann O ' Hare Psychology Marie Pacheco Education Janice Perelman English Henry Peter Opiekun Business Education Sigma Nu Elizabeth Pattillo Joy Perreault Education Alpha Chi Omega 297 ro CD oo CO o 73 NOT DETACH University of Rhode Island Name Telephone No Fraternity Degree Major Subject ACTIVITIES (List all Extra-curricular activities, honorary affiliations, etc. you have participated in, in order of major importance). Meredith Persson Administration Mrs. N. C. Pettigrew English You have a tendency not to fill out registration forms completely . . . Claremary Pratt Secondary Education Donna Jean Rogers Math Susan Raiche Sociology Gloria Rogers English Joy Scanlon Elementary Education Chi Omega Paul Smith Charlotte Stamatakos Beth Swanson English Kappa Alpha Theta Sharleen F. Soscia Helen Sovet Secondary Education English Math Elizabeth Spellman Psychology Phyllis A. Stenhouse English Sigma Kappa Anna Swiski English Ethel Sullivan Thomas Tait Psychology Thomas Trainor Jr. Management Lambda Chi Alpha Lorraine St. Germain English Alpha Chi Omega Dorothy Swanbeck English Margot Vadeboncoeur History 299 Alice Veznaian English Janis C. Weinstein English Ann Whitford Education-English Thomas Wilburn Civil Engineering Loretta M. White English James Wollish English Deborah M. Wyss Secondary Education Zita C. Yaghoobian Child Developement Sigma Delta Tau Dorothy Yamzon English You are always seeking new conquests. Lenore Friedman Glubo Home Economics Education 300 V Janet Halligan Editors in Chief When dealing with a staff this small in number, it often becomes necessary to demand of those few, more than you would normally ask of a large group. We would like to extend our thanks to all of these people who tolerated our sometimes illogical requests and assign- ments, and who contributed a part of their own personali- ties into the very book itself. Steve Friedman only wanted the position of Business Man- ager; he soon became invaluable to us in all facets of ad- ministration. Shahrokh Dowlatshahi made only one request: Keep Greg out of the dark room! . Instead, we assigned enough work to keep 2 darkrooms busy. Bob Emerson ' s struggle to constantly remind Jan to get him the 85 lens and more film usually ended up in failure, Miss Grist but still he produced what was so much needed. Thanks too to Bob Izzo in P.R. Rob Sherwin is still looking for that roll of film he left on our desk, yet knows he ' ll never find it. But at least we found the tanglewood shot! To Joe Norris, we extend a very personal thank you. His complete dedication to photography and his deep con- cern for the Grist have helped more than anyone will ever know or realize. A final thank you to Aaron Jarit and Bernie Friedman of Carol Studios who were so patient with our many prob- lems and especially to John Levis of Taylor Publishing Company who proved to be more than a company repre- sentative; he was our personal friend. Steve Friedman — Business Manager Bob Emerson — Photographer (Introduction Photo ■ — Boy with Flag) Rob Sherwin — Photographer (color Photography in Senior Section) (Color Photo in Introduction Grist Page) Joe Norris — Color Introduction Elizabeth Banks — Ecology Color Nicholas Scholera — Cover Design Shahrokh Dowlatshahi tonranhic Editor ADVISORS Roger Conway Arther Petrosemelo Linda Shamoon Abdul-Raheem, Zaid A. — 4 Taft Hall URL Kingston. F.S. Abdur-Rashid. Mustafa H. — Shermon Rd. RFD I Snug Harb. Wakefield. R.l. Abizaid, Cheryl L. — 35 Benjamin St., Pawtucket. R.l. Abrams. Lois B. — 24 Sixth St„ Providence. R.l. Abrams. Ronald P. — 98 Wilcox Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Ackroyd. Michael H. — 47 Woodland Ave.. Esmond. R.l. Adler. Ethon J. — 18 Memorial Rd.. Providence. R.l. Adriance, Bryan T. — Posac Point. North Kingstown. R.l. Adriance. Kathleen N. — 44 Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Agnello. Joy A . — bVi Haswell St.. Westerly. R.l. Ahlschlager. Robert E. — 10 Cherry Lane, Huntington. N.Y. Aiello. Eugene N. =6£ Pleasant St.. Westerly. R.l. Ainbinder. Michael A. — 83 I Cedar Rd., North Bellmore. N.Y. Albanese, Sandra M. — 52 Sussex St.. Providence, R.l. Alberg. William G. — 161 Whittier Rd.. Pawtucket. R.l. Aldred. John M. — 36 Bernard St., Merrick, N.Y. Aldrich. Barbara E. — 102 Sylvan Dr.. East Greenwich. R.l. Alexander. Mary A. — I 1 10 Old Baptist Rd., North Kingstown. R.l. Algren. Cheryl A. — 46 Lafayette Dr.. E. Greenwich. R.l. Allen. Jeffrey H. — 552 East Ave.. Pawtucket, R.l. Allen. Robert W.— 123 Lutz Dr.. Valley Stream. N.Y. Alton, Bradley M. — 17 Beech Hill Rd.. Peace Dale, R.l. Alves. Paul J. — 4 Elm St.. Cumberland, R.l. Amaru, Linda J. — 155 Hill Top Dr.. Warwick, R.l. Amore. Carole J. — 71 Concord Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Amore. Janice M. — 139 Oxford St.. Cranston. R.l. Anderson. Carl E. — 142 Namquid Dr.. Warwick, R.l. Anderson. Craig L. — 167 River St.. Warwick, R.l. Anderson. Denise W. — Box 152 Rt. I. Hockessin. D.E. Anderson. Kathryn G. — 934: Toll Gate Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Anderson. Linda A. — 24 Palm Blvd.. Warwick. R.l. Anderson. Linda J. — 53 Lewis St., Warwick, R.l. Anderson. Susan J. — 51 Spencer Ave.. East Greenwich. R.l. Anderssen. Ivar A. — 4 Taft Hall URL Kingston, F.S. Angelone. Paula J.— 69 Heath Ave., Warwick, R.l. Ardente. Kathleen A. — 10 Marshall Rd.. Cranston, R.l. Arrigan. Donald J. — 261 Norwood Ave.. Cranston, R.l. Arusso, Donna M. — 12 Edna St.. Johnston, R.l. Arvidson, Katharin L. — 14 Parkway Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Aschettino. Stephen N. — 35 Jacksonia Dr., North Providence, R.l. Ashton, Robert A. — 144 Allen Dr.. East Greenwich. R.l. Asser. Eliot S. — 157 Melrose St., Providence, R.l. Asting, Mary D. — Curtis Corner Rd.. Peace Dale. R.l. Atkinson. Nancy L. — 77 Harris Ave.. Johnston. R.l. Auclair. Sandra J. — 59 Sidney Ave.. Woonsocket. R.l. Auger, Deborah A. — 669 Adeline Dr., Webster, N.Y. Austin. Linds D. — 96 Shirley Blvd.. Cranston, R.l. Avedisian. Sandra L. — 108 Canton St.. Providence. R.l. Babcock, Diane M. — 989 Valley Rd., Bluebell. Pa. Backer. Richard E. — 5 Woodford St.. Worcester. Ma. Baglini. Robert L. — 4 Abbott St., Cumberland. R.l. Baker, Daniel R. — 129 Nelson St.. Providence, R.l. Baker. Joan M. — 533 Langley Ave., West Hempstead. N.Y. Balogh, Michael P. — 743 Stony Hill Rd., Wilbraham. Ma. Bargamian. Janice M. — 816 Narragansett Pkwy., Warwick. R.l. Barney, William R. — 3 Ice House Rd.. Peace Dale. R.l. Barone. Anthony J. — 1679 Cranston St.. Cranston. R.l. Barovick. Barry M. — 20 Coles Ct.. River Edge. N .J. Barr, James P. — I 13 Crown Ave.. East Providence. R.l. Barrett. Stephen P. — Box 159. Kingston. R.l. Barry, Wendy L. — Shields St.. Newport. R.l. Barsoumian. Manoug P. — 4 Taft Hall URL Kingston, F.S. Bartlett. Stephen F. — 24 Grove Ave., Cranston. R.l. Bartley, Lawrence J. — 525 Daggett Ave., Pawtucket, R.L Bate. Thomas R. — 367 Hopkins Hill Rd.. Coventry. R.l. Beagan, Patricia A. — 56 Errol St.. Warwick, R.L Beatrice, Thomas J. — 21 Gould St.. Wakefield. R.l. Beaudoin. Robert A. — 525 Massachusetts Ave., West Acton. Beaudoin, Robert J. — 690 County Rd.. Barrington. R.L Beaujean, Suzanne L. — 15 Dwight St.. Cumberland, R.L Beauregard, Robert L. — Shelter Ln., Cumberland, R.l. Bebby. Barbara A. — 30 Warrington St.. Providence, R.L Bedard. Celeste P. — 92 Dana St., Providence, R.L Bedell. James E. — 67 Forest Ave., Verona, N.J. Bednarczyk, Cynthia M. — 32 Mechanic St.. Hope Valley. R.L Belisle, Thomas M. — 9 Helme Rd.. Kingston, R.L Bell. Richard A. — 231 Ann St., Cumberland, R.L Beilin. Barbara H. — 26 Fairview Ave., Cranston, R.L Belmore. Carol A. — 29 Summer St.. Bristol, R.L Bencivenga. John A. — 32 Lester Avenue. Lynbrook, N.Y. Bennett, Bridget R. — 416 Diamond Hill Rd., Cumberland. R.l. Bennett, Roger B. — Pojac Point. North Kingstown, R.L Bennis, Richard E. — 1438 Middle Rd.. East Greenwich. R.l. Benoit, Normand G. — 176 Transit St.. Providence. R.L Berardo. John R.— 30 Hobart St., Westerly. R.l. Berger. Ann L. — 141 Cole Ave.. Providence. R.l. Berger. Carrie A. — 1607 Salem Rd.. Valley Stream. N.Y. Berger, Robert M. — 15 Hobomack Rd.. Quincy, Ma. Bernstein. Jane P. — 37 Sixth St.. Providence. R.L Berry. John A. — Saugatucket Rd.. Wakefield. R.l. Berube, Lucille Y. — 32 Hampton St., Providence. R.L Bessette. Armand F. — 251 Norwood Ave., Cranston, R.L Bickel, Nancy F. — 3720 Lynn Ln., Wantagh, N.Y. Billig. Rory D.— 245 Legion Way. Cranston. R.l. Binder. Robert J. — 234 Lincoln Ave., Island Park. N.Y. Bisbee. David E. — 15 Burgess St.. Nashua, N.H. Blackburn, Ann M. — 37 Austin St.. Wakefield, R.L Blake. Richard J. — 101 Westwood Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Blake. Robert C. — 241 Howland Rd.. East Greenwich, R.L Bliss, Betsey N. — 1345 Newman Ave.. Seekonk, Ma. Blue. Richard A. — 102 Buttonwoods Ave., Warwick, R.l. Blum. Roberta S. — 165 Colony Rd., New Haven, Ct. Blythe. Ronald R. — 62 Kiwanee Rd., Warwick. R.L Boas. Donald P. — 561 Nod Hill Rd., Wilton. Ct. Bolton, David R. — Pine Hill Rd.. Johnston, R.l. Boocock. Harry D. — 46 Point Rd.. Portsmouth. R.l. Boulmetis, John — 73 Clifford St., Pawtucket, R.L Bourbon. Hugh A. — 160 Harmony Ct.. Warwick, R.L Bourne. Edward A. — 35 Walcott Ave., Jamestown. R.l. Bouvier. Margaret P. — Box 423-E Shady Harbor. Westerly. R.L Bova, Robert D.— 56 Perkins St.. Warwick. R.L Bowman, Glenn C. — Palmer Grove Rte. 2. Saunderstown, R.L Bowman, Ray E. — Box 275, Kingston. R.l. Boyd, Carolyn — 246 Washingon Rd., Barrington, R.L Boyle, John C. — 83 Pinecrest Dr., Pawtucket, R.L Boyles. Glenn T. — Snake Hill Rd. Bx. 297. North Scituate, R.l. Bradley. Lawrence R. — 92 Diana Dr.. Woonsocket, R.l. Bradley, Susan C. — 79 Rice Ave.. East Providence. R.L Bradway, Bob A. — 86 Maywood Rd., Darien, Ct. Brady, Jean M. — 81 Tangle Wood Dr., East Greenwich. R.L Brady, Patricia C. — 19 Overbrook PL. Neptune City. N.J. Branchaud. Marjorie A. — 384 Pound Hill Rd.. Woonsocket, R.l. Braverman, Jack L. — 18 Colonial Rd., Providence. R.L Bray. James F. — 7 Cooper St., Pawtucket. R.L Brazil Jr.. Edward J. — North Rd.. Jamestown. R.l. Breitner. Dennis A. — 749 Buchanan Rd.. East Meadow, N.Y. Briden, Linda S. — 62 Burton Ave.. Riverside. R.L Briden, William J. — 53 Wesleyan Ave.. Providence. R.l. Brillon. Richard A. — 676 Dexter St., Central Falls, R.l. Brindle. Barbara J. — 394 Harrington Ave., Warwick. R.l. Broccoli. Joseph T. — 20 Susan Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Brod, Stephen C. — 218 Ronald Ave., Cumberland. R.L Brokaw. Walter Y. — 59 Westfield. Warwick. R.l. Brooks. Richard H. — 22 Cambridge Rd.. East Rockaway, N.Y. Brooks. Seymour J. — 54 Gallatin St.. Providence. R.L Brouillard. Steven — 41 Tampa St., W. Warwick. R.L Brown, Cynthia J. — I I Madison St. Apt. 6. Warwick, R.L Brown, Paul E. — 97 Raymond St., Providence. R.l. Brown, Richard A. — 600 Putnam Ave.. Greenville, R.L Brown, Steven J. — 168 Dudley St., Providence. R.l. Brown, Theodore A. — Box 260, Kingston. R.L Brown, Walter B. — 83 Franklin St., Westerly, R.L Browning, John S. — Po Kelley Ave., Rumford, R.L Brunetti, Roney R. — 646 Mendon Rd.. Woonsocket, R.L Bruzzese. Thomas M. — 401 Wickenden St.. Providence. R.l. Buckley. Carla A. — 6 Mosher Dr.. West Barrington. R.l. Budlong. Corinne M. — 20 Green Ct.. Cranston, R.L Buffington. Marilyn A. — 6 Moorland Ave., Cranston. R.L Bugely. Arn W. — 7 Fourth St„ Barrington. R.l. Bullock, Joseph A. — 7 Fones Ave.. North Kingstown. R.L Bullock, Paul — 9!6 Church St., Bristol, R.L Buonocore, Carol A. — 52 Hampton St.. Providence, R.L Burden, Barry E. — 79 Walnut Rd., West Barrington R.L Burdette, John R. — 50 Roosevelt Dr.. Bethpage. N.Y. Burke, Michael F. — Chapel St., Harrissville. R.L Burkhardt, Deborah R. — 5 Jenison St.. Newtonville, Mass. Burns. Barbara A. — 3 Thurston Ave., Newport, R.L Burns, Linda L. — 1705 South Bend Dr.. Rocky River, Ohio Bursie, Marie E. — 45 Waldron Ave., Warwick, R.L Bursley, Jeanne L. — 260 Nayatt Rd., Barrington, R.l. Bursley, Sue E. — 260 Nayatt Rd., Barrington. R.l. Burton. Karen A. — 20 Sylvan Dr., East Greenwich. R.l. Bush, Keith S. — 7 Bayou Dr., Greenville. R.L Buslik. James B. — 952 Midway, Woodmere, N.Y. Bustin. Deborah H. — 48 Fenwood Ave., Pawtucket, R.L Butler, James L. — 254 Vermont Ave.. Providence. R.L Butler, Jo-Ann C. — 69 Overhill Dr., West Warwick, R.l. Cabral, Anthony P. — 52 Collins St.. Bristol, R.L Cafferty, Susan G. — 74 Rowley St., Providence. R.L Caffrey. Garret P. — 28 Corrente Ct., Pawtucket, R.L Cahill. Melanie B. — 166 Lincoln Ave., Pawtucket. R.L Cahoon. Andrea R. — 14 Ridge Dr. E.. Roslyn, N.Y. Caito, Janet A. — I 10 First Ave.. Cranston. R.L Calenda. Alexande — 315 Mt. Pleasant Ave.. Providence, R.L Calista, Patricia A. — 1 15 Benjamin St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Callan, Martha E. — 15 Poplar St.. Providence. R.L Camire. Joseph E. — 9 Social Dr.. Warwick. R.L Campbell, Dawn F. — Foddering Farm Rd. Box 93 R.R. 4. Narragansett. R.L Campbell. Douglas I. — 23 Peartree Ln., Huntington St.. N.Y. Campbell. Linda A. — 99 Lakeside Ave., Cranston, R.L Campbell, Philip G. — 10 Farm St., Cranston, R.L Campbell. Sharon E. — 23 Cornwall Dr.. Winsorlocks, Conn. Campella, Bruce A. — 60 Meadowbrook St., Weston, Mass. Camuso, Jean C. — 43 Orchard St.. North Providence. R.L Candon. Kathleen E. — 48 Melrose St.. Cranston. R.l. Capalbo, Margaret N. — 1 18 Top St.. Westerly. RJ. Capece. Pamela N. — Phillips Ln., Harmony, R.L Caprio. Claudio A. — 23 Monmath Ct., Brookline. Mass. Caragher, William F. — 64 Virginia St.. Valley Stream. N.Y. Cardi. James J. — 184 Wayland Ave., Cranston. R.L 305 Cardi. Vincent C. — 30 Green Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Cardillo. Mary Ann R.— 700 Academy Ave.. Providence. R.l. Cardin. Marcia L. — 165 Knollwood Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Carlson. Kurt C.— 29 Hobart St.. Westerly. R.l. Carmody. Jane E. — 43 Homestead Ave.. Johnston. R.l. Carney. Paul F. — 38 Hagerstown Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Carosi. Nola— 122 Metcalf St.. Providence. R.l. Carr. James E. — 152 Hunts Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Carr. Thomas R.— 26 Carlson Circle. West Warwick. R.l. Carroll. David H. — I Maple Root Park R.R. I. Coventry. R.l. Carroll. James H. — 95 Greenmeadow Cir.. North Kingstown. R.l. Carter. Janice A. — 27 Bliss St.. East Providence. R.l. Cascio. Joyce P. — 33 Trescott Path. Fort Salonga. N.Y. Casey. Patricia A. — 22 Bayberry Rd.. Kingston. R.l. Castrovillar. Francis — 43 Freedom Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Caswell. Robert C.— 80 Pine Hill Rd.. Wakefield. R.l. Cataldo. Thomas M. — 37 Farrington St.. Franklin. Mass. Catley. John E. — 1221 Elmwood Ave.. Providence. R.l. Catterall. Bruce T. — 268 Ann St.. Cumberland. R.l. Catto. Margaret A. — Broad St. Box 3. Ashaway, R.l. Cavallaro. Michael P. — 19 Valley Dr.. Bristol. R.l. Cecchini. Robert R. — 78 Massachusetts Ave.. Cumberland. R.l. Chace. David G.— 165 Massassoit Dr. Warwick. R.l. Champlin. George H. — Boom Bridge Rd.. Westerly. R.l. Chan. William B. — 62 Cato St.. Woonsocket. R.l. Chappell. Diane R. — 40 Rodman St.. Peace Dale. R.l. Chappell. Robert J.— 40 Greenwich St.. Providence. R.l. Chase. Peter F. — 26 Rhodes Avenue. East Providence. R.l. Chaves. Claudia T. — 1 56 Grosvenor Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Chemel. Michael C. — 102 Edgewood Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Chin. Melvin W. — 40 Daboll St.. Providence. R.l. Chipparoni. Linda L. — 5 Scenic Dr.. North Kingstown. R.l. Chircop. Linda A. — 200 Walter Ave.. Hasbrouck Heights. N.J. Chmura. Michael S. — 572 Cottage St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Choper. Merrill A. — 69 Hazelwood Ave.. Metuchen. N.J. Choudry. Janette — Faculty Apt. A6. Bayside. N.Y. Christensen. Karen M. — 12 Kenneth Ave.. Portsmouth. R.l. Christopher. John H. — Victory Highway. Mapleville. R.l. Cicchelli. William M.— 84 Lawrence St.. Cranston. R.l. Ciesynski. Carol A.-48 Togansett Rd.. Providence. R.l. Clancy. John M.— 259 Canal St.. Westerly. R.l. Clark. Christin M.— 30 Kelley Ave.. East Providence. R.l. Clark. Mary M.— 21 Stage Coach Rd.. Portsmouth. R.l. Clark. Noah G. — I 15 Bates Ave.. North Kingstown. R.l. Clarke. Mary L. — 30 Palmer Rd.. Tiverton. R.l. Coates. Richard W. — 46 West Genesee St.. Baldwinsville. N.Y. Cocci. Michael J. — 77 Power Rd.. Pawtucket. R.l. Cofoni. Diane E. — 38 School St.. Peace Dale. R.l. Cohen. Aaron— 934 East 81st St.. Brooklyn. N.Y. Cohen. Curt M. — 783 Lydia Ln.. Westbury. N.Y. Colan. Joseph R. — 1 5 Frank St.. Providence. R.l. Colarusso. Paul T. — 40 Wedge St.. Cranston, R.l. Coleman. Fely C.— 220 Tower Hill Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Collins. Elinor M.— Brayton Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Condon. David K.— 945 North Main St.. Randolph. Mass. Conklin. Sharon L. — Box 157. Kingston. R.l. Connerton. Francis X. — 3 Cliff Terr.. Newport. R.l. Connery, Charles F. — 219 Annaquatucket Rd., North Kingstown. R.l. Connor. Howard R.— Box 456 Bayberry Rd.. Narragansett. R.l. Connor. Thomas H.— 84 West Main St.. North Kingstown. R.l. Cook. Christin F. — 80 Hedley Ave.. Johnston. R.l. Cook. David P. — 28 Fernckest Dr.. Pawtucket. R.l. Cooney. Louise M. — Breezy Lake Dr.. Coventry. R.l. Cooper. Gregory C. — 12 Enfield Ave.. North Kingstown. R.l. Coppolelli. David E. — 1018 Cranston St.. Cranston. R.l. Cornell. Everett I. — Burlingame Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Corry, Ellen A. — 158 Grove Ave.. East Providence. R.l. Corwin. Robert D. — 197 Medway St.. Providence. R.l. Coupe. Linda C. — 345 Narr Bay Ave.. Warwick Neck, R.l. Covill. Ardell L. — 82 Chatworth Ave.. Warwick, R.l. Covill, Richard J.— 139 Wendell Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Craig. Alfred J. — 59 Marion St.. E. Greenwich. R.l. Cramer. Benedict F. — 487 N. Village Ave.. Rockville Centre. Crescenzo. Kathleen A. — I 12 Langden St. Providence. R.l. Crocker. Richard N. — 4 Blackfrock Rd.. Yardley. Pa. Cronan. Ann L. — 45 Franklin St., Riverside. R.l. Crook. Janet F. — 99 Parkside Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Cross. Jeffrey N. — 96 Tracy Dr., Fords. N.J. Croucher. Dorothy J. — 6 Overbrook Ln.. East Greenwich. R.l. Crowley. Linda M. — 105 Bluff Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Crowley. Paul W. — 52 Ayrault St.. Newport. R.l. Crowther. Beverlee A. — 320 Academy Ave., Providence. R.l. Cruickshank. Irene B. — 1235 Kingstown Rd.. Kingston. R.l. Cullen. Mary J. — 34 Kelley Ave. Rumford. R.l. Cummings, William J. — 69 Forestdale Dr.. Cumberland. R.l. Cunard. Donna J. — Needwood Bluffs Bstn. Nk. Rd.. Narragansett. RJ. Curlee. Susan E. — 72 Greene St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Curran. John F. — 172 George Arden Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Czekanski. Robert A. — Box 96 Sidney St.. Esmond, R.l. Daiell. Roy B. — 213-65 82 Ave.. Queens Village. N.Y. Dailey. Mary J. — R.R. 4 Longview Dr. Box 9148, Narragansett. R.l. Dair. Roderick L. — 8 Fiirway Dr., Cold Springs Harbour N.Y. Dandreta. William J. — 106 Pemberton St.. Providence. R.l. Dandrow Jr., Walter J. — 9 Main St.. Hope. R.l. Danielson. Kathleen J. — 105 Jackson Flat Rd.. Hope. R.l. Dann. David A. — Johnson Rd.. Foster. R.l. Dart, Edward D. — Bay View Rd.. Southold. N.Y. Davids, Richard C. — 290 Concord Dr.. River Edge, N.J. Davis Jr. Albert P. — 10 Brookside Dr.. North Kingstown. R.l. Dawson. Charles G. — 2123 Georgetown Blvd.. Ann Arbor. Mich. Dee. Barbara H. — 372 Tyler Ave.. Groton. Conn. Dee. Robert D. — 43 Main St.. South Acton. Mass. Defrancesco. Michael P. — 383 Cowesett Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Degaetano. Arthur A. — 180 Tenney Ave.. River Edge. N.J . Deitch. Clifford J. — 136 Wheeler Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Delbonis. Carlo V. — 13 Allard St.. Cranston. R.l. Delgrande. Anthony P. — 310 Langdon St.. North Providence. R.l. Delillo. Joseph M.— 37 ' j Winter St.. Wakefield. R.l. Delprete. Alberta L. — 197 Knight St.. Providence. R.l. Delprete. Michael A. — 34 Preston Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Delsesto. Joseph — 23 Oak St., Providence. R.l. Deluca. Claire R. — 80 Proctor Ave.. East Greenwich, R.l. Demayo. John C. — 62 Rockland St., Narragansett. R.l. Demello, Geraldin A. — 170 Pidge Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Demicco. Louis J. — 19 Ashland St.. Jewett City. Conn. Denisewich. Carol A. — 245 Cypress St.. Providence. R.l. Depetrillo. Raymond J. — 163 Summit Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Deragon. Jeanine M. — 52 St. Barnabe St. Woonsocket. R.l. Derkaz. Corrine T. — 5 Towne St., Cranston. R.l. Dermanelian. Guent-er H. — 404 Cranston St.. Providence, R.l. Derouin, Kathleen M. — Pole 53 Saw Mill Rd.. North Scituate. R.l. Deroy. Cecile L. — 261 Main St.. Wakefield. R.l. Deroy, Gerald L. — I 16 Whippel Ave.. Oakland. R.l. Derrico. Herbert J. — 205 Dunedin St.. Cranston, R.l. Desantis. Janice M. — 47 Maplecrest Dr.. Greenville. R.l. Desantis. William J. — 2017 Cranston St.. Cranston. R.l. Deschane. Arthur H — 13 Bryant PI.. West Warwick. R.l. Desforges. John E. — 24 Norman Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Desilets, Richard H. — I Maxfield Ct., Barrington. R.l. Desimone. Jean S. — 146 Beach St.. Westerly. R.l. Desista. Robert J. — 8708 Lowell St.. Bethesda. Md. Detweiler. John R. — 122 Edgemont Rd., Scarsdale. N.Y. Devaney, John — 82 Miriam Pkwy.. Elmont. N.Y. Dichristofar. Linda — 71 Messina St.. Providence, R.l. Dick. Robert N.— 212 High St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Dickinson. Dorothy L. — Samuel Rodman Rd. Rd.3. Wakefield, R.l. Digiovanm, Elaine M. — 52 April Dr., Glastonbury. Conn. Dill. Frederic C. — 241 Jerome St.. Syosset. N.Y. Dillon. Anne Q. — 690 Academy Ave.. Providence, R.l. Dillon. Patricia B. — 15 Roanoke Ave., Boston. Mass. Dimartino. Patricia D. — 127 Legris Ave.. West Warwick. R.l. Dimeo, Robert A. — 16 Sherwood St,. Cranston, R.l. Dimock. Crandall W. — 158 Bennington Dr.. Woodbridge. N.J. Dinapoli. Vincent A. — 32 Waveland St.. Johnston. R.l. Dinola. Louis P. — 58 Vervena St.. Cranston. R.l. Dionne. Joseph — 233 Laban St., Providence. R.l. Dipadua. Nicole M.— 87 Second St.. West Warwick. R.l. Dipaola, Thomas P. — R.R. 3 Box 220 A. Westerly. R.l. Diprete. Alfred C. — 45 Vale Ave., Cranston, R.l. Diprete. Doris A. — 45 Vale Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Diquinzio. Diane M. — 2 Pope St.. North Providence. R.l. Disano. Carmine — 46 Stonelaw Ave., Providence. R.l. Ditoro, John L. — 159 Penn St.. Providence. R.l. Dobra. Jane M. — 85 Ferndale Ave.. Glen Rock. N.J. Dodge. Nancy L. — Connecticut Ave.. Block Island. R.l. Doherty. Edward S. — 9 Wandsworth St.. Narragansett. R.l. Dolan. Sharon C. — Apt. 305. 337 Cowesett Ave.. West Warwick, R.l. Dolan. William M. — 207 Lexington Ave., Providence. R.l. Donadio. Gary J. — 448 Passac Ave., W. Cladwell. N.J. Donilon. Diane M. — 528 Fair St.. Warwick. R.l. Donnelly. Brian T. — I 14 Woodside Ave.. Pawtucket, R.l. Donpvan. Daniel J. — I I Togansett Rd.. Providence, R.l. Dormer. Robert W. — I 10 Metropolitan Dr.. Warwick, R.l. Dorn. Margaret E. — 51 Normandy Ct.. Middletown. N.J. Dowlatshahi. Shahrokh D. — 1 1 Rue AFShar. Ave. Roosevelt. Tehran. Iran Drake. Thompson E. — West Kingston. West Kingston. R.l. Drapala. John J. — 102 Bristol Ave., Pawtucket, R.l. Drechsler, Edward G. — Stillwater Rd. Box 150. Esmond. R.l. Drechsler. Jane L. — Stillwater Rd.. Georgiaville. R.l. Dressier. Stephen B. — 66 Cranston St.. Woonsocket. R.l. Droby. Lucia A. — 56 Meadowcrest Dr.. Cumberland. R.l. Drucker. Stephen M. — 840 East 8th St., Brooklyn. N.Y. Duarte. Joann — 41 Smoerset Ave., Riverside. R.l. Ducharme, Frances D. — 19 Duclos St., Manchester. N.H. Duell. Thomas D. — 81 Sprague Ave.. Riverside, R.l. Duhamel. Terri L. — Post Rd.. Charlestown. R.l. Dumont. Janice H. — 2513 Central Dr.. Joliet. III. Dupre. William G. — 174 Tiogue Ave.. Coventry. R.l. Duquette. Henry C. — 31 Blaisdell St.. Cranston. R.l. Dutko. Lawrence — 324 Fisk Ave.. Brielle. N J. Dutra. Joseph F. — East Shore Rd.. Jamestown. R.l. Duxbury. Marilyn— 2 Whitman St.. Smithfield. R.l. Dyer. Susan A. — 10 Rex St.. West Warwick. R.l. 306 Dyl. Alan S. — 33 Whitman St., Pawtucket. R.l. Early. John W. — 19 Lantern Ln., Barrington. R.l. Ebbitt. Hugh A. — 26 Kay Blvd., Newport. R.l. Eckhart. Jan P. — 9 Kay St., Newport. R.l. Eddy. Nancy E. — 12 Flint Locke Ln., Medfield, Mass. Edwards. Leroy R. — 171 1 Clinton St.. Linden. N.J. Eggleston. Gary F. — 1000 Main St.. Wakefield. R.l. Ellis, Claire P.— 23 Honeyman Ave., Middletown. R.l. Ellis, Edward F. — 90 Aquidneck Ave., Portsmouth. R.l. Ellis. Harlan M. — 5 Ladeside Dr., Rockville Center. N.Y. Ellison, Nona S. — 9 Dorchester Dr.. Port Chester, N.Y. Ennis, Pamela J. — Turk Hill. Brewster. N.Y. Enser. Richard W. — 8 Maplehurst St.. Lincoln, R.l. Eskelund. Eric C. — Ledgewood Rd.. Kingston. R.l. Esposito. Linda E.— c o Taft Hall. Kingston. R.l. Essex Jr.. Stewart R. — 228 Spring St.. East Greenwich, R.l. Etter, John W. — 141 Waterman Ave.. Cranston, R.l. Etzold. Gail A. — 25 Mountain View Rd.. Creskill, N.J. Etzold, Vera T. — 8P a Central St.. Narragansett. R.l. Evans. George H. — 131 Wood Ridge Rd., Narragansett. R.l. Everett. Allen C. — 34 Highland Ave., Westerly. R.l. Faella. Dianne M. — I 15 Garden Hills Dr., Cranston. R.l. Fahy. James T. — 204 West Naples St.. Wayland. N.Y. Faiola. Marilyn L. — 32 Newton Ave.. Westerly. R.l. Falcone. Eileen M. — Lae Shore Dr.. Harmony, R.l. Fallon. William E. — 51 Lawn Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Famiglietti, Helen M. — 545 Angell St.. Providence. R.l. Fargnoli. Donald V. — 45 Standish Ave.. North Providence, R.l. Farrington. Paul — 490 Daggett Ave., Pawtucket, R.l. Farrington. Wayne I. — 490 Daggett Ave., Pawtucket. R.l. Fedorko. Albert M. — 100 Acre Pond Rd.. West Kingston. R.l. Feeley, Jeanne M. — 47 Walnur Rd.. West Barrington, R.l. Feeney. David P. — 21 Madison Cir., Greenfield, Mass. Feinstein. Amy M. — 37 North St.. Providence. R.l. Feldman. Robert L. — 1 17 Woodbine St.. Providence, R.l. Fenstermache. Earl W. — 26 Allen Dr.. East Greenwich, R.l. Feroce. Jeffrey A. — 31 I Greenwood Ave., Warwick. R.l. Ferraro. Lola A. — I I Continental Rd.. Narragansett. R.l. Ferri, Victoria J. — 8 Royal Ave., Cranston, R.l. Ferrucci. Michael A. — Middlebridge Rd.. Narragansett. R.l. Fians. Edward W. — 217 Lafayette St., Pawtucket. R.l. Field. Fredda L. — 316 Mail Coach Rd.. Portsmouth, R.l. Finneran, Marjorie E. — 91 Thelma Irene Dr., North Kingstown. R.l. Fiore, Arthur F. — 300 Carpenter St.. Providence. R.l. Fischer. Pamela J. — 1862 Nitas PL. Wantagh, N.Y. Fisher. Douglas O. — 785 Woodland Rd.. Ingomar, Pa. Fisher, Henry D. — Box 483, Carolina, R.l. Fitzgerald. Christin E. — 6 Sidney St.. West Warwick, R.l. Fitzpatrick, Elizabet M. — 137 Blauvelt Ave.. Dumont. N.J. Fitzpatrick. Mary A. — 52 Thames St.. Newport, R.l. Fitzsimmons, Rosemary — 48 Sequoia Ln., Portsmouth, R.l. Flaig. Arnold J. — 120 Edgewood Blvd.. Providence. R.l. Flanders, Roger D. — 26 Eddy St.. Cranston. R.l. Fleischer, Richard J. — 2744 Windmill Dr.. Yorktown Heights, N.Y. Flynn. Nancy N. — 9 Marmarel Rd.. Greenville, R.l. Flynn, Susan H. — 1771 Main Rd., Tiverton, R.l. Fogarty. Charles E. — I 16 India St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Foley, Ellen C. — 15 Harwood Rd.. East Greenwich, R.l. Ford. Kenneth E. — 166 Earl Ave., East Providence, R.l. Ford. Maureen E. — 236 Third Ave.. Warwick, R.l. Forleo. Frank L. — 16 Ledge Dr.. West Warwick, R.l. Forte. Peter A. — 343 Elder Ballou Rd., Woonsocket, R.l. Fortuna. Jeffrey M. — 25 Canterbury Ln., Milford, Conn. Franchina. Joseph J. — 94 Sinclair Ave.. Cranston, R.l. Francis. Justin M. — 44 Middle Rd.. Narragansett, R.l. Frankevicz, Joan E. — Paradise Rd.. Bethel. Me. Franklin, Leslie P. — 49 Lucas Rd.. East Greenwich. R.l. Freedman, Allen J. — 400 Bellevue Ave.. Newport, R.l. Fretard. Mary A. — 58 Bellevue Ave.. Westerly, R.l. Friedman. Steven P. — Half Moon Ln., Sands Point, N.Y. Frizzell. Deborah J. — P.O. Box 341, Kingston. R.l. Frost. Charles B. — 6 Franklin St.. Calais, Me. Frost. James N. — Box 168 Harbour island Rd., Narragansett. R.l. Frost. Meryll M. — 637 Knotty Oak Rd.. Coventry, R.l. Frost. Susan C. — 637 Knotty Oak Rd., Coventry. R.l. Fuller. Mary J. — I 15 Allerton Ave., East Providence, R.l. Funk. Sarah T. — 3127 Queen Ln., Philadelphia. Pa. Furtado. Carol M. — 641 Wood St., Bristol, R.l. Gabriel. Lois J. — 2079 Mineral Spring Ave.. North Providence. R.l. Godoury, Paul — 5 Willis Dr., Cumberland, R.l. Gagne. Therese A. — 51 Douglas St., West Warwick, R.l. Galbraith, Kathryn A. — 15 Rawson Hill Rd., Newburyport, Galeone, Robert J. — 29 Sunnyside Ave.. Providence. R.l. Galipeau, David W.— 583 First St.. Westfield. N.J. Gamble. Gloria J. — 1 18 East St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Ganem, Charles F. — 61 Gibbs Ave., Newport, R.l. Garabedian, Edward R. — 634 Fruit Hill Ave., North Providence, R.l. Garaventa. Michelle R. — 412 Prospect Ave.. Oradell, N.J. Gardiner. George H. — 262 Pt. Judith Rd.. Narragansett, R.l. Gardiner. Margaret M. — 344 Buttonwoods Ave.. Warwick, R.l. Gardner, Lynda J. — 31 Deborah Rd., Warwick, R.l. Gardner, Patricia — 14 Robert Treat Pkwy., Milford, Conn. Garfinkel, Robert S. — 40 Glenwood Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Garvey. Katherin L. — 45 Ann M. Brown Dr.. Warwick, R.l. Gaschen, Frederic S. — 17 High Ridge Dr.. Cumberland. R.l. Gaulin, William D. — 99 Rugby St., Cranston. R.l. Gaunt. Stephen R. — 1315 New London Ave., Cranston. R.l. Gebler, Keith E. — 4 Bellevue Cir., West Warwick, R.l. Geffner, Susan H. — 376 Cole Ave.. Providence. R.l. Geiselman. Christin A. — Box 502 R.R. 4 Redwood Drive, Narragansett, R.l. Gens, Donna L. — 1819 Oakland Ave.. Wantagh, N.Y. Genser. Sheryl I. — 76 Summit Ave.. Providence. R.l. Gentili. Nancy R. — 733 Armistice Blvd.. Pawtucket. R.l. George. Edmund D. — 161 Welfare Ave.. Warwick, R.l. Gerardi. Madeline M. — 8 Ackerson Ave., Pequannock. N.J. Gerstein, Bernice E. — 225 Fourth St., Providence, R.l. Gesualdi, Albert P. — 47 King Phillip St.. Providence. R.l. Gianfrancesc, Edward T. — 17 Viceroy Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Giannuzzi. Michael J. — 57-52 Parsons Blvd., Flushing, N.Y. Giard, Rosanne T. — RFD 6A Box 280, Narragansett, R.l. Gibson. Sarah J. — East Oxford Rd., South Paris. Me. Giebler, Kathleen A. — 545 Kingstowne Rd., Peace Dale. R.l. Gilkes. Barbara L. — 12 Somerset Ave., Garden City. N.Y. Gilman Jr.. John F. — 42 East Manning St.. Providence, R.l. Gilstein. Robert W. — 29 Rock Hill Dr., Cranston, R.l. Giusti. Jayne M. — 51 Ferry Ln., Barrington, R.l. Godfroy. Richard E. — 70 Bradford St.. Woonsocket, R.l. Goldberg, Jeffrey M. — 44 Clyde St., Pawtucket, R.l. Goldblatt, Kenneth I. — 303 Main St., Pawtucket. R.l. Golden, Greg E. — 79 Northfield Rd.. Watertown, Conn. Goldschlager, Gail A. — 4 Nancy PL, Bronxville. N.Y. Goldstein. Anne L. — 103 Sherman Ave., North Providence. R.l. Goldstein, Lawrence B. — 76 Deerfield Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Gong, Cheuk F. — 34 Douglas Ave.. Providence. R.l. Goodman, Joseph — 1658 Broad St.. Cranston, R.l. Goodsell, Pamela J. — 10 Park PI.. North Kingstown. R.l. Goodwin. Linda J. — Nooseneck Hill Rd.. R.F.D. Coventry. R.l. Goodwin. Peter K. — 17 Edgemere Ave.. Providence. R.l. Gordon. Elaine M. — 14 Arnold Ave.. Lincoln, R.l. Gordon. John R.— 5 Wright Ave., Wakefield. R.l. Gorin. Allen H. — 57 Pembroke Ave.. Providence. R.l. Goshgarian. James P. — 60 Delway Rd.. Cranston, R.l. Gosselin, Stanley J. — 65 Fatima Dr., Warren. R.l. Goulet. Paul A. — 981 Roosevelt Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Goyette. Emilia S. — 7 Noble St.. Seekonk. Mass. Goyette. Janice C. — 104 Bates St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Goyette. Richard A. — 104 Bates St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Gozdowski, Kenneth — 9 Hunting Ave., Wilbraham. Mass. Graham. Douglas P.— 6 Brae St.. North Providence. R.l. Graham. Pamela J. — 158 Cumberland St., Providence. R.l. Grant. Patricia E. — 90 Centre St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Gravel. Richard R.— 59 Redwing St., Providence. R.l. Graves. Christin A. — 24 Hart Ave., Warwick, R.l. Graves, Helen R. — 14 Norwich Ave., Providence, R.l. Gray, Channing — 225 Shady Hill Dr.. East Greenwich, R.l. Graziano. Richard A. — 217 Whiting St., Cranston. R.l. Green. Richard — 15 Hewitt Rd., Mystic, Conn. Greenberg, Howard M. — 69 Burnside St.. Cranston. R.l. Greene, Bernard P. — 33 Leroy St., Tenafly. N.J. Greene, David M. — 262 Freeman Pkwy.. Providence, R.l. Greene. Kenneth W. — Red House Rd., Wakefield. R.l. Greene. Maureen R. — 236 Sackett St., Providence, R.l. Greene. Merton E. — 29 Patton St.. Coventry. R.l. Greene. William F. — 171 Crest Dr.. Pawtucket. R.l. Grey. Mark R. — 73 Charter Rd.. West Acton. Mass. Griffin, Karen T. — 17 Glen Ave., Cape Elizabeth, Me. Groet. Suzanne S. — 498 Harrogate Dr., Rochester, N.Y. Groff. John H. — 1056 Smithfield Ave., Lincoln, R.l. Gross, Margaret J. — 2525 McGovern Dr., Schnectady. N.Y. Grossmann. Neil W. — 220 Washington Rd.. West Barrington. R.l. Gruber. Philip M. — 10 Arbor Rd.. Roslyn Heights, N.Y. Gruen, Marion A. — 32 Oak Hill Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Grzebien. David J. — 54 Silver Lake Ave., Warwick. R.l. Gudas, Robert E. — 23 Winthrop St., Cranston. R.l. Guerke. Lawrence R. — 71 Franklin St.. Cedar Grove. N.J. Guertin, Jeanne M. — 143 Oakton St., Ft. Lauderdale. Fla. Guglielmi, Toni M. — Sherman Ave.. Lincoln, R.l. Guglielmino, John J. — I 18 Pomona Ave., Providence. R.l. Guilmain Jr., Roger W. — 47 Shove St., Woonsocket. R.l. Guldemond. Martin P. — 397 Wapping Rd., Portsmouth, R.l. Gurdin. Laurie J. — 615 Waterview Rd., Oceanside. N.Y. Haber. Deborah S. — 1685 Greenway Blvd.. Valley Stream. N.Y. Hackett. Stephen E. — 62 Pembroke Ln.. Coventry, R.l. Hackman. Kevin A. — 180 Maintonomo Dr.. Warwick, R.l. Hagenauer, Linda K. — 19 Diane Ct., New Providence, N.J. Hagopian. Gregory J. — I 1410 Rollinghouse Rd.. Rockville, Md. Haik, John M. — 37 Hobart St.. Westerly, R.l. Hale. Allen A. — 50 Virginia Ave.. Groton, Conn. Haley. George — 71 Follett St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Halliwell, David B. — 812 Smithfield Ave.. Lincoln. R.l. Hallock. Katherin J. — 240 South Main Ave.. Albany. N. Y. Hamel, Ronald J. — 15 Echo St.. Central Falls. R.l. Hamer. Terry L. — 8345 S. W. 157th St.. Miami. Fla. Hammerstrom, David N. — 180 Vancouver Ave., Warwick. R.l. Hampton. Catheren M. — 61 Old Baptist Rd.. North Kingstown, R.l. 307 Hanan. Larry E.— 1 122 East 83 St.. Brooklyn. N.Y. Harper. Gail E. — 145 Duck Cove Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Harrington. Charlene — 58 Pontiac Ave.. Providence. R.l. Harris. Ruth L. — 128 Main St.. Westerly. R.l. Harrison. Bruce M. — 29 Spencer Dr., North Kingstown. R.l. Harvey. Roberta S. — I 15 Lansdowne Rd.. Stang Warwick. R.l. Hashway. Mary — 63 Booth Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Hathaway. Meredith A. — 88 South Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Hauserman. Nancy F. — 14 Ladue Estates. St. Louis. Mo. Hayes. James W. — 149 Canconchet Dr.. Portsmouth. R.l. Haynes. Edward L.— 10 Whitehall Rd.. Hooksett. N.H. Hazebrouck. Marc G. — 615 Mendon Rd.. Woonsocket, R.l. Healy. Mary F. — 19 Tucker Rd., Greenville. R.l. Hedison. Eric D. — 54 Highland Ave., Warwick. R.l. Heeg. Joseph M. — 200 Old Post Rd.. Wakefield. R.l Heines. Gerald W. — Box 12. Wood River Jet., R.l. Heilman. Sandra R. — 59 Midland Rd.. Roslyn Heights. N.Y. Helmen. Victor W. — 4 Taft Hall URL Kingston. F.S. Helmken. Gilbert M. — I I Wilcox Dr.. Mountain Lakes. N.J. Hempstead. Melissa J. — Southeast Light Rd.. Block Island. R.l. Henehan. John A. — 52 Deerfield Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Henry. Joseph H. — 221-02 1 15 Ave.. Cambria Heights. N.Y. Henry. Ralph M. — 44 Ocean View Rd.. Swampscott. Mass. Herman, Richard — 245 Miantonomo Dr., Warwick. R.l. Herrington. George F. — Edgewood Farm Rd.. Wakefield. R.l. Hersey, Harlan S. — 230 Magnolia St., Providence. RJ. Hersey, Susan E. — 169 Village St.. Millis, Mass. Hey. Margaret A. — 37 Tower Hill Rd.. Wakefield. R.l Heywood. Leslie A. — 2 John St.. Westboro. Mass. Hicks. Robert A. — 2763 Windmill Dr.. Yorktown Heights. N.Y. Higgins. Frederic G. — Narr Village Apt. NC4, Narr Pkwy.. Warwick. R.l. Hilliard. Edward J. — 2032 Indian Ave., Portsmouth. R.l. Hillier, William J. — I 154 Old Baptist Rd.. North Kingstown. Hillman. Janice L. — 461 Old Baptist Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Hinckley. Leslie A. — 45 Midland Dr.. Cranston, R.l. Histen. William J.— 94 Manistee St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Hitchcock. Carl L. — 10 Globe St.. Warwick. R.l. Hitchener. Alan T. — 54 Cambridge Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Hoag. Kevin G. — 129 Shaw Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Hodosh. Lee R. — 180 Slater Ave.. Providence. R.l. Hodosh. Mark B. — 199 Ausdale Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Hoffman. Sheila — 5 Sherwood Rd.. Middletown. R.l. Hoffman. Susan M. — 348 Manor Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Hoffman. William J. — I 15 Rangeley Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Hofmann. William T. — 163 Parkwood St.. Ronkonkoma, N. Y. Hogan. Linda A. — 81 Lane One. Warwick. R.l. Holburn. Robert M. — 225 Williston Way. Pawtucket, R.l. Holden. Donna M. — 66 Paula Dr.. North Kingstown, R.l. Holden. Robert L. — Flintstone Rd. R.R 4 I I9B, Narragansett, R.l. Holland. Clinton R. — 22 Spring St.. Peace Dale. R.l. Holland, Glenn A. — 34 Wilcox Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Hollis. Louise A.— 9 Hook Rd.. Rye. N.Y. Holmes. Douglas P. — 15 Anchorage Way. Barrington. R.l. Holmes. Jonathan M. — R.R. 4 Hill Farm Rd.. Coventry, R.l. Hood. Virginia S. — 391 Davisville Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Horman. Elizabet A. — 184 Naples Rd. A 4. Brookline. Mass. Horton. Kirtley S. — 609 Paradise Ave.. Middletown. R.l. Horvitz. Sharon — 243 Brayton Ave.. Somerset. Mass. Hosley. Cynthia S. — Ministerial Rd.. Peace Dale. R.l. Hosmer. James F. — 12 Huntington Ave.. Sharon. Mass. Houston. Linda R. — 9 Allagashtrail R.R. 7A Box I64A. Narragansett. R.l. Howard. Thomas A. — 53 Highland Ave., Westerly. R.l. Howarth. Lee J. — 90 Founders Ave.. Portsmouth. R.l. Howe. David C. — 2 Joann Dr.. West Barrington. R.l. Howe. John E. — 880 York Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Howe. Wayne F. — 1391 South Broadway. East Providence. R.l. Howell. Kathleen L. — 2 Parkview Ave., Providence. R.l. Hoyt. Kenneth J. — 214 Winthrop St.. Woonsocket. R.l. Hughes. Patricia E. — Causeway Rd.. Vineyard Haven. Mass. Hunt. William J. — 50 Wheaton St.. Warren. R.l. Hunter. Robert H. — 36 Cadoret Dr.. Cumberland. R.l. Hunter. Suzanne I. — Box 232-A, Saunderstown. R.l. Hurairi. Muhsin A.— 4 Taft Hall URL Kingston. R.l. Hutchinson. John E. — 1 13 Ingersoll Ave.. Warwick. R.L Hynes. Thomas F. — IL College Rd.. Providence. R.l. lannucci. Frank R. — 661 Hartford Ave.. Providence. R.L llich. Robert T. — 244-18 88 Rd.. Bellerose. N.Y. Imperatore. Ann E. — 64 Orchard Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Infantolino. Michael J. — 84 Hickory Dr.. East Greenwich. R.L Integlia. Barbara A. — 171 Rankin Ave., Providence. R.L Iverson. Deborah J. — St. Marys Rd.. N. Scituate. R.l. Iverson. Richard A. — St. Marys Rd.. North Scituate. R.L Jackson, Joyce M. — Scott Rd.. Ashton. R.L Jackson. Susan A. — 7 Woodland Rd.. North Scituate. R.L Jacobsson. Carol J. — 27 Humes St.. Providence. R.L Janarelli. Bernard A. — 5 Hardwick St., Cumberland, R.l. Jansen, Dale K. — 20 Callender Ave., East Providence, R.L Jarbeau. Janet T. — 824 Wakefield St.. West Warwick. R.L Jarocki, Joseph — 400E Pleasant St. Apt. 7, Rumford. R.L Jeffrey, David A. — 1970 Elmwood Ave., Warwick. R.l. Jeffrey, Robert H. — 1445 Warwick Ave. Apt. 23, Warwick. R.L Jekowsky, Ira — 1917 East 36th St.. Brooklyn, N.Y. Jennings. Kathleen M. — 349 Greenwood Ave., Warwick. R.L Jerald. Jeffrey F. — 87 Lancaster Ave.. Warwick. R.L Johnson. William A. — 56 Somerset St.. East Greenwich. R.l. Johnston. Beryl M. — 2 Anglers Ct., Narragansett. R.L Jones. Arthur B. — 225 Couqty Rd.. Barrington. R.L Jones. Brent W. — Chicopee Row. RFD 2. Groton. Mass. Jones. Cheryl A. — 1494 West Shore Rd., Warwick, R.L Jones. Christin L. — 30 Benedict Rd., Warwick. R.L Jones. Doris J. — 62 Mirion Ave.. Cranston. R.L Jones. Ernest W. — 9 Meadowvale Rd.. Burlington. Mass. Jones. Julia A. — I 10 New Britain Dr.. Warwick, R.L Jones. Kathleen A. — 6 Oakbrook Rd.. Ossining. N.Y. Jones. Linda M. — 1400 Ten Rod Rd.. North Kingstown. R.L Jones, Rhea A. — 8606 Wiese Rd.. Brecksville. Ohio Jorge. Jerry V. — 155 Valley St.. Central Falls, R.L Joyce. Judy K. — 37 Garden Dr.. Albertson. N.Y. Kaestner. Judith A. — 555 Bear Ridge Rd.. Pleasantville. N.Y. Kahn, Deborah F. — 18 Whiting St.. Providence, R.L Kahn. Lawrence I. — 58-30 Hewlett St.. Little Neck. N.Y. Kane. Judith A. — 29 Gorham Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Kane. William H. — 67 Jo Ann Ave., Portsmouth. R.L Kanelos. Theodore G. — 95 Columbia Ave.. Cranston. R.L Kanis. Jacquely M. — Hedley Avenue 87, Johnston. R.L Kaplan. Ronald Z. — 83 Fourth St.. Providence, R.L Kasdan, Dana R. — 4 West Saddle River Rd., Waldwick, N.J. Kassel, Steven D. — 620-18 Baychester Ave.. Bronx. N.Y. Katz. Donald E. — 46 Woodbury St.. Providence. R.L Kaye. Russell S. — 2165 Broad St., Cranston. R.l. Kayser, Barbara V.— P. O. 335. Charlestown. R.l. Kazlow Marsha S. — 2048 Wellington Ct.. Westbury. N.Y. Keenaghan. Edward J. — 93 Whitman St., Pawtucket. R.L Keller. Marek G. — 219 Gray St.. Providence, R.l. Kellner. Mary E. — 701 Fourth St.. Belvidere. N.J. Kelly. Janet M. — 28 Sherman Line. Middletown. R.L Kelly. Kathleen B. — Edgewood Dr.. Harmony. R.l. Kelly, Marie F; — 85 Thurston St., Riverside. R.L Kelly. Sharon M.— 210 Pulaski St.. West Warwick. R.L Kenerson. Orville B. — 23 Hartford Ave. R.F.D.. Wakefield, R.L Kenney, David J. — 75 Young St., Pawtucket. R.L Kenney. Dennis J. — 75 Young St.. Pawtucket. R.L Kent. Sandra M. — 1250 S. Broadway. East Providence. R.l. Kenyon, Robert V. — 56 Westwood Ave.. Cranston, R.l. Kersey. James M. — 21 I Fairway. North Kingstown. R.L Ketinos. George J. — 40 Warwick Rd., Pawtucket. R.L Keyes. Donald C.— 208 Hilton Rd., Warwick. R.L Kidwell. Carol A. — 6 Middle Dr.. Windsor Locks, Conn. Kilroy. Bonnie B. — 29 Crest St.. Middletown. R.L Kilroy. Gary J. — 182 Blvd., Middletown. R.L Kimball, J. T. T. — 26 McAllister St., Newport, R.L King. Frederic W. — 137 Bliss Rd.. Newport. R.L King. James T. — 831 Smith Neck Rd.. South Dartmouth. Mass. King. Nancy R. — RFD 4. Hurlburt Rd.. Rockville, Conn. Kingsbury, Robert M. — 76 Meadowbrook Rd.. East Greenwich. R.L Kipphut. Thomas J. — 13 19 Dunbar Hill Road. Hamden. Conn. Kirby, Alan W. — 305 Turner Rd., Middletown. R.L Kirk. Robert S. — 84 Trenton St., Pawtucket. R.L Kirkutis. Bruce A. — 140 Lindy Ave.. Warwick. R.L Kizirian, Joanne R. — 134 Chad Brown St., Providence. R.L Kleinman. Jeffrey L. — 214 Deerfield Rd.. Cranston. R.L Kleist. Kristine M. — 15 McCormick Rd.. Newport, R.L Kling. Elton H. — 48 Holburn Ave., Cranston, R.L Klingensmith, Amy L. — Foddering Farm Rd.. Narragansett. R.L Kluver, James L. — 61 A R.R. 4. Narragansett. R.l. Kneller. Jeffrey M. — 41 Ridge Dr., Westbury, N.Y. Knowles. Charles T. — 17 School St.. Wakefield. R.L Knox. Robert W. — I I I Dalehill Dr.. East Greenwich. R.L Knudsen. Terry L. — South Rd.. Wakefield. R.L Koch, Walter R. — 136 Everleth Ave„ Warwick, R.L Kohn. Joanne — 16 Chelsea Ln.. West Hartford. Conn. Konove. Paul W. — 14 Shellby Terr., West Orange. NJ. Kopp. Russell T. — 418 Bogert Ave., Ridgewood. N.J. Kosh, Ronald J. — 237 Admiral St.. Providence. R.l. Kosowski. Joseph S. — 4833 Milestrip Rd.. Buffalo. N.Y. Koster. Jo-Anne K. — 166 Cady Ave.. Warwick, R.L Koteen, Anne T. — 1445 Warwick Ave., Warwick. R.L Kotler. Steven A. — 1741 Wampanoug Trail. Barrfngton. R.L Kozij. John M. — 3 Potomac Cir.. Warwick. R.L Kraemer. Jane E. — 131 Roosevelt Ave.. Cranford, N.J. Kravetz. Arthur F. — 30 South Garby Rd.. Springfield, N.J. Krawiec. John E. — 16 Norman St., Cumberland. R.L Kresch. Ronald W. — 485 E. Lincoln Ave.. Mt. Vernon. N.Y. Krzan. Donald — I I Carrie Brown Ave., Warwick. R.L Kudon. Louis — 88 Norman Rd.. Hamden. Conn. Kullberg. Susan M. — 54 Ticonderoga Dr., Warwick. R.L Labossiere. Janice R. — 41 Rand St.. Central Falls, R.l. Lacey. Virginia A. — 7 Thurton Dr.. New Canaan. Conn. Laflamme. Elizabet A. — 3545 Mendon Rd.. Cumberland. R.L Lafreniere. David W. — 70 Lindley Ave., North Kingstown, R.L Lagerquist. Stacy A. — 73 Willett Ave., Riverside, R.l. Lallo. Richard G. — 32 Upland Ave.. East Greenwich. R.L Lalonde. Marilyn B. — 136 Mayflower Dr.. Cranston. R.L Lamberton. Elizabet P. — 12 Campus Ave.. Kingston. R.L Lameraner Jr.. Antoine L. — I 1 7 Bay View Ave., East Greenwich. R.L Lamothe. Richard P. — 35 Ridgeway Dr.. Warren. R.L Lamoureux. Joanne L. — 161 Greeley Ave.. Warwick. R.L Lamson. George A. — Old Forge Rd.. Smithfield. R.L Landers, Cynthia J. — 63 Buckingham PI.. Milford, Conn. Landrigan. Colin G. — 8 Durkin Dr., Narragansett. R.l. Landry, Robert P. — 70 Beaver Rd.. Weston. Mass. Langer. Marcia Y. — Apt. 751 II Balint Dr., Yonkers, N.Y. Langlois. Gaston R. — 69 Lakeside St., East Providence, R.l. Lapham. Carol A. — Brayton Rd.. Smithfield, R.l. Lapierre. Nancy E. — 239 Schraftts Dr. Apt 209, Waterbury, Lapierre, Richard J. — 47 Main St., Oakland. R.l. Larkin, Raymond M. — 56 Montgomery St., Warwick. R.l. Larson. Stephen N. — 34 Rugby St., Cranston, R.l. Lataille. Christin L. — I Meadow Lake Dr.. Westerly. R.l. Lataille, Leon E. — I Meadowbrook Dr., Westerly. R.l. Lawson. Betty A. — 34 Willow Rd., Greenville, R.l. Leavitt. Holly F. — 86 Academy St.. Bath. Me. Lee, Debra — 152 Washington Ave., Providence. R.l. Lee, William R.— 66 Don Ave.. Rumford. R.l. Lees. Albert C. — 40 Beverly Dr., Somers, Conn. Lehrer. Mark R. — 0-50 Pine Ave.. Fairlawn, N.J. Leibowitz, Martin — 24 Briar Hills Circ.. Springfield, N.J. Lemoine. Charles J. — 134 Melrose St. Apt 3. North Providence. R.l. Lentz. Cynthia — 137 Bluff Ave., Edgewood, R.l. Leonberger, Meredith — 5909 Walton Rd.. Bethesda, Md. Lepore, Richard W. — 51 Greene Ave., Cranston. R.l. Lepper, Patricia H. — 36 Cherry Rd., Kingston, R.l. Leshner, Janeen E. — 2270 Cranston St., Cranston. R.l. Letendre, Susan — 1486 North St., Suffeild, Conn. Letourneau. Ronald P. — 71 Summer St., Central Falls, R.l. Leung, David T. — 4 Taft Hall URL Kingston, F.S. Levesque, Colleen E. — Eagle Peak Rd., Pacoag, R.l. Levin, Harold C. — 292 Aqueduct Rd., Cranston, R.l. Levine, Nancy B. — 1403 Warwick Ave. Apt 334, Warwick. R.l. Levison, David H. — 1460 Stevenson Rd.. Hewlett. N.Y. Levy. Kenneth R. — 61 Dartmouth St., Pawtucket, R.l. Lewis. Barry G. — 12 Overhill Ln., Roslyn, N.Y. Lewis. Dorothy L. — Bayview Ave. R.F.D.. Bradford. R.l. Lewis. John C. — 38 Highland Ave., Wakefield, R.l. Libby, Alan D. — 30 Cranston Ave.. Newport. R.l. Lietar, Jean P. — 245 Terr. Ave., Riverside, R.l. Lifland, Mark B. — 30 Brookway Rd., Providence, R.l. Lindequist. Susan M. — 105 Brookside Dr., North Kingstown. R.l. Linke, Ronald D. — 4 Honeysuckle Ct.. Barrington. R.l. Lipson, David M. — 270 First Ave., New York, N.Y. Lirakis. Warren S. — 62 Kane Ave.. Middletown, R.l. Lister, Richard A. — 41 Burton Ave., Riverside. R.l. Locke. Rodney — 394 Adelaide Ave., Providence. R.l. Logan, Kevin J. — 29 Orchard Ave.. Barrington, R.l. Lombardo Jr., Joseph A. — 45 Sweet Meadow Dr., Cranston. R.l. Lonardo, Margaret M. — R.F.D. I Box 8A. Greene, R.l. Lonardo, Robert — 14 Linwood Ave., North Providence, R.l. Loparto. Gregory M. — 26 Colonial Dr.. Lincoln, R.l. Lopes, Joseph A. — 104 Woodbine St.. Providence. R.l. Lorenz, Linda A. — 1451 I Pinney St., Arleta, Calif. Louder. Ronald G.— Rt. 4 Box 505A, Narragansett. R.l. Luckenbaugh, Thomas L. — 30 Squantum Dr., Middletown, R.l. Lukasiewicz, Anthony V. — 100 Roland St., Cumberland, R.l. Lupo, Linda B. — 161 Ocean Rd.. Narragansett, R.l. Luprik, Kathleen P. — 797 I Ith Ave.. Paterson, N.J. Luther, David S. — 6 Riverside Dr., East Providence, R.l. Luzzi, Michael S.— 22 Top St.. Westerly, R.l. Lynch, Alan F. — 145 Daggett Ave., Paw+ucket, R.l. Lynch. Barbara M. — 126-3 Pendar Rd., North Kingstown, R.l. Lynch. Jacquelyn N. — 59 Austin Ave.. Greenville. R.l. Lyons, Joanne M. — 60 Summit Ave.. Tiverton, R.l. Lyons, Joellen M. — 60 Summit Ave., Tiverton. R.l. Lyons, Patricia A. — 126 McCorrie Ln.. Portsmouth. R.l. MacAllister, Robert J.— 1 1 I School St.. Braintree. Mass. MacDonald, John M. — 6 Potter Ln.. Kingston. R.l. MacDonald, Mary M. — 127 Gallatin St., Providence. R.l. Mack, Patricia A.— -5 Herzig St., Bristol, R.l. MacManus. Richard A.— 57 Waterway. Barrington. R.l. MacMullen. Richard J. — 45% Middle Rd.. Narragansett. R.l. MacPherson. Donald E. — 4 Taft Hall URI, Kingston. F.S. Madrick. Millie R.— 76 20 271 St., New Hyde Park. N.Y. Magee, Drew J. — 3824 Franklin Ave., Seaford, N.Y. Magee. James E. — 2 Dean Ave.. Newport, R.l. Maguire. Thomas A. — 27 Desmarais Ave., Pawtucket. R.l. Maiko, Douglas W.— 574 Cottage St., Pawtucket, R.l. Maine, Robert P. — Palmer Grove Rte. 2. Slocum, R.l. Maiorano, William S. — 372 Jastram St., Providence, R.l. Malafronte. Ralph M. — 22 Aaron Ave., Bristol. R.l. Malcomson. Kimberle A.— 717 Towamencinave, Lansdale. Pa. Mamakos. Maryann C. — 5 Peckham Ave.. Newport, R.l. Mancini. Maurice B.— 121 West Blue Ridge Rd.. Cranston, R.l. Mandell. Stephen R. — 44 Royal Way, Manhasset Hills. N.Y. Mandryk. John P— 60 Riverside Dr.. Riverside, R.l. Mangels, Linda E. — 329 Elm St., Oradell. NJ. Manosh. Suzanne L.— 20 Meadowcrest Dr., Cumberland. R.l. Marcello, Gregory J.— 31 Red Cedar Dr., Cranston. R.l. Marchand, Thomas J. — 66 Union St.. Warren. R.l. Marcoullier. Joan M.— 25 Riley Dr.. East Providence, R.l. Marino. Joseph M.— 55 Atlantic Blvd.. North Providence. R.l. Marinsky, Ellen B.— 38 Granite St.. Westerly, R.l. Markham. Lynn J. — 127 Hickory Dr., North Kingstown. R.l. Markowitz, Michael J. — 26 Interlaken Dr., East Chester. N.Y. Marks. George F. — 94 Calla St.. Providence. R.l. Marquis. Robert E. — 39 Violetwood Dr., Levittown. Pa. Marsh. Patricia A. — 12 Holmes Ct. Jame. Jamestown, R.l. Marshall, John R.— 50 Prospect Ave.. North Kingstown. R.l. Martin. Dennis J.— 14 McTeers Ct., West Warwick, R.l. Martin, Gail M. — 93 John Duggan Rd.. Tiverton, R.l. Martin, Maureen A. — 38 Invernia Rd., Cranston, R.l. Martin. Richard T. — Evans Rd.. Chepachet. R.l. Martinelli, Frank A.— 182 Salina St.. Narragansett. R.l. Martinelli, William A. — 3 Susan Circ., Johnston, R.l. Martland. Cynthia J.— 142 Ruggles Ave., Newport, R.l. Marzilli, Richard L. — 40 Allen Ave.. North Providence. R.l. Mason, Pamela J. — 27 Jensen St., Manchester, Conn. Masuck, Stephen P. — 101 Arland Dr., Pawtucket. R.l. Matarese. Susan M. — 567 Winter St., Framingham, Mass. Mattson. Barbara J. — Fort Ninigret Rd., Charlestown. R.l. Matuszek, Linda J. — 52 Kendall St.. Central Falls, R.l. Maughan. Robert R. — 76 Gardner St., Groveland, Mass. Maxwell. Thomas F.— 345 Ridge Rd.. Orwigsburg, Pa. McBrair, David C. — 20 Bowers Rd., Caldwell, N.J. McCabe. Thomas F.— 346 Potters Ave.. Warwick. R.l. McCarthy, Daniel F.— R. R. 4 298B, Narragansett, R.l. McCarthy, James I. — 15 Ambrose Dr., Bristol. R.l. McCarthy, William R. — P. O. Box 281, Kingston. R.l. McCaughy, John H. — Bartlett Ave., Cranston, R.l. McCooey. Thomas S. — 10 Wildwood Rd., Forestdale. R.l. McCraw. Susan E. — 21 Lawrence Ave., Warwick, R.l. McCurry, Gail A. — 32 Charlesdale Rd., Medfield. Mass. McDonald. Mary M. — 5 Wellington PI.. New Brunswick. N.J. McEleney. Marilyn J. — 44 Bisson St.. Beverly, Mass. McEntee, Marie A.— 28 Hillside Ave., Providence. R.l. McEntee, Owen E. — 231 Algonquin Dr., Warwick, R.l. McGauran. Patricia E.— 26 Wells St.. Westerly, R.l. McGill. Bernard J. — 229 Roger Wms. Ave.. East Providence. R.l. McGivern, Michael L. — P.O. Box 373, Middletown, R.l. McGowan, Maria T. — 955 Manton Ave., Providence. R.l. McGowan, Richard D. — Main St. Larchwood Inn, Wakefield. R.l. McGowan, Steven P. — 18 Ninigret St.. Warwick, R.l. McKenna. Maureen E. — 55 Biltmore Ave., Providence, R.l. McKenney. Joan H. — R.F.D. 4, Smithfield, R.l. McLaughlin. Karen — 34 North Country Club Dr.. Warwick. R.l. McNamara. Stephani A. — 715 Hope St., Bristol. R.l. McNiel. Donald G. — 10 Progress Ave., North Providence. R.l. McNiff. James F. — 53 Winthrop Ave., Providence. R.l. McTammany. Robert W. — Hunting House Ln.. North Scituate, R.l. Mead. Susan M. — Language Dept. URI, Kingston, R.l. Medeiros, John G. — 43 Mathew Rd.. Tiverto n, R.l. Medici, Michael C. — 59 Church Hill Dr., Cranston, R.l. Mehalko. Susan L. — 30 East 36 St., Paterson. N.J. Mehew. Susan G. — 19 Prospect St.. Greenville, R.l. Meinel, Charles F.— 150 Shirley Blvd., Cranston, R.l. Melenkivitz. Edward J. — 134 18 116 Ave.. New York, N.Y. Menasha, Marie — 36 Burlington St.. Providence. R.l. Mendes, Michael A. — 12 Craige St., North Providence, R.l. Menke, Edythe M. — Box 159, North Kingstown, R.l. Mentlik. Candice L. — 52 Viola Dr.. Glen Cove. N.Y. Merdinyan, Marjorie L. — 42 Cresthill Dr.. East Greenwich, R.l. Merritt. Carolyn — 15 Prospect St., West Boylston. Mass. Meschino, Louis T. — 9 Brooks St.. Cranston, R.l. Messina. Marianne — 26 Forest Ave., Old Tappan, N.J. Metcalfe. James A. — 8 Belvedere St., Johnston. R.l. Michalenka, James A. — 40 Privet St., Pawtucket, R.l. Midwood. David M. — 154 Hilltop Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Migneault, Linda A. — 84 Smith Ave., Greenville. R.l. Migneault, Lois A. — 84 Smith Ave., Greenville, R.l. Milbery, James M. — 63 Revere Ave., West Warwick, R.l. Milewicz, Sandra L. — 139 Garden Hills Dr., Cranston, R.l. Millard, Susan — 54 Glenwood Dr., North Kingstown. R.l. Miller, Aline F. — 27 Oxford Ave., Belmont, Mass. Miller, Elaine M. — 124 Doolittle St., Coventry, R.l. Miller, Howard D. — 26 Brooks Rd., Toms River, N.J. Mills. Douglas E. — Diamond Hill Rd., Ashaway. R.l. Miner. Kenneth B. — 1090 Buttonwood Ave., Warwick. R.l. Mirman, Hilary J. — 70 Oakwood Dr., Peace Dale, R.l. Miska, Jeanne M. — 3216 E. Main Rd., Portsmouth, R.l. Mitchell, Leeanne — 155 Cowesett Rd., Warwick, R.l. Mitchell, Shawn M. — Club House Rd., Coventry, R.l. Mitchell, Thomas F. — 31 Reynolds Ave.. Providence, R.l. Modliszewski. Rachele C. — 15 Franconia Dr., Cranston, R.l. Molloy, Edwin A. — 3085 Shore Dr., Merrick, N.Y. Monahan, Christin C. — 283 Pulaski St., Coventry, R.l. Monahan, Gail — Star Route. Essex Junction. Vt. Montanaro. Nancy E. — 7 Stone Gate Dr.. North Kingstown, R.l. Montaquila, Joan E. — 141 Bretton Woods Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Montecalvo. Joseph — 2194 Cranston St., Cranston, R.l. Montgomery. Mark J. — 10 Curtis St.. Scituate. Mass. Moore. Stephani A. — 5 Ambrose Dr., Bristol, R.l. Moore. Stephen M. — 500 Ives Rd.. East Greenwich. R.l. 309 Moretti. Donna I. — 1591 Stevens Ave.. North Merrick. N.Y. Morgan. Gail A. — 26 Tilley Ave.. Newport. R.l. Moriarty. Anne M. — 85 Tyndall Ave.. Providence. R.l. Moritz. Barbara F. — I I Timothy Dr.. Doylestown. Pa. Morra Jr.. Franklin L. — 49 Kingstown Rd.. Narragansett, R.l. Morris. James P. — 317 Swan St.. Providence. R.l. Morris. Joseph M. — 92 Martha St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Morris. Marilyn A. — 18 Palmer PI.. Easton. Conn. Morrison. Karen A. — 620 Liberty St.. Braintree. Mass. Morrocco. Stephen L. — 1680 Plainfield Pike. Cranston. R.l. Morrow. Lawrence R. — 7219 Golden Ring Rd.. Baltimore. Md. Morse. Charles E. — 26 North St.. Warwick. R.l. Morse. Karen L. — 271 Love Ln.. Warwick. R.l. Mosher. Judith A. — 15 Shippee Rd.. East Greenwich. R.l. Moulson, Pauline M. — 36 Woodlawn Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Mowry. Barbara E. — 47 Church St.. Latersville, R.l. Moy. Peter H. — 26 Caswell St.. Narragansett. R.l. Mulholland. Ann C. — Harbour Island. Narragansett. R.l. Muller. Roger F. — I I Welwyn Rd.. Great Neck. N.Y. Mullin, William D. — 16 Parker St.. Lincoln, R.l. Mulvey. Christin — Hope Furnace Rd.. Hope. R.l. Mulvey. Susan — Bolton St., Harmony, R.l. Mumford. Betty A. — 878 Standish Ave., Mountainside. N .J. Murphy. Christop W. — Goose Island Rd., Narragansett. R.l. Murphy. Janet I. — I I Revere St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Murphy. John S. — 66 Massasoit Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Murray. Jonathan A. — 38 Fairway Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Murray. Kathryn M. — 46 Ferncrest Dr.. Pawtucket. R.l. Murray. Michael J. — 1520 Rockway Ave.. Lakewood. Ohio Musco. Jerome — 131 Woodland Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Mycroft. Mary E. — 108 Sisson St.. Providence. R.l. Myles. Joy A. — 608 Lafayette Ave.. Westwood. N.J. Nacci. David M. — 80 Brettonwoods Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Nadeau, Patricia A. — 46 Gray St.. Providence, RJ. Nadeau. Sallyann M. — 52 Wood Cove Dr. Wood Estate. Coventry. R.l. Naficy. Hormazd— 4 Taft Hall URI. Kingston. F.S. Nagle. Raymond D. — 20 Homer St.. Providence. R.l. Najarian, Carol E. — 936 Hartford Ave.. Johnston. R.l. Najarian, Harold M. — 15 Bracken St.. Cranston. R.l. Narcessian, Patricia A. — Rt. 6 Collins Ave.. Narragansett. R.l. Narcessian. Richard — 71 Castle Hgts. Ct.. Woonsocket. R.l. Narcessian, Robert P. — 71 Castle Hgts. Ct.. Woonsocket. R.l. Nass, Ronald D. — 28 Sampson Ave., North Providence. R.l. Natale. Agnes A. — 4 Meadow Dr.. West Warwick. R.l. Natale. Gregory J. — 37 Sylvia Ave.. North Providence. R.l. Nathan. Ralph — 182 Sumter St.. Providence. RJ, Navas. Frederic J. — 454 Bayberry Rd. Bonnet Shrs., Narragansett. RJ. Negri. Warren A. — 20 Grandview Ave.. Danbury. Conn. Nelson. Katharin E. — 757 Main St.. Royersford, Pa. Nelson. Martha A. — 624 Maple Ave.. Barrington. R.l. Neri. Angelo P. — 32 Anthony St.. Johnston. R.l. Nester. James R. — 131 I N. W. 66 Ave.. Hollywood. Fla. Neubold. Virginia A. — 76 Education Ln.. Portsmouth. R.l. Neumann. Paula M. — RFD 2. Canterbury, Conn. Neville. Steven E. — 44 Sewell Rd.. Narragansett. R.I. Nichola. Susan D. — 82 Cross St.. Central Falls. R.l. Nicholls. Charlene — 289 Commonwealth Ave., Warwick. R.l. Nielsen. Alan P. — 2 Walnut Ridge Rd.. Wilmington. Del. Nieratko. Karen I. — 12 Prospect St.. Greenville. R.l. Norris. David T. — 56 Silver Birch Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Norris. Dianne M. — I 188 Main Rd.. Riverton. RJ. Norris. Joseph M. — 12 Navy Dr., North Kingstown, R.l. Norton. Paula C. — 53 Allen Ave.. East Providence, R.I. Noss, Lucille E. — 781 Indian Corner Rd.. Slocum. R.I. Noury. Roland J. — 52 East St.. Pawtucket. R.I. Novak. Barbara A. — 30 Switch Rd. R.F.D., Hope Valley. R.I. Nuhn. Clare A. — Crescent Dr., Albertson. N.Y. Oakes. Robert D. — Winnapaug Ave.. Westerly. R.l. Obrien. Francis J. — 158 Byron Blvd.. Warwick, R.l. Obrien. Jocelyn A. — 15 Monroe St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Obrien. John W. — 5 Cynthia Dr., North Providence. R.l. Obrien. Kevin F. — 665 South Rd.. Wakefield. R.l. Obrien. Patricia A. — 9Vi Rockland St.. Narragansett, R.l. Oconnor. Brian F. — 2064 Mineral Spring, North Providence. R.I. Oconnor. Robert D. — 35 Hemlock St.. Central Islip, N.Y. Odowd. Walter J. — 40 Humes St.. Providence. R.l. Ofstie. Richard B. — 155 S. Bedford Rd.. Chappaqua. N.Y. Ogrodnik. Catherin — 50 Pembroke Ln.. Coventry. R.l. Ojanpera. Maritta K. — 94 Worcester Rd., Westminster, Mass. Olean. Paul A. — 3 Maple Ave.. Westerly. R.l. Olsen. Elyse P. — 32 Dart St.. New London. Conn. Olsen. Randi C. — 23 Grand View Dr., Warwick. R.l. Oravec, Mark J. — 12 Wilson St.. Garden City. N.Y. Oreilly, Patricia A. — 5 Chandler St.. North Providence. R.l. Orner. Ann A. — 72 South Main St.. Spring Valley. N.Y. Orton. Abigail K. — Amesbury Ln.. Little Compton, R.l. Osborne. Kathleen N. — 353 Diamond Hill Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Otto. Alan C. — P.O. Box 651-93 Crystal Beach. Moniches. N.Y. Ouimette. Janice D. — 186 Chapin Ave.. Providence. R.l. Ozar. John G. — 5548 Orchard Rd.. Whitehall. Mich. Paccasassi. Paula A. — 33 Wabun Ave.. Providence. R.l. Pacelt. Charlene — 175 Saratoga Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Pacheco. Stephen P. — P. O. Box 140. Kingston, RJ. Paden. Pamela R. — 733 Crescent Pkwy.. Westfield. N.J. Painter. Pamela C. — I Caroline Ave.. Caribou, Me. Palazio, Karen G. — 4 Lyndon. Warren, R.I. Palazzo. Antonio J. — 54 Anoka Ave.. Barrington. R.l. Palazzola. Raymond J. — 135 Wingate Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Palmer. Janet L. — 105 Beacon Ave., Warwick. R.l. Palmieri III. Anthony — 77 King St.. Johnston. R.l. Palmisciano. Bessie J. — 384 Angell Rd.. Lincoln. R.l. Palo. Robert L. — I 124 Newport Avenue. Pawtucket. R.I. Pampel. Frederic A. — Grovedale St.. Warwick, R.l. Panagiotis, Peter M. — 29 Grove Ave.. Cranston, R.l. Pandozzi. Gail M. — 260 Nausauket Rd.. Warwick. R.I. Pantalone, John V. — 44 Lawn St.. Providence, R.I. Pantelakis. Charles P. — 42 Farrar St.. Cranston. R.l. Papa. Frank R. — 23 Rose Ct.. Narragansett. R.l. Papa. Judith M.— 65 Old Post Rd.. Wakefield. R.l. Papertsian. Robert J. — 480 Worthington Ridge, Berlin. Conn. Papitto. Beverly A. — 242 Brettonwoods Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Paquette. Marcelle S. — 14 Clairmoor Dr.. Nashua. N.H. Parascandolo. Nancy M. — 15 Bowen St.. Johnston. R.l. Parenteau. Diane L. — Hill Farm Rd.. Coventry. R.l. Parenti. Frank A. — 37 Bridgton Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Parker. Nancy R. — 44 Parker St.. West Warwick. R.l. Parker, Raymond F. — 108 Woodward Ave.. East Providence, R.I. Parsons. Philip G. — 195 Robinson Ave.. Pawtucket. R.I. Partington. Irene R. — 61 Scott Rd.. Seekonk. Mass. Pasquarelli. Lora J. — 27 Scotland Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Passarelli. Thomas J. — Box 276. Kingston. R.l. Passoff. Todd L. — 22 Gordons Corner Rd.. Englishtown, N.J. Pattie. Kenneth P. — 24 Greenhill St.. West Warwick. R.l. Pawlowski. Mary A. — 13 Ferris St.. South River. NJ. Payne. Elizabet C. — 91 Maplewood Dr.. East Greenwich. R.l. Payton. David G. — 40 Greenfield St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Pazienza. Lois M.— 320 Scituate Ave.. Cranston. R.I. Peacock. Robert D. — 85 Hunts River Dr.. North Kingstown. R.l. Peckham. Deborah M. — State Rd.. Chilmark. Mass. Pellerin. Ronald C. — 30 Walnut St.. Wauregan. Conn. Pelosi. Milton D. — 93 Boxwood Ave., Cranston. R.I. Pelser, Marvin M. — 109 Main St., North Kingstown, R.I. Pelser, Sharon A. — Victory Highway. Exeter. R.l. Pennine. Paula L. — 42 East Hill Dr., Cranston, R.l. Pennoyer, Frederic W. — 16 Poplar Ave., Wickford. R.l. Pepin. Deborah A. — 2840 Hartford Ave., Johnston, R.l. Perdikakis. George G. — 39 Salem Ave., Cranston. R.l. Pereira. Dennis M. — 1 1 15 Greenwich Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Pereira, Jorge M. — 78 Gano St.. Providence. R.l. Pereira. Joseph N.— 80 Farnum St.. East Providence. R.l. Perna. Francis M. — 102 Sowams Rd.. Barrington. R.l. Perreault. John D. — P. O. Box 43, Wyoming. RJ. Perry. Marcia E. — Box 274. Amherst. N.H. Persson. Meredith D. — 134 Trent Ave., Warwick. R.l. Peters. Susan D.— 3434 Post Rd., Warwrck. RJ. Peterson. Linda L. — 312 Griswold St.. Glastonbury, Conn. Petrangelo. Julian J. — 94 Oak St.. Providence, R.l. Petrarca. Murray R. — 948 Douglas Ave.. Providence. R.l. Petronio. Thomas M. — 553 Dyer Ave., Cranston. R.l. Petruck. Christin A. — 191 Country Club Rd.. Middletown. Conn. Piascik, Joan H. — 57 Julian St.. Providence. R.l. Picard. Paul R. — 3 Brockwood Rd.. Bristol. R.l. Piccirilli. Dennis J. — 91 Brendard Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Piccirillo. Anthony L. — 52 Frankfort St., Cranston. R.I. Pickles. Francis J.— 259 Diamond Hill Rd., Warwick. R.l. Pillsbury. Randall M. — 8 Patterson St.. Providence. R.l. Pimental. Francis J.— 37 Fortin Rd.. Kingston. R J. Piper. James E. — 41 Oakdale Rd.. North Kingstown. RJ. Pitterman. Arthur B. — 151 Buttonwoods Dr., Cranston, R.I. Pizio. George M. — 15 Kenyon Road. Teverton, R.I. Plant. Ralph I.— 1133 Stafford Rd.. Tiverton, RJ. Plante. Frederic E.— 212 Bay View Ave.. Cranston. R.I. Plante. James R. — 60 Brewster St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Plourde. Marjorie T. — 157 Riverside St.. Portsmouth. R.l. Pollock. Robert W. — 1535 Marsha Terr., Yardley, Pa. Porri. Richard L. — I6A West Princeton Circ., Lynchburg, Va. Potter. Barbara D. — 216 Riverside Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Potter. Gail E. — New Street. Mapleville. R.l. Potter. John C. — 46 Wildwood Ave., Rumford, R.l. Potter, Jonathan R. — 533 Covington PL. Wyckoff. N.J. Potter. Spencer B. — 81 Strathmore Rd.. Cranston. RJ. Potvin, Richard D. — 360 South Main, Manchester, N.H. Poulton. Jeffrey A. — 87 Leroy Dr., Riverside. RJ. Powell. John V. — 272 Orchard St.. Cranston. R.l. Powell. Veronica J.— 21 Mohawk Trail. Westfield. NJ. Powers. Michael A. — Shore Rd.. Westerly. R.I. Preston. Marilyn E. — Rawson Rd.. Cumberland. R.l. Price. Richard B. — 18 75 CPL Kennedy St.. Bayside. N.Y. Prince. David S. — 34 Beaverbrook Rd., Simsbury, Conn. Prince. Steven S. — 90 Greenwood Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Pritchard. Daniel E.— Sloop St. Box 216. Jamestown. R.l. Procaccianti. Elizabet A. — 35 Hi View Dr., Hope. R.l. Profe, Karl R. — 487 Pine Rock Ave.. Hamden. Conn. Proulx, Michael A. — 17 Pond View Dr., Coventry. R.l. Provencal. Carol A. — Sayles Hill Rd.. North Smithfield. R.l. Provost. Kathryn E. — 63 Edgemere Rd.. Pawtucket. RJ. Purrington. Marie C. — Newfound Lake, East Hebron. N.H. Pytel. Donna M. — 9 Lawn Ave.. Pawtucket. RJ. Qabazard. Hussain A. — 4 Taft Hall URI. Kingston. F.S. Quetta. Francis J. — 495 Woodward Rd., North Providence, R.I. 310 Quill. Barbara L. — 17 Sunset Dr., Raynham, Mass. Quimby, George — 70 Duck Cove Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Quinlan. Edward J. — 23 Harmony Ct., Warwick, R.l. Quinn. Charlene M. — 12 Faxon Green. Newport. R.l. Quinn. Francis D. — 66 Harrison Ave., Newport. R.l. Raab. Nancy E. — 1760 Lakeview Ln., York. Pa. Ragosta. Raymond J. — 100 Grace St., Cranston. R.l. Rainer. Ronald L. — 17 Highview Ave.. Barrington. R.l. Rake. Elizabet A. — 77 Rosehill Rd.. S aunderstown. R.l. Ralston. Cecil E. — P. O. Box 458, Jamestown, R.l. Rampino. Deborah M. — 38 Homelind St., Johnston, R.l. Randall. Herbert D. — Waxcadowa Ave., Westerly, R.l. Rawlings, James E. — 33 Castro St.. Rumford. R.l. Raymond, Margaret S. — 5 Sunview St.. Lincoln, R.l. Rebello, Nancy — 10 Ridgewood Dr., Rumford. R.l. Records. Paul G. — 105 Fairgrounds Rd.. West Kingston, R.l. Reddy. Stephen — 43 Smith Ave.. Niantic. Conn. Regan. Jeffrey B. — 33 Hill St.. Newburyport. Mass. Reilly. William T. — 863 Kingstown Rd., Peace Dale. R.l. Reimer. Jean — 740 Summit Ave.. River Edge. N.J. Reimer III. Robert E. — 16 Baldwin Rd.. Middletown, R.l. Reinke, Kathleen M. — 924 South Knight. Park Ridge. III. Relle. Marylin A.- 1 8 Valley Dr., Bristol. R.l. Renzi. Raymond — 67 Hutchinson St., Warwick. R.l. Reynolds, David M. — 61 Upper College Rd.. Kingston, R.l. Reynolds. Donna L. — 2 Mansion Ave.. Narragansett, R.l. Reynolds. Sandra — 83 Wilbur Ave., Cranston, R.l. Reynolds, Sharon A. — 164 Washington Rd., West Barrington. R.l. Rezendes, Russell — 1 12 Fifth St., East Providence, R.l. Ricci, Lance A. — 1414 New London Ave.. Cranston, R.l. Richard. Robert D. — 81 Glenwood Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Richards. Thomas J. — 198 W. Forrest Ave., Pawtucket. R.l. Richardson. Arthur R. — 9 Cannon St., Cranston, R.l. Riordan, Leonard E. — 21 Peckham Ave., North Providence. R.l. Rishe. Patricia A. — 881 Hope St.. Bristol. R.l. Ritacco. Gerald E. — I Homestead Rd.. Narragansett, R.l. Rivard. Eugene A. — 67 Lynch St., Providence, R.l. Rivelli. Peter V. — 101 King Philip St.. Providence. R.l. Robert, Brian M. — 27 Woodside Ave.. West Warwick, R.l. Robertson. William J. — 314 Spring Green Rd.. Warwick, R.l. Robinson. Anthony M. — 79 Whitier Rd., Pawtucket. R.l. Robinson, John W. — 10 Wasp Rd.. North Kingstown, R.l. Robinson. Justine R. — 90 Swampwams Ave., Babylon. N.Y. Robinson. Kenneth J. — 88 Garfield Ave.. Providence. R.l. Rocchio. Melanie A. — 379 Red Chinney Dr.. Warwick, R.l. Roch, Gerald M. — 8 Creamer Ave., West Warwick. R.l. Roderick. Bernard P. — 8 Conant St., Provincetown. Mass. Rodriguez. Angel S. — 25 East Greenwich Ave., West Warwick, R.l. Rodyn. Steven L. — 38 Warrington St., Providence, R.l. Rokoski. Lillian A. — 725 Armistice Blvd.. Pawtucket. R.l. Romanelli. Irene H. — 146 Boston Neck Rd.. Wickford. R.l. Romano. Antonio M. — 4 Taft Hall URI, Kingston. F.S. Rosen, Ann M. — 2538 New York Ave.. Huntington Station, N.Y. Rosen. Carl H. — 14 Scarborough Rd.. Pawtucket. R.l. Rosenbloom. Linda B. — 71 Emeline St., Providence. R.l. Rosenfeld, Sally M. — Laurel Rd.. Woodbridge. Conn. Rosenthal, Donald G. — 455 Glenwood Ln., East Meadow. N.Y. Ross. Maureen E. — 7 Blossom St., Rockland, Mass. Rotella, Thomas G. — 222 Woodbine St.. Cranston, R.l. Rotenberg, Barry S. — 135 Carr St.. Providence, R.l. Rousseau, William H. — 153 Laurens St., Cranston, R.l. Roy Jr.. Peter J. — 99 Lonsdale St., West Warwick, R.l. Rubin. Steven M. — 127 Jordan Rd., Brookline. Mass. Rudgers. George E. — Box 390 R.R. I, Exeter. R.l. Ruggiero, Patricia A. — 144 Modena Ave.. Providence, R.l. Russell, Stanley J. — I Railroad St.. Peace Dale. R.l. Ryan, Janet B. — 47 Webb Ave., Ocean Grove, N.J. Ryan, Marianne G.— 157 King St.. Warwick, R.l. Ryan, Thomas R. — 38 Advent St., North Kingstown, R.l. Rydberg, Richard E. — 76 Chapmans Ave., Warwick. R.l. Ryle. Janet C. — 2901 Beverly Rd.. Camp Hill, Pa. Sabatini, John M. — 20 Rosewood Ave., Cranston, R.l. Sabatini, Patricia A. — 46 Grotto Ave., Pawtucket. R.l. Sabula. Gary D. — 100 Rogers Ave., Barrington, R.l. Sack, Steven A. — 256 Williston Way, Pawtucket, R.l. Saglio, Robert G. — Glen Rock Rd.. West Kingston, R.l. Sahagian, Marcia L. — 138 Lexington Ave., Providence. R.l. Salvatore, William L. — 32 Chapin Ave., Providence. R.l. Sanford. Donna E. — 139 Vancouver Ave., Warwick. R.l. Sanger, Grayce A. — Box 189 Diamond Hill Rd., Cumberland, R.l. Santaniello. Alan S. — 105 Langdon St., Providence, R.l. Sardiello, Robert J. — 23 Haddon Hill Rd., Cranston. R.l. Sarnoff, Mitchell I. — 3319 Poplar St., Oceanside. N.Y. Saucier, Russell J. — 95 Newark St.. Providence, R.l. Sawchuk, Brian — 302 North Main St., Cohasset. Mass. Sawyer, Carl D. — 175 Arlington Ave., Providence, R.l. Sawyer, Elizabet T. — 175 Arlington Ave.. Providence. R.l. Saxon, Mark S. — 226 Adams St.. Warwick. R.l. Saylor. Jo A. — 7109 Elizabeth Dr.. McLean. Va. Scalera, Nicholas J. — 5 Brighton St., Providence. R.l. Scallin, Joseph P. — 107 Mt. Vernon Blvd., Pawtucket. R.l. Scanlon, John L. — 103 Garden St., Pawtucket, R.l. Sceery, Maryann T. — 31 Trappers Ln., East Greenwich, R.l. Schaffer, Robert E. — 82 Bristol Ferry Rd.. Portsmouth, R.l. Schaufler. Sandra E. — 207 Hwy. 36, West Keansburg, N.J. Schauman, Lindsay A. — 250 Clover Hills Dr., Rochester. N.Y . Scheak, Karen E. — 103 Austin Ave., Greenville. R.l. Scheinberg, Laura H. — 21 Noll Terr., Clifton, N.J. Schenck, Jane M. — 2000 East Ocean Blvd., Stuart. Fla. Schenck, William E. — 5 Vose St. Apt 3, Westerly, R.l. Schjang, Evita D. — St. John Christiansted. St. Croix, V.l. Schmelzer. Saul J. — 50 Toppa Blvd., Newport, R.l. Schold, Karen G. — 666 Main St., Shrewsbury, Mass. Schultz, Donald R. — 3 San Marcos Dr.. Monroe, N.Y. Schunke. Peter W. — 10 George St.. Wakefield. R.l. Schwartz, Patr icia E. — 19 Hamilton Ave., Wayne. N.J. Schwarz, Susan C. — 20 Dakota St., Providence, R.l. Schweikart, Walter A.— 34 Walker St.. West Warwick, RJ. Scialla, Geraldin M. — 55 Echo Dr., Warwick. R.l. Scott, Carol L. — 3438 Pine Tree Terr., Falls Church, Va. Scotti, Nancy J. — 64 Balch St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Selden, Michele R. — 1 108 Landis Ave., Vineland, N.J. Senape, Vicki A. — 7 Normandy Rd., Wakefield, R.l. Senecal, Raye J. — 26 Oswald St., Pawtucket. R.l. Senerchia, Stephen W. — 85 Tillinghast Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Sgardelis, Katherin — 33 Parsons Rd.. Lincoln Park, N.J. Shadford. Anne M. — 89 Silkey Rd., North Granby, Conn. Shannon, Michael C. — 31 New Lexington Rd., North Kingstown. R.l. Shaver. Ronald E. — 6 School St.. Medway. Mass. Shaw. Melodie B. — 3 Roy Ave., Middletown, R.l. Shaw, Robert A. — P. O. Box 126. Kingston. R.l. Shawver, Paul A. — 39 Rowe Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Shea. Patrick D. — 7 Harrington St., Newport, R.l. Shepard. Deborah J. — 6 Wolf Hill Rd., Esmond. R.l. Sherman, Daryl S. — 199 Jenckes St., Woonsocket. R.l. Sherman, Susan J. — Sakonnet Point, Little Compton, R.l. Sherwood. Robert W. — 4 Friendship Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Shields, Michael A. — 181-42 Aberdeen Rd.. Jamaica. N.Y. Shoemaker, Benjamin A. — 190 Point Rd.. Little Silver. N.J. Shore. Allen M. — 336 Olney St., Providence. R.l. Shorin, Carol A. — 80 Faunce Dr., Providence. R.l. Shrake. Andrew J. — 39 Willow Ave., Middletown. R.l. Shread, Irene M. — 9 Kennedy Dr.. Coventry, R.l. Siegel. Joseph A. — I 76 Chestnut Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Silbert, Elizabet A. — 40 Highlind Ave., Great Neck, N.Y. Silva. Ernest R. — 270 Heather St.. Cranston, R.l. Silverberg. Wendy J. — 270 Garlind St.. Bangor. Me. Silverman, Arnold H. — 292 Aqueduct Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Silvestro. Charles A. — 106 Russo St., Providence, R.l. Silvestro, Kenneth C. — 62 Clyde Ave.. East Providence, R.l. Simmons. Kenneth G. — 256 Maple St.. Warwick, R.l. Simpson. Alan L. — I I Standard Ave.. West Warwick, R.l. Singer. Gay L. — 10 Nayatt Rd., Barrington. R.l. Sisson, Jeffrey R. — 191 Pine Rd.. Chepachet. R.l. Sisun, Henry — 568 LeHeigh Ln.. Woodmere. N.Y. Skaradowski. John M. — Box 297. Kingston. R.l. Skaradowski. Susan K. — Box 297. Kingston, R.l. Skeffington. Brian M. — 1792 New London Tpke.. West Warwick. R.l. Skerpon, Melvin J. — 31 I North Hopkins St.. Sayre. Pa. Sklavounos. Constant G. — 13 Susan Ct., North Kingstown, R.l. Skolnik, Lynne P. — 1319 Alden Terr., Union, N.J. Slavin. Gary L. — I I Locust St.. Winchendon, Mass. Smalley, Lee J. — 515 Woodland Rd.. Woonsocket, R.l. Smith. Eric M. — 33 Prospect St., Norwich. Conn. Smith. Linda K. — I 156 Wayne Ave., Lansdale, Pa. Smith, Neil S. — 90 Central St.. Narragansett. R.l. Snegg, Ruth M. — I I Riverfarm Rd., Cranston, R.l. Snow, Harry U. — 516 Whalehead Rd.. Gales Ferry, Conn. Snyder. Lawrence R. — 759 Atwood Ave., Cranston, R.l. Solinger, Rosalind A. — 34 Leslie St., Cranston. R.l. Solomon, William S. — 1 12 Mawney St., East Greenwich, R.l. Somberg, Neil N. — 518 Queen St.. Westbury, N.Y. SoJsa. Angela — 64 Monroe Ave., Bristol, R.l. Sowinski, Margaret L. — Log Road R.F.D. J, Smithfield, R.l. Spaulding, Marion L. — 40 Spring St.. Hope Valley, R.l. Spaziano. Anthony J. — 150 Madison Ave.. Cranston, R.l. Spencer, Julia L. — 17 Concord Ln., Convent Station, N.J. Spero, Susan A. — 336 Blvd., Middletown, R.l. Spicer, Robert A. — 654 Great Rd., North Smithfield. R.l. Spiegel. Hermann C. — 18 Spring St., Westerly. R.l. Spring, Jeffrey C. — Absalona Rd., Chepachet, R.l. Squiers, Thomas S. — 19 Academy St., Hallowell. Me. St. Amand, Alan R. — 45 Fairview Ave., Coventry. R.l. Staffopoulos. William P. — 15 Wilton Ave., Pawtucket, R.l. St. Denis. Jeanne R. — I 10 Hargraves Dr.. Portsmouth. R.l. St. Denis. Loran W. — I Girard Ave., Warwick, R.l. Steadman, Marjorie C. — Wandsworth St.. Narragansett, R.l. Steere, Linda A. — Putnam Pike, Harmony, R.l. Stein. Eric D. — 174 Sessions St., Providence, R.l. Steiner, Mark F. — 185 Gallatin St.. Providence. R.l. Stemple, Hilary C. — 178 Ann St.. Valley Stream. N.Y. Stetson. David L. — 18 Steepletop Rd.. Rowayton, Conn. Stevens. Christop J. — 8 Hadden Rd., Scarsdale. N.Y. Stevenson. Frank B. — 192 Eaton St.. Providence. R.l. Stevenson. Kathleen A. — 55 Whitcomb Rd., Riverside. R.l. Steward. Meta G. — 360 Lloyd Ave.. Providence, R.l. Stewart. James P. — 15 Tincley Dr., Cumberland, R.l. Stewart. Mary — R. R. 4 Box 386A, Narragansett. R.l. Stewart. Warren H. — 1009 Beechwood Ln.. Vestal. N.Y. St. Germain, Lorraine L. — 400 Woodbine St.. Cranston. R.l. Stickney. Sandra E. — 5300 Post Rd., East Greenwich. R.l. 311 Stigliano, Joan F. — 35 Harriman Ave., Sloatsburg. N.Y. St. Laurent. Rene — 251 State Ave.. North Tiverton. R.l. Stocklinski. Andrew W. — Peckham Rd.. Little Compton. R.l. Stockman. Leslie — 21 Belgrade Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Stolarz. Thomas E. — Ray Hill Rd.. East Haddam, Conn. Stone. Freda L. — 128 Reservoir Ave.. Providence. R.l. Stramm. Stephen R. — 2141 Walnut PL. Cinnaminson. NJ. Strijek. Ronald L. — 5 Aster St.. Schenectady. N.Y. Sugarman. Ruth A. — 93 Bluff Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Sullivan. Dennis B. — 17 Marshall Ln.. Middletown. R.l. Sullivan. Donald P. — 762 Atwells Ave.. Providence. R.l. Sullivan. Gerald P. — 41 Howard St., Norwood. Mass. Sullivan. Kathleen K. — Lawrence Farm. Portsmouth. R.l. Sullivan. Rae C. — 125 Roger Williams Ave., Rumford. R.l. Sullivan. Timothy J. — 762 Atwells Ave.. Providence. R.l. Susi, Gino — S3 Penn St.. Providence. R.l. Sutherland. Linda L. — 18 Child Ln.. Warwick. R.l. Swain. Cynthia A. — 61 Belvedere Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Swan. Sheryl E. — 57 Lakeview Rd.. Lincoln. R.l. Sweeney. Michael E. — 58 Olympia Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Sweeten. Clifford L. — Bo 171, Hope Valley. R.l. Swider, Lucille J. — R.F.D. 3 West Rd.. Salem. Conn. Szepatowski, Helen D. — I Gregory Ct.. Barrington, R.l. Tabakin, Donna L. — 2 Forest Ave.. Manuet. N.Y. Taber. Susan J. — 15 Ocean Ave.. Riverside. R.l. Tabor. Carl J. — 12 Sunnyside Ave., Bristol. R.l. Talbert. Mark J. — 85 Sweet Ln.. North Kingstown. R.l. Tanenbaum, Michael A. — 1935 South Hibiscus Dr.. North Miami, Fla. Tarasovich. John E. — 58 State St.. Westerly. R.l. Tashman. Joan C. — 2714 Evans Rd.. Oceanside. N.Y. Taylor. Dorothy Q. — Post Rd.. Wakefield. R.l. Taylor. Lynne A. — I 10 Hill Top Dr., Cranston. R.l. Teixeira. George J. — 41 Rosella Ave.. Pawtucket, R.l. Telfeyan. John E. — 34 Meritoria Dr.. East Williston, N.Y. Templeton. Deborah L. — Wilbur Rd. RFD I. Lincoln. R.l. Teres. Wayne M. — 30 Judith Ct.. East Rockaway. N.Y. Terranova. John L. — Wood River Junction. Richmond. R.l. Terry. Cheryl A. — 16 Midway Dr.. West Warwick. R.l. Testa Jr.. Alfred — R. R. 4 Box 9 IOC Longview Dr.. Narragansett. R.l. Thomas. Cynthia D. — 95 Dohm Ave.. Guilford. Conn. Thompson. Adele M. — 168 Ashley St.. Cranston. R.l. Thompson. Bradford W. — Potter Hill Rd., Westerly. R.l. Thomson. Joel E. — 787 Pontiac Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Thornton. William A. — 6 Fatima Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Thresher. Timothy C. — 76 Scarborough Rd.. Manchester. Thurber. Thomas A. — 700 Beverage Hill Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Tillinghast. Suzanne C. — 28 Walker Ave., Lincoln, R.l. Tishkevich. Ronald A. — 545 Neptune Ave.. Brooklyn. N.Y. Toole. Richard J. — 1 1 Wamsutta Ave.. Barrington. R.l. Toothill. Lynn T. — 5 Crest St.. Springfield. Mass. Tow. May J. — 175 Jewett St.. Providence. R.l. Traynor. Priscilla — 1 1 12 Alden Rd., Alexandria, Va. Trebisacci. Michael — 78 East Ave.. Westerly. R.l. Troiano. John B. — 61 Upper College Rd.. Kingston. R.l. Troll. Janice M. — 137 Bay View Ave.. North Kingstown. R.l. Trump. Arthur F. — 864G R. R. 4. Larch Ave.. Narragansett. R.l. Tryder. Deborah L. — I Circle Dr., Bedford. N.H. Tsapakos. Wendy A. — Knotty Oak Rd. Fairhvn 6. Coventry, R.l. Tuchapsky. Carolyn — 354 Cass Ave.. Woonsocket. R.l. Turano. Thomas A. — 61 Bellevue Ave.. Westerly. R.l. Turner. Janet M. — 17 Bedlow Ave.. Newport. R.l. Twarog, Frank — Riverview Ave.. Bristol, R.l. Ulles, Barbara I. — 37 Hubbard St.. Westerly. R.l. Unda, Denise C. — 53 Laura Ln.. Stoughton. Mass. Upham. Sandra P. — 1 12 Fort Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Upham. Wil ' iam B. — 55 Mayfair Rd.. Warwick. R.l. Vacca. Frank L.— 47 Perkins Ave.. Westerly. R.l. Vacca, Richard C. — 14 John St.. Westerly. R.l. Valimahomed. Salim A. — Box 7733. Nairobi Kenya Vallande. Rocco A. — 225 Heather St.. Cranston. R.l. Vanable. Eleanor D. — 19 Dixwell Ave.. Cranston. R.l. Vandale. Bruce L. — I I Gloria St.. Pawtucket, R.l. Vaughn. Judith A.— 151 Pocahontas Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Ventrone. Deborah C. — Dutchtown Rd. Rd. 2. Belle Meade. N.J. Very. Janice M. — 38 Fuller St.. Warwick. R.l. Vick. Lee W.— 24 Barre Ct.. Warwick. R.l. Vieira. Katherin M.— 29 Douglas St., Jamestown. R.l. Villagran. Eduardo — c o 4 Taft Hall URI. Kingston, F.S. Villani. Donnalee L. — 36 Schofield St.. Providence. R.l. Vincent, Stephen F. — 41 Amherst Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Viti, Jane M. — 278 Chases Ln.. Middletown. R.l. Vitrano. Salvator V. — 205 Davis Ave.. Hackensack. N .J. Vonvillas. Barbara A. — 4 Ruth St., Middletown, R.l. Votta. Jill S. — 60 Royal Ave.. Providence. R.l. Vouras. Carol Z. — 84 Division St.. Newport. R.l. Waddington. John F. — 22 Hobson Ave. North Providence. R.l. Wade. William H. — 612 Fairmount St.. Woonsocket, R.l. Wagner, Jean E. — 16 Garden Dr.. Lincoln. R.l. Wagner. Naomi J. — 9902 Hedin Dr.. Silver Spring, Md. Wainger. Jeffrey M. — 485 Dunster Dr.. West Hampstead. Walchle. Richard C. — 591 Willett St.. Riverside. R.l. Walsh. Dennis F. — 241 California Ave.. Providence, R.l. Walsh. Donna M. — Old Post Rd.. Charlestown. R.l. Walsh. Leo A. — Melrose Ave.. Jamestown. R.l. Walter. Jean C. — 91 Old Great Rd.. Slatersville. R.l. Wardle. James C. — 291 Main St.. Fiskeville. R.l. Wardwell. Barbara — 46 Highland St.. Reading. Mass. Warren. William E. — 195 North Country Club. Warwick. R.l. Warwick. Stuart A. — 21 Taconic Rd.. Livingston. N.J. Waterman. Brayton C. — I 149 Frenchtown Rd.. East Greenwich. R.l. Waterman. Kathie J. — Angell Rd.. Cumberland. R.l. Waters. Linda D. — 6 Angworthy Rd.. R.F.D. Westerly. R.l. Watkins. Elizabet S. — Box 277 Rt. I A., Saunderstown. R.l. Watson. Arthur J. — 139 Cushing Ave., Williston Park. N.Y. Watson. Mary S. — 1406 Boyce Ave.. Baltimore. Md. Webster, Bradley J. — 69 Narragansett Ave., Narragansett. R.l. Weeden. Marjorie L. — Tomaquag Rd.. Ashaway. R.l. Weiner. Eileen R. — I Memorial Rd.. Providence. R.l. Weiner. Roberta L. — 3101 Danny Pic St.. Metnior. La. Weintraub. Stuart — 1 1 Dexterdale Rd.. Providence. R.l. Weisman, Elizabet A. — 190 Eighth St.. Providence, R.l. Welch. Celine M. — 13 Lakeside Dr.. Esmond, R.l. Welch. Dennis W. — I I Briarfield Rd.. Barrington. R.l. Welch. Paul T. — 10 Hickory Rd.. Southboro. Mass. Wentz. Jeraldin G. — 50 Robert Ave., Port Chester. N.Y. West. Susan M. — 202 Alabama Ave., Providence, R.l. Westcott, Douglas W. — 35 Collation Circ., North Kingstown, R.l. Weston. Rodney E. — 424 Birlows Landing. Pocassett. Mass. Wexler. Lois B. — 35-43 84 St.. Jackson Hts.. N.Y. Weygand. Robert A. — I A3 Rolens Dr. Grad Apt.. Kingston. R.l. Whaley. David A. — 30 Elam St. . North Kingstown, R.l. Wheeler, Thomas E. — Univ. Gardens Apt. 5C2, Kingston, R.l. Wheless. Kenneth D. — Lee St.. Westerly. R.l. White. Adelle A.— 330 Red Chimney Dr.. Warwick. R.l. White. Craig W. — 24 Livingston St.. Lincoln. R.l. White. Janice L. — Tunmore Rd. R.F.D. 4. Esmond, R.l. White. Robert P. — 680 Main Ave.. Bay Hoad, N.J. Whitney. Marilyn R. — 222 Rocky Point Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Whyte. Joseph P. — 87 Pidge Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Whyte. Rollin C. — 64 Pleasant St.. North Kingstown. R.l. Wicks. Kurt R. — 18 Somerset Rd.. Cranston. R.l. Wiener, Bonnie R. — 37 Market Dr.. Syosset, N Y. Wiesner. Albert F. — 198 Algonquin Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Wilcox. Douglas A. — 271 Draper Ave.. Warwick. R.l. Wilder. Brian G. — 650 Tower Hill Rd.. North Kingstown. R.l. Williams, Hugh A. — I Mechanic St.. Wakefield, R.l. Williams. Lawrence W. — 82 South St.. West Haven, Conn. Wilson. Donald D. — 1 1 Marion Rd.. Kingston, R.l. Wilson. Henry R. — 26 Old Washington Rd.. Ridgefield. Conn. Winpenny. Marjorie L. — 74 Sunny Cove Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Winsor. Barbara — Winsor Ave.. Johnston. R.l. Winterbottom, James J. — 415 Chestnut St.. Warwick, R.l. Winther, Judith K. — 900 Deer Rd.. Bryn Mawr. Pa. Wise. Daniel A. — 349 Vine St.. Pawtucket. R.l. Wolff. Susan M.— 1 19 84 St.. Brooklyn. N.Y. Woljan, Dennis M. — 84 Norwood Ave., Cranston. R.l. Woo. Wan C. — c o 4 Taft Hall URI. Kingston, F.S. Wood, David A. — 41 Pawtuxet Terr., West Warwick, R.l. Wood. Robert S. — David Dr. Purdys Sta.. New York, N.Y. Woodmansee. John E. — Main St.. Carolina. R.l. Woods. Nancy J. — 73 Meredith Dr.. Cranston. R.l. Woodward. Margaret D. — Rd. 2 Woodward Rd.. Englishtown. N.J. Woolf. Barry P. — 57 Capwell Ave.. Pawtucket. R.l. Worrell, Marie E. — 22 Bangor St.. Warwick. R.l. Yaghoobian. Nathalie G. — 39 Pinewood Dr.. North Providence. R.l. Yeagley. Geoffrey L. — 9 Fairview Dr.. Bristol, R.l. Yenoli. Roy J. — 19 West Maple Dr.. New Hyde Park, N.Y. Young. Carol A. — 75 Ganung Dr.. Ossining, N.Y. Young. Mark E. — 106 Elder Ave., Riverside. R.l. Young. Neil B. — 261 Williston Way. Pawtucket. R.l. Zabilski. Jean F. — 41 1 Central Ave., Johnston, R.l. Zachok, Marlene C. — 53 Kiwanis Dr.. Wayne. N.J. Zambrano. Paul J. — 225 Fairfax Dr.. Warwick. R.l. Zarick. Susan M. — 25 Elm St.. Westfield. NJ. Zartarian. Robert J. — 1 13 Twin Oak Dr.. Warwick. RJ. Ziman, Helaine F. — 2 Aldon Terr.. Bloomfield, N.J. Zimmerman. Michael R. — 2 Lighthouse Ln.. Old Greenwich, Zisserson, Shayna F. — 73 Western Promenade. Cranston. R.l Zutty. Robert N. — 10 Embassy Ct.. Great Neck. N.Y. 312


Suggestions in the University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) collection:

University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

University of Rhode Island - Renaissance / Grist Yearbook (Kingston, RI) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974


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