Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA)

 - Class of 1967

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Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 456 of the 1967 volume:

sub turri ' 67 BOSTON COLLEGE CHESTNUT HILL β€’ MASSACHUSETTS i i b turri ' 67 sub turri Β« irri ' 67 sub turri ' 67 lb turri ' 67 sub -ri ' 67 sub turri sub turri ' 67 sub turri ' 67 turri ' 67 sub turri ' 67 sub ' 67 sub turri ' 67 sub turri sub turri ' 67 turri ' 67 sub turri ' 67 ' 67 sub turri ' 67 sub EDITOR-IN-CHIEF JAMES M. PETERS, JR. BUSINESS MANAGER JOHN J. NANNICELLI, JR. MANAGING EDITOR PATRICIA-LOUISE HANNA ASSOCIATE EDITOR JOHN J. LAMBERT, JR. MCMLXVII Published by Pembrooke Company, Inc. at Boston, Massachusetts. table of contents prologue 4 academics 47 underclass 79 activities 1 23 sports 1 69 features 225 graduates 265 prologue .N. S HΒ of Β ii i J f - ' - ' i They come to the Heights from many different high schools, from all across the country, each bringing a different background and perspective to Boston College. When they leave, they will enter other fields of en- deavor, but their experience will have been enriched, their perspective will have been changed. They probably first heard the word college spoken when they were still in the cradle, too young to understand what it would mean to them. Then it was just the wonder and hope of parents, now it is an individual ' s reality. In grade school, they did not think much of higher education, ig- norant that it was necessary for the careers they lightly dreamed of β€” doc- tor, teacher, nurse, or President of the United States. While in high school, they realized, or at least their parents did, that they should seek more learning. And so they came. For these students, as well as those that preceded and those that will follow them, Boston College is a major experience in their lives. Into this melting pot of academics and society, the individual student blends his individuality. Yet there are no stereotypes. Each student is affected by his college experience in a singular way and no two emerge alike from the process. The influence of the University is small in some of the students, but for the majority, it is a major force in shaping their lives. Students emerge from Boston College with the tools and the outlook to assume responsible positions in the world. Many will use the knowl- edge acquired on the Heights as a foundation for graduate work in med- icine, law, or further education in their major field. None of them will ever forget Boston College. The Boston College student is, and does, many things. He is nominated Scholar of the College, and he flunks a freshman math course. He is an avid disciple of Barry Goldwater, and he fights to establish S D.S. on campus. He comes from Nigeria, San Francisco, or Chestnut Hill, He will go into his father ' s business, and he will become a famous novelist or artist. There are many things that the Boston College student does not like about the University. He would like the core curriculum limited to include fewer required courses which would be presented by means of a broad interdisciplinary approach. He would like the tuition lowered. He would like them to do something with the dust bowl. But let anyone attack B.C. HKTIHG| CUSHlHO and he will leap to its defense. Though within its society he may find more to criticize than to praise, without he is loyal and proud of his alma mater. Most students on the Heights are concerned about the world they are living in and will help to form. Many have committed themselves to the social, political, religious, and service organizations on campus to pro- vide themselves with a forum for their ideas and a framework for con- structive activity. Many more are more generally committed to such ideals and will actively work for them in later life. So that they might aid them- selves and others, our students strive to become more knowledgeable and mature in every possible way. They are interested and curious in the class- room, open-minded in their dealings with fellow students, and sincere in their desire to learn. It is impossible to generalize about the typical Boston College student. He simply does not exist. If he did, this institution would have failed as a university. College, in the best sense, was never designed to turn out assembly line products. For every one who will fit a neat category, there are a thousand that cannot be classified. Besides, no one will ever act as a typical B.C. student, but as an individual, and that is as it should be. 11 These young men and women were probably more alike upon entering the University than they will be upon leaving it. For in the interim, much in them has developed. They have become more mature, more sophisti- cated, more complex. They have become individuals rather than members of a type. They have learned much β€” from their teachers, from their studies, and, perhaps most of all, from their association with the other individuals that make up the Boston College community. 12 Their knowledge of scholastic philosophy and modern languages will perhaps be dulled and slip away during the years after graduation. The nanne and course of their favorite teacher will perhaps even be forgotten. There will be no further contact with the members of the bull session groups. But all of these will have gone into making the person that moves on from Boston College and makes his way in the world. Later in life, if an honest summation were to be made, they would have to point back to the Heights and admit, A great deal of me was created at Boston College. 13 15 16 17 In the past four years, Boston College has undergone a major and far reaching academic evolution. Admittedly, progress was made in previous years, but it came neither as swiftly nor as sweepingly as the changes that have been recently witnessed. This evolution has created ef- fective structures in which the momentum of progress will be maintained far into the future, bringing new im- provements to make Boston College more vital and more modern than ever before. The Centennial Celebration four years ago marked the end of a century of birth and growth, and promised greater things for the years to come. Now a mature and estab- lished institution turned from a nostalgic remembrance of things past to a dynamic determination to create an even better university. The first step toward creative evo- lution was taken by the College of Arts and Sciences with the initiation of its self-study program. This internal criti- cism, which bettered its curriculum and revitalized its philosophy of education, was soon seen to produce sig- nificant results. Core courses were reduced in number | rΒ F ' Β« ir o,j Β« prΒ«yr .;r -W| MH M V- Β T a ' ' r ' ] K 18 and strengthened in value. The College sought new and excellent teachers, while the tendency toward inbreeding was eliminated. We can recognize the present Super Committee and its goals as stemming from this incentive to furnish constructive criticism and better our academic life. The two most conservative elements on campus, the Departments of Theology and Philosophy, were reformed under the inspired leadership of Reverends William Leo- nard and Joseph Flanagan, S.J. Dr. David Neiman, a Jewish rabbi. Dr. Mary Daly, a lay woman, and Dr. Her- mann Schussler, a Lutheran minister, were added to the Theology faculty. The Philosophy Department now offers such courses as Zen Buddhism, Arabian Philosophy, and Contemporary Atheism. The University Catalogue listsa great number of courses that were not presented just four years ago. In that short span of time, the Speech Department, under Dr. John Lawton, has evolved from virtual nonexistence into one of the strongest and most active departments on campus. 19 with courses in theater arts, group dynamics, and radio and television. In 1963 the School of Education intro- duced a Special Education major designed to train stu- dents for the teaching of the mentally retarded child. In Arts and Sciences, The Honors Program initiated and then expanded Modern Man: The Cultural Tradition, a course which cut across departmental lines and fulfilled core requirements. In the fall of 1965, a special group of commuting stu- dents arrived at Boston College β€” the scholastics from Weston College. This was a result of Weston ' s own self- study which decided that their future priests would bene- fit from the more diverse academic potential available at B.C. These young men have been very successfully assimilated into the academic community and their in- tellectual curiosity clearly re-emphasizes the type of stu- dents that now populate the Heights. The quality of the student attracted and accepted by Boston College has risen significantly in recent years, and consequently, this new student has helped in the forma- 20 tion of the University just as much as it has contributed to his formation. Critical analysis, questioning, and in- dividual judgment have replaced passive acceptance of material in the classroom. There is a more meaningful dialogue between the student and the professor. Creativ- ity and freedom of scholarship is encouraged. The stu- dent is more vocal and his voice is heard and, with ever increasing frequency, heeded. We have witnessed a great academic revolution at B.C., but the effects of this change will not be totally felt during our lifetime. These effects will radiate from the Heights to be absorbed and appreciated by all those who have any contact with Boston College, either the Univer- sity, the students, or the graduates. The last four years have not seen an end to the academic problems of the University, or even of each individual college, but a be- ginning has been made. We have witnessed a dynamic transformation whose products will long outlive the proc- esses which made them. In keeping with its ever constant drive for strength in 21 excellence, Boston College has undergone continuous transformation. One of the most obvious indications of this has been, of course, the expansion of its physical plant. The University has recently added a faculty center, a science center, three dormitories, expanded library fa- cilities, and has begun construction of a social sciences center. The new biology and physics center, Higgins Hall, has been referred to by Reverend Michael P. Walsh as the building that will enable the University to move toward greater accomplishments and fuller participation in the dramatic expansion of scientific knowledge and research in our present day society. In addition to the usual assortment of classroom, offi- ces, and seminar rooms, the building also contains spe- cial animal rooms, constant temperature rooms, a green- house, and a closed circuit television system. The new Carney Faculty Center provides long needed office space for the University ' s ever increasing faculty. Departmental personnel are now gathered under one n:ziirjji.,_. imniii 22 convenient roof β€” a tremendous improvement over pre- vious, decentralized, haphazard facilities. Its functional design which includes well lighted, air conditioned class- rooms and offices make for an atmosphere most condu- cive to study and work and are greatly appreciated by students and faculty alike The center serves as a memorial to Andrew Carney, the man who helped to make the University possible more than one hundred years ago by providing Reverend John Bapst, S.J. with half the funds required for com- mencing the opera tion of the college. The expansion of the University ' s library facilities is perhaps the most important factor of all for students and faculty specifically and for B.C. academic reputation in general. The quality of the University library system is reflected by the large proportion of B.C. students who continue their studies on the graduate level. Containing more than 650,000 volumes, the system is constantly increasing in size. This year alone it acquired 28,000 new volumes. 23 Greater efforts are required however, as each and every still frustrated student will vouch. As a result, a part of its gigantic development program will include the construc- tion of a new campus library to help solve the problem. The new library will be a consolidated library which will be completely accessible to all members of the University community and adequate to meet the needs of students on all levels. In addition, three new men ' s dormitories also contrib- ute to B.C. ' s new look. These dormitories provide in- creased recreational facilities which include pool tables. ping pong tables, T.V. sets and weightlifting equipment. The students ' rooms also have larger desk areas and bet- ter lighting and heating. This increase in on campus housing functions as a source of unity by allowing the male student to become a more involved member in the B.C. community. Similar accommodations are still merely a dream for B.C. ' s women students. While senior women students may now live in approved apartments, the rest of the women residents are forced to continue under less than ideal conditions. 24 The aim of Jesuit higher education is the development of the well- rounded individual, physically as well as intellectually. In accordance with this goal, Boston College annually participates in numerous intercollegiate athletic activities and conducts a comprehensive intramural program. The schedules for both include all those sports normally classified as major and a large number of minor ones too. 25 Of all the major sports, the one that has developed the most is, unques- tionably, basketball. Formerly ignored by the majority of the students and alumni, the roundball game is now one of the most popular on campus. Student support has been crystallized with the formation of the Courtside Club, and additional bleachers have had to be built to accommodate the many new fans. In four seasons under its dynamic Coach Cousy, the team has been invited to three successive post-season tournaments, culminat- ing in this year ' s very respectable showing in the N.C.C.A. eastern region- als. Once a mediocre quintet, the Boston College basketball team is now a national power. 26 Under Coach John Snooks Kelley. the hockey team continued its traditional role as one of the East ' s consistently outstanding sextets. Play- ing before capacity crowds and nnaking the playoffs every year, the Eagles won the ECAC title two years ago and finished that season ranked second in the nation. Last year Coach Kelley chalked up his four hundredth victory in intercollegiate competition, a record unmatched by any other coach in the country. There has been no change in hockey β€” Boston College ex- celled as always. 27 The fortunes in football were not quite as good. Many outstanding individuals brought glory to themselves but the same cannot be said of the team. Insufficient depth and frequent injuries to key personnel ham- pered Coach Miller ' s elevens and they never lived up to expectations. One result was that interest in the sport has waned considerably in the last two years. 28 The completion of the Jack Ryder Memorial Track in the spring of 1 965 focused attention anew on the college ' s superior track team. Never a squad noted for its depth, the Eagles consistently came through with fine individual performances, particularly in the field events. The highlight of the past four years came last year when, despite the competition of sev- eral excellent opponents, the team captured the coveted New England title. 29 Much like the hockey team, the baseball squad continued to be one of the area ' s powerhouses. Coach Pelligrini ' s charges have always been prime contenders for the Greater Boston crown and the team competed in the New England regional tournament on many different occasions. Per- sonnel turned over but the winning tradition remained. WM 5f ' Β 30 As is probably normal, most of the apparent change in the athletic climate of the campus came in the area of the minor sports. The wrestling team, for one, was just getting started four years ago and interest in the sport was certainly not overwhelming. Coach Maloney ' s squads have per- formed quite creditably since that time, winning most of their matches and doing well in the area championships. Attendance in Roberts has in- creased accordingly and more candidates come out for this excitirtg sport each year. 31 The soccer team ' s history is another rags-to-riches story. Organized by interested students and financed by contributions from several campus groups, the sport operated on a club basis for its first few seasons. After piling up an impressive record and after winning the support of a large segment of the student body, the team received official recognition just this past year. It also ended its first season on the University ' s newly com- pleted soccer field. 32 Expansion was also evident in many other sports. With better performers participating in more contests than was ever the case before, both the golf and the skiing teams received greater notoriety and support. The same was true for the tennis club which, with the new courts and a vastly improved squad, has been promised official recog- nition in the upcoming year. And it looks as if lacrosse has also acquired a following of its own. For those students interested m the major sports but unable to compete on the varsity level, the intramural pro- gram remained the center of attention. In basketball, soft- ball, football, and hockey, competition was conducted in both day and dorm leagues; and the completion of the new basketball courts and baseball diamonds meant that even more students could participate. In this area of athletics then, as in so many others, there has been marked growth in terms of facilities, athletic ability, and perhaps most importantly, student interest. 33 One of the primary obligations of every expanding university is the pro- vision of decent facilities for the development of intellectual and social facilities. Important as this development is inside the classroom, it is of perhaps greater importance outside it. The good university sponsors num- erous cultural events in attempting to serve its community properly. In the past four years, Boston College has taken many steps to more adequately meet this obligation. The major change in social activities on the Heights has probably been best characterized by the shift in emphasis from popular music and dances 34 to more diversified forms of entertainment. Folk music, comedy, and jazz are now more popular than ever before. Performers like Alan King, Astrud Gilberto, Evelyn Cataldi, Dave Brubeck, and Tom Rush have joined the ranks of people like Little Anthony and the Lovin ' Spoonful as favorites of the student body. If diversity has characterized social development on campus, greater maturity has marked the advance in cultural activities. In every conceiva- ble field, new heights have been attained by people trying to acquaint themselves with the best that has been said and known in the world . 35 Music, theater, art, the humanities β€” all fields have been expanded in what has sometimes been called Boston College ' s cultural revolution. And more than anyone else, the student has symbolized this change in B.C. ' s cultural atmosphere. Theater, for one, has reached new levels of proficiency. Drama, comedy or musical, one-act play or five-act, the Dramatics Society has been equal to every challenge. With its recent production of Little Mary Sunshine, the D.S. achieved a peak of perfection rarely encountered at Boston College previously. Much the same can be said of Camelot, the Junior Class play 36 of 1967. Independent productions like The Fantasticks and Stop the World-I Want to Get Off further contributed to the development of pro- fessionalism in the theater arts on campus. Musically, the situation is very similar as many noted performers have visited the Heights for the first time. Such people as classical guitarist Alirio Diaz, harpist Grainne Yeats, and the New England and low a String Quartets thrilled audiences with their skills just as Jesus Maria Sanroma and the Boston Pops have done so often m the past. As always, the Hu- manities Series sponsored many of these attractions; but other groups i 37 like the Arts and Sciences ' Student Senate, its Honors Progrann, and the English Department have contributed ever more frequently in an attempt to bring great music to the University. Paralleling this development were the achievements of the University Chorale as a significant artistic group. Undaunted by any type of music, the students in the Chorale performed works by Berlioz, Weill, Mendels- sohn, MousSorgsky, Bernstein, and our own C. Alexander Peloquin to name just a few, with a competence remarkable for a college group. The appearance of many renowned soloists, particularly Eileen Farrell and Jean Maderia, and their accompaniment by entire festival orchestras fur- 38 ther enhanced the Chorale ' s artistic status. As for art and the humanities, the change has been less dramatic; both continued the excellent traditions established over many past years. The one notable difference was the greater emphasis on individual creativity spurred by the presence of two distinguished gentlemen, Mr. Allison Macomber, the artist-in-residence, and Mr. Sean O ' Faolain, the writer-in- residence. The annual spring exhibition of the works of Mr. Macomber ' s students probably epitomizes this general shift in attitude better than any- thing else. In these two fields as in every other, there have been develop- ment and growth. CAnEEns liv WBiTmc 39 40 The Council of Resident Men has also made significant innovations. Mixers have been conducted in the Eagles Nest Snack Bar, lounge parties have been arranged in the dorms and the weekend movie schedule has been expanded β€” all under CORM ' s steadily increasing influence. Its most successful achievement though, was the establishment of Middle Earth, the Boston College coffeehouse. Owned by the Council and operated under a work-study grant from the Federal Government, Middle Earth offers a wide variety of programs from rock and roll to poetry readings and has become immensely popular with the University at large. 41 Socially and culturally then, Boston College has witnessed great change β€” change for the better both in scope and in attitudes. Hopefully, the realization of the proposed Social Commission which would co-ordi- nate all campus social activities and provide those organizations spon- soring events with cheaper and more effective means of securing talent, as well as the recommendations of the sub-committees on Student Well- Being, Student Government, Student Activities of the Committee on Student Life and Super Committee, will result in further improvement. 42 The student on the Boston College campus also turns to God. Reflecting Vatican Ms stress upon the individual in contrast to the institutionalization of the Church, re- ligious practices both on campus and off have adapted themselves to the many faces of the student. Hence, the decision to make a retreat is a completely personal and voluntary one now. Plans for a central University chapel have been abandoned in favor of small oratories where the Mass comes to the student in a more meaningful manner. The music of today ' s generation is heard at these student Masses. Guitars are the acceptable mode of ac- companiment and several varieties of folk Masses are now concelebrated at various sites on campus as well as in the girls ' dormitories. Midnight Masses are also of- fered for the convenience of the student body. With this new emphasis upon the individual within the Christian community has evolved a student who more freely discusses his faith with regard to both its theoreti- cal aspects and its practical application β€” a student who seeks to rethink in a new light those tenets which he only mechanically accepted until this time in his life. For him, religion does not end on Sunday or with the closing bell 43 of theology class β€” it only begins there. Thus, it is no longer unusual to encounter discussions of various aspects of faith in McElroy among students or between students and a faculty member. Through the office of Reverend John Gallagher S.J., Spiritual Director for the University, the student has been given the opportunity to participate in formal discussions of this nature and to seek individual counsel. The woman student has also become an integral part of this program. On several weeknights, she is able to contribute to discussions on topics which range from a philosophical approach to love, death, and Christian commitment, to more concrete issues such as ecumen- ism, the changing forces in the Church, marriage, divorce, and birth control, with such young Jesuits as Father Bill Callahan, Father Ed O ' Flaherty, Father Frank Doyle, and Father Pat Cahalan. Toward the end of this year she was introduced to the singing, guitar-playing duo from Wes- ton, Dick Eisemman and Don Monerieff, who devoted themselves to making the Mass come to life as well as to stimulating discussion of a dialectic nature. 44 The spirit of ecumenism on campus has been evi- denced by participation in interfaith conferences. IViany of these have been sponsored by the Men ' s Sodality. To- ward the end of the 1967 Lenten season, another group of students commemorated our Jewish heritage with a Paschal Supper. And many a B.C. student is now serving Christ and mankind in various forms of apostolic work β€” from teach- ing C.C.D. classes to spending a summer or number of years in home or foreign missions. 45 The religious aspect of the student ' s life was also deemed an innportant part of the University self-study program which occurred during the second semester of this year. Here, the student banded together with his faculty and administration to seek improvement in his re- ligious development in addition to his social, intellectual, and cultural advancement. He saw a definite need for a Christian renewal to begin here and through his influence, spread to his own generation. He sought a permanent Religious Activities Program to help him achieve this aim. His interest has been then in the spiritual as it will effect his life and that of his children some day. 46 academics J V - ' Very Reverend Michael P. Walsh. S.J- President 48 1 β– l €1 H um i MtimimiiP II 1 HHIWilBiffllill HfflH ' ' ' ' 1 ill B fl B S 1 1 1 1 β–  1 β–  ' ' ' 1 β– ;:. ' ;v::;:;| H H H|||Mfe, H M -. . lEi.ill i ' -1 1 Rev. Lawrence A. Dorr, S.J. Executive Assistant to the President university administration Rev. W. Seavey Joyce, S.J. Vice President of tlie University 49 Rev. Charles F Donovan, S.J. Academic Vice President Rev. Francis B. McWlanus, S.J. Secretary of the University 50 Rev. Thomas Fleming, SJ. Financial Vice President and T reasurer Rev. Edmond D.Walsh, S.J. Director of Admissions 51 Rev. John F. Fitzgerald. S.J. Registrar of the University Rev.JohnE. Murphy, S.J. Business IVIanager 52 Rev. Brendan C. Connolly, S.J. Director of Libraries Rev. Edward J. Hanrahan. S,J. Director of Resident Students Rev. George L. Drury, S.J. Director of Student Personnel Service 53 college of arts and sciences RevJohnR, Willis, S.J. Dean HenryJ.McMahon Assistant Dean 54 college of business administration Christopher J. Flynn, Jr. Assistant Dean Rev. Alfred J. Jolson.SJ, Acting Dean 55 school of education JohnF.Travers Acting Associate Dean 56 school of nursing RitaP. Kelleher, R.N.M.Ed, Dean Pauline R. Sampson, RN, M.Ed. Administrative Assistant to the Dean evening college Rev. Charles M. Crowley, S.J. Dean 57 The experience of others is a safe light to walk by, and he is not rash who expects success in the future by the same means which secured it in the past. The application of such a maxim to education requires that a teacher not only provide the light β€” that is, to instruct, but to be the light β€” that is, to make his own life the best example of what he is trying to teach his students. For this reason, the value of teachers such as Mr. Ermenegildo Alfano of the College of Business Administration is immeasurable. Mr. Alfano is an alumnus of Boston Latin School and one of the youngest graduates of Harvard University. Majoring in French and Italian, he completed his program of studies at twenty years of age, intending to enter the teach- ing profession. However, during the Depression he had spent four years working to defray college expenses and felt he should begin his career in a more financially profitable area of endeavor. He became interested in business and eventually graduated with a Master ' s Degree from Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. He then embarked upon a career in the business world, spending eighteen years with a Boston de- partment store and gaining experience in every aspect of the retail business β€” from a general apprenticeship position to divisional merchandise manager of foods and home furnishings. This direct contact with the consumer ceased when Mr. Alfano purchased a pet food canning corporation which he continued to operate until the land was taken by the state under the Law of Eminent Domain. He then sold the physical assets of the company and retained only the marketing activities. After five years, he sold the marketing activities to concentrate on the finan- cial control of the business. Mr. Alfano then discovered that he had a great deal of extra time on his hands. Disliking this in- activity, he entered the banking business. He and seventeen others opened the Milton Bank and Trust Company of which he is presently Vice- president. Throughout the years he spent in business however, Mr. Alfano never completely lost sight of his pre-graduate school teaching ambitions. Yet, after so many years in a seemingly unrelated field, he was unsure of two things β€” whether he was capable of teaching and whether he would enjoy teaching. I had to enjoy it, says Mr. Alfano, for after a business career, I certainly was not thinking of teaching for its financial benefits. Thus, he accepted a part-time position at Regis College teaching courses in retailing and management. He received affirmative answers to the questions concerning capability and enjoy- ment and thus continued for two years at Regis before becoming a member of the Boston College faculty. His first few years at Boston College were spent teaching the principles of marketing and the business policy course of which he is now director. According to Mr. Alfano ' s students, colleagues, and superiors, his business policy course is probably one of the most beneficial courses to be had at the College of Business Ad- ministration. Based upon the case method, each class a panel of three students directs the class in complete student participation. These sessions are conducted in a manner similar to professional business conferences. This is a required course for seniors in all of the five majors. Its aim is to integrate at a practical level all the areas of busi- ness taught at the school. Mr. Alfano was recently given permission to conduct an experimental business policy course next year. For this course twenty seniors, repre- senting an even distribution of the five majors, will meet in one three hour session per week to discuss in conference the cases similar to those used by the Harvard School of Business. They are more detailed than those currently in use at 58 Boston College and Professor Alfano intends to give them intensified coverage. He feels that this is valuable training for any future businessman. Thinking and making decisions is the function of the man in business, claims Mr. Alfano. To- day, computers take care of the bulk of the factual information. We mustteach our students primarily how to handle this information β€” to think and make decisions and this is what the present and also next year ' s experimental policy courses are designed to do. Undoubtedly, the same qualities that con- tributed to Mr. Alfano ' s success in the business world were also largely responsible for his similar success in the teaching profession β€” namely his ability to understand other people well and to instill in them optimism and self-confidence. Al- though he does not occupy an official advisory position, these qualifications have frequently en- couraged students to seek his counsel. This is not a new role for him, however. Besides being a father and grandfather for twelve years, he and his wife were active in the Milton Youth Club, a recreational organization for young people be- tween fifteen and nineteen years of age. In his leisure time, Mr. Alfano enthusiastically pursues an avid interest in golf, finding it not only relaxing, but definitely beneficial to the establish- ment and maintenance of good business rela- tions. He and his wife have traveled extensively throughout the country visiting nearly all of the states. They are planning a long awaited trip to Europe this June. Mr. Alfano is generally in favor of most of the changes that have occurred at Boston College in the past few years. He approves of the reduction in philosophy and theology requirements, since it creates a better balance in the curriculum. He feels that girls have a right to be in schools other than Nursing and Education and that they have the ability to contribute something beneficial to nearly any type of class. Concerning the recently introduced cut system, Mr. Alfano possesses mixed feelings. He favors the system as a lo ng- term experiment, but believes that the numerous aspects of the situation should be considered. Thorough consideration should be given to such matters as parental transfer of responsibility and admission standards. He also noted the necessity for consistency in faculty reaction to the system. There should either be no penalty or a standard penalty for cutting classes. Such a policy should be agreed upon and enforced by all teachers in order to properly evaluate the success or failure of a cut system. Mr. Alfano is a perceptive, understanding, and stimulating member of the Boston College fac- ulty. From a full, active, and successful business career he turned to that which he felt would be a greater means of fulfillment: and as a result, he has increased his value to both the business world and the teaching profession. It is exactly eleven o ' clock on a wintry Tues- day nnorning in a classroom in Carney β€” a class in Mt. 023A, Intermediate Calculus. Professor Augustus Fabens rushes into the room, immedi- ately removes his sport coat and places it on top of the hot-air ventilator, and opens his class with, Are there any questions? It reminds one of the old show business cliche: The band has arrived β€” let the show begin Everyone is there; one hundred per cent attendance is normal. His students feel that they really cannot afford to cut. Besides, who would want to miss the per- formance of B.C. ' s most energetic lecturer? He assumes any position while speaking; he literally attacks the blackboard; sometimes he stares at the ceiling while groping for an answer. He will talk about anything. He is dramatic. Professor Fabens has an educational back- ground almost as varied as his teaching methods. A physics major as an undergraduate at Harvard, he went on to Stanford to study statistics, but completed his stay with a Ph.D. in the field of mathematics. He has since published at least a half-dozen significant papers on Probability (with such titles as The Maximum-Sojourn Distribu- tion for a Semi-Markov Process ), and is cur- rently considered to be the only professional probabilist on the B.C. faculty. His teaching, prior to his arrival at B.C. three short years ago, took him to such far out places as Dartmouth and the Australian National Uni- versity. Dr. Fabens ' description of the Australian collegiate system, most important for its British philosophy of education, reveals his own concept of the nature of education. He makes two major points in analyzing the system. First, Once you have chosen your major, you have absolutely no choice of courses. You are told what to take the rest of the way And second, Once you have chosen to study one thing, you take nothing else. The general assumption underlying this system is that the college student actually needs no broadening. He has been well exposed to academic pursuits unrelated to his major while he was in high school. The professor comments; Their high schools are no better than ours. It ' s all a lie β€” just not true. What is expected of the college student in Australia is that he learn a specific number of concepts and facts; if you know the degree a man holds, you should be able to estimate almost exactly what facts he has acquired. Dr. Fabens considers this philosophy too narrow in terms of today ' s cultural demands. He does not believe in memorizing theorems or simply learning how to apply previously acquired formulas. This is not what mathematics is, nor what anyone should try to make it. The British-Australian system is too limited. Every man who is well educated should be acquainted with movements in fields other than his own. The mathematician must read more than papers on probability theory; he should also read social science journals, physics papers, newsmagazines, and the best recent novels. His students often comment that Dr. Fabens has a remarkable ability to digress from mathematical topics into seemingly unrelated fields, and yet keep the dis- cussion in proper perspective at all times. He manipulates ideas as quickly and as fascinatingly as he moves himself from door to window to desk to blackboard. He modestly admits that he tries to keep abreast of the current events in all the intellectual disciplines. 60 Mathematics itself is, in essence, a way of thinking. All the different subjects are primarily just examples of that, though the specific facts, theorems, and concepts in each are valuable in themselves. But the way they tie together, the common thread, that is the thing we call mathe- matics. The courses in the Mathematics Department reinforce each other. Most are introductory courses; for instance, the whole of the Calculus series could probably be considered one quite elegant introduction. The specific course is not the important thing. One of Dr. Fabens ' students has speculated that he tries to inculcate a math- ematician ' s intuition in every member of the class. Proving theorems is more important than using them. The objective is the liberation of the student from the limits imposed by practical ap- plication and attempts to visualize dimensions. Dr. Fabens forces every class member to think; i1 is a demanding experience. After all, mathe- matics is in essence, a way of thinking. This year the professor has taught only under- graduate courses; Intermediate and Advanced Calculus, and a course in Probability. He enjoys switching courses and teaching different types of students. They all interest him a great deal β€” even the non-math majors. Teaching, in general, is often a hard and discouraging thing. Only oc- casionally are there rewards, like working with some bright people in the classroom, and know- ing that you can be satisfied with how you have taught someone. There are bright people in the humanities as well as in mathematics. ' Gus Fabens is as interesting to his students as they are to him. He skips from place to place in the textbook, spending two weeks on two pages and then two days on twenty. He insists on referring to theory β€” an unnerving experience for many. He presents all the trivial and the ob- vious proofs, which are often obvious only to him; it demands concentration. His testing meth- ods are somewhat peculiar. The students never see anything on an exam which they have seen before; there are no questions where all that is necessary for the correct answer is plugging numbers into a formula. His method of grading is also disturbing to many. Gus has a frustrating passion for deducting a considerable number of points for little, seemingly unimportant mistakes. Typical class averages might range in the forties or fifties through most of the semester; thus, each member is encouraged to work harder for that final grade. However, many will admit that despite the time and effort spent, the possibility of a low grade does not lessen their enjoyment of his classes, simply because they are such a challenge. Professor Fabens offers some interesting views concerning the betterment of Boston College. He feels that the university has witnessed a vast im- provement already. Eac h class of students that comes in is better than the last. B.C. is definitely better each academic year. The real reason is that they are consciously trying to be better. You have to try hard these days to keep from improving, as more and better students apply for entrance, and more top teachers become available. But in addi- tion, B.C. is trying even harder. He finds that the administration has worked especially hard for the students, seeking outstanding professors who will not sacrifice the welfare of the students for their own research pursuits. Certainly, Dr. Fabens is in this category. 61 Enter the lounge in Cheverus Hall at eleven thirty any Saturday night and you are struck by the abnormally large number of people gathered together there. Forty or fifty students in that par- ticular place, at that particular time is certainly an unexpected sight. Yet, by midnight, four or five hundred more will have somehow or other squeezed their way into that excessively crowded room. No famous lecturer is speaking, no enter- tainment is being staged. These people are here for one reason and one reason alone, to assist at Mass. Since the beginning of the Second Vatican Council, the Catholic Church has been experi- encing an aggiornamento , an updating of past practices and traditions. As a Catholic institution of higher learning, Boston College has been un- dergoing a similar evolution in every phase. The midnight Masses now celebrated every Saturday night and on the eves of holy days is just one manifestation of this process of change here on the Heights; but it is a dramatic and welcome one. The man solely responsible for its inception, one of the leaders of both the religious and aca- demic aggiornamento at Boston College, is the popular Assistant Professor of Theology in the College of Arts and Sciences, the Reverend Robert T. Ferrick, S.J. A native of Rhode Island and a graduate of LaSalle Academy in Providence, Father received both his Bachelor and Master of Arts Degrees in Theology at Boston College. His other degrees, the Licentiate of Philosophy and the Licentiate of Sacred Theology, were earned at Weston Col- lege. Education has been Father ' s whole life, tak- 62 ing him to all parts of the globe as both teacher and student. His regency saw him in Iraq, teach- ing English at Baghdad College; subsequent studies brought him to the Gregorian Institute in Rome and the Franciscan School of Biblical Theology in Jerusalem. Father Ferrick is currently in his sixth year as a theology professor at Bos- ton College, although these years have not been consecutive. Just one year ago. Father was awarded a scholarship by the Bro wn University Department of Religious Studies for further the- ological study under the renowned Father Mc- Nally, S.J. of Fordham University and the Union Theological School in New York, Father Ferrick has many interests aside from the subject he teaches. For relaxation, he enjoys listening to music, especially the works of such great composers as Beethoven. But he is also an addict of the Broadway musical. Rodgers and Hammerstein are especially appealing to Father β€” he often quotes them in his sermons, and a statue of the Man of La Mancha ' currently stands on his desk. Then too, when the oppor- tunity presents itself, this engaging priest enjoys just plain walking. According to Father, nothing is quite so refreshing as a peaceful stroll by the seashore, although he has been known to settle for a circuit of the reservoir every now and then. But the main interest in Father ' s life is still his freshman theology course. This past year he taught four sections of the standard Promise and Fulfillment , but with some innovations. With the assistance of Scholastics from Weston, each class was occasionally divided into small discus- sion groups to encourage more interest and par- ticipation by the individual student. The principal text was, of course, the Bible, but the edition was an ecumenical one according to the belief that Scripture will make us one some day. Further readings included recent works of special rele- vance to the topics under consideration. The in- structor and material combined to make this course one that most freshmen found both chal- lenging and arresting. In addition to his duties as a member of the faculty, Father Ferrick is involved in numerous extracurricular activities both here at Boston Col- lege as well as off-campus. Foremost among these is his position as a Senior Counselor in Roncalli Hall. Whenever Father is in his room, his door is always open to those in his charge. In order to become better acquainted with these students. Father has instituted the practice of having ten fellows into his roonn once a week for informal discussions on whatever topics interest them. The results, in terms of corridor rapport, have been astonishing β€” a fact made obvious merely by a visit to Roncalli. Father is also moderator of the Gold Key So- ciety, the university-wide service organization. Under his leadership, this body has increased in membership to well over four hundred students, and is one of the three largest organizations on campus. More activities than ever before now come under its aegis. As moderator. Father Fer- rick has advocated two major revisions in the so- ciety β€” increased senior participation and in- creased off-campus activity. In regard to the former. Father has encouraged a more dynamic Senior Senate working through increased com- mittee activity: as for the latter, he has encour- aged programs like the Gold Key ' s current policy of inviting children from the Perkins School for the Blind to one home football game each fall. Future plans call for the annual presentation of an outstanding achievement award to some citizen of the Boston area in order to further improve Boston College ' s town and gown rela- tionship. This idea is just one more indication of the growth the Gold Key Society has experi- enced under the leadership of Father Robert T. Ferrick. The new Executive Committee for Student Affairs and the Spiritual Life Committee both afford Father still other opportunities to demon- strate his lively concern for the student ' s religious life. But more than any other single event, the midnight Mass Father Ferrick initiated has demonstrated the thoughtful understanding this priest has of the spiritual needs of his flock. Stu- dent response to the Mass has been so over- whelming that one local radio station has even expressed interest in the possibility of broad- casting from Cheverus Lounge. The friendly, in- formal atmosphere, the folk hymns sung, and the active participation of all those assisting com- bine to make this weekly occurrence a unique religious experience for all. Questioned as to the recent history of the The- ology Department, Father speaks of the many favorable changes he has witnessed. Of these, the most significant have been those affecting the department ' s staff and those related to the courses offered. Once composed solely of Jesuits, the Theology Department now includes many laymen, both Catholic and non-Catholic, and even one female professor. As for the policy of allowing seniors a choice of courses. Father has nothing but praise. He regards the addition of electives such as Professor Neiman ' s Jewish History as one of very definite benefit, and looks forward to the day when all of the university ' s students will be able to choose the theology courses they desire. As for the future. Father Ferrick envisions still greater change. One he himself would like to see is the institution of an advanced placement test in theology for incoming freshmen. Since many high school students take courses roughly similar to those now offered in the first year, unnecessary duplication would be avoided. Another of Father ' s ambitious projects calls for a three day study period, rather like a retreat, in which all facets of university life would be discussed. Similar in purpose to the meeting held at Round Hill last year, this new forum would be run solely by lay- men β€” perhaps the Gold Key Society β€” in an at- tempt to facilitate communication among all the university ' s groups. Father Robert T. Ferrick is thus a vibrant man vitally interested in everything around him. Eager to give retreats or address an interfaith gathering, he is equally at home in the classroom or the pul- pit, a student ' s room or a faculty lounge. An in- tegral part of the aggiornamento the university is now undergoing, the talents of this remarkable priest extend to every aspect of life at Boston College. ' ' ?T2r , Three years ago the Philosophy Department of Boston College had no doctoral program; today there is one. Three years ago most students took required courses in that department and very few, if any, electives; today they choose from a wide variety of electives covering many different fields. One man was responsible for both these changes, the man to whom the Heights gave its Man of the Year award one year ago in recognition of his outstanding achievements. This man is, of course, the ebullient and progressive Chairman of the Philosophy Department, the Reverend Joseph F. X. Flanagan, S. J. A visit to Father Flanagan ' s office provides a good indication of what the man himself is like. The walls are decorated with modernistic paint- ings, many religious in tone; the desk is clear ex- cept for a pile of letters lying neatly in the lower right hand corner and a stack of uncorrected theses diametrically opposite. Were it not for the hockey equipment placed discreetly behind the file cabinet, the overall effect would be one of quiet efficiency. As it is, there is something both refreshing and dynamic about this equipment ' s peculiar presence. Unique is probably the best word to describe the room ' s atmosphere and it is probably the best word to describe its occupant. For Father Flanagan is one of those uniquely well-rounded individuals one hears so much about but meets so very infrequently. The war interrupted many young men ' s educa- tion, and Father ' s was no exception. He studied one year at Boston College, two and a half years at Brown University, and was finally awarded his Bachelor of Arts Degree from Boston College while studying at the Jesuit seminary in Weston. Father ' s Master of Arts was also earned at Bos- ton College and his Doctor of Dental Surgery from Washington University in St. Louis. His final degree is, of course, the Licentiate of Sacred The- ology, obtained from Weston College. Since assuming the chairmanship of the Phi- losophy Department, Father Flanagan haseffected numerous changes. In the first place, the number of required courses has been drastically reduced and the number of available electives consider- ably increased. This increase has made it possible for both the students and the teachers to empha- size those fields which most interest them, and student response has been very enthusiastic. The fact that more than five hundred undergraduates chose at least one course in the department this past year is ample evidence of this fact. But even more important has been the institution of the department ' s doctoral program. Excellent stu- dents of philosophy can now be recruited on both the graduate and undergraduate levels. In two short years, the number of philosophy majors in the College of Arts and Sciences has soared from twenty to sixty-six. At the present time. Father Flanagan teaches two sections of the Philosophical Anthropology course with which he had had so much success in the past. This course, a study of the evolution and processes of human consciousness, empha- sizes Father Bernard Lonergan ' s highl y regarded Insight but also relies on extensive outside read- ing. Last semester Father also offered a new elective entitled the Philosophy of History , de- scribed by the Boston College Bulletin as the examination of the (m)ethod and purpose of man ' s knowledge of the past, patterns of ex- planation used by historians and the aims of his- torical inquiry. Its principal texts were Insight. 64 Collingwood ' s The Idea of History, the philosophy of history of Arnold Toynbee, and the Study of Man of Michael Polanyi. Both courses incorporate stimulating subject matter with interesting read- ing material. But, as is the case with most excellent courses, it is the professor who makes these classes the worthwhile experiences they are. Father Flana- gan ' s teaching method is different from what one usually encounters at Boston College. As he him- self said, My main interest in the classroom is to get people to think for themselves. It is a process of self-appropriation, a development of ' critical power ' , a reaching out for more than the student now understands, an arrival at insight, if you will. In order to accomplish this objective, the affable priest poses a series of questions through which the student gradually attains knowledge. It is not an easy process of learning, but is cer- tainly a thought provoking and an illuminating one. The picture of this tall, determined priest β€” his long fingers outstretched as if to mold stu- dents ' minds as a sculptor would a statue; his visage intense until, with some great insight on a young philosopher ' s part, it breaks into a charm- ing, boyish grin β€” this is a picture that few of Father ' s students are ever likely to forget. When asked about the university. Father Flana- gan invariably discusses its maturation. The big change has been in the society of the students: three years ago they were more homogeneous . . . now they ' re more diversified. The word that ap- parently characterizes them more than any other is idealistic. Students have become more criti- cal, not only of the administration (through such organs as the student newspaper), but also of themselves and each other. Political and intellec- tual indifference on this campus has been sup- planted by an aggressive and critical quality of the students ' minds This freshness and vitality, this eagerness for change, this critical power that Father attempts to elicit in his own course he attributes to an earlier adolescence in the American society, an earlier awareness of the social surd, the composite of failure which needs to be corrected. As for the university in general, it too is under- going a process of growth, of intellectual mat- uration. There is a new sophistication here at Boston College, even to the point where there is a growing problem of overspecialization. Father sees the Modern Man series as one attempt to solve this particular difficulty, the policy of allow- ing more students a double major as another. In regard to the future. Father Flanagan says: What will change the university most is the in- crease in the senior professors coming in as Boston College expands and puts more effort into graduate programs rather than the already excellent undergraduate studies. In his own de- partment, the institution of the aforementioned doctoral program and its subsequent approval by the National Defense Educational Association has meant increased financial aid and the ability to attract more top students. This expansion of the graduate programs will make possible many ex- cellent courses previously unavailable to under- graduates, and will provide them with the oppor- tunity to obtain first hand advice from some of the best students in their fields. No description of Father Flanagan would be complete without some mention of his many and diverse interests. A lover of music and art. Father prefers modern composers like Bartok to the more traditional ones and enjoys visiting art gal- leries whenever the opportunity arises β€” espe- cially those in New York. A devotee of foreign films, his favorite directors are Antonioni, Fellini, and Ingmar Bergman, as anyone who has ever been in one of his classes can testify. Also a sports enthusiast. Father plays wing on the fac- ulty hockey team and can usually be seen at any home hockey or basketball game rooting the Eagles on to victory. This then, is the Reverend Joseph F. X. Flan- agan, S.J., one of those uniquely well-rounded individuals one hears so much about but meets so very infrequently. 65 One of the most disheartening experiences for a Boston College English major is to be waiting near the head of the English Department pre- registration line when the Chairman announces, English 133 and 134 are filled. Every spring these courses are among the first to be closed. They are both taught by Dr. Richard E. Hughes. Perhaps this fact, more than any other, best in- dicates the populanty and esteem that Dr. Hughes enjoys among students. His classes are acclaimed as a real experience and the kind of thinking I came to college for. He quietly enters the room, head downcast, not a note in his hand, and pro- ceeds to a free-wheeling lecture β€” explication- discussion that is inevitably coherent, usually ex- citingly creative, and always interesting. It is a refreshing change from the normal dead, dry note-taking experiences that students have seen far too much of β€” , and they love it. Dr. Hughes ' s fascinating classroom technique grows out of his concept of the classroom as the major laboratory of scholarship, the place where you actually explore the validity of new ideas. And to the amazement of those who thought it must take great planning. Dr. Hughes continues, Really when I walk into class I haven ' t the foggiest idea what I ' m going to do. Unless something spon- taneous happens, unless something honest-to- God gets born, then we ' re back to exchanging facts and we might as well quit. After graduating from Siena College in 1949, Dr. Hughes first came to Boston College. He was not Dr. Hughes at all then, just a young college graduate who had decided, for lack of any cer- tainty in career plans, to take a year of graduate English. But the young man fell into the hands of Professors Duhamel and Hirsh who beckoned him on to Academia. By September of 1950, he had pocketed his master ' s from BC and was working on a doctorate at the University of Wisconsin, concentrating on the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The fall semester of 1953 found Mr. (still) Hughes teaching at Ohio State University, while he completed his dissertation on Dryden and Pope and the sense of the ridiculous. In 1954 Wisconsin conferred the Ph.D. It was now Dr. Hughes. Dr. Duhamel helped bring his former student back to Boston College in 1956. In 1958. he divided up the Renaissance with Dr. Duhamel and began teaching the material with which stu- dents now associate him β€” the metaphysicals and particularly John Donne. The following year. Dr. Hughes began a three- year tour as Chairman of the English Department. During this period. Dr. Hughes teamed with Dr. Duhamel to work on a series of books designed 66 to demonstrate that classical rhetoric is a viable study in the contemporary world. In 1962 they published Rhetoric, in ' 63 Persuasive Prose, in ' 64 Literature: Form and Function, in ' 65 Princi- ples of Rhetoric, and this year a wholly new edi- tion of Rhetoric. This will probably be the end of the series. Dr. Hughes feels that the glamour of it has worn off: Well, we ' ve done that bit, and now we ' re each moving on to something else In Dr. Hughes ' s case, the something else is his book on Donne. It has been long expected by his students. Unlike any of the present critical treat- ments of Donne, Dr. Hughes ' s book will be an at- tempt to look at the entire canon, and through this explore the mind of Donne. There is something about Donne, or at least the way Dr. Hughes talks about Donne, that has fascinated nearly all of the students who have ever heard him speak of that poet-satirist-ser- monist-and-whatever. Sometimes in a particu- larly well-donne-class, one can ' t be sure if it is Hughes or Donne talking and if you are sure, you are not really sure that it makes a difference. There is something about the two men, but Dr. Hughes says that his approach is not to infuse Donne into the experience of students, but rather to get the students to enter into the personality and world of John Donne. And if the excitement develops, it works because Donne is a very com- pelling figure, a fascinating mind Students come to realize that the seventeenth century, as expenenced by a sensitive and intelligent mind, is not at all alien. Another side of the friendly, yet unassuming scholar is the social and family side. This is an aspect of Dr. Hughes that students seldom have an opportunity to see, which is a matter of real regret to him. Dr. Hughes and his wife. Gay, (and five young children) live in a large old Greek Re- vival home in Sherbourne. They enjoy tennis. Baroque music, and any and all theater. Dr. and Mrs. Hughes have made it a tradition to have a group of seniors out to their home in May for an evening of plain and simple good fun. But it ' s unfortunate, Dr. Hughes says, that young scholars and their professors haven t worked out some way of getting the community together on a regular basis. ' On the subject of students and the great changes that have occurred at BC since his ar- rival, Dr. Hughes is very pleased. When I came here B.C. was a self-satisfied, insular four-year community college existing around strap-hangers and bologna sandwiches. We ' ve always had a wide spectrum of professorial talents, but the most exciting change has been in the student body. Everything else, building programs and the rest, are secondary and unimportant. These stu- dents are β€” pardon a cliche or two β€” impatient with mediocrity, more absorbent of diverse ex- periences, more conscious of themselves as carnal intellect, (more aware of the excitement of being young and healthy and at the same time, more excited with ideas), and are convinced that all the pat formulas of yesterday are gone. We professors have to learn to recognize their points of view or were dead. By his students he is most admired as the perfect scholar, professor, and friend. 67 Excellence in the field of education, as in any other field of endeavor, demands that the indi- vidual strive to improve, by continually reevaluat- ing himself and his work. In this respect, the School of Education at Boston College is indeed fortunate to have as a member of its faculty Sister Josephina, of the Sisters of St. Joseph, who has for years dedicated herself to this pursuit of excellence in the teaching profession. Sister ' s preparation for her role as a teacher began at Mount Saint Joseph Teachers College in Buffalo, New York. While there. Sister became involved not only in her studies as a social science major but in various extracurricular activities such as glee club and dramatics. I do have a little bit of the ham in me, Sister quips. At Boston College, she received a Master ' s Degree in ad- ministration and supervision and a Doctorate in psychology and measurement, writing her dis- sertation on the gifted child. Sister utilized her strong educational back- ground by becoming a classroom teacher, then supervisor of all schools in the Boston arch- diocese (over one hundred in all), and finally, teacher and counselor at B.C. ' s School of Educa- tion. She has been on the Boston College faculty since 1948, teaching a multitude of courses at both the graduate and undergraduate levels. This past year she conducted courses in Methods and Materials of Teaching in the Elementary School, Psychometrics, and also an elementary reading seminar. The fact that Sister Josephina has never been content with being only a good classroom teacher has long been realized by her peers and superiors. Recognizing her superior intellect and her deep concern for the philosophical and psychological aspects of her profession, they have awarded her various grants and research positions, confident that she would very capably further the aims of the profession. In 1961, Sister received Boston College ' s faculty fellowship. On this grant, she toured Eu- rope for the purpose of studying the Montessori method of education. After extensive research in ten different countries. Sister returned to estab- lish a modified Montessori classroom at Boston College which was in operation until 1964. As a result. Sister Josephina is now considered to be one of the foremost authorities on this method of learning. She was also the first member of the Boston College faculty to receive a Cooperative Research Grant from the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Through this, she performed an ex- perimental study of the Influence of the In- dividual Versus Group Instruction on Spatial Abilities in the Pre-school Child. In 1963, the Cambridge School of Business awarded her a citation for the preparation of teachers for public schools. That same year, she was also inducted as an honorary member of the Alpha and Omega Honor Society of Boston College. In 19 65, she received an honorary L.L.D. Degree from Regis College. In recent years. Sister ' s knowledge and experi- ence in the field of Education has become in- creasingly more renowned. Last year, she was elected to serve for three years on the executive board of the National Council of Teachers of Eng- lish. She performed her first official task last fall by attending their conference in Houston, Texas. Sister ' s extensive knowledge of the many and varied aspects of teaching has prompted her to write more than eighty articles for numerous pro- fessional publications. After much research on the teaching of spelling. Sister had published two spellers for grades two through eight β€” Word Power Through Spelling, and Spell Correctly. Although a teacher ' s record of professional achievements is of a great importance in evalua- ting her mark in the educational world, the per- sonal characteristics of the individual, her tastes, her outside interests, and the degree to which she pursues these, contribute in a very great degree to her success as a teacher. Sister Josephina scores high in this respect. It is difficult to understand exactly how she man- ages to participate in so many professional activi- ties so well, and still maintain an enthusiastic 68 interest in so many nonprofessional areas. One look into her office on the third floor of Campion Hall is enough to reveal Sister as a uniquely fasci- nating person as well as educator. From the cold businesslike office space allotted her, she has created a warm, friendly atmosphere with softly colored curtains, carpets. Hummel knick knacks, and pictures β€” all with a very feminine touch. My office is really my home, she says, so why not make it look like one! On the bulletin board outside the office, she has a display of Madonna paintings which have been famous for centuries. Sister possesses a deep appreciation for these artistic masterpieces and declares that she never misses an opportunity to visit the various mu- seums in her travels throughout the world. Sister feels that the cut system provides the students with a freedom they deserve. However, she does not consider this too great an issue in a student ' s education. A student will not usually cut unless there is a good reason. She believes that, in many instances, it is the professor ' s re- sponsibility to eliminate these reasons by con- ducting classes which the students find educa- tionally profitable. This new policy has created no problem in any of Sister ' s classes; she finds the incidents of cuts very low. Such liberal policies, including the permission of alcoholic beverages in the dormitories, are necessary freedoms, she claims. Within bounds, the individual must be given certain responsibil- ities and rights to exercise his free will Regarding the question of the admittance of women students to the College of Arts and Sci- ences, Sister was hesitant to answer. If a girl wishes to become a teacher. Sister maintains that her place is in the School of Education where specialized courses, direction, and philosophies are provided for her. Yet if a young woman wishes to enter a non-teaching field, she should have the right to become a candidate for a liberal arts de- gree. For any student, male or female, interested in the teaching profession, probably one of the most informative, enriching, and rewarding experi- ences is an association with Sister Josephina, a person who has truly achieved excellence as a student of education, as a teacher of education, and as a human being. When asked her opinion of the current changes being enacted at Boston College, Sister ' s answer reflected a great respect for today ' s students as conscientious, responsible individuals deserving of the best a college has to offer. The presence of this type of student, she believes entails a de- gree of change in administrative policy if Boston College is to make progress as an institution of higher learning claiming to prepare young men and women to become intelligent members of society. She considers the recently reduced number of required philosophy and theology courses bene- ficial to the student only if it provides a more well-rounded curriculum . Such modifications in the curriculum are necessary for the demands of today ' s world. However, she believes that these courses do have a definite place in one ' s educa- tional preparation, and that they should be in- tegrated into and applied to other courses and to life in general. 69 Miss Eileen Ryan Is a teacher in the School of Nursing; but unlike most teachers, she spends comparatively little time in the classroom. Lectur- ing is only a small β€” a very small β€” part of her job. Most of her time is spent in the clinic, the hospital, or β€” while here at the Heights β€” in re- search conferences. The one course with which Miss Ryan is asso- ciated is medical-surgical nursing, an intensive program for sophomore nursing students. It is de- signed to prepare them for comprehensive care of the adult patient. There are fourteen faculty members who rotate classroom instruction, at- tempting to integrate concepts like nutrition, in- terpersonal relations, use of drugs, and pathology. Miss Ryan ' s two blocks of classroom instruction are concerned with respiratory diseases and the care of the neurological patient; in addition to these lecture blocks, she can be called on through- out the year for spot lectures on related topics. The whole system is remarkably flexible since the blocks can be arranged in many orders. Because of this flexibility. Miss Ryan taught approximately only six class hours during the entire first semester. The medical-surgical experience is a powerful tool for combining the theoretical with the prac- tical aspects of nursing. Just as important as the classroom instruction is the two and one half days per week which the sophomores spend in actual clinical work over a period of thirty weeks. The hospital is the course ' s laboratory in which we manage experience through assignments to patients with specific nursing problems. Be- cause of the very low eight to one student-teacher ratio for this course, each student receives a great deal of personal attention. Miss Ryan describes the learning process of B.C. nurses this way: First, the students have worked at acquiring the fundamental nursing arts; for example, handling sterile equipment. During their first academic year, they have no association with actual patients. Medical-surgical nursing is their first chance for patient contact. There are approximately one hundred students who have completed her course this year. Miss Ryan comments on them: Some come here with very little idea what nursing really is, some with a vague idea. Almost all are beginners, with no previous hospital experience, although there are exceptions. These are the young women who must be introduced to the hard facts of nursing practice, and Miss Ryan helps make the introduc- tion a success. She believes that if there has been any definite change in the type of girls entering the School of Nursing during her five years at B.C., it is very difficult to pinpoint. Possibly they question more, are not so satisfied with accepting just what is given as being good. There is a growing trend to- wards intellectual curiosity. In particular, the liberal arts is an area which the students them- selves would like very much to see strengthened, and so would we. But she points out that a great amount of practical nursing work is always neces- sary, and with the lack of sufficient time, some- thing must be sacrificed. Still, the curricula com- mittee is continually examining the course curricula carefully. There is a great deal of change, especially when new clinical areas be- come available. 70 Such a change took place last year, when the School of Nursing made arrangements with St. Elizabeth ' s Hospital for some of the medical- surgical nursing students to do practical training there. Of each student ' s thirty weeks hospital work, twenty are spent at Boston City Hospital and the other ten at St. Elizabeths. The addition of St. E ' s makes possible a much wider scope of practical experience. For instance, there is much more ward service at Boston City than at St. Elizabeth ' s. Boston City has more accident cases and more cases with complications caused by alcohol. St. Elizabeth ' s is much smaller and handles more special cases. In short, the addition of another hospital allows the students to meet many more different problems and situations than before. Miss Ryan was in virtual retirement from the classroom for a large part of this past teaching year. In addition to her clinical work, she was de- voting a large amount of time to a nursing-faculty research project. The project, jointly conducted by the School of Nursing and the Sociology De- partment, is just completing the second of a pro- jected five year study. There have been nine members of the nursing school faculty meeting with Dr. Powell, a professor in the Sociology De- partment, for one full day every week. The proj- ect is examining the skills needed in nursing re- search; there are vast amounts of written material and data to which the ten researchers can refer, since sociologists have been carefully studying nurses for years. The aim of the project is to discover the theory or base of nursing, what goes into the nursing act which distinguishes it from what the other health professions do. Under very close analysis are the various approaches to the teaching of nursing which have been used in the past; for example, the care-cure-coordination schema presently defining what nursing is for instructional pur- poses. All the present definitions and concepts are being studied. Miss Ryan explains: This is a question that the profession itself is struggling with β€” How can we best educate nurses for our changing so- ciety? The results of the study may point the way to a changed system. Always, as also with the work of the School of Nursing Curricula Com- mittee, the question of most concern must be, Is there another way of teaching this? There is a related question; What differenti- ates the levels of nursing? All nurses take the same state board examination for their R.N. But not all of them have the same nursing education; their preparatory programs might be very different in length. For instance, Boston College provides four years of collegiate nursing education; St. Elizabeth ' s, from whose nursing school Miss Ryan herself graduated, has its own instruction, spread over a period of three years. The state boards make all nurses legally the same, but be- cause of the varying programs of nursing educa- tion, the question naturally arises, Should there be any difference in the hospital as to the func- tion of those with different training? This is a well-disputed question in the nursing profession at the present time; one which Miss Ryan and many other teachers and administrators are try- ing to answer. It is a knotty problem. With problems like these on her mind, in addi- tion to the daily cares of the teacher and the problems always besetting the nurse, it is some- thing of a slight miracle that Miss Ryan finds any extra time for trips to McHugh Forum: she is an enthusiastic Eagle hockey fan, with season ' s tick- ets for all the home games. But there are only twenty-four hours in each day, so she must miss many of those pre-Broadway theater openings she enjoys. Besides being a nurse and an instructor. Miss Ryan is a speculator as to the role of the School of Nursing. This is, after all, what that research project is all about. There are a lot of changes going on now. Students are asking themselves. Am I in the best program? ' We are asking our- selves. Are we offering the best program? ' There is great flexibility here and the Curricula Commit- tee is constantly re-examining the courses we offer. But we are constantly being pressured by society: more nurses are always needed. Still, we are concerned with quality, despite the pressure for quantity. 71 The office number is 33 1 . It ' s just a little place, like all the Carney faculty cubicles. They are all simple places for complex, busy people. But maybe number 331 is different. Thefading sun pushes through the half-opened windows and dully lights the bookcases care- lessly stacked with tomes of many tongues. Wooden shelves beneath the windows grudg- ingly reveal their unbound papers: a neat pile of mimeographed sheets bearing a Moscow date- line β€” not in Russian script, but in some Romance language; a manuscript, now showing signs of wear: and several issues of a Madrid literary magazine, a sort of Spanish Figaro. Strange things hang upon the dull walls β€” not blazing modern art, not the sedate visage of some long-forgotten Church Father. Enframed papers, not enframed pictures, dot the walls β€” here, a Peace Corps Training Program diploma; there a thank you letter from some Italian cardi- nal-archbishop and a Harvard scholarship award. The blue name plate on the door tells you that this is the office of Professor Ernest Siciliano. Dr. Siciliano has been here much longer than his cosy room m Carney, much longer. Since 1939 he has been a full-time teacher; from 1937 through 1939, he was a teaching fellow while pursuing M.A. and Ph.D. studies at Harvard. That was after an A.B.-M.A. student career at B.C. The extra Master ' s Degree from Harvard provided him with the opportunity to win a traveling scholarship for study in Spain. He won the prize all right, but Generalissimo Franco was busy winning a bigger prize. So, the traveling schol- arship led to no travel. Professor Siciliano teaches Spanish. He also teaches about Spanish life, literature, and his- tory. There is the elementary course, in the basic 31-32 class. But not just anyone takes Sp. 31- 72 32. It is elementary, but exclusive β€” designed es- pecially for modern-language majors who want a Spanish background in two not so easy lessons. At present, in a rather informal approach to grammar, fifteen dedicated beginners are learn- ing the 700 active vocabulary words, and even conversing a little in Spanish. This course, after all, is conversation-oriented, audio-lingually ap- proached, and . . . intensive. The students use an introductory text, just recently published, by one Ernest Siciliano. Maybe soon they will start read- ing and discussing in Spanish those mimeo- graphed newspaper and magazine articles of cur- rent interest. There is also the advanced undergraduate course entitled Literature of the Golden Age. It is a survey of sixteenth and seventeenth cen- tury Spanish literature conducted in Spanish. Its topic is the historical and cultural Golden Age, seen through the lives and writings of her most precocious children, Cervantes and Calderon. The Doctor does not like to take himself or his material too seriously. Merely to provide infor- mation is something less than intellectually in- spiring; it must be palatable. Informal discussions let us have a little fun in the classroom. Humor does have a place. In his two graduate school courses. Dr. Sicili- ano tries to give his students a deeper insight into Spanish literature through a most detailed study. His Cervantes course examines Cervantes the man, hisworkin general, and his great master- piece in particular. Classroom discussions are centered about the various interpretations of Don Quixote. The course on Calderon and the Auto Sacramental is very much like the Cervantes study, with give and take discussions on the works themselves and the various interpreta- tions, followed by analysis of the literary tech- nique of the dramatist. Professor Siciliano ' s introductory course is only in its second year as an intensive study for language majors. Except for the stronger motiva- tion of these students he has seen very few dif- ferences among Spanish students through the years. The students are slightly better prepared in oral facility when they come to us from high school, but over all, no better. Something has to be sacrificed if the strictly oral approach is used, and that something is verb forms, grammar and so forth. Perhaps the classes are starting to be better controlled, but this could easily be the re- sult of having only the better prepared and per- haps more ambitious language majors. As for his advanced and graduate students, the Professor sees no difference at all. The students come and go, only the teachers and the language remain much the same. Sometimes there is a shift in the teaching method; there might be more language labs, or mimeographed hand-outs, but the aim of the teaching game is ever the same, proficiency and literacy. There are always a few extra chores waiting for the industrious faculty member. In 1964 Dr. Siciliano directed the Spanish language training for fifty-two Peace Corps students here at B.C. He conducted intensive β€” three hours per day through four months β€” instruction and drill les- sons, as the volunteers prepared themselves for a community development project in Peru. There was one surprising result of the program. When it was all over the graduating students voted to give not just fifty-two but fifty-three training di- plomas. The fifty-third went to their language instructor. Then there was the little chore way back in 1960. The Archbishop of Milan wanted to learn to speak some English. He learned quite a bit from an introductory course which included tapes planned and recorded by Siciliano. Back and forth, English dialogue and Italian instruction and finally, the then Cardinal Montini β€” now Pope Paul VI β€” acquired a basic speaking facility. For which effort, he wrote the letter expressing his gratitude that now hangs in Carney. In his spare time, there are always Spanish short stories to write. Earlier this year the pro- fessor had his first submission to a leading Ma- drid literary magazine published. He plans to sub- mit more of his work; until then, he is scouring the latest Spanish writing for ideas which could be developed. Carney 331 tells you a lot about its occupant β€” an easy resting place with room to chat at lei- sure with a man who tries not to take himself or his work too seriously. That is his style β€” the quiet, mellow attitude he exhibits, which never completely conceals his scholarship. Only close observation reveals signs of the little extras upon which he works β€” signs like the Peace Corps di- ploma, or the Spanish literary magazines. You might have a talk with the graying little man, or even take a quick peek inside his green bookbag, if you can get it off his shoulder. 73 The college student of today is continually ex- hibiting initiative, interest, and self-direction. The most beneficial classroom procedure for this type of person is one providing a high level of group participation and discussion with the teacher el- evated from the role of lecturer to that of guide and stimulator, claims Dr. John F. Travers Jr., the Boston College School of Education ' s new Acting Associate Dean This philosophy of the learning process is by no means new Yet until recently, it was rarely seen in American colleges and universities. The lecture method is an institution in the field of ed- ucation and by merit of that fact, it is difficult to modify or replace. Withthe repeated studies and reports of men such as Dr. Travers however, edu- cational leaders are realizing the need for new classroom methods that will effectively bring out the best in each student. For the most part, they are impressed by the success of seminar-type classes. Dr. Travers states that he tries never to lecture, but rather to lead and guide his class in discus- sions. His approach to teaching is through, not at the student. This is a fact that any of his students will readily verify. Those in his geography and psychology classes were pleased with the nu- merous opportunities he offered for self-expres- sion. Regardless of whether or not his own opinions coincided with theirs, he listened, gave thought to, and respected their points of view At the start of each period, they immediately real- ized that the success of the class depended upon them. His classes, they claim, are immensely stimulating . One senior elementary major who was in Dr. Travers ' class two years ago com- mented, His classes were real. Everything he said he backed up with his own fascinating ex- periences. He ' s dynamic and personal, ex- claimed a junior girl. He never forgets anyone ' s name. Most students agreed that his tests were difficult but very fair The tests were obviously not designed to catch you but to gain an accurate estimation of how well you had learned to think about the subjects covered in class, one girl declared. Throughout his career. Dr. Travers has been extremely interested in the philosophy and psy- chology of the learning process, and has devoted a large part of his time to research in these fields. His first book. Learning: Analysis and Application was concerned chiefly with this subject. Funda- mentals in Educational Psychology, Dr. Travers ' latest and as yet unpublished work, pursues the subject further, exploring its more practical appli- cations Dr. Travers, a lifetime resident of Arlington, Massachusetts, is a graduate of Boston College High School and Boston College where he earned a Bachelor ' s Degree in biology, a Master ' s De- gree in education and a Doctoral Degree in edu- cational psychology His doctoral thesis dealt with a study of juvenile delinquency. Before coming to Boston College, Dr. Travers taught for a few years in the Jamaica Plain-Rox- bury area. During his first years at Boston Col- lege, he taught primarily geography, educational psychology, and methods courses. His present position as Acting Associate Dean of Education encompasses a variety of duties ranging from ad- ministrative work to the more unofficial confer- ences with students. He does not like to consider himself an advisor, since he feels that he unfortu- nately does not have the time to devote to so de- manding an area: but many students after a fif- teen minute talk, leave his office encouraged by a greater confidence in their own abilities. During the first semester, Dr. Travers was on sabbatical. Under this program he spent a semes- ter off campus dedicated to research and publica- tion. He did most of his work at his home in Ar- lington. He, his wife, and their four children enjoyed this added time together, but his children, all un- der ten years of age, found it difficult to under- stand why their father was always at home studying. This is not the whole story, however. A man with Dr Travers ' great interest in psychology and concern with practicality would find it impossible to divorce himself completely from the concrete situation Dr. Travers was on campus at least two days every week attending conferences, speaking at assemblies, and trying to create as close a re- lationship as possible with the students, who are his ultimate concern. He will frequently greet for- mer students who pass by his office by name and invite them in for a chat. They, in turn, are often amazed at the details he remembers about them and his interest in their current activities The atmosphere of Dr. Travers ' office reflects well his strong family ties and his concern for close, personal contacts. On the left wall he has on display his children ' s school drawings. Pic- tures of his family are arrayed on his desk. He is very proud of the accomplishments of his chil- dren. His daughter, he claims, at ten years of age, is a poet It seems to be this encouraging, fatherly attitude combined with his willingness to be a classroom discussion leader rather than lecturer, that makes Dr Travers one of the most apprecia- ted and best loved teachers m the School of Ed- ucation During the summer, Dr. Travers participates m a Boston College graduate program at Wellesley High School. This is essentially an internship pro- gram which selects qualified graduates of four year colleges and universities who are interested in teaching yet possess no background in student teaching or specialized education courses. At Wellesley High School, they receive instruction and teaching experience under the direction of Dr Travers and the rest of the staff. Due to the great intellectual change he has witnessed in students since his undergraduate days, Dr Travers is in favor of corresponding changes taking place in the university ' s educa- tional policy. The reduction in philosophy and theology requirements he believes was neces- sary With the increased demand for specializa- tion and subsequent requirements for degrees beyond the Bachelor ' s level, a student needs a broad background in all subjects to qualify for graaudte school Dr. Travers ' great confidence in the students of today and his respect for their earnestness in academic affairs leads him to believe the new class cutting policy significantly beneficial He maintains that the student should be allowed to accept responsibility; he need not be accountable to a professor for his absence from classes. He states, I have noted littte difference in class at- tendance, anyhow. If there had been a significant drop in some classes, I believe it ' s most likely the fault of the teacher. I like the idea It keeps us on our toes. The question of more liberal policies in the dormitory situation he feels is dependent upon individual student reactions to the restriction lift- ing If the privileges are not flagrantly abused, and a certain amount of order is maintained, this new freedom is a good idea. It had been said that Greatness is not in being strong, but in the right use of strength; and strength is not used rightly when it serves only to carry a man above his fellows for his own solitary glory. He is the greatest whose strength carries up the most hearts by the attraction of his own Intellect alone will never define the great teacher A love of learning combined with a love and un- derstanding of mankind are together the deter- mining factors According to this definition. Dr. John Travers is truly on the road to greatness. 75 Physics is a science that deals with matter and energy and their interactions in the fields of mechanics, acoustics, optics, heat, electricity, magnetism, radiation, atomic structure, and nu- clear phenomena. At Boston College, the De- partment of Physics offers a major with a bal- anced program of classical and modern Physics. The sequence of courses, integrated with the ac- companying courses in mathematics, aims pri- marily at preparing the gifted student for gradu- ate study in Physics. At the same time, it endeavors to communicate to the student the basic theoret- ical and experimental techniques requisite for employment and advancement as a professional physicist. Currently in charge of the department is the man who has been Acting Chairman for the last several years, the very congenial and popu- lar Professor Frederick E. White. A native of Peabody, Massachusetts, Doctor White received his basic education in the Beverly School System. After earning his Bachelor of Arts Degree in mathematics at Boston University, he attended Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, from which he was awarded his Master of Science and Doctor of Philosophy De- grees in physics. Professor White joined the Bos- ton College faculty in 1936, and he and his wife presently reside in Beverly. This past year. Doctor White taught two courses to sophomore physics majors in the College of Arts and Sciences. These were Mechanics II, a course which summarized the mechanics of par- 76 tides, systems, and rigid bodies while discussing moving coordinate systems and the equations of Lagrange and Hamilton: and Electricity and Magnetism 11 which was described in the col- lege bulletin as a thorough discussion of electric and magnetic fields in empty space and in ma- terial media, culminating in Maxwell ' s equations and the propagation of electromagnetic radia- tion. Required of all majors in their second year, both courses were designed to provide the nec- essary background for a more detailed study of the science. Under the leadership of this disarming gentle- man, the Physics Department at Boston College had been characterized by sweeping change. The most obvious indication of this fact was the com- pletion of Higgins Hall last year; but probably even more important to the student, was the total reorganization of the physics program. As a result of the recent self-study conducted by the College of Arts and Sciences, and in recognition of the better preparation of the incoming freshmen, it was decided to teach the general physics course in the first year and Doctor White ' s two compul- sory courses, in addition to two semesters of chemistry, in the second. In effect, this earlier completion of the basic courses means that it is now possible for the juniors and seniors to fulfill their yearly twelve credit requirement by electing more courses than was previously possible. Paralleling the revisions within the department have been changes in the structure of the courses themselves Almost universally, the topics dis- cussed are more advanced than was formerly the case, and some courses actually deal with totally different subject matter. As a result, the eighteen senior physics majors and the eighty to one hun- dred undergraduate majors have better, more comprehensive electives from which to choose. Returning to the subject of Higgins Hall, Doc- tor White naturally regards its completion as a milestone in the development of the sciences at Boston College β€” indeed, as the beginning of a new era. The fact that the Physics Department now has more than twice as much space as be- fore, more than sixty thousand square feet as op- posed to the twenty-five thousand it occupied in Devlin, means that intellectual as well as phys- ical expansion should become increasingly more evident within the next few years. Professor White looks forward to the aadition of many fine professors to complement the department ' s al- ready excellent faculty. This strengthening of the teaching staff, together with the greater auton- omy the department had enjoyed since the com- pletion of the Arts and Sciences self-study, should consequently produce an influx of topnotch physics students. Thus, at the graduate as well as the undergraduate levels, the presence of Higgins Hall will do much to enhance the future of the department. If there is one asset which Professor White possesses, both as an instructor and as an admin- istrator, it is orderliness. This phenomenal ability to have absolutely everything under control is clearly evident in everything the Professor does. Within memory. Doctor White has never been late for class. Then too, he is always extremely well prepared, both in delivering his daily lectures and in answering any questions his students may have. For their benefit, he always informs them of the class average, its mean, and their percentile rankings on any test, and is so thorough as to bring a wire basket to class with him whenever there are numerous homework assignments to collect. Most amazing of all though, is Doctor White ' s treatment of the seniors ' graduate school applications. At times burdened with seven or eight of these lengthy forms from a single individ- ual, he nevertheless manages to complete and forward every one of them within two or three days of their reception. Matter, energy, and or- derliness are therefore some of the ingredients that make up the life of Professor Frederick E. White. Once off campus. Doctor White has numerous scholarly interests and activities with which to occupy his time. He is a member of a large num- ber of honorary and scientific societies including Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Pi Sigma, the national physics honor society. In addition, his work has been published in the American Journal of Physics, and he is currently an assistant editor of the Jour- nal of the Acoustical Society of America in which capacity he reviews the latest books published in this field. Acoustics has always been one of Doctor White ' s primary interests; it might even be called his hobby. Because of his knowledge in this area, he was stationed at Duke University for three years during World War II. Working with a num- ber of other scientists, he conducted research un- der the direction of the National Defense Re- search Committee in affiliation with the Army ' s base at Fort Bragg. The objective of the program was to devise new methods for detecting and pinpointing enemy artillery by means of acousti- cal devices. Today he is still interested in the field, which is evidenced by his willingness to discuss the acoustical problems encountered in any building, even Philharmonic Hall at the Lin- coln Center. One other notable achievement of Professor White was the television program recently con- ducted over WGBH-TV, Boston ' s educational station. Taped two years ago in conjunction with Harvard University, the program consisted of a series of lectures entitled, Physics III which was primarily devoted to the Polaris missile pro- gram and the physical principles involved. Har- vard students could receive credit for this course by watching Doctor White on Tuesday nights and subsequently doing related work in the classroom. As an administrator. Professor White has done much to strengthen both the fine undergraduate and the relatively new doctoral programs; as a teacher, he is remarkably lucid and informative; and as an advisor, he is always willing to take time from his very demanding schedule to offer help and advice to his students in the form of constructive criticism. For all these reasons then, Boston College is indeed fortunate to have on its faculty a man of the caliber of Doctor Frederick E.White He who knows nothing, loves nothing. He who can do nothing understands nothing. He who understands nothing is worthless. But he who understands also loves, notices, sees . . Paracelsus 78 β€’ ' ' ' ' ' f S?, ' wmi t k 80 81 82 83 84 -;β–  ' %- 85 86 87 88 89 90 HPP SI BPBP ' BWBf 91 v 92 93 94 95 96 r rBf n BMCTC fc. m-. j - r- ...β–  . . β– β– β–  β–  pB Β . β€’ tfeflHI i- ' Β«. 3 F 97 98 99 ,J.. . ' Β«- , 100 101 r r 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 Ill 112 i _ - H_ 1 1 Β« Β£, M tM i ' 1 114 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 activities i -i ' .- ' ' -M: class officers A S L to R. George Didden, Sec; William Durkin, Jr., Pies.; David T. Gay, V. Pres.; missing: Paul J. L. Hughes, Treas. C.B.A. L. to R. Dennis J. Reardon, Treas.; William E. Bates, Sec; William J. Zak, Pres.; Robert K. Doherty, V. Pres. 12-4 Education L. to R. Thomas Dillon, Pros.; Sal Mucci, Treas.; Sandi Polman. Sec; Bill Gilmore, V. Pres. Nursing L to R. Carol Diana, Sec: Pat Anton, Treas.: Joanne Folts, V. Pres.: Kathryn Gallagher, Pres. 125 Student government on the Boston College campus is no simple affair. The task of heading the highly complex organ belongs to the Campus Council which coordinates the activities of the four Student Senates and the four Interclass Councils, not to mention the Evening School Senate, the resident councils, and the newly established Commuters ' Council. The Campus Council, now in its eighth year, controls many phases of University life. To it is relegated the re- sponsibility of evaluating and approving campus events and campus organizations β€” both old and new. This year ' s Council continued in the traditional position as chief gov- erning body, but relegated sponsorship of some social events to other campus organizations. As the University has grown, so have the Council ' s problems. In the course of many late meetings, it con- ducted a self-study to work out changes in its constitu- tion, election procedures, and structure. This year it found it necessary to appoint various committees and sub-com- mittees to investigate the areas which come under its sway. It also helped to organize the Super Committee , the 126 campus-wide self-study program which probed all areas of the student ' s relation to the University, by working in conjunction with the Student Personnel Office. It also worked very clos ely with its advisor, Mr. J. Mclntyre, con- cerning such problems as the tuition increase, budgeting, and proposed changes in the academic calendar. Direct contact with the student body is maintained by the Student Senates in the individual schools. In the College of Arts and Sciences, the Senate con- cerns itself primarily with the academic phase of the stu- dent ' s collegiate career: so important is this role, that a totally distinct slate of officers deals with the school ' s social functions. Its Freshman Assistance Program has provided the opportunity for closer contact between new students and their junior and senior advisors: its tutorial service has functioned as an aid to the entire student population. The first A S Course Evaluation and Critique was published in the spring to aid students in the election of courses for the next academic year. This year, the Sen- ate also concerned itself with such matters as the pro- posed change in the academic calendar and the admis- sion of women to the A S student body. 127 The College of Business Administration endeavors through its Senate to honor professional businessmen and the ideals which they personify. Having published their own Course Critique this year, they also began a self-study program with the intention of achieving greater unity of action and purpose. Communication between the students and their representatives was aided by the in- creased role of the section representatives. The school ' s business-oriented clubs were also re-evaluated in the in- terest of student welfare. A movement was also initiated which, if effected, would place more power in the hands of the student body. And for the first time, the annual awards programs of the Senate and the business fraterni- ties were combined into a school-wide Senior Awards Banquet which honored the outstanding members of the graduating class. This year, the School of Education Senate made sev- eral advances. Also emphasizing greater communication between the student and the governing body, the Senate clarified the role of the section representatives and pro- vided for direct election by the student body of next years Interclass Council representatives. It also reorgan- 128 ized its tutoring program. Two major advances were made with the initiation of a lecture series and the selec- tion of two students to represent the voice of the stu- dents in the school ' s Educational Policies Commission. The Women ' s Council represents the School of Educa- tion ' s women. Serving as an advisory board to Dean of Women, Dr. Mary Kinnane, this year it again sponsored a lecture series which focused on the role of the woman. The group also held its annual Mother and Daughter Fashion Show. The Senate in the School of Nursing serves as a unify- ing force in the face of the nurses somewhat abnormal hospital schedules. The Senate is concerned with the social and spiritual aspects of the nurses ' lives as well as the intellectual, and provides an effective Mason between the students and the administration. This year the graduate nurses and the basic nursing students worked as a group to make the graduate nurses an integral part of the University community. Thus, an R.N. Club was formed. Geared to the graduate nurses ' special professional interests, it helps to bind the group together. 129 The School of Nursing Dormitory Council followed much the same program and co-sponsored several events with the other two resident councils. Their major concern this year was the perfection of the senior-prefect system and the establishment of Masses at Greycliff for the student nurses. The Commuters ' Council is an organization which fills a long existing gap on the B.C. campus. Through its ef- forts, the commuting student has been able to participate more in University life. The problems of the day student have been studied and presented to the administration; social and educational activities have been sponsored The Senate ' s major activities for the year were the an- nual Winter Whirl and the Intercollegiate Council of Nurs- ing Day when students discussed the problems and prac- tices of today ' s nurses. The year ' s climax was a testimo- nial dinner held in March for their advisor. Reverend Edward J. Gorman, S.J. The fact that it is separated from the rest of the under- graduate community has not hindered the activity of the Evening College Senate. This year it continued the tradi- tional Halloween and Christmas parties. Once again, food baskets were distributed in order to enliven the holiday season for needy area families. Its activities were brought 130 to a close by the Senior Dinner Dance and the production of Fiorello which was staged in the early spring. The Interclass Councils are ordinarily composed of the elected officers of the four schools. This year, however, the A S and Education Senates chose to delegate these p osltions to the section representatives. The Councils interest themselves mainly with the social life of Boston College. The Senior Interclass Council worked throughout the year to organize Senior Week activities. This event, as well as the planning of Homecoming 66, formed the bulk of its activities. The resident councils worked closer together this year than ever before. The Council of Resident Men continued to sponsor its Orientation Week activities and mixers. They were also responsible for Winter Weekend, and this year also or- ganized a Resident Weekend. Their major claims to fame are the establishment of our coffeehouse. Middle Earth, and the granting of liquor privileges to dorm students of legal age. The School of Education Dormitory Council made re- markable strides by becoming a truly active organization 131 band Of all the student groups which claim to demonstrate true B.C. spirit, one group is heard above all the rest, and justly so β€” the Boston College Eagles Band. No matter what the outcome of any sporting event, the band is al- ways there For Boston. The precision marching of this fine unit at football games, its notorious impromptu chants and swinging solos at basketball and hockey events, are always a source of entertainment to both the athletes and the spectators. 132 In the past few years, the band has displayed its talents to even larger audiences while marching in such events as the local Columbus Day Parade and the St. Patrick ' s Day Parade in New York City. This year ' s group, in addi- tion to its usual duties, presented a Christmas Concert in the Lobby of McElroy Commons. The Boston College Eagles Band actually consists of four bands: Marching, Concert, Pep, and Dance. The lar- gest of these is the famous Eagles Marching Band which includes a drum major, a color guard, and a lovely major- ette. The newest member is the Eagles of Sound which performs at formal and semi-formal affairs throughout the year. Under the direction of Mr. Peter C. Siragusa, our versa- tile musicians contribute many hours to making collegiate life at B.C. the most high-spirited in the area. IP BOSTON nCOLLEGE Β£ ' BANE 133 chorale One of the most vital contributors to the cultural revo- lution at Boston College is the University Chorale. Under the direction of Dr. C. Alexander Peloquin, a man of many musical dreams and deeds, the Chorale presents the Uni- versity with a series of annual concerts. Concerts of special interest from the immediate past include the performances of Vivaldi ' s Gloria. Bach ' s Magnificat in D, Benjamin Britten ' s Saint Nicholas can- tata, and Carl Orff ' s Carmina Burana. The highlight of University Chorale in concert. Chorale officers, 1967 134 the last year ' s concert season was a performance of Pou- lenc ' s Gloria, featuring Miss Eileen Farrell as guest solo- ist. Another notable occasion was the performance, by a group of men from the University Chorale, of the Festival Mass for the Quadricentennial Celebration of St. Augus- tine, Florida. The Mass and other works for the celebra- tion were composed by Dr. Peloquin. This year, the Christmas Concert on December 4, 1966, included Bach ' s Cantata No. 140. and Part I of Handel ' s Messiah. The concert came to a close with the rousing Hallelujah Chorus. Following last year ' s precedent, the Chorale brought the grand opera to Boston College by presenting Bizet ' s Carmen in a concert performance with the renowned soloist. Miss Jean Madeira, and Nicholas di Virgilio of the Metropolitan Opera Company. To round out the year ' s performances, a program of American music was presented on May 6, 1967 for the annual Home Concert. 135 dramatic society In its 101st season, the Boston College Dramatics Society continued to present plays of artistic merit, designed to provide its members with an opportunity for creative expression and the development of theatrical skills. Under the leadership of its Executive Council and the direction of its faculty advisors. Dr. J. Paul Marcoux and Reverend Joseph Larkin, S.J., the Society began the year with a fine production of Christopher Fry ' s The Lady ' s Not For Burning. Directed by Dr. Marcoux, the play, situated by Fry in the 15th century, either more or less exactly, treated, sometimes humorously. New England ' s attitude during its witch-trial days. 136 Immediately following this initial production, rehears- als began for the extremely successful musical comedy by Rick Besoyan, Little Mary Sunshine. Although Little Mary was the first musical attempted by the Dramatics Society, it was perhaps the most professional theatrical event ever presented on the B.C. campus. This commen- dation was duly justified in light of the raves it received from B.C. audiences and the sell-out crowds at the War Memorial Auditorium during the annual Boston Arts Fes- tival, Winterfest. In March the Society once again entertained audiences in the Campion Hall Auditorium. On this occasion, a night of student-directed one act plays including Jean Anouilh ' s Cecile, The Undertakers by John Hawes, and a sequence of scenes from the Thurber Carnival, reaffirmed the vari- ety of talents that exist within the Society ' s membership. As the finale of its 1 01 st season, the D.S. presented an evening of Eugene lonesco: The Lesson, and The Chairs. The quality of this year ' s productions are most assuredly an indication that an impressive year of dramatic enter- tainment will follow this most successful 66-67 season. 137 fraternities The Delta Eta chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi, the first pro- fessional business fraternity in America, was established at B.C. in 1955. Its professional activities include tours of manufacturing plants and lectures on various business topics. For the benefit of the entire student body, it has sponsored surveys of major fields, electives, and graduate schools as well as an annual marriage lecture series. Upon graduation, the brothers are eligible to join alumni chapters which exist throughout the United States. Delta Kappa at B.C., a member of the International Fraternity of Delta Sigma Pi, is a professional commerce 138 and business administration fraternity dedicated to broadening its members ' perspective of the business world. It augments the core curriculum of the business student, attempting to bring him closer to the actualiza- tion of his goals. Instituted at B.C. in 1966, Omega Alpha Psi seeks to enlighten its members regarding the opportunities in the business world that are available to the college graduate. Thus, it provides its members with a series of programs designed to offer assistance in choosing a field of con- centration and insights into the problems encountered by the novice in the business world. The B.C. chapter of Pi Sigma Epsilon was established in 1966 for those interested in the advancement of mar- keting, sales management, and selling as a profession. It attempts to stimulate in its members an interest in the most recent professional methods of selling and instill in them the highest possible ethical business standards. 139 bellarmine With the steadily increasing number of Boston College undergraduates contemplating political or legal careers in recent years, the Robert Bellarmine Law and Govern- ment Academy saw it necessary to improve both the quantity and quality of its service. In addition to their regular sponsorship of professional speakers, this year they also held a student forum. Comprised of eight stu- dents representing five major law schools, its purpose was to acquaint B.C. students with the demands of law school. Similar services including a newsletter and a li- brary of graduate school bulletins have also been insti- tuted by the Academy in its endeavor to serve the student. 140 1966-67 spelled success for the Fulton Debating So- ciety which is coached by Mr. James J. Linger and di- rected by Dr. John H . Lawton. First semester, the varsity earned fifth place at the Brandeis University Tournament, and finished ninth at the Georgetown Tournament. Second semester saw the team rise to fifth place in the Harvard University National Invitational Tournament, the largest meet of the year. The New England-New York Regional Tournament, the Na- tional Championships, and the Tournament of Champions, to which B.C. was the first invited, will finish the year. fulton 4(|B, ' - 141 gold key This year marked the thirtieth anniversary of the Gold Key Society, the University-wide service organization. Founded on October 12, 1937 under the direction of Mr. John Gately and formally organized the following year under the leadership of Reverend Joseph Maxwell, S.J. the Gold Key has grown from a band of ten men to its present enrollment of 450 members. Throughout the group ' s history, its students have exemplified the bond of unity which is embodied in its motto of Service and Sacrifice . In service to the University and the community, the 142 Key assists in the B.C. sponsored Public Affairs Forum, Citizens ' Seminars, Humanities Series Lectures, concerts, and athletic events. Its members also work with the underprivileged children at the Nazareth Child Center in Brookline, Massachusetts. This year ' s Society made tremendous strides in the area of the Key ' s government. Vast internal transition occurred with the strengthening of the Board of Gover- nors, increased legislative power for the Senior Senate, and the formation of a House of Representatives for undergraduate members. Senior Keyholders also assisted and supported other campus organizations by serving on the various com- mittees established for the evaluation and improvement of student life. The Society ' s fraternal aspect is fostered by a variety of intramural athletic, social, and religious events. To further strengthen the fraternal ties among its members, this year the Gold Key Senate established the Gold Key Scholar- ship in memory of David Spangler, whose life exemplified the ideals of the society. The best description of the Gold Key Society is β€” an organization dedicated to Alma Mater and community which engenders the Boston College spirit of excellence. Faculty Advisor, Robert T. Ferrick S.J. 143 honor societies Ever to Excel is the familiar Boston College motto and the achievement of this goal in the academic sphere is recognized on the Heights by the existence of several exclusive honor societies. Each year those students who have demonstrated the highest level of academic per- formance and service to the University are accepted into one of these elite groups. Though membership require- ments for each may differ, scholastic excellence is com- mon to all. There has been a Boston College chapter of Alpha Sig- ki y . a 144 ma Nu, the national Jesuit honor society, since 1939. Organized to honor those students who have distin- guished themselves in scholarship, loyalty, and service to the University, the society is composed of male under- graduates from the colleges of Arts and Sciences, Busi- ness Administration, and Education. In addition, five of the University ' s eleven colleges have their own special honor societies. The school of Education recognizes those students who have achieved both academic and professional distinction during their Scholars of the College Cross Crown 145 first three years at Boston College by electing them to its Alpha and Omega Society. Similarly, seniors in the School of Nursing who have achieved high scholastic standing and have been notably active in University life are rewarded for their efforts by being appointed to the Siena Society. The Mater Spei Society is its counterpart in the Graduate School of Nursing. Membership in Beta Gamma Sigma, the only scholastic honor society recog- nized by the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business, is the highest academic honor that can be attained by an undergraduate in the College of Business Administration. Finally, Dean ' s List students in the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences who have distinguished them- selves in extracurricular activities are appointed to its Order of the Cross and Crown. Each year, the College of Arts and Sciences also hon- ors several students who have demonstrated the highest level of academic ability, intellectual maturity, and scholarly achievement by appointing them Scholars of the College. Under the guidance of specially selected tu- Z CZ} m Wt, ' ? ' - .- , 146 tors, these scholars attend class at their own discretion, determine their own programs of study, and undertake the writing of research theses which are presented to the University at graduation. Finally, there exists at the University Omicron Delta Epsilon, a chapter of the national honor society in Eco- nomics and Sigma Pi Sigma, its counterpart in the field of Physics. Thus, all of these societies serve as a constant reminder of that excellence which is the goal of the Boston College student. 147 k. of c. The B.C. Council of the Knights of Columbus is a Cath- olic fraternal organization whose prinnary aim is spiritual and social service to the University and the community. Their numerous services include co-sponsorship of the University blood drives, teaching C.C.D. classes, and serving as counselors at the Newton Boys ' Club, as well as campus-wide lectures on topics of especial interest to the modern college student. As a fraternal society the Council holds an annual Communion Breakfast and is a member of the K. of C. College Council Coordination Committee. 148 The Boston College International Club, now in its fifth year of campus activity, is still in its embryonic stages. Its present membership numbers nearly one hundred Pri- marily a social organization, its chief purpose is the pro- motion of better understanding between the American students and the foreign students on the B.C. campus. In attempting to realize this objective, the club ' s social activities have included informal panel discussions, parties, and events such as this year ' s African Night In all its functions, the club ' s officers strive to place Ameri- can-foreign student relations on a more meaningful per- sonal basis. international club Club president outlines plans. International Club In session. 149 rod and gun club ricci The aim of the Ricci Mathematics Academy is to ac- quaint its members with the most significant develop- ments in the ever expanding world of mathematics. In this respect, in addition to its other mathematically ori- ented activities, its advisor, Reverend Stanley Bezuska, S.J., the recipient of many substantial grants established for the purpose of revamping mathematical instruction in the secondary schools, has introduced members to new instructional methods in the field. The Academy also sponsors several bridge, whist, and chess tournaments during the course of the year. Annual Ricci Math Academy Chess Tournament. Check. 150 The Mendel Club serves to acquaint future members of the medical profession with various aspects of develop- ment in the current medical scene. Guest speakers are brought to campus to address the membership. This year, the addition of Nursing students to the organization added interest and spurred attendance. The social high- light of the year was the annual dinner dance. In 1967, the Mendel Club was directed by President Edward Cottle, Vice-President David Burns, Secretary Richard Skoblar, and Treasurer Richard Stanton. mendel club lendel Club Officers. fyr y 151 lay apostolate Going Out to All Nations has been the practical motto of the Boston College Lay Apostolate program since its inception ten years ago. Since that time, paper plans have become operating realities, as B.C. under- graduates have sponsored their classmates and alumni in their mission to the farthest regions of the earth. They represent us in Jamaica, performing teaching and nursing tasks throughout its villages and towns, and in Iraq, teaching a variety of subjects in the educational institutions of its ancient cities. They have tutored Eng- lish to foreign peoples in the South Pacific, Japan, and 152 the Philippines. The volunteers serve as nurses in Mexico, Korea, Zambia, and Alaska. On the home front, many of our present students have participated in the summer program in Kansas City, Mis- souri where they worked in the underdeveloped areas of the city, teaching both children and adults, building, and aiding the residents to complete projects that they had already begun themselves. Some students lived with the families and count the days spent with them as the most memorable of their lives β€” an occasion which promised lifelong friendships. In addition to the sense of accomplishment that is theirs, the volunteers realize that this experience has af- forded them the opportunity to discuss their ideas and way of life with people of diverse backgrounds. The re- sult of such associations has been a better understanding of themselves in relation to the world community. Theirs is a spreading of Christianity by living Christ β€” through word and action, a helping hand, an understand- ing ear. It is a Christianity that encourages others to share its beliefs and conduct by its concern for concrete human problems ratherthan abstract intellectual exercises. 153 political clubs The major purpose of all B.C. political clubs is to stimu- late interest in political affairs. The Young Democrats Club and the Young Republicans Club try to inspire party ideals and mold responsible future party members, while Y.A.F. and the A.D.A try to provide open discussion of conservative and liberal opinions. Young Democrats Officers. Checking the voting list. 154 The first semester saw much activity on the part of the two partisan clubs. After vigorous early membership drives, both sponsored speeches by state-wide candi- dates and provided opportunities for their members to participate in the actual campaigning. The Young Repub- licans were far more successful than the Young Demo- crats in both respects, their two real triumphs being a speech-reception visit by Governor Voipe and an elec- tion night party at the Hotel Somerset. During the fall semester, little was heard of either the ADA or the YAF, which underwent a constant change of command. During the second term, the Young Republicans stepped into a role not formerly associated with the po- litical club ' s activity. In addition to their efforts to stir in- dividual thought through the work of a special Policy Committee, they became strongly involved in specific University affairs. For example, the conducted a campus- wide SDS poll and laid plans for a new student magazine. Also during the second semester, the B.C. YAF chapter began to show definite signs of life as they sponsored a book sale and a Vietnam teach-in. The ADA, however, re- mained in a state of suspended inactivity. Senator Brooke Speaks at Young Republicans Forum. 155 the heights Since its founding in 1919. The Heights, the under- graduate newspaper, has served Boston College by re- porting and commenting upon events occurring within or relating to the members of a Christian intellectual com- munity. During the last four years, University life at Boston Col- lege has to a large degree shed much of its intellectual and institutional dross in the process of realizing what a Catholic university should and possibly can be. It is times like these, times of institutional awakening, that make working on a collegiate newspaper interesting. ChHJlwiWs ' h,. U.S. AGGRESSORS GET OUT OF SOUTH I : D ' - . T ONCE: .jr. a. j ' 156 Throughout Boston College ' s awakening and struggle for university legitimacy. The Heights has established it- self as the representative of student opinion favoring the ideals and goals endemic to a true university. From 1 963 to 1967, in incidents like the Michaud case (perhaps our first experience with real politik at Boston College), the fight for retreat reform, Fr. Healey ' s dismissal and the events surrounding the visit of Vice-President Humphrey, The Heights has shown itself a crusading protagonist not for what is but for what should be. While boasting a liberal ideological position during these four years. The Heights has progressed technically as well. It was ranked All-American for the first time in its history, for both spring and fall semester of 1966, the highest award offered by the Associated Collegiate Press. Aggressive news coverage and probing, pertinent edito- rial comment highlighted both commendations. As a student activity. The Heights will probably always exist at Boston College. However, its excellence will de- pend upon its success in attracting the committed, vi- sionary students it has been fortunate to have in the past, to continue its mission at Boston College. 157 humanities J- o. b. The Humanities Magazine, the undergraduate journal devoted to original articles of research in the liberal arts and social sciences, annually publishes two general is- sues consisting of contributions from each school of the University. This year, a special edition containing exclu- sively contemporary literature was also published. The Journal of Business is the research-oriented pub- lication of the College of Business Administration. It has sought to reflect those aspects of business which will be most stimulating to the student. 158 The Stylus is the oldest undergraduate literary maga- zine of any Catholic College in this hemisphere. Founded in 1882, it is today recognized as one of the better col- lege magazines of creative writing. In addition to original literary entries, it was the showcase for the talents of B.C. ' s student artists this year. Cosmos is the undergraduate journal of the sciences. Previous to its appearance, a separate journal was pub- lished by each science department. But since each shared the goal of extending to the student body a knowledge of recent research in the natural sciences, it was decided that a unified effort would be more effective. cosmos Stylus 159 sub turri Once again the staff of the Sub Turri has emerged victorious. After having spent innumerable hours in our subterranean domicile, we have produced a volume worthy of its name. The project was initiated in May of 1966, as the Edi- torial Board was selected. Shortly thereafter, plans began to formulate. The staff was appointed early in September and the wheels of production slowly began to squeak. Those wheels, however, were lubricated at the first champagne party of the year, which followed the Holy S , 160 Cross Victory Dance which we sponsored. The major portion of the work was underway in De- cember, with the advent of the first deadline in the offing. Roger Pelissier had begun completion of his picture as- signments when his extensive social commitments would allow. The massive amounts of copy were compiled and corrected by Marlene Gauthier The pages were laid out amidst the ever-present stench of Charlie Weschler ' s stogies. Morale, a most important element, was kept on a high plane by our in-residence funsters under the direction of Jay Nannicelli. Patty Lou Henna, our managing Editor consistently provided the staff with imaginative ideas, a few of which were even followed. March came fast upon us and the completion of this monumental task neared the end. In early April, the book , as it is called by those in the know, was finally laid to rest. β€’3 fn V -I 162 WVBC is the campus radio station manned by B.C. students specifically for the entertainment of the dorm residents. Operating from studios in Fulton Hall, the 90 hours of broadcast time per week include everything from continuous rocl to late evening jazz. New equipment has allowed a great deal of expansion. A UPI teletype machine has made possible up-to-the- minute sports and news coverage, and detailed news specials. A cartridge-tape system has enlivened the rock shows. Equipment donated by WEEI has made possible the establishment of a second broadcast studio and production facilities. w.v.b.c. 163 r.o.t.c. The Boston College Reserve Officers Training Corps was organized in 1947 by Colonel James M. Lewis, U.S.A. Its purpose then was to train artillery officers for the Arnny, but in the past nineteen years, the program has undergone tremendous modification and improve- ment. 1966 found ROTC as a general military science pro- gram preparing basic and advanced corps cadets for all the branches of the Army. The Regular Army officers comprising the cadre of the B.C. unit represent the In- fantry, Artillery, and Corps of Engineers. Leadership training is the prinnary concern. The emphasis is no longer placed upon the preparation of the artillery officer, but the officer. There were several changes in the program this past year. A special Black Beret counterinsurgency training unit was organized; this B.C.C.U. emphasizes practical soldiering, training its members in such skills as map reading and close-combat fighting during work-outs on campus and on weekend training trips to Fort Devens. B.C. suffered an important loss this year with the re- tirement of Sgt. Major William L. Cote who had been sta- tioned at the Heights for more than six years. One of the finest enlisted men in the country, the Sgt. Major exem- plified the good soldier as well as the good instructor and leader. However much the B.C. unit might change though, the purpose of its program will remain the same β€” to train leaders for America ' s fighting forces. 165 sodalities In its attempt to update the Catholic Church, Vati- can II has provided for a much greater degree of partici- pation by the laity. It may truly be said that the layman has come of age. The Church looks to its laymen for as- sistance in proving that indeed, God is very much alive. But an active laity was in force as early as 1 563 with the establishment of the Sodality Movement as an as- sociation whose primary end is the spiritual growth of its members and the subsequent expression of their Christian commitment through various apostolic works which are performed within their own milieu. It is in this area of Christian involvement β€” the means by which they 166 fulfill their desire to make a more visible commitment to God ' s people β€” that the Sodality Movement is most widely recognized. On the B.C. campus, there are three Sodality groups active in the community and University spheres. Members of the Men ' s Sodality worked in C.C.D. pro- grams and an adult religious education program. They directed a Big Brother Program as well as recreational programs at the Emmanuel House in Roxbury. Tutoring and guidance, directed towards college admission for cul- turally deprived high school students, was carried on through Project Opportunity. On the campus, the group again sponsored the Fourteen Flicks film series. This year, it also co-sponsored a Fordham-B.C. Sodality publication on contemporary theology, and discussion groups on such topics as peace, ecumenics, and existential psychology. This year, the Women ' s Sodality of the School of Ed- ucation ioined in the various activities of the Men ' s So- dality in addition to conducting a separate tutoring pro- gram of its own at Dennison House in Roxbury. The Nursing Sodality gears its apostolic activities to the duties of the nursing profession as a means of ful- filling the Christian ideals embodied in the Sodality. 1 , β–  1 I kiΒ ist! : t ' Β rji SjP i ? 167 w.r.a. The Women ' s Recreation Association is an athletic organization open to all women students of the School of Education and Nursing. The W.R.A. ' s goal is to unite B.C . ' s women students by means of more than twelve athletic events which include varsity basketball, tennis, fencing and cheerleading. W.R.A. also strives to encour- age physical fitness as well as to foster a spirit of sports- manship and competition among its members. Because it is a relatively new club, this year was devoted to en- hancing its athletic activities and gaining campus-wide recognition. 168 CBy- ' .!)!$i)a ' Jr ' Β ' .;?gS jA ' ili ' Picture the B.C. campus in the fall, with multicolored leaves covering Linden Lane and the warm sun sparkling on the Eagle by Gasson Tower. Soon the warmth and beauty of the campus is covered by the cool of a fall night and then it begins. RALLY! Throngs of students pour out of their dorms and the air rings with cries of TO THE CIRCLE! Shoul- der to shoulder, ten across and a hundred deep, the singing, chanting, dancing crowd winds its way down Commonwealth Avenue to Cleveland Circle. There the students sit and sing For Boston. Remember those good old rallies? This two page introduction to sports will recall the great events of the past three years which brought glory to the Heights and pride to students. Sept. 19, 1964β€” B.C. and Syracuse in football. The Eagles have held Little and Nance and their number one ranked team to a 14-14 tie. Jeers fill the air as it ap- pears B.C. will settle for a tie. With 15 seconds left, Marzetti drops back and arches a wobbly 55 yard pass to end Cronin. He leaps into the air between three defend- ers, grabs the ball and carries it into the end zone as the crowd became hysterical. With two seconds left the score reads, B.C. -21 Syracuse-14! Nov. 27, 1965 β€” the Eagles defeat Holy Cross on a Unseld against Wolters. Cronin ' s historic catch TO THE CIRCLE! IVIcCarthy heads for goal line. rain-soaked field. McCarthy wins the O ' Melia Trophy as B.C. wins the game 35-0. Feb. 1 5, 1 965β€” the Eagles defeat B.U. 5-4 to win the Beanpot Trophy for the third straight time. Feb. 22, 1 966, the team defeats Dartmouth 6-2, giving Snooks Kelley his 400th win, while the fans give him a huge cake and a ten minute standing ovation. Mar;, 1 965 β€” the Eagles win their first EC. AC. Playoff crown beating Dartmouth 5-3, Clarkson 3-2 in overtime and Brown 6-2. Mar. 1965 β€” B.C. meets four goal favorite North Da- kota in round one of the N.C.A.A. Playoffs. The score reads 3-3, when York splits the defense and gets the winning goal with a slap shot. Michigan Tech beats the Eagles 8-2 in the finals and leaves them second in the nation. Mar. 12, 1966 β€” B.C. is playing nationally ranked Louisville in the N.I.T. Behind 74-72, Hockenbury puts in a lay-up at the buzzer to send the game into ' overtime. B.C. misses the last shot of overtime one and the score is 80-80. Louisville misses a final lay-up and the second overtime ends 84-84. When Unseld fouls out, the Eagles finally win 96-90 for their greatest victory ever. E.C.A.C. Final: B.C.-6 Brown-2. Victory Cake: Kelley ' s 400th. York ' s winning M.C.A.A. goal. Bob Hyland was one of the most outstanding seniors on the 1966 football team Despite a losing season, he was named to three All-American teams and selected to play in the East-West Shrine Game and the Senior Bowl Game. Coach Duffy Daugherty of Michigan State, Hy- land ' s coach in the Senior Bowl, said Bob and All-Amer- ican Bubba Smith were the best linemen he had ever coached. At B.C. Bob played center and guard, as he had at Archbishop Stephinac High School in White Plains, New York. Throughout his four years Bob could be seen open- ing holes for halfbacks, protecting the passer, or blocking on a sweep. Even when injured he played to the best of his ability. Throughout his career, he has displayed the attributes of a fine scholar-athlete. Though quiet and soft- spoken, he was a leader and greatly inspired his team- mates. He continually praised the team and offensive line coach Emerson Dromgold. The 1964 Syracuse win and this year ' s Penn State game are the most memorable for Bob. A marketing major, he was the first round draft choice of the Green Bay Packers. Kavanagh is interfered with. Guard Lavoie finds it hard to relax. Delia Villa sweeps Villanova for 1 yards. Β ti . 173 If Syracuse slips, Boston College is the team most likely to supplant the Orangemen as the class of the East. This was how one pre-season poll saw B.C. ' s sea- son. The Eagles were also picked to make the Top Twenty with an 8-2 record. But the final tally read 4-6 and many were disappointed. A few breaks and fewer injuries could have made the record 7-3. A large crowd journeyed to Annapolis to see the first game of the season against Navy. B.C. received the kick- off and drove to the 25 of Navy only to lose the ball on mistakes. Later a Thomas pass was intercepted and re- turned for a T.D. Pass defense was the Eagles greatest problem. In the last period, he threw a 2 yard T.D. pass to make the final score 27-7 for Navy. The next week, Ohio University invaded the Heights with a twelve game losing streak! They scored 10 points the first two times they had the ball. In the third period, Thomas led the team 57 yards in ten plays and scored on a dive play to make the score 14-10. An Eagle field goal fell short and Ohio went 75 yards in one play to end Stetz halts V.M.I, quarterback. Again Hyland protects Thomas. Egan for the first down. Bennett stopped for no gain. Option playβ€” Thomas to Erwin. β– vβ– :w ' ' S β–  β€’f ' 174 B.C. ' s hope for victory. A weak V.M.I, came to muddy, rain-soaked Alumni Stadium and B.C. won a game and lost a quarterback. Early in the game, Thomas dislocated his shoulder and was out for the year. O ' Neil caught five passes for 118 yards and one T.D. while Donovan, Delia Villa, and De- Leonardis ran over everyone. Early in the game, the Eagles went to the V.M.I, six and fumbled. Later Donovan scored from the two. B.C. ' s defense was great and the statistics were B.C. with 430 yards to 1 38 for V.M.I, and a 1 4-0 victory for the Eagles. B.C. was up for Penn State and almost pulled an upset. After leading 15-8 at half time, the pass defense failed and Penn State ended up with 221 yards and two T.D. ' s on passes. Marzetti hit 11 of 25 passes for one T.D., and ran for 63 yards. On a broken play, Marzetti found McCarthy with a T.D. pass and later capped a 71 yard drive with a two yard plunge as the Eagles lost 30-21. It takes three to stop Number 44. Jaf ' 4Β Jia Ja lJΒ£- iag Bg III 111 β– !β–  m sammsss - G-o-o-o-o EAGLES! % ifj H ' M - McCarthy heads for the hole. 175 A capacity crowd packed Alumni Stadium to see B.C. play Syracuse in a game that was supposed to decide the Lambert Trophy, according to pre-season polls. Syracuse rolled up a 23-0 half time lead and won 30-0 on their way to a bowl game and the Lambert Trophy. B.C. got only eight first downs, reached the Syracuse 34 only once, had a total offense of 73 yards, and had three passes intercepted. Little and Csonka ran at will for 221 yards. ROTC Day saw Buffalo at the Heights. Delia Villa scored first; then, late in the first half, Buffalo made it 8-7. With less than a minute to play, Bennett took the kickoff on the 1 5, headed up the right sideline, got two great blocks, broke to center field and outran the de- fenders 85 yards for a T.D. and a 14-8 lead. In the third period, the Bulls scored on a pass and made it 15-14. Marzetti came back with a bomb to Delia Villa and Kavanagh caught a pass for two points and a 22-15 lead. A Buffalo drive made it 22-21 , but Borsari stopped the two point attempt on the one. Regional TV carried the B.C. -William and Mary clash. This weird game saw the Eagles throw away three early scoring chances inside the five yard line. Fumbles, inter- ceptions, and poor calls were the reasons. In the second B.C. meets H.C.-THE Game! Pass clicks against the Cross. Morale boosters never quit. 176 half, B.C. drove 91 yards on Marzetti ' s passes and on his 31 yard run: McCarthy went the last eight yards for the score. He dove in from one yard out in the last period to make the score 1 5-6, with a two point pass play to Kavanagh. The first W and M touchdown came as their end, while falling to the ground, caught the pass. The point after was missed but following their next T.D., they got it and were behind 15-13. The defense gave up only 27 yards rushing but 265 passing, while McCarthy and Marzetti combined for 21 5 yards rushing. Villanova was psyched up for victory. For three peri- ods no one scored, then a 35 yard run put Villanova ahead 7-0. An interception made it 13-0. B.C. lost the ball on downs and the Wildcats, on a fourth and 17, scored to make the final 19-0. In the third period, the Eagles drove to the 25 where McCarthy missed on a fourth down play by inches. He gained however, 55 of B.C. ' s 73 yards and the Eagles stood 3-5 for the season. Then came the game where B.C. had to defend its honor and pride while UMass was reaching for big time football status with a 6-2 record and another Yankee Conference Championship. B.C. moved at will but had trouble scoring, while the defense stopped UMass cold. A field goal and a safety made the half-time score 5-0. Great pass defense β€” Kutz. Bennett ' s second effort gains 3 yards. Then in the third period, B.C. put together a drive. Mar- zetti picked up 25 yards to the one and Delia Villa swept in for the T.D. and an 11-0 lead. UMass scored on a de- flected pass that was caught as the Redmen ' s end was on the ground in the end zone. O ' Neill added his second field goal and B.C. won 1 4-7. The final game saw Holy Cross, with a 5-3-1 record, come to B.C. for revenge. It was the wildest, strongest game ever played in the Jesuit rivalry. It looked like a romp in the first period as Lentz ran for one T.D., passed for one, and Raminski kicked two fields goals for a 19-0 lead. In the second period, the Eagles shocked everyone by scoring 20 points in 7 minutes and 18 seconds. A drive ended with a 10 yard Marzetti to Egan pass for the first score. Guard Dick Kroner grabbed a loose ball from Lentz and, while many stood around, started the slowest run in B.C.-H.C. history. With Lipson running interfer- ence. Kroner lumbered 55 yards to cut the Cross lead 19-13. H.C. fumbled the kick-off and Kutz recovered on the twenty-six. B.C. fans went wild. DeVito, who came from nowhere to be the hero, hit Kavanagh for a T.D. and 20-19 lead. The second half saw Lentz score to make it 25-20, Holy Cross. But DeVito passed to Egan and Kav- anagh, and McCarthy ran to move B.C. again. Kavanagh made a one hand catch and went to the five where De- Vito punted; a clipping penalty hurt B.C., but they drove to the 27 where O ' Neill tried a field goal. Everyone but the referee said it was good. Minutes later, Lentz scram- bled for his life and found Kimner open for the winning score 32-26. McCarthy drags Villanova line for 2 yards. Gang tackling halts Ohio U. Bennett rambles 85 yards for TD. Kane returns kickoff. . --l i ii Delia Villa looks for running room. 178 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING: TC YG YL NY TD AVG. Dick DeLeonardis 8 39 39 4.87 Dave Bennett 33 158 4 154 4.67 Terry Erwin 5 22 22 440 SCORING: Dave Thomas 18 95 17 78 1 433 Paul Delia Villa Brendan McCarthy 139 594 9 585 2 4.21 Mike O ' Neill Bill Donovan 16 67 1 66 1 4.12 Brendan McCarthy Joe Marzetti 115 570 189 381 1 3.31 Dave Bennett Mike Violante 8 22 22 2.75 Jim Kavanagh Joe DIVito 8 34 12 22 275 Bill Donovan Paul Delia Villa 81 265 43 222 4 2.74 John Egan John Kane 9 21 8 13 1 1.44 John Kane PASSING: ATT COM YDS INT TD EXP Dick Kroner Joe Marzetti 126 36 549 10 4 2 Dave Thomas 59 18 252 1 1 Dave Thomas Gordie Kutz Joe DiVito 21 11 174 3 1 TD EP(1) EP(2) 10-11 2-2 FG 2-7 30 22 18 14 10 6 6 6 6 6 6 2 Front row, left to right: Head Coach Miller, Kutz, Carlyon, Pesapane, Collins, Captain Lipson, Blair, Stetz, O ' Neill, Gurry, Hyland. Second row: Coach Clemns, Risio, Powers, Donovan, Schneider, Kitlowski, Reardon, Connors, Sarkesian, Doherty, Graziano, Coach Miller. Third row: Coach Dickie, Marzetti, Violante, Petruzziello, Garofolo, Kuharich, Froelich, Hazlin, Lavoie, Giardi, Coach Dromgold. Fourth row: Clemens, Borsari, Eagan, Horman, Markey, Kane, Erwin, McCarthy, McGovern, Eager, DiVito. Fifth row: Borababy, Dunbar, Roccia, Spellecy, Pierandri, Ragosa, Hughes, Norton, Toupal, Townsend, DellaVilla. Sixth row: Toof, Carrigan, Thomas, Sullivan, Kroner, Hunt, Duffy, Evans, Nevard, Fleming, DeLeonardis. Seventh row: Manager Croce, Persuitte, Zailskas, Andrachik, Kruger, Gallup, Cavanaugh, Salmon, Scully, McGeoghegan. Eighth row: Cunningham, Daniels, Kavanagh, Bennet, Ladewig, Murphy, Shepard, LePore, Graham, Grace, Sr. Manager Lawrence. PUNTING: NO YDS AVG. Joe DiVito 49 1889 38.4 Mike Robertson 5 162 32 4 Mike O ' Neill 6 182 30.3 PUNT RETURNS: NO YDS TD Tom Carlyon 12 45 Jim Grace 5 14 Dan Zailskas 4 25 Dick DeLeonardis 4 14 Kickoff Returns: NO YDS TD Dick DeLeonardis 12 245 Dave Bennett 8 226 1 Jim Grace 8 191 John Kane 5 83 1 966 Varsity Record RECEIVING: NO YDS TD EP Jim Kavanagh 17 282 1 2 Paul DellaVilla 13 207 1 7 Navy 27 Barry Gallup 11 157 14 OhioU 23 Mike O ' Neill 7 140 1 14 V.M.I. Dave Bennett 7 91 1 1 21 Pen n State 30 John Egan 7 87 1 Syracuse 30 Brendan McCarthy 2 4 1 22 Buffalo 21 John Kane 1 7 1 5 William and Mary 13 Villanova 19 INTERCEPTIONS: NO YDS TD 14 U. Mass 7 John Salmon 5 112 25 Holy Cross 32 Tom Carlyon 4 24 Won 4, Lost 6 Jim Grace 3 35 Ed Lipson 3 21 Harry Connors 1 179 hockey Captain Jerry York is a prime candidate for first string Ail-American as a result of his over-all play and 67 sea- son points. A product of B.C. High, he had a colorful ca- reer at B.C., including the upsetting goal against North Dakota in the 1965 NCAA, playoffs, five goals in the 1965 EC. AC. playoffs, All-East honors, All-Tourney hon- ors many times, and recipient of the Walter Brown Me- morial Award as New England ' s top American hockey player. His 134 career points rank him fourth in all t ime B.C. scoring, while he holds the record of most goals in one game β€” five. Captain York typifies the spirit, hustle, and morale that made a fair team a great one. Captain Jerry York 180 John Snooks Kelley entered his 31st season at B C with an unprecedented 402 wins and only 175 defeats. He said it was a building year with many sophomores and few lettermen. Spirit, hustle, and morale were the goals, with the hope of pulling a few surprises. Pre-sea- son polls had B.C. just making the E.C.A.C. playoffs, but for those who remembered the rebuilding year of 1964- 65 with its second place N.C.A.A. finish, Kelley was fooling no one and it came as little surprise that his re- building year ended in success again, with a third place in the E.C.A.C. behind powerhouses B.U. and Cornell. The regular season opened with a surprise 12-3 vic- tory over senior studded Yale, heralded as one of the East ' s best. Hurley played his first game as a wing and scored his first hat trick of the season. Previtt got his first two varsity goals and Cohen was great in the net. Johnson had the crowd roaring when his clear-in pass started bouncing around and slipped past the startled goalie. B.U. came to the Heights ranked number one and de- feated B.C. for the fifth straight time 4-2. The breaks fell against the Eagles which was evidenced by penalties and two nullified goals. With the score 4-2, Allen was awarded a penalty shot after being tripped on a breakaway. He Rebound shot! One on three break. McCarthy trick shot. 181 missed, was awarded another shot when the goalie left the crease too soon, and missed the second. Brown gave Hurley a shadow that kept him from tak- ing a shot, but York and Allen hit three goals and Clarke, Fuller, and Kinsman scored as the Eagles won 6-3. Cohen, Allen and York were named game stars by the Brown Daily Herald. Hurley came back strong and scored his second hat trick of the year to pace an 8-4 win over Princeton. Robertson got his first varsity goal and York and Clarke continued their consistent scoring. Cohen and Johnson were great on defense as B.C. was playing be- yond expectations. For the sixth time B.U downed B.C. The John Gallagher Memorial Award went to B.U. goalie Ryan as the game ' s best performer. This new award would continue to be given at each B.C. -B.U. game. Trail- ing 4-1 Fuller and Allen made it 4-3 in the second period. But the Eagles collapsed and the Terriers bombed Cohen for four more goals and an 8-3 win. The Christmas Season found the Eagles meeting last year ' s NCAA. Champion Michigan State in the Garden Tournament and after a wild game, succumbed 5-3. However, they returned to down Northeastern 6-0 in the final round and placed third in the tournament. The East- ern Olympics came to the Heights having beaten all the Dowling keeps it in. Kinsman gets over anxious. TRIP I I - -- 4Sm[ ' 182 local teams, but fell to B.C. 8-2 in a surprise upset, be- hind York ' s only hat trick of the year. Cohen was out sick and had been replaced by Sophomore George McPhee who played so well that he continued in the nets for the rest of the year. Two Canadian teams followed the Olym- pics and also found the going rough. Loyola lost 1 0-3, as Hurley scored his third hat trick: then McGill fell 6-2. McPhee was sparkling and the team clicked well. B.C. seemed to have a post Christmas let down and lost to Northeastern 4-2, playing one of their worst games of the year. Clarkson ' s defending EC AC. Championship team in- vaded the Heights. In preseason polls, they had been ranked fourth in the East. Gordie Clarke ' s third period goal was the deciding one in a wild game. Kupka scored twice while Kinsman, Allen, and Johnson each lit the lamp. With two minutes remaining and B.C. leading 6-4, the Golden Knights pulled their goalie. They pressed and with seconds remaining scored to make it 6-5, but it came too late. Paul Hurley received unanimous acclaim for his efforts against Harvard. B.C. trailed 3-1 in the last period, then Hurley hit his second goal; one that amazed both goalie Fitzsimmons and the crowd. The slap shot hit the goalie ' s pads and curved into the net. Fuller fol- YorktoFuller-SCOREI Clark solos for a tally. A genius at work. 183 lowed with the tying goal. Earlier, McPhee kicked out a breakaway that would have made it 4-1, Harvard. In the overtime, Allen set up Bastarache for his second varsity goal and the exciting win. Division II leader Colby came to McHugh and was defeated. Kinsman scored a hat trick and York hit for two as B.C. easily rolled to its tenth vic- tory before exams. Returning from exams, B.C. maintained their momen- tum. Kupka and Fuller scored two goals apiece as an E.C.A.C. television audience saw the Eagles take a 5-0 lead. Snooks missed the game due to illness, and Red Martin took over. The East ' s number two team was almost upset, but Cornell hung on for a 3-2 win. A capacity crowd saw Bob Ferguson ' s late third period goal win it. B.C. complained that one man was in the crease, but to no avail. Clarke scored first and Cornell scored as B.C. changed lines to lead 2-1 . After a wild scoreless second period, Clarke and York broke in on the goalie, who came 30 feet out and York pushed the puck into the net. Mc- Phee, who made spectacular saves, was pulled and B.C. pressed but couldn ' t score. McPhee had 40 saves, 20 in the hectic second period. Getting back to winning ways, B.C. bounced R.P.I, around 12-2 and Hurley got his fourth hat trick. Behind 1-0 and 2-1, B.C. caught fire for Another Johnson dash halted. WlcPhee kicks out another. 184 eleven goals in preparation for the Beanpot. Everyone was hoping for another B.C.-B.U. show- down in the Beanpot, but the Eagles fell to a hustling Northeastern, 6-5, in a thrilling overtime game. St. Lawrence was dumped by B.C. ' s hot first line in a tone up for the consolation game of the Beanpot. Kupka man- aged two goals while York and Clarke each scored. York ' s goal came on a long pass from Clarke as he broke in on the goalie alone. Kupka and Clarke hit on blazing slap shots, which ended the scoring. In the consolation game, the Eagles again gave the fans an exciting exhibition, beating Harvard in overtime 6-5. Garden officials wanted to leave it a tie, but fans protested and B.C. went on to win. A sloppy Providence team was defeated 9-0 as B.C. sent 53 shots at their goalie and only 44 were stopped. McPhee and Cohen had only 27 saves. Unheralded Put- nam found the mark twice. McPhee posted another shut out as Ed Jerimiah and Snooks Kelley met for the final time in the nation ' s oldest coaching rivalry. B.C. easily defeated Dartmouth 8-0 for its 16th win of the series. The B.C. -Army clash was the greatest finish ever, ac- cording to Kelley and B.C. fans. To get an EC. AC. play- off birth the Cadets needed to win. The Eagles played a sluggish game and were behind 2-1. Late in the third GO ll l, SHOOT Woody clears the zone. Kupka ' s bid foiled. 185 period, with six minutes left, York put in a rebound to tie it up. Then began the greatest eleven seconds of B.C. hockey; the most explosive ending ever seen according to Snooks . With 54 seconds left, Prevett pushed the puck out of the corner to Hurley who blazed it home. As the crowd roared, York took the face off and caught the goalie starting to leave the ice and put in a 40 foot slap shot. York took the ensuing face off and passed to Clarke who hit a shot eight seconds later. The crowd was hyster- ical and the B.C. band sounded its seventh consecutive round of For Boston. The final score read 5-2. North- eastern continued its hex on the Eagles by downing them for the third consecutive time, 3-1 and gained its first win ever on B.C. ice. The Eagles threw away many scoring chances and just couldn ' t connect. York made it 2-1 in the third period, but a scramble in front of the B.C. net ended in N.U. taking the lead 3-1. Hurley and the Eagles ended the season by crushing Providence 13-2, as The Shot hit his fifth hat trick. Within 5 minutes of the second period, B.C. went from 3-0 to an 8-1 lead. Hurley added three assists to five goals and Allen had two goals and five assists. The Eagles were now ready for the E.C.A.C. playoffs, which they richly deserved after placing third in the East, 1 8-7. York signals goal as first line clicks. Capt. York gets 1 of fiis 67 points. Smashβ€” it ' s Woody! ....... 41 - 186 SCORERS YEAR POS. GP PER G A PTS PIM HT WG YORK, Jerry Sr. c 28 87 26 41 67 14 1 2 HURLEY, Paul Jr. c 28 87 32 23 55 12 6 5 ALLEN, Whitey Jr. RW 28 87 17 33 50 19 1 2 CLARKE, Gordie Jr. RW 28 87 23 19 42 23 3 KUPKA, Bob Sr. LW 27 83 16 17 33 6 KINSMAN, Fred Sr. LW 25 72 14 13 27 4 1 1 FULLER, Dick Sr. LW 28 87 12 12 24 12 4 MacCARTHY, Barry So. RD 28 87 4 19 23 40 DOWLING, Steve Jr. LD 28 87 5 16 21 56 JOHNSON, Woody Sr. LD 28 87 5 13 18 54 1 FLYNN, Mike So. C 28 85 4 13 17 4 PREVETT.Jim So. RW 28 78 7 9 16 4 BASTARACHE, Ray So RD 28 87 2 10 12 12 1 ROBERTSON, Mike So. LW 18 45 2 4 6 8 PUTNAM, Bill So. C 8 20 2 2 4 4 1 CEDORCHUK, Steve So. LD 12 16 1 1 0 ' NEIL,Jack So. LD 3 3 COHEN, Jeff Jr. G 13 23 2 McPHEE, George So. G 24 68 4 GOALIES YEAR GP PER SAVES GA SO AVG. w L McPHEE, George So. 24 67 629 61 3 2.73 16 6 COHEN, Jeff Jr. 13 20 213 29 435 4 2 i Β lM fl Hff 1. A - i - : f) _β–  overall record; won 20, lost 8 pet. .714 division I: won 14. lost 6 pet. .700 12 Yale 2 Boston U. 6 at Brown 8 at Princeton 3 at Boston U. 3 Michigan St. 6 Northeastern 8 Eastern Olym 10 Loyola 3 6 McGill 4 2 at Northeast. 3 6 Clarkson 4 4 at Harvard 8 6 Colby 5 6 at Colgate 2 Cornell 2 12 at R.P.I. 3 5 Northeastern 2 5 St. Lawrence 4 6 Harvard 5 9 Providence 3 8 at Dartmouth 1 5 at Army 2 1 Northeastern 3 13 at Providence 2 9 Clarkson 6 2 Cornell 6 St. Lawrence 1 5 2 3 2 2 12 4 187 garden tourney In the annual Boston Garden Christmas Tournament, B.C. entered against the East ' s best, B.U., Michigan State and Northeastern. The Eagles met the Spartans and, al- though they outplayed them, came out on the short end of the final score 5-3. Behind 4-3, McPhee was pulled in attempt to even the score. The partisan fans cheered B.C. on but to no avail. With less than a minute remain- ing, Michigan State scored into an empty B.C. net. The consolation game saw B.C. defeat Northeastern 6-0. Whitey Allen hit for his only hat trick of the year, while McPhee was great. As a result, the Eagles took third place in the tournament. Fight, Jerry! The Shot ' s backhand. McPhee halts Michigan State. 188 A B.C.-B.U. final was anticipated in the Beanpot, but N.U. upset the Eagles, 6-5, in overtime to spoil it. The lead changed hands until York soloed to make it 4-3, B.C. Behind 5-4, the Eagles had a goal nullified, but man- aged an overtime on the next shot. Nine minutes passed in which B.C. couldn ' t score, even with a two man ad- vantage. Then N.U. scored to end it. McPhee was great with thirty-eight saves. Against Harvard, B.C. again needed an overtime to win 6-5. Allen went in alone for the victory. York, Hurley and Allen were great as the Eagles again settled for third place in the tournament. beanpot Another day, another game. On the move. In on goalie. 189 GaCaaaCa Once again Snooks Kelley ' s Eagles fought their way into the E.C.A.C. playoffs. Playing round one on home ice, B.C. took on the Golden Knights from Clarkson, before a capacity crowd. A close contest turned into a rout as Flynn, Clarke and York scored within a minute to take a 4-0 lead. Period two saw Kupka, Kinsman, and Fuller all but end the game. Paul Hurley tied the all-time record for hat tricks in a season when he scored his sixth of the year. McPhee had one of his finest games and the team played great hockey in a convincing 9-2 victory. In the St. Lawrence shoots . . . SAVE! Soph. McPhee makes another spectacular save. 190 semi-finals, B.C. was out to settle a score with Cornell, but the Big Red was just too much and B.C. played be- low-par hockey. A dozen records were set in the 12-2 loss which saw York give Doug Ferguson twelve stitches in the eye. Play was rough and at one point the penalty box contained seven players. Except for Johnson ' s check- ing, the B.C. fans had little to cheer about. Another successful season ended as it started, with a victory. St. Lawrence was defeated in the consolation game 6-4. The Eagles started fast with a 6-0 lead, but allowed four goals to be scored on them in the last period. The Larries were kept alive by its goalie who had 19 saves in the first period, to six for McPhee. Kupka, Allen and Hurley made it 3-0. Then Clarke scored a record setting two goals in six seconds. York added a score in the last stanza to close out the season and leave the Eagles final record 20-8, good for third place in the East. Where ' s the puck? Dowling awaits a rebound. Perfect power play set up. 191 basketball Captain Willie Wolters ' spirit and determination was reflected in the team ' s play and final record. The 6 ' 8 Senior holds the school records for most rebounds in a game, in a season, and in a career. Among his awards are the Most Valuable Player in the Beanpot, in the B.C. -Ford- ham game, and in the Boston Garden Tournament. He was named All-East and placed on many All-Tourney teams. Willie is a psychology major and hopes to give pro basketball a try. To quote a banner at the last home game of the year, Thanks for the Memories! Even before the football season ended, the countdown Capt. Wolters hits tie breaking jump shot. 192 began for basketball. A Courtside Club was formed and a Beat Providence sign was hung in Roberts. Coach Cousy had been building for two years and now had a team with unlimited potential. Sophomores Evans and Driscoll developed overnight and played like veterans. Hence, B.C. enjoyed its greatest year ever. Pre-season polls placed them as high as fifth in the nation and first in the East. Final polls had them ninth in the nation and top in the East. Individual honors included: Coach of the Year-Cousy; Boston Garden Tourney Team-Wolters and Evans; Boston Tourney MVP-Wolters; All Sugar Bowl Team-Adelman; Ail-American Honorable Mention-Adel- man; NCAA. Regional Team-Driscoll; and EC. AC. Sophomore of the Year-Evans. The season began against a non-N.C.A.A. opponent, Quantico. It was no contest as B.C. ran, shot, and re- bounded in excellent style. Driscoll was high scorer with 23 points as B.C. romped 101-80. U. Mass was the first NCAA. game. Defense and foul shots saved this one as the Eagles hit 32 of 36 free throws. Evans showed his great style and Adelman had 20 points. A strong zone defense won the game 86-63. Bill demonstrates for Jim. Driscoll lays it in. 6 w 193 Against U. Conn the Eagles were slow and it took Adel- nnan and Driscoll to keep them alive. Terry had fifteen points and twelve rebounds. Evans and Kelleher held high scorer Bialosuknia to 16 points. Adelman ' s shooting finally iced the game, though Mice was the only consis- tent scorer in this 87-69 victory. Unbeaten Harvard fell thanks to Adelman ' s 32 points, Driscoll ' s 21 points, and board control by Wolters, Driscoll, and Kissane. With three minutes left, Adelman and Evans gave B.C. a thir- teen point lead and it was over. In the other non-N.C.A.A. game, B.C. ran over the Swedish Nationals for an easy 84-65 win. The Eagles next captured the first Boston Garden Tournament over Syracuse, U. Mass, and Manhattan. Un- beaten Syracuse fell first 87-75 in a thriller and then U. Mass was beaten for the title 75-67. Cousy ' s men showed excellent speed, shooting, and defense in these games, and were ready for the Sugar Bo wl Classic. Possi- bly over-confident with an 8-0 record, B.C. lost a close one in the last second to Utah, 90-88. However, they came back to defeat Tennessee in the consolation game 68-61. Evans overTexiera. Steve Adelman tips in a Wolters shot 194 Navy invaded the Heights and was sunk 101-76. Wolters was great with nineteen points and good all- around play, and Evans sparked at ball-hawking and play- making. Navy was completely out-classed. Northeastern played its usual slow game, but fell 54-47. The Huskies led at half-time 28-26, then Evans and the 2-3 zone went to work. Wolters finally tied it and Evans on a fast break put them ahead. Willie had thirteen rebounds as the East ' s top small college team lost to B.C. Against a weak but stubborn Duquesne, Driscoll came off the bench and rallied the Eagles to a 93-66 win. He had eighteen points and twelve rebounds. Evans had a twelve point scoring rampage in the second half for a 78-53 lead. Then Cousy emptied his bench. Seton Hall was the next victim, 90-75. Superior height, shooting, and the fast break told the story. Evans ran wild, Adelman hit 27 points, Driscoll had 24 and ruled the boards with Wolters. Next, H.C. lost to B.C. 92-74. A close game turned into a romp when Adelman and Dris- coll combined for sixteen straight points. H.C. came back, but Driscoll ' s ten points ended it. It was a great team effort and the defense was excellent, holding heralded Bill maneuvers. Hit the low post! Top scorer Adelman, double teamed. 195 Teixeira to six points and Siudut to thirteen. Revenge was obtained when B.C. defeated St. Joseph ' s at the Palestra, 83-69. Wolters was great on defense, hold- ing Cliff Anderson to six points. Adelmans deadly shoot- ing and Driscoll ' s rebounding gave B.C. a 43-31 half- time lead. Adelman hit for 27 points, 20 of them in the first half. It was a great victory, but may have led to over- confidence, because against weak Fordham, the team played their worst game of the year and lost 85-81. The Rams hit 35 of 38 foul shots to win, although B.C. kept close to the end. Evans had thirteen points and eleven assists. One good result was that the team lost all cockiness for the year. Against Rhode Island, the Eagles were erratic, but managed an 81-71 victory. Driscoll came off the bench to spark a rally that put B.C. ahead. Evans was great as usual. The second half saw the Rams close the score to 69-64, then no one scored for three minutes. Wolters finally iced the game with a three-point play THE GAME in Eastern basketball saw B.C. playing Providence. The Eagles were out for revenge and got it. They ran to a 51 - 32 half time lead on the play of Evans and the shooting Evans-Kvancz press Terriers. Students remember. Wolters and Mice receive Courtside Club award. THANKS FOR THE .A3; ' MEMORIES 20 111. 196 of Adelman and Wolters. Walker had only eleven points until the Eagles changed their tactics in the second half and became sloppy. Walker then hit 22 points and it was a tie game, 73-73, with three minutes left. Koski fouled out, but Walker ' s three-point play put Providence ahead. B.C. kept its poise and came back. Welter ' s four foul shots and Adelman ' s jumper made it 79-76 B.C. Willie scored with 24 seconds and Hayes with twelve and the lead was only one. Kissane got the ball, froze it in the backcourt for nine seconds, then threw it away at the buzzer as B C beat the Friars 83-82. Mullaney was im- pressed by Evans and the B.C. defense. This game gave the Eagles the New England title and an almost sure NC.A.A. bid. A poor B U. team tried to play a slow game, but made too many mistakes, as B.C. rolled 74-46. Evans had seventeen points and seven assists as the entire team played. Following the game, the team voted to accept an NCAA, bid instead of an N.I.T. bid. However, former B.C coach McGee ' s Georgetown team almost spoiled things before falling 103-91. B.C. was down by eleven until Evans and Kissane closed it to 48-47 at half-time and Doug ' s jumperβ€” GOOD! Kissane us. Friars. X His Master ' s voice. IΒ« IT 197 put the Eagles ahead 64-51 in the second period. In the final home game, B.C. defeated Canisius in a close one 80-76 Evans was out sick and Wolters and Mice were playing their last home game, Willie had fif- teen and Doug cooly hit two foul shots in the last minute to win the game. The Griffins were deadly from outside, but B.C.s desire and team play came through for win number twenty. As usual, the Holy Cross finale was a thriller. H.C. could do nothing wrong in the first period and they led by as many as seventeen before a regional TV Charge or foul? Adelman taps it up. THE score of THE GAME! .- -i-- I ' TTirm 198 audience. Adelman ' s twenty points kept B.C. alive. In period two, the Cross ' lead was cut to 53-46 and then Driscoll led a rally to put B.C. ahead 54-53. The Eagles lost a six point lead with 1:11 to go and it was 70-69. Kvancz hit a free throw and with 3200 fans screaming, Capt Willard of H.C. missed a jumper, Driscoll took the rebound and passed to Kvancz, who was fouled. Jack made both shots and then a jumper for a 75-69 edge. It was a thrilling finish to a thrilling season β€” and the N C.A.A remained. Driscoll hooks over Texeira. Kelleher for two. Wolterson defense. 199 101 Quantico 80 90 86 at Massachusetts 63 92 93 at Fairfield 76 83 87 Connecticut 69 81 99 at Harvard 81 81 84 Swedish Nationals 65 83 87 Syracuse 75 74 75 Massachusetts 67 103 88 Utah 90 80 68 Tennessee 61 76 101 Navy 76 48 54 Northeastern 47 63 93 Duquesne 66 80 OVERALL: WON 23 LOST 3, Pet. .885. NCAA: WON 21 LOST 3, Pet. .875. at Seton Hall Holy Cross at St. Joseph ' s Fordham at Rhode Island Providence Boston University at Georgetown Cansius at Holy Cross Connecticut St. John ' s North Carolina 75 74 69 85 71 82 46 91 76 71 42 62 96 POINTS: For-2151: Aga.-1856 POINTS: For-1966; Aga.-1711 INDIVIDUAL SCORING NAME Adelman. Steve Driscoll. Terry Evans. Billy Welters, Willie Kissane, Jim Kvancz. Jack Hice, Doug Kelleher, Steve Pacynski, Tom Rooney, Ed King. Jim Helton, Jim Gallup, Barry BOSTON COLLEGE TOTALS: OPPONENTS TOTALS: YEAR POS GP FG % FT % REB PTS AVG Jr F 26 203-470 43.2 77-114 67.5 177 483 18.58 So C 26 126-259 48.1 99-135 73.3 262 347 13.35 So G 25 1 13-225 50.1 90-144 62.5 67 316 12.64 Sr C 24 94-183 51.4 63-90 70.0 206 251 10.46 Jr F 26 90-198 45.5 59-94 62.8 174 239 9.19 Jr G 26 80-164 48.8 53-72 73 .6 58 213 8.19 Sr F 25 54-96 56.3 47-59 79.7 39 115 6.20 Jr G 21 25-55 45.5 5-8 62.5 6 55 2.62 Jr C 11 13-26 50.0 0-3 0.0 22 26 2.36 Jr F 13 10-27 37.0 5-10 50.0 12 25 1.92 So F 15 10-23 43.5 5-10 50.0 25 25 1.67 So G 5 2-5 40.0 3-5 60.0 1 7 1.40 So F 6 0-1 0.0 5-7 71.4 4 5 0.83 26 820-1732 47.5 51 1-751 68.0 1213 2151 82.68 26 730-1664 42 2 450-624 72.5 1013 1856 71.38 200 Bob Cousy came to B.C. four years ago with an im- pressive record. Everyone wondered if the sport ' s great- est player could become one of its greatest coaches. This year Bob was voted New England ' s Coach of the Year by the largest margin ever. He has brought an unknown team with a 10-16 mark in 1 963 to national prominence in 1967. Bob and B.C. are crowd-pleasers everywhere. Although a soft-spoken man, he motivates the men to play their hearts out for him. His spirit, his ability, and his class have become part of basketball at B.C. The class of ' 67 salutes B.C. ' s best team and its great coach, the immortal Mr. Basketball. 201 Christmas tourneys B.C. was 3-1 for Christmas Tournaments. In the Boston Tourney, they defeated unbeaten Syracuse 87-67, on Evans ' twenty-one points, and won the Tournament beat- ing Massachusetts 75-67 on Wolters ' nineteen points. Evans and Wolters made the All-Tourney team. At the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans, B.C. lost to Utah in the last second 90-88, as Adelman missed the final shot. He had already scored thirty points. In the consolation game, the Eagles beat Tennessee 68-61 in a a slow down match. Adelman, a crowd pleaser there, made the All- Tourney team. With these Christmas victories began talk of the NCAA. Tournament in March. 202 B.C. turned down its third straight N.I.T. bid to enter the N.C.A.A. playoffs. In round one of the Eastern Re- gionals, they faced the Yankee Conference winner, U. Conn. The Huskies played a slow down game and it worked until B.C. took a 14-13 half time lead. After n.c.a.a. 203 winning the important second half tap-off, Adelman hit seven straight points and B.C. led 21-13. The Eagles held a flexible eight point lead and at times played a slow down game themselves. The 2-3 zone worked and kept them out of foul trouble. Adelman had sixteen points and Kissane ten, while Bialousuknia was held to only fifteen. Cousy felt that the Huskies ' tactics were bad and did little to help the image of college basketball for the re- gional T.V. fans. B.C. ' s 48-42 win sent them to College Park, Maryland for the Eastern Regional semi-finals against St. John ' s. The Eagles were out to revenge their 1965 NIT. loss to the Redmen. Although sloppy, the game ended dra- matically and left the 14,000 fans limp. B.C. had to play catch-up ball all the way. Driscoll put in a great shot to make the half time score 24-22, St. John ' s. Quickly the Redmen took a 30-22 lead. The Eagles fought back but couldn ' t get closer than three points. With three minutes left, Cousy called time out and blasted the team. They came back and with 1 :53 left, Adelman put them ahead 59-58. A big play followed when Evans ' pass-in hit the guide wire and the ref ruled it had been deflected by St. Jik 204 John ' s. Evans then threw to Wolters who was fouled and put in both shots with 55 seconds remaining. After a steal, Driscoll passed to Evans who was fouled and made the score 63-60, B C. St. John ' s scored the last basket to make the final 63-62. The Eagles hit 23 straight foul shots in the second half and Adelman scored seventeen points to aid in the victory. The championship spelled the season ' s end for B.C., as third ranked North Carolina rolled to a 96-80 win. Lewis hit 31 points and N.C. ' s height took over in the second half. The Eagles played their fast type of game in the first half and took a quick 12-3 lead. But poor shooting and defense saw N.C. go ahead 15-14, B.C. hit the last six points of the first half to cut the lead 44-42. With seven minutes left in the second half, B.C. was behind 69-64, but they scored only two baskets in the next six minutes and it was over. Senior Doug Hice played well until he got into foul trouble. Driscoll scored 17 points and got ten rebounds to win a berth on the All-Regional team. Kissane played excellently with 15 points and ten re- bounds. B.C. proved it could play on the same court with the nation ' s best teams. baseball B.C. was considered a darkhorse when the baseball season began, but by the final game Coach Peiiagrini had molded a tournament team. Key players in the successful season were All-League choices Bill O ' Brien (7-2), Ed Foley (5-3), and the double-play combination of Ander- son and Riley. Team play and pride finally ended in a 13-5 record and a trip to the NCAA. District I playoffs. The Eagles opened the campaign with six straight wins. M.I.T. was the first victim with Riley and Kitley getting five hits and Ford relieving O ' Brien on the mound. After a see-saw battle, R.I. lost 5-4, with Amick hitting a s,ii- ii ' w Hi neighbor, have a Gansett; it ' s BC baseball tim The hit and run is on. 206 two-run triple. O ' Brien pitched a six-hitter and Hocken- bury tripled while Amick homered to defeat Springfield. Fighting to maintain a winning streak, B.C. came from behind to overtake Dartmouth 7-5. After Plunkert tied the score with a pinch-hit single, Foley homered to win the game. O ' Brien hurled his second shutout to down Harvard. Bill gave up only four hits and Prifty belted a two-run single to gain the 3-0 win. For their sixth straight win, B.C. got six runs in the eighth inning with a three- run homer by McElaney as Tufts was defeated. League leader Northeastern ended the Eagles streak by handing them their first of three defeats. Kos of N.U. hit a grand-slam to decide the game. In beating Provi- dence, B.C. set a record of eleven broken bats in three innings and Kitley hit a 335-foot homer. Foley struck out seven and allowed only four hits. Fine hitting and pitch- ing gave B.C. two more wins before B.U. gave O ' Brien his second and last season loss. Then N.U. ended B.C. ' s greater Boston League title hopes and captured the flag themselves with a 4-1 win on a rain-soaked field. All the runs came in the eighth inning. Before the B.C.-H.C series, the Eagles downed Amherst on an Anderson homer and beat Providence on Foley ' s pitching. t Β Β Β s ' - :rf«« 1VlkVt Stolen base. Kitley saves a wild throw. Close, but OUT. 207 The Holy Cross series had extra meaning since B.C. and the Cross were fighting for the final playoff spot in District I. The University of Massachusetts, Northeastern, and Colby had been chosen. It was felt that B.C. (1 1-3) was the stronger team with a better league and regional record, but had to prove itself against the Cross (9-4). The Eagles quickly got the tournament bid by stomping H.C. 5-0 before a large Alumni Day crowd. O ' Brien threw a five hitter and struck out twelve. B.C. got two runs in the first inning when O ' Neill doubled, Anderson singled him home and McElaney pushed him home after a walk. In the seventh inning, Kitley doubled, O ' Neill got hit by a pitch, O ' Brien walked, Foley beat out a hit, and a passed ball added two runs. A day later, the Cross scored an upset by winning 2-1 on an interference call in the last of the ninth inning. It was a close 1-1 game when after a strike-out, Hockenbury threw wild to second base, attempting to throw out a runner trying to steal. When the runner rounded third base, O ' Neill fell on him and as he got up slowly, the umpire awarded the runner home and the winning run. The last game of the series was rained out. The 1 966 team almost made Omaha and although not rated high in pre-season polls, it combined teamwork, spirit and talent to put Pellagrinis boys on top again. In round one, B.C. met University of Massachusetts, A long fly, going, going, going β€” FOUL. Anderson crosses the plate. Happiness is a game winning home run. mm Hockenbury to Riley for the out; Anderson backs up. - 5 208 the Yankee Conference champs. O ' Brien got into trouble early, allowing 8 hits and 4 runs in four innings. Pellagrini left him in and he finished, giving eleven hits and five runs. Bill hit a two-run single and Anderson chipped in with a homer to left. When the game ended after 8 in- nings because of rain, the score read B.C. -8 Mass. -5. It was B.C. -Northeastern in the finals. Grolnic held B.C. to 4 hits and only 2 runs, as N.U. triumphed 10-2. The Huskies got 6 runs in the second inning and 4 runs in the ninth. A double by Anderson scored one run, but a rally collapsed. O ' Brien allowed one hit, no runs and struck out 7 in relief for 6-2 3 innings. So ended another successful season. n.c.a.a, Runners lead away, one out. A swing and a miss, strike two. Problems of coaching. A perfect slide: B.C. 1-0. m. .Jt ,β€’β–Ό Anderson scoops and throws to Kitley for the out. - 209 B.C B.C. B.C BC. B.C B.C. B.C B.C. BC. M.I.T. 3 Rhode Island 4 Springfield Dartmouth 5 Harvard Tufts 1 Northeastern 9 Providence 1 B.U 1 (O ' Brien) B.C. 11 Tufts 1 (Hutchison) B.C. 1 B.U. 5 (O ' Bnen) B.C. 1 Northeastern 4 (Foley) B.C. 5 Amherst 3 (O ' Bnen) B.C. 3 Providence 1 (Foley) B.C. 5 Holy Cross (O ' Brien) B.C. 1 Holy Cross 2 (Foley) B.C. 8 U Mass. 5 (O ' Brien) B.C. 2 Northeastern 10 (Foley) (O ' Brien) (Foley) (O ' Brien) (Foley) (O ' Brien) (Foley) (O ' Brien) (Foley) INDIVIDUAL BATTING POS. NAME CLASS G AB H 2B 3B HR RBI AVG. 2B Fran Riley Sr. 18 57 19 2 5 .331 SS Tom Anderson Sr. 18 68 21 2 2 9 .310 P-RF Ed Foley Sr 16 53 15 1 1 7 .283 3B Ed O ' Neill So. 18 71 20 2 5 .281 IB Bill Kitley Jr. 15 51 14 1 1 8 .274 LF Fred Prifty Sr. 18 71 18 1 2 1 10 .255 C Ed Hockenbury Sr. 17 52 13 2 5 .250 CF Ed McElaney Sr. 17 52 13 1 1 11 .250 RF Mick Amick Jr. 18 51 12 1 1 1 12 .240 P Bill O ' Brien Jr. 11 29 6 2 .207 P Pete Ford So 7 2 1 .500 OF Marty Joyce So 6 6 2 .333 3B Bill Plunkert So 5 4 1 1 .250 P Dennis Connolly Jr. 1 1 .000 P Jim Curley So 1 .000 C Larry Marino So. 1 1 .000 INDIVIDUAL PITCHING NAME CLASS G IP R ER ERA HO BB SO W-L Bill O ' Brien Jr. 11 81% 22 17 1.89 55 25 75 7-2 Ed Foley Sr. 8 551 3 17 14 2.29 42 19 36 5-3 Pete Ford So. 6 13 ' 3 5 4 2.79 8 14 13 0-0 Rich Hutchison Sr. 4 eva 4 3 4.63 5 6 4 1-0 Steve Kelleher So. 1 1 ' 3 2 0.00 1 4 1 0-0 Dennis Connolly Jr. 1 3 4 1 3.00 5 2 2 0-0 Jim Curley So. 1 1 1 1 9.00 2 1 0-0 Coach Eddie Pellagrini completed his 9th season Won 1 1 1 Lost 67 Tied 1 Captain: Tom Anderson, ' 66 Senior Manager: John Muldoon, ' 66 Assistant Managers: John Barry Kevin O ' Malley Percentage .624 210 . After a disappointing fall season, the 1966-67 track Eagles moved into the Spring schedule prepared to de- fend its New England I.C.4A. Championship which it won from Holy Cross last year. A strong freshman team from 1965-66 added to a team built around six seniors which included Captain Bill Norris, Joe Kopka, John Lyons, Brian McNamara, Kevin O ' Malley and Charles Zaikowski. Norris and junior sensation Jim Kavanagh were the team stars. Norris was the I.C.4A. steeplechase champion and Kavanagh picked up where All-American John Fiore left off in the weight events. Jim took third in the N.C.A.A. hammer throw and also won the A.A.U. decathalon at Buffalo. On the indoor schedule, after soundly defeating Rhode Island, the team competed against Harvard, M.I.T., Brown, Holy Cross, Boston University, and Northeastern. Other indoor meets included K. of C. in Boston, Millrose Games, BAA. Boston, K. of C. New York, G.B.C. at Tufts, N.Y.A.C. Championships and the Conn. Relays. The Eagles met Boston University, UConn., and Holy Cross in outdoor meets and competed in the B.C. Car- nival Relays, the Penn. Relays, the G.B.C. and the New England I.C.4A. Championship, ending the year. Another first helps close the gap against Harvard. Even track has its hazards. Norris on way to steeple-chase record. 212 Coach Gilllgan talks pre-meet strategy. Up-up-up and ooooover! m The 1 00 yd. dash takes stamina and a big chest. β–  ' A k; 213 Art Kelley attempts to break John Thomas ' record. Star Jim Kavanagh wheels around in preparation for a new discus record. ft 214 It could be a new record on the high hurdles. Another first in the broad jump. Coach Gllligan plans strategy. 215 y f ! n p n RP. ' ' n ' . t β€’Β« ' p ' i .Β , β€’ f V 216 B.C. ' s ski team placed sixth for the 1 966-67 season in the New England Intercollegiate Ski Conference ' s Osborne division. High point of the season was the B.C. slalom meet at Mad River Glen, Vermont. Second place went to soph Bill Toof, and ninth, twenty-first, and twenty-ninth to juniors Richard Fitzgerald, Roger Kerouac, and Richard Ballou. The Eagles placed third. Overall Champion of the NEISC ' s seven races was Bill Toof, with 67 1 out of 700 possible points Captain Steve Hamlet received the league ' s Senior Recognition Award, annually given to the senior who has contributed most to the NEISC in his four years. ski 217 soccer Soccer has finally made it big time at Boston Col- lege. In its fourth year as a club, it had a regular schedule and a coach. With the financial aid of student organiza- tions and the B.C. A. A., a field, nets, and uniforms were ob- tained. The players themselves did the rest by bringing home the only winning record of the fall campaigns. The world ' s football game acquired international flavor with many of the University ' s foreign students adding their skill knowledge, and points. Most of the players however, were local students with little or no experience. A word of congratulations must be given to coach Al Charlie Ponera maneuvers for a shot. %j| 2J ! ! r i The winning goal is set up against a strong Nasson team. 218 Rufe, a former all-Conference goalie at Mt. St. Marys of Maryland. A graduate student in C.B.A., he was a volun- teer coach, but after his performance, he may be around for a while. The club finished a complete varsity schedule with a 9-4 record. This included wins over such highly regarded teams as American International, Lowell Tech, Nasson College, and St. Francis. The losses were to Gordon College, the N.A.I. A. Eastern Champions, and Nichols, which has lost only one game in three years. Only Captain Rich Quinn and Charlie Ponera, an orig- inal founder of the club, will graduate. The stars were Alfred Skip Gostyla who set a new scoring record of 21 goals and 4 assists for 25 points and Alonso Villegas, a freshman from Colombia. Bill Plunkert, a third baseman in the spring, filled in at goal after an injury sidelined Doc Cavan, and his 2.28 average of goals against and two shutouts ranked him among the best goalies in New England. Next season the team moves to varsity status and a schedule featuring twice as many games and competi- tion to include such rivals as Brandeis, Tufts, Boston Uni- versity, and M.I.T. Due to hard work and persistence, it appears that Boston College now has another varsity team to proudly support. First Row (L-R): Warwick, Martinez, Jegede, Hinchey, Villegas, Nijhawan Second Row (L-R): Cahill, Saplenza, Gostyla, Sarno, Capt. Quinn, Ponera, Angelini Third Row: Manager Connolly, Buckley, Wasowski, Cavan, MacCormack, Innes, Narcisco, Coach Rufe. Missing: Plunkert, Mwaura B.C. 3 BC 12 B.C. 4 B.C. 6 B.C. B.C. 7 BC 5 Gordon College 5 Worcester JC 1 BC, 3 Maryknoll 3 B.C. 2 A.I.C. 3 BC 2 Nichols 5 BC 3 Worcester J C B.C. 2 Lowell Tech 2 BC 2 Wentworth Inst. Assumption Nasson College St. Francis Salem State Stonehill 219 rifle club The Rifle Club operates under the auspices of the De- partment of Military Science. The club seeks to encour- age organized rifle shooting and improved marksmanship through the intercollegiate competition of the Varsity, Women ' s, Freshmen, and ROTC Teams. Rifle Shooting is a recognized sport of the college and the Varsity Team members earn school letters. This year the Varsity Team won over eighty percent of its matches, with the highlight of the year being the win over North- eastern. The success of the Varsity Team was due to the shooting of seniors Jack Lambert, Bob Cartwright. Mary Gallogly, and John St. George. 220 Although handicapped by lack of both f acilities and a coach, the Sailing Team had another successful season. In nine meets against New England ' s best, the Eagles won six trophies. At Stonehill, Rich Reinhard and Pete Gingras captured a first place trophy, while Emmet Logue ' s crew of Chuck Lamar, Art Kelly, and Art Stratton took first place at the Coast Guard Academy. Commo- dore Reinhard and Gary MacDonald skippered the team to a second place at Tufts. The third place came on the Potomac in the Frostbite Intersectional Regatta. sailing 221 golf After a slow start in the fall, the Golf team came back to have a good spring season. Rain and snow held up early practice, but in April things got started. The com- petition was fairly tough, but B.C. made a good account of itself. After the regular season, they competed in the New England championships. The team receives little recognition and supplies its own time and equipment. However, every year B.C. is represented on the greens and fairways of the East. As in any other season, drives that sliced, putts that hung on the lip of the cup and chips into the sand traps, told the story. X 1966-67 Golf Schedule .fei . i E.C.A.C. Tournament Babson, M.I.T. E.C.A.S. Golf Williams, Harvard B.U., Brandeis Greater Boston Golf Tournament Holy Cross Brown New Englands Burlington, Vt. Farmingdale, N.Y. Charles River C.C. Wayland C.C. Charles River C.C. Providence Rhode Island 222 The Wrestling Team, coached by Mr. James Maloney and captained by Rick Bradley (10-0) and Dick Moses (8-0-1), completed its seventh year of intercollegiate competition. The feature of this season ' s team was the wrestling of seniors Matt Avitable, Pete Gately, Tom Cur- tin, and Norm Leen. The team (4-4-2) defeated Bran- deis. Rhode Island, Boston State, and Holy Cross while tying Brown and Coast Guard Academy. Bright spots in an injury filled season were juniors Paul Trombi and Brian Froelich who lost only one match each. The future looks bright for this growing varsity sport. wrestling Reversal for two points. Pin him in 20 sec? 223 tennis One of the newest spring sports is tlie Boston College Tennis Club. It has been officially recognized as a varsity sport for the spring of 1 968, so 1 967 was its last season at the club level. The four boys returning from last year who made up the nucleus of the young and promising squad included John Chanowski, Bill Meakem, Jack Semar and Ken Sibelian. Other prospects for starting positions included Tom Delaney, Pete Gingrass, Joe Harney and Tom Hey. After regular season play, the team sent four players to Yale for the New England Tennis Tournament. Things look bright for tennis in the future. 224 features ' yur ; ' -fiyi-- β–  ' junior week In Camelot the rain may never fall till after sundown β€” in Framingham however, it may and did. But as the scene switched on Friday night, even the rain couldn ' t spoil the elegant setting of Caesar ' s Monticello. There, the club orchestra set the mood for the more than five hundred couples who had come to dine and dance. All were enter- tained by the popular comedian. Jack Carter, who liter- ally stole the show in his own inimitable fashion. The culmination of the evening was the coronation of Miss Judi Lorden as Junior Prom Queen. It was her honor to reign that memorable night. We ' ll drink anything. We sing our proud refrain. ' Really! Ilii e it. 226 You old DEVIL! 227 Along with the balmy days and misty nights of the spring of 1966 are stored the memories of Junior Week. In April, the Class of 1 967 set out in quest of a happy interlude in the midst of their academic cares. The result was the retelling of a legend filled with the adventure and excitement that characterized the whole of Junior Week. On this quest, we were led back to the days of chivalry and the Round Table as the Lerner and Lowe musical, Camelot, made its debut in Campion Auditorium on Wed- nesday evening, April 27. This Arthurian tale of the conflict between Sir Lance- lot ' s love for his queen and his loyalty to his king is a familiar one. But the performances of David Morgan as the idealistic king, Nancy Collins as the amorous queen, and Terry Dwyer as the gallant intruder, brought the tale to life. So much so, that for many, Camelot has become synonymous with Junior Week 1 966. This would have been impossible however, without the very competent and talented cast of supporting actors and actresses. Steve Lowe as the comic King Pellinore, Ray Sarno as the despicable Mordred, Connie Curran as his irresistible, sweet-toothed aunt Morgan le Fey, as What do you think? Give me my sword. What happened to the prompter? M w What have I done? 228 well as the numerous dancers, knights and ladies-in- waiting deserve proper recognition for their delightful performances which contributed so greatly to the show ' s success. Scenery for a Junior Show had never been so magnif- icent and elaborate. This was due to the artistic and cre- ative imagination of director Frank Mitton. Under his guidance, the magic land of Camelot appeared amidst a flourish of color with its splendid castles and enchanted forest. It was against such a splendid background that the brilliant, spectacular costumes found their proper setting. To Ann Home and her industrious staff belong the praise for these creations. A tremendous part of the fairy tale mood that was con- veyed in this production was due to the beautiful, lively musical score so superbly presented by the orchestra under the very capable direction of Burt Parcels. The audience seemed most reluctant to awaken from the magical spell which had been cast over them during the evening. This seemed to be signified most emphati- cally by their standing ovation. Let ' s go lusting. It ' s your turn now. Once a knight Is enough. 229 Yes. my lord! 230 Bringing together a host of varied talent, the concert was quite possibly the most unusual part of Junior Week. The Beach Boys received top billing, singing fanniliar hits to a capacity crowd at Roberts Center amidst the usual bantering for which they have become famous. Included in the program was The Lost, an area rock group. Brandishing loud guitars and long hair, they literally filled the room with sound. With a laugh and a song and another laugh, the Uncalled-For Three topped off the afternoon in the comic-songster tradition. It was a fitting end to a week so full of memories. 231 homecoming 1 966 232 Highlighting the fall social calendar, Homecoming 1966 proved to be an outstanding event. On Friday eve- ning October 14, a lively audience enjoyed the exciting entertainment provided by the Isley Brothers and Martha and the Vandellas The program had many of B.C.s more jubilant constituents literally dancing in the aisles. The next day, at the important B.C. -Syracuse game, a motorcade conducted Homecoming Queen, Mary Har- rington and her court into Alumni Stadium. The lovely quintet was introduced to the capacity crowd by Sal DiMasi, chairman of the Social Committee of the Inter- class Council. Escorted by members of the Interclass Council, the girls added a refreshingly bright note to an otherwise somber afternoon. That night however, spirits were on the upswing at the Hotel Bradford where the Flamingos treated students and their dates to an evening filled with mirth and dancing. The weekend is now merely a memory, but to those who shared in the gaiety it will linger as a happy one. 233 lecturers performers The goal of Boston College, as it is of every institution of higher learning, is the education of its academic family. In practice, this necessitates both a faculty that is compe- tent and challenging, and a forum for the ideas and talents of those not affiliated with the University. In providing for the latter, many eminent lecturers and distinguished performers have always graced our campus, and this past year was certainly no exception. Boston College was truly the proverbial marketplace for the meeting of noted spokesmen from varied and diverse fields. Since 1962, the Honors Program of the College of ftrnoldToynbee Barry Ulanov Hans Kung 234 Business Administration has contributed to this end by sponsoring the highly successful Loyola Lecture Series. Previous speakers have included such noted authorities as Sean Lemass, the former Premier of Ireland, Gustave Weigel, S.J., and author Vance Packard. This past year. Doctor Iran Van Chuong and Mr. Robert C. Tyo were presented to highly appreciative audiences. Dr. Chuong, one of the world ' s foremost experts on South- east Asia and the former South Vietnamese Ambassador to the United States, discussed The Way to Peace: A Vietnamese View. Mr. Tyo, the Executive Vice President of the Black and Decker Manufacturing Company, asked. Is Business for the Birds? treating the principles and philosophy of business management. The Knights of Columbus also contributed to the intel- lectual life of the University by sponsoring Dr. William A. Lynch, the noted obstetrician and gynecologist. Speak- ing on birth control. Dr. Lynch offered the historical view- point on the subject and also discussed the problem of the pill and its moral implications. It was an illuminat- ing and informative experience for everyone involved. In March the Order of the Cross and Crown, the Honor Society of the College of Arts and Sciences, presented its annual piano concert with Jesus Maria Sanroma. Accord- Jesus Maria Sanroma 235 ingly, this year ' s program included selections from Hay- den, Chopin, Casals, and Gershwin. March also saw the annual Maurice J. Tobin Interna- tional Affairs Lecture, sponsored by the Student Senate of the College of Arts and Sciences. For the second time in the history of the series, the featured speaker was the famous and controversial British historian, Arnold Toyn- bee, whose speech was entitled, The Future of Cities . The most comprehensive and diverse group of lectures and performances presented at Boston College is, of course, the Humanities Series, which is now in its tenth year. Originally organized as a forum for noted poets, and financed by a gift from a prominent New York physician, the series subsequently expanded to include all cultural activities. An obvious example of this change in focus is the added emphasis placed on musical production in the last few years. In conjunction with these endeavors, the Humanities Series has affiliated itself both with the American Asso- ciation of Colleges and the New England Poetry Circuit. The former organization provides lectures and performers in many fields, particularly music, and participation in Iberian Dance Theatre Don Cossack Chorus Alirio Diaz 236 their Arts Program has meant diversification for the program here. Boston College is one of the original founders of the Poetry Circuit which aims to provide interested au- diences for many of the nation ' s best younger poets. All of these events, including three or four art exhibits each year, are performed as a cultural service to the University, of course, but also as a public service to the community at large. The list of the past year ' s attractions is, indeed, an im- pressive one. The world of the performing arts was repre- sented by the Don Cossack Chorus, the Iowa String Quar- tet, the Yale Russian Chorus, the Iberian Dance Theater, and the classical guitarist, Alirio Diaz, who appeared at Middle Earth, the Boston College coffeehouse. The academic world sent the theologian, Hans Kijng, the playwright. Marc Connelly, and the critic, Cleanth Brooks, and many other renowned lecturers. Finally, the noted artist, Ulrico Schettini, painted a mural for the University. Working in McElroy Lounge, he lectured simultaneously on his techniques. All in all, it was a remarkably success- ful year for the Humanities Series and for the college community in general. Yale Russian Chorus THE lINIVEBSIir CHIHIlLf ;i BOSTON C01U6E C. AlEXaHDER PELOQUIN a - Jean Madeira 237 computer center The presence of a computer on the B.C. campus was occasioned not only by the need for more efficient admin- istrative operations, but also by the University ' s desire to assist, through computerized research, both the faculty and student body in the pursuit of more meaningful study in their respective fields of concentration. For the student especially, a knowledge of computers and their possible uses is an asset which will enable him to make great strides in the business world after graduation. In 1 964 Boston College acquired its present computer, the I.B.M. 1401, the largest available model. ( β– .. |;|) 1 β€’β– .I ' jl I I i;m I ! | ' 238 In keeping with the rapid expansion of all departments on our campus, so too, the Biology Department ushered in the past year with the opening of its own greenhouse. The major reason for its construction was to facilitate graduate studies. Other advantages of the structure are the opportunity it affords for the study of plant physiology and the biochemical activities of plant life. The green- house ' s constantly controlled temperature also allows for a successful study of tropical fish. In the future, it will also be available for the use of undergraduate students. greenhouse :,Mi .; 239 triple h The first semester of the past academic year was en- livened by the visit of Vice-President Hubert Humphrey. Arriving at the Heights on October 1 3, his purpose was to speak in behalf of the policies of the national administra- tion and to lend his enthusiastic support to the campaigns of Massachusetts Democratic candidates prior to Election Day, November 6. Greeted by pickets protesting the war in Vietnam, Mr. Humphrey entered Roberts Center under the protection of the Boston Police. Once inside, the Vice-President faced an auditorium jammed with 4,500 students and in- 240 terested news reporters. Following an introduction by Reverend Robert J. McEwen, S.J., Moderator of the Pub- lic Affairs Forum of Boston College, the conference began with Mr. Humphreys speech entitled, Challenge of the Sixties. While recognizing the picketers ' right to non- violent protest, he defended the necessity of the Admin- istration ' s actions in the Vietnam War. He mentioned America ' s power and its world-wide reputation as the bastion of justice and the guardian of the free world. Thus, he maintained that America was not in Vietnam to overtake the country, but rather to restore the peace which existed prior to the start of the present conflict. Mr. Humphrey ended his speech by stating that U.S. foreign policy in Vietnam was cautious, prudent, and sensible. Before opening the conference to questions, Mr. Humphrey paused to praise the qualifications of the Democratic candidates for election in Massachusetts who had accompanied him to B.C. He lauded especially gubernatorial candidate Edward J. McCormack, and senatorial candidate Endicott Peabody, who was unable to attend. A panel consisting of WHDH ' s newsman Leo Egan, Thomas Gallagher of the Boston Herald, Robert Healey, Political Editor of the Boston Globe, and the Heights own Bill Waldron questioned the guest speaker. 241 boston 242 What can you do in Boston? is a query often on the lips of many college students. A great variety of diversion- ary activities exist to fulfill any possible desire. Whether you are a doer or merely a watcher, your spirit of adven- ture is sure to be satisfied in Boston. If seeking a cultural experience, you may wend your way through the Museum of Fine Arts, spend an evening at the Pops, or attend a preview of a Broadway-bound stage production. On the athletic scene, you may cheer the Celtics and the Bruins at the Boston Garden, or the Red Sox at Fenway Park. If in the mood for strolling, there is always the Charles River with its sailboats and crews, the Boston Common and Public Gardens, or the Freedom Trail. Entertainment such as is found in the many coffee houses of Boston, provide yet another face of Boston. The variety of music presented in these establishments ranges from jazz to blues and folk. There you may also hear the works of an aspiring young poet or view an ex- perimental form of theatre. The entertainment is exciting. ALF SMOKV JOE ' S l 243 unique and often sparked by enthusiastic audience participation. For those devotees of the stage, Boston has much to offer. Whether it be a pre-Broadway engagement with big name stars, a local company production featuring some excellent local talent, or a college effort head- lining some possible future star. The wide selection of quality plays performed in and around town makes the hectic scramble for tickets a truly worthwhile effort. A city ' s museums make a tremendous contribution to its overall cultural environment. Boston is most fortunate to be able to boast several fine museums of art and science. The libraries of the many area colleges and universities in addition to the Boston Public Library, fondly referred to by its frequenters as the B.P.L., afford students a bet- ter opportunity to locate source material for those numer- ous papers. In their leisure hours, college students also enjoy con- gregating at some favorite spot to engage in the friendly fiackBayTHEATRE sw w iiilo THRU MAR PAT ROBEP SUZUKli HrrsETj l l l l l lll t .l . UJllU Ml UlA ff |β€” rmw wurmiiiilii 244 art of conversation As a relief from the daily pressures of academic life, students are able to unwind in the local tap rooms which dot the city. Every college has one or two locales which are patronized by the quaffers who have miraculously attained legal maturity in the state of Massachusetts. There are many fine pubs other than the select few which collegians regularly visit. A new trend in many bars has been to establish a place where stags can meet new people and where girls can find pleasant company. As a result, these new places are now referred to as date bars. If you enjoy a good meal, Boston houses numerous restaurants β€” some elegant, some simple β€” to suit Indi- vidual tastebuds. Baked beans may have made Boston famous to foreigners, but when in Boston you may also discover what Boston is famous for among its own citi- zens while enjoying a delicious seafood dinner. As every schoolboy has been taught, Boston is also the cradle of American civilization. But have all her col- 245 legians taken the opportunity to visit the historical land- marks which are scattered throughout the city? It is sur- prising how an actual tour of these historic sites can make history come to life for each individual. Those stu- dents who are here merely for four short years and who never walk the Freedom Trail create a void in that educa- tion for which they traveled to the historic city. For the student who takes the initiative, the rewards of Boston are invaluable. Returning to the Hub will al- ways be a happy remembrance of the past. 246 JESSICA TANDTT z HUME CRONYirzz ROSEMARY MURPtCt A DELICATE BALANa furksM dcqftefpse 247 little mary sunshine Little Mary Sunshine, the first musical presented by the Boston College Dramatic Society, which is in its 101st season, brought us back to a time when the world was much simpler than ours is today. Good meant good, bad meant bad, virtue was all, and justice always triumphed. Rick Besoyan ' s delightful parody of the Jeanette Mac- donald-Nelson Eddy oldies, featuring Michael Lynott and Evelyn Cataldi, brought to Campion Hall overwhelm- 248 ing professionalism. The dancing, singing, comedy, and obvious dynamism of the cast were the ingredients re- sponsible for the productions success and its subsequent invitation to appear at Boston ' s Winterfest 1967. Little Mary ' s reception there definitely paralleled the enthusi- astic praise it had received at B.C. You ' ve got to hand it to Little Mary Sunshine for providing such refreshing, artful entertainment. H r SHH I W Bli3 I H 249 winter weekend The Winter Weekend of 1967 coupled the biggest social event of the winter season with the biggest basket- ball game of the year. The festivities began on Friday, February 17, with a semi-formal dance at the Meadows with The Remains supplying the soul . The next after- noon was set aside for the Boathouse Bash at the Cam- bridge Boathouse where B.C. men and their dates received their psych for the big game along with liberal doses of music supplied by the Downbreakers and free 250 refreshments supplied by the Council of Resident Men. The focal point of the weekend had to be the B.C.- Providence basketball game at Roberts Center on Satur- day night. It was an event that will proudly be remem- bered by B.C. sports fans for years to come. The date section of the stands greeted the team with a shower of streamers which began the cheering that never ceased that night. Playing one of their finest first halves, the Eagles, sparked by Billy Evans, Ste ve Adelman, and Willie Wolters, beat Providence 83-82 despite All- American Jimmy Walker ' s usually great performance. Sunday featured a concert at Roberts Center by that country boy from Harvard, Tom Rush, who offered his polished folk routine. Playing on the same bill. The Junior Citizens displayed their own brand of talent that ranged from comedy to folk music Thus the curtain came down on an extremely success- ful, fun-filled weekend. 251 junior year abroad What was that year? What were those months of study in Europe? What was that experience all about? The answer to these questions is very elusive, very complex. For some, the year was a break from monotony. For others it was an opportunity for independence and grow- ing up. Yet, for all, it was something much more. The year was experience β€” going places, doing things, seeing for themselves. It sometimes became a giddy merry-go- round, a blur of sights, sounds, and faces. But after the 252 ride was over, the riders discovered that they were left with something very solid β€” a brand of education that books alone could never adequately furnish. Last year, ten Boston College students spent their junior year studying in various foreign cities. Pamela Fitzgerald studied English in Rome. Economics majors Charles Hauser, Joel Millonzi, and Bill Murray studied in Vienna. Joseph Jennings continued his studies in English at Caen. A Philosophy major, Patrick Madigan worked at Louvain University in France. Winner of the Campus Council scholarship for study abroad, Robert Penella spent the academic year in Naples pursuing a major in Classics. Alfred Sauliners studied Mathematics at Lou- vain. Carl Schaefer, an English major was in Munich. Brian Walsh studied Economics in Dublin. If you knew one of these people, perhaps you were treated to hours of stories and touring via pictures, but mere words cannot explain all that that year was. It can only be hoped that more students will be able to experi- ence its magic for themselves. Β«; . K u:r:Β«..:. . m i i 253 education skits In early March, under the auspices of their Student Senate, the four classes of the School of Education pre- sented to the University their eleventh annual Inter-class Skit Competition. By every conceivable standard, the evening was truly a memorable one. Who ' s Afraid of Juanita Chiquita Marita??? , the presentation of the Sophomore Class, recounted the story of an ambitious senorita ' s attempts to find herself a boy- friend. With the help of her father ' s irresistible perfume and the support of a talented cast of classmates, the young Juanita eventually succeeded in capturing both the mata- 254 dor she loved and the applause of an appreciative audience. The perils of student teaching were delightfully paro- died in the senior skit, Student Geisha . Depicting the disastrous homecoming of a small village ' s first and only geisha, the production culminated in an uproarious cari- cature of the troubles student teachers encounter. Win- ning costumes and outstanding choreography character- ized this skit, a surprisingly good one in view of the class ' lack of adequate time for preparation. The Freshman Class offering, Paradise Lost? , was decidedly amusing and really quite professional for a group witn so little experience. A cute little angel ' s successful antics in winning the Big Boss of hell were artfully portrayed in this rather arresting production. The acting, choreography, and music all contributed to this skit ' s warm reception. As for the juniors, only superlatives can describe their rendition of the Making of a God 412 B.C. An im- probable Zeus, a patriotic Junobird, an indescribable Brunhil da, and an outlandish Athenian, Attilio by name, combined to make the Junior Class skit the biggest hit of the evening. Indeed, almost everything about this produc- tion was slick to the point of perfection. 255 sab higgins In the spring of 1947 the Heights spouted a wooden structure which was in fact an authentic U.S. Army bar- racks. Originally intended to house campus activities, it first held classrooms and offices. Later, the Reserve Officers Training Corps commandeered it. Likewise, the Geology Department claimed a section of the unpreten- tious edifice for its laboratory facilities. Its walls also echoed with numerous Dramatic Society rehearsals and hectic deadline activity of the Heights staff. In the fall of 1966, however, bulldozers and steam shovels devoured its military-like facade to break ground for the new Social Science Center. 256 Higgins Hall, the Biology and Physics Center at Boston College, is an integral part of B.C.s ambitious ten year development program. Completed in late 1 966, the build- ing marks the beginning of a new era for the Sciences here on the Heights. Generous contributions from numer- ous alumni and benefactors, grants from the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Health, and assistance from the Federal Government made its construction possible. The building honors Mr. John P. Higgins of Arlington, Massachusetts, a long-standing friend of Mr. Stephen P. Mugar, one of the University ' s most generous benefactors. Despite the controversy that its architectural design has sparked, no one can deny that Higgins Hall filled the very pressing need for more adequate scientific facilities. Its one hundred thirty-six thousand square feet of class- room, laboratory, and research space alleviated the in- tolerable conditions that existed in Devlin Hall as a result of the overall expansion and growth of the University in the last forty years. Indeed, the new science center ' s very presence testifies most significantly to the progress and excellence which will continue to characterize the sci- ences at Boston College for many years to come. gjirtiw .1 j - . - 1 --- 257 258 rEASOlM V 259 cataldi in concert 260 On the night of March 12, 1967, Miss Evelyn Cataldi, a sophomore in the School of Education and a profes- sional folksinger, appeared in concert for the benefit of the B.C. Lay Apostolate Program. Charming the audience with her lighthearted show- manship, she sang a wide variety of popular folk songs which ranged from Bob Dylan ' s It Ain ' t Me, Babe to the Negro protest song. Oh Freedom. When the audience joined in Pack Up Your Sorrows, Roberts Center shook under their enthusiastic singing and clapping. This tempo continued during the second half of the show when, hav- ing switched from a full length pink gown to a very at- tractive miniskirt, Evelyn returned to finish the concert in a more groovy manner. In her own provocatively cute rendition of Hello, Hello, she charmed every male in the audience. The folk-rock atmosphere had the audience lit- erally swinging to the beat of the music. As the lights dimmed for the final time, the applause still lingered. But the audience was not alone in its appreciation. Speaking on behalf of the Lay Apostolate Program, Father David Cummiskey expressed his heartfelt appre- ciation. The financial success of this evening would trans- port B.C. apostles to their faraway missions. 261 middle earth This year the Heights witnessed the appearance of a campus coffeehouse. Middle Earth. Sponsored by the B.C. Council of Resident Men and directed by Bob Rebholz and Rene Durand, the creators of this new establishment were guided by two principles. They be- lieved that resident students deserved some sort of in- expensive, on-campus entertainment β€” someplace where the student without a car could bring a date for a pleasant 262 evening. Secondly, they strove to provide an enjoyable experience that was both socially broadening and in- tellectually stimulating. From these two aspirations emerged the coffeehouse. Entertainment ranges from live folk music on week- ends to dramatic workshop productions and poetry read- ing on weeknights. Some of this year ' s more frequent performers have been B.C. ' s Evelyn Cataldi, Carol Bregar, Tom Power, Bob Handler, Bill Fischer, Carroll Delaney, and numerous others. This freshman season has proved highly successful. Next year promises to be even better with the initiation of an exchange program with other college coffeehouses: Middle Earth will then be able to feature folksingers from such schools as Brown, B.U., U.Mass, and Holy Cross. Thus, Middle Earth will become not only a center of B.C. campus life, but also an effective liaison between Boston College and the rest of the collegiate world. COME TO MIDDLE EARTH! 263 courtside club The 1966-67 basketball season was highlighted not only by an NCAA bid, but also by unparalleled student support. Several seniors envisioned organizing student supporters in an attempt to display to the team the students ' unquestioning confidence in them. This dream was realized in the Courtside Club. Following the sugges- tion of Eagle coach Bob Cousy, the Athletic Association sold more than seven hundred season tickets at regular student rates to Club members. The efforts of this year ' s Club were well rewarded by an obviously confident team that completed the season by ranking first in the East. KKKi ' iirr !iΒ iios WHEII ClOSCD 264 graduates ANTHOMY F. ABELL ALBERT ACKIL RICHARD J. AIELLO JOHN T. AGRESTO Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences A.B. English B.S. Biology B.S. Finance A.B. Political Science DAVID J. AHERN PETER M. ALBERICO ROBERT M. ALLEN JOSEPH P. ALVES School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. French A.B. Economics B.S. Marketing A.B. Economics ELLIOTT W. AMICK, JR. RICHARD J. ANDERSON HENRY J. ANDROSKI PATRICIA L ANTON Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Nursing B.S. Economics A.B. Mathematics A.B. History B.S. Nursing dh Aik 4) iM ik 266 MARSHALL ANTONIO M. ANGEL A. AREVALO PATRICIA A, ARTHURS DIANE ATKINSON Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education School of Education B.S. Marketing A.B. Economics B.S. Elementary Education B.S. History JAMES F. ATKINSON HAROLD ATTRIDGE BRIAN M. AUSTIN VINCENT A. AVALLONE Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration A.B. Mathematics A.B. Classics B S, Marketing B.S. Finance CARL A. AVENI MATTHEW J. AVITABILE RICHARD M. AYACHE THOMAS J. AZAR Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences A.B. Political Science A.B. Psychology B.S. Geology A.B. Philosophy g[kiki 267 KATHRYN MARY BABEL STEPHEN C. BACHLE JOHN F. BAICHI GERARD A. BAKER Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Nursing A.B. English B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting WILLIAM M. BALE WILLIAM G. BARBIERI PAUL J. BARNES ROBERT E. BARRETT Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Economics B.S. Accounting B.S. Economics A.B. Economics THOMAS J. BARRETT JOHN J. BARRY JOHN S. BARTLETT III WILLIAM E. BATES Arts and Sciences Business Adm inistration Arts and Sciences Business Administration A.B. English B.S. Marketing A.B. Economics B.S. Production 268 JOHN J. BAUM JAMES F. BEATON GERALDINE C. BECK DENNIS E. BEHAN Arts and Sciences School of Education School of Education Business Administration B.S. Physics B.S.English B.S. Speech-English B.S. Marketing ALBERT F. BELLIVEAU JEROME J. BELLO EDWARD J. BENE CHARLES A. BENEDICT Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration A.B. Modern Language A.B. Psychology B.S. Accounting B.S. General Business ROBERT M. BENT RICHARD P. BERGAGNA RICHARD J. BEVILACQUA SR. BERNADETTE BEZAIRE Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing B.S. Economics B.S. Finance B.S. Biology B.S. Nursing ' - as ' 4 A Ik 269 Good evening. 271 BRADFORD BIGHAM BRADLEY B. BILLINGS MARY K. BLACKWOOD JOHN H. BLAIR Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education Business Administration B.S. iVlarketing A.B. Economics B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Economics MICHAEL BLUMER ROBERT F. BODIO RONALD J. BOGNORE ARTHUR J. BORDUAS School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Mathematics B.S. Accounting B.S. Biology B.S. Economics SALVATORE BOSCO CARMINE N. BOTTO EDWARD J. BOUCHEA PETER 0. BOULAIS Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Chemistry B.S. English A.B. Political Science B.S. Economics i Z M A β–² β–²t d 272 MICHAEL K. BOURKE JOHN A. BOVE WILLIAM J. BOVITZ MARGARET BOWES Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing A.B.Slavic Studies B.S. Marketing A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing MICHAEL J. BOWLER CHARLES J. BOWSER, JR. JESS L BOWSER JOHN J. BOYLE Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration A.B. English A.B.English A.B. Theology B.S. Economics ARTHUR J. BRADLEY RICHARD J. BRADLEY, JR. THOMAS V. BRADY LEO D. BRANNELLY Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Biology B.S. Economics B.S. Biology A.B. Economics r: v 273 MARK E. BRANON STEPHEN B. BRANSFIELD JOHN H. BRAZILIAN PETER F. BRIDE Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Biology B.S. Production B.S. Marketing B.S. Economics JOHN J. BRODY, JR. WILLIAM W. BROKOWSKI DAVID G. BROWN JOAN C. BROWNE Arts and Sciences School of Education Business Administration School of Nursing A.B. History B.S. English B.S. Accounting B.S. Nursing WILLIAM J BRUNELLE MAUREEN BRUNNER CLAIRE J. BUDWITIS JOHN E, BURGOYNE, JR School of Education Evening College School of Education Business Administration B.S. Speech-English A.B.English B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Production 274 JOHM P. BURKE SHEILA A. BURKE JOHN J. BURMS, JR. RICHARD F. BURNS Arts and Sciences Evening College Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Biology B.S. Education A.B. Sociology B.S. Finance SUSAN E. BURI IS JOHN A. BUSIWGER WILLIAM J. BUTLER III LYNDA L. BUTT School of Nursing Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education B.S. Nursing A.B. History B.S. Marketing B.S. Elementary Education ALAN L BUTTERS ARTHUR P. BYRNE THOMAS L. CAFARELLA RONALD F. CAHALY Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Production A.B. Economics A.B. Mathematics B.S. Finance β–  -- 275 BENJAMIM J. CAKE JOHN R. CALF JAMES E. CALLAi IAN III PETER A. CAMARRA Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Accounting B.S. Production B.S. Economics B.S. Production BARBARA ANN CAMILLE GORDON L CAIVIPBELL WILLIAM P. CANTY, JR. DAVID C. CAPOBIANCO Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Nursing A.B. Classics B.S. Production B.S. Accounting RAYIVIOND J. CAPOBIANO JOSEPH A. CAPPADONA ANTHONY J. CAPRARO JOHN A. CARBONE Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Accounting A.B. Englisli B.S. Accounting A.B. Mathematics f v. . d. ' - JS8: 43SiHrvv -f fllH l t ii Ai tA I li ik 276 JUDITH CAREY THOMAS J. CARLYON DAVID J. CARR JOHN L CARR Graduate Nursing School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Nursing B.S. History A.B. Economics A.B. English DAVID M. CARROLL ROBERT F. CARTWRIGHT, JR. JOAN MARIE CARUSO JOHN D. CARVEN Business Administration Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences B.S. Economics A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing A.B. Economics LEONARD M. CASEY EDWARD L CASHIN LEE V. CASSANELLI STEPHEN M. CASSIANI Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics B.S. Marketing A.B. History B.S. Geology k 111 278 279 JOSEPH A. CATANZANO JOANNE M. CAVALLARO ROGER J. CAVALLO JAMES E. CAVANAUGH Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Biology B.S. English A.B. Economics B.S. Mathematics THOMAS W. CECIL RICHARD R. CESATI II ARTHUR C. CHADWICK PETER S. CHAMBERLAIN Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Education School of Education B.S. Physics B.S. Biology B.S. English B.S. Speech-English JOSEPH J. CHANDA BRUCE W. CHAPMAN PETER L CIAMPI JACK R. CIMPRICH Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Biology A.B. Philosoph y B.S. Physics B.S. Math., Chemistry 280 RAYMOND J. CIOCI KAREN CLAFLIN MARY E. CLANCY WILLIAM R. CLIFFORD Business Administration School of Education Graduate Nursing Business Administration B.S. Finance B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Nursing B.S. Marketing CHRISTINE M. CLOCHER CAROL ANN COAKLEY JOSEPH E. COFFEY PATRICK J. COFFEY School of Nursing School of Nursing Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing A.B. English B.S, Chemistry CAROL A. COLAMARIA RAYMOND F. COLANGELO DENNIS M. COLEMAN ELLEN C. COLLINS School of Ectucation Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Elementary Education A.B. Philosophy A.B. Economics B.S. History Mmk kktsk 281 FRANCIS L. COLLINS JOHN J. COLLINS NANCY M. COLLINS RICHARD J. COLLINS Arts and Sciences School of Education School of Education Business Administration B.S. Biology B.S. Speech-English B.S. Elementary Education B.S, Marketing WILLIAM H. COLLINS WILLIAM J. CONCANNON JOHN R. CONKLIN JOHN B. CONNARTON, JR Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting A.B.English B.S. English ELIZABETH A. CONNELLY JOHN B. CONNERS JOHN W. CONNERY DENNIS F. CONNOLLY School of Nursing Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education B.S. Nursing A.B. Mathematics B.S. Accounting B.S. History is 282 FRANCES P. CONNOLLY JOHN β–‘. CONNOLLY JOHN F. CONNOLLY WILLIAM M. CONNOLLY School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Production A.B. Mathematics B.S. Biology WILLIAM R. CONNOLLY MARY E. CONNOR HARRY E. CONiyORS, JR. THOMAS F. CONNORS Business Administration Evening College Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Finance B.S. Education B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing RAYMOND CONSIDINE RICHARD F. CONWAY PAUL W. COOK ANN K. COSTELLO Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration School of Nursing A.B. English B.S. Finance B.S. Marketmg B.S. Nursing ikmk 283 They have got to do something about this dust bowl! 284 Did you hear the one about the farmer ' s daughter? 285 BRIAN COSTELLO Business Administration B.S. Finance IVIARY E. COSTELLO School of Nursing B.S. Nursing ANNE MARIE COTTER Graduate Nursing B.S. Nursing WILLIAM D. COTTER Arts and Sciences A.B. History EDWARD C. COTTLE Arts and Sciences B.S. Biology JOHN P. CRADOCK Business Administration B.S. Production CARROLL J. COUGHUN School of Education B.S. Special Education PATRICIA A. CRAIGEN School of Education B.S. English JOHN P. COUGHLIN Arts and Sciences B.S. Physics ANNE L CREEDEN School of Education B.S. Elementary Education ALFRED C. COURNOYER Business Administration B.S. Economics JANET T. CRIMLISK School of Nursing B.S. Nursing tf.i 286 DAVID CRIMIVIINS ROGER L CROKE MARGARET A. CROOK JOHN D. CROWLEY Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics B.S. Accounting B.S. English B.S. Mathematics, Physics JOHN C. CULUNAN RICHARD A. CUMMINS MARGARET A. CUNNIFF ROBERT H. CUNNINGHAM Arts and Sciences Business Admmistration School ot Education Arts and Sciences A.B. History B.S. Production B.S, Mathematics A.B. Economics ROBERT J. CUI ININGHAIVI BROTHER MICHAEL CUPOLI CORNELIA L. CURRAN JOHN R. CURRAN Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education Business Administration B.S. Economics B.S. Biology B.S. Speech-English B.S. Finance 287 RICHARD J. CURRAN GEORGE F. CORRIVAN ANDREW P. CURRY THOMAS B. CURTIN School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. English A.B. History B.S. Production B.S. Physics, Philosophy THOMAS J. CUSKIE MARIANNE DACKO CAROL A. DAILEY JOHN JOSEPH DAILEY Business Administration School of Education School of Education Business Administration B.S. Finance B.S. French B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Production JOHIM S. DALEY MARTIN R. DALEY NORBERT W. DALKIEWICZ JOHN A. DAMICO Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration A.B. Economics B.S. Finance B.S. Marketing B.S. Accounting 288 JENNIE R. DANIELE School of Education B.S. English ARTHUR A. DANIELS Arts and Sciences B.S. Biology LOUISE A. D ' ANTONIO School of Education B.S. English STEPHEN B. DARR Business Administration B.S. Accounting MARIANNE T. DAVIS School of Nursing B.S. Nursing KATHLEEN MARY DAWSON Graduate Nursing B.S. Nursing JAMES P. DAY Arts and Sciences A.B.English WILLIAM J. DeBERNARDIS Business Administration B.S. Accounting JOHN J, DeCOLLIBUS Business Administration B.S. Accounting RICHARD DEFRONZO Business Administration B.S. Accounting CAROL LEE DEIANA School of Nursing B.S. Nursing CAROL A. DEITSCH Evening College B.S. Education 289 GEORGE F. DELANEY LEON J. DELANEY WILLIAM F. DELANEY MARIE E. DELANY Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Nursing B.S. Economics B.S. Production A.B. History B.S. Nursing ANTHONY R. DeLUCA CAROL L. DeLUCA JOSEPH A. DeWlAMBRO JEREMIAH DeMICHAELIS Arts and Sciences School of Nursing Business Administration Arts and Sciences A.B, History B.S. Nursing B.S. Economics A.B. Economics NICHOLAS DeMINICO JOSEPH J. DENEEN JEANNE M. DERBA PETER B. DERVAN Evening College Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics A.B. Economics B.S. Special Education B.S. Chemistry 290 RALPH F. DESENA CELIA C. DEVLIN LORRAINE DIAMOND GEORGE A. DIDDEN Arts and Sciences School of Education Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics B.S. Special Education B.S. Nursing A.B.English ELIZABETH A. DIGGINS NANCY T. DiGREZIO THOMAS A. DILLON MICHAEL F. DiMARZO School of Nursing School of Education School of Education Arts and Sciences B.S. Nursing B.S. English B.S. Mathematics A.B. Economics SALVATORE F. DiMASI SANDRA 1. DiMATTEO JULIE A. DiNATALE FRANCIS J. DINEEN Business Administration School of Education School of Education Business Administration B.S. Accounting B.S. English B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Accounting Ah 291 Steve, PLEASE! You too, John. 292 293 JAMES M. DINEEN JAMES F. X. DINNEEN ALESSANDRINA DISCHINO DENISE J. DIVVER Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Nursing School of Education A.B. Modern Language A.B. Political Science B.S. Nursing B.S. Elementary Education ANNE K. DOHERTY BARRY C, W. DOHERTY EDWARD J. DOHERTY ELLEN T. DOHERTY School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Nursing B.S. Elementary Education A.B. Mathematics, Philosophy A.B. English B.S. Nursing LEONARD J. DOHERTY PAUL F. DOHERTY ROBERT E. DOHERTY ROBERT K. DOHERTY Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Production B.S. Biology B.S. Biology B.S. Marketing 294 JOHN F. DOLAN NEIL Wl. DOLAN PAUL E. DOLAN JAIVIES E. DOMINICK Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Accounting B.S. Finance B.S. Accounting A.B. Economics DOi INA M. DOWAHUE BRIAN P. DONOHOE SUSAN M. DONOVAN WILLIAM J. DONOVAN School of l lursing School of Education School of Education Arts and Sciences B.S. Nursing B.S. History B.S. Special Education A.B. Political Science ANN M. DOOLIN CHERYL ANN DOUGLASS JOHN F. DOWNES JOHN J. DOWNEY Evening College Graduate Nursing School of Education Business Administration B.S. Education B.S. Nursing B.S. Mathematics B.S. Economics β–  1 WM PC iX 1 rt ' 295 MARY L. DOWNEY KAREN MARIE DOYLE RICHARD J. DOYLE PAUL F. DRISCOLL School of Nursing Graduate Nursing Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing B.S. Production A.B. Psychology IVIARGUERITE P. DUFFY PAULA K. DUFFY DONNA E. DUGAN MICHAEL J. DUGGAIM School of Nursing School of Education School of Education Business Administration B.S. Nursing B.S. Special Education B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Production KEVIN C. DUNFEY JEAN DUNN RICHARD J. DUNN WILLIAM D. DUNN Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing School of Education Business Administration A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing B.S. English B.S. Finance β–  f 296 ARTHUR E. DURKIN, JR. WILLIAM J. DURKIN, JR. TERRENCE K. DWYER THOMAS E. DWYER Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Marketing A.B. English B.S. Economics B.S. Economics S. JOHN DWYER WILLIAM F. DWYER RICHARD F. DYNIA PAULA J. EDMONDS Business Administration School of Education Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Mark eting B.S. English B.S. Biology B.S. Speech-English MICHAEL G. EGGER FRANK J. EISENHART ELAINE ELENEWSKI RICHARD J. ELLIOTT Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Nursing School of Education A.B. English B.S. Economics B.S. Nursing B.S. Elementary-Speech Am 297 298 Get what? High there! 299 PATRICIA A. ELSON ANNE MARIE EMOND MICHAEL P. EQUI KATHLEEN ERCOLING School of Nursing School of Nursing Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing B.S. Biology B.S. Elementary Education DENISE M. ERICKSON LLOYD F. ERICKSON PAUL V. ERWIN FREDERICK C. FAHERTY School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. French B.S. Accounting A.B. Economics B.S. Marketing HENRY A. FAHEY MARY J. FALLA EDWARD P. FALLON JOHN G. FALLON Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Geology B.S. Elementary Education A.B. English A.B. Mathematics t J w y 4ik 300 MARK P. FALONGA ROBERT W. FANNON PAUL H. FANTASIA MARIE ELLA FAUST Arts and Sciences Evening College Business Administration Graduate Nursing A.B.English A.B. History B.S. Accounting B.S. Nursing ELLEN F. FEELEY JOHN M. FEENEY MARY PAMELA FEENEY PATRICIA A. FERACO School of Education Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing School of Education B.S. Special Education A.B. Psychology B.S. Nursing B.S. History CARROLL E. FERGUSON EDWARD J. FERRARONE BONNIE G. FIBKINS ELAINE A. FINNEGAN School of Nursing Arts and Sciences School of Education School of Education B.S. Nursing A.B. Economics B.S. Special Education B.S. English 301 FRANCIS A. FINNEGAN, JR. Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics ANGELA FIORE School of Education B.S. History ELIZABETH V. FIORE School of Education B.S, Elementary Education CAROL FIORENTINO School of Nursing B.S. Nursing JOHN H. FITZGERALD 11 Business Administration B.S. Finance JOHN J. FITZGERALD Business Administration B.S. Accounting PAMELA J. FITZGERALD School of Education B.S. English JOHN F. FITZGIBBONS Business Administration B.S. Economics JOHN R. FITZPATRICK Business Administration B.S. Accounting FREDERICK A. FIUMARA Business Administration B.S. Finance SR. SONIA M. FLANDERS School of Nursing B.S. Nursing DOROTHY FLETCHER Graduate Nursing B.S. Nursing 302 CATHERINE FLYNN JOHN L FLYNN JOHN P. FLYNN PATRICIA A. FLYNN Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Nursing A.B. History A.B. Sociology B.S. Elementary Education WILLIAM J. FLYNN CAROL L. FOLEY JOANNE FOLTS RONALD C. FONTAINE Business Administration School of Education School of Nursing Business Administration B.S. Production B.S.English B.S. Nursing B.S. Accounting PAUL E. FORAND JOHN K. FORD KENNETH J. FORD WILLIAM P. FORD, JR. Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration A.B.English A.B. History B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing Aii iL iii ii 303 JOSEPH A. FORINA FRANCIS X. FOSTER, JR. JOAN E. FOSTER JOHN C. FOSTER School of Education Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences B.S. French A.B. History B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Physics DAVID S. FOWLER ERNEST W. FOWLER LINDA D. FOWLER THOMAS F. FOY School of Education Business Administration School of Education Arts and Sciences B.S.English B.S. Finance B.S.English A.B. Economics JAMES E, FREDERICK DEMISE FRIGON JOHN C. FROHN CAROL ANN FRONC Business Administration School of Education Business Administration School of Education B.S. Accounting B.S. Mathematics B.S. Finance B.S. French Aii A 304 RICHARD M. FRUCCI GORDON 1. FULLER RICHARD FULLER MARY T. FUSONI Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration School of Education B.S. Finance B.S. Accounting B.S. Marketing B.S. English ROBERT J. GALIBOIS KATHRYN GALLAGHER HARRY W. GALLAGHER, JR. ELAINE E. GALLAHUE Arts and Sciences School of Nursing Business Administration School of Nursing A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing B.S. Production B.S. Nursing ROBERT J. GALLI MARY K. GALLGGLY SR. JANE DWYN GALLUP, S.G.M. PAUL J. GALVIN Arts and Sciences School of Nursing Graduate Nursing Business Administration A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing B.S. Marketing iM M 305 To you and yours. I ' m sorry, Jackie. 306 Let ' s Leave! 307 JOHN T. GAMMON JOHN V. GARAVENTA HERBERT W. GARDNER MARY KATHLEEN GARTLAND Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Evening College Graduate Nursing A.B. History A.B. Economics B.S. General Business B.S. Nursing SUSAN RUTH GARVEY PAUL J. GARVIN JOHN P. GATELY, JR. GERALD L GAUGHAN Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. IMursing B.S, Biology A.B. Political Science B.S. Biology MARLENE A. GAUTHIER JAMES F. GAVIN WILLIAM F. GAVIN DAVID T. GAY School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Englisti B.S. Production B.S. Geology A.B. Economics lid i 308 GERALD L. GEAGAN JOSEPH J. GEIMEVICH SAMUEL L GEORGE PAUL G. GERETY Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Marketing B.S. Economics A.B. Mathematics B.S. Biology DONALD J. GERVAIS MICHAEL F. GIARRATANO PAUL R. GIBLIN FRAWCIS P. GIGLIO School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. History A.B. Economics B.S. Biology B.S. General Business JOSEPH L GILBERT WILLIAM M. GILMORE ROBERT E. GINSBURG ELIZABETH G. GOETZ School of Education School of Education Business Administration School of Education B.S. Special Education B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Marketing B.S. French Β£kmM sM 309 RICHARD G. GOLD TERENCE J. GORMAN BRIAN F. GORMLEY ALFRED S. GOSCINAK Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics A.B. Psychology A.B. English A.B. History JAY R. GOTTLIEB MICHAEL W. GRANWEHR JOSEPH L GREANEY, JR. WILLIAM F. GREEN Arts and Sciences Business Administration Evening College Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics B.S. Finance A.B. English A.B. History JOANN M, GRENNAN ANTHONY J. GREY DENNIS M. GRIFFIN JAMES M. GRIFFIN School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. History B.S. Biology B.S. Biology A.B. History iiikilii 310 TERRANCE J. GRIFFIN GERALD J. GRIPSHOVER MARTIN P. GROSS ROBERT V. GUARENTE Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Biology A.B. Mathematics B.S. Biology B.S. Production JOSE GUARINO VIRGINIA IVI. GUDEJKO ELAINE A, GUENETTE BARBARA J. GUERRIERO Arts and Sciences School of Nursing School of Education School of Education B.S. Biology B.S. Nursing B.S. English B.S. Special Education EDWARD J. GUILFDYLE HARRIS G. GUILMETTE JUDITH GUNDERSEN ROBERT J. GUNNIP Business Administration Evening College Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences B.S. Accounting A.B. Social Sciences B.S. Nursing A.B. Sociology 311 312 313 JOHN F. GURRY. JR. LAWRENCE J. GUZZARDI FABIAN N. HAAK JAMES M. HACKING Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Economics β– B.S. Chemistry B.S. Economics A.B. History MICHAEL J. HALEY MARY M. HALPIN SUSAN KAY HALTGN ROBERT A. HAMILTON Arts and Sciences School of Education Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Nursing A.B. Mathematics STEPHEN P. HAIVILET ROBERT M. HAMPTON ELLEN P. HANLEY PATRICIA-LOUISE HANNA Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Nursing School of Education B.S. Finance A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing B.S. Elementary-Speech r Β£k MM 314 J. KEMP HANNON PATRICIA HANNON JOHN V. HANSCOM ROSEMARY HARMON Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing Business Administration School of Education A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing B.S. Production B.S. Elementary Education KATHLEEN T. HARRINGTON MARY E. HARRINGTON WILLIAM F. HARRIS JOHN J. HART School of Education School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Mathematics B.S. Elementary-Speech A.B. Psychology B.S. Accounting MAUREEN ANN HART JOHN T. HARTEN JAMES J. HARTFORD JOSEPH P. HARTIGAN Graduate Nursing Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Nursing B.S. Production A.B. Mathematics B.S. Production mkmk MiM M 315 JOSEPH D. HARVEY CHARLES R. HAUSER JAMES P. HAYES JOHN C. HEAD School of Education Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration B.S. English B.S. Economics B.S. Finance B.S. Accounting MAUREEN LOUISE HEAFEY GEORGE W. HECK JUDITH M. HENDERSON EDWARD P. HENNEBERRY Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences School of Nursing Arts and Sciences B.S. Nursing A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing A.B. History THOMAS J. HENNESSEY WILLIAM J. HENRY GERALD W. HERLIHY DOUGLAS J. HICE Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration A.B. History B.S. Spanish A.B. English B.S. Marketing iL Ai amJ jf sua Ati 316 JAMES J. HICKEY Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics JOSEPH C. HILL Arts and Sciences B.S. Physics JOHN J. HOARE Business Administration B.S. Economics GERARD E. HICKIViAN Arts and Sciences A.B. IVIathematics ROBERT F. HINES Business Administration B.S. Production RICHARD C. HOCKMAN School of Education B.S. Special Education JOHN P. HIGGINS Business Administration B.S. Finance ROBERT J. HINES School of Education B.S. English KENNETH W. HOGAN School of Education B.S. Speech-English JOHN H. HILBERT Arts and Sciences A.B. Classics DONNA K. HINRICHS School of Education B.S. Mathematics PATRICK J. HOGAN II Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics M ilb 4il 317 HOWARD M. HOLMES DAVID P. HORGAN ELIZABETH HORMANN ANGELYN M. HORN Arts and Sciences Business Administration Evening College School of Nursing A.B.English B.S. Marketing A.B. English B.S. Nursing DAVID A. HORVAT MARGARET M. HOSEY JOHN F. HOWARD, JR. WILLIAM F. HOWARD Arts and Sciences School of Nursing School of Education Business Administration B.S. Biology B.S. Nursing B.S. Speech-English B.S. Finance JOHN J. HOYLE WALLACE N. HUBBARD WILLIAM T. HUBERT ELIZABETH F. HUGHES Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education B.S. Marketing B.S. Biology B.S. Accounting B.S. English 318 JAMES A. HUGHES PAUL J. L HUGHES STEPHEN G. HURLEY JOANNE MARIE HYDE Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration Graduate Nursing A.B. English A.B. History B.S. Finance B.S. Nursing ARTHUR F. HYDER ROBERT J. HYLAND VINCENT lACONO JOHN F. ITRI Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics B.S. Marketing B.S. Biology A.B. English ARLENE R. JACQUETTE RICHARD M. JAEGER LEONARD J. JAMIOL GAIL A. JANSON School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education B.S. English A.B. Mathematics B.S. Accounting B.S. Elementary Education i k ik 319 events of the day One INlM-iKV ' T-.TWHa r-cv ' o t. -- - _β€’=!- ' β– -.: β– !β– β–  If WBM β– hH H H β–  W M ' flHH Bj HHHI β– β– 1 β– i β–  β–  H 320 Three im Two 321 JOSEPH H. JENNINGS MICHAEL S. JEROME RONALD K. JERUTIS JANE A. JEWETT Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education A.B. English B.S. Accounting A.B. English B.S. Elementary Education PETRA G. JOHNEN WOGDROW D. JOHNSON, JR. DONNA A. JORDAN RAE E. JORDAN School of Education Business Administration School of Education School of Education B.S. History B.S . Finance B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Elementary Education JOHN A. JOURNALIST DONALD T. JOWORISAK MONICA K. JOYCE MARY ELIZABETH JUDGE Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education Graduate Nursing B.S. Production A.B. History B.S. English B.S. Nursing 322 JUDITH F. KADLIK A. T. Wl. KALINDAWALO JOSEPH W. KANE PAULA KANE School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Nursing B.S. Elementary Education A.B. Political Science B.S. Marketing B.S. Nursing RICHARD F. KANE ROBERT A. KAI IE DIANE F. KARD SUZANNE U. KAYSER Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education School of Nursing B.S. Finance B.S. Biology B.S. Elementary-Speech B.S. Nursing ELIZABETH T. KEANEY MARY E. KEARNEY EILEEN M. KEARNS JOHN J. KEATING School of Education School of Education School of Education Business Administration B.S. Special Education B.S. Speech-English B.S. Special Education B.S. Production J i m V 323 MADELINE M. KEAVENEY MARIE HONOR KEEGAN RICHARD V. KEEGAN, JR. JOHN J. KEENAN School of Education Graduate Nursing Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Speech-English B.S. Nursing B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting JOHN P. KEENAN RITA CHRISTINE KELEHER JOHN D. KELLEHER BRIAN H. KELLEY Business Administration Graduate Nursing School of Education Business Administration B.S. Marketing B.S. Nursing B.S. History B.S. Economics JOSEPH G. KELLEY SUSA N M. KELLEY ROBERT J. KELLEY DANIEL E. KELLY Arts and Sciences School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences A.B.English B.S.English B.S. Accounting B.S. Biology ?1rΒ y l 4i Ik 324 ELIZABETH A. KELLY GEORGE H. KELLY JOSEPH F. KELLY MARGARET V. KELLY School of Nursing Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Nursing B.S. Nursing A.B. Economics A.B. Theology B.S. Nursing KATHLEEN ANN KENNEDY FRANCIS M. KENNEDY HAROLD V. KENNEDY, JR. CAROLYN MARY KENNEY Graduate Nursing Business Administration Business Administration Graduate Nursing B.S. Nursing B.S. Accounting B.S. Finance B.S. Nursing LEO P. KENNEY WILLIAM R. KERIVAN JAMES B. KERVICK JOSEPH G. KIELY Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Biology B.S. Economics B.S. Economics A.B. Economics 325 326 mw 327 MICHAEL A. KIENER Arts and Sciences B.S. Chemistry RUTH M. KILLIOI l School of Nursing B.S. Nursing JOHN F. KING Arts and Sciences A.B. Wiathematics FREDERICK 0. KINSIViAN Business Administration B.S. Marketing FRANCIS T. KIRWIN Arts and Sciences A.B. English WILLIAM T. KITLEY Arts and Sciences A.B. Psychology CHRIS P. KITLOWSKI Business Administration B.S. Economics ROBERT T. KLEINKNECHT Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics THOMAS J. KOLLER Arts and Sciences A.B. History JOSEPH KOPKA Arts and Sciences A.B. English DEWNIS M. KOSTYK Arts and Sciences A.B. English DIANE M. KOTTMYER School of Education B.S. Classics 328 ALEXANDER H. KRAJEWSKI Business Administration B.S. Finance BERNARD J. KRZYNOWEK Business Administration B.S. Finance JAIVIES M. lABBE Arts and Sciences A.B. History JOSEPH FRANK KRASOWSKI Business Administration B.S. Accounting ROBERT J. KUPKA Scliool of Education B.S. History MARK S. LACHARITE Business Administration B.S. Production ANN IVl. KREIVIIVIELL School of Education B.S. Elementary Education JOSEPH T. KUREK Arts and Sciences B.S. Chemistry WILLIAIVl J. LaCOUTURE Business Administration B.S. Marketing CAROL A. KRUEGER School of Education B.S. Special Education GORDON R. KUTZ, JR. Business Administration B.S. Marketing MICHAEL R. LaFONTAINE Arts and Sciences A.B. Politi cal Science, Phil. 4 4ik ill β– β€’Β - vΒ iM tf iik dk 329 PATRICIA C. LAKUSTA JOHN J. LAMBERT, JR. β–‘AVID A. LANE PETER J. LANZA School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Marketing A.B. History A.B. Economics PHILIP B. LAVELLE JAMES S. LAVENDER ANTHONY J. LaVOPA MARTIN J. LAWLER Evening College School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. General Business B.S. Speech-English A.B. English A.B. English JOSEPH F. LAWLESS JOHN A. LAWRENCE KEITH J. LAWRENCE WILLIAM J. LAWTON Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences A.B. Political Science A.B. History A.B. Psychology, Math A.B. Sociology AUMiM 1 [ Iβ€” 11 III 330 WILLIAM P. LEAHY JOHN C. LEARY JAMES T. LEAVITT THOMAS F. LEE, JR. Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics A.B. Mathematics A.B. Economics A.B. Economics NORMAN E. LEEN, JR. JOHN A. LEMBREE ROGER J. LENNON JAMES M. LEONARD Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing A.B. Political Science B.S. Accounting PATRICIA A. LEVERGOOD GERALD M. LEVINSON LESTER J. LIBBY MARY JANE LIDDELL School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Economics A.B. History B.S. Special Education guk d,MΒ£k ifm ' ISfc ill fktk mk 331 PETER S. LINCOLN ANDREW E. LINDH ROBERT D. LINN, JR. JOHN W. UNOWSKI Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Biology A.B. Political Science B.S. Production B.S. Chemistry fDMUND D. UPSON EDWARD J. LISTON JOANNE M. USTORTI JOSEPH A. LOBIONDO Business Administration Business Administration School of Nursing Business Administration B.S. Accounting B.S. Marketing B.S. Nursing B.S. Accounting PATRICK P. LOFTUS SUSAN E. LOFTUS MARIE C. LOGAN RONALD E. LOGUE Business Administration School of Nursing School of Education Business Administration B.S. Production B.S. Nursing B.S. English B.S. Production 4ik 332 JUAN M. LOLI ROI IALD L LOPER, JR. JUDITH E. LORDEIM MICHAEL C. LOUGHRAN Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences B.S. Finance A.B. Economics B.S. Elementary Education A.B.English JAMES C. LOUNEY ROBERT F. LOVELY STEPHEN J. LOWE R. DENNIS LUDERER Business Administration Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences B.S. Accounting A.B. Sociology B.S. French A.B. Economics FREDERICK A. LUMINOSO MYLES J. LUWD MARIANNE LUTZ PAUL T. LYDON Arts and Sciences School of Education Graduate Nursing Business Administration A.B. Economics B.S. English B.S. Nursing B.S. Economics iil i M 333 Miller ' s High Life 334 Just can ' t keep my mind on my work. |its B g S;:e ;Th t Count 335 CHARLES B. LYNCH DONALD F. LYNCH FRANCIS J. LYNCH JOHN M. LYONS Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences A.B. Economics B.S. Accounting A.B. History A.B. History DONALD J. MacDONALD, JR. JOSEPH P. MacDONALD ROBERT S. MacDONALD PAUL W. MacKINNON, JR School of Education Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. English B.S. Finance B.S. Accounting B.S. Biology PATRICK S. MADIGAN ROCCO A. MAGNOTTA BARBARA A. MAGUIRE MICHAEL B. MAGUIRE Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Education Arts and Sciences A.B. Philosophy A.B. Economics B.S. Elementary Education A.B. History y 3 .. mM 336 GERARD J. MAHONEY KATHERINE ANNE MAHONEY MARY ANN P. MAHONEY MAUREEN MAHONEY Business Administration Graduate Nursing School of Nursing Graduate Nursing B.S. IVlarketing B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing WALTER J, MAHONEY, JR. DANIEL R. MAHONY RONALD G. MAKARA DOUGLAS A. MALLON Arts and Sciences Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration A.B. English B.S. Accounting A.B. Mathematics B.S. Finance PAUL J. MANDEVILLE KATHLEEN M. MANNING ROBERT A. MANNING MICHAEL J. MANNION School of Education School of Nursing Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. History B.S. Nursing A.B. Economics A.B. Political Science hΒ£M 337 JOHN F. WIANNIX DIANE M. MANSFIELD THOMAS C. MANTEGANI THOMAS A. MARCHITELLI Business Administration School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. IVlarketing B.S. Elementary Education A.B. English A.B. Sociology ROSS A. IVIARCOU JOSEPH P. MARIANl JOHN R. MARQUARD DONALD C. MARR, JR. Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration A.B. Economics A.B. Economics A.B. Mathematics B.S. Accounting WAYNE P. MARSHALL WILLIAM P. MARSHALL CATHERINE E. MARTIN RICHARD J. MARTIN Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Nursing Arts and Sciences A.B. JVlathematics A.B. Economics B.S. Nursing A.B. Modern Languages ir Β ' sitn tiM r = ' β€’ 4; iV i. -β€’β€’ 338 SHERYL L MARTINO PETER A. IVIARTO STEPHEN W. MASCENA PAUL F. MATULEWICZ School of Nursing Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Nursing B.S. Finance B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting BARRY W. MAWN MARION F, MAYR RICHARD B. McARDLE JEANNE E. McAULIFFE School of Education School of Nursing Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Nursing B.S. Biology B.S. Elementary Education JOHN J. WIcAULIFFE KEVIN F McAULIFFE CAROL E. McCABE GEORGE F. McCABE Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Nursing School of Education A.B. Economics B.S. Marketing B.S. Nursing B.S, History 339 Holy Cross Ticket Line Nice Drawers! 340 341 JOHN F. McCABE PETER J. McCABE EDWARD F. McCaffrey JAMES R. McCALL Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Finance A.B. Economics A.B. English A.B. Political Science CHARLES F. McCANN JANE MARIE McCANN RICHARD F. McCARTE BEATRICE ANNE McCARTHY Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing Business Administration Graduate Nursing A.B. Psychology B.S. Nursing B.S. Economics B.S. Nursing EUGENE J. McCarthy, jr. JOHN H. McCarthy PATRICIA R. McCarthy RICHARD J. McCarthy Business Administration Business Administration School of Nursing Arts and Sciences B.S. General Business B.S. Accounting B.S. Nursing A.B. English 342 ROGER T. McCarthy wiLLiAivi D. McCarthy MICHAEL J. Mccarty JAMES F. McCGNVILLE Business Administration Evening College Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Accounting B.S. Production A.B. History A.B. Political Science MICHELE C. McCRANIM PATRICIA A. McCUE BRUCE J. McCUEN MARY M. McDAVITT School of IMursing School of Education Business Administration School of Education B.S. Nursing B.S. Spanish B.S. Marketing B.S. Mathematics JOSEPH X. McDERIVIOTT KENNETH J. McDONNELL GEORGE P. Mcdonough MARY c. Mcdonough Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education B.S. Chemistry A.B. Economics B.S. Accounting B.S. Biology 343 MICHAEL w. Mcdonough KEVIN P. McDowell JAMES E. McENEANEY JEAN ELIZABETH McFADDEN Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Graduate Nursing B.S. Biology A.B. 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MISKELL Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration Graduate Nursing B.S. Biology B.S. Biology B.S. Finance B.S. Nursing ROBERT K MITCHELL FRANK W. MITTON ROBERT MONIZ FRANCIS A. MOONEY Business Administration School of Education Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Production B.S. Speech-English A.B. Political Science A.B. English ROBERT L MOORE THOMAS B. MOORE RICHARD G. MORAN MARILYN E. MORENCY Business Administration Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences School of Education B.S. Finance A.B. Slavic Studies B.S. Chemistry B.S. Elementary-Speech 347 348 349 JANE L. MORGAN MARGERY F. MORGAN NANCY M. MORGAN CLINTON D. MORRELL School of Education School of Education Graduate Nursing Arts and Sciences B.S. Mathematics B.S. Elementary Education B.S. Nursing A.B. Economics THERESA A. MORRIS ETTORE A. MORTARELLI RICHARD T MOSES STANISLAUS MROCZKOWSKI Evening College School of Education Business Administration Arts and Sciences A.B. English B.S. Special Education B.S. 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NOVAKOWSKI Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Finance B.S. Accounting B.S. Marketing A.B. Psychology ANTOINETTE M. NOVELLINE STANLEY P. NOWAK PAUL J. NUGENT ROBERT E. NURCZYNSKI School of Education Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration B.S. Elementary Education A.B. Economics B.S. Finance B.S. Accounting m fi Mk MiM ' β–  . iA Β«i 353 l lp Are you kidding? 354 I would have never thought it of Father. 355 CHERYL E. O ' BRIEN FREDERICK T. O ' BRIEN JOHN E. O ' BRIEN STEPHEN T. O ' BRIEN School of Education Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences B.S. Elementary-Speech B.S. Marketing B.S. Production B.S. Biology WILLIAM F. O ' BRIEN MICHAEL F. O ' CONNELL RICHARD C. O ' CONNELL, JR. KATHLEEN A. O ' CONNOR Business Administration Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education B.S. Economics A.B. Classics B.S. Finance B.S.French ROBERT P. O ' CONNOR JOHN P. 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SZECKAS Business Administration Business Admmistration Arts and Sciences Business Administration B.S. Finance B.S. Production A.B. Economics B.S. Production iMmA k kiil 381 peace . β– % M 382 v; v- 383 RONALD C. TALEWSKY IRA C. TARLIN JEFFREY M. TAUBER DANIEL P. TAWCZYNSKI Business Administration Business Administration Business Administration School of Education B.S. IVlarketing B.S. Finance B.S. Finance B.S. Speech-English JOHN P, TERRANOVA PRISCILLE R. TESSIER GENE D. THERRIAULT LORRAINE E. THIBEAULT Business Administration School of Nursing Arts and Sciences School of Nursing B.S. Accounting B.S. Nursing A.B. Mathematics B.S. Nursing PHILIPPE A. THIBOOEAU ROBERT J. THOMAS BRUCE J. THOMPSON ROBERT P. THOMPSON Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration A.B.English B.S. Biology A.B. Sociology B.S. Accounting Ak ih mk dM 384 DOMINIC N. TIERI GILDA S. TIMMEL RICHARD S. TITILAH ROBERT B. 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Philosophy B.S. Nursing JAMES A. WOLF PAULENE ANNE WONG SISTER M. ELIZABETH WOOD MARY ANNE WOODWARD Business Administration Graduate Nursing School of Nursing School of Nursing B.S. Finance B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing B.S. Nursing 391 BRUCE D. WORTHEN JOHN J. YACKUUCS JEREMIAH F. YORK JAN C. YUTZY Arts and Sciences Business Administration Business Administration Arts and Sciences A.B. English B.S. Economics B.S. Marketing B.S. Physics CHARLES J. ZIAKOWSKI WILLIAM J. ZAINO WILLIAM J. ZAK FRANK A. ZAMMARCHI, JR Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Business Administration School of Education A.B. Philosophy A.B Philosophy B.S. Finance B.S. Elementary Education BARRY Wl. ZIDE MICHAEL F. ZIDE ROBERT G. ZIMMERMAN MAUREEN P. ZOEHLER Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences Arts and Sciences B.S. Biology B.S. Biology A.B. Mathematics A.B. Theology 392 ads and patrons i y, .. rr Β± t ' JΒ« |grfB y i8 l !!! Ul!!Β i.W! - S J i Β ' - ' ' ' ) Guy R. Abbate William S. Abell Mr. and Mrs. Abdallah Ackil Henry J. Ahern Mr. and Mrs. Maurice B. Ahern Lena Aiello Michael R. Allen Dr. and Mrs. Gerard J. Alonzo L. E. Amann John J. Amero Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Americo Amodio Stepehn D. Amoroso Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Anastasio Mr. and Mrs. Frank Anzalotti Mr. and Mrs. J. Arnstein Harold W.Attridge,Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Austin Lawrence P. Avery Mr. and Mrs. William I. Bair Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Bale Mr. and Mrs. John T. Baran Paul E. Barber, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Barrett Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Barry Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Beaupre Mr. and Mrs. Leonard W. Belter Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bergogna Herbert Block Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Blute Mr. and Mrs. Francis A. Bodio Mr. and Mrs. Attilio E. Borsari Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Bosco Mrs. Hugh Boswell Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Bouchoux Wilfred J. Boudreau Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Bourke Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Bowser, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Boyle, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John T. Bradley Dr. and Mrs. Alfred W. Branca Mrs. Mary R. Brawn Mr. and Mrs. James F. Brennan Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Brennan Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Brennan Mr. and Mrs. Roger W. Breslin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. William Brokowski Mr. and Mrs. Bernie A. Bromka Mrs. Francis Brown Joseph J. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Allan J. Browne Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Bryk Arthur J. Buckley Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Budwitis Mr. and Mrs. John E. Burgoyne, Sr. Edward Burnett Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Businger Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Butters Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Byrne Mrs. William P. Callahan Mr. and Mrs. Anthony P. Camarra Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Capobianco Mr. and Mrs. Frank Carbone Salvatore E. Carbone Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Carr Mr. and Mrs. Leo J. Carr Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Cartwright Peter L. Casalino Mr. and Mrs. John J. Casey Edward V. Cashin John E. Castellini Louis V. Cataldi Stephen Cedorchuk Mr. and Mrs. George Chanda Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Chase Mr. and Mrs. David A. Clancy Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Clifford Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Clinton Mr. and Mrs. James F. Cole Mr. and Mrs. Floyd A. Collins Francis L. Collins, Jr. T. W. Connell Matthew T. Connolly William F. Connolly Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Connors Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Considine Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Conway Mrs. Lionel Cormier Mr. and Mrs. James H. Cotter Thomas J. Cudmore John D ' Addario Walter S. Dalkiewicz Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Dalton Mr. and Mrs. C. Daniele Leo Darr James J. Dawson Mr. and Mrs. James H. Day Joseph K. Dee Insurance Agency, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. John V. Delany Dr. and Mrs. Joseph V. DeLuca Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Deluhery Mr. E. A. Derba Mr. and Mrs. Ralph DeSena Mr. and Mrs. Leo Diamond Mr. and Mrs. Anthony DiBona Mr. and Mrs. George A. Didden, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Dillon Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. DiMarzo George and Jean B. Dennison Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. DiPerna Hugh F. Doherty Gerald Donovan Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth T. Doran Mr. and Mrs. John F. Dorff Francis Drohan Mr. and Mrs. Francis P. Duffy Mrs. G. Richard Duffy Frank J. Dunn Dr. John J. W. Dunn Mr.and Mrs. William J. Durkin Mrs. Arthur H. Duvall Mr. and Mrs. Louis E. Dwyer Thomas E. Dwyer John W. Egan Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Egger Mr. and Mrs. Carl Eisert Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Elliott Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ercolino Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Erwin William Evans James G. Faherty Salvatore M. Falonga Mr. and Mrs. Serafino Fantasia Dr. and Mrs. Rocko M. Fasanella Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. Wm. E. FitzGerald Mr. and Mrs. Francis X. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Frederick Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Frederico Mr. and Mrs. Leon A. Frigon Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Fronc Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Gartland Peter B. Gay Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Geisel Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Geswell Mr. and Mrs. Ignatius F. Giglio Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Granwehr Mr. and Mrs. Armand L. Graveline Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Grey Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hacking Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Halli Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Hanna Mr. and Mrs. James M. Hannon Mr. and Mrs. John J. Hannon Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Harmon Harold F. Harrigan A. J. Harrington, M.D. John M. Hazlin Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Head Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Helwick Mrs. Constance Hice Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. Hickman Joseph C. Higgins Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hilbert Mr. and Mrs. Maurice W. Hogan Mr. and Mrs. George J. Horn Mrs. David J. Houston Mrs. John F. Howard Mr. and Mrs. George M. Hoyle Mr. and Mrs. John T. Hughes Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Jacquette Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Jennings Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Jerutis Mr. and Mrs. Fernand E. Jette Robert C. Jordan A. Kabisaitis Mr. and Mrs. Miah Kearney John W. Keenan Mrs. George E. Kelley Robert J. Kelley Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Kelly John F. Kelly, M.D. Judge and Mrs. Paul Kelly Mr. and Mrs. James F. Kervick Mr. and Mrs. John J. King Mrs. John W. King Mr. and Mrs. George Kinsman Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Kirwin H. M. Kline Mr. and Mrs. Milton P. Klish Michael Kostyk Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Krueger Mr. and Mrs. Gordon R. Kutz Raymond A. 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Middleton Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Miller Major Edward T. Mitchell Dr. and Mrs. Bertram F. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Lucien A. Morin Arthur A. Muldoon Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Muratore Mrs. Donald C. Marr, Sr. Mr.and Mrs. Hugh J. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Murphy, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Nannicelli Representative John J. Navin Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Nelpi Arthur C. Nelson Captain O. B. Nelson, U.S.N., Ret. Mrs. George Newbury Dr. and Mrs. B. R. Nijhawan Dr. and Mrs. John W. O ' Brien William H. O ' Brien Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O ' Dowd Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. O ' Hara Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Ormond, Sr. William D. Osenton Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Paglierani John and Mary Padden Mr. and Mrs. William R. Palmer, Jr. Capt. and Mrs. George W. Parcels Mr. and Mrs. Liberate Parrillo Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Patti Mr. Ralph D. Paul, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Peccini Mr. and Mrs. Alva L. Peckham Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Pendergast Dr. and Mrs. James M. Peters Mr. and Mrs. John F. Petroccione Mr. and Mrs. J. Claude Shea Michael J. Shea Mrs. Charles W. Sheehan Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Sheehan Mr. and Mrs. William Sherry Mr. and Mrs. Emil M. Signes Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Pietig Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Polmon Mrs Marie R. Portelance Mr. and Mrs. A. Procopio Mr. and Mrs. Raymond L. Proulx Roger K. Prunier Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Quinn Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Randall Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Reardon Capt. and Mrs. Allen B. Register Mr. and Mrs. W. Donald Reilly Armand J. Riccardo Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Riley Mr.and Mrs. Wendell C. Ring Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Rogalski Mr. John R. Rotchford Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Rulli Mr. and Mrs. Agostino Runci Fred W. Rusiecki Mr. and Mrs. Leiand G. Ryan Mr. and Mrs. William Ryan Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Sacco Mr. and Mrs. John P. Sachs Rugo Santini Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Sarantis Sarni Cleaners of Framingham Inc. Francis Scannell Salvatore Scelso, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Carl F. Schaefer Mr. and Mrs. Marvin E. Schellhase Samuel J. Schoenfeld Dr. and Mrs. George C. Schulte John A. Schultheis Dr. Oscar J. Schwoerer Gregory Salvatore Scime Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Scotto Mr. and Mrs. Edward Shanley Edward Parr Sharp Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Silbersack Mr. and Mrs. Alfred F. Silva Mr. and Mrs. M. Skoblar IMevin M. Smiley Mr. and Mrs. Terence P. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Snyder Mrs. Leo F. Spellman Mr. and Mrs. Henry N. Stamm James F. Stanton Mr. ana Mrs. James M. Staunton Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Stearns Mr. and Mrs. A. Stetz Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Stewart Mrs. Aldora Stronach Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Suckfull Mrs. Stella Sulla Daniel F. Sullivan Mrs. J. Burke Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sullivan Helen P. Tawczynski Peter S. Terranova Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Therriault Mr. and Mrs. James M. Tonsmeire Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Tuley Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Tulis Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Twomey Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Wall Dr. and Mrs. James R. Wall Mr. and Mrs. James T. Wallenta Dr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Walsh, Jr. Dr. Wm. L. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Albert T. Wantz Mr. and Mrs. John A. Ward, Jr. Harry G. Welch Mr. and Mrs. James B. Wheeler, Jr. Captain and Mrs. Herman L. White William J. White, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Wolf Mr. and Mrs. Harold O. Wolff Wilhelm Wolters and Family Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wong Mrs. Harry J. Wunderlich Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Zinno Pino ' s Pizza House 1920- A Beacon St. (Cleveland Circle) 566-6468 Come on down everyone knows it ' s ' The Best Pizza in Town (Subs also!) SULLIVAN D.C. CO., INC. Specialists in Industrial Security Undercover Operators β€” Guards 24 HOUR SERVICE 6 Beacon Street CApitol 7-0349 COMPLIMENTS OF FOOD SERVICE CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1967 from THE OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY DEVELOPMENT β– c 1700 BEACON STREET LUNCH AND DINNER ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY Compliments of the JAMES A. HEALY AND SONS FUNERAL HOME Main Street Graniteville, Mass. 692-6502 JULIE ANDREWS ., MILLIE CAROL CMANNING BEATRICE LILLIE Boston ' s Newest Concept in Luxury and Entertainment THE CIRCLE 399 Chestnut Hill Avenue Brookline, Mass. 02146 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1967 from a Lowell Friend - ' - vi - This page owned and operated by The Heights. CHARLES F. MURPHY, INC. Compliments 24 School Street of the BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02108 BOSTON COLLEGE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION CHARLES F. MURPHY, SR., 1930 CHARLES F. MURPHY, 1955 Compliments of BOSTON COLLEGE COUNCIL 5278 s E R V I C E S A C R I F I C E COMPLIMENTS OF THE GOLD KEY SOCIETY S. S. PIERCE Importers Grocers Since 1831 S. S. PIERCE has become America ' s pace- setter for first quality food products and con- venient service. At S. S. Pierce stores, you will find adventure and excitement and a wide selection of unique foods and delicacies. S. S. PIERCE ' S unequalled variety includes: Fine Foods Fresh Meats Frozen Foods Delicious Candies Wines, Liquors Cigars, Tobaccos Perfumes, Cosmetics Fresh Baked Pastries Festive Holiday Gifts BOSTON CAB COMPANY KEnmore 6-5010 The Brown and White Fleet Boston Cab Brigham Cab Brighton Cab Cleveland Cab KEnmore 6-5010 BEacon 2-5500 STadium 2-2000 ASpinwall 7-8700 THE STUDENT SENATE of the BOSTON COLLEGE School of Education Extends its Congratulations to the 1967 GRADUATING CLASS of BOSTON COLLEGE COMPLIMENTS OF PAUL E. P. BURNS CO., INC. 316 Summer Street Boston 10, Mass. ACADEMIC CAPS, GOWNS AND HOODS, CHOIR ROBES AND ACCESSORIES FOR SALE AND RENTALS LI 2-1513 LI 2-1514 PAUL E. P. BURNS, ' 53 HOME SUPPLY CO. HARDWARE β€’ PAINTS β€’ WALLPAPER LINOLEUMS WORLDS LARGEST TRANSMISSION SPECIALISTS AAMCO TRANSMISSIONS 366 Washington Street 433 MAIN STREET WATERTOWN, MASSACHUSETTS 924-0200 LIFETIME GUARANTEE BRIGHTON, MASS. STadium 2-0240 ELI SOKOLOVE J. H. McNAMARA, INC. READY MIX CONCRETE SAND, GRAVEL and ROOFING GRAVEL 298 NORTH HARVARD STREET ALLSTON, MASS. STadium 2-33 50 TW 3-7562 BROADWAY PACKAGE STORE 60 BROADWAY NORWOOD, MASSACHUSETTS FINE WINES FOR FINE PEOPLE HOWLAND LINEN SUPPLY CO. INCORPORATED 40 Bristol Street BOSTON 18, MASS. HAncock 6-6630-31-32 Corner Rt. No. 28 and Bearse ' s Way HYANNIS, MASS. spring 5-2245 Best Wishes M. B. FOSTER ELECTRIC CO. 368 CONGRESS ST. BOSTON Electrical Contractors NEW HAVEN PORTSMOUTH CONNECTICUT NEW HAMPSHIRE JJ. C. W IXWRIGHT 8c CO. Established 1868 Members Boston and New York Stock Exchanges INVESTMENT SECURITIES 60 State Street Boston 120 Broadway New York Salem, Mass. Framingham, Mass. Fitchburg, Mass. Providence, R.I. Portland, Maine Lewiston, Maine Bangor, Maine Manchester, N.H. Keene, N.H. D. W. DUNN CO. Exclusive Metropolitan Boston Agent Aero Mayflower Transit Co., Inc. World-Wide Moving Service HAncock 6-8000 BOSTON Bob Dunn, ' 42 Dan Dunn, ' 42 RINGS PINS MEDALS CHARMS CUPS PLAQUES TROPHIES excellent design, skilled craftsmanship, superb quality. YOUR CLASS JEWELER DIEGES CLUST 226 PUBLIC ST., PROVIDENCE, R. I. NEW YORK - PHILADELPHIA MANUFACTURING JEWELERS Compliments of Boston College ROTC Brigade WELCOME TO THE CLASS OF 1967 BOSTON COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION ALUMNI HALL CHESTNUT HILL MASSACHUSETTS REPOINTING AND WATERPROOFING LEAKING MASONRY WALLS ABOVE GROUND CONCRETE RESTORATION MASONRY RESTORATION BUILDING CLEANING BIRDPROOFING w ESTERN ATERPROOFING CO., INC. BOSTON 02118 NEW YORK 10017 ALBANY 12201 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1967 From the book store Mcelroy commons β€’ boston college the bookstore is a true academic branch of any university Textbooks β€’ Required and Recommended Paperbacks From All Publishers β€’ Reference Books Sportswear β€’ Jewelry β€’ Stationery β€’ Glassware Greeting Cards β€’ Supplies Boston College Songs Recorded by the University Chorale Classical Popular Records GIFT items for ALUMNI AND FRIENDS Campus Gift Tray Cigarette Music Box Desk Clock Scrap Books College Pets Ceramic Coffee Tea Set (five pieces) Desk Sets Ash Trays Campus Pillow Song Books BARNES NOBLE INC. of MASS. FOR BOOKS We have the facilities to service all your book needs In Print or Out of Print β–  NTIRE STOCK OPEN TO BROWSERS Over 10,000 Paperback titles, outline and review books, reference books. Our Specialty BUYING and SELUNG Used β€” TEXTBOOKS β€” New FINE BOOK BARGAINS On Sale on Our Feature Tables 28 Boylston Street at Harvard Square UN 40640 TYPEWRITERS β€” ADDING MACHINES Rented Sold Repaired PETER PAUL OFFICE EQUIPMENT CO., INC. 1 1 PINE STREET WALTHAM, MASS. TW 3-8920 ATTENTION GRADUATING SENIORS: GET YOUR UNIFORMS AND FATIGUES FROM US NOW NO PAYMENT UNTIL YOU GO ON ACTIVE DUTY. All uniforms by Allied are approved by the Army Quality Control Board and are guaranteed for excellence of workmanship, materials, and correct fit. ALLIED UNIFORM COMPANY 260 DOVER STREET BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02118 Telephone: 542-9600 Outfitters of Boston College Army R.O.T.C. Tom, our results speak for themselves. The fmest printing organization in the East to- day for both science and industry is the Fandel Press. brochures β€’ reports β€’ letters β€’ stationery β€’ sales literature β€’ labels β€’ tags β€’ business cards β€’ checks β€’ envelopes β€’ business forms ' a u? INC. 59 McBRIDE STREET β€’ JAMAICA PLAIN dial . . . 524-0203 THE BOSTON COLLEGE BAND EXTENDS ITS CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1967 MORENCY CARPET COMPANY, 1440 PURCHASE ST. β€” AT THE COMMON β€” NEW BEDFORD, MASS. PHONE 617-994-3111 . . . ALL GRADES OF CARPETING AVAILABLE MADE INTO RUGS OR SOLD UNFINISHED AT, FACTORY PRICES AND SHIPPED TO ANY DESTINATION IN THE U. S. . . . NATIONALLY FAMOUS BRANDS FOR HOUSEHOLD, INSTITUTIONAL OR COMMERCIAL SERVICE . . . WRITE OR PHONE FOR QUOTATION. KftTHVCONNOU-Y A BCDEFGH IJK f- - n c ' AA y ji2 ' Must be a MORENCY ' ' carpet! THE WARREN KAY VANTINE STUDIO, INC. OFFICIALLY SERVING The 1967 Sub Turri CHARTER COACH TOURS dxewlon-Waltham Jjank to Washington, D. C. and Montreal, Canada and C rusI LyOmpanu PACKAGE TOURS FOR GROUPS S E to all points in the United States and Canada β€’ Modern De Luxe Coaches β€’ Friendly efficient service β€’ Tour planning our specialty call 436-4100 for PERSONAL |{ CHECKING LOANS ACCOUNTS V SAVINGS EDUCATIONAL ACCOUNTS ' LOANS KB courteous information BRUSH HILL TRANSPORTATION COMPANY 109 Norfolk Street, Dorchester N Lawrence A. Anzuoni G General Manager Agents for Plymouth and Brockton St. Railway 9 Newton Waltham Wayland Weston Member F.D.I.C. TO CLASS OF 1967 CONGRATULATIONS Superior Motor Transportation Co., Inc. Boston β€” Providence β€” Worcester All that the name implies GOODS INSURED WHILE IN TRANSIT MAIN OFFICE RHODE ISLAND OFFICE 69-71 Proctor Street 350 Walcott Street ROXBURY, MASS. PAWTUCKET, R. I. Highlands 2-6666 PAwtucket 4-44CX) 4 β€’ β€’ ' StttflV H 4, M Jltf ' -SS, v . StX ' BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1967 Newton Charter House Route 9 Chestnut Hill, Mass. Best Wishes of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent P. Roberts TO THE CLASS OF 67 OUR SINCERE GOOD WISHES NOW AND FOR THE FUTURE THE SHERATON-PLAZA BOSTON H. de F. Dan Nyboe General Manager dtfuks - optttoort ItoliQii opt ' rinltips Entertainment Nightly in our CLUB LOUNGE For Reservations Call 232-1749 I 268 Boylston Street Just Two Blocks East Of The Charter House FUNCTION ROOM FOR 10 TO 100 President Michael F. Mastronardi Vice President Joseph P. Kiely Compliments of THE BOSTON COLLEGE Council of Resident Men Treasurer Edward J. Ferrorone Secretary James L. Malone Alpha Kappa Psi Delta Eta Chapter. ROBERT J. LEONARD β€” President RICHARD F. KANE β€” Vice President JOHN A. DAMICO β€” Treasurer ROBERT F. W ALLWORK β€” Secretary WILLIAM R. CO NNOLLY β€” Master COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND COMPLIMENTS OF WVBC THE STUDENTS COMPANION FROM SUNRISE TO SUNSET AND THEN SOME BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1967 COLLEGE OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION STUDENT SENATE Congratulations and best wishes to the Class of 1967 from a friend of Boston College. BEST WI SHES TO THE CLASS OF 1967 FROM THE SENIOR INTERCLASS COUNCIL William J, Zak, Chairman J. Peter Gately Jr., Vice Chairman JoAnne Grennan, Secretary William E. Bates, Treasurer Congratulations and Best Wishes from The Student Senate College of Arts and Sciences CO 6-0222 RUBY NEWMAN ORCHESTRAS COMPLIMENTS 400 Commonwealth Avenue OF BOSTON, MASS. 1423 COMMONWEALTH AVE. BRIGHTON, MASS. BILL CROSBY RUBY NEWMAN The purpose of the Campus Council is to foster and promote the academic, cultural, spiritual, and physical welfare of the student body as a whole. CHAIRMAN β€” Patrick J. Murphy VICE CHAIRMAN β€” John Agresto SECRETARY β€” Carmen-Anita Signes TREASURER β€” Mary Gallooly CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1967 DELTA KAPPA CHAPTER OF DELTA SIGMA PI PROFESSIONAL COMMERC Mb ' SINESS THE COZY CORNOR 17 Shell Street S asconsetj Massachusetts Finast Food aiid Fntertamment on the L and Keasonabk Prices Compliments of the Management n 50C DINING AT THE HIGHLANDS IS DELIGHTFUL! We Serve Choice Beef Seafood Poulthy Our Service Is Superb Our Decor Is Charming COMl ' LETE BANyUET FACILITIES FOU SOCIAL AND BUSINESS FUNCTIONS . . . s Entertainment Nightly Comjilimcntani llois D ' Oeiivrcs Scried Daily 5-7 P.M. in the CORK X BOTTLE LOINGK Sunday β€” 1 ' mily I av, Wednesday β€” Fashion Shows Eleven Fourteen Beacon St., Newton 4 Comers f Sg For Reservations: Tel. 332-4400 Best Wishes from VALLE ' S STEAK HOUSE ROUTE 9 CHESTNUT HILL NEWTON Famous 1-Lb. Broiled SIRLOIN STEAK $3.25 EVERY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY SPECIAL TWO 1-LB. MAINE LOBSTERS . . . $3.50 Broiled, Boiled, or Baked Stuffed CHOICE OF MANY COMPLETE DINNERS Including Prime Rib Roast of Beef $1.95 to $4.50 COMPLETE LUNCHEONS . 99c to $1.95 ALL PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE ALLES STEAK HOUSE NEWTON β€’ Open 7 AM β€” 1 AM 969-9160 GARDEN CITY GRAVEL CORPORATION Radio Dispatched Service Shovel Rubber Tire Loader Rental Sand β€’ Gravel β€’ Fill β€’ Loam β€’ Peat β€’ Stone Church Street WESTON, MASS. Telephcme TW 4-1174 If No Answer Call TW 7-8502 Mailing Address: P.O. Box 365, Waltham, Massachusetts Owner: Louis W. Marinelli Knowledge is proud fhaf he has learn ' d so much; Wisdom is humble fhat he knows no more. ' WILLIAM COWPER A message to the Class of 1967 from five Boston College graduates and the company they serve. WILLIAM H. SULLIVAN, JR, ' 37 JOHN J. GRIFFIN. ' 35 President Vice President JOSEPH F. TOWER, JR, ' 53 ROBERT F. LARKIN, ' 51 Treasurer Sales Representative JOHN F. SULLIVAN, ' 59 Sales Representative A METROPOLITAN PETROLEUM COMPANY 500 NEPONSET AVENUE ' BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 02122 β€’288-1100 A DIVISION OF THE PITTSTON COMPANY Lheat The MARSHARD ORCHESTRAS The Outstanding Favorite of America ' s Universities 73 Newbury Street, Boston New York KEnmore 6-5173 Bar Harbor Congratulations to The Class of 1967 from THE OLD VIENNA HOFBRAU music by the famous HOFBRAU ORCHESTRA Singing Waiters Specializing in Parties and Banquets Showers β€” Weddings β€” Anniversaries RATHSKELLER LOUNGE Fri. Sat. β€” Banjo Band Sing-A-Long Trio Compliments of The Boston CoUei e UNIVERSITY CHORALE C. Alexander Peloquin, conducting Compliments of a FRIEND ....yearbooks created with enduring q uality PEMBROOKE NEW ENGLAND YEARBOOKS β€’ A DIVISION OF PEMBROOKE COMPANY INC. 80 FARGO STREET β€’ BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS index WlA arts and sciences BARRY, LAWRENCE 39 Winfield St., Norwood, Massachusetts BURNS. FRANCIS M. 1 9 Forrest Ave., Norwood, Massachusetts ABELL, ANTHONY F. 25 West Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Maryland BARTLEH, JOHN S. Ill 1 Paul Ave., W. Peabody, Massachusetts BURNS. JOHN J., JR. 41 Lila Rd. Jamaica Plain. Massachusetts ACKIL, ALBERT 35 Emmet Street, Brockton, Massachusetts BAUM, JOHN J. 27 Hughes Ave., Rye. New York BUSINGER, JOHN A. 164 East 226th St.. Euclid. Ohio AGRESTO. JOHN T. 3 1 07 Avenue J, Brooklyn, New York BELLIVEAU. ALBERT F. 14 Oliver St., Tewksbury, Massachusetts BYRNE. ARTHUR P. 1 6 Lancaster St. Cambridge. Massachusetts ALBERICD, PETER M. 1 8 Prentiss St., Watertown, Massachusetts BELLO, JEROME J. 59 Congreve St., Roslindale. Massachusetts BYRNES, DANIEL P. 5 Fox St.. Dorchester. Massachusetts ALEXANDER. ROBERT W. 240 North Harvard St., Allston, Massachusetts BEVILACQUA. RICHARD J. 3 Frank St., Woburn, Massachusetts CABRAL. DOUGLAS A. 1 45 Chestnut St.. Fairhaven. Massachusetts ALVES, JOSEPH P. 490 Noble Ave., Bridgeport, Connecticut BILLINGS. BRADLEY B. 5729 Morningside Ave.. Dallas. Texas CAFARELLA. THOMAS L 262 Crescent St., Waltham, Massachusetts ANDERSON, RICHARD J. 239 Wentworth Ave.. Lowell, Massachusetts BOGNORE, RONALD J. 1 9 Arlington St., Everett, Massachusetts CALLAHAN. LEO X. 172 Cowper St. E. Boston. Massachusetts ANDROSKL HENRY J. 262 Wakelee Ave., Ansonia, Connecticut BOSCO. SALVATORE 121 AdmiralSt.,W. Haven, Connecticut CAMBPELL, GORDON L 1 4 Faragut Ave.. Somervilie, Massachusetts AREVALO, M. ANGEL A. Atahualpa 1 044, Callao, Peru BOUCHEA. EDWARD J. 1 1 Doris St. Dorchester, Massachusetts CAPPADONA, JOSEPH A 68 Erie Ave., Newton Highlands. Massachusetts ATKINSON, JAMES F. 25 Medford St., Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts BDURKE. MICHAEL K. 1 7 Minnesota Ave.. Somervilie. Massachusetts CARBONE. JOHN A. 25 Hillvale Rd.. Ajbertson. New York AHRIDGE, HAROLD 21 Parkdale St., Somervilie. Massachusetts BOVITZ, WILLIAM J. 1 02 Middlesex Ave., Wilmington. Massachusetts CARR, DAVID J. 1 07 Cashin St., Lowell. Massachusetts AVENI. CARL A. 3 1 Lynn Fells Pkwy., Melrose, Massachusetts BOWKER, STANLEY A. 1 09 Anawan Ave., W. Roxhury, Massachusetts CARR. JOHN L 74 Fresh Pond Pkwy.. Cambridge, Massachusetts AVITABILE, MAHHEW J. 59 Oneida St., New Britain, Connecticut BOWLER. MICHAEL J. Steinman Ave., Middiebury, Connecticut CARTWRIGHT, ROBERT F. 50 Plaza St. Brooklyn, New York AYACHE, RICHARD M. 35 Congreve St., Roslindale, Massachusetts BOWSER, CHARLES J.. JR. 57 Exeter St.. Arlington. Massachusetts CARVEN. JOHN D. 30 Beechcroft Rd.. Newton. Massachusetts AZAR, THOMAS J. 75 Clifford St., New Bedford, Massachusetts BOWSER. JESS L 53 Granger St.. Dorchester. Massachusetts CASEY, LEONARD M. 1 8 Bonmar Circle. Auburndale, Massachusetts BACHLE, STEPHEN C. 72 Moran Rd.. Grosse Pt. Farm, Michigan BRADLEY. ARTHUR J. 41 Houghton St.. Dorchester, Massachusetts CASSANELLI, LEE V. 210 Marmon St, Springfield, Massachusetts BALDASSARE, ANDREW R. 22 Slocum Rd., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts BRADY. THOMAS V. 1 1 Dorchester Lane. Riverside. Connecticut CASSIANI, STEPHEN M. 36 Loyed Ave., Brockton, Massachusetts BANFIELD, TIMOTHY J. 1 4 Ellsworth St.. Somervilie, Massachusetts BRANNELLY, LEO D. 691 W. Roxbury Pkwy., Boston, Massachusetts CATANZANO, JOSEPH A. 75 Mary St, Arlington, Massachusetts BARNHART, ROY J. 80 Winton Rd., Fairfield, Connecticut BRANDN, MARK E. 1 6 West Passaic Ave., Rutherford, New Jersey CAVALLO, ROGER J. 18 A Melvin St, Somervilie, Massachusetts BARRETT, ROBERT E. 29 Valley Rd., Dorchester, Massachusetts BRODY, JOHN J., JR. 709 S. Lindell Rd., Greensboro, North Carolina CECIL, THOMAS W. 9 1 6 McKewin Ave., Baltimore, Maryland BARRETT, THOMAS J. 22 Phillips Circle, Swampscott, Massachusetts BURKE, JOHN P. 1 1 8 Wentworth Ave., Lowell, Massachusetts CESATI. RICHARD R.II 3 Conry Crescent Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts CHANDA, JOSEPH J. 300 Union Ave., Clifton, IMew Jersey CUPULI, BRO IVIICHAEL Sons of iVIary, Framingham, IVIassacfiusetts DOHERTY, BARRY C. 28 Brae Burn Rd., Milton, Massachusetts CHAPMAN, BRUCE W. 13 Waban St., Mewton, Massachusetts CURRIVAN, GEORGE F. 2 Gray Rd.. Foxboro, Massachusetts DOHERTY, EDWARD J. 38 Greaton Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts CHISHOLM, CHARLES J, 56A Flint St., Somerville, Massachusetts CURTIIM, THOMAS B. 607 Sheridan Ave,, Roselle Park, New Jersey DOHERTY, PAUL F. 8 Kent St., Saugus, Massachusetts CIAMPI, PETER L 61 Waldemar Ave., E. Boston. Massachusetts DALEY, JOHN S. Tioga Lane, Pleasantville, New York DOHERTY, ROBERT E. 1 4 Elda Rd., Framingham, Massachusetts CIMPRICH, JACK R. 7823 Bergenline Ave., N Bergen, New Jersey DANIELS, ARTHUR A. 41 8 Ridge St., Arlington, Massachusetts DOMINICK, JAMES E. 1 2 Heather St., Manchester. New Hampshire COFFEY, JOSEPH E. 77 Oriole St., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts DASCOLI. GARY J 9 Staples Ave.. Everett. Massachusetts DONOVAN, WILLIAM J. 206 West Phillip St.. Coaldale. Pennsylvania COFFEY, PATRICK J. 7331 Northmoor Rd., University City, Missouri DAY, JAMES P. 301 7 Riverdale Ave., New York, New York DRISCOLL, PAUL F. 87 Chittick Rd., Hyde Park. Massachusetts COLANGELO. RAYMOND F. 1 208 Chillum Manor Rd., Hyattsville, Maryland DELANEY, WILLIAM F. 70 Adams St., Dedham, Massachusetts DUNFEY, KEVIN C. 90 Trowbridge Circle, Stoughton, Massachusetts COLEMAN. DENNIS M, 33 Long Ave.. Boston. Massachusetts DELUCA. ANTHONY R. 55 Chadwick St.. Bradford. Massachusetts DUNN. PAUL M. 350 A Rindge Ave.. Cambridge. Massachusetts COLLINS. FRANCIS L 272 Valentine St., Fall River, Massachusetts DELUCA, ROBERT J. 24 Alder St., Lawrence. Massachusetts DUNN. WILLIAM J. 1 27 Rockland Ave., Maiden, Massachusetts CONKLIN, JOHN R. 1 5 Orvis Rd., Arlington, Massachusetts DEMICHAELIS, JEREMIAH 7162NilesAve..Niles. Illinois DURKIN, WILLIAM J.,JR. 1 0009 Belhaven Rd., Bethesda. Maryland CONNERS, JOHN B. 1 22 Summer St., Hyde Park, Massachusetts DENEEN, JOSEPH J 66 Robbins Rd., Watertown. Massachusetts DYNIA. RICHARD F. 88 Clark St.. New Haven, Connecticut CONNOLLY, JOHN F. 1 1 Vandergrift St., Lawrence, Massachusetts DENNEHY. FREDERICK J. 1 1 1 5 Delmar Ave., Franklin Square. New York EATON. FRANCIS A. 593 Dudley St.. Dorchester. Massachusetts CONNOLLY. WILLIAM M. 366 Beacon St., Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts DENNISON, GEORGE V. 238 West 1 1th St., New York, New York EGGER, MICHAEL G. 1477 Potter Lane, Wayne. Pennsylvania CONSIDINE, RAYMOND 50 Laurel Dr., New Hyde Park, New York DERVAN, PETER B. 62 Welles Ave., Dorchester, Massachusetts EOUl, MICHAEL P. 21 Allyn St., Holyoke, Massachusetts COTTER, WILLIAM 0. 7 Park Lane, Westport, Connecticut DESENA, RALPH F 1469 West Ave.. Bronx. New York ERWIN. PAUL V. 1 8 Pleasant View Ave., E. Braintree, Massachusetts COTTLE, EDWARD C. 56 Kingsbury St , Needham. Massachusetts DIBONA. ROBERT 121 Florence Rd.Waltham, Massachusetts FAHEY, HENRY A. 438 East Sixth St., S. Boston, Massachusetts COUGHLIN, JOHN P. 177 Meadows End Rd., Milford, Connecticut DIDDEN, GEORGE A. 4222 42nd St., N.W., Washington, DC. FALLON, EDWARD P. 82 Proctor St.. Salem. Massachusetts CRIMMINS, DAVID 30 Woodbrier Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts DIMARZO, MICHAEL F. 40 Andrews St., Norwood, Massachusetts FALLON, JOHN G. 2 1 8 Ashcroft Rd., Medford, Massachusetts CROWLEY, JOHN 0. 225 Whitford Ave., Nutley, New Jersey DIMAURO, RONALD J 20 Queensbury St., Boston, Massachusetts FALONGA, MARK P. 87-18 87th St., Woodhaven, New York CULLINAN, JOHN C. 1 27 Old Brook Rd., Springfield, Massachusetts DINEEN, JAMES M. 39 Love Lane. Kittery. Maine FEENEY. JOHN M. 38 Howard St.. Portland. Maine CUNNINGHAM, ROBERT H, 38 Cedar St., Mattapan, Massachusetts DINNEEN, JAMES F. X. 2 1 Hilltop St., Milton, Massachusetts FERRARONE, EDWARD J. 35 Wendover Rd., Springfield, Massachusetts FII II IEGAI I, FRANCIS A., JR. 27 Second St., Bangor, Maine FLYNN, JOHN L 1715 Astor Ave., Bronx, New York GIBLIN, PAUL R. 5 Hidden Rd., Andouer, iVIassachusetts GOEPFERT, PAUL L. 747 Berkeley Ave., Orange, New Jersey HALEY, MICHAEL J. 1 6 Upland Ave., White Plains, New York HAMILTON, ROBERT A. 46 Brookmoor Rd., W Hartford. Connecticut FLYNN, JOHN P. 202 Edge Hill Rd., Milton, Massachusetts FOLEY. GERARD J. 1 334 River St., Hyde Park, Massachusetts FORAND, PAUL E. 33 Orchard St., Southbridge, Massachusetts FORD, JOHN K. 1 2 Moultrie St., Dorchester, Massachusetts GOLD, RICHARD G. Woodland Rd., Greenvillage, New Jersey GORMAN, TERENCE J 88 Mt. Vernon St., New Bedford, Massachusetts GORMLEY, BRIAN F. 16 Ox Yoke Lane, Norwalk, Connecticut GOSCINAK, ALFRED S. 70 Cedar St., Somerville, Massachusetts HAMMOND, EDWARD R. Ill 630 East Wishart St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania HAMPTON, ROBERT M. 216 Temple St., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts HANNON, J. KEMP 41 Kenwood Rd., Garden City, New York HARRINGTON, RICHARD D. 1 670 Grand Ave., Baldwin, New York FOSTER, FRANCIS X., JR. 1 2 Merrill St., Cambridge, Massachusetts FOSTER, JOHN C. 206 Elmtree Rd., Rochester, New York FOY, THOMAS F. 1 5 Cambridge Ave., Bethpage, New York GALIBOIS, ROBERT J. 353 Beacon St., Somerville, Massachusetts GALLAGHER, VINCENT P. 549 8 1 st St., Brooklyn, New York GALLI, ROBERT J. 17 Grove St., Torrington, Connecticut GANNON, JOHN T. 1 950 McGraw Ave., Bronx, New York GARAVENTA, JOHN V. 97 Muriel Ter., Haverhill, Massachusetts GARVIN, PAUL J. 46 Norton St., Dorchester, Massachusetts GATELY, JOHN P., JR. 58 Arborway, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts GAUGHAN, GERARD L 60 Montclair Ave., Ouincy, Massachusetts GAVIN, WILLIAM F. 217 High St., Hingham, Massachusetts GAY, DAVID T. 1 Whitehill St., Taunton, Massachusetts GEORGE, SAMUEL L 33 High St., Methuen, Massachusetts GERETY, PAUL G. 13 Autumn St., Everett, Massachusetts GOTTLIEB, JAY R. 34 Blaney St., Revere, Massachusetts GRADY, PAUL F. 1 8 Blosson Hill Rd., Winchester, Massachusetts GREEN, BARRY E. 720 Huntington Tnpk., Bridgeport, Connecticut GREEN, BARRY E. 720 Huntinghton Tnpk., Bridgeport, Connecticut GREEN, WILLIAM F. 92 Alpheus Rd., Roslindale, Massachusetts GREY, ANTHONY J. 1558 Union St., Schenectady, New York GRIFFIN, DENNIS M. 31 Lincoln St., Winchester, Massachusetts GRIFFIN, JAMES M. 3 Shields St., Woburn, Massachusetts GRIFFIN, TERRENCE J. 1 1 Coral St., Lowell, Massachusetts GRIPSHOVER, GERALD J. 140 Spring St., Watertown, Massachusetts GROSS, MARTIN P. Elm Ave., Gloucester. Massachusetts GUARINO, JOSE 27 Running Brook Rd., W. Roxbur y, Massachusetts GUNNIP, ROBERT J. 529 Rathbury Rd., Wilmington, Deleware GUYETTE, ROGER W., JR. 53 Cedar St., Cambridge, Massachusetts GUZZARDI, LAWRENCE J. 250 South 1 3th St., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania HARRIS, WILLIAM F. 21 Stubtoe Lane, Sudbury, Massachusetts HARTFORD, JAMES J. 82 Grove Circle, Braintree, Massachusetts HECK, GEORGE W. 283 Kings Hghwy., Tappan, New York HENNEBERRY, EDWARD P. 20 Nashoba Rd., W. Acton, Massachusetts HENNESSEY, THOMAS J. 297 Plainfield St., Hartford, Connecticut HERLIHY, GERARD W. 9 Euclid Ave., Bradford, Massachusetts HICKEY, JAMES J. 2 Eddie St., Ouincy, Massachusetts HICKMAN, GERARD E. 77 ' 46 79th St., Glendale, New York HILBERT, JOHN H. 44 Beech St., Maywood, New Jersey HILL, JOSEPH C. 20 Prescott St., Roxbury, Massachusetts HOGAN, PATRICK, J. II 74 Seyms St., Hartford, Connecticut HOLMES, HOWARD M. 3707 Cassen Rd., Randallstown, Maryland HORVAT, DAVID A. 66 Franklin St., Danielson, Connecticut HOWARD, WILLIAM, JR. 61 Willow St., New Bedford, Massachusetts HUBBARD, WALLACE N. 44 Harding Rd., Melrose, Massachusetts GIARRATANO, MICHAEL F. 1 1 Beckett St., Danbury. Connecticut HACKING. JAMES M. 330 Hyde St., Fall River, Massachusetts HUGHES, JAMES A. Garth Woods Apt. 2-D, Scarsdale, New York HUGHES, PAUL J. L 86 Ardale St., Roslindale, Massachusetts KLEINKNECHT, ROBERT T. 930 Wildwood Rd., Oradell, New Jersey LEAVITT, JAMES T. 207 Glenwood St., Manchester, Connecticut HYDER, ARTHUR F. 57 Wall St., Quincy, Massachusetts KOBBS, FRANCIS A. 1 4 Church St., Natick, Massachusetts LEE, THOMAS F., JR. 66 Wooster Hgts., Danbury, Connecticut lACONO, VINCENT 1 2 Thorndlke St., Revere, Massachusetts KOLLER, THOMAS J. 1 744 Highland Ave., Rochester, New York LENNON, ROGER J. 83 Hawthorn PL, Briarcliff Manor, New York ITRI, JOHN F. 240 1 82nd St., Brooklyn, New York KOPKA, JOSEPH 292 Douglas Ave., Providence, Rhode Island LESKOSKY, RICHARD J. 1323 Winstanley Ave., East St. Louis, Illinois JAEGER, RICHARD M. 9265 Shore Rd., Brooklyn, New York KOSTYK, DENNIS M. 1 23 Bridge Ave., Cohoes, New York LIBBY, LESTER J. 1 16 Austin St., Hyde Park, Massachusetts JENNINGS, JOSEPH H. 1 1 2 Old Mill Rd,. Fairfield, Connecticut KOVAR, JOHN L, JR. 104 Union St., Natick, Massachusetts LINCOLN, PETER S. 43 Fay Rd., Scituate, Massachusetts JERUTIS, RONALD K. 1616Mann Helm Rd., Westchester, Illinois KUREK, JOSEPH T. 2233 Wharton Rd., Glenside, Pennsylvania LINDH, ANDREW E. 365 Forest Ave., Middletown, Rhode Island JETTE, ERNEST A. 4 Houde St., Nashua, New Hampshire L ' ABBE, JAMES M. 14-1 2 Belmont Ave, Waterville, Maine LINOWSKI, JOHN W. 30 Fulton St., Hyde Park, Massachusetts JOWORISAK, DONALD T. 66 Clifton PL, Jersey City, New Jersey LAFONTAINE, MICHAEL R. 43 Vine St., Nashua, New Hampshire LOPER, ROLAND L, JR. 55 Spruce Rd., Norwood, Massachusetts KALINDAWALO, A. T. M. P 0. Box 2, Zomba, Malawi, Africa LANCE, TIMOTHY L. 1 1 8 Red Fox Rd., Stamford, Connecticut LOUGHRAN, MICHAEL C. 279 Pleasant St., Canton, Massachusetts KANE, ROBERT A. 2 1 7 Spring St., Brockton, Massachusetts LANE, DAVID A. 374 Lebanon St., Melrose, Massachusetts LOUGHRAN, THOMAS F. 131 London St., Lowell, Massachusetts KEITH, ROGER W. 38 Grove St., Lynn, Massachusetts LANZA, PETER J. 1 237 Central St., Leominster, Massachusetts LOVELY, ROBERT F. 1 1 Waverly PL, Newton, Massachusetts KELLEY, JOSEPH G. 7 Beechwood Rd., Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey LARGESS, ROBERT P. 1 908 Ouincy St., Washington, D.C. LUDERER, R. DENNIS 1 03 Pleasant Ave., Bergenfield, New Jersey KELLY, DANIEL E. 24 Webster Rd., Braintree, Massachusetts LAVOPA, ANTHONY J. 2435 Frisby Ave., Bronx, New York LUMINOSO, FREDERICK A. 177 Belltown Rd., Stamford, Connecticut KELLY, GEORGE H, 977 South Meriden Rd., Cheshire, Connecticut LAVRAKAS, PAUL A. 3 Peter Spring Rd., Concord, Massachusetts LYNCH, CHARLES B. 1 1 8 Dartmouth St., Rockville Center, New York KELLY, JOSEPH F, 15970lhSt,, Brooklyn, New York LAWLER, MARTIN J. 1 1 Gardner St., Beverly, Massachusetts LYNCH, FRANCIS J. 497 Dwight Rd., Springfield, Massachusetts KENNEY, LEO P. 525 Lowell St., Peabody, Massachusetts LAWLESS, JOSEPH F. 66 Adams St., Maiden, Massachusetts LYONS, JOHN M. 23 Ardmore Ave., Providence, Rhode Island KIELY, JOSEPH G. 4 Stuyvesant Oval, New York, New York LAWRENCE, JOHN A. 1 22 Gates Ave., Montclair, New Jersey MacKINNON, PAUL W., JR. 9 King Rd., Middletown, Rhode Island KIENER, MICHAEL A. 3462 Edison Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio LAWRENCE, KEITH J. 301 Patrick Ct., Schenectady, New York MADEK, GERALD A. 6 Dawes Ter., Dorchester, Massachusetts KING, JOHN F. 46 Bonham Rd., Dedham, Massachusetts LAWTON, WILLIAM J. 1 2 Highland St., W. Concord, Massachusetts MADIGAN, PATRICK S. 3800 LeIand St., Chevy Chase, Maryland KIRWIN, FRANCIS T. 1 9 1 6 Avenue A, Scotts Bluff, Nebraska LEAHY, WILLIAM P. 1401 19th St., NW, Canton, Ohio MAGNOTTA, ROCCO A. 5 Hilldale Ave., White Plains, New York KITLEY, WILLIAM T. 87 W. Ouackenbush Ave., Dumont, New Jersey LEARY, JOHN C. 27 Wildwood Ave , Newtonville, Massachusetts MAGUIRE, DANIEL 1 27 Second St., Medford, Massachusetts MAGUIRE, MICHAEL B. 33 Desson Ave., Troy, New York Mccarty, michael j. 4 Beal Rd., Waltham, Massachusetts MINIHAN, PATRICK T. 893 Washington St., Dorchester, Massachusetts MAHONEY, WALTER J., JR. Bellevue Ave., Rye, New York McCONVILLE, JAMES F. 52 Nixon St., Dorchester, Massachusetts MII 10GUE, RICHARD P. 175 Sherman Ave., New York, New York MAKARA, RONALD G. 97 Alexander Dr., Bridgeport, Connecticut MANNING, ROBERT A. 53 Marlboro St., Dedham, Massachusetts MANNION, MICHAEL J. 2 Mountainville Ave., Danbury, Connecticut MANTEGANI, THOMAS C. 1 60 Calef Rd., Manchester, New Hampshire MARCHITELLI, THOMAS A. 1 2 1 Temple St., Somerville, Massachusetts MARCOU, ROSS A. 57 Longfellow St., Portland, Maine MARIANI, JOSEPH P. 1 54 Young Ave., Cedar Grove, New Jersey MARQUARD, JOHN R. 286 South St., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts MARSHALL, WAYNE P. 1 2 Devonshire Ct., Middletown, New Jersey MARSHALL, WILLIAM P. 230 Mt. Vernon St., Dedham, Massachusetts MARSTON, VINCENT 1 97 Linwood St., Brockton, Massachusetts McDERMOTT, JOSEPH X. 21 Cedar Circle, Randolph, Massachusetts McDonnell, kenneth j. 1 83 1 Hyde Pard Ave., Readville, Massachusetts Mcdonough, michael w. 1 Magoun Rd., W. Islip, New York Mcdonough, robert e. 1 934 East 1 4th St., Brooklyn, New York Mcdowell, kevin p. 140 ' 35 Cherry Ave., Flushing, New York McENEANEY, JAMES E. 1 6 Wallingford St., Dover, New Hampshire McGinn, robert f.,jr. 34 Forbes St., Riverside, Rhode Island McGINNIS, RICHARD C. 96 School St., Milford, Massachusetts McGOVERN, PHILIP C. 2662 Bainbridge Ave., New York, New York McINTIRE, ROBERT J. 14 Danbury Rd., Mattapan, Massachusetts McMAHON, JOSEPH V. 23 Haslet St., Roslindale, Massachusetts MOLON, THOMAS J. Lake Conway, Vernon, New Jersey MONIZ, ROBERT 770 Plymouth Ave., Fall River, Massachusetts MOONEY, FRANCIS A. 24-1 2 Cottage St., Gr. Barrington, Massachusetts MOORE, THOMAS B. 216 East 50th St., New York, New York MORAN, RICHARD G. 8 Verndale Rd., Milton, Massachusetts MORRELL, CLINTON C. 503 Main St., Madawaska, Maine MROCZKOWSKI, STANISLAUS 243 ' 40 1 44 Ave., Rosedale, New York MULHOLLAND, MICHAEL J. Harbour Island, Narragansett, Rhode Island MULLER, WILLIAM P. 73 Delle Ave., Roxbury, Massachusetts MULREADY, EDWIN 40 Shawmut St., E. Weymouth, Massachusetts MURPHY, JOHN A. 1 1 8 Bluff Ave., Cranston, Rhode Island MARTIN, RICHARD J. 60 Pierce St., Milton, Massachusetts MARTINEZ, ROBERT P. 620 Rancocas Ave., Riverside, New Jersey McARDLE, RICHARD B. 24 Mamelon Circle, Mattapan, Massachusetts McAULIFFE, JOHN J. 103 Salem St., Haverhill, Massachusetts McCABE, PETER J. 1 3623 Sylvan St., Van Nuys, California MCCAFFREY, EDWARD F. 25205 Bayfair Ct., Bay Village, Ohio McCALL, JAMES R. 18 Edwards St., Roslyn Heights, New York McCANN, CHARLES F. 24 Kipling Rd., Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts McCarthy, richard j. 544 Andover St., Lawrence, Massachusetts McNAMARA, BRIAN W. 1 9 Wallace St., Rockville Ctr., New York McNAMEE, BROTHER H., REV. 296 Allston St., Brookline, Massachusetts MEGLEY, DAVID J. 32 Wells Ave., Croton-on-Hudson, New York MELEEDY, MICHAEL F. 220 East Squantum St., Ouincy, Massachusetts MELLEN, MICHAEL J. 36 High St., Charlestown, Massachusetts MEL LYN, JOHN E., JR. 43 Westwood Circle, Dover, New Hampshire MERIGAN, WILLIAM H. 608 Hancock St., Abington, Massachusetts MILLER, DOUGLAS J. 20723 Beachwood Dr., Rocky River, Ohio MILLER, JOHN H., JR. 24 Blakeville St., Dorchester, Massachusetts MURPHY, NEIL F. 1 3 Broadview St., Bristol, Connecticut MURPHY, PETER A. 5 Brower PL, Port Chester, New York MURPHY, THUMAS W. 1 5 Bradford Rd., Schenectady, New York MURRAY, PHILIP C. 3 Alfred Ter., Woburn, Massachusetts MURRAY, VINCENT A., JR. 8 Victoria Rd., Ouincy, Massachusetts MURRAY, WILLIAM B. 7005 Ridge Crest Ter., Brooklyn, New York NANNICELLI, JOHN J. 39 Elder St., Dorchester, Massachusetts NAPOLI, PAUL K. 36 Rhode Ave., Nutley, New Jersey NEEDHAM, THOMAS M. 148 Sycamore St., Roslindale, Massachusetts NICOLETTA, ANDREW F. 1 7 Farquhar Rd., Mewton, Massachusetts NOCERA, MICHAEL J. 161 Winding Brook Rd., New Rochelle, New York NOVAKOWSKI, THEODORE L 45 North Federal St., Lynn, Massachusetts NOWAK, STANLEY P. 55 Phoenix Ave.. Lowell, Massachusetts O ' BRIEN, STEPHEN T. 41 Washington Rd., Rye, New Hampshire O ' CONNELL, MICHAEL F. 601 West 179St., New York, New York O ' FLANAGAN, JOHN P. 66 Crest St., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts O ' HARA, DANIEL J. 205 Stiles St., Elizabeth, New Jersey D ' KEEFE, TIMOTHY R. 923 West Sunnyside, Chicago, Illinois OKEN, RICHARD L. 1 203 Wine Spring Lane, Towson, Maryland OlEARY, DENIS 21 Sidley Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts OlEARY, JOHN P. 8 Electric Ave., Somerville, Massachusetts PABST, MICHAEL J. 7251 Scherrei Dr., Hales Corners, Wisconsin PADDEN, EDWARD M. 24 Dell Ave., Hyde Park, Massachusetts PAGLIERANI, RONALD J. 39 Clover Ave., Brockton, Massachusetts PALMER, PHILIP J. 235 Forest St., Medford, Massachusetts PARCELS, BURTIS G. 2 Maple PL, Keyport, New Jersey PARRILLO, CARL G. 442 Wolcott St., Waterbury, Connecticut PATTI, JOHN A. 9 De Young Rd., Glen Rock, New Jersey PECCINI, ROBERT T. 302 Chancery St., New Bedford, Massachusetts PECKHAM, RAYMOND L. 10 Petrell Park, Weymouth, Massachusetts PENELLA, ROBERT J. 49 Holyoke St., Ouincy, Massachusetts PENNING, JOSEPH S. 259 Vine St , Everett, Massachusetts PERRAS, RICHARD A. 1 05 East Clinton St., New Bedford, Massachusetts PUCCI, WILLIAM P. 55 Fenno St., Wollaston, Massachusetts QUARATIELLO, FRANCIS C. 29 Bradwood St., Boston, Massachusetts RAMPOLLA, MICHAEL A. 24 ' 07 36 St., Astoria, New York RANDALL, ARTHUR III 1 5 1 Weeburn Dr., New Canaan, Connecticut RAYMOND, RICHARD N. 92 New York Ave., S. Portland, Maine REGAN, CLIFTON JAMES 1 1 5 Asbby State Rd., Fitchburg, Massachusetts REGAN, JAMES D. Ill 225 Vermont St., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts REGISTER, DAVID F. USN Amm. Depot Otrs. A, Red Bank, New Jersey REILLY. CHARLES J. 3 Brownson Ter., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts REILLY, THOMAS E. 1 1 7 Loring Rd., Winthrop, Massachusetts REILLY, THOMAS H. 28 Wescott St., Riverside, Connecticut REINHARD, RICHARD W. 257 Cabot St., Newtonville, Massachusetts OlEARY. JOSEPH E. 37 Washburn Ave., Wellesley, Massachusetts OlEARY, THOMAS J. 89 Peach St., Walpole, Massachusetts OlOUGHLIN, JOHN E. 1 94 Claflin St., Belmont, Massachusetts O ' MALLEY, TERENCE P. 1047 Walnut St., Newton, Massachusetts O ' NEILL, BRIAN R. 1 80 Laurel Dr., Needham, Massachusetts O ' NEILL, MICHAEL R. 1 29 Fay Rd., N. Syracuse, New York O ' REILLY, THOMAS P. 23 Wellesley Park, Dorchester, Massachusetts ORMOND, THOMAS M.,JR. 104 Proctor Ave., Revere, Massachusetts O ' ROURKE, JOHN M. 1 60 Eliot St., Ashland, Massachusetts PESAPANE, DAVID A. 81 Center St., W. Haven, Connecticut PHELAN, ANDREW P. 1 583 East 1 G St., Brooklyn, New York PITTA, DENNIS A. 44 Maple St., Belmont, Massachusetts PJURA, GEORGE A., JR. 63 Hickory St., Bridgeport, Connecticut PONERA, CHARLES J. P. 0. Box 555, Dar-es-Salaam, Tanganyika POOPOR, MARK J. 96 Carson Ave., Dalton, Massachusetts PORCARO, ANIELLO 226 Palfrey St., Watertown, Massachusetts POWER, STEPHEN C. 20 Valley Rd., Woburn, Massachusetts POWER, THOMAS E. 1 34 Prince St., Needham, Massachusetts RENDA, VINCENT J. 9 Tally Ho Lane, Framingham, Massachusetts RICCI, JOSEPH D. 44 Thornton St., Lawrence, Massachusetts RICCIO, ALBERT H. 1 1 69 Highland Pk. Rd., Schenectady, New York RIEHL, EDWARD J. 1 2 Terrace Park, Garden City, New York RING, WENDELL C. 130 High St., Hampton, New Hampshire ROGALSKI, RICHARD A. 6 First St., Saugus, Massachusetts ROSS, RAYMOND F. 1 38 Mishawum Rd., Woburn, Massachusetts RYAN, DENNIS M. 1 10 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Gloucester, Massachusetts RYAN, JOHN J. 88 Cary Ave., Milton, Massachusetts OSENTON, WILLIAM D. 1 7 Glover Rd., Needham, Massachusetts PRUNIER, GARY G. 2 Btookfield Rd , Methuen, Massachusetts SACCO, JOHN M 82 Leyden St., E. Boston, Massachusetts SALIMBENE, FRANKLYN P. 64 Sigourney Rd., Revere, Massachusetts SANDBERG, WILLIAM C. 67 Beach St., Revere, Massachusetts SANNELLA, NICHOLAS 94 Hancock St., Lexington, Massachusetts SOUZA, PAUL J. 129 Adams St., Fairhaven, Massachusetts SPADA, SALVATORE 2 1 Dorchester St., Quincy, Massachusetts STEINKRAUSS, PHILIP J. 1 6 Dustin St., Brighton, Massachusetts THOMPSON, BRUCE J. 131 Quincy St., Brockton, Massachusetts TIERI, DOMINIC N. 224A Lake St., Brighton, Massachusetts TOBIASZ, ROBERT B. 25 Linebrook Rd., Ipswich, Massachusetts SANTOSUOSSO, DAVID V. 624 Poplar St., Roslindale, Massachusetts STEIR, MICHAEL L. 622 Morton St., Dorchester, Massachusetts TREACY, MICHAEL F. 722 Washington St., Dedham, Massachusetts SARNO, RAYMOND L 8 Oriole Rd., Yonkers, New York STEWART, CHARLES A. 3318WoodleyRd., Toledo, Ohio TRIBBLE, JOHN A. R.F.D. 1 , Box 233, Jaffrey, New Hampshire SAULNIERS, ALFRED H. 41 Jean St., Acushnet, Massachusetts ST. GEORGE, JOHN H. 45 Sunset Ave., Amityville, New York TUCKER, KENNETH D. 26910 Eastwood Lane, Olmsted Falls, Ohio SBARRA, ROBERT D. 76 Brookside PL, New Rochelle, New York STRAW, LAWRENCE J. 3623 Ballina Can. Rd., Encino, California TULEY, R. DAVID 1 670 Woodview Lane, Hamilton, Ohio SCANLON, LOUIS JAMES, JR. 25 Sheridan St., Lawrence, Massachusetts STRONACH, THEODORE H. 1 07 Concord St., Holliston, Massachusetts VANLEER, PAUL W. Box 48 1 , Woodstock, New York SCELSO, SALVATORE P. 207 Fellsway West, Medford, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, DANIEL F. 2 St. Clare Rd., Dorchester, Massachusetts VERDU, PEDRO 23 Bay St., New Britain, Connecticut SCHAEFER, CARL F. 1 1 Eimwood Rd., Westport, Connecticut SULLIVAN, DANIEL R. 612 Howe St., Manchester, New Hampshire VIAVATTENE, RONALD L. 9 Park Meadown Dr., Pittsford, New York SCHNEIDERHAN, PAUL A. 7 1 Belmont St., Weymouth, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, DAVID J. 108 High Service Ave., N. Providence, Rhode Island VIOLANTE, MICHAEL 725 Seymour Ave., Niagara Falls, New York SCHUMACHER, GERALD J. 246 Eimwood Ave., Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey SULLIVAN, DAVID R. 56 Riverview St., Springfield, Massachusetts VIZVARY, GEORGE L P. 0. Box 486, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico SCOTTON, EDWARD G. 41 Boulevard Rd., Dedham, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, DONALD L 1 25 Pond St., S. Weymouth, Massachusetts WALDRON. WILLIAM H., JR. 170 Oakley Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts SEROW, WILLIAM J. 2046 Schenectady Ave., Brooklyn, New York SULLIVAN, EDWARD J. 63 Thornton Park, Winthrop, Massachusetts WALKER, THOMAS M. 1 59 ' B Fort Lee Rd., Leonia, New Jersey SHALGIAN, ROBERT E. 203 North Ave., Rockland, Massachusetts SHAUGHNESSY, EDWARD G. 726 Washington St., Dedham, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, ROBERT J. 8 1 Ridgeway Ave., Pittsfield, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, SAMUEL H. 26 Carruth St., Dorchester, Massachusetts WALSH, JAMES M. 41 Perham St., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts WALSH, ROBERT E. 405 North Ave., Weston, Massachusetts SHEVLIN, TIMOTHY J. 7 Rosemary Rd., Dedham, Massachusetts SUTHERLAND, CHARLES J. 1 1 23 Brandon Rd., Cleveland Heights, Ohio WALSH, THOMAS A. 1243 California Rd., Eastchester, New York SILVEY, JOSEPH F. 1 5 Winter St., Maiden, Massachusetts SWYMER, GEORGE S. 101 Alexander Ave., Belmont, Massachusetts WATKINS, ALLEN C. 27 Jeanette Ave., Belmont, Massachusetts SIMON, JOHN J. 441 16thSt., Brooklyn, New York SKOBLAR, RICHARD S. 369 Broad St., Fairview, New Jersey SMILEY, LEONARD M. 159 ' 03 28th Ave., Flushing, New York SMITH, DAVID S. 34 Chesbrough Rd., Boston, Massachusetts SZPAKOWSKI, MARK M. 54 Park Ave., Natick, Massachusetts THERRIAULT, GENE D. 265 Walton St., Fitchburg, Massachusetts THIBODEAU, PHILIPPE A. 80 Highland Ave., Wollaston, Massachusetts THOMAS, ROBERT J. 1 7 Pershing Ave., Ossining, New York WESTPHAL, RICHARD F. 585 Bergen Ave., Jersey City, New Jersey WHITE, JEFFREY A. 68 Foster St., Arlington, Massachusetts WHITE, THOMAS J. 85 Chesbrough Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts WHITE, WILLIAM P. 47 Rosemont St., Dorchester, Massachusetts WILLIAMS, TIMOTHY J. 49 Brooks St., Springfield, Massachusetts WOLTERS. WILLIAM F. 588 Onderdonk Ave., Brooklyn, New York WOOD, JOSEPH T. 229 Whaley St., Freeport, New York WORTHEIM, BRUCE D. 26 Thayer Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts YUTZY, JAN C. 56 Danbury Circle So., Rochester, New York ZAIKOWSKl, CHARLES J. 86 Florence St., Providence, Rhode Island BUDWITIS, CLAIRE J. 34 Tierney St., Cambridge, Massachusetts BUTT, LYNDA L 76 Mayo Rd., Wellesley, Massachusetts CARLYON, THOMAS J. 846 Locust St., Hazleton, Pennsylvania CATALANO, NANCY A. 144 Sixth Ave., Long Branch, New Jersey CAVALLARG, JOANNE M. 1 53 Grove Ave., Wilmington, Massachusetts CAVANAUGH, JAMES E. 1 7 Flint St., Somerville, Massachusetts CURRAN, CORNELIA L 41 Old English Rd., Worcester, Massachusetts CURRAN, RICHARD J. 141 1 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. DACKO, MARIANNE 141 Alvin Ave., Milton, Massachusetts DAILEY, CAROL A. 55 Bright Rd , Belmont, Massachusetts DANIELE, JENNIE R. 1036 Glen Rd., Palisade, New Jersey D ' ANTONIG. LOUISE A. 1 2 Yale St., Medford, Massachusetts ZAINO, WILLIAM J, 1212 Sleepy Hollow L, Scotch Plains, New Jersey CHADWICK, ARTHUR C. 40 Westchester Drive, Attleboro, Massachusetts DERBA, JEANNE M. 65 Damon Rd., Medfotd, Massachusetts ZIDE, BARRY M 70 Clyde St., Newtonville, Massachusetts CHAMBERLAIN, PETER S. 1 062 Barnes Rd., Wallingford, Connecticut DEVLIN, CELIA C. 25 Miami Terrace, W. Roxbury, Massachusetts ZIDE, MICHAEL F. 70 Clyde St., Newtonville, Massachusetts ZIMMERMAN, ROBERT G. 4 Gregory Ct., Barrington, Rhode Island school of education ABBOTT, ANN L. 6 Brook Farm Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts AHERN, DAVID J. 43 Gardena St., Brighton, Massachusetts ARTHURS, PATRICIA A. 382 Broadway, Somerville, Massachusetts ATKINSON, DIANE 399 Rantoul St., Beverly, Massachusetts BEATON, JAMES F. 81 Gardiner St., W. Lynn, Massachusetts BECK, GERALDINE C. 1 93 Manthorne Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts BLACKWOOD, MARY K. 27 Wentworth Rd., Melrose, Massachusetts BLUMER, MICHAEL 1 94 Congress Ave., Chelsea, Massachusetts BOTTO, CARMINE N. 9 Jackson Ave., Everett, Massachusetts BROKOWSKI, WILLIAM W. 343 New London Turnpike. Norwich, Connecticut BRUNELLE. WILLIAM J. 146 Chiswick Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts CLAFLIN, KAREN 82 Moss Hill Rd., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts COLAMARIA, CAROL A. 8 Woodland Rd., Norwood, Massachusetts COLLINS, ELLEN C. 1 Gray St., Cambridge, Massachusetts COLLINS, JOHN J. 84 Tonawanda St., Dorchester, Massachusetts COLLINS, NANCY M. 68 Hutchinson Rd., Winchester, Massachusetts CONNARTON, JOHN B., JR. 1 7 1 Park St., Medford, Massachusetts CONNOLLY, DENNIS F. 1 2 Grant St., Cambridge, Massachusetts CONNOLLY, FRANCES P. 54 Gushing Rd., Maiden, Massachusetts CORMIER, LINDA A. 5 Mill St., Beverly, Massachusetts COUGHLIN, CARROLL J. 1239 Mitchell Ave., Tallahassee, Florida CRAIGEN, PATRICIA A. 51 Veterans Memorial Drive, Peabody, Mass. CREEDEN, ANNE L 42 Underwood Park, Waltham, Massachusetts CROOK, MARGARET A, 8 Canterbury Drive, Norwood, Massachusetts CUNNIFF, MARGARET A. 13 Sherman St., Natick, Massachusetts DIGREZIO, NANCY T. 27 Powder House Rd , Medford, Massachusetts DILLON, THOMAS A 1 98 Windsor Ave., Pittsfield, Massachusetts DINATALE, JULIE ANN 1 29 Main St., Maiden, Massachusetts DIVVER, DENISE J. 40 Westchester Drive, Westwood, Massachusetts DOHERTY, ANNE K. 1 1 Locke St., Andover, Massachusetts DONOHOE, BRIAN P. 1 08 Greaton Rd., West Roxbury, Massachusetts DONOVAN, SUSAN M. 48 Evans St., Medford, Massachusetts DOWNES, JOHN F. 8 Theriault Court, Cambridge, Massachusetts DUFFY, PAULA K. 878 Highland Ave., Fall River, Massachusetts DUGAN, DONNA E. 32-20 1 68th St., Flushing, New York DUNN, RICHARD J 93 Willowdean Ave., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts DWYER, WILLIAM F. 1 686 Metropolitan Ave., Bronx 62, New York EDMONDS, PAULA J. 1 56 Hampshire St., Cambridge, Massachusetts ELLIOTT, RICHARD J. 14 Christine Terr., S. Weymouth, Massachusetts ERCOLINO, KATHLEEN 75 Deal Lake Point Rd., Wanamassa, New Jersey GILMORE, WILLIAM M. 30 Piermont St., Watertown, Massachusetts JOHNEN, PETRA G. 940 Brinsmade Ave., Bronx, New York ERICKSON, DENISE M. 16 Vernon St., Newburyport, Massachusetts FALLA, MARY J. 619 Main St., Harwich Port, Massachusetts G0ET2, ELIZABETH G. 61 Pomona Ave., Fair Lawn, New Jersey GRENNAN, JOANN MARIE 12 Middle Drive, Plandome, New York JORDAN, DONNA A. 49 Standish Circle, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts JORDAN, RAE E. 72 Charles St., Mansfield, Massachusetts FEELEY, ELLEN F. 1 56 Grove St., W. Medf ord, Massachusetts GUENETTE, ELAINE A. 26 Jackson St., Salem, Massachusetts JOYCE, MONICA K. 62 Sheldon St.. Milton, Massachusetts FERACD, PATRICIA A. 75 Stonehedge Drive, S. Greenwich, Connecticut GUERRIERO, BARBARA J. 59 George St., Medford, Massachusetts KADLICK, JUDITH F. 14 Birch Rd., Natick, Massachusetts FIBKINS, BONNIE G. 297 Fern St., W. Hartford, Connecticut FINNEGAN, ELAINE A. 90 Turner Rd., Scituate, Massachusetts HALPIN, MARY M. 26 Linden St., Reading, Massachusetts HANNA, PATRICIA-LOUISE 175 Landing Rd. North, Rochester, New York KARD, DIANE F. 90 Schneider Lane, Hauppauge, New York KEANEY, ELIZABETH T. 581 East 8th St., S. Boston, Massachusetts FIORE, ANGELA 9 Churchill Rd., Winchester, Massachusetts FIORE, ELIZABETH V. 14 Bailey Rd., Somerville, Massachusetts FITZGERALD, PAMELA J. 1 1 Royce Rd., Newton Centre, Massachusetts HANNABURY, RALPH A. 1 29 Porter St., Melrose, Massachusetts HARMON, ROSEMARY 1 24 Clinton Park, Tonowanda, New York HARRINGTON, KATHLEEN T. 9 Loumac Rd., Wilmington, Massachusetts KEARNEY, MARY E. 26 Winter St., Arlington, Massachusetts KEARNS, EILEEN M. 1 59 Highland Ave., Arlington, Massachusetts KEAVENEY, MADELINE M. 76 Oakdale Ave., Dedham, Massachusetts FLYNN, PATRICIA A. 967 Summer St., Lynnfield, Massachusetts HARRINGTON, MARY E. 708 Seaman Ave., Beachwood, New Jersey KELLEHER, JOHN D. 67 Willis St., New Bedford, Massachusetts FOLEY, CAROL L 297 Fuller St., Dorchester, Massachusetts HARVEY, JOSEPH D. 58 Somerset Ave., Winthrop, Massachusetts KELLER, MARLENE A. 125 Franklin St., Newton, Massachusetts FORINA, JOSEPH A. 106 Bremen St., E. Boston, Massachusetts HENRY, WILLIAM J. 250 Shore Drive, Winthrop, Massachusetts KELLEY, SUSAN MARIE 30 Deerfield Rd., Needham, Massachusetts FOSTER, JOAN E. 1 2 Stanley Rd., Waltham, Massachusetts HINES, ROBERT J. 4 Ware St., Dorchester, Massachusetts KELLY, JAMES F. 18 Allendale Ave., Billerica, Massachusetts FOWLER, DAVID S. 4 Woodage Circle, Braintree, Massachusetts HINRICHS, DONNA K. 247 Longview Rd., Union, New Jersey KOTTMYER, DIANE M. 8 Grafton St., Lawrence, Massachusetts FOWLER, LINDA D. 1 5 Pleasant St., Medford, Massachusetts HOCKMAN, RICHARD C. 57 Reservoir St., Cambridge, Massachusetts KREMMELL, ANN MARIE 1 1 1 Pacella Drive, Dedham, Massachusetts FRIGON, DENISE 68 East Clay St., Waterbury, Connecticut HOGAN, KENNETH W. 25 Puritan Rd., Watertown, Massachusetts KRUEGER, CAROL A. 51 Stevens Ave., W. Long Branch, New Jersey FRONC, CAROL ANN 40 Prospect Ave., Lynnfield, Massachusetts HOWARD, JOHN F, JR. 50 Codman Hill Ave., Dorchester, Massachusetts KUPKA, ROBERT J. 97 Brewster St., Springfield, Massachusetts FUSONI, MARY T. 16 Sheldon St., Milton, Massachusetts HUGHES, ELIZABETH F. 41 6 Mt. Vernon St., Dedham, Massachusetts LAKUSTA. PATRICIA C. RD. 2, Box 474, Ramsey Rd., Lebanon, New Jersey GAUTHIER, MARLENE 203 West Hooper St., N. Tiverton, Rhode Island JACQUETTE, ARLENE R. 6 Sagamore Rd., Stamford, Connecticut LAVENDER, JAMES S. 2 1 2 High St., Medford, Massachusetts GERVAIS, DONALD J. 86 West Chapel St., Abington, Massachusetts JANSON, GAIL A. Box 528, Seroe Colo, Aruba Island, Neth. Antilles LEVERGOOD, PATRICIA A. 8 St. Mary ' s Lane, Salem, New Hampshire GILBERT, JOSEPH L 1 Anthony St., Jewett City, Connecticut JEWETT, JANE A. 28 King St., Dorchester, Massachusetts LIDDELL, MARY JANE 1 6 Eleanor St., Dedham, Massachusetts LOGAN, MARIE C. 1 1 4 Taylor St., Waltham, Massachusetts LORDEN, JUDITH E. Tarbell St., E. Pepperell, Massachusetts LOWE, STEPHEN J. 29 Lockland Ave., Framingham, Massachusetts LUND, MYLES J. 33 Hathaway Ave.. Beverly, Massachusetts LYNCH, KATHRYN L 298 Indian Trail, Mountainside, New Jersey MacDONALD, DONALD J., JR. 270 Main St., Watertown, Massachusetts MAGUIRE, BARBARA A. 78 St. Gregory ' s St., Dorchester, Massachusetts MANDEVILLE, PAUL J. 143 Druid Hill Ave., Randolph, Massachusetts MANSFIELD, DIANE M. 90 Richardson Rd., Lynn, Massachusetts MASCI, CAROLANN Cross Rd., Nabnasset, Massachusetts MAWN, BARRY W. 68 Arlington Rd., VVoburn, Massachusetts McAULIFFE, JEANNE E. 70 Nichols St., Norwood, Massachusetts MITTON, FRANK W. 53 Mt. Washington St.. Everett, Massachusetts MORENCY, MARILYN E. 55 Laurel St , Fairhaven. Massachusetts MORGAN, JANE L. 28 Goldsmith St., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts MORGAN, MARGERY F. 1 1 5 Child St., Hyde Park, Massachusetts MORTARELLI, ETTORE A. 1 1 7 Bedford St., W. Bridgewater, Massachusetts MUCCI, SALVATORE V, 76 Delano Ave., Revere, Massachusetts MUCINSKAS, LUCY C. 447 East Seventh St., S Boston, Massachusetts MURRAY, JANICE M. 17 Whitten St., Dorchester, Massachusetts MUSUMECI, JOAN M. 10 Boylston St., Methuen, Massachusetts NAHM, SR. LAURIANNA 62 Newton St., Waltham, Massachusetts NEYLON, MARY ELLEN 1 1 Barnard Ave., Watertown, Massachusetts NOVELLINE. ANTOINETTE M. 3 Burget Ave., Medford, Massachusetts POWER, FIONA A. 1 5-E Honeycutt Rd., Fort Bragg, North Carolina PRUYN, WILLIAM J. 458 Dover Rd., Westwood, Massachusetts REID, LANA F. 1 7 Stratford Rd., Natick, Massachusetts RENZULLO, ROSEMARIE A. 276 Hanover St., Boston, Massachusetts RIETCHEL, CAROL L 52 Warwick Rd., W. Newton, Massachusetts ROGERS, JANET M. 970 South St., Roslindale, Massachusetts RUSIECKI, ELIZABETH M. 1 1 Front St., Three Rivers, Massachusetts RYAN, JUDITH A. 35 Asticou Rd., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts SANTOLUCITO, SANDRA M. 14 Gale St., Waltham, Massachusetts SCHAIT, MARTHA L 181 Cooper Ave., Upper Montclair, New Jersey SCHAUB, NOEL A. 40 Trainor Drive., Braintree, Massachusetts SIGNES, CARMEN A. 299 East 3 1 st St., Paterson, New Jersey McCABE, GEORGE F. 2 Hill St.. Charlestown, Massachusetts McCarthy, dermod t. 1 1 5 Channing Rd., Watertown, Massachusetts McCUE, PATRICIA A. 31 Columbia St., Wilmington, Massachusetts McDAVITT, MARY M. 1 Ainsley St., Dorchester, Massachusetts Mcdonough, mary c. 198 Metropolitan Ave., Roslindale, Massachusetts McGRATH, MARY ELLEN 14 Perkins Rd., Winchester, Massachusetts O ' BRIEN, CHERYL E. 91 Myrtle Ave., Millburn, New Jersey O ' CONNOR, KATHLEEN A. 249 Payson Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts O ' MALLEY, KEVIN J. 61 Whitten St., Dorchester, Massachusetts ONDRECHEN, THEODORA G. 1 4 Margaret Rd., Stoneham, Massachusetts PARRELLA, VINCENT J. 163 Waverley Ave., Watertown, Massachusetts PENERGAST, ANN MARIE 176 Porter St., Manchester, Connecticut SLAUTA, NANCY F. 5 Elwin Rd., Natick, Massachusetts SMITH, MARY T. 6 Beachway, Pt. Washington, New York SPINKS, KAREN ANN 22 Park Lane, E. Walpole, Massachusetts STRATFORD, CATHERINE V 22 Suffolk Rd., Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts STRAUCHON, REGINA R. 1 9 Warren Place, Montclair, New Jersey SULLIVAN, JANE M. 42 Norway Rd., Milton, Massachusetts McGUIRE, ANN M. 19 Linden Ave., Scituate, Massachusetts POOD, PATRICIA A. 920 Boulevard St., Westfield, New Jersey SULLIVAN, LAWRENCE J. 726 Chestnut St., Waban, Massachusetts McLOUGHLIN, MAUREEN A. 348 S. Third St., Oradell, New Jersey McNAMARA, ANN L 433 Adams St., Milton, Massachusetts POLMON, SANDRA L 1 26 Southwest Rd., Waterbury, Connecticut PGRTANOVA, DONALD F. 65 Evergreen Ave., Somerville, Massachusetts SUPPLE, JEANNE A. 50 Audrey Ave., Needham, Massachusetts TAWCZYNSKI, DANIEL P. 137 Division St., Great Barrington, Massachusetts MESSINA, FRANCES ALEX 1 424 Center St., Newton Centre, Massachusetts PORTER, SUSAN A 132 Gulliver St., Milton, Massachusetts TOOMEY, FRANCIS M. 51 Montrose St., Somerville, Massachusetts TROTTA, NOREEIM A. 1 1 Richmond Aue., Milford, Massachusetts BALE, WILLIAM M. 957 West Second St., Elmlra, New York BROWN, DAVID G. 1 65 Long St., Warwick, Rhode Island TUOHEY. BRIAN J. 480 Crafts St., West Newton, Massachusetts BARBIERI, WILLIAM G. 19 Riverdale Rd., Milford, Connecticut BROWN, THOMAS J. 14 Downing Rd., Peabody, Massachusetts TUSZYNSKI, NANCY A. 3939 Emerson St., Evanston, Illinois BARNES, PAUL J. 290 Renfrew St., Arlington, Massachusetts BURGOYNE, JOHN E. JR. 1 Buttonwood Lane, Lancaster, Massachusetts VINCENT, FRANCIS J. 73 Tarkiln Hill Rd., New Bedford, Massachusetts BARRY, JOHN J. 90 Orchard St., E. Hartford, Connecticut BURNS, RICHARD F. 249 Mystic Valley Pkwy., Winchester, Mass. WARD, BARBARA J. 1 2 Pershing Rd., W. Newton, Massachusetts WEISENBERGER, JUDITH C. 249 Manchester St., Mattapan, Massachusetts BATES, WILLIAM E. 26 Mt. Pleasant St., Winchester, Massachusetts BEHAN, DENNIS E. 138 Common St., W. Ouincy, Massachusetts BUTLER, WILLIAM J. Ill 51 Longview Rd., Port Washington, New York BUTTERS, ALAN L 75 Landseer St., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts WELCH, KATHLEEN M. 9 Sunnyside Rd., Lynn, Massachusetts BENE, EDWARD J. 40 Evergreen St., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts CAHALY, RONALD F. 58 Adamson St., Allston, Massachusetts WHITE, ELAINE M. 8 Davidson Rd., Wakefield, Massachusetts BENEDICT, CHARLES A. 141 2 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. CAKE, BENJAMIN J. 1425 Hunter Rd., Rydal, Pennsylvania WHITE, WILLIAM C. 2 Highland Park, Cambridge, Massachusetts BENT, ROBERT M. 28 Suffolk Rd., Wellesley, Massachusetts CALF, JOHN R. 21 Lake Ave., Walpole, Massachusetts WILDE, ROBERT T. 40 Corbett St., Andover, Massachusetts BERGAGNA, RICHARD P. 72 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Massachusetts CALLANAN, JAMES E. Ill 651 Watertown St., Newtonville, Massachusetts WILLIAMS, CHARLES T. 324 Savin Hill Ave., Dorchester, Massachusetts BIGHAM, BRADFORD 97 Bacon St., Waltham, Massachusetts CAMARRA, PETER A. 10 Sanford Rd., Canton, Massachusetts ZAMMARCHI, FRANK A., JR. 1 9 Ridge St., Winchester, Massachusetts BLAIR, JOHN H. 29 Barbour Rd., New Britain, Connecticut CANTY, EUGENE J. 49 Putnam Rd., Somerville, Massachusetts business administration BODIO. ROBERT F. 58 Mt. Pleasant St., Milford, Massachusetts CANTY, WILLIAM P., Jr. 44 Walnut St., Everett, Massachusetts AIELLO, RICHARD J. 1 10 Highland Rd., Somerville, Massachusetts BOND, ARTHUR M. JR. 394 Franklin St.. Wrentham, Massachusetts CAPOBIANCO, DAVID C. 1066 Hyde Park Ave., Hyde Park, Massachusetts ALLEN, ROBERT M. 1 5 Brierwood Rd., Braintree, Massachusetts BORDUAS, ARTHUR J. 23 Rockland Ave., Portland, Maine CAPOBIANCO, RAYMOND J. 1066 Hyde Park Ave., Hyde Park, Massachusetts AMANN, Peter T. Cayuga Lane, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida BOULAIS, PETER D. 45 Reynolds St., Danielson, Connecticut CAPRARO, ANTHONY J. 14-1 2 HullSt., Boston, Massachusetts AMICK, ELLIOTT W., JR. 5 Tart Place, Cornwall Hudson, New York BOVE, JOHN A. 25 Marshall Ave., Scituate, Massachusetts CARALUZZI, ANTHONY E., JR. Giles Hill Rd., Redding, Connecticut ANTONIO, MARSHALL 46A Margo Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts BOYLE, JOHN J. 4 French St., Danbury, Connecticut CARNEY, OWEN J. 1 9 Canterbury Rd., Winchester, Massachusetts AUSTIN, BRIAN M. 1 53 Whitehall Rd., Albany, New York BRADLEY, RICHARD J. JR. 60 Main St., Westford, Massachusetts CARROLL, DAVID M. 25 Upland Rd., Corning, New York AVALLONE, VINCENT A. 430 Lighthouse Rd., New Haven, Connecticut BRANSFIELD, STEPHEN B. 49 Pleasant St., S. Natick, Massachusetts CASEY, JOHN P. 75 Alpine St., Arlington, Massachusetts BAICHI, JOHN F. 41 4 North Orchard Rd., Solvay, New Vork BRAZILIAN, JOHN H. 41 Glades Rd., Scituate, Massachusetts CASHIN, EDWARD L 481 Upham St., Melrose, Massachusetts BAKER, GERARD A. 44 Home Park Rd., Braintree, Massachusetts BRIDE. PETER F. 50 Poinsettia St., Middletown, Connecticut CHABOT, PAUL E. 61 SeventhSt, Auburn, Maine ClOCl, RAYMOND J. 61 Forbes St., Providence, Rhode Island CURRY, ANDREW P. 461 Washington St., Brighton, IVlassachusetts DOWi IEY, JOHN J. 1 96 Fuller St., Dorchester, IVlassachusetts CLIFFORD, WILLIAM R. 5 Dunbray Rd., Springfield Massachusetts CUSKIE, THOMAS J. 43 Windsor Place, Brooklyn, New York DOYLE, RICHARD J 1 2 Beechcroft Rd., Newton, Massachusetts COLETTA, JOHN N. 304 Marrett Rd., Lexington, Massachusetts DAILEY, JOHN JOSEPH 6 Washington St., Milton, Massachusetts DRISCOLL, PAUL F. 64 Brattle St., Arlington, Massachusetts COLLINS, JOSEPH R. 1 1 Leiland Rd., Stoughton, Massachusetts DALEY, MARTIN R. 1 7 Elliot Ter., Newton, Massachusetts DUGGAN, MICHAEL J. 40 Waldo Rd., Arlington, Massachusetts COLLINS, RICHARD J. 64 Holmes St., Marion, Massachusetts DALKIEWICZ, NORBERT W. 21 Q W. Seneca St., Vernon, New York DUKE. WILLIAM H. 4323 Braddock Rd., Alexandria, Virginia COLLINS, WILLIAM H. 1 1 7 Franklin St., Brookline, Massachusetts DAMICO, JOHN A. 1 04 Forrest Ave., Fair Haven, New Jersey DUNN, ROBERT G., JR. 6 Fernway St., Winchester, Massachusetts CONCANNON, WILLIAM J. 279 Linwood Ave., Newtonville, Massachusetts DARR, STEPHEN B. 348 Adams St., Milton, IVlassachusetts DUNN, WILLIAM D. 6 Grovenor Rd., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts CONNERY, JOHN W. 10 Briarfield Rd., Barrington, Rhode Island DEBERNARDIS, WILLIAM J, 8878 1 6th Ave., Brooklyn, New York DURKIN, ARTHUR E.,Jr. 5 Felicia Rd., Melrose, Massachusetts CONNOLLY, JOHN D. 1 9 Rockledge Dr., W. Hartford, Connecticut DECOLLIBUS, JOHN J. 23 Hodder Lane, Framingham, Massachusetts DWYER, S. JOHN 599 Country Way, N. Scituate, Massachusetts CONNOLLY, WILLIAM R. 58 Avalon Rd., Milton, Massachusetts DEFRONZO, RICHARD 1 2 Intervale Ave., Saugus, Massachusetts DWYER, TERRENCE K. 43 Courtenay Circle, Pittsford, New York CONNORS, HARRY E., JR. 608 Delafreld Rd., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania DELANEY, GEORGE F. 55 Lyndhurst St., Dorchester, Massachusetts DWYER, THOMAS E. 107 Tudor Rd., Needham, Massachusetts CONNORS, THOMAS F. 61 Nehoiden St., Needham, Massachusetts DELANEY, LEON J. 221 Cambridge Rd., Woburn, Massachusetts EISENHART, FRANK J. 1805 Hillcrest Rd., Laverock, Pennsylvania CONWAY, Richard F. 650 Concord Ave., Cambridge, Massachusetts DEMAMBRO, JOSEPH A. 326 Hammond St., Newton, Massachusetts ERICKSON, LLOYD F. 73 Marianna St., Lynn, Massachusetts COOK, PAUL W. 8 Karlton Circle, Andover, Massachusetts DIMASI, SALVATORE F. 181 Salem St., Boston, Massachusetts FAHERTY, FREDERICK C. 27 Ledge Rd., Wayne, New Jersey COSTELLO, BRIAN 446 Dover Rd., Westwood, Massachusetts DINEEN, FRANCIS J. 19 Lewis St., Somerville, Massachusetts FANTASIA, PAUL H. 1 88 Edenfield Ave., Watertown, Mass. COSTELLO, JOHN H. 305 Andover St., Lowell, Massachusetts DOHERTY, LEONARD J. 575 Canton Ave., Milton, Massachusetts FITZGERALD, JOHN H. Ill 715 Broadway, Chelsea, Massachusetts COURNOYER, ALFRED C. 28 Longfellow Dr., Holyoke, Massachusetts DOHERTY, PETER S. 49 Union St., Watertown, Massachusetts FITZGERALD, JOHN J. 30-1 2 Mellen St., Wakefield, Massachusetts CRADOCK, JOHN P. 1 Roseway, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts DOHERTY, ROBERT K. 345 Ashmont St., Dorchester, Massachusetts FITZGIBBONS, JOHN F 1 6 Lawrence St., Wakefield, Massachusetts CROKE, ROGER L 27 Thornley St., Dorchester, Massachusetts DOLAN, JOHN F. 1 5 Linden St., Salem, Massachusetts FITZPATRICK, JAMES P. 9 Tyler St , Maiden, Massachusetts CUMMINS, RICHARD A. 183 Boylston St., Brockton, Massachusetts DOLAN, NEIL M. 17 Bow Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts FITZPATRICK, JOHN R. 82 Congress St., Milford, Massachusetts CUNNINGHAM, ROBERT J. 214 Central St., Danvers, Massachusetts DOLAN, PAUL E. 1 3 Sturgis St., Chelsea, Massachusetts FIUMARA, FREDERICK A. 40 High St., Winchester, Massachusetts CURRAN, JOHN R, 83 Frances St., Portland, Maine DONAHUE, JAMES J. 652 Neponset St., Norwood, Massachusetts FLYNN, WILLIAM J. 66 Lee Rd., Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts FONTAINE, RONALD C. 252A F. D. Roosevelt, Halo Rey, Puerto Rico HAAK, FABIAN N. 1 1 3 Gushing Ave., Dorchester, Massachusetts JAMIOL, LEONARD J, 363 Poplar St., Roslindale, Massachusetts FORD, KENNETH J. 295 Summit Ave., Brighton, Massachusetts HAMLET, STEPHEN PHILLIP 1 1 7 Wolcott Ave., Syracuse. New York JEROME, MICHAEL S. 90 Newton Ave., Worcester, Massachusetts FORD, WILLIAM P.. JR. 19 Churchill St.. Newtonville. Massachusetts HANSCOM, JOHN V. 6 Grew Hill Rd., Roslindale, Massachusetts JOHNSON, D. WOODROW, JR. 845 Hale St., Beverly Farms, Massachusetts FOWLER, ERNEST W. 2 Dutch Lane Apts. 1 E, Spring Valley, New York FREDERICK, JAMES E. 554 Central Ave., Needham, Massachusetts FROHN, JOHN C. 1 1 Summer St., Lexington, Massachusetts HART, JOHN J. 1 3 Everett St., Waltham, Massachusetts HARTEN, JOHN T. 66 Longfellow Dr., Longmeadow Massachusetts HARTIGAN, JOSEPH P 6 Meadowhank Ave., Mattapan, Massachusetts JOURNALIST, JOHN A. 1 7 Crestdale Rd., Danbury, Connecticut KANE, JOSEPH W. 4 Wyman Court, Winchester, Massachusetts KANE, MARTIN W. 213 M St., S. Boston, Massachusetts FRUCCI, RICHARD M. 35 Elm St., Norwood, Massachusetts FULLER, GORDON T. 34 Marble St., Manchester, Connecticut FULLER, RICHARD 1 4 Middlesex Ave., Swampscott, Massachusetts GALLAGHER, HARRY W., JR. 49 Huntington Rd., Arlington, Massachusetts GALVIN, PAUL J. 58 Kirkwood Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts GAVIN, JAMES F. 1 24 Ridgewood Rd., Milton, Massachusetts GEAGAN, GERALD L 57 Sunset Rd., Arlington, Massachusetts GENEVICH, JOSEPH J. 51 Pleasant St., Dorchester, Massachusetts GIGLIO, FRANCIS P. 1 Hitchcock Ter., Ouincy, Massachusetts GILL, JAMES F. Ill 1 5 Ouincy St., Somerville, Massachusetts GINSBURG, ROBERT E. 206 Park Ave., Revere, Massachusetts GORHAM, MICHAEL JAMES 49 Tolland Rd., North Andover, Massachusetts GRANWEHR, MICHAEL W 1 26 S. Hill Rd., Ridgewood, New Jersey GUARENTE, ROBERT V. 44 Church St., Winchester, Mas -achusetts GUILFOYLE, EDWARD J. 1 89 Independence Ave., Ouincy, Massachusetts GURRY, JOHN F., JR. 356 Pearl St., Cambridge, Massachusetts HAUSER, CHARLES R. Old Saugatuck Rd., Norwalk, Connecticut HAYES, JAMES P. 7 Hardy St., S. Boston, Massachusetts HAYES, THOMAS J. 8 Elena St., Mattapan, Massachusetts HEAD, JOHN C. 363 El Greco Dr., Osprey, Florida HICE, DOUGLAS J. 243 Second St., Trenton, New Jersey HIGGINS, JOHN P. 963 Centre St., Newton, Massachusetts HINES, ROBERT F. 64 Moreland St., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts HOARE, JOHN J. 41 Perthshire Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts HORGAN, DAVID P. 14 Wellesley Ave., Wellesley, Massachusetts HOWARD, WILLIAM F. 33 Ridgeview Ave., Mattapan, Massachusetts HOYLE, JOHN J. 1 2 Nostrand Ave., Valley Stream, New York HOYT, BRENDAN L. 221 West St., Reading, Massachusetts HUBERT, WILLIAM T. 14 Vine St., Milford, Massachusetts HURLEY, STEPHEN G. 1 57 Palmer St., Ouincy, Massachusetts HUTCHESON, JOHN W. 1 1 Stuyvesant St., Huntington, New York HYLAND, ROBERT J 56 Davis Ave., White Plains, New York KANE, RICHARD F. 4500 NW 25th St., Ft. Lauderdale, Florida KEATING, JOHN J. 27 Glenmont Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts KEEGAN, RICHARD V., JR. 349 S. Ridgewood Rd., S. Orange, New Jersey KEENAN, JOHN J. 20 Allen St., Arlington, Massachusetts KEENAN, JOHN P. 33 Curve St., Waltham, Massachusetts KELLEY, BRIAN H. 1 85 Tudor Rd.. Needham, Massachusetts KELLEY, ROBERT J 75 South St., Quincy, Massachusetts KELLY, JOSEPH P 1 2 Kerrigan PL, Brookline, Massachusetts KENNEDY, FRANCIS M. 146 Western Ave., Lynn, Massachusetts KENNEDY, HAROLD V., JR. 1 90 Gaylor Rd., Scarsdale, New York KERIVAN, WILLIAM R. 14 Thomson Lane, Lynn, Massachusetts KERVICK, JAMES B. 418 Casino Ave., Cranford, New Jersey KINSMAN, FREDERICK 0. 488 Nahatan St., Norwood, Massachusetts KITLOWSKI, CHRIS P. 6840 Meade St., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania KRAJEWSKI, ALEXANDER H. 33 Park St., Rockville, Connecticut KRASOWSKI, JOSEPH FRANK 5 Bond St.. Portland, Maine KRZYNOWEK, BERNARD J. 208 Clark St., New Britain, Connecticut IVlacDQNALD, ROBERT S. 301 Eliot St., Milton, Massachusetts McHUGH, LEO A. 523 High St., Medford, Massachusetts KUTZ, GORDON R,, JR. 39 Richmont Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania MacNEIL, STEPHEN B. 8 Stafford St., Dedham, Massachusetts MclNNESS, LEO F. 483 Washington St., Brighton, Massachusetts LACHARITE, MARK S. 9 Ayer Rd., Lawrence, Massachusetts MAHONEY, GERARD J. 305 Summer St., Arlington, Massachusetts McKAY, RICARDO A. 53 South Moison Rd., Blauvelt, New York LACOUTURE, WILLIAM J. 18 Greenwood Rd., Natick, Massachusetts MAHONY, DANIEL R. 3 Cottage Ave., Winchester, Massachusetts McKENNA, WILLIAM R. 251 Country Club Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island UMBERT, JOHN J., JR. 88 Knollwood Rd., Roslyn, New York MALLON, DOUGLAS A. 41 Monument St., Wenham. Massachusetts Mclaughlin, james p. 77 Whitcomb Ave., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts LEEM, NORMAN E., JR. 35 Sutton Rd., Needham, Massachusetts MANION, EDWARD F. 38 Seminole Drive, Worcester, Massachusetts McMACKIN, HUGH J. 7 1 Pontiac Rd., Quincy, Massachusetts LEMBREE, JOHN A. 167 Nehoiden St., Needham, Massachusetts MANNIX, JOHN F. 4Blithedale St., Newton, Massachusetts McMAHON, DANIEL J. 6 Pleasant St., Kingston, Massachusetts LEONARD. JAMES M. 23 Leiand St., Maiden, Massachusetts MARR, DONALD C.,JR. 1 Glenmont Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts McMAHON, PAUL M. 2 Robbern Rd., Hopkinton, Massachusetts LEONARD, ROBERT J. 888 Concord Ave., Belmont, Massachusetts MARTO, PETER A. 1 32 Winsor Ave., Watertown, Massachusetts McMANUS, RICHARD J. 1 32 Minot St., Dorchester, Massachusetts LEONARD, WILLIAM M. 25 Berkeley St., Arlington, Massachusetts MASCENA, STEPHEN W. 5 Fox Hill Ave., Bristol, Rhode Island McNAUGHT, JOHN J., JR. 81 Ellis Farm Lane, Melrose, Massachusetts LEVINSON, GERALD M. 3 Lothian Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts McAULIFFE, KEVIN F. 2 1 Shiretown Rd., Dedham, Massachusetts MILLER, LCREN III 135 Maple Hill Rd.,Glencoe, Illinois LINN, ROBERT D., JR. 663 Adams St., Milton, Massachusetts McCABE, JOHN F 1 034 East 32nd St., Brooklyn, New York MILLONZI, JOEL C. 82 East Main St., Fredonia, New York UPSON, EDMUND 0. 18 Murray St., Lynn, Massachusetts McCARTE, RICHARD F. 369 Lawrence Rd., Medford, Massachusetts MINOR, EDWARD 269 Elm St., Everett, Massachusetts LISTON, EDWARD J. 46 Mansfield St., Somerville, Massachusetts McCarthy, charles j. 1 1 Wyatt Circle, Somerville, Massachusetts MITCHELL, ROBERT K. 67 Bigelow St., Ouincy, Massachusetts LOBIONDO, JOSEPH A Box 254, Rosehayn, New Jersey McCarthy, eugene j., jr. 1414 Concord St., Framingham, Massachusetts MOONAN, JOHN X. 21 Joseph St., Medford, Massachusetts LOFTUS, PATRICK P. 14 Lincoln St., Natick, Massachusetts McCarthy, john h. 109 W. Moreland Ave., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania MOORE, ROBERT L 1 6 Old Colony Drive, Scituate, Massachusetts LOGUE, RONALD E. Com. 5 Recion Milita, Iquitos, Peru McCarthy, roger t. 40 Orchard St., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts MOSES, RICHARD T. 6 Audubon Drive, Newton, Massachusetts LOLI, JAUN M. Com. 5, Region Milita, Iquitos, Peru McCUEN, BRUCE J. 2ArdenRd.,Scotia2, NewYork MULDOON, EDWARD R. 1 9 Prospect Ave., Roslindale, Massachusetts LOUNEY, JAMES C. 56 Edgeworth Ave., Portland, Maine Mcdonough, george p. 28 Elm St., Foxboro, Massachusetts MULHEARN, DANIEL T., JR. 1965 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. LYDON, PAUL T. 7 Shannon Lane Millis, Massachusetts Mcdonough, thomas h. 163 Ridgewood Rd., Milton, Massachusetts MULVEY, MARTIN F. 78 Normal Hill Rd., Framingham, Massachusetts LYNCH, DONALD F. 69 Sylvia St., Lynn, Massachusetts McGOVERN, DAVID S. 1243 Narragansett Blvd., Cranston, Rhode Island MURATORE, JOSEPH R., JR. 14 Twin Oak Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island MacDONALD, JOSEPH P. 21 Arden Rd., Watertown, Massachusetts McHALE, WILLIAM 9 Armistice Blvd., Pawtucket, Rhode Island MURPHY, RICHARD E. 99 Hillside Ave , Ouincy, Massachusetts MURPHY. ROBERT G., JR. 64 Blue Ledge Drive, Rosllndale. Massachusetts O ' NEIL, DENNIS E. 1 1 Baxter St.. Westboro. Massachusetts RANDO. ROBERT J. 383 Lexington St., Auburndale, Massachusetts MURPHY, WALTER FRANCIS 73 Jasset St.. Newton, Massachusetts O ' NEILL, FRANK M. 41 Pleasant St., Milton, Massachusetts RAU. ROBERT J. 21 Hunting Hill Ave., Middletown, Connecticut MURRAY, THOMAS J. 1 5 Bailey St., Dorchester, Massachusetts MURRAY, WILLIAM J. 1 8 Hale St., W. Springfield, Massachusetts OSMOND, JOHN P. 35 Mfingal Rd., Watertown, Connecticut PALMER, WILLIAM R. Ill 290 Red Fox Rd., Stamford, Connecticut READY, TIMOTHY F., JR. 10 Dorset Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts REARDON, DAVID W. 1 18 Malvern St., Melrose, Massachusetts NOLAN, JOSEPH W. 234 Court Rd., Winthrop, Massachusetts PANAGROSSI, PHILIP 43 Collett St., Hamden, Connecticut REARDON, DENNIS J. 84 Elm St., Cohasset, Massachusetts NOLAN, PAUL J. 33 Carruth St., Wollaston, Massachusetts NOLAN, TERRENCE E. 19 Luke St., New Bedford, Massachusetts NOONAN, THOMAS J.,JR. 150 Newton St., Brookline, Massachusetts PARNOFIELLO, ANTHONY J 228 Donaldson Ave., Rutherford, New Jersey PAUL, DAVID S. 1 20 Old Acre Rd., Springfield, Massachusetts PAUL, MARTIN E. 83 Putnam Park, Greenwich, Connecticut REARDON, RICHARD D 504 Ashmont St., Dorchester, Massachusetts REARDON, ROBERT I., JR. 4 Shawandassee Rd., Waterford, Connecticut REGAN, PAUL J. 9 Linwood St., Medford, Massachusetts NOONAN, WILLIAM T. 1 09 Child St., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts NORRIS, WILLIAM H. 9 Pearl St., Beverly, Massachusetts NUGENT, P AUL J. 31 Ledyard St., Wellesley, Massachusetts NURCZYNSKI, ROBERT E. 2 Dorset Lane, Wellesley, Massachusetts O ' BRIEN, FREDERICK T. 47 Bradley Hill Rd., Hingham, Massachusetts O ' BRIEN, JOHN E. 20 Quarley Rd., Roslindale, Massachusetts O ' BRIEN, THOMAS P 104 Bellevue Ave., Bristol, Connecticut O ' BRIEN, WILLIAM F. 76 Wellwood Rd., Portland, Maine O ' CONNELL, RICHARD C, JR. 1 1 47 Adams St., Dorchester, Massacuusetts O ' CONNOR, ROBERT P. 23 Brookings St., Medford, Massachusetts O ' CONNOR, THOMAS M 249 Payson Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts O ' HARE, LAWRENCE P. 22 Hillside Ter., Belmont, Massachusetts O ' HARE, RICHARD M. 22 Hillside Ter., Belmont, Massachusetts O ' NEIL, CHRISTOPHER V. 5 School St., Walpole, Massachusetts PELLETIER, THOMAS M. 1 Carrigg Rd., Squantum, Massachusetts PETERS, JAMES M., JR. 1 4 Rice St., Newton Centre, Massachusetts PETRUZZIELLO, MICHAEL G. 1 54 Orangeburgh Rd., Old Tappan, New Jersey PEYSER, LAWRENCE J. 9 Cornell St., Newton Lower Falls, Massachusetts PICCIRILLO, NICHOLAS P. 41 Court St., Newtonville, Massachusetts PICKETT, GILBERT J. 18 Aberdeen Rd., Hingham, Massachusetts PIETIG, JOHN F. 118WestFirstSt., Carroll, Iowa PIRRAGLIA, WILLIAM A. 496 Red Chimney Dr., Warwick, Rhode Island PORTER, JAMES C. 529 Park Ave., Revere, Massachusetts POWERS, BRIAN E. 37 Electric Ave., Lunenburg, Massachusetts POWERS, RICHARD E. 163 Wilkins St., Manchester, New Hampshire POWERS, RICHARD F. 64 Bankside Drive, Huntington, New York QUINN, RICHARD M. 27 Cedar Ave., Arlington, Massachusetts RABBITT, PAUL M. 1 1 1 Grozier Rd., Cambridge, Massachusetts RENZELLA, BENNY C. 26 Rice St., Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts RESHA, NORMAN M. 33 Maverick St., Dedham, Massachusetts RIDGE, MARTIN S. 33 Wildwood Ave., Newtonville, Massachusetts RISIO, WILLIAM J. 28 Dale Ave., Quincy, Massachusetts ROGERS, MANUEL, JR. 1010 Cambridge St., Cambridge, Massachusetts ROSSI. ALFRED F., JR. 1 5 Denise Rd., Randolph, Massachusetts ROTCHFORD, EDWARD J. 7 East Main St., Hopkinton, Massachusetts RYAN, WILLIAM F. 22 Briarcliff Terr., Mattapan, Massachusetts RYAN, WILLIAM M. 1 6 Van Ness Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts SANFORD, LORAN J. 1 7 Wellesley Park, Dorchester, Massachusetts SAND, JOSEPH M. 28 Mt. Pleasant St., Lynn, Massachusetts SARKISIAN, THOMAS M. 206 Waverly St., Belmont, Massachusetts SCALDINI, JOHN J., JR. 4 Luther Rd., Medford, Massachusetts SCARLATA, PAUL F. 1 30 Furnace Brook Pkwy., Quincy, Massachusetts SCHIAPPA, FRAMCESCO J. 214 School St., Waltham, Massachusetts SCHNEIDER, THOMAS H. 241 West 23rd St., Erie, Pennsylvania SCHOENFELD, WILLIAM E. 1 04 Colby St., Bradford, Massachusetts SCIME, GREGORY S. 77 North Maple Ave., E. Orange, New Jersey SCRIBNER, EDWARD A. 234 Lexington St., Auburndale, Massachusetts SELVITELLA. JAMES F. 31 Hillside Ave., Medford, Massachusetts SEMAP, JACK H. 355 Grove Rd., S. Orange, New Jersey SENESI, PAUL MICHAEL 225 Forest St., Winchester, Massachusetts SERGI, ROBERT J. 7 Fairview Ave., Hyde Park, Massachusetts SHANLEY, PETER J. 24 Greenfield St., Lowell, Massachusetts SHEA, HENRY A., JR. Tremont St., Duxbury, Massachusetts SHEA, JOHN G. 78 Claymoss Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts SHEEHAN, JOHN F. 1 4 Sunset Rd., Westwood, Massachusetts SHEEHY, MICHAEL J. 26 Chiswick Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts SHERMAN, EDWARD J. 64 Millstone Rd., Readville, Massachusetts SHERRY, WILLIAM T., JR. 25 Walter St., Lynn, Massachusetts SHORES, DAVID W. 2 1 8 Spring Valley Rd., Darby, Pennsylvania SOLERA, JOHN J. 57 Chickering St., Pittsfield, Massachusetts SGSKIN, KENNETH S. 24 Florence Ave., Rerere, Massachusetts SOUSA, FRANK B. 66 Eastern Ave., Fall River, Massachusetts SPARROW, PAUL G. 160 Washington St., Hyde Park, Massachusetts SPELLMAN, LEO F. 47 Greenway North, Forest Hills, New York SPENLINHAUER, ROBERT J. 98 Rutledge Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts SPIEGEL, MARTIN A. 107 Kilsyth Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts SPINNEY, JOHN F. 47 Rossmore Rd., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts STAUNTON, RICHARD M. 99 Otis St., E. Milton, Massachusetts STEARNS, JAMES M. 2 W. Beechcroft Rd., Short Hills, New Jersey STETZ, WILLIAM A. 3 1 9 Quinlan Drive, Pewaukee, Wisconsin ST. GERMAIN, ROBERT E 1625 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. STILLMAN, DAVID M, 164CalebSt., Portland, Maine STIRLING, THOMAS G 37 Shiretown Rd., Dedham, Massachusetts SUCKFULL, PAUL S. 41 Bowker St., Brookline, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, EDWARD J 236 No. Main St., W. Hartford, Connecticut SULLIVAN, JAMES T 1 74 Cherry St. Maiden, Massachusetts SWEENEY, DANIEL M. 3 Virginia Ave., E. Greenwich, Rhode Island SWEENEY, WALTER J. 24 Cameron Rd., Norwood, Massachusetts SWIERZ, MITCHELL M. 35 Granite St., Uxbridge, Massachusetts SZECKAS, STEPHEN S, 55 Kenmere Rd., Medford, Massachusetts TALEWSKY, RONALD C. 46 Gordon St., Somerville, Massachusetts TARLIN, IRA 0. 101 Lanark Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts TAUBER, JEFFREY M. 1151 Plummet Circle, Rochester, Minnesota TERRANOVA. JOHN P. 10 Spruce Park, Syosset, New York THOMPSON, ROBERT P. 123 Centre St., Dorchester, Massachusetts TITILAH, RICHARD S. 78 Beacon St., Arlington, Massachusetts TOMASETTI, PAUL A. 78 Main St., Watertown, Massachusetts TGRTO, RICHARD T. 25 Cherry St., Lynn, Massachusetts TORTORELLA, ANTHONY N. 93 Langley Rd., Brighton, Massachusetts TOTO, ROBERT L 33 Barbara Rd., W. Newton, Massachusetts TRAINA, THOMAS P. 70 Engle St., Tenafly, New Jersey TRAVERSE, JOHN H. 1 9 Ellison Ave., Dorchester, Massachusetts TREHY, JOHN R. 16 Chatham Place, Huntington, New York SILVA, ALFRED F., JR. 39 Buchanan St., Winthrop, Massachusetts SKGRKO, JOHN E, State Rd., Westminster, Massachusetts SLATTERY, ROBERT L 75 Ocean Drive, Box 234, Humarock, Mass. SULLIVAN, JOSEPH P., JR 1 1 Marathon St., Arlington, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, PHILIP J , JR. 70 Gooch St., Melrose, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, WILLIAM C. 67 Quintard Ter., Stamford, Connecticut TWOMEY, DAVID P. 75 Augustus Ave., Roslindale, Massachusetts VANHAREN, FRANCIS B. Wittenburgerweg 72, Wassenaar, Netherlands VANHORN, RICHARD F 301 Buckmidster Drive, Norwood, Massachusetts SLYNE, KEVIN M. 92 Manthorne Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts SMITH, FRANCIS B., JR. 81 Oakeley Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, WILLIAM J. 1 7 Hancock St., Melrose, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, WILLIAM J. 33 Rogers Ave., Somerville, Massachusetts VASILY, MICHAEL W. 542 Ferry St., Everett, Massachusetts VECCHIARELLO, DENNIS A. 31 Cross St., Somerville, Massachusetts VOLNER, ROBERT S. 37 Kimball Rd., Arlington, Massachusetts WALLWORK, ROBERT F 41 Cypress St., Newton Centre, Massachusetts WALSH, BRIAN T P. 1 35 Loring Ave., Salem, Massachusetts WALSH, HUBERT M. 620 Columbia Rd., Dorchester, Massachusetts CODY, CHARLES A. 1 1 Locust Way, Nahant, Massachusetts CONNELLY, JOHN J. 10 Greenway Rd., Salem, Massachusetts CONNOLLY, JOHN P, 35 Redlands Rd., WestRoxbury, Massachusetts CONNOR, MARY E. 1384 Commonwealth Ave., Allston, Massachusetts HENNESSY, BERNARD J, 1 2 Village Rd., Sudbury, Massachusetts HORMANN, ELIZABETH 1 1 6 Poplar St., Watertown, Massachusetts KANE, JOHN D. 26 Barton St., Somervllle, Massachusetts KELLEY, JOHN H. 178 Central St., Somervllle, Massachusetts WANTZ. ROBERT A. 51 Storer Ave , Pelham, New York CONNORS, THOMAS F. 1 Vogel St., West Roxbury, Massachusetts KELLY, JOSEPH D. 48 Winter St., Watertown, Massachusetts WARD, JOHN A. 10 Kensington Ave,, Jersey City, New Jersey DANEHY, JOHN J, 48 Parsons St., Brighton, Massachusetts KILCOMMINS, OWEN M. 85 Chapel St., Norwood, Massachusetts WEARER, CHARLES CJR. 13 Intervale Rd., Wellesley, Massachusetts DAVIS, HERBERT K. 1666 Comm, Ave., Brighton, Massachusetts KILROY, ROBERT W. 8 Oak St., Winchester, Massachusetts WEAFER, RONALD F. 6 Warren Ave., Woburn, Massachusetts OEITSCH, CAROL A. 1384 Commonwealth Ave., Allston, Mass. KIME, JOHN C. 161 Chestnut St., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts WELCH, WILLIAM F. Box 323, Sea Island, Georgia DeMINICO, NICOLAS 17 Cleveland PL, Boston. Massachusetts KWIATEK, WILLIAM 0. 14 Fenton Ave., Lynn, Massachusetts WEST, PAUL M. 66 Russett Rd., W. Roxbury, Massachusetts DOHERTY, LUCILLE 51 Blake St., Mattapan, Massachusetts LAOD, PAUL F. 1 5 Massachusetts Ave., Natick, Massachusetts WHITESIDE, ROBERT D. 28 Cherry St., Danvers, Massachusetts DOOLIN, ANN M. 143 Falcon St., Needham, Massachusetts LAVELLE, PHILIP B. 5 Grandville Dr., Franklin, Massachusetts WOLF, JAMES A. 1 1 Gallinson Drive, Murray Hill, New Jersey FANNON, ROBERT W. 1 7 Terrane Ave., Natick, Mass. LEAHY, MARGARET M. 1 5 1 Sherman Rd., Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts YACKULICS, JOHN J. Cioverly Circle, E. Norwalk, Connecticut YORK, JEREMIAH F 235 Mt. Auburn St., Watertown, Massachusetts GARDNER, HERBERT W. 55 East Fairview Ave., Lynnfield, Massachusetts GARIN, JEANNE 12 Anson St., Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts LINDEN, FAY 60 Kensington Circle, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts LOGAN, FRANCIS H. 102 Highland Ave., Somervllle, Massachusetts ZAK, WILLIAM J. 132 Radnor Ave., Naugatuck, Connecticut evening college GARVEY, DANIEL J. 81 Bacon St., Natick, Massachusetts GIOVANNANGELO, FRANCIS 27 Chester Rd., Belmont, Massachusetts LOGAN, JAMES P. 102 Greaton Rd,, West Roxbury, Massachusetts LUCEY, HENRY J 1 06 Church St., West Roxbury, Massachusetts AVERY, RICHARD W. 1 3 Glenly Terr., Brighton, Massachusetts BRUNNER, MAUREEN 1384 Commonwealth Ave., Allston, Massachusetts BUCKLEY, JOHN J. 20 Dell Ave., Hyde Park, Massachusetts BURKE, SHEILA A. 21 Canterbury Rd., Waltham, Massachusetts CALLAHAN, JOHN B. 76 Granite St., Melrose, Massachusetts GREANEY, JOSEPH L., JR. 19 Union St., Needham Heights, Massachusetts GRODEN, CAROL A. 42 North St., Newton Centre, Massachusetts GUILMETTE, HARRIS G. 37 Irving St., Everett, Massachusetts NAJJAR, JEANNETTE 4 Union Park, Boston, Massachusetts HALLIWELL, JOSEPH L, JR. 1 8 Gladstone St., Wakefield, Massachusetts McCarthy, william d. 44 Worthington Circle, Braintree, Massachusetts McEACHERN, JOSEPH C. 1 55 Lawrence St., Maiden, Massachusetts McELHENNY, PATRICIA E. 66 Phillip Darch Rd., Watertown, Massachusetts McMAHON, JAMES F. 1420 River St., Hyde Park, Massachusetts McPHERSON, JULIA C. 62 Turner St., Brighton, Massachusetts CIESLIK, JOHN F. 1 1 Edison Green, Dorchester, Massachusetts heaffy, jane M. 9 Belton St., Dorchester, Massachusetts MATTHEW, WILLIAM J. 51 Magnolia St., Arlington, Massachusetts MORE, SAM J. 5 Chester St., North Cambridge, Mass TIMMEL, GILDA S. 2021 Commonwealth Ave., Brighton, Mass. CARUSO, JOAN MARIE 1 1 Crown St., Auburndale, Massachusetts O ' ROURKE. JOSEPH 1 Ashmont Park, Oorchester, Massachusetts TOTARO, MAOALAINE M. 317 Langley Rd., Newton Centre, Mass CASSIOY, MAUREEN THERESA 1 Metropolitan Oval, New York, New York OUELLETTE, M. ANITA 98 Collins St., Woonsocket, Rhode Island VASEL, JOHN, JR. 144 Read St., Winthrop, Mass CLANCY, MARY E. 2542 University Ave., Bronx, New York PENOER, ROBERT H. 40 Oakridge St., Oorchester, Mass PETRO. ROBERT H. 51 Belmont St., Cambridge, Mass PINDER, PAUL J. 73 Rockingham Ave., Lowell, Mass QUIGLEY, WILLIAM G. 20 River Bank Rd., Saugus, Massachusetts VITALE, JOHN A. 9 Seven Pines Ave., W. Somerviile, Mass WARNOCK, EARL C. 41 Pleasant St., North Reading, Mass graduate nursing COLLINS, MONICA MARY 7 Henry St., Brookline, Massachusetts CONNELL, MARY PATRICIA 10 Garfield Ave., Providence, Rhode Island CONNORS, ELIZABETH ANN 1 09 N. Fourth Ave., Ilion, New York COSTAGLIOLA, SR. MARIA REOEMPTA 30 Warren St., Brighton, Massachusetts QUILTY, HUGH R. 358 East Squantum St.. Salem. Mass ANOERSON, RUTH VIRGINIA 6 Lawson Rd., Winchester, Massachusetts COTTER, ANNE MARIE 23 Pleasant St., Dorchester, Mass ROWE, JOHN F, 4 Gallows Hill Rd., North Ouincy, Mass ROY, RONALO G. 130 Warner St., Manchester, New Hampshire SANCLEMENTE, FRANK 87 Medford St., Medford, Massachusetts ARFFA, ELISSA BUDD 1 5 Pleasant Park Rd., Sharon, Massachusetts BABEL, KATHRYN MARY 32 Prospect Ave., Norwood, Massachusetts BARNICLE, MARY F. 14 Beaufort Ave., Needham, Massachusetts DALTON, HANNAH MARIE 54 McCoy St., Avon, Massachusetts OAWSON, KATHLEEN MARY 1236 White Plains Rd., Bronx, New York DECOTEAU, SHEILA ANN ParisHill, South Paris, Maine SHEEHAN. JOHN J. 30 Arden Rd., Watertown, Massachusetts BARRY, MARY LOUISE 97 Russell St., Everett, Massachusetts DIGENNARO, MARIE THERESA 1712 Edison Ave., New York, New York SIMOES, ANTONIO, JR. 1 6 1 Beacon St., Somerviile, Massachusetts BARTA, JUOITH ANN 82-4 Middlesex Rd., Waltham, Mass DOBBIN, MARY JULIANN 2630 Marion Ave., New York, New York SNOW, CAROLYN J. 1880 Commonwealth Ave , Brighton, Mass. STARR, EDITH 219 Clark Rd., Brookline, Massachusetts BELLEVILLE, JEAN ELIZABETH 78 Deerfield Ave., Waterbury, Connecticut BEZAIRE, SR. BERNADETTE 10 Pelham Rd., Lexington, Massachusetts DOONA, MARY ELLEN 40 Weld Hill St., Jamaica Plain, Mass DORAN, KATHLEEN ANN 47 Grimsted St., Manhasset, LI. STENBERG, CAROL G. 83 Brookside Ave., Newtonville, Mass BOURGAULT, SISTER GRACE M. Providence Motherhouse, Holyoke, Mass DOUGLASS, CHERYL ANN Bethel, Maine STENBERG, EDWARD B. 1 Bolster St., Jamaica Plain, Mass BOWES, MARGARET 914 East Fourth St., South Boston, Mass DOYLE, KAREN MARIE 75St. Marys Rd, Milton, Mass STETSON, ELINOR R. 34 Hollis Ave., Quincy, Massachusetts BRIDGE, LAURA JANE 39 Woodland Dr., Greenwich, Connecticut DUNN, JEAN MARIE 52 Stevens Ave., West Long Branch, SULLIVAN, FRANCIS G, 1 Monmouth St., East Boston, Massachusetts CALLAHAN, CAROL PATRICIA 5 Crossway St., Norwich, Connecticut ELLARD, PATRICIA 290 Market St., Brighton, Mass SULLIVAN, JAMES J., JR. 27 Rosedale St., Dorchester, Massachusetts CAMILLE, BARBARA ANN 33 Williams Ave., E. Providence, Rhode Island FARRELL, MARIAN THERESA 2460 Davidson Ave., Bronx, New York SULLIVAN, MARTIN J. 88 Tuttle St., Dorchester, Massachusetts CAPUANO, CAROL ANN 89 Upham St., Melrose, Massachusetts FARREN, SARAH 27 Pheasant Hill Dr., Scituate, Mass SWISTON, MARIE C. 3 Barr Rd., West Peabody, Massachusetts CAREY, JUDITH 127 Bathes Ave , Quincy, Massachusetts FAUST, MARIE ELLA 3 Ashland St., Jewett City, Connecticut FEEWEY, MARY PAMELA 33 Coach Rd., E, Setauket, New York FLETCHER, DOROTHY ROSE 227 Locust St , Attleboro, Massachusetts FLYNN, CATHERINE E. 169-1 5 24th Ave , Flushing, New York GALLAGHER, THERESA A, (McCARTHY) 92 Court St., Newtonville, Massachusetts JOHNSON, SR. MARY NORMA St. Clements Convent, Boston, Mass JUDGE, MARY ELIZABETH 40 Longhill Rd., Ashland, Massachusetts KACZMAREK, VIRGINIA ROSE 10 Catherine St Dudley, Massachusetts KEEGAN MARIE HONOR 34 Hamlet Ave., Woonsocket, Rhode Island McHUGH, ESTELLE 56 Monument St., West Medford, Mass McNAMARA, SR. MARIA CONSUELA Providence Motherhouse, Holyoke, Mass MICHAUD, JANICE ANN 79 Cliff Ave., Lexington, Massachusetts MILLETT, ROSEMARY BRIDGET 55-03 3 1 St Ave., Woodside, New York GALLUP, SR. JANE DWYN SGM 736 Cambridge St., Brighton, Mass GARTLAND, MARY KATHLEEN 465 Fifth Ave., River Edge, New Jersey KELEHER, RITA CHRISTINE 50 diehard St., E Hartford, Connecticut KENNEDY, DATHLEEN ANN 340 Taylor Ct, Troy, New York MILSTEIN, GLORIA ETTA 234 Jamaicaway, Jamaica Plain, Mass MISKELL, CAROLYN JEAN 1 2 Howard St., Auburn, New York GARVEY, SUSAN RUTH 1403 S. Wanamssa Dr , Asbury Park GILLIAM, ELIZABETH REGINA 25 W. Central St., Natick, Mass GRIES, SR. MARY FRANCINE 1024 Court St., Syracuse, New York GUAY, PAULINE 95 Park Ave., Woonsocket, Rhode Island KENNEY, CAROLYN MARY 57 PearlSt, Melrose, Mass KILAR, ARLENE WANDA 1 283 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. KUEBELBECK, SR. M. GORETTI 1406 Sixth Ave., St. Cloud, Minnesota LANKIN, PATRICIA 30 Myrtle St., Pittsfield, Massachusetts MORGAN, NANCY MARY 56 Franklin Hill Ave., Dorchester, Mass NACE, SISTER M. JOSEPH Providence Motherhouse, Holyoke NOONAN, PATRICIA ANN 22 Peak Hill Rd., West Roxbury, Mass O ' GARA, ELEANOR FRANCES 47 LindenSt., Rye, New York GUNDERSEN, JUDITH J. 229 Kelton St., Allston, Massachusetts LEMKE, MRS. SHIRLEY ANNE 26 Hanks St., Lowell, Massachusetts OLMSTEAD, GWYNNE 3879 Orloff Ave, Bronx, New York HALTON, SUSAN KAY 110 Maple Ave., Troy, New York LESOFSKY, KATHLEEN MARIE 61 Jacob St , Dracut, Massachusetts O ' MALLEY, ROSEMARY AGNES 1 04 Pearl St., Clinton, Massachusetts HANNON. PATRICIA ANNE 6 1 Homer Ave., Comstock, New York LUCAS, JEANNE MARIE 1 1 Willowdean Ave., West Roxbury, Mass. O ' NEILL, MARY ROSE 113 Rockland St., Canton, Mass HART, MAUREEN ANN 1 34 Trinity PL, W. Hempstead, New York LUTZ, MARIANNE 1 7 Bolton Rd., New Hartford, New York ORBIE, PAULA ANDREA 40 Orkney Rd., Apt. 4, Brookline, Mass HARTNETT, KATHLEEN PATRICIA 59 Francis St., Worcester, Massachusetts MADDEN, MARY T. 24 Phillips St., Swampscott, Mass PETRALIA, VIRGINIA MARY 1 67 Palmer St., Arlington, Mass HASKELL, SR. MARY M. Providence Motherhouse, Holyoke, Mass MAHONEY, KATHERINE ANNE 39 West Town St., Norwich, Connecticut PORTELANCE, ROSE MARIE DIANA 20 South Shore Ave , Peabody, Mass HEAFEY, MAUREEN LOUISE 197 N. Maple St., Florence, Mass MARA, SISTER M. JUSTINA Providence Motherhouse, Holyoke, Mass OUINN, JOHANNE ALICE Melody Lane, Pelham, New Hampshire HEMPHILL, ELEANOR CLAIRE 36 Iowa St., Lowell, Massachusetts McCANN, JANE MARIE 26 ChittickRd., Hyde Park, Mass RADO, JUDITH ANN 63 Coen St., Naugatuck, Connecticut HIGGINS, MARY ROSE 4398 Valleyside Rd., Cleveland, Ohio HOGAN, ELIZABETH ANN Lower Maple St., Hudson Falls, New York HYDE, JOANNE MARIE 1 6 1 Lovell Rd., Watertown, Massachusetts JOHANNSSEN, INGEBORG Salt Point Tnpk., Pleasant Valley, New York McCarthy, Beatrice anne 94 W. 1 5th St., Bayonne, New Jersey Mccarty, elaine edith 1 6 Beacon Ave., Auburn, Maine McELHENNY, ROSEMARY 6 Myrtle Ave., Cambridge, Mass. McFADDEN, JEAN ELIZABETH 8906 9 1 St Ave., Woodhaven, New York RIGLER, CAROL RAE 1107N. 28 St., Billings, Montana ROMANCHUK, SR ALICE 1 Pelham Rd., Lexington, Mass ROMANOWSKI, MAUREEN ELAINE 1 2 South View St., Dorchester, Mass ROSSIGNOL, SR. MARIE ROMAINE 333 Lee St., Brookline, Massachusetts ROY, SHIRLEY 26 St. James Ave., Somerville, Mass RYAN, NANCY ELLEN 566 Fern St., West Hartford, Connecticut SHARP, DONNA LOUISE 249 Beecher Ave., Waterbury, Connecticut SKEFFINGTON, CATHRYN AGNES 2 1 Batchelder St., Melrose, Mass. SMITH, BARBARA LYNN 214-18 29th Ave., Bayside, New York SMUDIN, BARBARA 25 Clarence Ave., Bridgewater, Mass SPAGNA, PATRICIA ANN 23 Edgewook St., Hartford, Connecticut STURTEVANT, MARIE HELEN 16HighSt.,Sabattus, Maine SULLA, BONITA JEAN 578 Bridgewater Ave., Somerville, Mass SULLIVAN, ANNE ELIZABETH 1 36 Silver St., W. Springfield, Mass TAYLOR, SHIRLEY JANE 22 Breakneck Hill Rd., Southboro, Mass. TOOHEY, ELEANOR MARIE 75 Orange St., Roslindale, Massachusetts WILDONER, MARIE LOUISE 1 7 E. Fourth St., Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania WILLARD, BARBARA 30 Barnes St., Waltham, Massachusetts WONG, PAULENE ANNE 40 Monroe St., New York, N.Y. WOODHOUSE, BETTY F. 1470 Beacon St., tirookline, Massachusetts ZASTAURY, SHIRLEY ANN 293 Parklawn Dr., Waterbury, Connecticut school of nursing ANTON, PATRICIA L. Avon Lane, Greenwich, Connecticut BROWNE, JOAN C. 1 04 Crest Ave., Revere, Massachusetts BURNS, SUSAN E. 1 12 Valley Rd., Needham, Mass CLOCHER, CHRISTINE M. 7 Elm St., Peabody, Massachusetts COAKLEY, CAROL ANN 21 GretterRd.,W. Roxbury, Mass CONNELLY, ELIZABETH A, Ironworks Rd., Clinton, Connecticut COSTELLO, ANN K. 4NancyRd., Concord, Mass COSTELLO, MARY E. 1 36 Walworth St., Roslindale, Mass CRIMLISK, JANET T. 4 Pembroke St., Newton, Mass DAVIS, MARIANNE T. 1 87 Broad St., Bloomfield, New Jersey DEIANA, CAROL LEE 231 Mendon St., Hopedale, Mass DELANY, MARIE E. 21 Colton Lane, Shrewsbury, Mass DELUCA, CAROL L, 37 Toilsome Hill Lane, Bridgeport, Conn DIGGINS, ELIZABETH A. 10 Elmira St., Brighton, Massachusetts DISCHINO, ALESSANDRINA 1 03 Raymond Ave., Somerville, Mass DOHERTY, ELLEN T. 36 Winter St., Dorchester, Mass DONAHUE, DONNA M. 26 MacArthur Rd., Wellesley, Mass DOWNEY, MARY L. 1 1 Elm Lawn St., Dorchester, Mass DUFFY, MARGUERITE P. 35 Sunset Circle, Fairfield, Conn ELSON, PATRICIA A. 152 Brown Ave., Roslindale, Mass EMOND, ANNE MARIE 25 Evergreen Ave., Bedford, Mass FERGUSON, CARROLL E. 1 5 Grandview Ave., Watertown, Mass FIORENTINO, CAROL 79 East Main St., Marlboro, Mass FLANDERS, SR. SONIA M. 1 Pelham Rd., Lexington, Mass. FOLTS, JOANNE 89 The Helm, E.lslip, New York GABOURY, EMITA T. Chiriqui Land Co. Armuelles, Panama GALLAGHER, KATHRYN 5 Andover Rd., Beverly, Massachusetts GALLAHUE, ELAINE E. 3 South Central Ave., Wollaston, Massachusetts GALLOGLY, MARY K. Northfield Rd., Watertown, Connecticut GUDEJKO, VIRGINIA M. 28 Balcarres Rd., W. Newton, Massachusetts HANLEY, ELLEN P. 88 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts HENDERSON, JUDITH M. 172 Lisa Dr., Brockton, Massachusetts HORN, ANGELYN M. 45 Edgewood Rd., Cranston, Rhode Island HOSEY, MARGARET M. 497 Walcott St., Pawtucket, Rhode Island HOUDE, KATHERINE H. 14 Leewood Rd., Wellesley, Massachusetts KANE, PAULA 85 Dale St., Waltham, Massachusetts KAYSER, SUZANNE U. 135 Concord Ave., White Plains, New York KELLEY, ELIZABETH A. 101 Wallace St., Freeport, New York KELLEY, MARGARET V. 35 Lindall St., Roslindale, Massachusetts KILLION, RUTH M. 282 Edge Hill Rd., Milton, Massachusetts LISTORTI, JOANNE M. 71 Waverly St., Everett, Massachusetts LOFTUS, SUSAN E. 1 1 Morningside Dr., Delmar, New York MAHONEY, MARY ANN P. 1 3 Birch St., Ramsey, New Jersey MANNING, KATHLEEN M. 50 Belcher Circle, Milton, Massachusetts MARTIN, CATHERINE E. 6 Beal Rd., Waltham, Massachusetts MARTINELLI, DONNA M. 203 Pleasant St., Bridgewater, Massachusetts MARTINO, SHERYL L 1 1 7 Campbell St., New Bedford, Massachusetts MAYR, MARION F. 81-26 Kent St., Jamaica, New York McCABE, CAROL E. 74 Don Ave., Rumford, Rhode Island ROBERTO, DENISE A. 20922 Aualon Or , Rocky River, Ohio SULLIVAN, MGIRA A. 65 Lenox St., W. Newton, Massachusetts McCarthy, patricia r. 172 Park St., Newton, Massachusetts RULLI, MARYANN E. 39 Brodeur Ave., Webster. Massachusetts TESSIER, PRISCILLE R. 7 Bedel St., Manchester, New Hampshire McCRANN, MICHELE C. 41 Forster St., Hartford, Connecticut SCHWOERER. KAREN M. R. D. 2 Moseman Ave., Katonah, New York THIBEAULT, LORRAINE E. 1 37 Temple Rd., Waltham, Massachusetts MIDDLETON, JOANNE P. 49 Allendale Rd., Hartford, Connecticut SHEA, JUDITH M 61 Villa St., Waltham, Massachusetts TRACY, CHARLENE M. 92 Hancock St., Bedford, Massachusetts MURPHY, JANE E. 31 Pine Hill Circle, Wakefield, Massachusetts SHEA, MAUREEN T. 73 Seymour St., Roslindale, Massachusetts WHOOLEY, CAROLYN T. 59 Willard St., Dedham, Massachusetts MUSKALSKI, MARY-LOUISE 45 Noble St., W. Newton, Massachusetts SPERANDIO, KAREN L Concord Country Club, Concord, Massachusetts WILSON, JUDITH M. 1 02 Vreeland Ave., Rutherford, New Jersey O ' NEILL, EVELYN M 91 Arlington St., Brighton, Massachusetts STEWART, ELLEN 244 Hamilton Ave., Glen Rock, New Jersey WOODS, SR. M. ELIZABETH 54 Oakes St., Everett, Massachusetts PETROCCIONE, MARGARET M. 425 Colony Ct., Wyckoff, New Jersey SULLIVAN, ANNMARIE 8 Merril Rd., Hull, Massachusetts WOODWARD, MARY ANNE 49 Beal Rd., Waltham, Massachusetts RAE, CYNTHIA L 32 Driftway St., Weymouth, Massachusetts SULLIVAN, KATHLEEN M. 1 74 Cherry St., Maiden, Massachusetts BEST WISHES β€” FROM THE OFFICERS OF LACAROPO COMPLIMENTS OF THE ROPEL CORP. general index Academics Activities Administration Al fano, Professor E. Arts and Sciences Administration Band Baseball Basketball Bellarmine Law and Government Academy Boston Cataldi in Concert C.B.A. Administration Class Officers Computer Center Courtside Club Dramatic Productions Dramatic Society Education Administration Education Skits Evening School Administration Fabens. Professor Augustus Faculty Section Ferrick, Fr. Robert Flanagan. Fr. Joseph Football Fraternities Fulton Debating Soceity Gold Key Society Golf Graduate Section Greenhouse The Heights FligginsHall Hockey Homecoming Weekend Honor Societies Hughes, Professor Richard Humphrey, Hubert H. International Club Josephina, Sister 47 123 48 58 54 132 206 192 140 242 260 55 124 238 264 248 136 56 254 57 60 57 62 64 172 138 141 142 222 265 239 156 256 180 232 144 66 240 149 68 Junior Week Junior Year Abroad Knights of Columbus Lay Apostolate Program Lecturers Mendel Club Middle Earth Nursing School Administration Performers Political Clubs Prologue Publications Ricci Math Club Rifle Team Rod and Gun Club R.O.T.C. Ryan, Miss Eileen S.A.B. Sailing Team Sicilano, Professor Ernest Skiing Soccer Sodalities Sports Section Student Government Table of Contents Tennis Towers Track Travers, Professor John Underclass Section University Administration University Chorale White, Professor Frederick Winter Weekend W.R.A. Wrestling W.V.B.C. 226 252 148 152 234 151 262 234 154 4 156 150 220 150 164 70 256 221 72 217 218 166 169 126 3 224 258 211 74 79 48 134 76 250 168 223 163 1967 sub turri staff LAYOUT EDITOR LITERARY EDITOR PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Charles J. Weschler Marlene A. Gauthier Roger Pelissier ACADEMICS EDITOR SENIOR EDITOR Anne McGuire Peter F. Bride ACTIVITIES EDITOR SPORTS EDITOR Raymond Peckham D. Michael Ryan FEATURES EDITOR UNDERCLASS EDITOR Loren Miller, III Steven McCabe LITERARY STAFF BUSINESS STAFF PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF Tony DeLuca John Duffy Michael Egger David Fowler Elizabeth Goetz Robert Halli Charles Lynch Donna Martinelli Mark Silbersack Bruce Thompson Jerome Bello Donald Joworisak Joseph Mariani Wayne Marshall James McCall Tore Scelso Gene Therriault Bruce Thompson Edward Amento Joseph Britt F. Andrew Finnegan John J. Lambert, Jr. Joseph Navin J. Peter Osmond James M. Peters, Jr. D. Michael Ryan LAYOUT STAFF GENERAL STAFF TYPISTS Al Demers Elaine Finnegan F. Andrew Finnegan Mark Silbersack Robert M. Bent David Carroll Robert Cartwright Robert Cunningham Mary Wendell Dailey Mary Gallogly Jeffery Tauber Patricia Currie Kathleen Dalton Nancy Healy Julie Mancini Ann Marie Young Jan Zinno The preceding pages of this volume repre- sent a re-thinking on the part of the Editorial Board concerning what our yearbook has been in the past and what it should be here and now. We have initiated changes both in content and design in order to meet the changes of our ever evolving university. It is our aspiration that they meet with your approval. James M. Peters, Jr. Editor-in-Chief


Suggestions in the Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) collection:

Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

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Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

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Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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Boston College - Sub Turri Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

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