Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences - Yearbook (Boston, MA)

 - Class of 1952

Page 85 of 120

 

Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 85 of 120
Page 85 of 120



Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 84
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Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 86
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Page 85 text:

infamous for in college. Allan jaspon has a somewhat lost look on his f h' h suddenly brightens into a smile as he spies his partner in business DQWZCB W IF There they are: Bppy and Jas always together. Arthur Foden now has clijrieeloqf the largest stores in the state of Maine, but is still frustrated in his endeavor to improve on Professor Goodness's analysis chart. Luke Perkins who alwa s said that once he got back home to Maine he would never come back, to Maggadilusetts has broken his word for this special occasion. Bill Rezuke pharmacy's foremost? representative in the Worcester area, has received special, permisgign from his charming wife, Emily, to be with us for this one day. Will Osgood who is H9311 graying about the temples, arrived with Clayt Randall. Will has fhe distinctioii of being the only pharmacist in the universe still selling fishing licenses. Clayt who is now running his father's store in Dover, still finds time in the summer to get to Salisbury and Hampton beaches. Sid German has made a fortune in a fast- selling nerve tonic, besides acquiring hypertension and an ulcer. Standing alone in a corner is Larry Kadis who, suffering from a complex developed in his senior year, speaks only to his family and close friends. Doc Rice also developed com- plications in his senior year and could not decide whether to go into real estate or pharmacy. Doc chose pharmacy and has gone a long way in the field. john Hounsell, having decided that Florida was too cold both in climate and population has settled in California, where he and jerry Goodwin are partners in the Goodj sell Pharmacy. A roar is heard from the rear of the building and we all know that Dave Feather, a well-known figure in pharmacy in the state of Vermont, has arrived on his rotor-cycle. john Lemanski has finished his first edition of the interplanetary Remington and can be seen discussing it with Edmund Kowalski, now the pro- prietor of the North Shore Pharmacy in Danvers. Pat Chase has combined an avocation with a vocation and is now the proprietor of a swank hotel and pharmacy called Pat's Place. Bill Colman, having found time through his college career for short naps, is now owner of Colman's Rest Home. Robert Michael Deyak arrives somewhat worn out, the boys, as a practical joke, hid his Crossley jet, and he has had a difficult time finding it. Cries of Ti Kanis and Kala can be heard at the door, and Ted Kallelis, James Leontire, and Milt Stamatos, the Classis de- scendants of Aristotle, meet amid much handshaking and backslapping. john Regan, after graduation from M. C. P., was the rage of the Abbott Research Laboratories, doing six hours work in one hour, he is now manager of this divi- sion of Abbott. Tom Major, having acquired the dignity of age and a solid repu- tation, can now enter and leave Simmons at will. The hour for departure is drawing near. At the last minute Larry Segel and Mort Zuroff come dashing up the stairs. Mort and Larry still use the Mystic River Bridge traffic as an excuse for their tardiness. . We now proceed to the Boston Spaceport where our rocket is ready. At the Spaceport, waiting for us, are other classmates. After commuting for four years to M. C. P., Frank Germain took over the Armstrong Co. and installed a drug line. As the rocket is about to leave, Oscar Beck proposes the type of quesl tion for which he gained notoriety as a student and asks, What time do we eat? The scene now changes again and we are on the moon. The group has scat- tered somewhat, and I can see members of the class that I had 'missed while on earth. Fred Riley, who was unable to secure a recommendation for a Public Health job, has gone on in retail work and is now owner of theilargest drug store in the city of Lowell. Irving Stoller, following the radio advertising policy of his

Page 84 text:

CLASS PRQPHE CY JOHN ZABRISKIE U Once upon a midnight dreary, as I pondered weak and weary Over many a quaint and curious book of pharmaceutic lore,- Suddenly there came a rapping as of someone gently tapping, Tapping at my chamber door. Some late visitor, I muttered, tapping at my chamber doorg Only this and nothing more. Open then I flung the shutter, with my heart and nerves a-flutter, Fearing fears no man could utter, and flung wide my chamber door. On the threshold stood a Being. Long I looked in wonder, seeing What the fearful creature wanted: 'TWAS AN ORACLE OF YORE! Why, I asked in halting stammer, do you seek me in this manner? Tell, I cried in accents plainer, what have I to do with you? I have come, he said, to save you from the labor that they gave you, I can show you all the future of the class of fifty-two. Then in a puff of smoke appeared a crystal ball on which was seared A date I read through smoke clouds weird, the date of nineteen seventy-seven, And as the hazes rolled away, I saw my classmates, I and they Were in a place not far away, the foyer at M. C. P. It is the early morning of a bright summer day. Through the college building hectic preparations are being made for the Class of '52 outing to be held on the moon. Dean john Fay is racing about the building followed by Stirling Mac- Donald, Special Assistant to the Dean. Lou Stoyle, Professor of Chemistry, can be seen about with camera in hand, acting like that old TV hero, Casey, Crime Photographer. Okie O'Connell is also a professor in the Chemistry Depart- ment and is giving out tougher quizzes than those he complained about as a student. Gordon Dean, who found that many close associates could be made at M. C. P., had continued his studies and is now a Professor of Pharmacy. Ed Duggan, Gordon's cohort, having given up browbeating jean Michaud Cjean, by the way, is now proprietor of Michaud's Pharmacy in Salemb, is now brow- beating the students as Professor of Pharmacognosy. Mel Mastrodomenico ac- quired scholastic degrees at Purdue and Notre Dame, and is Professor of Bacteriology. Also on the third floor is Frank Tura, Professor of Pharmacology. Frank did his thesis work on the mollusca of the South Shore. It is a funny thing - Frank did all of his collecting on moonlit nights in the summer on the beach. Sumner Berkovitz, having taken over the Public Speaking course, is also teacher of First Aid. As Truant Officer in the College, Fred Hackett keeps his eyes on students skipping classes and also those arriving late. Charles Mosher, being noted for his erratic nature, always had his eye on Mr. Bargh's snowplow. Charlie is now Custodian of the Building. Jim Donahue, always the organizer and politician, who has become the head of Lilly's sales office, is seated at the registration desk. Gathered about the foyer are various members of the class. Flash Flaherty, endeavoring to run a pro- fessional store, still drives some business away with the type of puns he was



Page 86 text:

relatives, now sponsors a half-hour television program upon which is featured Robert Dolloff, the Singing Pharmacist, and a serial entitled Carl Shumrak, Dispensing Pharmacist. In a large recreation hall are a group of classmates con- sisting of Hugh Hartman, Andy Perina, Jerry Muller, Richard Briggs and Elmer Brown. During our senior year we thought it was chance that brought them together, but it was no game. They were planning the chain of stores which they now operate. Frank Roddy is talking to their group. Prank's cultured tones and articulation make us wonder if he hasnit spent a good deal of time with someone in the teaching profession. joe Reynolds is also in this group. Joe, besides prac- ticing pharmacy, also has a partnership in a mortuary. If medicine can't cure them, Joe collects anyway. Leo Gagnon is seated at the piano playing a tune accom- panied by john Sharpe on the uke.', Leo still manages to take piano lessons while working fifty-five hours in a drug store, while john Sharpe is the director of the Sharpe and Steeple manufacturing company, successor to Sharp and Dohme. Clarence Hassan is the proprietor of the moon's only drug store, called the Oasis. On the moon is a hospital for research. The staff has several members of our class: Thelma Lezberg and Eleanor Pendergast are working on an advanced theory of genetics, trying to develop the ninety-nine point nine student. Head of the pharmacy is Joe Moloney, while Joe Powers, having made his fortune Havoring medicinal alcohol with agents developed in the Navy, is on the advisory board. A loud racket can be heard from outside the building and looking through the window I can see that Max Anetzberger has meted out revenge for a wrong done to him by Charlie King during a past fraternity affair, and has doused Charlie over the head with a large bottle of coke. A program of events is passed out to us. The program was edited by Warren Spear, who put to use experience acquired as publisher of his Frat's paper. Sid Tankel is talking to-of all people-myself! Sid is recalling the day in our senior year when, after completing a set of Blaud's pills, I found that I had left out the strychnine sulfate. Sid's remark at the time was, Leave out the strychnine, john, it's poison anyway! This has come down as an M. C. P. classic. Bill Spears is dashing about trying to get everyone photographed for a pamphlet to be published recounting the class outing. Seems like old times. Luncheon is the next event on the program, and I notice that we have as speak- ers some of our classmates. A loud argument has taken place during the meal. Ralph Shangraw, now Chairman of the Vermont State Board, was the center of it. Ralph insisted that he ordered a peanut butter sandwich and not a peanut butter and jelly. The master of ceremonies is Henry Gagnon. Henry has received prominence as head of the A.Ph.A. The first speaker is Charlie Mountain. Charlie, while preparing a talk on bacteriology, became interested in the treatment of the common cold and now can cure in two weeks a cold that would ordinarily persist for fourteen days. The next speaker is Bob King. Bob's topic is The Need of Closer Social Contact Between Pharmacists. Bob and his wife tried to carry out this plan during the latter part of the senior year. Seated next to Bob is Dave Henry, who has always helped Bob with programs of this sort. Next comes a discussion period at which various questions are asked from the floor. Louis Principe, one of the first of a long line of Principes to enter M. C. P., who is now settled in California, gives viewpoints of trends in West Coast pharmacy. Look- ing down the table I notice the flaming red-headed Mert Dyer. Mert is seated next to platinum blond Al Laaperi. Both A1 and Mert are partners as drug

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