Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing - Yearbook (Boston, MA)

 - Class of 1973

Page 1 of 120

 

Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1973 volume:

A .HaAA a :-jgM 1 p ‘ 1 ' (if l ■ ‘ ijM 1 . massachusetts general hospital school of nursing class of 1973 transition “Tenderness and kindness are not signs of weakness and despair but manifestations of strength and resolution.” Gibran 2 Amidst the curriculum of nursing school, our personal lives can easily be pushed aside. To two special people we were human beings, not “just student nurses.” It is difficult to innumerate the instances in which you have helped us both as a group and as individuals. You coun- seled us in our most discouraging hours and backed us in our seemingly futile positions. You found interest in each of us as a student and friend, never lacking insight into our difficulties. There was never too little time to smile, to wave, to sympathize, to support, to say “come in anytime and talk.” You cared and you believed in us and for that we thank you both. Sincerely, The Class of 73 3 See what’s . . become of me, 5 gp] Ai. Gjjg f Ci II II 1 1 ■ While I looked around for my possibilities. V- r ' L v ' ■ jB i i I r ■ ■ ' ■ ; . ' ' ■ ■ y v 7 Look around, leaves are brown, and the sky is a hazy shade of winter. 8 Down by the riverside’s bound to be a better ride than what you’ve got planned. 9 Hang on to your hopes my friend. y rtr ■ 1 JK J 10 That’s an easy thing to say, but if your hopes should pass away , Simply pretend that you can build them again. 12 Look around, It’s the springtime of my life. 13 Seasons change with the scenery; weaving time in a tapestry. Won’t you stop and remember me? Simon and Garfunkel 15 administration Natalie Petzold 16 Helen Sherwin Richard Tierney Dorothy Mahoney Audrey Brady Lillian Kiely 17 Dr. Keller I Yolanda Mamone Paul Wheelock 18 Mrs. Myrtle Hibbard 19 freshman year I! freshman faculty A. Frances Gibbons Sandra Beckford 22 Annabelle Birrow Not Pictured Laura McCarthy Patricia Mahoney Mrs. Hadley Nancy Lorenze Marilyn Tamburro ElKe Haas Elizabeth Bunten 23 Freshman Year First night ... hi, I’m your proctor ... two hours of dos and don’ts and don’ts and don ' ts . . . warm hearted house mother . . . don’t go out on the fire escapes — they shoot to kill ... be in on time — they notify the police within a half hour ... 200 pounds of books and a free laundry bag ... a long night ahead ... no radios, clocks, stereos, T.V.s etc. . . . And life went on . . . with belches in the elevator . . . s a, footcare, and the bedbath . . . examining the inards of our cats . . . Wednesdays off . . pondering the Hopi way ... 6 a.m. on Charles Street . . . long cold walks ... the MGH trot . . . rides-cabs when you’re rich, Helen Sherwin when you’re lucky, hitching when you’re desperate, police cars when you’re snowbound . . back care, mouth care, and peri care . . . “You’re here for education, not service!” ... The Christmas Drunk . . . January dropouts ... “I need an L.O.A.” . . . warming up in Phillip’s . . . spare change? . . . demonstrations in the common . . . sunba- thing on the roof . . . 10:25 p.m. jaunts to Baskin-Robbins ... the flood . . . Mayor White in knee-deep H 2 0 ... evacuation to Walcott . . . living out of suitcases . . . freshman invade Bartlett. ” --PM SECTION IV KNEELING: Mary Reddy. Lenore Reilly. Christine Rheaume, Charyl Ricketts. Patricia Ries, Debra Robie. Valerie Row- mski. Claudia Russell. Barbara Salois. Linda Sample. Charlene Sampson SIT- TING Diane Schult. Susan Sheridan. Debra Shontz, Christine Strachan. Rhonda Tabb. Carol Tanski. Martha Tay- lor. Diane Thomas. Janice Thomas. STANDING Nancy Turner, Janet Wall. Marueen Wallace. Katherine Warren. Elizabeth White. Kenneth White, Helen Wilder. Elaine Wilson. Maura Wilson. Ruth Wilson. Elizabeth Zulkiewicz AB- SENT: Steven Stepansky, Karen Wood SECTION III KNEELING: Denise Lamarche. Judith Lamsa. Shelley Lautzenhiser. Denise Lavoie. Eileen Lawrence. Lecmda Law- rence. Manbeth Layden, Stephen Luchi- m, Sheryl McDonough, Nancy Mc- Kenzie. Veronica Mallory SITTING: Syl- via Marshall, Jo Frances Masciulli. Jane Mindermann. Maureen Mmihane. Nan- cy Morrisey. Ellen Mossman. Jean Mur- phy, Mary Norato. Suzanne 0 Loughlin. Donna O ' Neil STANDING Margaret O ' Shea. Kathleen O ' Toole, Maryann Pagnim, Christine Panco, Nancy Paza- reskis. Antoinette Peters. Joanne Pick- ett. Gail Pmgeton. Elaine Poirier. Mary Powers. Kathaleen Ragsdale ABSENT Richard Peloqum. SECTION II KNEELING Charlene Feilteau. Priscilla Ferrm, Frances Fisher. Gail Fitzgerald. Colleen Flanigan, Anne Foster. Diane Foster. Virginia Fournier. Susan Gal- lagher. M Delia Bell. Lois Gielbunt. SITTING Margaret Gillespie. Louise Goneau. Diane Goshgarian. Martina Grady. Susan Graetz. Joanne Grant, Lois Greenbaum Kathleen Gricius. Alme Guay, Mary Guilfoyle. STANDING: Elizabeth Halloran, Donna Harris. Nan- cy Hopkins. Kathleen Hughes. Kathleen Keenan. Joan Kelleher. Jane Kirkpa- trick, Martha Knight. Ann Koch. Joanne Kozicz. Gisella Kuri SECTION I KNEELING: Kathleen Allen. Kathy Allen. Patricia Anderson. Patricia Balcom. Christine Beaulieu. Donna Behrakis. Sylvia Benson. Susan Berard. Diane Biggio. Christina Blanc. Peary Brown SITTING Mary Burke. Deborah Cadoret. Margaret Carlson. Anne Carrieri. Dean Champagne, Marcia Christensen. Mar garet Cirmo. Mary Clarkin. Cathy Con- rad. Ellen Cosgrove STANDING: Maria Cosmopoulos. Dale Costanzo. Christine Daly. Patricia Damsma. Ann Demos- thenes. Maureen Doherty. Suzanne Dooley. Carolyn Elliott. Catherine Cummings. Donna Ember I ey . Laura Fairbank 26 27 junior year Junior Faculty Maureen Heafey Bernice Gardner Thelma Powers Tanya Ratney Jean Boswell Gail Rubin C. Kohn 30 Pamela Sargent C. McCreary Anne Cahill Anne Soraghan Carolyn Long Margarete Sandelowski Marian Relitch Janice Baker 31 Maternity Nursing Last year I talked about black humor and the Impact of the Common Market on the European economy and threw clever lit- tle cocktail parties in our discerningly eclectic living room with the Spanish rug and the hand-carved Chinese chest and the lu- cite chairs and was occasionally hungered after by highly placed men in communications, but this year we have a nice baby and pablum drying on our Spanish rug, and I talk about nursing ver- sus sterilization while the men in communications hunger elsewhere. Last year I had a shampoo and set every week and slept on un- broken sleep beneath the Venetian chandelier of our discerningly eclectic bedroom, but this year we have a nice baby, and Ger- ber’s strained bananas in my hair, and gleaming beneath the Venetian chandelier, a diaper pail, a portacrib, and him, a nice baby, drooling on our antique satin spread while I smile and say how nice, it is often said that motherhood is very maturing. (Judith Viorst) 1 - Stc A J 9 p OUT PATIENT EMERGENCY BOSTON CITY HOSPITAL 33 Pediatrics Do you remember days not so very long ago When the world was run by people twice your size And the days were full of laughter, and nights were full of stars And when you grew tired you could close your eyes. (John Denver) 34 Psychiatry Alone is frightened — of the unknown within yourself, and the forces you may release if you walk too close to the edge. Alone is angry — at the people who fail to see the fear beneath your smile, lest their little placebo worlds be, jarred by recognition of another’s pain. Yet they say alone is stronger — to confront life unaided is admirable, though you may die in the attempt. Yes, alone is stronger — until acting alone becomes irresponsibility for your actions. Alone is a wall you reinforce hourly, all the while praying that someone will knock it down, so you never need to be alone again. 36 37 Operating Room Nursing I think I’m going to be sick ... head gear, grey dress, black boots ... talk about 0 2 deprivation, have you tried those masks? . . . open technique — why can’t we just put the gloves on? . . . Weitlanders, baby Mumons, Allis, Kelly, Kochers, poms, mosquitoes . . they all look the same to me . . . “But why can’t all six of us scrub on the same case?” . . . three times I’ve scrubbed and three times I’ve contaminated myself . . . I think I have frostbite from the alchohol dip ... I asked the circulator to tie me up — he did — then I found out he was the surgeon . . . well, I gloved the doctor today and got all five fingers in the same hole . . . first scrub!? but I’ve only been in the O.R. for four and a half weeks! ... if I second scrub on one more D. C. I’m going to scream ... no! that’s not C-A-B-B-A-G-E! ... my care study was cancelled three times . . . after standing and holding retractors for eight and a half hours I think I need a Carotid Endarterectomy . . . oh, oh, I thin k I just bovied someone’s thumb . . . have you seen Neuro — it looks like 2001 down there . . . Never say can’t” . . . Miss Boswell, calm down, I’m doing fine! (Kathy Keenan et al.) 38 39 Ambulatory Nursing Old friends Sat in their clinic chairs Like bookends. A name called through the hall Falls on the deaf ears Of old friends. Convalescent companions The old men Lost in their overcoats, Waiting for a kind word. The sounds of the hospital, Whizzing about them Settle like dust On the shoulders Of the old friends. Can you imagine us Years from today Sharing a clinic bench quietly? How terribly strange To be seventy. Old friends, Memory brushes the same years Silently sharing the same fear . . . (Based on song by Simon and Garfunkel) 40 41 42 43 Ipf ’ ’■■ What is a Student Nurse? Student nurses are one of the nicest things that can happen to a hospital. They come in all sizes, shapes, uniforms and caps. They show up everywhere — in wards, in utility rooms, at chart desks and in classrooms. Head nurses criticize them, doctors yell at them, residents overlook them, interns tolerate them, med students snow” them (or try to), mothers worry about them, and patients love them. An MGH student nurse likes days off, meal time, certain doctors, p.o. temps, giv- ing emotional support, classes at 10 a.m., orders to d c an I.V., and fathers in the delivery room. She doesn’t care much for her first injection, alarm clocks, getting up in the dark, diabetic foot care, monitors, being called “the student”, I A. meds, handouts and rectal temps. A student nurse is a rare person. No one else gets so much pleasure from adjust- ing a bed or fluffing a pillow. No one else gets such satisfaction from being pas- sed on medications, comforting a dying patient’s family and having a good cry in the utility room. You can criticize her, but you cannot dishearten her. You can hurt her feelings, but you cannot make her quit. Her hours are long; her studies are difficult, but she is a hardworking young woman, full of determination, sensitivity and empathy. senior year Sarah Tramello 46 Linda Siller Sarah Robinson Susan Larkin Margaret Keeley Ann Hammer Margaret Sipe 47 Medical Beep . . . Beep . . . Beep . . . Beep . . . phew! . . . monitors . . . CVP’s . . . respirators . . . confer- ences on death . . . emergency cart ... Code Call . . . cardiac teaching . . . diabetic foot care . . . TNG . . . bigeminy, trigeminy . . . safety precautions . . . “Keep those urinals off the monitors!” . . . Give the patient a thump, note the time and call for Help! . . ATP and bedrest . . . Miss Hammer’s compre- hensive classes ... “I always hated the liver!” . . . Phillips House 2!!? . . . MIRU ... 5 lb. bath towels ... 50 gallon wash basins ... 4 mile corridors . . . 100 lb. sterling trays ... “I feel like a maid.” . . . she’s rich and has a 22 year old son ... Scope — once in the morning . . . 48 Orthopedics . . . simple, compound, comminuted, greenstick . . . bal- anced suspension . . . Buck’s traction . . . intracapsular vs. extracapsular . . . crutch walking ... the good goes up and the bad comes down ... “I finally got an ortho patient!” — dx? hallux valgus . . . back injuries class with Dr. Huddles- ton — perfect attendance . . . ‘‘I’m beginning to under- stand why orthopedic nurses don’t wear their caps.” . . . why old people fall ... “I wish I had ortho in the hockey season!” . . . ‘‘If you must get involved with a patient, ortho patients are pretty safe!” . . . how do you do a gluteal pinch? . . . he’s a chronic back . . . pain meds q 3h ... patient problem — how does a total hip patient make it through the metal detectors at Logan? . . . I’ll take that Valium! . . . 50 51 SURGICAL South wing . . . occlusive dressings . . . hypercal . . . NPO ... UGI ... BaE ... GTT . . . penrose drains . . . G tubes, J tubes, T tubes ... “I broke the three bottle chest suction!” . . . feed me, clamp me, drain me . . . 7am grand central station on White 7 . . . dental team . . . the tooth fairies . . . Weirdo who? ... bow tie s . . . WB 12 — Top of the Hub ... TCDB . . . Help, I’m T.L. this week . . . “What ' s a fern pop?” . . . PC0 2 , P0 2 , FI0 2 . . . elongated lung!!? . . . Who is Ellen after now? . . . sitting demurely at Grand Rounds ... my day in the OR . . . Mrs. Jones still makes me nervous! . . . 52 53 Neurology White vs. Baker . . . oriented x3 . . . NVS . . . flashlights without batteries . . . “the patient is depressed, what about the student?” . . . skull caps with ribbons ... On Old Olympus Towering Tops . . . “I’ve got a better way to remember it . . . suctioned for gobs . . . trach care ... de- flate what cuff? . . . squeeze my hands . . . what is the origin of cranial nerve 7? . . . the “happy tumor” ... dx: unknown . . . seizure precautions . . . pseudomonas . . . Grand Rounds ... ICP . LP . . . CSF . . LOC . . . PEG . . . TIA . . . BBB . . . “I’ve got a headache” . . . depression strikes again! ... and cetera . . . 55 57 Class Officers Diane Foster Gail Fitzgerald Debra Shontz Charlene Feilteau SNCA Denise Lavoie Paul Mercaitis Ann Peters Nancy McKenzie 59 Transition Co Editors Maryann Pagnim Diane Schult Photography Linda Sample — Editor Staff Chris Bland Marylou Clarkin Gail Fitzgerald Joan Kelleher Eileen Lawrence Maribeth Layden Mary Norato Charlene Sampson Literary Elaine Wilson — Editor Staff Anne Carrieri Eileen Lawrence Layout Liz White - Editor Staff Mary Burke Charlene Feilteau Diane Foster Susan Gallagher Donna Harris Eileen Lawrence 60 61 V. 1 m . V m - Bi 1 - ft . i ' :W V All r Convocation 10-72 C. Welch Dr. Sanders 65 100 Days Party 66 67 r j k3 -j Kathleen Marie Allen Our whole life is but a greater and longer childhood. Kathy Jeanne Allen We are only undefeated because we have gone on trying.” Patricia Lynn Anderson “Believe that those you love, love you.” 70 Patricia Barbara Balcom Christine R. Beaulieu “Remember this, — that very little is needed to make a happy life.” Wherever she met a stranger, there she left a friend.” Sylvia Katherine Benson You give but little when you give of your possessions. It is when you give of yourself that you truly give. 71 « : Susan Claire Berard “The most I can do for my friend is simply to be his friend. Diane Jeanne Biggio Silence is the most perfect herald of joy: I would be but little happy if I could say how much.” Christina Lea Bland “Friend I will remember you, think of you, pray for you: And when an- other day is thru, I’ll still be friends with you. ' 72 Mary E. Burke the shy, wistful smile hides a secret or two.” I Margaret Lynne Carlson The end of learning is knowledge and the mind is uneasy until it attains certitude.” Anne Isabella Carrieri Keep me from the wisdom that does not weep, the philosophy that does not laugh, and the pride that does not bow it’s head before a child 73 Dean Champagne I wish to know the meaning of life, father. Well, my son, life is like a beanstalk, isn ' t it?” Marcia Irene Roberts Christensen I am not afraid of tomorrow for I have seen yesterday and I love to- day.” Mary Louise Clarkin I was not born to be forced. I will breathe after my own fashion. 74 Ellen Marie Cosgrove Maria Cosmopoulos There ' s no need to discuss or understand me. I won ' t ask of myself to I do not give lectures or a little charity. When I give, I give myself. become something else - I’ll just be me!” t- Dale Marie Costanzo If you compare yourself with others, you may become vain and bitter; for always there will be greater and lesser persons than yourself. 75 Patricia June Damsma Maureen Ann Doherty To believe in God is to get high on love enough to look down at your T ' is the quiet deeds that express the valor of a woman.” loneliness and forget it forever. Susan Lee Dooley If I had but two loaves of bread, I would sell one and buy hyacinths, for they ' would feed my soul.” 76 Carol Ann Dugan Laura King Fairbank “And let today embrace the past with remembrance and the future with longing.” Charlene Ann Feilteau ‘Listen I don’t apologize for being hard to know I am what I am sulking will not change that but apple pies and warm hands help 77 Pricilla Jan Ferrin “Very little is needed to make a happy life. It is all within yourself, in your way of thinking. Gail Mary Fitzgerald “Shoulders that bear great responsibilities have no room for chips.” Colleen Ruth Flanigan Those who bring sunshine to the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves. 78 Susan Jean Gallagher If you wish to see the valleys, climb to the mountain; if you desire to see the mountain top, rise into the cloud; but if you seek to understand the cloud, close your eyes and think. Diane Irene Foster Ginger Fournier “For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is re- freshed.” 79 Lois Gielbunt “Very little is needed to make a happy life It Is all within yourself, in your way of thinking. Susan Carolyn Graetz “The rule of my life is to make pleasure a business and business a plea- sure. Joanne Marie Grant “I don’t know where I’m going but I’m on my way.” 80 Kathleen Gricius Lin Guay What I know of friendly winds I ' ve learned from being on the sea. Sail- “In the depth of my soul, there is a wordless song mg no place; going with the wind, making every harbor home.” Mary Patricia Guilfoyle Her merry fits she freshly ' gan to rear And did of |oy and jollity demise Herself to cherish and her guest to cheer.” 81 Elizabeth Ann Halloran “I can alter my life by altering my atitude of mind. ' ’ Donna Lee Harris I ' d know he ' d be a poorer man if he never saw an eagle fly. Nancy M. Hopkins “She is a friend, Oh, such a friend! She knows, she loves, she cares. 82 Kathleen Agnes Hughes Christina A. Jones A good manner springs from a good heart, and fine manners are the outcome of unselfish kindness. Kathleen Gertrude Keenan The most wasted of days is that in which one has not laughed. 83 Joan Betn Kelleher Joanne Stephanie Kozicz People all around: and yet you are alone. With a group of people who A loving heart is the truest wisdom. don ' t understand you, your thoughts are yours alone.” Gisella Marie Kuri ■■ I feel the capacity to care is the thing which gives life its greatest significance. 84 Denise Helen Lamarche And a smile that is sweet will surely find a smile that is just as sweet.” Judith Ann Lamsa “Winning ways, airs, innocent, maiden manners, sweet looks, loose locks, long locks, going gallant, girl grace.” Denise Linda Lavoie She has looked for the best in others and given the best she has.” 85 Eileen Mary Lawrence So while you are young you should awaken within yourself the flame of discontent; You should be in a state of revolution. This is the time to inquire, to discover, to grow Lecinda Lawrence May she become a flourishing hidden tree. That all her thoughts may like the linnet be. And have no business but dispensing round, their magnanimities of sound. Maribeth Layden Every life is a work of art shaped by the woman who lives it. 86 Sheryl Ann McDonough Nancy McKenzie “During his lifetime, an individual should devote his efforts to create From a little spark may burst a mighty flame.” happiness and enjoy it . . 87 Joan Eileen Mason Though her words are few, her thoughts are many. Jane Constance Mindermann To know solitude is to enjoy freedom. Maureen Ellen Mmihane God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, cour- age to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference between both.” 88 Suzanne O ' Loughlin It is better to be small and shine than to be large and cast a shadow 89 Donna Lee O ' Neil Content lodges oftener in cottages than in palaces Kathleen Patricia O ' Toole You have to make the good times yourself. Take the little times and make them into big times and save the times that are all right for the ones that aren ' t so good Maryann J Pagmni Love is the key we must turn, Truth is the flame we must burn, Free dom the lesson we must learn. 90 Christine Elizabeth Panco The Lord has made as much provision for your failure as for your success.” Nancy Ann Pazareskis The woods are lovely, dark and deep But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep. Antoinette Peters One ' s self I sing, a simple separate person. 91 Kathleen Jo Pettigrew Joanne Pickett Within you there is a stillness and sanctuary to which you can retreat at anytime and be yourself. Gail Ann Pmgeton He that would live in peace and ease must not speak all he knows, nor judge all he sees.” 92 Mary Louise Powers Quiet yes, but still waters run deep. Kathleen Ragsdale “A friend is a present you give yourself.” Mary Reddy He climbs the highest who helps another up.” 93 Christine Marie Rheaume Happiness is not a place you arrive at, but a way of traveling, Charyl Anne Ricketts Patricia Ann Ries A kind and gentle nature contains it ' s own reward. 94 Claudia Jean Russell Debra June Robie Valerie Ann Rowinski If you keep within your heart a green bough there will come one day to stay a singing bird. 95 Linda Jean Sample “You will find, as you look back upon your life, that the moments that stand out are the moments when you have done things for others. Charlene Marie Sampson True humor springs not more from the head then from the heart; it is not contempt, it ' s essence is love; it ' s issues not in laughter but in smiles, which lie far deeper Diane Patricia Schult To accomplish great things. You must not only act, but also dream. Not only plan but also believe. 96 Lawrence Peter Shield Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes.” Debra Ann Shontz And think not you can guide the course of Love, for Love, if it finds you worthy, shall guide your course. Christine Mary Strachan Then you can look forward with confidence, and back without regrets. 97 Martha Alexandra Taylor “Things that are natural are never without a certain grace and excellence. Diane Esther Thomas Music and rhythm find their way into t he secret places of the soul. Janice Elaine Thomas The greatest happiness of life is being loved for yourself or, more cor- rectly, being loved in spite of yourself.” 98 Janet Mary Wall If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeav- ors to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.” Elizabeth M. White “She has a world of ready wealth, Our minds and hearts to bless, Spon- taneous wisdom breathed by health, Truth breathed by cheerfulness.” Kenneth Milton White “That I should know how to speak a word in season to him who is weary.” 99 Cynthia Keeshan Zafft Able to approach the future as a friend without a wardrobe of excuses, without a set mask of rectitude or an embarrassing over-familiar gesture. Elaine Theresa Wilson Ruth Margaret Wilson “The vision that you glorify in your mind, The ideal that you enthrone in your heart — This you will build your life by, this you will become.” 100 Camera-shy Seniors: Margaret Mary Donahue Linden Stephen George Luchmi Jean Marie Murphy Karen Grace Heminway Wood The Harvard Gardens 320 Cambridge St. Boston Featuring Weddings, Banquets up to 160 Persons Your Hosts: Peter and George Coulouras For Information or Reservations call: 523-8786-8880 Melvin and Badger Phillips Drug Co., Inc. Druggists 155 Charles Street Boston Physician Pharmacist Open 24 Hours Registered Pharmacists Patient in Attendance at all Times 175 Cambridge St. 523-1028 523-0393 102 De Luca’s Market Marvin Neitzel Corporation Troy, N.Y. Gourmet Shop Meat, Groceries, Beer, Wines, Liquors, Fruit, and Cheese For a Snack or Meal! Outfits for the Class of 73 Best Wishes to you all! J. B. Spaghetti House Featuring “Hot Oven Subs Italian Meals Take Out Orders in Aluminum Containers Brown and Connolly Inc. Medical — Dental Nursing Books Corner of Brookline Ave. 1397 Boylston St. 523-9471 267-1511 103 SPONSORS Mr. and Mrs. Manning L. Balcom Mr. and Mrs. William F. Gallagher Mrs. Mary C. Goodwin Mr. and Mrs. Roland E. Lavoie The Piper Press 2257 Mass. Ave. Cambridge, Mass. 02140 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond T. White, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sample Patrons Miss Dolores Allicen Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Powers 104 Many Thanks To: Miss Gibbons for dragging us out of our valleys and steadying us on our peaks, Miss Keeley for being there on short notice, Mr. White and Mr. Wheelock for just being friends, Bob Murphy for getting us back on our feet, Avidon Studios for finishing our pictures before ending themselves, Dennis Geaney and Doug Kirwin for helping us to grow up by showing us that, sometimes, that silver lining has a cloud. The Transition” Staff Look: the constant marigold Springs again from hidden roots Baffled gardener, you behold New beginnings and new shoots. Robert Graves m m m W k l m iA THERE’S A WORLD There’s a world you’re living in No one else has your part All God’s children in the wind Take it in and blow hard. Look around you . . . Has it found you walking down the avenue? See what it brings . . . Could be good things in the air for you. We are leaving. We are gone. Come with us to all alone. Never worry. Never moan. We will leave you all alone. In the mountains, in the cities, you can see the dream. Look around you. Has it found Is it what it seems? Mg - ' 1 |


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Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

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Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing - Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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