Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing - Yearbook (Boston, MA)
- Class of 1975
Page 1 of 124
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 124 of the 1975 volume:
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MGH HEALTH SCIENCES LIBRARY Qmduatkm OnjnujO:) itti 1 :h i r.i i I jjj Ā āi) Jilt! 1 ; ā Ā« IE |JL 1. f - - - i l M Our Parents . . . Your children are not your children. They are the sons and daughters of Lifeās long- ing for itself. They come through you but not from you. And though they are with you yet they belong not to you. You may give them your love but not your thoughts. For they have their own thoughts. You may house their bodies but not their souls. For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams. You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you. For life goes not backward nor tarries with yesterday. You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth. The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite, and He bends you with His might that His arrows may go swift and far. Let your bending in the archerās hand be for gl ness; For even as he loves the arrow that flies, so He loves also the bow that is stable. . . . Zhank you everyday the trees grow fractions of inches more in the upwards direction-- reaching higher. . . and higher for completeness. . . trees are clever Stephen 6 TION MISS DOROTHY MAHONEY 8 MISS YOLANDA MAMONE MRS. JODY ASBURY MISS KAREN THURELSON e r s 0 H n e I S e r r c e s MR. PAULWHEELOCK MRS. MARIA BRESNAN 9 Oh, it gets so lonely when your walking and the streets are full of strangers. All the news of home you read just gives you the blues just gives you the blues. . . Joni Mitchell f- u I 10 MRS. JOAN JONES dresltman Instructors Show us not the aim Without the way. For ends and means on earth are so entangled. MRS. SANDRA SWEENY MISS ANNABELLE BIRROW MISS FRANCES GIBBONS . . . That changing one, you change the other, too; Each different path brings other ends in view. MISS ELIZABETH DILL O Z Z C 2 Pi 2 z u o CQ w o a z z U-. ( t 5 2 MISS JOANNE HYDE MRS. MARJORIE SIPE Missing: DOUG HUGHES MISS JILL CARRICO MRS, CAROL STOLLAR 13 J I ' m glad life is given us bit by bit, in min- utes and days and years; For if we were faced with the whole of it, how filled it would be with fears. With all of its laugh- ter and all of its pain, its sorrow and joy and care. And whether the way be rough or fine. It ' s a comforting thing to know. We ' ve only one step to take at a time. Just one little day to go. Helen Lowrie Marshall I I I S 14 1 wts I 1 M RU.KH , voint i aoctx n O ' TOW ftAMāV Rucn MR. tāM RfrTBS Bosi rrĀ«x, mlbrpimu n - āP aW ir- t! Ā« l Ul YlMO 0 ( V tĀ«vāra A vmn 1C IKTHli SHOWKtt AT KD.1.. When you ' re through learning, you ' re THROUGH! 15 I phine Albert, Mary ā nyzeski, bl ' aula Bergwall, Hei i Be ' ucR , ij luse, Barbara Bugbe Patricia Cj lell. Standing: Mirf Cook, EK s Donovarij MicheltfShrBois, Chr [y Arcbamba] ibis. JBig io. J SiiU, Susan Q In CoretefmaJ Armour, Rita Barry, rllis Binks, Claire Ice CavalloJ Kath- fcmish, Saiyra Coy, [irorly, .Mfcanne SECTION II,] Judith Framp] Lefclijs Hagen iry Fischer, Christ itting: lind Gr ote HeweyJj eAH erg, laertel, :herine [elen Luckhl| Arm McAull lall, Ellen , Mellon, I json, Nanc Elise Ra; Barbar: lara Munchbich, Donns brthrop, Barbra O ' Hard Jean: ' Pflflto§iarĀ«, J i han. oTttii 1, Margara eefe. Lord ' yles, Dei(] .rerTC Diam I I 16 18 Down in front ! ! ! And I thought my job in the meat room was bad. . . Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear- not absence of fear. . . 19 20 21 i 22 1 Can Jou Zell MiW Zo Qet. Mow Zo et ā Zo Sesame Street? 23 24 4.J We are guilty of many errors and many faults, but our worst crime is abandoning the children, neglecting the fountain of life. Many of the things we need can wait. The child can not. Right now is the time his bones are being formed, his blood is being made, and his senses are being developed. To him we cannot answer Tomorrow. His name is Today. Gabriela Mistral 25 j MRS. JEAN TEAGUE MRS. EVELYN LYNNES MISS ELLIE TURNBALL MRS. ANNE SORAGHAN 26 The curtains of life opened today. And I saw a miracle happen. There was no background of crashing orchestration. Nor was there a dramatic narration. Spectacular, glittering, magnificent stage sets? None! But the impact of this act, when done. Gives a fleeting glimpse of infinity. While yesterdays merge with today. Thus creating tomorrow. Yes, 1 saw a miracle happen -the birth of a child. And knew at that moment. Life is ours just to borrow. 27 ā 1 I 28 a baby is God ' s opinion that the world should go on. 29 J MAUREEN TUCKE MAUREEN HAFEY Const thou not. . . raze out the written troubles of the brain, And with some sweet oblivious antidote Cleanse the stuff ' s bosom of that perilous stuff Which weighs upon the heart? Shakespeare Macbeth Act V Scene 3 SUSAN McPherson pat grouse Mental Mealth Mnesing 30 MAIL R OOM COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES medical records MEDICAL LIBRARY NEUROPHYSIOLOGY CODMAN HOUSE Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here? That depends a great deal on where you want to get to, said the Cat. Lewis Carroll ALICE IN WONDERLAND Time, Time, Time, see what ' s become of me While I look around for my possibilities. I was so hard to please. Look around. Leaves are brown. And the sky is a hazy shade of Winter. Hang onto your hopes, my friend. That ' s an easy thing to say. But if your hopes should pass away Simply pretend that you can build them again. . . 31 He found most people per- plexing: they did inexplicable things. Each sometimes reacted to life in ways he could not com- prehend. He had sometimes thought, watching them, listening to them, that they were as mys- terious as chemicals in an opaque bottle. Until the cork was re- moved, you never knew what they would do. 32 1 Silence is painful; but in silence things take form, and we must wait and watch. In us, in our secret depth, lies the knowing element which sees and hears that which we do not see nor hear. All our perceptions, all the things we have done, all that we are today, dwelt once in that knowing, silent depth, that treasure chamber in the soul. And we are more than we think. We are more than we know. That which is more than we think and know is always seeking and add- ing to itself while we are doing nothing - or think we are doing nothing. But to be conscious of what is going on in our depth is to help it along. When subconscious becomes consciousness, the seeds in winter-clad selves turn into flowers and the silent life in us sings with all its might. Gibran 33 34 , 1 . Zhe Jomal ā 1974 36 A J ight Zo Remember . . . 37 Snd Of junior year Party Hey baby, wanna boogey? 38 As soon as the rush is over. I ' m going to have a nervous breakdown. I worked for it, I owe it to myself. And nobody is going to deprive me of it! 39 r 1 ' Vjfl HI K ' v Jr j|M Hr ' VnSBE ā 1 k . S Hi - T M jm 1 iH ,r ( t H? flk ā r t i 42 1 I have learned that success is to be measured not as much by the position that one has reached in life as by the obstacles which he has overcome while trying to succeed. Brooker T. Washington Up from Slavery 43 MISS JUDY DYZAK feelings. . . i J eurology 44 1 set me free loose the bonds of the spirit. let me soar into the unknown where mind and body are as one. working together we will reach that GOAL. 45 $ M Surqical MRS. DOROTHY McMAHON Co-Teamleadership Instructor . j i MISS NANCY VETOCK MISS ALICE ROSE V 46 ' Twas the night before surgery here on White Six As I wait patiently for my gallbladder to get fixed. The nurse comes in all shiny and white and says, Sir, youāre getting an S.S.E. tonight. It ' s now midnight and I ' m dying for a drink Don ' t you think N. P. O. p Midnight stinks? Now the sleepless night has passed The stretcher is here for ME at last. What ' s going to happen to me now Nurse? I ' m scared, but that shot ' s working And I feel sleepy -yawn- I hope it doesn ' t hurt. . . 47 Orthopaedics Ā I 48 1 What makes lonliness an anguish is not that I have no one to share my burden, but this: I have only my own burdens to bear. Dag Hammarskjold 49 MRS. SALLY ROBINSON Medical MISS HONOR KEEGAN I y 1 A 50 MEDICAL INTENSlVEvCARE UNIT TRAFFIC RESTRICTED TO INTENSIVE CARE PERSONNEL AND VISITORS THANK YOU It is vain to distress oneself even if eveiything is . . .going wrong, for such distress brings more harm than good. But to bear all things with peaceful and tranquil equanimity not only brings much good to the soul, but also enables it to judge with greater clear- ness and apply a suitable remedy. 51 February 1975 Dear Members of the Graduating Class: Each year graduation stimulates within me a wide range of emotions. I rejoice with you, am caught up in the excitement and exhilaration, the anticipation, the sense of release and of stepping over imaginary thresholds into a new world. There are also feelings of nostalgia; and memories of the past three years kaleidoscope through my consciousness as they do now as I write. Registration Day at 20 Charles St. three years ago seems both eons ago and as if it were yesterday. In just a few months as I sign each of your diplomas, I know that I shall experience once again that profound sense of respect for your accomplishments; something of an appreciation of the struggles, the disappointments, uncertainties, and the up times that you have experienced; and though wishing that I might have come to know each of you better, I give you my thanks for sharing with us and with each other such a precious part of your lives: learning, growing, developing, and experiencing new responses and ways of responding, and helping us to do the same. Graduation, as Registration Day three years ago, is both an ending and a beginning. You have become a part of the fabric that is the M.G.H. School of Nursing. It spans the years, it transcends ephemeral differences, it captures in subtle design the intracacles, the flavor, uniqueness and special quality and contribution of each person and each Class. It has little really to do with black and white checks, and black shoes and stockings, but everything to do with continuity and the legacy which you are leaving for those who will follow you, just as you take with you a part of M.G.H. and will always be a part of M.G.H. The School is the better for having known you and for all that you have given to us. So most of all I am saying thank you: for the service to patients and dedication to their well-being; for helping the staff to benefit from your inquiry and your insights; and the myriad ways that you have helped the School as well as the Hospital to achieve its goals. Today happens to be Valentineās day so all the more reason that I tell you how much you have meant to us. Thank you for sharing with us your frustrations, disgruntlements , exasperations, your ideas, expectations and hopes, but most of all thank you for your understand- ing, enthusiasm, perseverance and constructive help in making the School a better place to live and to learn in; and for the spirit of friendship and fellowship which you have helped to create within the school community. Your impact has been felt, you will be remembered. Congratulations upon your achievements. We welcome you as colleagues in Nursing, and give you our very best hopes for years of fulfillment still to come. 52 This is not our prison but our home. It is the road we must walk and the walking of it is called life. Because we will walk it only once, then how important it is that we should walk it with some purpose that we can call our own. 1 J ā 1 S.J .C.A- Lisa Grimes, Joan Lanzoni, Karen Mellon, Diana Hannon, and Donna Murray. Missing: Mary Rooney. SN ' s to join Mass. Senafe of S+uci rrlNiKses SHK KP mvolvemeni W unity W nix 4?,Tr ii 1 1 56 o ' o ' n Uig jCittle Brother Sister 57 58 KesUieiice Meads 59 . I 60 61 1 62 Look to this day for it is life the very life of life. . . In its brief course lie all the realities and truths of existence- the joy of growth, the splendor of action, the glory of power. For yesterday is but a memory And tomor- row is only a vision But today well lived, makes every yesterday a memory of happiness And every Tomorrow a Vision of Hope! Look well, therefore, to this day! 63 May this year bring you much happiness with just enough sorrow to ap- preciate your joys. May you learn to be strong enough to face yourself when you are weak; and brave enough to face yourself when you are afraid; always be proud in honest defeat, and humble in victory. May your wishes never replace your actions and may you realize that to know yourself is the cornerstone of knowledge. Let your heart be clear, your goals high, and remember to master your- self before you seek to master others, learn to laugh but never forget to cry, reach into the future but never forget the past, remember to have a sense of humor that you may be serious yet never take yourself too seriously. May you always have humility so that you may always remember the simplicity of true greamess, the open mind of true wisdom and the meekness of true strength. General Douglas Mac Arthur J da ane Adams Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative. Mary Anyzeski But the sun ' s been quite kind while 1 wrote this song It ' s for people like you, that keep it turned on. Kita Kathleen Barry Happiness comes of the capacity to feel deeply, to enjoy simply, to think freely, to risk life, to be needed. Storm Jameson Maureen Zheresa Beaulieu Yesterday is but a memory and to- morrow is only a vision. But today well lived makes every yesterday a memory of happiness and every to- morrow a vision of hope. Paula Sue Per gw all I cried for madder music and strong- er wine. 67 T I Heidi jC. Meucker What I gave, I have; What I spent, I had; What I kept, I lost. Kobin Ann Biggio They can conquer who believe they can. 68 Phyllis 6. Pinks Life is like a game of chess. I don ' t enjoy the game much, but I like to play my cards well, and see what will be the end of it. Claire drances Powes I udy Annette Preed Life is too short to waste. 69 Existance would be intolerable if we were never to dream. ⢠Monica Mrothertou Imagination is more important than knowledge. Einstein Virginia U rouse It is better to travel hopefully than to arrive. 70 Barbara can Uugbee Against the assault of laughter, no- thing can stand. Twain Caura ane Cohen Perhaps we are less than our dreams would make us. But that less is more than some gods would dream of. Joseph Pintauro Patricia M- Cahill 71 If it ' s th e truth, what does it matter who said it. UoHHie Cotton Everyone is a moon and has a dark side which he never shows to anybody. Twain Sandra Coy Man is the only animal that blushes or needs to. Sllen Marie CordermaH In this tiny little world People ' s all we ' ve got. Have we forgotten. Forgotten how to love? 72 Twain Donna Crowley Then when my eyes were closed You opened them for me And now we journey thro ' our lives to what will be. Diane M rie Davin It was her thinking of others that made you think of her. Catherine Dolan Our lives are shaped by those who love us and by those who refuse to love us. John Powell 73 Michele DuUois I may have strength strong enough To move mountains. . . But if I have no love, I am nothing. St. Paul Christine Duncliffe My trade and art is to live. Meieianne Eastman In the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is refreshed. Gibran 74 Roberta obns Slwell The pursuit of excellence in the face of adversity is invariably matched by the glory of the result. 3ane Slizabeth Syre There are two ways of spreading light : To be the candle or the mirror that reflects it. Edith Wharton Paula Frances ?arrell Time passes much too quickly, when we ' re together. . . laughing. 75 Anne lischer Cherish yesterday. . .dream tomor- row. . . live today. Ed Cunningham Judith Ellen Brampton So we think, so must we act. Christine Anne 7orsberg Eat, drink and be merry, for tomor- row we may die. Debbie A- Jnee Talk not of wasted affection, affec- tion never was wasted. 76 Longfellow Carol Qrodzins Loyalty to petrified opinion never yet broke a chain or freed a human soul. Twain JCinda 3ane Qrote Take me out to the ballgame. . . t. JCyn Maertel There is but one straight course, and that is to seek truth and pursue it steadily. CesUe fjean Magenstein It is hard to say good-bye - but by knowing me, you know my heart is in the mountains. Love to all, Les George Washington 77 lyn haley enough. . . Diana Manmn In the midst of winter I finally learn- ed that there was in me an invincible Camus summer. Amt Ā£, Matem A woman is not whole by herself, her friends are the rest of her. 78 Barbara T). Mdlmaii To grow is to change, and to have changed often is to have changed much. John Henry Newman Deborah Heait Mewitt The behavior of the fully human be- ing is always unpredictable simply because it is free. 79 John Powell T I Katherine Mur thal It is only with the heart that one can see rightly. What is essential is in- visible to the eye. Exuprey Pamela Jppolito Those who bring sunshine into the lives of others, cannot keep it from themselves. MiceJzen No bird soars too high if he soars with his own wings. , William Blake Sir James Barrie 80 Paula Kaminski As long as we can laugh at our- selves, we are nobody else. Chris Kenzerski 1 hope you don ' t mind that I put down in words. How wonderful life is since you ' re in the world. 81 kareu Cagassc You gotta tell your story You know the reason why Are you ready for the country- Because it ' s time to go. CaMoittagne And if it is more than you can believe Happiness just happened to me Since I got you. 82 oafi MdTk Canzoni Carol A an Ceskiewicz I feel the capacity to care is the thing that gives life its deepest significance. Pablo What ' s in a name? A rose by any other name would smell as sweet. Shakespeare Jikg Cijnck Who ' s homesick? 83 Cori Mit MacDonald I have wept in the night for the short- ness of sight That to somebody ' s need made me blind; But I never have yet felt a twinge of regret For being a little too kind. KaMeen M( loney If only I may grow firmer, simpler - quieter, warmer. Dag Hammarskjold Qeorgia Pauline Marshall The most wasted of days is that in which one has not laughed. Sebastian R. N. Chamfort 84 Barbara Slim All work is empty save when there is love. Gibran Jme SUzabetlt McAuley Sometimes 1 put a seashell to my ear and let it all come back. . . friends, warm smiles, frightened grasps and whispered words. Rod McKuen Mciarem Ann Mdia A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step. Chinese proverb 85 Karat A A dlon Love compels action. I āDeborah Merigan Some things you decide with your heart. T)inuta C. A ctafom Thoughts left unsaid are never wasted. 86 T)oiuia JH r e Murray To have the courage of one ' s diver- sity is a sign of wholeness in indi- viduals and in civilizations. Erik Erikson Judith Haye Mels on Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly. Chesterton. 87 Maraaret Rita Mdsem The flower that grows above the clouds will never wither. And the song chanted by the lips of brides of dawn will never vanish. Gibran Donna une J ickerson Keep your face to the sun, and the shadows will fall behind. Barbara Marie O ' Mara The great man is he who does not lose his child ' s heart. Mencius karen Ā£, O ' Keefe Most of the shadows of this life are caused by standing in our own sunshine. Corena M O ' Ceary You just never know. . . ! Ralph Waldo Emerson 88 Opuda Do not walk in front of me - I may not follow Do not walk behind me - 1 may not lead Walk beside me- and just be my friend. Camus Pearson The most I can do for my friend is to simply be his friend. Thoreau Rebecca Perry Positiveness of a condition does not lie in the state, but in the struggle - the effort to reach a goal which, in its perfection, is unattainable. ean Ann Perlingero Never say anything that will not im- prove on silence. E. Muskie 89 Aiutdieke Kictsmca I have always felt 1 was using the five senses within me, that is why my life has been so full and complete. Helen Keller Dicdre Catherine Quealeij What a long, been. . . strange trip it ' s Judith S. Koekefeller Time is not measured by passing of the years, but by what one does, what one feels, and what one achieves. 90 Judith JCee Rogers It ' s nice to be natural when you ' re naturally nice. Peggy Kussel Kosenblum I will not follow where the path may lead, but I will go where there is no path, and I will leave a trail. 91 i Kyerson The hurrieder I go, the behinder 1 get. I Barbara Schulz The person that each of us is - is unique. John Powell 92 Sersig i thank heaven someone ' s crazy enough to give me a daisy. V Khonna oyce Scharaf I think that leaving spaces for things that you haven ' t planned is the real secret of life. Mdty Anne Sheehan Happy are those who dream dreams and are ready to pay the price to make them come true. Buffy Sainte- Marie 93 Suenens Kobyn Ceah- Ann Smith Away with the work, let ' s have some fun. une Salto H Stetkar You may give gifts without caring but you canāt care without giving. Frank A. Clark Paul Kaijmond St, M tiu Every man is entitled to be valued by his best moment. T)ebm Aau Stokes Hold fast to dreams, for if dreams die, life is a broken winged bird that cannot fly. Langston Hughes Haue Stolecki My boat sails stormy seas Battles oceans filled with tears At last my port ' s in view Now that I ' ve discovered you. 95 Cihda Diane Zorti Well something ' s lost, but some- thing ' s gained in living every day. Joni Mitchell Kristin Marie Zrent When through one man A little more love and goodness, A little more light and truth comes into the world. Sandra Kose Varadian Everything has its beauty, but not everyone can see it. Debra Mn Varney I don ' t know where I ' m going, but I ' m on my way. Confucious 97 Verb I live on Earth at present, and I don ' t know what I am. I know that I am not a category. I am not a thing - a noun. I seem to be a verb, an evolutionary process - an integral function of the universe. R. Buckminster Fuller Carol Cee Vescera What you have to attempt - to be yourself. What you have to pray for - to become a mirror in which, ac- cording to the degree of purity of heart you have attained, the great- ness of life will be reflected. Dag Hammarskjold 96 day can Woffendm Life is made up of small comings and goings, and for everything we take, we leave something behind. Elizabeth M- Wood Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart, and try to love the questions themselves. Rilke Diane Claire Wot hers poon The past is out the beginning of a beginning, and all that is and has been is but the twilight of the dawn. H. G. Wells All these places have their moments, with lovers There are places I remember all my life Though some have changed, some forever, not for better. Some have gone and some remain. friends 1 still can recall. Some are dead and some are living. In my life I ' ve loved them all. . . friends is no one that compares with memories lose their meaning when I think of love as something new 1 know ril never for people and things that went before. I know I ' ll often stop and think about them (Jood Morning, J ursel Good morning Nurse. Yes, I am still here, all of me. But, you are right, I am dying, I have been classified, but so have you. You no longer stand close to me, you only smile when you are leaving. Guess what Nurse. . . I hear everything you say. I could feel you touch me, if you would. I could tell you my mind, if you would let me Did you know that I am afraid? I know that you are afraid. Please Nurse, don ' t be afraid, you can see your future. Can I see mine? Hey Nurse. . . Did you know that you are my family? Yes you are the one that is here now, and I need you to love me. Why do you talk at me like that? Would you sit and talk with me? My dear Nurse. , . Could I bargain with You?? Take out this thermometer and I ' ll sing to you. I could You know. I ' m really the same me. By: Susan Doucette Patrons . . . MR. MRS. ROBERT W. BIGGIO MR. MRS. JOHN J. DAVIN MR. MRS. LEO E. DuBOIS MR. MRS. ROY W. FORSBERG MR. MRS. HENRY J. FUCE MISS SHARON R. LADD MR. MRS. DEXTER LEEN MR. MRS. HARRY A. RUSSELL A FRIEND THE SEILER CORPORATION Sponsors MR. HENRY ANEYZESKI MISS ROBIN BIGGIO MISS JOANNE BINKS MR. MRS. THOMAS BINKS MR. WILLIAM E. COMEAU JR. MR. K. CONNELLY FAMILY MISS MICHELE DuBOIS MISS PATTY DuBOIS MISS PAULA DuBOIS MR. F. FEDEROWSKI FAMILY MR. R. FORSBERG JR. FAMILY MRS. BEULAH FORTIER MR. MRS. RAYMOND GROTE MRS. MARJORIE HAGENSTEIN MR. MRS. PAUL HAGENSTEIN MR. JOSEPH EACH MR. DON MAJOR MR. MRS. THOMAS MEARS MISS PEGGY NELSON MRS. HEATHER REYNOLDS MRS. PEGGY RUSSELL ROSENBLUM MR. PETER M. ROSENBLUM MR. MRS. RICHARD F. VARNEY MR. MRS. SANTINO VESCERA MR. ALFRED WOLSKY MRS. LEONARD WOLSKY 104 Congratulations Keep Learning Join Your Alumnae Association Compliments MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL NURSES ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION 105 YELLOW SUBMARINE Submarine Sandwiches Remember how we talked and laughed and cried into the dawning. To those memories, Jo, Barb, Chris, Lori and Anne 30 Cambridge St. at Charles St. Circle, Boston 523-8546 Bostons Oldest Largest SARNI Cleaners ā Launderers Chanes ā River Plaza Boston āStudent Discountā Open 10:00 am-3:00 am (open 7 days a week) Call up for TAKE OUT ORDERS 106 Instead of going out for dinner go up for dinner. The Penthouse Restaurant may be 15 floors above the city, but the prices on the menu are very down to earth. And while you ' re enjoying your superb meal, you can be enjoying our superb view of old and new Boston and the Charles River, Complete dinners start at only $5,25 lENTHOUSE I RESTAURANT Government Center, 5 Blossom St.. Boston. Tel. 742 7630 LEENāS CAPE COD, MASS. BROWN CONNOLLY INC. 1399 Boylston St. Boston, M a. 021 15 Medical-Nursing Books 107 E. HALLāS SOUL VILLAGE 288 Cambridge St. Boston, Mass. 523- 856 108 CHARLES PLAZA FLORISTS NURSEWEAR INCORPORATED MARVIN-NEITZEL CORP. Troy, N.Y. Manufacturer of Student Nurse Uniforms for MGH āBest wishes to all you in your careers TONYāS PIZZA 29 Charles St. Boston, Mass. 523-3924 BOOKS RECORDS INSTRUMENTS GAMES TAPES S0}iirĀ SOUND New windows for the mind CHARLES RIVER PLAZA 173 CAMBRIDGE STREET BOSTON, MASS 02114 PHONE (617)523-5195 109 Adams, Ida 105 Beacon St. 8 Boston, Mass. Anyzeski, Mary 46 Carlton St. Brookline, Mass. 02146 Barry Rita 44 Summer St. Quincy, Mass. 02169 Beaulieu, Maureen 89 Shirley Rd. Waltham, Mass. 02154 Bergwall, Paula 1816 Reedie Drive Silver Springs, Maryland 20902 Beucker, Heidi 3 Concord Ave. RD 2 Factoryville, P a. 18419 Biggio, Robin II Noreen Drive Bedford, Mass. 01730 Binks, Phyllis 231 Congress St. Milford, Mass. 01757 Bowes, Claire 110 Murdock St. Brighton, Mass. 02135 Breed, Judy 167 Sheffield Ave. Englewood, NY. 07631 Brotherton, Monica 156 Bond St. Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 Brouse, Virginia 15 Staples Ave. Everett, Mass. 02149 Bugbee, Barbara 55 Sawyer St. Providence, R.I. 02907 Cahill, Patricia 121 Howard St. Rockland, Mass. 02370 Cohen, Laura III Beech St. Belmont, Mass. 02178 Corderman, Ellen 3 Dix Terrace Winchester, Mass. 01890 Cotton, Bonnie 41 Howe St. Wellesley, Mass. 02181 Coy, Sandra 100 Walnut St. Watertown, Mass. 02172 Crowley, Donna 4 Dreeme St. Saugus, Mass. 01906 Davin, Diane North Salem Rd. RFD 3 Katonah, N. Y. 10536 Dolan, Cathy 106 Myrtle St. Apt. 11 Boston, Mass. 02114 Du Bois, Michele 27 Rowe St. Roslindale, Mass. 02131 Dimcliffe, Chris 43 Danbuoy Rd. So. Weymouth, Mass. 02190 Eastman, Marianne 74 Treflon Drive E. Braintree, Mass. 02184 Ellwell, Roberta 6 -A John St. Belfast, Me. Eyre, Jane Birchwood Drive Cumberland, R. I. 02864 Farrell, Paula 42 Autumn St. Malden, Mass. 02148 Fischer, MaryAnne 102 Sydney St. Dorchester, Mass. 02125 Forsberg, Chris 69 Tuttle St. Dorchester, Mass. 02125 Frampton, Judith 24 Milford St. Boston, Mass. 02118 Fuce, Deborah 125 Woburn St. West Medford, Mass. 02155 Grodzins, Carol 19 Fair Oaks Drive Lexington, Mass. Grote, Linda 39 Kathleen Lane Norwood, Mass. 02062 Haertel, Lyn 2 Champhey Place Boston, Mass. 02114 Hagestein, Leslie Box 91 Pinedale, Wyo. Haley, Lyn 98 Mountain Ave. Summit, N. J. 07901 Hannon, Diana 11 Clinton St. Cambridge, Mass. 02139 Hatem, Ann 19 Hemingway St. Meuthuen, Mass. 01844 Heilman, Barbara 155 Canterbury Rd. Rochester, N. Y. 14607 Hewitt, Deborah 18 Roseway St. Apt. 2 Jamaica Plain, Mass. 02130 Hobica, Zania 2 Forrest Grove Waltham, Mass. 02154 Hurxthal, Katherine 51 Trowbridge St. Cambridge, Mass. 02139 Ippolito, Pamela 57 Manchester St. Leominster, Mass. 01453 Izen, Felice 158 Georgetown Drive Hyde Park, Mass. 02136 Kaminski, Paula 59 Upland Street Worchester, Mass. 01607 Kenzerski, Christine 370 Cook Lane Marlborough, Ma. 01752 Lagasse, Karen 446 South Main St. Bradford, Mass. 01830 no āDirectorij La Montagne, Anne 376 Thicket St. So. Weymouth, Ma. 02190 Lanzoni, Joan 24 Nottingham Drive Norwood, Mass. 02062 Leskiewicz, Carol Thasher Road Claremont, N. H. 03743 Nickerson, Donna 65 Dimboy Street Brighton, Mass. 02135 O ' Hara, Barbara 26 Caspian Way Dorchester, Ma. 02125 O ' Keefe, Karen 87 Fatima Drive Somerset, Mass. 02726 Lynch, Meg 426 Ocean Ave. Hartford, Conn. 06497 O ' Leary, Lorena 168 Newton Street Brighton, Mass. 02135 Mac Donald, Lori 15 Geraldine Road Framingham, Ma. 01701 Maloney, Kathleen 36 Robken Road Roslindale, Ma. 02131 Marshall, Georgia 41 Hawthorne St. Gambridge, Mass. 02138 Mawn Barbara 73 Arlington Road Woburn, Mass. 01801 McAuley, Anne 66 Hillside Avenue Providence, R. I. 02906 Melia Maureen 63 Finch Avenue Pawtucket, R. 1. 02860 Mellon, Karen 15 Walnut Knoll Canton, Mass. 02021 Merigan, Deborah Thayer 45 School St. Quincy, Mass. Metafora, Donna Cornish 618 Newton Street Brookline, Mass, 02167 Murray, Donna 287 Village St. Medway, Mass. 02053 Nelson, Judith 35 Bellmap Road Braintree, Mass. 02185 Nelson, Margare t 15 Jefferson St. Winthrop, Mass. 02152 Opuda, Anne 378 Eliot Street Milton, Mass. 02187 Pearson, Mary-Jane 243 No. Central St. E. Bridgwater, Mass. 02333 Perlingero, Jean 4 Harold ' s Lane Middletown, R. I. 02840 Perry, Rebecca 15 Hollywood Dr. N. Grafton, Mass. Quealey, Diedre 3 Hapgoodway St. Shrewsbury, Mass. 01545 Rockerfeller, Judith 10 Emerson Place Boston Mass. 02114 Rodgers, Judith Warren Ave. Plymouth, Mass. 02360 Rosenbaum, Peggy Russel 5025 Arlington Ave. Riverdale, N. Y. 10471 Ryerson, Maria 13 Comonwealth Ave Boston, Mass. 02116 Schultz, Barbara 104 Hemenway St. 7 Boston, Mass. 02114 Sersig, Nan 1223 Yellowstone St. Clevland Heights, Ohio 44121 Sheehan, Mary 15 Hutchins St. Shrewsbury, Mass. 01545 Smith, Robin 46 Angela Rd. Braintree, Mass. 02185 Stetkar, Jiuie 131 Park Dr. 36 Boston, Mass. 02116 St. Martin, Paul 18 Centre St. Cambridge, Mass. Stokes, Debra 14 Morton St. Providence, R. I. 02905 Stolecki, Jane 51 E. Circle Dr. Longmeadow, Mass. 01028 Sullivan, Maureen 12 Chissman Dr. Sharon, Mass. Torti, Linda 34 Winthrop Ave. Beverly, Mass. 01915 Trent, Kristen 7190 Brighton Rd. Pittsburgh, Pa. 15202 Varadian, Sandra 25 Ingleside Ave. Cranton, R.l. 02905 Varney, Debra 52 Highland St. Peabody, Mass. 01960 Verb, Ann He lmetta, N.J. 08828 Vescera, Carol 337 New York Ave. Providence, R.l. 02905 Woffenden, Faye 221 Proctor Ave. Athol, Mass 01331 Wood, Beth 6 Virginia Rd. Worcester, Mass. 01602 Wotherspoon, Diane 846 Locust St. Ranham, Mass. 02767 111 The time has come for many of us to fully mature and try to cope in the wor ld we have been preparing for thoughout the last three years. We suddenly have to become a responsible, independent part of society with motivation, initiative, creativity and perseverence. Overnight, we are supposed to set up our own objectives, carryout our duty with our own priorities and evaluate our abilities to function as a well -trained nurse in our own minds. For many years- -the rest of our lives, probably, as we change with time, there will always be a hint of MGH in our souls. We will always carry a hidden bit of pride in this institution, in our education, in our knowledge, in our abilities. We will reminisce about our past; our many insignificant mistakes throughout training, our thousands of exams and papers, the ever changing objectives and grades, our happy times. . .our disappointments. . .our long forgotten friendships which meant so much to us at the time. 1 feel quite fulfilled having come to Mass. General for the most important years of my life, and proud to have met so many fantastic people like you. You just don ' t know how much each and every one of you has, in some way, become a part of me. 1 know Iām a better person by just knowing you, working with you, respecting you. I want you to know that youāve all touched my life immensly. Thank you for allowing me to grow with you, live with you, lead you and follow you. For without words, in friendship, all thoughts, all desires, all expectations are born and shared, with joy that is unacclaimed. When you part from your friend you grive not; For that which you love most in him may be clearer in his absence. . . Kahil Gibran Pam Ippolito President, Senior Class 1975 112 i tl Iw ' . I?6 Kemember When Jt Was At Zke 100 Days Party?? I Invocation - Rev. Mark J. Dyer Address - Mrs. Marie Elizabeth Dyer CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 75 Contratulations ! Excellence in Patient Care Deborah Varney De Quealey Wetherhill Awards Paul St. Martin Karen Mellon Donna Metafora Zhe yearbook Staff I wish to thank all those who helped me in putting this yearbook together. 1 feel that we have been very successful in the ideas that we have conveyed as well as memories we have stirred in our class- mates. Best wishes to all of you in your future endeavors. Thank-You, Editor tt ' 1 ⢠u 1 4 [ -ā¦āāS I ft K. ip: V 1
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