Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA)

 - Class of 1989

Page 1 of 218

 

Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1989 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collectionPage 11, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collectionPage 15, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collectionPage 9, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collectionPage 13, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collectionPage 17, 1989 Edition, Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 218 of the 1989 volume:

Merrimack COLLEGE North Andover, Massachusetts t§ 1 i i I ; Life Sculpture Chisel in hand stood a sculptor boy With his marble block before him. And his eyes lit up with a smile of joy. As an angel-dream passed o’er him. He carved the dream on that shapeless stone, With many a sharp incision: With heaven's own light the sculpture shone. — He’d caught that angel-vision. Children of life are we, as we stand With our lives uncarved before us. Waiting the hour when, at God's command, Our life-dream shall pass o’er us. if we carve it then on the yielding stone With many a sharp incision, it’s heavenly beauty shall be our own — Our lives, that angel-vision. SENIORS Faculty Administration Clubs Organ izations • • • p 52 p 74 4 Sports Resident Life ... p 92 ..... p 130 p 176 D 6 7 9 io 11 Autumn Interlude Christmas Reception 16 m - 18 Woody Dinsmore Thank you Woody for everything you have done to make our years at Mer- rimack College memorable. Your gener- ous and caring heart has often touched all of us at one time or another. Those fortunate enough to have lived in Ash were spoiled by your annual Christ- mas parties and Spring cookouts; not to mention all the little things along the way from hot cocoa and flu ff to your warm smile. The 1989 yearbook has been dedicated to you because some years down the road, when we reminisce our Merrimack years, Woody Dinsmore will surely put smiles on our faces. SENIORS 20 (' hip j =£. S fJ Accounting Patricia 0. S' osso Accounting 3Zaum S' JOj ( HO Finance S' hho 3). S3na taM English Z tcAe Ze c t f c Zhc opSoh Electrical Engineering Jo i toftn SZ. Finance {r ra t a h 3. SZroio tacoHO Electrical Engineering -r- Sc utaroZ 31. S3nZim Political Science , Z ns tn S n'yo Management 3 e m S Menau t 3 Marketing OHHOl Z( ' . SZiou owian Finance 3Z mc Ze y Z . SZ 3 Marketing 22 ana -3toae t Finance a S 'Zhh S Zxxo f na Marketing jfo t h S' . cZ facZvancZ Finance Political Science « ( tco e A u A AAerfe ( Management , __ c A A . SAtMa iim lam i oi . Z OtMtZi Biology « {tc tae A. , y ) ■ , Accounting doc wawf AA. A ot f t English A«„ sZ. AAouc k Management Ajouwyue Business Economics . A ieiAt « . SAo ycwicwi Marketing jfo i n kS C. A Marketing a ui o S . SA) oudreaa Accounting . t' xirtt i S . SAcm iKer- Computer Science =Aamm Ad. SA anaiera Accounting , flicAae Jjf. Awf ' Biology a yen { a n i. ya f .Jusan S fSe A a 0 uel ( aye a ye f C e wyer A S A. (oayy-eiyo Electrical Engineering Psychology nece S$. Aoaytey Sociology Political Science anea f . wamey-em Accounting Q) tane A . A am fioeA a y-o Finance 4 Wauween ZoaA y Marketing I ic to aj ZoaSino Marketing nee «, . Zoali-nsx Management . ZZmx SZ . Zoo oawinaua, Marketing ZZCeil i Zo iewwe c . Z wiZc S' , Zct ea Electrical Engineering Management jfo mes ZZ . Z 1 1 n ( Marketing Marketing ZZCe Zu S . ZonZon Political Science = Z tei SZ . Zoofe Accounting Zc . • : (' oh rtf Marketing ZZZZm er u- S . Zoo few Accounting ZZZaren SZ. ZZo e Psychology Smc ZZ . Zonfa Biology , ZCaWM S . Zoou U'M Marketing Otrur yA(. Q ’S$Mjpe o- Management «_ licAe e AJ) a «) Political Science M yy History £ ag t ta £ ( Marketing ay eij . ZttMt i ZAP. Q a y ' Accounting f myw u A . C a pAi hA Management Ac A rfs tte C.A u At A no Accounting yCenme fA Ad. Q a ats English jfoiefi i S' . . u affoo s tic uze jfi. . u auro Management Biology ty acUz, Electrical Engineering ofie ( . (Sfta nta Management Electrical Engineering English Management English Aau . . OUCe e Civil Engineering orwune mw Political Science ,- o4llS Qj u tO iS jforuce M. English . J atA een S . i uyas Annof iy t ra i SAae e S . Q a v cee SAetex us ta me Psychology Computer Science Electrical Engineering Psychology llteA e e Aranw Management DLtuwa, A. A 'an zuta Management Wt AamJ. AAwyew =£tnda AA . (dc ukdtc a Political Science Political Science Political Science Marketing English Electrical Engineering oA AdA ws v tAer }V. Computer Science A t . AAew cm Finance (ary AAef i Ad. AAay Management « aura AAC. At x AAe aAl f! f Aam AA. Af xyewfA jfanet . . AAoAey English Marketing Management { c Ae ryA SA. AAoA o Biology Peter f? . ancftni Accounting « ffie ae . orfes Marketing reefertef , . 'or it Management Asa Z 'oarriter Marketing « flarf ia . , Z'oto er Accounting f a ro t ie P . 'ranee Psychology 0 a nttf . Z ra ieoear Finance Mne a $. Z rtt ncaf o Biology jftuc tf i Z f . Z raser Accounting jfosefi i If . 'raxter Accounting jfio m jft. ret fas Finance ffofn S-f. rote Accounting Jjfa ief fc . fjaefefts Marketing ZP a iea A. P a roes Accounting lit of , . Paac ef Accounting ZPo i wen M. Pe t iaee Marketing Finance y uvmaA zAt. {jtanyra n A Management llic me A . (s Math ' 041 « (ary are , ( . { ra y Management -Z ru‘ w « . AAvwnt Accounting y a tA AAreemvooc Finance . flicAue A ft Ay Finance A y x a « . f ne ‘ Political Science Accounting ' Electrical Engineering Finance Finance Electrical Engineering Accounting c oa r A cAy. A AiAy Management 31 n nfer t . c (a mi ton Management . Au am c ffai'rinqto H Marketing (a A wn It. (a web Psychology . t A • • ! t A ( ’ r Biology Psychology Finance Sociology 32 « I a nr if A A) . . Ay nuxio Electrical Engineering A la ft i . Ah n mes Z i vna c Ju f sa i AAP. AAtan e Finance Jftoyce « tf . S n e ran e Political Science i tcAae jfi. jfa o tsA( Political Science , ' f mo ) if jfi. Marketing 0le jffna . {a • Psychology • 7 . C Gi ru ca n as Management m wan 0 . C777arney Accounting lau we tt S0. J (e e i€M Marketing {icAae 0 . , 7 e ’ u Accounting 'ece i 0(7 e ier Computer Science S0 ntte K . { tf Marketing jfoa n « ( . , WV y Psychology CfQ v €. 0 0fy Computer Science ) w n 0 . . 77 ) ? Accounting f 0Ao )H(lS jf. 0Qnne if 00J? Finance Si ee i S$. J Cte y Accounting ( Zirtsfo t ier ■' . (ten Sociology Finance ,£ mi . { . CACu wns ct Psychology r )H If =£. Marketing . am m 3)ee , ACoM Ia oC Accounting Finance 9 ' Cl Axi tcxf AA. CAG c nwy Accounting jfiean =£. AaAAoonte AAoycf A. AaAAoimfe jfo- Finance Finance C on t « . Aa crcxr Electrical Engineering Aeorye « V. Aajor i nc Computer Science 0 c ( ) ! a Aose Aa Jtmh Psychology nice . f . e me m Management PPe er Pe f(o e . a ) een Sp. Pen Accounting , Scoff P . J_ l iy Accounting 'Mic iae Piizaiewc- Accounting eiemani Sp. Xein English JPevitfi aCuce'U Finance jfone S. J. if nc i Management M n (dr. K tf-O M Marketing Kuiri teKi KuonA Management H f jfi. « II jkI on« ! . rts yn KacKe lcm Political Science Accounting L Itacie Marketing jfoh n SK. flnaadini tt t Cxt . lyvUMjft Business Economics y c Jjf. , (acjen ntj Management , 'Kelly KC. « Kainellt Finance W. JGAy MU on Management t moth y jft. « Kalloy English on ho . Hanxi Accounting Kaura « Marketing 36 oAefi i K. Komoum Management SKleax ncler- « . . llaMklen Management Kami vKawie « lloyilt Psychology Holter a S . lla n English AfHfer A . « artoi Management (r . , daftei English ACevin _ AiAca Accounting ACiwn 'AtAoa'rfAu Computer Science Aau ft. AtcAa ' fi i Accounting J™ n. CtcAoo e Psychology AautA. Accounting om titjfA OA Marketing r ('aw « Arf ui w Marketing Auxin S . « t English armt . 4C. « CtcACeon Aatrtcf jfi. lAtcAAweu Marketing Marketing Auxanne AC. , Cte an on Aaiiwe SA. AA tf o Psychology Accounting (' irfs ofi tey J]C. kACA o Iu Computer Science (' t rts t na . fane « vte ofa, Marketing Jte i iame , o i n fjwy SZ. « ZZo Z jfiase i i S'Z. « ott ag ta znaywuvnd S'. ovney International Business Accounting English Political Science , tc tae , Z or eu JaMi ZZ . , Zowi Z PPauZ £7. « or e Mon « ZZicZiae SZ. « ZZoscaritoZ Electrical Engineering Accounting Accounting Accounting Marketing English Management a trW ( . , 1 Accounting . xaf i ' . . « ur t i if { it wen S . . tavfiJi u Management Management . a r . 'y . ( a tfjf Management , {ftti ’ i 'Y S' . , a iY Sociology 'wt . . , t • Psychology A . . ( cy r ft Psychology .yk Chemistry VuaewX Marketing 7 English ymte mea '. (Aacwc boa Accounting c ZZicZtaeZ jfi. « r« ZZo Accounting f t na X . XXeZZfawno Finance XPauZ _ ft. XXeZZictc Accounting fanc m ZZ . X e ast Marketing Jftamei ZPeZZ tter fiat a jf. ZX eZZe ter Medical Technology Accounting Xaura ZZPa me awo Psychology , Z(a Zt if XXan axofuwZoi Management Jftanet « ZZ . XeyZtam Marketing £ ou jZ u JjX. XXXtufr ScZwa d ' Jfi- XXt ncme ZXfcZiarcZ Jf. XPvon Computer Science Finance Sociology jfo i n Ad. otts Civil Engineering CAuzven S. AAP cw Marketing cffiotwircl Ad. Aftor w Marketing (AAteAecca S$. Aftr mte Management CAAAwvn S. A 'u to s , AAo Zx av-en id. z vewnci Marketing d r- . A A icAaw ao'n Psychology jfo iefiA AAfc noayK Sociology ‘ ri c { . Au’wt Psychology 41 C xx e A y t. AAi cy Psychology . c iae sZ. sAt t c ie Finance SAn n A i ne utp Marketing SAnc pea SAtZc xe Psychology ! e ppieen AAiZo i Economics AAxm zAodi w- History Q tan rve AAc Ztns History t Z c ie Ze AAcmc eau Accounting wry AAxan Management SAatncia A t a t Management Art pfcZ AAn Ztep o p Marketing f ic icie AA uaw, Marketing (' epy AaAcuuan Accounting = Aaupie Aalva ope Accounting A e pa Aan cmaMt no Management Aeppence Aanfpy Accounting Finance International Business Accounting Accounting if $ . cffoea, Marketing iau een' (' . cfAe fo Marketing •annaha h Marketing Management Political Science cyafoicia S . . t iws ro Marketing S fSOM Zr. English eAora i f cm cas Management cftfvewda «_ if. exetva Marketing Waiu tarn (o . Aotnas Accounting History Electrical Engineering 44 Accounting 0L awy C C. ie Finance (' ta ? es f io me u Management Y« r a £f. u ma « . , ymo U Political Science (r of oon A . If a fcer Marketing jfio i n jfi. if aid Economics -ias wti . if aiJi Accounting (tttte. e J. IP, Finance anoimaier 2Ae i ffinlcouis ct =£ee SA. ffA n mn jfosefii? HA. if ( «)' y jfodie A . flood Management ‘ Psychology History' William H. Woods Management Lawrence M. Ziliotto Management Heather B. Bernard Management Christopher J. D'Ambrosio English Kathleen A. Jusczak Accounting 46 47 48 49 Fyf yjfc Frid-ay, Sept. IQ s3. 00 I C urrdLj Lounge proper HTQ reoC |Or CA. 50 CD CO CD LAST CLASS PUB a cn BIER CZ and WINE o GLOBE TICKET CO. (S) 260 51 A Faculty Administration 52 53 Faculty Administration I J Francis E. Griggs. Jr. Vice president. Academic affairs Dean of College £|LJ Rev. John E. Deegan. O.S.A. President 54 I. w 7 — t: Elizabeth Chisholm 'ddle: Donna E. Rudeck iht: Neil Wilson Administration 56 Administration Carol Taylor Joseph 7 . Kelly Patricia A. McAndrews cv Brian Lowery Student Activities Director of Campus Ministry Campus Minister campus Minister Accounting Finance John N. Slipkowsky Donald T. Hanson Philip G. Moody Donald A. Nelson 58 Management s. m Management Marketin; James J. Corbett Charles Comegus Catherine Rich- Duval Joseph R Stasia, Jr Zvi Szafrart J. Dauid Davis Ronald M. Dike Mono Mohan Singh i Civil Engineering Electrical Engineering Daniel E. Farmer Vincents. Turanoe (electrical enginering) William F. King William F. Kennedy 62 Economics Ira Golc II )erq Anthony Laramie Jack Amariglio T, T, S. English Fine Arts Department JjA JF Bk I Ellen L. Longsworth David F. Sears Professor Lipsey Cheryl Lanzoni (Secretary) Education Psychology Dennis L. McLaughlin William E. Gutowski Michael F. Kanner-Mascolo . . Nicholas Buehler Political Science Physics MorqueriteP. Kane Benjamin Cogen Ernest F. Costello, Jr. Daniel J. Tatnbasco r) Pr Religious Studies Rabbi Samuel J. Fox Elaine C. Huber Edward J. Enright, ()SA Kevin F. Dwyer. OSA Math Computer Science Mary G. Noonan Michael .1. Bradley Joseph A. Pauelcak Michael St. Vincent History Philosophy Carol A. Lawson Richard Hennessey Herbert 1 1. Meyer Arthur Ledoux '£ S. 7 ociology . ( )hn R. 1 k )l lit i ( k ire ik IN. A lain )ss l ku k 1 1 , cl ur 1 si i i “Through Knowledge to Wisdom” Modern Languages 71 72 73 IflA r 75 CLUBS 76 FRATERNITIES Beta Sigma Epsilon Beta Sigma Epsilon is known for its socially oriented nature, it sponsors and co sponsors many social events for the stu dent body of Merrimack Col lege. BSE is also involved with blood drives held on campus and is active with the annual Boys Club Soccer Clinic. Nu Phi Kappa Nu Phi Kappa is one of the oldest fraternities at Mer- rimack College. The members of Nu Phi Kappa hold various leadership positions through- out the Merrimack College Community, such as Resident Assistants. __ _____ ___ __ ____ __ FRATERNITIES Sigma Beta Kappa Epsilon Tau Kappa Epsilon is a na- tional fraternity with more than 155,000 men and is com- mitted to its members. Their achievements in business, government service, science and nearly every field of human endeavor, is a legacy of leadership. Sigma Beta Kappa was founded in 1947. It holds annual social events for the College com- munity. such as the October fest. its members are active with charitable events in the Merrimack Valley, and in- volved with the college's intra- mural sports. Tau Kappa SORORITIES Pi Theta Epsilon Pi Theta Epsilon was founded at Merrimack Col lege in 1984. Many sisters are active or hold leader ship positions in various other organizations, such as SGA. PTE sponsors ac- tivities for the Merrimack community and other orga- nizations as well. PTE. was working with the Girl Scouts of Andover this past year. Sigma Phi Omega New this year. Sigma Phi Omega emerged from a past tie as the 'Little Sisters' of one of Merrimack's fraternities. Many members hold leader ship positions with the Mer- rimack College community, such as Resident Assistants. The sorority was established with the intention of expand- ing opportunity for female in- volvement in Greek organiza- tions on campus. 80 SOCIAL ORGANIZATIONS Program Board Commuter Council This club is responsible for programming a variety of social, recreational, cul- tural, and educational pro- grams throughout the aca- demic year. The Commuter Council works to develop projects and programming that en- courages communication and a sense of community among cimmuters. resi- dents, and administration, it represents the needs and concerns of the off campus students. GOVERNMENT Student Government Association The Student Government Association is the voice of the student body. This associa- tion speaks to ensure that stu- dent needs and concerns are heard by the administration, faculty, and college com- munity in general. GOVERNMENT ere — n v; ora o — o cb ns ere — n ooa© ACADEMIC A d v a n c e m e n t o f t C i v i 1 E n g i n e e r s co c co £ cj c M.O.R.E., Merrimack Out Reach Experience is a time to open up, be yourself, and forget about the hustle of the world outside. congress Sports at the MACK THE MERRIMACK WARRIORS HOCKEY 27-7 (Conference record 16-2) 1st place EC AC East ECAC East Champions ECAC lst-Team All-Star: Richard Pion ECAC 2nd-Team All-Star: Andy Heinze Chris Kicne 94 95 96 WR r 97 Merrimack MEN’S BASKETBALL 22-9 (Conference record 13-5) 3rd place NE-io ECAC Division 11 Champions NE-io lst-Team All-Star: Paul Neal 1988-89 MERRIMACK WARRIORS 98 99 lOl WOMEN’S BASKETBALL 11-16 (Conference record 9-9) 6th place NEMO NE-io 2nd-Team All-Star: Jenny Jenkins 102 103 104 105 WOMEN’S SOCCER All American Division 11 Sue Plante All New England Division 11 Sue Plante Beth Licopoli Janice Carter NE-IO lst-Team All-Star Sue Plante Mary Clancy Cathy Walsh Beth Licopoli NE-io 2nd-Team All-Conference Carol Marquardt Janice Carter NE-io ‘Player of the Year Sue Plante NE-lO “Rookie of the Year Carol Marquardt 107 108 MEN’S SOCCER no Mm NE-IO lst-Team All-Star Joe Lococo iJHipk % ■MHHsfeaMM -T 111 'VSmEfSF - j ..J| ■ 4 '£• • iaSft! • k r ■A' , . 112 19-17-2 (Conference record 7-9) 8th place NE-io ECAC Division 11 North Champions NE-io lst-Team All-Star: George Evangelista Angelo Fucillo NE-io 2nd-Team All-Star Greg Forte MEN’S BASEBALL DIVISION I BASEBALL NORTH pHAMPIONS 1988 114 in ‘ 115 116 30-20 (Conference record 11-5) 3rd place NE-10 Runners-up ECAC Division 11 NE-10 lst-Team All-Star: Kathy Donnelly Sue Foulcis Jenny Jenkins Michele Myslinski NE-10 “Rookie of the Year” Sue Foulcis SOFTBALL 117 118 119 VOLLEY BALL 120 121 122 Colonial League record 7-5 Colonial League All-Star Joe Schneider LACROSSE V, r 124 125 WOMEN’S TENNIS 126 H ! r I 132 G H A H n o d u o s V e e 133 B o x H f o o u r s d e N H o o r u 134 C 5 3 ■— 5 0 H f o o u r s d e S a 1 e m H o u s e 136 137 mm S HH ft MB n wnw ft HR ft! A jp RH HH -n p ■ R MM 1 MB | ■ MMM •| flftftft R jftftRRHI a r MR RM r ■ mm m 139 4 L rm 140 b « 3 w pH Hjjjt ftfitit SHU . ■ Mi r- - -r' - . ■ ;-- _ 142 143 THE NEW ST. ANN APARTMENTS Temporary home TV time: Merrimack College students watch TV at the Chester, N.Y.; Jennifer Butler of Medfield: Pamela But- Holiday Inn From left: Tim Malloy of South Yarmouth; ier of Woburn; and Jim Grimaldi of Springfield Joan McCole of South Boston; Roberta Martin of East E«n«i n pw, Students find a room at the inn Just until dorm is ready By Art Hagopian Eagle-Tribune Writer LAWRENCE — More than 60 Merri- mack College students have enrolled at Holiday Inn as the North Andover col- lege scrambles to put finishing touches on a new apartment buidling that was not quite finished in time for the start of classes today. “People are going to think it’s a big vacation for us, but they don’t realize it’s a big inconvenience,” said Cindy Trojan, a junior from Newburyport who is sharing a hotel room with three other women who will become her apartment- mates once the new building is finsihed. “This is getting monotonous. When we got here, I thought this was going to be fun, but after two hours of watching ‘Win, Lose or Draw’ and ‘Gilligan’s Is- land,’ I don’t know. We could be getting settled,” Joan McCole, a senior from South Boston, lamented to a group of students gathered in the hotel’s lounge around nine last night “I wish I sewed, or something,” she joked. In all 148 students, who pay $1,650 a semester for on-campus apartment liv- ing, are without places to stay until the new, 40-unit St. Ann apartments are fin- ished, Merrimack College spokesman Casey Coburn said. That might be as early as tomorrow, she said. Faulty fire alarms and lack of an oc- cupancy permit, carpeting and furni- ture delayed the opening, Ms. Coburn said. The alarms finally passed inspec- tion yesterday, and an occupancy per- mit was expected as early as this af- ternoon, she said. Stone Construction Co. of Wayland was unable to finish the building in time because of poor summer weather, stu- dents were told. Students living at the Route 114 Holi- day Inn are being shuttled to the cam- Please see COLLEGE, Page 26 144 College From page 13 pus in vans from 7:30 a.m. to midnight, she said. Of the 148 upper classmen signed up to live in St. Ann, 60 are commuting or staying with friends. The rest are either staying at the hotel, or staying home until next Tuesday, said senior Timothy Malloy of South Yarmouth. “A lot of people just didn’t want the hassle, so they’ll miss the first three days of classes,” agreed se- nior Pamela Butler of Woburn. Students from outside the area, like Roberta Martin of East Ches- ter, N.Y., were hardest hit by the delayed opening. Miss Martin was in Connecticut yesterday when she learned of it, so she dropped off most of her belongings at her grandmother’s house there and will return this weekend to get them, she said. Still, the students were taking the confusion all in stride. “We’ll all be complaining when we move into the apartments. We’ll be saying, ‘Remember when we were at the Holiday Inn and the maids made our beds every morn- ing?’ ” said Miss McCoie. 145 147 april i8 Band Impersonation 149 SPRING WEEK Campus Ministry , Commu- ter Council, and the Pro- gram Board sponsored this years Balloon Day. All proceeds from the event, such as the selling of the tickets at the ends of the balloons you see. were contributed to OXFAM. (right) During Balloon Day people form teams and compete in various relay and other games — trying to score the most points by the days end. april 20 Balloon Day 151 M33A ONIHdS 333M ONIHdS 333M ONIHdS 333M ONIHdS 333M ONIHdS 333M ONIHdS D ganizations sponsored Carnival Day. Due to inclement weather, the event had to be held in the Volpe Complex. Students had the chance to win prizes, dunk fellow-students in a pool of water, and bombard their professors with pies. ir (i I Carnival Day SPRING WEEK SPRING WEEK SPRING WEEK SPRING WEEK 158 159 160 161 162 163 1S . 164 165 Merrimack Students Reach Out above — Karen Smith and John Spooner pose with their trustworthy transportation? MERRIMACTION above — Our home at H.O.M.E. right — Janine Van Patten and Karen Popp do some icebreaking in order to wash their hair. When spring break came, a small con- tingent of students lead by Patty McAn- drews of campus ministry, began their an nual journey H.O.M.E. However this journey was not to visit Mom and Dad but, to lend a helping hand to Homeworkers Organized for More Employment H.O.M.E. is dedicated to providing homes to the families of Maine that cannot otherwise af- ford them. Merrimack students aided H.O.M.E. in their goal by logging in a good day's work. Some were lumberjacks while others were carpenters at the house sight. How ever students also played a more per- sonal role as they interacted with the people who all to often are lumped into that abstract category of “the poor . The re- velation was that these people were not so different, and seemed in some re- spects superior as the students admired the strength re- quired to survive from day to day. Merrimack students also had plenty of time for relaxation, admiring the beautiful aspect of Maine's wilderness. Students had the chance to make new friends both from school and H.O.M.E. which resulted in good times. Surely all those who participated will always remember their journey with fond memories as they think to them- selves Ahh Yepp. That's Right . . . — Bob Simpson 166 center left — SNOW in Maine, center right — a week's worth of wood destined for the paper mill thanks to alot of hard work, left bottom — navigating the rugged Maine terrain. above — A farewell feast at Duffy's, a down home Maine restaurant, pictured from bottom left clockwise — Dave Tagliferra, Janine Van Patten, Christine Morgan, John Spooner, Joe Lemay, Jay Arthur, Vicki Cavanaugh, Karen Smith, Monica Hulman, Patty McAndrews, Karen Popp, Tom Boyle, and Bob Simpson behind the camera. 168 169 171 174 175 SENIOR WEEK Due to unfortunate circum- stances, LAST PUB pic- tures were unobtainable. I SENIOR WEEK M1SC. These Seniors were awarded for their outstanding services for the Class of '89. GRADUATION GRADUATION GRADUATION MAY 14TH SENIOR- 192 THE PERSON IN THE GLASS When you get what you want in your struggle for gain And the world makes you King for a day. Just go to the mirror and look at yourself And see what that reflection has to say. It ins’t your father or mother of love Who’s judgement upon you must pass ; The one who's judgement counts most in your life Is the one staring back in the glass. S He's the one you must satisfy beyond all the rest For s he's with you right up to the end, And you've passed your most difficult test If the reflection in the glass is your friend. You may be one who got a good break, Then you think you're a wonder ful guy But the person in the glass says you're only a fake If you can't look him straight in the eye. You may fool the whole world down the pathway of years AikI get pats on the back as you pass. But your final reward will be heartaches and tears If you've cheated the one in the glass. This poem is dedicated in memory of my friend Leo Redgate (19201989). who showed interest in, and gave me encouragement to produce this book. This was his favorite poem. 193 194 1980 Ronald Regan is sworn in as President of ike United States after a landslide election over President Jimmy Carter. Tke American hostages in Iran are finally freed after a long captivity. Mount St. Helen errupted and covered tke state of Washington with ashes. The 19 0 Winter Olympic U.S. Hockey team is victorious over the U.S.S.R. and wins the gold medal. Southern Italy has a tragic earthguake that claimed the lives of 3 ,000 people. John Lennon died at age 40 , Alfred Hitchcock at age HO , And Mae West at age H7 . 1981 Lech Walesa lead a crusade for freedom in Marxist Poland. He established an outlawed trade union called Solidarity. John Hinckley attempted to assassinate President Ronald Reagan Pope John Paul II was gunned down in Saint Peter’ s Sguare by Ali Agca, age 24. President Sadat was murdered April J2, the Columbia launched , circling the earth 30 times under the control of computers and commander John Young , landing successfully 7 months later. 1982 A federal district judge in Arkansas declares unconstitutional a state law requiring that creation science be given equal tune in any school in which the theory of evolution is taught. In Brussels , at the first emergency meeting ever held by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization ( NA TO) , foreign ministers of 14 member countries issue a communique denouncing the Soviet U nion for its active support of repression” by the martial law regime in Poland. Comic actor John Belushi , 33, is found dead of a drug overdose in Holly- wood, CA. The U .5 . space shuttle Columbia completes its third and longest test flight. Col. Jack. Lousma and Col. C. Gordon Fullerton land the craft at White Sands Missile Range, NM, after eight days in space. Great Britain launches its largest naval assault force in 25 years on an d ,000-mi ( 1 3 ,000-km) voyage to the Falkland Islands off the coast of Argentina. Three days earlier, Argentina seized control of the British- held islands, claiming that they form part of our national patrimony . Five Muslim extremists are executed for the October 1 3d t assassination of Egyptian President Anwar el-Sadat. Seventeen others received prison sentences and two others were acquitted in the March 6 ruling of a mili- tary tribunal. Keeping a campaign promise. President Reagan announces a proposal for tuition tax credits for families who send their children to private el- ementary or secondary schools. The Rev. Sun Myung Moon, founder and leader of the Unification Church, is found guilty by a federal court in New York on four separate counts of income tax evasion. At the shrine of Fatima in Portugal, Pope John Paul II emerges un- scathed from an assassination attempt by a 32-year-old Spanish priest who ran toward him carrying a bayonet. A bomb explosion at the French embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, leaves at least 12 persons dead and 27 wounded. The U.S. Department of Justice announces that Id Japanese business- men have been charged with conspiring to steal computer information from the International Business Machines Corp. A Pan American World Airways jet crashes in a residential area of New Orleans, LA, killing at least 1 54 persons. Nine British soldiers are killed and some 50 persons are injured as two bombs explode in two London parks. The Irish Republican Army ( IRA) claims responsibility for the attacks. The International Whaling Commission votes to ban all commercial whaling, effective in 1 3d 6. Israeli jets bomb West Beirut for II hours, and Lebanon responds by suspending negotiations on the withdrawal of Palestinian guerrillas from 1 Lebanon. The maker of Extra- Strength Tylenol orders a recall of some 264,000 bottles after seven persons in the Chicago area died from capsules that had been laced with cyanide. The United States signs a compact of free association giving limited independence to the Federated States of Micronesia. The U.S. Senate passes, a 54-33, a bill providing for a 5c-per-gallon increase in the gasoline tax to finance highway repairs and mass transit. Norman Mayer, a 66-year- old advocate of nuclear disarmament, is shot to death by police at the Washington Monument in Washington, D. C. , after taking over the structure for 10 hours and threatening to blow it up. An earthquake in Yemen leaves more than 2,dOC dead. Martial law in Poland is partially lifted. 196 Source: Americana Annual 19H3. Canada: Crolier Inc. 1983 1983 The Polish government establishes officially sanctioned trade unions to replace the outlawed Solidarity federation. The U .S . Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civil- ians releases a 467-page report concluding thatthe relocation and intern- ment of 120,000 Japanese- American citizens and resident aliens during World War II was a grave injustice. American playwright Tennessee Williams, 7J , dies in New York. In a nationally televised address. President Regan calls for a long-term research and development program to create an anti- ballistic missile (ABM) system capable of destroying Soviet nuclear missiles before they reach their targets. Barney Clark, 62, the first human patient to receive a permanent artifi- cial heart, dies at the University of Utah Medical Center, where the device had been implanted 112 days before. President Reagan signs into law a bill to ensure the long-term solvency of the Social Security system. The U.S. embassy in Beirut is leveled by a car- bomb explosion, leaving several dozen persons dead and more than J00 injured; a pro- Iranian group claims responsibility. After a successful five-day mission, the U .S . space shuttel Challenger is landed safely at Edwards Air Force base in California. The mission, Challenger’ s first, featured the first American space walk in nine years. The National Commission on Excellence in Education, created in 1 JX 1 , issues a 36-page report which warns that a rising tide of mediocrity in U.S. schools threatens our very future as a nation and a people. Chairman Lee lacocca of the Chrysler Corporation announces that the company will pay off $400 million in federally guaranteed loans by the end of June. The total ft .2 billion (U.S.) in federal bailout money, which saved Chrysler from bankruptcy in 1 3 LG , was not scheduled for repayment until 1330. Lech Walesa, the founder of Poland s outlawed trade union Solidarity , is named the winner fo the I3 3 Nobel Peace Prize. In a series of three cases, the U.S. Supreme Court limits the power of state and local governments to restrict access to legal abortion. In one of the most severe terrorist attacks ever in South Africa, a car bomb explodes outside the Pretoria headquarters of the national air force, killing IS persons and injuring 200 others. The African National Congress ( A NO, an outlawed black nationalist group, claims respon- sibility. The space shuttle Challenger completes a trouble-free six day mission with a night landing at Edwards Air Force Base in California. Among the five astronauts aboard is Lt. Cot. GuionS. Bluford , Jr. , the first U .S . black to travel in space. The space shuttle Challenger is launched from Cape Canaveral, FL, carrying the first U .S . woman astronaut, Sally K. Rude, and four other crew members. Ending an t t-year losing streak, the American League defeats the Na- tional League, 13-3, in baseball’s All-Star Game. Pob'sh leaders declare an end to martial law , imposed in December 13dl , and partial amnesty for political prisoners. At the same time, however, they enact a series of special restrictions that ensure tight control over political, social, and economic life in the country. The Washington Public Power Supply System (WPPSS) files documents stating that it cannot repay $2.25 billion in bonds. It is the largest default in municipal bond history. The plan by which American Telephone and Telegraph Co. (ATO-T) would divest 22 of its local telephone companies is given final approval by U.S. District Judge Harold Greene. The company is ordered to stop using the name and logo of Bell Telephone. After three days of heated debate, the U.S. House of Representatives votes, 22H- 135 , to bar covert aid to Nicaraguan rebel forces . Hurricane Alicia whips through southern Texas, leaving 17 persons dead and property damage valued at up to $ 1.3 billion. A truck loaded with explosives barrels into a U .S . Marine headquarters building at Lebanon’s Beirut International Airport, killing 233 members of the American peacekeeping contingent. A simultaneous attack takes place at the nearby French compound . U.S. Marines and Army Rangers, along with troops from six Caribbean nations, invade the island of Grenada in what President Reagan de- scribes as a joint effort to restore order and democracy. ’’ A massive earthquake in the mountainous region of eastern Turkey leaves thousands of people dead or homeless in freezjng temperatures . An earthquake measuring 6.3 on the Richter Scale , the strongest in the contiguous 4S states since 1353 , hits Idaho and seven other northwestern states. A Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 , flight 007 from New York to Seoul, is downed by a Soviel heat-seeking missile after crossing into Soviet air- space. All 240 passengers , including U.S. Rep. Larry McDonald (D- GA), and 23 crew members are killed. 197 Source: Americana Annual 1984. Canada: (irolier Inc. I9H1. 1-21 1984 As Prime Minister Zhao Ztyang concludes a three-day visit to Wash- ington, China and the United States sign a science and technology agree- ment and a new accord on industrial cooperation. France announces that it has agreed to sell Saudi Arabia more than f 4 billion in arms. The U.S. Supreme Court rules that a city may include a Nativity scene as part of its Christmas decorations without violating the constitutional clause calling for the separation of church and state. In Poland , protests against the removal of crucifixes from the schools become more widespread . A giant storm sweeps across the East Coast of the United States: some 67 persons are killed in a series of tornadoes in North and South Carolina. The Public Service Company of New Hampshire lays off 5 ,200 workers and halts work on both reactors at the Seabrook ( NH ) nuclear power plant. Vanessa Williams announces her resignation as Miss America. Pageant officials had asked her to step down upon learning that nude photographs of her would be published in a magazine. Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya, 36, becomes the first woman to walk in space. The United States and Japan announce a series of measures to raise the value of the yen and open Japan s financial markets. The U.S . government commits itself to a j 4.5 billion rescue package for the ailing Continental Illinois National Bank of Chicago. It is the largest federal support package for any private enterprise in U.S. history. The Games of the XXIII Olympiad in Los Angeles are declared open. A federal jury in Los Angeles finds former automobile manufacturer John Z. De Lorean not guilty on eight charges related to an alleged sale of cocaine in 13 2. Six days before the first production model is to be unveiled , a prototype of the controversial B- bomber crashes during a test flight near Edwards Air Force Base in California. One crewman is killed and two injured. Nearly 1 ,400 people are killed as Typhoon Ike ravages the southern Phil- lippines. In one of the stiff est crackdowns ever on the Mafia, Italian law enforce- ment authorities begin arresting dozens of suspected organized crime fig- ures. The roundup follows the confession of former high-level Mafia drug trafficker Tommaso Buscetta. Three Soviet cosmonauts return to earth after spending a record 23 7 days in space. Britain's Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her entire cabinet es- cape assassination as a bomb explodes at a hotel where they are staying in Brighton, England. The Irish Republican Army claims responsibility for planting the bomb. Kathryn D . Sullivan becomes the first U .S . woman to walk in space, as she leaves the space shuttle Challenger during its eight-day mission. Seven astronauts , the most ever, are on the flight. Margie Velma Barfield , a 52-year old North Carolina grandmother convicted of murdering her fiance in 137 , becomes the first woman to suffer the death penalty in the United States in 22 years. President Ronald W. Reagan and Vice-President George Bush are re- turned to the White House with a landslide victory over the Democratic ticket of Walter F. Mondale and Geraldine A. Ferraro. E aby Fae, a two-month old girl whose defective heart had been replaced by the heart of a baboon on October 26 , dies at Loma Linda CA) Uni- versity Medical Center, where the operation was performed. A storage area for liguefied natural gas in a suburb of Mexico City explo- des inflames just before dawn, distroying a heavily populated 20- block area and killing more than 500 people. In what is described as the worst industrial accident ever , a poisonous gas leak from a pesticide plant in Bhopal, India, leaves more than 2,000 people dead. Bernhard Hugo Goetz, a 37-year-old Manhattan man, turns himself in to police in Concord , NH, confessing to be the vigilante ' gunman of four teenagers on a New York City subway ten days before. The United States and I rag restore full diplomatic ties. 198 Source: Amrncana Annual 1985. Canada: Grolier Incorporated. 1985. 1-24. 1985 A train derailment in eastern Ethiopia kills 332. persons. The central banks of the United States and six European nations take successful action to check the rise of the U.S. dollar against other major currencies. At the end of a three-dap burst of diplomatic activity , which included an exchange of envoys and the highest-level contacts in more than two years , Israel supports Egypt’s call for peace talks with a joint delegation of Jordanians and Palestinians. Twelve years of military rule come to an end in Uruguay , as a civilian , Julio Maria Sanguinetti is sworn in as president. President Reagan vetoes a farm credit bill that would have provided fed- eral loan guarantees to farmers with debt problems. The president had announced the broadening of a separate program in early February. Mikhail S . Gorbachev is named chairman of the Soviet Communist Party following the March 10 death of Konstantin Chernenko. In the largest U nited Nations conference to date on drought and famine relief for Africa, representatives of more than 70 nations and scores of private aid groups meet in Geneva. In New York City, Bernhard H . Goetz is indicted on charges of attempt- ing to murder four youths on a subway in December 13X4. Goetz has claimed self-defense in the controversial case. Jack C. Burcham, 62, the oldest human patient yet to receive a perma- nent artificial heart, dies ten days after the device was implanted . Pope John Paul II names 2X new cardinals, including archbishops John J. O'Connor of New York and Bernard F. Law of Boston. Shortly after takeoff from the Athens airport, two Lebanese Shiite Muslim gunmen hijack TWA flight X47 en route from Cairo to Rome. In exchange for the 153 passengers and crew on board , the hijackers de- mand the release by Israel of 766 mostly Shiite prisoners. Thirteen persons, including four U.S. Marines and two U.S. civilians, are killed by leftist guerrillas in El Salvador. An Air India jetliner suddenly explodes and crashes into the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland , killing all 323 persons aboard. A bomb is suspected. A cyclone and tidal wave batter southeastern coastal Bangladesh, killing up to 1 0,000 people, leaving 250,000 or more homeless, and damaging vast areas of farmland . An earthen dam bursts in northern Italy, releasing a wall of mud and water that kills more than 200 persons. In the worst air disaster ever involving a single plane, a Japan Air Lines Boeing 747 crashes in the mountains norhtwest of Tokyo, killing 520 passengers and crew members. A spokesperson for Rock Hudson discloses in Paris that the actor is suffer- ing from AIDS. Live Aid , a rock music telethon staged in Philadelphia and London, raises and estimated j 70 million for African famine victims. A major earthquake rocks southwestern Mexico, devasting parts of Mexico City and three coastal states. At least 150 persons are killed in Ponce, Puerto Rico, when heavy rains trigger a massive mudslide. A team of U .S. and French researchers is reported to have located the S.S. Titanic, lost in 1312. Israeli planes bomb the headquarters of the Palestine Liberation Or- ganization near Tunis, Tunisia, killing 72. Paul Castellano , reputed head of the powerful Gambino organized crime family , is shot dead in New York City. The United States and Great Britain sign an accord giving the latter a role in research on the Strategic Defense Initiative. A chartered DC-X jetliner carrying 24 X U .S . soldiers and eight crew members crashes after takeoff in Gander , Newfoundland . There are no survivors. The World Bank and International Monetary Fund conclude joint an- nual meetings in Seoul, South Korea. The United States proposed a J 23 billion plan to aid the world’s debtor nations. 199 Source: Americana Annual 1986. Canada: Crolier Incorporated. 1 -24 1986 U . S . President Ronald Reagan and Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev deliver five- m unite messages of peace that are televised in each others country. Spain and Portugal officially join the European Community. The U.S. space shuttle Challenger explodes shortly after takoff from Cape Canaveral , FL. All seven crew members are killed. A woman in Peekskill, NY, dies after taking a Tytenu, gain-relief capsule laced with cyanide poison. A trial of some 474 Mafia suspects, the largest in history, opens in Pa- lermo, Italy. In one of the major thrusts of its ongoing war with Irag , Iran captures the oil port of Fao, near Kuwait. Libyan- backed rebels attack government forces in central Chad , setting off the worst fighting in that country since 1 3 4. Six currencies of the European Monetary System are realigned. In Italy, at least 20 persons are reported dead in recent weeks after drinking wine contaminated with methanol. U.S. consumers are warned not to drink Italian wine until it has been tested. The Soviet Union confirms that a serious accident has taken place at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant north of Kiev, relasing a cloud of radia- tion into the atmosphere. Poep John Paul II visits Rome s main synagogue , in what is believed to be the first papal visit to a Jewish house of worship. In Hands Across America, organized to focus attention on the prob- lems of poverty and homelessness, more than five million persons form a human chain across the United States. The New York Mets win baseball's World Series with an -5 victory over the Boston Red Sox in Game 7. President Reagan tentatively affirms U.S. compliance with the 1373 Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT II) but warns that continued Soviet violations would force a change in policy. Ronald W. Pelton, a former employee of the U.S. National Security Agency, is found guilty of spying for the Soviet Union. Cocaine overdose is identified as the cause of death , June 13 , of college basketball stat Len Bias. In a reversal of a March vote, the U.S. House of Representatives ap- prove $100 million in aid to Nicaraguan contra rebels. Irish voters overwhelmingly reject a measure to end the nation s ban on divorce. Athletes from 70 nations gather in Moscow for the opening of the first Goodwill Games, a 1 6-day Olympic-type competition. U.S. officials announce that Army troops and equipment have been sent to Bolivia to help in the war on drug trafficking . Nicholas Daniloff, a correspondent for U.S. News O' World Report magazine, is arrested in Moscow under suspicion of spying. The move is seen as a retaliation for the arrest in New York one week earlier of al- leged Soviet spy Gennadi Zakharov. A Soviet freighter and cruise ship collide on the Black Sea. Some 35 people are rescued , but 33 are dead or missing. Four- Arab terrorists storm a Pan Am jet in Karachi, Pakistan. After a 16- hour standoff, the gunmen open fire and kill 21 passengers. The hijackers are captured in a raid by Pakistani troops. Soviet dissidents Yuri Orlov and Irina Valitova are welcomed at the White House. Their release October 5 was part of the deal between Washington and Moscow for the exchange of accused Soviet spy Gen- nadi Zakharov and U .S . journalist Nicholas Daniloff. ( continued on next page) 200 General Motors Corporation announces that it will close 1 1 plants , em- ploying some 29 000 people, by 1990. Ivan Boesky , a major Wall Street stock investor, agrees to pay a fl 00 million penalty for insider trading. John A . Walker , Jr. , the convicted leader of a spy ring that sold important military secrets to the Soviet Union, is sentenced to life in prison. U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese III reports that up to f 30 million in proceeds from secret U .S . weapons sales to Iran had been diverted to Nicaraguan contra rebels. President Reagan says that he was not fully informed of the activities and therefore has accepted the resigna- tion of National Security Adviser John M. Poindexter and fired a key aide , Lt. Col. Oliver L. North. Foreign ministers of the 12 European Community nations agree to a package of economic sanctions against South Africa. The World Health Organization announces a major international cam- paign against Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). Eugene Hasenfus , the American flyer shot down over Nicaragua while carrying arms supplies to contra ’ rebels in October and later sentenced to 30 years in prison , is set free. Five days earlier another American, self-styled counterterrorist Sam Nesley Hall, was arrested in Nicaragua and charged with spying. Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov and his wife, human-rights cam- paigner Yelena Bonner, are released from internal exile in Gorky and allowed to return to Moscow. Another prominet dissident Anatoly Mar- chenko, died in a Soviet prison December X . Richard G. Rutan and Jeana Yeaper, flying the experimental plane Voyager, complete the first nonstop flight around the world on a single load of fuel. The nine- day trip began and ended at Edwards Air Force Base in California. Some 50 ,000 students march in the streets of Shanghai , China, calling for broader democratic rights. Nearly 100 people are killed in a New Year’s Eve fire at the Dupont Plaza. Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Arson is suspected. Source: Americana Annual 1987. Canada: Grolier Inc. 1987. 1-24 1987 Obver North on trial over the Iran-Contra affair. For one straight week the press poured money into its coverage. October 19, Black Monday. The Dow Jones dropped SOX points in one day, losing a half-trillion dollars of wealth. Ivan Boesly gets 3 years in jail after waiting 13 months for a sentence. 200th Anniversary of the Constitution. National Geographic magazine is 100 years old. September 22, a U.S. militia helicopter attacked an Iranian cargo ship. Dancer, Fred Astaire died at XX. Henry Ford III, automaker died at age 70. 201 1988 The U.S. Supreme Court rules, 5-3, that Public-school officials have broad powers to censor school newspapers and other school sponsored activities. ” Two U.S. warships are intercepted and bumped by Soviet naval vessels in the Black Sea. XV Olympic Games open in Calgary, Canada. The government of South Africa imposes new restrictions against 17 leading antiapartheid groups. U.S. grand jury indicts Lt. Col. Oliver North , former National Security Advisor John Poindexter , and two other key figures in the Iran-contra affair. Iran and Irag negotiate a ceasefire with the help of Turkey s Prime Min- ister TurgutOzal, after 10 days of missile attacks into each others capital cities. Afghanistan, Pakistan, the U.S.S.R. and the U.S. sign accords on the withdrawal of Soviettroops from Afghanistan and the creation of a neu- tral Afghan state. By the next month the U.S.S.R. begins to withdraw 100,000 troops from Afghanistan. During a 5 day summit in Moscow , President Reagan and Gorbachev exchange ratification documents for the 1J 7 Intermediate Nuclear Forces ( INF) treaty. A U.S. crusier in the Persian Gulf shoots down an Iranian commercial airliner after mistaking it for an attack plane. All 230 people on board the aircraft are killed. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charges the Wall Street firm ofDrexel Burnham Lambert and the head of its junk- bond depart- ment, Michael Milken, with insider trading and other violations. The space shuttle Discovery with 5 astronauts aboard , lifts off from Cape Canaveral, FL ending a 32-month hiatus in U.S. space flight. Former Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos and his wife Imelda are indicted by a U.S. grand jury on tax reform, insider trading , and other issues. Vice-President George Bush is elected president of the United States, defeating Governor Michael Dukakis of Massachusettes. The Soviet Union successfully launches, orbits and lands its first space shuttle, Buran. A Pam Am 747 bound from London to New York blows apart in the air and crashes in the Scottish village of Lockerbie, killing all 253 persons aboard and at least 1 1 on the ground . Soviet cosmonauts Vladmir Titov and Musa Manarov return safely to earth after a record 365 days in space. A collision involving three trains during the morning rush hour in London leaves 33 persons dead and 1 13 injured. The U.S. Department of Agriculture reports that 50% of the nations agricultural counties have been designated as disaster areas due to drought conditions, June 23 . 202 Source? Americana Annual 198V. Canada: Grolier Inc. 1989. 1-24. 1989 FISCAL YEAR 19 9 — your dollar Where it comes from: ,3d = Individual Income Taxes .32 = Social Insurance receipts .12 — Borrowing .11 = Corporate Income Taxes .04 = Other .03 — Excise taxes Where it goes: A3 = Benefit payments .27 = National Defense .14 = Net Interest .11 — Grants . OS = Other Bejing China becomes the focal vocal point for student protestors fighting for the right to democracy. An Exxon oil tanker ran aground spilling 1 1 million gallons of oil in Valdez, Alaska which resulted in a multi- billion- dollar lawsuit against Exxon. Voyager II began its expedition into outer space. For the first time in 40 years substantial numbers of non-communist party Poles hold government offices in Poland. However, they have a long way to go before the Polish people achieve solidarity. 204 205 TIH IE yiEAEIDC'CE STATE ROBERTA E. MARTIN (Editor-in-Chief) JAMES GRIMALDI TIMOTHY MALLOY (Co-editor Sports layout) (Co-editor Sports) BOB SIMPSON (Assistant Manager, Merrimaction layout) PHOTOGRAPHY MIKE EHRMANNTRAUT GORDON ROBERTS JIM KEANE CHRISTINA LAWLESS SCOTT CARPENTER COPY LAYOUT CREDITS MARY M. FINNEGAN, (Senior Portraits) PAMELA BUTLER, (Senior Portraits) JENNIFER BUTLER, (Faculty) WILLIAM FITZGERALD, (Sports layout) SPECIAL THANKS TO COLLEEN DILLON FOR HER HELP SPECIAL THANKS TO GUY GARON OF JOSTENS — HUNTER PUBLISHING COMPANY. THANK YOU TO MADELINE WOODS OF LOR1NG STUDIOS. THE LORING STUDIO PHOTOGRAPHERS, AND PAUL MCCARTHY. 206 207 m • Winston-Salem HUNTER PUBLISHING COMPANY • North Carolina Guy Garon, Hampton Falls, N.H


Suggestions in the Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) collection:

Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

1983

Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

1984

Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

1985

Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

1986

Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1987 Edition, Page 1

1987

Merrimack College - Merrimackan Yearbook (North Andover, MA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 1

1988


Searching for more yearbooks in Massachusetts?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Massachusetts yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.