Northeastern University - Cauldron Yearbook (Boston, MA) - Class of 1971 Page 1 of 430
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1971 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 430 of the 1971 volume: “
For Reference Not to be taken from this room CALUDRON S Yearsbook Audio-Essay 1966-71 Edited by Bob Matorin ( Engineering by John Bak o N :: T . PHOTO CREDITS MONTREAL STAR (Expo) p. 35 (Riot) p. 155 (Cross-Headline) p. 264 (Headline-Funeral) p. 269. SZEP cartoons pp. 49 123 130 13 5 161 1 81 214 243 244 244 277. BOSTON RECORD AMERICAN (Beatles) p. 4 (Red Sox) p. 53 (White-Hicks) p. 55 (Snow) p. 55 (Wallace) p. 57 (McCarthy) p. 79 (Football) p. 93 (Kennedy) p. 109 (Celties) p. 115 (Kennedy) p. 127 (Spock) p. 130 (Elma Lewis) p. 136 (Moratorium) p. 138 (Shea) p. 239 (Bruins) p. 243 (Wake) p. 267. NEW YORK DAILY NEWS (Garbage) p. 65 (Columbia) p. 74 (Francine) p. 89 (Mantle) p. 108 (Mailer-Breslin) p. 121 (Woodstock) pp. 132-133 (Smog) p. 211 (Knicks) p. 214. WIDE WORLD PHOTOS (Six-Day War) p. 41 (King- Funeral) p. 70-71 (Paris Talks) p. 75 (Kennedy) p. 76 (Invasion) p. 81 (Moon) p. 128 (War) p. 162. BOSTON GLOBE (All SZEP cartoons) (McCarthy) p. 67 (Speech) p. 123 (Kennedy) p. 126-127 (Headlines) p. 141 (Riot) p. 205 (Earth Day) p. 211 (China) p. 214 (Bruins) p. 243 (Headlines) p. 245 (Headlines) p. 251. MIAMI HERALD (Nixon-Convention) p. 82-93 (Jets) p. 101 (Colts) p. 275 (Chiles) p. 350. ROLLER DERBY (Action) p. 108. FRIENDS of ANIMALS, INC. (Brian Davies ' Seal Pup) p. 362. CANADIAN PRESS (Trudeau) p. 79. VOLKSWAGON (Dune Buggy) p. 66 US CENSUS BUREAU (Figure) p. 55. CHICAGO SUN TIMES (Jackson) p. 66 (Police) p. 95 (Hamp- ton) p. 163. THE DAILY TEXAN (Tower-2) p. 7. THE AUSTIN AMERICAN- STATESMAN (Injured) p. 7. CHILDREN ' S TV WORKSHOP (Sesame St. p. 2- 158-259. US ARMY (Fighting) p. 26-33-154. LBJ LIBRARY (Vietnam) p. 19 (Announcement) p. 67. LOUISEVILLE COURIER JOURNAL (Ali) p. 39. DETROIT TIGERS (McClain) p. 214. HAIR (Actors) p. 75. BOSTON HERALD TRAVELER (Headline) pp. 159-245. VALLEY DAILY NEWS (Kent St.) p. 219. SPORTS ILLUSTRATED (Baseball) p. 249 (Brooks) p. 265. GARY POST-TRIBUNE (Mayor) p. 55. AVCO EMBASSY (Graduate) p. 49 (Stones) p. 215. UPI (Nixon) p. 217. ULOZ1 ENTERPRIZES (Olympics) p. 91. LIFE (Biafran) p. 91. NEW YORK TIMES (Cambodia) p. 216. OFFICE of the PRESIDENT (Nixon) p. 103. OFFICE of the VICE-PRESIDENT (Agnew) pp. 102-159. JET (Researcher) p. 42. ASSOCIATED PRESS (Groppi) p. 13 (West- moreland) p. 43 (War) p. 53. (Pueblo) p. 61 (War) p. 65 (King) p. 70 (Senators) p. 71 (Columbia) p. 74 (Spock) p. 75 (Train) p. 77 (Berkeley-Chicago) p. 83 (Wallace) p. 89 (San Francisco St.) p. 95 (David-Julie) p. 101 (747) p. 101 (Berkeley) p. 105 (Golda) p. 108 (John-Yoko) p. 108 (Smothers Bros.) p. 115 (Cornell) p. 120 (Berkeley) p. 121 (Chappaquiddick) p. 126 (Jones) p. 131 (Nader) p. 131 (Woodstock) p. 132 (Movie) p. 135 (Rubin) p. 141 (Mets)p. 154 (Angela) p. 154 (Lew) p. 155 (Lottery) p. 161 (Martha-Manson) p. 163 (War) p. 187 (Cambodia) p. 216 (Kent St.) p. 220 (Jackson St.) p. 221 (Hardhats-Flag) p. 244 (Hickel) p. 244 (Spiro-Capp) p. 247 (Calley) p. 265 (Hoover-Rubin- Blanda) p. 267 (Prisoners) p. 269 (Jew-Berrigans) p. 275 (Beatles) p. 279. RAYMOND ROHAUER (W. C. Fields) p. 22. ELECTRA RECORDS (Tom Rush) p. 23 (Judy Collins) p. 59. AVCO EMBASSY PICTURES (The Graduate) p. 58. COLUMBIA PICTURES (Midnight Cowboy) p. 164. PARAMOUNT PICTURES (Easy Rider) p. 164. We wish to express our thanks to the above individuals and groups for allowing us to reproduce their materials for use in this book. Our SPECIAL thanks go to THE MONTREAL STAR. THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS, PAUL SZEP, THE DAILY TEXAN, MYER OSTROFF (at the Record American), ROLLER DERBY and the ASSOCIATED PRESS for going out of their way to help us with photos. Accolades must also go to the PURITAN and WINDSOR Restaurants for good food; WRBB-fm for good music and to the NU NEWS for all their pictures and staff members, which we stole. EDITOR James A. Vrabel MANAGING EDITOR Richard B. (Dixie) Tourangeau Janet Conway Mike Chung Jack Goldberg Frank Moy Bob Matorin Tom Rozum Mike Fine Myron Burtman Barry Gilbert Mike Gilman Bill Ashforth Marc Stern Mark Hamilton Warren Talbot Maggie Rhodes Donna Radcliffe Kathy Kepner John Silvia Ed Rice Ken Block Colleen Harrington Mike Mui Martin Offenhauer Ray Jamie Doubleday Judy Saykin Pat Martin Chris Mosher Dale King Rich Sobicinski Jerry Greenberg Evmorfilli Kyridis Paul Sullivan Mary B. Gelinas Suzie Q Goldwitz Electric Lou Michele Tenedou Larry Rothstein J. Martin Beiser Ed O ' Donaghue Donald Leamy Donna Doherty A. Brooks Lubow K. Hipster Weber A. Warren Wurdeman Peter Lance ADVISOR Harvey Vetstein This book is evidently the product of leftist hockey players who attended every Silver Masque Play. TABLE OF CONTENTS 5 Years Freshman 1 966-67 bent, folded, spindled and mutilated 5 Sophomore 1967-68 assassinated into consciousness 45 Middler 1968-69 rudely wakening 85 Junior 1969-70 waves of protest and reprisal 137 Senior 1970-71 a sullen, silent final year 253 The President ' s Messages September 1966 greetings, warnings, challenges 9 August 1970 ignored on the report card 250 June 1971 how he thought it was, and will be 278 sketches some kinds of seniors, not types, but life styles 10,34,48,64,104,186 List Reviews the Movies, Books, Records and Deaths of the 5 years 22,58,96,164,270 The GradNUate Arthur Enyou on the comic road to Lux, Veritas, Virtus 192 Trustees who are those guys? 282 Administrators the woodshed behind the gray brick 284 Faculty taught us all we know? 286 Student Activities not activists, necessarily 291 Seniors the class of 1971 and their reflections: 297 those that showed themselves and spoke 302 those that spoke 350 those that showed themselves 363 a list of the rest those that co-operated 415 those that full-timed 416 A Final Plea: Do Not Forget. 424 Audio-Essay the shouts and songs of the times we had insert JULY 1966 Beatles come to Boston. US airstrikes against Haiphong oil bases. American pilots on display in Hanoi. Richard Speck knifes 8 Chicago student nurses to death. Hough riot in Cleveland; Lindsay cools Harlem. Agena 8 and 10 rendezvous in space. Whites asked to leave head posts in NAACP. Trouble brews in N. Ireland. Dominican Republic. Sinatra-Farrow marriage; clergy marriages on rise. Beatles beaten in Manila for refusal of royal invitation. Mickey Mantle goes on last home-run tear. Rock music said to be dirty. Motorcycle, powerboat crashes kill enthusiasts. denotes picture AUGUST 1966 1. Charles Whitman kills 15 people, wounds 31 in Texas University Tower shootout. 2. Jerry Rubin testifies at HUAC hearings in costume. 3. 5,000,000 women said to be taking The Pill. 4. Moon pictures shown from first lunar orbit. 5. South African racial policies stir world comment. 6. Pittsburgh Pirates initiate the Green Weenie hex. 7. Luci and Pat Nugent married in White House ceremony ■WH Sf-55- m ! ■, ' 1 . ii ■ .[ . ' ' 1 - t ij i  |H ii U ( r i till JjT, ■I I MM ; ' | ' j « ' ■. ' i ' .„ _ . i n . - L . ■' « ' ; I | j l l ' i J il ' iT i i i i ii ' i i M . ipiii jf ll j llll SS: ' : -- •• ' ' . :,-■■:};■■■■. • -••. f ■• .-,• -.5- ' ■•„■' -.-■. ' ■r . • FRESHMAN I 1 i i i SEPTEMBER 1966 reaking i. ' oOOt Frosh cla .•nters North Northeastern i S named Al I -American . lid to Nil cut by LBJ. It plans stir commuters and pranners Husks bought for school spirit. utry overnight policy begins. «- H PRESIDENTS MESSAGE SEPTEMBER 1966 As President of Northeastern University, I welcome you to our campus as young adults in pursuit of advanced education - charge you to do well in your classes, but even more, I urge you to absorb every aspect of education that is found here. Success in your academic studies is important, but in this day and age, the even greater task before you is that of finding yourselves as individuals and developing a sound philosophy of life. To find yourself socially and intellectually as an adult, you must ask yourself, Who am I? and What am I? - then have the courage to face an honest answer. Seek to gain a better understanding of your own social and religious background. Think for yourself. Learn to discern true intellectual leadership. Seek to blend the culture of the old world with the culture of the new world. Read and contemplate. Learn that there is much to be gained from observation outside the classrooms. Partake of the cultural resources that abound in Boston. Become familiar with great music, great theater, and great art. You have chosen an urban university. Avail yourself of its advantages. Yours will be the generation in which 80 percent of the population will reside in urban areas. As a college student in an urban institution, you will have an unexcelled opportunity to gain an understanding of the problems surrounding urban living. Do not hesitate to put your finger .on the pulse of urban society. Feel the Beat! This is the complete education for which you should strive and I urge you to accept the challenge! I came to Northeastern from California and getting to know a lot of people quickly by being in a dormitory eased the burden of being far from home and a close family. I was forced to become more extro- verted to get to know people and I spent a lot of time going places with a small mob that had gathered together. As a sophomore, though, I found that most of my freshman friends had flunked out, quit, transferred, got married or gone into apart- ments. Only a few of the once large circle remained. I began to spend my time outside the dorm. I stayed partially due to the convenient location. More important, for lack of an alternative. Not only where else could I live, but with whom? I have this habit of losing roommates and friends to marriage. Since I live in Boston year-round, I would have to find someone else that did too. or roommates in each division. They would have to be people 1 would be confident to be comfortable living with for a long period of time. I remained in the dorm. Roommates were a joy and a nightmare. I ' ve been a bridesmaid and the first one to know about three engage- ments. I ' ve also had to demand that my underwear not be borrowed, hint at the virtues of bathing, and been slandered to dorm councilors. The rules, which regulated us like infants freshman year, have become almost non-existant. Even ways of enforcing common courtesy - en- ding the constant noise - is disappearing. I found the food often fattening, sometimes unedible. I ' ve found hair in the ragout and tomato bugs in the salads. When I got to my upperclass years, though, the rule that co-op students could cook for themselves helped a lot - when someone didn ' t steal my dinner. One of the most serious problems in the dorm has been the drug question. It has stopped me from a number of possible apartment ven- tures. Most of my friends smoke marijuana. I do not. I have not wan- ted to risk getting busted due to a roommate, unlikely as that may be. People smoke in the dorm but don ' t get busted, and wouldn ' t en- danger you even if they did. Most dorm councilors fall into two categories - those that smoke themselves and so wouldn ' t bust anyone. and those who wouldn ' t recognize a joint if you handed it to them. Precautions against getting caught run from wedging a wet towel un- der a door to spraying the room with deodorant, hair spray or cologne. Consequently, a straight dorm dweller doesn ' t run the risk a grass-smoking apartment-mate brings. Freshman and senior years in the dorm the black-white problem wasn ' t very evident. But in between, things were kind of tense. During that time a lot of blacks became black-power oriented and it seemed they thought it was beneath them to associate with whites. They demanded (and received) a lot of special privileges that some of the whites resented. A lot of them became loud and rowdy. By senior year though, it seems the mixing has resumed. I think a lot of the blacks have put their militancy into perspective and no w aren ' t so afraid to be themselves. By senior year I ' ve come to wish I had an apartment. I ' ve become more intolerant of the freshman - they seem so childish. The dorm has become less my world and more just a place to go back to at night. Dorming has combined a few convenience for me during my life at Northeastern that living elsewhere would not. The proximity to school, relative cheapness, freedom from roaches and rodents. The dorm student also has an advantage of never being alone. Living with four hundred people, someone is always available to talk to or go somewhere with. But at the same time, there are always places to go to be alone. I ' ve learned a great deal about myself by being placed in an almost independent situation, surrounded by people whose lives and back- grounds, so different from my own, I would have never e xperienced unless I lived with them. I hope I can take the lessons I ' ve learned and use them in teaching little kids, since I ' m an elementary education major. Things about differing cultures, environments and attitudes they can benefit from. Just like Northeastern, the education from the dorm comes not from the buildings, but from the people in- side. SEPTEMBER 1966 1. South Vietnam elections won by Thieu and Ky. 2. Valerie Percy killed in Illinois home. 3. Father James Groppi begins civil disturbances in Milwaukee. 4. Blacks riot in Grenada, Miss. 5. US G.I. ' s burned by own planes carrying napalm. 6. S. African Prime Minister Verwoerd assassinated. 7. Chinese begin Mao ' s Cultural Revolution. 8. LBJ announces anti-inflation program. 9. Beatles hold concert in New York. 10. Raquel Welch begins her career in films. (37-22-35) 1 1. Adam Clayton Powell in trouble with Senate code. 12. Anti-smut campaign waged by moralists. 13. Yankees fall to last place; Koufax arm trouble. OCTOBER 1966 1 Clean mayoralit) campaign elects All Monv (Jake Hagopian). 2 Student Council has student-faculty gripe sessions. 3 SPECTRUM magazine in financial trouble. ' 4 Bill Curran becomes starting fullback. ■5 Prowlers plague NU coeds and dorms. 6 Freshmen girls get sex talks. 7 Blues Project and Shirelles perform at Homecoming. s Donna Willoughby elected Homecoming Queen. 1=9 Apple-dunking contest held in Quad. ■IFW ' NU (6-2) C. W. Post 32 19 Bridgeport 6 17 Colby 6 41 A. I.C. 16 14 Springfield 28 15 N. Hampshire 14 4 King ' s Point 8 14 Cortland St. 7 Bill Curran Barrels Way Into Starting Fullback Slo Add ft tittle emJffc e W UiP«wwkw  f«a« 8 im , «« mw — you haw now prod«c l North?« t«m  ar .aws ww f twi ( MB I To «e if Mii new uraduct reaOly work , $w t a tto  an its Ktsry « loose on a football fk id. You then may aee tt Kttin IW y««U in  t aw , «v M ?■ In 22 earrtc . ■tayw. 4 r l mtM w fc tt 1 1 i fcted t aHHwa .- (fed In both of Northeaatarirt victoria i for the csatwfwf fill the  £ w U this does not yet stive ywt «  « proof about Bill Curraa. maybe Hh put football record ifl Self y w. Haying foe Matt Quuwv Bt«b Bill agauwt Brid«rjwrt and Cb%. BiB . RfU . ! I wt-1 m a trained iu ur fc-r M y-trU in 3 ■— ' ™ ™ ' ■ ■ I each week Before the MOM I ed. ! took the «wfc oft to I extra running. l e w I years ahead. Coach Zftbttikl my . gained just under MOO yards ywrs of varsity competition. He was ao easy AU-ScnoUAie cootce and was also selected to the Hit School All-America team. Ik- had 65 College offers for his standout performance, but he wanted to stay around Boston. Last year on the freshmen squad Bill averaged 150 yards a game. Not convinced yet? Would you believe he ' s got bis coach saying tbat he ' s a com- plete football player? He ' s a blocker on defense as well as a ball carrier on offense. Coach Zabilski, in describing his running ability, said, It ' s pretty good. He gained over 100 yard against Bridgeport. We ' re very happy with him. AI out his second effort, Coach Zabilski said, He doesn ' t go back- wards when he ' s bit. He ' s got the right Northeastern attitude—lie al- ways goes forward. Toach ZabiUki Is exceptionally high on BUl ' s attitude. He ' s got a real high morale. He has the will to make sacrilices. He ' i a real CURRAN scored a touchdown w cad) game, and was a leader of the ground at- tack with gains of 104 and M yards, respectively, averaging t.7 yards a carry. Not bad for a : ptunnore. Hill kn«w« thai, m.wv i.xnorts haw weds 2 nwre panada and experience to be toother Cam He ' experienced as a more, but not cniito a CsaaaaM He ' s the est thing to ha though. He also added fti Bill has a different ttyk lm Cappy. Bill .says that his style J from Cappy ' s because 1 the ends mote than lie does. Ka ing that he is picked to re ' padono, BUI modestly haven ' t thought much a only hone to. Coach ZabQsti further on the different styles of bath ? ers. They both have si) own which are effective i If Bill ' s style is carry... on his back into the en ' did against Brtdgepoti ago. then his style us - (j iivineed vet ANOTHER PROWLZR! (NEWSpWo by Vm Alat Stetson Hall Invaded; Officials Evade Queries AEPi Dunks Best; Takes Apple Title i slippod and stumbled i ' ! « ' Ui I lu- sopping wei win-. Imi Alph.t !■ct ;j frtjil-suvwn course locantun- the Rrsl ' ■' V ' ' --! ' ' ' ■■- All Hail ' Sear P of «v KRISTEN KINOSBFRY if getting stuck with those jplete with white cane and ou ' re sick of the date with they hide in the back seat a decoy to set you? naht nd sei how many times have you said you prefer the pe and w ind up with a guy who has the build only with a filthier mind and hands likr Van Cttburn? Guys, when was the last time you wound up with ■' ' sporty girl. . . the Russian women ' s dogsled cham- jiHin who can press 175 pounds, and you have to keep totting her to watch where she ' s pressing? SURCEASE FROM SORROW WHI. for those of you who have wearied of this sort of thing, try Operation Match, the computerized dating It ' s what ' s happening, baby. You simply apply form, fill it out. send it in with a few beans ($), and BAM!, in a few weeks you get a letter with five names on it Hopefully, they are the names of members of the opposite sex, who have been matched by an IBM mach- ine to you and your personality. This is what the bro- churessay. What really happens is that the people who «-nd in the forms, lie on the questions (Who would ad- mii Ihav :n- ih ' Iv nv r a YpH havp virulent anno anit OCTOBER 1966 1. Ronald Reagan runs for California governorship. 2. Black Panther Party initiates platform. 3. Louise Day Hicks talks on anti-busing in Boston. 4. First draft card burnings in New York and Washington. 5. LBJ visits Australia, talks with allies. 6. Aberfan coal slide disaster kills 144 school children. 7. Jack Ruby has Oswald-shooting sentence reversed. 8. Koufax beats Phillies 6-3 for pennant only to lose to Balti- more in 4 games. Drabowsky stars as Dodgers do not score in 33 innings. 9. Larry Jaster of Cards shuts out Dodgers five times. 10. Hanratty-Seymour ignite Notre Dame football fans. 1 1. Frank Robinson wins Al Triple Crown. NOVEMBER 1966 worker at Waterbury Republican on (rial. th becomes place of ideological discussions. Masque pats on You Can ' t Take It With You. ROTC group tonus. student vote favors NSA Viet de-escalation stand, announced for pool. slock takes reigns of Student Council, m In Virgo coffeehouse begins. Stearns Study group publishes ' Campus Values. Hill Alii 1 ROTC Questioned At SDS Forum bj ion win Mm pus Uf« and the jur whi-h the Fa fc ' Of i. tieipatc FORT DEVENS, NOV. 28 — Saigon 30, said the signpost at the dirt crossroads. Ben Hoa 90. Can Tho, 100. Phu Bai, 360. The mission sounded easy Sweep and clear the Vietnam ese village of Hai Don, build a perimeter defense while e amining its extensive tunnel sys tern, then evacuate before the enemy could counter attack. To Take It Pom Viet Cong fR SKS 1 CORRESPONDENT By JAMES 6. McGARRY littie Roy Wheelie, A Council Appointee, Is Eating His Christmas Pie; Though NEVER Elected. His Goal He Selected And Now He ' s The Number One Guy! Drinking - Sex - Drugs Investigated By Stearns Study By PETER LANCE Dean of Chap Havice, Chairma: B. Stearns Study, the publication of Ca ues, the study ' s for students morality. The handbook vestigat.es in detail nking, cheating and use of da American college cam been designed to stinr cussion and aid student ing personal problems. The Stearns Study, endow Russell B. Stearns, a member «• the Northeastern rtriversity Bttu.nl of Trustees, was founded in 19U with the purpose of invettttgatbuc the ethical and social behavior at Thank God WE - RE Safe NOVEMBER 1966 1. LBJ visits Vietnam to congratulate Thieu, talk war moves. 2. Women protest food prices by store boycotts. 3. Notre Dame 10. Michigan St. 10 in showdown. 4. Twiggy invades fashion world with 31-22-32, 90 lbs. frame. 5. Koufax retires, gets job as NBC-TV sports announcer. 6. Art Arfons pushes the Green Monster to new land speed records. 7. GOP does well in off-year elections. DECEMBER 1966 I. I R hawkers appear al the Quad gates. ;. Dodge I ibrarj to be computerized. The Monkees arc favorite campus group. 4. Two students charge intimidation by Dean MacDonald. 5. King Husky wins Jog show award. 6. Law building planned For coming year. 7. Dana Chemistry Building to open in fall. i DECEMBER 1966 Bob Hope, Billy Graham, women tour Vietnam for USO. Adam Powell scares off reporters at Bimini with gun. Biafran War begins between Ibo tribe and central Nigeria Bad breath commercials invade television. Julie Andrews appears in epic Hollywood productions. Watts rebuilding with progress after 1965 riots. Movies of 1966 Endless Summer A Man and A Woman Grand Prix Blow Up A Man for All Seasons Loves of a Blonde Fahrenheit 45 1 Shop on Main Street Khartoum The Russians Are Coming Born Free Morgan Virginia Wolfe The Wrong Box Sand Pebbles Hawaii Georgy Girl Blue Max Cul de Sac Battle of Algiers Alfie A Thousand Clowns A Fine Madness A Patch of Blue Duel at Diablo Dr. Doolittle Le Bonheur Modesty Blaise Nevada Smith How to Steal a Million Dear John Assault on a Queen Wild Angels Night Games What Did You Do in the War? Kaleidoscope Appaloosa Fantastic Voyage Alvarez Kelly Gambit Murderers Row Funeral in Berlin Not With My Wife, You Don ' t A Funny Thing Happened on the Way Darling The Fortune Cookie Dr. Zhivago King Rat Books of 1966 The Valley of the Dolls The Adventurers The Source Secret of Santa Vittoria Human Sexual Response In Cold Blood Games People Play Churchill Unsafe at Any Speed Love ' s Body Papa Hemingway Incident at Exeter Cannibals and Christians Rush to Judgement With Kennedy Tai-Pan Passover Plot Flying Saucers The Boston Strangler Paper Lion How to Avoid Probate Is Paris Burning? Capable of Honor The Embezzler Those Who Love Up the Down Staircase A Thousand Days The Last Battle Kennedy Go Up for Glory Albums-Singers of 1966 Rubber Soul - Beatles Revolver - Beatles Yesterday Today - Beatles Today Yesterday - James Brown I Like It Like That - Dave Clark 5 Go Away from the World - M. Faithful Gold Vault of Hits - Four Seasons Confessin ' the Blues - BB King Kinkdom - Kinks December ' s Children - Rolling Stones Greatest Hits - Dave Clark 5 Greatest Hits - Mama ' s and Papa ' s Mann Made - Manfred Mann Women - Peter and Gordon Crying Time - Ray Charles Blues Project - Blues Project Best of ... - Chad and Jeremy Can ' t Help Myself - Four Tops How Sweet It Is ... - Marvin Gaye Daydream - Lovin ' Spoonful Dance Party - Martha the Vandellas Best of ... - Animals Turn, Turn, Turn - Byrds Hold On - Herman ' s Hermits Greatest Hits - Gerry the Pacemakers Just Like Us - Paul Revere the Raiders Green Berets - Barry Sadler In Concert - Phil Ochs Take a Little Walk - Tom Rush My Generation - Who Young Rascals - Young Rascals My Love - Petula Clark Unforgettable - Sam Cooke Sunshine Superman - Donovan Soul Sister - Aretha Franklin In Song - Judy Garland Pet Sounds - Beach Boys 1966 - Beau Brummels Sonny Side - Cher Sun Ain ' t Gonna Shine - Walker Bros. Up Tight - Little Stevie Wonder Gettin ' Ready - Temptations Color Me Barbara - B. Streisand You Don ' t Have To Say It - D. Springfield Li ' l Red Riding Hood - Sam the Sham Thunderball - Tom Jones Soul Inspiration - Righteous Bros. Aftermath - Rolling Stones Very Best of ... - Roy Orbison Red Rubber Ball - Cyrkle Association - Association Saturday ' s Child - Monkees Bus Stop - Hollies Parsley, Sage ... - Simon Garfunkel Sounds of Silence - Simon Garfunkel Deaths of 1966 Lenny Bruce 40, perceptive, obscene comic. Champagne Tony Lema 32, pro golfer. Ed Wynn 69, film and TV star. William Parker, racist LA police chief. Hendrick Verwoerd, SA prime minister killed. Hubert Eaton 85, creator of Forest Lawn; American funerals. Walt Disney 65, cartoon and children ' s empire builder. Valerie Percy 16, murdered in sleep. Hank Gowdy 76, highest World Series ave. at .545. Eric Fleming 41, of Rawhide drowns in Peru. Enola Gay Tibbets 72, atomic bomb plane named for her. Art Baker 68, of You Asked for It. Andre Breton 70, father of surrealism. Francis X. Bushman 83, film star. Charlie Dressen 67, baseball manager. Gertrude Berg 66, of television fame. Christian Herter 71, politician. Buster Keaton 70, film comedy star. William Frawley 72, TV star, I Love Lucy. Bernard Gimbel 81, financier. Hedda Hopper 75, gossip columnist. Mississippi John Hurt 74, jazz musician. Sabastian Kresge 99, store-chain owner. Adm. Chester Nimitz 80, Naval hero in WWII. Billy Rose 66, musician. Sophie Tucker 79, stage and song star. Abe Saperstein 63, originator of Harlem Globetrotters. Clifton Webb 72, film star. 144 children in Aberfan coal slide disaster. Thousands in Vietnam. Mid-East, Africa. JANUARY 1967 1. Basketball team drops close game to high-ranked B.C. 2. Nursing students sue NU for misrepresentation of degree. 3. IFC president quits, calls frats irrelevant. 4. Slacks, shorts prohibited on campus. 5. One-third of frosh vote in their elections. 6. Sixty-six faculty sign stop-bombing request ad. 7. Student Council plans dorm rule study. 8. Music at Noon becoming popular. 9. Interfaith Council debate on Vietnam. 10. Record high vote for Mr. Husky. 1 1 . Zoo Story and The Maids put on by Silver Masque. 12. Woody Herman plays at Winter Carnival. KZ ip H [jJL ' ■HP M°fl BASKETBALL 1966-67 Huskies Prepare For Season ■Iujky H p Heads Niw Emsl n Co Couch RigH«HP DvKEShiRE 9 5eovr FoA Huskies DlDIMTEB To The ««£ 1966-67 BASKETBALL S cto 4 TI£ LEADERS rtf w s THE TEAM N Mike UMlent j L Steve TromWy r II, fee Tarns To hti Modo t fibr, Lajoie NU 22-4) 94 Colby 66 102 Bates 73 98 N.H. 74 79 Clark 66 88 Tufts 74 86 Brown 66 106 Middlebury 70 88 Springfield 74 104 Norwich 59 84 C.W. Post 79 76 Trinity 62 91 B.U. 54 60 Springfield 49 102 W.P.I. 71 76 A.I.C. 77 69 M.l.T. 60 79 B.U. 57 80 Amherst 63 68 A.I.C. 70 70 Brandeis 63 89 Cen. Conn. 86 91 Coast Guard 68 47 B.C. 54 61 St. Michaels 70 65 U.R.I. 63 80 A.I.C. 53 JANUARY 1967 I. Bombing of Hanoi announced by LBJ. 2. More upheaval as Red Guard actions engulf China. 3. Packers rout Chiefs in first Super Bowl, 34-10. 4. Skiing craze starts for those who have the money. 5. The Lew Alcindor reign at UCLA begins. 6. Magazine specials on pollution fail to stir interest. 7. Lurleen Wallace to run for George ' s governorship. 8. Julie Nixon attends Deb Ball at 17. FEBRUARY 1961 ; Pickets protest manufacture of napalm and recruiting by Dow Co. : ROTC instructors quiz students on their profs ' views. 5, NEWS calls for withdrawal of ROTC. 4. Student Council asks for study on ROTC. 5. Silver Masque puts on Streetcar Named Desire. 6. inter Carnival features Donna Adams as queen. 7. Dionne Warwick and Chad Mitchell Trio entertain. 8. 1500 students sign pro-ROTC petition. s 9. Track season. p Siji Dean of Students Issues Intimidation Charge Denial B JON V1IJ. SOPKR Dean of Students Gilbert C. MacDonald has neeided not to answer h - student chaises of intimidation because the charges stem from eonvers tiofw whfcHh he regards as confidential. He did issue a blanket denial of intimidation being against his policy, however. In the nature of not regarded b ' him as a chance tie dkln ' These counseling situations and I am professionally bound not to dis- cuss them in public. It would be unfair to the students. i defend himself ' against n ' t think I have to defend The fairness I attempt to i well known among stu- dents, said MacDonald. Threats Denied because then- was a mix-op. MacDona ' d said With thai many (20001 diplomas we usually make ' about a half-dozen mistakes. It just happened to John — of all people K a student doesn ' t get tt, he comes to the director of financv or writes, requesting it be mailed to his post-graduation address. it there the other day. The intimidation charges were made by John DeWitt 66LA, now a Ph.D. candidate at Univ. ot Conn., and Michael Berman The dean categorically de- o ' ( TED. Both accused Dean Mac- nied that he had threatened any- ti Donald of trying to force them one. Use of threats or intimida- I into disassociating themselves lion is not the policy of this of- Dean MacDonald tmm the off-camnus magazine fice. he said. The dean said he Pickets Protest Napalm ,fn,L-, I SHOULD TH tiro i rite BE Pfn?T0Fr]| a SDS MEMBERS stage sit-in during Dow Chemical Co. recruitii ing the company ' s manufacture of napalm, later agreeing to I campus last Thursday, ya w p picketing to tkc a p f rf cw w Mi (NEWSphoto by Km So . Northeastern NEWS, February 3. IW7 P Mf H m EDITORIAL ROTC Training Recent student activities here and earlier at ton University have brought up a question that ma have been paid serious attention otherwise: is L training on campus compatible with the educational process of an. academically concerned university? Yesterday the BU faculty voted on abolishing crctfit for military courses as a result of a proposal sup- ported heavily by students and faculty. A similiar action has been suggested by the Northeastern Students for a Democratic Society. While the NEWS does not agree with all of the assumptions the SDS brings to the arguement we feel that not only should academic credit be elimin- ated for these military courses but that the entire Reserve Officers Training Corps program should be withdrawn from Northeastern. Withdrawal of the course credit from the ROTT brigade, the largest voluntary corps in the count ry, at nearly 3000, could be justified simply on grounds of the gut characteristics of the basic courses. Almost auto- matic high grades in courses that rank educationally with basket-weaving are unfairly inflating the average of legitimate courses, an advantage female students, for example, cannot option. Present Pro-ROTC Petition By JOfc KH1IAKI); IP ROTO cw sented i i Knowies, r esidoi ■the v ■- . . . ... . .... .... s ■:.- ' ■' ■' %HwrtBng I DrWngMto. Ihrtv ma m formal motion ..r ... dormuenl madr bj jsh eotttwn Qfpuboitka. Several -if hi !.-i tow h th.T-. in the VnNwrJ ing to •.tuvV-nu ami (jath. riitc ■■■■■■■■■■■■.. ■■■r m) rii Aw - • Mb pre- ■iitn m n pOOs ) ■( Or J J- « bodv ■.•■■.■■H- bHk , ■■r Ti as t,. :.. .. ' ■• ' ■■■' ■■-■i sa« -h..! ROD ,h.r. • ■• ■l had not allowed en . ■j Corps prop ■5a I ,-v . awre campus- passed 15GG ■1 ■-fte turthM- befleve ii cu I aba n . ' Toprwml ii Aortas s ' NU (5-0) 74 Bates 39 81 Springfield 68 62 St. John 42 82 Mass. 53- 74 U.R.I. 39 URI 45 20 Harvard 79 90 Bates 59 84 N.H. 29 102 B.U. 47 89 U. Mass. 24 84 H.C. 29 82 Maine 31 71 B.C. 42 68 B.U. 45 FEBRUARY 1967 1. Astronauts Grissorn, White and Chafee die in capsule fire. 2. Edward Brooke in spotlight as only black senator. 3. China-Russia begin border, ideological tiff. 4. China Red Guardsmen storm Moscow embassy in Peking. 5. Anti-Chinese demonstrations in Moscow widen distaste. MARCH 1967 dents get coop questionnaire. rteen-story library plan announced for second time. den ' s rules lightened in face of more coeds, kstore monopoly stopped; booklists given out. library seen lacking, but a new one coming. neering students ask for more L.A. electives. team beats B.C. for third time in five games. S. Alexander KCerensky speaks at NU. New 14-Story Library To be Built in 1970 By MICHAEL .1. DOKFSMAN lh  tcm s proposed 14-story library and learning resources center will at an initial cost of no more than $6 NU (12-14) 5 Brown 4 6 A. I.C. 1 2 Yale 9 5 Colby 3 3 N.H. 4 6 Dartmouth 2 1 Cornell 9 2 Princeton 3 B.C. 6 6 PC. 1 2 Cornell 4 6 Bowdoin 1 B.U. 6 6 B.C. 5 4 Harvard 5 3 Norwich 4 3 Merrimack 4 1 Middlebury 3 4 B.C. 2 B.U. 4 5 Colgate 2 2 Army 4 5 R.P.I. 2 B.U. 2 5 Harvard 4 3 B.C. 1 MARCH 1967 1. Debate rages in Senate over bombing of N. Vietnam. 2. Albert DeSalvo. the Boston Strangler. escapes from Bridgewater institution but is recaptured. 3. Jim Garrison in New Orleans stirs nation with Clay Shaw-JFK assassination plot case. 4. Kansas farmers dump fresh milk into gutters in price protest. 5. Cameramen catch VC dead piled in heaps at US post. 6. Questions of draft reform begin as more cards burn. 7. Tanker Torrey Canyon breaks up off England spilling 119.000 tons of oil into Channel. The first great oil slick. APRIL 1967 6 I. LA. nixes credit for ROTC. 2. Nurses get compromise in law suit. 5 3. Turtle races run in Quad. 4. Sing-Out group to come for songfest. 5. Despite conflict. Student Council stays in NSA. b. NUers attend peace rally in New York. 7. Curfews for women liberalized by university. s 8. Quad rally for peace meets extensive heckling. 9. Cafe cleanup begins on order of study. MO. Weitzman drafted by Boston Celtics. 1 1 . Division A NEWS disagrees with Division B over ROTC. ! 12. Arlett beetns crew boom at Northeastern. Dream Come True -Rick 1967 CREW NorHit oittrn Unlvcrttty, lotto . M««. Apt 7,m f-d i LA Nixes Credit For ROTC By MICHAEL 4. DORFSMAN Krcshmcn entering the College of Liberal Arts in the fall of 1967 will not re- m«dil for auYann-d courws in the Reserve Ofik-es Training Corps. Nurses Gain Compromise R T aeirt t PrnnMim ■? -, ' .- , ' W •: ' - ' • ■£f 1 K : My name is Fred and I ' m in the class of 71. I ' m a student in engineering and I am also in ROTC. Five years is a very long time to go to school and in the past five years many things have happened; Kent State, Jackson State, the Cambodian Excursion, the deaths of Dr. Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy. Due to some of these events, my personal ideas have changed. In spite of some of them, my ideas have remained the same. Northeastern has improved a great deal I think, in the time I ' ve known it. Freshman year, right on through, I was forced to carry six or seven different courses, to work my butt off just to get by. Some academic changes - an expanded computer center, tutoring and the four-by-four course set-up - have now been put in that would have saved a lot of misery on my part and allowed me a better education. Some of the courses I had to take were a waste of time and had nothing to do with my major and it was not until senior year that I got really into it. When I first came to Northeastern, I really didn ' t know what ROTC was like. I came from a very quiet, uninvolved high school where the loudest noise was made on Saturday during the football game. I joined ROTC because almost everybody did, and if you didn ' t like it you could always get out of it after two years. My attitude toward ROTC changed from one of extreme agreement to tacit respect. I have come to think of the Vietnam war as a mistake, a costly mistake that has drained dollars and sons from the United States. I think that the two main problems with the war are that the military cannot fight (and end) it the way they want, and the American soldier is incapable of fighting an irregular conflict. I hope there will be no Americans left in Vietnam after 1973. However, my disagreeing with some of the army ' s policies is not different from the many officers in the service now who feel the same way. But I do believe that ROTC has a definite place on the college cam- pus - so that both sides of the picture may be presented; not only the radical left but also the so-called fascist right. If ROTC is kicked off the campus the student caught in the middle has only one way to turn and is offered no choice. Also, the trained officer with a college background will prove very important with the prospect of an all volunteer army, for it is this kind of officer that may question any or- der that seems to him unreasonable. As I have changed in my political views, so has the army changed its views of the ROTC student. I ' ve gone from being a member of a vast majority to a small minority of students on campus, and the army has gone from being more rigid to more understanding toward me and my group, understanding the pressures on me and the others that has come from the growing number of people who have become anti- war and anti-draft. They, and those who want the campus free from government influence, have combined to make staying in ROTC very difficult for me and the others. At this stage of the game I am committed to the army and I really have no regrets about it. If I had it to do all over again I would do the same thing and join ROTC. Activities in it and in the NU Band have produced some of the highlights of my college life. As things turned out, I made a fairly good choice since in the lottery system for the draft my birthday was the 11th number drawn. All in all the past five years have been very interesting, very dif- ficult and very long. I ' ve stated a number of ideas - about my education and opinion on the military in it - that may or may not be agreed with. However, it shouldn ' t cause anybody any worry. To the class of ' 71 seniors - good luck in whatever you do. 3d APRIL 1967 I. Sierra Leone in Africa gets fifth government in week. 2. Expo ' 67 opens in Montreal. 3. Spring Mobilization to End the War begins. 4. Tornadoes hit Midwest. 44 funnels in one day. 5. Svetlana arrives in New York to write, enjoy US. 6. Canadians win Stanley Cup, beating Detroit 3-2 OT. 7. Celtics lose to Philly, ending their domination of game. 8. Wilt, 76er ' s beat Rick Barry ' s Warriors in 6 games. 76er ' s at- tempt 61 free throws in finale. MAY 1967 Co-op questionnaire results given; coordinators marked. All turtles fail to place in intercollegiate competition. Afro-Americans ask school for black history course. Bill Baird speaks to NU women in auditorium. First Sadie Hawkins Day festivities. Casino Royale publicity stunt turns to melee at 4 a.i PGP turtle places 5th in Washington trot-off. SDS sit-in to protest Navy recruiters on campus. Jack Green asks censure vote on Debbie Lasky in Student Council. Silver Masque puts on How to Succeed an Cage. Baseball season. Frosh sell books back to stores at a loss. 3 .OS 1 1 3 COORDINATOR QPA Profauor Paul M. Pratt 3.26 Mill Elizabeth A. Locke 3.26 Mr. Peter H. Akin 3.16 Profeuor Nancy C. CaruM 3.03 Miu Rotalind Rna 3.00 Profauor Phillip W. Dumphy 2.96 Profeuor Roderick W. Somman 2.91 Profauor Ralph C. Portar 2.85 Miu Jana S. Shacter 2.75 Profeuor Charlai F. Raid 2.72 Profauor George K. Howe 2.72 Profeuor Homer C. Littlefiold 2.71 Profauor Harold P. Wattt 2.60 Miu Corrina Cianci 2.59 Mr. John A. Orphanot 2-57 Profeuor Joiaph E. Barbeau 2.52 Profatior Ernest V. Berauo 2.49 Mr. William Dutciak 2. Profeuor Robert W. Millar 2-3 .....  • . . i .„.,. 1 .....«... ..I. . , „„.„ Jt4 _. 4ii:i . ,, Afro- Assoc. Wants Black Hist. Course By PETER LANCE The Northeastern Afro-American Association re- cently petitioned the administration for the addition of a fully accredited course in Black History, to the cur- riculum of the History Department. The Association, which operates under the auspices o£ S.N.CC called for the further under- standing of the Black Man through education in identical letters sent May 4, to Pres. Asa Knowles, Norman Rosenblatt, as- sistant dean of Liberal Arts and Prof. Raymond Robinson, chair- man of the History Apartment. Submitted by Delano Farrar and Frederick Johnson, chairman of the Association, the letters pe- titioned the administration to fol- low its avowed purpose of dis- covering and meeting community needs, by pioneering new areas of educational service. Farrar and Johnson did not give specific details as to course content, but they observed that courses in Black History would help to eliminate contusion, mis- understanding and misconceptions which not only rack, but make a mockery of the democratic we feel that the dispersion of thr Basra his heritage, culture, i lions to both eastern i civilization, would be changing his modern day The University of „ setts, Brandeis. and Harvard have already successfully instituted such courses, Farrar said. W feel that Black History course would not only give the Negro at Northeastern an in-depth famili- arity of his heritage, they would foster understanding among whites as well. Prof. Robinson said that hte department had been co n ak iw- ing the addition of a course on the American Negro fee quite some time. Our major problem is adopt- ing such a course, result rron the great deficiency of educators in this field. Robuanr. said mm n. «m Theater Never Expected Even Full-house at 4 a.m. TV emmi of !%, m ytwth that rffuaUott. The mm would « rraptrd f  dangwoai mob he diminished by 30 while early la Saturday morning in other mm waited outside. downtown Boston at a preview showing of Casino Royale had thought the majority never been expected by the pro- lho s? were there were wi tnoters. behaved and came with good Sack Theatres General Mara- t ™ tion - ger Alan Friedberg told the u „ .jj. tUmt . . . _ NEWS, No one who was in- He  t he took o«a volvcd with the promotion-unless at ,hose who arged the cro Ik- enlisted the aid of a clairvoy- of mostly college students w ant— could have anticipated the being immature and hoodlums, ' .-rowd that materialized. I talked with some of the eai In fact, because of the early arrivals, Friedberg said, and morning hour, we seriously con- found them to be extremely w lemplated no one being there. We behaved and there only for even held a meeting with the in- good time. They weren ' t looldi tent of changing the liour to mid- for trouble at all. night or 6 a.m. He said that in any crowd The decision to show Casino that size there are bound to be Royale early came when the po- few that will ruin things, but thi lice department insisted on it to were the exception, avoid injuries, Friedberg said. The promotion, sponsored joir Friedberg went on to say, Ad- ly by radio station WRKO, Cblur iilional showings were content- bia Pictures and Sack Theatre plated but it was decided that was termed an unfortunate ire Jiev would only aggravate the dent by Friedberg. Council Bans Protesters [ Ml HMO | •Sa ■1 - H i V l •  H rTjMh ] lV ' : B DEBBY BEATS CENSURE RAP Marchers Move On Navy Booth! Rep. Morse Named Graduation Speaker BASEBALL 1967 NU (7-10) Tufts 2 7 U.R.I. 8 3 N.H. 5 8 B.U. 5 W.P.I. 7 6 B.C. 3 3 Tufts 4 7 H.C. 15 7 Colby 6 I 1 Bates 2 4 Clark 1 7 Brandeis 2 4 B.C. 7 B.U. 8 2 Harvard 12 5 Springf. 7 II M.I.T. 2 BOOKS THINGS NEWSUSED BOOKS BOUGHT a SOLD MAY 1967 1. Westmoreland goes before Congress to explain Viet losses. 2. Clay becomes Ali. joins Muslims, refuses induction. 3. Greek coup of Papadopoulos government. 4. LBJ extends the Selective Service Act for 4 years. 5. Mantle ' s 500th home-run. 6. Support USA demonstration in Washington. 7. Haight-Asbury hippies get on television. 8. Bill Bradley signs with lowly Knicks. 9. Student unrest grabs headlines from Vietnam. 10. George Wallace speaks at Dartmouth about third party 11. Cass Elliott has child; Elvis Presley gets married. 12. Arab-Israeli battle brewing in Middle East. 13. Orioles Stu Miller and Steve Barber hurl no-hitter and lose 2-1 to Detroit (7 BB, 2 HBs, 2 E). 14. Snowfall recorded in Dublin, N.H. on May 26. NU ' s Barre Roxbury, Northeastern ' s scarred neighbor, has undergone a seri- ous decline in recent years. But, the school is not expanding in that direction. A look a:i another large, urban university may give some insight into the potential of Roxbury for Northeastern. Girls discover handbook allows the wearing of slacks. 2. Student Course and Teacher Evaluation (SCATE) group begun. 3. Student Council proposes a Distinguished Speaker Series. 4. NU YAF to attend Birch Society meeting. . DISCARDED CAR MUFFLER I B DAVIT) N. STERN Special Assignments Reporte Roxbury is the oldest section of Boston. The successive migrations of humanity through this section — the white Anglo-Saxon Prote- stants, the Jewish and the Ne- groes — have left an indelible mark on the area. LITTLE REMAINS Instead of the once incredible beauty of the Roxbury ' residen- tial area, all that is there is a slum — an eye-sore. And barren earth where rat-infested houses once stood. But she still hangs on, waiting for that day when she will be revitalized, beautiful again. Northeastern University mov- ed into the Roxbury area inno- centlv enough one day in 1898, while the section was still Bos- ton ' s Bedroom. ' ' Then, the school became a neighbor, moving into the Back Bay. The University ' s holdings grew through the years until today it is what has been called the sleeping giant. But is it? Many critics of the University building programs — especially in the past two years when a great hurry of construction activity has overtaken the school — have said that expansion is much too fast. Our bodies are growing fas- ter than our minds. they add. And then they cite the intellec- tual atmosphere of such univer- sities as Harvard and the Uni- versity of California at Berke- ley. Not much mention has been made of Temple Uhhmity in Philadelphia. The situation at Temple Uni- versity is analogous Northeastern. It is ;t commubHT university in the heart of a blighted section in Philadelphia. But. Temple is taking another way out in its expansion pro- gram, which began 11 ye«r ago. That university is buytnf en- tire areas of slums, tearing them down and then rebuilding There are now four camtuxs in the center of Ptulad a fifth only a few minutes aw a in the Norih Philadelphia «•■■The total area which Temple [Adversity preaentty cootraai at more than 38CJ acres— In the tug city. What they are constructing i« also similar to what Northeast, em is building — a science eanv plex, a gymnasium with two sw-tmming pools, and many oth- er buildings. 18 NEW BITLDINGS Eighteen buildings haw been constructed at Temple unce lu expansion program began in 19S6. More are presently on the drawing board. Another analogous situation there U the commuter probsrm Temple now ha only three dor- mitories. Many out-of-state stu- dents are being aecejued three provi lona]| they mud he cum- muter students. This means they must nasi JUNE 1967 1. Arab-Israeli six-day war stirs world comment. 2. Biafran War becomes of interest to world. 3. Roxbury riots on Blue Hill Ave. in Boston. 4. Clay-Ali gets 5 year prison sentence and $10,000 fine. 5. War protests marches draw thousands in Los Angeles. 6. China ' s first hydrogen bomb exploded. 7. Rioting begins around country, major cities hit in east, mid- 8. Glassboro Peace Talks with LBJ and Kosygin. 9. John Wayne making new war movies for general audiences. 10. Thomas Dodd campaign fund case stirs Senate, Connec- ticut. 11. Tom and Dick Smothers gaining attention for TV show. 12. 22-car crash in Tewksbury, Mass. fog. AUGUST 1967 Finding out what tuition will be as a sophomore. Irving to find an apartment for the coming year. JULY 1967 rst coop assignments please and dissapoint. 2. Long summer wondering about adventures of sophomores. JULY 1967 1. Westmoreland ' s decision for more men in Vietnam. 2. Arab oil stops going to western owned companies. 3. Sixty-nine killed in Central Highlands lighting in Vietnam. 4. DMZ fighting worst since 1965. 5. Melina Mercouri stripped of all Greek citizenship. 6. Quick-kill classes being held at Ft. Benning, Ga. 7. Biafran War featuring Ojukwu vs. Gowan. 8. Jayne Mansfield (40-18-36) killed in New Orleans crash. 9. Shirley Temple Black goes to Congress. 10. Tom Seaver of Mets makes All-Star start. 11. Three people 124 years old found in South. AUGUST 1967 1. Detroit riot includes Algiers Motel incident. 2. The Kerner Commission on rioting is composed. 3. Turkish earthquakes kill hundreds of poor villagers. 4. Two girls killed by bearsat national parks. 5. Alaskan floods cause $250 million damage. 6. Dating Game and Newlywed Game begin TV stints. 7. Doctors criticize LSD-taking mothers. crTm apartments, 266-3265 SOPHOMORE SEPTEMBER 1967 1. Upperclass apartments made coed accidentally, ;. Sophomores invade the campus and fraternities. Oliver Twiggj (Bob Goldman) beats Peter Stetson for Mayor. 4. First signs of Black Power on campus. 5. ROTC men complain of courses taught in activity periods. 6. Distinguished Speaker Series launched with Harrison Salisbury. 7. WNEU planning more shows dealing with issues. To Live The Impossible JLiic Campus Co-ed Apartments By NEDDA YOUNG The residents at 122 St. Stephens St have one thing in common — they all enjoy living there. The reason is very simple — the apartment building is co-ed. Girls occupy the first and second floors, boys the third and fourth. This phenomena happened pure- ly by accident. In September. 26 transfer girts were inadvertently left with dorm rooms. 90 with the permission of the administra- tion, they became a Northeastern first. REAL FEMALES For some of the boys, however, the situation is an innovation. As Dean Hasseman 68LA explains, A lot of boys don ' t have sisters, and seeing these girls walk around sloppy, just as they would around their house, makes them rules. The girls have the same curfews as in the Dorms. Since they are all upperciassmen, they are on the honor system. The boys and girls, however, are restricted to their own floors, and there is no inter-room visiting. RESIDENT VIEWS Meanwhile, representatives from the dorm have been meeting to discuss the situation. Dominic Moo n I 68 LA, spokesman for the dorm, gave their positions. First of all, he said, the entire dorm and the administrn- er rooms until 12 p.m. weekdays and until 2 a.m. weekends. But perhaps most important if the issue of responsibility. Tin girls were toid by tlte administra Hon that they were expected ti act in a responsible and matun manner. But with the rules an regulations now in effect the ad ministration is being hypocritical Meo complained. The girts insteai are told what to do. The girls are enjoying the lux ury of the apartments. We lov the apartments, Marilyn saic K VB T Jw- Ifijf v r 5E ik v m ■- ! % 7 ■■B 1 ■V 1 1 1 I came to Northeastern with expectations, anxieties and prejudices - so did my peers. That strange intangible bond initiated an infinite series of experiences that have taken me where I ' ve been and will lead me where I ' m going. People, human beings, that ' s why I chose Northeastern. I wanted di- versification and I wanted the challenge of making myself more than a number. I succeeded by getting active. I got to know the right people - I was a name not a number - and it made me nauseous. I was elected Homecoming Queen. Lucky me! But what about my fellow student who hates me now because she needed that recognition but didn ' t get it? I was very disappointed in my search for maturity and individual- ity. I was in for a rude awakening. The people I built friendships with weren ' t really committed to anything, including the people they associated with. They were unwilling to give a part of themselves for fear they would receive nothing in return. I was very impressed with the Greek way of life - the fraternities and sororities - but the people I associated with had no interest. Then, I got tired of listening to the unsupported theories that sororities were only social crutches. I was a junior when I pledged Alpha Omicron Pi and I was a fool for waiting so long. The Greek system isn ' t a social crutch. After pledging, I didn ' t automatically become popular once I became a full- fledged sister, but I became free to develop as a person and an in- dividual. Homecoming Queen is a title which automatically includes the per- tinent subject of school spirit. My experience as queen showed me that school spirit at Northeastern is dying and now I ' ve found that, sadly, it ' s taking the Greek system with it. I don ' t think that students want organizations for social reasons anymore. Everything and everyone else has taken priority. But I think that the students are missing something. I ' m apolitical. I was five years ago and I am now. My immediate needs as a person living with other people still have priority over my position in this so-called democratic society. Four years of living in and working for a dormitory proved to me how ludicrous it is to ex- pect to accomplish anything positive for a large group of people in a limited amount of time to the satisfaction of the majority. I can ' t imagine not being able to look back at the relaxing social life of my college years. To me they represent a time that will never exist again. Northeastern has really been an experience. Through it and in spite of it, I ' ve learned to question, to listen, to understand, to be critical, to be warm - to be me. SEPTEMBER 1967 1. Dcf. Sec. McNamara says bombing of N. Vietnam success- ful. 2. Sgt. Pepper album put out by Beatles. 3. Che Guevara captured by Bolivian army. s 4. ABM debate begins in Senate. 5. National Guard being trained for city riots. 6. Bob Cousy caught in gambling charges. 7. ' Four teams tied for first place in AL baseball. 8. Rockettes picket for higher wages in NYC. 9. Draft counseling becomes new job. 10. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi becomes star of TV. 11. Student power for curriculum change growing. 12. Runaway kids drawing attention of nation. 13. 1.800 forest fires in dry Pacific northwest. 14. More and more bombing runs scheduled. s 15. The Graduate lures college movie crowd. RK MY YV0RC5, PRO ™. YOUR OWN OCTOBER 1967 Boh Connors c aptures Husky QB slot. Uice MacDona Id is Homecoming Queen. Jaj and the Te ehniques signed for Homecoming. 4. Edward Brooke speaks to students at Burlington. 5 Demonstration Quad. rules tightened after anti-ROTC rally in •6. ROTC men pla j war games during training. 7. i AF plans pro -war rally. First big Wash, ngton anti-war rally includes NU students. Black Berets Stage Mock Assault On Cape By ANDY DABIUS Operation: Beach Green. The 80 members dressed in military part), complete with blark berets, life jackets, field packs. M-l rifles and paddles climbed down from the USS Reedbird. a Navy- minesweeper, on Jacobs ladders into the 15-man rubber rafts, a mile and a half off the enemy beachhead. Silent- ly, because there might be observers on the beach Green. Once all the rafts were ready, the order to give way was given and the journey toward the unknown beach began. The first raft to hit the beach was unload- ed quickly. A perimeter defense was set up to secure the beach for the other rafts which soon came sloshing through the frigid ocean waters. Rapid arm movements and Spotter Report whispered commands began the motion of assembling the teams ' ° them - ne gasped to the in the brisk morning air Less cam leadeT Theres a 20 than an hour after leaving the lhem at ttx fom of the learns were neadv I 1 6 awd a burned out bon- ship. the learns were ready where are we going, one nervous youth asked of a battle- hardened combatant Don ' t know, he replied. r body does. Only thing I know The leader squinted into the early-morning sun. thought for a minute then surveyed the terrain. uooy ooes. may thing 1 know is We ' ll have to set up a machine that there ' s supposed to be some gun m bottom of the ridge missile sites inland that w hum OUt of their Sieht and send nws.ul ■have ■Q ' tn™ sghl and send assault teams around their perimeter and force them out into the open The trek began. For two hours £f S JZ? they moved through the w ods. , ££■. f JVJ ,J Z, S averting well-travelled trails J?.l a  undertroh. Must have eaZTtLJFtx U T ' ? ■  « to the veteran and said plaintive- _ ,_ ) „,,,_!_) -ZrL wu ;,u) ' ' round sounded and two members „ . . , , „ ° ' cam A broke from the under- .Sudd,-nly ihe silence was broken brush yelling with M-l ' s blazing by the burst of a machinegun vol- The startled aggressors fled in ley Quickly everyone dived in the panic, some right into the blazing brush at Ihe side of :he narrow crossfire of the machine guns trail and held their breath Were most with their rifles in the air hey discovered ' firing as they ran. missile sites inland that to take. Zero Hoar BEACH LANDING-A NortWtern ' Counter Su.rritla team land, on beach on Cape Cod near Otn AFB as Mrf «r a training 8 „ rc i„. Their minion is to hZZZJ? eMmV m ' ,le ' • a,W « m nned b r ' inomw CSS foam from Normeertern. (NE rVSphoto by Irving Stower.) attack on mock SAM missile ftes. cold, and in the Division A c4e Training in on-mr-cii wa. The landin. r force exposed of wet. nobody re rette me ,££ J V $£££,£, p.m. Friday night and arrived  « very Suable, some- offshore nearly 6vc hour, later i £} «« m ■ « IT ' Aggressor, from Division B and T m ™ SSS Z. 1 ' P Va,m ° n U1 some new members from Kvi n other JS S?S£ hT   « irir« the antph . A left Boston at 8 pm. Friday realty showed iL . J ? •  •-■ Part of the operatmn M rughl and prepared the missile tary skill, One of the n ftrtal -«- have been reor.1,-1 Whit, n- agreed that , was S, l tm? one showed me the same thine: Tk Wmn • • last year. he ended -n_ Suns d H: ' £ ' T We new rt on one leg on the spmy rail bc rafts and it hurt  . ma members. $M8 ' AM Cool Connors Captures Quarterbacking Chores By DAI.K KING FOOTBALL 1967 NU (7-1) 37 C.W. Post 23 Bridgeport 41 Colby 35 A.I.C. 19 Springfield 13 N. Hampshire 24 Maine 22 Cortland St. OCTOBER 1967 1. Red Sox win pennant as Tigers drop second game of doubleheader. Sox lose Series to Cardinals and Gibson in seventh game. 7-2. 2. Pentagon and Lincoln Memorial anti-war protests. 3. Hurricane Beulah ravages southwest coast. 4. Bodies of prisoners found in Mississippi burial ground. 5. Starvation in India as crops fail. 6. Speed Kills campaign on by health officials. 7. Che Guevara executed by Bolivian government. 8. Rape and murder hurting drug-culture living. 9. Abortion reform surfaces in House debates. 10. Mariner flight to Venus for first pictures. 11. Con Thien bombing assault by VC. 12. Yaz wins triple crown of AL. NOVEMBER 1967 I uther King planned Winter Carni in blasts apathetic Student Council, S meet to discuss Vietnam views. ' red h Student Union. ,il Relations Club gets good speakers. for men in Nam. var poll of students. for United Fund. tlj church keys for King Husky. 83 of students non-druggies. Masque performs Street Scene. ctuan at colleges for draft resisters. Rights leader King next in top speaker series Martin Luther King will be the second speaker in the university ' s Distinguished Speaker Series Jan- uary 11. King ' s appearance will kick off the 1968 Winter Carnival week. Tickets for the speech in Alumni Auditorium will be priced at 5ft- for members of the Northeastern community and $1.00 for all others according to Leroy C. Wheetork 68Ed, chairman of the Dis- tinguished Speaker Series Com- mittee. Dr. King founded the Southern -A m i OPK-SDS meet in peace By MARTIN BEISER and IX RETTA ERRICO With a ie v toward promoting increased intellectual activity at Northeai . imma Phi Kapi a invited members of the Students for a Democratic Socie liscuss the concept of fraternalism last Sunday evening at the GPK fr meeting came .is a result ative Lapoint defended Mayoralty Greek selectivity, and the po ,■the brothers deemed un- m example of the value of of ' ra,r ™I L° t thp . , ... , _, „ One intiTestinK aspect of the ■' ' .. , 11 T ' i diversion. He pointed out that bate was many of the differen, diversions were characteristic of between the organizations ste We (■It that the fraternities , i_i„i , , , ___ t ' th groups, citing alcohol. re it fault for not responding B ■.. criticisms. said Tom and drugs as m il ' rnt,-, 69I.A. a GPK brother, important Issues. ading the part if SDS. mod from the erroneous imaj projected by each group. After the formal debate, it v apparent that members of b as an onsanfced Continumg. he stated many in- T Tm , incl discussion consisting of five dividual benefits, such as team- )aycd enthusjasm for a c ntatives from each group. wor k, organization, and involve- t j nuanon on an expanded basis. h.- discussion centered on the men t are derived from activities a GPK spokesman indicated tl : s ,-ind eons of fraternities on a f Bus nature. other political and religious grot _. . - . - . .  nru. ...,-„. M i imriteH in narrieioate Rail} to be held supporting War A rally to support American policy in Vietnam will be held at Boston Common, Sunday, Nov. 19, at 2 p.m. The rally, sponsored by the Student Committee to Enlist Na- tional Effort, is designed, accord- ing to the organization, to counter- act those demonstrations in re- cent months against the war. SCENE hopes, by a show of strength and spirit, to send the word to our servicemen that will give them the moral boost they ■o richly deserve. NOVEMBER 1967 Sanctuaries for draft resisters at BU, MIT. US population figures hits 200,000,000. Black candidates win big-city elections. Kevin White defeats Louise Day Hicks for Mayor. Selective Service records destroyed by activists. Napalm and Down Chemical take abuse from protestors. X-15 test craft crashes and kills pilot Michael Adams. Leo Held kills six in shooting spree in Lock Haven, Conn. Battles of Dak To and Loc Nihn in Vietnam. Dodge girl becomes famous through commercials. Joe Dimaggio hired by Charles Finley for the A ' s. Boston snowstorm snarls traffic. A new girl for girl-watchers to watch... i Dodg F«v r Girt. A new car for car- lovers to love . . . Its name Is Charger, and it ' s the bes •looking Dodge ev Complete with disappearing headlights an 1 sports-cjr styling features a European-type spoiler n the rear deck. Bu looks aren ' t everything, we made tt euci jng to drive, with a . bucket seats and an airplane-type inslr umenl panel. Even p the doors for your shades and or rally n aps. With all this in we ' ve reduced Charger ' s list price by nore than $100. May please everybody, but we sure try, See you r Dodge Dealer rlgh DECEMBER 1967 vies dedicates eternal Christm places King as DSS speaker; good turnout. ns HORN. SDS newsletter; charges fly. resigns as SC Pres. because of HORN banning. 1 needs SI million to re-open. tal college planned; problems with bookstore Hockev season. Green Re-Resigns; Horn Is Banned y HOCKEY 1967-68 NU (6-17-1) 5 Brown 5 1 Harvard 9 Princeton 6 1 Yale 2 4 Princeton 5 3 Dartmouth 2 3 St. Francis 5 4 B.U. 5 6 Merrimack 5 1 PC. 2 5 Merrimack 7 1 B.C. 6 3 N.H. 4 7 Dartmouth 4 3 Army 2 7 A.I.C. 8 3 Colgate 4 4 B.U. 7 4 B.C. 6 5 Bowdoin 3 2 B.U. 6 R.P.I. 4 4 Colgate 5 5 Colby 6 Better Dead than SDS A U.S. Congressman feels the Federal Government should deny funds to any college or university which permits Students for a Democratic Society to have an organization on its campus. SDS has been infiltrated by the Communists, and therefore I think all colleges throughout the United States should ban SDS from their campuses, said Republican Joe Pool, (D-Texas). Pool, a member of the House Committee on Un-American Activ- ities, said he is currently investi- DECEMBER 1967 1. Eugene McCarthy announces his candidacy. 2. George Wallace announces his candidacy. 3. First heart transplant by Dr. Barnard in S. Africa. 4. Military might hits 525,000 men in Vietnam. 5. The Mini-skirt and peek-a-boo fashions on market. 6. SST budget hearings, budget not cut. 7. Student rioting in Europe. 8. VC slaughter at Dak Son. 9. Chinese army harvests crops during turmoil. 10. Baseball expansion announced. 1 1. Silver Bridge collapses. 100 die; 2,235 ft. structure falls into Ohio River. 12. David and Julie get engaged. 13. Two young boys killed by German shepherds in Virginia. 14. Don Rickles, Mr. Warmth. becomes TV celebrity. Movies of 1967 A Fistfull of Dollars For a Few Dollars More The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Bonnie and Clyde Ulysses The Dirty Dozen You Only Live Twice To Sir with Love In the Heat of the Night Up the Down Staircase Closely Watched Trains Finnigans Wake Cool Hand Luke The Graduate In Cold Blood Guess Who ' s Coming to Dinner? Bedazzled Valley of the Dolls Hombre How I Won the War Comedians Penthouse The Incident Naked Runner Luv Titicut Follies Camelot The Bible Barefoot in the Park 1 Million BC Taming of the Shrew Don ' t Look Back The Family Way More than a Miracle Tony Rome The Stranger Hotel La Guerre est Finis Tobruk 25th Hour The Dutchman Oh Dad, Poor Dad Deadlier than the Male Corrupt Ones Fal staff In Like Flin. Thoroughly Modern Millie Casino Royale Two for the Road Guide for the Married Man Caprice Divorce American Style Triple Cross The Trip The Flim-Flam Man Fathom Born Losers Elvira Madigan The Tiger Makes Out Bobo Waterhole No. 3 Wait Until Dark Reflection in a Golden Eye Far from the Maddening Crowd The Great Train Robbery Persona Books of 1967 Inside South America Five Smooth Stones Death of a President The Medium is the Message The Arrangement Quotations from Chairman Mao The Arrogance of Power The Comedians Madame Sarah Disraeli Bertrand Russell Autobiography Rosemary ' s Baby Washington, D. C. The Chosen The Plot By-Line The New Industrial State Selected Letters of Dylan Thomas Anyone Can Make a Million Stories and Texts for Nothing When She Was Good Modern Priest Looks at Outdated Church Our Crowd Why Are We in Vietnam The WASP Between Parent and Child Topaz 20 Letters to a Friend Gabriel Hounds Confessions of Nat Turner The Six-Day War The Exhibitionist The Beautiful People The President ' s Plane Is Missing Beyond Vietnam Rickenbacker Albums-Singers of 1967 Sgt. Pepper ' s Lonely Hearts Club Band Handful of Soul - James Brown Something Special - Ray Charles Mellow Yellow - Donovan Live - Four Tops Arrives - Aretha Franklin I Never Loved a Man - Aretha Franklin Kind of a Hush - Herman Hermits Moby Grape - Moby Grape Hard Road - John Mayall Greatest Hits - Little Richard Surrealistic Pillow - Jefferson Airplane Youngbloods - Youngbloods Ricochet - Nitty Gritty Dirt Band For Your Love - Peaches and Herb Happy Together - Turtles Stone Ponies - Stone Ponies Little Games - Yardbirds Greatest Hits - Temptations SRO - Herb Alpert Inside Out - Association Golden Decade - Chuck Berry Ode to Bi 1 lie Joe - Bobbie Gentry I ' m a Man - Spencer Davis Grateful Dead - Grateful Dead Blues Magoos - Blues Magoos Projections - Tim Buckley In My Life - Judy Collins Greatest Hits - Dylan II - Tim Hardin Fresh Cream - Cream Greatest Hits - Pete Seeger Second that Emotion - Smokey Robinson I ' m a Believer - Monkees Snoopy vs. Red Baron - Royal Guardsmen Groovin ' - Rascals Kind of a Drag - Buckinghams Windy - Association Magical Mystery Tour - Beatles The Letter - The Box Tops Reflections - Supremes Sock It to Me Baby - Mitch Ryder Georgy Girl - Seekers Light My Fire - Doors DEATHS of 1967 Nick the Greek 85, Nicholas Andrea Dandolos bookie Jack Ruby 60, Oswald killer. Reese Goose Tatum 45, of Globetrotters. Ann Sheridan 51, film star. Barney Ross 57, prize-fighter. Astronauts Grissom, Chafee, White die in capsule fire Henry Luce 68, owner of TIME magazine Alice B. Toklas 89, English writer. Nelson Eddy 65, singer and film star. Konrad Adenauer 91, government official in Germany Langston Hughes 65, black writer. Claude Rains 76, film star, the Invisible Man Spencer Tracy 67, film star. Max Kiss 84, inventor of Ex-Lax. Jayne Mansfield 34, (40-18-36) film sex star. Vivian Leigh 53, movie star. John Big Tree 90, Seneca Tribe on 1913 nickel Jimmy Foxx 59, baseball star. Basil Rathbone 75, Sherlock Holmes film star. Carl Sandburg 89, poet and author. Emmanuel Ress 59. lapel-button slogan-maker. George Lincoln Rockwell 49, leader of the American Nazi party. Paul Muni 71, film star. Brian Epstein 32, Beatles manager. Charles B. Darrow 78, inventor of Monopoly game. Bernard Goldfine 76, involved in Eisenhower-money scandal. Prince Felix Youssoupoff 80, assassin of Rasputin. Woody Guthrie 55, folk singer. Vance Colvig 75. voice of Goofy, Pluto characters. Che Guevara 39, revolutionary fighter of Cuba, Bolivia. Tommy Manville 73, had 11 wives; one for II yrs.. one for 8 min. Gordon Allport 69, sociologist, author. Michael Adams 37, X-15 test pilot killed in crash. Native Dancer, won almost $4 million on track. Thomas Sweet 38, Ajax white knight, plane crash. Francis Cardinal Spellman 78, Catholic power figure. Harry Wismer 54, sports announcer. Cora Baird 55, puppeteer. Bert Larh 72, film star. Stu Erwin 64, television star. Louis Washkansky 55 + , first heart transplantee. Smiley Burnette 55. cowboy sidekick. John Coltrane 40, jazz musician. Johnny Keane 55, baseball manager. Henry J. Kaiser 85. industrialist. Clement Atlee 84, English government official. John Masefield 88, poet. J. Robert Oppenheimer 62, scientist, atomic bomb. Gregory Pincus 64, birth control pill developer. Siegfried Sassoon 80, poet. Girls killed in National Park area by bears. Thousands killed in Vietnam, Mid-East, Africa. JANUARY 1968 Knowles defends ROTC ' s place on campus. Blacks charge racist policies of administration. The Four Tops and Herbie Mann at Winter Carnival. Lois Novak is Winter Carnival Queen. Forty-four faculty members petition against ROTC on campus. SC debates NSA stand on ROTC. drugs, blacks. THORN appears in the quad as SDS finds loophole. Three men dorm counselors quit in controversy. 90 of students back open recruitment on campus. Prof. Martin fights with English Dept. on conditions. Silver Masque does The Typist and the Tiger. President Knowles Speaks Out: ROTC Belongs On Campus TJnder present world conditions it seems essential that the United States maintain a large and effective military establishment. Failure to do this would be to risk the loss of our hard won free- doms. Military forces such as are needed to defend our democracy today require substantial numbers of officers who must be trained in service academies operated by the federal government, in officer candidate schools, or in ROTC programs in civilian colleges. Students who com- plete ROTC curricula receive commis- sions either in the regular army or in the reserve forces at the time of their gradu- ation from college. Choice of a commis- sion as a regular army officer is at the option of the individual student provided that he qualifies. Less than one quarter of the military officers commissioned each year are the product of service academies or officer candidate schools. The remaining three quarters of the total number commis- sioned are the product of ROTC pro- grams conducted in some 250 civilian col- leges and universities throughout the United States. This arrangement suits admirably the requirements of a demo- cratic society not desiring to establish a dominant military class and conforms to the fundamental principle of having citi- zen soldiers controlled by the citizenry. Northeastern University ' s Depart- ment of Military Science was established in 1951 and has ' been an integral part of education programs in the Basic Colleges ever since. Officers assigned by the Army to administer the ROTC program at Northeastern (with prior approval of the President of the University) have been carefully selected, well educated men, personally qualified for service In a uni- versity community, who have shared helpfully in student and faculty affairs. They have worked ha andrfflfocjjwil for excellence in their Department and towards its integration in the overall pn - gram of the University. The ROTC pro- vides opportunities of Interest to «tudrnt from different backgrounds and with widely varying academic Interest, but no student at Northeastern University Is required to enroll in courses offered by the Department of Military Science. The basic ROTC program is populated en- tirely by volunteers and is offered during the first two years. Students arc free to withdraw from the ROTC at the end of the basic program if they so desire. Those who elect and are admitted to the advanced courses offered during the final three years of the baccalaureate cur- ricula acquire a knowledge of military matters and a training in leadership which equip them to become officers m the United States Army. The Department of Military Science is an academic de- partment of the University and appropri- ate academic credit is granted for the courses in Military Science. The program has many specific ad- vantages for students who are enrolled. They receive regular compensation at the rate of $50 per month while they are In training. An extensive and generous scholarship program providing both 4- year and 2-year scholarships for ROTC cadets has recently been established by the Department of the Army. Several Northeastern cadets have been recipients of these awards. Since the program is wholly optional and valued highly by many members of the Northeastern community, there would seem to be every reason for sustaining it. The concept that a majority of the officers In the armies of a demo- cracy should be educated in the nation ' s colleges and un iv e r s iti es Is in the heal time tested tradition of civilian control of mOJtary fon 4n pur ( MtlajL ,£8 , 89 o-OPEN RECRUITING Referendum Results Decisive Blacks Charge Racist Policies SMtan « a- Aft. ■■f   ■■!«■,« « _grgg «M ■ la Mnllm Wihi  •( Mr kMffl cofnMtfta Art «  Ea W. Ibkkaoa. «M « «.— oM «  and  fcr. JANUARY 1968 1. Pueblo captured by N. Korea. 83 men taken, ] dies. 2. Betty Furness begins consumer stand campaign. 3. Vietnam veterans finding homecoming difficult. 4. Second heart transplant: Philip Blaiberg, 58. 5. Eartha Kitt and Mrs. LBJ square off at dinner. 6. Green Bay wins Super Bowl 34-10 over KC Chiefs. 7. The New Madison Square Garden takes shape. 8. Russia becomes growing influence in Middle East. 9. Pete Maravich setting records at LSU. 10. Soccer player Pele wins Sao Paulo Cup for Brazil. 11. Arlo Guthrie sings his Alice ' s Restaurant song. 12. Clergy members get involved in war protests. 13. Cities said to be crumbling from lack of funds. 14. Pornography dealers face tougher laws. 15. Sharon Tate, Roman Polanski are married. 1 6. Television news teams doing important specials. Ml IN FEBRUARY 196S II season. ton roads her poetry at Northeastern. asque presents Boys from Syracuse. men suspended for selling SDS paper. ? of fin and Mitchell speak on eve of arraignment. ietnam all-night teach-in. SD replaced by Speed craze. Sk rejects faculty-senate recommendations on ROTC. sK. backs ROTC on campus and writes. MO. Rick Anderson named Mr. Husky - only candidate. 11. Coeds support partial parietals in dorms. 12. SCATE gets going. M3. Choice ' 68 finds majority of students favor escalation. 14. 1.000 students support the THORNsellers. 15. THORN case heard - unsuspended. 16. Dr. John Martin refused tenure by the English Dept. 17. Jonathan Kozol speaks at Burlington. 18. First muster of support for Gene McCarthy. 19. Black student union formed; will be recognized. ee BASKETBALL 1967- NU (19-9) 68 Brown 80 86 Clark 67 80 Maine 68 79 Colby 55 78 A. I.C. 83 76 C.W. Post 65 106 W.P.I. 80 75 Fairleigh-D. 86 72 Harvard 67 63 Springfield 71 71 Guilford 82 63 Cen. Conn. 57 80 Bowdoin 68 70 B.U. 57 96 Merrimack 67 75 M.I.T. 61 75 B.C. 83 86 Brandeis 63 55 M.I.T. 53 59 U. Mass. 61 66 U.R.I. 81 69 N.H. 56 93 Amherst 56 70 Rochester 73 85 Tufts 74 67 LeMoyne 54 94 Bates 71 68 B.U. 67 LSD Fad Replaced By Speed Craze By CURT LEVINE Boston hippies and LSD, long thought as insepar able as Batman and Robin or the Smothers Brothers appear to be breaking up after a whirlwind courtship LSD users in the Boston are? through his division, indicating ■are switching from their psyche- slacking in traffic. delic diet to heroin and other nar- This decline in acid use is on cotics. according to Boston Police explanation for the new-found poj apt Joseph W. Jordan, head of « daril y of methamptetamina „. . . .. ,. . . commonly referred to as speedy. toe vice and narcotics division. „ , ... .. .. . - Speed, like its sister drug, STP Jordan, who is enrolled at North- thrives due to its newness to th Majority Favors Viet Escalation; Seniors Want Bombing Halt ■ity of Uic North- ■■graduates from first ; who voted in the zine ' s . Council Vietnam prima vored cither esca- voted military effort or B participation in the a student approaches his senic inipus poll in Time maga- vear. Choice ' 68 presidential ' of the seniors who voted, 38.9 y. Another 2038 students percent favored a bombing halt ,n Division A. and negotiations as compared to ieems no matter how much 35.3 percent of freshmen, of present policy, publicity and advance notice the While only 8.9 percent of the Jeffrey Smith (TO ENG), IMvi- student body is given, the same freshman class favored immedi- ! referendum head, said number will vote, Smith said, ate withdrawal, 13.5 percent of M percent voted for total in- We feel, though, that the vote the seniors made that choice, i- ii ■■' ii and 37 percent for was pretty representative of the About 43.3 percent of thefrosh riry tombing halt fol- student body. voted for an intensification of negotiations. If the vote had been today, the effort in Vietnam. That per- i ! 13,8 percent advocated the senior class, especially ' , centage decreased steadily j ■. tion while 10.8 percent would have been more dovish in among upperclassmen, as 34.8 ' i immediate and total its vote because of the recent percent of the senior class fa- 1 1: .1] from Vietnam. suspension of occupational and vored escalation. : mnli said 2359 undcrgradua- graduate school deferments. While 14.6 percent of the l and I J faculty members cast According toSmith ' s figures freshmen favored a continuation [horn Sellers Stuck by Suspension ) r . Martin to appeal no-tenure vote MTKE IX RFSMAN the UhtveraUy; Id tsOtm the bv hwwwr. off probation c attoriiil Dmn CrhiiiopbCT F. Korocdy, tgtattfcn and Discipline 3fco t ft. 1 ! thai fl (be fat m-t the rights and privileges JScS i r S olk10 ' IT students bmmedl to . court .texXber « ■provide a ' oomph Ht ' l BY STEPHEN WILLIAMS jfosor John Martin was declared not eligible for tenure by the Department of English and the university admin Martin, assistant professor at Northeastern for six years applied for tenure lasl .year, but the decision wa d until this week. He said he was given no official reason for the refusal by the English Department ■care decisions the ui ■cording to regulation ■i b the American As I ' Rjversity Professors, d to give 1 for t-lime advocate of improve r d development in the De- il of English and through university. Dr. Martin ex- regret that he h3d been enure, but offered no apol- tus past involvements. ikt to stay because I hope rtmpnt can change for the agitating for change and reform, and. In alt, I don ' t think of myself h a poor or Ineffective teacher. According to A.A.U.P. rules an instructor must receive a tenure decision within seven years of his employment at any one Institution. Many colleges give a decision in three years; Northeastern ' s policy is not to give a decision before a seven-year stay at the University. Dr. Martin told the NEWS he will submit a written appeal to the Ad- ministration for reeonsiderauon of e Dr re Martin has been the subject „„ , and the cause of much cern to various chairmen, deans, and provosts . In early 19M the topic of «a- demic freedom came under Mar- tin ' s attack. The controversy erose In November, 1965, when a student In Dr. Martin ' s writing class reed en original story containing • four- letter word. Some students In the class claimed the story was ob- Ta letter to The NEWS (Feb. 25 1966) Dr. Martin explained his position. When 1 asked the Chair- man of the English Department to erial and iudge il grounds, he replied, to read it ' In addition, Dr. Martin stated that letter, The Chairman also J formed me that, when I shou come up for a tenure vote, that i would not favor tenure for ir nor would he vote it ' Too mBJ complaints about you, ' he said ■complaints that he had never shov any interest in investigating or verifying as to truth, though mai have been patently ludicrous. The next week (Mar. 4, 1966) in lengthy and bitter debate Invoi GOOD LUCK NORTHEASTERN NEWS I Pmrl In ,, v„ „l Ifmf NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY, BOSTON, MASS Two Thornmen Unsuspended By MIKE DORF5WAN R,,k ulk f h.,i..-.i b ■u, -i ' re to) not to u pend Joe Kch and .a hmMit, both :m. , for their rales (he tale of Thorn. In.ttad, Uii:  itv pian-d ,ir, disci n to acceptable standards of pur blllty. rtw coniTiiUw fount) .ill the sUdent Mart Jacnbi, ,n ;ur Mosohvu nwmis Koberls and [ avld Smith ca received sis month ' s disciplinary pr nder on, found «ullty of the ftr ctame, but Innocent of the secon Text Of Decision. P. 2 f, 2 -- Students arc expected The Administrative Co mm t memo to President Asa S. Kno Teach-In Preaches ' Dissent or Resist ' ' Must Have Been Something I Said By NANCY VOGELSON n Vietnam ' according to Kverc Sfttohn, assix-l-ik- ].n.fi, ' -.- ' ir of History catitxi i Harvard Ifai ho retu th-long My first recollection of college life was the way I felt about Boston people. Coming from New York, I thought I had the advantage of being on the inside track. 1 mocked anyone and everything that didn ' t speak and look like me. I soon learned I was on the outside. Massa- chusetts people have a thing all their own - never bragging, just producing. That first year was incredible - I couldn ' t handle everything at once. I felt like I was submerged in a pool and everytime I swam to the surface, it turned out to be the bottom. I don ' t think it was the exams or the work. I think it was the fact that I didn ' t have the com- fort of coming home after school and forgetting it all. It just stuck with me - that constant badgering of the mind - school, work and more school. Money really became a problem, I soon learned 1 couldn ' t come and ask Dad for a couple of bucks. Vietnam was a million miles away then, and a million years. Majoring in Physical Education gave me an opportunity to meet many different types of people. Different in many ways but people who shared one common likeness - they enjoyed competition and the joy of striving to show their ability. I found there was no difference between white and black on a basketball court. A person is respected for his ability to produce. Differences are lost somewhere out of bounds. As a P.E. major you have to produce with more realness than in most other fields. You are competing with your mind and your body. My next year I laughed at the freshmen and their immaturity. I was a pro, or at least I thought I was. I thought I was secure. I think that is where my biggest realization took place - you are as secure as you think you are. A lot of my security was illusion. That year I did more, met more people and understood much more. College became a way of life instead of a trip away from home. Viet- nam got closer and the streets bled with unrest. I had a lot of part-time jobs while I was in school, most of which I really hated but did for survival - like washing floors and dishes. But I guess I enjoyed each of them at payday. Co-op jobs were a little bet- ter. They mostly dealt or were connected in some way with physical education - doing a little coaching and training with kids. Co-op let me see first hand the pros and cons of my profession. During my last three years at Northeastern, 1 began looking at issues. Vietnam was getting closer and the Administration was cracking down on the students. It was hard taking sides, because I felt that the extreme left had as many faults as the right. But on current issues - the war, racism and poverty - the right seems more oppressive. College became important to me not as an intellectual or professional activity, but as taking part in an experience that began to share the head-lines with Vietnam. I met and married Vicki. The yearbook asked for nominations for the most important people in the last five years and I put her name down. Northeastern is a changing place. I feel the university has changed in proportion to the times. We can ' t close ourselves off from a world that asks so much of each individual. A person is not a free man to the world around him unless he is a free man to himself. The past five years, I think, have placed a greater burden of individual responsibil- ity and decision on each of us. And each of us must take a stand. 1. New York City garbage strike. 2. Enormous Tet Offensive engulfs S. Vietnam. 3. Smothers Brothers gaining audience for TV shows. 4. Winter Olympic s begin in Grenoble, France. 5. Helen Gurley Brown takes over Cosmopolitan magazine. 6. Drug abuse cases coming from white suburbs. 7. Stocks decline 75 pts. in one month. 8. Battle of Hue ranges in Vietnam. 9. Building trade unions start desegregation. 10. High school students protest their plight. 11. Murf the Surf caught stealing in Miami. 12. Jean-Claude Killy rated best skier. 13. Jogging popular with overweight Americans. 14. Exercise shows become TV draw. TRACK 196 ' ' -68 NU (7-2) 50 St. John 54 31 Harvard 78 77 N.H. 27 77 H.C. 29 63 B.U. 41 80 U. Mass. 24 69 U.R.I. 34 64 B.C. 40 Outdoor TRACK 1968 NU (6-0) 81 B.C. 68 95 B.U. 50- Mass. 46 98 Bates 49 84 Spring. 65 NH 35 MARCH 1968 1. Track season. 2. Getting ready for Common draft resistence rally. .jy Lf iSm w MARCH 1968 1. Cesar Chavez fasts for grape strikers. 2. New Hampshire primary goes to Clean Gene. 3. RFK announces his candidacy for president. 4. LBJ announces he, Will not accept . . . 5. Rhbdesian racist government executes Africans. 6. Laugh-In gains national acclaim for satire. 7. Columbia protestors hamper gym building efforts. K 8. Jesse Jackson leads Operation Breadbasket. 9. Gold stampede sets world market whirling. 10. Fighting again in Palestine. 11. UCLA revenges earlier loss to Houston 101-69. 12. Cassette equipment finding large market. f 3. Dune buggies made for summertime fun. APRIL 1968 -1 The King assassination shocks Northeastern. Chape! services and speakers. Beginning of University Committee Against Racism (UCAR1. 4 Crew season. •5. Timothy Lean- debates Sidney Cohen in last stand before jail. 0. 50% cut seen in financial aid. 7. Draft resistance rally on Commons. 8. New parietals O.K. ' d for dorms. HAIWN STATEMENT -Page 9 NOKMEAWRN UNIVl , l _ No. ' 8 NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY Wednesday on the Common, r Scene of protest, resistance BY NEDDA YOUNG inches marking the entrance to Boston ,,„, were occupied Wednesday by eld- tinen and women who come often to en- km and routine conversation. some sat and listened to the music pro- ii« Raj the Friendh Organ Grinder, Hi Utched children hold ' their out- ■leted hands to waiting pigeons, and then , Hack squealing to their mothers when pigeons sot too close. Most, howevei stared at the thousands went to the Resistance Rally in the more than a jail term; it was the start of a radical vocation. lie challenged resisters to work in the poor sections of the city where help is want- ing. Lvnd urged more involvement of the draft resistance with political issues. Everett Mendelson, a Harvard professor who recently visited Vietnam during the Tct offensive, termed tins period of war the •winter of our discontent and the spring of He told the audience that victory in tn protest the war in Vietnam and Vietnam simon Selective Service System. The H1..J0I ity were college students who t again gathered to voice their opposition i way they knew Ix ' st. There were hippies, girls with flowers fheir hair selling the Resistance , boys and 16 in favor of the war. who march- around advocating the stopping of mimuiism. Middle - age businessmen iible and defeat i it,,.;, i„.„.|, I,.,,,, vW entircK unlikely. There is a change in the mood tif our people. There is dissent in voting — and a resistance to illegal authority, he said. Mendelsohn watched Vietnam be des- troyed so we can save it. and there is no sign of a letup he added. There is no mention of the National Liberation Front he complained. The N ' LF ,lo,.sn ' t think tliev themselves arc losinC the 1968 CREW NU (3-2) 1st NU, BU, MIT 1st Vesper, NU 1st Harvard, Rutgers, NU 1st NU, Brown 1st NU, BU Alumnus asks soap for Viets According to McTaggari, skin dis- eases are the most prevalent mal- ady among the children and many of these result from a lack of soap. The medical teams arc usually given only enough soap to treat one illage in the which they may McTaggart indicates the treat- ment given is, at best, only tempo- rarily effective because withoul more soap the maladies return. In letters to friends here Mc- Taggart has indicated the desperate need for soap to arrest skin dis- eases that could have been pre- vented with cleanliness. Any soap or money collected will be turned over to the Catholic Re- ct snap for I 30,000 students i :ugh for not only the childt LT. McTAGGART, who major In political scitnet, graduated i V1U jr.: protect us • ' mi all of the evidence is in and events? If so. histon could lo accumulate,, we can never Historians write, whether im- ons arc shaped by their values, his tentative judgments-which U fresh in the memories of con- e in the daily headlines. ni philosophy ot Mahatma Gandhi In the days since his death, news- papers and public orators have spoken ot King as the apostle of n-violence. M But this tells only half of the story. In his books Stride Toward Freedom and Why We Can ' t Wait. King emphasized that his doctrine was non-violent resistance. He stated quite explic- it) ' that both words were essential ■in opposing the evil of racism the evil of the Vietnam War. n violence was not enough; with- drawal in the pattern of Thoreau j insufficient. There must also January 15, 1929 April 4, 1968 be active, positive resistance. And so, for the last ten years of his life, until he was murdered on April 4. 1968 while planning a mas- sive demonstration on behalf of the garbage collectors of Mcmphsi, messee. King organized direct frontations between his fol- ers and the forces of racial bigotry wherever they existed, whe- ther in Montgomery, or Selma, or Chicago. it nonviolent resistance, to Martin Luther King, was more than philosophy and a technique to defeat racial bigotry It could, he the  ' «« hoped, end the and end poverty State It was hts oppressed of all races whir 1 him to direct much of hi f  ti in the last weeks of hi 1 ' «■i winning support for the fort i«m ing Poor People ' s March on Vt l King, working individually « through the Southern Chri f i Leadenhip Conference, which I founded in 1957, achieved gr deal — civil right hrgitUtiotv ipirit of lovt within the hejr  {Continued on Peg 5) NOKMEASTERN UNIVEKSI VOL I - No. 19 BOSTON. MASS. 800 attend service for Dr. King By JOE SMIAROWSKI A memorial service for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.. sponsored by the Black Student I nio as held Monday at Alumni Auditorium. More than 800 students attended President Asa Knowles, Professor Harvey Vetstein, and Dean Charles llavice v.. aniong the guest speakers. President Knowles said, Rev-I It would be a betrayal of this mem - 1 Black Student Union at North erend King was a world citizen, ajorial lervice if it was emotional. | «rn, spoke ne« . To the tu APRIL 1968 1. 200,000 Memphis blacks ask better working conditions. 2. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. assassinated. 3. King funeral draws anger and sorrow, more talk. 4. Blacks riot in several cities, Boston fairly cool. 5. Kerner Commission report out and ignored. 6. Battle of Khe Sanh in Vietnam bloodbath. 7. Yippies shaping plans for Chicago convention. 8. Alexander Dubcek rises to power in Czechoslovakia. 9. 52 die as ferry boat Wahine capsizes off New Zealand. 10. Arabs and Jews fight it out in Jordan. 11. Jimi Hendrix rises to rock-star fame. 1 2. City insurance up because of riots. 13. Celtics come back from 1-3 to beat Philly, 4-3. 14. Yuri Gagarin, first space man dies in plane crash. 15. Roberto deVicenzo scorecard error costs him US Open. Tommy Aaron marks 17th hole wrong. 16. Nudity in fashions is big selling point. Black Boy Zu ' d ' to rS5 nr. .™ tomwie MB) !S mhL, if t, inn. J STJT Z?ZJ£ 5 r,Thu  t ' ' 2ZZ2Z Onl, hl. .end. , iwr  tfSZ miai u , ' ,i°L,1 ' m Valediction X A--S, ill MAY 196S r Masque puts on Come Back, Little Sheba. NEWS editorial supports Columbia student takeover Campus unrest stirs at NU too. Phi Beta Kappa eludes NU; library a major factor. NU holds national police seminar. ASK sets two policies to get more blacks on staff. ASK accepts all 13 Black demands. 8. Rev. Ralph Abernathy speaks at $100 plate Poor Peoples ' lunch. 11 9. A swami visits the gray bricks of Northeastern. p 10. William F. Buckley Jr. speaks here on conservatism. 11. Black lit course planned. 12. Students pick Gene in mock election and want less bomb- ing. 13. Black Culture Week at NU. 14. Columbia student speaks at Northeastern over takeover. ■5. Grape strike puts some on fence. k 16. PBA turtle wins the annual classic. 17. Fraternity men greet film star Essy Persson at airport. s 18. Baseball season. Ot l No 22 BOSTON, MASS. MAY 10, 1968 Blacks make steady gains; ASK will act on 13 demands BY PKTFR LANCE Northeastern ' s Black • atvrptrti all L3 of the nd curricula re-cvafuatio The university is in sympathy Ah the objective implicit in your eawrsndum. Knowtos said of list of demands received Fri- ll He emphasized the impor ate of insuring full and fair tetment for members of the ark student community at North- sum so that their status shall the same as that of white stu- ats. Kswwkn a cce pt a nce of the de- seeds came on th heels of his awee n eo m snt Friday that the kshwrstty will more than dou- h its financial aid to black hMSsnrt during Hi next eca- eotfc rear. About $175,000 In Uefllst added to the $125,000 aw prov id ed blacks in graduate atoriradvate, part and futlttme (eraaods fo ed HU-L sti lesdaj dent vhen President Kr, . lln tit, scholarship TV formal Uet of demands was tstaed by more than 200 black assets at a meting in the ball- as Friday and presented to Rwdea by William L. Hazlewood, LA, Delano B. Farrar, 69 LA, mu A WU turns 09 BB, Arnold Evans 70 LA, and Ralph It •ee 70 LA. ' At a mass meeting of black •  the president ' s replies are received with favorable re- aaase, a spokesman for the law said, but the students ar« Mr waiting for definite action ■a implementation of the de- rmis an conjunction with a sssssssu 1 committae as set up r the bUcfc st u de nt s. atadents are withholding fur- v action until definite results t nude on the part of the univ- T the spokesman said. representatives of the faculty administration and black students will be instituted as one of the 13 demands to institute, view, and report on the University im- plementations of these demands. Knowles immediately appointed Deans Norman Edward Robinson, and Professors James R. Bryant, Juaniu Long, George A. Strait, Sr. and Duane L. Grimes to serve on the Committee with a comparable number of black students. Other demands to be met in- clude; — Increased Black enrollment enhanced by a stepped-up re- cruiting program and additional tutorial assistance so that by 1971 10 par cant of th. incom- ing Freshman class will be black. — A re-evaluation of all social science and humanity courses with emphasis on Western Civilization and freshman English. The West- ern Civ. course will be expanded to include lectures on African. Orien- tal, and Islamic Civilizations, while (Continued on Pag 2) Black culture The Black Students ' Union will present a cultural weak be- ginning Monday, May 13th through the 17th. It will consist of an art exhibition In th. Bit lounge area. Othor exhibits will bt In various display windows, including the Bookstore window. The Boston Negro Artist As sociation and selected arts and crafts stores have contributed many of the works. The Drama department will centrflbute special effects for a large dis- play WNEU will add a back- ground of African music during the noon hours of the week. Division A picks Gene 38.15 per cent of division A students who voted ir Choice ' 68 favoi Senator Eugene J. McCarthy for President Robert Kennedy ran second with 21.86 per cent, and Rockefeller third with 12.17 per cent of the 2184 who voted in the Time spon- sored election. Nationally, 21.07 per cent chose McCarthy, 20.99, Kennedy. Rich- ard Nixon placed third, receiv- ing 19.35 per cant of the vote. Voting on military action. 57.56 per cent of Northeastern students phased reduction of mill 31.44 per cent voted far a twa . porary suspension of bombing, 28.98 for permanent cessation cf bombing, and 17.13 par cent favor intensifying the bamblng. This is in a greement with na- tionwide figures. Job training ranked first in Nartheastern voting in prionty fori rnment spending with 42 40; per cent of ballot , while education: H tary effort. 14.18 for immediate; received 37 10 per r Ed caUosi NU (11-9) 4 Tufts 1 2 Brown 4 2 B.U. 3 7 N.H. 5 4 W.P.I. 2 6 B.U. 2 5 Colby 6 5 B.C. 7 2 M.I.T. 1 2 Bates 1 3 Tufts 3 H.C. 5 6 B.C. 5 4 Bowdoin 7 Brandeis 2 PC. 5 2 A.I.C. 4 8 U.R.I. 3 Harvard 2 Springf. 4 A ai7 Columbia students MRU NES The efficacy of student protest and power has never been more necessary than in these tumultuous days, as a people strive for equal- ity and an unjust war in Southeast Asia drags on. A large group of Columbia University demonstrators are using their power today in the face of police brutality to combat the evils and excesses of the Columbia Admin- istration. The NEWS supports them and hopes their demands are met. Student power, the right and obligation of the student to exercise power in order to influence or force university decisions that affect the student and the neighboring com- munity are essential at Columbia, where the administration has not acted morally in is- sues of poverty but instead has chosen to suppress the needs of a community and the desires of its students. The protest was sparked by three issues: | 1 ) A project to build a new gym adjacent to Morningside Park, site of the University, overlooking Harlem. (2) Columbia ' s ties with the Pentagon, its affiliation with the Insti- tute of Defense Analysis, a 12-university con- ftortium that does military research for the Government, and an issue related to com- HkiIi in the Vietnam War. And (3) A de- m ud that students who had previously de- monstrated Ix-cause of the first two issues br panted amnesty from disciplinary action. Our of the issues involved had been sub- pntl of much reflection by concerned stu- otatS, For more than a year, they held ral- ( - wJ circulated petitions to protest con- KttiMiton of tin- new gym. They considered tt 4 caJtum affront to citizens, who did not «utl I U gym located in Harlem. Thm tcrotifn, acting against Administra- t Mi potfctefj physically seized control of five Mi untvt r itv buildings last week, brine- barricated buildings. More than 100 stu- dents were injured and 638 were arrested. The police acted brutally and clubbed and kicked people indiscriminitely, but NYC Po- lice Commissioner Howard R. Lean-, who witnessed the eviction, complimented his men for an excellent job. ' Students and sympathizers acted immed- iately in response to these developments. A coalition of 80 student leaders representing every class, club and political group called for a student- faculty strike, the resignation of University President Grayson Kirk and Vice President David Truman and an in- vestigation of the trustees responsible for ! calling the police. A number of students and faculty said they will attempt to close the university for the rest of the year, unless major changes are made in the administra- tion. (GLOBE, May I,) The similarities found in the Columbia situation and the Free Speech Movement at 1 Berkeley four years ago are striking and bear relevance to all students attending large impersonal urban schools. Columbia has a . high percentage of commuters; after class ] they make their way through this nation ' s j largest city. The campus atmosphere is not conducive to learning processes. The lead- c ers of the university are remote and cold. 1 The students have difficulty pinpointing causes of injustice. At Columbia and similar- s ly large schools, the sources of the exercise of power are undefinable and unreachable. Since this school is a large and impersonal one which lies close to ghetto areas, we urge that Northeastern students reflect on their own relationship with this school and the Roxbury community. President Knowles has taken steps to ex- p pand aid to the Black community with a r special policy for recruitment and several P MAY 1968 I. Columbia students take over president ' s office. ' 2. Paris Peace talks begin; attempt to end Vietnam war. 3. HAIR play begins on NYC ' s Broadway, reviewed as fair. 4. Dr. Benjamin Spock ' s court trial in Boston. 5. HHH announces and White House campaign begins. 6. Rockefeller announces his GOP candidacy late. 7. Newark burns in aftermath of King, city conditions. 8. Resurrection City constructed in Washington, D. C. 9. Four killed in W. Vir. coat mine explosion. 10. Vicky Drake (38-22-36) runs for Stanford U. class president with nude photographs. 11. Tiny Tim emerges as star with offbeat gimmick. 12. Celtics win championship from LA; 124-109. 13. Liz and Richard Burton buy $305,000 jewels. 14. Canadiens beat St. Louis Blues in four games for Stanley Cup. JUNE 1968 Finals time and division changeover. : Some students start first summer term in school. Now a third assassination - RFK - stirs some, shocks others. 4. Gene backers see switch from their man to HHH. 5 Disenchantment with America after back-to-back killings. ' 0. More drugs at Northeastern than ever before. 1. Non-profit bookstore nets $39,000; SDS asks why. 2. Gun control an issue after ' 68 grad killed in street. 3. AEPi house attacked and brother beaten. 4. San Diego Rockets select Harry Barnes in draft. 5. UCAR raises $762 for Biafra. 6. Black frosh orientation planned. 7. SC wants to hear more student gripes. victories in western primaries. RFK assassinated in Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. Two people killed as RFK funeral train goes to D. C. Vietnam becomes US longest war . . . June 23. Impeach Earl Warren campaign initiated. Mutual newsman Andrew West lauded for RFK tape. Abe Fortas appears to be in line for chief justice post. Transplantitus hits world physicians. Helen Keller dies at age 87. Draft resistence trials start around nation. Brothers Berrigan in news as conspirators. Aretha Franklin as new record sensation. Grass warning from AMA people. HHH now sewing up delegates for convention. New bikini fashions wait for summer buyers. JULY 1968 1. Abe Fortas nominated by LBJ for Chief Justice. 2. McCarthy speaks to Bostonians at Fenway Park. 3. Pierre Elliot Trudeau becomes Prime Minister of Canada. 4. Boston Common hippy curfew set by CC and Timilty. 5. George Wallace gives Massachusetts speech. 6. Murf the Surf enters Miami mental institution. 7. Che ' s diary given to world revolutionaries. 8. TV talk shows try to get relevant. 9. Czech liberal policies feeling squeeze. 10. Fosbury Flop (by Dick) intrigues nation, Olympic team. 11. Detroit Tigers 8 games up in runaway year. 12. Los Angeles gets Chamberlain for Clark-Imhoff. 13. Mays scores only All-Star run as Koosman fans Yaz for last out. H ' HITK RACISM BLACK ORIENTATION PLANNED UCAR Raises $762 In Biafra Campaign By MARCAHET RHODES The University Committee Against Racism col- ,.MLa ™.«f than STOO to aid the starving popula- Separate Social Events Offered To Incoming Negro Freshmen By MIKE E Separate black and white orientation programs evolved during the past week as the result of the 13 Black Demands made to President Asa S. Knowles in April. outlined the program as including parties at a black student ' s home; visits to the Avant Garde Coffee House; two movies, Cool World and Color US Black, and a dance at the Professional Businessmen ' s Club on Massachusetts Avenue, The Freshman Orientation Bo;ird (FOB), concerned lhat n u ' par.Uc orientation pro- gram could lead to a split in the class. ESTIMATED COST i5t of the black orientation pre s estimated by Dean Kennedy a agreeable compromise. At the Student Council meeting on Tu day, a joint resolution offered by Jan Seldncr (71LA) and David Levinson (7IB proposed five gui dtlnes. The guidelines call for a joint freshm orientation committee administering all I allocated funds. All activities must be open to all fre- ilh a block speaker invited to tu ■. tin- i ' DIRECTION Tlie resolution said thatit is assumed tl the black students will direct th. eprogra related to black orientation within t framework of the black committee, Dean Kennedy said he does r Racism at NU Fought on Two Fronts n STEVE TIIORI Dr. n.-.irUnl t! ; ' , ' , ' , ' n of Jr. for !r ' £{, it,,, .,i the- the hfTl ,ll ' , ' ,r ' , ' ' ' ' i. ' i. . ' , ' „, i his urban iinivcrsil ing thr alien , „i «. rgc ii™ ZV f .!, Tu S J. ' l 1 ' , r L rll V THE BLACK CONCERN COMMITTEE coplc arc Bttcmpllnit AT NEWPORT AUGUST 1968 : 1 . Russia invades Czechoslovakia, Wenceslas Sq. fighting. : 2. GOP presidential ticket chosen. Nixon-Agnew. 3. Black freedom fighters battle Ian Smith ' s Rhodesia. 4. India-China rumble over border dispute. 5. Pope Paul VI makes Latin American tour. 6. Tito calms nerves of USSR against more Czech repression. 7. Janis Joplin arrives on blues-rock scene. 8. Pete Rose hitting his $100,000 singles. 9. ABC-TV hires Buckley-Vidal team for convention. 10. Mayor Daley, Chicago ready for Democrats, others. 1 1. HHH wins 1761 to 827 1 2 for Gene; streets erupt. Aug. 29. 12. Buckley-Vidal name calling contests coast-to-coast. At ESS •-a SSl K fa£ A U£ ,k. J i v j M 1 j IIP 8 MIDDLER SEPTEMBER 196S mes of Poll. Sci. Dept. wins primary tor state rep. ade to standardize tuition. tudent Concern Committee stirs students, makes owles sidesteps 13 demands in his answer, shmen on guard as separate orientation is followed. anoucer of NBC speaks at DSS. iv is not to he denied. Bud Weiser (Tom Kennedy) Rumor that Nixon might speak at NU during campaign. President Answers Demands By MIKE DORFSMAN President (if the University Asa S. Knowles Thursday give the Stu- dent Council broadly based new powers in his answer to the 13 de- mands made hy the Student Con- WOTEST ASHES - Skip Finley bum. hi« copy o Pre Knosvtes ' reply e Srootm Concern Committee ' s 13 demench. The gesture took plice p  i froi he Preside Advisors Commiss which w be composed of administratm students picked by Council, at facults chosen In the Facultj Se ' The gist of tin- entire stat menl shows that the Student Con udents impatience with ■ss of democratic process- but he asks that the students id hastily conceived proposals 1 arhitrariK imposed decisions. President knowles refrained peeifically outlining the commission ' s duties in great detail because he felt such an action would be limiting. Their duties will become more apparent, he said, when the mem- bers meet amongst themselves. His memo, which was released to the academic community of North- eastern, suggested that the advis- ory council open many of its meet- ings for the fr.e exchang oi iD viewpoints. Going into the ,penlK de- mands, his answers are (Continued on P o 31 Demands Week In Retrospect By PETEB SEREMEl and MARCMU.T RHODES ons The meeting started peacefully enough but questions quick ly arose over such things as tlie purpose of the meeting, who tailed the martin , and who appointed the Mot! . ft:, per-ionaijty clashes. ! ers of the stearin;; ...... the imprwstofl that further I been the meel formulati (eontinutd on 5) Koxlwwn MEWS Sep ' ember 2 President Knowles ' Decision students student vi uons of tt members ot the academic icludir both the Faculi Senate and Stu- dent Council, and I find that then i- t.insiderable interest in improving our methods of com- munication There is also substan- tial support for increased efforts to enlarge the students ' partici- pation tn University affairs. in era of widespread change and reform throughout demands I in higher the country. The interest of mod- ern students is a refreshinc on- irasl to the relative apathy of cer tain earlier periods Like other universities. Northeastern is chal- lenged to recognize the need for possibie reforms. At the same time it must be recognized that at a university the process of change should be consistent with scholarly investigation, free and open discussion, and democratic procedures In this process the unique roles and responsibilities of students, faculty, adminislrat- i havi In the past decade t been major chages in the role of the faculty at Northeastern as evidenc ed by the creation of the Faculty Senate, procedures for granting tenure, and faculty par- ticipation in the selection of can- didates for academic administr3 live posts We are now in the midst of effecting comparable ! Student Handbook Freedoms of Slu- and I would be glad to have sll will ask the President ' s Advisor Committee how they should b bt Faculty dismissal and ter ure This is a resjionsihilit vested in the college faculties b, the Board of Trustees, and I wil i the ( nds ing role for the student eastern. I can readily identif; with the spirit of which stress greater participation m University affairs Therefore, in order to insure fresh ap- proaches to the problems of stu dent participation and communi- cations with administrators and faculty of the University. I will immediately appoint a broadly based President ' s Advisory Corn- seek the avic Acade mic C i of the Faculty Sen- ent Council and the [merits I hope that 1. at Fiscal policy and tuition — Last spring I agreed to discuss fiscal policy with the Agenda Committee of the Faculty Senate, i this i by the faculty 2 Pass-fail eleetives — the deci- sion to have pass-fail eleetives must be decided by the college authority for both the approval of courses to be offered and the establishment of criteria for measuring the accomplishment of the students. Several of the Col- leges have already voted a pass- fail option for their students A Faculty Senate committee has the matter under consideration at the present time I am already on record as favoring a pass-fail op le bookstore ii truly nonprofit and is operated a: a service to the University com operations are intended to be self supporting and should not be sub sidized out of I operations of the bookstore hav been explained to the Studer Council on sev 6. Voluntary Dormitory Resi- dence for Upperclassmen — This matter is under investigation by the Committee on Dormitory Life, who will shortly conduct a poll among the upperclass women students. It should be recognized that major changes must be planned carefully to insure that the dormitory operation does not become a financial burden on the non-resident population. 7 Freshmen Residence in Dor- mitories — Given the shortage of housing in this area, together with the past experience when freshmen found their own hous- ing, it seems wise at present to continue existing policies regard- ing freshmen housing. 8. Birth Control Information — The University has little option in this matter, since Massachu- setts law allows the giving of birth control information to mar- ine 4. Food Service — I cannot ac cept the concept that the food service contractor be selected by the legal and financial respon- sibilities involved. The University already makes individual arrange- ; for s cial food requirements for reli- gious and health reasons. I shall request the existing student food mediately with the Vice President ; Uni sity i of violating the law. 9 Choice of Co-op Assignments — Under the Northeastern Uni- versity Cooperative Program the student and the faculty coordina- tor work together in seeking ex periences best suited to the inter- ests, abilities and aptitudes of the studenl. In recent years, con- siderable flexibility for the stu- dent has been introduced into the program. However, the degree of choice available to a particular student vanes according to both his individual circumstances and the field in which he is studying. The Student Advisory Committee to the Dean of Cooperative Edu- cation, which was formed this summer, will be asked to examine the advantages and disadvantages of additional flexibility and make develop prelim proved to be U ing double th architects were three allemativt $1,000,000 towart Applications will year for federal meet the cost o funds will be obt being made for raising campaign 11. Student Rei the Board of Trusi ter will be referr formed President ' recommendation: Trustees for the that the present classes is 35 stuc era! arts classes I rollments than f not correctly est dents are given problems of pre- size of classes £ registration proc this problem. In clai for the winter Students Support 12 of 13 Demands By LENNY GAMACHE More than 1,200 Northeastern student faculty and graduates voted on the Student Concern Committee ' s refer- endum of Friday, October 25. The most significant demand of the thirteen was the final one providing for a Student Concern Committee, open to the stud lx dy for the negotiation of student demands. The vote was overwhelmingly in favor of the Committee with 827 votes for, 301 against, 3 undecided, and 51 failed to answer. Through the referendum students and faculty alike expressed their desire for an established Student Concern Committee. Phil Mandell (69BA), president of the Interfratemity Council which sponsored the referendum, considered the total vote to be a low one. He attributed this to be number of reasons including very poor publicity by the SCC and the extreme length of the referendum. LONG BALLOT Maude! said, The ballot was so extremely long and complicated that it did take a long time. He also added, The SCC insisted that the ballot include both the demands and the replies. Of the 1,232 persons who voted, 1,177 were under- graduates, 33 were graduates, and 22 were faculty members. The undergraduates rejected only the seventh demand concerning voluntary freshman residence in dormitories, while the faculty disapproved of the first demand relating to faculty dismissal. The graduates voted in favor of all demands. A number of demands received a decisive majority with at least 70 per cent of the voters in support. These demands concerned the formation of a student committee on tuition raises and fiscal policy, a pass-fail elective, a true non-profit bookstore, an all student court, choice of co-op jobs, a new library and its qualifications, observers on the Board of Trustees, excessive size of classes, and a Student Concern Black Freshmen ---On Guard! ttx HENRY ( VliVKIU s Dwt e caiuht off suant in (hi- art tit „„ . Pal is. m ■«• m l i « ' a Mtv action. „,. etc Sometimes « is bettor in be silent, « tmisw  fooL n ™ ' «P k ui mi clear Tte  snt preclude that you must bo a MKbte pnsiMWer. It ivouM, hoiveicr, bo naive jjf yea or anyone to think that one person or M In ? 1 ltwu ' • - ' problems that i0 t it- Blacks tn society today Sor con yea st that any one person M crous brought £wt ti great benefits that are available to Sjci. snriests or Blacks in general. ,. Sstfcer :t is the interaction between several map- that brm£ about changes, necessitating i for this revolution Datt be caught dead thinking lint appe.i f preclude? their blackness Black to me means an affirmative attitude toward the upgradin g of black power in all of its aspects Dont think that Blacks are the only down race. Look around at all of the bruised knees! We are not the only race not standing up. For power one must have communication. m i is redaced to tike level of an electrical eaoaiL Cimaaanw it inn is a necessary- part of she jaa w . m i h i for aS actions, even on the group fact TJkey iaHim as well as manifest actions, iii rhwi yaw he throwing a football or Molotov Stacks deal hare a formidable communi- oaana aaessa yet Neither oral nor written in nasawi Has m a deadly handicap, and it is up a aw safari establish one and Afro are two to overcome this aaassaav Please no to both, and see what you — [ tkem. I as sure thai they can do aaaansaaw. tar j w Afro meets on Tuesday and WE sserts m Tfcaroday dating activities period. Ostttsa Utec tor iirformatkm lilt. III! am •mphutitnfl ai-e bfl Bfn| c hai l ■■■flea . nhim! human the difference be or brlwern race lakes (  r cconomj c$ f ipppai nix .■n probably mplcr to attribute dfffcrenci e) than to Juggle sll the complex Is for differences thai extol tpecific in dealing with per - in. i representative Rroup i«iwrr. is article to Black freshmen rtaser to Ihe homo plate of cduca ft-cl that there are areas of the th.it you arc not up on — there — I would suggest that the quick est way to catch up to to cam first hand expert I have found that Black auto biographies are one of the fastest and more economical ways — time-, mental-, and money-wise — to achieve this It may be up to you to do this in order to get an authentic view of your major field, before you graduate Education, no doubt, is one of the few means left to the Black man to get his equality suc- cessfully through self-determination But educa tion seems to be the hardest thing for the Black race to obtain, even though it is the most vital tool necessary for his survival It is found only by those who expect and probe for it prodig- Education is most vita! for survival because it has a direct bearing on economic and political endeavors. This is best pointed out in a quote by Horace Mann No educated body of men can be permanently poor ; and the obverse is that no uneducated group can expect to rise out of pov- erty. So remember, dont be a naivete, communi- cate with other Blacks, evaluate situations with a grain of salt, study hard, and repeat the pro foundest of profound statements: You are what you are. Explodes on Campus minutes in which to make their first official campaign speech Kverctt Nau. as Herb Acid, lead er of the Marijuana Grass, camr onstage with his band playing Campaign Trail Last night two representa- tives from the Niaon-Agnew National Compaign Headquar- ters were here. They conducted a question and answer period on the for- mer vice-president ' s policies. They also collected questions which will be sent to Nixon, and will be answered by re- There is speculation that Nixon may be here, within the next two to three weeks, un- der the auspices of the Dis- tinguished Speaker Series. Northeastern is one of three colleges under consideration for the Nixon visit. The other two are Harvard and BC. Department jcial Citation atlend I he 1 •All Hail llrrb Acid to the tune of All Hail Northeastern His companions, drea ed in such statement as. A pot in every chicken, Push Herb Acid — he injects you with spirit. Go Herb Acid — he ' s addictive, and Push Herb Acid — he ' ll dilate NVs pupils. Herb was introduced as the man who will give you a shot in the arm. ' ' He sang The Old Dope Ped- dler and said that unlike Mayor Daley of Chicago, he would not attack the students of Northeast ( Continued on Page 3) SEPTEMBER 1968 1 . George Wallace campaigns in Boston with Common speech. 2. Ralph Nader drops bomb on FTC for inefficiency. 3. Max Rafferty and Eldridge Cleaver have words in Calf. 4. Black Panthers taking bad raps from police. 5. FCC hits convention coverage by networks. 6. Police riot charges spur investigation of actions. 7. Eruptions of students in Mexico before Olympics. 1 8. Francine Gottfried, 21, watched by Wall Streeters. 9. Jose Feliciano singing his way to fame. 10. Toy industry looks into less making of guns. 11. Agnew slowly becoming household word. 12. NFL teams losing exhibition games to AFL. 13. McLain wins 30th against Oakland while on bench. 14. Arthur Ashe becoming super tennis star. 15. Rocky Colavito wins game for Yanks on mound vs. Det. 6-5. 16. Crashing of pleasure boats creates new safety hazards. OCTOBER 1968 I Campus Values becomes moral success. UCAR raises another $1086 for starving Biafrans. 1 3. NU pool dedication. 4. More and more cars crowd less and less parking space. 5. President ' s Advisor} Council named by Knowles. 6. SPECTRUM magazine to go quarterly. 7. Law school reopens. 8. Inner Belt says NU to lose 10 acres. 9. NU sponsors sex lectures for students. 10. Lisa Minelli speaks at NU visit. 11. Debbe Cross is Homecoming Queen: Mitch Rider enter- tains. 12. Plans set for new Student Court. M3. Nixon at NU rumor persists. 14. Prof. Saletan quits PAC; calls it ineffective. 15. Student referendum backs 12 of SCC ' s 13 demands. 16. Food service debated for improvement. 17. Silver Masque presents Loot. Vicious Cycle of Racism -By N TR BVJTC Nl OUil By JIM KILPATRICK UCAR President Welcome Freshmen, not to Northeastern, but to Roxbury. What is Roxbury? It ' s a ghetto and its one half mile, a five minute walk from your new school. You can see its periphery by look- ing out the windows from the back of the luxuri- ous student center with the extravagant red car The Kerner Commission report gives us some facts that are characteristic of the ghetto. The crime rate in the ghetto is almost triple the national average. Vandalism, juvenile delin- quency, shootings, knifings, dope addiction, prostitution, rapes, and theft are frequent occur- rences in the ghetto. Unemployment rates for ghetto dwellers are double those of whites. About two-thirds of the low income group are making nosignificant eco- nomic gains despite a continued national pros- perity. Where there is employment, the jobs are gen- erally low status, unskilled jobs involving sub- standard wages, great instability, and little or no chance for meaningful advancement. The maternal mortality rates for non white mothers in the ghetto is four times that of white mothers and the relative gap is increasing. The infant mortality rate among non-white liabies from one month to one year of age is 587r higher than for whites, fiver forty percent of the children born in the ghetto are illegitimate. The number of fa:.. ilies with no father averages about thirty nine percent. These are facLs, but why do they exist and why haven ' t they changed. ' I offer two words in mswrnng White Racism, The reason the ghetto black can ' t get a job u discrimination, not just by white employers in Hi- ghetto educational system, . ( m gives black children inferior IChooU, v ith inferior, insensitive teachers and a middleclass white curriculum that has no rele- vancy to the child ' s ghetto life. Furthermore, because their families need the money, many children are forced to drop out of school before graduating. Either way, a poor education means a poor job which means pov- erty — right back where we started. Faced with the frustration of poverty, dis- crimination, and powerless the black man is psychologically forced to turn to crime, dope addiction and alcoholism. Children with no fath- ers and mothers must often work and naturally turn to the streets. Then the same white society which has psy- chologically caused criminal behavior physically arrests the ghetto law-breaker. Then he is judged in a court by a double-standard of justice which differentiates laws by color. Forced into poverty by white racism, the ghetto black can ' t afford a lawyer or a costly appeal. A criminal record ensues. Then white society says we can ' t give you a job, baby, be- cause you ' ve got a criminal record. Since ghetto families are poor, they can ' t af- ford birth control devices, medicine or sufficient food for their children. This causes a high infant mortality rate. But all white society says is, Look at those babies they ' re having; they de- serve poverty. Poverty means below average income to pay for average priced food. But in the ghetto, local white merchants charge above average prices for lower grade or lower quality products. They do this, they say, to cover the losses due to crime in the ghetto. The ghetto in Roxbury is not a black problem but a white problem caused and perpetuated by the vicious cycles of racism that pervade our whole socio-economical system. This is a prob- lem onlv whites can change. I urge this yean freshmen students not to follow in the fool steps of their fellow upperclassmen who. by their apathy, have taken part in the cycle one-hall mile from their school. OCTOBER 1968 1. Olympic Games begin with 7,226 athletes from 119 coun- tries. 2. Bob Beamon breaks long jump record with incredible leap, 29 ' 2 1 2 . !( 3. Carlos and Smith score black-power victories. 4. Wallace chooses Gen. Curtis E. LeMay as running mate. 5. Boeing 747 takes shape in secluded hanger. 6. Stock market rises to 930 after 825 low-point. 7. Agnew makes racial and ethnic speech-blunders. 8. Laugh-In becoming number one TV show. B 9. Biafran War draws attention for starvation, not killing. 10. Teacher strike in NYC hurts children and peace. 11. Pueblo crew member gives world the sign in a photo. 1 2. Al Kaline erupts in fifth Series game to lead Tigers to cham- pionship in eventual seventh game 4-1. 13. Bob Gibson pitching record 22 wins. 13 shutouts, 1.12 ERA. 14. Blacks get more and more TV commercials. 15. Marriage of Jackie and Aristotle Onassis. 16. David (Shapiro) Frye starts doing great imitations. NOVEMBER 1968 ton of Richard Ni on stirs campus radicals, netted for new library books. Grimes loses at polls. sin-story library proposed for 1970. ee riot in student center. jretary quits; calls group politickers. at Court approval sought by planners. WNEU-am seeks to become WRBB-fm for more power. Silver Masque puts on Detective Story. Coeds break rules and get own apartments. Football season. Olatunji and Drums of Passion perform. Wm C-rr 1111M .  « ,„„ „ I pui ttMIr ml nm You don ' l M hi., a Irishman, tan ' p .„. adult, and that I- u 01 ,• are. ■llbmr, J The Librar Construction Begins in ' 70 Construction is expected to start on North- m university ' s 16-story library-learning re- Kn ter in the summer of 1970. ' The library will be built in two phases, with u f tt first phase costmg $6 million and with com- J Won scheduled for the fall of 1972. J When the second phase is completed, the li A aa  ill be able to house one million volumes. lunch Ai:-r s udy individual electronic jrek scattered throughout the building, Presi- !6t Asa S- Snowies reported. There will also be a seating capacity for 1.600 Wests, including 775 non-electrunic study booths pi 120 small study-conference rooms. The S6 million cost includes equipping the Iding with the latest electronic learning re- MB which ' Brill feed information using a sa- lae first floor to the 280 electronic carrels The entire 16-story tower will be completed the first phase, although six upper floors will t be finished on the interior until the second phase The lop floor will house the building ' s Brthanical equipment. President Knowles said the university has ap- plied for a federal grant to. help finance the build Bg, and an anonymous donor has already pledged pft of SI million. The library ' will be constructed around a cen si service core containing rest rooms, stairways, ad elevators. On the ground floor, in addition to the com- Unjrications center, will be the library ' s process- a. The main entrance will be on the first hich will house a lobby, exhibit area, circu- lation desk, catalogs reference area and periodi- cal ™ center is completed. he center will be located between Churchill H 1 ' and the railroad tracks and will be faced ]« h the traditional white-gray brick. FOOTBALL 1968 NU (6-3) 22 C.W. Post 28 42 Bridgeport 19 36 Colby 8 30 A.I.C. 13 10 Springfield 7 3 N. Hampshire 26 E. Michigan 41 20 Cortland St. 17 41 Temple 26 looked like it hadn ' t Item pauf since St arid W nr II and the stmt U been cleaned time then either. He km furniture tram Morgan Memorial aid tatted anything given or hepped jar r{IrSz£iz } togl £T£ V . ' ■nl  nd ulvietd  n.rttal r family, or nothbori nth lor n.l °ma £ Wf f S S u !™,.iT. uliy, most of u  p rt«a  n j pumpkin into « ° 3 M«s£n: 1 A £ £ S «TZZ x™:r a nmu «-cr ranilto RfS NO PLACE I ■ ■.■m, E 55 .nl.g.i. 3 Making of a President By DICK MATTULINA I960. JFK in a squeaker. The press won ' t have ... ' 62. Pat Brown reelected. ' The press won ' t have Nixon to kick around any- 11 22 63. Dallas. Noon. Black Friday. JFK assassinated hy lone gunman. OgodOgodOgod. Tippit, Oswald, Ruby. New Nixon horn. ' 66. Reactionary Reagan btfats Pat Brown. Kick in the former vice-presiden- tial teeth. 11 30 67. Senator Eugene J. McCar- thy of Minnesota (who?) to oppose LBJ on war stand. Split the Democratic party? Goodie, goodie. Sometime, 1967 — Julie and David. How cute. A White House wedding? Ojoyojoyojoy. NINETEENSIXTYEIGHT February . . . Romney ' s brain washed. On to New Hampshire. One down. MARCH - White Knight upsets John- son in New Hampshire. Moral victory. Fight it out, boys. Massachusettswiscon- sinoregonnewjersey . . . APRIL FOOL: I will not seek, nor will I accept the nomination of my party for another term as your Presi- , dent. Noble gesture. Two down. 4 3 68. Bobby ' s candidate. Young up- start. Ruthless. Wiretap. Bay of Pigs. Good Christ, not another TV debate. 4 4 68. Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gunned down in Memphis. Lone as- sassin. Oh, Christ. Horrible. Pity, love, brotherhood. Everyone ' s a liberal. 4 7 6S. King buried. Scratch another nigger loudmouth. Three down. 4 8 68. Hubert Horatio Humphrey leaps into the fray. Surprise, surprise. No primaries. Backdoor politics. Too late. To hell with the people. Good. 4 30 68. Rocky decides at last. He ' ll run. Hey! What about party unity? Julie and David. 6 5 68. California Wednesday. Dra- matic victory. Hurrah, hurrah, hu ... shots, screams, blood. Robert Francis Kennedy fatally wounded in Los Angeles hotel. Tears, anguish, disbe- lief. Lone assassin. Hasn ' t this happened before? Four down. Dr. Spock. SUMMER: Ike ' s coronary. Get one for the Gipper. AUGUST: Miami. Reagan. Stassen. Goldwater? Sorry, Rocky. To hell with the people. Republicrats rule. Right, right, right, Strom. Five, six, seven down. Spiro T. . . Julie and David. SEPTEMBER: CHICAGO. Pogrom in the Park. We love Mayor Daley. Up against the wall, mother. Eugene Who? Ribicoff and Unruh and young, black Julian. To HELL with the peo- ple. Eight down. Humphrey-Muskie. OCTOBER - Fat Japs. Polacks. Seen one slum . . . Spiro gets the bigots. Sh- eerest apologies. David and Julie. . . . Debate? Whatever for? To hel) with the people. Bombing halt. My God. Commie dupes. Better dead than Red. NOVEMBER. 290 Electoral votes. Vote with your feet .To hell with the people, humphreycleavergregory down- Wallace Lemay. Last little indian. Vice President Agnew. NOVEMBER 1968 1. Nixon-Agnew win election by less than 1% of vote. 29,565,052 to 29.539,500 to 9,181,466. 2. Riots in Tokyo by students and political people. 3. NYC hit by several strikes at once, Lindsay going nuts. 4. Shirley Chisholm wins Brooklyn election. 5. Womens groups demanding abortion reform. 6. Catholic Church reaping own kind of dissent. 7. Commercials against litter and smoking. 8. N. Vietnam bombing halt called for by LBJ. ' ■9. Harvard and Yale tie in 29-29 fiasco. 10. Toomey wins decathalon event at Olympics. 1 1. Heidi Bowl on NBC. 32-29 NY lead turns to 43-32 loss to Oakland. DECEMBER 196S Jems fight for and get more vacation time. Silver Masque schedules bawdy Lvsistrata. UCAR plans sensitivity sessions for NU racists. Experimental college folds for lack of funds. Cars being pilfered from lot incite commuter protest. Students spend first Christmas holidays with Nixon as president. Night before Christmas By MIKE BROWN Twas the night before Christmas and alt through the alums, not a Honky was stirring not even a bum; The ritles were stacked by the chimney with care, in hopes that Brother Eldridge soon would be there; The children all starving and cold in their beds, while visions of Freedom danced through their heads; With you and your roaches and me and my rats, had just settled down lor a much needed nap. When trom the streets there came such a banter, I sprang trom my bed to see what was the matter. Away to the window I tlew like a Hash, tore open the shutters and threw up the sash. The moon on the breast of a new falfen Boy, gave feelings of sorrow to those who sought joy, When what to my tear-filled eyes should appear, but one Black Maria and 12 men of fear. With a little oVdriver, so callous and slick, 1 knew in a moment it must be St. Dick. More rapid than eagles his millionaires came, and he whistled and shouted and called them by name; Now, Order! Now. Justice! Now confusion and mix-ups! Gone freedom, gone protest, gone hopes for a shake-up! To the torch of our freedom, to the problems, unsolved, Now dash away, dash away, dash away all! As problems before the people did fly, when we met an obstacle, we tried to reply. So up to the White House, the milli onaires flew, with a mouth full of promises, and St Richard too! And then, in a twinkling, 1 heard at my door, an officer telling me to open, Or! As I drew in my head, and was turning around, on my new T.V. St. Richard was found. He was dressed in a costume, from his head to his foot, with no trace of anger, but how his fists shook- A silk-like material hung from his back, and he looked like a demon, with no traces of black, His eyes, — how they quivered, his jowls how they fell, his cheeks were like caverns, his nose like a bell, His droll little mouth was drawn up like a bow, And the skin of his face, was as white as the snow; His complexion seemed one of much felt grief, yet the meaning behind it, was hidden quite deep. Behind his broad face and his fat little belly, that shook when he spoke, like a bowlful of jelly, He was dumpy and plump, a right jolly old elf, and I cried when I saw him, inspite of my self; A wink of his eye and a twist of his head, brought in the policeman and all I did dread; He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work, searching and yelling, then he turned with a jerk. And laying one linger aside of his nose, seeing my gun. out the door he had flown, He sprang to his wagon, to his team he did whistle, and away they all flew, like the dawn of a missle. But I heard him exclaim, ere he drove out of sight Happy Xmas to Niggers, and to all a good nightr DECEMBER 1968 1. San Francisco St. College disturbances, fights. 2. Chicago convention action called police riot. 3. Anders, Lowell, Borman . . . ready for moon ride. 4. 78 miners closed up in Mine No. 9 explosion in W. Vir. 5. Public television on rise financially. 6. Loch Ness monster draws attention, with findings. 7. NYC cops accused of sleeping on duty, pictures taken. 8. Skyjackers plague all airliners. 9. Barbara Jane Mackle abducted for $500,000 ransom. 10. Construction of Paris Peace-Talk-table irritating. 11. Arab commandos, Al Fatah gain strength in Palestine. 12. Joe Namath shaves Fu Manchu mustache for $10,000. 13. Big E, Elvin Hayes, making baskets at San Diego. 14. Flu epidemic hits northeast area. 15. College students learning about police beatings. Movies 1968 Books of 1968 Yellow Submarine Alice B. Toklas Lion in Winter Split Birds of Peru Magus Candy The Fox Smashing Time The President ' s Analyst The Producers Berserk Fitzwilly The Jungle Book Poor Cow Charlie Bubbles Planet of the Apes The Two of Us A Matter of Innocence Secret War of Harry Frigg 2001 Belle de Jour War and Peace The Odd ' Couple The Red Mantle The Fifth Horseman is Fear The Swimmer Wild in the Streets Therese and Isabelle The Detective Petulia Paper Lion STUDENT FILMS Rosemary ' s Baby Green Berets True Grit Thomas Crown Affair Bride Wore Black Secret Life of American Wife For Love of Ivy Bandolero The Strange Affair Hang ' um High Rachel. Rachel Targets How Sweet It Is Faces Two or Three Things I Know . Finian ' s Rainbow If He Hollers . . . Funny Girl The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter Romeo and Juliet Charge of the Light Brigade Charley Barbarella Shoes of the Fisherman Joanna Weekend Secret Ceremony Bullitt Boston Strangler Oliver Killing of Sister George Chitty Chitty Bang Bang The Way Things Work Where Eagles Dare The Instrument Tolstoy Myra Breckenridge Vanished The Naked Ape While Six Million Died Tower of Babel Thomas Wolfe Airport Double Helix Soul on Ice Couples Kennedy and Johnson Armies of the Night Iberia The French Chef Cookbook The Algiers Motel Incident The Money Game Or I ' ll Dress You in the Morning Our Own Worst Enemy Red Sky at Morning The Rich and the Super Rich Ho Chi Minh, A Biography Black Rage The Senator The Case Against Congress The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test Preserve and Protect The Hurricane Years Pumphouse Gang The Beatles 60 Years on the Firing Line Cancer Ward Instant Replay Lonesome Cities Bogey Man Arms of Krupp The Pornography of Power Revolution for the Hell of It Savage Sleep The Day Kennedy Was Shot Look Out Whitey . . . 1897 Sears Catalogue Doctors Quick Weight Loss Diet Born Female The Unheavenly City Albums-Singers of 1968 DEATHS of l l Hey Jude - Beatles Somethin ' Else Again - Richie Havens Pleasures of the Harbor - Phil Ochs Disraeli Gears - Cream After Bathing at Baxter ' s - Airplane Farewell to Era - Mama ' s Papa ' s Wildflowers - Judy Collins Wild Honey - Beach Boys Fixin ' to Die Rag - Country Joe Best Hits - Ian Sylvia Boogie - Canned ' Heat Reach Out - Four Tops Mr. Fantasy - Traffic Long Time Comin ' - Electric Flag Earth Opera - Earth Bookends - Simon Garfunkel Music from Big Pink - Band Wheels of Fire - Cream Ascending - Orpheus Ballad of Bonnie Clyde - George Fame Good, Bad Ugly - Hugo Montenegro Mighty Quinn - Manfred Mann Blues Alone - John Mayall Quicksilver - Q. Messenger Service Waiting for the Sun - Doors Super Session - Bloomfield, Kooper, Stills Undead - Ten Years After Cheap Thrills - Big Brothers Holding Co. Now - Aretha Franklin Late Again - R P M In My Own Dream - Paul Butterfield Stoned Soul Picnic - Fifth Dimension In Search of Lost Chord - Moody Blues Dance to the Music - Sly the Family Stone Last Time Around • Buffalo Springfield Getting to the Point - Savoy Brown Renaissance - Vanilla Fudge Born to be Wild - Steppenwolf Livin ' the Blues - Canned Heat Sailor - Steve Miller Band Hurdy Gurdy Man - Donovan Truth - Jeff Beck Crazy World of ... - Arthur Brown Magic Bus - Who Dock of the Bay - Otis Redding Those Were the Days - Mary Hopkins Light My Fire - Feliciano Classical Gas - Mason Williams Get to Phoenix - Glenn Campbell My Eyes Off You - Lettermen Paul Whiteman 76, bandleader. Raymond Harroun 84, first Indy Race winner at 74.6 mph. Bob Jones Sr. 84, evangelist and college founder. Fannie Hurst 78, novelist. Stanley Berman 41, world-event gate crasher. Yuri A. Gagarin 34, first man in space. Helen Keller 87, handicapped author, humanitarian. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 39, civil-rights leader; murdered. Robert F. Kennedy 42. liberal politician; murdered. Dan Duryea 61, film star. Wes Montgomery 43, exceptional guitarist. Dr. Charles W. Mayo 70, founder of the Mayo Clinic. Red Foley 58, singer of country music. Chester Carlson 62, xerography inventor, drycopy. Bea Benaderet 62, TV personality. George Papandreou 80, premier of Greece. Ramon Novarro 69, the first Ben-Hur. Wendell Corey 54, film star. Upton Sinclair 90, novelist. Tallulah Bankhead 65, film personality. Arthur H. Sulzberger 77, NY Times editor. John Steinbeck 66, novelist The Grapes of Wrath. Norman Thomas 84, socialist candidate that never won. Jess Willard 86, prizefighter. Nick Adams 36, of television Rebel fame. Jimmy Clark 32, auto racer. Tommy Armour 72, pro-golfer. Harold Gray 74, creator of Little Orphan Annie. Karl Barth 82, theologian. Marion Lome 82, television and film star. Bill Mastersonn 24, Minn. North Star. First NHL death. Moon Mullins 60, fullback under Rockne. Dennis O ' Keefe 60, film star. Lurleen Wallace 41, governor of Alabama. Salvatore Quasimoto 66, Italian poet. War correspondents killed while covering Vietnam action. 78 men killed in mine explosion in No. 9 shaft W. Vir. Thousands more killed in Vietnam. Nigeria, Mid-East. JANUARY 1969 ! I. Hockey season. 2. Black Student Union showing films on racism, Panthers 3. NU cops carrying guns to guard cars and buildings. 4. Snow sculpture popular tor Winter Carnival. 5. Students protest denial of tenure to Dr. Ina Samuels. 6. Hacker wants to unionize faculty. 7. Mr. Husky vote sparse; seen dying. 8. Track season. 9. Music major sought by students. 10. Students look back on LBJ philosphy. Ml. Phones being ripped off walls. FEBRUARY 1969 1. WITCHES picket slave auction mixer. 2. Buckwald speaks at Winter Carnival as part of DSS. 3. Al Hirt entertains; Marilyn Princi is queen. 4. AAUP radical group charges salaries unfair to faculty. 5. ROTC and drugs are big issues on campus. 6. NU and other colleges plan Roxbury Community College. 7. Tuition raised again. 8. Yerma performed by Silver Masque. HOCKEY 1968-69 NU (6-17) 4 Harvard 8 1 Yale 5 4 Bowdoin 3 4 PC. 5 5 R.P.I. 4 2 Brown 7 1 B.U. 9 4 Clarkson 6 2 Princeton 1 1 Colby 6 1 Vermont 3 1 Colgate 2 4 N.H. 7 6 Dartmouth 4 1 Army 5 6 A.I.C. 3 2 B.C. 10 4 Harvard 8 3 PC. 7 3 B.C. 6 3 B.U. 11 N.H. 3 6 Merrimack 5 Prohibition must be repealed Perhaps thin hat much aftei : really changed ; Volstead Act of grew up contending w 1919, legislation prohibiting the use of alcohol in the ill-fated experiment the United States found to be completely unworkable. There tion learned, that could not be controlled by the sttae or federal governments. People dustry, and the i finally repealed : In 1938. New York City ' s Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia requested a committee of impartial scientists from the New York Academy of Medicine to make sociological, medical, and psychological studies of the alleged marijuana problem in the city. The summary of that report, published in 1944, stated, Marijuana is not a drug of addic- distress . . . Those who have been smoking , . . for a number of years showed no mental or physical deterioration which may be attributed -growing group of indtviduuls, especial- of college age. have found the drug harmless and desirable euphoriant, ;d by ridiculous laws backed with juna users throughout the world, a f lubtably higher today. These people d that the myths connected with the addic punishable by five described ; Should iychological effects, i Until 1937, hemp derivativ therapeutic device. An upsurge of the drug in the 1930 s. howi posed primarily by pressure grou industry (ot • fedei Propaganda campaigns co Federal Bureau of Narcotics tablished in 1930) told the of violence and acts of scsu havior, physical degeneratio ear, the marijuana myths i , S. legislators as factual. phine, etc). EiRhieen y-. r the congressional hearings 1956 Narcotic Control Ac! people who had testified B public as to the drug s addictive drugs. Yet .on end; hopefully. TRACK 1968-69 NU (8-1) 72 1 2 Brown St. John Harvard N.H. H.C. B.U. U. Mass. U.R.I. B.C. 36 1 2 45 76 45 40 25 45 37 38 1969 Outdoor TRACK NU (5-1) 92 1 2 U. Mass. U.R.I. Bates B.C. H.C. Springfield 65 1 2 75 57 64 73 67 JANUARY 1969 1. Nixon gives lower voices speech at inauguration. 2. Agnew also inaugurated at Jan. 20 ceremony. ' 3. David and Julie married . . . Julie kisses Dad first. 4. Brandeis blacks take Ford Hall in demonstration. 5. Boeing ' s 747 jet test flights. 6. Return of the Pueblo crew by N. Korea. 7. Astronauts fly around moon taking first photos. : 8. Jets beat Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl upset 16-7. 9. Trial of Sirhan B. Sirhan opens in LA. 10. Jews and blacks in NYC fighting. 11. Ulster. North Ireland boiling over with fears. 12. Jan Palach, 21, sets self ablaze in Czechoslovakia. 13. Snowmobiles becoming safety hazard. 14. French mood low after student riots-worker strikes. 15. Government hearings on Pueblo incident. 16. Fires, explosions damage USS Enterprise. God is dead! There is no God! The Bible ' s just not relevant anymore! There are just no answers for society in religion anymore. Religion is just a way the Establishment tries to keep young people from having fun. In the last ten years, a growing number of people began to feel this way about God and religion. The greatest effect has been upon young people. Rejecting religion, kids have taken off in search of something to take its place - something they can believe in. They ' ve tried just about everything they can think of - from money and big cars to sex and drugs. And very few, if any, have found what they were really looking for. In fact many just give up and commit suicide. For the most part I have to agree that some of the traditional ceremonies are outdated. However, in God and the Bible - in the messages of His love, our free will and the burden of prayer - there is something to believe in. God ' s sending of His only Son - Jesus Christ - and His message of Redemption can never, especially in times like we ' re going through now, be called irrelevant. I have accepted God ' s gift, and that is how I know it ' s for real. It ' s a personal thing each individual must experience for himself. And with the world the way it is, it ' s great having a true friend who provides real peace and security. During the five years I ' ve spent at Northeastern, I ' ve had countless opportunities to do new things and to go to some new places. This was when I found my faith really worked. Instead of feeling low because I wasn ' t having any fun, I was happy because I knew I was doing what God wanted me to do. I still do things I shouldn ' t do, but He is willing to forgive me if I ' ll ask Him to. He ' s a friend I can talk to about anything - anytime, anywhere. Without His help I ' m sure I wound ' t have made it through school. From what I ' ve said, it must sound like I sit around all the time with my nose in a book. Well, my nose has had more contact with footballs and basketballs than it has with books. I enjoy just about every sport there is. I like to have a good time as much as the next guy. The only difference is the sources of my activities are different from those of most kids. This hasn ' t prevented me from having fun, though. There are lots of kids that share my beliefs and we have great times together. The best part about faith in Christ, however, is that I have a reason for living - that is - to do what God wants me to do. I believe it was His will that I came to Northeastern and that I majored in Account- ing. Now I ' m seeking for His will in the future. Although there is a de- gree of uncertainty, I know I can rely on Him to guide me in the direction He wants me to go. When you accept Christ, your life is changed. Of course, you ' re still human and you have the same emotions as before. But you become in- terested in the everlasting things of God instead of the short-lived pleasures of this life. And to me, there ' s nothing like it. FEBRUARY 1969 1. Berkeley campus erupts with student demonstrations. 2. Nine Jews hung in Baghdad for spying. 3. Betty Friedan ' s NOW group invades all-male restaurant. 4. Cigarettes get notice of eviction from TV in 1971 . 5. Nixon goes on first European tour of allied countries. 6. Costs of medical care to be investigated. 7. Oil spill off Santa Barbara irks Hickel, boat owners. 8. Skyjackings more numerous, Arabs lead the way. 9. Protests grow of ROTC being on campus. 10. Girl jockeys invade horseracing sport at Hialeah. 1 1. Hollywood accepts new actors into fold. 12. Saturday Evening Post puts out last issue. 13. Boston ' s new City Hall is dedicated in Gov. Cen. MARCH 1969 M. SC and PAC oppose ROTC credit. 2. Basketball season. 3. SCATE completes booklet. 4. No end seen to tuition increases. 5. Student Court seen operating by summer. 6. K.U Klux Klan threatens Vincent Lembo. 7. Parking space at a premium. BOSTON. MASSACHUSETTS Council, PAC Oppose ROTC Credit Councilors Say jl ' s Non-Academic Knowles Supports Campus Corps get Council Tuesday voted to with- p)d academic credit from Reserve Officer fei :£an 300 students, many of them fen of Students for a Democratic Soci- [C ad other prominent campus groups, pdaf tbe Student Center Ballroom to de- teubject — Be it resolved that ROTC ■baser be considered an academic course Set ill credit be withdrawn — with pisBJted council delegates. TW SbsJ •ote, closer than many had anti- afad nth 25 for and 18 against the pro- aal ktiamvd nearly two hours of formal ad- ■a tad informal, heated debate by stu- ■k ad (acuity, opponents and proponents ' Sf %- ai .anted speakers, three for and three ant the council proposal, addressed the FOR THE MILITARY - it. Col. R a wr rr for five minutes each, decrying tag cradii for ROTC at th Sti • KOTC caws or appealing for abolition of F™ « Y PIWl held ■mier. aft fa- military courses. be carried live on WNEU. The s fConfimnd on P t 4) by Jack Girriry. Klan Threatens UCAR Member tches for the NEWS Only two colleges. tWuu-.s Adm id Education still allow •dit for ROTC. The other colleges, he id. allowed :tdfJ-on credit where the hours were applied toward graduation. trrMsin- r hc tred|t f(ivm hcre - Dr Know J L „ Tuesday. - neaf , y loken ROTC [n some form should remain or. ipus, he said, because a lot of student ' •V Kb Dax SUn e laMamiAj has b The student who want ROTC -should lave it. Dr Knowles said Taking it away vould deny their freedom. He added that the $21,000 the univer- ;ity annually pays to continue ROTC. is more than made up in the $50 monthly ... h..l.ir,!i)ps the advanced cadets receive i the Army. •SMfl Ik, , weeks lata ( aeomp lis tunc •xtfatmOoa ot -v by the lcifl« ir.jiiruted : 4 .xr SCATE Booklet Avaaabl The Student Council Student Course and Teacher Evaluation Committee ' s (SCATE) booklet is now available to students. The evaluation, which is the students ' opinions on such things as the instructors ' approach, sti- mulation and availability, was ad- ministered to students last winter during the Div. B. quarter. The six areas of evaluation list- ed in the booklet are: course sub- stance, classroom approach, work load, instructor ' s availability; in- structor ' s stimulation of the stu- dent ' s curiosity in the subject, and student ' s recommendation. Because of an incorrect tran- scription, the evi .uatton of Prof. Lawrence J. Blumsack ' s classroom approach on Page 30 should read: 6 per cent never effective, Wro per cent rarely effective, 31 per cent generally effective, and M per cent effective, according to Robert Weisman (70BA), chair- man of the SCATE committee. He also noted that Miss Carolyn Gartrell ' s name should not ap- pear on Page 22 for Western Civ- ilization. Hiss Gartrell was the discussion leader for only one section of 10 students who she said were actually evaluating the lecturer of that course. When asked to identify that lecturer Miss Gartrell said, The evaluation by only 10 students out of the 1,000 who took the course is not significant She would not mention the lecturer ' s The SCATE booklet is available at the Student Council office and in the commons area: BASKETBALL 1968-69 NU (16-5) 77 St. Anselm ' s 67 86 Maine 81 60 H.C. 67 73 A.I.C. 72 75 W.P.I. 54 70 Marietta 61 80 Vermont 62 55 Cen. Conn. 66 68 Assumption 67 72 N.H. 75 87 Colby 56 85 Bates 55 75 B.U. 70 68 U. Mass. 64 53 Fairleigh-D. 57 69 B.C. 80 72 C.W. Post 58 86 Tufts 74 79 M.I.T. 56 66 B.U. 64 73 Springfield 64 1 4H Hail Up My Tuition, Up Yours By GIL OK-haml over your wallet, all jewelry, gold fillings, ami your complete set of 1957 baseball cards as a down poj n nt - rtiitii Ah. frrshi till bar. ag.i nine- tloslon-S 173 fo vhen-BurUngtori-$270 for 15 weeks. Sophomore year— big weeks plus $12.50 in activity sundries and SIS more in siek pay. Then along comes $.500 plus extras, .nips. S.vsU, by another quarter of a C-note for ., disposable cap-gown degree combo and a chance to melt ,n the Huston Garden Sauna Circus on the hottest day in |un« listening to Louise Day Hicks talking on Afro-Ameri- can culture. Tuition in September of 1964 averaged $27 a week. Next fall cost per week will rise to a little more than $58 .$1400 per term) - that ' s almost S4 a cut, Jack. How - I can lxrar you logically mouthing through the mashed coffee grinds lingering in the cracks of your cracked lower lips - (wait a minute. Where was I before 1 got started on that little image? Oh yeah), how can you keep up with mflationary tuition? How the hell do I know? But, having been around for lo these many years I can offer a few suggestions (you knew I would). IMPOSSIBLE DREAM Approach your co-op employer and explain the money squeeze. After ho pretends not to get the point for 10 minutes, come right out and ask for a raise commen- surate with both your ability and your weekly tuition boost. Upon being released asexpeodable to the corpora- tion, you can apply for financial aid as a hardship case. it von can walk the Halls life free of charge on the Doesn ' t grab ya mud 1 got it. Live at hon estate and let them foot of Huntingto C.I. bill. , Lcland? e with Morn the cost no n the rest of your and Dads on the matter how high it goes. Oh, the family ' s poor Your mother and father college professors without anymore because you ge and even the goldfish tor are virtually tenure You too much as tail on vol elfare nest month penniless - both can ' t live at home rricf from the dog And besides, you couldn ' t commute from Chester, N. J., anyhow? IF AT FIRST Still haven ' t found the solution, huh? Try this. First dav of school next term, take a paper punch and really do a job on your IBM schedule cards-being care- ful not to punch out obscenities. Next cut your name and student number off the card and in the space pro- vided state clearly your new name which is NAME LAST FIRST. On top of the schedule it says to print last name first, then first name and then middle name. Your monicker will then read FIRST NAME LAST. For class and division, write 1968C, then proceed to fill out the card with last term ' s schedule and room numbers. NOTHING VENTURED It should take until the ninth week to figure out just what you have done. Of course, you still haven ' t paid any tuition by this time and have culled 45 days of precious Northeastern knowledge on the house. If, in the 10th week, the wheels start humming to MARCH 1969 ■■I. Golda Meir becomes Prime Minister of Israel. 2. ABM debate continues with no actions taken. s 3. Roller Derby craze exciting fans coast-to-coast. :: 4. Mickey Mantle retires from baseball. ' 5. John and Yoko Ono newest rock two-some. •■6. Ted Kennedy marching without brothers in St. Pat ' s parade. 7. Vietcong dead dragged by allies to graves. 8. Campus newspapers, underground press using 4-letter words. 9. Gen. and President Dwight D. Eisenhower dies at age 78. 10. Britain invades Auguilla island. 11. Banking rates soar to 7 1 2% to battle inflation. 12. China-Russia again fight over border. 13. Mod Squad-Smothers Bros, cited for TV shows. 14. Paul McCartney married at 27. 15. Trappers beat baby animals for skins, profit. 1 6. Astrology and occult become in studies. 1 7. Clay Shaw acquitted of conspiracy in New Orleans. 18. James Earl Ray sentenced to 99 years for King slaying. APRIL 1969 !: 1. Adam Clayton speaks for DSS. 2. Standardized tuition called unreal. 3. Criminal Justice Dean dismissed for no reason. ■■4. Guerilla Reeves quits ROTC on moral grounds. 5. Baird predicts overpopulation. 6. Upward Bound in financial trouble. ,: 7. Anti-ROTC people attacked in Quad. 8. 1 ,000 attend ROTC meeting and rally. 9. Seldner resigns from SC after fight with ASK. 10. Students petition for sex education course. 1 1. Abolition of dorm requirements. ' } 2. Sgt. Pig leads colorful anti-ROTC drill. 1969 CREW NU(3-2) 1st NU, Vesper 1st Princeton, NU 1st NU, BU, MIT 1st Brown, NU 1st NU, BU Poile and Swett Named Captains In a move that was really no surprise to anvoi Dave Poile and Paul Swett were elected captain the 1969 - 70 Husky hoc-key and basketball teams spectively. The announcement was made at the annua! b ketball and hockey banquet held Tuesdav m the S dent Center Banquet hall. Poile, winner of the Paul Mines Award for t Most Improved Player as chosen by the New Ei land Hockey Writer ' s Assn., figured in all of M victories this season. The son of Norman Bud Poile. general ma ager of the Philadelphia Flyers, Poile scored the wi ning goal in six out of seven Husky wins and assist on the other winning score for a season total of points. A tennis star in high school, Poile never pbj organized school hockey until he came to Sorthea em, but that didn ' t stop him from beating out tl more experienced competition for a starting pfo on the varsity. This past season he was also named to the  ' ond line of the AH New England team. DAIRD AMES ;i.5 Billion and Still Rising Sgt. Pig Leads Troops To Different Drummer V KATHV KEPNEK It could have been the Battle of Bull Run all over again as 300 spectators swarmed to find good seats to watch the anti-ROTC demonstrators outmaneuver the ROTC drill team in the Fens Wed- nesday. The confrontation came at 1 p.m. when about 300 ROTC ca- dets carrying rifles led by a police escort, marched into the Fens and met a small band of 13 gray clad troopers carrying a red flag with American Death Co. printed on it. FULL FORCE The police were there in full force, protected by their police dogs. However they were never called upon to perform and RO- TC, seemingly unflustered by the additional drill company, ignored them and proceeded with then- practice. Following suit, the gray band led by Sgt Pig, wearing a pig ' s head showed the audience how wett-they learned their lessons in coordination. Perfectly in step they marched through the ROTC lines to the front of the bleachers. Sgt. Pig called for a roll call. Militarism, Racism, Imperialism, Capitalism, and all the other isms were present and accounted for. PEP TALK Giving his men a pep talk, Sgt. Pig told troopers that this or- ganization must be tight, tight like the Army. I want you to jump at my orders, like in the Army. You ' ve been in the classroom too long. In the background could be seen a mass of green uniforms obedi- ently following their commanders marching around the field. Sgt. Pig explained to his com- pany that there are three faces: the right face, the left face, and the about face. Then they proceed- ed to nractice these. Is This You I am opposed to the Vietnam War {and any such war that is not based upon defense of our ceun- (ry ). Please send me application to the Ministry of your church, as well as information as to its beliefs and membership throughout the world. It is my understanding that if I am accep te d to the ministry of your church, I can not conscientiously participate in any military involvement not directly concerned with the defense of our country or its possessions. I further understand that training will not interfere with my normal work or academic schedule, — and I can choose my own location of service to God and humantiy. Enclosed is $1 .00 to cover clerical expenses and cost of mailing NAME ADDRESS . AGE CITY STATE ZIP J 1 entire ad to: Church of the Humanitarian God; 2J Box !3236 ; St. Petersburg, Florida 33733. Indents Fight Durine March .. rotesting ROTC on Campus BY NANCY VOGELSON rhc first taste i i violence in an emot- ional week of anti-ROTC activity came to the Northeastern campus Wednesday as undergraduate bystanders clashed with SDS picketers in the quadrangle. Trouble began shortly before 10 a.m., some 90 minutes after SDS members and supporters began what was to have been a day-long informational picket line through the quadrangle. According to Douglas Stone (71LA). a spokesman for SDS, Our picket line was designed to last all day and was not meant to obstruct people from entering or leav- ing Richards Hall. We were marching peaceably around the quad when three Then the) jumped Dave Smith, Slot said. ' The) hit him and knocked off h glasses. Others followed. They tore u signs and attacked just about everyone i the line. It ' s kind of sad, Stone note that some NT students don ' t think. Th( resort to their fists instead of their brail They can ' t discuss things rationally, ai they have to resort to this. DIFFERENT STORIES Meanwhile groups of spectators ga varied accounts of the incident which 1 one student with a sizeable gash on 1 forehead But other non-SDS members said h iniurv occurred when a group of student former Guerilla- Scholar Released, Instructor Sympathetic to Reeves BY PETER LANCE the advanced Reserved Officer Training Corps who was a I ,rps Counter Guerrilla Group and at one time the highest was given permission to withdraw from the corps this weel ntspoki OLA), an active member of the University Committee A opponent of the presence of ROTC on campus, was gi lw C.n RieharH C. Mn Here Comes the Fuzz It seems that one of the quickest ways to solidify a student body against the ad- niinistration is to call in the police. Students opposing a building ' s take- over, suddenly join the fight once they spot the flashing beacons, blue uniforms and the shiny badges. Heads get bashed. Admittedly, mis is all part of the politics of confrontation, but the ad m inistration plays into the protestors hands. Harvard ' s Nathan Pusey is the cur who beats children. While on the other hand, Brandeis ' Morris Abram is the picture of self-restraint He found the police unnec- essary. Abram still maintains his students ' re- spect. Pusey even has his faculty against him. But both schools had a student disrup- tion, and in each case the police determin- ed the students ' sympathies. It shouldn ' t happen here, but if it does, the police are not needed. The problems can be worked out without Northeastern students bleeding and crying on the steps of Richards HaH The cops don ' t give a damn. APRIL 1969 : 1. Smothers Bros, censored by CBS-TV (for late tapes). . 2. John Hancock Bldg. planned, to be higher than Pru. : 3. Celtics win last championship from LAKERS, Wilt; 1( 106. 4. Annual Boston Marathon gaining in world prestige. : 5. Harvard Strike fills Stadium for student vote. 6. Sirhan Sirhan declared guilty of first degree murder. 7. Hawk Harrelson traded from Boston to Cleveland. 8. Transplants become moral issue; religion vs. medicine. 9. Baseball in Canada as Expos open first season. 10. North Korea shoots down EC 121 American spy plane. 1 1. Military-industrial complex term; new and overworked. 12. Abe Fortas charged with inappropriate behavior. 13. Old Mole news uncovers Harvard-CIA ties. 14. Sino-Soviet rift grows over border issue. 15. TV news magazine shows criticized. 16. Ban on pants for women fought by employees. 17. Phil Esposito ' s 100th point, Bruins surging. 18. Ted Williams accepts Washington Senator manager ' s job. MAY 1969 ' 1 . Baseball season. s 2. DSS speaker Abe Fortas ignores charges and talks on system. 3. Silver Masque puts on Once Upon a Mattress. 4. Knowles names friends to ROTC study committee. 5. L.A. faculty considers abolishing ROTC entirely. 6. Library construction again to start - June 1970. 7. Drug use spreading among dorm students. s 8. SDS takeover of Interfaith lounge draws egg-throwers. 9. George McGovern speaks at academic ceremonies. 10. School decides not to punish sit-in group. 11. Women start campus discussion groups for liberation. 1 2. Food service a little better after study ' s charges. 13. Blacks seek coordinating aspect for black consciousness. 14. Secretary fired for protesting female staff positions. 15. Fraternities becoming more politically awure and active. Fortas Ignores Charges BASEBALL 1969 BY PETER LANCE. NANCY VOGELSON and MARC STERN Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas did not reply Thursday night to charts made In Life Magazine that he accepted a check for $20,000 from the Wolf- son Foundation. Fortas appeared as the final speaker in the Dis- : Speakes Series. After Justice ForUs concluded his speach on violence and civil disobedienoe, former scries chair- man Tom Conrad t 69LA | said. There will be ques- tions, but only on what Justice Fortas covered in his Louis Woll foundation chairmai rise it were ' ' unties laws FortaS reportedl; ;il : [] i.i-ir. after Wolfsoi i onrad « In his speech. Justice Fortas called for the young people of the nation to ioin the establishment m a common mission to cam ' out and perfect educational reforms and the great social revolutions that have been started by the older generation in this country. He concluded that the establishment must pro- vide the means for this student participation. traveling expenses. Fortas would not accept his personal speaking fee of S1.325, the balance of the original con- tract fee. The Walker Agency told me they just heard of the change in fees on Monday, Conrad said, but Justice For- tas ' secretary claims that she requested his personal fee be dropped months ago. at NU (8-11) 1 Brown 10 B.C. 5 Tufts B.U. 5 N.H. Springf. U.R.I. 7 Tufts 1 B.C. 12 Colby 2 Bowdoin 17 Brandeis 5 A. I.C. 4 Harvard B.U. 8 Bates 3 P.C. 6 H.C. MIT. Dorm Drug Use Rising Rapidly •vi f ' rnnkly Admit 8 Mmpread (.sage ft Drugs in Dorms - Part 11 Narcotics ' Use Rising In Men ' s Dormitories CASH For Your TEXTBOOKS at the Harvard Book Store 305 HUNTINGTON AVE Highest Prices Paid! It ' s irorlh your time to compare prices! TWO VltWS _ Antt-SDS tt« •Janta attempt to break down •ha  W leading Int. the mm occupied by SO trudenti who ttuJ.ov.rth. Inf.rf.lth lounao, hi Hi picture M l.ft. In the more peaceful icene at ritjttt, • SOS w. I ks down rh. tt.l r., arena opr.lwd, Toeid.y while minollno with torn, faculty mem- ««. Tha occupation •ihM at 2:17 run. Both photo, arc by Frank Moy Jr. SDS Lounge Sit-In Ends Peacefully -Mike Chuns from South Dakota, Caneacatlan audience this country mint pull troop, out of Viatnam and run thoir own governments. Sonator apoke in Alumni Audi- | U 6 IN VIET — George McGovern, Democratic aenator l n) Convocation i,uH .n r . thit eountrv must Dul l troop. McGovern Scorns US Involvement in Vietnam Out Of Asia Dissent Is Healthy f AhXTT VOGELSON Ge te McGovern (DSD) told •Ktieuee in Alumni Auditor- thtt ' Neither the United V other great power has i , ? ght capacity to try to ™eai regime abroad that u e confidence and respect •jai , 1 •■■« r H, ah s guest speaker at the Honors Convocation here •ho b « u«.. „k, ,„ t _ _  Y MIKE OORFSMAN Sen. George McGovern, (D-SJU white deeding student dissent, sa.d he couW not so along with students who sieze buUdSgs and manhandle university per- sonnel. McGovern answered students que uons during an interview in tte tater faith Lounge, the s.te of the SDS sit in earlier this week. ••I suppose every student mus dec.de — w! i7if he wants to join the mil BY NANCY VOGELSON Between 40 and 50 Students for a Democratic Society and sym- pathizers seized the Interfaitti Lounge of the Ell Building Tues- day to protest Dr. Asa S. Knowles ' rejection of their demands that ROTC be abolished from campus and that financial remuneration be given corps upperclassmen. The five-hour sit-in followed a heavily - attended SDS meeting Monday night during which stu- dents grilled Kenneth Ryder, vice president of administration, on the administration ' s views on the RO- TC issue. Ryder appeared at the meeting in response to the SDS demand two weeks ago that the president or a member of his staff appear in in the ballroom to answer students ' questions. Shortly after 9 a.m. Tuesday members met in the quadrangle and began to search for a possible seige target. They marched single file into the Ell Building, climbed to the second floor and entered Edwards Lounge in which Prof. Beneditto Fabrizi was teaching a French class. The students reportedly ordered Fabrizi and his students out of the room following an announcement that thev were taking o er. How- ever, Tom LaPointe [69L.M. an SDS protester, later apologized to the professor stating, Follow itijj tewing ' : Ik.- ordc 1 .1! Liter Meanwhile second ffoot m prccatttioiur ' . pressroom . lounge utilized bv r « uit- it U-rs conttoninfj du f nig m the ES H ■■,!, coukf («• ckiw to tl. e  ea W Tiro Reporter f ' mm Events From l$t ute By OO Ha tA «at«UMi Ana) SCOOf I Tueafcy murron we « ««,« « o moder airmail tUft ' dent body By AtMdMji iiiWWW.ll feeling efe  yas|fcd h« ; SDS Because w am « ( $8% Interfaith Uwtn e ee titui f ; ;.. to be completely wBjamliM ing of the tak w We are out aiwam « men! with  • « tj ... That ' s all are cc ble to Itri - aut a vrtrr ■j mum tft -m Fac-Sen Offers Compromise fUMKEO BY BLACK STUDENTS — Prafaaaar Jan MdM of  «•  i M hwi tfca chair at Tmnday faculty saiut ma« ting. TW faculty P« | i mil a comprom i m a nua d m a w t to Mm black (he tat araaa nl at a latar maatino Tuaaday night. Blacks Propose Institute Black students submitted a proposal Tuesday for the establishment of a degree- granting Afro - American Institute which oukJ combine all aspects of blackness on campus while working in the black com- wmity off campus. The proposal, submitted at the Faculty Senate meeting, calls for the combination f aD elements relating to the black com- ■Muuty, including academic, administra- te, community relations, student serv- ices, councelling and tutoring. The institute would consist of the fol- lowing five interrelated departments: a Bbck Studies program, a research and in- formation center, an Afro-American li- brary, and a clearing house for special programs. By LENNf CAMACHE The Faculty Senate in a closed session Tuesday night offered a compromise re- solution on the Afro-American Institute which would set up a special committee composed equally of faculty and black steering committee appointments. The compromise was rejected late Thursday afternoon because the students told Pres. Asa S. Knowles they would rather have the program as they set it up without a degree than be altered and re- tain the degree. Their hope is that once it is establish- ed, Dr. Knowles said, the faculty wiO accept the program on a degree basis. Dr. Knowles said he suggested the stu- dents place the program in the Depart- ment of Continuing Education, which he said are considering The Faculty Senate approved, in prin- ciple, the establishment of an Afro-Amer- ican Institute because they felt there is an imperative need for action to create academic programs that relate to the tra- ditions, culture, and problems of black f Knowles estimates tbe ,«l vt frw Institute it .1 maximum ,.f % The Senate approved n - Kstahftshrmrnt of the steering commut e , is propped in the original institute proposal, hut stipii- lated that a special committer tx estab- lished jointly by the Faculty Senate and the steering committee Each group wn M choose one half of the special committee membership. The functions of this special committee would be: -To recommend to the dean of facility candidates for the position of director who will serve as consultant to the committee. —To work with the director in formu- lating a black students curriculum. —To formulate guidelines on methods of staffing and on academic standards. —To determine the best method for im- plementing this curriculum. —To report its findings to both the ap- propriate faculty body and the steering committee. The curriculum and recom- mendations for staffing will be forwarded to the president and Board of Trustees only upon concurrence of hoth the ap- (Contimjad an Paa 14) In the Black Studies program, classes might be taught by degree-less members of the black community or by students themselves. The program would also in- clude working off campus in the black community for which students would be given class hour credit toward graduation requirements. Purpose of a research and information center include increased communication, interpersonal contact, knowledge and so- cio-political awareness. Besides engaging in research aimed at raising the levels of people ' s understanding of blackness, the center would publish black textbooks, syl- labi and periodicals. Guest speakers and cultural activities (Contimiad an Paa 12) -ft «• . LISTENING INTENTLY — Jim Aftnaaator (TILA) Mat Baft Paaca (71LA) two laadan of tfca Mack ituaVwt aum a nat  tat ua m Imtitvt of Afro-Amarican Stuattaa haft, tatw in au il tl ai ay ftanMy mambars at Tuaaday ' Sana maatino. k Students Get -American Studies Center Afro- American Center and a Black Studies De- int will be established here this spring, it was an- by President Asa S. Knowles last week. MAY 1969 1. Cornell U. blacks leave dorm with guns . . . violence avoided. 2. Mailer-Breslin run for mayoral post in NYC. 3. C5A transport plane attacked by ecologists. 4. France rejects De Gaulle ' s policies 53% -47%. 5. De Gaulle quits and Pompidou takes reigns of state. 6. Bernadette Devlin stirring Catholics to fight. 7. Pope discredits some saints on merit basis. St. Christopher. 8. Peoples Park takeover at Berkeley campus. 9. Dr. S. I. Hayakawa does his sign posting at San Francisco St. 10. Hamburger Hill attack hits newspapers and Senate. 1 1. Astronauts Cernan, Stafford, Young and SNOOPY view moon. 12. Warren Burger indicated as next Chief Justice. 13. Coed dorms in news; parents and students wonder. 14. Life magazine changes wishy-washy views. 1 5. Canadiens beat Blues in four games again for Cup. JUNE 1969 1. Frisbee throwing in Quad. 2. Summer classes, deserted campus, beach days. Nixon Strikes Blow at Campus Radicals Brands ' Bullying ' Tactics ' Self -Righteous Arrogance ' ■' 1. Nixon speaks at Gen. Beadle St. College, only place to go. 2. Sheep killed by nerve gas in Utah. 3. Eighteen whites spared lives in Biafran War spy case. 4. Nixon Air Force Academy speech, safety in numbers, 5. Blacks demanding white-church money for reparations. 6. Niagara Falls shut off for water, erosion tests. 7. Rockefeller trip to our friends in South America. 8. France to have an election without De Gaulle. 9. China-Russia collide at border with tanks, shots. 10. Yorty wins bitter election against black candidate. 1 1. Pompidou elected by French, De Gaulle takes holiday. 1 2. Graduation 69 kicks off with strike signs, protests. J JULY 1969 M. Women ' s Liberation issue of NEWS. : SC bucks action of fired secretary; charges discrimination, 3, Student Court still debated by university. 4. Tuition rise in fall for those still in school. 4 You have nothing to lose but your. . . '  a ll hail would imagine that college ' By PHYLLIS would be panic HILL of their life style What makes me dress the way I do 7 Act, think, talk, want thU, not that 1 Why do I feel detached, as though waiting for my life to begin ' ' What is it I really . . . It is. after all., the primary task of students to analyze phenomena and discover the dynamics of events — especially to learn how to understand themselves I would have imagin- ed this desire for self-knowledge to be the case until I began reaching out with clearer perceptions of my own behaviour to other women at Northeastern. I found myself sharing an overwhelmingly similar unquestioned pattern of behaviour uid expectations, much of which I thought trivial and prob- ably irrational. That rather passive acceptance is part of irhlt it is like to be a woman. I felt, however. I was in a somewhat better position than most other women, a not uncommon defense mechanism, when -ejecting one ' s role. I did not wait around (or dates, fearful jf not being asked, nor was I intimidated by men in numbers exercising their social and academic perogatives of aggressive issertior. of self. 1 felt the quiet apologetic girls, the cos- metic Barbie DoU freaks, the Catholic conscience stricken V ' a gin-Mother-Trip chicks, the devourers of Seventeen, Modem 3nde. (etc ad nauseum) to be foolish and contemptible 1 had io ready answer to explain why they were like that — just veird I guess. Living in the dorm freshman year (against my will) made ne realize that friendships grow between women when there s a kind of truce made in the social war We stopped fear- ng each other as competitors, for our relationships with men a ere usually drawn from various unconnected groups. Very )ften. friendships were only an alliance for progress, slightly ineasy and frequently disbanded when .one girl was pinned r engaged. It happened to me several times — most I accepted as :he way things are, others hurt anyway. It seemed as though I was right. You can ' t trust other women, they are almost icious about getting married. But why was that, what was to obsessively important about marriage for women that it ietermined so many actions (women students jetting up one r two hours before classes to get made up, hours on their ieir at night, borrowing clothes, shaving their legs) while he men whom they eventually marry seem to go unfazed? Just living in Boston makes a sensitive woman feel in- human. Why am I propositioned if I walk alone on the street it night? Why do I fear the footsteps behind me 1 Because I enow I cannot defend myself from attack I can only scream. 2ars slow down and men lean over, voices from doorways, groups of men stare openly and say what they want. My sxiatence as a sexual object is smashed into my face and I am expected to respond with eyes averted and hurry on. It is disgusting and the feeling of disgust began to mani- r est Itself in my own attitudes toward my sexuality. It he- roines difficult not to suspect men of feeling vulgar all the ime The beginning of a new relationship is full of fears f being used. It goes on and on in this vein. We are socialized into be- ng what we are. We pick up on images flashed at us. Ladies ■fome Journal soothes us into the fantasies of bourgeoisie con- sciousness, anti-dirt godliness, the consumer-oriented Lies of Teative housewifery Playboy entices us with the smooth promises of plastic ' antaetic sex (all breasts and no genitals), flash ' women :aressing beer bottles, draped over cars, smiling adoringly nto video-land, eyes begging you to buy everything, anything. Wt internalize the tricks, the smiles, the clever ways to make a man feel like a man, to be his woman. There is more than a superficial reason for that imagery. The political and economic condition of this country is such that women must want to be In the home, and. while they are in the home, they must want to consume vast quantities of goods as a part of their housewife role. Betty Friedan. in her book The Feminine Mystique, docu- ments the importance and role of female consumer power. In Ch. 9, The Sexual Sell (p. 193) she says, It would take a clever economist to figure out what would keep our afflu- ent . economy going if the housewife market began to fall off, just as an economist would have to figure out what to do if there were no threat of war. . . Properly manipulated he (a motivational researcher) said, American housewives can be given the sense of identity, purpose and creativity, the self-realization, even the sexual joy they lack — by the buying of things. 1 suddenly realized the significance of the boast that women wield seventy-five per cent of the purchasing power in America. I suddenly saw American women as vic- tims of that ghastly gift, that power at the point of purchase. The liberal arts education becomes a waiting period in which middle-class women are trained to be educated com- panions for their husbands. Women do not fail to graduate in large numbers, nor to go on to graduate school and careers, because they are stupid or incapable of adapting to the dis- cipline of academia Instead, they are subtly discouraged from pursuing such matters. (Continued on Paae 15) Pluggin ' a few dykes By EDWARD O ' DONOOHUE and then Wendell, who was. in platonic actuality. Lucy ' s ,„,. lover Alton- h-mr.h disfigured by a ireak mishap while lMdlns a gallant, though ill-forluned. rescue attempt of the fair damsel s lost footwear during the Great War in the West said, with rank pain rawly forming fraud phoenetics on the last smattering of a mouth. Ruthie. 1 ruv rue , while she sauckered another Parisicnne parfeit, softly smacking the dew- •Phyllis Hill.., CW 05 ± tVCKOUR. iCoujffRltl dropped fresh fullness of her blood-hued supra labiL... and seraphimly sighed (sic. again) Walter, (could ' ja hand me that candy box again — hey. these sooo gooood) Waller, you ' re the test, kindest, warmest, most sin- cere, gentlemanly man I have ever met, but I always thought of us as just friends Northeastern was founded on set and divinely inspired principles — though the charters that were drawn up were all but lost during the big excavation exploration of ' 53 — which maintained that mankind (as opposed to womankind) deserved a better break than it had been getting and — M.ry c«iinuth3t engineers should be men and that it would only rain after sundown and that the land owners, if they were decent fellows about it, would not trample down the meek, and the like. But — ah ha — what, in devious actually, has happened? brodes — female predators — shirley temples — aghhhh- hhhh They have diverged on our Mother, our campus. Defil- ers • . . infidels (or is it infidellettes ) turning concrete labs into mudcake tea parties. Silly goose girls screaming women ' s liberation while holding their cigarettes waiting for you to light them — and the door — do you mind, if you were any kind of a gentleman, . . , But, if lor a moment, we drop from the phyii« of the matter to the shallowneti we shall henceforth refer to «i the plight of the male college itudent in relation to the deft inarei of the predatory tongue-lashingbltchfemaleorgenlim, we find deft mares of the predatory tongue-lathing Brucic, dear, why don ' t you steal a car and rob a bank and lift a decent set of clothes and think of some wonderfully expensive place to take bored little ol T me for the week-end and give me a call at 6:30 Friday night and I ' ll be ready for you by 1- ... oh hi. Bruce, oh you were go.ng to r- - and you ' re right, it is 6. 30, oh. I can ' t talk long picking me up any minute now — I gotta run — s date ' s bye iteration on the idylli ier-girlilla purging the o ?) and giving the mal ever, don ' t they have lillion of mankind Uo Mary and doe ah i tains the dead remain of all the pains she sent before. Or • ill their waking ■yes reflect the lies and reel lie their urfem :ry for sight no more? — Tindyn Aimer girls ' phono numbers, girls ' n; to r ou finally caught your Utile not the one you caught mtsilng - and put the kids ' , the itallon wagon ,||. well, well. well. (Confinued from Page 7) The fall quarter last year gave me . verse personally with President Asa Knowles and preter Dean MacDonald. It initially concerned the admim ' strati ve co-operation of the Student Concern Committi-e and followed with an interesting personal inquiry into mj scboi astic ambitions What, they both pressed me, was I going to do with a degree in philosophy 1 was rather surprised at their question, considj - position as educators, then dismayed by their B satisfaction with my sarcastic reply that I would probably . make a good wife and mother. Knowles assured BM young women should desire that which is so natural for them , There are hundreds of artificial constructs thrust upon men. Their social roles are restricted to mamtair.ar.ee ■k in the phallic power structure and very ' often, just like liggers. the chicks say they like it that way They iat they are social and sexual equaJ? yet they bear the relations without legal recourse W out free birth control information and apparatus, cornp ' e legal and inexpensive abortion clinics, extensive sex cation, including anatomy and technique, and free chjld-i centers for working parents, sexual liberty is a fraud and delusion. L ' ntil women are given identical salaries with male em- | ployees in comparable jobs, and fight the profit-oriented rati- onalizations for denying women jobs with equal benefits and job security, they will continue to be a passive powerless source of labor. Thei r jobs will continue to be meaningless clerical skills which they perform without any say at the mercy of the individual administrator or manager (who is often | possessed of a fragile but powerful ego. What prompted me to reflect disappointment in college- women at the beginning of this article is that there has been a Women ' s Liberation booth set up in the Commons and quad. | but unfortunately only on several occasions this quarter The ! observations of women who sat at that booth last quarter and this article ; ■the i Men invariably displayed some kind of reaction to the lit- erature and frequently engaged in lengthy conversations with us while women walked by. Even female students rarely break out of the pattern of their immediate interests — and especially not into political and social nonclassrcom debates Sometimes they would listen but usually shy away at any attempt to include them la dis- cussion Even more maddening are the girls who folio their boyfriends to the table, wait until he has satisfied his curiositv and then hurry on after him. Women must liberate themselves from their own tdees about themselves and confront men as strong, capable, loving individuals who have a tremendous stake in bringing about the new world They will do it by gathering together in small groups to learn the fears and strength thej all share, to dis- cover the worth of other women, and to destroy the isolation from each other which kept them so long in theft place Women must realize thai their seme of self-respect and ability to defend themselves from the physical and emotional ■Hacks ol male supremacy will enable this stifling, dchuman- dehumaniiing for men who are forced to play the sick counterpart to the submissive feminine role to SpUt lparl w ' ' mess of all people, for all people Says Leaving Scene ' Indefensible ' But Denies Any Immoral Conduct Reveals He Returned to Pond, Made 2d Rescue Try With Aides Senator Kennedy Weighs Resigning, Asks Public to Help in Decision Callers React 2-1 in Favor Of Kennedy Tells of Lone Swim In Graphic TV Plea nins his Senate . Saturday fala] accident on Martha ' :- rlhcd throuchrut the nation. Jh vr.abt ...r !.■, ' ...:, •■■t-y.-i the arcidenl wai THE DEFENSE RESTS ' American Apollo 11 lands on moon, Neil Armstrong, ' One small step for a man . . . July 19, 10:56 ESDT. Mary Jo Kopechne drowns at Chappaquiddick Bridge. Spock trial verdict overturned by Supreme Court. Arthur E. Fitzgerald finds overcosts ($4 Billion) in arms. Pentagon probe panel discusses costs of killing. Venice floods ruin major art pieces. Dr. John Knowles loses bid for HEW post. Heroin addicts found dead in city streets. YAF flying in Hawaiian grapes to end Chicano strike. Reggie Jackson bats in 10 runs as Red Sox lose 21-7. All-Star game to NL by 8-2. McCovey. Bench blast homers. Colleges to get less money for operations. Assassination of Kenyan Economic Minister Tom Mboya. Ex-Rolling Stone, Brian Jones, Dies HARTFIELD, England 0) - A midnight swim with a bikini- clad Swedish blonde ended in death Thursday for former Roll- ing Stone Brian Jones— a one- time garbage collector who be- came the pop idol of millions. Desperate life-saving efforts failed after Jones was found lying at the bottom of the swim ming pool at his 15th century Sussex farmhouse, tucked away in the Ashdown Forest, south of London. It appeared that 27-year-old Jones, who earned $2,400 a week, may have died from an attack of asthma or a heart at- tack caused by over liberal use of an asthma inhalant. An inhal- er was found beside the 50-foot pool. Les Perrin, spokesman for the Rolling Stones, said Jones was an asthma sufferer. Bad Attack Seen It looks as though a bad at- tack while he was swimming caused his death, he said. BRIAN JONES Pop Idol Drowns try to coax back a spark of 1 A post-mortem examinat was carried out and an inqu :■■, - ■-. . ; % : 5S ► ' f Pfe k •« AUGUST 1969 1 . New Left issue of NEWS. 2. Student Court finally accepted by university. 3. 160 deposits paid and no room in dorms. 4. Kent St. Field dedicated to Ed Putty Parsons 5. Another swami speaks at NU. 6. Local SDS splits after convention fight. 7. Students head into 69-70 term. THE AHEJUCA COUJEGE ! Tl OtV AUGUST 1969 1. Sharon Tate murders in California. Aug. 8, 2. Harvard Stadium-Elma Lewis concerts for Summerthing. 3. Woodstock Nation goes to Max Yasgur ' s farm in Bethel, NY. 4. MIRV added to ABM debate and worries of Senate doves. 5. Stock market begins the BIG drop, 953-825 in a month. 6. ABM vote tied at 50-50 until Agnew casts winner. 7. All night with Joan Baez at Harvard Stadium. 8. Cuyahoga River in Cleveland sets itself ablaze with pollution. 9. Hurricane Camille ravages southern coast cities, kills 238. 10. Philip Blaiberg dies after 594 extra days. ] 1 . Cam Rahn Bay attacked by VC. 12. Pope Paul visits Africa; first time for any pontiff. 13. Green Berets on trial for killing double agent. 14. SDS splits after shouting convention in Chicago. 15. Russia asks allies about bombing Chinese nuclear plants. 16. Nixon nominates Clement Haynesworth for a justice position. 17. Whites stone black job-marchers in Pittsburgh. 18. Midwest and South get Hee-Haw TV show. 19. Nixon leaves on Asian trip. 20. Rod Carew of Twins makes record steals of home. 21. PGA ' s Gary Player harassed by S. African demonstrators. 22. DDT warnings by government to curb usage. 23. Six Michigan coeds killed by rainy-day murderer. A HANDFUL — Jennifer N L icl handful of dolls (seepina !f , (Sha i° n Tate P° ur5 heneW Dolls. l eop,no pilk) ,„ tfle moy|e „ Va||ey of fhe As the addict ' s tolerance for drugs increases, his demand fo drugs rises, and the cost oj his habit crp— RICHARD NIXON 7-15-69 JUNIOR SEPTEMBER 1969 Gary Carotenuti, 19, killed on Boston street. James McGary, 24. killed in action in Vietnam. 3. Pass-tail voted; conditionals dropped. 4. English H.S. kids run amuck at NU. 5. Student Council votes support of National Moratorium. 6. Another NU student, Dennis Nadeau, shot on street. 7. DSS Urban Symposium brings Yorty, White and Cavanaugh. 8. Frosh get group therapy as part of orientation. V nnittaihini news BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS SEPTEMBER 19, 19M Student ' s murder investigated; NU mourns loss of Carotenuti GARY CAROTENUTI By BARRY GILBERT Boston Police Ibis week continued an inten- sive investigation into the murder of Gary M. Carotenuti. 19, a Northeastern student whose body was found Saturday wrapped in a green canvas pup tent in front of the Elma Lewis School of Fine Arts in Roxbury. At NEWS deadline Wednesday night, homo- ride squad detectives reported no new informa- tion in the slaying. Carotenuti, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Caro- tenuti of Torrington, Conn., bad recently moved to 11 Delle Ave., Roxbury. A philosophy major in the class of 1972FT, he was consistently on the dean ' s list and was faking part in the uni- versity ' s honors program. Friends, fellow students, and faculty mem- bers of the university community expressed dis- belief at the apparently senseless killing and were unanimous in describing Carotenuti as brilliant A girl who is killed is always beautiful. A boy Is always brilliant, mused Dr. Joseph H. Wellbank, assistant professor of philosophy. But in Gary ' s case It was really true. He had a bril- liant, quick mind — a very fair mind. This ia a deep loss to myself, the department and all who knew him. Carotenuti ' s body was found lying in front of the school at 122 Elm Hill Ave. shorty after 9 a.m. Police said the racial slur, nigger lover, was carved on his back with a knife or other sharp instrument Associate Medical Examiner (Continued on Pa« 3) S meeting struggles with split By MARY GELINAS • two major factions of the Students for a Democratic Society met head on yes- at Northeastern chapters first meeting of the year. wins two hours of heau d try to gain entrance to the NU th( mMting li only tor non-PL FRESHMAN WOES beset Northeastern University student Robert Pribusouskas as he tries to fill his locker during Freshman Orientation Week. The largest freshman class in Northeostern history, more than 4,000, are here this week to familiarize themselves with their school and with Boston before classes start tomorrow. An engineering major, Robert is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Pribus- ouskas of 369 North Cary St., Brockton. ' Hippie ' Found Slain in Street The body of a young mar described by police as ' hippie type with an anti-Negro slur carved into his back, was found yesterday morning wrapped in a roll of green tent canvas on a Roxbury sidewalk. The unidentified white man was shot once in the back o( the neck. HF IS ROSTON ' S 71st mur- Slain Youth ' s Pals Quizzed for Clues Police probing the gun- slaying of a brilliant 19- y e a r-o 1 d Northeastern University student contin- ued today to interview friends and feliow students of the victim. The body of Gary M. Carotenuti of 11 Delle av., Roxbury, a bullet wound in .the back of the head, was found Saturday morn- ing wrapped in a green canvas pup tent in front of the Elma Lewis School in Roxbury. Carotenuti came from Torrington, Ct., and was the only child of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Carotenuti. He was described by students and professors as a highly intelligent, dedicated, so- cially concerned, with a sincere interest in people and a love for peace. Lt. Dels. Edward F. Sherry and James Mac- Donald spent most of last night questioning members of a hippie colony in the Beacon st.-Kenmore sq. area, and the Fort Hill sec- tion of Roxbury. Particularly puzzling to detectives was the fact that the words nigger lover had ben carved on Caro- tenuti ' s back. The young victim, long- haired and bearded, was about to enter his junior year at Northeastern Uni- versity and had been on the dean ' s list for two years. MURDER Page 3 Former NEWS staffer McGarry killed after first week in Vietnam After a week in Vietnam. Marine 2nd Lt. James B. McGar- ry. a 1968 graduate of North- eastern, died September 17. The 24-year-old Arlington resi- dent had left a job with The Boston Globe to enlist in the Marine Corps. While on patrol with the Third Marine Division near Quo So. about four miles from the DMZ, he was killed by a hand grenade. A dean ' s list student during his entire Northeastern career, the English major wrote for The NEWS during his sophomore through senior years. In addition, he was involved in The Cauldron during his senior year and the Student Union for three years. During his senior year at NU, the 1963 graduate of Coyle High School was a Globe reporter on the night staff. He had previ- JAMES B. MCGARRY ously worked for the State House News Service, The Taunton Gazette, and the New Bedford Standard Times. J o in i n g Officers Candidate School after graduation, McGarry was trained in Quantico, Va. MEXICAN PEASANT SHIRTS _BLOUSES q. Pass-fail makes it; ] conditionals failed 1 By MARTIN BEISER After more than a year and a half of arguing and hassling, 5 a limited pass-fail system will be initiated in the fall term on | an experimental basis. From that time on, a student will have the opportunity to take one non-required course per term in a subject area other than his major, without receiving the tradi- tional letter grade. One limit on this system, how- risking serious impairments to ever, is that each instructor will their QPAs, there will be a decide individually whether he greater interest in taking courses will use a pass-fail grading pro- which are important, but quite - cedure for those students in his often, much more difficult than classes who are eligible. the average elective course of- 6 If he wishes to grade in the fering. traditional manner, he may do In classes where there is a so. mixture of students who qualify In exchange for accepting the for pass-fail status and those Student Council ' s pass-fail pro- who do not, the instructor will f posal, the Faculty Senate re- not be aware of an individual ' s quired that, simultaneously, con- status until the end of the term. c ditional exams no longer be This is to avoid possible dis- V available for students who fail crimination on the part of the tl He was the husband of the former Kathleen Cavanagh, 21 Harvard St., Arlington. They had been married five months. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. McGarry, 1832 Rte. 44, Raynham. He also leaves three brothers: Frank, of Thompson, Conn., Brother Peter McGarry, a mis- sionary in Africa, and John, of Raynham; four sisters: Mrs. Shelia Kelley, Foxboro. and Kathleen, Patricia, and Christine McGarry, all of Taunton. Military funeral services will be held at a later date. McGarry w The following article, wr The Boston Globe: Marine Cpl Ronald Hunsbcrger. 20, of Reading. Pa., stood hrsid ' ' E.H.S. students march on NU seek revenge for radicals ' ac By MARY GELINAS Incensed by the attempt of an SDS faction to bar entrance to English High Sch Wednesday morning, approximately 250 students marched onto the Northeastern camp about 8:30 a.m. yesterday shouting, Down with SDS. lullout? GIs in Viet Hit New High SEPTEMBER 1969 1. Senate passes Defense budget 81-5, $20 Billion. : 2. Chicago 8 conspiracy trial begins, the group vs. the judge. ' 3. Pope says the pill is a no-no. : 4. New high amount of GI ' s in Vietnam. 5. Russell retires from Celtics, officially. : 6. N. Vietnam President Ho Chi Minh dies at age 79. Sept. 3. 7. Much guerrilla action in South Africa. 8. Kopechne trial of Kennedy in Edgartown, Mass. 9. Unions, blacks disagree on changes. 10. Alaskan oil fields, pollution . . . situation discussed. I 1. Everett Dirksen, 73, dies; Senate mourns. 12. Charges against Green Berets dropped, CIA doesn ' t testify. 13. Miss Vicki marries Tiny Tim on Johnny Carson show. 14. Mayor Alioto (Frisco) vs. Look magazine on Mafia ties. 15. Start of school session worries faculty, administrations. 16. Soldiers at Son Chang Valley base refuse to fight on. 17. Mets go into first place 9 10 69, 8:43 p.m. 3-2 over Expos. 18. Chicago Cubs and Durocher choke 8 game lead, finish second. 19. Black Power shows itself at West German Army bases. CIA Won ' t Testify; All Berets Free OCTOBER 1969 march to the State House with Baird. is take part in Oct. 15 Moratorium on Boston Cou campus reported and discussed by users, mano and Submission done by Silver Masque. 5. Larger and larger crowds drawn to Quad political rallies. 6. Division A starts Student Court. FOOTBALL 1969 NU(3-6) 38 C.W. Post 8 31 Vermont 39 A.I.C. 21 13 Springfield 22 8 N. Hampshire 26 E. Michigan 56 27 Cortland St. 17 17 Temple 35 29 Bridgeport 14 SC votes moratorium support By MARY V. CELIKAS Northeastern University joined, the growing national student movement in support of the Vietnam Moratorium Tuesday when Student Council voted to request the ad- ministration to cancel all normal activities . . . October 15 ... to express its support of the goals of the moratorium. scheduled to vote on a similar resolution Thursday. eel all normal activities pertain- ing to students, faculty, admin- istrators and staff from 10 a.m. to 5 pjn. on October 15th. The resolution considered at the senate meeting, which was originally presented September 25 by Prat Arvin Grabel, states that, the Faculty Senate, recog- nizing the value of unique edu- cational experiences, requests the administration to cancel day classes tram 10 am. to S pjn. oa October 19 so that the Stu- dent Council may present its planned program. Pro . Robert L. Cord proposed The .Faculty Senate was Local and national organizers of the moratorium are calling tor a country-wide cessation of all normal activity on cam- puses and in communities on October IB to demonstrate the demand for immediate and total U. S- withdrawal from Vietnam. By a vote of 25 to 9, the coun- cil, before an audience of ap- proximately 180, resolved that, the Student Council at North- eastern, recognizing the value of educational experiences, and in order to express its support for the goals of the moratorium, re- quests the administration to can- at the earlier senate meetuf that, and in order to expns its support for the goals of moratorium, be added to resolution. msday on the moratorium (he Sufdent Council ' s raeivHen, Pra . As S. Knowles replied, through Ms ucratary, mat Presenting the majority at the council meeting, Step! Potoff 72BA, chairman of the special studies committee, said he hoped the day would be an organised educational experience with the hacking of the admin il i 75 V ' V.M w % I: ' - ' ' ■■m y ,- ■■- r -i. ' Uly Nixon wouldn ' t dare touch us, right, Lewis? . . . Lewis, where ere you? OCTOBER 1969 I. Angela Davis case of Communist teaching at US school. 2. Montreal cops go on strike and town goes wild. 3. Lew Alcindor begins his life in the NBA. 4. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey relieved of duties as peace offering. 5. Mets win pennant with comeback, beat Cards 6-0; NYC wild. 6. Oct. 15 MORATORIUM DAY across nation. 7. Mario Procaccino battles Lindsay for NYC mayorship. 8. SST cost figures appear in Senate, House debates. 9. Induction centers bombed and picketed. 10. Spiro ' s, effete impudent snob speech. I 1 . Mets win Series from Bait. 4 to 1. NYC sweeps Bait. 12. Gay Power pickets seen at demonstrations. 13. McCormack-Sweig case in House. 14. Cartier diamond bought for Liz Taylor. 15. Girl Scouts outraged over pregnant poster, 16. Purple Gang of Vikings. Eller, Paige, Larson, Marshall. 1 7. Champi, Harvard QB of THE GAME, quits football. 18. Government warnings on cyclamates. 19. Radicals riot in Chicago. 20. Paul McCartney rumored dead. NOVEMBER 1969 1. Husky football team loses to Eastern Michigan 56-0. 2. Louisa Visconti is crowned Homecoming Queen. 3. Eric Mann and NU students Reeves and Kilpatrick charged in Cambridge police station incident. 4. 70 professors endorse Nov. 15 march on Washington. 5. Hundreds of NU students attend D. C. Moratorium. 6. Silver Masque presents Rashomen; poor review in NEWS. 7. Student Union raises money for Ethiopian orphans. 8. PTK. gives Halloween party for Boston orphans. 9. HELP phone being planned for university use. 10. Art major offered. 1 1. Campus police staff strengthened to stop assaults, thefts. 12. SDS complains about grad cafe conditions, salaries. 13. Prof. George Berkley writes book on police in U.S.A. 14. Rumors fly about death of Paul McCartney. 15. Celluloid Experience in film big success for DSS. 16. Demonstration at M.I.T. to protest campus complicity. Norrtwj.lern NEWS, November 7, 1969 Drug experience — merely mind over matter? You stumble through hesitant askings find you are wormed - . . with hon- est and concerned words these upper- class creatures donate their ideas, their experiences, and the doubts and atti- Uides that spill across this page are pieces of themselves, made public for your understanding. and these are hunks of the night in your apartment when S., who is a dorm chirk, sat rapping: NEWS; How old were you when you itarted? S; um . . . right before I came to school . . . grass . . , we were with a whole bunch of kids. And everyone had smoked before. And, I hadn ' t and 1 was sitting there sort of looking at every- body else, like and you ' re too scared to say, you know, ' Tve never smoked before. NEWS: Do you think there ' s pwi group pressure? S: It ' s fear. It ' s not pressure. It ' s like I am glad to be rejected; not so much that the group is m akin g me feel that they are going to reject me . . - you ' re not being pressured from every- body else. You ' re being pressured from yourself. NEWS: Whafs the strongest thing you ' ve ever done? S: MDA. NEWS: Uh, why do you think people do drugs? S: For a long time I thought, well people did it because there was some- thing lacking in their personality . . and because it allowed people to violate social laws. It ' s the excuse for the ac- tion . . . But I don ' t think so now. It ' a a materialism . . . It ' s nice to say Well, Tve got some hash back in my room. Irt ' c smote it Th« druc bs the NEWS: Do you think there ' s anything to exploring with drugs? S: There ' s something to it but I don ' t think that ' s what ' s happening . . . well, there ' s the idea — is it for enjoyment or is it for escape? And you don ' t really know what happens. Is it your eyes or your mind that ' s doing it? Now if what I saw when I was on that MDA ... I mean, those things were damn nice. The clouds never looked like that before. It was too good. Now I wonder, do things really look like that and this is giving me fantastic perception to see what is there, to see what God has put there, to see it like it really is? Or am 1 fan- tasking what I want to see? Do I want to make it beautiful? ... Is it what ' s in the drug that makes it beautiful? . . If we ' re really escaping, then our mind is doing it. Maybe I don ' t want to face reality, so I ' m making everything beau- tiful. Or maybe everything is beautiful and its there for us to discover. NEWS: Do you think the majority of people do It to get stoned then? S. Yes. Because it feels good. But vou have to have the ability to be able to feel that way without the stimulant, I have to be able to say to myself that I can get up there just as much without iL NEWS: Do you think the people who are doing drugs are intellectually su- perior to the people who aren ' t? S: Not intellectually, I ' d have to say perceptually . . My world is sitting witii my group of friends and toking up and passing the pipe around. And we ' re aJJ laughing and it ' s all very nice But what happens is you walk into George ' s apartment and all the furniture la in em) patterns. It was like some night marc [I terrified me. And all of a ud h n jrou realize that it isn ' t no far S: No. I saw kids there 1 went to school with. And that shows right there that it isn ' t very far away ... If I saw a film shown at NU about the dangers of drugs, and if it was filmed right in George ' s apartment, I ' d laugh my guts out. You know, this doesn ' t go on. But it does. NEWS: Do you think thet the normal college student . . . that ir s easy for them to get into that scene? S: No. I just cant see ... . the ex- posure to the university, to the idea of what you can have if you put your mind to it NEWS: O.K., people draw lines then? Do you think that someone who starts on grass wilt stop before they get to a needle? S: Yes. It horrifies most people . . . NEWS: You don ' t think grass is harm- ful then? S: No. Definitely not For the average college kid it doesn ' t lead to bbieer . . . You know what really scares me is that they say tripping is harmful to your genes. Some day when I ' m forty years old and I look at my kid who ' s got a head as big as a watermelon, or has three arms-— I can ' t look at thai kid honestly and say Tve been fair That s selfish. But we don ' t know what the effects will be. and the plumpness that was Pepper ' s baby sprawled on the dirty sheets . . . a few days behind, the plumpness and its parents and several assorted bikies and some grass were conquered by po- lice . . . and now the plumpness rolled its head into the bag of glue damp . - . but you knew that Pepper had dieted acid so that the plumpness could be born whole. and tucked into a corner of an ell cen- ter room R, who is older and a radical, created these pieces of thought as be rapped: NEWS: Do you think that playing with drugs is playing with your sanity? S. Definitely, Yes. That day when I did the MDA, like I was going to walk on the water. I was going to do these crazy things NEWS: Whafs In our generation thafs causing It to be ■drug culture? S: Disappointment . . . O.K. what ' s causing me to do it? I see that my father worked his ass off for one com- pany for twenty-five years What has he got? This is going to go on incessant- ly. It ' s circular. I think we are each trying to reach this great climax. And climax. And climax. And no one thinks of a decline. Like our generation can- not tolerate old people. That ' s some- thing that they just won ' t face. They think with medicine and things, there just won ' t be a decline. NEWS: Do you want to talk a little about tripping? S: Like what happened to me with the MDA ... I sat and I just couldn ' t get my mind off what I saw. I just couldnt forget it. And I ' m always tempted to take it again. Because ft was so nice . . . you want to figure it out Was it my eyes? Was it my mind? Was it real? Was it make-believe? ... I think what people are searching for is a common denominator. But while you ' re going through the experience, you ' re alone. Nobody can help you. If you freak out, they ' re going to stand there and they ' re going to be so interested in what ' s hap- pening to them, and they won ' t be able to do anything for you. So drugs are a very selfish thing But afterwards, we can all got together and talk about it Like w sat down and said Wasn ' t it good Wasn ' t it niee. And then- was ;i common denominator . . . But. people don ' t know how to handle drugs. Like  Um« 1 frv.ikedout at Amherst and ■. know ho to handle me. R: The first exposure to drugs I had vas like when I u different from what it is now. Some friends turned me on to grass which was the first exposure of the illegal drugs. But just growing up in America, you know the drug culture from Con- tact and asprin through alcohol was still there ... At that time I got into it — not too heavily because I was still drinking alcohol. And it was only later, when grass became more easily avail- able, that we all concentrated onto that ... I started tripping with acid, you know the progression from ... 1 don ' t know if it ' s a progression or not, but . . . grass and then acid. And I found out about other things later on . , . Mo- tivation, I think, was curiosity rather than peer group pressure. NEWS: Well thafs probably true that when you were starting into the scene the peer group was against it rather than for it. R: Yes . . , And from there I tried a lot of different drugs — THC, speed, and some smack, (Heroin). NEWS: Did you shoot or snort smack? R: Snort. I ' ve never shot. That ' s one thing, you know, a vow that Tve made to myself — that I ' ll never touch a needle to my vein. Most of my drug exposure has been with white middle class kids, except when I used to hang around with a bikie gang . . . The intellectual- ism connected with using drugs, to find a path to whatever, is for college kids. But the bikies it was out for kicks . . . Drugs is fun, kicks, and I think that that shouldn ' t be put down, under- rated as a reason for doing them. NEWS: Do you think the kids are only an extention illegally of their parents legal need for drugs? R: Yes . . Especially in the late fiflu- .-. IV r aiking . i the in a row. Like for ups and for downs and for anything that you want The dicotomy between what ' s legal and what isn ' t doesn ' t make much sense to the average drug user because they know that nothing ' s wrong with grass. NEWS: Do you believe that? R: I reaily believe that. I can ' t see any reason that grass isn ' t legalized. I think indicative of the whole problem— and the drug problem is a problem be- cause it ' s illegal, not because it ' s a drug — is that in New York a few years back there was a move to legalize mari- juana. And the biggest lobby against it was Schenley Corp., because look at what they had to lose. NEWS: Do you think that acid is basically exploration, that it can lead R: Well I don ' t consider myself an intellectual or very spiritual. I think that the straight reality when you ' re looking at the world is, for day to day living, the reality. I think that the worth of drugs is that it changes the five senses, so that you ' re picking things up differently. You ' re getting a different perspective . . . I don ' t believe in these great revelations that happen when you ' re tripping. I think the worth of it is proved when you come down and are able to evaluate what you experienced while you were tripping. And apply that and use it to lift yourself out of the ordinary . . . Drugs can be, I think, a radicalizing ex- perience because . . . every time you trip or smoke you know that The Man is down on you. And there ' s nothing like a bust or a club across the head to be a radicalising experience. But to make the jump to revoltuionary . .. a lot of revolutionaries think drugs are counter-revolutionary . . . You can ' t go NEWS: Do you think that you can go from grass to shooting stuff? R: The Idea that grass leads to heorin on a one-to-one relationship is complete- ly false. The thing is that . . . being in contact with people who are smoking grass, you might come in contact with people who are tripping with acid. So through personal contact you could try it But nobody is forcing you to do it So the thing isn ' t completely without truth because there is some truth just in the associations with the people. But there ' s a difference between drug use and drug abuse also . . . People that go on to heroin ... I think that it ' s primarily an escape because you go into a nod and nothing bothers you. NEWS: Why do you think most people are doing drugs? R: I think one very small part that ' s been over emphasized in the mass media is rebellion. It ' s just a nice social thing to do. It ' s fun. Just the physical act of passing a joint around a circle is, more than alcohol, a communal type of activity . . . But smack is something dif- ferent ... a lone wolf, a person set apart type of thing. NEWS: Do you think for most people Ifs a need to belong? Or to escape? Or to explore? R: I think its really all three . . . when the pressures are really getting down on you, it ' s good to say let ' s sit back. Get out of the stream for awhile, And exploration is a pan of it too . . . you know, every person has to find out his own head. And like you can ' t drop a thousand mica without knowing how far your head is stretch- able . . . The friendliest thing you can do is say Here, have a toke. NEWS: Are you optimistic about drugs. d fa wandering t matter  l it n right Side ' Two Oh, lovely Rita Rtett Where would I be wi Give us a wink and n GOOD MORNING, GOOt Nothing to do to save Nothing to say but w your f_ sup gtosa .good don ' t fkrrthkf ■.. k em kc|( he i lift:. I 1 in, ist i.f v irlive .! ifonrlivt-s ■I i vrrv ' uo£ ■[i after l . alone m town l- v ! ' V ' e you  ««, is f li. liuwf M, tea and ' Let Us Be United for Peace . . . Against Defeat Nixon Bars Precipitate Pullout From Vietnam, Asks Support ' Let Us Be United ' ' Let us be united for Peace. Let us also be united against defeat. Because let us under- stand: North Vietnam cannot defeat or humili- ate She. United States, Only ' Americans can do thai hilly -prepared appeal I f Iwmefmni support of ll 1 have chosen o p!.in for peace, be jal I believe It vm toe ceed . , , l« va be tutted, for peace. Let os al t united agjtliw detent Because let us ondemend: .Only A Declaring tl ■humiliate I i reveal my details, Admlnbtnttei Mrs declined to tpeclfy whit eannter step Nixon n employ. They aim sold E j (ftJ !d cot Immediately give CooiJnu«] w p ap Twnty) NOVEMBER 1969 : 1 . Nixon ' s famous nothing speech of Nov. 3. ' 2. Bobby Seale tied up in Judge Hoffman ' s court. 3. November Moratorium draws 250,000 in Washington. 4. Agnew blasts TV and newspapers for commenting on Nixon. ' ■5. Se same Street, nationwide hit; teacher of preschoolers. ' 6. Women ' s Liberation groups hit beauty contests. 7. My Lai massacre dug up; investigation and trial proposed. 8. Judge Haynsworth downed by Senate vote, 55-45. 9. General Electric strike hits northeast hard. 10. Bombings in NYC scare businessmen, shoppers. 1 1. Press retaliates at Spiro for news ideas. 12. Penthouse magazine vies with Playboy for readers. 13. Silent Majority term used by Nixon in St. Louis speech. 14. Start of SALT talks with USSR. 15. Yasir Arafat gaining followers in Jordan. 16. Raquel Welch does worst movie, Myra. 17. Weathermen become violent group. 18. Louise Day Hicks, Thomas Atkins draw large CC votes. 19. Bean and Conrad walk on moon while Gordon mans ship. DECEMBER 1969 I Draft [otter) stus interest o( NU male population. 2. ASK says Council may have say in budget. 3. Finals and vacation prove rest before 1970. That ' s right folks, just tell us when you. were soru am6 ' ameriko the great ' will predict mwr. destiny! DECEMBER 1969 1. Draft Lottery winner is Sept. 14. Everyone loses. 2. Murder of Black Panther Fred Hampton in Chicago, also Mark Clark. 3. Charles Manson caught in California with his tribe. 4. Martha Mitchell gets into the talking act. 5. Rolling Stones and Janis Joplin perform in Boston. 6. Boeing 747 makes public preview flight. Seattle-N.Y. 7. Pele scores his 1000th goal for soccer team. 8. My Lai pictures in Life bring it all home. 9. Signs of Cambodian involvement showing. 10. Dick Cavett to replace Joey Bishop on ABC-TV. 1 1 . Chemical warfare becomes Senate debate issue. 12. Consumer revolt starts on toys, food. 13. Lew and Wilt meet for first time with kid doing well. 14. World tries to forget 60 ' s as year runs out. 15. Support Nixon rally draws 200 persons to Common. Movies of 1969 Easy Rider Medium Cool Putney Swope Satyricon Butch Cassidy the Sundance Kid Oh What a Lovely War Wild Bunch Zabriskie Point Midnight Cowboy I am Curious (Yellow) In the Year of the Pig John and Mary They Shoot Horses Don ' t They Last Summer Bob, Carol, Ted and Alice Alice ' s Restaurant If . . . Winning Downhill Racer Take the Money and Run Thank You All Very Much Loves of Isadora Learning Tree Cactus Flower La Femme Infidele Willie Boy Is Here Hello Dolly Good-Bye Mr. Chips Che Popi Vixen Sterile Cuckoo Secret of Santa Vittoria The Arrangement Paint Your Wagon Marquis de Sade Battle of Britain The Night They Raided Minsky ' s The Sargeant Ice Station Zebra The Brotherhood Greetings Riot Sweet Charity Three in the Attic Monterrey Pop Royal Hunt of the Sun Gaily, Gaily A Place for Lovers Spirits of the Dead Gypsy Moths Staircase Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Play Dirty Night of the Following Day Stolen Kisses Where Eagles Dare Heironymus Merkin Love Bug Baby Love 100 Rifles Goodbye Columbus Le Prisonnaire Illustrated Man Ring of Bright Water If It ' s Tuesday This . . . Libertine Once Upon A Time in the West The Chairman April Fools Books of 1969 Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon The Valachi Papers Small Town in Germany Testimony of Two Men 900 Days Tragedy of LBJ The Woman Destroyed The Voyeur The Godfather Portnoy ' s Complaint Jeannie Bullet Park Slaughterhouse Five The Peter Principle Styles of Radical Will The Love Machine Ada Ernest Hemingway The Economy of Cities The Kingdom and the Power Unfinished Woman The Making of the President 1968 New Moon Rising My Turn at Bat Naked Came the Stranger Captive Cities My Life with Martin Luther King The Selling of the President 1968 Custer Died for Our Sins Prime Time Mary, Queen of Scots Promise The American Heritage Dictionary Ambassador ' s Journal The French Lt. ' s Woman Present at the Creation Human Zoo Seven Minutes The Urban Guerrilla Die, Nigger, Die Albums-Singers of 1969 Abbey Road - Beatles White Album - Beatles Yellow Submarine - Beatles In A Gadda Da Vida - Iron Butterfly Hair- Hair Cast Bayou Country - Creedence Clearwater Who Knows - Judy Collins Any Day Now - Joan Baez Beggars Banquet - Rolling Stones Two Virgins - John and Yoko Stonehenge - Ten Years After Born to Be - Malanie Happy Sad - Tim Buckley Nashville Skyline - Dylan Say It Loud, I ' m Black ... - James Brown Chicago Transit Authority Salty Dog - Procol Harum Stand - Sly the Family Stone This Was ... - Jethro Tull At Newport - Herbie Mann Age of Aquarius - Fifth Dimension Clouds - Joni Mitchell Pickin ' Up the Pieces - Poco Last Exit - Traffic Tommy (Rock Opera) - The Who Everybody Knows - Neil Young Spinning Wheel - B, S T In the Year 2525 - Zager Evans Bad Moon Rising - Creedence Clearwater Wichita Lineman - Glenn Campbell 2001: Space Odyssey - Soundtrack At San Quentin - Johnny Cash Soul ' 69 - Aretha Hot Buttered Soul - Issac Hayes Best of ... - Bee Gees 10 to 23 - Feliciano Smash Hits - Jimi Hendricks 11 - Led Zeppelin Let It Bleed - Rolling Stones Santana Live at the Forum - Three Dog Night Volunteers - Airplane Kozmic Blues - Janis Joplin Sssssh - Ten Years After Easy Rider - Soundtrack Archies - Archies Alice ' s Restaurant - Arlo Guthrie Blind Faith In Concert - Cowsills Are You Experienced - Jimi Hendricks Romeo and Juliet - Soundtrack Switched on Bach Ball - Iron Butterfly Soft Parade - Doors Album 1700 - Peter, Paul and Mary Through the Past Darkly - Rolling Stones DEATHS of 1969 Walter Winchell Jr. 33, son of newscaster, suicide. Daisy and Violet Hilton 60, Siamese twins joined at hip. Thelma Ritter 63, film star. Boris Karloff 81, monster movie idol. Ralph McGill 70, editor of Atlanta Constitution. Fairleigh Dickinson III 19, OD LSD, heir to millions. Joseph Kasavubu 56, Congo leader. Eddie Cicotte 84, Chicago pitcher in Black Sox scandal. Leo Gorcey 52, member of the Dead End Kids. Robert Taylor 57, film star. Judy Garland 47, OD of sleeping pills, Wizard of Oz. Brian Jones 26, Rolling Stones drummer drowns. Tom Mboya 38, Africa ' s most promising leader from Kenya. Moise Tshombe 49, premier of the Congo Republic. Rev. A. D. Williams King 38, brother of M. L. King, drowns. Sydney Weinberg 77, Mr. Wall Street. Sharon Tate 26, murdered in cult killing. Jay Sebring 35, fashion designer, murdered at Tate ' s. Philip Blaiberg, second transplant patient living 594 more days. Ho Chi Minh 79, president of North Vietnam, fought 25 years. James A. Pike 56, modern theologian lost in Jordan desert. Rocky Marciano 45, Brockton Blockbuster, undefeated. Drew Pearson 71, newsman and journalist. Everett McKinley Dirksen 73, conservative senator. Mary Jo Kopechne 28, killed in accident at Chappaquiddick. Diane Linkletter 20, falls from 6th floor on LSD trip. Walter Hagan 76, legendary golf pro. Sonia Henie 57, ice skating queen from Norway. Jack Kerouac 47, author and founder of beat generation. Dwight David Eisenhower 79, president and general of WWII. Levi Eshkol 74, Israeli government official. Bud Collyer 61, Superman ' s radio voice. Joseph P. Kennedy 81, father of the Kennedy clan. Fred Hampton 21, Panther leader in Chicago murdered by police. Mark Clark 22, Panther also murdered by police in raid. Eight Jews hung in Baghdad on spying charges. GI ' s die for glory on Hamburger Hill. Thousands die in wars in Vietnam, Mid-East, Africa. VXL - aIpJ n Student Mobilization Group, SDS Plan Protest Vs. GE Recruitment In light of their objections to Uie policies of General Electric, especially during the present strike, certain radical groups within the university are attempting to halt recruit- ment by that company here next week. Starting Tuesday the Cicnfuego.s police and theii ' functionaries. that there are very real con- SDS will undertake a scries of Thursday evening Dr. Samuel nections between G.E. and the war in Vietnam which makes it The Student Mobilization Com- the Distinguished Speakers Ser the recruiting. against his coming in the form boycott of G.E. goods. sUtiM wil lTset uJTin the We plan to have noisemakcrs The SMC drew up the list of day and Wednesday SDS and Since Hayakawa has already ment which was defeated by the sympathetic friends said they will spoken, we want to speak to him. Student Council on Tuesday. Members of the Student Mobil SDS and SMC agreed that This strike is a manifestation of the Tuesdays campaign, according marily an anti-war organization. Nixon administration trying to to Bert Weiss (73LA). an SDS said it does not ally itself with G.E. ' s role in world imperialism By refusing to allow G.E re- say they are refusing to aid the ENDS OPPRESSION AJong well SMC, he contends war effort plant, for example. Advisory Head Named The Student Advisory Committee to the dean of Busi- ness Administration elected new officers on Jan. 6. Vincent DeBiase (71BA) was elected chairman of the c Jim Curran (71BA) secretary. work Defeats Proposal 12-8-1 Student Council Votes for GE Recruitment By SANDRA MOTT At Tuesday ' s Student Council meeting, a proposal to prohibit G.E. representatives from recruit- ing at Northeastern was defeated in a 12 to eight vote, with one abstention. The proposal, which was sub- mitted by the Student Mobiliza- tion Committee, was sponsored by Vincent Lembo (73LA , Jim McDonnell (70ED), and Mike Put- nam (72ED). The proposal stated that Northeastern would be act- ing hypocritically concerning its status as a free learning uni- versity if it allowed G.E. to re- cruit on campus. It was felt by the supporters that NU should be concerned with the best in- terests of the Northeastern com- munity and the larger society in order to sustain its position as a political institution. CLASS OBJECTS An objection to the whole pro- posal was made, based on a peti- tion circulated by the class of ' 70, which held that the open recruit- ment policy was supported by those students who signed it. Since a two-thirds majority was with one abstention was cast), the discussion continued. The submitted proposal con- sisted of four resolutions which supporters urged Northeastern to accept: 1) that no private recruiting be allowed on campus on behalf of G.E., and we request that G.E. representatives and union repre- sentatives submit to an open forum with the university com- munity. 2) that the University join in the boycott of G.E. goods, 3) that President Knowles an- swer these demands at an open meeting Thursday, January 15th at 12:30 p.m. 4) that this motion remain in effect until the settlement of the An attempt to divide the first proposal into two parts was de- feated. The basic question of one stu- dent ' s rights infringing on that of another ' s was debated with lim- ited emotional outbursts from the UNION SPEAKER One individual who did appeal to the Council was Donald Tor- mey, an international representa- tive of the Electrical Union. He stated that the strike was (1) an attempt to change the legal lock- out policy of G.E. if separate con- tracts were signed, (2) to protest economical hardships, and (3) to restore the workers ' dignity. Tormey then appealed to the floor ' s emotions through refer- ence to those who are hired to make napalm and their disregard of what it will be used for. His attempt to correlate the strikers hardships and the presence of G.E. representatives on campus as the cause for suffering was quickly ended by President Rob- ert Weisman (70BA) who asked Tormey to be seated. GE BLASTED Darla Dunlop (71N), a Council representative, asked about the management side and was told by Mike Putnam (72 ED), secretary- the that contacts were made with G.E., but that the company was unwilling to be present at an open forum in front of the university com- munity. Several members of the coun- cil defended the open recruit- ment policy because they felt that without the free acceptance of companies on campus, the future of the current senior class would be hampered and the Northeastern community consid- ered hostile to the large G.E. The proposal s supporters then submitted their evaluation of the policy. George Kontaius, a city staff member of the Student Mo- bilization Committee, stated that as an educational institution, a tool. NU VOCATIONAL INST. A similar attitude was held by Frank Gerry (71ED), vice-presi- dent of the Council. He said he saw the open-recruitment policy as a hindrance to NU and sug- gested that Northeastern change its name from Northeastern University to Northeastern Voca- tional Institute. Gerry questioned just how much of an aid the recruitment policy was to the education of the student He said it seemed more precisely an aid to his fu- The whole discussion finally was summarized by Tom Dickson (71BA), council rep. at large and a proponent of the proposal into two basic issues: 1) freedom of speech in the university and 2) the referendum at the university. He was concerned not only with the effect of the decision on NU. and its students, but of it- effect on the nation as a who) ■concerning the G.E. strike. Although N.U. had a referen- dum, he said, there are moral implications, and the majority is not necessarily right S. I. HAYAKAWA, president of San Francisco Stats Collage, will appear at Northeastern a the tint Distinguished Speaker of the year. Tickets go on sale Tuesday. Parietals • • • {Continued from Page 1) don ' t care if the new parietals are instituted, noted Robinson VOCAL MINORITY Those parents opposed to the idea were quite vocal, he point- ed out. Many feel that the pre- sent parietal set-up of Friday from 6 a.m. to 2 pjn.; Saturday from 2 p.m. to 2 a.m . and Sun- day from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. are sufficient privileges. Others thought that study con difjoris would be affected, whilt some mentioned that a student who had overnight visitors often would be infringing upon the rights of his roommates.. Robinson noted that the dorm- itory handbook provides for mu- tual agreements of roommates when having visitors; otherwise BUILDING CONDEMNED under Article 2 Fteopteste AW pro Compression are.obeco re tumed«o.he.r rightful owners Council Rescinds Recruitment Vote By LENNIE GAMACHE approved, The Student Council in a special session voted to prohibit the Gen- eral Electric Company from re- cruiting on campus at this time, a vote rescinding council ' s action eight days previous. The meeting, held in the ball- room Wednesday night, was called as a result of developments which occurred this week, namely, the is- suance of a restraining order by the university without the consul- tation of the Student Council. Seven separate motions were passed, four by large majorities and the other three unanimously. The major motion, passed 18 to 10, demanded that the GE recruiter be restricted from the campus next week because the methods of con- trolling violence were determined by the university without student consultation. A motion condemning the force- ful removal of nonviolent CE union strikers from the campus, which occurred earlier this week, was passed unanimously in light of provisions in the Student Bill of Rights. A second resolution unanimous- ly approved, called for consultation with council in respect to any ac- tion concerning the use of Boston or other non-campus police or hired Boston police provided there is time for such consultation. A third resolution unanimously ; board of the student council and the student council ' s name on the President Asa S. Knowles Wednesday ' s message. Council members felt the reference to them in the president ' s remarks were totaJly invalid. Council considered the restrain- ing order and any subsequent in- junction to ! e invalid and non- applicable to Northeastern stu- dents I this i They further charged Knowles and his administrative assistants with violating a resolution and pre- cedent set in May of 1969 provid- ing for joint consultation with the Agenda Committee of the faculty senate and die executive board of the student council and the pres- ident of the University. The council also specifically de- manded that the administration not serve the injunction or re- straining order. The final motion passed cited flagrant and persistent violations of the University Student Bill of Rights. It also called for disasso- ciation with the administration ' s present policy toward injunctions and restraining orders. Finally, council called upon the faculty and student body to join in a condemnation of the adminis- tration ' s irresponsible use of power if the stated demands are not met. President Knowles was presented with die demands at a meeting Thursday moming with the Execu- tive Board of student council. After Wednesday ' s meeting, council president Bob Wcisman (70LA) said, The basic concept of these notions is that we want a revocation of the restraining order, after which the thi university students The defendants named, Dean MacDonald said, were chosen be- cause they are membeis of Stu- dents for a Democratic Society and the University Committee Against Racism. There was no known ef- fort to name conservative group members who might ' counter- demonstrate. The Student Council, concerned sectors of the about the possible violence, tem- faculty, and porarily rescinded its support of meet and decide GE recruitment at the special meeting. Knowles Backs Injunction With Fac-Sen Resolution NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY Office of the President January 21, 1970 To: Members of Ihe Northeastern Community In a recent memorandum I reported to the University Community that certain young people, some of Ihem identifiable as Northeastern students, indicated their opposition to recruitment by the Gen- eral Electric Company scheduled for later this month. cles and handbills posted about the Uni- versity that a threefold attack against University activities has been planned for January 27-29. As indicated in the last issue of the Northeastern News, a group calling themselves the Northeast- ern Conspiracy is planning an action program, as follows: 1, January 27, 2ft— Against General Electric Recruiting 2. January 29— Against the College of ' Law 1 forcement Program at University College 3. January 29 — Against Dr. Hayakawa, a scheduled speaker in the Dis- tinguished Speakers Series A call to action printed in The Old Mole, a radical student newspaper, and the appearance of professionally prepared handbills make clear that radical stu- dents from the Greater Boston Com- munity are being called to a joint con- spiracy against activities scheduled at Last week when we realized the full scope of the proposed radical attack on the . University and its legitimate pro grams, we scheduled a number of con- sultations with administrative officers of the University and the University ' s Le- gal Counsel. On Monday, January 19 a joint meeting of the Faculty Senate Agenda Committee and the Executive (Continued on Pag 3) •AGAINSrl m CEVfflK Nrm SDS-Hftf -m • % f ' t ' i is ' ' « iiiiiww fimppNpip) v mrn t • ' • iSi S ' . ' ;■;■■■■■' . ' ■' ■!■■.!?.;■;■:«■; PF . P r- Special Edition Northeastern News VOL. Ll-No.15 BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS FEBRUARY 3, 1970 Riots Follow Hayakawa ' s Speech There were basically two incidents Thursday night resulting in 31 arrests, 15 policemen and an undetermined number of students injured, and S5000 damage to Northeastern property. The first incident, occurring during Dr. S.I. Hayakawa ' s speech, began when students hurled rocks, billiard balls and bricks at the Ell Building. In some cases, the objects struck members of the detachment of off-duty, hired Boston police assigned to augment the campus security police. The second phase, witnesses said, was unprovoked and occurred after Dr. Hayakawa ' s speech. Many students, in no way connected with the earlier demonstration, told the News of instances where police officers beat students indiscriminately. The hired Boston Police called for reinforcements after they cleared the demonstrators from the quad shortly before 10 p.m.. Dean Gilbert G. MacDonald, vice-president of Student Affairs, said the next morning. The quad filled early Thursday night with students waiting for admission to Dr. Hayakawa ' s 8:30 p.m. speech. Because of WRITTEN BY News staffers Lenny Gamache, Bill Ashforth and Jay Colen the rumors about forged tickets, the Distinguished Speaker Series refused to admit ticket holders unless they had a Northeastern University ID card. Dr. Hayakawa Degan his speech shortly before 9 p.m.. the delay resulting from the extra security precautions. But at 9:10 P.m., a rock thrown from the midst of the 2,000 demonstrators outside broke an Ell Building window above the heads of policemen guarding the building ' s entrances. This initial action precipitated the What Happened Outside 1—9 p.m. police clear quad for first time. 9:45 police clear quad again. One group of demonstrators run up Huntington Avenue towards Massachusetts Avenue. 2—10 p.m. Police clear subway island; move down Huntington. 3—10:15 p.m. police attack students in parking lot and push down Forsyth Street. 4—10:15 p.m. police begin first of many attempts to clear Opera Place. 5—10:45 p.m. police clear Opera Place: start making busts on Speare. 6—10:45 p.m. police begin push down St. Stephens Street. 7-11 p.m. With crowds dispersed, police continue moving around, but are too dispersed for further busts. 8-11:30 p.m. A group of Weathermen and or street people move down Westland Avenue breaking Shawmut clearing of the Ell Center steps. Police asked students to leave the steps and when their request was not heeded, they proceeded to push people-down the stairs. Police set up a wall of defense at the foot of the Ell and more rocks crashed windows of the student center ' s doors to cries of Right on! . One youth, about 16 years old, after encouraging two friends to throw rocks, urged them to Go get some more. The call went out to storm the Ell and the police readied their clubs behind their backs with their familiar elbow to elbow stance. A number of girls from the crowd started a Skipping picket line which balked at the line of police and then mingled back into the crowd. Close to 9:30 p.m. at the center of the quad the chant of Plainclothes Pig! was repeated over and over, and then Get the Pig! A plainclothes officer wearing a black overcoat was pulled to the ground, beaten and kicked by a few demonstrators. A second plainclothesman was roughed up but managed to stay on his feet. A half dozen police moved to the scene immediately, beat and poked the (Continued on Page 8) —Peter Gray CONFRONTATION-Students and police exchange words on the quadrangle after S.I. Hayakawa ' s speech Thursday night. Other confrontations during the night were less verbal and more physical. Strike Receives Little Support A feeling of apathy prevailed on the quad yesterday at noon at the suggestion of a student strike. Leaders of the rally representing various political opinions spoke out again on what happened here Thursday night and what the student body should do about it. About 200 attended the rally. They issued a plea that no one cooperate wi th the District Attorney in their investigation of Thursday ' s activities. Some of the issues brought up were abolition of ROTC and the college of Criminal Justice, racism, the co-op system, and student administration problems. Finally, a day of protest, possibly for today, was generally agreed upon by a few of the leaders, but was not wholeheartedly accepted by the crowd. The day of protest would not necessarily mean a boycott of classes, but a discussion of what occurred Thursday on campus. The purpose of the rally, they said, was to bring out the truth and to educate the student body. Earlier, Dr. Asa S. Knowles issued a statement from his office detailing the events last week. The statement said aggrieved students could receive legal aid from attorney Philip Boyd, in 139 Richards. Dr. Knowles statement said a faculty member reported that the Weathermen planned to visit Northeastern Thursday armed with rocks. Dr. Knowles said students close to SDS confirmed the plans and added that the Weathermen planned to beat up Northeastern SDS members unless they became more militant. About excessive police action, Dr. Knowles said: Police called to the scene from other sections of the city may have had difficulty distinguishing between innocent students and those bent on destruction. Only a careful investigation will reveal all the facts of what happened in the streets adjacem to the university. He was asked for the names of those facing charges from the demonstration, the names of the injured, both police and civilians, and the police department ' s side of the story. Suffolk County Dist. Atty. Garrett H. Byrne announced Saturday that his office will investigate the incident which resulted in the injuries of 28 policemen and an undetermined number of s tudents. Police officers are not second class citizens, Byrne said this weekend. If they are attacked in the performance of duty they have a right to defend themselves. I will use every means at my disposal to protect these officers in quailing these student riots. Two members of Byrne s office Jack I. Zalkind and Lawrence Cameron are handling the investigation. Zalkind refused to discuss any matters of the case with the News referring to the canons of judicial ethics. I don ' t want to say anything that might prejudice the case against the defendants, he said. He said he was unaware of press statements in Monday morning ' s Globe. I don ' t know where it came from. he said. He repeated his refusal to comment when asked about reports in Saturday ' s newspapers saying the district attorney was investigating why police were not issued helmets and who was responsible for throwing rocks. Capt. John Kreckler, of the police superintendent ' s office, also refused to discuss the case with the News Monday morning. We prefer not to discuss it in view of the fact that ther is onino to If anyone was too slow, their reward was a crack on the head. — Gerald Golden There was a guy there with a motion picture camera. He was trying to take pictures, and the cops who weren ' t holding kids kept putting their hands on the lens . . . — Barbara Ferri, Richard White was pushed to the ground. I got up after losing my glasses. As I was blindly stumbling around, I was hit in the back by a policeman and also pushed into the wall. I then proceeded to the parking lot where I found this fellow who had been clubbed over the head. He was apparently in a state of shock. I picked him up and we walked into the lobby of Stetson East where we tried to get help. I wanted to call an am- bulance for him, so I asked the two men who were at the desk if I could use the phone. They said, ' No, you can ' t use it. ' ... — Jim Seldner X « • j L I ' l 2 1 ..... • ' yi Northeastern NEWS. February 3. 1970 Eyewitnesses to a Riot - Tell PETER GOLDIN: I was at the library lasl night studying for a test today. I watched the action briefly before 1 went into the library Upon coming out I saw that the quadrangle was cleared except for a few people on the steps of the library I walked across the quadrangle to the far exit of Richards Hall The line of demonstrators had been pushed out onto Huntington Avenue. 1 saw what appeared to be an arrest and a photographer trying to take a picture of it. The photographer was hit by a cop standing behind the fence The photographer then turned around and claimed that the action ' was unnecessary, an opinion with which 1 concur. I got the policeman ' s badge number which I believe was 201 Deciding to go back to the apartment, we proceeded to move through the police line using the car that the police had left a space around to get through. On the other side of the car I saw a policeman threaten a demonstrator swinging with either fist or a blackjack and yelling, Get out of here, you filthy animal I spent the rest of the evening helping people who had been hurt and giving rides to the hospital. Peter Goldin IAN DOUG JOHNSON: push a guy through the window of the Frost Lounge They were using the lounge to keep them until the paddy wagon got there I don ' t have the slightest idea what (hey arrested him for because 1 was inside, but the second or third guy they brought in was pushed through the nd he w s completely pa: they told the guys they had to ung He and couldn ' t take pic standing beside me and he said to the cop who was also standing beside me, Why won ' t you allow pictures ' ' The cop turned around and said something like, Shut up or I ' ll punch you in the nose, and then the kid started to say something else and the cop yelled Shut up again and some of his friends dragged him away so that nothing would happen to him The reason I ' m telling you this is because I definitely saw them push the kid through the door, but I heard out in the quad that someone testified it was the cop whose shoulder hit the door and broke the glass, but it wasn ' t Ian Doug Johnson I70BA) Girls were thrown to the ground, manhandled by cops. : poll ought If ested The firs in the the five He had by people that brought in wjs accused of six policemen drag him in, assaulted h kicking him and punching him The detect! ' beating him over the head with a blackjack as he was being handcuffed. He was being kicked and beaten as they put the cuffs on him About this time they brought in the second person without manhandling him loo much He was a photographer and they told him to sit down and confiscated his film He remained in the room as they brought in two more people The third person was brought in by five cops and was pushed through the window, breaking glass He kept asking who was going to arrcsl these characters (plainclothesmen), He was accused of spitting at a police officer. He kept denying it and they kept beating him. He tried to break away And they beat hnn down with sticks and black jacks He tried to get away a second time and a police man jumped on his legs, and a plainclothcsman jumped on his ankle and I heard bones cracking They finally put cuffs on him and kept beating hnn About this lime the fourth person was brought on. A plainclothesman noticed there were four witnesses standing there After a few obscene phrases he told us to get out We were thrown out of the room by a sargeant and two policemen. After w and that ' s w: and he also lobby and they had pot 1 could hear was kicking and s people being beaten I only - taken to the paddy wagon He head was bleeding and he look badly beaten t, they let the photographer go they brought the lifth person in the glass I was standing in the Daniel Rafferty (73LA) JAMES L PROST: On Thursday night, my roommate and I (my roommate is a Lt Col. in ROTO went to se S.I. Hayakawa speak Although I did not agree with Hayakawa ' s statement ' s I was very much annoyed and angered with the actions of the radical groups against Hayakawa 1 had no knowledge of events going on outside whde I was listening to Hayakawa After Hayakawa completed his speech, my roommate and 1 left the auditorium. My roomma te and 1 and several other students stopped for a few minutes in the quadrangle to discuss Hayakawa ' s speech Boston police officers informed us to clear the quadrangle We cleared the quadrangle. Whde I was crossing Huntington Ave , I saw a police officer mercdessly beat a student In my horror I cried Jesus Christ-Stop 1 Where upon a police officer stopped beating the student and punched me in the eye with his fist I screamed for hi badge number and the next thing I knew, he had me around the neck with his arm and he yelled, Rock-thrower He started to drag n AJC. ' T Dr JAMES PROST I was then thrown into the paddy-wagon Soon other students were thrown into the paddy- wagon The paddy- wagon contained six people. Four of them were Northeastern University students One was a co-op student from Antioch College and one was a staff photographer from the Boston Globe. Mr Ellis. Four of the people arrested were maced, including the Boston Globe photographer One of the students suffered a knee injury and i uffered sever black eye which was throbbing v olenlly e of the stude nts clairr ed hi eyes were burning violently from the mace Hise es were red and w atery He asket did no for 15 minute s 1 after he wasi i the police A e were n i infi med of our rights with the excep on of the righ to make a phone tall The pol ce office e generally although they t ended a of u The eth lie ba kground of of The Boston Globe photographer r privileges 1 do no know if he w as release d bur he was not After being booked (I gues ) Ihey look all my out at about 2 30 am 1 was tc be ar aigned al Q Roxbury court T e police officer in charge of the station said 1 did ot need medica for n y eye Alter being eleased on ball went to Massa husctlvtyc eye damage The doctor appliec appointment to go Saturday i and a thorough eye examination On Friday morning I el Court The Roxbun An offic ho If JOHNGOFF: Last night after the assembly I walked outside and was forced off the rounds of the university I wen i down Huntington Avenue till 1 was next to the Cabot Gymnasium circled around and went through the Student Ce iter, and again emerged at the auditorium 1 walke ! outside . . . was with my friend Loren. We were took pictures of the po ce. As we were taking the pictures and talking to two policemen on the corner, we witnessed one policeman hit a girl in the ear and mouth They then asked us to leave the scene explicitly ( Get the Christ out of here ) We then went across the street from the quad and we split up I was chased up Opera Place and was forced to go into Stetson West to get away from the cops. On the steps of Stetson West there was one kid bleeding from the head and they took him away without aiding him They made numerous charges up and down Speare Place and each time the slowest people or the last in line were hit repeatedly and some were taken away and some escaped I witnessed one person in front of White Hall who couldn ' t get through the gates; he was arrested and taken away JohnGoff(74LA) MALCOLM EMORY: I came out of the library with books under my arm when I saw all the people there. I put down my books and I walked around and talked to friends. Some people were throwing rocks or some bricks at the police who then charged the crowd Everybody scattered and then police got one of 3wn on the ground and were beating thei ng it Like it Was hit by I d picked up my books already I had my left hand I don ' t remember anybody s around me. When 1 was standing then outside, about 20 feet from the steps, I wa a club when the police attacked the first time got knocked down on the ground and my glassE were knocked off. but I kept holding my book: The police took me to Frost Lounge There wer about six or seven people in there They made a handcuffed our hands behind our back: police started beating us after they closed tin doors Then one of the policemen struck arm with a billy club I think he was The ighl The last guy they brought into the Frost Lounge was beat up really bad They were like kicking him and hitting him with clubs and he just kept screaming all the time They took the handcuffs off one of my hands and put it on the guy next to me. Then they took us out to the wagons. When we were inside the wagons, the officer across from me had alcohol on his breath. Then I was taken to the station and arrested Then they took me to the hospital At the hospital there was an older police man who asked me if most of the policemen at the campus were young guys. And 1 told him that Northeastern NEWS, February 3, 1970 PHILIP BOLDUE: Thu sporadically att groups of JO or more, confusion ensued, the observers scattered, the slower of them oeing captured and beaten by the police. This took place on Huntington, Speare Place and Opera Place Philip Boldue ( FT) ; young saw a policeman being beat up. ' . He They were stepping on break it They were making about our long hair They lint; i. : this most of what he s that they were hotheads JOHN MISIEWICZ: There were two til ung peopl ' ;tly ething to the effeel they were, like, beating everybody One of the kids who was about two or three feet from me was being kicked in the side and legs He kept saying he was from Northeastern News. The police told him to shut-up and they kept kicking him He protested and kept saying but, but and they kept telling him to shut-up and kept kicking him Then they let him alone after he was quiet About a minute later, they asked where he kept his film and he told them that he kept it in his right hand pocket, 1 think I assume they took snowballs i soon as the melee s lark to them 1 was in the reference roor Secondly. I sav, When one of then- whatever jumped oi ary on the first floor a group of rioters or When they came to his on them and tried to : got one of the rioters Frost Lounge John Misiewiczi72BA) ' Students lijfre lying in th r I flitters heads cracked. They islike: pulled up t onally know policemen, have ar d tickets requi ade little if.. policemen, Thus, T am not Several NLF frightened or hostile at the sight been brought of a cop This is important ch I D I Igain dragging kids to the ground ar were employing the use of Yawa sticks (hand size billy clubs) ( people at will If anyone was l The SDS member who wore specs, beards, standing about ' 5 ' 4 , was hurled to the ground and pounced upon by 5 cops, dragged across the hot top and brought up into the Ell center I was grabbed by two ■girls ' i ngton Avenue end of Ope ixty to 70 cops begai Ope Placi clubbing everyone they vould get hold of People in suil coals and es were attacked The charge the sp. in complete dissapproval! Events began for myself at about 7:45 p.m. Myself and two roommates had returned from MacDonald ' s to the quad a second time that night The stairs of the Ell Center by this time were filled with people By the building could be set approximately eight be seen The quad itself had not filled the tarred region yet People were beginning to gather on the steps of the Dodge and Richard buildings I also met a former neighbor Ol mine, now residing in Topsfl named Robert Campbell, an ac ghing, mostly speculating i events that could happen A group of about the Ell stairs aboutii began to speak again read a pamphlet a Tiv nig Campbell i so I lent hi He looked . be the above lofted me a farewell, way up the crowde the front d Just as he got door, a black studt the top What appeared a group through the the Richard ' anyone was too slow, their reward was a crack on the head. ' BARBARA SMITH: I was present in the Quad last night standing immediately in front of the line of policemen in front of the Ell Center. Students began to throw rocks at the building and at the police An officer directed three policemen to move on a student with a rock in his hand . they threw the students to the ground and then began to advance, ordering people to move out. An officer directly on my left smashed the camera of a hoy who was merely standing there This was the only instance of unnecessary violence f observed while the officers were clearing people from the quad However, after the Quad was cleared and the police proceded out onto Huntington Avenue police discipline broke down The police began to push and shove people who were merely standing on the street, walking down the street, people who weren ' t doing anything to arouse the anger of the police or to incite the use of force or violence iivm FREDERICK G HUNT: Having gone to the Thursday night demonstrations as a political observer. I tried to present as many forms l violence as possible Admitting that the initial violence was from a (action of the youth in the quad 1 find it necessary to point out that most of the violence . the . 20 s of students on Huntington Avenue a! the trolley stop, at the dorm areas of St Stephens Street. Speare Place and Forsyth Street I stayed very close to the violence, being )usl beyond (5-10 yards) those apprehended hv the police, The tactics involved 1 of 20 to .10 offic hand. The wo st area of he area of the ephens and Speare Place ers at a time apprehended n the streets, (he alley, on of the dorm and inside the : from violence I therefore ncsscd the apprehension of Frederic G Hunt(70LAI n through tin- basemen I Center in front of the ■owing had just started cops started pulling the wd They were throwing inge. We saw them pull like ng hnn The cop went to open the duor, and In ' t realize that H opened out, he couldn ' t open. So, he pushed Dave right through the with a There was a guy the camera He was trying to take pictures, anu ine cops who weren ' t holding kids kept putting their hands on the lens so he couldn ' t take pictures. They also tried to stop anybody else from taking pictures and threatened to take them out if they took pictures, and to take their cameras from Skrf .41 « Knowles Points to Outside Agitators (The following is the text of President Asa S. Knowles statement to the press following the activities of last week.) In recent weeks, printed and oral threats against General Electric recruiters on the Northeastern University campus and against the appearance of Dr. SJ. Ilayukawa. President of San Francisco State College, have been very prevalent. With these threats. Northeastern naturally took steps to protect the rights and guarantee the safety of these individuals. The steps that the University took were the augmentation of our Campus Security Force and the procurement of a restraining order from the Suffolk Superior Court. Earlier this week. General Electric recruiters were on campus and the recruiting of students look place without incident. Last night the threatened violence inside the Student Center auditorium where Dr. Ilayukawa spoke, did not lake place. Unfortunately, however, a large group of non-students assembled in the quadrangle Reportedly, in this group were a large number of people who hud no connection with Northeastern University, including activists and members of the Weatherman faction of the Students for a Democratic Society. Some of these outsiders came to incite trouble, as they had publicly stated that they would, and even brought with them their own supply of rocks and first aid kits. Trouble began when this group started throwing rocks through windows of the Student Center. When the aggressive activities of this group went out of control, the Boston Police deemed it necessary to clear the quadrangle in order to prevent a riot. Unfortunately, at this point, some innocent onlookers were swept up in the events wjtich followed. A majority of the people arrested had no affiliation with Northeastern University We estimate the damage done to the University, mainly in -the form of broken windows, to be about $5,000. The University extends its appreciation to all of those who made a valiant effort to maintain order. It is my hope that the campus can now be restored to normal and we can resume our regular activities JANUARY 1970 PAC makes 40 proposals; ASK accepts 32, forms commit- too 2. Division B. to start its Student Court. 3. ROTC committee votes to keep ROTC credit. 4. Trustees accept $6.3 million for library. 5. SC defends SDS right to display Viet Cong Hag. 6. Music major proposed. 7. SDS plans protest vs. G.E. recruitment and policies. 8. ASK seeks injunction against any kind of demonstration. 9. Student Council backs G.E. recruitment. 10. SDS - Criminal Justice debate continues. Ml. Campus braced for G.E. protest which proves peaceful. s 12. Council reverses its stand on recruitment. B 13. Radicals protest scheduled appearance of Dr. S. I. Hayakawa. i: 14. DSS present Hayakawa: riots follow. 15. Quad meetings to discuss police brutality of Hayakawa night. s 16. NEWS special issues on Hayakawa, affidavits, photos. 17. Mandragola put on by Silver Masque. Jftta f JANUARY 1970 1. UMW ' s Jock Yablonski, wife and daughter found. Murdered Dec. 30. 2. Leonard Bernstein has dinners for Black Panther Party. 3. End of Biafran war, as 2 million starve. 4. 40,000th American falls in battle in Vietnam. 5. Moon rocks analyzed, world scientists await results. 6. Arab skyjacking terrorizes Mediterranean area. 7. Denis Michael Rohan judged insane for burning mosque. 8. Agnew ' s Asian trip, policy speeches, in 1 1 countries. 9. Parochial schools facing poor financial health. 10. Oil slicks become daily news issues as sea turns black. 11. Inquest of Chappaquiddick by Judge Boyle, Ed Dinis. 12. Sneaky God commercials on late-night TV. 13. Hong-Kong flu takes toll of America. 14. Texas over Notre Dame in Cotton Bowl 21-17. 15. Super Chiefs score 23-7 victory over Vikings. 16. Ali-Marciano computer fight: Ali KO ' ed in 13th .. . 57 sec. 1 7. Boston police buy Fuzzy the Pig for contributions to police. 18. Nixon gets White House police new palace uniforms. 19. Boston Patriots stadium issue with Rozelle, NFL. FEBRUARY 1970 1. Riots cause some new attitudes among NU students. 2. Rose Tatoo done by Silver Masque. 3. Quad rallies over Hayakawa night and charged students. 4. School ' s lawyers to help on cases. ; S. Nineteen acquitted of riot charges. : 6. Student strike rejected tor the time being. 7. Truth movement challenges Boston Press on Hayakawa coverage. 8. Dr. Luder makes last attempt at chastizing student morals. ' 9. Prof. Steve Worth pushes anti-war Shea bill. 5 10. Basketball season. f ll. Everett Nau elected Winter Carnival Queen. ►12. Knowles blames outsiders for riot, not police. = 13. Dellinger and Froines of Chicago 7 speak at Northeast- ern. i: 14. Ralph Nader gets the message of consumer power across at DSS. 15. Faculty accepts student-taught racism course. 16. Poile scoring at record pace for NU hockey team. M7. Donna Doherty elected first female sports editor of paper. 18. WNEU pressing for change to far. BASKETBALL 1969-70 NU (14-8) 99 Brown 73 65 N.H. 63 70 St. Anselm ' s 66 79 Harvard 83 76 H.C. 78 76 St. Michael ' s 57 63 Fairleigh-D. 73 91 Bates 83 84 Tufts 64 89 B.U. 71 97 Springfield 74 61 Assumption 77 64 B.C. 95 62 U. Mass. 90 78 Colby 76 66 A. I.C. 72 51 Long Island 48 74 C.W. Post 61 79 Tufts 56 71 B.U. 74 82 Brandeis 55 101 M.I.T. 71 fell ' s Bright Spot oile Chasing Chisolm ' s Records iy JIM CONNOLLY There have beeji very few right spots in the 1969-70 hoc- _ key season for fij North eastern, F ' W B and center-cap- Vj} tain Dave Poile 1 is one of those. Poile, one of the leading goal getters in the east with tallies AVE POILE and seven assists, as only four games remaining i his illustrious career with the [uskies. Son of former Philadelphia Tyers general manager Norman Bud Poile, Dave needs only even more to tie the NU season ecord of 40 goals held by Art ' hisolm. Chisolm ' s career mark f 100 appears well out of Dave ' s each. Poile has scored 78 goals, but Ihisolm played four full years . r hile Poile didn ' t come up to he varsity until his sophomore ear, and then missed half of hat season with an injury. Of all the goals he has scored his year Poile ' s favorite is prob- bly the one he scored against JC in overtime. Northeastern trailed the Yellow- in the sudden death fourth per- iod. Husky coach Jim Bell says. We just wish we had Dave around for another couple of years. He ' s an exceptional shooter and he ' s very accurate. It prob- ably comes from his father being a pro coach. He had practice shooting at pro goalies when his father coached on the West Coast The elder Poile, who played on the Bruins with NIPs assistant coach Ferny Flaman in 1950, coached a minor league team in San Francisco, before moving up to the expansion Flyers. He was recently replaced, but has been mentioned for the new National Hockey League franchise in Van- couver. Dave winds up his collegiate career February 28 at Brown, but still has a year remaining before graduation. A finance and insurance major, Dave ' s future is uncertain at the moment He has not been con- tacted by any professional teams, so he will most likely play in the Mass. Amateur League dur- ing his senior year. Poile needs less than two goals a game for the rest of the sea- son to break Chisolm ' s season record, but t.h rest of the frames The Huskies are now 3-17 oi the season after dropping a 9-1 decision to BU Saturday nigh and losing 6-4 to Providenci Monday night. Northeastern will be back ii action tomorrow night at RP1 before finishing the season wit] matches against UNH, Colby ant Brown. HOCKEY 1969-70 NU (3-20) 5 Vermont 3 4 Princeton 5 3 Harvard 6 B.C. 5 2 Yale 4 3 Dartmouth 9 6 Merrimack 8 2 Colgate 5 1 B.C. 7 4 Harvard 5 3 B.U. 7 5 B.U. 9 5 Mich. Si. 6 4 PC. 6 3 PC. 4 2 R.P.I. 4 4 N.H. 14 3 N.H. 5 4 Bowdoin 5 3 Colby 7 7 Army 4 1 Brown 6 5 A.I.C. 4 fel £S£ iE: 19 Acquitted Cases were dismissed yesterday against 19 of the 31 arrested in connection with the Hayakawa riots at NU on Jan. 29. Beth Doyle, one of the defendants, said that lawyers representing the 19 con- ferred with the judge and that Mr. Holmans, a university lawyer, announced they would be free and there would be no criminal records involved pro- vided they stayed out of trouble for the next six months. The charges against all 19 defendants were either being a disorderly person and or blocking a free footpath, both misdemeanors. Those charged with fel- onies are to go on trial today and those to be prosecuted under a grand jury indictment will be tried at a later date. Miss Doyle also said that Dean Gilbert MacDonald had hinted that the charges might be dropped in a meeting held earlier this week. Worth sees war bill limiting presidential power The following interview with Northeastern ■political science Professor Bteve Worth is an in- depth discussion of the so-call- ed Vietnam War Bin, which has recently passed the Massa- chusetts Bouse and Senate. Pro- lessor Worth played an instru- mental role in the formulation and passage of the bid. Questions were asked by Aest. News Editor Jim Kelly. NEWS: Why la thlt Vietnam bill now a safe political issue whan two years ago an anti-Viet- nam referendum was defeated In Cambridge? Worth: The puhlic has histor- ically indulged the President ' s judgment. Four years ago the president decided that the war should be escalated and this was consistent with American inter- ests in S.E. Asia and around the world. Those people just took the president at face value. I made speeches in support of the war because. I fel t that the president knew things that we didn ' t know. Well, that ' s a lot of crap. We ' ve waited and waited and have found out that the president doesn ' t know that much more of anything than we do. In fact, he ' s probably less well informed than the students of South East Asia that we find on college I campuses. I think public opinion has just caught up and passed the presi- dent on this issue. If Congress had assumed its ■rightful responsibilities four or five years ago in respect to Amer- ican foreign policy in South East Asia, we would have ' debated then what we are debating now. And so- now, after the country has been on the brink of na- tional disaster and fragmentatit NEWS: ■• Governor Sargent In a difficult position vis-a-vis th national Republican administra- tion? Worth: I would have to say yes because if he signs the bill, it will force some kind of re-think- ing about this archaic process that we have in the determina- tion of foreign policy. 1 think one thing the public doesn ' t real- ize is how very inadequate and, in some ways, almost childish the mode of making American for- eign policy . . . NEWS: How do you moon. Worth: It is ineffective, it is inefficient, it fails to exaimn many of the legitimate interests of groups of people in the United States. Sometimes the president simply lies to Congress and to the committees. I think in this respect, if the bill does nothing but force a rethinking of the by which the country led . of 1 will have accomplished a great deal. NEWS: Do you fool that the executive branch his too much Worth: It ' s not just too much power. Its the ineffective and sometimes dishonest way in which they exercise that ; We i for i other reason than the president ' s vanity. We may get into a war for no other reason than bad advice from the people on whom the president leans. Under Johnson it was the thin- nest, most confused and ineffec- tive process. NEWS: What do you think Bos- ton Globe reporter Kenneth D. Campbell ' s remarks that this bill, even If upheld In the Supreme Court, will not force an Immedi- ate declaration of war, less likely , the i ; de- bating. And we ' re debating it be- i ln segregation rulings at dent? Worth: We talked 1954 « Prof. Worth phone and 1 think that what Mr. Campbell is suggesting is that the problem of disengaging from as large an adventure as this would require some active coop- eration between the courts and the other branches of govern- ment and that its pretty obvious that you couldn ' t issue the same kind of decree to execute the de- cision as you would on a more private matter. This, after all, involves the entire American so- individual can bring it under the bill and if he does then the court can issue a restraining order or -,me kind of injunction to pre- vent him from being sent to a combat zone. That ' s the immedi- ate decree, applying to one guy. NEWS: Do you think that the State Department ' s announcement that It did not oppose repeal of at windmills? the Tonkin Gulf resolution Is a show of supreme confidence and that even If challenged, that the Congress will opt for a declare- Worth: I don ' t think that Con- gress will opt for a declaration of war. NEWS: But what about ' the State Department statement? Worth: Of course you ' re asking me what the Nixon administra- tion ' s motive is in saying that they don ' t care if Congress re- peals the Gulf of Tonkin resolu- If I were President of the Unit- ed States, I wouldn ' t want that embarrassing Gulf of Tonkin re- solution on my back. It was the thinnest kind of childish endea- vor to get a technical certifica- tion. If the consequences of M (Continued on Page 12) FEBRUARY 1970 1. Chicago trial ends with chaos, jury to decide. 2. No-knock drug bill becomes law. 3. Massachusetts weighs House cut idea. 4. Indians striking back by demonstrating at Alcatraz. 5. Dubcek ousted by USSR. 6. Barry Commoner ranks as top ecology expert. 7. Half-way houses for addicts appear. 8. Machiasport, Maine oil decision. 9. Business layoffs begin. 10. Agnew bops Doug Sanders with golf ball. 11. Ralph de Jesus, 12, talks on heroin at hearing. 12. Dennis McLain suspended for indefinite period. 1 3. Boston Chicago 7 Demonstration ends in violence. 14. Three suspects caught in Yablonski murder. 15. Nixon calls for pollution clean-up. 16. Environment commercials hit television. 17. Catholic clergy exodus from church to marry. 18. Maravich hits record setting basket vs. Miss. Breaks Big O college scoring record. 19. American Motors tries with the Gremlin. 20. Pacifist Bertrand Russell dies at age 97. Coming to N.U. in 1966 there were few blacks. The dress code was casual but neat and Friday night mixers, fraternities and sororities were the in things. Now the black population is growing and long hair predominates. Demonstrations, political activism, and civil dis- obedience have taken interest from the fraternities and sororities which are not steeped in relevance in today ' s world. The established old timers must believe N.U. is going to the dogs. In 1966 the black students were trying to form a Black Students ' Union and were pushing the importance of the Afro-American Club to the incoming freshmen. Most of the black freshmen, myself in- cluded, were going their own separate ways or in their own individual bag. I didn ' t feel that organizing was so important and figured it was up to each one of us to make it on our own. I remember when there were so few blacks on campus it was possible to know everyone by name. During the next three years the black union as a community increased to a point where we gained an Afro Center by April of 1969. Now I ' ve come to see the importance of the solidarity. Even if the black enrollment is growing, it is a big, white school and having brothers and sisters around to talk to about problems only they can understand is important. The Afro Institute is the single most impor- tant social institution on campus for many of us. The unity tables in the cafeterias and the unity tree in the quad, though they ' re taken by the whites as some kind of resentful separatism, mean a lot to us, and help keep us together as a group and as individuals. I ' ve had to gain more than a black conscious in the last five years - I ' ve had to create a political conscious. I ' ve had to deal with the tur- moil and questions presented to me by the expanded war in Vietnam and its devastating effect on the society. I ' ve come out of the silence and keep-to-myself attitude I had when a freshman and now I ' m not afraid to speak out against the immorality of that war as well as the racism the society has bred. And I ' ve found it impossible to be apolitical in the face of the brutality - both physical and psychological - that the oppressor is using. I took part in the cooperative activist efforts before and during the Strike in Spring, 1970 and found the emphasis was on communication - between the students and the community. Doing canvassing in the community, I found the working man knew he was starting to be remembered by the kids. The students being seen as the workers ' ally is the fore-runner of the realization that their fight is against the same injustice and therefore they should be political partners. I think the five years we ' ve just gone through has been healthy only for blacks working politically within the system, however. We have had at least new laws - the Civil Rights Act, etc. - working for us. But the age of civil disobedience looks as if it is about to end. I hope for the good of all that it continues. I am excited about the political relevance of today ' s black nurse. I feel I can be an educational tool and representative of the third world within the system. If I choose to work in the community, I ' ll be working with the total family as a liaison and resource between the families and the established health care systems and a worker towards change. I am fulfilling short ranged needs of the community, being aware of their long range results - taking care of the adults and children who will fight and win the right kind of revolution against social injustice. MARCH 1970 1 . Massachusetts Rep. James Shea files anti-Vietnam bill. 2. Expo in Japan costs country $2 billion for waste. 3. NYC cemetery workers strike with 2,000 dying a week. 4. Solar eclipse takes place March 7, very clear. 5. School bus overturned by Lamar, SC parents. 6. Bank of America burns in California. 7. European snowslides kill hundreds of skiers. 8. Postal strike new Nixon worry. 9. Columbia Eagle ship hijacked by pot smokers. 10. Curtis Tarr takes over the selective service. 1 1 . Women raid Ladies ' Home Journal headquarters. 1 2. Chicago Zephyr takes last run through mountains. 13. Revolutionary Force 9 blows itself up in NYC 18 W 11th St. 14. Bombings scare city dwellers around nation. 15. Rap Brown to be tried in Maryland court. 16. Dynamite blast in car kills black friends of Brown. 17. Rap Brown goes underground. MARCH 1970 I. Track season. 2 Seventeen Hayakawa riot cases still pending. 3. Jerry Rubin entertains in the cafe for free. 4. Financial aid drop blamed on Nixon cuts. 5. Panther groups attempt to educate students. 6. Tuition hike rumored. 7. Black enrollment growing steadily. 8. Moon in Virgo coffeehouse prospering. 9. Bomb scares in dorms. 10. Hot lunches proposed for elderly in area. TRACK 1969-70 NU (8-2) 64 Brown 44 53 St. John 56 46 Harvard 72 58 N.H. 46 55 Dartmouth 54 64 B.U. 39 58 U. Mass. 46 66 U.R.I. 38 77 H.C. 27 59 B.C. 45 Outdoor TRACK 1970 NU (7-0) 103 93 1 2 U. Mass. 70 - BUI 6 U.R.I. 51 Dart. 81 1 2 BU 14 Springfield 66 B.C. 75 Witnesses sou ght Hayakawa riot cases still pending By STEVE KAUFMAN The cases of 17 Northeastern students charged in connection with the Jan. 29 Hayakawa riot are still pending. Fourteen are charged with disorderly conduct while the remaining three are charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon against a police officer. John A. LaVine 72BA, Malcolm Emory 73E and Steven M. Miller 73LA were indicted by the Grand Jury on felony charges. The trials for Emory and LaVine are set for April 14; the date has not yet been set for Miller ' s trial. All three will be tried in Suffolk County Superior Court LaVine claims he is innocent of the charges against him and that he was subjected to police brutality after he was handcuffed and taken to the Frost Lounge. He described his condition at the time as a near state of shock and was taken to Boston City Hospital, where he remained for several hours. The Jan. 30 Boston Herald Traveler ' s report of the riot in- cluded photos, one showing a youth in the custody of police. The defendant ' s friends claim the youth resembles LaVine. Boston police were contacted for a statement but said they could not divulge any informa- tion prior to the trial This Is standard police practice. Emory and Miller also contend they are innocent. Emory report- edly received 12 stitches in the head and Miller said he was maced. The three request any John LaVine witnesses who may have seen them that night to call 227-8420 or 4452744 if they are willing to testify at their trials. LaVine In particular requests such a call by the girl he al- legedly put his arm around while attempting to pull her away from a policeman, who he said was shaking her brutally. Several people are reportedly suing the police for brutality. The students charged with dis- orderly conduct pleaded not guilty to charges Feb. 26. Their cases were continued to Aug. 26, when the charges will be dropped if they maintain good behavior during the intervening six months. According to Philip Boyd, as- sistant to Pres. Asa S. Knowles, those involved include David E. Jacobs 74E, George E. Cusick 71BA, Daniel Remiszewski 73LA, Robert E. Hindin 73E, David E. Jensen 73E, George Hopkins 73E, Carl Driscoll 74BA. Marc P. Omgman 73LA, James L. Prost 70LA, Alan D Belt 74BA. Eliza- beth Doyle 72LA, Gregory L. Wyss 71 LA. Bruce Lemay 74BA and Nicholas Tcnsen 74ED. 1970 CREW NU (1-4) 1st Yale , NU, Rutgers 1st BU, NU, MIT 1st Brown, Columbia, NU 1st NU, BU 1st Penn ., NU. St. Joseph ' s Four Years Crew: (10-9) Coffeehouse offers small pizza pies, full Virgo moon and a patch of Sky By ALAN WUROEMAN The house that folk buu t is expanding its schedule this term to include such folk. music artisti as Eric Anderson and Patrick Sky. Sponsored by the Ethnomusieo- logical Society, better known as tiie folk club, the performances wsll be held at the club ' s Moon in Virgo Coffeehouse, 356EC. ' We ' ve been drawing 150 peo- ple, 5 per cent of whom are NU students, on most Friday nights this year, commented Stephen Baird 72CE, manager of the stu- dent-operated coffeehouse. When we opened three years ago. we usually only drew 30 or 40 folk music fans per show, he added. The decision to bring in such folk personalities as Anderson and Sky was due to the increased coffeehouse popularity and a de- sire on the part of the folk club to de monstra te th e need of a campus Rathske Mar-Coffeehouse. Presently, the Moon in Virgo Cof- fwhouse uses 356EC for its Fri- day night shows, but problems in schtMiuling the room and setting up equipment have prompted them to check out the chances of a permanent establishment. The most likely spot for a coffeehouse end Rathskeller would be the Freshman Book- store which is really only used three months of the year ' ex- plained Baird. We know there ' d be problems in getting this area. :i ' fy fire code regulations He estimated renovatii or the area st $3O,0C roold include lavatories to kitchen facilities, a permanent sound system, staging and other remodeling charges. An alternate plan, reportedly suggested by the administration, would be to enclose the patio area on the west side of the Ell Cen- ter cafeteria, which could cost 15 times as much as the first plan. Baird emphasized that such re- location plans are not imminent and that the coffeehouse ' s main concern now is to present quality entertainment to the NU com- munity at minimal cost. During the Spring term the April 3 Chris Smithers Mary Rhodes April 10 Dandelion Wine Evan Leonard April 17 Eric Anderson Lynn Kushner April 24 Leonda May 1,2 Paul Geremia Sweet Potato Pie May 8 Bill Madison May 15 Patrick Sky (tentative) Nancy Michaels Folk Edleman 70LA, the performing at local concerts end coffeehouses. Four members of the club will be taking part in the Music at Noon series April 30 in a presentation of tradition- al, contemporary and Indian folk music. Club membership ex- ceeds 150. Serving 30 different coffees, assorted teas, bagels, tonics and. in the near future, pizzas made with Assyrian bread, the Virgo Coffeehouse is open from Sep- tember to late May, Fridays from 8 p.m. to 1145 p.m. This term the club plans to try a Saturday night opening as well. Free transfusions in blood drawing What costs you nothing but a temporary hole in your arm and insures you and your family against expensive hospital bills resulting from costly transfu- The answer, if you haven ' t al- ready guessed, is donating a pint of blood to the Red Cross. The organization, whose re- serve is presently recuperating from the yearly poor volunteei season, will have representative: in the Ballroom April 16 and 17 from 10 a.m. to 3:45 pjn. The Red Cross, which require; a simple health pre-donat ' on check-up for the volunteer, in- sures the donor that if 3ny mem ber of his immediate family needs transfusions during th year following the donation, bloo will be available at no cost. NorttHMHttm Ntwa, Apni a, iww Black enrollment growing steadily By JIM KIU.Y The enrollment of black students is increasing, according to data released by the admissions office. Northeastern is doing much more for black students than any other local institution. There are more blacks here than at any metropolitan college, stated Ronald £. Latham, assistant clean of students. In 1988 there were 118 blacks fvnHy In these areas for blacks the unfventtty also sponsors wch admitted to the freshman class, than In engineering. program as the Summer-Prep In the wake of Martin Luther In fliy) „ ia mttmt h« ten d«- P  B«m which provides tutoring King ' s death, the newly formed JJ £, u mr lTls   math « d n dlne. The Afrt, American MJ -present- —J ft £ %% America ,ns hn else offer. H, ed the university with 18 de- wh „ a gM to increase t 4i tswkt. mauds, including one which  et felack , 1 The - w wn r than In engineering. In order to meet the ted per- :ent quota, the university Is in vohred in a number of programs maeds, including one which set atenjwcentnunlmuniQ Ufor Ja(tm«t prograji whteh _ minority groups entering the un| jo lttU y coordiMted by the admis- verslty. Among ttu students, ad- mitted the following September were 180 blacks. According to Gilbert C Cer- tand, dean of admissions, this fig- ure wilt probably merest te 170 thf September. He added that the ten per cent quota would hopefully be met by 1971, These figures are only rough estimates since they only repre- sent the number of blacks which the university actively recruits. Latham estimated that there sxe between 500 and 800 blacks en- rolled in the night, graduate, and undergraduate schools. Garland stated The ca- reer Interests of black students seem to He primarily In educa- tion sod liberal arts. He be- lieves the reason for tins con- centration Is because black stu- dents want to get back to help their brothers. Latham disagree . My feeling Is that black students are en- rolled in programs In which they find Indication of success, he far encouraging an appreciation of African history end cufrura. do for them. The final decision for selecting students recommend- ed by these recruiters rest in a fsctdty-atudent committee which meets bi-weekly. Sloe many ef the student coma from disadvantaged schools. Garland believes that the key to progress lies in attitudes. The one thing that black and whits people have In common, he said, is the belief that education opens the doors to more oppor- tunities, LA faculty petitions ASK Sixty-five liberal Arts facility members recently signed a reso- lution recommending . . . Northeastern (Adversity assume all uninsured medical and all le- gal expenses, including appeals fees, incurred by all persons In- volved in incidents relating to the events of Jan. SO, 1870, The, statement was proposed, they said, because the only of- ficial notice taken by the uni- department Prof, Norbert I . Fuflington history department, and Prof. Eugene jr. Saletan, physics department. It stated: fl) We understand, that of the seven people still under in- dictment, two are not Northeast em students. (2) In those Instances where cases were continued or charges were dropped, some defendants APRIL 1970 I. Factions and violence mar April Moratorium at Har- vard Sq. 2. Free Bobby Day downtown ends in slight violence. 3. SDS will sue police for beatings. 4. Galbraith speaks in DSS series, 5. Fearing trouble, DSS committee cancels Abbie Hoffman. 6. Betty Shabazz (Mrs. Malcolm X) speaks in his place. 7. Silver Masque does Prof. Robbins ' The Revolution Starts Inside. 8. Earth Day response good by NU students; Hair cast enter- tains. DSS Committee cancels Hoffman; picks Betty Shabazz to speak Id an unprecedented action, the Distinqtiished Speaker Series Committee canceled the scheduled April 14 debate between Abbie Hoffman, Yippie leader and member of the Chicago 7, and Philip Luce, national college coordinator of the Young i Zinn rally draws 700 ££ that they are being brought oui Helpless to do anything that th? T.J S. is Increasingly be- Sealc or ■mggesring that perhaps anti-war WE ve ' ■t - v JHKi piled, Th administration haa who might Si° 1 S l, d ' !S ' o°?™SS MRS. BETTY SHABAZZ tlnguiih d Sp ak r S rl i Com- T%To clding on th baili of tomothlng r s . ' B ° th. audi- tee ' s decision Lanec added. This of loo committee. They assumed Anti-war plans outlined ; (Continued on Pago t) e-lT f bTuI to To foi d rd, for non rl nd«ne Th. Vietnam, Laoa, Cambodil aad the th atri Tortrd™ ' bVoth rest of Southeast Asia, the April win vot d in MJPPort of th r c- scheduled acttrttha that began Neat ' s etda; haa been dep- ctLmUe thTdl wE? den ! gutod ort fol inf ed Following a kick-off rally yes- tor a Ht-Ik n xt Wodnrnday, alnv oal not for th day and allow (Conrl ni .d on Pag 4) KID. HAVE YOU EVER THOUGHT. OF [OWING THE BIG LEAGUE? SNATCHED OUT OF THE OLD wome-seEK of Home, he ' s ON HIS OWN. THE FIRST STEP KJ THE JOUR WE y TO U ttT, T UTH AN VlRTUS AT THE BASTIOM OF LEARNING... THE ROAD BEfrAM LONCr eEfoRE ! TVCkEB AU)AH iisj A SmALL SUBURBAN commuNiiM behind the short Hills 6E NEW TERSEY WR + n RS CLARENCE ENMOH. BEHELD J THE SCF OF PRomiSE VN TME R SON, AHTHVR AN KN£U vt m?6 ATtLY they io€re atesseo ' iltOEER] THE u ARm wjeLcorv e to the Woliouj HAllS u AS E-wough Tt ft? a Ire ALL BUT THE 8RAUE D0U6TJ BH 0€ FENDING- T ff NATION} coHKH DEFENDS Tt THE DEATH, bEFENSE; BW SUBTLE AND SEtUCTlOE ENTICE me NTS V P AND CAN LEAU€ AMD 0O€ CAN A UTTU9| earuer! Bl h BLAH BLAH BlAH effTAr BLAH- 6LAH BlAK BLAK BlAH BlAH BLAW BLAH BLAH THE MM OF -|He GREAT TURTLE KACB HAD ARRIUEb,,, TtiE $C HCOC ' s GRWBST ACComPLlSHmeivJT, for it WAt G E€M MCLUDFD IN) L FE mAGAZlMF. ' _= NI6T ONILM bOES ARTHUR. fo LOSC HIS SH JN€S5.. BUT ALSO somt A D BECAUSE OF HIS U3ILL TD SUCCEED AND OF coyRSF His AMERICAN! HERITAGE ' - he finally comes UP lOlltt THE Plan so long- sought JS V .en AW ij roejy i ft s _E l de i ! TEANfCK B14T THE FORCE OF SOCIAL imPATIENCE ARRIVES TO CHAR THE SCENE teaneck ' s an rv Blacks, ahoused that ttfE STAOlum TOOK THE PLACE OF A PROPOSED CDLONCL SANOGHRS F4 l 0 CHICKEN, ftlOT, DESTROYING- t si rtMwuTt author ' s feat of fcNbiMeEfUNk HAUIN6 HAD HIS SOCIAL Conscience Aujakewed, arthur is back at school ! THERE IS A UUfeE RALLf IKj THE QUA bfc ANGLE UOWCH -TURNS. OUT TO BE, MOT THE toAWALlTY CONTEST, BUT A REAL LIFE, fclfrTWrtE, FOR. ALL T €- mA BL POLITICAL SPEECH 11 ivnmeRse:6 in the T cmo r tKY of- peace, AKthvr. mEETs, the f-iRst fteAL CrVRL Vfe ' s EMER. TOET , ' ADIE , SttORT, P LUPOfi AMD U CrLY, BUT OH SO H )0L ) 1[ ARTHUR PlVNfrES HEAOFIftSf INTO 1NE CAmPAlfrM CANl ASSlN(£ TAUK N(y TO THE LITTIE fEOPLE, mR.ANO mRS. JbE UOTER. U)Ha me And Wis candidate. $uiX6TE, rtAOE V OtOED TO SAVE FSonn THE C 0RRWT AND CVIL fORCGS IN lOASttlNGTON. ' me GRIND OF THF D06- DAYS OF THE CAmPAIfcN WEAK ON, ©HT eATT£Yl€D ANfc BRUISED. ARTWR ANt SADIE HDLO TW FORT OF QUIXOTE SINKING- TWE SHOUJbOHJN - CONVENTION ! I BUT LO AW (aeHOLDj XN TEAD OF A pot of oub vncroft FOR the PEACE mACWlNE, QUIXOTE |S BEATEN f THE (OAR WONCrER. potmc u HlLe ARTHUR AND THE OTHERS IK THE AWWf OP THE ALTRUISTS AR€ BEATEN BY A fcV NCH OF BLUE WEANlES U) T H CLV 6S ANO BA ES WHO ARTHUR HAS ONLY SEEN PRCVJIOUSUr (MR CTlNGr T«AFFVC l . I FLEEIWG- me CO PIG- %, ARTHUR. OHK% THR6U. H AW OPEMEb JIM 0 WITH A CRASH i IN BOSTON BACK MS HE ' S TURNF OT J, TUNCD CAN , U)Uii.e H(S HAtR. SEEims to G-SOco L.0N6E19. A REASSESSED HIS L ?E TXLE A Nfc FOU.NJO OUT U)HER€ OUT AND CROPPED THE fOI OlULA i IN OR.kjf+ATEUEfe. RTHUl . IT S AT. ' 1 nates, the: straights out I nte eST BUS«m€NT INTENT 6N A AND P8.EAkIN( - THE ACCCSS TO RU S THAOUG-H SOfc TERflANEAM CH-ANW6L IS. MOT So HARb HE SOOW LEARWS7 (OHM EVEN IK) TME; -fVNNeLS UKJOEK MIA.... imn AR. ] LOST AND PCX -  - A PE mANENT FIXTURE OUTSIDE Tti£ GATES TD EN NLU, THE miG-HTV PEANUT WAN STAN OS. NOU) IF 1(JU fcEVER f I6URED OUT UHV THE 5£ costs roafc THAN THE 10 8 AG EVJEN THOUGH ITS THE S AWE AND ARWR rrwsT Face the 8ANe or THE BOSTON STREET PEOPLE : ©LI MO JUSTIC€ ELlTAtf ASH HOLE BACK ON me STRETET AFTER THt BUSTlMfr AM ENRA E MVTHU WUJS REVENGEi FRom miLD- MANNERED WPSTER, THE TRANSFORM AT ON T KES PLACE %l j ALuoAWS SUBTLE, ARTHO DES6UISES fHS PR PAGrANDA WITHIN THE PAGES OF -me wore tolerate (and popu la r bible NOT SATISFIED WITH f?ADlCALI ZlNfr HIS PEERS, AND EVER SENSITIVE TD THE NEEOS OF THE LE S AFFLUENT,,, ARTHUR S«6WS Hoio eommiTTOD HE IS TD TH£!M€E S OF THE ioORK.IN( TOA oJ 5 ano ioe mosT o e= AfeOUT FlCrttTlMr TOE fc==; SMSTEW IN AS mAMl T SMMS as possible. J ? : 75 = tboa s sfec E SOUP 2 ' ? ' , ' THOaOH THE REVJOLimONARV DIALECTIC IS A LONG- AND tOHMOING- ROAD, HIS STAOMNA IS NEUER. TAXED. ' He IS , AT HIS BEST IN LONG COZ ETINGS W HEMENWAY SF. NI ttTJ awed U llH HIS ROCK COLLECTION THE REmWAWT OF £N(rlfVeEftlNk t AWS) ARTtiil , RIKHES FOR THE UJIWDWS, HE PELTS HARmLESS AMD NON-REPftESSWE GARBAGE CANS IN THE ALLEY AND DOESNV get TO VIEW TW€ ACTION ' Commence went! thc raiw ovoed pot 6f g-old for au students, eve.n the radical si as the endless limes file: ikjtc boston ARTHUR ATTEmpTS TO QOmp, THE PROCEEDINGS, 8UT BEFORE HE CAM LEAVJE THE mEZZ AMINE iv en ' s Room,. ,..iwe nmiNGr device GOgc, £ pp and wr is CA-TAPULT O.,, „. ONTO THE STft E; IN THE middle of the ceftemoNies! BEFORE A CAPACITY CR0WO wmcH SUPftlSINGLH CONTAINS HIS FARE NT$ THE STUNNED WR ENMOLt, S HANDED HIS s sueePSKiNi! STILL LA1SR, THE HERITAGE IS CONTIN- UED. FOR ARTHUR ENYOU, OR N.LU.™E TR1LES AND TRIBULATIONS OF A mOTH- E ATEN EDUCATION CULmiNATE AND THREATEN A REPEAT PERFORMANCE ! ! ARTHUR. JR. SETS i an erecto ser FOR CHRISTMAS! ypnwi ; ;,;,; ;;.,, .; ;.- tuti. our u p f IS5l V Cambridge Reacts to Worst Riot Night Cit) I ' uis Halt lo Marches Parades, Assemblies; Curfew May Continue t CLOt 1 16 SHACKLE Y f ' Peace ' Marchers Riot, Burn, Loot in Cambridge 6000 Battle 1200 Cops. 223 Hurt, S500G Damage 103 V ■• T - -« WW S « « T '  ap c w« a C - - ! famMUtnbn ai rioting folld-eif peace tallv S -Ml P e -onnj. Mike Brown No room for Majority blacks in the Silent Today I wrote a tetter to the Richard M. Nixon Silent Majority Club and Memorial Association, asking for a map noting the route to America the Beautiful, They replied, requesting that I give my reasons for wishing to find this heaven on earth. In re- sponse, 1 sent another letter in- forming them that I was a hard working college student, trying to get the proper education that would open the doors of plenty that I just know lead to America the Beautiful. They answered that a college education was a very important step but they wanted to know if I had ever been involved in a protest demonstration or had smoked marijuana. Seeing this as a valid inquiry into my char- acter, I sent them a copy of a police file on myself which in- dicated that I had never been arrested or charged with any crime. In fact, the only blemish was a speeding ticket at age 17. I imagine (hat the Washington  ddress on the police report prompted them to inquire about my home and family because they wanted to know in what section of Washington did t live and did my parents also live and work in Washington. I realized right away that they sought to establish the fact that I had a normal, stable childhood. I wrote back relating several memorable experiences of my youth; one that stood out in my memory was the first day in an integrated school and enough books to go around the class. I also informed them that my parents were both hardworking, upstanding adult citizens of Washington. My mother works for the federal government and my father teaches at the black Howard Uni- versity in Washington. After these numerous exchanges of letters I was getting a bit apprehensive as to whether or not I ' d ever make the Beautiful. I decided to chance a call. In my very best college English I requested an application form. To my surprise, in only a matter of a couple of days received the application. It was so simple 1 couldn ' t really bciiev e it. They only asked; (1) Name (2) Age (3) Race and (4i to please send photos of both parents. The latter question was a bit unusual but I brushed over it in my glee. The questions were answered quickly and I posted it special delivery. I waited anxiously for the mailman each day and four days later my pa- tience was rewarded. 1 opened it quickly and read sorry but at present vacancies for your s! We qualificatio Under these words I ' d like to add, in case you ' ve forgotten... We hold these truths to be self evident: that all men are created equal; That they are en- dowed by their Creator with cer- tain inalienable rights: That among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness: . . . That whenever any form of gov- ernment becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it . . . it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such govern meat . . ■mmmm- Fresh Air v jno hear: VheN the fiw rry S Jt WO : S:f::iJ ' -SSSSi5 : !fts:;i fc ■■CH MY MONEY S ON YCU. ...YOUR SON ' S A8UM • ' • Chinese Orbit First Earth Satellite Intones ' The East Is Red ' TOKYO — Communist China yester- announced it had put into orbit its first satellite — a 381 -pound package that plays a song honoring Mao Tse-tung. The announcement did not say what else the satellite might be doing or what soil of rocket carried il into a high, loop- rbit in space Friday Hsinhua (New China) n reported early yesterday the : moving satisfactorily and it; functioning normally, itellite was equipment il is brondc lUSly sending back Peking reported a huge celebration in the streets of the Chinese capital to mark the launching. It said Peking streets were specially lighted by giant reflectors so people could continue the festivities far mto the night. ( Shouting and music arc heard from all sides, accompanied by shots and detonations by which this significant mo- ment for China is celebrated, the Tan- jug correspondent reported.). In Washington, the U,S. Defense De- partment said the launching came as no surprise. It said the achievement ob- viously reflects the significant progress The U.S. North American Air Defense Command headquarters jn Colorado Springs, Colo., confirmed Peking ' s an- noucement thai the satellite was circline the globe every 114 i . the i ) 273 i Mowed by (he United States 1480 miles. NORAD said the satellite will pass over several U.S. cities, inHuding New York, Honolulu and San Francisco, but will probably not he ixtblo to the APRIL 1970 1. Earth Day ceremonies around Nation, Apr. 22. 2. Moratorium around nation brings violence. 3. Harvard Sq. taken over by trashers, then police. 4. Red China orbits first satellite. 5. Nixon gives famous bums speech. 6. Altamont music festival with Rolling Stones, bikies. 7. Reed, Frazier, Knicks finally win championship . . . Wilt loses. 8. Lon Nol government replaces Sihanouk in Cambodia. 9. Air-traffic controllers threaten strike action. 10. Pro Vietnam demonstration in Washington. 1 1. Roped Vietnamese bodies found floating in Mekong River. 12. McLain suspended for half season by Bowie Kuhn. 13. Return of ill-fated Apollo 13 with Lovell, Haise, Swigert. 14. Judge G. Harrold Carswell nominated, defeated; Nixon enraged. !5. Martha Mitchell gives crucify Fulbright speech. 16. Baby seals and other fur animals slaughtered, ecologists angry. 17. Judge Harry Blackmun gets justice position. 1 8. Johnny Cash refuses to sing Nixon request Okie from Musgokee. 19. Flip Wilson becomes TV personality. 20. Strippers finding work not as easy to get anymore. 21. Gunter Grass tries to narrow the generation gap. 22. INVASION OF CAMBODIA BY AMERICAN TROOPS, get sanctuaries. Apr. 29. IB OAR Prompt Action owing Alarm on Mideast B. SEMPLE Jr. IN. April 29— trowing sense of Ihe Middle East, n today ordered and full evalu- I that the Soviet med a subsstan e in the defense Arab Republic- yesterday indi- r the last two (Jots have been formations over for defense -■the Israeli Air U.S. AIDS SAIGON PUSH IN CAMBODIA WITH PLANES, ARTILLERY, ADVISERS; MOVE STIRS OPPOSITION IN SENATE SENATORS ANGRY! Some Seek to Cut Off Funds for Widened Military Action By JOHN W. FINNEY A4lt n ' ;«V tT ri WASHINGTON. April 29— The Administration ' s decision to support a South Vietnamese military operation in Cambodia set off moves by leading Sen- ators in both parties today to £fK? |a« off funds for American military activities in Cambodia The moves — which could lead to a constitutional confronta- tion with the White House — were indicative of a wide- spread, angry and frustrated reaction in the Senate. Some Senators, however, e JS67 Arab- !,„,.,, „ Joh „ sumn j, f m s- ■that It had lent information • reports. n, Israeli lead- s ' the use of a the Egyptian MS most serious n the Middle bXj NORTH VIETNAM RISING PERIL SEEN Nixon to Speak on TV Tonight— Action Is Termed Limited Statements issued in Saigon and Washington, Page 2. By WILLIAM BELCHER WASHINGTON. April 29- The United States announcct! today that it was providing combat advisers, tactical ail support, medical evacuation teams and some supplies tc South Vietnamese troops at- tacking Communist bases In Cambodia. The South Vietnamese offen- sive, including thousands of : ■W J| : -I EXPANDING OFFENSIVE l fc Major invasion front !, i • t-l jt-. I Neak Luong ' kok. Thorny. HeW by Viet Cong Recaptured by, ._7 . Cambodian army Svay Riene J.S-SVN Hot,Ua S . ■% | reJuro to IV Corps 1 1 T iv corps Jyjjoc 5 10 IS 30 }3 % : W ' : ' ' W - -: ' -!-Z- V. £n X-: W mji 1 : fc Pr B fm% m % S •• m m •• • J MAY 1970 I. Kent State, via Cambodia, shocks and enrages students. 2. STRIKE - suspension of all university activities. Strike voted by large majority of students. Strike Central headquarters set up; NEWS goes daily. Kent State witness speaks at rally in Quad. Faculty and T.A. ' s vote strike. Alumni concerned over the dissent and not the war. 8. Students deny Knowles ' word that strike is over. 9. Sohacki claims strike damage to Ell Center. 10. Jonathan Kozol praises strike effort. 11. Reach-Out goes into community teaching anti-war. 12. David Hillard drums up support for May Day rally. 13. March to State House gets Sargent to lower flag. 14. Thousands gather at Harvard Stadium. 15. Hemenway St. starts week of block parties. 16. Police riot in dispersing crowd of students. 17. Accounts, charges, affidavits and photos in NEWS. 18. New York Times breaks press silence of incident. 19. Police occupy Hemenway St.; to stay the summer. 20. Faculty investigations and administration barbecues. 21. Rene Dubos speaks on ecology. 22. Pete Seeger rally in Fens end up strike activities. 23. Juniors get class rings. 24. Baseball season has been played. 25. Silver Masque performs Celebration. } s % !$ $ , r jV % i It ' ? J .$4 i ■Jk 1 xr 1 IHH in r ! I r= ■mtt 11 ill I ill ft 1 1 ii it (■-(■f? Police smash Hemenway, Westland About 150 club-swinging Bos- ton Tactical Police charged a crowd of 300 students on Hcmcn- way street ears.v, Monday morn- ing, smashing wiftdrws arhd eat- ing bystander, tSsh. surgee into apartment buildings tastd djorms, smashing down doors and injur- ing residents At least 20 per- sons, Including a blind student wen- injured during the two and a half hour melee, The i hat !e came at 12:40 a.m ward th Museum of Fin Arts, it stopped in front of 120 Hemon- way St., where someone threw a chair and beer can at the cruiser. Student marshals said th attack- er was not a student. Two hours later, a flaming mat- tress was thrown from the roof of the same building as studeUS milled In the street. The build- in;: is not a dormitory. in the streSCNsere not students I ' d] ice had notif ied iecurityjio- ' lice prior to the charge and mar- sh. iK had given 25 minutes wa.-s, ing to much of the crowd. A report from W$[EU nc-$ gan Ed Ferguson 74CE, ar (he scene said there was no provocation whatsoever for the police attack, and reported at one point that police were on the roof of 99 Hcmenway St. throwing rocks and bricks. Reports from NfcWS and WNEU newsmen at th seen said a po- lice cruiser with two officers passed th area at 10:30 p.m. Sunday. As th car existed to- Witoesses Will any eyewitnesses to Sunday nighfs activities, as well as those who were injured and those who took photo- graphs, please, contact the NEWS in 446EC or call 437- - 2..$!? Thank you. Police yelled Up the pig, here come the pigs in response. After the first pass, the police regrouped at the same intersec- tion and began a second charge. They smashed windows in homes and parked cars and beat by- standers as they passed, reporters %. . ' - eople were clubbed while fleeing down streets and into buildings. Police entered buildings in ding system gald«igfJ5 Jhc Northeastern C ISke bsfonn.iti.m X ' en ' .er, which  ad fcao in direct c.KJimuniea- . Hon witliMayor Kevin White ' s office for the previous two days, was notified that 100 police were massing near the intersection of Westland and Massachusetts Ave- nues. The report said that unless the area was cleared, the police would be called In The charge began forty min- utes later from the intersection of Westland Avenue and Hcmen- way Street. Riot hehnetod police ran five abreast and 20 deep swinging clubs as students chant ol, 1 2, 3, 4, we don ' t want your t J ng war. of Student Ho bins, was beate the entrywas yway of 153 Hemenway St. after he tried to call the stu- dents back into the dormitory, Robbins ' first-floor apartment door was kicked open. Robbins said his wife and children were inside at the time. RobblnS said he felt the police attack had been provoked, hut that the tactical police weal a little too far. They ' re fast, they ' re That ' s their job They chart deistattd anything else. The dorm director, I {Continued on (Continued from Pag 1) a graduate student, was also beat- en inside the dorm building. Doorways to apartments were also smashed open on Gainsbor- ough Street, Westland Avenue, Symphony Road, and The Fen- way. One elderly couple, who live at 157 Hemenway St., said police smashed open their second-floor apartment door, yelled Watch out, then smashed the apart- ment windows, furniture, and ripped pictures off the walls. The couple declined to give their names to the press. Witnesses said police hurled rocks and bricks and yelled ob- scenities from apartment build- ing rooftops. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mandel, of 110 Gainsborough St., were beaten in the hallway of their apartment building. They were treated at Massachusetts General Hospital for scalp lacerations and released. Mr. Mandel, a student at Berklee School of Music, is blind. Barney Prank, administrative assistant to Mayor White said that reports of the police action seemed unlikely and that I a obviousl ' y can ' t comment on what ' s precipitated this since I ' m not there and can ' t see it. Sunday marked the fourth night students had gathered in the streets as the national student strike entered its second week. Spontaneous block parties on Hemenway Street, between West- land Avenue and Gainsborough Street, were held Thursday and Friday nights. The police came, but allowed the crowds, ranging up to 600 persons, to remain. Saturday night, however, 60 Tactical Police dispersed a crowd of 350 when the group attempted third night of partying. BPD official refutes over-reaction charge According to Boston Police Supt. William Bradley, 60 to 80 policemen were involved in the clearing operation at Hemenway Street Monday morning. Of these, 30 were members of the Tactical Police Force. Supt. Bradley said that the use of the TPF was in response to complaints of citi- zens and at the request of student marshals. He said that officers were dispatched to Hemenway Street and were greeted by a hail of cans and bricks thrown from the street ' s rooftops. Bradley said, none of die police had used clubs. No objective person, he said, could say the police had over-reacted. ASK: NU ' s image harmed by riot By NEDDA D. YOUNG Members of faculty, administra- tion, the Boston Police Department and student leaders met late Monday afternoon to try and avert another Sun day night, termed by Prcs. Knowles as a riotous situation that the police had to control. The president regretted any- thing that happened the night be- fore, and hoped there would be no reoccurrence. It won ' t do any- body any good, he explained, it merely gives the wrong im- pression to the public of what goes on at Northeastern. And to insure that nothing would happen, four precautions were agreed upon by those at- tending the meeting. 1) Hemenway Street and the cor- ner of Gainsborough and St. Ste- phen ' s Streets were closed to traf- fic. Wooden horses were set up at each end to prevent cars from entering. Faculty were also stand- ing at these points. 2) Campus police, faculty and student marshals were stationed inside the entrance to each dorm- itory. 3) Faculty and students were on hand as observers. 4) The Tactical Police Force was not to be brought into the area. Curfews in dormitories, original- ly set for 8 p.m., were resched- uled for midnight. Among those attending the meeting with Knowles were Supt. William Bradley and Dep. Supt. Warren Blair of the Boston Po- lice Dept. and John Fisk repre- senting the Boston City Legal Dept. An investigation into Sunday night ' s melee was decided upon by the faculty. If the mayor does not appoint a blue ribbon com- mittee to study the incident, Knowles promises that he will organize one himself. Eyewitnesses recount intensity of police reaction I stopped my car at the in- tersection of Forsyth and Hem- enway streets and found three other cars stopped in the inter- section with about seven to 10 people standing by them. I looked to the right (toward Gainsborough) and saw a group of perhaps 20 to 40 tactical police standing in the street. I saw several looking down the street toward where I was sitting on the roof of my car, waving their nightsticks in my direction The next thing I saw (was) a group of eight to 15 tacticals come out of a building with a well-lighted front door, which en- abled me to see the nightsticks in their hands. They joined the group of tacti- cals in the street and they moved in my direction with no perceiv- able haste. I cannot say that I saw the street number of the building out of which the police came, but my conviction is that the police came out of 153 Hem- enway St This is based on the fact that the group of 20 to 40 police was standing directly next to a stretch of fence I know, and police came outside and walked straight to the middle of Hem- enway Street I swear the above statements are factual and truthful. James A. Kinsley 72LA On the night in question l was standing in front of 153 Hem- enway St. observing the disturb- ances of the evening. Seeing the students start to disperse and hearing rumors that the tactical force was coining, I assumed the tactical force was clearing the streets. Many students, includ- ing myself, entered the dormi- tory. I immediately attempted to clear the lobby by telling the students to go to the upper floors of the building. Moments later, a few members of the tactical force entered the building by smashing several plate glass windows. Seeing them entering the building and swing- ing Indiscriminately at students and private property, I attempted to seek refuge in the closest door available, which was the apart- merit of David Robbins, assistant director of student housing at Northeastern. Finding the door locked, I turned around and found the tactical force members standing In front of me. In the process of Identifying myself as a member of the staff, I was clubbed twice, resulting In need- ed medical attention. The offi- cers, having found mat I was a member of the staff, broke open the door of Mr. Robbins ' apart- ment with a nightstick and or- dered me inside. I also saw David Robbins get clubbed In a similar manner across the thighs. In a conversation later in the evening with Lt. MacDonald of the tactical force, he informed me that no search warrants had been issued for any Northeastern University property. Later in the evening I received medical at- tention for an injury sustained in the incident Charles Bearce Resident Assistant Northeastern University 153 Hemenway St. At approximately 12:30 a.m., Monday, I ran into 153 Hemen- way , St I .Was standing In the lobby when members of the Tac- tical Police Force converged on the building, breaking windows; I then ran into another apart- ' ment The last person in the room was bleeding hard and seemed dazea. The police then retreated, and the people in the room left and stood in the lobb . About 15 minutes later, four of us were standing in the door- way to an apartment and a fifth person was outside the room. Suddenly the person outside hol- lored to get in the room because the police were coming. The four ran into the Interior and seconds later the fifth and an unknown sixth person entered the room. The police kicked in the outer door and entered the interior. There were three policemen and all five of us were hit. No ar- rests were made. As the last po- liceman was leaving, he stopped and with his club he swept off a bureau and then smashed a bottle. Other damage incurred was a broken set of shower doors and a smashed phone. Richard W. Ayer II I was on the roof of 56 Sym- phony Rd. on Monday morning at 1 ajn. observing the Tactical Police Force clearing Symphony Rood of people. A TPF spotted me, drew his gun and fired In my direction and then moved on. Steven Miller I was working with the Red Cross (strike medics) aiding peo- ple on the street, when I was struck by a police officer on the head. They went crazy and beat everybody around. They beat a blind man up in front of his own apartment They broke win- dows. They threw bricks from the roof at kids. They repute their claim to be called animal. And now I ride on the revolu- tion and want to get even for the sake of all those that were hurt in the struggle. Al Cole At about 12:30 a.m. I entered one of the apartments at 153 Hemenway St One student was lying on the floor, bleeding pro- fusely from a gash on his right fore-arm. I helped him out of the room to administer first aid. After helping him out, I returned to the apartment with four others and we sat down in the middle A couple of minutes later, I heard a lot of yelling, and two students ran in, one into the mid- dle room, the other into a third room, locking the door behind him. I heard a bang; later I learned they (the police) severed the lock from the door. Three policemen raced into the middle room, striking at the stu- dents and objects in the room. I was struck five times — twice on the left arm, once on the left shoulder blade, once on the left wrist, and once on the right knee. After being struck twice, I yelled What are you hitting us for, we haven ' t done anything? and re- ceived no reply. As they left the room, I asked, What the hell are you doing? One of the po- licemen replied, We ' rcdoing our job, and swept everything off of the top of a bureau smashing a couple of bottles. Then they left Michael Ellis The main group of Tactical Police Force were still coming down Hemenway Street when I decided to return to Melvin Hall. I was in the middle of the small alley, between 84 and 90 The Fenway, when one tactical pig came tearing around the comer. Having just gone outside a few minutes before, (and thereby mis- sing the previous police action) 1 threw my hands into the air and stood at attention. This lone cop reached down and from a distance of eight to 10 feet threw half a brick at me. I ducked to the ground and it went just over my head. He be- gan to swing his club at me when witnesses on my dorm ' s rear balconies began to holler. 1 guess he heard them past his own cursing just enough to imagine that someone was going to throw something at him from the fire escape. He had left the mam group of cops so 1 guess he just wanted a little blood, yeah, real sport for the creep. Jay P. Rosllff At approximately 1:00 a.m., a group of nine or 10 policemen (fully riot-equipped) strolled up The Fenway and stopped in front of Melvin Hall. I was watching them from the lobby window. On a signal from one of them, they began throwing rocks through Melvin ' s windows, shout- ing obsceneties, I heard one of them say, You Diking bas- tards! You throw more rocks than us! and another made a pointed remark about a student ' s mother (perhaps to commemo- rate Mother ' s Day). Rex Schulrz 74LA Two friends and I were sitting Oil the front steps of 120 Hem- enway (private apartments). We were told to clear the streets, so we went inside where we live. We locked the door and stayed ■BfcaKul HEMENWAY STREET — Monday morning — 12:40 a.m. Members of the Boston Police Department walk down the street prior to charging students In what Police Superintendent William Bradley described as a clearing operation. away from the windows. One win- dow was broken (not by us) at some time. Then the police came and broke down the door without knocking. It took about three to four minutes to break the door. We backed off into the bedroom and said that we had done noth- ing. They started to beat us — me, while I was standing, and. then while on tfw floor. I was then pushed into the bathroom and they closed the door. Then they, the pigs, were gone. The piano keys were all smashed and so was a record player. A similar incident hap- ened upstairs. I consider the beating as unprovoked and sadis- tic. John Freeman 71 LA I has outside the dorm and at approximately 1:15 a.m., I sighted a tactical force charge proceeding west on Hemenway Street heading toward me. I en- tered the inner lobby of the dormitory (153 Hemenway) and turned around in order to see what was happening in the street. A policeman swung his club through the window and struck me in the neck and showered me with glass, cutting me slight- ly. Immediately : afterward, a policeman came through the door and struck me in the right elbow. X kept from being further accosted by fleeing into the basement Medical attention was required on my arm. Gary Stacev Inside hallway, trying to get into apartment (with) husband ' s key. Eight Tactical Police Force clubbed Mr. and Mrs. Mandel. They were into their hallway when police threw an unidenti- fied object to break glass door and commence beating the couple. Mass. General Hospital treated Mr. Mandel, six stitches. Mrs. Mandel received two stitches on (the) head and several bruises and abrasions. Elizabeth Mandel 110 Galnborough St. Ed Ferguson Statement At this time I wish to state that a quote of mine was used out of context on the first page of Northeastern NEWS, Tuesday, May 12. The NEWS quoted me as say- ing no provocation whatsoever for the police attack. Un- fortunately the time of this statement was not given. At approximately 1:51 a.m. the police had made a second charge down the street entering 97 and 103 Hemenway Street. It was at this time that the police were throwing rocks off the roof of this building. It was during this second attack, not during the first attack, that I made the state- ment no provocation whatsoever for the police attack. I was not consulted before this quote was used and this is why i| is out of context. There was definitely provocation for the first attack. Edward Ferguson 74CE WNEU The Information Explosion It is ostlmstod that Hw amount of wrlttan Information will dou- bl. during the Sovontios. Can You Keep Up? W. guarantM to TRIPLE YOUR READING SPEED and litems your raading officioncy or your tuition will bo fully rafundod. AMERICAN READING INSTITUTE 5 TROWBRIDGE ST., ARLINGTON, MA MM777 WOULD YOU LIKE A Free Course locoirie a StudantSal.iman Froo Cours . Plus 10% of your solos. CALL US JUNE GRADS Come Where The Jobs Are! Free Consultation Hundreds of current openings far MEN and WOMEN  apply m«! • Sales Trainees • Administrative Management ' Salesmen i Retailing Engineering ' Technical Clerical ■Office yjngiing Employment Service 5W Soylstoe St.. Rutin. Mm. 1073 HancKk St., Qjincy, Mist 14 Central Avenue., Lynn, Man. 100 Etui St, Lawrence. Man. 55 Miorfy St., Walthjfj, Man. 400 offia t to i i Equef Opportunity . Employment Service Northeastern NEWS, May 22, 1970 Page 7 More accounts of Hemenway Street fracas Second floor On the morning of May 11th, 1970, around 12:45 I was sitting on my porch at 111 Gainsborough Street when I saw policemen run- ning down Hemenway Street to disperse a crowd that had gath- ered on Hemenway Street for a block party, (the people, 5 or 6 out of the crowd, had been try- ing to incite the crowd by block- ing traffic between Gainsborough Street and Westland — they were unsuccessful in inciting the crowd). I was not involved in any action ' that might have provoked the police. I saw the police group at the intersection of Hemenway and Gainsborough and I saw them break the door windows with their sticks at 110 Gainsborough Street and charge into the build- ing. 1 observed approximately 8 policemen breaking into a run toward my building and I rushed into my apartment with 8 other people. Some stranger in this group ran through our apartment and out the livingroom window onto the fire escape. My room- mate, Bob Donovan and I held the apartment door after the po- lice started trying to break it down. They burst the door off its hinges and I ran into the kit- chen and was approached by a black policeman who proceeded to club me with his nightstick. After approximately 10 blows, I managed to grab his stick with one hand. Then another police- man came over and clubbed me. The black policeman said let go of my stick, and after a few minutes they left. We all went to the upstairs apartment and I collapsed on the couch in shock. At about 2 a.m. I was taken to the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, treated, and released. William H. Nickorson ' Get one for you ' I am William C. DeSerres of 115 Gainsborough St. in Boston, am 22 years old and a student at Northeastern University. This is my fifth and last year of under- graduate study; during most of these years I have been a history major with better than average grades and have had co-operative education jobs working for the National Park Service Depart- ment of the Interior, U. S. Gov- ernment, the Children ' s Museum in Boston, and the Massachusetts Historical Society in Boston. On the night of Sunday, May 10, when the Tactical Police Force were sent into the Hem- enway St. area, at approximately 12 midnight (I am not sure of the exact time, it was sometime be- tween the hours of 11 pjn. and 1 ajn.), I walked to Westland Ave. to visit a friend there. At Westland Ave. near the junction of Massachusetts Ave., I wit- nessed approximately 75 to 100 police of the Tactical Police Force massing and getting ready to enter the Hemenway St. area, where students had been holding block parties for the preceding four evenings. I also saw about 4 or 5 police dogs who were driven to Westland Ave. in a police car labelled K-9, I saw the police . march in formation to- ward Hemenway St, I clearly heard one member of the Tactical Police Force on the way to Hem- enway St. say exactly, I ' ll get one for you, to a policeman who was remaining behind in the car. At this point I decided the area was unsafe, and was told by other area residents that I would prob- ably be beaten by police if I at- tempted to return to my apart- ment. I went to the Northeastern Student Center where I remained until 4 a.m. when I heard the police had cleared the area. William C. DeSerras Hot pursuit On the morning of May 11th sometime around 2 o ' clock I and about 8 others were sitting on the front steps of our apartment, saw a police wagon coming down Hemenway Street in our direc- tion. Not one of us physically or verbally provoked the police in any way. As the police wagon slowed to a stop the policeman on the passenger side of the window, then left. My apartment is located well above Westland Ave. No one had run by us and we were sitting and hadn ' t been running at all. Aside from the fact that they came from the opposite direc- tion of the disturbance, they had no reason to suspect us of having thrown anything or even having engaged in any of the activity earlier that evening. Paul A. Harvey COMPLAINT TO POLICE Police attack on blind musician, wife EVENTS LEADING UP TO other hand — I had my glasses stitches over his right eyebrow. POLICE ASSAULT AT in my right hand — Peggy was I received 2 stitches to a cut on 110 GAINSBOROUGH, APT. 14 agains ' the door with both Mike the back of my head. Also, Mike and I behind her. Our backs were was beaten on the shoulders and On Sunday evening, May 10, to the police at all times, only I was beaten on both shoulder 1970, my husband and I, along turning our heads to explain that blades, the top of my thigh and with various neighborhood we lived there, Mike and I each my left arm. We returned home friends, were observing the ac- received five blows that were after 4:00 a.m. and then found tivities on Hemenway Street from visible afterwards, and when they Mike had another laceration, so our living room window. At were through beating us they im- sometime after 6:00 a.m. we went 10:45 we went outside and then mediately left the building and back to the hospital and he re- at 11:00 we went to New Eng- we got into our apartment and ceived 2 more stitches and land Conservatory of Music to locked the door. series of head x-rays. We finally their Marathon Concert. We re- , UHBnlATC , v ,„„ Tuc got home at 9:30 am turned approximately one hour 1«I, 1 ?t later and met with friends in the „ assault street and stood around the en- J° r °T an hour we _ were ™ DEPARTMENT trance to our building talking able to leave our  P artaent to We reported the above incident with them and observing the g0 £or medical help ' Mike and l t0 the PoUce Complaint Dept by events on Hemenway Street Mike were both bleedln S £rom e P hone around 6:00 a.m. and were went into the house and got his head ' Medlcs who were on hand referred to Precinct 4. We called flute and was standing near our in if bui ! ding „ tended , ' ° ou , r Precmct 4 and were M at we entrance playing the flute I was wounds best they could wlth should talk to P 13 Russe11 standing in this area with a alcoho1 but said we neeaed mei who would be in at 8:00 a.m. We neighbor girl (Peggy of 100 Gains- ical assistan «- We were afraid called back at 9:30 after return- borough l-A). Sometime later t0 g0 out of the a P artm ™ t for ™Z from the hospital and were I could see the police marching ass ta « ce becauM ° f what we informed that Capt Russell would saw going on in the streets — by not be in that day. I asked for lying on the floor in the living the person in charge that day room (with the lights out) look- and was told it was Lt. Dow. I ing out the window. The police then spoke with Lt. Dow, at- were moving up and down Gains- tempting to explain what had tte stairs and Peggy and I start- borough street striking and happened t0 us He said he ed up the stairs after him, keep- the fence with thejr dubs as they djd no , want tQ discuss oyer ing an eye on the advancing po- walked aIong of the po . the phone we should uce. i tnen saw them break rank licemen stood at ae intersection come to the station and talk with and start running at full speed of Hemenway and GainsDorough him ere. We got there about m our direction. We then started shouUng remarks up t0 people m noon waiting some Ume tQ ge , th ™ n ° th 0U fi t eS n„w h™ ' theLr a P artm ents. I also saw them into his office. Finally we got chasing a boy down the street into his office and spoke with and he was yelling I ' m leaving him. We explained in depth the — I ' m leaving as he went by above events and I asked several our window at a full run. We times to make a written state- were afraid to go out into the ment. His reply was always ' you giving me your report ' . He formation in our direction. THE ASSAULT Michael had already started up through the first outer door which is unlocked. We then got through the second outer door which is locked. The three of us were standing at the outside of apartment door (the first street to get to our car for fear door inside the outer doors) Mike of being beaten again attempted to get the key lock and open the door. As he was doing this the police broke the windows in the outer doors and then burst into our build- EXTENT OF OUR INJURIES After the streets had been empty of police for a few min- utes (just over an hour from the ing, breaking through the locked beating) and we saw that other outer door. Without any remark people were leaving for medical to any of us, six to eight police- help; we went to our car which said Sgt. Chase would come to see us to investigate this com- plaint. We said when and he said that day. We emphasized the fact that we wanted someone there that day so the damage to the area could be seen before it was cleaned up. He said if Sgt. Chase couldn ' t make it someone started beating us with was parked in front of 128 Hem- wQuld sent We w(mt clubs as we stood huddled, fac- enway and announced we were s t home and ing our apartment door, we tive going to the hospital. Bob Dono- hours u n here — we live here. They van of 111 Gainsborough, Apt. stood and beat us, yelling some- 1-R was brought to our car and thing to us which was uninteUi- we went to Mass. General Hospi- gible. We huddled against the tal- Emergency. Mike was treat- 5f |£ A Y MOKNINCi door — Mike had the flute m ed for scalp lacerations: 6 stitches one hand and the keys in his on the top of his head and 3 called and told my husband he would be coming to make his investigation of our complaint on E lizabeth E. Mandel Car-stoning cops It is my duty to report what I saw Sunday, May 10th. I was an eye-witness when one of the po- lice officers dropped a brick from the roof of 97 Hemenway onto a 1969 Cutlass Olds. I also witness- ed them (police) throwing stones at people who were walking on this street and also Symphony Road. I saw one police officer break a window at 70 Symphony Hoad, because it had a peace £ign painted on. it John La man wagon told us (yelling) to, get the fuck off the street. We were chased into our apartment build- ing. I was the last one in. As I closed and locked the door, the policemen were already at the top of the steps. There were about 3 of them (police). As I ran down the hallway to my room, I heard something hit and shat- ter the glass on the outer door window. Entering the apartment I told every one to be quiet. We heard loud talking and laughter coming from the policemen out- side. .They continued, to. break what was left of the glass in the Crashing a dorm The morning of May 11th around 2:00 a.m. I was in the lobby of Melvin Hall and some- one ran inside and screamed that the T.P.F. were coming. I ran up to my room and looked out my window. Lined up below were ap- proximately 30 T.P.F. They stood outside looking up into the win- ' dow for 5 minutes and then be- gan throwing rocks through the windows of our dorm. They marched away after throwing the rocks. Gary Sefamn ' Rear window On the morning of Monday, May 11th, at about 12:30 I wit- nessed the beating of my neigh- bor, Wm. Nickerson, who lives in 111 Gainsborough, Apt. 1-R by a policeman. I heard screaming and opened my apartment door to see where the noise was coming from. I looked out a window outside my door and could see into his apart- ment (the kitchen) and saw the policeman beating him with a club in his right hand. This was going on in front of bis kitchen window. In about 3 minutes, the policeman went out of view and I then climbed out a window and crawled across onto the fire es- cape and into the apartment di- rectly above my friends apt By, this time my friend, and the other people who had been in Apt. 1R with him had all arrived in this apartment We waited for about an hour, until the police were off the streets. Then we got into my car and drove to Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, where my neighbors received medical atten- tion. Martin C a macho Taking the roofs Several policemen of the Bos- ton Tactical Force stormed our apartment building Sunday night They smashed all the glass in the two front doors, came in and smashed the two windows on the first and second landings on the way up to the 4th (top) floor, en- tered apartment 4A and asked where the stairways to the roof was. The man in 4A said there was no stairway from his apart- ment to the roof, and they knocked him down. Then they kicked in the doors to 4B (dam- age to door is very apparent) and also 4B ' s door. (We heard all of this, and saw the damages after police left). Also I saw some of the police- men in the streets pick up bot- tles and throw them through . windows of 115 Hemenway. Also I saw several of the po- licemen walking up and down Gainsborough St. hit the sides of cars with their clubs for sound effects, causing dents in the cars. Diane Ingratiam Beetle beater Early Monday morning, May 11, 1970, at about 12:45 a.m. I heard people running and shouting down Symphony Road from Hem- enway St. When I looked out our window which faces Symphony Road I saw helmeted police with clubs chasing people down Sym- phony Road. When some of these people ran into our building the police followed and smashed two windows next to our front door in an attempt to enter the build- ing. When the 4 or 5 policemen started to return to Hemenway Street they were yelling obscen- ities and one policeman charged a Volkswagen directly across from our window and, for no reason at all, tried to break some windows in the bus. There was no one in the bus or anywhere in the area of the bus. After this they continued down the street smashing apartment windows in- discriminately and continuing the yelling of obscene phrases. 237 Rep. Shea commits suicide Rep. H. James Shea from New- ton was buried yesterday at the St. Joseph ' s Cemetery, West Rox- bury. Shea ' s death, last Friday, was the result of a self-inflicted bul- let wound from a .38 calibar re- volver. Mrs. Anita Shea, his wife, be- lieves that Shea ' s suicide was caused by overwork and dispon- dency about the conflict in South- east Asia. Rep. Shea was the sponsor of land-mark legislation designed to test the constitutionality of the Vietnam war and the powers of the President as commander-in chief. The law stipulates that Masss chusetts citizens do not have fc fight in undeclared wars. Shea did graduate work in lav and political science at Northeasl em and was an assistant politica science instructor. The representative ' s last publi speech was at the State Hous rally against the invasion of Can bodia last Tuesday. At the rail Shea denounced Pres. Nixon an urged students to challeng America ' s forign policy by wort ing within the system establish by the constitution. JL [r ' nfl H Hw H ! «w BASEBALL 1970 NU (9-9-1) 5 Tufts 1 5 Brown 4 9 B.U. P.C. 3 P.C. 2 1 W.P.I. 3 7 Colby 4 2 N.H. 2 12 B.U. 9 5 Tufts 12 B.C. 5 1 B.C. 10 3 Bowdoin 6 16 Brandeis 2 5 Bates 4 4 A.I.C. 3 2 Harvard 6 2 Springfield 14 8 H.C. 6 Four Yr. Record W 35-39-1 R 337-329 A 4.5-4.4 ' At Imt . . . the perfect A MAY 1970 1. Nixon rationalizes Cambodia decision on television. 2. Many colleges hold demonstrations against Cambodian venture. 3. FOUR STUDENTS MURDERED BY OHIO NAT. GUARDSMEN AT KENT STATE. 4. More than 35 0 colleges close down - The Strike - concern. 5. Burials of William K. Schroeder, Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandy Scheuer. 6. MISS. ST. POLICE KILL TWO BLACKS IN DORM AT- TACK. Gibbs-Green. 7. Panther rally in New Haven, Conn, has nation tense. 8. Hard-hats march with flags, beat up anti-war demonstrators. 9. Rep. H. James Shea commits suicide; he thought he failed. 10. Bruins win Stanley Cup in overtime 4-3 in nation ' s darkest hour. 11. Electoral college system under attack from Senate. 12. Parrot ' s Beak GI ' s show ammo, guns captured in Cambodia. 13. California school strikes, Reagan orders police to patrol. 14. 283 pt. fall of the stock market has investors reeling. 15. Georgian riots stir Lester Maddox; six blacks killed. 16. Love Story becomes number one seller in bookstores. 1 7. Hank Aaron gets his 3,000th hit; first to also have 500HRs. 18. Johnny Bench showing the way for the Big Red Machine. 19. Alaskan pipeline causes ecological fears. 20. Philip and Daniel Berrigan get taste of jail. 21. Rioting in Paris, London; strikes aimed at US invasion. 22. Masters and Johnson explain their sex book. 23. Red Sox lose to White Sox 22-13. President Limits Scope of Acfion 1 Nixon Vows Cambodia Pullout by June 30 Strikes Spread, Some Colleges Cancel Classes SAIGON. South Vietnam. May 7— Official today that a flotilla of South gunboats, many of scheduled to begir neutralize North Vietnamese md Vietcong sanctuaries that ire said to be along the 45-mile ■tretch of the river between the ' order and Pnompenh, and to airy medicine, food and relief NIXON WILL BAR HOSTILE COMMENTS ON STUDENTS BYAGNEWAND OTHERS; SUMMONS 50 GOVERNORS TO MEETING President Sees Heads of 8 Universities- Youth Aide Quits By ROBERT B. SEMPLE Jr. WASHINGTON, May 7 — President Nixon moved today on a variety of fronts to repair his lines of communication with the campuses amid fresh evi- dence of revolt against his 1st GIs to Quit Cambodia Next Week President Tells Students His Decision Made for ' Verv Reasons ' The l rote t ■■■■■■: 30,000 Gather in Quiet Demonstration Bullet in Head Kills Lawmaker JUNE 1970 1. Student graduation speaker Mrs. Edith Stein e jected. :. WNEU-am becomes WRBB (Radio Back Ba power. y)-fm; more 3. Events of spring lapse as bad dream; summer classes. WNEU becomes WRBB-fm Exerpts from Mrs. Stein ' s Speech My voice is that of thousands of stu- dents who together in new bonds, arising from perceptions which had long been sup- pressed, found that we held within our ranks a new breed of men and women — a breed that no longer looks without seeing, a breed that no longer listens but does not hear, a breed that no longer can be pla- cated with gifts which flow from authori- ties who serve up poverty to 40 million Americans, racism to 22 million Americans and never-ending war to countless num- bers of our young men. Here we sit at a commencement which signals the end of an era spent in prepar- ing ourselves for significant contributions to society and as we focus on this perspec- tive we find that we must reject the tasks which this society has scheduled for us. . . . We are not prepared to bow meekly to the military and see the young men of our class go off to kill or be killed! We are not prepared to join the ranks of the so-called defense industry, producing weapons of sophisticated murder. We are not prepared to participate in a consumer production— producing commodi- ties for a market that already spells greed and glut to the rest of the world. Where six per cent of the world ' s population con- sumes 70 per cent of the world ' s produce. We are not prepared to be more con- cerned with the Gross National Product than with the Gross National Apathy. We are not prepared to allow murder and repression to continue to tear at the content of our lives. We are not prepared to divest ourselves of that human responsibility which educa- tion is committed to cherish — that greatest responsibility of all — the right to think and the right to question. That is the essence of our strike! It em- bodies the declaration that we would not be impelled any longer to look away as more of our comrades are called to die — to look away as more of our black brothers and sisters are victimized by growing racism — to look away when huge numbers in our city are denied the right to study in our university — to look away as we ourselves become callous and de-sensitized. To all this we say — we are not pre- pared. . . . What we have tried to do during the recent strike is primarily to impart a new belief to all people — a belief that they are not powerless — a belief that governments can be changed — a belief in the myriad of paths that may be chosen to accomplish this imposing task. . . . To vitalize this beginning we have done more than merely protest during our strike activities. We have done more than merely say— You are doing wrong! We have helped to develop creative alternatives. We have worked together to meet the community and bring forth a people ' s vote on the war. We have worked together to establish workshops on The History of Viet Nam, on the Nature of Imperialism: We have direct- ed our attention to the study of racism and its cancerous growth in our nation: We have sought to explore alternate forms of gov- ernment that would allow for greater self- realization on the part of all people. We have worked together with professors to en- courage new commitments among our stu- dents who suffer from defeatism and alien- ation. We have worked with those problems relating to their families and their teachers. We have tried to make ourselves and our concerns known to larger and larger sec- tions of our school and community popula- tions. For this, many of us have been iso- lated, rebuffed and stereotyped. . . . We have it in our power to overcome — we have it in our power to be concerned — we have it in our power to cry out against the endless slaughter — we have it in our power to stand together and shout for all to hear - ENOUGH! WAR NO MORE! If you have turned your radio dial to 560 in the past several weeks and encount- ered silence, you have discovered the hard way that WNEU has seemingly vanished, yet although not on the air, the situation is far from silent in the WNEU-studio com- plex. Walls are being torn down, equipment modified, studios remodelled, policies form- ulated — all in preparation for September when WNEU will officially return to the air as WRBB, Boston ' s newest FM station. Began in 1963 The advent of WRBB is the culmina- tion of the growth which has characterized Northeas tern ' s radio station since it was be- gun in 1963. At that time, as WNEU, it operated from a small room in the base- ment of the old Ell Center. When the new Student Center was com- pleted, WNEU moved up to its present lo- cation on the fourth floor, with three-and- a-half rooms and more modem equipment. In the following two years, the record library was expanded and two more offices were added. But the most noticeable change of all occurred in the fall of 1968 when WNEU changed its format from top-40 to progressive rock. It was not long after this when talk of becoming an FM station started, but the preparations were not begun in earnest till last fall. Telegram Finally, in the spring of this year, WNEU received a telegram from the Federal Com- munications Commission in Washington, giving approval to construction of a ten- watt educational FM station. The trouble with this news was that the frequency as- signed to the station was 91.7 megahertz, a frequency already occupied by WBRS of Brandeis. Despite the fact that WNEU ' s consult- ing engineer proved to the FCC that its sig- nal would in no way interefere with WBRS, a time-consuming legal battle ensued, with WBRS lodging a complaint to try to pre- vent having to share 91.7. The dispute con- tinued for several months before it was re- solved, and WRBB became a reality. Radio Back Bay WRBB stands for Radio Back Bay. It is the intention of the staff to serve the Back Bay area with a balanced program of rock, blues, jazz, folk and public service presen- tations. Currently, a definite format is being decided upon by Division A Program Di- rector Marc Cohn and Division B Program Director Rog Richard, who is, incidentally, one of three active staff members who have been with the station since its earliest stages. Tentative plans for the fall involve remote broadcasts from trie Quadrangle during Freshman week. When it ' s all completed, WRBB will be a far cry from the station which once broad- cast in a room about the size of a broom- closet And with a potential listening audi- ence of over a million now available, the phrase ' just another college station ' may well become as obsolete as the name WNEU. JUNE 1970 1. Nixon cabinet splitting over Cambodian decision. 2. Robert Finch, liberal HEW head, first to leave cabinet. 3. Arabs attack Israeli school bus with mortar fire, kill many. 4. Cambodian invasion war prizes questioned by Senate. 5. Peruvian earthquake kills thousands, relief slow. 6. Agnew. Al Capp and Martha join forces for GOP show. 7. Agnew hits tennis partner in head with Spiro serve. 8. Police caught filming anti-war demonstrations for files. 9. Penn. Central Railroad goes bankrupt. 10. Radicals writing books to finance movement, themselves. 11. Speaker John McCormack plans to retire from service. 12. Killing of animals in northwest; Portland Die-In demon- stration. 13. Rumanian floods kill hundreds, rescue slow. 14. Edward Heath wins surprising victory in England ' s election. 15. Joseph Rhodes of Harvard battles Agnew on campus report. 16. Newark election sees black Kenneth Gibson win over Mafia. 17. Opera singer Grace Bumby strips to perfume in England. 18. Nat. Urban Coalition TV ad for LOVE. 19. War reporters captured in Vietnam, Cambodia. 20. Shaky calm in Jordan with Al Fatah and King Hussein. 21. Rico Carty gets on All-Star ballot as write-in candidate. 22. Agnew speaks at West Point, builds fighting-man image. 23. Arthur Barkley hijacks plane because he owed $471 to Government. 24. SST hearings, unemployment rises, graduation protests. 25. Government continues warnings on DDT. 26. Y. Yevtushenko publishes poem to Krause girl. 27. Radical Tommy the Traveler unmasked as cop-spy on cam- pus. Penn Central Railroad Co. Is Bankrupt Hemenway Street riot study now a criminal investigation By JOHN O ' LEARY The Boston police command structure, apparently dissatisfied with preliminary po- lice reports, has initiated a criminal inves- tigation of the events which took place on Hemenway Street the night of May 10. That night, in what one Boston official called, the worst case of police over- reaction in recent Boston history, police charged down Hemenway and Gainsbor- ough Streets, clubbing everyone in their wav; they forcibly entered several build- ings, including NU dorms at 115 and 157 Hemenway and 90 The Fenway; they smashed open apartments, clubbed the resi- dents indiscriminately and destroyed furni- ture and personal belongings. Among those injured were Michael Man- del, a blind student at the Berkeley School of Music, who was attacked while trying to unlock the door to his apartment, and Da- vid Robbins, Northeastem ' s assistant direc- tor of housing, who was beaten while at- tempting to call students into the dormi- tories. Police gained access to the roof of 103 Hemenway Street and pelted students with rocks, bricks and other assorted debris. They also shattered windows at 90 The Fenway. Preliminary police reports made no men- tion of police entering dormitories or apart- ments and made no mention of injuries. However, subsequent statements taken by the Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, the Mayor ' s Office of Human Rights, and the NU News revealed many instances of forced entry, property damage and person- al injury. At that point, police officials re- evaluated their data, and decided to begin a criminal investigation. According to John Fisk, Boston Police Department legal counsel, an officer in- volved in a criminal investigation has the right to legal counsel and may remain sil- ent if he chooses. Criminal charges may result, if evidence so warrants. Fisk stated that 62 officers were in- volved in events at Hemenway Street and most have enlisted the services of attorneys. There have been 78 complaints received, but as of yet, no one has brought suit. (Continutd on Pag 3) JULY 1970 1. Hemenway St. study becomes a criminal investigation. 2. Long-awaited Hemenway St. report issued: police over zealous. 3. Hemenway St. July 4th party turns to trashing; bank scorch- ed. 4. Police ignore riot; White and McNamara rift reported. 5. Summer dulls student unrest. 6. Jobs becoming tougher to find. 7. Police maintain vigil over Hemenway St. Hemenway report issued Police Commissioner Rob- ert L. McNamara reported yesterday on the results of the long awaited police in- vestigation into the events which took place on Hemen- way Street on May 9-11. He said, I have carefully considered that the police of- for senior pix for an extra fee. There are no dress rules or suggestions for this year ' s pictures. The Class of 1971 has been sent out questionnaire forms on which they may make state- ments on their reaction to events of the past Five years in and out of school in addi- tion to or in lieu of the normal activity biography. These state- ments will accompany the year- book pictures in the Cauldron. ficers involved were under extreme provocation and the fact that they had obviously been lured into position for a pre-arranged, premeditated attack. Nevertheless, in my judgement the police depart ' ment investigation indicates that some of our police offi- cers were over-zealous in car- rying out their duties on this occasion, that they did not maintain their professional self-control and that they did use unnecessary force in dis- persing this unlawful assem- bly. . . . The officers themselves have denied any misconduct or mistreatment. . . . The complaintants and wit- nesses to these actions have been unable or unwilling to identify the officers involved and we have therefore been unable to proceed with crim- inal complaints. $A VM JULY 1970 1. Cooper-Church amendment to cut funds for Cambodia. 2. Nixon starts summer rhetoric effort to cool nation. 3. Bernadette Devlin ' s jailing sets off N. Ireland Catholics. 4. Veterans benefits costing as much as war. 5. Starvation in Biafra goes on, government botches relief. 6. Willie Mays joins Aaron in 3,000 hit - 500 HR class. 7. SALT talks open, hope for disarmament. 8. NL wins All-Star game on Clemente sacrifice, Rose slide. 9. Nixon picking candidates he wants defeated in November. 10. VD becomes national concern, epidemic reports. 11. Alaskan land boom, development worries ecologists. 12. Demonstrations against Pacific Gas Electric. 13. Chicago blacks turning on black gangs. 14. Person kills caged lions at Portland, Ore. zoo. 15. Missiles in Suez threaten Israeli troops, peace. 16. Walter Hickel made honorary Indian. 17. Pele and Brazil team World Cup from Italy 4-1. 18. Predictions of war end thrills businessmen. 19. Charles and Anne of England become world travelers. 20. Gay Power pickets in NYC. 21. Spiro T. Agnew T-shirts and watches selling fast. 22. Flag stickers more popular for middle-America. AUGUST 1970 s l. Prof. Sally Michael - teacher - marries Rich Gawel - student. 2. Pres. Knowles criticized for ignoring ac- tivism in annual report. Annual Report exerpts We ' ve had the Jazz Age of the Twenties, the Depression years of the Thirties, the War Years of the Forties, and the Silent Decade, the Fifties. The Sixties? No word presently seems more apt than violent. It has been a violence which has manifested itself in two distinct ways — through specific acts of many misgnided in- dividuals, and through a more general mode, or pall, among many of our youth. ... p. 6. The general public has little sympathy for faculty members who support radical students, especially those who take over facilities and destroy property. They have no sympathy for faculty who do not support their administration, and for those who waiver back and forth in making their decisions. Faculties are not looked upon as strong leadership groups. Neither are some administrations, however, because in some instances they don ' t act forcefully enough. Expelling agitators from an insti- tution, which the general public most often views as justifiable, tends to draw the sympathy of a great many so-called ' •middle- of-the-road students. ... p. 7. College presidents now share responsibility with students and faculty in such areas as appointments, the budget, and pri- orities in planning. All university regulations are subject to review by student and faculty groups. . . . In spite of all these changes and modifications in univer- sity operations, the administrator must recognize that it is he who has the final responsibility, that it is he who must answer to the public and to his governing board. Unfortunately, there are many faculty members and students who want to share the authority, but little if any of the responsibility. ... p. 7-9. What has happened to faculty attitudes? In many cases, faculty members, and particularly those who are associated with any politically oriented left-wing element, are seeking more campus control in all areas. Many devote more time to poli- ticking and administrative matters than to research and teach- ing, aiming at their own election to influential faculty senates and committees. . . . On some campuses, students want a voice regarding the teachers themselves. They want to know who the teachers are and the nature of their qualifications. They want to help select them, and, to have a hand in deciding tenure. For obvious rea- sons, the real campus confrontation of the future may very well be a battle for power between the students and the faculty. ... p. 9. Student activists are frequently aided and abetted by alien- ated faculty members whose poL 3ies and tactics also place them in the radical camp. MA. ' AUGUST 1970 I. Judge, three blacks killed in Marin County Courthouse escape. 2. Angela Davis linked with guns used in escape. 3. WOMEN ' S LIBERATION DAY ACROSS NATION, Don ' t iron while strike is hot. Aug. 26. 4. Gunnar Jarring sets up Middle East peace talks. 5. Chavez wins the Black Eagle symbol for migrant workers. 6. Maddox says he will ride nerve gas train to prove safety. 7. Gas makes it to Sunny Pt. NC for later dumping in Atlantic. 8. Ecologists wild over nerve gas, fur coat buyers. 9. Prisoner revolt at Manhattan H of C; conditions blamed. 10. Chet Huntley ends 14 yr. career as NBC newscaster, tears at end. 11. Women ' s liberation protests in Europe. 12. NYC voided of cars on weekends in experiment. 13. Anti-ecology people blame Commies for excitement. 14. Hundreds of cities have smog problem as weather settles. 15. Cereal industry hit by the Choate nutrition chart. 16. Thermography ray helps to find breast cancer. 17. Nixon polishing Agnew ' s image for campaign trip. 18. African women seeking new image. 19. Pill commercials frowned on by anti-drug people. 20; Rally for Decency sponsored by Miami ' s Jackie Gleason. 21. More fights over sex education. 22. Nixon gets editorial backing from NY Daily News. 23. Kidnappings in South America scares diplomatic corps. 24. Pills given to hyperactive children. 25. Sly Family Stone riot in Chicago as cops, kids battle. 26. Powder Ridge festival becomes fiasco in Conn. 27. Old People facing tough lives with inflation, indifferent public. 28. Twenty-fifth anniversary of Atomic Bomb blast. 29. Strom Thurmond pelted with marshmellows at Pittsburgh speech. SENIOR SEPTEMBER 1970 I. Tlie final year begins quietly enough Administration prints NORTHEASTERN TODAY to count- it NEWS. OTC HO suggested by Knowies. esident Frank Gerry tries anti-war hunger strike. O Conservative panel for DSS. udent attaeks Journalism Dept. for methods. U football goes big-time; opens with Harvard; loses. Central ROTC headquarters favored by President Knowles By JOHN BURTON President Asa 5. Knowles, speaking at a Fac- ulty Senate meeting last Thursday, said that, I would like to see in Boston, New York, Chicago, and other large cities, a central headquarter for ROTC, instead of small scattered training centers. On July 14, 1969, a program was enacted by President Knowles in response to discussion of ROTC by students, faculty, and administrators, to recommend possible changes in ROTC at North- eastern. After more than a year of waiting, a re- port by the committee was established. Most of the changes recommended by the com- mittee have been accepted. Among these are the reduction of curriculum from 396 hours to 196 hours (plus 40 hours of cVill) and continued nego- tiation with the Army to seek removal of drill and weapons from the campus and the assumption of all costs for the program now carried by the Univesrity. Perhaps part of the reason for revisions of ROTC is the fact that attitudes towards ROTC have changed. Said Knowles, ROTC is no longer what it used to be. A few years ago 1200-1500 students was the normal number of recruits. This year 110 freshmen entered ROTC. The largest con- densation of ROTC occurs in the South and Mid- west. Knowles ' greatest concern about the program is that he sees it as a necessary part or the mili- tary, that, is to have civilian-trained officers. I see a volunteer army resulting in many serious problems. The discussion ended with a welcome to ques- tions, and then passed on to the topic of the new library. When asked by one of the faculty members about the possibility of having one central library for the many neighboring schools in the Northeast- ern area, Knowles answered, Most libraries in the area are inadequate. Northeastern ' s is pretty good in comparison. I ' d like to see local schools pool their resources into one library. Possibly an elec- tronic storage library, to prevent becoming outr dated in ten years. In fact a staff of administrators just returned from California where they examined the Ampex video-tape files systems. They may change our whole concept of a library. The meeting concluded with a brief discussion concerning the Health Services of the University. Vietnam hunger strike supported by Council By CHRIS NIELSON In an unscheduled Student Council meeting September 25, Presi- dent Frank Gerry turned the meeting over to Vice President Michael Putnam and proceeded to move: Be it resolved that 1) The Student Council supports the hunger strike of our Presidents Frank Gerry and John Hanson. 2) That the Student Council will organize an evening of fast on Friday, October 2 with the money collected to be forwarded to the National Student Association to pay the costs of the campaign to release the Saigon Student Union leaders, and that this action will hinge on negotiations with University Housing A third point was then added to the proposal — That Student Council make available to the student body means by which they can contact their congressmen and senators. According to Gerry, the pur- pose of the motion is to involve more students in the nationwide hunger strike and at the same time educate them to the less-publi- cized atrocities taking place in Vietnam. The Ballroom meeting was attended by about 35 non-council members. After a seconding of the motion, Ken Simpson of the C.I.A. proposed an amendment The substance of the amendment was that the students giving up their meal could choose whether the money from that meal would go to either: 1) The Palestinian Red Crescent, 2) The Black Panther Defense Fund, and 3) The U.S. National Student Association. Discussion on the amendment proceeded and although there was general agreement that all programs were of great importance to universal solidarity, it was decided that whatever funds were received would be sm-ead so thin as to render the Droeram ineffective. Journalism Department attacked An Open Letter To: President Asa S. Knowles; The Collcgs uf Liberal Arts; The Northeastern NEWS; The NU Journalism Dept.; The NU Cu.nraunity-at-Iarge; With this letter I ask for the total cessation of whatever sup- port Northeastern University gives the organization known as the Journalism Department (JD). Thi:- Department must be re- vamped entirely or should be dropped immediately from the university. The JD is irrelevant to anything that approximates learning and has been cheating students of not only a proper 1970 journalism education but also of grades they obtain under adverse conditions. Dividing tuition costs in a per class ratio I have paid more than $600 for four JD courses and have received about $50 in knowledge; which becomes less when the frustration, boredom and unethical grading methods are subtracted from that figure. Examples of JD grading and ethics. (1) In the fall of ' 68 Mr. Azer taught my course in Journalism. During the course we had regu- lar homework and quiz assign- ments and a final exam. Going into the final my average was B for homework and B for quizzes. Included in the home- work grade was supposedly five A-grades (counting double) for stories that were done from scratch. (Meaning instead of writ- ing from notes given by teacher, students wrote their own notes on movies and speakers.) Just before the final I was told ray homework grade would be dropped to C because I had cut five classes, two over the allowed three, and was being penalized. I received a C is my final grade. The exam mark was never dis- closed. ' I was ' penalized for not going to a class which the instructor could not make interesting or rel- evant. I do not remember one good question being asked or dis- cussed in three months. (The attendance-making trick and daily homework assignments are the usual ploy of those who cannot draw students to class on their own or the course ' s merit) (2) In the spring of ' 69 Mr. Quarrington taught my second JD class. During the term we Something ne v - a Christmas boycott To the editor: We see as hypocrisy the ex- travagant celebration of Christ- mas when there is no peace on earth. So our group feels it is time for a Christmas boycott. We are not going to buy presents this year, nor are we going to receive them. We will do with- out decorations, and may be fast- ing on Christmas day instead of feasting. Instead of spending, we will work for peace on earth by giv- ing our money to help make amends for the suffering we have caused — such as by financially adopting a Vietnamese child, and by giving our time to stop the war. We are calling for people to put peace back in Christmas — what better way to observe the birth of Christ than to bring an end to the war this year? We are counting on college groups to do most of the local work. Here are some possible ap- proaches for organizing the boy- cott: 1. Contact local clergy — many should be receptive to taking commercialism out of Christmas and putting peace back in. 2. Organize picket lines at de- partment stores and shopping centers. ' 3. Do guerilla theater on the Because of the large number of Letters to the Editor the NEWS receives, toe cannot in- sure that each will be -printed, although every effort will be made to do so. We therefore ask that all letters run no longer than 200 words and that they be typewritten, preferably triple-spaced. Unsigned letters, and letters without a class num.- or title of the writer will be printed. did 18 stories for homework and quizzes. The ending to this class was more ludicrous than the Azer class. I received two A ' s, 14 B ' s and 4 C ' s. A female member of the class did about 12 of those assignments and got an even num- ber of B ' s and C ' s. She had had three months co-op experience on newspapers and by then I had had 15 months. The final exam was rewriting stories and the grades were never available as co-op began again. The final grade, however, was a C. The girl received a B. (3) In the winter of ' 69 I had Quarrington again. By the end of three months I received about sidewalk in front of large stores. Dramatize the horrors of war or the contradictions in the think- ing of the military. 4. Leaflet at high schools, train stations, churches and shop- ping centers. 5. Urge fellow students not to go home for vacation unless their parents agree to participate in the boycott. We would welcome any criti- cisms and suggestions readers might have of this proposal. Westport Citizens for Peace P.O. Box 207 Saugatuck Station Westport, Conn. 06880 the same grades as the spring. The girl also received the same grades. I was the only person to finish the final, which was again doing stories as we had all year. I finally received a B, she also received a B for a final grade. Exam marks were not given out because of co-op. The final exam is doing the same work as for the three-month per- iod, but obviously if you do not do well marks go down and three months ' work mean nothing. (4) This past term, summer ' 70, both Azer and Quarrington taught half a course. In Azer ' s class I received six A ' s, a B+ was not an A because he made a mista ke correcting against my favor and I did not get it changed. I was not going to allow his stupidity to bother me for one grade. The C was because I did not bring a dictionary to class for a quiz and could not correct words, though leaving a note saying the words were wrong. During each class the students pointed out corrections that were, in fact, incorrect in themselves. The incorrect corrections bring to mind the point of how final exam grades lower term grades. With students not around to argue, ineptness prevails and stu- dents are robbed of grades to satisfy curves. If any student does manage to come in from co-op he is given the run-around. The entire JD grading system is based on the judgment of people who are wrong every day of the term. (5) Chairman George Speers (of JD) showed his interest in the students during the winter term when he cut six straight classes to attend the NEPA con- vention. He did not tell the stu- dents he was not coming to class and they went every day. With Speers working for NEPA and Quarrington working for the Herald the JD has one full-time instructor and his background in journalism, aside from the NU News is nearly nill. (6) All the courses in JD are now related to newspapers. Could the reason for this be the fact that the JD is really run by the New England Press Assn. and not NU? The students learn news- paper styles, the students get newspaper jobs, usually for low pay, and the worst work. JD Chairman Speers says he does not want technical courses in the undergrad program. That is tech- nical courses in TV, radio, and magazines; but newspaper tech- nical courses are fine. Is that because these, three men know only newspaper work or is it be- cause NEPA runs the show? Which ever it is the students suffer. These nine episodes concerning the JD are nothing in compari- son to the daily frustration of horrible JD classes. The trivial assignments handed out are in- credible considering the fact that the journalistic field is now one of the most interesting and sure- ly controversial, but these men do not have the equipment to handle anything interesting. With the many books being written about the media, the NU JD prisoner gets a steady diet of How to Report and Assignment Jonesville. The only discussion in class is when a professor errors in correcting, which is often. The JD lives in 1955 and the students pay 1970 prices. The JD has robbed me of two grades, several smaller grades, and $500 in tuition. Also there is the fact that I could have taken four educational courses, which I will personally try to make other students do, if I know they are going to be J majors. If no students are enrolled in the JD program there will be no use for the JD. I am asking for the immediate resignation of the entire JD and I ask the University to take over the department, knowing full- well this may be a frying pan to fire suggestion. With the JD functioning the way it does, chances like this must be taken. Richard B. Tourangeau (71LA) I guess I came to Northeastern for the same reasons as most other kids: pressures - from family in becoming their status symbol and from society to get a good job. I don ' t think too many kids c ome to really learn. In my freshman year 1 found out high school hadn ' t prepared me and the first semester was bad. I hadn ' t learned how to study. Then I found the technique - react. I came to see that it was a passive in- tellectual atmosphere and curriculum at Northeastern. No one challenges you. There are few papers; tests are usually multiple guess. You find out how to study and answer in a certain way. Sophomore year was the biggest learning experience of my college career. Taking a course in Anthropology and Sociology, I came to a broader view and understanding of things. I began to appreciate dif- ferent ideas, other cultures, other people. Also, I made Boston my en- vironment instead of just Northeastern. I discovered bookstores. Har- vard and M.I.T. and began to drop in on classes and lectures there. I began to become very alienated from my courses in school. Besides the irrelevance of the tests and the instructors ' from-the-book lectures, I saw one philosophy being confined to - American Capitalistic Economics. Business taught quantity and not quality, production of goods measured in dollars and not value. An oil spill off the coast of California was bad because it ' s a fiscal loss and not because it spoils beaches. Co-op left me with ambivalent feelings. Working on a contract for the Harvard Graduate School of Education, I was involved in a project analyzing the Boston school system. Despite a responsible job, exciting work, and the credit by having my name appear on a finished report, I still felt treated like a menial laborer. I think co-op does that. Somewhere along the line the philosophy gets the employer, the administrator and the student thinking of it as beneficial job training instead of the student being looked on as a valuable asset to the com- pany. The wrongs of the education system alienated me even more as I went along in school. The American Educational System, American Society, the American Theory of Economics. It made me want to break out of the system where grade superiority and benefits - like cars and homes and money - spur a people on more than learning or contributing back to society. The promise of all the benefits in the future, is a control mechanism that keeps a person in the system. It doesn ' t make sense to me anymore, I ' m trying to get away from it. I ' ve gotten into Urban Studies. There ' s no money in it. Just a lot of people that need help. I found out that half of the children that enter the Boston school system don ' t graduate, and that the half that doesn ' t is determined by the economic weakness of the child ' s family structure. This keeps the Chain of Poverty going round and round. I ' m not going to make more money getting more kids graduated from high school, but I ' m going to profit more, and it ' s going to be worth more to me. I ' ve come to feel out of it in the university - where a specialized building that 15 or 20 graduate students will use draws a higher priority than a library, where kids stick together on big political issues but never question the whole system, and wind up taking care of themselves first. The college diplomas we receive are like the peace or ecology buttons - a symbol for something not worked hard at or worth much. People wearing peace buttons drive their cars in the city in rush hour, helping to kill the ecology. Most people taking diplomas make it just a piece of paper because they don ' t care about learning, or changing the system for the better through learning. SEPTEMBER 1970 I. Father Drinan, other priests, run for Congress. 2. Gamal Abdel Nasser dies, UAR loses God-like leader. Sept. 28. 3. Radicals dynamite Wise. Math Center. One killed, $500,000 damage. 4. Calf. Mexican-American rallies end in violence, death. 5. Agnew goes to Saigon, views troops and policies. 6. War correspondents released by VC. 7. Sniper action kills policeman in several US cities. 8. John Fairchild of Women ' s Wear Daily wants midi-skirt. 9. Chevron oil fire off Calf, coast; firm fined $1 million. 10. Legal abortions in NY total 16,000, 80% free. 11. US kids abroad arrested for hash smuggling. 12. Lead free gas helps ecology says TV commercials. 13. Auto workers strike with new boss Woodcock leading. 14. Jordan: Arafat vs. King Hussein for control. 15. Sesame St. Rubber Ducky song rises to No. 1 as does show. 16. Agnew ' s nabobs of negativism speech. 17. Skyjacking now unbearable for airlines. 18. Radioactive diagnosis of cancer found. 19. Doctors discover way to fight facial paralysis. 20. New Orleans police round up Black Panthers on ride. 21. Willie Shoemaker rides his 6,033rd winner; surpasses Longden. 22. Mickey Mantle Day at Yankee Stadium. 23. Ali making the fight comeback try. 24. New black magazines aimed at middle-class blacks. OCTOBER 1970 s 1. Mayoralty returns to NU with Rubber Dicky (Nat Weiner). N 2. Ubu Roi presented by Silver Masque. 3. Charlene Nixon is Homecoming Queen. s 4. Charles Evers at Distinguished Speaker Series. ■' ■5. Rep. Michael Dukakis speaks on campus. 6. Would-be Senator Peter Camejo accused of trespassing. 7. Teachers let some elu de exams to work in elections. ,f 8. Bomb threats plague campus throughout term. 9. Father Drinan speaks on priests in politics. MO. Sochacki bans four students from Ell Center. 11. Tim Hardin and Buffy St. Marie perform in gym. s 12. New Husky dog bought for school. 13. Journalism Dept. attempts to discredit charge. Rubber Ducky vs. Suntan Kid Mayoralty returns to NU By VALERIE THERRIEN The Mayor of Huntington Avenue Cam- paign will be returning to Northeastern this year after a one-year absence. The contest to see who will become the un- official spirit leader at NU will be held during the week of October 19. The two candidates this year are Nate Weiner, who will be running as Rubber Dicky, and Albert Thomas as the Suntan Kid. Weiner is a middler majoring in elec- trical engineering and makes his home in Canton. He is being sponsored by the NU Band. He said he chose the theme, Aubber Dicky for its obvious political implica- tions but added, ' Rubber Ducky ' (Ses- ame Street version) is my favorite song. Weiner has participated in quite a few campaigns since he came to Northeastern. I actively supported the Sterile Fagnew campaign for Mr. Husky last winter and also worked for Herb Acid for Mayor in the fall of ' 68, he said. I ' ve been a member of the band for the last three years and I usually go to all the football games and as many hockey and basketball games as I can. NU is my school and I believe it ' s important to support its activities when- ever possible. It ' s nice to be politically active, but not to the exclusion of every- thing. He also added that as mayor he wo uld make an effort to be at every game. Weiner also believes that the band has more spirit than any other organization on camprus. We ' ve been to every football game since I ' ve been he e and at least 80 per cent of the hockej and basketball games. I ' ve been involved in a lot of activi- ties here and I ' ve come to the conclusion that the world isn ' t going to end if we don ' t have a mayoralty r .ce, but I think that it ' s probably the most entertaining aspects of NU campus lif-.:. Farp to every- one! Weiner ' s rival for the office is Albie Thomas, a sophomore education major, whose last stage appearance was Fresh- (Continued on Page 2) Sochacki bans four students By JOHN O ' LEARY As a result of the unauthorized use of the lounge area of the Student Center for an Anti-ROTC rally on Tuesday of Fresh- man Orientation Week, Director of the Stu- dent Center Richard Sochacki revoked the Student Center privileges of four Northeast- ern students. The students, Andy and Phil McGee, Ken Simpson, and Jeff Winbounne were notified in a recent letter that they will be unable to reserve rooms, use litera- ture tables or student printing facilities for an indefinite period According to Sochacki the demonstra- tion constituted Open defiance of the rules of propriety and good manners . . . and as a consequence of your actions it is obvious that further cooperation with you is impos- sible. During the third week of the summer term a committee was formed for the pur- pose of opposing ROTC presence on the Northeastern campus. The Anti-ROTC Committee, which became a sub-commit- tee of the Freshman Orientation Board, re- quested permission to hold a rally in quad- rangle during the week of freshman orien- tation. According to McGee, Dean Kennedy expressed some opposition but finally agreed to allow the rally. Gary Melnick, chairman of the Fresh- man Orientation Board, said During sev- eral subsequent meetings with Dean Ken- nedy, he expressed opposition to our use of the quadrangle, and asked us if we might not be able to use some other area, but he never outright denied us the use of the quad. Recognition of the rally appeared in the freshman issue of Northeastern Todav , a newspaper published by the Northeastern University Press Bureau, and on the FOB schedule, both of which were available to Dean Kennedy. The day before the rally, Andy McGee asked Dean Kennedy for permission to leaf- let the Student Center to advertise the rally. Dean Kennedy granted him permis- sion. On the same afternoon McGee discov- ered difficulties with the sound system which they had intended to use. When he asked Dean Vetstein for permission to use the school ' s sound system he was allegedly (Continued on Pag 6) Knowles raps on campus report Camejo guilty of trespassing By STEVE LIPOFSKY Peter Camejo, Socialist Work- ers Party candidate for senator, was Toufifl grritty- Wednesday of trespassing on the NU Quad- Charges stemmed from a So- cialist Workers Party rally last Thursday during which Camejo was magged from the podium and arrested. Defense based its case on the fact that the NU Quad is open to public access and has always been considered a free speech area. They claimed Camejo ' s rights had been violated under the First Amendment. The university contended that the defendant did not get per- mission previous to the rally, and further, did not leave after be- ing told to do so. Camejo was defended at no charge by Joe Remcho of Rem- cho and Remcho of Central Square, a law firm that handles civil rights and other cases for nominal fees. The first prosecution witness was Sgt. McCall of the Campus Police. He testified that upon arrival at the rally he was told by Assistant Dean of Student Ac- tivities Richard Sochacki to have Camejo removed. But because of what the Sergeant called the possibility ' of an incident (since the crowd was quite worked up ) for the Boston police. Next Sgt. Mike Camcrato was called. He testified that he was called in by the Campus Police and arrested Camejo shortly af- ter he arrived on the scene. Camerato also commented on the ugliness of the crowd and implied, as did McCall, that Camejo was trying to incite a riot. Then defense introduced five pictures showing the arrest of Camejo and the calm nature of the crowd before and during the police action. The judge said he felt the ' condition of the crowd was irrelevant. Then Camejo took the stand. He stated that he had understood the Quad to be a free speech area. He said he had purposely chosen the time so that it would not disrupt any university ac- tivity, as students were on break during these hours, He spoke a little about how difficult it was to campaign if one was a SWP candidate and not a Ted Ken- nedy or a Si Spaulding. The defense tried for a dismis- sal, citing a 1968 Supreme Court case in which it was ruled that a shopping center parking lot was fair game for free speech by candidates. After Remcho finished, the judge asked Camejo to enter a plea. After a short conference with his lawyer, Camejo pleaded guilty. The judge so -ruled and gave no fine or sentence. Bomb threats plague campus By JACK GOLDBERG In response to the bomb threats which have swept over the campus in the past two weeks, President Asa S. Knowes, has set forth a new set of guidelines to be followed in the event of future bomb scares. The president ' s memorandum includes the following three procedures: 1 when a call is received, a conscientious search of any threatened building will be made by the University Security Force. They, in turn, will normally call for assistance from the Bomb Squad of the Boston Police Department whenever there is a serious bomb threat. 2 — As soon as a call is received, signs will be posted at all building entrances as follows: THE UNIVERSITY HAS BEEN NOTIFIED THAT SOMEONE CLAIMS THERE IS A BOMB OR IN- CENDIARY DEVICE IN THIS BUILDING. ALL PERSONS ENTERING AND OCCUPYING THESE PREMISES ARE WARNED THAT THEY DO SO AT THEIR OWN RISK. 3 — Persons who are occupying a building at a time when a bomb threat is received will simi- larly be notified promptly, as follows: THE UNI- VERSITY HAS BEEN NOTIFIED THAT SOME ONE CLAIMS THERE IS A BOMB OR INCEN- DIARY DEVICE IN THIS BUILDING. A SEARCH IS NOW BEING CONDUCTED BY MEMBERS OF THE CAMPUS POLICE WITH ASSISTANCE FROM THE BOMB SQUAD OF THE BOSTON POLICE DEPARTMENT. ALL OCCU- PANTS OF THE BUILDING ARE WARNED THAT IT MAY BE HAZARDOUS TO REMAIN IN THE BUILDING. ANY PERSONS WHO REMAIN IN THE BUILDING DO SO AT THEIR OWN RISK. Students will not be penalized for classes missed because of a bomb threat. Faculty are urged to make special efforts to help students make up missed materials. There have been 28 threats between October 9 and October 27. Every building in the university complex, at least once has been threatened with the exception of the student center, the Greenleaf Building, Boston-Bouve and the Dana Building. Roy Lynch, Chief of Campus Police said, There is more than one person making the calls. There are many male and female voices. Some of the (Continued on Page 5} Drug overdose kills Janis Joplin Reuters HOLLYWOOD. Calif - Jams Jo- plin, who rose to rock singing stardom belling out soul music and clutching a bottle of whisky, died here last night of an apparent overdose of drugs. The body of the 27-year-old Miss Joplin was found in her Hollywood apartment at about 10 p.m. PDT by a friend, police said. Police did not iden- tify the friend. Her body was taken to the county coroner ' s office where authorities said an autopsy would be performed later Police at the scene tentatively fixed the cause of death as an overdose of drugs. Miss Joplin reached fame as a member of the Big Brother and the Holding Company group. A Texan, she was so popular that she went out on her own with the Big Brother company giving her musical festi- the i val. Her uninhibited, screaming, wailing style made her a top pop singer. Police reported finding fresh needle marks on her arms. It didn ' t look like foul play, an ambulance attendant said. It looked like she had just fallen over. Miss Joplin, who lived in Larkspur, north of San Francisco, had been here since Aug. 24 to record for Columbia Records with the Full Tilt Boogie rock group, police said. Miss Joplin became a star after appearing at the 1967 Monterey Inter- national Pop Festival, where she sang Ball and Chain, a blues classic. She was appearing then with Big Brother and the Holding Company. She told an interviewer once of her style: It ' s all feeling. When I ' m sing- ing I ' m not thinking. She admitted to being a heavy bourbon whisky drinker, often drinking during performances. When asked whether her all-out performances might cut her career short, she an- swered: Maybe I won ' t last as long as other singers, but I Ihink you can destroy your now by worrying about tomorrow. Among the songs for which she was best known are Maybe, Work Me, Lord, Little Girl Blue, One Good Man, Try, Kozmic Blues, I Need a Man to Love. Turtle Blues and Piece of My Heart. Miss Joplin let her long brown- blonde hair fall uncombed and often wore floppy hats, beads, bell-bottom slacks and hippie-like clothing. She said she was not a hippie but a beat- nik: Beatniks believe things aren ' t going to get any better and say the hell with it, stay stoned and have a good time. mnnBH ■■■■. OCTOBER 1970 1. NASSER FUNERAL DRAWS MILLIONS, Nixon snubs ceremonies. ' ' 2. James Cross, Pierre LaPorte kidnapped in Montreal. s 3. My Lai trial shaping up for Lt. William Calley Jr. 4. National Air Quality Standards Act passed in ecology move. 5. Salvatore Allende wins Chile election as Marxist candidate. 6. Kent St. indictments handed down to students, no soldiers. 5 7. Janis Joplin dies from OD and overwork in Calif.; Jimi Hendrix dies in London. 8. Jordanians battle the Al Fatah for four days, mass death. 9. Montreal under attack by the FLQ, Laporte killed. 10. Anwar Sadat takes reigns of UAR, says he will fight Israel. 11. US 6th fleet patrolling Mid-East waters. 12. Angela Davis captured in NYC motel. 13. Nixon calls Oct. 22 National Prayer Day. 14. Dick Cavett becoming revenue for ABC-TV. 15. National health insurance plan discussed. 16. Billboards on the way out as Hickel moves for beauty. 17. Boston policeman William K. Schroeder shot in radical bank holdup. 18. Bernadine Dohrn put on the FBI list as wanted. 19. 42nd St. NYC puts on sex drama for the needy. 20. Scranton Commission blames both sides for campus rows. 21. The Fox (Environment Crusader) hits Chicago Busi- nesses. 22. Monday night football hits the air-waves, women shudder. 23. Intrepid beats Gretel II off Rhode Island for America ' s Cup. 24. Willie Sutton, bank robber, to write his memoirs. 25. Walter Cronkite forgets the day on CBS news, Oct. 16, says Dec. 13. 26. BROOKS is the name of the game, Bait, over Cinn. 4- 1 in series. 27. Wichita St. loses 38 players in plane crash tragedy. NOVEMBER 1970 1. Forme Flammen now hockey coach. 2. Small artli-ROTC rallies held, 3. Blood drive for United Fund does well in Quad. 4. Dark of [he Moon ' is Silver Masque production I fill M 1 ' ' STON EVENINGCUNff HOCKEY 1970-71 NU (7-22) Pennsylvania Harvard Yale A.I.C. Princeton Notre Dame R.P.I. P.C. R.P.I. Wisconsin W. Ontario N.H. B.U. P.C. Colgate Army Dartmouth Merrimack B.C. B.U. N.H. U. Mass. Brown Colby Vermont B.C. Norwich Bowdoin P.C. Five yr. totals: W-L 34 - 90 - I Pts. 397 - 655 Ave. 3.2-5.2 NOVEMBER 1970 I. Charles De Gaulle dies in France, world mourns. 2. Richard Cardinal Cushing dies in Boston, all faiths sad. 3. Ramsey Clark criticises J. Edgar Hoover in new book. 4. Thanksgiving invaded by Indians seeking reparations. 5. Nixon stoned in San Jose after giving peace sign. 6. Elections refuse to tell nation the mood of the people. 7. Dirty campaign tactics cause much Washington distaste. 8. Ali fights and beats Quarry; now on the comeback trail. 9. George Blanda at 43 kicking the Raiders to victory in final seconds. 10. East Pakistan typhoon, flood, is second worst world disaster. 11. Yippies invade the David Frost English TV show. 12. Conquest of El Capitan mountain by W. Harding. D. Cald- well. 13. UAW strike ends and economy hurt badly. 14. Fire at French chateau kills 145 17-27 yr. olds, burned alive. 15. Commercials for Alka-Seltzer, Ketchup given plaudits. 16. Devlin says riots not doing much to create change. 17. Sesame St. ranks as all-time greatest teacher on TV. 18. Khruschev book deplored by USSR officials. 19. Communists polluting their own environment. 20. US ecology threat by snowmobile, dune buggy, all-terrain car. 21. Blue collar workers getting the financial blues. 22. The year of Plunkett, Manning and Thiesmann. 23. Alliance proposed between UAR, Lybia. Sudan. 24. Encounter and sensitivity groups created. 25. Beetle Bailey gets black character. 26. Dr. Victor Ohta and family murdered in Calf. 27. Missile buildup in Suez area threatens peace. 28. My Lai trial begins at Ft. Benning, Ga. 29. Eric Sevareid responds to Agnew asking for newsmen ' s philosophies. 30. Urban guerrillas making trouble for police around nation. DECEMBER 1970 1. Money scarce for those in school - rent, tuition. : Students unable to obtain coop jobs or laid off. 3. Northeastern basketball season, record win mark. H. Wcstland food coop serving neighborhood. Final days of most active and depressing year. BASKETBALL 1970-71 NU (17-4) 58 B.C. 62 69 Fairleigh-D. 76 75 B.U. 60 73 G. Washington 56 71 Evansville 56 80 Buffalo 61 66 Scranton 65 60 Bates 46 67 Springfield 63 72 Brown 71 76 B.U. 52 95 Tufts 48 77 Assumption 84 47 U. Mass. 61 86 A.I.C. 70 75 U.N.H. 65 83 St. Anselm ' s 59 61 L.I.U. 56 92 Brandeis 63 93 St. Michael ' s 74 77 Vermont 59 Five Yr. Totals: W-L88-30 Pts. 9018 - 7863 Ave. 76.5 - 66.7 War measures act invoked 242 rounded up by police as Ottawa outlaws FLQ DECEMBER 1970 1 . US POW ' s in news after aborted rescue attempt in N. Viet- nam. 2. FLQ murders Pierre LaPorte in Montreal, world shocked. 3. Portuguese invasion of Guinea. 4. Senate seniority investigated by liberal faction. 5. Pope Paul VI attacked while in Manila. 6. SST in trouble as funding vote comes up. 7. Poland erupts in wake of economic crisis. 8. GNP reaches trillion mark though production is down. 9. The Don Meredith-Howard Cosell show closes on Monday nights. Monday football success. 10. J. Edgar Hoover speaks on M. L. King, minority sharp- shooters. 11. Research edging way toward conquest of cancer. 12. The great train strike is averted by quick negotiations. 13. Population grows to 206,432,263. 14. Robert Gordon, 16, of Newton, attends Nixon press con- ference. 15. Yukio Mishima 45, commits harakiri, disgusted with Japan. 16. Environments games for all ages to play. 17. Jews take over Christian jobs for Christmas holiday. 18. Spanish basque nationalists caught, trial watched world- wide. 19. Mitch Michaud climbs every state ' s highest peak in one year. 20. Howard Hughes empire suffering internal pains. 21. East Pakistan flood relief teams are late with little. 22. Arville Garland of Detroit pulls Joe shooting daughter, mates. 23. Uncertainty about the future of the American family. Movies of 1970 Books of 1970 The Damned The Reivers Boy Named Charlie Brown Marooned Topaz MASH Anne of 1000 Days Viva Max Soldier Blue Patton End of the Road Magie Christian Molly McGuires Tropic of Cancer Only Game in Town What Do You Say to a Naked Lady? Battle of Cable Houge Loving Airport Liberation of LB Jones Boys in the Band The Adventurers The Sicilian Clan A Man Called Horse Getting Straight Sympathy for the Devil I Am Curious (Blue) Woodstock Let It Be The Out-of-Towners Catch 22 Rider on the Rain On a Clear Day . . . WUSA Little Fauss, Big Halsy Trash Owl and the Pussycat Ryan ' s Daughter Cromwell Song of Norway Gimme Shelter Where ' s Poppa Love Story Little Big Man I Love My Wife Girl in My Soup The Cheyenne Social Club Hawaiians Myra Breckenridge Strawberry Statement Cotton Comes to Harlem The Virgin and the Gypsy The Revolutionary Junie Moon Joe Darlin ' Lili Chisum Mad Housewife MOVE Ned Kelly Performance Lovers and Other Strangers This Man Must Die Five Easy Pieces Wild Child Tristana Tora, Tora, Tora Quiet Days in Clichy RPM The Great White Hope Baby Maker Going Down the Road Fools Beyond the Valley of Dolls Beneath Planet of Apes Fire from Heaven The Gang that Couldn ' t Shoot Straight Graham Kerr Cookbook Travels with My Aunt Shivering Sands Life with Jacqueline Kennedy The Life and Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger Cosmos Mr. Samler ' s Planet Seize the Time Do It Of a Fire on the Moon The Politics of Ecology The Sensuous Woman The Sensuous Man QB VII Love and Will Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex Decent - Indecent In Someone ' s Shadow Sal Si Puedes The Inheritors Beggar in Jerusalem New English Bible Love Story Up the Organization Culture and Commitment Deliverance Points of Rebellion The Anderson Tapes I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings My Lai 4 One Morning in the War Human Sexual Inadequacy Hard Times Ball Four Out of Their League Confessions of a Dirty Ballplayer Zelda The Value of Nothing Bech: A Book Neophiliacs Crystal Palace Secret Woman Losing Battles The Wall St. Jungle Sexual Politics Future Shock Bucher: My Story Play It as It Lays Oh, Sex Education Body Language Inside the Third Reich The Lord Won ' t Mind God Is an Englishman The Greening of America Going All the Way Baby It ' s Cold Inside Calico Palace Crystal Cave Nixon Agonistes Unbought and Unbossed Rich Man, Poor Man Islands in the Stream Civilisation Crime in America Khrushchev Remembers Passage to Frankfurt Green Man C aravan to Vaccares White House Dairy Don ' t Fall Off the Mountain Passion of Robert Bronson Wartime Journals of C. A. Lindbergh DEATHS of 1970 Albums-Singers of ' 70- ' 71 Let It Be - Beatles Woodstock - Soundtrack Rain Drops Keep Fallin ' - BJ Thomas Bridge Over Troubled Water - Simon Garfunkel Joe Cocker Sweet Baby James - James Taylor Cosmo ' s Factory - Creedence Clearwater Green River - Creedence Clearwater It Ain ' t Easy - Three Dog Night I Want You Back - Jackson 5 Here Comes Bobby - Bobby Sherman Okie from Muskogee - Merle Haggard Fightin ' Side of Me - Merle Haggard Greatest Hits - Neil Diamond Frijid Pink On Time - Grand Funk Railroad Eric Burdon Declares War - War Morrison Hotel - Doors Diana - Diana Ross Puzzle People - Temptations Self Portrait - Dylan Sesame St. Book and Record Completely Well - BB King Best of Ferrante Teicher Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young 10 Years Together - Peter, Paul Mary Reach Out - Burt Bacharach Stillness - Sergio Mendes Brazil ' 66 Sha-na-na Issac Hayes Movement - Issac Hayes American Woman - Guess Who Suitable for Framing - Three Dog Night Deja Vu - Crosby, Stills, Nash Young Get Ready - Rare Earth Benefit - Jethro Tull I Want to Take You Higher - Ike Tina Jesus Christ, Superstar Tumbleweed Connection - Elton John Pearl - Janis Joplin Cry of Love - Jimi Hendrix Sex Machine - James Brown New Morning - Dylan Super Bad - James Brown Nantucket Sleighride - Mountain Bloodrock II Love Story - Soundtrack John Lennon Plastic Ono Band Ringo ' s Blues - Ringo Starr McCartney - Paul McCartney All Things Must Pass - George Harrison Theodore Reik 81, psychoanalyst, author of Love and Lust. Max Born 87, nuclear physicist, Nobel Prize Winner. John B. Hynes 72, Mass. Dem. defeated Curly for mayor. William T. Piper 89, designer of Piper Cub planes. Hal March 49, quiz master on $64,000 Question. Bertrand Russell 97, pacifist philosopher. Jack Mills 64, engineer on train of Great $7M Robbery in 1963. Conrad Nagel 72, film star of 50-60 era. Paul Christman 51, announcer and All-Star football player. William Hopper 54, Perry Mason ' s Paul Drake on TV. Erie Stanley Gardner 80, writer of Perry Mason books. Doris Doscher Baum 88, posed for Miss Liberty 25c piece 1916. Joe Pyne 45, TV talkshow for crazies; I ' m not a nice guy. Maurice Stokes 36, basketball player struck with paralysis in ' 58. Dr. Sammuel H. Sheppard 46, involved in famous murder case. Merriman Smith 57, senior White House newsman, suicide. Inger Stevens 35, beautiful TV star, OD of sleeping pills. Anita Louise 53, film star of ' 50 ' s. Ed Begley 69, film and theater star. Gypsy Rose Lee 56, first big-name stripper, learned from Tessie Tassel. Herb Shriner 51, country humorist, TV personality. H. James Shea 30, Mass. rep. fight war with new bill, suicide. Walter Reuther 62, 24 yrs. president of UAW. Thomas Butler 57, Grey Fox of Scotland Yard, caught train robbers. John Gunther 68, author of the Inside books. Terry Sawchuck 40, outstanding NHL goalie. Richard King Mellon 70, billionaire, richest family in US. Frank Lauback 85, missionary who taught millions to read. E. M. Forster 91, novelist, wrote Passage to India. Alexander Kerensky 89, Russian premier after czar coup. Abraham Maslow 62, psychologist and humanistic writer. Sukarno 69, father of Indonesia who lost power in the end. Asa A. Allen 59, evangelist of radio. Robert Sagandorph 69, editor of Farmer ' s Almanac. Eric Berne 60, author of Games People Play. Antonio Salazar 81, president-dictator of Portugal for 36 yrs. Louis E. Lomax 47, author of black studies, literature. Edward Rommel 72, first umpire to wear glasses, was pitcher. Dr. Hermann Kraus 77, rhythm method founder, calls pill rape. Vince Lombardi 57, football coach of Green Bay Packers. Chester Morris 69, was Boston Blackie on TV. Gamal Abdel Nasser 52, president and god-figure in UAR. Charles De Gaulle 79, president of France. Richard Cardinal Cushing 75, archbishop of Boston. John Dos Passos 74, novelist and historian of early 20 ' s. Jimi Hendrix 27, rock musician and excellent guitarist. Janis Joplin 27, rock-blues singer; had white soul. Edward Everett Horton 84, bit player who rose to stardom. Theodore Granik 63, moderator of Youth Wants to Know. Henry Simon 68, of Simon Schuster publishers. Charlie Root 71, Cub pitcher who Ruth called HR off of. John T. Scopes 70, 1925 trial in Tenn. on Darwin teaching. Richard Hofstadter 54, historian, author of Age of Reform. Rube Goldberg 87, inventor, humorist. Oscar Lewis 55, sociologist, author. Benjamin O. Davis Sr. 93, first black general in US army. Field Marshall Viscount Slim 79, leader of WWII Burma army. Mendel L. Rivers 65, US Rep. and military ' s friend. KENT STATE MURDERS: William K. Schroeder 19, ROTC student, psychology. Allison Krause 19, art history. Sandra Lee Scheuer 20, speech-therapy. Jeffrey Glenn Miller 20, transfer student in psychology. JACKSON STATE MURDERS: Phillip L. Gibbs 21, father, sociology. James Earl Green 17, high school student. Six blacks shot in backs in Atlanta, Ga. Thousands more die in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Mid-East, Africa. JANUARY 1971 Nc« Paritats for mens dorms accepted. Sochacki and Student Center Committee at odds. Justice William O. Douglas speaks on ecology for DSS. Jobless coops to near 10%. Cafe officials scuffle with PL rally supporting high schooler. Officials cancel Buddv Miles concert that would aid Pan- thers. Upward Bound proving success. L.A. adds BS degree; drops language requirements. Another good film series runs in auditorium. SC petitions to aid Project Turnabout drug center. Funds lacking to run proposed day care center. New England Conservatory in financial trouble. Women ' s groups plan films, speakers. Coop study to be initiated. Track season: highlighted by vaulter Carisella. Commencement speaker list drawn up. Sochacki and SCC clash over proposed constitution By JACK GOLDBERG This term, the Student Center Committee is em- barking on a program to assume more responsibility and decision-making powers in the running of the Ell Cen- ter. Although this action was originally supported by Richard Sochacki, assistant dean of student affairs and director of the Ell Student Center, there is now an ar- gument over exactly how much power the committee should assume. When the Ell Center was opened in the Fall of 1965, the Student Center Committee was formed as an advisory committee to assist the dean. It is made up of representatives of 20 different campus organizations. When Sochacki took over as director of the center, he attempted to give the committee more responsibility in running the building. Regarding this Sochacki said, At the outset they did not want the additional power above their advisory duties. They now feel they should have carte blanche over de cision making. I did not agree with the first view and I cannot agree with the second. They would like power that neither President Knowles or I enjoy. I still hope for a greater sharing of responsibility. I would like to be a facilitator of the committee, to enhance student power but instead I find myself in the role of babysitter. The chairman of the Student Center Committee, Jeff Gren 71RA, said, The SCC originally started as an advisory committee to the director of the Student Center when it was established. Since Dean Sochacki became director, he urged us to take a more active role in regard to decision making. Recently when we started to do this we have encountered some opposition. It is my feeling that the SCC is a responsible committee and should be able to make decisions concerning this building. The Student Center Committee is presently draw- ing up a constitution which will make clear their pro- posed new duties. Buddy Miles concert to help Panther Defense Fund The Student Council decided to sponsor a concert by Buddy Miles, the proceeds of which will go to the Black Panther Defense Fund. The concert was proposed by a former Northeastern student, David Smith who added that Miles offered to per- form free so that all of the proceeds could go to Ericka Huggins and Bobby Seale, presently on trial in New Haven on murder charges. John Hanson 72LA, president of the student council, said, The tentative date for the concert is February 11. We have had no hassles with the administration so far concern- ing the use of Alumni Auditorium for the concert. We main- ly have a logistical problem. We have to make sure the NU Band will not be using the auditorium on that day. They have always been very good about things like that. We also have to have confirmation regarding whether or not Miles can make it on that day. Details on the time and tickets will be given at a later time when the date is finalized. Officials cancel Miles concert By MAXINE LIEBERMAN In meeting Wednesday between Student Coun- cil President John Hanson 72LA and Richard So- chacki, assistant dean of students, it was an- nounced that the administration would not allow the proposed Buddy Miles concert to be held. Miles had offered his performance free so that all money collected could be donated to the Black Panther Defense Fund. There were a lot of reasons for this decision but they all boil down to one main reason. No matter what stand the university takes on this, it will be a political stand. It ' s an area the adminis- tration thinks is too highly controversial to be involved in either a pro or con stand, explained Sochacki at a Student Council meeting Wednesday night. Hanson asked if the real objection to the con- cert was that the money will be going to the Panthers. Sochacki replied that No matter what occurred it would alienate part of the students. According to Sochacki, the decision was made by Deans Gilbert MacDonald and Christopher Ken- nedy after an unidentified alumnus complained about the proposed program. President Asa S. Knowles was not included in the meeting but was aware of the decision, Sochacki said. Hanson tried to obtain the name of the alumnus but was informed by Sochacki that the name was being held in confidence. When contacted at his home later Sochacki elaborated, the auditorium is a special area. The Student Handbook points out that it is a special area that cannot just be used for anything. The deans in student affairs feel that this decision is in the interest of the entire community. The Student Council asked for a written state- ment of the decision and the reasons behind it from Sochacki and MacDonald, who agreed to the request. Student Council will also ask the Student Cen- ter committee to give them permission to use the Ballroom for the purpose of holding the concert. Corresponding Secretary Vinnie Milaiko 71BA, said, This is an important motion and we will try again. Officials remain adamant in Panther music dispute By JOANNE McMAHON banned from campu: formal this proposal had been Deans Christopher Gilbert MacDonald MacDonald calk the : try 1 Student Council. Itichanl Soch.iki, it clear that the university would not allow the use of its facilities for a fund raising drive for an ition. Thei of differed be- No NEWS Next week i i twecn allowing individuals of differing political philosophies an opportunity to speak to inter- ested student groups and the sponsorship of fund raising pro- grants for an outside political or- ganization in a university facili- ty, he explained. (See the full text of Sochacki ' s statement on live by in the university. but denied that it gave students the right to involve the university in political fund raising. Upon reaching this impass Council President John Hanson 72LA slated that There are very good reasons to say that the uni- versity has violated the rights of sludenls as outlined in the hand- book. In speaking with Student Council ' s lawyer Wednesday after- noon, Hanson was told that the fund raisin;; drive seemed in con- The following points were quoted b y council from the Joint Statement to back their TRACK 1970-71 NU (7-3) 40 Brown 60 49 St. John 60 37 Harvard 80 82 N.H. 24 66 B.U. 29 70 Dartmouth 39 76 H.C. 28 73 U. Mass 31 661 2 U.R.I. 371 2 65 B.C. 39 Five years TRACK (40-9) Four yrs. Outdoc r (23-1) (63-10) Financial difficulties bar day care center By VALERIE THERRIEN Chances for the establishment of a day care center at North- eastern are slim. Only 25 mem- bers of the faculty and staff re- sponded to a questionnaire and financial resources are nonex- istent. According to Loring Thompson, vice president and dean of plan- ning, there is practically no way to fund the proposed center. Funds couldn ' t be taken from any professor ' s salaries to pay for the center, he said. Even with a donor who would cover all costs, the red tape and licensing would take until September be- fore the center could open. Thompson estimates that the total operating costs of the cen- Ihc center would also need adults working everyday, without fre- quent personnel turnovers, there- by eliminating the possibility of using daily volunteers or coop students. According to the Office of Uni- versity Planning, the proposed center might be used as a labora- tory for courses related to chil- dren and child care given by vari- ous departments in the university. Priority for enrollment of chil- dren would go to Northeastern parents, but children from the surrounding community might also be enrolled. Although few students have children, numerous members of the faculty and staff could use the center. Commencement speaker proposals to be prepared for trustee board By JIM KELLY A joint meeting of the Adult Student and Senior Class Coun- cils will be held Sunday, Febru- ary 7 at 2 p.m. to decide on a final list of commencement speak- ers for presentation to the Board of Trustees. The present slate of speakers, which was drawn up by Division B Senior Class Council, is expected to be amended. The list includes Charles Garry, and William Kunstler, controver- sial defense lawyers for the Chi- cago Eight, union leader Cesar Chavez, and civil rights spokes- men Julian Bond, Coretta King and Ralph Abernathy. Also men- tioned were antiwar activist and famed pediatrician Benjamin Spock, lawyer-author Ralph Na- der, Senator George McGovern (DSD.), Supreme Court Justice William Douglas and Canadian Premier Pierre Trudeau. According to Steve Goldberg 71CHE, president of the Senior Class Council, most of those on the list will be unacceptable to the trustees. While Knowles didn ' t come right out and say it, he gave me every indication that eight out of the entire list would probably be unacceptable to the trustees, said Goldberg. He added that some would be rejected because they have al- ready appeared on campus in other speaking engagements. Massachusetts state law requires that the final authority to grant degrees be invested in the Board of Trustees. Since the university confers honorary degrees upon non-student graduation speakers, the final decision concerning them rests with the trustees. As seniors, commented Dave John- son 71BA, chairman of the Senior Commencement Committee, we can only suggest who we would like to have. It was the senior ' s limited role to suggest a speaker which came under heavy criticism last ' June, exercises were disrupt d then w hen a group at- temptec to pre sent a student spokesrr an, Mrs. Edith Stein. Al- though she was not allowed to address the convocation, the ques- tion of hav ng a student speaker was con seqi ently raised. While a student speaker is still a matter for discussion, Goldberg feels that the problems involved in choosing a spokesman would be insurmountable. It would be very difficult, he stated, to pick someone who would repre- sent the entire graduating class. The meeting is tentatively scheduled for 174EC and is open to all interested members of the NU community. JANUARY 1971 1. Fathers Berrigan jailed in suspected conspiracy. 2. J. Edgar Hoover angered by Clark ' s book on FBI. 3. Colts get Super Bowl from Cowboys. 16-13, in fiasco. 4. Plight of Soviet Jews, JDL. USSR diplomats arises. 5. Notre Dame upsets Texas winning streak of 30; 24-11. 6. Cigarette commercials now void from TV. 7. Ali-Frazier fight weigh-in nearly starts fight. 8. Hot pants shorts look like newest fashion style. 9. Love Story movie making money as book did. 10. Communications gap on invasion of Laos by S. Vietnam. 11. Studies done on possible upcoming quakes in California. 12. Poland gets new regime under Gierek; economics priority. 13. Nixon does Conversation with the President on TV. 14. Spencer Haywood jumps from ABA to NBA; court battles seen. 15. Vice-president calmed by White House as New Congress opens. 16. Northern Ireland erupts after accidental deaths. 1 7. Postal and phone strike in Britain closes communications. 18. Steel companies ask 12% and get the 6% they really want. 19. More oil slicks off California coast, people clean birds. 20. Cambodia falling to VC as S. Vietnam tries to fight all fronts. 21. New racial policies begin Georgia ' s new governor ' s term. 22. Nixon State of the Union message hardly grasps the state. 23. Derek Bok becomes president of Harvard. 24. Common Cause consumer group gaining strength. 25. Willy Brandt wins praise for unification attempts. 26. Welfare heating up in turmoil of inadequacy. FEBRUARY 1971 I. Stephanie long elected Winter Carnival Queen. :. Student-taught racism course given full status. Nixon ' s Laos tactics bring march, some trashing to ichoot. H. Bernadette Devlin is DSS speaker. NU NEWS supplement lampoons right and left. FEBRUARY 1971 1. Invasion of Laos, secrecy; boggles American minds. 2. Apollo 14 moon-landing with Shepard, Roosa, Mitchell. 3. Los Angeles earthquake kills 64, millions in damage. 4. Rolls-Royce near bankruptcy as Lockheed fails to pay. 5. Nixon thinks about construction price controls. 6. Detergents losing phosphates in ecology move. 7. Patriots get Jim Plunkett in football draft. 8. Angry farmers bring cow to Common Market office. 9. Business looks at possibility of four-day week. 10. Mid-East peace plans up and down as truce runs out. 11. Hendrix-Joplin records put out for fans. 12. Medical research finds new way to treat burns. 13. Children turning in pot smokers because of drug propoganda. 14. 1. F. Stone publishes Polemics and Prophecies. 1 5. Industry finds boom in the waterbed craze. 16. N. Ireland becomes children ' s war against British troops. 17. Cleaver jails Tim Leary in Algiers. 18. Convictions handed down for Manson crew. 19. US choppers losing Laos battle in air combat. 20. Hearings held on military spying of civilians for records. 21. Spiro Agnew bops three more people at golf match. 22. J. C. Penny 95, store-owner; Sen. Richard Russell 73, die. 23. Charles Sonny Liston 38, fighter; Larry Burrows 44, photographer; die. 24. Coco Chanel 87, fashion model; Charley Ruggles 84. actor; die. s 25. Beatles finally split, personality-money breaks up THE group. 26. CBS runs Selling of Pentagon. PRESIDENTS MESSAGE TO THE CLASS OF 1971 « MMM«P| The Class of 1971 is a unique class in academic history. Your college years have been spent in the midst of one of the most exciting and challenging periods of higher education. You have been students at a time when the campus became a focal point of social revolution. Upheavals have occurred in all forms of our social structure - the church, the military, the government, science and the humanities. Man and his institutions have developed an increased social awareness and a heightened sense of social responsibility. Minority beliefs and values have assumed greater importance. Humanitarian considerations have taken precedence over scientific accomplish- ments. Institutional responsibility has switched from an emphasis on parietals to a concern with relevancy and community involvement. And social issues have become campus issues. As participants and observers in this process, you have had a great educational venture. Now you are preparing to enter the mainstream of American life. You have had the most pragmatic preparation of any college generation. Asa S. Knowles MARCH 1971 isions A and B seniors reunited for first time since 1967. series brings top-flight movies to big audiences. Nau resigns as president of Senior Class. APRIL 1971 1. Financial problems plague DSS series. 2. Trustees decide against having commencement speaker. 3. Knowles calls commencement a trustees affair. 4. Peter Lance co-produces film for American Dream Machine series. 5. Knowles and Dean MacDonald hear mass meeting of seniors call for commencement speaker. 6. Howdy Doody and Buffalo Bob make a comeback in Boston. 7. T.V. news course offered by Journal ism Department. 8. Plans released for month-long anti-war offensive. 9. Shea and Chaisson chosen hoop and ice MVP ' s. 1 0. Board of Trustees reverse commencement speaker stand. 11. F. Lee Bailey speaks for Dss on My Lai trial. 12. Sensational Killing of Sister George put on by Silver Masque. 13. Student Council re-organizes executive board. 14. B.S. degree approved for College of Liberal Arts. 1 5. Boston colleges dissolve YAF. 1 6. NU Band changes symbol; no more boomerang. 17. Hundreds at NU take part in April 24 moratorium in Wash- ington. MAY 1971 1. Most NU people escape arrest in May Day and JFK demon- strations. 2. Senior class gift to go to survivors of Peterboro St. fire. 3. Hemenway St. again swept by police. 4. Crew disappoints; fails to make finals in Eastern Sprints. 5. First five-year nurses to graduate in June. 6. Prof. Sally Michael Gawel resigns from Philosophy Dept. 7. And that ' s the way it was, Tuesday, May 1 I, the sun came out. JUNE 1971 1. Commencement- June 20, 1971. MARCH 1971 1. Joe Frazier is unanimous-decision winner over Muhammed Ali in $20 million fight of the Century. 2. Lt. William Calley testifies before court- mars hall. 3. Fifty tornadoes rip Mississippi, kill 100 - vast damage. 4. East and West Pakistan battle for political control. 5. Explosion in Capitol Building stirs fear and disgust. 6. Blackout of fight broadcast irks sportsmen, laws sought. 7. Joe Namath says before-game sex is okay for athletes. 8. Agnew visits Boston, attacks CBS for Pentagon ; outside demonstrators battle police. 9. CBS re-runs Selling of the Pentagon. show wins award. 10. Panther leaders Cleaver and Newton split party. 11. 52 Peterboro St. burns leaving eight dead; beginning of at- tacks and articles on Maurice Gordon. 12. Monroe, Mich. ' s Billboard Bandit joins the Fox . 13. Whitney Young Jr., 49. of National Urban League and horsefaced French movie-star Fernandel, 67, die. APRIL 1971 1. Nixon ' s SST shot down in Senate vote - 5 1-46. 2. Lt. Calley convicted of murder; nationwide demonstrations stir Nixon to good guy release action. 3. Henry Aaron blasts 600th homer in Atlanta. 4. Boston white and black high-schoolers, police, school com- mittee battle over education-politics of city. Strike lasts days. 5. Hardhats reject pay-cut for good of the country. 6. Bruins set 35 records to win NHL, score 399 goals only to lose to Candiens in seventh game 4-2 in first round. 7. Knicks ' dynasty halted at one year by Bullets 93-91. 8. French women C. Deneuve, J. Moreau. S. deBeauvoir sign legalize abortion papers; say they ' ve had the operation. 9. Manson and group sentenced to gas-chamber. 1 0. Ecologists argue facts behind garbage dumping in ocean. 1 I . US Ping-Pong team visits China in epic move toward better relations with Mao; Agnew against trip. 12. Frank Sinatra retires from show business, receives awards. 13. 200,000 people gather in Washington for 4 24 march; peaceful protest meritous but no anti-war progress. 14. Vietnam veterans do search-destroy missions in Washing- ton to dramatize war life; John Kerry emerges as leader. Second Earth Day attracts less press. George C. Scott wins Oscar award for Patton , refuses it. Milwaukee Bucks (Lew-Oscar) win NBA title 1 18-106. - J. Edgar Hoover ' s bugging FBI-forces fight off criticism. Soviets launch first parts for space station. US ' friendly dictator Haiti ' s Papa Doc Duvalier dies at 64. MAY 1971 12.000 arrested in Wa shington during May Day protests. School-busing decision by Burger court irks Nixon. 25,000 protest peacefully in Boston. Arrests at JFK Building spur brutality charges. Ky to battle Thieu for Saigon presidency. Sports Huddle show to leave WBZ air-waves. AMTRACK train service begins on east coast. Petition started for small-breasted women ' s beauty. Canadiens Blackhawks in Cup. (fill in) Beatles group are officially split by London court. games in Stanley TRUSTEES i©€ • Charles F. Avila Lincoln C. Bateson F. Gregg Bemis George R. Brown Louis W. Cabot Norman L. Cahners Richard P. Chapman Edward Dana William R. Driver Byron K. Elliott William P. Ellison Frank L. Farwell Samuel A. Groves Donald B. Guy George Hansen Ernest Henderson III Harold Hodgkinson Chandler Hovey Robert L. Johnson Lawrence H. Martin Dwight P. Robinson Jr. Henry C. Jones Harold A. Mock Thomas Phillips Donald W. Smith E. Douglas Kenna Jr. James A. Morton Francis J. Quirico Farnham W. Smith Asa S. Knowles Stephen P. Mugar Frank L. Richardson George A. Snell k 5W I k Augustin H. Parker Joseph Riesman Russell B. Stearns Earl P. Stevenson Robert G. Stone Robert H. Willis Alvin C. Zises ADMINISTRATORS Lincoln C. Bateson Vice President Finance Arthur E. Fitzgerald Vice President Faculty Gilbert G. MacDonald Vice President Student Affairs Daniel J. Roberts Vice President Finance Kenneth G. Ryder Vice President Administration Loring M. Thompson Vice President Planning Roy L. Woodridge Vice President Cooperative Education Catherine L. Allen Dean Boston-Bouve ' Kenneth W. Ballou Dean University College Geoffrey Crofts Dean Acturarial Science V Juanita Long Dean Nursing Robert A. Shepard Gilbert G. Garland Dean Dean Liberal Arts Admissions Martin W. Essigman James S. Hekimian Leroy C. Keagle Dean Dean Dean Research Business Pharmacy M ' M ' -;;Jv Alan A. Mackey Registrar William F. King Dean Lincoln College Melvin Mark Frank E. Marsh Jr. Norman Rosenblatt Dean Dean Dean Engineering Education Criminal Justice Rudolph M. Morris Dean Administration Charles W. Havice Richard Bishop Thomas Sprague Dean Dean Director Chapel University Relations Press Bureau FACULTY 31 If 1 i 06 1 Mi ipy i i H .,.yr., . ■■ART ACCOUNTING BIOLOGY CHEMICAL ENGINEERING 286 CHEMISTRY z 1 CO-OPERATIVE EDUCATION i 1 h r« |J| I ■T ' r wp K -IR H I B - ■■- :f - If] Iv i DRAMA ECONOMICS EARTH SCIENCE EDUCATION EDUCATION ENGLISH GRAPHIC SCIENCE FINANCE AND INSURANCE HISTORY MATHEMATICS MODERN LANGUAGES MODERN LANGUAGES MUSIC NURSING PHARMACY PHILOSOPHY ri i PHYSICAL EDUCATION PHYSICAL THERAPY 289 PHYSICS POLITICAL SCIENCE PSYCHOLOGY RECREATION EDUCATION REHABILITATION AND SPECIAL EDUCATION Christopher Kennedy Dean Students Edward Robinson Associate Dean Students Edith E. Emery Associate Dean Students Roland Latham Assistant Dean Students Anthony J. Bajdek Assistant Dean Students Margaret L. Bishop Richard E. Sochacki Harvey Vetstein Assistant Dean Assistant Dean Assistant Dean Students Students Students STUDENT ACTIVITIES AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERS AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS ALPHA SIGMA TAU BETA GAMMA EPSILON DELTA PHI EPSILON DELTA SIGMA THETA DISTINGUISHED SPEAKER COMMITTEE ENGINEERS COUNCIL ETHNOMUSICALOGICAL SOCIETY HUSKIERS HUSKY KEY INST. OF ELECTRICAL ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS INTER CLASS COUNCIL NU EPSILON ZETA OMEGA CHI EPSILON OMEGA SIGMA SCABBARD AND BLADE SENIOR CLASS BOARD SENIOR CLASS BOARD -i WOMEN ' S ENGINEERING COUNCIL STUDENT UNION YACHT CLUB NORTHEASTERN NEWS NORTHEASTERN NEWS CAULDRON 2T 7 2 -m? V WS v JBJ|H ■• m w f £ - If ft ' ; i M 5 II W i gr ' ] fc Ami a w w ' h (  1 • ' ' r- i  «W - ,► ' ' ■. I is i ' ■■■■; •te--: - M , g , 52 ......... !?. ' 1 11 v : ' ' .. M 5 . ; -. v i i ■( ► V 1% SwH • [ -=- 1 1 ■•M :. r •• l ! % v % 7 V L 4- . - 5-S -n - i V - -. r --Tif-t i Vn ' — Vp ? ■- -T ■For CAULDRON poll statistics, we would like seniors which they felt had the greatest inpact or. the tlm agreement or disagreement - an impact that will s«-ar preceded t PLsASfi RaTURN TH 3 POM PEOPLE Martin Luther King 23% Richard Nixon 21% Lyndon Johnson 20% Robert Kennedy 17% Spiro Agnew 16% Eugene McCarthy 9% John Kennedy 7% The Beatles 5% Ralph Nader 4% Nei! Armstrong 3% George Wallace 2% Ho Chi Minh 2% Bobby Orr 2% Ted Kennedy 2% Mao Tse Tung 1% Eldridge Cleaver 1% Sirhan Sirhan 1%. Pope Paul VI 1% less than 1 % Abbie Hoffman Charles De Gaulle Moshe Dayan Richard Daley Bobby Seale S.I. Hayakawa Malcolm X Huey Newton Jerry Rubin Earl Warren Golda Meir John Mitchell Julius Hoffman Pope John XXIII Jesus Christ Gamal Abdel Nasser Timothy Leary Bill Baird Alexander Dubcek John Lindsay Strom Thurmond Snoopy Paul Szep Cesar Chavez Fred Hampton Bill Russell Brooks Robinson Mark Hatfield Astronauts Bob Hope Jaqueline Onassis John Lennon one vote each Christian Barnard Paul Erlich The average man Andy Warhol Che Guevara Jefferson Airplane The human race Angela Davis Charles Evers Pierre Cardin Buddha Confucius Plato Paul McCartney Julian Bond Margaret Mead Eric Fromm Rose Kennedy Hubert Humphrey Sally Michael H. Rap Brown Stanley Kubrick Chicago 7 Cassius Clay All dead people Raquel Welch Stokley Carmichael The campus radical Nikita Krushchev Kevin White Mahatma Ghandi John K. Galbraith Martin Buber Heidegger People at NU Ronald Regan Lee Harvey Oswald James Earl Ray Warren Berger John Gardner William Rogers Robert McNamara Frank Borman Karl Marx Benjamin Spock Herman Hesse Bertrand Russell H. James Shea Allen Ginzberg Charles Manson My family Joan Baez Rev. Jesse Jackson Leroi Jones Simon Garfunkle Vicki The college student The college liberal Tom Mboya Bob Dylan Hitch-hikers Vietnam Kent State Man on the Moon Death of Robert Kennedy Death of Martin Luther King Cambodia invasion ' 68 Democratic convention ' 70 National Student Strike Campus unrest and involvement ' 67 Mideast War Ecology Woodstock The peace movement Election of Nixon- Agnew The Black Panthers Death of John Kennedy The Draft Student radicals Drugs Chicago 7 Trial Jackson State Urban crisis and riots The Economy Racial prejudice The Generation Gap Civil Rights The Pill Radical bombings Women ' s liberation Heart transplants Black Power Change in morals and values Federal Govt. (Big Brother) NU tuition hike EVENTS 37% 17% 15% 15% 13% 12% 10% 9% 9% 9% 9% 8% 5% 4% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 3% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% % 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% The Pueblo 1% Defeat of Eugene McCarthy 1% SALT talks 1% Sino-Soviet split 1% Mass. anti-war bill 1% Czechoslovakian invasion 1% Violence 1% Z 1% Easy Rider 1% The Pentagon 1% LBJ declines to re-run 1% Population growth 1% 1 8 year old vote 1% ABM 1% Berkeley ' s Peoples ' Park 1% Law and Order 1% one vote each Changing of Church Liturgy Hair Bruins ' 70 Red Sox ' 67 Mr. Husky Mayor of Huntington Ave. Grape pickers strike Boston Mental health strides Rising African nations Revolutions in So. Ameriea The South Music-Theatre- Films Nature Freedom Foundation walks Penn. Central Metroliner Hemenway Street Free schools Development of U.S. of Europe Mail strike Irish conflict Computer revolution Columbia student takeover Mini-dress Biafra Merging of NFL and AFL Welfare Death of Walter Reuther Hatfield-McGovern act Resurrection City My Lai Chinese ICBM World War II Greek coup d ' etat Death of Malcolm X Conscientious Objector Demonstrations on TV. Poverty Being in ROTC Hitch-hiking PHOTO NOT AVAILABLE John S. Aalto, Westminster, Mass. ME I have died in Vietnam but I have walked the face of the moon. I have befouled the waters and tainted the air of a magnificent land. But I have made it safe from disease. I have divided schools with my prejudice. But I have sent armies to unite them. I am ashamed. But I am proud. 1 am an American. Lorraine M. Adamski, Niantic, Conn. Math Vietnam, Kent State, and Woodstock suggest that feeling is more widespread than thinking. Progress will be made only when man realizes that action must proceed from thought. David M. Alessandri, Mansfield, Mass. Acct. The past five years can be characterized as a period of student unrest. Conformity in the collegiate world has been surpassed by a desire for individuality. The assertion of individuality in- volves the questioning of the purpose and goal of society. Al- though this questioning has led to demonstration and violence, I feel assured that society is the benefactor through the awaken- ing power these events have created. Stacey E. Alsfeld, Barrington, R.I. Management It is, obviously, impossible to characterize the past half-decade in a few words. There have been so many changes; or maybe its me thats changed. Our school, our nation, our world has numerous problems. How- ever, the voices of youth have brought awareness. Things and ideas are changing, slowly, but for the better. Edward P. Ambrogie, Natick, Mass. Electrical Eng. In the past five years young people have discovered that they can be an effective force in stimulating social and political reform. Howard D. Anderson, Warwick R.l. Electrical Eng. For the last half decade we have been told that the world will soon be unfit to live in. Half out of fear, and half out of selfishness, we should use our ca- reers as tools to change this prediction. Roger H. Anderson, Auburn, Mass. Economics 1966-1971 — A time enlightened by constructive controversy; But deformed by cheap rhetoric and half-truths. I971-? — Lan- guage is our door to truth and to survival. Conscious expression is our key to that door. Will our key fit? Richard E. Andreotti, Milford, Mass. Electrical Eng. The past half-decade within the university has proven prosper- ous in the academics but has demonstrated that life, man, and peace are equally important. Peter Ansara, Lighthouse Pt. Fla. Engineering When a small minority of radicals can close schools and cause vi- olent demonstrations a country is weakened. Belief in what is right or wrong politically is an important one, especially when it can be voiced. Until the fat majority decide to become concerned, they will be led by the nose by the small minority. James M. Aufiero, E. Boston, Mass. Electrical Eng. In the past five years many people have begun to realize the problems facing the human race. This is half of the solution. However, it is only the first half of the solution. The second half requires work. Joseph C. Arsenault, Brookline, Mass. Civil Eng. The past half-decade has seen great changes in many areas which have a direct bearing on each individual in society. These changes are due to the realization that improvement of the present sys- tem is necessary and possible. However, with the institution of changes comes the responsibility to see that the changes func- tion as intended. Joyce M. Bahn, Brookline, Mass. Nursing I can think of no more apt words to describe this time of my life than the title New World in the Morning. The pace has been exciting, yet I ' ve missed so much. Five years is very long and very short. PHOTO NOT AVAILABLE Phyllis I. Baisuck, Beverly, Mass. Education The half-decade of my education was characterized by a tremen- dous lack of leadership which eventually brought about a most uneasy political and social atmosphere. Youth is now facing the unpleasent responsibility of affecting the changes necessary to solve the problem. James F. Bakey Jr., Cambridge, Mass. Fin. lns. During the past five years of my life at Northeastern, there have been many changes, some good, some bad — more stimulating and relevant course, better communication between teacher and student. Awareness of politics and world affairs (especially S.E. Asia) has increased. Overcrowding in the universities and exorbi- tant tutition are the problems which must be met. Jeffrey Baker, Cranston, R.I. Management It is not the decline or loss of moral values which has created our troubled times. It is the current re-evaluation of just what those morals should be. People are beginning to understand what justice, morality and love really mean. Doris Banchik, Elmont, N.Y. Nursing. Human suffering, as I see it, often has its etiology in the biases of society. I feel that it is the plight of the enlightened to effec- tively bring relief through the motivation of the apathetic. Car- ing will bring peace. m Al Bargnesi, New London, Conn. Electrical ting. A larger number of the graduates today are not as intrigued as their pre-1960 counterparts about making their glamorous and monetary mark in society. A sense of responsibility for the present and future conditions of our race and world has progressed within the past decade. Subsequent generations will testify to the results. Lawrence M. Barry. Dorchester, Mass. Marketing. The past five years have resulted in profound changes in univer- sity and student identities. Students realize that they are also citizens of a troubled nation; and universities must assume a more prominent role in community development. Hopefully, the past turbulent years will result in a more enlightened environ- ment for the citizens of tomorrow. Francine Barna, Vonkers, N.Y. Nursing. To get the most out of life we must take time to live. In order thaM may contribute to the onward march of man, I will give of myself, my talents, my abilities, my devotions and my convic- tions. David W. Bearg, Whitestone, N.Y. Chemical Eng. The years showed a marked decrease in the quality of life, in ev- erything from political repression to overpopulation. This trend will continue until either people decide to have socially useful goals or until we destroy ourselves. The longer we wait, the greater the likelihood of the latter. Clay A. Beccue. Lockport, N.Y. Electrical Eng. The events and happenings in the past years at Northeastern have given me additional perspective on many aspects of life. They have provided a re-examination and expansion of my beliefs, my quest for identity and a search for maturity of self. Mary Belsky. Seekonk. Mass. English. Striving for peace, We reached out our hands To a dormant world. Because we aimed for something greater Than a world engulfed By its past failures And broken hopes, We. ourselves, have not failed. Ronald R. Benanto, Derby, Ct. Industrial Eng. The past five years at Northeastern have certainly been indica- tive of a time of change. This transition can be noticed when one realizes the way in which the Northeastern student has changed from the apathetic commuter with white socks to a concerned but not yet unilied student body. Leon G. Benkovitz, Chelsea, Mass. Political Science. America is currently facing a massive breakdown. There is a grave urban crisis, the alientation of youth, the issue of race, and a barbaric and unnecessary war. Our generation has publicized the status que; now it is incumbent on all Americans to work together towards a solution. Scott Bennett, Wal ' tham, Mass. Education. The past five years at Northeastern have been the best years of my life. I have met and made many, many friends, have received a fine education from the teachers, and have learned about the world while attending Northeastern. I have grown up very much here and I am sure it will help me in my chosen field. Wayne F. Benoit, Beverly. Mass. Psychology. I am concerned with an oversimplistic philosophy of both right and left, in their attempts at solving the social ills of our day. I look optimistically to a more socially educated electorate and politician of the future in reaction to our half decade ' s experi- ence. Stuart M. Berkowitz, Sharon, Mass. History. Events of the past half decade have heavily burdened our exis- tence of which I am but a single, microscopic entity. Change, coupled with disgust and disillusionment, have chilled our era. Both my family and Northeastern, a complex institution itself, have taught me to accept, however, both triumph and defeat, to control my doubts and anxieties, and to rationalize a more productive end. Charles A. Bernat Jr., Jewitt City, Conn. Marketing. As the United States had accomplished its goal of reaching the moon, so to, may this first goal, graduation from Northeastern, lead to future plateaus which are greater achievements, this is our base to work from, reach out, and broaden its horizon. Gary T. Bertram! Deny. N.H. Education. The past half decade has seen the scope of American life increase greatly. Problems face us today, such as have never faced us before. Some elements of our society believe that our way of life must, by force, be greatly altered. I, however, feel that as a nation we will solve our problems and that the coming dec- ade will hold bright promise for us. Richard F. Bilotta, Medford, Mass. Electrical Eng. Recently the university has become an active source of social change. To some extent this is good. But in many quarters this activism has gone too far and resulted in unnecessary violence. It must be remembered that the primary function of a university is education. And only through education can meaningful change take place. Beverlie Bilow, Clifton, N.H. History. Yesterday is but today ' s memory and tomorrow is today ' s dream. . . Kahlil Gibran Michael Black, Peabody, Mass., Accounting I view the past half-decade as a period in which I became greatly aware of the social change among peoples ' relations between one another, which is becoming an attempt at greater understanding of different ideas and opinions. Norman A. Boisseau. Woonsocket, R. I., Chemistry. Although the past few years have been torn with racial strife, marred with increased war activity, and bloodied by assassi- nations, a more omnipotent and fearsome danger continues to imperil every American — pollution. Society and industry alike must recognize the finite limits of our resources and act now with a unified concern and determined effort to end this menace. A. Kenneth Bonanno, Methuen, Mass., Accounting. When a young man enters college, he is immediately exposed to a vast array of people, places and ideas. To meet the challenge of this experience he relies on friends, but finds they have gone their separate ways. A fraternity provides new life-long friends to guide a young man and provide him with an understanding of life and brotherhood such that cannot be found in books alone. William L. Boodger, Elmira, N.Y. Finance Insurance. The late Bruce McLaren once wrote, To do something well that is so worthwhile that to die trying to do it better cannot be foolhardy. The past five years have been marked with tragedy; the assassi- nation of a senator, a racial leader and the killing of students. WHY? Anthony P. Bottaro, Watertown, Mass. Electrical Eng. The past five years have been times of social reform and social revolution. I am disenchanted with the system that allowed a statesman like RFK. to be assassinated. At the same time, I believe that we can peacefully reshape this system to better mankind. Paul J. Bourque, Norwell, Mass. Civil Eng. The true progress of civilization drowns in the sea of delusion, deceit and ignorance. It flourishes where organized men of good intent have an open mind. Howard W. Boyd Jr., Wellesley, Mass., Economics. Farewell Northeastern. You have tried to teach me ... I have tried to learn. I have seen war, assassination, campus unrest but somehow two can still enjoy the beauty of the mountains, the ocean, and only dream of better things. It has been a long five years . . . but even a longer lifetime. Gregory L. Bowden, Albany, N.Y. Economics. The national events which 1 remember most are the murders of Dr. Martin Luther King, Fred Hampton, those at Jackson State and Kent State and those of Cambodia. Sometimes I wonder about the logic of people who tell me to en- joy my college years since they are supposed to be the best years of my life. Daniel Bragdon, Watertown, Mass. Chemistry. The past five years have brought an awareness of the problems that face the world. Some of the problems are old and others are just being realized. Mankind ' s survival depends on solving or at least easing these problems before they completely overcome mankind. Michael Brass, Natick, Mass. History. The past half-decade has revealed man as he is in both the best and the worst light. The next years, to be decided by us, will probably shape the foreseeable years to come. Frederick A. Brehm. Pompano Bch., Fla. Electrical Eng. The past five years have really been an experience. Just think — freshman, sophomore, middler, junior and senior years and we are still alive and well. Who knows what the future holds? James M. Brennan, Boston, Mass. Accounting. My past half-decade has been marked by dissent and crisis. Some of this dissent has been good and other dissent has been bad. Regardless of the moral nature of the dissent, it has caused a split between the people of the U.S. Only time will tell if this split can be healed. Stuart A. Brennan, Norwood. Mass. Electrical Eng. Through our co-op jobs we get an idea of what the outside world is like, and are forced to become more practical in our reasoning. This contributes to the lack of school spirit, but it greatly aids our education. Linda Brich. Naugatuck, Conn. Nursing. World peace and peace in our little worlds of family, industry and community depends upon each of us putting into action the art of peace. For me it is a mighty faith in the goodness of God. Robert K. Brown, Greenfield, Mass., Sociology. During my years I have come to one conclusion. Two generations before us have made this nation the wealthiest and greatest na- tion in the history of mankind They have satisfied most peo- ple ' s needs in America, such as food, shelter and clothing. Now I feel it is our generation ' s turn to understand other people, their feelings and behavior. I hope we will make a large dent in this area. Alan Brindle, Greenville, R.I., Finance Insurance. The five years of my college life will be remembered for the people 1 would not have otherwise met, but also they will be re- garded as a period of developing awareness of the world ' s com- plexity. Robert W. Brumbaugh, Lynn, Mass. Mathematics. The prevalent atmosphere throughout the past years has been student apathy. Student concern increased with interest in the war in Vietnam and finally climaxed into a school-wide student strike after President Nixon sent troops into Cambodia in the spring of 1970. This concern will inevitably shape the future of our nation. Thomas Garrison Bucko, New London, Conn., Electrical Eng. To solve the problems of today everyone must voice his individu- al views. Difference of opinion breeds innovation, betterment. The increased involvement of students towards sociological and political reform has added a fresh, new prospective. Jeannie A. Butler, Boston, Mass. Education. Bob, love, war, hate, racism, black, education, children, pollution, tuition, friends, enemies and insecurity have caused me much meditation and soul-searching the past five years. Some still have no solution in sight I can only push on and do my small part in society well and do it constructively, not destructively. Deborah Budd, Mattapan, Mass., Education And they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and the spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. — Deuteronomy Sally E Campbell, Elmwood, Mass. Recreation. I am happy to have been a college student for these past five years. The uproar and turmoil caused by the exasperating, debat- able topics of the times taught me lessons of life no lecturer or textbook had expressed so clearly. After I graduate, the oppor- tunity to give full meaning to the laughs and tears that I have shed will be a challenge for which I am prepared. Douglas M. Canfield, White Plains, N.Y., Electrical Eng. In this era of pronounced individualism, we still find few leaders and many sheep. Individualism existing as a distinct, indivisible entity; pertaining or peculiar to a single person or thing (Ameri- can College Dictionary). Individualists? A false claim. Ronald M. Cedrone, Arlington, Mass., Electrical Eng. IEEE Student Chapter, 2,3,4,5 Intramural Basketball. 1 Musky Key, 1.2 SAME, 1,2 Beta Gamma Epsilon, 2,3,4,5 BME IFC Representative, 2,3 BME President. 4,5 Intrafraternity Council Representative, 2,3.4 Intrafraternity Sports, 2,3,4,5. Richard A. Capoccia. Revere, Mass. Mathematics. I have seen my world erect a plateau of technology enabling man to walk on the moon and then — shatter as those who stand for equality were taken from us. Man often sees what he wishes to see and closes his hardened heart to suffering of Americans here and abroad. Phi Sigma Kappa Vice president, social chairman. Surf Club Ski Club Husky Key. William O. Champ, Jr. Uniondale, N.Y., Electrical Eng. Turmoil has become commonplace on the campus and in interna- tional settings due to hightened political, social and moral awareness of the individual. Many of us take part for the first time in trying to realize the goals we would like for our security. Joyce Charhonneau. Hudson, Mass. Mathematics. Peace does not rest in characters and covenants alone. It lies in the hearts and minds of all people. In this world, no act, no pact, no treaty, no organization can hope to preserve it without the support and the wholehearted commitment of all people. — John F. Kennedy Richard A. Chiodo, Johnsville, N.Y., Electrical Eng. When I entered N.U. in 1966 this country was exploding economi- cally, the Indo-China disturbance was in its ugly childhood and ecology was just a definition. Today we face an ever-widening non- war in Southeast Asia, economic collapse and environmental disas- ter. Rebuilding will be our task. David K. Chase, Boston, Mass. Civil Eng. Look back. Try to think young. Do you remember all the work and play? And remember the tempo of the times. Good? Bad? Different! (Hi, kids!) William T. Choate, Canterbury, Conn., Chemical Eng. Graduation will be our chance to work toward solutions to the ecological, economical, political and social processes that we have criticized with our ideals for the last five years. Hopefully, our solutions will not generate the magnitudes of criticism that we have given the present solutions. Gerald A. Chrusz, Johnsonburg, N.J., Management. These are the times that try men ' s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in crisis, shrink from the service of their country. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered. — Thomas Paine Wayne Clark, Lynn, Mass. Industrial Rel. The years at Northeastern have provided me with many memo- ries, good and bad. What I shall remember most are the many friends which I have made. Carl B. Chudnofsky. Framingham, Mass., Management. Amid the growing frustrations of a futile and intolerable war, I think many of us, including myself, have matured by having to re- evaluate ourselves and our goals. We ' ve all faced many problem;; — getting through school, meeting the rising cost of tuition, facing the draft — but five years of college will have taught us one thing: hard work for peace and order in our society is most valuable. Andrew Cohen, Milton, Mass, Electrical Eng. The corrupt filled their pockets while others starved. One man hated another man ' s color. Pollution robbed our lives while we all helped it grow. Young people died opposing the path our elders chose. A divided country sought the same end . . . Peace on Earth. Louis Mark Cohen, Mattapan, Mass., Industrial Rel. As president of Northeastern ' s Choral Society from 1968-1971 I derived pleasure. As a man, I have become concerned. We soar to the moon for rocks but can ' t cross the street to help a man. We speak of peace but can ' t seem to implement it. Reaching the moon may have been a giant step for mankind, but it was a small step for man. Ronald R. Cohen, Brockton, Mass., Physics. Regardless of the crises of our time or of the future, the world will continue to better itself as long as the supply of compas- sionate, open-minded, logical human beings is not exhausted. John B. Cole, Norway, Maine, Marketing. Education and rational thinking are the foundations of communi- cation and peace. Rayna B. Cole, Cambridge, Mass., Mathematics. 1 feel that I have changed a great deal since my freshman days. I am much more aware of the world in which I live, its hardships, its problems and its limitations. I have matured greatly and gained a better understanding of the people around me. John F. Collins, Watertown, Mass. Fin. Ins. Consider the auk: Becoming extinct because he forgot how to fly and could only walk. Consider man, who may well become extinct Because he forgot how to walk and learned how to fly before he thinked. — Ogden Nash Deborah Connor, Cohasset, Mass. Nursing. As years pass, the value of existence becomes more apparent. Knowledge, friendship and love flourish, and my belief that peo- ple everywhere is beautiful is enhanced. My participation in numerous organizations has made NU and the past years very meaningful. Frank A. Conrad, Roslindale, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Universities closed, students boycotting classes, college presidents threatened, and university buildings taken over. The students have won, but how will they recover their loss? Richard E. Cooney, Waltham, Mass., Biology. Society ' s resources should be focused upon peace and under- standing among men. Sheryl J. Cooper, Milton, Mass., Sociology. Activities at school appear to be so trivial next to the events of the world. The United States is hopefully beginning to learn the lesson that O! It is excellent to have a giant ' s strength; but it is tyrannous to use it like a giant. — Shakespeare Anthony Corey, Jamaica Plain, Mass., Chemical ting. In the past half-decade people of the world have hopefully come to realize that a lack of respect for their environment be it ecological or social, can only lead to disaster. These vital years have seen man sinking in a sea of egoism and self-righteousness, ignoring basic needs of the world and catering to the petty desires of the particular sub-culture of which he is a member. Thomas Costello, Norwood, Mass. Marketing. During my years at this University I have watched a nation emerge from the doldrums of pacifism and rise to the heights of public activism. Some have condemned this activism, while others have condoned it. This, 1 feel, is a moot question. Howev- er, one must agree that at no other time in our history has the voice of the people spoken so loudly. Alan J. Cousin, Maiden, Mass. Electrical Eng. From my college experience, I can express: JOY at departing from institutionalized learning — university style; RELIEF to have reached an accomplished level at the bac- calaureate stage; DESPAIR to reenter a society far more chaotic and complex than five years ago. Pierre Cousineau, Dayville, Conn. Finance-Insurance. These have been confusing times both on and off campus . . . People misunderstanding and not communicating with each other . . . war, riots, bombings . . . sorrow, frustration, death ... a time for soul searching . . . time for moral con- viction . . . a time for change. Carolyn M. Cragin, S. Weymouth, Mass. English. A time of questioning, a time of hope and a time of action. The past five years have seen an increased awareness of social inequities and an intense desire to alter man ' s world. Problems cannot be resolved without indicting established practices and tradition. The answers are not imminent but the active ques- tioning continues, and it is this that offers hope for man. John L. Criscione. Fairfield, Conn. Mechanical Eng. In five years. I have seen the American college student asking many questions about our way of life. Questions about environment, poor people, blacks, government ' s place in the world. These questions require quite a bit of energy to answer. I would hope this generation has that energy and can work together rationally toward a better life for all Americans. William E. Crisp, Dedham, Mass., Accounting. In the past five years I believe that people have become more aware of what is wrong in the world. Young people see these wrongs and wish to make them right. I do not feel violence is the way to solve these problems but I sometimes find myself sym- pathising with those who act violently out of frustration, because working within the law has brought no positive results. Debbe Cross, East Haven, Conn. Nursing. Education has not really changed — the students have just shown greater degrees of unrest; some purposeful, others, ruthless and aimless. Sometimes 1 had to disassociate myself from these past years because this generation reflected frustrated and rebellious individuals. For me constructive change cannot grow out of chaos and turmoil, but from improvement from within the structure. Nancy Cunha, Arlington, Mass. Education. The university five years ago was a world apart from society. The university has attempted to deal with the surrounding world beginning with the deaths of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy; also the campus strike. If we are to grow together and secure a peaceful society, then knowledge must be gained from a better understanding, not only in our own backyard, but in the world around us. Denis J. Crowley, Hingham, Mass. Business Management. The major events of my five years at Northeastern all seem to revolve around one concept — FREEDOM. Students, Negroes, and even women want freedom. These factions came about because people started thinking and though causes went unan- swered at least the times show people are thinking about more than themselves. Reynold A. Currier Jr., Arlington, Mass. Accounting. The last five years have been filled with new problems of great social significence, but close examination reveals that greater awareness to existing conditions is what really is happening. In an attempt to find answers to these questions many have become destructive. This is understandable and change is need- ed, but peacefully. Richard Currier, Portland. Maine. Civil Engineering. J. M. Dahlquist, Weymouth, Mass. Mechanical Engineering. If Western Man is to exist we must correct the society that allows for: a My Lai massacre, guns in the hands of idiots, the marijuana — alcohol paradox, individuals dictating to the majori- ty on matters of personal morality, the election of an adminis- tration that denies the need for basic research, thus setting back Cancer research alone ten years. The Saviors must be capa- ble of marching to Beethoven ' s Third. Francis Daggett Jr.. Schenectady, N.Y. Recreation. I am a transfer student and therefore have little experience at the school. I would like to say that it is unfair to tell incoming freshmen a certain tuition rate and then raise it each year so that it is $300 more by the time he is a senior. I would like to see an end to the Vietnam War and campus riots so that peace can be achieved. Robert S. Damon, Greenfield, Mass. Finance and Insurance. 1 am proud of the country I live in. Freedoms are greater and improving faster here than anywhere else in the world. I find it discouraging that a few misguided individuals among our college age group want to destroy it all. William Darby, Pawtucket, R.I. Civil Engineering. During the past half-decade, the era of thinking has had its advent. As individuals, we have learned to evaluate and question rather than merely to accept Our instruction has come from people: teachers, students, friends, parents, and events. Men have walked on the moon while others were shot in the streets — to both we have asked why? The past five years have taught to cherish that development Philip Davis, Boston. Mass. Civil Engineering. Lux Veritus Virtus — Soap Truly Cleans. Janice Davis, Westwood, Mass. English. Eternal, five years, exams, deadlines, two-day vacations, slam- ming lockers, morning traffic, whizzing by to go nowhere, moist springs, engagements, sticky summer, disengagements, solitary fall mornings chilled by an early frost, performances, masque of change, broken thoughts utterances of a fool. Teaching, ecological and universal concern, a promise of an unfulfilled fu- ture. Vincent Davulis, Boston, Mass. Mechanical Engineering. Nothing new can be said about the past, we ' ve been there. But it ' s the future we must plan for. This generation must gain polit- ical power and change our system to one that will inherently function for the benefit of all its citizens. Vincent L. DeBiase, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Marketing. The past few years have been proud and memorable ones in the cause of peace. Our fate in the years ahead lies in the boldness and energy of youth. 1 believe good fortune will favor youth over age, for youth tends to be more dynamic and commands fate with greater audacity. Caspar G. DeGaetano, Old Bethpage, NY. Electrical Eng. Thanks a lot to some really great teachers who helped me learn and who gave me the inspiration to want to learn more. William Richard DeCoste, Phoenix, Ariz. Mech. Eng. End F=ma; Boston a= v 2 R; Vietnam P=my; LBJ V=dxdt; Israel x=at 2 2; Arabs C=dQ dT; Free E=w 2 pA 2 2 Love T=ABsinJ; West 3.1415; politics f(x)=y + y; life bj = b + V 2 age; Nixon To=S OR; Draft E= RI; Wife d 2 = nq(l-q); Vote J = W— N cos gt Change a=tanV 2 gp; Mope g=— KAdt dx; Peace? hd K= 141; Son u= mdv dx; begin: John M. Degnan, Concord, N.H. Economics. Life is too short to do what you do not want to do. Donald J. Demoy, Waltham, Mass. Marketing. The individual must realize the full potential of oneself. If not then he is hurting those who come in contact with him and the rest of mankind has lost a little something. Peace. Geoffrey De Young, Westfield, N.J. Mechanical Eng. My music teacher once said, Everyone thinks they live in the worst era; well this time I think we ' ve got it. What hasn ' t changed? The parking problem. Dodge Library and the war. What has changed? Men ' s hair, smoking habits and tuition. Robert J. DePasqua, Brockton, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Some people say we are what we eat. Others claim we simply are what we are. As students, we are committed — committed to peace. As graduates we are responsible — responsible for peace. If we are to remain what we were, there is hope If we remain what we ate, I ' m a lemon meringue pie. Robert A. DiCenso, Braintree, Mass. Marketing. Probably the most important change I ' ve noticed is the aware- ness of the incoming freshmen during the past four years. Each incoming class seems to be more aware and concerned about so- ciety in the aggregate than just being concerned about them- selves or their microscopic worlds. David L. DiPietro, Haverhill, Mass. Electrical Hng. 1966 — The war is in Vietnam Watts is somewhere out west Newark is near New York King and Kennedy Kent and Jackson State (Americans did it) 1971 — The troops are coming home (or is it the war) Mary E. Dmoch, Lynn, Mass. Mathematics. Apathy reigned at Northeastern from September 1966 to May 1970. The student strike, however, successfuly evoked varying reactions and opposing opinions from the majority of students. Hopefully it indicated a turning point for increased involvement, awareness, and concern not only for university events but also for national affairs. Joseph DiSabato, Bristol, Conn. Industrial ling. The past half decade has been a period of growth — both intellec- tual and social. It has been a time of listening, learning and ul- timately committing myself to ideals, ideas, and people. It has been an invaluable experience. Donna K. Doherty, Bradford, Conn. Journalism. ... a time of sporadic violence, some of it felt more deeply than others, unity for a peaceful mission (Moratorium); death for an unknown reason: RFK, Martin Luther King; a never-ending fight for equality among men. Ronald W. Dorman, Bethel. Conn. Electrical Eng. From the initial confusion of freshman year and through the fol- lowing four years I have witnessed and learned much. I have been well schooled in my major and have developed a new awareness of myself and the people around me. Now in the last year, I express my wish that we all use our education to better the con- ditions that exist and that we will see the results of our efforts. William D. Duckworth, Pawtucket, R.I. Industrial Eng. The impact of the changes in our traditions and values has brought to light two guidelines to follow. We must allow our- selves to be open about and flexible to change but, at the same time, we must be strong enough to be individualistic in deter- mining our commitments. Douglas W. Downs, Ashaway, R.I. Mechanical Eng. In the animal kingdom, only two animals will fight until death. One is the wolverine, the other is man. I fail to see how we can call ourselves civilized until we consent to join this silent major- ity. Robert M. Dunn, Natick, Mass. Mechanical Eng. The solution to the world ' s problems lies within psychology. The basic human nature of man has to be changed. Nancy Ellen Durning, Molden, Mass. Nursing. Choose life — only that and always and at whatever risk. To let life leak out, to let it wear away by the mere passage of time, to withhold giving it and spreading it is to choose nothing. — Kelley Howard L. Epstein, Mattapan, Mass. Electrical Eng. As people find their priority not to be the realization of as much personal material gain possible; when they concern themselves with fellow man, and desire sharing equally all gains among all people, this is when lasting peace will be achieved. Vernon Eldringhoff Jr., Dorchester, Mass. Civil Eng. To define myself in terms of the mood of the last half of the dec- ade in the allotted space of 40 words or less granted me here, seems quite impossible. I only hope that I have not just been educated during these five years, but that I have learned and become aware. Eugene P. Esposito, Milford, Conn. Management. Today, as yesterday, we feel inclined to be both critical and cynical of both our academic and social environments. But to those who work and strive for a better tomorrow, we find our hope. My education has just begun and I hope we can all learn each day a little more for our own sake. Nancy Farwell, Wakefield, Mass. Physical Therapy. Being a transfer student from Vermont College I have had the experience of attending a small country school and a large city university. I have enjoyed the program here and 1 am looking for- ward to working in this field after graduation. Charles John Ferreira, Taunton, Mass. Management A half decade of turning up the lights to get a clearer view of our responsibilities to each other — flashes of lightning spark the es- tablishment to thunder toward an attempt to committee our problems. Success? Switch the lights on in another hundred years for the answer. Hope = Us! We must communicate our willingness and readiness to correct the abuses of our society. Robert J. Feltovic. Ansonia, Conn. Chemistry. College has meant more than the mere accumulation of classroom knowledge. The world that our generation will inherit will be both confusing and confused: and the duty will be ours to meet its challenges, remedy its ills and eventually reap its joys. I only hope that I have prepared myself to offer a worthwhile contribution. Michael Fine, Hull, Mass. Journalism. LBJ — Vietnam — Gemini — Ho — Mao — Bairci — Israel — Napalm — Arabs — Red Sox — DMZ — Apollo — Titicut — Dow — Greece — Ref- erendum — Pueblo — Hue — Dr. King — De-escalation — RFK — HHH — McCarthy — Nixon ' s the One— Czechoslovakia — Moon — Mets — Thailand — Spiro — Chappaquiddick — Namath — Cambodia — Moratorium — Hayakawa — My Lai — Bruins — Kent— Hijacks — Vietnam — These were a few of my favorite things. Lawrence K. Fink, Flushing, N.Y. Civil Kngineering. The five years spent at Northeastern have been formative one for both myself and the world. The effect these years will have: only time can tell. James Fong, Boston, Mass. Mechanical Kngineering. An attitude of change for the better prevailed in my years at Northeastern, and it was this attitude, I feel, that motivated the mechanical engineering department to initiate several major changes. The new curiculum will benefit the department immea- surably in the future. Cheryl Lea Flater, Baltimore, Md. History. Well, something ' s lost but something ' s gained In living every day. I ' ve looked at life from both sides now. From win and lose And still somehow It ' s life ' s illusions I recall. 1 really don ' t know life at all. Shirley M. Forbes, Dedham, Mass. Nursing. If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears. However measured or far away. — Henry David Thoreau — Joni Mitchell Bertrand L. Forest Jr., Manchester, N.H. Electrical Eng. In my five years at Northeastern, I have seen a change in the average college student. He has begun to shed his usually pas- sive social role, and developed an awareness of those outside his educational sphere. He must now channel his creative abilities to exploit his new ideals. Stephen B. Fox, Brighton, Mass. Mathematics. As a freshman, I believed college to be the academic institu- tion devoted solely to booklearning. But I quickly learned it was a way of life: making new friends, pledging a fraternity, getting elected to Class Board, becoming totally involved in the microcosm. College would have been in vain if 1 had not learned to bridge the gap to involvement in the world outside. Work for peace. John Forlizzi, East Boston, Mass. Electrical Engineering. These past five years have given me the opportunity to be able to view more than one side of situations. 1 cannot pinpoint the exact factor which accomplished this but it must include the fra- ternity to which I belong, other students and people I have come in contact with; I know that there would be a large void in my life it 1 had not come to a university. David Freed, Newton, Mass. Civil Engineering. I ' d like to see America reach a happy medium and eventual solu- tion to our problems by having the far right and the far left give way to each other ' s desires. Then there will be happiness and love for all. My happiness and love is with Arlene, August 29, 1971. M i Alexanders. Frisch, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Marketing. Student Government. Interpersonal relationships are gaining increasing priority in the hierarchy of human values. Resource allocations must be adjusted to allow individuals a healthy self concept. Failure to carry through these changes can only lead to the emotional collapse of our species. Herbert A. Fuchs, Hempstead, N.Y. Accounting. Compromise — fight and win the war or withdraw immediately and abolish the military; support the establishment or tear it down and let everyone do their own thing. When there are ar- guments like these, there is only one solution — compromise. Both sides must bend to meet each other. Until this happens nothing is gained. Carolyn Garofano, Medford, Mass. Education. Although we, as college students have been labeled radicals by our elders, we have learned to be courageous in non-conforming and open-minded in considering the opinions of others. Our college years have been rewarding not for our own academic cer- tificate alone but more importantly a great learning experience of life. James L. Gaudet, Cambridge, Mass. Electrical Eng. It ' s been a strange journey. Half-man, half-boy. Where freedom approaches responsibility, that ' s where I ' ve been. I like to think I see things clearer now. Lee Geoffrion, Manchester. N.H. Industrial Relations. The theme has been the giving of one ' s self. But can we offer less than everything and still call it love? Can destruction be proper- ly substituted for change? If we believe this, our time here has been wasted. May God find our ideals sincere. Harvey Gershman, Pawtucket, R.I. Mechanical Engineering. The Student Strike of Spring ' 70 was a time when my texts were dropped and my slide ruling stopped. I became aware of Nixon ' s war. Black America ' s plight and the Silent Majority ' s long winter nap. The involvement, the education, and the frustration of being part of a minority that tried to awake this country. I felt that I tried to do something, 1 tried hard, but failed, not knowing why! Lois Geremonte, Arlington, Mass. Nursing. We were all messy rooms at times, out of order. We often tried to hide it. At times we couldn ' t hide it. That ' s because we needed faith, love, peace — each other. Jonathan S. Gerson, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Civil Engineering. The more we study, the more we know. The more we know, the more we want to know more. The more we want to know more, the more we study. Why is it, with all this knowledge, we don ' t know how to live? Lorna Dale Goldberg, Gloucester, Mass. Nursing. Life is what one makes it. The more one gives of oneself, the more one receives. Marshall Goldberg, Randolph, Mass. Accounting. Perhaps the most significant occurance for me in this past half- decade has been experiencing life. The happiest moment has been my wedding night. Without a doubt the event having the greatest impact on the world has been the Vietnam War. Steven A. Goldberg, Milton, Mass. Chemical Engineering. The advanced technology of today ' s world has moved ahead of people who have developed it. We have allowed ourselves to become self-destructive through environmental deterioration. But people are escaping from their individual worlds to help the entire society. We have left the everyday existence for an aware- ness of the future and a liveable world. Class Pres. 4,5. Tau Kap- pa Epsilon 2,3,4,5. Inter-Class Council 4,5. Irene K. Gorczyca, Wethersfield, Conn. Industrial Eng. One-half-decade is like another — Somewhere discoveries are made, somewhere wars rage — Everywhere people and pollution increase; 1966-71 is no different. Unique, however, is the effort on my life — for 1 received an education in both engineering and people. This knowledge 1 prize above all my possessions and I am eternally grateful to my parents who worked so hard to give all this to me. Ronald Louis Grasso, E. Boston, Mass. Hlectrical Eng. The past half-decade has really awakened me to the world. As a high schooler 1 would read about events and happenings in the world and would not really believe them. Now, as a college gradu- ate, I find myself in the middle of these events and happenings and learning more about the world as it is today. Jason Grossman, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Biology. We are amidst a revolution against past standards. Repression is no longer tolerated. We must let it all hang out. Yet, none of these objects of protest are new. They are just enlarged reflections of the past. Jerrold Jay Greenberg, Clifton, N.J. English. There have been size and stature changes in Northeastern in the past five years. My organization (WRBB-FM) has also expanded. As station manager, I have been exposed to change in the atti- tudes of students and administration concerning our largest is- sue: Student Protest of the Southeast Asia War. The culmina- tion was Nixon ' s Cambodia decision. 1 hope the polarization is stopped. Robert E. Grover, Melrose, Mass. Civil Engineering. Man has reached the moon, but not the community; he has filled the air with missiles and other debris. Small steps are being taken but giant steps in the right direction are needed. Regina Gurfinkiel. Mattapan, Mass. Modern Languages. Nancy Hall. Augusta. Me. Marketing. More important than the academia in which we have revolved was our exposure to outside forces. We have witnessed the as- sassination of leaders, been directly confronted with a real war, and seen the forceful impetus of dissenting minority groups. The result — we have learned to relate ourselves realistically to the changing world we will enter — now! Peter W. Haggerty, Arlington. Va. Physics. Our five years as undergraduates at Northeastern can only be judged to be of value if, some 30 years from now, we can truthful- ly make the comment: I can still make 30 per cent of the state- ments that I made as an undergraduate; and I still hold and believe in 30 per cent of the ideals that I believed in as an under- graduate. Marc Hamilton, Summit, N.J. Journalism. Regardless of motivation or expression, the past five years are witness to the growth of an intense concern. It focused on the college and university and expanded to the problems of humanity in every realm. That is behind us, but the concern we developed and displayed must be carried along. Its continuance is the in- surance for our future and that of those to come. 43 ; Lorraine A. Hanna, Waldoboro, Me. Political Science. My college life has been most influenced by the Vietnam War and the women ' s liberation movement. The war caused my first participation in the American political process which is now be- ing replaced with concern for equal rights for women. Eric Warren Hanson, Hingham, Mass. English. The recent years ' hard feelings between people so neatly (and impossibly) labeled members of the establishment and the young liberals, has made us in America quite proficient at hurling and fielding maledictions and violent response. It ' s sad- dening that we can ' t take some council on tolerance from a Shakespearian charlatan named Parolles who says There ' s place and means for every man alive. Richard J. Harding, Melrose, Mass. Industrial Eng. Rifle Club 1. Beta Gamma Epsilon 2,3,4,5. l.F.C. Sports. Alpha Pi Mu 4,5. A.I. I.E. 2,3,4,5 (Pres.) Delegate to Regional and Na- tional Conventions 3. After I entered the university scene in 1966, I perceived what was later termed the Silent Majority, but as I leave in 1970 1 recognize healthy trends toward constructive participation. John Kevin Hayes, Somersworth, N.H. Civil Engineering. Education in the period 1966-71 has lead to these thoughts. Become involved in America and her problems, trying to better democracy. Let the ideas presented to us in the past five years lead us to the achievement of the goals in the future. Jonathan B. Hedmah, Braintree, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Looking back at the last five years, marked by violence, immoral- ity, insecurity, dishonesty, pollution and materialism, I believe we still will be part of a better world in the future. Youth needs a firm faith, a strong challenge and opportunity to serve his fellow man. Deborah E. Hogan, Cambridge, Mass. English. Fortunately, reactions to different life styles have become looser and more tolerant. The development of the mind has become, rightly so, more important than the cultivation of pre- digested data Harry Herman. Woonsocket, R.I. Marketing. Today our rapidly changing environment requires that the socio- industrial relationship be closer and more effective in solving the economic, social, and physiological problems of today ' s man and tomorrow ' s environment. For neither will society or in- dustry thrive in a threatening atmosphere detrimental to the basic ingredients of life itself. Deborah Hollman, Hanson, Mass. Education. When you educate a man, you educate an individual; When you educate a woman, you educate a family. A winner never quits. And a quitter never wins. Frederick Ray Hunt, Worcester. Mass. Management. These five years mark the beginning. The younger generation will no longer passively accept a world of darkness. Poverty, prejudice, pollution and hate must end if there is to be light The first star has begun to shine. Patrice Hurley, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Education. Northeastern, new friends, roommates, Dirty Gurdy, love, problems, co-op, exams, Sam, Schnodgrass, cooking dinner, a bottle of wine, tears, good-bye, hello. If 1 must say something about my short, but beautiful twenty-two years, I would borrow the words from a song: I Did It My Way, and I have no regrets. William Paul Huntley. Meriden, Conn. Electrical Eng. The 1960 ' s marked the beginning of the not so silent spring. The last five years have demonstrated our increasing frustration and discontent with society morally, politically, and humanely. The question we keep asking ourselves is Can we make the fu- ture better? I only hope our generation continues to try. Charles Iannaccone, Woburn, Mass. Chemical Eng. Through the events of the past five years, I am firmly convinced that the U.S. should take a good long look at its own domestic problems. Instead of spending billions fighting a futile war in Vietnam, or implementing an unnecessary ABM system, this money could be put to positive use; for instance, poverty, hous- ing, education, and urban renewal. AttiliaA. Iannarelli, Providence, R.I. Biology. Life is a strange phenomena. It is impossible to grab it by my hand. It is a moment of contradiction in reality. We, like fish, try to fly in vain, jumping from the calm sea, wanting to be shone in the sunset It is the joys and sorrows brought by experiencing others . . . and finding oneself. Ralph L. Jacobs, Belmont, Mass. Civil Eng. To take a single experience or event and attempt to explain the transition of my life during the past five years would be impossi- ble. For behind this social maze of love, hate, war and prejudice, is one most significant personal event . . . that I as an individu- al have found myself. Steven P. Irving. Randolph. Mass. Biology. The apotheosis of human greed is a major factor contributing to the ecological and social crisis with which we are faced. If life on this planet is to survive, we must re-evaluate our values and our goals. That is, we must reach a compromise with our physical and social environment Richard J. Jennings, Wakefield, Mass. Education. Martin Luther King . . . senseless; Chicago defendants and Judge Hoffman . . . who is (are) the pig(s); Weathermen . . . why?; ROTC . . . why not?; Richard M. Nixon in 1968 ... I ' m sorry; RFK . . . another one?; Quadrangle Massacre ... ac- cording to whom? . . . Too bad N.U. doesn ' t give courses in people!! Dwight S. Johnson, Spruce Head, Maine. Hlectrical Kng. The past five years of school have shown me that of all my im- pressions there is only one which really stands out far above the others. This one impression is obvious yet seldom recognized. It is simply that we have been — Ronald B. Johnson, Windsor, Conn. Management. Changes in life styles, people and places, from apathy to protest, beer to grass, death to resurrection within a half decade of my life. Constant war within and between peoples with peace hover- ing above and yet unable to prevail. The future looks bright if man can survive the next half-decade. Lesley Johnson, Natick, Mass. Education. And like the baseless fabric of this vision. The cloud-capped towers, the gorgeous palaces. The solemn temples, the great globe itself — shall dissolve And, like this insubstantial pageant faded. Leave not rack behind. We are such stuff As dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep. — Shakespeare Peter A. Jones, Norwood, Mass. Political Science. I view my years at the university as a period of realization. Prior to it, topics of great concern, which include world and domestic peace, the population explosion, pollution, social equality and the generation gap were present but it seems not realized. Today it appears that these topics will now be identified and acted upon to bring about a true brotherhood of mankind. David R. Jose, Marlborough, Conn. Mechanical Hng. Changes made at record speed; minds rejecting society ' s molds; a time filled with fear; more people aware and caring than ever before; but always the hope for a better tomorrow. Edmond R. Joyal Jr., Waltham, Mass. Political Science. In the past rive years political assassination — and sometimes genocide for political reasons — has become commonplace. This has had an effect upon me that is to make me more committed to making this world a better place in which to live. Paul G. Joubert, Wilbram, Mass. Accounting. What this university meant to me, — One degree and a wife-to-be. Rachelle Kahalas, Norwood, Mass. Political Science. Our college years were ones of great emotion — but not of despair — for we learned to ' dream things as they never were and say, why not and try things never tried and say, I can. Gerald Kalenderian, Watertown, Mass. Management The past five years at Northeastern have made me realize how little I actually know; but this realization has encouraged me to learn more about myself and the things around me. Pauline kantos. Brookline. Mass. Education. The past half-decade has had its emphasis on youth. More than ever older people have had to talk, listen and try to understand youths. We are all children born in a different world. Violent changes and happenings have made us this way. We began to question the system. We exist in an uptight society. Everyone is uptight about something. But if we all get together we can make it an even better world for our children . . . Peace. Karen Kearney. Melrose, Mass. Nursing. Five years somehow sounds like less time than a past half- decade. Although I had become involved in some school activi- ties, my sorority Alpha Omicron Pi being a major part, so many things have happend during these past five years both inside and outside of the university to really get into, including the October Moratorium and the Strike of this past year. James J. Keilty, Dorchester, Mass. Finance. The years ' 66-71 were the years when the word priorities became so common. Priorities, a system of goals, must first be established. If, then, we strive hard enough and work long enough we can achieve whatever goals we set. James. M. Keirstead. Framingham, Mass. Chemical Fng. Over this past half-decade we have seen a war continue to rage in Vietnam, while we are promised peace. Now as violence erupts, we must work for immediate peace and end the violence before it destroys what we have worked so hard to achieve. Peace. H. Allan Kidd, Elmont, N.Y. Electrical Eng. Awareness; Martin Luther King; Vietnam; devious Richard; war; marijuana; stereo; headphones; light show; colors; Yellow Subma- rine; lots of freaks; Woodstock; Peace Corps; VISTA; Strawberry Fields Forever; bust; Eugene McCarthy; RFK; the silent majority is fucked up. Peace! Love! Happiness! Kathleen Kellogg, Wyckoff. N.J., Kducation. City life, lights, concerts and plays. Faster, N.Y.C. — J.W. Thompsons. Then was the summer of sunshine and sailboats. Beautiful skiing at Loon Mountain; transport at Tufts NEMCH and living on Symphony Rd. Teaching in New Jersey. Skiing with the Hus-skiers. Dale King, Attleboro, Mass. Journalism. The University has developed into an institution of total in- volvement As a Northeastern News staffer, I saw the college campus merge with the community bringing knowledge to a world torn by misunderstanding. Our generation will spread peace throughout all nations. Terry R. Kishbaugh, Unadilla, N.Y. Mechanical Hng. For many decades to come, man, if he continues to exist, may truly wonder at the idiocy of the late ' 60 ' s. Why must our daily lives be filled with war, poverty, racism, fear, hatred, ignorance and violence. We are one people inhabiting one world; can we not live by the principles of universal love, brotherhood, compassion and individual freedom? Carol Kramer, Manchester, Conn. Physical Therapy. Being suddenly caught up by the frenzied events of the campus and the world, I have, gratefully learned from those around me; both of differing and similar views. With the direction their call as have given me, I hope to make my way through the turbulence. Ronald A. Koven. Albany, N.Y. Management. We as seniors have watched five years of social change. In es- sence change has been the watchword of our society. It is evi- dent in everything we ' ve done. There has been a change in break- ing down of barriers between the students themselves. In the fu- ture barriers between students and administration must drop for the betterment of the entire university. Leslie Jean Kramer, Naval Hospital, Chelsea, Mass. Biology. Today freedom is equated with unrestrained license. Never before has such a system prevailed, where those who know the least are actively, and with some success, dictating the conduct of society. Could it be that the enlightened generation is most dedicated? Richard F. Kramer, Baldwin, N.Y. Civil I ng. We have learned enough now to know That we need to learn much more. Lawrence M. Krupnick, Athol, Mass. Accounting. Turmoil and lack of remedial action have beset our times. Strikes and demonstrations have done much to aggrevate the awareness of problems, but little to offer operable solutions. Callous self-goals and lack of true friendships have hindered our making a better nation. Henry C. KubliJr., Pittsfield, Mass. Llectrical Lng. The world-wide problems of hunger, environmental pollution and population increase have become curtly apparent to us all. As a result, the peoples of the world have begun to realize that if mankind is to survive, hatred, war, and nationalistic pride must be replaced by love, peace and mutual respect. Ronald F. Ladner, Holden, Mass. Industrial Eng. AIIE 3,4,5; Joint Eng. Council 4,5; Tau Beta Pi 3,4,5; Alpha Pi Mu 3,4,5; Vice-President 4; President 5; Freshman ' s Honor List Dean ' s List 2,3,4,5. Mary Lam, Boston, Mass. Pharmacy. This half-decade have vividly marked a time for change in our so- ciety. The young people have taken strides to try to form a more real society, so each of us may live in an authentic way and thereby be happier. New life styles with new ideas are gradually replacing the old ones, for it is the times they are changing. David R. Lambert, Wethersfield, Conn. Electrical Kng. Let everyone do their own thing and you do yours — If it has to do with the ocean, I ' m all for it — Activities: Underwater Club, Sports Car Club, IEEE. 4fl . Carl H. Landrum, Roslindale, Mass. Electrical Eng. The young people have overridden the old American principle of going along with the system and decided to voice their disap- proval of the way our society exists and the direction our lead- ers are taking us. This change in tempo has had a part in deter- mining our future. Nancy J. Lavender, Bayonne, N.J. English. For every great achievement during the last five years there seemed to arise twice as many stumbling blocks. Man can replace a worn out heart, and he has touched the moon, but he has not solved the problem of strife. Maybe someday when man begins to truly understand, he will learn to love, and when his love is understood, there will be everlasting peace. David I. Larson, Belmont, Mass. History. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times; it was the Age of Wisdom, it was the Age of Foolishness; it was the epoch of belief, it was the Age of Incredulity . . . — Charles Dickens Jack Lee, Boston, Mass. Mathematics. The last five years at Northeastern have been frustrating ones. This frustration results from overt inability to change our social, political or environmental ills. This frustration is affect- ing individuals in different manners, ranging from indifference to violence. Both of these are dangerous. We must have change — soon. Pauline E. Lee, Taunton, Mass. Nursing. Transition and volatility set the stage for our five years. As freshmen we saw the demise of the silent, accepting college student role. To us belonged the turbulance of the ' 60 ' s and ' 70 ' s — war, assassination, political upheaval and social unrest. We became aware and active. We sought to accept and demand of ourselves a measure of responsibility. We are a new generation of Americans. Robert C. Lesuer, Waltham, Mass. Civil ting. The right of peaceful dissent should be protected always, the necessity of violent dissent, encouraged never. I pray that people will no longer meet death, either in the service of their country or in the pursuit of those ideals they hold sacred. James H. LeTourneau, Somerville, Mass. Mechanical Eng. My college years widened my view to real life through acquaint- ances with others and especially the cooperative program. By ac- tually entering the industrial field while studying I found book knowledge to be of little significance when compared to knowl- edge gained on how to think. Philip N. Littlefield Jr.. Arlington, Mass. Physics. I believe the Manned Space Program, and its culminating lunar landing to be the greatest achievement of the 60 ' s. if not of all time, for it demonstrated the intrinsic positive nature of technology. It now rests with the humanists to use what science has provided for the improvement of human kind. Stanley J. Lewis, Somerville, Mass. Marketing. From high school history to studying Afro-American relations. From watching war movies to joining ROTC. From personal resentments to taking part in nationwide student strikes. From being sheltered to having the world at my hands. My years at Northeastern — they changed me. Robert W. Lothrop, Roslindale. Mass. Electrical Eng. The past five years have shown vast changes in the attitudes of students toward the society that surrounds them. Today ' s students are concerned with morality, sex, drugs, ecology, war, and even the integrity of our government. At last students are waking up and asking Why? Debra Lynn Lubin, Chelsea, Mass. Sociology. What made the most intense impact upon my thinking and beliefs during the past years has been the assassination of Bobby Kennedy, especially because it occurred when it did. I had felt that he was the hope for the future of the country and I see no such new hope arising soon. Paul L. Lucerto, Winthrop, Mass. Accounting. In the past half-decade the accent has been on youth. I feel that Northeastern ' s program of work and study will become increas- ingly more important because it is more functional to the young. Bernard D. Lucey, Quincy, Mass. Civil Engineering. Hour by hour we stood by the flame melting the earth and star, re-shaping the mold. The casting in hand, we step to the exit. Joan Edith Lund, Everett, Mass. Nursing. One significant change I have seen during my nursing education is the absence of individuality. There is disintegration of minds and bodies by drugs taken to cope with personal, national, and international problems. Such momentary relief has led to histor- ical despair for both the users and the abstainers. Anne Lupo, Newtonville, Mass. History. The past five years have seen an unending war, assassination, protest, and death. We, as young people directly affected, have felt shock and despair. Despite the attention focused on us — our efforts at change — we have been a misunderstood generation. Richard J. MacDonald, Salem, Mass. Electrical Eng. The past half-decade brought with it an awareness in man that he must learn the meaning of true communication and commit himself to meaningful interaction with others for the purpose of survival. Donald Ross MacDonald, Roxbury, Mass. Accounting. Mon ami tremble d ' horreur a evoquees souvenirs, embodies my opinion of the past half-decade. Our country is undergoing a period of change in morals and ideas. 1 hope that the end result will be constructive change to benefit all. Listen carefully to the sounds of silence. Treasurer — Beta Alpha Psi. William MacDonald, Rockland, Mass. Chemical Engineering. The past half-decade has been one of constant change and reor- ganization. The attitudes of some people have changed radically with their extreme beliefs on bombing and taking the law into their own hands. Much has to be done politically and socially to improve our society and our lives. Walter Maciejowski, Everett, Mass. Marketing. During my years at Northeastern, I have witnessed world problems grow to almost unbelievable proportions. In summing up these past five years, I can only say that we are now closer to a possible world cosmocide. Thomas B. Mackey, Lynn, Mass. Industrial Engineering. As we leave Northeastern, we find an American torn by war and violence. Let us resolve to build a better world, not as the masters of that world, but as the servants of all men. Robert E. MacKay, Dorchester, Mass. History. 1966-1971: Interesting times. David F. Mahoney, Framingham, Mass. Biology. The awareness, shown by college students at this university and others, has been acute. Never before has the student shown more concern of events, domestic and for eign, taking place about him. Although the methods of response may have been unwar- ranted, he has shown a genuine interest in trying to solve problems in our society. Cheryl A. Mansfield ' , E. Weymouth, Mass. Mathematics. Nicholas Mariani, Waltham, Mass. Civil Engineering. The past half-decade for me has been a world full of frustrations and uncertainties. The frustrations evolved from the constant and unrelenting pressure of the academic requirements. The un- certainties emanated from the Vietnam War, rioting and the po- larization of the people. Robert L. Martino, Shelton, Conn. Electrical Eng. The most fruitful lesson of the last five years was to see the need to question the events taking place around us and to try and do something about them. We see the need of the underpriv- ileged and repressed, understand their position, and their depen- dence on external help. We should plan our future with these ex- amples in mind. Donald I. Martin, Lynn, Mass. Industrial Eng. Freshman — Confusion, numbers, and IBM cards. Sophomore — Cook ' s cook book and Gold ' s engineered money. Middler — What is the probability of Gold leaving? Junior — O.R. — the simple Simplex; Cambodia — missed Strike. Senior — What senior paper? Is it really over, or is this just the beginning? Francis J. Masciarelli. Milford, Mass. Electrical Eng. We should all work for a better world. Some have worked within the system and some have not. Those who did not must be ready to pay the price. They may suffer but we may benefit and the system may improve. Phyllis B. Mazzarella, Reveie, Mass. Political Sci. The school, the nation and the world have been dramatically changed over the past five years. This change affects all of us for better or for worse. Many of our values and ideals have been changed. Many have been broken. Do we really have a future? Did we get what we wanted or have we gotten more than we bargained for. Mary Ellen Mattox, New York City, N.Y. Nursing. In the recent past, the students ' attitude toward their universi- ties and society has changed. They have become increasingly more interested in their physical world (evidenced by Earth Day) and with the problems of their country and the world (Moratori- um and Strike). This change has been long in the coming and it is here to stay and help reform. Robert R. McAuslan, Seekonk, Mass. Fin. Ins. The greatest single change that we have witnessed during the past half-decade has been the focus of attention on the problems of limiting the population, and conserving the environment. This will be the most important campaign of the seventies. Elizabeth A. McCarthy, Worcester, Mass. Psych. In the past half-decade the university has been influential in un- covering the need for concern with now. Regardless of the past, today is the first day of the rest of our. therefore, we must look to the future. RobertO. Mclntyre, Brighton, Mass. Soc. Studies. The pursuit of peace has been valid and worthwhile. True peace will come when all men decide to give something to their fellow man. Thomas McDonough, Maiden, Mass. Management. In the past five years, the college scene has observed that have affected the college in many ways. Curriculum has changed to suit the times. Students have had a larger part in college life. Unrest is prevalent. One of the most shocking of tragedies was the deaths of Ohio Students. Judy Ann McLaughlin, Boston, Mass. Philosophy. Northeastern has taught me to beware of definitions. As a freshman, I needed to be a perfect person. As an upperclassman, I needed to be a person. As a graduate, I need to BE. Alan John Meister, Rockland, Mass. Accounting. A movement of growing concern is the younger generation ' s drive against the establishment, not only to correct wrongs and evils, but to strengthen their own moral and social standards. The flag my country has fought so hard to wave is often forgot- ten and the enemy ' s flag is waved. Death to traitors! My country tis of thee! Michael J. Menzie, Westfield. N.J. Electrical Eng. We must strive to preserve the freedom and privacy of the indi- vidual rather than sacrifice our will to those who would help us in spite of ourselves, and we must see to it that government begins to serve the people and stops serving itself. Richard Mellitz, Mi lford, Conn. Electrical Eng. When there is someone, we don ' t need anyone. When there is no one, we need only someone. David S. Miller, Brighton, Mass. Electrical Eng. From our modern buildings, I can see the poverty across the railroad tracks. Thus, Northeastern has let me see first-hand where our national priorities have gone. Tau Beta Pi, 3,4,5 Eta Kappa Nu, 3,4,5 Chapter vice president, 5 1 EEE, 2,3,4,5. Herman J. Miller, Mattapan, Mass. Mech. Eng. These past years have seen greater tension in our society aris- ing from the polarization of the races, and radicalization of many students. It was a period of widespread campus unrest and pro- test, stimulated by frustration over the Vietnam War and the inability to bring about changes in our society fast enough. Donald K. Mitchell Jr., Dorchester, Mass. Mgmt. I feel the last half of the ' 60s has shown sharp awareness the college generation has for themselves and their environment, both philosophical and ecological. It is my hope that we will be able to incorporate this awareness into constructive improve- ment through the system of government we now have. Lawrence E. Miscowski, Woburn, Mass. Mech. Eng. Joel B. Mittler, Commack, N.Y. Industrial Eng. I am, I think, I will . . . What must I say besides? . . . And now I see the face of God, and I raise this god over the earth, this god who men have sought since men came into being, this god who will grant them joy and peace and pride. This god. this one word: I. — Ayn Rand Thomas J. Monaghan. Brockton. Mass. education. Northeastern: Sheila, Walpole, Kappa Delta Pi, peace, effete, shoes, friends, foosball, yomechas. Kit Cat, laughing, write-on. Blue H ill Ave., despair, Kent, palstics, Mash, hopes, Peter B., Dolly, whalers, Andre, Hair, qpa, oi, smile. Thank you, God Bless. Timothy E. Moore, Tewksbury, Mass. Electrical Eng. Northeastern ' s Ecology Day helped to bring about an awareness of the immense problem that pollution presents. Man must learn to conserve his natural resources and to recycle his wastes which are currently polluting the land, the air and the sea. Brian C. Monahan, Wellesley, Mass. Journalism. The ' 70s are here, and for this generation of graduates, the most vociferous of late, it is time to put rhetoric, high idealism and exuberant energies to the test. It may take decades to prove the stamp of effete was wholly inappropriate. President, Journ. So- ciety Sigma Delta Chi Student Advisory Committee L.A. Library Committee. Martin Edward Morse, Wells, Maine. Management. The past five years have been the most interesting but frustrat- ing years of my life. I think I have developed a true awareness of my environment. When observing a problem objectively, there is no easy clear-cut answer. Beware of people with simple solu- tions to complex problems. Amy Louise Moskowitz, New York, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Life is a sport that few of us can play skillfully enough to win. Learn to love a challenge or lose your chance to compete. Gregory P. Murphy, Marblehead, Mass. Management What has impressed me most over the last five years is the in- volvement of America ' s youth in national affairs. Unfortunately, youth ' s claim to an opinion that is morally and legally theirs is being suppressed by the more narrow-minded. Thomas William Mullen, Dedham, Mass. Pol. Sci. The past half-decade was a period of flux, of gestation. Certain institutions, heretofore sacrosanct, were pressured to the break- ing point. Excesses and provocations were indulged in by all sides. Perhaps the next decade will be one of congealing, the practicing of valid goals by valid means. Thomas J. Murphy, North Andover, Mass. Civil Eng. The past five years have been spent learning how to build a bet- ter world. Let ' s hope we do a better job than the people who built those years. John P. Mustonen Jr., Walpole, Mass. Mechanical Eng. My years at N.U. have been spent in the atmosphere of a world struggling for survival. The history of these years bears witness to the urgent need for dedication, on the part of new graduates, to the pursuit of excellence in their chosen professions and tranquility in their inherited society. Nell Naideth, Pasadena, Calif. Education. Man has the power to be a determiner rather than a victim of his fate. It is time for him to use that power both individually and jointly to cease killing himself through violent and subtle means. George F. Nelson, Boston, Mass. Accounting. Introspect thyself and appreciate the change. A large part of college, aside from the learning process, is interaction with people. These relationships imprint lasting influences on all of us. Go from the grey brick walls and live meaningful lives free from anxiety and tuition increases. Nancy M. Newell, Bedford, N.H. Nursing. My college life was an experience of bitter reality, a never ending party and next week we study. Never before nor after are you so close to reality. There is the joy and ecstasy, the love that spills over and pours down the avenues of your life filling me with a peace that no cathedral or poem could ever give. These five years will be re-lived time and time again. William J. Newman, Saugus, Mass. Electrical Eng. While at Northeastern I have witnessed in myself and my gener- ation a continuing shift in emphasis from materialism to humanism. Hopefully this will lead to a day when brotherhood, love and other ideals which until now have been paid only lip ser- vice, will become living realities. Dennis J. Nightingale, Garden City Park, N.Y. Electrical Eng. For me the past half-decade was a period of unwarranted assas- sinations, a time of mass demonstrations and a time of uncalled for violence. It was the time of the so-called ' youth movement I would sum up this period in one word . . .confusion. Edward J. Niemiera, Perth Amboy, N.J. Political Science. The past half-decade ushered in an era of increasing concern among students black and white, of the social, political and eco- nomic problems existing in the United States. This concern brought about increased militancy and unfortunately violence, which in turn, has brought about a conservative reaction. Vincent P. Nobrega, Fairfield, Conn. Electrical Eng. The most important occurrence of the past half-decade was the unification of students for the purpose of bringing peace to Viet- nam. I believe the reductions in U.S. military strength in Viet- nam are a direct result of this unification. Richard Noce, Rocky Hill, Conn. Mechanical Eng. Young people working for changes, not sure what the changes should be. Coming out of school with technical but little social knowledge, wanting to help the world, but confused on what my next step should be. In ten years? Deborah B. Novick, Richmond, Mass. Industrial Relations My college years were a change to mature. Just being away from home, getting active in school life, and making new friends have helped to achieve this feeling. Probably my biggest impression during the past five years has been the evolution in women ' s dorm life and the participation of N.U. ' s students in the strike against Nixon ' s involvements in Cambodia. Michael F. Noonan, Wakefield, Mass. Finance. I ' m quite sure that I have no race prejudices, and I think I have no color prejudices . . . Indeed I know it. I can stand any soci- ety. All that I care to know is that a man is a human being . . . that is good enough for me; he can ' t be any worse. — Mark Twain Thomas B. O ' Donnell, Lynn, Mass. Electrical Eng. As a direct result of world events in the past five years 1 find myself emerging from a cocoon of apathy into a new awareness of my surroundings and regarding my life and its relevance in a new disquieting manner. The advantages of university life, which 1 regarded unconsciously as somewhat of a retreat into oneself, have instead caused me to be shoved into the turmoil of a new age of social concern. Thomas M. Osborne, Allston, Mass. Electrical Eng. Those in the university who develop ideas and form theories about the structure of society should not condemn those in the community at large who do not agree. Jean M. Panepinto, Braintree, Mass. Electrical Eng. The past half-decade at Northeastern has made me aware and concerned with the problems of our country and the world, as well as given me a broader view of life. Pamela A. Pandolfo, Revere, Mass. Math. Change is at the core of growth. Yet, change is not total rejec- tion of the old. It involves choosing the best of the old or established and the best of the new. If we totally reject the old our new can be nothing but shallow. James W. C. Parker, Brookline, Mass. Electrical Eng. Northeastern has been a place where I have matured, through classroom education, but more important at my co-op job. My co-op job taught me what outside competition is like, and that there is no teacher like experience. Pashion P. Payton, Buffalo, N.Y. Pharmacy. The past five years have provided an interesting experience which will last forever. Social change has finally recognized the Black student and events such as the Dr. King assassination made one question his existence as a human being. Roger D. Perham. Lynn, Mass. Electrical Kng. Martin Luther King has shown us that peaceful persuasion does work. He has demonstrated that it is possible to change a per- son ' s mind by quiet talk in a friendly manner rather than by harsh threats in a loud voice. Robert J. Piantedosi, Holbrook, Mass. Mechanical Eng. The ideologies and life styles of men such as Robert Kennedy, Cassius Clay and Martin Luther King, impressed and influenced me the most. The sacrifices and tribulations these men had to suffer through because of their beliefs instilled in me a rekindling of hope for the future of mankind. Roger Pierce, Reading, Mass. Education. The university as a microcosm of the world; very confusing. The letter of the law rather than truth reigns supreme. Needed: con- structive changes until we have Woodstock on a universal level. More patience and tolerance. Less repression. Love people, not things. Pamela Genie Pittman, Dorchester, Mass. Nursing. The past half-decade has been healthy for most Blacks politically working in the system. The expression of civil disobedience has brought new laws— Civil Rights Bill, etc. — but the tactic ot vio- lence is at an end. The relevancy of the Black nurse excites me— working for th e short-range health needs of her community to in- sure a healthy start for Black and White youths to join the struggle. Lauren (Ketchen) Potter, E. Weymouth. Mass. Education. •Women and men (both little and small) cared for anyone not at all they sowed their isn ' t they reaped their same sun moon stars rain — e.e. cummings Barbara F. Poulter, Boston, Mass. Nursing. Changes have taken place and will continue to take place as long as individuals remain free-thinking and work together to achieve a society that is free, equal and concerned with the welfare of its people. Albert Raymond Quinn, Weymouth, Mass. Civil Eng. Students have become more responsive to the outside world. They no longer are primarily sociably orientated as they are socially and politically concerned. Edward Paul Raccio, Hamden, Conn. Chemical Eng. It has been a time of change. The youth of today has become keenly aware of the existing problems. By working to solve them, hopefully with as little violence as possible, we will discover a new and more peaceful world. Elizabeth Rand, East Patchogue, N.Y. Physical Therapy. Life is all encompassing. We should live it as it comes — day by day, and try not to destroy ourselves by over-population, pollu- tion, war and hatred. James M. Rafferty, Reslindale, Mass. Management. The past five years have not, by any means, been happy ones for the people of the United States. The Vietnam War has divided the greatest country in the world to an extant to which it has never been divided. We can only hope for the strong leadership needed to end this war. Susan Rand, Woodcliff Lake, N.J. Physical Therapy. As a dormitory counselor and therefore part of the establish- ment, I have frequently overlooked rules because I didn ' t believe them valid anymore. Three years ago 1 did. Stephen C. Raphel, Canton, Mass. Mathematics. In any half-decade we are exposed to many people — consider each to be good until proven bad; and indeed, if some prove to be bad — treat them good, and who knows perhaps peace. James W. Rathbun, Quincy, Mass. Education. Gentlemen, it took you 184 words to ask me to use 40 words or less to sum up 5 years of experience. You couldn ' t do it and neither can I. Ronald Reed, Melrose, Mass. Accounting. In the pursuit of affluence we have created a corporate state whose foundations are based upon exploitation and expediency. A reordering of our priorities and reallocation of our resources are the only solutions to the crises we now face. Thomas J. Regan Jr., Charlestown. Mass. Mech. Eng. The United States will continue to regress until its citizens and leaders shed their amazing indifference to the slaughter in Viet- nam and the killings of students at Kent State and Jackson State. Steven L. Remillard, Lynn, Mass. Industrial Eng. In five years, we ' ve all matured five generations. We ' ve created an awareness of social injustice as well as showing a need for population and pollution control. Our corrupt environment can only create a corrupt society. Linda Kay Riccio, Newton, Mass. Education. The past decade has been a time of change, antagonism, hate — a time of people tenaciously clinging to a past ideas and institu- tions, and people rejecting the past completely. More people should be understanding and sensitive to others, take an outside view of ideas, construct instead of destruct, truely promote love and understanding and peace. Scott L. Reynolds, Waban, Mass. History. I have made a ceaseless effort not to ridicule, not to bewail, nor to scorn human actions, but to understand them. — Spinoza Edward Rice, Owings Mills, Md. English. At Dawn ' s sudden light, A thought-enslaved Steppenwolf spirit Begins to prowl an Afternoon, Tactful tea environment, a place Seemingly ensnared by the presence of Social pretense, and then continues An enraged search for viable words Devoid of Blackness in meaning. Carl Rich, Gloucester, Mass. Mechanical Kngineering. As there are more and more humans and they are closer and closer together physically, they get farther and farther apart. Crowding leads to irritation, fear, and hate, Each man must find his own room to survive. Personally I prefer sea gulls. Susan Ann Robertson, Westwood, Mass. Nursing. It was the best of times; it was the worst of times; and it was five years of my life! Douglas R. Roeck, Troy, New York. Chemical Eng. Woodstock — symbol of truth, happiness, love and peace. What good is a silent majority? Easy Rider — some people refuse to change with the times. MASH — cannibus, Maine, Bruins, Margy — good! Agnew, assassinations, Chicago (convention and trial), Vietnam — very very bad. Barbara Rose, Marblehead, Mass. Elementary Ed. The past five years at Northeastern, both in school and on my various co-op jobs, has given me immeasurable experience and knowledge that will certainly shape my future as no other single event has during the past half-decade. Ken Rowland, Melrose, Mass. English. Five years of learning and forgetting; waiting and doing; of watching and failing; of hoping. Five years looking to five more years and remembering: one often works for meanial ' s hire, only to learn di smayed, that any wage asked of life, life will willingly pay. Ronald Carl Roy, Biddeford, Maine. Accounting. The past five years have been a time for growth. Not a physical growth, but the growth of friendships, better understandings of some things and in other cases, misunderstandings of people and things. Edward Rubin, Hyde Park. Mass. Modern Language. I came. I saw. I did not like what I saw. I learned. My world fell down around me. I learned. Now I go out to build a better world than the one I learned about. And hope for peace. Richard Vernon Rude, Reading, Mass. Modern Lang. These past five years have witnessed a great change on the na- tional as well as the academic scene. Social awareness has as- sumed a prominent place in our value systems. With a continua- tion of the present humanitarian trend, many of the problems extant in our society may finally be rectified. W. Russell Rylke, Hyde Park, Mass. Kducation. The past has afforded us with that precious unknown, time, upon which we can plan and recollect; a commodity that the fu- ture can only offer but can ' t promise a given quantity to anyone being or object . . . Robert Sandell, Westbury, N.Y. Marketing. The university is the citadel of man ' s learning and of his hope for further self-improvement and is the special guardian of this heri- tage. Those who work and study on the campus should think before the risk its destruction by resorting to force as the quick way of reaching some immediate goal. Kalman Saffran, Chelsea, Mass. Physics. The past five years have bred an atmosphere of change. Good change, bad change, peaceful change, revolution . . . change. Beneficial change can only be accomplished by people, all people, united. John Sarni, Melrose, Mass. Electrical Engineering. The past half-decade has made me aware of the changes that are urgently needed in the world. I realize that we must stop fight- ing wars, stop polluting, change our educational systems, con- trol population and redirect our priorities. My responsibility is to work toward their solution now. Herbert Paul Sathan, Mattapan, Mass. Elec. Eng. Before man chokes on his own garbage, he has to combine legislation and technology to clean up the world he has fouled. Richard P. Schuit, Wyckoff, N.J. Accounting. In all the time spent at Northeastern, no one influenced my life or helped me more than Jesus Christ. In this time of continuous change, he is the constant who was, and will always be, my source of strength and guidance. Joseph Savy, Peabody, Mass. Accounting. I feel it is not the system of any matter which determines it as bad or good. It is by whom and how it is run. Governments on paper can be very good but Russia had Stalin, and the U.S. has its cheap politicians that care less about the people they serve and care more about being in office. Blind voters without looking at the issues but at the pretty faces are to blame. Paula Elaine Lebel Schultz, Peabody, Mass. Nsg. May events such as college, co-op, riots, students strikes, elec- tions, etc., have changed my life and increased my maturity. Most important to me, though, is my knowledge of people and how to react to them and communicate with them and accept them and their social setting. 1 can ' t pinpoint any particular events, but each has had an impact. Alan Michael Schwadron, Merrick. N.Y. Management. It ' s all so discouraging, looking back . . . We did it all before and we ' ll do it again. Will we ever see the tragedy? Will we ever learn any lessons from it? Larry Shapiro, Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Economics. Five years of one ' s life — a capsule account The draft, the war, classes, finals, pleasure, fun, girls, basketball games, the war, the draft, the war, more finals, protests, politics, Johnson, Nixon, McNamara, Boston, the war, the draft, bigots, violence, burn, baby burn, keep the faith, baby, the war, school. I don ' t like it all, but It ' s happened. Deena(Gorin) Segal, Randolph, Mass. Spch. Hrng. History can repeat itself. It has shown the paradoxical side of the U.S., a nation that can send men into space and control them on earth, but can ' t control a war. 1 feel that my education and the people I have met have helped me to accept and cope with each human being for what he is, not for what he isn ' t. Robert L. Sheppard, Jr. Winthrop, Mass. Mathematics. During my years at Northeastern, the Yacht Club celebrated its most rewarding seasons. As Commodore, my association with people in the yachting world helped me develop the confidence and assurance which are vital in the coming years. Helen L. Shotwell, Medford, Mass. Nursing. Paul Sjoberg, Moulton; Maine. Psychology. Life for the college student in the past half-decade has proven that the scholar should not only concern himself with academics but should voice his opinions concerning events happening in his world. How this function is performed depends upon the individ- ual student ' s rearing, association of friends, social values and fu- ture outlook on life. Walter Sivigny. Hamden, Conn., Flectrical Fng. Five years of emotions flowing constantly from despair to hope and back, punctuated by the regularity of weekly body counts. The world has aged five years and I ten times five. There ' s a chance peace will come in my life. George J. Soukaros, Hyde Park, Mass. Education. Our society seems to thrive on change and improvement. The younger generation reflects it. many attend college to obtain it, and even wars are fought because of it. I hope this improve- ment is worth the price we are paying for it. Winthrop Staples III, Randolph, Mass. Biology. The paradoxical realities of these times are best expressed by the following sarcastic remark: Blessed are the peace-makers They keep me in business. — Maj. Myron Dydurk, 7th Air Calvary, US Army Advisor to Northeastern Counter-Guerrilla group ' 67- ' 69. Killed in Vietnam April 1970, but Gary Owen still lives. Douglas W. Stevens, Brockton, Mass. History. An ever widening, engulfing, embittering, dividing war forcing we seniors to become cynical, defiant, less conservative, more dis- satisfied with the political and social American system as it has been imposed on us, one which has seen our leaders, countrymen and fellow students slain. For WHAT? Marc J. Stern, Hull, Mass. History. Education and change is the story of five years at Northeastern . . . activism, war, peace, a library which never materialized. Man ' s glory at its highest on the moon, at its lowest with the treatment of the poor. Five years ago everything was normal , but what of today . . . tomorrow? Jeffrey Stohn, Maiden, Mass. Political Science. The past half-decade, 1 believe, has been featured by national and international ferment generated by certain crucial events and by influencial statesmen. Our college years will be remembered as a time when men sought peace at a price of war. Pamela A. Stone. Newport News. Va. Kducation. These are the days of conflict — within the society and within the individual. Perhaps the resolution of the struggle within each individual for peace of mind is a vital prerequisite to world peace. William F. Sullivan, Woburn, Mass. Mathematics. As the years moved on the violence grew and civil disorder thrived. People have become aware of the world around them, and their own capabilities. Great strides are made in the field of medicine to save lives, and yet the Vietnam War continues and young people destroy themselves with powerful drugs. Robert P. Suarez, East Rutherford, N.J. English. This seemingly ever-present slice of years, holding such an impact on our lives, our times and our society, will soon enter into the pages of history and succumb to mankind ' s eternal desire to release the past and prepare for the future. Arthur Suskevich, Nashua, N.H. Business Adm. The past five years have seen a great deal of change in the college way of life, where demonstration has become an action through which much good evil has been done. I am proud to have taken part in this change of Northeastern, where it is being done in an intelligent and responsible manner. It is the process of building a better school not destroying a believed inadaquate one. Charlie Swartz, Marblehead, Mass. Education. My education has caused me to believe life should be viewed with as much emphasis on means of accomplishments as goals. We should help people to help themselves become responsible by providing them with hope, a will to improve, and the needed edu- cation. Robert P. Tardiff, Manchester, Conn. Accounting. The last five years have seen the birth of a period of social awareness, initiated largely through the efforts of those of us in college. I hope we will all continue to work for solutions to the problems of this country, rather than become members of the silent majority. Bernard Tautkus, Whitman, Mass. Management. During the past five years social unrest has predominated in our society. Created by the striving for equality by minority groups and a heightened awareness and involvement by the younger generation. I feel that this unrest, although sometimes violent, is the catalyst which will eventually bring the problems of this nation into focus and final resolution. Peter M. Testagrossa, New London, Conn. Mathematics. These years were a time when students rose up and voiced their opinions on almost everything which caused great upheaval all over the world. I have gained a lot from being part of it all. I only hope that society has been affected as much as I have. Richard J. Thorton, Saugerties, N.Y. Civil Eng. The action taken by the university and many other colleges and universities in the spring of 1970 cannot help but bring to our at- tention that this nation is in trouble. It is a time that America do more for Americans. Bruce Tis, Boston, Mass. Electrical Eng. From my limited observation of individuals, whether singularly or collectively as a society, I have acertained that the most progress occurs when selfish, materialistic, sensual thoughts and actions are replaced with a more spiritualized state of thought, which results in an unselfish love for all mankind. Richard B. Tourangeau, Middletown, Conn. English. To change the presently outrageous conditions of government and society, knowledge must be gained of these laws and institu- tions. We have been lied to long enough. If the pen is really mightier than the sword I will do my part until TH EY no longer sell ink. Sometime you just have to put yourself out. — me 1970 John D. Trachy, Franklin, N.H. Finance Insurance. The past five years have been characterized by change. The deaths of Kennedy and King plus the war have caused us to become concerned and involved. A social consciousness has been acquired that is now a guiding factor in our lives. Sarandos N. Traggis, New London, Ct. Mechanical Eng. The last five years have taught me to try to use every freedom I have to the fullest, while letting others do the same. Only in this way will I always have these freedoms. James E. Trant, Somerville, Mass. Civil Engineering. During the past five years, the most moving thing of importance was the Peace Movement. While I concur with the thoughts I do not agree with the methods. The violence of these years can never be forgotten. It should stand as a model not to be repeat- ed. Mary Ann Tricarico, Millbury. Mass. History. Look to this day, For Yesterday is only a vision; But today well-lived Makes every yesterday A dream of happiness. And every tomorrow A vision of hope. — The Sanskrit Gregory L. Triplett, Bluffton, Ohio, Elec. Eng. The years 1966-71 have been an educational experience. Book learning, although important, has not been as valuable as learn- ing to think, to work, and to live with others. 1 H. Hugh Troutman, Harpswell, Me. Fin. Ins. The recent past has had still undefined and unlimited impact. And what is more revealing than physical confrontations; only to inevitably demand inner examination and hopefully reality. Arthur L. Vaillancourt, Dracut, Mass. Accounting. Campus life has changed to a great extent the same way life in general has changed. People are more concerned with what a per- son contributes to society than with his appearance. People are more free to say what they feel they must. More people are willing to listen to the suggestions of others before giving their own views. Donna Marie (Battista) Vallee, Billerica, Mass. Ed. A time to be born, a time to die . . . A time to laugh, a time to weep . . . A time to dance, a time to mourn . . . A time to build up, a time to break down . . . A time to love, a time to hate . . . A time for war, a time for peace . . A time we may embrace, I swear its not too late. Frank Orlando Vemi, Pert Chester, N.Y. Pharmacy. For the most wealthy nation in the world, we spend more money on promoting mass murder such as wars, germ warfare, chemical warfare, then on fighting man ' s most dreaded enemies: cancer, heart disease, etc. But, this is the disposition of man. Frank M. Vieira, Cambridge, Mass. Fin. Ins. The event I feel most important is the sometime violent, some- times peaceful social revolution characteristic of this period. The result has been a strong and often violent polarization of the members of our society. 1 hope in the end we will all live in harmony no matter what our race, religion, or national origin, or political conviction. Robert E. Vogel Jr., Burlington, Mass. Mech. Eng. Conservatively liberal, Northeastern — Burlington, Country Club, ROTC, computers, soaring, Boston, SDS 4Q, mountain climbing, liberalization, Viet Nam, McCarthy, Chicago, Oct. 15, Canada, Peace-Now!, AMC N.H. 4000, Draft, 239-Mar. 20, Why Biafra? Why Vietnam? Why? Metaphysics, radicalization. Where Now? Why?- Apathy, Effort, Agnew, Frustration. Joseph J. Vitaliano. Long Beach, N.J. Biology. My whole outlook on life has changed since I have been at Northeastern. College has expanded my way of life and helped make some decisions. My studies, my relationship with people of different backgrounds have helped me greatly. But college was also an experience — the War in Viet Nam, pollution, violence, our political system — that showed me what the world is. Richard B. Votapka, Oceanside, N.Y. Civil Eng. Recapitulation ( 1 966-7 1 ) Society of American Military Engineers, Silver Masque Stage Crew. Your Father ' s Moustache Banjoist, Deaths of Robert Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Eisenhower, Moon Landing, Mor- atorium, Mets, American Civil Engineers, Earth Day, National Student Strike. Graduation. James A. Vrabel, Wilsonville, Conn. English. I learned on the road where it ' s only what you know; Now I ' m afraid in the streets of the city. I ' m going out while the hard rain ' s falling — Lord, Lord, don ' t take away my highway shoes. Randal G. Wagner. Allentown, Pa. Electrical Eng. Maybe I ' m amazed. Michael A. Wajer, Baltimore, Md. Power Systems. Borrowing from Thoreau, my life as a student is not completed. My purpose is not to play life or study it but rather to live it earnestly from now until the end. Joel L. Warsof, Millis, Mass. Electrical Engineering. Since these five years have been hectic for me, I can say that an episode of Mission Impossible has ended and a new one begins. Virginia Weidel, Freeport, N.Y. Accounting. To merely say it ' s been an experience is not enough. It ' s been more than an academic education — it ' s been an education about myself, other people and the world. In the microcosm of the large university we have seen politics at play, riots, social unrest, racial problems and more. Hopefully, from this, we have gained an awareness that we did not possess five years ago. Leonard D. Weiner, Lowell, Mass. Marketing. The past five years American society has been severely tested. The needs for greater interaction and understanding between groups, constructive not destructive participation, protection of individual rights, and a government that realizes its obligation to young and future generations are imperative. David Weiner, Medford, Mass. Management. The biggest achievement I have witnessed in the last half-decade is my getting through Northeastern ' s five year co-operative work-school program. One of the big changes noticeable has been the conservative to liberal life-styles of college people. Kenneth E. Weise, Trumbull, Conn. Electrical Eng. Out of the turmoil and relative uneasiness at the last half- decade, some people are beginning to examine closely the forces, events and institutions which have seemingly automatically de- termined their lives. Relevancies and priorities are being es- tablished and hopefully, in the coming decades, solid and con- structive change, long overdue, begin. Richard T. Westcott, Quincy, Mass. Civil Eng. Suppression breeds violence. There are definitely policies and priorities which must be changed. The government and other people in power are obligated to heed those calls whether they are unpleasant or not. A country grows old and stagnant when it tries to suppress unrest. Everyone suffers from stilling ideas which could pave the way for a more moral and just society. Arthur L. Wing, Auburn. Me. Accounting. The change for the better in social concern is in danger of being slowed by Agnew and the Silent Majority. Come mothers and fathers, throughout the land. And don ' t criticize what you can ' t understand, Your sons and your daughters are beyond your command. The old world is rapidly aging . . . — Bob Dylan Allan Noah Williams, Waban, Mass. History. The evolution of man is a series of reactions to or against beliefs, institutions, and ways of life, not merely an evolving of events and ideas. New eras build on past experiences but are of- ten responses of dislike for existing ways. Hence, the hypocrisy of our social order has created reactions of frustration and hatred directed toward the standing social order. Michael Winter, Hyde Park, Mass. Marketing. In five years we have seen a progression of war both exterior and interior that has divided our nation. Our values have drastically changed, we despise our system, yet we exploit it. The Revolu- tion has changed our society, but the latter will destroy it. Paul R. Winters Jr., Belmont, Mass. Management. Educated in a period of crisis one comes to realize that only through sincere and orderly dissent can one search for truth and understanding concerning the problems of man. IraWinthrop, Revere, Mass. Mechanical Engineering. The past five years have been a time of great social and political change in the country. This is reflected by the college students ' new and increased involvement in the society in which he lives. Hopefully, the student and society will benefit from it. Brian James Wyman, Lowell, Mass. Political Science. Violence has played a major part in the history of the past five years. Assassin ' s bullets and revolutionary ' s bombs have done little to alleviate social ills. The country has become dividied and polarized. We are the unwilling Led by the unqualified. To do the unnecessary. For the ungrateful. — a Vietnam veteran Sally Yardley, Andover, Mass. Nursing. My reaction to the events of the past half-decade is one of anxi- ety, despair and hope — Anxiety ever the countless unreasoned murders; Despair that change is often ignored if realized; Hope that our generation will continue to strive for peace and love, not only in relation to themselves but also others. Alan A. Aldrich, Quincy, Mass. Economics. The years 1966-1971 have been hardest years for the youths of this country. Having an unwanted war hanging over their heads with no end in sight; and watching those leaders they could iden- tify with being killed or persecuted. I hope that in the very near future that a leader will emerge to bring this country back together. David Amiralian, Burlington, Mass. Education. There ' s something happenin ' here. What it is ain ' t exactly clear . . . There ' s battle lines being drawn, Nobody ' s right if every- body ' s wrong. Young people speaking their minds, Gettin ' so much resistance from behind. Our generation must finally solve the domestic problems that have been passed from father to son. Larry M. Beinema, Whitinsville, Mass. Management. The obsession by the United States with the Indo-China War from 1965-1970 and more than 40,000 battlefield deaths profoundly effected the thinking of college students such as myself. Although rapid social change was evidenced many problems seemed intensified on the college campus, such as rac- ism, drug culture, crime, and political expression. Susan Bernstein, Linden, N.J. Sociology. New faces, new friends . . . New England winters . . . Jan. 14, 1967 . . . The passing of Martin Luther King . . . frustrating ac- ademics . . . friends and more friends . . . The passing of Rob- ert F. Kennedy . . . astronauts on the moon, poverty on the earth ... an evening with S. Hiyakawa . . . Kent State . . . STRIKE . . . Vietnam . . . more exams . . . graduation at last ...June 26, 1971. Ellen Jill Berkowitz, Lake Mahopac, N.Y. Education. The past half-decade has enabled me to see America as it really is. The assassinations of such men as Bobby Kennedy, and Mar- tin Luther King, the mass murders in Vietnam, the shooting of students who were exercising their right of dissent, were events which had great significance for me. It has been gloomy! John H. Blackburn, Uxbridge, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Students have become a major driving force of efforts seeking reform. Campus reactions to events, however, have all to often been spontaneous and violent If we are to improve our society we must learn to temper our knowledge with wisdom. Kent D. Bradley, Sturbridge, Mass. Mathematics. The youth movement in America is a Communist plot Unless something is done soon to curb the reactionary repression by the Establishment the Communists will emerge victorious. Robert D. Brautigam, East Will iston, N.Y. Drama. What ' s her face Simplicity and Absurdity Theatre James J. Brennan, Quincy, Mass. Journalism. It was the worst of times. It was the best of times. War did not cease. But we worked for peace. Christine Brisbon, Somerset, Mass. Biology. The past half-decade has been a time of radical change brought about by awareness. This awareness has been exemplified by the students of our time in reaction to the Vietnam War, Kent State murders, racial integration, and increased crime rates. Campus unrest has been the students ' way to demonstrate his protest against the happenings of our time. Ralph G. Brown. Braintree, Mass. Electrical Eng. There ' s were the themes of a half-decade: Assertions of love and expressions of hatred; dipoles of Woodstock and Chicago, Mc- Carthy and Agnew, hippy and hardhat, sexual freedom and social concern; napalm, hydrogen bombs, polarization, uncertainty. Northeastern University 1966-1971. Richard H. Brown, Wayland, Mass. History. Escalating the war, Nixon and Agnew have failed to defeat the Vietnamese, who persevere in fighting for their independence. These two demagogues, as AGENTS PROVACATEUR, are do- ing everything in their capacity to discourage peaceful solutions to domestic issues. Allan W. Cameron, Milford, Mass. Finance. College has provided an opportunity for learning about our- selves, our environment, and, above all, about the imperfection of man and his institutions. Let us seek reformation through per- fection of ourselves; our institutions will follow. Let ' s improve, not destroy the traditions our forefathers have bestowed upon Paul N. Campus, Ipswich, Mass. Modern Languages Reflecting upon the past half-decade of oppressions and turmoil in American society, it makes me wonder whatever happened to the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Neither can I look to the future with optimism. ArnieCann, So. Essex, Mass. Accounting. After over 1750 days and $6500 it has reached an end. All hail Northeastern? Ronald L. Capaln, Waba, Mass. Management After five years of hearing new answers to old questions, I pray five years from now the new way will prove to be the right way, for there will be no turning back. Paula A. Cardran. Haverhill. Mass. Psychology. The past decade has been one of immense change. More people have become disillusioned with the idea that problems will work themselves out . . . Action has been made a vital part of all groups wishing to see progress. Perhaps the black movement, their struggle to attain inalienable rights, began the revolution against existing conditions. Repression has helped people realize our government is only practicing equality for the few. Paul C. Cargill, Higham, Mass. Management So many Gods, so many creeds, so many paths that wind and wind, while just the art of being kind is all the sad world needs. Enzo Carrara, Framingham. Mass. Industrial Eng. Within the past five years, my ideas and attitudes on life have changed considerably. The atmosphere which surrounds me is one of perplexity and turmoil. I have become aware and also ap- preciate the simple patterns of life. At the same time, 1 realize that we ourselves have made confusion out of this simplicity. Frank J. Casasanto Shrewsbury, Mass. Electrical Eng. When the violence of hunger, unemployment, pollution, insuf- ficient housing and education has ended. When the violence of exploitation and oppression of the peoples has ended. Then we will have achieved true equality, freedom, and peace. Candace Susan Chung, Fall River, Mass. Psychology Five years. It seems like a long ti me. But is it really? We have discovered that there is a need to bring every problem out into the open — not only to accept the beautiful, but the ugly also. Thomas F. Codyer, Acton, Mass. Psychology. Nothing can justify the violence in Man ' s history, ancient or new. Perhaps if he learned from his mistakes, it might be jus- tified. But, as the last few years have shown, man has not learned from his violence. Michael S. Cogan, Saugus, Mass. Electrical Kng. Who; what; when; where; how; why? These questions must be answered before one can take his place in society. College an- swers what and why. Co-op answers when and how. Society dic- tates where. The latest social upheavals are concerned with who. Janice Leslie Cohen, Revere, Mass. Journalism. 1. Live and let live. 2. You could say we want to be free. I can say some day we will be, 3. Hope helps us pass the days, brings sunshine, gives courage to go on, gives the young spirit. But does tomorrow come for those who do not believe? Kenneth A. Cohen, Taunton, Mass. Chemical Kng. We students at Northeastern, like other students all over the nation, have participated in a movement — somewhat vague and undefined. Yet its idealistic axiom of creating a better world has somehow survived. It is still a dream, time will tell how much a reality we can make it. Things cannot be changed overnight, but eventually . . . Angela Cristini. Palisades Park, N.J. Biology. Incongruities: 1966-71 — Halt the bombing . . . Send more troops to bring peace . . . napalm . . . Invade Cambodia for its own protection . . . radio active waste dumped in ocean . . . peanut, peanut, the university supports the war . . . Bobby Seale bound and gagged in a court of law . . . morality and con- science . . . the girl at Kent State screamed . . . Richard T. Curley, Whitman, Mass. Political Sci. These years have been an awakening of sorts for all of mankind. Our globe is tiny, still we have reached the moon. Man has not yet learned to reach his fellow man. Let us all devote ourselves to this task. Michael Thomas Doran, Lexington, Mass. Ind. Rel. The beginning of wisdom is a just appraisal of one ' s ignorance. This familiar quotation is the best answer I have to the ques- tions of these past five years. I only hope that all people and all nations reflect on this quotation and help one another. Thomas Doran, Lexington, Mass. Sociology. I wasn ' t going to bother writing this it ' s been said too many times before it even sounds trite writing it but even the ones you thought heard it didn ' t and the other ones didn ' t even try but that ' s a selfish attitude that has no place in the world one must find their own way but I still don ' t understand why Paul F. Doucette, Braintree, Mass. Phys. I ' d. The past five years have been a good time to be in college — to be exposed to the questioning and uprooting of the philosophies, life styles and traditions. To me the 60 ' s have been the complacency years. In the 70 ' s will be confrontation; discus- sion and I hope understanding between men of ideas. William N. Duffey Jr., Bedford, Mass. Mkt The time has come, the walrus said, to speak of many things. Of shoes and ships and sealing wax, of cabbages and kings. — Lewis Carroll So much was promised and talked about in the sixties. It hurt most to lose the Kennedys, and the boys overseas — when will that bullshit stop? So much promised, but . . . maybe the walrus is right? David Eastwick, Proctor, Vt Electrical Eng. Stop the Vietnam War! Will this war ever end? The Moratorium is the answer! What good did that do? Ecology . . . surely every- one wants a clean environment . . . stamp out pollution! Why isn ' t anyone listening? Tony L. Edger, Harrisburg, Ky. Pharmacy. From the Bluegrass of Kentucky to the Blue Hills of Boston, a Southern Liberal sums up his Northeastern experiences per se: Quote: In all matter of opinion, our adversaries are insane. — Samuel Langhorne Clemens Shaun G. Fggleston, Framingham, Mass. Mgt. Why does the richest and most highly educated nation continue to carry on senseless war which threatens to tear it asunder? Why does this same country polarize itself on all issues? Why does emotion rule over love and intelligence? Richard L. Flkins, Brattleboro, Vt. Pol. Sci. Reactions — In a university everyone chooses the same subjects, without verbs or predicates, and the subjects endure: glorious past, unlimited opportunity, challenging future, dedication, inspired leadership, enlightened followership, rededication, moral fibre, spiritual values, outer space, inner man, higher ideals . . . Frank E. Federman, Peabody, Mass. Elec. Eng. Politics, war and social upheaval pervade this period, but the widespread realization that we must stop the waste and pollu- tion of our environment ' s resources is to me the most signifi- cant occurance of the past five years. Leslie (Finn) Feldman. Quincy. Mass. Soc. The past half-decade has been one of new awarenesses. People are becoming concerned with the ills of the society which they have created. Some are seeking to ameliorate it, as I am. others to destroy it. Only when these factions join will they be able to bring about change and the betterment of the society. Nancy (Fraser) Ferguson, Amherst, N.H. Nursing. These past five years have been an experience of learning; knowl- edge of technicalities and of people. It has been a leading out to a new way of life, to an awareness of other concerns rather than just my own. As journeying through life, I have learned to live by the way. Scott Charles Ferguson, Salem Mass. Hducation. Teaching high school students about their own environment is what I will do, or social working if teaching does not work out. Thoreau had his Walden Pond and I shall have my own high school in which to create my own destiny. Gerhard Fichtl, Hauppauge, N.Y. Chem. Eng. These past five years have been filled with happiness and sor- row, war and no peace, Johnson and Humphrey, Nixon and Ag- new, Kennedy and King, and Mary and Me. Obviously times of mixed emotions. Jane E. Firth, Brookline, Mass. Recreation. These five years will be remembered for events ranging from two assassinations, the continuation of a useless war which led to an all-college strike, and meaningless deaths to scientific breakthroughs such as man ' s landing on the moon. These events and others have emphasized the worthlessness of prejudice and war and a stronger desire for peace and togetherness. Leslie Forman, Maiden, Mass. Management I feel over the past five years there has emerged a greater aware- ness of the troubles that have confronted society. The answers are not to be found by radical action, but rather a peaceful method of working to improve the system, which has given us the freedom to change it Thomas C. Gaputis. Roslindale, Mass. Chemical Engineering. Change, merely for the sake of change, secures destruction and promises nothing. The foundation is solid. Let us rebuild upon that foundation, and thus insure the integrity of the structure. Donna Gatnarek, Wallington, New Jersey English. Recent events assure me the world is a gigantic cauldron. Waters and oils are hopelessly spun about by the elusive ladle of human nature. The mixture is doomed because barely an ingredient understands the properties of another. Sara Griffin, Schenectady, N.Y. Physical Education. The times will change but pray the times will never change the now Glenn Edward Gately, Weymouth, Mass. Marketing. The most significant thing about my five years at Northeastern was the amazing awareness that the student world had for what surrounded it. I ' ll never forget the cries of injustice and the at- tempts and suggestions that my contemporaries made. In years to come these words I have written may seem foolish but only time will tell. Aloysius Richard Geelhaar, Baltimore, M.O. Math. The past half-decade has been one of hope. There have been beginnings in a total search for peace, especially among the young. Racial barriers have shown evidence of falling, although the cost has been tremendous. I can only hope that these trends continue in the future, and that we obtain our goals of peace and brotherhood. Mark L. Grossman, Framingham, Mass. Management. I am very thankful to be involved in a university during the years in which the world recognized youth not merely as a resident but as a productive being with contributions to make to society. I am proud to be part of the Woodstock nation where youth from a variety of backgrounds proved to the world that 400,000 human beings could live together in peace. William M. Hall, Dewitt, N.Y. Mechanical Eng. The most significant thing of the past decade was the way a small group of students took the Cambodian issue and duped most of the rest of us into thinking we had had our constitutional rights infringed upon and that we were revolutionaries out to set things right. All we succeeded in doing was losing six weeks of class. Nancy Hailey, Woburn, Mass. Psychology. As a freshman, I entered college seeking the answer. nior, I am leaving college seeking the question. Richard A. Heath Jr., Waltham, Mass. Sociology. The people demand an end to the war in Vietnam, but it goes on. They demand an end to oppression, but it continues. They demand a government responsive to their needs, but it remain responsive only to corporate interests. What happens next? Monroe Heyman, Boston, Mass. Psychology. In 1966, students wanted reform, today complete change. The leaders of youth have been eliminated either by assassination or by political maneuvering. The war in Vietnam has been extended into Cambodia. Civil rights are still in the I950 ' s. The system ' s promises have not come true. In the last five years, I have grown tired of peaceful protest. Michael A. Hickox, Boston, Mass. Philosophy. These years have been headlined by war and violence. Yet love survives and relentlessly tries to make the world a place of joy. I pray we can help to bring celebration into the world and that I may read this in the year 2020 and be glad. William Hoag, Cranston, R.I. Industrial Eng. After one hundred and ninety five years of existence, America ' s melting pot has yet to feel the presence of a flame. Alan L. Hooker, Laconia, N.H. Mechanical Eng. 1 came wanting to be an engineer. I leave wondering if I will ever be one. Richard W. Hunter, Abington, Mass. Electrical Eng. Awareness of our social ills has become increasingly manifest over the past decade. From civil unrest to open revolt, this con- cern has been prominent display. Awareness alone, however, does not necessarily assure meaningful reform. The events of the next decade will determine whether this awareness will bring about a mere harmonious state, or one crippled by the forces of anarchy. Peter Hutchinson, Nashua, N.H. Mechanical ting. The sixties will go down in history as an age of revolution. The young, as well as many others, will continue to revolt to build a better world, a more pleasant environment, a more just social order, and greater freedom for the individual. William C. Hutnick, Maiden, Mass. Marketing. The years 1966 to 1971 will always mean education to me. Not only what I have learned from books and professors, but also from simply existing and perceiving. I feel the most important principle I learned is that education, money, and power are only part of one ' s experience and peace, love, and freedom are also matters of real consequence. Henry Jabzanka, Lowell, Mass. Psychology. The last half of the preceding decade and the beginning of the present decade mark the time during which a substantial number of people realized that it was time for a change. Social, political, and economic change is the answer; but these changes must be brought about within the present system if the nation is to sur- vive and be of benefit to all. Michael D. Jacques, Somerville, Mass. Marketing. A time for us there will never be, when hate and greed have left this world for love that ' s free. A time when peace abounds on earth, and flourishes with true people who now must hide. They who work for death instead of peace. Harbo P. Jensen. Needham. Mass. Chemistry. Although all of our problems are not purely technological, the solutions will probably involve a large usage of technology. In evaluating possible solutions, we must also consider new problems which the solutions may create. It is sometimes easi- er to prevent an anticipated problem than it is to solve the problem after it has arrived and become implanted. James F. Keaney, Allston, Mass. Spanish. The sole accomplishment of one who overturns the applecart is to throw good and bad apples on the ground. Selective separa- tion and adequate disposal of the bad— while maintaining the transport vehicle ' s stability — is the best means to satisfactory reform. Susan E. Karlin, W. Roxbury, Mass. Physical Therapy. I feel non-violent protest is probably the only tactic that will allow us to reach peace. The grape pickers used it and in 5 years accomplished their goals. If we could all get together and work non-violently for change we could do it too. James T. Kelly, Jr. Roslindale, Mass. Accounting. Concern for ecology, the environment, population must result in action if man, who is now the endangered species is to survive . . . the quest will cost handsomely in both money and sweat. Some say it is impossible . . . We should not forget two impor- tant things. WHO WE ARE and HOW WE GOT HERE. In short, this is America — nothing is impossible. Kenneth C. Keyser, Burlington, Mass. Chemical Eng. Northeastern has been a stepping stone of life, but though the stone may have a strong, time-enduring base, it has a many generation-worn surface. The stone needs replacing. Man ' s long history indicates the next stepping stones will suffer the same problem. Chester A. Kobierski, Salem, Mass. Management. The last five years have been years of drastic changes. Hopefully these changes are pointed toward progress? This question will only be answered by carrying on with these changes, and by indi- vidually trying to change ourselves for the better. The last five years at Northeastern has had a major role in my personal devel- opment, the direction will again hopefully be for the better. Kathleen Kleponis, Hyde Park, Mass. Nursing. Five years of studying, working and becoming more aware of mankind ' s problems is but small preparation in the process of gaining the courage and social and moral consciousness neces- sary to make improvements in this life. Jeffrey A. Kubrick, Roslyn His., N.Y. Economics. The past half-decade has been one of great social, economic and political change. The enlightenment of many people to present situations and their increased participation in various causes will show America is a progressive society and can cope with its many problems. Fred LaSelva, Quincy, Mass. Marketing. The experience of this university has only proved that a factory does not produce anything by stereotyped non-individual beings. It is the time put into living that develops an educated man. And this analysis is a little silly. Fred Lehtonen, East Sandwich, Mass. Biology. I feel that in becoming the greatest nation in the history of the world, we have destroyed the quality of life in the United States. 1 think we have become a nation of ideologies rather than a na- tion of people. Pamela (Hunters) Leonard, Roslindale. Mass. Sociology. My reaction to tne past five years has been a growing disrespect to those dissenters who do not allow dissent, who try to im- pose their ideals upon others and ridicule those who do not agree with them. Laurence S. Liebson, Boston, Mass. Industrial Engineering. The most significant events of the last five years are manifested in the changing attitude of the academic community. Students have become keenly aware of the environmental and sociological needs of our society. Future classes will continue which I am proud to say, we initiated. James A. Lloyd, Norwell, Mass. Management. Life at Northeastern has not only broadened my concepts of social behavior but it has also helped prepare me to experience a more meaningful relationship with the people and events in the environment. If these were the only values of college life, which of course they are not, then it would undoubtably be a worth- while venture. I believe all of us have learned from our experi- ences at Northeastern and that ' s what it ' s all about. Robert D. Lovett, Canton, Mass. Marketing. It is the era of hypocrites. People scream against discrimi- nation, but demand discrimination in different forms. Cries are heard of lack of concern, when those who cry are the least con- cerned. It is time to become honest with ourselves. David Allan Ludden, Abington, Mass. Industrial Engineering. The shifting of personal ideas and beliefs from suppression to expression has created a reaction that encompasses the entire range of human emotions. The results will emerge when we in turn must judge our children. John J. Lynch, Cochituate, Mass. Electrical Engineering. The dominant feature of the past half-decade has been the rate at which the world has been changing. Today we seem on the verge of even greater change. Our responsibility should be to see that it is peaceful rather than violent. Maureen T. Lynch, Dedham, Mass. Nursing. The last half decade has witnessed a shift in the emphasis of ed- ucation: as freshmen institutions filled us with fact and opinion: as seniors we are educated to seek fact and form our own opinions. Joseph L. Manfredi, Newton, Mass. Management. I feel that the past few years have changed my life in such a way that I realize now that the war, civil rights and many of our other problems have to be solved by working together and not by violence. Ronald W. Mansulis, S. Boston, Mass. Economics. I entered college awed by the efficiency of the human system of organization. I leave fearful that technology has thrust that sys- tem or organization beyond its capacity to function, and con- vinced that the reassertion of man ' s personality, his humanity, is our imperative need. Robert P. Mazzarino, Saugus, Mass. Civil Engineering. The Paths of glory lead but to the grave. Walter R. McCowat, Manasquan, N.J. Management. The past 5 years have probably been the most troubled half- decade that the U.S. has ever endured. The violent deaths of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy, the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, the Student Strike, and of course S. E. Asia. Probably the most meaningful event for me was the Strike in which virtually every college student across the nation banded together to say, Just give peace a chance. Robert L. McCrensky, Lexington, Mass. Management. The troubles of the world have often played upon the minds of NU students and faculty. Some go left, some go right, while I have chosen the attributes of both in order to maintain a flexi- ble position and a flexible mind. Stephen J. McGrail, Wakefield, Mass. Management. In the past decade this country and the world have changed greatly. There still, however, must be more changes made if we expect to live in peace and harmony with out neighbors. The events that have acted as catalysts to bring about these changes have been the assassination, Vietnam, and the much-needed Civil Rights Act. Warren C. McLean Jr., Somerville, Mass. History. Today youth holds the key to the future of the world. They are concerned and willing to take action against the many problems which beset the world from war to pollution. I think the world will be in good hands. Steven W. Miles, Auburn, Me. Electrical Eng. In the past five years of college at NU, I have learned many things — some in examinations, some on my co-op assignment, and some in my everyday school life. I think that the most im- portant think that I have learned in these five years is to never stop learning. Joseph Mitola III, St Laurel, Md. Electrical Eng. Israel Vietnam The Red Guard Marx Mao Ho Safeguard Martin Bobby John The Pueblo and N. Korea are drowning Alexander Dubcek OH LSD SALT STP NO and with everyman doing that which is right in his own eyes i repented and became a son of man i died now here i am again; so should you Stephen J. Mosher, St. Piesque Isle. Me. Accounting. The last five years might be characterized as one long search for easj v ictories over the nation ' s problems. The problem for the next half-decade is to change the national priorities before its too late to win victories. William F. O Neil Jr. Somerville, N.J. Political Sci. The American student has come of age; he has become a political activist in the same tradition as his European counterpart. As a result of his activism social values have and are being reap- praised. Our time has been called the Age of Aquarius; it should be the Age of Awakening. Turtle races went out of vogue; the race to save the world from ecological starvation became real and im- portant. Jean L. Packard, Stoughton. Mass. English. 1966-1971; Beatles, Dylan, Led Zepplin; King, Kennedy; Johnson, Nixon, Agnew; Hash, Grass, Pollution; Poetry; Blacks, Indians, Women; Vietnam. Middle Hast; Minis. Midis, Bell-bottoms; Demonstrations, Riots, Strikes; SDS, YAF, ROTC, PAX; Blois, Wilmarth, Sanders, Michaels; Grey Brick, Greenhope, Great change. Richard B. Packard, Duxbury, Mass. Finance Insurance. During the past five years, national and local events and vastly different groups have been changing our way of life at an increas- ingly rapid rate. As participants of these events, we must take time to reflect on their usefulness to ourselves and to our fellow man. David L. Pair, Dorchester. Mass. Psych. I have observed black and white men and women spearhead the process of social change. Some have been for the betterment of mankind, some have caused the deterioration of society to set in. This society functions on systems. If a negative change is asked for in the system, it means the system is inadequate. David M. Palmieri, Roslindale, Mass. Mgt. Looking back on the past half-decade, I realize that it is not from what man has descended that is important, but rather to what he has descended that has created the state our world is in. For education and technology are only as good as the way they are used. John Richard Parnagian. Roslindale, Mass. Econ. During my life at Northeastern, I believe above all I have learned how to think rationally. This skill has helped me first take a bet- ter look at Vietnam, Kent State and the Student Strike, then to discover my real feelings. Northeastern and time together have given me something that will stay for the rest of my life. John Philbrook, No. Quincy, Mass. English. My high school yearbook motto, lightly tossed off, has deepened with meaning through my college years to become too true: Life is a farce. Lynn Phillips. Bronx, N.Y. Sociology. We see the power of the bomb and preach love. We see limited resources and were concerned about ecology. We see our parents ' materialism and with it their emotional barrenness and we reject wealth if we must wager our souls. David G. Phinney, Eatontown, N.J. Mktg. It will be satisfying to look back and know that Northeastern and the cooperative education contributed to a more worldly and pragmatic youth and not to the ranks of those who, over idealis- tic, impractical, and destructive, hindered those desiring con- structive change. Roger L. Pilotte. Manchester N.H. Mktg. Times change and so do people, college has helped me see that. Co-op has subjected me to different people and systems, made me realize constructive work can be done through those sys- tems. Life is what you make it. My college education has broadened my ability to cope with changes and challenges. Robert D. Player, Cambridge, Mass. Physics. The last five years: hypocricy — the Vietnam War, the Draft and the Vote; society — militant, corrupt and sick; yourself — the awakening and realization of yourself, good or bad, life or death. Peace. Paul Rapo, Southbridge, Mass. Economics. I will study now, for someday my time will come. — Abraham Lincoln Northeastern has provided an urban atmosphere for understand- ing the social crisis that plagues this nation. Someday our time will come to confront the issues that have plagued us — war, rac- ism and repression. T Jay Ribaga, Brockton, Mass. Ind. Relations. I do my thing, and you do your thing. I am not in this world to live up to your expectations; And you are not in this world to live up to mine. You are you and I am I, And if by chance we find each other, it is beautiful. Joseph Riendeau, Cambridge, Mass. Acct. I am dismayed by the violence that is prevelant throughout the world, war in Vietnam, Cambodia and the Mid Hast, violence in the classroom and race riots in the streets. Where will it end? Can we find peaceful co-existence among men? The future — if war doesn ' t put an end to man, pollution may. Peace. William D. Sheehan, Woonsocket, R.I. CE. The times forced me to have a long overdue sense of awareness. It violently demonstrated that individual complacency is intoler- able in our society — that the U.S. is not godly in all its efforts. Most important it developed my personal free expression, which regardless of dissenting tones, is the basis for democracy. Susan Silver, Brookline, Mass. Phys. Therapy. The past five years have brought social, political and economic upheavals. The disturbances caused the college campus to change from a hard-shelled protective other world to a hotbed of unrest and disillusionment. Let s hope the Class of 1976 can look back on their college years as peaceful. John E. Silvia, Somerset, Mass. Economics. Do not look here for profound statements. You will not find any. Only a true one. Good-bye. Richard B. Sims, Chelsea, Mass. Mech. Eng. The mid-segment of the 20th century will be marked as man ' s confrontation with conflicts long avoided: the individual vs. the group; man vs. his environment; man vs. God. He finds the stock answers no longer satisfy. Man cannot solve his problems by en- treating powers outside his own realm. Mark I. Smith, Boston, Mass. Fin. Ins. The most challenging, interesting, maturing and dynamic period of my life is now coming to an end. I have witnessed this century ' s greatest change not only in our academic community, but in society as a whole. Change has been important but I hope future classes do not use it recklessly. Karen Stable, Beverly, Mass. Education. Carl Mario Sutera, Boston, Mass. Mech. Eng. In the past half-decade I ' ve seen a remarkable change in the reception of feelings and attitudes of the young by the old Un- fortunately in my own estimation, the opportunity afforded by such a favorable change has, by and large, been wasted on imma- ture violence and hotheaded extremism of all sorts. Warren H. Talbot, Medford, Mass. Hnglish. All skill ought to be exerted for universal good; every man has owed much to others, and ought to repay the kindness that he has received. — Samuel Johnson Roger Thomas Tierney Jr., Dedham. Mass. Kd. After five of the most harrowing yet meaningful years of my life. I look optimistically to the future and hope that the mistrust and misunderstanding among people will pass into eternal oblivion, never again to haunt mankind. Marshall Toback, Newburge, N.Y. Finance and Insurance. Since I came to Northeastern, many tragic events have hap- pened. There has been three major assassinations namely (two Kennedy ' s and Martin Luther King). There have been large numbers of Americans killed in Vietnam. Let us all stop and think of what these men have given their lives for and strive to make this a better world to live in. JohnToohil Jr., Waltham, Mass. Mechanical Lngineering. The years 1966-197! were ones of violent termoil and change. Changes for better, for worse; women ' s liberation, abortion, use of drugs, police riots, student riots, student-faculty commit- tees, strikes, and course changes. I am a participant and an ob- server, mostly I hope a participant, on the right side not neces- sarily the winning side, or the side which draws the most atten- tion. Robert Torbin, Methuen, Mass. Mechanical Lngineering. Attitudes towards life and love have changed drastically during my years at Northeastern. People were more open with their love yet more apprehensive towards life. Old standards are challenged, new ones are being established. I think for the best. Steven Trehub, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Management. Someone poked a small hole in the balloon that surrounds us. And minds rushed out and saw the boundaries that had con- tained them. The hole has gotten bigger, the balloon is collaps- ing. A lot of minds will be blown out. Raymond Tuller, Boston, Mass. Management Surviving in these dynamic yet troubled times has made people adhere to many things, yet has produced many followers merely because it is easier to adhere than to dessent Much of my gen- eration needs desperately to adhere to something that adults sometimes fail to see — idealism. I hope that we will realize what is crystalizing in the rising generations and respond in a positive way. Arthur W. Tunnell. Southampton. N.Y. Industrial Relations. The pendulum swings: They say when will you take up your re- sponsibilities? We pause, wondering What are my responsi- bilities? They say, Look at me, I ' m successful. And we say, But you don ' t understand your children. They say, Grow up it ' s a cruel world And we say, If I grow up like you it will always be so. They say. Don ' t be so idealistic — you can ' t change human nature. But all progress was once only an idea. Jeffrey M. Vichnick, Bronx. N.Y. Phys. I d. I feel the world has not changed, merely the views of its inhabi- tants. The world in its gross physical state is the product of each man ' s individual state of mind. A university such as ours has allowed us to look at our world with a better focus than we previously had. David E. Walsh, Belmont, Mass. Marketing. Although youth may still be misunderstood, there has been for the first time an attempt, made out of fear and necessity, to in- terpret them. Marc Webb, Waltham, Mass. I conomics. (Five years) . . . realizations of alternatives to what is . . . as- suming the freedom to change people and institutions . . . at- tempting to stop the change on all levels . . . frustration, frus- tration, frustration . . . more determination for deeper change . . . attempts to build institutions of change . . . frustration, repression, nevertheless need for change. Bruce D. Weeks, N. Weymouth, Mass. Philosophy. ' Most people do not take heed of the things they encounter, nor do they grasp them even when they have learned about them, al- though they suppose they do. Much learning does not teach understanding. — Heraclitus — fragments 57 6 Benjamin L. Weiner. Maiden. Mass. Civil Eng. The years between 1966-71 saw an increasing involvement of people participating in outward demonstrations of their feelings. The silent majority was fictional since everyone took stands on war. racial, political and economic issues. 1 was changed from a sit-by-and-watch-attitude to a get-out-and-do-something attitude during and after the Student Strike. Peace. Susan Werner, Hamden. Conn. Knglish. We are now entering the era of the videoshere where fact is the enemy of truth. The spiraling system of life will eventually bring us around to a great age of compromise. Stanislaw A. Wejtunik Jr., New Bedford, Mass. Elec. Eng. It is known that systems attempt to remain static. Any forces used to attempt change will cause an equal force from within to stop the change. It is therefore easier and more beneficial to change the system from within. Alan I ' . Wurdeman, Nashua, N.H. Journalism. Inverse Reaction, a time of Ups and Downs: The cost of education went up while the quality went down, the price of war rose, the country heads for depression, one Eagle landed on the moon while on earth another shook soot from its feathers. Kevin W. Wynn, Prescue Isle, Me. Chemical Eng. In my five years at Northeastern. I ' ve seen a lot of changes in myself and society. Most of these changes were met by insis- tence or repression. 1 give this advice: Don ' t let the bastards wear you down. Harry Targehn Yuan, Tappita, Liberia (West Africa) Elec-Eng. The sensitivity of students to local and international issues has been astonishingly heart warming. Continued concern demon- strated positively could channel technology for non-destructive services to mankind, and make the Earth peaceful and better. I therefore salute the concerned generation — my fellow students. Henry Ziewacz, Hartford, Conn. Psychology. The study of academic psychology has convinced me that un- desirable personality traits such as nervousness and quick temper to a cause as vague and undefinable as human nature. Equipped with such knowledge one can trace the causes of such habits; and with enough patience one can effect changes in one ' s personality. Linda Abele Boston, Mass. Physical Therapy Edward Adajian New Britain, Ct. Mechanical l£ng. Frederick L. Aiello Brighton, Mass. Marketing William G. Alcusky Weymouth, Mass. Electrical Eng. Julianna M. Alexander Dorchester, Mass. Education William R. Alford Marblehead, Mass. Accounting Richard C. Andersen Westwood, Mass. Electrical Eng. Paul R. Anderson Brockton, Mass. Management Robert M. Anderso n James F. Andrews Michael J. Angieri Marguerite Anker Hanover, Mass. Taunton, Mass. West Hartford, Ct. Boston, Mass. Electrical Engineering Management Civil Engineering Physical Education Joseph J. Antista Glenn D. Appleton Evelyn Ashey Methuen, Mass. Brockton, Mass. Somerville, Mass Education Electrical Eng. Education Nabil A. Atiya West Newton, Mass. Civil Engineering Joseph C. Aurelia Daniel J. Auerman Susan Ayer John R. Ayers Arlington, Mass. Franklin Sq., N.Y. Scituate, Mass. Weston, Mass. Education Electrical Eng. Psychology Chemical Eng. Richard Asirgan Paul F. Baeri Richard E. Bagley Norwood, Mass. Morganville, N.J. Springfield, Mass. Electrical Eng. Finance Insurance Electrical Eng. Paul H. Baizman Maiden, Mass. Electrical Eng. Arthur M. Baker Jr. Randolph, Mass. Accounting Robert L. Baker Westwood, Mass. Education Beverly A. Banks Taunton, Mass. Physical Education Frank A. Baragona West Orange, N.J. Civil Engineering Noel D. Baratta Belmont, Mass. Civil Engineering Norman F. Barber Brookline, Mass. Industrial Eng. Thomas J. Barrerra Hudson, Mass. Civil Engineering Suzanne M. Barrett West Roxbury, Mass. Nursing Thomas E. Barron Warwick, R.l. Civil Engineering Bruce F. Barry Milton, Mass. Education David P. Bartolini West Medford, Mass. Civil Engineering Betty A. Barsevich Boston, Mass. Physical Education Joan E. Baumber Quincy, Mass. Nursing Susan L. Bawn Boston, Mass. Physical Therapy Linda C. Baxendale Whitinsville, Mass. Pharmacy 345 Paul D. Beaulieu Janis Beder Salem, Mass. Randolph. Mass Chemical Eng. Education Joyce Bell Patrick K. Bellande Everett. Mass. Elmhurst, N.Y. Nursing Marketing Carol E. Belletti Walpole, Mass. Education Norman J. Bellive Boston, Mass. Accounting Richard P. Benko East Greenbush, N.Y. Electrical Eng. Keith Bennett Steven C. Benson Raymond E. Bergiel Fran Bergman Lovell, Me. Revere, Mass. Winthrop, Mass. Brighton, Mass Marketing Chemical Eng. Education Drama Ellen J. Berkowitz Lake Mahopac, N.Y. Education Annette H. Berman Dorchester. Mass. Education Edward H. Berman Maiden, Mass. Civil Engineering Stephen Berowitz Fairlawn, N.J. Accounting David H. Berube Nashua, N.H. Chemical Eng. Ann D. Berin Boston. Mass. Sociology Rocco R. Bianchi Johnstown, N.Y. Chemical Eng. Michael A. Biasini Johnstown, N.Y. Industrial, N.Y. Anthony J. Bilotta Norwood, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Gloria M. Bizelia Arlington, Mass. Education John H. Blackburn Uxbridge, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Francis X. Blais Medford, Mass. Biology Mark J. Blass Karen L. Blomquist Tamar A. Bois Frank N. Boncoi do Maiden, Mass. Staten Island, N.Y. Taunton, Mass. Braintree, Mass. Accounting Nursing Education Electrical Kng. Paul Bond Brighton, Mass. Education Richard C. Boston Bridgewater, Mass. Civil Engineering Charles R. Bourgoin Lynn, Mass. Accounting Aileen E. Bowers Boston, Mass. Physical Therapy Kenneth R. Bradford Abington, Mass. Electrical Eng. Paul J. Bradley Dorchester, Mass. Electrical Eng. Kevin J. Bratton Billerica, Mass. Accounting Arthur W. Brautigam Stoneham, Mass. Civil Engineering Paul H. Breen Islington, Mass. Civil Engineering Edward J. Brennan Mattapan, Mass. Political Science George E. Brennan Lynn, Mass. Management, Richard E. Brennan Cambridge, Mass. Marketing Marcia S. Breslof Brook line, Mass. Nursing Loren S. Bristol Canton, Mass. Civil Engineering Barbara Lees Brooks Winchester, Mass. Education Berthany Brown Brookline, Mass. Education Douglas A. Brown Woburn, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Barbara J. Bruce Ocean City. N.J. Physical Therapy Virginia L. Bruce Barr, R.I. Nursing Randolph W. Brumagim Lowell, Mass. Education Stanley R. Bryant Natick, Mass. Electrical Eng. John R. Buben Seekonk, Mass. Industrial Eng. Earl W. Buchman Keyport, N.J. Accounting John K. Buck Andover, Mass. Political Sci. George A. Buechel Jr. Patterson, N.Y. Civil Engineering Joseph E. Burnett Woodhaven, N.Y. Electrical Eng. Leonie Burns Boston. Mass. Physical Therapy Robert A. Burns Hyde Park, Mass. Electrical Eng. Patricia M. Burrell Boston, Mass. Nursing William J. Cadogan Weymouth, Mass. Electrical Eng. Kathleen A. Caizzi Bristol, R.I. Biology John D. Caldwell Beverly, Mass. Political Sci. Arthur A. Callahan Cornwall, N.Y. Management Jean Cahill Lexington, Mass. Physical Therapy Allen S. Callendar Everett, Mass. Accounting Anthony S. Camarota Absecon, N.J. History Philip E. Cameron Addleboro, Mass. Electrical Eng. Jane K. Campbel Hudson, N.H. Nursing Stuart S. Campbell Dedham, Mass. Industrial Eng. Arthur G. Caparell West Roxbury, Mass. Kducation Michael J. Carakatsane Saugus, Mass. Klectrical Kngineering Donato Cardarelli Quincy, Mass. Physics Michael J. Carvevale Braintree, Mass. Mechanical Kng. James P. Carpenter Roxbury, Mass. Hlectrical Kng. Kdward A. Carpman Mattapan, Mass. Civil Kngineering Paul K. Carson Salem Mass. Klectrical Kng. Janice Carter Boston, Mass. Nursing Josephine Caruso Garwood N.J. Knglish Joseph F. Cassidy West Roxbury, Mass. Industrial Kng. Patricia A. Cawley Dorchester, Mass. Nursing Lap Tak Chan Boston, Mass. Physics Thomas F. Charbonneau Lynn, Mass. Industrial Engineering Edward J. Chase Whitman, Mass. Electrical Eng. Linda M. Chase Boston, Mass. Political Sci. Barbara A. Cheever So. Weymouth, Mass. Education Robert E. Cichanowicz Riverhead, N.Y. Chemical Engineering m Maureen Clougherty Beverly J. Coffin Marc A. Cohn Brighton. Mass. Dedham, Mass. Elmhurst, N.Y Sociology History Biology Sandra B. Colovos Cambridge, Mass. Education James S. Congdon Warwick, R.I. Electrical Eng. Kathleen Conley West Roxbury, Mass. Nursing George H. Conly St Johnsbury, Vt Civil Engineering Elizabeth Connors Anita L. Constantine Richard Conti Michael J. Conway Dorchester. Mass. Westwood, Mass. Cranston, R.I. Medford, Mass. Nursing Biology Marketing Marketing John A. Coombes Boston, Mass. Accounting Pamela Coon Medfield, Mass. Physical Therapy Terrence J. Cooney Worcester, Mass. Education Thomas W. Cooney Bayport, N.Y. Fin. Ins. Albert J. Cooper West Islip, N.Y. Accounting Leonard L. Coppola Seymour, Conn. Education Norman F. Corbett Falmouth, Mass. Pharmacy Kenneth Costa Peabody, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Charles W. Costas Hamilton, Mass. Chemical Eng. Ava M. Costello Westwood, Mass. Education Joseph A. Cota Englewood, N.J. Electrical Eng. Alan Cotich West Camp, N.Y. Industrial Eng. 8KaS3ijiaJi: :1 William E. Cotta Dorchester, Mass. Electrical Eng. Suzanne Crane Boston, Mass. Physical Therapy Joseph T. Creamer Melrose, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Marian E. Crocker Milton, Mass. Physical Education John G. Cronin So. Boston, Mass. Political Sci. Margaret M. Cronin Wollaston, Mass. Kducation Phyllis Cronin West Roxbury. Mass. Nursing Gerald L. Cross Marlboro, Mass. Civil Engineering Paula A. Crowdle Newton, Mass. History John M. Crowley Arlington, Mass. History Anthony L. Culmore Elmont, N.Y. Electrical Eng. Donald R. Cummings Nashua, N.H. Industrial l- ' ng. Rita E. Cunha John A. Curtin Richard J. Curtin John O. Curtis Lexington, Mass. Lowell, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Biddeford, Me. Nursing Civil Kng. Marketing Mechanical 1-ng. Judy Dagresto Arlington, Mass. Education Gerald F. Dale Jamaica Plain, Mass. Management Lawrence V. Dalton Winchester, Mass. Management Richard A. Daugherty Hingham, Mass. Management Pearlene M. Davidson New Rochelle, N.Y. Education Walter P. Davis Wayne, N.J. Electrical Eng. Shelley Davison Boston, Mass. Sociology Kenneth J. Delisa Wethersfield, Conn. Management Gene J. Demarco Boston, Mass. Marketing Marco Depalma Medford, Mass. Civil Engineering Marguerite DeSimone Revere, Mass. Education Ellen M. Devine Needham, Mass. English Gail Devine Needham. Mass. Nursing Thomas E. Dixon Greenwich, Conn. Management Roberto DiMartino Brookline, Mass. Chemical Kng. Andrea M. Dinneen Dedham, Mass. Biology Donald R. Divine Trenton. N.J. Marketing Lorraine J. Dobzinski Brighton, Mass. English Dorothy E. Dodge Petersham, Mass. Education Thomas A. Doe Winterport, Maine Civil Engineering Charles E. Doherty Peabody, Mass. Civil Engineering George D. Doherty Somerville, Mass. English Stephen L. Domyan Fairfield, Conn. Electrical Eng. Patrick H. Donahue Milton, Mass. Political Science George F. Donnellan Arlington, Mass. Mechanical l- ng. Stephen T. Dorman Fairlawn, N.J. Accounting Raymond J. Doubleday Boston, Mass. Electrical Eng. Mu Ying H. Dow Boston, Mass. Pharmacy Robert B. Doyle Burlington, Mass. Electrical Eng. Walter F. Doyle Medford, Mass. Industrial Eng. Dennis R. Driver Melrose, Mass. Psychology Paul N. Duffy Cumberland, R.I. Mechanical Eng. Darla A. Dunlop Fort Pierce, Fla. Nursing Edith C. Dukanne Closter, N.J. Nursing Janie R. Eaton Newton, Mass. Education Joseph B. Engel Brighton, Mass. Political Science John R. Ensor Weymouth, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Robert S. Erickson Scotia, N.Y. Electrical Eng. Susan B. Ernstein Boston, Mass. Education Ronald K. Estell Andover, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Frances Faletra Michael T. Farley Robert P. Favilla Vincent N. Federici Roslindale, Mass. Plainview. N.Y. Arlington, Mass. Revere, Mass. Biology Industrial Fng. Marketing Accounting Joseph L. Feeley Henry P. Feranski Alan Ferragano Sharon L. Ferrick Franklin, Mass. New Britain, Conn. Revere, Mass. Boston, Mass. Chemical Eng. Accounting Civil Engineering Hn George F. Fettig Ruth Ann Fichenberg Gerhard W. Fichtl Quincy, Mass. Slingerlands, N.Y. Hauppauge, N.Y. Marketing Nursing Chemical Eng. Laura Filletti Leslie (Finn) Feldman Jane E. Firth Mona Fisgeyer Hyde Park, Mass. Quincy, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Brookline, Mass Nursing Sociology Phys. Ed. Sociology Faye T. Fisher Winthrop, Mass. Education Johnny A. Fisher Piscataway, N.J. Mechanical Fng. George A. Fitch Jr. Sterling, Mass. Accounting Janet M. Fitzgerald Dorchester. Mass. Nursing Flaine L. Fitzpatrick Norwell, Mass. Education Robert G. Fitzpatrick Norwell, Mass. FJectrical Fng. George L. Flanagan Hyde Park, Mass. Civil Engineering Samuel P. Fogg Watertown, Mass. Marketing Richard W. Ford Hanover, Mass. Civil Engineering John F. Foulis Jr. Hyde Park, Mass. Chemical Fng. Dierdre E. Francis Cambria Heights, N.Y. Journalism Peter J. Franks Lexington, Mass. Political Science Anne L. Frappier Nancy E. Fraser Richard D. Frassa William S. Frazier Dorchester, Mass. Amherst, N.H. Cambridge, Mass. Quincy, Mass. Mathematics Nursing Accounting Electrical Eng. Kenneth B. Fredholm Lynn, Mass. Electrical Eng. Cheryl R. Freedman Mattapan, Mass. Education John A. Freeman Pompton Lakes, N.J. English Kenneth Fuld New York, N.Y. Psychology Thomas H. Fuller Belchertown, Mass. Finance Insurance John L. Gabriel Portsmouth, R.I. Chemical Eng. Denise M. Gallagher Mattapan, Mass. Chemistry James T. Gannpn Edgewood, R.I. Electrical Eng. Alfred R. Garafalo Peter L. Garbati Mary A. Garbati Sandi S. Gelles Valley Stream, N.Y. Melrose, Mass. Medford. Mass. Boston. Mass. Chemistry History English English Doiglas A. George Berkeley Heights, N.J. Physics Linda M. Gessner Brighton, Mass. Education Dennis J. Gianatassio Everett, Mass. Education Howard L. Gifford Johnsonville, N.Y. Civil Engineering Michael Gilbert Dennis L. Gilkenson John D. Gillis Lauara L. Giorno Chatham, N.J. Dorchester, Mass. Woburn, Mass. Westerly, R.I. Management Mechnical Eng. Biology Nursing John G. Glaze Jr. Robert J. Glovitz John J. Glynn Linda S. Gold Hyde Park, Mass. Valley Stream, N.Y. Quincy, Mass. Boston, Mass. Chemical Eng. Accounting Electrical Eng. Sociology R.H. Brown Cathy DeMarkey Jamie Doubleday Wayland, Mass. Andover. Conn. Boston, Mass. History Anthropology Education Wayne Hamilton Karen Kearney Maureen Lynch Robin Mack Danvers. Mass. Melrose, Mass. Dedham, Mass. Dorchester, Mass Political Sci. Nursing Nursing Drama Cheryl Mansfield E. Weymouth, Mass. Mathematics Steven Phillips Brookline, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Jeanette Theriault Salem, Mass. Nursing Ulysses Wallace Albany. N.Y. Education PRODUCTION 696969696969 w S T. % James V. Golemme Bruce R. Good Frank C. Goodfinger Michael A. Gorman Norwell, Mass. Wakefield, Mass. Avon, Mass. Boston, Mass. Biology Mechanical Eng. Electrical Eng. Psychology Michael A. Grandinetti Neill M. Grant William F. Grant David L. Greaves Lakewood, N.J. Belmont, Mass. Valley Stream, N.Y. Winchester, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Chemical Eng. Mechanical Eng. Chemical Eng. Brian P. Greeley Hamilton, Mass. Mechanical Eng. James L. Greenwood Watertown, Conn. Accounting Elizabeth Grefe E. Braintree, Mass. Nursing Robert H. Gropper Boston, Mass. Economics Joann L. Gschaar Paul J. Guilfoyle Anne C. Hale Patricia J. Hagadorn Wilton, Conn. Randolph, Mass. West Roxbury, Mass. Boston, Mass. Accounting Accounting Pharmacy Physical Therapy Neil L. Halliday Jr. Washington, D.C. Management Marge Hamlin South Waterford. Maine Physical Therapy Barbara Lee Hanley Belmont, Mass. Education Janet M. Hanley Waltham, Mass. Education Robert E. Hannigan Braintree, Mass. Civil Engineering Alice M. Hanson Delmar, N.Y. English Jane E. Harding Wollaston, Mass. Nursing Susan Harfield Brookline, Mass. Education Nancy M. Harkins Dedham, Mass. Psychology Scott D. Harrison Arlington, Mass. Management Edwin E. Harrow Norwell, Mass. Management Robert N. Harvey Jr. Lexington, Mass. Civil Engineering Jeanne E. Heath Framingham, Mass. Education Royden W. Henry Haddonfield, N.J. Management Craig N. Hess Pottstown, Pa. Mechnical Eng. Leta C. Hillman Boston. Mass. Education Gerard M. Hines Lynn, Mass. Accounting Martin T. Hines Lynn, Mass. Management Marc J. Hochheister Oakdale, N.Y. Mechanical Eng. David J. Holcomb Lowell, Mass. Electrical Eng. Maureen Holden Boston, Mass. Physical Therapy Frederick Holland Jr. North Abington, Mass. Finance Insurance Jeanne Holzman Pembroke, Mass. Psychology Paul M. Hoole Kathleen M. Horgan Kathleen M. Horgan David Horwitz Somerset, Mass. Summit, N.J. Summit, N.J. Ithaca, N.Y. Civil Engineering Physical Therapy Marketing Beverly A. Howard Seymour, Conn. Nursing Wayne D. Howard W. Scarboro, Maine Civil Engineering John R. Howbrigg Esther J. Howes Meriden, Conn. Boston, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Nursing Cheryl E. Hudson Kenneth L. Hume William C. Hutnick Diane J. Huxtable Somerville, Mass. New Britain, Conn. Maiden, Mass. Foxboro, Mass. Education Marketing Marketing Education Richard C. Hyde Manchester, N.H. Electrical Eng. Ernest C. Ikenze Boston. Mass. Biology John B. Jablonski New Britain, Conn. Finance Insurance Alan P. Jackson Somerville, Mass. Education jgg f Robert N. Jarnis Thomas H. Jensen Kristina A. Johnson Raymond H. Johnson Newton, Mass. Southport, Conn. Dedham, Mass. Beverly, Mass. Civil Engineering Mechanical Eng. Education Mechanical Eng. Wayne E. Johnson Edward S. Jones Stanley J. Jorsz Jean M. Joseph Lynn, Mass. Bellvale, N.Y. Boston. Mass. Lexington, Mass Accounting Chemical Eng. Psychology Nursing Dennis W. Joubert Attleboro, Mass. Pharmacy Thomas W. Jurczyk Norwich, Conn. Civil Engineering John A. Kachichian Belmont. Mass. Management . James P. Kaduboski Cambridge, Mass. Accounting Kenneth Kalenderian Watertown, Mass. Management Robert J. Kalustian Arlington, Mass. Electrical Kng. Charle S. Kanach Hyde Park, Mass. Civil Engineering Frances Kanach Hyde Park, Mass. Nursing Robert R. Kando Dedham. Mass. Electrical Eng. Donna S. Kaplan Newton, Mass. Education Linda Sue Perlin Randolph. Mass. Education Barbara R. Katzen Brookline, Mass. Education David C. Kearney Quincy, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Timothy J. Kelleher Stratford, Conn. Civil Engineering John L. Kelley Stamford, Conn. Marketing Stephen G. Kelley Susan V. Kelly Richard T. Kendall Daniel J. Kennedy Melrose, Mass. Norfolk, Mass. Weston, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Political Science Nursing English Mechanical Eng. . 1 John J. Keough Joanne M. Kerivan Irene E. Kerr Neal F. Kessman Auburndale, Mass. Westwood, Mass. Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Chemical Eng. Education Physical Therapy Sociology Edward L. Kilbron Jr. Key West, Fla. Electrical Eng. Charles H. Kirchofer Boston, Mass. Management Michael J. Kirdzik Beacon Falls, Conn. Civil Engineering Christine M. Kiss Brookline, Mass. Education Peter R. Kitchener Beverly, Mass. Electrical Eng. Anna M. Knight Newton, Mass. Education Paula A. Koch Mattapan, Mass. Education Loretta M. Kodzis Westwood, Mass. Education Jill A. Kofman Quincy, Mass. Nursing James R. Kogut Meriden, Conn. Electrical Eng. PaulW. Koloski Hamilton, Mass. Chemical Eng. Kathleen M. Kleponis Maiden, Mass. Nursing Ronald D. Koppel Milford, Mass. Electrical Eng. Michael T. Kosciak Milford, Mass. Electrical Eng. Eleanor D. Kotowski Lexington, Mass. Education Beverly J. Kowal Lexington, Mass. Nursing Rosemary E. Kozlowski Meriden, Conn. Mathematics Lois A. Kravetz Boston. Mass. Nursing Patricia A. Krine Dedham. Mass. Nursing Joan A. Krueger Linden, N.J. Education James S. Laine Boston, Mass. Electrical Eng. Bing Lam Beverly, Mass. Accounting Mary E. Landrigan Carl E. Landrum Dean A. Langmaid Lois B. Lanzillott W. Roxbury. Mass. Roslindale, Mass. Newton, Mass. Milford, N.H. English English Anthropology Accounting James T. Larkin Wappinger Falls, N.Y. Mechanical Eng. Gerardo C. Lau Boston, Mass. Industrial Eng. Robert C. Lawrence Hanson, Mass. Industrial Eng. Michael J. Leary North Andover, Mass. Economics Joseph A. LeBruto Carol E. Ledwell Peter C. Lee Paul D. LeFrancoi Sudbury, Mass. Whitman, Mass. Boston, Mass. Plainfield, Conn. Mechanical Eng. Education Management Electrical Eng. Deborah N. Leidner Brookline, Mass. Education Laraine E. Lellman Greenport, N.Y. Education Susan J. Leonard Cohasset. Mass. Nursing William J. Lepsevich Dedham, Mass. Electrical Eng. Barbara S. Levine Mauapan. Mass. Education Martin A. Levitt Milton, Mass. Biology John R. Lewis Taunton, Mass. Electrical ling. Marion S. Lewis Boston, Mass. English Stephen C. Lewis Rockland, Maine Management Amy J. Liebman Boston, Mass. Sociology Joel D. Lillian Brookline, Mass. Sociology Patrick R. Lim-Sue Bronx, N.Y. Mechanical l.ng. Edwin B. Litchfield Bruce L. Little Gail K. Lockwood Richard J. Lofstrand Jamaica Plain, Mass. Medfield, Mass. Quincy, Mass. Maiden, Mass. Mechanical ling. Education Phys. Id. Mechanical 1 ng. Emma J. Lombardi Nahant, Mass. Sociology Eric Longbottom Brookline, Mass. Mechanical ling. Margaret C. Lord Boston. Mass. Physical Education Lynn E. Loudermilch Scituate, Mass. Nursing Paul L. Lucerto Wayne D. Lunger Marjorie Lunt Deborah A. Lutz Winthrop, Mass. Denville, N.J. Boston, Mass. Quincy, Mass. Accounting Mathematics Nursing Nursing Anita M. Lyons Babylon. N.Y. Psychology Cynthia A. Lyttlc Glen Cove, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Alice A. MacDonald Maplewood, N.J. Ph.ys. Ed. Susan A. MacDonald Boston, Mass. Nursing Peter D. MacKinnon Dedham, Mass. Management Malcolm D. MacLeod Norwood, Mass. Management Roger P. Macie Dedham, Mass. Electrical l-.ng. William F. Madden Waltham, Mass. Accounting Lynne Maden Revere, Mass. Education Lawrence C. Maggio Roslindale, Mass. Electrical Kng. Richard N. Mainville Upton, Mass. Civil Engineering _ w mJm i f lift ' ■Margo L. Maione S. Hamilton, Mass. Phys. Ed. John J. Majeski Wakefield, Mass. Civil Engineering Raymond H. Malenfant Lakeville, Mass. Civil Engineering Paul A. Maletta Belmont, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Roberts. Mandl Passaic, N.J. Electrical Eng. Roger W. Manzolini Pittsfield, Mass. Electrical Eng. Frederick Marcellus Unadilla, N.Y. Industrial Eng. Marjorie M. Marcoux Manchester, N.H. Sociology Louise A. Marks Gloucester, Mass. Sociology Jeanne E. Martell Northbridge, Mass. Journalism Thomas G. Martin Rivervale, N.J. Mechanical Eng. Denise Martwichuck Peabody, Mass. Modern Language Marcia A. Massalski Boston, Mass. English Elizabeth M. May Newton, Mass. Nursing Frank J. Mazza Lawrence, Mass. Accounting Barbara A. Mc ' Lellan Boston. Mass. Nursing Thomas J. McCarthy Lexington, Mass. Accounting Robert B. McConnell Randolph, Mass. Management Lawrence P. McDonald Whitney Point, N.Y. Chemical Eng. Catherine M. McFadyen Wilmington, Mass. Nursing Robert L. McGuire Lexington, Mass. Accounting Brenda J. Mcintosh Chelmsford, Mass. Political Science Richard A. McKenzie Waltham, Mass. Electrical Eng. tv Michael C. McLaughlin Boston. Mass. English Frances H. McLean W. Roxbury. Mass. Nursing Warren C. McLean Jr. Somerville, Mass. History John F. McTernan Norwood, Mass. Education David Medina William J. Meehan Dennis S. Meltzer Leonard H. Meyer Boston. Mass. Somerville, Mass. Monsey, N.Y. W. Hempstead, N.Y Psychology Electrical Eng. Management Accounting Esther F. Menz W. Roxbury, Mass. Pharmacy Kenneth J. Miller Scranton, Pa. Mathematics Sandra H. Miller Waltham, Mass. Biology George C. Mill Albany, N.Y. Electrical Eng. Francis J. Mitrano Joanne Mitsis Robert M. Mittica Michael H. Monks Medford, Mass. Worcester, Mass. Wethersfield, Conn. Lynn, Mass. Chemical Eng. Accounting Electrical Eng. Finance and Insurance Joseph M. Montauti Hamden, Conn. Electrical ling. Francis G. Morey Lexington, Mass. Civil Engineering William A. Morse Arlington. Mass. Mechanical ting. Jane I. Mulholland Hingham, Mass. Nursing r Elizabeth Mullett Chelsea, Mass. Nursing Roger W. Mulloy North Berwick, Maine Civil Engineering Deborah Murphy Roslindale, Mass. Nursing Richard T. Murphy Mattapan, Mass. Education Samuel Mushnick Providence, R.I. Mechanical Eng. Lorraine A. Nardini Somerville, Mass. Education Everett B. Nau Dorchester, Mass. Education Mary F. Nau Dorchester, Mass. Education W Kathleen W. Nau Arlington, Mass. Nursing Stefano C. Navarrolli Dorchester, Mass. Management Mary T. Nazzaro Belmont, Mass. Education Frank Nebush Boston, Mass. Political Science David B. Nettleton Str atford, Conn. Industrial Kngineering Michael M. Neville Woonsocket, R.I. Accounting Carole S. Newman Randolph, Mass. Accounting Janet M. Newman Mattapan, Mass. Nursing Joseph O. North Boston, Mass. Modern Language Allen J. Novakouski Manchester, Conn. Civil Kngineering Dennis M. O ' Brien Reading, Mass. Management Robert J. O ' Brien Braintree, Mass. Accounting Richard W. O ' Connell Whitman, Mass. Biology Allen W. Oi Jeanette M. Oliva Claire L. Olivera Donald R. Olney Boston, Mass. E. Boston, Mass. Plymouth, Mass. Danvers, Mass. Chemical Eng. Education Nursing Civil Engineering Brian R. Olson North Windham, Maine Civil Engineering Charles H. O ' Neil Danvers, Mass. Civil Engineering Daniel J. O ' Neil Everett, Mass. Finance Insurance Jeffery L. Ontell Livingston, N.J. Political Science Janet F. Onthank Boston, Mass. Nursing Walter G. Opanasets Dorchester, Mass. Accounting Dean F. Ostrander Robert M. Ostrofsky Daniel F. O ' Sullivan Ronald S. Page Rensselaer, N.Y. Chelsea, Mass. Roslindale, Mass. Hyde Park, Mass. Mechanical Hng. Civil Engineering Accounting Accounting Stephanie H. Pardee Pacific Palisades, Calif. Phys. Ed. Robert B. Park S. Weymouth, Mass. Management Eric B. Parker Philadelphia, Pa. Management Thomas G. Parker Braintree, Mass. Civil Engineering Patricia L. Parks Robert M. Paroskie Robert T. Patelski Julie Pauliukonis Dorchester, Mass. Maiden, Mass. Trenton, N.J. Boston, Mass. Nursing Electrical Eng. Electrical Eng. Physical Education Carol Pazaricky Stephen C. Peabody Boston, Mass. Boston, Mass. Nursing Accounting Charles Penta Richard S. Penta Boston, Mass. E. Boston, Mass. Electrical Eng. History John H. Perkins Arlington. Mass. Biology Erwin Pearl Maiden, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Alicia C. Perretz Brookline, Mass. English Harvey B. Peters Milton, Mass. Eng.-Journ. John A. Petrulavage Boston, Mass. Education Edward F. Phelan Jr. Gerald L. Pickard Patricia A. Pitcher Somerville, Mass. Woonsocket, R.I. Boston, Mass. Civil Engineering Chemistry Education Ralph D. Perry Montvale, N.J. Marketing Stuart D. Piatt Concord, Mass. Civil Engineering David R. Poile Jamaica Plain, Mass. Finance Insurance Wilder C. Porter Lynn, Mass. Management Stephen E. Pournier Revere, Mass. Accounting Michael K. Powers North Randolph, Mass. Civil Engineering Jean E. Prescott Portland, Maine Education Linda E. Prescott Lawrence, Mass. Nursing Mary C. Quinn Boston. Mass. Biology Jonathan S. Radovsky Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Electrical Eng. Robert J. Pusateri Norwich, Conn. Chemical Eng. Peter R. Rano Shrewsbury, Mass. Civil Engineering Steven Rappaport Rockville Center, N.Y. Accounting Mark W. Rayla Holden, Mass. Management Dale E. Raynor Remsenburg, N.Y. Management Alan D. Reed Framingham, Mass. Management Philip Reggiannini Quincy, Mass. Electrical Eng. Michael J. Reppucci Lexington, Mass. Accounting David A. Reynolds Dorchester, Mass. Management Elizabeth A. Reynolds Marblehead, Mass. Education Elizabeth H. Rice Boston, Mass. Physical Education Mary B. Rice Newton, Mass. Education Elizabeth Ricci Bedford. Mass. Education Nancy L. Richardson Newton Center, Mass. Education Stephen L. Richmond Marblehead, Mass. Accounting Robert F. Riemer Bristol, Conn. Mechanical Eng. Christina M. Rizzo Dorchester, Mass. Mathematics HeneS. Robbins North Easton, Mass. Economics Stuart E. Robbins Old Greenwich, Conn. Political Science William H. Robinson Clinton, Mass. Mathematics Thomas J. Rooney Lynn, Mass. Education llene L. Rosenberg Milton, Mass. I ' ducation Theodore Rosenberg Chelsea. Mass. Journalism Susan Rosenfield Boston. Mass. Sociology Linda R. Rosenthal Kdison, N.J. Education Aland M. Ross Maiden, Mass. Klectrical Kng. Peter Rothenbach Boston, Mass. Industrial Kng. Anne D. Rubin Boston. Mass. Nursing Rita Rubin Paramus, N.J. Mathematics Linda Rubinson Waltham, Mass. Modern Language Ellen J. Rumerman Boston. Mass. English Donald P. Russell Methuen. Mass. Mechanical Kng. Josephine Ruzzo Boston, Mass. Psychology Kristy E. Sastamoinen Boston, Mass. Physical Education George G. Salgado Dorchester, Mass. Management Edward M. Saliva Boston, Mass. History Olive M. Samson Waltham, Mass. Knglish Kenneth W. Sanders Saugus, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Antoinette Santamaria Valley Stream, N.Y. Marketing George A. Serafinas Holbrook, Mass. Electrical Eng. Diane M. Scanlon Canton, Mass. Nursing JohnW. Schaaf Jr. Wollaston, Mass. Electrical Eng. Joseph C. Schindler Jr. Allston, Mass. Civil Engineering Carol M. Schwartz Revere, Mass. Education Alan W. Seaver Brookline, Mass. Chemical Eng. Barbara A. Seghezzi Canton, Mass. Sociology Evelyn K. Seppelin Westminster, Mass. Nursing Carol A. Sarota Jamaica Plain, Mass. Nursing Susan B. Shapiro Mattapan, Mass. History John J. Sheehan Brookline, Mass. Industrial Eng. Robert P. Sheehan Dorchester, Mass. Education Gay L. Sherman Newton, Mass. Education William A. Sherman Mattapan. Mass. Psychology Anna P. Shewbridgc Rockport. Mass. Education Virginia V. Shugrue Medfield, Mass. Accounting Marjorie E. Shulman Boston, Mass. Modern Language Judith F. Siegal Klpidio A. Silvestri Sandra A. Sina Susan N. Sinanian Portland, Maine Allston, Mass. Wingdale, N.Y. Roslindale, Mass. Sociology Electrical Eng. Management Education James C. Sirkin Kenneth M. Skoglund Stephen I. Slavin Myles N. Slavit Oaklyn, N.J. Braintree, Mass. Fairlawn, N.J. Somerset, Mass Accounting Management Accounting Education Kathleen N. Sliney Everett, Mass. Nursing Peter D. Smallidge Topsfield, Mass. Mechanical E ' ng. Joseph F. Smiarowski Jr. Sunderland, Mass. Political Science Agnes B. Smith Philadelphia, Pa. Phys. Ed. Clifford G. Smith Lynn, Mass. Chemical Eng. Edward J. Smith W. Roxbury, Mass. Political Science Janice M. Smith Hillsboro, N.H. Management Katherine M. Smith Roslindale, Mass. Psychology Michael A. Smith Fairfield, Conn. Electrical Eng. Mark I. Smith Sharon, Mass. Finance Insurance Russell G. Smith Rochester, N.Y. Industrial Eng. Robert D. Smith Jr. Glastonbury, Conn. Mechanical Eng. William D. Smith Westport, Mass. Pharmacy Ellen Sousa Boston, Mass. Political Science Ellen Sousa Boston, Mass. Elayne DiSpacone Quincy, Mass. Education Faye J. Speed Robert Speziale Boston, Mass. Woburn. Mass. Pharmacy Biology Albert C. Spiniello Roslindale, Mass. History Patricia S. Sprague Dorchester, Mass. Carmen C. Squatriglia Prospect, Conn. Management John B. Staples Westbrook, Maine Klectrical Hng. James A. Stares Norton, Mass. Mechanical Kng. John F. Steber Jr. Waltham, Mass. Management Barbara E. Steinberg Portsmouth, N.H. Kng-Journ. Phyllis A. Steinberg Winthrop, Mass. Kducation John P. Stevens Lynn, Mass. Industrial Kng. Robert G. St. Germain Waltham, Mass. Accounting Catherine H. Stanford Brighton, Mass. Nursing John F. Stolle Flemington, N.J. Klectrical Kng. Karen Stahle Beverly, Mass. Kducation John A. Stone Roxbury, Mass. English Martha F. Stoney Stoneham, Mass. Nursing Anthony J. Stramondo Methuen, Mass. Physics Donald L. Springhetti Brockton, Mass. Civil Kngineering Joseph A. Straut Roslindale, Mass. Civil Kngineering Bruce C. Studley Hopkinton, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Florence E. Stutman Boston, Mass. English Paul J. Sullivan W. Roxbury, Mass. Mathematics Robert M. Sullivan Braintree, Mass. Accounting Robyn B. Sumka Metuchen, N.J. Education Kevin V. Symmons Wollaston, Mass. Management John C. Takki Hingham, Mass. Management Joseph H. Tamaro E. Haven, Conn. Civil Engineering Robert F. Tancreto Medford, Mass. Accounting Harvey Tanton Oceanside, N.Y. Accounting Bruce C. Taub New York, N.Y. Economics Susan M. Taylor Boston. Mass. Nursing Donald R. Telage New London, Conn. Mechanical Eng. Frank Tees Boston, Mass. Electrical Eng. Michelle C. Tenedou Irvington, N.J. English Paul H. Terlemezian Belmont, Mass. Mathematics Susan Thibeault Dorchester. Mass. Physical Education Alan G. Thomas Needham, Mass. Accounting Richard D. Thomas Glen Rock, N.J. Finance Insurance Joseph B. Timmons Roslindale, Mass. Electrical Eng. Thomas M. Tinlin Mansfield, Mass. Management Sharon E. Tolman Providence, R.I. Sociology Robert N. Torbin Methuen, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Marshall D. Toback Newburgh, N.Y. Finance Insurance Joseph A. Tocci Brighton, Mass. Management John P. Toohil Jr. Waltham, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Thomas R. Townsentl Beacon, N.Y. Mathematics Peter M. Trask Bruce M. Trumball Lois B. Trusten Flaine Tsolas New London, Conn. Watertown, Mass. Woburn, Mass. Watertown, Mass Electrical Eng. Finance Insurance Nursing Education Kathleen Tudor Newton Center, Mass. Sociology Joseph G. Tully Maiden, Mass. Management James R. Turner Brighton, Mass. Psychology Thomas J. Tys Schenectady, N.Y. Chemical Fng. Steven P. Urban Jane E. Valentine Kenneth J. Vancisin Peter D. Vanvessem Medford, Mass. Boston, Mass. Stratford, Conn. Naugatuck. Conn. Fducation Nursing Accounting Electrical Eng. Robert A. Varsoke Johnstown, N.Y. Industrial I ng. Susan Y. Vassallo Belmont, Mass. Education Kathleen A. Virok Boston, Mass. Psychology Louisa A. Visconti Suffern, N.Y. Education Nancy N. Vogelson Glenside, Pa. English Charles D. Voymas Watertown, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Robert J. Waefler Medford. Mass. Industrial Eng. Walter Waida Somerville, N.J. Industrial Eng. Barbara L. Walker Oenise Walker Frederick P. Walker Peter B. Wallace Boston, Mass. Andover, Mass. E. Boston, Mass. Braintree, Mass. Nursing Nursing Electrical ling. Electrical ling. Pamela A. Wallis N. Weymouth, Mass. Nursing Thomas D. Walsh Quincy, Mass. lilectrical Ing. Willard C. Warren Fryeburg, Maine Civil Engineering Bonnie Waterman Winthrop, Mass. Education Raymond B. Watstein Hamden, Conn. Accounting Donald P. Webber Jr. Clinton, Mass. Mechanical Eng. William B. Weber Newington, Conn. Management Ellen Sue Weinberg Newton Center, Mass. Education Marcia L. Weinberg Winthrop, Mass. Education Michael J. Weinswi; Peabody, Mass. Language Howard R. Weiss Hamden, Conn. Accounting Kathleen M. Welch Arlington, Mass. Nursing Barbara A. Wells Enfield, Conn. Nursing Albert W. Welz Jr. Woodbridge, Conn. Electrical Eng. Rowland W. Wentworth Winchendon, Mass. Civil Eng. Gloria White Arlington, Mass. Education Judith L. White Peabody, Mass. Education Leo E. Whitworth, Jr. Boston, Mass. Biology Walter W. Wiebel Westport, Conn. Sociology Lawrence B. Wiener Hyde Park. Mass. Management John W. Wilkie Quincy, Mass. Chemistry Ted IX Williams Newtonville, Mass. Civil Engineering Betty Jean Wilson Paxton, Mass. Nursing David C. Wilson Brockton, Mass. Mechanical l- ' ng. Irene E. Wilson Wakefield, Mass. Nursing Francis C. Winter Annapolis, Md. Industrial Eng. John A. Wishneusky Lynn, Mass. Electrical ling. Dick M. Wong Joseph Wong Richard E. Wood Robert L. Wright Mattapan, Mass. Allston, Mass. Hudson, Mass. Belmont, Mass. Accounting Electrical Eng. Mechanical Eng. Marketing Jeffrey P. Xenaki Haverhill, Mass. Chemical l.ng. Glenn J. Yaffa W. Hartford, Conn. Political Science Richard A. Yardley North Laston, Mass. Political Science Brian A. Yargeau Lynnwood, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Martha L. Yousoufian Bedford, N.H. Mathematics Paul H. Zagchowski Chicopee, Mass. Chemistry Linda M. Zebley Boston. Mass. Physical Education Risa Z. Wax Roslindale, Mass. Nursing Carol Nada Zuckerman Pittsfield, Mass. Education Alan Abber, Sharon, Mass. Finance. Martin H. Abramson, Winthrop, Mass. Pharmacy. Peter Accardi, Pembroke. Mass. English. Bella G. Adler, Brockton, Mass. Sociology. David G. Akillian. Watertown, Mass. Political Sci. William G. Alcusky, Weymouth, Mass. Electrical Eng. James Alexander, Dorchester, Mass. Political Sci. Paul E. Balie, Gardner, Mass. Psychology. Donna P. Allen, Kittery, Me. Education. Vincia A. Allen, Mattapan, Mass. English. Barbara C. Alleyne, Roosevelt, N.Y. Economics. Arthur F. Almstead, Germantown, N.Y. Psychology. Charles L. Alongi Jr., Wollaston, Mass. Recreation. William Amoroso, Everett, Mass. Mechanical Eng. Donald Anastasia, Norwood, Mass. Finance. Dean R. Andersen, Marblehead, Mass. Marketing. Harold K. Andersen, Randolph, Mass. Biology. Erick R. Andersen, Talcottville, Conn. Mech. Eng. Kirk M. Anderson, Wilmington, Mass. Management. Leslie J. Anderson, Woburn. Mass. Industrial Eng. Charles L. Andrew, No. Andover, Mass. Education. Francis M. Antczak, Somerville, Mass. Electrical Eng. James M. Apicco, Boston, Mass. Mathematics. Donna Lee Appel, Roslindale, Mass. English. Richard K. Araujo, Brighton, Mass. Electrical Eng. Arthur E. Aronovitz, Randolph, Mass. Mathematics. Barry J. Aronson, Swampscott, Mass. Finance. Gerald L. Aronson, Canton, Mass. Mechanical Hng. Susan L. Aronson, Scarsdale, N.Y. Sociology. Maher M. Asfour, Watertown, N.Y. Industrial Eng. Robert Ashworth, Stamford, Conn. English. Jeffrey D. Askew, Stamford, Conn. History. Stanley C. Atkinson, Dorchester, Mass. Elec. Eng. Gary G. Attmore, Litchfield, Conn. Pharmacy. Steven Ayer, Wakefield, Mass. Physics. Richard P. Baglione, Boston, Mass. Physics. David W. Bakken, Braintree, Mass. Elec. Eng. Andrew G. Bales, Burlington, Mass. Industrial F.ng. Patricia E. Bales. Louisville, Ky. Sociology. Martin S. Ball. Marblehead, Mass. Economics. Rita S. Baltusis, Dorchester, Mass. Education. Susan M. Baluk, Lee, Mass. Physical Ed. Richard C. Bamberg, Boston, Mass. Physics. Marie A. Baratta. Watertown, Mass. Psychology. Herbert H. Barclay, Rockland, Mass. Industrial Eng. Peter G. Baratt, Carlisle, Mass. Elec. Eng. Peter M. Barry, Norwood, Mass. Management Ronald A. Bartell, Arlington, Mass. Mech. Eng. Mariam E. Bartow, Wayland, Mass. Physical Ed. Joseph K. Basile, Lexington, Mass. Marketing. Sandra F. Bassett, River Vale, N.J. Mathematics. Johnathan R. Bassett, Jr., River Vale, N.J. Mathematics. Louise R. Bastoni, Woburn, Mass. Psychology. Douglas J. Bates, Boston, Mass. Mathematics. Paul D. BaughmanJr., Boston, Mass. Industrial Eng. Mark L. Baumgarten, Boston, Mass. Management. Richard Bazirgan, Norwood, Mass. Marketing. Albert J. Beaulieu, Somerville, Mass. Elec. Eng. Paul D. Beaulieu, Salem, Mass. Chemical Eng. James A. Beeson, Stoneham, Mass. Management. James E. Beggan, Arlington, Mass. Management. Regis M. Beigel, Nashua, N.H. Industrial Eng. John M. Beiser, Glenside, Pa. Political Sci. Eugene J. Beitel, Bellport, N.Y. Political Sci. Russell C. Bell, Norwood, Mass. Industrial Eng. Theodore R. Bell, Cambridge, N.Y. Physical Ed. Thomas G. Bellone, Melrose, Mass. Accounting. Paula R. Belton, Somerville, Mass. Education. Patricia M. Bennett, Reading, Mass. Physics. Richard R. Bennett, Mansfield, Mass. Industrial Eng. Raymond R. Benoit, Springfield, Mass. Marketing. Richard A. Benson, Natick. Mass. Industrial Eng. Paul L. Beohner, Boston, Mass. Marketing. Lawrence Beren, Randolph, Mass. Biology. Robert L. Beres, Bethpage, N.Y. Philosophy. David W. Berglind, Concord, N.Y. Industrial F ng. Barry M. Berlin, Colonia, N.J. Industrial Eng. Robert M. Bernardi, Jericho, N.Y. Physics. David A. Bernstein, South Miami. Fla. Accounting. Susan E. Berube, Boston, Mass. Mathematics. Stephen Biciocchi, Arlington, Mass. Industrial Eng. Susan C. Bickford, New Hampton, N.H. English. Mark S. Bicks, New York, N.Y. Mechanical Eng. William N. Bilodeau, Saugus, Mass. Chemistry. Margaret H. Birnbaum, Glen Cove, N.Y. Sociology. Robert li. Bjornsen, New White Plains, N.Y. Biology. Susan C. Black, Saratoga, N.Y. Biology. Thomas K. Blackburn. Portland, Me. Management. Steven Blader. l.akewood. N.J. English. Ralph V. Blanchard, North Adams, Mass. Biology. Stephen F. Blazejewski, Adams, Mass. Management. William K. Blood, Methuen, Mass. Management. Lawrence M. Bloom. Passail, N.J. Psychology. John J. Boduch, Springfield, Mass. Management. Philip M. Boldue. Armonk, N.Y. Philosophy. Renzo A. Bontempo, Watertown, Mass. Industrial I {rig. Nancy Bookstein, Albany, N.Y. Physical I d. Jesus Botana, Somerville, Mass. I .nglish. John M. Bouchie. Maiden. Mass. Management. Richard A. Bourbonniere, Woonsocket, R.l. Chemistry. Carole A. Boyko, Cumberland, R.I. Pharmacy. Gerald L. Brace, Tewsbury, Mass. Pharmacy. Carl P. Bradley, Webster, Mass. Education. Christi ne Bradt, Boston. Mass. Physical Ed. Maureen T. Brady. W. Springfield. Mass. Sociology. Stephen B. Bragdon, Brewer, Me. Management. Walter B. Brandes, Everett, Mass. Biology. Gerard H.R. Brandi, Quincy, Mass. Management. Poul H. Brandt, Boston, Mass. Finance. David A. Braun, Port Monmouth. N.J. Electrical Eng. Jean N. Brewer. Watchung, N.J. Sociology. Douglas R. Brian, Fairhaven, N.J. Finance. Peter J. Briere, Somerville, Mass. Civil Eng. Loren S. Bristol, Canton, Conn. Civil Eng. Lois H. Broadbent. Westport Pt., Mass. Physical I d. David S. Bromberg, Newton, Mass. Political Sci. Alan W. Brown, Wayland, Mass. Pharmacy. Albert W. Brown, Melrose, Mass. Marketing. Paula M. Brown, Lynn, Mass. Psychology. Virginia L. Bruce, Barr, R.l. Nursing. Susan C. Bruno. South Boston, Mass. Pharmacy. Robert D. Bryant, Lexington. Mass. Physical Ed. Richard A. Buckler. East Natick, Mass. Management. Patricia A. Buckley. Lexington, Mass. Philosophy. Donna M. Beuhler. Haverhill. Mass. Nursing. William E. Buehner, Metheun, Mass. Language. Wilson R. Bull, Stratford, Conn. English. Edward T. Burke, South Boston, Mass. Elec. ling. Gerald F. Burke, Brockton, Mass. Phys. Ed. Robert L. Burke. Maiden, Mass. Psychology. William F. Burke, Cambridge, Mass. Finance. James L. Burnett. Wayne, N.J. Civil Eng. Alfred N. Burns, Cheswick. Pa. Mech. Eng. James E. Burns. Belmont. Mass. Finance. David L. Burt. Rochester. N.Y. English. William T. Burton. Newburgh. N.Y. Mech. Eng. Richard J. Butler. Canton. Mass. Accounting. Michael H. Byrne, Jamesville. N.Y. Biology. Paul T. Caggiano, Melrose, Mass. Marketing. John C. Cahalan. Tewksbury. Mass. History. William H. Cahoone Jr., W. Warwick, R.l. Phys. Ed. Gerald E. Cain. Milton, Mass. Electrical Eng. Terrence P. Cain, Somerville, Mass. Marketing. William H. Cain, Oceanside, N.Y. Psychology. Peter G. Calden, Peabody, Mass. Industrial Eng. Anthony D. Calderoni. Bristol, Conn. Elec. Eng. Edward F. Callahan, Milton, Mass. History. Joseph A. Callahan, Brockton, Mass. Mech. Eng. Scott G. Cameron, Braintree, Mass. Accounting. Charles E. Campbell, Carien, Conn. English. George E. Campbell, Waltham, Mass. Phys. Ed. Stephen G. Campbell. Boston. Mass. Elec. Eng. Stephen V. Capone, Springfield, Mass. Chem. Eng. Douglas R. Capra, Westboro, Mass. Journalism. Ralph M. Carasso, No. Brunswick, N.J. Ind. ling. William H. Card. Waterbury, Conn. Mech. ling. John P. Caron Jr., Woonsocket, R.l. Drama. Raymond G Caros. Sharon Hill, Pa. Elec. ling. James L. Carpenter, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Pol. Sci. John J. Carpenter Jr., Raynham, Mass. Chem. ling. Alan R. Arkowitz, Everett, Mass. Psychology. Eugenie M. Ackerly. Kings Park. N.Y. Philosophy. Claire A. Adams, Greene, Maine, Psychology. Eric S. Adler. Babylon. N.Y. Biology. Marc S. Alabaster, Plainview, N.Y. Psychology. James B. Alexander. Boston. Mass. Poly. Sci. Richard H. Allem. Boston, Mass. Biology. Robert F. Allen, Hingham, Mass. Poly. Sci. Michael Almeida Jr.. Fall River, Mass. History. Lea J. Aschkenase, Worcester, Mass. Psychology. 416 Phillips B. Carpenter, Waltham, Mass. Accounting. James li. Carr, Arlington, Mass, Pharmacy. Nancy J. Carroll, Salem, Mass. Elec. ling. Robert E. Carter, Dorchester, Mass. History. William H. Caseley, W. Springfield, Mass. Mgmt. David Castro, Fall River, Mass. Pol. Sci. Michael A. Catone, li. Boston, Mass. Marketing. Roy T. Cavicchi, Quincy, Mass. Finance. Fred A. Cella, Framinham, Mass. Education. Anthony F. Cesare, Albany, N.Y. English. John D. Chalmers, lilnora, N.Y. Economics. Paul J. Champagne, Woonsocket, R.l. Pharmacy. Kenneth L. Champion, Stoughton, Mass. Accounting. Franklin T. Champlin, Los Gatos, Calif. Id. Lawrence M. Chin, Allston, Electrical ling. Robert W. Chin, Brookline. Mass. 1 lee. ling. Andrew S. Chiras, Worcestor, Mass. Pharm. Janet A. Chisholm. Lincoln, Mass. Phys. lid. Frank E. Christman, W. Roxbury, Mass. Elec. Eng. William A. Christmas, Farminton, Mass. Pharm. Constance Cristy, Worcester, Mass. English. Robert A. Crusciel, Springfield, Mass. Civil ling. Kevin J. Chursz, Belmont, Mass. Education. Mark Chudy, Lynn, Mass. Electrical Engineering. Peter A. Ciesluk, Wellesley, Mass. Management. Joseph L. Cipp, Rowkowkoma, N.Y. Physical lid. Michael J. Cirrella, Salem. N.Y. Physics. Paul B. Clark, Belmont, Mass. Sociology. Phillip E. Clark, Mattapan, Mass. Management. Charles L. Clement, Allston, Mass. Marketing. Michael L. Clerico, Boston, Mass. Management. Peter Coakley, Boston, Mass. Philosophy. James K. Cobb, Easthampton, Mass. Poli. Sci. Melissa Cobb, Lunenburg, Mass. Sociology. Carolyn E. Cochrane, Watertown, Mass. Nursing. Lawrence Cohen, Brookline, Mass. Psychology. Paul S. Cohen, Bellrose, N.Y. History. Robert J. Cohn, Rochester, N.Y. English. William J. Colangelo, Naugatuck, Ct. Ind. Eng. Christopher Colbert, Quincy, Mass. Psychology. Charles W. Cole, Casco, Me. Industrial Engineering. George A. Cole, Hingham, Mass. Finance Insurance. Philip D. Cole, Truro, Mass. History. Ellen B. Coleman, Woburn, Mass. Sociology. Francis D. Coleman, E. Boston, Mass. History. Bruce H. Collins, Marblehead, Mass. Biology. Thomas F. Colonna, Medford, Mass. Ind. Eng. Russell B. Comstock, Dudley, Mass. English. Rober J. Concannon, W. Roxbury, Mass. Education. Paul D. Condon, Cambridge, Mass. Mathematics. Ellen L. Cone, Milton, Mass. Education. Alan H. Connie, Westbury, N.Y. Political Sci. Anne L. Connolly, Weymouth, Mass. English. Robert A. Conners, Waltham, Mass. Phys, Ed. Sherrie A. Converse. Lexington, Mass. Education. Laurence J. Conway, Peabody, Mass. Mathematics. Evan P. Cook, Williamstown, Mass. Sociology. Robert F. Cook, Watertown, Mass. Political Sci. Paul K. Cooley, Norwood, Mass. Accounting. Nathaniel Cooper, Norwich, Ct Political Sci. Robert Cooperstein, Maiden, Mass. Finance Robert R. Corbin, Salem, Mass. Management Lorraine I. Corneau, Ansonia, Conn. Accounting Bruce A. Cornell, Taunton, Mass. Accounting Leon M. Cornell, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Sociology Paula F. Correggio, Everett, Mass. History Anthony D. Corso, Medford, Mass. Pharmacy Karen Coslit, Springfield, N.J. Economics James A. Costello, Newton, Mass. History Kevin W. Cox, Quincy, Mass. Political Science William J. Cox, Allston, Mass. Electrical Engineering Thomas P. Coyne, Charlestown, Mass. Accounting Jonathan P. Cranton, Norwell, Mass. Marketing John F. Cronin, Dorchester, Mass. Mathematics Constance Crosson, Summit, N.J. Physical Education Joan S. Crosson, Pompton Lakes, N.J. Philosophy Robert F. Cuddyer, Gloucester, Mass. Industrial Engineering James A. Curran, Danbury, Conn. Finance and Insurance Eugene C. Curtis, Weston, Mass. Electrical Engineering George Fi. Cusick, South Weymouth, Mass. Management Alice A. Asendorf, Cranbury, N.J. Sociology. Eugene S. Battles. Roxbury, N ass. Philosophy. Roy E. Baker, Arlington. Mass. Psychology. Lawrence Bass. Sharon, Mass. Mathematics. Susan L. Bawn. Naugatuck. Conn. Phys. Ed. Paul O. Beane, Brockton, Mass. Philosophy. Jacqueline Beaulieu, Methuen, Mass. Phys. Ed. Carl M. Benante, Oceanport. N.J. Phys. Ed. Stephen L. Berezin, Springfield, Mass. Fin. + Ins. Russell M. Bergh, Haverhill, Mass. Phys. Ed. Richard J. Cussen, Readville, Mass. Chen. Eng. Candice Cutler, Chatham, Mass. Journalism. John J. Daforno, Dorchester, Mass. Chemistry. Virginia E. Dagosta, Jersey City, N.J. History. Concetta Dalelio, E. Boston, Mass. Journalism. Richard Dalton, East Boston, Mass. Accounting. John F. Daly Jr., Milton, Mass. Civil Eng. Richard J. Dambriosio, W. Medford, Mass. Mgt. Douglas E. Damon, Auburn, Me. Civil Eng. Ariel G. Dance, Arlington, Mass. Education. Robert M. Darcey, West Haven, Conn. Mech. Eng. George R. Darling, Melrose, Mass. History. Marshall F. Davanzo, Everett, Mass. Math. Jane E. Davis, Waltham, Mass. Nursing. William K. Davis, Lincoln, Mass. Economics. Robert W. Dawson, Beverly, Mass. Marketing. Leroy S. Day, Salisbury, Mass. Economics. Walter B. Day, Woburn, Mass. Physical Ed. Clifton C. Dean, Newton, Mass. Political Sci. Richard E. Dean, Williamstown, Mass. History. Mary E. Deans, New Bedford, Mass. Nursing. Joanne E. DoCota, Arlington, Mass. Phys. Ed. Donald E. DeGolyer, S.W. Harbor, Me. Pharmacy. Donald W. DeGroff, Somerville, Mass. Pharmacy. Richard A. DeGuglielmo, Lawrence, Mass. Accntg. Joseph A. DelGallo, Weymouth, Mass. Pharmacy. David A. Delatano, Sharon, Mass. Ind. Eng. Richard D. Demaine, Danville, N.H. Elec. Eng. Paul A. Derrico, Franklin, Mass. Mech. Eng. Michael W. Devaney. Reading, Mass. Fin. Ins. Kathryn A. Devries, Winchester, Mass. Ed. John B. Dewey, Boston, Mass. Philosophy. Edward J. DeWitt, Stamford, Conn. Psych. Kathleen P. DeWitt, Canton, Mass. Nursing. Loren DeWitt, Avon, Mass. Industrial Eng. Nancy V. DeWolfe, Westboro, Mass. Philosophy. Thomas O. Dexter, Marion, Mass. Elec. Eng. Rose M. Diaz, Allston, Mass. Psychology. James A. Dickinson, Albany, N.Y. Physics. David H. Dicks, Ormond Beach, Fla. Chem. Eng. Robert R. Dill, Orlando, Fla. Chem. Eng. Rosemarie DiMarco, Portchester. N.Y. Phys. Ed. Robert J. Dionne, Dedham, Mass. Biology. Daniel F. DiPalma, Newton, Mass. Civil Eng. Lynn DiPerri, Wiscasset, Me. Nursing. Kenneth D. Diskin, Arlington, Mass. Psychology. Frederick J. Doblander, Riverside, Conn. English. Glenn F. Doherty. Bedford, Mass. Mech. Eng. Judity M. Dolan, Woburn, Mass. English. John A. Donahue. Sudbury, Mass. Ind. Eng. Michele Donald, Madison, Wise. Phys. Ed. Barbara L. Donley. Framingham, Mass. English. John P. Donlon, Philadelphia. Pa., English. Michael A. Donovan. Stooughton. Mass. Maktg. Lois B. Dorfman, Brighton, Mass. Sociology. Robert P. Dorland, New York. N.Y. Pol. Sci. Frank G. Doron, Salem, Mass. Management. Jamie E. Doubleday, Boston, Mass. Education. John J. Dovich. Revere, Civil Engineering. Emilienne Dow, Miami, Fla. Education. Joseph W. Downes, Melrose, Mass. Management. Paul L. Driscoll, Milton, Mass. Management. Warren D. Droms, Winthrop, Mass. Psychology. Jospeh P. Dubanowitz, Ramsey, N.J. Fin. Ins. Kenneth A. Dube, Dorchester, Mass. Pharmacy. David A. Dubowik, Framingham, Mass. Biology. Debbie L. Dudley, Bedford, N.H. Phys. Ed. Jeffrey W. Duncan, Lexington, Mass. Elec. Eng. Daniel N. Dunn, Everett, Mass. Chemical Eng. John E. Dunn, Maiden, Mass. Elect Eng. Partricia M. Dunphy, Boston, Mass. Sociology Robert B. Dunphy, Wollaston, Mass. Education. Wayne R. Duprez, Newton, Mass. Mech. Eng. Steven R. Dutton, Milford, N.H. Marketing. Aloyce B. Duval, Roxbury, Mass. Sociology. Robert H. Dwyer, Dorchester, Mass. Economics. Edward J. Dziadul, Ipswich, Mass. Fin. Ins. Lawrence H. Easton, Walpole, Mass. Management. William C. Ebeling, Newport, R.I. Mathematics. Walter J. Eck, Boston, Mass. Philosophy. Ann D. Berin, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Stephen S. Berowitz. Fair La« ' n N.J. Sociology. Cecile L. M. Berube, Lawrence, Mass. Phys. Ed. Louise D. Bielinki, Quincy, Mass. Mathematics. Louise A. Bishop, New Bedford, Mass. Sociology. Christopher Blaicher ,oston, Mass. Economics. Pamela M. Bland, boston. Mass. Biology. Susan Blezard, Cumberland. R.I. Phys. Ed. Stephen M. Blumberg, Lynn. Mass. Poly. Sci. Elaine M. Boisvert. Maiden. Mass. English. Susan M. Eckland, Tuckahoe, N.Y. Education. Brian H. Eddy, Melrose, Mass. Marketing. Douglas C. Edwards, Westboro, Mass. Mech. Eng. Richard T. Eichel, Saugus, Mass. Management. Sandor I. Einstein, Peterson, N.J. Chem. Eng. Stephen C. Eisenhut, Marshifield, Mass. Phys. Ed. Gerald R. Elias, Boston, Mass. English. Lucy W. Elias, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Louis C. Elliott, Brookline, Mass. English. Allan C. Elster, Fords, N.J. Fin. Ins. Carl D. Emery, Westfield, N.J. Mech. Eng. Rodney C. Emery, Westfield, N.J. Civil Eng. Kathleen B. Enos, Winthrop, Mass. English. Dayle A. Epstein, Creve Coeur, Mo. Sociology. Gersohn I. Epstein, Taunton, Mass. Nursing. Thomas R. Ermolovich, E. Northport, N.Y. EE. Carole W. Ernst, Somerville, Mass. Education. Daniel Espinal, Franklin, Mass. Ind. Eng. Seth A. Essenfeld, Allston, Mass. Mech. Hng. Terrence C. Estey, Presque Isle, Me. Mgt. Russell B. Fair, Revere, Mass. Pharmacy. Allan D. Farber, Marblehead. Mass. Pharmacy. Linda S. Fata, Sharon, Mass. Education. Maureen K. Faucette, Reading, Mass. Phys. Ed. Donald Fedosiuk, Jamaica Plain, Mass. English. Joann E. Feeley, Newton, Mass. Biology. John P. Feerick, Revere, Mass. Marketing. Steven D. Feldman, Hewlett, N.Y. English. David G. Fennessey, Quincy, Mass. Accounting. James T. Fennessy, So. Boston, Mass. Accounting. Ellen Sue Fenton, Freeport, N.Y. History. Bruce W. Ferguson, Weston, Mass. Physics. Marcia L. Fernald, Melvin Vil., N.H. English. John Fernandes, Taunton, Mass. Physics. Thomas Ferriero, Allston, Mass. Mathematics. Mark R. Ferruccio, E. Greenwich, R.I. Ed. Mark S. Feulner, Allston. Mass. Pharmacy. Frederick A. Fiandaca, Belmont, Mass. Mgt. Carl E. Fibkins, W. Hartford, Conn. Fin. Ins. Glen A. Field. Rehoboth. Mass. Mathematics. William J. Fillingim, N. Weymouth, Mass. ME. Terry R. Finger, Saugerties, N.Y. Elec. Eng. David F. Finlay, Everett, Mass. Mech. Eng. Ewell W. Finley, Rockville, N.Y. Drama. Paul K. Finsmith, Orange, Conn. Sociology. Judith S. Fischgrund, Parlin, N.J. Ed. Michael C. Fitts, N. Tonawanda, N.Y. ME. Dianne M. Fitzgerald, Hyde Park, Mass. Hd. Kathleen F. Fitzgerald, Boston, Mass. English. Brian M. Fitzgibbons, Millis. Mass. History. Richard W. Fitzherbert, Roslindale. Mass. Fin. Ins. Richard D. Fitzpatrick. Sherborn, Mass. English. Stanley B. Fiumara. Medford, Mass. Accounting. Joseph P. Fleming Jr., Lynn, Mass. Pharmacy. Stephen A. Floyd, Burlington. Mass. Mathematics. Lorraine M. Flynn, Newton, Mass. Mathematics. Francis T. Foley, Stoneham, Mass. Pharmacy. Phillip J. Fong. No. Attleboro. Mass. Fin. Ins. Donald J. Forand, Belmont, Mass. Civil Eng. Gregory F. Ford, Boston, Mass. Accounting. Richard W. Forgione. Methuen, Mass. Phys. I ' d. Jeffrey A. Forman, Bronx, N.Y. Ind. Eng. Stanley B. Fossett, Falmouth, Me. Political Sci. Roland D. Fournier, Waltham, Mass. Phys. Ed. Stephen E. Fournier, Westbrook, Me. Civil Eng. Carolyn S. Fowler, Holbrook, Mass. Education. Jeffrey A. Fox, Roslindale, Mass. Fin. Ins. Beverly A. Frankel, Winthrop, Mass. Sociology. Roland J. Frappier, Cumberland, R.I. Civil Eng. Lisa V. Frazzetta, Stamford, Conn. Philosophy. Ronald E. Freedman, New Bedford, Mass. Economics. Harlan W. Frerking Jr., Melville, N.Y. Chemistry. Rodney A. Fretthold, Fairview Park, Ohio. Pharmacy. Alan B. Freund, Brookline, Mass. Economics. Martin E. Frey, Cambridge. Mass. Physics. Wayne A. Fricke, Greenlawn, N.Y. Psychology. Rosalind A. Friedman, Brookline, Mass. Psych. David F. Friswell, Needham, Mass. Mech. Eng. Stanley R. Frizzell, Lynnfield, Mass. CT. Dale E. Gahm, Everett, Mass. Psychology. Veronique M. Boucher. New York, N.Y. History. Wendell C. Bourne Jr., Cambridge, Mass. History. Barbara A. Breen. Jacksonville. Florida. Biology. Mary A. Briggs. West Paris. Maine. Biology. Deborah Brill, Baldwin. N.Y. English. Carol Ann Broussard, Millis. Mass. Psychology. Robert K. Brown. Greenfield. Mass. Sociology. Martin L. Browne. Flushing. N.Y. Drama. Thomas M. Bruni. Revere. Mass. Biology. Anne T. Buffum. Buffalo. N.Y. Phys. Ed. Edward Galvin, Winchester, Mass. Journalism. John W. Galvin, Dorchester, Mass. Management. Dennis L. Gane. Wakefield, Mass. Accounting. Thomas B. Gann, Dorchester, Mass. Fin. Ins. Joseph T. Gannon, Abington, Mass. Mgt. Nancy L. Garber, Brookline, Mass. Education. Richard A. Gardner, Bedford, Mass. Ind. Eng. Leonard H. Garfield, Peabody, Mass. Pol. Sci. Jeanne Gargagliano, N. Andover, Mass. Psych. Eileen F. Garrity, Brighton, Mass. Nursing. Margaret A. Garvey. Melrose, Mass. Phys. Ed. Bernice E. Gaudet, Waltham, Mass. Mathematics. Ralph E. Gaudet, Waltham, Mass. Management. Pierre J. Gauguet. Watertown. Mass. Management. John W. Gaythwaite. Lynnfield. Mass. Civil Eng. Mary Virginia Gelinas. Randolph, Mass. English. John J. Gendreau. Lynn. Mass. Political Sci. Robert Genest. Brockton, Mass. Pharmacy. Richard H. Gentile, So. Easton, Mass. History. Anthony P. George, Lynn, Mass. Economics. Frank C. Gerry. Holbrook, Mass. Education. Gloria A. Gesak, Peabody, Mass. Nursing. Peter N. Giacomozzi, Weymouth, Mass. Accounting. Alan A. Giancola, Marlboro, Mass. Accounting. Edward L. Giangrasso, New York, N.Y. Ind. Eng. Robert L. Gibson. Tewksbury, Mass. Ind. Eng. Alan V. Gilbert, Amesbury, Mass. Management Marilyn Giles, Wilbraham, Mass. Phys. Ed. Cheryl Gilkes, Cambridges, Mass. Sociology. James E. Gill, Dorchester, Mass. Elec. Eng. James D. Gilmore, Camillus, N.Y. Accounting. Jay F. Gilmore, S. Boston, Mass. Phys. I ' d. Joyce J. Gird. Newton, Mass. Psychology. Robert C. Girola, Boston, Mass. Journalism. William J. Glasser, Eastchester, N.Y. Civil Eng. Lynette S. Glover, Brighton, Mass. Education. James L. Godbout, N. Billerica, Mass. Ind. Eng. Janet A. Golden, Framingham, Mass. Journalism. Mitchell F. Goldstein, Needham, Mass. Math. Robert N. Goldstein, Newton, Mass. Political Sci. Steven Goldstein, Brighton. Mass. Ind. Eng. Susan Q Goldwitz, New York, N.Y. English. Jewelle L. Gomez, Boston. Mass. Sociology. Arlene E. Gonsalves, Mansfield, Mass. Phys. Ed. Judith F. Gooding, New Durham, N.H. Biology. Mark S. Goodman, Oceanside, N.Y. Management James A. Gordon, Danvers, Mass. Management James P. Gorden, Roxbury. Mass. English. Jeffrey A. Godron, Brookline, Mass. Fin. Ins. Warner P. Gorenzel, Easton, Conn. Economics. Dennis Gorin, Stoughton, Mass. Sociology. Judith A. Gorman. Cambridge. Mass. History. Jeffrey E. Gould, E. Hartford. Conn. Civil Eng. Kenneth J. Gould, Newton, Mass. English. Philip H. Govatsos, Canton, Mass. Elec. Knt. John E. Grabowski, Dorchester, Mass. Mgt. Joann Grabon, Springfield, Mass. Biology. Marie Graboski, Brookline, Mass. Education. Patricia A. Grady, Riverside, R.l. Nursing. Anna A. Graham, Dorchester, Mass. Nursing. Wayne J. Graham. Wayne, N.J. Ind. Eng. Marjorie Grant, Danvers, Mass. Sociology. Kevin A. Grasse, Brighton, Mass. Mathematics. Anne M. Grazer, N. Quincy, Mass. Biology. Harvey J. Greece, Worcester, Mass. Pharmacy. John W. Greeley, W. Roxbury, Mass. Mgt. Charles V. Green, Cambridge. Mass. Nursing. Janyce R. Greenblott. Somerville, Mass. Soc. Anita M. Greene, Washington, D.C., Sociology. Robert W. Greene. Arlington, Mass. Management LoisT. Greenwald, Yonkers, N.Y. Phys. Ed. John T. Greenwood. Camp Hill, Pa. Marketing. Louis C. Gregory. Meriden, Conn. Management. Jeffrey L. Gren, Bayside, N.Y. Management Charles A. Griffin, Montvale, N.J. Elec. Eng. Paul F. Grigas. So. Boston, Mass. Sociology. Linda E. Griggs, E. Bridgewater, Mass. Nursing. Edward F. Grilli, Quincy, Mass. Education. Stephen P. Grillo, Somerville. Mass. Math. Carl V. Burger. Medford. Mass. Biology. Jeanne M. Burns. Nahant. Mass. Sociology. Barbara A. Burris. Schenectady. N.Y. Phys. Ed. Joseph Busa. Boston. Mass. Philosophy. Amy E. Buzen, Port Washington. N.Y. Psychology. Henry W. Caburris, Boston. Mass. Psychology. Margaret E. Cahalen. Tewksbury. Mass. Sociology. Richard D. Cameron. Hillsdale. N.J. Pol. Sci. Arthur A. Canter. Hamden. Conn. Psychology. Ann Caraefe. Boston. Mass. Biology. David M. Grover, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Hermann A. Guenther, W. Roxbury, Mass. Civil Eng. Roger L. Guillerault Biddeford, Me. Fin. Ins. Kenneth J. Guinen, N. Bedford, Mass. Pharmacy. Gary A. Gurwitz, Worcester, Mass. Management Paul R. Gustafson, Taunton, Mass. Psychology. Andrew S. Haimes, Babylon, N.Y. Anthropology. Douglas Haley, Boston, Mass. Drama. Mark X. Haley, Belmont Mass. Civil Eng. Donald B. Hall, Melrose, Mass. Physics. Wayne G. Hall, Edison, N.J. Management. Helene M. Hallissey, Salem Mass. History. Emmett R. Halpin, Melrose, Mass. Management. Diane E. Hamilton, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Math. James R. Hampe, Dedham, Mass. Marketing. Ronald B. Handverger, Medway, Mass. Sociology. Mary L. Hanley, Dorchester, Mass. Phys. Ed. Leland T. Hanson, Arlington, Mass. Chem. Eng. Robert J. Hanson, Marlboro, Mass. Ind. Eng. Ernest J. Hapgood, Swampscott, Mass. Mgt. Barbara H. Harmon, West Newton, Mass. Drama. Henry A. Haroian, Lincoln, Mass. English. Kathleen F. Harrington, Westwood, Mass. Journ. Mark S. Harrington, W. Medford, Mass. Accounting. Edward J. Harris, Dorchester, Mass. Marketing. Kent E. Harris, West Concord, Mass. Ind. Eng. Duncan Harrison, Dalton, Mass. Accounting. Brian R. Hart, Wethersfield, Conn. Chem. ling. Frederick H. Hart, Nahant, Mass. Marketing. Eugene B. Hartnett, Roslindale, Mass. Elect. Eng. Harold E. Harwood, Southbridge, Mass. Psych. Therese M. Hauerstein, Closter, N.J. Chemistry. Richard E. Hawkins. Springfield, Vt. Ind. Eng. Ann L. Hayden, So. Salem. N.Y. Phys. Ed. Daniel Hayes, Chelmsford, Mass. Ind. Eng. Richard D. Hayes, Cambridge, Mass. Fin. Ins. George E. Haynes, Natick, Mass. Elect. Eng. Alan H. Hayward, Lakeport N.H. Elec. Eng. Kenneth F. Heald, Needham, Mass. Management. Bernard W. Heath, Everett, Mass. Elec. Eng. Thomas C. Hegarty, Bridgewater, Mass. Ed. Richard W. Heidebrecht, Saugus, Mass. EE. Benjamin I. Helme, Gales Ferry, Conn. EE Gail E. Hendershot Turner, Me. Sociology. Thomas F. Henderson, Columbia, Md. Pol. Sci. William E. Hendy, Brookline, Mass. Management. Carol V. Henning, Holden, Mass. Phys. Ed. Kenneth F. Henninger, New Milford, N.J. EE. Linda S. Hershfeld, W. Hartford, Conn. Biology. Akifumi Higurashi, Boston, Mass. Pharmacy. John A. Hillier, Lexington, Mass. Ind. Eng. Charles T. Hinchey, Salem, Mass. Psychology. Stanley W. Hinds, Lynn, Mass. Sociology. Harold D. Hirshound. Melrose, Mass. Political Sci. Barbara F. Hirshout Wilmington, Del. Accounting. Susan M. Hobart Boston, Mass. Nursing. Donald C. Hodge, Nashua, N.H. Political Sci. Thomas T. Hodge, Amesbury, Mass. Accounting. William F. Hogan Jr., Weymouth, Mass. CE. Diane L. Holden, Rego Park, N.Y. Sociology. Stephen E. Holmes, Pawtucket R.I., Mech. Eng. Judy R. Homer, Arlington, Mass. Education. Gerald C. Hopper, Framingham, Mass. Sociology. Mark A. Horeanopoulos, Burlington, Mass. Anthro. Thomas C. Houston, Hyde Park, Mass. Civil Eng. Edward T. Howard Jr., Somerville, Mass. Account Richard C. Howe, Natick, Mass. Electrical Eng. Ronald S. Howland, Bridgewater, Mass. Elec. Eng. William F. Howland, E. Boston, Mass. Mech. Eng. Richard J. Howley, Newton, Mass. Elec. Eng. Leonard P. Hubbard, St Albans, N.Y. Mech. Eng. Oulton A. Hues, Stoughton, Mass. Ind. Eng. Susan Huffman, Attleboro, Mass. Sociology. Gerald F. Hughes, Dorchester, Mass. Mech. Eng. William F. Hunter, Dorchester, Mass. Elec. Eng. Robert G. Huntley, Hyde Park, Mass. Phys. Ed. Edwin C. Hutchins, Peabody, Mass. Pharmacy. Albert R. Iapicca, Saugus, Mass. Mathematics. John E. Cavicchi. Everett, Mass. Pol. Sci. Bruce W. Chamberlain, Brattleboro, Vt. History. Cyril O. Champman, Dorchester, Mass. Sociology. Christopher Cheney. Braintree, Mass. Biology. Paul K. Chin, Providence, R.I. Biology. Edward R. Christian, New York, N.Y. Pol. Sci. Waylin Chu, Bedford, Mass. Chemistry. Joseph J. Ciccio, Whitman, Mass. Phys. Ed. Cheryl P. Clark, Cambridge, Mass. Psychology. Maureen P. Clougherty, Brighton, Mass. Soc. Barbara N. Indeck, Somerville, N.J. Education. Lester H. Ingber, Hull, Mass. Journalism. JohnT. Irick, E. Boston, Mass. Political Sci. Robert C. Irving, Taunton, Mass. Accounting. Iris M. Isaacson, Linden, N.J. Sociology. Donald H. Isenstadt, Newton Ctr., Mass. Soc. John J. C. ltz, Revere, Mass. History. Rachel Jablon, Linden, N.J. Knglish. Edward L. Jackson, Weymouth, Mass. Pharmacy. Fred N. Jackson, Winchester Mass. Klec. Eng. Nancy Jacoby, Burlington, N.J. Pharmacy. Uldis A. Jakobsons, Wayland, Mass. lnd. ling. Edward W. James, Pennsville, N.J. Accounting. Phyllis M. Janoff, W. Roxbury, Mass. Nursing. Theodore H. Jansen, Natick, Mass. Klec. Ling. Thomas W. Janssen, Massapequa, N.Y. English. Francis T. Jantzen, Brookline, Mass. Mgt. Glenn L. Jarvi, Lunenburg, Mass. Pol. Sci. William A. Jenness, Wollaston, Mass. Phys. I£d. Lrnest W. Jennings, New Haven, Conn. Flee. ling. Joseph D. Joaquim, Lawrence, Mass. Psychology. David R. Johnson, Madison, Conn. Fin. Ins. Richard A. Johnson, Burlington, Mass. lnd. Fng. Ernest T Johnson Jr. Boston, Mass. Philosophy. Leroy H. Johnson Jr., Cambridge, Mass. Psych. Linda Ann Jordan, Norwood, Mass. Political Sci. John F. Joyce, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Management. William Joyce, Melrose, Mass. Psychology. John J. Judge Jr., Maiden, Mass. Pharmacy. Joseph M. Jupa, Springfield, N.J. Chem. Eng. Patricia L. Jurewicz, Billerica, Mass. English. Philip R. Kaan, Winthrop, Mass. Phys. Ed. Joel M. Kahaner, Long Island City, N.Y.ME. Arnold R. Kaija, Reading, Vt. Mech. Eng. Alfred A. Kalition, Dorchester, Mass. Phys. Ed. Elliot Kaplan, Franklin Sq., N.Y. Chem. Eng. Judith B. Kappel, Far Rockaway, N.Y. Poli. Sci. Leslee A. Karol, Highland Park, N.J. Art Barbara L. Katz, Westport Conn. English. Danny M. Katz, Oceanside, N.Y. Management Robert J. Katz, Winthrop, Mass. Management. Rochelle Katz, Revere, Mass. Phys. Ed. Alan F. Kaul, Livingston, N.J. Pharmacy. Nancy M. Kealey, Milton, Mass. Economics. Robert E. Kearney, Taunton, Mass. Elect Eng. Garret F. Keegan, E. Weymouth, Mass. Biology. Peter R. Keen, Wilmington, Mass. Phys. Ed. William J. Keen Jr., Wilmington, Mass. Education. Kenneth J. Keller, Morrisville, Pa. Psychology. Bart A. Kellerman, Roslyn, N.Y. Sociology. Nancy Kellerman, Brookline, Mass. Sociology. Doreen Kelley, W. Bridgewater, Mass. Education. Francis M. Kelley, Milton, Mass. Accounting. Barry M. Kellner, Stoneham, Mass. Philosophy. Baxter A. Kelly, Cambridge, Mass. Marketing. Judith R. Kelly, Boston, Mass. Nursing. Terence J. Kelly, Medway, Mass. lnd. Eng. Thomas J. Kelly, Medford, Mass. Phys. Ed. Thomas N. Kemp, Boston, Mass. Drama. Robert J. Kennedy, Cambridge, Mass. Management. Thomas A. Kennedy, Needham, Mass. Psychology. Andrew P. Kenney, E. Providence, R.I. History. Kevin K. Kenney, Randolph, Mass. Chem. Eng. Michael B. Kenney, Manchester, Conn. Finance. Kathryn Kepner, Boston, Mass. English. Alice M. Kern, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Eleanor H. Kerns, Framingham, Mass. Language William C. Kidd, Danvers, Mass. Management. Elaine R. Kidder, Gardner, Mass. Psychology. Benjamin A. Kilgore, Woburn, Mass. English. John Killion, Roslindale, Mass. lnd. Eng. John B. Killoran, Roslindale, Mass. Philosophy. Haekyung Kim, Boston, Mass. Mathematics. Ralph C. Kimball, Reading, Mass. lnd. Eng. Neal L. Kimmel, Atlantic Beach, N.Y. Mech. Eng. John R. King, Lexington, Mass. Phys. Ed. Mary A. King, Revere, Mass. English. William R. Kirby, Brookline, Mass. lnd. Eng. Eileen M. Kirk, Charlestown, Mass. Nursing. Wayne L. Klahs, Brighton, Mass. lnd. Eng. John W. Cochrane Jr., Quincy, Mass. Biology. Joann N. Coderre. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Psychology. Dennis S. Cole, Rye, N.Y. English. Peter A. Conrod, Tewksbury, Mass. Physical Therapy. Charlene D. Cooper, Arlington, Mass. Biolo gy. Lynn A. Cooper, Miami Beach, Fla. Phys. Ed. SherylJ. Cooper, Milton, Mass. Sociology. Sandra F. Curt, Somerset, Mass. Phys. Ed. Jerold L. Cutler, Newton, Mass. Sociology. Alma B. Dagher, Arlington, Mass. English. Anita Klausner, Flushing, N.Y. Psychology. Edward C. Klausner, Flushing, N.Y. Biology. Steven R. Klein, Somerville, Mass. Marketing. Madeline A. Kleiner, Adams, Mass. Biology. Kerrie Knapp, Closter, N.J. Philosophy. Jay O. KnipeJr., Saugus, Mass. Pharmacy. Glen E. Knowles, Stoughton, Mass. Chem. Eng. Robert Kocur, New Bedford, Mass. Chem. Eng. Andrew Y. Kook, Boston, Mass. Pharmacy Thomas E. Koslowski, Belmont, Mass. Management Arthur f. Kostka, Taunton, Mass. lnd. Eng. Eileen S. Kotler, Irvington, N.J. Phys. Ed. Kathryn A. Kouray, Schenectady, N.Y. Phys. lid. Frank Kozacka, Exeter, N.H. Electrical Engineering. John A. Krance, Brockton, Mass. Marketing. John J. Krant, Somerville, Mass. Industrial Eng. Stuart C. Kratky, Bethpage, N.Y. Industrial Eng. Andrew G. Krause, Amsterdam, N.Y. Industrial Eng. Jason C. Kravetz, Lynnfield, Mass. Management. Steven A. Kravetz, Hull, Mass. Accounting. Martin R. Kriensky, Maiden, Mass. Management. Anil Kumar, Boston, Mass. Economics. Robert R. Kunicki, Cambridges, Mass. Management. Pamela A. Kurtz, Fairfield, Conn. Phys. Ed. Joyce A. Kustra, Stoneham, Mass. Chemical ling. Michael J. Lach Jr., Quincy, Mass. Education. Theodore P. Lack, Brighton, Mass. lnd. Eng. Maryann Laffey, So. Weymouth, Mass. Education. Paul M. Lafkowitz, Union, N.J. Pharmacy. Antonino LaFrancesca, Watextown, Mass. Pol. Sci. Robert H. Lake, Fall River, Mass. Electrical Eng. John A. LaLiberty, Walpole, Mass. Pharmacy. Philip W. Lam, Brighton, Mass. Mathematics. George F. Lamb, Hingham, Mass. Psychology. David E. Lamore, Walpole, Mass. Pharmacy. Allen L. Lampert, Chelsea, Mass. Accounting. Peter A. Lance, Newport, R.l. Philosophy. Robert C. Langen, N. Bellmore, N.Y. lnd. ling. Dean A. Langmaid, St. Johnsbury, Vt. Mech. ling. Jay C. Lanning, Brighton, Mass. Mathematics. Joseph J. Lantry, Carlstadt, N.J. Fin. Ins. Robert L. LaPerle, Springfield, Mass. Chem. Eng. George W. LaPierre, Wollaston, Mass. Accounting. Frances C. Larkin, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Linda E. Larkin, Worcester, Mass. Education. David LaRosee, Marlboro, Mass. Sociology. Roxane LaRouche, Brookline, Mass. Drama. Charles R. LaSalle, Taftville, Conn. Mathematics. Karyn Ann LeBel, Roxbury, Mass. Sociology. Barbara J. Lee, Belmont, Mass. Education. William K. Lee, Glen Wood, N.Y. Management. Kenneth R. Leger, Somerville, Mass. Pharmacy. Richard W. Lehtinen, Lexington, Mass. lnd. Eng. Gregory LeMay, Laconia, N.H. Industrial Eng. Louis J. Lemieux, Ashland, Mass. Industrial Eng. Gerald L. Lenore, Westport, Conn. Accounting. Peter D. Leonard, Abington, Mass. Marketing. George A. LePage, Woonsocket, R.I. Anthropology. Robert Lepine, Nashua, N.H. Industrial Relations. Samuel A. Lepore, Jamica Plains, Mass. Philosophy Gerald L. Lerman, Mattapan, Mass. Pharmacy Gerald Lester, Brookline, Mass. Sociology Steven B. Levery, Forest Hills, New York Chem. Fred M. Lewchik, Berlin, Ct. Chem. John R. Lewis, East Homer N.Y. Indus. Eng. Paul Light, Boston, Mass. Psychology. Hemant S. Limaye, Boston, Mass. Mech. Eng. Diane K. Lincoln, Athol, Mass. Pharmacy. Jeffrey M. Lines, Middlebury, Ct. Chen. Eng. Glenn J. Linke, Brooklyn. N.Y. English. Robert J. Linnekin, Danvers, Mass. Elec. Eng. Franklin Linton Jr., Barre Vt. Education. Steven G. Lipset, Lynn, Mass. Civil Eng. Pamela Liset Revere. Mass. Sociology. Lawrence Litwak, Belmont, Mass. lnd. Eng. Cathleen E. Logan, Winthrop, Mass. Education. James L. Logan, Winchester, Mass. Pharmacy. Marie J. Loiacone Jr., N. Weymouth, Mass. Mech. ling. John A. Lomartire, Waltham, Mass. Accounting. Thomas Dallamora, Saxonville, Mass. Psychology. Maria C. Daviero. Schenectady, N.Y. Recreation. Jonathan U. Davis, Riverside, Conn. Sociology. Karen R. DeLuca, E. Boston, Mass. Philosophy. Paul M. DeLuca, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Patricia B. DeMarco, Somerset, Mass. Phys. Therapy. Anthony J. DeVicoJr., Belmont, Mass. Poli. Sci. Joseph A. DiBlasio, Cambridge, Mass. Biology. Dean T. DiBona, Boston, Mass. Physics. Gerald K. Dolan, Salem. Mass. Science. Michael A. Lombardi, Brockton, Mass. Education. Randall W. Looke, Everett, Mass. Education. John L. Lopes Jr., Teaticket, Mass. Management. Roderick D. Lorente. Lynnefield, Mass. Biology. John S. Lorway, Stoneham, Mass. Accounting. Frederick Loud, Dorchester, Mass. Management William A. Lounsbury, Acton, Mass. Management Steven C. Lovely. Marblehead, Mass. Chem. Kng. Charles T. Lowe. Ballston Spa, N.Y. Indust. Kng. Sheila A. Lowney, Arlington, Mass. Nursing. Thomas Lucas, Newburgh, N.Y. Elect. Kng. LeoT. Lucchesi, Somerville. Mass. Civil Kng. Kenneth H. Lundquist, Woburn, Mass. Chemistry. Richard C. Lunn, Framingham, Mass. Management. John J. Luz, Brighton, Mass. Indust. Kng. Sheila A. Lycette, Jamaica Plains, Mass. Nursing. Patrick J. Lyddanc, Gainsville. Va. Accounting. Cheryl A. Lynch, Dorchester, Mass. Biology. George C. Lyon, Springfield, Va. Poli. Sci. Dorothy E. Lyons, Hyde Park. Mass. Sociology. Robert J. Macauley. Norwood. Mass. Management. George A. MacConnel. Framingham. Mass. Management. Norman J. MacConnell. Hingham. Mass. Elec. Eng. William A. MacDonald. Westwood. Mass. Ind. Eng. Donna L. MacLeod, Framingham, Mass. Nursing. Richard E. MacPherson, Lynn, Mass. Elec. Kng. Frank W. Madone, Kensington. Conn. Political Sci. Ina Lee Madow, Waltham, Mass. Education. Gerard R. Magnan. Boston. Mass. Civil Kng. Jamie C. Magnana, Boston, Mass. Mathematics. John P. Magnifico, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Chem. Eng. Patricia A. Maguire, Charlestown, Mass. Phys. Ed. Walter J. Maguire, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Civil Eng. Dennie T. Mah, Boston. Mass. Chemical Eng. Edward J. Mahan. Allston, Mass. Pol. Sci. Walter L. Mahan, Manchester, N.H. History. Joseph A. Maher Jr., N. Weymouth, Mass. Klec. Knt. Bruce M. Malkath. Boston, Mass. Biology. Sheila Malasi. Dorchester. Mass. History. George Maloof, Roslindale, Mass. Management. John P. Mancini, Framingham, Mass. Elec. Eng. Joseph L. Manfredi. Newton. Mass. Management. Robert A. Manka, Naugatuck, Conn. Klec. Eng. Jean Mann. Linwood, N.J. Sociology. Alan Maravelias. Danvers. Mass. Pharmacy. Albert J. Marchant, Watertown, Mass. Mech. Kng. Robert H. Marcou. Waltham, Mass. Management. Stephen G. Marroni, Roslindale. Mass. History. Robert C. Marsh Jr., Norwell, Mass. Education. David W. Martin, Berlin. Mass. Pharmacy. Richard P. Martin, Boston. Mass. English. William J. Martin, Arlington, Mass. Pharmacy. Judith A. Martino, Suffield, Conn., Phys. Ed. Daniel L. Marvin, Arlington. Mass. Sociology. Anna M. Marzinek. Boston, Mass. Political Sci. William M. Matejek, Norwich. Conn. Mech. Eng. Robert M. Matorin, Sharon, Mass. Political Sci. William J. Matusz. Naugatuck, Conn. Mech. Kng. Mark P. Maxim. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Elec. Kng. John A. McBay. Roxbury, Mass. Pharmacy. Johnathan K. McCabe, Mundelien, III. Management. Clyde. F. McCarthy, Cambridge, Mass. Phys. Kd. John J. McCarthy, Woburn, Mass. Accounting. Kathleen M. McCarthy. Boston, Mass. English. Michael A. McCarthy, Abington, Mass. Kconomics. Paul F. McCarthy, Billerica, Mass. Ind. Kng. David F. McClay, Stoneham, Mass. Management. Peter H. McClellan, Boston, Mass. Marketing. Robert G. McCormick. Belmont. Mass. Ind. Kng. Charlotte McDewell. Nutting Lake, Mass. Kducation. Catherine McDonald. Lawrence. Mass. Kducation. Walter T. McDonald, Brighton, Mass. Klec. Eng. Christine McEnaney. E. Briantree, Mass. Phys. Ed. Theresa M. McFarland, Boston, Mass. Political Sci. Andrew B. McGee, Staten Island, N.Y. Political Sci. Mary M. McGovern, Brockton, Mass. Biology. Stephen T. McGowan, Framingham, Mass. Finance. James A. McGrath, Springfield, Mass. Mathematics. Richard A. McGrath, Lunenburg, Mass. Biology. Patricia McGregor, Chatham, N.J. Phys. Ed. David R. Mcintosh, Lynn, Mass. Chemistry. Raymond, T. McKeever, Norwell, Mass. Ind. Eng. Harrison R. McKim, Pittsfield, Mass. Mech. Eng. Sherl A. McLarrin, New Fairfield, Conn. Physical Therapy. Paul G. McLaughlin, Quincy, Mass. Management. John W. McLeod, Newton, Mass. History. Richard A. McMahon, Quincy, Mass. Chemistry. William P. McMahon. Dorchester, Mass. Elec. Eng. Bradford H. McMillian, Harwichport, Mass. Pharmacy. John D. McNeill, Belmont, Mass. Management. William T. McWeeny, Quincy, Mass. Biology. Mary L. Medlar, Newton, Mass. Nursing. Barry J. Melhorn, Allison Park, Pa. Mech. Eng. JudyC. Melvin, Newburyport, Mass. Mathematics. Michael J. Mentus, Boston, Mass. Pharmacy. Mark Meo, Marblehead, Mass. Biology. John Meserve, Hingham, Mass. Sociology. Daniel A. Michaud, Lewiston, Me. Management. Vincent J. Milaiko, Lynn, Mass. Management. Martin A. Miller, Roxbury, Mass. History. Steven A. Miller, Westwood, Mass. Mech. Eng. William L. Miller, Milton, Mass. Elec. Eng. William D. Milieu, Hanover, Mass. Civil Eng. William R. Millington, Lunenburg, Mass. Biology. John G. Milne, Canton, Mass. Ind. Eng. Paul J. Mirabito, Fulton, N.Y. Civil Eng. Kathleen E. Moloney, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Education. Robert S. Mone, Waquoit, Mass. Finance. Austin Moore, Newton, Mass. Phys. Ed. Donald Moores. Saugus, Mass. Sociology. Walter J. Morette Jr., Lincoln Mass. Accounting. Stanley Morris, Waltham, Mass. Ind. Eng. Francis X. Morrison, Worchester, Mass. Economics. Kenneth R. Morrison, Boston, Education. Schuyler J. Morrison, Thomaston, Me. Chem. Eng. John A. Morrissey, Lexington, Mass. Mathematics. Kathleen E. Mortenson, Weymouth, Mass. History. Mark D. Moses, Worchester, Mass. Psychology. Alfred E. Motschman, Framingham, Mass. Ind. Eng. Thomas W. Mottram, Hartwick, N.Y. Pharmacy. Frank R. Motyka. Marlboro, Mass. Ind. Eng. Edward J. Mulligan, Wollaston, Mass. Marketing. Emanuel W. Munzer, Framingham, Mass. Ind. Eng. Paul T. Murphy, Boston, Mass. Management. Peter L. Murphy, Stoneham, Mass. Management. Eleanor J. Murray, Roslindale, Mass. Phys. Ed. Marilyn Murray, Hingham, Mass. English. Richard L. Murray, Quincy, Mass. Management. Robert E. Murray, No. Quincy, Mass. Biology. James R. Murtagh, Framingham, Mass. Economics. Paul R. Nangle, Danvers, Mass. Political Sci. Geoffrey C. Nash, Norwood, Mass. Management. Larry Nativi, Barre, Mass. Chem. Eng. James K. Naughton, Rochester, N.Y. Elec. Eng. Donald E. Naugler, Bedford, Mass. Ind. Eng. Diane Nee, Arlington, Mass. Sociology. Donald V. Negethon, Hingham, Mass. Management. George A. Nelson, Chelmsford, Mass. Ind. Eng. James A. Nelson, Hyde Park, Mass. Marketing. Stephen F. Nevero, Dorchester, Mass. Civil Eng. Charles J. Nichols, Worcester, Mass. History. Lawrence J. Nichols, Burlington, Mass. Ind. Eng. Toby W. Nichols, Ipswich, Mass. Psychology. Carl R. Nielson, Newton, Mass. Mech. Eng. Horst F. Nitschke, Quincy, Mass. Ind. Eng. William B. Nixon, Englewood, N.J. Marketing. Michael Nolan, Attleboro, Mass. Pharmacy. John F. Normile, E. Boston, Mass. Marketing. Robert C. Norris, Arlington, Mass. Elec. Eng. Jennifer Novak, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. Philosophy. Laura J. Nowasielski, Boston, Mass. English. Paul E. Nyren, Medfield, Mass. Management. Mary A. Qbara, Boston, Mass. Sociology. John A. Oberson, Hamden, Conn. Civil Eng. Joseph P. O ' Brien, Arlington, Mass. Marketing. Paul F. O ' Brien, Cambridge, Mass. Mathematics. Michael K. O ' Connell, Somerville, Mass. History. Liam P. O ' Conner, Boston, Mass. Education. Paul J. O ' Conner, Marshfield, Mass. Pharmacy. Robert M. Odachowski, Lynn, Mass. Management. Richard J. Dornan. W. Concord, Mass. Physics. Elizabeth L. Doyle. Bronx, Mass. Philosophy. Berit B. Drake. Somerville. Mass. Phys. Therapy. William P. Dubinsky, Middlebury, Conn. Chemistry. Russel A. Edvett. Framingham. Mass. Psychology. Richard L. Elkins, Brattleboro. Vt. Political Sci. Loretta G. Errico. Cranston. R.I. Phys. Therapy. Joyce R. Essigmann, Medford. Mass. Biology. Leon D. Fairbanks, Bedford, Mass. Mathematics. Stephanie D. Feiring, Warwick, R.I. Sociology. 420 Deborah A. Fellman. Brookline. Mass. Sociology. Janet E. Fichman, Forest Hills, N.Y. History. Pearl Figa. Portland, Me. Psychology. David G. Fine, Cambridge, Mass. English. Lewis D. Fisher. Wanamass. N.J. Political Science. Rita A. Fitzgerald, Weymouth, Mass. Physical Therapy. Michele A. Fitzmaurice, Milton, Mass. Physical Ed. Katherine A. Flagg, Epping, N.H. Philosophy. Cheryl L. Flater, Boston, Mass. History. Cathy R. Frank, Wayside, N.J. History. Edward O ' Donoghue, Weymouth. Mass. English. Teresa W. Oflaherty, Milton, Mass. Civil Eng. William J. Oflaherty, Winchester, Mass. Political Sci. Richard G. Ogurick, Wallingford, Conn. Chemistry. Thomas F. Oleksiak, Newton, Mass. Sociology. Edward C. Olson, Belmont, Mass. Management. Conrad J. Omansky. Canton, Mass. Marketing. Kenneth K. Orcutt, Bridgewater, Mass. Accounting. Ireneusz Orlowski, Perth Amboy, N.J. Elec. Eng. Leslie R. Orsini, Brighton, Mass. Education. Raymond H. Ortstein, Andover, Mass. Management. Frank W. Osborne, Milford, N.H. Physics. Jean A. O ' Toole, Stoneham, Mass. Physical Education. Dianne E. Paccione, Westwood, Mass. Sociology. Philip C. Paige, Barrington, R.I. Management. Richard E. Pais, Everett, Mass. Accounting. Penelope Palmer, Groton, Conn. Elec. Eng. George A. Papa, Stoughton, Mass. Elec. Eng. Sandra L. Parnaby, Weymouth, Mass. Political Sci. Richard M. Patinsky, Nashua, N.H. Chem. Eng. Leonard M. Patt. Weymouth, Mass Chemistry. LeeG. Paul, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Warren M. Pearlson. Brookline. Mass. Pharmacy. Arthur L. Pearson, Arlington, Mass. Psychology. Joan E. Pearson, Woodbury, Conn. Nursing. Wayne K. Pearson, Attleboro, Mass. Chem. Eng. Douglas C. Peck, Ashland, Mass. Philosophy. Joseph E. Pelletier, Amesbury, Mass. Chem. Eng. Rhoda M. Penn, Allston, Mass. History. Claude D. Pepin, Kennebunkport, Me. Physics. Robert L. Perchalski, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Pharmacy. Fortunato Persechini, Brighton, Mass. Management Richard F. Person, Northboro, Mass. Political Sci. Vincent F. Petroni, Medford, Mass. Accounting. Diane L. Peverly, Bethel, Vt. Nursing. David L. Pfeil, Winthrop, Mass. Chemistry. Carol L. Phelan, Waltham, Mass. English. Robert M. Phelps. Asburnham, Mass. Phys. Ed. John E. Pickett, Marshfield, Mass. Chem. Eng. Vincent J. Pierdominici, Woonsocket R.I. Ind. Eng. David C. Pikcilingus, Jamaica Plains, Mass. Educ. John D. Pinkham, Marshfield Hills, Mass. Educ. Diane J. Pitman, Danvers, Mass. Phys. Ed. Peter A. Pizzaruzo, Hempstead, N.Y. Physics. Steven L. Plante, Turners Falls, Mass. Indust Eng. Philip W. Poe. Nashua, N.H. Finance and Ins. John Polhemus, Staten Island, N.Y. Fin. and Ins. Peter A. Polk, Waltham, Mass. Civil Eng. Kenneth R. Pollock, Long Beach, N.Y. Fin. and Ins. Franklin S. Pond, Westwood, Mass. Civil Eng. William A. Pope, West Roxbury, Mass. History. Jan C. Porter, Mattapan, Mass. Civil Eng. Ralph R. Pottle, Melrose, Mass. Management. Karen F. Powell, Roxbury, Mass. Nursing. Teresa F. Power, Brighton, Mass. Sociology. Edward T Powers, Brockton, Mass. Mech. Eng. Stanley D. Prescott, Newtonville, Mass. Civ. Eng. Frederick Price, New Canaan, Ct. Fin. and Ins. Alfred I. Priest Jr., Waltham, Mass. Phys. Ed. William H. Pritchard, Holbrook, Mass. Management. James R. Prouty, Colchester, Vt. Ind. Eng. Alfred L. Pruneau, Boston, Mass. Civil Eng. Peter J. Puglisi, Melrose, Mass. Mech. Eng. Wade T. Putnam, Mapleton, Me. Electrical Eng. William A. Puze, West Roxbury, Mass. Sociology. James M. Quarto. Norwich, Conn. Industrial Eng. Richard C. Queeney, Dorchester, Mass. Mgt. Rosemary T. Quinn, Brookline, Mass. Math. Stephen H. Quinn, Al lston, Mass. Marketing. Stephen W. Racicot, Auburndale, Mass. Phys. Ed. Isaac O. Ragwar, Cambridge, Mass. Elec. Eng. James H. Rainey, Framingham, Mass. Mech. Eng. Betsy M. Rainie, Roxbury, Mass. Sociology. Gary P. Ralston, Plainview, N.Y. Education. Sandhya R. Rao, Watertown, Mass. Phys. Ed. Michael J. Raposa, Brockton, Mass. Pol. Sci. Ronald R. Rautenstrauch, Bedford, Mass. Ind. Eng. Mark J. Ravinski, Norfolk, Mass. Mech. Eng. Robert L. Ready, Brockton, Mass. Chem. Eng. Michael P. Regan, Dorchester, Mass. Mgt. Ann L. Fraser. Sterling Jet.. Mass. Drama. Wendy R. Fredrickson. Danvers. Mass. Sociology. Robyn Friedman, Allston, Mass. Sociology. Blythe E. Gaither. Framingham. Mass. Drama. George J. Gannon, Brookline, Mass. English. Wendy Garber, Chicago, 111. Philosophy. William Gervais. Allston. Mass. Mathematics. Sandra L. Gibbs, Dorchester. Mass. Psychology. Barry H. Gilbert. Randolph. Mass. English. Richard J. Goldstein. Dorchester. Mass. Economics. Michael J. Reggie, Boston, Mass. Psychology. Kathleen A. Reilly, Dorchester, Mass. Education. Henry G. Reintges, Marblehead, Mass. Industrial. Mary A. Renfro, Youngstown, Ohio Phys. Education. Madeleine Reynolds, Cambridge, Mass. Sociology. Stuart A. Reynolds, Framingham, Mass. Psychology. John B. Rhoads, Norwood, Mass. Electrical Eng. Margaret R. Rhodes, Johnstown, Ohio. English. William J. Ricardo, Arlington, Mass. Management. Louis F. Ricciardone, Maiden, Mass. Biology. Lynne E. Richmond, Brookline, Mass. English. Dennis A. Ricupero, Winthrop, Mass. Math. Jeffrey B. Rigmont, Marblehead, Mass. English. Lynn D. Rigney, Wayland, Mass. Nursing. Alan Riley, Kittery, Me. Management. Mary A. Roach, Belmont, Mass. English. Dennis J. Roberts, Norwood, Mass. Accounting. Michael E. Roberts, Dorchester, Mass. Economics. Craig Robins, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Stanley Rock, Rockland, Mass. Management. William H. Rodger, Hudson, Mass. Civil Eng. Albert E. Rodgers, Attleboro, Mass. Nursing. Edward J. Rogalski, Salem, Mass. Management. Judith L. Rogers. McLean, Vir. Education. John A. Romano, Reading, Mass. Nursing. Douglas M. Rooney, Brighton, Mass. Management Chester H. Rosansky, Boston, Mass. Chemistry. Rena L. Rosenfeld, Oceanside, N.Y. Sociology. James I. Rosenkranz, Milton, Mass. Sociology. Gregory R. Ross, New Milford, Conn. Management. Eileen S. Rossway, Pleasant Valley, N.Y. Biology. Lawrence Rothstein, Randolph, Mass. Political Sci. Richard A. Rotman, Maiden, Mass. Marketing. David B. Rowlings, Hingham, Mass. Economics. Judith A. Rozanski, Rochdale, Mass. Education. Evelyn R. Rubin, Portage, Mich. Sociology. Jeffrey M. Rubin, Hull, Mass. Sociology. Leslie S. Rubin, Maiden, Mass. Chem. Eng. Robert L. Ruggerio, Medford, Mass. Chem. Eng. John J. Ruscio, Swampscott, Mass. Chem. Eng. Gail A. Russell, Marblehead, Mass. Sociology. Joseph P. Russell, White Plains, N.Y. Economics. Giuseppe G. Russo, Medfield, Mass. Ind. Eng. Richard R. Russo, Arlington, Mass. Economics. Bruce C. Ryan, New Canaan, Conn. Chem. Eng. Dennis J. Ryan, Boston, Mass. Elec. Eng. Nobuko Saito. Japan, English. Gloria L. Salkovitz, Hyde Park, Mass. Sociology. Deborah F. Sallie, Trenton, N.J. Education. Robert J. Salo, Brookline, Mass. Physics. Nickolas W. Sampson, Dorchester, Mass. Hist. Joseph M. Sanroma, Newton, Mass. Ind. Eng. Julie R. Santopietro, Waterbury, Conn. Phys. Ed. Francis R. Santry, Abington, Mass. Elec. Eng. Leo J. Scammon, Natick, Mass. Ind. Eng. David W. Scanlon, Wakefield, Mass. Psychology. Michael J. Scanlon, Boston, Mass. Mech. Eng. Richard Scaramozza, Everett, Mass. Psychology. Philip J. Scarfo, E. Boston, Mass. Mathematics. Rocco Scenna, Everett, Mass. Mech. Eng. Vincent Sceppa, Quincy, Mass. Jour. Robert L. Schaaf, Franklin, Mass. Indus. Eng. Gerald K. Schaffer, Brookline, Mass. Fin Ins. Michael D. Schatz, Randolph, Mass. Mech. Eng. Sandra Scherer, Atlanta, Ga. Phys. Ed. Madelaine Schiering, Needham, Mass. Hist. Andrea H. Schilling. Harrington Pk. N.J. Jour. Julia Schlinski, Roosevelt, N.J. Pol. Sci. James R. Schneider, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Biology. Richard A. Schoenfeld, Cedarhurst N.Y. Chem. Eng. Samuel Schrendi, Hyde Park, Mass. Math. Rita I. Schultz, Boston, Mass. Philosophy. Lawrence E. Schwartz, Bronx, N.Y. Political Sci. George S. Schwedler, Quincy, Mass. Management. James L. Scoppa, Everett, Mass. Pharmacy. Lauren A. Scott, Stoneham, Mass. English. Lynne L. Scott, Winchester, Mass. Nursing. Dana S. Seaman, Abington, Mass. Management. Bethany B. Sears, Taunton, Mass. Education. Donald R. Secord, Waltham, Mass. Management Jane E. Goodwin, N. Easton. Mass. Pol. Sci. Gerald M. Gordon. Brookline. Mass. Economics. Wilmot Grant, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Jonathan M. Grassi, Brighton, Mass. Pol. Sci. Jerrold D. Green. Newton Ctr., Mass. English. Maxine J. Gruttz. Colonia. N.J. Philosophy. Jeffrey B. Grushin, Linden. N.J. Psychology. Richard J. Guzikowski. Syracuse. N.Y. Biology. Bonnie B. Hagenbuch. Holland, Pa. English. Frances M. Hale. Chestnut Hill, Mass. English. Margaret A. Sedlak. Little Silvern, N.J. Math. Jeffrey Sen, Lexington, Mass. Management. Richard J. Sena, Rockland, Mass. Elec. Eng. William F. Sepples. Litchfield, Conn. Elec. Eng. Anne W. Seymour, Hungington, N.Y. Jour. Bernard F. Shadrawy Jr., Waltham. Mass. Marketing. Norman P. Shapero, Brookline, Mass. Civil Eng. Sue Jane Shapero. Bangor, Me. Phys. Ed. Jill C. Sharpe. Boston, Mass. Phys. Ed. James C. Shaw. Brighton, Mass, Management. John T. Shaw, New Gloucester, Me. Elec. Eng. Margaret A. Shay. W. Barrington. R.I. Phys. Ed. James A. Shea, Warwick, R.I. Indus. Eng. James E. Shea. Waltham, Mass. Physics John F. Sheehan, Somerville. Mass. Accounting John P. Sheehan, Quincy, Mass. Chem. Eng. Raymond B. Sheely, Newton, Mass. Math. John M. Shepard, Arlington, Mass. Fin. Ins. Leslie J. Sher, Marblehead, Mass. Indus. Eng. Bruce L. Shlager, Framingham, Mass. Hist. Stephen W. Shulman, Newton, Mass. Accounting. Leslie Shurin. Newton Mass. Ed. Marvin I. Siegel, Holbrook, Mass. Physics. Stephen P. Siegel, Brighton, Mass. Elec. Eng. Robert J. Silveira, Taunton, Mass. Elec. Eng. Elpidio A. Silvestri, Allston, Mass. Elec. Eng. Leonard A. Simon, Teaneck, N.J. Pharmacy Linda L. Simon. E. Syracuse, N.Y. Psych. Paul J. Simon, Cambridge, Mass. Chem. Michael J. Sinapi. Cranston, R.l. Marketing. William P. Sinausky, Brighton, Mass. Pharmacy Rosalie S. Singer. Roslyn Hts., N.Y. Phys. Ed. Bertram Sirkin, Mattapan, Mass. Fin. Ins. George T. Slone, Roslyn Hts., N.Y. Psychology. Barbara J. Small, Brookline, Mass. Physical Ed. Barbara Jo Smith. Schenectady, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Daniel Smith, Auburn, Mass. Pharmacy. Diane B. Smith. Rowley, Mass. Phys. Ed. Gary R. Smith, Brighton, Mass. Pharmacy. Kenneth A. Smith. Framingham, Mass. Pharmacy. Margaret C. Smith, Framingham, Mass. Nursing. Mark C.E. Smith, Maiden. Mass. Fin. Ins. Maurice E. Smith, Portland, Me. Indus. Eng. Steven R. Smith, Randolph, Mass. Phil. Willie Smith Jr., Lexington, Mass. Ed. Barbara L. Smyth, Brighton, Mass. Jour. Albert A. Snow, Melrose, Mass. Civil. Eng. Dennis L. Snow, Hanson, Mass. Phys. Ed. George Snyder, Franklin Lakes, N.J. Civil Eng. Carlos M. Soares. Somerville, Mass. Psych. Arvid W. Soderberg, Upton. Mass. Indus. Eng. Bruce S. Sogoloff. Swampscott. Mass. Elec. Eng. John A. Sokoloski. Cumberland. R.I. Biology. Paul F. Souney, Bristol, Ct Pharmacy Kevin J. Spadafora, Wakefield, Mass. Sociology. David N. Speis, N. Brunswick, N.J. Ed. David B. Spiegel, Woburn, Mass. Management MacDonald Sprague, Holbrook, Mass. Management William B. Squillace, Gloucester, Mass. Phys. Ed. Donna Stabers, Braintree, Mass. Hist. James J. Stamboni, Arlington, Mass. Elec. Eng. Gerard J. Stanton, Cohasset, Mass. Management Paul D. Stanton, Massapequa, N.Y. Chem. Eng. Roland C. St. Cyr, Auburn, Mass. Management. Francis B. Steele, W. Medford, Mass. Pol. Sci. Edward A. Steiman, Revere, Mass. Pol. Sci. William D. Stelmok, E. Douglas, Mass. Management. Steven P. Stepak. Boston, Mass. Sociology. Zelian Sterk, Mattapan, Mass. Indus. Eng. Joyce A. Stevens, Dunstable, Mass. Phys. Ed. Mary L. Stevenson, Worcester, Mass. Psych. Ronald B. Stewart, Arlington, Mass. Elec. Eng. Jacqueline St. Germain, Rochdale, Mass. Pol. Sci. Wayne R. Stoddard, Braintree, Mass. Economics Dexter E. Stone, Waltham, Mass. Pol. Sci. Douglas B. Stone, Brookline, Mass. Pol. Sci. Richard I. Stone, Brighton, Mass. Fin. Ins. Glenn M. Stonnell, Staten Island, N.Y. Eco. John Storck, Northport, N.Y. Biology. Donald E. Haley. Saugus. Mass. Biology. Daniela Hall, Boston. Mass. Language. Gregory S. Hall. Plymouth. Mass. Biology. Barbara A. Hamilton. Pittsford. N.Y. Drama. Wayne W. Hamilton. Danvers. Mass. Pol. Sci. William H. Harris Jr.. Leroy. N.Y. Biology. Nancy J. Harrison, Manhasset Hills, N.Y. Soc. Dennis L. Hart Brookline, Mass. Phys. Therapy. Howard P. Herbitter. Floral Park, N.Y. History. Sharon L. Heritage, Albany, N.Y. Philosophy. Dennis W. Stowe, Auburn, Me. Chem. Eng. Peter J. Straggas, Waltham, Mass. Fin. Ins. Susan E. Strong, Lake Forest, 111, Phys. Ed. William T. Stubler, Attleboro, Mass. Management. Robin Stumpf, Rye, N.Y. Education. James A. Sukeforth, W. Roxbury, Mass. Management. Edward J. Sullivan, Boston, Mass. Management. James M. Sullivan, Woburn, Mass. Hist. John J. Sullivan, Newtonville, Mass. Management. John T. Sullivan, Winthrop, Mass. Hist. Kathleen M. Sullivan, Maiden, Mass. Sociology. Maureen P. Sullivan, Brighton, Mass. Journalism. Paul F. Sullivan, Lexington, Mass. Accounting. Paul J. Sullivan, Braintree, Mass. Fin. Ins. Frank A. Swenson, Saddle River, N.J. Math. Gerald B. Swenson, Belmont, Mass. Management. Geoffrey P. Swetka, Walpole, Mass. Math. Paul N. Swett. Medford, Mass. Hist. Catherine H. Sykes, Brighton, Mass. Ed. Perry J. Sylvester, Watertown, Mass. Indus. Engin. Ann M. Takala, W. Millbury, Mass. Phys. Ed. Paul K. Tamulynas, Cambridge, Mass. Accounting. David L. Tannozzini, Arlington, Mass. Elec. Eng. Alan M. Tarin, Cedarhurst, N.Y. Sociology. Carmen Tarrago, Brighton, Mass. Journalism. Edward G. Tawa, W. Roxbury, Mass. Accounting. Anne C. Taylor, Rockport, Mass. Phys. Ed. Paul A. Taylor, Framingham, Mass. Indus. Eng. William A. Tenanes, Northampton, Mass. Sociology. Richard E. Tenenbaum, Marblehead, Mass. Hist. Peter A. Tennant Ipswich, Mass. Civil Eng. Keith Tenney, Milton, Mass. Physics. Paul E. Terceiro, Tiverton, R.I. Elec. Eng. Roger A. Tessier, Amesbury, Mass. Indus. Eng. George S. Thayer, Beverly, Mass. Civil Eng. Stephen C. Theobald, Revere, Mass. Mech. Eng. Jeannette Theriault, Salem, Mass. Nursing Terrence J. Thisse, Martinsburg, N.Y. Civil Eng. Robert W. Thomas, Waterbury, Conn. Fin. Ins. Ruth C. Thompson, Roslindale, Mass. Sociology. Julia G. Thurber, Auburndale, Mass. Physical Ed. Janis L. Tirone, Waltham, Mass. Education. Andrew R. Tobey, Kittery Pt, Me. Ind. Eng. Richard E. Toland, S. Boston, Mass. Civil Eng. Ronald W. Tolini, Boston, Mass. Pharmacy. Franson D. Tom, Auburndale, Mass. Physical Ed. Charles A. Tomaselli, Lawrence, Mass. Accounting. Chester P. Tomsick Jr., Roslindale, Mass. Chem. Eng. Antonia E. Torre, Olean, N.Y. Education. Ralph J. Torti, Natick, Mass. Management. Carl A. Tortolano, Holliston, Mass. Civil Eng. Vera Sue Tortolano, Holliston, Mass. Civil Eng. John O. Tortora, Brighton, Mass. Physics. Cheryl Townsend, Beverly Farms, Mass. Physical Ed. Richard M. Traskos, Old Lyme, Conn. Finance. Richard J. Traverse, Arlington, Mass. Biology. Richard H. Trotta, Medford, Mass. History. Robert E. Trotta, Medford, Mass. Economics. John E. Troy, Somerville, Mass. Accounting. Joseph T Tucceri, Somerville, Mass. Psychology. Nancy H. Turek, New Britain, Conn. Art. Ellen M. Turezky, Allston, Mass. Psychology. Gail Turner, Boston, Mass. English. David H. Tuttle, Sterling, Mass. Pharmacy. Barbara A. Tynan, Brookline, Mass. Education. Archie D. Typadis, Brockton, Mass. Economics. Sonia H. Uchman, Boston, Mass. Biology. Paul L. Ulrickson, Freeport, Me. Chem. Eng. Virginia D. Umbro, S. Braintree, Mass. Physical lid. Darcy K. Upton, Farmingdale, Mass. Sociology. Mary R. Vadenais, Bellingham, Mass. English. Steven L. Valerio, Waterbury, Conn. Marketing. Michael Vance, Montvale, N.J. Pharmacy. John J. Vargo, Boston, Mass. Management. Benjamin H. Vaughan, Prides Crossing, Ma. Elec. Eng Thomas J. Vaughan Jr., Dorchester, Ma. Civil Eng. David J. Vaughan, Westwood, Mass. Management. Richard B. Vignoni, Braintree, Mass. Elec. Eng. Gina M. Villa, Newton, Mass. Physical Ed. Bruce W. Hershfield, Boston, Mass. Economics. Barry G. Hoffman, Buffalo, N.Y. Biology. Banprot Hongtong, Boston, Mass. Economics. Philip S. Honsinger, Cincinnatti, Ohio. Physics. Joyce L. Horner, E. Northport, N.Y. Phys. Therapy. Beverly A. Howe, Jamaica Plan, Mass. Sociology. Gail J. Hushla. Lima, N.Y. English. Kevin F. Hyland, Esses Fell, N.J. Pol. Sci. George J. Isaac, Brookline, Mass. Mathematics. Glenn Vine, N. Attleboro, Mass. Ind. Eng. Maria Vodopivec, Westbury, N.Y. English. Anita R. Vogel, Newton, Mass. Nursing. John R. Vogel, Westwood, Mass. History. Gustav Voyk, Woburn, Mass. Ind. Eng. George Vroom, Somerville, Mass. Civil Eng. William P. Vuilleumier, S. Boston, Mass. Mech. Eng. Kenneth Wade, N. Plainfield, N.J. Management. Patricia M. Wagner, Dracut, Mass. Education. Ruth E. Wagner, Boston, Mass. Ph ilosophy. Kenneth Wahl, Hillsdale, N.J. Chem. Eng. Lawrence W. Waithe, Cambridge, Mass. Management. David M. Wald, Ossining, N.Y. Political Sci. Robert L. Wallace, Dorchester, Mass. Elec. Eng. John F. Walsh, Everett, Mass. Management. Michael Walsh, Quincy. Mass. Biology. Robert B. Walter, Jamaica Plain, Mass. History. Joan M. Ward, Waltham, Mass. Pharmacy. Eric R. Ware, N. Reading, Mass. Management. Elizabeth Warnken, New London, Conn. Math. Andrea C. Warren, Weston, Mass. Hist. Bradford S. Warren, Norwell, Mass. Elec. Eng. Charles H. Warren, Fair Lawn, N.J. Accounting. Robert E. Warren, Framingham, Mass. Fin. Ins. Steven T. Warshaw, Newton, Mass. Fin. Ins. Ingrid E. Watkins, Ramsey, N.J. Phys. Kd. Paul J. Watson, Marlboro, Mass. Marketing. Richard L. Watts. Stoneham, Mass. Industrial Eng. Barbara Webster, Boston, Mass. Physical Ed. George E. Wehrfritz, Reeds Ferry, N.H. Ind. Eng. Paula Weiderhorn, Mattapan, Mass. Education. Alissa B. Weinberg, Brookline, Mass. Sociology. Andrew Weiner, Jenkintown, Pa. History. Isabel Weisman, Quincy, Mass. Biology. Brenden J. Welch, Hyde Park, Mass. Ind. Eng. George V. West Jr., Wollaston, Mass. Pharmacy. Robert J. Wheater, MessenaN.Y. Chem. Eng. Virginia Wheeler, Oakland, N.J. Sociology. Linda C. Wheeler, Marshfield, Mass. Education. Robert A. Wheeler, Beverly. Mass. Biology. Robert J. Wheeler, Medford, Mass. Pol. Sci. Raymond A. Whelan, Boston, Mass. Pol. Sci. Shirley A. Whipple, Boston, Mass. Hist. Robert B. Whitcomb, Framingham, Mass. Phil. Carl B. Whitney, Lynn, Mass. Management. John L. Whitney, Natick, Mass. Chem. Eng. Barbara T. Wicicersham, Huntington, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Edward J. Wilk, Newton Corner, Mass. Sociology. Richard D. Willett, Bucksport, Me. Pharmacy. Peter L. Williamson, Brockton, Mass. Elec. Eng. Valerie Williamson, Brighton, Mass. Biology. Arthur W. Winterhaler, Framingham, Mass. Indus. Eng. Walter K. Wirtanen, Salem, Mass. Fin. Ins. William H. Wishart Jr., E. Allentown, Pa. Journalism. Richard W. Wissenbach, Clinton, Mass. Elec. Eng. David S. Withe, Hollistown, Mass. Phil. Charles J. Wolfe, Roslindale, Mass. Psych. Stephen E. Wolfe, Hull, Mass. Fin. Ins. Susan P. Woll, Atlanta, Ga. Phys. Ed. Juanita M. Wood, Plymouth, Mass. Educ. Warner E. Wood, Concord, Mass. Indus. Eng. Peter L. Woodbury, Needham, Mass. Management. John A. Wright, Danville, Vt. Elec. Eng. Thomas L. Wright, Brookline, Mass. Management. Van A. Wright, Natick, Mass. Management. Richard A. Yagjian, W. Peabody, Mass. Psychology. Russell Yashinsky, Auburndale, Mass. Civil Eng. Harry Yee, Cambridge, Mass. Political Science. Paul M. Yee, Boston, Mass. Pharmacy. Donna L. Zack, Rochester, N.Y. Sociology. Edward W. Zagol, Taunton, Mass. Pharmacy. Stanley F. Zamkow, E. Meadow, N.Y. Elec. Eng. Lorraine M. Zanni, Boston, Mass. Sociology. James Zannis, Newton, Mass. Elec. Eng. Paul R. Zaro, Hingham, Mass. Management Paul M. Zavracky, Pompton Plains, N.J. Physics. Mary Lou A. Zdanowich, Fairfield, Conn. Indus. Eng. Barry R. Zeeberg, Hyde Park, Mass. Chem. Robert J. Zeles, Brockton, Mass. Elec. Eng. Lawrence M. Zelms. Norwell, Mass. Education. Stephen A. Ziolkowski. Quincy, Mass. Elect. Eng. Stephen L. Zolner, Beverly. Mass. Mechanical Eng. Steven J. Zottu. Haverhill, Mass. Marketing. Stanley F. Zuckerman, Emerson, N.J. Mngmnt. Karen G. Zuckerman, Raynham, Mass. Sociology. Janet L. Conway, Basking Ridge, N.J. Biology. Colleen A. Harrington, New Bedford, Mass. Pol. Sci. Arthur Brooks Lubow, Jericho, N.Y. History. Corrine E. Markey, Hartford, Conn. Economics. Keith R.H. Weber, Cranford, N.J. Sociology. Helene M. Jacobs, Great Neck, N.Y. Philosophy. Nelson J. Jean, New Orleans, La. Mathematics. Russell B. Jenkins, Wakefield, Mass. History. Regina M. Johnson, Boston, Mass. Psychology. Kenneth R. Jones, W. Lebanon, N.H. Languages. Clifford J. Jurdi. Methuen, Mass. English. Susan P. Kahn, Teaneck, N.J. Languages. Debra S. Kamen. Spring Valley. N.Y. Psych. James F. Keaney, Allston. Mass. Languages. Sheila B. Kelley, Grand Island, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Allison M. Kern, Auburn, Me. English. Jane A. Kerzner, Boston, Mass. Drama. David G. Killam. Melrose, Mass. English. James A. Kinglsey. Bristol. Conn. Pol. Sci. Melvin Klayman. Maiden, Mass. Languages. Phillip M. Klein. Newton, Mass. Psychology. Ulrike D. Klein, Cambridge, Mass. Phys. Therapy. Mary K. Kovacs, Bedford, Mass. Psychology. Avrun C. Krim, Great Neck, N.Y. Biology. Linda Kuhns, Boston, Mass. Psychology. Bruce W. Laing. Weymouth. Mass. Psychology. Thomas J. Lane, Quincy, Mass. Political Sci. Stephen C. Lascala. Bronx, N.Y. English. Martin A. Laschi, Reading, Mass. History. Sieuram Laukaran, Boston, Mass. Pol. Sci. Robert P. Lee. Somerville, Mass. Biology. Virginia Lees. Shresbury, N.J. English. Fred E. Lehtonen, E. Sandwich, Mass. Biology. Bernard J. Lemos, Cumberland. R.I. Biology. Arthur J. Leon, W. Roxbury. Mass. Psychology. Stephen P. Lepre, Providence, R.I. Phys. Therapy. Elizabeth J. Leroux, Old Orchard Beach. Me. Phys. Ther. David W. Levinson. Brighton, Mass. Economics. Andrew B. Loman. Cresskill. N.J. Psychology. Martha B. Long. Massena. N.Y. Phys. Therapy. Karen E. Lorenz. Washington, D.C. English. James M. Loveday. Brockton, Mass. Economics. Karen E. Lucius, W. Brookfield, Mass. Phys. Therapy. Kenneth L. Luthanen. Wallingford, Conn. Biology. Chan T Luu. Boston, Mass. Psychology. Robin C. Mack, Dorchester, Mass. Drama. Sharon A. MacNeill, No. Andover, Mass. Phys. Ed. Marshall Y. Mah. Lynn. Mass. Biology. Andrew T. Maio, East Haven, Conn. Philosophy. Gail L. Malbon, Bridgewater, Mass. Biology. Charles J. Mango, Scotia, N.Y. English. Candice A. Manoogian. Huntington, N.Y. Psych. Rodney C. Mashia, Norco, La. Mathematics. Christopher Mauran. Boston, Mass. Anthropology. Susan A. Maxwell. Framingham. Mass. Psychology. Joyce J. Carriston, Swampscott, Mass. Psychology. Barbara J. McCauley, Roxbury. Mass. Phys. Ed. Marjorie R. McCaracken. Brookline. Mass. Phys. Ed. Lunne M. McCumiskey. Dorchester. Mass. Phys. Ed. John S. McDonough, Brockton. Mass. English. Philip R. McGee. Staten Island, N.Y. Pol. Sci. Janice N. McGovern. Lynn, Mass. Sociology. Mary C. McGuire. Brighton. Mass. English. Rosemary McKenna, Taunton. Mass. Phys. Ed. Kathleen McLellan. Boston. Mass. Psychology. John L. McMahon. Southampton, N.Y. James P. McManus. Boston, Mass. English. Sharon M. McPhail. Cambridge, Mass. Sociology. Bruno, J. Meoli, Everett, Mass. Journalism. Ronald B. Mertens. W. Newton, Mass. Sociology. William W. Metters, Mansfield. Mass. Drama. Daniel E. Micciantuono. Boston, Mass. History. Marilyn Mirman, Boston, Mass. Philosophy. Peter E. Moore. Wakefield, Mass. English. Jacqueline Mosesso, Boston, Mass. Psychology. Grant H. Moskowitz. Millburn. N.J. English. Jeffrey L. Moss, Jericho. N.Y. Psychology. William J. Mullen. Weymouth. Mass. Biology. Robert C. Murray. Boston. Mass. Journalism. Nancy S. Najarian. New Britain. Conn. Sociology. Richard J. Nardone. Arlington. Mass. Psychology. Brenda A. Newman, Mattapan, Mass. Sociology. Philip M. O ' Connor. W. Roxbury. Mass. Economics. Kelley J. 0 Leary. Brighton, Mass. Drama. Dibugwu Z. Onwenu. Boston. Mass. Economics. Donald L. Tuff, Wenham, Mass. Mathematics. George S. Tzantzos. Roxbury, Mass. Poly. Sci. Janice M. Vahl. Webster, N.Y. English. Henry T. Venuti, E. Boston. Mass. English. Marcia L. Warren, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Risa D. Wax, Roslindale, Mass. Phys. Therapy. Mable Weathers. Dorchester, Mass. Sociology. John E. Welch. Roslindale. Mass. History. Jocelynne D. Welch. New York, N.Y. Biology. Fredda E. Wieder. Brooklyn, N.Y. Philosophy. David L. Pair. Dorchester. Mass. Psychology. Judith L. Pappo, Long Beach. N.Y. Sociology. Barbara L. Parker. Holliston, Mass. Phys. Ed. Ralph M. Peace. Jr.. Roxbury. Mass. Biology. Mark V. Pelletier. Kennebunk, Maine. Psychology. Brenda E. Perlman, Massapequa. N.Y. History. Philip A. Pina. Boston. Mass. Psychology. Michael E. Pingree. Lynn. Mass. Journalism. Barbara R. PoUack, Rockville. Md. Sociology. Albert H. Postle. Williamstown. Mass. English. Ellen S. Prince. Hampton Bays, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Dennis R. Pronowicz. Holyoke. Mass. Phys. Ed. Richard Pultz, Rockaway, N.J. Biology. Frederic M. Radoff. Livingston. N.J. Psychology. Gail C. Ramsay. Brockton, Mass. Phys. Ed. William R. Plotica. Meriden. Conn. Philosophy. David A. Rawding, Lynn, Mass. Mathematics. Ilene S. Reich, Irvington, N.J. Phys. Therapy. Linda L. Reim, Palmer. Mass. Phys. Ed. Eugene K. Richards, Boston. Mass. Political Sci. Mary E. Riggs. Boston. Mass. History. Harris I. Risman, Lynn. Mass. English. Peter R. Roach. Bryn Mawr. Pa. Mathematics. Susan E. Roberts. Linden, N.J. Sociology. Bruce W. Robie, Shawnee. Kansas. History. Richard S. Rogers. Wrentham. Mass. Psychology. Eugene P. Rondinaro, Dumont. N.J. Poly. Sci. George C. Rosenmann. Brookline, Mass. English. Michael M. Roth, Renssalear. N.Y. Psychology. Jerald G. Rubin, Newton. Mass. Philosophy. Tibel B. Rubin, Natick, Mass. Language. Ellen J. Rumerman. Belmont. Mass. English. David E. Rundlett. Waltham. Mass. Poly. Sci. Janis R. Ryan, Boston. Mass. Physical Therapy. Michael J. Salvo. Belmont. Mass. Drama. Leonard J. Sampson. Melrose. Mass. Electrical Eng. Peter N. Sandgren. Groton. Conn. English. Jonathan G. Saunders, Bedford, Mass. Sociology. Diane M. Calfati. Boston, Mass. Biology. James A. Scanlan, Lynn, Mass. History. Ravenna R. Schall, Hewlett L. 1., N.Y. Philosophy. Paula E. Schneider. Hamden. Conn. History. Marilyn I. Schulman. Jericho. N.Y. Language. Ilene Scwartz. Brighton, Mass. History. Ruth J. Sedgewick, Dover, N.H. Psychology. Paul L. Semprini, Brookline, Mass. Psychology. Angela M. Serrecchia, Quincy, Mass. English. Edward P. Shea, Brighton, Mass. Economics. Mary Ann Shue, York, Pa. Phys. Ed. Marjorie E. Shulman, Pittsfield. Mass. English. Deborah S. Shwom, Hyannis, Mass. Phys. Ed. Robert 1. Silverstein. Woodbury. N.Y. Biology. Edward W. Simonson, Saugus. Mass. Sociology. Carol P. Slocum. Mansfield, Mass. Sociology. Mary B. Sochacki. Higham, Mass. Language. James D. Sousa, Boston, Mass. Biology. Olga A. Sowchuk, Monroe. Conn. Sociology. Robert E. Spencer, Buzzards Bay, Mass. Biology. Steven H. Speyer, Brookline, Mass. History. Karen K. Stanzione, Yonkers, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Alice M. Staskawicz. Melrose, Mass. History. Linda M. Steeves, Lexington, Mass. English. Martha A. Steeves, Lexington, Mass. English. JaneS. Steinberg. Br ooklyn. N.Y. Phys. Ed. Mary Sue Steinberg, Allston, Mass. Drama. Allyn F. Stern, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Jane E. Stoller. Methuen, Mass. Psychology. Deborah A. Stone, Mattapan. Mass. Language. Jesus Suarez. Boston, Mass. Economics. Timothy D. Sullivan, Charleston, Maine. Physics. Kimberley J. Summers. Framingham, Mass. Phys. Ed. Archie F. Syrene, Manchester, N.H. History. Lori Lee Tack. Long Beach, N.Y. Phys. Ed. Susan E. Thibeault, Dorchester, Mass. Phys. Ed. Judith A. Thistle, Melrose, Mass. English. David K. Thompson, Andover. Mass. English. Ralph J. Timperi. Hyde Park, Mass. Sociology. John V. Todd. Scituate, Mass. Psychology. Dennis A. Tolbert. New York, N.Y. Poly. Sci. Joel Towbin, Wakewood, N.J. Poly. Sci. Gary W. Wihbey, Waterbury, Conn. Biology. Steven R. Williams. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Biology. Alfred F. Wong, Brookline. Mass. Phys. Therapy. Diana T. Wong, Boston, Mass. Sociology. Wesley A. Wright. W. Quincy. Mass. Biology. Conrad F. Wrobel, Lynnfield, Mass. Physics. Gregory L. Wyss, Sidney, N.Y. Mathematics. Joe M. Yoe, Framingham, Mass. Biology. Nicholas Zachary, Brighton, Mass. Sociology. Karen G. Zuckerman, Raynham. Mass. Sociology. Printed By BRADBURY, SAYLES, O ' NEILL-PARAGON College and Independent School Affiliate of Paragon Press, Inc. I I 37 OR -HEA?n RN UNlv ' RSITY W
”
1967
1968
1969
1972
1973
1974
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
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.