Northeastern University - Cauldron Yearbook (Boston, MA)

 - Class of 1973

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Northeastern University - Cauldron Yearbook (Boston, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 320 of the 1973 volume:

For Reference Not to be taken from this room JUtbrarg E Liliris: HE CAULDRON ' o 1 u m e L I I I Dr. Asa Smallidge Knowles A.B., A.M., LL.D., Litt. D. , SC. D., D. B. A. m IHE CAULDRON Mine is yesterday, I know tomorrow. -Book Of The Dead [c.3500 B.C.] There is no remembrance of former things: neither shall there by any remembrance of things that are to come with those that shall come after. — Ecclesiastes 1:11 [c.250 B.C.] Those who do not remember the past are condemned to relive it. —George Santayana [1863-1952] STAFF Donald C. Leamy Editor-in-Chief Jeanne Ryder Michelle Saffioti Managing Editor Associate Editor Arthur MacPherson (Sports Editor) Scott L. Kaeser John P. Mello Joe Prevett Maxine Lieberman Karen Schindehette Thomas A. Rozum Jack R. Goldberg David Deans David C. Dunlap Bruce Morse James Yee Ben Lee Ellen Frank Frank Callahan Barry Novich Dean Harvey Vetstein Advisor The Editor and the Staff of the Cauldron would like to acknowledge our thanks: To Ray D. Wells, for allowing us access to his personal files and information regarding the Silver Masque productions during the past five years; to Dean Ryder for access to the pseudo-kitchen with its food and drink for the body, and solace for the soul (Saturdays by appointment); to Teresa for a sweet scowl and her faith in what she knew we were up to; to June of the Windsor Tap Room for rye whiskey and sympathy to yearbook staffs past and present; to Harvey Vetstein, always the man in the middle, defending us when we think we ' re right even if he thinks we ' re wrong; to Richard Sochacki for the beer (the Editor is a studying alcoholic); to Thomas Sprague and Seth Wanatik for their research assistance; and to Gil MacDon- ald for always being ready to make every effort to improve the quality of the Cauldron. Say hi to the Shadow for us. And to all, we wish to thank everyone, especially you. Table of Contents The Origins, 1898-1973 8 1998 NEWS 72 The President ' s Message to Seniors 74 TAR 76 Student Activities 82 Distinguished Speaker Series 98 Silver Masque 103 Varsity Sports 112 The Seniors Liberal Arts 142 Engineering 173 Business Administration 209 Education 230 Boston Bouve 241 Pharmacy 248 Nursing 251 Criminal Justice 259 The Administration Student Affairs 263 University Administration 264 The Trustees 266 The Faculty 268 Index of Seniors 278 HE ORIGINS 1898-1973 N 1989, WHAT WAS TO BECOME [Northeastern University was embodied in a series of night courses in law sponsored by the Boston Young Men ' s Christian Associa- tion, and Lowell Institute; and in the person of Frank Palmer Speare. Head of the YMCA ' s education division since 1896, it was Speare whose imagination, per- serverance, and work enlarged the scope of course offer- ings and directed the organizational development which culminated in the incorporation of Northeastern College in 1916. With his major objective being the promotion of edu- cational opportunities for young men, in his capacity at the YMCA and later as Northeastern ' s first president, Speare led the educational institution through years of growth and experimentation in an effort to offer unique and beneficial opportunities for the development of the community. Northeastern is not an old institution. Some of the men who have devoted their lives to helping the university get off the ground are still alive. The university is not a dust- encrusted hand-me-down from a bygone era. Instead it represents the attempts and failures, the strengths and weaknesses which result in any effort conceived and nur- tured by a group of men. Some of the university ' s pro- grams have eventually proven to be weak and have died. But the ideas of men sometimes require many tests and much use before they can be recognized as either suc- cessful or unsuccessful. Many of the things the university now does may prove in time to have been based on faulty reasoning. Then improvements will follow. No one is om- niscient and able to institute a program secure in the knowledge that it will succeed and continue to be rele- vant forever. In spite of occasional failures in specific situations, the basic philosophy and structure of the in- stitution as established by Speare seems to be a stable one. The university ' s three presidents have carried the in- stitution through different phases: Speare ' s era was one of experimentation and formulation; Ell ' s administration was one of personal rule, in spite of rapid growth of the campus and the ever-increasing student body; Knowles ' administration has had to respond to the monumental growth and pressure exerted by the sixties, with more students than ever, and with the impending Diamond An- niversary closing in on a cramped, suddenly inadequate campus. The philosophy of Northeastern has always been to of- fer unique educational opportunities without overly du- plicating the efforts of other local institutions. In 1898, the Evening Law School was started, which in 1904 was in- corporated with degree privileges. The Law School was on of the mainstays of the developing university for 55 years. The first formal program of the university, it of- fered working men the chance to study law at night. In :v ' i l ' J48 ' i sm - THE HOME OF NORTHEASTERN COLLEGE 1953, the Law School was phased out for 17 years because it seemed to duplicate unnecessarily the efforts of many local law schools which had been established during the first half of the twentieth century. This philosophy of unique opportunities without du- plication of effort sprang from the fact that the Evening Institute course offerings were entirely dependent on community interest for their success or failure. To be- come just one more in a large number of institutes offer- ing duplicate programs would have spread the public too thin. The Evening Institute thus offered unique opportu- nities, thereby procuring the entire segment of the com- munity interested in its particular programs. The favor- able response to the Law courses offered in 1897, encouraged the YMCA directors to approve Speare ' s plans for more advanced law courses to be offered begin- ning in 1898. This more formal program was to become the first school of Northeastern, and thus its inauguration is considered the birth of the university. With Speare ' s perseverance and initiative, the Evening Institute grew from an eraser and two sticks of chalk into a viable organization. Early success was achieved through the teamwork of its organizers and the enthusi- asm of its students. In the early years of the Evening In- stitute, Speare inaugurated many courses, some of which populated, others of which died for lack of interest. The unsuccessful course is exemplified by one called Knots and Splices which Speare initiated simply because he knew a retired sea captain available to teach it and be- cause he thought it would be useful and intriguing. No one shared his interest enough to enroll, and the course was never taught. The process of experimental offerings and the resulting expansion of the courses was carried on in a very infor- mal and spontaneous fashion in the early years of the Evening Institute. As the twentieth century began to as- sert itself in the fields of automobiles, business adminis- tration, and engi neering technology, programs became more formalized, giving the Institute substance enough to become a chartered college by 1916. In 1903, the YMCA ' s Education Division opened the world ' s first Automobile School, offering three courses: a general coarse in motor transport; a course for those in- terested in the industry of automobiles; and a course in maintenance. In many ways, the Automobile School is in- dicative of future Northeastern philosophies. The estab- lishment of the school reflected a community need: that of absorbing the new phenomenon of the automobile into existing social patterns. The school offered garage work, carried on in the Vocational Building (now known as the Botolph Building), which placed a value on practical ex- perience later reflected in the philosophy of Co-operative Education. Some of the automotive courses were opened to women, thus setting a precedent for the later adoption of co-education. H t H s c re Oi In 1907, in response to the relatively new idea of aca- demic training for businessmen, the Evening Institute formed a School of Commerce and Finance. Some of the earliest courses offered by the YMCA since the 1860 ' s were typing and bookkeeping for the training of clerks. By the turn of the century business had become more complex and it became desirable to educate businessmen to more modern techniques of administration as well as to more contemporary business ethics. The School of Commerce and Finance offered courses in finance, administration, business law, and languages. Later, more specialized courses were introduced in- cluding banking, finance and bond salesmanship, and accounting. In 1910, the School of Commerce and Finance was in- corporated and in 1911, it was granted the power to con- fer bachelors and masters degrees in commercial science. The name of the school became the School of Business in the undergraduate Evening Division, in 1928, with Carl D. Smith serving as dean. It became the largest school in the Evening Division, with graduate work added to the pro- gram in 1950. The school most closely related to its present-day counterpart, the Cooperative Engineering School, was also started in 1909, the second institute in the United States to operate on the cooperative plan. The first co-op engineering courses were begun in 1906, at the University of Cincinnati, by Herman Schneider, the originator of the plan. The Evening Institute ' s Cooperative Engineering School opened in 1909 with an enrollment of eight. The following year courses in civil and mechanical engineer- ing were offered to the burgeoning enrollment of 30 students. The 1912-13 Catalog of the Evening Institute delineates the rapid growth of the Co- operative Engineering School: Faculty: 18 Enrollment: 70 School expenses: (in- cluding YMCA mem- bership) $100 per year Rooms at the YMCA: $1.50 per week and up Board at the YMCA: $3.50-$5.00 per week From 70 students in 1912, enrollment reached 235 by 1918, and more than doubled to 592 by 1920, when tuition had climbed to $175 per year (with $10 student activities fee). Obviously the Engi- neering School, with the added attraction of Co-op employment was something the public needed and wanted. Until 1909, the Chauncey Hall School gave day classes in the same YMCA facilities used by the Evening Insti- tute at night, located at the corner of Boylston and Berke- ley Streets. When the Chauncey School relocated, leaving the YMCA vacant during the day, Speare suggested that the space be used by the Evening Institute to conduct day classes. Speare envisioned a new type of college prepara- tory school, providing individual supervision of students; programs of sports and activities; and college preparatory education at a cost between that of private boarding school and evening school. Therefore, in 1909, the College Preparatory program which had been part of the Evening Institute since its in- ception, was reorganized and established as a day pro- gram. The initial enrollment of 100 in 1909, grew to 250 in a year later. In 1913, this Association Day School became the Huntington School for Boys. After the incorporation of Northeastern in 1916, the Huntington School became 12 FRANK PALMER SPEARE President of Northeastern College one of the group of Northeastern schools. However, in 1950, the decision was made to make Northeastern strictly a college-level institution. Thus the Huntington School resumed its ties with the Boston YMCA and con- tinues its work today at 290 Huntington avenue. Until 1910, the Evening Education Division operated in the Boylston Street YMCA. In that year the building burned down and for months classes were held in rooms provided by the City of Boston, the Boston YMCU, Bos- ton University, MIT, and after that, in various buildings on Huntington and Massachusetts Avenues. The YMCA decided to rebuild, not on Arlington Street as originally planned, but on Huntington Avenue. The section of Huntington Avenue which appealed to the YMCA directors in 1910, was an open field which lay beyond Symphony Hall and had been the site of the first World Series games in 1903, when the Boston Americans had defeated the Pittsburgh Nationals. This area was at- tractive because of the ath- letic field, and because of the rapid development tak- ing place in the Back Bay area. Symphony Hall had been erected in 1900; the New England Conservatory completed in 1901; Isabella Gardner had transplanted her palace in 1902; the first section of the Museum of Fine Arts had been com- pleted in 1907; and the Bos- ton Opera House had opened in 1908. Ground-breaking ceremo- nies for the new YMCA Main Building were held in November, 1911. But the Vocational Building had been completed in October of that year, and was already occu- pied by the Automobile School and the Electrical School. The Main Building was completed in 1913. The Catalog of the Evening Division for that year boasted the facilities provided in the new building, including a fine gymna- sium, bowling alleys, swimming pool, cafe, dormitories, shops and laboratories, library and reading room, camera club rooms, social and recreative rooms, and auditorium. The new facilities and the coagulating curricula gave a new lease on life to the Education Division. With bright outlook, the 1913 Catalog stressed that any man with abil- ity and good character should be able to succeed in any of the programs. c -a 3 O CO 75 O 3 23 iff 33 aa miHii ' THE VOCATIONAL BUILDING THE POOL In describing its new facilities, the Catalog emphasized the importance of the location, surroundings, and physi- cal appointments of a school: The location ought to be healthful, accessible and attractive. Its build- ings ought to be properly heated, lighted and venti- lated and above all con- ducive to the health and progress of students at all seasons of the years. Having sweltered for an hour in a room in Robin- son Hall, in the middle of January, incapable of opening the windows, one can see that the above is one of the ideals towards which Northeastern con- tinues to strive even now. PROF. JOSEPH SPEAR THE HUNTINGTON BLOCK The new YMCA Facilities also boasted one of the coun- try ' s largest indoor salt water swimming pools, heated to a comfortable warmth by an elaborate pipe system. The Education Division sponsored various monthly so- cials and entertainments for the exclusive enjoyment of its students, including an outdoor field meet, held an- nually in May. While educating a good lawyer or engineer, the Educa- tion Division retained its desire to concurrently build men of good character. The 1913 Catalog thus exhorts students to avoid excessive social and athletic activities. Furthermore it is assumed that ... Students come to the school for a serious purpose, and that they will cheer- fully conform to such regulations as may from time to time be made . . . Students are expected to behave with decorum . . . and to pay due respect to (the School ' s) officers. For students commuting to school, the Catalog points out that the facilities are easily accessible by various rail- roads and electric trolley cars. The Education Division sponsored various monthly so- cials and entertainments for the exclusive enjoyment of its students, including an outdoor field meet, held an- nually in May. The Huntington Schools offered a wide variety of stu- dent activities in conjunction with the YMCA including an array of athletic teams, a school newspaper, a Glee Club, and an Orchestra. Some of the more unique activities included a Con- gress, similar in composition to the national body, with each student representing a state. The purpose of the club was to debate proposed bills and gain public speaking ex- periences. Another oddity was the moving pictures series held in Bates Hall, one of the subsidiary sections of the YMCA complex. The educational films shown in the series were evaluated in the 1914 catalog as a means by which much informa- tion can be received . . . in a short time with little effort (nascent McLuhanism!). In the Business School the directors were busy looking out for the physical well- being of students: Business duties are so exacting that only those who have strong physiques can meet the re- quirements. Thus, pro- grams of regular exercise in the gym and pool were required. The overall atmosphere of the pre-war schools more re- sembles a junior high school of today. The school day went from 9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., with a 30 minute break for a light luncheon . Stu- dents were not permitted to leave the building without permission except at lunch time. The 1914 Catalog explained, The pupil ' s time be- longs to the school and is at the disposal of the teacher in the same way as it would be at the command of an employer. The popularity, variety, and ever-increasing formal- ization of Education Division programs led in March 1916, to the incorporation of Northeastern College. The 1916 Catalog declares, The College is not a new in- stitution, but the realization of an ideal carefully worked out and persistently followed for a period of twenty years. A thorough investigation of all the Association Schools was conducted in 1914 by George H. Martin, former secretary of the State Board of Education, prior to CARL STEPHENS ELL application for incorporation. This investigation con- cluded that all the technical and professional schools were of college or graduate grade. The 1916 Catalog capsulizes the development of the College: The Association system starting with evening courses only, elementray in character, brief and uncon- clusive, and with no endowment, adequate space or equipment, and no criteria to guide them, have passed successively through the realm of elementary education and of secondary education, into the professional and technical school realm, retaining and developing nearly every feature ever undertaken, and finally emerging as a fully organized college with both day and evening courses, splendidly housed and equipped. Upon incorporation, the Education Division ' s pro- grams were divided in two groups: the college level schools fell into Northeast- ern College; the secondary grade courses continued un- der the old title of Depart- ment of Education. The Northeastern College group consisted of the School of Law, in its 19th year; the School of Commerce and Fi- nance, in its tenth year; the School of Co-operative En- gineering, in its seventh year; and the School of Lib- eral Arts, which was estab- lished in the Fall, 1916. Since its beginnings in 1898, the student enrollment had increased by 768 per cent, from 419 to 3,620 stu- dents. The number of teach- ers had risen from 12 to 214; the number of courses had increased from 20 to 336; and the budget had gone from $2,800 to $185,418. In their preliminary statement, in 1916, the Trustees glorified the low operation costs of Northeastern, since it didn ' t need to pay for its own buildings and facilities. However, the statement stresses the urgent need of an endowment to be spent on a new building containing lecture halls, laboratories, ampitheatres and drafting rooms; additional scientific equipment; and the creation of more liberal scholarship funds . The School of Liberal Arts, announced in the 1916 Trustees ' statement, opened in September of that year. The purpose of the school was to offer the advantages of a bachelor ' s degree in a re- duced number of years, requiring only two years of study at night to obtain a certificate of advanced standing quali- fying the student for day study at a regular liberal arts school. This plan allowed the student to work during the day for two years while studying at night at Northeastern. Non-paying day studies at liberal arts college would then only require two years from a person ' s productive life in- stead of four. At this stage, the co-op plan operated in bi-weekly seg- ments, with A students working two weeks while B students studied, and then the roles reversed the follow- ing two weeks. The school year went from the second week in September to the second week in June. The wages detailed in the 1916 Catalog of the Co-oper- ative Engineering School ranged from $5 per week for first year students, to $10 per week for seniors. In March 1920, Northeastern College, consisting mainly of the Co- operative Engineering School, was empowered by the Massachusetts General Court to grant bachelors degrees in civil, mechanical, chemical, and electrical engineering. A fifth degree in administrative engineering was added in 1921, and changed to industrial engineering in 1928. The students celebrated the granting of degree powers with a Degree Jubilee. This was one of the efl ' orts of Pro- fessor Joseph Spear, the prime mover in the estab- lishment of a regular program of student activities. In his position as the head of the Department of Student Activi- ties between 1921 and 1926, Spear was responsible for the establishment of Field Day, a long-standing tradition; and for the direction of the musical activities of the school, Including a band and an orchestra. In 1921, the Department of Student Activities was offi- cially established, including the following divisions: pub- lications, athletics, and miscellaneous. Under Spear ' s ad- ministration, the activities were funded through a $10 DANCE ORCHESTRA Student Activities Fee which was later increased with student approval to $15. j The publications division included the newspaper, the yearbook, and the newly devised student handbook. The newspaper, established in 1916 as The Co-op, and pub- lished sluggishly until Spear took over, changed its name to the Northeastern Tech. Its circulation increased from 600 to 1800, and its pages grew from three columns to five. The Cauldron, which made its initial appearance in 1917 with pictures of 20 seniors and 19 faculty was re-es- tablished in 1921 and has been published annually since then. The Student Handbook, called the Freshman Bible , was published by the students at this time. Later the task of compiling a guide for freshman was taken over by the Dean of Students Office. ORCHES TRA X 1 ' J f I i| t ■-■-.•; , NORTHEASTERN OFFICE FORCE Under the Activities department, athletics were estab- lished on a university basis in 1924, v fith letter awards and eligibility requirements. Track competition had be- gun in 1919, followed the next year by established base- ball and basketball teams. The teams in wrestling and swimming during the 20 ' s did not gain permanency. In 1922 soccer was started as a minor sport, the team winning its first game against MIT. Through efforts of George Frost ' 24, captain of the first soccer team, the sport was made a major facet of the athletic program until 1933 when football was initiated at the university. The Miscellaneous Activities included mass meetings. Field Day, the Rush, Student Council, and other minor activities. Initiated in 1910, Field Day was developed to major proportions by Spear in 1920, and continued on into the late ' 30 ' s. It was essentially a family picnic, so when the university grew too large, the event became in- feasible. But for the many years it survived. Field Day was held at the Riverside Recreation Grounds in Weston, and was attended by students and faculty. The day fea- tured sporting events, races, eating, and dancing. The loss of events such as Field Day are perhaps among the more expensive costs of becoming a larger university. In those days there was a real feeling between faculty and students that sharing in Northeastern made them all one family. It is this warm and personal touch which is most clearly absent from the university today. The Freshman-Sophomore Rush was started in 1919 by the Class of 1922. It continued until 1932 when the Stu- dent Council abandoned it as having outlived its useful- ness . That it was ever useful is questionable, never- theless, the Rush was one of the non-academic high points every year. On the day designated Rush Day, Division A freshmen and sophomores met in combat in the Fenway; Divi- sion B, being in school in the winter months, had to hold a more sedate Rush Day in the YMCA gym. In the Fen- way production the activity always climaxed by a Pole Rush, with one class gathered around a twelve-foot greased pole on top of which flew class colors, while the other class stormed the phalanx of students in an attempt to reach the top of the pole and seize the colors. The other main event of Rush Day was the tug-of-war with each class on either side of the Muddy River. That event would probably prove fatal for the losers today with the pollution level being what it is. NORTHEASTERN BAND The increasing size of both classes involved, and the increasing number of abrasions, contusions and other mishaps, and the increasing tendency of both classes to relieve at least a few of their opponents of their clothing in the Pole Rush led to the prohibitive action by the Stu- dent Council. In 1921 The Senate was created by Professors Spear and Philip Nash as an honor society for engineers. The Senate later was accepted as a chapter of Tau Beta Pi, the National Engineering honor society. Additional chapters were added: Eta Kappa Nu, for electrical engineers; and Pi Tau Sigma, for mechanical engineers. Two fraternities founded in 1919, Alpha Kappa Sigma and Beta Gamma Epsilon, were augmented in 1921 by Nu Epsilon Zeta, Sigma Kappa Psi, and Eta Tau Nu (now defunct). At this point Spear encouraged an inter- fraternity council to promote coordinated efforts between the groups. By 1925 the Music Division included a Band, Concert Orchestra, Glee Club, Banjo Club, Dance Orchestra, and Dramatic Club. Spear himself was involved in the direc- tion and procurement of instruments for the musical organizations. In 1922 the College of Business Administration was es- A BANJO HITTER THE BANJO CLUB tablished by the Board of Governors in recognition of the nascent science of business administration. Heretofore, colleges had offered descriptive courses in business, but analytical courses with a scientific approach were a rela- tively new phenomenon. The faculty of the new college was largely drawn from the School of Commerce and Fi- nance. The tuition fee was $250 per year, including YMCA membership. In 1927 the College of Business Administration adopted the Co-op plan, providing students previously unable to attend college on a full-time basis, the opportunity to earn a reasonable amount of their educational expenses. As the various colleges began to take on shape and size, pressure for classrooms and offices began to mount. In 1920, Northeastern rented and set up classrooms in the third floor of the Gainsboro Building (where Termpapers Unlimited is now). When the Huntington Building (the MacDonald ' s block) was constructed in 1924, a second story was built specifically for Northeastern ' s use. The Gainsboro Building was temporarily vacated. As space became more valuable, the Gainsboro Build- ing was re-adopted, and Northeastern conducted classes in increasingly larger areas between Gainsboro Street and Symphony Hall, eventually utilizing the entire sec- ond floor of the Huntington Building. THE 1926 BASKETBALL TEAM THE PRINCIPALS, THE RAJAH OF KASHMIR ' ptn Cetl) Vol. V No. 20 Both rented buildings proved less than satisfactory as classrooms. The elevator in the Gainsboro Building had a tendency to entrap faculty betw een floors. The class- rooms were also attractive to mice, rats, and other non- collegiate transients from a drugstore and restaurant on the lower floor. The Huntington Building classrooms fronted the avenue and trolley tracks. Several of the rooms had no windows and ventilation was provided by decreasingly effective skylights. The need to establish a campus with adequate facilities was felt simultaneously with the need to separate North- eastern from the YMCA. In 1922, the School ' s name was officially changed to Northeastern University, and in the same year three trustees were elected who weren ' t simul- taneously directors of the YMCA. At the same time, the trustees attempted always to make the school responsive to the changing needs of society. Having attained a viable status, it was necessary to confront some of the problems and challenges of existence. The Automobile School, begun in 1903 when the car was still an experimental marvel, was discontinued in 1926 when it became evident that society had accepted the auto. It was also clear that the space in the Botolph Building was urgently needed by the Engineering School. February 6, 1925 Noted Egyptology Expert Heard in Special Lecture Relation of Ancient Civilization of Egypt To Modern Progress Demonstrated by European Professor CLASSES OMITTED TO ENABLE ALL TO ATTEND FACULTY WINS FIRST GAME Dean Ell Stars Although considerably handicapped by the absence of some of their best players, the Huntington School Fac- ulty put up a very good fight against the Northeastern Engineering School Faculty in a basketball ganie held Tuesday afternoon, January 1 2, in the L ' niversity Gymnasium. Only three regulars of the Huntington team were available and so Dean Garner of the Business Administration School and E. T. Carlson on the Engineering Practice Department substituted in the Hun- tington lineup, and in fact were the outstanding players of the team. For the Engineering Faculty, outside of Whittakcr who substituted and held ground nobly, (and in fact could be moved from the spot where he rooted), the outstanding player the Dean who shot seven baskets did considerable running with the in his hands. For the Huntington Team as has been stated, Garner and Carlson, for- wards, covered the most ground, while Skinner who was busy nt guard posi- tion with Moore, was still busier when- ever Moore took a rest. Jones at cen- ter was the outstanding center of both teams and would be picked for the All-Faculty Team were such a team to be picked by an expert. He invari- ably touched the ball first but as the summary shows his efforts were of no vail. We must not forget the good work of Renker, captain of the varsity bas- ketball team, as lie was the score- keeper as well as the timer. He did well in both jobs. is expected that in the next con- between the two teams, if such a contest is to be, the Huntington School ill have its regular team in the lield, .nd the i : will probably be closi NEW REGULATIONS ADOPTED BY SCHOOL Before Holiday Classes to Close Early Tho following regulations have re- cently been adopted by the School of Engineering : 1. All class sessions are to be amitted after 1 :00 P. M. on the day preceding Thanksgiving and the day preceding Christmas each year. 2. A fine of two dollar will be im- posed on students who are absent from the last class before a holiday or recess V. ■idly prcs nting tlie weird, dreamy rnma nee of a cient Egypt as revealed Ml ll c snm. in islv r cesses of the ncw- ly c- ■i cava ted jnih I the great King iklianicn. ■ roies or Jean Capart, of the ,,„s nivr-r ity th.- mos 01 L ' ge. Belgium, pcr- vned Egyptologist •-■ :iK 1.1 !ls ttt ure upon Egypt 111 on !■■ re .tur bruary 4, held cn- c.n body of North- c:tste n Engine nng school with amaz- mg c «erpts irc m tlie scientific discovcr- ics and records 31 the ultra-modera civil- izatio 1 of this con b iried people. i ff pt— the ne w familiarity with which ilii 1 .lunims; tc rm is accepted is in it- scil ; stounding. I ' rio r to the discovery of rli tomb ol kin , Tutankhamen, a short time ago, hieroglyphics and their relalio 1 to the ;fascina ng history of old Efiypt were practically unknown. There s luirdly anyone at present in the civil- zed A -or!d wJio now cannot recognize l[ OTl isiit. nd discr-nr ;€ upon the liiero- ■ ' ' : : ■■- ' :■; ■ ' ■mcnt of this topic ti ' -i: : ■- ' ' ■ ■ ■ . .■ (■] [:s immediate fas- ' in;itiii;. 1 ;,i mh .-r, u[ on this student Jiudiencc oi the privilege of being ad- dressed upon the subject by the fore- most authoritj ' in the world at the pres- ent lime m;ty well be imagincd. In discoursing upon the treasures found and the discoveries made in the tomb of King Tutankhamen to which he has al- ready made three trips, Professor Capart stressed the excavation of this vault as one of the greatest discoveries of the ages, and held as limitless the value of the possibilities o-f its further contribiH n one alone of the four rooms whlcb ; foimd the tomb stated Professor irt, there were over slx-luindred ob- ' — each a treasure to be added to itorc of scientific research and knowl- ' .- It is impossible to estimate as The scope and staggering value of further contributions of this tomb c made to the world. Tlicre arc yet ronUuurd on Page 2) BEFORE HOLIDAY CLASSES TO CLOSE EARLY IN FUTURE (Co cd from Page 1) fContiTmt?d on Page 3) period. bnexcused absences a course, at all timet, t-iibjccts to ipiinary action by the Adminisl Committee. The above regulations become tivc immediately. ■l?- ' -l n«Si ' X ' cl: ' : ' . Vol. VH. No. 1 S. S. Uvi rhnn—WorWs Lfll ROUND out your education by seeing Europe this - summer. Go via the United States Lines and you are sure to have the vacation of a lifetime. Ask the United States Lines ' representative on your campus for the new, illustrated 32-page booklet written by a Princeton professor, containing specimen tours with dctiiled Itineraries and costs. For example, on a comprehensive 32 ' day trip you can visit four countries of Europe and travel both ways in specially prepared and exclusive tourijt third class cab- ins for only $283.25. Find out about the tours sailing on the S. S. Leviathan June I3th and July 25th, S. S. George Washington June 10th aiid July 8th. Improved tourist third class on the famous United States Lines ' ships provides light, airy and clean state- rooms with delightfully comfortable berths, excellent food and service, daily concerts, dances and sports on broad, sunny decks. Get the facts, organize your p:;rty and make your reservations earlv. Usaited States Lisies UNITED ?r TES SHIPPINO BOARD Local Office 75 STATE ST. Wednesday, Feb. 24, 1926 See EUROPE 3Z Days — 283 aU expenses ( including round trip steamship ares i uni N t;u ' York) COMBINE TECH AND ! BULLETIN TO FORM I UNIT PUBLICATION Heads Staff of New FORMER NEWS Northeastern Paper ORGANS OF TWO SCHOOLS CEASE Maddocks and Stewart Senior Heads of First University Paper KING HUSKY I, 1926-1941 Outlying branches of Northeastern had been developed between 1917 and 1920, in Worcester, Springfield, Provi- dence, New Haven, and Bridgeport. These schools mainly oifered courses for the law degree. As the Boston campus grew, these associations were gradually dropped, al- though four present-day institutions resulted: Worcester Junior College; Western New England College in Springfield; Roger Williams Junior College, in Provi- dence; and Bridgeport Engineering Institute. The student body was steadily increasing, and the need for buildings which had been desperate since 1920, made it imperative by 1930, to develop a building plan. The de- velopment of a separate facility would promote the sought-for separation from the YMCA, which had been marked in 1924 by the separation of the University finan- cial accounts from those of the YMCA. The University thus had its own funds to spend, and in 1929, the first parcel of land was bought from the Boston and Providence Railroad. The land was slightly over an acre in size, south of the YMCA main building, 300 feet back from the avenue, with no legal access to the street. It was, however meager, at least a beginning. The YMCA in 1930, transferred to Northeastern the, ownership of two acres of land between the street and the acre purchased by Northeastern the previous year. The YMCA tennis courts and a small handball building remained on the land for several years. It is now the site of Dodge Li- brary. The YMCA also transferred title to the Botolph Building and the land on which it stands. On Kent Street, in Brookline, a five-acre plot which had been used as an athletic field for several years, was purchased and a field house was erected. This of course, was to become Parsons Field. Left, FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE POLE RUSH AT HUNTINGTON FIELD On the administration front, separation from the YMCA was marked in 1932, by the election of Robert Gray Dodge as Chairman of the Board of Trustees. He was the first chairman not on the YMCA Directors Board. This event followed on the heels of a report delivered to the Trustees in 1931, which recommended reconstitution of the Board of Trustees. The proposal expanded the Board to 45 members and stipulated that YMCA Directors should never be in a majority. The reason given to justify this proposal was that large po- tential benefactors might hesi- tate to support an organization which was controlled by an- other. At this period in North- eastern ' s history, when money was being sought to launch a building plan, that justification was considered valid. In 1935, Avery Churchill, Vice President of the univer- sity, presented a temporary or- ganization chart detailing an interlocking directorate with 10 members simultaneously serving on the YMCA Board and the Northeastern Trustees Board. In that same year the words, . . . of the Boston YMCA were dropped from the name Northeastern University. CHARLES HAVICE LIBRARY SITE The By-Laws of the university were amended in 1936 to formalize the Corporation of 75, with the Board of Trustees to be elected from and by its membership. There were to be four standing committees on the Board: Exec- utive, Development, Funds and Investments, and Housing. ELECTRICAL MEASURE LABORATORY An architectural competition was held by the Univer- sity in 1934, judged by the Trustees ' Committee on Hous- ing and the Executive Council. The plan for a campus de- signed by Coolidge, Shepley, Bulfinch, and Abbott was selected. In October, 1934, the Trustees established the Committee on Development to raise funds for the con- struction of the first building. The optimism of the Trustees is seen in their adoption during a time of eco- nomic depression, of a plan calling for the construction of six buildings at a cost of over $3.5 million. FIRST HOCKEY GAME AT NORTHEASTERN WILL BE i PLAYED TUESDAY, JAN. 8 INTERCLASS PUCK SHOOTERS START NEW HUSKY SPORT JANUARY 3, 1929 The immediate construction of at least one building became vital as it was realized that the College of Engineering would not be accredited unless it had more adequate facilities. Funds for the first building were raised by widespread solicitation. When the building was completed, its $800 thousand cost had been met by a mortgage which was cleared in 1940. Ground was broken for the first building on September 29, 1937, and the cornerstone was laid in November. The new structure, designated as the West Building, was occupied in June, 1938. In October, 1938, at the Fortieth Anniversary and _ _ ____ __ _ __ Dedicatory Exercises held in the Boston Opera House, the West Building and the university ' s new building at 47 Mount Vernon Street were dedicated. The later was called the School of Law Building, and had been bought and renovated to provide space for day and evening law classes which had begun in Sep- tember of that year. NOVEMBER 21, 1928 TELEVISION TALK BY J. W. HORTON BEFO RE ENG INEERS Meeting in Cruft Laboratory at Harvard with Twenty-One N. U. Men Present Last Friday evening at 8.00 p.m., the Boston Section of the American Institute of Radio Engineers held a meeting in the Cruft Laboratory at Harvard University. The speaker of the evening, Mr. J. W. Horton, formerly of the Bell Laboratory, gave a very lucid illustrated lecture on the Transmission of Images, an explanation of the theory under- h-ing Tclc Msion. Twenty-one Northeastern Uni- versity students were represented at this eminent gathering of one hundred radio engineers and college professors. This is an unprecedented record and shows the keen interest displayed by the Northeastern elec- trical students in their chosen pro- fession. Har -ard was represented by Dr. Kennelly and Professors Pierce and Chaflee of the Faculty. The Northeasieni Student Branch of the A. I. E. E. plans to have both Mr. Horton and Dr. KenneUy talk at future meetings at the school. Mr. P. W. Peek of the Pittsfield Works of the General Electric Co. i Section of the American Institute of I Electrical Engineers, Tuesday even- ing, December 4 at 8.00 p.m. in Tremont Temple. | DECEMBER 12, 1928 Moving Picture Machine Proves of Value to N. U. The moving picture machine again proved its vast utiHty other than providing amusement last Tuesday evening when the track squad was shown instructive pic- tures and slides. The idea of this meeting was to show the different members of the squad their faults on the track. Pictures had been taken previously of different men in action and these were flashed on the screen in slow-motion. The faults of each man were pointed out, and conse- quently not onlj ' those in question but everj ' one present received the benefits. There were also many slides of Oljnnpic stars shown. The meeting was similar to ' ' black- board practice plus the advantage of seeing the faults as they were pointed out. The meeting was planned especially as an instruction meeting and the men carried away with them many good points that may make them winners in the nearby season. About thirty members of the squad listened to Mr. Edward S. Parson ' s talk illustrated by instruc- tive rno Hes. Sixty-five Enthusiastic Puck Chasers Answer Call For Candidates SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED Captains and Managers Elected With Fine Prospects For Big Year At a meeting held in 6-H on Tuesday noon, sixty-five candidates answered a call for class hockey teams. !Mr. Nelson Raymond, a member of the Faculty, was in charge of the meeting. General instructions concerning the forma- tions of the teams and of the running of the series were a n- nounced. After the general business was finished, the gathering split up into groups and each class pro- ceeded to form its hockey team and to elect captains and managers. The Sophomores, with twenty- two men reportiiT:;:, h .il the largest ::r„ui PR-oni V,,,- ,-... , ' ,,.,1; ..-ns c:c. ■ , , -.T and ' ' i! I • , s ' .biiity for Ills .,- : , -raduate of e ' J in hockey Edilie Demp- scy of i. ' ijricord T T fame will be in the Soph line-up. The Seniors present the most bril- liant array of stars in their pro- spective line-up. George Martin, Varsity polc-vaulter extraordinary, is captain and will play at center {Conlh ' .ui-d an page 3) l S. and Aloc ' navn The West Building provided more class- rooms, laboratories, an enlarged book- store, and general service areas. The new Department of Chemistry offices were dedicated in the Fortieth Anni- versary ceremonies as the Charles Hayden Memorial Laboratories. On May 7, 1941, the Trustees gave the West Build- ing a permanent name and unveiled a tablet in the lobby designating the building as Richards Hall, af- ter James Loring Richards, an industrialist and hon- orary degree recipient from Northeastern. Richards had been on the Board of Trustees since 1935 and had been a charter member of the newly organized Northeastern University Corporation. He was re- sponsible for raising more than half of the money which paid for construction of the West Building. As the campus became a visible entity, the col- leges were expanding and developing, simulta- neously requiring the provision of more space. In 1936, the Cooperative Engineering School became the College of Engineering, but the greater devel- opment was happening in Liberal Arts. The College of Liberal Arts began in 1935, with 35 students on the co-op plan. The college was an outgrowth of the Evening Division ' s Lincoln School of Liberal Arts, which had of- fered a junior program in cultural fields culmi- nating in an Associate of Arts degree. According to the 1935 Catalog, the School of Arts and Sciences was established on two prin- ciples: that a man should have a broad under- standing of the main currents of human activ- ity ; and that studies without sacrificing their liberal value , should prepare a man for a use- ful career. Contribution to human welfare, in short, is regarded as the chief end of scholarship. Concurrent with the academic growth, was the continuing growth in Student Activities. The second Director of Stu- dent Activities, from 1926 to 1929, was Professor Harold W. Melvin, who had joined the faculty in 1920 and became head of the English department the following year. In 1929, Melvin was ap- pointed the first Dean of Students and his position in activities was filled by Edward S. Parsons. Under these men new activities grew and existing activi- ties flourished. Sigma Delta Epsilon, an honor society in the new College of Business Ad- PARSONS ministration was founded in 1925. A revamped Stu- dent Council came to life 1924. In the same year a Student Union was formed, with Milton J. Schlagenhauf as its fac- ulty advisor and its purpose stated to broaden engineering education by lectures, trips, and religious activities. From 1922 until 1926, the new College of Business Administration developed a group of activities paralleling those of the Engineering School. They organized their own dramatic club. Student Union, Student Council, orches- tra, newspaper (The Bulletin) and yearbook (The Administrator, first published in 1926). The impracticality of such duplication led to the combining of groups in the next few years. The Bulletin fused with The Tech to become the Northeastern News, in February, 1926; and in 1929, the Administrator joined with the ADMINISTRATOR AND CAULDRON COMBINE TO MAKE ONE YEARBOOK Tearhoo Co Editor JAMES J. HOULAHAN JANUARY 16, 1929 SEPTEMBER 26, 1928 STUDENT UNION TO SHOW FIRST UNIVERSITY FILM Here ' s the big chance you fellows have been waiting for! The Student Union announces that they are going to run some FREE movies in Bates Hall to- moiTOw, Thursday, from one o ' clock until quarter of two. The movie is a University film and shows some of the high Ughts of student activ- ities here at Northeastern during the past year. Veron A. Love 1929E is in charge of the movie show. This will be the only opportunity for many of the upperclassmen to see this film, especially the Seniors. Students are always thinking up new ways of profitably spending their noon hour, and the Student Union is offering a fine solution for one of them at least. STAFF SOON TO ORGANIZE FOR THE 1929 ISSUE Grammontand Houlahan Elected Editors of the Combined N. U. Publication ADDED FEATURES ValmoreR. Grammont, 1929E. of Gardner, and James J. Houlahan, 1929BA, of Milton, as co-editors, head the staff of the 1929 issue of the yearbook. Grammont and Hou- lahan are both activities men, Houla- han having been chairman of the Junior Prom Committee, while Grammont has served on nominat- ing and social committees for the Engineers in his freshman and soph- omore years. This is the first time in the his- tory of the Day Division that the two schools have combined to issue a yearbook. In the past years the Engineers have p ublished the Catil- dron, while the B.A. men Lssued the Adminisiratar. The new book this year will be no larger than the 1928 issue of the Cauldron. It vnW contam the same amount of material, including inter- esting histories and pictures of seniors, the write-ups of the year ' s activities, and pictures of the vari- ous organizations. Additional fea- tures may be added. It is the plan of the co-editors to have the work of producing the book well under way before the end of this period. The staff is now being organized and they will aid the edi- tors in getting off to an early start. The Department of Publications, of which Prof. Stanley G. Estes is the head, is seeking a name for this book. Students who have sugges- tions for a name are urged to present them to the editors. The photographic work this year will be done by Wairen Kay Vantine, the photographer for last year ' s Cauldron and Administrator . Con- tracts for engraving and printing are vet to be placed. , The Northeaster News Vo . X No. 26 Published Weekly by the Day Collegiate Schools Thursday, March 14, 1929 FRESHMEN SCORE SWEEPING VICTORY IN RUSH, 450 TO 100 SIbRAtS NEWS TO SPONSOR REC 52!??M, i - mM ixf rS u-r WAR HERO SPEAKS BIRTHDAY PARTY MADE TO CAST OF ORGANIZATION IN FlGHl AT MASS MEETING TO HUSKY TODAY TOP 0 ' THE WORLD FOR CLASS SUPREMACY Famous German Sea Devil ' Who Made The Sea Unsafe For Allies Tells Adventures PRISONERS USED WELL Count Felix von LucJcner, the fa- mous Sea DeN-il, was the speaker at the mass nieetin j held Wednes- day noon, March 13. Needless to say, Northeastern received him en- thusiastically. Dean Ell was indeed fortxmate in procuring the ser -ices of this remarkable character. Bom the son of a Gennan noble- man. Felix von Luckner ran away from home, when but thirteen years of age. to sail before the mast. Ever since, his life has been one of danger. ; and adventure- He worked The University will celebrate tlic third birthday of Huslcy today at a birthday celebration sponsored by the NEWS and the Student Union, This affair will be held in 44-H at one o ' clock to acciuaint the students with Husky and his con- nec ' tion with the University as a mascot. All students who can arrange to attend this aft ' air should be present, as a very interesting program, has been arranged by the committec- Deaii Carl S, Ell and Prof. Harold W. Meh-in vdW speak, along with other features. The captains of the various sjjorts teams, together with representatives of other student organizations, will be present. [Conlinued on page 4) Cabaret Girls and Chorines to Possess Full Share of It By Opening Night In the past week there has been an increase of about forty per cent in the number of co-eds at North- eastern. This increase has been brought about by the recent chorus selection of ten students to take the part of cabaret girls and Eskimo chorines in Top o ' the World. The girls are being coached to ex- hibit their steps or movements as rliythmically and femininely as pos- sible. By opening night the chonis will possess and exhibit its full share of it. The men playing the feminine parts in the chorus are: William {Continued , in pa e J, JOHN O. HARMAALA An executive of a linn is rarely j found among college graduates in their first year out of school. North- eastern can boast of one in John O, Hai-maala 1028E of Lanes alle. The Manchester Engineering and Welding Company Incorporated, engaged in the business of structural engineering, electric welding, steel and iron fabrication in New Hamp- shire, has John O. Harmaala as its Vice-President, General Manager. Wlule in scliool, Hannaala was a member of the orchestra in his first year, and a member of the band for three years. During his last year he was on the administrati ' e com- mittee of the B.S.C.E. MANY CONTESTANTS FAIL TO SHOW UP FOR ANNUAL RUSH Overwhelming Score of 450 to 100 Gives Frosh Greatest Victory in Years RED HATS NOW DOFFED There will he !;jrcal: rejoicing to- night .ilong the Avenue. The Frosh have upset the dope and have won a bitterly-waged battle. The final score was 450 to 100. The first event to be staged was the obstacle race. The teams were composed o£ five men each. (Conlimitdon page S) Cauldron. In dramatics, a series of annual all-University shows took place be- tween 1924 and 1934. Six of these were original musical comedies combining the talents of students and certain faculty members, in- cluding Melvin himself. The climax of the series was Banned in Bos- ton , a production with a cast of 75, an orchestra of 50, and a puppet pro- logue, which was presented in the Arlington Theatre. A new dramatic club formed in 1934, operating under several handi- caps for many years including poor facilities (before Alumni Audito- rium was completed in 1947), and no female actresses (before co-educa- tion was adopted in 1943). Hockey was initiated by H. Nel- son Raymond ' 28, who coached the first season in 1929-30. Another im- portant figure in the growth of hockey at Northeastern was Herbert Gallagher, who played as an under- graduate, coached the team for fif- teen seasons, and finally landed up as Athletic Director of all sports activities. Football was instituted by admin- istrative rather than student initia- tive. The first varsity season, in 1933, consisted of five contests and was coached by Alfred M. McCoy. By 1935, athletic activity at North- eastern had reached intercollegiate status as the university held mem- bership in the New England Asso- ciation of the Amateur Athletics Union, and several other regional and national amateur athletic THE RELAY TEAM, 1929 Wccliii.- ilav, March 20, 1929 THE MORTHF.JiSTERN NEWS Pa e Three INTERESTED IN TENNIS? SEE PAGE ONE UNIVERSITY SPORTS EXIT BASKET BALL ENTER BASEBALL Will the geulleiiiaii who just coughed, kindly step to the hox office . . . for a package of Old Golds? or oin-r. I Inn.- ri. ,r :M ju-l li..i i- vordx from llir Iu ' .— IhiI In all MikIm. ' -s I liavr oflcii «M.il.-.l li. oil. 1- llii- IViiii.liv ll. ' l|. lo M..1I. ' |.,.or r.ll.n ..ho-:.- .-..ii !! «iis i,il.ini|.linf; llo- s.|..r. um |,oilii,g ih.- rn- j.,,,n,nlol ' ll,..Har..,.,Hllii,n. ' • . ' iii- or -o :t ' i.. 111.- iii.iki i ..f Ol.n r.OI.J) rail -oni.- aiU .ui llio li liiil)iiit; .-ff.-.i of coucllirifr ill lliratr.-s. Ah all a !...-. ! . a- n-al.-ful for lllo .- a.ls. I am uiorr pi-ai. fill iioM that lll.n ;ol.l) Ikh iiivilcil la!; ■ folk to our iiiilia|iii rriiii.l-. ill.- ■lli(-alrc--coujj;liers. ' ' ! I oivu ailvi.-i- I- tliat |ircveiiIion is tlir best ai.l. I In- Linil ..f |.i -vrnlion lliat i-niokiuf; Oil) (aiLDS t v . Ilarsll tobacco irrilal.-s tli.- tlii-oat. ami lliat i ' aUM- coiinlun ' . Cliaii niig to (11.11 COLDS sontlii-s the throat aii.l rc- m.p c tin- (-aiiHC of tlic ' cough tickle. WIi y not a ! oil ell in a carload? . %t ' ' eat a chocolate, Hglit an Old Gold, and enjoy both! associations. In 1926, the need for a mascot for the athletic teams became evident. A suggestion contest held by The News aroused various responses from ant, to elephant, to bee, finally Husky was the chosen symbol. Dean Carl Ell made a winter trip to Poland Springs, Maine, returning with the news that Leonard Seppala, internationally-known breeder and racer of Siberian Huskies, had given a dog to the university to serve as mascot. The dog arrived in Boston on March 9, 1927 and was met at North Station by a parade including 1200 students, the Northeastern Band, and a float on which King Husky 1 was to be carried to his realm. On the march back to the campus there was an incident of egg-and snow- throwing by some students in the Boston University business adminis- tration building on Boylston Street. The Boston Police moved into the building and confiscated crates of eggs and vegetables, while the Northeastern boys refused to retali- ate and continued back to campus. King Husky 1 was the university mascot until March, 1941. In that time he appeared at student gather- ings, won prizes at the Eastern Dog Show, and in many respects lived up to his royal name and significant position. Housed mainly by Ell, in Newton and at the Cape, King Husky did display a common dog ' s appetite and occasional love of mischief, causing expensive dam- age in a poultry farm on Cape Cod near the Ell residence. in conjunction with the mascot and the athletic teams, the Fore Paw Key was organized in 1929 to pro- mote school spirit. One of its tradi- tional events was the Football Dance, inaugurated in 1934. During the war years the Fore Paw Key ceased to function. It was reorga- nized in 1948, as the Husky Key, car- ' Director of A.ctivities EDWARD S. PARSONS rying on the original purpose with different sorts of activities. The Student Union expanded af- ter Charles W. Havice became its adviser in 1927. Activities including charity drives, walking tours, and camping trips were carried out as they contributed to the well-being and community college life of stu- dents. Later efforts included joint projects with other university groups, and volunteer service work in the community. The major lasting contribution of Dean of Students HAROLD W. MELVIN THE HOCKEY TEAM, 1930 The Northemstern News nor heJI tej untvei ity M SSJi ;SETTS Vol. XI. No. 22 Published Weekly by the Day Collegiate Schools Thursday, February 13, 1930 the Students Union were the weekly Chapel services, inaugurated in Oc- tober, 1927. The first service fea- tured President Frank Palmer Speare as speaker and was held in the then Church of Messiah, on the corner of Gainsboro and St. Stephens Streets. Later Chapel ser- vices were held in the Repertory Theatre on Huntington Avenue; a room in the Huntington Building, and eventually Richards Hall. nor Alien Sianma Decree Bill Govornor .Mien, scaled. 5 iw(  ifi: Dean Cart S. El!; Galen D. Licht, Comptroller: John D. Wrifiht, Rcerotary to the Governor. N. U. ' IS, School of Law; Horaee T. Cahill, member of the House. N. U. ' IS, School of Law. GOVERNOR ALLEN SIGNS BACHELOR OF SCIENCE BILL Legislature Authorizes Giving of Degree to Students of Five Year Plan STATEMENT BY DEAN ELL Northeastern has aj, ' ain advanced a step in takinj its place among the foremost colleges of the East. The degree of Bachelor of Science v ill be awarded to the class of 1034 since the} ' mil be the first to finish the recently established five-year course. The University had its beginning in ISOS when the Evening Law School of the Boston Young Men ' s Christian Association was estab- lished. Since then it has gained grad- ual cognizance by the Legislature who in 1904 granted the Evening Law School the right to grant the degree of Bachelor of Laws. It wasnot until theyearlDlG, how- ever, that the University assumed the name of Northeastern, consist- ing then of the School of Law and School of Commerce and Finance. Four years later engineering courses were offered and the Bachelor ' s de- gree was awarded for completion of the Civil. Mechanical, Chemi cal an Electrical courses. For only eight years has the school been bearing the designation of UnivciT-ity. In 1022 by legal authorization Northeastern College was changed to Northeastern Uni- versity and the School of Business Administration was instituted. The last step, completed eight days ago, is an important one; it is the culmination of the efforts of the University directors in behalf of the school. Dean Ell issued the following statement to the NEWS concerning the awarding of the degree : When Governor Allen affixed his signature to House Bill No. 20-3 on February .5. 1930, he completed the final act nccessaiy to authorize Northeastern University to grant the Bachelor of Science degree to students who complete the five-year cuiTiculums in the School of Engi- neering and the School of Business Administration. This law authorizes the University to grant the B.S. de- ( Continued on page 4) MUSICAL BANNED IN BOSTON 1929 Page Six THE NORTHEJtSTERN NEWS Thursday, March 12, 1931 NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY AT WORK IN SOUTH AFRICA WINNER OF HARMON AWARD IS KNOWN AS LEADER OF HIS RACE Max Yergan is the Sliaw Uni- versity winner of the 1U20 Harmon Medal. The Harmon awards are given annually for the best worl;: In ' Negroes in science, education, liter- ature, business, and religion, and for the best work by a colored i an in race relationships. w has been aw-arded the 1 religion for religion and -ices to students and South Africa. If York ' Times-, in a or wliite i: Mr. Yerg: first prize ■ social ser teachers ii The A lengthy editorial on the subject en- titled Negro Advancement, closes with the following significant sen- tences: The Harmon awards are but an indication of what the talent of this race may yet give to the world. It is the prerogative of the men of genius to devote the life of this race to the higher ends of man- Id nd. Specialized in Sociology Mr. Yergan specialized in soci- ology and modern languages at Shaw University, Raleigh. North Carohna, and made for himself reputation for athletics and Chr tian work before he was graduated with honors in 1914. In h year at college he attended a student convention in Atlanta, and it wa; on this occasion that he made hi: final life work decision. He had thought of becoming a lawyer, but he now felt the need of giving his life to some form of social service. He took special work at the Inter- national College at Springfield and spent two years as tra ' eling secre- tary for colored students; and then, in 191G, he decided to go to India to help with the work among native troops. Later he was transferred to East Africa with a detachment of Indian troops. Although he suf- fered repeated attacks of African fever, he stayed for two years, and did not allow himself to be invalided home until six young men had been recruited in the United States to help in the work. MAX YERGAN Improves Conditions of Negro Education on Sound Principles Max Ycvgan has dfrnonstvated to the natives the possibility of prac- tical service to their fellows and is aiding in building an intelligent and sensible leadership. His substantial work has already done much to im- prove social conditions and to pro- vide high motives and sane guidance among the future leaders of the Bantu races. He is laying the foun- dation of a sound policy, whicli will in time prove effective in the spir- itual, moral, and social uplift of the ENTIRE UNIVERSITY SHOULD HELP SPONSOR EDUCATIONAL PROJECT OF MAX YERGAN ' S American Institutions SupportWork in Africa Up until se -cral j-cars ago Korth- eastern has made annual contribu- tions to foreign work projects, but the money has gone to general funds. This year, however, thi University is directing its interest; to a definite and specific work which has as its leader the eminent per- sonality of Max Yergan. The drive is undenominational in religious character and universal in appeal. It should receive the hearty support of all those interested in furthering ntcr-racial goodwill and under- standing. Notable Institutions There are many projects of vari- is world service enterprises to which students have already been ig or are now asked to give. In supporting the Max Yergan for- gn project, N. U. is following a program similar to that found in most of the larger colleges and uni- versities in this country. Notable iplcs among American Institti- tions which support foreign projects are Yale, California, and Brown in China; Princeton in Peking; Dart- mouth and M. I. T. in Turkey; Am- herst in Japan; Obcrlin in Shansi; Vassar in Tokyo; Smith in Nanking and Wcllcsley in Peking, Vassar, Smith and Wellesley liavc adopted Sister Colleges in the Orient. N.U. STUDENT UNION TO CONDUCT CAMPAIGN TO AID YERGAN FUND March 10, the Student Union wil begin its campaign to solicit contri butions for the annual Max Yergai Fund. .yThis campaign mil extend throughotit the week, at which tim it is expected that both members of the faculty and the student body will have been given sufficient oppor- timity to help this very worthy cause. The headquarters for this drive will be in the Student Union office (27H). The entire executive com- mittee of the Student Union will actively participate in the campaign. Extensive publicity material will be .used to focus attention upon this project. The Student Union will take charge of the drive for the entire University, including the evening division. An increasing niunber of colleges e linking themselves in a perma- nent way with some corner in what often a needy or backward race nation. Student associations on ery college campus unitedly study e problem of finding some inter- tional cause to which students of that college will give. Mr. Yergan bos also been influen- tial in opening tlie eyes of the Euro- pean students. In 1940, Havice was made Dean of Chapel and gave up his position with the Student Union. Chapel ser- vices were carried on in connection with the Union until 1971, present- ing a variety of local clergymen speaking on moral and ethical top- ics. A chapel choir was initiated by Professor Laurence F. Cleveland, of the Electrical Engineering depart- ment, who constructed an electrical organ for the choir ' s use until the student center was completed in 1947. In 1940, Frank Palmer Speare re- tired as President of Northeastern to become President Emeritus. Upon his death in May, 1954, his succes- sor. President Carl S. Ell, declared, Speare was, without question, an outstanding leader. It was his in- domitable enthusiasm and optimism which made Northeastern possible in the early days in the face of many discouraging experiences which met the development of the educational work which is now Northeastern University. As the university structure had become increasingly complex, Speare had revised it in 1925, creat- ing two vice presidential positions: Ell was in charge of the Day Divi- sion; and Churchill w s in charge of the Evening Division. Displaying great foresight, Speare had written a Professional Will and Codicil which was filed through Dodge with the Board of Trustees in 1937. In this will , Speare declared his willingness to retire at seventy if it would be of benefit to North- eastern. Speare went on to say, the dominating motive in my life has been the establishment and perpetu- ation of this great People ' s Univer- sity. I have put everything that I pos- sessed into it and it is fulfilling its function magnificently. His feeling of identity with the university even after his retirement is poignantly shown in his statement, I am pur- chasing several pairs of new shoes because I find my old ones take me up Huntington Avenue, in spite of all I can do. Speare ' s successor, Carl Stephens Ell, was President from 1940 to 1959. Often referred to as Mr. Northeast- ern, Ell was the central force which made possible the building of a university, in terms of campus and structures; growth in colleges, num- bers of students, and corresponding educational status; major and minor innovations within the university which even now have become tra- ditional. A good deal of Ell ' s work remains in its original quality, other things have changed or been re- placed by his successor. Never- theless, the period of Ell ' s Presi- dency was a dynamic one. Ell had come to Boston in 1909, from his native Indiana, to do gradu- ate study in civil engineering at MIT. In 1910, one of his professors asked him if he would teach a course in surveying at the YMCA. On or about October 1, 1910, I went HUNTINGTON AVENUE to the YMCA and talked with the Educational Director, Frank Palmer Speare, about the program. I began teaching the eight students in the first day class in surveying, which later turned out to be the first class in Civil Engineering in what is now the College of Engineering. Ell illuminated the early, primi- tive days of the Co-op Engineering School: The class work was con- ducted in the attic of the building, where we frequently banged our heads against the rafters as we straightened up from the drawing table. In 1912, having received his mas- ters degree from MIT, Ell became one of the seven teachers on the staff of the Co-op Engineering School. He succeeded Hercules Geromanos as dean of the school in 1917. Ell ' s seemingly boundless energy led him to carry a heavy schedule, and he expected equal output from others. Inevitably there was some complaint, but the number of fac- ulty and staff who stayed on, even through the uncertainties of depres- sion and war, is a tribute to the spirit of faith in the future springing from Ell. The circle of contributors to the university, the development of the Corporation, the establishment of the Permanent Faculty, and the ini- tiation of annual events involving faculty, students, alumni, staff, Cor- poration members, and visitors rep- resent a broadening basis of activity which has resulted in an increased sense of identity with Northesatern in those participating. Ell is clearly the most central figure in the estab- lishment and development of North- eastern. His life has been devoted more than any other to achieving EWS NO THE- TE-P UNfVEP iry Vol. Xtll. No, Published Weekly by the Day CoUegiate Schools Friday, Seprcmbcr 18, 1931 IT AT TOTALS OVER FOUR HUNDRED CANADA AND CUBA ARE REPRESENTED AMONG_STUDENTS Little Red Caps Lend Color To Huntington Avenue and Surroundings Freshmen Are Urged to Study Handbook (.Co, ■Uroir: page 1) School of Business Administration for the M.B.A. degree. Later he will continue his education and secure a D.C.S. degree. His office is in the Economics Department in Room 50 of the Huntington Building. Mr. Maclvenzie is well known to many of the students at North- eastern. He prepared for college at Quincy High and was a member of the Quincy High Club hero for four years, being elected president dur- ing his senior year. He is a member of Gammn Phi I-Iappa Fraternity MR. DONALD H MatKENZIE and the Foie P,iw Key Society His other college activities were N CNS, ACS (2, 3, 4) Deans List (2), Assist- ant Manager Basketball (2, 3), Man- ager Basketball (4), Nominating MR. ASA S, KMOWLES Committee (2), Prom Committee (3), Field Day Committee (3), Class Treasurer (3, 4). He was a student in the Chemical Engineering course. In addition to teaching he will give part of his time to the Department of Student Activities and will be located in Room 2-H. THREE INSTRUCTORS JOIN NORTHEASTERN FOR CURRENT YEAR ■ A il 1 tl c opening ot CO Icgi, for the asoi 1931-32 tliree new instruc- tors are welcomed to the faculty Roger St tr ton Hamilton A,B, M A Instructor in Economics; Mr. Smallidge Knowles B. structor m Bu ' inc ' s Management md M- Donald Heisliej Mac- IvonziL Northcistern ul InstruC ' m Che 1 1 1 Fn iiK .n ' lENT UNIO! iLCOME TONIGHT AT BATES HALL FOR FRESHMAN_CLASS Scholarship Awa7ds mVEl PLANS WILL Presented Freshmen ENLIVEN PROGRAM OF ANNUAL EVENT MR. ROGER STANTON HAMILTON Mr. Hamilton received his under- graduate training at Cornell aiid the ersity of Pittsbiurg. From the latter institution he received the Bachelor of Arts degree with honor, having ruajored in Sociology. Al the University of Pittsburg he was awarded the vai ' sity insignia in de bating, having participated in inter collegiate debates throughout the country. For the past two years Mr. Hamilton has been a student and part-time instructor at Tufts and nomics in June of this year. His office is in f 0-H. Has Active Career Mr. Knowles received his early education at Thayer Academy in Eraintree. At Bowdoin College he had an active career in student activities and achieved an. excellent scholarship record. Here he joined Chi Psi Fraternity which he served variousl} ' as Rush Chairman, Treas- urer, and A ' ice- President. He was a member of the managing board of the Bowdoin Orient, the student publication. In 1930 he was awarded the Bachelor of Arts dcgi-ee, haN-ing majored in Economics. For the past year Mr. Knowles has been studying in the Harvard Graduate (ConHmied on page J,) Dean El!, Professor HavEce an. ProfeEsor VViMiam C. White To Address Group FOOTBALL RETIRING IN FAVOR OF OTHER SPORTING CONTESTS Every yc r about this time there is always considerable discussion, especially among the underclassmen, about making football a varsity sport at Northeastern. Petitions are circulated and many students sign them. The petitions are then carried triumphantly to the head of the Student Activities Department and each year the head of that de- partment gives out good and suffi- cient reason why football as a major sport, is practically impossible at the college. Regretful and only partly convinced, the petitioners leave- To the student body as a whole and to the general outside public, football is a thrilling game, but to an athlete, a sport reporter, or a real sport fan, there are many other games which require more skill and hard work and which bring more publicity, of the right kind, to a college than football. First and fore- most among these is track. Track as a sport is gaining more and more attention from ever} ' body each year. Track brings a different and a better kind of publicity to a college than football, and at Kortheastern there exists one of the best track teams in New England. Soccer, basket ball, baseball, and especially hockey are gradually and surely forcing football to retire more and more each year. Before many years, football will no longer be the major sport. A wise stock buyer does not hang on to stocks which have reached their peak and are ready for a fall. He gets out from under before the fall, and backs some rising stocks. Football is riding for a fall in the sport market, and track, hockey and other sports are rapidly rising. Let Northeastern be a wise buyer and back the rising sports. w The Nofthemstern News Vol. XIII. No. 8 Publislicd Weekly by the Day Collegiate Schools Thursday, Novembei- 5, 1931 FOOTBALL CRASHES IN AS MAJOR FALL SPORT educational and physical per- manency for the institution. The establishment of a home for Northeastern was a long process. The development plan initiated un- der Speare, was largely executed and directed by Ell. After three months as President, Ell reported to the Trustees in Sep- tember, 1940, that he had $30 thou- sand in gifts for a building fund and proposed that construction of a building smaller than the West Building be undertaken immediately. The resulting new building housed the chemical engineering de- partment and provided for expan- sion of the biology department, a temporary student lunchroom, of- fices, and classrooms. The new building was called Science Hall and later became part of the Mugar Building. By 1944, the original plant design had been revised. Interconnection of buildings was discarded in favor of separate building with connecting basement passages. In the same year, the Trustees voted to raise $1 million for further construction, in- cluding a proposed building for stu- dents with an auditorium and gym- nasium to be added later. It was discovered that property lines pro- hibited the addition of both faci- lities. Ell exercised his initiative in securing funds for the Student Cen- ter, and in ordering steel for the en- tire building, thereby insuring con- VARSITY WILL BE FORMED IN 1933 AFTER SEASON OF INTRAMURAL COMPETITIONS struction of the auditorium. The Alumni Auditorium is a result of the response to an alumni fund-raising campaign conducted between 1945 and 1947. The Student Center and Audito- rium were dedicated on October 5, 1947. At the dinner in honor of Ell in 1958, Robert Gray Dodge, then Chairman of the Corporation, an- nounced that the Student Center Building would be renamed the Carl Stephens Ell Student Center. The formal ceremony was part of Alumni Day on June 19, 1959. One of the features of the Student Center was Bacon Memorial Chapel, the permanent home for the Student Union Chapel services. A gift of Chandler and Company, dedicated to the memory of Charles F. Bacon, the chapel has been the scene for marriages and baptisms of many students and faculty. The 1939 catalogue delineates some of the changes that had taken place in the university over the pre- ceding decade. The tuition had climbed to $250 per year, with addi- tional charges of a General Library and Materials Fee of $12 annually; and a Student Activities fee of $15 annually. The Student Activities Fee included membership in the North- eastern University Athletic Associa- ' FIRST SCHEDULE WILL HAVE FOUR OR MORE GAMES New Locker Building and Flood Lights Make Huntington Field Ideal Grounds COLBY GAME DEFINITE Northeastern is to have varsity football! A simple sentence but a mighty one. The announcement tiiat the Red and Black is to be represented by a varsity football team in the future came as a complete surprise to the student body. Eut to say that it has been met with enthusiasm is puttii It Lightly. The announcement was made last Thursday by Edward S. Parsons, Chairman of the Faculty Committee on student activities, shortly after the conmiittee voted to approve football as a recognized varsity sport. The plan as outlined by the committee will include a varsity eleven in 1933. following a year of Freshman competition with other college frosh together with inter- class football. In order to carry out tbispianittecomes necessary to dis- {Contuntcd an page 4) tion, and subscription to the North- eastern News. It also provided for the services available from the uni- versity physician. Co-op wages had not risen consid- erably from the early teens: the min- imum range had gone from $5-10 per week, to $12-16 per week. At this point the Co-op periods were ten weeks in length, alternating with ten weeks of classroom work. N. U. STUDENTS VICTIMS OF HORRIBLE EPIDEMIC IVniversity Shifts UTE NEWS FLASHES Schedule to !,„ ' !!.,; !, i ' ' ' i! ' ' !!!, ! ' ' , ' n Battle Malady] , ' A Terrible Example of the Plague { y ' ° ' Three-Qaarter Time Northeastern I ' niversit College Editor Fired ilii.lrrl. ii. . K ■ • 1 iri Ft.-i Inik-lh ill II 1 liil ' ial .hlliiii.. ..r II o (Vnti-C l ' .|||. ' :;c !■.■ nil lli, Sli li.lity of .MlHli.l I. fh:i 1.• .1. ' I ' llliri, iii.l is no lonu. ' l (•.lll.ir-i -.■lii. ' r nf 11 II lll ' WS- paper. RefM, 1 Kl 1 ■ III. ' (■ III IIMIIO Ill itiK ' ii Hint hi ' iikin;: on lln ioh Tlilir llll.l IK ' CII siil..|,..t. ' llll- IC Killls or his ,• i-ilnlions HUSKY ' S HISTORY ■•Hiisk.v, . „i-lli..asi,Ti, iMivin-sity-s silverhiiiii ' ii. IhoioiiKliluvii siliovinn I.VIiiuiii Nli ' il-.loi; iniiscol. -:is liont in Xom. ' . .Viii-il n. on Miir. ' li 17. llljli. II|. ivils lin.,1 in llu- kfiincl.. ol ' l.ooniiiiid Si piiiplii. till ' woijil-ra lis doi-nlrini- iinrt i.s .m.. i.r ;i iiitcr Ironi llu- fjinioii.s Xloki. 11.- u.is ,,n..s,.„|,.,l to -Nollh- enntiTii liihi ' isii.v on Mni-iii a. i ' .ijt. ja.«t licforc. Ills liist liiiih.lii.v. Husky. «iio vv.-is .■liii.stwipcl -Snp- siit, niiul,. Ills I with l ' :irl s. Kll, Uran of rile lliiy Jiivision of file nni- ii-r.sity iiiitil ii ' cciitly. iiiiil wns keu- neleil oti Ite.tiiinoiit Avenue, y -.icon. At the Iiejiiniiinir ttf. ' tn ' sunitiier Inst year. Hui.n . iv.,o in.. o(i to new oimi-- ters ,.l til.- k,-nli..is of . Jf.s. p. I.. .Vor- i,i Weston. .Mthoiiirli llnsUy is not ol.l .lo -. .ily wiiys HIT not his :s. unci soiiie .■onieiii wiis felt for llis hejiltti. tint till ' latest relHirts are that witll tlie exeri-ise now iir.ssihle ill lis new iioiiii ' . nnsl;y will liv,. to a •il .- old ;iKi-. Husky ' s arrival in Hcstoii was a nil- He ill iK.-soii. Til., iii.isroi Was met at Nnrtli station li.v sr ..ial hiinilred stu- dent. , wlio stnsc.l a wi ' lroiiiiii;. ' eele- hration in tiio forin r f n parade and appropriati. leretiionies at its eonc-ln- iiela iiituie till- foniiai pri ' .seiitatinn. and Husky was a.-reptid lai lalialf ot the atndents iiy the pri ' sideiit ot the senior class, in thc Siiiooi of KnsiiieeriuK. He then iiresi.iiled Husky to Frank i ' alnier S|ie.ile. president of Northi erii. who rwuiveil tlie niasefpt on helialf of the university. .Sinee that memonihle day Husky h: onterr.l h!Tii«eIf to lilernlly thousands of students ot .Vortiieasi.i n I ' li s i It i.s ViMlieularly littliii; that today, l.eiai; the lilrih.hiy of v V,r loved nias, .,t. should have iinnsual sis liflcan.c- for Ih.. stildeiils of .North Althoiii:h Husky has soveral time. •rasheil It,. ' fivait pace ..,- 1 ■.,i.,.|.-r. In New ihii iaiid. and ailhoush tin vents hav,. usually h.-i-n the ,«- iisloi of his KoiiiL- A. W. 1 1. 1,.. ill- has alwayi returned tin- heller doi: for his ad ventures. Husk tiHlay is sin years ohl, llvi Of whiih h.- has seinil In the servi.i- o: .Northeastern. May he liv,. nnd reiido] valuald.. si-rvi(.|. for tlii. next Hvi ' foijott ■ •Marriace is the stupidest of .ill iii- ■•.Natiires erenliiri ' s are desii-ned lo rra.t e. ' Nh other, and after altnie- .1! ic. prni-renle aii l |.eri,,.tiMl.. their kind . . . Tliis iniillial nllraelion he- iweii nv.. per.soils is :i |,iiiely physieal tiling- unci lairely lor the piirravse of pro.roiiilon and iierpetuntioii. Tiro at- Ira.iioi, is epheniereal: of all the IhiUKs in tiie world, it is Hie mo.st eiiheniereal . . . Tiitelle. lual .oinpati- hility is ipiite .inotin.r thiiiH. Two liersons. properly nailed in their intcr- .ests. anihlfions. nhllilies. ,a|iacltics. I and intolleeiiial einlownients. do well I to lieeouie eomiMiiioiis and live to- gether. Two persons of the siiine sen- der ean enter into this nmrriaKe. It J is platonie. 1 The paper ' s new editor is l.iirrv jwohorii, .;,- MARCH 17, 1932 The same conduct was expected from students as had been demanded in 1913. The 1939 Catalog exhorts stu- dents to devote themselves to the work of the University between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. except for a lunch period . . . . Careful attendance was taken at all classes, and all students were required to attend their Mass Meetings, sponsored from noon till 1 p.m. every Wednesday By the Student Activities Department. These Mass Meetings presented a University Lecture series (the 1939 series included H.V. Kaltenborn, and Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.), or concerts, sports rallies, or class meetings. Mass Meetings were held either in Jordan Hall or the Boston Opera House. The Student Union was publishing the Student Hand- book, which it sold to students at a nominal price. The Student Council was the authority on all matters relat- ing to student policies not definitely connected with classroom procedure. The College of Liberal Arts had established its honor society. The Academy, in 1937, elec- tion to which was declared, the highes t honor that can be conferred upon an undergraduate. The number of fraternities on campus had risen to ten, each having a faculty advisor responsible for the proper administration of the fraternity house. At this point the fraternity houses were the only housing available to stu- dents aside from rooms in the YMCA. Students were un- der no circumstances eligible to lease apartments, and the attempt to do so was considered a breach of discipline. Certain clubs and professional societies had grown at Northeastern by 1939, including an Internationa! Rela- tions Club, Banking Club, Rifle Club, Astronomy Club, Hiiiitinn toii Avpitup El Tiiittu ' l lo Aid N.li. i ' oinmuU ' rs th Mr D h dd nt, d Mr 3ado ch ef con r li d uger ;n add t on I Uv U l drgt- f Ih plann ng and e g ng Co! Su a b t e WPA jm d 1 3o ton hd ing fu u I r r :h 100 F deral p o I ork on Ih suh-Ad T a J u 1 of the ork s5 J h c ly pro d ng db u 1 nd ,he Fcdoral Ro n PP B ,U r n a nder ult of th Tdp k don dur g past wo t nued up Exe [ at Opera Placf. directly opposite the | [University, | No Serious Accident | ' The authorities say thai during the j twi. vt-ars of building, no st-rious ac- 1 , cidi-nt has ever happened Only i thrL-e shifts, have been employed. 1 Tht. work of building a subway is j dangerous because it is necessary to give the surface tracks support while 1 tunneling beneath them. Because j there are fewer surface cars running at niglit. most of the supports are placed then. With wood supports i holding up the tracks, holes are j dug 4 feet wide and 6 feel deep. | Steel I-beams 3 feet in depth and weighing nearly two tons, supported : on each end by a block 8 inches to a i square foot,, are placed in these holes. When the holes are dug. 3 [ beams a night can be put in place, i The digging proceeds until a depth } of -10 feet IS reached. The walls are j supported by tongue-and-groove | plaaks until the reinforced ( walls and floor of the tunnel i a New Stations The floor is composed of 5 feet ot I concrete over a gravel base. The [ roof of the subway is placed and the I steel beamsremoved. Then the sur- - j face cars run over the top of the I tunnel. Tar is placed between lay- : ers of cement to prevent the leak- i age of water through the usually i porous cement. Two automatic j pumps now dispose of 100.000 gallons of water a day. When the construc- tion is completed, one pump will be sufficient to take care of the drain- age system. When completed, the subway will be about 20 feet wide and 18 feet high, inside njeasurc- ment. There will be two new sta- tions in this system, one at the Me- chanics Building and the other at the comer of Mass. Ave. and Huntington Ave. The tunnel will be separated at Mass. Ave. to permit the build- ing of an automobile underpass, similar to the one at Commonwealth j Marine IJfe Uncovered ' This project has been prunarily a manual labor undertaking, because machines have been found imprac- J tical. Derricks and snow-loaders j have been used to great advantage in disposing of the dirt, and com- 1 pression hammers have been of use ; in breaking up sucli hindrances as ' the old cistem uncovered in front! of Symphony Hall. Nevertheless, les to be] of equip- 1 Sand, similar life. that ; of C ' , waltr once stood wher : finest buildings now stand- When, and if. you visit ihis subway con- I struction. trj ' and grasp the signifi- cance of die feats these men are perfomimg. in overcoming the great ' forces of nature. Would it not be ' . interesting to hear the words of an ' • early Puritan, if he could return and ' view the magnificent spectacle of the subway, in a place where once I the meandering Charles River flowed? X. r ! came the North Parking area, and in- cluded tennis courts and a space for track practice before the Cage was built. The area is currently the site of Stetson Hall. The Tufts Medical and Dental Buildings on Huntington Avenue were purchased in 1949. After razing two of the three buildings, the Greenleaf Building was occupied by ROTC, and a new location was es- tablished for the Industrial Engi- neering Department and additional electronics labs. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, American Institute of Chemical Engineers, and American Institute of Electrical Engineers. In 1943, the university became a co-educational institution, based on precedent set by the Automobile School, and later by the Evening Law School. With the addition of women came a sorority, Sigma Phi Psi, and the Omega Sigma Society, organized for all women students to derive social, moral, and in- tellectual benefits for both them- selves and the University. In addi- tion came new activities and clubs including a Camera Club, Chess Club, Debating Society, German Club, Mathematics Society, and Yacht Club. By the 50 ' s the Dramatic Club was called the Silver Masque, and combined with the music clubs to put on annual mid-winter entertainment. King Husky 1 had been succeeded in 1941, by Queen Husky 1, a gift of Mr. Mrs. Milton Seeley. The Queen died at the early age of six months and was replaced by King Husky 11 also a gift of the Seeleys. Tuition by 1945 was still $250, however, the Student Activities Fee was up to $16 and the Library Fee, now called University Fee had gone up to $24. As the colleges were growing, the library had become totally in- adequate. Originally the university had used the library of the YMCA. By 1929 the university had a sepa- rate, growing collection of nearly 13,000 books housed in the YMCA. Myra White, associated with the university from 1920 till 1957, aimed the collection towards the need of a larger university. The construction of a university library was determined by the over- flow, and the need of the YMCA to use space they were loaning to Northeastern. Ground-breaking cer- emonies were held on August 29, 1950, and the old tennis courts were converted to a more valuable pur- pose. The library building was paid for largely by alumni, faculty, stu- dents, and friends. Completed sooner than expected, the library was in use the summer of 1952, with the fourth floor used for classrooms and the offices of the drawing department. Between 1947 and 1948 the univer- sity acquired the land bounded by Hemenway, St. Stephens, and For- syth Streets, a plot of four acres which had passed through many hands since its reclamation from the tidewaters of Back Bay. This be- In 1951, a building on Forsyth Street, vacated by Sylvania Electric, was acquired and remodeled into the Forsyth Building, providing ad- ditional areas for ROTC and instruc- tional departments. By 1951, the central campus on the south side of the Avenue was estab- lished. Twelve acres with frontage of 1300 feet had been acquired in 14 separate purchases of land. Campus growth continued when the Physical Education Center was begun in the summer of 1952, and completed in 1954. On February 26, 1957, the two buildings of the center were named the Godfrey Lowell Ca- bot Physical Education Center, on the occasion of Cabot ' s 96th birth- day. Cabot had been a member of the Corporation since 1941. To provide offices for the evening Division and more classrooms, a seventh building was constructed between 1955 and 1956. On October 24, 1956, the name of the new build- ing became Hayden Hall, in recog- nition of the gift from the Charles Hayden Foundation. Another part of the funding had been raised by the fraternities. Silver Masque, and other student groups. The College of Education began in 1953, as a four-year full-time school, in response to the postwar teacher shortage, particularly at the elemen- tary level. Lester S. VanderWerf was the first Dean of the College of Edu- cation. In 1957, the teacher intern- ship part of the program was initiated. By 1953, many of the people on the Northeastern faculty were people still serving in relatively sim- ilar positions today. Lincoln C. Bate- son was financial officer; Gilbert G. MacDonald was Dean of Freshmen; Charles Havice was Dean of Chapel; Rudolph Morris was Registrar, Gil- bert C. Garland was Director of Ad- missions; Herbert Gallagher was Di- rector of Health, Physical Education and Athletics; the list goes on. Other people were present in the faculty and staff who would, in the proceeding twenty years, move to positions of more prominance in the university; Eugene J. Blackman went from assistant professor of English to become Chairman of the Depart- ment of Drama and Speech; Sidney Herman went from instructor in Economics to become Associate Dean of Faculty; Christopher F. Ken- nedy began as an Assistant Profes- sor of Mathematics and became Dean of Students; Robert A. She- pard began as an Assistant professor of chemistry and became Dean of the College of Liberal Arts; and Ken- neth G. Ryder was an Instructor of History and Government who would become Executive Vice President. The student activities outlined in the 1953 catalog include even more additional clubs, reflecting the ever- widening scope of interests of the student body. For two years, until 1955, the administration of activities was divided into two departments: the Sports Department was headed by Herbert Gallagher, and all other activities were co-ordinated by Charles E. Kitchin, assistant director of student activities. Among the newer clubs were an art club, biol- ogy club, Hus-Skiers, psychology club, and square dance club. The Omega Sigma Society for women had developed a wide vari- ety of program for co-eds in the ten years of its existance. Aside from a Mother and Daughter tea, and a Big Sister Banquet for freshmen, the group coordinated with the Student Union in sponsoring an annual Christmas party for children from community centers. The society also organized outings, sponsored guest speakers, and offered opportunity for closer friendship, for spirited participation in wholesome activity, and for leadership development. Junio ' S en i o r Alum nos • H --A- l THE FIRST UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL TEAM, 1934 The noon hour on Wednesdays continued to be reserved for con- vocations at which attendance was required. The statements in the 1953 Catalog relative to conduct were al- most verbatim transcriptions from the 1916 Catalog. While providing no housing for men, Northeastern did acquire some residences for women on Marlbor- ough Street. No students were per- mitted to rent apartments without the Registrar ' s approval. By 1956, the Boston Opera House, which had been losing money, was condemned as unsafe by the City of Boston. Northeastern bought the land and the building, later remov- ing the building and making the area a parking lot. In his 1957-58 Report to the Mem- bers of the Corporation, Dr. Ell em- phasized that with the opening of the Space Age, it became more ap- parent that providing better-edu- cated and more highly trained spe- cialists in many fields must supersede all other responsibilities of our colleges and universities if we are to enable the American way of life to survive. In response to the pressures of the times and the pressures of the bur- geoning student population, ground was broken for a Graduate Center, in July, 1958. The building would also house the Physics Department and a cafeteria. Dedicated on Sep- tember 8, 1959, the day of Knowles ' inauguration, the building was named Churchill Hall, after Everett Avery Churchill. Named Dean of the Law School in 1920, Churchill had served as a central figure in the ad- ministration of the out-of-town edu- cation programs from 1922 to 1925; as Vice President of the Evening Di- vision from 1925 to 1943; and as Sec- retary of the Corporation until his retirement in 1953. By 1958, the campus plan an- nounced in 1934 was essentially completed. The result was a set of buildings constructed at a cost of $8 million. With the new Graduate Center providing space for the Physics De- partment, the second floor of Rich- ards Hall was converted in 1959, to house the Financial Aid Office and the Co-op Department. In 1958, the University acquired a women ' s resi- October li, 1939 Northeastern News NortheastPiii li niversilv Boslon. Mas.-achusotts Vol, XXI No 4 (Division A) Published by the Day Collegiate Schools Wedncstlav, 0 ' President Frank Palmer Speare Resigns; ►r, Carl Stephens Ell Made New Head Shnson Elected ienior Class .resident Appointment Effective In June Uuiiicatiuu of Da . E enui2 ' tIiooIb aiBcFli lMo e !S;r.:ii ' ' Neiv England Section of S.P.KE. o., Fridawht Hth Conveiies at Northeastern Saturday Chtiiiical to Hcai B -| 10llll t { okf ' Plant Opeiators Oi Siaoimif Fidtf], Dies of Cancel Oisciiss N iitrdlit Background At I. R. ( Itcetiii vkIi III  ;|M I T. Piofrs%or 1° To Adfliess Desipi l. tionofB S K M t F .i- .., rofessor Norris W Pottu v Northeastern News li..-l ii. M;i-..ailiii . II- President -Elect Carl Stephens Opens Drive for S. U. Funds Faculty Organizes Deans ' Cabinets Dr. Ha k«- Says Lnion SiipporU-d Bv Sludciit Body Dcsiribfs Many Projci And Services Foslcrcil By ihe Gruiip ! fostered by rcollegiate activities institutions as Yale Univers M- 1. T„ Dartnioutli. Williams, i Brown does much to bring the t , vereity into closer relationship w other ' leading centers ol educalit said Proressor Havice. The speakers recalled the man dence on St. Stephens Street. A year later three contiguous buildings on Hemenway Street, numbers 125, 129, and 131, were purchased from the New England Conservatory to serve as residences for men. The Boston Storage Warehouse, which stood in the center of the nas- cent Northeastern campus, was ac- quired in 1959 for $1.25 million. Af- ter an architectural study ruled out the possibility of converting the structure to classrooms and offices, it was demolished. An addition to the Field House at Chairmen of Student Boards Will l)e Heads OfB.A. and LA Colleges To I ' lo idc ( Icariiif; House and Foriini For Discussion ol Stnd -nl Opinion. lriti -isni!5 and Ideas The special student problems and relalionships arising oi he growth and development of the Colleges ol: Busiiless Adm id Liberal . Vrts will be ser ' ed in the future by the ( Kent Street Field was made in 1959, to provide more facilities for visiting teams and the Health Service. In the same year, the dormitories pur- chased from the Conservatory were renovated, but contrary to the origi- nal plan, it was decided they should house women. The need for men ' s housing led to the purchase of the Roosevelt Apart- ments at 21 Forsyth Street. This building, one of the Back Bay ' s more prestigious apartment houses during the ' 30 ' s, was renovated to provide a cafeteria, mail and laundry rooms and was called West Dormitory. r the discussion ol stu- . criticisms and ideas. ; presenting of recomraenda- To provide a permanent or- ition for arranging and con- dvicting social and other functions such as dances or smokers which will be operated on a college basis. (3) Ultimately Lo provide men lo rep7-- ' -?nl the special interests of each college at the meeting of the All-Day Division Student Council and other day division activities and The chairman of each cabinet will be the dean of the college. One of the earlv tasks of the cabinets will be the formulating of a system for electing a reprtsentaiive group of n:eniberE. Until this c; pLished. the following Middlers Successful In Jinx-Brcakiiijj Hi-Jinx Dance Casting all superstitions of Friday, ic- thirteenth, to the winds, Dic- itor Edward Dacey and the Class f 1942 succeeded in maintaining the nviablo record of ( I Divij A for t ippoinied Ernest E. Whitney 41), Edward T. Barry 43 Libe Alls: Honald C. Davis ' 40, Ernest W. McKenzie 40, Arthur S. Anderson 41. James A. Morris ' 41. Edward F. Dacev ' 42. Thomas H- McDonald ' 42, H. Russell Austin ' 43, Francis H. furnished by Dol Brissette and his ijth orchestra, featuring Dol ' s lovely vocalist, Mbs Wini Shaw. The Hotel Somerset was decorated n fine -Hi-Jinx style, having num- ?rous pasteboard black cats all around. And behind those black Its crept the sinister Prof. Doo Poo. the person of Louis Michaelson, ho imiUiled Fred Allen, Tizzie ish and Elmer Blurp, Edwin C. ill. and several others. Michaelson then introduced Robert ;ncFadan, who in turn introduced acting advis gavei of authority of the Middler Class by Mr. Nelson. Dacey then ;sentcd the remaining class offi- s for the year. Nine Men Elected To Jnnior Staff Of Canldion Compilation of 1 he University year Prof. Everett Carter Mareton, fac- ■- - -lvie°nVvh ' e publication. While the senior staff, of seven members, is already engaged in gathering and editing data and pictures, announce- ment of the junior staff members has just been made. Division A members of the Class of 1941 to be engaged in Cauldron work are; Raymond O. Dion E, Mil- Laurence S. UhJand BA. and Mau- rice Zallen E. The senior Cauldron board is composed of seven members: editor. Thomsi; E. McMahon E: business ager. David Kushner E; manag- A); {Div vin S. Cronan E. (Division B) ; photographic editor. Garnet L. Gib- son Jr.. LA, (Division A), photo- graphic editor. Donald W. Van TuyJ E. (Division B); and infonnal pic- tures editor. Ronald C. Davis LA. Despite the additional Women ' s dorms on Hemenway Street, more housing was re- quired for the increasing num- ber of co-eds. The Board of Trustees, in 1961, authorized the construction of a $2.6 mil- lion dorm itory to house 400 women. Construction of Speare Hall, on the former site of the Boston Opera House be- gan in 1963. In his 1957-58 Report to the Corporation, Ell announced he would retire on June 30, 1959, to be replaced by Dr. Asa Smallidge Knowles. Ell charac- terized Knowles as a man of strong and forceful character, a fine educational background, and proved capacity as an edu- cational administrator. Knowles, a native of Maine, was graduated from Thayer Academy and Bowdoin Col- lege. He began his teaching ca- ment, later serving as professor and head of the Department of Industrial Engineering. From 1939 to 1942 he was Dean of the College of Business Adminis- tration and Director of the Bu- reau of Business Research. In 1942, Knowles left North- eastern and became Dean of the School of Business Admin- istration and Director of Gen- eral College Extension at Rhode Island State College. He was founder and President of the Associated Colleges of Up- per New York, Vice President for University Development at Cornell University and in 1951, Knowles became President of the University of Toledo. After his election to the Presidency of Northeastern by the Trustees in 1958, Knowles was present at the university in an unofficial capacity as the power was slowly transferred from Ell. Northeastern And The Emergency A Special Message From President Ell We aj(e American. We still have confidence in men as human beings, regardless of their nation, race, color, or religious belief, until they have indicated beyond the shadow of a doubt that our faith is in vain. The Japanese Government, while feigning national peace through its envoys in Washington, was proceeding with the full force of its armed might to a murderous attack upon America im- der cover of darkness. The price we have paid for our respect for decency and honor is, in tliis instance, 3000 Americans killed or wounded without a chance for self-defense. The Japanese authorities have shown themselves to have the ethics of a yellow cur and the poison of a rattlesnake. I learned long ago on the range in Montana, however, that even a rattlesnake warns before it strikes. We are determined to keep faith with those who lost their lives in this cowardly attack, but we must keep that faith in such a manner that our efforts shall be made to coimt. We must not only be determined but also be force- ful and effective. Foresight is better than hind- sight. England was saved from German invasion in the early stages of this war by the wise use of her small air fleet — by using only a limited number of her planes against each successive at- tack and thus continuously stem- ming the tide while production was getting under way, instead of using maximum resistance immediately only to lose in the end. — NORTHEASTERN AND THE EMERGENCT — THE BACCHANALIANS, 1940 THE FOLK CLUB, 1940 MARCH 11,1942 NORTHEASTERN NEWS Northeastern and The Emergency . , . Last August our National Government strongly urged college students to continue tlieir education, saying; All governmental agencies recognize that education as such is national defense; tliat it is of vital importance to maintain a continuous supply of men and women trained in mind and body; tiiat the college, through more eilec- tive instruction and guidance, can make a most impor- tant and necessary contribution to national defense. This was true in peace. It is even more necessary in war. It is your job and mine to furnish to oui- Government ti ' ained minds as well as trained bodies. If we knew how long this war were to be, we could, of course, more readily advise Northeastern students in regard to the wisest course for tliem to pursue for the maximum benefit to tlie nation. But lacking tliat knowledge, it behooves us to prepare for the worst, pr y for the best, and meet what comes with intelligence and with force. It is expected that the Government will ui ' ge the colleges to continue their regular programs. This Northeastern plans to do. It seems to me that your wisest course of action today, and during the days to come, is to avoid confusion, hysteria, and rash action. Continue to prepare yourselves by diligent study for service to your community and to your nation, until the National Government has advised the University that another course of action for you would be more helpful to this country. Obviously the University is alert to tbe-situation, and will keep in touch with the Government and transmit all helpful information to you as soon as it is received. Northeastern University pledges full support to the National Government. The University is better prepared today tJian at any time in its history to make effective this support. With the un- ceasing efforts of a united nation, this war can have but one out- come. Democracy will win. (Signed) Carl S, Ell, President Northeastern University At the annual meeting of the Cor- poration in May, 1959, Ell was elected President Emeritus and Hon- orary Chancellor of the University. At the same meeting, Robert Gray Dodge resigned after 23 years as Chairman of the Corporation, and 27 years as Chairman of the Board of Trustees. He was elected Honorary Chairman of the Corporation, and was succeeded by Bryon K. Elliot as chairman of the Corporation and the Trustees. Elliot, the President of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insur- ance Company, was also on the Board of Trustees of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Before he stepped down. Ell re- structured the administration, creat- ing William C. White as Provost of the University, in addition to his po- sition as Vice President. As Provost, White was made responsible to the President and placed in charge of the educational activities of both the day and evening students. Another administrative change was the appointment of Professor Kenneth Ryder, Secretary of the Robert Rogers First Husky War Fatality Outstanding Student Killed in Treacherous Pearl Harbor Attack Northeastern s first war casualty in World War II is twenty-six year old Lieut. Robert F. Rogers ' 38E of Concord, New Hampshire, who was shot out of the air during the attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7. The information was received by Sigma Phi Alpha, Rogers ' fraternity. Industrial Engineering Major while at Northeastern, Rogers was a D-jar: ' s Lht ua.f, c-r.J a m. nihsr of several organizations. Well remembered by faculty mem- bers, Rogers ' conduct and activities earned for him the highest com- mendations from members ,of the faculty. As fine and upstanding a boy as you would ever want to meet. stated Professor Towle, Rogers ' co- ordinator. Prof. LflVinrence F. Cleve- land, former adviser to Sigma Phi Alpha, recalls Rogers as a clean-cut, personable, energetic young man. Interested in aviation, Rogers en- tered the Naval Air School at Pensa- cola, Florida, after his graduation in 1938. At the completion of his flight training course he was commissioned Lieutenant in the Naval Air Reserve and was stationed at Pearl Harbor. Rogers had been married only a month previous to his death. ARTIST ' S CONCEPTION ' 8 ' F F fe r t« ■ ikJteW Hit 1 Faculty since 1955, to the new posi- tion of Dean of Administration of the Day Colleges. By the time he retired, Ell had in- stituted many traditional social events. The annual President ' s Stu- dent Luncheons brought members of the Corporation together with members of the student body. The annual News Staff Luncheons, at- tended by the editors of the News and the Cauldron, featured informal talks by leading journalists, Giving student editors an invaluable insight into current professional journalism and the relation between it and stu- dent publications. Convocations had been reduced in number, and increased in impor- tance. There were also annual Hon- ors Convocations, at which time out- standing students were recognized for achievement in scholastic pur- suits and student activities. During the presidency of Carl Ell, the university attained a physical plant, a broad acceptance and recog- nition as a university, an enrollment of 19,800 students, and a substantial increase in financial contributions AERIAL VIEW, 1942 toward the building fund. In his first Report to the Members of the Corporation, in 1960, Presi- dent Knowles declared, Great met- ropolitan universities, including Northeastern University, are chal- lenged as never before. They cannot stand still; they must move forward. They must experiment with new programs and procedures. Out of controversy and ferment on our campuses there must evolve the best answer that men can give to the old questions of whom to educate, how to educate, and toward what ends and with what content. Little did Knowles realize the amount of con- troversy and experimentation he would face in the coming 13 years. As he assumed office, Knowles launched an exhaustive study of the academic organization of the uni- versity to determine how the struc- ture could be changed to serve the greatly increasing numbers of stu- dents, to reflect the technological advances of the space age, and to fulfill the need for part-time adult education. One of the results of the investiga- tion was the adoption of uniform standards for admission to and grad- uation from the four basic colleges. The degrees to be conferred would be identical in the day and night schools. Effective July 1, 1960, the College of Business Administration and the former evening School of Business joined to become a single unit called the College of Business Administra- . ARTIST ' S CONCEPTION tion. All four of the Basic Colleges began to offer both day and evening curric ula leading to Bachelor ' s Degrees. University College was estab- lished in 1960, offering courses lead- ing to various degrees, aimed specif- ically at the adult wfishing to pursue part-time study at night. While drawing heavily upon the day schools for its faculty, University College was not intended merely to offer the day school courses at night. Rather, the courses were tailored to meet the particular needs of adults desiring formal programs of profes- sional development on a part-time basis. At the same time, the Office of Adult and Continuing Education was established to handle adminis- tration of University College and the evening undergraduate programs. In addition, the Bachelor ' s Degree pro- grams of the College of Education were made available to evening and part-time students. Other new departments and of- fices in the university included the Office of University Planning, estab- lished in the Spring of 1959 under Dr. Loring M. Thom pson, and the Advisory Committee on Planning. Together these two groups were re- sponsible for the formation of real- istic long-range objectives for the growth and development of the uni- versity. The Office of University Development was set up in Septem- ber, 1959, under the directorship of F. Weston Prior. This office was re- sponsible for overall fund-raising activities including promotion of alumni donations, and gifts from corporations and foundations and encouragement of bequests. The Office of the Alumni Fund was placed under William A. Lovely while Rudolf Oberg, Director of Alumni Relations devoted all his time to alumni club activities. The name of the game became money. If Northeastern was to build on a Space Age scale, it was going to require great amounts of money. To help sell the great metropolitan university image, an Office of Uni- versity Publications was established. The academic programs did not stagnate while the university charged out after the almighty dol- lar. A new program in Physical Edu- cation for men began in the Fall of 1960, with Herbert Gallagher ap- AERIAL VIEW, 1939 COMING GRADUATIONS 1949-G (June 22, 1947 1949-C (Credit-Sliy) Sunday, SeptJ 4, 1950 AB 1947 1, 1948 Vol. xxvin No. 6 Thursday March 13 1947 NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE FOR NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH • JOHNNY LONG FOR PROM Prom Maestro Formal Dinner to Precede Junior Festival at Copley Plaza May 9 unior rrom Has New Ticket Plan LEFT-H NDCD TIDDl r K— Jolinny Long leader of the orchestra of Shantytown fa-me. who will bring his band to Boston for the NU Junior Prom. Pive-couple tables which may be reserved in advance and an installment plan for payment are among the novel features to be considered when buying tickets for the Junior Prom shich takes place at the Copley PKza on May 9. A one dollar deposit by each of five students will reserve a table which they may select from the seating plan at the ticket table outside of the Com- mons. The price of tickets is $15 a couple. With the use of the prepayment ticket which has already been mailed to the members of the Junior Class, one must pay $5 by March 19, $5, April 1; and the remaUider Lane, featured with Johnny by April 25. Long ' s Orchestra. Prom March 17-31, tickets ft ill be on sale outside of Com- mons on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. For the first week, tickets will be available only to members of the Junior Class; after this, tickets will be avail- able to all students in the Uni- versity and will be available daily throughout April. No tickets will be sold at the door and choice of dinner menu must be made at the time of the first payment. Johnny Long and his orchestra, outstanding favorites on the collegiate dance circuit, have been signed for the Junior Prom on May 9th at the Copley Plaza, Larry Redgate, class president, announced last Saturday. Danc- ing will be from 9 o ' clock on and will be preceded by a formal banquet at 7:30. Francey Lane, Beachcombers To Supply Vocals Although making his first ap- pearance before a Northeastern audience, Long is well-remem- bered for the numerous one- nighters and theatre appear- ances that he has made in this locality. Tops among his re- corded music is the famous Shanty In Old Shantytown. The success of Shantytown paved the way for When I irow Too Old To Dream and Blue Skies, each receiving a similar jive treatment. Francey Lane, vocalist with the Long band, has been char- acterized by music critics as a pint-si2ed Greer Garson. Miss Lane was a student at Columbia University when she heard that Long was looking for a new vocalist. She went to Chicago where she auditioned for Long and was signed Immediately. Johnny Long, a graduate of Duke University, holds the dis- tinction of being the only left- See Prom (Page 3, Column 3) pointed Director of Health, Physical Education and Athletics. The University Health Services were moved from the Ell Center into more adequate facilities in the For- syth Building. Dr. George M. Lane was appointed full-time University Physician, with the added responsi- bility of maintaining a healthy en- vironment on campus. With the Athletics Department separated from Student Activities, Charles E. Kitchin was placed in sole charge of student activities. The department came under the general supervision of the Dean of Students. In 1961, construction began on an addition to Science Hall to provide offices, classrooms, and laboratories for the Pharmacy and Psychology Departments, as well as graduate re- search labs for the Chemistry De- partment. The university obtained additional space for the Electronics Research Project staff by leasing part of the United Realty Building. Simultaneously, the university con- tinued to acquire adjacent land as it became available. By 1961, suf- ficient property had been obtained on Field and Ruggles Streets to es- tablish a new parking lot. The burgeoning problem of in- adequate parking space was also re- lieved by the demolition of the Bos- ton Storage Warehouse. The site is still used as a parking lot for the faculty. Northeastern dedicated its Center for Continuing Education, Hen- derson House, on May 12, 1962. Hen- derson, President of the Sheraton Corporation and donor of the prop- erty and house in Weston, Mass., de- livered the principle address at the ceremonies. The 1962 Report of the President, NEW LABORATORY BUILDING subtitled Gathering Momentum , displays the effect on the university of the increasing speed of the six- ties. The pace of life and change be- gan to take on a youthful vigor dur- ing the Kennedy Years, which forward propulsion was later to be driven and embittered by the fury of the Vietnam War and reactions to it. The sixties was a decade of ever-in- creasing speed, and sometimes sud- den collision, from the 707 jet, through the 727, to the 747 and the stillborn SST. In the decade in which trans-oceanic communication was superceded by nightly news- casts from around the world via sat- ellite and messages from astronauts in space. Northeastern propelled it- self into its own race for drastic, monumental expansion and im- provement: The Diamond Anniver- sary Development Program. Some- where in its race for expansion, the institution left the students behind, breathlessly bewildered and trying not to lose touch with the university which grew larger and more remote. The Mugar Life Sciences Building, the addition to Science Hall begun in 1961, was the first structure com- pleted under the Diamond Anniver- sary Program, a project which was planned to result in the construction of a campus including 24 buildings and athletic fields by 1973, the uni- versity ' s 75th anniversary. The ar- chitect ' s rendering of the total pro- posed project is familiar to anyone who has purchased a Northeastern bookcover or post card. Mugar Hall, named for the parents of Stephen P. Mugar, president of the Star Market Company and mem- ber of the University Corporation, also contains facilities donated by the Charles Hayden Foundation, the Gillette Company, the National In- stitute of Health, E.I. Dupont de Ne- mours and Company, Inc., and the Monsanto Chemical Company. The university acquired a former Nike missile site in 1962, and began construction of a suburban campus. The first building, containing 22 classrooms, a small library, an audi- torium, and a lounge and cafeteria, was completed in 1963, but not dedi- cated until 1971, as Byron K. Elliot Hall, in honor of the retiring chair- man of the Trustees. The former premises of the J.P. O ' Connell Company located just JANUARY 31. 1948 SPEERS ELECTED MANAGING EDITOR Marshall Peck Made News Editor George A. Speers 49LA and Marshall H. Peck SOLA were elected to the positions of Man- aging Editor and News Editor respectively at an Editorial Board meeting of the NEWS on Monday, January 27. English Journalism Major An English-Journalism major, George Speers, has been with the NEWS for three years. He was formerly on the Sports and News Staffs and was elected News Editor last November. The new Managing Editor is a veteran of three years of Army Signal Corps service, two and one-half years of which were spent in North Africa and India. Speers is an active partici- pant in the Husky Key Society, the Hus-Skiers, the Interna- tional Relations Club, and the Dramatic Society. News Editor Marshall Peck is an English- (Continued on Page 6) beyond the Forsyth Building on For- syth Street, was purchased and re- named Forsyth Annex. The first floor was renovated to house the of- fice of University Publications, the upper floor to be devoted to the Alumni Records Office and the Alumni Directory Office. In September, 1962, the New England College of Pharmacy be- came the Northeastern University College of Pharmacy, ceasing inde- pendent operations and adopting the five-year co-op plan. The in- tegration of academic work with practical experience through co-op, eliminated the year of post graduate apprenticeship required in most states for registration as a pharmacist. J resideBifs Message T Frestutnen , By I R. ASA KNOWXES It is a spocial privik-gc for me to e ;i.cnd a : ' woids of i- icome to Members oi Hu ' ' nsw rrcsliinan clas5 at Novthea.stem University this year. I feei especially clc- e lo mem- bers of this new class iince we both huV ' e something in com- moiu We are hegtnnine our careers together at the Univer- sity — you as students oE a great University and myseJf a-s North CIS tern ' s third President. I feel !t Is a privilege for each of U3 to join this growing, dy- namic family we call North- eastern University. Our future here will certainly he a chal- lenge 35 well as a new way of life. Many of you will become leaders of the future by virtue of the education you receive at the University over the next five years. Some will help make our world a better place in. which to live. Others may become outstanding engineers, businessmen, teachers, or mem- bers of other professions and do credit to themselves. North- eastern, and the professions in which they serve. A future with wide hcrizona la now being made available to you as a result of your dtcision to earn a higher education. Northeastern University has an excellent faculty and out- standing facilities avmlable to help you attain some of the higher values of life as well as some o£ its rewards. The op- portunities are here. You are at the threshhold. The deci- sion is yours now to stride ahead with vigor, determination and purpose. It is my hope that each of you will take advantage of your outstanding opportunities dur- ing the years ahead. I speak for the faculty and myself in wishing each of you success in your studies and college ac- tivities as a preparation for a pleasant, productive, and fruit ful life in the future. Welcome to Northeastern TJn- iversity. New President Inaugura ' For the trustees and members of the Corporation I V I ' lcome you as the third president of Northeati.ern Univeisity. I assure you of the confidence whicli all a jsociated with the University havjs in you and of their conviction that, under your administration, Northeastern Univcisity will go on to attain the greatness that is its destiny. , These were the words of Byron K. Elliott, Chairman of the University ' s Coi-poration and the Board of Trus- tees alter he placed the gold lavalier symbol of the pre- .-.idciuy, around the neck of Dr. Knowles during inaugu- lalion ceremonies at the University Tuesday. VOL. XLI NO. 1 Record Number Of Co-eds Among 1870 Entering Frosh By LIND.V EVANS Two hundred and twenty-seven co-eds — a 95 per cent increase over last year — will help grace the ranks of Northeastern ' s largest September freshmen class. FIN ' .ANCIAL AID INCREASED seating an investment of $100,000. The lotal enioUmenl will be The new regional scholarship in- 1870 %i1h 240 more coming in stituied by Northeastern this rs ' ovemher. This number wns ac- year has increased the scholar- ccpted irom over 30,000 sJudenU .ship aid 540,OtK) o -er last year. Northcasi 5,000 plied irly 200 olht r freslamen re- fram o-, or ceived aid from industry, their actually ap- high schools, the U-S. Govern- A ratio of nient and numbers of . ' jocia! ag- or ' 3 appli- encies. These scholarships total another $100,000. The aid rang- , u-a. given ed in amounts from $200 to nd EducatTJn 211, repte- $1350. Majority of Freshman Expected to Join ROTC Knrolljmeitb In both the College of Education and X i l erai Arts has increased Li- benil Arts shows the great- est gTovi th Vi-ith 400 students enterinir this year as com- pared to 155 last fall. Both Engineering and Business Administartion have re- mained constant with 650 and 465 respectively- The increase in Liberal Arts ndicates the growth of Northeastern as a University, according to Dr Gl bert C. Garland. Director of Ad INTEREST IN CO-OP More and more students in these fields have seen the advan- tages of co-op training, he said, Cha orporalion and the Board of Trub ce . p shoulders of Asa S. Knowles as Dr. . rman of the CorporaHon of M f.T. loohs Seven out of ten incoming fresmmen will join the Northeastern ROTC Brigade, according to Colonel Sidney ' S Ubemr Arts ' nT ' EducaUon Davis, professor of Military Science and Tactics and j benefit froim their interest commander of the unit. Prof. Leary Named Adviser To Freshman Professor Tiiamas J- Leary, assistant professor of EcOnom- Ir ics. will act a-s adviser lo the gib! Class of 19 4. ' .he University has cite As Advise 2760 Wich approximately dets the Northeastern Eriga ' the largest voluntary ROTC on a single campus in the ( try, overshadowing Cadets at West Point, welcoming address ttf eli- freshmen. Col. Davis will le two goals of freshmen: to earn your degree and to sene Prof. Leary will your coun ' ry by being conunis- counsellor, social sioncd an officer in the aiTned and financial adviser, and gener- foi ' ces of the United States. al advisor to the class. Plons He will also extend an invita- £ar tho activities of the class tioa to alj veterans to visit the wiii start under l«s direction ROTC hoadquarter i in the Green- when the November frcshnien leaf Building ttf fiiKl out how have entered and will include ROTC can benefit, tiiem. plans for the freshmen class el- ectiotis and other social events, Fre«hmeii looking tor ad- vice on any problem may find him hi his office at 409H. After graduating from Nortli- Signs easter.i with honors in 1951,, band, Prof. I.eai- ' twjk his Masters i and Doctorate degpces from Ohio State University, The -jnew adviser joined the Bcononiic Department of North- easternV m 195S. Previously he fcaughli ' economics at Ohio State Unvvp.ysify and the University of Maryhhvi. Al though 75 per cen t of the frerfimen come fixwn New Eng- land, other states represented in- clude Te.xas, Michigan, Delaware, in the coun- California, New Jersey, New the Corps of York, Pennsylvania, D. C, Mary- land, and Oliio. Among foreign nations repre- sented wilt be Australia, China. England, Germany, Greece, France. Hungary, Italy. Latvia. Lithuania, Turkey, and Venezula, The iQ roase In coeds from 130 bo 227 is iKirtly because o( tjhc new regional scliolar- ship. according: to Dr. Gar- land. Tliese scholarships, whrch only entering i ' reshmen are eligible New cadets wiH be eligible for for, give aid to tliosc students Pershing Rines, the honorary so- living away from iKMne. The slu- ciety for ROTC freshmen . ' ind dent may rec ive amounts up to sophomores; Military Affiliated S1200 depending oJi his fii aiK:iaI Radio System, a lA ' orld-wide or- need. to In addition traioing In Ii adershlp, aU- vanccxl course stmlcnts (larn pfty al the nite .t 90 oenU a d y during ]iiK 1 tcntts and have :ih oiiiwrtunity t-o com- pete for auxny liOTC oltolar- lnaugux atioti PHOTOS AND STORIES PAGES 6 - 7 Nearly 1,000 dignitaries, faculty and g uests were seated in Alumni Auclitoriuin as Dr. Knowles, former president of the University of Toledo, officially became head of New England ' s second largest university with ail enrollment oi nearly 20,000 students. Only an hour before the inaugural ceremonies in. Alumni Auditorium, the University dedicated a new $L450,000 Graduate Center complete with amphithea- ters, classrooms, laboratories, administrative offices and air-conditioned cafeteria. Seated -on the flower bedecked stage and clad in ac- ademic robes were among otliers, Owen B. Kiernan, State Commissioner of Education who represented the Com- monwealth of Mas.sachusetts, and the Honorable Mayor John B. Hynes who gave greetings for the City of Bos- ton. Dr. Harold C. Case, president of Boston Univer- sity brought greetings from the Institutions and Learned Societies, while Robert G. Dodge, first instructor at Northea.stern and Honorary Chairman, Northeastern Un- iversity Corporation, presented greetings from the Cor- IKjratibn. Previous to the ceremonies in Alumni Au- ditorium, nearly 400 represent ! fives from more than 300 American ooUeges and universities and 58 Icarried societies, professional and educational organizations, participated in the academic pro- cession. After the iuauguration a reception was held for Dr. and Mrs. Knowles in the Edwin Sibley Webster Reading Room of the Robert Gray Dodge Library. Winding up the day was the Faculty Inaugural Dinner held that evening in the main gymnasium of the Godfrey Lowell Cabot Physical Education Center. DECEMBER 4, 1959 By 1962, the co-op system had be- come increasingly complicated and unwieldly as the administration still had to arrive at a workable division of the year into work and study peri- ods. Each student spent two ten- week terms and one five-week term at school; and one ten-week term and one sixteen-week term at work, with one week vacation. While uniform admission and graduation requirements were adopted, the tuition became vari- able; engineers paid $380 per quar- ter ($190 for the semi-quarter in summer); all other Basic Colleges charged $340 per quarter (170 in summer). DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY CAMPUS $1,100 Raised For Statue; New Drive Begins Monday Division B will kick-off it. ' ; Campaign to complete the Husky Statue Fund Mends ' .hrough the sale of Husky Pins and continue it lliiough Dec. 23 or until the ?2,0( joal is reached. Representa. t i lives from the t  Student i :il will .lu-sky pins to m e m b e r .s of profes.sional or- janizations on Tuesday and Thursday There wiU also ,000 ue a booth set up in the main concourse to the Comnjons, 500 open from 12 noon to 2 p.m every day and before 9 a.m. Council mem- bers will accept any donatiOir. (|v but if each stu- dent donates only 30 cents apiece the fund will be com- pleted. DRIVE OPENED — Dr. Asa S. Knowles. Universily pre dent made first conlribulion to kick-off Husky Statue Tw Drive in DiT A Left to right: John Quinn BOBA, presidei Student Council. Ben Bradford BOBA, council cecrelary, I Knowles, and Jim Lore BOBA. council vice president. Miss Nancy MacLean i . . -MflkbL ilk. m «. ' . In the field of student activities, a new literary publica- tion had been established, the NU Writer. Other new clubs included an Auto Club, Jazz Society, Politics Club, Sociology Society, Sport Parachute Club, and a second women ' s society. Gamma Delta. In addition, there were twenty various national professional societies. sachusetts General. The three year program was operated on the co-op plan, with academic work in the last two years at Northeastern alternating with co-op periods at one of the three affiliated hospitals. Students thus quali- fied for the associate degree and R.N. examinations, with the option to continue to a Bachelor ' s Degree. In addition to the continuing affiliation with Forsyth Dental School, in 1964, Northeastern offered programs for Medical Technologists and for Nurses. In co-operation with the New England Baptist and New England Deaco- ness Hospitals, Northeastern offered full-time courses on the co-op plan, leading to a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Medical Technology. Northeastern also offered, for stu- dent nurses at Peter Bent Brigham, New England Deaco- ness, and Children ' s Hospital Medical Center Schools of Nursing, courses in the sciences, humanities, and social studies. These programs made the resources of Northeast- em ' s liberal arts faculty available to local specialized training schools for the broader education of specialists. The importance of the general education of specialized technicians was only beginning to be recognized in the early sixties. The ultimate acceptance of this idea is em- bodied in Northeastern ' s College of Nursing, as estab- lished in 1965. Convocations were still required for students, but they were held less often, on specially announced Wednes- days. By this time, the size of these assemblies required the seating capacity of Symphony Hall. Incredibly, the exhortations on stu- dent conduct were exactly the same in 1962 as they had been in 1916. With all the radical changes in plant and cur- riculum, the students were still consid- ered employees of the university. In 1963, Northeastern began pro- grams of affiliation with Forsyth School for Dental Hygienists and the Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing. Enrollment in the Forsyth Dental program, entailing two years of classes attended at Northeast- ern and the Forsyth Dental In- firmary on Hemenway Street, resulted in the Certificate of Dental Hygiene from Forsyth and the Associate in Science degree from Northeastern. Stu- dents in the Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing were en- rolled for 35 weeks as freshmen at Northeastern in the College of Liberal Arts. The remaining two years of the program included courses in nursing and general education given by Massa- chusetts General Hospital, with credits for all courses ap- plicable to an associate degree in science. The Affiliated Nursing Program was called the College of Nursing in 1964, with three collaborating hospitals: Beth Israel, Children ' s Hospital Medical Center, and Mas- The same principle guided the merger in July, 1964, of the Bouve-Boston School for Women with Northeastern. Affiliated for 20 years with Tufts University as a women ' s school, with the merger the school ' s focus was opened to in- clude men and women interested in Physical Therapy, Recreation ' and Physical Education. Com- bining programs of liberal arts, science, and professional prepa- ration, the Bouve program fea- tured student teaching and lead- ership training in camping and outdoor recreation at the newly acquired Warren Center for Phys- ical Education and Recreation, in Ashland, Massachusetts. In 1962, the widow of Henry E. Warren, inventor of the Tele- chron clock, gave a 39.5 acre tract of lake-front land to the univer- sity, including fields, woodlands, and a large house. In addition, the university was authorized to use 25 adjoining acres. The timing of this gift was a great aid to the nas- cent physical education programs. A new lodge was built at Ashland through the aid of the Charles Hayden Foundation, containing a meeting area, craft room, and dining facilities. As part of a labora- tory for Bouve students, six houses to accomodate 16 stu- dents were constructed. These facilities were planned to make Northeastern ' s program one of the finest available in the training of recreation leaders, camp directors, and playground directors. One of the lower priority projects of the Diamond Anni- versary Program was an exten- tion of the Student Center. As a result of a petition signed by 74 per cent of the students, the university was given a $2.97 million loan from the U.S. Housing and Home Finance Administration. The loan was to be amortized by student as- sessments, approved by the pe- tition, over a period of 40 years. To raise funds for the first stage of the Diamond Anni- versary Program, the alumni were given an opportunity to invest in a land-share and multiple-payment plan. Un- der the plan, an alumnus would receive one Land-share for each $100 contribution. This plan was designed to give alumni the opportunity to help pay for university land acquisitions while land was still available at reason- able prices. The present quarter plan was developed in 1964 and adopted by the Faculty Senate, the President and the Board of Trustees. The academic year was divided into four equal parts in order to provide longer periods of in- struction, which was deemed beneficial to the academic quality of Northeastern curri- cula. Also, the six month co-op periods would allow more in- tensive training and thus more varied and significant co-op assignments. In recognition of the prob- lems of Blacks in affording and preparing for college educa- tion, the university began a program for financial assis- tance for 25 Black students who enrolled in 1963. Scholar- ship aid was provided by the Ford Foundation ' s Fund for the Advancement of Education. To assist Black students in preparation for college, graduate co-op students from the College of Education served as teacher aides in public schools to boost language and reading skills. By 1964, the Suburban Campus was a success beyond expectations. In addition to 350 freshmen, the new cam- pus facility was serving 4500 students in State-of-the-Art courses. These post-doctoral level courses were designed for engineers and scientists (centered conveniently in the Rt. 128 area nearby the campus) to help them keep abreast of new developments in their fields of special- ization. Futhermore, the campus was providing over 400 women, mostly housewives, the opportunity to take courses while their children were in school, during the morning and early afternoon. The idea of co-operative education was apparently ap- propriate for the sixties. While fulfilling a need for semi- skilled, college-educated labor, it also gave students a more immediate exposure to the realities of the business world. Co-op was increasingly recognized as a major fac- tor in the training of well-educated and experienced people, ready to step immediately into business and the professions. Northeastern assumed a major role in the spreading of co-operative education. The Department of Co-operative Education was reorganized in 1964, into a Center for In- formation and Research and a Division of Co-operative Education. The Center, supplementing the work of the National Commission for Co-operative Education, was designed to stimulate interest and conduct research in the expansion and improvement of co-operative curricula and to provide consultant services. Northeastern confronted the space age in 1964 with an 11-day space exposition which was held in the Cabot Cage in conjunction with the Fourth National Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Space, held at John Hancock Hall, and co-sponsored by NASA. Isaac Asimov ' s lecture about the Lunar Excur- sion Module and the life-size model of a Sa- turn V rocket engine made the moon seem less cheesey but still very far away. In 1964, Speare Hall, named after the first president of the univer- sity, and housing 400 women, was officially dedicated. The Dia- mond Anniversary Plan was marching on with the official open- ing of the Burlington Campus also taking place. By 1964, Northeast- ern had the largest voluntary unit of Reserve Officers Training Corps in the United States. With over 2,000 ca- dets, the brigade produced more Signal Corps officers than any other unit in the country. The Library Story Construction Begins in ' 70 Construction is expected to start on North- eastern University ' s 16-story library-learning re- sources center in the summer of 1970. The library will be built in two phases, with the first phase costing $6 million and with com- pletion scheduled for the fall of 1972. When the second phase is completed, the li- brary will be able to house one million volumes. After completion of the first phase, the cen- ter will contain 280 individual electronic study carrels scattered throughout the building. Presi- dent Asa S. Knowlcs reported. There will also be a seating capacity for 1,600 students, including 775 non-electronic study booths and 120 small sludy-conference rooms. The S6 million cost includes equipping the building with the latest electronic learning re- sources which will feed information using a va- riety of media from a centi ' al communications area on the first floor to the 2S0 electronic carrels. The entire 16-story tower will be completed in tlie first phase, although six upper floors will not be finished on the interiur until the second phase The top floor will house the building ' s mechanical equipment. President Knowles said the university has ap- plied for a federal grant to help finance the build- ing, and an anonymous donor has already pledged a gift of SI million. The library will be constructed around a cen- tral service core containing rest rooms, stairways. and elevators. On the ground floor, in addition to the com- munications center, will be the library ' s process- ing area. The main entrance will be on the first floor, which will house a lobby, exhibit area, circu- lation desk, catalogs, reference area and periodi- President Knowles said the existing Dodge Librar ' will continue to be used as a library when the new center is completed. The center will be located between Churchill Hall and the railroad tracks- and will be faced with llie traditional white-gray brick. Book Booth Nets $1,300 By SR KON GR VNEK The Bookworm in our Librar ' May Die of Hunger . . . Please Give. was one of the many signs being carried around Ihe Quad in order to publicize the Library Action Commillees ' book drive, which as of Wednesday raised $1,300 Approximately 20 freshmen gave up their lunch Tuesdaj to donate money to the book fund and march around the quad with their signs. The action was spurred by Prof. Dan .Mien, their English professor. Prof, AUen kiddingly told them that they would all flunk English if they did not contribute to the fund. The signs were m.ide in class with the money donated by Prof, Allen, AjTiong some of the slo- gals were: tlxpand Your Mind With Books, or A Dollar a Day to Keep Ignorance . way, and But ' Tis Jolly To Be Wise, and Our oks . Plei ' WE ' RE PLEASED ' Even with Prof, Allen ' s supporL Nancy Vo- gelson (71L( 1, the committee ' s chairman, said We ' re pleased with the amount we have received so far. but we don ' t have nearly 100 percent sup- A large percentage of the 31,300 came from the students. A number of mdividual faculty members gave contributions, but we are disappointed in the number of faculty departments that have given us support, she .said. Not a day goes by, Miss Vogelson contin- ued, that instructors do not criticize the library in one way or another. ENTHUSIASTIC APATHY Although they were alt very enthusiastic be- fore the drive started, not many have come up with contributions yet. If students are witling to back their complainls with money the faculty should too, she said About 1,000 contributions wei-e made to bring the sum to Wednesday ' s figure. IConllfiwad on Peg 3} Roland H. Moody had been director of the Dodge Li- brary for ten years as of 1963, and by that time he had ex- panded the general collection to over 132,000 volumes. In 1963, Moody and his staff compiled a bibliography guide for engineering colleges and technical schools which was published by G.K. Hall and Co. This volume, containing 15,000 titles, was the only major ef- fort of its kind pro- duced in recent years. Another improve- ment in the library was the institution of the Division of Pro- grammed Instruction, serving the university as a repository and a research unit for self- teaching devices. The National Coun- cil of Northeastern University was estab- lished in June, 1963. Composed of out- standing alumni, the Council was established to provide alumni leadership in helping to realize the university ' s long-range objectives. Northeastern was carefully culti- vating and maintaining close relations with her alumni as a prime source of funds for the Diamond Anniversary program. In sports, 1963 saw the beginning of rowing as a sport at the university, through the efforts of Chandler Honey, a member of the Trustees and the Corporation. Using facilities of the Riverside Boat Club, the Husky Crew joined Harvard, B.U., and M.I.T. as the fourth collegiate crew competing on the Charles River. In dedication ceremonies held November 9, 1965, sev- eral buildings were officially named. The newest women ' s dorm was named in memory of Charles Stetson, a former member of the Board of Trustees, and his mother, Mrs. Annie S. Stetson. Churchill Hall became the official name of the Graduate Center, in memory of Ever- ett Avery Churchill, former Vice President and Secretary of the university. Light Hall (the St. Stephen street women ' s residence) was named in honor of Galen David Light, the first secretary and treasurer of Northeastern; Smith Hall (129 Hemenway St.) in honor of William Lin- coln Smith, the university ' s first professor; White Hall (formerly West Dormitory) for William Crombie White, ' 25, first Executive Vice President of the university; and Melvin Hall (90 the Fenway) for Harold Wesley Melvin, first dean of students. The dedication of these facilities demonstrated the continuing growth of the university in both graduate and undergraduate divisions. With a $900,000 grant from the National Science Foun- dation, the university was able to construct the Physics- Electrical Engineering Research Building in 1966. The university was able to develop its marine science research institute after the acquisition in 1966 of a 20-acre former Nike missile site at East Point, Nahant. The prop- erty was transferred to Northeastern without cost by the General Services Administration. The officers ' quarters were converted into research rooms, offices, and a labora- tory for the study of marine biology, wave action, harbor pollution, and sea water corrosion. In 1966, the Board of Trustees voted to resurrect the Law School, the original school of the YMCA Education Divi- sion, reopening in 1968 as the first law school in the country to operate on the co-op plan. The College of Nursing es- tablished two degree programs in 1966. Continuing the associ- ate degree program already ex- tant, the curriculum was ex- panded to a bachelor of science. The establishment of the five-year program at North- eastern reflected two national trends: the offering of nurse ' s training in college, with the broad intellectual atmosphere of the campus replacing the purely technical orientation of the hospital nursing school; and the need to train more nurses for hospital administrative positions. Across the country the desperate need of gigantic urban hospitals for medical personnel trained in administration had led to a reshaping of the philosophy of education for nursing, embodied by the new College of Nursing. The college was given a headquarters in the spring of 1966, when Mary Gass Robinson Hall was dedicated. The building also housed the Riesman Biology Center, and new labs for the Physical Therapy department. Trustees accept tower library plan By DON LEAMY Plans for a tower Library-Learning Re- sources building to be constructed in what in now the faculty parking lot between the Student Center and the Dana Research Building were reviewed and accepted with minor alterations Wednesday by North- eastern ' s Board of Trustees. The present estimated cost of the 16- story structure is $6.3 million exclusive of the books and other educational equipment. Final plans should be completed and presented for bidding in the early spring of 1970 and construction is scheduled to begin at the start of the summer. The build- ing shoidd first be ready for use in the summer of 1972. Cost estimates have been increased over last year ' s figure of $5 million due to the inflation of construction costs ($800,000 more) and the expansion of the floor areas at the base of the building (another $500,- 000). The building is so constructed as to have only five main stress floors, each bearing the weight of the two floors above it, with a center core of elevators, lava- tories and utility rooms. Due to a limited budget and an insuf- ficient stock of books, only the first nine (Continued on Page 3) Andy Dabilis I Northeastern will go I big lime— University I Two of the biggest reasons for Northeastem ' s need Ito go big time, to make the switch to University Divi sion from the College Division were silently expressed on sober faces in late January when football stais Craig MacDonald and Mike Donovan were not drafted by any professional team. „ Just over on Commonwealth Avenue, Boston Um- i versity, playing a university schedule all season besides I post-season competition, had no less than six pla)ers i drafted, several by our own beloved Boston Patriots I More irony lies in the fact that only several weeks I earlier, MacDonald, rock-ribbed defensive left end and I captain of the 1967 Husk-y football squad, was chosen I Best Defensive Lineman in New England, and Donovan, I offensive guard, was picked as Best Offensive Lineman 1 by the Wire Services Poll. I But, because both were chosen in the College Di i vision category, both were overlooked despite tlieir im p pressive credentials in leading Coach Joe Zabilski ' s 20th 4 season team to a 7-1 record, not allowing a touchdown I on the ground, and giving up only 34 points all season I Zabilski himself has said that botli these bovs I could play for any team in the country. Poor consola I tion when a possible fine future appears gone because 4 of the schedule you play. I Northeastern should go university. Not only would i it eliminate a lot of patsies from the schedule, but de- d spite what critics of this mo ' e sa) ' , it would give tlie i school more athletic prestige. i True, the ruling for University Division affects only i post-season competition, such as tournaments, but it i would enforce equity in athletic policy where the basket i ball and football teams now play on a College Division 4 scale against AIC, Colby, Bates, Bowdoin, and other 1 teams definitly not in the same league. 4 The hockey squad is already in Division I ECAC, 1 which corresponds to University Division, as is the base i ball nine, which means tliat only the football and basket p ball teams would have to make the switch, i And, if they wanted to participate in post-season i tournaments, more than half of the regular season sched d uhng must include University Division teams. 1 For the footballers, this means Boston College, Har- p vard, Holy Cross, Boston University and the like. Any i one who saw last season ' s edition gridironmen would 4 not doubt that within several years they would easily P hold their own in this competition, and could beat Bos i ton University right now. P In basketball, we could still retain traditional rivals i such as AIC, Spiingfield, Amherst, and Tufts, but coul4 i now pick up St. Bonaventure, Providence, St. Johns I N.y., and St. Joseph ' s, Pa. 1 True, for several years we would have a mediocre 4 record, but when the competition gets tough, it ' s easier i to entice better players to attend Northeastern, and may- f be then die recruiting policy would loosen up. i Little Fairfield, Conn., University switched to the I University Division in basketball several years ago and i now is holding its own against Houston, Boston College I and most of the major college independents. I But who wants a .500 record, college division ad- P vocates say, We can have an .800 record against South- 1 eastern Mass. Tech and Eastern Nazarene. Come on i now. isn ' t a L5 at Yale just a bit better than a 3 5 at I Alabama? You know it is, and I know it is, so why denj I It or try to hide it. Tell it like it is, baby. I Nordieastem should go university. As Mike Holo I vak would say, No question about it. Gosh. I Look at the record; football - 32 wins in the last I 40 games; basketball, 41 wins in the last 55 games and I si.x College Division tourneys in the last eight years I Look at tire New England University Division bas I ketball record for 1967-68. Teams Like Dartmoutli witl I an 8-18 record were being named to the top ten. Other additions to facilities in 1966 included a new lab for the Electro-Optics program in Hayden Hall; the remodeling of the Health Services in Forsyth to provide a small infirmary for dormitory residents needing overnight hospitalization; and new laboratories for the psy- chology department estab- lished in reconstructed areas of Mugar and United Realty. In the works were plans for the Bouve building, swimming pool, and chemistry building. As the demand for student power began to be heard, Northeastern students ac- quired positions on advisory committees, desciplinary committees, and in stu- dent activities. The Stu- dent Council was given representation in the Uni- versity Planning Com- mittee, and on a com- mittee investigating the feasibility of a new li- brary and center for learning resources. Some administrative changes in 1966 accom- panied the continual growth of the university. Dr. William C. White, Vice President and Pro- vost since 1958, was elected Executive Vice President. The Office of Academic Afi ' airs was created to co-ordinate the ad- ministration of academic pro- grams, faculty and staff, and was placed under the deans of faculty, planning and administration. Arthur E. Fitzgerald, former head of the electrical engineer- ing department, was appointed Dean of Faculty; Loring M. Thompson, former Dean of Adult Programs became Dean of Planning; and Kenneth G. Ryder was named Dean of Ad- ministration and Executive Of- ficer of the Office of Academic Affairs. Lincoln C. Bateson was ap- pointed Director of Finance, with general responsibilities for auxiliary enterprises and all accounting and financial af- fairs of the university. The of- fice of Comptroller was estab- lished, with Daniel J. Roberts, Jr., former Bursar, appointed to fill the post. In 1965, the Russell B. Stearns Study, investigating the social values and behavior of American college youth, published Campus Values, edited by Dean Charles W. Ha- vice. The book was highly praised by college adminis- trators and guidance counsel- o rs and thenceforth was dis- tributed gratis to incoming freshmen. Northeastern expanded its involvement with the Anti- Poverty Program in 1966, as more than $2.5 million was granted by the U.S. Office of Education, the Department of Labor, and the Office of Eco- nomic Opportunity. Scholar- ships totaling $353,000 were given to limited income stu- dents, and the work-study awards were the largest total in the nation, reaching $1.85 mil- lion. An experimental school was initiated in conjunction with the Office of Economic Opportunity to provide reme- dial instruction and high school equivalency to public school dropouts in the Boston area. ' ag« 8 Northeastern NEWS, September 26, 1969 Former NEWS staffer McGarry killed after first week in Vietnam After a week in Vietnam, Marine 2nd Lt. James B. McGar- 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 i hand grenade, dean ' s list student during entire Northeastern career, the English major wrote for The NEWS during his sophomore through senior years. In addition, ;as involved in The Cauldron during his senior year and the Student Union for three years. During his senior year at NU, he 1963 graduate of Coylc High Jchool was a Globe reporter on JAMES B. MCGARRY ously worked for the State House News Service, The Taunton Gazette, and the New Bedford Standard Times. J in i n g Officers Candidate School after graduation. McGarry He was the husband of th( former Kathleen Cavanagh, 21 Harvard St., Arlington. They hat been married five months, 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 mLs sionary in Africa, and John. o( 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. and storage rooms brary of 10,000 boo electrical engineer Additional land was also added to the Burlington campus as 75 acres were purchased including greenhouse facilities to be devel- oped for Botany research by the Biology department. The Physics-Electrical Engi- neering Research Building was also dedicated in May, 1967, and named after Charles A. Dana, in- dustrialist, philanthropist, and university benefactor. The build- ing was constructed at a cost of $2.1 million, including 24 labs, 3 departmental, and 121 individual offices. In addition, the building houses wood-working and wiring shops, a recording studio, control room, listening studio, lounge. The Dana Center also contains a li- ks and journals all relative to research, ng, and physics. In 1967, the university was reaccredited for ten years following an inspection visit by the New England Asso- ciation of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Another com- mendation came from the Ford Foundation in the form of a $375,000 grant which was matched by the university to establish an endowed research professorship in co-oper- ative education. The professorship would allow an estab- lished scholar to serve as teacher, research director, con- sultant, and curriculum advisor in the field of co- operative education. The late sixties begat a public outcry for law and or der. As social pressure was exerted on the country ' s po- lice forces, the need was recognized for more and better trained policemen and law enforcement administrators. In 1966 a grant from the Ford Foundation assured the opening in 1967 of a College of Criminal Justice, with a curriculum designed to train municipal and state police personnel. Under the acting dean, Robert Sheehan, the college prepared students for advanced study in public service fields from social work to public administration. The curriculum was also planned to prepare students for admission to the Northeastern School of Law. The residents of the North Shore were given an oppor- tunity to partake of Northeastern ' s programs when an- other suburban branch was established utilizing facilities of Lynn English High School. The completion of the Warren Center allowed for the opening of a summer camp, giving 300 underprivileged children an opportunity to experience outdoor recrea- tion. The dedication of the center in May, 1967, was high- lighted by the announcement that the Warren Benevolent Fund was donating an additional 104 acres adjoining the center to be developed for recreation purposes. The Marine Science Institute at Nahant was provided with four additional research rooms and a classroom-lab- oratory. An important addition was the running sea wa- ter system needed to maintain living sea organisms. The Board of Trustees voted to name the center in memory of Mr. and Mrs. David F. Edwards, with dedication ceremo- nies held in the spring of 1968. Stetson Hall East, housing 400 women, was opened in September, 1967 while ground-breaking ceremonies were held for the Bouve and Chemistry buildings. An addition to the Cabot Physcial Education center was planned, in- cluding an Olympic-size swimming pool, handball courts, rowing tank, and other facilities. Council Motion Vnaninioiis Publications Board Rejected By MIKE DORFSMAN In 3 unanimous decision, the Student Council opposed the formation of :i proposed publication board. The motion, presented by Frank Gerr ' , (71Ed), passed after little debate. Although the university administration has not fornially suggested a publications board be estab- lished. GeiTv said Gilbert G. MacDonald, vice-pres- ident of student affairs, has spoken with a num- ber of students about the idea. ■■I just thought we ' d bring it to the council be- fore the adnunistration tried to sneak it Uirougb, Gerry said. The council ' s resolution, which says a publica- tions board would result in de-facto censorship, reads: Be it resolved that the Student Council stands firmly against the institution of any such publications board aud will in no form whatso- ever consider adoption of any plan which would impose ce;isorship or control of any nature over the NU News. REPRESSION Ex-officio member David Levinson (71LA) called a publication board outright repression, I hope you realize, Levinson said, that we ' re not just putting our names on record. We ' re put- ting ourselves on the line for this- The vote came after Levinson ' s remarks. The council spent most of its meeting dis- cussing possible candidates for advisor. At its first meeting Dec. 9, Dean MacDonald introduced Christopher F. Kennedy, assistant dean of stu- dents, as the council ' s new advisor. The council rejected Dean Kennedy because they wanted the prerogative of choosing their own advisor. Council President Robert Weisman (70BA) made it clear after the meeting tiiat Ken- nedy ' s rejection was not based on personality. A CHOICE It was simply a matter of being able to choose our own advisor, Weisman said. ■ During the past week, the council ' s executive b. ard asked Miss Margaret Bishop, assistant dean of women; Profs. Robert Cord and Stephen Worth, of political science; Norman Rosenblatt, dean of Criminal Justice; and James E. Spencer Jr., assistant to the director of the Student Cen- ter, if they would be willing to serve as advisor. With the exception of Spencer who leaves for the National Guard, the administrators and faculty mentioned said they would accept if asked. However, both Profs, Cord and Worth have applied for sabbaticals next year, so their appoint- ments, Gerry said, could only be temporary. TOO BUSY Dean Rosenblatt, Weisman said, would serve but is busy with his new duties In the College of Criminal Justice, Weisman noted Dean MacDonald thought se- lecting Miss Bishop would create problems for his office internally since the council rejected his earlier appointment. The council aproved Weisman ' s suggestion for a joint Div. A and B executive board meeting to decide procedure for selecting an advisor. The procedure would then be approved at the coun- cil ' s ]oint meeting with a temporary ' advisor Be- lected until then. ST RIKE EDITION m P VOL. LI - No. 25 BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS AAAY 12, 1970 Police smash Hemenway, Westland ONE OF MANV apartment entryways that ware smashed by the Tac- tical Police Force yesterday. In some cases, the police did not stop at the door, but invaded people ' s apartments. About 150 club-swinging Bos- ton Tactical Police charged a crowd of 300 students on Hemen- way street early Monday morn- ing, smashing windows and beat- ing bystanders, then surged into apartment buildings and dorms, smashing down doors and injur- ing residents. At least 20 per- sons, including a blind student were injured during the two and a half hour melee. The charge came at 12:40 a.m. ds the students lined Hemenway Stieet watching a group of 30 persons who sat in the roadway blocking traffic. Student mar- shals who had ti ' ied to disperse the crowd of onlookers said those m the street were not students. Police had notified Security Po- lice prior to the charge and mar- shals had given 25 minutes warn- ing to much of the crowd. A report from WNEU newsman Ed Ferguson 74CE. at the scene said there was no provocation whatsoever for. the police attack, and reported at one point that police were on the roof of 99 Hemenway St. throwing rocks and bricks. Reports from NEWS and WNEU newsmen at the scene safd a po- lice cruiser with two officers passed the area at 10:30 p.m. Sunday. As the car existed to- The university renovated the previously purchased Catholic Boys Guidance Center (102-104 the Fenway), in 1967, con- verting it to house the College of Education and temporarily to contain the Law School and its library. A Speech and Hearing Cen- ter was opened in the Forsyth Building in April, 1967, with five therapy rooms, providing speech therapy, initial eval- uation for speech and hearing difficulties, and adult and chil- dren ' s out-patient programs. The University Computation Center moved from Hayden to Richards Hall in October, 1967. The new complex housed a Control Data 3300 Computer to be used for instruction, re- search, and administration purposes. The Bookstore space being pre-empted by the com- putation center, allowed the store to move to expanded facilities in the basement of the Ell Center. By 1967, Northeastern had achieved the status of the larg- est private educational in- stitution in the nation. The President ' s Report for that year cites three reasons for the uni- versity ' s popularity. One was the increasing popularity of co- operative education, another was the growing demand for part-time and evening educa- tion for which the university had expanded to accommodate; ward the Museum of Fine Arts, it stopped in front of 120 Hemen- way St., where someone threw a chair and beer can at the cruiser. Student marshals said the attack- er was not a student. Two hours later, a flaming mat- tress was thrown from the roof of the same building as students milled in the street. The build- ing is not a dormitory. Witnesses Will any eyewitnesses fo 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- 2648? Thank you. At midnight, the Northeastern Strike Information Center, which had been in direct communica- tion with Mayor Kevin White ' s office for the previous two days, was notified that 100 police were massing near the jjitersection of Westland and Massachusetts Ave- nues. The report said that unless the area was cleared, the police vvuuld be called in. The charge began forty min- utes later from the intersection of Westland Avenue and Hemen- way Street. Riot-helmeted police ran five abreast and 20 deep swinging clubs as students chant- ed, I, 2, 3, 4, we don ' t want your fucking war. 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 said. People were clubbed while fleeing down streets and into buildings. Police entered buildings in groups of up to 15 at a time, in- cluding apartment houses at 97, 99, 119, 120 and 153 Hemenway St., at Northeastern dorms at 115 and 157 Hemenway St., and 90 The F enway. Apartments inside each of the buildings were smash- ed open and residents were club- bed. Furniture and personal be- longings were smashed. Northeastern ' s Asst. Director of Student Housing. David Rob- bins, was beaten by the police in the ent3-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. Robbins said he felt the police attack had been provoked, but that the tactical police went a little too far. They ' re fast, they ' re brutal. That ' s their job. They don ' t un- derstand anj ' thing else. he said. The dorm director, Eric Porter, (Continued on Page 4) 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 TFF 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 the police had used clubs. No objective person, he said, could say the police had over-reacted. J finally, the increased public empha- sis on graduate education was matched by Northeastern ' s. In September, 1967 the Distin- guished Speaker Series was in- augurated by the appearance of Har- rison E. Salisbury, Assistant Managing Editor of the New York Times. In other activities, the Northeast- ern News won another in a long line of All-Ameri- can ratings from the American Collegiate Press Association. The Student Council under- took the development of a faculty rating system in order to determine teacher effectiveness. Another change in the organization of the ad- ministration led to the ap- pointment of seven vice presidents, with William C. White still serving as Executive Vice Presi- dent: Bateson thus became Vice President and Director of Finance; Jack R. Bohlen, Vice President for Development; Fitzgerald, Vice Presi- dent of Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty; Gilbert MacDonald, Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students; Ryder, Vice Presi- dent and Dean of University Admin- istration; Thompson, Vice President and Dean of Planning; Roy Wool- dridge, Vice President and Dean of Cooperative Education. Seven new deans were appointed in 1967, including Catherine Allen, Dean of Bouve; Israel Katz, Dean of the Center for Continuing Educa- tion; James S. Hekimian, Dean of the College of Business Admin istration; John S. Bailey, Dean of University College; William F. King, acting Dean of the College of Engineering; Thomas O ' Toole, Dean of the Law School; and Kenneth W. Ballou, Dean of University Relations. Student unrest was on the rise in 1968, an outgrowth of the rise of an academic youth in revolt against es- tablished social and political pro- cesses. In the spring, 1968, the Black Student Concern Committee pro- posed increases in the numbers of Black students and staff, increases in financial aid, and increases in Black culture and race courses. To help implement these programs, Kenneth C. Williams was appointed Assistant to the President for Black Commu- nity Affairs. Another cause of stu- dent unrest was the in- creasing discontent aris- ing from involvement in Vietnam. Social problems like poverty and crime were also causes for stu- dent concern. Across the country stu- dents questioned the in- stitution of the university, especially the quality and relevance of education re- ceived. Other issues arose over the impersonal, large classes; over the justifica- tion for ROTC on cam- pus; and over student morality and parietal rules. In September, 1968, the Student Concern Committee presented a list of demands to the administration, including demands for a student voice in tuition, hiring, afld curriculum policies; a non- profit bookstore; a student-selected food service; a student court; volun- tary upperclass dormitory residence; voluntary dormitory residence for freshmen with parental consent; the dispensation of birth control infor- mation through the Health Services; the immediate construction of a new library; and for an observational seat on the Board of Trustees. To insure communication be- tween the students, faculty, and ad- ministration, the President ' s Advi- sory Committee was established. Its members were chosen by the Presi- dent under advisement of the Fac- ulty Senate, Student Council, and Academic Council. The goal of the committee was to allow for the dis- cussion and consideration of differ- ing viewpoints on vital issues, giving students the opportunity to affect change in an academic tradition of discussion, investigation, and evaluation. Two new committees were estab- lished on the Board of Trustees deal- ing with student affairs. The Com- mittee on Academic Affairs was responsible for presenting proposals to the board concerning academic programs and personnel. The Com- mittee on Student Affairs was in charge of proposals pertaining to student life and welfare at the university. Students already had been given a measure of power on such univer- sity committees as Student Affairs, Commencement, Student Center, Distinguished Speakers Series, Li- brary Planning, Black Community Concerns, and Cooperative Education. A new relationship was devel- oping between administration, fac- ulty, and students. The demand for more decision-making power by stu- dents could not be overlooked. The faculty was gaining increased au- thority over curriculum policies and tenure procedures. The Faculty Senate, composed of representatives of the Basic Colleges and the administration was created. During 1967-68 this group discussed campus recruitment, the library, tenure policy, the role of the univer- sity in the urban community, park- ing, sabbatical, and student rights. The issue of academic freedom dominated the later years of the dec- ade, closely connected with the is- sues of faculty and student rights. The original philosophy of North- eastern remained basically in tact, although its implementation ap- peared to be changing. The univer- sity was still offering courses de- signed to meet specific manpower needs; still offered courses which al- lowed students or adults to learn while working; and the enrichment of spirit through cultural activities. In 1968, ground was broken for the $2.3 million bipartite building to house the School of Law and the College of Criminal Justice. The law library, containing over 100,000 vol- umes, would also be housed in the new building. Charles and Estelle Dockser Hall was dedicated in October, 1968, the first building to be named after an alumnus whose gift provided a ma- jor portion of construction cost. Dockser, former President of the Garden City Trust Company, is a member of the University Corpora- tion and the National Council. The building contains the administrative offices of Bouve College, classrooms, a gymnasium, and recreation faci- lities. Bouve also gained new faci- lities in the Barletta Natatorium, also completed in 1968. The Natatorium, for use in Bouve courses, is also available to the uni- versity in general at specific hours. The swimming pool is the regulation size for intercollegiate swimming in the facility. Northeastern continued to pro- vide world leadership in the devel- opment of cooperative education. The mission was aided considerably in October, 1968, when President Johnson won passage of the Higher Education Act authorizing grants to schools attempting to develop co-op. This act reflects a growing aware- ness of the relevancy to society of the co-op system. Vice President and Dean of Co-op, Roy Wooldridge was given the re- sponsibility of supervising the uni- versity ' s consultation service on co- op. Wooldridge was also Director of Consulting Services for the Nation- Marston, former News advisor, dies By DEAN HARVEY VETSTEIN Piofessoi- Everett C. Marston died recently after a lengthy ill- ness. This may or may not mean anything to you, depending upon how long you ' ve been at North- eastern. It would be easy enough to describe this man by pointing to a biography or a set of cre- dentials, by naming the books and articles he wrote and the positions he held at the univer- sity. But he hadn ' t permitted this type of thing for a pre-planned memorial Service, so it would, tlicietore, be presumptuous to be- gin doing so now. It is far easier discussing the quality of the man. His colleagues in the English Department and his editors on the NEWS and CAULDRON, found in him a gen- tle speaker and an avid listener. His closeness to student pub- lications and the editors is, per- haps, best summed up in his own words in the 1960 CAULDRON ' Through the years there has al- EVERETT C. MARSTON ways been a small hard-core of bright, conscientious, articulate, aggressive, fanatical students willing and able to produce a newspaper, to maintain and in- tensify standards, to lose sleep and cut classes, and to brace themselves for the barrage of comment from people who had not cut classes and lost sleep in order to produce a newspaper. For more years than a few I have known these fanatical editors and staffers, and both they and the years have been harrowing and wonderful. His English Department col- leagues were impressed by the way he taught and the rapport he maintained with the students. The editors of the CAULDRON, in dedicating that yearbook to him, described him this way: He is (juietly humorous when the time is right, seditiously sarcas- lis when the time is right; and when his heart is touched by a bit of sadness or tragedy con- cerning one of his charges, the eyes of this man of spiritual hardness fill with unashamed tears. ... It can be truly said of him that he lives through his heart, loves through his soul, and judges through his mind. For those of us who knew him, his passing is our misfortune; for those who didn ' t know him. it is their- misfortune as well. competition, with a gallery seating 500. The Natatorium is named after three members of the Barletta fam- ily: Vicenzo, Nicola, and Frederick. The family has contributed sub- stantially to many public in- stitutions with a minimum of publicity. The Chemistry Building was a third new facility completed in 1968, forming an east quadrangle with Mugar, Ell, and Robinson. The building provides for undergraduate and graduate labs, offices, research labs, and a departmental library. A meeting room for the American Chemical Society was also included Commission for Cooperative Educa- tion. By 1968 there were 133 colleges in the country with some form of co- op plan, and Northeastern had been advisor to over 100 of them. Among the administration in 1968, four new Deans were appointed in the eight Basic Colleges: Melvin Mark was named Dean of Engineer- ing; Robert A. Shepard, Dean of Lib- eral Arts; Charles W. Tenney, Dean of Criminal Justice; and Juanita O. Long, Acting Dean of Nursing. Ed- mund J. Mc Ternan was named Dean of the newly created Division of Health Sciences. BOSTON, MASSACHUSrrrS FEBRUARY 12, 1971 — Edward O ' Donoghue TRUCK TRASHtNG. After helping smash the ROTC van outside the Greenleaf Building, two of Wed- nesday ' s anti-war demonstrators make their way back to Huntington Avenue. ASK says no tuition rise in ' 71 William C. White, Executive Vice President, retired from Northeastern in 1968 after 42 years of dedicated ser- vice in a variety of positions. Named Vice President in 1953, he added the title of Provost in 1959, and became Executive Vice President in 1965. White received an hon- orary Doctor of Engineering Degree in 1952 from North- eastern, and was also honored by the naming of White Hall Dormitory. March turns violent after Common ' s rally By BARRY GILBERT and JOANNE McMAHON n anti-war rally on Boston Common Wednesday culminated in a cris.vcrossing march around the city resulting in at lea.st 12 arrests and six known injuries. The mass march wound through the Northeastern community during the late afternoon where some vandalizing occurred. By early evening the demonsta-ation had moved to Kenmore Square where most of the arrests and injuries took place. In protest against the recent invasion of Laos by South Vietnam, Northeastern and other area college students marched to the Com- mon and the State House to demand a halt to US involvement in Asia. The demonstration was part of a nationwide day of protest called last weekend by the Student- Youth Conference at Ann Arbor, Mich. (see story on pg. 3). About 50 NIJ students assembled in the quadrangle at 2 p.m. and joined approximately 400 more on Huntington Avenue repre- senting various colleges and leftist groups carrying signs and chant- ing anti-war and anti-racist slogans. The Youth Against War and Fascism held a banner which read, Stop the war against black America and Indochina. The marchers travelled from Huntington Avenue to Massachu- setts Avenue and onto Commonwealth and Beacon Street to the steps of the State House shouting, One, Two, Three, Four, We don ' t want your fucking war, and Ho Ho Ho Chi Minh, NLF is gonna win. On Commonwealth the group was met by a slightly larger mass consisting partly of BU students led by police on motorcycles. When assembled at the Common in front of the State House two speakers spoke out against US involvement in Laos and expansion of the war. The speakers announced plans for a May-Day march on Wash- ington in support of the People ' s Peace Treaty. About half tlie crowd, having been foiled in an attempt to paste a copy of the peace treaty on the State House doors, marched down Tremont Street to Boylston. From Arlington Street to Copley Square the street was free of traffic as Boston Police diverted cars down side streets. The march regrouped in Copley Square as an American flag was draped over a traffic sign and burned. Somebody, apparently using a bullhorn or sound truck, called for the marchers to proceed to Northeastern. However, traffic was not diverted on Bo,vlston Street from Cop- ley to Massachusetts Avenue and marchers were forced to walk be- tween the lines of traffic causing a massive tie-up. The march then turned left down Massachusetts Avenue to Huntington Avenue and up Huntington towards Northeastern. (Continued on Page 5} In May, 1969, Kent Street Field was officially renamed for Edward Snow Parsons, who served 28 years as Direc- tor of Athletics, until 1953, when he became business manager of the university. The Trustees appointed him Vice President for Business prior to his retirement in 1968. Dedicated in October, 1969, the Edwards Marine Science Laboratory at Nahant, is the only facility of its kind in New England owned by a private university for use by graduate research students. A member of the Uni- versity Corporation since 1943, Edwards was also remem- bered by the dedication of a lounge in the Ell Building to his name. Private dedication ceremonies were held in December, 1969, for the dedication of the Chemistry Building to the memory of Edward L. Hurtig, an alumnus who was killed in World War II. The building was named by his brother, Carl P. Hurtig, a member of the Corporation and the Na- tional Council story library building were also set for 1970. The new li- brary was to be located in the parking area behind Churchill and Hayden Halls. The new library was estimated to cost $6.3 million, which was ameliorated by a $750,000 Federal grant under Title One of the Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963. The planned facility would seat 2,000 and house over one million volumes. Designed to allow expansion on the lower floors, there would be accomodation for an entirely centralized Learning Resources Center. The period from April 30 to May 13, 1969 was fraught with controversy over ROTC. The Students for a Demo- cratic Society (SDS) demanded immediate abolition of the ROTC program and the replacement of ROTC schol- arships with University Sch olarships. These demands were rejected and resulted in a takeover by 40 or so stu- dents of the Interfaith Lounge of the Ell Building. The sit- uation was resolved peacefully after about five hours. By 1969, the Knowles Center for Law and Criminal Jus- tice was occupied, with dedication ceremonies scheduled for Fall of 1970. Plans for the ground-breaking for a 16- As a result of the sit-in, the Interfraternity Council con- ducted a referendum, giving all students, faculty, and staff a vote on the following measure: 1. That ROTC be removed from the academic and physical en- vironment of the university. 2. That ROTC remain but be stripped of academic credit. 3. That ROTC remain on campus, with credit, as a factor in the quality point average (QPA). The balloting resulted in a tie be- tween the second and third propos- als. A ROTC study committee was initiated to prepare a study on the relevance of ROTC in an aca- demic atmosphere. The controversy over Black Stud- ies came to a head in February, 1969, when members of the Black Student body submitted a proposal for the establishment of an Afro-American Institute and Black Studies Depart- ment which would offer a degree in Black Studies. The Board of Trustees approved the use of the Forsyth Annex as an Afro-American Institute. The build- ing was subsequently remodeled and equipped for use by the Black students at Northeastern. Charles H. Turner, Co-chairman of the United Front of Boston, a coalition of Black community groups, was appointed Director of the Institute in July. The Faculty Senate, exercising its authority to approve degree curri- cula and academic standards, sub- mitted a proposal to the Black Stu- dents, recommending the establishment of an 11-man com- mittee to develop the Black Studies curriculum. This went against the Blacks ' own proposal for a 21-man committee to manage the Afro Insti- tute as well as to develop a curriculum. The Black students rejected the Senate proposal offering as an alternative the setting up of a non-credit Black Studies pro- gram, with a 21-member com- mittee planning the curricu- lum, operating the Institute, nominating its director and staff, and applying later for fac- ulty accreditation. This pro- posal was approved and cur- riculum development was placed under the auspices of the university ' s Center for Continuing Education. The Research Professor of Cooperative Education, James W. Wilson, ap- pointed in 1968, com- pleted four projects dur- ing his first year. The first, a survey of information relative to individuals in the field of cooperative education, was the basis for a paper delivered at Pennsylva- nia State University in June, 1969. Wilson ' s remaining three projects were published in the Journal of Cooperative Education. Administrative changes in 1969 included the naming of five Deans: Christopher Kennedy be- came Dean of Students; Juanita O. Long, Dean of Nursing; John W. Schermerhorn, Dean of Health Sciences; Kenneth Ballou, Acting Dean of University College; and Norman Rosenblatt, Acting Dean of Criminal Justice while retaining his role as Associate Dean of Faculty. 1969 was the year man first stepped on the moon; the year of Ted Kennedy ' s car accident; the year Sirhan Sirhan was sentenced to death; and the year that the Smoth- ers Brothers Comedy Hour was cancelled by CBS for its daring po- litical satire. While Spiro Agnew attacked free- dom of the press, half a million people got together in the spirit that was Woodstock. This same spirit of peaceful togetherness providing the strength to fire a caus e was found in the half million who turned out on Boston Common on October 15, 1969 for the first Moratorium against the War. Another moratorium in No- vember had the same effect on the war— none at all. In 1969, the Student Court went into operation, a separate entity from the Student Council. Com- posed of five panelists and 10 alter- nates, the Court was designed to hear and resolve questions of dis- cipline and student rights. In another important move, the Student Council op- posed the formation of a publications board on the grounds that it would impose censorship on the News. When Division B returned from co-op in December, 1969, the left-wing at the university had splintered into several factions as a result of the rift at the National SOS Convention in June. The SDS at Northeastern split into three fac- tions: The Cienfuegos, the Worker- Student Alliance (WSA), and Revo- lutionary Youth Movement No. 1 (RYM 1), also known as the Weathermen. Cienfuegos supported the Na- tional Liberation Front (NLF) and other world liberation movements, including Women ' s Liberation and the Black Panthers. RYM-1 was ideologically fairly close to Cien- fuegos but favored immediate revo- lution. The WSA concentrated on is- sues relative to workers ' disputes. As protest against the society in general and the war in particular grew more vehement and pervasive, a labor dispute between General Electric and its employees be- came a heated issue in January, 1970. A group of students submitted demands to President Knowles that GE not be allowed to recruit on campus. Knowles rejected the demands. On January 27 and 28, the GE booth was set up in the Graduate Placement Center. The SDS and the Student Mobilization Committee (SMC) staged protest events, contending that GE ' s labor problems were related to the war is- sue. The university went to court to get an in- junction against any demonstrations at the re- cruitment site. Despite a Student Council vote protesting the injunction. President Knowles proceeded, with the full support of the Faculty Senate, to augment the Security force with Boston Policemen. The confrontations over GE between police and the Northeastern Con- spiracy on January 27 and 28, were over- shadowed by what was termed a police riot following the appearance of Dr. S. I. Hayakawa as part of the Distinguished Speaker Series, on January 29. Tight security precautions had preceeded Hayakawa ' s arrival, and supplementary ushers and policemen had been stationed around the auditorium in anticipation of a strike by the Northeastern Conspiracy. Whether the carnage and chaos in the Quad was due to police bruta- lity, left-wing subversive agitators, or frayed human nerves on both sides, no one will ever know for certain. But when the dust cleared 31 students had been arrested; 15 policemen and an un- known number of students had been injured by flying rocks, bottles, bricks, and fists; and the campus had suf- fered $5,000 in damages. The resulting call for a student strike met with mixed apathy. A variety of is- sues were at stake aside from the Hay- akawa riot: the GE confrontation; the abolition of ROTC; the abolition of the College of Criminal Justice; racism; co-op; and student power. But it remained for Division A, in the Spring quarter to really get together a strike, as well as vastly im- proved police riots. On April 30, 1970, President Nixon an- nounced that American troops were go- ing to cross the border into Cambodia in an attempt to restore the recently de- posed government. On May 4, on the crest of the wave of student protest spawned by the Nixon announcement, four stu- dents were murdered by National Guardsmen during a protest at Kent State University in Ohio. As the nation grieved and raged over this tragedy, two more students were shot at Jackson State, Mississippi, and six Blacks were shot and killed by police in Augusta, Georgia. At Northeastern, the normally apathetic masses were moved to protest, with the endorse- ment of the faculty. On May 13, a group of 50 students marched to President Knowles ' office to demand he cease his efforts to undermine the strike, referring to announcements in the news media that normalcy had returned to Northeastern. Normalcy was actually a wispy dream, as a police raid on He- menway Street on May 11, culmi- nated the three nights of student block parties and street activity which had caused complaints from neighborhood residents. 150 tactical policemen stormed down He- menway Street wielding clubs and feeling the pain of hurled bottles and other debris. At least 20 stu- den ' s were injured, and much prop- erty damage was sustained. The Mayor ' s office launched an investi- gation to pin blame for the riot on either students or police. Classes petered off as the faculty passed resolutions on the determina- tion of grades for those choosing to participate in the strike activities. Remember the warm spring days when you could sit on the quad soaking up sun when you should have been in class, and still keep your 3.5 by taking S ' s in everything? The spirit of revolution was constructively chan- neled into the ecology move- ment. Successful clean-ups in Franklin Park and the Fenway gave excess energy a useful vent, as well as pro- viding a tangible service to the community and a grati- fying increase in neighbor- hood spirit. There were many good things about The Strike which are often for- gotten in the haze of police brutality charges and bomb- ing attacks on the Greenleaf Build- ing. The pervasive spirit of com- mittment and togetherness has never been equaled since. Commencement 1970 was the cen- ter of another controversy, whether the students had a right to choose the speaker at their graduation cere- mony. Mrs. Edith Stein, the speaker selected by a student committee, was removed from the platform when she and a group of graduating students interrupted the ceremonies. In other areas, WNEU prepared to convert to WRBB, an FM station. The Office of Educational Resources was developing a new course in Psy- chology utilizing video-taped lec- tures in a self-instruction format. The ground-breaking for a new li- brary was still set for summer until nearly the last minute, when a sub- stantial increase in the projected cost led to postponement of the project. But it was a nice idea anyway. On July 30, 1970, Police Commis- sioner, Robert McNamara reported that, while the police in the He- menway riots had been unduly pro- voked, some of the men had been over-zealous in carrying out their duties. As the Huskiers began construc- tion on their lodge in Shelburne, N.H., other student groups were planning yet another Freshman Ori- entation Week. Included in the week ' s plans was another Group Dy- namics effort, following the highly successful initial attempt at T groups in 1969. When the Freshmen of 1970 as Rubber Dicky (Nate Weiner), de- feated the Suntan Kid (Albert Thomas). The slowly increasing pace of the Arts at Northeastern was given an extra kick when noted pianist Mik- los Schwalb was appointed as Artist In Residence. The Hungarian-born pianist, who studied with Dohnanyi, Kodaly, and Weiner, three of Hun- gary ' s outstanding com- M posers, was partially spon- il sored by Myron Idelson, ' 46, and was hired as an adjunct ij ' to the Music Faculty, giving ji, private lessons and three ' public recitals per year. landed at Northeastern, they were greeted by a new publication. Northeastern Today. Published by the University Press Bureau, the pa- per was often criticized as being a jaundiced mouthpiece of the admin- istration. However, the paper did serve to keep potential donators among the alumni in touch with the campus. The graduation of the class of 1970 had meant the loss of King Husky V, who was owned by the class. With the new freshmen came a new mascot, Queen Husky 11, oth- erwise known as Nanook. Handled by freshman Liz Busa, Nanook was purchased with funds from the en- tire student body. The tempo of Fall, 1970, began to pick up, the Student Council pro- posed a hunger strike in opposition to the war in Vietnam. In a detri- mental move, the government cut fi- nancial aid, causing a work-study cutback from 15 to 10 hours per week. Other controversies arose when four students lost their Stu- dent Center privileges for holding an anti-ROTC rally in the lounge. After an absence of one year, the Mayor of Huntington Avenue con- test was revived in the Fall of 1970 The issue of a com- mencement speaker for 1971 was already simmering in October, 1970 when the Board of Trustees scheduled i ' SSl a December meeting to deal with the Senior Class Board ' s pro- posal for a student speaker. In the meantime, the Student Cen- ter Committee was seeking to ex- pand its powers by drafting a consti- tution which would give the committee more binding authority in the control of the Student Center. The plucker and the line-bucker card made their debut in November, 1970, as the Registrar ' s office at- tempted a new variation on the old theme, How to commit 10,000 names to course lists without being trying. The College of Liberal Arts adopted a group of sweeping reforms as Division A returned to school in January, 1971. In- cluded in the proposals were provisions for an independent, self-planned major, and the dropping of the language and dis- tribution requirements in order to achieve a Bachelor of Science Degree. The first major controversy of the new quarter concerned the use of university facilities for a concert by Buddy Miles for the benefit of the Black Panther Defense Fund. Dean Richard Sochacki banned the concert from the campus because it was fund-raising for an outside activity, while Student Council declared the university facilities should be open for all students to use responsibly. The concert was never held. The Student Center Committee, still working on its constitution, also ap- proved the conversion of the ceiling area over room 346 into additional office space for student groups requiring relatively little office space. A course in racism was given full status by the College of Liberal Arts and in the Dodge Library the infamous Tattle-tape book detection system was installed. Anti-war groups planned a Spring of- fensive and the National Student Associa- tion sponsored a People to People Peace Treaty. At the same time, the US Govern- ment sponsored the South Vietnamese in- vasion of Laos and a few thousand people gathered on Boston Common to protest. In their December meeting, the Board of Trustees rejected all proposals for a commencement speaker. Reasons for the cancellation of any speaker were the length of the ceremony and the lack of in- terest in sitting through a speech. As spring filled the air, the rebellious spirit again resulted in a series of riots, sit-ins, and demonstrations. A demonstra- tion involving 5,000 students took place at the Kennedy Federal Building. The non- violent protest was broken up by police. Social concern was also expressed as the Student Council held a fund-raising drive for the victims of the halocaust on Peterborough Street on March 30, 1971. A moratorium was held, with mixed enthu- siasm, to commemorate the Kent State Page 6 Northea.stcni NEWS, October 29, 1971 N i!li; teih Victory?! what victory. . . No confrontation is better than one which sees both sides claiming victory. Student Council and Student Mobilization Committee said in a joint press release last week; We consider the action of the NU Board of Trustees as a victory for the student move- ment on the NU campus and in the city. By postponing the dedication, President Knowles and the Board of Trustees said, in effect, they would not let protesting students spoil a good time. They took the ball and went home. Council believed Mitchell to be an inap- propriate speaker for the dedication of the Voipe Building. Council asked the president to withdraw the Mitchell invitation. For his part, the president demonstrated no willingness to withdraw the invitation,- instead he pjostponed the event. Although Mitchell didn ' t speak, the administration never really considered council ' s demands and council never managed to per- suade Knowles to retract the invitation. If one side doesn ' t best the other, there are no victors after the battle. In the loss column, however, we can chalk one up for council. Once again the administra- tion managed to ignore the student representa- tives on this campus. And pitiful as it may seem, the administration has taken a beating where they hurt the most— in prestige. As the trustees saw it, . . . lawless ele- ments on the fringe of the University communi- ty seemed quite willing to use force to silence the views of those with whom they disagree. To insure the safety of guests and students, the event will instead come off sometime in the future. , The Worcester Telegram, in its lead editorial Northeastern Chickens Out (Oct. 22), said: There is something especially shocking about the way Northeastern University authorities cancelled the planned speech of US Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell because of threats of violence. We don ' t pretend that the choice facing Northeastern was easy. It was not. But we pre- dict that Northeastern and many other colleges will rue the day the flag of free speech was pulled down at the first whiff of verbal artil- lery. President Knowles will undoubtedly rue the day he garnered such a poor press. The Boston Herald Traveler said in its lead editorial (Oct, 25), Northeastern Is somewhat smaller today because of the action it was forced to take. The Student Council could have done noth- ing to keep their demonstration peaceful once the militants chose to make it otherwise, and any contention to the contrary by the council is both unrealistic and irresponsible. And there is, of course, that unflappable champion of American democracy, William Loeb, whose paper, the Manchester (New Hampshire) Union Leader said, in a Page One editorial; Once again academic freedom, freedom of speech and just plain old-fashioned decency have been slaughtered on another US college campus. Now, when a bunch of kooky kids can prevent the highest law enforcement officer in the United States from speaking on a college campus, then the educational system of this nation must really be a shambles! Furthermore, the trustees of any institution who would allow themselves to be dictated to by a group of fas- cist, Nazi-like little brats ought to have their heads examined. Awright you guys, wait a minute. There was no indication that a formidable number of people in Boston, let alone in the university, were crouched at the ready to wreak violence should Mitchell have appeared. The mood at this and other campuses throughout the nation is notably unviolent. Council was prepared, and we believe capable, of maintaining order. The risk of violence is in- herent during any demonstration, but between council, the FBI, Secret Service agents and the Boston police, we suggest the gathering would have been ordedy. Now, about the flag of free speech being sullied on the steps of Eli. Were free spe ech a question, we would do well to recall the ' invi- tation proffered to Abbie Hoffman by the Dis- tinguished Speakers Series last year. Hoffman was scheduled shortly after the S. I. Hyakawa incident and university admini- strators decided that the was far too inflamatory and cancelled his appearance. Barn burner or not, Hoffman would have spoken in Alumni Auditorium where his audience would have at- tended his harrangue by choice. Hoffman was not a guest. After his performance he could collect his fee and carry on. Hoffman, as Hyakawa, had a right to speak at this campus. A university, as President Knowles is fond of pointing out, has an obliga- tion to pursue the free and open exchange of ideas on its campus. In Mitchell ' s case, however, this is not the situation and freedom of speech should not be the issue. First, Mitchell was to come at the be- hest of the president. The President and the Board of Trustees cordially invite. . . No con- trocts were negotiated; no money exchanged hands; the student body at large not invited to hear the man and question his commentary. Instead we have a closed dedication at which Mitchell would speak unopposed to dedi- cate a building used by students who had no say in the choice of the dedication speaker. We are asked to passively accept a dedication speaker whose views are anathma to those of many of the students on this campus and whose actions revolt intelligent lawmen throughout the country, the sort of lawman this university Is attempting to educate. The point is, of course, that President Knowles could have retracted Mitchells invita- tion on the philosophical grounds we have cov- ered so often in the past. The president could have saved face for the university and retained the respect of students. Tho sitpfosMd in tho NEWS edili tfioso of the edirorial board ; tarily thoM of Ihs i and fackson State shootings. Another commemoration was held on Hemenway Street as 200 police and 500 stu- dents relived the thrills of street rioting which they had tasted in 1970. One of the crowning events of Spring, 1971, was the opening of a pornorgraphy store at 299 Huntington Ave- nue, managed by a Northeastern grad named Jason (no last name given). Black students pressed for a solution to the financial aid crisis as 200 Blacks confronted President Knowles in his office. Knowles promised possible solutions would be discussed with the Trustees. The result was a set of guidelines for financial aid for Blacks, and the increase of Martin Luther King Scholars from 50 to 200. The commencement speaker issue was finally resolved when the Trustees selected Coretta Scott King to address the gathering. The deci- sion marked the end of lists of pro- posed speakers, and decisions and reversals and vituperative ex- changes between the class board, the President, and the Trustees. The Summer of ' 71 featured a con- troversy over the legality of the Stu- dent Council ' s dissemination of a Birth Control Handbook compiled by a women ' s liberation group. The university also risked prosecution for, and therefore enjoined the News from further publication of abortion advertisements. The university was rocked by the raucous humor of John Phillip Mello as his column A Day in the Life of . . . seared the incoming freshmen with pithy images of the realities of college life. As a result of Mello ' s imagina- tive ramblings President Knowles ordered the estab- lishment of a student publications committee to be com- posed of representatives from each of the Basic Colleges plus administration and faculty. Portions of the faculty and administration advocated abolishing the News, ex- pelling the editors, and other rash responses, but, moder- ation prevailed, and, after some paranoid mumblings about censorship on the part of the News, a fairly neutral publications board was established in the fall of 1972. When student protest groups threatened violent reac- tion, the Board of Trustees, decided to postpone the ap- pearance of Attorney General John Mitchell at the dedi- cation of the Criminal Justice Building. Student Council declared the cancellation a victory for the student move- ment. There were no incidents when the building was calmly dedicated the following April. Student Council executive board members were elected for the first time by the whole student body in De- cember, 1971. The presidential contest put Skip Hartwell against Brian Humphrey, with Hartwell the victor. Other plans for the reorganization of student government in- cluded better coordination of social and service activi- ties. The Social Council was set up to fulfill social func- tions previously handled by the Class Boards, Husky Key, Entertainment Committee, and Film Committee. Another Council proposal was to secure a lawyer for the student body. In an important administrative change the Board of Trustees appointed Kenneth G. Ryder as Executive Vice President in November, 1971. His promotion was planned to allow President Knowles the op- portunity to raise the final portion of the Diamond Anniversary Fund. The battle against increasing cam- pus crime was aided by the pur- chase of one-man Cushman vehicles for the Campus Police. The vehicles allow easy transportation through traffic and parking areas, allowing Security to keep a closer surveil- lance on the remote areas of the campus. The issue of Commencement and speakers arose again, with the issue being again determined by the Trustees. In an unprecedented ex- periment two commencement cere- monies were planned; one in the morning for the Basic Colleges, and one in the afternoon for University College, Lincoln College, and the Graduate Schools. The university got its first taste of presidential cam- paigning in January, 1972, as John Lindsay and Paul McCloskey visited the campus to arouse some prelimi- nary grassroots support. Division B Student Council suffered a lack of candi- dates for its elections in February, 1972. Transfer of divi- sions and dropouts were blamed for the shortage. The re- sult of the elections was the elevation of Vincent Lembo to student body president. Spring, 1972 was highlighted by an unprecedented meeting between students and members of the Board of Trustees to discuss the conflict over ROTC. The silence of the Trustees in the meeting caused frustrated students to sit in at the Bursar ' s office. They left or were removed when the office closed at 4:30 p.m., after Vice President MacDonald read an injunction against the sit-in. Five were arrested after some incidents of violence punc- tuated the demonstration. novation of the third floor stack area overlooking Hunt- ington Avenue into a reading room with lounge furniture and carpeting. In the technological phase of operations, the library joini d the New England Library Information Network (NELINET), a computer link with 21 other New England libraries for the purposes of sharing catalogue and human resources to avoid costly duplication of effort. The same night a group of dissidents broke into Rich- ards Hall and chained the door closed behind them. Po- lice overtook the demonstrators, including the national secretary of SDS who was out on bail after her earlier ar- rest in the Bursar ' s office that afternoon. Three arrests were made and a crowd of onlookers and protestors about 350 strong paraded down Speare Place chanting anti-war slogans. They headed towards the Greenleaf Building but turned back when they found several Bos- ton Police vehicles waiting for them. Interest in storming the building was minimal, and by 12:30 a.m. the crowd had dispersed. The following morning, students sat on the steps of Richards Hall for a few hours, then proceeded to march through several buildings, beating a bass drum and chanting. The issue of amnesty for those ar- rested the previous day was posed to Dean Kennedy, who declared that he felt the Bursar ' s office incident had been handled properly, and am- nesty was not deserved. Afterwards, 40 students moved into the President ' s office and he agreed to speak with two represen- tatives. Later that evening an open meeting was held in the Lounge and five demands were agreed upon. In- cluded among these were a demand for the immediate end to the war; an end to all university complicity in the war; amnesty for those arrested in the campus incidents; the conversion of the Greenleaf Build- ing into a day care center; and university scholarships to replace those lost by the cancellation of ROTC. After all the furor had .settled, the Trustees decided ROTC would stay just as it was. The Dodge library was undergoing changes as part of the plan to make do with the existing structure until such time as the 16-story vision would become a reality. Physi- cal renovations over the period from Spring, 1972 to 1973, included air conditioning installations on the first and third floors, removal of the card catalogs to a central loca- tion in the lobby, carpeting and improved lighting in a central information and check-out foyer area, and the re- Over a fairly quiet summer the major issue was the stu- dent lawyer program which was finally accepted in Sep- tember, two weeks before the upperclassmen returned from their brief vacation. The divisive question about the lawyer program involved the use of the lawyer ' s services in cases against the university. The tardy acceptance of the program led to a lack of publicity which resulted in less than 500 subscribers to the program. The upperclassmen also faced a $60 per quarter tuition increase when they returned for the fall quarter. The increase was a signifi- cant indication of one of the most basic problems facing Northeastern as 1973 set upon her. Private educa- tion is running a high risk of pricing itself out of business. As the costs of operation increase, tuition must in- crease, until a price is reached which students cannot pay. Con- current with this threat, for North- eastern in particular, is the impend- ing threat embodied by the new Columbia Point campus of U. Mass. Public education seems cheaper, and admission requirements are also more flexible. This makes state schools seem particularly attractive. Another problem not to be eased with the coming of U. Mass. students to Boston, is the problem of student housing. This problem and its ramifi- cations were graphically demonstrated when Division B upperclass residents returned from vacation to find their rooms had been assigned to freshmen the previous week. 49 students were housed temporarily in the Midtown Mo- tor Inn and other emergency housing acquisitions. In the Fall of 1973, the housing crunch is expected to be even more emphatic as U. Mass. students join the competition for cheap urban housing. On October 4, 1972 the Afro-American Institute gained new leadership in the person of Gregory T. Ricks, who was appointed Dean of the Institute. Ricks took office with plans to initiate a new program of academic ex- cellence , including improved counseling, educational environment, and employment opportunities for Black students. A day in the life of . . . By JOHN MELLO Class of 1976, we welcome you! As President of the Universitij I would like to wish you luck in your pursuit at Northeast- ern — the acquisition of knowledge . . . I ' m here! The draft can ' t get me for five years! Men ' s residence? Shit house. That ' s what it is. Why did I let my parents talk me into going to college anyway? 1 19 Hemenway Street. This is it. Five years and I ' ll be ready to make a fortune. A dip- loma ' s as good as gold. Fare? I ' ve got some change in my pocket somewhere. Cheesus, after I graduate and I ' m rollin ' in sweet green I won ' t have to worry about exact fares to cab drivers. What do you mean tip? Get an educa- tion. Oh, you ' ve already graduated from North- eastern. You ' re embarking on a new experience (thinking?), an experience that icill mature your mind and develop your body . . . I ' m pregnant, mom. Again? I think I ' ve got the clap. Why? It hurts. Go to the health service. But I hear their am- putation crazy. I don ' t know. What ' s there to know; you got bladder trouble? No, but this is a dirty trick. What dirt; this is the way I cured my acne problem. Why don ' t we tell him before we do it? If someone told you, would you believe it; and besides, the secrecy is part of the cure. I don ' t know. Pis, damn you, pis! Alright, but I still say we should tell him be- fore we put the urine in his Phisohex. Hello? Speare Hall? This is an obscene phone call: Richard M. Nixon. Counselor; everyone act like he ' s sleeping,- into bed quick. Lights turned off. Darkness. Foot falls. Louder. LOUDER. The foot falls stop. Start again. Fade. He ' s gone. Yeah, now who was the motherfucker that coated my sheets with menthol shaving cream? My God! Someone ' s exposing himself in that dorm across the street. Easy, Mabel, they probably had knockwurst for lunch again. . . . not an easy road you ' re about to embark on. It ' s a road crowded with intel- lectual peril and scholastic temptation and lined with the sweat of study . . . Isn ' t it hot in here with all those clothes on, Marcia? No, John. Marcia. Yes, John. Marcia, John. Marcia. OH JOHN! Smack, smack, smooch, smooch, grope, grope, Marcia, I love you. John, I love you. Let ' s ball. JOHN! Mar- cia, I . . . I ' m so sweaty. (Continued on page 7) The Student Center Committee continued to work on its constitu- tion and the definition of its role as a governing body. made in financial aid. The univer- sity arranged for $1.5 million loan program to counteract some of the pressure on students dependent on aid to finance their education. had faded almost to the point of animosity. With a swift stroke of the ballot, Council voted itself out of existance, with great plans for reorgani- zation to form a body more representative of students ' de- sires and opinions. As a culminating news event, on Wednesday, March 14, Pres- ident Asa S. Knowles an- nounced he would retire in 1975. Having achieved the phe- nomenal growth of the sixties, and having raised more than the original sum planned for the Diamond Anniversary Fund, Knowles ' contributions to the university are slowly reaching a denouement. The pressure of the sixties has been met to a degree of success of which each man must be the judge. Many new areas have opened up at the university during the past decade in- cluding international politics, the fine arts, and scientific fields of research. It will be the responsibility of the new president to set the course Northeastern Uni- versity will pursue in the future based on the lessons of the past. Insipid radio advertisements for the January enrollment were re- moved from the air by radio station WBCN when their program di- rector labelled them amateur- ish . The university remade the advertisements to remove some of the objectionable artificiality. The new year dawned with the new hope for the student lawyer at the hands of Division A. The hope was in vain, how- ever, and refunds had to be ar- ranged for the students who had subscribed. The students received an- other squeeze from the US gov- ernment as cutbacks were The fatal lack of candidates for the winter elections of Division A Student Council led to their realiza- tion that student support of the body •A day in the life of... (Continued from Page 1) Don ' t touch that John; please, not that either. You want me to keep my hands in my pockets? Please, John. Why? It feels good. More embracing, caressing, and stuff like that. John, puU my jeans back up. Come on, Marcia. rU get pregnant. No, I ' ve got . . . one of those things. You mean a rubber? Marcia! Well, what were you doing with that; I mean what kind of girl . . . Marcia, Tm sorry; I didn ' t mean . . . oh . . . gafaw . . . ril throw it away this Instant. Wait, let ' s not be hasty about this. ...if you stick to the path, if you remain steadfast, then you, will drink from the cup of higher education, and be drunk with knowledge . . . Gimme another toke, man. Sure, here, far out grass, huh? Yeah (choke! choke!), far out (choke, choke!). Man, I ' m really stoned, you know, far fuckin ' out. I ' m not sure; it ' s my first time. Well, take it from me; this is good stuff; another toke? No thanks, I ' m not feelin ' too good. Come on; Joe won ' t mind; he told us anytinje we wanted to try his stuff to go ahead. Well, I . . . Joe, hey, wel- come back; care to join us? Yeah, sure, as soon as I find that bag of oregano I left on my desk; have any of you guys seen it? Harry, I ' ve never been this drunk before. That ' s all right. Bill, just get into bed. Harry, I didn ' t mean to ... to ... all over Alice . . . you know ... I just can ' t hold my beer. Okay, Bill, Okay, just go to sleep. Harry . . . I ' m sorry . . . I ' m really sorry . . . I ' m awfully sorry. What the hell for? I . . . I . . . don ' t know. Forget it and go to sleep. Harry? What? Will you sleep with me? WHAT! It ' s the beer; it makes me sick; it brings out the latent homosex- uality in me. Harry? What is it now? You won ' t tell Ruth I wanted you to go to bed with me; she doesn ' t like me sleeping with anyone else. . . . and so we welcome you to Northeastern. Tuition pay- ments ar e due today. HE REST IS HISTORY... Ul in 2: S T3 O o O Z a U) a: 5 o ■ o - ' ' - S: I-- .°-:i ?■ G -5 S - .£ — e Ills- O S =■ = 2 .•= a| e| § § ■t! TD . :: = :- ' r S ' a: 3 -g -3 O O rv r r, - „ X -, _ A ,  ui w i -?5; ' ;!P?:°s i t Sfn f. i « U X ::SE;i S5SSoH2 g o s S2r. ' -S!£?12 ? ••- ' oi o o m C 3 5§ RK5iiS;-Sr,S = 5; s (A S jQ „ ; £ g 0) f i S J a 5 o 1—1 i -o-° -o§ U ' ji- l:l||l||| O t§ iSc ' i| S5a!!!S;S c - 16.213 = 3535555 M 5 SSEzSsSC SsgS If SgS£SSSSES25 E RESIDENT ' S MESSAGE My congratulations to all members of the Class of 1973. You are entering the business and pro- fessional world at a time most unique in the his- tory of this nation, and you are perhaps the envy of most of those who have gone before you. Our involvement in the South- east Asia conflict has finally been concluded, and you need concern yourself no longer with compulsory military service. I join with you in hoping that our nation may never again be forced into such a long, costly, and tortur ous war. Those of you who will now launch your lifetime careers have been prepared uniquely for the demands which will be placed upon you. Cooperative education has provided most of you with a practical experience which is alien to graduates of most traditional institutions. Education is, in a broad sense, a preparation for the practical life, and of course for the in- telligent appreciation of that life. Although it certainly has its place in our academic world, strictly esoteric shcolarship is even viewed by some as not only unfortunate in the 20th cen- tury, but actually quite counter-productive. Society continues to clamor for solutions to numerous problems, many of which are tech- nological in nature. Northeastern, as an in- stitution, and you, as her products, are the most qualified of all to establish and develop the many new patterns and ideas which link not only technological endeavors, but those which are human as well, to the mainstream of life. Good luck to you all, and God bless you in the years ahead. Asa S. Knowles President TO SENIORS  T mAY BE HARD TO CONTACT TWE TRUSTEES. THIS IS THE TimE WHEN A LOT OF THEin  RB IN FUDRIDA! Necrophillac ES nAAM WE ' l- HAy£ OUT M JoON AS possible ' . [lilNTlTy ' crtisiS AT T E PTOmAINg CQ KALlI @ ' i-(7r— ur ; r , (V 3 -N e pL- £ It I . TUDENT ACTIVITIES Division D Bridge Club Chess Club Chorus 1 r J ■■1 Jh jF- y -V n H p M l BBJI 1 V j HB HH -c-. - K ' HH Hv fl H ■H ' M r ] ' T ' m rHI MM ' i I , j -a H |J 1 Si Huskiers Student Center v . Committee N- ' - Student Union Turf Club Yacht Club Jivisioii A w American Institute of Chemical Engineers American Society of Civil Engineers American Society of Mechanical Engineers ,JJ Cheerleaders Delta Chi Ecology Coalition Folk Music Club Hillel Hot Rod Association Hus-Skiers and Outing Club Karate Club Underwater Society WRBB Yacht Club ®l| N0rtI|matrrn Nrms r Jls v Could 1 eml)ody and unbosom now That which is most within me,— could I wreak My thoughts upon expression, and thus throw Soul— heart— mind— passions— feelings— strong or weak- All that I would have sought, and all I seek, Bear, know, feel— and yet breathe— into one word. And that one word were Lightning, I would speak; But as it is, I live and die unheard. With a most voiceless thought, sheathing it as a sword. —George Gordon, Lord Byron from Childe Harold ' s Piigrimage (( Tk Cauldron is loaded... Vice-Pres. MacDonald, Letter to the Class of 1972 HE CAULDRON A product of ZANY COLLEGE YOUTHS, Inc. ' Trademark Olatunji November, 1968 Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. March, 1969 Art Buchwald February, 1969 Mayors Symposium eptemher, 1969 Kevin White Sam Yorty Jerome Cavanaugh John Kenneth Galbraith March, 1970 Ralph Nader February, 1970 Betty Shabazz April, 1970 Dr. S.I. Hayakawa January, 1970 100 Charles Evers, October, 1970 Julian Bond, May, 1971 Bill Baird, September, 1970 Bernadette Devlin, February, 1971 Dick Gregory October, 1972 Betty Friedan April, 1973 ILVER MASQUE Loot October 25 26, 1968 Detective Story November 15 16, 1968 Once Upon a Mattress May 23 24, 1969 Yerma February 21 22, 1969 Rashamon November 15 16, 1969 Mandragola January 30 31, 1970 Rose Tattoo February 20 21, 1970 The Revolution Starts Inside April 24 25, 1970 Celebration May 15 16, 1970 Ubu Roi October 30 31, 1970 Canterbury Tales May 21 22, 1971 The Connection November 5 6, 1971 I -J ' ' The Baptism February 10, 11. 12, 1972 Hedda Gabler May 11, 12, 13, 1972 Anyone Can Whistle June 2 3, 1972 41 Exit The King February 8, 9, 10, 1973 Tartuffe March 9 10, 1973 A Visit to a Small Planet February 23 24, 1973 % % THLETICS v ' ' ' ' ■: ' ' ■. ' . , j J li A. J 1 footkll 1968 After fumbling the opener away to C.W. Post, 28-22, the Huskies made Coach Joe Zabilski ' s 21st sea- son a success by winning their next four games, and going on to post a 6- 3 season record. The Northeastern defense was su- perb all season, failing only twice, against New Hampshire, which used a wide array of plays to roll to a 26-3 win; and Eastern Michigan, which scored 28 points in the first quarter and went on to win, 41-0. The defense shined for the other six games, while the NU oifense, led by star passer Bob Conners and run- ning back Bill Curran, romped against Bridgeport, 42-19, Colby 36- 8, and AIC 30-13. Two victories, Springfield, 10-7, and Cortland, 20-17, came in the fi- nal minutes on 32 and 37 yard field goals by kicker Dick Quigley. The biggest win, an upset, came in the finale in Pennsylvania against Temple. The Owls featured a 371- yard passing attack by quarterback John Waller, but the Huskies showed a tremendous pass rush and picked off four passes to finish what Zabilski called a successful and really gratifying season. -1 I Joe Zabilski ' s 1969 Huskies did a turnabout from the previous year, going from 6-3 to a dismal 3-6. Once again the offense was led by quarterback Bob Conners, who com- pleted 90 of 181 passes for 1135 yards and 11 touc] downs. Junior fullback Ed Hichborn led the rush- ers with 457 yards and two touch- downs, while Jim Fennessey headed the receiving (35 catches for 490 yards and seven TD ' s) and the scor- ing (46 points). High points for the season, of course, were the three wins, over C.W. Post 38-8; Bridgeport, 29-14; and Cortland, 27-17. Included in the six defeats were Vermont, 39-31; AIC, 21-0; Springfield, 22-3, New Hampshire, 26-8; and Eastern Michi- gan, 56-0. The loss to Eastern Michigan was the second in a row for the Huskies. Coupled with the 41-0 shutout the year before, the Hurons outscored NU, 97-0, in their two-game series. This was Coach Joe Zabilski ' s first losing season in nine years, and only his sixth since he began coaching NU in 1948. The Huskies again finished the season with a losing record, this time three wins against five losses. The team was composed mainly of underclassmen. We realize that we were a green squad, said Coach Za- bilski. It would have taken a stroke of luck for us to get where we wanted, and we just didn ' t get that kind of luck. The opener against Harvard was the first of a two-year series with the Crimson. Although senior quarter- back Phil Raby scored on a three- yard plunge, the Huskies failed twice deep inside the Johns ' terri- tory. Harvard crossed the goal line twice in each of the last two quar- ters to make the final score 28-7. Following Harvard, NU posted two of its three victories, against Vermont, 34-21, and AIC, 20-6. De- fensive back Gary Hogg picked ofl four passes against Vermont, while halfback Wally Quigg ran for 175 1970 yards and three touchdowns. The defense was the key against AIC as they held the Yellowjackets to 38 yards total offense. The streak ended though, against Springfield, the top-rated small col- lege team in New England. The Chiefs had some trouble, however, when, down 14-0 in the fourth quar- ter, the Huskies, under sophomore quarterback Al Mello drove 82 yards for a score. The game ended before Mello could reach the goal again, and the final score was 14-7. Northeastern then lost three more straight to New Hampshire, 33-7, Maine, 24-17, and Cortland, 8-7. The Maine and Cortland games were both lost in the late stages, with the Bears from Maine scoring in the last second of play. The finale, against Bridgeport, provided NU ' s third win, by a 9-7 score. At the end of the 1971 season, Joe Zabilski closed out his 24-year ca- reer as Head Football Coach at Northeastern to take the position of Associate Athletic Director. The Zabilski Era began in 1948, when Mr, Z. came to the Huskies from the University of Maine. He won 101 games as football mentor for NU and was voted the New England Football Writers ' Coach of the Year in 1955, and in 1963, a per- fect 8-0 season topped off by a trip to the Eastern Bowl in Pennsylvania. Coach Zabilski had trouble win- ning his 100th, however, as the 1971 Huskies finished with four wins and five losses, with Number 100 coming on Homecoming Weekend against Springfield, 34-16. The season opened against Rhode Island, and Northeastern started the year strong with a 36-22 victory over the Rams. The oifense under quar- terback Phil Raby (two TD passes to Bill Murray) and Pat Fitzgerald (95 yards rushing and one touchdown) combined with the defense, which intercepted four URI passes and held the Rams to 19 yards rushing, for the win. After the positive start NU dropped two straight, losing to Bridgeport, 10-7, and Harvard, 17-7. Against Bridgeport, substitute quarterback Al Mello led his team to a third period score to go ahead 7-3, but the Knights ' Roy Ferriera engi- neered a 65-yard march for the win- ning score late in the game. The Huskies played surprisingly well against the heavily favored Crimson, but mistakes on both sides ruled the course of the game, and in the final period, they hurt the Husk- ies, as Harvard drove for the win- ning score. The Huskies then did an abrupt turnabout and won Joe Z ' s 99th and 100th, defeating American Inter- national and Springfield. Star half- back Wally Quigg scored twice, and Pat Fitzgerald and Mike Graceffa each tallied in the win over AIC, whose powerful oifense led by Bruce Laird (now with the Baltimore Colts) failed to score until the final minute. Scoring twenty-one points in the first half, and two pass interceptions (both by Tom Rezzuti, his fifth and sixth of the year), the Huskies had no problem against Springfield to push Zabilski past the century mark. The team ' s success was short- lived as three straight losses fol- lowed the Springfield game. New Hampshire took its fifth consecutive game from NU, 37-7, despite a 330- yard off ' ensive effort by the Huskies. Against Holy Cross, a 99-yard ef- fort by Pat Fitzgerald was nullified, as the Crusaders ' Mike Guilfoile ran back an NU pass 37 yards to make the winning score 17-7. Against Cortland State, mistakes once again proved the Huskies ' doom, as they suffered seven turn- overs inside the Dragons ' 20-yard line, losing 23-6. I The season ' s finale provided Za- bilski ' s 101st and final victory, as his team defeated the Vermont Catamounts, 42-7. Phil Raby, also in his last game, threw for 252 yards and three touchdowns. Assistant Coach Robert Bo Lyons was named to replace Mr. Z at the end of the season, and was faced with the happy prospect of the re- turn in 1972 of stand-outs Mello and Rezzuti, who finished the year with a record 14 interceptions. Besides Raby, Lyons lost Wally Quigg, who led the team in scoring (42 points) and receiving (31 catches for 539 yards) and finished second in rushing (472 yards). Rushing leader Fitzgerald (491 yards) also gradu- ated, leaving Lyons with the task of rebuilding half of his offense for the coming year. Page 20 Northeastern NEWS. December 6, 1971 Lyons named successor Zabilski retires as head coach By RICHARD SOBOCINSKI Joe Zabilski, head football coach ai North- eastern for the past 24 years, retired at the age of 64 last week to devote full time to his responsi bilities as Associate Director of Athletics. Assistant coach Robert Bo ' Lyons was named as his suc- Zabilski has coached his teams to losses and six tics over the 24 years, Lvons, 45, served 101 the capacity as line coacn for the Huskies for the past nine years, A 1953 graduate of Northeastern, he captained the squad m 1957 and as a center, both offensively and de- fensively, he was selected to the 1956 and 1957 All-New England teams. During Zabilski ' s reign as head coach he was voted Coach of the Year by the New England Foot- ball Writers in 1955 and again in 1963. United Press International named him Coach of the Year in 1963 and 1967. His most successful year was 196;- when ihe Huskies finished their first undefeated and untied season with an 8-0 record, earning them an invi- tation to the Eastern Bowl, in Allentown, Pa. Zabilski came to Northeastern in 1948 from the University of Maine where he served as line coach Until 1958 he combined his talents as head coach of football and basketball and was the weights events coach for the track team In 1958 he was appointed Assistant Director of Athletics after re linquishing his basketball and track coaching duties. Last year Zabilski was appointed Associate Director of Athletics, Citing his rea. ' ions for retirement, Zabilski quipped, Football is a young man ' s game and now is the opportune time for me to leave, while I still have good health and while Northeastern has such an able replacement available. As Associate Director of Athletics, Zabilski has set no definite goals, but says he will be on the line fighting for better facilities and the establish- ment of a more meaningful athletic program including Northeastem ' s admittance into a regular conference. When asked to cite his fondest memory. Coach Zabilski, in the typical Zabilski style, said, My boys are my fondest memory, noting that all his football players have worked under adverse con- ditions (combining school and co-op) to play a game they love. Coach Bo Lyons plans no obvious changes 111 the Zabilski strategy saying. The kids and coaches are familiar with the system so there ' s no reason to change only for the sake of change. The transition from line coach to head coach should be an easy one for Lyons, who coached both the offensive and defensive lines during his first three years at NU. He admits missing the two-way action Lyons assistant is expected to be named within the month Skaters lose first; Frozen by Wildcats By ROGER MEDVIN The University of New Hamp- shire Wildcats spoiled the season opener for the Husky skaters Monday night at Durham. New Hampshire won 6-4 before a capa- city crowd of 4000. Northeastern put up a good fight against the powerful New Hampshire team, but penalties, especially in the third period, led to the Husky defeat- The winning goal was scored by sophomore Gordie Clark at 5:02 of the third period while the Huskies were two men down. Twenty of New Hampshire ' s 49 shots were in the final period. Goalie Bob Smith of New Hamp- shire turned back 20 of 24 shots. Husky goalie Dan Eberly had 43 New Hampshire ' s captain, Dick Umile. opened the scoring with his first of two goals at 11:40 of the first period Denis Moffat scored first for Northeastern at T7:07. Clark also scored in the second period to go along with his game winner. Other Northeastern scorers were Les Chaisson. Wayne Blan- cbard, and Paul Scherer. Chaisson also added two assists. Despite the loss, Coach Fern Flaman was generally pleased with his team ' s efforts. Flaman pointed out that UNH had the advantjpe of playing two pre- season games with a tough St. (Continued on Page 19) :rn-34, Sprmgf.eld-16 . , . Zabilski ' s lOOrh Football team ends mediocre year By ART MacPHERSON Another football season has come to a close, and life goes on as usual. What little excitement tlie nine games brought was overshadowed by the retirement of Head Coach Joe Zabilski after 24 years as NU ' s football mentor. After winning 101 games, Zabilski decided to devote full time to his duties as Associate Athletic Director. The new coach, Bo Lyons, will have his hands full trying to build a winning team out this year ' s juniors ' and sopho- mores. The starting quarterback will prob- ably be niar clous Al Mello, unless Jim Lazo can conic up from the freshman team and take o tr. So much for the offense. The season was pretty much a disap- pointment ill that the team was murdered against the weaker teams, and then did well agamst its strongest opponents - Har- vard and Holy Cross. However, next year looks better because neither the Crimson nor the Crusaders will be on the schedule. They will be replaced by two real heavies, B,U. and Hofstra. The offensive standout this year was W ally Quigg who led the team in scoring (42 points) and receiving (31 for 539 yards), and was second in rushing with 472 yards. Pat Fitzgerald was first with 491 yards. On defense, Tom Rczzuti had an un- believable season with 14 interceptions, which set a Northeastern record. The rest of the team had a total of 13 steals. {Continued on Page 19) Track season here By DONNA BERTAZZONI The track season is approach- ing! And the home opener is on December 11 at Cabot Cage vs. Brown. Steve Hogan and Charlie Vann will be back in the dash this year. and they should give the Huskies one of the best 1-2 dash teams in New England. A major part of the team ' s success depends on the achievements of the hurdlers, led by Tim Sweeney and Peter Sabii. The distance runners, despite a lack of experience, look prom- ising. Paul Horrigan and Ralph Moschella are the top men in the 600, while the 1,000-yarders are led by Simon Langer The mile is set with Larry Joseph, co- holder of the school record at 4:14. Following him is Dave Gold- smith, who has run the event in 4:16. The prob lem with senior Ralph Bowman is that no one is sure where to run him. He has been timed in 1:12 in the 600, 2:10 in the l.OOD and 4:14 in the mile. Assistant Coach Everett Baker feels that, Bowman is capable of setting school records in all three events. Last year ' s field events team was plagued by inconsistency in the high jump. Changing this should prove to be the added lift they need to challenge Harvard for the Greater Boston Champion- ship, The top high jumper is Tom Murphy, who is also a long {Continued on Page 18) Bo Lyons ' first season as the Husk- ies ' head coach turned out to be a successful one, as his team dropped their first two games and then went on to take the remaining six for their first winning record in four years. The slow start was due mainly to the new offense, with 1971 quarter- back Al Mello being shifted to half- back, and being replaced by soph- omore Chris Aylward. Joining them in the backfield were Bob Behrens and Paul Parisi, both of whom had seen only limited action the pre- vious season. The inexperience of the players was evidenced as the team lost to Rhode Island, 27-7, and Bridgeport, 16-14, to open the season. The de- fense, however, continued to hold up under the pressure, as it had the past year. The phenomenal streak began against Hofstra, when a strong run- ning game of Mello, Parisi and fresh- man Kevin Foley, who replaced the injured Behrens, led the way through the mud to take the Flying Dutchmen, 28-6. The next game was even easier, as a steadily improving offense com- bined with a tight defense to stomp on American International ' s Yel- lowjackets, 35-13. A fumble-fiUed win over the Springfield Chiefs, 21-0, provided the third straight win for the Husk- ies and put them over .500 with a 3-2 record. After a close 9-7 victory over the New Hampshire Wildcats, NU ' s first in six years, the Huskies moved to Nickerson Field for the Alumni Day game with Boston University. Under the lights at BU, Paul Parisi rushed for 140 yards, and was voted the game ' s Most Valuable Player. The defense recorded its second shutout, with the final score being 10-0. The short season ended with a 29-19 tri- umph over Vermont. Parisi finished the season as the Huskies ' leading rusher with 504 yards, due greatly to the blocking of the off ensive line, led by captain Dan Grabowski. The defense was once again the team ' s strong suit, and the strongest of all was defensive back Tom Rez- zuti. Rezzuti finished his record- breaking career with 27 inter- ceptions, including five a s a soph- omore, 14 as a junior and eight as a senior. Rezzuti was voted to the Little All-American team as a junior, and was awarded a Golden Helmet as a senior by the New England Football Writers ' Association. As the season ended, there was talk of the strong possibility for ad- mitting the Huskies to the Yankee Confernce for the 1973 season. The 1969 crew was composed of four returnees from the 1968 varsity, and four rowers up from the fresh- men team. Coach Ernie Arlett predicted that the team ' s inexperience would make them slow starters, but their talent and size (A Boat average of 6 ' 4 , and 195 pounds) would pull them to- gether by the end of the season. Ar- lett was not far from wrong. The varsity boat was composed of Mike McLaughlin (stroke), Mike Wa- jer (2), Dick Pultz (4), Captain Bill Miller (5), and Brian Chisholm (cox), all veterans from the previous year. Combined with sophomores Jim Reid (3), Vic Pisinski (bow), John Ferguson (6) and Charlie Buuck (7), they formed a good strong balance of youth and poise. Their perfor- mances during the season varied from one to the other, ending with a mediocre record. The crew took first in the opener against Vesper Boat Club. The Husk- ies covered the 2,000 meter course in 6:25.8, four seconds ahead of VBC. The second regatta was less suc- cessful, with NU finishing second to Princeton on Lake Carnegie, with Navy close behind. The Huskies resumed their win- ning ways again in the third race, back on the Carles, taking BU by four-tenths of a second with MIT trailing far behind. But fate struck again, and on the Seekonk River, NU clocked an identical 5:5 7.2 against Brown, but was just nosed out for the win at the wire. The final regatta was a win back in Boston against BU. The Eastern Sprints were held on the Charles that year, but home wa- ters were no help, as the Husky var- sity finished sixth and last, nine sec- onds behind Harvard, which was in the midst of its domination of the sport that began in the early Sixties. The experienced sophs, showed promise for a better season in 1970, and Arlett ended the season, after finishing 13th in the IRA, with high hopes for the following year. The 1970 crew had some new and some old faces, and overall did not have a good year, finshing first in only one meet. The team never did live up to expectations, despite the training advantage of the new in- novation installed in the basement of the Barletta Natatorium— the crew tank. The tank is an amazingly simple device, in which the crewmen sit in seats in the floor and row the water surrounding their boat , thereby getting just as hard a workout as on the Charles, but never moving from the floor of Cabot Center. Back from the 1969 varsity were Captain Jim Reid, Vic Pisinski, and 1969 MVP Mike McLaughlin. Filling out the boat were newcomers Jim Dietz, who would compete in the Single Sculls in the 1972 Olympics, Carl Nordstrom, Dennis Klager, Steve Leonard, Byron McKibbon, and Charles Fabriano. The Huskies ' only win came on the Charles against Boston U. Also on the Charles were a second place to BU, with MIT third, and a third place finish behind Brown and Columbia. In the away regattas, MU finished second between Yale and Rutgers at Yale on the Hosatonic, and second between Penn and St. Joseph ' s in Schuylkill, Pa. In the two big meets, the Husky Varsity failed to qualify for the fi- nals in the Eastern Sprints, and took tenth place in the IRA. The 1971 crew, led once again by Captain Jim Reid, and under the ex- pert tutorial care of Coach Arlett, managed to perform well for most of the regular season, but failed once again in the Eastern Sprints, and In- tercollegiate Rowing Association championships. The Huskies included Reid, Jim Dietz, Calvin Coifey, Vic Pisinski, Pete Karrassik, John Maslowski, Kent McKinnon, Byron McKibbon, and Charles Fabiano. The season started slowly, with the team finishing a poor third to Yale and Rutgers on the Carnegie River in New Jersey, nine seconds behind the Elis. The Huskies then rowed to firsts over BU and MIT on the Charles, Brown and Columbia 1971 on the Seekonk, and BU back on the Charles. The regatta season ended with a stunning upset of UPenn, a perrenial eastern power, winning by four full seconds on the Charles River. The Eastern Sprints again were the Huskies doom, as the varsity eight failed to qualify for the finals for the second year in a row. The team did improve on the previous year ' s tenth place finish in the IRA, however, creeping up to eighth place. The regular season heroics of the Huskies provided an optomistic out- look for the following year, which turned out to be the greatest in the short history of Northeastern crew. The pre-season prognostication for the 1972 crew was that this would be the year to catch the big one. The success that the Huskies ultimately enjoyed, however, was far above any that could reasonably be promised in early April, when the oarsmen first took to the Charles to work out. Heading up the seventh NU team since the sport ' s inception here in 1965, was Captain Bill Bachman, a junior. Other underclassmen on a veteran crew included Calvin Cof- fey, Pete Karrasik, John Maslowski, Dick Wennersten, Jeff Marshall, and Frank Leahy. Only two seniors, Kent McKinnon and Carl Nordstrom, rowed in the varsity boat. The season began with a disap- pointing three-second loss to Union Boat Club on the Charles. But the oarsman were unaifected by the loss, and came back to win their next four straight regattas. The first was a breeze over Rut- gers and Yale in Connecticut, fol- lowed by half-length victories against MIT and BU, and against Browm and Columbia on the Harlem River in New York. The Huskies completed the streak with an easy win over BU and UMass on the Charles to go into their old nemisis, the Eastern Sprints, as the third- seeded crew. The announcer at the Sprints called the teams to the gate, billing the race as, The one you ' ve all been waiting for— the rematch between Harvard and Penn. In fact, the race began that way, with the Crimson battling Penn and surprising Brown for the lead. About two-thirds through the race, however, the NU crew, urged on by cox Leahy, burst into the lead, and took the title, with Brown close behind, and a stunned Harvard trail- ing in third. There followed the grandest cele- bration in the history of Northeast- ern sports. The victory made the headlines, and was described in detail in Sports Illustrated, including the powerful bartending of NU Sports Information Director Jack Grinold, whose talents wit h a shot glass and jigger gained him national fame. The team then travelled to England where they lost the Grand Challenge Cup to the Russian Na- tional team by half-a-length, ending the season with hopes high for 1973, bolstered by the return of seven of the nine varsity members, and a number of promising rowers up from the jayvees. Crew nails Harvard in Sprints Huskies start sloivly; roar from fourth to win 1 think this is the bigiJesl thrill of my lifi-.- With those words an emolionc: oked Ernie Arletl accepted the trophy for his victorious varsity eight at the Eastern Sprint Cham pionships in Worcester last Saturd Minutes before. his varsity crew had roared fron 1 behind to crack the favored H rvard eight and win the first Ea .,.rn Sprml Championship in No rthcaslern ' s short crew history. On Friday, and i Ihr m.irn- ing heat on Sulurd; V. Ihc Huv kies gave no indie; u n Ih M a spark of urcatiiess i-xislud ill their boat. They h d qualified easily enough for th fmals. bul finished behind a Br )wn crt ' W in their heat that they had bealc-n two weeks before NU was seeded only third on Ihe basis of their season perfor nances and no one but the cr w and the coach felt that an u psel wai in the makmg As the hot. sunn f aflemoon droned on. the antic ipation and tension slowly bui I up wilh each race until the oudspeakfr blared the announce nenl of the varsity race: Coach Ernie Arlett accepts the award for his team ' s Eastern Sprints victory, as team members chant We ' re Number One ' ITt Coach Arleit ' s bloody hard e forts to beat Harvard finally paid til off. began just as every- Cornell, Northeastern and Wis- down the course had not heard ectcd. with Harvard consin spread out close behind. the race announcer so much as itlling for the lead Harvard had stretched Iheir lead mention Northeastern which was a one-seat lead over to a length over Penn and the still in the pack somewhere meters with Brown. crowd, more than a half-mile astern of the leaders. Then, suddenly at the 1500, the Huskies had begun to make their move and were passing the other crews, creeping up on Har- vard, who by now had a lilllo open water on Pcnn, The NU shell was jusl three quarlPis of ii length down jusl pa.si the 1500 . and at the com- mand .if cox Frank Leahy in- crciwed ils pace and pulled even wilh Har ' ard with 250 meters to en Harvard crumbled under the pr,.s,.v,rc, and the blackshirled HiLskies slarted to sprint, pulling fnrlhor and further away with • ,. h stroke. They crossed the BniwH. who had raced to _ — Mi.iUh second place, and Har- vvird limped across the line in an advantage which v i their first Sprints. The Huskies broke Arlett gets dunked BY JIM REID A race that started out as a battle between two Ivy schools, ended in a complete surprise, when Northeastern beat Brown, Penn, almighty Harvard and the rest to win the Eastern Sprints Heavyweight title. While Harvard has spent the last ten years gaining fans with its unprecedented success as a crew team, this streak has also earned the Crimson a large following of people who like nothing better than to see them lose. But no one really believed it would happen. When the Huskies started to sprint past the Crimson, it was very close to the last 500 meters, when the loud- speaker ceases to announce so as not to distract the crews. Just before the bullhorn shut off, the astounded an- nouncer said, Oh, my GodI Northeastern ' s moving . . . ' From that point on. Harvard was beaten. Pandemonium broke loose on the shore and a wonder- ful sort of craziness seized everyone who had had their fingers crossed for Northeastern all these years. Total strangers embraced and jumped up and down holding hands. NU supporters. JV and freshmen crew members, alumni, and families of the winning NU varsity crowded onto the awards dock to greet their heroes. The Quotes Captain Bill Backman: I wouldn ' I trade this bunch of guys for anything All season we ' ve shown (he coach just bits really put it all together for him Wc haven ' t even peaked yet. We ' ll get much faster before the Nationals . . ■ ■ Geoff Marshall: •n T you come out on top Carl Nordstrom: 7 was unbeliev- able The full impact ofVie race didnl hit me until the next morning when I read the story in the paper and actually started to cry ■■ , Rich Wennersten: -All I can remember is a bewildered feeling when someone said. We beat em we really beat Har- vard ' John Maslowski: All the long nights of running. I lot t ethir Xing Heights, ulmina this It made all the pain worth- while . Kent MacKinnon: A high school buddy of mine coxed the Brown varsity, and he came over after the race and just Calvin Coffey: 1 just told Frank (Leahy) to keep us within a length, and we just hung there waiting for the last 500 meters to really pour it on . Hasktkll IDOD The 1968-69 season marked the first for the Huskies in University Division play. After leading his charges to the NCAA College Divi- sion Regional play-offs for five out of the last six years, Coach Richard Duke Dukeshire was voted New England Coach of the Year, the second time he had earned that honor. The first year in the tougher com- petition was a successful one, as the hoopsters won 16 of their 21 games for a .762 percentage, second in New England only to Boston College. At the end of the campaign, they were fifth-ranked in the region. Captain Leo Osgood led the team in scoring with 325 points for a 15.5 per game average, with fellow se- nior Carleton Chandler second (284 for 13.4). Chandler was also the leading rebounder, with 210, aver- aging ten per game. One of the season ' s biggest thrills came in the second game, a 86-81, double-overtime victory against Maine. Leading scorer in that one was Chandler, with 25 points. The Huskies hit their peak midway through the season defeating Colby, 87-56 and then Bates, 85-55, winning the two games by a total of 61 points. At the end of the campaign, NU posted a 79-56 victory over MIT in the opening round o f the Colonial Tournament, going on to defeat Bos- ton University in a thriller, 66-64, to take the tourney championship. High game for the season was turned in by Osgood, with 26 points in a 75-70 win over BU. Led by junior guards Jack Ma- heras and Kevin Shea, and soph sen- sation Jim Moxley, the ' 69-70 hoops- ters slumped to a 14-8 record for the season. Six of the right losses were to such New England powerhouses as Harvard, Holy Cross, Assump- tion, Boston College, UMass and Boston University. Among the 14 victims were BU, Tufts, Springfield, and Long Island University. Against UNH, the Huskies came back, scoring 14 points in ten minutes, to take the Catamounts, 65- 63. The outside shooting of Maheras (20 points) and the rebounding of Moxley showed the way in the last minute against Colby, as NU de- feated the Mules 78-76. And in the last game, the Huskies went over the century mark for the only time all season, winning by their largest margin, 101-71, over MIT. The low point of the season was the 90-62 drubbing by Umass and Ju- lius Enving, now an outstanding Star in the American Basketball Association. Maheras was leading scorer for the Huskies, with 324 points and a 14.7 per game average. Second in scoring was Moxley (320 for 14.5), who also led the team in rebounding with 187 for an average of 8.5. The most noticeable feature of the team was its lack of a big center. Coach Dukeshire, compensated by using a rotating offense, with two gards (Maheras and Shea), and three forwards (Moxley, Bill Moore, and Jack Niven). 1971 The Huskies rebounded to a 17-4 record in their last season under Coach Dukeshire, who ended his thirteenth year as NU basketball mentor by taking a one-year leave of absence to coach the Greek national team for the Olympics. The Duke later decided not to re- turn to Northeastern, where he had compiled a career of 202 wins and 95 losses, twice winning the New England Coach of the Year Award (in 1963 and 1967), and guiding teams to the NCAA College Division playoffs for six of seven years prior to the Huskies ' promotion to the University Division. The Duke ' s last NU team started the season on an unpromising note, losing to Boston College in the open- ing game of the Beanpot Tourney, and then to Farleigh Dickenson. The Huskies woke up in the third game, a 75-60 victory over Boston University to take third place in the Beanpot. That began a ten-game winning streak that lasted until early February. Included in the streak were tri- umphs against Buffalo, 80-61, and then Scranton, 66-65, to take the Scranton Invitational Tournament in Pennsylvania. The streaking Huskies were halted by back-to-back losses to New England ' s top team. Assumption, and to UMass. Northeastern bounced back from the two failures and went on to cop their remaining seven games. The power behind the Huskies ' success in the Duke ' s final season was junior forward Jim Moxley, who led the team in scoring (15.5 points per game) and rebounds (8.8 per game). Moxley ' s 31 and 30-point performances against BU and Evansville respectively, were ap- proached only by senior Kevin Shea ' s 28 points against powerhouse Assumption. Combining with Moxley and Cap- tain Shea to make the year a good one were seniors Bill Moore, Jack Maheras, and Jack Niven, and un- dergrads Paul McDonough, Kevin Lacy, and Mark Jellison. With the Duke showing the Greeks how, James Brown, a former NU standout hooster, took over the coaching duties. His only season was a turbulent one, with his style of play much different from the one taught by The Duke. His slower, more deliberate mode of offense combined with a large number of close losses to make the season less than happy for all concerned. At the end of year ' s conclusion. Bowman left Northeastern when it was rumored that Dukeshire would return and take the job that Bow- man felt he had earned. The season began ominously, with four straight losses, all by three points or less. Harvard was the first to squeeze the Huskies, 57-54 in the opening round of the Beanpot. Following the Crimson game were losses to New Hampshire, 48-46, Boston College, 52-51 (the Beanpot consolation games), and UMass, 62- 61. Later on in the season, the Husk- ies lost to Assumption, 79-77, and George Washington, 48-47. The final record was 12-9, despite the bad luck and or coachplayer difficulties. And some of the close ones went NU ' s way, including a 56- 54 overtime victory at Vermont, and a 74-73 defeat of Army in the season finale. Leading the team once again was forward Jim Moxley, both in scoring and rebounding. His 369 points lev- eled to a 17.5 average, while his 154 rebounds (7.3 per game) tied him with fellow senior Paul McDonough for the team lead. McDonough also finished second in team scoring, with 250, for an av- erage of 11.9 per game. Also contrib- uting heavily to the Huskies ' efforts were Mark Jellison and John Barros, both of whom were slated to return in 1972-73. At the end of the season, with Bowman looking for another job, Dukeshire turned down the chance to return to NU, and James Calhoun, from Dedham High School, was named to head the Huskies the fol- lowing year. BULLETIN-The Northeastern Husky basketball team, with a record of 12 wins and 5 losses, has a shot at a regional playoff berth in the NCAA tournament, as well as finishing with a winning record for the thirteenth straight season. Leading the charge for NU is se- nior captain Mark Jellison, whose 326 points gave him a 19.1 per game average, tops for the team. Teamed with Jellison at the guard position is freshman John Clark, the only frosh player to make the var- sity team. Also starring are forwards Jim Connors, Rick Brault, and John Barros, along with center John Haviland. The Huskies ' biggest problem ap- pears to be inconsistency, with three of the five losses being by ten or more points. Such a case occurred in early January, when they beat pow- erhouse Harvard in overtime, 74-69, Then, three nights later, in the Beanpot Championship game, the Huskies fell apart, with the Crimson getting their revenge and then some, 105-63. Coach Jim Calhoun, if he can help his team get over the bad moments, may still be faced with a play-off stiuation in his freshman season. Calhoun, formerly coach of Dedham High School, succeeded Jim Bow- man, whose one-year stint as the Huskies ' mentor brought him a 12-9 record. im K Coach Jim Bell ' s ' 68- ' 69 icemen had less than a successful season, winning only six of their 23 games. The team ' s disappointing showing was due to a combination of weak offense and ineffective defense, as the Huskies gave up 128 goals, while scoring only 74 for the year. Of the six wins, four were by only one goal: Bowdoin, 4-3, RPI, 5-4, Princeton, 2-1, and Merrimack, 6-5 in double overtime. The other two victories came against Dartmouth, 6- 4, and AIC, 6-3. In the annual Beanpot Tourna- ment, NU lost the opening round to Harvard, 8-4. The Crimson ' s Joe Cavanaugh won the tourney ' s scor- ing title, as his team went on to beat Boston University for the champion- ship. Meanwhile, the Huskies lost the consolation game to Boston Col- lege by a score of 6-3. One of the few bright spots for the Huskies during the season was the play of junior center Dave Poile. Poile ' s 31 goals and 46 total points led the team, with soph Glenn Er- amo second (11-34). Against Dart- mouth and AIC, Poile had four-goal games, one short of the team ' s all- time record. Poile, Eramo and soph Ken Ab- bott were the Huskies ' number one line during the year, however, by the end of the season, both Eran and Abbott were declared academij cally ineligiUe, and were unat participate OT ng their juoi,_ Another staifiBffT; and perr the loneliest man on the te pi was goaltender Ken Leu. Altl u Leu was in the nets for 124 q|ume oppo- nents ' 128 goals, it took 772 shots tq do it. Leu stopped 647 enemy shots dur- ing the season, setting the tone for later seasons, as the problem of weak defense was to haunt the Huskies for the next few years. Things were hardest for Leu against New Hampshire, when the Catamounts fired 48 shots at himt and despite the lack of help from his 4 S3nimates, Leu stopped 41 of them nbe 7-4 loss. Coach (im Bell ' s fifteenth and fi- nal season as head coach of hockey at Northeastern was far from one to remember. Despite large numbers of seniors (8) and juniors (6), the pucksters only managed to win three games, while dropping 20. Their won-loss percentage of .130 was the worst ever in Northeastern hockey history. The previous low was the 1937-38 season, when they finished 3-9-1 for a .250 percentage. On the whole, the season was a failure, despite a slightly improved offense from the previous year. Of the 80 Husky goals, 37 belonged to senior Dave Poile. His point total for the year, 45, upped his career total to 82 goals, 36 assists, and 118 points, placing him fourth in the all-time NU scoring race. Following Poile in the season standing were Crawford Bell and Terry Cain, his linemates, with 29 and 22 points, respectively. In the tradition of the ' 68- ' 69 team, the Huskies ' were also helpless on defense. Sophomore goalie Dan Eberly appeared in twenty games, and was bombarded with 869 shots, almost 44 per game. Eberly stoppe;d 759 of those shots, many of which were rebounds (and rebounds of rebounds) that his de- fense were unable to clear. In the face of such adversity, Eberly ' s 110 goals against and 5.5 per game average was a credit to his immense talent. In the annual Beanpot Spectacu- lar, Boston College and their star wing Tim Sheehy, knocked NU out of the first game in a 5-0 shutout. The Huskies put up more of a fight, however, in the consolation game, losing to Joe Cavanaugh and the rest of Harvard ' s team 5-4 in overtime. Boston University went on to win the tourney, defeating BC in the championship. Jim Bell ' s final games as head coach came against Brown, and the Huskies were unable to pull it out for him, as Dan Eberly saved a sea- son-high 57 shots in a 6-1 loss. Bell finished his career with 153 wins and 372 losses for a lifetime .411 percentage. His last victory came on January 31, a 5-4 overtime win against Amer- ican International. Although Bell was not the winni- ngest coach m the history of th.e game, his ' 1964- ' 65 team had fin- ished Id-iG, and went on to win the ECAC Holiday Tournament at Madison Square Garden, Bell ' s top triumph .is thr- Huskies ' ice mentor. The 1970-71 hockey season was only a minor improvement from the previous year ' s 3-20 record. Under first-year coach Fernie Fla- man, former Boston Olympics and Bruins star, the team managed a dis- mal 7-22 mark. It vifas the same old story for the Huskies— fine goaltending with no defensive help. Danny Eberly faced his second straight year in which he saw more rubber than a tire manufacturer. Opposing teams took 677 shots at Eberly scoring on only 106 of them. Sharing the undesirable position with Eberly was fellow junior John Burke. Burke was the target of 576 blasts, of which 68 got through. The albatross around the goalers ' necks was once again the inability of the defense to stop opposing play- ers from taking shot after shot at the harried netminders. Enemy centers often planted themselves in front of the NU net, and stayed there as long as they wanted, despite the best efforts of the defense. At times, the losses sounded like football scores, including defeats at the hands of Harvard, 12-0, Wiscon- sin, 14-3, Boston University, 9-0, and 12-2, Dartmouth, 11-0, and Boston College, 10-3. The only holes in the clouds of de- spair were against Penn, AIC, Princeton, Colgate, Merrimack, Ver- mont, and Norwich. In the Beanpot, the Huskies failed for the nineteenth time in as many tries to take the championship, being the only team of the four (NU, BC, BU, and Harvard) not to have won at least one title. The opener was the 12-2 bombing by BU, which was followed by an 8- 2 consolation loss to BC. High scorers for NU for the season were Les Chaisson (13 goals, 21 as- sists) and Paul Scherer (13-10), both sophomores. Senior Crawford Bell led the team in goals with 16 for the season. Fernie Flaman ' s second season as icemen coach at Northeastern was much the same as his first, this time with a record of six wins and 20 losses. But, while things looked bad on the surface, there were glimpses of the success that Flaman ' s rebuilding program would begin to show the following season. While the defense still needed a lot of work, a younger and more pro- ductive offense was unveiled, led by junior center Les Chaisson. The Husky skaters scored 102 goals for the season, while giving up 146. The figures were much better than in the previous year, {Jl for and 175 against). Following Chaisson ' s 21 goals and 40 total points were three soph- omores: Wyane Blanchard (18,39), Allan Dunkle (22,36), and Terry Toal =1 (10,30). Captain Dan Eberly starred in the goal again for the Huskies, stopping 581 shots in 19 games, and letting only 92 goals by him. As in the past two years, Eberly ' s superb talents were often hidden by the in- adequate play of his defensive teammates. At the end of his three seasons as the Huskies ' starting net minder, Eberly had had 2,219 pucks fired at him, of which he managed to stop 1,909. It is to Dan ' s credit that he withstood such an onslaught, when his talent could have been more readily acclaimed at a better hockey school. The Huskies were once again un- successful in their attempt for the first NU Beanpot Championship. The opening round was again the stumbling block (Northeastern has made it to the championship only twice in the tourney ' s 19-year his- tory), with Harvard doing it to NU, 8-3. The consolation game, traditional home of the Huskies, was a 5-4 loss to Boston College. There were several high points to remember during the season, how- ever. The first was a stunning upset win over BC in the fifth game of the season by a score of 8-7. At about the midway mark, NU again sur- prised by defeating St. Lawrence 5- 4. The games were often marked by late-period collapes, an indication of inexperience. But the youth of the team, with only two seniors and three juniors, combined with the flashes of talent that the youngsters showed, gave the hope at the end of the season for better things to come. The 1968-69 track seasons were among the most successful in North- eastern history, with the indoor and outdoor teams winning a combined total of 14 meets, while losing only two. Irwin Cohen ' s teams were cap- tained by hurdler, long-jumper and triple-jumper Jay Jellsion. Also among the top performers were shotputter Andy Kenney, dash- man Ron Hunter, distancemen Larry Joseph, Mike Roberts, Mike Scanlon and Bob Fallon, and javelin thrower Fred Silva. The highlights of the indoor sea- son were romps over Bates and Bos- ton College, and a three-point vic- tory over Holy Cross. The only loss of the Winter was a 75-74 defeat at the hands of the Rhode Island Rams. The Huskies finished a poor third to perrenial powerhouse Harvard in the Greater Boston Championships in February. Outdoors, the only loss was to, of course, Harvard in early April, a 76- 33 shelling. Only St. John ' s managed to come close the rest of the way, as the others fell by ten or more points. And, again, the tracksters fell to Harvard in the GBC ' s in May. _ -The tracl team suffered the same t f fate as in the previous year. - ' Assistant Coach Everetti«  aker tS said, It ' s a case of Northeastern .beiBg far supferior to everyone ex- cept Harvard, and Harvard beirigfar [ ahead of us. BuUwe ' i; catching up fev ry year, andTomeday we ' ll take 1969-70 was not to be the season, however. The team, under the lead- . jBShip of ptain and 600-yarder Mike Roberts, went 8-2 indoors, and went undefeated in five meets outdoors. Only St. John ' s, 56-53, and Har- vard, 72-76, took the Huskies in the Nm% . In FdhTf Tj U again -missed the GBC tif , wiUi I tyard victor. ' ' ' || T Outdoors, the fliSlH|[||Dn all lal iflStets, and captureothe pston College Relays, only to fiaish sjcond in the GBC ' s; Q7 P e0 t i f Crimson. Consistent performers for NU in- cluded distance runners Larry Jo- seph, Tom Wittenhagen, Mike Scan- on, and Ralph Bowman. Tim Sweeney led the hurdlers, while Tim Sirois, Billy Riggs, and pole vaulter Jim Carisella led the field events. r£ . JB rmm a Following the beaten path forged by the teams of the years before them, the ' 70- ' 71 Husky trackmen were outstanding in almost every meet, except when facing Harvard. The squads, captained by Tom Wittenhagen indoors, and Larry Jo- seph outdoors, compiled 7-3 and 6-1 marks, respectively, but failed to take the Crimson in both the Febru- ary and April Greater Boston meets. Supported by such strong per- formers as shotputter Mel Taylor, New England Champion in that event; hammerman Tom Sirois; IC4A Champion Jim Carisella, school record-holder in the pole vault; star hurdler Tim Sweeney; and distancemen Ralph Bowman and Paul Horrigan, the team stum- bled only against four teams. They were Rhode Island, St. John ' s, Brown, and as usual, Harvard. The indoor GBC score was Har- vard-104V4, NU-53, and then the rest of the Boston area schools. Out- doors, it was much the same thing, with the Johns taking the Huskies for a ride, 104-79. It seemed that it would be years before Harvard could be challenged, but it happened sooner than anyone thought it would, in t he Winter of 1972. ' s.ZkJ: Everett Baker ' s prediction that the Huskies would catch Harvard fi- nally became reality in 1972. On a star-studded team with unbeatable depth, there were many stars con- tributing to the undefeated indoor and outdoor seasons. But among those who really shone for Coach Ir- win Cohen, voted New England Track Coach of the Year, were in- door captain Jack Flynn; outdoor captain Larry Joseph; polevaulter Jim Carisella; and distancemen Ralph Bowman and Paul Horrigan. Also starring were Bill Milton, a freshman who went undefeated in the dash; hurdlers Tim Sweeney, Pe- ter Sabia, and Carl Sandy; field events men Mel Taylor, Bill Riggs, and Walter Martin; and distance men Billy Rowe and John Wooten. In the third meet of the Winter season, the Huskies shocked the New England track world with a •, -ii  l i stunning 61-48 crushing of the Crim- son. The win was called a fluke by sportswriters, and the Huskies were given little chance of a repeat win in the GBC ' s, Harvard ' s annual posses- sion. The Northeastern team ' s depth and strength in every event showed through, and NU emerged on the winning end of a 94-67 pasting in the Championships. The streak continued in the Spring, as the Huskies, who only run as visitors during the outdoors sea- son because the school has no out- door track, went undefeated in dual meet competition, and took the triple crown of New England Track-the BC Relays, the Outdoor GBC ' S, and the New England Cham- pionships. The NE title marked the fitting end to the most memorable season in the 51-year history of Northeastern track. Iiii ii Coac|B hn ' linker ,,i_,®tinoiiv 1969 tedifr never quite livea up to ' Hts potential, and despite the pre-season promises of good pitching and de- fense, the Huskies finished the Spring with a 8-11 record. There were times when the pitch- ing, defense and hitting all seemed to come together, and at those times the team was devastating. Among the casualties were Boston College, 10-4, Tufts 7-1, Colby, 12-1, and Brandeis, 17-1. At other times everything went sour, with New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and MIT among those to profit from the Huskies ' problems (12-5, 9-0, and 7-0, respectively). In addition, Northeastern ' s base- ballers were shutout five times dur- ing their up-and-down year. There were consistently hinifc stars for the Huskies, one of the berst being thirdbaseman Pat Bauer, who led the team in hits (26) and batting average (.351). Bauer also tied for the RBI lead with leftfielder Tom Mig- liaccio with 16 apiece. Junior Art Kosta led the starting pitchers, hurling 47 innings with a 1.72 ERA. The entire pitching staff gave up 81 runs for the year, only 48 of which were earned. The offense managed only 86 scores, many of which came in outbursts of five or more runs in one game. In Greater Boston tsPague play, the Huskies showed a dismal three wins and six losses beating only Tufts, Brandeis and Boston College and finishing sixth in the seven-team conference. The 1970 baseball season, in the words of Coach Tinker Connolly, was a big disappontment. While the pre-season press releases de- clared that the team had hopes for a College World Series berth, and being a contender for the Greater Boston League title, something went wrong along the way, and the -team finished with a mediocre 9-9-l_ record. With six sophomores starting dur- ing most of the season, the team ' s in- experience contributed heavily to the streaky performance on the field. The Huskies started by winning their first three games, dropped their next three and then won two more and tied one. A four-game losing streak then followed, preceding a turnabout, and three straight wins -1910- again. Two losses among the last three games accounted for the final tally. The most promising of the sophs was outfielder John Wright, who batted .290, while leading the team in homeruns, four, and runs batted in, 14. Junior Gary Hogg was among the best in the field, handling his catching chores. Allan Jackson, drafted number one by the Pittsburgh Pirates, was the leading hurler, throwing 43% in- nings and compiling an astounding 1.03 ERA. Of the 20 runs that got by Jackson, only five were earned, with the remainder the result of errors in the field. Northeastern ' s Greater Boston League record was 4-4, placing them fourth behind BC, Tufts, and Harvard. The big question at the beginning of the 1971 season was whether or not Tinker Connolly could come up with the pitching to match his quick defense and powerful hitting. The answer in the end was No, and the team that showed so much promise in April trudged home with a record of eight wins and thirteen losses at the end of the campaign. The baseballers had not scored so many runs, 102, or hit so many homeruns, nine, or come through with so many hits, 151, in years. But neither had the pitching staff given up so many runs to opposing teams in years, 100. That was the story of the season; NU scored one run, Brown scored two; the Huskies scored four, and Colby tallied five; NU came through -1971- with two, and Harvard counted 11. Despite the overall record, Dick Patchett shone on the mound. The soph righthander threw 51 % innings and gave up eight earned runs, for a 1.41 average. Rick Grim led the team in strike-outs, with 41. The batters were once again led by power hitter John Wright, whose .308 average included 24 hits, five homeruns, and 16 RBI ' s, all team- leading figures. In the Greater Boston League, NU won three and dropped six, to finish in a tie with Tufts for fifth place. The Huskies finally lived up the expectations, after years of promise, by qualifying for the NCAA regional Playoffs for the first time in six years. In a season which saw Tinker Connoly ' s boys go into the playoffs with a record of 16 wins and 5 losses, there were many stars, the greatest of which was Tom Rezzuti. Rezzuti, a junior outfielder, shone at the plate on on the field, leading the team in runs (29), hits (30), dou- bles (5), homeruns (2), and batting average (.370). Rezzuti also played flawless centerfield, being one of only two starters to go the season without an error. Rezzuti was named to the Greater Boston League All-Star Team, along with four other Huskies— shortstop Steve Giambianco, leftfielder and captain John Wright, third baseman Mike Archambault, and pitcher Mark Whittemore. Wright led the team in RBI ' s, with 17, and was the second leading bat- ter, with a .273 average. Tops among the pitching staff were Rick Grim, Whittemore, Mike Shea, and Steve Umbro. Umbro and Grim both sported records of 4-0, and ERA ' S of 2.18 and 1.72 respec- tively. Whittemore went 3-3, and Shea threw two wins and two losses. The season started with two losses, and after five games, the Huskies stood at 3-2. They then went on a 12 game tear, losing to Springfield to end the streak. Some of the more devastating victories in- cluded St. Anselm ' s 12-1, Boston College, 11-1, and Bowdoin, 12-1. The Huskies traveled to the Uni- versity of Connecticut for the Re- gional play-offs, and it was there that they met their unmakers. Losing to Connecticut in the first game of the series, 5-2, the baseballers were faced with a must-win situation to avoid a second loss and disqualification. They came through once, beating Providence College in a close 4-3 game. Facing their old nemisis. Harvard, they collapsed. One of the only five teams to beat the Huskies during the regular season, the Crimson started fast, scoring 15 times in the first three innings. With the score 18-6, the game was called in the seventh due to darkness, and the remainder was scheduled for the next day. Monday brought no changes, and after the final two innings. North- eastern had been bombed, an unde- served humiliation at the end of an otherwise unforgetable season. HE SENIORS IBERAL ARTS Scott Kaeser English Everyone suspects himself of at least one of the cardinal virtues, and this is mine: I am one of the few honest people that I have ever known. — F. Scott Fitzgerald Barring the natural expression of villany which we all have, the man looked honest enough. —Mark Twain H. Kennedy Hudner The old that is strong does not wither. Deep roots are not reached by the frost. From the ashes a fire shall be woken, A light from the shadows shall spring; Renewed shall be blade that was broken. The crownless again shall be king. Journalism -Candalf the Wizard John Philip Mello Political Science Then the fourth part of the poem broke free, its wild wind carrying him higher and higher. And the words, like hard-brined fists of fire beat back at the sun. -Elliott Baker A Fine Madness Elizabeth J. Anterni Journalism Cheshire Puss, she began, rather timidly, would you tell me, please, which way I ought to walk from here? That depends a good deal on where you want to get to, said the Cat. I don ' t much care where, said Alice. Then it doesn ' t matter which way you walk, said the Cat. Donald C. Leamy English And these few precepts in thy memory Look thou character: When the stakes are high, logic is obscene to a politician; Nobody forgives a favorite who loses by seven lengths; and Revenge is a dish which people of taste eat cold. Ntichelle P. Saffioti Sociology It is not reasoning that are wanted now; for there are books stuffed tull of stoical reasonings. For what constitutes a child?-lgnorance. What constitutes a child? Want of instruction; for they are our equals so far as their degree of knowledge permits. — Epictetus Jeanne Ryder Music History and Criticism I swear by my life, and my love of it, that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine. -Ayn Rand Alias Shrugged Cordon E. Castanza English There are new directions everywhere. In the odyssey of my life I wonder sometimes about the road not taken. One consolation may be that there is still time to retrace my steps and try others, but never forgetting the experi- ence of all those that went before. Stephanie Urban English All that is necessary for the forces of evil to win in the world is for enough good men to do nothing. — Edmund Burke Thomas A. Rozum Biology Richard William Brown Everyone searching for The Answer, Yet never finding it. Peace stxjght for and not obtained. Saving graces? I counted two— Debbie, my wife. And our baby, Tara. lack R. Coldberg Journalism Journalism I would like to thank all the people I have known at Northeastern. I hope it has been as pleasant for you as it has been for me. ' ' 5 - 1 Anne Sullivan Political Science As you throw the weight of your influence on the side of the good, the true, and the beautiful, your life will achieve and endless splendor. It will go on in other, bigger, finer, nobler than you ever dared to be. -Anonymous Bernard T. Costigan Economics Things that come to mind as I think about what to write: Softball, Drum Corps, The Elms, Goffs Falls, N.H., and Baseball. Larry and John, always re- member Row, Column; Row, Column; Row, Column; Row, Column Brian Gladue Please allow me to reproduce myself, I ' m a man who strove for some taste. I ' ve been around for long, long years. Done many a thing with style and grace. But to think that I ' ve done all that. And have come to question all that I ' ve craved. Just let me say, you ' ll all still be in the circus. When I ' m laughing, yes, laughing in the grave. Allan B. Deitch Biology Independent Don ' t ever try to change yourself! Because the self you are trying to change yourself into is the self that should be changed. -Alan Watts William Alan Gifford History Make no little plans; they have no magic to stir men ' s blood, and prob- ably themselves will not be realized. Make big plans: aim high in hope and work, remembering that a noble, logical diagram, once recorded, will be a living thing, asserting itself with evergrowing intensity. Remeber that our sons and grandsons are going to do things that would stagger us. Let your watchword be order, and your beacon, beauty. Diane Martin Biology Juventud, divino t soro jYa te vas, para no volver! Cuando quiero llorar, no lloro Y a veces lloro sin querer. —Ruben Dario, Nicaragua Paul J. Scoglio Psychology This isn ' t anything different. Its just the same because I ' m the same per- son. Five years gone by is no time at all. Not enough to see the change. I ' m just the same because it ' s just the same. This wasn ' t anything different. George Banos History Thanks to all who contributed to make the Judo Club the great success that it was. Good luck to all members-past and present. Christine Kurowski Mathematics. It is my fervent hope that my whole life on this earth will ever be tears and laughter, tears that purify my heart and reveal to me the secret of life and Its mystery, laughter that brings me closer to my fellowmen. — Kahlil Gibran from Secrets of the Heart William D. Saunders Political Science He vkfho knows himself to be master of his days concludes that all is well. This universe without a master seems neither sterile nor futile. The struggle toward the heights is enough to fill a man ' s heart. Edward John Giangrande Economics In order to perform a particular task in the most efficient manner one must possess the proper tools. Northeastern University has bestowed upon me a tool chest filled with knowledge awaiting all tasks. Many thanks to all. Mary L Cappadona Sociology With mixed feelings I say good-bye. To all the wonderful people I ' ve come to know, especially those in the Chorus, thank you. It ' s been real. Mary Ann Voutselas The heart has its own memory like the mind. And in it are enshrined the precious keepsakes. —Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Deborah Barrett Sociology Psychology No man can reveal to you aught but that which already lies half asleep in the dawning of your knowledge . . . If he is indeed wise he does not bid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads you to the threshold of your own mind. — Kahlil Gibran from The Prophet Peter Schneider Political Science To grow is to change and to have changed often is to have grown much. —John Henry Newman Glen R. Forman Within the city lies the future of humanity. History - ; John Ferguson Chemistry A new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it. —Max Planck Elinor Boise Medical Technology Though nothing can bring back the hour of splendor in the grass, of glory in the flower, we will grieve not, rather find strength in what remains behind . . . —William Wordsworth Arthur John DeDonato Physics Some men see things as they are and say why? I see things that never were and ask why not? —Robert F. Kennedy Joel Davidson Drama and Speech Nothing in the world is more important than man caring for his fellow man. Moral justice must come to be before we are ever to succeed as a culture. Let it be, let it be. Teri Silken Drama May the long time sun shine upon you and the pure light within you guide you all the way. Olga Anganis English Ready am I to go, and my eagerness with sails full set awaits the wind. Only another breath will I breathe in this still air, only another loving look cast backward. And then I shall stand among you, a seafarer among seafarers. — Kahlil Gibran, The Prophet Steven Kaufman journalism First say to yourself what you would be; then do what you have to do. — Epictetus Steven Edward Leary Political Science Respect is what we owe; love, what we give. -Philip James Bailey If we are to attain anything in our lifetime, we must act in this manner, whether it be with a friend or foe. This is our key to success. Nicholas Ruggiero Biology You Me Who are we, the class of one thousancJ nine hundred seventy-three? A small entity, graduating in an era of discord uncertainly. Here is our plea: To live in a world of peace, love, serenity! Audrey A. Brown Psychology I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, wtien I came to die, discover that I had not lived. —Henry David Thoreau Maxine G. Cohen Political Science . . . along the way I ' ve learned some things. You have to make the good times yourself, take the little times and make them into big times and save the time that are all right for the ones that aren ' t so good. Joseph Murphy K ' an Philosophy and Religion Water flows on uninterruptedly a nd reaches its goal The image of the abysmal repeated. Thus the superior man walks in lasting virtue And carries on the business of teaching. Paula Leanne Leavy Journalism I came hoping Northeastern would make me a better person, but I left hoping that I had made Northeastern a better place. Cayle M. Chesterman The happiest heart that ever beat Was in some quiet breast That found the common daylight sweet And left to heaven the rest. —John Vance Cheney Psychology Robert T. Forte History An admonition for my fellow graduates as they go out into the world: in this dog eat dog woHd try to retain some of your humanity, but ' emember, if you turn the other cheek, you may get the other fist. Carol Facella Sociology He who has everything except true values is a thirsty man who quenches himself with ocean water. The salt drives him on to yearn for all that man can possibly conceive and much that he cannot. He lives for him- self, and the love affair is truly epic. -Meir Kahane John F. Hahesy English A truly learned man does not display pride in his knowledge but humility upon perceiving the infinite complexity, beauty and energy of creation. Caii Paris it was a pleasure knowing you though nervous and swiftly did you move about me. life is no different for you without me. the times keep changing and getting better i may be defeated before i ' m old but, oh, the times i had believing. Sociology Joy Levack English If you ask me what I have come to do in this world, I will reply, ' I am here to live aloud. ' Nothing can be done except little by little. Great minds have pHjrfxjses, others have wishes. I wish, I wish. Virginia K. Barry Psychology Into the steaming cauldron I throw this tidbit of wisdom: enjoy the plenty of time, my friends. And try not to build your castles In the air out of pre- fabricated materials. Kevin J. Doyle Political Science It is a great thing to have a sense of humor. To go through life with no sense of the humorous and ridiculous is like riding in a wagon without springs. — Beecher N.U.H.O.C, Val. Gerard Roy Time, Time, time. See what ' s become of us While we looked around for our possibilities. We were so hard to please. Look around. The grass is high. The fields are ripe, Ifs the springtime of our lives. —Paul Simon Political Science Judy Jacksina Drama Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond; cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education. -Mark Twain Maureen Flanigan Biology Looking back, I saw how every safe generality I gathered in my travels was canceled by another. —John Steinbeck A woman ' s eccentricities are what makes her lovable. —Goethe paraphrased Susan E. Parker Hold fast to dreams For if dreams die Life is a broken-winged bird That cannot fly Hold fast to dreams For when dreams go Life is a barren field Frozen with snow -Langston Hughes Valerie Therrien History Political Science True friends who care and are ready to listen make your life livable and ivorthwhile. Alan ). Lappin Modern Languages I ' avais toujours un extreme desir d ' apprendre a distinquer le vra avec le faux, pour voir clair en mes actions et marcher avec assurance en cette vie. — Descartes, 1637 Ellen Burns After the turn you finally learn to go along Your feelings are blind so you don ' t mind if its right or wrong. Political Science Robert M. Rooney . . . be that self which one truly is. — Soren Kierkegaard Geoffrey Latsha A product from the scheme A product from the plan I ' m not quite a machine And I ' m not quite a man. Books won ' t teach you all So don ' t search for it Oh, there ' s one thing more I ' m not quite a poet. Political Science Biology Donald Brault Biology Let there be no scales to weigh your unknown treasure; Seek not the depths of your knowledge with staff or sounding line; For self is a sea boundless and measureless. -Kahlil Gibran from The Prophet Michele Diamond I am only one. But still I am one. I cannot do everything. But still I can do something; And because I cannot do everything I will not refuse to do the something that I can do. —Edward Everett Hale Sociology Daniel R. Fishman FIVE YEARS (1) Wendy . . . Commuting . . . NUB . . . Pledging . . . Hair ... (2) NUB . . . AEPi . . . CO-OP . . . Washington . . . Strike . . . Long Hair ... (3) Apartment . . . Longer Hair ... (4) Love . . . HAIRCUT . . . France . . . 4.0 .. . (5) Student-teaching . . . growing-up . . . Future-gazing . . . Wendy . . . NOTHING ENDURES BUT CHANGE! Peter D. Rose Philosophy A person asked a holy man, Instruct me so that I may be illumined. The holy man replied, The Absolute is the only reality; everything is un- real—realize this and then sit silent. What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence. L.W. Philip A. Cataldo Political Science A man does what he must-in spite of personal consequence, in spite of obstacles and dangers and pressures— and that is the basis of all human morality. —John F. Kennedy from Profiles in Courage Sandra Lee Mott In the earth-realm all is crossed; Wierd ' s will changeth the world. Wealth is lent us, friends are lent us, man is lent, kin is lent; All this earth ' s frame shall stand empty. —from The Wanderer History Steven Paul Freedman journalism Anxiety and elation were synonymous with Northeastern as I was thrust through a five year whirlwind at this academic community. The pressures of doing well in school and of obtaining a good co-op job have been disheveling, but satisfying in the end. Northeastern is an experience I do not want to forget. Karen Frankel Your greatness lies within yourself. Give from the very depths of your soul. Without any limiting, without self-seeking. And you will be enriched. Psychology Donna Sowell and nobody was angry enough to speak. Robert Levinson Education sows not seeds in you. But makes your seeds grow. — Kahlil Gibran Psychology Modern Languages David W. Hdyward Biology What is life It is pulling doors marked ' Push ' and pushing doors marked ' Pull ' and not noticing notices whiih sav ' Please Use Other l5oor ' (from You and Me and P.B. Shelley by Ogden Nash) Paul Ruhlman Biology My teachers could easily have ridden with Jesse lames for all the time they stole from me. Say what you will. Do what you will. You cannot make me believe that Blue is Dead. Martin A. Dallon Political Science Without the love and sacrifice of my wife it would not have been possible. Elizabeth W. Young We have tomorrow Bright before us Like a flame Yesterday A night gone thing A sun-down name And dawn today Broad arch above The road we came We march! -Langston Hughes Psychology Christopher Greene Mathematics There is in all things a pattern that is part of our universe. It has sym- metry, elegance, and grace. When man disrupts this pattern the forces of the universe retaliate. Robert DeMarzo The only life worth living is one that aims at ideals. -G.F. Stout (1860-1944) Unselfishness consists in sharing the interest of others. -Santayana (1863-1952) Grace is to the body what clear thinking is to the mind. -LaRochefoucauld (1613-1680) Political Science Charles B. Gold Never Again Cheryl Cheney If you had listened hard enough you might have heard what I meant to say. How tall we are. We ' ve learned so much. Everything it seems. But how to stay in touch. -Rod McKuen Sociology History Anthony DiDonato Michael A. Jacobs C.F. U.S.L.T.N.R.B. MC2 Physics Political Science Let the fxjwer be sufficient as the need that invokes it. Activities: Freshman Dormitory Council; Student-Faculty Advisory Board of Liberal Arts 1,2; Student Council 2,3,4,5; Chairman of Council University Parking Committee 2,3,4,5; Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity 1,2,3,4,5; Vice Presi- dent, ZBT, 3; Corresponding Secretary, ZBT, 2; Inter-fraternity Council 3; Student Court Justice, Executive Secretary 4. David S. Ferriero It is so small a thing To have enjoyed the sun. To have light in the Spring, To have loved. To have thought. To have done? —Matthew Arnold Gerald F. Lordan English Political Science There are many confusing things in this world, most of which we will never understand. Such a reality does not, however, excuse non-in- volvement. For it shall always be far better to light one candle than to curse the darkness. William E. Minsinger Biology Deign on the passing world to turn thine eyes. And pause a while from learning to be wise. —Samuel Johnson Kenneth McLean Modern Languages Before I entered this institution of thought and mind development, it was continuously drilled into my head, Co to college and you will get a better job. Well, five years of study and financial expenditures, and now I ' m out, where is my better job? Sheldon Louis Mover Psychology Where there is no knowledge, there Is no understanding, and without understanding there can be no knowledge. Brian J. Donovan Yacht Club Racing Team Captain Philosophy Ronald M. lannazzi Political Science A word is not a crystal, transparent and unchanged, it is the skin of a living thought and may vary greatly in color and in content according to the circumstances and the time in which it Is used. —J. Holmes Elaine Poirier Time is . . . Too slow for those who wait, Too swift for those who fear, Tcx3 long for those who grieve, Too short for those who rejoice; But for those who love, time is not eternity. —Henry Van Dyke Sociology Stephane A. Makseyn When life gives you lemons, make lemonade. Carlton Strobel Anthropology Chemistry Truth shall emerge from the interplay of attitudes freely debated. Don ' t be misled by fanatics who say that only one truth should be stated: Truth is constructed in such a way that it can ' t be exaggerated. -Piet Hein John J. McCarthy, Jr. Thanks to all in the Northeastern Community. Joseph M. Morrissey All these people that you mention Yes I know them, they ' re quite lame I had to rearrange their faces And give them all another name Right now, I can ' t read too gcx)d Don ' t send me no more letters no Not unless you mail them from Desolation Row. -Bob Dylan Political Science Rita A. Tibbetts Mathematics The only true measure of success is the ratio between what we might have done on the one hand and the thing we have made of ourselves on the other. -H.C. Wells Paul J. Boyle Biology But it is not your own Shire, said Gildor. Others dwelt here before Hobbits were; and others will dwell here again when Hobbits are no more. The wide world is all about you: you can fence yourselves in, but you can- not forever fence it out. Gail Holbrook While you and i have lips and voices which are for kissing and to sing with who cares if some oneeyed son of a bitch invents an instrument to measure Spring with? ... the thing perhaps is to eat flowers and not to be afraid. — e. e. cummings Scott Knowlton Drama and Speech Psychology It seems that in attempting to facilitate personal growth, one acquires two things: a long neck and a taste for shoe leather. Marc R. Collard Sociology Five years at Northeastern has taught me reality. Although I ' ve been only fairly satisfied academically, the opportunities afforded by the co-op peri- ods in Boston have shown me life as it is. As one leaves this university, one Is not entering the world, merely continuing in it. Emma M. J. Northup All. Journalism Alen R. Beerman Political Science Today is the essence of tomorrow. We must not procrastinate over our deliberations whether to grasp it, or it will turn into yesterday and be gone forever. Eric R. Smith English Everyone suspects himself of at least one of the cardinal virtues, and this mine: I am one of the few honest people I have ever known. Richard G. Louf Modern Language Watching, calculating, weighing the scales according to my own peculiar standards. My life, my world is one of the crisis. I feel so far away from the happy little things in life that I have forgotten how to find them again. Vincent J. Lembo Political Science Come my friends, ' tis not too late to seek a newer world. Push off, and sitting well in order smite the sounding furrows; for my purpose holds to sail beyond the sunset . . . until I die. -Alfred, Lord Tennyson Jessica Landau Sociology These past four years have been filled with experiences that will long be remembered. But you can never go back, for in doing so, you find that nothing stays quite the same-The biggest change though, is within yourself. Lynn Norris Mathematics Going to college is an experience from which I have greatly benefited. It has broadened my perspective of life both intellectually and emotionally. I have learned what true friendship is and I will always remember my friends from NU. Jeffrey Pepka Political Science When I look back on these past few years I feel some sense of growth and accomplishment They were years of maturing, years of many experi- ences and meeting many fjeople. I look forward to the future with hope and optimism and a sense of purpose. Richard D. Neville Political Science It is human nature to discount your past achievements and look forward to new ones, to feel the past achievements will be insignificant compared to what will come. — Enzo Ferrari Kenneth Goldman And miles to go before I sleep. And miles to go before I sleep. Virginia Shepard My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends- It gives a lovely light! —Edna St. Vincent Millay Political Science Biology Patricia L. Weslowski Political Science And so ends a beautiful freedom. It ' s over, I ' ll miss it. It could have been more free, but that matters not now. It remains, as all things, a positive experience. Donna Marie Burke I will never laugh at traffic reports again. And never fill out another computer card, I will control my hysteria on entering a parking lot. And hofjefully, I ' ll remember some of what I learned, arxd use it for good purposes. Journalism John L. Abbott English Sahron A. Abdelahad Political Science Frank E. Arthur Economics Philip R. Anderson Economics William L. Backman Political Science Kenneth A. Basche Political Science Bruce S. Baum Mathematics Joost J. G. Baumeister Mathematics Catherine F. Bergeron fournalism Ceri S. Bergman Sociology Yasmin D. Bicsevas Modern Language Everett G. Bishop Mathematics Carroll W. Blake Sociology Robert |. Botterio Sociology Margaret Bowen Saciology r% L — Charles M. Brackett Mathematics Shelly C. Braun Mathematics John C. Brewer Biology Lesley A. Browman Sociology Diana P. Brown Political Science |ohn E. Bucacci Political Science Erma J. Buckley Economics Amy L. Burke Medical Technology Allan M. Carman History Michael E. Castillo Sociology Mary L. Centola English Suzanne L. Chalfen Political Science Jon A. Chilingerian Political Science I Sho W. Chu Mathematics Jay C Colen Journallsnn Janine S. Conner Journalism Brian G. Cooper Physics Gerard J. Corbin Mathematics Bonita A. Couterman Biology James C. Cram Economics Roger E. Cullen Biology Patricia A. Curley Drama Michael j. Daley Biology Sylvia A. Danella Medical Technology Royal T. Davis Biology Edward R. Delia Paolera Political Science Patricia A. Desisto Political Science Daniel J. Desjaroins History John S. Disilvestro History Patricia C Donaldson Political Science John L. Duffy Psychology Stewart R. Ehrlich Political Science Susan A. Emery Medical Technology Gary R. Esposito Political Science Barry Feinstein Political Science Thomas J. Fields Sociology Linda A. Firestone Drama Kathleen M. Fisher Medical Technology Jerrold S. Fishlin Mathematics Susan C Flanagan Sociology Zandra I. Flemister Political Science Robert M. Fogel Sociology Robert Foley History Louise A. Forrest Medical Technolog Lancelot A. Forrester Political Science D. James Fraser Political Science Lawrence E. Fuller Economics Steven B. Getzoff Mathematics Dominic L. Giannangelo Philosophy Ann Marie L. Gilbert Political Science Betsy J. Golberg Sociology Lawrence Grimaldi Biology Martha L. Groomes Economics Richard D. Groves Biology Mary E. Harrington Sociology lames G. Hawkes Qiemistry Roberta Hawkins Political Science George E. Healy English Melvyn L. Hcchi Biology Howard B. Hellen Psychology Stephen A. Hiltz History Maureen D. Hollins English Patrick C. Hunt Chemistry Josef J. Hurwitz Journalism William F. Huxley Mathematics Santo Ippolito Modern Languages Russell B. Jenkins History Donald F. Jordan History Jeffrey P. Kadison Independent Patricia A. Karolow Biology Theodore W. Kazo Psychology Penny B. Kefalas Philosophy Ellen M. Kelley Mathematics James ). Kelly History Walter C. Kennedy Political Science Elizabeth Killgoar Psychology Lynne Kiorpes Psychology Michael H. Knoll Psychology Monika Kratzmann English Andrea S. Lambert Mathematics Diane M. Lennox Chemistry r Sheri B. Levin Journalism Robert |. Limoncelli Psychology Juliet M. Lewis Economics Jeffrey R. Lief Psychology Alice M. Loszewski Medical Technology Barry F. Lowenkron Biology Richard K. MacBarron History Daniel J. MacDonald Philosophy Edmond F. Maes Psychology Joel H. Malman Mathematics Mary ). Mann Political Science Elveta M. Martin Political Science James J. McArdle History Jeanne M. McNeil journalism Susan A. Michaud History Marilyn S. Miller Mathematics Douglas E. Moffat Biology William W. Moffet Sociology l John F. Molina Chemistry A. Thomas Montrone Sociology Douglas C. Moran History Thomas F. Morey Political Science Dorinda M. Moul Art History Margaret A. Moynihan Biology Thomas J. Mullins Biology Geraldine R. Murphy Sociology Laurie E. Murphy Ps ychology Sharon E. Murphy Psychology Margaret A. Nally Psychology Roberta L. Nelson Medical Technology Judith C. Newton Mathematics Constance A. Neyer Journalism Valeria A. Noonan English Stephen P. O ' Connor Biology Kathleen M. O ' Doherty History Ronald A. Oleet Political Science Walter M. Olihovik Political Science Michele O ' Rourke Political Science Eliott M. Oven Sociology Joseph E. Pasciak Mathematics Barbara R. Pasvoll Sociology Arlene J. Patashny History James R. Pavao Mathematics )ames F. Phillips Economics Linda N. Platzer English Ronald |. Portman Chemistry Michael S. Primack Sociology Marilyn D. Princi History Elaine T. Profy Political Science Timothy J. Quinn Political Science Donna R. Radcliffe Psychology Barbara A. Ratti English Linda ). Raymond Mathematics Leonard F. Raymond Political Science Kenneth M. Reed Mathematics Mathew R. Rello Sociology Douglas J. Renfrew Psychology Margaret M. Ruler History Joyce R. Rollins Mathematics Barry Rosenberg Psychology David L. Rosenfield Political Science Helen L. Ross Drama Robert A. Rusciano Political Science Bemadette Ruskey Journalism Courtney C. Russell Biology Patrick Ryan Political Science Angela Saboeiro Economics Patricia M. Sadler Sociology Nancy E. Schlosberg Biology Paul V. Sebra Mathematics Kathryn L. Seekell Political Science Wendy L. Spangler Biology Michael B. Sailer Political Science t . ' lames Spencer Activities Susanne M. Sheil Political Science William D. Smolnycki English Linda D. Spicer Psychology Paul B. Silverman Biology Bradley Sohn Political Science Marilyn G. Squeglia English Craig R. Stepno Political Science Arthur W. Stowe History Dennis J. Sullivan History Nora L. Sullivan Medical Technology John T. Summers Biology Lynn W. Sutherland Medical Technology lames ). Sweeney Mathematics Sandra ). Sweetser Psychology Gayle E. Tarpinlan Medical Technology Debra M. Toto Political Science Robert C. Thatcher Biology William C. Thornton Economics Judith C Traiger Sociology Kenneth W. Turcotte Psychology Timothy C. Udall Mathematics Kenneth J. Valente Psychology David F Varga Political Science Lawrence Vigneaux English Karen L. Visco English Donna J. Walsh Medical Technology William G. Watt Psychology Lawrence M. Weiss Drama Kenneth L. Wengrod Economics Leonard P. Wesley Physics Joseph S. Whittier Medical Technology Maureen K. Wiggins Sociology James F. Williams Journalism Sylvia A. Wironen Psychology Allen S. Wluka Drama Otto W. Wolf Political Science Richard G. Wonson History Nancy E. Worrell Mathematics Toby R. Zager Sociology Thomas W. Desmond TREUE BIS AUF DEM TOD ROTC 73 GOTT MIT UNS Marie A. Donnelly History Physics 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 ' s beautiful. Bernard Drew English Pfui. I am not a common cheat . . . not that I am a saint. —Nero Wofe Wolfe Archie Goodwin in Rex Stout ' s Instead of Evidence Ion Arsen Political Science . . . The ultimate good which is desired by society can best be reached by a free trade in ideas-The best test of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market, and that truth is the only ground upon which our wishes safely can be carried out ... It is an experiment, as all life is an experiment . . . Barbara Campagna After 5 years of footshifting and waiting, may these be the last lines I have to contend with at Northeastern University. Speech and Hearing Daniel Frio History Dedicated to Laurie: That man (woman) Is a success who has lived well, laughed often and loved much . . . who looked for the best in others and gave the best he had. -Robert Louis Stevenson May our success be found together. Harold Edward Cohen Biology Being a member of Northeastern University ' s Cooperative Plan has been very beneficial in affording me the opportunity to be exposed to both the research and clinical hospital environments in which I hope to be actively involved as my life ' s work. Kevin )ohn Hallisey Political Science Each man ' s life represents a road toward himself . . . or an attempt. Each of us —experiments really— strives toward his own destiny. We can under- stand one another; but each of us is able to interpret himself to himself alone. lark Cook Economics Difficulty is an excuse history never accepts. Thou shalt not make history. Hemenway St., Homer St., Franklin St. Number 81, Oscar ). Tuffner is alive and burning in every home. Nomey, Pookie, -Abby. William Alan Hilshey Biology I attend college to learn, not to profess; to build, not to tear down; to receive, not to reject. I can not dictate world morality nor world politics, and neither can my peers; for many admit they can not find their ever elu- sive identity. Charles D ' Ambrosio Mathematics I love my family; I love my wife; I love music; I love life. What else is there? Kevin Danell And I have felt A presence that disturbs me with the joy Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime of something far more deeply interfused; And then you spread a sanguing smile as an infant who ' s stood awhile, and you take a first unsteady step: There ' s nothing I can do. I ' ve been set into motion and I ' ve only to continue. And you realize what you always knew. — Bom Sankar Bholenath Steven M. Kahn Chemistry Such an utterance may be explained by the consideration that people do not know what they ought to say but only that they must say something. -S. Kierkegaard Danny Kwok-faiso Biology It has been a delightful experience for the past five years studying in this country, working on the co-op, and getting to know new friends. There we re, of course, times of tribulation, but overall it was a meaningful adventure! Peter MacFarlane Modern Languages Paulette Speight Economics )e suis comme ie suis ]e suis fair comme qa )e ne suis pas comme les autres |e suis fait pour plaire Que voulez-vous de plus Qu ' est-ce que ga peut vous faire Je suis comme je suis I ' aime a qui je plais Et n ' y puis rien changer Merci beaucoup Stous les Professeurs qui mont compris. Stuart Rutenberg Economics What i think of this school as an institution, or as a social value, could not possibly be expressed here. The last time I used those words I got my mouth washed out with soap. Barbara Ryan lournalism Les seules limites de la decouverte sont les limites de imagination humaine. How life is strange and changeful, and the crystal is in the steel at the p)oint of fracture, and the toad bears a jewel in its forehead, and the mean- ing of moments passes like the breeze that scarcely ruffles the leaf of the willow. Gregory F. Stiles History I came to Northeastern University not knowing really what I wanted. While in school, I was cynical at times. But as I leave, I know what career to pursue. I will make it. Thanks to family, DAT, H|D, WF, and WAG. Robert Sullivan One does not begin feasting at dawn but at sunset. Kierkegaard, The journal, 8 1 1835 Rudy VanVeghten Psychology English Wisdom is a feeling of what the state of things should be. Knowledge is the understanding of what the state of things is. In much wisdom is much grief, and is there an escape? I have increased my knowledge— can I en- dure the pain? Louis J. Venuto History Nancy E. Sciarappa lournalism Incessant falls teach men to reform, and distresses rouse their strength. Life springs from calamity, and death from ease. Men of special virtue and wisdom are wont to owe these powers to the trials they have endured. — Mencius Stefan J. Smith Take time to think-it is the source of power. Take time to play-it is the source of youth. Take time for friendship-it is the secret of happiness. Take time to laugh— it helps lift life ' s load. Take time to dream— it hitches the soul to the stars. Take time to love— it is life ' s only lasting investment. Biology In the long run men hit only what they aim at; though they should fail immediately, they had better aim at something high. — Henry David Thoreau Lawrence M. Weiss If you can ' t walk alone. Don ' t try to run with me! Diana T. Wong I sit— now paralyzed by my hilarity- laughing at the riddle that is myself . . For I am my greatest mystery— the intricate composite of my past, and the ultimate answer to my future. And I sit now stimulated by my enigma- Laughing at the puzzle That is my life . . . Drama Sociology NGINEERING Rick Kravjtz ' Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe. All mimsy were the borogroves, And the momeraths outgrabe. Beware the Jabberwock my son. The jaws that bite, the claws that snatch. Beware the Jujube bird. And shun the fruminous Bandersnatch. —Lewis Carroll Electrical Engineering Kenneth A. Thompson Industrial Engineering To quote a not very famous philosopher— me: Life is like a bank; you get out of it what you put in to it, and then some diMd Thomas A. Watson Electrical Engineering If you find a task, though it ' s not your bit And it should be done, take care of it. And you ' ll never conquer or rise it you Do only the things you ' re compelled to do. Hobbies: Chess, woodworking, scuba diving, swimming and skating. William A. Sarruda Chemical Engineering Northeastern is a good university because the professors respect the stu- dents. However, Northeastern could become much more prestigious if only it would improve its football team and schedule. There has been some improvement but much more is needed. Go N.LI.! George S. Klocek The thing that distinguishes thought from thing is that thoughts are harder to thinl . —Pier Hein William Philip Michalowski Michalowski, William Philip, Hanover, Mass. Mechanical Engineering, Dean ' s List 2,3,4,5 Pi Tau Sigma 3,4,5 ASME 3,4,5 ICET, ASCET Sverdrup Parcel Assoc, Boston, Mass. Jackson Moreland Co., Boston, Mass. Picker X-Ray Corp., Stoughton, Mass. Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering John W. McCormick Salvatore J. LaRiccia Chemical Engineering Mechanical Engineering If the stars should appear one night in a thousand years, how would men believe and adore, and preserve for many generations the remem- brance of the City of Cod! —Emerson r Martin S. Leff Good guys finish last! David Fox Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering There is no hope for freedom in a country whose people are proud of a government they should be afraid of. Robert Mockapetris Electrical Engineering If you want to do your own thing, you become a soloist. Harvey F. Manne Industrial Engineering We do, doodley do, doodley do, doodley do, What we must, muddily must, muddily must, muddily must; Muddily do, muddily do, muddily do, muddily do. Until we bust, bodily bust, bodily bust, bodily bust. The Books of Bokonon James F. Dillon Electrical Engineering He ' s a guy like you and me with warts and worries and un- fulfilled dreams. He puts it all on the line when the bell rings. He ' s a man who savors life because he has seen too much death. He ' s a fireman. Mark Horeanopoulos If nothing else, it ' s been a time When I ' ve come to know and need Starshine. Mechanic al Engineering John Hamalainen A silver-scaled dragon with jaws flaming red sits at my elbows and toasts my bread I hand him fat slices and then, one by one he hands them back when he sees they are done Stephen H. Olster ACTIVITIES: Radio Club, Treasurer Electrical Engineering Electrical Engineering Steven Goldberg Electrical Engineering I sincerely thank my parents for putting up with me for the extra five years not to mention the years before that. (And I even thank the nudgy Monkey.) Bradley I. Berit Mechanical Engineering To all my friends at Northeastern; Members of the Student Union, fellow classmates, and especially to Fred Colarusso, I would like to give my deep- est thanks for helping me thru the rough times and laughing with me thru the good. Gary N. Doyle Electrical Engineering After five years of rising tuitions, mind boggling courses, and much hard work, my only regret is not having met every member of the class of ' 73. Brian Kerrigan Industrial Engineering I have enjoyed college life at Northeastern. I ' ve been enriched by all the experiences and interactions of the past five years. Now, I am saying good- bye to a stage in my life of which I will have many pleasurable memories. Onward in life I go. Terry A. White Mechanical Engineering If this generation cannot find the solutions to the problems of today, then there may not be any succeeding generations to meet the problems of to- morrow. If we do not develop the technology to cleanse the earth, than no one will. Roland E. Lefebvre Electrical Engineering Peace is now showered on all men like the falling of rain or the fluttering of snowflakes. Peace has to be earned; it has to be deserved. John R. Risitano Civil Engineering Thanks to all those who made it enjoyable and good luck to those who have finally made it after five long years. Joseph G. Lally Electrical Engineering 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 ' s beautiful. David G. Hicks To Sandi: Let ' s hope the wait has been worth it. James I. Watts Electrical Engineering Mechanical Engineering President-Tau Kappa chapter of Pi Tau Sigma, National Honorary Me- chanical Engineering Fraternity. Program Cnairman— Student Chapter of American Society of Mechanical Engineers. We are left now with the memories; some to try to forget, the rest to cherish. Thomas A. Baumes Electrical Engineering To NU I leave my $10.00 a day parking space on Forsyth Street in hope that some day a library, equal to none, will be built on it. James W. Grundy Mechanical Engineering I will always cherish my days and friends made at Northeastern Univer- sity, and throughout the coming years, I will do my best to live up to North- eastern ' s traditions. Ijmes Cimaglio Industrial Enf lniH ' rlng There are cerlain queer limes and occasions in this sirange mixed affair we call life when a man takes his whole universe for a vast practical joke. -Herman Melville Larry Cohen Chemical EnRineering Happiness is to be finished with Unit Operations Lab. 1 - . Mark Rosenbaum Mechanical Engineering When I came to Northeastern University, 2 + 2 = 4. When I left, 2 + 2 = f - w (x) - ma + m dx + ( i - hi| i g dt Is this what I spent $12,000 for? Does anyone know Rube Goldberg? Neil H. lanson Electrical Engineering Happy is the man who finds wisdom, and the man who gets understand- ing, for the gain from it is better than the gain from silver, and its profit better than gold. She is more precious than jewels, and nothing you desire can compare with her. James A. Pappas Civil Engineering Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent rev- olution inevitable. — |ohn F. Kennedy Loren Swingle Industrial Engineering As I look back over my college years, I see some changes that have taken place in the world. Violence is on the rise. Apathy towards violence is rising with it. I can only hope it will change. Bruce Savik AB F.A.A.D. John D. Stevens Beyond the bright searchlights of Science, Out of sight of the windows of sense. Old riddles still bid us defiance. Old questions of Why and Whence. -William Cecil Dampier Whetham Civil Engineering Industrial Engineering Raymond R. Narciso Mechanical Engineering Narusso . . . PE . . . January 17, 1969 . . . TKE . . . Friday night horror shows . . . The House . . . Good times . . . pledgemaster and house- manager . . . North End Italian Festivals . . . used cars . . . hunting and fishing . . . Lola, Sam, and Slob . . . rushing tor a parking space . . . CO- OP .. . August 18, 1972 . . . combat zone. Robert D. Curll Civil Engineering Here is a man, who after five long years, asks, Where do I go from here? First, he realizes where he is; in a professional sense, and can only hope that whatever direction he takes from here will be favorable. Else S. Bettencourt As a beauty I am not a great star There are others more handsome, by far But my face— I don ' t mind it. For I am behind it- It ' s the people in front get the jar! Lester M. Cohen Industrial Engineering Civil Engineering There is a choice of two courses, and I will not lay down for you which to take; use your own judgement. One course will being you to a pair of pre- cipitous rocks . . . the other course leads between two cliffs . . .which? Roy E. Hanssen Electrical Engineering To my wife: If ever two were one, then surely we. To my friends and relatives: Thanks. To anyone who knows me: I always made it to class— eventually. Richard E. Grazer Solitude is impractical. Society fatal; Keep the head in one. The hand in the other. .... And with your foot . . hmm-ah Whatever happens Chemical Engineering Thomas E. Migliaccio . . . and in the end. the victory is peace. Donald H. Marr Electrical Engineering Civil Engineering Future Environmental Engineer-Co-op assignment with Camp Dresser McKee-R.O.T.C. 1,2,3-Model Railroad Club 1,2,3,4,5, President 2,3,4,5,- Known in his section as CHOCH . There goes the Turbo Train. Frederick P. Colarusso, Jr. Mechanical Engineering Laugh and enjoy life to its fullest at all times. For even in your moments of despair, if you think hard enough, you can remember a time when things were worse. While you are worrying about the future, your todays are slip- ping into yesterdays, and that is truly time lost. James Chiang Chemical Engineering Oh! My Cod! Another unit operation report! Thomas DeCaetano Chemical Engineering The dreams of the last generation are the realities of today. What might seem today as impossible should not be discarded, but instead pursued fully. With determination today, the impossible will be a reality for tomorrow. Donald A. DellaRocca Mechanical Engineering Smile, it makes [jeople wonder what you have been up to. Robert E. Sheffield We dance round in a ring and suppose. But the secret sits in the middle and knows. —Robert Frost Joseph Pobliner Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering I have learned these past five years that any goal can be achieved if those seeking it have the desire and conviction to obtain it. Man, given any chal- lenge, regardless of how impossible it seems, can achieve any end for both the good and the bad of humanity. David R. Dawley Mechanical Engineering During my years at Northeastern I have received two of the greatest as- sets a man can obtain: knowledge and friendship. Thomas G. Hartnett Electrical Engineering Discontentment comes in proportion to knowledge. The more you know, the more you realize you don ' t know. Remember this ... in any field of scientific endeavor, anything that can go wrong, will go wrong. - Murphy ' s Law Electrical Engineering Roger Marini Wonders of a lifetime, Right there before eyes. Searching with this life of ours. You ' ve got to make the journey, out and in. Thanks for the memories, N.U., but now I, too, must make my journey, out and in. Vasken M. Bogosian Industrial Engineering Every human being has an expertise, a means of expression, a differing set of values, and they must be respected for it. Without a platform based on respect nothing ever built arose to touch the skies unless some man dreamed that it should, some man believed that it could, and some man willed that it must exist in one ' s life style. ■f m .. Kenneth Renda Mary had a little lamb. She also had a bear. I ' ve often seen her little lamb. But I ' ve never seen her bare. Dana A. Woodbury By the way we live in our confusion And the way that we misspend our youth. By the time we ' re stripped of our illusions We may find illusions are the truth. Electrical Engineering Electrical Engineering William P. Bodkin Electrical Engineering O to sail In a ship. To leave this steady, unendurable land. To leave the tiresome sameness of the streets, the sidewalks and the houses. To leave you, O you solid motionless earth, and entering a ship. To sail arxJ sail and sail! -Walt Whitman Chester Lee Chemical Engineering The communists disdain to conceal their views and aims. They openly declare that their ends can be obtained only by the forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions. Let the ruling classes tremble at a communist revolution. The proletariat have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. WORKINGMEN OF ALL COUNTRIES, UNITE! Paul I. Douglas Mechanical Engineering For the excruciating pain of five years of boredom I leave no cure. Frederick Banta Chemical Engineering Now gainer up sea shells. And write down brave words. Your prayers are unanswered. Your idols absurd The seaweed and cobweb Have rotted your sword. Your barricades broken Your enemies Lord. James Y. Wong Electrical Engineering Progress in the advancement of science and the exploration of space should always be strived for. We should not condemn the space program as too costly. Technology through the ages has created many jobs. On the other hand, one is justified to condemn the wasteful spending on the Viet- nam War. Michael Sansevero Electrical Engineering It ' s much better to live life than look at it . . . for it is prudent to recall man with moonbeams in his hands has nothing there at all. l mW Edgar CSeely III Civil Engineering Today is tomorrow? Sometimes one does not follow the other is a steady stream. One should make plans for the future in the present, as today ' s experience shows, today ' s tomorrow is a lie. Plan for tomorrow! Live for today! William A. Pritchard, Jr. Mechanical Engineering 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 he hears, however measured or far away. — Thoreau Stevan J. Thayer Electrical Engineering To Ann-Marie, without whose patience this would not have been pos- sible. And to my parents for their help and support during those troubled times. To George K. and Joe L. for their friendship, help, and famous words: Don ' t worry, next quarter will be downhill. To Dr. M.S. for being more than a professor. To Mr. Swanson for his help and guidance. And to all the teachers I have worked with: Thank you. Wai Yuen Tse Electrical Engineering Knowledge gives one the best smile and college is the entrance to knowledge. Oiristopher William Oura Commanding officer of Pershing Rifles 5 President Sport Parachute Team 4,5 FAA Senior Rigger Scuba Diver Lawrence S. Small Like a bridge over troubled waters. There will be a guide; Like a bridge over troubled waters. There will be a guide. Search for that guide. Electrical Engineering Chemical Engineering Bernard X. Chenette ir. Go and feed your mind. —A professor concerned with the human animal. Civil Engineering Chemical Engineering Wayne T. Crandin Let everyone mind his own business, and endeavor to be what he was made .... 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 Stephen Marko Mechanical Engineering Tact is the unsaid part of what you think; its opposite, the unthought part w+iich you say. John V. Madden Industrial Engineering I wished for all things that I might enjoy life, and was granted life that I might enjoy all things. May you enjoy the horn of plenty without blowing it. John F. Loomis Industrial Engineering Well, I ' m finally though with classrooms. But I just can ' t seem to get away from class. Someone is forever telling me that I don ' t have any. But the day I start worrying about that is the day I start wondering why I live in a world filled with idiots. Sheldon Lam Electrical Engineering I wish to thank my parents, my brothers and my sister for all the help and encouragement they have given me the last five years. They helped make my education a success at Northeastern. Brian S. Nelson Civil Engineering If s extremely difficult to put five years onto a piece of paper. Northeast- ern has given me so much. Besides my academic education and personal experiences, the past five years have given me a personal development and a new awareness making values and judgements and setting goals for the future. My basic goal-happiness. Mark P. Fitzgerald Electrical Engineering You win some, you lose some . . . some get rained out. Roger Raymond Dwon Electrical Engineering He ' s a true friend. He doesn ' t care if you ' re black or wfiite, man or woman. Republican or Democrat. He cheers when you ' re sad, comforts when you ' re lonely, understands when you ' re troubled. This loyalest of friends is not scarce though. He ' s a dog. David C. Dunlap With love and thanks for my wife and parents. Power Systems Kenneth Thomas Power Systems Activities: Member-Huskey Key, Auto Club, HKN TBn B 1) President- T B 11 Interests: Engineering, Cars Future: Middle Class America May the future fulfill our needs and desires to be fruitful and con- scientious individuals. Kevin A. Kirby Power Systems Member, Eta Kappa Nu What constitutes a life well spent? Love and admiration from our fellow men is all that anyone can ask. Edward Blocker If every man were granted a wish. This one wish. Oh come to me: Never to look within, and have cause to say, If only I tried, if only I had tried. Kenneth L. Albringer Electrical Engineering Power Systems My college days (which were many years) showed me a great deal in life. There are countless pursuits for me now. I came to understand one important guide in life. One must follow that path which has a heart. Eor otherwise you will not be fulfilled. Paul Johnson Power Systems I ' ll forget about the strike, the bomb scares, and the crowds at N.U., but I ' ll never forget the good friends that I have here and especailly the very special person I met in the library who has changed my life so much. Joseph Ryzewski I hold it true, whate ' er befall; I feel it, when 1 sorrow most; ' Tis better to have loved and lost Than never to have loved at all. Power Systems Bryan i. Richards Why are we so impatient to end That which we so spirited began. And find new things to fancy our mind With the old not properly mellowed? William). O ' Conner III Electrical Engineering Industrial Engineering Higher education must never assume the comfortable haven of objectiv- ity, the sterile pinnacle of moral neutrality. In our perilous world, we cannot avoid moral judgments; that is a privilege only of the uninvolved. David John Early Mechanical Engineering I May, I Might, I Must If you will tell me why the fen appears impassable, I then will tell you why I think that I can get across it if I try. —Marianne Moore Edward G. Calante Civil Engineering My time at Northeastern has yielded more than just a degree. It ' s been an education from which I ' ve derived a greater appreciation of the feelings of others, a new set of ideas, and an objective approach towards understanding. Barry Frank Novich Electrical Engineering Have I finished my education or is my education just about to begin? Walter Beck Civil Engineering A man should never be ashamed to admit he is in the wrong, which is but saying in other words, that he is wiser today than he was yesterday. —Jonathan Swift There is no limit to the good a man can do if he doesn ' t care who gets the credit. — judson Branch Howard Marcus Electrical Engineering We were talking-about the space between us all And the people-who hide themselves behind a wall of illusion Never glimpse the truth-then it ' s far too late-when they pass away. —George Harrison Philip W.Dowd Mechanical Engineering .... that I can face the future with the confidence to conquer, peace of mind to be happy, and fond memories to remember ... is that I have friends who have supported, a family which has encouraged, and parents that have loved. Alan I. Hansen Electrical Engineering Impressions: A sigh of relief— it ' s finally over. Five long years, both good and bad. I found my love; now to find my life. Stephen Niers Electrical Engineering THE PURPLE COW I never saw a purple cow, I never hope to see one; But I can tell you, anyhow, I ' d rather see than be one. -Gellett Burgess THIS SPACE RESERVED FOR FUTURE ENHANCEMENT John Sabbag, Jr. Civil Engineering After five long years at N.U., I find that my Road of Life is under construction. Paul J. Meyer My transcience here has brought— knowledge maturity memories friends a wife. May the future abide— my dreams. Mechanical Engineering Narayan N. Cidwani Electrical Engineering Three passions, simple but overwhelmingly strong, have governed my life: the longing for love, the search for knowledge, and unbearable pity for the suffering of mankind. — Bertrand Russell Charles J. Ackerman Electrical Engineering Many commemorable and tragic events have occured while we were studying at Northeastern. Let us strive for more commemorable happen- ings and fewer future tragedies as we pass through the business world of tomorrow. Continual success to all! Joseph M. Salvo Mechanical Engineering Man sets many goals throughout life. Some he may achieve while others may always remain unreachable. He works just as hard for those he attains as he does for those he can not. Why? Elizabeth Ellen Ames If you think you are out-classed, you are. If you think you dare not you won ' t. Think that you can and you will Ifs all in the state of mind. Life ' s battles don ' t always go To the stronger or faster man. But sooner or later, the one who wins is the woman who thinks she can. Electrical Engineering George D. Quinn Mechanical Engineering Mechanical Engineering Active Member Pershing Rifles 1968-1970 Coop Employment-Army ' s Research Labs Watertown One aspect of the cooperative method of education is that It puts a first dent into a student ' s idealism with respect to professional employment. Steven M. Liberfarb Mechanical Engineering The real danger of our technological age is not so much that machines will begin to think like men, but that men will begin to think like machines. —Sydney j. Harris Thomas Hyrcaj Mechanical Engineering Never fear that your life might come to an end. Rather, fear that it might have no beginning. William Littlefield EXPRESSION To preserve one ' s sanity We should be willing at times To part with some of it In whatever form that may be For then we are not losing it, Only exchanging it. Mechanical Engineering Steven V. Alfano Mechanical Donald W. Alger Industrial Steven V. Amato Electrical Robert P. Anastasi Mechanical Robert F. Anthony Civil Kenneth C. Baldwin Mechanical Edward J. Banzy Mechanical Stephen C. Barberi Electrical John S. Barry Electrical Ronald A. Beaupre Mechanical Stephen F. Behrle Electrical Mark B. Beisecker Mechanical lames B. Bernard Power Systems Jeffrey |. Bianca Electrical Thomas R. Benham Industrial ■I vM Paul R. Bonatz Industrial Mark I. Bornstein Chemical Christopher Bosco Industrial William |. Bracken Chemical Edward N. Bradbury Mechanical Robert C. Bradstreet Industrial Michael S. Braheney Electrical Robert F. Brenn Civil Edward J. Broderick Chemical Clinton S. Brown Civil Leslie C. Brown Qvil Robert F. Bucelwicz Civil Donald G. Burgess Electrical Donald R. Cabral Electrical Steven J. Cabral Civil Ralph A. Campanelli Industrial Michael C. Carey Chemical Michael J. Carey Mechanical James V. Carisella Mechanical Wayne L. Carlson Chemical Richard E. Caron Mechanical Donald Carr Power Systems Richard J. Casabona Electrical P. John Cataldo Civil Richard P. Centola industrial James C. Chagnon Electrical Robert W. Chagrasulls Chemical Louis E. Champagne Power Systems Ronald W. Chandler Civil (!w B HHI mk BKKm Pan Yi Petr Chen Mechanical Donald J. Chiavaroli Mechanical Hans T. Clarke Mechanical Moshe I. Cohen Mechanical Stephen P. Conti Civil William J. Cook Electrical Vintenl Costa Electrical Lawrence S. Cotton Civil Steven J. Couto Chemical Bouglas G. Coy Civil Donald E. Crafts Jr. Mechanical Ronald E. Creamer Mechanical John L. Curcio Mechanical Michael E. Cusack Industrial Paul Czarnowski Mechanical Karl Dalenberg, )r. Civil Richard M. Delorme Electrical Anthony J. Dilioeo Chemical ' SJ nc- i i h Paul B. Doran Civil Anthony M. Deltufo Civil Robert C Dobson Civil Fred L. Douglas Civil Richard E. Dupre Civil Thomas J. Desisto, Jr. Civil Francis X. Donovan Civil l % rC?: ) Roger A. Drake Industrial Paul V. Diamond Industrial 1 : . lIlMiid John A. Donovan Industrial William M. Dwyer Industrial Kevin M. Eastman Electrical Walter P. Eaton Electrical David R. Edwards Mechanical Douglas P. Ellis Industrial Lawrence P. Erekson Civil Donald G. Ericson Industrial Stephen S. Fader Qvll Thomas E. Fahey Civi James J. Fallon Electrical Robert M. Farrell Civil Arnold S. Feinberg Mechanical Alan Fiorente Mechanical Harry R. Fitzpatrick Industrial Alan A. Fletcher Electrical Dennis M. Florie Electrical Michael C. Flynn Civil Michael |. Forman Mechanical Robert W. Fox Electrical Arthur S. Frank Electrical mr Robert M. Franzblau Industrial Stephen F. Freitas Electrical Glenn ). Friedenreich Electrical Charles M. FroehJich Chemical Dale J. Gallant Mechanical Thomas C. Gates Mechanical Stephen P. Gelshecker Mechanical William M. Genovese Electrical Michael G. George Electrical Michael B Gilbert Civil Alan W. Goddard Civil Howard Goldberg Civil William R. Gonella Industrial Henry E. Goodhue Civil Janet B. Gorcenski Mechanical Theodore R. Grave Power Systems Charles K. Gray Industrial Robert M. Gross Mechanical Vs.. 14 Glenn S. Haas Civil Kenneth P. Hadley Industrial Ronald R Hagopian Electrical Richard S. Hahn Power Systems Robert F. Halle Industrial Kenneth E. Halliday Electrical Abdulkader Hamadeh Civil Raymond F. Hankinson Mechanical Paul W. Hannigan Civil William Hartman Electrical Channing S. Haskell Electrical Stephen P. Hassell Civil John P. Hawko Qvil Robert E. Hindin Electrical Francis X. Hitchcock Civil Neil A. Hoffman industrial - John R. Holland Mechanical Sterling W. Honeywell Mechanical Shiu K. Hung Electrical Russell O. Huntington Civil Donald J. Huntley Civil Charies L. Hurwitz Chemical Joseph A. Jankowski Electrical Richard A. Johnson Industrial John W. Keating Gvil Paul M. Jendzejec Civil Thomas R. Jordan Mechanical Russell E. Keene Mechanical Bruce E. Johnson Civil George C. Karadimas Electrical iA Dennis G. Kelley Electrical Carl Johnson Civil J Leonard S. Kasendorf Industrial Ralph A. Kelliher Electrical Edward J. Kenney Chemical Scott A. Kendrick Mechanical Paul W. Keohan Civil Robert A. Kimball avil Hans ). Kivijarv Mechanical Kenneth D. Klint Mechanical Robert ). Kobylarz Mechanical Daniel R. Kogut Chemical Walter W. Kostrzewa Mechanical John A. Krawczyk Civil Robert Kursmark Mechani cal Richard |. Kwoiek Civil Kwok N. Lam Electrical David M. Larson Electrical Kenneth D. Larson Industrial Donald R. Leclair Chemical Donald ]. Leffingwell Mechanical Frank H. Lemay Qvil Robert H. Letourneau Civil Stephen P. Levreault Civil Anthony T. Lionetta Civil Edward E. Lisavich Electrical James M. Lombardi Mechanical Edward M. Lowell Industrial lohn P. Luongo Civil Francis X, Lucey Civil John Mac Donald Electrical Robert W. Mackay Electrical Paul E. MacNevin Civil James A. Madden Mechanical Phillip I. Maillet Electrical Robert Maksian Electrical Joseph P. Mandosa Electrical Richard A. Marsden Mechanical John J. Marshall Civil Gerard P. Massa Electrical Michael G. Mastrianni Electrical Aldo Mastrocola Electrical I Leonard E. McBroome Civil Robert R. McCoy Power Systems James L. McGrath Mechanical Timothy J. McGrath avil James Bryan McLaughlin Electrical Paul V. McQuade Civil Septhen E. Meisner Civil Michael J. Menovich Electrical Robert C. Merrill Civil Norman F. Meunier Mechanical William F. Michael Electrical Fred E. Michelson Mechanical George V. Mileris Mechanical Frank M. Milos Electrical Ahmad Minai Electrical Brian M. Mulligan Electrical Stephen C. Mullin Civil John K. Murphy Civil Lawrence E. Murphy Electrical Thomas J. Murphy Chemical David W. Muselwhite Electrical Paul E. Nangeroni Mechanical Anthony N. Navikonis avil Edmond Negari Chemical Thomas ]. Nigrelli Chemical Henry T. Nover Civil Randall ). Nowell Electrical James F. O ' Leary Civil Walter L. Oliwa Electrical John E. Owens Electrical Michael W. Oyer Electrical Richard R. Papetti Mechanical Andrew M. Pappastergion Civil Peter R. Paradls Mechanical Adalberto J. Paruas Mechanical Carl R. Persson Chemical Kenneth J. Petraglia Civil Kenneth |. Pilczak Electrical AJWSS rlk Stephen J. Pizzotti Industrial Stephen C. Plotner Civil Jean E. Poisson Electrical Francis A Pokrant Mechanical ■ ' Thomas ). Prodouzi Chemical James M. Quigley Mechanical James M. Quinn Electrical Allan M. Rabinovitz Industrial Marc H. Raibert Electrical Robert J. Rancatore Mechanical Vincent M. Rappa Civil Wayne W. Reeves Civil Charles A. Riley Mechanical Cordon A. Robertson Electrical Steven ). Rosenstein Mechanical Philip C. Rowlinson Industrial Arthur I. Rudin Electrical Gerald J. Ryan Civil Joel B. Sandberg Electrical Leo J. Schiavello Industrial Gary M. Schuman Civil Antone R. Sebastiao Mechanical Paul W. Shaneck Industrial Frederick S. Sholds Mechanical Walter P. Siemiatkaska Civil Alan M. Silbovitz Civil William R. Skelding Chemical Kevin M. Smallhorn Chemical James L. Smallwood Chemical James R. Smith Mechanical Peter M. Smith Civil William J. Smith Electrical Richard Sobocinski Mechanical Henry G. Soones Power Systems Gary A. Steinberg Industrial Brian P. Sterman Civil Walter H. Straetger Electrical Robert Streeter Civil Michael K. Stryker Civil William F Sullivan Mechanical Howard M. Swanson Mechanical Hugh J. Sweeney Electrical Richard J. Tambini Electrical K.T. Thomas Tchang Chemical David F. Tobiason Civil William R. Valentine Electrical Robert C. Vergnani Mechanical Charles A. Viola Chemical Gerald |. Viola Chemical Billy R. Wachtenheim Industrial Stephen J. Walker Civil Kevin J. Walsh Civil Alan T. Waters Chemical S- iTJ a ' l William G. Weaver Civil Timothy J. Webster Chemical Earl H. Weller Mechanical Lawrence C. Wetmore Electrical Lawrence G. Wemer Industrial Roger C. Whipple Electrical Donald M. White Industrial Steven R. Wilson Civil Richard K. Wizeman Civil Thomas G. Wu Industrial Michael E. Ziobro Civil Chiu Kun Woo Civil Gary ). Zawada Civil Richard A Zimbone Chemical Mark M. Zuberek Civil Laird Bruster Mechanical Engineering Can I interest someone in repaying my student loans!? Lawrence Y. Chu Electrical Engineering PEOPLE OF THE WORLD, UNITE AND DEFEAT THE U.S. IMPERIALISM AND ALL THEIR LACKEYS! PEOPLE OF THE WORLD, BE COURAGEOUS, DARE TO FIGHT, DEFY DIFFICULTIES AND ADVANCE WAVE UPON WAVE! THEN THE WHOLE WORLD WILL BELONG TO THE PEOPLE! Joseph A. Costa Industrial Engineering One of the most often unrecognized properties of education is that It is not an obvious, outward sense of being but a subtle, unnoticed entity. Robert L. Fratto From freshman fantasies and fraternity madness. To sophomore jinx and unlimited hassles. A tightrope of smoke, Another grade made. Power in protest. We all know the way; To middler and junior. It ' s all over now. Don ' t plan to look back, Ahead ' s where I ' m bound. Industrial Engineering Jorge iglesias Mechanical Engineering Wonderland gives you a comfortable and spacious library, good parking facilities, excellent food, well-arranged schedules . . . and beautiful co- eds. John J. Mandler, Jr. Electrical Engineering Of all the preposterous assumptions of humanity over humanity, noth- ing exceeds most of the criticisms made on the habits of the poor by the well-housed, well-warmed, and well-fed. —Herman Melville Anthony N. Navikonis Civil Engineering The years which I have spent at Northeastern University have been some of the most challenging and decisive years of my life. Bmce A. Rodgers YA OCHEN RAD. Nanci J. Williams Civil Engineering Chemical Engineering . . . but we just keep on marching— generation following generation— as if we can hear no other drum. So I must continue to walk those streets as a soldier without a weapon with a war raging all around me. C Peter Woodman Civil Engineering Things must change and we must change with them. Up through our un- dergraduate years we have changed. These changes have made us aware; this awarness has taught us responsibility; this responsibility we must take with us from these semi-responsible years. This is the change we must make. Are we ready for this change? Vincent E. Kierstead Industrial Engineering Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers. -Tennyson As friendship is earned through knowledge, friendship also lingers on. To never stop seeking knowledge is to never be without friends. USINESS Richard P. Crowley You now have the vision to see. Business Administration Student Accounting and Psychology majors Track team— 3 years Christy Guzzetta This above all: to thine own self be true. And it must follow as the night the day. Thou canst not then be false to any man. Farewell; my blessing season this in thee! Accounting Management —William Shakespeare Hamlet Robert Brauner Management These benefit man today, but principally in the hereafter: honoring par- ents, practing loving-kindness, eagerness to learn, hospitality to guests, vis- iting the sick, dowering the bride, escorting the dead, devotion in prayer, bringing peace amongst men; but studying Torah equals all. Gregory C. Fyfe Management Long after most of the academic material is forgotten through the course of time, I will still retain two things in my mind about Northeastern— happy memories and eternal friendships. lacques K. Miller, Jr. Industrial Relations From where you came and to where you ' re going not many will remember your name. Pessimism? Maybe. A truism? Possibly?! But what is important to remember is that anyone can make it if they try hard enough. Samuel Grozalsky Accounting To solve the problems of the future, Man must first solve those within himself. John M. Flynn Marketing I can no other answer make but thanks, and thanks, and ever thanks. Mark Barry Goldstein Accounting We are all products of the past; but, also producers of the future . . . With this possibility and with what we have learned and experienced we must venture to make this inherited world a better place for ourselves and OUR products. KimYee Accounting How time flies! What ' s left is just the sweet memory of what has passed. There is no presence due to the fact that all our senses are to that which has just passed. For we see the past, hear the past, smell the past. Bruce H. Wheeler Finance and Insurance A plea for peace by Alfred Lord Tennyson: When shall all men ' s good be each man ' s rule and universal peace be like a shaft of light across the land? John Sentas Marketing From the world I ask only that I be allowed to live, be free, and love. CaHton N. Ross If nobody cared just a little for you And nobody thought about us. And we all stood alone in the battle of life What a dreary old world it would be. It ' s giving and doing for somebody else On that all life ' s splendor depends. And the joy of the world when you ' ve summed it all up Is found in the making of friends. — Unknown Accounting Paul W. Dobbs Accounting Remember that to change your course and to accept correction is no surrender of freedom; for your act is accomplished in accordance with your own desire, judgment, and understanding. Theodore Gerard Dawe Accounting There is nothing so powerful as the truth, and often nothing so strange. Robert C Harrington Finance Yet all experience is an arch wherethrough gleams that untraveled world whose margin fades forever and forever when I move. How dull it is to pause, to make an end, to rust unburnished, not to shine in use! George E. Mastaby Accounting Yesterday is already a dream, and tomorrow is only a vision; but today, well-lived, makes every yesterday a dream of happiness, and every tomor- row a vision of hope. The Sanskrit ' ymwW- X 1 . iiMal David B. Fisher Industrial Relations In retrospect, it appears that many of my attempts at academic advance- ment during the past five years, which at the time seemed vague, were in reality . . . meaningless. Most likely, the future holds great prospects, such as opening a candy store. Betsy I. Roberts Finance And let today embrace the past with remembrance and the future with longing. — Kahlil Gibran Steven Markowitz Marketing Wherever you are it is your own friends who make your world. —William James Ronald A. Boucher Management What I have been, what I am, what I will be, I owe to my wife Rosemary, But words cannot express love, only feelings and therefore, to love anyone as much as I love her is impossible. We welcome the future together. Judy Rosenberg Accounting The five years of my college life will be remembered for the places I ' ve been, maturity and education I ' ve gained, and most of all for the people I ' ve met and the widsom they ' ve given to me. They have taught me to be more aware of myself and of my capabilities as a person. Marvin D. Getman Vishnas! Management David Coyle, jr. Management I ' d like to thank all those who have helped me while at N.U. I came here very confused and leave slightly confused. I have to thank my wife and my family for putting up with me during exams. Karl Johnson Management If I have gained the world, but lost the Savior, would my gain be worth the life-long strife? Are all earthly pleasures worth comparing for a moment with a Christ-filled life? Walter King The great end of life is not knowledge but action. — T. Huxley Charles L. Grant Brother, Alpha Kappa Sigma; Inter-fraternity Council Like a rat in a maze Tha path before me lies. And the pattern never alters Until the rat dies. Accounting Accounting . Brian ). Humphrey Industrial Relations There was never any more inception than there is now. Nor any more youth or age than there is now. And will never be any more perfection than there is now, Nor any more heaven or hell than there is now. David Ziner Marketing This face you have now glanced upon reflects the look of a Northeastern student bent on receiving a diploma. I finally have one and I must say it is a rewarding feeling. Now the question is where to venture from here. Robert M. Sullivan )r. Finance and Insurance To be a good philosopher, a man must have a strong desire to know, combined with a great caution in believing that he knows. -Bertrand Russell With these words I dedicate these five years of education to my parents. Brian P. Curtin Accounting Alpha Kappa Sigma— social chairman, auditor, inter-fraternity. Sports - football, basketball, softball Some men see things as they are and say why, I dream of things that never were and say why not. -Robert F. Kennedy Daniel E. |. Caudette Accounting The unexamined life is not worth living ... If you have known how to compose your life, you have accomplished a great deal more than the man who knows how to compose a book. —Michel De Montaigne Fred Abdelahad Only that day dawns To which we are awake. Ther is more day to dawn. The sun is but a morning star. Finance Karen P. Goncalves Marketing Happiness is knowing your own strengths and weaknesses-mand mak- ing the best of them. Paul Trostel Marketing And away we go. — Jacky Gleason To put 5 years into 40 words is ridiculous. A special thanks to my teacher, friends, classmates and most of all family for making it all possible. Good bye and peace. - 95686 mM £ Richard A. Roy Finance and Insurance We wish the area of our knowledge to be as profitable as possible. Joseph Finnigan Accounting It is with much satisfaction and eagerness to make my way that I am leav- ing Northeastern. I have enjoyed the involvement in school affairs and will miss my close association with the many wonderful people I have met dur- ing these five years. I wish to thank my wife. Sue, and many friends for much support and understanding. Donald R. LeShane Finance and Insurance The influence of my five years at Northeatern has been considerable. At the start of my freshman year, I was working as a pump jockey at a gas station. By my senior year I was qualified to successfully complete a COOP assignment as a Bank Examiner for the Federal Deposit Insurace Corpora- tion and merit an offer for affiliation after graduation. Erik Hoffer Industrial Relations The majesty of the mind of man stems not from years of learning but from moments of application. Fruitful application of thought therefore creates majesty for men. Faith in one ' s own ideas is the basis upon which I plan to approach my endeavors. Gary Fertig Accounting The times, you know we had some times with gentle women and vintage wines. But that was when we didn ' t know our youth was passing by. Now all we have to think about are times gone by. -Rod McKuen George A. Craig Miles to go before I sleep. ' Management Jeanette Der Business Life seems to be so full of highs and lows, and too often, too many lows; to raise the highs and discount the lows seem like a constant challenge, but yet perhaps the most sensible solution. William Cranswick Mitchell Finance To grow is to change, and to have changed is to have grown much. -John Henry Newman David M. Bloom Accounting To be nobody— but— yourself in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else— means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight; and never stop fighting. — e.e. cummings Lester J. Adelstein Beta Alpha Psi Secretary and Treasurer of the dormitory Freshman Qass Board Study hard for five years; enjoy fifty years of good living Accounting Phi Sigma Kappa-Treasurer ! Ingrid Dahl Now you know that you are free. Living all your life at ease. Each day has its always, A look down life ' s hallways, doorways. To lead you there. —Mike PInder (Moody Blues) Steve Hoberman Management Management Ten years; Z.P.C; PIRG; ).D.; Boston; Cambridge; U.R.I.; P.C; F.D.U.; Good-bye. Albert ). Hagan, )r. Accounting Some misfortunes bring success, some things gained are a man ' s loss. ' -New Testament, Book of Sirach, Ch. 20, V. 8 Walter R. Chiappini Management From Melrose High I entered N.U. as a management major. At N.U. I became interested in the transportation field which I hoped to enter upon graduation. My interest are sailing, hunting, music, and reading. Co-op ex- p)erience was with Brockway— Smith Co. and Star Market. niiP Bruce Haskin Accounting Upon admission a freshman is an unknown quantity; then, the university shapes him, and his friends shade him. At graduation the transition is ap- parent, an individual who is capable of mastering the challenge of our future. Paul H. Manners Accounting To all my friends— esp)ecially those in Senior Week ' 73—1 extend my sin- cerest thanks for many warm and fulfilling relationships. I hope I have con- tributed as much to your lives as you have contributed to mine. Finance and Insurance Peter A. Rossetti Jr. Five years has been a long time and for what? Maybe we only remember the cafeteria and the parking lot, but maybe the days to come will tell. We can only hope. Joel G. Crowell Accounting Senior Week, Bridge, Punters ' 251, 500, Puerto Rico, boat cruises, soft- ball, football games, G.F. baby; all these things and the fjeople associated with them have meant more to me than books or education. So let ' s go for just one. Richard W. Moskowitz Accounting As I lay in my hospital bed incapacitated with a bad leg, I realized how I ' ve always taken something as simple as walking for granted. It is sad that one does not fully appreciate his assets until they become liabilities. Thomas A. Tuminski Finance Now that we are at the stage of choosing our careers, we must used an all or nothing principle. We must either entirely devote ourselves to doing the absolute best in our fields or stand by and let someone else do so. Joseph P. Bouoreau Management As we step into the business world with an education and a degree, let us always remember that this is not a panacea which will insure our future successes, but merely another step in the road of life. We have been given the opportunity— the results will be each individual ' s success or failure. John Buttrick Finance and Insurance I can only hope these years of Blood, Sweat, and Poverty will prove valu- able; maybe I ' ll even get a job!! Signed, 82472 BUTTRICK J 0% 8 3A 440 Gary Brian Melinick Accounting I don ' t know what I ' ve seen here but I know I ' ll never see it again. Michael L. Hurley Marketing Desire. Faith. Auto-Suggestion. Specialized Knowledge. Imagination. Organized Planning. Decision. Persistence. Power of the Master Mind. The Mystery of Sex Transmutation. The Sub-Conscious Mind. The Brain. The Sixth Sense. Sarah J. Anderson Accounting Richard C. Andrews Accounting Eugene P. Archambault Finance and Insurance lames A. Bazydio Marketing ' V Joseph D. Basile Management Ronald L. Berger Marketing il . , ' Stuart R. Berman Finance and Insurance Tighe L. Berman Management Mitchell S. Blaustein Management Mark E. Bookman Accounting David F. Bradley Management John H. Breault Marketing Robert E. Buttner Management Ronald E. Carbary Business Albert J. Carpenter Management Paul j. Colantonio Accounting Doaglas J. Connors Marketing William H. Cotter Accounting Robert C. Coyne Finance and Insurance Alan B.Crawford Management James D. Crowley Finance and Insurance Emil |. Curran Finance and Insurance Lawrence M. D ' Agostino Management Richard ). D ' Angelo Finance and Insurance Rolando DeAguiar Accounting Robert J. Delande Management John F. Delucia Management Michael D. Demarco Management James R. Denormandie Management Edward C. Deschamps Management y Paul J. Donnellan Accounting Richard M. Donovan Finance and Insurance Antonio P. Dossantos Management Richard W. Doyle Marketing Robert J. Driscoll Marketing Richard L. Drummond Management Edward E. Dudevoir Accounting lames W. Duffy Finance and Insurance Dennis J. Duggan Marketing William G. Duke Accounting Michael B. Ekman Rnance and Insurance William P. Everson Management Howard J. Feinstein Finance and Insurance Pedro M. Ferrera Accounting Jeffrey A. Forman Management Andrew N. Forrest Industrial Relations Jerry M. Fortino Accountin Steven R. Freedman Marketing David P. Freni Finance and Insurance Andrew V. Callonio Accounting Robert J. Carber Marketing Thomas C. Gardner Marketing Michael E. Geezil Finance and Insurance Samuel S. Geller Management Robert D. Gersh Accounting John M. Goldberger Accounting Philip L. Goodwin Management Steven S. Gorban Marketing Robert P. Creenberg Management Milton R. Gumey Finance and Insurance ' mw Richard S. Haddad Management Peter D. Hebert Management George C. Helms Finance and Insurance Joseph F. Herlihy Finance and Insurance Laurent A. Hevey Accounting ' WM fSk 7 _- V xT . 1 9 i SHmkI Gary W. Hogg Finance and Insurance Kenneth Honer Accounting George G. Hopkinson Management Patricia Houghtaling Accounting John J. Hudson Finance and Insurance Salvatore J. lacono Management Jeffrey A. Jacobson Accounting Keith E. Jacobson Marketing Thomas F. Jennings Accounting Thomas J. Joyce Marketing Mark I. Jurgrau Finance and Insurance Marvin M. Cahn Accounting James M. Kaloyanides Management 1 _Sil Alan I. Kandel Management Jeffrey D. Kaplan Management Galen J.E. Keller Management Joseph P. Kennedy Accounting Dennis C Klager Marketing Charles H Colbek Industrial Relations Donald J. Kornacki Finance and Insuarnce William A. Kowlczyk Accounting Kevin M. Lacey Management John Lavery Finance and Insurance Joseph C. Lawler Finance and Insurance John H. Lengsfelder Marketing Patrick J. Lawlor Management Stephen N. Levy Management Stephen Lowe Finance and Insurance Jeffrey M. Lieberman Accounting Gary S. Lowenstein Accounting Gregory A. Leonard Industrial Relations Robert M. MacDonough Management Kent D. MacKinnon Marketing Scott L. MacLeod Finance and Insurance Stephen C. MacLeod Accounting David J. MacMaster Marketing Edward D. Mahaney Management Wilson E. Maines Industrial Relations Davjd C. Manburg Accounting Robert S Mann Accounting David C Marino Marketing Thomas E. Mathews Management Robert J. McDonald Finance and Insurance Paul V. McDonough Finance and Insurance Michael V. McKee Management Robert B. McKibbon Finance and Insurance James |. Meehan Accounting Gavin J. Melford Marketing Michael H. Miller Management William L. Moeller Marketing Thomas |. Normile Management Ralph Morrison Marketing David F. Morrissey Management Ronald D. Murakami Marketing Douglas W. Murdock Accounting Donald M. Nee Accounting Paul E. Pagliarulo Marketing David C. Pearson Marketing Kenneth C. Peterson Accounting Linda C. Phifer Management Gordon S. Phillips Management Leslie P. Poinelli Management Chester |. Popkowski Jr. Accounting Sheldon M. Prenovitz Management Thomas M. Pupl Marketing Michael F. Reilly Accounting Charles J. Resler Accoun ting David D. Ribeiro Accounting iFM4 Kenneth A. Rivernider Management Theodore B. Ronkin Accounting Robert C Rossetli Business Edward P. Rudolph Marketing Robert F. Russo Management Gerald P. Russo Accounting Larry J, Segal Industrial Relations Ronald L. Shaw Finance and Insurance Charles E. Shepardson Accounting Peter E. Simonsen Finance and Insurance Harold T. Slack Accounting Richard M. Snyder Finance and Insurance Charles E. Souther Accounting Donald K. Stockwood Management Barry A. Summerfield Management Leonard Y Syat Accounting lay F. Terwilllger Marketing Geralu T. Ineriault Finance and Insurance Howard B. Trauber Accounting Thomas P. Turchetta Accounting David A. Turkoff Industrial Relations Mark |. Wantman Finance and Insurance M ' Daniel B. Weberg Management David N. Weinblatt Accounting Mark A. Wenckus Marketing Richard E. Wennersten Accounting Ralph E. Whitcomb Accounting i ' X w Jf w. .l ' Darlene S. Wiggins Marketing Mark B. Wilcox Finance and Insurance Mark A. Wilder Accounting Irwin D. Wolf Finance and Insurance Ronnie C. Wolfson Accounting Kwok Chee Wong Accounting Richard L. Yates Accounting Howard D. Zidel Accounting Gregory J. Zucco Marketing Christopher Ford The poor beetle that we tread upon In corporal sufferance feels a pang as great As when a giant dies. —Shakespeare Management Cesare A. Protto II Nothing is certain but uncertainty. Stephen Godek Finance Who am I and where am I going? I am a human being in search of my- self. The journey to self discovery is long and lonely, but the sight of the light at the end of the cave is worth the stuggle! Spencer C. Jones Jr. Life is queer with its twists and turns. As everyone of us sometimes learns And many a fellow turns about When he might have won had he stuck it out So don ' t give up though the pace seems slow- You may succeed with another blow. Peter Newman Management Accounting It is better to keep one ' s mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt. Marvin M. Shapiro Finance ... with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God ' s work must be truly our own. -John F. Kennedy Robert Simann Accounting Now is the time to assess our values, determine our goals, and strive to- ward achieving them. George Smart Industrial Relations Whatever ultimate meaning life may have, this much can be said al- ready; life is a call to share in the world ' s making. It is a chance to inter- vene, to contribute, to enhance what exists by the sheer power of one ' s own presence and activity. One cannot be good simply by avoiding evil. To be indifferent or apathetic to the needs of one ' s neighbor, to stand aloof from a world begging for help— is already to be guilty. -R. O. lohan Robert Ougheltree Marketing To all those I have had the chance or occasion to meet and say hello, a simple and solemn-best of luck. To those L have not-why not-and the same. Steven M. Stroum The harder you work, the luckier you get. Management DUCATION Mary Barry ... That which we are, we are; One equal temper of heroic hearts. Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. —Alfred, Lord Tennyson Ulysses Thomas N. Coode II Fools make feasts, and wise men eat them. —Benjamin Franklin Rita P. Mazer Elementary Education If he is indeed wise he does not bid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads you to the threshold of your mind. -Kahili Gibran Lois Colen Elementary Education 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 far away. -Henry David Thoreau Patricia Jean Larosee To be nobody— but— yourself— in a world which is doing its best night and day, to make you everybody else- means to fight the hardest battle any human being can fighl: and never stop fighting. Qiristine Olson Strange how much you ' ve got to know Before you know how little you know. —Anonymous Elementary Education Elementary Education ;J|Jg?i,i|Sg Dolores Pestana Modern Languages yFiva Education is like a seed. If it Is planted, and taken care of, it will grow. However, it must be cared for dally— watered, nourished by the sun, its dead leaves must be plucked away. Each new day brings on something new. Rosa Underwood Elementary Education Knowledge and understanding are life ' s faithful companions who will never prove untrue to you. For Knowledge is your crown, and Understand- ing, your staff; and when they are with you, you can possess no greater treasures. — Kahili Cibran Edith H. Goldstein Reading Work, knowledge and love are the well-springs of human life. WerKly Leopold Each life is precious— unto itself- from the tiniest insect to the greatest tree . . . Vigorously it must protect its right to be- — and to become .... Upon this one obsession rests— the continuance of the universe . . . . — Cwen Frostic Elementary Education Katherine M. Gabriel Elementary Education Education is now going through vast changes. Choices of teaching come from many diverse schools of thought. Many children are being treated as educational guinea pigs. I wonder if this confusion in adult minds can really be helping their students. Patricia A. Walsh Elementary Education It is sad that our schools value grades above learning. It is sadder still to see this value reflected throughout our society. Janet Crellet McCann English No man can reveal to you aught but that which already lies half asleep in the dawning of your knowledge. The teacher who walks in the shadow of the temple, among his followers, gives not of his wisdom, but rather of his faith and his lovingness. — Kahlil Gibran from The Prophet Phyllis Clebnik Elementary Education To know that which you think is true for all men is the essence of pure genius. William S. Sax T.V. Dinner by the pool. I ' m so glad I finshed school . . . -F. Zappa Randie Alan Blunt LIFE IS CHANGE. HOW IT DIFFERS FROM THE ROCKS. I ' VE SEEN THEIR WAYS TOO OFTEN FOR MY LIKING. NEW WORLDS TO CAIN. MY LIFE IS TO SURVIVE, AND BE ALIVE. English Social Studies Bette Ann Goldsmith English anticipation, acquaintance, acceptance, frustration, interpretation, ennui, anticipation MEMORIES!! Anita Frances Weinstein Speech and Hearing Therapy Happiness is meeting your own Charlie Brown at Northeastern. With Dean ' s List grades, membership into Kappa Delta Pi was an important ac- complishment. With my degree in Speech and Hearing Therapy, I hope to pursue a career in Deaf Education. Kathleen O ' Brien Elementary Education Life is a mirror— if you frown at it, it frowns back; if you smile, it returns the greeting .... Life holds many lasting friendships. Linda ). Spear Elementary Education If a man could mount to Heaven and survey the mighty universe, his admiration of its beauties would be much diminished unless he had some- one to share in his pleasure. —Cicero Marion Bricker There ' s a reason why I made it! I Have a mother who babysat, made meals And took care of the house. She sat up Nights when the kids were ill Knowing that I needed my sleep. For five Years she bridged a double generation gap, Offering patience and understanding. Unremitting until the goal was obtained. Debra Rubin Elementary Education English The following is dedicated to the memory of Dean Cavanaugh, who died earlier this year. I was just one student whose whole life changed because of his great foresight, optimism, wisdom, understanding, and desire to give a student that second chance. Lawrence W. Roop Social Studies Morning mocks its flowers by becoming afternoon — Ferlinghetti Bob Dorson Elementary Education Well, it ' s finally come down to this. It ' s been so long, you know. Since we first entered with bliss This factory which continues to grow— And it ' s not so much the school I ' ll miss, As those I ' ve come to know. , t Debra S. Katz Elementary Education To my parents Norma and Lester and my husband Barry my sincere and warmest gratitude for making all of this possible for me. Michael |. Scopa English Orientation . . . New faces . . . Nixon . . . Term papers . . . Mid-terms . . . Finals . . . Q.P.A. ' s . . . C.P.A. ' s . . . Pre-registration . . . Co-op . . . Globe . . . Cambodia . . . Kent State . . . Strike! . . . Dean ' s List . . . Co- op .. . Garfield School . . . Montreal . . . May 11, 1972 . . . Carol Ann Francis . . . Student teaching . . . Seminars . . . Nixon again . . . Degree . . . Commencement . . . Ah, Bartleby! Ah, Humanity! Joanne Rashbaum Elementary Education All men have the stars ... but they are not the same thing for different people. For some, who are travelers, the stars are guides. For others they are no more than little lights in the sky. For others, who are scholars, they are problems. For businessmen they were wealth. But all these stars are si- lent. You-you alone-will have the stars as no one else has them. Laura C. Wallace Time it was. And what a time it was, it was . . . A time of innocence, A time of confidences. Long ago ... it must be . . . I have a photograph. Preserve your memories; Thafs all thafs left you. -Old Friends, Like Bookends Social Studies Elizabeth M. Acinapura Humanities Bruce R. Anderson Speech Hearing Linda J. Bogosian Humanities Mary L. Bonanno Humanities Aura L.Bornslein Humanities Joy Lynn Bovernick English Grace E. Bowen Humanities Loris A. Boyie Humanities Gloria M. Bush Humanities Patricia L. Byrne Humanities Ann L. Callahan Humanities Barbara A. Campagna Speech Hearing Sandy L. Collins Humanities Sharon Cutler Speech Hearing Janet A. Davis Humanities Lydia R. Desgoseilier Humanities Diann B. Dubbin Humanities Marcia C. Durkin Humanities Eileen A. Dutka Social Studies Charles W. Earle General Science Nancy A. Une Humanities Sandra E. Fleishman Humanities Dorothy M. Foley Humanities Laurie E. Frazier Humanities Andrea L. Garland Humanities Linda K. Cersh Humanities Cynthia E. Classman Social Studies Trina E. Gloth Humanities Alvina M. Coon General Science Linda C Gordon Humanities Frederick J. Greco Humanities Elizabeth A. Creenic Humanities Valerie L. Haskell Speech Hearing Marcia D. Hellring Speech Hearing Mary Ellen Hobbs Humanities Paula E. Johnson Humanities Judith M. Katz Humanities Valerie I. Killam Humanities Kenneth H. Kippenberger Social Studies Lauri J. Klein Speech Hearing Susan N. Kline Humanities Karen D. Landman Humanities Andrea E. Lane Humanities Linda M. Laroche Humanities Sheila M. Lyons Speech Hearing Saundra M. Marcus Humanities J Eugene C. McCarthy Social Sciences Charles J. McKenney Social Sciences Carol J. McLaughlin Speech Hearing Carol J. Merklinger General Science Thomas E. Merrigan General Science Diane E Miller Humanities Kenneth G. Monteith General Sciences Marie A. Montilio Humanities Margaret M. Most Humanities Elaine Murano Social Sciences Carol A. Murphy Humanities Barbara S. Najarian Humanities Judith A. Nicodemi Humanities Cynthia M. O ' Connell Humanities Susan M. O ' Connell Humanities Sandra Orlando Humanities Gail E. Owens Humanities Marie E. Petralia Humanities Jean Primerano Humanities Sharon M. Provost Speech and Hearing Malcolm H. Raid Social Studies Kathleen M. Reilly Humanities Alleen J. Resnick Speech and Hearing Alan B. Rostoff Social Studies Lynn B. Ryback Humanities Gerard |. SalvuccI English Anthony Sarvis General Science Janice J. Sikorski Humanities Melissa J. Stanton Speech and Hearing Joan E. Streifer Humanities Margaret A. Sudrabin Humanities Timothy W. Sweeney Humanities Edythe F. Tevelson Speech and Hearing Barbara J. Thomas Social Studies Hilda F. Thompson Humanities Judith C Treback Speech and Hearing Susan E. Waldman Speech and Hearing John J. Walsh General Science Susan J. Watts Speech and Hearing Brenda V. Wengener Humanities Sharon M. Welch Speech and Hearing Diane L. Witkowski Humanities Rita M. Zerrillo Speech and Hearing Kevin P. Swetchenbaum Speech and Hearing Edward Bod:ko, Jr Social Studies The man who sat on the ground In his tip! meditating on life and its meaning, accepting the kinship of all creatures and acknowledging unity with the universe was infusing into his being the true essence of civ- ilization. And when native man left off his form of development, his huma- nization was retarded in growth. —Chief Luther Standing Bear Joe Martin Biology the masses will realize that the true human successes are those which triumph over the mysteries of matter and of life. At that moment a decisive hour will sound for mankind, when the spirit of discovery absorbs all the momentum contained in the spirit of war. -Pierre Teilhard de Chardin Alvina MieGoon General Science You ' ve got to get up every morning with a smile on your face And show the world all the love in your heart Then people gonna treat you better Ycxir ' re gonna find, yes you will That you ' re beautiful as you feel. —Carole King Deborah Silverman Elementary Education May I never be barred from the knowledge of life ... to sit and dwell on all that has happened ... to dream of what I cannot see ... to hope for what may never come ... to stagnate and lose all that was learned. Barry Fishman Social Studies Education anywhere is worthwhile, and a university offers an opportunity and time for education, and thereby becomes important. Lorraine A. Mason Elementary Education There is an energy in us which makes things happen when the paths of others touch ours. We have to be there and let it happen. Susan Kline Elementary Education f I feel depressed, I will sing. If I feel sad, I will laugh. If I feel III, I will double my labor. f I feel fear, I will plunge ahead. If I feel inferior, I will wear new garments. If I feel uncertain, I will raise my voice. If I feel poverty, I will think of wealth to come, f I feel imcompetent, I will remember past success, f I feel insignificant, I will remember my goals. Today I will be master of my emotions. OSTON BOUVE C Betsy Levin Physical Therapy Only after you have experienced the pain of tears and sadness can you fully appreciate the joy of smiles and happiness. Sally June Olson Physical Therapy If a man looks with loving compassion on his suffering fellow man, and out of his bitterness inquires of the gods, ' Why do you afflict my brothers? then surely he is gazed upon more tenderlv by Cod than a man who con- gratulates Him on being merciful so that he flourishes happily, and has only words of adoration to offer. —Horace t Nancy Crimp Malick Mind boggling . . Paul D. dementi Physical EducationThough I am young, and cannot tell. Either what Death, or Love is well. Yet I have heard, they both beare darts. And both doe ayme at humane hearts; And then againe, I have beene told. Love wounds with heat, as Death with cold; So that I feare, they doe but bring Extreames to touch, and meane one thing .... —Ben Jonson Physical Therapy Physical Education mn ' Arthur C Reis, |r. Physical Education I shall pass through this world but once. Any good that I can do to any human being let me do it now. Let me not defer it or neglect it for I shall not pass this way again. Pauline R. Cloutier Where there is hatred, let me sow love; Where there is despair, hope; Where there is darkness, light; and Where there is sadness, joy. —Francis of Assisi Physical Therapy Ellen Cocks To live, love, laugh and be happy. Margaret Louise Chase Physical Education Physical Therapy I hope my future will be all I want it to be and that I will be able to con- tribute something by helping people lead happier and more useful lives. Nancy L. Guilford Physical Education Happiness is knowing the struggle is finally over for me. Nancy E. Bloomfield Physical Therapy ' The woods are lovely, dark and deep. But I have promises to keep. And miles to go before I sleep. And miles to go before I sleep. —Robert Frost Bonnie Ann Simpson Physical Therapy Love can not fill the thickened lung with breath. Nor clean the blood, nor set the fractured bone; Yet many a man is making friends with death Eve as I speak, for lack of love alone. —Edna St. Vincent Millay Barbara E. Turner Physical Therapy To see the world in a grain of sand And Heaven in a wild flower To hold Infinity in the palm of your hand And Eternity in an hour. loanne M. Lambert Physical Education No distance of place or lapse of time can lessen the Friendship of those w+io are thoroughly persuaded of each other ' s worth. —Robert Southey Bonnie J. McCilvray Physical Therapy Some men see things as they are and ask Why? I see things that never were and ask Why not? — Robert F. Kennedy loanne Gail Assetta Physical Therapy These four years have passed by quickly, but now I have the future to look forward to in helping others less fortunate than me. Jean Qothers love is a place through this place of love move (with brightness of peace) all places yes Is a world in this world of yes live (skilfully curled) all worlds — e e cummings Physical Therapy Elena M. Pechinsky Physical Education ... Let each season encircle all the other seasons, and let today em- brace the past with remembrance and the future with longing. Patricia M. McCoy Recreation Better late than never. Education unlocked so many doors that might never have been opened to me before. Life is only as good as you make it. Try education on for size, make it in today ' s world; without it you ' ll not survive. Past-Factory Worker Present-College Student Future KYS-is the limit Eileen S. Horvitz Physical Therapy There ' s no need for a personality to grow old. The thing is not to remain adolescent but to work toward maturity, to appraise life honestly and with experience, not naively but critically and at the same time keep this open- ness, this willingness to face reality, this interest in life and not grow old. Our whole thrust should be towards the future, and that ' s what typifies youth. —Bernard Cooke )oanne E. Burrill I expect to pass through this world but once. Physical Therapy DO IT NOW Any good thing, therefore, that I can do or any kindness I can show to any fellow human being let me do it now. Let me not defer nor neglect it; for I shall not pass this way again. —Stephen Creiiet Julie Lavigne Physical Therapy Will you tell me please, which way I ought to go from here? That depends a good deal on where you want to get to. I don ' t much care where- Then it doesn ' t matter which way you go. So long as I get somewhere. Oh, you ' re sure to do that if you walk long enough. Karen Irene Anderson Recreation Education Much reeducation of the general public is needed to note the differ- ences between the fields of Recreation Education and Physical Education. Recreational activities are less structured, and are more for personal enjoy- ment rather than competition. Recreation goes one step further, in that its many activities may be engaged in by all persons, regardless of talent or skill. ludith H. Alman Physical Therapy Ellen M. Anderson Physical Education Martha P. Billings Physical Education Irene Broghigian Physical Education Billy M. Bolinger Jr. Physical Education Mary Ellen Boyd Physical Education Dorothy Bradley Physical Education Richard M. Caffelle Physical Education Janet M. Cantillon Physical Education Francine J. Chasan Recreation Education Elizabeth Clinton Recreation Education Patricia A. Conway Physical Therapy Marilyn T. Demers Recreation Education Linda C. Dobson Recreation Education William H. Ellsworth Physical Education Patricia A. Ford Physical Education Nadine M. Goguen Physical Therapy Kathleen A. Crogan Physical Therapy Richard Guilbert Physical Education Margaret L. Hamlett Health Education Linda Hausmann Physical Therapy Catherine R. Johnston Physical Education Barbara Jones Physical Education Ann L. Lada Recreation Education Patricia A. Leary Physical Education Janet M. Lesko Physical Therapy Patricia L. Madsen Recreation Education Kenneth P. McCabe Physical Education Francis P. McDavitt Physical Education Joanne B. McLagan Physical Therapy Wendy S. Overbay Physical Therapy Marllee A. Page Physical Therapy Theresa M. Panzenber Physical Therapy Ann H. Quilbert Physical Education Janet G. Scribner Physical Education Patricia F. Shea P hysical Education William |. Sheehan Physical Education Linda A. Silver Physical Therapy Joan L. Silverman Recreation Education Donna L. Singer Physical Therapy Margaret J. Smith Physical Therapy Sandra E. Sweeney Physical Therapy Paula C. Troiano Physical Therapy Thomas E. Wellwood Physical Education Linda Anne Hartley Physical Therapy You ' ve got to get up every morning with a smile on your face, and show the world all the love in your heart. -Carole King Often it was difficult in my years at N.U., yet, my college days hold many beautiful memories. Christine A. Wilding Physical Therapy Evi K. Wiley Physical Therapy Teresa A. Grenier Elizabeth M. Woodbury Physical Therapy Physical Education John W. Zahn Physical Education Give me courage with a fervent glance. Bring me contentment in softened tones. Guide my Knowledge with truth serene To continue my life in meaningful purpose. Show me the way through the human maze Guide my confusion into simpler days. -Rinder Sharon Nichols Recreation Only the children know what they are looking for . . . They waste their time over a rag doll and it becomes important to them; if anybody takes it away from them they cry ... It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye. . . —The Little Prince Carlton Sandy Civility Costs Nothing Recreation Education HARMACY Shirley Lesieur I do remember an apothecary,— And hereabouts he dwells,— which late I noted In tattered weeds, with overwhelming brows. Culling of simples;. . . A beggerly account of empty boxes. Green earthen pots, bladders, and musty seeds. Remnants of packthread, and old cakes of roses. . . -William Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet Eugene C. Johnson Pharmacy Pharmacy I have lost more than I have gained during these five years. I have found life to be shockingly short and beyond redemption for those who would have it so. An expired life is the only way to remove the hurt caused by an expired love. Margaret A. Danylchuk If you hear the song I sing You will understand (listen!) You hold the key to love and fear All in your tremblin ' hand Just one key unlocks them both It ' s there at your command. Try to love one another right now! Rita Metzger Pharmacy Pharmacy I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, but, I am not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant. Diane W. Kamenski Medical Technology Thomas D. Page Pharmacy John C. Spaulding Pharmacy |ohn F. Moriarty Pharmacy Debby D. Pun Medical Technology Joseph M. Morrissey Pharmacy Maryann P. Rucki Pharmacy Robert L. Swaine Pharmacy Richard A. Truesdale Pharmacy Salvatore M. Venditti Pharmacy Morris I. Naggar Pharmacy Kathleen F. Scanlon Pharmacy Daniel F. Torre Pharmacy Phyllis W. Ying Pharmacy Wayne N. Crowley Pharmacy Michael E. Grossman Pharmacy Joan G. Gollins Pharmacy Of making many books there is no end, and much study is a weariness of the flesh. The end of the matter; all has been heard. -Ecclesiastes 12:12-13 And who can say with any certainty where the road not taken may have led. Andrea Deutsch Dental Hygiene I shall strive to make my life and the lives of those around me more joy- ful and meaningful than they are now. Lorraine Slaybaugh Men say they know many thing; But lo! they have taken wings— The arts and sciences. And a thousand appliances; The wind that blows Is all that anybody knows. — H. D. Thoreau Dental Hygiene URSING Lana Taylor Baccalaureate - AL - -(V) 5)-t- -Mty Audrey Fraser Baccalaureate I hope that I may put my knowledge to new and exciting channels which will create more consciousness among us. Awareness is a necessity and tcM) many people do not have enough of it. Mary C Blake Baccalaureate To be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing its best, night and day, to make you everybody else— means to fight the hardest battle which any human being can fight, and never stop fighting. — e. e. cummings Sandra Mosher Baccalaureate Choose life, only that and always and whatever the 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. Charlene Francis Associate Nursing has always been my only ambition. I hope to pursue my career in the field of public health nursing. Judy Holland Woman was created from the rib of man. Not from his head to be above him. Nor from his feet to be walked upon. But from his side to be equal. Near his arm to be protected. And close to his heart to be loved. Baccalaureate Mary F. Harvey Baccalaureate And now here is my secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye. It is the time you have wasted for your rose that makes your rose so important. —St. Exupery Anne Murphy Some destination, A footstep in the sand. Some indication, A truth to understand. I ' m going hunting To find it if I can. But it might be just an arrow To still some other plan. But all I find is that behind Each new door is another door. Baccalaureate Diane M. Pash Baccalaureate Only one thing matters— That wherever we go And however we go We hear the music of life — Theodor Fontane I hope my friends, instructors, and especially my parents who have given so much to me will always hear the music of life. Ellen Dwyer Baccalaureate Dear Cod, every day show me some way to help my fellow man. Let me be tolerant, sympathetic, and put to good use the excellent background I have received from Northeastern. Above all, please don ' t let my profes- sionalism overshadow my human empathy. Carol Fitzpatrick We come into the world alone. We go away the same. ' We ' re meant to spend the interlude between in closeness Or so we tell ourselves. But if s a long way from the morning to the evening. —Rod McKuen Elizabeth D. Nye Yesterday is past; a change is coming breaking down the walls of silence lifting shadows from your mind. Placing back the missing mirrors that before you couldn ' t find filling mysteries of emptiness that yesterday left behind. Let ' s make it last. Baccalaureate Margaret M. McCrath Baccalaureate To know that yesterday is but today ' s memory and tomorrow is today ' s dream, is to realize that there is something gained and something lost in living every day .... Mary L. Cotter You give but little when You give of your possessions. It is when you give Of yourself that you Truly give. Associate ludy Woodard Associate If ifs true that laughter is contagious, an epidemic would cure everything!!! Janet Sliwa Baccalaureate As a nurse, may I use the knowledge I have gained from these years at Northeastern to the best of my ability, treating my fellow man as I would like to be treated and always exercising patience. Catherine H. Carpenter Has it really been three years? Diane M. Schiffer Baccalaureate Self is a sea boundless and measureless. Say not, I have found the truth, but rather, I have found a truth. — Kahlil Gibran Lefs all keep trying. Karen M. Kelley We shall never cease from exploration. And the end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started And know the place for the first time. Sharon Majkut Baccalaureate Associate As I look back on my life, one of the most constant and powerful things I have experienced within myself is the desire to be more than I am at the moment— an unwillingness to let myself remain where I am— a desire to in- crease the boundaries of myself— a desire to do more, learn more, express more— a desire to grow, improve, accomplish, expand. Patricia Ann Didio Associate The time I have spent at Northeastern has afforded me an opportunity to meet people and form new friendships. Frustrating and disappointing times were mixed among the good moments. My first goal has bieen achieved; the future may hold more. Cathy Jean Patterson Baccalaureate I must stand still and listen with open ears, far from the noises of the vil- lage . . . Silence alone is worthy to be heard . . . The silence rings; it is musical and thrills me. A night in which the silence was audible. I heard the unspeakable. —Henry David Thoreau Kathryn L. Morrow Baccalaureate Every deed and every relationship is surrounded by an atmosphere of si- lence. Friendship needs no words— it is solitude delivered from the anguish of loneliness. — Soren Kierkegaard Markings Janet L. Agolia Associate Linda P. Boddie Baccalaureate Francine A. Casarella Associate Ann M. Cirillo Baccalaureate Mary A. Coppens Baccalaureate Joan M. Creeden Baccalaureate Donna M. Curran Baccalaureate Noreen A. Daley Baccalaureate Shelia M. Duffy Baccalaureate Elaine E. Elkington Baccalaureate Ruth B. Finn Associate Laura D. Freedman Baccalaureate Judith L. Callinaro Associate Sharon M. Carey Baccalaureate Judith A. Gan-ick Baccalaureate Jeanne A. Flamilton Associate Mary A. Heafey Associate Bette F. Holbrook Associate Vuokko V. Kaupplla Associate i V Kathleen M. Kippenberger Baccalaureate Jane Levenson Associate Rosemary MacFarlane Associate Susan A. Margolis Associate Margaret R. Matthews Associate Teresa R. McGowan Associate Jacqueline McNeilly Baccalaureate Joanne T. Menz Baccalaureate Frances J. Molony Baccalaureate Jane E. Nelson Baccalaureate Cheryl L. Packer Baccalaureate Pamela J. Pechulis Associate Sister Marion Reynolds Associate Alice L. Rudnicki Baccalaureate Donna M. Sabbagh Baccalaureate Phyllis E. Santer Associate Carol A. Scanzio Baccalaureate Karen A. Schwarz Baccalaureate Lorraine Seroll Associate Loretta Smenton Associate Donna ). Stebenne Associate Sandra S. Steins Baccalaureate Arlene M. Sturtevant Baccalaureate Kathleen T. Thurston Baccalaureate Joyce L T son Associate lane A. M. Wilderoter Baccalaureate Five long years of: Good learning experiences; a few useless courses; good nursing instructors; papers; exams; that half way point of depression; Uncle Mike ' s letter; and last, but not least, friends who went through it all too . . . and survived. Joyce A. Michelini Baccalaureate My days at N.U. were pleasantly enriched by having a co-op job in Lon- don. The people, job, country and whole pace of life made an invaluable experience to remember. Colleen Christine Roy Don ' t you ever try to go there- Ifs to dream of, not to find. Lovely things like that are always Mostly in your mind. —John Van Alstyn Weaver Baccalaureate Jeanne M. Graham Baccalaureate Lyn Ann Bornstein Baccalaureate There are no worlds of discernment worthy of being written or read. There are only ways of rephrasing those sagacious sayings bequeathed to us by the millions who have lived before us. Real life is, to most men, a long second-best, a perpetual compromise between the ideal and the possible. -Bertrand Russell ... A continuous adjustment of internal relations to external relations. —Herbert Spencer Dolores DiLorenzo Baccalaureate When through one man a little more love and goodness, a little more light and truth comes into the world, then that man ' s life has had meaning. -Alfred Delp Cecelia Wynn Beauty has its own language May you always look for the beautiful . Alma P. Arnold I can ' t believe it is over!! RIMINAL JUSTICE Kevin Allan Mooney Criminal justice A hope and belief that someday there will be harmony among all men and that our daily newspapers will not always be headlined with hate, dis- sension and war, maybe some of us can make this hope a fact. Frederick L. Colbert Criminal justice Ask not what your country can do for you; but what you can do for your country. —John F. Kennedy I see today ' s youth answering this call but elders misreading our in- tentions. Constructive, peaceful change of the many must not be confused with the destruction and violence of the few. Guy Michael Mancini Crimiral justice The other day a tree, a very intelligent Maple, said this to me. Man can only hope that he advances to the next step in the chain of evolution be- fore he destroys himself, thus ending the process which brought him forth. Russell L. Lattuca lllegentium non carborundum. Criminal justice Lawrence R. Newman Criminal Justice Always practice, because when you aren ' t somebody somewhere is and when you two meet he will win. Varsity Cross Country, 2,3,4 Varsity Track 2,3,4 Varsity Club Joseph M. Orrigo We have tomorrow Bright before us Like a flame. Yesterday, A night-gone thing A sun-down name. And dawn today Broad arch above the road we came We march! Criminal Justice 1 Paul R. Landry Criminal Justice Why should we be in such desparate haste to succeed, and in such des- perate enterprises? If a man does not keep pace with his companions, per- haps 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 Dorothy Tumer If you think you are beaten you are; If you ' d like to win, but think you can ' t Ifs almost a cinch you won ' t If you think you ' ll lose, you ' re lost. For cxJt In the world we find Success begins with a fellow ' s will; Ifs all in the state of mind. Criminal Justice Kenneth |. McBride Law Enforcement I believe that man will not merely endure; he will prevail. He is immor- tal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance. —William Faulkner Charles F. Murphy Criminal Justice Education is an admirable thing, but it is well to remember from time to time that nothing that is worth knowing can be taught. -Oscar Wilde Lois N. Barr Criminal Justice Behold the turtle! He makes progress only when he sticks his neck out! Marilyn Faith Amopol Criminal Justice Say not, I have found the path of the soul Say rather, I have met the soul walking upon my path. For the soul walks not upon a line. Neither does it grow like a reed. The soul unfolds itself. Like a lotus of countless petals. George D. Anderson Dennis A. Brignolo James A Brunei Kevin I. Burl e Thomas J. Donnelly Bruce L. Dorner John J. Gelinas Robert P. Gordon Linda S. Gregory John R. KiJIion Donald V. Leclair |r lames P. McKenna Richard R Ruscak John Skinner Thomas E. Sullivan John R. Symington John F. Van Kirk Jeffrey Whitaker Richard F. White Leslie F. Wilson John A. Wright Robert A. Getchell Criminal Justice For no man is more of a man than any other man in the way that one white thing is whiter than another, or one beautiful thing more beautiful than another. —Plato, Logic (Bambrough translation) HE ADMINISTRATION Dr. Asa S. Knowles President Kenneth G. Ryder Executive Vice-President TUDENT AFFAIRS mXM Christopher Kennedy Dean of Students Edward Robinson Associate Dean Edith E. Emery Associate Dean Roland Latham Associate Dean Richard E. Sochacki Assistant Dean Anthony Bajdek Assistant Dean Harvey Vetstein Assistant Dean Judy Link Assistant Dean NIVERSITY ADMINISTRATION Lincoln C. Bateson Vice President Business ns Daniel J. Roberts, Jr. Vice President Finance Arthur E. Fitzgerald Vice President Academic Affairs Gilbert G. MacDonald Vice President Student Affairs ■- ' iTCSW Loring M. Thompson Vice President Planning M Roy L. Wooldridge Vice President Co-operative Education Eugene M. Reppucci, Jr. Vice President Development Royal K. Toebes John Curry Catherine Allen Kenneth Ballou Vice President Dean Dean Dean Alumni Affairs Academic Services Boston-Bouve Adult Education Programs ? k Geoffrey Crofts Dean Grad School of Actuarial Science Martin W. Essigmann Dean Research William F. King Director Lincoln College Juanita O. Long Dean Nursing James S. Hekimian Dean Business Administration Le Roy C. Keagle Dean Allied Health Professions Norman Rosenblatt Robert A. Shepard GUbert C. Garland Alan A. Mackey Dean Dean Dean University Registrar Criminal Justice Liberal Arts Admissions gSk Rudolph M. Morris Charles W. Havice Richard W. Bishop Thomas Sprague Dean Dean of Chapel Dean Director University Administration University Relations Public Information HE TRUSTEES g George Brown L ouis Cabot Lincoln Bateson Norman Cahners Richard Chapman David Cogan William Driver Carl Ell Byron Elliot Edward Dana William Ellison Joseph Riesman Dwight Robinson Donald Smith Farnham Smith George Snell Russell Stearns Earl Robert D. Thomas Chaplin Robert Alvin Stevenson Stone Trigg Tyler WUlis Zises HE FACULTY- Accounting c«2 ' Iff-- jy - . ' ' ' r . ■ - ' M. Carter, L. Malchman, J. Curran, J. Colemme. E. Carter. R. Roy and R. Farrar. Art S. Bishop, L. Havens, Chairman Robert L. Wells, R. Davis and P. Serenyi. Biology H. Werntz, H. Lambert, C. Meszoely, C. Ellis, J. Pearincott, K. Boghdan and E. Ruber. Chemistry First row: E. Jones, W. Cass, K. Weiss, E. Spinos; Second row: F. Boig, G. Grzywinski, R. Wiener; Third row: A. Soloway, D. Glagett, R Huber, A. Viola; Fourth row: W. Giessen, H. Keller: Fifth row: D. Howell, G. Davies, C. Jankowski. Civil Engineering First row: I. Wei, R. Scranton, E. Spencer; Second row: C. Gregory, J. Cochran, L. Branagan; Third row: K. Leet, P. Ossenbruggen; Fourth row: W. Jaworski, S. Namyet, R. Meserve, I. April. Co-operative Education First row: S. Kane, B. Berestezky, T. McMahon, J. Dromgoole, D. Roy; Second row: H. Talbot, B. Lavoie, J. Hammond and G. Howe. Drama M. Littlefield, B. Bailey, M. Kaplan and A. Buglio. Graphic Science R. Finkenaur, W. Herrick, B. Kreimer, W. Rule, F, Brown, R. Lang. Economics First row; M. Horowitz, I. Herrnstadt, Murphy; Second row; S. Swanson, C. Chamberlain, P. Sawhney. History M. Ring, W. Fowler, R. Anderson. D. Allen and N. Fullington. Management First row: L. Kieth, W. Briggs, R. Parson; Second row: R. Lieb, D. Scio- letto; Third row: R. Olive, M. Brimm and D. Hiegins. Modern Language First row: B. Landesman, L. Coopersteih. „. Boehme; Second row: J. Gilman, A. JoUiff, B. Fabrizi, E. Williams: Third row: D. Pauling, L. Morse, B. Andrea, P. Laplante, N. Cedrone. Mechanical Engineering First row: P. Samantary, |. Rossettos, j. Cipolla, J. Zelinski. D. Lautman; Second row: B. Long, P. Hansen, E. Mills, R. Murphy; Third row: J. Zotos, W. Chao, R. Blanchard, Jr., W. Nowak. Music H. Kearney, H. Silverman, Chairman Roland L. Nadeau. Nursing First row: M. Smith, M. Lynch, B. Capacio, J. Carroll; Second row: R Finn, F. DeScenza, L. Cutler; Third row: R. Wade, B. Goodfellow, M Johns; Fourth row: E. Mayer, P. Dean, N. Carr; Fifth row: E. Norman, J Hannan, J. Lee; Sixth row: A. Kane, E. Gates, E. Daly; Seventh row: J Aroian, J. Tingle, D. Williamson, N. Walden; Eighth row: A. O ' Brien, O Gagnon. Pharmacy First row: J. Palumbo, A. Soloway, OJ. Inashima; Second row: D. Mackeen, P. Smith, V. Warner; Third row: E. Spector, B. Laprade, A. Goldstein. Philosophy PirsI row: P. John, I. Arman, W. Fogg; Second row: M. Marlies, W. DeA- igelis, Nathanson; Third row: E. Hacker, |. Wellbank, C. Pruell. (In columns— front to back) Left column: C. Ayres, D. Moore, [. MacAla- ren, R. White, J. Nolan. Middle column: W. Jones, J. Medeiros, D Schmitt. Right column: T. Felton, H. Grimes, G. Bursey, R. Cord. Physical Therapy Chairman Katharine Carlisle, E. Van Slyck, N. Cardinali, B. MacFarlane, N. Le- venthal, P. Cerasoli, ]. Foster, C. Williams and K. Shaffer. Psychology T. Corwin, A. Skavenski, J. Armington, E. Arees. M. Glancy, R. Morrison, A. Sayed, A. McCay, F. Robinson, H. Jeffrey. E. Eliopoulos. C. Stoler, L. Lafontaine, H. Oberg, E. Weigel. ENIOR INDEX Abbot, John L, Dorchester, Ma, English Abdelahad. Fred R., West Roxbury, Ma, Finance Insurance Abdelahad, Sharon A., West Roxbury, Ma, Political Science Abelli, Elaine M., Waltham, Ma, Physical Education Abrahams, Joel M., Forest Hills, NY, History Abram, Sam, Watertown, Ma, Industrial Engineering Acinapura, Elizabeth M., Paramus, NJ, Humanities Ackerly, Eugenie, Cambridge, Ma, Philosophy Ackerman, Charles J.. Rochester, NY, Electrical Engineering Adams, William B., Reading, Ma, Management Adelstein, Lester J., West Hartford, Ct, Accounting Affsa, Daniel F., Weymouth, Ma, Criminal Justice Agoglia, Janet L., Merrick, NY, Nursing Albinger, Kenneth, Brookline, Ma, Power Systems Engineering Alessandro, Albert R., North Providence, RI, Political Science Alexander, Robert C, WoUaston, Ma, Finance Insurance Alexander, Stanley J., Quincy Ma, Psychology Alfano. Steven V., Providence, RI, Mechanical Engineering Alger, Donald W., Hanover, Ma, Industrial Engineering Aliano, Theresa A., Boston, Ma, Electrical Enginering Allard, Peter D., Braintree, Ma, Sociology Allen, John F., Auburndale, Ma, Management Allea Patrick H., Winchester, Ma, Accounting Alman. Judith H., Medway, Ma, Physical Therapy Alter, Carol A., Swampscolt, Ma, Sociology Altieri, David M., Stoughton, Ma, Criminal Justice Alves, Theodore P., Stoneham, Ma, Management Amato, Steven V., Framingham, Ma, Electrical Engineering Ames, Elizabeth E., Bedford, Ma, Electrical Engineering Ames, William N., Boston, Ma, Social Studies AmoreUo, Mark E., Grafton, Ma, Non-concentration Business Anastasi, Robert P., Nevifton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Anderson, Bruce R., Athol, Ma, Speech Hearing Anderson, Claire M., Belmont, Ma, Forsyth Dental Anderson, Ellen M., Nevrton, Ma, Physical Education Anderson, George D., Burlington, Ma, Criminal Justice 156 213 156 234 185 214 254 183 186 186 186 185 186 234 244 261 Anderson, John R., Watertown, Ma, Management Anderson, Karen I., Natick, Ma, Recreation Education Anderson, Marilyn, North Quincy, Ma, Social Studies Anderson, Philip R., Saugus, Ma, Economics Anderson, Sarah J., Newton, Ma, Accounting Andrews, Jr., Richard C, Wayne, NJ, Accounting Anganis, Olga, Saugus, Ma, English Angarano, Lisa, Winsted, Ct, Nursing Anglin, William G., Roslindale, Ma, Criminal Justice Antemi, Elizabeth J., Riverside, RI, Journalism Anthony, Robert F., Nutley, NJ, Civil Engineering Antoine, Gerald C, Newton, Ma, Mathematics Archambault, Eugene P., Scarborough, Cn, Finance Insurance Arcidi, Joanne M., Concord, Ma, Forsyth Dental Arnold, Alma P., Dorchester, Ma, Nursing Arnold, Douglas V., Islington, Ma, Sociology Arnopol, Marlyn F., Levittown, NY, Criminal Justice Arsen, Jon, Waltham, Ma, Political Science Arthur. Frank E., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Economics Assaf, Roxanne, Hyde Park, Ma, Psychology Assetta, Joanne G., Franklin, Ma, Physical Therapy Aucella, Thomas A., Reading, Ma, Marketing Aucoin, Roland P. J., Wahham, Ma, Biology Augustus, Frieda, Boston, Ma, Forsyth Dental Audet, Richard D., Fall River, Ma, English Augee, Christine A., Pittfield, Ma, Forsyth Dental Auld, Linda S. Waltham, Ma, Nursing 156 217 ' 217 146 142 186 258 260 171 156 156 243 Backman, William L., Cambridge, Ma, Political Science Backman, William R., Peabody, Ma, Psychology Backus, Elsa, Pembroke, Ma. Respiration Therapy Bagdigian, Richard M., Medford, Ma, Accounting Bagley, Frederick D., East Boston, Ma, Criminal Justice Bailey, Lawrence G., North Sutton NH, Mechanical Engineering Baird, Christianne, North Reading, Ma, Forsyth Dental Bak, John M., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Baker, Richard J., Braintree, Ma, Biology Balano, Bonnie, Boston, Ma, Forsyth Dental Baldwin. Kenneth C, Wilmington, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Balian, Ara. Watertown, Ma, Lincoln College Mech. Eng. Tech. Bamberg, Michael P., Braintree. Ma. Biology Banerjee, Ajoy, Framingham, Ma, Industrial Engineering Banks, Jody S., Wantagh, NY, Forsyth Denial Bancs, George C, Lynn, Ma, History Banta, Frederick, plainview, NY, Chemical Engineering Banzy, Edward )., Somerville, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Baranowski, Carol, Franklin, NH, Forsyth Dental Barberi, Stephen C, Newton, Ma, Electrical Engineering Baron, Marsha E., Brockton, Ma, Sociology Barr, Lois N., Boston, Ma, Criminal Justice Barrett, Deborah E., Newton, Ma, Psychology Barrett, Douglas C, Jamaica Plain, Ma, History Barrow, Nancy H., Newton Highlands, Ma, Modern Languages Barry, John S., Belmont, Ma, Electrical Engineering Barry Mary C, Dorchester, Ma, Humanities Barry, Virginia K., Webster, Ma, Psychology Bartek, Jean E., Mountain Lakes, NJ, Psychology Bartlett, Charles A., Maiden, Ma. Mechanical Engineering Bartz, Steven M., Quincy, Ma, Pharmacy Basche, Kenneth A., Nutley, NJ, Political Science Basile, Joseph D., Belmont, Ma, Management Bates, Kenneth L, West Roxbury, Ma, Political Science Batisis, Madeleine C, Cambridge, Ma, Forsyth Dents ' Battaglieri, Judith L., Somerville, Ma, Humanities Baum, Bruce S.. New York. NY, Mathematics Baumeister, Joost J.G., Nashua, NH, Mathematics Baumes, Thomas A., Remsen, NY, Electrical Engineering Baylies, Christopher, Lynn, Ma, Accounting Bazydlo, James A., Boston. Ma. Marketing Bean. Martha, Lynnfield, Ma, Speech Hearing Beaudet, Celeste A., Medway, Ma, Forsyth Dental Beaupre, Ronald A., Wakefield, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Bechtel, Alan R., Brockton, Ma, Management Beck, Barry D., Swampscott, Ma, Economics Beck, Walter W., New Hyde P,ark, NY, Civil Engineering Beck, William M., Boston, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Bedard, Michael P.. Jamaica Plain, Ma, Psychology Beddoos, Frederic, Winthrop, Ma. Physical Education Bedrick. Sheryl B.. Newton, Ma, Forsyth Dental Beebe, Christine D., Glendale, Ma, Physical Therapy Beerman. Alen R.. Jamaica. NY. Political Science Beggs, Donna W.. North Attleboro, Ma, Forsyth Dental Behrle, Stephen F., Melrose, Ma, Electrical Engineering Beisecker, Mark B., Westborough, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Beitel, Eugene, Brookline, Ma, Philosophy Bell, Charles F., Revere, Ma, Electrical Engineering Bellamy, Paul T.. Melrose. Ma. Journalism Belli. Robert J.. Newtonville, Ma. Civil Engineering Belsky. James E.. Haverhill, Ma, Chemical Engineering Bender, Sarajane, Cambridge, Ma, Speech Hearing Benham, Thomas R., Saugerties, NY Industrial Engineering Benoit, James, West Newton, Ma, Chemical Engineering Benoit, Robert C, Revere, Ma, Speech Hearing Benotti, Nancy, Weston, Ma, Sociology Beres, Robert, Boston, Ma. Philosophy EJerg. Janet L.. Brighton. Ma, Humanities Berger, Robin R.. Providence. RI, Psychology Berger, Ronald L., Milton, Ma, Marketing Bergeron, Catherine F., Auburn, Me. Journalism Bergeron. Jeanne M., Warwick, RI, Humanities Bergman, Geri S.. Yonkers. NY, Sociology Bergman. Marcia A., Wrentham, Ma, Humanities Bergstrom, Joanne M., Woburn, Ma, Mathematics Berit, Bradley I., Dedham, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Berlin, Elayne, Norwood, Ma, History Berman, Alexis, Mattapan, Ma, Forsyth Dental Berman. Stuart R.. Mattapan, Ma, Finance Insurance Bernard. James B.. Needham Heights. Ma, Power Systems Bernard, John A., Cambridge. Ma. Management Bemi. Tighe L.. Oradell. NJ. Management Beroz. Neal S., Hyde Park. Ma. Sociology Bertsch. Donald A.. Newton Ma. History Bettencourt. Else S.. Peabody, Ma, Industrial Engineering Betts, Peter M., Brighton, Ma, Pharmacy Biaggi, Leslie A., Cambridge. Ma. Sociology Bianca. Jeffrey J., Harrison. NY. Electrical Engineering Billings. Martha P.. Natick. Ma. Physical Education Biosevas. Yasmin D., Harrison, NJ, Modern Languages Bishop. Everett C, Pawcatuck. RI, Mathematics Bishop, Francis N., Bedford, NY, English Bisi. Peter R.. Mount Vernon, NY, Mechanical Engineering Bislarides, Anthony H., Brockton, Ma, History Bissell, Ste ven B., Westboro, Ma, Management Blais, Joseph, E. Medford, Ma. Electrical Engineering Blake, Carroll W., Dorchester, Ma, Sociology Blake, Mary C, Boston, Ma, Nursing Blake, Mary C, Boston, Ma, Nursing Blanchette, Jr, Paul }., Belmont, Ma, Management Blaney, Geoffrey, Cambridge, Ma, Civil Engineering Blau, Kathy. Miami, Fl, Forsyth Dental Blaustein, Mitchell S., Quincy, Ma, Management Blinderman. Edward S., Brookline, Ma. Accounting Blocker, Edward M., Philadelphia, Pa, Power Systems Blomerth, Steven A., Danvers, Ma, English Bloom, David M., Rego Park, NY, Accounting Bloomfield, Nancy E., Belmont, Ma, Physical Therapy Blunt, Randie A.. Shrewsbury. Ma, Social Studies Bocko. Edward F., Burlington. Ma. Social Studies Boczenowski. Anthony P.. Cambridge. Ma. Criminal Justice Boddie, Linda P., Dorchester, Ma, Nursing Bodkin, William P.. Dorchester. Ma, Electrical Engineering Boghigian, Irene, Belmont, Ma, Physical Education Bogosian. Linda L., Westboro, Ma, Humanities Bogosian, Vasken M.. Methuen, Ma, Industrial Engineering Boiardi, Richard S., Wellesley, Ma, History Bois, Donna J., Salem, Ma, Forsyth Dental Boise. Elinor. PhUadelphia. Pa. Medical Technology Bolinger, Jr., Billy M., Buzzard Bay. Ma. Physical Education Bolyai. Stephen D.. Fall River, Ma, Sociology Bonanno, Mary L., South Boston. Ma, Humanities Bonatz. Paul R., Norwood, Ma, Industrial Engineering Bond, Allan, Brighton, Ma, Management Bondi, Joseph E., Revere, Ma, Biology Bono, Anthony M., Somerville, Ma. Management Bono, Marilyn T., Andover, Ma. Sociology Bookman. Mark E.. Teaneck. NJ, Accounting Borger. Edward P.. Natick. Ma. Management Bornstein. Arlyne A.. Chestnut Hill. Ma. Nursing Bornstein, Aura L.. Boston, Ma, Humanities Bornstein. Mark I., Maiden. Ma. Chemical Engineering Bosco, Christopher, Dorchester, Ma, Industrial Engineering Botterio, Robert J., Valley Stream, NY, Sociology Boucher, Ronald A.. Waltham, Ma, Managment Boudreau, Donna M., Southbridge, Ma, Pharmacy Boudreau, Joseph P., Waltham, Ma, Management Bourdon, James P., Richmond, Ma, Finance Insurance Bourgeois, Paul T., Lynn. Ma. Political Science Bova, Robert F., Arlington, Ma. Marketing Bovernick. Joy Lynne. Methuen. Ma, English Bowdy. Bruce K.. Waterford. NY, Criminal Justice Bowe, Thomas R., Poughkeepsie, NY, Industrial Engineering Bowen, Grace E., Cambridge. Ma, Humanities Bowen. John J., Belmont. Ma, Political Science Bowen, Margaret A.. Somerville, Ma, Sociolgoy Bowman, Ralph F., Framingham, Ma, Biology Boyd. Mary Ellen, East Longmeadow. Ma. Physical Education Boyd. Walter M., Middletown. NJ. History Boyle, Loris A., Woburn. Ma. Humanities Boyle, Paul J., Centerville, Ma, Biology Brace, Ronald E., Foxboro, Ma, Accounting Bracken, William J., South Boston, Ma. Chemical Engineering Brackett, Charles M.. Somerville, Ma, Mathematics Bradbury. Edward N., Everett, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Bradley, David F., Maiden, Ma, Management Bradley, Dorothy S., Dorchester, Ma, Physical Education Bradstreet. Robert C, Albion, Me, Industrial Engineering Braheney, Michael S., Raynham, Ma. Electrical Engineering Brannen. Sylvia C. Arlington. Ma, Nursing Brault, Donald A., Southbridge, Ma, Biology Braun, Shelly G.. Boston. Ma, Mathematics Brauner, Robert, Bookline, Ma. Management Braunhardt, Denise A.. Lynnfield, Ma, Biology Brayton, Steven M., Boston. Ma. Political Science Breault. John H., Framingham, Ma. Marketing Brenn. Robert F., Dedham, Ma. Civil Engineering Brennan. James A., Lewiston. Me. Criminal Justice Brennan. Jean M., Charlestown, Ma. Nursing Brennan, Thomas J., Boston. Ma. History Brewer. John C. St. Clair Shore, Mi, Biology Bricker, Marion S., Maynard. Ma, Humanities Bridgman. Charles A.. Rosemont. Pa. Psychology Briggs. David L.. Brighton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Briggs, Teresa E., Willmette, II, Political Science Brignolo. Dennis A.. Williamstown, Ma, Criminal Justice 214 242 232 240 251 180 244 234 180 146 244 234 187 157 217 258 234 187 187 157 211 244 157 234 15 3 187 157 187 217 244 187 188 149 157 209 217 188 157 233 188 261 Broderick. Edward |.. Dedham. Ma, Chemical Engineering Brodin, Gregory C, Arlington, Ma, Chemical Engineering Brodin, Judith, Arlington, Ma, History Brodney, David C, Brookline, Ma, Modern Languages Browman, Lesley A., Laurelton. NY, Sociology Brown, Audrey A., Boston, Ma, Psychology Brown, Clinton S., New London, Ct, Civil Engineering Brown, Diana P., Brooklyn, NY, Political Science Brown, Kenneth F., Woodhaven, NY, English Brown, Laurence A., Stroughton, Ma, Biology Brown, Leslie C, Needham, Ma, Civil Engineering Brown, Melissa, Island Park, NY, Philosophy Brown, Richard, Brighton, Ma, journalism Brown, Richard ].. Belmont, Ma, Accounting Browning, Keith A., Pawtucket, Rl, Marketing Brunet, James A., Albany, NY, Criminal Justice Bruster, Laird H., Springfield, Oh, Mechanical Engineering Bruster, Richard C, Wellesley Hills, Ma, Accounting Bryce, William M., East Longmeadow, Ma, Industrial Engineering Bubenickova, Marie, Melrose, Ma, Physical Therapy Bucacci, John E., Cranston, Rl, Political Science Bucelwicz, Robert P., Brighton, Ma, Civil Engineering Buchhalter, Brian, Newton, Ma, Accounting Buchman, Rhonda, Winthrop, Ma, Forsyth Dental Buck, Gregory J., Flemington, NJ, Pharmacy Buckley, Erma J., Boston, Ma, Economics Buckman, Leigh W., Laconia, NH, Forsyth Dental Burden, Christopher, Ridgewood, NJ, Biology Burdin, Lora E., Wakefield, Ma, English Burgess, Donald G., East Longmeadow, Ma, Electrical Engineering Burke, Amy L., Dedham, Ma, Medical Technology Burke, Donna M., Lexington, Ma, Journalism Burke, Jeffrey L., Lynn, Ma, Psychology Burke, John F., South Boston, Ma, Pharmacy250 Burke, Kevin J., Andover, Ma, Criminal Justice Burns, Alfred N., Attleboro, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Burns, Ellen M., Dorchester, Ma, Political Science Burns, Ellen M., Dorchester, Ma, Political Science Burns, Sharon A., Somerset, Ma, Physical Education Burrill, Joanne E., Lynn, Ma, Physical Therapy Burrows, James D., Brookline, Ma, Political Science Burrows, James E., Upton, Ma, Accounting Bush, Gloria M., Cherry HUl, NJ, Humanities Busick, John J., Cranford, NJ, Psychology Bussichella, Frank S., Winchester, Ma, Political Science Butler, Thomas F., Framingham, Ma, Physical Education Buttner, Robert E., Plymouth, Ma, Management Buttrick, JoJm S., Arlington, Ma, Finance Insurance Byer, William B., Chestnut Hill, Ma, Biology Byrne, Patricia L, Mount Kisco, NY, Humanities 157 147 188 157 188 143 261 208 188 157 250 157 188 157 155 149 149 217 216 Cabral, Steven J., Bristol, Rl, Civil Engineering Cabrera, Jorge L., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Caddell, Linda, Tewksbury, Ma, Forsyth Dental Cadres, James A., Whitman, Ma, Management Caffelle, Richard M., Brockton, Ma, Physical Education Cahoon, Catherine M., Walpole, Ma, Humanities Gaboon, Linda A., Ipswich, Ma, Nursing Call, Judith, Owl ' s Head, Me, Forsyth Dental Callahan, Ann L., Woburn, Ma, Humanities Callahan, William F., Woburn, Ma, Social Studies Callahan, William J., Brockton, Ma, Accounting Cameron, Edward H., West Newton, Ma, Mathematics Cameron, Kathleen, Amesbury, Ma, Humanities Campagna, Barbara, Westwood, Ma, Speech Hearing Campagna, Vincent M., Bristol, Rl, Pharmacy Campanelli, Ralph A., Milford, Ma, Industrial Engineering Campbell, Irene, Woburn. Ma, Physical Education Cannell, Deborah M., Newton, Ma, English Cannon, Steven D. Tenafly, Nj, Psychology Cantillon, Janet M., Winchester, Ma, Physical Education Cappadona, Mary L, Newton Highlands. Ma, Sociology Capuano, Frank P., Brookline, Ma, Criminal Justice Caramello, James A., Plymouth, Ma, Philosophy Carbary, Ronald E., Slow, Ma. Non-concentration Business Cardullo, Cfu-istopher, Hopkinlon. Ma, Philosophy Carey, John F., Medford, Ma, Accounting 244 145 Carey, Michael C, Wakefield, Ma, Chemical Engineering Carey, Michael J., Allston, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Carideo, Mary K., Winthrop, Ma, Nursing Carisella, James V,, Wakefield, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Carlino, Peter V., Tewksbury, Ma, Electrical Engineering Carlson, Wayne L., Quincy, Ma, Chemical Engineering Carman, Allan M., Maiden, Ma, History Games, David H., Hingham, Ma, Geology Games, John, Hyde Park, Ma, Accounting Caron, Richard E., Kittery, Me, Mechanical Engineering Carpenter, Albert J., Attleboro, Ma, Management Carpenter, Catherine H., Gharlestown, Ma, Nursing Carr, Donald, Arlington, Ma, Power Systems Carroll, Elizabeth A., Woburn, Ma, Physical Therapy Carrozza, Charles L., Methuen, Ma, Finance Insurance Carter, Carolyn D., Washington, DC, Accounting Carter, John F., Lawrence, Ma, Marketing Carter, Shelton H., Washington, DC, History Caruso, Irene F., Arlington, Ma, Biology Casabona, Richard J., Oceanside, NY, Electrical Engineering Cassarella, Francine A., White Plains, NY, Nursing Casey, Robert W., MUlirocket, Me, Marketing Casey, Thomas A., Brookline, Ma, Electrical Engineering Castanza, Gordon E., Dedham, Ma, English GastQlo, Michael E., Mountainside, NJ, Sociology Gataldo, Marie D., Waltham, Ma, Nursing Cataldo, P. John, Everett, Ma, Civil Engineering Gataldo, Philip A., Revere, Ma, Political Science Catino, Stephen N., Avon, Ma, Political Science Caudill, Jr., Lawrence E., Brighton, Ma, English Cavagnaro, Peter V., Woburn, Ma, Civil Engineering Cella, David J., Southboro, Ma. Criminal Justice Celli, Anthony J., Norwood, Ma, Power Systems Cence, Donate, Brighton, Ma, Marketing Centola, Mary L., Waltham, Ma, English Centola, Richard P., Waltham, Ma, Industrial Engineering Chagnon, James C., Meriden, Ct, Electrical Engineering Ghagrasulis, Robert W., Gasco, Me, Chemical Engineering Chajes, Samuel, Hyde Park, Ma, History Ghalfen, Suzarme L., Brookline, Ma, Political Science Chalpin, Richard J., Arlington Heights, Ma, Biology Champagne, Louis E., Dorchester, Ma, Power Systems Chandler, Ronald W., Stoughton, Ma, Civil Engineering Charlap, Charles A., Penns Grove, NJ, English Chartier, Elaine, Canton, Ma, Criminal Justice Chasan, Francine J., Pawtucket, RI, Recreation Education Chase, Judith R., Newton, Ma, Independent Chase, Margaret L., Wellesley, Ma, Physical Therapy Chase, Stuart M., Salem, Ma, Criminal Justice Ghenette, Bernard X., Maiden, Ma, Civil Engineering Cheney, Cheryl B., Dedham, Ma, History Cheng, John, Chestnut Hill, Ma, Electrical Engineering Chesterman, Gayle M., White Plains, NY, Psychology Chaining, James J.M., Maple Glen, Pa, Chemical Engineering Ghiappini, Walter R., Melrose, Ma, Management Ghiavaroli, Donald J., Braintree, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Chien, Pan Yi Petr, Boston, Ma. Mechanical Engineering Ghilingerian, Jon A., Waltham, Ma, Political Science Chin, Gorman, Cranston, RI, Sociology Chin, Whalen, Brookline, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Chmielecki, Charles J., Franklin, NH, Accounting Choper, Keith, Long Island City, NY, CivU Engineering Chow, Long N., Boston, Ma, Chemical Engineering Chrisis, John, Saugus, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Chu, Jeanne H., Brighton, Ma, Sociology Chu, Lawrence Y., Cambridge, Ma, Electrical Engineering Chu, Sho W., Boston, Ma, Mathematics Churchill, Robert, Randolph, Ma, Criminal Justice Cicciarella, Charles F., Wakefield, Ma, Biology Cicciarella, Nancy A., Stoneham, Ma, Nursing Cimaglio, James, Waterbury, Ct, Industrial Engineering Circo, James D., Everett, Ma, Political Science Cirillo, Ann M., North Reading, Ma, Nursing Clancy, Michael F., Waltham, Ma, Political Science Clark, Beverly A., Cambridge, Ma, Mathematics Clarke, Hans T., Lexington, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Gleary, Kevin C, Lakewood, Oh, Sociology Glebnik, Phyllis, Quincy, Ma, Humanities Clement, Wayne M., Dedham, Ma, Finance Insurance Glementi, Paul D., Sudbury, Ma, Physical Education Clifford, Paul R., Waltham, Ma, Marketing Clinton, Elizabeth, Lexington, Ma, Recreation Education Gloran, Richard C., Beverly, Ma, Accounting 188 188 188 188 189 157 189 217 253 189 189 254 143 157 189 150 157 157 189 189 189 158 158 189 189 244 158 242 182 151 189 147 179 215 189 189 158 189 189 190 208 158 177 254 190 232 241 244 Cloutier, Pauline R., Chicopee, Ma, Physical Therapy Clymer. Lesley, White Plains, NY, Nursing Cochrane, [r, John W., Quincy, Ma, Biology Cocks, Ellen M., Glen Cove, NY, Physical Education Coffe, Daniel E.. Lynn, Ma, Civil Engineering Cohen, Harold E., Brookline, Ma, Biology Cohen, Larry S., Revere, Ma, Chemical Engineering Cohen, Lester, South Fallsburg, NY, Civil Engineering Cohen, Maxine, Baldvirin, NY, Political Science Cohen, Moshe 1., Brookline, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Cohen, Sally R., West Roxbury, Ma, Modern Languages Cohen, Stephen A., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Cohen, Susan S., Worcester, Ma, English Colantonio, Paul |., Newton, Ma, Accounting Colantropo, James J., Waltham, Ma, Management Colarusso, Jr., Frederick P., Revere, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Colbert, Frederick L., Watertown, Ma, Criminal Justice Colcord, Herbert N., Randolph, Ma, Journalism Cole, John G., Boston, Ma, Civil Engineering Colen, Jay C, Kingston, NY, Journalism Colen, Lois S., Yonkers, NY, Humanities Coletti, Jr., Victor F., Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering CoUard, Marc R., Boston, Ma, Sociology Collin, Amy J., Newton, Ma, Physical Education Collins, Joan G., Lewiston, Me, Pharmacy Collins. Michael B., Cambridge, Ma, Criminal Justice Collins, Sandy L., Wakefield, Ma, Humanities Combs, Glenn S., Nashua, NH, Psychology Comeau, Denise, Lynn, Ma, Forsyth Dental Conley, James J., Brockton, Ma, Criminal Justice Connelly, Mark V., Arlington, Ma, Electrical Engineering Conner, Janine S., Lockport, NY, Journalism ConnoUy, C rald S., Framingham, Ma, Management Connolly, Marilynne T., Tewksbury, Ma, Humanities Connors, Douglas J., Voorheesville, NY, Marketing Conti, Stephen P., Watertown, Ma, Civil Engineering Contino, Louis, Norwood, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Conway, Janet L., Basking Ridge, NJ, Biology Conway, Patricia A., West Medford, Ma, Physical Therapy Cook, Mark N., Bayside, NY, Economics Cook, WUliam J., Braintree, Ma, Electrical Engineering Cooper, Barry f., Brighton, Ma, Journalism Cooper, Brian G., Orono, Me, Physics Coppens, Mary A., Braintree, Ma, Nursing Corbin, Gerard J., Salem, Ma, Mathematics Cordes. Dale M., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Physical Education Corona, Patricia M., Yardley, Pa, Psychology Costa, Joseph A., Kingston, Ma, Industrial Engineering Costa, Vincent, Somerville, Ma, Electrical Engineering Costello, Maureen A., Boston, Ma, Psychology CosteUo, Thomas D., Belmont, Ma, Criminal Justice Costigan, Bernard T., Winthrop, Ma, Economics Cotter, Mary L., Dorchester, Ma, Nursing Cotter, William H., Needham, Ma, Accounting Cotter, William J., Belmont, Ma, Economics Cotton, Lawrence S., Norwood, Ma, Civil Engineering Coughlin, Diane, Dorchester, Ma, Forsyth Dental Coughlin, Michael, Boston, Ma, Marketing Coutermarsh, Bonita A., Lebanon, NH, Biology Couto, Steve J., New Bedford, Ma, Chemical Engineering Cowles, Gary F., Salem, Ma, Criminal Justice Coy, Douglas G., Lynnefield, Ma, Civil Engineering Coyle, Jr., David, Belmont, Ma, Management Coyne, Robert G., Avon, NY, Finance Insurance Crabtree, Donald V., Hampton, NH, Biology Crafts, Jr., Donald E., Riverside, Ct, Mechanical Engineering Craig, George A., Arlington, Ma, Management Craig, Lynda, Brookline, Ma, Forsyth Dental Cram, James C, Portland, Me, Economics Crawford, Alan B., Newburgh, NY, Management Creamer, Ronald E., Melrose, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Creeden, Joan M., Waltham, Ma, Nursing Cronin, Lawrence D., Boston, Ma, Psychology Cronin, Robert J., Brockton, Ma, Criminal Justice Crothers, Jean A., Byram, NY, Physical Therapy Crowe, Stephen G., Topsfield, Ma, Accounting Crowell, Joel G., Dennis, Ma, Accounting Crowley, James D., Brighton, Ma. Finance Insurance Crowley, Leo X., Hingham, Ma, Marketing Crowley, Margaret A., Kittery, Me, Nursing Crowley, Richard P., Cambridge, Ma, Accounting Crowley, Robert M., Rockland, Ma, Sociology Crowley, Wayne M., Medford, Ma, Pharmacy 171 177 178 147 190 179 259 158 230 154 250 234 244 171 190 143 158 255 158 208 190 144 253 158 190 190 212 190 214 190 255 215 218 209 250 Crown, Daniel H., Indianapolis, In, Electrical Engineering Cuddy, James A., Pawtucket, RI, Industrial Engineering Cuddy, Kathleen A., Jamaica Plain, Ma. Modern Language Cullen, Roger E., Reading, Ma, Biology Cummings, Gertrude, Revere, Ma, Forsyth Dental Cunningham, Marchelle, East Boston, Ma, Sociology Cunningham, Susan, Revere, Ma, Forsyth Dental Curcio, John L., Garden City, NY, Mechanical Engineering Curley, Patricia A., Belmont, Ma, Drama Curll, Robert D., Dorchester, Ma, Civil Engineering Curran, Dorma M., Dedham, Ma, Nursing Curran, Emil J., Danbury, Ct, Finance Insurance Curtin, Brian P., Burlington, Ma, Accounting Cusack, Michael E., Hyde Park, Ma, Industrial Engineering Cushman, Steven S., Sharon, Ma, Economics Cutler, Sharon, South Weymouth, Ma, Speech Hearing Cutler, Stephen H., Queen ' s Village, NY, Accounting Czarnowski, Paul, Jamaica Plain, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Czupryna, Louise M., Ludlow, Ma, Nursing 190 158 190 158 178 255 218 213 190 234 190 Danbey, Lana E., Dorchester, Ma, Forsyth Dental Dagostino, Lawrence M., Newton, Upper Falls, MA, Management Dahl, Igrid, Belmont, Ma, Management Diagler, Douglas P., Tonawanda, NY, Management Dalenberg, Jr., Karl, Jamaica Plain, Ma, Civil Engineering Daley, Michael J., Lynn, Ma. Biology Daley, Noreen A.. Norfolk, Ma, Nursing Dall, Lawrence H., Bayside. NY, Mathematics Dallon, Martin A., Lawrence, Ma, Political Science D ' Amrosio, Charles R., Watertown, Ma, Mathematics Dana, Robert G., Lancaster, Ma, Accounting Danell, Kevin S., Walkefleld, Ma. Journalism Danella, Sylviz A., Seekonk, Ma, Medical Technology D ' Angelo, Richard J.. West Roxbury, Ma, Finance Insurance Daniels, Susan F., Hull, Ma, Drama Daniels, Victoria E., Dorchester. Ma. Respiratory Therapy Danylchuk, Margaret A., Mattapan. Ma. Pharmacy Davidson. Joel E.. Willingboro. NJ. Drama Davis. Gary A.. Rutland. Ma, Finance Insurance Davis, Janet A., Norwood, Ma, Humanities Davis, Jeffrey R., Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering Davis, Marian C, Jamaica Plain, Ma, Psychology Davis, Patricia, Boston, Ma, Forsyth Dental Davis, Royal T., Framingham, Ma, Biology Davoren, Ann M., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Forsyth Dental Dawe, Theodore G., Quincy, Ma. Accounting Dawes. Sally C.. Duxbury, Ma, Nursing Dawley, David R., Pawcatuck, Rl, Mechanical Engineering De ' Aguiar. Rolando, Duxbury. Ma, Accounting Dean, Mary P., Framingham, Ma, Physical Education Dec, Robert M., Forest Hills, NY, Management DeCross, Ernest J., East Braintree, Ma, Criminal Justice DeDonato, Arthur J., Holbrook, Ma, Pysics DeGaetano, Thomas J., Old Bethpage, NY, Chemical Engineering Dege, Janet B, Livonia, Mi. Forsyth Dental Dietch. Allan B.. Mattapan. Ma, Independent DeLande, Robert J.. Salem, Ma, Management DeLaney. Eileen P., Belmont, Ma. Forsyth Dental DeLaney. Kevin B., Walpole, Ma, Psychology Dellapaolera, Edward R., Watertown, Ma, Political Science Dellarocca, Donald A., Brookline, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Delorme, Richard M., Woonsocket. Rl. Electrical Engineering DeLosrios, Enrique, Cambridge, Ma, Sociology Deltufo, Anthony M., Boston, Ma. Civil Engineering DeLucia, John F., West Roxbury, Ma, Management DeMarco, Michael D., Medford, Ma. Management DeMarzo, Robert F.. Norwalk. Ct. Political Science Demers, Marilyn T., Manchester, NH, Recreation Education Dempsey, Richard J., Brighton, Ma, Civil Engineering Denekamp, Linda J., West Roxbury, Ma, Nursing Denery, Wesley J., Lanesboro, Ma, Industrial Engineering Deriormandie, James R., Norwood, Ma, Management DePina, Manuel J., Chelsea, Ma, Accounting Der, Jeanette, Boston, Ma. Finance Isurance Derman. Jay. Milton, Ma, Finance Insurance DeRosier, Stephen R.. Billerica. Ma, History 218 215 190 158 255 151 171 171 158 218 248 146 211 255 179 218 146 179 144 218 159 179 191 191 218 218 151 245 218 214 171 250 159 Deschamps, Edward C, Nashua. NH, Management 218 DeGrose iler. Lydia R.. Lunenburg, Ma, Humanities 235 DeSiso, Patricia A., Everett, Ma, Political Science 159 DeSisto, [r., Thomas ).. Revere, Ma. Civil Engineering 191 Des|ardins. Daniel 1.. Boston. Ma. History 159 Desmond, Martin L.. Milton. Ma, Finance Insurance Desmond, Thomas W., Newton. Ma, History Detsch. Philip |.. Stow. Ma. Philosophy Deutsch, Andrea T., West Hartford, Ct, Forsyth Dental DeVincentis, Guy |., Quincy. Ma. Biology Devlin, Joseph |., Boston, Ma, Marketing Devlin, Mark A., Weymouth, Ma. Biology De Young. Nancy M., Weymouth. Ma. Forsyth Dental Di Amatopouls. Dennis. Lowell. Ma. Political Science Diamond. Michele L., Cranford. N]. Sociology Diamond. Paul V., New York, NY, Industrial Engineering DiCredico. Bernard D., Stoneham, Ma, Pharmacy Didio, Patricia A.. Maiden, Ma, Nursing DiDonalo. Anthony A.. Wakefield. Ma. Physics DiGiusto, Carlo A., Hudson, Ma, Accounting DiLeo, Anthony J., Braintree. Ma, Chemical Engineering Dillon, James F.. Scituate, Ma, Electrical Engineering DiLorenzo, Dolores M., Medford, Ma, Nursing Dinarco, Ronald L., Quincy, Ma. Management Dingee, Julie A., South Ashburnham, Ma, Humanities Dion. Alan E., Glastonbury, Ct, Industrial Engineering DiSilvestro, John S., East Boston, Ma, History DiStefano, John L., Bristol, RI, Power Systems Engineering Dobbs. Paul W.. Boston. Ma, Accounting 211 Dobson, Linda C, Cambridge, Ma, Recreation Education 245 Dobson, Robert C, Meriden. Ct, Power Systems Engineering 191 Dodge, Ivy R., New York City, NY, History Doherty, Neil F., Framingham, Ma, Respiratory Therapy Donahue, Regina, Cambridge, Ma, General Science Donaldson, Patricia C, Concord, Ma, Political Science 159 Donnellan, Paul J., Arlington, Ma. Accounting 219 Donnelly. Kevin L., Somerset, Ma, Sociology Donelly, Marie A., Gloversville, NY, Physics 171 Donnelly, Thomas J., Fall River, Ma, Criminal Justice 261 Donovan, Brian J., Brookline, Ma, Philosophy 152 Donovan, Francis X., East Weymouth, Ma, Civil Engineering 191 Donovan, John A., Newton Upper Falls, Ma, Industrial Engineering 191 Donovan, Richard M., West Roxbury, Ma, Finance Isurance 219 Doran. Jr., Paul B., Everett, Ma. Civil Engineering 191 Dorner. Bruce L., Newport, RI, Criminal Justice 261 Dorson, Robert K., Lynn, Ma, Humanities 233 DosSantos, Antonio, P., Ossining, NY, Management 219 Douglas, Fred L., Beverly, Ma, Civil Engineering 191 Douglas, Paul I., Pennsville. NJ, Mechanical Engineermg 180 Douglass, Marilyn J., Milton, Ma. Forsyth Dental Dow. Deirdre A., Milton, Ma. English Dowd, Philip W., Hyde Park, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 184 Downs, Robert K., Brighton, Ma, Nursing Doyle, Gary N., South Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering 175 Doyle, Kevin J., Needham, Ma, Political Science 148 Doyle, Richard W., Burlington, Ma, Marketing 219 Drake, Roger A.. Needham. Ma. Industrial Engineering 191 Drew, Bernard A., Windsor. Ma, English 171 Drexler, Philip W., Stoneham. Ma, Social Studies Driscoll, Jr., Robert J., Hingham, Ma, Marketing 219 Drummond, Richard L., Pawtucket, RI, Management 219 Dubbin. Diann B., Coral Gables, Fl, Humanities 235 Dubie. Thomas A.. Waltham, Ma, Physical Education Dubois, Myrielle U., Dorchester, Ma. Nursing Dudevoir. Edward E., Lynn, Ma. Accounting 219 Dufault. Robert A., Allston, Ma, Mathematics Duffy, James D., Cambridge, Ma, Management Duffy, James W., Westford, Ma. Finance Insurance 219 Duffy, John L., West Roxbury, Ma, Psychology 159 Duffy, Michael, Waltham, Ma, Industrial Engineering 191 Duffy. Sheila M.. Milton. Ma, Nursing 255 Dugan, Robert J., Flushing, NY, Civil Engineering Duggan, Dennis J., Roslindale. Ma. Marketing 219 Dugheltree. Robert F., Mountain Lake, NJ, Marketing Duke, William G.. Ossining, NY, Accounting 219 Dunlap, David C, Saratoga Springs, NY, Power Systems Engineering 183 Dunn, Alice B., Milton, Ma, Sociology 159 Dunn, Kathryn M., Cranston, RI. Humanities Dupont, Mary M., Brighton, Ma, Nursing Dupre, Richard E., Northbridge, Ma, Civil Engineering 191 Duquella, Eric, Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering 191 Durant, Jr., Michael G., East Weymouth. Ma, Electrical Engineering Durkin, Marcia C, Watertown, Ma, Humanities 235 Dutka, Eileen A.. Belmont, Ma, Social Studies 235 Dwon, Roger R., Mendham, NJ, Power Systems Engineering 183 Dwyer, Ellen )., Dorchester, Ma, Nursing 252 Dwyer, William M., Framingham, Ma, Industrial Engineering 191 Dyer, Mary Lou, Brookline, Ma, Humanities Eadie, Alexandra H., Norwich, Ct, Sociology Earl, Betsy C, Lake George, NY, Humanities Earle, Charles W., West Boxford, Ma, General Science Early, David J., Worcester, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Eastman, Kevin M., Brighton, Ma, Electrical Engineering Eastman, Richard C, Arlington. Ma, Industrial Relations Eaton, Walter P., Rochester, NY, Electrical Engineering Eberly, Dan H., Needham, Ma, Marketing Edelstein, Martin S., West Roxbury, Ma, Chemistry Edwards David R., Melrose, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Ehrlich, Stewart R., Springfield, Ma, Political Science Eiselen, Theodore W., Brighton, Ma, Electrical Engineeri ng Ekman, Michael B., Manchester, NH, Finance Insurance Elkington, Elaine E., North Quincy, Ma, Nursing Ellis, Douglas P., Braintree, Ma, Industrial Engineering Ellsworth, William H., Ashland, Ma, Physical Education Emery, Susan A., Woburn, Ma, Medical Technology Emond, Edward W., Braintree, Ma, Mathematics Enman, Blair J., Acton, Ma, Civil Engineering Epstein, Roy A., Franklin Square, NY, Biology Erekson, Lawrence P., Lynn, Ma, Civil Engineering Ericson, Donald G., Quincy, Ma, Industrial Engineering Esposito, Gary R., Hamden, Ct, Political Science Estee, Thomas M., Hudson, NH, Respiration Therapy EsteUa, George R., Peabody, Ma, Management Everson, William P., North Quincy, Ma, Management By, Kenneth, Norwood, Ma, Psychology Fabiano, Charles E., SomervUle, Ma, History Facella, Carol A., Winthrop, Ma, Sociology Fader, Stephen S., New York, NY, Civil Engineering Fagner, Maureen P., Pinehurst, Ma, Physical Education Fahey, Thomas E., Barrington, RI, CivU Engineering Fallon, James J., Watertown, Ma, Electrical Engineering Fallona, Ronald D., Dorchester, Ma, Chemical Engineering Falzone, Joanne M., Quincy, Ma, Forsyth Dental Fantasia, Michael J., South Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Fardy, Dean R, Lincoln, RI, Electrical Engineering Farese, Robert L., Medford, Ma, Political Science Farrell, Robert M., Arlington, Ma, Civil Engineering Fatow, Craig R., Roslyn, NY, Industrial Engineering Faucher, John D., Newton, Ma, History Fava, Mitchell P., Stoneham, Ma, Electrical Engineering Feder, Norman E., Portland, Me, Sociology Feinberg, Arnold S., Natick, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Feinberg, Robert E., Brighton, Ma, Sociology Feinstein, Barry A., Peabody, Ma, Political Science Feinstein, Howard J., Freeport, NY, Finance Insurance Feldman, Betsy J., SomervUle, Ma, Humanities Feldstein, Jeffrey, Swampscott, Ma, Psychology Fehnan, Steven W., Maiden, Ma, Chemistry Felt, Julia O., Boston, Ma, Humanities Fenton, Donald M., Andover, Ma, Criminal Justice Ferguson, John H., North Attleboro, Ma, Chemi stry Ferguson, John H., Boston, Ma, Civil Engineering Ferrante, Charles R., East Boston, Ma, Industrial Engineering Ferraro, Irene E., Everett, Ma, Respiration Therapy Ferraro, Vincent P., Watertown, Ma, Marketing Ferreira, William J., Melrose, Ma, Humanities Ferrera, Jr., Pedro M., SomervUle, Ma, (Accounting) Ferriero, David S., Danvers, Ma, English Ferrino, Paul A., Milford, Ct, Psychology Ferris, Susan, Springfield, Ma, Forsyth Dental 159 235 235 184 191 192 159 219 255 192 245 159 192 192 159 147 192 192 192 159 219 235 146 219 152 Ferrisi, Alfred [., South Weymouth, Ma. Accounting Fertig. Gary I., Brooklyn, NY, Accounting Fialkow, Neal )., Natick, Ma. Marketing Fields. Thomas )., Stoneham. Ma. Sociology Fillio. loanne E., Lenoxdale. Ma, Forsyth Dental Findlater. David L.. Detroit, Mi. Management Fine, Nancy A., Chestnut Hill. Ma. Humanities Fingon. Robert [.. Hamden. Ct. Sociology Finkel. Doreen E.. Canton. Ma. Biology Finlayson. Glenn A.. Wakefield. Ma. English Finn, Ruth B.. Walerbury. Ct. Nursing Finneran, Thomas M.. Dorchester. Ma. Finance Insurance Finnerty, Kevin B., Belmont. Ma, Management Finnigan. Joseph M.. Winooski, Vt, Accounting Fiore. |r.. John, Newburgh. NY. Mathematics Fiorente. Alan. Forestville. Ct. Mechanical Engineering Firestone, Linda A.. Valley Stream. NY. Drama Fisher, David B., Brookline. Ma. Industrial Relations Fisher. Kathleen M.. Arlington. Ma. Medical Technology Fishlin, [errold S., Medford, Ma, Biology Fishman, Barry S., Boston, Ma, Social Studies Fishman, Daniel R., Maiden, Ma. Modern Languages Fity, Christine, West Islip, NY, Political Science Fitzgerald, Mark P., Winchester, Ma. Electrical Engineering Fitzgerald, Robert H.. Lexington. Ma. Civil Engineering Fitzgerald. Sharon. Ipswich, Ma, Psychology Fitzgibbons, Mark F., Quinebaug, Ct, Criminal Justice Fitzpatrick, Carol A., Winchester. Ma, Nursing Fitzpatrick, Harry R.. Everett, Ma, Industrial Engineering Fitzsimmons, Paul J., Waltham, Ma, Respiration Therapy Fiumara. John. Medford. Ma, Industrial Engineering Flaherty, James C. Dedham, Ma, History Flanagan, Stephen P., Milford, Ma. Electrical Engineering Flanagan. Susan C. Hazardville, Ct, Sociology Flanigan, Maureen T., Weymouth, Ma, Biology Fleishman. Sandra E.. Hyde Park, Ma, Humanities Flemister, Zandra 1., South Glastonbury, Ct, Political Science Fletcher, Alan A., Haverhill, Ma, Electrical Engineering Florentine, Mary S.. Nutley, NJ, Psychology Florie. Dennis M., Newburgh, NY. Electrical Engineering Flynn. John M., Maiden, Ma, Marketing Flynn, Linda A., Stoneham, Ma. Sociology Flynn, Marie A.. Jamaica Plain, Ma, Nursing Flynn, Michael C, Revere, Ma, Civil Engineering Flynn, Peter J., Dorchester, Ma, Industrial Engineering Flynn, Stephen M., Waltham, Ma, Management Flynn, Jr., John H., Methuen, Ma, Sociology Fogel, Robert M., Franklin Square, NY, Sociology Foley. Dorothy M.. Woburn, Ma, Humanities Foley, Robert, Somerville, Ma, History Font, Alvard G., Bayamon, PR, Industrial Relations Fontes, Joseph L., Natick, Ma, Criminal Justice Forcina, John A., Brockton, Ma, Marketing Ford, Christopher, Allston, Ma, Management Ford, Patricia, Brookline, Ma, Physical Education Forest, Vicki M., Huntington, NY, Forsyth Dental Forman, Glen R., Randolph, Ma, History Forman, Jeffrey A., Maiden, Ma, Management Forman, Michael J., Baldwin, NY, Mechanical Engineering Forrest. Andrew N., WoUaston, Ma. Industrial Relations Forrest, Louise A., Dorchester, Ma, Medical Technology Forrester, Lancelot A., Boston, Ma, Political Science Forte, Robert T., Roslindale, Ma, History Fortini, Leda D., West Springfield, Ma, Forsyth Dental Fortino, Jerry M., Medford, Ma, Accounting Fosbrook, Richard L., Glens Falls, NY, Economics Foss, Jeffrey J., Somerville, Ma, Physical Therapy Foster, Carolyn N., Roxbury, Ma, Humanities Foster, Joyce P., Dorchester, Ma, Psychology Fox, David, Bronx. NY, Mechanical Engineering Fox, Robert W., Cheshire, Ct, Electrical Engineering Fraites, Jr., Richard E., Mansfield, Ma, Economics Francis, Charlene R., Roxbury, Ma, Nursing Frank, Arthur S., Albany, NY, Electrical Engineering Frankel, Karen B., Roslyn Heights, NY, Psychology Franzblau, Robert M.. Paramus, NJ, Industrial Engineering Eraser. Audrey J., Milton, Ma, Nursing Eraser, David J., Boston, Ma, Political Science Fraser, George S., Sterling Junction, Ma, Physical Therapy Fratto, Robert L., Medford, Ma, Industrial Engineering Fratto, Thomas G., Cambridge, Ma, Mathematics Frazier. Laurie E., Duxbury, Ma, Humanities Freedman, David R., Cliffside Park, NJ, Psychology  Freedman, Laura D., Peabody, Ma, Nursing Freedman, Steven P., Belmont, Ma, Journalism Freedman, Steven R., Swampscott, Ma, Marketing Freilich, Marc A.. Philadelphia, Pa, Mathematics Freitas, Jr., Stephen F., Medford, Ma, Electrical Engineering Freni, David P., Burlington, Ma, Finance Insurance Friedberg, Joel B., Brighton, Ma, Pharmacy Friedenreich, Glenn J., Palisades Park, NJ, Electrical Engineering Friedman, Pamela S., Newton, Ma, Sociology Frio, Daniel C, Cranston, RI, History Froehlich, Charles M., Peekskill, NY, Chemical Engineering Frost, Gregory H., Weymouth, Ma, Sociology Frye, James D., Brookline, Ma, Nursing Fuchs, Denise C, Jericho, NY, Sociology Fuller, Lawrence E., Bellport, NY, Economics Fullington, Brian P., Auburndale, Ma, Journalism Furnald, Stephen G., Watertown, Ma, Criminal justice Fyfe, Gregory C, Andover, Ma, Management 255 150 220 193 220 171 193 Gabriel, Katherine M., Weymouth, Ma, Humanities Gagnon, Alan J., Framingham, Ma, Accounting Gagnon, David D., Boston, Ma, General Science Galante, Edward G., Inwood, NY, Civil Engineering Galeazzi, Alexis, Boston, Ma, Forsyth Dental Galgay, Elizabeth, Belmont, Ma, Forsyth Dental Gallagher, Kathleen M., Boston, Ma, Nursing Gallant, Dale J., Brighton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Gallinaro, Judith L., Quincy, Ma, Nursing Gallonio, Andrew V., Johnston, R I, Accounting Gamache, David M., Springfield, Ma, Art History Gandbhir, Dilip S., Newton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Garabedian, Randolph N., Salem, NH, Criminal Justice Garber, Robert J., Winthrop, Ma, Marketing Gardner, Thomas G., Readville, Ma, Marketing Garey. Sharon M., Allston, Ma, Nursing Garland, Andrea L., Boston, Ma, Humanities Garrick, Judith A., Stoughton, Ma, Nursing Gates, Robert E., Roslindale, Ma, Civil Engineering Gates, Thomas C, Lake Katrine, NY, Mechanical Engineering Gaudet, Patricia L., Lynn, Ma, Speech Hearing Gaudette, Daniel C. J., Maiden, Ma, Accounting Gay, James A., Burlington, Ma, Electrical Engineering Gayle, Mary L., Hampton, Va, Physical Education Geezil, Michael E., Dorchester, Ma, Finance Insurance Geishecker, Stephen P., Wrentham, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Gelinas, John J., Arlington, Ma, Criminal Justice Geller, Leon A., Auburndale, Ma, Sociology GeUer, Samual S., Pawtucket, RI, Management Gemignani, Joseph S., Boston, Ma, Political Science Genovese, William M., Lynn, Ma, Electrical Engineering George, John J., Watertown, Ma, Biology George, Michael G., Glens Falls, NY, Electrical Engineering Gersh, Linda K., West Newton, Ma, Humanities Gersh, Robert D., Hyannis, Ma, Accounting Gerstenzang, Marcia R., Grand Gorge, NY, Pharmacy Gervasi, Patricia A., WoUaston, Ma, Nursing Getchell, Robert A., Randolph, Ma, Criminal Justice Getman, Marvin D., Waltham, Ma, Management Getrost, Deborah A., Arlington, Ma, Physical Education Getto, Leslie, East Meadow, NY, Industrial Relations Getzoff, Steven B., Brooklyn, NY, Mathematics Giambanco, Steven J., Brighton, Ma, Political Science Giampapa, Gail G., Newtonville, Ma, Forsyth Dental Giangrande, Edward J., Medford, Ma, Economics Gia.mangelo, Dominic L., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Philosophy Giarinetti, Anthony P., East Boston, Ma, Criminal Justice Gidwani, Narayan N., Flushing, NY, Electrical Engineering Gifford, William A., Norwood, Ma, History Gilbert, Ann Marie L., Burlington, Ma, Politica l Science Gilbert, Ivlichael B., Worcester, Ma, Civil Engineering GiL, Paul, Worcester, Ma, Criminal Justice Gillen, Laurie M. Rochester, NY, Physical Education Gilman, Peter J., Brighton, Ma, Accounting Gtnsburg, Peter, Revere, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Girard, Andre Y., Springfield, Ma, Biology Gisetto, Paul I.. Reading, Ma, Chemical Engineering 193 255 220 220 ' 220 255 235 255 213 193 220 193 261 220 193 193 235 220 262 212 145 160 185 144 160 193 Gladue. Brian A., Baltic. Ct, Biology Classman, Cynthia E., Haverhill, Ma, Social Studies Clasthal, Jay N., Yonkers, NY, History Clebowski, Carl C, North Tonawanda, NY, Industrial Engineering Gleichauf, Edward P.. Walpole, Ma, Management Click, Murray L., Maiden, Ma, Management Cloth, Trina E., Framingham, Ma, Humanities Coddard, Alan W., Wakefield, Ma, Civil Engineering Codek, Stephen, Newport, RI, Finance Insurance Goguen, Nadine M., Gardner, Ma, Physical Therapy Colberg, Betsy |., Brookline, Ma, Sociology Cold, Charles, Mattapan, Ma, Sociology Goldberg, Howard, Norwich, Ct, Civil Engineering Goldberg, Morton, Boston, Ma, Respiration Therapy Goldberg, Steven J., Hull, Ma, Electrical Engineering Goldberger, John M,, Scardale, NY, Accounting Golden, Gerald D., Peabody, Ma, Social Studies Goldman, Kenneth J., Boston, Ma, Political Science Goldman, Naomi H., East Bridgewater, Ma, Biology Goldsmith, Bette A., Peabody, Ma, English Goldstein, Edith H., West Newton, Ma, Humanities Goldstein, Mark B., Winthrop, Ma, Accounting Goldstein, Robert, Massapequa, NY, History Combos, William A., Wayland, Ma, Psychology Concalves, Karen P., Lynn, Ma, Marketing Gonnella, William R., Wakefield, Ma. Industrial Engineering Goode, Thomas N., East Bridgewater, Ma, Social Studies Goodhue, Henry E., Red Bank, NJ, Civil Engineering Goodman, Carol A., Springfield, Ma, Physical Education Goodman. Kitty K., Cambridge, Ma, Independent Goodwin, Lynne, North Andover, Ma, English Goodwin, Philip L, Danvers, Ma, Management Coon, Alvina M., Cambridge, Ma, General Science Gorban, Steven S., New Bedford, Ma, Marketing Gorcenski, Janet B.. Dorchester, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Gordon, Joanne C, Braintree, Ma, Physical Therapy Cordon, Linda C, Newton, Ma, Humanities Cordon, Martin H., Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering Gordon, Richard, Newton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Gordon, Robert, West Roxbury, Ma, Criminal Justice Cordoa Spencer, B.. Framingham. Ma, Management Gormley, William D., Hopkinton, Ma, Mathematics Could, Christine M., Woburn, Ma, Mathematics Gould, Lawrence A., Natick, Ma, Accounting Graceffa, Michael J., Maynard. Ma, Physical Education Graham, Jeanne M., West Roxbury, Ma, Nursing Granato, Joseph P., Dedham, Ma, Psychology Grande. Robert W.. Providence, RI, Political Science Grande, Stephen F., Maiden, Ma, Political Science Grandin, Wayne T., Massapequa, NY, Chemical Engineering Grant. Barbara N. AUston. Ma, Humanities Grant, Charles L., Lexington, Ma. Accounting Grave, Theodore R.. Boston, Ma, Power Systems Engineering Cray, Charles K. Reading, Ma, Industrial Engineering Grazer, Richard E., Quincy, Ma, Chemical Engineering Greco. Frederick J.. Revere. Ma, Humanities Greeley, Thomas F., North Weymouth. Ma. Criminal Justice Green. Errol D., Jamaica Plain. Ma. Pharmacy Green, Patricia A., Kingston. Pa, Psychology Green, Peter C., Milton, Ma, History Green. Steven P. North Bellmore, NY. Sociology Greenberg, Robert P., Foxboro, Ma, Management Greene, Christopher. Holyoke. Ma. Mathematics Greene. Patricia M.. Weymouth. Ma. Nursing Greengarten, Linda B., Bridgeport, Ct, Nursing Greenidge, Elizabeth A., Cambridge, Ma. Humanities Gregory. Harold. Boston, Ma, Biology Gregory, Linda S., Dahon, Ma, Criminal Justice Crenier. Teresa A.. Upton. Ma. Physical Education Grimaldi, Lawrence S., East Providence. RI. Biology Grogan. Kathleen A., Byfield. Ma. Physical Therapy Croomes, Martha L., Dorchester, Ma, Economics Cross, Robert M., Boston, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Grossman, Arthur B., Scarsdale. NY. Mathematics Grossman, Michael E., Framingham. Ma. Pharmacy Grout. Catherine P., Saugus. Ma. Nursing Groves, Richard D., Arlington. Ma, Biology Crozalsky, Samuel. Brighton. Ma, Accounting Grundy. James W.. Coventry. RI. Mechanical Engineering Guilbert. Richard L.. North Kingston, RI, Physical Education CuUford. Nancy L.. Bridgewater. Ma, Physical Education Curland, Herbert S., New London, Ct., Accounting Gurman. Robert A.. Beverly, Ma, Biology 144 235 220 235 194 229 245 160 151 194 175 220 232 231 210 213 194 230 194 236 220 236 220 194 212 194 194 178 236 220 151 261 k .;. 247 f ' 160 245 ■ 160 ■ ' ► 194 . 250 S ' . Itk 160 210 176 145 242 ' ' « o4 ?- ' Ua- ' « Gumey, Milton R., Randolph, Ma, Finance Insurance Gushen, Nancy, Swampscott, Ma, Nursing Guymont, Philip J., South Easton, Ma, Finance Insurance Guzzetta, Christy, Scarsdale, NY, Management Haas, Glenn S., Holliston, Ma, Civil Engineering Hachey, Anne M., Fitchburg, Ma, Pharmacy Hackel, Kenneth C, Mattapan, Ma, Social Studies Hackett, David, Allston, Ma, Mathematics Hackett, Walter F., Weymouth, Ma, Criminal Justice Haddad, Richard S., West Roxbury, Ma, Management Hadley, Kenneth P., Manchester, NH, Industrial Engineering Hagan, Albert, Beverly, Ma, Accounting Hager, Joy I., Lynnfield, Ma, Sociology Hagopian, Ronald R., Lincoln, Ma, Electical Engineering Hahesy, John F., Revere, Ma, English Hahn, Richard S., Arlington, Ma, Povk er Systems Engineering Hahn, Richard S., Cambridge, Ma, Power Systems Engineering Hale, Paul F., Norwood, Ma, Mathematics Hall, David F., Cambridge, Ma, Criminal Justice Halle, Robert F., Quincy, Ma, Industrial Engineering Halliday, Kenneth E., Cambridge, Ma, Electrical Engineering Hallisey, Kevin J., Brockton, Ma, Political Science Hallman, Kenneth A., Norwood, Ma, History Halloran, Bernadette, Rowly, Ma, History Hamadeh, Abdulkader, Kingston, Ma, Civil Engineering Hamalainen, John R., Ashburnham, Ma, Electrical Engineering Hamburger, Steven J., Westbury, NY, Economics Hamill, Daniel B., Nahant, Ma, Chemical Engineering Hamilton, Jeaime A., North Quincy, Ma, Nursing Hamlett, Margaret L, Dorchester, Ma, Health Education Hammond, David H., Boxford, Ma, Journalism Hand, Richard A., Bangor, Me, Physical Therapy Hankinson, Raymond F., Quincy, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Hanley, John A., Brighton, Ma, Chemistry 221 194 215 194 148 194 194 261 194 194 171 194 175 255 245 Hannigan, Paul W., Houlton, Me, CivU Engineering Hansen, Alan J., Hempstead, NY, Electrical Engineering Hansen, Susan J., Pawcatuck, RI, Nursing Hanssen, Roy E., Pawling, NY, Electrical Engineering Hardian, Henry, Lincoln, Ma, English Harrell, Howard, New Bedford, Ma, Industrial Engineering Harriman, Timothy W., Park Ridge, NJ, Industrial Relations Harrington, Colleen M., New Bedford, Ma, Political Science Harrington, Mary E., Fall River, Ma, Sociology Harrington, Robert C, Arlington, Ma, Finance Insurance Harris, George E., Dorchester, Ma, Finance Insurance Harris, Linda L., Brookline, Ma, Sociology Harrison, Bryan E., Lincoln, RI, Political Science Hart, Lorraine A., Peekskill, NY, Physical Education Hartley, Linda A., New Bedford, Ma, Physical Therapy Hartman, William, Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Hartnett, Thomas G., West Roxbury, Ma, Electrical Engineering Harvey, Mary F., Framingham, Ma, Nursing Haskell, Channing S., Contoocook, NH, Electrical Engineering Haskell, Valerie L., Quincy, Ma, Speech Hearing Haskin, Bruce L., Jackson Heights, NY, Accounting Hashp, Richard R., Winthrop, Ma, Respiration Therapy Hassell, Stephen P., Holbrook, Ma, Civil Engineering Hassig, Kirk E., Natick, Ma, History Hatch, Cynthia M., Swampscott, Ma, Recreation Education Hausmann, Linda A., North Weymouth, Ma, Physical Therapy Hawkes, James G., Hingham, Ma, Chemistry Hawkins, Roberta, Leominster, Ma, Political Science Hawko, John P., Maiden, Ma, Civil Engineering Haworth, Dennis, New Bedford, Ma, Physics Hay, Brian, Fitchburg, Ma, Political Science Hayes, Dana, Dover, Ma, Sociology Hayes, Stephen M. Medford, Ma, Political Science Hayes, Jr., Thomas F., Reading, Ma, Electrial Engineering Hayward, David W., Philadelphia, Pa, Biology Heafey, Mary A., Roxbury, Ma, Nursing Healey, Maureen E., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Psychology Healy, George E., Providence, RI, English Hebel, Karen S., Rockaway, NJ, Forsyth Dental Hebert, Peter D., Topsfield, Ma. Management Hecht, Melvyn L., Yonkers, NY, Biology Hellen, Howard B.. Brighton, Ma, Psychology 195 185 160 211 247 195 179 252 195 236 215 245 161 161 195 151 255 221 161 161 Heller, Paul J., Milton, Ma, Industrial Engineering HeUring, Marcia D., Springfield, NJ, Speech Hearing Helms, George C, Atkinson, NH, Finance Insurance Hemingway, Rebecca, South Dartmouth, Ma, Physical Education Hepburn, James M.. Hanover, Ma, Mathematics Herlihy, Joseph F., Somerville, Ma, Fnance Insurance Herrmann, John S., West Boylston, Ma, Chemical Engineering Hersey, Suzanne W., Portland, Me, Nursing Hevey, Laurent A., Lawrence, Ma, Accounting Hicks, David G., Schenectady, NY, Electrical Engineering Hildreth, Andrew J., Troy, NY, Physical Education Hill, Paul W., Brockton, Ma, Management Hill, Scott C., Rochester, NY, Criminal Justice HUly, James A., Roslindale, Ma, Political Science HUshey, William A., Gloucester, Ma, Biology Hiltz, Stephen A., Needham, Ma, History Hindin, Robert E., Mendham, NJ, Electrical Engineering Hinds, Stanley, Lynn, Ma, Sociology Hirschy, Donald L., Taunton, Ma, Criminal Justice Hitchcock, Francis X., West Newbury, Ma, Civil Engineering Hobbs, Mary Ellen, Norwood, Ma, Humanities Hoberman, Steven R., Cambridge, Ma, Management Hofer, Patricia, Boston, Ma, Nursing Hoffer. Erik H., Lawrence, Ma, Industrial Relations Hoffman, Ned A., Forest Hills, NY, Industrial Engineering Hogan, Cynthia A., Marblehead, Ma, Forsyth Dental Hogan, Edward J., Somerville, Ma, History Hoge, Wendy C, New York, NY, English Hogg, Gary W., Redding, Ct, Finance Insurance Holbrook, Bette F., Hingham, Ma, Nursing Holbrook, Gail F., North Branford, Ct. Drama Holden, Carol L., North Quincy, Ma, Nursing Holland, John R., West Hartford, C. Mechanical Engineering Holland, Judith S., South Boston, Ma, Nursing Hollins, Maureen D., Roxbury, M , English Holmes, Walter E., South Weymouth, Ma, Management Honer, Kenneth, Fair Lawn, NJ, Accounting 221 Honeywell, Sterling W., West Hartford, Ct, Mechanical Engineering 195 Hopkinson, George G., New Hartford, NY, Management 221 Horbal, Kathryn S., Middleboro, Ma, Chemical Engineering Horeanopoulos, Mark A., Presque Isle, Me, Mechanical Engineering 175 Horgan, John R., Melrose, Ma, Economics 161 236 221 221 176 195 236 215 214 195 221 255 154 195 252 161 Horton, Jr., Richard W., Warwick, RI, English Horvitz, Eileen S., Stoughton, Ma, Physical Therapy Houghtaling, Patricia, Woburn, Ma, Accounting Howard, Cynthia L., Lynn, Ma, Forsyth Dental Howard, DNDL D., West Boylston, Ma, Electrial Engineering Howard, Irene, Hollywood, Fl, Forsyth Dental Howard, Paul, Boston, Ma, Sociology Howard, Jr., Jimmie, Hyde Park, Ma, Marketing Howe, Beverly, Lexington, Ma, Sociology Howe, Boyd A., Farmingdale, NY, Management Howe, Constance L., Boston Ma, Criminal Justice Howey, Jon A., Dubois, Pa, Chemical Engineering Howley, Thomas J., Quincy, Ma, Sociology Hrycaj, Thomas M., Amsterdam, NY, Mechanical Engineering Hudner, H. Kennedy, Swansea, Ma, Journalism Hudson, John J., Worcester, Ma, Financa Insurance Hughes, Julia, Maiden, Ma, Forsyth Dental Hughes, Susan A., Fall River, Ma, Physical Education Huling, Ray G., Marshfield, Ma, Management Humphrey, Brian J., Gardner, Ma, Industrial Relations Hung, Shiu K., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Hunt, Patrick C, Pavjrtucket, RI, Chemistry Hunter, Joanne G., Dracut, Ma, Speech Hearing Hunter, Ronald, Weymouth, Ma, Chemical Engineering Huntington, Joan E., New Hartford, NY, Psychology Huntington, Russell O., Weymouth, Ma, Civil Engineering Huntley, Donald J., Acton, Ma, Civil Engineering Hurley, Kevin J., Ridgewood, NJ, Management Hurley, Michael L., Lexington, Ma, Marketing Hurwitz, Charles L., Newton, Ma, Chemical Engineering Hurwitz, Josef J., Brookline, Ma, Journalism Hutson, John P., Boston, Ma, English Huxley, William F., Hingham, Ma, Mathematics Hwang, Catherine C, Garden City, NY, Sociology Hwoo, Lily, Boston, Ma, Accounting Hyytiainen, Nina M., Rochdale. Ma, Forsyth Dental 243 221 186 142 221 212 195 161 195 195 216 195 161 161 161 lacono, Salvatore J., Mahwah, NJ, Management lannazzi, Angela M., Lexington, Ma, Nursing lannazzi, Ronald M., Waltham, Ma, Political Science Iglesias, Jorge, Brighton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering lodice, Michael F., Weston, Ma, Sociology Ippolito, Santo, East Boston, Ma, Modern Languages Isbitsky, Joseph J., Maiden, Ma, Respiration Therapy Iverson, Paul J., Lowell, Ma, Drama 153 195, 208 Jacksina, Judith A., Boston, Ma, Drama Jackson, Leslie D., Roxbury, Ma, Nursing Jacobs, Michael A., New Hyde Park, NY, Political Science Jacobson, Jeffrey A., Auburndale, Ma, Accounting Jacobson, Keith E., Newton, Ma, Marketing Jaffa, Jane D., Manhasset, NY, Sociology Jafolis, Stephen N., Manchester, NH, Electrical Engineering James, Douglas B., Winthrop, Ma, Management Jamiel, Adrienne M., Fall River, Ma, Management Jankowski, Jr., Joseph A., Bayport, NY, Electrical Engineering Janson, Neil H., Shrewbury, Ma, Electrical Engineering Jaye, Larry, Mattapan, Ma, Mechanical Engineering JefFers, Gary T., Venetia, Pa, Accounting Jendze jec, Paul M., Coventry, RI, Civil Engineering Jenkins, Russell B., Wakefield, Ma, History Jenner, Wendy R., South Hamilton, Ma, Nursing Jenness, Kathleen, Wakefield, Ma, Forsyth Dental Jennings, Frederick C, New Ashford, Ma, Economics Jennings, Thomas F., North Quincy, Ma, Finance Insurance Jerpi, Henry J., East Wymouth, Ma, Sociology Johnson, Ann M., Belmont, Ma, Forsyth Dental Johnson, Arthur G., Cumberland, Rl, Civil Engineering Johnson, Bruce E., Acton, Ma, Civil Engineering Johnson, Carl, Newtonville, Ma, Civil Engineering Johnson, Eileen C, Newport, Rl, Forsyth Dental Johnson, Eugene, Medford, Ma, Pharmacy Johnson, John P., Westfield, NJ, Finance Insurance Johnson, Karl E., North Attleboro, Ma, Management Johnson, Ludwig A., Natick, Ma, Finance Insurance Johnson, Pamela L., Holliston, Ma, Forsyth Dental Johnson, Paul R., East Weymouth, Ma, Power Systems Engineeri Johnson, Paula E., Roxbury, Ma, Humanities Johnson, Richard A., Lynn, Ma, Industrial Engineering Johnson, Wayne A., Red Hook, NY, Mathematics Johnston, Catherine R., Southington, Ct., Physical Education Johnston, Kathleen A., Bayside, NY, English Jolda, James M., Webster, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Jones, Barbara, Marblehead, Ma, Physical Education Jones, Donald E., Framingham, Ma, Biology Jones, Richard J., Braintree, Ma, Civil Engineering Jones, Spencer C, Boston, Ma, Management Jordan, Donald F., Walpole, Ma, History Jordan, Gregory, Jamaica Plain, Ma, Marketing Jordan, Thomas R., Georgetown, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Jouvelis, Jeanne, Wakefield, Ma, Accounting Joyce, Daniel C, South Boston, Ma, English Joyce, Patrick J., Brookline, Ma, Political Science Joyce, Jr., Thomas J., Dorchester, Ma, Marketing Joyet, Robert A., Ulster Park, NY, Civil Engineering Jurgrau, Mark I., Waltham, Ma, Finance Insurance 152 221 221 161 196 177 221 196 161 161 196 196 248 212 ng 183 236 196 229 161 196 222 222 222 -«gi:: a !.-«ii« • ..j araii ' a-.. Kadison, Jeffrey P., Woodside, NY, Independent Kaeser, Scott L., East Hartford, Ct, English Kagan, Judith S., Red Bank, NJ, Pharmacy Kahn, Marvin M., Newton, Ma, Accounting Kahn, Steven M., Medford, Ma, Chemistry Kaloyanides, James, M., Newton, Ma, Management Kamenski, Diane W., Dorchester, Ma, Medical Technology Kandel, Alan I., East Northport, NY, Management Kane, John W., Arlington, Ma, Finance Insurance Kane, Philip F., Weymouth, Ma, Biology 162 142 222 171 222 249 222 Kannally, Mary C, Walpole, Ma, Forsyth Dental Kaplan, Deborah E., Suffern, NY, Physical Therapy Kaplan, Jeffrey, Rutland, Vt, Management 222 Kaplan, Linda M.. Yonkers, NY, Humanities 236 Kaplan, Pearl E.. Cranston. Rl, Nursing Karacek, Edward D., Chelsea, Ma, Physical Education Karadimas, George C. Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering 196 Karagheusian, Lawrence G., West Hartford. Ct, Electrical Engineering Karasyk, Philip, Boston, Ma, Political Science Karlson, Nancy R., West Roxbury, Ma, Biology Karolow, Patricia A., Newburyport, Ma, Biology Kasendorf, Leonard S.. Hollis, NY. Industrial Engineering Kattar. Thomas A., Lawrence. Ma, Criminal Justice Katz, Barry A,, Weymouth, Ma, Humanities Katz, Debra L., Weymouth. Ma, Humanities Katz, Judith M., Brookline, Ma, Humanities Katz, Paul J.. Oceanside. NY, Psychology Katz, Susan J., Woburn, Ma, Nursing Katzenberger, John, Boston, Ma, General Science Kaufman, Steven B.. Hamden. CT. Journalism Kauppila. Vuokko V.. Boston. Ma, Nursing Kaveney, Jane, West Roxbury, Ma, Sociolory Kayes, Florence. Nashua. NH, Sociology Kazo, Theodore W., Shelton, Ct, Psychology Keagle, Cynthia A., West Newton, Ma. Physical Therapy Kean. Barry. Reading, Ma, Finance Insurance Keane, Paul J., Mattapan, Ma. Biology Keating, John W.. Medford, Ma. Civil Engineering Keaveny, Joseph M., Haverhill. Ma. Civil Engineering Keenan, Stephen L.. Somerville. Ma. Management Keene. Russell E.. Keene. NH. Mechanical Enigineering Kefalas. Penny B., Brookline, Ma, Philosophy Kelleher. John M.. Brockton, Ma, Biology Kelleher, John T., Brockton, Ma, Management Keller, Galen J.E.. Wareham. Ma. Management Kelley. Barbara J., Arlington. Ma. Psycology Kelley, Dennis G., Belmont. Ma. Electrical Engineering Kelley. Elaine F.. West Roxbury. Ma, English Kelley, Ellen M. Dorchester. Ma. Mathematics Kelley, Karen M., Wakefield, Ma. Nursing Kellilier. Ralph A.. Winthrop, Ma, Electrical Engineering KeUy, James J., Stoneham. Ma. History Kelly. Judith E.. Brookline. Ma. Economics Kelly. Kevin L.. Auburndale. Ma. Political Science Kelly. William G.. Waltham. Ma. Marketing Kelly. William S., South Weymouth, Ma, Electrical Engineering Kendall, Robert J.. Dorchester. Ma, Accounting Kenealy. William E.. Whitman. Ma, Mathematics Keimeally. Thomas M., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Kennedy, Joseph P., Plantsville, Ct, Accounting Kennedy, Rosemary M., Arlington, Va, Psychology Kennedy, Stephen J., Needham, Ma, History Kennedy, Walter C. Milton, Ma. Political Science Kenney. Edward J.. Westwood. Ma, Chemical Engineering Kenney, Francis E.. Boston, Ma. Management Kenrick. Scott A.. Saugus, Ma. Mechanical Engineering Kent, Virginia A., Charlestown, Ma, Nursing Keohan. Paul W.. Hanover. Ma. Civil Engineering Kerr. Geoffrey, Somerville, Ma, Electrical Engineering Kerrigan, Brian J.. Jamaica Plain, Ma, Industrial Engineering Kerrigan, James H., Woonsocket, Rl, Chemistry Kertes, Patricia G., Melrose, Ma, Sociology Keyes. Robert D., Dorchester, Ma, Physical Education Khachadourian, Eileen M., Woburn, Ma, Criminal Justice Kliaachadourian, William K., Woburn, Ma, Criminal Justice Khoury, Samuel, Arlington, Ma, Political Science Kidney, L.aurence, Framingham, Ma, Economics Kierstead. Vincent E., Maiden, Ma, Industrial Engineering Kilgore. Benjamin, Natick, Ma, Journalism Kilkenny, Dale C, Lexington, Ma, Forsyth Dental Killam, Valeria 1., Somerville, Ma. Humanities Killgoar. Elizabeth A.. Hingham. Ma. Psychology Killion, John R., Hanover, Ma, Criminal Justice Kimball, Robert A.. Bradford, Ma, Civil Engineering Kimmel. Linda. Newton Center. Ma, Humanities King, Thomas S., Norwell. Ma. Psychology King. Walter H., Lawrence. Ma, Accounting Kinnard. Laurence W., Wollaston. Ma. Biology Kiorpes. Lynne, Bratenlial, Oh. Psychology Kippenberger. Kathleen M., East Weymouth, Ma, Nursing Kippenberger, Kenneth H., East Weymouth, Ma, Social Studies Kirby Kevin A.. Dedham. Ma, Power Systems Engineering Kirchner. Bruce A.. Boston, Ma. Sociology 162 196 222 196 162 162 253 196 162 196 196 175 208 212 162 256 236 183 Kitzmiller, David E., Boston, English Kivijarv, Hans J., Stoneham, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Wager, Dennis C, Newton, Ma, Marketing Klein, Lauri J., Brookline, Ma, Speek Hearing Kleinwaks, John T., Norwood, Ma, Political Science Klimkiewicz, Geroge C, Chelsea, Ma, Physics Mine, Cheryl }., Newton , Na, Humanities Kline, Susan N., Maiden, Ma. Humanities Klint, Kenneth D., Islington, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Klocek, George S., Hartford, Ct, Electrical Engineering Knight, Pamela J., Needham, Ma, Nursing Knoll, Michael H., New York, NY, Psychology Knowlton, Scott L., Lewiston, Me, Psychology Kobrenski, Ronald J., North Andover, Ma, Mathematics Kobylarz, Robert |., Simsbury, Ct, Mechanical Engineering Koch, Dana J., Concord, NH, Philosophy Kodis, Jack R., Revere, Ma. Marketing Kogut, Daniel R., Meriden, Ct, Chemical Engineering Kolber, Charles H., West Seneca, NY. Industrial Relations Koralishn. Stephen M., Lawrence. Ma, Social Studies Korbas Tom, Boston, Ma. Industrial Engineering Komacki, Donald J., Schenectady, NY, Finance Insurance Korsak. Robert J., Methuen, Ma, Power Systems Engineering Kostrzewa, Walter W.. Metheun. Ma, Mechanical Engineering Kouffman, Robert H., East Hampton, NY, Management Koufopoulos, Peter P., Lynn, Ma, Electrical Engineering Kovler. Batya B., Lowell. Ma, Forsyth Dental Kowalczyk. William A.. Holbrook, Ma.Accounting Krakow. Sandra. Boston. Ma. Nursing Kratzmann, Monika, Cambridge, Ma, English Kravitz, Richard L., Wantagh, NY, Electrical Engineering Krawczyk, John A., Amherst, Ma. Civil Engineering KroU, Thomas M., Brighton, Ma, Journalism Kuhn, Louis C, Wichester, Ma, Accounting Kurowski. Christine M.. Chicopee Falls Ma. Mathematics Kursmark. Robert, Mystic, Ct, Mechanical Engineering Kwok-Faiso. Danny. Boston, Ma, Biology Kwolek, Richard J., Lincoln, RI, Civil Engineering Kwong, Glenn L., Cambridge, Ma, Forsyth Dental Kwong, King Tung. Cambridge. Ma, Chemical Engineering 197 222 236 236,240 197 174 162 154 222 197 222 197 222 197 197 162 173 197 145 197 171 197 Labella, Charles. Allston, Ma, Chemical Engineering Lacey, Kevin M.. North Attleboro, Ma, Management Lada, Ann L. Webster. Ma. Recreation Education Lahey. Karen A.. Pittsfield. Ma, Biology Laliberte, Robert A., Waterville, Me. Mechanical Engineering LaUy. Joseph G.. South Boston. Ma, Electrical Engineering Lam, Kwok N.. Boston. Ma. Electrical Engineering Lam. S.H. Sheldon. Beverly. Ma. Electrical Engineering Lamb. Carol S.. Sharon, Ma, Physical Education Lambalot, Roland P., New Bedford, Ma. Accounting Lambert. Andrea S.. Plainview. NY. Mathematics Lambert, Joanne M.. Williamstown. Ma. Physical Education Lambert. Wayne ].. Littleton. Ma. Biology Lamonica. Carol. North Andover. Ma, Nursing Lampert, John G., Boston, Ma, Accounting Landau, Lessica, Rockville Center, NY. Sociology Landman, Karen D.. Brookline, Ma. Humanities Landry. Paul R., Belmont, Ma, Criminal Justice Lane, Andrea E., Woburn, Ma. Humanities Lane. Jeanne E.. Essex. Ma. Humanities Lane. Mary A.. Dorchester. Ma. History Langford, Valorie J., Dorchester, Ma, Nursing Langlois, Raymond A., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Crim inal Justice Lanham, Carol A.. Boston, Ma. Speech Hearing Lankhorst. Craig E., Boston. Ma. Political Science Lanman, George T.. Bellport. NY. Economics Lanza. Dorina M., Lexington, Ma, Mathematics Lapierre, Deborah J., Boston. Ma. Forsyth Dental Lappin. Alan J.. Providence. RI, Modern Languages Lariccia, Salvatore J.. Somerville, Ma. Mechanical Engineering Laroche, Linda M., Maiden, Ma, Humanities Larosee. Patricia J., Manomet. Ma. Humanities Larsen, Kermeth P., Qunicy. Ma. Pharmacy Larson. David M.. Beverly Farms. Ma. Electrical Engineering Larson, Kenneth D.. Bedford. Ma, Industrial Engineering 222 245 162 176 197 182 162 243 155 237 260 237 149 174 237 231 197 197 Latsha, Geoffrey L, Brookline, Ma, Biology 149 Lattuca, Russell, L., Maynard, Ma, Criminal Justice 259 Laucka, Edward P., Dorchester, Ma, Biology Laurence, P ' crre, Allston, Ma, Industrial Relations Lauro, Louise E., Waterbury, Ct, Forsyth Dental Lavery, |ohn, Stoughton, Ma, Finance Insurance 222 Lavigne, Julie A., Lawrence, Ma, Physical Therapy 244 Lawler, Joseph C, North Reading, Ma, Finance Insurance 223 Lawless, Deborah M., West Hartford, Ct, Nursing Lawless, John A., East Boston, Ma, Respiration Therapy Lawlor, Patrick J., Maiden, Ma, Management 223 Lawrence, Wesley H., Boston, Ma, Respiration Therapy Lazar, James R., South Boston, Ma, Journalism Leahy, Nancy J., Meh-ose, Ma, Forsyth Dental Leamy, Donald C, Somerville, Ma, English 143 Leary, Patricia A., Brookline, Ma, Physical Education 245 Leary, Steven E., Acton, Ma, Political Science 146 Leavy, Paula J., Boston, Ma, Journalism 147 Leblanc, Denise M. Waltham, Ma, Nursing Leclair, Donald R., Beverly, Ma, Chemical Engineering 197 Leclair, Jr., Donald V., Keene, NH, Criminal Justice 261 Lee, Chester, Boston, Ma, Civil Engineering 180 Lee, John D., Mattapan, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 197 Lee, Kang L., Boston, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 197 Lee, Katherine E., Belmont, Ma, Forsyth Dental Lee, Kit H., Brookline, Ma, Electrical Engineering 198 Lee, Margaret P., Weston, Ma, Sociology Lee, Walter J., Boston, Ma, Biology 162 Lee, Wanda, Quincy, Ma, Pharmacy Lefebvre, Roland E., Nashua, NH, Electrical Engineering 176 Leff, Martin S., New London, Ct, Mechanical Engineering 174 LeffingweU, Donald J., New Haven, Ct, Mechanical Engineering 198 Lehtonen, Fred E., East Sandwich, Ma, Biology Leiacheur, Janice, Chelmsford, Ma, Forsyth Dental Lemay, Frank H., Hanover, Ma, Civil Engineering 198 Lembo, Vincent J., Norwood, Ma, Political Science 154 Lengsfelder, John H., Scarsdale, NY, Marketing 223 Lennox, Diane M., Norwood, Ma, Chemistry 162 Lento, Michael A., East Boston, Ma, Industrial Engineering Lentz, Robert L., Westbury, NY, Accounting 223 Leonard, Gregory A., Charlestown, Ma, Industrial Relations 223 Leonard, Steven E., Milton, Ma, English Leopold, Wendy E., Roslyn Harbor, NY, Humanities Leshane, Donald R., Waltham, Ma, Finance Insurance Lesieur, Shirley C, Newton, Ma, Pharmacy Lesko, Janet M., Stratford, Ct, Physical Therapy Letoumeau, Robert H., North Attleboro, Ma, Civil Engineering Letty, Donald F., Winchester, Ma, Finance Insurance Leung, Paul L., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering Levack, Joy E., Flushing, NY, English Levangie, Daniel J., East Braintree, Ma, Pharmacy Levenson, Jane, Framingham. Ma, Nursing Levin, C. Betsy, Holden, Ma, Physical Therapy Levin, Sheri B., Hyde Park, Ma, Journalism Levine, Dale A., Yonkers, NY, English Levine, Martin J., Boston, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Levine, Robert L., Allston, Ma, Political Science Levinson, Robert O., Paramus, NJ, Modern Languages Levreault, Stephen P., Brockton, Ma, Civil Engineering Levy, Stephen N., South Weymouth, Ma, Management Lewis, Jean, Lynn, Ma, Forsyth Dental Lewis, Juliet M., Cambridge, Ma, Economics Lia, Annett e M., Hillsdale, NJ, Psychology Liberfarb, Steven M., Newton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Liberman, Ellen S., Everett, Ma, Biology Lichtenstein, Robin M., New Hyde Park, NY, Psychology Lieber, Ellen L., Newington, Ct, Forsyth Dental Lieberman, Jeffrey M., Valley Stream, NY, Accounting Lief, Jeffrey R., Brookline, Ma, Psychology Lief, Susan J., Brookline, Ma, Sociology Light, Starr E., Avon, Ct., Forsyth Dental Likwornik, Jack, Brooklyn, NY, Chemistry Lim, Robert, Somerville, Ma, Civil Engineering Limoncelli, Robert J., Boston, Ma, Psychology Lindsey, Ann L., Marion, Ma, Humanities Lionetta, Anthony T., Arlington, Ma, Civil Engineering Lipman, Lois T., Mattapan, Ma, Humanities Lipson, Joan R., Dorchester, Ma, Independent Lisavich, Edward E., Lowell, Ma, Electrical Engineering Litalien, Gilbert J., Fall River, Ma, Biology Lite, Laurie R., Springfield, Ma, Forsyth Dental Littlefield, William E., Longmeadow, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Lizotte, Normand E., Milford, Ct, Power Systems Engineer ing Locke, Alan H., Randolph, Ma. Management 231 214 248 245 198 198 148 256 241 163 150 198 223 163 186 223 163 163 163 237 198 186 223 Mrf. Locke, Constance, Melrose, Ma, Forsyth Dental Locke, Jean E., Newton, Ma, Psychology Lombard!, James M., Ansonia, Ct, Mechanical Engineering London, Gerlad, Chelsea, Ma, Management Long, James P., Kearny, NJ, Political Science Loomis, John F., Monroeton, Pa, Industrial Engineering Loomis, Wayne R., Frederick, Md, Criminal Justice Loporto, Gerard M., Brookline, Ma, History Lordan, Gerald F., Arlington, Ma, Political Science Lostocco, Larry G., Bristol, Ct., Mechanical Engineering Loszewski, Alice M., Lawrence, Ma, Medical Technology Louf, Richard G., Salem, Ma, Modern Languages Lowe, Charles, Ballston Spa, NY, Industrial Engineering Lowe, Stephen, Worcester, Ma, Finance Insurance Lowell, Edward M. Port Chester, NY, Industrial Engineering Lowenkron, Barry F., Mattapan, Ma, Psychology Lowenstein, Gary S., Lakewood, NJ, Accounting Lubin, Barbara S., Elmira, NY, Psychology Lucey, Francis X., Melrose, Ma, Civil Engineering Luck, Gary D., Braintree, Ma, Chemical Engineering Lucyk, Greg E., Wallingford, Pa, Political Science Ludovina, Roberta C, Taunton, Ma, Recreation Education Luk, Ting Lung, Boston, Ma, Chemical Engineering Lukosi, Barbara, Brookline, Ma, Nursing Lunday, William F., Lexington, Ma, Non-concentration Business Luongo, John P. Everett, Ma, Civil Engineering Lyga, Harry A., Boston, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Lynn, Janet E., Brookline, Ma, Forsyth Dental Lyons, Janet A., Holbrook, Ma, Nursing Lyons, Richard J., Reading, Ma, Recreation Education Lyons, Sheila M., Brockton, Ma, Speech Hearing Lyons, Thomas P., North Quincy, Ma, Biology Lytwyn, Paula M., Green Brook, NJ, Forsyth Dental 163 198 223 163 182 163 154 223 198 163 223 198 198 198 198 Macaione, John A., North Attleboro, Ma, Non-Concentration Macaulay, Susan E., Duxbury, Ma, Physical Education MacBarron, Richard K., Southbury, Ct, History MacDonald, Daniel J., Randolph, Ma, Philosophy MacDonald, John, Quincy, Ma, Electrical Engineering MacDonough, Robert M., Maiden, Ma, Management MacDougall. Jean E., Bedford, Ma, Humanities MacFarlane, Peter D., Roslindale, Ma, Modern Languages MacFarlane, Rosemary, Hanover, Ma, Nursing MacGregor, John R., Holden, Ma, Sociology Macht, Alan H., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Accounting Maciver, Malcolm P., Brookline, MA, Criminal Justice MacKay, Robert W., Stoughton, Ma, Electrical Engineering MacKinnon, Kent D., Needham Heights, Ma, Marketing MacLean, Sharon A., Quincy, Ma, Biology MacLeod, Scott L., Arlington, Ma, Finance Insurance MacLeod, Stephen G., Stoneham, Ma, Accounting MacMaster, David J., Hingham, Ma, Marketing MacNevin, Paul E., Sharon, Ma, Civil Engineering Madden, James A., Mattapan, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Madden, John V., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Industrial Engineering Madge, Bradley J., Westwood, Ma, Economics Madsen, Patricia L., Millbury, Ma, Recreation Education Maes, Edmond F., Brookline, Ma, Psychology Magnasco, Elaine M., Melrose, Ma, English Mahaney, Edward D., Marlborough, Ma, Management Maillet, Philip J., Rumford, Me, Electrical Engineering Main, Charles D., Bath, Me, History Maines, Janis M., Wakefield , Ma, Marketing Maines, Wilson E., Lyndonville, NY, Industrial Relations Majkut, Sharon L., Boston, Ma, Nursing Makseyn, Stephanie A., Cambridge, Ma, Sociology Maksian, Robert, Methuen, Ma, Electrical Engineering Maleska, Gary E., Cresskill, NJ, Electrical Engineering Malick, Nancy, Quincy, Ma, Physical Therapy Mallon, David, Wenham, Ma, Marketing Malman, Joel H., Roslyn, NY, Mathematics Maloney, Gerard L., Methuen, Ma, Civil Engineering Manburg, David G., West Roxbury, Ma, Accounting Mancini, Guy, Bedford, Ma, Criminal Justice Mandler, Jr., John J., Plainview, NY, Electrical Engineering Mandosa, Joseph P., Roslindale, Ma, Electrical Engineering 163 163 198 223 172 256 198 223 223 223 224 199 199 182 245 163 224 199 224 224 253 153 199 241 224 163 224 259 208 199 Mann, Mary ]., Boston, Ma, Political Sience Mann, Robert S., Chelsea, Ma, Accounting Manne, Harvey F.. Flushing, NY, Industrial Engineering Manners, Paul H., Wappingers Falls, NY, Accounting Manning, |ames A., [amaica Plain, Ma, Marketing Manning. John E., Dedham, Ma, Political Science Marchesano, Anthony A., Plainview. NY, Social Studies Marchese, Thomas F., Somerville, Ma, Electrical Engineering Marcotte, Peter C, Billerica. Ma, Finance Insurance Marcus. Howard S., Milton. Ma, Electrical Engineering Marcus. Saundra M.. Chestnut Hill. Ma. Humanities Marcy, Ann M., Chestnut Hill, Ma, Humanities Marcy, Ann M., Shrewsbury, Ma, Humanities Maretz, James A., New Haven, Ct, Sociology Margolis. Susan A.. West Hartford. Ct, Nursing Marian, Radu, AJlston. Ma. Electrical Engineering Marini, Roger R.. Quincy. Ma, Electrical Engineering Marino, David C. Belmont. Ma. Marketing Marko. Stephen G.. Adams. Ma. Mechanical Engineering Markowitz. Steven L.. Roselle, NJ. Marketing Marks, Peter C, Newton Upper Falls, Ma. Mathematics Maroney, John A.. Watertown, Ma. Management Marr, Donald H.. Needham, Ma, Civil Engineering Marsden, Richard A.. Melrose, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Marshall. John J., West Roxbury, Ma. Civil Engineering Marshall. John R.. Lake Placid, NY, Criminal Justice Martel, Sei e V., Hartford, Ct, Electrical Engineering Martin. Diane. Boston. Ma. Biology Martin. Elveta M.. St. Albans, NY. Political Science Martin. Joe. Lynn. Ma. Humanities Mason, Lorraine A. Somerville, Ma, Humanities Massa. Gerard P., Revere. Ma. Electrical Engineering Mastaby, George E.. West Roxbury. Ma, Accounting Masterson, Kenneth, A.. Dedham, Ma. Finance Insurance Mastriarmi. Michael G., Hamden, Ct, Electrical Engineering Mastrocol a, Aldo, Everett, Ma, Electrical Engineering Mathews. Larry W., Wellesley, Ma. Management Mathews, Thomas E., Lowell, Ma, Management Mathewson, Susan M.. Matawan. NJ. English Matta. Jr., Michael J.. Whitman, Ma, Psychology Matthews. Maragret R., Fall River. Ma, Nursing Matzilevich. Benjamin, Brookline, Ma. History Mayes, Ira J.. Somerville, Ma. Electrical Engineering Mazer. Rita P., Brighton, Ma, Humanities McArdle, James J., Dedham, Ma, History McBride, Gregg W., Boston, Ma, Biology McBride, Kenneth J.. Belmont. Ma. Criminal Justice McBroome, Leonard E., Plainfield. Ct. Civil Engineering McCabe. Kenneth P.. Dorchester. Ma, Physical Education McCabe, Kerry A., Pembroke, Ma, Economics McCann, Janet G., Everett, Ma. English McCarthy. Eugene C. Lawrence. Ma. Social Studies McCarthy. John J.. Roslindale, Ma. Economics McCarty. Justin D.. Akron. Oh. Political Science McCarty, Katherine F., Peabody, Ma, Sociology McCormick. Brian J., Hyde Park. Ma, Finance Insurance McCormick. John W.. West Haven. Ct. Chemical Engineering McCoy. Patricia M.. Lowell, Ma. Recreation Education McCoy. Robert R.. Medway. Ma. Power Systems Engineering McDavitt. Jr., Francis P., Walpole, Ma, Physical Education McDonagh, John P.. Mattapan. Ma. Social Studies McDonald. Patricia E.. Lynnfield. Ma. Nursing McDonald. Robert J.. Quincy. Ma. Finance Insurance McDonough. Paul V.. Maiden. Ma. Finance Insurance McDougle. Stephen H., Keene. NH. Chemical Engineering McDowell. Janis G.. Warwick, RI, History McElhinney, Donald T., West Roxbury, Ma, Civil Engineering McEwen. Paul D.. Tewksbury, Ma. Finance Insurance McGarry. James F., Saugus, Ma, History McGee, Jean F., Worcester. Ma. Forsyth Dental McGilvray, Bonnie ]., Ashland, Ma, Physical Therapy McGowan. Teresa R.. Framingham, Ma. Nursing McGrath. James L.. Natick. Ma, Mechanical Engineering McGrath. Margaret M.. Warwick. RI, Nursing McGrath, Timothy J.. Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering Mcintosh, Margaret J., Cambridge, Ma, Modern Languages McKay. John F.. Milford. Ma, Management McKee, Michael W., Framingham, Ma, Management McKenna, Brian P., Winchester, Ma, Psychology McKenna, James P., Braintree, Ma. Criminal Justice McKenney. Jr., Charles J.. Wakefield, Ma, Social Studies McKibbon. Robert B.. Brookline. Ma. Finance Insurance 163 224 174 215 184 237 237 256 199 180 224 182 211 178 199 199 144 163 240 240 199 211 199 199 199 230 163 260 199 245 232 237 153 174 243 199 246 224 224 243 256 199 253 199 261 237 224 act-  « t . . : ■ ' T McKim, John J., Dumont, NJ, Marketing 224 McKinnon, Christopher, Belmont, Ma, Civil Engineering McKnight, Robert T., Franklin, Ma, Sociology McLagan, Joanne B., Brookline, Ma, Physical Therapy 246 McLaughlin, Carol J., Hillside, NJ, Speech Hearing 237 McLaughlin, Jam es B., Weymouth, Ma, Electrical Engineering 200 McLean, Kenneth O., Boston, Ma, Modern Languanges 152 McManus, Joanne M., Needham, M, Sociology McMuUin, Timothy R., Burnsville, Mn, Finance Insurance McNamara, William J., Worcester, Ma, Criminal Justice McNeil, Jeanne M., Cohasset, Ma, Journalism 164 McNeil, Keith, Wesport, Ct, Marketing McNeUly, Jacqueline, Saugus, Ma, Nursing 256 McNulty, Martha E., MUton, Ma, Nursing McQuade, Paul V., St. Johnsbury, Vt, Civil Engineering 200 Meehan, James J., North Scituate, RI, Mechanical Engineering Meehan, James J., Wilmington, Ma, Accounting 224 Meisner, Stephen E., Lynnfield, Ma, Civil Engineering 200 Melford, Gavin J., Pembroke, Ma, Marketing 224 Mellen, Jean M., Hyde Park, Ma, Nursing Mello, John P., Swansea, Ma, Political Science 142 Melnick, Gary B., West Roxbury, Ma, Accounting 216 Menovich, Michael J., Maiden, Ma, Electrical Engineering 200 Menz, Joanne T., West Roxbury, Ma, Nursing 256 Mercier, Noel E., Danvers, Ma, Recreation Education Mercik, Allan J., West Bridgewater, Ma, Criminal Justice Merklinger, Carol J., Barrington, RI, General Science 237 Merrigan, Thomas E., Randolph, Ma, General Science 237 Merrill, Robert C, East Braintree, Ma, Civil Engineering 200 MerriU, Wesley R., Peabody, Ma, Power Systems Engineering Messieri, William G., Dedham, Ma, Industrial Engineering Metzger, Rita J., Cranford, NJ, Pharmacy 248 Meunier, Norman F., Wakefield, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 200 Meyer, Paul J., Pitlsfield, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 185 Mezer, Howard C, Miami Fl, Chemical Engineering Michael, Jr., William F., Manchester, NH, Electrical Engineering 200 Michalowski, William P., West Hanover, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 174 Michaud, Carmen, Lawrence, Ma, Forsyth Dental Michaud, Susan A., Ashburnham, Ma, History 164 Michelini, Joyce A., Winchester, Ma, Nursing 258 Michelson, Fred E., Walpole, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 200 Middleton, Philip T. , Cambridge, Ma, Nursing Miegoon, Alvina, Cambridge, Ma, General Science 240 Migliaccio, Thomas E., Natick, Ma, Electrical Engineering 178 Mileris, George V., Norwood, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 200 Miles, Lynn L., Hialeah, Fl., Philosophy Milici, Roberta M. West Haven, Ct, Forsyth Dental Miller, Alice L., Arlington, Ma, Physical Therapy Miller, Diane E., Southborough, Ma, Humanities 237 Miller, Emily B., Bangor, Me, Marketing Miller, Harry F., Olean, NY, Mechancial Engineering Miller, Jacques K., Tyrone, Pa, Industrial 210 Miller, Jane, North Easton, Ma, Physical Education Miller, Joyce A., Winsted, Ct, Political Science Miller, Marilyn S., Newton Centre, Ma, Modern Languages 164 Miller, Mark R., West Roxbury, Ma, Pharmacy Miller, Michael H., Norwell, Ma, Management 225 Milos, Frank M., Manchester, NH, Electrical Engineering 200 Minai, Ahmad, Cambridge, Ma, Electrical Engineering 200 Minear, David W., Medford, Ma, Mathematics Minsinger, William E., Milton, Ma, Biology 152 Minski, Meyer, Auburndale, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 200 Miranda, Susan R., Waban, Ma, Physical Therapy Mistretta, James A., North Andover, Ma, Physical Education Mitchell, Donald G., Natick, Ma, Transportation Mitchell, Gerald M., Lexington, Ma, Physical Education Mitchell, Susan R., Peabody, Ma, Physical Therapy Mitchell, William C, Glen Rock, NJ, Finance Insurance 214 Mittleman, Howerd M. Pawtucket, RI, Political Science Moar, Mjchael T., Beverly, Ma, Management Mockapetris, Robert F., Dorchester, Ma, Electrical Engineering 174 Moeller, William L., Ridgewood NJ, Marketing 225 Moffat, Douglas, E., Winchester, Ma, Biology 164 Moffett, William W. Glen Ridge, NJ, Sociology 164 Moge Barbara A., Woburn, Ma, Nursing Molina, John F., Westbury , NY, Chemistry 164 MoUoy, Helen R., Framingham, Ma, Forsyth Dental Molony, Frances J., Burlington, Ma, Nursing 256 Mondlick, Anne L., Hyde Park, Ma, English Montagna, Marianne, Boston, Ma, Nursing Montanari, James A., North Scituate, Ma, Civil Engineering Monteith, Kenneth G., Westborough, Ma, General Science 237 Montilio, Marie A., Quincy, Ma, Humanities Montone. Andrew G., Winthrop, Ma, Journalism Montrone, A. Thomas. Massapequa, NY, Sociology Mooney, Kevin A., Walertown. Ma, Electtical Engineering Moore, Douglas C, Newton Lower Falls, Ma, Chemistry Moore, Lester R., Dorchester, Ma, Respiration Therapy Moran, Douglas C, Hingham, Ma, History Morey, Thomas S., Hanson, Ma, Political Science Moriarty, Jr., John F., Stamford. Ct. Pharmacy Mormile, Thomas |., Valley Stream. NY. Management Morrill. Lawrence. Pocasset, Ma. Mechanical Engineering Morrison. Ralph. Boston. Ma, Marketing Morrissey. David F.. Somerville. Ma, Management Morrissey, Joseph M.. Charlestown. Ma. Political Science Morrissey, Joseph M., Dorchester, Ma, Pharmacy Morrow. Kathryn L.. Medford. Ma. Nursing Morse. Randal W.. Southbridge, Ma, Non-concentration Business Moschella. Ralph N.. Somerville, Ma, Electrical Engineering Mosgofian. Siman P.. Winthrop, Management Mosher, Sandra J.. Watertown. Ma, Nursing Moskowitz, Richard W., Jericho, NY, Accounting Most, Margaret M. Huntingdon Valley, Pa, Humanities Motipara, Suresh P., Boston, Ma, Accounting Mott, Sandra L., Baldwin. NY. History Moul. Dorinda M.. Bethlehem. Pa, Art History Moulter, Lavio-ence C, Hamden, Ct, Political Science Mover, Sheldon L, Maiden, Ma, Psychology Moy, Jack S.. New York. NY, Industrial Engineering Moyer, Craig F.. Harrisburg. Pa. Chemical Engineering Moynihan. Margaret A.. Boston. Ma. Biology Mucha, Christine A. New Britain, Ct. English Muhlfeld. Richard E.. Southport, Ct. Sociology Mullee. Margaret. Dorchester. Ma. Forsyth Dental Mullen. Jr.. William J.. Hanover. Ma. Biology Mulligan. Brian M., Maiden, Ma, Electrical Engineering Mullin, Stephen C. Milford, Ma. Civil Engineering Mullins. Thomas J., Reading, Ma, Biology Murakami, Ronald D.. New York, NY. Marketing Murano, Elaine. East Boston. Ma, Social Studies Murdock. Douglas W., Waltham. Ma, Accounting Murphy, Anne M., Brighton. Ma, Nursing Murphy, Carol A., Maiden, Ma, Humanities Murphy. Charles F.. Randolph, Ma, Criminal Justice Murphy, Dennis J.. Stoneham, Ma, Biology Murphy, Diane I.. Lynn. Ma, Drama Murphy. Geraldine R., North Haven. Ct. Sociology Murphy, Grant A., Langhorne, Pa. Mathematics Murphy, James S., Duxbury, Ma, Recreation Education Murphy, John, Stoughton, Ma. Civil Engineering Murphy. Joseph M., Middlebury, Ct. Philosophy Murphy. Kenneth P.. Quincy, Ma, Respiration Therapy Murphy, Laurie E., Brookline, Ma, Psychology Murphy, Lawrence E., Lynn, Ma, Electrical Engineering Murphy, Sean. Boston. Ma, Electrical Engineering Murphy, Sharon E., Taunton. Ma. Psychology Murphy, Thomas J., Somerville, Ma, Chemical Engineering Murra. Janet. Boston. Ma Humanities Murra. Rita, Boston, Ma. Humanities Murray. Francis X., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Criminal Justice Murray. William P.. Arlington, Ma. Finance and Insurance Muselwhite. David W., Winthrop. Ma. Electrical Engineering Mussman. Steven V., Winthrop. Mo, Social Studies Myers, Sandra J., Shaftsbury, Vt, Physical Education 164 164 249 225 225 225 153 249 254 251 216 237 150 164 152 200 200 200 164 225 237 225 252 238 260 200 147 164 201 201 164 201 Naa, Edward L., Nashua, NH, Electrical Engineering Naggar. Morris I., Brookline. Ma, Pharmacy Najarian, Barbara S.. Providence, RI, Humanities Nalbandian, Varsenig, Watertown. Ma, Pharmacy Nalewajk, Patricia, Webster, Ma. Forsyth Dental Nally. Margaret A.. Yorktown Hts. NY. Psychology Nangeroni. Paul E.. Avon. Ma, Mechanical Engineering Nannery. John P.. Roslindale, Ma, General Science Nannicelli Paul X., Medfield, Ma, Marketing Narciso, Raymond R.. Allston, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Nardone. Richard, Arlington, Ma, Psychology Nash. Alan E., Farmingdale, NY, Marketing 249 238 164 201 238 178 225 Nason, Robert L., Waltham, Ma, Management Navikonis, Anthony N., Boston, Ma, Civil Engineering Nedvins, Joann M., Braintree, Ma, Psychology Nee, Donald M., Charlestown, Ma, Accounting Negari, Edmond, Brighton, Ma, Chemical Engineering Nelson, Brian S., Stamford, Ct, Civil Engineering Nelsoa Jane E., Braintree, Ma, Nursing Nelson, Roberta L., Maiden, Ma, Medical Technology Neudel, Robert H., Brighton, Ma, Sociology Neveloff, Janice A., Boston, Ma, Marketing Neveu, Paul R., Nashua, NH, Chemical Engineering Neville, Richard D., Middleborough, Ma, Political Science Newberne, Judy L., Bedford, Ma, Forsyth Dental Newberry, James R., Cranston, RI, Industrial Engineering Newman, Howard, Bethpage, NY, Psychology Nevranan, Lawrence R., Bradford, Ma, Criminal Justice Newman, Peter L., Newton Centre, Ma, Accounting Newrton, Judith C, Burlington, Ma, Mathematics Neyer, Constance A., Middletown, Ct, Journalism Nicgorski, Albin J., Lawrence, Ma, Management Nichols, Sharon, Melrose, Ma, Recreation Education Nicholson, Michael R., Natick, Ma, English Nicodemi, Judith A., Revere, Ma, Humanities Nielsen, Christine L., Boston, Ma, General Science Niers, Stephen N., Mattapan, Ma, Electrical Engineering Nigloschy, Daniel A., South Boston, Ma, English Nigrelh, Thomas J., North Andover, Ma, Chemical Engineering Nims, Tyler W., Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering Nirenberg, Sandra L., Brighton, Ma, Sociology Noonan, Mary K., Readville, Ma, Nursing Noonan, Valerie A., Watertown, Ma, English Nordstrom. Jr., Carl H., Bedford, Ma, Power Systems Engineering Norkus, Edward P., Somerville, Ma, Biology Norris, Lynn T., Stoughton, Ma, Mathematics Northup, Emma M., Boston, Ma, Journalism Nourse, George H., West Concord, Ma, Political Science Nover, Henry T.. Hanson. Ma. Civil Engineering Novich, Barry F., Warwick, RI, Electrical Engineering Nowell, Randall J., Lexington, Ma, Electrical Engineering Nugent, George T., Bath, Me, Industrial Realtions Nye, Elizabeth D., Norwood, Ma, Nursing 208,201 225 201 182 256 165 260 229 165 165 201 201 155 154 201 184 201 Oasis, RusseU A, Bloomfield, Ct, Criminal Justice Oberg, Carl P., Warwick. RI. Industrial Engineering 201 O ' Brien, Kathleen A., East Weymouth, Ma, Mathematics 232 O ' Brien, Patrick E., Methuen, Ma, Pharmacy O ' Connell, Cynthia M., Auburndale, Ma, Humanities 238 O ' Connell, Eugene F., Somerville, Ma, Mathematics O ' ConneU, Susan M., Auburndale, Ma, Humanities 238 O ' Connor, Joseph G., Quincy, Ma, Chemistry O ' Connor, Robert, Dorchester, Ma, Political Science O ' Coimor, Stephen P., Medford, Ma, Biology 165 O ' Connor, William J., Meriden, Ct, Industrial Engineering 185 O ' Doherty, Kathleen M„ Winchester, Ma, History 165 O ' Hara, Edward T., West Roxbury, Ma, Finance Insurance O ' Hare, Alison M., Maiden, Ma, Biology O ' Keefe, Lawrence P., Everett, Ma, Management O ' Leary, James F., Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering 201 O ' Leary, Jearme M., Arlington, Ma, Forsyth Dental Olett, Ronald A., Mount Vernon, NY, Political Science 165 Olihovik, Walter M., Worcester, Ma, Political Science 165 Ohva, Mary L., Windsor Locks, Ct, Nursing 256 Oliver, June E., Kingston, Ma, Mathematics Oliwa, Walter L., Derby, Ct, Electrical Engineering 201 Olson, Christine, Waltham, Ma, Humanities 231 Olson, Sally J., Naugatuck, Ct, Physical Therapy 241 Olster, Stephen H., Salem, NH, Electrical Engineering 175 O ' Malley, Paul J., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Criminal Justice O ' Neil, Paul R., Beverly, Ma, Management Orlando, Sandra, Arlington, Ma, Mathematics 238 Orner, Richard G., Cochituate, Ma, Mechanical Engineering O ' Rourke, Michele, Waltham, Ma, Political Science 165 Orr o, Joseph M., Arlington, Ma, Criminal Justice 260 Orsi, Leo J., Hyde Park, Ma, Biology 165 Ostroff, Caren, Hull, Ma, Forsyth Dental O ' Sullivan, Donald L., Dorchester, Ma, Journalism O ' Toole, Laurence P., Brookline, Ma, Industrial Engineering O ' Toole, Michael I., Middleboro, Ma, Recreation Education Ottariano. Steven G., East Boston, Ma, Pharmacy Ouellet, Rita P., Brookline, Ma, Biology 165 Oughehree, Robert, Marketing 229 Oura, Christopher, Old Bethpage, NY, Electrical Engineering 181 Oven, Eliott M., West New ton, Ma, Sociology 165 Oven, Sol, Brookline, Ma, Electrical Engineering 202 Overbay, Wendy S., New London, Ct, Physical Therapy 246 Owens, Gail E., Marlborough, Ma, Humanities 238 Owens, John D., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering 201 Oyer, Michael W., Weymouth, Ma, Electrical Engineering 201 Pace, Raymond M., Manchester, Ct, Mechanical Engineering Packard, James H., Norwood, Ma, Philosophy Packard, Melissa J., Wakefield, Ma, Biology Packer, Cheryl L., Brockton, Ma, Nursing Page, Marilee A., WaUingford. Ct, Physical Therapy Page, Thomas D., New London, Ct, Pharmacy Pagliarulo, Paul E., Saugus, Ma, Marketing Paisner, Eliot L., Dover, NH, Biology Paiz, Fernando, Brookline, Ma, Industrial Engineering Palmerino, Michael, Wakefield, Ma, Political Science Panzenbeck, Theresa M., Sea Clifl , NY, Physical Therapy Papetti, Richard R., Mattapan, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Pappas, Cynthia, Peabody, Ma, Forsyth Dental Pappas, James A., Manchester, NH, Civil Engineering Pappastergion, Andrew M., Lowell, Ma, Civil Engineering Paradis, Peter R., St. Marys City, Md, Mechanical Engineering Paris, Gail, Dorchester, Ma, Sociology Parise, Anthony V., Mamaroneck, NY Industrial Engineering Parker, Kimmberley, Manhattan, NY, Political Science Parker, Susan E., WoUaston, Ma, History Paroskie, .Charles J., Bridgeport, Ct, Electrical Engineering Paruas, Adalberto J., Maiden, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Parziale, Deborah S., West Barrington, RI, Nursing 256 246 249 225 246 202 177 202 202 148 149 202 Pasciak, Joseph E., Cumberland, RI, Mathematics Pash, Diane M., Braintree, Ma. Nursing Pasvoll, Barbara R., Oceanside, NY, Sociology Patashny, Arlene J., Manhasset, NY, History Patrician Robert P., Allston, Ma, Political Science Patrick, Jr., Edward N., Acton, Ma, Finance Insurance Patterson, Cathy J., Melrose, Ma, Nursing Pavao, James R., Swansea, Ma, Mathematics Pawlik, Michael M., Gales Ferry, Ct, Electrical Engineering Pearl, Pamela A., Boston, Ma, Nursing Pearson, David G., Belmont, Ma, Marketing Pechinsky, Elena M., Peabody, Ma, Physical Education Pechulis, Pamela J., Brockton, Ma, Nursing Pelio, Richard L., Clifton, NJ, Accounting Peniston, John F., Boston, Ma, Finance Insurance Perm, Rose E., Wellesley, Ma, Sociology Pepka, Jeffrey P., Somerset, Ma, Political Science PereUa, Anthony J., Brighton, Ma, Marketing Perkins, Dennis W., Arlington, Ma, Chemistry Perkins, Elliott W., Medfield, Ma, Civil Engineering Perkins, Mark A., Belmont, Ma, Mathematics Perhnan, Richard, Woodstock, NY, Civil Engineering Perry, David A., Hyde Park, Ma, Chemical Engineering Perry, Robert J., Holyoke, Ma, Accounting Perry, Ross B., Quincy, Ma, Philosophy Persson, Carl R., Quincy. Ma, Chemical Engineering Pestana, Dolores E., Woburn, Ma. English Peterson, Kenneth C, Wakefield, Ma, Accounting Petraglia, Kenneth J., Maiden, Ma, Civil Engineering Petralia, Marie E., Winchester, Ma, Humanities Petraskiewicz, Michael J., Salem, Ma. Electrical Engineering Pettengill, Nathan G., Cincinnati, Ohio. Mathematics Pfistner, Paul R., Boca Raton, Fl, Industrial Engineering Phifer, Linda C, Bridgeville. Del, Management Philbrick, Robert W., Boston, Ma, Speech Hearing Phillips, Gordon S., Salem, NH, Management Phillips, James F., Upper Saddle River, NJ, Economics Phillips, Peter C, Utica, NY, Biology Piecewicz, Frederick M., Lynn. Ma, Industrial Engineering Piel, Kenneth P., Millbury, Ma, Management Pierce, Stephen E., Danvers, Ma, Accounting Pike, Deborah M., Rockland, Ma, Nursing 165 252 165 165 254 165 225 243 256 166 202 231 225 202 238 202 225 225 166 Pilczak, Kenneth J., Windsor, Ct, Electrical Engineering Piscitelli, Jr., Frank J. , Millbury, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Pizzotti, Stephen J., Saugus, Ma, Industrial Engineering Plante, Margaret, Wakefield, Ma, Forsyth Dental Platzer, Linda N., Merrick, NY, English Player, Lee H., St. Johnsbury, Vt, Physics Plotner, Stephen C, Ipswich, Ma, Civil Engineering Plunkett, Kevin M., Tewksbury, Ma, English Pobliner, Joseph C, Lynbrook, NY, Electrical Engineering Pofit, Joseph F., Glenmont, NY, Biology Poinelli, Leslie P., Boston, Ma, Management Poirier, Elaine N., Brockton, Ma, Sociology Poisson, Jean E., Fall River, Ma, Electrical Engineering Pokrant, Francis A., Everett, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Polcari, David, Meford, Ma, Social Studies Pollina, James L., Wellesley, Ma, Forsyth Dental Polukort, Peter P., Berne, NY, Mechanical Engineering Pomodoro, Denise M., East Boston, Ma, Recreation Education Popkowski, Jr., Chester j.. West Lyim, Ma, Accounting Porell, Paul S., North Windham, Me, CivU Engineering Porreca Ronald P., Needham, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Porter, Judith, West Roxbury, Ma, English Porter, Michael, Nashua, NH, Economics Portman, Ronald J., Portsmouth, NH, Chemistry Potter, Ralph C, Palmer, Ma, Management Powers, Charles J., Lynn, Ma, Electrical Engineering Powers, Edward R., Medford, Ma, Marketing Powers, Larry D., Lower Waterford. Vt, Biology Powers, Linda L., Augusta, Me, Nursing Pozner, Jeffrey M., Lynn, Ma, Non-Concentration, Business Pratt, Maureen A., Watertown, Ct, Forsyth Dental Prenovitz, Sheldon M., Brookline, Ma, Management Preziosa, Jerome, Lynn, Ma, Biology Priestley, Patricia C., Northfield, Vt, Nursing Primack, Michael S., Newton Center, Ma, Sociology Primerano, Jean, Arlington, Ma, Humanities238 Princi, Marilyn D., Winthrop, Ma, History Pritchard, William A., Portsmouth, RI, Mechanical Engineering Prodouz, Thomas J., Bridgewater, Ma, Chemical Engineering Profy, Elaine T., Levittown, Pa, Political Science Protto, Cesare A., Wilmington, Del, Finance Insurance Provost, Sharon M, Weymouth, Ma, Speech Hearing Pryor, Donald L., Hampton, NH, Industrial Engineering Pun, Debby D., Boston, Ma, Medical Technology Pupi, Thomas M., Hyde Park, Ma, Marketing 202 202 166 166 202 226 153 202 202 166 181 203 166 229 238 249 226 Quemere, Kathleen E., Quincy, Ma, Mathematics Quigg, Walter L., Watertown, Ma, Physical Education Quigley, James M., Ware, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 203 QuUbert, Ann H., Stonybrook, NY, Physical Education 246 Quinn, George D., Milton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 186 Quinn, James, M., Newburyport, Ma, Electrical Engineering 203 Quinn, Timothy J., Upper Marlbor, Md, Political Science 166 Rabinovitz, Allan M., Fall River, Ma, Industrial Engineering Raby, Philip P., Salem, Ma, Physical Education Radcliffe, Donna R., Somerville, NJ, Psychology Radziusz, Donna M., Norwell, Ma, Forsyth Dental Ragucci, Patricia F., West Roxbury, Ma, Forsyth Dental Raibert, Marc H., Ridgewood, NJ, Electrical Engineering Raikis, Sarah J., Westport, Ct, Forsyth Dental Rainone, Thomas A., Providence, Rl, Electrical Engineering Rakitin, Steven R., Westboro, Ma, Power Systems Engineering Rancatore, Robert J., Billerica, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Rapchak, Diane L., Carmichaels, Pa, Art History Rappa, Vincent M., Roslindale, Ma, Civil Engineering Rashbaum, Joanne L., Great Neck, NY, Humanities Ratner. Barry E., Sharon, Ma, Political Science Ratti, Barbara A., Lincoln, Rl, English Rattigan, Mary E., Natick, Ma, Forsyth Dental 203 166 203 233 Ranch, Joann, Miami Beach, Fla, Forsyth Dental Raymond, Leonard F., Amesbury, Ma, Political Science Raymond, Linda J., Hyde Park, Ma, Mathematics Read, David A., Cumberland, RI, Mathematics Readinger, Charles, Juneau, Ak, English Realini, Anthony L., Franklin, Ma, Accounting Reed, Kenneth M., Farmington, NH, Mathematics Reen, John G., Dorchester, Ma, Management Reeves, Wayne W., Staten Island, NY, Civil Engineering Reid, Malcolm H., North Haven, Ct, Social Studies Reilly, Kathleen M., Hamden, Ct, Humanities Reilly, Maureen E., North Branford, Ct, English Reilly, Michael F., Revere, Ma, Accounting Reis, Arthur C, Provincetown, Ma, Physical Education Reiss, Richard W., Orange, Ct., Finance Insurance Rello, Matthew R., Stoneham, Ma, Finance Insurance Rembisz, Martin G., Allston, Ma, Pharmacy Renda, Kenneth W., Medford, Ma, Electrical Engineering Rendell, Ronald W., Framingham, Ma, Physics Renfrew, Douglas J., Clinton, Ct, Psychology Renn, Agnes A., Plantsville, Ct, Nursing Repucci, Michael J., Bedford, Ma, Physcis Resler, Charles J., Orange, Ct, Accounting Resnick, Aileen J., West, Orange, NJ, Speech Hearing Reubins, Stephanie, Brookline, Ma, Psychology Reuter, Margaret M., Warwick, RI, History Reynolds, Marion, Brighton, Ma, Nursing Ribeiro, David D., Brighton, Ma, Accounting Rice, Louise I., Winthrop, Ma, Forsyth Dental Rich, Frederick E., Wakefield, Ma, History Richards, Bryan J., Bayport, NY, Electrical Engineering 166 166 203 238 238 226 242 166 180 166 226 238 167 256 226 302 Richardson, Sheila, Holden, Ma, Forsyth Dental Richman, Beth A., Hewlett, NY, Sociology Richmond, Curtis E., Lakeville, Ma, Finance And Accounting Riemer, [ohn R., Needham, Ma, Marketing 226 Riggs, William J., West Quincy, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Riley, Charles A., Wolfebord, NH, Mechanical Engineering 203 Riley, Daniel F., Braintree, Ma, Biology Risch. lane E., Boston, Ma, Economics 167 Risitano, John R., Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering 176 Rivernider, Kenneth A., Worcester, Ma, Management 226 Roberts, Besty 1., Chestnut Hill, Ma, Finance and Insurance 211 Roberts, Colin A., Harrington, Rl, Mathematics Robertson, David D., Watertown, Ma, Accounting Robertson, Gordon A., West Yarmouth, Ma, Electrical Engineering 203 Robertson, Linda A., Watertown, Ma, Criminal Justice Robins, Craig, Lake Mohegan, NY, Sociology 167 Robinson, Leonard |., Weymouth, Ma, Chemistry Robinson, Susan M., Tarrytown, NY. Psychology Rodgers, Bruce A.. Bridgewater, Ma, Civil Engineering 208 Roland, Carl L., East Boston, MA, Management Rollins, Joyce R., Farmington, NH, Mathematics 167 Roman, Stephen M., Marblehead, Ma, Electrical Engineering Rondeau, Ronald, E., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Physics Ronkin, Theodore B., Randolph, Ma, Accounting 226 Rook, Richard C, Braintree, Ma, Recreation Education Rooney, Robert M., Danvers, Ma, Political Science 149 Roop, Lawtence W., Reading, Ma, Education 233 Roos, John M., Westwood, Ma, Civil Engineering 203 Roque, Henry E., Roxbury, Ma, Political Science Rosa, Thomas R., Chelsea, Ma, Electrical Engineering Rosansky, Chester H., Boston, Ma, Chemistry Roscoe, Margaret, North Quincy, Ma, Forsyth Dental Rose, Gerald F., Plymouth, Ma, Social Studies Rose, Jennifer, Mattapan, Ma, Sociology Rose, Peter D., Flushing, NY, Philosophy 150 Rosen, Daniel, Plainview, NY, Electrical Engineering Rosen, Gail H., Columbia, Ct, English Rosenbaum, David P., Worcester, Ma, Criminal Justice Rosenbaum. Mark, Long Beach, NY, Mechanical Engineering 177 Rosenberg, Andrew S., Claremont, NH, Recreation Education Rosenberg, Barry, Chelsea, Ma, Psychology 167 Rosenberg, Janice M., Newton Centre, Ma, Forsyth Dental Rosenberg, Jonathan S., Great Neck, NY. Political Science Rosenberg, Judy, East Rockaway, NY, Accounting 212 Rosenberg, Nancy, Peabody, Ma, Forsyth Dental Rosenfield, David L., West Hartford, Ct, Political Science 167 Rosenfield, Robin M., Marblehead, Ma, English Rosenstein, Steven J., Great Neck, NY, Mechanical Engineering 203 Rosenstock, Richard J., Boston, Ma, Sociology Ross, Carlton N., Scarborough, Me, Accounting 210 Ross, Frederick S., Bedford, Ma, Political Science Ross, Helen L., Arlington, Va, Drama 167 Ross, Ronald J., Needham, Ma, Independent Major Rosetti, Robert C, Arlington, Ma, Non-Concentration Business 226 Rossetti, Rosario M., Scarborough, Me, Accounting Rossetti, Jr., Peter A., Saugus, Ma, Finance Insurance 215 Rostoff, Alan B., Hyde Park, Ma, Social Studies 238 Rothstein, Brian M., Jamesville, NY, Political Science Rounds, Deborah J., Lynn, Ma, Forsyth Dental Routhier, Thomas, Reading, Ma, English Rovillard, Jr., Edward A., Brookline, Ma, Management Rowe, Richard, Winchester, Ma, Accounting Rowland, George A., Washington, DC, General Science Rowlinson, Phillip G., West Roxbury, Ma, Industrial Engineering Roy, Colleen C., Bridgeport, Ct, Nursing Roy, Gerard L, Jamaica Plain, Ma, Political Science Roy, Richard, Mansfield, Ma, Finance Insurance Rozum, Thomas A., Prospect, Ct, Biology Rubin, Debra R., Quincy, Ma, English Rubinstein, Helen S., Great Neck, NY, Psychology Rubinstein, Richard P., Brighton, Ma, Humanities Rucki, Maryann P., Holyoke, Ma, Pharmacy Ruder, Frederick G., Amherst, Ma, Management Rudin, Arthur I., Hyde Park, Ma, Electrical Engineering Rudnicki, Alice L., Totowa Boro, NJ, Nursing Rudolph, Edward P., Medford, Ma, Marketing Rudy, Joel S., Roxbury, Ma, Management Ruggiero, Nicholas W., Medford, Ma, Biology Ruggles, Arthur E., Stoneham, Ma, Social Studies Ruhlman, Paul V., Lockport , NY, Biology Rundlett, David E., Waltham, Ma, Political Science Ruscak, Richard R, Waltham, Ma, Criminal Justice Rusciano, Robert A., Highland Park, NJ, Political Science Ruskey, Bernadette, Utica, NY, Journalism Russell, Courtney C, Mattapan, Ma, Biology Russell, James A., Boston, Ma, Political Science Russem, Lee M., Andover, Ma, Marketing Russo, Robert F., North Weymouth, Ma, Management Rutenberg, Stuart A., Roslindale, Ma, Economics Ryan, Barbara A., Watertown, Ma, Journalism Ryan, Gerald J., Quincy, Ma, Civil Engineering Ryan, Kevin C, Watertown, Ma, Political Science Ryan, Patrick, North Weymouth, Ma, Political Science Ryan, Paul R., Stoneham, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Ryan, William A., Lowell, Ma, Chemical Engineering Rybak, Lynn B., Whitestone, NY, Humanities Ryzewski, Joseph R., West Haven, Ct, Power Systems Engineering 203 258 148 213 203 256 226 261 167 167 167 226 172 172 203 239 183 Sabbag, Albert J., Boston, Ma, Accounting Sabbag, Jr., John G., West Roxbury, Ma, Civil Engineering Sabbcigh, Donna M., Methuen, Ma, Nursing Saboeiro, Angela L., Trumbull, Ct, Economics Sacco, Albert, Belmont, Ma, Chemical Engineerinp Sadler, Patricia M., Providence, RI, Sociology Saffioti, Michelle P., Upper Saddle River, N), Sociology Saffron, Arlene M., Bayonne, NJ, Psychology Saitz, Fayellen, Brookline, Ma, Sociology Salerno, Joseph M., Woburn, Ma, General Science Sales, Robin L, Little Ferry NJ, Sociology Salvo, Joseph M., SomervUle, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Salvucci, Gerard J., Brighton, Ma, English Sandberg, Joel B., Waban, Ma, Electrical Engineering Sandy, Carlton G., Derry, NH, Recreation Education Sansevero, Michael F., Wethersfield, Ct, Electrical Engineering Santarpio, Stephen R., Newtonville, Ma, Marketing Santer, Phyllis E., Sharon, Ma, Nursing ■■luitoro, John M., East Boston, Ma, History Saran, Nicholas S., Waltham, Ma, Respiration Therapy Sardo, Thomas G., Norwich, Ct, Sociology Sarhanis, Christopher, Jamaica Plain, Ma, Biology Sarruda, William A., Quincy, Ma, Chemical Engineering Sasson, Stephen B., New Haven, CT, Biology Satkevich, Ronald J., Dorchester, Ma, Civil Engineering Sattler, Russell, Holyoke, Ma, Management Saunders, William D., Bristol, Vt, Political Science Savage, Janet K., Charlestown, Ma, Humanities Savaris, Anthony, Lowell, Ma, General Science Saveall, Bradley A., Winchendon, Ma, Journalism Savik, Bruce, Oceanside, NY, Civil Engineering Savoy, Donald J., Waltham, Ma, Social Studies Sax, William S., Winthrop, Ma, English Scanlon, Jean L., Norwell, Ma, Nursing Scanlon, Kathleen F., Portland, Me, Pharmacy Scanzio, Carol A., Walpole, Ma, Nursing Scarlata, Gerald P., Dorchester, Ma, Accounting Schaefer, Joanne M., Colonia, NJ, Physical Education Schechter, Howard W., Boston, Ma, Drama Schein, Burt S., Yonkers, NY, Accounting Schekhtayan, Norazine H., Waltham, Ma, Electrical Engineering 256 167 203 167 143 167 185 239 204 247 181 145 239 177 232 249 257 226 Schiavello. Leo )., North Massapequa. NY, Industrial Engineering SchifTer, Diane M.. Stoughton, Ma. Nursing Scholsberg, Nancy E., Stoneham, Ma. Biology Schmidt, Frederick, Boston, Ma. Electrical Engineering Schneider, Peter L., Livingston. N|. Political Science Schneider, Susan L., Fairfield. (;t. Humanities Schoenborn. Gail L., Boston, Ma. English Schoener. Albert W.. Boston. Ma. Physical Education Schubnel. Joseph W., North Adams, Ma, Management Schultz, Jeanne M., Wollaston, Ma, Nursing Schaltz, Rex C, Brookline, Ma, English Schultz, Richard D., Roslindale, Ma, Management Schultz, Richard J., Waterford, NY, Industrial Engineering Schuman. Gary M., Hyde Park, Ma, Civil Engineering Schuman, Jill R., West Orange, NJ, Forsyth Dental Schuman, Mindy, AUston, Ma. Speech Hearing Schwab. Bradley W.. Stamford. Ct. Pharmacy Schwartz. Nancy G.. Brooklyn. NY, Nursing Schwarz, Karen A., Schenectady, NY, Nursing Sciacca, Christie A., Melrose, Ma, Finance Insurance Sciarappa, Nancy E.. North Weymouth. Ma. Journalism Scoglio. Paul J.. Beverly. Ma, Psychology Scollins, Eileen M., Lynn, Ma, Nursing Scopa, Michael J.. Chelsea, Ma, English Scribner, Janet G., Weymouth, Ma, Physical Education Scully, Michael K., Beverly, Ma. Management Seavey. Robert E.. Walpole. Ma. Recreation Education Sebastiao. Antone. R.. Wrentham. Ma. Mechanical Engineering Sabastyn. Michael S.. Dorchester. Ma, Marketing Sebra. Paul V.. Brockton. Ma. Mathematics Seekell. Kathryn L.. Manchester. Ma, Political Science Seeley, Edgar C, Levittown, Pa. Civil Engineering Segal. Larry J., Willimantic. Ct, Industrial Relations Segal, Stephen H., Brighton, Ma, Sociology Seller, Michael B., Forest Hills, NY. Political Science Seltzer. Barbara A.. Providence, RI, Sociology Sentas, John R., North Reading, Ma, Marketing Sergi, Robert A., Revere, Ma, Electrical Engineering Seroll, Lorraine, Brookline, Ma, Nursing Shams, Maliheh, Brookline, Ma, Political Science Shaneck. Paul W.. Winthrop. Ma. Industrial Engineering Shapiro, Arlene F., Brighton, Ma, Humanities Shapiro, Barry J., Brookline. Ma. General Science Shapiro. Marvin M., Mattapan, Ma, Finance Insurance Shaw, Alan, P., Brighton, Ma, Accounting Shaw, John C, Bingham, Me, Criminal Justice Shaw, Ronald L., Whitman, Ma, Finance Insurance Shea, Kevin F., Medford, Ma, Political Science Shea, Patricia F., Hingham, Ma, Physical Education Shea, Rosemary, Medfield, Ma, Forsyth Dental Sheehan, William J., Brockton, Ma, Physical Education Sheehy, William L., Cambridge. Ma. Psychology Sheffield. Robert E.. Wakefield, M. Chemical Engineering Shell, Susanne M., Milton, Ma, Political Science Shepard, Virginia, Georgetown, Ma, Biology Shepardson, Charles E., Sterling, Ma, Accounting Sherblom, Debra M., Holden, Ma, Political Science Sherman. David H.. Woonsocket. RI, Mechanical Engineering Shoenfeld, David B., Burlington, NJ, Management Sholds, Frederick S., Milton, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Sholemson, David R., Hempstead, NY. Sociology Shoner, Harvey J., Morristown. NJ, Accounting Shore. Edward S.. Lynn, Ma, Criminal Justice Shustack, Steven, Brookline, Ma. Biology Siciliano, Jr., Peter D., Boston, Ma, Marketing Siemiatkaska, Walter P., Boston, Ma, Civil Engineering Sikorski, Janice J., Pittsburgh. Pa, Humanities Silbovitz, Alan M., Peabody, Ma, Civil Engineering Silken, Teri A., Oceanside, NY. Drama Silva. Linda M.. East Boston, Ma, Pharmacy SUver, Linda A., New Bedford, Ma. Physical Therapy Silverman, Deborah A., Mineola. NY, Humanities Silverman, Geraldine S., Pittsburgh. Pa. Psychology Silverman. Joan L., Scarsdale, NY Recreation Education Silverman, Paul B., Massapequa, NY. Biology Sima, John F., Southington. Ct. Civil Engineering Simas. John. Somerville. Ma. Accounting Simblaris. Annette, Reading, Ma, Humanities Simmons, Robert. Roxbury. Ma. Respiration Therapy Simon. Meryl L. Hackensack. NJ. English Simon. Steven S.. Clinton NJ, Sociology iSimonsen. Peter E., Saugus, Ma, Finance Insurance ' Simpson, Bonnie A., East Orange, NJ. Physical Therapy 172 144 233 246 167 168 181 226 210 204 257 229 226 227 246 246 179 168 155 227 204 239 204 146 246 240 246 168 229 227 227 242 Sims, Cheryle A., Newton, Ma, Recreation Education Singer, Bette H., Peabody, Ma, Forsyth Dental Singer, Donna L., Mountainside, NJ, Physical Therapy 246 Singleton, Severlin B., Cambridge, Ma, Management Sirota, Barbara, Sharon, Ma, Forsyth Dental Skelding, William R., Glen Ridge, NJ, Chemical Engineering 204 Skinner, John, Watertown, Ma, Criminal Justice 261 Sklar, llene, L., Oceanside, NY, Humanities Sklut, Edward J., Braintree, Ma, Biology 168 Skowronski, James E., Shelton, Ct, English Slack, Harold T., Billerica, Ma, Accounting 227 Slaten, Floyd J., East Orange, NJ, Pharmacy Slavin, Mary L., Peabody, Ma, Respiration Threapy Slaybaugh, Lorraine R., Somerville, Ma, Forsyth Dental 250 Shwa, Janet E., Mattapan, Ma, Nursing 253 Small, Janet M., Lynn, Ma, Humanities Small, Laurence S., Maiden, Ma, Chemical Engineering 181 Small, Thomas, L., Dedham, Ma, Psychology Smallhorn, Kevin M., Hohegan Lake, NY, Chemical Engineering 204 Smallwood, James L., Lynn, Ma, Chemical Engineering 204 Smart, George H., Bourne, Ma, Industrial Relations 229 Smenton, Loretta J., Brockton, Ma, Nursing 257 Smith, Ann M., Cambridge, Ma, Nursing Smith, Bradley, Brighton, Ma, Political Science Smith, Eric R., West Hartford, Ct, English 154 Smith, Fred L., Cambridge, Ma, Marketing Smith, James R., Tully, NY, Mechanical Engineering 204 Smith, Janice L., Sudbury, Ma, Sociology Smith, Joan A., Masseha, NY, Sociology 168 Smith, Kevin B., Quincy, Ma, Finance Insurance Smith, Linda P., Foxboro, Ma, Speech Hearing Smith, Margaret M., New City, NY, Physical Therapy 246 Smith, Paul A., Brookline, Ma, English Smith, Peter M., Swampscott, Ma, Civil Engineering 204 Smith, Reggie H., Natick, Ma, Political Science Smith, Stefan J., Weymouth, Ma, Biology 172 Smith, William F., Milton, Ma, Criminal Justice Smith, WUliam J., Lynn, Ma, Electrical Engineering 204 Smolnycki, William, D., Syracuse, NY Chemistry 168 Snow, David M., New Britain, Ct, English Snyder, Barbara E., Reading, Ma, Political Science Snyder, Nancy C, Newburg, NY, Forsyth Dental Snyder, Richard M., New York, NY, Finance Insurance 227 So, Danny K. F., Boston, Ma, Biology Sobiewski, Denis P., Framingham, Ma, Management Sobocinski, Richard, Salem, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 204 Sohn, Bradley, Poughkeepsie, NY, Political Science 168 Sokolov, Bernard P., Fairport, NY, Journalism Solomon, George, Quincy, Ma, Management Solov, Karen T., Brighton, Ma, Nursing Soones, Henry G., Cambridge, Ma, Power Systems Engineering 205 Souther, Charles E., Hingham, Ma, Accounting 227 Sowell, Donna M., Mattapan, Ma, Psychology 150 Spang, Thomas D., Winchester, Ma, Psychology Spangler, Wendy L., Danvers, Ma, Biology 168 Spaulding, John C, Quaker Hill Ct, Pharmacy 249 Spear, Linda J., Jamiaca Plain, Ma, Humanities 232 Speier, Karin A., Auburndale, Ma, Sociology Speight, Paulette E., Chatham, Ma, Economics 172 Spencer, James, Ell Center, Ma, Activities 168 Spicer, Linda D., Somerville, Ma, Psychology 168 Spinosa, Angelo J., Hopkinton, Ma, History Springer, Richard, Plympton, Ma, Management Sprung, Susan E., Brookline, Ma, Sociology Squeglia, Marilyn G., New Haven, Ct, English 168 Stack, Carol R., Brookline, Ma, Sociology Stanton, Melissa J., Versailles, Ct, Speech Hearing 239 Stares, William B., South Easton, Ma, Civil Engineering Starinskas, Algis J., Dorchester, Ma, Marketing Steams, Philip, Wayland, Ma, Chemical Engineering 205 Stebenne, Donna J., Seekonk, Ma, Nursing 257 Steinberg, Gary A., Everett, Ma, Industrial Engineering 205 Steinberg, Judith A., Fairfax, Va, Forsyth Dental Steinhart, Stevan, Fair Lawn, NJ, Economics Steins, Sandra S., Huntington, Ma, Nursing 257 Stephenson, Nancy A., Westwood, Ma, Forsyth Dental Stepno, Craig R., Holyoke, Ma, Political Science 168 Stefman, Brian P., Franklin Square, NY, Civil Engineering 205 Stem, Richard W., Fishkill, NY, Management Stevens, Joanne E., Milton, Ma, Forsyth Dental Stevens, John D., Millis, Ma., Industrial Engineering 177 Stewart, Thomas C, South Boston, Ma, Industrial Engineering Stiles. Gregory F., Manchester, Ma. History Stockwood, Donald K., Belmont. Ma. Management Stone, Carole E.. Lexington. Ma. English Stowe, Arthur W.. Milford. Ct, History Strauss. Marc D., Valley Stream. NY. Management Straetger, Waller H., Brookline. Ma. Electrical Engineering Streeter. Robert. Sudbury, Ma. Civil Engineering Streifer, |oan E.. Monticello. NY. Humanities Strobel. Carlton B.. Morrisville. Vt, Chemistry Stroum. Steven M.. Newtonville. Ma, Management Stryker. Michael K., Walden. Ma, Civil Engineering Stuart. Carolyn. Whilinsville. Ma. Forsyth Dental Sturtevant, Arlene M., Lynn, Ma, Nursing Stygles, Joan R., Woburn, Ma, Nursing Sudrabin, Margaret A., Berkeley Heights. NJ. Humanities Sullivan. Anne E.. Marlboro. Ma. Political Science Sullivan. Cathy L.. Roxbury, Ma, Sociology Sullivan, Dennis )., Belmont, Ma, History Sullivan, Gail I., Acton, Ma, Humanities Sullivan, John B., Framingham, Ma, Finance Insurance Sullivan, Kevin R., Quincy, Ma, Criminal Justice Sullivan, Mary C, Lynn, Ma, Forsyth Dental Sullivan, Nora L., Somerville, Ma, Medical Technology Sullivan, Robert B., Watertown, Ma, Psychology Sullivan, Robert M., West Roxbury, Ma, Finance Insurance Sullivan. Thomas E.. Brighton, Ma, Criminal Justice Sullivan, William F., Peabody, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Sullivan, William J., Saugus, Ma, Finance Insurance Sullivan, Jr., Edward F., Dedham, Ma, Criminal Justice Sumares, John, Somerville, Ma, Industrial Engineering Summerfield, Barry A., Sharon, Ma, Management Summers, John T., Hingham, Ma, Biology SutcIifFe, Susan A., Franklin, Ma, Forsyth Dental Sutherland, Lynn W., Lynnfield, Ma, Medical Technology Suvarnapradip, Panthong, Boston, Ma, Economics Svikla, Alius J.. Waltham. Ma, Pharmacy Sw aine. Jr.. Robert L., Greenwhich, Ct, Pharmacy Swanecamp, Gail, Framingham, Ma, Forsyth Dental Swanson, Harold M., Attleboro, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Sv fanson, Richard J., Medford, Ma, Journalism Sweenye, Hugh J.. Westwood, Ma, Electrical Engineering Sweeney, James J., Pequannock, NJ, Mathematics Sweenye, Kathleen A., Newtonville, Ma, Physical Education Sweeney, Sandra E., Randolph, Ma, Physical Therapy Sweeney, Timothy W., Weymouth, Ma, Humanities Sweetser, Sandra J., Reading, Ma, Psychology Swingle, Loren C, Hudson, NY, Industrial Engineering Syat, Leonard Y., West Roxbury, Ma, Accounting Symington, Jr., John R., Dennis, Ma, Criminal Justice Symmes, Keith L., Danvers, Ma, Electrical Engineering Szoke, Robert W., Milford, Ct, Chemical Engineering 172 227 205 205 239 153 229 205 257 257 239 144 168 172 213 262 205 227 169 249 249 205 169 246 239 169 177 227 262 Taggart, Victor U., Norwood, Ma, Economics Taglienti, John V., Auburndale, Ma, Marketing Tai, Peter J., Melrose, Ma, Biology Tallent, Michael C, Bethel, Ct, Mathematics Tambini, Richard J., Peekskill, NY, Electrical Engineering Tang, Francis S.Y., Boston, Ma, Economics Tapper, Joyce K.. Cranston, RI, Humanities Tarbell, John C, Peabody, Ma, Civil Engineering Tarpinian, Gayle E., Lynn, Ma, Medical Technology Tarquinio, Richard G., Somerville, Ma, Political Science Taylor, John E., South Boston, Ma, History Taylor, Lana J., Marlboro, Ma, Nursing Taylor, Linda M., Bradford, Ma, Forsyth Dental Tchang, K. T. Thomas, Yonkers, NY, Chemical Engineering Temko, Ronald J., New Shrewsbury, NJ, Marketing Tenney, Jeanne M., Brookline, Ma, History Tenuta, Nicola J., Westerly, RI, Industrial Engineering Terella, Michael G., Watertown, Ma, Industrial Engineering Tervrilliger, Jay F.. Wallkill. NY. Marketing Tevelson, Edythe F.. Pottstown. Pa. Speech Hearing Thatcher, Robert C, Paramus, NJ, Biology Thayer, Stevan J., Wakefield, Ma, Electrical Engineering Theriault, Gerald T., Maiden, Ma, Finance Insurance Therrien, Valerie M., Mattapan, Ma, Political Science 169 205 251 205 227 239 169 181 227 149 Thomas, Barbara J., Boston. Ma, Social Studies 239 Thomas, Fern L., Boston, Ma, Sociology Thomas, Kenneth R., Baltimore, Md, Power Systems Engineering 183 Thompson, Hilda F., Roxbury, Ma, Humanities 239 Thompson, James G., Plymouth, Ma, Civil Engineering Thompson, Jeanne L, North Quincy, Ma, Forsyth Dental Thompson, Kenneth A., Duxbury, Ma, Industrial Engineering 173 Thompson, Loren B., Plymouth, Ma, Political Science Thornton, William G., Granby, Ct, Economics 169 Thornton, William T., Reading, Ma, Criminal Justice Thrope, Susan D., Hyannis, Ma, Speech Hearing Thurston, Kathleen T., Dorchester, Ma, Nursing 257 Tibbetts, Rita A., Cambridge, Ma, Mathematics 153 Tiedemann, Christine M., Boston, Ma Pharmacy Tiemey, Raymond D., Haverhill, Ma, Respiration Therapy Tierney, William J., Dedham, Ma, Political Science Tobias, Alexis H., North Miami Beach, Fl, Nursing Tobiason, David F., Lexington, Ma, Civil Engineering 205 Tobins, Marlene D., Quincy, Ma, Forsyth Dental Tom, John T., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering 205 Tonell, Joseph J., Medford, Ma, Marketing Toolin, Jr., Brendan, Osterville, Ma, Sociology Topping, Samuel P., Lynnfield. Ma. Mechanical Engineering Torossian. Richard M., Haverhill, Ma, Biology Torre, Daniel F., New Haven, Ct, Pharmacy 249 Toto, Debra M., Holden, Ma, Political Science 169 Totten, Noah T.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Marketing 227 Toye, Wayne E., B raintree, Ma, Mathematics 169 Traiger, Judith C, Newton, Ma, Sociology 169 Trasko, Linda A., Taftville, Ct, English Trauber, Howard B., East Meadow, NY, Accounting 227 Travers, Gregory J., Plainville, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Trebach, Judith C, Belmont, Ma, Speech Hearing 239 Triompo, James M., Southington, Ct, Mechanical Engineering Tripi, Joseph W., Lexington, Ma Industrial Engineering 205 Tripp, Frances K., Somerville, Ma, Biology Troiano. Paula C. Cranston Rl, Physical Therapy 246 Trostel. Paul J.. Randolph, Ma, Marketing 213 Troy, Elizabeth H., Boston, Ma, Art History True. Roberta E.. Wakefield. Ma. Forsyth Dental Traesdale. Richard A., Wakefield. Ma. Pharmacy 249 Truscott, Irene F., Boston, Ma, Nursing Tse, Wai Y., Boston, Ma, Electrical Engineering 181 Tucci, John M., Pittsfield, Ma, Electrical Engineering 205 Tuffy, Robert E., Weymouth, Ma, Accounting Tufts, Jr., Robert B., Salem, Ma, Physical Education Tuminski, Thomas A., Boston, Ma, Finance Insurance 216 Turchetta, Thomas P., New Britain, Ct, Accounting 227 Turcotte, Kenneth W., Jewett City, Ct, Psychology 169 Turkoff, David A., Orange, Ct, Industrial Relations 227 Turner, Barbara E., Brookfield, Ma, Physical Therapy 242 Turner, Dorothy D., Boston, Ma, Criminal Justice 260 Turner, William A., Burlington, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Tyson, Joyce L., Staten Island, NY, Nursing 257 Udall, Timothy C, Meriden, Ct, Mathematics 169 Underwood, Rosa M., Cambria Heights. NY, Humanities 231 Urban. Stephanie D.. Mahwah. NJ. English 143 Urquhart. Donald S.. Cranston, RI, Chemical Engineering Valentine, William R., Wakefield, Ma, Electrical Engineering Vallante, Kenneth, J., Lawrence, Ma, Psychology Vallas, Holly M., New London, Ct, Art History Valle, Lawraine J., Woodstock, NY, Mathematics Van Kirk, John F., Brielle, NJ, Criminal Justice Van Veghten, Ruby W., Manchester Center, Vt, English Van der Wyk, David A.. Waltham, Ma, Electrical Engineering Vanvooren, Marc, Southbridge, Ma, Criminal Justice Varga, Dale W., Fairfield, Ct, Accounting 206 169 262 172 Varga, David F., West Roxbury. Ma, Political Science Vendilti. Salvatore M., Newton, Ma, Pharmacy Ventresca, Joseph, East Boston, Ma, Accounting Venuto, Louis [., Chatham Township, Nf, History Verge, Heather A., Melrose, Ma, Forsyth Dental Vergnani, Robert C, Somerville, Ma, Mechanical Engineering Vicari, Joseph C, Arlington, Ma, Biology Vieira, [oseph P., Cambridge, Ma, Electrical Engineering Vigneaux, Lawrence E., Saugus, Ma, English Vileniskis, George [., South Boston, Ma, Mathematics Viles, Henry L, Weston, Ma, Social Studies Vinson, Robert A., Yorktown Heights, NY, Economics Viola, Charles A., Hyde Park, Ma, Civil Engineering Visco, Karen L., East Boston, Ma, English Vitale, Robert H., Revere, Ma, Criminal Justice Vlahov, Richard D., Centerport, NY, Sociology Vogel, Gerald )., Brighton, Ma, Chemical Engineering Voutselas, Mary A., Boston. Ma, Sociology 169 249 172 206 169 239 206 170 206 145 Wachtenheim, Billy R., Lakewood, NJ, Industrial Engineering 206 Wade, Thomas J., Burlington, NJ, Mathematics Wagner, Kathy K., Allston, Ma. Physical Education Wakefield, Pamela, Boston, Ma, Sociology Walb, Thomas A., Garden City, NY, Civil Engineering Waldman, Susan E., Chelsea, Ma, Speech Hearing 239 Walker, Diane M. Cumberland. Rl, Economics Walker. Paul E.. Charlestown. Ma. Criminal Justice Walker. Jr.. Stephen J., Newton, Ma, Civil Engineering 206 Walklet, John J., Reading, Ma, English Wall, Thomas J., West Roxbury, Ma, Political Science Wallace, Laura C, Walpole. Ma, Social Studies 233 Walsh, Donna J., Fairfield. Ct. Medical Technology 170 Walsh. John J., Ipswich, Ma, General Science 239 Walsh, Kevin J., Charlestown, Ma, Civil Engineering 206 Walsh, Moira F., North Tarrytown. NY, Speech Hearing Walsh, Patricia A., Brookline, Ma. Humanities 231 Wambolt. Janice. Cambridge. Ma. Political Science Wantman. Mark I.. Medford. Ma. Finance Insurance 228 Wanyo. Michael J.. Salem. Ma. Accounting Ward, Arnold F.. Hyde Park. NY. Mechanical Engineering Warren. Douglas L.. Braintree, Ma, Finance Insurance Wasoff, Richard B.. Boston, Ma. Political Science Waterman. Karen M.. Allston. Ma, Nursing Waters, Alan T., Wakefield. Ma. Chemical Engineering 206 Watson, Elaine, Weymouth. Ma. Forsyth Dental Watson, Thomas A., Cumberland, RI. Electrical Engineering 173 Watt. William G.. Reading. Ma, Psychology 170 Watts. James I., Lexington, Ma, Mechanical Engineering 176 Watts, Susan J., Holbrook, Ma, Speech Hearing 239 Wayne. Barry H.. Marblehead. Ma. Accounting 228 Weaver, William G., Bloomfield, Ct, Civil Engineering 206 Weberg, Daniel B., Southbridge, Ma. Management 228 Webster. David J.. Merrimack, NH, Political Science Webster, Timothy J.. Cheshire. Ct. Chemical Engineering 206 Wedge. Paul ].. Peab ody. Ma. Accounting Wegener. Brenda V.. Lowell. Ma. Humanities 240 Weimann. Patricia E., Huntington, NY. Physical Education Weinblatt. David N.. Westbury. NY. Accounting 228 Weiner. Nathan K., Canton, Ma, Electrical Engineering Weiner, Renee T., Newtonville, Ma. Marketing Weinstein. Anita F.. Allston. Ma. Speech Hearing 232 Weisberg. Howard B., Cranston. RI, Marketing Weisman, Adina R., Waltham. Ma. Humanities Weiss. Lawrence M.. Plainview, NY, Drama 172,170 Weiss. Sharon L., Cambridge, Ma, Speech Hearing Welch, Paula A., West Springfield. Ma, Forsyth Dental Welch, Sharon M.. Barre, Vt, Speech Hearing 240 Welenc. Thomas S.. Salem. Ma, Psychology Waller. Earl H. Hamburg, NY, Mechanical Engineering 206 Wells. Ray D.. Maiden. Ma. Pharmacy 249 Wellwood. Tomas E., West Newbury, Ma, Physical Education 246 Wenckus, Mark A., Sudbury, Ma. Marketing 228 Wengrod. Kenneth L. East Rockaway. NY. Economics 170 Wennersten. Richard E., Wyckoff. N|. Accounting 228 Werner. Lawrence G.. West Roxbury, Ma, Industrial Engineering 206 Wesley, Leeonard P., Danbury, Ct, Physics 170 Weslowski. Patricia L. Norwood. Ma. Political Science 155 Wetmore, Lawrence C, Needhara, Ma, Electrical Engineering Wexler. Janice M., Cranston, RI, Humanities Wheeler, Bruce H., Boston, Ma, Finance Insurance Whelton, Daniel J., West Roxbury, Ma, Political Science Whipple, Roger C, Cohasset, Ma. Electrical Engineering Whitaker, Jeffrey M., Boston, Ma, Criminal Justice Whitcomb, RaJph E., Boxboro. Ma, Accounting White, Donald M., Kittery, Me, Industrial Engineering White, Douglas E. Kittery, Me, Electrical Engineering White, John P., Dorchester, Ma, English White, John F. West Roxbury, Ma. Sociology White. Nancy., Portsmouth, RI, History White, Richard F.. Boston. Ma, Criminal Justice VXTiite, Terry A. Boston. Ma, Mechanical Engineering Whitney, David C. Newton Highlands, Ma, Management Whitney, Willard W.. Warwick, RI, Industrial Engineering Whittemore, Nancy A. Brookline. Ma, Nursing Whittier. Henry L., Scituate, Ma, Social Studies Whittier, Joseph S.. North Easton. Ma. Medical Technology Whittimore, Richard S., Holliston. Ma, Electrical Engineering Wiggins, Darlene S., Norwood, Ma, Marketing Wiggins, Maurene K., Smoke Rise, NJ, Sociology Wilcox. Mark B., Chatham. NJ, Finance Insurance Wilder, Mark A., Melrose, Ma, Accounting Wilderoter, Jane A., Lexington, Ma. Nursing Wilding. Christine A.. Fall River, Ma, Physical Therapy Wile, Daniel D., East Bridgewater. Ma, Recreation Education Wile, Carolyn M., Charlestown, Ma, Nursing WUey, Evi K.. Boston, Ma, Physical Therapy Williams, Bernadette, Roxbury, Ma, Philosophy Williams, Craig C, Beverly, Ma, Criminal Justice Williams, Deborah, Brookline, Ma, Forsyth Dental Williams, James F., Milton, Ma, Journalism Williams, Juliana M., Roxbury, Ma, Humanities Williams. Nanci J.. Woburn. Ma. Chemical Engineering Williamson. James M.. Natick, Ma, Political Science Williamson. Joann A.. Boston, Ma, Nursing Wilson, Edward B., Boston, Ma, Drama Wilson, Leslie F., Allston, Ma. Criminal Justice Wilson. Shelia M.. Roxbury. Ma, Psychology Wilson, Steven R.. Canton, Ma, Civil Engineering Winter, William M., Goldens Bridge, NY, Psychology Woronen, Sylvia A. Arlington, Ma, Psychology Withe, David S., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Philosophy Withe, Eleanor F., Jamaica Plain, Ma, Physics Witkowski, Diane L., Fall River, Ma, Humanities Wizeman, Richard K., Churchville, Pa, Civil Engineering Wluka, Allen S. Milton, Ma, Drama Wojciechowski, Mary A. Warwick, RI. Civil Engineering Wolf, Irwin D.. Pittsburgh, Pa, Finance Insurance Wolf, Otto W., PlainvUle. Ma. Political Science Wolff. Jeffrey A.. Sharon, Ma, Psychology Wolfson, David C, Franklin Square, NY, Political Science Wolfson, Ronnie C, Wellesley, Ma, Accounting Wolk, David A., West Orange, NJ, Psychology Wong, Daniel K.. Salem, Ma. Power Systems Engineering Wong. Diana T. Sociology Wong, James Y.. Worcester, Ma. Eectrical Engineering Wong. Kevin, Boston, Ma, Biology Wong. Kwok Bing, Boston. Ma, Chemical Engineering Wong, Kwok Chee, Boston. Ma, Chemical Engineering Wong, Theodore D., Boston, Ma, Industrial Relations Wonson, Richard C, Gloucester, Ma, History Woo. Chiu Kun, Boston, Ma. Civil Engineering Wood. Craig N., Bethel, Vt, Electrical Engineering Woodard, Judy, Nursing, 206 262 228 206 170 170 262 176 228 170 228 228 257 247 170 208 262 206 170 240 207 170 228 170 207 172 181 170 207 207 253 Worley, John M., Boston, Ma, Recreation Education Woronen, Sylvia A. Arlington, Ma, Psychology Woodbury, Dana A.. Canton, Ma, Electrical Engineering Woodbury, Elizabeth M., Needham, Ma, Physical Therapy Woodman, Charles P., Intervale, NH, Civil Engineering Woodward, Ruth, Roxbury, Ma. Psychology Woodward, Timothy B.. Hudson, NY, Criminal Justice Worrell, Nancy E., Norwood, Ma, Mathematics Wright, John A.. Beverly, Ma. Criminal Justice Wroblewski. Daniel J., South Yarmouth, Ma, Management Wu, Thomas G.. Boston. Ma, Industrial Engineering Wyman, Clement T.. Berwick, Me, English Wynn, Cecelia L., Boston, Ma, Nursing 180 247 208 170 262 207 258 Yaffe, Nathaniel I., Newton, Ma, Psychology Yancey, Vincent G., Roxbury. Ma, Accounting Yanover, Michael G., Boston, Ma, Drama Yates, Henri B., New London, Ct, Mathematics Yates, Richard L., Fitchburg, Ma, Accounting Yee, Edward, Brookline, Ma, Electrical Engineering Yee, Filbert Y., Allston, Ma, CivU Engineering Yee, Kim J., Boston, Ma, Accounting Ying, Phyllis W.. Arlington. Ma, Pharmacy Yiu, Daniel S., Boston. Ma, Finance Insurance Yoshimura, Yoko. Boston. Ma, Pharmacy Young, Elizabeth W.. Arlington, Ma, Psychology Young. Faye R., Brookline, Ma, Psychology Young, Valerie L. Jamaica Plain, Ma, Speech Hearing Yunker, Gary D.. Stamford. Ct, Accounting 207 210 249 151 171 Zack, Marilyn G., Lewiston. Me, Speech Hearing Zadikov. Greg A., Wantagh, NY. Drama Zager, Toby R., Dorchester, Ma, Sociology Zahn, John W., Slingerlands, NY, Physical Education Zalk, Barry D., Huntington, NY, Accounting Zalvan, Robert M., Milton, Ma, Economics Zarella, Patricia, West Roxbury, Ma, Physical Education Zawada. Gary J., Arlington, Ma, Civil Engineering Zerillo, Rita M., Cherry Hill, NJ, Speech Hearing Zetes, Anastasia M., Swampscott, Ma, Physical Therapy Zidel, Howard D., Maiden. Ma, Accounting Ziegler, Susan E., Lincoln, Ma. Sociology Zimbone, Richard A., Stoughton, Ma, Chemical Engineering Zimmerman, Simon H.. Toms River. NJ, History Ziner, David F., Maiden. Ma. Marketing Ziobro, Michael E., Somerset, Ma, Civil Engineering Zitcer, Beverly A., East Paterson, NJ, Nursing Zitcer. Deborah, East Paterson, NJ, Forsyth Dental Zovickian, John A., Winchester, Ma, Biology Zuberek, Mark M., Dorchester, Ma, Civil Engineering Zucco, Gregory J., Medford, Ma, Marketing Zucker, Maryly, West Newbury, Ma, Forsyth Dental Zwetchkenbaum, Kevin P., Poughkeepsie, NY, Speech Hearing 171 247 228 207 240 229 207 212 207 207 229 -CC j l H i Him I II i vmmm - ff 3 ' - • '


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1971

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1975

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