Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA)

 - Class of 1970

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Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 224 of the 1970 volume:

MOUNT REGIS 1970 REGIS COLLEGE Weston, Massachusetts The following two hundred-thirteen pages were not compiled to be a “glorified memory book’’ but, rather to represent a genuine effort reflecting a subculture, Regis, within a society, and to understand our place in that society, and our responsibilities to our- selves and to others. Our dedication is to the guiders of mankind. No one person has influenced us as much as the overall happenings of our generation. Our lives, ambitions, and futures wouldn’t exactly be the same had any one of these events not occurred. We, the editors, merely ask the reader to pause and to think, and to try to understand her part in this book and our college. EDITORIAL STAFF Barbara Lipcan, Editor-in-Chief Judith Doherty, Literary-Layout Editor Mary Jo Hennis, Business Editor Mary Ellen Maye, Senior Section Editor Carole Mathieson, Senior Section Co-Editor Mary Dailey, Photography Editor Rosemary Carvelli, Creative Photographer Sr. Marie de Sales Dinneen, Moderator The campus ... the backdrop of our education. We often pass the buildings and don’t know they’re there. Concrete and bricks . . . brought to life by virtue of what they contain. All humanity is contained within four walls, and we are no exception. We change the scene . . . move on to other buildings, but a little of our enthusiasm lives on in the brick work. Our campus is a mixture of new and old, reflecting our combined philosophies. Construction is going on . . . not just a new building, but within us. We’re growing, and yet we have an integral part in the school’s growth. Our moments here are unique and ours alone. We are the school. 7 I’m safe and secure at Regis, but sometimes, just sometimes I step into the big, cold world. Am I a china doll, and will I shatter? When I must live in this world, will I sit on a shelf and collect dust? Or will I roar? Roar so my cries are heard, from D.C. to Moscow. Others will join me . . . we’ll line up in rows and some of us will be knocked down but not shattered. I’m heading in a direction. I’m running and no one will catch me until they have recognized my presence. Some might wish I didn’t exist, and not listen, but I don’t give a damn. I have something to say, something to give, and I want someone to listen and someone to take and accept. I also must listen and take, but not until I’m sure of my existence. Then I will be living. 8 the Da 111 . KID fdterIM “• ' I™ ' TS ' ■•fc, ' - t i -L , l.jjf j 10 11 To understand is to look up to... . . . Love . . . beautiful people, with beautiful ideas. People who are willing to give us a slice of their lives. They want us to act, to move, to live. They willingly give us the momentum, all we have to do is accept it. They are the people to whom we dedicate our yearbook. For you, their photos may not all be here; there may be many more. Without these people there is no art, no music, no literature, no science, no peace, no beauty in the world. Their contributions range over the gamit of human interest and human history, from the first cave man who showed others how to light a fire, to Jesus Christ who showed people how love and understand one another after they had long forgotten the art. 18 These photos represent those people with whonn Regis students had the most contact, philosophically and idealogically. They speak both loudly and softly, and are the dedicated leaders and followers who have faith in their cause and have the courage and fortitude to carry on. Some of them are never appreciated in their life time. Unheeding, mankind lets them come and go. Some are persecuted, persecuted by ridicule, ostracism, or even death. To these people we dedicate our yearbook, without whose contribution we could not imagine a better life, a better world. (Courtesy of AP) 19 1 L , H0? IPVB s i 3hC 5 student involvement . . . involved in what? Am I content to sit in my room, study to receive good grades, and take the least advantage of those opportunities offered to me here at Regis, in Boston, and elsewhere? Or do I take stock of the situation and learn to arrange my priorities in order that they afford the greatest amount of satisfaction to me? Regis has created an atmosphere that offers many avenues to be explored — not only in the academic sphere, but also in the cultural and social. If I choose, at the first roadblock I can go no further and remain the same person I was when I first came here. But if within me I know that I must expand my mind, no one would hear me say, “I can’t go to that lecture tonight — I know it will be interesting, but I’m tired . . .” or “Gee, how can you ever find the time . . .’’ to do what? Run for an office, do volunteer work, attend a lecture on another campus, go to a museum in Boston, participate in the Viet Nam Moratorium, or actively disapprove . . .? Don’t I care enough about myself as an individual to want to develop into a complete entity unto myself — me? Accepting responsibility, whether it be large or small, contributes to my understanding of myself. Only after this has been accomplished can I reach out to those around me and attempt to understand them in relation to the world in which I must live. Only through accepting responsibility, through becoming involved, can I ever understand what is necessary for me to be an independent, whole person. And Regis is a start for some people, for others, just another step. Wf§ w We have received these mortarboards and robes and to us they indicate the beginning of our fourth and final year of study on the undergraduate level. These robes, however, are indicative of other more awesome things ... we moved into a new realm; we are no longer children in the academic world, rather we are now full-fledged members of academia, and must realize that as part of this academic world we bear a responsibility for the action or, as in some cases, lack of action of that world. I, for one, have no intention of contributing to the reflections of some historians twenty years hence on the inaction of American academic circles while crisis confronted the country. 24 We are supposedly fairly learned now and it is up to us to utilize our intellectual facilities to work to resolve the questions confronting this country — the problems of urban America, of society, of the poor of all races, and the moral problem of our murderous involvement in Vietnam. It is our responsibility, and should be our intention, to make certain that informed opinion and action based upon that opinion will be the hallmark of our times — so that it will not be true that we and the academic world of our time were characterized only by inaction and apathy. Founder ' s Day address — Anne Marie Goggin, President of the Class of 1970 J|1 25 26 27 !!!!t:!itKnv I sometimes wonder how people can cheat themselves out of the knowledge which is available to them at a lecture. What the lecturer’s name is isn’t quite as important as what he says and what he does for his audience. This year we had many good and diverse topics being discussed by qualified men and women. These people made me think “. . . The first question is always the hardest . . . won’t someone ask a question?” Dialogue is the vehicle of understanding. If questions aren ' t posed then the audience’s reception of the lecture isn’t tested and revaluated. It is in this way that the speaker gets a chance to see how his points stand up to youthful criticism. If we are to keep informed and exist as an intellectual community then we should realize the value of outside speakers as a stimulus for liberal and well-rounded knowledge. If not, what else are we here for? 33 student A good “We decided to experiment with a new system, a representative form of student government ... So far the outlook is hopeful . . . Perhaps now we can succeed at being heard where once we could not even reach a decision for lack of interest . . . future actions will show us if we have gained by it.” Mount Regis, 1969 — p. 55. 34 Government: way to understand Is anyone interested, do you have any “constructive” criticisms, gripes, problems, ideas, feelings, . . . anything? Have we stimulated interest? Is it a plague of society that only twenty per cent is ever committed enough to put themselves on the line by assuming the responsibility of an elected office? The interest mounts when a major issue is at stake, but wains on “small” questions such as “Is Student Government necessary?” t ’H ' it 35 student government, a power organ or not, a respected vehicle of the majority of students, or a bunch of kids passing laws that they want? These are the questions this year. They are questions which bore into the core of student unity . . . wherever that is. Can we continue as it now stands or are we heading towards the ideal of an “all college government?” The debate goes on. Where is the cause of student unrest? Are we content to sit back, or do we want the responsibility of an all college government? Are we ready for it? Curfews, honor codes, library cards for other colleges ... a reaching out ... a reaching in. Do these decisions affect anyone? They affect everyone, but how many realize the ultimate impact? After the confrontation, after the fact, the hope is that people will realize, and in their own way appreciate student government. The individual members of government do not hold the power which is contained in the student body in general. Each girl must contribute to make this a more vital force. 37 When I became editor-in-chief of Mt. Regis, 1970, I held certain views about the “apathy” that had been debated for the previous three years when discussing student interest on the Regis campus. Considering myself a basically optimistic person, I had hoped that when the time came to embark on the production of our publication, I would be proved wrong. I thought I would be shown that, in reality, people — a lot of people — did care enough to commit themselves to a task and follow it through. Gathering a yearbook staff would only be a small indication of the real interest that existed among us. But now, in retrospect, I can say only that my original opinions were greatly strengthened. I can not now, nor will ever be able to understand how people can remain totally uninvolved in the world around them. Our attempts to recruit workers for the yearbook staff were met with the same response that other publications on campus, student organizations, and student government had encountered. Granted, everyone cannot be a leader, but even the dependable followers were few in number. Everywhere I turned, everything was organized and run by a group composed of perhaps twenty percent of the student body. Out of the remaining percentage, some were totally disinterested; some only became involved when issues were “hot;” but some — thank God for these individuals — were very interested, supplying constructive criticism, suggestions, encouragement, and giving an occasional vote of thanks. To those who were totally disinterested, I can say that this book, and its theme of understanding and involvement has absolutely no meaning. At best, this can only be a memory book to them. For they have never bothered, in Corita’s words, “to stand under,” or “to look up to,” or ever sought to find their own “good way to understand.” For those who were involved only when the “thing to do” was to jump on the band-wagon, I hope the message of our book can contribute to some sort of new awareness on their part. For those who have helped, not only in producing Mt. Regis, 1970, but in the many efforts all along the way during our four years, I can only say thank you. For without their contributions, so little of it would have had meaning. And to those who have lead — those who have been forced “to stand under” so many times, forced by their own inner spirit “to look up to” so often that it pained — to them, this book can have the greatest significance, for they truly can understand. Barbara J. Lipcan, Editor-in-Chief Mt. Regis, 1970 39 Science lab stinks — formaldehyde, acid, burning sulphur . . . but it’s a great aid in the learning process. A chance to experiment, attempt a new approach to an old problem, develop my own technique, learn about the intricate biological workings and chemical reactions of life itself. Where so often we generalize, theorize, and speculate about the philosophical and psychological side of life, science lab brings me into the realm of the concrete, the real. Labs denote not only scientific experiments, but also artistic creativity and the attainment of comprehensive conversations in a foreign language. From the beginning language lab is purely mechanical, teaching phrases, helping me to comprehend. But as I progress in study, the tapes expose me to the beauty of foreign authors’ dramatic works, and to more sophisticated levels of understanding. Art lab offers unlimited opportunities — ceramics, silk-screening, painting, sculpturing — to create, to express, to communicate. The chance for me to “tell it like it is,” in whatever medium I choose. I could talk for hours, and fail to communicate what one of my art works can say. I can substantiate my thoughts for all to see. t The day hops . . . the royal order of the round tables . . . the day hop union Union . . . pull up a chair and we ’re three deep around a table endowed with grafitti and free art form . . . crash!!! . . . another day hop just bit the dust and slipped off a chair, . . . “Help! My car pool left without me” . . . “can you fit twelve extra girls in you car, mine won’t start?” . . . anyone know how to change a flat, charge a battery, or fix a water pump? Chatter, chatter, chatter . . . could I possibly talk someone into a game of cards? . . . someone help me eat an order of french fries . . . tomorrow I diet . . . QUIET! This is a study table . . . the union of social and scholastic, silly and serious, and as four o’clock approaches, the din diminishes and the crowd disperses in all directions . . . Routes 20, 30, 128 . . . the lanes that link home and school, friends and teachers. We leave, only to return again, meeting for coffee at 8:50 sharp the next morning. 43 Twas the night before Christmas vacation and all through the school; Not a creature was stirring! who are you trying to fool? The bottles were lined up all neat in straight rows; In hopes that thirsty throats would soon on the scene show. A small party before dinner, and then to a Christmas play; Then up to the Foyer singing carols in our own graceful way! Now up Seniors, up Seniors to Regis Hall you must run; For more Christmas spirits . . . the evening has just begun! Now down Seniors, down Seniors, back to the dorms you must hurry; To finish papers due . . . and join in the party. And as the pink sun rose and my tired eyes shut tight For the first time I realized that Christmas was in sight! 45 Parents’ Weekend: Another Dimension Along with the hustle and bustle of Harvest Hop and Country Fair comes Parents’ Weekend. So it’s called — but who is it really for? It gives Mom and Dad a chance to come and see their “little girl” and spend some time with her. They take advantage of the opportunity to meet their daughter’s friends and parents, and become a part of the Regis world for a few days. And yet, from our point of view, although we like to think of ourselves as mature and independent, we find ourselves looking forward to the weekend. Perhaps we enjoy it so much because we are sharing a world that we are so much a part of with people who are so very important to us. From football field to banquet table, we come away knowing each other a little better, understanding ourselves a little more. 47 I R R . . . rest and relaxation. There 1 are times I have to forget my work and channel my energies into something 1 ; else. Whether I come breathlessly off the tennis court, or improve my skill at I pool. Or maybe I don’t have any particular end in mind and enter an egg throwing contest. Also, friendships expand when you find something else you have in common ... he skies too! People really get to know each other on the tennis courts ... ‘‘I wasn’t ready!” They work in pairs and change sides ... “I always lose when I play with you!” The games won and lost always seem to balance out and the ,) conversation can continue after the game . . . “You served when I wasn’t looking!” Wasting time? ... I don’t think so. I can return to the books a little less restless and a little more relaxed. 49 Genevieve McMahon House Director To understand is to live under the same roof Where can I wait until the guard comes back in an hour . . .! Parietals, no curfews . . . many rules were changed, debated, and ammended. At one point, no one really knew what the rules were, but now they’re heading in one direction . . . out. Our house mothers no longer carry the heavy responsibility for us and we speak to them as friends who have a genuine concern for us. They’re there when we need them. As Regis, just as our sooiety, grows, it will become less tied down by regulations. This is fertile ground for free thought and living. Look around . . . We no longer depend on John Meyer for clothes coordination, and we no longer expect our God to give us all the answers gratis. We’re under one roof, but each girl is going in her own direction. We’re part of a free society’’ and we act accordingly, doing our own thing.” My dorm, one huge closet from which everyone gets their clothes, an apartment complex, where the only thing we have in common isn’t just our sex. Our personal lives, disasters, accomplishments, sick jokes, exams, assignments ... all appropriate topics for conversation. Here no one is afraid to speak her mind. There are subcultures within subcultures . . . rooms within floors, within dorms. Some nights a room freaks out and it spreads to the entire floor . . . tumult . . . “I’m trying to sleep!’’ “Who needs sleep?’’ . . . “I’m in love” ... “I flunked my final” ... “I got a grant” ... “I love this song” . . . “Could you turn your radio down!” . . . “I’ve got a paper due” ... but I need sleep.” If you’re tired you’ll sleep! It’s a lot of living and studying, and very little sleep, under one roof. Parties, mixers, dates. Harvest Hop, proms, so many social events are held during our years at Regis. “A blind date — how tall is he?’’ “White socks!’’ “If I stay in one more Saturday night. I’ll scream . . .!’’ So much a part of our life — studying with one ear towards the phone, waiting for a “visitor at the desk.’’ We attend dances and meet everyone’s beaux — and give our stamp of approval. We acquire friends, expand our social circles — no longer are we strangers on other campuses. 55 There were many people on the Junior Bridge Committee; at first there always are. People overestimate the time they have to offer a function or underestimate their part in that function. But as the days grew nearer and the committee dwindled down to the hard core workers, the plans began to take shape. The day was a success, thanks to Anne Palmerino, and everyone settled down to an afternoon of card playing and feeling lucky. 56 The evening began in confusion — we lined up in alphabetical order. But as we met our senior sisters and stepped through the ring symbolizing our seniordom, we realized that this was the first in a series of steps culminating in that long, slow walk to receive our diplomas in June. We felt a part of Regis, but more than that, a member of the class of 1970. That night we were moved by the togetherness of our class, and, perhaps, for the first time, knew that all too soon we would be separating. The ring itself, the tower, and the Regis insignia mean something to all of us, but, beyond that, they represent the experiences we have had in our four years as a class. 57 I I I I ! ! Folk Masses . . . ballerines . , . personal petitions . . . i both species . . . readings ... I became involved in : Mass. There is change and I see it: I am changing too, as I participate in it. Whenever or wherever I go to Mass I feel the impersonal disappear. I do not walk away from this experience, but feel it in my every day life. I sense that I am not just a member of a religion or a person viewing a ceremony, but ! that I belong to a community. Father Burns and now Father Gorman fulfill my religious experience; I know they are there whenever I want to question or ; communicate my feelings. 59 I have found that I have a different “study position” for each of my moods. When I feel sociable, I can sit in a room with any number of people, and all the noise in the world couldn’t disturb me. But there are times when I just have to be alone, perhaps to listen a little more carefully to my own thoughts. 61 Mr. Z “ — Did you take your stupid pills today?’’ “ — Sing as if you really were women!” That man! One man — with thirty women madly in love with him. One man, raving, insulting us and each tone we managed to produce. One man, dynamic, shouting until his voice gave out. Then, pounding his fist in time against his music stand. He stood there, sleepless, the night before a concert. ‘‘Sing, damn it — if you can’t do better than that, we’ll have to tell those stupid people you can’t sing.” He stood there, the next night, dapper, one man against an overwhelming backdrop of feminity. He had one word, Bravo! Mrs. G That woman! She stands, slim and lithe against that same backdrop. Moderate in all things, she is especially slow to violence and anger. The music we sing is different now and she never calls us stupid. “Gut baby, gut.” Course Registration. We started at noon and queued up, as in a bread line. We brought lunch. We brought dinner. We sat for hours on the worn marble stairs. From the gym to the fourth floor, we sat, knee to knee to back. It was suffocating. The old sneaker smell of the gym drifted up and our talk drifted down. The milling and pushing over, we trudged disgruntled or satisfied back up the stairs, past the candy wrappers and coke cans, and those less fortunate than we. 65 Smash . . . a hit . . . utter confusion . . . “does anyone know the score? 400 to what?! You’ve got to be kidding . . . Oh, well, we’ve got two innings to catch up, you never know . . .’’ But somehow the faculty always manages to win. It is here that the faculty joins in with the seniors in a “no holds barred” baseball game. Both teams argue the calls, and base stealing is rampant. The seniors are never as adept with stealing bases as the faculty but are always willing to give it a try, using most devious tactics. The sidelines would begin the afternoon quietly and work up to taking almost as active a part in the game as the faculty and seniors, screaming comments and hints at the unheeding participants. At the game’s end, with all discrepancies in the score ironed out democratically by both sides, the group drifts back into their separate roles of students and faculty. 67 STUDENT STATEMENT The protest action was initiated Tuesday night, April 22, 1969, by several seniors who felt that, since for three years going through “proper channels” had failed to achieve any re-evaluation of the comp policy, more drastic measures were necessary. A Student Steering Committee drafted the previous evening introduced a revised resolution for student approval that morning. Essentially, the resolution, ratified by the protesting majority, offered the faculty three points for consideration: that comps no longer be required for graduation (a student could elect to take them in order to attempt to graduate with honors); that the integration purpose of the exams be preserved in the form of a nongraded seminar, paper, or oral exam; that another equitable solution be devised. FACULTY STATEMENT “Written comprehensive examination which will be required for all seniors will take place on Monday and Tuesday, April 28 and 29, 1969. The faculty will evaluate the quality of the examination and will indicate the evaluating statement on the back of the transcript. This statement will embrace a range from outstanding to below average but satisfactory work. Students will have the option of improving this evaluation. Candidates for Honors will be expected to write a high quality paper. This proposal is a temporary measure for the senior class. The joint faculty-student committee will commence immediately to study the entire comprehensive system.” DISSENTING FACULTY STATEMENT “We are deeply concerned about the recent faculty decision, which we did not support.” So begins a statement released April 25, 1969 by the fourteen faculty members who had voted against the decision to accept the student-faculty comps resolution. They feel that the decision has “compromised the intellectual integrity of the Regis academic community.” A feeling common to many of the fourteen was that there was an element of appeasement in the faculty decision rising from what may have been anxiety and shock at the students’ actions. 69 I Regis faculty members: teachers . . . instructors . . . lecturers . . . associate professors . . . professors . . no words fit the profession. The words have no relevant meaning. To say one teaches sounds passive. One shares what one knows and guides students from making misconceptions. I sometimes really know what a teacher is saying. 1 become actively involved in a lecture, book, article or what ever. I do more than I have to for a passing grade, and he does more than he has to to teach. We both have something to learn and share, and that’s the essence of teaching.” There is something unselfish in a career in which one must put everything he knows on the firing line. A teacher can’t be two steps ahead of a student, but must be with them, getting through the difficult parts and at the same time himself know inside and out the reasoning inherent in the subject matter. In other words, the teacher must not only know all the right answers, but also care to know how a student gets the wrong answers, and try to understand the thinking process involved, wrong though it may be. It must be tedious to hear the same questions year after year and answer them as though the student were the first to ask, but each teacher confronts this and handles it in his own way. This is perhaps why no verb or noun describes the art of teaching, because to everyone it means something different and to every teacher it is something different. Hands . . . explaining, pointing, tracing a thought through to the end . . . molding, shaping, working an image in and out again . . . patting, tapping, tamping down an unruly concept . . . explicating, delineating, filling in our gaps. . . . They tell us how they think with their hands. They move from point to point in the air or make free form patterns in space. Their gestures tell the tale of their discipline. Watch their eyes, their faces and their hands. Dr. Grace A. Hawley, Professor English, Chairman Dr. Gene Davis, Lecturer Chemistry 74 : .y;- Sarah W. Lockeretz, Instructor Sociology Frances Trapp, lecturer Art 75 Students and faculty members discussing, discovering, sharing, just being together. There is no learning en masse here. I am treated and I feel as an individual. We are not worlds apart — we meet in an intellectual sphere. Whenever I feel the urge, I can seek her out, whether I wish to discuss an academic problem, a political situation, or just talk. Sister M. Louisella Walters, Associate Professor Art, Chairman Sister M. Juan Mahan, Associate Professor French, Chairman 76 Sister M. Emily Cahill, Professor Chemistry Sister M. Cabrini Angelli, Instructor Biology Sister Marie de Sales Dinneen, Assistant Professor Art 77 Edward Mulholland, Assistant Professor Economics What is shown to me aids my comprehension. I feel that what I have read is suddenly coming alive. The concept is within my grasp and it begins to have meaning. This comes about as a process — visual and auditory effects combining into something more significant. Associating ideas, debating in my mind what I see makes this factual knowledge become more applicable. Sister Marysia Donovan, Assistant Professor Biology 78 Glenn D. Sproul, Lecturer Mathematics Dr. Elizabeth Shuhany, Professor Mathematics, Chairman 79 Reverend James J. Bretta, Lecturer Philosophy I find it startling sometimes when someone tells me what she thinks about a particular class, and my view is entirely different. It is hard to realize that everyone’s personality and entire being goes into the reception of a lesson. The classroom is the common ground for these divergent ideas and the teacher must take this into account, as well as her own slant on the field. Sister M. Viterbo McCarthy, Professor Psychology, Chairman Dr. Marguerite Bouvard, Assistant Professor Political Science Edward Siegfried. Instructor Mathematics Dr. Leo S. Chang, Assistant Professor Political Science, Chairman As I sat in the audience the evening of the Viet Nam “teach-in”, I came to be av are of the deep personal commitment that many of our professors felt toward society. They were involved . . . willing to give us their reasons for involvement in unbiased terms. This wasn’t a classroom setting. If we disagreed or felt a point unjustified, our hands would go flying, and we would get “equal time” at the mike. The setting was people . . . speaking, listening, and arguing with each other. One could forget for a couple of hours that she would be seeing that professor in class the next morning. We were united in the common prayer for peace, and we brought to it our own ideas, inhibitions, and prejudices which were tried and tested throughout the evening. For peace to exist there has to be a uniting of factions which was perhaps the culmination of the evening’s events. But we were united to a larger group ... to all the other “teach-ins” held that week. And we all held on tightly to our prayers for peace. A gesture is somewhat a “typographical” device. It is the articulation of a point to be made. Analagous to underlining an important word, it calls my immediate close attention. For a moment that word or sentence stops to be held under close scrutiny in my mind. I then decide whether this word which is important, is really important to me. This self questioning is essential to my learning and assimilation of the subject matter. And it is most clearly triggered by an articulate gesture. Dr. Edward M. Case, Professor Philosophy, Chairman 85 We sit before them, hour on hour, soak it in, and, on occasion, pour it all back out. They talk to us, at us, with us and sometimes, for us. They find words for us in French or Spanish. Structure and form become irrevocably linked in our minds. Their words become ours. We finish assignments, read chapters and do the lab work. We sit, then, before them, praying it will all fall into place. F or that, in a day of paperbacks and cartridge tapes, is the function of the medieval lecture system. The classroom must be an experience, directed to the future, linked to the past, and congruent with the present. Sister Patricia McDonough, Instructor French Sister M. Cecilia Agnes Mulrennan, Associate Professor Biology, Chairman Dr. William S. Barron, Assistant Professor History Sister Ann Marie Grady. Instructor Theology Sister Helen M. Fenton, Associate Professor Economics 88 As I sit in class I participate in the teacher-student relationship, cannot just listen, no nnore than the teacher can just lecture. What I learn and how I learn depend on how we interrelate our ideas. Learning becomes a cooperative experience and through this experience I find myself broadening my ideas by listening to the thoughts of other students as well as to my professor’s view Sister Loretta Hegarty, Assistant Professor Education 89 Sister M, Margaret William McCarthy, Assistant Professor Music Dr. Jacqueline Covo, Assistant Professor English Sister M. Xaveria Sullivan, Professor Classics As I attempt to understand and to learn, the thinking process not only generates new ideas within my own mind and in those of the other students around me, but also stimulates the open mind of the instructor sharing in the creativity. To inspire a professor with a new approach to a well-worn problem, novel, work, or theory is one of the highlights of the academic experience. 91 Dr. A. Michael Rossi, Lecturer Psychology Seminar; nerve session, trial by fire, the ninth level of hell . . . “I had a beautiful weekend . . . It’s Tuesday? . . . It’s Tuesday! ... Is it legal to cut seminar? ... I don’t feel very well. . . . Somebody talk!” Informal discussion, bull session, mass hysteria, confusion . . . “I do wish she would be quiet ... I believe ... I disagree . . . but, don’t you find? ... I discussed in seminar . . .!” A worthwhile learning experience . . . breakdown the barriers . . . explore new territory ... in seminar. Leo Barrington, Assistant Professor Sociology 93 Anna G. Gallos, Lecturer Music Dr. Donald W. Brown, Lecturer Psychology Sister M. Perpetuus Lang, Associate Professor Spanish 94 Dr. Joseph Green, Jr., Lecturer Sociology Dr. Vera Laska, Assistant Professor History A teacher ... a dynamic force forever exploding with thoughts and ideas, waiting patiently in hopes of stimulating that one reaction to complete a whole being already more than the sum of its parts. An atmosphere is created . . . would that it be nourished and sustained. Dr. Stephen J. Clarke, Associate Professor Education 95 Sister Neonilla Barrett, Assistant Professor Sociology, Chairman Through my student teaching I learned what a science and an art teaching really is. As the class proceeds, a teacher must be alert and know how to pace her class according to their understanding. She then invites questions and divises impromptu” methods to clarify answers. These impromptu” methods are a result of a deep and comprehensive knowledge of her field. Sister Claire Bouley, Instructor Russian 97 Dr. Mary C. Bryan, Professor English Sister Regina Marie Koch, Assistant Professor German Directed, linked, congruent, the experience is reciprocal. They relate to us: pour it in, spell it out. They enumerate, explicate, evaluate. We, in turn, speak to them. We make their ideas ours, 1 and ours theirs. We pound the desks, defend ourselves and the children of our minds. They reveal their vision, verbalize their understanding. And, at moments of grace, we speak together. We know it happens. In a warm exchange, there is a tingle, a little gasp of breath, a nervous laugh, and a smile that passes from student to teacher to student. We communicate. Someone drops a book and the gulf between the desks widens again. We communicated. I Mary P. Hamilton, Professor German, Chairman 99 Up 2, 3, 4, down 4, 3, 2, up, down, up, down, the stairs to the gym don’t get any shorter. “Hustle ladies, hustle . . Right wing? Left wing? ... My turn to referee again? . . . Whose ball is on the balcony? . . . But it’s cold outside . . . Just how warm do you think a pinnie is? . . . How many cuts is that? . . . Physical education is one thing at Regis that everyone experiences. After you had memorized the alloted number of names, the team could work together and communicate effectively . . . “Hey . . . uh . . . uh . . . what’s your name, the basket’s down the other end of the court!’’ After the proddings of Miss Hughes and Miss Nolan, we found that we were shaping up, and could probably make it back up the stairs without resting once, if we really tried. Olive A. Nolan, Associate Professor Physical Education, Chairman 100 Sister Marie Klapacs Health Instructor and Nurse Mary Malany, Instructor English The tools of the trade: A melange, new and old — the ways in which they communicate. Their words; “Arma virumque cano.” “Oriental art, which is characterized by . . . poetry resting in our boughs . . . people today, working and studying to make a better world for . . . the themes in English literature.” “Where does it hurt, dear?” Can you dig it, baby? Dr. Susan Williamson, Associate Professor Mathematics 102 Sister M. Francis Holloway, Associate Professor Classics Sister M. Grace Healy, Director John Hancock on Campus Work Project Sister Melmarie, Assistant Professor English 103 Sister M. Claire McNamara, Professor Chemistry Cherry blossoms . . . dandelions . . . the wooden stairs are removed from the library ... I no longer listen to WHDH as the first snowflake falls ... or walk on top of two feet of snow to meals before the walk is shoveled ... I walk around the tower . . . the frangrance of the flowers ... the green grass . . . spring arrives at Regis ... I don’t feel like studying ... it couldn’t be spring fever already, could it? . . . How can I last fifty-eight more days? . . . Everything is alive! . . . But I have seminar to do, papers to write . . . classes go on . . . teachers take their classes outdoors. The lawn provides a better atmosphere than the classroom now ... I can’t study in the library . . . Instead of a carol I chose the shade of a tree . . . There is more than one place to find quiet . . . and to prepare for that last exam ... it won’t be long now. Sister M. Rosenda Gill, Assistant Professor French 104 Sister Margaret Kiley, Professor Theology Sister M. Leonarda Burke. Professor Coordinator of Research Activities Whether they teach, advise, stand at the controls of the language laboratory, or direct the math project, there is skill involved. More important is their unselfish interest and willingness to impart the fundamentals of their fields to questioning students. Ronald McCulloch, Assistant Language Laboratory 106 Julie A. Hanna, Lecturer French 107 Louis P, Anastas, Lecturer Education Sister M. Anna Lawrence Roche, Archivist Library Reverend Paul G. Gorman Chaplain Reverend John L ' Heureux Writer-in-Residence 108 Sister Catherine E. Murphy Advisor to Foreign Students Faith in God isn’t a stagnant or a singular entity. It is transferred through interactions with people. Perhaps it is a deep desire to help, in any way, all the people with whom we share this planet . . . whether they be violent, nonviolent, communist, socialist, aggressive or nonaggressive. This is where it has to work and exist . . . somewhere between the believer and the questioner. Sister M. Julie Harkins, Associate Professor Theology, Chairman 109 Sister Claire Ryan. Instructor Theology Sister M. John Sullivan, Professor English There are days when I sit in a class meekly writing down every word . . . But there are days when I have to put down my pen and really be on the receiving end of thoughts and words. I don’t want to miss anything which is being expressed; I might end up with a blank page in my notebook, but I leave the class with a mind full of ideas and a fuller understanding of the field. Sandra Santolucito, Lecturer Sociology Sister Catherine Mary Meade, Instructor History 110 Ill jrji Reverend Charles Ring, C.S.S., Lecturer Theology Action . . . reaction ... I watch, and participate. I can refuse to listen, or ask for more, . . . the choice is personal. The learning experience is mine and yet it is also theirs. I feel that as an individual I have something to contribute to my courses; and I know that each instructor adds a new dimension to her subject matter by virtue of her own personality. I digest, and assimilate both the interesting and the uninteresting, and then make it my own. Where do I go from here? I’m on my own . . . Camille C. Malamud, Lecturer Spanish Sister Margaret McGarry, Assistant Professor Chemistry, Chairman Richard D. Mical, Lecturer Physics Josephine E. DeSimone, Associate Professor Italian and Spanish 113 Senior year . . . how much do we know? It would be ludicrous to say that what we have learned could be put down on paper, tested, folded, bent or mutilated ... it is in us in the form of experience . . . experiencing new ideas, prejudices, facts, love, and hate . . . over every second of the last four years. At times it seemed that the facts would never end. But then came the day when we could say something on our own . . . for some it was a depth paper, for others it was student teaching ... in both cases we learned the most important fact . . . how to use our knowledge and integrate it with our own experiences. This was the culmination of our four years. In the future we will learn new facts, and live new experiences, but however broad our horizons become, Regis will have been our foundation for life ... a common denominator for us all. Frances M. Arey Nancy Jo Adams Theresa M. Ascolillo Joan M. Archer Eileen M. Backus Cynthia M. Bamberg 116 I Marian Batho Gertrude F. Bantle 118 Judith M. Brennan Susan H. Brosnan 119 Anne L, Black Martha A. Brine Gertrude E. Brown Margaret M. Brennan I Rosemary A. Carvelli Margot P. Cleary Margaret E. Cohan Victoria D. Connelly Margaret R. Conry Elizabeth A. Cormier 122 Geraldine M. Cataldo 124 Lynda J. DiFalco Mary C. Dailey Lee M. Dineen Denise C. Dalton Kathleen A. Dobbyn 127 128 Judith A. Doherty Christine M. Doyle Janice C. Dubowik Barbara A. Fiorda 130 Rosemarie Earls Deborah A. Fairbanks Olivia A. Ferrante Louise A. Finocchio Kathleen E. Eichorn Anne M. Finigan , ;n -V ; ‘.y . ♦ . V y« V ♦•♦V.V 5fr ' 4 V wvlwwiv : • V VAV.V«( pwiL lfl« ■ite ii Gail P. Finan 131 Jacklyn A. Fraser Carol M. Fulton Suzanne M. Gautreau Carol A. Giacomo Mary Ann Gianetti Kathleen M. Giardi 136 Maureen E. Hayes Catherine T. Hill Carol M. Hennessey Jane T. Hogan Mary F. Hogan Margaret A. Hogan Mary T. Hutzler Priscilla L. Hook Jane F. Hurd 138 140 Rita M. Keavy Vilai Jaruthavee Anne P. Kelleher Constance R. Lambert Jane M. Kraska Pamela A. Irving Mary T. Kelly Catherine F. Leahy 141 Kathleen M. Leonard Amy C. Lind Alice A. Luster Nancy J. Lynch 142 V 143 Barbara J. Lipcan Mary F. Lombard Sandra E. Lupo Joanne T. Mazzarelli Charlotte M. McDonald Mary A. McCallum Michele L. McFaull Carole E. Mathieson 144 Susan M, McKenzie Mary E. McGloan Susan F. Meagher Mary Lou McKay Mary F, Morrison 146 147 Lucille B. McNulty Paula M. Melican Kathleen E. Murphy Marie L. Powers Nora B. Quinlan Anne F. Ramelli 150 152 Geraldine M. Scalese Elinor A. Ryan 153 Isabelle M. Shaw Marie L. Sorrenti L. Jane Scott Patricia E. Sheridan Valerie V. Shakespeare Priscilla M. Sicard 154 Cornelia A. Sullivan Cheryl A. Sullivan Donna A. Souza 157 Christine M. Sullivan Donna M. Stayer Kathleen M. Stone Patricia A. Sullivan Marilyn A. Toomey Patricia A. Taft Maureen I. Irani Charlotte M. Thompson 159 I Elizabeth A. Wright Ouida K. Williams Jeanne M. Warren V, . 161 Graduation . . . THE BIG DAY . . . proud parents . . . nervous chatter . . . would it ever come? Will this day ever end? The years of security went so fast and the day ends too quickly. But as we counted the days we should have realized that every day of classes constituted a small part of our graduation. With each question we asked and with each question answered, we moved into the responsible position of the educated. We don’t become graduates on one day, it is a maturing process. When we came to college it was because we had questions to ask, now, hopefully, we know how to answer or to find the answers to these questions. As members of the class of 1970, and this violent generation, we are people of action. We inherit a world which needs to be questioned and changed. As members of this era we know the enormous power we hold, and by virtue of our education we have the know-how and the responsibility to put this oower to good use. 165 Ten . . . Hey Jude don’t be afraid . . . Nine . . . the Christmas truce has been broken seventy-two times . . . Eight . . . and I repeat, 1 will not run nor will I accept the nomination for president of the United States . . . Seven . . . the city is in flames . . . the reserves have been called out and instructed to shoot on sight any loiterers . . . Six . . . cops-bad, busted-bad, high-good, straight-bad, head-friend . . . Five ... fly the friendly skies of . . . Four . . . he’s shot . . . he’s shot . . . Bobby’s shot . . . Three . . . the pill is a no-no . . . Two . . . the students continue to hold the administration building . . . One . . . and the cold war continues . . . gesundheit . . . ignition ... a step for mankind . . . but in what direction? We call it the “free society’’ . . . Caution; cigarette smoking . . . and every year we report every cent we make and how we spent or saved it . . . Uncle Sam wants you! ... air pollution . . . gesundheit . . . balance of power . . . fat-free . . . ultra-brite gives sex appeal. It’s strange that our technically directed f society can be so seemingly gullible when it comes to advertising . . . join the rebellion (I don’t know where those college kids get all those violent ideas). You know Alice; she has the freshest mouth in town (camera pans in on a beautiful blonde’s all-American toothy smile). Drink a completely new experience (are we all that bored!). Sometimes something provoking comes along, the Beatles’ Abbey Road, the movie The Graduate . . . the Pueblo’s impotence . . . a dove runs for President ... a nation starves . . . people react, we come out of our “boob” tube trances and react, feel, think, laugh, cry . . . and the great impersonal wall between one member of a nation and the great masses of that nation is scaled. We realize we still share our humanity . . . and our feeling for fair play. We take sides . . . argue for causes. We’re violently for . . . violently against, but we’re thinking and feeling. Our nation is rampant with paradox. There were those who were crushed when Jackie married that “dirty old man,” and those who marched for peace and Eugene. Some people burned cities and some joined Vista to build them. Some of us live nine-to-five and some live only on weekends; others couldn’t be bothered to vote, and many upright businessman secretly send checks to Wallace so we can all live under “law and order.” So the typical American couldn’t be considered “typical” by many people at a time. He is a product of his environment and himself. An environment which moves quickly and sometimes seemingly aimlessly in its dartings. We live in a disposable world and have ourselves to look out for; survival is part of our evolution. It is when we look out for someone else that we deserve our humanity, and take an active part in the evolution of man. Photographs courtesy of AP We’re the test tube generation. Our every capability has been tested, made a statistic of, and tagged on us with all the black magic of predestination. We’re the first generation who have spent most of our cognizant hours before the T.V. screen. We have been subjected to more varied and continuous stimulation than any children before us. before us. The present generation of students is one which has seen heros come and go, movie stars fly up to the heights and fall to the gutter, and products which come and go before one can properly pronounce their names. We look for more solid foundations on which to place an ideology of life. We’re not apt to totally accept our parent’s word, we want to prove things on our own or at least look for another way. These more “steady” ideals we believe we can find on our own. We sometimes attack the most established foundations— not because we know they’re wrong, but we feel they need to be tried and tested. This is the feeling of our era, and we are a representative portion of that era. So here we are, a section of that section, a piece of that whole. We at Regis might not yell as loudly as others but we’re not silent. We have given up asking for somethings as soon as we recognized our own maturity to stand up and accept our own responsibilities. We felt the problem of comps was a serious one and last year we showed others how serious it was. Maybe our awakening as more aware students is an indirect result of the more diverse speakers we have had on campus, starting with “that pagan Gore Vidal” and on to Stokely Carmichael. But the whole stimulant lies within ourselves. In going to Regis, we haven’t unlinked hands with students all over the world. Anything worth existing is worth questioning and many of today’s students feel it is part of their education to ask questions and seek out the answers. As students at Regis we also have strong ties with the university city of Boston. Play try-outs. Bill Baird for Senator, The Tea Party, the Kennedy family, history made, old and new. Boston is itching to swing . . . our city hall already does. Some neighbors have begun to exchange courses with Regis . . . Afro and Soc. courses were the first. These represent the most up to date interests. Our liberal education can truly be liberal, rounded out by Boston’s varigated weave. In Boston the mode is individualistic and the feeling grows at Regis. Student life, a time to ask, try, shout, whisper. We’re guided by masters and given many opportunities. We’re limited only by our own ambitions and capabilities. The future world we make, . . . may be our own, but the one we served our apprenticeship in was Regis and Boston, and this is the basis for an example. WH (Ch 170 Marie Barbano Tassinari President of Alumnae Association . . and when you work with love, you bind yourself to yourself, and to one another and to God . . There are many to whom this quotation by H. D. Thoreau might apply, but in June, 1968, the Regis Alumnae Association saw fit to present their President Marie Barbano Tassinari ’51 with a gift so engraved. This, to express in a some how small way, their appreciation to a Regis daughter who has always given so completely of her energies and devotion to a cause she staunchly believes in and works for — Regis College. Marie, whose alumnae career prior to 1968, found her tackling such jobs as Alumnae Fund Co-Chairman and Association Vice-President, took on yet another challenge of leadership — a second, two-year term as Alumnae President, a job she puts aside this June, 1970. When Regis undertook her first capital fund drive in 1966, Marie’s tireless and unselfish leadership was in large measure responsible for the Alumnae Association’s total contribution to Regis of over $640,000., this from a membership of less than 5,500. The need was there. The cry for support was answered. During her four years in office, she has led an outstanding “supporting cast’’ to become more vitally concerned, to become more the participant than the observer, and to desire to be more fully informed — this for the betterment of self, and thus to aid in more fully helping Regis. Marie Tassinari is only one of many who care enough to defend, question, praise, support, and work for Regis. All striving to guarantee a tomorrow as strong and vital as the yesterdays which helped them grow to a full and useful maturity. Marie — you have given so fully of self in the true and right sense of the word, Regis could not help but have benefited; we hope you have received in the fashion in which you have given. God Bless You. Barbara Jordan, Alumnae Administrator 171 Barbara L. Jordan Alumnae Administrator 172 173 A proud history of over thirty-five years can be claimed by the Regis Alumnae Association, whose first President was Dr. Grace Hawley, and whose fledgling membership was in the low hundreds, compared with today’s figure of over 5,600. For a small but enthusiastic body, the RAA has financially supported Regis far above any predicted estimate. Approximately $450,000., was given prior to 1966, being in some measure responsible for the completion of Maria Hall, the Library, and the Student Center. She has striven constantly to keep her members informed through publication of a semiannual Magazine, and a 5-times-a-year Bulletin. Today she maintains contact with alumnae, in conjunction with the four classes of undergraduates at Regis, assimilating ideas of administrative, educational, and student leaders. The association has been, and will be, a strong contributing factor in the future of Regis College. She possesses pride in her alma mater. She will work for her survival and future success. Barbara Jordan, Alumnae Administrator In the four year process of maturing and of taking on the added responsibilities along the way, I begin to realize the immense task involved in guiding the education of one thousand students. The Administration is the intermediary between factions and must judiciously give attention to all problems and decisions which have to be made. In the present, the college cannot be a single entity. Colleges, as well as people, must be involved in a constant interchange of policies and ideas. What one school does affects another. And perhaps more important, is the college’s involvement with the community. The Administration performs the official functions of keeping these channels open, which of themselves are vital. Sister M. Jeanne d’Arc O’Hare President 176 Presidents, . . . deans . . . directors ... if we are worried about something, we can turn to them ... It may be an academic query . . . what difference will one more person in Anthropology make? . . . a campus concern . . . what, another parking ticket? ... or an overall problem . . . what is the relevance of my four years of college? . . . They are in their offices. I can see them there. But they are also everywhere on campus . . . overlooking the science building construction . . . attending lectures . . . participating in Mass . . . standing in line at meals. We know there are people concerned with wide-ranging problems . . . taking time to answer our individual questions. Virginia W. Robins Assistant to the Dean It IS often difficult to imagine them apart from their positions. We see the function and try to understand the structure behind it. But seldom do we personally relate to members of the administration. It is often difficult to assign a name to a face, and a face to a voice. How often do we understand that the faces passing us do have voices? Sherry H. Jenkins, Assistant Director Office of Development and Public Relations Sister Mary Bernarda Murphy Director of Continuing Education 179 Should I choose Regis? More important . . . should Regis choose me? The answers to these questions and many more lie within the walls of the Admissions’ Office. The first impression is a lasting one. How welcomed is a smile! How helpful an encouraging word! Carroll M. Beegan, Assistant Director Office of Admissions Judith Powers, Assistant Director Office of Admissions Sister M. Janet Silva, Director Office of Admissions 180 Sister Marguerite A. Donovan Dean of Students I enter Regis as a freshman, holding fears of the doors on the second floor. I have the impression that the administration is the aloof part of the school. How quickly my fears disappear! Sister Catherine Laboure lives on my floor in College Hall — she is there among my classmates. A smile and a hello and I know Regis is a friendly place. Sophomore, junior, and senior year, she is still everywhere on campus and her office is always open. Her enthusiasm extends to every class and to each problem of every student. How can one person know so many people? Maybe it is just because she is Dean of Students . . . she understands. 181 Sister Lisette . . . Mrs. Gebron . . . Sister Ellenice . . . Sister Albertina . . . We meet them all . . . “Sister Ellenice just asked me for a cigarette!” ... we never really appreciate them until they’ve all quietly helped us through and out. Sister M. Lisette Donlon Assistant Treasurer Sister Mary Albertina Kelly Registrar 182 Katherine A. McNally, Acquisitions Assistant Library “O God Mercifully bestow they blessings upon this library. . . A wall of glass reflecting the changing seasons. A refuge in which I can lose and again find myself. I look out but can’t quite touch the reality I see. What lies beyond that next hill? “. . . that those who study here. . . .” “All my seminar books are gone . . vanished. I may kill myself.” “But why would anyone want the 1958 volume of Theolog ?” “. . . may advance in divine and human knowledge, and in love of Thee.” The girl at the next table smiles. Sister Mary Fidelma Conway, Executive Director Philatelic Museum 184 Sister M. Ricarda Vahey Reference Librarian Sister M. Macrina Shyne Associate Librarian Sister Mary Agnes Power, Cataloger Library 185 Freshman Class ANN MARIE ABBAMONTE 64 Gregory Ave. West Orange, N.J. JANET MARY ATWOOD 21 Dickens St. Wollaston, Mass. SUSAN LOUISE BANAS 20 White St. Chicopee, Mass. KATHLEEN MARY BARRETT 256 Broadway Norwich, Conn. VIRGINIA K. BARRY 6 Plasse Court Webster, Mass. LYNNE MARIE BAUER 258 Linden St. Wlatham, Mass. JACQUELINE L. BEDNAZ 7 Ahern Ave. Windsor Locks, Conn. ANNE C. BELLETETE RED 1 Box 208 Jeffrey, N.H. PATRICIA K. BILODEAU 1 66 Mossman Rd. Sudbury, Mass. DEBORAH ANN BORAN 87 Captains Ct. Bricktown, N.J. NANCY MARIE BOYLE 58 Medford St. Arlington, Mass. JOANNE MARGARET BRASCO 1 66 North Ave. Weston, Mass. DEBORAH LOUISE BREEN 12 Lloyd St. Hopedale, Mass. TERESA ELIZABETH BRIGGS 65 Winthrop Dr. Riverside, Conn. SUSAN ANN BRODBINE 10 Carol Ann Rd. Lynnfield, Mass. GEORGIA ANNE BROWN 154 Harding Terr. Dedham, Mass. PATRICIA ANN BROWN 76 Holly Ln. Centerville, Mass. BARBARA ANN BURKE 89 Glendale Rd. Needham, Mass. SUSAN MARY BURKE 4 Bramble Ln. Riverside, Conn. MARIA LUISA CABASSA 5505 S.W. 85th St. Miami, Florida DENISE LOUISE CAHALIN 80 Townsend Rd. No. Scituate, Mass. RITA MARIE CANNON 61 1 Greendale Ave. Needham, Mass. MARY ELLEN CARLOW 35 John St. Adams, Mass. ANNEMARIE CARR 21 Chestnut Hill Rd. Chelmsford, Mass. JANICE MARY CAWLEY 967 Palm Way No. Palm Beach, Florida JANET MARIE CELMER 14 Greenway Rd. New London, Conn. MILDRED ANN CENTER 187 Plymouth St. Whitman, Mass. BARBARA JEAN CHASE 51 Longivew St. New London, Conn. LORRIE ANN CIROME 23 So. Prospect St. Haverhill, Mass. FRANCES JOSEPHINE CLANCY 1028 Edgewood St. Royal Oak, Michigan MARY IRENE CLAYTON 7 Lee Ave. E. Williston, N.Y. ELLEN CLEARY 34 Powder House Terr. Medford, Mass. JEANNE MARIE COLACHICO 35 Bay State Rd. Wakefield, Mass. SUSAN ELIZABETH COLE 95 Lincoln St. Dedham, Mass. ARLAN THERESA CONDON 5 Knoll Rd. So. Hingham, Mass. ELAINE MARY CONTAS 34 Robbins Rd. Keene, N.H. ROBERTA SUSAN CORMIER 1177 Main St. Leominster, Mass. GRACE JOY CORRADINO 4 Harbor Place Massapequa, N.Y. MARIE-CHRISTINE G. COSTA 118 Abbott Rd. Wellesley, Mass. PATRICIA ELLEN COWLES 708 North Farms Rd. Wallingford, Conn. MAUREEN ANN CROAK 820 Arrow Lane Ridgewood, N.J. MARY THERESA CROSS 10 Fells Ave. Milford, Mass. LAURAS MARY CULHANE 9 Merrill Rd. Watertown, Mass. JOANNE CAREY CUNNIFF 26 Fells Rd. Wellesley, Mass. MARY C. CUNNINGHAM 120 Newell Ave. Needham, Mass. ANN LISA D ' ALESSANDRO 544 So. Main St. Bradford, Mass. PATRICIA ANN D’AMORE 34 Cleveland Ave. Everett, Mass. LYNDA ANN DABKOWSKI 1 63 Ridge Crest Cir. Wethersfield, Conn. ELAINE ANN DELUCA Vernon Lane Thompson, Conn. PAULETTE L. DEMERS 1 98 Wendell St. Providence, R.l. CHARLOTTE ANN DEMPSEY 10 Dahlia St. Warwick, R.l. ROSEMARY C. DEPIERRO 187 Wilson Dr. Hazleton, Pa. PEGGY ANNE DESCHENES 39 West Shore Dr. Marblehead, Mass. LOUISE A. DIGENNARO 235 Ashmont St. Dorchester, Mass. MARGARET J. DILLON 21 Dartmouth St. Holyoke, Mass. WINIFRED MARY DILLON 1 1 Massasoit PI. Springfield, Mass. DIANE MARIE DOHERTY 23 Larnis Rd. Framingham, Mass. NANCY LOUISE DOHERTY 430 High Rock St. Needham, Mass. SUSAN MARGARET DOHERTY 88 Chesbrough Rd. W. Roxbury, Mass. PAULA MAIRE DOLLIVER 16 Union Ave. Terr. Framingham, Mass. CAROL AGNES DONEGAN 1 51 Brewster Ave. Braintree, Mass. MARY-JANE DONELAN 339 Summer St. Manchester, Mass. MOIRA ELIZABETH DONELAN 1 80 Forest Ave. New Rochelle, N.Y. JANET MARIE DONOVAN II Marion Ave. Norwood, Mass. JOAN MARIE DUA NE Green Dunes Dr. W. Hyannisport, Mass. MARY E. DUFRESNE 35 Buick St. Springfield, Mass. MARTHA ELLEN DWYER 19 Maple Ridge Rd. Reading, Mass. PATRICIA ANNMARIE DWYER I I I Dudley St. Cambridge, Mass. PHYLLIS ROSE EDWARDS 150-25th St. Wyandanch, New York JANET IRENE EGAN 32 Llewellyn Rd. West Newton, Mass. ELIZABETH ANN ELSAESSER 51 Fox Den Rd. Glastonbury, Conn. JUDITH MERRELL EREMIN 847 Blanch Ave. Norwood, N.J. BARBARA ANN EVERITT Bull Run Rd. Trenton, N.J. SR. CHARLENE FAVREAU Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. RENE VIRGINIA FETRIDGE 94 Locust Lane Needham, Mass. MARY LENORE FIDLER 12 Lodge St. Milton, Mass. CHRISTINA LOUISE FILIP 5 Burling Ave. White Plains, N.Y. ELIZABETH ANNE FILON 25 Pleasant St. W. Hartford, Conn. PAULA ANN FIORILLO 76 School St. Shrewsbury, Mass. SR. ALICE MARIE FORCIER 106 Main St. Concord, Mass. ALICE KAY GADO 34 West St. Manchester, Conn. CAROL ANN GAMBLE 30 Rollingwood Dr. Trumbull, Conn. ELISE GARDELLA 1 6 Benedict Ave. White Plains, N.Y. JANICE GEOGHEGAN 120 So. Pleasant St. Hingham, Mass. CYNTHIA CAROL GERARDE 86 Fairlane Dr. Wethersfield, Conn. MARGARET M. GHADAR Pahlavi Ave. Dolatshahi St. Tehran, Iran MICHELE SUSAN GORRA 24 Elsie Dr. Manchester, Conn. MARY LYNDA C. HANSEN 51 Atwater Rd. Springfield, Mass. CHRISTINE E. HARRIS RFD 1 Box A3 Riverhead, L.I., N.Y. SYLVIA KATHERINE HARRIS 96 Dikeman St. Waterbury, Conn. DEBORAH CHRISTINE HAXTON Horse Hill Rd. Westbrook, Conn. PAULA MARILY HOLLBROOK 88 Thorndike St. Palmer, Mass. DENISE LILIAN HOWLAND 23 Beaver Ave. Lynnfield, Mass. NANCY CATHERINE HUBERT 74 Peaceable St. Ridgefield, Conn. PATRICIA ANN HUFNAGLE 20 Hemlock Dr. Canton, Mass. MARIE PATRICE HURLEY 31 1 Cross St. Belmont, Mass. KAREN ELIZABETH HYDE 531 Rothbury Rd. Wilmington, Delaware MARY JANE JENNINGS 360 Silver St. So. Boston, Mass. ELIZABETH ROSE JOHNSON 9113 Saranac Ct. Fairfax, Virginia MARIANNE JOYCE 19 Keene St. Stoneham, Mass. 186 ELIZABETH ANN KEARNEY 9 Roberts St. Biddeford, Maine SHELAGH MARY KILEY 12 Phillips Beach Ave. Swampscott, Mass. PATRICIA ELIZABETH KNIPE 46 Bellevue Ave. Marlboro, Mass. MAUREEN SYDNIA KOPPEL 159 Mill Rock Rd. Hamden, Conn. CLAIRE MARIE L’ECUYER 3 Summer St. Fitchburg, Mass. JANE MARIE LaBARBERA 100 Ridge Ct. New Milford, N.J. JANICE LOUISE LABRIE 355 New Ludlow Rd. Chicopee, Mass. CHRISTINE MARIE LANGLEY 29 Latern Lane Milton, Mass. CHERYL JEAN LASCOLA 4 Arbania St. Auburn, Maine ELENA LAI TUNG LAU 12 Charles St. Waltham, Mass. ELIZABETH ANN LAVOIE 59 South St. Southbridge, Mass. MARY LAWLOR 31 Farnham Ave. Waterbury, Conn. KAREN ANN LEE 18 Chesterfield Rd. Milton, Mass. ANNE MARIE LEO 20 Albion St. Somerville, Mass. KAREN ALEXIS LEONARD 41 Park St. West Roxbury, Mass. VIRGINIA ANNE LOPEZ 91 Alder Dr. Ramsey, N.J. MARY LOUISE LYNCH 14 Granada Ave. Roslindale, Mass. MARYANNE CECILE LYONS 69 Van Kleeck Rd. Minis, Mass. MAUREEN THERESA LYONS 67 Piper Rd. W. Springfield, Mass. ELIZABETH ELLEN MacDONALD 54 Village St. Medway, Mass. ANNE MALONE 208 Chapman St. Canton, Mass. EILEEN MARJORIE MALONE 96 Shornecliffe Rd. Newton, Mass. PATRICIA ANN MANLEY 12 Appleton PI. Arlington, Mass. SR. PATRICIA MARBLE Regis College Framingham, Mass. SUZANNE GAIL MASCARO 43 Decode Dr. Wilbraham, Mass. THEODORA MATTOS 114 Old Harbor St. So. Boston, Mass. BARBARA ANN McAULIFFE 20 Falcon Terr. Middletown, Conn. JANET ANN MCCARTHY 35 Burling Lane Sq. West Islip, N Y. CARYL JEAN McCUNE 123 Van Houton Ave. Chatham, N.J. JOAN ELIZABETH McDONOUGH 15 Ronaldo Ct. Rutland, Vt. COLEEN ANNE McGINNIS 371 Toll Gate Rd. Grotton, Conn. MARY ROSELU McGOHEY 2414 Greenwood Ave. Wilmette, III. JOAN E. McGovern 56 Richards St. Cedham, Mass. ELLEN MARIE McGRATH 29 Sixth St. Portland, Maine JOANNE McPherson 587 Freeport St. Dorchester, Mass. ANN MARIE MEADE 27 Dorcaster Circle Lynnfield, Mass. JOYCE A. MENDS-COLE 505 East 79 St. Apt. 1 5-6 New York, N Y. STACY B. MILLER 70 Black Oak Rd. Weston, Mass. WEVONNEDA MINIS 788 E. Wolf St. Savannah, Ga. CLAUDIA MARIE MONCADA Ave. Los Magos Ota. Caracas, Venezuela GIANNA PIERA MONCADA Ave. Los Magos Ota. Caracas, Venezuela SUSAN ELLEN MONTANARD 1 1 1 Farmingdale Rd. Wethersfield, Conn. JOAN DENISE MORRISON 76 Dorchester St. Lawrence, Mass. MICHELLE MARIE MOZIEK 32 Mountain View St. So. Hadley, Mass. ALICE MARIE MURPHY 11 Prospect St. Belmont, Mass. DENISE ANN MURPHY 1 74 Fays Ave. Lynn, Mass. JANE MURPHY R F D 2 Oakdale, Conn. KATHLLEN ADAMS MURRAY 120 Linden Ave. Verona, N.J. JOYCE ELIZABETH MUSTO 15 Country Corners Rd. Wayland, Mass. JEAN MARIE MYLETT 228 Essex St. Weymouth, Mass. PATRICE NASH 97 Old Broadmoor Rd. Colorado Springs, Colo. JOANNE ANNE NAWROCKI 1062 Varnum Ave. Lowell, Mass. CAROL NOEL 1125 North Six Nashville, Tenn. JUDITH ANN NOWAK 4 Hilton Rd. Dover, N.H. DEBORAH JEANNE O ' BRIEN 232 North St. Manchester, N.H. JANET ANNE O ' BRIEN 1 724 Adams Ave. Scranton, Penn. PAULA O ' BRIEN 4 Beacon St. Natick, Mass. MARY ELIZABETH O ' CONNELL 122 Chruch St. Winchester, Mass. ANN ELIZABETH O ' DOWD Box 191 Mcaffe, N.J. MARY ELIZABETH O ' GRADY 63 Depot St. Milford, Mass. WINIFRED ANN O ' NEILL 51 Elmwood Ave. Holyoke, Mass. KATHLEEN OKREN 81 Whittier Ave. Providence, R.l. CATHERINE PAULINE OZIMEK 29 Cherryfield Dr. W. Hartford, Conn. RITA MARIE PAGANO Crogston Highland Falls, N Y. BESSIE PAN Sunnyside Lane RFD 2 Lincoln, Mass. ROXANNE PAPPAS 33 Hamilton St. Brockton, Mass. NORMA JEAN PARKER 785 Barretts Mill Rd. W. Concord, Mass. SUSAN IRENE PARRELLA 134 Bright St. Waltham, Mass. LOUISE MARIE PAULIN 145 Central St. Westbrook, Maine MARY ANN POISSON 32 Old Tavern Rd. Wayland, Mass. JANE ELIZABETH PORAZZO 69 Warner St. Hudson, Mass. LIANA BLANCHE PRATT 13 Great Rd. Maynard, Mass. PATRICIA ELIZABETH QUINN 254 Sandra Dr. E. Hartford, Conn. DIANA LEE RANDO 47 Hermaine Ave. Dedham, Mass. KATHLEEN ANNE REGAN 2 Ashwood Rd. Acton, Mass. LINDA MARIE REGELLE 58 Sherbrook Dr. Berkeley Heights, N.J. Nancy LINDA REID 75 Parkside Ave. Daly City, Calif. DEBORAH CHRISTINE RICE 388 Pawtucket Ave. Rumford, R.l. PAULETTE FRANCES ROACH 6 Talbot Rd. Canton, Mass. MARILYN ELIZABETH ROONEY 111 Highland Ave. Winchester, Mass. KATHLEEN MARY RUSH 43 Richard Rd. Manchester, Conn. JOYCE ELLEN RUSSELL 37 Woodside Dr. Grafton, Mass. CONSTANCE MARIA RYAN 66 Midchester Ave. White Plains, N Y. FRANCES M. SALERNO 127 Highland Ave. Winchester, Mass. JANE LYNN SAVITEER 98 Clifton Ave. W. Hartford, Conn. RITA AGNES SEELIG Greenlea Lane Weston, Conn. MADELINE FLORA SERPA 24 Arrowhead Lane Arlington, Mass. NANCY LEE SILVIA 845 Aquidneck Ave. Middletown, R.l. KATHLEEN E. SIMMONS 183 Dunns Pond Rd. Hyannis, Mass. MAURA ANN SLATTERY 251 Mandalay Rd. Chicopee, Mass. JEAN LOUISE SMITH box 369 Fisher St. Westboro, Mass. NANCY FLORENCE SMITH 5 Bass River Rd. So. Yarmouth, Mass. PAULA MARIE SMITH 104 Mercer St. So. Boston, Mass. GLORIA ANGELA SORDILLO 32 Newcomb St. Quincy, Mass. SUSAN ANN SPARRICHINO 98 Grove St. Melrose, Mass. CAROLYN RITA ST. ANDRE 22 Fieldstone Dr. Whippany, N.J. DENISE LINDA ST. SAUVEUR 12 Park St. St. Johnsbury, Vt. ANNEMARIE T. STANTON 114 Shornecliffe Rd. Newton, Mass. SARAH E. STEFFENHAGEN 11 Nantucket Rd. Wellesley Hills, Mass. CLARE FRANCES SULLIVAN 1 6 Carroll Ave. Newport, R.l. KATHLEEN D. SULLIVAN 82 Butman Rd. Lowell, Mass. MARGARET SULLIVAN 8 Algonquin T rail Saddle River, N.J. LAUREN MARIE SWEATT 1178 Blazo Terr. Mountainside, N.J. SR. EILEEN MARY TANGUAY 106 Main St. Concord, Mass. 187 VICKI SUE TASHIRO St. James St. Marion, Ohio PATRICIA FRANCES TERZANO Avda 2 Demayo 1 730 San Isi Lima, Pero ANNE CYNTHIA THORNTON 17 Cleveland St. Norfolk, Mass. JOANNE PAULA TOMASO 126 Hesse Rd. Hamden, Conn. MAUREEN ANNE TRAINOR 21 Eighth Ave. Haverhill, Mass. GAIL I. AHLQUIST 75 Birchwood Dr. Holden, Mass. DONNA P. ARLOTTA 92 Betsy Brown Rd. Portchester, N.Y. VIRGINIA R. BALDWIN 15 Wykeham Rd. West Newton, Mass. BARBARA E. BARRY 140 Selden Hill Dr. W. Hartford, Conn. MARY M. BASLER 34 St. Rose St. Jamaica Plain, Mass. MICHELE G. BELANGER 42 Almont St. Medford, Mass. ANNE-MARIE R. BELL 50 Helena St. Leominster, Mass. WINIFRED BIRMINGHAM 425 Walden St. Cambridge, Mass. JOAN M. BRACKEN 7 Sequoia Lane Andover, Mass. CHRISTINE B. BRIGHAM 39 Central St. Winchester, Mass. VIRGINIA A. BROOKS 234 Chatterton Pkwy. White Plains, N.Y. JANE BUCKLEY 627 So. Franklin St. Holbrook, Mass. PANPIT BUNBONGKARN Thai Embassy Washington, D.C. CATHERINE M. BURNS 87 Townsend Ave. New Haven, Conn. ANN P. BUTLER 54-1 7 31 St Ave. Woodside, N.Y. CHRISTINE M. CAHILL 27 Longmeadow St. Longmeadow, Mass. SHARON L. CAIN box 1 1 4 St. Thomas, Virgin Islands DEBROAH A. CALDBECK 31 North Ave. St. Johnsbury, Vt. LINDA M. CALLAGHAN 62 Forest Dr. Chelmsford, Mass. VIVIAN MARIE VACCA 166 Lockland Ave. Framingham, Mass. CAROLYN JANE WATERS 412 Fox Chapel Dr. Lutherville, Md. SUSAN MAIRE WEITZ 219 York St. Canton, Mass. CHERYL A. WELCH 19 Churchill Ave. No. Cambridge, Mass. REGINA CECILIA WHITE 26 Old Tavern Rd. Wayland, Mass. MELISSA ANN WHITMAN 87 Heroux Blvd. Cumberland, R.l. JOAN MARIE WILLIAMS 1 1 Allerdyce Dr. Kingston, Jamaica W.l. PATRICIA AVERY WILLIAMS 178 Pleasantville Rd. Pleasantville, N.Y. SUSAN MARIE WIRONEN 28 Abbott St. Gardner, Mass. DEBORA ANN WRIGHT 2761 Wrenford Rd. Shaker Heights, Ohio Sophomore Class ANDREA P. CATINO 141 Kemper St. Wollaston, Mass. SUSAN H. CAULO 865 Olentangy Rd. Franklin Lakes, N.J. DONNA M. CAVANAUGH 34 Lochnavar Pkwy. Pittsford, N.Y. JOANNE M. CESARE 37 Ives St. Waterbury, Conn. DIANE K. CHARETTE South View Ave. Middlebury, Conn. ANNE E. CHISHOLM 685 Terhune Rd. Ridgewood, N.J. JENNIFER H. CISLAGHI 147 Elm St. Duxbury, Mass. 2332 MARY A. CLANCY 141 Newton Rd. Springfield, Mass. IRENE M. CLARK 18 High St. Spencer, Mass. SR. MARGARET COMFREY 93 Bethany Rd. Framingham, Mass. MARY C. CONNELLY 43 Wellington Rd. Garden City, N.Y. MARY A. CONNOLLY 28 Puritan Rd. Arlington, Mass. PAULA M. CONNOLLY 179 LaG range St. West Roxbury, Mass. MARGUERITE C. COOK 1710 Maxwell Dr. Belmar, N.J. CHRISTINE J. COOKE 36 Marine Rd. Boston, Mass. MARY L. CORMIER 21 Lowell Ave. Waterbury, Conn. MARY F. COSENTINO 56 Woodcrest Dr. Wakefield, Mass. ANNE M. COSTELLO 27 Stevens Rd. Needham, Mass. VIRGINIA M. COUGHLAN Mirror Lake Ave. Norfolk, Mass. LYNNE M. CRISMAN 797 William St. Bridgeport, Conn. ELIZABETH A. CROWLEY 141 Rice Ave. Rockland. Mass. CYNTHIA A. CZAPIGA 1769 Country Club Rd. Middletown, Conn. SR. FAIRLEE DALTON Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. DONNA M. DELISA 66 Highview Ave. Wethersfield, Conn. CHRISTINA M. DELTORTO 49 Samson Rd. Medford, Mass. DIANE DENTE 155 Marine St. Thomaston, Conn. DIANE M. DESMARAIS 136 Exeter St. Hartford, Conn. PAMELA A. DIGENNARO 235 Ashmont St. Dorchester, Mass. PATRICIA M. DINICOLA 91 Parker St. Pittsfield, Mass. KATHLEEN A. DONAGHUE 29 Grant Hill Rd. Bloomfield. Conn. PATRICIA DONCARLOS 4 Bourne Ave. Seekonk, Mass. DEBROAH L. DONNELL 25 Gedick Rd. Burlington, Mass. SUSAN E. DOWD 27 Flintlock Rd. Lexington, Mass. PAULA J. DOWNES 701 Union St. Bangor, Maine KATHRYN DOWNING 22 Hillsdale Rd. Holbrook, Mass. KAREN A. DREW 7 Shawmut Pk. Newton, Mass. MARY B. DUCHARME 12 Major Andre Dr. Stonypoint, N.Y. KATHLEEN A. DUGGAN 256 Clyde St. Brookline, Mass. KYOKO YOSHIZAWA 812 Teradake Iruma-City, Saitama, Japan MARY ELIZABETH ZATOR 73 Devon Rd. Albany, N.Y. BEVERLY FRANCESCA ZOLLI 7 Bryden Rd. Southboro, Mass. CAROL R. DUMAIS 4 Saunders St. Lawrence, Mass. CYNTHIA DUPERRE 2 Snow St. Rochester, N.H. LORETTA A. DWYER 993 Broadway St. Somerville. Mass. KATHLEEN D. EDWARDS 215 Lucille St. Glenshaw, Pa. SR. JANICE LOUISE EMOND 1 Main St. Groton, Mass. MARGARET H. FASULO 55 St. Jude St. Portland, Maine PAULA G. FENTON 24 Franks Dr. Holyoke, Mass. CHERYL A. FERGUSON 27 Franklin Rd. Winchester, Mass. LINDA J. FERRARI 244 Ridgewood Dr. Norwood, Mass. ANNA FERZOCO 104 King Ave. Leominster, Mass. GRETCHEN FINCH 40 Knox St. Palmer, Mass. JANE A. FIORENTINI 69 Kingsbury Ave. Bradford, Mass. BARBARA A. FITZGERALD 6344 Cavalier Cor. Falls Church, Va. MARY E. FITZSIMONS Cedar Hill Rd. Dover, Mass. KATHLEEN A. FORBUSH 45 Maolis Rd. Nahant, Mass. CHERYL M. GACETTA 29 Olde Forte Rd. Cape Elizabeth, Maine MARY V. GALLITANO 205 Villa St. Waltham, Mass. JEANNE H. GANTLEY 215 Bellevue Rd. Squantum, Mass. ANN GARGULINSKI Wilder Rd. Sterling, Mass. 188 JANET A. GARNETT 25 Brigham St. Hudson. Mass. CHARLENE E. GILES 8 Riverbank Rd. Salem. Mass. MARION F. GONSALVES 289 Elm St. No. Reading. Mass. SUSAN C. GOODMAN 170 Plumtree Rd. Springfield, Mass. KATHLEEN L. GRAHAM 1 20 Melrose St. Melrose, Mass. ANN M. HAFEY 376 White St. Springfield, Mass. KATHLEEN A. HEANEY 76 Morse Ave. Dedham, Mass. VALERIE A. HICKEY 87 Tatham Hill Rd. W. Springfield, Mass. LINDA A. HIGGINS 5 Prospect St. Medway, Mass. PATRICIA M. HIPPLE 18 Farrington St. Franklin, Mass. MARY T. HOLLERAN I 69 Old Kings Hwy. Downington, Pa. HELEN M. HOOVER ! 31 Clark Ln. Sudbury, Mass. I VERNA-JANE HOWE I 111 Marlboro St. I Quincy, Mass. LESLIE F. HYLAND 57 Prospect Ave. Haworth, N.J. MARILYN M. ICKES 1 William St. Wakefield, Mass. SR. RITA JOHNSON Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. KRISTEN L JONES 7 Collins Ave. Fayetteville, N.Y. PATRICIA M. JONES 77 Jackson St. Garden City, N.Y. JANE M. KEANE 226 N. Central Ave. I Wollaston, Mass. REGINA M. KELLEHER 0 . Elmwood Rd. Hancock, N.H. MARGARET A. KELLEY 7 Sagamore St. i Dorchester, Mass. RITA J. KENNEDY I 1 46 Western Ave. f Lynn, Mass. RITA J. KENNEDY 1 46 Western Ave. I Lynn, Mass. : JUDITH A. KENNEY I 26 Shornecliffe Rd. I Newton, Mass. MARYANN KILIJANSKI I 418 West Rock Ave. 1 New Haven, Conn, i ELIZABETH A. KMON I 63 Portland St. Holyoke, Mass. Lower Lake Rd. Danbury, Conn. BARBARA G. KOZLOWSKI 710 Berkeley Ave. Orange, N.J. CAROLYN A. LAMARRE 836 Church Ave. Warwick R.l. SANDRA J. LAVEZZOLI Ferry Rd. Chester, Conn. SUZANNE J, LEBEL 242 Crawford St. Lowell, Mass. CHERYL E. LEE 4 Lothrop Ave. Westfield, Mass. SYLVIA E. LENTI 227 Hillside Rd. Southbridge, Mass. SUSAN G. LEONCINI 1 1 Soward St. Hopedale, Mass. JEAN E. LESLIE 2313 Union Blvd. S.E. Grand Rapids, Michigan GAIL M. LEWIS 3948 Brighton Ave. Los Angeles, Calif. SANDRA M. LINEHAN 6 Hampshire St. Danvers, Mass. CAROLINE M. LORE 2955 Dolores Way Burlingame, Calif. LYNNE M. LOVELESS 51 Bertmor Dr. Stamford, Conn. KATHRYN ANNE LUNDGREN 40 Colby Rd. Braintree, Mass. KATHRYN ANNE LUNDGREN 40 Colby Rd. Braintree, Mass. SUSAN M. MacDONALD 20 Iroquois Rd. Arlington, Mass. DIANE M. MacDOWELL 365 Ray St. Portland, Maine CHARLENE MacGILLIVARY 38 Fallon Cir. Braintree, Mass. ARLENE A. MACHNIK 245 Barker St. Three Rivers, Mass. ANITA M. MAIELLA 503 Washington St. Brookline, Mass. JANIS A. MALISZEWSKI 31 7 Christian St. Lowell, Mass. DIANE M. MALLETT 45 Thornbury Rd. Scarsdale, N.Y. MARY K. MARAS 1308 Anthony Wayne Dr. Wayne, Penn. KATHLEEN M. MARKT 51 Fredrick PI. Morristown, N.J. JOANNA M. MAYO 3277 Annandale Rd. Falls Church, Va. KARIN M. McCONE 52 Chestnut St. Brookline, Mass. FRANCES McCRACKIN 135 Phillips St. Wollaston, Mass. SHARON A. McDEDE 1404 Chestnut Ave. Wannamassa, N.J. LOUISE A. MCDONALD 2 Milford St. Medway, Mass. CHRISTINE M. McEVOY 46 Radcliffe Rd. Belmont, Mass. ANN B. McGrath 86 W. Commonwealth Portland, Maine CHRISTINE J. McHALE 48 Delaware Ave. Waterbury, Conn. HELEN M. McKENNA 38 Preston Ave. Pittsfield, Mass. ELAINE D. Mcknight 27 Oak St. Ext. Franklin, Mass. KATHERINE M. McLANE 108 Arah St. Manchester, N.H. MARIE V. McMAHON 142 Downey St. Westwood, Mass. SUSAN R. MELOCCARO 38 Wayside Dr. Cranston, R.L DIANA C. MENDEZ 460 Italia St. Hato Rey, Puerto Rico CENZINA MICOZZI 49 Seventh St. Medford, Mass. DEBRA A. MINIUTTI 54 Ridge Rd. Concord, N.H. SR. JAMES PAULA MORAN Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. MARYANN E. MORRAN 540 Maple Hill Ave. Newington, Conn. SHERIDA B. MOSS 167 Concord St. Haverhill, Mass. CONSTANCE M. MOTTA 35 Monmouth Ave. Medford, Mass. ROSEMARY A. MOTTA 35 Monmouth Ave. Medford, Mass. CDENISE A. MURPHY 58 Wyndwood Dr. Bristol, Conn. KATHLEEN A. MURPHY 15 School St. Bridgewater, Mass. MARY S. MURPHY 1 Beach Ave. Newport, R.l. MARIANNE M. MURRAY 68 Timothy Ln. E. Norwich, N.Y. PAULA M. NASSIF 1 23 Pomeroy Ave. Pittsfield, Mass. MARY KATHLEEN NEALON 65 Hayden Rowe Hopkinton, Mass. DEIRDRE C. NEILEN 6 Sunfield Cir. Waterbury, Conn. KATHLEEN D. NOBLE 7 Harbor Hill Dr. Huntington, N.Y. MARY-ELIZABETH O ' BRIEN 320 Wentworth Ave. Lowell Mass. MAJORIE E. OCZKOWSKI 7 Charlotte Rd. Marblehead, Mass. KATHLEEN A. OFFICER 53 Charlton St. Oxford, Mass. SR. ALISON M. O ' HARE Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. MAUREEN C. O ' MALLEY 78 Andrews Rd. Wollaston, Mass. BARBARA-ANN O ' NEIL 69 Pierce Ave. Dorchester, Mass. PATRICIA G. OSBORNE 598 Maple Street Franklin, Mass. MARTHA J. PARIS 310 Shore Rd. Douglaston, N.Y. SUSAN T. PARISEAU 20 Elm Ave. Salem, Mass. GAIL PETROSKI 45 Dale Ave. Dracut Mass. PATRICIA A. PETROWSKI 109 Maple Ave. Uncasville, Conn. CYNTHIA A. PEYS 130 Hawthorne St. Longmeadow, Mass. CHRISTINE R. PIACENTINI 99 Tredeau St. Hartford, Conn. CYNTHIA L. PIERSON 135 No. Malden Ave. Lagrange, III. CYNTHIA POURAVELIS 4 Summit St. Biddeford, Maine ALANE C. PROBST 1272 Lednam Ct. Merrick, N.Y. MARGARITA A. PROCOPIO 1432 Somerset Ave. Taunton, Mass. ELIZABETH A. QUINN 79 Riverview Terr. Springfield, Mass. VIRGINIA N. QUINN 117 Fox Run Rd. New Canaan, Conn. ELIZABETH R. RAFFERTY 15 Waterville Rd. Farmington, Conn. MARY L. RANDALL 2 Sylvan Knoll Rd. Stamford, Conn. ELIZABETH L. RATTIGAN 45 Hyde Ave. Newton, Mass. LYNN M. REALE 1041 Main St. Hanover, Mass. MARILYN A. REARDON 7 Seneca Rd. Ossining, N.Y. CATHERINE A. REARICK 51 S. Forest Ave. Rockville Center, N.Y. 189 JEANNE-MARIE REGAN 15 Frances St. Winthrop, Mass. JANICE M. ROKOWSKI 4 Crestwood Rd. Marblehead, Mass. LYNNE RUSIECKI 609 No. Main St. Palmer, Mass, CONSTANCE RYAN 345 Worcester St. Wellesley Hills, Mass. JEAN F. RYAN 847 Webster St. Needham, Mass. KATHLEEN F. RYAN 2 Chapel St. Newburyport, Mass. KATHLEEN T. RYAN 16 Dudley St. Haverhill, Mass. VIRGINIA RYAN 215 Tremont Ave. Orange, N.J. PAULINE SANDNER 57 Birch Ave. Haverhill, Mass. ADELE SANTORA 3404 Park Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. SUSAN M. SAUNDERS 4 Sea View Ave. Carnston, R.l. MARGARET SCHEIDELER 593 Ramapo Valley Rd. Oakland, N.J, SUSAN E. SCHISSEL Estes St. Amesbury, Mass. MARY V. SCHORTMANN 72 Ames St. Dedham, Mass. KATHLEEN A. SHEA 93 Burncoat St. Worcester, Mass. ANNE M. SHIMKUS 6 Peace St. Hopedale, Mass. SUZANNE ST. ONGE 88 Mechanics St. Putnam, Conn. MARIE E. SULLIVAN 76 Cottage St. Fall River, Mass. MARJORIE E. SULLIVAN 13 Bonneta Cir. Chicopee, Mass. MARY ANN SULLIVAN 262 Union St. Ashland, Mass. JANICE L. SZCZAWINSKI 556 Boston St. Lynn, Mass. LYNETTE SZCZYGIEL 95 Gay Hill Rd. Uncasville, Conn. SR. DENISE TENANTY Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. MARIA P. THIBEAULT 3 Flagg Rd. Southboro, Mass. JANE E. THOMPSON 38 Everton St. Dorchester, Mass. MARY A, THOMPSON 290 Western Ave. Gloucester, Mass. KATHERYN E. TOWER 7 Dartmoor Dr, Shrewsbury, Mass. CAROLYN S. TRACY 433 W. Roxbury Pkwy. W. Roxbury, Mass. LINDA J, TRAILL 196 Moncrief Rd. Rockland, Mass. JANINE TREMBLAY 1949 Mass Ave. Lexington, Mass. PATRICIA A. TUOHY 42 Ellsworth Rd. W. Hartford, Conn. ANNE-MARIE TURNER Main St. Cotuit, Cape Cod, Mass. MARIE VANDERHAEGEN 74 Evans St. Watertown, Mass. JOAN E. VINCOLA 77 Richardson Dr. Needham, Mass. CAROL A. VITALI 352 Main St. Yalesville, Conn. AUDREY J. VOLCKMANN 1 20 Corona Ave, Pelham, N.Y. DEIDRE J. VREELAND 446 Forest Ave. Brockton, Mass. VIRGINIA WALSH 38 Clifford Rd. Sudbury, Mass. TERESA WEADOCK 1713 Bellehaven Rd. Alexandria, Va. HELEN C. WEATHERS 640 Church St. Asbury Park, N.J. ELAINE R. WEGLARZ 245 Candlelite Dr. Rockey Hill, Conn. MARY L. WENTHE 269 Winfield Rd. Rochester, N.Y. JACQUELYN WEST 50 Kelley Ave. Rumford, R.l. JANET L. WILHELM 330 Brookshire Rd. Youngstown, N.Y. DORIS WOJTKIEWICZ 3 Orchard Ln, Chelmsford, Mass. LYNNE WOODMAN 56 Bliss Rd. Longmeadow, Mass. SUSAN WOODS 24 Albin St. Concord, N.H. DARCY YOKE 403 Monroe Ave. Wyckoff, N.J. ANN E. ZIMAROWSKI 20 N. Quincy St. Brockton, Mass. MARIA L. ZODDA 16 Greentree Terr. Tenafly, N.J. Junior Class ANNA ARSCOTT SUZANNE M. BLACKMER P.0, Box 24 103 Barnard Rd. Kingston, Jamaica W.l. Worcester, Mass. SR. DIANA R. BALLBUX NADINE MARIE BONDA 1 Main St. 298 Hartford Ave. Groton, Mass. Mendon, Mass. JANET ANN BARAN JANET MAIRE BOSWORTH 1 65 Britton St. 52 Fowler St. Raynham, Mass. Randolph, Mass. JANE AFTON BARRY ANN M. BRENNAN 6 Plasse Ct. 27 Fuller Rd. Webster, Mass. Cochituate, Mass. PATRICIA M. BARRY LYNN ANN BRUSIE 124 Green End Ave. Coleman St. Middletown, R.l. Chatham, n.y. TERESA E. BARTLEY jo ellen bush Estes St. 107 Main St. Amesbury, Mass. Monson, Mass. BRENDA ANN BEASLEY ELLEN MARY BYRNE 79 Norfolk Rd. 1 22 President Lane Arlington, Mass. Quincy, mass. MARY GERALDINE BECKER MARY CAHILL 107 Running Brook Rd. 97 Wilber St. W. Roxbury, Mass. Springfield, Mass. MARY A. BIASI MARY E. CALLAHAN 12 Edenfield Ave. 31 1 Lexington St. Watertown, Mass. Auburndale, Mass. LOUISE BISHOP MARY ROSE CALLAHAN 334 Waverly Rd. 176 Common St. N. Andover, Mass. Watertown, Mass. VIRGINIA M. BLACK ANNE ELIZABETH CANESI 64 Shade St. 79 Stowecroft Rd. Lexington, Mass. Arlington, Mass. MARY CAPPADONA MARYRUTH COLEMAN 68 Erie Ave. 612 Randolph St. Newton Highlands, Mass. Abington, Mass. ANN CAPUTO EILEEN M. COLLINS 1730 Columbia Rd. 2412 Seminary Rd. South Boston, Mass. Silver Springs, Md. MARILYN C. CAREY MARTHA D. COLLINS 1131 Main St. 55 Winshaw Rd. Hingham, Mass. Swampscott, Mass. SHARON T. CAREY ROSE MARIE COLLINS 110 Staniford St. 225 South St. Auburndale, Mass. Marlboro, Mass. CHERYL ANN CARLSON ANN MAIR CORMIER 1 9 Dana Park 15 Smith St. Hopedale, Mass. So. Dartmouth, Mass. ELLEN L. CARROLL KATHLEEN CORNYN 10 Chadwick St. 31 Booney Lane No. Billerica, Mass. Dedham, Mass. JOAN D. CASHIER ANN MARIE COSGROVE 731 Maple Dr. 230 Chipman Rd. Fayetteville, N.Y. Easton, Penn. MARCIA ANN CHARLTON EILEEN GABRIELLE CRANE 21 Walker Rd. 104 Oak Trail Rd. Manchester, Mass. Hillsdale, N.J. CYNTHIA A. CHMURA KATHLEEN E. CROAK 75 Parker St. 820 Arrow Lane Indian Orchard, Mass. Ridgewood, N.J. DONNA E. CHRISTIAN SR. DENYSE S. CROTEAU 98 Lewis Ave. 1 Main St. W. Springfield, Mass. Groton, Mass. ELIZABETH A. COAN ELIZABETH A. CULLINAN 38 Golden Ball Rd. 24 McDonough Way Weston, Mass. So. Boston, Mass. 190 ROSEMARY F. CULLINANE 46 Chestnut St. Brookline, Mass. NANCY CULLOTTA 3 Glenwood St. So. Natick, Mass. CONSTANCE CURCIO 27 Howland Rd. W. Hartford, Conn. CARMEN E. CURRAN 115 Shepley St. Auburn, Maine MARY J. CURTIN 84 Rockwell Ave. Nagatuck, Conn. EMILY C. DANIELS 78 Seminole Ave. Wayne, N.J. DIANE DECOSTE 35 Nelson Rd. So. Weymouth, Mass. ANNE K. DERUSHA 325 Conant Rd. Weston, Mass. SHEILA M. DEVIN 597 Jerusalem Rd. Cohasset, Mass. JACQUELINE DION 176 No. Main St. W. Hartford, Conn. MARY W. DISKEN I Sherman Br. Rd. Wayland, Mass. PATRICIA DONAHUE P.O. Box 426 Wenham, Mass. SHARON M. DONOVAN I I Marion Ave. Norwood, Mass. BARBARA DORGAN 1 4 Prentiss Lane Belmont, Mass. MARY J. DRUKEN 14 Cook Circle Medofrd, Mass. LOUISE DUNLAY 14 Russell Cirice Natick, Mass. CYNTHIA C. DUROL 54 Cumley St. Hamden, Conn. SUSAN G. EFFGEN 22 Redwood Rd. Westwood, Mass. MARIANNE ECROLINI 62 Sturges Rd. Reading, Mass. MARILYN K. EWER 53 Chestnut St. Lynnfield, Mass. LINDA L. FALDETTA 89 Turner St. Brighton, Mass. JANE G. FARRELL 26 Walnut St. Holden, Mass. SR. ROSANNE MARIE FASSI Famingham Campus Framingham, Mass. LAVINA T. FERRARO 89 Elm St. Stonington, Conn. JEANNE FINAN 278 Edgewater Dr. Needham, Mass. REGINA M. FINNEGAN 15 Lake St. Hamden, Conn. ELLEN C. FITZGERALD 24 Russel St. Cambridge, Mass. ANN M. FITZPATRICK 1414 Andover St. Tewksbury, Mass. SHARON M. FITZPATRICK 5 Park Ave. Natick, Mass. JOANNE FLYNN 29 Judson St. Thomaston, Conn. MARILYN FLYNN 1 7 Bow St. Hyde Park, Mass. ANNE FOLEY 49 Beacon St. Florence, Mass. CHARLENE W. FOY 2 Rose Ave. Marblehead, Mass. SR. KATHLEEN FRASER Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. CHRISTINE C. FREGOSI 60 Woodcrest Dr. Wakefield, Mass. EVELYN FRIEL 22 Wesley St. Somerville, Mass. FRANCES A. FRYDRYK 23 Dalton St. Indian Orchard, Mass. PATRICIA L. FUNDER 15 Pattison St. Abington, Mass. ROSEMARY GAFFNEY 54 Donna Rd. Needham, Mass. KATHLEEN M. GALIHER 5816 Highland Dr. Kenwood, Md. REGINA C. GAVIN 20 Peacedale Circle Needham, Mass. MARY ALICE GEARAN 309 Elm St. Gardner, Mass. BARBARA SARAH GEORGE 2140 Northeast 29th St. Lighthouse Point, Florida LESLIE ANN GIKNIS 2275 Cayuga Rd. Schenectady, N Y. PATRICIA E. GILLSON 1 1 1 Lincoln Ave. Bergenfield, N.J. NANCY GUIDICI 11 Orth St. Pawtucket, R.l. SUSAN E. GRAY 15 Holly Ct. Woodcliff Lake, N.J. JANE M. GRENIER 4 Dixon Park Rd. Weymouth, Mass. MARTHA M. GRIMES 46 Lincoln St. Waltham, Mass. PAMELA L. GUILES 242 Maynard Dr. Sudbury, Mass. LYNN C. HABEL 22 Dalton PI. Springfield, Mass. CHERYL J. HAMILTON 91 Dale Rd. Manchester, Conn. SUSAN F. HAMMOND 2 Puritan Rd. Danvers, Mass. JOSEPHINE M. HATCH 6600 Cataneda Coral Gables, Florida CATINA M. HAYDEN 34 Granite St. Melrose, Mass. CATHERINE M. HEALEY 8520 Edgerton Blvd. Jamaica, N Y. MARIHELEN HILL 53 Bennett St. Brighton, Mass. ELAINE HOGAN 4 Kelley Terr. Tewksbury, Mass. DONNA HOUGH 33 Emerson St. Newton, Mass. JEAN L. HUBERT 74 Peacedale St. Ridgefield, Conn. KATHLEEN HUDDY 73 Hartford St. Natick, Mass. NARGARET A. JAMES 130 Westwood Dr. E. Greenwich, R.l. CAROLYN L. JOYNT 82 Martin Dr. Sierra Vista, Arizona PAULA M. KANE 12 Legion Dr. N. Abington, Mass. SR. LAURA L. KELLEHER 85 Bethany Rd. Framingham, Mass. NANCY F. KERN 64 Grandivew Ave. Auburn, Maine NANCY M. KIELY 37 Wallace Rd. Quincy, Mass. MARY ANN KING 182 Bristol Rd. Wellesley, Mass. SUSAN T. KINIRY 35 Harvest Hill Rd. Kensington, Conn. ANNE KIRBY 455 W. Elm St. Brockton, Mass. JOAN M. KOTTCAMP 1349 Alexander Ave. Chambersburg, Pa. JANE KUPROSKA 777 Charlton St. Southbridge, Mass. NANCY LANDOLFE Scott Circle White Plains, N Y. NANCY A. LANDOLFI 32 Lyman St. Beverly, Mass. CHERYL ANN LANE 27 Lexington St. Weston, Mass. VERONICA LAROCCA 3183 Skillman Ave. Oceanside, N Y. CATHERINE T. LAUZIERE 90 S. Main St. Hanover, N.H. ELIZABETH J. LAWLOR 75 Highland St. Amesbury, Mass. SIMONE J. LE BLANC 16 Curtis St. Waltham, Mass. LOUISE LE FEBVRE Box 264 So. Barre, Vt. VERONICA LE FEVRE 41 Morton Rd. Waterbury, Conn. BERNICE L. LEONARD 225 Shaw Ave. Abington, Mass. MARGARET I. LYNCH 190 Lake Ave. Saratoga Springs, N Y. JANET M. MABEE 538 Morton St. Stoughton, Mass. JAN MACCHI 6 Florence St. Milford, Mass. DONNA M. MAGGIORE 96 Common St. Quincy, Mass. ANN E. MAGYAR 92 Mohegan St. Shelton, Conn. MARY E. MAHONEY 73 Holyoke St. Lynn, Mass. LINDA A. MARTIN 26 Wheeler Rd. Wethersfield, Conn. CHRISTINE A. McCARTER 110 Eastwood Rd. Groton, Conn. SALLY A. McCOLGAN 135 Cushing Ave. Dorchester, Mass. PATRICIA A. MCDONALD 28 Windsor Rd. Norwood, Mass. CONSTANCE McELROY 48 Tolman St. Waltham, Mass. JAYNE E. McENTEE 136 Pellana Rd. Norwood, Mass. HELEN McGAFFIGAN 22 Emerson PI. Needham, Mass. KATHLEEN McGANNON 673 Weed St. New Canaan, Conn. KATHERINE McGURK 86 W. Glen Ave. Holyoke, Mass. MARY McHUGO 1 6 Everit Ave. Framingham, Mass. CAROL E. McMAGON 95 Blackman Ave. Pittsfield, Mass. SUSAN McMONAGLE 31 Palmer St. So. Weymouth, Mass. DEBORAH V. MEDEIROS 55 Sable Ave. No. Dartmouth, Mass. MARY ELLEN MILLER Buckberg Mt. Rd. Tomkins Cove, N.Y. SR. JOAN FRANCES MITCHELL 1 Main St. Groton, Mass. BARBARA S. MONTY 15 Vadnais St. Holyoke, Mass. 191 KATHLEEN MOORE 103 Concord St. Waterbury, Conn. SANDRA MOORE 70 Schuyler Dr. Commack, LI.. N.Y. MARTHA MOQUIN 898 Boston Rd. Ward Hill, Mass. MARY EL MORAN 23 Beacon St. Natick. Mass. PATRICIA MOSCHELLA 887 Commonwealth Ave. Newton Center, Mass. COLLEEN MULCAHY 381 1 Foxwood Nook Falls Church, a. ELIZABETH MULSHINE 55 Hartwell Rd. W. Hartford, Conn. SHEILA A. MURPHY 15 School St. Bridgewater, Mass. SHEILA H. MURPHY 9 Milton Rd. W. Barrington, R.l. SHEILA J. MURPHY Riverdale Circle Concord, Mass. DIANE T. MURRAY 4 Hickory Ln. Hudson, Mass. KATHLEEN MURRAY 68 Timothy Ln. E. Norwich, N.Y. GERTRUDE M. MUSANTE Nth. Prospect St. Ansonia, Conn. MARY MYERS 25 Wilson St. Revere, Mass. POMPEA S. NARDELLI 13 Madison Ave. Watertown, Mass. EILEEN F. O ' BRIEN 465 College St. Lewiston. Maine MAUREEN O ' BRIEN 41 Dunster Rd. Jamaica Plain, Mass. KATHERINE E. O ' CONNOR 5 Richmond St. Winchester, N.H. ELLEN T. O ' HALLORAN 50 Sturges Rd. W. Roxbury, Mass. KATHERINE M. O ' NEIL 6 Commonwealth Ave. Auburn, Mass. MAURA J. O ' NEIL 10 W. Adams St. Lowell, Mass. KATHLEEN OWENS, R.N. 41 Dunster Rd. Jamaica Plain, Mass. JOANN T. PAPAGNO 17 Amory Rd. Marlboro, Mass. SUSAN PEDERZOLI 20 E. Walnut St. Milford. Mass. GAIL PLATT 73 Mapleton St. Hartofrd, Conn. SR. ESTHER PLEFKA Framingham Campus Framingham, Mass. JOANNE C. PLESKOWIEZ 160 Allen Rd. Pinehurst, Mass. CAROL L. PROCTOR 45 Woodland Rd. Ashland, Mass. SHELLY K. PROUT 9 Kensington Park Roxbury, Mass. BONITA PURNELL 3 Legion Rd. Weston, Mass. BARBARA QUATTROCHI 49 Stewart St. Amsterdam, N.Y. ANN M. RANDALL 2 Sylvan Knoll Rd. Stamford. Conn. CLAUDIA A. RSAULIS Tolland Rd. R.F.D. 2 Tolland, Conn. KATHLEEN M. READ 202 Haddonfield Dr. Dewitt, N.Y. MARGARET E. REARICK 51 S. Forest Ave. Rockville Center, N.Y. MARY BETH REGAN 1 37 Santa Fe Ave. Hamdon, Conn. LINDA L. RICHARDS 44 Desrosiers St. Dracut, Mass. KATHLEEN P. RILEY 1215 Main St. Tewskbury, Mass. BETTE J. RIORDAN 84 Haven Rd. Portsmouth, N.H. ANNE M. ROACH 169 Charlton St. Arlington, Mass. JOYCE ROACH 55 Salem St. Wakefield, Mass. PATRICIA ROSSVALL 485 Main St. Farmington, Conn. NANCY A. ROTH 56 Harrington St. Watertown, Mass. ELEANOR SALVUCCI 28 Cummings Rd. Newton Centre, Mass. BRENDA M. SCALLY 12 Coen St. Naugatuck, Conn. ANNE LAUREL SERPA 24 Arrowhead Ln. Arlington, Mass. MARIE ALOYSE SHEA 29 Valley Rd. Milton, Mass. KATHLEEN A. SHEEHAN 102 Barretts Mill Concord, Mass. ROSEMARY M. SHEEHAN 136 Commonwealth Ave. W. Concord, Mass. KATHERINE SHUTE 36 Briarfield Rd. Milton, Mass. KAREN SMITH 5 Bass River Rd. So. Yarmouth, Mass. SUSAN A. SMITH 13 Porter Rd. Natick, Mass. SR. CATHERINE ANN STARE Mt. St. Vincent Wellesley Hills, Mass. SARA M. STEETS 9 Maple Leaf Dr. Park Ridge, N.J. SANDRA A. STEWART 85 Garfield Rd. Auburn, Maine JANE SULLIVAN 55 So. Normandy Ave. Cambridge, Mass. JANET E. SULLIVAN 87 Winter St. Norwood, Mass. MARGARET SULLIVAN 111 Standish Rd. Milton, Mass. ELIZABETH M. SZEMELA 47 Ashwood St. Indian Orchard, Mass. JUDY A. TETREAULT Crosby Circle Centerville, Mass. CONSTANCE R. TODINO 20 Water St. Milford, Mass. MARGARET TROMBLY 99 Middlesex St. No. Andover, Mass. MARGO ULYSSES I Meadow St. East Haven, Conn. JUDITH A. VENTRES 58 CIrrk St. Worcester, Mass. CORINNE A. VOLPE 32 Wesson Ave. Quincy, Mass. CLAUDETTE VOYER 17 Fairview Rd. Salem, Mass. ALICE P. WALL 78 St. Rose St. Jamaica Plain, Mass. DONNA M. WALSH 2324 Massey Rd. Memphis, Tenn. MARY G. WARD 3 Maxfield Ct. Barrington, R.l. ROSEMARY WEBER II Hiawatha Ln. Arlington, Mass. MARY P. WELCH 25 Arcellia Dr. Manchester, Conn. CAROL WILSON 307 Park St. Westfield, N.J. EILEEN M. WILSON 17 Hoover St. Milford, Conn. CAROL WISNIESKI East St. Middletown, Conn. MARYANNE C. WOELFLEIN 6 Old Forge Rd. Hampstead, N.H. KAREN A. WONG 3 Edgecombe Ave. Kingston, Jamaica, W.l. MARY ZOLADZ Montgomery Rd. Westfield, Mass. 192 Senior Class NANCY JO ADAMS 91 Main St. St. Johnsubry, Vt. MATHEMATICS MAURA F. BURNS 494 Amherst St. Manchester, N.H. HISTORY NANCY M. COTTER 21 Newhall St. Springfield. Mass. MATHEMATICS SUSAN D. DOWD 237 LaGrange St. West Roxbury, Mass. CLASSICS JOAN M. ARCHER 15 Clark Ave. Beverly, Mass. ENGLISH ANITA CAHILL 8 Collings Cir. W. Medford, Mass. SOCIOLOGY CATHERINE A. COUMAS 585 Nashua Rd. Dracut, Mass. HISTORY CHRISTINE M. DOYLE 36 Maryland St. New Bedford, Mass. ECONOMICS FRANCES M. AREY 15 Minihans Lane Quincy, Mass. CHEMISTRY PAMELA M. CAPUTO 50 Hilltop Rd. Hamden, Conn. PSYCHOLOGY JEAN M. CURLEY 34 Sewall St. Wollaston, Mass. CHEMISTRY JANICE C. DUBOWIK 6 Taylor Rd. Lynn, Mass. FRENCH THERESE M. ASCOLLILLO 119 Cornell St. Roslindale, Mass. SOCIOLOGY BARBARA A. CARLEY 18 Edith Rd. Framingham, Mass. GERMAN ROSINA M. D’ACCI 276 Pond St. S. Braintree, Mass. FRENCH ROSEMARIE EARLS 57 Hillsdale Rd. Arlington, Mass. POLITICAL SCIENCE EILEEN H. BACKUS 51 Pembroke St. Kingston, Mass. SOCIOLOGY SUSAN J. CARINI 20 Welland Rd. Weymouth, Mass. CLASSICS PATRICIA A. DADDABO 2 Hillside Ave. Thompsonville, Conn. PSYCHOLOGY KATHLEEN EICHORN 5018 Beckford Dr. Charlotte, N.C. ENGLISH CYNTHIA M. BAMBERG 105 Phillips Brk. Rd. Westwood, Mass. CHEMISTRY ELIZABETH M. CARR 17 Chandler Rd. Malden, Mass. SOCIOLOGY MARY C. DAILEY 61 Checkerberry Ln. Framingham, Mass. ART DEBORAH A. FAIRBANKS 90 Azalea Dr. Norwood, Mass. HISTORY GERTRUDE F. BANTLE 1 1 Carriage Dr. E. Hartford, Conn. ENGLISH ROSEMARY A. CARVELLI 330 Winthrop St. Medford, Mass. ART DENISE DALTON 54 Sturtevant Rd. Quincy, Mass. ENGLISH OLIVIA A. FERRANTE 115 Reservoir Ave. Revere, Mass. HISTORY MARIAN BATHO 180 South Main St. Attleboro, Mass. SOCIOLOGY GERALDINE M. CATALOG 14 Aerial St. Lexington, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY DONNA A. DEFEO 122 Main St. Everett, Mass. ENGLISH GAIL P. FINAN 278 Edgewater Dr. Needham, Mass. ECONOMICS ANN L. BLACK 39 Berkley St. Reading, Mass. FRENCH CAROL M. CELLUCCI 464 Crafts St. Newton, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY RUTH E. DELANEY 3 Hampton Rd. Pori Washington, N Y. MATHEMATICS ANNE M. FINIGAN Walnut St. Concord, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY JUDITH M. BRENNAN 117 Rutherford Ave. Charlestown, Mass. POLITICAL SCIENCE MARGOT P. CLEARY 147 Country Rd. Ipswich, Mass. CHEMISTRY LYNDA J. DIFALCO 48 Brockton Ave. Haverhill, Mass. GERMAN LOUISA FINOCCHIO 670 Main St. Concord, Mass. ENGLISH MARGARET M. BRENNAN 320 Casino Ave. Cranford, N.J. SOCIOLOGY MARGARET E. COHAN 24 Glendon St. East Boston, Mass. GERMAN EILEEN M. DINEEN 1 1 Shetland Rd. Marblehead, Mass. HISTORY BARBARA A. FIORDA 79 Stephen Mather Darien, Conn. SOCIOLOGY MARTHA A. BRINE 34 Berkshire St. Swampscott, Mass. ENGLISH VICTORIA D. CONNELLY 17 Grant Rd. Salem, Mass. SOCIOLOGY KATHLEEN A. DOBBYN 1 Strathmore Rd. Braintree, Mass. ART LOUISE A. FOURNIER 57 Western Ave. Auburn, Maine ENGLISH SUSAN H. BROSNAN 297 Long Hill Rd. Wallingford, Conn. POLITICAL SCIENCE MARGARET R. CONRY 23 Winter St. Medford, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY JUDITH A. DOHERTY 3 Durant St. West Roxbury. Mass. MATHEMATICS JACKLYN A. FRASER 323 Oak St. Manchester, N.H. PSYCHOLOGY GERTRUDE E. BROWN 7 Sherman St. Roxbury, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY ELIZABETH A. CORMIER 21 Lowell Ave. Waterbury, Conn. PSYCHOLOGY THERESA E. DOLAN 370 Adams St. Milton, Mass. BIOLOGY CAROL M. FULTON 149 Henry St. Windsor, Conn. ECONOMICS FRANCES M. BURNS 37 Monument Ave. Charlestown, Mass. SOCIOLOGY KATHLEEN P. COSGROVE 45 Linnmoore St. Hartford, Conn. SOCIOLOGY MARY F. DON CARLOS 4 Bourne Ave. Seekonk, Mass. SPANISH SUZANNE M. GAUTREAU 52 Stoney Brook Rd. Belmont, Mass. ENGLISH MARGARET A. BURNS 66 Knollwood Rd. W. Hartford, Conn. ENGLISH LILA COTE P.O. Box 495 Osterville, Mass. POLITICAL SCIENCE SARA A. DONAHUE 66 Douglas Rd. Needham, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY CAROL A. GIACOMO 12 Annjim Dr. Greenwich, Conn, ENGLISH 193 MARY ANN GIANETTI 32 Pearl St. Milford. Mass. FRENCH KATHLEEN M. GIARDI 33 Tiffany Rd. East Hartford. Conn. SPANISH MADLYN M. GILLESPIE 157 Tilden Rd. Marshfield, Mass. ENGLISH ANNE MARIE GOGGIN 116 Dalton Rd. Chelmsford, Mass. ENGLISH ELIZABETH M. GOLDEN 148 Madison St. Fall River, Mass. SOCIOLOGY ELIZABETH GOODRICH Box 561 Montpelier, Vt. FRENCH MARYANN GREENE 20 Kingston Rd. Newton Highlands, Mass. ENGLISH JUDITH A. GRIFFIN 1 5 Barbara Rd. Waltham, Mass. PSCHOLOGY KATHLEEN M. GROVER 10 Mechanic St. Milford, Mass. GERMAN CATHERINE M. HACKETT 1 04 Longview Dr. Cranston, R.l. ENGLISH ELAINE M. HANDY 215 t aGrange St. West Roxbury. Mass. POLITICAL SCIENCE PATRICIA M. HANIFEY 6 Old Salem Rd. Marblehead, Mass. ART CHRISTINE M. HANSEN 2 Reed Rd. Peabody, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY MAUREEN E. HAYES 360 K St. So. Boston, Mass. CHEMISTRY CAROL M. HENNESSEY 41 Edgewater Dr. Needham, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY MARY J. HENNIS 391 Cherry St. West Newton, Mass. SPANISH NANCY E. HIGGINS 38 Doreen Dr. Oceanport, N.J. POLITICAL SCIENCE BARBARA HIGSON 8 Hilltop Terr. Chelmsford, Mass. SOCIOLOGY CATHERINE T. HILL 639 Mattison Ave. Sumter, South Carolina PSYCHOLOGY JANE T. HOGAN 56 Allen Cir. Milton, Mass. FRENCH MARGARET A. HOGAN 28 Grace Rd. West Meford, Mass. SOCIOLOGY MARY F. HOGAN 28 Grace Road West Meford, Mass. SOCIOLOGY MARY A. HOLLAND 10 Whittier Rd. Wellesley Hills, Mass. ART PRISCILLA L. HOOK 10 Elmcrest Cir. Melrose, Mass. FRENCH JANE F. HURD 125 Bacon St. Natick, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY ANNE MARIE HURLEY 232 Beech St. Holyoke, Mass. FRENCH MARY T. HUTZLER 183 Brown St. Providence, R.l. CHEMISTRY PAMELA A. IRVING 20 Greystone Pk. Lynn, Mass. SOCIOLOGY VILAI JARUTHAVEE Royal Thai Embassy Washington, C.D. ART RITA M. KEAVY 361 Linden St. Fall River, Mass. MATHEMATICS ANNE PATRICIA KELLEHER 26 Park Ave. Maplewood, N.J. POLITICAL SCIENCE MARY T. KELLY 27 Marcy St. Cranston, R.l. POLITICAL SCIENCE JANE M. KRASKA 3 Hillside St. Worcester, Mass. BIOLOGY CONSTANCE C. LAMBERT P.O. Box 108 West Roxbury, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY CATHERINE F. LEAHY 29 Gov. Winthrop Ln. South Weymouth, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY KATHLEEN LEONARD 16 Hodge Rd. Arlington, Mass. ENGLISH AMY C. LIND 23 Lincoln St. Lexington, Mass. SOCIOLOGY BARBARA J. LIPCAN 520 Fort Hale Road New Haven, Conn. POLITICAL SCIENCE MARY F. LOMBARD 1057 Old Conn. Path Framingham, Mass. BIOLOGY MARY P. LOWNEY 1 30 Beford St. New Bedord, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY SANDRA E. LUPO 88 Pleasant St. Wellesley, Mass. FRENCH ALICE A. LUSTER 92 Harrishof St. Boston, Mass. SOCIOLOGY NANCY J. LYNCH 144-69 29th Ave. Flushing, N.Y. PSYCHOLOGY NANCY M. MACKENZIE 38 Ridge Rd. Milton, Mass. ENGLISH CAROLE E. MATHIESON 2 Deforest St. Hyde Park, Mass. SOCIOLOGY MARY ELLEN MAYE 8 Priscilla Rd. Brighton, Mass. MATHEMATICS JOANNE T. MAZZARELLI 4 Eames St. Milford, Mass. POLITICAL SCIENCE MARY A. McCALLUM 42 Herford Ave. South Portland, Me. FRENCH JANE L. McCUSKER 58 Wayne St. Norwich, Conn. MATHEMATICS CHARLOTTE M. MCDONALD 12 Stanton St. Dorchester, Mass. MATHEMATICS MICHEL E L. McFAULL 1 34 Edgewater Dr. Needham, Mass. HISTORY MARY E. McGLOAN 101 Dean St. Belmont, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY MARY L. McKAY 51 Drummond St. Auburn, N.Y. PSYCHOLOGY SUSAN M. McKenzie G raniteville, Vt. FRENCH LUCILLE B. McNULTY 20 Crest St. West Roxbury, Mass. ENGLISH SUSAN F. MEAGHER 33 Buena Vista Rd. Asheville, No. Carolina SOCIOLOGY PAULA M. MELICAN 269 Moreland St. Worcester, Mass. SOCIOLOGY MARY F. MORRISON 28 Kinsley St. Nashua, N.H. POLITICAL SCIENCE KATHLEEN E. MURPHY 541 Roosevelt Ave. Springfield, Mass. ENGLISH ANNE B. NIGRO 7 Douglas Ave. Beverly, Mass. SOCIOLOGY CAROL M. NOONAN 14 Fairfield St. Needham, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY LOUISE C. O’BRIEN 37 Cedar St. Lowell, Mass. MATHEMATICS MARGARET C. O’BRIEN 8 Mill Lane East Braintree, Mass. SPANISH JANET M. O’HEARN 9 Alice Dr. Nashua, N.H. HISTORY ANNE N. PALMERINO 127 Lebanon Hill Southbridge, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY SR. JUDITH A. PARK 125 Oakland St. Wellesley, Mass. ENGLISH GINETTE M. PATCH Box 333 Middleburg, Va. SOCIOLOGY PAULA J. PESATURO 42 Forest St. Stoneham, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY 194 ANNE PLEGGE Groton House Ipswich, Mass. SOCIOLOGY ELINOR A. RYAN 847 Webster St. Needham, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY KAREN A, PORCELLA 14 Wellesley Rd. Belmont, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY KATHRYN A. RYAN 18 Bellegarde Ave. Lewiston, Maine SOCIOLOGY MARIE L. POWERS 6 Lindauer St. Peabody, Mass. GERMAN GERALDINE M. SCALESE 28 Rangeley Rd. Watertown, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY NORA E. QUINLAN Lake Ave. Sunapee, N.H. ENGLISH EILEEN A. SCHMIDER 29 Lancaster Ave. Maplewood, N.J. ENGLISH MARCIA A. RAGONESE 150 Greene St. Hopedale, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY CAROLYN J. SCHNAARS 134 Piper Rd. Hamden, Conn. ENGLISH ANNE E. RAMELLI 98 Greene St. Hopedale, Mass. ENGLISH LOUISE JANE SCOTT 17 Ledgewood Cir. Topsfield, Mass. SPANISH JUDITH A. RAMSDELL 63 Bradley Hill Rd. Hingham, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY VALERIE Y. SHAKESPEARE 264 Troy Ave. Brooklyn, N Y. ECONOMICS BARBARA A. RANCOUR! Box 151 Jackman Station, Me. ENGLISH ISABELLE M. SHAW 1 Chestnut St. Providence, R.l. ENGLISH MARY L. RIGGS 148 East Foster St. Melrose, Mass. BIOLOGY PATRICIA E. SHERIDAN 41 Club Dr. Massapequa, N Y. HISTORY PATRICIA E. RILEY 46 Gilbert Rd. Newington, Conn. FRENCH PRISCILLA M. SICARD 275 Andover St. Lowell, Mass. SPANISH ELIZABETH F. ROBICHAUD 535 Hyde Park Ave. Roslindale, Mass. ENGLISH MARIE L. SORRENTI 23A Glendale St. Maynard, Mass. ENGLISH DYANNE M. RUSSETT Benlise Dr. Williamstown, Mass. ART DONNA A. SOUZA 101 State Rd. No. Westport, Mass. HISTORY DONNA M. STAYER 160 Gulf Rd. Dover, N.H. POLITICAL SCIENCE NANCY L. TORREY 107 Paddock Dr. Dewitt, New York SOCIOLOGY KATHLEEN STONE 86 Bedford St. Concord, Mass. HISTORY JOSEPHINE A. TORRISI 31 Buswell Ave. Methuen, Mass. SOCIOLOGY CATHERINE M. SULLIVAN 35 Lawndale St. Belmont, Mass. GERMAN MAUREEN TRANI 1 1 Slocum Rd. Lexington, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY CHERYL A. SULLIVAN 46 Chittenden Rd. Scituate, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY JOANNE M. TRIBULAUSKAS 153 North Ave. Brockton, Mass. GERMAN CHRISTINE M. SULLIVAN 49 Rexford St. Mattapan, Mass. GERMAN DIANE J. TULLY 30 Grosvenor Rd. Short Hills, N.J. SOCIOLOGY CORNELIA A. SULLIVAN 13 Bartlett Crescent Brookline, Mass. ENGLISH ANNE F. VALENTINO 7 Cedar Ave. Somerville, Mass. MATHEMATICS MARTHA M. SULLIVAN 280 Tremont St. Braintree, Mass. ENGLISH DONNA M. VILLONE 32 Milton St. Arlington, Mass. PSYCHOLOGY PATRICIA A. SULLIVAN 82 Kennesaw Ave. Centerville, Mass. FRENCH JEANNE M. WARREN 123 Elmwood Rd. Needham, Mass. SOCIOLOGY PATRICIA A. TAFT 8 Elton Rd. Barrington, R.l. FRENCH OUIDA K. WILLIAMS 284 Columbia Rd. Dorchester, Mass. MATHEMATICS NANCY J. TARSA 307A Pray Hill Rd. Chepachet, R.l. CHEMISTRY ELIZABETH A. WRIGHT 81 Ellsworth Rd. Peabody, Mass. ECONOMICS CHARLOTTE THOMPSON 25 Abbott Rd. Dedham, Mass. MATHEMATICS MARILYN A. TOOMEY 22 Gilbert Ave. Revere, Mass. FRENCH 195 FRIENDS Most Reverend Jeremiah F. Minihan, D.D., V.F., LL.D. Most Reverend Thomas J. Riley, D.D., Ph.D. Right Reverend Charles A. Finn, P.A., V.F., D.D., LL.D. Right Reverend George F. Sullivan, V.F. Right Reverend Dennis J. Burns, J.C.D. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Reverend Mother M. Catalina Casey, LL.D. Sister M. Clarona Moore, Ed.D. Sister J. Benedict McLaughlin, A.M. Sister M. Anacleta Burns, A.M. Sister M. Laetitia Gibbons, A.M. Sister Josephina Concannon, Ed.D., LL.D. Laurence P. Harrington, C.P.A., LL.D. James M. Kendrick, LL.B. Sister M. Jeanne d’Arc O’Hare, Ph.D. ASSOCIATE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Carroll Miles, Ph.D., Chairman Lawrence M. Kearns, LL.B. John I. Ahern, B.B.A. Robert E. Arnot, M.D. Bernard R. Baldwin, A.B. Alice E. Bourneuf, Ph.D. Catherine Burke, A.B. Thomas W. Casey, A.B. Harold J. Coleman Gordon M. Fair, Ph.D. Patricia A. Goler, Ph.D. Richard F. Messing, B.Ch.E. Most Rev. Jeremiah F. Minihan, D.D. Catherine Garrity Quinn, M.S. Timothy J. Regan, Jr., LL.B. William A. Ryan, LL.B. James J. Shea, Jr., B.S. Richard H. Stanton, M.D. John B. Tillson, A.B. Richard W. Young, Ph.D. Right Rev. Augustin F. Hickey, S.T.L., Ed.D. 196 Mrs. Etta M. Batho Mr. and Mrs. John L. Black Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Brine Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Carini Mr. and Mrs. John B. Carr Attorney and Mrs. Cornelius A. Cleary Mr. and Mrs. J. Alfred Cormier Jr. Mr. and Mrs. M. Cosgrove Mr. and Mrs. Louis Coumas Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Dailey Dr. and Mrs. John Dalton Dr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Delaney Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Dobbyn Mr. and Mrs. James J. Earls Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Farrugia Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J. Fiorda Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grover Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Handy Mr. and Mrs. John P. Hennessey Mr. and Mrs. Matthew H. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Lind Mr. and Mrs. William R. MacKenzie 197 Mr. and Mrs. George H. Mathieson Mr. and Mrs. William J. Maye Mr. and Mrs. Rosario J. Mazzarelli Mr. and Mrs. N. Lome McGloan Mr. and Mrs. Leo J. McNulty Mr. and Mrs. Warren Nigro Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. O’Brien Mr. and Mrs. Henry Palmerino Miss Ginette M. Patch Mr. and Mrs. Ernest F. Powers Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Ramelli Mr. Paul Rousseau Mr. and Mrs. Norman Russett Miss Elinor A. Ryan Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Scalese Mrs. Madeline Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Tarsa Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Clarence F. Torre Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Tribulauskas Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Tully 198 Alston Studio, Inc. L. W. Bills Co. L. Davenport Boyd, Inc. Central Tailoring Co., Inc. Compliments of a Friend J. Irving Connolly European Health Spa Fall River Trust Co. Garden Crest Apartments Holiday Inn Waltham Keane Fire and Safety Equipment Co. Keohane Wine Co., Inc. Louis Hair Fashions Mary Jayne Bakery Mendelsohns, Inc. Moody and Reagan Printers One More Tyme (Resale Clothing) Sal Rizzo of Waban, Inc. (Beauty Salon) Veteran’s Cab Co. of Newton, Inc. Waltham Wallpaper and Paint Corp. Weston Cleaners and Tailors Fred Woodside’s Tire and Battery Shop 199 Mr. and Mrs. Clement C. Archer Mr. and Mrs. John L. Brennan Mr. and Mrs. Arnold P. Caputo Mr. and Mrs. John J. Conry Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Louise A. Doherty Mr. and Mrs. J. Edward Finnegan Mr. and Mrs. William H. Hannify 200 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel W. Hogan Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Holland Mrs. Daniel S. Lowney Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Park Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Ragonese Mr. and Mrs. Laurin L. Rancourt Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Sorrenti Dr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Sullivan 201 Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Wright Mrs. Mary M. Brennan Class of 1973 Success to Regis in the 70’s Success to the Regis Class of ’70 THE REGIS COLLEGE CLUB OF GREATER LAWRENCE Our Continued Support and Best Wishes THE SOUTH SHORE REGIS CLUB NEWTON CORNER PRESS, INC. 1 85 Charlesbank Road Edna Soraghan English, ’59, President Patricia Glennon McCarthy, ’57, Vice-President Ann Bailey Reilly, ’62, Treasurer Newton, Mass. 02158 Telephone: 244-6484 Frances Kopka Parsons, ’59, Secretary Nancy Greene Mullin, ’62, Secretary Letterpress — Offset Printing DiNATILE FLOORS, INC. KING’S GRANT 4 Ericsson Street Route 128 Boston, Mass. 02122 Danvers, Mass. 01923 202 VITO M. D’ACCI COPLEY CAMERA AND HI-FI 914 Washington Street South Braintree, Mass. 02185 Insurance and Real Estate 480 Boylston Street Boston, Mass. BALCOM ELECTRICAL CO., INC. CLAY CHEVROLET, INC. 27 Irving Center Malden, Mass. 431 Washington St. Newton, Mass. NORTON FUNERAL HOME 53 Beech Street Framingham, Mass. 01701 BOULEVARD PHARMACY 2090 Commonwealth Avenue Auburndale, Mass. 02166 VINCENT POTATO CHIP CO., INC. JOSEPH A. PINK AND SON, INC. 205 Highland Avenue Salem, Mass. 01970 40 Plympton Street Boston, Mass. 02118 203 Compliments of THE CHATEAU RESTAURANT OF WALTHAM, INC. 1 95 School Street Waltham, Mass. 02154 THE NEWTON WALTHAM BANK AND TRUST CO. DUAL MANUFACTURING AND ENGINEERING, INC. Bigelow Street Holyoke, Mass. 01040 UNITED ART CO., INC. 502 Harrison Avenue Boston, Mass. 02118 PLASTICRETE CORP. 1883 Dixwell Avenue Hamden, Conn. 06514 FREDERICK BRASCO, FLORIST 229 High Street Waltham, Mass. 02154 ROBERT M. LEEDS Royalmetal Corp. SOUTH MIDDLESEX SUPPLY CO., INC. 541 Concord Street Framingham, Mass. 01701 204 FAMOUS PIZZA, INC. JACKSON LUMBER CO. 61 Nicholas Road 245 Market Street Saxonville, Mass. 01701 Lawrence, Mass. 01843 FISHER ROBERTS, INC. COLONIAL TEN ACRES 12c Washington Street Route 20 Wellesley, Mass. Wayland, Mass. THE CHESTNUT SHOP Weston Centre Mall Weston, Mass. Telephone; 899-4331 Gifts — Fabrics — Wallpapers — Antiques John J. Ryan 376 Washington Street Brighton, Mass. Insurance Agency MYSTIC AUTOMATIC SALES CO., INC. 55 Salem St. Medford, Mass. Telephone: 396-3300 Complete Vending Services Telephone: 245-0600 205 Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Schmieder Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Lipcan, Sr. Regis College Alumnae Association Class of 1970 206 Class of 1971 Class of 1972 Paige OBrion Russell 40 Broad Street Boston, Mass. Educational Insurance Division Gillespie Ford Sales 700 Plain Street Marshfield, Mass. 207 V. Massa and Sons Marriott Motor Hotel 198 Summer Street Watertown, Mass. 02172 ROOFERS 2345 Commonwealth Avenue Newton, Mass. Poorvu Construction Co., Inc. 103 River Street Waltham, Mass. 02154 208 Scientific Cleaners, Inc BOX 171 AUBURNDALE, MASS. Telephone; 244-5226 Schools — Churches Banks — Industrial Buildings Development Direction, Inc. International Building 45 Rockefeller Plaza New York, New York 10020 209 Hicks Electric Company, Inc. 9 Betty Street Everett, Mass. 02149 210 James Hook and Company 15 Northern Avenue Boston, Mass. 02210 211 Anthony Vanaria 63 Milton Street Waltham, Mass. 02154 LANDSCAPE SERVICE 212 WE PROUDLY ACKNOWLEDGE, WITH THANKS, YOUR SELECTION OF US AS YOUR OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR THE SIXTH CONSECUTIVE YEAR fine distinctive photography 105 Newbury Street Boston, Massachusetts COpley 7-8765 for all future photography, including wedding and family photographs, remember our gift to you Melvin F. Hookailo Boston ' s Only Master of Photography 214 Compliments of Student Government: Academic Affairs Committee Cultural Committee Social Committee From Sister Corita, published by United Church Press, 1968. Reprinted by permission of the publisher and artist. 215 fU. 1 G fr Vv ' f” V s. ( •h (A h thv A Ia v cUa. i ’ v i j U.bo ' h tiHu cA lA. .triM [ A M -jv l tvu e44f®U i- 216 d ' ■ ' fK ? W W! 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Suggestions in the Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) collection:

Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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Regis College - Mount Regis Yearbook (Weston, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973


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