77 Might it be that stones are the fulfillment and bridges only dreams? —John L’Heureux Each generation holds freedom as precariously as any other. The heroic among us struggle to be free as Hamlet had to struggle ... or the Karamazovs ... or Siddhartha. The less than heroic tend to fall under the Grand Inquisitor’s judgment of finding freedom too great a burden. The disguises of unfreedom are always contemporary; the reality remains as constant. In our world where news media destroy our illusions, where philosophical systems no longer concur with life as we experience it and theologies are groping and humble, we move toward hope or despair. To see life as radically mysterious can propel us toward constructing new myths. In our fear of an open, hanging world, we can declare our new patterns as absolutes and declare in our arrogance that we have found our resting place. And so can become the dogmatists of a new age, however liberal our cause. We can tell the still-free seekers and questioners that our truth is the whole truth because we say so. Locked in our skinner boxes we can succumb to the temptation that all the world is there with us. Or we can proclaim meaninglessness, and the futility of a shattered world. But to be free is to live with the dimensions of forever— of height and depth and past and future filling the present. To be free is to face life without systems of thought; it is to be equal to the pain of wrestling with meaning of our life and all of life as proof of life’s deep mystery and its infinite possibilities. To be free is to hope. It is to reject death as curse and choose life as blessing. It is to believe in oneself and others so deeply that neither war nor poverty nor racism nor injustice nor stupid, compassionless leadership can ever separate us from life. To be free is to resist the foolish desire for an unhuman Utopia where all of life in its fullness is present forever. To be free is to cherish stones and find that the beauty of the cherishing creates the bridge. It is to be reconciled to life as forever moving and so forever incomplete— never wholly present or possessed once and for all. To be free is to love the fragments as sheer gift and grace and to be made free and whole in the loving. —Dr. Marilyn Rose 2 3 4 5 6 7 « 8 9 I stand on the highest branch of the tallest tree, bare toes gripping, arms extended, body falling forward so, so slowly; a bubble rises from the pit of my stomach. Enlarging and quickening as it passes, it forces its way through my chest to my throat. I close my eyes and surrender all my being to the bubble, which with one last thrust, breaks the barrie r of my mouth and enters the region of my brain. Bare feet slide on slippery bark and my body leaves the tree, falling upwards at tremendous speed. My body . . . what an amazing creation. My body ... a precision instrument in the hands of my brain. My body ... a hard and compact unit whose core generates such energy and heat that the flames turn my vision red, turn my vision back to the source of all heat and fire, back to the sun. The earth’s dark bosoms’s beating and heaving, heaving and beating against my back. The sun enters my uplifted palms, seeps down, down deep, melting each sinew, each vein, disintegrating each love, each hour, each individual trait and leaving only that flame at the core of my existence to unite with the fire of the sun and the warmth of the earth and the core of every other living or inanimate thing. The sun has come to earth, and the green lattice-work clouds melt and flow across the red sky in joyful imitation of the union of all living and inanimate things which they witness and of which I am a part. When I got back I wanted to tell you all about it, but I knew you could never understand, so I decided to just keep it to myself. 11 12 13 1 14 Scene: Empty Stage On walks a lad apparently looking for something on the ground. Soon an onlooker approaches the lad. Onlooker: I say, what are you searching for so intently? Lad: (somewhat startled), Oh! You frightened me. You see, now I have been caught without them. Oh, no. I must not tell you. (Secretly and to himself). He must not know, no one must know. Onlooker: (Swinging his black cape over his left shoulder and sneering). Stop being so mysterious. Lad; after all I am an understanding person, perhaps I can help. Lad: (to himself), I need someone to confide in now, but what if he is one of those without any? He seems like an understanding person, yes, I will do it, I will tell him. (to Onlooker), You see, it all started when I began to doubt, then suddenly it happened and here I am alone, my morals have been lost. I have been scurrying to find them, before anyone discovers my helpless situation, but to no avail. Onlooker: (twisting his long black moustache between his middle finger and thumb). Nothing to worry about, my boy, nothing to worry about. Just come with me and we will forget about— I mean find— your morals or whatever. Lad. (confused), but, but, but, . . . Onlooker: (quickly throwing his caped arm around the boy). Now, now, my boy, just come with me. And off they go with Lad under the wing of Onlooker’s cape. In the not too distant future the two come to a waterfall. Lad sits down alone on a rock to meditate on the loss of his morals. Lad: Oh, Waterfall, may you be the object I need to convince myself that the loss of my morals was just. You are so beautiful and so happy, yet each day you lose so much of your precious water. What are a few morals compared to so much of your beautiful sparkling water. Waterfall: If only I could speak to you lad. You see the water that comes off of me is always replaced by more. I am constantly in a state of flux, never to run dry. Lad then once again left with Onlooker convinced he should no longer search for his morals. They walked for some time. When they stopped to rest they were in a sunny patch of grass. Onlooker sat under a nearby tree as he was one for shade, but Lad remained in the sun. Lad: (Still reflecting the loss of his morals). Oh, Sun, you are so beautiful, so warm, so rich, and yet you forever shed your light. I may this once shed my morals. Sun: Oh, Lad, but if only I could speak to you. I shed my light but I have an ever replenishing supply. This is the difference between us. Soon the duet traveled on again. Their final resting place in this day’s journey was a wheat fie ld. Lad: (wandering along in the field and still pondering his situa- tion), Oh, Wheat Field, your wheat is so beautiful, yet every fall you let your wheat die, so just this once I may let my morals die. Wheat Field: Oh, Lad, if only I could speak to you. Before my wheat dies I drop my seeds, thereby replacing the wheat that has passed on. But Lad was content, you see. As he rationalized away the prospect of searching longer for new, more meaningful morals he substituted in their place his shallow impression of other peoples values. Lad and Onlooker went forth arm in arm. —Nadine Bonda 15 For me, individuality connotes precious, thought-filled, uniqueness. Where individuality is cherished, there is continuous striving in the direction of creative becoming. There is a heightened awareness of the expansion of human faculties and attentiveness to the styling of an inward disposition which seems to be the fruit of my own activity. Of consequence to me are the impressions I am constantly assimilating from the changing context of the world in which I find myself, the memories I am recovering to carry with me, the affections I am owing as I move through successive stages of my life helping to create the future. Matters of importance to me— my perceptions, my remembrances, my loves, my judgments— must be twice lived that through reflection I may discover those forms— or pollutions— in my empirical soil which my thought or activity first took and which now must be jettisoned. Over and over again I begin; I tear myself away from myself in search of new forms. The freedom of all persons to experience this beginning fills me with excitement and with a longing to share in the infinitude of patterns which are being woven. As numberless, precious, thought-filled, unique individuals make progress toward completion, I believe they experience the end as the beginning, supporting the life that is given far more than it is formed. —Sister Viterbo McCarthy 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 The setting sun smiles on others now And tomorrow I will ride the wind. I expect the weather to be fair, And the sky to be always open. I know I’ll hear the thunder speak, But only after today’s breeze has sung; And I’ll be sunburned now and then— Strange . . . that warmth and openness should sting. My coat, at any length, keeps out the cold of frowning clouds Yet smiles know no season. A little fear has come to visit . . . We’ll travel together on tomorrow’s wind. —Mary Jane Curtin 27 Mount Regis 1971 Editor: Nancy Kiely Literary Layout Editor: Nadine Bonda Frances Frydryk Carol McMahon Kathleen Moore Brenda Scally Photography Editors: Kathleen Riley, Cynthia Czapiga Janice Carragher Louise Dunlay Cheryl Lee Mary Myers Bessie Pan Mary Beth Regan Connie Ryan Karen Smith Denise Travers Mary Lou Wenthe Business Editors: Patricia Barry, Marcia Charlton Cynthia Chmura Kathleen Croak Kathleen Galiher Catherine Healey Sandra Moore Senior Section Editors: Linda Faldetta, Deborah Medeiros Cynthia Durol Sandra Stewart Technical Assistance: Jo-Ellen Bush Catina Hayden Veronica Lefevre Gertrude Musante Faculty Consultant: Sister Marie de Sales Dinneen All written copy submitted by faculty and students Expectation is . . . awareness of a past rich with its grateful memories encouraging in its testimonies of true humanity demanding that we continue to struggle against injustice and hate awareness of the present brimful with ambiguities of optimism and pessimism of the agony and ecstasy of life of the tension between what was and what will be awareness of the future challenging us to deepen each man’s experience of his own dignity and worth to translate the rhetoric of peace, love and justice into realities to wonder and grow in the world that is ours as free individuals before God and servants of one another. —Sr. Claire Ryan 30 31 32 j 35 36 i 37 What am I to you? Have I caught fire from the tiny fire you offered me— or have I let the cold wind of my in-seifness diminish your flame? Am I the strong bond that welds two identities to a whole, or am I the doubt that pushes a wedge between the both of us merging to one? The high winds are blowing and softly singing the song of my being— are you listening with ear bent to catch the breathings of my heart to yours? Who is listening— or are we both talking too stridently? The whir of the time- machine deafens us; the vibrations of the time-machine shake loose the tentative grasp we had of each other’s self and racing on, we slip unnoticed into the past, having left, snail-like, a shiny residue to love upon the shape of every life. —Sister Regina Marie Let ' s be friends. 38 i ! i i 39 40 t. 41 42 .1 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 j 53 54 55 56 57 58 i 59 60 4 61 62 63 64 65 66 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 QUESTION: There have been a great many changes on campus during my four years here. I would like to ask you a few questions about the present Regis student since, as Dean of Students, you come into contact with a great number of us daily. Could you evaluate social or political activism at Regis. Are students here involved enough outside the campus? SISTER CATHERINE LABOURE: On the whole, I think that the group which devotes itself to the active support of social and political causes is relatively small. The majority of students are committed to their self-development and the immediate concern of day-to-day living. It’s evident that the students who are socially and politically oriented have usually experienced some satisfying involvement prior to their arrival at Regis and, once here, they continue their activities. What we need is a higher degree of leadership from these students; perhaps then a greater degree of student involvement would be achieved on and off the campus. QUESTION: The role of student government is always changing. Is the present structure effective and functioning? SISTER CATHERINE LABOURE: These are the days of self determination and enlightened questioning of authority. I feel that the Regis students have developed a satisfactory form of government so far. But with the rapid evolution of all forms of human organization, I feel that student government will develop into an all embracing type of college government corresponding to the broadening horizons of the college scene. QUESTION: Have you seen different social patterns evolve within the past several years? SISTER CATHERINE LABOURE: Yes, this is an inevitable and challenging condition of college life. Since students come from the world of the ' 70s, their social patterns don ' t revert back to a previous decade. They come to Regis with a presupposition of freedom and movement. This can be observed in the increased freedom with which the students leave home. They move out not just to a college campus, but many go right into apartments. I believe this will increase, and an exodus will begin out of the dormitory into the community or into college-owned low cost apartment buildings, similar to what is being done at Boston College now. Also, the students’ dress indicated that they do not intend to conform to a mold set up by an institution. Freedom of expression has definitely increased, and the girls seem to be more self-confident in relating to others as well as truly putting across their ideas. There is no longer a respect for traditional college patterns. Students intend to form rather than accept a Regis tradition. QUESTION: The women’s lib movement is often talked about and quite a few students are actively involved in it. Has this changed the problems you’ve been approached with? SISTER CATHERINE LABOURE: The successive classes of freshmen come here from varied educational and cultural backgrounds. They are then immersed in a culture that is predominantly female. At present, the Regis student does not usually indicate any strong, radical support for women’s lib. The climate here poses no threat to their rights as women and so there has been no distinct evidence of any change in their demands traceable to the women ' s lib movement. QUESTION: Sister, you have been involved in both counseling students and in abolishing the in loco parentis theory. In the future, what role do you think the college will play in a student’s personal life? Does it have to be neutral, or does it have the obligation to present some kind of moral structure or value system for the students? SISTER CATHERINE LABOURE: The college should provide a milieu in which the student can mature and become her best self. Regis aspires to give her students the information and motivation to choose a value system worthy of an educated Christian adult who is capable of living a full life of love and service in the world of the 70’s. We’re always bombarded today with technology. The person is less valuable in this context. The educated person should be able to sift truth and sense intuitively that which is really human. I think that this is done primarily through the teaching of the humanities hand-in-hand with the sciences. The wisdom of the ages is presented so that the student is not caught up blindly in this technological age. Hopefully, through the education we offer, the student can evaluate knowledge and make it serve to give weight to that which is truly human in her own value system. The institution can not be neutral. This position would be dangerously innocuous. 75 Equipped now with the jargon of the trade proving my intellectual ability; knowing the proper semantics and arguments: familiar with the aesthetic products of the ages; having followed the proper course of study; emerging a liberally educated woman, I find that my only need is a denim jacket. —Barbara Rancourt Kane 76 77 78 1 79 81 1 82 83 85 m 86 88 89 QUESTION: In most of the dorms, the R. A. system is new this year. Do you think the new system allows for a greater amount of personal freedom? GAIL PLATT I don’t think it allows the student more personal freedom. If you’re talking about discipline, when the house- mother was solely in charge, the rules were not enforced and quite generally ignored. Now, we hope that the rules are workable, and that the responsibility for making them work lies with each girl. I see the R. A.’s function, not as increasing freedom, but as fostering a community spirit, uniting the wing or floor. The R. A. isn’t supposed to be a policeman, but she’s there if she’s needed. PATSY WONG I agree. The main role of the R. A. is uniting the students in the dorm, working together, sharing problems together, making a dormitory system work. Personal freedom is not the issue here. QUESTION: Has there been any conflict between the R.A.’s and student government roles? GAIL I don’t think so. Our roles are really quite different. The R. A. is more of a medium. She can go to student government and relate the information to the students if she wishes. We did set up a meeting with Student Court to set up guidelines. It is conceivable that the R. A. would give the student a warning and then send her to Student Court. R.A.’s are auxiliaries between many different campus organizations: administration, student government, and so on. PATSY It’s certainly one of the main reasons for R. A.s’ existing to be able to refer a student to the proper authorities if she is in trouble, or needs assistance. QUESTION: Have you run into problems regarding apathy on campus? PATSY In my four years at Regis College, I have found it to be a very apathetic place. Girls do not care, and are not interested in what is going on outside the school. The typical middle-class problems occupy the mind: shopping, dates. The students really don’t care about world situations, oppression. Even when there is a lot of stimulation around, they still don’t respond enough. I find it very surprising in girls who should be more active. GAIL I agree mostly with Patsy, but I’d like to make two points. First, I’m not sure about classifying Regis girls as “apathetic.” I think they can be accused of passivity. I know many girls who would like to be involved in activities on campus, for example. But most of them have the impression that it would be beating their heads against the wall. They say— why try? I won’t get it done anyway. But, of course, there are a certain group of people who do try. Secondly, there was an interesting letter about student radicals to the editor in a recent issue of Time. It pointed out that demonstrations and talk of injustice was very popular, but when it came down to really concretely working on something, students lost interest. I think that this is true, not just on the Regis campus, but as a fairly widespread college phenomenon. PATSY This year we also have a problem in that a cloud of depression has really settled on campus. The kids don’t seem to feel that they’re getting anywhere. Something is lacking in their get up and go, even in their own personal concerns. I can’t put my finger on the problem. GAIL Last year, they lightened the course load, yet this year, there’s more work than ever before. There doesn’t seem to be any time left over for anything. There’s a high pressure push on everyone, even if it’s to complete course requirements. QUESTION: There’s been a controversy among the students as to the necessity and advisability of the R. A. system. Would you comment on this? GAIL The system is still very new. People are not used to it. Once they realize what the R. A. program is about, then opinions change. There hasn’t been much education concerning what the R. A.’s are doing or can do in the future. They have many responsibilities. Hopefully, by uniting the girls, we can get more spirit and life on campus, and get rid of the apathy. PATSY In a dorm of sophomores and seniors, I see a difference in attitudes. Sophomores really appreciate the R. A. system and are using it well. By the time these kids are juniors and seniors, they’ll know the system and be able to make it a more workable program on campus. There should be more done in the dorm: films, lectures, impromptu seminars. Twenty-four hour parietals may be feasible. In any case, a better communication between administration and students will come about. GAIL I think it would be devastating if the R. A. system were terminated. It prods the girls to be more responsible to themselves and to each other, and to create a more adult atmosphere. 90 91 92 93 94 95 In an age preoccupied with expressions of freedom, no word is more difficult to define. Fundamentally, it is bound up with the ability of the individual to be open to suggestions, to think of alternatives, and to admit of many solutions to a single problem. The free mind does not spurn history, but learns from it; it does not reject tradition, but translates it into a new context. Instead of being threatened by the ideas of others, the free person regards them as an opportunity for acquiring new knowledge. Always receptive to the possibilities of change, the free spirit will never be incarcerated in the microcosm of self. Such imprisonment is regarded as the worst kind of slavery. In the end, freedom transcends any particular time, place, and set of circumstances: it is a state of mind that creates a way of life. —Sister Marie de Sales 96 97 98 i 99 Responsibility is a “heavy” word, but we need not think of it as oppressive. It is unfortunate, in fact, that so many men have focused only upon its burdensome connotation, later to find that they are helplessly weighted by its awesome implications. For our generation, the word “responsibility” should take on new meaning. We must re-examine the term in a positive light! What is responsibility? For each individual, first of all, it is a self-directed opportunity to discover who he is. It is an invitation to explore the innermost depths of one’s own being; to become a soul-searcher, a seeker of truth; to take Thoreau’s advice and become a “Columbus to whole new continents and worlds within you, opening new channels ... of thought.” Hopefully, at least one of these channels of thought will bring each man to action outside of himself. Clearly, each of us should see responsibility as an occasion to show another man that he matters, perhaps to rejoice in the happiness of another human being, or maybe caress the cares of another as if they were our own. Responsibility should mean that we charitably extend ourselves to meet the needs of those around us. Through such actions, “solitudes protect, touch and greet each other” (Rilke) as all men become one. In the last analysis, the new description of responsibility sounds much like a description of love. Think about it. Isn’t responsibility actually a means of demonstrating love? Isn’t it the responsible person who says: I am concerned about my neighbor and myself ... I truly care what happens in this world? If we look at the term from this perspective, we cannot help but be heartened by the optimistic picture it presents. Certainly, the command for responsible action is not a light one; however, it will be one which is a pleasure to bear. Indeed, if our generation approaches “responsibility” as an opportunity to work for the betterment of all men, most assuredly we will be able to sing (pardon me, Jacques Brel) that the world is “alive and well and living” in love! —Ellen Byrne y? ' •U 100 101 102 I 104 L 105 106 107 •t.¥‘ f ' A - ;-?i w 4 ’--c r . % ” 4 ’ % ■9 .. t- f!«. A A ; ■T ' -.. ■ ' ■ A. ■ ■ It- ' ' 5 -.,. ' ' • - ' ‘ _ 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 J 117 118 119 Liberation is . . . by a collective of male and female faculty members who prefer to remain anonymous going to a women’s college running in the Boston Marathon liking math inviting your male secretary for a drink and making a pass at him wearing a bra if you’re running upstairs asking a man to dance at a mixer not going to a mixer becoming a priest teaching your son how to knit enjoying pornography not caring if your male professor is married paying for your date’s dinner lurking in the woods behind the Holy Cross dorms with binoculars subscribing to The Ladder whistling at a good looking man taking (and passing) the tests to become an astronaut not having wedding pictures to show at your first college reunion not having baby pictures to show at your second college reunion encouraging your son when he asks to take ballet lessons 120 keeping your own name after marriage wearing Levis to the senior prom (what are you doing at the senior prom?) going to see Censorship in Denmark without pretending you are interested in its social content not knowing how to type knowing how to type but not telling anyone about it trying out for the football team giving a man your seat on the bus because he looks tired not caring if you earn more than your husband quitting the garden club because it interferes with your Friday night poker game asking your father-in-law to teach your husband how to cook dating a male nurse taking sewing lessons with your husband stopping on the highway to help a man change a flat tire listing yourself as “head of the household” on the census going to the Harvard Business School winning a chess game on your first date with a man you like changing the words of sexist nursery rhymes when you read them to your daughter serving rib steaks at a ladies’ luncheon when you’re in Italy, pinching a man on a crowded bus dating someone who is younger than you are having your own bank account expectation 121 122 123 ' NO EN-CO t O 124 125 Women have been struggling publicly for their rights more more than one hundred and twenty years. In 1 851 , Sojourner Truth, a Negro freedwoman addressed a women’s rights convention: “Look at my arm! I have ploughed and planted and gathered into barns, and no man could head me— and ain’t I a woman? I could work as much and eat as much as a man— when I could get it— and bear the lash as well! and ain’t I a woman? I have borne thirteen children, and seen most of them sold into slavery, and when I cried out my mother’s grief none but Jesus heard me— and ain’t I a woman?’’ May we continue this struggle together in order that the strength of a united effort might bring us to the day when each sister is free to make those decisions that affect her life. —Sharon Donovan 126 127 Janet A. Baran Jane A Barry Patricia M. Barry Brenda A. Beasley 128 Mary G. Becker Nadine M. Bonda Maryann Biasi Janet M Bosworth Louise F Bishop Ann Brennen Suzanne M Blackmer Lynn A. Brusie 129 Mary R. Callahan Ellen M. Byrne Anne E. Canesi Mary E. Cahill Ann M. Caputo Marilyn C. Carey 130 L 131 Sharon T. Carey Marcia A. Charlton Cheryl A. Carlson Cynthia A. Chmura Ellen L. Carroll Donna E. Christian Joan D. Cashier Elizabeth A. Coan 132 I ! I I 1 , Maryruth Coleman Margaret Rearick Conboy Eileen M. Collins Ann M. Cormier Martha D. Collins Kathleen M. Cornyn Rosemarie Collins Ann M. Cosgrove 133 134 Eileen G. Crane Kathleen E. Croak Elizabeth A. Cullinan Rosemary F. Cullinane Nancy A. Cullotta Mary Jane Curtin ' ■■■ Emily C. Daniels Anne K. DeRusha Sheila M. Devin Jacqueline M. Dion Mary W. Disken Patricia Donahue 135 Sharon M. Donovan Cynthia C. Durol Barbara A. Dorgan Susan G. Effgen Mary J. Druken Marianne Ercolini Louise Dunlay Marilyn E. Ewer 136 137 Linda A. Faldetta Regina M. Finnegan Jane G. Farrell Ellen C. Fitzgerald Rosanne Fassi Ann M. Fitzpatrick Jean M. Finan Sharon M. Fitzpatrick 138 Joanne Flynn Patricia L. Funder Marilyn B. Flynn Rosemary C. Gaffney Kathleen M. Galiher Regina C. Gavin 139 Nancy L. Giudici Jane M. Grenier Susan Gray Groth Lynn C. Mabel 140 141 Catherine M. Healey Jean L. Hubert 142 I Kathleen A. Huddy Nancy F Kern Margaret A. James Nancy M. Kiely Paula M. Kane Susan T. Kiniry Anne M. Kirby I 143 144 Susan Krauss Joan Marie Kottcamp Nancy A. Landolfi Elizabeth J. Lawlor Simone L. LeBlanc Cheryl A. Lane Catherine T. Lauziere Veronica R. LaRocca Louise P. Lefebvre Veronica M. Lefevre 145 Mary J. Lewis Donna M. Maggiore Margaret I. Lynch Ann E. Magyar Janet M. Mabee Mary E. Mahoney Jan F. Macchi Bernice L. Leonard 146 Ann E. McDermott Patricia A. McDonald Susan McDonough Constance McElroy 147 148 Carol E. McMahon Susan I. McMonagle Deborah V. Medeiros Mary Ellen T. Miller 149 Kathleen D Moore Colleen P Mulcahy Sandra E Moore Elizabeth M Mulshine Ellen Minihan Barbara S. Monty Martha I Moquin Mary E. Moran 150 151 Sheila H. Murphy Mary K. Myers Sheila J. Murphy P. Silvana Nardelli Dianne T. Murray Mary Ann King Neher Eileen F. O’Brien Gertrude M. Musante 152 Katherine E. O’Connor Jo Ann Papagno Ellen T. O ' Halloran Susan I. Pederzoli Maura J. O ' Neill Joanne C. Pleskowicz Katherine M. O ' Neill Gail Platt 153 154 Carol L. Proctor Bonita L. Purnell Kathleen P. Riley Bette J. Riordan Barbara A. Quattrocchi Kathleen M. Read Carmen Curran Rioux Michelle Quevillon Mary Elizabeth Regan Anne M Roach 155 Patricia Rossvall Ann L. Serpa Nancy A. Roth Kathleen A. Sheehan Eleanor J. Salvucci Katherine A. Shute Brenda M. Scally Joyce A. Roach 156 157 Karen M. Smith Jane F. Sullivan Susan A. Smith Janet E. Sullivan Sara M. Steets Margaret A. Sullivan Sandra A. Stewart Mary Zoladz Sullivan 158 Judy A. Tetreault Corinne A. Voipe Constance R. Todino Donna Walsh Vrana Claudette M. Voyer Elizabeth M. Szemela Judith Ventres Thompson Margaret S. Trombly 159 160 Mary Patricia Welch M. Gail Ward Rosemary Weber Carol A. Wilson Carol J. Wisnieski Karen A. Wong Lavina T. Ferraro Virginia M. Black Rosalind J. Whitney Maryanne C. Woelflein Charlene W. Foy Evelyn M. Friel Pamela L. Guiles Shelley Prout Jenkins Helen M McGaffigan Linda Richards Martin Patricia A Moschella Maureen K. O ' Brien, R.N. Kathleen Owens, R.N. Marie A. Shea Margo O. Ulysses Alice P. Wall Sister Denyse Simone Croteau SUSC Sister Joan Frances Mitchell SUSC Sister Catherine Stare SCH 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 QUESTION: In regard to finances, what’s in store for the private college such as Regis? Can it survive? SISTER JEANNE D’ARC: You have undoubtedly read in the newspapers the high points of the recent Carnegie Study on the financial status of private education. It portrayed very graphically that a financial crisis is now! The problem of bridging the gap between operating expenses and operating income is real. To date, at Regis, the breach has been met in large part by the contributed services of the Sisters of St. Joseph. However, This gift is decreasing at the same time as there are sharp increases due to such factors as: salary increases, higher cost of living expenses, growing number of applicants needing financial aid, and new academic programs. This past year, close to 70% of the students applying for admission requested some aid — approximately 38% did receive assistance. For private colleges not merely to survive, but to be significant, there must be more programs similar to the New York State Bundy Program. Likewise, if private colleges are to survive, alumnae must assume the central role, both in interesting prospective students in the college and in making substantial contributions to their college. There is a future for the private college, but only if it can obtain vastly increased support from its graduates, friends, as well as some state and or federal assistance. QUESTION: What effort is Regis making toward increased enrollment of disadvantaged and black students? SISTER JEANNE D’ARC: The Regis Admissions Office, Alumnae, and students have made every effort within the resources of the college to interest students who are disadvantaged. Working closely with the Afro-American Society, a recruiting program has been arranged, including high school visitations and attendance at college programs especia lly aimed at assisting minority students. Some of the activities that the Office has been involved in include: membership in National Scholarship Service Fund for Negro Students and attendance at the annual meeting and college days in New York each spring; membership in Aspira (information and counseling organization for Puerto Ricans) and attendance at annual college day in New York; attendance at annual college day sponsored by METCO at Northeastern University in Boston; communication with Sponsors for Educational Opportunity. The Admissions Office also sends congratulatory letters to students who have been cited by the National Achievement Scholarship Program for Negro Students for academic success and encourages them to apply for admission. Whenever possible, our students who represent minority groups participate in college programs in order to bring Regis prospective students. Likewise, high school counselors have been requested to interest disadvantaged students in Regis. QUESTION: Has Viet Nam affected the so-called “apathy” on campus? SISTER JEANNE D’ARC: I wouldn’t say that there is apathy on campus. Rather I observe that students are more concerned and involved with events beyond the campus rather than in the extra- curricular events of the past. QUESTION: Has the women’s lib movement affected the student body? How do you think that it should? SISTER JEANNE D’ARC: As I see it, the deeper issue underlying the concept of women’s liberation is that of human growth and development — the right of each individual to become the person he or she has the potential to become. This coincides with the goals of liberal education. Certainly a strong college for women provides the opportunities for women to assume greater responsibility. Basically, this is, I believe, what most women are seeking. They want to have the opportunity to be recognized as person — not merely a cog in a wheel, or merely a useful member in a functional society. There is, I believe, validity to some of the practical goals of the recent highly publicized Women’s Liberation Movement— such as equal pay for equal work, promotion based on competency and merit, greater sharing of domestic responsibility, and changing the TV image of women as immature, irresponsible, submissive. While I support these objectives, I reject others, and likewise, the militant approach of the movement. It does seem that much of the present activity spreads an unhealthy excitement about women doing things that are still considered exceptional. It is an overreaction to a situation which does need change, but in a more rational fashion. Likewise, to be a truly liberating force, the movement must respect the freedom of each woman to choose her own role, whether it be predominantly within the home or in the larger community. 168 To speak of a cultural revolution is to speak of a new perception of reality. Yet, as our culture becomes more sophisticated, more technologically advanced, it becomes more difficult to discern those situations which are causing the oppression, causing the injustice, causing the inequality. Our perception of reality becomes conditioned to the fabric of the society, and cannot distinguish the conditions which should be changed. To speak, therefore, of changing a perception of reality without first clearly distinguishing the conditions which are creating a false perception, is futile. To expect the very institutions which make up the warp and woof of the offending society to accomplish these social changes is ludicrous. To speak of making these institutions relevant is to beg the question; the first step in a cultural revolution would be, in fact, to recognize the inherent irrelevance of those accepted institutions of social change. These institutions are tired; they lack the vitality to respond effectively. They are marching to a different drummer; they do not hear the urgent rhythm of our souls. —Christine Fregosi 170 171 172 173 174 Student Council QUESTION: What have you run up against in regards to apathy on campus? MARIA ZODDA: I think apathy is a very apparent characteristic on the Regis campus, especially at certain periods. I suppose you could call it the winter syndrome. Then we have a little rebirth in the spring, with an increase in activities. Generally, I don’t think the students are concerned with the same things, the same values, the same goals. Regis is not a community, as far as I can see. It would take a very charismatic person or a very big issue to bring us together. MARGY PROCOPIO; The number of girls who care on this campus is in a minority. Those who do care, such as people here in student government, have just found any effort a frustrating experience. After awhile, you just cannot keep up the facade that you’re doing something, or that your work is worthwhile, if you don’t get cooperation from others. You want to be more than a service organization, but that’s all you end up being because people just don’t care and won’t help you. LINDA REGELE: A recent article in Newsweek stated that people are running to the suburbs and hiding because the changes are coming too fast and heavy to be borne. Maybe that’s what the students here are reflecting: a malady that has permeated the country on all age levels, students not excluded. I don’t know . . . apathy, unconcern; whatever it is, it’s frustrating. MADELINE SERPA: I agree with you, but there’s one more thing that seems to be peculiar to Regis, and particularly this year. The students here are very grade conscious and often this leads 175 them away from all other parts of their life. Many of them always think about the future and their degree, and they don’t think about what ' s happening to them right now. LINDA: Future, maybe they won’t have a future! MADELINE: Right, Linda, if they don’t think about the present, the future looks pretty nebulous. The kids work for next week and the week after, next year or the year after. This keeps going on and periods of time are lost. ELLEN FITZGERALD: I don’t think the problem of apathy is peculiar to the Regis campus at all. I’m sure that it’s a problem of students in general. Our Student Government has been in office only since September. We are, so to speak, an interim type of government. It is frustrating for all of us to be in Student Government. There is a transition taking place, a change of issues of social life toward a social action program. Perhaps we haven’t done the best job we could have done, but I think we’ve made a start. The new Council will have to set its own goals, but it will have to concentrate on issues off the Regis campus. The concern has to change from the idea of Regis students to that of citizens. ROSEMARY CULLINANE: I feel apathetic myself right now because it seems as though there is no real communication between the administration and us. Going through the so-called proper channels is discouraging when one word, one changed thought, nullifies a whole semester’s work. The student on the Regis campus is not considered a citizen. We ask ourselves: Does the administration believe we’re qualified for anything, for any decision making at all? MARIA: For instance, there was a committee formed to investigate coeducation. No, not coeducation, but to investigate if a committee was needed. Isn’t that beautiful? A committee to investigate to see if a committee is necessary. Anyways, we did a lot of investigating and came up with a few conclusions based on quite a bit of research. When the time came to give a report, the only thing that the powers-that-be would accept from us was whether a committee was needed. All the preliminary work that was done might as well have gone right down the drain. Our research, because it was conducted by students, I suspect, is not being either used or considered. ROSEMARY: It’s been like that, though. Apathy exists on all levels because of frustration. Our link with the administration has been very poor. The meetings were token, and very little listening ever took place. QUESTION: Could you comment on the school’s admission policy of black and disadvantaged students? ELLEN: I think that they’ve been very fair. For over 20 years, Regis has given scholarship aid to blacks. I know they recruited hard last year. The enrollment of blacks is still small, but I think that it’s because of the nature of the school itself rather than any fault of the admission policy. I don’t think that a small, predominantly white, rural. Catholic college for women is attractive to a black college student. MARGIE: As far as scholarships and loans go, I think Regis is very, very fair. I know that the resources aren’t many, but I think that they utilize what they do have to the utmost extent. Many of the girls in my class wouldn’t be here if it weren’t for aid from Regis. There certainly isn’t any bias here for the wealthy student over the student who is disadvantaged. QUESTION: Has Viet Nam affected the attitude on campus, in regard to activism or politics? LINDA: It has, but not as much as it should, maybe. We had a strike last spring and Drinan and Donahue were both featured speakers. When Father Drinan’s crew asked for help, 1 50 girls volunteered their help. This year, I headed up the drive in the fall. We canvassed on Saturdays, and on no Saturday did more than 5 girls show up. The malaise was nationwide: 1 % of the college population turned out to help the candidates they had pledged themselves to. This is a very poor showing for students who showed such promise last spring. I don’t think that the strike politicized any students on campus that weren’t already. Viet Nam has certainly started a revolution in thinking, along the anti- war, humanist revival, anti-poverty lines, but its hard to see any action based on the new thoughts. 176 VOTE c =0 ! IMMEPIATE UirHORAUBt? - KifntKuulj ' I • 1 2 t ; i Vi f • • 1 I • ’ I t . • t ■ ’ Uft min M ' . FK ET I t 178 179 Uncle Peter works under a bridge. His first day on the job he made $7.95 per hour. Union man, of course. What’s her name will make $50,000 if she sings (or whatever it is she does) and properly seduces the Las Vegas audience. Many of us will graduate in June and won’t have a job. We’re over qualified for the blue-collar job and white- collar men and women join the already too long list of unemployed every day. A logical situation? I think not. Do I not have reason to seek a change in Uncle Sam’s value system? Granted, the economist can list alternative budgets that would channel the already exorbitant amounts of money from the military department (given that we have the Middle East and Southeast Asia) into social welfare programs or back into the budget to affect deficit spending. The object of consideration is what can be done with the fiscal dividend when we get it. But the question that follows can’t be answered as readily. Who will change the value structure? In what direction? Now, don’t misunderstand me. I’m not as concerned about the money as the misallocations. I don’t want to make $50,000 this weekend. This weekend!? Neither do I want to earn my bread fitting iron things together under a bridge, (uncle Peter says it gets damn cold. He does it. That’s his economic choice. Not mine.) I could go out and work for the war machine. That’s where the money is being poured into the system, that’s where the jobs are. QED. But do I want to support this system? These values? Can I turn it down? If roadblocks lead me astray, I can’t make a free choice. Uncle Peter said his silent majority-fascist-egalitarian parents set up these roadblocks. (Quite an extraordinary couple, aren’t they?) I won’t be as harsh (nice of me, huh?) but obviously their generation set up the budget and they think military expenditures warrant more money than social programs. Socialism may as well be a four- letter word. Think of their budget, then think of the alternatives to spending money on war. The fiscal dividend might be quite large, but if the silent majority determines how it is to be distributed . . . 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 I One morning I said to my son, “John, we want you to eat this cereal because it will help you to grow, to become strong, and graceful, and intelligent, and to feel good.” However, John said, “But I don’t want to eat it because it is yicky.” I explained about proteins and minerals and told him that when he was an adult he would decide for himself what to eat, but his response was, “Still yicky.” He wound up eating cottage cheese or something. It was annoying that he refused cereal, but of course the whole idea is that John will grow strong, graceful, and intelligent, not that he do what I tell him. II One day at Anycollege, Charles Student’s advisor told him, “You have to fulfill X,Y, and Z requirements.” However, Charles said, “But I find that stuff a drag. Why do I have to?” His advisor said something about “well- rounded” and “conversant with Human thought,” but Charles felt well-rounded already and did not believe him. The upshot was that Charles signed up for X and Y because it was a Rule of Anycollege. (He put off Z until next year.) Ill Adults don’t (normally) tell other adults to do things “because I say so.” There isn’t even much usefulness in telling children what to do. But a parent at least has the advantage of having definite ends in mind, and that can free him to find alternate means of reaching such goals. (Ballet lessons aren’t the only way to make someone graceful.) Colleges aren’t so lucky. Within themselves they are confused about their goals and objectives, and they find their stated purposes increasingly rejected by their clientele. This is one reason why Anycollege’s requirements are eroding. It’s hard to require things as means to an end when the ends are no longer clear. —Ed Siegfried 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 1 197 The frequency at which modern man must make choices involving lives beyond his own has been increasing at an ever more rapid rate. Our success and understanding of this difficult task is attested to by the very complexity of our world. Immense governmental, military and technological structure is commonplace, and visiting the moon within our realm of experience. The off-spring of the class of 1 971 will, however, be faced with a new sort of decision: the time is close at hand when men will have the option and the responsibility of selecting an optimum human population size for the earth. It is time now to begin thinking and planning for that decision. At the moment, some people feel (and one need not be an ecologist to have an opinion in the matter) that the carrying capacity of the United States has been exceeded. One, in particular. Dr. Paul Ehrlich, a noted authority on the population explosion, suggests that Americans are almost one and one-half times as abundant as they should be to live a high quality life. He points to our strained city governments and law enforcement agencies, our dwindling resources and crowded recreation sites as evidence. What measures can we use to determine the best size for our population and that of the world? This question is made difficult by three factors. First, it requires that we list and order what is most important in life. Even Americans who are famous for their ability to reach agreement in electing officials, will argue heatedly in a choice between the use of an area for recreation with access for cars and boats and people, or its preservation as wilderness useful for only the select few who could afford the time and energy to “hike in.” The second obstacle in answering this question is that of placing quantitative value on the aesthetic, cultural and historical richness of our natural resources. How much value does a winter trail in the White Mountains lose for skiers, when eager but noisy snowmobiles are permitted its use? The third snag, and one we as a people are just becoming aware of, is the value our descendents will place on nature. Can we expect each generation to see our action in damming Glen Canyon to make Lake Mead as the proper action, or are we the ones who are damned for our action, for taking the easy way out in the light of water shortages and future “electric power needs.” Certainly one of the prime requirements in overcoming the difficulties presented is our education, stressing breadth as well as depth in understanding. To that degree, Regis is doing its share in deciding the future of man in the population sense. —Hugh Nelson W! 198 199 200 r H ' ‘Ml w ' ■ Tn « ■ t- 201 203 Freshman Class PHYLLIS ANN ADDIVINOLA 1 7 Bainbridge St. Malden, Mass. MARIBEL ALONSO 1906 Orquidea St. Rio Predras, P R. MARY AMBRUSKO 768 Lebrun Rd. Buffalo, N Y. ELIZABETH A. AOUADRO 24 Forbes Ave. Northampton, Mass. KARIN ARCHIBALD 19 Massasoit Rd. Wellesley, Mass. SUSAN M. ARMATA 122 Lake St. So. Windsor, Conn. LYNDE B. AUSTIN 441 Whipple Rd. Tewksbury, Mass. BARBARA L. BARAN 677 Orchard St. Raynham, Mass. CYNTHIA C. BARATTA 45 Brentwood Dr. Holden, Mass. SUSAN M. BARTLEY 51 Langdon Ave. Watertown, Mass. JOANN BAYER 61 Fairhaven Rd. Rochester, N Y. MARY M. BEGLEY 64 Haines Dr. Bloomfield, N.J. SHARON L. BOLARDI 3 Hobart Rd. Wellesley, Mass. SYLVIA Y. BOISVERT 22 Phelps St. Salem, Mass. JUDITH L. BOLGER 45 Roanoke Rd. Springfield, Mass. DONNA M. BOUTILIER 20 Orange St. Abington, Mass. PATRICIA A. BOWE 38 Chilson St. Springfield, Mass. NANCY E. BOYD 18 Cedar Ave. Ext. Islip, N Y DINAE BRIELMANN 121 Janet Dr. E. Hartford, Conn, MARY E. BRODERICK Kelly Rd. Middlebury, Conn. STEPHANIE L. BROWN 2300 Good Hope Rd. Washington, D C. NANCY V. BURKE 254 Stratton Bk Rd. Simsbury, Conn. JUDITH L. BUTT 27 Brookford St. Cambridge, Mass. MARY E. BYRAM 1 74 Edgewood Ave. Thomaston, Conn. CAROL L. CAHILL 6750 Chesapeake Pt. Atlanta, Ga. MARIE A. CALABRETTA 749 Maple St. Wethersfield, Conn. JEAN E. CAMPBELL 31 Keats Rd. Short Hills, N.J. SUSAN J. CAMPBELL 25 Pleasant St. West Hartford, Conn. CANDACE M. CANNING Lucas Ave. Ext. Rd7 Kingston, N Y. SUSAN J. CARLSON 19 Dana Pk. Hopedale, Mass. ELLEN T. CARR 21 Chestnut Hill Rd. Chelmsford, Mass. LOUISE F. CARREIRO 36 Plainfield Ave. Malden, Mass. MARY E. CARROLL 253 Walker St. Lenox, Mass. MARIE C. CATINO 20 Feeley St. Avon, Mass. MARY E. CHAMBERLAND 64 Sherman St. Hartford, Conn. JENNIFER ANNE CHANG 5735 29th Ave. Hyattsville, Md. CHRISTINE W. CLANCY 141 Newton Rd. Springfield, Mass. PATRICIA A. CLARK 1664 Centre St, Newton, Mass. LAVINIA D. COBUCCIO 346 Savin Hill Ave. Do rchester, Mass. JANE P. CONNERTON 52 Hammond St. Newport, R.l. KATHERINE M. CONWAY 36 Lumae St. Springfield, Mass. SARAH E. CORCORAN 41 Johnson Ave. Medford, Mass. COLLEEN M. COSTA 49 Forest Rd. Millis, Mass. ANN H. COSTELLO 22 Varick Rd. W. Roxbury, Mass. MARGARET J. CRABTREE Burning Tree Rd. Greenwich, Conn. ANNE M. CRAWLEY 181 Montclair Ave. Montclair, N.J. DEBORAH A. CRIST 6 Brookside Ave. Danvers, Mass. JOANNE CROWLEY 18 Birchwood Rd. Hudson, Mass. ELIZABETH A. CURTIN 109 Cottage St. Norwood, Mass. PATRICIA M. CUSICK 50 Cushing St. Cambridge, Mass. JODY E. CZEPIGA Prospect Ct. Woodbridge, Conn. DIANE M. DEFRANZO 15 Sycamore Rd. Melrose, Mass. SUZANNE DEMPSEY 173 King Philip Rd. Worcester, Mass. IRENE S. DENT 5309 Acorn Dr. Camp Springs, Md. ANITA M. DESCHENES 75 Bellamy Rd. Dover, N.H. ELIZABETH DIBARTOLOMEIS 91 Sherburn Cir. Weston, Mass. MARY E. DONAHUE 21 Willow St. Dedham, Mass, KATHLEEN M. DONOVAN 358 Maes St. Lawrence, Mass. LIANNE M. DONOVAN 1 1 Marion Ave. Norwood, Mass. MARY C. DORAN 33 Locust Ave. Lexington, Mass. ELIZABETH A. DORN 7 Parkside Cir. Braintree, Mass. CELESTE J. DOWNS 30 Thompson St. Dedham, Mass. JOAN M. DRAY 519 Bay Rd. So. Easton, Mass. ELISABETH E. DRISCOLL 61 Belcher Cir. Milton, Mass. MARIE T. DRISCOLL 2 Wanders Dr. Hingham, Mass. KAREN L. DUDGEON 26 Quincy St. Watertown, Mass. CONSTANCE DUGGAN 256 Clyde St. Brookline, Mass. LINDA A. DUNN 105 Country Club Dr. Warwick, R.l. BARBARA A. FALESE 125 Burkeside Ave. Brockton, Mass. JANET M. GRANT 7 College Ave. Arlington, Mass. KAREN M. JULIANO 16 Ladd St. Watertown, Mass. MARIA M. LONDONO AV2AOESTE 7 125 Cali Valle, Colombia DORIS E. FARNAM 8 Myrtle St. Winchester, Mass. PAMELA J. GRIFFIN Rt. 100 Somers. N Y JUDITH E. KAIKA 14 Pepperidge Dr. Quaker Hill, Conn. PAMELA A. LOTZ 104 Duncan Rd. Staten island, N.Y. MARY R. FECTEAU 35 Cedar St. Hopkinton, Mass. LYNNETTE A. GRISE 514 Mill St. Southington, Conn. JOAN M. KELLEY 14 St. George Ave. Norwood, Mass. CHRISTINE M. LUCEY 22 Berwick St. Worcester, Mass. KATHERINE A. FERRARI 59 Woodmont Rd. Upper Montclair, N.J. CRISTETA T. GUZMAN P.O Box 235 Manilla, Philippines SUSAN A. KELLY 80 Dalton Rd. Concord, Mass. MARTHA A. LYONS 219 High St. Thomaston, Conn. SUSAN L. FEZZA 18 Windsor Rd. East No. Haven, Conn. CATHERINE F. HAGAN 95 Kingsbury Rd. Garden City, N Y. LINDA A. KNAPP 1 Martin Rd. Amesbury, Mass. MARY-LEE E. MAHONEY 1 2 King St. Norfolk, Mass. JUNE 1. FISHER 25 Amble Rd. Chelmsford, Mass. JAN E. HANNON 1 1 Clinton St. Cambridge, Mass. ELIZABETH K. KOEHLER 25 Sunnyside Rd. Scotia, N.Y. THERESA C. MALONEY 1 1 Hobbs Rd. Waltham, Mass. KATHLEEN E. FITZGERALD 6344 Cavalier Cor. Falls Church, Va. KATHLEEN M. HARRIGAN 87 Stoughton Rd. Dedham, Mass. JULIA M. KOEHLER 25 Sunnyside Rd. Scotia, N.Y. DEBORAH L. MANN 29 Mechanic St. Haverhill, Mass. JOLINE J. FONTAINE 43 Foster Ave. Auburn, Maine ANN E. HARVEY 74 Henderson St. Needham, Mass. SANDRA A. KRULICKI 94 Barbara Rd. Bristol, Conn. JOANNE E MARTIGNETTE 5 Pocahontas Dr. Winchester, Mass. ELIZABETH A. FRASER 183 Butman Rd. Lowell, Mass. MARY A. HAYES 3 Birch Hill Rd. Danvers, Mass. CAROL E. KRZEWICKI 1 4 Murphy Ave. Lynn, Mass. KATHLEEN M. MASON 15 Loring Rd. Lexington, Mass. ELIZABETH A FRAWLEY 820 W. Wafer St. Elmira, N Y. EILEEN M. HEALY W. 1 32 Midwood Rd. Paramus, N.J. BETTYANN S. KUPCHUNOS 2019 Ellington Rd. So. Windsor. Conn. CHERYL A. MEADE 95 Swann Ave. So. Weymouth, Mass. GERALDINE M. FURREY 550 Park Ave. Paterson, N.J. MARY J. HEINS 1 Scott Lane Bristol. R.l. ELIZABETH A. KURKJIAN 3 Langdon Ave. Watertown, Mass. LIANELLA MEDRANO 24 Chestnut Hill Greenfield, Mass. PAMELA A. GARLAND 1492 Union St. Manchester, N.H. MARIE E. HENNESSY 323 Unity Rd. T rumbull. Conn. ELIZABETH A LATINO 23 Stoneland Rd. Worcester, Mass. JO-ANN R. MESSINA 41 5 Cedar St. Dedham, Mass. JANICE H. GAUDINO 99 Spencer St. Manchester, Conn. DEBORAH J HOWE 48 Baker St. Keene, N.H. MARY R. LEBEL 272 Main St. Osterville, Mass. HELENE M. MOREAU 160 Third St. Auburn, Maine PATRICIA M. GODDARD 55 Whitman Ave. W. Hartford, Conn. NANCY E. HOY 53 W. Brother Dr. Greenwich, Conn. PATRICIA A. LECH 42 Pine St. Thorndike, Mass. MARIANNE J. MORELLI 107 Chandler St. Marlboro, Mass. JANICE M. GOMES 47 Carpenter St. Pawtucket. R.l. NANCY B. HUBLEY 131 Southville Rd. Southboro, Mass. PATRICIA E. LEEBER 1274 Great Plain Ave. Needham. Mass. ANITA L. MUCCI 1 9 Wellington Rd. Winchester, Mass. MARYELLEN C. GONDEK 15 Oak St. Three Rivers, Mass. DEBORAH A. JABAR 82 North St. Waterville, Maine ANNE D. LEMARBRE Hopedale St. Mendon, Mass. KATHLEEN A. MULLINS 10 Lucy St. So. Dartmouth, Mass. MARY E. GRAHAM 71 Elk Ave. New Rochelle, N Y RITA S. JONES 374 Pearl St. New York, N Y. MARY E. LINNEHAN 40 Hazel Ave. Scituate, Mass. DONNA R. MUNAFO 1 53 Elmdale Ave. Providence, R.l. MARYANN MUNCE 193 Nowell Rd. Bangor, Maine MARY C. O ' REILLY 51 OIney Rd. Bourne, Mass. ROBIN A. ROCKS 5208 Oakland Rd. Chevy Chase, Md. JOAN M. SIRACUSA 23 Francis St. Everett, Mass. GRACE M. MURPHY 56 Walnut St. Gians Falls, N Y. DEBRA L. PANGONIS 1 51 Madison St. Hartford, Conn. MARY A. ROUILLARD 14 Dell PI. Springfield, Mass. PATRICIA J. SNIADACH 65 Lake St. Webster, Mass. THERESE A. MURPHY 69 High St. Everett, Mass. STEPHANIE T. PANTAZONIS 2839 Valentine Ave. New York, N Y. MARY L. RYAN 55 Chester Lane Waltham, Mass. GAIL A. SOUZA 101 State Rd. Westport, Mass. JEAN T. MURRAY 68 Timothy Lane E. Norwich, N Y. ROBIN J. PARKER 90 Park St. Hudson, Mass. SUSAN E. RYAN Pine Valley Rd. Oyster Bay, N.Y. ALICEMARIE SPELLMAN 21 1 Ridge St. Winchester, Mass. JOAN F. MURRAY 50 Osborn St. Providence, R.l. ALICE M. PARMALEE 237 N. Triphammer Rd. Ithica, N Y. JEAN M. SALAMONE 131 Plymouth Rd. Needham, Mass. MARISA SPIRIDIGLIOZZI 6 Fifth Ave. Watertown. Mass. KATHLEEN M. MURRAY 18 Plymouth River Hingham, Mass. FAITH K. PELTEKIS 4 Belleview Ave. Marlboro, Mass. DIANE E. SALVATORE 82 Robin Rd. Windsor, Conn. SANDRA E. STEPICH 4423 17th St. N.W. Washington, D.C. JOAN M. McCANN 8 White Ave. Chestnut Hill, Mass. PATRICIA E. PENNIE 349 Highland Ave. Randolph, Mass. SUSAN L. SANDUSKI 34 Latham Ridge Rd. Latham, N.Y. BEVERLY M. STEVENS 265 State St. Presque Isle, Maine PATRICIA E. McCOURT 1 1 Mark Lane Hingham, Mass. FRANCES A. PERRONE 6 Cardinal Rd. Stoneham, Mass. MARITZA D. SANTIAGO 7020 Gail Drive Norfolk, Va. SUSAN STORY 5 Mottelputstraat Afsnee, Belgium JOYCE M. McCUE 38 Front St. Weymouth, Mass. NANCY J. PIECEWICZ 50 Butler Ave. Maynard, Mass. SUSAN E. SANTORO 224 Benedict Ave. Thornwood, N.Y. KATHLEEN L. SULLIVAN 14 Middlesex Rd. Stoneham, Mass. JANICE E. MCDONALD 16 Spellman Rd. Westwood, Mass. KATHERINE J. PILEWICZ Hillcrest Rd. Jaffrey, N.H. MARIA L. SANTOS 21 Converse Lane Melrose, Mass. JEANNE E. SUNNY 62 High St. Derby, Conn. JOAN E. McDonough 14 Ronaldo Ct. Rutland, Vt. MARY E. PIOTTE 9 Colby Rd. Arlington, Mass. NANCY A. SCALIA 192 Gridley St. Bristol, Conn. ELAINE P. SVELNIS 30 Boylston St. Jamaica Plain, Mass. JUDITH H. McHENRY 44 Oak St. S. Weymouth, Mass. KAREN PLAKAS 4 New Field St. W. Roxbury, Mass. PATRICIA M. SCANLON 442 Crest Drive Northvale, N.J. KATHLEEN A. SYKES 5 Homestead Rd. Sudbury, Mass. CHERYL L. McMAHON 12 Christine Rd. Arlington, Mass. MARGARET M. RANDALL 2 Sylvan Knoll Rd. Stamford, Conn. JEANNE M. SCHWALBACH 558 Blankenbarer Lane Louisville, Ky. LOIS M. TARTAGLIA 90 Bateswood Rd. Waterbury, Conn. JOANNE McNALLY 656 Waters Edge Valley Cottage, N Y. ELIZABETH R. REARICK 51 So. Forest Ave. Rockville Ctr., N.Y. BRENDA A. SCOTT 2 William J. Hghts. Framingham, Mass. CAROL A. TINGLE 476 S. Main St. Thomaston, Conn. SUSAN A. NEY 261 Forest Ridge Rd. Waterbury, Conn. DEBRA M. REED 41 Cushing Rd. Westwood, Mass. CAROL A. SHEA 180 Longhill St. Springfield, Mass. DENISE M. TRAVERS 35 Carter St. Hudson, Mass. KATHLEEN A. O ' LOONEY 107 Rockland Rd. Fairfield, Conn. JOAN F. REYNOLDS 76 Grosvenor Rd. Needham, Mass. ELISE M. SIMARD 56 Meadowbrook Rd. Chestnut Hill, Mass. KAREN J. VANIER 2 Crestwood Rd. Barrington, R.l. MARY J. O ' NEIL 32 Beaumont St. Rumford, R.l. BARBARA J. RICE Winter St. Lincoln, Mass. DIANE A. SIMEONE 93 Lawson Rd. Winchester, Mass. MARY-LOUISE VOLANTH 155 Clark St. Milford, Conn. MARIA VOREADI Box 567 Regis College Weston, Mass. BARBARA A. WARDWELL 59 Melton Dr. El Hartford, Conn. SHARON J. WINANS 26 Ave. B. Northport, N Y. MARCIA L. ZEGEL 105 Case Ave. Patchogue, N Y. MARGARET E. VOSS 44 Powder House Rd. Medford, Mass. SUSAN A. WEINBURG Box 6 APO San Francisco, Calif. DIANE ZAKARIAN 3 Berkshire Dr. Paxton, Mass. LESLIE L. ZULLO 16 Shaw Dr. Wayland, Mass. MARYANN WALSH 261 Thornton St. Hamden, Conn. Sophomore Class JANET MARY ATWOOD 21 Dickens St. Wollaston, Mass. SARAH E. BUCK 40 Sherri Ann Ave. Nashua, N.H. GRACE H. CU RK 9 Manila St. Worcester, Mass JOANNE C. CUNNIFF 26 Fells Road Wellesley, Mass. SUSAN L BANAS 20 White St. Chicopee, Mass. BARBARA A. BURKE 89 Glendale Road Needham, Mass. MARY 1. CLAYTON 7 Lee Ave. E. Williston, N Y. MARY C. CUNNINGHAM 120 Newell Ave Needham, Mass. KATHLEEN M. BARRETT 256 Broadway St. Norwich, Conn. SUSAN M. BURKE 27 Normandy Lane Greenwich, Conn. ELLEN CLEARY 34 Powder House Ter. Medford. Mass. LYNDA A. DABKOWSKI 163 Ridge Crest Cir. Wethersfield, Conn. LYNNE M. BAUER 258 Linden St. Waltham, Mass. MARIA L. CABASSA 5505 S W 85th St. Miami, Fla. JEANNE M. COLACHICO 35 Bay State Rd. Wakefield, Mass. ANN L DALESSANDRO 544 So. Main St. Bradford, Mass. JACQUELINE L. BEDNAZ 7 Ahern Ave. Windsor Locks, Conn. DENISE L. CAHALIN 80 Townsend Rd No. Scituate, Mass. SUSAN E. COLE 95 Lincoln St Dedham. Mass. PATRICIA A. DAMORE 34 Cleveland Ave. Everett. Mass. ANNE C. BELLETETE RED 1 Box 28 Jeffrey, N.H. RITA M. CANNON 61 1 Greendale Ave. Needham, Mass. ARLAN T. CONDON 5 Knoll Rd. So. Hingham, Mass. ELAINE A. DELUCA Vernon Lane Thompson, Conn. DEBORAH A BORAN 87 Captains Ct. Bricktown, N.J. MARY E. CARLOW River Road Clarksburg, Mass. ELAINE M. CONTAS 34 Robbins Rd. Keene. N.H. PAULETTE L DEMERS 198 Wendell St. Providence, R.l. NANCY M. BOYLE 58 Medford St. Arlington, Mass. ANNE M. CARR 21 Chestnut Hill Road Chelmsford. Mass. ROBERTA S. CORMIER 1177 Main St. Leominster, Mass. CHARLOTTE A. DEMPSEY 10 Dahlia St. Warwick, R.l JOANNE M. BRASOO 166 North Ave. Weston, Mass. JANICE M. CAWLEY 967 Palmway Road No. Palm Beach, Fla. GRACE J. CORRADINO 4 Harbor PI. Massapequa, N Y. ROSEMARY C. DEPIERRO 187 Wilson Dr. Hazleton, Pa. DEBORAH L BREEN 12 Lloyd St. Hopedale, Mass. JANET M. CELMER 14 Greenway Road New London, Conn. PATRICIA E. COWLES 708 No. Farms Rd. Wallingford, Conn. PEGGY A. DESCHENES 39 West Shore Dr. Marblehead, Mass. TERESA E. BRIGGS 65 Winthrop Drive Riverside, Conn. BARBARA J. CHASE 51 Longview St. New London, Conn. MAUREEN A. CROAK 820 Arrow Lane Ridgewood, N.J. LOUISE A. DIGENNARO 235 Ashmont St. Dorchester, Mass. SUSAN A. BRODBINE 10 Carol Ann Rd. Lynnfield, Mass. LORRIE A. CIROME 23 S. Prospect St. Haverhill, Mass. MARY T. CROSS 10 Fells Ave. Milford, Mass. MARGARET J. DILLON 21 Dartmouth St. Holyoke, Mass. PATRICIA A. BROWN 76 Holly Lane Centerville, Mass. FRANCES J. CLANCY 1028 Edgewood Dr. Royal Oak, Mich. LAURAS M. CULHANE 9 Merrill Road Watertown, Mass. WINIFRED M. DILLON 1 1 Massasoit PI. Springfield, Mass. NANCY L DOHERTY 430 High Rock St. Needham, Mass. RENE V. FETRIDGE 94 Locust Lane Needham, Mass. NANCY C. HUBERT 244 Peaceable St. Ridgefield, Conn. MARY LAWLOR 31 Farnham Ave. Waterbury, Conn. SUSAN M. DOHERTY 88 Chesbrough Rd. W. Roxburv, Mass. MARY L. FIDLER 1 2 Lodge St. Milton, Mass. PATRICIA A. HUFNAGLE 20 Hamlock Dr. Canton, Mass. CLAIRE M. LECUYER 3 Summer St. Fitchburg, Mass. PAULA M. DOLLIVER 1 6 Union Ave. Terr. Framingham, Mass. CHRISTINA L. FILIP 5 Burling Ave. White Plains, N.Y. MARIE P. HURLEY 31 1 Cross St. Belmont, Mass. KAREN A. LEE 18 Chesterfield Rd. Milton, Mass. CAROL A. DONEGAN 151 Brewster Ave. Braintree, Mass. ELIZABETH A. FILON 25 Pleasant St. W. Hartford, Conn. KAREN E. HYDE 531 Rothbury Rd. Wilmington, Delaware ANNE M. LEO 20 Albion St. Somerville, Mass. MARY-JANE DONELAN 339 Summer St. Manchester, Mass. PAULA A. FIORILLO 76 School St. Shrewsbury, Mass. MARY J. JENNINGS 360 Silver St. So. Boston, Mass. KAREN A. LEONARD 41 Park St. W. Roxbury, Mass. MOIRA E. DONELAN 180 Forest Ave. New Rochelle, N.Y. ALICE K. GADO 34 West St. Manchester, Conn. ELIZABETH R. JOHNSON 9113 Saranac Ct. Fairfax, Va. VIRGINIA A. LOPEZ 91 Alder Drive Ramsey, N.J. JANET M. DON OVAN 1 1 Marion Ave. Norwood, Mass. CAROL A. GAMBLE 30 Rollingwood Dr. Trumbull, Conn. MARIANNE JOYCE 19 Keene St. Stoneham, Mass. MARY L. LYNCH 14 Granada Ave. Roslindale, Mass. JOAN M. DUANE Green Dunes Dr. W. Hyannisport, Mass. ELISE GARDELLA 16 Benedict Ave. White Plains, N.Y. ELIZABETH A. KEARNEY 9 Roberts St. Biddeford, Maine MARYANNE C. LYONS 69 Van Kleeck Rd. Minis, Mass. MARY E. DUFRESNE 35 Buick St. Springfield, Mass. JANICE GEOGHEGAN 120 So. Pleasant St. Hingham, Mass. MARGARET M. KENAH 17 Tuscan Rd. Maplewood, N.J. MAUREEN T. LYONS 67 Piper Rd. W. Springfield, Mass. MARTHA E. SWYER 19 Maple Ridge Rd. Reading, Mass. CYNTHIA C. GERARDE 86 Fairlane Dr. Wethersfield, Conn. MARTHA J. KENNEDY 25 Watson, Rd. Belmont, Mass. ELIZABETH E. MacDONALD 54 Village St. Medway, Mass. PATRICIA A. DWYER 111 Dudley St. Cambridge, Mass. MARGARET M. GHADAR Pahlavi Ave. Tehran, Iran SHELAGH M. KILEY 12 Phillips Bch Ave. Swampscott, Mass. ANNE MALONE 208 Chapman St. Canton, Mass. PHYLLIS R. EDWARDS 150 North 25th St. Wyandanch, N.Y. MICHELE S. GORRA 24 Elsie Dr. Manchester, Conn. PATRICIA E. KNIPE 46 Bellevue Ave. Marlboro, Mass. PATRICIA A. MANLEY 12 Appleton PI. Arlington, Mass. JANET 1. EGAN 32 Llewellyn Rd. W. Newton, Mass. MARY C. HANSEN 51 Atwater Rd. Springfield, Mass. MAUREEN S. KOPPEL 159 Mill Rock Rd. Hamden, Conn. SUZANNE G. MASCARO 43 Decorie Dr. Wilbraham, Mass. ELIZABETH A. ELSAESSER 51 Fox Den Rd. Glastonbury, Conn. CHRISTINE E. HARRIS RFD 1 Box A3 Riverhead, N.Y. JANE M. LABARBERA 1000 Ridge Ct. New Milford, N.J. THEODORA S. MATTOS 114 Old Harbor St. So. Boston, Mass. JUDITH M. EREMIN 110 Summit St. Norwood, N.J. DEBORAH C. HAXTON Horse Hill Rd. Westbrook, Conn. JANICE L. LABRIE 355 Ludlow Rd. Chicopee, Mass. ANN M. MEADE 27 Doncaster Cir Lynnfield, Mass. BARBARA A. EVERITT 155 Bull Run Rd. Trenton, N.J. PAULA M. HOLBROOK 88 Thorndike St. Palmer, Mass. CHRISTINE M. LANGLEY 29 Lantern Lane Milton, Mass. JOYCE A. MENDS-COLE Via Montemignaio 4 Rome, Italy CHERYL A. FERGUSON 27 Franklin Rd. Winchester, Mass. DENISE L. HOWLAND 23 Beaver Ave. Lynnfield, Mass. ELIZABETH A. LAVOIE 59 South St. Southbridge, Mass. WEVONNEDA MINIS 788 Wolf St. Savannah, Ga. CLAUDIA M. MONCADA Ave Los Mangos Qta Caracas, Venezuela SA PATRICE NASH 2715 Delta Ave. Panama City, Fla. LOUISE M. PAULIN 145 Central St. Westbrook, Me. MADELEINE F. SERPA 24 Arrowhead Lane Arlington, Mass. GIANNA P. MONCADA Ave Los Mangos Qta Caracas, Venezuela SA JOANNE G. NAWROCKI 1062 Varnum Ave. Lowell, Mass. MARY A. POISSON 32 Old Tavern Rd. Wayland, Mass. NANCY L. SILVIA 845 Aquidneck Ave. Middletown, R.l. SUSAN E. MONTANARO 1 1 1 Farmingdale Rd. Wethersfield, Conn. CAROL NOEL 1125 No. Sixth St. Nashville, Tenn. JANE E. PORRAZZO 69 Warner St. Hudson, Mass. KATHLEEN E. SIMMONS 183 Dunns Pk Rd. Hyannis, Mass. JOAN D. MORRISON 76 Dorchester St. Lawrence, Mass. JUDITH A. NOWAK 4 Hilton Rd. Dover, N.H. PATRICIA E. QUINN 254 Sandra Dr. E. Hartford, Conn. MAURA SLATTERY 251 Mandalay Rd. Chicopee, Mass. ELISE A. MOYSE 73 Concord Ave. Glen Rock, N.J. JANET A. O ' BRIEN 1 724 Adams Ave. Scranton, PA DIANA L. RANDO 47 Hermaine Ave. Dedham, Mass. JEAN L. SMITH 89 Fisher St. Westboro, Mass. BARBARA A. MULLEN 9 Cantwell Rd. Milton, Mass. DEBORAH J. O ' BRIEN 232 North St. Manchester, N.H. KATHLEEN A. REGAN 2 Ashwood Rd. Acton, Mass. NANCY F. SMITH 5 Bass River Rd. So. Yarmouth, Mass. DENISE A. MURPHY 1 74 Fays Ave. Lynn, Mass. PAULA O ' BRIEN 4 Beacon St. Natick, Mass. LINDA M. REGELE 58 Sherbrook Dr. Berkeley Hgts., N.J. PAULA M. SMITH 104 Mercer St. So. Boston, Mass. JANE S. MURPHY RFD 2 Windrock Oakdale, Conn. MARY E. O ' CONNELL 243 King St. Falmouth, Mass. NANCY L. REID 75 Parkside Ave. Daly City, Calif. GLORIA A. SORDILLO 32 Newcomb St. Quincy, Mass. JOYA E. MUSTO 15 Country Crns Rd. Wayland, Mass. ANN E. O ' DOWD RD 2 Sussex, N.J. DEBORAH C. RICE 388 Pawtucket Ave. Rumford, R.l. SUSAN A. SPARTICHINO 98 Grove St. Melrose, Mass. JEAN M. MYLETT 228 Essex St. Weymouth, Mass. MARY E. O ' GRADY 63 Depot St. Milford, Mass. MARILYN E. ROONEY 1 1 1 Highland Ave. Winchester, Mass. ANNEMARIE T. STANTON 114 Shornecliffe Rd. Newton, Mass. BARBARA A. McAULIFFE 20 Falcon Terr. Middletown, Conn. KATHLEEN OKREN 81 Whittier Ave. Providence, R.l. KATHLEEN M. RUSH 10 Walker Rd. Westwood, Mass. SARAH E. STEFFENHAGEN 1 1 Nantuchet Rd. Wellesley, Mass. CARYL J. McCUNE 123 Van Houton Ave. Chatham, N.J. WINIFRED A. O ' NEILL 51 Elmwood Ave. Holyoke, Mass. JOYCE E. RUSSELL 37 Woodside Dr. Grafton, Mass. CAROLYN R. ST. ANDRE 22 Fieldstone Dr. Whippany, N.J. COLEEN A. McGinnis 371 Toll Gate Rd. Groton, Conn. CATHERINE P. OZIMEK 29 Cherryfield Dr. W. Hartford, Conn. CONSTANCE M. RYAN 66 Midchester Ave. White Plains, N Y. DENISE L. ST. SAUVEUR 106 E. Vermont Ave. Escondido, Calif. MARY R. McGOHEY 2414 Greenwood Ave. Wilmette, III. BESSIE PAN Sandy Pond Rd. Lincoln, Mass. FRANCES M. SALERNO 127 Highland Ave. Winchester, Mass. CLARE F. SULLIVAN 16 Carroll Ave. Newport, R.l. JOAN E. McGovern 56 Richards St. Dedham, Mass. ROXANNE PAPPAS 3 3 Hamilton St. Brockton, Mass. PAMELA R. SAMPSON 62 Wellington Ave. Marshfield, Mass. KATHLEEN D. SULLIVAN 82 Butman Rd. Lowell, Mass. CATHERINE M. McGRATH 778 Clinton Ave. Westwood, N.J NORMA J. PARKER 5 Barretts Mill Rd. Concord, Mass. JANE L. SAVITEER 98 Clifton Ave. W. Hartford, Conn. MARGARET SULLIVAN 8 Algonquin Trail Saddle River, N.J. JOANNE McPherson 587 Greeport St. Dorchester, Mass. SUSAN 1. PARRELLA 134 Bright St. Waltham, Mass. RITA A. SEELIG 48 Greenlea Lane Weston, Conn. LAUREN M. SWEATT 1178 Blazo Terr. Mountainside, N.J. SUSAN M. WIRONEN VICKI S. TASHIRO VIVIAN M. VACCA REGINA C. WHITE 28 Abbott St. 245 St. James St, 166 Lockland Ave. 26 Old Tavern Rd. Gardner, Mass. Marion, Ohio Framingham, Mass. Wayland, Mass. KYOKO YOSHIZAWA PATRICIA F. TERZANO CAROLYN J. WATERS MELIZZA A. WHITMAN 812 Terakade Iruman Av Dos De Mayo 1 73 1341 Pelhamdale Ave. 87 Heroux Blvd. Saitama, Japan S. Isidro, Lima, Peru Pelham Manor, N Y. Cumberland, R.l. MARY E. ZATOR ANNE C. THORNTON SUSAN M. WEITZ JOAN M. WILLIAMS 73 Devon Rd. 1 7 Cleveland St. 219 York St. 1 1 Allerdyce Dr. Delmar, N Y. Norfolk. Mass. Canton, Mass. Kingston, Jamaica Wl BEVERLY F. ZOLLI JOANNE P. TOMASO CHERYL A. WELCH PATRICIA A. WILLIAMS 7 Bryden Rd. 126 Hesse Rd. 19 Churchill Ave. 1 78 Pleasantville Southboro, Mass. Hamden, Conn. MAUREEN A. TRAINOR 21 Eighth Ave. Haverhill, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Pleasantville, N Y. Junior Class GAIL 1. AHLQUIST 75 Birchwood Dr. Holden, Ma. PAMPIT BUNBONGKARN Royal Thai Embassy Washington, D.C. MARY A. CLANCY 141 Newton Rd. Springfield, Ma. CYNTHIA A. CZAPIGA 1769 Country Club Rd. Middletown, Conn. DENISE M. ANGLAND 1 86 Manchester St. Mattapan, Ma. ANN P. BUTLER 54-17 31 Ave. Woodside, N Y. SISTER MARGARET M. COMFREY 30 Taylor St. Waltham, Ma. SISTER FAIRLIE A. DALTON 125 Oakland St. Wellesley, Ma. DONNA P. ARLOTTA 92 Betsy Brown Rd. Port Chester, N Y. SHARON L. CAIN Box 144 St. Thomas, Virgin Is. MARY C. CONNELLY 43 Wellington Rd. Garden City, N.Y. JEANNE F, DeCONTO 7 Stevens St. Winchester, Ma. VIRGINIA R. BALDWIN 15 Wykeham Rd. West New ton. Ma. LINDA M. CALLAGHAN 62 Forest Dr. Wethersfield, Conn. MARY A. CONNOLLY 28 Puritan Rd. Arlington, Ma. DONNA M. DELISA 66 Highview Ave. Wethersfield, Conn. SISTER SUSAN M. BAMBINI 72 Crescent Ave. Newton Centre, Ma. JANICE M. CARRAGHER 1 1 Longview Dr. Chelmsford, Ma. PAULA M. CONNOLLY 1 79 LaGrange St. West Roxbury, Ma. CHRISTINA M. DELTORTO 49 Samson Rd. Medford, Ma. BARBARA E. BARRY 140Selden Hill Dr. West Hartford, Conn. ANDREA P. CATINO 141 Kemper St. Wollaston, Ma. MARGUERITE C. COOK 1710 Maxwell Rd. Belmar, N.J. ANN M. DEMAMBRO 19 Tanglewood Rd. Wellesley, Ma. MARY M. BASLER 51 George St. New Waterford, Nova Scotia DONNA M. CAVANAUGH 34 Lochnavar Pkwy. Pittsford, N Y. CHRISTINE J. COOKE 37 Marine Rd. South Boston, Ma. DIANA DENTE 155 Marine St. Thomaston, Conn. MICHELE G. BELANGER 40 Harris St. Malden, Ma. JOANNE M. CESARE 37 Ives St. Waterbury, Conn. MARY F. COSENTINO 56 Woodcrest Dr. Wakefield, Ma. DIANE M. DESRARAIS 136 Exeter St. Hartford, Conn. ANNE-MARIE R. BELL 50 Helena St. Leominster, Ma. LORRAINE G. CHAPMAN 215 Herrick Rd. Newton Centre, Ma. ANNE M. COSTELLO 27 Stevens Rd. Needham, Ma. PAMELA A. DIGENNARO 235 Ashmont St. Dorchester, Ma. WINIFRED M. BRIMINGHAM 425 Walden St. Cambridge, Ma. DIANE K. CHARETTE South View Ave. Middlebury, Conn. VIRGINIA M. COUGHLAN 8 Mirror Lake Ave. Norfolk, Ma. PATRICIA M. DINICOLA 91 Parker St. Pittsfield, Ma. JOAN M. BRACKEN 7 Sequoia Lane Andover, Ma. ANNE E. CHISHOLM 685 Terhune Rd. Ridgewood, N.J. LYNNE M. CRISMAN 797 William St. Bridgeport, Conn. KATHLEEN A. DONAGHUE 29 Grant Hill Rd. Bloomfield, Conn. VIRGINIA A. BROOKS 234 Chatterton Pkwy. White Plains, N Y. JENNIFER M. CISLAGHI 147 Elm St. Duxbury, Ma. ELIZABETH A. CROWLEY 141 Rice Ave. Rockland, Ma. PATRICIA A. DONCARLOS 4 Bourne Ave. Seekonk, Ma. DEBORAH L. DONNELL 25 Gedick Rd. Burlington, Ma. CHERLY M. GACETTA 29 0lde Fort Rd. Cape Elizabeth, Me. MARILYN M. ICKES 1 William St. Wakefield, Ma. GAIL M. LEWIS 81 2 West 98th St. Los Angeles, Calif. SUSAN E. DOWD 27 Flintlock Rd. Lexington, Ma. MARY GALLITANO 205 Villa St. Waltham. Ma. SISTER HELEN F. JOHNSON 295 Adams St. Newton, Ma. SANDRA M. LINEHAN 6 Hampshire St. Danvers, Ma. PAULA J. DOWNES 701 Union St. Bangor, Maine JEANNE M. GANTLEY 215 Bellevue Rd. Squantum, Ma. KRISTIN L. JONES 7 Collin Ave. Fayetteville, N Y. SISTER MARJORIE F. LOCKE 295 Adams St. Newton, Ma. KAREN A. DREW 7 Shawmut Pk. Newton, Ma. ANN GARGULINSKI Wilder Rd. Sterling, Ma. PATRICIA M. JONES 77 Jackson St. Garden City, N Y CAROLINE M. LORE 22 Shaw Dr. Bedford, N.H. KATHLEEN DUGGAN 256 Clyde St. Brookline, Ma. JO-ANN GIACOMUZZI 130 Forsythia Dr. East Levittown, Pa. JANE M. KEANE 226 North Central Ave. Wollaston, Ma. LYNN M LOVELESS 51 Bertmor Dr. Stamford. Conn. CAROL R. DUMAIS 4 Saunders St. Lawrence, Ma. CHARLENE E. GILES 8 Riverbank Rd. Salem. Ma. REGINA M. KELLEHER 50 Elmwood Rd. Hancock, N.H. KATHRYN A. LUNDGREN 40 Colby Rd Braintree. Ma SISTER SANDRA L. DURANT 720 Boston Post Rd. Marlboro, Ma. SUSAN C. GOODMAN 1 70 Plumtree Rd. Springfield, Ma. MARGARET A. KELLEY 7 Sagamore St. Dorchester, Ma. SISTER ANN MARIE LYONS 72 Crescent Ave. Newton Centre, Ma. MARYANNE DURBON 7007 Donna Circle Annandale, Va. KATHLEEN L. GRAHAM 120 Melrose St. Melrose, Ma. RITA J. KENNEDY 146 Western Ave. Lynn, Ma. SUSAN M. MacDONALD 20 Iroquois Rd. Arlington, Ma. LORETTA A. DWYER 993 Broadway St. Somerville, Ma. ANN M. HAFEY 16 Bither St. Springfield, Ma. JUDITH A. KENNEY 25 Shornecliffe Rd Newton, Ma. DIANE M. MacDOWELL 365 Ray St. Portland, Maine MARGARET M. FASULO 55 St. Jude St. Portland, Maine KATHLEEN A. HEANEY 76 Morse Ave. Dedham, Ma. MARIJO KIDD 111 Pine Hill Cir. Waltham, Ma. ARLENE A. MACHNIK 245 Barker St. Three Rivers, Ma. PAULA G. FENTON 24 Franks Dr. Holyoke, Ma. JOAN M. HERBSTRITT 1224 Ashland St. River Forest, III. MARYANN KILIJANSKI 418 West Rock Ave. New Haven, Conn. ANITA M. MAIELLA 503 Washington St. Brookline, Ma. LINDA J. FERRARI 244 Ridgewood Dr. Norwood, Ma. VALERIE A. HICKEY 87Tatham Hill Rd. West Springfield, Ma. ELIZABETH A KMON 63 Portland St. Holyoke, Ma. JANIS A. MALISZEWSKI 31 7 Christian St. Lowell, Ma. ANNA FERZOCO 104 King Ave. Leominster, Ma. LINDA A. HIGGINS 5 Prospect St. Medway, Ma. CATHLEEN 1. KOWALSKI Lower Lake Rd. Danbury, Conn. DIANE M. MALLETT 45 Thornbury Rd. Scarsdale, N Y. GRETCHEN FINCH 40 Knox St. Palmer, Ma. PATRICIA M. HIPPLE 18 Farrington St. Franklin, Ma. CAROLYN A. LAMARRE 836 Church Ave. Warwick, R.l. MARY K. MARAS RFD 5 Frederick, Md. BARBARA A. FITZGERALD 6344 Cavalier Corr. Falls Church, Va. MARY T. HOLLERAN 69 Old Kings Hwy. Downingtown, Pa. SUZANNE J. LEBEL 242 Crawford St. Lowell, Ma. KATHLEEN M. MARKI 51 Frederick PI. Morristown, N.J. MARY E. FITZSIMONS 71 Ridge Rd. Milton. Ma. VERNA J. HOWE 1 1 1 Marlboro St. Quincy, Ma. SYLVIA E. LENTI 227 Hillside Rd. Southbridge, Ma. SUSAN R. MELOCCARO 38 Wayside Dr. Cranston, R.l. PATRICIA A. FITZSIMONS 20 Capital St. Newton, Ma. LESLIE F. HYLAND 57 Prospect Ave. Haworth, N.J. JEAN E. LESLIE 2312 Union Blvd. Se. Grand Rapids, Mich. DIANA C. MENDEZ 460 Italia Hato Ray, Puerto Rico SISTER LAURA C. MESSIER 720 Boston Post Rd. Marlboro, Ma. CENZINA MICOZZI 49 Seventh St. Medford, Ma. SISTER KATHLEEN J. MORAN 72 Crescent Ave. Newton Centre, Ma. SHERIDA B. MOSS 167 Concord St. Haverhill, Ma. CONSTANCE M. MOTTA 35 Monmouth Ave. Medford, Ma. ROSEMARY A. MOTTA 35 Monmouth Ave. Medford, Ma. DENISE A. MURPHY 58 Wyndwood Dr. Bristol, Conn. KATHLEEN A. MURPHY 15 School St. Bridgewater, Ma. MARY S. MURPHY 1 Beach Ave. Newport, R.l. KARIN M. McCONE 52 Chestnut St. Brookline, Ma. FRANCES M. McCRACKIN 135 Phillips St, Wollaston, Ma. SHARON A. McDEDE 1404 Chestnut Ave. Wanamassa, N.J. LOUISE A. MCDONALD 2 Milford St. Medway, Ma. CHRISTINE M. McEVOY 46 Radcliffe Rd. Belmont, Ma. SISTER GERALDINE A. McGARRY 72 Crescent Ave. Newton Centre, Ma. ANN B. McGrath 41 Evergreen Ave. Elnora, N.Y. CHRISTINE J. McHALE 48 Delaware Ave. Waterbury, Conn. THERESA M. MclNTYRE 297 Winthrop St. Winthrop, Ma. HELEN M. McKENNA 38 Preston Ave. Pittsfield, Ma. KATHERINE M. McLANE 108 Arab St. Manchester, N.H. MARIE V. McMAHON 142 Downey St. Westwood, Ma. SUSAN M. McNAMEE 124 Emerson St. Providence, R.l. DEIRDRE C. NEILEN 6 Sunfield, Cir. Waterbury, Conn. MARJORIE E. OCZKOWSKI 7 Charlotte Rd. Marblehead, Ma. KATHLEEN A. OFFICER 53 Charlton St. Oxford, Ma. MAUREEN C. O’MALLEY 78 Andrews Rd. Wollaston, Ma. BARBARA A. O ' NEIL 69 Pierce Ave. Dorchester, Ma. PATRICIA G. OSBORNE 598 Maple St. Franklin, Ma. SISTER GLORIA J. PARADIS 720 Boston Post Rd. Marlboro, Ma. MARTHA J. PARIS 310 Shore Rd. Douglaston, N.Y. GAIL E. PETROSKI 45 Dale Ave. Dracut, Ma. PATRICIA A. PETROWSKI 1 09 Maple Ave. Uncasville, Conn. CYNTHIS A. PEYS 130 Hawthorne St. Longmeadow, Ma. CHRISTINE R. PIACENTINI 99 Tredeau St. Hartford, Conn. CYNTHIA L. PIERSON 135 Malden St. La Grange, III. ALANE C. PROBST 1272 Lednam Ct. Merrick, N.Y. MARGARITE A. PROCOPIE 1432 Somerset Ave. Taunton, Ma. ELIZABETH A. QUINN 79 Riverview Terr. Springfield, Ma. ELIZABETH R. RAFFERTY 15 Waterville Rd. Farmington, Conn. MARY L. RANDALL 2 Sylvan Knoll Rd. Stamford, Conn. ELIZABETH L. RATTIGAN 45 Hyde Ave. Newton, Ma. LYNN M. REALD 1041 Main St. Hanover, Ma. MARILYN A. REARDON 7 Seneca Rd. Ossining, N.Y. CATHERINE A. REARICK 51 South Forest Ave. Rockville Ctr., N.Y. JEANNE M. REGAN 15 Frances St. Winthrop, Ma. JANICE M. ROKOWSKI 4 Crestwood Rd. Marblehead, Ma. LYNNE S. RUSIECKI 609 North Main St. Palmer, Ma. CONSTANCE P. RYAN 345 Worcester St. Wellesley, Ma. KATHLEEN F. RYAN 2 Chapel St. Newburyport, Ma. PAULINE P. SANDNER 57 Birch Ave. Haverhill, Ma. ADELE A. SANTORA 3404 Park Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. SUSAN M. SAUNDERS 4 Seaview Ave. Cranston, R.l. MARGARET M. SCHEIDELER 593 Ramapo Valley Rd. Oakland, N.Y. SUSAN E. SCHISSEL Estes St. Amesbury, Ma. MARY V. SCHORTMANN 72 Ames St. Dedham, Ma. KATHLEEN A. SHEA 93 Burncoat St. Worcester, Ma. ANNE M. SHIMKUS 6 Peace St. Hopedale, Ma. SUZANNE A. ST. ONGE 88 Mechanic St. Putnam, Conn. MARIE E. SULLIVAN 76 Cottage St. Fall River, Ma. MARJORIE E. SULLIVAN 13 Bonneta Cir. Chicopee, Ma. MARYANN SULLIVAN 262 Union St. Ashland, Ma. JANICE L. SZCZAWINSKI 556 Boston St. Lynn, Ma. LYNETTE SZCZGIEL P.O. Box 116 Uncasville, Conn. MARIA P. THIBEAULT 3 Flagg Rd. Southboro, Ma. JAMES E. THOMPSON 4 Woodland Rd. Stoneham, Ma. MARY A. THOMPSON 290 Western Ave. Gloucester, Ma. CAROLYN S. TRACY 483 West Roxbury Pkwy. West Roxbury, Ma. LINDA J. TRAILL 196 Moncriel Rd. Rockland, Ma. JANINE M. TREMBLAY 1949 Massachusetts Lexington, Ma. AUDREY J. VOLCKMANN East Doubletree Ranch Paradise Vly., Ariz. ELAINE R. WEGLARZ 245 Candle Lite Dr. Rocky Hill, Conn. DORIS M. WOJTKIEWICZ 3 Orchard Lane Chelmsford, Ma. PATRICIA A. TUOHY 42 Ellsworth Rd. West Hartford, Conn. DEIDRE J. VREELAND 446 Forest Ave. Brockton, Ma. MARY L. WENTHE 269 Winfield Rd. Rochester, N Y. LYNNE G. WOODMAN 56 Bliss Rd. Longmeadow, Ma. ANNE-MARIE TURNER Main St. Cotuit, Ma. VIRGINIA WALSH 252 Old Lancaster Rd Sudbury, Ma. JACQUELYN WEST 50 Kelley Ave. Rumford, R.l. ANN E. ZIMAROWSKI 20 North Quincy St. Brockton, Ma. MARIE A. VANDERHAEGEN 74 Evans St. Watertown, Ma, TERESA L. WEADOCK 1713 Belle Haven Rd Alexandria, Va. JANET L. WILHELM 330 Brookshine Rd Youngstown, N.Y. MARIA L. ZODDA 16 Greentree Terr. Tenafly, N.J CAROL A, VATALI 352 Main St. Yaiesville, Conn. HELEN C. WEATHERS 640 Church St. Asbary Park, N.J. Senior Class KATHLEEN M. ADAMS 54 C. Street Framingham, Ma. Psychology MARY G. BECKER 1 07 Running Bk., Rd. West Roxbury, Ma. Sociology SISTER MARIE G. BRINE 72 Crescent Ave. Newton Centre, Ma. History ANN M. CAPUTO 1730 Columbia Rd. South Boston, Ma. Psychology ANNA T. ARSCOTT Box 24 Kingston, Jamaica Political Science MARY A. BIASI 12 Edenfield Ave. Watertown, Ma. Psychology LYNN A BRUSIE Box 342 Chatham, New York Psychology MARILYN C. CAREY 1131 Main St. Hingham, Ma. Sociology ROSEMARY M. BAKER 1 75 Everett St. Concord, Ma. Sociology LOUISE F. BISHOP 334 Waverly Rd. North Andover, Ma. Art JO ELLEN BUSH 107 Main St. Monson, Ma. Chemistry SHARON T. CAREY 110 Staniford St. Newton, Ma. French JANET A. BARAN 165 Britton St. Raynham, Ma. French VIRGINIA M. BLACK 64 Shade St. Lexington, Ma. Political Science ELLEN M. BYRNE 1 22 President Ln. Quincy, Ma. English CHERYL A. CARLSON 19 Dana Park Hopedale, Ma. French JANE A, BARRY 6 Plasse Ct. Webster, Ma. Sociology SUZANNE M. BLACKMER 103 Barnard Rd. Worcester, Ma. Biology MARY E. CAHILL 97 Wilber St. Springfield, Ma. Sociology ELLEN L. CARROLL 10 Chadwick St. North Billerica, Ma. Math SISTER MARY E. BARRY 295 Adams St. Newton, Ma. English NADINE M BONDA 298 Hartford Ave. Mendon, Ma. Math MARY E. CALLAHAN 31 1 Lexington St. Newton, Ma. History JOAN D. CASHIER 731 Maple Drive Fayetteville, N.Y. Political Science PATRICIA M. BARRY 129 Indian Ave. Portsmouth, R.l. English JANET M. BOSWORTH 52 Fowler St. Randolph, Ma. Psychology MARY R. CALLAHAN 176 Common St. Watertown, Ma. English MARCIA A. CHARLTON 21 Walker Rd. Manchester, Ma. Psychology BRENDA A BEASLEY 79 Norfolk Rd. Arlington, Ma. Sociology ANN M. BRENNAN 27 Fuller Rd. Wayland, Ma. Sociology ANNE E. CANESI 79 Stowecroft Rd. Arlington, Ma. Chemistry SISTER LYNDA CHIODETTI 330 Market St. Brighton, Ma. Biology CYNTHIA A, CHMURA 75 Parker St. Indian Orchard, Ma. History DONNA E. CHRISTIAN 98 Lewis Ave. West Springfield, Ma. English ELIZABETH A. COAN 38 Golden Ball Rd. Weston, Ma. English MARYRUTH COLEMAN 612 Randolph St. Abington, Ma. Political Science EILEEN M. COLLINS 2412 Seminary Rd. Silver Spring, Md. Psychology MARTHA D. COLLINS 55 Winshaw Rd. Swampscott, Ma. Psychology ROSEMARIE C. COLLINS 225 South St. Marlboro, Ma. English ANN MARIE CORMIER 15 Smith St. South Dartmouth, Ma. Math KATHLEEN M. CORNYN 31 Bonney Lane Dedham, Ma. Psychology ANN M. COSGROVE 230 Chipman Rd. Easton, Pa. Sociology EILEEN G. CRANE 104 Oak Trail Hillsdale, N.J. Sociology KATHLEEN E. CROAK 820 Arrow Lane Ridgewood, N.J. English SISTER DENYSE S. CORTEAU 15 Notre Dame Ave. Cambridge, Ma. Psychology ELIZABETH A. CULLINAN 24 McDonough Way South Boston, Ma. English ROSEMARY F. CULLINANE 46 Chestnut St. Brookline, Ma. Classics NANCY A. CULLOTTA 3 Glenwood St. South Natick, Ma. German SISTER GAILC. CURLEY 330 Market St. Brighton, Ma. History MARY JANE CURTIN 84 Rockwell Ave. Naugatuck, Conn. English EMILY C. DANIELS 78 Seminole Ave. Wayne, N.J. English ANNE K. DERUSHA 325 Conant Rd. Weston, Ma. Psychology SHEILA M. DEVIN 597 Jerusalem Rd. Cohasset, Ma. History JACOUELINE M. DION 1 76 North Main St. W. Hartford, Conn. French MARY W. DISKEN 14 Shrewsbury Lawn Dublin, Ireland Psychology PATRICIA DONAHUE 63 Arbor St. Wenham, Ma. Spanish SHARON M. DONOVAN 1 1 Marion Ave. Norwood, Ma. Psychology BARBARA A. DORGAN 14 Prentiss Lane Belmont, Ma. Psychology MARY J. DRUKEN 14 Cook Circle Medford, Ma. History LOUISE A. DUNLAY 14 Russell Circle Natick, Ma. Art CYNTHIA C. DUROL 54 Cumley St. Hamden, Conn. Math SUSAN G. EFFGEN 22 Redwood Rd. Westwood, Ma. Psychology MARIANNE ERCOLINI 62 Sturgis St. Reading, Ma. French MARILYN K. EWER 53 Chestnut St. Lynnfield, Ma. Political Science LINDA L. FALDETTA 86 Turner St. Brighton, Ma. Psychology JANE G. FARRELL 26 Walnut St. Holden, Ma. History ROSANNE M. FASSI 1 7 Susan Ave. Burlington, Ma. French LAVINAT. FERRARO 89 Elm St. Stonington, Conn. English JEANNE M. FINAN 278 Edgewater Drive Needham, Ma. English REGINA M. FINNEGAN 15 Lake St. Hamden, Conn. Political Science ELLEN C. FITZGERALD 24 Russell St. Cambridge, Ma. Biology ANN M. FITZPATRICK 141 Andover St. Tewksbury, Ma. Sociology SHARON M. FITZPATRICK 5 Park Ave. Natick, Ma. French JOANNE FLYNN 29 Judson St. Thomaston, Conn. History MARILYN E. FLYNN 17 Bow St. Hyde Park, Ma. Sociology CHARLENE W. FOY 2 Rose Ave. Marblehead, Ma. Classics CHRISTINE C. FREGOSI 60 Woodcrest Drive Wakefield, Ma. English EVELYN M. FRIEL 22 Wesley St. Somerville, Ma. History FRANCES A. FRYDRYK 23 Dalton St. Indian Orchard, Ma. Math PATRICIA L. FUNDER 15 Pattison St. Abington, Ma. Biology ROSEMARY C. GAFFNEY 54 Donna Rd. Needham, Ma. English KATHLEEN M. GALIHER 5816 Highland Drive Chevy Chase, Md. French MARYALICE GEARAN 309 Elm St. Gardner, Ma. Sociology BARBARA S. GEORGE Reservoir Road Chepachet, R.l. Psychology LESLIE A. GIKNIS 2275 Cayuga Rd. Schenectady, N.Y. English PATRICIA E. GILLSON 1 1 1 Lincoln Ave. Bergenfield, N.J. Sociology NANCY L. GIUDICI 1 1 Orth St. Pawtucket, R.l. Sociology JANE M. GRENIER 4 Dixon Park Rd. Weymouth, Ma. Psychology SUSAN G. GROTH 28 Edmands Rd. Framingham, Ma. English MARTHA M, GRIMES 46 Lincoln St. Waltham, Ma, French PAMELA L. GUILES 280 Great Rd. Bedford, Ma. Political Science LYNN C. HABEL 22 Dalton Place Springfield, Ma. Psychology SISTER JOAN F. HALLISEY Regis College Convent Weston, Ma. English CHERLY J. HAMILTON 91 Dale Rd. Manchester, Conn. Biology SUSAN F. HAMMOND 2 Puritan Rd. Danvers, Ma. Sociology CATINA M. HAYDEN 34 Granite St. Melrose, Ma. Classics CATHERINE HEALEY 8520 Edgerton Blvd. Jamaica, N Y. Sociology MARIHELEN HILL 53 Bennett St. Brighton, Ma. French ELAINE M. HOGAN 4 Kelley Terr. Tewksbury, Ma. German DONNA M HOUGH 33 Emerson St. Newton, Ma. German JEAN L HUBERT 244 Peaceable St. Ridgefield, Conn. Biology KATHLEEN A. HUDDY 73 Hartford St. Natick, Ma. Sociology MARGARET A. JAMES 1 30 Westwood Dr. East Greenwich, R.l. English SHELLEY K. JENKINS 75 Nicholas Rd. Framingham, Ma. English PAULA M, KANE 1 2 Legion Dr. North Abington, Ma. French BARBARA A. KEANE 27 Vernon St. Rockland, Ma. English NANCY F. KERN 64 Grandview Ave. Auburn, Maine English NANCY M. KIELY 37 Wallace Rd. Ouincy, Ma. English SUSAN T. KINIRY 35 Harvest Hill Rd. Kensington, Conn. Psychology ANNE M. KIRBY 455 West Elm St. Brockton, Ma. Sociology JOAN M. KOTTCAMP 1349 Alexander Ave. Chambersburg, Pa. Economics SUSAN E KRAUSS 35 Vesey Rd. Randolph, Ma. English CAROLYN L. LAGEMAN 29 Oberlin St. Worcester, Ma. Math NANCY J. LANDOLFE Scott Circle Purchase, N Y Sociology NANCY A. LANDOLFI 32 Lyman St. Beverly, Ma. German CHERYL A LANE 27 Lexington St. Weston, Ma. Psychology VERONICA R. LAROCCA 31 83 Skillman Ave. Oceanside, N Y. French CATHERINE T. LAUZIERE 90 South Main St. Hanover, N.H, Sociology ELIZABETH J. LAWLOR 75 Highland St. Amesbury, Ma. Biology SIMONE J. LEBLANC 1 6 Curtis St. Waltham, Ma. French LOUISE P. LEFEBVRE Box 264 South Barre, Vt. French BERNICE L. LEONARD 225 Shaw Ave. North Abington, Ma. Math MARY J. LEWIS 42 Blackinton St. North Adams, Ma. Psychology MARGARET I. LYNCH 190 Lake Ave. Saratoga Springs, N Y. Sociology JANET M. MABEE 538 Morton St. Stoughton, Ma. Math JAN F. MACCHI 6 Florence St. Milford, Ma. Psychology DONNA M. MAGGIORE 96 Common St. Quincy, Ma. Art ANN E MAGYAR 92 Mohegan St. Shelton, Conn. English MARY E. MAHONEY 73 Holyoke St. Lynn, Ma. Political Science JUDITH M. MARTENSON 12 Acorn Drive Newton, Ma. History LINDA A. MARTIN 26 Wheeler Rd. Wethersfield, Conn. Economics DEBORAH V. MEDEIROS 55 Sable Ave. North Dartmouth, Ma. Psychology MARYELLEN T. MILLER Buckberg Mt. Rd. Tomkins Cove, N Y. English ELLEN MINIHAN 3 Lantern Lane Weston, Ma. English SISTER JOAN F. MITCHELL 1 6 Notre Dame Ave. Cambridge, Ma. English BARBARA S MONTY 15 Vadnais St Holyoke, Ma. English KATHLEEN D MOORE 1 03 Concord St Waterbury, Conn. Psychology SANDRA E. MOORE 70 Schuyler Dr Commack, N Y Psychology MARTHA L. MOQUIN 898 Boston Rd. Ward Hill, Ma. Sociology SISTER MARGARET A. MORAN 50 Oakland St. Wellesley, Ma. Engllsh MARY E MORAN 23 Beacon St. Natick, Ma. Math PATRICIA A. MOSCHELLA 887 Commonwealth Ave. Newton, Ma. Art COLLEEN P. MULCAHY 4631 Denpat Ct. Annandale, Va. Sociology ELIZABETH M. MULSHINE 55 Hartwell Rd. West Hartford, Conn. Biology SHEILA H. MURPHY 9 Milton Rd. Barrington, R.l. English SHEILA J. MURPHY 16 Riverdale Cir. Concord, Ma. Art DIANNE T. MURRAY 4 Hickory Lane Hudson, Ma. English GERTRUDE M. MUSANTE North Prospect St. Ansonia, Conn. Spanish MARY K. MYERS 25 Wilson St. Revere, Ma. Sociology CHRISTINE A. McCARTER 110 Eastwood Rd. Groton, Conn. History SISTER KATHLEEN McCLUSKEY 295 Adams St. Newton, Ma. English SALLY-ANNE McCOLGAN 135 Cushing Ave. Dorchester, Ma. Psychology ANN E. MCDERMOTT 21 Franklin St. Belmont, Ma. History PATRICIA A. MCDONALD 28 Windsor Rd. Norwood, Ma. History SUSAN F. McDonough 23 Gilbert Ave. Revere, Ma. English CONSTANCE I. McELROY 48 Tolman St. Waltham, Ma. English JAYNE E. McENTEE 136 Pellana Rd. Norwood, Ma. Psychology HELEN M. McGAFFIGAN 22 Emerson PI. Needham, Ma. Political Science KATHLEEN L. McGANNON 673 Weed St. New Canaan, Conn. English SISTER MARGUERITE PACITTI 50 Taylor St. Waltham, Ma. Math MARGARET E. REARICK 51 South Forest Ave. Rockville Ctr., N.Y. English KATHERINE M. McGURK 86 West Glen St. Holyoke, Ma. History JOANN T. PAPAGNO 1 7 Amory Rd. Marlboro, Ma. French MARY B. REGAN 137 Santa Fe Ave. Hamden, Conn. Psychology MARY A. McHUGO 16 Everit Ave. Framingham, Ma. French SUSAN 1. PEDERZOLI 20 East Walnut St. Milford, Ma. Sociology LINDA L. RICHARDS 44 Desrosiers St. Dracut, Ma. Math CAROL McMAHON 95 Backman Ave. Pittsfield, Ma. Sociology SISTER DONNA M. PERRY 780 Mt. Auburn St. Watertown, Ma. History KATHLEEN P. RILEY 1215 Main St. Tewksbury, Ma. English SUSAN 1. McMONAGLE 31 Palmer St. South Weymouth. Ma. German GAIL D. PLATT 73 Mapleton St. Hartford, Conn. English BETTE J. RIORDAN 84 Haven Rd. Portsmouth, N.H. Political Science P. SILVANA NARDELLI 13 Madison Ave. Watertown, Ma. German SISTER ESTHER M. PLEFKA 50 Oakland St. Wellesley Hills, Ma. English CARMEN C. RIOUX 407 Moody St. Waltham, Ma. French MARY-ANNE NEHER 96A Charlesbank Way Waltham, Ma. Psychology JOANNE C. PLESKOWICZ 160 Allen Rd. Billerica, Ma. Chemistry ANNE M. ROACH 169 Charlton St. Arlington, Ma. French EILEEN F. O ' BRIEN 465 College St. Lewiston, Maine English CAROL L. PROCTOR 45 Woodland Rd. Ashland, Ma. English JOYCE A. ROACH 55 Salem St. Wakefield, Ma. Sociology MAUREEN K. O ' BRIEN 103 Gaslight Dr. South Waymouth, Ma. Sociology BONITA L. PURNELL 3 Legion Rd. Weston, Ma. Sociology PATRICIA ROSSVALL 485 Main St. Farmington, Conn. Spanish KATHERINE E. O ' CONNOR 5 Richmond St. Winchester, N.H. Chemistry BARBARA A. OUATTROCCHI 49 Stewart St. Amsterdam, N Y. Sociology NANCY A. ROTH 56 Harrington St. Watertown, Ma. Biology ELLEN T. O ' HALLORAN 50 Sturges Rd. West Roxbury, Ma. Math MICHELLE J. QUEVILLON 166 Sherrin St. Hyde Park, Ma. History ELEANOR J. SALVUCCI 28 Cummings Rd. Newton Center, Ma. Psychology KATHERINE M. O ' NEILL 6 Commonwealth Ave. Auburn, Ma. English ANN M. RANDALL 2 Sylvan Knoll Rd. Stamford, Conn. French BRENDA M. SCALLY 485 North Spring St. Naugatuck, Conn. English MAURA J. O’NEILL 10 West Adams St. Lowell, Ma. Sociology KATHLEEN OWENS 41 Dunster Rd. Jamaica Plain, Ma. Sociology CLAUDIA A. RASULIS Route 74 RFD 2 Tolland, Conn. History KATHLEEN M. READ 202 Haddonfield Rd. Dewitt, N.Y. Art ANNE L. SERPA 24 Arrowhead Ln. Arlington, Ma. Sociology MARIE A. SHEA 29 Valley Rd. Milton, Ma. Political Science KATHLEEN A. SHEEHAN 586 Barretts Mill Concord. Ma. English KATHERINE A. SHUTE 36 Briarfield Rd. Milton, Ma. English KAREN M. SMITH 5 Bass River Rd. South Yarmouth, Ma. Sociology SUSAN A. SMITH 13 Porter Rd. Natick, Ma. Sociology SISTER CATHERINE A. STARE 125 Oakland St. Wellesley Hills, Ma. Math SARA M. STEETS 9 Maple Leaf Dr. Park Ridge, N J English SANDRA A. STEWART 85 Garfield Rd. Auburn, Maine Math JANE F. SULLIVAN 43 Gray Cliff Rd. Newton, Ma. Sociology JANET E. SULLIVAN 87 Winter St. Norwood, Ma. English SISTER JEANNE d ARC O HARE Professor of Political Science A B Regis College A M., Ph D. Boston College LOUIS P. ANASTAS Lecturer in Education B.S.Ed., M Ed. Worcester State College SISTER M. CABRINI ANGELLI Instructor in Biology A.B Regis College M A T. Brown University SISTER CLAIRE ARCHAMBAULT Instructor in Mathematics A.B. Regis College A M. Catholic University EVE BALTZELL Lecturer in Art MARGARET A. SULLIVAN 1 1 1 Standish Rd. Milton, Ma. Sociology MARY F. SULLIVAN Montgomery Rd. Westfield, Ma. Sociology ELIZABETH M. SZEMELA 47 Ashwood St. Indian Orchard, Ma. English SISTER MARY E. TARALLO 780 Mt. Auburn St. Watertown, Ma. History JUDY A. TETREAULT Box 325 Centerville, Ma. Psychology JUDITH A THOMPSON 18 Gill Rd. Apt 1 Waltham, Ma. Psychology MARGARET A. TOBIN 19 Gannett Rd. North Scituate, Ma. Political Science CONSTANCE R. TODINO 20 Water St. Milford, Ma. English MARGARET S. TROMBLY 858 Great Rond Rd. North Andover, Ma. Psychology MARGO A. ULYSSES Box 360 Regis College Weston, Ma. Political Science SISTER KATH LEEN M. VESEY 800 North Main St. Randolph, Ma. History CORINNE A VOLPE 32 Wesson Ave. Ouincy, Ma English CLAUDETTE M. VOYER 1 7 Fairview Rd. Salem, Ma. History DONNA M. VRANA 2324 Massey Rd Memphis, Tenn. Sociology ALICE P. WALL Main St. Hanover, Ma. English GAIL M. WARD 3 Masfield Ct. Barrington, R.l Psychology Faculty and Administration Boston Museum of Fine Arts School B F A. Tufts University SISTER NEONILLA BARRETT Assist. Professor of Sociology B Ed. Bridgewater State College M.Ed. Boston College M.S.W. Catholic University LEO BARRINGTON Assist. Professor of Sociology A.B. Washington and Lee A M. Boston University WILLIAM S. BARRON Assist. Professor of History A.B., A M., Ph D. Catholic University SISTER NANCY BOARDWAY Instructor in Chemistry A.B. Mount Holyoke Cand. Ph D. M.l.T. SISTER M. GRETCHEN BOGAN Assist. Professor of Drama A.B. Regis College A M. Catholic University PAUL BOULANGER Lecturer in French A M. University of Colorado Ph D. University of Fribourg MARGUERITE BOUVARD Assist. Professor of Political Science A.B Northwestern University A M Radcliffe College Ph D. Harvard University DONALD W. BROWN Lecturer in Psychology A.B. Boston College Ph D. Tufts University ROSEMARY WEBER 1 1 Hiawatha Ln. Arlington, Ma. History MARY P. WELCH 25 Arcellia Rd. Manchester, Conn. History ROSALIND J. WHITNEY 1 7 Fairfield St. Montclair, N.J. Spanish CAROL A. WILSON 307 Park St. Westfield, N.J. History EILEEN M. WILSON 1 7 Hoover St. Milford, Conn. Math CAROL J. WISNIESKI East St. Middletown, Conn. Sociology MARYANNE C. WOELFLEIN 6 Old Forge Rd. Hampstead, N H. Sociology KAREN A. WONG 3 Edgecombe Ave. Kingston, Jamaica French MARY C. BRYAN Professor of English A.B Regis College A M., Ph D. Boston University SISTER M. LEONARDA BURKE Professor of Mathematics A. B. Emmanuel College A M. Boston College Ph D. Catholic University SISTER M. EMILY CAHILL Professor Emeritus of Chemistry B. S. Simmons College A M. Boston College Ph D. Catholic University EDWARD M. CASE Professor of Philosophy A.B. Mount St. Mary A M. University of Ottawa Ph.D. Catholic University SISTER ELIZABETH CAWLEY Lecturer in Classics A.B. Regis College A M. Tufts University LEO S. CHANG Assist. Professor of Political Science A.B. Catholic University A.M., Ph.D. Georgetown University SISTER MARIE CICCHESE Instructor in English A.B. Regis College A M. Boston College JOSEPHINE E. DeSIMONE Associate Professor of Italian and Spanish A.B. Boston University A.M. Middlebury College SISTER M. LUCILLA DINNEEN Professor of Classics A.B. Emmanuel College A M., Ph.D. Catholic University SISTER MARIE DE SALES DINNEEN Assist. Professor of Art A.B. Regis College A.M., Ph.D. Boston University SISTER GERTRUDE DISKIN Lecturer in Political Science A.B. Regis College A M. Georgetown University SISTER MARGUERITE A. DONOVAN Dean of Students A.B. Regis College M.Ed. Salem State College SISTER MARYSIA DONOVAN Assist. Professor of Biology A.B. Regis College M S. Catholic University SISTER M. ANDRIUS DOUGLAS Assist. Professor of English A.B. Regis College A. M. Catholic University SISTER HELEN M. FENTON Associate Professor of Economics B. S., M.C.S. Boston University A.M. Boston College SISTER ZITA FLEMING Lecturer in Classics A.B. Regis College A.M. Boston College SISTER M. ANDRENE FOLEV Assistant Professor of Psychology A.B. Regis College A.M., Ph D. Catholic University ANNA G. GALLOS Lecturer i n Music E.Mus, M.Mus Eastman School of Music SISTER M. ROSENDA GILL Associate Professor of French A.B. Regis College A M. Boston College Diplome de I’Ecole de preparation des Professeurs de Prangais a I ' Etranger a la Sorbonne D.M.L. Middlebury College SISTER ANN MARIE GRADY Instructor in Religious Studies A.B. Regis College A M. University of St. Michael ' s College SISTER MARY RITA GRADY Instructor in Philosophy A. B. Regis College Cand. Ph D. Georgetown University JOSEPH D. GRESSER Lecturer in Chemistry B. Ch.E. Syracuse University Ph.D. New York State College of Forestry WARREN GRIBBONS Professor of Psychology A. B. Boston University M.Ed., D.Ed. Harvard University ANN GUGGENHEIM Assist. Professor of History B. A. Elmira College M.A., Ph D. New York University FRANCIS J. GURCZAK Lecturer in Education A.B. Merrimack College M.Ph. University of Dayton MARY P. HAMILTON Professor of German A.B. Regis College A M. Radcliffe College SISTER MELMARIE HANABURY Associate Professor of English A.B. Catholic University A.M. Boston College GRACE A. HAWLEY Professor of English A.B. Regis College A M., Ph.D. Columbia University SISTER LORETTO HEGARTY Assist. Professor of Education A.B. Regis College A.M., Ph D. Boston College SISTER THERESE HIGGINS Associate Professor of English A B. Regis College A M. Boston College Ph D. University of Wisconsin SISTER M. FRANCIS HOLLOWAY Associate Professor of Classics A. B., A M. Boston College EDWINA HUGHES Associate Professor of Physical Education B. S. College of St. Catherine M.Ed. Boston University SISTER MARGARET KILEY Professor Emeritus of Religious Studies A.B. Emmanuel College A. M., Ph.D. Boston College SISTER MARIE KLAPACS Associate Professor of Health and Coordinator of Health Services R.N. Carney Hospital B. S. Regis College M.Ed. Boston College SISTER REGINA MARIE KOCH Associate Professor of German A.B. Regis College A. M. Boston College A M. Radcliffe College Ph.D. Harvard University WILLIAM KUEHN Instructor in Sociology B. A. Randolph-Macon College M.A. Northeastern University SISTER M. PERPETUUS LANG Associate Professor of Spanish B.Ed. Teachers College of Boston M.Ed. Boston College A M. Western Reserve VERA LASKA Assist. Professor of History A M. Charles University, Prague Ph.D. University of Chicago SARAH W. LOCKERETZ Assist. Professor of Sociology A.B. Barnard College A.M. Columbia University AGLAIA LILY MACRAKIS Assist. Professor of History A.B. Athens University A M. Radcliffe College SISTER M. JUAN MAHAN Professor of French A.B. Regis College A.M. Boston College Ph.D. Fordham University CAMILLE C. MALAMUD Lecturer in Spanish A B. Skidmore College M.Ed. Fitchburg State College MARY MALANY Assist. Professor of English A. B. Regis College A M. Yale University SISTER M. MARGARET WILLIAM MCCARTHY Assist. Professor of Music B. M. Manhattanville College M.M. Pius XII Institute, Florence Mus.A.D. Boston University SISTER M. VITERBO MCCARTHY Professor of Psychology A.B. Regis College A M., Ph D. Catholic University SISTER PATRICIA McDONOUGH Lecturer in French A.B. Regis College M.Ph. Yale University SISTER MARGARET McGARRY Associate Professor of Chemistry A.B. Regis College Ph D. University of Pennsylvania SISTER M. JOHN REGIS McKENZIE Assist. Professor of Physics A.B. Regis College A M. Boston College SISTER M. CLAIRE McNAMARA Professor Emeritus of Chemistry A.B. Emmanuel College A M. Boston College Ph.D. Catholic University EDWARD MULHOLLAND Assist. Professor of Economics A.B. St. Vincent College A M. Boston College SISTER M. CECILIA AGNES MULRENNAN Associate Professor of Biology A.B. Regis College A. M., Ph D. Fordham University SISTER A. CATHERINE MURPHY Professor of Religious Studies B. S. Simmons College M S. Cornell University A. M. Catholic University SISTER CATHERINE E. MURPHY Instructor in Religious Studies B. S. Regis College A.M. Boston College SISTER M. BERNARDA MURPHY Professor of Physics A.B. Emmanuel College A M. Catholic University SISTER ANNE LOUISE MURRAY Instructor in German A B. Regis College A M. Tufts University HUGH E. NELSON Instructor in Biology A. B. University of Michigan M S. Harvard University SISTER MADELINE MARIE NEVINS Lecturer in French A B Regis College A M. Tufts University OLIVE A. NOLAN Associate Professor of Physical Education B. S., M.Ed. Boston University SISTER MARY J OATES Assist. Professor of Economics A.B. Catholic University A M. Ph D. Yale University KAY RAYMOND Instructor in Spanish A.B. Radcliffe College A M. Brown University REVEREND CHARLES RING, C.S.S. Lecturer in Religious Studies A M. Boston College S.T.L. University of St. Thomas, S S L. Pontifical Biblical Institute SISTER M. ANNA LAWRENCE ROCHE Professor Emeritus of Biology A B. Emmanuel College A M. Boston College Ph D. Catholic University MARILYN ROSE Associate Professor of English A.B. Regis College A M. Boston College Ph.D. University of Wisconsin A. MICHAEL ROSSI Lecturer in Psychology A.B. Fresno State College A M. Standord University Ph D. University of Utah SISTER CLAIRE RYAN Instructor in Religious Studies A.B., A M. Catholic University SANDRA SANTOLUCITO Lecturer in Sociology A.B Boston College A.M. University of Chicago SISTER M. THEREZON SHEERIN Assist. Professor of Psychology A. B. Regis College A M. Catholic University ELIZABETH SHUHANY Professor of Mathematics A B., A M., Ph D. Boston University EDWARD SIEGFRIED Instructor in Mathematics B. S. University of Notre Dame M.A. Brandeis Universi ty SISTER M. JOHN SULLIVAN Professor of English A.B. Trinity College A M. Boston College Ph.D. Catholic University SISTER M. ST FRANCIS SULLIVAN Professor Emeritus of French A.B., A M., Ph.D. Catholic University SISTER M. XAVERIA SULLIVAN Professor of Classics A.B. Regis College A M Boston College Ph D. Catholic University ALICE MAGINNIS WALSH Assist. Professor of Art A.B., A M. Radcliffe College SISTER MARY WALSH Lecturer in Psychology A.B. Catholic University Cand. Ph D. Clark University SISTER M. LOUISELLA WALTERS Professor of Art A. B Regis College M.F.A. Catholic University Pius XII Institute, Florence Massachusetts School of Art RONALD W. WALTERS Lecturer in Sociology B. A. Fisk University M.A. American University JEAN WHITE Lecturer in Chemistry B.S. Pennsylvania State University Cand. Ph D. Brandeis University SUSAN WILLIAMSON Associate Professor of Mathematics A.B. Radcliffe College A.M., Ph D. Brandeis University ALTHEA C. WOLFKOPF Associate Professor of German A.B., A M., Ph D. Boston University Office of the President SISTER JEANNE d ' ARC O ' HARE President SYLVIA W. POWERS Secretary Office of the Dean SISTER REGINA MARIE KOCH Academic Dean VIRGINIA W. ROBINS Assistant to the Dean LORETTA B. DUNLAY Secretary Office of the Dean of Students SISTER MARGUERITE A. DONOVAN Dean of Students JANET ANN HOYT Director of Residence ROSE CLAIRE M. PIERCE Secretary Office of Administrative Affairs JOHN T. de CAMP, JR. Director MARY FORMAN Secretary SISTER M. ELLENICE DONOVAN Treasurer SISTER MARY MARGARET DONLON Assistant Treasurer OLGA METANIAS Secretary EDWARD WALSH Superintendent of Buildings Grounds SISTER MARIUS SCOTT Mailroom Supervisor Office of Development and Public Relations GARDNER E. CAMPBELL, JR. Director of Development ETHEL Y. BLACKWOOD Alumnae Fund Coordinator GLORIA ROSS Secretary LINDA L. SCHULTE Director of Public Relations ELIZABETH CAREY Secretary Office of the Registrar SISTER M. ALBERTINA Registrar ALICE PARENT Secretary EILEEN HURLEY Secretary • Office of Admissions CARROLL M. BEEGAN Director JUDITH POWERS Assistant Director SISTER ELIZABETH CAWLEY Counselor HELEN E. McELROY Counselor JANE L. McDonough S ecretary Office of Financial Aid JUDITH ALLEN Director LORETTA MALLOY Secretary Office of Career Planning MARGARET E. McCULLOCH Director ELIZABETH REYNOLDS Secretary Office of Continuing Education SISTER ANNA MARY KELLY Director Library Staff SISTER SARAH THERESA BARRETT Librarian SISTER M. MACRINA SHYNE Associate Librarian SISTER M. RICARDA VAHOY Reference Librarian SISTER MARY AGNES POWER Cataloger SISTER M. ANNA LAWRENCE ROCHE Archivist KATHERINE A. McNALLY Aquisitions Assistant VERONICA DUFFY Circulation Assistant Health Staff ADRIAN V. BLAKE, M.D Medical Director SISTER MARIE KLAPACS, R.N. Coordinator of Health Services FRANCES McCRACKIN, R N. Assistant Nurse MAUREEN O ' BRIEN, R.N. Assistant Nurse KATHLEEN OWENS, R.N. Assistant Nurse DONNA RONCONE, R.N. Assistant Nurse Language Laboratory SISTER M ROSENDA GILL Coordinator RONALD McCULLOCH Laboratory Assistant Alumnae Office BARBARA L. JORDAN Administrator of Alumnae Activities MARGARET HOGAN Assistant Administrator Philatelic Museum Office SISTER M. FIDELMA CONWAY, Executive Director ELIZABETH PALUMBO Secretary 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 Rev. Mother M. Catalina Casey, LL.D. Sister M. Clarona Moore, Ed.D. Sister M. Benedict McLaughlin, A.M. Sister Josephina Concannon, Ed.D., LL.D. Sister M. Jeanne d’Arc O’Hare, Ph.D. Laurence P. Harrington, C.P.A., LL.D. James M. Kendrick, LL.B. Associate Board Lawrence M. Kearns, LL.B., Chairman John I. Ahern, B.B.A. Robert E. Arnot, M.D. Bernard R. Baldwin, A.B. Alice Bourneuf, Ph.D. Catherine Burke, A.B. Thomas W. Casey, A.B. Patricia A. Goler, Ph.D. Rev. Msgr. Augustine F. Hickey, Ed.D. Richard F. Messing, B.Ch.E. Carroll F. Miles, Ph.D. Most Rev. Jeremiah F. Minihan, D.D. Catherine Garrity Quinn, M.S. 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. 220 221 Mr. Steven Ball Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Beasley Mr. and Mrs. Frederick T. Becker Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bishop Dr. and Mrs. James Bush Mrs. Sylvester F. Byrne Mr. and Mrs. Dino A. Canesi Mr. and Mrs. John A. Carlson Attorney and Mrs. Robert F. Charlton Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Chmura Mr. and Mrs. William Christian Mr. and Mrs. Edmund J. Coan Mr. and Mrs. Louis E. Cormier Mr. and Mrs. William P. Cornyn Mr. and Mrs. Allan Croak Mr. and Mrs. William Curtin Mrs. Norbert J. Dion Mr. and Mrs. John Donovan Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Ercolini Mr. and Mrs. Kurt G. Ewer 222 Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Finnegan Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Flynn Mr. and Mrs. John A. Frydryk Mrs. John S. Gearan Mr. and Mrs. William John George Mr. Hugh M. Gillson Robert A. Grimes, Attorney-at-Law Mr. and Mrs. William J. Joynt Mr. and Mrs. T. William Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Eugene P. Lynch Mr. and Mrs. John Magyar Mr. and Mrs. Robert McCarter Mr. and Mrs. Edward X. McColgan Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McDonald Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow F. McEntee Mr. and Mrs. John McGurk Mrs. C. J. McMahon Mr. and Mrs. D. B. McMonagle Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Moore Mr. and Mrs. William C. Moore 223 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Baran Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mulcahy Mr. and Mrs. Eugene F. Murphy Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David J. Murphy Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. O’Brien Mrs. Charles T. O’Neill Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. Randall Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. Roach Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Shute Mr. Lester B. Smith Mr. and Mrs. William T. Smith Mrs. William J. Sullivan Attorney and Mrs. Charles W. Trombley Sr. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Ventres Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Weber Mr. and Mrs. James E. Welch Mr. and Mrs. Richard O. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. John Woelflein 224 Annis-Morrill Corp. “Bill” Mitchell’s West End Chevrolet Capezio Shoes Central Tailoring Co., Inc. Clay Chevrolet Lake Cochituate Pharmacy South Middlesex Supply Co., Inc. V. Massa and Sons Weston Cleaners and Tailors 225 MR. AND MRS. IVAN D. ARSCOTT MR. AND MRS. LOUIS J. BARRY MR. AND MRS. JOHN A. BIASI REV. DENNIS J. BURNS MRS. JOHN L. CALLAHAN MR. AND MRS. FRANK J. CASHIER MR. AND MRS. JOHN DANIELS MR. AND MRS. JOHN J. DEVIN 226 DR. AND MRS. JOSEPH A. DORGAN MRS. RICHARD J. DRUKEN MR. AND MRS. RICHARD W. GALIHER MR. AND MRS. GEORGE HAYDEN, JR. MRS. RAYMOND B. HEALEY MR. AND MRS. KENDALL H. KIELY DR. AND MRS. JOHN E. KINIRY MR. AND MRS. JOHN A. MILLER 227 DR. AND MRS. SAMUEL MOSCHELLA MR. AND MRS. J. C. RASULIS MR. AND MRS. PAUL W. ROSSVALL MR. AND MRS. RALPH SALVUCCI MR. AND MRS. JOHN F. SCALLY MR. AND MRS. JOHN BRISTON SULLIVAN MR. AND MRS. JOHN E. VOLPE MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM C. WALSH 228 CHMURA BAKERY, INC BUTTRICK’S ICE CREAM Weston, Massachusetts WATCH CITY LIQUOR STORE NORTON FUNERAL HOME 892 Main Street Waltham, Massachusetts 53 Beech Street Framingham, Massachusetts JOSEPH A. PINK AND SON, INC. RICHARDSON DRUG CO. 40 Plympton Street Boston, Massachusetts 37 Center Street Weston, Massachusetts HOLIDAY INN OF BOSTON-NEWTON COPLEY CAMERA AND HI-FI 399 Grove Street Route 128 and Grove Street Newton Lower Falls, Massachusetts 480 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts 229 SAGA FOODS Regis College THE CHATEAU RESTAURANT 195 School Street Waltham, Massachusetts NEWTON CORNER PRESS, INC. THE CHESTNUT SHOP 185 Charlesbank Road Newton, Massachusetts 428 Boston Post Road Weston, Massachusetts KEN’S STEAK HOUSE FAMOUS PIZZA Route 9 Framingham, Massachusetts 61 Nicholas Road Saxonville, Massachusetts COLONIAL TEN ACRES 141 Boston Post Road Wayland, Massachusetts Dining and Dancing UNITED ART CO., INC. 502 Harrison Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 230 MARRIOTT MOTOR HOTEL THE CLASS OF 1972 2345 Commonwealth Avenue Newton, Massachusetts THE SOUTH SHORE REGIS CLUB Edna Soraghan English ’59, President THE CLASS OF 1973 Patricia Glennon McCarthy, ’57, Vice-President Ann Bailey Reilly, ’62, Treasurer Frances Kopka Parsons, ’59, Secretary Nancy Greene Mullin, ’62, Secretary THE REGIS OF YESTERDAY EXTENDS TO THE REGIS OF TODAY THEIR BEST WISHES FOR THE FUTURE THE REGIS ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION 231 COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND THOMAS F. COLLINS INSURANCE AGENCY 146 Burrill Street Swampscott, Massachusetts GLOBE TOOL AND GAGE WORKS, INC. GRADUATE TO SOMETHING BETTER. Avon Industrial Park King ' s Qrant In-the-Country Avon, Massachusetts Exit 21 off Rt. 128 in Danvers, Mass. 01923 232 JOHN HANCOCK ON-CAMPUS WORK PROJECT Regis College FREDERICK BRASCO FLORIST 229 High Street Waltham, Massachusetts ASSOCIATES mrtllHATIONAL INC. S €zncZa ’f 2z e £ACC PRESIDENT 7 2 9-5 83 L. DAVENPORT BOYD, INC. 426 Boston Post Road Weston, Massachusetts Serving Regis with pride, interest in education and young people. 233 Thanks to MR. ROBERT F. CHARLTON We are proud and happy to be host to your party JOHN C. PAIGE AND COMPANY One Boston Place Boston, Massachusetts Educational Insurance Division 220 WORCESTER RD. (ROUTE 9) FRAMINGHAM, MASS. 01701 Telephones: 879-5300 332 400 CLASS OF 1971 CLASS OF 1974 DR. AND MRS. FRANCIS L. GIKNIS MR. AND MRS. BERTRAND G. VOYER 235 Compliments of STUDENT COUNCIL Compliments of NU-WAY SANITATION CORP. 1 Ellery Street South Boston, Massachusetts Division of Sanitas Service Corporation Over 30 Years of Complete Rubbish Removal Industrial, Commercial, Institutional and Residential Fast, Dependable 24 Hour Service Radio Dispatched Modern Equipment Compaction Units, Rolloffs, Containers Our Aim is Complete Satisfaction for All Our Customers No Job is Too Large or Too Small. We Wish The Class of 1971 “BEST OF LUCK IN THE FUTURE” 236 COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND ANTHONY VANARIA 63 Milton Street Waltham, Massachusetts LANDSCAPE SERVICE 237 JAMES HOOK AND COMPANY 15 Northern Avenue Boston, Massachusetts 238 HICKS ELECTRIC COMPANY, INC 9 Betty Street Everett, Massachusetts 02149 240
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