Salem State University - Clipper Yearbook

 - Class of 1971

Page 1 of 337

 

Salem State University - Clipper Yearbook online collection, 1971 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 337 of the 1971 volume:

1 I mm. M i'1 .'l 'I JA .UQ tx s x ,-?.r.f.:V, 'if '. x -rio -fvti t lx s v . n1 u, -. .,, A . -!-a:g- N f-f ','i , D '. '- . va, ,..,, , 'T .f N . ...A , .-,. , .', ' . , , A '-, 4 ' ' . Q' ,JK -v. . .1..,.' x , 1 Q. mi, 1 T' . ul s . ,. I ,l M.. .:, ffl.. - 'L' ' . , ' ' f f'1 '-,' . .. V .,'a , .x, -, - 1 ng.. 'x . , '-,' 1' X ,. H.. . 1 - . ' V- , ' I ' ' 1 . 4 '..,x ' A 1 ,vtmwma . . ' ,,,4, , . . . u'u7 ' , fll v ' -' .,,, . I. N' 1,,y,.. . . ui, . . . , 1 A . . . . , 4 , . , . . J', v,.!.p I .4 ,xt 'X 1 '1 ' ' 4 . 'I'-L .1 1 , Y' 1 ,5- ' 'Pllg I . Ml' 'l.' ',' I Wx 4 ,' 'jH' . t7'v.,,, ,,.' ' ' ' V412 'in A I .Ju wx? 3. .X 15 n xv 'A -1. . xr-' 1: A v IV. Vg' v.',.,, 1.-N1 u .'. I'- xl' str 1 7, UU 1. WI, H Q 'uw 1'-' 4 v . 1 I.. Hy 4 Y Y, 'fu .r , 1. '2'51a 13 .4- :, .' .'-f'45.?Pr7'fn , .. W. ,qi4yl:.i, I 'J -Q A ,24,nfj! ,g ' M' -1-ngu- 1 ,A , e.'1.' anx', ,f I ' r , f'- 1 v v , 'mir m , .ll 4 X. ,Ms . 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Straight and taut we skimmed the sky as did our stiff, correct gray tower in winding trance through all our days, its calculating face above our coming and our going, we found it hard to ease the spring. Swift flowering becomes the young and time has other ways of showing what greeness in her fancy wants of childrening. We were not meant to take the rancid blubberings of a callous creed, we fumbled as sincerest lovers will, together wore our gayest dawnings most with tears our dragging dooms, knew with the gaudy fears that preyed our hearts, only alone our slowest wounds healed quickest in the dark. Hoping to know we end where we begin, with feeling, where all the lovers tend. Still innocent unprismed eyes, spread wholly if in angled agony you bend with lurid light, give us then a still unmated wondering. Ours crave the morning's purple destiny, deny us not the violet yearnings of the night. Pat Stansfield 2 ' C P if Lv- ' f ,,4,- 'Lg' 99- 'F N N xr - , - w X N . ,D .. . 1 '1 VA 4 i , ,,g S .' f K .., X fx ',,f , I K, ' .. ' if sk v , L X Q' , '7' 'L ,nuc- V 4.1.1--iii '-7 3 5 4 fi ' pl. C K-. vb, ' X A .. 2.3 . ff . x- ,Hu .WX x ll ,S X I ul' Vs w Ss K- . fe . .'2. 'S' ' J Y . 'A Q. 2 . ,- v ,IP ml . . X1 Q Au , 4 'sv X fi 33 v Q I r 'Sggq 'X ln- Q. 4 . ,,,,. 'vi-+- 1 x 'DFW J J 4 . nn X- We need a day of peace, a year of peace, a century of peace. John Fox May 5, 1970 5 f ..f,'4 ' if at 6 u ! 'ii .rd - yr. s Y 1' ' J 1 I , v W -...... ,,,, , 'W nv uf 11 ' Q 0 inn- 8 L? p A R 1 N U8 ,,. I 1 r if' - Mgl ,y,:,C'R 'NZJV' ,,.., - . , 12+ , . , n jf L2--1,,,.,' '3 -' ...na '- 'VD' .Y ,z-.aan I W1 f' K5 ll 4 F' I if HX yX'f'NQ 51 '27 'Kiw- Q0 14,33 1 Qll Y , ,U uh -. f M, V o - I 13 fl YO: .itll 0 0 . '! jf!'7 I U- 1-'gp if U2 'T x w 1 1 -x x Q 5 P ,f f -fjifv x rl' if 7' . Kimi ' P X' X ,, ,f J. N 4 J '11 JY , Q 1 'fi-fs i -J . -A MP, 1. - JI ,-.Q , - 2.14 mr!! L Ll, -,f , , +P? - 7 . f , 1 4 , a f' Q, .. , 'SM r , 1 ,A -. V: ., f 5 4 x ' r 5 , I 16 I ,gr fu W. -14 xv 'XS il ,,. ,,v,e iff 5 .-- - L -5 t , 1-M --' L,.,,.. f 20 3 I e J I 1 EEE?-Q5-E , AUC I 3 ', x -9 n 1 , m 4 g 1 I : 1 ' 'Qi 1 5 M :- W' . - . m f- : i - ,5 . ,- A N Q 7' . q dv, -.X wb X M ibn'-5' W.- tw.. .,, ,,. qmvvbywuw- N f - va O 3 'Ni 21 Nils. 23 9 Q 5 F P4 1 J D 25 'ws '9- M lx 'fl ni U- w f' . .L . ,. ' J, .' iff,-. 0,4 Q 'WI A' V- -, Q ,mx ws gf :Q V -1 LAL. N '16 vi 4' - 2 ' val V U w.....,, ...E ff-nvfw 31 ii- - VOL. XLV NO. 7 SA. UFFICERS RESIGN, CHALLENG This week President Jim Harrington, Vice-President Allan Stafford. and Secretary Verna Petrilli of the Student Association, announced their resignations. With the student lounge filled to capacity on Tuesday morning at eleven, students and professors alike had to resort to sitting on the floor in order to hear each member state his reasons for giving up his position, THE LOG Friday, October 9, 1970 Page 4 by Buddy Cushman SSCMSCENE OF TRAGEDY CARL OUELLETTE Carl Ouellette, age 10, of and crawled along the fragile tiles, where the ceiling meets the that the many children in the housing project adjacent to the 1 As 3 5: the Commit! not my 0 college sincere 0 educatic experien nearby Rainbow Terrace, was pronounced dead last Sunday night His death was the result of a fifty foot drop through the ceiling of the SSP Auditorium early last Thursday evening. In spite of a valiant rescue effort by the than Ouellette, with two other boys whose identity is not known, got to the ceiling by way of ladders and trap doors Over the ceiling, 'ht-Q. were walking on catwalks that are there for electricians f .irl s accident occurred when tif' apparently left the catwalk wall Hand prints were visible on the tiles surrounding the hole where the young boy fell through. He suffered a fractured skull, internal injuries and lacerations of early Monday morning Carl left two brothers and two sisters Keegan further stated that he expected a full report on the incident within a few days. As of press time, the report was not released and the auditorium is still locked up college lack adequate playground facilities. This never would have happened if the kids decent t arl s mother in a stateme G S l tll Xl , Rm Q,Dtl.S lltlkl. UND RESDLV EU SUE . PRNUS XS LUG Editors l November 6, 1970 1. 'l UMMUNIIY Open Letter to TH EI F , ' '- . . Al' l' AIR, OI' X fi -... JN, . 0 411-0 e College Community affverssllzflglr epresentatrve on tic Policies iilemma I face is that of the entire nity. It is my in that the entire process as 2 at Salem State reevaluated and X iii. teas resent Demands The Individual and the Establishment 0-V512 .. Keegan Stresses New Salem ON PURPOSE An excerpt from Dr. Keegan' speech Sept. 28 We might perhaps do here what Clark Kerr hoped to do on the Santa Cruz campus of the University of Califomia, which is grow larger all the while growing smaller. I told the faculty that if we could disrupt campus life so that we could ALL learn together, we would turn so-called peaceful campuses into lively, active and stimulating ones in this Inauguration year. We could, I suggested, take some days off this year: to increase independent study among all students. to encourage new teaching methods. to stimulate discussion bet- ween our students and faculty on national and intemational issues. to draw the North Shore community to the college and move the college out to the community. to bring adult education or lifelong learning to the Salem campus, and finally. to set the tone for a new Salem ate. also told the faculty of my ew that the day of the socalled multiversity is over, whether public or private. I told them I have no interest in a large, research oriented university where the distinguished professors teach few students and the most distinguished teach none at all. I told them that professional advancement on some campuses is determined by the number of air miles flown. the number of lucrative con-' sultantships held, the number, and weight, of publications issued and the fewest number of students taught. In these terms it is ironic for some administrators and faculty to maintain that students should not be involved in sharing academic deliberations on the ground that they are transient and here for only four or five years. It would be interesting to compare the mobility of ranking professors with that of regular students. In some places, the argument of permanence and regularity of attendance would favor the students over the faculty. As the multiversity continues to prove its inability to teach undergraduates colleges like Salem State will take up the slack. xi t Q: 'F mf XS if H7 36 37 38 5. f 5 X M 6' + sf l 41 42 43 -il' NSU, nk 1. .g . '7a's?? wa as AE' 1+-5 K , n l s ' 1. 1' 'Ju 3x 1 ml. v Q 45 46 .33 ish, 'gill M9111 arf' mn? IXITYKEB mmm W r Ami. u. WW! UE FIRST THING in 'fo-v V'!'v, If 'fr cr' - uusnfl' Y 6 0' , X 1 ' f Vina , x., Y , K R , ,A XX K 'C 51 A ,,jf 15 ! 48 Until philosophers are kings, or the kings and princes of this world have the spirit and power of philosophy, and political greatness and wisdom meet in one, and those commoner natures who pursue either to the exclusion of the other are compelled to stand aside, cities will never rest from their evils,-no, nor the human race, as I believe,-and then only will this our state have a possibility of life and behold the light of day. Plato, The Republic 49 1 r I L l im I i I H I I f, I 50 Ns dl E 1 51 I l- H 'wh A ...J-xr-iq ,,. X uv--1 - .2 , 52 1 ,XX W! E :.::f Q2 j I, , Qa- wr' 'f ni' nxgrte-TY? Y f, '-'f' z'- , x .- v my ,. , , -if , n - - f?F1Pfi23'Q'f-fxkixg 'v 1-Vffhf? 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IUQVF' n -,' 'n .44 V154 53 I, .'. P-f uf' 'ff my-' W-. YJ 1 XXW i X- 0 , I'-if ' ' -'44 I -kappi a., HA. fi. V X ---1 61, 1. my f ,,,r..,- Q- ...a-gi ' . v I v swii -ni.-.- 'Z' --fs ' ff MW 86 AA '5- ....wg...4.-.A Q - 3 3 , J -T f 'Q am E I ' AMES J REILLY our or uuofncwuarf ' 4. K H? frm GN sl i'. 4.n' ll Vik: 'J UA. If ,t 'UI'- 5, nge ,.,, 3' 'fy .', 'Lil' 'fu ' 5 -,cl 9' ' N m:QN-'Z' 59 v'.'fp',3.. 1'.1'i ut ffi 1 I 4 I . JJ 1' 2 I 1 1,1 .- .. ...J I I '- in rv vf7x,q I.- -4 1 Q A f.'1..'.. . fi .,. 4,- ' ,v - fl ' 1'0- , bn, .., - 12.1 0 , '. , , o. .:,- 1, , L. Ora., .97 ' - ., 1, is B , I 88 ..a lil! 4'-, lvx .. ,, R..,.! f In 55 wk- 9 1.5 I r 'K' 1 1 -A .vc g'2.,.,-z., ,x f ,. Ex Q x 4. 'I r 1 ' 1' - . ', E 1-1. . . 3 ' w..f x x'- X . . ,I . F 1 F , 3 ' .. W - - -. -. . f. ' , . , '. B, .tk T :Q 014 3. .f Y X fr, ,, .4' .- '8 !'lur-um, ..,.. . . -1- - .- 2 Q 4 5 5 f 'x 1 I N u , x- vp.. . . - ' tv--Q , - 'W -' .p-pf. an 'ffl-e:'m.i'-'Nigga .. ,,, .. .. . . h .. H- .1 r .-. . 1. .4 L4 5 V' .., s .' . as ..- -- 'vs -,' ff 1-. 1 4 9 'hir-f '5 sw' ,A nf ' . ,4, f,,'. 2 hgh QS' - .Mfh 'Q S.ag .,.' . . . 4 . -.J- Hrs . ' 'W ' Q, .V A . Q , , W s-.. 'ff' '. sa f -1 f. at-I 5, 'M ' ' s - 'bud -,n,,,, J 4 Q .T 1 K -ik Q. . .Jax I 1 J V v I f' V. x'1, Nha 92 E . v 11 ' x Q . 'AH' i' 4 A 93 'IV 471 Nl 1.3. 'vfi xv 2 ...J Ziff- ..-- I. -.-Hz X S I Y Z x , 95 li .f X. 'lv-iunf' bl 98 f 99 P-.4 nt . , ,, L :ifl W 'f' i 1 :FQ x.. I 1 ' ' A , 1 fm' 1 . , , , 2 I 4? v, 5 'S- fu. , zf- Jgwmg. ,-. . .pu 5 f f, r xXN ' l, 1 1 hi A.,,f J' T iliv- ' Qguony-:isis 41' K hiv' 7 ' 'fs-br 133. 'F Vi. 3 I f- I 1 5 . I 1-:Q I --. gg IX '5 ?' X 'K FS f X M515 2-' ,if .4sL I A'- 1 ! 4 4 Q i 2 S 525. X iff - Wi , Al KY- J i 41 Waals, ffl.- .-qasqxs ' Lv. 110 A 4 . 1 -X h l Q 11' xmllth O11 C0 mm 1971 1123 45 6 7 8 910 f'12131415151'1 2192021222324 25 26 .11 28 29 30 i I . Y n an ..1 . .1 rf 29 ,Z 5 3 . ,. Y GY, I ,ls ts -L Beautiful People Beautiful people, you live in the same world as I do, but somehow I never noticed you before today, l'm ashamed to say . . . Beautiful people, we share the same back door, and it isn't right, we never met before today . . . But then, we may never meet again. If I weren't afraid you'd laugh at me, I would run and take all your hands. I'd gather everyone together for a day, and when we're gathered, I'd pass buttons out that say . . . Beautiful people, never have to be alone 'cause there'II always be someone with the same button on as you Include him in everything you do. Beautiful people, you ride the same subway as I do, every morning I just gotta tell you something. We got so much in common. I go the same direction that you do. So if you take care of me, maybe l'll take care of you. Beautiful people, you look like friends of mine, and it's about time someone said it here and now . . . I make a vow that sometime, somehow . . . I have a meeting, invite everyone you know. l'll pass out buttons for the ones who come to show. Beautiful people never have to be alone 'cause there'lI always be someone with the same button on as you Include him in everything you do. He may be sitting right next to you. He may be a beautiful people, too. If you take care of him, maybe he'll take care of you. 'Cause all of the beautiful people do, and you're all beautiful people, too. Melanie Safka 113 9 -x zaoet' V Akasa 5 ,-5. Af- B .Je 'ess Ezmcat on 'N .J 'Zi- 3.'J: AB' rx v-r-Q S i is Beverly Allison Frederick Anderson Elaine Andromidas English Social Studies Elementary Education an--'nf' Constance Antonuccio Diane Aquino Elementary Education Elementary Education James J. Argento Kathleen Arment Marcia Arsenault BUSWISSS Administration Social Studies Elementary Education Annette Audy Early Childhood Qt 'mf' If ' Patricia Banks Business Education ., 1-' I.. X NT Mrs N I 14 ff' s ..', Q.E QL .wmv L, -1 1, f url: , 1, ' fir' 'ity flfwu , ist'-ii' u ,L -1,58 . :fy lv' 54 , lk xV,l 5 ' . ,emily ' 4 I -rt I AQ v . , ' ' 1'ltllI N f1.ir'.tirN lr Hli',rlif:',', I fliinsitiiiir Aff -nfl Paul J. Baldi History : X Q James Barrows Business Education 116 James B. Ballard Biology Kathleen Barry Elementary Education 'C' Jennifer Bates Elementary Education gay 'sri-'gi - -' Peter R. Beauregard History -va Judith A. Belliveau X Laraine Bennett Elementary Education Lis Early Childhood Charles A. Benoit Ill Business Administration 'fig Louise Bianchi Business Education nvff' Margaret Bigwood Business Education ,. 5 J af Robert A. Bilodeau 117 LEIUVS BiShOD Business Administration Elementary Education Ellen M. Bisson Mary B. Bitonti Patricia Blair Business Education Business Education English Q Noreen Blanchard History firilliwriy T Hlziiiflirii ,J iz, y. nz. 4 lm- arts E . li ,--1 N Anthony J, Blandini English Y Lirirla S Blazonis F'fe'iif-rikiry F 'lliuiliriri Lllfjllfyll 'Ui L Claire Bogel French L X .ff , ,um id ,i ' , -. -' r 4. 4 'Fil' , 9' K x X A. 'i . q ,.. so Wes i gp- x Ethel Boghosian Barbara Bombaci Angela M. Boncore Business Education Elementary Education Elementary Education l i Qksx., 7 X 4 Wayne Bossa Richard Boucher Social Studies Business Education Cf Linda M. Bowman Jo Ann Boylan Edward Bozek Elementary Education English Business Administration X Q . .f 'IJ' fy, .,. q,A-cA,-. ...flluvu ..- A.,,,. A Q,-.Q -,, 5: -M. S. :Lv Qc L 5': X: f di, O if 'T J Abef'Bm.e A- 'Tb- Bus 'ess E' ca' of ff!- 120 L-'vda Brmey Elementafy Educatwon 5 I Pame a Bfoo-cs E e-fnemafy Edqcatxon SH ey Bros-.rw E'eff1efwta'y Eoucavorw an-1 Pun William Brown Math-Science Joyce Buckley English W Ronald Brush A., Early Childhood Robert Buckley French Elizabeth Buckley History Richard Burchill English Edna G. Burgess 121 Carol Burns Elementary Education Early Childhood 'si -wg Q he J'rx fki rx EW James Burns Patricia Burns Patricia Burton Business Education Biology Elementary Education Terry Bussone English T f' '3 'init 'Y 'v 1 ,..f- Paula S, Butkovitz Elementary Education 'Amfr-ill-rl Ffllllf'l vii in Butler Kathleen Cahill F ff iffll',i'y' t, 1l.'..1' l fkllly Clillrllloorl English Patricia Cahill Diane Callahan Rosemarie A, Calobngl Social Studies Elementary Education Elementary Education ,QS 1' if K 1:7-'W' Diane Calvi Jeffrey Cameron Business Education Math-Science Louise Campana Elementary Education Business Education Elementary Education Theresa Canavan Judith A. Cangiano -ag ,41- hwy T' Paul A, Cannava Biology Michael P Carey History intl Mary J. Cannon Early Childhood ff' J -gn' A4 Joan M. Cardile English Ralph Carter Business Administration Qf ' Frank Carter History jmii F f,.i'..iii 'i'i',',5i 'ifii'ji1l'. Richard F. Casey History S, f f-:ff 'IO' 3--f 'hi ff '6' -r Brian Cassidy Edward Cassidy Social Studies Business Administration 'fin' Candice Cassidy 'V X Geography Sharman Catanzano 'fi Julie Cause Elementary Education Elementary Education ,,. Q.. .,.aQ.m--0 Joanne L Cattley cn- Math-Science Paul J. Cavanaugh 125 Richard Cerone Business Administration Business Administration Mucnael Cerullo Socual Studies ' .' '...,' Mlvfx QIN7' Cletus A. Cervone Georgia F, Chaggaris Bnology Business Education iw! Thomas Cnarron Linda Chenery SOCIHI SYUUIGS Elementary Education X- .h r Q 'Ox rt ,uf ,, f,Pt,,f'rn,1 IJ ma I hnld 1 1 1 Hwy F 'inf fx? YI H11'.u1f:'f.', Ari 71 Stephen Chun rnumstrntnorm Busuness Admunlstratnon 13 5' sci? Patricia Chouinard English Linda A. Clute Elementary Education Peter Colantuonio Biology H!'f 7 iv' '?9 '4' Nancy N. Citro Noreen Clark Business Education Mathematics is James Colantonio Math-Science 3 ' 'US 'Zh' 45.2 -mmf' John R. Colby Norman Cole History Business Education -6 f ' 'mf' ' 3f9DlW9fl F Cole Peter Colosi Jr. EFIQNSH Biology 19g Mary Collrns qv, X Business Education K M csv' Thomas P Connelly Kathleen Connolly Buslness Educatuon Elementary Education In-o 'N-. 'W' X 4 'q Danuel P Connolly Hlstory Mary f,flnnf,llf 1Q8 Dorothy CNortonl Connors Vlffrrlffrllflry Fflllnzlllfm Elementary EduC3IlOr1 X 1 Voula qAgganisJ Connors History Y I Frank J. Coppolino Business Administr mmf? ation 1' rm 'US- Kenneth A, Cormier Business Administration Patricia M, Conti Early Childhood 'YQWX Ann Corso English Ay -cx 'Y Eleanor Cosgrove Elementary Education Norma Corsetti Elementary Education 129 John Coskery Biology ilk' Love me Cote Susan E Cotter Bruce Coughlin E e-'rwertary Eddcatwofw EHQMSH Hustor Y Daw a Com Fr:-PPV' I9 Cathryn Covert Enghsh 1' c1'W 1'f,,'1 Q CVVDQRPY AIISOU E Crowe Bw was Arjrrmmsrratmorw Busmess Educatuon bs. Chris Cucurull Patricia Cotter Maryanne Crozier ' d Elementary Education Elementary Education Early Childhoo TN Cftv' Kathleen A. Damato Norma A. Dane Business Education English John E. Day Business Education Business Admi Mary Ann Davis Marilyn Danisiewicz Elementary Education nistration an -Ss I Fllchard A Decareau Elementary Educatlon Barbara DeRocher Early Chlldhood ,Q 2 Mary Delaney T 'Sv' 175 Elementary Educatlon Jean Deslarduns French 5 ', l',,1'l li U1-Yfffm ll llll tl fl P I- ll-'l,'f' I f,.' Francis J. DeLeo English Marie Desjardnns Early Childhood ,, Joyce DlBIasi Elementary Education Janice DiLena Elementary Education en! Tb'- Cathleen Doherty Business Education 1- Karen Doherty l.. Elementary Education iv' , 'Y' Susan E. Donaghey Business Education 5 Linda Donahue English arzf' MaryEIIen NI. Donahue Early Childhood Pamela A. Donahue 133 Patricia Ht Donahue Business Education History .nf ,U D Katnenne M. 1KosudlakJ Donato Catherine Donovan Diane Donovan Business EduCaIlOn English Elementary Education Katnenne Donovan Sandra Doody G5 f ..f,p'x English Business Education Hfnrtmm J llmqovmz Gall Drnsczoll Ewwwfnmrf F fifnffrmrl Soma! Studaes Jo Ann Driscoll Business Educatuon 0- ' N 0 h 7 S. Louis E. DuBois Marybeth Dunham Linda A. D'Urso Business Administration English Elementary Education ik Robert W. Dwyer Sheila Grace Earle Business Education Elementary Education '! ?-f 2 Christine J. Edwards Elementary Education .new ' mfg . N 4 Nancy Jean Ellis Mathematics Leo C. Erwin English '-x f! 'in- Q--,-,. L Ma'1 a A Fam! Q' ,n 'M Q Q 9 'NM A4 . f 3:3 25 Eafp Cv Cwood n ff 10' my it YT J ' 17 fa' nge: 135 Nia'-4 LN Fave BJS 'ess Acfn 'w swat ov X. 'Jag P Fe:e'co B o oQy Maureen Feeley Elementary Education Carol A. Ferrone History 'Qtr Cynthia M. Figuerido Elementary Education Sereda M. Feener Social Studies Anne C, Fields Elementary Education 137 R TVX Q gh Mark D. Ferrera History Ann Filou Elementary Education 'ik' A Paula L, Finklestein Elementary Education 28 'Ui- GQ' T' Janet M FISH M Deirdre FltZQlbbOf'lS Joanne Flahgffy Elementary Educatlon French Elementary Education QS ,pr Thomas lvl Flanagan Bruce G Flannagan l-llstory English 3 F ' 'U' J l rllrf f- flllt'Q Pamll Frmtalne Elaine F Ford , l3lv,urlfff,f, Af,lTlIllI',ll'HllUll Elementary Education 1- 'Ui ,fc W- 'Q 4' 'U Kathleen A. Ford Marilyn A. Forte Jane Praize Elementary Education Business Education Elementary Education div -atv fi' f , ,Lug Camille E, Freda John Frontino Elementary Education English 3 ., tl x, ., .. iwsmw ,x. , -an-fn-sv- ' Regina M. Fulone James J. Gallagher Allen R. Gallant Business Education Business Administration History isa, K1 Jane E Gawlensku Elementary Education Robert F Genova Socnal Studies V wh A uttrwh ' Math Scuence -.f- ' Malcolm Gill Social Studies Eileen Marie Godsill Elementary Education Linda A. Golash Business Education 1' Arlene Goodwin English Carol Gordon 141 Millicent Gould English Elementary Education Iii 'if 'N f xi v1v 'PX Ks. ft N. iz! 1 , Elarne M Grady Chris Grarnmatucas Jr, Marla P, Grasso Elementary Educatlon Earth Scrence English Jean A Gray Htstory Av' .-I Q...-al Dorothy Green Busrness Education M i 595 A-' Q 1 Eterrfr '4 f 'f-1-rn' KAY? r 'r 4 1 f.1v f f ' ttf' mletrn Grlffum Nancy J Gualtlerl ffrruffntruy Eduf,.1tlfJf1 English 0 Pamela A. Guerette Diane T. Gulino Arthur J. Hall English English Business Education CZ' .uw Janice M. Hanley English 3-fa Anne M. Harrington Business Education in-fr! James T. Harrington Social Studies 'Ez Elizabeth M. Haran Mathematics 45.4 R Susan L. Harrison Biology W if' Kenneth Hartford Busrness Educatuon Diane Haveltck Enqtrsh '? -x 45 Kenneth Harvey Busnness Admrnnstratlon Janet E Haven T' .., 1 Elementary Educatnon , I . P ,f1' than: r 1 tr-',',P 1' if' Pamela J. Haug Elementary Educatuon Bruce Ns Hayes Englush Susan E Heenehan English K-2 15 Q! fr 'f FW, bf' Chi-7 L Christine E. fTrufantJ Hickey Elementary Education Joanne Hill Elementary Education Cheryl Hodgkins Elementary Education 4 lb? '1 Brenda Higgins Elementary Education Francine B. Hirsch Elementary Education 145 l K.. V James Higgins Business Education 1' Beverly fMoultonJ Hoch Early Childhood David J Hooks Business Education li fi 'Q-.,:Y' Patricia Horrigan Business Education Daniel F Hourinan Business Education nav ff V,'i'i',tivif: U1 Hrfriyhiiyri Hi'i'f:'.',i'i'if,51Yif1Ii -fi 'SQ' '-'nd-3 HOfwO0d Dennis J, Hough Business Education Hgsgofy X A .f '45, fb f Sandra l.. Howes Elementary Education Edward Hunt Elizabeth Hufynowicz H15ItJry French Andrea Hyde Cheryl Hyde Mary lannino Elementary Education Biology Rosalind Ann lnfurna Eileen lngalls English English James Ingram Lorraine Jackson Social Studies History AN 1 ' :N 3 Q I ' - x - ff . EI, 1 Y f T .4 ff' Nl' Z' . Margretta fO'l.earyJ Johnson lv! Q-f Denise A, Joy Elementary Education English Philip C. Joy History di 41 Marilyn qMurphyJ Johnson English 75 John Kavaleski 'fin Business Education Michael Karamas Elementary Education Ann Keefe English 149 Cynthia Keller Business Educ ation fir if 11'- as, J Mary Ann Kelley Socnal Studles Karen Kelley Elementary Educatlon ,315 Mary Kelllher Elementary Education Margo Kenlston Ellen Kenney Elementary Education History J.. fix Q-, -..qgy VPll'l'fl'll'f fl. Vffnmfy Duane rfQnnrnb'sJ Kernvan ilffrrlffrttnry l flllultlwn Ellqlmll ,CW 3 df Wllllam Keto Buslness Admunistratlon Flobert Kieran Nancy M. Kierstead Ellen Kiley History Elementary Education Elementary Education 0' .f- Claire Kiriaji Esther Klarreich Biology Business Education Gr taser June C. Knowlton Alan J. Kobos Jeanette Kochanski Elementary Education Elementary Education Elementary Education 1 H v- I hd! cf' Q cg Af.: -M ff' zo., . ' ' r ,' 4.'y.',a1 X T 'fri' 1 9 V lgr PV lx sf gf WL Carol Kulas Richard A. l.aChapeIIe Early Childhood Elementary Education Patricia Kwiatkowski Elementary Education uh YZ Beverly H. LaCoste Karen S. Laider Elementary Education Early Childhood 'C' , 0-' Linda CDOWJ Lafond English Ann Lake 153 Michael F. Lanny Business Education Business Education Gerard Lambert Brology MAP' Duane Marne Landano Elementary Educatlon in Sk Mary l lrtrlrf l wrlf-rl':l'f 7 flllmzlllfm ROQGV F '-3mD9V1 Martha B. Land Buslness Admlnistratlon Bugmegg Education John J. Landers Jr. Business Admmistration YWX ,f 4 Us YL.: Cheryl D Lanrgcrr Joan Larson ElIfjlI'ull English if ..,.- , fi I . 'N :rr cn- , 5 1 V. .f h . -V 4' ' F, t' .fJ'gx5Pyg, i 5 gf I af! Q, A-'I Roger L. Lauzon Business Education Nancy Langill Paul Langone Math-Science Business Administration ' . ig,-. Q Kathleen Lavangie John Lawler Eafih Science Business Administration f CN x or IAQ JHFYISS E. Lawlor Catherine Lazarakis Arthur R. Lear Mathematics Elementary Education Earth Science in-f 19? Cdr EQ ia Q 5' 9x Steorven LeBlanc Busmess Ecmcazuon l' Dove L.-55 afwc 'Aafefvat cs fiaou D Lee P-4StO'y QPR Q J 9 1, if n1A, A Ellabeth LQWWGS Buswess Education Nancy L. Legro Biology Anita Lehto English Stephen Levin English ET' ,ps eq' , 1r '7 Brenda Lewis Elementary Education Marie Loiselle 157 Social Studies ings David W. Leigh History SR Dale Lodge Business Administration Q- .Lf l Victoria Long English 1,9 5' -: g: Pete' Looata L wda Lord 5 'ess E:-:at 3' B.s ness Acfr rw stfat of E erver1ta'yE:.camofw iw 25.11 Ldias Karev B Lulwgo '-'af'S aT SS Bus ness Ecucat Oh Q i .+ -2 cfvw L -v'Nf Patfcwa 'dacmado H H 4 Efg e Bdswess Educatxorw 'Ir jf 'WK 1- 'ao Tv- v- Donna MacKay Claire S. Macoul Susan CSawyerJ Maghione Business Education English Elementary Education QV' .gmt ,, Michael Mahoney Paul W. Mailloux History History 'QB Patricia M. Maisey Janet Mallia David M, Maloney English Early Childhood Business Administration ,.., 1' l Ga Ma oney Busmess Ecucatfon Mafy Mancm: Engusn , NV Yr John Manning HiSiOry Aan ng Ewa gn 1' if' I.. ,.l:,,,,V , r'l fn ri 'Y Cainer ne N4ans'weNd tn- v ,v 'ti E evwentafy Educat-on 160 Mncnael Marcamec Eartn Science Pamela Marcuccl French fr cf' :ab-7 M-an Janet Marino Elementary Education Ann Terese Mascia Business Education fi Beverly Martin Business Education Cynthia Mason Business Education bl 15 A Q, wuz 'Y Barbara L. Martinson Elementary Education 'Q-1-4 L Michael Masucci English Linda Mazzaferro Christine May 161 Elementary Education History W-.43 oa' 'dciif de Isabel McCarthy Paul Ge McCIory og Sn Elementary Educatlon Buology -..Z Y' 'JC Q: if-N Sn j be 'D' 104 James M McCulloch History Qgl., '-7 i' 4' D iwvf: '. 1cEaf,' em Joanne McGee B .5 was Afzfnm fstfatmn Busaness Education Jeannie McGinn English Christopher McGillivary Business Administration ? Linda Mclnerney English I 2 James McHugh Biology :Ki Joanne McLaughlin Elementary Education 1 -1 ' Michael McLaughlin Ellen L, McNiff Phyllis McTighe Business Administration Elementary Education Elementary Education wx' arf' he J Peter F Meggeson Busmess Eoucanofn ,..- Joseph Fi, MSIIO Socwal Studaes -Of. X- ' J 2 C+-ery' A 'N.1esewe E e'Ywee'a', Efwcaf of' Q Mnrdred Metrsck Elementary Educanon 164 Francis N1 Mwcabe H4STOry ,f-Y Kent Miller History 1, r Patricia Minogue Jul i , Elementary Education 1 Natalie Miller K English rp- le Nbr Pamela Mitchell Elementary Education 'WT Mary M, Moore Business Education ff' ' if, Mane A. Moccia Elementary Education Gloria Montuori 165 Ann M, Moquin Ef1QliSh Elementary Education ' a , I . John Morarwdu 'VlathfSc:ence 5-1 I .3 WN UC' '-14 Hemy E Morgan Barbara G. Moring HIStOry Elementary Education fe, ir' l Lucmle C Mormw RIChard Morley Busmess Admumstrahon SOCIHI Studies ,X Q 5 P X 42+ Arm T Mfqmse Alan Morrell EI'I'jlI'uY1 Mathematucs !lP7 i7 Y' . i, A - 1fl'fQ'Ql 'Xl Karen Morrell Arleen Morris Mark T. Morrisey Elementary Education Elementary Education HiSi0ry Mary E. Morrison Business Education Caroll E. Moulton English Regina E. Moscardini Elementary Education 1' ,fi 'TP Sheila E. Muldoon Paul W. Munzing Mathematics Social Studies fl? 4 :UQ 'J Anne Murphy Elementary Education Dtana M Nahass English in W R. Joanne fMooreJ Muse Early Childhood RM I 5 'lf -- Eileen Murphy English ,-,4 YY, Judith Nangle Math-Scnence N Dorothy Nardella Mathematics ,,,,,,, rJ,,,.,,',,,,,, 168 Linda Nataupsky F:1rY!'r',f.tf' ff: Buslness Education 'few f f 1 1- we s....:' Ann Naughton Business Education arg, 'Av' 11 - ' Roberta Nussbaum English Susan D. Naun Business Education Bichop Nawrot Business Administration Elaine Newman English Barbara Nazarechuk Business Education 169 Susan A, Nelson Elementary Education 6 1'-7 -of Susan Nitto Elementary Education ,fin fi ff? wg. Barbara Ngfmg Cnnstlne O Bnen Patncua A. O'ConnelI Eng sn Busnness Education Business Education Jose-:urn O Conno' Patncua O'Connor Engnsn Elementary Educatuon 3 D Q- -Q' i ' ' ' 'n ' Snsan fS,wf:ttewOC1frm Gerard O'DonneII ia' , Ch'3d 'fJ',lU Social SIUUISS Brian L. O'Leary James B. O'Leary Jean Oliva Biology Business Education English ., 'bag si: Q Y' x -. J I Ann O'Meara David B. O'NeiI Mathematics Business Administration il' .lf 3 Anne J. Ordway Paul G. Ormond Patricia A. O'Shea Business Education English Chemistry 1Q '1 ' .mn ,XF . X ravi T .4-f Germ Ostefman Boogy AC-5 9 Saga an 0 E ea'e'a'a', Ecacaf sw Loretta O'Wm Busmess Educatuon 3.4 Q John Packard Social Studnes Dame! Pamano Busmess Admsmstratuon QD VH. 34.4. . ,f:'.f.,, Joseph Palazola MathfSc1erwce 172 Walter Pare Elementary Educatuon O Diane Pariseau Early Childhood Lucy Parsons Elementary Education , Robyn Parkinson Cynthia Parsons 49' Y Elementary Education Business Education 1 X. 'Q Linda Patsiaris Business Education wg? James Pawlowski Business Education if Robin Pearlstein 173 Joan Peckham Elementary Education Business Education 'Q 'YA 'Sw' Q' Donna L Pentiand Donald M, Perkins Richard Perron Elementary Education Business Administration Business Administration Linda Peters Richard A. Peters Elementary Education Mathematics 1 lg. V Fiimtieth fitmirfiofii Pvfttiriqrfll Anna Petullo Sharon Phipps PA,,ii.ffrn,irif,'. Eilqlisli Business Education 671715 qv, : l T- -x M. Lois Phelan Barbara Pierce Thomas Pizzello Elementary Education Elementary Education Business Administration W? TTI? 'X' ' S.. cis. 4 Mina, .1t3?fC'.1f-: -A gi :L '44 rms- -'5i3i:V'Ps2 ',v ffzffffffjf Befflafd Pohl Maureen Polsi Business Administration Mathematics 1 ' Wg Lois Polsonem Wendy Ellen Portney John powers Elementary Education Early Childhood Business Education 5- Wt' Dane O 34 ew N1aryE, Oumn H stofy 3 4117i S ef' 176 Donna Rauseo Bwsme-ss Educateorw Deborah Reagan Busmess Educatuorw ff IV Q r pn. .. flqx 0 4 ,I f 'WN Jane Reilly Elementary Education Richard Reily Mathematics K-,AD Pauline Remy Business Education 4r ' Susan Reilly Mathematics Judith Renoni History 'i iii rv. 13' -'rv Robert Restaino History 'S '79 -az ' A 6' -11' ' ff ' x V R Andrew RSUSCN Joan Reyngldg Social Studies English 53' 5.1-v .4 vb- 2 a'ga'et Ca e,N 5? 3:5 Eare :Ace s 'ass CMH' ff Eau C .4 - -Q VJ., V To 49 Irene R1CT'T3fOSOO Vlathematwcs Hrs: -1 D rv-aff-4SAf .1 - , Roc I. Ficnabaugh E emeffaf, Ezmcat Cf E efvevtafy Ecdcat on fvl 4, 1 If Ar-- is .J, . s .gf-1 'I A ' 4'4 D':Df 'SU '17 E3a'bara Robmsorw Hfstofy 51 Yvonne Roderick Daniel Rogalski English English Linda Rogers Earth Science '40 T.. 'Y Marlene M. Roman Claire Rooney vi 'rf Early Childhood Elementary Education K' 5 ff ap- 'P Roberta Rosenstein Brenda Rotondi Earth Science History Diane Ruel French IU? 'Q War' 1 fi if ' 7'- R RN' . 2-P' X l , Paula Ftuelle Paul Ryan Elementary Education Social Studies Mary Ryan Elementary Education ,gif 3' f' hr- ' 'f NN: f XM 4 Edward Flybuckr ' 54 Lucllle Sacco Englrsn -. A 4 Elementary QI' 'CN Katheryn S Sacco Elementary Education lwfu, ',,,'lf,, 180 Stephen Salvo lllglmy Engllsh Diana Sampson Elementary Education J' Patricia Santeusanio English , 'BY ,4-' :Q if if Donald Sandos Business Education f X 'D Susan Camille Sardella Mathematics Mary Sanguedolce Elementary Education S- Theodore Sarnowski Business Administration Kathleen M, Sauchuk 181 Daniel Schaefer English Business Education '23 'UN ,MIIX ,J Sl -:-l.-,: X-.. 2..- ... Q-:QQ ..- ..:. -F Q 1 Qx qfr' AQ - J ,X Maureen E. Shannon Patricia F. Sheehan Elementary Education Business Education I Q H, Deborah Schultz Elementary Education ef' S.. Marjorie Shyavitz Ferna Silva Business Education History Jeanne H. Skinner English T15 Q Dennis Smith Business Administration Elizabeth fOtoskiJ Smith English Ga e Lynn Sm tn Eng en K v ,, F- A .fx , Dru 'eme a', Eiga Pl 3 ,., .., f- ge' 1 'Qi ti' Kathy Lee Smith 9 'fi a t 3 'N Elementary Education Katnleen Smith Eany Chndhood Noreen Sotan Enqltgn 184 Casmera L Soroka Elementary Educatuon E FTE' '-YN ff-KA' Stephanie Squullace Elementary Education i Carol J. Stagno Elementary Education Donna R. Staples English A u 4f'w-New ,S O , sf Andrew W. Stallworth Social Studies 1 M! ,Tc i, Elizabeth Steele Early Childhood Patricia Stansfield English 1' Gail Stokes English Maureen 5YU QlS 185 James L. Sullivan E'emem3VY Education Business Administration Q--J Mary H, Sullivan Christina Szybiak Paul Tagliamonte History Elementary Education Social Studies Q' 1 Qu Mary E Tanrnosh Mary Tassi Bus megs Education BUSUISSS EdUC3fiOf1 Ao i .,,f Rairwl 1 Tsiylwr Liirry Taylor Mark Taylor E iffrnffnmry f1'jWf,FlYiUVI Mathematics Main-Science .-ev yy Ann Thibeault Elementary Education Rita Terenzi Business Education si. qi' Susan Thlerauf Elementary Education 2:9 Otis B. Tholander Arlene Thomson History Business Education 1 JV 1 Dorothea Thomas Cheryl Thornton Elementary Education Elementary Education Elaine Toleos English '- Ronald T Toleos Hlstory Carmlne C5 Tortora MEIN-SCl6OCE' X, Mlcnael Tomao Buslness Admlnlstratlon dx ' 'ff Barbara Tominsky Elementary Education Karen Tranos Elementary Educatlon L 'Vx Randolph Townsend Buslness Admlnlstratlon E. 9.,, S 'l',r'rl:1r Trcgrr may Sheran Tremblay Elg,,f,,f:o5,'Y Efiwfla. K, Early Cnlldhood Robert M. Trudeau History Gale Tuomi Business Education nr-P Susan M Trull Early Childhood Paula CCaseyJ Vail Early Childhood 'T' ga Sf K 'fm-W-fr' .P N Ralph Tufo English JS' wil' If Patricia Vaillancourt English X ,I Veronica M. Valente 189 Diane Valenti Elementary Education English ro 1, Joan Vaslly Mary K Vallas Susan Vatalaro Elementary Educatlon English Early Childhood vii rv ? ' fv' Y' Beverly Vogel Donna Voke Jeanne M. Vozzella Elementary Elementary Educatlon History - p 4- . N5 l 'Y' Q ,fy lj ,l',',,' ,,nr- Davlrl E Walker Kathleen Walsh l my Swami Strlrllffs Soclal Sludaes tx Q-' 66 Sharon Walsh Linda A. Walsh Paula Walsh . . h English Elementary Education Englis 31 'if' A 1 65+ L60 ll- ,gp Ronald Weekley Sheila A, Waltos Anne Weafer Business Education Elementary Education English 9 3-N 1' 'Q William Whalen Doreen CDoyleJ Welch Martha Welch ' ' Ad ' ' tation Social Studies Elementary Education Business minis r Davxd Wfweiton V Karen A. Wnckman EWQES x -ff 1:1 yy I Lwqe N3 1 1 P Ffa' 'uf gal Ea.1cat: 'w QQQZQQ 'ya' ' ' 1, E 'H 1 She-'Ia Whute Earwy Cmdhood 'as N- P HQ-Wy .'.' -1 8.15 was Educatwom 192 Busmess Educatmon DornsgGraybW1IIuams Engirsh 'TI Cheryl Woodfm Elementary Education Dr7b 'b'5 P x ufsf-r Charlene Wodzynski English 'Q' i Jan Wazniak Business Administration Edward J. Zubiel Math-Science U Cynthia J. Wood English Nancy A. Zampell Elementary Education 193 Ronald Wood History Joseph R. Zina Earth Science an . K -.Q an Rhonda CPoretskyJ Zunick Elementary Education fx lo' i Adellna Antunes Engl sh 3' Y N K , Qt 4' 'wx- Patncla Carter Buslness Educatlon N Kenneth Beaton Robert Carlson Buslness Educatlon Mathematlcs L My L Kathleen Conrad Elementary Educatlon 'ZFX' Xv L, .,k,., 5,1 -1, if' Wllllarn Kuszmar Nance Lallberte Bloloqy Elementary Educatlon C 'Y diff? Eileen Manos Linda Mahan Patricia tCareyJ McCarthy Elementary Education Elementary Education Elementary Education 195 Dx During the past year, my first at Salem State, I have been struck by the dramatic quality of a campus in conflict with itself, struggling to move out of a past age of witchcraft into the present. The diverse impressions l have received, placed in juxtaposition, form a mental collage of such twisted images as . . . the highly prescriptive curriculum which treats stu- dents as bleating sheep rather than as individuals . . . mossbacked faculty oaken in their opposition to any change because any change is evil . . . baby-bottomed faculty quixoti- cally supporting any change because any change is good . . . students who have the guts to challenge the system . . . the incredible inefficiency of the audio-visual services . . . the normal school mentality of those administrators, faculty, and students who consider col- lege a four-year extension of high school . . . the deep dedication of faculty who work ex- ceptionally hard to effect rational change . . . students who don't give a damn and those who give too many damns. . .the twaddle and circumlocution in the Faculty Senate. . .the impotence of student government . . . the many students who care . . . the fear, mistrust, and confusion in all segments of the campus community . . . the intellectual maturity of senior English majors . . . the completely inadequate size of the secretarial staff . . . stu- dents who request extra classes because they are interested in learning . . . faculty who consider students to be inferior beasts who must be kept in chains . . . the sophistication and maturity of many students . . . unethical conduct before and after the faculty election . . . the banal priorities of student demands . . . those faculty who believe students are people too . . . the archaic minds that believe all knowledge comes packaged in semester- long chunks. . .those misguided souls who think that the art of teaching can be taught in a course . . . students who can produce a pamphlet on ecology and work to improve the campus environment . . . students who deface the grounds and litter the buildings . . . the willingness of the faculty and administration to consider changes and a spirit of guarded optimism among those who strive for improvements. The conflicts involved within these images infuse vitality into the college. From such con- flicts will come, I believe, a break with the rigidity of tradition and a movement into a period of innovation and experimentation. From such conflicts will come a time when students, faculty, and administrators work together with mutual trust and respectg when students are treated as individuals and as human beings, when faculty place the educational process above their petty departmental and personal concerns, when the curriculum is open, and when students have options available to them for meeting degree requirements, fulfilling major programs, and being evaluated. My impressions, then, are such that l believe the necessary changes will occur, and they will happen because members of the college community are growing to realize that educa- tion is not dictation and memorization but rather questioning, analyzing, and thinking. And the educational process at Salem State is already being questioned, analyzed, and thought about at every level. Dr. William E. Mahaney 196 f 198 -ff'- 1' 0 1 A' if 2: O hw? . Z Y Q. .Q 'Q , p U LJW1' ' ' LQ if . J f b ' we , it iff' ' - ,LH in -f 9 ,- ,fre ' ,J 0:5 , O ' 1' -4 1 ' . ay, Y - gl :fpip 44,47 , 5 -Q ' 5,531,454 . xg -57 ffl: f-1 . Q U is .n, 1 Z xiii Hx W -- X ,E X ,i X x K ' - 'S' 'L X , -ff .W-K if M .Q gf Q.. fklll. ,U -,Aw 1' A w , was ,' 1,133 1 ' wig., ,A '5 , . 6 3.. M- 3 1,51 ' , J: '5'1?'.,x:.r4'!', .,., A f 1 nivvuui- ..:fP,f.,f2?w'.:, 4123.3 I rg-ga.'1.., .... S I z' 205 Win A x -Q X 5' , gil , .rt C ,J f,,v TA 1- if Freedom All of the other beings in creation are subordinated to very deinrte physical laws. You are not. You are not restricted and you can take anything upon yourself and you can be anything you will yourself to be. You are your own master worker and sculptor. and you form yourself to your own liking. So. you are tree to descend to the level ofthe beasts. but you can raise yourself to the highest species ofthe godhead. ln you alone. as human. is every type of action and every kind of life. And so the basic freedom we all possess is the capacity to determine ourselves. By mal-ting decisions we are free to be anything. bat. mo'e than anything eise. we are tree to realize ourselves through the fullest use of our freedom. Each one of us is the principle of freedom that we are willing to accept. We cannot be any more free than the amount of risk we are willing to take. Thus. we can never avoid the stark reality of our responsibility. lf you deny that you are free. you are destroying yourself-your whole existence becomes a matter of despair. lf you deny your own freedom. you can only regain some semblance of freedom by living for the group or the commune. Your indifference to freedom makes you susceptible to any of the various systems of un-freedom, and existence, as it is in Orwell's 1984, becomes a life of complacent routine, a habit, or a duty. If you recognize yourself as free, you are freed by the components of every decision that you make. You then gain the capacity to live with less structure, with the unpredictable, and even with your own self You are freed to use your own resources, and you are freed to determine yourselfthrough your own work, whatever that might be. You will then possess freedom and control. You are then a spontaneous being. What you do is not important. By your decisions, your actions, and your labor you are engaged in the most fundamental project of all-your own self-formation. Your only handicap in this endeavor is yourself. Knowing yourself then means knowing what you can do, and nobody knows what he can do until he tries. The only clue to what you can do is what you have done. One cannot avoid conflict in this, if you do, you become a smooth-running machine where every effect is levelled off, where all desires are automatic, and where all feelings are flattened out. So in order to be free you must involve yourself in risk, the risk of your security, your comfort, your time, and most importantly of all, your self-interest. You have to use conflict, then, because all freedom is born out of conflict and tension. We are really freed then through self- discipline. We are really only freed through commitment. When you recognize yourself as free, when you are responsible for your freedom, you act spontaneously, and you seek to give yourself completely. You realize that you cannot be part of a noisy crowd and be free, but that you must stand as a single individual-inwardly honest and generous, in order to reveal yourself to yourself and in order to help others to be tree also. Mr. Edward D. Meagher 209 '1 . 't v 210 211 I tix Y I X M 0 Qi fl S --...sz f f 1 5. ' Q .- ' six . A' V W 7. I H-Q . P I wr - it f , F 7 r 1 1 . . In JL ,IQ Y 516 Q 'li 4 u 1 ' Q 4 ? .f -sl . . ,n L ia-'Ez 3'-w A '- '..1- ' V- ,.-.-g. - ' . .f,,,-.- - , -J A- 214 '21 Q' wh sf., ws f :ffl 2' L... 'WSW' ,1 - -ua- - ... l 4 217 I - ...,- l If A 9 XC ng Wlfxk N-Q5 'vvw-esnvw O ay. 1 ,fx SE 5 Q ss . -avi S A W 5 T ,Q -ss , 1. 'M ENN'-4 X-..,,.c4 ' v i .K K . f a. N, ..... Q , g axxi 219 -id- . . ' , 5r,'2,.-'5 1 fr f f,:, ff! 4 .. ,- . , 'H- 4, 1 11. iffy, . gif., An f' V f'.1. 1 i4. 'e f ul Nw sr': ,g .P ++muif +'2i+f ' 1 .'.qw ,sv A55- 1 c.4 , m'4l ' Y , 'AA K ps, - M-uk 'sq ,gk .4-yn 1-'.,,.'-- 2, Je,-yfby' ' o k l 91 ,. I , 7 ' i- f ffq i,w..,: ,Q ' .ff ' -'Q at J - -sa.-'f-'-F UU! 9- 'P fi 0 -.2 5 Y'.1'.'Q'!-Q. I 'Xi D-. ' I vfikqiyff I 'Hg LW-1 ,lg Q rig! 3,1 ,Q Q .J w., - f - - H.-A , . I tw ' 7 5 V --Q,-u -. J., .Y yn Q w 'P+ ' 'l f - .J 3+ -,rg '+,- '- z,, k--4 f.. ,ww- '- ', .9 xl' ' fa 11' LY' 2 . yi' 1' -:V 'u,J 'J Y FAA' ' -fn rf ' -yr? th A2 Z 1f ,L,-J- K'-C fr- 'H 6. n .. A ,Q ,wb HV ' AVS?-vb .,,'5g ' ,q ,,,- ll' -' z ,. ' ,mm aw .- 5'l'Ef iZLfglhr ,L-1 J+- ns' - - 3Y3QJ'W wk-fgvnug 1 - - A af fa. ' i.'n.iMff' RAY' ' .1 :lv?Y,'Na r .9 inf - . ' :JK JPN 220 R 4 ' ' Rv? slr 'ks 'WWW Y ': Y' 'LG 4 'F ar- 0 . .- . .YNL 71. lf x X Q' sf' -, 'Y uk Tslv ' 5 PA ' 7- stl I ow' . 1 sn 'I I f 2 ew N. 1 C I , x O 222 Wx 'A ., Ax'aA X x ' i f Q' 1 .X fxxx A-, CC' Bl g..l 32 has 225 -1-.,. 1. - . uf 3 1 .f l 226 A if. I L ,ix -it ? m T 227 In Memoriam lg K9 wx Z' June 14, 1970 228 , ,,1A ,rf - V - , ,, I . -m Ei. .--' 4241, .fYx '44e ' , 33. 1 A ,yr ,sp Laner 5'1970 229 X v I ff' 1 X ' ' dn l ,I 1 1 My UT XR?-J 71,5 J ' 'X h w-f, 1 ' ' 'ZQTQ -B -4 --'H' 231 3 'KN -J N 3. Fw , 22 ll S i r L 4 5 S 5 1 1 5 l x gyx s 1. X 5 -6 11? X .,-n ! i I 238 I W 239 X' ss A Cb :H 93 s n Q I' , D h llllllll lll'lI mg In 0, SIBVISII IIBS INAUGURATING THE 1970'S AT SALEM STATE COLLEGE Not the inauguration of a person but of a place, not a historical pageant but a celebra- tion of the future. Salem State College will open wide its campus between April 28 and lVlay 16 to inaugurate the 1970's. The themes are learning and teaching, race and society, man and civilization, science and technology, and our common cultural roots. Leaning on the strength of the past but not bound by it, the College will become for a few weeks a learning society, a wonderful degree-less world of concerts and plays, sound and film, books and seminars, life and learning. We invite you to join us. ZW! 1. W Frank L. Keegan President Salem State College 243 2-44 A 'T XXX 4,.. Cl Zi 'u 'z iifili Av Y? xv ' . H' 1, flak QQ. :fNLJw v-rg 'f- I n .1243 fi: ' 4 ,Q 4 ,Q , -e+,s ,- 'g g-:if .yvf ', dai' -US ff3K ,X ,xv ,a ny - we-' n Zhfv QQSQ. -7i3??: 3 'gif Al, 5 . V? 'fxq 1 4, N' P 'E z u 110 J :QQ 1 Q. QF.. dl' x 249 10 flfi vfjwg 5909 C 'DUNS KJ 250 251 ,N 'FW f 451 252 mm 1 O df Iii' O vl QR x th? 0. ww yslke.. - ' r . ' - x- , . .. 4 -1 , 1 -. , X, .nwg 5 . ' V A.-sh V. I l I ,Lf . 1 I.. , .l.- - ,xV.,r, uv? xr, 1 - '-. , - , -- V :Q -X ,, 4. . t s12'fN',, . f ,--- ' 1, ' V 1 . . ' 'q ' 'P' ':, Q .,' x-Q 'x 42 ' ' .'- V , 'we 1 :4,.f5, '. X -' A fi . Ms.,-. , ,. ,. H 1 XXHP- --S x ., ,, .V .5 -A K . .. . N . , 1 J., .., --..,.' :'+-.' 'X . , 1 'I .31 My- fi . 'gmvl , at x 1- -gf - 'C'-A ' - . X ' N ,, Al., . , ., .. N . . .5 ,.,., , -. an X .. . 1.,-Y' 510-.'1 ' .o'. : S'.5x- ' 'l.,,Kuf vuq., ..:Lk '15 H, 5 h ,. ,-.znq Q.-.,.. . , N- if .Y rr Y -ig Qs Nfg ' pikxa X Q 7- N ,' -H991 iw g-.x. .Rm X 4 I A K K I i 'Nm X .-.Xxx X S ,N - - ' .wg , . :- ' A Ns, v Y - we ' - ' Q ' 7' ,rj . x 4 K - pq. 1 ' ' R lx , , .ii X, ,, ,,..f h u 5 Q f F 1 :idk ,. e s .. x' R www- ' i-xg 'MQ x,.,.2l- l 254 DL, ., 5 in I ---,,,'-r-r---.,.g..- Iv ' ' '- 'ff afar 256 257 In Retrospect , . . Ave atque vale-hello and goodbye! lt's been a short four years. Having come aboard-i.e., to Salem-just four years ago with the Class of '71, I feel a close identity with this class. We've laughed together, cried together, and that's good! That's good because, to my knowledge as a psychologist, the human animal is the only animal which can laugh and cry. We've proven we're human! Changes in the last four years? Well, from my vantage point, the changes are most reflected in curriculum development. ln the last four years the following curricula have come into being-with a lot of quiet, hard work making them possible: social service, psychology, nursing, political science, among others. Note that these are all action programs. Any student coming out of one of these programs in the future will be in a strong position to move creatively in hisfher little corner of the world. Equally significant, in my judgment, are the evolving options which are available to students, honors work, foreign study, independent studies, interdisciplinary studies, etc. The corollary here is that with more options available the counselling function should be strengthened. In my judgment, we still need more work in this area. Some years ago, I was involved in the development of something called CUES , or College University Environmental Studies. The environment here is not merely the physical environment but, more importantly, the intellectual environment. The CUES Scales were developed to measure the tone of the setting. The two poles on the scale were Cay an extremely rigid, structured, controlled environment, and Cbj a completely free wheeling, open, uncontrolled setting. Obviously, either extreme gets slightly ridiculous upon analysis, as the pure existentialist is as impure as the pure essentialist. In my judgment, again, I believe we can strike the balance at Salem. I believe we are in the process of doing so at this point in time. The process, from my perspective, is involving increasingly more an identity with the Salem community and the North Shore generally. The town and gown are working more effectively together. This process has also been going on for the last four years. When recalling change during the last four years, we probably should not forget the sensitivity training activity begun a few years back. In my book, as a generalization, there are no good guys and bad guys -no white hats and black hats-simply people who have not yet met each other on the level at which both are functioning. It is always enlightening to discover how much people have in common when they talk to each other, listen to each other. The planet earth does indeed look small as seen from the moon, or some point beyond. Finally, may I enter a caveat? One of the more silly pictures l get these days is that of institutions suddenly discovering that what happens in the third grade Ci.e., early childhoody is important. This institution has known that for a long time-say, a hundred years. Through the blood, sweat, and tears years-when name institutions were not remotely concerned with the third grade-this college and the state colleges generally were involved. A lot of good work was done. Alot of good people were engaged, committed. As we move constructively, creatively into the future, let's not forget the past! My prayers, my good wishes go with the class of '71-now and for always. Dr. James J. Fieilly 259 lllvlll 1 unifi- 117 Q6 , f Sb 5 1 ,w ,gg . I tl A In dlp' I' .1 vwa 4.-fr v,:.'.,,. -. vig.- -. v,,..f. 1 sew -s.. . - P. X-.ttf . 9-. 5, V. .. ,..,,.ff 4. x ' '- N., B., -.ZX sw., .,.:1 if- xi .ff .. 1' . I W, g x . f 1 f 'd 'Q- , r '1 rf 'FX' X 262 1 X N g X. s K. 5 I g Z I lil III: III! Ill N X , - .f-XE. ,5', . '- in Fifi-. 2?5!1'if3Z L f'fS9f --.1-13?-' 3 I x, ' .- , - ,ffl ,, ,. 2. , ! ' I 1 Q Q I ' ' 4 ' l i - - I A KI v . ll I -QTL ! V' - vu- 1-iuflihlv XFX , uv: Z-5 , Eli 4, L , XX ' V .4 ' ' l k,- h. -' isp.: ' ' ' Q . -- , ' 51 N A '11 1 . , K Q X ,hw ... 1-- .4 '--N,-' 'Q f . 9'-r. g?1t:,,2-w gif? Elisa: ,?'::33m1.L:,i .2 Ag 4 K ' i .rig ,715 1 . ' 'A V ,. xii. A yay 4 ','..,- Mr' ' ' J . 1,1 ' ' ,,ns.,?3':f3'LJQ V-x ,' ' ,574 .' 6. ,, 5 2- 'Qi X H ii 'f Q hu St 2 ,, I I ', 1 x -i. . :J Yr' V awk. . -if - x nv. 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' ' ' ' - ' -,I V . f f f . - ,X ' 4-' ' J., 1 A , ' -' Q mv '-4 7 295 -v. . nuuuc llsltbOIDDlOlOOlUbQlOCOUl UOIXOOOOCOOD v I -'M'-'-f wmv!!- pf- ,..,..Y 297 Commencement Address Class of 1971 Let me express my gratitude that the students of this class have seen fit to honor the faculty at this college by asking one of its members to speak as an individual at its commencement exercises . . . When I first came to Salem State College, students often asked me why I did so. l suspect they questioned me because they themselves were searching for their reasons for their own presence. From what I can remember, I told them the following: 1. I said that I believed in some way that the future of the nation depended on public higher education. 2 After living in the New York City area for ten years, I said I wanted to come to a college that was small. I wanted to feel that I belonged to the institution. 3. I said that I did not want to live in Boston. and I didn't want to face the problems of commuting. 4 I said-most important of all-I wanted to work in a College that had roots in a community because I deeply believed that this fact was a require- ment for a meaningful education. I find-six years later-that my reasons have greater validity now than ever before . . There were certain things happening at the College when I came here. The College was growing. It offered a range of valid programs. It encouraged a host of cultural and artistic activities. Like so many other colleges, however, there was one thing it really did not do It did not carefully gauge the reality around it. The very movement and ex- pansion ofthe College was creating problems that had to be resolved, and in essence, it did not anticipate that a changing college would require that it keep pace with the intellectual and emotional needs of its members. It was this failure to anticipate the new pressure surrounding the institution that found faculty and students struggling last spring to find procedures on howto handle problems that were already in their midst. As Dr. John Walsh of Boston College argued at the Honors Convocation, many colleges did not de- velop a philosophy of education that was comprehensive and practical and did not do enough research to have the information necessary to handle their own operations in time of stress. So that in the turmoil that followed here, there were noble and ignoble acts but, for the most part, individuals suffered in- dignities in all segments because the College was confused and individuals within it were forced to make decisions under confused conditions. But this, it is true, is in the past, but it is an awareness of the past, as T. S. Eliot suggests, that constantly reveals its presence in the present, and we must strive not to repeat our mistakes. It is sad but there were voices warning us in 1966, '67, and '68 to prepare for this change. And basically, the driving force behind it centered upon this need. Taking its impetus perhaps from the civil rights movement. people in a variety of fields-social workers, teachers, students, others-wanted a truly meaningful role in the events that determine their lives. As the pressure inside and outside institutions increased, the need to feel that you could exert some control over these pressures increased as well. Those of us who teach literature have a particularly painful experience. We go to the historians who give us the historical framework behind a work of art, but we go to the writers of fiction-the makers of tales-because they so often have an uncanny way of seeing ahead of their time. We see their prophecies come true and Cassandra-like, their visions reveal a future that so very few people are prepared to acknowledge. In 1844. Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote the short story Ftappachini's Daugh- ter in which he foresaw the poisoning of our environment by our technology and the coming of fallout. In the short story Bartleby the Scrivener 418533 Herman Melville foresaw the problem of alienation in the cities and the havoc it plays upon our citizens. In 1955, Wallace Stevens-American poet and businessman-wrote an es- say entitled The Noble Rider and the Sound of Words in which he said the pressures in our society were growing with increasing omen, that they could stir the emotions to violence. and that they would upset the concepts that or- der our society and that finally they could threaten life itself. His description of these pressures is worth noting: The collapse of authority and the need for people to make key decisions by themselves, the power of the news media. the dreariness of non-human hous- ing projects, the sexual pressure in our literature, the smattering of a little edu- cation. the lack of physical distance between people: the influence of Freud and the view that we must face reality without the need for myth and ritual, the frustration of meaningless work, a growing and paralyzing introspection that makes us, like Prufrock in Eliot's poem, unable to act upon any overwhelming aquestions Stevens writes on the need for space. lt is not only that there are more of us and that we are actually Close to- gether We are close together in every way. We lie in bed and listen to a broad- cast Irom Cairo and so on There is no distance We are intimate with people we have never seen and, unhappily, they are intimate with us . . .Stevens defined the pressure of reality It was his premise that outside events on the consciousness could become so powerful that they could prevent our ability to think Are there pressures. 298 then, in our society that so invade our thoughts and our time that we are unable to focus our attention on more crucial and meaningful endeavors? Stevens' conclusion was also significant. He argued that the artist must re- sist these pressures and, by using his imagination, he could balance the real- ity around him, and this would give his work of art a sense of nobility. In my view, there are certain pressures in our midst that exert an influence upon the quality of life at this College and in the community around it. lt will be my thesis today that no matter what educational structure one adopts-traditional or experimental, free school or de-schooled, or any com- bination of these patterns-it cannot succeed in a truly meaningful sense if the .reality around us does not permit us to create a noble and heroic image of ourselves. What forces in our society undermine this heroic concept? What point of view will help it? Let me speak to you now. if I may, with the imaginative logic of the poet who strives to create resemblances between different things and who hopes to re- veal a unity that permeates them. Let me mention several words and my re- sponses to them as I prepared this address. 1, Automobile ls the personal comfort it affords worth the role it plays in the world around us? If lack of space is a pressure, congested roads contribute to it . . . How can students at this college get its full benefits if they are forced to fix their schedules at registration in order to get transportation to cities that are re- mote from the campus? How can a student enjoy an open-college concept which should permit him to arrive at 8:00 a.m. and stay until 11:00 p,m. If there are events outside the classroom that interest him, if he is always worried about how to get a ride home? Just recently, a city decided not to have fire- works during the 4th of July because of air pollution, And yet during the last holiday, people sitting along the beach road waiting for the last display, watched an endless parade of automobiles, moving bumper to bumper, chok- ing the air with fumes and noise. ls it irrational to suggest that one ban the automobile for this day, allow people to move freely in the streets so that they can enjoy one of the few things that occurs during the year that gives them a sense of unity with their community and their nation? But there is another factor about the automobile that is significant. Does it isolate us from one another. One goes to a class reunion and discovers that his classmates live in his neighborhood but that he never sees them . . . We now discover that the trolley car had at least three wonderful virtues. lt was safe, it was clean, and significantly, it provided a social context, a chance for people to meet one another in an open and free manner. 2, Sports If pressure is an external event that invades our consciousness so that we cannot think, a barrage of news about professional sports is a pressure . . . Why must thousands of men and women be reduced to the role of shriveled spectators, as social critic Sidney Harris so aptly defines us, while just a few play sports and primarily for money. Why must we be reduced to a kind of pas- sivity, particularly when psychologists inform us that passive people are so of- ten filled with hostility. How often do our citizens get a chance to play out or act out the frustration in their own lives? And sadly enough. we have sports everywhere, but not enough true interest in physical education for all of us. We seem to forget that in certain Eastern cultures, the daily training of the body is an important necessity for a true in- tellectual and religious experience. 3. Secrecy Ivan Illich said it very well when he visited the College. Is it ever possible to have a community when important decisions are not made in the open and after a full discussion? Does one ever feel more manipulated and insignificant than when he finds that he has been invited to discuss an issue that has al- ready been decided in someone's favor? 4. Advertising . . . When the Goodyear Tire Company advertises that there is nothing more lonely than a woman on a highway with a flat tire, it succeeds in doing at least two things. lt creates the image of a hostile environment and it undermines the role of men, who have often felt that they must, and not in a patronizing sense, protect and help women who find themselves in these situations. If a young college student is afraid to drive home at night, what meaning do experimental programs have for her? . . , 5. Telephone ls it possible to ask people never to telephone us before they come to visit and that we vow never to apologize for an untidy house when they do? 6, Violence It is rather strange that people do not see a contradiction when someone expresses a violent hatred for the tactics of the enemy in Vietnam and then can attend a hockey game and urge the players to kill one another . . . Or, from another viewpoint, a Boston newspaper decries the cost and the vio- lence ofthe Vietnam War, and yet on the opening day of the season, one of its sportswriters is elated by the toughness of one player who slides into second base with such force that the opposing player does a double somersault. It is interesting, but not surprising, then, to see a ten-year old in his game go into second base with sneakers up to knock his rival, as they say, out of the play. The thing to notice here-it's important-not to play. When we praise violence, we should not be surprised then when it becomes contagious. One can attend a crowded concert, then. and throw an empty wine bottle into the air and not care whom it hurts. One can vandalize our pub- lic buildings. Why not? indirectly, we approve of these acts. 7. Noise lf airplanes cannot travel over our classrooms, our homes, and our back- yards in silence, it is better to consider other means of transportation. No technological advance has any meaning if it jeopardizes human needs. If the suspension of supersonic travel endangers jobs, there must be another way to put people to work to create other means of travel . . 8. Asphalt Can someone urge that all cities and towns remove black asphalt from their playgrounds so that children can play in healthy dirt and grass? lf education. as Bremer states, is learning in the presence of disorder, can we permit chil- dren to organize and create their own games with a minimum of interference from adults? 9. Heroin The use of heroin, the newspapers inform us, has reached epidemic propor- tions in Vietnam. If pressures in a society make one feel small and manipu- lated, how do tragic young men, who may have other problems as well, sur- vive an unexplained war in which they must spend their time concentrating on a way to save themselves and their friends. One victim speaks to us: There is nothing to do. l mean nothing at all. All you do is stand there and watch for people trying to attack, and theres nobody trying to attack. You can't read, you can't listen to the radio. lt drives you crazy. l tried skag just to have something to do. In the name of the heroes in our past, let us bring these men home . . . 10. Patriotism ln his Ode to the Athenian Dead Pericles said: We are lovers of beauty without extravagance, and lovers of wisdom without unmanliness. Our citi- zens attend to both public and private duties, and do not allow absorption in their own various affairs to interfere with their knowledge of their city. We dif- fer from other states in regarding the man who holds aloof from public life not as quiet but as useless, we decide or debate, carefully and in person, all matters of policy, holding, not that words and deeds go ill together, but that acts that are not discussed are foredoomed to failure. For we are noted for being at once most adventurous in action and most reflective beforehand . . These are several words and they tend to say that if education then means to create a community, our tasks are before us. l know that I should not give assignments on the last day of the academic year, but l'm a teacher and I just can't break the habit. Here are a few for all of us. We must open the society, control the automo- bile and work for public transportation, take some of our attention away from professional sports, keep the media responsible, return the sense of adven- ture and mystery to our holidays, open our homes, stop the war and re-chan- nel our resources, admire technique in our play, clean the air and silence the noise around us, allow children to play creatively, and encourage an active participation by everyone here in the creation of a true community in the sec- tion of the city or town in which he lives. As we do these things, as we urge political leaders to break down imperso- nal cities into smaller communities with a house or building as a focal point. we can create our own heroes-indigenous heroes springing from our own plot of land in a variety of fields-intellectual, artistic, athletic-and we can re- gain a true sense of our own American heroism-the sense of nobility upon which this great nation was founded. People who are made to feel like heroes will perform heroic acts. People who feel like victims perform the most disheartening acts of all. They do a ter- rible violence to themselves. And we must not despair when we do not succeed. When the system does not work, we must realize that whenever two or three people are in a sit- uation, individually or collectively, one has a system. In what creative ways can we strive to insure the greatest amount of social and economic justice within it? ln what way can we channel more of our resources into the public sector of our society? And l believe in democracy, imperfect and disappointing as it often is, is still the way to move toward this goal. lt does assume that the individual is important, an assumption it often viol- ates, it is tnue. But it does permit criticism and it does offer a free press, which, although often cheap and vulgar, protects the rights of all of us. But democ- racy also provides something else. In his essay, What I Believe, E. M. For- ster wrote: The people I admire the most are those who are sensitive and want to create something or discover something, and don't see life in terms of power, and such people get more of a chance under democracy than elsewhere . . . The dictator-hero can grind down his citizens till they are all alike, but he can't melt them down into a single man . . . The evidence of history shows us that men have always insisted on behaving creatively under the shadow of the swordg that they have done their artistic and scientific stuff for the sake of doing it. There is also the need to struggle and the capacity to endure defeat. When those of you who will teach in a poor school discover that you do not have enough books for your class, you will get your first very sharp taste of dis- appointment. But as one poet explains it, one must be able to stand on the abyss without flinching and one must stare at the awesome realities without fleeing into an imaginary world. And, again, E. M. Forster encourages us by placing those who endure in a very special group. He writes: There is an aris- 299 tocracy of the sensitive, the considerate and the plucky Its members are to be found in all nations and classes and all through the ages, and there is a secret understanding when they meet. They represent the true human tradition, the one permanent victory of our queer race over cruelty and chaos You may recall from your study of history the famous Battle of Thermopylae in which King Leonidas of Sparta took 300 men to hold back the invading Per- sians while the rest of the Greek city states quarreled with one another You will remember how Leonidas and his men fought the Persians until a Greek traitor by the name of Epialtes informed the Persians of a secret pass and the Spartans were eventually surrounded At one point, the historian Heroditus in- forms us, the leader ofthe Persians urged Leonidas to surrender, warning him that the Persians were so many that they would hurl enough spears to cover the sun. Leonidas responded that this was good. He and his men would fight all the better in the shade. Leonidas and his men were defeated but their ac- tions inspired the Greeks who organized themselves. and, after victories at the Battles of Salamis and Plateia, prepared the world for the Age of Pericles, one of the most intellectually and artistically creative democracies in the history of man Throughout history, Leonidas remains a symbol of the creatively heroic act. Epialtes, a symbol of the forces that have attempted to destroy that creativity. The modern poet, Kostas Kavafy. has written a poem entitled Thermo- pylae based on this historical event in western civilization I wish to dedicate it to those in this audience who have taken and those who will take their stand at Thermopylae to move this College and the community around it toward a new and brighter destiny A n 5'-l -9 'alfa A i. .10 Thermopylae Honor to those who in their lives Guard and protect Thermopylae. May they never desert that sacred duty. Straight and just in all their actions. But forgiving also and compassionate. Generous when they are rich. and yet, when They are poor. generous in a smaller fashion. Helping again and again as much as they can. Always speaking the truth And yet without hatred for those who are false And an even greater honor is due them When they foresee tand many do foreseel That Epialtes will appear in the end And the Persians will finally cross the pass. lt has been an honor to speak to you Dr. Michael Antonakes May 30. 1971 Senior Directory Mary Elaine Abenante 16 Sprague Court Medford, Mass. Marie E. Adams 65 Atlantic Ave. Marblehead, Mass. Leonard Abrams 134 Fremont Ave. Everett, Mass. Elizabeth Marie Afonso 404 Sandwich Rd. Teaticket, Mass. Robert Ahern 9 Amos St. Tewksbury, Mass. Kristine Aker 1260 Whipple Rd. Tewksbury, Mass. Kathryn A. Albrecht 44 Marmion Way Rockport, Mass. Nancy Alexander 175 Spring St. Cambridge, Mass. Daniel Alfred Allen 22 Garland St. Chelsea, Mass. David F. Allen 10A Linden St. Salem, Mass. Beverly Allison 14 Strawberry Hill Rd. Acton, Mass. Richard H. Amato 99 Larkin St. Revere, Mass. David R, Amero 45 Lexington Ave. Magnolia, Mass. Frederick Anderson Horne St. Apartments Methuen, Mass. Joan E. Anderson 220 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. Elaine Andromidas 75 Wallis St. Peabody, Mass. Constance Antonuccio 200 Forest St. Medford, Mass. Adelina Dios Antunes 1199 Rodman St. Fall River, Mass. Diane Aquino 119 Josephine Ave. Somerville, Mass. James Joseph Argento 84 Sportsmens Trail Whitman, Mass. Kathleen Arment 151 High St Lee, Mass William L. Armsden 5 Nanepashemet Ave. Malden, Mass. Margaret C. Aspeslagh 427 Wood Lane North Andover, Mass. Francis J. Arsenault 21 Elm Hill Ave. Leominster, Mass. Marcia Arsenault 15 Princeton St. Danvers, Mass. Sandra J. Atkins 171 Burrill St. Swampscott, Mass. Annette Marie Audy 35 Farley St. Lawrence, Mass. Paul Joseph Baldi 69 Almont St. Winthrop, Mass. James Bruce Ballard 5 Park St. Apt. 7 Peabody, Mass. Mary Portia QFedericoJ Ballard 5 Park St. Apt. 7 Peabody, Mass. Margaret Ann Baniewicz 10 Elm St. Everett, Mass. Patricia Ann Banks 15 Beverly St. Revere, Mass. Daryl R. Bargeron 25 Linden St. Orange, Mass. Lauren B. Barkin 34 Myrtle St. West Newton, Mass. Linda M. Barnstead 673 Western Ave. Lynn, Mass. James Barrows 88 Oak St. Hyannis, Mass. Kathleen B. Barry 340 South Broadway Lawrence, Mass. John Norman Barstow Jr. 15 Monument Ave. Charlestown, Mass. Robert Barthe 200 Swanton St. Winchester, Mass. Rita J. Batchelder 149 Howard St. Lawrence, Mass. Jennifer Susan Bates 132 Essex St. Beverly, Mass. Kenneth Paul Beaton 233 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. 300 Peter R. Beauregard 216 Canal St. Salem, Mass. Janet Bedard 17 Verdon St. Salem, Mass. Judith Ann Belliveau 60 Newton Ave. Lynn, Mass. Laraine Ann Bennett 138 George St. Medford, Mass. Annette M. Benoit 117 Corcoran Park Cambridge, Mass. Charles A. Benoit Ill 25 Cabot St. Salem, Mass. Jacqueline Bernasconi 90 Taconic Ave. Lenox, Mass. Donna J. Bevan 237 Rosalind Ave. Gloucester, New Jersey Lisa Bianchi 7 ladarola Ave. Milford, Mass. Margaret J. Bigwood 255 Commonwealth Rd. Cochituate, Mass. Robert Albert Bilodeau 9 Read St. Salem, Mass. Sheryl S. Bish 57 Raymond St. Manchester, Mass. Laura Ann Bishop 50 Westford Ave. Saugus, Mass. Ellen Marie Bisson Blackstone St. Uxbridge, Mass. Mary R. Bitonti 22 Harding Ave. Haverhill, Mass. Patricia Lee Blair 16 Hardwood St. Beverly, Mass. Judy Blanchard 10 Peabody St. Salem, Mass. Noreen Ruth Blanchard 59 Bay State Rd. Peabody, Mass. Anthony J. Blandini 140 Black Brook Drive Lowell, Mass. Anthony T. Blandini 47 Renwick Rd. Melrose, Mass, Linda Susan Blazonis 19 Anthony St. Methuen, Mass. Claudia A. Blodjian 12 Broad St. Peabody, Mass. Claire Maire Bogel 34 Purchase St. Danvers, Mass. Ethel Boghosian 15 Bowdoin St. Danvers, Mass. Barbara Bombaci 28 Lila Ave. Medford, Mass. Angela Boncore 260 Bowdoin St, Winthrop, Mass. Wayne Edward Bossa 392 High St. Bridgewater, Mass. Richard Alfred Boucher 24 Cherry Hill Terrace Waterville, Maine Linda M. Bowman 21 Orient Ave. Melrose, Mass. Leigh J. Bowser 5 Highland Ave. Annisquam, Mass. Richard Boyd Gardner Street Peabody, Mass. Jo-Ann C. Boylan 12 Kinsman Ct. Ipswich, Mass. Thomas P. Boyle 18 Arcola St. Malden, Mass. Edward Bozek 9 Conant Street Salem, Mass. William J. Bradford 153 Brooks Street Medford, Mass. Albert W. Bradley 34 Upland Ave. Bradford, Mass. Linda Ann Braley 71 Edgewood Ave. Walpole, Mass. Ellen Ann Brennan 30 Fox Hill Rd. Andover, Mass. Joseph Brennan 28 Clifton St. Malden, Mass. Karen Brindle 34 Cross St. Beverly, Mass. Robert B. Britnell 22 Highgate Rd. Framingham, Mass. Pamela J. Brooks 8 Boardman St. Georgetown, Mass. Roberta Brooks 39 Western Ave. Beverly, Mass. Judith C. Brown 303 Chestnut St. Lynnfield, Mass. Karen Brown 80 Cotting St. Medford, Mass. Shirley A. Brown 92 Bromfield St. Newburyport, Mass. William L. Brown 100 Embassy Rd. Springfield, Mass. Ronald R. Brush 13 New Balch St. Beverly, Mass. Ann Marie Bryson 272 Shute St. Apt. 2 Everett, Mass. Elizabeth Buckley 55 Savage St. Haverhill, Mass. Joyce A. Buckley 32 Doncaster Cir. Lynnfield, Mass. Robert F. Buckley 1386 Salem St. Malden, Mass. Richard D. Burchill 8 Jean Rd. Arlington, Mass. Edna G. Burgess 101 Summer St. Manchester, Mass. Kathleen J. Burnett Pine Ave. Middleton, Mass. Carol Burns 38 Parramatta Rd. Beverly, Mass. James P. Burns 212 Prospect St. Lee, Mass. Patricia Burns 45 Abbott St. Lynn, Mass. Ralph Burns 6 Pearl St. Wakefield, Mass. Robert W. Burns 257 Stevens St. Lowell, Mass. Patricia A. Burton 23 Centre St. Winthrop, Mass. Terry Ann Bussone 117 Colon St. Beverly, Mass. Paula S. Butkovitz 170 Bellingham St. Chelsea, Mass. 301 Maryellen J. Butler 39 Dale St. Revere, Mass. Susan M. Butler 42 Dearborn Ave. Beverly, Mass. Phyllis Butters 23 Walnut St. Danvers, Mass. Catherine Caezza 224 Bradford St. Everett, Mass. Kathleen M, Cahill 3 Swain's Pond Ave. Melrose, Mass. Patricia Cahill 506 Amesbury Rd, Haverhill, Mass. Caroline Caldeira 150 Maplewood Ave. Gloucester, Mass. Alayne Cail 8 Popes Lane Danvers, Mass. Robert Calder 9 Summer St. Beverly, Mass. Rita Call 43 Summit Ave. Salem, Mass. Diane M. Callahan 186 Winn St. Woburn, Mass. Robert Callahan 10 Stearns Pl. Salem, Mass. RoseMarie Calobrisi 8 Saunders St. Lawrence, Mass. Diane C. Calvi 22 Lincoln Ave. Athol, Mass. Augustine Camara 212 Eagle St. Fall River, Mass. Jeffrey R. Cameron 25 Farwell Ave. Melrose, Mass. Louise A. Campana 33 Paine St. Winthrop, Mass. William Campbell 39 Dawley St. Westminster, Mass. Theresa M. Canavan 62 Edgemont St. Springfield, Mass. Judith Cangiano 24 Fifth St. Medford, Mass. Paul A. Cannava 26 Royall St. Medford, Mass. Mary Jane Cannon 35 Keslar Ave. Lynn, Mass. Lawrence A. Caranfa 25 Harding Ave. Newburyport, Mass. Joan M. Cardile 15 Kimball Ave. Wakefield, Mass. Michael P. Carey 61 Bedford St. Waltham, Mass. Patricia Carey 6 Charron Dr. Newburyport, Mass. Robert T. Carlson 6 York St. Lexington. Mass. Margaret Carney 155 Boston Street N. Andover, Mass, Ann Marie Caron 5 Palmer St. Salem, Mass. Nelson L. Carpentier 43 Clement St. Peabody, Mass. Carol Carpentier 43 Clement St. Peabody. Mass. Frank Carter Jr. 13 Emory St. Saugus, Mass. Patricia A. Carter 13 Emory St. Saugus, Mass. Ralph E. Carter 361 Franklin St. Reading. Mass. Joan Casali 10 lverson Rd. Beverly, Mass. Richard F. Casey 5 Stuart Rd. Peabody. Mass. Brian P. Cassidy 108 Forest St. Danvers. Mass. Candice Cassidy 34 Lafayette St. Lynn, Mass. Edward Cassidy 49 Rainbow Terr. Salem. Mass. Sharman Catanzano 67 Whittier Rd. Reading. Mass. Joanne Cattley 15 Cannon Hill Rd. Ext. Groveland, Mass. Julie A Cause 1 Curtis Rd Saugus. Mass. Paul Cavanaugh 10 Beacon Blvd. Peabody, Mass. Richard Cerone 287 Walnut St. Lynn, Mass. Michael Cerullo 50 Trask Rd. Peabody, Mass. Cleti A. Cervoni 209 North St. Salem, Mass. Georgia Chaggaris 52 Tyler St. N. Quincy, Mass. Thomas Charron 1 Elizabeth St. Amesbury, Mass. Linda Chenery 27 Patricia Rd. Danvers, Mass. Patricia Chiacchia 214 Pearl St. Malden, Mass. Dana F. Childs 4V2 Lowell St. Salem, Mass. Stephen Chin 293 Main St. N. Reading, Mass. Harry Chisholm 8 Plume St, Magnolia, Mass. Patricia Chouinard 30 Rainbow Terr. Salem, Mass. Nancy Citro 4 Jackson Rd. Somerville, Mass. Noreen Clark 18 Atherton Cir. Lynnfield, Mass. Linda A. Clute 39 Washington St. Newburyport, Mass. Elaine Cohen 20 Faunbar Ave, Winthrop, Mass. James Colantonio 250 Waldemar Ave. East Boston, Mass. Peter Colantuonio 28 Bellevue Ave. Wakefield, Mass. John R. Colby 105 Hyatt Ave. Bradford, Mass. Marjorie Colby Pine Hill Rd. Newburyport, Mass. Norman R. Cole 108 Lakeview Ave. Lynn. Mass. 302 Stephen Cole 317 Western Ave. Lynn, Mass. James J. Collins 50 Grassmere Rd. Hyde Park, Mass. Mary A. Collins 4 Veterans Memorial Dr. Peabody, Mass. Theresa Collins 46 Belcher Cir. Milton, Mass. Peter Colosi Jr. 41 Arlington St. Everett, Mass. Douglas Comeau 8 Prospect Ct. Gloucester, Mass. Paul J. Conlon 816 Lakeview Ave. Lowell, Mass. Thomas P. Connelly 8 Newbern St. Lynn, Mass. Daniel P. Connolly 37 Moulton St. Lynn, Mass. Kathleen Connolly 116 Boston St. Salem, Mass. Mary T. Connolly 10 Seminary St. Charlestown, Mass. Voula fAgganisJ Connors 40 Sagamore St. Lynn, Mass. Dorothy Connors 233 Storey Ave, Newburyport, Mass. Kathleen Conrad 11 Enmore Rd. Saugus, Mass. Patricia Conti 17 Grant St. Stoneham, Mass. Frank Coppolino 419 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. Kenneth Cormier 21 Vestry St. Beverly, Mass. Michelle Cormier 218 Waterford St. Gardner, Mass. Norma Corsetti 59 Forest St. Stoneham, Mass. Ann Corso 36 Windsor Rd. Medford, Mass. Eleanor Cosgrove 80 Surrey St. Medford, Mass, John Coskery 32 Railroad Ave. Salisbury, Mass. George Costa 50 Tuttle St. Suite Wakefield, Mass. Lorraine Cote 38 Lawrence St. Salem, Mass. Patricia Cotter 303 Beach St. Revere, Mass. Susan Cotter 68 Edward Ave. Lynnfield, Mass. Bruce Coughlin 97 Orchard St. Lynn, Mass. Paula Couillard 9 Sycamore St. Danvers, Mass. Cathryn Covert 3 Horseshoe Lane Hamilton, Mass. Margaret Crighton 41 Dearborn Ave. Lynn, Mass. Kenneth Crocker 18 Summer St. Topsfield, Mass. Kathleen Croucher 21 Lawrence St. Chelsea, Mass. Alison Crowe 31 Corbett St. Andover, Mass. Maryanne Crozier 52 Winslow Ave. Norwood, Mass. Chris J. Cucurull 57 Washington St. Peabody, Mass. Barbara Curtin 59 Parker Rd. Wakefield, Mass. Donna G. Curtis Fort Hill Ave. Gloucester, Mass. Winston H. Cushman Jr. 191 High.St. Wareham, Mass. Rosina Dagresta 550 Highland St. S. Hamilton, Mass. Kathleen Damato 759 Saratoga St. East Boston, Mass, Thomas Damelio 20 Winn Terr. Malden, Mass. Norma A. Dane 4 Londonderry Rd. Marblehead, Mass. Marilyn Danisiewicz 54 Minot St. Lynn, Mass. Alison Dargie 133 Orchard St. Rowley, Mass. Alexandra Dauvergne 128 Nichols St. Wilmington, Mass. Mary Ann Davis 17 Lincoln St. Natick, Mass. John E. Day 20 Thorndike St. Beverly, Mass. Jeanne Dearing 191 State Rd. N. Dartmouth, Mass. Richard Decareau 45 Briar Hill Drive Lynn, Mass. Mary Delaney 30 Old Colony Rd. Arlington, Mass. Francis DeLeo 29 Ashcroft Rd. Medford, Mass. Barbara DeRocher 74 Beach St. Malden, Mass. Jean Desjardins 13 Western Ave. Lynn, Mass. Marie Desjardins 3 Quadrant Rd. Salem, Mass. Cynthia Desmond 31 Lockwood Lane Topsfield, Mass. Eugene Desruisseaux 29 Town Hall Ave. Bx. 4 S. Yarmouth, Mass. Susan Deteso 149 Central St. Stoneham, Mass. Joyce DiBlasi 97 Taft St, Revere, Mass, David Diette 1154 Lawrence St. Lowell, Mass. Marion DiGiammarino 83 Cherry St. Malden, Mass. Janice R. DiLena 169 Revere St. Revere, Mass. Cathleen Doherty 102 Bartlett Ave. Arlington, Mass. Karen Doherty 66 Salem St. Woburn, Mass. 303 Linda Donahue 13 Knapp St. Somerville, Mass. Mary Ellen Donahue 37 Gould St. Wakefield, Mass. Pamela Donahue 503 Lowell St. Methuen, Mass. Patricia H. Donahue 27 Carlton St, Salem, Mass. Katherine tKosidlak7 Donato 43 Endicott St. Peabody, Mass. William Donoghue 58 Leach St. Salem, Mass. Catherine A. Donovan 16 Columbus Ave. Newburyport, Mass. Diane Donovan 15 Alden Ave. Revere, Mass. Katherine L. Donovan South St. Carlisle, Mass, Kathleen G. Donovan 97 Highland St. Holden, Mass. Sandra Doody 15 Ellsworth St. Westfield, Mass. Linda S. CDowl Lafond 5 Edgewood Rd. Billerica, Mass. Paul Downs 3 May St. Marblehead, Mass. Michael Doyle 371 Chatham St. Lynn, Mass. Barbara Dragonas 59 Leach St. Salem, Mass. Gail A. Driscoll 57 Walpole St. Sharon, Mass. Jo-Ann Driscoll 41 Tower Ave, Lynn, Mass. Robert F. Driscoll 16 Avon St. Stoneham, Mass. Louis E. Dubois 137 Hampshire Rd. Methuen, Mass. Frank L. Duley 140 Main St. Rockport, Mass. Janice E. Duley 140 Main St. Rockport, Mass. Marybeth Dunham 23 Longview Drive Beverly, Mass. Linda D'Urso 74 Durso Ave. Lawrence, Mass. Robert Dwyer 1098 Mass. Ave. Arlington, Mass. Sheila Earle 543 Washington St. Gloucester, Mass. Christine Edwards 15 Parramatta Rd. Beverly. Mass. Stella Eliopulos 27 Germain Ave. Bradford, Mass. Susan CElliottJ Madore 23 Cornell Rd. Danvers, Mass. Nancy-Jean Ellis 20 Margin Terr. Peabody, Mass. Jay H. English 14 Forest St. Middleton, Mass. Stephen Ennis 16 Tapley St. Lynn, Mass. Mark Epstein 38 General Cobb St. Taunton, Mass. Leo C. Erwin 8 Summit St. Gloucester, Mass. Evangelia Evlogiadis 8 Earlene Dr. Saugus, Mass. Mary A. Fall 9 Kernwood Hts. Beverly. Mass. Laura Falzone 93 Florence St. Everett, Mass. Martha Fantasia 67 Boston St. Somerville, Mass. Annina Faraci 71 Forest St. Stoneham. Mass. Betty Farinoso 50 Hathaway Cir. Arlington, Mass, Mark Farrell 64 Cl'ttCkering St. Pittsfield. Mass William Faucher 230 Essex St Melrose. Mass Maureen Feeley 24 Pearl St Amesbury, Mass Sereda Feener 8 Angle St. Gloucester, Mass. Anna Ferrazzani 200 Broadway Somerville, Mass. Mark Ferrera 34 Otis St. Somerville, Mass. Carol A. Ferrone 97 Windsor Rd. Medford, Mass. Anne Fields 59 Floyd St. Everett, Mass. Cynthia Figuerido 19 Figuerido St. Teaticket, Mass. Mary A. Filmore 132 Hale St. Beverly, Mass. Paula Finklestein 61 Central Ave. Chelsea, Mass. Janet M. Fish 127 Wethersfield St. Rowley, Mass. M. Deirdre Fitzgibbons 5 Bradford St. Lawrence, Mass. James Fitzpatrick 24 Curry St. Rockland, Mass. Joanne Flaherty 133 Prospect St. Reading, Mass. Thomas Flanagan 14 Bates Rd. Gardner, Mass. Bruce Flannagan 321 Essex Ave. Gloucester, Mass. William Fling 9 Prince St. Salem. Mass. Eric F. C. Gedult von Jungenfeld P. O. Box 448 Wakefield, Mass. Marcia Doreen Geehan 15 Waldemar East Boston, Mass. Robert Francis Genova 10 Ronaele Road Medford, Mass. Gerald C. Gerardi 9 Almont Ave. Worcester, Mass. Mary Lou Flockerzi 31 Carleton St. Methuen, Mass. Robert Folloni 91 Bedford St. Bridgewater, Mass. 304 Paul Francis Fontaine 234 Washington St. Leominster, Mass. Elaine Frances Ford 95 Harnden St. Reading, Mass. Kathleen Anita Ford 95 Harnden St. Reading, Mass. Michael P. Forman 116 Fremont Ave. Everett, Mass. Marilyn Ann Forte 80 Myrtle St. Lawrence, Mass. Pamela Fowler 445 North St. Georgetown, Mass. Edward Fox 267 Old County Rd. Esmond, R.l. Jane Fraize 22 Cambridge St. Lawrence, Mass. Camille E. Freda 40 Baker Rd. Everett, Mass. John Frontino 330 Ridge St. Arlington, Mass. Regina Marie Fulone Lackey Dam Rd. East Douglas, Mass. Joseph Furtado 37 Cherry St. Plymouth, Mass. Joseph W. Gagnon 29 Yale St. Lawrence, Mass. James Joseph Gallagher 337 Great Plain Ave. Needham, Mass. Joseph Gallagher 81 Shade St. Lexington, Mass, Allen Rosario Gallant 131 Walnut St. Saugus, Mass. Edmond P. Gallant 4 Dennison St. Baldwinville, Mass. Gregory Garnes 101 Sunset Drive Springfield, Mass. Jane Ellen Gawlinski 553 Bennington St. East Boston, Mass. Joyce Geanoulis 44 Market St. Ipswich, Mass. Charles Geary 37 Riverdale Rd. Dedham, Mass. Ann M. Gilbert 33 Carnes St. Lynn, Mass. Sheila Mary Gilbride 151 Warwick St. Lowell, Mass. Sandra Lee Giles 7 Stony Brook Rd. Marblehead, Mass. Malcolm M. Gill Spring St. Dixfield, Maine Edward C. Gillick 112 Riverneck Rd. E. Chelmsford, Mass. Robert J. Gillis 44 Grand St. Leominster, Mass. Robert U. Gillis 37 R Elm St. Marblehead, Mass. Walter R. Gionet Fredonian St. Shirley, Mass. Michale Glabicky 12 Pine St. Palmer, Mass. Joanne M. Glufling 11 Vernal St. Everett, Mass. Eileen Marie Godsill 18 Connell Place Everett, Mass. Linda Ann Golash 46 Marshall St. Northampton, Mass. Roslyn Elizabeth Goldman 21 Cedar St. Marblehead, Mass. Arlene Goodwin 1635 Broadway Raynham, Mass. Linda J. Goodwin 64 Red Spring Rd. Andover, Mass. cfo Joseph Di Fraia Carol Rhonda Gordon 25 Cary Ave. Chelsea, Mass. Millicent Jo Gould 95 Dodge St. Beverly, Mass. Elaine Maureen Grady 57 Barstow St. Salem, Mass. Chris Grammaticas Jr, 10 Andrew St. Salem, Mass. Maria Phyllis Grasso 14 Franklin St. Revere, Mass. Jean Alexis Gray 255 Pearl St. S. Braintree, Mass. Dorothy Green 11 Birchwood Ave. Peabody, Mass. Eleanor Mildred Greene 86 Clarke St. Everett, Mass. Kathleen Dorothy Griffin 165 Gladstone St. East Boston, Mass. James A. Griffin 412 Lynnfield St. Peabody, Mass. Nancy J. Gualtieri 16 Coburn St. Malden, Mass. Pamela Ann Guerette 95 Bellevue Rd. Swampscott, Mass. Diane Teresa Gulino 38 Willard Ave. Medford, Mass. Leonard Gustus 16 Brand Ave. Wilmington, Mass. Melinda K. Haley P.O. Box 109 Ashburnham, Mass. Arthur J. Hall 85 Barton Rd. Wellesley, Mass. Alexander Ross Halperin 174 Abbott St. Springfield, Mass. Janice Marie Hanley 31 Princeton Rd. Malden, Mass. John F. Hanlon 26 Lexington Ave. Bradford, Mass. Elizabeth Marie Haran 8 Joy Rd. Peabody, Mass. Susan E. Harney 32 Summit Ave. Lynn, Mass. Anne M. Harrington 6 Steele St. Stoneham, Mass. James Thomas Harrington 170 South Rd. Holden, Mass. Susan Lee Harrison 8 Junior Ave. Methuen, Mass. Kenneth E. Hartford 125 Richard Rd. Abington, Mass. Kenneth A. Harvey 28 Clifton Ave. Salem, Mass. Pamela J. Haug 53 Butler Ave. Stoneham, Mass. 305 Diane Havelick 21 Evans Rd. Peabody, Mass, Janet Ellen Haven 3 Butler Ave. Wakefield, Mass. Bruce Noble Hayes 4 Briggs St. Salem, Mass. Colleen M. Hayden 497 Pleasant St. Athol, Mass. Susan Margaret Hayes 260 Washington St. If 19 Salem, Mass. Frank L. Hecht 41 Mall St. Lynn, Mass. Richard H. Heck 12 Lake Warren Drive Littleton, Mass. Susan Eleanor Heenahan 13 Terrace Rd. Natick, Mass. Christine E. qTrufantJ Hickey 21 Walnut St. Everett, Mass. Brenda Camille Higgins 110B Gladstone St. East Boston, Mass. James Thomas Higgins 110B Gladstone St. East Boston, Mass. Joanne Marie Hill 8 Hayes Ave. Beverly, Mass. John A. Hilton 6 Middle St. Beverly, Mass. Francine Barbara Hirsch 4 Broad St. Newburyport, Mass. Beverly L. CMoultonJ Hoch 79V2 North Central St. Beverly, Mass. Cheryl Elaine Hodgkins 59 Linnea Lane Reading, Mass. Eileen N. Hoffman 12 Sunset Drive Swampscott, Mass. David James Hooks 26 Shore Ave. Salem, Mass. Joy E. Hooper 23 Pleasant St. Rockport, Mass. Dana M. Hopkins North St. Westford, Mass. Patricia Ann Horrigan 26 Green St. Athol, Mass. Linda Mary Horwood 15 Victor St. Saugus, Mass. Robert A. Hosman 2 Rainbow Rd. Marblehead, Mass. Dennis James Hough 207 Englewood Drive San Antonio, Texas Daniel Francis Hourihan 12 Chatham St. Lynn, Mass. Sandra L. Howes 36 Tremont St. Stoneham, Mass. Christine M. Hrynyshyn 40 Thayer St. South Deerfield, Mass. Edward James Hunt 215 Bay Rd. Sharon, Mass. Janet E. Hurley 89 Moulton St. Lynn, Mass. Bruce J. Hurvitz 34 Mohawk Rd. Marblehead, Mass. Betty Marie Hurynowicz 69 Bristol St. Cambridge, Mass. Andrea Jeanette Hyde tMrs.J 73 Mall St. Apt. 116 Lynn, Mass. Cheryl Lee Hyde 1 Curran Rd. Lynn, Mass. V. Karen Hynes 2713 Arlington Rd. Woburn, Mass. Patricia F. Hynes 403 Quincy Ave. Braintree, Mass, Mary J. lannino 34 Phillips St. Lawrence, Mass. Rosalind Ann lnfurna 65 Windsor St. Melrose, Mass. Eileen Ingalls 80 Kingston St. Lawrence, Mass, James Stephen Ingram 18 Roy St. Swampscott, Mass. Lorraine Ellen Jackson 6 Ravena Rd. Lynn, Mass Alan Thomas Jacob 129 Pleasant St Reading, Mass Donna Jacobsen 33 Tyler si Malden, Mass Bruce Michael Jangro 42 Melrose St. Melrose, Mass. Margaret H. Jannino 300 Cross St. Malden, Mass. Leticia A. Jendraszek 6 Beacon St. Salem, Mass. Elaine Denise Johnson 22 Stage Hill Ipswich, Mass. Elizabeth Anne Johnson 49 Crescent St. Wakefield, Mass. Esther Anne Johnson 5 Ocean St. Nahant, Mass. Evelyn Frances Johnson 18 Joy Rd. Peabody, Mass. Margretta Ann Johnson 14 Arnold Rd. Stoneham, Mass. Marilyn Murphy Johnson 18 Moody St. Byfield, Mass. Joan Ellen Jones 1750 Pleasant Valley St. Methuen, Mass. Denise Ann Joy 96 Clark St. Everett, Mass. Kathleen Elizabeth Joy 21 Ashcroft Rd. Medford, Mass. Philip Charles Joy 21 Ashcroft Rd. Medford, Mass. Joanne M. Kalapinski 173 Lafayette St. Apt. Salem, Mass. Marcia Mary Kalinawski 14 Wabash Ave. Worcester, Mass. Michael Karamas 4 Tanners Court Peabody, Mass. John J. Kavaleski 4 Briggs St. Salem, Mass. Ann Marie Keefe 16 Dearborn St. Medford, Mass. Cynthia Margaret Keller 64 Bonair St. Somerville, Mass, Karen Marie Kelley 9 Sammet St. Everett, Mass. Mary Ann Kelley 2 Summit Place Newburyport, Mass, 306 Richard D. Kelley 49 Ely St. Westfield, Mass. John H. Kelliher 416 Charles St. Malden, Mass. Mary E. Kelliher 31 Clifford St. Melrose, Mass. Thomas Kellner 18 Cornell Rd. Beverly, Mass. Linda A. Kempton 26 Washington Square Marblehead, Mass. Margo Keniston 11 Leslie Cove Marblehead, Mass. Ellen Jean Kenney 5 Larchwood Rd. Methuen, Mass. Katherine A, Kenney 26 MacArthur Rd. Beverly, Mass. Keith L. Kenney 73 Andover St. Georgetown, Mass. Mihran Keosian Jr. 45 Fort Ave. Salem, Mass. Diane Marie fCoombsJ Kerivan 99 Jefferson St. Lynn, Mass. William Neil Keto 20 Harrison St. Maynard, Mass. Robert E. Kieran 25 Barstow St. Salem, Mass. Nancy Marie Kierstead 41 West St. Malden, Mass. Helen Ellen Keley 30 Beal St. Winthrop, Mass. Thomas M. Kiley 102 Marble Ave. Lawrence, Mass. Susan King P.O. Box 462 Lexington, Mass. Paul Kirby 39 Lansing Rd. Lynn, Mass. Claire Kiriaji 26 Apple St. Lynn, Mass. Robert Kirouac 30 Regina Drive Leominster, Mass. Kathleen M. Kirvan 47 Abbott St. Lynn, Mass. Esther Klarreich 165 Shurtleff St. Chelsea, Mass. June Celeste Knowlton 35 Overlook Rd. Marblehead, Mass. Alan Kobos 4 Beresford St. Lawrence, Mass. Jeanette Kochanski 16 Bonner Ave. Medford, Mass. Mary Margaret Kocsis 55 Ocean Ave. Salem, Mass. Carol Ann Kondel 33 Ashcroft St. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Linda Josephine Koski 4 Harvest Lane S. Hingham, Mass. Constance Kotseas 11 Suburban Rd. Worcester, Mass. Carol Ann Koza 74 Hawley St. Lawrence, Mass. Patricia Ruth Kramer 11 Brown St. Peabody, Mass. Thomas J. Kristoph 11 Wellington Place Byram, Conn. Paul V. Kulakowski 4 Audette St. Peabody, Mass. Carol Ann Kulas 9 Summit Ave. Salem, Mass. William Johm Kuszmar 7 Lemon St. Salem, Mass. Patricia Ann Kwiatkowski 64 Shawmut St. Chelsea, Mass. Richard A. LaChapelle 320 Highland Ave. Salem, Mass. Beverly H. LaCoste 33 BeaverlAve. Lynnfield, Mass. Karen Sue Laider 43 Samson Rd. Medford, Mass. John W. Laird 4 Oliver St. Salem, Mass. Nance Marie Laliberte 66 Pleasant St. Methuen, Mass. Michael Francis Lally 163 Goldsmith St. Littleton, Mass. Gerard F. Lambert 38 Rollins St. Groveland, Mass. Roger F. Lambert 250 Old Bedford Rd. Concord, Mass. Martha B. Land 73 Burlington Ave. Wilmington, Mass. Diane Marie Landano 30 Signore Terrace Revere, Mass. John Joseph Landers J 2 Warren Ave. Wakefield, Mass. Mare T. Lane 12 Fernwood St. North Andover, Mass. Cheryl D. Langer 15 Nancy Ave. Peabody, Mass. Nancy Jean Langill 148 Essex St. Lynnfield, Mass. Janet L. Langley 34 Curry Circle Swampscott, Mass. Paul Francis Langone 53 Pennsylvania Ave. Somerville, Mass. Patrick R. LaPointe 145 Seventh St. Leominster, Mass. Michael P. LaPorte 1730 N. 54th Ave. Hollywood, Fla. Joan Larson 4 Fourth St. Ipswich, Mass. Roger L. Lauzon 300 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. Kathleen E. Lavangie 69 Stanley Ave. Medford, Mass. John Michael Lawler 48 Everett St. Arlington, Mass. James Edward Lawlor 81 Lisbon St. Malden, Mass. Catherine R. Lazarakis 21 State St. Ext. Peabody, Mass. Arthur Richard Lear 96 Centre St. Danvers, Mass. Stephen R. Leary 64 Colonial Rd, Weymouth, Mass. Donna Marie LeBlanc 14 Gallows Hill Rd. Salem, Mass. 307 Stephen Vern LeBlanc 60 Federal St. Salem, Mass. Judith Anne LeBrun 62 Chandler St. Arlington, Mass. Mary Lee 53 Essex St. Lawrence, Mass. Raoul D. Lee cfo Gen. Delivery Willow St. Post Office Lynn, Mass. Maurice Robert LeFlem 6 Ridgewood Ter. Beverly, Mass. Elizabeth A. Lefthes 9 Roslyn St. Salem, Mass. Nancy Louise Legro 2 Butler Ave. Danvers, Mass. Anita Louise Lehto 21 Farnham Ave. Peabody, Mass. David Weeks Leigh Chestnut St. West Newbury, Mass. Stephen James Levin 127 Cottage St. Chelsea, Mass. Brenda Lewis 3 Walter St. Salem, Mass, Patricia M. Libby 797 Boston St. Lynn, Mass. John Libuda 22 Brook Rd. Southbridge, Mass. Kathleen M. Linacre 50 Harris Rd. Lynn, Mass. Dale M, Lodge 4 Briggs St. Salem, Mass. Marie H. Loiselle 5 Horton St. Saugus, Mass. Victoria Lillian Long 41 Beal St. Hingham, Mass. Jean F. Longo 27 Salem St. Wakefield, Mass. Peter David Lopata 53 Belanger St. Three Rivers, Mass. Linda Karen Lord 28 Pine St. Apt. 5 Danvers, Mass, Thomas J. Loring 25 Osgood St, Salem, Mass. David Arcadie Lucas 97 Charles Ave. Stoughton, Mass. John E. Lupien 15 Heald St. Pepperell, Mass. Karen Blanche Luongo 48 Lyle St. Malden, Mass. Brian Lyman 17 Dahlia Ave. Peabody, Mass. David Lynch 17 Washington St. Peabody. Mass. George Edward Lynch 69 Granite St. Ashland, Mass. Thomas A. Lynch 401 Lincoln St. Lowell. Mass. Robert D. MacEachern 18 Myrtle Sq. Gloucester, Mass. Peter S. Maclfaden 78 Washington Sq. Salem, Mass. Patricia Alicia Machado 5 Leavitt Ct. Salem, Mass. Donna C. MacKay 36 Lake Shore Drive Hopkinton, Mass. Stephen MacNutt 9 Aerial St. Lexington, Mass. Claire Shelley Macoul 15 Newport St. Methuen. Mass. Roland Madore 31 Forrester St. Salem, Mass. Susan J. Maglione 123 Stevens St. Revere, Mass. M. Linda Mahan 211 Brimbal Ave. Beverly, Mass. Michael D. Mahoney 13 Crestwood Circle Lawrence, Mass. Paul W. MaiIlOUx 33 Laconia Ave. Saugus, Mass. Patricia M. Maisey 3 Parker St. Charlestown, Mass. Janet Ann Mallia 3 Hourihan St Peabody, Mass. David Michael Maloney 23 Bertram St Lowell, Mass Gail Ann Maloney 173 Salem St. Wakefield, Mass. Mary R. Mancini 45 Larkin St. Revere, Mass. John Joseph Manning 9 Keenan Rd. Brighton, Mass. Mary Ann Manning 16 Oliver St. Salem, Mass. Eileen S. Manos 1 Esquire Drive Peabody, Mass. Stella Manoukian 239 E. Boylston St. Watertown, Mass. Catherine Susan Mansfield 133 Newport St. Arlington, Mass. Michael S, Marcinieu 70 Pleasant St. Thorndike, Mass. Maryann Theresa Marcinonis 78 Kingston St. Lawrence, Mass. Patricia Ann Marcucci 23 Blaine Ave. Beverly, Mass. Janet Lyn Marino 23 Suffolk Ave. Swampscott, Mass. George Maria 35 Harris St, Peabody, Mass. Maria Marques 6 Haskell Place Peabody, Mass. Karen F. Marrazzo 332 Cherry St. W. Newton, Mass. John R. Marshall 16 Washington St. Apt. 6 Ipswich, Mass. Beverly J. Martin Bugbee Rd. Southwick, Mass. Barbara L. Martinson 58 Thurman St. Everett, Mass. Anne-Terese Mascia 54 East Main St. Milford, Mass. Cynthia Mason 2 Woodlawn St. Amesbury, Mass. Michael Dennis Masucci 245 Prospect St. Lawrence, Mass. Christine Theresa May 178 Webster Ave. Chelsea, Mass, 308 Linda Ann Mazzaferro 62 Castle Rd. Nahant, Mass. Philip J. Mazzeo 43W School St. Gloucester, Mass. Joan McBride 27 Maple St. New Bedford, Mass. Isabel McCarthy 189 North St. Stoneham, Mass. Patricia L. tCareyy McCarthy 1 Arlington St. Amesbury, Mass. Paul G. McClory 12 Batchelders Ct. Lynn, Mass. Judith Ann McCue 37 Oak St. Stoneham, Mass. James M. McCulloch ll 104 Linden St. Apt. 3 Salem, Mass. Linda L. McCullough 61 Eunice Circle Wakefield, Mass. Richard J. McCulIey 63 Starrett Rd. Lynn, Mass. Richard McEachern 206 Lincoln St. Winthrop, Mass. Joanne M. McGee 65 Sycamore St. Brockton, Mass. Christopher J. McGillivary 7 Beacon Ave. Newburyport, Mass. Jeannie McGinn 29 Woodlawn St. Lynn, Mass. Ellen F. McGrail 144 Broad St. Lynn, Mass. James Harold McHugh 312V2 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. Linda Jean Mclnerney 80 Florence Ave. Tewksbury, Mass. Joanne McLaughlin 37 Clement Ave. Peabody, Mass. Michael A. McLaughlin Old Common Rd. Lancaster, Mass. David McPhee 20 South Pond St. Newbury, Mass. Ellen L. McNiff 7 Smithson Drive Beverly, Mass. Phyllis S. McTighe 7 Lexington St. Stoneham, Mass. Philo E. McVann 37 Newcastle Rd. Peabody, Mass. Charlene V. Mead Ipswich Rd. Boxford, Mass. Peter F. Meggison 53 Ellen St. New Bedford, Mass. Joseph Reynold Mello 182 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. Linda Ann Mercaldi 6 Winslow Rd. Beverly, Mass. Cheryl Ann Meserve 5 Hamilton Rd. Wakefield, Mass. Mildred Metrick 101 Addison St. Chelsea, Mass. Claire M. Meuse 21 Lovell St. Somerville, Mass. Frank Micale 16 Summit Terrace Peabody, Mass. Steven Migliero 146 Larkin St. Revere, Mass. John Miles 40 Ladd Hill Rd. Lynn, Mass. Kent D. Miller 32 Estes St. Lynn, Mass. Natalie A. Miller 12 Sunnyside Rd. Lynn, Mass. Patricia Minogue 5 First St. Medford, Mass. Elaine Mitchell 16 Landon Circle Lynn, Mass. Pamela Mitchell 58 Haverhill St. Andover, Mass. Theodore Mlynarski 419 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. Marie Moccia 500 Mystic Ave. Somerville, Mass. Geraldine Moloney 116 Marcella St. Roxbury, Mass. Gloria Montuori 310 Orchard St. Watertown, Mass. Mary Moore 86 Elm St. Medford, Mass. Thomas Moore 3 Howard St. Salem, Mass. Ann Moquin 21 Smith St. Haverhill, Mass. John J. Morandi Jr. 2 Garfield Ave. Woburn, Mass. Henry Morgan 314 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass, Patricia Morgan 27 Louise Ave. Methuen, Mass. Barbara Moring 26 Annavoy St. East Boston, Mass. Lucille Morini 23 Norman St. Springfield, Mass. Richard Morley 47 Lamb St. S. Hadley Falls, Mass. Judy Morong 237 Chatham St. Lynn, Mass. Ann T. Morose 88 Liberty St. Danvers, Mass. Alan R. Morrell 40 Prince St. Beverly, Mass. Karen M. Morrell 40 Prince St. Beverly, Mass. Jeannine Morrill 56 Middlesex Ave. Swampscott, Mass. Arleen Morris 5 Summit Ave. Salem, Mass. Mark Morrisey 98 Winn St. Belmont, Mass. Mary Morrison 15 Lyman Rd. Northampton, Mass. Elizabeth Morse 30 Roslyn St. Salem, Mass. Regina Moscardini 4 Phillips Place Somerville, Mass. Caroll Moulton 33 Hobart St. Danvers, Mass. Sheila Muldoon 37 Olive St. Newburyport, Mass. 309 Dianne C. Mullen 24 Winthrop Ave. Quincy, Mass. Paul Munzing 153 Holten St. Apt. 3 Danvers, Mass. Michael Murano 3 May St. Marblehead, Mass, Anne Murphy 9 Hatch Rd. Medford, Mass. Eileen Murphy 27 Philip St. Haverhill, Mass. Kathleen Murphy 24 Linden Rd. Melrose, Mass. William Murphy 9 Story Ave. Lynn, Mass, Christopher Muse 49 Richardson Rd. Melrose, Mass. Joanne CMooreJ Muse 29 Chestnut St. Wakefield, Mass. Angela Mustone 93 Prospect Ave. Revere, Mass. Diana M. Nahass 12 Field St. Brockton, Mass. Judith Nangle 12 Water St. Peabody, Mass. Dorothy Nardella 16 Oxford St. Somerville, Mass. Frank Nartowicz 19 Harrison Ave. Easthampton, Mass. Linda Nataupsky 119 Bellingham St. Chelsea, Mass. Ann Naughton 23 Williams St. Salem, Mass. Susan D. Naun 67 Beacon St. Somerville, Mass. Bichop Nawrot 79 Woodstock Rd, Southbridge, Mass. Barbara A. Nazarechuk 14 Windsor Terrace Whitman, Mass. Susan Nelson 12 Maple Ave. Medford, Mass. Elaine Newman 14 Clark St. Salem, Mass. Susan Nitto 383 Chestnut SL Lawrence. Mass. Barbara Nonis 431 Putnam Ave. Cambridge. Mass. Roberta Nussbaum 7 Murray St. Chelsea. Mass. Christine O'Brien 1717 Ocean St. Marshield. Mass. Patricia A O'Connell 286 Plain St Rockland. Mass. Clifford O'Connor 167 Old Main St. S. Yarmouth. Max. Joseph O'Connor 7 Smith Terrace S. Braintree. Mass. Patricia O'Connor 39 Nicholson Dr. Brockton. Mass. Stephen O'Connor 40 Broadway Rockport. Mass. Susan tSurretteJ Odom 57 Sylvan St. Danvers. Mass. Gerard O'Donnell 11 Hilltop Circle Woburn. Mass. Alice Ohanian 27 Raymond Ave. Beverly. Mass. Katherine Oheir 241 Clark Rd. Lowell. Mass. Thomas O'Hare 75 Curtis St. Somerville. Mass. Brian O'Leary 9 Prince St. Marblehead. Mass. Bruce O'Leary 6 Chapel Rd. Danvers. Mass. James O'Leary 47 Tuttle St. Dorchester. Mass. Kathleen O'Leary 34 Coolidge Ave. Peabody. Mass. Jean M Oliva 111 Chestnut St Everett. Mass. Ann M O'Meara 7 Beacon Blvd Peabody Mass David OYNEII 241 Lafayette St Salem Mass Ann Ordway 51 Pine St. Hudson. Mass. Paul Ormond Bells Neck Rd. W. Harwich, Mass. Patricia A. O'Shea 22 Forty Steps Lane Nahant, Mas. Paul O'Shea 15 Maple St. Salem. Mass. Glenn Osterman 65 Whipple Rd. Tewksbury. Mass. John Otieno 43 High St. Topsfield, Mass. Loretta O'Wril 1336 Broadway Haverhill. Mass. Thomas Owen 10 Quinnway W. Roxbury. Mass. John Packard 102 Wyman Rd. Billerica. Mass. Adele Pagliarulo 171 Franklin St. Stoneham. Mass. Joseph Palazola Jr. 40 Beacon St. Gloucester. Mass. Daniel Pantano 7 Patterson St. Dorchester. Mass. Linda J. Parady 10 Lincoln Ave. Manchester, Mass. Roger Parady r217C Main St. Rockport. Mass. Walter Pare 17 Howard St. Haverhill. Mass. Diane Pariseau 137 Lynn St. Peabody. Mass. Grace A. Parisi 42 Fort Sq. Gloucester. Mass. Robyn Parkinson 98 Bridge St. Salem. Mass. Cynthia Parsons 305 Prospect Ave. Revere. Mass. Lucy A. Parsons 260 Washington St. Salem. Mass. Kathryn Pasios 72 Highland St. Lunenburg. Mass. 310 Linda Patsiaris 4 Haskell Place Peabody, Mass. James Pawlowski Greenwich Rd. Ware, Mass. Joan Peckham 31 Banks Terrace Swampscott, Mass. Gregory Pedersen 4 Hazel St Salem, Mass. Margaret Pedro 70 Ocean Ave. Salem, Mass. David Pekins 28 Chase Ave. Lexington, Mass. Donna L. Pentland 849 Main St. Woburn, Mass. Donald Perkins 141 Plymouth St. E. Bridgewater, Mass Carol A Perron 20 Grant Rd. Salem, Mass. Richard G. Perron 224 Lafayette St. Apt. Salem, Mass. Linda A. Peters 460 Main St. N. Andover, Mass. Martin Peters 173 Aspen Rd. Swampscott, Mass. Richard A. Peters 15 St. Botolph St. Haverhill, Mass. Virginia Peterson 87 Columbia St. Malden. Mass. Elizabeth Pettingell 57 Carter St. Newburyport, Mass. Anna M. Petullo 17 Beacon St Lowell, Mass. M. Lois Phelan 931 Tumpike St. N. Andover, Mass. Michael Phelan 49 Felt St. Salem. Mass. Madelyn Phelps 82 Front St. Marblehead, Mass. Sharon Phipps 26 Hamilton Ave. Hamilton, Mass. Katherine Photos 60 Winona St. Peabody. Mass. Louis Piacentini 108 Hancock St. Somerville, Mass. Barbara Pierce 4 Atlantic St. Salem, Mass. Thomas Pizzello 37 Endicott St. Salem, Mass. Bernard Pohl 15 Howe St. Ipswich, Mass. Maureen Polsi 14 Watson Pkwy. Danvers, Mass. Lois C. Polsonetti 57 Birch Rd. Winthrop, Mass. Wendy Portnoy 44 Bonad Rd. W. Roxbury, Mass. John B. Powers Jr. North Ave. Mendon, Mass. Frances Pytka 53 Belchertown St. Three Rivers, Mass. Margaret Powers 50 Wachusett St. Leominster, Mass. Thomas Price 492 Chatham St. Lynn, Mass. Joanne Princigalli 269 N. Warren Ave Brockton, Mass. Diane Puglisi 40 Adams St. Somerville, Mass. Daniel Quill 13 Story Ave. Beverly, Mass. Mary E. Quinn 50 Yeomans Ave. Medford, Mass. Donna M. Quirk 10 Pleasant St. Salem, Mass. Barry D. Ramsdell 23 Robin, Rd. Wakefield, Mass. Robert Ramsdell 24 Chase St. Lynn, Mass. Donna J. Rauseo 36 Heritage Lane Wakefield, Mass. Shirley Ravaris 8 Elm St. Peabody, Mass. Bruce Raynard 26 N. Main St. Middleton, Mass. Deborah M. Reagan 14 Cornell Rd. Beverly, Mass. Robert F. Reed Jr. 223 S. Common St. Lynn, Mass. Jane C. Reilly 14 Edward Ave. Lynnfield, Mass. Susan M. Reilly 1 Alter Court Newburyport, Mass. Richard F. Reily 48 Holten St. Peabody, Mass. Pauline Remy 254 Fourth St. Fall River, Mass. Robert Renna 16 Clinton St. Waltham, Mass. Judith A. Renoni 47 Flora Rd. Attleboro, Mass. Robert Restaino 101 Wilbur St. Everett, Mass. Andrew N. Reusch 26 Platt St. Lawrence, Mass, Kathleen A. Reusch 26 Platt St. Lawrence, Mass. Linda Revell 282 Boutelle St. Fitchburg, Mass. Joan D. Reynolds 68 Winnepurkit Ave. Lynn, Mass. Margaret A. CCarneyJ Riccio 21 Howe St. Apt. 6 Methuen, Mass. Elaine Rice 31 Franklin St. Holliston, Mass. Catherine Richard 224 Bradford St. Everett, Mass. Irene Richardson 46 Hacker Rd. Lynn, Mass. Ross P. Richardson 9 Gardner St. Peabody, Mass. John Richner 364 Cabot St. Beverly, Mass. Ricki L. Rickabaugh 251 Upham St. Melrose, Mass. Lawrence Riley 107 Stimson St, W. Roxbury, Mass. 311 Michael Rivet 5 Burlington St. Lawrence, Mass, Kathleen A. Robertson 5 Lakeview Ave. Reading, Mass. Barbara L. Robinson 84 Collins St. Lynn, Mass. Douglas N. Robinson 56 Bow St. Stoneham, Mass. Yvonne Roderick 43 Bradford St. Provincetown, Mass. Daniel Rogalski 20 Chestnut St. Marblehead, Mass. Linda Rogers 28 Montana St. Marshfield, Mass. Marlene Roman 3 Lynn Fells Pkwy. Melrose, Mass. Claire Rooney 26 Estey St. Malden, Mass. Roberta Rosenstein 7130 S.W, 5th Court Pembroke Pines, Hollywood, Fla Brenda Rotondi 188 Laurel St. Melrose, Mass. Diane L. Ruel 10 Marion Ave. Biddeford, Me. Paula J. Ruelle 26 Webber St. Malden, Mass. John M. Ruth Jr. 634 Primrose St. Haverhill, Mass. Constance Ryan 57 Emerson Ave. Peabody, Mass. Mary E. Ryan 5 Grant St. Danvers, Mass. Paul K. Ryan 11 Ellsworth Rd. Peabody, Mass. Edward Rybicki 21 Conant St. Salem, Mass. John Ryder 20 Rodwell St. Brockton, Mass. Walter Rydzewski 12 Euclid Ave. Worcester, Mass. Katheryn Sacco 16 Sherwood Rd. Medford, Mass. Lucille Sacco 29 Muriel Ave. Wakefield, Mass. Leslie Sack 8 Heritage Drive Salem, Mass. Irene Safley 6 Kenway St. Medford, Mass. Stephen Salvo 25 Raymond Ave. Salem, Mass. Elizabeth Scaparotti 30 Roslyn St. Salem, Mass. Diana Sampson 4 Sewall St. Marblehead, Mass. Donald Sandos 265 Main St. Gardner, Mass. Kenneth Sands 79 Newton Ave. Lynn, Mass. Mary A. Sanguedolce 56 Carmel Rd. Andover, Mass. Patricia Santeusanio 19 Endicott Ave. Marblehead, Mass. Timothy W. Sapp 500 Chestnut St. Lynn, Mass. Susan Sardella 16 W. Water St. Wakefield, Mass. Ralph Sargent 1 Ryder Ave. Melrose, Mass. Catherine Saris 28 Mayflower Drive Wenham, Mass. Theodore Sarnowski 72 Rainbow Terr. Salem, Mass. Kathleen Sauchuk 23 Brimbal Ave. Beverly, Mass. Linda Saulnier 266 Washington St. Salem, Mass. Daniel Schaefer 97 Newport St. Arlington, Mass. Kenneth Schaefer 12 Marshal St. N Reading, Mass Rexford Schiano 20 Fox Rd Plymouth, Mass. Sandra A Schifano 36 Donegal Rd Peabody, Mass Ronald Sciabarrasi 5 Redman St. Fitchburg, Mass. Jeanne Scione 606 North Ave. Wakefield, Mass. Gloria Seabrook Mill Rd. Boxford, Mass. Linda Secondini 52 Pond St. Stoneham, Mass. Laural Segal 15 Surfside Rd. Lynn, Mass. Janet Semple 67 Brownell St. Attleboro, Mass. Albert Serino 31 Great Woods Terrace Lynn, Mass. Gaetano Severo 19 Carson Rd. Woburn, Mass. Gary Sewall 22 Sunset Rd. Salem, Mass. Kathleen A, Shaheen 207 Saratoga St. Lawrence, Mass. Maureen Shannon 111 Chestnut St. Haverhill, Mass. Stella Shaw 22 Woodside Ave. Winthrop, Mass. Patricia Sheehan 20 Malcolm St. Hingham, Mass. Pauline Sheehan 284 Chatham St. Lynn, Mass. Glenn Shepherd 72 Magnolia Rd. Swampscott, Mass. Steven Shepherd 72 Magnolia Rd. Swampscott, Mass. Deborah Shultz 260 Washington St. Salem, Mass. Majorie Shyavitz 16 LaGrange Terrace Lynn, Mass. Lesley Sidman 39 Campbell Ave. Revere, Mass. Ferna Silva 301 Brick Kiln Rd. Falmouth, Mass. James Skerry 48 Grimshaw St. Malden, Mass. 312 Jeanne Skinner 32 Clifton Hgts. Lane Marblehead, Mass. Richard Slipkowsky 48 Camden St. N. Andover, Mass. Dennis Smith 466 Broadway Lynn, Mass. Elizabeth Smith 84 Linden Ave. Malden, Mass. Gale Smith 4 Barnstable Rd. W. Peabody, Mass. Kathleen Smith 95 Butler St. Lawrence, Mass. Kathy L. Smith 4 Burnside Ave. Merrimac, Mass. Mary Sokol 8 Auburn Rd. Salem, Mass. Noreen M. Solan 68 Orchard St. Lynn, Mass. Brenda Somma 674 Turnpike St. N. Andover, Mass. Elaine Sontag 3 Bourne St. Clinton, Mass. Casmera Soroka 17 Farley Ave. lpswich, Mass. Charles Southard 12 Pranker Rd. Saugus, Mass. Charles Spanger 40 Conomo Ave. Lynn, Mass. Lewis Spates Jr. 16 Summer St. Danvers, Mass. Stephanie Squillace 18 Lyman St. Beverly, Mass. Carol Stagno 22 Sheridan St. Lawrence, Mass. Andrew W. Stallworth 240 Bradford St. Everett, Mass. Patricia J. Stansfield 8 Nabby's Pt. Rd. lpswich, Mass. Donna Staples 134 High St. Lee, Mass. Elizabeth Steele 9 Hardy St. Danvers, Mass. Robert Stephenson 368 High St. Dalton, Mass. John Stevenson 1 Sullivan Ave. Lawrence, Mass. Susan CDonagheyj Steward 53 Humphrey St. Lowell, Mass. Patricia Stewart 212 Dodge St. Beverly, Mass. Gail Stokes 4th St. Plum Island Newbury, Mass. Maureen Sturgis 94 Fay's Ave. Lynn, Mass. James Sullivan 1 Field Terrace Woburn, Mass. Kevin Sullivan 13 Liberty Hill Ave. Salem, Mass. Mary H. Sullivan 17 Meacham Rd. Cambridge, Mass. Peter Sullivan 24 Grove St. Medford, Mass. Susan Sullivan 33 Sekonnet Ave. Ocean Bluff, Mass. Luana Swartz 8 Franklin St. Apt. 21 Marblehead, Mass. Christina Szybiak 37 Forrester St. Salem, Mass. Andrew Tagliaferri 254 Newbury St. Peabody, Mass. Paul Tagliamonte 194 Marianna St. Lynn, Mass. Maryellen Tahmosh 21 Hodge Rd. Arlington, Mass, Mary Ann Tassi 8 Melvin St. Wakefield, Mass. Carol Taylor 321 Locust St. Danvers, Mass. Larry Taylor 43 Eastern Ave. Beverly, Mass. Mark E. Taylor 22 Congress St. Amesbury, Mass. Arthur Teichmann 38 Bradstreet Rd. N. Andover, Mass. Rita Terenzi 28 Rear Ober St. Beverly, Mass. James Thelen 48 Pleasant St. Marblehead, Mass. Susan Thierauf 33 Lynwood Dr. Norwood, Mass. Ann Marie Thibeault 241 Lafayette St. Salem, Mass. Otis Tholander 252 Boston Ave. Medford, Mass. Dorothea Thomas 2 Longwood Ave. Beverly, Mass. Arlene Thomson 9 Highland Terr. Beverly, Mass. Cheryl Thornton 36 Beach Ave. Swampscott, Mass. Joseph Thorpe 764 Central Ave. Needham, Mass. Stephen Timony 52 Harwood St. N. Andover, Mass. Elaine Toleos 8 Doty Ave. Danvers, Mass. Ronald T. Toleos 7R Shillaber St. Peabody, Mass. Michael Tomao 14 Hamilton Rd. Waltham, Mass, Barbara Tominsky 82 Water St. Milford, Mass. Carmine Tortora 185 Pearl St. Somerville, Mass. Randolph Townsend Jr, 15 Ashton St. Beverly, Mass. Jean Trainor 7 Foster Dr. Beverly, Mass. Karen Tranos 4 Bedford St. Salem, Mass. Norman A. Tremblay 6 Leonard St. Gloucester, Mass. Sheran Tremblay 9 Margaret Rd. Burlington, Mass. Robert Trudeau 46 King St. Peabody, Mass. 313 Susan Trull 62 Juniper St. Lawrence, Mass. Ralph E. Tufo 41 Falls St. Lynn, Mass. Gale Tuomi Sudbury Rd. Stow, Mass. Clifford Turner 1 Wisteria St. Salem, Mass. Wayne Turner 24 Fayette St. Beverly, Mass. Paula C. Vail 86 High St. Topsfield, Mass. Patricia L. Vaillancourt 9 W. Hawley St. Lawrence, Mass. Veronica Valente 84 Green St. Lynn, Mass. Diane M. Valenti 157 Winthrop St. Medford, Mass. Peter Vallance 6 Rafferty Rd. Stoneham, Mass. Mary Vallas 24 Hawthorne Blvd. Salem, Mass. Suzanne Vandewalle 2 Cedar Pl. Wakefield, Mass. Joan Vasily 161 Central Ave. Malden, Mass. Susan Vatalaro 34 Marshall Ave. Malden, Mass. Karen Vaughan 86 Pearl St. Everett, Mass. Stephen Vesey 6 Shirley St. Holbrook, Mass, Beverly Vogel 10 Park Ave. Methuen, Mass. Michael Vogt 235 Perkins Row Topsfield, Mass. Donna Voke 24 Thornton Pk. Winthrop, Mass. Jeanne M. Vozzella 11 James St. Malden, Mass. Carol Wagner 352 Lynn Fells Pkwy. Saugus, Mass. Michael Waldron 16 Deer Pk. Lynn, Mass. David Walker 95 Clarendon St. S. Weymouth, Mass. Eugene Wallace 115 Bradlee St. Hyde Park, Mass. Richard Wallace 39 Sohier Rd. Beverly, Mass. Diane Walsh 106 E. Boscobel St. Braintree, Mass. John Walsh 14 Bartlett St. Brockton, Mass. Kathleen Walsh 169 E. Central St. Natick, Mass. Linda A. Walsh 859 Summer St. Lynnfield, Mass. Paula Walsh 120 River St. Lynn, Mass. Sharon Walsh 9 Tappan St. Melrose, Mass. Sheila Waltos 29 Chestnut St. Lowell, Mass. Jan F. Wozniak 11 Linden Ave. Salem, Mass. Anne Weafer 6 Warren Ave. Woburn, Mass. Ronald Weekley 38 King St. Peabody, Mass. Doreen fDoyleJ Welch 41 Federal St. Salem, Mass. Martha Welch 27 Abbott St. Marblehead, Mass. Phyllis Welch 10 Safford Rd. Lynn, Mass. Kathleen Whalen 149 Parker Rd. Wakefield, Mass. William Whalen 30 Elmhurst St. Arlington, Mass. Richard Wheeler 32 Webacowitt Ave. Lynn, Mass. Barbara Wheet 7 North St Saxonville, Mass. David Whelton 10 Surrey Rd. Salem, Mass. Patricia White 20 Wedgemere Rd. Beverly, Mass. Sheila A. White 8 Norfolk Ave. Peabody, Mass. Karen Wickman 22 White Ave. Worcester, Mass. Nancy Wilber 16 Lincoln St. Medway, Mass. Christine Wilber 1022 Washington St. Gloucester, Mass. Henry Wilk Jr. 254 Nottingham St. Springfield, Mass. Doris QWilliamsJ Gray 145 Stetson Ave. Swampscott, Mass. Gerald Williams 112 Ashland St. Malden, Mass. Michael F. Winn 24 Farrington Ave. Saugus, Mass. David Winters 820 Beacon St. Apt. 301 Boston, Mass. Charlene Wodzynski 26 Bolton St. Somerville, Mass. Cynthia J. Wood 20 Trickett Rd. Lynnfield, Mass. Ronald Wood 20 Maple Ave. Woburn, Mass. Cheryl Woodfin 29 Lincoln Ave. Marblehead, Mass. Ronald Worth 15 York Terrace Lynn, Mass. Andrew Xenios 38 Washington Sq. Salem, Mass. Roger Young 6 Woodland Dr. N. Reading, Mass. Nancy Zampell 111 Collincote St. Stoneham, Mass. Joseph R. Zina 20 Joy St. Ludlow, Mass. Edward Zubiel 11 West Dane St. Beverly, Mass. 314 Rhonda fPoretskyJ Zunick 53F Garden Rd. Peabody, Mass. Compliments THE GRIDIRON Norlh Shore Oplical Co 4 oPncuANs :dv Canal St. Salem 'M 'L 2 FWS: 133 Canal sr. A'579,,,. Salem, Mass. Tel. 744-5715 J ggjg YQ. Compliments GAUTHIEFZ IMPORTED CARS 142 Canal St. Salem, Mass. 01970 745-5500 Mercedes-Benz 8. 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Kerr Furniture Downtown Salem Good Luck National House Furnishings Est. 1898 145 Washington St. Corner 81 Front Of Washington CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 1971 SALEM STATE COLLEGE - 7 GLVLLQK 06005 JEWELEFIS 8t SILVERSMITHS IN SALEM SINCE 1867 231 ESSEX STREET, SALEM, MASS. 01970 TEL. 745-0535 your better local banking COl'1I'1eCtIOl 1 llfaufnkeag' 7705! f MAIN OFFICE 81 LOAN CENTER 217 Essex Street, Salem DRIVE-IN 81 WALK-UP OFFICE 24 Central Street, Salem MEMBER F-D-I-O 317 BEST WISHES CLASS OF Good Luck 1971 Class of 71,' 9 seg 15? ms, A . SALEM FIVE Cents Savings Bank O 'A' .I E i' 19 '-.N ?T ,QP '-1i ,, ,....---' be ll- 4-Q- -, 9 S A v IN G 5 125 Washington Street, Salem, Massachusetts 745-5555 BEST WISHES MERCHANTS-WARREN HAWTHORNE NATIONAL BANK MOTOR HOTEL Salem - Peabody Member F,D.I.C. 18 Washington Sq.. Salem 318 544 Fred Randall builds strong clients three ways ,...-.-v- v . :lu ,A I, gg .4 Q. it 4 Frederick P. Randall, '64 First, he explains the low purchase rate ad- vantage of getting an early start now on the life insurance protection you're going to need later on. When you start thinking about a ca- reer. Or think about starting a family. Second, he shows how even a student budget can handle policy premiums without a lot of strajn. Fred remembers how it was when he went to Salem. Third, he serves his policyholders on a regu- lar and continuing basis. In fact, most of Fred's clients today are among the more than 200 Salem State graduates he helped get started on sound financial programs four or five years ago when they were students. Fred Randall builds strong clients: he can show you how to strengthen your financial situation as well. CW gens Frederick P. Ftandall!1O Colonial Road-Salem!Telephone 744-5786 MAHAN'S, INC. 87 Washington St., Salem, Mass. Hosiery - Draperies - Domestics - Linens Compliments of MUSINSKY'S Lynn - Swampscott - Wakefield Good Luck THE SALEM EVENING NEWS I or SALEM where you will always find the top names in fashion .... and a warm friendly welcome awaits you. 252 Essex Street 320 Compliments To THE CLASS OF 1971 POUSSARD'S PHARMACY 335 Lafayette St., Salem Best Wishes VlNCENT'S POTATO CHIPS 205 Highland Ave., Salem Compliments BERNARD'S JEWELRY INC. 179 Essex St., Salem Good Luck GlBLEE'S Washington St., Salem 321 Congratulations C H S 450 Highland Ave. Salem 74 Washington St. Salem 744-0042 TRAVEL CENTER OVER 65 YEARS IN TRAVEL BEAULIEU and LINSKY 279 Essex sr. Tel. 744-4260 Wall Paper - Paints Tile Boards - Linoleum - Metals For Rent SANDERS - STEAIVIERS - WAXEBS Q1 X-1 ,.-al!! ff Compliments to the Class 1971 ROGER CONANT CO-OPERATIVE BANK 256 Essex Street Salem, Mass. 01970 Telephone 745-1124 Good Luck NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE Best wishes from ALMY'S SaIem's Largest Department Store other stores in Danvers Plaza - Beverly - Burlington - Revere - Methuen - Dorchester - Nashua N.H. Today is the first day of the rest of your lives. Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1971. Salem State College Bookstore William Stamos, Manager 323 To change one's life is to recapture the truth that only individuals and individual lives are real. Charles Reich SERVOIVIATION 324 F P PM cz-,wr Xa! -s f eg ry L 3 'W' lf 5 ': E' QREHEEI' nt ml . 53 i ggimu .4635 sm Eine: mm5 :5 BU P3 3 Murrm House EBEEESZQE 505 PARADISE ROAD Eagn fgf g rae: SWAMPSCOTT me-hmmfiil 7 uddummul 593-5322 .EDQFNQQ IE. --Q, . - .- lfgg Qlmggg' LIU Eiiwgwfifiigplf 'Wm 'I' Hwang When can you enjoy the unexcelled hospi- tality of Pewter Pot Muffin Houses? From 7 a.m. to after midnight. Breakfast, luncheon, dinner, snack-time, late evening, and even on Sundays. Our cheerful Pewter Pot Muffin Girls are always ready to serve you. our lafchsfring is out 7 a.m. 'til after midnight LUCY and Diane, Carol, Flick, Betty, Patti, Maria, Judy, Mary, Paula, and Janice. 325 Editor-in-chief Assistant editor Business manager Faculty and administration Senior section and directory Activities Advertisements Layout Staff workers Advisor STAFF 326 Diane Gulino Carolann Ferrone Richard McEachern Betty Farinoso Patricia Kramer Maria Grasso Paula Couiliard Judy Fienoni Mary Sullivan Lucy Morini Janice Hanley Ann Morose Richard Burchill Beth Haran Anne Harrington Bon Toleos Claire Keyes Listen to music, dance, seek out nature, laugh, be happy, be beautiful, help others whenever you can, work for them as best you can, take them in, the old and the bitter as well as the young, live fully in each moment, love and cherish each other, love and cherish yourselves, stay together. Charles A. Reich 327 We wish to express our sincere gratitude to the following people Michael Antonakes Alvin Billings Rick Cowley Joe Crilley Bob Desrosiers Joe Donovan Roger Hardy William J Keller Inc. Frank Kyle Larry MacLean William Mahaney Tony Mauro Phil McCarthy Edward Meagher Mike Pidgeon James Reilly Lewis Spates Skip Tom Stawasz Maurice Stuart Kathy Stevens The Log Special thanks to our advisor, Miss Claire Keyes. 328 v - - 1 1 1 .4 1 '1 1 - .'1 . 131,1-.1:::i.':i'v:31fsli VI 111. 44 H.. 4,321 .,fjJ:': Q '1'L gf' nay I '1 ri I Q Y X Q' u1x:.zJf11fL!.Q1f1uM '7-'I' ' - F Z W f 7611113-N1-1.N!-'31i1'11I' M1111 1 11' '. 9' 1 ' 1' 1. 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