Southeastern Massachusetts University - Scrimshaw Yearbook (North Dartmouth, MA)
- Class of 1979
Page 1 of 280
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 280 of the 1979 volume:
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1 1 U Q M 1 4 1 Y' W A 1 x 1 1 'a 1 1 ,1 I- .,.1 1,! 1 .-' , ' . .. ':qw',. - 4 1 .1- 1 'fx -IJ, .1 'ii 1 s , 1 . , -' 'Qw- .'1 1 Q Q xxx 1 A X ,ful 94 U 1 c 1 J A p Y A .UM , 4 2, I A lx , 1 'C '. ' M ,, , 4 Y .Nl ,N , 4. 11 ., ' 5 4.1-Lo , l '40 I v .lx Q' W 1 A 1 1 1 . 1 1 ur ,31 1 1 -4 A f 1 1' . .1 1, ,.a 1 .'l' Pm. ' 'ya J. .A . ., ,111 1 1. 1 ai .11 H '4 'r 1 .1 ..i 1, ,nf- '1 ,N .win 110' ,4.,. QW nl' ' ' '.r.n1An111m. ugwku. .l,1'. .lf- 0' '- , llfl f?1llfiil7l iilllllllllll IIIIILLZ S SCRIMSHAW1979 Southeastern Massachusetts Univer ty North Dartmouth, Massac husett ffl 'Q Ox J ffl, , if J . g 1 er XV ,':.l'- ff if 'ff' Q 5 I-Q r4 ' 1 f 41 This close proximity has heightened our awareness of ourselves, and those around us. National identities have become stronger, encouraging individuals to come forward. In our country, after years of incorporating newcomers into the system, it is suddenly all right to show our ethnic differences. On campus, is a new pride and a new aggressiveness VW TABLE OF coNTENTs Dedication .................... 1 6 Faculty and Administration ....... 18 Clubs and Organizations ......... 30 Happenings ............. ..... 5 6 Sports ...... .... 1 04 Seniors ......... .... 1 34 Commencement .... .... 2 26 Kaleidoscope .... .... 2 52 QI Z Krigman 5 i u Krigman T X ? 1, Kass s Noyer i I g ff' gafesff gaffaf Q.-25:-Zaff'-2'-a'i'2-s'f5,,-65 4-553222256 Z ff ff' 12,f5 f:f2-722561 gff'5 ',,-:J-5-fff :f1,f',,,v,5X ilk' rf 4.- .- A '- if DiCecca SMU, one part concrete and three parts humanity. 'P lx., G H H' Y me w J, Y' pr 9-5 me se! Q-. mf ff. ai' 1 ml 2 Af -1 4-'L I fl 42 4 5. M' fm? Y' .1 ,v 'fQ s- 'E , , gr' i ' ,gg l '-R ' J sa . ' ANN , 'Y ,?i' z 4979-fn-I A.. fry, X91 I f, 4:45 ,W f F 4 w M ,, f rr' 34, jg. - -iw I' AMQ1, - . 11 f in jf? . .- -ff, '1 'f ' ,iff 1 3.1 , X 'L Q- ,, , Krigman ,,. Krigman Krigman h'. 924 'um Mn'-m nn url' V V ,101 'Ta -' ' 'T :gilyw ,t M. -av 1-as ,. , 1 , .v 1 1. L . .M f 1 '1 ,, g rm ,bg I. 1 Ki' . ' 12 ue' , -Q Q. - Krigman f-W Kass Krigman 12 Krigman i v 1 3 1 3, Q 4 1 1 I N QQ- LQ 4 C wc, 5 YN lg, G' V- f4 K OL E N N lb' I Mas-fglrgg EQMETHING KSSS .Q .ggw --3' Aff, S.. rm' IQ-qf tlf L, X Krigman W DiCecca J A 4 , K i Krigman Krigman 1 ' A P I ' A A , 1 X 'f ww wg X fix' H, -XXX ' 4 Q 1 1 Y . ix F44 G 5 Y ...,..wa.1 'X , Jn I S Krigman ic 'T 05 rib iff 'I . . ' K i'. . ..w. ' 'i' . x-:F I. V 1- 'SSP . g ' . :I ri uf. 1 0. 'ku ' ' 5 .2: l L, 'N' rrf' -' I . ' 9- wvpiff. ' L ' ff . f' tl . ' K .Q 1 U f Q. 4. John Wehner. . . President Shirley Hemmer. . . Seo! Treasurer Douglas Scott. . . Vice President I6 6 During the past year, there has been a concerted effort to put the Yearbook organization in order. The responsibility of this task has fallen, for the most part, on the Senior Class officers: John fOscarj Wehner, Doug Scott and Shir- ley Hemmer. They took on an immense responsibility when they began the selection process for the staff in the fall of '78. Without any experience they chose the staff that compiled the 1979 SCRIMSHA W. They did much more than this. To ensure that future classes would inherit a firm yearbook organization, one that was professional and well run, they set up a set of guidelines by which the yearbook staff would perform its duties. For the first time in a long time the SCRlMSHAWstaff had a direction and some pattern to follow. Because of these and many more accomplishments, many of which have gone unnoticed by the University at large, we, the 1979 SCRIMSHAW staff, would like to dedicate this year's book to these three super people. Thanks for everything! ' '43 4 v 6 , .. SY sm, A A A : au E .9 H Z Thomas M. Mulvey Harvey Goldman Associate Dean of Students Design f 1 1 . f , 5 s. as ai 9 5 9 , 1 1' .AL i- i ! fi ,N FA C UL TY AND ADMINIS THA TIUN D. David Pascal Biology Kass DONALD E. WALKER UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT l have always been optimistic about the future, even when world and national matters looked far bleaker than they do now. But my optimism for you, for your future, and for what you will contribute when you leave here is greater than usual. I think we are going through a period in which there is a special maturing of our democracy. A period when we appear to be regaining a sense of se f-sufficiency, not in a romantic, pioneering sort of way, but in a very realistic and practical way. sense this in such things as the trend towards the use of solar energy. A decade ago peop e looked more to the government and other large institutions to solve their problems. Now think more people are saying, they're- tired of waiting for someone else to solve their prob ems-they'll do it themselves. That's healthy. l think it's at the heart of the way a good university community functions. l think it's the true substance that makes us strong as a group, when we really believe in the capacity of ourselves and our colleagues to solve those problems which confront us. And I think this has a lot to do with you, with this group of students who have been here for four years and are now leaving. ldon't expect you to remember a great deal of details of what you learned here, but I do expect you've learned how to learn. l think you now have a basic grasp of where the boundries are and where you might push to bend them back a little. Those of you whom l have had the opportunity to know personally have been a source of inspiration to me for l did not come across this optimistic vision of the future by QQ! reading books. I came across it by listening to what you had to say and watching what you did. I was impressed. No, all wars have not been fought, nor all battles won, but you rekindle in me the feeling that we will meet successfully the challenges before us, and that is what really makes my task as president of SMU rewarding far beyond the traditional yardsticks with which we try to measure happiness and satisfaction. DEAN DONALD C. HOWARD Associate Dean of Students REFLE C TIONSJ As graduates of the Class of 1979 you set forth on a new adventure in your ongoing voyage through life. You enter into your future, l suspect, with the same mixture of concern, uncertainty and hope, that many of us who have preceded you faced ours. Hopefully that future will contain for you much fulfillment and the joy that comes from fulfillment. But true and lasting fulfillment can only be realized as you grow in your understandings and insights, both about who you are and what life is about. Those understandings and insights come through a con- tinual process of thinking out concepts and values that will form the foundation of a working philosophy by which your practice of life will be guided. In expressing a fond farewell to you may I share some thoughts from my own life's philosophy that could prove helpful as you search for your own. To Truly Live To truly live, l believe is to be aware that there is something larger than one's self. That despite our fall from Grace we are not aimless atoms ambling to annihilation, rather we are the highest expression of God's cre- ation, with a beginning in time that stretches to an infinity beyond time. And because we are, we have a duty, a responsibility to express in whatever we create, a reflection of our God bestowed virtue. To truly live is to recog- nize the fact that we neither live nor die 'unto ourselves, we are accountable not only to God in matters eternal, but are answerable to both mankind and God in matters temporal. Upon this recognition we discern still another, that of our obligation to bring into the lives of our fellow humans a full measure of love, dignity, respect for human worth, goodness and purity of purpose. Remembering always that such power as one possesses to shape the course of events, influence the lives of others, flows not from a life lived for self, which is a life of alien- ation, but from the strength of interpersonal relationships. Such is the life that satisfies, for it goes beyond mere survival. The roots of human dealings are of the spirit, without which nothing profound in the way of influence can ever be generated. And the spirit is what comes from within. When a life of survival is compared to that of a life that satisfies, the comparison is obvious. The former you can meet every day by the score. Their numbers can be found among the human zombies of the world, the dull clods in whom no magnetism resides, and whose capacity to lift the human spirit or motivate a human action is nil. They can also be found amongst the brilliant, brittle or sophisticated types who populate so much of our urban society. But their characteristics are one and the same. They are self servers, and the selfish. The pleas- ure-for-the-moment seekers. Their interest is primarily in things and only in people when people can be used as objects to gain an end. They are indifferent to everyone's needs and feelings but their own. The sum of it all is that they are the selfish takers, not the givers in life. Be a giver, but also realize that in giving there is a positive sense in which you must likewise be an unselfish taker, capable of receiving from others the flow of their commitment to you and the expression of their love and care for you. Without such natural give and take your capacity for healthy relationships becomes a parched and pinched experience, your life an unbalanced ledger. Celestino D. Macedo Dean of Students Donald C. Howard Assoc. Dean of Student Life 22 Victor P. Caliri Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences A--it bs Joseph P. Sauro Dean of the College of Engineering . 4 :N Nj . 53-?! 'A-1 -V' Norman Zalkind Chairman of Board of Trustees 51 I. x Mary Louise Walsh Assoc. Dean of Student Life 1, Robert Piper Dean of Continuing Studies Mathew Sgan Assistant Dean of Arts and Sciences I Robert Adams Fine Arts Robert Edgar Biology inked 4 Louis Simeone Mathematics 24 Walter Mierzejewski Mathematics Robert Kowalczyk Mathematics , ! f may-,g,,,.-,. Leah Curnin Biology Robert Wilson Biology X Frederyk Gorczyca Mech. Engineering Richard Ibara Biology xf John O'NeiI Education ll ga 4 Samuel Stone Mathematics Dan Aldridge Assistant to the President John Choporian Management R John Fyock Political Science 0 'b I Charles Ratto Dir. of Student Counseling Joseph Bronstad Modern Language Edmund Depre Textile Sciences James Sears Biology Altoro Wilson Textile Sciences Manuel Carreiro Dir. of Resident Life ENT 5 ,I . jx gm wwf!!! nga' , Francis O'Brien Biology Paul Caron El. Engineering ' ' l in x,g. WV., . .1 5 L Paul Nolan Assistant Dir. of Records 2 1 L i Q ' 1 lx if A James Wiley Director of Public Relations Robert Wilson Biology Y 4 Q I T George Mellor Fine Arts ' 1 Phillip Zoretic Chemistry Mary Nanopoulos Nursing Joseph Scionti History Julie Cleare Psychology Martin Butler History Terry Montgomery Textile Sciences Alton Wilson Textile Sciences Howard Windham Visual Design Joseph Gilbert Visual Design Warren Holt Mathematics 26 l Michael Crowley Mathematics Nursing Nursing Joan Felder Medical Tech. Ralph Tykodi Chemistry 5 1 . U d 0',r, Q .. iq QQ' ll' ,K e me I ref 100. 5.1. I , ,ri Q, .A f vig? S Nursing ' 9 - 9 ' . Nursin rs .hiv 9 ,n xx --ng A4gV A M. C. Rosenfield History 4134? Lester Cory El. Engineering Marion M. Chase Nursing 3883 ......3 Janet Freedman Head Librarian - V Tig , ,f f , ' I, . F I . s Dorothy Freifelder V K i Biology 'Af Milton Young QQ Education David Pascal Sat Dev Khanna Civil Engineering Theodore Mead Fine Arts Alan Bates Chemistry Modern Languages Robert Bento Physics Donald Presel Physics Alben Hill History Robert Leamnson Biology P Virgilio Zanin Sociology 28 , Biology 'me Wesley C. Panunzio ,ff D Robert Griffith Biology Richard Larschan English P1 Shaukat Ali Political Science if f 1 Robert McCabe Mathematics TQ? fl I Chang-Ning Wu Chemistry Donald Wetmore Management Dwight Mowery Chemistry Naseer Aruri Political Science Lawrence Washington Modern Language 4 Kazi Haq Physics i 'O -x CF Marge Zeller Electrical Engineering af Geraldine Phipps History f-' 7 Qi I I 'wi Outing Club T. Webb CLUBS AND OFIGANIZA TIONS Kass Vet s Club Boogie and Bash MASS PIRG One of the projects thatthe group sponsored this past year was the Book Exchange this past spring. Mass PIRG Invites Participation Mass PIRG, the statewide consumer and environmental advocacy group, has an extremely active chapter at SMU. Governed by an eleven member local board, the organization has implemented projects and programs addressing many of the basic consumer and legal needs of its student membership such as the student Book Exchange and the Small Claims Court Advisory Service. Students have investigated the quality and nutritional value of food served on campus and are undertaking a community-wide project which will check the quality of records and tapes sold at area stores. Mass PIRG students are researching the efficiency of solar energy as an alternative to nuclear power and are conducting surveys on the hazards involved in the transportation of nuclear wastes. The organization has y 'fd . X' wx- .- The SMU student local board has committed itself to increased quality in public higher education and has been lobbying for a fair budget for SMU and no tuition increases. Mass PIRG invites participation. In fact any SMU student may come to the local board and suggest a research project or program within j the realm of consumer, consumer legal or j environmental affairs. Mass PIRG, student-governed and student- l financed, continues to challenge its student j membership to become involved in its various 1 programs. Students have continually proven T that they can indeed make a difference if F motivated and unified. 5 jj, l i l l l l l coordinated a paper recycling program azbetween SMU and the Town of Dartmouth. if ll ii l ill SMU VE TS CLUB H-K lx NOLFSON X The SMU Vets Club is an active and concerned organization on the University Campus. Its members are concerned with the needs of the cIub's membership, and also the University popula- tion as a whole. Among some of its services is an information and counselling program for veterans who are part of the SMU Com- munity, and their dependents. Besides being concerned and a worthwhile source of assist- ance and information, it is a group of people who enjoy a good time and share that with the whole University by sponsoring get- togethers such as the Club's annual Boogie Bash. S.A.P. StudentAdvisors Program Kass First Row CLeft To Righty: Lisa Brown, Susan Goodrich, Lynn Pault, Caren Lamkin, Nancy Hoole, Lisa Wayne, Lorraine Roberts. Second Row: Cheryl Thomas, Vicki Funny, Debbie Hartford, Ron Robertson, Sharon Santos, Doug Scott, Chris King, Rich Norton. Third Row: Glenda Rosenberg, Becky Ward, Brendan Stokes, George Dudley, Elayne Tam, Susan Schramm, Donna Boggs, Susan Kerwin, Karen Rines, Shirley Hemmer, Sharon Benson, Cliff Smith. f SOURCE HOTLINE SOURCE Hotline is consistantly improving to facilities increase our capabilities to handle help you. During the 78-79 academic year problems such as: Pregnancy, Rape, Birth changes such as the expanding of hours and Control, Depression, Suicide, Human Abuse, increasing number of staff members have made and Drug and Alcohol Abuse. SOURCE's services more available to the In our efforts to improve our qualifications community. and to make the community more aware of SOURCE Hotline is a crisis intervention and SOURCE, we attend various seminars, referral service. Our expertly trained para- conventions, and participate in National professional staff gives the utmost attention Medical Week in the North Dartmouth Mall. and understanding possible, with confidentiality The reputation established by SOURCE's guaranteed. volunteers will continue to grow and to To be in closer touch with the community, positively effect the community year after year. SOURCE set up a hotline phone system in New Many thanks and congratulations to the hard Bedford, Ma. in February. These improved working volunteers of.SOURCE Hotline. 34 INDUSTRIAL RELA TIONS CLUB x Kass Photo taken during the annual banquet of the I.R. Club in the spring of 1979, held at the campus center. Kass The Industrial Relations Club has been active on the SMU Campus for the past 5 years. Most of the members are Industrial Relations majors at the University. The group is an affiliate with ASPA. fAmerican Society of Personnel Administrationj The organization offers the students of the Business Administration many opportunities to socialize with each other and to meet with people who are involved in personnel selection in many different businesses and industries throughout the area. The club is under the direction of Dr. Donald C. Whetmore, who is the faculty advisor. fi' L Pg x J First Row: Bradford Cheney, Jayne Brady, Maureen Lynch, Andreas Gounaris, Kerry Sullivan, Naomi Andrews, Bill McGowan, Caryl Salisbury, Dan Hoffman, Wendy Scofield, Joe McKeown. Second Flow: Wayne Campos, Rosemary McAndrew, Bill Faye, Kevin Murray, Jim Hoffman, Sue Clyde, Eric Gold, Mary Ellen Griffin, Donald France, John Gounaris. ,4g,- Monday Night Meetings 36 l STUDENT SENATE ' ,,-.r,4' QE il 54- , Cause Mixed Emotions. The Student Senate is the government of the student body. The members of this body are elected by popular election held during the academic year. Participation on the part of all members of the student body is highly encouraged for both the elections and for the meetings of the Student Senate during the year. The Monday night meetings are open to all to attend and to give their views on different subjects. During the Fall of this past year the Student Senate made an effort to improve its communication power by participating in a type of encounter weekend. lt was hoped that through the time spent in getting to know each other, there would be a strong basis for a working relationship between all the members of the Senate. Among some of the duties of the Senate are the approval of new organizations on campus, and the establishment of committees and boards that deal with various issues and topics of pertinence to the SMU student. The Senate is also responsible for the distribution of Student funds to the different clubs and organizations that request moneys for their programs during the academic year. The Student Senate is in fact a group of concerned students serving in an important capacity for the rest of the College community. ' 5 i I ' ag, ' W Photos by Bryon Kass SMU RIDING CLUB ' Hx r of ' If iPhoto taken at the Medway competi- A l tion this past year.j Front Row QLeft to Righty Rose Hawkes, Catherine Heim CTeam Cap- tainj. Back Row: Natalie Swendsen, Nancy Miller, Ann Marie Zaleski fClub Pres.J, Paula Brault. CMissing from the picture is James Lopes.J The SMU Riding Club commenced in November of 1978 with the intent of providing easily accessible information, literature and riding for all those students with any interest in horses or horsemanship. Our weekly meetings were held to organize such activities as field trips, like the one we made to Racehorse Rehabilitation Farm, films and slides on horsecare, riding clinics, fox hunts and olympic training, scheduling of riding with our coach, Linda Allen and speakers such as Patty Sedden and Linda Allen on intercollegiate showing, local and national +1 ,V 1 'Q competition and horsemanship and importantly fund raising activities. As a team an intercollegiate equestrian team we were very successful for newcomers to the Intercollegiate Horse Show Association. Out of three shows we managed to place reserve champion fsecond placej out of 26 competing colleges, and champion team iffirst placeb out of 21 competing colleges. There were seven students competing, Catherine Heim, Ann Marie Zaleski, Paula Brault, Nancy Miller, Rose Hawkes, and James Lopes. MARKETING CLUB Kass The Marketing Club is an organization comprised mainly of Marketing majors at the University. It is a social as well as an informative association. One of the major activities sponsored by the club during this past year is the Spring Banquet held at the Campus Center. Here faculty and students joined together in an evening of conversation and relaxation. The Cultural Wine Drinker's Association is a new and different club here at SMU. It was created by a group of students in the interest of preserving the arts and tradition associated with wine drinking. Many of these traditions date back to ancient Rome, in fact. . . and, in the interests of preserving culture and inebriation, the Cultural Wine Drinkers have been known to pursue topics of interest into the wee hours. The club has also taken field trips to the Taylor Wineries, Sackonett Vineyards and Nick's Tankard Pub. 1979 was a very good year for wine drinkers, and we would like to thank all that participated. CULTURAL WINE DRINKERS ASSOCIA TIUN Bill Napolitano - President Mark Routhier - Vice President Ruth Oftring - Secretary Gail Dohtery - Treasurer Nancy Jones - Recreational Director Deb Robillard - Cultural Affairs Director Richard C. Waring - Faculty Advisor TEMPER I nearly lost my TEMPER. I grew TEMPER mental. I learned to TEMPER my enthusiasm with patience, and it happened. I wish I could say that handfuls of poets tore down my door and burdened me with manuscripts, but it was an effort to find poets. On the other hand, fiction was plentiful - in fact, it's amazing to me that students can find the time to write fiction. We had some nice artwork. In all, the book was well balanced. It's discouraging to realize how few people know what TEMPER is. When I went to budget meetings, etc., I found out how low a profile we have. Yet, the magazine is read by people from other schools, and they have commented on the book. TEMPER is more than just a magazine however: lt's a great experience to meet poets, writers, artists, and feel that you're helping them to be heard and seen. The attitudes and visions of writers and artists are an important reflection of the TEMPER of the times. I was happy to be able to help. Stephen Thorley Editor N 40 SMU ci-:onus The SMU Chorus, a small group under the direction of Dr. Robert Adams, brings a touch of class to the college community through their presentations of various styles of choral music to the listening public It is a group of men and women who enjoy the sound that they make together. E-l ai :wi For those of you who enjoy a quiet, mind sharpening game of Chess, here's the club for you. These dedicated Chess buffs meet regularly to test their skill and finesse on other members. Although the club isn't large, the competition is strong. Even those who are new to the game are welcome to join. Plenty of advice and practice will be given to you. Perhaps a future Chess master is hiding right here on the campus of SMU. CHESS CLUB POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION lk As an active Qroup on campus, this group provides a service to the Community in terms of political awareness. Through their sponsorship of special guest speakers during the November elections, issues were brought to light and the students were made aware of political happenings and issues. Through their involvement and interest in politics and the political scene, these men and women have added a dimension to the University life that is unique and refreshing. First Row fLeft to Righty Caryl Salis- bury, Mark Sawyer, Ron Leblanc, Dan Walsh, Kevin Kern. Second Row: Bob Pedder. Sue Darbyshire, Greg Jarosik, Lisa Putnam, Flick O'Brien. Third Row: Phil Butta, Mike Greene, Mark Abelson. Maureen Lynch, Ed Sojka. Fourth Row: Martha Weeks. Mike McGrew, Al Has- kell, George Hebard. O WUSM is a student-owned and operated, ten watt, educational, stereo FM radio broadcasting facility. The station is a highly professional organization that produces both entertainment and educational programming. Interests and tastes of practically everyone in the community are met by the weekly programming schedule of the radio station. Rock music is the primary fare that is aired, but other types are also heard on the airwaves at various times during the broadcasting week. The requirements of the FCC are strictly adhered to by the station crew and management. The quality and diversity of the programming improves with each year. One of the major accomplishments this year has been that the radio station has become an ABC radio network affiliate. As such, the college community now enjoys the benefit of world and national news from the studios of ABC radio. The future of the station is bright and the news, sports, music and small talk continue to be heard by all who turn to 90.5 on the FM dial. .--'A 44 WOMEN 'S CENTER t ! The SMU Women's Center exists to meet the needs of the SMU women. The Center is in its eighth year of operation. The information and services provided reflect what is felt to be the current issues and concerns of women. Counseling and referral services are available. Activities have been organized that meet the needs and desires of students. The Women's Center provides support for individuals or groups with particular interests, issues, or programs they would like to discuss or plan. All if services of the Women's Center are available to the entire SMU community. The Women's Center sponsored radio program She's on Top. , 'lo J. M. - Falandys CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP Starr These pictures were taken during the Joshua Concert this past year. N- WN? A -.. as 'E TTT!! Z--r-mn.,-,,f . , ,M-..,.,, ..-...,,,,,m -- -X- A'T j Starr The Christian Fellowship is a group of young men and women who join together to share their experiences in their relationship with Jesus Christ. They sponsor special speakers and events, to which the whole SMU community is invited to attend. This year the group sponsored the appearance of the group Joshua They presented different skits concerning various topics and played music that complimented their program. The A.S.U. is a young, but growing organization, with a lot of energy. This year, we continued our Expose Yourself series, where faculty, as well as area artists showed slides of their work, and talked about their experiences in life. We also held a BrugeIfest in the fall, and a May Day festival in the spring. Our union also had a part in the presentation of two Alumni panel discussions for the students, and have sponsored a few visiting lecturers. We have also taken on the task of beautifying the interior of the Art Building, and have financed a few aesthetic projects. l see the A.S.U. as an organization with a lot of potential, looking for bigger and better things in the years to come. Andreas A. Gounaris President ART STUDENT UNIGN PRESIDENT: Andreas A. Gounaris VICE-PRESIDENT: Daniel McCluer TREASURER: Susan Messner SECRETARY: Lynne A. Francis 46 T. Webb SMU's Outing Club is composed of people who seek new experiences and appreciate the beauty of a panorama from a mountaintop, or the scenery of the New England countryside from a canoe or a bicycle. Winter, spring, or fall, the members are involved in activities that entice a wide range of people to join their little group. Trips and activities are constantly in the works, and the enthusiasm of the club members makes this club a popular one for those who enjoy the challenge of an action-packed weekend. OUTING CL UB Photos taken on the fall trip to New Hampshire and Maine. RESIDEN TASSIS TAN TS ri I , f - llif--f - ll gig El L E E I r .J 5? W ' .-- ff- El E I LL ,. 3 C E E UH' ig Iflll' ii V! V 1155?-'FSL-ns. Krigman le. L Q il Q 9 ai ' s .D 6 v 42:49 F I' QC .aw First Row: Sue Timmons, Jon Sargeant, Manuel Carreiro1Director of Resident Lifey, Dina Lindquist, Sharon Chandler, Carol Kiley. Second Row: Mary Davey, Steve Clancy, Dan Serpico, Denise Whritenour. Third Row: Tom Ley, Elaine Varelas, Brad Cheney, Rich Norton, Mela Dutka, Rita Walsh, Susan McCall. Fourth Row: Jon Sides, Mary Ellen Griffin, Duncan Warden. Fifth Row: Jill Harrington, Cindy Valles, Cliff Smith, Sharon Benson, Sheri Slauson. Sixth Row: Dominic Marinucci, Brian McGreevy, Steve Burke. '1 ., Z ,K 54 Q Q' ,ff-vii 5' 1 'E' Aiz' , ., ,N 173 P , , 'J iw saw -wil ,1f,Vfk , iff! Krigman A. S. M. E. Charles D. Oyenuga, President I ff-.- The A.S.M.E. is the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The student branch at SMU has many members from both the Mechanical Engineering and the Mechanical Engineering Technology majors on campus. This year, the officers were: Charles Oyenuga, President, William Kiem, Vice- President, Johm Mantega, Treasurer, and Eileen Avilar, Secretary. The Faculty Advisor was Prof. Jo Hansberry. Numerous meetings were held, such as Student! Faculty socials, lectures on energy and related issues in Mechanical Engineering. Trips to the Regional A.S.M.E. meeting, held at the University of Maine, Orono, were organized. The A.S.M.E. Sectional Meeting was also attended at Western New England College. industrial trips were also attended at the Bryton Power Plant. The academic year ended with the annual Tune-Up Day held in May, and a gala celebration for graduating Seniors, members, and faculty. HISTORY ASSOCIATION The History Association, under the advisorship of Dr. Koot, brings together faculty and students who have an interest in the past and a curiosity concerning the events that effect the way we live today. The group sponsors guest speakers to the campus to discuss a wide variety of topics. The group's meetings are times when people can share a common interest and various thoughts concerning different topics. The final meeting of this past year was highlighted by a speaker from the Kennedy Library. He shared with the group some stories about President Kennedy, common misconceptions that are held today, and a brief description of some of the materials to be found at the Kennedy Library. Being situated in New England, and having the benefit of many excellent ski areas within a relatively close proximity to the College there is great interest among students. Informal gatherings are organized and special trips are set up for the winter sport enthusiasts who enjoy the cold crisp mountain air of these various ski areas. This year, trips were planned for areas like Lake Placid, N.Y. and Franconia Notch, N.H. STAGE BAND The SMU Stage Band is a group of musicians who work together, have fun together, and give a great deal of pleasure to those who listen to them. Although small, they have a Big Band sound. Whatever the style or era, they execute the music in a way that would make anyone proud. Concerts are given to the students and faculty at various times during the year in the Commuter Cafeteria. Concerts are also given to the public in the form of concerts given throughout the year. Be it Disco or Swing, the SMU Stage Band is on the scene ready to play for all who will listen. Carol Lunig Linda Santoro Claudette Lecomte I 'S I R EN , 1 Janice Angelo Jill Saunders Albert Zabriskie Nancy O'Connor Chris Hebert Judy Noyer Peggy Enright Mary Schwartz Elizabeth Moura CONTRIBUTORS Nancy Jenney Nina J. Ponte Jeanne Moquin- Falandys Eleanor Lessard Evy Lipman Carole Farrell Margo Fletcher Ann Valliant Bob Grant Tom Kennedy Jerry Seney Fran Hutchinson Stephen Thorley Emily Shelley Claudia Comstock Trisha Hanlon Kathe Camara Marsha Schofield Nancy Adams Casey Priscilla Bates Grant Gail Paul Virginia Claudio Mary Wright Karen Oliver Donna Huse Judith Martin-Katz Marie Muir Audrey Witt Marlene Ayash Janet Aalfs Joan Moreau Andrew Blais Caroline DeJesus Lois Shea Sherri Ford Susan Kivela Marlene Pinski Ed Lomax Mike Krigman Morrison Dale King Mark Dumont Joanne Kuliga Virginia Jones Siren, a Women's Journal, is a monthly publication dedicated to reporting news and information relevant to the women's experience and serving as a forum for the various voices of women. As such, Siren welcomes all expressions of the viewpoints of women. Cpoetry, graphics, commentary reviews, announcements, ads, letters, news and informationl Elizabeth Duarte Maureen Lynch Nancy Burnham Lu-Ann Viera Lisa Coburn Barbara Jacobskind Marcelle Mavidis PHYSICS CLUB Dr. Robert Bento Faculty Advisor The purpose of the Physics Club is to supply information to the academic community about a wide variety of topics relating to physics. The club invites guest speakers to the campus, shows films, sponsors equipment demonstrations, conducts field trips to research facilities, and schedules visits to the campus for area high school students and faculty to inspect the facilities of the Physics Department. MASS SENATE UF STUDENT NURSES Judith Keefe, PfeSidehf MSSN-SMU is the university chapter of the Massachusetts Senate of Student Nurses. It is a professional organization for students which enables them to keep in touch with the ever-changing role of nursing. This chapter has been in existence for six years and has been to play a large role in the College of Nursing. It is also a service organization with functions serving students of the college and all of the SMU community. Under the guidance of the advisor, Elaine Hatch, this year's club has accomplished many projects. The health fair this spring, which was held outside of the auditorium, was well received by both students and faculty alike. The second annual job fair that was held in January, was the most successful of the projects sponsored by the organization this year. The club has also played an active role in setting up and running elections that established student participation on various committees of the College of Nursing. unc 41:- X T i 1 lx- 'xl And The TORCH Is Passed From One Generation To The Next Time and space . . . for the spiritual growth and welfare of the SMU Community. A - - A Y !1'L',.' , '-NAAX ,N-Q '. CA THOLIC CHA PLAINS 2 I W lull' Sr. Madeleine Tacy 0.P Fr. John Perry Over in group VI is an exciting and , stimulating area known as the SMU Gallery. It is an everchanging exhibition area where works of students, faculty, area artists and special guest artists are shown to the SMU Community and the area public. Since its opening last year, the Gallery has grown in popularity and is certain to grow in the future. One of the closing exhibits of the past academic year was the Senior Exhibit. ln this show, some of the best works done by Art Students were shared with the community. A deep thanks goes to all who worked so hard in establishing the Gallery as it is today, those artists who share their talents with all on campus and those in the background who put hours into the success of each show through setting up exhibits, designing posters and making sure that all runs smoothly. lfram GALLERY COMMITTEE HAPPENINGS , V .54 I I 1l -un--,M J il 1: 'B .V ,-- ,Ast -,Q W 5? 'V . 3 x :LPI ii' nh - 1- -G 4, , ' uf' f P. A. fix A , xx x 3'-. , jg 'I gl x I 'L f Y . I in 4 s ,- I 1 4 '. a 3.-u4....x 'L 'I fu J 'P Little PeopIe's Weekend Krigman EQ Sept. 28, 29, 30, Oct. 1 f 1 CAST Mark Abelson William Cain Nina Catelli Victor Duphily Sally Jones Manny Martines Joanna McQuiIian Ralph Moniz David Perry Michael Powers Barry Smith Peter Vannacche Kathy Whalley Fi. , PHILADELPHIA STORY Nov. 3, 4, 5. P: Q 9 CAST Mark Abelson John Brennan Peter Carlin Mike Lamane Denny Malone Elise Mariea Ralph Moniz Elizabeth O'Gara Bob Pedder Kathi Saxe Barry Smith Mellanie Snipes VERY GOOD XF , Y' f ' nf ' -in f, 4 .,, S xx . .- ..-1...- - f AS EDDIE 5'-s 6 Mark Abelson Gail Anderson Chuck Barboza John Brennan Norm Byron Peter Carlin Jay DeMeIlo Patrick Demers Kathy Fanning 'i.4v'f ' . f qw gf g I 7s . V M ' - . 4 J,-f s X 'Sf' Shella Furtado Denny Maloney Joe Ordog Lynn Pacelt Bob Pedder Candy Scarfo Leslie Spring Gail Talbot A CRY UF PLAYERS .Feb.16,17 18 Mark Abelson Dan Brule . Peter Carlin Brian Casey Kerry Cook Patrick Demers Victor Duphily Ben Emery Chris Gaucher David Gustafson Donna Harrelson Julie Hoddsdon Jill Holiday Paul Kuliga Tim McCarthy Ralph Moniz Ed Nichols Bob Pedder David Perry Richard Rogers David Rouland Jane Sanborn Barry Smith Mellanie Snipes Len Travers Liz Wilkin v 62 NO PLACE TO BE SOME BODY Jose Andrews Melvin Arnum Manny DaSilva Joanne Depina Victor Duphilly Elrick Kelly Gerry McCarthy Ralph Moniz SOUTH PACIFIC March 9, 10, 11 CAST Liz O'Gara Donald Reid Carol Robinson Richard Rogers Sue Sessler Barry Smith Randy Waters Jeanne White April 26, 27, 28, 29 Gail Anderson Naomi Andrews William Begley Lauri Boosahda John Brennan Brooks Burgess Norman Byron David Caron Brian Casey Glenn Casten Kerry Cook Joanne Depina Manny DaSiIva Vistor Duphilly Sheila Furtado Chris Gaucher Kevin Gil Donna Harrelson Patty Hodson Wendy Koertje CAST Anita Koss Denny Malone Gerry McCarthy Ralph Moniz Kevin Murray Ed Nichols Liz O'Gara Robert Pedder David Perry Doris Pina Donald Reid Robert Robinson Richard Rogers Chusk Ruegg Kathi Saxe Barry Smith Leslie Spring Gail Talbot Chris Van Dusen 1, Y x XY K , ' --.., x '-Sf A Q photos by Bryon Kass Kass Kass X I. .1 , f n I ll f DIRECTOR jd! Angus Bailey f' ASSISTANT DIRECTORS Mark Abelson K Norman Bygon H f, -' . SE1'TING DESIGNER f 'V R '1 V5 M ' I' ' if ary, :jan ey Al ' jx? P' LIGHTI DESIGNE Mic el Fastasior I I 'f ,. 94. . v? ' ST E MANAGER 'S I ff, ark Abels S, E I orman,Byr' U, n r 1, . X Patrick Y ', ff :,j2 ! J PRODUCTMNSTAFF fage Houbre aster Larry Piano lWard robe X ! z f' ' I 1 I EISTEDDFOD1978 'I D V Glasser X t X1 r N l i S Krigman 'X L1 ' 1 . , ' . ,, -1...-..- ' V TMTIL5 sl Ll .53 41- f 5 '7t'.f . Q, ... .. 65 - ,1.-vs. if a'. .J 'wqhfu M 3-Q srf 14. Krigman 69 F 1 P 4 , rg Q Q Qld-X i Krigman , ,ig-5,341 2'..-.. r 1 A x At i. A, - -K K i ns gl- Nr - wr , bi V, W - ., x..x if ,L ' . . ' ' r G W. V, .- ,1 x Pls E, 4.4 I N , ,159 'Y 'L I Nr Krigman Artwork courtesy of Howard Glasser 70 Glasser as L, vb .f' SKQY -W 1 Rlv, xi . Q Q A iwizw fgxs-I Wu, F6 I . 1 x 4 ' 4:4,'X 'rr' K I .1 rag'-+21 M af -sq' Ll. .,,-fs, . vt he A ? X . , 7 :lin tx ' 13 gl 7 I, if' t 0' .A I5 . JI- !94 F. , sr , , I ' pf ' 'X fp V f,- Q' Q ' - . by-gl. ' f -, F-rm :gs kll.-af 135 3 fl -5' GUEST SPEAKERS JULIAN BOND 4 YITZHAK RABIN 0 1 y' Q n , f A '63 ,P if u 1 7 4 ' , N -.9 v. g - 'S-4? 'E 6: Yay. A I 1. ff l+ -Au ..: E 1' ug Kngman SENIOR CLASS MIXER Kass 1: if ,gtk Efs ,,. 1 M W NM- ' 7.44 K v W ff , .,S. f A133 A, W , . ' X , 1 - 1 ,, M 77' ,ifffi , ' f f K.. ' , ff - ,f T W ,f 'ff , - L ' if f Q- 1, A J! T Q, . V 1 A ,,f X WJ ,, 1 - v 41' ' 2 ' x S X WE WERE WOOED WE WA TCHED , Kass 9 Republican Gubinatorial U.S. Representative Gerry Studds hopeful, Frank Hatch In the Fall of 1978, our campus was touched by those from the world of politics. Candidates came to address the voting populous. Hands were shaken, and smiles were seen on the faces of Sen. Ed Brooke, Lt. Gov. Tom O'NeiI, Congressman Gerry Studds, Sen. Paul Tsongas, and gubinatorial hopeful Frank Hatch The elections are over. Some of those who came to us lost. Others went on to victory. We have waited to see if promises made in the fall will be kept in the spring. We were wooed. We watched. We waited. We did nothing, and in some cases we were burned. WE WAITED Lt. Gov. Thomas O'Neil Gov. Michael Dukakis 7 Krigma U.S. Senator Ed Brooke Perhaps this year's campaign has taught us all a good lesson. Apathy may not be harmful initially, but in the long run, it may be hazardous to the health, welfare and fiscal well-being of our various worlds. AN END TO APA THY? 1, 2, 3, 4 We Won't Pay 3 fyij A Penny More. . 80 Krigman This was the one of many different chants heard on the SMU campus during the April 1979 Board of Trustees meeting. The chorus was composed of SMU students protesting the proposed tuition increase for the academic year 1979-80. Sentiments were high. Our rights Cas well as our pocketbooksy were being threatened, and we didn't like it. K9 Student leaders Joe McKeown, Kevin O'Neil Jayne Brady and Ed Haskill effectively headed the protest with chants aimed at raising the adrenaline level. They certainly worked. A multitude of concerned students flowed to the Trustees Board Fioom, to stand vigil while the voting took place. One by one, the trustees voted in our favor: no increases. Although this victory was only the first round it has shown us that there is truth to the saying, A people united will never be defeated. DRINK! . . . To drink or not to drink was the dilemma facing all those between the age of 18 and 20 this past spring. There was legislation in the Massachusetts Legislature that would push the drinking age to 20, and possibly 21. This change caused an uproar on campus. A concerned group traveled to Beacon Hill to plead their cause during an open hearing. Bradford Cheney and Dean Donald Howard spoke on behalf of those whose right to drink was being threatened. The Governor claimed that it would prove to be a deterent to the rapid rise in highway fatalities. Perhaps this will prove to be so, but this is yet to be seen. Right now, the effects that can be seen on campus are: the Fiat is much quieter, the Sunset Room is divided into the haves and the have hots, and the dorms have gone dry. Perhaps the legislation was called for, perhaps not. It is difficult to say. Perhaps the change will be in the attitudes of those who quietly sat back until their little world was Kngman Gov. King during the hearings in Boston on the drinking age. 82 DRINK I . . . DRINK? invaded, and regulation was introduced that they didn't like. V f 'T' Hx, -x': .. ' 'tif-...'w -A ,- ,V ' ' 'fs 'A i Heben .pl 1. - zns:wariu a.u mamma.- It was the life to choose We thought we 'd never lose For we were young and sure to have our way. Those were the days, my friend We thought they'd never end . . .f, . 5 ,ff ' A 'B ji J' ff DiCe C 'Q . -f Q- - 1, . .. . 0- any- T, - -.0 , 0. Q.. sq o,'a f '- , 0, ,..Q,1,0 QQ '- p s.:hrs5 N . 4 5 va- ' .5 ' , ' Q ff P, ' 'P' ' I . 'Q . b' H ,Q N ul.-4 Q , ,gf , r , -f ,9-V qggv A U P Q 'J rf' A J Q' ig 1'2- A4, ,Lf g g,x'fA Q.. 4 L. Krugman Kflgman Mock New Year's Eve Party Krugman James Mapes Hypnotist Y W ,f m ' . 1 lt 4 M -Q-.-. A . ,za xxx ' XR: v. uf. 41 of 5 51 5 x 217 -4- -f Ahw- 44 ORZGBERTESZ Krigman .- I 1 .1 fm p V A . .Q may X x . X qv-TK Q X 3 HRV W.. Q Q' M X ,f I x Af PM ,, ,. M4,,,,g L ,,. gin! 5-X nf T A K L S A. X S ' 1 1 ,f e Q Y sv if fl' vs r- 1 g I- T? QV jf, , M. ,Y ,fe Nw' -'wp , -,ig n , 4 412,51 -J ,Q I v C X C I wfiYg'f.8' ff! Kass Kass CHAMPAGNE BALL 89 THE Rl TZ Comedian Sean Morey G' XX ff! 1 ':5l5'7??f!f?'?3 S' 3 X l-4 ' 3 V?- 1 f x I I : QQ-a 'E 'T V pw J 2, if X '-.- . -ix .. ..- 46 41 4 s ,r N -ts aku.. 'X '-my , 4 . X Q iiglin fc 5 L , fi .'.-5 1'-xii! 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N ' f 'N , ' VOLLEYBALL V , ii wx 1 , W, ' ,..... in 1117- 'M' M mf ' H 1 W y ----1-Ma:-q-.11-M---1.1 --M -A. .---Q - - Pie 1 Front Row LeftlTo Flight: Kerry Cook, Judy Boyce, Kathy Dooley, Paulette Irving, Liz Wilkens. Back: Rose Marie Nappa, Julie Hodsdon, Joanne Moriarty, Alison Murray, Kim Bearse, Susan Godin, Marie Cimino, Janet Simon fCoachJ. 106 Ol SMU 3 1 3 3 3 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 3 0 2 C, SCORE COLLEGE Brown B.U. Boston State E.N.C. Fl.I.C. Boston College Bryant Wheaton Salem Barrington M.l.T. Keene Holy Cross Bridgewater Providence Fitchburg 6 WINS 10 LOSSES OPP 1 3 2 0 2 3 2 2 3 3 2 3 0 0 3 3 N. -Q f s . ' 11 k-i1.....f' Gathright f' ' X I :J I T VCR 6 . Q Ghgh if ,af- I SWIMMING CGLLEGE Brandeis Bridgewater Clark U. Bryant W.P.l. Boston College Bryant Holy Cross Boston U. Lowell U. v...,..m..,,m.. MEN'S SWIMMING SMU 66 73 67 44 35 50 60 39 33 5 WINS 4 LGSSES G th ght OPP 47 37 35 14 60 63 35 64 79 Chris Hebert READY WHEN YOU AFIE I X 5 5 fy? Gathright WOMEN'S SWIMMING COLLEGE SMU OPP Wellesley 49 81 Wellesley lnvit. - - U.Fi.I. 42 88 Mt. Holyoke 62 70 Brandeis 83 47 Bridgewater 58 73 M.l.T. 46 83 Smith fBrownj 34 96 Smith CBrownJ 27 103 Holy Cross 72 51 2 WINS 7 LOSSES I BASEBALL 'Q Y 0 ,W 'Q A.. xr -1 '-x Y-ws. .'L'mfF 3' 'J7rA-f..' u n Q 1 I V. Nl 1, 1 5 -. V. X NS 'ts' N w-54 F-.19 ' -- -fu ::, 'A,v,'A'2'HN'Q':Qa61?L'!Z 7 'x'f '-7 . Tx.:-. -Y,'51,-LM,-L,,.4:4! yo ij! ,- q 1' ' Alf.. 1.50. ,x.G1-- - Gafnrigm H0 Chris DiCecca J: 1 , Gathright 19 WINS 19 LOSSES Q 'W Y S Beth Cottle RECORD COLLEGE SMU OPP Virginia Commonwealth 0 3 North Carolina Wesleyan 5 6 North Carolina Wesleyan 3 7 North Carolina Wesleyan 7 6 Atlantic Christian 5 6 Virginia Wesleyan 3 5 Lynchburg 4 6 SMU Invitational 4 3 SMU Invitational 6 8 SMU Invitational 5 2 SMU Invitational 3 5 Assumption 1 4 Assumption 8 4 Bridgewater State 7 2 Bridgewater State 2 1 Castleton State 4 2 Castleton State 13 3 Salem State 3 1 Plymouth State 3 0 Plymouth State 6 7 U. Mass 1 6 Mass Maritime 9 8 R.I.C. O 8 R.l.C. 2 4 Lowell 6 9 Babson 4 3 E.N.C. 6 2 Bentley 2 6 Bentley 2 3 E. Conn. 3 10 New Haven 2 11 W.N.E.C. 6 1 Bryant 4 2 Nichols 15 5 Stonehill 6 5 Stonehill 5 12 E. Conn. 3 4 E. Conn. 8 4 WOMEN 'S CROSS COUNTRY N I RECORD COLLEGE SMU OPP Fitchburg 24 33 Brandeis Invit. 123 - 4th PI. Holy Cross 32 25 New England Championships 615 - 23rd PI. II2 1 F :gi if gill f MEN 'S CROSS COUNTRY Chris Hebert With all seven of the runners that have travelled to the Division Three Nationals this past year returning, things couldn't be looking any better for the future ofthe Men's Cross Country team. Unless you consider the fact that four of those seven harriers were freshmen. Brian Lockard from Salem High School, Keith Coughlin from Concord Carlisle, Ken Merrill from Dennis-Yarmouth and Jim Kent from Oliver Ames were the four that made such a big splash in Corsair Cross Country. All four under the twenty-five minutes on the SMU 5 mile course. Merrill and Lockard both went under 24:30 to destroy the old freshman standard. ln the Nationals, Lockard was the fifth freshman to cross the line and Coughlin the ninth. Need we say more? Left to Right: Brian Lockard, Kevin Childs, Kevin Merrill, Jim Kent, Dan MacAlpine, Matt Sukeforth. ri- , '. B .ff ' 1 f Y . t E' ,, M Mig J . wi' l , x ' - ,Agni .J Chris Hebert CROSS COUNTRY RECORD COLLEGE SMU OPP Springfield 36 22 Bridgewater 16 47 U. of New Haven 24 36 R.I.C. 78 Clark U. 17 44 Gordon 18 42 Keene 37 18 E. Conn. St. 80 U.Fl.l. 27 30 Stonehill 15 49 2 WINS 8 LOSSES -'NA x 114 A wr Ulf Yes! How about Dan MacAlpine, Kevin Childe and Matt Sukerforthg the three upperclassmen that helped their group turn into a strong and balanced enough squad to place second in the Eastern Championship. MacAlpine was an iron man all season, winning two dual meets and the SMU Invitational, and running the second fast- est time ever run by a Corsair on the home course. INVITA TIUNAL CROSS COUNTRY 2nd Place SMU Invitational 42 pts 5th Place Cod Fish Bowl Invitational 118 2nd Place Eastern Championship 28th Place New England Championships 875 5th Place NCAA Div. 3 Northeastern Meet 160 19th Place NCAA Div. 3 National Championships 451 The Corsair Final record was 8-2, a fine mark indeed, but it doesn't tell nearly the whole story. The 19th place finish in the Nationals, the stun- ning second place finish in the Easterns, and the surprising win over a favored U.R.l. squad come closer to telling the whole story. Bill Trippe FIELD HOCKEY The women's Field Hockey team had a season that was a curious mixture of victory and defeat. The Corsairs finished the season with an overall record of 9-2-2. Yet the end of the season saw the women Corsairs passed up for a bid in the AIAW playoffs. The season was highlighted by a strong finish Cundefeated over the final five gamesl and strong play overall, all through the season. The Corsair's Mary McCarthy capped off an excellent four year career in SMU Field Hockey by scoring her 50th career goal- and then some. In one two game stretch, the senior sticker scored all five of the Corsairs' goals as they defeated Providence and Salem State by the scores of 3-0 and 2-1. Bill Trippe H6 be COLLEGE Worcester Assumption Bentley Boston College Gordon Wheaton Bridgewater U.Ft.I. Holy Cross B.U. Providence Salem State Barrignton RECORD SMU 1 1 1 0 5 1 0 2 2 0 3 2 4 9 WINS 2 LOSSES OPP 0 0 2 0 0 O 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 9018- Z S532 QM, 05044 MEN 'S BASKETBALL The men's basketball team finished this season with a fine 14-9 record that earned them a spot in the ECAC playoffs. The Corsairs lost their opening round game to rival Bryant on a last minute basket. It was the second time in the season that Coach Bruce Wheeler's hoopsters lost to the Division ll powerhouse by two points. The season also featured a great second half comeback that saw the Corsairs win eight of their last ten games. After evening their record at 7-7 early in February, the Corsairs began their road to a winning season with a gutsy victory at home versus Bridgewater State. In that game the five starters fJohn Johannessen, Chris Huntley, Deene Jordan, Mike Robinson, and Mike Bobrowieckiy continued a balanced scoring attack with tenacious defense to give the Coraairs an 86-83 win. Later in the season, the hoopsters defeated Framingham State, a supposedly superior team that went on to edge out the Corsairs for selection in the NCAA Division Three Playoffs. In post-season rankings, Framingham was ranked fourth and the Corsairs, fifth. Overall, the Corsairs had a successful season and four of their five starters, including leading scorer Chris Huntley, will be returning. Co- Captain Mike Boborowiecki is the lone graduating senior. Bali Trippe fits-iff? A ,W - 4Uf'1 at -:M tt- A m,3Q..,g . 1 ,wx fx el H Q . Q, . X ' vm .RW L as-.' 5- . S an . ,ga P' ' fl ak - . 1 Y, K., ' C1 it 'Fc ' , ... .lfifgpgkfgf-.:i'? n V . II8 G ri gm 9' QW 7 1 ' -5. ,JQHEW . ' Q xl. . ,,g.f ' V if . ?5Af 4x 'pY.qWL . , .Higgs xg if hlillh 'JG I 'SEM' af' T , f 3 A f wr 1 Q 5.5, ' V a I A M , in V' 4 A ty , M . -: e-3 ', , A, T ,. r 4 ,K 'I'- A -2- ,Q 1 J ' ' EWQ 225 .- x ' -.. , , C.:.' V'-Q 1. ., 4 Mk C ' VJ 1 . ' - y , .rff.w- S, . : if - - ' ' .- lr , g a h wg Y ,-..-sUf ? lf' -Apwfijf IMX V,-p-if .pul Krigman Krugman 61. N. 'W , gmc ' . - V. , , N, ,,.,,. .. ,S 49 ,:, 1 m i. af- 'iw A r Inf 5 'V ' f 'Y 5' . fig-avian-.42ivPsi'M,w:vfi2?: . BASKETBALL vim 'f il xf, 'til 'yr f ' Q' c.-9' 2 fi ' U C' S wily 9 1 V 1 E i 4 i 1 6 Left To Right: Phil Graves, Doug Hayden, Deene Jordan, John Johannessen, Dave Daniels, Paul Bettie, Terry McCoy, John Allegrezza, Keith Simmons, Mike Bobrowiechi, Dave Sweat, Chris Hunt- Iey, Steve Healy, Mike Robinson, Dan Emma. Front: Coach Bruce Wheeler, Asst. Coach Mark X Cham a , p gne. ...Z --.--null? I I J .,,'r- , L . -rx'-A ., , - 'HWS 1,5 6- Krigman Left To Right: Lorilee Scionti, Charlene Santaga, Pam Sullivan, Joanne Costa, Lynne Clougherty, Gwen Cross, Ellen Meagher, LouAnn Neri, Debbie Scibibia. COLLEGE Barrington Curry Lowell E. Conn. Mass. Maritime E.N.C. Bryant Boston State St. Thomas Stonehill Nichols Fitchburg Salem State Bridgewater E. Conn. R.I.C. Plymouth Framingham St. E.N.C. Colby Worcester St. Curry Bryant RECORD SMU 67 65 78 89 75 68 66 86 1 03 70 72 82 74 86 70 72 72 95 61 104 1 13 99 93 14 WINS 10 LOSSES Krigman OPP 65 58 81 72 63 78 81 73 76 96 80 84 64 83 59 76 69 87 69 92 82 80 95 WOMEN 'S BASKETBALL Front Flow fLeft To Rightj: Joyce Locklin, Sharon Givnta, Pat Treckman, Kathy Dooley, Danette Jordan, Janice Kasinski, Linda Wessling, Alison Nar- done. Back: Mary McCarthy, Melony Martin, Barbara Brush, Lynne Harpin CManagerJ, Coach Judy Sullivan, Michelle Hall fManagerJ, Mary Beth Hill, Glenda Stroud, Carol Maloney, Sally Darlington. I don't like to individualize. All of my players are important. Everyone has done a super job this season. Great defense may not show up in the stats, but it is what wins our games. Judy Sullivan, Coach of Women's Basketball So went the theme of this year's women's basketball squad. Teamwork, defense and some more teamwork. Sounds almost corny in this day of million dollar atheletes, but for this squad it was the truth. A combination of fresh- men and upperclassmen, this well balanced team finished the regular season with a 14-6 record - good enough to qualify them for the State Tournament, and then, despite a loss in l22 the States, for the Regional Tournament as well. After a first round loss to eventual Regional champ Sacred Heart, the Coraairs came back to defeat the number one seed, Worcester State in a consolation game. Three seniors, Barbara Brush, leading scorer Mary Beth Hill, and assists leader Mary McCarthy will be graduating, but there is much talent to pick up where they left off. Sally Dar- lington will return with the team high of 39? from the floor average and leading rebounder Danette Jordan will be just a sophomore next year. Bill Trippe COLLEGE Clark University Merrimack Lowell U. E. Conn. Brown Barrington Boston State Fitchburg M.l.T. Bentley Worcester Ft.l.C. Assumption Holy Cross Salem State E.N.C. Tufts Harvard Boston College ,XX QS E l SOCCER 't M vt' gs mf' vw' 5 716m COLLEGE Brandeis Bryant N.E.C. Holy Cross Gordon Salem Westfield E.N.C. Boston St. Framingham E. Conn. Barrington Keene Stonehill Lowell Boston Col. RECORD SMU OPP 0 6 1 3 9 2 4 3 O O O 3 1 4 3 2 5 1 3 2 O 3 1 3 1 3 2 3 1 0 0 1 5 WINS 10 LOSSES 1 TIE 124 'ug Wil wi Garhrigm Krig With just three seniors graduating from this year's 5-10-1 squad, the future of SMU soccer looks very good. After a some- what shakey start the booters came back in a big way at the end of the season, topping Lowell, 1-O and narrowly losing to a pow- erful Boston College by the same score. Their excellent play against BC, a game which they consistently beat the Eagles to the play, showed the class and determination the players of the squad always had. Gone from this past year's squad are goalie Randy Sharrow, forward Chris DiCecca, and leading scorer Dale Peterson. Sharrow was a standout in the nets all season, consistantly coming through with fine performances to anchor the booters' effort. Chris DiCecca, whose absence for a number of games hurt the Corsairs' offense, had, according to Coach Phil Fortin, the strongest foot on the team. Peterson, the offensive dynamo who figured in 9096 of the Corsairs' goals, will probably be X 1 ' ,ff rf ' 1 ' . f 1 - ' , ,' ' .. , I t. if 1 A . 1 hr- -'-5, ' 'M - S .wtY ...L ' ' - pt f.....r ,sf A gf. .r 'r 'rv '-gfffw ' . .-'I 1 ' -' ..-' n P W '- . . , N Q :E the one who will be the most sorely missed. An All American selection while at Massasoit Community College and an All New England player at SMU, Peterson ranks fourth on the all time scoring list for the Corsairs despite the fact that he only played two of his seasons in a Corsair uniform. Peterson is currently a member of the New England Tea Men soccer team. Bin Trippe- COLLEGE W.P.I. Harvard Holy Cross M.I.T. Baruch Maine Trinity Brown U. Conn. Brandeis Brown New England Championships 4th Place 126 fi aw ..--5.-s---DOH W-.tm e W: 'ie' 21 ., Qt'- K, . -- . M? - , Y-5 , X 'P - ': rf, . gt ' . R. f .fii-1.- ,f.'3 ' ,V . i , Ef+if.TgfS- 1 2 5 ' ' ' rw f . ' ff? I ' f' if H52 ' 5 p,1g ,' 1 aff:-, . sql 1 A 1- 4 ' K' 5-1. fr. 'H-.,,, O 'A ' ,.',, . V ...L .x , M ff 'fi wh S J T Qi V W S. J V. Chiu .1 ,-1 WOMEN 'S FENCING COLLEGE Harvard Holy Cross U. Maine Barugh M.l.T. Trinity Trinity Brown U. Conn. Brandeis Brown 2. S 3 K. 'L RECORD SMU 5 12 3 9 4 59 8 10 10 9 9 7 WINS 3 LOSSES NA, . Y 2 1-. mf ily- .. V. Chiu OPP 11 4 13 7 12 58 8 6 6 7 7 ICE HOCKEY The men's hockey team had one of their most successful seasons ever this past year, finishing the regular season with a 13-6 record and narrowly missing a berth in the ECAC Division Ill playoffs. After a fine start, the Corsair icemen built their record to a respectable 9-4 record. But the Corsairs still needed to win their final six games to earn a playoff bid. The icemen were well on their way after defeating Clark, Curry, Nichols, and Fairfield. But two overtime losses on the final weekend of the season to powerful Assumption and New England's top Division lll school, Westfield State, killed any chances that this young squad may have had for playoff selection. Dan MacAlpine, a Torch reporter summed up the season this way, But the team was more than goals, crunch and flash. It was hard work, hard work as in Bill McCarthy hustling, all 200 some odd pounds of him, back into the play to break up a pass with some nifty backchecking. It was Rich Silva shoving in the corners to dig the puck out. Yet the team was more than that. lt was put together with intangibles like courage, desire, and a curious inability to give up. Guys it was a great season. Thanks. iv! Bnifrippe CM RECORD COLLEGE SMU OPP Bridgewater State 6 5 Fairfield Univ. 5 4 Babson 0 3 Boger Williams 6 1 Stonehill 9 6 Curry 12 2 N.H.C. 4 5 Roger Williams 14 5 N.H.C. 9 2 Fitchburg State 5 6 Assumption 7 2 Worcester State 6 5 Stonehill 5 4 Framingham State 3 10 Nw Clark 10 4 'T' Curry 5 4 Nichols 4 2 N' Fairfield Univ. 8 3 Assumption 4 5 If Westfield State 5 6 c H D 14 WINS 6 LOSSES 128 X321 SOFTBALL a .l I Q - A 4 . '. I . .1 .xv . - '. 'X If . qv A, A ' ' ll 7, 'J if 1 1 I Qf '7-'-L .A I . . ,. , ' A P5 COLLEGE P.C. A.l.C. Bentley Worcester Boston Univ. F1.l.C. Wheaton Barrington Stonehill U.R.I. M.I.T. Brown 5, RECORD SMU 3 8 4 2 4 7 2 12 1 0 7 2 2 WINS 9 LOSSES GCancelled due to rainy 1 2:9255 4' . 5- rw'Qf-' 4, A 'Sffzci . y 'nf 'V -1--Qu - G th agm OPP 25 13 9 24 3 8 3 121 12 6 4 9 129 MEN 'S TRACK 11 I I I I RECORD COLLEGE Stonehill E. Conn. Fitchburg Inv. Salem St. Keene St. Bryant College Lowell U. Plymouth St. Eastern Championships 7 WINS 0 LOSSES SMU 148 First Place 125 115 115 115W 92 7th Place I 1 I I I I I I I l, I I I I Krigman oPP 3 I I 41 I 20 38 32 ' I 33V2 I 57 I I I I I ,fs- ' - lk. 'ffuyi n - . TG'f'fe 'ih- iT5g:.iq'4Q4b. T57 if fi3.Qzf4E' IR, - -'QTWBV-Qiw , . -Qglciffvexw ..: R PH 24 552 1 N Q 'S Qc: lx.: 1413 uk! rss. Q 4. X x,.y,- .-K. 4 ww QC WOMEN 'S TENNIS RECORD COLLEGE SMU OPP Stonehill 3 4 Holy Cross 4 3 Bryant 4 3 Wheaton 2 5 B.U. CANCELLED R.I.C. 4 3 Bridgewater 1 6 Providence 2 5 Salem 2 5 E.N.C. FORFEIT Bentley 7 0 Northeastern 2 5 5 WINS 6 LOSSES 132 Front Row fLeft To Righty Judy Houghton, Beth Bonnette, Sue Power, Amy Trafton, Patri- cia Perna, Patricia Piotrowicz. Back: Kathy Sullivan, Mary Beth Hill, Kelly Wilson, Carol Whitney, Debra Rutherford, Mona Bisson, Sue Dichira fCoachJ. GOLF OPPONENT SMU OPP Lowell 4 3 Bentley 5 2 BryantfW. Conn. 368 369 Stonehill 434 474 Nichols 434 434 Salem State 434 411 E. Conn. 403 441 New Haven 403 U.R.l. 403 385 Mass. Open 3rd Place N.E.l.G.A. Tournament 13th Place Salem Mass. Open 8th Place COLLEGE Lowell Stonehill Assumption R.l.C. Salem St. Bentley U.R.l. Bryant E.N.C. Nichols MEN 'S TENNIS SMU OPP 3 6 8 1 7 2 3 6 4 5 5 4 2 7 8 1 9 O 7 2 6 WINS 4 LOSSES OPP 447 - f fa 'L ' 9 S A THE FACES OF '79 R , P59 ! COLLEGE OF ARTS BIOLOGY is '-'Qi QR Robert K. Adams: Susan L. Boehler Gilbert M. Buthlayi AH 2 J John L. Ciccotelli Steven J. Correiai Jeffrey Fi. Danneri' Janice G. Dyke var. ff -unmnfx:snswn1zn 7.4.4 :- Lawrence E. Furrerii Michael S. Goulart Mar B lgy AND SCIENCES Karin L. Gustafson? Christopher Hebert? Mark J. Helgerson Diane C. Hitchings I 13- 191 I-T45 flea-N I 1 'J L A 4 'i Al Gregory P. Jarosik Bryon L. Kass: Carol Kiely Jeanne M. Maynard ' . 'i ' fi I Karen E. Moriarty Anne E. O'Harai ...J John J. Ohrenbergerii Elaine C. Fiezendes 3 , 76.9 f I y. .5 i 3 Alexander Oyemuga Catherine A. Partridge James J. Prunierf .fr '11 Michael J. Stringer ,J- ' Deborah L. Udalli' Susan B. Wolff i n f i f 42 V41 R.. Y A .I Q A A 45 -J, . - JEL., , gf ' ' '11 ,yor ' A ' 1' at M E Miva Q X . ' ' it R , ' :Yu ' ' n . Eff! 1 Hg ef. if X , V 1 . is X' ' ' A 'f' a' , 1 J f '- 1 ' ' . .f fir ff Nix A ' 7 ,, 3 ' X .fx w-3 ' - Xl..- if 'NJ 15 CHEMISTRY Richard O. Angus Jr A LT, I, I gee, 33 .I 1 4 . Q. ,L I V 1 ,' Q 2 ff! V rt YZ 1 Lisa F. Antonelli Susan Ferreira Michael J. Lane Charles Mickle ENGLISH .V l .X .M s .. .a Fredric T. Walder Mary N. Almeida Gail L. Anderson 'lb ww' ,xi . X Katheryn Cabral Christine David 1: X f rt F5111 Janice A. Davidian Martha M. Davis Jeanne M. Fabian Francis Faulkner .Q XL N if- as , U XX Xi' Q, fag ' Bernadette R. Ferreira Sheila A. Furtado Angus G. Garber III Leslie A. Guia 140 .Al Janice P. Harris Eleanor G. Lessard Judy Ann Noyer Gregory J. Pietrzyk I -I!-.L+ Katherine C. Manning Jerome L. Seney Janet M. West A3 Joanna E. McQuiIlan Lu-Ann Viera Shirley wmiams FRENCH Mary E. Colgan GERMAN Lorraine L. Jacobs 2 i i i i 1 ii i X 5 f.fM14.a Martine B. Cotton Joseph DaSilva Donna J. Amaral David Arnold Dianne M. Klim Steven J. LeBlanc f' -, 3450? tlsfeifffv Q Q1 5211: EH i . x i 5 i i 1 1 Sr. Jane T. Kirby O.P. Dina Lindquist Francis Miller 4 Ki Robin M. Oliver Marc J. Santos Kim M. Shaughnessy Katherine Silva ' if Peter E. Skarstein Ra HISTORY i 2 I, iff: f HUIVIANITIESXSOCIAL SCIENCES D L. Comella Jeanne M. Fa LATIN Mary Schwartz David Sullivan Flora C S MATHEMATICS Pauline N. Audette . enna i 1 ,livug-ynzLa1 1 - X 1 vi , . Janice M. Bishop Cheryl A. Emond 'vi nn' A .. ,..., James J. Halpin Caren A. Lamkin Mary Martins Brenda J. O'Brien Nancy E. Webber Norma J. Bland Carol M. Flaherty MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDIES 'Wham- XYUK a'7'34Q1fX Cynthia Jamgochian Gerard V. McCarthy Kevin H. O'NeiIl Michael Parisi Gerard W. Reczek Jed P. Sederholm ef of f A i David Silvia Susan Tansey Constance Tobia 146 Rx: Us MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY 3 E . I y 1 Wayne A. Aguiar Larry N. Bywell Marian T. Foley Paulette J. Fontaine Catherine M. Hadala Karen A. Maneikis Suzanne G. Noiseux s.-S x 5 xxx 1 Jacquelyn R. Pelkey Cheryl A. Perry Y 'L ,. . .fr , . A. 4 ,, q 'fr A' Y, I ,l fw:n .vt I .JJ 1 ? 52 M 3 is ,lf 147 .f'- t . 'LAWS' fn.-1' ' 7 df. C 148 X, eps Q? W 5 fs Mis. Deborah A. Pitts Cinde Richardson Cheryl A. Souza Kathryn A. Souza PHYSICS i Debra I. Tavares Marilyn E. Zaborski David C. Greim Steven E. Gushue Marianne McCaffrey I sm PORTUGUESE A o Q ..i.aW..a Ligia M. Ferreira 'll' ,ss Belmira L. Azinheira Dulce M. Correia 1, 3. L Maria J. Ferreira Maria Gomes Joseph Toomey Jr. Carol-Ann DeLisIe A-'T 6, Beverly P. Martin 'Q-f it I .QSM 4, gf ,. Q .132 1 :egg K. , Q .. iffy 1, I sr 'I' on 'K . f 'S' , ' Eg H. I ef fi if Q 'if e MD Donna M. O'ConneIl ,, rw YQ 2. , I Manuel A. Paulo Fran Viveiros I50 Mary E. Oliveira Mercedes C. Perry POLITICAL SCIENCE I Noelia D. Pinheiro Albertina P. Soares I. X. v Jill E. Britcliff Victor L. C. Chiu P 1 - ,- -.. iq' . I , im ,V . fix ra: ff! If f .. ' l 1 . li J J 1 - .1 Kevin M. Considine William H. Covell Diane Forand Michael A. Gallo vQ 'ff -. I ' 'v Kenneth S. Mello Elizabeth M. Methe Gary A. Michael George M. Pimentel Michael H. Plasski Robert J. Reddy PSYCHOLOGY Glenn M. Viens Jileen Araujo Ann E. Barker f icy . ., Delia Aguiar Robin Albert Mary C. Branco Teresa A. Bryan fx-.,'.' X cw - I Nora N. Cabeceiras Susan L. Casuscelli Paula J. Chandinha Annette M. Coderre Jane E. Dinnie 705 i t 'Q A K W X55 fy XXX f M fxx M I i Andrea L. Coderre m , 'if' m Susan Costa Diane F. DeLuca Bruce E. DeMoranvilIe f Lynn M. Donlan Evelyn A. Flaherty Debra Fontier ab a 4 Runlgf'i..i25.5Q... Wk Wim 5255 05,6 Donald W. France Robert A. Frates i N 4 I -J- ,. .- Bruce P. Frazer Judith Freitas Catherine E. Gronbeck Barbara L. Grota i Anne M. Guillemette Karen Lee Hallett Sally A. Heinemann Norma I. Holder 154 av-. pw. -lhxxt 'tv vw! N -4,.r H. ,F nu- Nancy E. Hoole Michelle E. Hoover Janet C. Howe David N. LaPorte Arthur W. Lawton Keith E. Lord Suzanne M. Mathieu Mary K. McCarthy Deborah J. Mendoza Eugene Mitchell ..a...1- Debra L. Morgan Patricia Neary Theresa E. Pereira 156 Donna A. Moss Elizabeth A. O'ConnelI Lynne M. Pilvines Karen A. O'Hara Janet P. Pepin Karen M. Rebello Lorraine Roberts IIN Susan M. Rose Eileen M. Shea Marie C. Sliwa Y as I Y Xi J L ' X 1 Gerald S. Tavares Jane E. Terry Elaine Varelas Judith A. Swartz -maui Paul W. Warren Janice W. Wiggin Mary E. Wilson SCJCIOLOGY Autilio S. Baptista Debra A. Briden Nancy E. Brown 5 . fm F , 'QQ' ...Q Robert L. Brown Richard Camara William C. Darmon Jr. David B. Foster ff I Linda Freitas Brenda J. Gagnon 158 jr 'Q A I .Q Erin A. Gisherman Dorothy M. Harris IN V Albert D. King Eleanor S. Lavault Timothy J. McCarthy Carol A. Mello Barbara Mendell William S. Morgan Robert J. Oliveira Dennis Orsi Maria G. Queiroz Q Judith A. Renaud Debora M. Rice Kathleen S. Riley 'Q 49 1' ' ft' Bernice A. Rose Joseph A. Rose Karen Surprenant 160 Ronald M. Ramos Paul Rodrigues Jr. David A. Thimas x S I- ..... ., K , Y Q ' ' ' SPANISH Cindy L. Wamboldt Mary W. Wright Gizela S. Cabral '-- 'FN uf' 'X is l,-S ,.. f .lit Normas Collazo Brenda L. Estrella Kathleen B. Keefe Constance L. Lowell l .- X I lx s,n 'Q' Susan J. McCall Maria V. Rodrigues Filomena M. Silveira ACCOUNTING COLLEGE UF BUSINESS -'rl Michael S. Aizerstadt Steven Alves Michael Andre mf' 5' J 7 1 N -ive.. sc., 5' Donna J. Boggs Gregory L. Borges Joseph W. Brinza Michael A. Britto 1 'ix Jeanne M. Buckley Carol A. Buffington 162 xXf AND INDUSTRY EIR Q-ng 3 ' hi, Q9 7 i JEL. f , -..-,,,.. ,... . .. .. I . Daniel L. Cole Joseph E. Costa Matthew J. Curran John DeBettencourt 1 . f , 7 - 5, ,1- Q, I . f' Q Q fa. - .. .... Ara James Faulkner David Fogaren Joao F. Fontinha Harold M. Gershman Paul B. Guillet Paul W. Harvey X ff. . :ff X Steven M. Kennedy Patrick T. Lynch 164 Michael G. Leandro !Q Edwin L. MacLean Nancy L. Higginson Kurt A. Jensen Brenda S. Lemoine Gary Litchmann X fxx i . .. 1. .1 L. .rx -- - .. ,,,, Daniel D. Metivier William D. Morrison in 0 L nr Paul N. Nwabueze Steven Oliveira John Oliver John L. Patricio 4191 Nw Jeffrey W. Paul Alda Petitti Jan F. Pina David P. Read :QA C Judith H. Fieale Kevin C. Reid 'V 'S'-Tv if 4 2 X 165 5? J-. If-eww X -1 L .ix . A , Na . , . Carol L. Fiemillard Mary L. Schedler Carrie L. Scholtes Gary S. Soares -:sf Diane D. Souza Catherine A. Spang Karen G. Stratton Patrick Sullivan -K 1 w 5u,, 1, Robert E. Tavares Anthony A. Teixeira I I-Y. David J. Tower John J. Vaccariello Daniel Walsh Donald Walsh FINANCE Jean Waskiewcz Steven Wojataszek Steven P. Audette 'X ff' f ., W I Thomas Cluman Charles L. Jackson J K XE, , f John F. Lynch Bruce D. Sandler INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS I68 'Wm Brian M. McGreevy Keg f I. 9:- . S 1 if 'v .,,f v4v . , ,W Y, :lll0ll! I Q,-11.4-u'-.fggggglu Eileen F. Sullivan Ann M. Whalen l L Steven C. Cristol Paul Doherty Wendy A. Koertje 'W Q Gail M. Mello Gregory M. Pelletier Ronald Rego George W. Ripley IV 23? 4-22-s Sharon M. Santos Michael A. Silva Lisa A. Urbanowicz Robert S. Waring John Wehner Henry A. Zimberlin Sf 169 MANAGEMENT Steven J. Alfonso Frederick B. Allen James E. Atkinson f---'P Neil Atkinson Veronica Bizarro Edward J. Borecki Andrew W. Brierley Michael L. Cabral Brian Cassidy H- , LY X l ,f,'j, :VH . H X 'x 1 J , l F M K U I ! I Q A f 1 I x I70 16 SSN Steven P. Charest Bradford T. Cheney I J x...., - lr XX A John M. Chivers Douglas Condon Donald L. Coulombe Clara Custy F S ..2 '-A -, ,gov ' '-l.-:vt X t X X' . l Q f I - Jeffrey F. Dacri Steven Derderian Christopher DiCecca Charlene A. Dragon I, 'i'u Steven Fi. Fowler Michael J. Gagne Robert C. Grant David Greenwood I72 Jeffrey G. Fagerberg Gordon A. Fitzgerald Robert B. Gaw Steven C. Goulart Shirley Hemmer Mary E. Hill Q, x .1 ' Edward W. Holmes Craig S. Judkins Frederick M. Kalisz Jr. Larry Kashuck fo? I. 1' I '- ,- ' ' , IH ' ' i 4, Christine Lawton Steven W. Machnik Steven Macuch David M. Martini i l.- X . rl 2 Ronald P. Maynard Terence P. McCoy 56-'55 , H7 ' .,..,,'. 1. ,- . Ng -. John T. McDonald Carol A. Miller Willaim S. Morlock 4 1 ,SS-if J' Geofry A. Morris Marie L. Muir Steven Nassr Gary T. Niarchos Laina A. Niarchos Paul D. O'Connor Adeyemi Olateru- Carlos M. Oliveira Olagbeg 174 X James O'MoIley Mark Pacheco no Peggy J. Pimentel 1 Franny F. Poon . x .2 K Ev- J . favs. ,P 3 1 wa il f. F David A. Pelletier Norman F. Perry llias Potsis Pamela J. Prime J x- f in . xl - xg-'Z' 9 x ki,-. . ,. X. ,- X-tx Q., Q-. X - K l fibre iQ if 4 Kenneth Raposa Donald Rattle 1 .U I l F '.,'sz f ,- .Q .Xf X X. ,U Q.-1: , N'-Qc? X x l l Zf James L. Robinson Richard L. Rusin Carl R. Sharrow James Silva l l - , , .M ,.s. , . .. ,M , 'ima' fmun ...i- ,-Mn ff-A-...qhvu .muon-r-n--Jgawf Lf' f Ju... or l l 13- L i x f l V L l fl L l Christine S. Ryan Douglas A. Scott Y ill ll l I i i I i li i il l l I ig ll I l ll i Al i U it ii l li. Robert Silva Brian Sullivan J va Louise Sylvia Elaine Tam 7 ll A gl ,i ll it l l Ai i l. li Cheryl A. Thomas .vi : 'i :.,'-: ' ' 5- - 1 0 ,' 1 I. 2' A I A '1 X ., W' 1 ,T Jean Tu rcott MARKETING Christine M. Tremblay Philip Warren Lynn E. Benevides - , 'hx'- xiv L.. . Therese M. Bourassa Jayne E. Brady K vi ' - , ,nm K' ., ,.' 'M News-an 1.4.8-is .hx John J. Burke Marie E. Cimino ,bf Q.-L '-. 21. ' '15 if 5 it C Robert D. Cooke Joseph M. Cosgrove Edmond T. Curtin Jr. Bruce Detmers l Daniel T. Doyle Nancy E. Duarte Donald M. Gale Jill A. Harrington 178 Douglas M. Hayden Joseph McDavitt Michael Jackson Carol LePage 'Seb' Thomas J. Noonan '41 sv IPB- if- SJ' Z,-J David E. Parsons Jonathan E. Sides Timothy P. McAIarney Patricia M. Rego Susan M. Sites , 180 Monica Smith Edward J. Sojka Paul J. Starociak Joanne M. Strillchuk Anne M. Tremblay Stephen Vierra Catherine Weeks Kenneth H. Wilensky Q n x f in I ss ni- : TEXTILE 'Q v TECHNOLCGY 'x 6 . N 'N 'il . - N -v li -Qifwey - . M flair Fi . -X ' J. f, .fix Q if-s-rf' . fi ,XX Lynn Barrett Susanne J. Bell Hakim Bolaji David P. DaPonte Charleen M. Fisher Partick A. Gouveia Steven D. Barboza John F. Halloran Richard F. Harding 4'-5 fm 3' is 1 ..P 4 . sf r f , ml ' Virginia A. Harwood Robin Johnson-Given Debra F. Lowell Mi Robert J. Medeiros V'. ,QA- -lla X Wayne D. Redfern Leo T. Sullivan -:mx Q A 3 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING John S. Bielski Robert P Campbell Daniel J. Donohue -4 he A x X X N 0 Charles E. Eckert Hamid R. Falaki mg Kevin W. Forgue Stephen J. Gaj Brian P. Harrison Paul G. L'Heureux Rodney F. Mach Kenneth D. Morin i KP 3 :V --ini' 1' ,. L .iff i k freer M Mohammad T. Kasraii David A. Nicol 41, it John C. Perry John P. Fioza Ill Joao Testa CIVIL ENGINEERING TECHNOLCGY 13 vt i,.I' I f 2 f X , Wayne A. Arruda Martin Derrig Peter J. Duffy 6 -.fx IX1:f.+ I David L. Gotwalt William T. Howell . Y I Thomas J. Pultorak ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING i.Q-L-M S. Daniel P. Nevins George A. Peck Kevin J. Smith Michael R. Todd 4? Q . ug., 'Nr Jose E. Amaral Michael J. Araby Gary Axelrod MHVC BVOUGUV Victor Cardoso , 'fx 5' . ' ' A . A v ii ff ' y XV l U, ..-.nmn Raymond A. Chace David Coble Jacob T. Collins Holly Corzine W 1 ' xx-, . l is C A .X i Peter A. Draymore Richard B. Durant Joseph P. Dwyer Daniel Ferreira 188 Richard H. Foster Hak Yung Fung David R. King Dennis R. Koranek Ronald C. LeBlanc Marc J. Martin Mark E. Hassel Michael Kaplan I x wr Q 4 6 1 i Daniel M. LaBossiere Glenn R. LaDue 190 Michael McCaffrey Michael L. Pulkowski Harold Sears Jr. Joel F. Seif Bruce W. Soares Joseph M. Souza Caroos M. Tavares Glenn S. Taylor William G. Thomas Kris Vorm .- ' Chuck-Wai Wan if ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLCJGY IW i J ln!!! . Ef- 5 J I k I I 9574 I f A- ' S. Donald P. Alderson Robert J. Bowen III Michael J. Carboni 1 'Ti f .-- f 9, N 3 Joseph K. Farrell Joseph A. Hamel Paul J. Kostek Dean A. Plowman Joseph S. Tedeschi John H. Turbak MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 192 xmas Linda Thomas ,NX Anthony Volpe Mark E. Yelinek Eileen Avelar Gebru Belay James S. Griffin f -I Q af- -- Soroush Hadavi Michael Hurley Mahmoud Kobeissi John A. Manteiga Steven C. Mazurek Frank R. Oliver Charles D. Oyenuga David J. Pineau EDWIN!- 'ri i xxx X i 4. 1 I K F A X 1 Gift A Ralph Ray Richard Terlisner MECHANICAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY John N. Allegrezza Jonge A. Amaral Mark T. Audette il- N LR I Paul Beck Donald FI. Bertrand Richard L. Bouthiller Ronald Burke 194 '-sa Nicolau S. Cabral Richard A. Cohen Richard A. Capobianchi James J. Cote Paul J. Ciavarelli QP' Scott D. Forman John C. Hagianis Thomas J. Hunt James J. Langlols Tomas J. Ley William A. Mello ...Qs Qii Kenneth L. Paiva 196 Leon R. Palmer Roger Remy GENERAL ENGINEERING iw A X David G. Shaughnessey Anatasia Gounaria Duncan C. Warden CULLEGE UF NURSING NURSING Patricia M. Almeida Mariana L. Antonio Denise M. Bernard Debora J. Bibeau Deborah M. Brazil KN 4'c 7 Barbara Brush Mary Jo Cabeceiras Diana Cardarelli Deborah A. Caron 198 li. 'suit X ,f fi 1 1,4 Kathleen M. Cassidy Susan D. Clyde f I xg. ki G-'v -N--jg N- Donna M. Correia Cheryl Lee Curney Deborah A. Cushing Debra M. Dalton 9... ..,' X '-,ag 's, r' '-..,. J. 4. js Rx R - - ' - - Q 'll t , .l . L.. .H mls -up at L f. Karen M. Ehrlich Arline M. Fahey Christine E. Forte Patricia M. Fuchs Diane J. Gauvin Jean F. Harmon Barbara L'Hereux Denise Guay xx f 'X , , cf , ,L .,k , x, -sw 1, 5 re ' rp V, Q Wy 4- .2 r ky., X ,, A . F ' L ' 1 ' . M,-...fri , , , 4- ,ps- 'T-Q -x 4, J, ,fy , - 1: Cathy Horvitz Julie A. Kisielewski Cindy L. Knapp Dianne M. Leonard Qui Sharon Lomba Wendy J. Mayer 200 N 3 p 'UI ax K -X 5. A-...rr ,'. .4-ffy l i ,f Joan M. Meunler Margaret M. Moynagh Anne E. Mullins Carolyn Neville QC' 'fv' ...B ' K Karen L. Oliifeira Karen L. Olson Diane Pearce Anne Pelczarski MDP gn Elizabeth Ramos Kathleen Raposa 1 X 'x . X. 5 'im- Mary Susa Rego Martha A. Robertshaw Suzanne M. Rondeau Gary Sawicki K s ,nv J R . ,K 'J i i i Elizabeth A. Smith-Hilton Lauren Snook Jane E. Spafford Dennis J. Sullivan Z 'fr - . u - v ' 4 v ' . ' - . if G 2 b- . -.i 1 Q J i Q . , q . . Q . ' Q - . - I ' 2 lx -Q fi' u I '. ' , ' , .2 's , A ' , pi , fray ' Q I ' ' -'yfifgi , ' ' V l'y'W , ' . 1- - . .4 ' 5 9 I v'. A: .1 I 4 if an. I 0 i D , 4 ' , V ' 4 Q A QQ ' . .X o , . , 1 202 .. -fs 1 , 1 1 0 , . f u . Ist. s . in 5 ,. . 4 , img. 4 A ' ' 'niflgiri -lax xiii: x-l't Jean M. Sullivan Susan Timmons Suzanne E. Trow BIOLOGICAL ENGINEERING Jeanne M. Walmer Judith A. Wholley Manuel Gomes ' H W ' W ' 204 COLLEGE UF VISUAL AND ART EDUCATION Alexandria E. Banks Sharon K. Chandler Pauline Hathaway Cheryl G. Hohl Donna M. Ippolito Lynn Pacelt Jennifer A. Smith PERFORMING ARTS ART HISTGRY PAINTING James G. Latessa Denise Wilhelm NE 'iv' gi , . .-4' X v Donna T. Armstrong John Barradas Carol A. Smith ,I r s ., i 3 A A 'S44XAi.K xx. .121 ff QQ,- iv- .fs 22386-fri. 'Mu TEXTILE DESIGN Constance Hayes 206 Katherine L. Federico Linda Koszerowski Cynthia E. Powers Laurie Flynn Heidi C. Fuchs Rene J. Koszerowski Sharon Lewy Judith L. Rush Andrea Towle ESQ VISUAL -A DESIGN A 1 il Jill Armstrong Dennis Brundige Cindy L. Burlingame J' af 'Mr -A. 5- 71 L13 Dianne Carter A Henrietta A. Cira John A. Conca Michelle Craparotta 'F' Paul G. Cuomo Richard DeToma i Karen J. Dionne Katherine L. Dubose Delia M. Higgs Garry Kashuk 208 6 I 9' N rf Deborah E. Gardiner Jane Henry Christopher Kent Lloyd A. Mendes .... Lx hula! , Q s .- ' n Donna M. Nashawaty Scott R. Newell Steven J. Panicci ' x . Christine M. Parulis James Pequita Linda D. Stewart Bramwell D. Young SENIORS NOT PICTURED COLLEGE OF ARTS 81 SCIENCES BIOLOGY Michael J. Campbellt' Cathy J. Chabott James P. Cole Leslie De Melo Patricia L. Dillon James F. Durning Fidelia V. Egbuniwe Cathy E. Hilderbrand Susan M. Kirby Joan K. Klebes James E. Lesage Barbara C. Matson Maryanne McEnroeii Janis F. McGaffigan Paul R. Moehle Drew L. Nahigyan Edward Nichols Fredrick L. Nicholson David D. Openshaw Placido J. Paulo Robert E. Richard Carol A. Richards Joseph K. Schneiderit David R. Schoorensii Thomas Schwartz Donald Surprenant CHEMISTRY Clarence Bullock Stephen Dobyna Peter D. Martelly Daniel C. Melchior lll John W. ,Parks Glenn L. Pickle Laurel A. Schiavone Michael J. Yelle tMarine Biology ECONOMICS William Brough Mark Chace Michael C. Clarke Stephen B. Dumont Michael P. Heywood Michael P. Hodkinson ENGLISH David Augustinho Lucille Bernat Gail Camara David R. Charnley Nancy L. Desmarais Alouise M. Dutka Marc Gamache Leonard A. Guisti Jr. Waynw R. Greneir Kenneth J. Langevin Frederick J. Lewis Carol M. Lunig Lizabeth Lynch Ralph J. Moniz Christine M. Pelletier Michael F. Powers Jacqueline Rafferty Mary J. Roy Joan M. Saba Marie P. Sliwa John L. Sullivan David Tidwell Barbara C. Townley HISTORY Edward K. Anderson John P. Andrade Mark S. Baroody Kenneth E. Brown Beatrice Chaves Daniel A. Clarke David M. Cutler Michael P. Gagliardi Philip E. Gomes David D. Grace Robert Hickman Victor J. Low David B. Maguire Americo Nobrega Joseph D. O'ConneII Gary P. Pavao Edward F. Skinner HUMANITIES! SOCIAL SCIENCES Adrien Chagnon Paul Cormier George R. Duarte Albert Falcon Joan K. Klebes Susan M. MacFarlane Ronald Maciel Charles Morin Jospph Rezendez Bonnie Werly 210 l MATHEMATICS Gary W. Brown Chester Lizak Michael E. McGinn Deborah A. Mello Mark Mogayzel Gladys A. Nwankwo Carolyn J. Pease Raymond G. Pelletier Gail A. Schady Stephen Smith Louis A. Vassoncelos Jane M. Wojtowioz Karl E. Wuilleumier MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDIES Lois Crandall Susan E. Davenport Lauren A. Doucette Carole E. Farrell Janice Gifford James L. Harris Edward L. Hazell Betty llowitz Randall Kamischke Mildred A. Krikorian Maryanne B. MacLeod Sharon Manchester Adele M. Massad Constance Michnay Kathlyn A. Myles David Ott Stanislaw Pietkiewcz Clare Ready Debra A. Silva Carl Stout MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY Ronald R. Frazer Susan Glatki Marguerite Piccard Dorothy Taylor PHYSICS William H. Porter PHILOSOPHY Ronald Perry Robert L. Roy Anton E. Stadt PORTUGUESE Arminda Andrede Joan S. Butler Dulce M. Correia Mary-Lou DeMello Jose Pacheco Antonio Silva Alda M. Souza POLITICAL SCIENCE Peggy J. Bolduc Robert J. Boulay Paul Branco Vernon J. Cahoon Dale R. Carroll Christopher Cayer Nancy L. Dupre William J. Fernandes Donna M. Hardeman Denise M. Haywood William H. Jenney Carol P. King Robert R. Levesque Paul E. Mulloch Cheryl Mazurek Richard S. Nordlund Joseph Oliveria Roland R. Ouellette John H. Sears Charles A. Silva Virginia Skinder Richard D. Sypher Milele Unaka PSYCHOLOGY Elaine C. Abdow Barbara Audino Ann C. Barmacchio Frederyk Bernat Thomas R. Burke Lorie A. Cabral Linda J. Cameron Joyce A. Cardon Arthur Carvalho James F. Cook James F. Courcier Mary D'Ambrosio Linda L. Darmon Deborah A. Decambra Constance A. DeTerra Stephen J. Devlin Robin L. Dupont Carol J. English Stephen P. Espindola Deborah W. Farnum Dan Gifford Jan M. Hackett Giil A. Hadley Dawn L. Hill Sally E. Janis Susan K. Koczera Paulette Kornetsky Mary A. Languirand Particia Lyons Robert A. Marcotte Linda J. Mendes Joanne Noble Karen Paulo Duane W. Peckhem William J. Perkins Gerard L. Ready Susan L. Smith James L. Souza Gary R. Stern Elizabeth A. Titus Joan M. Tripp Deborah T. Waiman Susan C. York 212 SOCIOLOGY Willie E. Agnew Kristine L. Ainsley Janice C. Angelo Denise J. Barboza Raymond V. Beauregard Maurice Bernique Loretta Blake Maureen Bolger Charles M. Briddy Robert L. Brown Linda M. Camara Katherine M. Carpenter John R. Costa Carol Davis Joanne S. Distefano Gail M. Doherty Kenneth E. Doircette Muriel F. Feldman Lee J. Fortier Sharon E. Gleason James M. Hallal Charles Kosinski John Kyod Ruth Lima John Marshall Jr. John J. Medeiros Kenneth J. Medeiros Nancy Norcross Joyce A. Oliveira Barbara Pax Susan M. Perkins Linda Pementel Winefred Y. Pina Ronald Raymond Kathleen Schofield Sally Stephens Lorna Welding COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY ACCOUNTING Robert M. Abisla Karl D. Almond Dean L. Bassett William C. Berry Richard A. Cassiani Paul J. Coelho Dennis P. Costa Gerard H. Cote Paul G. Couture William Crammer David T. Crumley Stephen P. Doran David Downing Roger Drapeau Helen Duryea Raymond M. England Anthony Esposito Jr. Lawrence Gannon Edward W. Gilman Richard C. Gonneville Charles Gurney Kenneth W. Hirsch Geraldine Holden Judy M. Howell Richard A. Laprise Michael J. Lavoie Pauline A. Lemleuy Fernando A. Lemos John F. Lopes Robert Marden John M. Margarida Paul A. McAlister Michael R. McGuire Judith Medieros Steven Moniz William D. Morrison Thomas E. Peckham Linda L. Rogers Teresa Ryan-Henry Paul W. Scholtes Stephen Sears Wayne Shea Ronald Souza Thomas Thorpe Clifford Wieden BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Douglas Condon Kenneth Duarte Vernon Ekstrom Kevin F. Gill Mary Eleanor Laing Brian Lapre Louis Machado John Marland Paul A. Pavao James Rolston James Wooler FINANCE Marie Affonseca Dennis Machado Clement M. Mazzelis Susan Perry Mark E. Routher Richard Thompson George Vallon INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS Mark R. Champagne William Driscoll Janet Fernandez Kathy L. Gracia Kirk M. Karcher Wendy L. Larson David S. Smarowski Barry M. Weinberg MARKETING Robert Allen Jeffrey Almeida Deborah A. Argeris Scott Argeris Pamela J. Bean Linda Harrison Lillian R. LaFlamme James Lang William J. McCaffrey Richard McKenzie Peter J. Mis Joseph J. Sikorski Carl E. Sjoquist Gail M. Talbot David Turkalo MANAGEMENT Lance Almeida Audrey Ascheero Robert Aagana Robert Benetti Thomas Benton Leonard A. Bourgeois Terance C. Brennan Thomas A. Casey Jr. John S. Caswell Kevin Clerkin Gilbert Costa Jr. Charles Croker lll Robert Crowley Donald Davidson Michael C. Earle Donna Ellias John Ellis Robert Fallance Martin Flinn Dennis Gallant Antonio Gomes Michael J. Gomes Stephen Hart Edmond LaCombe Alfred Landry William Lewis Judith Long Leonard McNullen John Medeiros Steven Medeiros Michael Misiolek Charles Moynehan John Mullins Frank F. Niemiac Brian D. A. Nobrega John Pelletier Henry Pietrzykowski Stephen Powers Joseph Ramos Ralph Rapoza Robert Roy John Silva Mark R. Sinotte Michael Soucier Johm M. Sullivan Jack Sylvia Grandison Tabor TEXTILE TECHNOLOGY William G. Belezos Jayne F. Conway Ellen C. Feibel Richard A. Joseph Suzanne J. Lishner Ana M. Le Robert Luckraft Kathleen A. Meineir John V. Newhouse David Querim Scott Quigley Denise Tolliver 214 COLLEGE OF t ENGINEERING CIVIL ENGINEERING Edvik Aghiksantrian Hamid R. Bahadori Roy Bousquer Robert Carey Dennis Carreiro Daniel Coughlin Richard Elloran Mohammad Hatam William Madden Jonathan Pink Charles Shurtleff Paul P. St. Yves Farzin Yazhari Hamid Yazhari CIVIL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY Jeffrey E. Gould John H. Judson Walter Landry Thomas M. McNiece Andrew G. Olanyk Bradford Rea John Santos Robert Silva Kevin Swenson Joseph P. Walker ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Mohammad H. Arab Michael N. Berube Peter Choi Paul Chrupial Anthony Dietzler Kenneth Furtado Felix Gregorian Jeffrey Y. Longworth Robert Lucey Onuechi C. Morah Susanna Pacheco Herbert Pflanz Athonasios Pitiliaangas Chuen F. Quek Regina B. Rheault Kenneth Santpo Babak Sardashti ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Bobert C. Baker Joseph Bilodeau Charles Bunting Antone Lawrence Joseph Mortozo Robert Shea Douglas Wilder Peter Wilson MECHANICAL ENGINEERING David Curran Brian Evans Thu Huynh Thomas Kannally William Keim Jay Spellmeyer Dad rew Twombley Gary Webb Sandra Whelan MECHANICAL ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY Richard Cohen John F. Lewis Dauna L. Simon Richard Stafford Donald Surprenant Joshua Trainer COLLEGE OF NURSING Mary E. Ambrose Kathleen F. Andruk Eileen Angelo Elizabeth Babson Barbara Costa Pamela Craddock Sandra Cushman Joi-Anne Dansereau Dianne M. Desnoyers Irene Doyle Alice Franklin Donald Gruenette Cynthia Hamlet Susan Harpham Michael J. Hartley Cynthia G. Hill Karen Hughes Priscilla Keddy Joan Lapre Mary Lawson Donna L. McCluny Lynn Michalak Lisa C. Mullin Brita Mulholland Charlotte Nicherson Roland M. Oulette Marilyn Pina Susan Potvin Charles G. Pye Ill Dale Robertson Mildred Ryan Marjorie Scowcraft Carol Sedlak Patricia Stewart COLLEGE OF VISUAL AND PERFORMING ARTS ART HISTORY Cynthia Collins Terrencd Dunphy Jill Fernandez Kathleen Keller Kathy Reynolds Linda Santoro VISUAL DESIGN Gary Alexander Richard O. Baird Hubert Bridgeforth Jr. Richard Bushey Christine Bushey Christine Castor Robert Castro Jr. Margaret Coughlin Ann Coulson Joseph DelRosso Thomas Dowd Milton Healy Jr. Gail Johnson Dianne Markham Lauren O'Brien Dianne P. Wilson FINE ARTS PAINTING Regina Cox Thelma Hayward PRINTMAKING Ann DeCollibus SCULPTURE John Se TEXTILE DESIGN Holly Begley Carolynn Clark Jennifer Cullen Susan Norlan l 3 216 5 'K .4 X ' af l GRADUATE DEGREES MASTER OF ART BILINGUALXBICULTURAL EDUCATION Isaura de Lourdes Amaral Sheila Azevedo Alice Botas Maria de Fatima Oliveira Botelho Bertram A. Boulfard Maria C. Branco Manuel C. Gomes Leonard Gonsalves Thomas Gouveia , Armand C. Marcelino Paula F. Monteiro Marla F. Pacheco Robert J. Pimental Stephen G. Pinto Mary Alice Janeiro Post Barbara M. Victoriano MASTER OF SCIENCE BIOLOGY MARINE BIOLOGY Phillips D. Brady Sherry Lynn Sass Paul Edward Genest William Ernest Hearn Dennis William Mulryan Neal Maftlfl Peffy CHEMISTRY Allen David Williams 218 BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Kurt Gent Elaine I. Berke Stanley Bickerman Michael James Boden Tilden Evan Bogus Joan Gwen Brierkey Maurice F. Burke Jr. Francis E. Carey Barry T. Coggshall Raymond Michael Cote Lee Oliver DiMarzio Gordon Thomas Helme Lee Edward Henry Robert A. Kalasinsky Robert E. Kay Thomas E. Kelly Gerald Kitchen Mary Eleanor Laing Brian A. Lapre Richard C. Letendre Louis Machado John E. Marland Raymond Joel Marquis Edward H. McNerney Maurice G. Michaus Sr. Bedros G. Glorighian Miguel F. Gouveia Tommy W. Kwan Donald Edward Powers Thomas Arnold Viana MATHEMATICS Stephen Barnes Smith MEDICAL LABORATORY SCIENCE Edward Samuel Balkovic Paul Campognone Shirley Ann Carreiro Jeanne C. Crepeau Janice Ann DiMeo James Joseph Durn Madeleine M. Ferruccio John W. Gerry Nancy A. Jacobd Adele D. Koritkowski Arne Curtis Perry PHYSICS Wilburn N- POTTSY Gerald Frank Pietruska Warren J. Preti William B. Purtell Jr. Raymond Ripley Jr. James P- R0'SI9 MASTER OF FINE ARTS Wayne W. Tessin Gordon E. Van Brunt Stephen A. Viera VISUAL DESIGN James Joseph Wall Robert Woodacre Jr. JGSGDII FI- 3- Osborn James Stephen Vvooler Joanne VHSCOVIICII Frederick Charles Zorbas ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Michael J. Bianchini Che Chang Chen John Edward DeYoung June 3, 1979 marked the end and the beginning for the Class of '79. It ended four years of academic and social experiences in the hallowed halls of SMU. It also marked the beginning of new experiences and challenges in the world of employment. ln short, The SMU Experience prepared us for our exodus into the real world. SMU is a unique and fine institution which provides students with, the opportunity to develop themselves in their chosen field, a quality education at a modest price, and the chance to grow socially and learn to understand people and their problems. Gaining the ability to understand the problems of others can lead to a better future for this country. Although SMU is a young university, it has gained substantial recognition due to the hard work and dedication of students, faculty, and administration. This dedication stems from the care and friendship exhibited by members of the SMU Community. These people have a sincere interest in the future of this institution, which was visible in: the takeover of the Campus Center, opposition to the rise in the drinking age, and the defiance of the tuition hike. SMU has been a stepping stone for the Class of '79, We have gained the required knowledge and now we must move on and experience life in different surroundings. I am proud to have graduated with the Class of '79, and I will never forget the knowledge gained, the friends made. -the times known as The SMU Experience! John L. Wehner President of the Class of '79 John L. Wehner Senior Class President Class of 1979 E if W ., A Krigman 2 ! E In Memoriam Elkie C. F. Su June 7,1979 ,., :svn-.vowww,. t . ,Y .QKQA 'P X 91 VK .. -4.....,,x 1 1 gn Wemorium PROF. FRANK GOLEN JR. On April 22, 1979, the University was stunned by the sudden death of one of its faculty, Professor Frank Golen, Jr. Frank died at the age of 53. He came to the University in 1959 as an instructor in Business Admin- istration at the then New Bedford Institute of Technology. As the young department of Business Administration grew, Frank grew with it. He was always an excellent teacher, but he became still bet- ter and grew in other directions as well. He founded the Lengo Realty Company and was its presi- dent. When the department was ready to add Real Estate to its curriculum, Frank was ready with one of the best and the most popular courses, and the large enrollment in this rigorous course attested to students' awareness of its excellence. When the University received a 95lO0,000.00 grant from Aid to Depressed Areas to study the Scal- lop and Flounder lndustry, Frank was one of the five faculty members most heavily involved. The marketing report published as a result of that project was largely his work, and still contains many valuable ideas from which the industry can profit. Frank's blending of the actual world with classroom theory was that fortunate blend for which any screening committee for Business Administration must constantly search. As he once remarked, what is going on in business gets into the textbooks five years later. ln spite of his very active business and professional life he found time because of his deep civic and religious commitment, to serve on the airport commission and as treasurer of his church and a member of the synod. Frank had also a very strong sense of family and was devoted to his wife and children. During the past few months both his parents had died, and that loss affected him deeply. He was a completely honest man with an excellent sense of humor. Our loss is very great, and he can never be replaced. . Prof. Matt Field DR. ROBERT P. 0'HARA For those of us who knew and loved Robert Paul O'Hara, the Spring of '79 was long, cold and lonely. The birds he loved so very much came back on schedule. Still beautiful. Still lyrical. Their notes now were piercing and poignant. They were in a sense a Requiem for a ceaseless seeker of Truth. At first, it was hard to grasp the fact Bob would not be coming back home -that he was already Home. Dr. John O'Neill 2 .a A ur'-. , ' -7 ..v . -N ..1 ' , 5 1 2' H' BL.- ill 541 ---- . 4 -. ' ill: N71 2 -sl-112' 1.1 4' -Qvf 'Qi' X' L - +7-s.'f': -2: ' G 4. 42452 B ,- me-'zr- , - v-,V . ' -1145-5--- 22 N ' . ...,,,. vw :SA .Q1-5: Ag... R - A' W' 1 ..,-,,s V-.. -.I -M ...sa v fu .4 1- -A ' -Q' ff, , QF'-L x I ,in ., it . 0 ,ii , , 5 5, ff nb 4 .es J D. Q ml .rm ' 'Q I 5 D Q B 3 3' A -r 4.v,,s- 4? N ag, an ' Q - -. 'f'f, - an 2' In W f- A 4- 3, A -- ' , ,f f . . I ' F 4 M 2 'V -. ' P s .,'- lu- ffl t X?- 'RU' ' ' . y e Q. A Q 4 IA 9 un, sv- 1 ' , u -, P 3 3 ax ' -, ,, , , , A A x! . :Q 1 ,X e 1 '71 b F- 1 ,Q . 'XA . Q g'vVv,v?' M, Q04-N ima . .fr ' ,M 3' Q k M J: .ifpk asa? Q Q 4 Q Q COMMENCEMENT '7 9 f- ! f' '41 1.493 t' Krugman 1979 HONORS CON VOCA TION JUNE 1, 1979 VENUS DE MILS RESTAURANT DA VID FROST, SPECIAL GUEST HIGHEST SCHOLASTIC STANDING: COLLEGE OF NURSING ........................................ Denise Guay COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING . . . ..... Sandra Whelan COLLEGE OF BUSINESS 81 INDUSTRY ......... ..... D avid Crumley COLLEGE OF ARTS 81 SCIENCES ................. . . .Mary Languirand COLLEGE OF VISUAL 81 I PERFORMING ARTS ................................ Heidi Fuchs BOARD OF TRUSTEES - CSTATUS OF WOMEN AWARDJ ............. Janice C. Angelo DISTINGUISHED STUDENT SERVICE AWARD ............... Jayne Brady, Kevin O'NeiI RETURNING STUDENTS AWARD ..................... .......... J anice C. Angelo P bym K TEXTILE VETERANS ASSOC. HONORS AWARD ................... Jane Conway HARRY RIEMER AWARD ..... Charlene Fisher NORTHERN TEXTILE ASSOC. MEDAL .Denise Tolliver AMERICAN ASSOC. FOR TEXTILE TECH. AWARD ................. John Newhouse AMERICAN ASSOC. OF TEXTILE CHEMISTS AND COLORISTS AWARD ....... Susan Bell PHI PSI AWARD ............ Robert Medeiros FRED E. BUSBY AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN CHEMISTRY ............... Michael Yelle WALL STREET JOURNAL STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT AWARD . .CIementMazgelis MECH. ENGINEERING TECH. AWARD FOR ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE ..... William Kiem JOHN E. FOSTER HONOR AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN CIVIL ENGINEERING .David Gotwalt, Joseph Walker AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIV. ENGINEERING STUDENT CHAPTER AWARD ....... Daniel INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS AWARD FOR SERVICE .... Marc Brodeur, Paul Smola, Kris I Vorm, Miguel Gouveia WHO'S WHO AMONG AMERICAN I UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES Coughlin Donna Jean Boggs Susan McCall Jayne E. Brady Brian M. McGreevey Sharon Kay Chandler Marie L. Muir Bradford T. Cheney Patricia Neary Susan D. Clyde Kevin O'NeiII Angus G. Garber III Robert Pedder Erin Gisherman Douglas Scott James J. Halpin Elaine Tam Jill A. Harrington Cheryl Ann Thomas Shirley Hemmen Elaine M. Varelas Carol Kiely John L. Wehner I Dina Ann Lindquist AGUSTA SILVA AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN ENGLISH ................... Bernadette Ferriera PROFESSOR RUDOLPH LAVAULT AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN PSYCHOLOGY ........ Mary A. Languirand HONORS PROGRAM PSYCHOLOGY ...................... Barbara Grota, Mary A. Languirand COMMUNITY EDUCATION COUNCIL OF FALL RIVER AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE . . .Diane Berube DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY ACCOMPLISHMENT AWARD .......... Dina Lindquist, Marc Santos COLLEGE OF NURSING PINNING CEREMONY 'fe XX.,- 1 m 231 -1. Aff- iQ I Krigman 554 fi, 1 :kg ,i A K ,.. A I H 232 1 V TIME STANDS STILL, BUT JUST FOR A MOMENT WHAT WAS OURS FOR A TIME IS WHAT OUR F ONDES T DREAMS ARE MADE OF W 'Num .... 1 -W Q 49 ? A -fr .NA sz 1 ' '-Q ...,,M .'h-f-'Inq .,. T' M, . .. :B i ef- A-f A 'ff -gli 4 , nr-A ,-- g f - 1 - 1- , - . 1-v ' 1 Us fs gf Q 5' P ik-wx-for -dd., ,N 1 QS' ... , - f - . 1-U , A , w f.. . ' - fi 1 . 1 ,h v - LN.- 4 r 1' N o. 3. ,. I1 I 3 in V fi, nag 9 .1 Q - 239 1 I F 1 , I 1 1 5 11 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 11 1 1' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 I 240 1 . :NG-d Pb ,av Q 'Wh-, S an-WQ' 1 V-fl df' 4 if-P jim ,vim l Q -x LGUIS RUKEYSEF2 1979 COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER A is Ng Ze iiifwi, m , r .1X.' 2 1 Q ,i .'.' 4 vi.. Rf' Q , E AQ William O. Taylor .-:aw L 'ei Michael S. Dukakis HONORARY DEGREES Michael S. Dukakas Doctor of Public Administration Alexander Nesbitt Doctor of Fine Arts Louis Rukeyser Doctor of Business Administration Vice Admiral James Bond Stockdale Doctor of Humane Letters William O. Taylor Doctor of Humane Letters Walter H. Tyler Doctor of Fine Arts 1 1 J 1 1 1 1 I I 1 1 S . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 '1 T 248 ' 1 x 9 Y 1, f Fo K KALEIDOSCOPE Scott R. Newell ' .1 4 an , . Q x aw f xv, Y 5 i ' 'nv-Nr' x . 4 - -. C Sv: 1 . , r-, is van Q , . s, , 4 . . 4 W . V vl I, Q , Hrwf ,K ,F UI f x - 3 HQ , ' ,, ' ' n -'- . fx' QQ A nf x ,A Q . , ' X514 5 Z w kk 5 ' 1 N ' ,SQ-' 'xx Q fl I 5 , ' 1 K, NJN .. ,lain ' wfff. Q in n x , . ' ' ' ' J gf' 4 A . f P r g , f 'Qu-V , . me ' AV f s. U 25:3 1 Q, ., R, x , X . X , Q K f .11 'PSN fum... . gd -a 'N I vi Y A 'Shats 2 5' ,K r-11 s- 1' -+ Qi 1 ' WA U1 wk 'W' xx 'I 5 15 U M' wwf, kv:-N r W r L N... 1- ' Q M 5' af if J Na- 4 ,,. 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In A ' fb - --.I'-'- A V I ' I-r- I I ' I' 1544. ., - I I - gf , ' ' - , . ng- V -515. ' .N A -f ' Q .Ln ' , . '. -' ' 5.. ' vs, , .x , I ' ' I 1, ,I ,.4I. ' ,..?.-I - 1 A -. g -I --fr---H A -Elan I -.-.. - , A, ,I - 'jg , , . f I ' ,.. ' I , ' - 15.4-my Annu- ....,. . -pe.x..vq- '. I -if A ,N I I I.I I I4 - -x.dIIIII . III- --Q '- ' whhl 4: I -Q. .ui Qu -,.,, .4 , . 4. nu. I ,.,.-.nuQ.L -A -I I 'W 1 I I s -Ibm. qg- -- Nigga 4 ' ' ' . . A in . . .funn-1 - -gf iii' .,.-v-4- nfjyv. N-sr K-'-'pa nw' '-A - ',:A..., . . -' sw-A-A---1' :T ' f--- ..Ar' 'A '.7' .HI ' F4 I, 'Qu .. .1.. ' --L - .1 ' , ' -1 ' II, ,.. A - A' V I f fn. I ' ,fm 'X . ' - ' .,.. ' -f --A-A --M-, 267 n 4 . I QQ, Q-or x . .,, . 3.. MA - . Q- - . AY' 'N-1-.. 1979 SCRIMSHAW STAFF SR. JANE T. KIRBY O. P. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ARNIE L OHMANN TA YL OF? REPFFE SEN TA TI VE RANDY SCHUL TZ ASS T. TO THE EDITORS MIKE KRIGMAN PHOTO EDITOR NANCY STARR, ART EDITOR f-'ll x f ix BRYON KASS ASST. PHOTO EDITOR K PETER CARLIN ASSISTANT EDITOR This publication has taken a great deal of time and effort to compile and bring into being. This year's book marks the beginning of a new era in Yearbook publications on this University Campus. For the first time in a number of years we, as an editorial staff, have worked as a team to turn out an annual that the whole University family might be proud of. As editor l would like to thank many peoplefor their hard work and hours of tireless effort. To my fellow editors I would like to say many thanks and job well done. Nancy, Mike, Bryon, Peter and Randy made the job much easier and very rewarding. I had the chance to work with people who were good in their respective fields and great human beings. A special thanks goes to Arnie Lohmann of Taylor Publishing. His quiet but constant support and encouragement was, and always will be greatly appreciated by me and the rest of the staff. To the Senior Class officers: Oscar, Doug, and Shirley, I would like to say thanks! Their care and interest made the rough spots a great deal smoother. Dean Howard was a source of encouragement for me throughout the whole period of time that this publication was in the works. His experience with past publica- tions and his knowledge of the ins and outs of this University opened many doors for all of us on the staff and made all of our jobs much easier. I could go on for many more pages listing the people who have helped us in compiling this book. I know that a sim- ple thanks is very inadequate, but know that it comes from my heart and I shall never forget the many people who were concerned and interested in the final outcome of this publication. I hope that the Class of '79 finds this book to be a worthwhile keepsake and record of their final year at SMU. As both Editor and a member of the Graduating Class of 1979 I am very happy with what we tried to do. Thanks goes to each and every one of the members of this University family for mak- ing this year and the many new experiences as Editor of a Yearbook such a rewarding and growth producing experience. Best of luck in the future! av, M Publishing Company: Taylor Publishing Company, Dallas Texas Publisher's Representative: Mr. Arnie Lohmann Cover Size: 8Mx1 1 Cover Design: Nancy Starr Silkscreen on base material Number of pages: 272 Number of Copies: 1300 Endsheet design: Mike Krigman Paper Stock: 80 pound enamel Type: Helvetica Standard in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Helvetica ItalicfHeadIinesj18, 24, 30, 36. Photography: Senior Portraits by Dodge Murphy Photographer Other photos found in the book: Mlke Krigmann Bryon Kass Nancy Starr Chris Hebert . Howard Glaser SMU Theater Company SMU Audio Visual Department Delia Higgs Marcia Rominuck Victor Chiu Bill Gathright Sr. Gertrude Gaudette r U . Q- .al Q1 V. A '-2l ! .2' I ...- i ' ' 'Qfisw-f-.. 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