Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA)

 - Class of 1972

Page 1 of 248

 

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1972 volume:

197172 FOREWORD This JUMBO BOOK records a year in a sig¬ nificant transition period of the College; a year of growth—not in mere numbers or size, but rather in capacity to fulfill its missions. While, naturally enough, in such a period the worthy past is not forgotten, yet it is to be marked that our attention is more turned upon the future. That future serves as a constant inspiration to us; it is the motive, whether we realize it or not, behind everything we do for the College; it has been the incentive prompting the ac¬ complishments indicated herein. But, through this Book, it is submitted that the present has been most satisfactory; that Tufts need not look to a golden future for glory. It is here—in Nineteen Twenty- Eight. 4 •r. Packard Avenue, c. 1928 College Avenue, 1875 8 The Hill, c. 1910 9 firttfem nf thr 131fi $raamt For the first time since JK75, a ' Tufts football team defeated Harvard, ' The victory was well deserved, clean cut 0 and decisive, the superiority of the Tufts men being well recogized by all sport followers. At the start of the lot6 season many were somewhat skeptical of success, on account of the difficult schedule that had been arranged, ' The nm t formidable teams in the blast were listed on the schedule, the first two games being with Harvard and Prineemn on success!ve Saturdays. Coach Whelan plunged into his work with unfavng energy and unlimited zeal. He had a veteran team to e,•• •?k with and in addition he had a large squad of men who were well accustomed to his style of coaching. For two weeks before the Harvard game, the men were drilled with the idea of perfecting team-work, a prime essential in the Tuff style of play. ' The fundamentals of the game were imparted ! ■ ;} 1)uk Smith, A tant Coach Htk:c) Dkcmmi.v CJoixu Tifnoecfi tm: Lis.?. -II %kv,%kh ii uf 10 aiuinm Dai’ (1916) y Personal Service to All . . That little touch of personal interest that you find lacking more and more as the big com¬ bines get under way will always he with you here. TUFTS COLLEGE BOOKSTORE M KTROPOLITAN COAL Keeps TUFTS STUDENTS WARM In their Class rooms. Dormitories Fraternity Houses and College Buildings Tufts Statistics Class of ’38 Most Typical Tufts Man Greatest Drag with the Women Class Shark Class Woman Hater Most Obliging Jackson Girl Smoothest Jackson Girl Biggest Heart Breaker Pleasantest Year in College Best Liked Circus Animal Best Movie of the Year Favorite Orchestra Greatest Man in the Country Most Popular Diversion Best Necking Spot on Campus Pride of Jackson Logical Choice for President Norman Harris Gordon Stott Allen Saunders Edwin Palmer Iris Kelman Louise Remick Jane Fitzpatrick Senior Jumbo Emile Zola Benny Goodman Henry Ford Necking Golf Course Tony Wojciechowski Joseph Kennedy 13 It twelve ‘ by the vill e clock ' When he crowed the bridge into Medford town! CS$PP UUMO ON-WE MYSTIC VIN N1GN jB5joEX OFFICIAL SOUVENIR UtUlNID tv BEDFORD • MERCURY The Golf Course, c. 1953 15 jugg B ■ : ■ ■ K yjgfe-y-v- lyl JP ™ ' .me B Bm Wt iSSuT mmf. , ' lPfc. ' ■: khil j | ' } 1 ■1 Jl Mil v i ml aa %« ■ . .jeSXKgfmt. 4 V ; yf J tel -3$ -w g ■ f; , 4 v -y ft::, ■ ¥ , ] A ' i 0 x -4. I ir v 1 v . ... ' ; | . BS0 J[f m Ml - r % v 1 fliis ! ■irr V ... 4 , % V Rar .„ . M aSMHW v ■• f - 17 19 20 22 America- I ' d like to Sit down alone with you For a couple of hours, And talk. 23 24 25 i. i i In America you can fuck whoever you want wherever and whenever you want. In America we are all busy getting fucked up and In America everything gets fucked. The revolution is to put America back in America and those other dudes in their places. The sociology of America is found late at night in donut shops in who you know that ' s in the Mafia in what to do with the niggers in scoring another bag in Doris Day as the perfect wife. While the White House turns to the past the Pentagon plans the future What do Americans do when they don ' t know what to do? America is charging for water from a hose at Woodstock America is killing all their chickens. Famous Americans: Dale Carnegie Earl Scheib Parson Weems Joseph McCarthy Clark Kent Ozzie and Harriet over C. C. Carlsen ts 29 ' - V; t’nknown STS SELL WDCDFECKKR. aOCDFKCKKRS - FOOD - BOOKWORMS, TAPEWORMS, ETC L 96 .P ' 5 lo?i Wessell ’Woodpecker. c Not to be confused with the California woodpecker. Kedford, I ass., «essell Tufts University, 1971 3 unpaged. 20cir«. V P ) C s , f l ♦««• ' - ,., . • •? ,r •■£ ' •( W 1 II ' acrtrieni A,Jcfouif yjncph ' . txe i c- 1 a ff: {_J , j V r ' ? % ■ fc V- % -V c ' , N S . • ' -; ' ' ’ • r v a fkO - ' A ' V yv fr -o ' • ' ir o . 4 ' ' cS O f Kr h r Kv« i« «4 ' r ✓ « w C« ‘ r v VCV V - ' , - ' 1 P v T H TO HU . ' n« ' V ' v vf lS JV SSTjrt 1 i 4 rC If ' ' -- 0 J 0 ' tx ' V TSS’gS , 4 op A«0 ,VV MX + ■ w - • 1 « mu L-. Wel ■ • hh B IBl : ; a . bj ? 58rB m B ■ ,?.• MOfl . % FfV gatfvPW ■t V JM|Lg|r 3 V7g wl UNIVERSITY HOUSING BULLETIN TUFTS UNIVERSITY MEDFORD, MASS. I. GENERAL INFORMATION You will be screwed. II. TYPES OF HOUSING There is a variety of university owned housing avai¬ lable to undergraduates. It is extremely likely that you will never live in any. In addition to facilities of different sizes and sex distribution, the various resi¬ dences have rooms that hold from one to Hit tili tit seven persons. The types of housing are: 1. ) Unisex dormitories 2. ) Coed dormitories a) alternating sections b) alternating rooms c) alternating beds 3. ) Cooperative apartments and houses 4. ) Small frame firetraps In addition to non-specific buildings, several resi¬ dences are reserved for groups with similar cultural interests. These are: Whips and Leather, Sado- Masochism, Foot Fetishists, Onanists, and French Culture. III. ROOM DEPOSIT PROCEDURE Deposit all your money and property with the Bursar by yesterday. Once you have given your life savings to the Bursar, you will receive 27 printed labels and an indelible tatoo on the inside of your right thigh. Following this, students will have between April 7-8 to sign room contracts or be beaten with a short length of rubber hose. IV. APPLICATION PROCEDURE Application forms will be available whenever we feel like putting them out. There will be seven different forms in the simplified system. BLUE FORM —quadruple occupancy rooms where more than three but less than four of the appli¬ cants apply for a dorm under 132 people over the mandatory application deadline. In other words, applications for a sextuplet in a coed dorm should only hand in one of these forms, although you may apply as though you were living separately. OLIVE FORM —Although normally two persons who decide to live together can attach their Bur¬ sar’s labels to a single form, in this case a single label is attached to two forms with each applicant applying as though he wanted a quintuplet in the basement of the power plant. RED FORM WITH BLUE SHUTTERS AND A WHITE ROOF —This form is only for binomials I. GENERAL You will W t m .tm I INFORMATION be screwed. with a ZBQ rating higher than six and a security clearance. LAVENDER FORM —Hiya sweetie! The indicated dates are the only ones we have indi¬ cated. On the appropriate day for submitting applications, the applicant should cower meekly outside of Cou- sens Gym and beg for permission to enter. Students should note that it is theoretically possible to apply in all 1,213 categories. Please, don’t make trouble kids. After you have received a card from Gertrude, the computer, proceed to any one of three tables assigned for drawing random numbers. Go to any table. It makes _no difference which table you go to. No one will have any advantage. Right. Once you have drawn your completely random number from the tables, give the number to the clerk at the random number table. (Where else, dum-dum!) V. RANDOM FEATURES OF SELECTION PRO- CESS Each applicant or applicant group representative draws a number from the available bowls. PLEASE DO NOT FLUSH THE BOWLS UNTIL AFTER THE DRAWING! Each bowl will have one hundred different numbered chits in it, (122-221). The bowls will bear a series number, and each four bowls will bear a category letter. After the close of a particular category, Dean Steind- ler will pour all the bowls into the Tufts swimming pool, which has been emptied for the occasion. Un¬ fortunately, those nice little categories and series will be lost. Too bad. Dean Steindler will then dive into the pool wearing a thick coat of Vaseline Petroleum Jelly. After rolling around in the pile of cards for 13 minutes, he will be pulled from the pool clutching one of the cards bet¬ ween his teeth. This card will be number one (i.e. the best, the highest, the one you want, le premier, el supremo, etc.). All cards which have stuck to the Dean ' s body will be peeled off and will come next on the order of priority. The rest of the cards in the pool will be burned. FINAL INSTRUCTIONS Persons not receiving assignments to their desired rooms are in big trouble. Leave Cousens immediately and seek medical help. FRONT AND REAR PORTIONS OF ALL APPLI¬ CATIONS SHOULD BE HANDED IN TOGE¬ THER! 39 iWVi% : vfc ■ £ ■ y fc 43 II. SANS PUNCH - NO I.ON. S. HISC. DUP CAROS S. SAN PNCH. - NEEO LI WET HEAVEN Saliva falls through the shitty dawn. Mud quiets a heavy lasagne. The rain draws in the perfect hair Smoke sucks the brisk grass. Lasagne smokes the soiled lilacs. Sand walks on the gooey dew and between, I crept. The IBM I 130 44 48 The Theatre at night is vigilant. I see Stanislavsky in pajamas pacing, and adjusting the moonlight to appropriate angles. —Susan Glickman darry Ritchie, Drama and Experimental College First of all, because my Scotch-Irisb-Presbyterian back¬ ground distrusts enjoyment and I have such an absolute ball standing up there lecturing, I assume there must be some¬ thing wicked about it. My first job in there is to try to gene¬ rate not enthusiasm, excitement, and enjoyment about the event that’s taking place in the class, but about the material. The next step is to start working with the feedback, and start working with material coming at me from the students. I hope we’re getting away progressively from the idea that teaching involves a quantity of knowledge that somebody has, either an instructor or a ' book or a document in a library. An education consists of how completely can you get it out of his mouth , into your notebook and into the blue book . . . ? That doesn’t matter. Learning, for all intents and purposes, is what happens to the other person. It’s the process of absorption, the process of evaluating what you absorb, the process of des¬ cribing meaning to what you get. I’ve got to learn, otherwise I go dead. In a funny sort of way, education has let the next level up set the standards. The ultimate line of argument for grading al¬ ways is: graduate schools won’t admit people unless we have some kind of yardstick to measure people by, therefore we grade! And if you push a graduate department to the wall, the reason they are grading is mainly because future em¬ ployers want some yardstick. So progressively, starting way back from a place like toilet training, we’re always trying to satisfy the next superior up the line that we are performing our job properly. It gets very confused. Students very easily get in a position where they’re here to please somebody, or they’re here so somebody wi ll say, They’re Smart, They’re Wonderful, They’re Educated, They’re Hirable! That’s not what it’s all about at all. My own colleagues in this department (Drama) are constantly saying (in reference to the Experimental College), ‘How can you possibly approve a course like this? That’s awful!’ which leads me to start arguing, ‘Well how can we teach a course like this in relation to that?’ The Experimental College is right now working on the theory that things you do with your hands, things that are literal and tangible, are a very real learning experience. That’s some¬ times the way you make your head go —not by constantly tal¬ king about things you have no literal connection with. Five years ago I used to hear a line of argument which said the glory of education was it wasn’t about anything, it didn’t train you for anything or give you any sellable skills. That ap¬ parently is not true now. I think there are a great many stu¬ dents on this campus who, in one way or another, are trying to create something of their own, something they can touch and hang on to. Where do you put your energies? Where do you put this vast amount of committment and hope and dedication that people want to tie into something? If you don’t challenge, you can’t lose. What’s more important—winning, or not losing? They’re not compatible. Seymour Simches, College Within It’s the trivium and the quadrivium—if you take distribution requirements and a foreign language requirement and you take a major this will make you able to cope with outside life. Well, obviously it doesn’t. Essentially, it is a ves¬ tige of an old program which was designed to prepare ministers and highly cultivated people for the nineteenth century, and it gave you the kinds of materials which presumably made you an educated person. It was essentially a kind of smorgasbord approach which presented you with what were called the ingredients of an educated man. What’s happened in the twentieth century, particularly since the fifties, is with the escalation of knowledge, I don’t see any longer a corpus curriculum, i.e. a body of facts or knowledge that everybody must have as being any kind of solution. First of all, if you read Toffler (Future Shock) you realize that knowledge is changing so rapidly that what you say today may be disproved in five years or two years or maybe six months. So that to isolate any group of facts or body of information and say you need this to be an educated man does not seem to hold much water. We deny people their myths in our society because we stick their noses in a book at the age of six and just never let them take it out until, depending if they go to graduate school, they’re maybe twenty-five. And so they don’t have much chance to kill dragons, or to go through fire and water, and to do the things archetypally they’re supposed to be doing. Even though we’re a highly civilized and sophisticated people, we still have within us I believe, if you subscribe to Jung, a whole arsenal of recollections of our archetypal images, and I think to deny them is to produce the kind of anxieties we’ve seen. When you’re in a program like this, you have what Sartre and Camus call ‘the existential freedom.’ But this free¬ dom is a two-way sword. You’re freed from what? You’re freed from constraints, freed from hour-exams, quizzes, from the rinky-dink of a course, freed from structures of a course outline which a teacher, no matter how good he is, imposes upon you—it is his way of looking at reality. But suddenly you’re freed . . . for what? You go through what Sartre calls “angoisse” or anguish. This anguish of a person is one who suddenly finds himself free, and many people find this distasteful and hard to bear and they scurry back to the comfort of sitting on their ass three days a week and being told what to do. They’re very enjoyable lectures. You can’t go to a lecture with Sol Gittle- man and say it’s not an enjoyable thing. I think these are alternatives and not everybody is made for this kind of burden carrying, because you begin to realize that along with freedom comes this tremendous responsibility. The College Within is different from the Experimental College in that if you say it’s good to go into water and you’re going for a swim, so to speak, it’s different to put one foot in than your whole body. If experimentation and concern for experiential learning, that is combining the life of the mind with the life of the experience, is an impor¬ tant part of education, than I’d say that the College Within tries to do it totally while the Experimental College can only do it in a fragmented way. The important next phase is developing what I call “a community of Jearners.” I’ve always been a little distressed that at Tufts we have not had, in my opinion at least, a community of scholars and learners. We tend to be very much alone; the teacher is alone, the student is alone, while these individualized programs are excellent, I think the next step is to try to create in the College Within exchanges of ideas, development of interest groups so that we can begin to develop communities around centers of interest. Teachers can help by rewarding initial efforts and by not negatively reinforcing creativity through harsh, crude cri¬ ticism. Most vital, there is a need for a general atmosphere of warmth. All of us, and especially the young, tend to create things for those we love. Sol Gittelman, German It’s difficult to say what is more depressing: pompous faculty or pompous students . . . I get particularly sad when I see people around me losing their ability to laugh, both at themselves as well as at others. Why do people take themselves so damned seriously? I’ll know it’s all over with me when I no longer have to go to the bathroom before each class . . . Each morning before shaving I thank heaven that I wasn’t born with a mind capable of creating a philo¬ sophy of education . . . I worry about people who are reflex educators, both students and teachers. Some simply have to say, “NO!” to everything innovative; others cry. “Innovate, no matter what!” Things have to change, no doubt, but sometimes it takes courage to say we’ve changed for the worse. I’d like to have the energy that has gone into covering up our failures, errors, and mistakes . . . It’s frightening to think that one out of every five stu¬ dents is smarter than I am—and sobering, too. What makes it really hurt is that it’s true . . . When things look really grim deep in the middle of winter, and I’m depressed, angry at myself, angry at my colleagues, genuinely miserable, I think about the spring and those short skirts .... ah, those short skirts! There is simply nothing in the world like constantly being surrounded by young people. It’s got to be the greatest thing ever! The happiest thought of all: as long as I’m teaching, I’ll always have teenaged friends! I would like to be re-incarnated as Mickey Mantle. I’ve never been able to figure this out but I really think that this is the biggest thing this whole place is missing—the sense of who it is. It’s not a small sleepy community college anymore. It’s attempting to make itself in some things that are very different from that. I also think that a lot of people who come to teach here do not come because of Tufts, but because it’s in the neigh¬ borhood, in Boston. That in terms of where we stand intellectually, we measure ourselves against Harvard and M.I.T. and about the Brandeis thing, I think it has an identity as being the jewish university in the country. So what identity do we have? We are situated in Medford and Somerville, and Somerville is terribly poor. It used to have a few years ago, one of the highest juvenille delinquency rates in the country. The tax base . . . there is no business in Somerville. The tax base comes out of the real estate; that is fantastically high. I think last year it was second or third in the Com¬ monwealth. And so the whole thing is getting enormous and people are leaving. I think that for the people of the College Within, they may have a community going for themselves. I still think that the College Within is still pretty much an incubator. You get the people in and give them a lot of intellectual heat, but you don’t really ask them to .. . there’s a lot of protection built into the system itself. You say we’re really going to give you a first rate education here, and you ’re going to cross-fertilize each other and they do. And you do break down the barriers between faculty and graduate students and students much more than in other courses. But it still seems to me that the situation does not reach out to and take into consideration as much as it could for an educational innovation. Jesper Rosenmeier, English Let’s say you expand the Day-Care Center—that means you can bring in more employees who couldn’t come here in the first place. That means they may move in and live in Medford or Somerville. You may be able to bring in students who would not otherwise have been able to come, so you enrich the student body that way. We begin to move into different ranges of ages, we begin to have a whole lot more women so it’s a sexual thing as well ... ra¬ cially, it makes for a much better mixing. AIJ of that seems to me to contribute to a sense of community. I get into wild schemes like maybe this place should become a community by itself so we all took care of it. If the community that chose the people that wanted to come here, and it (admissions) depended on what they could con¬ tribute, that they would have to take a direct responsibility in running this place ... it might go anywhere from cooking, cleaning, running the library, doing the grounds. I think the other thing is that education could become a hell of a lot less expensive. We could shave off somewhere between a quarter and a third of the price. I know this, because I have a step-son up at a school in New Hampshire like this. Maybe we shouldn’t be using the land for sports. Maybe we should be growing potatoes down in the Oval. Maybe we should have pigs and chickens in the gym, and grow lobsters in Hamilton Pool. What is it that I’d like to see happen? I’m not particularly interested in becoming a great national university. I think the criteria that are established for becoming that would work to our detriment. I would much rather that we took our cue from where we are. We are in Medford and Somerville. What is it that we can do in education that takes that into consideration? 54 mmm Ecology? Six years ago you had to tell people what the word meant. Now a lot of people feel at home with the word—and still don ' t know what it means. In a euphoric mood I thought the ecology Thing would bring us to discover not only the “eco —the Whoie Earth as Home, the system basic to all sys¬ tems—but “logos as well. Logos: spe ech, reason, ar¬ ticulation, inquiry—the human thing whose atrophy can be witnessed now in every level of the ecological system. Logos: the word —it belongs to, and has a debt to— yes, man, of course, but now we realize its debt to everything, the whole earth. Return to the land, you say? Contemplate natural beauty? Clean up the environment? Survival treks? No, that ' s apocalyptic bushwah at worst, and child ' s play at best. As child ' s play, it might all lead to adult practice ... But there ' s a lot of posturing in the name of Earth just now, and a lot of nature-tripping. Nature without man— lovely, sure, if you know where and how to experience it; but that isn ' t what we want a logos about, or what the Whole requires of us. Even worse is the crazy transmogrification of “ ecology into mere cosmetics. It amazes me that only human beings have what it takes to see that there is a Whole, and that the unborn generations really matter to us now. Is that because humanity is a creature of ideas? Does this mean that to understand man we have to understand ideas, like the idea of humanity, and the idea of the whole com¬ plicated system? Only through logos do we have ac¬ cess to ideas: and only through ideas can we see and revise what we do in action. What is logos? Well, we won ' t find out by taking lo¬ nely walks, or “altering consciousness, or chasing af¬ ter mystic insights. Not definitions or recipes, we aren ' t in want for those . . . what ' s wanted is a place devoted to its discovery and nourishment. I suppose you could call such a place a “school. With luck, the “ ecology thing might become real, and real schools might rise out of the ashes predicted for them in this decade. You think I am saying authentic schools are ecologi¬ cally necessary? Good idea; I ' ll think on it . . . Robert Carleton Dallery, Philosophy 55 Saul Slapikoff, Biology David Isles, Mathematics Martin Sussman, Chemical Engineerin Janice Green, French Charles Yeager, Education Aubrey Parkman, History Kenneth Van Wormer, Chemical Engineering Paul McCloskey (R-Calif.) Mrs. Eldridge Cleaver Harold Wilson, Former British Prime Minister I am waiting for Tom Swift to grow up and I am waiting for the American Boy to take off Beauty ' s clothes and get on top of her and I am waiting for Alice in Wonderland to retransmit to me her total dream of innocence Lawrence Ferlinghetti Dick Gregory 61 62 Mrs. Criselda White we can make music with our bodies it ' s dif¬ ferent this is the language of your body you are finding your o wn kind of dancing dance is so pleasure functioning as Pesso would say like writing to someone about my problems is such a passive way of re¬ leasing tension it feels much more sat¬ isfying to act it out (like Zorba did it ' s such a good way of telling a story if words won ' t or don ' t suffice) I get tired of doing so much in my head (when I ' m lying in bed waiting for sleep to carry me away) it felt so strange to see a dance that was semantically speaking mine but I didn ' t dance in it for me it was an intellectual striving to compose a dance whereas in the past I ' ve struggled and struggled to physically create a dance those in the circle seem to intensify the sharing principle you can see everyone else fol¬ low their movements and pick up changes in the rhythm or movement rapidly it en¬ closes the feelings portrayed by the group and symbolizes unity and togetherness it is a very strong symmetrical form one shouldn ' t think of the circle and what comes next but just feel and try to perceive what is happening inside back to the idea of Rogers that this sensitivity has to be nurtured in people and it takes time we experimented with different kinds of energy we painted the air around us with our bodies as tools using the room as canvas thin and thick lines straight and curved lines strong and weak shapes rough and smooth textures dance has a reality and through the use of one ' s body a feeling of certainty in a world of uncer¬ tainty can be found 63 Margo Gross Seatrain 65 Leonard Carmichael Society Observer Stops Publication Indefinitely The Observer hu halted public Tecttve Im¬ mediately. The decision to stop pubH - ' • an Editorial Board meeting Thur 7 Jtemoon. The Observer editors ' decision was b o ' rlmarlly on the fact that the Obeever had recel e cooperation and support from the community peclally Its represen¬ tatives in student govemme xb Observer editor And’ ' noted that In spite of the fact that a rerent opin . conducted by the TCT In¬ dicated that the cam -• pleased with the new daily format and the n news coverage, the Executive Board continued use to allocate funds for salaries for the editorip In past years the Observer editors as well as th V the yearbook. literary magazine, re¬ reived toke ies. usually about S300. This year. how¬ ever, the ok editor r criv d S’ 1K). hut the Executive, Board ’ ‘ used to give any salary to the editors of the ramr , iv, who have nonetheless assumed an even great . spoasihility than in previous years. Moreover, other students, including those who run the campus microphone system, receive salari s for their services to the community Additionally, the staff noted that the pressure and demands on each staff member in publishing a daily was much greater than in the past Vet many fewer students volunteered to work on the Observer this sem« ster. mak¬ ing the load on those purtieipating in the puhlieutkm more strenuous. Perhaps, that was a power play as many people said at that time. But it did have a purpose. It was a very real attempt to tell the campus that its newspaper was sinking. That attempt has failed. We believe, and we hope you will agree, that the Observer should continue to publish But we can ' t do that without the help of the entire Tufts community. In short, we ore tired. Many of us have spent at least two years working toward o better campus publication. We feel drained of all energy and resources because we have had little help. Where once the editors could be predicted three years in advance, we now scramble every week to hold a statf together. In two years time, the manpower of the Observer will have sufficiently depleted so os to make publication a physical impossibility. This newspaper has only functioned through the hard work of a few people, and it must have fresh blood to continue. It ' s fine to assume there will be o paper each Friday, but without manpower and lots of moral support, that will not be a safe assumption any longer. If you can find the time to help, we will find the energy to keep trying. If you will be upset when the Observer finally dies, do something about it. If you don ' t help, this may be the last paper to dry your tears. Call Lorry Tell at 776-6587 Coll Steve Wermiel at 396-8628 When it comes right down to if, it ' s your money. Hillel Tufts Mountain Club 68 69 71 .Tt ' ■ ■ - i-r : !? T ? f;-! . . ■ - fft¥? Tv V? ' ( V . v r (. jitsigst: f H . . « ts tfc ipuy f ; 4| : vi ■ v ■• • 5 - ,: ' ■ SmmrS ■•• r 7 1 - r.i StfSn j sSSr mmim 78 it i Turner Construction Company FOUNDED 190? 150 EAST 42ND STREET. NEW YORK. N.Y. 10017 October 26, 1971 Mr. W. U. Piegorsch 113 Haskell Hall Tafts University Medford, Massachusetts 02155 Dear Wolf: Thank you for discussing your career ambitions with me on my recent trip to Tufts University. It was a pleasure meeting you. A short interview is not enough time to use as a basis for decision, but such a decision has to be made, and it is with regret that I have to inform you that we shall be unable to place you following your graduation. Good luck in your efforts to find the right spot for the development of your career. Sincerely yours, 82 83 84 Asparagus Soup Trying to find my blue shirt with the button-down col¬ lar, you’ll excuse me if this whateveryoucallit isn’t per¬ fect. I’ve gone through all the drawers, and I’m wondering where she hid it, Martha! Somehow, the world spins around five minutes too fast and they just won’t wait, even when you’ve done it for the fourth time in your life, it’s still not good enough—you should have been early, they say. Never mind, never mind, this whole thing is too con¬ fusing. I’ll wear the white short-sleeve as usual. People say I have that spark of life in my eyes, that laughing look when I speak to them. So I’m seventy- four—that doesn’t mean anything except pages in my book. I still have a head and I’m thinking more now than I have in the past fifty years sitting hunched over clut¬ tered desks, shiny coffee counters, and stony stadium blea¬ chers. Not since I was a kid in grade-school has my brain been on the rampage like this, burning up streets and houses with a revolution going on in my head. Why I was only telling Martha the other day how those kids got more sense than anyone knows. She just stood there, silent, looking at me while she drained the asparagus over the sink, not paying attention to what she was doing. Watch what you’re doing, I told her. You’re going to spill the as¬ paragus if you don’t watch what you’re doing. Those kids know everything, is that right! she starts shouting at me, raising her hands in affliction like I cur¬ sed her or something. Like the blast out of a cannon, she lets me have it: Your grandchild is in jail for selling drugs to little innocent children and you’re telling me that those kids know everything? Hah! she threw up her hands and the asparagus came flying out of the pan and splattered on the floor. I told you to watch what you’re doing Martha, I said as I bent down and started picking them up. But she wasn ' t finished. Those little bastards are burning up the schools we slave to pay taxes for! What right do they have to destroy the things we work so hard to give them? So what are you so upset for? I asked her. What? She stopped outburst for a second and looked at me. The Jews never destroyed anything of their own? You forget the Ten Commandments? She’s looking down at the floor when suddenly she pulls out her white hanky and breaks down in tears. Okay, I’m sorry, let’s forget it, I said, feeling bad I had caused her tears, putting my arm around her. Come on, let’s forget it and have dinner. What about the asparagus? she blubbered, pointing to the mushed green spears spread haphazardly over the floor. Don’t worry about the asparagus, we’ll just have some frozen string-beans instead . . . that’ll be just fine. Yes, Martha is a sweet old woman; she just has her mo¬ ments like the rest of us. She’s really got two feet on the floor, and when she doesn’t spill them, she can cook aspa¬ ragus with her eyes closed, if necessary. But just think of it the two of us living together for half a century! I asked Martha just what she thought of it, cooking and cleaning, caring for a man for fifty years and he says, what are you drinking? What do you mean, what am I drinking? I haven’t touched a thing since lunch and you know it. I’m not asking you what you have been drinking I’m as¬ king you what you’re drinking now, right now for dinner. What’s the matter, you have a guilty conscience or some¬ thing? she started laughing, no sound coming out of her mouth, her whole face contracted into one big smiling wrinkle. Stop laughing old woman, I told her, starting to laugh myself, her hysterics unavoidably contagious. Tell me what’s so funny. She finally calmed down enough to talk to me. Fifty years and you’re still a sucker for my cooking, old man. You must have lost your taste buds a long time ago, and she started guffawing.again. I brought the dinner over to the table; leanly cut, juicy red roast beef, Bronx baked potato, and Birds-Eye french- cut string beans. What are you drinking? Martha asked me again. We have anymore of that Welches stuff? She opened the fridge and nodded yes. Okay, I’ll take some of the grape stuff on the rocks. When I think back, it’s hard to see what life would have been like without that woman. Before I got married I had plenty of wild dreams, and all I did was talk about them, lie awake at night and dream about my dreams. Then one day, I found myself talking to this gorgeous red¬ head who could really look you in the eyes so you could feel her. Now that was power for you! She shook me up and down my boots and it wasn’t ten minutes that I was telling her everything, like I love you 1 love you 1 love you, when can we . . . Even after we got married I still had those dreams chasing after me, but I knew deep down I had little chance of ever seeing them happen. 85 How’s the meat? she asked me. It’s fine, Martha, just right, like I always like it. Is it seasoned enough? Oh yes, it’s just fine, I assured her. So what’s wrong with it? she asked. Nothing, absolutely nothing. It’s the finest roast beef I’ve ever had in my life. She didn’t say anything for a few seconds, but I felt it building up in her. Then why aren’t you eating it? she said nervously, trying hard to control herself. I am eating it! What do you want from my life! I ex¬ claimed, looking up to God for deliverance. Look Max, you can’t tell me you like that roast beef when you’ve eaten exactly three pieces in the last ten mi¬ nutes. I scratched my head. Has it been that long? I must be getting senile. I was thinking of something, I was thinking about the first time I met you and all the dreams I had. What dreams? she interrupted. You had no time for dreams—we were married two weeks after we met. Eat your roast beef meanwhile before it gets cold; your dreams we’ll have for dessert, she said, her white eye¬ brows jumping with expression. I picked up the knife and cut a piece of roast beef. Look, see I’m eating. That’s a good little boy, Max. Now eat your string beans for grandma and you’ll get hair on your ears. I had millions of dreams, believe me, but there was ne¬ ver enough bread on the table for me to say, I’ve done my share and I’m leaving for Hong Kong or Trenton. I asked her, I said, Don’t you wish we could have settled up in the mountains, Martha? reminiscing over my earliest fantasy when I was stuck in the concrete of the Lower East Side during the Depression. We never go to the Catskills? Three days at Grossi- ngers and you’re ready to run a race at Aqueduct. No Max, you would have gone a little crazy in the woods. I’m not a little crazy already? Eat, she pointed down at the plate. The roast beef was still there to my suprise, staring me in the face. Well, what about a big boat, Martha? Don’t you think it would have been nice for me to have made a couple of millions so we could have had a big sailboat and traveled around the world? I tried another piece of roast beef. Nothing against money, Max, and nothing against you, but I get bored on big boats. Besides, you remember what happened on Sam Finkelstein’s yacht? 86 Let me think, I said, putting down the fork which came within an inch of my mouth. I was sick, my hand reaching for my stomach, the living color memory welling up with¬ in me of how we got caught in a thunderstorm out in the Sound. The boat rocked up and down, side to side so that we were nothing more than a paper bag being blown around in the wind. I was so horribly sick that 1 locked myself in the bathroom, not knowing which end to stick in first. Yes, I smiled at her, I vaguely remember it, but there must be something ... 1 waited for a suggestion but she only looked at me curiously. Well, instead of living in the mountains away from everything, and rather than buying a big boat which I wouldn’t know how to sail anyway, what about a beautiful mansion on the ocean? We could watch the tides roll in and the sun set on the clear blue waters and . . . Max, she smiled lovingly at me, we didn’t live in a bungalow at Rockaway for sixteen seasons? You mean you didn’t get enough sand kicked in your face or swallow enough ocean after sixteen summers? Well, Martha ... I couldn’t help but laugh. That was not exactly what I had in mind when I was nineteen, dug in those trenches under machinegun fire and Englishmen, German tanks running wild all over the place. “Oh shit!” “Excuse me,” Max said quickly. “No, it was my fault,” the young, spritely woman in¬ sisted as she bent down and started picking up the fallen papers. “1 wasn’t really watching ...” “Neither was I,” she laughed suddenly, blood rushing into her pale cheeks. “1 was watching that freak feeding the ducks over by the pond there.” She laughed again and looked up at him. Her wispy mane of earth-colored hair veiled her long and lean face. “1 wish I could help ...” He tried to bend down. “My back, it’s too old to go down so far.” He watched her putting the papers back together and appreciated her subtle lines and movements. “Why don’t you bring the pa¬ pers over there,” he pointed to a park bench, “and then we could rearrange them together.” She gave him a big smile and he wondered whether she was one of the Tribe or not. He had nothing against shikses—he had gotten over that a long time ago, ever since his nephew eloped with a gorgeous Norwegian last September. “What do you do here?” he asked as they sat down. She said nothing and busied herself with the mess of pa¬ pers. “Do you live around here?” Max ran his hand through his bushy white hair. “Do you have the first section?” she asked, her head appearing slightly too large for her thin, undernourished body. “I live around the block, 286th street. It’s a nice place, but the neighborhood isn’t so good anymore. You can’t take a good walk after dinner, but somehow ... we make do.” He waited for her to say something. “How come you’re reading the ‘Sunday Times’ on Monday?” “I have the magazine section, do you have the ‘news in review’?” She looked at him, her black opal eyes glisten¬ ing. “1 teach at the elementary school. We’re learning about Trotsky and Marx, and the ‘Times’ ran this beauti¬ ful spread.” She started to show him the headlines and pictures, but he brushed them aside and turned his back to her. “What’s it all coming to?” he said, looking up at an old elm tree towering over them, as if expecting an answer. He took out his handkerchief and wiped his brow. “Why do you people always think it’s better somewhere else? Look at you, you’re wearing nice clothes, you probably had a good lunch, and after work you’ll be able to get in your car and take a nice drive. What more could you want?” Max was sweating, his glassy blue eyes still shin¬ ing with energy. “We work and slave, break our backs and what do we get? Heartburn. You kids give us heart¬ burn!” “Heartburn!” she laughed, stopping what she was doing and giving him all her attention as if her body had sud¬ denly been pinched awake. “Look at this and then tell me all you’ve done for the world.” Nearly three inches long, a thick and ugly scar on her arm testified to some crude vio¬ lence. “One wrong move and I would have gotten it right in the stomach. Do you know the animal that attacked me? A puerto-rican boy, ten years old—ten years old!” she repeated, as if she herself could not quite believe it. 88 mm “Why? I’ll tell you why. It was because he had no fath¬ er and his mother was too drugged to stand on her own two feet. He has to steal to eat, like some animal in a jungle.” Her eyes were burning. “I’m trying to show them there’s another way, another system that won’t treat them like strays and freaks. It’s what you’ve been perpetuating that has driven that boy to smack and knifing.” “I never met...” “That’s not the point. The point is 1 live in a rat-in¬ fested, stinking tenement and no one does anything about it.” “Why don’t you move out?” “Move out. Where’s there to move to? You think if I had the bread I’d hang around a dump like that? Believe me, it’s worse than a nightmare.” In the distance, Max could see the long-haired youth that had distracted this woman before, empty out his plas¬ tic bag of crumbs into the quacking beaks. “Lve lived here for twenty-six years and we’ve made a good life of it. The trouble with you is you’re looking for only the bad and of course you’ll find mountains of it. But me,” he smiled his seventy-four years, “I see good, plenty of good all around us, sitting right here in fact.” “Well, you’ll have to show me where all this good is. I nearly got raped last night throwing out the garbage in the incinerator.” “You can worry yourself to death about everything that’s wrong, but the way I see it, who wants to go through life like a wet handkerchief?” He took out his hanky and wiped his face around. “It’s true people are starving, dying of disease, going insane, but who’s to stop it? When I’m going to die, I can’t hold up my hand and say, ‘Wait, just one more page and then I’ll be ready.’ It doesn’t work that way.” “But that’s just the point! You’ve got to try to fight it before—” She stopped herself and shook her head, sud¬ denly breaking out into a smile. “Anyway, I’ve got to run to class. I have to get these kids ready so that when the time comes ...” She felt the full weight of the papers. “Maybe I’ll run into, I mean, walk into you again Mister . . . ? “Schneider, Max Schneider. And you are . . . ?” She said something, but he couldn’t make it out. “What?” he shouted after her, but she was too far away. Max just sat there, quietly thinking of what they had said, conjuring her face up in front of him, trying to commit it to memory so he never would forget. Later in the day, he went out again. Forgetting the gar¬ dening shears at first, he took the elevator back upstairs and a few minutes later was waiting across the street for the number twelve bus. Because the air was clear, he could enjoy breathing without breaking into a fit of cough¬ ing and even sang a few old songs to himself. Soon enough the bus rolled up. “Hello, George,” he greeted the driver as he slowly inched up the steps like an old catepil- lar. “Hi, Max. How’s it going today?” “Not so bad. And you?” He took the chewed cigar out of his mouth. “Same as usual, but what can you expect?” “Don’t let it get you, George. You’re better off this way.” “Yeah, maybe you’re right,” he laughed and put the un¬ lit cigar back in his mouth. Max waddled into a seat a few rows behind the driver. He looked out the window and was glad he was getting out of the neighborhood, if only for a few hours. He took a letter from his overcoat and opened it again. He put on his glasses and read it over, wondering what he should do. His son was pleading with them to come out to California and live with his family for at least the hundredth time. It would be better, Steven was positive of that; after all, he was raised in the Bronx so he should know. Such an idea fit in with Max’s thinking, especially with his old dreams of sunshine and beaches and women. Yet, New York with all of its troubles, traffic, and delicatessens was still his home. Maybe Steve was right though, maybe he should move before it was too late. 89 Forty-five minutes gone by, he was there. Beth Moses was large and at the speed he walked, it took him some time to get to the right spot. The stones were arranged in long rows; some tall, some wide, some with stars, and oth¬ ers grouped three and four together. You live together and you die together, he thought happily, recognizing the old names, knowing he was getting closer. A few more steps and he was finally there, looking over her green plot. He put a few stones on her monument to show that she was part of the earth again, as from dust to dust. He took out his hedge clippers and trimmed the pint-sized bushes, plucking out a few weeds and cleaning off the small bench adjacent to the grave. Sitting down, Max stared at the granite block and read the inscription: “Mar¬ tha Schneider, 1899-1969, leaving a loving husband and son.” The final words engraved on the stone were “All that the Lord hath spoken, we will do.” He folded his hands and closed his eyes, feeling the clouds coming between the sun and his face. The momen¬ tary loss of light cast a gray shadow over everything. Max opened his eyes again and saw the dark land around him. “It’s a nice day, isn’t it? 1 almost forgot the clippers, but I went back upstairs. I know you have a thing for neatness . . . I still can’t leave my underwear on the floor for fear that you might come in screaming.” He felt his face growing long and sad, the idea of being separated painful for him to live with, but there was room beside her, and this comforted him. “I got a letter from Steven today . . . yes, he’s fine and Nancy’s going to have another one soon.” He saw through the earth and pictured her in the coffin, lying there calmly with her hands at her side. “1 sat in the park today and watched the ducks and the people. I should have brought some crackers for them, but I forgot as usual. I also met this girl . . . no, it’s nothing to worry about. She was young, maybe twenty-five . . . jewish? I’m not sure. At first I thought she wasn’t, but after talking to her for a few minutes I had to scratch my head . . . what did she say? Well—” Max stopped for a few seconds and tried to think of what they had talked about. “I don’t remember. The only thing it did was make me think about Steven’s letter. Now I know you think he’s right, but you’ve always wan¬ ted to do the best for me without thinking of yourself.” He looked up and saw a funeral procession in the dis¬ tance. “I can’t leave the Bronx, Martha. This is the place we met, we had our child, we lived and grew up here . . . what does the girl have to do with it? I don’t know. It was that just for a second, I saw that whether I stay here or not, 286th street will never be the same again. It’s lousy and you know it. We haven’t been able to go for a walk after dinner in years. It’s no place for human beings, espe¬ cially for a girl like that . . . Martha, I can’t leave you here alone, you know that.” His face was taut with feeling, an old tear forming at the corner of his eye. “Every morning I wake up in bed and roll over to hug you awake, but ...” He wiped the tear away. “If only I could see you, if only we could walk on the boardwalk and watch the sun set and eat blueberry knishes and play shuffleboard. We’re still together, it’s true, but sometimes I forget and call you from the kit¬ chen—Martha, where did you hide the Sanka? . . . I’m still very absent-minded.” He was silent for a few moments and tried to think of something to say. “I . . .1 don’t know what to do. If I lis¬ ten to you, we won’t see each other until—that’s not what you want, I can feel it. But that lovely girl I met this af¬ ternoon, she made me think of what life is, what energy and laughter you brought me the first time I met you. She couldn’t discover it, but it was right there in front of her. I saw it. It was as plain as the bench we were sitting on. Martha, you knew, you made life what it is so that it didn’t matter where we lived or what we did—we were together and held on to one another . . . No, no, I don’t know what I’m going to do.” He got up and clipped a few more of the hedges. “I’m too old to make decisions, you know that. I’ll think about it for a few days and I’ll come back and tell you, okay? What do you mean, no? I can’t decide right now, I haven’t had time to think about it . . . do you really want it that way, Martha? You always knew the right thing to do and I’d be too old a fool to stop be¬ lieving in you now. It won’t be long anyhow, a few months maybe. I get pains at night . . . no, Grobstein hasn’t looked at it. What can he do for an old man like me anyway? So, if you can wait a little while longer, maybe I’ll take your word for it and go live with Steven . . . yes, I’ll send them all your love, don’t worry. Don’t worry, I’ll pack neatly and take plenty of warm clothes. You’re right, it’s not very cold there . . . yes, my spring clothes, okay . . . Be well, Martha . . . yes, I will, I promise I’ll see Grobstein before I leave. It’ll only be a couple of months anyway, so don’t worry.” Max put down his shears and put a few more pebbles on top of the gravestone. He looked around and saw stones covering every hill for miles. There were plenty of people to keep her company until he could join her. He tried to think of the best way to leave, but couldn’t. He took a few steps towards the main building and looked back. “All right, all right, I’m going.” He continued on and caught the bus twenty minutes la¬ ter. —Ken Bortner 90 Lydia Acchione Joanne Abruzzesse Charles Benedict Charles Anderson Paul Austin Iris Lee Bagwell Susan Ashton William Anderson r i Steve Allison John Antonucci 95 Diane Bernstein Nancy Barton Judith Berry Ken Bortner Klaus Bartels Carol Barbier Steve Barles James Balmer Richard Barnhart Mark Joel Berenberg Donald Bettencourt 98 Amy Bernstein Karen Bessey Carolyn Bird Richard Bezubka 99 Martin Blatt Peggy Blumberg c v Larry Bell Peter Bitterman William Bowen Melani Bianchi Doug Blanding Beth Bitensky 101 Joanne Bongiovanni Betty Bohn Nancy Breslau Robert Bruce 104 Mark Bungeroth Dennis Burnham Everett Bronski Sandra Butler 106 Harris Chattman 107 Bruce Bzura Louis Cicolari 108 James Cherniack Marc R. Cutler Jeffrey S. Chavkin Nancy Challender 109 Eileen Cooley Edwin Colby f % - Jj - i : l, i ' - i Cynthia Costa no John Crawford Robert Copithorne Janet Frair Toby Berk Mac Cunningham Renee Cho Marcia Clark Dave Chase Edwin Colby Paul Coderre 113 Ron Carle John Sullivan L.D. Miller Mike Somadelis Greg Higgins Dan Coughlin Peter Watson David Campbell Dan McLaughlin Brandon ‘‘Lumpy” Krough Ransey Cole Robert Coutts 115 Joanne Dixon Richard Chapman Stephen Deering Marc Cutler mm V I Lynn Denis Anne Duli Maria Doerr Donald Depew 117 Marjorie Devereaux 118 Chellise Dunham Ellen Donahue Margaret Donaghey 119 Warren Dumphy Barbara Evans Kathryn Eike Donna Decker Barb Davidson Karen Ettenheimer Eric G. Nestler George R. Ekiert 1 ' • - JW ' ' r.j--vr. 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Chester Indianapolis, In BRAYBOY, ROBERT 1 0 Rockland Ave Roxbury, Mass BETTENCOURT, DONALD 2 Tewksbury St Lexington, Mass BRENMAN, MARK 590 Roosevelt St Gary, Ind BEZUBKA, RICHARD 40 Burnside St Medford, Mass BRENNAN, JOHN 1600 Dahlia St Denver, Co BIANCHI, MELANI 373 O St SW Washington, DC BRESLAU, NANCY 5856 Marbury Rd Bethesda, Md BILLINGS, MARY 5703 Ridgefield Rd Washington, DC BRIDGMAN, ARTHUR 4306 Grimes Ave South Minneapolis, Mn BIRD, CAROLAN 11 56 Commonwealth Ave Allston, Mass BRONSKI, EVERETT 1 71 Deerfield Dr Trumbull, Ct BISHOP, STEPHEN 25 Northfield Rd Simsbury, Ct BROWN, JULIAN 47 Hayes St Cambridge, Mass BITTERMAN, PETER 2 Hallo St Edison, NJ BROWN, LINDA 808 W. University Ave Champaign, III BITTING, JONATHAN 41 8 Main St Pennsburg, Pa BLANDING, DOUGLAS 115 Keefe Blvd Painted Post, NY BLANDING, JONATHAN 1 Gaines Ave Greenlawn, NY BLAH, MARTIN 233 Lincoln Place Brooklyn, NY BLUMBERG, MARGARET 525 Roehampton Rd Hillsborough, Calif BOGART, BETSY 508 Three Oaks Bend Stone Mountain, Ga BROWN, SAMUEL 70 Raymond Rd Brockton, Mass BRUCE, ALAN Viale SS Pietro E Paolo 29 E.U.R. Rome, Italy BRUCE, ROBERT 30 Sutton Rd Needham, Mass BRUNER, SALLY 510 East 86 St New York, NY BRUNJES, DANA P.O. Box 23017 University Sr San Juan, Pu erto Rico BULGER, LINDA 86 Havre St Apt 2 East Boston, Mass BOIVIN, WILLIAM 16 Hutchinson Court Lynn, Mass BURKONS, CATHY 24760 Shaker Blvd Beachwood, Oh BOND, RODNEY 815 Gay St Westwood, Mass BURNHAM, DENNIS 179-39 Tudor Rd Jamaica Estates, NY BONGIOVANNI, JOANNE 221 Roycroft Rd Dewitt, NY BURNHAM, RUTH 91 Capen St. Medford, Mass BONHAM, AMY 2230 NE 46 St Seattle, Wa BURRELL, DONALD 298 Pond St S. Weymouth, Mass BOREK, ROBERT 34 Shawsheen Rd Bedford, Mass BUSH,LUCY 999 Green St Apt. 1504 San Francisco, Calif BORTNER, KENNETH 34 Edgemere Dr Albertson, NY BUSH, PETER 59 A Strathmere Rd Brookline, Mass BOURGOIN, RUSSELL 25 Central Ave Waterville, Me BUSHMAN, FRANK 93 Kendall St Franklin, NH BOWEN, GREGORY 23 Watch Tower La Old Greenwich, Ct BUTANEY, HIRO 81 Highland Ave Cambridge, Mass BOWEN, WILLIAM 11 Union St Bristol, NH BUTTERWORTH, SUSAN 42 Longview Dr Marblehead, Mass BOY, JOHN 8 NewHall Ave Saugus, Mass BYRD, DONALD 13021 123 Ave North Largo, Fla 217 STEPHEN BERECZ COMPANY Illustrated 75 Locke Triplex Mower. Capacity 2 acres per hour. INCORPORATED 625 MAIN STREET (Route 38) WILMINGTON, MASS. 01887 Dial 658-6160 Labor Saving, Heavy Duty, Large Capacity POWER MOWERS FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICE National Mowers Locke Mowers Snow Plows NEW ENGLAND ENGINEERING CO., INC. MEDFORD, MASSACHUSETTS Telephone 395-9130 Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Heating Ventilating WHITE FUEL Corporation New England ' s Leading Oil Supplier for Over Thirty Years BZURA, BRUCE 38 Crest Dr South Orange, NJ CAIN, ERIK 94 Franklin St Arlington, Mass CALHOUN, DWIGHT 212 Beacon St Boston, Mass CALLAHAN, JOHN 35 North Shore Ave Danvers, Mass CAMPBELL, DAVID 9A Warren Ave Woburn, Mass CAPONE, DONALD 36 South Irving St Revere, Mass CARLE, RONALD 385 Concord St Cresskill, NJ CARLON, STEVEN 124 Broadview Terr Pittsfield, Mass CARLSEN, CARL 1 30 Byrd Ave Bloomfield, NJ CARPENTER, JUDITH RFD 4 Old Center Rd St. Johnsbury, Vt CARTEN, ANN 1 8 Ionia St Newton, Mass CARTER, JEFFREY 283 Huntington St Shelton, Ct CARTER, LYON 69 Beaverbrook Lane Duxbury, Mass CARTER, STEPHEN 53 Stoner Dr West Hartford, Ct CHALLENDER, NANCY 1 5 Amherst Rd Chatham, NJ CHAMPION, ANNETTE 6 Rolfe Rd Lexington, Mass CHANG, NELSON 21 Pleasant Ave Saugus, Mass CHAPMAN, RICHARD 1821 Homestead Ave Bethlehem, Pa CHASE, CALVIN 1 20 Markham Place Little Silver, NJ CHASE, STEVEN 7A Falmouth St Saugus, Mass CHATTMAN, HARRIS 77 Gregory Ave West Orange, NJ CHAVKIN, JEFFREY 745 Evergreen Dr West Hempstead, NY CHERNEY, LINDA 2785 Broadway Cranston, Rl CHERNIACK, JAMES 1 49 Bunker Ave Meriden, Ct CHO, RENEE 1 3A 1 1 36 Fifth Ave New York, NY CHUDZIK, MARK 26 Woodycrest Dr East Hartford, Ct CHURBUCK, BRUCE 26 Indian Neck Rd Wareham, Mass CICOLARI, LOUIS 36 Lawrence St Medford, Mass CLAASSEN, MARY 7 Princes Gate London SW 7 CLAIRWOOD, RICHARD 73 Woodman Ave Norwich, Ct CLAPP, ALISON 20 Linden St Wellesley, Mass CLARK, WILLIAM 16 Stony Brook Rd Darien, Ct CLEMENT, MELISSA 2106 Ferry Rd Grand Island, NY CLEVER, DAVID 7310 S. Timberlane Dr Cincinnati, Oh COCHRAN, MARIE East Hill Rd Canton, Ct. CODERRE, PAUL 3627 Cosmos St Palm Beach Gardens, Fla COE, NEILE Bruce Park Drive Greenwich, Ct COFFIN, MEREDITH 1 Ocean Rd South Portland, Me COLBY, EDWIN Apt 2-13 186 Gardner St Arlington, Mass COLEMAN, JAY 104 Lyman Rd Milton, Mass COLE, RANSEY 925 Forest Rd New Haven, Ct COLMAN, WENDY 6 Sutton Court Great Neck, NY CONLEY, PAUL 10 Dearborn Rd Medford, Mass CONN, DEBORAH 3302 Breaux Drive Louisville, Ky CONNORS, ANTHONY 1 10 Los Montes Dr Burlingame, Calif CONWAY, CHARLES 31 Barndoor Hills Rd Granby, Ct CONWELL, ANNE 1016 Smiths Bridge Rd Wilmington, Delew COOK, FREDERICK American Embassy APO San Francisco, Calif COOPER, CELESTE 1 5 Lantern Lane Lexington, Mass COPITHORNE, ROBERT 27 Gabriele Dr East Norwich, NY COSTA, CYNTHIA 250 Grandview Way Charleroi, Pa COUGHLIN, DANIEL 873 E Squantum St North Quincy, Mass COUTTS, ROBERT 625 Westbury Ave Westbury, NY CRAM, CATHERINE 230 Golfview Rd Ardmore, Pa CRAWFORD, JOHN 22 Parker Ave Stoughton, Mass CUNDY, DONALD 14 Crockett St Rochester, NH CUNNINGHAM, INGERSOLL 471 Grove St Needham, Mass CURTIS, DOUGLAS 37 Phillips Ave Pigeon Cove, Mass CUTLER, MARC 100 Kingspoint Dr N. Miami Beach, Fla CYBORON, SHEILA 226 Morrison Ave W. Somerville, Mass DALRYMPLE, NANCY South Great Road Lincoln, Mass DALTON, JOHN 1 38 Joseph Ave Westfield, Mass DALTON, VICTORIA 37 Av Montoie Lausanne DAVIDSON, BARBARA 14 Ledgewood Rd West Roxbury, Mass DAY, JOHN Page Brook Rd Greene, NY DECKER, DONNA PO Box 102 Standish, Me DEERING, STEPHEN 640 Watertown St Newtonville, Mass DEKOSTER, BEATRIX 47 Caprice Dr Stamford, Ct DEMAREST, MICHELE 204 Atlantic Ave North Hampton, NH DEPEW, DONALD 1 350 Putnam Ave Plainfield, NJ DER, KENNETH 28 Martin St Medford, Mass DEREMER, KATHLEEN 22 Lenox Rd Derry, NH DERY, PATRICIA 31 Hillside Ave Stoneham, Mass DESJARDINS, JOHN 5 Meade St Nashua, NH DETROY, DOUGLAS 128 W. Clinton Ave Tenafly, NJ DEVEREAUX, MARJORIE 3 Cardinal Dr Woodstock, NY DEXTER, BARRY 10 Greystone Rd West Hartford, Ct DIANA, RICHARD 393 Broadway Hamden, Ct DICKOFF, MITCHELL 1485 Court Place Hewlett, NY DIMATTEO, MARYANNE 216 Lincold St Lexington, Mass DIXON, JOANN 15 N. Lawrence Ave Elmsford, NY DOERR, MARIA 3408 Zenith South Minneapolis, Minn DONAGHEY, MARGARET 902 E. Squantum St Quincy, Mass DONAHUE, ELLEN 1 1 Millford Dr Locust Valley, NY DONALD, SUSAN American Embassy APO San Francisco, Calif DONALDSON, RICHARD 38 Thomson Rd West Hartford, Ct DOPKEEN, JONATHAN 48 Hancock Hill Dr Worcester, Mass DRUMMOND, MILDRED 155 Fairview Ave Brockton, Mass DRYSDALE, MARGARET 1921 24th St NW Washington, DC DULI, ANNE 145 Lowell St Somerville, Mass DUMPHY, WARREN 23 King Terr Beverly, Mass DUNHAM, CHELLISE 2142 St. Paul St Rochester, NY DYER, SHARON 1 3 Demar Rd Lexington, Mass EADY, BRENDA 2255 N W 165 St Miami, Fla EASON, GREGG 81 Hancock Hill Dr Worcester, Mass EDELSTEIN, ANDREW RR 1 Box 3 36A Evergreen, Colo EDGECOMB, GLENN 60 Benjamin St Warwick, Rl EDWARDS, ROBERT 88 Indian Memorial Dr South Yarmouth, Mass EHRLICH, CAROL 145 S Main St Pennington, NJ EIKE, KATHRYN 84 Tumey Rd Fairfield, Ct EKIERT, GEORGE 16 Walnut St West Hempstead, NY ELBOW, MARGARET 41 Fernbank Ave Delmar, NY ENGELHARDT, RICHARD 68 Pool Rd North Haven, Ct EPSTEIN, DAVID 71 Hillsdale Rd Medford, Mass 219 Congratulations From TULSA INDUSTRIES, LIMITED Medford and Meriden and Cambridge, Mass. New Haven, Conn. San Francisco, Calif. Tucson, Ariz Cleveland, Ohio Potomac, Md. Nairobi, Kenya forward— the best years are ahead THE CENTURY PAPER COMPANY, INC. BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS 02112 RICHARD WHITE SONS, INC. Contractors 70 Rowe Street Auburndale, Massachusetts Telephone 332-9500 FURBUSH SHUTE Apothecaries A. B. Hawkins, Reg. Mgr. 1153 Broadway, Somerville, Mass. “Courtesies Extended to Students of Tufts University” BIG DIPPER COFFEE HOUSE DO-NUTS MUFFINS 346 Boston Avenue, Medford, Mass. FIRST CHOICE IN PAINT J yanize CARROLL ' S Fine Foods a Tradition 7:00 Am to 2:00 Am 89 Main St. Medford Sq. ERICKSON, PETER 432 Chatham St Cambridge, Mass ETTENHEIMER, KAREN 255 Lakewood Dr Bloomfield, Mich EVANS, BARBARA 27 Revere Beach Pkwy Chelsea, Mass EWING, DAVID 3316 Elsmere Rd Shaker Heights, Oh FANG, BERNARD 5 Shady Hill Square Cambridge, Mass FARMER, CARL 95 Clifton St Malden, Mass FARNSWORTH, KEITH 8 Merrill St Colebrook, NH FARRAR, WILLIAM 34 Broad St Guilford, Ct FERGUSON, JACQUELINE 10024 Reddick Dr Silver Spring, Md FERNOW, LESLEY 63 Winthrop Dr Riverside, Ct FIORE, JOAN 720 Orangeburg Rd River Vale, NJ FISHER, JANE 2242 Lincoln Park West Chicago, III FISTORI, PHILLIP 72 Circuit Rd S. Weymouth, Mass FLAHERTY, MARIE 4 Fourth St Lexington, Mass FLAM, ABBY 1409 Northcrest Dr Silver Spring, Md FLATTERY, JOHN 965 Franklin St Melrose, Mass FLETCHER, CRAIG Mill Brook Lane Southington, Ct FLYNN, BRENDA 46 Windsor St Everett, Mass FLYNN, TIMOTHY 60 Gilbert St Marshfield, Mass FOLEY, ALAN Apt. 14B Tuxedo Mt View Tuxedo, NY FORD, KATHLEEN 59 Hughes St Plainsville, Ct FORD, REGINA 201 Weld St West Roxbury, Mass FOSTER, MARY 6848 S Constance Ave Chicago, III FOTI, ROBERT 1 24 Flint St Lynn, Mass FOULDS, RICHARD 2 Bancroft St Lynnfield, Mass FOWLER, JOHN 58 Cody Dr Stamford, Ct FOWLKES, GERALD 717 Girard St NW Washington DC FOX, JAMES Old Hawleyville Rd Bethel, Ct FRAIR, JANET 236 River Dr Hadley, Mass FRANCOIS, GERMAIN 26 Edgecomb Ave New York, NY FRANSEEN, ELIZABETH Atwater Rd Springfield, Mass FRANK, JUDITH 1 7 Hendrie Dr Old Greenwich, Ct FRATELLO, JAMES 20 Marathon St Arlington, Mass FROMMER, DANIEL 39 Whittemore Rd Framingham, Mass FUSS, SYLVIA R D 2 Allentown, Pa GAGOSIAN, WARREN 555 High St W. Medford, Mass GALLAGHER, SUSAN 18 Hillsdale Rd Medford, Mass GARABRANT, DAVID 1 27 Jefferson Ave Westfield, NJ GARROTT, W. RILEY 13115 Estelle Rd Wheaton, Md GEFFNER, ANN 7 Keniston Rd Lynnfield, Mass GEOFFROY, NICOLE 19 BRD De Montmorency Paris 16, France GELLER, SANFORD 42 Noll Terrace Clifton, NJ GENTRY, JOHN 46 Woodlawn Circle Marshfield, Mass GEORGE, KENNETH 8 Broadview Ave Madison, NJ GERASIMOW, ALEXANDER 181 Hampshire St Indian Orchard, Mass GERMESHAUSEN, NANCY 240 Highland St Weston, Mass GERSTEIN, PAMELA 23 Leicester St Brookline, Mass GERTSMAN, JANICE 6600 Kildare Apt. 1710 Cote St Luc Can GESSOW, LISA 730B Durbin Terrace Bethesda, Md GIBBS, CRISPIN 105 Orchard St Somerville, Mass GIBBS, DONALD 1 368 Longview Ave Peekskill, NY GIBSON, GEOFFREY 155 E. 50th St Plaza 50 Apt. 7D New York, NY GIFFORD, CYNTHIA 24 Elton St Providence, Rl GIGGEY, MICHAEL Rt 1 Box 131 Orrington, Me GILBERT, STEVEN R.D. 2 Charlotte Drive Lebanon, NJ GILMAN, GARY 791 Stafford Ave Bristol, Ct GINZBERG, JONATHAN 397 Furnace Dock Rd Peekskill, NY GIROLAMO, WILLIAM 28 Lyman Terrace Waltham, Mass GIRSCHICK, DAVID 150 Houston Terrace Stamford, Ct GITTLEMAN, RICHARD 36 Ethan Dr Murray Hill, NJ GLASER, JANICE BB 301-2 1400 Washington Ave Albany, NY GLASSANOS, ANDREW 33 Kittredge Rd Pittsfield, Mass GLASSANOS, PHILIP 33 Kittredge Rd Pittsfield, Mass GLUCKMAN, WILLIAM 251 Main St Westport, Ct GODOY, CARLOS 5 Wilson Rd Lexington, Mass GODY, DALE 3402 Kenilworth Dr Chevy Chase, Md GOFFIO, CHRISTINE 3 Sprain Valley Rd Scarsdale, NY GOLD, PETER 1 1 Park Place New York, NY GOLDSTEIN, JILL 2426 East 28th St Brooklyn, N.Y.C., NY GOLDSTEIN, NANCY 4709 Wythe Ave Richmond, Va GOLDSTEIN, PAUL 102 Sutton Dr Berkeley Heights, NJ GOODMAN, NANCY 300 Edwards St Roslyn Heights, NY GORDON, ALEXANDER 27 Bailey View Terr Mt. Kisco, NY GORDON, HARVEY 59 Meadowview Rd Milton, Mass GORDON, MICHAEL 733 Brook Rd Milton, Mass GORDON, TRACEY 7Atlas Rd Braintree, Mass GORMAN, DAVID 237 Winchester St Brookline, Mass GOTSHALL, DAVID 1 235 Raymond Ave Bethlehem, Pa GREEN, MICHAEL 4 Copeland Rd Framingham, Mass GREENE, SUSAN 10 Patterson St Providence, Rl GREENBERG, STEVEN 137 Glenhill Dr Rochester, NY GREENE, WILLIAM 323 Center St N Vienna, Va GREENVALL, PHILIP 29 West Point Rd Stony Creek, Ct GREGORY, GAIL 1 7 Lincoln St Melrose, Mass GREGORY, JAMES 1 94 Norotuck Ave Chicopee, Mass GREISMAN, GORDON 2 Macdonald PI Scarsdale, NY GREIST, A 16 Indian Head Rd Riverside, Ct GRETZ, KARL 284 Lowell St Somerville, Mass GREYSTONE, GENE 660 E. 1 7th St Brooklyn, NY GRIFFIN, PAUL 5702 Ogden Rd Washington, DC GRIMES, BRUCE 83 John Carver Rd Reading, Mass GRISWOLD, SCOTT 10 Bellevue Rd Wellesley Hills, Mass GROSS, CYNTHIA 29 Bates Ave Winthrop, Mass GROSS, DONALD 4 Trim St Camden, Me GROVER, MARILYN 1 1 Highland Circle Hadley, Mass GUEYE, AFALL Rue 65-60 Guenle Tapee Dakar Senegal HADARY, JONATHAN 5405 Linden Ct Bethesda, Md HADGIS, ANNE 2565 Elm St Manchester, NH HALL, DAVID 95 Rock Maple Ave Hamilton, Mass HALL, SUSAN Fessenden School West Newton, Mass HALPERIN, MARK 15 Dickel Rd Scarsdale, NY HAMILTON, ROSLYN 827 River St Mattapan, Mass 221 HILLSIDE LIQUOR MART, INC. b t I Congratulations to the CLASS OF 1972 ESPRESSO PIZZA Medford Hilside Choice Imported Wines and Beer 323 Boston Avenue Medford, Mass. 395-5020 Luther Witham, Inc. Caterers 441 Chatham Street Lynn, Mass. 01 902 592-5581 Compliments of F. D. SPERRITT LUMBER CO. 50 Albany, Street Cambridge, Massachussetts r POTHIER BROTHERS PRINTERS OFFSET LITHOGRAPHERS AND PRINTERS 21 Locust St. Medford, Massachusetts J. Larry Pothier HILLSIDE CLEANERS 3 hours Service — Free Pickup Service Same Day Shirt Service Telephone: EX 6-2929 334 Boston Ave. Medford HAMMOND, G EVAN 21 Maple St Bristol, Vt HANLON, MARY 7 Lee Avenue Scituate, Mass HANSEN, RICHARD 35 Storrs Heights Storrs, Ct HARRIS, CHRISTOPHER 98 Colonial PI New Rochelle, NY HARRIS, STUART 39-06 Kramer PI Fair Lawn, NJ HARRISON, JOAN 709 West Main St Cheshire, Ct HARRISON, WILLIAM 54 Heritage Dr West Yarmouth, Mass HECK, JOHN 100 Welford Rd Lutherville, Md HEGLAND, RICHARD 371 Toorak Rd Stnyarra, Austrailia HENDRICH, JAMES 67 Highland Ave. Apt. 3 Cambridge, Mass HERBERT, MIRANDA 415 St. Cbir Grosse Pointe, Mich HERING, JOANNE 8 Campbell Rd Wayland, Mass HERR, JOHN 1351 Foxcroft Dr Lancaster, Pa HESS, MICHAEL 81 37 University Dr St Louis, MO HESSION, JAMES 16 Hillside Ave Winchester, Mass HICKORY, GORDON 234 Taft St Upton, Mass HICKS, ALAN 46 Stillman Rd Lynnfield, Mass HICKS, SUSANNE 8222 Kingsbrook 548 Houston, Tex HIGGINBOTTOM, FAIR 32 Twin Lakes Lane Riverside, Ct HIGGS, JEFFREY 22 Wyngate Rd Greenwich, Ct HIGHT, MARGERY 3717 Porter St NW Washington, DC HINMAN, SYLVIA 150 Lowell St Somerville, Mass HINTLIAN, VARNEY 416 Mystic St Arlington, Mass HIRSHBERG, STEVEN 83 Longview St Haverhill, Mass HOFFMAN, WINIFRED 5 Shore Rd Chatham, NY HOLMES, BRUCE 1 7 Rich St Mattapan, Mass HOLMES, GLORIA 1 1 97 North Lockwood Ave East Cleveland, Oh HOLT, LINDA 25 Eastford Rd Auburn, Mass HOSMER, HILLARY 9 Rangeley Rd Winchester, Mass HOWARD, CYNTHIA 38 Parker Rd Wakefield, Mass HOWARD, T. 35 Morris Lane Scarsdale, NY HUNTER, JOHN 349 E. 58th St New York, NY HURD, KENNETH 1217 Via Barranca La Jolla, Calif HUSSAIN, OSAMA 2940 Tilden St Washington, DC HUSTVEDT, NANCY 5105 Phillip Rd Annandale, Va HYDE, BARBARA 42 Thorndike Somerville, Mass HYLAND, JOHN 107 Pond St S. Weymouth, Mass IGLAUER, PEGGY 6346 Pershing St Louis, Mo ISAACS, KENNETH 36 Whitman Rd Waltham, Mass ISSENMAN, TINA 21 Gordon Crescent Montreal, Canada JACKINS, BARBARA 24 Hight St Medford, Mass JACKSON, JOHN P.O. Box 16 Mt. Holly, NJ JACKSON, ROBERTA 41 Sylvan Ave Unionville, Ct JACOBSEN, ROBERT 15 Star Rd Cape Eliabeth, Me JACOBSON, MARK 1953 Piedmont Circle NE Atlanta, Ga JAMIOL, PHILLIP 15 Sunset Rd Cambridge, Mass JANCIN, BRUCE 7815 Fulbright Court Bethesda, Md JANELLO, JACKIE 144 Benefit St Providence, Rl JANIS, CHRISTINE 1 396 Quincy Shore Dr Quincy, Mass JANOWITZ, SUSAN 234 Cambridge Ave Englewood, NJ JARVIS, AVERILL 63 Lincoln St Hingham, Mass JALENKO, JILL Haviland Rd Harrison, NY JOHNSON, DAVID 4491 Grapevine Swing Copeley, Oh JOHNSON, ROBERT 1 77 Tobey Ave Windsor, Ct JOHNSON, WILLIAM 43 Burditt Ave Hingham, Mass JONAS, ALFRED 6400 Pine Tree Dr Cir Miami Beach, Fla JONES, SUSAN 2 06 Avenue De Messidor Brussels, Belgium JORDAN, ERIC 758 Main St Lynnfield, Mass JOSEPH, CHARLES 1507 N. Wood Ave Linden, NJ KABACK, WAYNE 1 Redwood Rd White Plains, NY KASPARIAN, ALAN Hickleberry Hill Lincoln, Mass KATZ, STUART 1 324 Auerbach Ave Hewlett Long Island, NY KAUFMAN, MARSHA 38 Felsmere Ave Pawtucket, Rl KAWALEK, JEFFREY 8 Merrywood Dr W. Orange, NJ KAYSER, LESLIE 250 Ridgeway Rd Weston, Mass KELLER, MARJORIE 3020 Old Yorktown Rd Yorktown Hts, NY KELLEY, HENRY 280 Smyth Rd Manchester, NH KENDIG, CHERYL 20 Sherwood Dr Nashua, NH KERBEL, RICHARD 3 Agnes Circle Ardsley, NY KERR, SUSAN 16 Random Rd Englewood, Colo KESSLER, WILLIAM 215 South Lincoln Ave Oakhurst, NJ KETCHUM, RICHARD 1 307 Glenwood Blvd Schenectady, NY KETTEL, HARRY 16 Second St Rumson, NJ KILMARTIN, MARK 87 Riverside Dr Denville, NJ KIM, JOHN Hospital Dr Wore, County Hspt. Boylston, Mass KINDL, EILEEN 1 8 Bidwell Pkwy Bloomfield, Ct KINNEY, DAWN RFD 1 River Rd Woolwich, Me KIRK, HARVEY 14 Stratford La Hohokus, NJ KLEIMAN, EDWARD 21 Whitney Rd Newton, Mass KLEIN, MICHELE 281 1 Arlington Rd Louisville, Ky KLEIN, FREDERIC 50 Fonda Rd Rockville Centre, NY KLINGER, RANDY 19 Trent Rd Overbrook Hills, Pa KODES, DIANE 27 Meacham Rd Somerville, Mass KODZIS, ANTHONY 21 University Ave Medford, Mass KOLBJORNSEN, SUSAN 1527 Summit St Sioux City, Iowa KOLKER, GARY 3045 Davenport St NW Washington, DC KONNERTH, KAREN 9 Little Harbor Rd Woods Hole, Mass KOUROUBACALIS, BRIAN 85 Brickford St Lynn, Mass KRAINSKI, WALTER 2 Ibbetson St Somerville, Mass KRAMER, DOUGLAS 2705 Dumbarton St NW Washington, DC KROGH, BRANDON 20 Revere Lane Glastonbury, Ct KRZYS, ROBERT Shaker Rd Somersville, Ct KUNZ, CHRISTINE 176 Beech St Rosalindale, Mass LABRECQUE, LAURENCE 1 32 Columbia Blvd Waterbury, Ct LABUZ, JAMES 741 West Diamond Ave Hazleton, Pa LACEY, PATRICIA 6 Bellevue Terr W. Perth, Australia LADD, BRIAN 27 Newington Rd Greenland, NH LAHITINEN, GLENN 60 Simonds St Fitchburg, Mass LANDBREGE, ANN 250 Oak St 2H Ridgewood, NJ LANE, LISA 7721 N. Lake Dr Milwaukee, Wise 223 STONE FORSYTH COMPANY Cambridge and Westwood Mass. “Complete paper service and Environmental Control’’ 329-3100 ONE-STOP travel service 30 Riverside Ave. Medford Planning a Caribbean cruise? A trip to Europe . . . Mexico . . . Hawaii? You can compare them all under one roof at our office! We’re agents for steamships, airlines, hotels, sightseeing companies, throughout the world. TRAVEL UNLIMITED, INC. 395-6500 HILLSIDE HARDWARE PAINT CO. “where everyone at Tufts buys and saves” We match any paint color Fraternity Needs Fine Wallpapers Shades and Blinds For rapid service call 395-0712 BUILDERS SPECIALTY and HARDWARE CORPORATION Congratulations to the CLASS OF 1972 Lumber—Doors—Windows—Builders Hardware 26 Weston Avenue JAY’S DELI Teele Square Fine Foods Somerville, Masachusetts 666-3000 LANE, NANCY 1 7 Pine Rd North Attleboro, Moss LANI, FRANK 2310 Hughes Ave New York, NY LANNEY, NICHOLAS 80 Waldemor Ave East Boston, Mass LANOIX, WINIFRED 1 Henri Spiess Geneva, Switzerland LARSON, ERIC 115 Wilson Rd Bedford, Mass LAVIN, JUDITH 107 Bartlett St Somerville, Mass LAWLER, JUDITH 332 Kenyon St Fall River, Mass LEACH, LAUREL 1 77 Perkins Melrose, Mass LEBOEUF, DENIZE 1 6 George St Medford, Mass LEIBOFF, ROY 40-18 Marie Court Fair Lawn, NJ LEIKKANEN, MARSHA 73 Narrows Rd Westminster, Mass LEIPHART, MARLENE Smallbrook Lane York, Pa LEMOS, PETER 6706 Hazel Lane McLean, Va LERMAN, LORI 60 Wadsworth St Apt. Cambridge, Mass LEUPOLD, ROBERT 3535 Citrus Ave Walnut Creek, Calif LEVINE, LAWRENCE 47 Edge wood Rd Hartsdale, NY LEVISON, JUDITH 224 Thornden St South Orange, NJ LEVY, HARRY 1 0 Centennial Ave Revere, Mass LEVY, RICHARD 43 Glenbrook Rd Monsey, NY LEWENAUER, JAMES 8 Patricia Terr Lexington, Mass LEWIS, MARK 143 School St Marshfield, Mass LIBBY, LOUIS 97 Waterside Lane West Hartford, Ct LICHTER, ERIC 6 Horseguard Lane Scarsdale, NY LIEBERMAN, LESLIE 1 269 Dahlia Lane Wantagh, NY LIGHTFOOT, PETER 42-42 Colden St Flushing, NY LILLIEN, LAURA 25 Gill Lane Iselin, NJ LISCOMB, KATHLYN 59 Winslow Ave Somerville, Mass LITTLE, THOMAS 9 Countryside Rd Fairport, NY LIU, JOHN 1 87 Lawrence Rd Medford, Mass LLOYD, JUDITH 474 Princeton Ave Palmerton, Pa LONGAN, KATHLEEN 51 Ibbetson St Somerville, Mass LOPORTO, NANCY Hilltop Circle Brookside, NJ LOTTERO, JANET 33 Sumner St E. Walpole, Mass LOVETTI, ANTHONY 89 Silver St West Springfield, Mass LUCHT, MARILYN Dogwood Lane Greenwich, Ct LYELL, ELIZABETH 1 Montvale Rd Worcester, Mass LYNCH, ROBERT 302 Fifth Ave Hackettstown, NJ LYON, EDWARD 76 Mill St Naugatuck, Ct MACKEY, PAULA 1 5A 14 Tallmadge Gate Setauket, NY MACLEOD, STEVEN 6322 Lake Shore Dr San Diego, Calif MACMILLAN, SCOTT 435 Knickerbocker Rd Tenafly, NJ MACPHEE, BRUCE 38 Lenox Ave Norwalk, Ct MAGNELLO, CHERIE 1 1 Forest Hills Dr West Hartford, Ct MAHONEY, JAMES Park Avenue Contoocook, NJ MAISTER, WARREN 1 89 W. Wyoming Ave Melrose, Mass MALINS, ERIC 199 Pleasant St Newton Centre, Mass MALLORY, JOHN 32 Grove St Winchester, Mass MALONE, MARK 3 Victoria Circle Norwood, Mass MANALY, LINDA 175 Fox wood Rd Stamford, Ct MANIKIAN, CARL 22 Glenwood Terr Lynn, Mass MARCUS, MERRILL 1 7 Carol Ann Rd Peabody, Mass MARK, DENIS 70 W. 95th St New York, NY MARKLE, PENELOPE 318 Beacon St Somerville, Mass MARKS, PATRICIA 6464 Caballero Coral Gables, Fla MARTIN, ROBERT 64 Ash St Weston, Mass MARTONE, CHARLES 6 Burnside St Nashua, NH MARX, KATHY 9219 Fox Meadow Lane Potomac, Md MASESSA, MAUREEN 15 Belmont St Methuen, Mass MASON, MARTHA 8 Earl St Norwalk, Ct MASSENGALE, BEACHER 15340 Alonzo Ave Cleveland, Oh MASUMIAN, GEORGE 56 Edgars Lane Hastongs on Hudson, NY MATERNE, RUSSELL 1 8 Pasture Lane Darien, Ct MATTESON, DOREEN 26 Morrison Ave Wethersfield, Ct McArthur, marilyn 5 Ethelton Rd N. White Plains, NY McAULAY, CARL 576 Winthrop Ave New Haven, Ct McCALL, DEBRA Robert G McCall R D 1 Renfrew, Pa McDo well, dean 14710 Deepwood Lane Nakesville, Va McEWEN, JOSEPH 2709 North Kent Rd Broomall, Pa McGRAW, HAROLD Watch Tower Rd Darien, Ct McKEE, CATHERINE Field Point Park Greenwich, Ct McLaughlin, daniel 3 Littles Court Merrimac, Mass McMAHON, THOMAS 1 24 Ridgewood Rd W. Hartford, Ct McNITT, BARBARA 92 Curtis St W. Somerville, Mass McNITT, JAMES 697 Steamboat Rd Greenwich, Ct MEACHAM, MATT Richardson House Hres Tufts U. Medford, Mass MEACHAM, TERI Richardson House Hres Tufts U. Medford, Mass MELLER, JEFFREY 275 N. Bedford Rd Chappaqua, NY MELLO, WILLIAM 11 Roman Rd Woburn, Mass MERCURIO, PAUL 23 Old Forge Lane Sudbury, Mass MERGUERIAN, H. 95 Merton Village Dr Mattapan, Mass MERTZ, MERLEN 575 West End Ave New York, NY MERROW, RALPH 746 Lowell St Peabody, Mass METH, RICHARD 1 20 Wilshire Dr Crawford, NJ MIECZKOWSKI, JAMES 25 Boswell St Stratford, Ct MILLER, ANNE 31 1 Westland Ave Columbus, Oh MILLER, JAY 21 23 Greenleaf Elkhart, Ind MILLER, MARIAN 7449 Deep Run Apt 1 1 0 Birmingham, Mich MILLER, MICHAEL 1 9 Brookledge Roxbury, Mass MITCHELL, EMILY 1 51 Merritt Place New Hartford, NY MITCHELL, PETER 37 Avon St Wakefield, Mass MITTRY, PATRICIA 2173 West Live Oak Dr Los Angeles, Calif MOFFITT, MARGARET 87 Ridge Rd Madison, Ct MOISUK, WILLIAM 1 6 Lynn St Colchester, Ct MOLVAR, PHILIP 14 Faxon St Melrose, Mass MONESTERSKY, JULIE 2626 Hawthorne Ave Union, NJ MOORE, DAMON 1 0 Wilson St Saugus, Mass MORRIS, ALFRED 4 East 72nd St New York, NY MORRISON, OWEN 1801 Courtney Dr North Augusta, SC MORSE, MARY R D 4 Red Lane Danville, Pa MORTON, GAIL 1 East Providence Rd Yeadon, Pa 225 WELL DONE AND GOOD LUCK! STEVENS STUDIOS A Complete Photographic Service MOSNY, SUSAN 645 Reed Rd N. Dartmouth, Mass MUENZER, BARBARA 4311 Bonniebrook Toledo, Oh NABEL, WILLIAM 994 Tolland St E. Hartford, Ct NAGEL, ELIZABETH 27 Bow Rd Wayland, Mass NASH, GEORGE 1295 Salvia St Stratford, Ct NAST, BARBARA 6350 N. Santa Monica Blvd Milwaukee, Wise NAURISON, AMY 5 Falcon PI Huntington, NY NELLIS, LINDA 1 92 Briarwood Loop Oak Brook, III NELSON, DAVID 2301 Pemberton Toledo, Oh NESTLER, ERIC 1 836 Summit Ave Madison, Wise NEWELL, MARGARET 584 Summit Dr Orange, Ct NG, RICHARD 7 Leicester St Brighton, Mass NICHOLSON, NANCY 1 35 Oldbury Dr Westgate Farms Wilmington, Del NIGHBERT, KENNETH 69 Mill Rd Durham, NH NISSAN, ROBERT 908 Northern Blvd Baldwin, NY NITTOLI, ANDREW Rte 25A Box 1710 Laurel Hollow, NY NORWOOD, STEPHEN 6409 Marjory Lane Bethesda, Md O’BRIEN, LOUISE 382 Lovell St East Boston, Mass O ' CONNELL, KATHLEEN 81 Pine St Malden, Mass O ' CONNELL, REGINA 1 7 Howard Dr Huntington, NY O ' CONNOR, CAROL 24 Oneida Rd Winchester, Mass OKOLOTOWICZ, ALAN 40 Ridgefield St Meriden, Ct OPPENHEIMER, KENNETH 3219 Timberfield Lane Baltimore, Md ORANSKY, ALAN 260 HEywood Ave Orange, NJ ORKIN, PETER 1 9 Goodnough Rd Chestnut Hill, Mass OTUE, NKECHI 270 Harvard St Cambridge, Mass OWEN, ANNE 300 Pinewood St Houston, Tex PALIOCA, CHARLES 228 Grove St Wellesley, Mass PANCIERA, CHRISTINE 361 Long Hill Rd Wallingford, Ct PAINTSIDIS, HARALAMPUS 1 1 8 Union Park St Boston, Mass PARENT, WILLIAM 65 Warren Ave Lewiston, Me PARKER, JOHN 6914 Chaucer St Pittsburgh, Pa PARKER, SUZANNE 1210 Evergreen Ave Plainfield, NJ PARR, CAROLINE 140 Bierys Bridge Rd Bethlehem, Pa PATINKIN, HUGH 6735 Constance Chicago, III PAULSON, ROBERT 16545 NE 80th St Redmond, Wash PEAL, RHONDA 3507 Fulton St Washington, DC PEARSON, RONALD 2145 Niskayuna Dr Schenectady, NY PEARTREE, GUY 89 Hausch Blvd Roosevelt, NY PECK, JAMES 23 Carver St Brandon, Vt PECUE, BARBARA 4 Tracy St Montpelier, Vt PELIS, STEPHEN 237 North Main South Deerfield, Mass PENDLETON, MARCIA 14 Hovey St North Quincy, Mass PERLSTADT, MARCI 203 Bromfield House Tufts U Medford, Mass PERRY, KAREN 87 Ashbrook PI Moraga, Calif PERRY, LIZABETH 9 Whiffle Tree Lane New Canaan, Ct PESSIN, JANET 50 Overhill Rd New Rochelle, NY PETERSON, THOMAS 1525 W. Greenlee St Tuscon, Ariz PHELPS, SUSAN 3729 Dauphine Ave Northbrock, III PIAZZA, JAMES 15 Johnson Rd Winchester, Mass PIEGORSCH, WOLFGANG 1 9 So Longfello St Hartsdale, NY PIKAART, EDWARD 45 Gold Blvd Baskingridge, NJ PIKER, LOUIS 28 Ashland St Rear Medford, Mass PITARRA, GEORGE 48 Jerome Dr Farmingdale, NY Pin, MARTHA 32 Runnymede Rd Chatam, NJ PIXLEY, JOHN 52 Fenway Dr Hamden, Ct PLICH, DAVID 7 Manila St Worcester, Mass PLOUFFE, ROBERT 36 Gifford St Brockton, Mass POLANSKY, MICHAEL 15 Westland Dr Tewksbury, Mass POLLACK, JANET B 13010 Carney St Wheaton, Md POLLAK, CHRISTOPHER 5 Round Pond Rd Westport, Ct POMAR, MARK 37 Fletcher PI Burlington, Vt PRESENT, ALLAN 6430 Wenonga Terr Shawnee Mission, Kan PRESTON, ELIZABETH 35 Ellis St Fitchburg, Mass PRUINER, PAUL 85 William St Worcester, Mass PUGH, REGINA 1 0 Hillside Ave Arlington, Mass QUILLARD, JUDITH 80 Asci Dr Pittsfield, Mass RABIDEAU, RENE 1 00 Barranca Rd Los Alamos, New Mexico RAISLER, RICHARD 227 Griffen Ave Scarsdale, NY RAPHAEL, DAVID 75 Loring Ave Providence, Rl RASH BA, HOWARD 49 Underhill Rd Hamden, Ct RATTNER, ANDREA 1 Holiday Dr Williston Park, NY RAWLINS, MAXINE 100 37 197th St Hollis, NY REDDY, DANIEL 41 Foxwood Rd Stamford, Ct REED, DAVID 581 Sasco Hill Rd Southport, Ct REGAS, PETER 50 Harlan Circle Brockton, Mass REID, BARBARA 26 Wooster St Gloversville, NY REID, BRANDON Ophir Farm Purchase, NY REILLY, PATRICK 4 Croyden St New Hyde Park, NY REITMAN, BRUCE 590 Ocean Ave Brooklyn, NY RESNICK, SUZANNE 4 Bancroft St Lynnfield, Mass REYNOLDS, ROBERT 284 Great Rd Apt. D-l Acton, Mass RICE, NANCY 600 Manor Lane Cheyenne, Wyom RICHARDSON, SHIRLEY 11 9 Methuen Rd Dracut, Mass RIDLON, SCOTT 67 South Dr Bridgewater, Mass RING, MICHAEL 160 West Union St East Bridgewater, Mass RING, STEVEN 1611 Chinook Trail Maitland, Fla ROBERGE, JOHN 2 Williams PI Wallingford, Ct ROBERTS, NANCY 1215 Fleetwood Rd Rydal, Pa ROBERTSON, NORMAN Box 1025 Litchfield, Ct ROBERTSON, SUSAN 24 Bradford Rd Watertown, Mass ROBINSON, ANNE 83 Main St Hyannis, Mass ROBINSON, DAVID 166 Salem St N. Andover, Mass ROBINSON, SHARON 19 Highview Terr Madison, NJ ROCKOFF, LEONARD 101 Francis St Everett, Mass ROHDE, CARL 25 Flint St Marblehead, Mass ROOTBERG, RUTH 1215 Belleforte Oak Park, III ROSEN, NED 30 High Ridge Dr Newington, Ct ROSEN, NINA One E. Prk Dr Paterson, NJ ROSENFELD, LYNDA 371 Jackson Ave W. 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Windsor Ave Brightwaters, NY SCHIFF, GORDON 61 2 Mulford Evanston, III SCHLESINGER, SUSAN 236 Broadway Cambridge, Mass SCHMIDT, KENNETH 20 Professors Row Medford, Mass SCHONFELD, VICKI 49 Cypress St Tenafly, NJ SCHULTER, MICHAEL 3716 Broadlawn Dr Los Angeles, Calif SCHWAB, BRENDA 1 6 Converse Ave Newton, Mass SCHWARTZ, ANDREW 207 Olive Ave Lawrence, Mass SCHWARTZSTEIN, ARTHUR 1 86 Harding Dr South Orange, NJ SCHWARTZWALD, MYRA 4-21 Brennan Court Fair Lawn, NJ SCIAUDONE, JOHN 2500 E Las Olas Blvd Ft. Lauderdale, Fla SCULL, BRUCE 101 Warren St Needham, Mass SEABREEZE, WILLIAM 1 2703 Cedarbrook Lane Laurel, Md SEAMANS, CAROLINE 29 Bowdoin St Cambridge, Mass SEDGEWICK, JOHN 100 Horne St Dover, NH SEIBERT, MILDRED 29 Winter St Malden, Mass SEIDNER, MICHAEL 70 Reservoir Ave Riveredge, NJ SEPERSKY, ROBERT 1059 Ashley Dr Valley Stream, NY SEXTON, MARGARET 1 4 Rangeley Rd Winchester, Mass SHAPIRO, FAITH 21 Fairland St Lexington, Mass SHAPIRO, JOANNE 83 Rutgers PI River Edge, NJ SHAW, CHARLES 1 8 Oak wood Lane Rumson, NJ SHAW, PAUL 8309 Whittier Blvd Bethesda, Md SHEA, MARGARET 5 Heritage Dr Bedford, NH SHERMAN, SHELLEY RD 1 Box 341 Barto, Pa SHERRY, STEPHEN 62 Griswold Dr West Hartford, Ct SHICK, BRUCE 766 Main St Newington, Ct SHOUKIMAS, GREGORY 26 Pheasant Hill Dr West Hartford, Ct SHUFRO, MARJORIE 38 Bennington St Needham, Mass SIDHOUM, LINDA 166 20 20th Ave Whitestone, NY SILFEN, ELLEN 20 East 9th St New York, NY SIMON, CATHY 1 1 85 Park Ave New York, NY SIMON, EVELYN 23 Hoxsey St Williamstown, Mass SIMPSON, JAMES 33 Irvine Rd Old Greenwich, Ct SINGER, JUDITH 1 6A Forest St Cambridge, Mass SKERRY, PETER 21 Roosevelt Rd Medford, Mass SKINNER, DAVID 2033 Wheeler Ave Balitmore, Md SLATTERY, JOHN 21 1 Wood Ave Hyde Park, Mass SLETZINGER, LAWRENCE 1 35 Rockview Ave No. Plainfield, NJ SLOAN, PAUL 40 Market St Cambridge, Mass SMALLS, NORMA 6 Brady PI White Plains, NY SMITH, CAROL 1 55 Alpine Dr Rochester, NY SMITH, CYNTHIA 1711 Evergreen Rd Anchorage, Ky SMITH, DEBORAH 32 Pearson Rd Somerville, Mass SMITH, PETER 21 Sage Park Rd Windsor, Ct SNIDER, PAUL 57 Clyde St Chestnut Hill, Mass SOMADELIS, MICHAEL 25 Ridgewood Dr Auburn, Mass SONENBERG, JANET 367 Edward Ave Woodmere, NY SONNTAG, WILLIAM Birchwood Terr Middlebury, Ct SOULE, MARTHA 74 Albert St Melrose, Mass SPADAFORA, WILLIAM 122 Lynn Fells Parkway Saugus, Mass SPADARO, CAROL 132 Scituate St Arlington, Mass SPAGNOLI, CATHY 28 Whitfield Rd Somerville, Mass SPEAGLE, EMILY 223 Snowden Lane Princeton, NJ SPIEGEL, SHOSHANA 2501 Lafayette Dr Univ. 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Newton, Mass WOLFE, WILLIAM 24 Billingsleg Dr Livingston, NJ WOLFF, BRADLEY II Suzanne Rd Lexington, Mass WONG, KARYN 56 Addington Rd Brookline, Mass WONG, SAMUEL 1 60 Boundary St 2 F Hong Kong YACHIMSKI, STEPHEN 1 41 Highland St Avon, Mass YAGGY, CAROL 506 East Rosemary St Chapel Hill, NC YAMARTINO, ERNEST 22 Daniel Rd Wakefield, Mass YANOFSKY, FAYE 81 Montrose St Newton, Mass YARROW, STEVEN 1201 Stratford Ave Melrose Park, Pa YEE, HON 242 Shawmut Ave Boston, Mass YORMAK, STEVEN 638 Colfax Place North Woodmere, NY YOUTZ, KATHRYN 169 Glenwood Ave Leonia, NJ ZACKRISON, PETER 20 Tealwood Dr Creve Coeur, Mo ZELIN, MARK 171 Stratford North Roslyn Heights, NY ZWERLING, ROBIN 278 Bedell Terrace West Hempstead, NY 231 We must do away with the absolutely specious no¬ tion that everybody has to earn a living . . . We keep inventing jobs because of this false idea that every¬ body has to be employed at some kind of drudgery because, according to Malthusian-Darwinian theory, he must justify his right to exist . . . The true busi¬ ness of people should be to . . . think about whatever it was they were thinking about before somebody came along and told them they had to earn a living. —R. Buckminster Fuller 1 iMm I know a planet where there is a certain red-faced gentleman. He has never smelled a flower, he has never looked at a star, he has never loved anyone. He has never done anything in his life but add up fi¬ gures. And all day he says over and over, I am busy with matters of consequence . . . that makes his head swell with pride. But he is not a man—he is a mushroom. -The Little Prince 232 News in Review: 1971-72 JANUARY FTC proposes warning on phosphates Baltimore Colts win in Super Bowl Charles Manson found guilty in Tate killing Apollo 14 launched towards moon FEBRUARY FDA calls tuna safe Tufts continues Volpe suit Rolls Royce goes bankrupt Egypt agrees to peace pact with Israel Linguistics prof. Noam Chomsky speaks at Tufts on Indochina U.S. Capitol is bombed MARCH Firebombs ravage Fletcher offices Joe Frazier beats Muhammad Ali Supreme Court rules against selective conscientious objection Senate defeats SST funds Mulholland, Erickson receive tenure; Dallerygets negative decision Lieutenant Calley sentenced to life imprisonment Civil War erupts in East Pakistan Tufts Day Care Center opens APRIL Unemployment up to 6% U.S. ping pong team visits Red China Supreme Court upholds busing Daniel Moynihan, Eric Sevareid, Elie Abel, Fred Friendly attend dedication of Murrow Center at Fletcher 200,000 attend D.C. peace rally MAY D.C. police arrest 13,000 May Day demonstrators Paris Peace talks enter fourth year JUNE New York Times publishes Pentagon Papers Ohio ratifies 26th amendment, reducing voting age to 18 years of age JULY Nixon announces he will visit Red China U.S. War deaths are lowest in six years Bertrand Russell dies AUGUST Dollar stature weakened as gold prices soar Mayor Lindsay switches to Democratic Party Nixon orders 90-day wage price freeze SEPTEMBER Senator Muskie rules out black as running mate Supreme Justice Hugo Black dies OCTOBER Thieu wins 90% in one-man Vietnam presidential election UN admits Red China, expells Taiwan Senate rejects foreign aid bill Nixon announces New Economic Policy-Phase II Lawrence Ferlinghetti reads sings at Tufts NOVEMBER U.S. explodes underground H-bomb at Amchitka despite ecology warnings Dick Gregory, black comedian turned activist, speaks at Cousens Gym Nixon accelerates Vietnam troop withdrawals DECEMBER Tufts Observer ceases publication, again Total war erupts between India Pakistan Dollar devalued by 8.57% Former British PM Harold Wilson visits TU; attacks proposed Common Market entry JANUARY Nixon reveals he submitted secret peace plan to Hanoi Muskie, Humphrey, Wallace, among others, enter ' 72 race Cost of attending Tufts rises to $4,520 FEBRUARY Thirteen Catholic demonstrators killed in Northern Ireland by British troops North Hall gutted by fire California Supreme Court rules death penalty unconstitutional Nixon goes to Red China; talks with Mao, Chou En-lai 233 Danang I saw your painted pretty whore ' s face along the dingy shacked dusty road traversed by ammo trucks. You came with me Money I only make tee-tee Rest of time I stay with you. We go to my camp on South China Sea sand. Soon you say money no matter (I give you smiles and food) And together we stay lying close cheating midday sun ' s heat In my bed hidden from all that is Crazy (We make sanity) except for the mama-sans who peek in and giggle and from whom you hide in shame. Jimmy, his golden gentle hair drifting over his brown eyes of orie nt Your pretty son of five intently watches me sensing our bed together. We eat at your house of whores and he watches my green eyes and light skin. At last my leg He clutches, squeezes, holds and weeps. You laugh as does your black toothed mother, too sluty to be a whore. He think you his father between throaty laughter you say. My pit bleeds at his truth. And now you drink your cocaine in front of me after a short sleep. It bulges and reddens your eyes and fires your mechanical loins. I become a fuck slid between a slew of fucks And loneliness after traveling a bitter crazy circle returns. Tom Conroy Quarter to Three It is late and all that seeps through to my twenty-watt stillness are the half ghosts of sound. A strident laugh that looses its face, the low sonorous confidence of a mid¬ night’s insights . . . and love’s litany betrayed by the quiet. And here, only the foreign prayers of a sitar and the tabla pace my blood as I wonder how to say good-bye. Once, on a night like this, I read so hard that when I came to a huge black “O” I tripped and nearly fell through. But I only sprawled on the white shadow of its core. Disappointed at losing Wonderland I had to put the book down. But how to say good-bye. The lady ticket-taker on the lunch line says hello, and we are best friends on the subject of weather and bir¬ thdays. She knows who my friends are and I know her name. The history department secretary isn’t really grumpy, but she makes believe and fools the gullible. And the light switch for the chapel in Goddard is hidden in the gray pa¬ nel in the side room off the apse. Some people don’t know that. Burton Hallowed still forgets my name, yet he always says hello as if he is about to ask me how’s my sex life. But before he can he is always seized with some forgotten task, and cutting off his smile half made, he hurries off. The tabla and the sitar tease each other to a frenzy, but the uncultured clock deafly points its boring lesson and I still don’t know how to . . . Laura’s much happier than before. She used to come into my room and read until I remembered to ask what was the matter. So many people know secrets that I don’t know. I once lived in 326. One of my secrets is that no one will ever know just what that was like. That was a girl ago. Susan was wonderful. Long, inky black hair. Once I asked her out to dinner and she accepted. It was too easy and I forgot to execute the next manuever. I think I asked if she was really sure. I had heard about a really fine place . . . it’s in Montreal. She got engaged that week and we had to cancel. Libby turned out to be one of my best friends. I’ve forgotten most of the classes I’ve had, and when I think about them it’s as if someone else is telling me and I can imagine only whisps of what he is saying. There is one full color memory: Miss Gordon, the perversely sexy French teacher in that basement room in Cohen. She was shrieking at me like something out of a Fellini movie and I wondered how much she cost. It was raining that mor¬ ning so the window and the room were grayed over and my sleeves and cuffs were cold with wet. The walls emerged green from the gray, rainy smell. I wondered if they really were. When I was in Rome I picked up a girl and she moved in with me. Her sister, whom she was traveling with, didn’t mind at all. How can a girl who would desert her own sister in the middle of Rome pass out on three glasses of wine? 236 In Nice I didn’t have a room so the sisters smuggled me into theirs that first night. At eight in the morning the landlady, armed with a bellboy, pounded us awake with “Ouvrez!” and “Police!” I sat in the overstuffed armchair with a studied look of bored composure while I specu¬ lated about the prospects of my grandfather knowing a la¬ wyer in town. When the door burst open, the landlady’s face flooded with self-righteous vindication. And so, I got a real good break on a room they were keeping in the at¬ tic, and all that week whenever she saw me, the landlady would wag her finger and cluck some French memory of her own. I liked the old bat, and she always smiled our un¬ derstanding. The sitar is really singing now and the tabla can’t keep up. Did you ever wonder if your friends truly like you? Or was it only habit that brought you to the same table at lunch and dinner . . . Mike Farrell left at 5:30 a.m. on the last day of my freshman year. I drove him to the airport, and since he was transferring to Berkeley, I was the last Tufts person ever to see him. So I stayed around the waiting room and tried to become a really close friend before the flight to Houston boarded. I still think about him and that airport. When he left to get on the plane I said, good luck. I couldn’t think of anything else. He had told me all about his girl friend who he wanted to marry. I never did like his habit of scattering prophy¬ lactic wrappers on his carpet; I would have believed him anyway. She ran off with another guy two weeks before school ended. Mike was a playwright, that’s why he was transferring. I spilled wine all over the final draft of his first play . . . my most lasting mark on literature. That morning when I got back from the airport, no¬ body else was up yet. Not even the sun. I walked around the A-bombed quad and into a dorm. The contents of a top desk drawer were shrapnelled over the floor, and I climbed over the corpses of dismembered beds and chairs, kicked through drifts of spoiled paper, used-up shoes, t- shirts, and broken paperbacks to get to the window. All the words spoken here were now ghosted by the clock in the faint red glow. And the atomic blast happened again, exploding orange behind the hills and with it, the hallway healed and the hill rocked off the gray deadness in yellow- green shudders. And who says good-bye when the night is too heavy to bear, and one is unsure of sleep or waking. The sitar and tabla are beating quietly apart. Try to remember all the old telephone numbers you’ve known. Forgetting them is like losing extraneous letters from your name. Once they were yours, like it or not. Now, say good-bye . . . To yourself —Bradford Lovette 237 (Ciui KIMBALL 238 editors Ken Bortner Gary Cahn business manager Alan Okolotowicz friends Susan Bailin Alan Carroll Chris Fineman Nick Roome Paul Snider Dave Snowdon Leslie Williamson Mr. Carter Wilson photography John Bogis Ken Bortner Cary Cahn Bruce Holmes Bill Lannigan Steve Macleod Bob McCann Gary Meyn Chris Morrow Mai Musiker Alan Okolotowicz Paul Snider Dave Snowdon Herb Suskin writing Ken Bortner Carleton Dallery R. Buckministe r Fuller Sol Gittleman Margo Gross Brad Lovette Antoine de St.-Exupery Andy Smith interviews Harry Ritchie Jesper Rosenmeier Seymour Simches poetry C.C. Carlsen Tim Conroy Bill Doerr Susan Glickman The IBM 1130 Robert Impagliazzo Al Morris graphics Lisa Dinhoffer Eric Kimball 239 DON’T WORRY BE HAPPY 240 .


Suggestions in the Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) collection:

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

1974

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

1975


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