Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA)

 - Class of 1974

Page 1 of 344

 

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



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Text from Pages 1 - 344 of the 1974 volume:

V 3 . m — ' ■ jl ■ ; • . - • • THE BLIND MEN AND THE ELEPHANT by John Godfrey Saxe It was six men of Indostan To learning much inclined, Who went to see the Elephant (Though all of them were blind), That each by observation Might satisfy his mind. The Fourth reached out an eager hand, And felt about the knee: What most this wondrous beast is like Is very plain ' quoth he: ' Tis clear enough the Elephant Is very like a tree! The First approached the Elephant, And happening to fall Against his broad and sturdy side, At once began to bawl: God bless me! But the Elephant Is very like a wall! The Fifth who chanced to touch the ear, Said, E ' en the blindest man Can tell what this resembles most; Deny the fact who can This marvel of an Elephant ils very like a fan! The Second, feeling the tusk, Cried, Ho! What have we here So very round and smooth and sharp? To me is very clear This wonder of an elephant Is very like a spear. The Sixth no sooner had begun About the beast to grope Than, seizing on the moving tail That fell within his scope I see, quoth he, the Elephant Is very like a rope! The Third, approaching the animal And, happening to take The squirming truck within his hands Thus boldly up he spake: I see, quoth he, the Elephant is very like a snake! And so these men of Indostan Disputed loud and long, Each in his own opinion Exceeding stiff and strong. Though each was partly in the right, They all were in the wrong. To Tufts 8-15 The Libes 17-23 To The Dogs 36-38 Intoxication 40-44 Climbers 46-50 Realities 62-64 Wessel Hill 68-72 Politicalized 73-79 Snow Shots 82-87 Affections 88-95 Cape, Cranes, Plum 98-101 Listening 104-113 Kids at Tufts 116-119 T eaching 120-128 Athletics 134-145 3 v VI SPRING 1970 Tufts admits class of 1974 FALL 1970 Armed guards ordered on all U.S. airlines prevent hijackings Mass. Supreme Court agrees to hear Tufts case against Volpe Co. on discriminatory hiring Salvadore Allende elected Marxist president of Chile Supreme Cout rejects Mass, suit on uncon¬ stitutionality of the Vietnam War Allen Ginsberg speaks at Tufts WINTER 70-71 Senate kills Supersonic Transport plane Torn Ticket formed to perform musicals at Tufts Winter Study begins officially at T.U. FTC proposes warning on phosphates Worker unrest sweeps Polish cities; 300 re¬ ported dead in riots over low standard of living Unemployment hits 6 percent McGovern announces candidacy for 72 pres¬ idential race Total cost of T.U. education rises to 4270 dollars Charles Manson found guilty in Tate killing Appollo 14 launches toward moon FDA calls tuna safe from contamination Rolls Royce goes bankrupt Egypt agrees to peace pact with Israel Linguistics professor Noram Chomsky speaks at T.U. on Indochina U.S. capitol is Bombed Firebombs ravage Fletcher School Office joe Frazier beats Muhammad Ali Supreme Court rules against selective con¬ scientious objection Dallery denied tenure; students raise outcry Lt. Calley sentenced to life imprisonment Civil War erupts in East Pakistan T. U. Day Care Center opens SPRING 1971 U. S. ping pong team visits Red China Supreme Court unholds busing Moynihan, Sevaried, Abel, Friendly attend dedication of Murrow Center at Fletcher 200,000 attend D.C. peace rally Paris Peace Talks enter fourth year D.C. police arrest 13,000 May Day demonstra¬ tors Fremming fired from Fletcher job; SDS charges racism SUMMER 1971 New York Times publishes Pentagon Papers Ohio ratifies 26th amendment reucing voting age to 18 Bertrand Russell dies Mayor Lindsay switches to Democratic Party Nixon orders 90-day wage and price freeze FALL 1971 Thieu wins 90 percent in one-man Vietnam presidential election U.N. admits Red China, expels Taiwan Senate rejects foreign aid bill Nixon announces New Economic Policy- Phase II Lawrence Ferlinghetti reads, sings and chants at T.U. U.S. explodes underground H-bomb at Am- chitka despite ecology warnings Dick Gregory, black comedian turned activist, speaks at Cousens Gym Troop withdrawals accelerated; ceiling is 49,000 WINTER 1971-72 Tufts Observer ceases publication again Total war erupts between India and Pakistan Dollar devaluated by 8.57 percent Former British PM Harold Wilson visits T.U.; attacks proposed Common Market entry Nixon promises legislation against court-or¬ dered busing 13 Catholic demonstators killed in Northern Ireland by British troops Muske, Humphrey, Wallace, among others, enter 72 presidential race Bangledesh declares independence from West Pakistan; civil war breaks out Cost of attending T.U. rises to 4520 dollars Nixon goes to Red China, talks with Mao, ChouEn-lai North Hall destoyed by fire T. U. hires gynecologist for Health Service SPRING 1972 U. S. suspends peace talks indefinately j. Edgar Hoover dies after 48 years as FBI head T. U. trustees vote to continue military recruit¬ ing on campus ITT contribution linked to White House deal U. S. mines in N. Vietnam harbor; steps up air war Wallace severely wounded in assasination at¬ tempt Nixon goes to Moscow for summit Meeting; signs Salt agreement 5 jgt J b • ' -v m w • r • f 9 • V t V ’ - v. -  • ■«• • Y w BPJMF t® , ■ i. ||f ji ' 111 SUMMER 1972 McGovern beats Humphrey in California pri¬ mary Angela Davis acquitted in murder conspiracy case Supreme Court bans capital punishment in 5- 4 decision Kissinger flies to Paris for secret talks Hanoi accuses U.S. of bombing dikes Olympics marred by death of 17 as Arab guerrilas storm Israeli dormitory Democrats nominate McGovern-Eagleton McGovern drops Eagleton from ticket after health disclosures; picks Shriver instead FALL 1972 Former Republican officials arrested in break- in on Democratic offices in Watergate; Democrats charge political espionage Mohammed Ali speaks at Tufts World watches as Bobby Fischer wins chess title U.S. grain exporters deny windfall profi ts in Soviet wheat deal Tufts Professor Christine Joost refused tenure, charges Political firing Kissinger announces Peace is at hand Jackie Robinson dies Rapes bring tightened security to Tufts Nixon sweeps to victory- in landslide; only Mass, and D.C. go for McGovern WINTER 1972-3 ZPG seen on horizon as U.S. birth rate drops to record low U.S. resumes heavy bombing of North Viet¬ nam after Peace talks collapse Moon program ends after successful Apollo 17 mission Tufts total cost rises to $4750 Truman and LBJ die Tufts obtains names of students who bought term papers; some are suspended Peace treaty signed Jan. 27 ending 11 years of U.S. involvement; 55,000 Americans dead, 300,000 wounded; total cost $135 billion; One million Vietnamese dead, over five million homeless Fighting continues as joint peace commission begins work Military draft ends after 30 years SPRING 1973 Ashley Montague declares female superiority in lecture at Tufts Senate committee begins Watergate hearings 140 U.S. POWs released Withdrawal of all U.S. troops form Vietnam Wounded Knee occupation begins, ends SUMMER 1973 Cousens Gymnasium begins $400,000 renova¬ tions Nixon orders 60 day price freeze USSR-U.S. sign pact to curb nuclea war U.S. bombing in Cambodia increased Illegal campaign fund disclosures Phase IV Pentagon admits to Secret bombing of Cambodia in ' 69-70 Approval of Alaskan pipeline Kent State case reopened Nixon ordered to give Sirica tapes Nixon support slipping at poles FALL 1974 Israel erupts with Syria and other Arab states 4 indicted in Elsberg break-in Chilean armed forces succeed in Junta U.N. admits two Germanys Tufts Winter Study ended Agnew resigns after case before federal grand jury on tax evasion Norman Mailer speaks on Mailer and Nixon Oil shortage-Arab embargo Buckminister Fuller elaborates on domes Leonard Carmichael dies Rumors of Impeachment Tom Wolfe on debutants in jeans Gerald Ford sworn in as V.P. Fed. speed limit 55mph. WINTER 1974 Tuition raised Watergate tape scandal over tape erasures Tufts closed in reaction to fuel shortage Solzhenitsyn expelled from Russia Patricia Hearst kidnapped by SLA 7 former Nixon aids indicted for Watergate coverup charges SPRING 1974 Mitchel and Stans tried in NYC Arab oil embargo lifted I.F. Stone speaks on the Investigative Journal¬ ist Professor Joost wins discrimination case against Tufts Impeachment proceedings come to a head .OGAN TO BOSTON TO HARVARD SQ. TO MASS. AVE.—SOMERVILLE TO 8 y p vMf f ,■ v i, fi ■ (ujy 9 TH£ FIRST and ONLY ■ W W ' NMTI«u K UttaSTOSRn mi 10 , - „ Sa • - ■ T i. s . - ' i Li- til ' iitiec -- 5iict .% ' % . sr IS . mifiiii 111 : iiiiits:: 11 mu, , cti f 17 19 . •v ; t ' V ' . yn? •♦ ' ■ ' ■ £ 1 £. Vx «, 21 22 V fc tir V 5 Sll ' 4rwm . W ■ (ft CMIC05 FRIDAY NITE SPECIAL I MPPY HOUR IQ-Il room % I UlfONSTAGE TH E M -• v Wf ROW Jasti ' t eg ; ! ' v - i ■ 1 1 r vhk zm Ck |y i.‘ • ,« I f i $C| « - -« A v j v- j feifc rfSttfr T •-y Eai At the end of four undergraduate years, the urge to evaluate, to take stock of what, exactly, has happened, is strong. For those of us who spent the years 1970-1974 in college, the question of what it all adds up to is important, not only because there were so many newly legitimated alternatives—dropping out, going to work, becoming political — but also because of expectations we brought with us as freshmen. College, or, more specifically, Tufts itself, was for many a bright new challenge, a new environ¬ ment which promised change, enlightenment, opportunities, and status. For many, the decision to go to college was not a conscious one. Rather it was a course of action expected by parents, educators, and peers. What emerges from conversations with fellow seniors is a lack of consensus over the purpose of an undergraduate education. Few of us talk about the general worth of a liberal education in the traditional sense; that it makes one a more rounded, sensitive, cultured individual. The concern seems to be instead with the experience of college as a totality. There is a feeling that such things as meeting new people, living in coed dorms, and going into Boston are just as important and valid as scholarly pursuits, in terms of learning opportunities Tufts has to offer. A marked resurgence of interest in the arts and in athletics parallels this trend. Some seniors comment that Tufts has allowed them to lead the life styles they are most comfortable with. On the other hand, a criticism develops to the effect that students today spend their time drifting instead of developing. For some, this is borne out in a lack of an intellectual atmosphere. For others, it means a loss of a sense of community. Tufts may well be an ivory tower, but there seems to be no agreement on whether college as a haven is desirable. The Class of 74- This year ' s graduating seniors seem to me to be the end of an era and the beginning of another. The talk among the faculty lately — to say nothing of educators around the country — has centered on the new breed of undergraduate, the goal ori¬ ented hard-eyed realist who can ' t wait to get into medical, dental, or law school, not to save mankind, but to put the down payment on the big house in Winchester. And more power to them. I remember the shock waves four years ago — when the class of 74 entered Tufts — when the New York Times reported that from 5% to 20 % of graduating seniors of 70 wanted nothing more than to forget their undergraduate education and get their heads together by eating berries, driving trucks, or forming a vegeterian commune. Impractical, maybe wasteful, if nothing else, of time. But I remember that wild breed with love and wonder. Four years ago I confronted a senior who attacked everything I stood for — lectures, learning, the Establishment. And his parting shout as he hitchhiked off the campus in time to miss his com¬ mencement was Wait till you see my kid brother — he ' s really wild! Well, I ' ve met his brother and sister, the class of 77. They are charming, intelligent, wide-open to knowledge, crawling with energy, but wild, they ' re not. And I miss it a little. Which brings me to the class of 74. Right in the middle between the poles. Hard-working but a little flaky. Cause-ori¬ ented but practically organized. More drama majors in this year ' s graduating class have been accepted in graduate school than ever before. Torn Ticket is doing more and better productions, led by some very able seniors. The bubbles at the Arena may never fly, but the arts are alive and well in Medford, thanks to a precarious balance of antic creative imagination and solid student organiza¬ tion. But the balance could so easily swing. I hope that none of the class of 74 will return to the days of pure creativity, happenings, chance art, random and destructive activity for its own sake. However, I also hope that they never lose the courage to be different, to oppose old ideas and older people in their search for respectability and a niche in the Establishment. The class of 77 is a joy to teach, but I hope the price will not be the creative death of that really wild kid brother or sister who hasn ' t come along yet. Best wishes to 74, who just may be that rarest of animals — a balance of imagination and reason. Harry M. Ritchie Department of Drama 29 30 4 32 Major Arena Productions 73-74: Macbeth Tartouffe, Moliere Awake and Sing, Odets Cherry Orchard, Chekhov Old Times, Pinter Total Eclipse, C. Hampton TO THE DOGS 37 Jean Shepherd Talks Tuft This is the first time I ' ve ever seen Tufts and I must say it is a very enlightening experience ... (Shepherd ' s pronunciation is ' Toffts ' ) ... Sweet, cuddly little Toffts—kind of like a little toy set right here in the middle of colorful Somerville ... You have the vague feeling that it ' s (Tufts) like a carbuncle on the ass of a rhinoceros. Now I want you to think about that. That ' s a pure Ionesco ... I knew it was an official school when I drove up and there was a street named Latin Way ... Professor ' s Row. Tell me, do you have an Algebra Lane, Geometry Square ... ? Toffts. Such a silly name. It sounds like some new kind of toothbrush. All you gotta do is go with a Colgate girl and you got it made ... I relate to you going here to Tufts. It ' s like standing in a great hall at Rutgers—you can actually look out of a window and see Princeton. Maddening. You guys are so close to Harvard you must taste it. Don ' t you wake up some nights at 3 a.m. and say, ' Why the Christ Toffts? ' ... ... How do you think Jersey feels living next to civilization? As a kid, I used to listen to the radio ... they ' d get down to the end of the sportscast and they ' d say, ' Blah Blah 100, Toffts O ... ' ' For Christ sake ' , we used to say, ' What ' s Toffts? ' 39 I 1 | T $ 1 n9|l I II liM L ly _ j a 41 ip .,aMI • 1 42 ■ ‘ ' ■  • -- First hour Exa.nlr.at ion e fol . wi integrals r.ay os integral, stpte wh Mc ' U ■vest wtKf ' r.ate. Jar not nr. Z6(_. rn ir CXT 44 MAKING OUT It has been evident that the greatest problem with Tufts is money. Simply that the cost of our education has not been reflected in the facilities provided or in some cases even in the caliber of teaching. At Tufts now, after four years one looks back and equates that time in terms of $20,000, and it is difficult and dissappointing. For some an outright loss must be calculated. Supposedly, we have been the recipients of the darling of the administration; the “Tufts Experience. Most students deny its existence, but after these years of avid Tufts watching, I would have to admit that there is something to it. There is, finally, a Tufts character. Not that Tufts men are all immature and horney or that women here are predominatly immature and horney, but that both are strong willed, productive, and slightly neurotic. It is because at Tufts you have got to fight. You have to fight to get course cards and a decent room and to get out of a compulsory meal plan and through a language requirement. You have to fight to get a good education when requirements do not demand that you do so. You have to fight to get an appointment with a dean or your advisor. And all this makes you a little tougher; a little more critical; a little more realistic. To get through Tufts, by hook or by crook you need to sustain a certain energy level not asked for at schools that provide the niceties for you. This is a variation on the This will hurt me more than you ' line, but somehow the source of our bitchiness and unhappiness during these years may have doubled the value of that time. 45 46 53 54 A Touch of Class It was an incident involving the class of 74 that told me too clearly that I had reached forty. My wife and I were sitting around with a bunch of kids, talking about Watergate and the presidency. Someone suggested that we organize an in-depth, all- night discussion seminar on the subject, and my wife added, A great idea, just like a teach-in ' Then, a particularly bright-eyed Jackson 74er jumped up and shouted, Hey, that ' s a great name for it, a teach-in! Robyn Gittleman looked at Sol Gittleman, and we both thought back to those Vietnam days of the ' 60 ' s, to the endless all-night sessions, to the marches, to the ROTC debates, to the Ballou Hall take-over, to the construction site crisis on the hill. Times had changed, a teach-in was a new experience to a new generation. But we had stayed behind, to face up to the challenge of new classes, new ideas, and new values. When we had left the campus to go on sabbatic leave in the summer of 1970, everyone was still in a state of shock after Kent State. Tufts had just graduated what was probably its most activist class in history, a class that made the tuxedo I had bought—back in 1956, to wear to the senior dance—obsolete. Now they were gone, and the Gittlemans packed bag and baggage and took off for a year in Europe, far from the cries of innovation, Pass Fail, potheads, and academic integrity. We also left behind a freshman class just coming in ... Now it ' s 1974, and that class is about to step out. All over the United States collapsed radicals of the ' 60 ' s are taking a look at this class and are lamenting the days gone by. They see instead increased self-interest, materialism, hard-nosed pragmatism, and a desire to live a structured, organized existence. But, this is a simplistic view, taken by some whose own private guilt at not having continued to exert leadership now turns against the next generation. The pendulum hasn ' t swung back to the ' 50 ' s, to the utter indifference of my generation. But, it has moved into another arc. No doubt about it, this class is different. And the final tally won ' t be in for another ten years, because this is a class that is still growing, still maturing, still finding out what it ' s all about. This is the class that said, Give us accountability in the classroom! This is the class that complained when instructors gave only A grades—in fact, this class howled more about individ¬ ual grades than any previous one in my Tufts memory. Now the concern was medical or dental school, or the law boards. How can I look better than the next guy? But, this is also the first class of consumer-oriented undergraduates and perhaps the first class to be thoroughly engaged in all aspects of equal rights for women—not just bra-burning. There is a certain amount of refreshing hard-headedness about this bunch. Yes, there was some weeping and wailing about grades; but there seemed to be less of the self-pitying What is this world doing to me? and more of the I ' m going to do something now! spirit. Indeed, this may be a class of doers. It will be interesting to watch them grow. _ . , Sol Gittleman Department of German and Russian ‘ V ' lY. ccccccuai 58 I U-- There emerges a nostalgia for the activism, outwardness, and political excitement of the late sixties, which has been replaced by a disillusioned, introspective, and passive ambience. Various factors account for this change in priorities, not the least of which is the rising cost of going to college. Students are now being forced to ask, Is it worth $5,000 a year? Moreover, the tightening of the job market has destroyed the notion that a bachelor ' s degree is carte blanche for an interesting, well-paying job. The result is that many of us have become unable to justify four years at Tufts as an end in itself. Undergraduates placed in the position of making a future for themselves are less inclined to be activist while in college. People want to see A ' s in return for their investment. More students are graduating from Tufts in three or three and one-half years than ever before. The disappearance of large-scale political activity has not, in fact, meant the disappearance of individual committment, as many of us seem to feel. There is a good deal of old-fashioned searching and involvement in the university which is not visible at a fleeting glance. Artistic endeavor and intellectual curiosity are indeed alive, but the last several years have witnessed a split between those who have found an individual goal worth pur¬ suing and those for whom relevance could only exist in a politicised, collective context. A further theme, also a carryover from past years, is that Tufts is essentially an elitist institution. We feel guilty because we sense that we are too privileged, that college has allowed us, as upper-middle class students, to avoid the sobering responsi¬ bilities of the real world. The search for relevance, through extra-school experiences like internships and field work, is still going on. 61 The Gillette Companv Safety Razor Division Gillette Park Boston, Massachusetts 021 06 (617)268-3200 March 28, 1974 Dear Mr, Anderson, Thank you for taking time from your schedule to talk with me at Tufts University recently. Since then, I have reviewed your background with appropriate management personnel; and, unfortunately, in view of their limited needs, it appears that we will be unable to offer you a position which would affectively utilize your background and qualifications. Because our employment needs do change, I have retained your data. Should an appropriate position develop, I most certainly will contact you. Again, thank you for the time you spent with me and for your interest in Gillette. Best of luck in your career. Sincerely, Donald F. Gourley, Jf Personnel Representative DFG eb 65 69 70 ; 74 Campus The weather warms, they gather there, The girls trying on their womanhood, The boys lounging into man ' s knowledge, Crowding the steps, trampling the grass, Books a burden, time a moratorium. In this garden all the trees offer Equal choice, apples of ash and golden, Like casual games where losers and lovers Who forfeit last hours option renew The uncommitted motion of this moment. And each great swing of the tower ' s bell Rings that the time is true, that nothing Passes that is alive and new In the sunny interval between classes. -Michael Fixler 75 Proposed Resolution: Military Recruiting; Whereas many members of the Tufts community (students, workers, faculty, and administrators) have during the last year and particularly during Spring 1972 expressed their concern with regard to the presence of military recruiters on the campus, and Whereas the Trustees of Tufts College and President Hallowell have continued to allow the presence of military recruiters on campus despite the considerable effort of many members of the Tufts community to convince them that the policy of the Univer¬ sity should not allow military recruiters on the campus, and Whereas the issue of recruitment on campus is of such impor¬ tance to the Tufts community that the dispartiy between present University policy as stated by the Trustees and President Hallow¬ ell and the policy desired by a considerable part of the commu¬ nity is such that the will of the majority of the Tufts community is not expressed in the current University policy which allows for military recruiting on the Tufts campus, Be it resolved that: The Senate of the Tufts Community Union calls for an imme¬ diate, binding, community-wide referendum of all Tufts stu¬ dents, workers, faculty and administrators specifically concerning the issue of military recruitment on the Tufts campus. The Senate also offers any and all assistance it can provide in the operations involved in conducting said referendum. Respectfully submitted, Fred Kelso President Tufts Community Union r ■ijfiif tr - y EXAMINING — It happens that when I was asked, in the middle of February, if I would contribute something to the yearbook, I was roughing- out a syllabus for the spring term, and I had decided that, yes, damn it, I would give a final examination. Not another paper masquerading as a final, but the real, old-fashioned thing. And so, at the risk of being not only old-fashioned but also gauche (why talk about examinations at Commencement?) I want to use this space to suggest that those hours you spent in preparing for examinations and in taking examinations may not have been wasted. 80 A good examination not only measures learning and thinking, but stimulates them. Even so humble an examination as a short- answer quiz— chiefly a device to coerce the student to do the assigned reading-is a sort of push designed to move the student forward. Now, of course, internal motivation is far superior to external, but even such crude external motivation as a quiz can have a beneficial effect. Students know and admit this; often seek external compulsion, choosing a particular course Because I want to know something about ... and I know that I won ' t do the reading on my own. (Teachers often teach a new course for the same reason; we want to become knowledgeable about, say, the Theater of the Absurd, and we know that despite our lofty intentions we may not seriously confront the subject unless we are under the pressure of facing a class.) In short, however ignoble it sounds, examinations force the student to acquire learning and then to convert learning into thinking. Sometimes it is not until preparing for the final examination that the stu¬ dent—re-reading the chief texts and classroom notes—sees what the course was really about; until this late stage, the trees obscure the forest, but now, reviewing and sorting things out, a pattern emerges. The experience of reviewing and then of writing an examination though fretful can be exciting, as connections are made and as ideas take on life. (Again there is a parallel with the activities of teachers: when, in order to make an examination, at the end of the term we think about the readings and class¬ room comments, we often get a new view of the course.) Discoveries about the whole subject matter of a course can, I think, almost never be made by writing essays on topics of the student ' s own choice, for such topics rarely require a view of the whole. Further, most of us are more likely to make imaginative leaps when trying to answer questions that other people pose to ourselves. (Again, every teacher knows that in the classroom questions are asked that stimulate the teacher to see things and to think thoughts that would otherwise have been neglected.) And although questions posed by others cause anxiety, when they have been confronted and responded to on an examination the student often makes yet another important discovery—a self- discovery, a sudden and satisfying awareness of powers one didn ' t know one had. While the rhapsodic mood is upon me, I am almost tempted to suggest that a reason many students find college insufficiently challenging is that instructors have taken too seriously gripes about examinations and have replaced them with ex¬ ercises—originating with the students ' present interests—that can¬ not provide the challenges and subsequent rewards of respond¬ ing to someone else ' s questions. There are, of course, plenty of things wrong with many examinations, and plenty of things right about efforts to develop substitutes. But the substitutes cannot be unqualified improvements. A price must always be paid; for every gain, there is some loss. As Barry Commoner taught us in Closing Circle, one of the laws governing the world is: There Is No Such Thing As A Free Lunch. Silvan Barnet Department of English ijys 4‘ . -J k ' flr drj£ ‘r. ■ u : y. - J, ' - j Jl 1 ‘ MfflPprX fe  « jfy jf | - v H ' jr j fe crn ‘ - ____ OBSERVATIONS ON WINTER STUDY Winter Study is, of course, one of those changes which grew out of the tumult of the 1960 ' s, although, in Tufts ' case, some¬ what by indirection. Together with the Experimental College, College Within, plan of study and similar phenomena, it was a part of Tufts ' reaction to the student unrest of that period. It has to be judged in that context. At the base of that student unrest were at least two important elements: the change within the universities in th e postwar period and the changes in the external world. Within the Univer¬ sity, in part to cope with an increasingly complex society, facul¬ ties moved increasingly toward specialization and the curriculum grew more specialized. The broad general education which had characterized the liberal arts in particular gave way to an increas¬ ing emphasis on concentration in one discipline. Students, mean¬ while, were emerging from high school into a world that was no longer understandable in the way the world of their parents had been. Rapid change threatened career choices, a student seemed to be confronted with a constricted life pattern leaving little opportunity for diversity or expansion; the future had begun to seem dehumanized. This kind of future, and the nature of the University, was not, at first, particularly disturbing to those students intending to become engaged in research, college or university teaching, or some of the professions. But most colle ge students were not going to be academicians or professionals; many would find their future in business, public service, communications, social service and a variety of other areas in which broad general knowledge, mastery of more than one discipline, and an ability to deal with complexity were necessities. Colleges and universities were fail¬ ing these students, however well they served others. Extra-cur¬ ricular activities and distribution courses, the historic ways of meeting this need, were no longer enough. Extra-curricular activi¬ ties were divorced from the outside world and seemed like meaningless busy work to many students. Indeed only a few, notably the newspaper, yearbook, radio station, i.e., those with specific vocational advantages, remained popular. Academic courses, precisely because most had become highly specialized, often failed to carry out the purpose of distribution which was to broaden a student ' s perspective. The nature of private college students had also changed. No longer, primarily, the children of lower and middle income groups of blue collar workers who grew up in cities and small towns where they had an opportunity to see society at work, they were now isolated in suburban communities. Their fathers and mothers worked miles away in a world strange to the children. There was no industry and little commerce in their communities. There was a homogeneity in the residents of these communities and in the students with whom they would be associated in college. In short, they were cut off from the world and that loss prevented most of them from bringing to their studies the kinds of perception, background and understanding that could give them meaning - particularly in the arts, the humanities and the social sciences. Many s tudents, in addition, were either completely at sea about why they were at college or what their goals were. Parental pressure had pushed them into college and, in some cases, pushed them towards particular careers. The students needed time—time to think about them¬ selves and their objectives, time to sample career opportunities and time to find out about themselves. Colleges had, if anything, reduced the opportunities for such exploration. In large part, the revolt of the ' 60 ' s was a result of these factors. Many students wanted more and they needed more. It is to Tufts ' credit that it reacted slowly and, in general, wisely. It did provide new options to meet the varying needs of students and to provide, if not always richer, at least more varied opportunities. But it did not surrender the academic curriculum and the research-oriented teacher as the heart of the University. The Experimental College, the College Within, Winter Study were not substitutes for curriculum but supplements to it. In varied ways they met the varied needs. Winter Study ' s role came to be, after some fits and starts, to provide students with a full-time, open period in which learning could be approached in different ways. Each year saw improve¬ ment as the number of students involved in serious activities increased. It filled an important need; a time when students could, without feeling undue pressure to complete academic work or earn money, organize their own reading, work in an outside location—particulary to determine career goals—take sem¬ inars and courses not available in the regular terms or do inde¬ pendent study on a full-time basis. Winter Study did have weaknesses, but they were primarily administrative rather than substantive. There was no staff con¬ centrating full-time, year-round, on the organization of the period, consequently catalogs were issued at the last minute, activities were often disorganized and students were in¬ sufficiently informed about the period. It is difficult for me to understand why Winter Study was dropped. Given the effect on future enrollment, including the difficulty of enrolling transfer students with the Spring term starting before most schools have completed their first term; given the enormous popularity of this period among students; given the enthusiastic reaction to the program by people with whom our students worked off campus; given the increasing number of students taking part each year, one would have supposed there would have been an overwhelming reason why it was abandoned. Perhaps there was, but it is not clearly evident. What is evident is that a program which enabled Tufts both to meet the varying needs of students and to retain its academic curriculum and quality should, in the absence of such an over¬ whelming reason for its demise, be retained. Bill Wells Wlw 88 89 90 91 92 94 95 i T l y Some years ago, out of a different kind of guilt, the universities began recruiting lower income and minority students. The high expectations for integration have recently left many white seniors at Tufts feeling intimidated and frustrated by the desire of black students to keep to themselves. There is a sense of regret that the promise of integration has not been fulfilled. Blacks, on their part, tend to feel that a certain degree of separateness is an essential w ay to maintain a meaningful identity in the university. If one theme recurs more often than any other, it is that Tufts is exactly what you make it. There is a widespread conviction that to have a positive and worthwhile undergraduate career one needs to take an active role. The essential attribute of Tufts for many seniors is that it has a program flexible enough to allow individuals to pursue their own learning styles. For many of us this realization probably came hard, for we were a generation accustomed to being passive in education and entertained via the media. Nevertheless a good many of us claim that the turning point came when we began to use the educational structure for our own needs. In sum we can say only that no self-characterization is pos¬ sible. As a group, we express such a variety of opinions on these past four years that no trend emerges as dominant. Almost every viewpoint, whether it be on academics, student life, or educa¬ tional philosophy, seems to be balanced by an opposing one. Clearly, this is a time of changing values in education. It is also a time of uncertainty as to what the role of the university should be. Until a sense of common purpose returns, the college ex¬ perience will continue to be as individualistic as the experience of these years has been for each of us. 97 98 99 It is easy to feel sorry for the Clas s of 1974. Your formative years, 1960-1970, have been the most brutal and unsettling in American history since the Civil War and were followed, like that war, by corruption at the highest levels of government. Three assassinations, one of a President; urban riots, campus turmoil, an ugly war in which your own country ' s behavior was nauseating; and, finally, what appears to be the most corrupt and power- hungry presidential administration in our history, is more than enough for any generation. The Peace Corps, the War on Poverty, the civil rights struggle and the environmental movement are almost the only evidence in this country in your time that Americans care for their fellow humans, and these evidences, all of them, are under attack by that same corrupt presidential administration and all too many of your countrymen. It is difficult for those of us from other generations to under¬ stand you because your experience has been so different. My generation, with its roots in the great depression of the thirties, could understand what motivated college students of the Ws because we, too, had known what it was to seek change, to find radical movements appealing. We were appalled by the ' 60 ' s but because we could remember periods of innocence we could put it in perspective. But most of you have known only moral chaos, the continued presence of the atomic bomb and the corruption of affluence, and we can ' t put ourselves in your place. Carrying that burden, you arrived at Tufts at the beginning of a watershed period between the storms of the ' 60 ' s and the studied quiet of the ' 70 ' s. The Experimental College, plan of study, independent study and Winter Study were already features of Tufts and the College Within was in the final planning stage. Minority students were, at long last, a significant part of this University. No new buildings would be constructed in your four years. There would be talk of change but little change. There would be some minor disturbances, a bombing, Cambodia, and then the calm. How did your class react? It started an equestrian team, made a truce with society, directed itself toward professional school or employment and plunged with zeal into career placements, off campus work and social services, giving new life to LCS in the process. It was polite, friendly, tolerant, and almost a stranger to radicalism. Strange people, it has been several years since we ' ve seen your like. Look at what you ' ve done in these years. You ' ve kept Torn Ticket vigorous and entertaining. You saw basketball become a major Tufts sport again. You joined in tut-tutting at some stu¬ dents exposing themselves or entertaining strippers at their par¬ ties, but now accept streakers with equanimity. You were given the right to vote and to drink publicly at an early age, and, for all one can tell, one may have been as bad as the other. You turned frisbee into a way of life and seemed to find nostalgia for an age you didn ' t know more pleasing than the rock music of the age you did. But you never did learn to turn down your stereos. And, while you preached PIRG and Nader, you continued to trample living campus grass into dust. You were, because you were in goodly measure of every race and creed and color, more representative of your country and of humankind than classes that have gone before. That may be your proudest boast. Tufts will go on after you ' re gone, but it will never be quite the same again. It never is when any class leaves. Your ripples, as you flowed by, cut new patterns in the soil and wore down the rocks a bit more. Most of you will come back, some time or other, and join in that common tradition that is part of every person who has been here. And you ' ll wonder why these four years were what they were, and grieve that they shall not be again. Bill Wells Assistant to the President 103 104 Norman Mailer R. Buckminster Fuller in 114 The class of 74 has been compared to the so-called “silent generation of college students during the years of Joe McCarthysim. This calumny fails to take into account that you, the class of 74, are the students who experienced the turmoil during your high school years-of the country being torn apart by the Vietnam War. Some of you were active in anti-war activities before you came to Tufts. What to do is simply not now as clear as it was to all of us then during that horrible war. The war in Southeast Asia is still horrible, but the U.S. is not so actively fanning its flames. In earlier years students and professors alike, the minority of activists and the major¬ ity of anti-war non-activists on the campus agreed that the first job was to get our men out of Southeast Asia. I believe they were right. The anti-war movement they built helped us get our men out. But now what? The class of 74 is living through Watergate, the Mideast War, and the junta in Chile. Are these students—because they have stormed no gates, and cancelled no exams-really like the silent generation of the 1950 ' s? Hardly. Scratch a college student these days and you do not find many naive, and politically paralyzed students such as could be found in the 1950 ' s. Instead, you find more political sopistication. You find skepticism about political slogans (try Law and Order on one of them). You find skepticism about disclaimers of American intervention in Latin America or Asia (try I.T.T. didn ' t influence U.S. government actions in Chile, or We went into Vietnam to assure self-determination to that poor country. ) The class of 74, unlike the class of 70, is less confident that we know the economic answers for our own country, let alone the world. They are just plain more savvy. They don ' t believe that industries will freely agree to cut their profits to keep our cities clean; they don ' t believe that government always tells the truth; they don ' t believe that men want to become doctors, and women nurses. They don ' t believe oil companies are out to serve the public interest; and they don ' t believe that whatever is, is right. Only the future can tell whether all this savvy will lead to cynicism and passivity or to responsible citizenship and political alertness. I may be the perennial optimist, but I ' d like to bet on the latter. Zella Luria Department of Psychology 115 HELPING For 12 years the Leonard Carmichael Society has coordi¬ nated Tufts students ' volunteer work in human service agencies throughout the Boston area. Now that answering some of the needs of Medford and Somerville has become a high priority at Tufts, LCS can ' concentrate on the communities straddled by the university, broaden its types of coverage, and serve as a clea ringhouse for all volunteer service. About 500 students were members of LCS in the fall semester. The group is the most popular extracurricular activ¬ ity on campus. The society is not only Tufts students with open hearts and open arms, showering gifts and flowers onto the com¬ munity. It ' s real experience, something that can ' t be gained in the classroom, said Dave Rabold, President of LCS. Among the myriad of activities sponsored and fostered by LCS are Big Brother and Big Sister programs (companionship for fatherless or motherless children); Boy and Girl Scouts; two food cooperatives (enabling local families to purchase food at wholesale prices); work with handicapped children; services at hospitals; part-time tutoring of prison inmates; and full-time tutoring in Medford and Somerville. 118 119 Letter to the Tufts Criterion, June, 1973 Note: The Criterion thanks Douglas Kappstatter, the author of the following letter, for changes he made in its original form. While we respect anyone ' s right to criticize this publi¬ cation, we felt that some of his criticisms of a particular individual were too harshly worded. —Ed. Sir: Your article concerning Miss. L. in the March issue kept me in stitches for two solid nights. I always try to read The Tufts Criterion in the same spirit as I read the National Lampoon — good satire. In the March issue, you people really outdid yourselves. I don ' t want other women to have to go through what I ' ve gone through. I read that sentence over and over but still could not believe what I ' d read. One would assume Miss. L. had spent the last four years in Dachau. Outrageous! Conceding that Miss L. has had her share of trauma and mental anguish at Tufts, this does not alter the fact that for the past four years she had led a highly privileged life — a privilege for which someone has had to pay dearly. Believe me, Miss. L., there are very few women who will ever have the opportunity to go through what you have endured. When I went to Tufts I had the good sense to see it for exactly what it was; a beautiful, green and peaceful finishing school where your daddy had to pay $4,000 a year (back then) so you could sit down under a tree and think about Voltaire. For better or worse, I accepted it as that. The thought of Miss. L. lounging around her warm, co-ed, $1,000 a year (a guess) dormitory contemplating the inequities in this country leaves me speechless. I ' m sure Miss. L. con¬ templates inequities daily, but never to the point where she relinquishes any of her privileges. I ' m afraid Miss. L. is a member of that ever-growing legion of people who are playing what I call The Sensitivity Game. The contestants are all over the place. Walk into any coffee house in Cambridge and you ' ll see dozens of people — all very INTROSPECTIVE, and DEEP, glancing out of the corner of their eyes trying to see if they can spot a racist, or a materialist or, perish the thought, a capitalist. Oh, how can a sensitive, pure, and beautiful person such as myself ever exist in a society run by such cold, brutal, and insensitive clods? The winner of The Sensitivity Game is that con¬ testant who, at the end of the evening, manages to look the most crushed. They spend their four years at Tufts (min¬ imum), attend all the philosophy lectures(if they ' re really far out, they might even dabble in Eug ene V. Debs or Rosa Luxembourg), hear Bella Abzug lecture about racism and sexism at Crane Chapel, and then stomp back to their dorms 120 ll.JlE MU mi f, -: and wonder how all those mean old construction workers can possibly be such racist dogs. That picture you have of her leaning up against the wall is just beautiful, it reeks sensitivity; Look at me America-young, concerned, anti¬ materialist, anit-racism! If you materialist boobs would only stop killing each other for a color TV and read books for a few years, you can be just like me! Maybe. Someday! Society, Miss. L. dear, is made up of masses of people all kicking and scratching and clobbering each other so that they can one day send their daughters to a place just like Jackson College—the sanctum sanctorum of privilege. If a society is ever to achieve a real degree of equality, it must be founded upon complete, absolute, and guaranteed equal rights and dignity for all— not upon elitism and privilege. If Miss. L. can ' t perceive that Tufts University is an elitist institution, she should put down her philosophy books, go back to the fifth grade and start all over again. And then there ' s that ridiculous administrator who offered Miss. L. a retainer to raise his consciousness. How absurd! I certainly hope this man was joking, and in fact I can see his position entirely; he ' s on the fat end of the lollipop—it ' s in his interest to placate the students of Tufts. He ' s playing with fire in any case. If all the students of Tufts became enlight¬ ened tonight, he ' d be out of a job tomorrow morning. I must concede that sections of this letter are subjective. I do believe, however, that many readers share my opinion that Miss. L. is a dilettante. Douglas Kappstatter, E ' 68 Des Moines, Iowa 121 Norton Nickerson, Biology Saul Slapikoff, Biology (Anti-War Rally 1972) Pierre Laurent, History Carol Jones, Geology 123 Geoffrey Movius, English Denise Leverov, English (Poet in Residence) Charles Stearns, Geology Daniel Mulholland, History Chick Yeager, Education Janice Green, Romance Languages 126 COLLEGE WITHIN TUFTS UNIVERSITY 127 Seymour Simches, Romance Languages Director: C.W. 130 131 The Class of 74 Political movements, national economics, and societies in general have long been observed to progress in a wormlike fashion. Educational institutions, faculties, and students are no exception. Revolving around the end of hostilities in Vietnam, the Class of 74, born in the aftermath of the Cambodian invasion, the Kent State massacre, and the barricades at Lewis Hall, is graduating with its mind, eyes and attitude directed inward. Some would assert that students have not changed—that they are as self-centered as ever and that it was the war and the threat of the draft that led to the manifestation of their selfishness in the student protests of the late sixties. Others might claim that the students ' own perceptions of the low productivity of excess protesting and the search for alternatives has led them to different means for accomplishing the same idealistic ends. Participation has replaced confrontation. To the voluntary student involvement of the past has been added the sincere desire to eventually work professionally on health delivery systems, education of the handicapped and retarded, ecology, urban planning and design, welfare reform, crime prevention, etc. While generalizations at best can be only sketchy and reco- nizing that when dealing in such large numbers it is entirely probable that someone will hold any view, a few things are abundantly clear. There is little doubt that the radicals have lost the critical mass necessary to convert words to action. Also obvious is that students are going to classes regularly, studying in the library to the point of taxing its capacity, and demanding more in the way of course structure, grading and discrimination in the recognition of excellence. I have no serious quarrels with most of the explanations for the apparent ' return to normalcy but as an Economist I must admit to my own brand of biases. What I see is an almost frenzied scramble to gain an advantage in the competitive struggle to get into graduate school or to land a decent job. The opening up of opportunities for women and their eager¬ ness to compete on equal terms with men, espcially in law, medicine, and business has aggravated the scramble. I see, however, as the underlying cause of their behavior the recent performance of the U.S. economy. Inflation in particular has been able to do what four post-WWII recessions could not; i.e., its persistence and pervasiveness has affected the living standards of a vast majority of Americans and in the process has revealed to even the untrain ed, the fragile nature of our economy, one not long ago considered shockproof. Food shortages and the oil crisis merely served to reinforce that impression. If the population of the sixties was living in the image of the opulent and decadent Romans of the past, then the class of 74 has been living under the specter of shortages of critical materials, greater uncertainties, and ecological catast- rophies. The threat is real and has been perceived that way. To me the behavior of the Class of 74 has been hard-nosed, practical and socially responsive. The tasks are many, the challenges complex; serious well-trained ‘minds are needed for the work ahead. Yes, the members of the Class of 74 may be preoccupied with ' self ' but they are on the right track, for they are simultaneously providing society with the skilled prac¬ titioners for the demanding challanges ahead. We wish them well. Dan Ounjian Department of Economics 133 For Manton Scott, Died 1973-Duxbury Regatta 135 Coach Herb Erickson (right) 1932-1974, Teacher-Advisor-Friend 137 139 141 K ’■ V • j i 1 d 1 ' 4b i i ! f ' k i L - VhT ' 1 r, r r S ili V 1 , i. My li t v K - rl t v; . MW . ‘ m V ' i }• ■ Ttnr ' -... ys v . • 1 fy j •- V G B LIGHT on the HILL 148 %.R 150 151 ' . VA au ; Wv ' ®5ft Spv v .• • mw: H«| :V  £ [fpfe iSvS§?§ i J • r - - ' t it.-c- Siwf - ;i '  ? ' aH ■ r 11 . ■■•■ : V ; I 11  Mfeg |ni ■ • • - v ' M aia i aii i gMM iia  «is ; ■ . ' - ::.: ' ; :: , . -, ;: . ■-■ ■ ■! . : ' - ' ;r : ' : ' - MM ?■ ' :- f ; .•••••• :.‘ r --y.$v - i ' r-2 ' :: •• ' •■ - £ ; ' « :; : - -■: % p|1 ' f. 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DEPALMA STEPHANIE BOZIGIAN KATHERINE BRIGGS KAREN BUXBAUM JACQUELINE CARLON 6 Hr MARTIN CHIN PHILIP ELIZABETH BUSHNELL BOB OUTTRIM BOB DOYLE JIM HADDAD TOM MacDOWELL STEVE GOOCH ( LINDA CARTIN 179 LINDA CASTELLANO ALLAN DANA CALLOW CHRISTOPHER CHEN ELIZABETH CASTLE 181 Row 1: KATHY CLARK VIRGINIA BRISTOL SUSAN McKOEWN VIRGINIA ATKINSON Row 2: JANET GOTTLER WENDY BLUTSTEIN LORRI BERENBERG EMILY SAMUELSON Row 3: DAVID DREIFUS ARTHUR BERGER DAVID COG AN ALLEN CHIN DANNY COHEN 183 MARY CIMILLO MARK CIOVALLO SUE CLARK 185 ROBERT CREEDEN RICHARD CREEDEN NANCY CROWLEY VICKI COHFN CHRISTOPHER CONKLIN LAURIE COOPERMAN DENISE DaCOSTA 188 BETH COLLINS AMY CREAN BRIAN DAHLGREN AMY DAVIS MOMODOU DARBOE EILEEN DRIPCHAK JOSEPH DESIMONE JOHN DELLOROSSO 192 FRANCIS DELUCA CHUCKLES HASTINGS ROCKET RHODES CHARLIE LARNER NICK PATTY McCLAIN T. C. B. CHAIRMAN . . . TUFTS CORP. FRED SPLATZ LOU RAVE NORM RICHARD DORFMAN H SS CHUSlTTjin 1 PEGGY DONNELL ANTHONY DIXON WILLIAM DOOLITTLE STEVEN DUSHAN DEBORAH EINHORN JESSE EICHENBAUM YVONNE EILLISON 198 DAN FALCONE HARRIET FINCK ELLEN FISHMAN 200 ROBERT FEINS JOAN FELDMAN s LINDA FINE JEAN GORDON AMY FISHER PHOEBE FISHER JAMES FINEGAN X ' t • ‘ SUSAN GLICKMAN STEPHAN GOOCH ROBIN GOWA IRIS GORDON Jiffs??® 1 •’ Wmi IV 1 ■ % | % WILLIAM VOGT 205 LAURIE FUBINI FREDERICK GOLD MARK FISHER MARY GEISZ ERIC GALE EDWARD FEINBERG ISABEL GAMBOAROJAS V FRANK GEMMATO Vv?«. ■? ■-% • ' ‘vA ■Vvi. - V .1 • ' ■ v • V • JOANNE GITTLESON ELIZABETH GRIFFIN SAM GUTTER DAVID B. GRAHEK 213 GEORGE HAUG BETSEY HAMLIN MUFFET GRACEY GARY HALE JANET HAHN JAMES HADDAD KAREN HARRIS 216 SHARON HARDY MATT KATZ HARRIS CONTOS TIM MORAN RICK COTE BRAD ENGLISH PETER FARRINGTON JOHN SPILLANE 217 CHRISTINE HOEPFNER JEFFREY HERTZ BARBARA HYDE 218 GEORGE HIRSCH JANE HOUSTON CHRISTINE HEATH 219 MARY HEFLIN DAVID HASTINGS 221 LINDA HOLMES 222 223 CAROLYN jACKSON 224 KERRY HYMAN 225 JAY BOYCE JOHN WARREN ROSS NEWTON MONA JAFFE t-jr ■ JON HOPKINS 48W STEVE HILLMAN BARBARA HEWETT , 4 COLLEEN KEITH PATRICIA KOCH CORDY FERGUS JUDD FEUCHER ANDREW CORONIOS DAN WIENER 229 MARK KENNARD PHILIP KERN KAREN GEYER 230 KAREN KREPLICK LENNY LAAKSO JOHN KORBA 232 LEE S. LAUBER MARGARET KOEHLER PETE ALEKSIEWICZ JEFF LAM JIM PIKE VAN ANTHONY DUNCAN SABEAN HENRY TAKATA PETE CHIN MIKE TONG SHARON LANDSMAN CHARLIE LARNER DOROTHY MEAD ALAN KOPIT PETER LEE 237 STEPHANIE LOVETT PETER LANDIS ERIC LINDQUIST 238 LORENZO LEPORE JANET LINDH 239 DIANNE LEMIEUX SPENCER LARSON SALLIE LATHROP 240 JAMES LOUD JANET HAHN MARIAN HANSEN JUDY UGELOW CHRISTINE KONDOLEON 241 BARBARA LUBASH 242 LAURA MATZ HELEN LEIBNER HOWARD LURIA 243 STANLEY LOUIS DONNA LEVINE 244 ANN LEVY v STEPHEN MABEE 246 KATHLEEN MAYZEL 247 CONSTANCE MARINE 248 JAMES LONDON JAMES MALTMAN MARK LITTLE 249 TEDDY MARTILLENI ZOE MAVRIDIS 250 KEVIN McNAMARA MICHAEL McKENNA ROBIN MARK jOAN McEWEN JONATHAN MIXTER ?MHp MAUREEN MCDONALD BETSY MOORE 253 ELAINE MROZ 254 255 ROWALD MILLER CHRIS MOONEY ROBIN MITNICK CAROL MOYLAN 258 MICHAEL MILLER SUSAN MOSS 259 SHARON NELSON PATRICIA NAYLOR IRIS NEWMAN JED MYERS JEAN MORRISON fJamm. 264 HUGH ROOME 265 MARTHA NOWELL BRUCE LINDENBAUM ED JACOBS LARRY OLANOFF JOE SMEDLEY LARRY SILBERT GARY TROP BARRY ENOS AL PERRY MARK FISHER 266 RICHARD F. O ' BRIEN IRENE PHILIPS RICHARD POPPER MARY MORRIS 268 STEPHEN OUTERBRIDGE 269 MARV RORICK JAMES BRICE MELISSA PUCHEK ROBERT RATNER NAN BERNSTEIN JITKA RAIDL 271 WAYNE AND DEBBY PRIGOFF JOY QUILLARD JUDITH PAUL CECILEA ROSEMAN DAVID PELLEGRINI DIANA RENO GEARY ROGERS BILL RUSH 275 Hi RICHARD ROTHMAN ROBERT SCHULER LYNN ROBERSON 276 ■ . S A Sf ' . s . t%3 Xltf j a iS- Jr •- « ;f 3PF, Jmm % EDWARD RAO vlARK ROBBIN ELIZABETH REGGIO BARBARA RUND BILL ROGERS 278 LARRY ROSS ANDREW ROBERTS 279 LOUIS RISOLI WILLIAM RITTENHOUSE GENE ROSTOV JUAN RIVERO JAMES RIVIELLO 281 MARC SCHEER HOOSIER HOSPITALITY IS NO ACCIDENT NANCY SHILEPSKY ROBIN SCHATZ LINDA SAPIENZO KAREN SHERBA ROBERT STACEY RICHARD SILVERMAN 284 JO ANN SHOTWELL DAVE SESSIONS MATTHEW SILVERMAN 286 ESTHER SALMI JEAN SEIGLE ANDY SIMON EDITH SIMO 288 ROBERT SMALL DEBORAH SOUTHWORTH DALEGRADEN GREG SMITH LITA SMITH KATHY SNYDER PETER SHAPLAND 291 MINDY ELLEN SPIER HOWARD SORKIN STEM SZUMOWSKI JANE STEINER JEAN STERNBERG 295 RUTH STOLZ JOHN STOTHOFF 296 ARTHUR SULZBERGER JUDITH SUTPHEN 297 HASAN AHMET TULUY ROBIN HALLE WILLIAM TALCOTT MARY THOMAS NANCY TANANA 299 WILLIAM THOMPSON ANDY THOMSON 300 PEGGY THOMAS RENEE THOMPSON BRUCE TEMPKIN % 301 ANN TRIFONE MARTA TUROK KATHY YANG JAMES TUCKER 303 VINCENT TUTELA ROSS WISHNICK BRIAN WALKER (COLLEGE WITHIN IN MOROCCO) 305 PAUL YAMARTINO HAROLD TURNER DENNIS WIGGINS VANESSA YABLIN GREGORY VRABLIK 307 FREDERIC WITTMANN 308 SCOTTY WELLS ■i FAY WEITZ KAREN WOLOZIN 309 JERRY WEINER BARBARA WEISS MARK YOUNG 313 George Boynton Powle 244 Foreside Rd. Falmouth, Maine Falmouth High Russell A. Prevost 6 Dora St. Nashua, N.H. Nashua High School Robert E. Ratner 4005 Flamingo El Paso, Texas Coronado High Elizabeth R. Collins 94 Bal lard Drive West Hartford, Conn. Northwest Cath. High David S. Pellegrini 347 Ginger Rd. Huntingdon Valley, Pa. Saint Joseph’s Prep. Milo F. Pulde 25 Sun Valley Drive Worcester, Mass. Doherty Mem. High Robert 0. Resnick 10 Retz Rd. Pearl River, N.Y. Nanuet Sr. High Susan E. Conrad 91 Surrey Lane River Edge, N.J. River Dell High Herbert Perez 965 Elizabeth Ter. Long Branch, N.J. Long Branch High Philip W. Pure 295 Oceanview Ter. Stratford, Conn. Frank S Bunnell High Ross Alan Rhodes 18 Wilson Ridge Road Darien, Conn. Darien High School Laurie Cooperman 11-13 Fairhaven PI. Fair Lawn, N.J. Fair Lawn High Alfred M. Perry 10 Spring St. Reading, Mass. Reading Mem. High Jose A. Quinones 76 Limonci llo St. Rio Piedras, P.R. Colegio San Jose Bruce A. Rich 140 Edgehill Rd. Syracuse, N.Y. Nottingham High Kathy Cotsonas 28-20 158 St. Flushing, N.Y. Flushing High Nancy Crowley 302 Abbott Ave. Leominster, Mass. Leominster High Minna Kohn Davidson 8814 Altimont Lane Chevy Chase, Md. Bethesda-Chevy Chase Amy Davis 43 Yale Rd. Hartsdale, N.Y. Woodlands High Katherine Ann Davis Millertown Rd. Bedford, N.Y. Rosemary Hall Helen Louise Delano Main St. Orleans, Moss. Nauset Reg. High Peggy Dru Donnell 2 Wyndman, Sloan Sq. London SW1, England Amer. Sch. in London Dorothy Dowling 1297 Marion Rd. Cheshire, Conn. Chesire High Priscilla N. Dunne 76 Annawan Rd Waban, Mass. Weston High Richard J.A. Popper 22 Scott Ave. Nashua, N.H. Mt. Hermon School Alexander T. Ragan F 576 La Rambla Ponce, Puerto Rico The Hotchkiss School HB Steven G. Ring 1611 Chinook Trail Maitland, Fla. Winter Park High Emi ly Stuart Cox 1725 Main St. Bethlehem, Pa. Liberty High Nancy Carol DeBlasi 397 Middlesex Rd. Darien, Conn. Darien High Diane M Dussault 217 Newton St. Weston, Mass Fleming College, Switz. Karen Anderson Susan Tobey James Harman Maurice Henderson Frederick Georgian Christine Kondoleon Barbara Laites Russell Prevost ABBOTT MARILYN ANN 18 Killington Avenue Rutland, VI 316 Mark Jones Jill Freeman ABOLAFIA MITCHEL Y 1255 North Ave New Rochelle, NY ACKER PAUL LEONARD 69 Meadowgate Wethersfield, CT ADRIAN CHERYL LYN 14 Goodrich Rd Farmington, CT AIDEKMAN KENNETH A 18 Highview Road Short Hills , NJ ALBERT JOCELYN MAY P O Box 125 Frenchville, ME ALEKSIEWICZ PETER JOSEPH 70 Oak Grove Avenue Brattleboro, VT ALEXANDER CAREY ANNE 40 South Road Rye Beach, NH ALEXANDER MIRIAM 290 School St Belmont, MA ALLEN DEREK BOWER 175 W 79Th Street New York, NY ALLERHAND PETER GORDON 531 E 20Th Street New York, NY ALTERMAN MICHAEL LEWIS 269 Vandelinda Avenue Teaneck, NJ ALTMAN SONDRA JOYCE 10 Castle Rock Drive Havertown, PA AMICARELLI CATHERINE 42 Sleepy Hollow Drive Cumberland, Rl AMOS DWIGHT JAMES 13713 Cranwood Pk Blvd Garfield Hts, OH ANDERSON DONALD CHARLE 17 Arapahoe Road West Hartford, CT ANDERSON JOSEPH FRANCIS 19 Drury Lane West Hartford, CT ANDERSON KAREN BARBARA 22 Sherwood Lane Barrington, Rl ANDERSON MARJORIE LEE 1400 E 55TH PI Apt 205 Chicago, IL ANGELO MANUEL IOAQUIM Tufts Sta PO Box 48 Medford, MA ANTHONY VANCE HOWARD 6302 Phyllis Lane Bethesda, MD APPLEBY AUDREY JANE 322 Clarke Ave Palmbeach, FL ARBITBLIT DONALD C 215 Pawnee Road Cranford NJ ARMSTRONG DWIGHT EDWARD 227 9TH Court West Birmingham, AL ARNO GUY J Irene Drive Monroe, NY ARNOLD CALVIN LINCOLN RFD 2 Box 431 Ligonier, PA ARNOLD SEWALL SHARPE Mashamoquet Farms Abington, CT ARRISON ANDREW J Box 281 Dutton District Springfield, VT ATKINSON VIRGINIA MARION Rd 2 Stanley, NY AVEDIKIAN SUZANNE MARIE 9 Waterhouse Road Stoneham, MA AYOUB JOSEPH SALEM 26 Stratford St West Roxbury, MA BACHMAN DANIEL GEORGE 974 Maurice Avenue Rahway, NJ BACKERMAN ROBERT CHARLES 243 McDonald Ave Brooklyn, NY BACON JONATHAN C 11 Fairview Terrace Derby, CT BAILIN SUSAN BETH 29 Crown Street Milton, MA BAKER CHRISTOPHER PERRY 1515 High Hawk Rd E Greenwich, Rl BALDWIN DAVID FOSTER 4640 Melissa Lane Dallas, TX BALDWIN MARK FRANK 7 Stoneway Lynnfield, MA BALLARD JANICE RUTH 11208 Landy Court Kensington, MD BLOOM DONALD HOWARD 81 Valentine Road Milton, MA BRIGHT JOSEPH PAUL 7616 Club Road Baltimore, MD BARBOUR JOYCE O 4268 Southern Avenue S E Washington, DC BLOOM JAN HETTIE 112 Point Breeze PI Pgh, PA BRISTOL VIRGINIA Maiden Lane Durham, CT BARGER CURTIS BASCH 14 Orchard Road Brookline, MA BLOUNT STEPHEN BROWN 18610 Roselawn Detroit, Ml BRONK PETER F 88 Four Seasons W Eggertsville, NY BARNES LORRIE RICKMAN 2101 Spruce Drive N W Washington, DC BLUM JONATHAN PHELPS 120 E 65TH Street New York, NY BROOMFIELD ROBIN ELIZABETH 10 Chiltern Hill Drive Worcester, MA BARSS VANESSA AJEMIAN 62 Richmond Rd Belmont, MA BLUTSTEIN WENDY SUE 1317 Lorraine Road Reading, PA BROOMHEAD KIRK 2956 Lake Road Pebble Beach, CA BAXTER ERIC LLOYD 53 Emmons Road Falmouth, MA BLY JOHN ARCHER 7 Saw Mill Road West Simsbury, CT BRUNSWICK RICHARD PETER 25 Village Rd Roslyn Hts, NY BECKER ANNE BALDWIN 5029 Amberson Place Pittsburgh, PA BOGART DAVID S 443 Pugatory Rd Middletown, Rl BRYANT JAMES H 52 Orient Ave Arlington Heights, MA BECKER NELSON KEVIN 11 Wahneta Rd Old Greenwich, CT BOHLANDER RICHARD E 26 E Dixon Ave Dayton, OH BRYCE PHILIP RUSSELL 23 Imperial Ave Westport, CT BEEBE THATCHER ROYS 183 Lawrence Street Gardner, MA BOLTANSKY HOWARD 3213 Woodvalley Drive Baltimore, MD BRYCE WENDY JANE 2081 Danby Road Ithaca, NY BELLINGER GEORGE MICHAEL 183 Roosevelt Avenue Stratford, CT BOWEN ROBERT MALCOLM 11 Union Street Bristol, NH BUDNER BRUCE ALBERT 5124 Royalcrest Dallas, TX BENJAMIN ROBERT ANDREW 2753 Sulgrave Road Beachwood, OH BOWMAN KIM ELISE 20 Welshman Court Caldwell, N) BUDRIS JOHN WILLIAM 18 Ames Street Brockton, MA BENNETT DAVID FRANCIS Poverty Hollow Road Newtown, CT BOYD JENNIFER 165 Cheshire Rd Wallingford, CT BULLARD ANNE Paska Mansett Lane Nonquitt, MA BERK BRUCE ANDREW 27 The Maples Roslyn, NY BOYD JOANNE ELIZABETH 9 McKinley St Montpelier, VT BUONOCORE JANET 83 Woodside Drive Penfield, NY BERKAL BRENDA DIANE 274 Puritan Road Swampscott, MA BOZIGIAN STEPHANIE 65 Craiwell Avenue West Springfield, MA BURKE CHARLES HENRY 7 Arrowhead Lane Arlington, MA BERNSTEIN NANCY ELIZABETH 3 Haig Ct Dix Hills, NY BRADLEY JOSEPH EDMUND 53 S Main St Wolfeboro, NH BURKE MICHAEL HENRY 11 Yale Street Holyoke, MA BINGHAM SARAH LINDSEY 2728 Leighton Rd Shaker Hts, OH BRANDT GARY ZAHN 75 Morris Lane Scarsdale, NY BURNS FRANCIS HERBERT 18 Pioneer Road Hingham, MA BISHOP JESSICA ANNE 76 West Harrison Street Tunkhannock, PA BRENNAN JOHN CARLTON 5965 Pat Avenue Woodland Hills, CA BUSHNELL ELIZABETH HAEHL 1431 Webster Street Palo Alto, CA BITTMAN JEFFREY ALAN 28 Pershing Rd Glens Falls, NY BRIGGS KATHERINE MINOR 145 Mount Vernon St Middletown, CT BUTTS MICHAEL JOSEPH 59 Pleasant Street Newton Centre, MA BLAIR LORRAINE S 34A Irving St Apt B Cambridge, MA BRIGHAM DENISE FLORENCE 50 Danforth Drive New Canaan, CT BUXBAUM KAREN LEE 3719 Bradley Lane Chevy Chase, MD BYRNE WILLIAM MARTIN 43 Pin Oak Drive Scituate, MA BYSE BARBARA HELEN 16 Garfield Rd Belmont, MA CAIN WILLIAM EDWARD 302 West Emerson Street Melrose, MA CALLAHAN ANN ELIZABETH 17 Rue Alphonse De Neuville Paris 17 France, ZZ CALLOW ALLAN DANA 492 Glen Rd Weston, MA CARLSON INGRID TEKLA 3457 Tyler Court Ellicott City, MD CARMEN ROBERT M 44 Yale Road Needham, MA CARPENTER JEANNE ANNE 23 Henry St Box 176 Mohawk, NY CARTIN LINDA HOLLIS 1027 North Main St West Hartford, CT CARTON MARGARET K 674 Hill Road Winnetka, IL CASPER WILLIAM EMMET 19 Sandra Lane Pearl River, NY CASTELLANO LINDA SUSAN 21 Skyview Drive Armonk, NY CASTLE ELIZABETH HEATLY 4 Whitney Lane Rochester, NY CAUSEY ANNE MACRAE 645 South Main Street Geneva, NY CHAMBERLIN MARY ELLEN 8800 Daimler Court Potomac, MD CHAMPAGNE KRISTINE B 47 Winthrop St Medford, MA CHANDLER WILLIAM DWIGHT 20 Av Jan Van Ruusbroec Tervuren Belgium, ZZ CHIN MARTIN JAN 6 Peppermill Drive Cherry Hill, NJ CHIN PETER 12 D Emerald Court Boston, MA CHOI KEE IL 15 Weldon Road Newton, MA CIMILLO MARY ELLEN 810 Summit Avenue River Edge, NJ CINAMON TOBY ANN 424 Woodford St Portland, ME CIOVACCO MARK GEORGE 195 Byram Shore Road Byram, CT CLARK DOUGLAS WHITNEY 40 Mountain View Drive West Hartford, CT CLARK KATHERINE 2325 Hartrey Avenue Chittenden, VT CLARKE LANCE DARNELL 3 Hancock St Cambridge, MA CLARKE VIRGINIA COBURN Box 505 Jamestown, Rl CLAYTON GEOFFREY A 113 Thurton Dr New Canaan, CT CLEGG DOREEN ANN 23 Ladd Hill Rd Lynn, MA CODY DAVID CHARLES 52 Merrow Road Lynnfield, MA COE ALAN J 1090 Longwood Drive Baton Rouge, LA COHEN CHARLES STEVEN 911 Park Avenue New York, NY COHEN DANIEL HAYS R Cohen 41 E 42nd St New York, NY COHEN MYER J 770 Boylston St Apt Ph A Boston, MA COHN RHEA JANE 3038 East Ave Rochester, NY COLE SUSAN JANE 346 Wolcott Hill Rd Wethersfield, CT COLEY CORNELL WAYNE 648 Morton Street Boston, MA COLLINS ELIZABETH ROBERTA 94 Ballard Drive West Hartford, CT COLLINS PAUL J 151 Warren St Arlington, MA COLTEN MICHAEL HARVEY 91 Touraine Avenue Hull, MA CONKLING CHRISTOPHER A North Broadway Upper Nyack, NY CONRAD SUSAN ELLEN 91 Surrey Lane River Edge, N) CONTOS HARRIS 10 Osceola Path Arlington, MA COOPERMAN LAURIE SUE 1113 Fairhaven Place Fair Lawn, NJ CORN RICHARD FRANKLIN 126 North Chatsworth Avenue Larchmont, NY CORNELL NANCY ANNE 81 Sunlit Drive Watchung, NJ CORONIOS ANDREW COVERT Glastenview Drive C O Ruth Rub Shaftsbury, VT COSTIGAN TIMOTHY MICHAEL 24 Valley View Drive Cumberland, Rl COTE RICHARD HENRY Bayview Road Marblehead, MA COTSONAS KATHY ANN 28-20 158Th St Flushing, NY COUGHLIN DANIEL F 873 E Squantum St MA COX EMILY 1725 Main St Bethlehem, PA CREEDEN RICHARD ARTHUR 40 Underwood Park Waltham, MA CREEDEN ROBERT EDMUND 40 Underwood Pk Waltham, MA CRENSHAW WILLIAM CRAWFORD 1424 Waggaman Circle McLean, VA CROSBY JOHN JOSEPH 130 Florence Road Waltham, MA CROSS KEVIN MICHAEL 68 North Deeplands Rd Grosse Pointe Sh, Ml CROWLEY NANCY 302 Abbott Ave Leominster, MA CUNNINGHAM FREDERICK 471 Grove Street Needham, MA CUSHNER ANDREW B 70 Winchester Street Apt 2 Brookline, MA DAHLGREN BRIAN EDWARD Box 26 Mars Hill, ME DALE BURCE EUGENE 1410 Monk Road Gladwyne, PA DALEY GEORGE EDWARD 18 Randolph Street Arlington, MA DAVIS AMY ROBIN 43 Yale Road Hartsdale, NY DEARY PAUL WILLIAM 352 South Ave Western, MA DEBLASI NANCY CAROL 397 Middlesex Rd Darien, CT DEBOSE VAN BYRON -8285 South Maryland Ave Chicago, IL DEER DARCY DEAN 1166 Phoenix Ave Schenectady, NY DELANO HELEN LOUISE 103 Main St Orleans, MA DELLO RUSSO J F 18 Norseman Avenue Watertown, MA DELUCA FRANCIS A 21 Hinsdale Street Medford, MA DEMIRJIAN CAROL ANN 85 Woodfall Road Belmont, MA DENNISON BRYNN LESLIE 8 Andrew Road Eastchester, NY DEPALMA EDWARD GREGORY 56 Gary Drive R D 2 Sewickley, PA DICKER RICHARD CHARLES 41 Crowningshield Drive Paxton, MA DIXON ANTHONY STEPHEN 44 Deckard Street Boston, MA DOLLOFF ROSS MORTON 145 York Street Stratford, CT EINHORN DEBORAH E 10 Ross Road Livingston, N) DONAHOE STEPHEN CHARLES 17 Peabody Road Stoneham, MA EISENHAURE KRISTINE DORRIS Bantam Road Litchfield, CT DONNELL PEGGY DRU 2 Wyndham House Sloane Square London Swi Englnd, ZZ ELLISON YVONNE PAULETTE 7957 Thouron Avenue Philadelphia, PA DOWLING DOROTHY ELLEN 1297 Marion Road Cheshire, CT ELSTON PAUL STUART Wolf Tree Drive Woodbridge, CT DOWLING GREGORY JOSEPH C O Aramco Box 549 Ras Tanura Saudi Arabia, ZZ EMONT ERIC M 3600 N E 170Th St Miami Beach, FL DOYLE ROBERT ANTON 42 Robert Street Hamden, CT ENDELSON KATHI L 857 Fifth Ave New York, NY DREILUS DAVID 4827 Princeton Memphis, TN ENGLISH BRADLEY 100 W Prospect St Kewange, IL DRIPCHANK EILEEN P 26 Myrtle St Haworth, N) ERICKSON GAIL LONA 62 Bishop St Attleboro, MA DUBROVSKY NEIL MICHAEL Box 574 Rd 2 Lakewood, NJ EVANS ALICE L 8 Beethaven St Roxbury, MA DUNN JOHN PETER 139 Stone Ridge Road Murray Hill, NJ FALCONE DANIEL LOUIS 124 North Street Norfolk, MA DUNNE PRISCILLA NAN 987 Memorial Drive Cambridge, MA FARRINGTON PETER M 3004 R St N W Washington, DC DUSHAN STEVE MERRICK 2 Phillips Terrace Swampscott, MA FARROW DANIEL ROBERT GREEN 1023 Drexel Hills Boulevard New Cumberland, PA DYER PAMELA ELIZABETH 13 Demar Road Lexington, MA FEIGER DEBRA JILL 259 42 148Th Ave Rosedale, NY EASTON MITCHEL D 180 Cedar Ave Hackensack, NJ FEINBURG DAVID ARTHUR 24 Peacock Farm Road Lexington, MA EATON JONATHAN 36 Royal Road Bangor, ME FEINS ROBERT STEPHEN 1295 Beech Street Manchester, NH ECKELS MARILYN JANE 1417 Dellwood Drive Raleigh, NC FELSMAN JONATHAN IRA 830 Longshore Ave Phila, PA ENRICH BEVERLY 67 Genesee Trail Westfield, NJ FELTH PATRICIA LYNNE 93 Deerfield Avenue Waterbury, CT EICHENBAUM JESSE DAVID 94 Roslyn Drive New Britain, CT FERGUS CORWIN 3060 Oakridge Road Columbus, OH EILAND ROBERT ANDREW 225 Andros St Cocoa Beach, FL FERGUSON BARBARA MUNRO 203 Congress Street Milford, MA FLINCK HARRIET LOIS 39 Somerset Rd Brookline, MA FINE LINDA ]ANET 10 Leighton St Natick, MA FINLEY GLENN 25 Dalrymple St Jamaica Plain, MA FIROUZ MASTANEH Farmauieh Ave Kamranieh Tehran Iran, ZZ FISCHER |UDD STUART 70 Ridge Road New Rochelle, NY FISHER AMY LEWIS 4201 Catherdral Ave Apt 502E Washington, DC FISHER MARTHA 17 Miles Road Hingham, MA FISHER PHOEBE C Jackson Hill Rd Sharon, CT FISHMAN ELLEN BETH 918 East Ninth Street Brooklyn, NY FLAHERTY FRANCIS XAVIER 4 Fourth Street Lexington, MA FLORIO STEVEN MICHAEL 173 Bartlett Street Brockton, MA FOREMAN IVERY DARNELL 145 Connecticut Ave Stamford, CT FORSBERG BARBARA KARIN 411 Concord Avenue Lexington, MA FOSTER THOMAS JAMES 885 Park Avenue New York, NY FOTIS LINDA DIANE 6901 Andover Drive Alexandria, VA FREDERICKSEN LOUISE NORMA 50 Commerical Street Stoughton, MA FRIEDMAN DAVID JONATHAN 116C Larchmont Acres Larchmont, NY FUBINI LAURIE L 2300 Hunter Mill Rd Vienna, VA CAGLIARDI PAUL JOSEPH 438 Wallingford Avenue Athol, MA GALE ERIC EDWARD 44 Beach View Drive Stamford, CT GALUSZKA PETER ALBIN 420 Riverside Drive Washington, NC GAMBLE CHARLES WALTER 1069 River Road Binghampton, NY GARCIA JAMES MARTIN 3011 Albany Crescent Bronx, NY GEISZ MARY BERNADETTE 436 East Durham Street Philadelphia, PA GEMMATO FRANK 70 Chester St Allston, MA GEORGE KENNETH M 8 Broadview Avenue Madison, NJ GEORGIAN FREDERICK PARIS A 139 Clifton Street Belmont, MA GEYER KAREN LUISA 209 Stone Street Walpole, MA GIBBS DAVID HARRY 256 Ravine Drive Highland Park, IL GIBBS RICHARD ALAN 23 Phillips Avenue Swampscott, MA GIBSON ELIZABETH HELEN 1331 Park Ave S W Albuquerque, NM GLAZIER KENNETH JAY 154 Sewall Avenue Winthrop, MA GLICKMAN SUSAN 641 Victoria Ave Montreal Pr Quebec Canada, ZZ GOLD FREDERICK SAMUEL 219 Lelak Avenue Springfield, NJ GOLDBERG STEVEN 38 Hemlock Drive Natick, MA GOLDMAN ROBERT KELLMAN 11 Dennis Court Riverhead, NY GOLSON CHRISTOPHER BERNARD 12000 Old Georgetown Rd R802 Rockville, MD GOMEZ GABRIEL GEORGE 31 Hope Street Bathurst Gambia, ZZ GONZALEZ ANA VICTORIA 1208 Ashford Ave San Juan, PR GOOCH STEPHEN FRANCIS 120 Chandler Road Medford, MA GOODALL HAROLD BRUCE 45 Clarke Road Barrington, Rl GORDON JEAN 1 Herkimer Rd Scarsdale, NY GORHAM MICHAEL ARTHUR 319 Convent Avenue New York, NY GRAUEL BARBARA JANE 2619 Wilmington Rd New Castle, PA GRAYSON LAURIE BETH 30 Dorchester Road Scarsdale, NY GRIFFIN STEPHEN JOHN 646 Main Street Hanover, MA GUTTER SAMUEL IRA 120 Walnut Street Walden, NY HADLEY ANN CLIFFORD 13 Summerhill Avenue Worcester, MA HAHN JANET 1322 Beechwood Blvd Pittsburgh, PA HALE GARY ALAN 134 Farm Stead Drive South Windsor, CT HALEY ELIZABETH B 490 Fern Street West Hartford, CT HALLE ROBIN Vesenaz1222 Geneva Switzerlan, ZZ HAMILTON JAMES A 235 Oak Neck Lane West Islip, NY HAMLIN BETSEY TODD 32 Pine St East Millinocket, ME HANSEN MARIAN ROMAINE 407 Wickford Drive Pittsburgh, PA GILBERT RICHARD DEAN 180 Mountainview Drive Holyoke, MA GILLETTE MARY DEMPSTER 11 Heath Hill Brookline, MA GINSBERG SUSAN MERL 301 Clen-Moore Blvd New Castle, PA GIORDANO PATRIC NELSON 311 Third Street Wilmette, IL GOROFF DAVID EARL 68 Trout Brook Avenue Milton, MA GOTTLER JANET MARCY 189 Clinton Rd Brookline, MA GOWA ROBIN SUSAN 1673 East 28 Street Brooklyn, NY GRACEY CHERYL APPLETON 614 Goldsborough Drive Rockville, MD GLABERSON WILLIAM BART 127 Remsen Street Brooklyn, NY GLASMAN FRANCES HELEN 68 East 19Th Street Brooklyn, NY GRADEN DALE THURSTON 14 Pine Ave Barrington, Rl GRAFF DENISE ARLENE 235 Sidonia Ave Apt 318 Coral Gables, FL GLASS GEORGE ALLEN 1208 Glen Ridge Drive Glassboro, NJ GRAHEK DAVID BRUCE Box 275 West Barnet, VT HARDY SHARON LOUISE 901 Narragansett Parkway Warwick, Rl HARMAN PAUL DAVID 83 High Hollow Road East Hills, NY HARRIS EVANGELINE DESPINA 11 Chadbourne Rd Lexington, MA HARRIS KAREN MARIE 1614 West Capitol Drive Milwaukee, Wl HARRISON DEBORAH H 47 Yale St Winchester, MA HARTUNIAN SHARON GRACE 391 Pleasant St Belmont, MA HASTINGS DAVID 23 Elmview Avenue No Dartmouth, MA HAUG GEORGE CHRISTIAN West Shokan, NY HAVILAND DEBORAH 105 Coolidge Hill Cambridge, MA HECK JR JOHN A 100 Welford Road Lutherford, MD HEFLIN MARY ELIZABETH 15 Terrace Avenue Tiverton, Rl HEILBRON ALAN B 125 Walnut St Somerville, MA HEKIMIAN PHILIP GARY 7 Daley Ave Methuen, MA HELLER KAREN ANNE 14 Hans Place London SW England, ZZ HEMENWAY THOMAS S 416 Franklin Street Geneva, IL HEMPHILL ELLEN R 344 Seventh Ave 140 East Hickory, NC HERBERT JACQUELINE MARY 198 Holden Street Holden, MA HERSTAND MARC DAVID 105 Westwood Drive So Golden Valley, MN HERTZ JEFFREY 1545 McGregor Ave Montreal Quebec Canada, ZZ HEWETT BARBARA JANE 93 Carthage Road Scarsdale, NY HEWITT JOHN HAMILTON 862 West End Avenue New York, NY HILL GEORGE GWYNN 3023 Que Street N W Washington, DC HILLMAN STEPHEN ALAN 18 Carthage Lane Scarsdale, NY HINGSON LUKE L 334 S Lexington Ave Pittsburgh, PA HIRSCH CAROLYN LOUISE 310 Capen House Tufts Univ Medford, MA HIRSCH GEORGE ROBERT 281 Newton Road Springfield, MA HODGKINS CHARLES DENNISON 111 Warren Avenue Plymouth, MA HOEPFNER CHRISTINE ANNE 25 Meadowview Rd Hyde Park, MA HOLMES LINDA THERESA 1630 Underwood St N W Washington, DC HOLNESS DORIS I 273 Walnut Ave Roxbury, MA HORNE ROBERT E 69 Walden St New Bedford, MA HORTON ROBERT ELLSWORTH 22 Oak Drive Riverside, CT HOSACK KENNETH ROSS 50 Midrocks Drive Norwalk, CT HOUSTON JANE DARRAH 1302 Rowe Road Schenectady, NY HOWARD HUGH GEORGE 1 Howard Avenue Westminster, MA HOWARD NORA JAN 251 Hawthorn St New Bedford, MA HOWARD ROGER POUND 12 Hapsburg Place Hempstead, NY HOWE DAVID VINCENT 2 Pine Haven Drive Holden, MA HOWES PAULA SURREY 444 Central Park West Apt 12C New York, NY HUNT PATRICE MICHELE 2170 Madison Ave 10G New York City, NY HWA DAVID JOHN 54 West Hill Circle Stamford, CT HYMAN KERRY A 505 East Pine Street Long Beach, NY INMAN THOMAS STEPHEN 731 Mt Moro Road Villanova, PA IRELAND JOHN MERRITT 137 Powderhouse Blvd Somerville, MA ISAACS TINA BETH 2219 Radburn Road Fair Lawn, NJ JACKSON CAROLYN RUTH 21 Harrison Place White Plains, NY JACOBS JOANNE 2 Hook Road Rye, NY JAFFE MONA LYNN 4103 Buck Creek Rd Temple Hills, MD JOHNSON CATHERINE LEWIS 131 Overlook Avenue Hackensack, NJ JONES MARC BENNETT 86 Bullough Park Newtonville, MA JONES VINCENT RONNIE 4916 First Street N W Washington, DC JORDAN MARK WILLIAM 3286 Whitney Ave Mt Carmel, CT JORDON JUDITH MARIE 5164 Rosecrest Drive Pittsburgh, PA KAGAN CANDACE BETH 370 Grandview Ave Bangor, ME KAPLAN DEBORAH L 665 Church Avenue Woodmere, NY KARLIN ARLENE BARBARA 115 Bird Street Needham, MA KATZ MATTHEW 40 Pelham Lane New Haven, CT This page gift of a friend KAU CHUAN LUNG 3-23-7 Sakuragaoka Setagaya Ku Tokyo Japan 156, ZZ KAVANAGH MAUREEN 3100 35Th St N W Washington, DC KAWALEK JEFFREY M 8 Merrywood Drive W Orange, NJ KAY JONATHAN MARK 14005 Newport Avenue Belle Harbor, NY KEEN BARBARA S 3501 Sturgis Lane Waco, TX KEITH COLLEEN CATHERINE Plains Rd Pittsford, VT KELLER DANA KESSLEN 240 Marbleridge Road North Andover, MA KELLER MARY LEWIS 226 N 27Th St Camp Hill, PA KELLY MARCIA HELEN 142 Sleepy Hollow Rd New Canaan, CT KELSO FREDERICK WILLIAM 13 Halick Court East Brunswick, NJ KENETY STEPHEN A Box 126 Ivy Hill Rd Cockeysville, MD KENNARD MARK SHEA 80 Scarborough Road Briarcliff Manor, NY KENNEDY SCOTT EYERLY 73 Campden Hill Ct Kensington London W8 England, ZZ KENNEY BRUCE WINFIELD 149 Colebrook St Hartford, CT KERN PHILIP ALFRED 1 Mabel Street Johnston, Rl KIEL MITCHELL BRUCE 14 Old Flintlock Road Bloomfield, CT KING MARY PATRICIA 353 South Center St Orange, NJ KNIGHT STANLEY HOWARD 913 Roslyn Road Ridgewood, NJ KOCH PATRICIA ANN 19 Reeve Circle Millburn, NJ KOEHLER MARGARET LOUISE 54 Hills Rd Amherst, MA KONDOLEON CHRISTINE 1327 Parsons Blvd Whitestone, NY KOPIT ALAN STUART 3643 Latimore Road Shaker Hghts, OH KORAB STEPHEN M Main St Higganum, CT KORBA JOHN ALAN 55 Lucerne Drive Andover, MA KREPLICK KAREN 67 Kensington Ave Northampton, MA KUNKES JEFFREY 39 Jonathan Drive EDISON, NJ KURFIST LEWIS A 14-25 165 St Beechhurst, NY KURIGER FREDERICK HOWARD 18 Winchendon Rd Ashburnham, MA KURT EVELYN ANNE 6 Fairview Drive Westport, CT LAITES BARBARA GAIL 40 Captains Walk Milford, CT LALIBERTE LINDA LEE 15 Bartlett Street Waterville, ME LAM WAI HUNG 1022 Boylston Street Newton Highlands, MA LANDAU RUTH SUZANNE 347 W Olive St Long Beach, NY LANDIS PETER JAY 352 Grant Avenue Woodmere, NY LANDSMAN SHARON STEPHANIE 44 Holtham Place Hampstead PR Quebec Canada, ZZ LATHROP SALLIE LOUISE Thompsons Corners Westerly, Rl LAUBER LEE SUSAN 4 The Crescent Short Hills, NJ LAWRENCE ROBERT W Bulls Bridge Road Kent, CT LEBHAR CLAY GODFREY 13 Elmwood Lane Westport, CT LEE DONGJU ANGELA 244-109 Huamdong Yongsanku Seoul Korea, ZZ LEE JENNIFER ISABELLA 653 Concord Ave Belmont, MA LEED PETER LEWIS 128 Greenridge Avenue White Plains, NY LEGGETTE LYLE POE 7215 Timber Lane Falls Church, VA LEIBNER HELEN ANN 27 Prospect Park West Brooklyn, NY LEITER RICHARD JOEL 3601 Johnson Avenue New York, NY LEMIEUX DIANNE JEANNINE 126 Lowden Ave South Plainfield, NJ LEONI JOHN PAUL 50 Popham Rd Scarsdale, NY LEPORE LORENZO 151 Playstead Road Medford, MA LEVIN BARBARA JOAN 20 Pauline Drive Natick, MA LEVINE DONNA L 7 Weld St Framingham, MA LEVY ANN DEBORAH 1176 Hardscrabble Rd Chappaqua, NY LEZBERG DAVID MICHAEL 33 Beecher Park Bangor, ME LIEBL MARCIA PENNY 3 Harbor Beach Rd Miller Place, NY LIPPE JO ANN 260 Saint Cloud Avenue West Orange, NJ LOEBEL MONICA RANDY 192 Garth Road Scarsdale, NY LOVETT STEPHANIE ANN 101 Leslie Ave W Lafayette, IN LUBASH BARBARA NAN 59 E Linden Ave Apt 7 Englewood, NJ LUBMAN ALISON J 20 No Hillside Avenue Livingston, NJ LURIA HOWARD DAVID 649 Hibiscus Dr Hallandale, FL LYONS BARBARA J 64 Militia Hill Rd Warrington, PA MABEE STEPHEN BLAISDELL 5 Tavern Lane Lexington, MA MACRAE CRAIG JOHNSON RFD = 1 Concord, NH MAIDLOW RICHARD MELVIN 118 Seventh Street Bangor, ME MAISLEN ANDREA HOPE 70 Foxcroft Road West Hartford, CT MALOOF JANET LOUISE 3 Sandrick Rd Belmont, MA MALTMAN JAMES SCOTT 615 South Pine Arlington Height, IL MANDELKORN RICHARD SHAI PO Box 5002 Santa Fe, NM MANNING MICHAEL BARRY 573 High Street Fall River, MA MANSFIELD STEPHEN WILLIAM 15 Spring St Danvers, MA MARCHAND RICHARD DAVIS 17 Barnesdale Road Natick, MA MARCUS SCOTT BRIAN 6 Polo Street Great Neck, NY MARINE CAROL ANN 122 Chestnut Hill Rd Torrington, CT MARINE CONSTANCE YVETTE 37 48 Crestway Place Los Angeles, CA MARK ROBIN ANN 101 West Ridge Drive West Hartford, CT MARKIEWICZ MICHAEL 30 Harwood Street Lynn, MA MARSHALL DOROTHY LOUISE 36 Hanson Road PO Box 114 Barrington, Rl MARSHALL SCOTT LYLE 14 Hillside Place Sudbury, MA MARTELLINI TED PAYNE 46 Walnut Avenue Andover, MA MARTIN JOHN DAVID 22 Farmington Street Fairview, MA MARTIN THOMAS CHARLES 163 Wilson Avenue Beaver, PA MARTINEZ DEBRA 1515 Grand Concourse Bronx, NY MASLAND JONATHAN L Rd = 6 Carlisle, PA MASLOW ELIZABETH ANN 5 Reynal Crossing Scarsdale, NY MASON SARAH ELLEN 167 Maine Ave Millinocket, ME MASON SUSAN RUTH 130 Coolidge Road Worcester, MA MATZ LAURA ELLEN 17 Broad St Belmont, MA MAVRIDIS ZOE ELIZABETH 5804 Agusta Lane Bethesda, MD MAYZEL KATHLEEN ANN 30 Broad Street Belmont, MA McClain olanda lee 7254 15Th PI N W Washington, DC MIGHDOLL STEPHEN JOSEPH 12 Briarwood Ct Rockville Center, NY McCLEARY CHARLES ALBERT Allerton Road Naugatuck, CT McCORKILL RODNEY DAVID 3 Lynwood Terrace St Johnsbury, VT McDonald maureen Helen 122 Paul Rd Morrisville, PA McEWEN JOAN ELIZABETH 101 Columbia Drive Amherst, MA McKENNA MICHAEL AUGUSTUS 3 Woodland Road Maplewood, NJ McLEAN PATRICIA RUTH 77 Peach Tree Road Glastonbury, CT McLURE BETHANY LOUISE Waterford Road Littleton, NH MEACHAM JERALD SAMUEL 2744 20Th Street Tuscaloosa, AL MEAD DOROTHY B Tower Rd Lincoln, MA MEADOWS DAVID JOHN 5603 Parkston Road Bethesda, MD MEADOWS RONALD J 435 Convent Ave New York, NY MEDINA RAFAEL ENRIQUE 16607 Hillside Ave Jamaica, NY MEDVIN NAOMI 7223 Beechwood Rd Alexandria, VA MENDELOWITZ EDWARD MICHAEL 30 Barnes Road Tarrytown, NY MERLINO PAULETTE F 149 Wilson Rd Nahant, MA METZLER MICHAEL WILLIAM 45 River Street Salamanca, NY MICHAELSON DEBRA 45 Vassar Avenue Providence, Rl MICHAELSON WENDY SUE 52 Canterbury Road Rockville Centre, NY MILLER JANE S 171 Main Street Kingston, NY MILLER MICHAEL CRAIG 21 Damson Lane Valley Stream, NY MILLER ROLAND WITMER 311 Westland Avenue Columbus, OH MILLIKEN JR JOHN F 952 Fisher Lane Winnetica, IL MILNER KAREN E 517 East Lancaster Ave St Davids, PA MINET LESLIE FRANCES 65 Frognal London N W 3 Eng, ZZ MITNICK ROBIN JOY 40 Winthrop Road Short Hills, NJ MIXTER JONATHAN CHARLES 116 Westmont West Hartford, CT MODNE LINDA ROBIN 109 Vere Terrace Livingston, NJ MOLSKI THOMAS MATTHEW 50 Hendley Street Middletown, CT MONDANO FRANK 477 Washington Avenue Chelsea, MA MOORE BETSY MAURICE 500 Shuttle Meadow Ave New Britain, CT MOORE MARY JOSEPHINE 40 Fletcher Rd Belmony, MA MORALES ESCAMILLO MONTERRO 330 West 28Th Street New York, NY MORAN TIMOTHY A 55 Riverstone Drive Chagrin Falls Mon, OH MORGAN DANIEL LOUIS Greenlea Court Westport, CT MORGAN WILLIAM DWIGHT 9 Bemis Rd Holyoke, MA MORGENTHALER LEE NICKEY 3710 Gibbons Avenue Baltimore, MD MORRIS MARY ADA 99 Kirkstall Road Newtonville, MA MORRISON JEAN KAREN 1869 Cider Mill Road Union, NJ MORROW STEPHEN ALEXANDER 218 East Greenwich Ave Roosevelt, NY MOSELEY DONNA L 233 Humboldt Ave Roxbury, MA MOSS SUSAN ANNE 237 Montague Place South Orange, N) MOYLAN CAROL ELIZABETH 28 Cross St Malden, MA MROZ ELAINE PATRICIA 17 Harrison Street Stoneham, MA MURPHY KATHLEEN 10 Dartmouth St Winchester, MA MUSACCHIO JOHN J 39 Main St Greenfield, MA MUSSER NANCY KATHRYN Hilton Heath Cos Cob, CT MYERS JED A 150 Rolling Rd Bala Cynwyd, PA NABEL WILLIAM J 994 Tolland St E Hartford, CT NACHT KATHY 52 Richfield Street Plainview, NY NAGLE PATRICIA KAREN 1750 Boulevard Westfield, NJ NAROWSKI JOHN THOMAS 153 Sentinel Hill Derby, CT NELSON SHARON DIANE 7 Meserve Road Durham, NH NEUFELD EMIL A 35 Benstone St Stamford, CT NEWMAN GARY ALAN 135 Wayside Road New Shrewsbury, NJ NEWMAN IRIS 4201 Hildring Dr E Ft Worth, TX NEWMAN MELISSA SUE 28 Parsons Drive Swampscott, MA NEWMAN RICHARD SAMUEL 116 Atkinson Road Rockville Cntre, NY NONACK STEPHEN ZANE 7 Ridgecrest Street Huntington, NY NOONAN DENNIS THOMAS 232 Pakachoag St Auburn, MA NOVICKI KATHERINE ANN 540 Boston Road Middletown, CT NUSSBAUM ROBERT SCOTT 1421 Hudson Road Teaneck, NJ ODONNELL JAMES P 814 West German St Herkimer, NY ODONNELL JOHN JOSEPH 1100 Wyndon Ave Rosemont, PA OLEARY DAVID JAMES 67 Arlington, St Newton, MA OLEARY SUSAN ANN 18 Kenilworth Rd Worcester, MA OLIAN MARY ELIZABETH 1340 Astor St Chicago, IL OLICKER ANDREA HOPE 54 Shrub Hollow Road Roslyn, NY ORANSKY ALAN N 260 Heywood Avenue Orange, NJ ORCHIN IRA ELLIOT 567 Beach 131 Street Belle Harbor, NY ORR JAMES LAWRENCE Box 1109 Lagrange, GA OSHEA TIMOTHY 32 E Springfield Ave Philadelphia, PA OSHER SUSAN LEE 66 Chadwick Street Portland, ME OUTERBRIDGE STEPHEN S Shalimar Fairylands Pembroke Bermuda, ZZ OUTTRIM ROBERT WINTHROP 1972 Boulevard West Hartford, CT OWENS JAMES THOMAS 30 Harding Avenue Braintree, MA OWENS MARY G 2 Hollins Ave Baltimore, MD PALMER EDWIN LINCOLN 30 Ginn Road Winchester, MA PARSONS STUART WILLIAM 204 Lincoln Street New Britain, CT PATINSKAS ANN RUTH 33 Wilmington Rd Burlington, MA PAUL GLORIA GEORGEANNE 1640 East 50Th Street Chicago, IL PEARLSTEIN ABBIE LYNN 1116 Sandringham Road Bala Cynwyd, PA PECK MARILYN 55 Pleasant St Stoneham, MA PELLEGRINI DAVID STEVEN 347 Ginger Road Huntingdon Vlly, PA PERRY ALFRED MANUEL 10 Spring Street Reading, MA PHILIPS IRENE LOIS 2 Stuyvesant Oval New York, NY PIETKEWICZ ARLENE FRANCES 53 Moulton Road Arlington, MA PINKE JAMES RICHARD 535 Barnard Avenue Woodmere, NY POLITO VICTORIA 14 Clark St Somerville, MA POLK GREGORY L Carmichael Hall R Dir Tufts U Medford, MA POMERANTZ PHYLLIS REVA 24 Klan Drive Wolcott, CT POND MARGARET TERESA 7 Springdale Ave Saugus, MA POPPER RICHARD JAMES A 22 Scott Avenue Nashua, NH PRATT MARY WADE 4119 Rosemary Street Chevy Chase, MD PREVOST RUSSELL ALFRED 6 Dora Street Nashua, NH PRIGOFF WAYNE THOMAS 6 Murdock Road Scarsdale, NY PUCHEK MELISSA 420 Silver Ave Willow Grove, PA PURA PHILIP WILLIAM 295 Oceanview Terrace Stratford, CT QUILLARD JOYCE MARIE 80 Asci Drive Pittsfield, MA QUINONES JOSE ALCIDES 76 Malva Limoncillo Rio Piedras, PR RAO EDWARD KRISHNA 555 Shackamaxon Dr Westfield, NJ RATNER ROBERT EDWARD 4005 Flamingo El Paso, TX REESE ROBERT OTTERSON 343 Centre St Trenton, NJ REIDER JEFFREY ISAAC 286 Taber Avenue Providence, Rl RENO DIANA 621 W Beal Road Flagstaff, AZ RESNICK ROBERT OWEN 10 Retz Road Pearl River, NY RHODES ROSS ALAN 18 Wilson Ridge Road Darien, CT RICH BRUCE ALAN 140 Edgehill Road Syracuse, NY RICH DAVID MARC 21711 Highbridge St Fayetteville, NY RICHARDSON JANICE ELAINE 270 Main Street Winchester, MA RICHARDSON MICHELLE DRISCO 5 Villa Madrid 92200 Neuilly France, ZZ RIDLON SCOTT A 67 South Drive Bridgewater, MA RING STEVEN GILBERT 1611 Chinook Tr ail Maitland, FL RITCHIE JILL ELAINE 8 Dorset Street Norwood, MA ROCHE THOMAS JOSEPH 427 Fairfield Woods Road Fairfield, CT ROSEN DAVID IRA 1380 North Ave Apt 521 Elizabeth, NJ ROYER MARY GRAHAM 516 North Rose Lane Haverford, PA RITTENHOUSE WILLIAM AMOS 27 Meadowbrook Vista Danbury, CT ROCKEFELLER GODFREY ANDERS 15 Twaddell Mill Road Centerville, DE ROSENBERG RONALD OWEN 151 Main Street Saugus, MA ROZWENC JONATHAN S 145 Heatherstone Rd Amherst, MA RITTER LOREN FRAN 1093 Ocean Ave New London, CT ROGERS GEARY HOWARD Noth Academy Road Brookfield, NY ROSENSTEIN ELLIOT DAVID 746 Redmond Street Teaneck, NJ RUUD BARBARA TAMLYN 348 Rumstick Road Barrington, Rl RITTNER STEPHEN LEE 345 Marlborough Street Boston, MA ROGERS WILLIAM RUFUS D Hilltop Farm Deerfield, MA ROSS JAMES FRANKLIN 49 Fresh Pond Lane South Hampton, NY SAHEED E CHRISTOPHER 2000 South Ocean Blvd Apt 14G Pompano Beach, FL RIVERO JUAN JOSE 601 West 15Th St Hialeah, FL ROLLER ELLEN JANE 143 Christol Street Metuchen, NJ ROSS LARRY CARLTON 19 Central Avenue Hull, MA SALM CLIFFORD ELLIOT 630 W 246 Street New York, NY RIVIELLO JAMES JOHN 6500 Madison Ave Pennsauken, NJ ROOME HUGH REINAGLE 15 Pilgrim Road Darien, CT ROSTOV GENE ANTHONY 114 Birchall Drive Scarsdale, NY SALMI ESTHER E 11 Anthony Dr Holden, MA ROBBIN MARK ALAN 19 Proctor Drive West Hartford, CT ROOS RANDALL WARREN 38 Linden Sq Wellesley, MA ROTHMAN NANCY E 215 Pepper Ridge Rd Stamford, CT SAMPSON CLARIE LOUISE 2352 Cayuga Road Schenectady, NY ROBERSON LYNN ALICE 145 Hoover Road Yonkers, NY RORICK MARVIN HORTON 322 E Indiana Ave Perrysburg, OH ROTHMAN RICHARD ALLEN 25 Dublin Hill Rd Greenwhich Conn, NY SANDBERG ERIC MARTIN Box 807 Wrightstown, PA ROBERTS EDWARD P 2711 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale, NY ROSE BARBARA ELLEN 1500 N Grady Ave =12 Charlottesville, VA ROTHSCHILD ALEEN 2134 Springdale Drive Columbus, GA SANDERS CLAUDIA R 107 Bennetts Farm Rd Ridgefield, CT ROBINSON EVERETT LORENZA 37 C Charlotte Street Charleston, SC ROSEMAN CECELIA ANN 184 River Drive Hadley, MA ROY STEVEN POLING 320 Long Bow Drive Franklin Lakes, NJ SAPIENZO LINDA KRISTIN 171 W Johnson Ave Somers Point, NJ Congratulations — From A Friend SATAGAJ JOHN STANLEY 40 Markham Street Middletown, CT SHOTWELL JO ANN 101 Westerly Terrace Rocky Hill, CT SOTER JOHN JOSEPH 113 East Bow Street Franklin, NH SZUMOWSKI GREGORY JOSEPH 15 Winter Topsham, ME SAWYER ARNOLD JAY 136 E 56Th St New York City, NY SILVERMAN MATTHEW HY 14288 Forest Crest Drive Chesterfield, MO SOUTHWORTH DEBORAH WHITE 7105 Ridgewood Avenue Chevy Chase, MD TAKATA HENRY SEIICHI 22-6 2-Chme Jiyugaoka Meguroku Tokyo Japan, ZZ SAYRE ELIZABETH HELEN 1717 Country Line Road Villanova, PA SIMMONS GLORIA FAYE 1520 20Th Place Birmingham, AL SPALDING ROBERT HIPPACH 1510 Sw 3Rd St Popano Beach, FL TALCOTT WILLIAM PLATT 4515 Willard Ave Apt 1710S Chevy Chase, MD SAYRE STEPHEN BOND 3 Broadmoor Drive Rumson, NJ SIMO EDITH 136 Curtis St Medford, MA SPERLING JAMES DOUGLAS 2 Whippoorwill Rd Chappaqua, NY TANANA NANCY A 10 Russet Lane North Andover, MA SCATTERGOOD DIANE 88 Fayson Lakes Road Kinnelon, NJ SIMON ANDREW GROSS 6907 Wayne Avenue Philadelphia, PA SPIER MINDY ELLEN 6 Horseshoe Lane Roslyn Heights, NY TAYLOR CAROLINE OLIVE 3726 Patterson Ave Baltimore, MD SCHATZ ROBIN DIANE 8 Wordsworth Rd Short Hills, NJ SIMPSON CHARLES J 10909 Falls Rd Potomac, MD STAUB JANET BETH 353 Short Drive Mountainside, NJ TAYLOR STEPHEN PAUL 506 Bronson Road Syracuse, NY SCHEER MARC RICHARD 4 Lynde Street Nashua, NH SIMPSON JOHN ALVA 211 Indian Hill Drive Gaffney, SC STEINER JANE LAURA 1025 Dartmouth Lane Woodmere, NY TAYLOR TALBOT JONES 19 Piping Rock Road Glen Head, NY SCHREINER WILLIAM PORTER Tallwood Great Falls, VA SKOURAS CASSANDRA M East Middle Patent Rd Greenwich, CT STETSON PHYLLIS HAFFENREFFER 14 Lathrop Rd Wellesley, MA TEMKIN BRUCE GORDON 24 Torringford West St Torrington, CT SCHUMACHER JAMES ROBERT 144 Lower Boulevard New London, CT SLEPIAN STEVEN L 212 Summit Ave Summit, NJ STEVENSON ROBERT D Irish Hill Road Shelburne, VT TEST KATHLEEN 8 Hillside Avenue Winchester, MA SCHWARTZ CAROL VIVIAN 186 Mayhew Drive South Orange, NJ SLOAN DAVID MINER 379 Highland Drive Danville, CA STOLZ RUTH IDA 315 Central Park West New York, NY THOMAS MARY LOUISE 503 Russell Blvd Columbia, MO SCOTT HARRY EARL 808 W 2Nd St Yazoo City, MS SLUZ GEORGE L 32 Central St Haverhill, MA STICKLAND JOHN MICHAEL 38 French Street Watertown, MA THOMPSON RENEE P 348 Quincy St Brooklyn, NY SEIGLE JEAN E 28 Northfield West Hartford, CT SMALL ROBERT DAVID 85 Blanchard Rd Easton, CT STRIGLER CHARLES ABRAHAM 11 Rose Garden Circle Boston, MA THOMPSON WILLIAM COLRIDGE 768 Putnam Avenue Brooklyn, NY SESSIONS DAVID MCKEY 360 Greenley Road New Canaan, CT SMITH DAVID LAWRENCE 319 Whitehall Boulevard Garden City, NY SUGAMELI RONALD ANTHONY 128 Asbury Avenue Carle Place, NY THORNER BROOKE J 25 Catherine Street Portland, ME SHAFFERMAN FRED 10 Fidelis Way Brighton, MA SMITH DOUGLAS STEVEN 172 Highland Ave Rowayton, CT SULLIVAN GERALD B 177 Sedgwick Rd West Hartford, CT TILESTON WILLIAM WILDER 86 Portman Towers 95 George St London Wi England, ZZ SHAPIRO RICHARD WILLIAM 30 Sycamore Road Newton Centre, MA SMITH GREGORY WARREN 6 Shirley Avenue Goffstown, NH SULLIVAN THOMAS KEVIN 5000 Brookside Drive Jackson, Ml TOBEY SUSAN 65 Falmouth Road Arlington, MA SHAPLAND PETER MERRILL 5336 Waters Terrace Lowville, NY SMITH MARIE TERESA 1216 Watchung Avenue Plainfield, NJ SULZBERGER ARTHUR OCHS 1010 Fifth Avenue New York, NY TODRANK STEPHEN K 38 Pleasant St Waterville, ME SHERBA KAREN JEAN 25 Hillside Ave Dedham, MA SOLOMONT DAVID 85 Baxter Rd Brookline, MA SUSI TED 42 Peltoma Avenue Pittsfield, ME TORRES BENIGNO 93 Calle Miramar Ponce Puerto Rico, PR SHIERS BARBARA ELLEN 6 Harvest Drive Scarsdale, NY SOMES JAMES Redmond Lane Oyster Bay Li, NY SUTPHEN JUDITH AMERMAN 33 Hull Brook Lane Fairfield, CT TOTH AGNES N 41 Payson Rd Belmont, MA SHILEPSKY NANCY SUE 37 Easton Rd Westport, CT SONG SHIELA WOO WON 15902 Kerr Rd Laurel, MD SZCZESIUL MARK STANLEY Box 534 Main Street Lakeville, CT TRADER GENELLE SCOTIA 309 W 38Th St Wilmington, DE TRUDELL ELIZABETH LOUISE 172 Dorwin Drive West Springfield, MA WALKER BONNIE KAY 4401 Colorado Ave N W Washington, DC WIGGINS DENNIS MICHAEL 570 Green Hill Road Smoke Rise, NJ YURKSTAS LAURA JEAN 174 Samoset Avenue Quincy, MA TULUY HASAN AHMET Haci Izzet Paza Sok 18 9 Topha Istanbul Turkey, ZZ WALKER BRIAN DOUGLAS 51 Mayo Avenue Greenwich, CT WILKS BRUCE EVAN 8 William Heights Framingham, MA ZASHIN LYNN SUSAN 38 Dorison Drive Short Hills, NJ TUROK MARTA D C O Na Bolom Sn Crstbl Casas Chiapas Mexico, ZZ WALKER CLINTON WILLARD 1 Beardsley Lane Huntington, NY WILL MARY ELIZABETH 338 W Elm St Granville, OH ZEYTOONIAN CAROLYN 202 Temple Road Waltham, MA TUTELA VINCENT JOHN 86 Fellsway West Somerville, MA WASHINGTON DIANNE 14312 Edgewood Avenue Cleveland, OH WILLIAMS ROBERT JAMES 13 Prospect Terrace East Oragne, NJ ZEYTOONIAN CAROLYN 202 Temple Road Waltham, MA UNDERWOOD BRADLEY WAYNE 10 Normandy Road Larchmont, NY WASSERMAN KATHERINE SUE 21 Black Oak Rd Wayland, MA WILLIAMS SAMUEL 2931 8Th Ave West 155Th St New York, NY ZIMMERMAN MICHAEL CURTIS 14 Laurel Lane Chappagua, NY UNDERWOOD ELLEN MARIE 16 Gannett St Boston, MA WEI ANDREA C 230 Park Avenue Suite 320 New York, NY WILLIS CATHERINE M 171 Wood Street Rutherford, NJ UPTON LETITIA GRAYDON 73 Francis Av Cambridge, MA WEINER DANIEL PAUL 65 Boulder Brook Drive Stamford, CT WILMOTH TRUDY 11 Netherlands Rd Apt 11 Brookline, MA VALENTINE JANE ELIZABETH 271 Fourth Avenue Stratford, CT WEINROTT JON NEIL 1030 Bryn Mawr Avenue Narberth, PA WINTERS THOMAS FRANCIS 8 Campion Avenue Norwich, CT VAN AUKEN CANDACE LEE Black Hill Road Plainfield, CT WEISBERG JULIE AYN 10702 Meadowhill Rd Silver Spring, MD WITTMANN FREDERIC EDWARD 3750 Hillview Drive Columbus, OH VAUGHAN JOHN ANTHALUS 7023 West Broad Street Richmond, VA WEISS BARBARA SUSAN 11 Driftwood Drive Glen Cove, NY WOLCOTT CHARLES RYDIN 97 Townsend Drive Middletown, NJ VIENS MARY DARCI 10 Whittier Drive Acton, MA WEISS CHUCK STEVEN 300 N Broadway Apt 5E Yonkers, NY vVRIGHT GLENN EDGAR 27 East Faunce Landing Road Absecon, NJ VITALE RUTH ANN 160 Heritage Lane Weymouth, MA WEISS SUSAN VITA 2110 N Crescent Blvd Yardley, PA YABLIN GRANDIS VANESSA L 9 Lake Drive Hewlett Harbor, NY VOGT WILLIAM THOMAS 437 College Avenue Haverford, PA WEITZ FAY LENORE 48 Fifth St South Portland, ME YAMARTINO PAUL DAVID 36 Florence Road Waltham, MA VON ARX EUGENIE ANN 13 Millford Drive Locust Valley, NY WELCH DAVID CUSHMAN 104 Luckie Lane Media, PA YANG CATHERINE P O Box 904 Hammond Rd Thiel Is, NY VOSS CAROL ANN 733 Midwood Road Ridgewood, NJ WELLS EILEEN SCOTT 151 Dutch Street Montrose, NY YAST CHARLES JOSEPH 6425 Cleveland Street Merrillville, IN VRABLIK GREGORY CHARLES PO Box 70 Cary, IL WELLS SUSAN ELLEN 17 Whitney Rd Falmouth Foreside, ME YAZDI MAJID TABATABAI 1 Sloane Square London England, ZZ WAGGONER DANIEL MARING 314 Vineyard Road Guilford, CT WERNER RUTH ELLEN 9810 Kensington Pkwy Kensington, MD YOSHIZAWA JAMES ARTHUR 1782 Chm Nagta Cho Chyoda Ku Tokyo Japan, ZZ WAGNER ROBIN 1 2200 North Central Rd Apt 12R Fort Lee, NJ WERTLIEB DONALD LAWRENCE 3133 Brooklawn Terrace Chevy Chase, MD YOUNG MARK DAVIS 270 Waban Ave Waban, MA WALDFOGEL PETER DOUGLAS 16 Brown Road Swampscott, MA WHITIN JOHN C 12 Old Lane Scarsdale, NY YOUNG STEVEN MARC 3010 Kersdale Rd Pepper Pike, Oh BENEFACTORS Mr. Mrs. Paul H. Einhorn Mr. Mrs. Robert H. Fergus Dr. Mrs. Eugene Fubini Gibbs Oil Co. Ira W. Leibner Mr. Mrs. Hugh R. Roome Barbara F. Skouras Herbert Wishnick David S. Young 328 SPONSORS Matthew Blount Dr. Mrs. John C. Bullard Mr. Mrs. Henry J. Cote Stephen F. Gooch Mr. Mrs. William Goodall Mr. Mrs. William C. Keller Dr. Mrs. James Koch Mr. Mrs. Stanley E. Kooper Stephen Korba Mr. Mrs. Howard D. Kurt Neil F. Lebhar Robert E. Leoni Mr. Mrs. James Maltman Mr. Mrs. Howard I. Mark John F. Milliken Mr. Mrs. Arthur Mitnick Mary S. Mulligan Mr. Mrs. Jerome B. Myers Frank C. Rabold Philip H. Roy Mr. Mrs. Robert W. Sagree Milton H. Stern Dr. Mrs. Charles Stolz Mr. Mrs. Paul E. Waggoner ?n-Ya Yang PATRONS Parents of Donald Anderson Jill S. Benjamin Mr. Mrs. Barry D. Berkal Mr. Mrs. Donald A. Bly Mr. Mrs. Edward Burnett Mr. Mrs. G. Barclay Davis Mr. Mrs. Louis T. Falcone Lillian Goff Mr. Mrs. William Golini Mrs. H. S. Hertz Mr. Mrs. F. Sheppard Holt Mr. Mrs. William H. Kenety John C. Kowanagh Mr. Mrs. Yale Laites Mr. Mrs. Robert A. Lauber Mr. Mrs. I. H. Mabee Mr. Mrs. Donald McLaughlin Dr. Jesse J. Michaelson Mrs. Matthew Molski Grace S. Nonack Florence Orchin Mr. Mrs. Lloyd W. Roberson Gloria A. Roberts Dr. Mrs. I. B. Temkin Mr. Mrs. William R. Knight Mr. Mrs. Sumner Tye Mr. Mrs. Joseph Underwood Editor-in-Chief Hugh Roome III Business Manager Thomas Caldwell IV i i Lay-out Assistants Photo Editor Photographers Staff f i Special Thanks David Sessions Gary Flomenhoft Katherine Davis Gene Rostov Mark Bresler Gary Cahn Arthur Greig Ham Amer Matt Katz David Sessions Rick Silverman Mike Stevenson Ben Hamlett Steve Feldberg Rolf Grun Sarah Kelley Randi Klein Copie Lillian Dave Pleet Cindy Roberts Lynn Rowe Eve Youngerman Professors: Barnet, Gittleman Luria, Ritchie, Ounjian The Members of Wilson House Mr. William Wells Credits Tufts Criterion (39,118) Layouts 1-332 HR3 Senior Informals — Amer, Roome, Rostov, Sessions (27, 61,97) — Cahn, Carrol, Roome f 1 :..


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

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

1971

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

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

1973

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

1975

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

1976

Tufts University - Jumbo Yearbook (Medford, MA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977


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