University of New Hampshire - Granite Yearbook (Durham, NH)
- Class of 1972
Page 1 of 344
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 344 of the 1972 volume:
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a I S i I X . ! z i , 3 s i i 5 i 4 i i 1972 GRANITE The University of New Hampshire Durham 2 3 uxkl , , . . . if ' ,Qi Li a Qi 5' . fx' .W ul' .Xi 4 stand: look: wait standingg watching all the red trees lookingg holding the thoughts of leafless days waiting for leaves to grow and turn green again 7 8 9 1 o FOUR 11 if S . sffvlw, 'Wm J if ' ' ' -154,1 1-.. V 41' l YS v a ,, 5 4 M li All -Y, 16 .-,.,, .-.wafgug ,,,. W ,U 5 H :sw f ' 'fslimnws ' f .wr .ax ' I-10.4,-S , .,..a.., -.v ...M ff, , , - . 9' , f 5-W'7'f ':Zi, f .1 X5 f' , X ' , H - ' ' J . .,.. :Hz W...- 18 ' Q K ' .qw ,Q Y rf QQQJQA think think of all the seconds that were so good: and smile because they were seconds 21 22 1 23 ,Q 42 4 w mi ,fi ,jf 5 L54 ,,.- W 25 J 26 .-,W-, ,,,,,,.,,-.qw K vi ,Q Q 4, ,1 N: .Q ig i 1? Q. ' L V J 28 29 30 31 N 32 33 34 K , a.w,wnv M H. Q' 11 M ' A 36 37 First leaf tomorrow this leaf won't be the first leaf: Tomorrow this leaf will be the only leaf: after a strong wind 38 39 N I 40 41 Q AB ,NJ Rf 5 1 W' 'I Q -1- is :,. 1:2 44 45 3 l 46 Y 47 J X ,' Q + J ! '1f -t7 , 5 5 1 e os ,qi is has bl A . O A , t X 49 Poco X 51 52 iff ,El ,, s-Mgr ,,, ., tm, , fiw, N ff f ' nn-fra., 53 ww W. ,W 5 V5 '5,,,,4 'i 'Wire-gl, Y In 'Y rl Q .ze 5 in 5, , 9,445 1 , 42.4 43 Q 1-,1 www Y .av F 5 5 i - :ix -XQ v .f ka! x 58 an-3 'hM x ov-f X' fx f 7 Q Eknygiksjf- if G-I A 3 xx v ii. 'V' ' .. . A ,, .. ..,- fi -A + T - N 4235 M M R 5,5 M M L vt Y N 5.1 veg: -,,,- +. I I .WML A A ,L ,, W W ' 7 ' . 1 v. ss, , . ' 1 1 . sf V' 4-2 5 f ' gb, ,f V9 ' y K .. A. , In N ,.W. . f. W . 1 v f Y .iwkfg 3. ,Mgt 3 k L ,Q-Q6 .1 av A wa - 4 59 s , , 'kk. M ,. eo 's N 62 63 64 65 66 i 68 69 70 The faces, names and conversations confused me that Spring. I rushed at the five sorority houses on campus so I could meet more people. The in- troductions and first words were superficial, but the friendships that grew persuaded me to become a part of the Greek system at UNH. As a Greek, I was part of the minority. Only five sororities, about three hundred and twenty-five girls, were active on campus. Many of my friends in the dorm decided not to pledge. Some ques- tioned me, asking what I could possibly see in the Greek system. I was told that Greeks became too wrapped up in their own world. They seldom be- came involved in any campus activities, and lost contact with friends who were not Greeks. Most of these people were satisfied with their dorm life, their friends and the relationships they had devel- oped. Sororities offered me more. The noisy, one A.M. raids with fraternities, beer and spaghettis, Bid Day, Pledge Dance and MERP initiated me into the social calendar of the sorority. Almost every night, l'd shiver out of bed at one or two A.M. and run across campus to the house. The pledges huddled at the mailbox on the corner of Garrison and Madbury, and waited for the whole group to arrive. Sometimes we decorated the house with crepe paper or Easter eggs. We held a breakfast party with entertainment on the front lawn and hung the Sisters' clothes on a line through the front yard. Often we dragged the Sis- ters from their rooms to drink beer at one of the thirteen fraternities. 'Is it worth the hassIe?' I asked myself after eight weeks of pledging. 'ls this a sorority?' The raids began to seem senseless. I was tired of the cold walk from Hubbard and the insane conversations over beer at three in the morning. I didn't feel a part of the house. The sorority and pledging was not complete for me. Work on the Blood Bank, donut sales in the dorms, campus clean-up and plans for our orphan in Southeast Asia brought a second phase to my sorority experience. The projects gave us all a chance to work together and know each other bet- ter. Diane and I washed windows together for Spring Clean-up. She was a Junior and I had never talked to her. Working on opposite sides of the windows, Diane and I talked about our feelings toward the house and what it meant to us. I told her the raids seemed superficial, and I had not found exactly what I wanted in the house. She listened and told me to wait. Sister-hood doesn't happen overnight. It grows with time. In May the Strike hit campus and our house. I had little time to walk to Madbury Road. When I did walk over, the house seemed deserted. Sisters gathered on the lawn at T-Hall or organized meet- ings in the MUB. I saw my friends actively support- ing something they believed in. We sat together, listening on the lawn at T-Hallg and walked togeth- er, holding candles in memory of the students at Kent State. As a pledge, I saw the Sisters as in- volved individuals, not stereotypes. Moving into the house the next September, my view of the Sisters continued to form. I became aware of how little I knew about the house and the people I had chosen to live with. For the first few weeks, I watched and listened to the girls who had lived in the house before. Did you get that prob- lem straightened out at home? What did you de- cide to do about your major? l'm kind of in a mess . . . Can I talk to you for a while? I discovered a new phase of sorority life, a part I found only through living inthe house. Throughout the house, doors were left open, there were no locks. I felt comfortable walking into any room in the house and talking to any of the thirty-two sisters. That year my courses were rough, I didn't have a major, couldn't find one I liked, and the tuition went up. I moped around campus, confused and unable to decide what to do. Margi asked me to talk about it. She helped me think out my alterna- tives and come to the conclusion that UNH wasn't so bad after all. I decided to declare a major and finish my four years. I began to see the sorority as an experiment in group living. Like a family, the sisters are com- mitted to make the experiment work. The goal is harmony. Each girl enters the committment as an individual and her individual talents and failings are respected. Yet, as her relationships grow with- inthe house, she becomes a part of the whole. l saw the Sisters everyday on a personal and in- timate level. Sometimes we took bike rides to the reservoir or thumbed to Wallis Sands or Adam's Point. ln the Spring, we sat out on Pebble Beach, the sun deck attached to the house. The Sisters were not alike and didn't share all of the same in- terests. Through meals at the house, discussions, problems and rallies Down Under for just one, I saw each girl as different, an integral part of the house as a whole. I began to lose my fear of letting others see me in tense situations. I opened myself, as others had opened themselves, and began to risk. My sisters accepted me. I felt a part. I think it is this committment to work for the har- mony within the group, this decision to risk being hurt and this acceptance of others that differ- entiate the house from a dorm. Every girl becomes a personality, not just a face seen down the hall. UNH began to mean more than classes, the Man- chester Union Leader, a new president from Cin- cinnati and disputes over tenure. The sorority brought my education down to a personal level. In my room alone I learned about interpersonal communications. The room was small and my five roommates and I each had a different style of liv- ing. I was easily upset by small things. My room- mates accepted my emotional outbreaks over exams, too much work, a thoughtless boyfriend or parent conflict at home and helped me to under- stand myself and them through our interactions. By the end of the year, we were able to commu- nicate openly about ourselves. As in most groups, factions develop in the house. It hurt me at first to see small groups of girls always sitting together at dinner or planning trips together. I felt excluded. l soon began to see that although not everyone in the house was my best friend, I felt close to all of them. We rallied to- gether at the Pledge Dance or for MERP, painted the livingroom and diningroom for Parents' Week- end and planned together for our new house. The raids and beer and dances now fade with each year. The long talks, understanding and in- volvement between my Sisters grow. I live with people who want to share my ups and downs, girls who make time to open their doors and under- stand each other. When I joined a sorority, I said I would not be changed. I wanted to remain an individual and not become a stereotype of the sorority girl. I cannot say that the sorority has not changed me, any more than my education at UNH has not helped me mature. My life is far from a flat stereotype. So- rority life has developed new sides of my person- ality. Susie and l sit on the floor of my room and try to put our feelings into words. By trying to help her untangle her own ideas, l have begun to see my- self more clearly. Susie has learned to express herself and I have grown. Diane knocked on my door at 2:30 one night. Her voice shookg she wanted to talk. We watched the sun come up over Stoke, considering the al- ternatives to dropping out of school in the last se- mester of her Senior year. Sharing these problems, understanding what is important to the people I live with and working with them has helped me fill a gap that my education at UNH has not fulfilled. On a campus where I can snuggle into the shelter of namelessness, the so- rority adds a new dimension. In a world where my role of student is chosen for me, I can go home and be myself. Interacting with people, not names or faces, I begin to touch my education and life at UNH with reality. I have built a reciprocal com- mittment to a group of girls, a sorority. The sororities on the UNH campus are not dying. They are developing into a new concept in group- living. They offer the UNH student an alternative life style, a supplement to education. Sororities are a place for women to interact dynamically as indi- viduals. As the University grows in size, the stu- dent becomes one number in many. A woman is unique in a sorority, not just 029-42-0887. Sorori- ties are alive. K s 75 76 77 79 ao 81 82 83 -51.4 A ... 85 86 New York Rock Ensemble 'W I ' 88 1' N 90 Q W 92 93 .,,.,t,m 'km Us 5 --.,, 4, ... 1 4 K w A N 'F 'K e M : '4 ' 1,X , x 'W W if .f , N1 ,MQ-W., xv ' fy ig. ,Nw We demand the opening of the granaries to feed the poor We demand the public ownership of workshops and factories We demand the conversion of the churches into schools so that now at last something useful can be taught in them We demand that everyone should do all they can to put an end to war This damned war which is run for the benefit of profiteers and leads only to more wars We demand that the people who started the war should pay the cost of it Once and for all the idea of glorious victories won by the glorious army must be wiped out Neither side is glorious On either side they're just frightened men messing their pants and they all want the same thing Not to lie under the earth but to walk upon it without crutches MaratfSade 96 If, Y Y 97 Does anyone here hate Laotians? Do you know what a simple, beautiful life those people lead, people we are not at war with? And yet, thinking we can deny supplies and crops to the enemy, we are bombing hundreds of villages in Laos, killing those people. Since 1968 Nixon has substan- tially escalated the unconscionable and in- excusable bombing in Laos and Cambodia and re- cently in North Vietnam, and in so doing has pre- cluded any chance of getting back the American prisoners of war. This, of course, is not the only issue of this campaign, but it is the one which prompted me to challenge the President. I believe we must get out of this immoral war, that we must reduce our negotiating demands to the release of our prisoners. If we will just do that, I believe this war will be over within 30 to 60 days. And by vot- ing for me in the primaries next March, you can put pressure on the Administration. Otherwise, you must wait until November. How many more Ameri- cans and Asians will die by then? Paul McCloskey-Chester, N.H. 98 I 99 O 101 O2 gm- iu..,.,, 103 NSURA 5 :ffm Although we have spent S3 billion on the Vietnam war, lost many lives, and are continuing to spend S2 million daily, the liberties of the Vietnam people are not expanding. We find American money and arms used to suppress the very liberties we went in to de- fend. lt is a policy of moral debacle and defeat. It is a policy that demonstrates that our expenditures for more and more 'special forces' are as useless and dangerous as our expenditures for more and more nuclear capability. The trap we have fallen into there will haunt us in every corner of this revolutionary world if we do not properly appraise its lessons. George McGovern 104 O5 1 a, ,. fn A Q, w L 'E .lm A 4, H I' fi 0 af sway H - Vwfxgggbi if ' .9 ? ' .07 QW 1 WL 1 6 3,5 . 'a ., ,V at is N . Wy. 1 I 11,4 A 1 sa, 6 ,f . fy V, tr A. ,Y ,. ' WW I 1 'H' 'A 4? . -1 ' ii V 44 I I fd f 1 ,,,,, . -- ,L 4, 9 VA 5 w L , I ' my I f f .Q Q , We, ,V i. 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K N . r 5: . uf Q' W' XSS KW ara, xl- 'ff . 131 J' i'!T'If 'f1f an si ,... i s ' i in wififfff , L . , rg ' f . 5, E5 M if iff, N V., 1' S , ,L1. :'1 1 i 1 William Loeb sells a lot of papers in Durham. By the end of most days, stacks of the Manchester Union Leader in Town and Campus and at the re- ception desk in the Memorial Union Building have vanished. Where do they go? Several copies can be found in the basement taverns of Durham, sopping up spilled beer of an afternoon spent in frothy discussions of the Loeb intent. Others can be seen on cafeteria tables, the sports page covered with used napkins and coca cola cups. A few students stroll around campus with their issue stuffed in a notebook. In Thomp- son Hall, one is folded neatly on the desk of Art Grant, President Bonner's chief administrative as- sistant and another is barely visible under a coffee table in the President's office. During their morning coffee break, a number of T-Hall secretaries casu- ally flip over the pages, and with pretended dis- interest, search out some article about their em- ployers. On Monday mornings, Brud Warren, Director of the UNH News Bureau scurries up to the Presi- dent's office for Bonner's weekly news conference with a copy of the Leader under his arm. The other reporters that will come to the press meeting also have copies, or at least will have read the story about UNH to which Bonner will reply: There has been a growth of wild extravagences in journalism which more properly should have been rejected as an embarrassment to the State. Dr. Bonner's position as President of the Univer- sity of New Hampshire was announced April 7, 1971. Before completing the academic year as Provost at the University of Cincinnatti, Bonner was attacked by the Manchester Union Leader. New Hampshire Senator Norris Cotton stood up on the Senate floor in Washington, after a long snooze, no doubt, and called Bonner's appoint- ment to the UNH Presidency a stab in the back. Something about Bonner working for George McGovern for six months. Then Union Leader re- porter Warren Pease began churning out a series of articles coloring Bonner a shade of commie red. With noteworthy endurance, Pease continued the accusations in the Union Leader's best style of free interpretation. A style that has shown Joe McCarthy to be short winded. Bonner, whose political stance is somewhere ibut not very farj to the left of the center line of the political spectrum, resented Pease's charges. Dur- ing the early part of the summer of '71, Bonner asked that an impartial committee investigate the accuracy of Pease's reporting and even threat- ened to file a law suit against Pease. But it wasn't long before the incoming president dropped the whole thing. Shortly after his haggling with the Union Leader, Bonner visited the campus of Plymouth State College. Students there asked him why he had curtailed his counterattack with Pease. He answered the students with the ln the Best interests of the University of New Hampshire kind of reply. President of Plymouth State, Harold Hyde, wished Bonner had stuck to his guns. For his own professional good, said Hyde. 132 After the summer's heat, the beginning of the new school year was marked by cool relations be- tween the University and the Manchester Union Leader. The placidity was short lived. On November 22, 1971, Bonner hired Pat Jack- son forthe new job of Vice President for University Relations. According to Bonner the purpose be- hind the job was to improve relations between the University and the People of the State. A job that Jackson was to do for the price of 330,000 a year. That price tag got a lot of people upset-UNH trustee Al Rock, New Hampshire Speaker of the House, Marshall Cobleigh, and of course, The Manchester Union Leader. Utilizing their most prized possession, in- vestigative reporter Arthur Egan, the Union Leader assaulted Jackson calling him unfit to hold a po- sition at the University. Egan was at his nastiest, extracting from old court records, information that Jackson had some marital and financial problems in the past. Regardless of the lack of pertinence in Egan's mud gathering, Jackson with the help of some friends in T-Hall, resigned, it had been impossible for him to carry out his duties and at the same time, fight off the Manchester Union Leader. Shaking his head Jackson sighed, I find myself in the unique position of being attacked merely be- cause l've been hired. And so, Pat Jackson left T-Hall and returned to his public relations firm in Epping. One might have thought the excitement was over, but Tom Bonner, now twice tormented at the hands of the monster from Manchester, went on T.V. and charged the Union Leader with manufacturing articles about UNH. He termed the stories news Pollution and psychological Pollution. He called together rep- resentatives from State newspapers for a dining room press conference and told the people of the State what he thought of the Union Leader's style. Once the attack begins, he said, even one's friends join in-apparently for fear they may be at- tacked if they don't. This is not civilization, it's the wolf pack, the jungle. Bonner in a series of news conferences, contin- ued his assault on the Union Leader, charging that newspaper with the continuous erosion of con- fidence, the assailing of leaders and institutions from Presidents of the United States to political, religious, and educational leaders in New Hamp- shire. Following the turbulence of the Jackson con- troversy the Union Leader continued its usual, regular attacks with exciting headlines like t'Bomb- er Linked to UNH or 58 Convicts Attend UNH. Bonner continued his rebukes, but the reprisals were toned down. Perhaps Bonner began to have doubts about his previous style of vehement rebut- tal and its effect on State citizenry. Perhaps he had become aware that combatting William Loeb in his own paper is an impossible feat. In retrospect, it is difficult to say whether Bon ner's year long battle with the Union Leader affect- ed any change of attitude on campus or through- out the State. Certainly no students felt the need to fall behind their leader and urge him on. A Win- ter Carnival snow sculpture of Loeb chasing Bon- ner was one of the only indications that any of the general student body was interested in what was going on in the pages of the Union Leader. When Bonner came to the University last year he isolated lack of state support as the University's most pressing problem. To gain that support Bon- ner formulated a plan to bring the University to the State through Community Service programs. A few of these programs were initiated, yet a concen- trated effort to make service programs viable and workable was hampered by the time Bonner and his administration spent refuting the Union Leader. With his integrity being questioned daily, it is no wonder that Bonner, a man who is not afraid to jump into the fray, responded to the attacks as he did. Certainly the frustration of being the object of false accusations is enough to anger any man. But can it be worth while to expend energy defending one's self and ideas in a newspaper whose psy- chopathic style will have the last word, regardless of its heroic motto. Some say Bonner made tactical errors in dealing with the Union Leader. Others say they were glad to see a man who would finally fight the paper. Still others argued that Bonner should have ignored the Union Leader entirely, that to fight the Man- chester paper was beneath the dignity of the Presi- dent and his University. Yet no one, including Bon- ner, has been able to provide a conclusive formula to dispell untruths about the University, and keep the University out of the papers at the same time. Further still, it must be remembered the amount of damage done to UNH by the Loeb press is a com- modity of influence that is virtually impossible to evaluate. Bonner once said that if his battle with the Union Leader had any beneficial results at all, the fight had visibly brought to public attention the Univer- sity problems that formerly had been discussed only in UNH administrative offices and legislative chambers. Finally the State citizenry had become aware of its University's problems. Perhaps a public awareness has initiated some response to University needs. The New Hampshire State Legislature did approve a S50 reduction for in-state tuition costs. At a news conference last April Bonner was asked if he thought the Legisla- ture had changed its attitude towards UNH. Many members of the legislature are coming to recog- nize tuition is too high, said Bonner, and op- portunities too few-and it's hurting students. As Bonner's first year in the Presidency drew to a close last Spring, remnants of his winter battle with the Union Leader still revealed themselves in promotional speeches made to various groups scattered around the State. Just to keep their hand in the game, the Union Leader occasionally pro- duced an editorial chastising Bonner for his own sporadic criticisms of the paper. But in Durham, the feud was fast becoming just amusing. lim-1+-3, we 3 1 . 3 -1, '35 i, N- i f ,Q N 4 5-aft-ii 4 H ,.v?14r,x 5,5 sw we -f ' 'J' VM J'f..l, . ,. tt Ji, is ,f' A , ,' In -vV- K ,-V f ' f S. X ' 4 ', 1 , X -'xfx 1 Z ,Wg A LfL5CfDY5im f , N 'VMHQS fifv , ', -,z ' f' u f,,. ' W5 9 'ff cm: XX il i Q 1 nf .gi ff! V ,Af f K K if 3- W Fw fl . Lw ffrfzc Aff A fi' C C! fi-' K ' 4 1 ' V7 A V. y 4 h xx f 7 I ' 5' f . L A -N. O Q A Q X, rj I I, 1, ,Q I f nu .1 ,X feb' f ff-x...,,.1-f- ' 5 XQ if '. , ' 1 'ffftf m Cf? f W ff l H? J 60 ,C 4 , Exp, . .,q gf? ' ..,-5, gl U 2: O , , N' X ffkffn'-4 O I A f x 'I VW, XX' X .Q 'J Cy KI 2 A K N 'v- ' , f N, Tj f EJ C, Q . X 1' .-41,1 5- ' I V , YQ U . U ML 1 A K7WA1 JU Q X.. fi X M 1 N4 J U C Oo mi 71' Y H- I. 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K 1' 'ffkrxivxg' K V' La X 139 -. xxx K Q, T QM W , Sify Q A Rgfiff ww - Q Qwsw 4 4 5. KAL Q 3 A ,E ,LL'-L 401 V 1 H 4 16, W F 4 F 'sn 43 ,,-..v JK: ff' ,.-f , ,,,. 1 i '-L ,K V ,rm 'Ulu 'Q ww ' --rs-.vw Mn -Oil!- ,,,, CHQ.. ,. A , A ,. g,,g ,,,...,..f1 ..,i Q .i,g ,WW ,.iW .. A-Zi' uma ik 144 .l.ff : , 2:4 ,-.,.-ni ,V-N ,. IM... .mff --.....,-V unb- '-s' 14 k x . ' w h' wx : A .,.4.4wvg.n,.,Q, 5 ' wf . .,:'fe1f f 1- .,4 :-,,f 5, I . - MK' -+A-af -w I 146 147 Well, you all know the story about Sam . . . 148 Dr. Wright-Bio. 409 UBWHIHIW71 l 41' PK R w I 1. f 149 .Wm 150 if 4. - - Q7 -.wg dr X Q i s -. pw 151 5 --Y - , 153 l ,.4P ' ' 154 iii! 155 , , ug' my Ns.,-1' 'i JA 13' ,, A , -S 4-,,,. ' JK ., - V 4 .qw yf' 'FILL L J. ,f x. .x W, Mg, X 13, S 'Q 'WN f' W Q5 'L 79 lla. J, 156 lx .M Three on one bench or a subway full of people. No one spoke or looked around But each picked a spot of ground or piece of sky to look atg Like a subway ad that gives attention to their stare They sat, had touched each other through rubbing coats, Left unnoticed and no notice taken. 157 5 4'- 3- ,, ? 161 2 Seatrain-Winter Carnival 1972 163 64 5 66 6 QA rv ,q',1fQ'Q ' ww x 3' 1' x 2.1! ' ' s V 1 ,A vii, 9 fn ig, A ' hi 4 . ,ta .s 'Y Y AV! ,WAV 4 fwrfx , Ak 1 ,4 G ' 2 s , , 'J' A af L A , ' 'A - 1 , ,, 251' mi' ., , ., L fi, , rl: ' e ff ? 33 1 , W a Q 5 , x .x s ,K ' L, , 3.xQtx ' as . 4 2 ,, it vp J 2 lin ? at ii f 1 - lg ' L' .1-ff . Q 5 5 , 5 ' e ,Z K v ' Q Q . Ll 3: I 3 5 1 gg + , 3 V T 3 ? fs 11 K E ' r , . ' 3 51. z F 2 25 f, 1' A in I mg 7 K 'I A 99' ' f ' 1' , ,, 4 Q. f, 4 v 5' H V I fg f f I ,W , , , 3,5 sig!! 'Q' Q, Q gf? 'V' 7, . ff- WMM. f V . ,V . ' Y 0. '-vgtwwww in 050- ' 'H' ' W' . ' ww., . , M-My ' - .M . M If , ff. - - ...,,. f 'yr -A ' f . , 1.-,,,.,.,g5f N, ,N , , M -fy - M f 2+ f ' ' rf' '74 ., :wit J' 1 , , H vw , , . vi . MU' fu... 'f. 'M'-.....m' M. F' i ' Q., g rem .WW f ,fkix 4b 7 nf H11 Aff . 2 3 if 'X 'B' lags: ,, rg 5 -Fix 4 N ' if J ' r 4 ar X 5 ' 2 ,M .-4 4. X J 5 ,I 'Q 1 f ., .,f,, ,, f K 4 x , Og I A . , I A A Q v ..,l,x ,, 3 l,Q. Q Q. Mfg, iq. ,W ,1 -, 'Q -M., 57. K .,, H ,E .JR NV , gba. , any H, A My ,fn ' ,A if ,, 1 by . . ,BX ' kw1, '9'ffAW .gag uligfj R' if - Q. jg ,W '-'if-321' t ' 5' 'E 9 9555-'i N' ff 2.-.fy-liigg nah. I .. yo, -r ..,K W fi' H 31' X ljG': PQ '3'3W W' ai 1- lug: ,Q-'i : V JSQBQ 1 . p 1.35, ,Q'v?'5L Ad Ji' . I. x ,tg ' V is cl 'Vx , -gg ,i , x ' L Qi , h A 5 ,V - 4 3' . , Q ,, ,F is WS 5 ' ' , ' :ff fi ls, Q 2 f ,neu .4 ffl We 4 1 15 - g ,, ..- ..--.X-A-1 ' .-f,1,1,,,..v. uf- ' ., , E kwa .. Y g .4 Nl . ,. 1 Qk ' 1 1 ' . X Q . . ' K X 5 s K 1 . W f N L , M K , ,w- L, 'L ' ' qiw - kk 1 .s-...l- 1 . ,' ,....w.s.xs, ' xxm. 'i -'fwfr-QQ. . ..-,,,,, ., ....UkK.., -. , -..-f.,'.. -4'-mls' ' ,,-X15 QM ., f, 1, H-A. is----1 1'-. '... , W 'Zi' -K---- S-3-.'f.. .4.-.-.-...,-- vw nv... ' .1 . Tn Ref 17 O .,.,,L , 1 - , 4 if ' .Y , ,, ., ag A Wu. 171 'Sr mmm. 4.1 'sm- 'val' 72 Everyone knows one thing about the ice sport here-UNH had a season to remember-and all those who witnessed it can testify to the ex- citement that it brought to them. Hockey was a feeling, like quadraphonic sound, that flowed off in all directions, touching and affecting large seg- ments of the student population like almost noth- ing else was able to do. lt was a feeling that brought the campus together for the common en- joyment of a great sport, and a great season. This was the best performance ever in Division I for the Wildcat skaters. They finished at 14-7-0 in the division, and 20-10-0 overall. UNH had won twenty or more games four times in the last five seasons, and the third-place finish prompted many to label the Wildcats as the cinderella team in Division 1. But mere figures are not all we see. lt was people-the players-the question marks, the defi- nites and the injured ones that came together to make the 1971-72 season what it was. lt was Charlie Holt, outlining his team's chances at the end of October. He worried about the 'tin- experience on defense, but, he was also sure that these boys don't feel that they have to back down to anyone this season. He felt the excitement of putting together a great season even then. The season began, and so did the problems. UNH just barely scraped by Norwich in a scrim- mage. Later in November, Wildcat fans packed 173 Snively as usual, but the Blue was having difficulty downing Northeastern, 6-4. Was this an auger of things to come? UNH went to Boston University, and came away losing, 2-1. But they also came away with the thought that they had not backed down at any time to the defending NCAA champions. , The Wildcats then breezed through their next three opponents with ease. But, in the Garden Christmas Tournament, RPI presented UNH with a loss. A week later, North Dakota was thrashing the Wildcats at home, and the quick-to-condemn were digging mass graves for the season's fortunes. During that game, however, something happened which completely reshaped those fortunes. A hustling sophomore named Gordie Clark was shifted to the first line with center John Gray and wingman Guy Smith. From then on, lightning struck whenever this line was on the ice. The Wild- cats began to win games again, with speed and fi- nesse now, and not by luck as had seemed much of the time before, The defensemen were settling down and a guy named Bob Smith was becoming a stalwart in the net. Each time the Wildcats skated on to the rink, you were sure that the Gray-Smith-Clark com- bination would be in the thick of the action. Each succeeding game saw these players coming through with big plays, and winning goals. Clark helped Gray notch the winning tally in overtime against Boston College early in January. Smith put a pass right on CIark's stick for the winner against Clarkson three nights later. But the big guy wear- ing Number Eight provided the biggest thrill. lt was mid-January, just before exams, and people were looking for one last excuse to let off steam. Harvard, number one-ranked team in the ECAC, skated on to the Snively ice surface. A little later, on came the Wildcats, and the now huge throng stood up to give the home squad a tre- mendous ovation. The two teams fought bitterly throughout the game, until there was no time left, and there was a 3-3 tie. Then it was overtime, Guy Smith was perched at a difficult angle to the left of the Harvard net when he got the puck on his stick. He promptly whirled around and sent a quick back- hander towards the net. The disc hit Harvard goalie Joe Bertagna's pads, glanced off, and rolled into the net. There was pandemonium. Fans jum- ping and screaming. Wildcat players mobbing each other near the Harvard net, Sticks high above their heads. Players in Crimson skating slowly off the ice with heads cast down-the spectacle will never be forgotten-it was a true legend in the making. Exams and vacation came and Durham quieted down. But, even then, the amazing hockey story had a chapter. Many players practiced skating and shooting during voluntary sessions in Snively. People came in and watched them go through their paces in amazement. Nothing like that had gone on in quiet a while. There was worry at the beginning of second se- mester that the old sharpness developed in Janu- ary would be gone. St. Louis U. found out that this was not the case, but when the Wildcats got trampled up at Vermont, the question of rustiness 174 cropped up again. Boston University came to town early in February expecting an easy game, but a Snively crowd which BU coach Jack Kelley de- scribed as must have been 6000, made life diffi- cult for the visiting Terriers. BU won that game, but the five goals UNH scored proved that the Wildcats were on again. The next night, they proved it by blowing the Providence Friars off the ice with a five-goal first period. This part of the season saw opposing teams trying to put the clamps on the Gray-Smith-Clark line. As a result, other names began to crop up, other faces began to show, other heads began to emerge from the crowd. Captain Dick Umile was one of these men. The senior right wing and head inspirationalist played all season with a painful shoulder-an injury which would have forced a lesser man to quit, accord- ing to Coach Holt. Umile, along with his linemates Bill Munroe and Terry Blewett began to come up with clutch goals when the first line was tied up. Later, scrappy sophomore, Rick Olmstead, joined the second line, and earned praise for his digging and hustle. Fla- dio station WHDH in Boston heaped plaudits upon him. One of the most promising sophomores in the East, according to Art Dunphy, WHDH com- mentator, during the ECAC playoffs in Boston Gar- den. As the season drew closer to its completion, the Wildcats bounced back and forth with impressive wins, and equally unimpressive losses. The Wild- cats came from behind masterfully against BPI with Gordie Clark scoring his eighth winning goal of the season. The Blue bounced Colgate on Win- ter Carnival Weekend, and Bob McCarthy bounced the puck from center ice past the Colgate goalie for his first of the season. McCarthy teamed with Glenn Hunter, and Gary Hrushka with Doug Towler to form the defensive corps, perhaps the most pressured component of the Blue Machine. Yet, the second half of the sea- son saw the defense improve and mature. Oppos- ing forwards were not able to take liberties in the offensive zone anymore. There were the strange losses. Providence avenged an earlier trouncing by defeating UNH, 5- 2, on a snowy night in Rhode Island. Then there was Clarkson. All the golden Knight players seemed to want to do was to injure and maim UNH players. After their 8-5 defeat, Coach Holt was prompted to say, that wasn't hockey out there, that was war. That game also spoiled the Wildcats chances for getting home ice for the ECAC playoffs. Never- theless, the University of Pennsylvania found out that determination wins out every time, home ice or not. UNH celebrated in Philadelphia after a 5-3 win-it insured a trip to Boston for the semifinals for the first time ever. The playoffs are now history, but the third-place finish has many good implications with it. Bob Smith showed his class before a huge Boston au- dience. All those skeptics who doubted that any- thing about UNH hockey was any good were si- lenced. Two standing ovations after his perform- ance were testimony enough. The third line emerged as a positive factor in the playoffs. Bill Beaney showed consummate skill in stick-handling and shooting the backhander. Mike Burkart made opponents think of John McKenzie, whose hitting and hustle adds luster to the Bruins' attack, while Dave Bertollo made tremendous strides in his perseverance and confidence. Other players made contributions. Dan Rooney showed great promise as a checking forward be- fore injuries slowed him down. John King and Mark Kaneb will be heard from on defense in the future. Most important, everyone worked together for the goal of skating on Boston Garden ice at sea- son's end. They accomplished this in going further and doing more in Division I than any UNH hockey team did before. The five graduating seniors, John Gray, Guy Smith, Dick Umile, Bill Munroe, and Ter- ry Blewett can be proud of their accomplishments. This was their year. 175 lm. ,.-Wh k y-Q-annul! 176 Q f?,W! , ,M 25 --f-N ,Jfzif K ki A 177 531 K ,4 78 9 'bfmhh 80 181 Odd Estrangement even in the beginning, if you listened past the end of mere expression, a certain hollowness to our laughs could be detected just as the heavy clomp of a shoe in a hallway echoes drawn-out in the space before closed doors. it was a peculiar situation we found each at the end of a dark corridor curious, attentive and awestruck by our chorus of sound and its ability to mingle, touch and separate as two distinct frequencies in mid-air: loose and electric, real but never seen. 182 183 an iih 18 9 'Miki'- i ,fy Gem -fi? ,W JZ' ,ga49 ..-v-'J fig ,ff ggi ,,.- ,W ,.- f K 185 an ffm ,Q - , I, Wu 86 87 Edgar Winter 'YP' Win. J. Geils 8 90 l 191 92 I 193 -w .n X 121: gig v- A 5: ...H .Q wk U .Y A, 1 , 1 1 yi , ,Wi ' Us 1 f. 1 Q, .W ,Q ,, 'ff I A K - . wx, N xi Qi- x QQ, x l i v 5 u . Q? .Q 4 E 'iz K1 '32 L 'Qin . 5? 5:2 'YL , KXQQX N x . Q 1 ' x : he X 4 -K Vs X fa Lei- - ,wg ' X m , X . . 1212 QQ A zfs1a 't es 3 .5 Y yi .ww W z f- 23: :ir CTI JI H.- I 5 X ' 5 f . . U AA' .sk Q gmwwimv-,. .4 5 f S .-..-f. 1 -13 .F Q, ,, m .W,.,k 2 '. L I Q . if ,fm , J-,v.,,. K' -is Ax.. 5' . K 1 Qi, Ni . WW -13, -f-, .5 Q 3 L F. , - ' . . 14 , ' 1 5 an x , ,ask k K 19' at vi 95 thought flashes flicker on blackened walls: Whaaa shall i do for ego plea? sure, or Sur, End. .....err.....TomyIdyO'Sin cri fthenj cies And's Mother the rag-Ing flame fshoutsl Sin Cealllll BURN EDWOODl!! crum blest O ash. 196 97 Ma, . f .1 mf' ,V V7 ,, ,hy r,,p09..w 17124 4 A a W fr gk, M A Q M. if '04 V55 W naw-wmv ,vii 4 ur W w K. 'V I Q i f M, F' . -4 ..H. - --1--w A V.,- 4, 1 ,wi it 2 O ,Q an W 198 f-V Q f -f--mm. .,f W..--...qwv it Q ,a 1 v4,,,m, ifvnvrw- 5 . -. , K ,. it L,, seq - ' Vs- V ' N H X' ' iw: Q Q Va , I f 7 X. - W, h ff - . - W.. 99 200 201 202 ,. 1 1.. 203 ww. WN fm A ws. -.-uw 'i I ai 204 205 206 208 20 Ay.,-vf-Q 210 .ps l Two years? Two years . . . And after two years plus, Life Studies is quietly dying somewhere out there, somewhere among the maze of reports, files, grade slips, and ros- ters-there among the sometime students-that one can find roaming the upper haunts of Ftich- ards House. Today those haunts are very quiet. Yes . . . two years... Life Studies was a well meaning, poorly organ- ized, two year ripoff to many students and faculty involved in it. For others it was a long awaited in- strument to be used either to educate or advance themselves-in either case it was finally the individ- ual who decided whether the result was for better or worse. Yes, two years is quite a chance. The program was an experiment in basic higher education, the goals were to innovate new ways to motivate the undergraduate student and, hope- fully, guide the student into the responsible role of self-educator. The University suspended the gener- al education requirements for those involved until the program was evaluated. The key to the pro- gram was a close knit, personal community which would decide its own educational needs and re- quirements. Unfortunately, the means given the ex- periment were never enough to meet the commu- nity's high, idealistic goals. From the beginning, the Life Studies community was an isolated community. The program, as an experiment, had no resources or controls to rely on for support-a house built with no foundation. This isolation came from many different points and people, fboth inside and outside of the programg but this arose mostly from the concept of the Life Studies workshop. The workshop, key to in- novation, was an unstructured class of ten to fif- teen people designed to break down the barriers between students and teachersg no tests, credit-fail grades, personal evaluations of both teacher and student, and most importantly, the student was ex- pected to share actively in the decision making process regarding the structure of the course. 2 Often, from outside observation, it looked not only unstructured, but undisciplined and chaotic. Many qualified people, especially those in the sci- ences and languages, viewed the experiment as a threat to disciplined educational processes. Their lack of co-operation and participation in the ex- periment not only robbed the program of valuable help, but robbed it of important controls which would have made the experiment stable. When it was needed, help was withdrawn too quickly, at a time when the going was rough. A problem that added to this was that Life Stud- ies never evolved as a self-supporting entity, and never managed to create an approachable self-im- age. Without this self-image, fmaybe of machine work, stability, and excited innovation,j Life Stud- ies was never really able to build the necessary bridges of communication throughout the univer- sity. Many departments that l encountered either knew nothing of the program, or considered it full of gut courses . After two years, a recent reac- tion from a close friend was, Ah, you dinks in Life Studies never have to work, you don't even have any exams. Exit one close friend . . . Or, the question I received at a party from a WSBE professor, Hey, just what's happening over there in that program anyway, hmmm? Exit me from the party . . . With this communication gap, such friends, stu- dents, and faculty were apt to remain apathetic and indifferent towards the program-waiting in the sidelines was the safest way to play the game without getting hurt. And, slowly the isolation be- came reinforced while the program suffered more and more from a lopsided approach to education . . . Just listen now to the quiet haunts of Richards. Where is the community? What happened to it . . . and it's self-image? lf...lf...If...If...lf...lf...lf...lf...If . . . If. Life Studies could build a mountain out of the ifs and still be at the bottom of it. If the community had a house or a farm-like old McDonald. If there was more money . . . more teachers, different teachers, more courses, better ones. If...if...if...if... If we as Freshmen had but known what we want- ed then, or would want now. If we had, it would have been better, maybe, but not as real. lf, in all its glory, papers the walls, floors, and opened doors at Life Studies. If, does not answer the question. People within the community have spoken to me about a deep community experience which evolved in Life Studies-Now, two years later, I wonder what they are talking about. I have watched, while slowly, the once high spirited com- munity drifted apart when apathy and realism en- tered the door. I have seen the once full, eager community meetings become gathering places for a small group of people-almost a clique. I have watched, with disappointment, people shy away from community commitments saying, Sorry, I've no time. I have watched people who are out- wardly warm and friendly, take freedom and in its name avoid responsibility. I have watched it and 212 known that it was being done because, I too took this freedom and misused it. My own lack of interest and failure to assume an active role in the community, combined with other similar attitudes, did nothing to generate the ex- citement that the program needed to survive. It was not an economic problem, fthough Life Stud- ies has approached a near crisis in this matter sev- eral times, and its the only program I know of that relied on benefits to help defray expenses,J but, rather one of no leadership from within the com- munity, a leaderless group with no group spirit creating apathy and confusion among its people. One of my courses was a weaving class which had no materials to work with. Under the workshop system, the group decided what goals the course would work for. But in this case, because of the lack of equipment, materials and group know-how, the goals of the course were unrealistic with the time available. The result was that half of the se- mester was spent deciding what was going to be done, while the other half was spent discovering that we couldn't do it. Because there was no lead- ership evolving from the group, or the instructor, and no one knew how to avoid the problem, the workshop, overall, was a failure. Was Life Studies then a failure? It had no grades, no way to check, no way to control. Failure . . . What did it do, accomplish? I cannot put it in those terms, maybe because I am so close to the program. Freedom was given, a lot of it, but along with the freedom a sense of realism was instilled in the student. Over and over again the questions, What am I doing here? What do I want? Do I want to be here? Life Studies was no ripoff. Some students may ask those questions, but how many are forced into day to day contacts with those questions? How many are realistic? How many are uncomfortable, frustrated, and con- fused? How many are lazy and know it? The University can be a haven for the lazy, buf- fering them from the cold world. In Life Studies that buffer was removed and the problems of the program were confronted by students, not by ad- ministrators, or teachers, but students. An ex- periment in reality, but where were the controls? I could go on citing charge after charge, fail- ure, success, critical and beneficial comments, on and on and on . . . but who would listen? Who would be willing to work out the problems? Who would listen? Two years of a life is quite a chance . . . And in an experiment there is usually a hypothe- sis lost back among the paperwork beginning with an lf and continued with a Then . . 213 215 is-.-neck. Ces4i+4Q!: 1 S u c UQ :L iiiif ,gsf v --N O QL 'Q 2 216 217 9 M fc V ax Q ,,,., .1 ., V, :iz , p A,A1 , V v ' 'J' ' Vue 1 NAM V E T E RAN5 ,,1 Zf AEAINET THE WAR H .K 'Eff' ,... ' X .mf ll l 219 A 'YN 'X 220 A v 22 222 223 HTG 224 225 226 Seals and Crofts 227 228 229 ,N .Ig 23 1, 4 W Kg' f z if Wig, 1 1 ,J . ig? 232 4, 233 234 235 236 k l!K3 237 238 Children I knew this girl once. she told me I would marry. She told me I should marry her. She wanted me to give her flowers. She said I should, even if I didn't like her-cause the flowers wouldn't care. One day I bought her a red balloon and told her I'd kiss her She closed her eyes as I tied the balloon to her waist. Now I think maybe I shouldn't have done it I really almost miss her in a strange way. But, it really was funny seeing her float away with lips puckered and eyes closed carried by a red balloon 239 240 W' if 'KM 1, Q 24 - ,,.. '- - 242 243 244 Durham is a nice little college town whose main street is called Main Street and whose newest hall on campus is called New Hall. There are a few stop signs, no stop lights, and a few stores ta Sat- urday window shopping tour will take less than five minutesj. Except for the University, perhaps even with it, Durham is a Sleepy Hollow of sorts-a fun- ny place to spend four years becoming edu- cated. I write educated with quotation marks because for some, the word has become nothing more than a euphemism for fruitless exercises in conglomerating irrelevancies. To a degree I must concurr. But it seems to me that the true lessons are not necessarily learned in lecture halls or semi- nars or even life-studies programs. They are subtle lessons in critical thinking that are perhaps only in- itiated in the classroom and extrapolated into a kind of view of me werid that becomes essentially personal, not to be labelled by the stamps that seems to mark our era: pessimism, cynicism, exist- entialism, fatalism. It seems to me that those who have most in- dulged in the critical thinking process are the ones who will suffer most. For some, leaving the univer- sity will be a form of intellectual suicide. Those who have nourished their intellects while taking refuge in the university's big belly, who have per- ceived fallacy after gaping fallacy in the world out- side, will find themselves upon Ieaving the univer- sity, intellectualized into a state of inertia, per- ceiving so much cancerous that they will not be able to cope with the smallest illness. The alterna- tives to such a dilemma appear no less merciful than the dilemna itself. One can see signs of that kind of mental grap- pling all around us. Those who have spent years complaining: nothing to do, nowhere to go, Boston's where it's happening, have found themselves in suddenly the enviable position of being back on the land, in a kind of retreat where nothing much is happening. Those who had regretfully backed their asses out of the glamorous city and into the dull drab mystery of Durham are now heard loudly proclaiming its virtues. A kind of flotsam of academe-the college graduate-is seen everywhere, lingering about Durham, uncertain where to go, apprehensive about what he'll do when he goes there. It's an unnerving feeling if you've been floating with the current for twenty- some years and find you're at the end of the stream and have to swim on your own or sink. I was talking to a janitor friend of mine for whom I worked part-time during school and I explained my feelings. He listened carefully, sucked on a cigarette and toed it out, then said: Yea, life is a goddam merry-go-round. You go round and round and up and down until you fall off and then you're dead. He added as he was leaving: But it's the goddam ride that counts-make the best of it. Sometime later I was sitting downtown sipping coffee with an art student friend of mine. I told her what I had been thinking and what the janitor had said. I finished talking, suddenly aware that it was perhaps a tedious monologue, and looked embar- rassedly away. Outside it was sluggish and muggy with the late spring heat. And through the warped window glass the passersby, and even the trees and leaves and sidewalks, seemed distorted like an underwater image broken by a wave. I looked back at her and she said, Yea, it's hard to believe it's all real. 245 19' 2116 IFREQQ Cynthia Douglas ABBOTT, Nancy Larson ABORN, Sheryl Williams ACETI, Alexis Kay ADAMOVICH, George P. ADAMS, jr., Rita R. ADAMS, William Joseph ADAMS, Ben- ny Ambrose AKONTEH, Roger F. ALLARD, Judith Ann AL- LEN, Martha Lynn ALLYN, Ar- thurAMIDON awk I 247 Ski Camping, Durham Carol Lee ANDERSON, Gary Kendall ANDERSON, Rodney Peter ANDERSON, Roger Paul ANDERSON, David C. AN- DREWS, Voula ANNAS, Marie A. APPLIN, Judith W. AR- NOLD, Linda Lea ASHFORD, Benoit Joseph ASSELIN 248 1, ,, f rf- 'i'2I'N' W ' 'I .VX i-xi ' fx ii , -. i ,. ' . x I V, L JN . ' i i 1 4.1 f ' J ,V ,UH N - i I of ii ww io l A y5 ,y Q.. rx ,. ? X - . , . . ., :A . 9 ' K .Q rp 4,2 Nix W . :,. ' Q' jaws? 'AA A K .fx r- 'Q-. .r..., - 'M-rf. I .. 1 'qfirff W 'Q GreenIand's Machine Concord, N.H. John Paul AUBIN, Michael Joseph AUBIN, David Warren AUSTIN, Patricia Ruth AUSTIN -J .5-fi ' iii is g iig 249 4 , I wld ay Q l .kzh 'lv 250 Robert Hare BACON, Theresa Mary BAILEY, Denise Renee BAKER, Wes- ley BAKER, Paula Jean BALBONI, Re- becca'BALDWlN, Susan Harriet BANGS, Deborah Ann BARIL, Denny Manny BARRANTES, Kathleen M. Barrow, Douglas Lee BARTLETT .1 M f A il 3. A-A n Nj A,',L 4 M W f A 1 ll A ,I FIV 1 A l l, ' M: I- Q K M 'l M fl xf2w.l1Zf-N l -I Y Z!! , K K, , ,AA A, xg 5 ,,,' .-IPL I -nf as, Sax N 5 , . ,Q 1 V, f 1':l ,, ,z 'E , v f 5z I ,Aff 5 ag- fi' '- ' , ft RE V' 1 izwvlgl,-...x I Fings? E 5133? 4- .f?g,i:j'T, A A ia n. uf' -.1 'Y' 1 4 1 39 Yr The Ram, Durham Coca-Cola Bottling Plants, Inc. Sanford, Maine Bruce Earle BASCOM, Carla Jean BATCHELDER Robert Charles BEALE, Pamela E. BECKHORN Carolyn Jean BEEBE, Linda Ruth BEHFIINGER, 251 -'iv 5 ...J L3 N JI K 1 K 'Y fgaxaligg? ,' f at f -. -. W' nf' Q 'Q xg- . -:L,:.,,. ' , ,..f, . 4 - is ' 2 , ' a 1-sais:-Q. ... fit E.. 32,-3, ff' Y 9 Clifford E. BEIDLEMAN, Robert Rene BELAND, jr., Joseph F. BELLE- FEUILLE, Ann Elizabeth BELLETETE, Margaret L. BELOWSKI, Caryl Ann BEMIS, Elizabeth A. BENNINK, Norman James BENT, Jaclyn Marie BER- GERON, Paul Robert BERGERON, Cynthia J. BERRY, Carol Fortnam BER- TSIMAS, Richard Thomas BERUBE, Deanna Jan BICKFORD, Ronald E. BICKFORD, Wilma Lorraine BINGHAM, Judy Elizabeth BIRT, Scott Hayden BLANCHARD, Charlotte V. BLANEY, Jane Lee BLANEY 252 Charles Fradd BOLLD, Gregory Dale BOARDMAN, Craig Melville BOAT- MAN, Diane Pauline BOLDUC, Step- hen Peter BOSIAK, Sally Irene BOSWOFITH, Richard John BOT- TOMS s n , Q: 253 Jerome Robert BOUCHER, Kenneth Armand BOUCHER, Sally Anne BOUCHER, Bonnie Louise BOWEN, Gary Robert BOWEN, Cheryl Ann BOWLES, Brenda Mae BRACY, Gail Miner BREED, Joan Mary BRENNAN, Gwy- neth BROOKE 255 Clarissa Dodge BROWN, Joanna Smith BROWN, Patricia Mary BROWN, Christopher R. BROWNE, Robin Adair BRUCE, Ernest George BSTANDIG, Kathleen B. BSTANDIG, James Richard BUCCI Q, 256 Gregory Alan BUNNEY, Wendra Lee BUOTE, Christine Ruth BURGOYNE, Dorothy Thamah BURK, Margaret Mary BURKE, Mary Eileen BURKE, Nancy Yvonne BURKE, Theresa Ann BURKE, Gilbert BURLLE, Sandra Kay BUSE 257 Lisa BUSS, Greg Morgan BUTTERFIELD, William Gor don BYERS, Antonia CAL ZONE, Anita Lucille CAMIRE, David Maurice CAMPBELL, Theresa Jean CAPOZZI, De- nise Ann CAPPI A4 258 The Outback, Inc. Beverly Ann CARLSON, Peter Martin CARON, Dianne Marie CARPENTER, James Hall CAR- PENTER, Robert John CARPENTER, Suzanne CARR Perkins Ltd. Women's Wear, Durham 259 Our 'Wf'll 260 Y ...J , ,. 'I' -,., rn -'gig International Harvester Company, Manchester, N.H. Gail Linda CARREAU, Patricia CARREIA, Mar- tha Rose CASELLA, Julie Anne CAYWOOD, Pamela H. CHAMPION, Amy Marie CHRIS- TENSEN, E. Jennifer CHRISTY, Peter John CHURCHILL, James Conrad CHUTE, Eliza- beth Ann CLARK, H. Elizabeth CLARK, Jane Howard CLARK 261 . I-Ilfffrf f 'v' fr ,V A - . 't Cha? 1 ' is 4 a,.,1fg- , W xiii 4 E ff ,ta , QE 1. 1-1. Q ' uf , , ' , : .'f.-5.14321 ' -4 ,, ., ,:w1, F' ', ff--f. 4. V ,,.,, , L -'HH , -.V ,P W ., eu -2 -4, If . ., Martha Jane CLARK, Terry CLARKSON, Louise CLAYTON, Priscilla Jane CLAYTON, Wayne A. CLIF- FORD, Cathleen Helen COAKLEY, Susan Elizabeth COBURN, Gary G. COLBATH, John Denis COLBATH, Dirryel COLE 262 9? A Tsrsrl 'V Margaret A. COLE, Brenda Joyce COLLINS, Lindsay Mor- gan COLLINS, Sally Ann COLLINS, Laurie May COLT, Su- san Theresa CONNOR, Katherine A. CONSTANTINE, Rob- ert John CONSTANTINE, Kathleen Ann COOK, Nancy Warner COOK ' i 'I' y M ' at ,mi if 4Y',6'- J . , 263 My , ,,f V , '.' .- ,- 5,1 Brady Ford, Portsmouth, N.H. 1 A I 3 fn. 4 3 3 ,, y Priscilla COOK, Jean L. COREY, Louise Jane COR- MIER, Cathryn Ann CORNISH, Colin Mark COSTINE, Linda Susan COTTER, Patricia O'NeiI COTTRILL, Kathleen Anne COUGHLIN, Mary COULEY, Betty COUTI 264 ll Elizabeth Foley COUTUBE, Michele Heloise COUTUBE, Brian L. CBAGGY, William Douglas CRAIG, Pamela Nading CBEAMER, Diane CROCKEB, Donna CRONIN imi ll llllm i llllllllllllll l The Exeter Banking Co., The Exeter Cooperative Bank, The Rockingham National Bank 'T gl ,-0 265 E, iw.-ilillwli W by 3' Fat in 1 N WS : gg: Tech Products Portsmouth Durham Trust Co. Michael J CRONIN, Carolyn I. CROSS, Sandra Jane CROSLEY, Karen Lee CROSS, 266 f 2lf Mary Marchbank CROUTER, Donna Marie CRO- VETTI, Jennifer CUDDY, James Starr CULLEN, David W. CUMMINGS, Jean Marie CUMMINGS, Miriam Hel- ene CUMMINGS, Deborah Lee DAEUIS, Thomas P. DALEY, Karen Ann DAMICO 267 Public Service Co. of N.H., Manchester Douglas Vanaken DANIELS, Susan DANIELS, Jane Anderson DAR LING 268 Town and Campus, Durham Stuart Shaines, Dover and Durham Community Market, Durham 269 Patricia Jane DAVIS, William H. DAVIS, Brenda Louise DAY, Susan Evangeline DAYTON S v Atherton's Furniture Co., Portsmouth Barbara Louise DEAN, Alicia Ann DECOSTER, Gynne E. DE- COSTER, Kathleen Ann DEIGHTON, Elaine C. DEROCHEMONT, Irene C. DESRUISSEAUX, Elaine Hannah DEWEY, Moulou- showa DINKE, Kathleen Beth DODGE, Joyce Barbara DON- NELLY 270 Charles Edgar DORIAS, Marianne Patri- cia DORNAN, William Francis DOWNES, Catherine Anne DOWNING, Kathleen Beatrice DRAKE 4- Kevin Lee DRAPER, Judith Ann DREES, Susan Ann DRIGGS, Robert Ray- mond DUBE, Beverly Ann DUCHARME, Paul Eugene DUCHARME, Roger A. DUGAS, Richard E. DUMAIS, James Gordon DUNBAR, Rebecca Louise DUNCKLEE, Louise Alice DUPPERON, Diane DUPUIS 273 Dennis Charles DUQUETTE, Kay But- ler DURGIN, Leslie Carol DURGIN, June E. DUFRNALL, Peter Lance DWYER, Tirone B. DYER ,JP-Q-- K if 'x .N A w i r 9 l s i Mike Todd EASTMAN, Paula S. EASTON, Deborah Ann EDGECOMB, Deborah H. EDLER 275 276 'X -S N Q f if x fx- X 1 ,f 4, bg, 4. Linda Marie EDMONDS, Jeanne Ann EDWARDS, James EGAN, Stephen F. ELDRIDGE, Anna May EMERSON, Sandra Ann ENGEL, Kathryn Beth ERNST, Jane M. EVANS, Susan La- vinia EVANS, Jenifer EVELETH 277 'H Carl Eric EVENSEN, Fary F. EWERT, Christopher John FARRELL, Karen Gail FAY, Janet Stewart FEIST, Starette FEUERSTEIN, Mary Ann FIATO, Gregory Michael FILIP, Lois Patricia FINN, Paul Frank- lin FINNEGAN E .5 E it 278 Susan Jane FITZGERALD, Ceclia Anne FLEMING, Karen Anne FOGG, Susan Margaret FORBES, Royal Newton FORD, Gloria Jean FORTIER, Dwight Lucius FOSTER, Karen Darlene FOWLER, Jack FRENCH, jr. 279 -nd Bank of New Hampshire Concord, Nashua, Manchester Judith Warren FRENCH, Susan Elizabeth FRICK, Morton Dewolfe FURBER, Deborah Jean FURLONE, Patricia Howard FURNANS, Peter A. GADIEL, William Timothy GAGE, Wayne Francis GAGNON, David Alan GAL- LAGHER 280 Linda J. GLATERIO, Susan Ann GARLAND, Mary Ann GARNEAU, Susan Laura GAR- NEAU, Sweaterville U.S.A., Por- tsmouth 28 i , S' Vw' at J , - ZLL 1- Jean Blanche GAUCHER, Marc E. GAUCHER, Cynthia Ann GEGAS, Anthony Louis GE- LINAS, Rita B. GEORGE, Marilyn Kay GERRATO, Janice Marie GEFZRIOR, Susan Marie GETMAN, David Jerome GETZ, Dorinda Maire GIAMMARCO, Douglas John GIFFORD, Lois F. GIFFORD 282 I if Amoskeag Savings Bank, Manchester, N.H. Member F.D.I.C 283 15 D' W5 I X S' lf ':l i:i 3 ? KN YY Q - i ' , Q QX x up . lg -7 H 59-f xx o 'v r X gan' F i ' ,:52i5?555f5f5E: 'X . ,gagigigigigsg , . 2555555 'ififffii W N igigz' N ' L lie' ' o r ,ni 1.4 4 G 4 A 'W , fs o Gallagher's Sport Center, Portsmouth '3' 91? Donald Russell GILMAN, Kenneth Barrett GILMAN, Michael G. GILMAN, Stephen T. GIONFRIDDO, Julie Beauregard GODDARD, Julie Alice GOLDBERG, Terry Bruce GOODMAN, John Michael GOODRICH, Mark Allen GOODRICH 284 4 141561 My .. qgrpauv i .sl vc'- Richard Elkins GORDON, John Philip GORHAM, Lona Margaret GORHAM 285 Ilene Teresa GORMLY, Bradford Win- slow GOULD, Phillip GRANDMAISON, Karl Irving GRAY, Margaret Sarah GRAY, Georgia D. GREEN, Alison Emily GREENE, Richard John GRE- GORY, James Francis GRIER, John Patrick GRIFFIN, John Joseph GRIGAS, John B. GRIGGS, Lynn GUERRINGUE, Donna Maria GUI- MONT, Philip Lloyd GUISER, Carolyn R. HACKLER, Joy Kathaleen HAGST- ROM, Eric Clifford HAKANSON, Karen Jeanne HAKANSON, Jeralyn Anne HALL, Rebecca Wanda HALL, Kath- leen M. HALLORAN Northeast Electronics Corps., Concord 5 , U ills? g ' Q I I fb 3 t I 286 'X lf ,,,, , ty 'V 1 . , up f Western Auto Association and Manne Technical Climbing, Dover A.E. Borden, air conditioning, refrigeration, industrial supplies 287 Young's Donut, Durham vvv wx Week's Ice Cream Shop, Durham 288 John Henry HANEL, jr., Christine HANNAH, Frederick D. HAN- NON, Gregg B. HARDING, Gail Ruth HARDY, Linda Susan HAR- KNESS, Judith Anne HARRIMAN, Joan Denise HARRINGTON, William Tyler HARRIS, Susan Margaret HARRISON, Dennis Alan HATT, Karen HAYES, Barbara Ellen HEALY, Pamela Sue HELD, Eric Clinton, HERNDON 4 'iz,fiQ,5, The Keene National Bank, Keene 289 we aa Sarah Ann HERNDON, Nancy Sybil HEWI- SON, Ruthellen HIGGINS, Barbara Ann HILL John Robert HILL, Roberta L. HILLIAFID, Can- dice Anne HILLSGROVE, Nina Day HIFISCH Brenda Leigh HOBBS, Velma Jean HOBBS Pamela HOCKENHULL, Laurie HODGES Nancy J. HOGAN, Joanne Esther HOLLAND Sally Christine HOLLAND 290 1 9 KR W Susan HOLLIDGE, David Chester HOLT, Janice Elizabeth HOLTON, Jonathan Brian HOTCHKISS, Irene J. HOULE, Ethan V. HOWARD, Bar- bara Zoe HOWLAND, Ronald Edgar HUBBARD, Richard Charles HUM- MERICH, Dale HUNT, Leanor HURL, Sara Lytle HYDE, Victoria Ann IHRIG, Gail Patricia INSLEY, Ann Amor IRWIN 2 ! DQR, f O .. W Amkif' A Carole May JAWORSKI, Jay Warren JEFFREY, Kathryn Ann JEGLUM, Brian Lester JENNISON, Marsha MacNeiI JOHNS,WiIIiam JOHNS III, Barbara Sue JOHNSON, David Andrew JOHNSON, Cecile Su- zanne JOLIN 292 if - was '5..4'.'IffLIf rr' is i t X Dale Arthur JOVIN, Peter Anthony JURASIK, David James KALIL, Robin Dale KATZ, Patri- cia Ann KAVALL, Francis Xavier KEANE, Ja- queline Ann KEATING, Kathryn Anastasia KEEFE, Marjorie Jean KENDALL, Beth KEN- NARD 293 3 A 294 1 mP'5I' N, Laura Ann KENNELLY, Eleanor KIL- HAM, John Carlton KIMBLE, Kathleen Ann KIMBLE, John Weaver KING ll, Kathy Barbara KING, Susanne Marie KING, Janice Wanda KISZKA, Lauri Joan KLEIN, Irene Elizabeth KNIGHT, Marianne Kathryn KNIGHT, Richard A. Kopely, Irene Germaine KOSOWICZ, Moyez Umedali KOTADIA, Gretchen Frances KRAMER 295 296 'H , Wu... Dorothy Grace KRASNER, Susan Madeline KRIEGER, David M. KUUIS- ITO, Walter E. KYLLONEN 'bv Dean Michael KYRIOS, David Barter LAKE- MAN, Raymond Barry LAMARRE, Diane Dora LAMONTAGNE, Frederick Gordon LANE, Kenneth Alden LANE, Rita Ellen LANE, Dale Corliss LANGLEY, Neil LAPIERRE, Deborah Elizabeth LARMIE, Anita Claire LAVIGNE, Su- san Marie LAVIGNE 297 ,f-' ,N fyg Z 1 ZZX Pic ln Pay I Richard E. LAVOIE, James Edward LAVOIE, Burton Ellsworth LEAVITT, Louise Violet LEAVITT, Gregory Galen LEBEL, Wayne Robert LE- CLAIR, Jean LEE, Robert Andrew LEE, Glenn Maynard LEPENE, Julia I. LESSARD 298 Af I 9 ei Q 1 . f W, 4 , fig' . , ii3Z??7i7fE,- V ,v 4: 3 g,,, . ff z..,ef,,,y,. i- , lafolla Construction Co., Portsmouth 299 Patricia D. LIBBY, Susan Lucille LIND- GREN, Jacqueline LINEHAN, Nancy Joann LINES Hovey's Camera Shop, Portsmouth Morrill and Everetti, Inc., Concord Cheryl Roberta LITTLE, Kathryn Ann LITTLE, Ivan Freeman LONGLEY, jr., Gloria S. LORD, Sandra Roberta LORING, Emily Jane LOW 300 Q-X as Kathleen Mary LYSIK, Kathleen Anne MacADAM, Cynthia Raye MacDONALD, Beth Morcott MacGRE- GOR, Suzanne MaoLEOD, Brian Richard MAHONEY, Donna Louise MAIOLINO, Deborah Inez MALETTE, Anne Catherine MALONE, John F. MALONEY 301 , L lggzsggl f , 'SGXYCEN' lELDlNf-LSU SUPPLY ' N. H. Welding Supply Co. Inc., Manchester Beverly Taylor MANN, Jane Geraldine MANNING, E. Mark MANUS, Hardy Hoover MAPP, Suzanne Irene MARKS, Bruce Robert MARSHALL, Heidi Melinda MARSTON, Leon E. MARTINEAU II, Dorothy Suzanne MARVEL, Rebecca Susan MASH 302 Georgeann Rogers MATTY, Kenneth George MAXFIELD, Virginia Margaret MAXHAM, Sue Pierson MAXWELL, AI- bert Paul MAYHEW, John Kimball MAYNARD Martha Jane MCATEER, Suzanne B. MCAVOY, Maryann MCBRIDE, James Curtis MCCAULEY, Kathryn P. MCCAULEY, John MCCLURE, Raymond Cecil MCCUBREY, Mi- chael Charles MCCURRY, Elizabeth C. MCDEVITT, Peter H. MCDONALD, William G. MCGONAGLE, Timothy C. MCINTYRE, Joel Gardner McKAY, Robert Joseph McKAY, Keith Alan MCKENZIE, Christopher Wright MENGE, David MERRILL, Susan Jane MER- RILL, Priscilla Ann MERRITT, Jane Cameron MESSER uw i .-:FE w if . '5 it .af A i ,.-,Q 5 E ,J f 3 .X A A A .... yy 'E , L , Z M 304 -an Kathryn Ann METULES, Lesley MEYERS, Paul Everett MILBURY, James Christopher MILES, Sandra M. MILES, Allen MILLER, Deborah Ann MILLER, Donald Richard MILLER, Karen Beth MILLER, Sally Manton MILLER, Victoria Louise MILLER, Barbara June MILLS, Harvey Allen MILLS, Virginia Helen MILLS, Bradford Allan MILNES 1 I fm 2 , , g,,g,.i'?. .Ii:Q?5. J J I0 I ff V I., .ir , ash Nr L.. , N 42, If L, I1- gx' Q ,ni . I. ,x 305 Walter W. Cheney, Inc., Durham wlflliafnr f BUILDERS - nzmons RENTALS Annette C. MINICHIELLO, Ann E. MINKUS, Jessie Anna MIT- CHELL, Susan Elaine MITCHELL, Bryce Norman MOCHRIE, Edward Paul MONGEON, Robert Stanley MOORE, Sheryl Lynne MOORE 306 Susan MOORE, Linda Jean MOORES, Dominic J. MORALES, Ralph Edward MORANG, Judith Lynne MOREY, Ste- ven Martin MORIN, Rita Helen MORN- EAU, Francis Joseph MORRIS Edward H. Quimby Co., Inc., Dover - 5 Lkky K 15 H , , K i 1 k : .1,.- 1 . S S t,t..t, it f 1 iik fl I 307 Stuart MORRISON, Sandra L. MORTON, Margaret Anne MOSHER, Christopher H. MOULTON, Daniel Patrick MOYNIHAN, Christina Ann MRUGALA, Dereena Elise MUCKJIAN, Judith Bishop MUL- V E Y 4 The Friar Tuck Pub, Exeter ', . A. I Q, ' 17 XX 5 1 fi 5 A V 'V +1..1iX5.5., , - if, , ,gf ' M ' ' 55' x,t4.l,5x-sw. , - -N , ' ft' ' ,, 5 gllllll X55 f , 1 55 is .lin .ll w rt X- 5 ' 5 f' ' I 5 1. lull A W '-'SS - '45, ' ,,. ,, , ,nf ' f , 1 'ii :Il ' .. , A JI, ,la , Y - f. i n ,wb mil - , Q7 5 :. Q ll gg . I figgggg- NN. my , fif ,551 1 .dm E 5 , . 5-... W WI :J A 45 Um f 4,-1 ,ll 5 H . f 1 I -1. 4 ' I 2 5 1' u 2111 A ggfiitl ggi Q - W' blmlhiiiii wi 5 . 5 .L 5 22522513 55555 ,A 5+ 5555 55 at .5 :gg 5 , 5 5: . at ., QL ullnu fit -. f um ,QL . ..t.. - -- Q gil- ,415-+5zgQg5 5 , qllllllll 5, 'Z' ,W '... 5,..,... ..,,,,..,,,.a rw 5 v1f.':.v '- :gi 55, hy--ff iff .f -.5 I- ' if - - f tn., 1,1 -'v I, ' f--ff--' --M i M - -ifu af, X-5, --. 5 1 - ,. - nik Lt: nw' .inanyqg-5 ' HI xr' 1 Y in A I '51i'g ,1'W!W t.lf5f9'kKVr'.g. M ,i -5 .5439 Ap M 55- +3 A . 'pg-ff 5 f,... . - - 5 -N' ' ' mv 5 5 5,5 wjff' , -t ' ia- ii: ,V Q X W xg XE I :W m zrariffita ' I ' ::.:::f::n:::r'33E?'::w 308 Mary Frances MURPHY, Martin Edward MUZEROLL, Paula Mong- eau MUZEROLL, Selma Elaine NACCACH, Carolyn Marie NADEAU, Ronald Edward NAWOJCHIK, Susan Ann NEAL, Carol- yn Jane NELSON WSIB? Interstate Restaurant Equipment Corp. Manchester .-f :O V t , . , M 5352, .. , , fe ' 51 f or i ' 1af ii 309 .ai Edith Fulton NELSON, Jane Elizabeth NELSON, Nelson Faulks NEWCOMB, jr., Janet Martha NEWTON, Andrea L. NICK- ERSON, Joan Mary NOGA, Susan Farrar NOLTE, Thomas Stevens NORCOTT, Ja- nette Anita NUESSLE, Kathleen Anne O'CONNOR Lacy's, Dover rllll E lvlorton's of Dover AIie's Jewelers, Dover and Portsmouth i rr.. vw N l? i i it R 'E an 2 W E D' K 6 ff, 4 Q Kathryn Clark ODETTE, Patricia O'HARA, Diane Marie O'LEAFlY, Gail Ann OPENSHAW, Steven M. ORENSTEIN, David Colin ORPIN, Daniel T. OUDENS, Louise Ann PAKSTIS QM-is f In 1, WALL, Central Paper Products, Co., Inc., Manchester Susan Gail PALETSKY, Margaret Rose PALM- ER, Anant PANANURUKSA, Betsy Ann PA- PADOPOULOS, Frank Leo PALELLA, Donna Jeanne PAPALE, Edward Lawrence PA- QUETTE, Susan June PARKS, Gail Ann PARO, Perry H. PATTEN, Vivian Jean PAY- ETTE, Janet Louise PEABODY, Robert Henry PELLEGRINI, Michael Raymond PEPIN, Harry Moulton PERKINS 312 D. D. Bean and Sons, Co., Jaffrey, N.H. Records Storage and Retrival, Durham 313 The Maxem Co., Portsmouth L 3' ,. is if 1 QAR H . xflxgier Y , , . . H. I ., L t , ,V Q J, .r X Robert A. PERREAULT, jr., Diane PERRY, Robert William PERRY Karen Ann PETERS, Katherine Ann PETERSON, Larry James PE- TERSON 314 Griffin Construction Co., Inc., Portsmouth Kathaleen Ann PHILLIPS, Marilyn Edith PHILLIPS, Robert Richard PIKE, Joseph M. PILACHOWSKI, Valerie Keto PINCIARO, Giu- seppe P. PINTON, Diane M. PITMAN, Gordon Howard PITMAN, Mark PITMAN, Donna Lisa PITOCCHELLI, Carolyne Leigh PLU- MER, Helene POMAZON 315 Durham, N.H. Susan Beth POMERANTZ, Cheryl Ann POTTER, Christopher R. POTTER, Su- san Gail POTTER, Susan Louise POWERS, Stephen George PRINCE, James Rendall PRIOR, Sandra Jean PROCTOR, Diane Helene PROULX lx my-I 316 Saralee PUSHEE, Kevin Wallace QUINLAN, Dorothy Mary QUINN, Mau- rice Bayard QUIRIN, John Joseph RAFFAEL Ill, Maureen Helen RAF- FERTY, Stephanie Ann RAGUCCI, James Edward RAYMOND fb:-5, 3, ig E 1. ' f we , ei i Markem Corp., Keene 317 Jane Ann RAYMOND, Peter George RENZELMAN, Helen Johnson REYNOLDS, Gail Lucia RICHARDSON, Douglas Scott RICHTER, Kathryn Helene RIPLEY 318 The Strafford Banks, Dover 1 Nashua Federal Savings 8t Loan Association 319 Claudia Grace ROACH, Eliza- beth Ann ROBBLEE, Stephen John ROBBLEE, Russell Don- ald ROBERTSON, Ann ROBIN- SON, Robert ROBINSON 2 oveia ' a x' Mark Anthony ROMAGNOLI, Susan Estelle ROONEY, Ann C. ROSE- NCRANTZ, Deborah Ellen ROSS, Jonathan Charles ROSS, Diane Joan ROTH, John Richard ROTTET, David Edward ROY, Duane P. ROYCE , I x ' We yi , W if 1 320 - X NX i Brenda T. RYAN, Bruce Allen RYAN, Michele Helen SALVAIL, Scott Mi- chael SANBORN, Jeannie Marie SANDBERG, Richard Woodruff SAV- AGE, Joan Elizabeth SAWYER, Susan Marilyn SAWYER, Morton T. SCHMIDT, jr., William R. SCHMIGLE The Suncook Bank 321 David Carl SCHOEPF, Anne-Marie and J. Clayton SCHROEDER, Johanna SCHUBERT, Bar- bara Joan SCHWIEBERT, Dean Francis SCOTT, Genevieve SCOTT, Lydia SEMCZYSZYN Juliette Anne SESIN, David Edward SEUBERT, Denise Susan SHAMES, Douglas E SHANLEY, Timothy William SHANLEY, Eileen Marie SHARP, Alan Lockhart SHAW, Kathryn SHAW, Nancy Elizabeth SHAW, Robert Vanhorn SHEFFIELD, Jane Veronica SHEHAN, Cary Lynn SHIELDS, Karen Louise SIEDENBURG, Lonnie Edward SIEL T bail .qw 61 -.-Q 1 f 5 ' F M 1 A I .ff fri: L ,fy ,:.-W lf, it. ffffffkfai- S 'mtl Q'ff:gfIgi5., .y 'pi I lviv'. Sf,lH? 9 .1 o' 1 K I - fini N ,infill ni., I ,'f,3'l 312-5 i rdgliillll, .'.'g': 12? i no ,pun an I1,'o nik E xg.:-i, ,ta as , Dry.. qi: ?!'u1,'.A ,'n, Af1' X W ' 2' A ' isnt. ft. VJ- i. A i , 1 .Lys - - EJ, 322 6 Theta Chi Fraternity Marjorie Lou SIMPSON, Nancy E. SIMPSON, Deborah Gail SIPE, Elaine Christine SKAMBIS 323 3 324 Rose Ann SKIRKEY, Mary Farrell SLATTERY, Christine SMITH, Dan- iel Gregg SMITH, Gary Haven SMITH, Leonard Alan SMITH, Paul Richard SMITH, jr., Barry David SOLNICK, Jill Anne SOUCY, John J. SPAGNOLA, James Kyriakos SPANOS, Margaret Rowena SPEAR, Norman Charles SPENCE, Jennifer Jean SPERA, Richard K. SPRAGUE, jr., Janice Linda SPREADBURY, Daniel Louis ST. CYR, Amantha Jean STACY, Sally Ann STARK, Linda Diane STE- FANY, Doreen Sue STERNDALE, Gail Ann STEVENS, John Rolfe STEWART, Linda Elaine STIERITZ, David North STONE, jr., Nancy Beth STONNER, Jennifer STUBBE, Mary Susan SULLIVAN, Pamela A. SUM- NER nf' N1 f x , ,,.-X 325 326 f.,- l Q, uf Janet Elizabeth SWANSON, Jane Rosemary SWIERZ, Francis Ralph SYLVESTER, Fumio TAKU, Blanche Lenora TANNER, Lona Gor- ham TASSEY, Leonidas E. TAYLOR III, Lynn Ellen TAYLOR, Thomas R. TAYLOR Ill, Stanley W. TEASDALE, jr., Christie Ward TEEPLE, Roberta Diane THOMAS, Paul Ed- ward THOMPSON, Joyce Ellen TILTON, Sandra Mae TILTON, Bruce Richard TIMSON, Linda Lee TOUSSAINT '2 Fr' :Wx I .. f ll 5 327 ness! Nancy Ann TOWLE, Christine Ruth TOWNS- END, Lidia M. TOYOFUKU, Gabriel Victor TREMBLAY, Katherine Hicks TREMBLAY, Norman Paul TREMBLAY, Roland Pierre TREMBLAY, Donna Lee TRIPP, Alan R. TU- PEK, Cheryl Anne TUPEK, Edward George TURCOTTE, Lanna Rae TWOMBLY, Susan Egerton UPTON, Louis Adam UFIENECK, Nancy Jean USHER 328 Lf! T T X I -Wi,r, -5 3 , v ' fi I-agtigl' . i2'ZMf Q , 'ccc irns my T -' J 9 Q, 'Q 12 V Ai Vi T w if' rl if , 2 ,rf-fi' Q' , . 5 , ix V , 5 4 WK' Claire Elaine VALENTI, Lenwood E. VALLIERE, Scott Charles VAN- DEMARK Gail VARNEY, Melissa VARNEY, Rich- ard Alan VARNEY, Monica Rita VIEL, Robert Maurice VIENS, Alan Edwin VITTUM, Peter Fulton VOLKERT, Mi- chael William WALKER, Richard Kevin WALTON, Michael Lee WASHBURN, Theodore F. WEAVER ll, Ann Marga- ret WESSELL, Susan Carol WEST- ERBERG, Frances Irene WHEAT 329 ii fs- . 'iii T. ' K r 1 'fi H6 if -in ii Brenda B. WHEELER, Douglas David WHEELER, Mary Catherine WHEELER, Carole Linda WHITCHER, Joan Elizabeth WHITE, Pa- mela Anne WHITE, Sherrill Ann WHITE, Jay Paul WHITEHOUSE, Margaret Rose WHITENECK, Brian Perley WIGGIN, Lynda L. WIL- LIAMS, Barbara Neal WILSON, John Frances WILSON, Nancy WIRDERHOLD, Betty Lou WOLTERS, Barry Lee WOOD l 'X F09- 9 'f 'Gu ' Fw N' NJ r5,,g:e'. .4', , - -' 1 , ,i,,.. G ti I 330 N I f ,lf l f ,f ll 1, ff If Jean Alice WOODWARD, Bruce Vincent WORRAD, William Roy WORTHEN, Loren Wilson WRIGHT, Mary Katherine WRIGHT, Rita Luisa WRIGHT, Warren Douglas YEARGLE, Barbara Jill YORK 331 HQ 332 10' wg 'A Brian George YOUNG, Debera Murchison YOUNG, Jane Davis YOUNG, Mary Janet YOUNG, James Gary YULE, Walter ZAGR- OBSKI, Nancy ZIMEROWSKI, Sandra Ann ZITRIDES, Peter Lee ZWERNER 333 PHOTOGRAPHERS Arthur Amidon-153, 159, 220, 222 both, 262, 288 top Karen Behringer-2 Linda Behringer-12 top, 34, 35, 51 both, 54, 55, 69, 70, 71, 72, 74, 88 both, 89 bottom, 91 bottom,111,112,113,117, 119,127 both, 129 both, 136, 137, 140-141, 142,143, 150, 156, 160, 186, 187, 188 both, 189 both, 195, 205, 213, 221, 226, 227, 228, 229, 246, 247, 249, 253, 256, 257, 258, 266 bottom, 292, 293, 294, 295, 299, 326, 132 Jaclyn Bergeron-11 top, 14, 16, 32, 45 bottom, 48, 49, 50, 58, 67, 84 top, 86 both, 89 top, 90, 95, 106, 121 bottom, 141 top, 151, 181, 183, 279, 291 bottom Sue Bylander-174 bottom Norman Desfosses-15, 17, 26, 27 bottom, 237 bottom, 238, 241, 243 John Doleac-7, 19, 24, 25 top, 40, 64, 68, 69, 76, 121 top, 87, 96, 233 Dan Forbush-223-224 Philip Getter-21 Bob Georgitis-148 Alison Greene-110, 123, 190, 231 bottom, 250, 259 both, 261 top, 264, 265 top, 266 top, 268, 269, 270, 271 top, 281, 286, 288 bottom, 298, 302, 303 both, 306, 307, 310, 311, 312, 313 top, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319 both, 320 Denis Harrap-121 Naoto Inoue-39, 53, 62, 83, 91 top, 101, 130 both, 158, 173, 175, 176, 177 top, 197, 225, 251, 255, 271 bottom, 277, 296 top, 301, 309 bottom, 325, 328, 336 Bill Klein-56-57 Patrick Maloney-46-47 Dennis C. McAllister-248 Murray McGurick-97 Ralph Morang-111 both, 112 Ken Oros-6, 25 bottom, 30, 31, 33, 41, 42, 43, 59, 60 top, 60 bottom, 61, 79, 80, 99, 100, 102 top, 118, 120, 122 bottom, 124, 125,144,146, 152, 170, 171,172, 174 top, 177 bot- tom, 191, 192, 193, 202 both, 209, 235 both, 240 both, 305, 323 Michael Painchaud--78 both Peter Patton-10 top, 11 bottom, 73 both, 155, 178 bottom Skip Prior-21 bottom, 27 bottom, 29, 102 bottom, 131, 140 top left and bottom, 141 bottom, 147, 162 bottom, 163, 184 bottom, 214, 216, 217 both, 232, 237 top, 274 bottom, 276 bottom, 278 Doug Purinton-94 Ron Rosenblum-103, 133 Gary Sampson-5, 13 top, 18, 36 Len Sargent-1, 8 top, 9, 12 middle, 12 bottom, 20, 37 bottom, 63 bottom, 65, 81, 82, 84 bot- tom, 92, 116, 126, 138, 139 both, 168-169, 178 top, 179, 184 top, 185 top, 194, 199, 200, 201, 203, 206, 207 all, 208, 215, 218 both, 219, 230, 231 top, 234,236 both, 242, 244, 260, 276 top, 282, 285, 296-297, 309 top, 321, 331 Karen Schneider-8 middle Bill Schultz-77, 85, 275 Gary Smith-3, 10 bottom, 23, 27 top, 128, 161, 165, 180, 204 Michael Thornton-108-109, 185 bottom, 198 Vali Valenti-8 bottom, 52, 134, 154, 164, 261 bottom, 263, 265 bottom Nick Wallner-28, 44, 45 top, 66 Dan Willett-135 Michael Williams-37 top, 63 top, 145, 162 top, 210, 211, 212, 332 ARTWORK: Polly Fowle-135 Michael Mistretta-149 334 Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Business Manager Photography Editor Literary Editor Senior Editor Secretary Advertising Manager Staff Photographers Literary Staff Stories Poetry Arthur Amidon Mary Burke Michael Williams Linda Behringer Stephen Kokolis Lisa Buss Mary Burke Alison Greene John Doleac Jaclyn Bergeron Len Sargent Ken Oros Naoto Inoue Skip Prior Lynda Billings p. 71 Ed Penhale p. 132 Bob Constantine p. 173 Peter Hendrick p. 211 Allen Miller p. 245 Naoto Inoue-stand: look: wait p. 5 Naoto Inoue-think p. 20 Naoto Inoue-first leaf p. 38 Joseph Goldsmith-The Parade p. 107 Henry Maxfield-Three on one bench p. 157 Stephen Kokolis-Odd Estrangement p. 182 Stephen Kokolis-thought flashes p. 196 Pat Tovey-Children p. 238 Our special thanks to Norman Benrimo and Joseph Donovan 335 336 14 1 r - , ,,, .- ,.. . 44 1, e A .,,h-gw-,-awww. 3: v 9 Q ,Q-5 'URL Q. 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