Worcester Polytechnic Institute - Peddler Yearbook (Worcester, MA)
- Class of 1969
Page 1 of 340
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 340 of the 1969 volume:
“
WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE dedication Four Years the year administration faculty seniors senior directory faculty director sports scores ads 2 6 32 214 228 248 290 296 308 312 DEDICATION President Harry P. Storke 82257 Defender of our traditions yet a planner for the future. Fan of our teams and host to dis- tinguished visitors. A fund-raiser who has asked of others, but also a man who has given much of himself. President of the Institute whose door is always open. For the seven years in which he has expanded Worcester Tech not only in terms of buildings and students but more importantly in terms of educational opportunities, we dedicate the 1969 Peddler to President Harry P. Storke. i Four years ago, the institute was a quiet place where minds came and minds went and the time spent drifted away, silently. ■• . .... The snow fell, the wind blew and a gray mist sheltered the people from any outside disturbance. l H f - 1 f S S K K R Sleepy Hollow sat as placid as if only moments away from a final and absolute sense of rest. SJT-oiS The hurrying and scurrying of the little people did not disturb the towering pillars that watched and smiled, and nodded approvingly. Occasionally the noise from the busy little devils would reach a pitch and fervor that would attract the attention of the pillars and the little people were told that they mustn ' t let their enthusiasm run away from them. 4 Z ;X £ 2 :. 10 Elf-like students were seen from above as they busily studied and worked, and ground answers, and prepped and schlepped about. 11 So the students held their pompous proms, tapped out their little cere- monies, presided over their clubs and teams and concerts and ran their little show . . . 12 Always under the ever watching eye of the smiling pillars of Worcester Tech. Victories and defeats were absurdly insignificant. W - £;«- 13 But . . . in the outside world, the non-technical world, the unorganized world, the unfamiliar world, the REAL WORLD, things were not quite so pleasant. ■9 ! ■i ■M £k ■14 ife People were starving outside, 15 Life Life there was a war outside, 14 Life 16 Life . . .there was a need for change outside. ife 17 mi A The senior knew it, the junior sensed it, and slowly. . .slowly enough so as not to announce its approach. . . The wind carried the message to Worcester Tech. 19 And now, the wheels of change are grinding, at work in every phase of campus life. A stagnant force is now in motion. 20 A. 7LMHUK miCMM FOB HOBO ' —■- ' OF IW PRESIDENT ' S PLA.WIW; CROUP: JOHN P. van ALSTYHE JOil. ' ; M. BOYD CRMUZi K. BEVEHTHAL, JR. WILLIAM K. ROADSTRUM C. WILLIAM SHIPWA STEPHEK J. WEIKINGER MARCH 1969 WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS 21 And we look back and see- that there was some meaning to our four years here. That all our energies were not cast aside And we recall the . . . .Grinding, 22 .grabbing, 23 ■' . (. ' - • hurting, 24 . . . hating, ■i-l L-- - xj mr ■:■i ' S| lis .-it r=t I ■E — - « 1 ' ■v 5 „1 P 25 ♦ . ♦ living, 26 ♦ ♦ . loving and ? It . : ■— - • 27 And now that Worcester Tech will soon be ours, now that the students have a small but not silent voice in the running of things, now that the pillars of wisdom have turned and bent to listen to the voices of change. V . .. ■■■.;4 I I mail 1 I jri i 30 Life at Tech might soon have a little more meaning, a little more relevance, and a little less of the absurdities and paradoxes that once reigned supreme over the institute. 31 Vi • o£T - 3 fh ' • bin , ..   •   ■•  ■■■W ' 3f ' • ■«■• ■■? .-- ' i ' ..;:• ' K 3  « i, I $MM ; • After years of building 34 . ' . -■v- ' T 3 - . ' W l m 36 37 38 39 40W .- ■' ■■i 1  • A 1 ■l__ -« ' B!3rfi- ' i! kJ 1 J f V ■;; hip — ■y iii J A .j- - — ■' ■' ■- n !J t w ! . ' ' •  is . % . . — ijSfli?.-  i 40 41 42 Tech stands foi learning . , . 43 . . stands for being 44 45 46 ■■■■■_- m S§£ t.0 . . . stands for living. 47 From the four corners of New England, students came to learn, came to be, came to live, and came to grow . . . 1 1 Pi VI ■v _;L ' 48 49 They came for over a hundred years without women. 50 One hundred years without gaining a full education, without learning the female qualities so needed by men. At first there were two. 51 While Frosh and Sophs are playing games to develop a rivalry that never gets off the ground . . . 52 53 . . .fraternity men are preparing for the fight of survival . . . rushing . . . 54 55 56 Always classes 57 .for some interest, for others boredom. 58 . 59 Football dispelles the boredom, and commences the weekend. 60 61 62 Hard work 63 .constant effort. 64 ■■■■■■■■■■PWM W iP 65 66 . . . team work 67 v Ww ■' £ wt ' p j fe ' 3fe w, l p .victory; this is football. 68 ■69 . ■, - T j _ ' ■ - ' w v V S 70 Many consider football a rugged contact sport, but for those who have watched soccer . . . 71 .although soccer is a team effort, victory is still the result of individual effort- 72 73 V ZT sS one s legs, 74 spirit, and desire . . . 75 . . .are, what in the end, X .Jk 76 .give victory. 77 Flying feet, straining muscles, timing, endurance, the desire to win, all these are cross country, but most of all, it is being alone. • «, . . ft 3 • ' - ■T  w 79 IIHMIItl . Il|||||r n ,r ■4 Homecoming is football, soccer, . . . a little bit of everything in one autumn weekend. 80 81 82 v „;■A time when all are drawn together . . .alumni, faculty, students, and friends . 83 The afternoon is alive with the color of autumn . . . . . .with cheering . . . 84 . . .and with the sounds of football 85 86 .which arouse emotions. 87 Homecoming is watching , — , — „ — . — ,„,„ ■■ ... jj 88 .watching sports. 89 90 fW[ifiHg MH ■'   ft •■££ ' )+ f: . .watching together. 91 92 Homecoming renews old traditions . .with old outcomes. 93 ► tT s% ' ■t  Happiness is Homecoming . . . 94 . . .winning adds to it, but people make it. 95 The afternoon ends 96 .the day ' s activities are put away in the scrapbook of our minds. 97 Night! With night comes the unknown, the never before experienced. Sly and Janice were just that . . . 98 99 . . . but more, they were unique people. Just as all of us are unique people. Yet . . . 100 101 As winter comes, the sides of Worcester Tech fold up to keep its inhabitants together and united . . . 102 104 . . and the only word more important than I is we . 105 together yet alone 106 107 The human body is always producing energy . . . 108 113 114 and the quiet and tedious. 115 . . Yet we are together and alone . . . 116 117 I.F. signifies fraternity cooperation in that mythical period between Thanks- giving and Christmas work period. 118 119 Tom Rush . . . 120 . . . and the Young Bloods were the featured entertainment. 121 January begins a new year; Tech students are finishing the old with projects and programs that must be done. 122 123 As finals approach, the library becomes the meeting place of the minds. For some, it is their first visit to this hall of learning. 124 125 Three hours ... an eternity ... or not long enough? 126 127 With registration, begins second semester. The lines are just as long as first, but somehow it doesn ' t seem as bad. The end of the year is much closer, and starting anew is a possibility. Old faces that have been vacationing appear, asking about grades and telling of how they got screwed. 128 129 After the golden grass of fall comes the blanket of winter. 130 131 Wf To some snow is happiness. To others it is an unwanted form of water . . . 132 133 134 ... to each his own. But common to all is the question, How much snow does it take for the Institute to call off a class? 135 136 137 138 ] D I liWi = ■■Four years of work ready us for that all important interview; leading to a job, and our place in society. 139 ' r £ i 140 141 Basketball is a game of height and ability. What a team lacks in one it makes up for in the other. What it lacks in both it makes up for in desire. But the team with the most height and ability will usually win. 142 143 144 145 146 147 Man plays and competes in many strange environments, 148 . . . here his only enemy is the clock. 149 An experienced coach, a supple and pliable body, each ounce of flesh muscle, quick reflexes and superb conditioning are qual- ities needed in this most ancient of sports. 150 151 152 153 154 155 i - 156 Wfflzmjmm s % 157 Hockey, slashing sticks and crush- ing checks. All the work, sweat and pain, but unfortunately, the great unwatched. 4 158 159 160 At the close of an athletic season and the beginning of the end of winter comes Winter Weekend. 161 Like unto other weekends the campus puts on a new face of no Saturday classes and entertainment. 162 This weekend brought Sam and Dave and the Proposition to the campus to create an oasis in a sea of snow and sculptures. 163 New England wrestling can, for Tech Students, 164 be summed up in one name: FRED 165 166 167 . . . dignity lies in deserving honors not in possessing them. 168 169 ' -f 170 In the spring, the flowers bloom, the grass trades its white blanket for a green smile, and the trees bud. 171 La ■I ,.(r | £ ' F. T HM r r gjjg The country side and the campus blossom with new life. . .both in- animate. . . 172 173 and animate. ' tr-. ■■■•... ::J 174 175 176 177 if j.J.M 178 On Saturday, one is free to choose how he spends his day . . . that is after ROTC drill. 180 But with final review we know the end of a school year is close. 181 Baseball is said to be a sport of running, throwing, hitting and thinking. It has, in common with all sports, thinking. 182 IsJ- £% V — «?- - ' «,2mSW ss . 183 Thinking is the reason for playing all sports. For what is life but thinking. As a man thinketh so is he. WE . b _ HH HSI 184 185 186 The crew has come a long way. . .from borrowed boats to the Rusty Callow Trophy. Hard work, year ' round conditioning, desire. . .has brought this about. 187 _ j dp t £ « 188 Crew is a sport of timing, endurance, teamwork. . .where six and a half minutes of rowing can be a life time. 189 1 .1 -■■190 191 192 193 Although some minor sports have become major, some are still little known and little followed. 194 195 -_; . . _ ;•■■■■- ' -r vS - ' ■• ' •• !■■' -• ■--■-■196 p k ■ft Track is a sport of individual efforts . 197 . . . team success is the sum of the opposing individual ' s efforts . . . 198 . . . the result can be frustration for both individual and team. 199 200 The first full mellow note of Junior Prom is the true beginning of spring . . . 201 202 ... a fresh breath of life. The campus lives with people. H 1 ■J O It £iL l - Jg f r w% t ? ■lVjH jJIbW A + . : M: ' 7 1 h - y LI Ku£l f% 9 i v. ' - ' .•■■■rlK ■; ' Wfk :1 ' 1 V k V 203 The loves of spring blossom in the month of May . . . and germinate during this April weekend. wMiS ■205 Brazil ' 66 206 Tech again stands for living. 207 Alas, the big bash. Tau Beta Pi has released the safety valve and sent us into oblivion. 208 r ■• ■S§ « , iis? Drink; swallow your sorrows; express your feelings; just be yourself. 210 If ' . ' ' v- xmi 211 212 Thus, the year has escaped into history leaving only memories of what was and what has yet to come. For some of us, our dreams have turned into reality. For others, reality never was. With our knowledge and all our education we say, Tute, Thank God we ' re out. 213 .,) «. ; .■.- ' . I P Gr -Hff ' Administration BOARD OF TRUSTEES Front row, left to right: Francis S. Harvey, Raymond J. Forkey, James C. Walker, John W. Coghlin, William E. Hanson, Wayne E. Keith, Harry P. Storke, Robert D. Harrington, George W. Smith, Jr., Robert W. Stoddard, Paul S. Morgan, James N. Heald, II. 216 Second row, left to right: John E. Hossack, E. Weldon Schumacher, Joseph C. Casdin, Helge S. Johnson, J. Norman Alberti, Richard Walberg, Charles C. Bonin, Thomas L. Counihan, Chandler W. Jones, Albert M. Demont, Warren C. Whittum, Lincoln Thompson, Charles R. Michel, James J. Clerkin, Jr., Rev. Wallace W. Robbins. Absent were: Earl H. Blaik, Paris Fletcher, Milton P. Higgins, Earl C. Hughes, Rev. James N. McCutcheon, Daniel F. O ' Grady, H. Ladd Plumley, Rev. Gordon M. Torgersen, Harold B. Whitmore. 217 M. Lawrence Price, Vice-President and Dean of Faculty 218 Dr. Edward N. Clarke, Associate Dean of the Faculty 219 William F. Trask, Asst. Dean of Student Affairs and Director of Placement 5S£8H r K D « %l WklixM iHHH ' Wmi 1 A I m 220 Martin C. Van de Visse, Dean of Student Affairs Alice saw that : Carpenter and Tweedledee Agreed to have a battle ; For Carpenter said Tweedledee Had spoiled his nice new rattle. Just then in flapped the Walrus, As mad as he could be; Which frightened both our heroes so, They quite forgot their quarrel. Walrus said to Carpenter, Come with me, For I have a disciplinary problem To discuss with thee. Alice said to Tweedledee, Tell me about you three, how you be. I ' ll tell you about the other two but not about me. 221 Bernard H. Brown, Assistant Director of Student Affairs Said Tweedledee: The Walrus and the Carpenter Were walking close at hand : They wept like anything to see Such quantities of sand: ' If this were only cleared away, ' They said, ' it would be grand ' ' If seven janitors with seven mops Swept it for half a year, Do you suppose, ' the Walrus said, ' That they could get it clear? ' T doubt it, ' said the Carpenter, And shed a bitter tear. William F. Elliot, Assistant Director of Admissions 222 Warren B. Zepp, Alumni Secretary-Treasurer Roger N. Perry, Jr., Director of Public Relations ' O Oysters come and walk with us! ' The Walrus did beseech. ' A pleasant walk, a pleasant talk, Along the briny beach: We cannot do with more than four, To give a hand to each. ' The eldest Oysters looked at him, But never a word they said: The eldest Oysters winked their eyes, And shook their heavy heads- Meaning to say they did not choose To leave the oyster-bed. But four young Oysters hurried up, All eager for the treat: Their beanies on, their faces washed, They wore an air of confidence- And this was odd, because, you know, They hadn ' t any sense. 223 The Walrus and the Carpenter Walked on a mile or so, And then they rested on a rock Conveniently low: And all the little Oysters stood And waited in a row. Four other Oysters followed them, And yet another four; And thick and fast they came at last, And more, and more, and more- All hopping through the frothy waves, And scrambling to the shore. Roy A. Seaberg, Jr., Asst. Alumni Secretary 224 ' The time has come, ' the Walrus said, ' To talk of many things : Of rules-and girls and sealing-wax- Of presidents and kings- And why the stars are boiling hot- And whether pigs have wings. ' ' But wait a bit, ' the Oysters cried, ' Before we have our chat; For some of us are below The Mark, And all of us are Bad! ' ' No hurry! ' said the Carpenter They thanked him much for that. ' A lot of work, ' the Walrus said, ' Is what we chiefly need: Diligence, conservatism besides Are very good indeed- Now, if you ' re ready, Oysters dear, We can begin to mold. ' ' But not on us! ' the Oysters cried, Turning a little blue. ' After such kindness, that would be A dismal thing to do! ' ' The work is fine, ' the Walrus said. ' Do you admire the school? ' Mr. Verne C. Edmunds Executive Officer, Office of the Vice- President and Dean of Faculty 225 David E. Lloyd, Vice-President for Business Affairs Kenneth A. Nourse, Associate Dean of Student Affairs and Director of Admissions 226 Edgar F. Heselbarth, Director of Financial Aid and Assistant Director of Admissions It was so kind of you to come! And you are very nice! ' The Carpenter said nothing but ' I ' ve soothed another fight. I wish you were not quite so deaf — I ' ve done it more than twice! ' T weep for you, ' the Walrus said: T deeply sympathize. ' With sobs and tears he sorted out Those of the largest size, Holding his pocket - handkerchief Before his streaming eyes. ' It seems a shame, ' the Walrus said ' To play them such a trick After we ' ve brought them out so far, And made them trot so quick! ' The Carpenter said nothing but ' The butter ' s spread too thick! ' ' O Oysters, ' said the Carpenter, ' You ' ve had a pleasant run ' Shall we be trotting home again? ' But answer came there none — And this was scarcely odd, because They ' d eaten every one. 227 : r f 5? ? in taking, ;♦ ;  :• ;  .. ;;, « w Faculty Bj ■« ; B, Allen Benjamin 230 Do what you think is right. One should try to leave his mark on the world by coming up with an idea or a physical change which will live beyond him. Leave the world a better place. Be concerned with the problems of today and their solutions. Question the assumptions about life and our role in it in relation to the problems of today. As an engineer or scientist think about the effects of the technological ideas you develop on other humans. 231 Dr. John Mark Boyd We have a technological society. We talk about social problems but they ' re all wrapped up in cities, transportation and energy sources. When we talk about outer space it ' s wrapped up in how to get there. When we talk about health it ' s about heart transplants. What education can be more relevant than one with a sound technological base that also developes the human beings. The liberal arts people are in trouble. We can talk with the historians, the social scientist, and the political scientist, but some can ' t talk with us. We are stuck with a technological society. 232 The days of building things, for the sake of building them, are gone. We have to start worrying about the effect of highways, heart transplants, and nuclear power plants. We all must relate these achievements to other human beings. How do these roads we cut through ghettos effect them? We tear out the ghetto, put in a highway-an engineering achievement. Then what happens? High rise apartments go up that rent for three hundred dollars a month. What happened to the people who live there? They are making another slum. Talking about technological developments in the content of social awareness is important. The teacher ' s role is to be available to young men so that he can communicate with them and them with him about these problems. The rest of life is being confronted with strange situations and educating one ' s self. Every student should realize one thing. He can educate himself. If I can give my students the confidence that they can learn anything, I have fulfilled my purpose. Gain the excitement of life in terms of some of the pleasures of knowledge in the unplumed areas of the arts of history. 233 William Robert Grogan Today, a lot of students preset the amount of work they will do. When they reach that level they stop. If their goals were not reached, they establish new ones. In some cases this means a change of fields. There are two levels of education. The most important is to get an education which is sometimes defined as what is left over after you have forgotten what you learned. The other is to be well rounded. To gain an understanding is what is happening in ourselves and others. An undergraduate education is one where a student ' s mind is stretched in a manner where he becomes dissatisfied with what he knows and wants to continue to know more. I want to create this desire in a student to keep growing rather than to get a B.S. to make money. If they want the latter, they ' re short changing themselves. In four or five years they ' ll be unhappy. They have received a training not an education. 234 235 Dr. Charles Heventhal, Jr. The chief function of a teacher of imaginative literature in a college of engineering and science is not to train professional literary critics and scholars; it is rather to outline the almost limitless possibilities of reading as an avocation with one ' s technical career. I do not think my function at WPI is to find the so called ' liberal arts student ' and encourage him to join my profession. I am most pleased as a teacher here when the student in engineering or science or mathematics who has previously been indifferent to poetry or the novel begins to say ' I like this work, and I don ' t like that one ' and beings analyzing intelligently why he makes such a choice. Hopefully the reading of English or American literature or the other literatures of the world, in addition to entertaining us, assists us in seeing some of the complexities of our human nature that we might have otherwise overlooked. Literary study reminds us, as perhaps no other art does, of our limited perspective as an individual. If there were only one thing I would want the students who have passed through my classes to remember, it would be the question asked by the Caterpillar of Alice in her trip underground: ' Who are you? ' 236 237 Dr. Donald E. Johnson 238 An educated man, in intellectual competition with his peers, seeks the truth. And in history, he deals, in part, with problems involving good and evil. Education flourishes best in a free society which encourages dissent and which does not confuse education with indoctrination. To many, this point of view will seem cliche-ridden and dated, for today, liberalism is suspect. The fact that our concepts of good and truth are somewhat fictitious does not mean that efforts to pursue these goals are futile. It warns us to seek for progress rather than perfection. It also indicates that we are not infallible, and to obtain conformity through coercion stifles progress. Once we accept the notion that words like evil are based only on subjective beliefs, it becomes preposterous to fight for or against anything on a moral basis. The attempt to achieve the ethical society becomes meaningless. Similar reasoning may be applied to the concept of truth. We constantly seek further information in order to revise our hypotheses. Such activity is absurd unless we believe we are doing something to eliminate that which is fallacious and bogus. A few of those who say they want reform are really seeking power, while marching under the banner of freedom. Contemptuous of orderly processes of reform and intolerant of dissent, these authoritarians try to achieve their goals through resort to confrontation and violence. Those who will not comply with their demands are denounced as both wrong and wicked. This has been a rationale for heresy-hunting since the dawn of history. The methods used cannot be divorced from the ends to be achieved. Such methods may either destroy freedom or make it impossible to achieve legitimate reforms. Our society will be able to cope with this and other problems. Despite many ups and downs, the progress of mankind has been striking-especially in a free society. And with Camus we may conclude that there are more things to admire in men than to despise. v SmBggBmBBmm. 239 Robert Long, II 240 Physics is not a spectator sport. It requires participation. This is true of life. We must participate. A student today is participating more. He asks more important questions earlier in his education. He is motivated by interest in a course not by discipline. Education is an opening to a renaissance of ideas and experiences. By learning and becoming more educated and not going into an academic cocoon you automatically influence people. This should be our purpose in life-to help our fellow man. As engineers and scientists in a technological society we are better able to do this, but we must be aware of the effects of our work on all parts of society. 241 Bruce Cale McQuarrie I sometimes get concerned when one of my students takes a job that is too closely involved with the military-industrial machine. I had a student not too long ago who was gleefully happy that he had a job programing war games on a computer. This bothers me. Maybe I shouldn ' t be training people to do that sort of thing. But, I have no right to impose my values and standards on students. I just try to make them the best students I can. 242 I hope they search for truth. No matter where it leads. Certainly not always in the strict mathematical sense, looking for nice true theorems, but striving for the basic truth of things. This is what education is about-searching out truth and knowledge. If people do this most of the time things will come out pretty well. 243 Dr. Nicholas Louis Onorato 244 The last generation was willing to accept the rules because some one older and wiser made them. Today the students question these rules. They want to know the why of things. They discuss a rule to find the reasons behind it. Then they make a judgement on its validity. Rules free people. They help people to develop. Without them society would be chaotic. Everything we do has an impact on life. Like a ripple made by a pebble thrown into water. It makes a splash and in time the ripple spreads out from the center of impact. As actions in life spread out. Ideas and actions move the world with a lag in time . . . Think about everything you do. Have a philosophy of life. Have your actions be consistant with your philosophy. 245 Dr. Stepehn J. Weininger The educational process should be a time in life when one begins to discover on an ever expanding scale one ' s own needs; in a very deep way the roots of one ' s personality. Part of this is the training for one ' s later life, but this is not a divorced thing or it shouldn ' t be. One should not train to do something as one trains a monkey. Train for a career which is in harmony with one ' s ownself. 246 There are a lot of ways of teaching besides those revolving around black boards, speaking to people, or giving out reading assignments. There are methods of communication which are less beautifully cataloged but are very real for we have all seen them operate. Even in something such as science which seems to have more of the factual and cut and dry about it than the other disciplines, there is a great deal of communication, particularly of attitude. This is a very important part of the learning process. It is the teachers attitude toward his subject, and his feeling about the whole place of science is something which makes its mark on the student. It may be at least as important as the factual information he gives out. There ' s a quotation that an old Jewish religious philosopher said about his teacher, I learned the Torah from all the limbs of my teacher, which is his way of saying that it was the man, his method of conducting himself, which taught more than anything he said. Remain open. Never close yourself to anything, remain open to all possibilities, all thoughts, to consider nothing impossible that is beyond consideration, nothing so repulsive that it cannot be thought about, so personally painful that it can ' t be contemplated. People must be more willing to take chances, make fools of themselves, make mistakes to get themselves in painful, embarrassing, awkward, uncomfortable situations for the sake of finding their own way, and to discover their own possibilities. 247 ■• ' . % + 1 •-,« tV y m t W r ..- r j : M ' ;i ' v. ' • . : « ■•to  i c« y : «c -? s v ' • I Seniors 3fcfc  -3 £ •7 r. ' if ; ' ' 7 ■w CHEMICAL ENGINEERING Raymond Barrows Anthony Bergantino Raj Chauhan Francis Barton William Boyan William Chudzik Ralph Clemons Rodney Dahlstrom Ronald Drozdick Ralph Eschborn David Ferris Richard Furman Richard Gross Thomas Gwazdauskas James Heinrich Andrew Heman Arthur Katsaros Lawrence Katzman Patrick Kelley David Kilpatrick Robert Kohm Edwin Kuenzler Thomas McAuliffe Gordon Miller David Morris Paul Norkevicius Alvin Pauly Alfred Perrone Donald Rapp Charles Robinson Robert Rose Michael Scelzo Thomas Semprebon Mark Simpson Stephen Spakowsky Joseph Senecal Paul Shea John Taylor John Watson CHEMISTRY Warren Anderson Gerald Axelrod Alan Cunningham Stephen Erikson Neil Glickstein Joel Greene Charles Hardy Jerry Johnson Alexander Malcolm Michael Nowak Clifford Obertuck Kent Rothammer John Starsiak Charles Trent Charles Zepp CIVIL ENGINEERING Stephen Andruchow Lawrence Areskog James Atkinson Edward Cannon Richard Carlson Thomas Connelly Richard Check Michael DeMoga Andrew DiLeo William Donges Thomas Gurney William Hallock Edward Griffith Richard Gurske Stephen Hammond If Glenn Harkness Leslie Hatch David Healy Donald Johnson Charles Kalauskas Ronald Lewis Christopher Masklee Nicholas Mazanitis Donald McCarthy Edward Mierzejewski ■HHHHHHHI Arnold Novick John Payne John Poblocki Gerald Robbins Laurence Shea Alan Randall Robert Scott Michael Wanczyk William Willand Paul Wolf ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Francis Archambeault Richard Aude Anthony Baglini Gregory Barnhart James Baxendale John Boyd Kenneth Case Brian Chace Alan Chamberlain George Davenport Lawrence Day Kenneth De Villeroy Larry Dexter Stephen Fischer James Foley Warren Follett Charles Forand Thomas Fournier Mark Garaway John Gavitt Michael Hart Harold Hemond Jeffrey Hynds David Jervis Duncan Loomis Daniel Lorusso Robert Mayer Sheldon Mittleman Stephen Nagy Matthew Neclerio Michael Ouellette Craig Past ore David Pietraszewski Gregory Pollack Daniel Pond David Pratt James Richey Ronald Roberts Richard Robey James Rodier Richard Romeo Rene Roy Donald Ruef Albert Shahnarian Donald Sharp Raymond Stanley Ronald Stelmak Barry Shiffrin Robert Slomcenski Robert Stessel David Swenson James Walker Peter Walsh Richard Warren Kimball Watson Richard Weiner Leon Wendelowski David Zlotek Stephen Zuckerman MANAGEMENT ENGINEERING Kenneth Berube Frank Corbiere John Czajkowski Joseph Doran Robert Downie Peter Heins Jeffrey Knapp Joseph Langone Mark LePain David Lieberman Daniel Lipcan Gordon Mears Roger Miles i%ffii Walter Miska Robert Reidy Ronald Rosadini Ronnie Wendelken MATHEMATICS Dennis Agin Richard Alpert George Banks Michael Cohen John Connell Richard Deland 272 Charles Doe David Eaton Douglas George Mark Gerber Philip Kazemersky Allen Lahikainen Stephen Legomsky Hyman Lofchie George McCandless Richard McCue John Paolillo Stephen Platz Howard Shore Donald Whelan Steven Zieve MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Brian Abraham James Alford Raymond Baker Robert Balcer Carl Ballard David Barrett Chester Blackman James Boyd Craig Bradley Douglas Brown Bruce Carlson mm. wii John Colognesi Anthony Crispino Roger Dashner Roger Dennison Paul Dresser Gregory Enz - . ' ■jOTRSSW SWWKS Donald Esson Arthur Evans Joseph Fitzgerald Jerome Flynn Alfred Freeberg Mark Freyermuth Michael Gan John Grant Bruce Green Peter Grosch James Haury Donald Holden Steven Hunter Edward Hyde David Johnson Ronald Jones Kenneth Kopka Curtis Kruger David Kuniholm Robert Kusy Gary Leventhal James Littlefield A i Craig Mading James Mills Steven Mathis Douglas Morash Ronald Morris Wayne Morse James Myers Douglas Nelson Kris Nelson Eric Nickerson Michael Noga Richard Palm Andrew Perreault Stephen Phillips 281 Donald Robinson Stephen Rogers I !i 2i Stephen Selinger Richard Smith Robert Smith John Simpson Peter Stanley 282 Martin Surabian John Szostek Thomas Taylor Robert Templin John Thompson Todd Tuomi Bruce Tuttle John Walkup Phillip Wilsey Bernard Wood 283 PHYSICS Arthur Aframe Jeffrey Bernard Joel Cehn Normand Bachand Donald Casperson Douglas Ferry Steven Leece Robert Lowell Lawrence Minkoff Dennis Murphy Peter Nott Donald Rule Robert Orenberg Joel O ' Rourke Ralph Rollo John Rush Robert Spicuzza Earl Spinks The Road goes over on and on Out from the door where it began. Now far ahead the Road has gone, Let others follow it who can! Let them a journey new begin, But I at last with weary feet Will turn towards the lighted inn, My evening-rest and sleep to meet. In retrospect the long road of four years has gone by quickly . . . too quickly. We now look back in wonder, half expecting to turn ' to salt, to view where we have been. We wonder if we are better individuals. Have we learned to live or to make a living? In fouri years, have we found our possibilities, our limitations, our desires? Can we satisfy our needs? . . .More important, 286 the needs of others. Has the fraternal sphere taught us to bare our souls, to bring down the protective wall that surrounds us, or does that take noc- turnal escapades? If we have learned how to give without asking or expect- ing anything in return, if we can give from our heart without any personal motive, then we have become men. We have become unique in a society of everyone for himself. Let us believe that the hole we give through is the hole we receive through. For some that hole is very large. For others not as large; yet, for far too many, it is sat upon. Now we, as Seniors, leave the shelter- ing walls of the Institute to build a new life. To prepare for the future, for we realize that we will spend the rest of our lives there. We all go our own way. But, do we all go with the understand- ing of why? . . . With a purpose and reason. For without understanding we are lost in our own ignorance, the mist that rose from the earth. Did the Institute give us this under- standing? Did it prepare us to find this understanding or did it teach us that the derivative of a constant is zero or that error UV-2 is an undefined array name. The Institute has sinned against us! Or has it? Can we forgive the Institute of its sins? But wait! That is the wrong question. We must ask if the Institute can forgive us of our sins . . . the sin of neglect, the sin of not caring, the sin of I ' ve paid my money, work for me. , the sin of selfishness. No one has screwed us, but ourselves. No one has made us insufficient to handle the social problems of our time, but our- selves. No one has made us retire to our academic cubicals to contemplate the myriad mysteries of the computer, but ourselves. 287 Where do we as engineers go from here? Do I we step into our accepted places in society to) commute from the suburbs ' til we are old and gray? Or, do we live in action for there is no reality except in action. Life is action and passion; therefore, it is required of man that he should share the passion and action of his time, at peril of being judged not to have lived. Be not judged, not to have lived. Accept your life as a challenge to give and share with all, from your best friend to your worst enemy. If you succeed, God is with you. If you fail, may God be with you. 288 Still round the corner there may wait A new road or a secret gate; And though I oft have passed them by, A day will come at last when I Shall take the hidden paths that run West of the Moon, East of the Sun. 289 SENIOR DIRECTORY BRIAN THOMAS ABRAHAM Worcester, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Golf; Newman Club; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt. ARTHUR MICHAEL AFRAME Worcester, Massachusetts. DENNIS GENE AGIN Maynard, Massachusetts Tau Kappa Epsilon Track, W , Mgr.; Semi Simple; New- man Club; Glee Club; Alpha Phi Omega. JAMES ALBERT aLFORD, JR. Watertown, Massachusetts A.S.M.E. RICHARD DEAN ALPERT Needham, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa Track; Semi Simple; FM Radio. WARREN LLOYD ANDERSON Auburn, Massachusetts Rifle Club. STEPHEN ROBERT ANDRUCHOW West Warwick, Rhode Island Baseball, W ; Football; A.S.C.E. FRANCIS PAUL ARCHAMBEAULT Oxford, Massachusetts Track, W . JAMES PETER ATKINSON Rocky Hill. Connecticut A n, WHO ' S WHO Class Treas.; A.S.C.E.; Tech Senate; Band; Masque. RICHARD LEONARD AUDE Indian Orchard, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Tech News; Newman Club. VESA ILMARI AUNIO Fitchburg, Massachusetts A.S.M.E. GERALD STUART AXELROD New Haven, Connecticut Alpha Epsilon Pi IJAE, SKULL Tech Senate; Tech News, Features Editor; Rowing Club. NORMAND LAURENT BACHAND Worcester, Massachusetts IJME, Shield. ANTHONY JOSEPH BAGLINI North Providence, Rhode Island Lambda Chi Alpha Boyntonians. RAYMOND ROBERT BAKER North Grafton, Massachusetts A.S.M.E.; Rifle Club. ROBERT CHARLES BALCER Naugatuck, Connecticut nTE Tennis, W ; Pi Tau Sigma, Vice-Pres.; I.E.E.E.; A.S.M.E., Pres.; Newman Club. CARL EDWARD BALLARD Penn Yan, New York Bridge Club. ROBERT ANTHONY BALOUSKUS Ansonia, Connecticut Sigma Alpha Epsilon A.I.Ch.E. GEORGE MICHAEL BANKS Mystic, Co nnecticut Golf; Shield; Band; Bridge Club, Treas.; Cosmopolitan Club, Sec. FELIX JOHN BARLIK South Attleboro, Massachusetts Theta Chi A.S.M.E.; I.F.C.; Glee Club; Rifle Club. ROBERT STANLEY BARNARD Springfield, Massachusetts. GREGORY EARL BARNHART Washington, D.C. Lambda Chi Alpha Tennis, W ; I.F.C.; Prot. Chris. Fel ' - ship; Debating Club. ARNOLD A. BARR Lansdown, Pennsylvania. DAVID JAMES BARRETT Worcester, Massachusetts Wrestling; A.S.M.E.; Shield. RAYMOND HAROLD BARROWS Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Basketball; Football, W ; Lacrosse, W ; Rowing Club. FRANCIS PAUL BARTON Westboro, Massachusetts. JAMES FRANCIS BAXENDALE Whitinsville, Massachusetts. ANTHONY BERGANTINO, JR. Waltham, Massachusetts CHS, SCABBARD AND BLADE C.H.S., Pres.; A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club; Rowing Club; R.O.T.C, Maj. JEFFREY CHARLES BERNARD Newington, Connecticut Track, W ; A.I. P.; Masque; Rifle Club. KENNETH BERTRAND BERUBE Haverhill, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Baseball; Basketball; Golf; Newman Club. CHESTER DWIGHT BLACKMAN, JR. Worcester, Massachusetts Track; Shield. WILLIAM JOHN BOYAN West Paterson, New Jersey Theta Chi nAE A.I.Ch.E.; Peddler, Ad. Mgr.; R.O.T.C, Capt. CAMERON PEARSALi. BOYD Haverhill, Massachusetts Wrestling; Shield, Pres. JAMES MICHAEL BOYD West Barrington, Rhode Island Tau Kappa Epsilon A.S.M.E. JOHN ROBERT BOYD Acton Center, Massachusetts. CRAIG FRANCIS BRADLEY Guilford, Connecticut Rifle Club. ARTHUR EARL BROWN, JR. New Bedford, Massachusetts. DOUGLAS EDMUND BROWN Spencer, Massachusetts FITS. EDWARD FRANCIS CANNON, JR. Braintree, Massachusetts Basketball, W ; Soccer, W ; Class Vice Pres.; Varsity Club. JOHN ANTHONY CAPRIO Portland, Maine A.I.Ch.E.; Skeptical Chyms.; Newman Club; R.O.T.C, Capt. BRUCE LAWRENCE CARLSON Rocky Hill, Connecticut nTE A.S.M.E.; Glee Club; Rowing Club, W . RICHARD CLIFFORD CARLSON North Easton, Massachusetts Baseball, W , A.S.C.E. GERARD EUGENE CARON Putnam, Connecticut Tennis, W ; Semi Simple; Shield; Newman Club; Bridge Club. KENNETH LEE CASE Simsbury, Connecticut. DONALD ELLIS CASPERSON Weymouth, Massachusetts IJME A.I.P., Pres.; Bridge Club. WILLIAM EDWARD CATTERALL, JR. Summit, New Jersey A.S.M.E.; Prot. Chris. Fel ' ship; Glee Club; Ski Club. JOEL IAN CEHN Dover, New Hampshire Alpha Epsilon Pi Swimming; Masque. BRIAN DAVID CHACE Marion, Massachusetts HKN, TBn, WHO ' S WHO Cheerleader, W ; Lens and Lights Club. ALAN CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN Natick, Massachusetts Shield; Newman Club. RAJ KANTILAL CHAUHAN Bombay, India. RICHARD WALTER CHECK New Hartford, New York Shield; Tech Senate; A.S.C.E. WILLIAM ALBERT CHUDZIK East Hartford, Connecticut Alpha Tau Omega Baseball, W ; Cross Country; A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club; Band. RALPH NORMAN CLEMONS Falmouth, Maine Sigma Phi Epsilon Swimming; A.I.Ch.E.; Rifle Club. MICHAEL JOSEPH COHEN West Hartford, Connecticut Semi Simple, Pres. JOHN QUENTIN COLOGNESI Southbridge, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha Ski Club; R.O.T.C. JOHN EDMUND CONNELL, JR. North Haven, Connecticut Semi Simple; Shield; Newman Club. THOMAS LEWIS CONNELLY Valley Stream, New York Tau Kappa Epsilon Lacrosse; Soccer, W ; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt.; A.S.C.E.; Alpha Phi Omega, Treas.; Rifle Club. STEPHEN DAVID COPE, JR. Palmer, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha Football; Newman Club; Varsity Club. FRANK HOWARD CORBIERE New Haven, Connecticut Theta Chi Wrestling, W ; Cheerleader; Rowing Club; Varsity Club. CHRISTOPHER JOHN COWLES Forestville, Connecticut Alpha Tau Omega Soccer; Track; Masque. ANTHONY JAMES CRISPINO Waterbury, Connecticut Tau Kappa Epsilon I.F.C.; Fencing Club, Co-Capt. 290 ALAN RICHARD CUNNINGHAM Worcester, Massachusetts Skeptical Chyms., Vice-Pres.; Alpha Phi Omega; Rifle Club; R.O.T.C, Capt. JOHN BOLESLAW CZAJKOWSKI Middletown, Connecticut Delta Sigma Tau Fencing, W ; Newman Club. RODNEY ALLEN DAHLSTROM Worcester, Massachusetts Tau Kappa Epsilon A.I.Ch.E.; Prot. Chris. Fel ' ship; Band; Glee Club. ROGER JAMES DASHNER Elmira, New York A.S.M.E.; Shield; Newman Club; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt. GEORGE DAVAGIAN, JR. Worcester, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon R.O.T.C, Capt.; A.S.C.E.; I.F.C. GEORGE GODFREY DAVENPORT III Mendon, Massachusetts Tau Kappa Epsilon I.E.E.E. LAWRENCE ELWOOD DAY Annapolis, Maryland Cross Country; Swimming; Radio Club. Shield; RICHARD WARREN DELAND Bridgeport, Connecticut. MICHAEL JOHN DEMOGA Boylston, Massachusetts. ROGER EDWARD DENNISON Waterford, Connecticut Tech Review. KENNETH EDWARD DEVILLEROY Clifton, New Jersey Peddler; Nautical Club. STEVEN PARKER DEXTER South Grafton, Massachusetts Theta Chi Newman Club. ROBERT A. DIDOMENICO Worcester, Massachusetts. ANDREW GEORGE DILEO Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa Arts Society. CHARLES THOMAS DOE Hallowell, Maine Tau Kappa Epsilon Tennis; Semi Simple; Newman Club; Chess Club. WILLIAM GEORGE DONGES Emerson, New Jersey Phi Sigma Kappa A.S.C.E. JOSEPH EDWARD DORAN, JR. North Attleboro, Massachusetts Sigma Pi S.A.M.; FM Radio Club. ROBERT MACKENZIE DOWNIE Warwick, Rhode Island Sigma Phi Epsilon Cross Country, W , Co-Capt. ; Track, W , Co-Capt. PAUL FRAYNE DRESSER San Francisco, California Phi Gamma Delta Wrestling; Nautical Club, Vice-Pres. RONALD JOSEPH DROZDICK Scranton, Pennsylvania. DAVID WESLEY EATON Swampscott, Massachusetts Semi Simple; Alpha Phi Omega; Camera Club. GREGORY BAKER ENZ Attleboro, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Soccer, W , Mgr.; Tech News. STEPHEN ALLAN ERIKSON Worcester, Massachusetts Delta Sigma Tau A.I.Ch.E.; Fraternity Sec; Rowing Club. RALPH JOHN ESCHBORN Rolling Hills Estates, California Alpha Tau Omega Wrestling, W ; Varsity Club. DONALD BOAK ESSON Rindge, New Hampshire. ARTHUR HENRY EVANS, III Worcester, Massachusetts SCABBARD AND BLADE R.O.T.C, Capt. DAVID BRENT FERRIS Worcester, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega Football; A.I.Ch.E. DOUGLAS GAGER FERRY Rochester, New York Theta Chi Swimming, W ; Peddler; Glee Club; Varsity Club. JOSEPH EDWARD FITZGERALD, JR. Chester, New Jersey Phi Sigma Kappa. JEROME BART FLYNN, JR. Bronx, New York Soccer; Wrestling; A.S.M.E.; S.A.E. JAMES WILLIAM FOLEY Worcester, Massachusetts Football; Shield, Vice-Pres.; Rifle Club. WARREN FRED FOLLETT Warwick, Rhode Island Sigma Alpha Epsilon Rifle Club. LAWRENCE FRANCIS FOLLONI, JR. Bridgewater, Massachusetts Basketball; Golf, W ; Skeptical Chyms.; Tech News; Newman Club. CHARLES ELEZAR FORAND Sturbridge, Massachusetts Tau Kappa Epsilon I.E.E.E.; Newman Club. DOMENIC JOSEPH FORCELLA, JR. Plainville, Connecticut Lambda Chi Alpha A.S.C.E.; Football; I.F.C; Tech News; Fraternity, Vice-Pres.; Newman Club. CHARLES EDWARD FORD, JR. Whitman, Massachusetts Theta Chi. THOMAS RUSSELL FOURNIER Southampton, Massachusetts Rifle Club. ALFRED GEORGE FREEBERG East Haven, Connecticut Sigma Phi Epsilon SKULL, WHO ' S WHO Football, W , Co-Capt.; Lacrosse, W , Capt; Varsity Club. MARK ALAN FREYERMUTH Plymouth, Massachusetts Theta Chi Wrestling; A.S.M.E.; Peddler; Newman Club; Glee Club; Alpha Phi Omega. RICHARD CHARLES FURMAN Worcester, Massachusetts Alpha Epsilon Pi A.I.Ch.E. LEWIS EUGENE GAMBLE Waltham, Massachusetts Sigma Alpha Epsilon Swimming; Wrestling; A.I.Ch.E.; Rifle Club; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt. MICHAEL GAN Springfield, Massachusetts A.S.M.E.; Lens and Lights; Radio Club. MARK WILLIAM GARAWAY Nanuet, New York Alpha Epsilon Pi Rifle Club. JOHN CORRINGTON GAVITT Croton on Hudson, New York. DOUGLAS J. GEORGE Needham, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Wrestling. MARK STANLEY GERBER St. Paul, Minnesota Sigma Alpha Epsilon nME, WHO ' S WHO Baseball; Basketball, W , Mgr.; Pi Mu Epsilon, Treas.; A. LP.; Peddler; Alpha Phi Omega; Masque; Ski Club. NEIL MELVIN GLICKSTEIN Syracuse, New York Alpha Epsilon Pi CHS A.I.Ch.E.; A.C.S.; Skeptical Chyms.; Student Activities Board, Pres.; Alpha Phi Omega. STANLEY JOSEPH GOLDMAN Dorchester, Massachusetts Alpha Epsilon Pi. JOHN STEVEN GRANT Worcester, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Cross Country; Wrestling; A.S.C.E.; Newman Club. BRUCE McNEILL GREEN Westboro, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega SCABBARD AND BLADE Cross Country; Football; Hockey, W ; Tennis, W ; Varsity Club; R.O.T.C, Maj. JOEL PAUL GREENE Northboro, Massachusetts Theta Chi FIAE, WHO ' S WHO Tennis; Pi Delta Epsilon, Sec; Skeptical Chyms.; Fraternity Treas.; Tech News, Editor-in-Chief; Ski Club, Vice-Pres. EDWARD LEWIS GRIFFITH, JR. Cherry Valley, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha SKULL, WHO ' S WHO Baseball, W , Co-Capt.; Basketball, W , Co-Capt.; Class Vice-Pres.; A.S.C.E.; Varsity Club. PETER THOMAS GROSCH West Hartford, Connecticut Phi Gamma Delta SKULL, WHO ' S WHO Lacrosse, W ; Wrestling, W , Co- Capt.; Class Pres.; A.S.M.E.; Varsity Club, Vice-Pres.; R.O.T.C, Lt. Col. RICHARD MICHAEL GROSS Wilbraham, Massachusetts Phi Gamma Delta CHS A.I.Ch.E.; Basketball. THOMAS CLARK GURNEY Quincy, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon SKULL. SCABBARD AND BLADE, WHO ' S WHO Basketball, W Co-Capt.; Athletic Council, Treas.; R.O.T.C, Lt. Col.; A.S.C.E.; Tech Senate; I.F.C., Pres.; Peddler; Varsity Club, Pres. RICHARD HARRY GURSKE East Bristol, Connecticut Phi Siema Kappa Football, W ; Athletic Council; A.S.C.E.; I.F.C.; Varsity Club. THOMAS MICHAEL GWAZDAUSKAS Hartford, Connecticut Tau Kappa Epsilon A.I.Ch.E.; Band; Boyntonians; Glee Club. WILLIAM ERWIN HALLOCK Sparrow Bush, New York Lambda Chi Alpha XE Football, W ; Class Hist.; Chi Epsi- lon, Vice-Pres.; A.S.C.E.; Rowing Club; Varsity Club. STEPHEN WILLIAM HAMMOND Maplewood, New Jersey Theta Chi A.S.C.E., Pres.; Ski Club. CHARLES DAVIS HARDY Quincy, Massachusetts Tau Kappa Epsilon Skeptical Chyms. GLENN EVERETT HARKNESS Delmar, New York XE A.S.C.E. MICHAEL MERRILL HART Pittsfield, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Tech News; Newman Club; Chess Club. LESLIE TYRONE HATCH Ashland, Massachusetts A.S.C.E. JAMES WALTER HAURY North Haven, Connecticut Tau Kappa Epsilon A.S.M.E. PAUL FRANCIS HAYNER. JR. Lexington, Massachusetts Soccer, W . DAVID GEORGE HEALEY Holyoke, Massachusetts Phi Gamma Delta Swimming, W , Co-Capt.; A.S.C.E., Vice-Pres. JAMES THOMAS HEINRICH Richlands, Virginia Alpha Tau Omega A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club. PETER SAMUEL HEINS West Newton, Massachusetts Lens and Light Club; Masque; Radio Club. ANDREW JUSTIN HEMAN Orlando, Florida Alpha Tau Omega CHS Lacrosse, Mgr.; A.I.Ch.E.; Fraternity Sec; Alpha Phi Omega; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt. HAROLD FIELD HEMOND Mystic, Connecticut HKN, TBI!, FIME Swimming; I.E.E.E., Pres.; Bridge Club; Cosmopolitan Club; Lens and Light; Radio Club, Vice-Pres. JAMES BERTRAM HILLS Holden, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa A.S.M.E. JOHN MATTHEWS HISCOCK Rosedale, New York Phi Sigma Kappa Soccer; Athletic Council; A.S.C.E. DONALD BRITTON HOLDEN Doylestown, Ohio Theta Chi Baseball; Basketball; A.I.Ch.E.; A.S.M.E.; Alpha Phi Omega. GREGORY T. HOPKINS Worcester, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega. STEVEN ALAN HUNTER Worcester, Massachusetts. EDWARD RICHARD HYDE III Wilton, Connecticut Soccer. JEFFERY ALAN HYNDS Glen Rock, New Jersey Tau Kappa Epsilon Baseball, W , Mgr.; Soccer; Fraternity Pres. DAVID E. JERVIS Bridgeport, Connecticut Tau Kappa Epsilon Swimming; I.E.E.E.; Radio Club; Rifle Club. DAVID HALL JOHNSON Manchester, Connecticut Alpha Tau Omega A n, SCABBARD AND BLADE Tennis; Fraternity, Pres.; Alpha Phi Omega; Masque, Sec. DONALD GUY JOHNSON Worcester, Massachusetts XE A.S.C.E. JERRY LEE JOHNSON Theta Chi Soccer; Peddler; Ski Club; R.O.T.C, Capt. RICHARD ELIOT JOHNSTON West Newton, Massachusetts. RONALD LEE JONES West Hartford, Connecticut Sigma Phi Epsilon Football, Asst. Mgr.; Lacrosse; Track; Tech News; Nautical Club, Pres. CHARLES ALAN KALAUSKAS Glen Head, New York Alpha Tau Omega R.O.T.C, Capt.; A.S.C.E.; Tech Sen- ate; I.F.C.; Fraternity, Vice-Pres.; Newman Club; Band, Pres.; Glee Club. ARTHUR THOMAS KATSAROS Massapequa Park, New York Sigma Phi Epsilon SKULL, ms, WHO ' S WHO Basketball; Baseball, W , Co-Capt.; Football, W , Mgr.; A.I.Ch.E.; Fra- ternity Sec; Fraternity Rush Chair- man; Tech News, News Editor; Var- sity Club. LAWRENCE KATZMAN West Hartford, Connecticut Alpha Epsilon Pi SKULL Cheerleader; Tech Senate; I.F.C PHILIP MICHAEL KAZEMERSKY Ansonia, Connecticut Sigma Alpha Epsilon WHO ' S WHO TBn, nAE, IIME, Vice Pres. Baseball, Asst. Mgr.; Wrestling, Mana- ger New England Tournament; A. I. P.; Tech News; Glee Club, Bus. Mgr.; Masque; Tau Beta Pi, Vice-Pres. GARY NORMAN KEELER Bedford, New Hampshire Semi Simple. PATRICK WILLIAM KELLY Gardner, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Football; Lacrosse; Track; Wrestling; A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club. DAVID EARL KILPATRICK Cranston, Rhode Island Phi Sigma Kappa A.I.Ch.E.; Fraternity Pres.; Arts Soci- ety; Rifle Club. JEFFREY CLARK KNAPP Amesbury, Massachusetts Theta Chi Class, Vice-Pres.; R.O.T.C, Maj.; Fra- ternity, Vice-Pres.; Camera Club; Ski Club, Pres. ADAM STANLEY KOCHANEK Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Lacrosse; Glee Club. ROBERT GEORGE KOHM Windsor, Connecticut Tau Kappa Epsilon Soccer; A.I.Ch.E. WILLIAM KENNETH KOPKA Southington, Connecticut Phi Kappa Theta nAE Basketball; Golf, W ; Tech News, Bus. Mgr; Newman Club. JOHN JOSEPH KORZICK North Haven, Connecticut Football, W ; Lacrosse, W ; Wrestling. MITCHELL PAUL KOZIEL Hartford, Connecticut. CURTIS STUART KRUGER Levittown, New York Sigma Phi Epsilon rrrs Basketball; Football, W . EDWIN DAVID KUENZLER Glen Rock, New Jersey A.I.Ch.E.; Shield; Bridge Club; Chess Club; Alpha Phi Omega. DAVID ARNOLD KUNIHOLM, JR. Orange, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Soccer, W ; Tech Senate; Ski Club, Co-Capt.; Varsity Club. ROBERT PETER KUSY Worcester, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega R.O.T.C, 1st Lt. ALLAN HENRY LAHIKAINEN Gardner, Massachusetts. WALTER EMERY LANG III Worcester, Massachusetts Fencing; Newman Club; Alpha Phi Omega; Camera Club; Nautical Club; Rifle Club. JOSEPH ANTHONY LANGONE Millbury, Massachusetts Theta Chi. JONATHAN WILLIAM LEAVITT Manchester, New Hampshire Football; A.S.M.E.; Newman Club; Alpha Phi Omega. STEVEN HEWITTE LEECE Hamilton Dome, Wyoming Delta Sigma Tau A n, WHO ' S WHO A. I. P.; Debating Club; Masque; I.F.C; Alpha Phi Omega. 292 STEPHEN HOWARD LEGOMSKY Miami, Flor ida Alpha Epsilon Pi Fencing; Tennis; Semi Simple; Frater- nity Pies.; Debating Club; Radio Club, Bus. Mgr. ANTHONY FRANCIS LEKETA Worcester, Massachusetts SCABBARD AND BLADE A.I.Ch.E.;R.O.T.C, Capt. MARK HENRY LEPAIN Sturbridge, Massachusetts S.A.M., Sec.-Treas. GARY LEONARD LEVENTHAL Woodmere, New York Alpha Epsilon Pi. MARSHALL W. LEVY Whitestone, New York Alpha Epsilon Pi A.I.Ch.E.; Alpha Phi Omega; Masque. RONALD COREY LEWIS East Hartford, Connecticut Lambda Chi Alpha XE Cheerleader; A.S.C.E., Sec; Tech News; Rowing Club. DAVID LIEBERMAN Naugatuck, Connecticut Alpha Epsilon Pi Cheerleader, W ; S.A.M.; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt.; Rifle Club. DANIEL ANTHONY LIPCAN North Haven, Connecticut Sigma Pi SCABBARD AND BLADE Cheerleader; R.O.T.C, Maj.; S.A.M., Pres.; I.F.C.; Fraternity, Pres.; New- man Club; Rifle Club. JAMES RANDALL LITTLEFIELD Sargentville, Maine HYMAN SAUL LOFCHIE Brookline, Massachusetts Alpha Epsilon Pi. DUNCAN ROYCE LOOMIS Westerly, Rhode Island Track, W ; Shield; Bridge Club. . DANIEL PETER LORUSSO Worcester, Massachusetts Radio Club; Rifle Club. ROBERT ALAN LOWELL Lynn, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha Track; Tech News; Rowing Club. CRAIG LEO MADING Short Hills, New Jersey Track, W . ROBERT JOHN MAGARIAN Worcester, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Baseball; Basketball, W ; Golf; A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club; Varsity Club, Treas. ALEXANDER RICHARD MALCOLM Warwick, Rhode Island Sigma Alpha Epsilon nAE Pi Delta Epsilon, Vice-Pres.; A.C.S. Skeptical Chyms., Pres.; Tech Senate Tech News, Feature Ed.; Peddler Masque; Rifle Club. CHRISTOPHER JOHN MASKLEE Totowa Boro, New Jersey Tau Kappa Epsilon Track; A.S.C.E.; Glee Club; Alpha Phi Omega; Rifle Club. STEVEN JAMES MATHIS Rancocas, New Jersey. NICHOLAS CONSTANTINE MAZANITIS Worcester, Massachusetts Soccer; Tennis; A.S.C.E.; Rifle Club. THOMAS FRANCIS XAVIER McAULIFFE Clinton, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta CHS Basketball; A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club. GEORGE THOMAS McCANDLESS, JR. New Britain, Connecticut Lambda Chi Alpha Tennis; Cheerleader, W ; Semi Sim- ple; Tech News, Ad. Mgr.; Peddler; Glee Club; Masque. DONALD E. MCCARTHY Holyoke, Massachusetts XE R.O.T.C, 1st Lt.; A.S.C.E.; Peddler; Masque. RICHARD HAROLD McCUE, JR. Wethersfield, Connecticut Alpha Tau Omega BasebaU; Soccer, W ; A.I.Ch.E.; Fra- ternity, Treas.; Alpha Phi Omega; Masque; Varsity Club. HENRY EDWARD McGUIRE, JR. Cumberland, Rhode Island Phi Sigma Kappa A.S.C.E.; Glee Club; Arts Society. KENYON EDMONDE McGUIRE Demarest, New Jersey Lens and Lights. GORDON JAMES MEARS Springfield, Massachusetts Glee Club; Lens and Lights; Radio Club. WILLIAM ORTONE MESSER, JR. Waterbury, Connecticut Theta Chi A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club. EDWARD ALFRED MIERZEJEWSKI Willingboro, New Jersey XE Chi Epsilon, Pres.; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt.; A.S.C.E.; Prot. Chris. Fel ' ship; Bridge Club; Chess Club. ROGER WILLIAM MILES New Bedford, Massachusetts Phi Gamma Delta SKULL, nAE, WHO ' S WHO Track, W ; Class Sec; R.O.T.C, Lt. Col.; I.F.C.; Fraternity, Pres.; Tech News, Copy Ed.; Alpha Phi Omega, Vice-Pres.; Varsity Club. GORDON RICHARD MILLER Rockville, Connecticut Skeptical Chyms.; Alpha Phi Omega. JAMES PAUL MILLS Worcester, Massachusetts Basketball. LAWRENCE ALAN MINKOFF Great Neck, New York Alpha Epsilon Pi £E Tech Senate; Fraternity Treas. WALTER JOSEPH MISKA Portsmouth, Rhode Island Delta Sigma Tau Newman Club. SHELDON ALLEN MITTLEMAN Providence, Rhode Island Alpha Epsilon Pi Football; Band; Bridge Club. DOUGLAS HOWARD MORASH Waltham, Massachusetts Phi Gamma Delta nTS Cross Country, W , Mgr.; Track, W ;A.S.M.E.;I.F.C DAVID BRIAN MORRIS Upton, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club. RONALD EDWARD MORRIS Oxford, Massachusetts. DENNIS JOHN MURPHY Springfield, Massachusetts A.I.P., Vice-Pres.; Bridge Club. EUGENE LAWRENCE MURPHY Milton, Massachusetts Newman Club. JAMES BRUCE MYERS Herkimer, New York Shield. STEPHEN FRANK NAGY Weston, Connecticut Lambda Chi Alpha. ROBERT ELIOS NAJEMY, JR. Worcester, Massachusetts A.I.Ch.E. MATTHEW THOMAS NECLERIO Orange, Connecticut Sigma Alpha Epsilon I.E.E.E.; Tech News; Peddler; New- man Club; Masque; Rifle Club. DOUGLAS ALBERT NELSON Milford, Connecticut Phi Gamma Delta nAE, WHO ' S WHO A.S.M.E.; Peddler, Sr. Ed.; Glee Club; Alpha Phi Omega, Pres. KRIS LLOYD NELSON North Attleboro, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Golf; Lacrosse; A.S.M.E.; I.F.C;Tech News; Rowing Club. ERIC HAMPTON NICKERSON Old Greenwich, Connecticut Phi Gamma Delta Lacrosse; A.S.M.E.; Peddler. MICHAEL WILLIAM NOGA Coventry, Rhode Island Phi Gamma Delta SKULL, nAE, WHO ' S WHO Hockey, Asst. Mgr.; Track, W ; Peddler, Editor-in-Chief; Class Histor- ian; Newman Club; Alpha Phi Omega. PAUL VITAS NORKEVICIUS Worcester, Massachusetts CHS, SCABBARD AND BLADE A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club; R.O.T.C, Maj. PETER ERNEST NOTT Marlboro, Massachusetts Band. ARNOLD STEVEN NOVICK West Hartford, Connecticut A.S.C.E. MICHAEL T. NOWAK Springfield, Massachusetts Skeptical Chyms. PAUL N. NYSTROM Worcester, Massachusetts Baseball. CLIFFORD MICHAEL OBERTUCK North Braintree, Massachusetts Tau Kappa Epsilon BasebaU; Glee Club; Ski Club; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt. ROBERT ALLEN ORENBERG Cranston, Rhode Island Delta Sigma Tau A.I.P. JOEL FRANCIS O ' ROUKE Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa A.I.P. RICHARD HENRY PALM Old Saybrook, Connecticut Phi Gamma Delta nAE S.A.E.; Rifle Club. JOHN THOMAS PAOLILLO East Haven, Connecticut Phi Sigma Kappa Newman Club. THOMAS C. PASIERB Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega Tech News. RALPH CRAIG PASTORE Claremont, New Hampshire Tau Kappa Epsilon I.E.E.E. ALVIN BRUNO PAULY Stamford, Connecticut Alpha Tau Omega A.I.Ch.E.; Masque; Rifle Club; Row- ing Club. JOHN CHESTER PAYNE Astoria, New York Phi Kappa Theta Swimming, W ; A.S.C.E.; Tech News; Newman Club; Rowing Club. KERRY RICHARD PAYNE Wallingford, Connecticut Phi Gamma Delta Glee Club. ANDREW THOMAS PERRAULT Warehouse Point, Connecticut IlTE Newman Club; Glee Club; Alpha Phi Omega; FM Radio Club. ALFRED FRANCIS PERRONE, JR. Paxton, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha Tech News. STEPHEN ROBERT PHILLIPS Natick, Massachusetts Alpha Epsilon Pi Golf; Masque. DAVID JOSEPH PIETRASZEWSKI New Britain, Connecticut HKN I.E.E.E., Treas.; Shield; Newman Club; Glee Club; Radio Club, Pres. STEPHEN EDWARD PLATZ Manchester, Connecticut Soccer; Semi Simple; Glee Club; Ski Club. JOHN FRANCIS POBLOCKI Webster, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Football, W ; A.S.C.E.; Fraternity Vice-Pres.; Tech News; Newman Club. GREGORY EDWARD POLLACK Wyandanch, New York Alpha Epsilon Pi Football; Track; I.E.E.E. DANIEL CHESTER POND Bristol, Connecticut HKN, nME Eta Kappa Nu, Sec; I.E.E.E., Sec; Shield; Band; Glee Club; Masque; Radio Club, Treas. DAVID BIRNEY PRATT Plymouth, Connecticut Band. STEPHEN WALTER PRESS Waterbury, Connecticut CHS Skeptical Chyms. SCOTT W. RAMSAY Portland, Maine Sigma Phi Epsilon. ALAN DAVID RANDALL South Easton, Massachusetts Delta Sigma Tau XE Golf; A.S.C.E. DONALD FREDRICK RAPP Martinsburg, West Virginia Sigma Phi Epsilon SCABBARD AND BLADE Football. W ; Track, W ; A.I.Ch.E.; Tech News; Varsity Club; R.O.T.C, Capt. ROBERT BRIAN REIDY Danbury, Connecticut Phi Kappa Theta nAE Golf, W Capt.; S.A.M.; Fraternity Pres.; Tech News, Mgt. Ed.; Newman Club. JAMES LAWRENCE RICHEY, JR. Wayland, Massachusetts Cross Country. GERALD MAXWELL ROBBINS Worcester, Massachusetts Football; A.S.C.E.; Band; Glee Club. RONALD GERALD ROBERTS Millbury, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Football, W ; Lacrosse, W ; Tech News; Newman Club. RICHARD ELLIS ROBEY, JR. Hicksville, New York Alpha Tau Omega HKN Wrestling, W ; Newman Club; Band; Masque, Vice-Pres.; Nautical Club. CHARLES FRANCIS ROBINSON, JR. Franklin, Massachusetts Theta Chi Lacrosse; A.I.Ch.E.; Boyntonians. DONALD EDWARD ROBINSON Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Sigma Pi A.S.M.E. ROBERT PAUL ROCCO Pawtucket, Rhode Island CHS Football; Tennis; Skeptical Chyms. JAMES LESTER ROCHE Marlboro, Massachusetts Band. JAMES THOMAS ROD1ER Oxford, Massachusetts. STEPHEN OTTO ROGERS Fitchburg, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Lacrosse; Swimming, W ; A.S.M.E.; Tech News; Rowing Club; Varsity Club. RALPH WALTER ROLLO Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Lacrosse; A.I.P.; Ski Club. RICHARD PAUL ROMEO Lenox, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta HKN, TBn, SKULL Wrestling, W , Mgr.; Tech News; Newman Club. ROBERT JOHN ROSE Sudbury, Massachusetts Tau Kappa Epsilon Golf; A.I.Ch.E.; Newman Club; Bridge Club. JAMES VINCENT ROSSI Worcester, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa. KENT FRANCIS ROTHAMMER Manchester, Connecticut Rifle Club. RENE JOSEPH ROY Whitinsville, Massachusetts. DONALD WILSON RULE Shrewsbury, Massachusetts A. I. P.; Band; Boyntonians. JOHN JOSEPH RUSH Coventry, Rhode Island A.I.P. WALTER SACKMANN Bristol, Connecticut Tau Kappa Epsilon Soccer; A.S.M.E. RICHARD JAMES SCAIA Torrington, Connecticut Alpha Tau Omega Football; A.S.M.E.; Newman Club; Band; Masque. MICHAEL JOSEPH SCELZO Woburn, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha A.I.Ch.E.; Band. ROBERT JOHN SCOTT Wethersfield, Connecticut XE A.S.C.E.; Tech News; Newman Club. STEPHEN EDWIN SELINGER Hillsdale, New Jersey Phi Sigma Kappa Arts Society; Rifle Club. JEFFERY H. SEMMEL Yonkers, New York Delta Sigma Tau. THOMAS SEMPREBON Barre, Vermont Sigma Phi Epsilon Soccer, Mgr.: A.I.Ch.E.; Tech News; Ski Club. JOSEPH ALBERT SENECAL Marlboro, Mass. Theta Chi nAE, TBn, CHS, SCABBARD AND BLADE, WHO ' S WHO Football, W ; A.I.Ch.E.; Peddler; Newman Club; R.O.T.C, Col. ALBERT SHAHNARIAN Jefferson, Massachusetts I.E.E.E. RICHARD ALAN SHAPIRO Worcester, Massachusetts Alpha Epsilon Pi Band; Glee Club. DONALD LLOYD SHARP Mystic, Connecticut HKN Shield; Bridge Club; Cosmopolitan Club; Masque; Rowing Club. LAWRENCE EDWARD SHEA Troy, New York Wrestling; A.S.C.E.; Shield; Newman Club. PAUL THOMAS SHEA North Providence, Rhode Island Theta Chi Wrestling; A.I.Ch.E.; Nautical Club. 294 BARRY NORMAN SHIFFRIN Glen Falls, New York I.E.E.E.; Band; Glee Club; Masque; Radio Club, Sec. HOWARD H. SHORE Winthrop, Massachusetts Alpha Epsilon Pi IIAE Tech News, Editor-in-Chief; Boynto- nians. JOHN STEPHEN SIMPSON Tiverton, Rhode Island A.S.M.E. MARK SHEDRIC SIMPSON Niagra Falls, New York Phi Kappa Theta CHS, TBn, WHO ' S WHO Football, W , Co-Capt.; Lacrosse, W ; A.I.Ch.E.; I.F.C.; Tech News, Sports Ed. ANTHONY SIMULYNAS Worcester, Massachusetts. JAMES FERN SINNAMON Bedford, Massachusetts Delta Sigma Tau n.T£. ROBERT JOHN SLOMCENSKI Naugatuck, Connecticut Sigma Alpha Epsilon IIME Basketball; Bridge Club; Masque; Rifle Club. GARY ALAN SMITH Holden, Massachusetts Sigma Phi Epsilon Baseball, W; Basketball. RICHARD STANLEY SMITH Binghamton, New York. ROBERT WENDELL SMITH Sharon, Massachusetts Track, W . STEPHEN WALTER SPAKOWSKY Ansonia, Connecticut Sigma Alpha Epsilon A.I.Ch.E.; Peddler; Alpha Phi Omega. ROBERT ALBERT SPICUZZA Warwick, Rhode Island Semi Simple; Newman Club; Bridge Club; Chess Club. EARL MERRIT SPINKS Newton, Massachusetts Phi Gamma Delta Nautical Club. FREDERICK GRANT SPRETER Summit, New Jersey Phi Gamma Delta Lacrosse; Soccer; A.S.M.E.; Glee Club. PETER STANLEY Marble Head, Massachusetts Theta Chi Hockey; A.S.M.E., Vice-Pres.; Peddler; Band; Rowing Club. RAYMOND BRUCE STANLEY Wolcott, Connecticut Sigma Alpha Epsilon I.E.E.E. JOHN STANLEY STARSIAK West Springfield, Massachusetts Skeptical Chyms.; Shield; Newman Club. ZENON RONALD STELMAK Agawam, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega SKULL, WHO ' S WHO I.E.E.E.; Tech Senate, Pres.; Tech News; Newman Club; Rowing Club. ROBERT LYMAN STESSEL Peace Dale, Rhode Island Delta Sigma Tau I.E.E.E.; Band; Glee Club; Radio Club. STEWART TELESPHORE STOCKING Meriden, Connecticut Lambda Chi Alpha Golf; A.S.M.E.; Newman Club. ROBERT JAMES STROPLE Portland, Maine Phi Kappa Theta A.S.M.E. JAMES KEVIN SULLIVAN Middletown, Connecticut Phi Kappa Theta Basketball, W , Co-Capt.; Track, W , Capt. MARTIN SURABIAN Worcester, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa A.S.M.E.; S.A.E. HENRY STANLEY SWEET Baldwinville, Massachusetts Delta Sigma Tau Golf; Peddler; Newman Club; Glee Club; Camera Club; R.O.T.C, 1st Lt. DAVID WALTER SWENSON Worcester, Massachusetts HKN Masque; Rowing Club. JOHN JOSEPH SZOSTEK Ansonia, Connecticut Sigma Alpha Epsilon Wrestling; A.S.M.E.; Newman Club. JOHN ANDREW TAYLOR Croton Falls, New York Sigma Alpha Epsilon CHS A.I.Ch.E.; Fraternity Pres.; Peddler. THOMAS FRANCIS TAYLOR Leominster, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa nTE A.S.M.E.; S.A.E. LUCIEN JOSEPH TEIG Worcester, Massachusetts IIME Pi Mu Epsilon, Pres.; Chess Club. ROBERT STEWART TEMPLIN Riverton, New Jersey Theta Chi A.S.M.E.; I.F.C.; Tech News; Peddler; Band; Camera Club; Nautical Club. JOHN SAMUEL THOMPSON Pequannock, New Jersey Phi Gamma Delta TBn, nAE,nT2 Lacrosse; Tennis; A.S.M.E.; Peddler, Sr. Ed.; Pi Delta Epsilon, Pres.; Pi Tau Sigma, Pres. WILLIAM DOUGLAS TRAVIS Chappaqua, New York A.S.C.E.;Band. CHARLES EVANS TRENT Maplewood, New Jersey Rifle Club; R.O.T.C, Capt. TODD RUDOLPH TUOMI Worcester, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega Hockey, W . BRUCE LEE TUTTLE Ansonia, Connecticut Delta Sigma Tau Fencing; A.S.M.E.; Rowing Club. JAMES RUSSELL WALKER, JR. Worcester, Massachusetts Phi Kappa Theta Tech News; Newman Club. JOHN LEO WALKUP Noank, Connecticut Newman Club; Bridge Club; Cosmo- politan Club. PETER ROY WALSH Brockton, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa Football, W ; Track; Arts Society; Rifle Club. MICHAEL JOSEPH WANCZYK, JR. Hadley, Massachusetts Alpha Tau Omega XE. RICHARD JAMES WARREN Shrewsbury, Massachusetts Theta Chi Tech News. WILBUR WILLIAM WATERS, JR. Bridgeport, New York. JOHN ERIC WATSON Niantic, Connecticut Theta Chi. KIMBALL MACKEN WATSON West Hartford, Connecticut Swimming; Prot. Chris. Fel ' ship: Glee Club; Alpha Phi Omega. RICHARD JOHN WEEDEN Barrington, Rhode Island Theta Chi A.S.M.E. RICHARD JOEL WEINER Maiden, Massachusetts Alpha Epsilon Pi Semi Simple. RONNIE LEE WENDELKEN Saco, Maine Alpha Tau Omega. LEON FRANCIS WENDELOWSKI Ansonia, Connecticut Phi Kappa Theta Track; Tech News; Newman Club. DONALD WILLIAM WHELAN Middletown, Connecticut Phi Sigma Kappa Fencing; Arts Society. WILLIAM LEIGHTON WILLAND Worcester, Massachusetts Lambda Chi Alpha A.S.C.E.; Rowing Club. PHILLIP WILSEY, JR. Chepachet, Rhode Island A.S.M.E. PAUL STANLEY WOLF Cleveland Heights, Ohio A.S.C.E.; Hillel Club; Bridge Club. BARNARD BRIEN WOOD Worcester, Massachusetts I.E.E.E.; A.S.M.E.; Rifle Club. CHARLES M. ZEPP Boylston, Massachusetts CHS Cross Country, W Co-Capt.; Track, W , Co-Capt. STEVEN LINCOLN ZIEVE Worcester, Massachusetts Band. DAVID ALAN ZLOTEK Manchester, New Hampshire IIME Class Pres.; Tech News. STEPHEN IRA ZUCKERMAN Newington, Connecticut Alpha Epsilon Pi Football; Track, W ; Alpha Phi Omega. FACULTY DIRECTORY Chemical Engineering WILMER LeROY KRANICH, George C. Gordon Professor of Chemical Engineering and Head of Department. B.S., Univ. of Pennsylvania 1940; Ph.D., Cornell Univ. 1944. Instructor in Chem. Engineering, Cornell, 1941-44; Assistant Prof., Princeton, 1946-48; Associate Prof., W.P.I., 1948-49; Professor, 1949-. FRANCIS C. BROWN, Affiliate Prof. B.S., Northeastern Univ., 1962; Ph.D., W.P.I. , 1966. Sigma Xi; Tau Beta Pi; A.I.Ch.E.; A.C.S.; Chem. Institute of Canada. Y.H. MA, Assistant Prof. B.S., National Taiwan Univ. 1959; M.S., Univ. of Notre Dame 1963; Sc.D., M.I.T. 1967. Sigma Xi; A.C.S. JOHN WILLIAM MEADER, Assistant Prof. S.B., M.I.T. 1953; S.M., M.I.T. 1954. JOHN MATTHEW PETRIE, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1929; M.S., W.P.I. 1931. L.B. SAND, Professor. B.A., Univ. of Minnesota 1948; M.E., Univ. of Minnesota 1950; Ph.D., Penn State 1952. Geological Soc. of Amer. ; Minerological Soc. of Amer. ; Geological Chemical Soc. ; National Clay Minerals Soc. ; Worcester Eng. Soc. ; Sigma Xi. C. WILLIAM SHIPMAN, Professor. S.B., M.I.T. 1948; S.M., M.I.T. 1949; Sc.D., M.I.T. 1952. Sigma Xi; A.I.Ch.E.; A.C.S. ROBERT CARL WAGNER, Professor. B.S., Drexel Inst. 1946; M.S., Princeton Univ. 1948; Ph.D., Princeton Univ. 1955. Sigma Xi; A.C.S.; Worcester Eng. Soc. ALVIN H. WEISS, Associate Prof. B.S., Univ. of Pennsylvania 1949; M.S., Newark College of Eng. 1955; Ph.D., Univ. of Pennsylvania 1965. Sigma Tau Phi; A.C.S.; A.I.Ch.E.; A.A.A.S.; Sigma Xi; Sigma Tau; Tau Beta Pi; Phi Lambda Upsilon. Alpha Epsilon Pi. IMRE ZWIEBEL, Associate Prof. B.S., Univ. of Michigan 1954; M.S., Yale 1959; Ph.D., Yale 1961. A.M.S.; A.I.Ch.E.; A.C.S.; Sigma Xi; A.A.A.S. 296 Chemistry ROBERT CHARLES PLUMB, Professor, and Head of Department. A.B., Clark Univ. 1949; Ph.D., Brown Univ. 1952. Research Assistant, Clark Univ., 1947-49; Research Fellow, Brown Univ., 1949-52; N.S.F. Postdoctoral Fellow, Cambridge, England, 1956-57; Assistant Prof, of Chemistry, W.P.I. , Associate Prof., 1959-64; Professor, 1964; Head, Division of Chemistry, 1964-67. HERBERT BEALL, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Wisconsin, 1961; Ph.D., Harvard Univ., 1967. A.C.S. LADISLAV H. BERKA, Assistant Prof. B.S., Union College 1957; M.S., Univ. of California (Berkeley) 1960; Ph.D., Univ of Connecticut 1965. A.C.S. HOWARD F. BILOFSKY, Instructor. A.B., Hunter College 1965. A.C.S.; Amer. Physical Soc. WILBUR BENJAMIN BRIDGEMAN, Professor. B.Ed., Eau Claire State Teachers College 1933; Ph.D., Univ. of Wisconsin 1937. N. E. Assn. of Chemistry Teachers; A.C.S.; Sigma Xi, A.A.A.S.; Phi Lambda Upsilon. CHARLES H. BUSHWELLER, Assistant Prof. A.B., Hamilton College, 1963; Ph.D., Univ. of California, Berkeley, 1966. Sigma Xi; A.C.S.; American Association for Advancement of Science. MONROE V. EVANS, Associate Prof. B.S., Univ. of Wisconsin 1953; Ph.D., M.I.T. 1958. Alpha Chi Sigma; Phi Lambda Upsilon; Optical Soc. of Amer.; Amer. Physical Soc; Coblentz Soc; Sigma Xi. WILLIAM DAVID HOBEY, Associate Prof. B.S., Tufts Univ. 1957; Ph.D., California Inst, of Technology 1962. JAMES A. KAUFMAN, Instructor. B.S., Tufts Univ. 1965. A.C.S. ARNULF J. MAELAND, Assistant Prof. B.A., Augsburg College, 1955; M.S., Tufts University, 1959; Ph.D., University of Vermont, 1965. MRS. B.F. MURPHY, Instructor. A.B., Vassar 1962; M.A., Boston Univ. 1965. A.C.S.; N.E. Assn. of Chemistry Teachers. ARRA NERGARARIAN, Instructor. B.A., Norwich Univ. 1949; M.A., St. Joseph College 1962. A.C.S. ALFRED A. SCALA, Assistant Prof. B.S., Brooklyn College 1957; M.S., Brooklyn College 1961; Ph.D., Polytechnic Inst, of Brooklyn 1964. A.C.S.; Sigma Xi; Phi Lambda Upsilon. P.E. STEVENSON, Assistant Prof. B.S., Harvard Univ. 1962; M.S., Univ. of Chicago 1963; Ph.D., Univ. of Chicago 1965. Phi Beta Kappa; National Science Foundation. DAVID TODD, Professor. B.A., Swarthmore College 1938; Ph.D., Harvard Univ. 1942. A.C.S.; Chem. Soc. (London). STEPHEN J. WEININGER, Assistant Prof. B.A., Brooklyn College 1957; Ph.D., Univ. of Pennsylvania 1964. A.A.U.P.; A.C.S.; Chem Soc. (London). 297 Civil Engineering CARL HENRY KOONTZ, Professor, and of Department. B.S., Univ. of Illinois 1948; M.S., Univ. of Illinois 1950. Instructor in Civil Engineering, Univ. of Illinois, 1948-52; Assistant Prof, of Civil Engineering and Math., W.P.I., 1952-54; Civil Engineer, 1954-56; Associate Prof., 1956-57; Professor, 1957-. B. ALLEN BENJAMIN, Associate Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1937; M.S., Cornell Univ. 1939. Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Xi; Chi Epsilon; Amer. Inst, of Planners; Inter-Amer. Planning Soc; A.S.C.E.; Amer. Soc. of Planning Officials; International Federation of Housing Planning. Alpha Tau Omega. A. FATTAH CHALABI, Professor. B.S.. Univ. of Baghdad 1946; M.S., Univ. of Michigan 1952; Ph.D., Univ. of Michigan 1956. Chi Epsilon; Sigma Xi; A.S.C.E.; A.C.I.; A.S.E.E. FRANK D. DeFALCO, Assistant Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1958; M.S., W.P.I. 1960. A.S.C.E.; A.W.W.A. PhiMu Alpha. ROBERT WILLIAM FITZGERALD, Assistant Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1953; M.S., W.P.I. 1960. A.S.C.E.; A.S.E.E. Phi Kappa Theta. K. KESHAVAN, Associate Prof. B.Sc, Univ. of Mysore 1950; B.E. (Civil), Univ. of Mysore 1955; M.S., State Univ. of Iowa 1960; Ph.D.. Cornell Univ. 1963. C.H. LANTZ, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Massachusetts 1959; M.S., Michigan Tech Univ. 1967. RICHARD WILLIAM LAMOTHE, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Connecticut 1953; M.S., W.P.I. 1961, A.S.C.E.; Chi Epsilon. Phi Kappa Theta. ALAN SAMUEL MARCUS, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Massachusetts 1955; M.S., Univ. of Massachusetts 1964. A.S.M.E.; A.S.C.E.; Sigma Xi. Alpha Epsilon Pi. JOSEPH DOUGLAS SAGE, Associate Prof. B.S., Rutgers Univ. 1953; M.S., Rutgers Univ. 1958. A.S.C.E.; A.S.T.M.; Arctic Inst, of North Amer.; International Soc. of Soil Mechanics and Foundation Eng. ARMAND JOSEPH SILVA, Associate Prof. B.S., Univ. of Connecticut 1954; M.S., Univ. of Connecticut 1956; Ph.D., Univ. of Connecticut 1965. A.S.C.E.; Chi Epsilon; Sigma Xi; A.S.E.E.; M.S.P.E.; International Soc. of Soil Mechanics and Foundation Eng. 298 Electrical Engineering GLEN ARTHUR RICHARDSON, Professor, and Head of Department. B.S., Univ. of Kansas 1941; M.S., Univ. of Kansas 1947; Ph.D., Iowa State College 1952. Reg. Professor Engr.; Instructor in Electrical Engin., Univ. of Kansas, 1942-47 ; Assistant Prof., 1947; Assistant Prof., Iowa State College, 1947-52; Associate Prof., 1952-56; Professor, W.P.I., 1958 . PAUL GERALD AMAZEEN, Instructor. B.S., Univ. of New Hampshire 1961; M.S., W.P.I. 1964. RICHARD GEORGE BESCHLE, Associate Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1950; M.S., W.P.I. 1955. Director of Division of Biomedical Eng. WILHELM H. EGGIMAN, Associate Prof. Diploma, Swiss Federal Inst, of Technology, Zurich 1954; M.S., Case Inst, of Technology 1959; Ph.D., Case Inst, of Technology 1961. A.E.E.E.; Sigma Xi. L.E. ESTES, Instructor. B.S., S.M.T.I. 1965; M.S., W.P.I. 1967. Sigma Xi. Nu Beta Tau. DONALD CALVERT ETESON, Assistant Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1948; M.S., W.P.I. 1956; Ph.D., W.P.I. 1966. I.E.E.E.; Sigma Xi. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. WILLIAM ROBERT GROGAN, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1945; M.S., W.P.I. 1949. A.S.E.E.; I.E.E.E. Director of Student Activities. Ph. Kappa Theta. OWEN WILLIAMS KENNEDY, JR., Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1944; M.S., W.P.I. 1948. I.E.E.E.; N.E.R.E.M., Board of Directors. Phi Sigma Kappa. RUSSELL HOWARD KRACKHARDT, Professor. B.S., Case Inst, of Technology 1946; M.S., W.P.I. 1948. Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi; I.E.E.E. H.P.D. LANYON, Associate Prof. B.A. (Physics), Univ. of Cambridge, England; M.A., Univ. of Cambridge. A.P.S.; A.A.U.P. WILLIAM WILLARD LOCKE, Professor, and Consultant for Electrical Maintenance. B.S., W.P.I. 1930. I.E.E.E. Lambda Chi Alpha. ARCHIE KEITH McCURDY, Assistant Prof. B.S., Eastern Nazarene College 1953; M.S., W.P.I. 1959. Phi Delta Lambda; Sigma Xi. HARIT V. MAJMUDAR, Associate Prof. B.S., Banaras Hindu Univ. 1952; D.I.I. Sc. (P.E.), Indian Inst, of Science, Banagalore 1954; M.S., Lehigh Univ. 1956; Ph.D., Syracuse Univ. 1961. I.E.E.E.; A.S.E.E.; Sigma Xi. ROMEO LOUIS MORUZZI, Professor. B.S., Northeastern Univ. 1948; M.S., Harvard Univ. 1949; D. Eng., Yale Univ. 1959. A.A.U.P.; A.S.E.E.; A.I.E.E.; Sigma Xi. GILBERT HSIAOPIN OWYANG, Associate Prof. B.S., Ta Tung Univ. 1944; S.M., Harvard Univ. 1950; Ph.D., Harvard Univ. 1959. I.E.E.E.; A.A.A.S.; A.A.U.P.; Sigma Phi. ROBERT A. PEURA, Assistant Prof. B.S., W.P.I., 1964; M.S., Iowa State Univ., 1967. Sigma Xi; Eta Kappa Nu; I.E.E.E. WILLIAM H. ROADSTRUM, Professor. B.S., Lehigh Univ. 1938; M.S., Carnegie Tech 1948; Ph.D., Carnegie Tech 1955. I.E.E.E.; A.S.E.E. JOHN DAVID SHERRICK, Instructor. B.E.E., Clarkson College 1960; M.S., W.P.I. 1966. I.E.E.E. JOHN HUGO SISTARE, Instructor. B.S., W.P.I. 1963; M.S., Univ. of Connecticut 1965. Phi Sigma Kappa. GEORGE EDWARD STANNARD, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1943; S.M., M.I.T. 1946; M.A., Clark Univ. 1960. I.E.E.E.; A.S.E.E.; Sigma Xi; Eta Kappa Nu. WILLIAM BLANCHARD WADSWORTH, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1940; M.S., W.P.I. 1941; I.E.E.E.; Acoustical Soc. of Amer.; Audio Eng. Soc; A.S.E.E. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. 299 English EDWIN HIGGINBOTTOM, Professor, and Head of Department. Assistant Director, School of Industrial Management. A.B., Clark Univ. 1926; M.A., Harvard Univ. 1932. Instructor in Modern Lang., W.P.I., 1927-34; Instructor in Modern Lang, and History, 1934-36; Assistant Prof, of English, 1937-43; Prof., 1943-; Staff, W.P.I. School of Industrial Management, 1950-53; Asst. Director, 1953-. EDMUND MILTON HAYES, Assistant Prof. B.A., Emerson College 1955; M.A., Boston Univ. 1956. JAMES HENSEL, Associate Prof. B.A., Yale Univ. 1941; M.A., Univ. of Maine 1958. A.A.U.P., Authors League of Amer. CHARLES R. HEVENTHAL, JR., Assistant Prof. A.B., Dension Univ. 1954; A.M., Columbia Univ. 1955; Ph.D., Columbia Univ. 1965. ARTHUR AFTON KENNEDY, JR., Professor. B.A., Nebraska State College 1942; M.A., Univ. of Wisconsin 1947. Modern Languages Assn.;A.A.U.P. DAVID PHARES McKAY, Assistant Prof. B.A., Oberlin CoUege 1951; M.A., Brown Univ. 1956. THEODORE HIRAM PACKARD, Associate Prof. B.S., Tufts Univ. 1934; M.F.A., Yale Univ. 1941. Alpha Kappa Epsilon. RICHARD HENRY ROCHE, Assistant Prof. A.B., Harvard Univ. 1950; M.A., Columbia Univ. 1953. A.A.U.P. 300 History and Modern Languages DONALD ELLIS JOHNSON, Professor, and Head of Department. B.S.E., Fitchburg State College 1940; NLA Clark Univ., 1941; Ph.D., DONALD bLLlb JUHiNauiN, r ' 1941-42; Instr. in Hist, and Modern Lang., W.P.I., 1946-51; Asst. Prof., 1951-56, Ssoc pTo V f. ' , TeZfZuS-neZf Zt, 1968-. Amer. Historical Assn, A.A.U.P, N.E. Forensic Conference; Worcester Assn. of Historians and Political Scientists; Phi Gamma Delta. ARTHUR WILLIAM BACK, Professor. A.B., Clark Univ. 1933; M.A., Middlebury College 1940. Amer. History Assn., Modern Language Assn. of Amer.; A.S.E.E.; A.A.U.P. Phi Kappa Theta. SERGE DURILIN, JR., Visiting Lecturer. A.B., Syracuse Univ., 1965 ; M.A., Brown Univ., 1968. MARTIN STEPHEN GOLDMAN, Instructor. B.S., Temple Univ. 1962; M.A., Temple Univ. 1965. Alpha Epsilon Pi. RICHARD EDWARD GREENE, Instructor. B.S., Worcester State College 1954; Ed.M., Worcester State College 1958; M.A., Clark Univ. 1964. SIDNEY HART, Visiting Lecturer. B.A., L.I.U., 1964; N.D.E.A. Fellow, Clark Univ. American Historical Association; Organization of American Historians. WILLIAM J. MULLOY, Visting Lecturer. A.B., Vanderbilt Univ.. 1929, and M.A., 1930; Ph.D., Univ. of Wisconsin, 1937. A.A.T.G, M.L.A.; A.A.U.P. CLAUDE KNIGHT SCHEIFLEY, Professor. A.B., Univ. of Pennsylvania 1928; M.A., Cornell Univ. 1934. JOHN A. WORSLEY, Assistant Prof. A.B., Brown Univ. 1956; M.A. Brown Univ. 1962. Amer. Historical Assn. 301 302 Management Engineering ALBERT JAMES SCHW1EGER, Professor, and Head of Department; Director, School of Industrial Management. B.A., Hamline 1928; M.A., Clark Univ. 1929; Ph.D., Harvard 1936; Harvard Business School 1943. Scholar and Asst. in Ec. and Soc, Clark Univ., 1928-29; Fellow, 1930-32; Austin Scholar, Harvard, 1932-33. Instructor in Ec, Univ. of North Dakota, 1929-30; Instructor in Ec. and Govt., W.P.I., 1930-36; Assistant Prof., 1936-37; Professor of Ec, Govt., and Bus., 1937-; Research Fellow in Human Relations, Harvard Business School, 1947-48; Director, W.P.I. School of Industrial Management, 1950-. GEORGE JERZY BURAK, Assistant Prof. B.S.C., Univ. of Iowa 1953; M.A., Univ. of Iowa 1954. Beta Gamma Soc; Amer. Business Law Assn.; Regional Science Assn.; Amer. Economic Assn. LUC DEWULF, Visiting Instructor. B.S., University of Louvain, Belgium, 1967; M.A., Clark Univ., 1968. DEANE E. HOFFMAN, Visiting Instructor. B.S., Babson Institute, 1966; M.A., Univ. of Maine, 1968. Sigma Phi Epsilon. R.K. JORDAN, Visiting Professor. B.S., Univ. of Maine; M.S., Clark Univ. 1968. Amer. Economic Assn.; Regional Science Assn. Phi Kappa Sigma. JOSEPH RALPH MANCUSO, Visiting Instructor. B.S., W.P.I. 1963; M.B.S., Harvard Business School 1965. 1.E.E.E. Phi Kappa Theta. NICHOLAS LOUIS ONORATO, Professor. A.S., Becker Jr. College 1949; B.S., Boston Univ. 1951; M.A., Clark Univ. 1952; Ph.D., Clark Univ. 1959. Amer. Economic Assn.; Connecticut Valley Economic Assn.; Amer. Finance Assn.; Alpha Omicron;Phi Kappa Theta. RAYMOND A. PEPIN, Visiting Instructor. B.S., Providence College, 1966; M.A., Clark Univ., 1968. CORNELIUS HIGGINS RIORDAN, Visiting Instructor. B.A., Fitchburg State College 1962. THADDEUS HALL RODDENBERY, Professor. A.B., Mercer Univ. 1963; M.A., Boston Univ. 1952; Ph.D., Boston Univ. 1964. Amer. Economic Assn.; A.A.U.P. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. PAUL SCHNEIDERMAN, Instructor. B.B.A., Univ. of Massachusetts 1965; M.B.A., Univ. of Massachusetts 1966. STEVEN A. SEELIG, Visiting Instructor. B.A., Clark Univ., 1966; M.A., Washington Univ., 1968. A.E.A.; E.H.A.; Omicron Delta Epsilon. F. STEPHEN TRIMBY, Visiting Instructor. B.S., Assumption College, 1966; M.A., Clark Univ., 1968. DONALD J. WHEATON, Visiting Prof. B.S., Northeastern Univ., 1959; M.A., Clark Univ., 1962. A.E.A. . Mathematics JOHN P. VAN ALSTYNE, Professor, and Acting Head of Department. B.S., Hamilton, 1944; M.A., Columbia, 1952. Instr. in Math, Hamilton, 1948-53; Asst. Prof., 1953-60; Assoc. Prof., 1960-61; Assoc. Prof., W.P.I., 1961-66; Prof., 1966-; Acting Head of Dept., 1968. Emerson Literary Soc. ; Skull; Amer. Math. Soc. ; Math. Assn. of Amer. ; A.A.U.P. GORDON CHARLES BRANCHE, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Notre Dame 1954; M.S., Univ. of Rochester 1956. ELLIOTT LYNDON BUELL, Professor. A.B., Syracuse 1938; Ph.D., M.I.T. 1941. WARREN E. CHASE, Instructor. B.S., Franklin and Marshall College 1956; M.S., Univ. of New Hampshire 1962. Phi Sigma Kappa. PETER ROBERT CHRISTOPHER, Instructor. A.B., Clark Univ. 1959; M.A., Clark Univ. 1963. Mathematics Assn. of Amer.; Pi Mu Epsilon. Kappa Phi. RICHARD NEIL COBB, Professor. A.B., Bowdoin College 1932; A.M., Harvard Univ. 1933. Amer. Math Soc; Skull; Mathematics Soc. of Amer.; National Council of Teachers of Math; Assn. of Teachers of Math; A.S.E.E.; A.A.U.P. Kappa Sigma. VINCENT FRANCIS CONNOLY, Assistant Prof. B.S., Holy Cross College 1949; M.S., Univ. of Vermont 1951. ANTHONY MICHAEL DEVOE, Visiting Instructor. B.A., Clark Univ., 1964; M.A., Boston College, 1968. R.A. FRENETTE, Instructor. B.S., W.P.I. 1964; M.A., Clark Univ. 1966. WILLIAM JOHN HARDELL, Professor. B.S., Northwestern Univ. 1950; M.S., Michigan State Univ. 1953; Ph.D., Michigan State Univ. 1959. Amer. Math Soc; Mathematics Assn. of Amer.; Inst, of Mang. Science. BERNARD HOWARD, Assistant Prof. B.S., William and Mary College 1951; M.A., Clark Univ. 1966. ALAN KAPLAN, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Mass., 1961 ; M.S., Syracuse Univ., 1963. Sigma Xi; A.M.S.; M.A.A. K.F. LINDBLAD, JR., Instructor. A.A., Worcester Junior College 1960; B.A., Clark Univ. 1962; M.A. Clark Univ. 1962; M.A., Clark Univ. 1964. BRUCE CALE McQUARRIE, Assistant Prof. B.A., Lafayette College 1951; M.A., Univ. of New Hampshire 1956, Amer. Math Soc; Mathematics Assn. of Amer. WILLIAM BRUNNER MILLER, Associate Prof. B.S., Lehigh Univ. 1947; M.A., Lehigh Univ. 1947; M.A., Lehigh Univ. 1955; Ph.D., Lehigh Univ. 1962. Amer. Math Assn. RALPH DANIEL NELSON, Professor. B.S., Univ. of Rhode Island 1935; M.S., R.P.I. 1936. Mathematics Assn. of Amer.; A.S.E.E.; A.A.U.P. EDWARD ALLEN NEWBURG, Associate Prof. B.S., Purdue Univ. 1952;M.S., Purdue Univ. 1953;Ph.D., Univ. of Illinois 1958. Amer. Math Soc; Mathematics Assn. of Amer.; Soc. of Applied and Industrial Math. RICHARD V. OLSON, Instructor. B.S., W.P.I. 1954; M.A., Clark Univ. 1965. A.S.E.E.; Mathematics Assn. of Amer.; Amer. Math Soc Alpha Chi Rho. KENNETH SCHOEN, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Conn., 1954; M.A., Yale Univ., 1955; M.S., R.P.I. , 1961; Ph.D., Univ. of Pittsburgh, 1968. Sigma Pi Sigma; Sigma Xi; M.A.A. ; A.M.S. RAMON CARLFRED SCOTT, Assistant Prof. B.A., Amer. International College 1953; M.A., Univ. of Massachusetts 1954. Amer. Math Soc; Sigma Xi;Pi Mu Epsilon; Phi Kappa Phi. WALTER I. WELLS, Lecturer, B.A., Univ. of Toronto 1925. LUKE N. ZACCARO, Professor. B.A., Univ. of Connecticut 1949; M.S., Univ. of Connecticut 1950; Ph.D., Syracuse Univ. 1957. A.A.U.P.; Mathematics Assn. of Amer. 303 Mechanical Engineering DONALD NELSON ZWIEP, Professor, and Head of Department. B.S., Iowa State College 1948; M.S., Iowa State College 1951;D.Eng. (Hon.), W.P.I. 1965. Reg. Professor Engr.; Assistant Prof, of Mechanical Engin., Colorado State Univ., 1951-1955; Associate Prof., 1956; Professor, 1957-. FREDRICK ARTHUR ANDERSON, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1942; M.S., W.P.I. 1953. N.E. Dist. Council of A.S.T.M.; A.S.M.E.; A.S.E.E. RONALD RAYMOND BIEDERMAN, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Conn., M.E., 1960 and M.S., Metallurgy, 1962, and Ph.D., Mat ' l Sci., 1968. Pi Tau Sigma; E.I.T.; A.S.M.; A.I.M.M. ROGER RICHMOND BORDEN, Associate Prof. B.S., M.I.T. 1952, and B.S. (G.E.) 1953; M.S., W.P.I. 1961. A.S.M.E.; Amer. Coc. of Tool and Mfg. Eng.; A.S.E.E.; S.A.E.; Sigma Xi. ROY FRANCIS BOURGAULT, Professor. B.S. , W.P.I. 1942; M.S., Stevens Inst, of Technology 1953. A.S.M.; A.I.M.E.; A.S.E.E.; Pi Tau Sigma; Sigma Xi. Phi Sigma Kappa. JOHN MARK BOYD, Associate Prof. B.M.E., The Ohio State Univ. 1952; M.Sc, The Ohio State Univ. 1956; Ph.D., The Ohio State Univ. 1962. A.S.M.E.; A.S.E.E.; Tau Beta Pi; Sigma Xi; A.A.U.P. FRAZIER P. COLON, Instructor. B.S., Norwich Univ., 1956; M.S., W.P.I. , 1968; Registered Professional Engineer. Sigma Nu; A.S.M.E. HAROLD SCOTT COREY, Associate Prof. B.S.E.; State College, Fitchburg 1948; Ed.M., State College, Fitchburg 1949. A.S.E.E.; Pi Tau Sigma; Skull. CHARLES L. FELDMAN, Associate Prof. S.B., M.I.T. 1958; S.M., M.I.T. 1958; Mech. E., M.I.T. 1960; Sc.D., M.I.T. 1962. A.S.M.E.; A.A.U.P.; I.E.E.E. ALBERT GEORGE FERRON, Instructor. B.S., W.P.I. 1957. A.S.M.E.; B.S.C.E.; Sigma Xi. Phi Kappa Theta. FRANK STANLEY FINLAYSON, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1931; M.S., W.P.I. 1945. Sigma Xi; A.S.M.E.; A.S.E.E. HARTLEY THEODORE GRANDIN, JR., Assistant Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1955; M.S., W.P.I. 1960. A.S.E.E.; A.S.M.E.; Sigma Xi; Pi Tau Sigma. Sigma Phi Epsilon. RAYMOND ROY HAGGLUND, Associate Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1956; M.S., W.P.I. 1959; Ph.D., Univ. of Illinois 1962. A.S.M.E.; A.S.E.E.; Sigma Xi. Phi Sigma Kappa. ROBERT JUDKINS HALL, Associate Prof. B.S., Univ. of Massachusetts 1951; M.S., Cornell 1956. A.S.E.E.; Industrial Eng. Professional Soc. Alpha Tau Omega. THOM HAMMOND, Associate Prof. B.S., Instanbul Amer. College, Robert College Eng. School 1945; M.S., Northwestern Univ. 1963. RAY CLIFFORD JOHNSON, Professor. B.S., Univ. of Rochester 1950; M.S., Univ. of Rochester 1954. A.S.M.E.; A.S.E.E.; S.E.S.E. WALTER ADMANDUS KISTLER, Assistant Prof. A.B., Clark Univ. 1952. PETER ANDREAS LARSEN, Assistant Prof. M.Sc, Structural and Civil Eng., Technical Univ. of Denmark 1958; Teknologie Licentiat, The Royal Inst, of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden 1965 (Doctoral equivalent). JOHN ANTHONY MAYER, JR., Assistant Prof. Bachelor of Marine Eng., N.E. State Maritime College 1954; M.S., Columbia 1956; M.S. (Nuclear Eng.), Columbia 1962. A.S.M.E.; A.N.S.; A.S.E.E. KENNETH GERALD MERRIAM, Professor. S.B., M.I.T. 1922; M.S., W.P.I. 1935; D. Eng., W.P.I. 1964. A.S.M.E.; Amer. Inst, of Aeronautics and Astronoutics; A.S.E.E.; Sigma Xi; Pi Tau Sigma; Tau Beta Pi. Sigma Phi Epsilon. LAWRENCE CARLTON NEALE, Professor of Hydraulic Eng., and Assistant Director of Alden Research Laboratories. B.S., W.P.I. 1940; M.S., W.P.I. 1957. CHARLES C. REYNOLDS, Professor. S.B., M.I.T. 1947; M.S., M.I.T. 1954; Ph.D., M.I.T. 1963. Sigma Xi. Phi Gamma Delta. ALDEN THAYER ROYS, Experimental Eng. and Instrument Specialist. B.S., W.P.I. 1940; M.S., W.P.I. 1963. Soc. for Experimental Stress Analysis; Amer. Nuclear Soc. KENNETH ELSNER SCOTT, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1948; M.S., W.P.I. 1954. A.S.E.E.; Sigma Xi; A.S.M.E. Sigma Phi Epsilon. CARLTON WILDE STAPLES, Professor. B.S., Tufts Univ. 1945; M.Ed., Bridgewater State College 1953; M.S., W.P.I. 1958. A.S.E.E.; A.S.M.E.; Sigma Xi. Delta Tau Delta. RICHARD BYRON STEWART, Professor. B.S., Univ. of Iowa 1946; M.S., Univ. of Iowa 1948; M.E., Univ. of Colorado 1959; Ph.D., Univ. of Iowa 1966. FRED NORMAN WEBSTER, Professor. B.S., W.P.I. 1939; M.S., W.P.I. 1941. JOHN HAMILTON WHENMAN, Associate Prof. B.M.E., Northeastern Univ. 1926; M.S., W.P.I. 1942. A.S.E.E.; Alpha Phi Omega. Lambda Chi Alpha; Beta Gamma Delta. LESLIE CLIFFORD WILBUR, Professor and Director of the Nuclear Reactor Facility. B.S., Univ. of Rhode Island 1948; M.S., Stevens Inst, of Technology 1949. A.S.M.E.; Amer. Nuclear Soc; A.S.E.E.; A.A.A.S.;Tau Kappa Epsilon. HERBERT WARREN YANKEE, Associate Prof. B.S., Fitchburg State College 1947; Ed.M., New York Univ. 1953. Epsilon Pi Tau; A.S.E.E.; N. Eng. Graphics Teachers Assn. 304 Physics ALLAN ELWOOD PARKER, Professor, and Head of Department. A.B., Amherst College 1929; Ph.D., Yale Univ. 1933. Assistant in Physics, Yale, 1929-32; Optometry, Columbia, 1934-35; Instructor in Physics, Hunter College, 1936-37; Professor of Physics, W.P.I. 1942-. VAN F.W. BLUEMEL, Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Michigan 1956; M.S., Univ. of Illinois 1960. A.P.S. JEFFREY W. CHAMPLIN, Assistant Prof. B.A., Swarthmore College 1963; M.S., Yale University 1964. RAYMOND GOLOSKIE, Associate Prof. Sc.B., Brown Univ. 1953; M.A., Harvard Univ. 1955; Ph.D., Harvard Univ. 1961. Sigma Xi. LOUIS PETER GRANATH, Associate Prof. B.S., Washington State College 1923; Ph.D., New York Univ. 1931. RALPH HELLER, Professor. Univ. of Zurich 1933-1937; Ph.D., Yale Univ. 1940. Amer. Physical Soc; Inst, of Physics and the Physics Soc. of London; A.S.E.E.; Sigma Xi. HAROLD W. HILSINGER, Associate Prof. B.S., Univ. of Michigan 1954; M.S., Univ. of Connecticut 1957; Ph.D., Univ. of Connecticut 1964. A.P.S.; Sigma Xi. DONALD WILLIAMS HOWE, Associate Prof. B.S., W.P.I. 1938; M.S., W.P.I. 1943. 1.E.E.E.; A.P.S.; Sigma Xi. Lambda Chi Alpha. JOHN CLARK JOHNSON, Professor. A.B., Middlebury College 1941; S.M., M.I.T. 1946; Sc.D., M.I.T. 1948. T.H. KEIL, Assistant Prof. B.S., California Tech 1961, Ph.D., Univ. of Rochester. ROBERT LONG, II, Assistant Prof. B.S., Lehigh Univ. 1955; M.S., Lehigh Univ. 1957. Amer. Assn. of Physics Teachers. Sigma Phi Epsilon. KURT LUDWIG MAYER, Professor. Staatsexamen, Technische Hochschule, Karlsruhe 1934. A.P.S. ; Amer. Assn. of Physics Teachers; A.S.E.E. BILLY M. MORRIS, Assistant Prof. B.S., University of Tennessee 1961, M.S. 1962. Ph.D. 1966. RICHARD FREEMAN MORTON, Professor. Associate Dean of the Faculty, and Director of Summer School and Evening Programs. S.B., M.I.T. 1936;A.M., Harvard Univ. 1948. A.S.E.E.; Amer. Assn. of Physics Teachers; Amer. Assn. for the Advancement of Science. LORENZO MARIA NARDUCCI, Assistant Prof. Ph.D., Univ. of Milan, Italy 1964. A.P.S. EDWARD L. O ' NEILL, Professor. A.B., Boston College 1949; M.A., Boston Univ. 1951; Ph.D., Boston Univ. 1954. Sigma Xi; Amer. Assn. of Physics Teachers; Optical Soc. of Amer. GEORGE FRANCIS RILEY, Instructor. Sc.B., Brown Univ. 1957; M.S., Univ. of Maine 1959. KARL D. SWARTZ, Assistant Prof. G.S., Case Inst, of Technology 1961; M.S., Univ. of Illinois 1963; Ph.D., Univ. of Illinois 1966. Phi Kappa Psi. ADRIAAN WALTHER, Visiting Professor from the American Optical Company. Technical University, Delft, Holland Kandidaats- examen 1955; Engineering Degree Physics 1957, and Ph.D. 1959. JERALD A. WEISS, Professor. B.A., Ohio State Univ. 1949; M.A., Ohio State Univ. 1949; Ph.D., Ohio State Univ. 1953. Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Xi; A.P.S.; Mathematics Assn. of Amer.; I.E.E.E.; A.A.U.P. JOHN F. WILD, Associate Prof. B.S., Yale Univ. 1950; M.S., Yale Univ. 1951; Ph.D., Yale Univ. 1958. A.P.S.; Amer. Assn. of Physics Teachers. BENJAMIN ALLEN WOOTEN, Professor. A.B., Univ. of Alabama 1937; M.A., Columbia Univ. 1941; Ph.D., Columbia Univ. 1958. A.P.S.; Amer. Assn. for the Advancement of Science; Sigma Xi; Phi Beta Kappa. Alpha Tau Omega. 305 Military Science EDWARD JOSEPH GEANEY, JR., Colonel. Infantry, U.S.A., Professor, and Head of Department. B.S., U.S. Military Academy 1943, Assistant Professor of Military Science University of Wisconsin 1949, Graduate of the Infantry Officer Advanced Course 1951, Graduate of Command and General Staff College, Ft. Leavenworth 1956, Associate Director, Department of Military Pay and Leadership, U.S. Military Academy 1960-62, Rainbow Division Veterans Association. JEROME M. ALLEN, JR., Captain. Assistant Prof. B.S., Univ. of Tennessee 1961. CALVIN MARION ANDERSON, Captain. Assistant Prof. B.S., So. Dakota School of Mines and Technology, 1962. ARTHUR F. CONLON, Captain, Assistant Prof. B.S., U.S. Military Academy, West Point 1963. ANTHONY DI CAPRIO, Major, Assistant Prof. B.A., Virginia Military Institute 1963. ROBERT ARTHUR DORF, Captain, Assistant Prof. B.S. Rutgers University 1963. MICHAEL F. EASTWOOD, Captain . Assistant Prof. B.A., Univ. of New Hampshire 1965. DONALD JAY KIEVIT, JR., Captain. Assistant Prof. B.S., U.S. Military Academy 1966. ARDEN N. KINNEY, SFC, Instructor. MALCOLM L. LEAVITT, SFC, Instructor. BERNARD McTERNAN, Captain. Assistant Prof. B.A., Northeastern University 1962. PETER P. MARGELONY, S SGT., Supply NCO and Instructor. JOSEPH E. PALLAT, SGM, Instructor. GEORGE J. SCHAGEL, MSG, Instructor. JAMES A. RAMDEN, SFC, Administrative Supervisor and Instructor. 306 Physical Education ROBERT WILLARD PRITCHARD, Professor, and Head of Department. A.B., Susquehanna 1936; M.Ed., Pennsylvania State Univ. 1940. Assistant Coach, Berwick, Pa., High School, 1936-37; Susquehanna Univ., 1937-41; Instructor in Physical Education, W.P.I., 1941-42; Athletic Director and Football Coach, Kingston, Pa, High School, 1945-47; Assistant Prof, of Physical Education, W.P.I., 1947-52; Associate Prof., 1952-56; Professor, 1956-. ROBERT A. DEVLIN, Assistant Prof. B.S., Holy Cross College 1946. ALAN KING, Assistant Prof. B.S., Springfield College 1957. National Soccer Coaches Assn.; N.E. Intercollegiate Soccer League, President 1966. CHARLES R. McNULTY, Associate Prof. B.S, Manhattan College 1942; M.Ed., Boston Univ. 1953. Phi Kappa Theta. M.G. MASSUCCO, Associate Prof. B.S.E.D., Holy Cross 1952. National Football Coaches Assn.; N.E. Football Coaches Assn. MERL NORCROSS, Associate Prof. A.B., Univ. of North Carolina 1950; M.A., Univ. of North Carolina 1951. Skull; U.S. Track Coaches Assn.; N.E. Football Coaches Assn. CARL PETERSON, Instructor. B.A., Bowdoin College 1966. JOHN ANGELO VINO, Instructor. B.S., Univ. of Bridgeport 1965. Kappa Beta Rho; Phi Epsilon Kappa. 307 SCORES Spring ' 68 Fall Winter ' 68 - ' 69 FOOTBALL CROSSCOUNTRY 14 Bowdoin 10 31 Clark 54 25 Middlebury 20 31 Assumption 41 30 Bates 20 76 M.I.T. 21 Wesleyan 29 76 R.P.I. 38 36 Coast Guard 20 26 Wesleyan 32 23 R.P.I. 21 15 Bates 50 12 Norwich 35 36 Tufts 45 22 Boston State 45 SOCCER 26 Bentley 29 17 Lowell 44 5 Univ. of Hartford 54 Brandeis 45 4 Holy Cross 54 St. Anslems 52 1 Tufts Univ. 2 54 Barrington 57 1 M.I.T. 15 Nichols 48 3 Lowell Tech 1 67 Coast Guard 15 Clark 3 67 Williams 60 3 Assumption 26 Amherst 47 Coast Guard 49 Trinity 48 Univ. of Mass. 1 Boston Univ. 1 2 Univ. N.H. 1 A. I.C. 1 308 BASKETBALL 76 Boston Univ. 104 104 Suffolk 84 77 Trinity 84 84 Assumption 92 67 Brandeis 85 54 Northeastern 75 77 C.W. Post 66 58 DePauw 70 91 Clark 99 62 Lowell Tech 59 65 Wesleyan 78 58 Bates 79 55 Colby 73 66 Williams 72 70 Tufts 78 68 Springfield 92 74 M.I.T. 62 74 Amherst 98 77 Clark 71 85 Coast Guard 73 84 A.I.C. WRESTLING 78 22 Brandeis 21 3 M.I.T. 42 37 Williams 10 35 Tufts 14 43 Holy Cross 8 12 Coast Guard 27 41 Hartford 6 48 Dartmouth 3 11 Univ. of Mass. 30 35 Univ. of N.H. HOCKEY 18 2 M.I.T. 8 3 Assumption 4 2 Nichols 5 4 Worcester State 7 3 Nasson 8 4 M.I.T. 1 2 Quinnipiac 2 Holy Cross 7 4 Wesleyan 1 3 M.I.T. 11 8 Nichols 10 1 Assumption 5 4 Nichols 3 1 Worcester State 4 3 Holy Cross 6 309 ■- CREW LACROSSE won lost W.P.I. Stony Brook W.P.I. A.I.C. W.P.I. M.I.T. Grads, U.R.I. W.P.I. Holy Cross, Clark, Assumption U. Mass. W.P.I. W.P.I. Trinity Wesleyan Marist Amherst Clark Assumption A.I.C. 5 6 7 2 2 7 3 8 3 Holy Cross Babson Trinity M.I.T. Univ. of Conn. Brandeis Bowdoin Middlebury Nichols Univ. of Mass. Tufts BASEBALL SWIMMING 2 5 2 8 2 2 6 6 2 5 4 M.I.T. M.I.T. Northeastern Suffolk Tufts Coast Guard Clark Brandeis Assumption Trinity Lowell Tech A.I.C. 1 4 4 1 5 1 1 4 5 3 16 57 38 42 58 37 38 22 54 Holy Cross Trinity Tufts Babson Coast Guard Univ. of Mass. Univ. of Conn. Lowell Tech 38 56 53 36 58 57 73 40 310 FENCING TENNIS 10 10 12 7 15 Brandeis S.M.T.I. Holy Cross Norwich M.I.T. 17 4 17 1 15 1 20 1 12 4 9 9 Assumption Holy Cross Univ. of Mass. Coast Guard Clark A.I.C. Lowell Tech 5 8 8 8 5 TRACK GOLF 72 48 50 64 64 88 84 84 84 71 38 38 73 Middlebury 67 5 Coast Guard 106 4 Southern Conn. St. 104 6 Colby 82 2 Norwich 38 5% Nichols 52 1 Bowdoin 51 5 Brandeis 6% Nichols 15 3 Tufts 78 5 Amherst 78 6 R.P.I. 57 5% Trinity 67 Lowell Trinity A.I.C. Providence Nichols Holy Cross Tufts Clark M.I.T. Univ. of Mass. Brandeis Assumption 2 3 1 5 Vh 6 2 % 4 2 1 Vh 311 To the Class of ' 69 CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR ACHIEVEMENT and WELCOME TO MEMBERSHIP in the W. P. I . ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OVER A CENTURY OF SERVICE IN SUPPLYING AMERICA ' S SCHOOLS Milton Bradley Company offers a quality line of Lecture Hall and Auditorium Seating, Library Equipment and Drawing and Art Room Furniture. • Matchless Appearance • Flexible Efficiency • Double Tube Channel Frames • Various Metal Finishes Long Service • Greater Economy • Functional Sturdiness • Various Colors of Nylon or Naugahyde Upholstery MILTON BRADLEY COMPANY Springfield, Massachusetts 01101 NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO Style No. 4400 NL Clarin Reserve Seating AVCO BAY STATE ABRASIVES DIVISION . . . congratulates you on your new role as a graduate engineer. Research and Engineering have been essential concerns of Avco Bay State Abrasives Division since its founding forty- five years ago. And today — the business of researching for new and im- proved abrasive products . . . and engineering for advanced manufacturing methods continue as fundamental criteria for our fast growing company . . . vitally interested in further growth and expansion. Avco Bay State Abrasives salutes the Class of 1968 — and the men who will help build our country ' s industrial future. May you enjoy success and happiness in your vital fields of work in the years ahead. j 5t«b t BAY STATE ABRASIVES DIVISION WESTBORD, MASSACHUSETTS 015S1 For all types of drilling operations, look to LELAND - GIF FORD Standard and custom built machines for any job. Single and multiple heads. Hand, power or hydraulic feed. Tape control for semi— automatic drilling. LELAND - GIF FORD 1001 Southbridge St. Worcester, Mass. 01601 Subs id iary of White Consolidated Industries, Inc. Custom Yearbooks For All New England unique creative distinctive (and on time) WOODLAND PUBLISHING CO., INC 600 Pleasant Street Watertown, MA 02172 A New England Company Serving New England C. V. BIANCHI AND SONS, INC. CONSULTANTS Established 1890 Marble - Tile - Slate Terrazzo - Granite All Resilient Floorings 428 SHREWSBURY STREET WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS PL 3-1564 Here is an extensive list of the significant suppliers of forgings for nuclear projects: Wyman-Gordon. This list is important because, ( 1 ) nuclear project builders specify the highest of metallurgical standards, and . . . (2) their demands for product reliability are as severe as any application we know. Any high-performance equipment benefits by relying on the company that is a major supplier of metal components meeting these nuclear super-standards ... in a broad range of shapes, materials and forms . . . forgings, precision thin-wall cylinders, compound contour panels, rolled rings. Whenever components need peak performance and reliability, look to the total capability of Wyman-Gordon; it comes from our aggressive concern with improved technology. Wyman-Gordon Company, Worcester, Massachusetts. Other offices in Chicago, Detroit, Dayton, Los Angeles, Fort Worth, Seattle, Bombay and Geneva. WYMAN - GORDON Forgings of all sizes and metals COMPLIMENTS OF OFFICIAL JEWELER THROUGH YOUR BOOKSTORE - HERFF JONES CO. Class Rings — All year dates JAMES P. CORR 74 Winsor Rd. Sudbury, Mass. 01776 AC 617 443-2715 WELDERS SUPPLY of WORCESTER INC. 512 SOUTHBRIDGE ST., WORCESTER. MASS. 01610 CONGRATULATIONS ESTES JOHNSTON INSURANCE AGENCY TO THE CLASS OF ' 69 - GREEN BROS, of WORCESTER INC. ASSOCIATES 60 KING ST. WORCESTER, MASS. Home Insurance Agency, Inc. New and Used Machine Tools HOWARD GREEN — Class of ' 49 ■■' ■— Cousy Sharry, Inc. COMMONWEALTH STATIONERS, INC. And Its Subsidiaries PROUTY PRINTING COMPANY DEERFIELD PRESS 90 GROVE STREET — WORCESTER, MASS. DEERHILL DAIRY D. BORIA SONS Homogenized Vitamin D Milk PL 4-0403 A Division of the L. B. Stevens Corporation BOSTON, MASS. CONCORD, NEW HAMPSHIRE BANGOR, MAINE WIESBADEN, GERMANY COMPLIMENTS F A FRIEND TO THE CLASS OF ' 69 CONGRATULATIONS RICE BARTON CORP. AMERICIAN WORCESTER DIVISION ARMOUR PORTER DIVISION ROBINSON METALS DIVISION WORCESTER AUTOMATIC MACHINE DIVISION JAMES COWAN SONS, INC. WHOLESALE MEATS PROVISIONS 20 TEMPLE STREET WORCESTER, MASS. THE BOZENHARD COMPANY, INC. GENERAL CONTRACTORS WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS ■Charles Hill Morgan designed the first successful continuous rolling mill to be built in the United States, thereby making a major contribution to this country ' s industrial base in the nineteenth century. In 1888 he founded the Morgan Construction Com- pany to meet the needs of the growing steel industry for advanced high-production equipment. Ever since that year, V% l C3 F Morgan of Worcester has been de- | 7 | WOR signing and building such equip- ment, until today the company ' s activities are world- wide. One out of every three members of the com- pany ' s work force is now in engineering, design, drafting, and allied fields. Licensing arrangements with Davy and United Engineering Company Limited of Sheffield, England, and Siemag Siegener Maschi- nenbau G. m. b. H. with offices in Dahlbruch and Dusseldorf, West CESTEB :i ± l Germany, expand our coverage to all centers of steel-making activity. N ROLLING MILLS-Since the first Morgan Rolling Mill, the company has designed 259 Rolling Mills of various types, now operating in the United States and in 16 foreign countries. Besides complete rolling mills, Morgan has an impressive list of firsts in the steel handling equipment field, including the new Stelmor Process for controlled cooling, collection and division of rod products. MORGOIL BEARINGS With the advent of the Morgoil Bearing in 1933, greater rolling pressures, higher speeds, and closer tolerances became possible. A precision bearing which rides on a film of oil, the Morgoil offers outstanding advantages of greater pro- duction, a better product, longer bearing life, and substantial savings in maintenance costs. Recent developments include hydrostatic lubri- cation, quick change design, new inboard seal, and advanced hydrodynamic lubrication. WIRE DRAWING MACHINES -the first successful continuous wire drawing machine was built by Morgan in 1921. Improvements and new de- signs have constantly been made since then. Today, Morgan Accumulator, Morgan Mordraw, Morgan-Barcro and Morgan Fine Wet machines are drawing all grades of wire at high produc- tion rates. A recent addition is the Morgan Olympic High Speed Multi-Head Stranding Ma- chine for stranding steel, copper and aluminum. COMBUSTION CONTROL — Another Morgan product is the Morgan-lsley system of combustion con- trol for furnaces in the steel, glassmaking, and allied industries. This system is a radical change from the natural draft system of supply- ing combustion air and exhausting waste gases, since the Morgan-lsley does the job mechani- cally. It may be regulated with extreme accuracy to maintain the high temperatures required in steel or glass furnaces. Morgan Construction Company, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605 i St X -fc F %K - BEST WISHES ABDOW SCRAP IRON CO. P. POWER ROOFING CO. 16 LEXINGTON STREET 18 CANTERBURY STREET WORCESTER, MASS. WORCESTER ROOFING AND SHEET METAL WORKERS MASSACHUSETTS ESTABLISHED 1868 752-6166 G. T. Abdow, ' 53 COMPLIMENTS OF jamesbury CORP HILL BRONZE ALLOYS Compliments COMPANY of Established 1928 • Hex CHAIN BELT COMPANY NON-FERROUS CASTINGS MATERIALS OF ENGINEERING Chainhelt, Inc. • ROLLER CHAIN DIVISION TAINTER AND GARDNER STREETS WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS WORCESTER SPRINGFIELD MASSACHUSETTS ENGINEERS Engineering ingenuity — a key to progress — has been a major factor in the growth of The Heald Machine Company. Over the years product innovation has produced many Heald firsts. Among these are the first fully hydraulic internal grinder for production line use, first internal grinder with automatic sizing and first centerless internal grinder. These innovations gained rapid acceptance and are now basic standards of the machine tool industry. More recently, research has established Heald as a leader in the isolation and control of vibration and resultant chatter. One notable result of this research is the damped quill which successfully elim- inates chatter marks in surface finish of deep bores. With industry ' s need for ultra high precision, Heald developed and introduced the first Numerically Controlled contour boring and turning machine capable of .000025 resolution. The procedure of in-process single jet air gaging of internal grooves is still another innovation. This process reduces size variation sizing methods. to I 2 that of other In 1963 Heald Controlled Force Grinders were announced, representing the first major break- through in internal grinding in 30 years. The CF principle controls the force at which the wheel is fed into the work and has set new standards for quality, production, and uniformity. Here at Heald, research continues in many areas such as fluid bearings, surface texture, numerically controlled machinery, and static as well as dynamic machine characteristics. Thus, Engineering ingenuity, a key to progress, has done much to justify our well-known slogan — IT PAYS TO COME TO HEALD. THE HEALD MACHINE COMPANY Associate of The Cincinnati Milling Machine Company Worcester, Massachusetts 01606 Congratulations to the Class of ' 69 from . . . GIBBS COX, INC. NAVAL ARCHITECTS g% nnAAiir s PRDGUE AND F ■■■■■-mw mw mm MARINE ENGINEERS THE MARK OF RELIABILITY NEW YORK ' AND WASHINGTON, D. C. A leader in the design, development and manufacture of semiconductor devices SPRAGUE ELECTRIC COMPANY 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Mass. J. K. OGASIAN SONS Compliments of 179 BELMONT STREET Worcester 5, Mass. BAY STATE HARDWARE COMPANY -TOOL RENTAL SPECIALIST 120 W. BOYLSTON STREET WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEVISION H. Tashjian Major Appliances ' - Stereo and Radio Class of ' 31 TO THE CLASS of 1969 M. D. HOLMES SONS CO. May you all have a successful and prosperous PLUMBING - HEATING future in your chosen fields. AIR-CONDITIONING WARREN BIGELOW ELECTRIC CO., Inc. 33 MILLBROOK STREET ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS WORCESTER 128 CHANDLER STREET MASSACHUSETTS Worcester, Massachusetts LsOfnpitfnents of WORCESTER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE BOARD OF TRUSTEES ATLAS DISTRIBUTING CORP. PLeasant 4-4171 WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR A. B. DICK PRODUCTS CO. BEER, WINE, LIQUORS OF WORCESTER, INC. 44 Southbridge St. Auburn, Mass. 860 Main Street Worcester, Mass. 01610 MIMEOGRAPH — SPIRIT — AZOGRAPH — OFFSET FOLDERS — PHOTOCOPY AND SUPPLIES jiAitnA- COMPLIMENTS OF 244 MAIN STREET The House of Quality H.E. HOLBROOK DROP FORGE INC. 40 ROCKDALE ST. ®t WORCESTER, MASS. APPLIANCES H.E. HOLBROOK JR. CLASS ' 44 FINE FURNITURE — GIFTS John W. Coghlin, Class of ' 19 Edwin B. Coghlin, Sr., Class of ' 23 Edwin B. Coghlin, Jr., Class of ' 56 SALMONSEN ' S FRESH LOCAL MILK A Better Milk for All the Family Over 50 years of quality and service Phone: PL 2-6562 5-7 VICTORIA AVENUE WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS C. K. SMITH CO., INC. Over 60 Years of Service HEATING OILS — BURNERS BOILER UNITS 24 Hour Service PL 3-1475 390 MAIN STREET WORCESTER, MASS. COMPLIMENTS - of - WORC. OXY-ACETYLENE SUPPLY CO. Compliments of COES KNIFE COMPANY MACHINE KNIVES and HARDENED STEEL WAYS 1000 SOUTHBRIDGE STREET 53 PRESCOTT STREET Worcester, Mass. Fitchburg, Mass. 72 COES STREET WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS Engineers and Contractors .1. (i. 1. A M Oil V DeFalco Concrete Corp. Millbury, Mass. i S M. C. HEATING SYSTEMS - OIL BURNING SYSTEMS - POWER PLANTS - INDUSTRIAL PIPING - VENTILATION • AIR CONDITIONING - PLUMBING BOSTON, MASS. WORCESTER, MASS. S. 1. HOWARD GLASS COMPANY With Sincere Wishes MIRROR - PLATE GLASS - INDUSTRIAL GLASS from THE BAKERS Window Glass - Automobile Glass of High Vacuum Coatings TOWN TALK BREAD Precision Grinding Dial PL 3-8146 379 SOUTHWEST CUTOFF COMPLIMENTS - of - G. F. WRIGHT STEEL AND WIRE CO. PUMPS SCOTT ASSOCIATES INC. 365-6341 GOULDS WORTHINGTON ' TOT Sales • Service • Engineering 60 Water Street, Clinton F. W. MADIGAN CO., INC. General Contractors - Engineers Francis W. Madigan, Jr., ' 53 54 MASON STREET WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS DEERHILL DAIRY MARK, INC. D. BORIA SONS Natural Model Clothing Homogenized 330 MAIN STREET Vitamin D Milk WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS PL 4-0403 A lot can happen to a pottery shop in 84 years. Birthplace of Norton Company — F. B. Norton Pottery on Water Street, Worcester, Mass. NORTON NORTON NORTON ' ABRASIVE MATERIALS DIVISION Worcester Massachusetts CHEMICAL PROCESS PRODUCTS DIVISION US STONEWARE INC AKRON. OHO COATED ABRASIVE DIVISION FORMERLY BEHR-MANNING TROY NY. NORTON NORTON ' PROTECTIVE PRODUCTS DIVISION WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS i REFRACTORIES DIVISION ' WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS NORTON ' CONSTRUCTION PRODUCTS DIVISION CLIPPER MANUFACTURING COMPANY INC KANSAS CITY. MO NORTON NORTON METALS DIVISION FORMERLY NATIONAL RESEARCH CORP NEWTON MASS. ' TAPED VISION FORMERLY REHR-MANNINC TROY. NY NORTON ' GRINDING WHEEL DIVISION WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS NORTON ' vacuum equipment division ' FORMERLY NATIONAL RESEARCH CORP NEWTON. MASS. NORTON NORTON ' machine tool division ' WORCESTER. MASSACHUSETTS ' PLASTICS AND SYNTHETICS DIVISION US STONEWARE INC AKRON. OHIO i.VikmLT RESEARCH CORPORA! ION CAMBRIDGE MASSACHUSETTS WffifflM INTERNATIONAL INC WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS Starting in a pottery shop in 1885, we ' ve become the world ' s largest manufacturer of abrasive products-and of many other products, from lightweight Noroc body armor, now in use in Vietnam, to heavy-duty encapsulating machines, improving health and nutrition in such far off places as Australia. We ' re now 14 divisions strong with headquarters s ill in Worcester, Massachusetts, with manufacturing operations at 48 plant locations-24 in the U.S.A. and 24 in 14 countries of the free world. THOMAS A. HICKEY, INC. 121 Highland Street • Worcester, Mass. 01609 • 754-2637 THREE PACKAGE STORES 121 Highland St., Worcester, Mass. 261 Lincoln St., Worcester, Mass. 40 Maple Ave., Shrewsbury, Mass. Armour-Porter Co. WELDING ENGINEERS CREEPER HILL ROAD NORTH GRAFTON, MASSACHUSETTS 01536 FABRICATING AND INDUSTRIAL WELDMENTS MACHINE BASES FLAME CUTTING PRESSURE VESSELS STAINLESS STEEL ALUMINUM MOTOR Compliments -of- TURNER COACH SERVICE 301 ELM STREET FITCHBURG, MASSACHUSETTS CHARTERED BUSSES OUR SPECIALTY NATIONWIDE CHARTERED TOURS E. L. DAUPHINAIS, INC TOP QUALITY - READY MIXED CONCRETE 85 two way radio equipped transit mixed trucks Serving central Massachusetts Main Office: NORTH GRAFTON Phones: Worcester Grafton PL 7-4501 839-4425 Lundquist Tool and Mtg. _somparvu inc. 677 CAMBRIDGE STREET WORCESTER. MASS. 01610 KESSELI MORSE COMPANY Masons Supplies — Building Materials Transit Mixed Concrete Tile and Floor Covering Installations 242 CANTERBURY STREET WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS with best wishes to the CLASS OF 1969 Carlstrom Pressed Metal Company, Inc. WESTBORO, MASSACHUSETTS Pressed Metal Engineers Manufacturers of Light and Heavy Metal Stampings THE HENLEY-LUNDGREN CO. 193 HARTFORD PIKE SHREWSBURY. MASS. KEYSTONE ELECTRICAL COMPANY, Inc. distributors of Electrical Supplies 244 PARK AVENUE WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS 01609 THE PRESMET CORPORATION METAL POWDER STRUCTURAL PARTS 112 HARDING STREET WORCESTER 4 MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of W. M. STEELE COMPANY, Inc. POWER TRANSMISSION EQUIPMENT WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS W. J. SHANNON TRUCKING CO. RIGGERS Specialist in Plant Relocation 60 Years of Serving Worcester Industry 129 SUMMER STREET WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS Phone 791-3221 INC. CHARLES E. KINKADE HAMILTON L. WOOD LUKE A. DILLON, JR. DAVID L. ORTON STEPHEN B. AM ES 1 BS4 - 1 95S AMERICUS 0 t vtcz, ri- t y x-ese ' C, s ■osjtoed e ' K , t Pi-ccdd. •40 iAJroae _St ee Telephone pleasant 7-772s MEN ' S WORLD . . . in a choice location, thought out for your convenience. Come straight into our Varsity Shop from the new High Street entrance. You ' ll like it! GOYETTE ' S SERVICE STATION ' AT THE SUNOCO SIGN Phone PL 3-9579 102 HIGHLAND STREET WORCESTER, MASS. B. BLOOMFIELD COMPANY, INC. 2 KANSAS ST., WORCESTER, MASS. 01610 METALS DEALERS-DISTRIBUTORS SMELTERS ALL NON-FERROUS ALLOYS ' BABCO BRAND INGOT METALS You Specify - We Satisfy AREA CODE 617 PHONES 756-3001 756-5101 BEST WISHES TO CLASS OF 1969 INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIERS OF WORCESTER, INC. ROLLED THREAD DIE CO. 1 | ' j 1 A DIVISION OF LITTON INDUSTRIES 1 j HOLDEN. MASSACHUSETTS 01520 m mtM Stocking Distributors of Metal Cutting Tools — Factory Supplies Subsidiary of Power Transmission UTD CORPORATION HOLDEN, MASSACHUSETTS 212 SUMMER ST. WORCESTER 8, MASS. HARVEY TRACY INC. Consulting Engineers WILLIAM F. LYNCH CO. INC. 143 DEWEY STREET Worcester Massachusetts PLUMBING - HEATING AIR CONDITIONING Francis S. Harvey ' 37 Richard L. Tracy ' 48 John J. Bryce ' 55 Ronald A. Carlson ' 60 11 CANTERBURY STREET Worcester, Mass. Charles W. Mello ' 61 R0SENLUND 306 MAIN ST WORCESTER Telephone 617 754-7236 SEE US FOR YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS NATIONAL GLASS WORKS COMPLIMENTS Two Convenient Locations of 119 SHREWSBURY STREET Dial PL 3-7296 MORGAN LINEN SERVICE, INC. 372 PARK AVENUE 81 MILLBURY STREET Dial PL 3-7209 Worcester 8, Massachusetts WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS ■I I Compliments III of III WORCESTER III GAS LIGHT CO. • • • GAS, THE KEY TO MODERN LIVING Among the nation ' s best selling tools are Display Room — Hanson High Speed Steel Twist Drills and 30 MECHANIC STREET Ace Taps and Dies made in Worcester at the Offices — HENRY L. HANSON 25 QUINSIGAMOND AVENUE COMPANY, INC. WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS PL 7-8311 COOPER ' S FLOWERS NEW ENGLAND GLASS AUTO GLASS - STORE FRONTS COURTESY — QUALITY — SERVICE MIRRORS - TUB ENCLOSURES - PLASTICS WALL PLAQUES 133 HIGHLAND STREET 589 PARK AVE., WORCESTER, MASS. DIAL 755-8646 WORCESTER 2, MASSACHUSETTS (Near Mill Street) 755-4351 George Hoyen COMPLIMENTS OF NORMAN D. NAULT O. E. NAULT 34 Cedar Street Worcester, Massachusetts 01609 ASTRA PHARMACEUTICAL PRODUCTS, INC. Neponset Street Worcester, Mass. 01606 Compliments of WORCESTER TELEGRAM THE EVENING GAZETTE SUNDAY TELEGRAM Radio Station WTAG STEVENS WALDEN, INC. 475 SHREWSBURY STREET Worcester, Mass. MANUFACTURERS OF MECHANICS HAND TOOLS GRANGER CONTRACTING CD., INC. General Contractors 306 MAIN STREET, WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS 01608 Raymond 0. Granger, ' 35 Russell P. Larson, ' 49 Eugene J. Dragon, ' 54 COMPLIMENTS - of - WILBUR ' S RESTAURANTS INC. COMPLIMENTS - of - WARE PRATT COMPANY MEN ' S and BOYS ' CLOTHIERS [ [B®E G3IX COMPANY INC. 36 BOYLSTON STREET • WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS 0160S • Custom Injection Moulding of Plastics e.g. radio cabinets, vacuum cleaners, electric knives CHAFFIN ' S GARAGE, INC. 512 MAIN STREET HOLDEN, MASS. CHEVROLET SALES and SERVICE ZOTTOLI BROS. OLSON MANUFACTURING COMPANY SCREW MACHINE PRODUCTS 100 PRESCOTT STREET WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS MAURICE F. REIDY CO. REALTORS 756-2411 2 FOSTER STREET WORCESTER 8, MASS. EDWARDS PAINT PAPER CORP. 3 KEI.LEY SQUARE WORCESTER 4, MASS. Telephone PL 7-7441 IMPERIAL WALLPAPER COLORIZER PAINTS PRATT LAMBERT PAINTS Conipliments of COMPLIMENTS - of - GEO. F. BLAKE, INC. STEEL - ALUMINUM - INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES CANADA DRY JOSEPH DWORMAN 70 QUINSIGAMOND AVENUE President WORCESTER MASSACHUSETTS Compliments of WORCESTER TECH BOOKSTORE FRANCIS HARVEY SONS INC. DANIELS HALL General Contractors 14 1 Dewey Street the college store Worcester, Massachusetts 752-2876 BOOKS — SUPPLIES Jackets Pennants Novelties Gifts Greeting Cards Sundries Stuffed Animals ATLAS RUBBER STAMP CO. MANUFACTURERS Compliments of THE BLOOMFIELD FAMILY Alfred Harold David Paul 42 Southbridge St. Worcester, Mass. The PEDDLER is a composite of pictures and words which expresses feel- ing and emotion we have all experienced at Tech. Here we have tried to present Tech as a living institution in the process of enlarging itself, improving itself in a desperate race to keep pace with a modern world, a race in which it must not fall behind. We do not claim objecti- vity, only the honest expression of our spontaneous thoughts and impressions. To this effect we hope to have succeed- ed. I would like to take the opportunity here to thank our advisor, Professor John P. van Alstyne and Mr. Roger Perry for their continuous help and encourage- ment. I would also like to extend my appreciation to all those who worked the many hours necessary to make this book what it is. Mike Noga EDITOR IN CHIEF: Michael W. Noga SENIOR EDITORIAL STAFF: LITERARY STAFF: PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: Douglas Nelson, John Thompson, Joseph Senecal, Gerald Axelrod, Mark Gerber, Philip Kazemersky, Joel Greene, Robert Stein, Thomas Kaminski, ADVERTISING MANAGER: BUSINESS MANAGER: William Boyan David Ploss LAYOUT STAFF: Peter Bladen, Dwight Dickerman, Gregory Dickson, Vincent Mellon, Stephen Bernaki nTTTTTrmnrT —m T i i Y, 7? W rTrfimiTrfi fiO afii
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.