Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2010 with funding from
Boston Library Consortium Member Libraries
http://www.archive.org/details/cauldron1970nort
The
CAULDRON
1970
50th Edition
© Copyright 1970 by Northeastern University, Boston, Massa-
chusetts. No portion of this book may be reproduced in any form
without permission. Permission to reproduce material from acknowl-
edged sources outside the university must be obtained from those
sources. All material used by permission.
Student Yearbook My candle burns at both ends;
Volume L It will not last the night;
Northeastern University But, ah, my foes, and, oh, my
360 Huntington Avenue friends —
Boston, Massachusetts It gives a lovely light.
— Edna St. Vincent Millay
We wish to express our thanks to The Boston Record American, the Los Angeles Times, The Patriot Ledger, The Boston Pilot, The Denver
Post, The Boston Globe, The Northeastern NEWS, The Toronto Globe and Mail, cartoonists Szep, Perpepelitza and Oliphant, Time magazine
photographer Steven Hansen, the LBJ Library, the US Army Public Information Bureau, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration,
The Democratic and Republican National Committees, the Northeastern University Press Bureau, Senators Edward M. Kennedy and Edward
W. Brooke, the White House Information Office, humorist Dick Gregory, Charing Cross Music Co. and Paul Simon and all other individuals
and agencies for permission to use their material in this book.
1970 CAULDRON
STAFF
RICKHOWLAND
Editor-in-Chief
ROBERT J. FLAVELL
Managing Editor
PROFESSOR HARVEY VETSTEIN
Advisor
Production Staff
SENIOR SECTION
Jack Dunn
Jana D. Howland
Robert O'Malley
Steve Ross
Robert Safford
SPORTS SECTION
Andrew Dabilis
UNIVERSITY
DEVELOPMENT
Chris Mosher
ADMINISTRA TION &
FACULTY
Beverly Chako
Seth Wanetik
CO-OP SECTION
Paula Ferren
CARTOONIST
Dan Perepelitza
STUDENT
ACTIVITIES
Linda Giardino
Candy Lowe
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Doug Capra
Ron Cardoos
Frank Fernandes
Frank Moy
Brad Randolph
Steve Rosenfield
1970 CAULDRON
Contents
Title 1
Staff 2
Table of Contents 3
Message From President Knowles 4
Message from Charles Devlin 5
Class of 1970: At Ease 6
Carl S. Ell: President Emeritus 9
Dedication: Our Time 10
A Time for Us: A History 1965-1970 12
Vietnam: Our Flag Was Still There 16
Moratorium 22
Left and Right: The Dissidence of Dissent 28
1965: The Disillusionment Began 34
1966: "We Will Continue" 36
1967: The folly of being comforted 38
1968: See How They Run 40
Kids Say the Darndest Things 44
1969: Anthem for Doomed Youth 46
1970: Protest Was Their Most Important Product 413
1970: The Strike 226
The Sounds of Silence — A Photo Essay 49
Athletics 79
Football 81
Hockey 88
Basketball 94
Final Results 96
Track 98
Crew 100
Sports at a Glance 1 02
Baseball 108
Freshman Week 110
Northeastern: Development of a Campus • 112
Northeastern: Another View 128
I Was a Typical, Apathetic, Northeastern Student 130
The Face of the Undergraduate 132
Groovin' 136
A Day at the Common 138
Leaves of Grass 140
NU: A Minority Report 142
The University Education 144
Faces, etc 152
Student Activities: Formal and Informal 160
Symbol of a Subculture: The New Morality 192
CONFRONTATION 196
Dick Gregory: Notes on a Troubled Land 198
The NEWS looks at GE and Hayakawa 202
The Idea of a University 204
Love Thy Neighbor 206
Pajama Games and Other Indoor Sports 208
People 210
The Generations 275
Northeastern, the Co-op School 220
Trustees 230
Administration and Faculty 232
Distinguished Speakers 274
Candids 279
Seniors 289
Senior Index 382
Cauldron Anniversary: It's Golden 418
Final Volley 424
Congratulations to the graduating members of Northeastern Uni-
versity's Class of 1970. You have been witness during your col-
lege years to the most profound, far-reaching revolution ever to
confront the American educational system. In spite of its ten-
dencies toward unlawful extremism, so often manifested by violence
and physical confrontations, this upheaval will engender a new
era on our campuses in student-university relations.
Already students are enjoying more decision-making power in our
colleges and universities than they have ever had in the past. This
is as it should be. The voicing of opinions, particularly relevant
to student life on campus, are rights, not extended privileges.
Administrations recognize this. Administrations encourage stu-
dents to recognize it also, but to make their voices heard through
the system of due process inherent in our democratic way of life.
It is essential that student participation in university affairs increase
in the years ahead, and I am confident it will do so. The opinions
of all elements of an academic community — students, faculty,
administration and trustees — are vital to any institution's success-
fully fulfilling its role and carrying out its overall educational
mission.
Responsible, mature reactions to complex problems are now what
you must develop as you take your places as new leaders in so-
ciety. The education you have received at Northeastern, strength-
ened by your cooperative experience, makes me feel confident that
most of you have already done so.
My sincerest wishes to you in the years ahead.
ASA S. KNOWLES
President
To The Class of 1970:
Commencement 1970-
nings.
-the time of many begin-
After working with you for five years, it seems
unnecessary to say "Congratulations," but what
other word can express the good wishes I want
for each of you.
September, 1965, is long past, and now, June,
1970, which seemed like an eternity away, is upon
us. The common thread that held the Class of
1970 together has dissolved into a new bond of
remembrances.
As each of you go your separate ways you take a
part of me and a part of Northeastern. We will,
each in our own way, share in your disappoint-
ments and rejoice in your success.
Go In Peace!
Charles M. Devlin
Advisor to the Class of 1970
Senior Class Board
Senior Week Committee
bDj
bD
m
CARL S. ELL
President Emeritus
Carl Ell watched Northeastern grow from
a small college into the largest private uni-
versity in the country. And he helped it along
the way. It is hard to think of this man as
ever having been a student, but once he
even played basketball for De Pauw Uni-
versity. Pictured above is the 1908-09 team.
Dr. Ell is seated, far left.
7
10
Dedication:
OUR TIME
You were the War Babies, The Spock Generation, the
first to live entirely under the threat of The Bomb.
And then the time came for you to take your place
in the world, eventually to take it over to do with as
you pleased.
In 1970, it was not an Eden you stepped into, but,
rather, a world torn by dissent and political strife, a
nation whose houses were divided, then divided again
over many and diverse problems.
You did many funny things. You did some violent
things. Your opinions and actions began to carry
weight. College students were no longer the goldfish-
swallowing, careless types of the 20's and 30's. They
were no longer the apathetic generation of the 50' s, but
rather, an involved, dynamic, energetic, concerned
group of students who were searching for a new way
of life, although that new life never was clearly defined.
This is your yearbook. It is quite different from any
other. It may shock you. It may offend you. It may
tickle you. It may be nothing what you thought your
college career was like. But it happened, and you were
part of it.
This is dedicated to you — after all, you wrote it.
11
A Time for Us
A History 1965-1970
It was the best of times, it was the worst of
times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the
age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief,
it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the
season of Light, it was the season of Dark-
ness, it was the spring of Hope, it was the
winter of Despair, we had everything before
us, we had nothing before us . . .
— Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities
By ROBERT J. FLAVELL
Managing Editor
We came seeking an education, and learned of our ignorance, we came
as the little children, and left doubting salvation; we came to be called
college graduates, and some of us learned a few things.
The importance of the past five years has been, for anyone with a con-
cern for his world as well as his niche, a time of crisis, of searching, of
national guilt, national questioning. Its importance has been in the
streets as often as in the halls of government; its events will change the
whole structure of our lives and those of later generations. And those
who feel unchanged by this mid-century sweep of social upheaval have
been at least half asleep.
The last half-decade, the time we spent getting an education, has been
one of protest and challenge, of confrontation, both of people and of
ideologies, a time of war, of sexual liberty, of struggles for rights, or
moral questioning, of hatred and guilt and sometimes, of innocence.
And whether we are, as a nation, plummeting to anarchy, or rising to a
new freedom, we, as a generation, are "changed, changed utterly," like
Yeats' middle class; and perhaps, as in his time of struggle, "a terrible
beauty is born."
12
13
We have lingered in the chambers of the sea
By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and brown
Till human voices wake us, and we drown.
— T. S. Eliot
NEWS cartoon by „^
Dan Perepelitza
rrn
"S*f
*f
A
V*ELFih
RIGHT
NOW
VIETNAM: Our flag was still there
"// everybody minded their own business,"
said the Duchess in a hoarse growl, "the
world would go round a deal faster than it
does."
— Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland
Most Americans supported US intervention in Viet-
nam in 1965. By 1970, most of them wanted to
withdraw, to turn the war over to the Vietnamese
Army. For the young people and the "effete corps
of impudent snobs" who were the target of Vice
President Spiro Agnew's jabs, it was none too soon.
The difference in American opinion seemed multi-
fold. It was, some thought, an immoral, illegal war
that went against American beliefs, not to mention
being in violation of the UN Charter; it was, some
felt, a civil war between two halves of a single
country divided only for the 1956 Geneva Con-
vention elections (which had not been held); it
was, others said, a recognition of the fact, conceded
by Eisenhower, that in free elections, Ho Chi Minh,
a national hero for having driven out the French,
would win.
But most Americans had no idea of the legal and
political intricacies in the Vietnam question. For
them, the change came as the numbers of American
soldiers killed kept increasing, as everyone who was
anyone stopped citing the Domino theory of Com-
munist aggression, as Johnson got caught in lie
after lie and spread the "credibility gap" wider and
wider.
It began with the President's statement during the
1964 election campaign that he would not send
American troops to do what the Asians "ought to
be doing for themselves," and with the contradictory
US military buildup, explained as reaction to at-
tacks from the North, as part of the US commitment
to a SEATO ally, and as retaliation for Communist
attacks on US vessels. But the hope, ill-founded
or not, that the Kennedy years had given the nation,
the optimism of the younger generation, was lost
in the Johnson years. And all youth could see was
hypocrisy, duplicity and rationalization from an
administration that had tread too deeply into the
Mekong Delta and got itself and a half million
soldiers stuck.
16
"WE ARE NOT GOING TO SEND AMERICAN BOYS 9000 OR 10,000 MILES AWAY TO DO WHAT
ASIAN BOYS OUGHT TO BE DOING FOR THEMSELVES"- LYNDON JOHNSON (1964 CAMPAIGN)
Among the older generation, the question of Viet-
nam was generally one of "honor." The United
States had never been defeated in a war, never quit
a war without winning, never been made to look
foolish, at least not in their selected memories. At
first, our elders had a clearly-defined group to rail
against — the "hippies," who, for them, were ob-
viously cowards, unwilling to fight against Com-
munist domination. But as the word "escalation"
became commonplace, as "we're winning" became
"we're holding our own," and then, "bombing must
be resumed," the pacifists looked less like Com-
munist dupes, the objectives went cloudy, and the
price of "stopping Communism" began to seem too
high.
True, the US had had personnel in Vietnam since
Truman first dispatched a handful of military in-
structors in 1950 to train troops for the French
puppet Vietnamese government. But the big war,
for the United States, did not begin until huge
numbers of troops, on Johnson's orders, arrived in
Vietnam to take over the shooting, and the dying.
17
In late July, 1964, Hanoi accused US ships of
violating North Vietnamese waters. On August 2,
North Vietnamese torpedo boats attacked a US
destroyer in the Gulf of Tonkin, in what the US
maintained were international waters. After a sec-
ond similar incident, Johnson ordered bombing
attacks on shore installations, noted that the US
had been the victim of deliberate aggression, said
that "peace is the only purpose of the course we
pursue," and ordered air raids on North Vietnam.
Congress passed the Tonkin Gulf Resolution, giving
Johnson a free hand, the Viet Cong hit the Ameri-
can installation at Pleiku, and Johnson ordered
round-the-clock strikes on the North.
For the next two years, peace proposals were offered
and rejected by both sides, the US holding that the
National Liberation Front could not justifiably
represent South Vietnam in peace talks, and the
North holding that US troops were the true aggres-
sors and would have to withdraw before talks could
begin. Meanwhile, reports of new US troop buildups
in Vietnam became commonplace, and the nation
began its division into "hawks" and "doves," the
"peaceniks" and the "militarists." As US troop
strength increased, so did protests; as Gen. William
C. Westmoreland began to order "search and de-
stroy" missions, draft card burning increased; as
bombing halts were ordered, then bombing resumed,
self-immolation, flag-burning, draft resistance and
emmigration to seek sanctuary increased.
US Army photo
18
1
LBJ Library photo
'All I Can Tell You Is That We're Winning'
Then, in 1968, the war and the mood of the nation
began to change. On January 30, the North Viet-
namese launched the Tet offensive, striking 30 cities
at once and killing over 400 Americans. On March
31, President Johnson pre-empted part of "Mission
Impossible" to announce that his administration
would self-destruct in nine months.
Westmoreland, Johnson and US Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker at Cam Rahn Bay, South Vietnam in December, 1967. (LBJ Library photo)
Johnson ordered unilateral reductions in war ac-
tivity, halted bombing over most of North Vietnam,
and called upon the North to begin peace negotia-
tions. On April 3, North Vietnam agreed to meet
at Paris; and though South Vietnam still had an
election scandal brewing, and despite reluctance on
the part of newly-elected South Vietnamese Presi-
dent Nguyen Van Thieu to enter the talks, there
seemed to be cause to hope for the end.
But the delegates to the peace talks spent their first
few months discussing the shape of the conference
table, and Americans, tired of war, turned to their
own political machinations. For the next several
months, the nation was wrapped up in the McCarthy
success, the Robert Kennedy murder, the Chicago
Democratic Convention scandal, the charges and
countercharges between the television media and
Chicago officials. And while Democratic nominee
Hubert Humphrey tried to explain his position to
a nation disenchanted with Johnson, Richard Nixon
took the Presidency with the pledge that "the new
leadership will end the war and win the peace in
the Pacific."
But during his first several months, Nixon appeared
to make little progress, and an increasing number
of adults joined a growing majority of youth in
demanding withdrawal from Vietnam. For the first
time since the war began, "pacifist" meant more to
the American mind than long-haired, pot-smoking,
bead-swinging college kids. For some, anti-war
people were still "cowards," but now there were
US Army photo
20
US Army photos
When the war began to go badly, Westmoreland
ordered "search and destroy" missions. From
these came the Green Beret scandal and the Me
Lai Massacre.
old, respectable, sometimes famous "cowards" as
well as young, irresponsible ones. Peace demonstra-
tions no longer bore the stigma of "treason."
Nixon had been in office eight months without
what the peace marchers felt was sufficient action,
when much of the nation joined the youth in Viet-
nam Peace Action Day (Oct. 15, 1969), a nation-
wide demonstration for peace greatly increased by
Nixon's politically unfortunate comment that "under
no circumstances will I be affected whatever" by
the moratorium march.
The march brought an immediate reaction from
loyal GOP senators, who called for a moratorium
on criticism of Nixon for 60 days, a proposal re-
jected immediately by the marchers. And, after the
announcement that another demonstration was
planned for November, criticism grew stronger from
Vice President Spiro Agnew, whose vituperation
had become a mark of pride among his targets. Ag-
new opined that the peace movement came from
"a spirit of national masochism" and was carried
out by "an effete corps of impudent snobs" who felt
"the need to cleanse themselves of their lack of
ability to offer a constructive solution to the prob-
lem." Nixon would take no credit either for Agnew's
mixed metaphors or the vice president's opinion,
and was quick to announce that though Agnew
showed courage both in his anti-protest and anti-
television speeches, the vice president spoke for
himself.
Between Nixon's "under no circumstances" state-
ment and Agnew's "effete corps" denunciation,
many middle-of-the-roaders joined the peace camp.
And Agnew's prediction that "hard-core dissidents
and anarchists" were planning a "wider more vio-
lent" march the next month brought a pacifist
chuckle as the November 15 march on Washington
first was forbidden, then allowed, then carried out
with no violence from the pacifists, and little from
other elements.
The war that was costing $2 billion a month, that
had cost 45,000 American lives, that had cost more
casualties than World War I, was the single most
important issue in the past half-decade. And at
the end of the decade, it was still that.
MORATORIUM
rn
* - * *-*""
22
All they were saying
was give peace a chance
Photos by Doug Capra
24
They gathered around the nation,
these pacifists. They came
singing songs and carrying
signs, and there was so
much resistance that
even Nixon, the
man who would not hear,
was forced to listen.
In Boston, they went to the
common, thousands of them.
And even Northeastern, the
apathetic school, was there.
And everyone disturbed the
sound of silence.
■Hgfe-.a
&$&
-■-- ili^'' ■
ai-yW
*L '^'W^W^'M
Sipp
25
26
Photos by Doug Capra and Brad
Randolph
Left and Right:
The Dissidence of Dissent
We came, many of us, with the hairbrained liberal ideas of the high school graduate suddenly at the
university. We listened to the cant of professors and elders the first year; we listened to the cant of
each other for the next four. Most of us went further left; some went right in reaction, and many
remained a part of what Nixon liked to call the Silent Majority.
We were the New Left and the New Right, though. We were not Roosevelt liberals or Southern
Conservatives. We were Kennedy liberals, McCarthy liberals, Goldwater and Buckley conservatives.
We read and heard what comforted our views and sometimes some of us made an act of committal.
There was, for the Left, a growing dissatisfaction with American society; there was, for the right, a
dissatisfaction with the Left. Some said we were "polarized" like the rest of the nation. But for most
of us, injustice, materialism, hypocrisy, war, the data-processed identity, the anguish of the black
man, the anger of the poor were all things that needed righting. And not at some misty future time
that would never come.
28
John Wellsman photo
29
Oh never fear, man, nought's to dread
Look not left nor right;
In all the endless road you tread
There's nothing but the night.
— A. E. Housman
For the Left, there was grass, there were bennies, there
was acid, there was stronger stuff: for some, the stuff that
dreams are made on and for others, the stuff that hopes
are maimed on. There was sex, legal, illegal, perverted,
subverted. For the right, there was opposition to some of
these things, a sometimes anguished concern for American
decadence, and a cry for sanity, though the definition of
that value changed with the issue.
And issues abounded, for both sides. There was, above
all and pervading all, the war. There was the draft, poverty,
civil rights, birth control, abortion, student power, black
power, white power, Red power, atomic power. There
were politics and pollution, ROTC and racism; there were
media being messages and messages being media. And for
all there were the ugly Americans, the bringers of evil,
though ugliness and evil were generally defined as the
other side.
For the Left, the more popular side among the young,
there was the Organization Left, the SDS, the group that
splintered into left, far left, and exceedingly far left. For
the Right, there was the YAF, though its efforts at counter-
marches generally attracted veterans instead of students,
and not many of those. But for many at Northeastern,
there was middle-of-the-road safety and there was apathy,
at least until Vietnam grew too hot, deferment time ran
out, and the numbers in Nixon's lottery kept coming up.
Escalation joined the American vocabulary, protest be-
came a reaction to it, and for some reason, the pacifists
wore Army jackets. Sideburns grew longer each year; the
NEWS went too far left for some and not far enough for
others; and while some professors signed newspaper ads
damning the war, others examined the provisions of their
research grants and kept their mouths shut. Then, in 1968,
there was the snit at Brandeis, another at Harvard, and a
little loud whispering at N.U., the nation's largest school.
Ron Cardoos photo
30
SHOULD TH
K PflTTTBFfl
Frank Moy, Jr. photo
r^G^^sssd^^ r*\ 5?§
John Wellsman photo
31
There were questions of academic freedom, of peace and
war, of rights and restrictions. And though many took time
to observe that, if nothing else, the students of the 60s at
least had greater intellectual involvement than previous gen-
erations, the Left was quick to add that the war and the
Northeastern Turtle Race went on as scheduled despite all
the supposed soul-searching.
For what seemed to be much of a generation, though, there
was a gap, an inability to comprehend, an "inability to com-
municate" between the young and its authority figures. There
was the "sexual revolution" for the young and corollary pro-
posals to stamp out smut for the old; there were demands
for legalizing drugs among the young; and a sometimes hys-
terical demand for drug law enforcement among the old.
There was the "God is Dead" controversy, an odd rejuvena-
tion of high moral standards among a generation which said
it didn't believe, matched by an equally odd utilitarianism
among a generation which said it did. It was a time of John-
son and of Nixon, of pacifism and militarism, of inflation
and poverty and wealth, of a search for the truth, and the
discovery of the big lie.
We came with our ideas, and they were changed by our
peers, our professors, and ourselves. We saw things that
delighted us, but too much that horrified us. We knew,
those of us who thought deeply, the feeling of intellectual
agony and social impotence. We heard the voice of the
prophets and tried to separate the false ones. We saw things
we deplored, if we tried hard enough, and tried to change
them if we cared enough to make a committal.
Ken Solano photo
32
TIME photo by Steven A. Hansen
English High students came to tell the NU SDS to stay home after SDS took a walk
to their school Oct. 1, 1969. (Wayne Wigbell photo)
1 M.UW
Chi ttreti
u,itTho
By
Marc Stern photo
Photo courtesy Boston Record American
33
1965: The Disillusionment Began
1965 was the year the American public noticed Vietnam,
the year American youth noticed Lyndon Johnson, and the
year Lyndon Johnson began his decline and fall. It was the
year the President pushed tuition aid programs, but doubled
the draft call; the year they put copper in the coins and took
romance out of the cigarette. It was the year Cassius Clay
knocked Sonny Liston out in a minute, the year the Queen
decorated the Beatles, the year of the grannydress and of the
Northeast Blackout. It was the time of "Goldfinger," and the
Smothers Brothers, of peacemarches and "Support the Boys
in Vietnam" bumper stickers. It marked the end of the New
York World's Fair, and many felt, the start of the pan-
Johnson circus.
In the beginning was the word: Lyndon (LB J for the USA)
Johnson had a mandate in the 1964 election, though many
argued that his landslide victory was more a rejection of
Republican Conservative Barry (In your heart, you know
he's right) Goldwater than approval of Kennedy's Texan.
At last President in his own right, Johnson began his Great
Society drive with a stream of messages to Congress for
emergency legislation, and told the American people of
the "peace offensives" his administration was making to
end the Vietnam war by negotiation.
But the war offensives got more attention. In June, 1964,
there had been 15,000 US soldiers in Vietnam; in Decem-
ber, 22,000; and by the end of 1965, 200,000, with greater
increases planned. As the war escalated, so did the protests,
the demonstrations, the teach-ins. Yet at year's end, pollsters
still gave LBJ the edge of support among the voters, and
protestors were still labeled "cowards" in many circles.
1965 marked the centennial of the Civil War, too. But that
era's optimistic prophecies for the black man's future had
been painful delusions. Despite Supreme Court rulings in
the black's favor, he was neither equal nor happy. North-
erners expressed shock at the Southern attitude toward him,
but continued their own arm's-length policy. But though
the black American didn't yet have his freedom, he made
it clear in 1965 that he intended to get it, and keep it.
From January to March, protestors gathered in Selma, Ala-
bama to demand equality for blacks, and brought about the
Voting Rights Act of 1965. In July, the first law banning
discrimination in employment went into effect, and officials
promised to desegregate the schools promptly.
But the scandal that surrounded the Selma incidents fol-
lowing Gov. George (Don't lay down in front of my car)
Wallace's orders to the Alabama state police to harass
NORTHEAST BLACKOUT— Nov. 9, 1965. (Record American Photo)
34
The New York World's Fair closed nearly $50 million in the red.
LBJ at Bethesda Naval Hospital with Lady Bird
after his gall bladder operation. (LBJ Library)
The Vatican Council (Courtesy, The Boston Pilot)
marchers, the increased activity of the Ku Klux Klan,
leading to a Congressional investigation, and the mur-
der of Mrs. Viola Liuzzo, a worker in Dr. Martin Luth-
er King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
replaced the good feeling that came from rights prog-
ress with bitterness over the continuing racism in the
nation. The first riots in reaction to it came in the
Watts section of Los Angeles in August.
LBJ placed the Alabama National Guard under fed-
eral orders to stop Wallace's state police; he pushed
his "war on poverty," and set up a Department of Hous-
ing and Urban Development. But many still felt that the
evils of Johnson's foreign policy outweighed even the
best accomplishments of his domestic one. He took per-
sonal interest in the Great Society, but also made the se-
lection of bombing sites in North Vietnam his personal
decision; he began the federal work-study program,
but also signed Presidential orders cutting draft defer-
ments, making it illegal to burn draft cards, and dou-
bling the draft call. By year's end, he may still have had
the majority's trust, but a significant minority of the
American people were growing dissatisfied with the
"lesser of two evils" they had elected.
1965 was the year Rhodesia declared its independence
from Britain, rather than give its four million blacks a
share in a country run by 217,000 whites. It was the
year of a parade of governments in South Vietnam,
ending with Nguyen Cao Ky as victor, the year the
Congolese war officially ended in favor of the govern-
ment, and the year China tested its second atomic
bomb. It was the year the Catholic Church's Vatican
Council absolved the Jews of collective guilt for
Christ's crucifixion, and the year Pope Paul VI became
the first Pontiff to visit the New World.
Speaking before the United Nations in October, the
Pope pleaded for "no more war; never again war."
He received polite applause.
35
Pope Paul VI (Courtesy, The Boston Pilot)
1966: "We will continue"
"A slow sort of country!" said the Queen. "Now
here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to
keep in the same place. If you want to get some-
where else, you must run at least twice as fast as
that."
— Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass
1966 was the year eight student nurses were murdered in
Chicago, the year China's "Red Guards" began their Cul-
tural Revolution, the year de Gaulle told NATO to get out,
and the year the United States lost an atomic bomb off
Spain. It was the year Massachusetts elected Edward
Brooke the first black senator since Reconstruction, and
the year Stokely Carmichael called for "Black Power." It
was the year Johnson went to Vietnam, the year of a birth
control drive in India, and the year France and China rat-
tled their atomic bombs in harmony. It was a time of "guns
and butter," of Ronald Reagan as a governor, of a 30-mil-
lion-man Chinese militia, and of US Supreme Court rulings
that contradicted some policemens' concept of law and
order. It was the year Charles Whitman climbed the U. of
Texas tower and killed 15 people, and the year Johnson
assured us we were not collectively insane.
China's ritual rejection from the United Nations gained
little notice, but she made headlines with the testing of her
fourth nuclear device, detonated only three months after
France's testing had brought her undeniably into the world
nuclear club. The fact that France had recognized Mao's
China the year before despite US protests, did little to shore
up failing French-American relations, and the "allies"
seemed parted after French President Charles de Gaulle
quit NATO and ordered members' troops out of France. In
mid-year, Mao Tse Tung's Red Guards began a nationwide
search and purge of "revisionists," in China and school
openings were delayed into the next year while unorthodox
thinkers were corrected.
In the U.S., it was the year the Supreme Court endeared it-
self to liberals in the Miranda ruling, but pleased "law and
order" elements in obscenity decisions. In the Miranda vs.
Arizona case, the court said arrested persons must be fully
and effectively warned of their rights, including the right to
remain silent and the right to a lawyer before questioning,
guarantees of considerable impact for some police who,
according to some lawyers, wanted to enforce the rules but
didn't want to play by them.
RONALD REAGAN as governor of California (Los Angeles
Times photo)
36
In China, the
Cultural Revolution
allowed no
"generation gap"
(Photos courtesy of
the Globe and Mail,
Toronto)
1966: Johnson went to Vietnam.
-and the Beatles came to Boston (Courtesy Boston Record American)
But the court did not swing to the left in obscenity decisions,
and many liberals found parallels between the prosecution
of authors Andrei Sinyavski and Yuli Daniel in Russia and
those of the publisher of Eros magazine and sellers of Fanny
Hill in the United States. The Eros case was among the
first in which the court found a publication "obscene," and
although the same court reversed a Massachusetts law under
which the 18th Century Fanny Hill was banned, it still held
the book obscene on the basis of promotional advertising.
The question of "redeeming social value" in art also affected
the motion picture industry, which adopted a "code" to rate
films according to the degree of maturity expected of the
audience. But as the rating was self-applied by the film-
makers, the questions of censorship and freedom of expres-
sion remained.
Politically, the Vietnam conflict helped the decline of Presi-
dent Johnson's popularity, and even his much-touted trip to
visit the troops there didn't help much. His January pro-
nouncement that the nation could afford both "guns and
butter" was to echo across the nation's editorial pages as
Vietnam cost more and more in money and lives, and as
inflation cut deeper into the dollar's value. What was more,
Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy emerged from three years of se-
cluded widowhood and promptly had a nasty argument with
author William Manchester over passages in Death of a
President (the "official" Kennedy version of the 1963 as-
sassination) offensive to the Johnsons. The passages were
eventually removed, but not before the publicity (and the
magazine serialization of the book) had given the public a
new and unpleasant image of the President.
*> r<y V V ij* •*> 'v> V V **
37
1967: The folly of being comforted
1967 was another year of protest, of riots, of war. It was
the year of a six-day skirmish between the Israelis and the
Arabs, the year of giant peacemarches in Washington, Chi-
cago, New York and San Francisco, the year racial violence
hit a hundred US cities bringing 60 times the damage the
1966 riots had caused. It was the year draft resistance went
organized, the year Dr. Sam Spock spoke out, the year Bill
Baird fought for birth control and was arrested. It was the
year Carl Stokes became the first black mayor of a major
US city, Cleveland, the year Svetlana Stalin came to the
west, and the year Lyndon Johnson called for prayer.
Internationally, the biggest news was that Israel was not
only not pushed into the sea by her Arab enemies, but in-
stead defeated the combined Arab forces in a war that lasted
only six days (June 5 to 10), and seized the Gaza Strip, the
Sinai Peninsula, the west bank of the Jordan River, and
Golan Heights. Gen. Moshe Dayan was the hero of the war;
and not only did the 20-year-old nation take new territory,
it kept it, under Dayan's leadership, a recalcitrance the
Arabs saw as cause for border incidents that threatened the
start of a new flareup.
In South Vietnam, voters installed Nguyen Van Thieu and
Nguyen Cao Ky, as expected, but Americans were not
happy about the war and the 1 5,000 American lives that had
been lost. In April, massive peacemarches were staged in
several US cities, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. joined
with Dr. Benjamin Spock in demanding that the boys come
home and the money spent on the war be used instead for
domestic programs, especially the relief of poverty. The
questions of poverty and civil rights were reemphasized as
violence erupted in several cities, including Boston. And
while the year's rioting seemed to be caused by insignificant
incidents, one significant fact reported by the US Civil
Rights Commission was that more blacks were attending
segregated schools in 1967 than had been in them in 1954
when the Supreme Court ordered desegregation.
It was the year Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger
Chaffee were killed in their space capsule on the Cape Ken-
nedy launch pad, the year Che Guevara was killed in Boli-
via, the year Cong. Adam Clayton Powell was refused his
US House seat, and the year the Harlem voters gave it back.
It was the year Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras
of the Orthodox Church closed the 1000-year-old schism
between the eastern and western churches, the year South
African Dr. Christian Barnard performed the first success-
ful human heart transplant, and the year the US defense
budget reached $70 billion, a new record for a nation seek-
ing peace.
CUT
tite
it
BirfhUrol
38
Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras (Courtesy, The Boston Pilot)
There will be time to murder and create
And time for all the works and days of hands
That lift and drop a question on your plate . . .
— T. S. Eliot
'
i LEGAL/Zc
y LOSS
m. MILLION
souzrr
39
AFTERMATH of Roxbury riot, pune, 1967 (Photo Courtesy of Boston Record American)
1968:
See How They Run
The Age of Innocence — both at home and abroad —
seems to have passed for most Americans.
— Eugene McCarthy
1968 was the year everyone but Johnson ran for President,
the year Nixon won, Humphrey lost, and McCarthy did a
little of both. It was the year Jackie Kennedy married Ari-
stotle Onassis, the year of the Spiro Agnew joke, the year
they began peace talks in Paris.
1968 brought the murders of Sen. Robert Kennedy and Dr.
Martin Luther King, Jr., the Pueblo capture, the childrens'
starvation in Biafra, and the Russian invasion of Czechoslo-
vakia. It was another year of hatred, of war, this time com-
plicated by the Anti-Ballistic Missle furor, and an almost-
revived Mid-East conflict, a more adamant China, and a
downright arrogant North Korea. But if the evils were just
as bad, they at least seemed to be more clearly seen by more
people. It was the year the cry of the nation's youth was
joined by adults, the year the cry became a shriek.
The year began with the Tet offensive in Vietnam, a battle
that seemed to change many Americans' minds in favor of
pulling out. It moved through Johnson's resignation speech
and a bombing halt, and ended with Richard Nixon as a
new President, Eugene McCarthy as a new hero for youth,
and former Alabama Gov. George Wallace as an already-
announced candidate for the 1972 campaign.
But in between, the nation's youth showed their power, not
only in anti-war protests, which became commonplace, but
also in pushing the man who was, for many of them, their
candidate, Sen. Eugene ("Clean Gene") McCarthy, the man
who wanted to fire Hoover and Rusk. McCarthy swept
through the New Hampshire primary without benefit of
Democratic sanction. And, despite his strenuous opposition
to Johnson's foreign policy, he lost by only 49 to 42 per
cent, a result looked upon as a victory for a relatively-
unknown senator against an incumbent President.
40
HUMPHREY - MUSKIE
It was shortly after the primary, on March 3 1 , that Johnson told a
national television audience he would neither seek nor accept the
nomination for another term. By the end of April, Vice President
Hubert Humphrey, Sen. Robert Kennedy, New York Gov. Nelson
Rockefeller, California Gov. Ronald Reagan, and Wallace had
joined McCarthy and Nixon in the race for the Presidency; stu-
dents at Columbia University had begun a new era in campus pro-
tests, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., had been murdered in Memphis,
Tenn. (resulting in several riots), and the U.S. and North Vietnam
had agreed to meet at Paris to begin peace negotiations.
Eugene ("Clean Gene") McCarthy
"I shall not seek, and I will not accept
March 31, 1968. (LBJ Library photo)
That's what I'd
do for a start!
I don't really believe
in Hawks, but Lyndon
locked me in this
thing, and . . .
would abolish all I'm going to win, Ipuf me down
so I really don't las 'Don't know';
have to make f ~
any promises
'Promises, Promises . . ." is cartoonist Oliphant's view of the early 1968 campaign situation. (Courtesy, the Denver Post)
41
The social and political turmoil continued. Robert Kennedy
ran a strong campaign in predictable Kennedy fashion un-
til, like his brother John, he was murdered. The nation
grieved, Edward Kennedy declined a vice presidential spot,
Hubert Humphrey moved in, Richard Nixon took the Re-
publican nomination, the Chicago police gained a national
reputation for brutality, Humphrey took the Democratic
nomination, and McCarthy withdrew. Then the official
campaign began.
Nixon ran on an undisclosed "plan" to end the Vietnam war
"honorably," and on a more easily-imagined design for
"law and order" in the streets. Humphrey was unable to
explain away his past loyalty to the now unpopular Johnson;
Wallace was unable to explain away his racist past; Mc-
Carthy die-hards were unable to bring off a write-in, and
the nation elected Richard M. Nixon, the political "has-
been" of 1960 to the Presidency with a popular vote about
equal to Humphrey's, but by 301 to 191 in the electoral
college.
1968 was the year the nation discovered Tiny Tim, the year
the sparkling Jacqueline Kennedy married Greek shipping
magnate Aristotle Onassis (a union at first traumatic to a
nation accustomed to Mrs. Kennedy's widowhood). It was
the year the less-sparkling Julie Nixon married the down-
right boring David Eisenhower, thereby ending for the
moment the spate of White House weddings that the John-
son girls had begun.
It was the year adults hopefully told each other that the
nation's youth had turned from drugs to gurus and con-
templation, and the year drug use rose sharply. It was the
year the children were starving in Biafra and no one seemed
to care; the year the Russians put a stop to the Czech
democratization program; the year the North Koreans seized
the US "reconnaissance" ship Pueblo and tweaked Amer-
ica's nose by holding the crew for 1 1 months while official
protests went unheeded.
It was the year Apollo 8 went around the moon, the year
astronaut Frank Borman stirred up professional athiest
Madalyn Murray O'Hair by reading Genesis from space,
the year Hue fell in Vietnam. It was a year of "blind vio-
lence" (Johnson), of "hard days ahead" (King), of the
"credibility gap," of cries for "peace now," of hijacked
airliners, of Resurrection City, and, for many, the year
when what McCarthy had described as "this sense of po-
litical helplessness" ended with a shout.
George C. Wallace (Courtesy, Boston Record American)
TINY TIM tiptoed through the tulips in 1968.
42
ROBERT F. KENNEDY lies wounded in the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles after winning the California primary. He died the next
day, June 6. 1968. (Los Angeles Times Photo)
y"9W!
YOUTHS HURL ROCKS at invading Russian tanks as Czech freedom
ended, August 20 to 21. 1968, (Courtesy, Toronto, Canada Globe and Mail)
GURUS OR DRUGS— a question for youth in 1968
43
Kids Say the Darndest Things
The best university that can be recommended to a man of
ideas is the gauntlet of the mobs.
— Emerson
It began at Berkeley and Columbia. It spread in what its
opponents called an atmosphere of appeasement and
coddling by college administrators. It became more de-
termined and, though it only barely touched Northeastern,
it deeply affected all of those for whom the university is
more than filled notebooks and final exams. It was, for some,
the reality of the "leaders of tomorrow" aphorism the
Establishment had been belching for years; and the burgeon-
ing of "student power" both frightened and angered an
Establishment that thought it was doing right.
There had always been authority crises, but it was not until
1966 that administrators at Michigan State University
handed names of left-wing students to the House Un-Ameri-
can Activities Committee; not until 1967 that faculty and
students at Catholic University of America staged a five-
day strike, that racial incidents broke out at several colleges,
that protests grew larger and larger until the public finally
realized that the days of panty raids and school dances
were over.
1968 was the big one: the year they closed Columbia down
over military research and university construction on ghetto
property, the year they forced the university president out,
and kicked off a wave of takeovers at colleges across the
nation over similar issues. It was the beginning of what
protestors hailed as "meaningful student participation" in
college administrations, the beginning of the end for "in
loco parentis."
Many felt administrators' concessions (co-ed dorms, student
advisory committees) didn't show an understanding of the
moral problem, the question of why black enrollment was
so low, why students had such little say in running their
colleges. When some administrators began comparing con-
cessions to "Munich," and used a "get tough" policy, the
uncommitted majority began to swing left, and the angry
voices grew louder.
HARVARD
BRANDEIS
They cried out at Brandeis in 1969, then at Har-
vard (where it couldn't happen), then elsewhere.
But what made matters worse at Harvard was the
entrance of the protestors' arch-enemy, the worst
of all possible outsiders to stride onto campus, the
cops.
"Pusey's Pigs" echoed through Harvard yard long
after the busloads of police and state troopers had
cleared protestors from University Hall. It echoed
again at Soldiers' Field when students met en
masse and voted for a six-day strike to express
their anger at Pusey's decision. And it echoed in
facuty lounges among respectable men for whom
the university was, and should have remained, a
place of free speech, an island for the intellect, a
place inviolate to outsiders.
PHOTOS BY EVERETT A. TATREAU AND
VINCENT ALABISO
COURTESY OF THE PATRIOT LEDGER
Brandeis President Morris Abram at occupied Ford Hall in January, 1969.
i m
Harvard graduation. 1969
1969: Anthem for
Doomed Youth
The last school year at Northeastern brought with it the
knowledge that the sanctuary of the University was over,
that even those who had ignored the world for five years
must now go into it, must pay attention to the economy and
taxes, must be concerned with poverty, civil rights, and the
direction society might take, must even be reduced to the
lesser concerns of social existence. It was the year the New
Generation realized that its often-stated design to change
society would be tempted by the Business as Usual philoso-
phy its parents preached.
1 969 was the year man landed on the moon, the year Ted
Kennedy drove off the Chappaquiddick bridge, the year
Sirhan Sirhan was sentenced to the gas chamber for killing
Robert Kennedy and James Earl Ray got 99 years for Dr.
Martin Luther King's murder. It was the year of the Abe
Fortas affair, of the Earl Douglas controversy, of the
Clement Haynesworth nomination (and rejection) for the
Supreme Court. It was the year the Johnson men condemned
Nixon's use of "patriotism" to force support for his war
policies, even though that tactic could be trailed to the
LB J ranch.
It was the year that Spiro Agnew struck out at television,
that famed anthropologist Margaret Mead told Congress
pot should be legalized, that the SDS split and its factions
turned to namecalling as the FBI kept investigating. It was
the year airplane hijacking became a national sport, the
year Nixon began pulling troops out of Vietnam and set up
the draft lottery, the year Ho Chi Minh died.
It was a time of music and joy at Woodstock, N.Y., where
a half million "hippies" gathered and newspapers couldn't
find even a fistfight to report; a time of national moratorium
when elder joined younger in the name of peace. It was
the year Howard Hughes was buying up Las Vegas real
estate, and the Aquarians noted he would have beachfront
property when California slipped into the sea; the year
campus takeovers came to Brandeis, Harvard, MIT and
even Northeastern, the year black studies came to many
campuses, the year racial violence declined instead of rising.
The generation that thought it right to only stand and wait
had been replaced by an activist generation that demanded
reform of social evils. But that latter generation waited, too:
waited for the end of war, for the end of racism, for the
end of the violence that pervaded our whole lives. Like
Prufrock, we "wept and fasted, wept and prayed," but it
was no longer a question of "Do I dare?" It was, rather,
whether human voices would wake us only to drown.
46
"All kinds of scrambled thoughts, all of them confused, some of them irrational, many of them which I cannot recall, and some of which I
would not have seriously entertained under normal circumstances went through my mind during this period. They were reflected in the various
inexplicable, inconsistent, and inconclusive things I said and did, including such questions as whether the girl might still be alivt. somewhere out
of that immediate area, whether some awful curse did actually hang over all the Kennedys . . ." — Edward M. Kennedy (Photo Courtesy,
Boston Record American)
/ ' , X,
the sound of silence
photo essay
hello darkness my old friend
i've come to talk with you again,
because a vision softly creeping,
left its seeds while i was sleeping
and the vision that was planted in my brain
still remains within the sounds of silence.
in restless dreams i walked alone,
narrow streets of cobblestone
'neath the halo of a street lamp
i turned my collar to the cold and damp
when my eyes were stabbed by the flash of a neon light
that split the night, and touched the sound of silence.
and in the naked light i saw
ten thousand people maybe more,
people talking without speaking,
people hearing without listening,
people writing songs that voices never share
and no one dares disturb the sound of silence.
"fools" said i, "you do not know
silence like a cancer grows,
hear my words that i might teach you,
take my arms that i might reach you."
but my words like silent raindrops fell
and echoed in the wells of silence.
and the people bowed and prayed
to the neon God they made,
and the sign flashed out its warning
in the words that it was forming.
and the sign said:
" the words of the prophets are written on
the subway walls and tenement halls"
and whispered in the sounds of silence.
From "The Sound of Silence"
By Paul Simon
e 1964 Charing Cross Music Inc.
Used With Permission of
The Publisher
49
hello darkness
attfe,--' .; ."''■/IT'-"
■ *^*-^i(»_v:
ii it |" •»
£*?*■=> -***„,>■
' ... /
'*%*****
-3B >*
rJ£
•V
FHfJ4yyfM.Hf| V-
*' 21
>r e£b 5 n
I
my old friend
#-«#-_
^5m* "* **
_^:«- - . #*•
™ .^J
It n
' ::*?*»
U^^
*h*>
' ' tei
ismMi
^«»i
^*»
i ve come
to talk
with you
again
52
because
a vision
softly
creeping
53
left its seeds
while i was
sleeping
and the vision that was planted
in my brain still remains . . .
55
within the
sounds
of silence
■'■mi
W,
56
in
restless
dreams
walked
alone
57
... man --■ •
'miiiiniHi
«V BH'm Miiii ■!■■■
* ~Eu TUlB *■■
Wl 4k in
"■■ Iftf aiijg
«# 15b si
1 *<u
"*~*»»>»i ft »«« ■» «li """^sum.
UlllllllllllH "
,, llllllll'I'HH
.rfUIIIHIIIII II"!1
'••■■■Mi
narrow
streets
of
cobble-
stone
tu> tit m tut «#
i l(JilU»lil-
tfunm
58
.. t rrti
'neath the
halo of
a street-
lamp
I
>l«i«
. % - *"^^^
i turned my
collar to
the cold
and damp
when my eyes were stabbed
by the flash of a neon light
60
i
i
■
■
a
T
A
P
! •
'2
•
■
II
2
Wr "^KL *■" *"
III
1
If
— • a
Ljfej
1^22 ^
■
SSBBT
4.*""
Ota 1212 M |
£5ft ~ — ^J
..
m
that
split
the
night,
and
touched
the
sound
°f
silence
■■ s*s
ijjgjj
■ I
1 1 SB
■
■i
M
v •
and in the naked light i saw
10,000 people, maybe more
people
talking
without
speaking
people hearing
66
without listening
67
people writing songs
that voices never share
68
and no one
dares
disturb
the
sound
of
silence
69
"fools" said i, "you do not know
silence like a cancer grows"
*
'JIM
%•." X'A.
• • • • •:
• *•••••
• ••••••
• • • • • •_• '
• • •
• • •
* • • #
• • » • •
• • • •
• • • • • •
• ••••••
• • • • • •
• . .WW.*
.%■ . .v.wv.
• • • .•••••••
• • •••••• • n
• ••••• iO
#••••• • • ji
• • • • • •_• •
• • • • • • • • • lU t
• • %%%v .^:>,
• • . • • • • • our
• we ■ ^~* •••••• • • • • •JCM
70
"hear my words
that i might
teach you
71
'Hake
my
arms
that
i might
reach
you
***J?s
f
#-1
•m
%*!*• *
MfV
LT
q000&HI&*'
j0»» !»■«•■" ' ■•-:■< »
72
i
my
words
and echoed
74
in the wells of silence
75
and the people bowed and prayed
to the neon God they made
and the sign flashed out
its warning
in the words that it was forming
76
and the sign said:
"the words of the prophets
are written on the subway walls
m MMM* i
wew* I
AN
VICT1D
DTI
and
tenement
halls'
effective JXN. 1
77
>♦>. *i6*«" ^ijum*.,!*-
and whispered in
the sounds of silence
78
tired of the
same old grind?
#'J**#*
79
■■■■■■■■■■I
.,#rifiS*»..'
-sss^saSi
Violence spoken here
These are the glory boys, the guts and glory boys who
give up society, studies, and life for the glumness of dark
Fall afternoons when they hit each other. These men are
protected by pads. People drool on Saturday afternoons
when they gather in the glory. Middle-aged men wince
with the crunching sound and crispness of youth. Old men
are amazed, wondering what ever happened to their legs.
Why did the muscles tighten? I can still remember racing
60 yards with an amazing interception against Colby one
rainy September in 1933, they say. During the week, North-
eastern football men, circa 1970, will duplicate what has
happened for years. They will run without noticing shin
splints developing. Breathing will not be so easy with a
vertigo stomach. Some, like captain Ken Orcutt, will feel
the pain during the game. For them, it is natural.
81
Hail to thee,
blythe spirit . . .
The coach is like
a master sergeant,
drilling, pushing,
driving his men —
But he is, too,
like a father,
like a general,
a leader who
finds a new way
to fight the battle
when the odds
seem too great —
a motivating force
that keeps the team
together,
that keeps spirits up.
Morale is a major
part of winning.
82
1968 Football
NU
22
C.W. Post
28
NU
42
Bridgeport
19
NU
36
Colby
8
NU
30
AIC
13
NU
10
Springfield
7
NU
3
UNH
26
NU
0
East. Michigan
41
NU
20
Cortland
17
NU
41
Temple
26
85
NU Field Goal
With Enraged Alumni
On Our Right . . .
86
87
Hockey
What could be on a hockey player's mind? Not helmets,
because they are uncomfortable, sweaty, and inhibit the
clash of bodies smashing at many miles per hour. How can
a person love something without trying to destroy it? For
them, a broken tooth is only a notch for the stick, it just
means they tried harder, and that's worth everything.
Something's happening here, you say when watching the
mortal combat on ice, but what it is ain't exactly clear.
There's a man with a stick over there, telling me I got to
beware. Stop! What's that sound, only goals ringing round.
Scars and sticks and reams of pain, the aching, paining
way you feel. That's for what it's worth.
A dark wind blowing in from my future
Stick
V^j Fight
Our own Dave Poile
1968-69 Hockey
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
NU
4
Harvard
8
1
Yale
5
4
Bowdoin
3
4
Providence
5
5
RPI
4
2
Brown
7
1
BU
9
4
Clarkson
6
2
Princeton
1
1
Colby
6
1
Vermont
3
1
Colgate
2
4
New Hampshire
7
6
Dartmouth
4
1
Army
5
6
AIC
3
2
Boston College
10
4
Harvard
8
3
Providence
7
3
Boston College
6
3
BU
11
0
New Hampshire
3
6
Merrimack (ot)
5
89
Up against the Ivy Wall
*
Battling Brown
Raising
(Terry)
Cain
A man's reach should exceed his grasp
Joe Sarno is one of those little wingers in Northeastern hockey history that nobody
ever heard of. He's also a scrapper who brought NU a few moments of glory in the
continuing dismal seasons against faster, bigger, stronger, and better opponents.
Even wearing glasses, he was always the fist in the crease looking for a centering
pass, or along the boards, centering the pass. Little Joe was average, but his desire
stood above his ability, making him a man for NU's winter.
92
93
Basketball
1968-69 Basketball
NU
77
St. Anselm's
67
NU
86
Maine (2ot)
81
NU
60
Holy Cross
67
NU
73
AIC
72
NU
79
WPI
57
NU
70
Marietta
61
NU
80
Vermont
62
NU
56
Cent. Conn.
66
NU
68
Assumption (ot)
67
NU
72
New Hampshire
75
NU
87
Colby
56
NU
87
Bates
52
NU
75
BU
70
NU
68
UMass
64
NU
53
Dickinson
57
NU
69
Boston College
80
NU
72
C.W. Post
58
NU
86
Tufts
74
NU
79
MIT (Colonial)
56
NU
66
BU
64
NU
73
Springfield
64
Record :
16 and 5
94
95
Overall, Northeastern had a good season as far as winter sports went. After a tender three wins and
six losses for the football team, sports fans were looking for one winter sport to shine. Unfortunately, it
never really happened.
The hockey team under the direction of Coach Jim
Bell had the cards stacked against it almost from the start
of the season. Only eight lettermen were returning from
the 1968-69 squad which had posted a 7 and 16 record.
In addition, the number two and three scorers from the
previous season were scholastically ineligible.
Captain Dave Poile, center, compiled 37 goals and
eight assists for 45 points, while his wings, Crawford Bell
and Terry Cain, posted 29 and 22 points respectively. Help
also was received from seniors Dean Andersen, Jim
Hampe, Tom Daniels, Kevin Delaney and John Joyce.
And all to a lost cause. Three wins and 20 losses.
Both games at the Boston Arena Christmas Tourney
were lost to BU and Michigan State, but at the Beanpot
was a little sweeter, having taken AIC 5 to 4 in overtime.
Unfortunately, Harvard defeated the Northeastern stick-
men by the same score at the Beanpot — also in overtime.
The men in the net looked good, all things considered.
Northeastern simply was outshot; opponent's shots on
goal 1,045, to NU's 690. Dan Eberly was able to turn
back 759 out of 869, while his partner in the nets, John
Burke, who took less of a barrage, returned 131 of 159.
It felt good to take Army 7 to 4.
If Northeastern had a spectator sport at all this year,
it was basketball. Coach Dick Dukeshire's men managed
to capture a 14 and 8 overall season record.
The loss of two big men in the 68-69 season didn't
hamper Dukeshire and his hoop men who were able to
dump such Big Name Schools as Brown, Bates, Tufts, and
BU as well as Brandeis and MIT in the Colonial Tourney.
The 78-76 loss to Holy Cross was a heartbreaker. In
all, Northeastern deserved its winning season, outscoring
opponents 79 to 75 and outrebounding them 47 to 39
per game. That's what it takes to win a basketball game;
control of the ball and putting the ball through the hoop.
Jack Maheras and Jim Moxley along with Bill Moore
managed to account for about 42.4 points per game. (The
statistics do not reflect the outcome of the Colonial Tour-
nament.)
Backing up the three M's were underclassmen and re-
turning players Kevin Shea, Fran Blais, Jack Niven and
Paul Swett. Help also came from seniors Jeff Gallahue
and Stan Fiumara.
Next year should look promising for Dukeshire with so
many returning, experienced players.
Indoor Track was another winning sport. Out of 10
dual meets. Northeastern came away with 8 wins, losing
only to St. John's and Harvard. In addition, Northeastern
placed third at the Greater Boston Championships at
Harvard coming in behind the perennial foes Harvard and
BC. At the New Englands meet at the University of Con-
necticut, NU placed second to U. Conn., losing its New
Englands title won in 1969.
TRACK
N.U.
Team Opponent
65
BROWN 44
53
ST. JOHN'S 56
46
HARVARD 71
58
U.N.H. 46
55
DARTMOUTH 54
64
B.U. 39
77
HOLY CROSS 27
58
U. MASS 46
66
U.R.I. 38
59
B.C. 45
96
It usually begins early Saturday morning. It's
cold, and frost is perched on the ground, where
trees stand shivering in a naked row. You're 11,
with sneakers hidden by a wrapped white towel.
Bounding into the gymnasium, you're completely
oblivious of the hidden terrors a colder world
has outside. The only world you know has hard-
wood, steel rims, and a white net. What else could
there be to live for? Two hours of running, jump-
ing, faking, twisting, and turning with other half-
naked bodies in a sweatbox gym has just con-
vinced you that without basketball life would be
as the cold as the weather.
97
99
■fti* -
The sounds of crew are truly silent. What else besides solitude could make a man rush through water in a shell at 5 a.m.?
Does the murky dawn bother men whose conversation is with water sloshing gently — or churning deadly whitecaps. The only
glamour for crewmen is a patted back, a good dunking in water cold enough to chill men's minds. Like all sports, crew ex-
emplifies its only ideal, the pursuit by man for an inner excellence strong enough to destroy the gnawing horror of reality
eating away his flesh.
, ..gHii'W ' »"«>
It*
•4
mm
if
.♦.•JJB^"
102
A
103
104
*
fi
106
-* **
This sporting life is killing me. Why do we not hear the
glamorous roar of crowds urging men to kill themselves
for the pleasure of non-participants? The athlete is a
separate creature, turning away from frenetic rushes into
crowds. He wants a lonely world, seeking only the satis-
faction of a great performance. Inside, beneath the strained
heart and limbs, he knows there is a great moment wait-
ing. And though there be thousands of people to see it,
only he will understand how it was built.
*£ 1
mm
j
N», ^TM
1
JSl
1 l
Jwf
W^ ^
\^P^
i' A
• ■
[ - '- t
« -
1mm :: <ik
:=£J
^L
'«
$?
Small Beginnings Hatched A Giant University
As each student flipped over the colorful post-
card which acknowledged the university's receipt
of his admissions application five years ago, he
viewed what was to be the end result of North-
eastern's Diamond Anniversary Development Pro-
gram as of 1973.
Along with the admissions message on the back
of the postcard, the student was told that the
world's largest co-operative plan university would
double its academic facilities and nearly triple the
size of its faculty under this $40 million program.
Even then, in 1965, the artist's conception of
Northeastern's expansion essentially was dead on
the drawing boards.
The campus pictured above would never be
realized in time, because of the indecision of the
Massachusetts Turnpike Authority as to the lo-
cation of the long-delayed and hotly-debated in-
ner belt.
Yet, the university, in the past five years has
gone ahead with as much of the program as possi-
ble.
In a quest for academic excellence, Northeast-
ern, through its Diamond Anniversary Program,
has expanded its physical facilities to provide the
framework, grey-glazed brick and mortar as it
may be, necessary to bring such universal educa-
tional ideals to their full potential.
The seeds of this development program first
were planted in 1961 when the university an-
nounced its plan for the building schedule to co-
incide with the 75th anniversary of its founding
—1973.
The year was 1898 when the law school first
opened its doors as part of the YMCA's Evening
Institute classroom program. This was Northeast-
ern's official beginning, yet at the time, no one
knew or dreamed such humble beginnings would
blossom into a university — the largest private uni-
versity in the nation.
The course itself was offered four nights a week,
one hour a night, for a total of 200 credits, and
was taught by a law faculty of five — three profes-
sors from Harvard, and two from Boston Uni-
versity, the only two law schools in the area at
the time. Tuition was $30, including a $5 mem-
bership fee in the YMCA. On Oct. 3, 1898, North-
eastern's history began as one of the only three
area schools preparing students for the state bar.
112
ON A PLOT OF GROUND which now defines Northeastern University was once a baseball field. The first World Series
(above) gets under way in 1903 on the university site. The infield, (upper right) probably is now the parking lot. In that
first series, the Boston Americans won the world title by defeating the Pittsburg Pirates Nationals. Below, an aerial photo
a couple of decades later shows plans for the new University. (1.) Other areas shown are the university's laboratory build-
ing (2), the educational building of the Boston YMCA occupied by the university (4), and the assessor's plan for the
university's first building, Richard's Hall (7).
113
In 1902, the law school graduated its first class, a total
of 21 students. In 1904, the program was incorporated
into the school of law with the power of granting the LL.B.
degree in law. Since that time, Northeastern University has
developed rapidly.
Co-operative education was initiated into the Boston
area in 1909 — three years after the University of Cin-
cinnati set the precedent of co-op learning in an academic
setting. At that time, the YMCA's Evening Institute offered
a four-year program in engineering that consisted of alter-
nating single weeks of classroom study with practical job
experience.
In 1916, Northeastern College was established, with
the power of granting bachelor's degrees in engineering
coming in 1920. Two years later, the college was renamed
Northeastern University. That same year, the College of
Business Administration was established with the power
to grant A.B. and B.S. degrees.
In 1929, the University made its first purchase of land
on Huntington Avenue, and the following year also pur-
chased Huntington Field in Brookline, which recently
was renamed the Edward Snow Parson's field in honor of
the University's first athletic director.
By 1937, the College of Liberal Arts was established
with degree granting power. The Northeastern University
Corporation was begun and the Academy was organized.
It wasn't until 1938, however, that its first building,
Richard's Hall, right, was completed on Huntington Ave-
nue.
Below, an aerial photo shows completed Richard's
Hall (1.), the YMCA, which still was being used (2.) the
laboratory (3), the oval track (4) and parking lots (5).
^i.:WrfcR'3,'Jfc
114
Above, aerial view of the campus,
circa 1944, shows the addition of
a new science building next to the
YMCA building.
Left, an artist conception shows
the new university library as en-
visioned in 1945. The final location
of the library was made quite late,
and it eventually went up next to
the YMCA building, facing Rich-
ard's Hall.
115
ONLY AN ARTIST'S CONCEPTION— The pictures on these pages are
simply artist's ideas of what the plans for the Northeastern University
Quadrangle once called for. Fortunately, the obelisk-quad was aban-
doned. Top left is a cross section of university as seen from the rear.
Left is what the quadrangle would have looked like from Hungtington
Avenue. At the time these plans were being made, Richard's Hall was
the only building in existence.
117
Northeastern now has more than
30 completed buildings on its
sprawling 47-acre campus.
Before the building program was
announced, university buildings in-
cluded Richards Hall, Science Hall,
Carl Stephens Ell Student Center
(above), Robert Gray Dodge Li-
brary, Godfrey Lowell Cabot Phys-
ical Education Center, Hayden Hall
and Churchill Graduate Center.
At right, Mugar Life Sciences
Building, first to be completed under
the construction program, receives
its name in concrete.
120
As the Mugar Life Sciences Building was being com-
pleted, work was begun on the addition to the Ell Student
Center and the new Frank Palmer Speare Hall dormitory
for women. Remodeling of the Henderson House (center
for continuing education in Weston), and the establishment
of a suburban campus on a former Nike site in Burlington
also got underway.
During the program's second phase, gifts were received
for the improvement of Ashland's Warren Center for
physical education and recreation, as well as the suburban
campuses and the colleges of Nursing and Pharmacy were
received.
Below, a look at Speare Hall.
Left, the completed addition to the Ell Student Center.
Ail aerial view of the Warren Center for physical edu-
cation and recreation, top, including Hayden Lodge, right,
is located about 30 miles from Boston's campus in Ash-
land. The center serves as a year-round outdoor laboratory
for students in the Boston Bouve College. The 150-acre
wooded estate is bordered on one side by a large lake.
There are facilities for conferences, special education in
arts and crafts as well as sports. The site was dedicated
officially in May, 1967.
The Burlington Campus, below, established in 1964
on a 15-acre tract, which formerly was a Nike site, con-
sists of a modern classroom-office building as well as a
library and bookstore.
The complex supports about 300 commuter freshmen
each year. Programs also are offered to adults and gradu-
ate students. In Burlington, students don't seem to com-
plain about parking problems.
« f
■ illllHlllll Igl
i"~.n j,
In 1965, which for the Class of 1970 was
freshman year, construction began on the Mary
Gass Robinson Hall, Top, Speare Hall and the
physical-electrical engineering research building.
In November of that year, the Ell Student Center,
complete with "modern" cafeteria, officially was
dedicated.
A year later, the Robinson Hall or the so-called
"nursing building" was completed, just two years
after Northeastern launched its unique co-opera-
tive College of Nursing.
Five other buildings named that year were Stet-
son Hall, Churchill Hall, Light Hall, Smith Hall.
White Hall and Melvin Hall.
Also in 1966, the university acquired 20 acres
at East Point, Nahant which would become the
beginning of a Marine Science Research Institute.
In 1 967, heavy machinery moved onto Forsyth
Street, marking the beginning of Bouve College.
And, commuters lost another parking lot, above.
Also begun that year was the swimming pool
and chemistry building.
123
Barletta Natorium, known to most as the
"NU swimming pool," under construction.
124
The Edwards Marine Science Laboratory, top, located at East Point, Nahant, is used during the summer for the teaching
of four graduate courses in Marine biology. A dormitory housing 20 graduate students and four small cottages for visiting
investigators is planned. All colleges in the area use facilities for field work in ecology and marine ecology.
Below, Edward "Putty" Parsons views a placque which dedicates the athletic field in Brookline to him.
Bottom, a view of Stetson Hall.
Progress on the development program continued
in 1 968 as we entered that year of limbo as mid-
dlers. Ground was broken for the $2.3 million
building which now housed the school of law and
provides headquarters for the College of Crim-
inal Justice. It is named the Asa S. Knowles Build-
ing, in honor of the current president of the uni-
versity.
The school of law which began the university's
history in 1898 was reopened officially in Septem-
ber, 1968 as a four-year college on the co-op plan
— the nation's first co-op law school.
In October, 1968, the Charles and Estelle
Dockser Hall, which houses Bouve facilities, was
dedicated.
Early in the senior year, the Barletta Natato-
rium, or the swimming pool, was completed.
On the next page is the proposed 16-story, $6.3
million library scheduled for completion in 1973.
The bottom picture shows the amount of park-
ing spaces which will be taken for the project.
The Diamond Anniversary Development plan
has expanded the campus tremendously during the
past five years, and although the architect's plans
of 10 years ago will not thoroughly materialize,
much has been accomplished.
126
Northeastern: Another View
I WENT To
|C^9\? Nil The
'Wl Co-op
School
THAN
X.
collected
TOLLS
ON THE
Turnpike
POR, THE NO
3 ROOM OS
keepsk
CLEAN I NO
THE
JOB WAS
AT FIL6NE%5
snoe ^>epr
n\Y BE'bT
Running-
U/^WN&TON
ELEVATOR
N0O> THAT
I HP\ve
9Rp>D«Jf\TeO
X AIY\
QOIN9 TO
eecom£
Co-op
COORDINATOR
Mote: each 3oB (S an actual co-op *sai9NmeNT.
128
"I was a typical apathetic
Northeastern student . . ."
JAMES L. PROST, a political science major, was a "typical
apathetic Northeastern student" until the night of the Haya-
kawa riot. He saw a policeman "mercilessly beat" a student,
yelled at him to stop, and was himself grabbed as a "rock
thrower."
130
131
134
■\""^JI
p^jfl
Wk
<J?
I^A
7f*; \
, jgj|
mm
■*PH$r
135
Groovin'
136
TORM
PC COLLEGE &£«,*£&&
▼*
137
A day at the Common
,*_
138
ATTENTION ALL PEACE MARCHERS:
SViMTitih*. Ui's. fntilors.
o.j.nus anil thviv ag«'iit* and <iii|»< s - — -
Just By Staying Out of It!
- I 111' I llll.ll v
THE WEATHER
Clear-Cold
iu, l r..£.
MANCHESTER *§Lffe& UNION LEADER
*]rwe is nofrWng so powerful os frufn"
-oamu WEasrar
CITY
EDITION
iorik yu« _ numi[« i7i _. s» pagis
MORE THAN 61,000 COPIES . . . AND GROWING!
MANCMCSTtR in M i UNION UAOEIt -W.<friri<l<.», 0<tobr, IS. 1«6°. Telephone 6JS 5432 f P IC t T .VELVt CtNTS
AMERICAjJore/tj>r/ea™/£/Y%
Iss^T^**
he Manchester Union Leader proudly displays its answer to the Vietnam War Moratorium
•m :*5> »•■
TORIUM DENOUNCED
Hanoi's
Little Helpers
L J. Boulanger Bridge Condition
Nominated For Reported Critical
Police Board »'><•-
a.siriBi) ■.., »a
, ■ ■ ■ . ■ .*
: . ■
W. »ov.!d, I,...
'« IK. >»»"
,i ih... ntwiliua 10 |l»«n. mil
,.i (hem m hran if tt» CaamaahU »t>r« to
it. itv» thi* ceuotr. Th* hr.t p.npl. tK. Com*
<a»<«< Inn .l.m.n.t.d m aatieai iwh ><
wrlw.lov.fc i*. PoLod. Hu.t..v .nd (titer »«•
on* tk«y K.v. **:.'i* S.v. b.on the '>.*(*'*
,.«h»r. To. Communi.l. fcjur, it th.y w.r«
Mba >«tk to march FOR than taaj an
ompM.lt aaraKafcla. So Oatt f-n'- an aa-
n.di.t.W r.movnd from th. *r.n* by *.mou»
Hriadr m*tkod« of .».ewl«.ri
STITIDITY
tint 1*1 vl
: ■ l|
. *[!r-novr
: t» >>r ia> d k n
■ —~ — -
tad./. ChuckL
«r((i*d to pa* ■■'-■:■.'
mi} v, tfark <ir bum still b*
. ■ ■ ■.■■■■
■■■■.■
EtM brittg* can N
■,.■■-'.
■■ >. ■: .,■:■■■ nil ■
■! r&rattofi
J ■-■, ■. ■ ■.<<-. ■ « ;: be
■■■■■■■-'■■
■■■-..
■
Student Throng Groups Rally to Back
Arrives Here US Policy Against Foes
For Parade
■ ' ■
thH .if'* ••;
ej (he . rtttwtf. \ etcrai
Bl ( IROI, MORRIS) ^
■■-.'■■
..■.;■ . ■ ■■ ■ ■ ■■
v ho b|»Ic<
rb, ■
*■•■: ■' n
,
pt?r hour Moiottets «r<
.-,..■ to
. . ■ . .
■ *
■>..■- ti n
i The
. ,: ■ a
■ ■ .
m hr
URatCd at
rippfSlI
BRIDGE
\-L. 14
Mtv of N.v r .- . :■
moBti i
:,.,-, _. », r, . ■.;„ -. .! '■■ j. ■-
tn ittiie
... ■ . H
■:
!
l •■<■■ . ■■ ■
Demonstrations
Set Over U.S.
Soys Marchers 'Carry Flag of Hanoi'
Reagan Charges Peace Groups
Blacks Prevent
Shockley Talk
HANOVER - '-•-■
■ ' - ■
SANTA'S VILLAGE
m rat a-am wotfatAiwl
•oirrt J m'i*sOM. m m
Will Remain Open Until
tint ih# n*c <4 HUMn
f'intrfr« an> IwM to lb? nam* ef p^*'*- bttt
h*« kilVd fttmmt WWW *»f «tor nM| mf-n"
- n.M* He *:*« «(4 ttin
.-■..■.
■ . ■ ..■. ■ ■■
I ■ MURATOK1I M
..... ■ . ■ ■ .
Kff«^r» bj fuCTiRj nwmber>
to esubiiifl *» duloguw be
t*wn th* sHid- t-ts antl Dr
SHOCXtEY Plgt 33
Union tcodcr Indtx
(1^-tfV.t HI'ttl'lM*
PtlOTESn
Leaves of Grass
A child said What is the grass? fetching it to me with full hands,
How could I answer the child? I do not know what it is any more
than he.
— Walt Whitman
(Courtesy, Boston Record American)
"/ should much wish, like the Indian Vishnu to float about along
an infinite ocean cradled in the flower of the Lotus, and wake once
in a million years for a few minutes just to know that I was going
to sleep a million years more."
— Samuel Taylor Coleridge
141
THOUSANDS filled Boston Common for the 1969 Moratorium. (Courtesy, Boston Record American)
143
The University Education
. . . the education
which gives a man a
clear conscious view
of his own opinions and judgments,
a truth in developing them,
an eloquence in expressing them,
and a force in urging them.
it teaches him
to see things as they are,
to go right to the point,
to distangle a skein of thought,
to detect what is sophistical,
and to discard what is irrelevant"
— John Henry Newman
144
145
!
/*
fc^Pi
* 2*H
tTp-7^7
">*
o
155
156
%#mJi
157
mm
v \%,
\ >
Z>r4
w* lk.--^j0^jgjtl
/ w ^
164
166
/
2\ -«^
V.
167
168
$4 1 1
14 >#*/
Miss Regina Ryan, opposite page, top, won the honors as the Queen of the Military Ball, 1969. Below, Miss Louisa
Visconti, receives the crown as Queen of the Homecoming Festival. But, Northeastern beauty contests took a turn in the
winter when Everett Nau (the one wearing the tie) was overwhelmingly elected Winter Carnival Queen. Someone wearing a
wedding band appears to have a few questions to ask. Nau's escapade won him and the university international attention
and an appearance on "I've Got A Secret."
169
-tHe.
be held on
ThursSeptZ£>
"Po.smoMS/yAnftBlE
To be on "ti^
"inHm.15?." onijdoj
£|sc <wa,Ubk
'" V;. [52 K0
.the -tcpT[yC vO^C
getters uStrf be seated
Eg
\
^
"N
Jm
n
Jal
172
173
175
The Pecking Order
Student Union
177
Student Center Committee
Inter Class Council
Senior Week Committee
178
Huskey Key
Scabbard & Blade
pv * i&TAt r ^tcd
7^//7^ C7w&
AFCEA
Student Executive
Committee (Education)
179
Fraternizing
Inter-Fraternity Council
Phi Kappa Tau
180
Tau Epsilon Phi
U£$m &£> flippy #v:
r<3w Kappa Epsilon
Phi Kappa Tau
Gamma Phi Kappa
181
•p^
if * *.
rnTm^ip. .„ * >
P/z/ Sigma Kappa
Chi Epsilon Honor Society
Ro Pi Phi Professional Society
182 Delta Sigma Theta
Professional Society
Nu Epsilon Zeta
Phi Alpha Rho
Phi Beta Alpha
183
Phi Gamma Pi
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Zeta Beta Tau
Delta Chi
184
Chi Pi Epsilon
L
Lambda Delta Pi
Sigma Alpha Tau
Omega Sigma
tiM&mi. hJM*~rnm*«-:--~~-~~-i >— ~--- jWfcifalilJMKlBBB 1
mrum
Society of Women Engineers
185
Chinese Club
Journalism Society
Surf Club
Folk Club
1 If €L^ ■
(•
,gj| 3«
I
K%\7%
I 1
1
! * J
Civil Engineering
Institute of Electrical
and Electronic
Engineers
Institute of Electrical
and Electronic
Engineers
American Society Of
Mechanical Engineers
187
Business
Administration
American Society
of Chemical Engineers
Electrical Engineers
Electrical Engineers
American Institute
of Chemical Engineers
iffj^g?? ^^y,*;^pCK£0 ^ -r ,"«*£i
American Institute
Of Chemical Engineers
American Institute
Of Industrial Engineers
Chemical Engineering
Honor Society
189
Engineering Council
Joint Engineering
Council
Chemical Engineering
Chess Club
190
p«li
Mechanical Engineering
Honor Society
Alpha Pi Mu
Cauldron
The News and Spectrum wish to
express their apologies for not
showing up for pictures. They were
too busy putting out their own
propaganda
191
Symbol of a Subculture
The New Morality
'That is no country for old men."
— Yeats
Like the 1950s, the 60s had their character, their attitudes,
their issues. At the beginning of the decade, commentators
predicted the "sexy sixties" and the "decade of optimism"
ahead. They were right about the first part, at least in com-
parison with the fifties; but the second was made when Ken-
nedy's "new generation" held the White House, before the
Old Men with their old beliefs took over again.
In the fifties, the symbols of youth — the leather jackets, the
long slick hair, the Elvis Presley love songs — were simply
little side trips into the unorthodox to show that the teen-
ager was not yet ready to join the Establishment. The older
generation's complaint was only that rock 'n' roll was stupid,
not that authority had lost its grip on the young. But the
things the youth of the fifties saw as unorthodox — drinking,
sex, motorcycles, violent dances — had the stink of common-
ness to the children of the sixties.
They came with protest songs and miniskirts, placards and
peace symbols and paisley pants, demanding the right to
toplessness, to long hair, pot, peace and love. They came
with a moral voice that made the fifties seem naively
thoughtless, and with an affinity for the unorthodox that
made the former decade seem amateurish by comparison.
There were lightshows and lapel buttons, draft resistance
and drugs; there were flowers for cops, who had clubs for
kids; there were gurus and an existential sense of self-in-
others, and singers like Dylan and the Beatles for a sense
of others-in-self. But above all, there was a new sense of
freedom among the young, a sense of self-expression, a "do
your own thing" sense of identity, a pacifist philosophy that
abhorred violence, an indignation that was itself sometimes
violent.
193
And the change was so fast, that the gap was not merely
between generations, but between persons only a few years
apart in age, only a few miles apart in distance, only a few
political science courses away in education. Professors in
middle age agreed with students in their mid-teens, while
parents in their thirties could not talk to children who had
an adult sense of anguish at the injustices of a society they
would inherit and change, perhaps for the better.
The political and social apathy of the adults was more than
matched by the activism of the young; the blind patriotism
of those for whom the Domino Theory meant "win in Viet-
nam" was matched by the realities of their own dead sons.
Age thirty was the cutoff age between rebel and respect-
able citizen, at least in the opinion of those who hoped the
New Morality was just another version of goldfish swallow-
ing. But the heroes — Robert Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy,
Kenneth Galbraith, Benjamin Spock, Timothy Leary, Ed-
ward Kennedy — were past the thirty barrier. And even
those who predicted after each protest that the placard
carriers would soon join the Business as Usual generation
were sometimes uneasy that, somehow, the Establishment
would never be the same again.
195
CONFRONTATION
' __^_ (fur**"**** jj^%^,^
From October 8 to 11, 1969, the
Weathermen faction of the Students
for a Democratic Society invaded
Chicago for the first major New
Left confrontation with "Mayor Da-
ley's police" since the 1968 Demo-
cratic Convention.
They did some smashing, some ter-
rorizing, some rioting. They were
not supported by other SDS fac-
tions, but went forth looking for a
place to smash out the frustration of
their impotence to end Vietnam, to
end American imperialism, to help
the black man, to destroy the evils
of American capitalism.
They ran and smashed and yelled
slogans; the National Guard joined
the police, and the Weathermen
"Red Army" was beaten.
NU NEWS Editor-in-Chief Robert
Matorin was there. These are some
of his photos.
197
Dick Gregory: Notes on a troubled land.
Dick Gregory, comedian and philosopher, civil
rights activist and a self-styled "old fool" ready
to tell youth the secrets his generation used to fail
so miserably, has much to say to today's troubled
generation. Though his humor and idiom are
somewhat lost in print, we think these excerpts
from his "The Light Side, The Dark Side" album
are worth reading. The album itself is unques-
tionably worth hearing in its entirety.
The editors
. . . you young folks in
America today is probably
the most morally dedicated,
\Jfl I committed group of young
^Bl tJH I people that's ever lived in
this country, bar none. I
hope you don't have to de-
pend on these old right-
wing cracker-controlled
newspapers ... to find out
who you are, 'cause you'll
never learn. What these
newspapers say about you,
they say that you are hippie,
yippie, irresponsible, bearded, smelly kids, whatever that
means. And the question that comes to mind is, because
you have a beard why does that mean you have to stink?
They don't say nothin' about Abraham Lincoln. And he
didn't only have a beard, he was ugly, too.
You see, the average established newspaper in America is
really too immoral to even discuss you young people with
yourself. They've never been honest with you. The news-
papers in this country are so busy puttin' you down they've
never once reported that had it not been for you, LBJ
would probably still be the President today. You young
kids created an atmosphere where LBJ had to retire. Do
you know how strong that is? LBJ is probably the number
one tyrant to walk the face of the earth since Julius Caesar,
and you young kids sent him back to the ranch, and you
didn't fire one missile, one firebomb, or shoot one shot.
You just got out with a pure moral dedication, and he
understood how powerful that was . . .
. . . you know, it gets pretty embarrassing to me as I have
to go all over the country and speak with young people and
not only tell you that the fate and destiny of America de-
pends on you, not only do I have to say that you have to
solve the problems confrontin' America tonight, you have
to solve problems that you had nothin' to do with creating.
These problems confrontin' America today . . . were here
before you got here, but thanks to us old fools, they will
not be here when you leave. ... we have created a situation
for you youngsters that you have no choice but to solve
the problems.
We had a generation of us fools that crossed right ahead
of you (and) . . . not only did we not solve the problems
confrontin' America, but for the first time in the history of
America, we used up all the tricks. . . .
... I remember when I was a kid, my mother, my father,
the whole community taught me: "one day, you're going
to grow up, boy, and white man goin' to call you nigger,
and don't get mad, 'cause God don't like no ugly." And
198
sure enough, I grew up, and a cracker called me a nigger,
and I didn't get mad, cause God don't like no ugly. You
know, I got seven little black kids at home right now, and
me and my oF lady ain't teachin' em nothin' ....
On the National Credibility Gap
. . . the Establishment keeps lying to you twenty-four hours
a day. And then after you catch us, we say, "'well, there's
a generation gap." There's a moral gap. I stand here tonight
and I say, "two and two is seven," and when you react to it,
O say, "ah, well, it's just the generation gap." Ain't got
nothin' to do with age. Bertrand Russell is 98 years old
and can leave London, England and come to America and
be one of the youngest among us because he's going to
reach you from a high, ethical, moral standpoint. . . .
. . . And what's the number one lie we tell you young kids
today? We say, "the number one problem confrontin'
America today is the problem of air pollution." That's
what we tell you. The number one problem confrontin'
America today is the problem of moral pollution. This is
the most morally-polluted, degenerate, insane nation on
the face of this earth, bar none. And you youngsters have
the job of giving America her sanity back, you have the
job of makin' America the morally stable country that the
founding fathers meant for her to be. And I hope you don't
make the same mistake that all these right-wing crackers
make. They're so busy eulogizin' the country — "America
the beautiful" — eulogies are for dead things. And thanks
to you youngsters, America is not dead yet. ... I hope you
will go out and examine this country and find out where
the cancer is and cut it out. . . .
... the sad thing about this country, and 1 think the most
embarrassing thing is we are the only country on the face
of this earth that lies about what we're all about. Mao
Tse Tung don't pretend to be anything but a Communist
and a revolutionist. Them
fools over there in Moscow,
0j*~~ '■ 3r3fc| Russia, they don't pretend
k I to be anything else other
than some Communists. As
dirty and as sick as Hitler
was, he didn't pretend to
the world, he let the whole
world know he felt them
Nazis were superior to
everybody else on the face
of this earth. Them folks in
South Africa, they don't lie.
They let the whole world
know they don't like them
niggers. America's the only country that lies about what
she is. And that should embarrass you. Because no mat-
ter how dirty the rest of the world is, they will own up to
what they are. We say we're about one thing, but we do
altogether something else in this country. . . .
... I was tickled to death over what happened at the
Democratic Convention. 'Cause three days after the Dem-
ocratic Convention was over, a lot of you kids woke up.
Three days after the Democratic Convention was over,
the whole Establishment tried to convince you that you
did not see what you saw on television. They said it didn't
happen. They said the press created it. You know, if
Kosygin and the rest of them damn fool Russians in Mos-
cow was dealin' with the world as insane as America, you
. . . / hope that you will create a situation in America where America will
become as ashamed of injustices at home as she is afraid of Communism abroad. . . .
know, they could beat that Czechoslovakian rap. Just get
on worldwide television and say, "It didn't happen, y'all.
Yeah, you didn't see it." . . .
But them fools in Moscow, Russia made the same mistake
these old fools made in America. . . . they knew how the
old folks was goin' to react, but they never took into con-
sideration the reaction of you young kids. When them Rus-
sians moved those tanks into Czechoslovakia, they knew
them old folks was goin' to be scared, but they, they never
knew they'd see the day that young kids would run to
their tanks and put swastikas on the tanks. I guess it'd be
the same thing in America, if they plotted on bringin'
tanks into America — wake up Sunday mornin' and every
church's got a tank sittin' in front of it, and a loudspeaker
says, "anybody tries to go to church is goin' to get ma-
chinegunned to death." They'd know damn good and well
them old folks ain't about to go to church. But what they
wouldn't consider: that in America, young people that
ain't never been to church in their life would decide to go
Sunday mornin'.
That's why you keep the system upset. 15,000 hippies and
yippies came to Chicago to change a system and the whole
Establishment got up tight. ... it had nothin' to do with
what you kids was doin' there, didn't have nothin' to do
about tearin' up the town. . . . And to prove that, for the
last ten years every spring break, you white kids been
goin' to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, tearin' the whole town
up, and nobody gives a damn. They say, "Git drunk, boys
will be boys, ha, ha, ha." In Chicago, it was that you were
comin' to change the system, and the whole Establishment
got up tight. . . .
. . . that same television set that showed you the hippies
and yippies in Chicago, nine weeks after the Democratic
Convention was over, that same television set showed you
another crowd in the street that nobody got upset over.
'Course, they weren't "irresponsible kids," neither, and it
wasn't Chicago. You remember that mornin' in New York
City, 20,000 sick, slimy degenerates came out on Wall
Street to look at a broad's titties. Nobody got upset over
the titty-watchers. J. Edgar Hoover has yet to get on
television and proclaim that titty-watchin' is definitely
Communist-inspired.
What do you call 20,000 sick, slimy degenerate titty-
watchers? Extremists, left to right. And if sister Francine
is really sincere about not wanting to be watched in the
mornings, all she has to do is understand how these old
degenerates think. She should hold a press conference to-
night and say, "tomorrow mornin' at 11:33, I'm goin' to
get off that same subway wearin' one of the tightest sweat-
ers ever been worn in the history of the world." And I
guarantee you, tomorrow mornin' in New York City at
eight o'clock, there will be 300,000 of them sick degen-
erates waitin' on her. And when she emerges out of that
subway at 1 1 : 33 with that tight sweater on, if she sincere-
ly don't want to be watched, have two signs across her
bosom, one readin', "Free Huey Newton, Baby," and the
other one, "Bring the Boys Home from Vietnam." And I
guarantee you within two seconds' time, those 300,000
degits will be gone — back into their Madison Avenue of-
fices to finish participatin' in their anti-trust violations.
I say you youngsters got a big job.
You notice how today we try to make you youngsters
think there's never been such an irresponsible young kid
in the history of America. Well, it's not that we didn't do
things; we just never did things to change the system. See,
that's what makes you irresponsible. Bring tear gas out
and throw on you, and you just keep comin'. Call the
Army out, and you still don't behave. See, that's irre-
sponsible. Never supposed to ignore that gun. ... so we
hope you young kids understand why us old fools in this
country are so up tight. Now you youngsters want to tell
us in America, that morality will no longer means a Brooks
Brothers suit and a clean-shaven face and a haircut once
a week. You must be out of your mind. You tell us mo-
rality will no longer mean gettin' the latest fashions from
Paris and bathin' in Chanel No. 5, and havin' all the
abortions you want, and you're still Mrs. So-and-So. You
young kids are tryin' to tell us that morality will no longer
come from without, but will come from within. You young-
sters is tellin' us that we'll never be able to buy our morals
in this country no more. That's why we're so upset with
you . . .
Constitution or Capitalists
I do not advocate destroyin' the capitalistic system. I say
to you kids you got to work like hell to beat the capitalists
into their rightful position, and that is behind the United
States Constitution, and not in front of it. Because as long
as the capitalists are in front of the United States Consti-
tution, that means in America, we will always put em-
phasis on property rights and there will be no emphasis
on human rights. This country is not controlled by the
United States Constitution, this country do not function
under the democratic process. This country is controlled
and governed by the capitalists. . . .
... In a nation so insane we demand that you get a
prescription to get your medicine . . . you don't need a
prescription to get your gun.
Hell, I can't hit you in the
head with my pills and kill
you, nor can I injure you by
throwin' my cough syrup on
you. I'm not sayin' Amer-
icans shouldn't have guns.
The Constitution says all
Americans have a right to
bear arms. But Americans
have a right to get well, too.
And if this country's goin'
to make me go through
some changes to get my
medicine, then damn it, it
should make me go through some changes to get my
gun. . . .
. . . you better check out this system real quick. We live
in a country today that tells you eighteen-year-old boys,
"at 18 years old, you're old enough to go to war and die,
199
. . it's sad I have to sit here and admit to you . . . until you make this country
peep up through the muzzle of a gun, she's goin to keep you a nigger . . .
but you're not old enough to vote." Any of you go along
with that, maybe death is what you need. I meet so many
young folks that say to me, "If I got to go to war at 18,
I want the right to vote at 18." Don't be no damn fool. If
you got to die at eighteen, you better fight to get the right
to vote at seventeen. . . .
. . . You want the right to vote at 17 years old? You can
get that. Don't be down here marchin', carryin' no flags,
singin' all them old tunes. You want the right to vote at
17 years old, you organize across this country and after
you get young folks organized, you go to the record in-
dustry and you tell them if they don't get to Washington,
D.C., and lobby and within two months' time get a bill
pushed through that says 17-year-olders can vote, you're
goin' to call for a nationwide boycott on buyin' phono-
graph records for two years. What do you think would
happen? Before they'd sit back and let you wipe out
a multibillion-dollar-a-year
industry, they'd let 16-year-
olders vote. . . . You got a
big job of movin' the capi-
talists behind the United
States Constitution, because
the capitalists have demon-
strated time and time again
they have a passionate
disrespect for human
rights. . . .
. . . you got to ask a lot of
questions. And one question
you've got to ask loud and
clear is a simple question.
That question is: // democ-
racy is as good as we tell
you it is, then why in the
hell are we runnin' all over the world try in' to ram it
down people's throat with a gun? And the day you young-
sters work to make this democracy work right for the first
time, that's the day we can bring the guns home, because
you see, anything good, you don't have to force on people.
They will steal it.
... I hope you youngsters, as you work to change the
system, you will spend a lot of energy to change the edu-
cational establishment, for the first time, make 'em live
up to their name, educate. 'Cause the average school in
America do not know how to educate, they been too busy
indoctrinatin', and there's a difference . . .
... If you took a survey of all the colleges in America
and took the names of all the people on the board of
directors and looked 'em up and did research on 'em,
you'd find out that 98 per cent of them cats are causin'
all the problems on the face of this earth today. And the
only thing that qualified them to be on the board of di-
rectors was because they made some money. Nobody even
asked 'em how they made it. They don't know nothin'
about education, and Lord knows, they don't know nothin'
about you kids . . .
On Black Attitudes
. . . Few people seem to understand what the black stu-
dents are talkin' about. Few people seem to understand
what black folks is talkin' about in this country. . . . White
folks is real up tight thinkin' we dislike you. You're so
damn insignificant, we ain't got the time to dislike you.
. . . We don't dislike you: we hate your stinkin' white
racist institution. That's what we dislike and we're very
up tight with you because you're responsible for it . . .
. . . Let me give you (an) example. If you came by my
house and we was good friends and you brought your
little daughter with you and my dog attacked your daugh-
ter, who you goin' to sue, my dog or me? Although I
didn't bite her, right? But I'm responsible for that dog.
You're responsible for this white racist system. Not that
you are racist: you're responsible for the system because
it's yours. . . .
. . . You know, I'd like you youngsters to do me a favor.
. . . First chance you get, go by the library and copy down
the Declaration of Independence . . . (and) when the riot
season opens up again ... I'd like for you to run home
. . . and get your television set and put it in the middle of
the room, and turn on the evenin' news, 'cause they're
goin' to show them niggers riotin' and lootin' and sockin'
it to the town. ... At that point, run upstairs and get your
mom and daddy and bring 'em down and put 'em right
in front of the television set. Just let 'em look, look at the
niggers burn the town. Just listen to their reaction, you've
heard it before. Then when you've heard enough of it . . .
go up and turn the sound off the television . . . (and)
read your Declaration of Independence as loud as you can
read it, and maybe for the first time, them fools will under-
stand what they're lookin' at:
WE HOLD THESE TRUTHS TO BE SELF-EVIDENT,
THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL AND EN-
DOWED BY THE CREATOR WITH CERTAIN IN-
ALIENABLE RIGHTS, THAT WHEN THESE RIGHTS
ARE DESTROYED OVER LONG PERIODS OF TIME,
IT IS YOUR DUTY TO DESTROY OR ABOLISH
THAT GOVERNMENT.
... are you white folks really sick enough to believe you
can put this stuff in our neighborhood and we're not goin'
to read it and do what it says to? Are you white folks sick
enough to believe you can still draft niggers into your
army and send 'em down to Fort Benning, Georgia, and
teach 'em how to be guerrillas and send 'em to Vietnam,
killin' foreigners to liberate foreigners, and think they're
not goin' to come back to America and kill you to liberate
200
. . . we got enough sense to know we can't stop white folks in this country from insultin' us, and
we hope you get sense enough to know you can't stop us from reactin to your insults ever again . .
their mammy? Then you're sick and out of your mind.
. . . after you get that Declaration out of my community,
real quick, run and get that filthy white boy American
history book out of my ghetto. 'Cause let me tell you
somethin'. There's not a way in the world you can expect
niggers to behave and keep makin' us read your history.
Baby, your history tells me that from the time you landed
at the Plymouth Rock, you shot and murdered your way
all the way across to California. Are you serious? Do you
really think you can give me that and think I'm goin' to
behave?
. . . You know how insultin' it is when white folks in
America ask black folks to be nonviolent? . . . The only
country in the history of the world that's dropped a nu-
clear bomb on another human being is now askin' us to
behave? Every mornin' you go out and drop napalm on
Am,
women and kids and then you want us to behave? . . .
You own the mightiest army, the mightiest navy, the
mightiest air force, own all the police — state police, fed-
eral police, local police, sheriff's police, CIA, FBI — you
own all them guns, then come to us (we don't own
nothin'), and say, "Be nonviolent, boy." We say, "Yeah,
you go to hell."
. . . Did you ever stop to ask yourself how many people
on the face of this earth would be dead today if it were
not for blood plasma? Are you aware of the fact that a
black American by the name of Charlie Drew invented
blood plasma? . . . Are you also aware of the fact that
Charlie Drew bled to death in an Atlanta, Georgia hospital
waitin' room after an automobile accident 'cause they
didn't accept niggers? And you tell us education is our
problem? The man who had the educational knowledge,
the genius, and the wisdom to give blood plasma to the
world died from the lack of his own invention 'cause his
face was black, and education didn't have a damn thing
to do with it. . . .
0 1969 by Dick Gregory. Manufactured by Poppy Industries,
Inc.. New York, N.Y. No portion of this material may be re-
produced without permission from Mr. Gregory or his representa-
tive. Recorded uncensored at Southampton College. Southampton.
N.Y., March 6. 1969.
201
Pat Martin Photo
Northeastern News
VOL LI - No. 13
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
JANUARY 23, 1970
Hayakwa, Recruiters
Cause Campus Turmoil
— Judy Seykte
SPECIAL MEETING — Student Council Vice President Frank Gerry (71 Ed) (right)
raises a point at Tuesday's meeting at which members expressed desire to be included
In university negotiations concerning possible campus violence.
By MIKE DORFSMAN
Preparing for the demonstration
against General Electric recruiting,
the university administration will
go to court Monday seeking an in-
junction against violent protest.
But the Student Council, after a
joint emergency meeting Wednes-
day night voted to stop the injunc-
tion. The meeting was disturbed
when three Boston Police ap-
peared outside the meeting.
Yesterday afternoon, Council
President Bobert Weisman, Vice-
President Frank Gerry and Secre-
tary Mike Putnam met with the
university's executive committee.
Weisman presented Dr. Asa S.
Knowles with a statement explain-
ing why the council believes the
injunction should be stopped and
condemns Dr. Knowles for not
consulting the council as the elect-
ed student tepresentatives.
The statement concludes, "This
action (the injunction) has placed
the university in a position in
which the likelihood of violent
Council Rescinds Recruitment Vote
By LENNIE GAMACHE
The Student Council in a special
session voted to prohibit the Gen-
eral Electric Company from re-
cruiting on campus at this time, a
vote rescinding council's action
eight days previous.
The meeting, held in the ball-
room Wednesday night, was called
as a result of developments which
occurred this week, namely, the is-
suance of a restraining order by
the university without the consul-
tation of the Student Council.
Seven separate motions were
passed, four by large majorities
and the other three unanimously.
The major motion, passed 18 to 10,
demanded that the GE recruiter
be restricted from the campus next
week because the methods of con-
trolling violence were determined
by the university without student
consultation.
A morion condemning the force-
ful removal of nonviolent GE
union strikers from the campus,
which occurred earlier this week,
was passed unanimously in light of
provisions in the Student Bill of
Rights.
A second resolution unanimous-
ly approved, called for consultation
with council in respect to any ac-
tion concerning the use of Boston
or other non-campus police or
hired Boston police provided there
is time for such consultation.
A third resolution unanimously
approved, disassociates the use of
the executive board of the student
council and the student council's
name on the President Asa S.
Knowles Wednesday's message.
Council members felt the reference
to them in the president's remarks
were totally invalid.
Council considered the restrain-
ing order and any subsequent in-
junction to be invalid and non-
applicable to Northeastern stu-
dents on this campus.
They further charged Knowles
and his administrative assistants
with violating a resolution and pre-
cedent set in May of 1969 provid-
ing for joint consultation with the
Agenda Committee of the faculty
senate and the executive board of
the student council and the pres-
ident of the University.
The council also specifically de-
manded that the administration
not serve the injunction or re-
straining order.
The final motion passed cited
"flagrant and persistent violations
of the University Student Bill of
Bights." It also called for disasso-
ciation with the administration's
present policy toward injunctions
and restraining orders.
Finally, council called upon the
faculty and student body to join
in a condemnation of the adminis-
tration's irresponsible use of power
if the stated demands are not met.
President Knowles was presented
with the demands at a meeting
Thursday morning with the Execu-
tive Board of student council.
After Wednesday's meeting,
council president Bob Weisman
(70LA) said, "The basic concept of
these notions is that we want a
revocation of the restraining order,
after which the three sectors of the
university students, faculty, and
administration can meet and decide
what action should be taken."
confrontation may well now be
inevitable."
The council members believed
possible alternatives were closed
by not consulting the students.
Additionally, the administration's
action violated an agreement with
the Council which said council's
advice would be sought if prior
knowledge of a demonstration
were available.
The injunction prohibits John J.
Fahey, Bruce W. Hershfield, Fred-
da E. Wieder, Phyllis Broker, Nan-
cy E. Patten, Mark S. Alabaster
"and all persons acting with or in
participation with aforesaid de-
fendants," from entering, congre-
gating, occupying, assuming con-
trol and trespassing on parts of the
university when forbidden by an
addinistrator to do so.
The administration has already
retained Boston Police to work un-
der the jurisdiction of Northeast-
ern, but if the situation warrants
it, police, working under their own
leaders will be called.
The defendants named, Dean
MacDonald said, were chosen be-
cause they are members of Stu-
dents for a Democratic Society and
the University Committee Against
Racism. There was no known ef-
fort to name conservative group
members who might counter-
demonstrate.
The Student Council, concerned
about the possible violence, tem-
porarily rescinded its support of
GE recruitment at the special
meeting.
Knowles Backs Injunction
With Fac-Sen Resolution
NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY
Office of the President
January 21, 1970
To:
Members of the Northeastern Community
In a recent memorandum I reported to
the University Community that certain
young people, some of them identifiable
as Northeastern students, indicated their
opposition to recruitment by the Gen-
eral Electric Company scheduled for
later this month.
It now appears from recent news arti-
cles and handbills posted about the Uni-
versity that a threefold attack against
University activities has been planned
for January 27-29. As indicated in the
last issue of the Northeastern News, a
group calling themselves the Northeast-
ern Conspiracy is planning an action
program, as follows:
1. January 27, 28 — Against General
Electric Recruiting
2. January 29 — Against the College of
Criminal Justice and the Law En-
forcement Program at University
College
3. January 29 — Against Dr. Hayakawa,
a scheduled speaker in the Dis-
tinguished Speakers Series
A call to action printed in The Old Mole,
a radical student newspaper, and the
appearance of professionally prepared
handbills make clear that radical stu-
dents from the Greater Boston Com-
munity are being called to a "joint con-
spiracy" against activities scheduled at
Northeastern.
Last week when we realized the full
scope of the proposed radical attack on
the University and its legitimate pro
grams, we scheduled a number of con-
sultations with administrative officers of
the University and the University's Le-
gal Counsel. On Monday, January 19 a
joint meeting of the Faculty Senate
Agenda Committee and the Executive
(Continued on Page 3)
Special Edition
Northeastern News
VOL. Ll-No.15
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
FEBRUARY 3, 1970
Riots Follow Hayakawa's Speech
There were basically two incidents
Thursday night resulting in 31 arrests, 15
policemen and an undetermined number of
students injured, and S5000 damage to
Northeastern property.
The first incident, occurring during Dr.
S.I. Hayakawa's speech, began when
students hurled rocks, billiard balls and
bricks at the Ell Building. In some cases.
the objects struck members of the
detachment of off-duty, hired Boston
police assigned to augment the campus
security police.
The second phase, witnesses said, was
unprovoked and occurred after Dr.
Hayakawa's speech. Many students, in no
way connected with the earlier
demonstration, told the News of instances
where police officers beat students
indiscriminately.
The hired Boston Police called for
reinforcements after they cleared the
demonstrators from the quad shortly
before 10 p.m.. Dean Gilbert G.
MacDonald, vice-president of Student
Affairs, said the next morning.
The quad filled early Thursday night
with students waiting for admission to Dr.
Hayakawa's 8:30 p.m. speech. Because of
WRITTEN BY
News staffers Lenny
Gamache, Bill Ash forth and
Jay Colen
the rumors about forged tickets, the
Distinguished Speaker Series refused to
admit ticket holders unless they had a
Northeastern University ID card.
Dr. Hayakawa began his speech shortly
before 9 p.m., the delay resulting from the
extra security precautions.
But at 9:10 P.m., a rock thrown from
the midst of the 2,000 demonstrators
outside broke an Ell Building window
above the heads of policemen guarding the
building's entrances.
This initial action precipitated the
What Happened Outside
1—9 p.m. police clear quad for
first lime.
9:45 police clear quad again.
One group of demonstrators
run up Huntington Avenue
towards Massachusetts
Avenue.
2—10 p.m. Police clear subway
island: move down
Huntington.
3-10:15 p.m. police attack
students in parking lot and
push down Forsyth Street.
4-10:15 p.m. police begin first
of many attempts to clear
Opera Place.
5 — 10:45 p.m. police clear Opera
Place: start making busts on
Speare.
6—10:45 p.m. police begin push
down St. Stephens Street.
7-11 p.m. With crowds
dispersed, police continue
moving around, but are too
dispersed for further busts.
8-11:30 p.m. A group of
Weathermen and/or street
people move down Westland
Avenue breaking Shawmut
clearing of the EH Center steps. Police
asked students to leave the steps and when
their request was not heeded, they
proceeded to push people down the stairs.
Police set up a wall of defense at the
foot of the Ell and more rocks crashed
windows of the student center's doors to
cries of "Right on!".
One youth, about 16 years old, after
encouraging two friends to throw rocks,
urged them to "Go get some more."
The call went out to storm the Ell and
the police readied their clubs behind their
backs with their familiar elbow to elbow
stance.
A number of girls from the crowd
started a "Skipping" picket line which
balked at the line of police and then
mingled back into the crowd.
Close to 9:30 p.m. at the center of the
quad the chant of "Plainclothes Pig!" was
repeated over and over, and then "Get the
Pig'"
A plainclothes officer wearing a black
overcoat was pulled to the ground, beaten
and kicked by a few demonstrators. A
second plainclothesman was roughed up
but managed to stay on his feet.
A half dozen police moved to the scene
immediately, beat and poked the
(Continued on Page 8)
—Peter Gray
CONFRONT ATION-Students and police exchange words on the
quadrangle after S.I. Hayakawa's speech Thursday night. Other
confrontations during tl e night were less verbal and more physical.
Strike Receives Little Support
A feeling of apathy prevailed on
the quad yesterday at noon at the
suggestion of a student strike. Leaders
of the rally representing various
political opinions spoke out again on
what happened here Thursday night
and what the student body should do
about it. About 200 attended the
rally.
They issued a plea that no one
cooperate with the District Attorney
in their investigation of Thursday's
activities.
Some of the issues brought up
were abolition of ROTC and the
college of Criminal Justice, racism, the
co-op system, and student
administration problems. Finally, a
day of protest, possibly for today, was
generally agreed upon by a few of the
leaders, but was not wholeheartedly
accepted by the crowd.
The day of protest would not
necessarily mean a boycott of classes,
but a discussion of what occurred
Thursday on campus. The purpose of
the rally, they said, was to bring out
the truth and to educate the student
body.
Earlier, Dr. Asa S. Knowles issued
a statement from his office detailing
the events last week.
The statement said aggrieved
students could receive legal aid from
attorney Philip Boyd, in 139 Richards.
Dr. Knowles' statement said a faculty
member reported that the Weathermen
planned to visit Northeastern
Thursday armed with rocks. Dr.
Knowles said students close to SDS
confirmed the plans and added that
the Weathermen planned to beat up
Northeastern SDS members unless
they became more militant.
About excessive police action, Dr.
Knowles said: "Police called to the
scene from other sections of the city
may have had difficulty distinguishing
between innocent students and those
bent on destruction. Only a careful
investigation will reveal all the facts of
what happened in the streets adjacent
to the university."
He was asked for the names of
those facing charges from the
demonstration. the names of the
injured, both police and civilians, and
the police department's side of the
story.
Suffolk County Dist. Atty
Garrett H. Byrne announced Saturday
that his office will investigate the
incident which resulted in the injuries
of 28 policemen and an undetermined
number of students.
"Police officers are not second
class citizens," Byrne said this
weekend. "If they are attacked in the
performance of duty they have a right
to defend themselves. I will use every
means at my disposal to protect these
officers in quailing these student
riots."
Two members of Byrne's office
Jack I. Zalkind and Lawrence
Cameron are handling the
investigation.
Zalkind refused to discuss any
matters of the case with the News
referring to the canons of judicial
ethics. "I don't want to say anything
that might prejudice the case against
the defendants," he said.
He said he was unaware of press
statements in Monday morning's
Globe. "I don't know where it came
from." he said.
He repeated his refusal to
comment when asked about reports in
Saturday's newspapers saying the
district attorney was investigating why
police were not issued helmets and
who was responsible for throwing
rocks.
Capt. John Kreckler. of the police
superintendent's office, also refused to
discuss the case with the News
Monday morning.
"We prefer not to discuss it in
The Idea of a University
I in Oiko I e|jc« to "ffo* StucUrff
L-0»?«rh«n,»e p 04 fee
Tkw p»*<e«- u*n 34»l* u»»» a. projc*"t »f » 3»iUn
Rr1 y*u«l<m1 nte«<«4 ?•<■ cr«rf<t •."♦ K<a AtWoo).
Lik« 4Vnj»Vi#t#» #*t»l«n »4+ti« ph*io d.ifU^
TV\t S^»«Un* C «n.+e>- Ci«a,H« put » in*sfMin
U» 4« cl»»« 4V« b -Id,*.., btun, »f -H,f*.» «.»«(
fl» * tCf r«»«n H «.tivc • f +«.« f-41. «••*«•, t»lm*'t*f
*• frU»« •*** 3K4en+ C«n"»*T ■♦. a« «l<i<, *-»w«C«Xt
H« c»?«+«»i* ?•«■■ all of n«*1 u/««k.
1* nuki -Hmi tvt>ir«r*if^ * better ftAta- +# hyc
n*1*ntii h«,vc4» fi^Kt $«h»« I 4f*4k3 ; *»M.t <Uj»
The C«ffeeH««#«. iu.// /oje ower
K ZOO o" wh*«t -Ik* S-*»«***< CW<^ ia clo*cJ
next w#«tr b*ii ■♦*« t**«|*«4Wc •* "H»«W« *•»«*
wei»i/««iwt ($•« Mill c«*«** /«£ *•» j+Hj«nt,.
t« Wt.w» «k<i*f -ike'uU
«^»«%, •«•. »»• •»»•»« <vt ; -<. s^/.^ »/5i; «mmc ^<t«-»
(The poster was returned)
205
Love thy Neighbor
Come live with me and be my love,
And we will all the pleasures prove .
— Christopher Marlowe
206
Photos by
Steve Rosenfield
Pajama Games & other Indoor Sports
208
209
People
210
211
212
213
..,'
#. X $
214
■|» ,.,:■ W
215
216
217
The Generations
Photos by Steve Rosenfield
218
219
Northeastern, the Co-op School
Work your way through college at a job relevant to your
field. Graduate, and have two years' work experience to
recommend you. Get your degree without having to go
to class a "school year" at a time. Dodge the draft a
year longer than other college kids.
The co-op system at Northeastern offered many things,
including sometimes irrelevant jobs, sometimes coolie
wages, and sometimes, an absentee co-op coordinator.
But it also offered the chance to learn the realities of
a field that might have been glamorous only because of
ignorance. It offered the chance to see professionalism,
to experience it, perhaps even, to master it. For some
of us, it meant the difference between being a college
graduate and not being able to go; it gave the chance
to leave college a step ahead of the four-year graduate,
to leave an experienced professional instead of an inex-
perienced college kid.
It offered a job as an elevator operator and a toll col-
lector, but it also turned out lab technicians, newspaper
reporters, casualty claim representatives, legislative re-
search assistants and, in one case, an experienced editor
of a weekly newspaper.
For the radicals, co-op sometimes meant a haircut and
conformist clothes. It fostered apathy and ruined the
chance for school spirit, some said. But even for the
radicals, even for the social dissenters, co-op brought
the chance to learn about the establishment, the 'military-
industrial complex,' first hand. You cannot change what
you know nothing about.
BIO-RESEARCH INSTITUTE co-op students Suzanne Benoit
(left), Paul MacDonnell and Janice Crawford discuss a re-
search project with Institute Director Dr. Peter Bernfield.
A
220
AT BETH ISRAEL HOSPITAL . . .
THE CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER . . .
AND THE BOSTON POLICE CRIME LAB
221
In 1970, Northeastern is the largest cooperative institution
in the United States, with 9,000 students alternating be-
tween school and the 2,000 member firms employing
them. Most of the 4,500 co-op jobs are in Greater Boston,
but 25 per cent of them offer positions around the nation
and in several foreign countries.
Cooperative education began at the University of Cin-
cinnatti in 1906 when Herman Schneider set up a pro-
gram in the belief that education is not limited to the
classroom. Three years later, the Cooperative School of
Engineering of the Boston YMCA (later known as North-
eastern University) became the nation's second institu-
tion to offer co-op.
That year, eight engineering students alternated a week
of work with one of school over the four school years.
Today, students from eight colleges and the graduate
school participate in the nationally-recognized program.
JAMES HENDERSON, a physics major, tests a power control circuit
at the NASA Electronics Research Center.
PROGRAMMING THE GENERAL FOOD COMPUTER
is Andrew Sacks, a math major.
222
PETER SEREMET, a journalism major, as a reporter with the Hart-
ford C our ant, (Photo courtesy the Hartford Courant)
223
224
We wish to thank
the Department of
Cooperative Education
and the Northeastern
Press Bureau for their
help with this section.
The Editors
225
STRIKE!
On April 30, 1970, President Nixon announced that American troops in Vietnam were crossing the Viet-
namese border into Cambodia, a nation whose government had recently been overthrown in a coup. The
Cambodian government had granted no authority for such a move. Nixon told a national television audience
that his action was necessary to "buy time" for withdrawing American forces which were being attacked by
Vietcong guerrillas from their strongholds along the border.
What followed brought a new blot to the history of American dissent. Students participating in the national
student strike that began immediately to protest Nixon's action were beaten, threatened and killed. Nixon
called protesting students "bums" as National Guardsmen massacred four students at Kent State, Ohio. Two
more students were shot down at Jackson State, Miss., and six blacks were shot in the back and killed by
police in Augusta, Ga. In New York, construction workers under the aegis of patriotism beat and kicked
protestors as police looked the other way.
The strike seemed triggered by a list of grievances against Nixon as the "neo-Nazi" course some felt the
nation was taking. Members of Nixon's own cabinet spoke out against the Cambodian action; but student
protest went deeper. It demanded an end to the imprisonment of Black Panthers for "political" reasons and
an end to the kind of political repression that had been used against dissenters since the Vietnam War began.
At Northeastern, even the apathetic majority took part in the strike, perhaps because the faculty endorsed
it. It took more than two weeks for students to calm down enough for Pres. Knowles to announce (above
protests) that normality had returned. In the meantime, there were mass demonstrations and marches, a
Molotov cocktail thrown into the Greenleaf building, and most unbelievably, a mass attack by 150 club-
swinging Boston police on 300 students on Hemenway Street, an attack that included beatings of people
inside their homes and the senseless smashing of property.
Special investigations followed the attack, and though the Boston press largely ignored the students' charges
against the police, the New York Times and CBS did not. The university administration spent the last
three weeks of that Spring term doggedly insisting the strike was over. But for many, the spectre of revolution
seemed awfully close.
BEFORE THE HEMENWAY ATTACK
students had frolicked in the streets around
NU for three nights.
Shortly after midnight, May 1 1 , police noti-
fied strike marshals that residents of the
area had complained and that the street
would be cleared in 25 minutes.
At 12:40, the charge came as 150 riot-
equipped police ran five abreast and 20
deep down Hemenway Street yelling "Up
the Pig, here come the pigs" and "If you
think Kent State was bad, wait till tomorrow
night" in response to students' anti-war
chants.
After the first pass, the police regrouped,
and charged again, this time smashing win-
dows in homes and cars and clubbing by-
standers. They entered buildings after smash-
ing doors, clubbing residents (including a
blind student) and smashing furniture, in-
cluding that of an elderly German immi-
grant couple.
The NEWS expressed the feelings of many in
observing that "when uncontrolled, police
in this country are equal to the Nazi Ges-
tapo." At least three investigations were
launched in the wake of the attack.
Students frolic in Hemenway St. before the police attack (Mike Mui photo).
POLICE CHARGED down Hemenway Street toward a group of 300 students who had gathered to watch 30 non-students who sat in the
street. At least 20 persons were injured in the 2 '/2 -hour melee that followed. The left photo above was subpoenaed as evidence in the state
attorney general's investigation of the attack. ( Mike Mui photo)
SMASHED HEMENWAY DOORWAY.
Witnesses said police "went crazy" in "ter-
rorizing" the area. (Photo by Jean-Paul
Cayre)
The Strike: the people and the issues
-Russ Bell PROF. STEVE WORTH, a strike STATE HOUSE PROTEST, where some state official expressed sympathetic opposition
supporter. (Frank Moy photo) to Nixon's Cambodia invasion (Mike Mui photo)
HAMPT0Mfe
W
-Frank Moy
-Pat Martin
Pfe«?epelit2A
Trustees
*rv
•^ &~- ?
Lincoln C. Bateson F. Gregg Bemis
George R. Brown Louis W. Cabot Norman L. Cahners Richard P. Chapman Edward Dana
William R. Driver Carl S. Ell Byron K. Elliott William P. Ellison Robert Erikson
Frank L. Farwell Samuel A. Groves Donald B. Guy George Hansen Ernest Henderson III
Harold Hodgkinson Chandler Hovey Robert L. Johnson Henry C. Jones E. Douglas Kenna Jr.
230
Asa S. Knowles
James A. Morton
rv
i \
Frank L. Richardson
Donald W. Smith
Robert G. Stone
Stephen P. Mugar
Joseph Riesman
Farnham W. Smith
Earl H. Thomson
Lawrence H. Martin
Augustin H. Parker
Dwight P. Robinson Jr.
T
!2T
^
Russell B. Stearns
Chaplin Tyler
Harold A. Mock
Thomas Phillips
Robert E. Slater
Earl P. Stevenson
Robert H. Willis
231
Alvin C. Zises
Lincoln C. Bateson
Vice President
Business
Arthur E. Fitzgerald
Vice President
Faculty
232
Gilbert G. MacDonald
Vice President
Student Affairs
Daniel J. Roberts
Vice President
Finance
Faculty
Loring M. Thompson
Vice President
Planning
\
Kenneth G. Ryder
Vice President
Administration
Roy L. Wooldridge
Vice President
Co-op Education
233
..s
Catherine L. Allen
Dean
Boston-Bouve
Kenneth W. Ballou
Dean
University College
Geoffrey Crofts
Dean
Graduate School
Of Actuarial Science
James S. Hekimian
Dean
Business
234
Vv
Leroy C. Keagle
Dean
Pharmacy
Juanita Long
Dean
Nursing
Melvin Mark
Dean
Engineering
Frank E. Marsh Jr.
Dean
Education
235
Thomas J. O'Toole
Dean
Law
Gustav S. Rook
Dean
Lincoln College
Norman Rosenblatt
Acting Dean
Criminal Justice
Robert A. Shepard
Dean
Liberal Arts
236
■ *W~
'UN
James E. Gilbert
Associate Dean
Administration
William F. King
Associate Dean
Faculty
Alan A. Mackey
Associate Dean
Administration
Rudolph M. Morris
Associate Dean
Administration
237
Gilbert G. Garland
Dean
Admissions
John A. Curry
Associate Dean
Admissions
Thomas J. Cavanaugh
Assistant Dean
Education
Charles F. Haley
Assistant Dean
Education
238
Otis F. Cushman
Assistant Dean
Engineering
9 ^ v
George W. Hankinson
Assistant Dean
Engineering
Thomas E. Hulbert
Assistant Dean
Engineering
Donald H. MacKenzie
Associate Dean
Engineering
239
Alvah K. Borman
Assistant Dean
Co-op Education
Sidney Herman
Associate Dean
Liberal Arts
Robert H. Ketchum
Assistant Dean
Liberal Arts
Martin W. Essigman
Dean
Research
240
^^^^^p ^^^^
Edward G. Elliott
Assistant Dean
Research
Edith E. Emery
Associate Dean
Students
Charles W. Havice
Dean
Chapel
Christopher Kennedy
Dean
Students
241
Edward W. Robinson
Associate Dean
Students
Margaret L. Bishop
Assistant Dean
Students
Roland E. Lathem
Assistant Dean
Students
Thomas E. McMahon
Associate Dean
Co-op Education
242
Sidney F. Austin
Associate Dean
Co-op Education
Paul Pratt
Assistant Dean
& Director
Co-op Education
Charles F. Kitchin
Director
Student Activities
Thomas Sprague
Director
Press Bureau
243
Nursing Faculty
244
r
i
Nursing Faculty
'; \
245
History
246
Drama
Co-operative Education
249
Chemical Engineering
Mechanical Engineering
250
Industrial Engineering
Civil Engineering
251
Modern Languages
252
Modern Languages
253
254
Earth Science
llllllilillllllllllilillll
255
Political Science
Teaching Fellows
256
257
Finance and Insurance
Economics
258
SOAK A prof
iOAK A PROF
X TH ROW!,
for ZBi
259
260
Graphic Science
261
Management
Pharmacy
262
ROTC
263
Music
264
Accounting
*■"■
265
Physical Education — Women
S
L>iV
J*;. • -- :
I ' i' &
r 2-. *
P *
•*-
■"". " '^ijlV
^ . ^; ■'
- ' - >->% !
•■ ■ iifc" s?
&*.
•;
.- >v-<
■Hnmh»
&^**&&*--'u
*-*52l
*% '5T*KlBi
.*s!-3p3
-
:«iw^
~*^f
" ^ ***#$?*
fk?; 5
dtky'.H
*h$&
|D***»
'*&%(*■ '
' 'ry.
5^ .
aik*
^
Physical Education — Men
ijiMi
■Mir;
gaMmamMnn
Bouve
268
Recreation Education
269
270
271
For several generations, Northeastern was known only
as a law school, and more so, a "tech" school for engi-
neering students. With the growth of the university came
the desire to bring onto the campus notable speakers to
discuss the issues of our times. Out of this desire came
the Distinguished Speaker Series which pitted the dauntless
wits of some of our best students against some of the
most controversial men of the day.
A half a dollar a piece was not to much to pay to hear
such men, some of whom investigating committees would
have been glad to pay the cover charge to hear.
Do you remember the men included? They are left to
right, TOP ROW: Abe Fortas, Supreme Court Justice;
Mayor Kevin White of Boston; Mayor Sam Yorty of Los
Angeles; Adam Clayton Powell, U.S. Rep. from Harlem;
BOTTOM ROW: S. I. Hayakawa from San Francisco
State; Conservative Republican philosopher William F.
Buckley, and political satirist Art Buchwald.
274
275
277
278
.. ;••- ^ •-.* ",/ ■ \. ■
«;-**f -,•• - '*£j3?f:i * f ^Ifll "
f . 4
rank- ' '^K^Hu
# g I H
*>k
■^B^r" s. " ' 3§ ] ^^B ' ""iff i^P J ^BB ^H**^*
§1
Bt V '*' Mm
^Br t *- I
*a 1
iff ■ -t 'twHH
^m i ~
MP, VI l$|
280
LmL
. A_.v'
281
SENIOR CLASS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
As this yearbook was going to press, a
bill, sponsored by Northeastern Universi-
ty Professor of Political Science Steve
Worth (below), had just passed the Mas-
sachusetts Congress and was on the gov-
ernor's desk.
The bill would disallow any Mas-
sachusetts man from fighting in an un-
declared war, and, if such a bill was
enacted, there would have been little time
lost in making a case for the Supreme
Court — at least in 1970. Time will tell.
* FTJfr
286
til
"111!
/
- • "_ ^^^8(1
w/N^j
(Hp
.-, *i
~ :
DEAN OF I
f|§ FURNITURE
DIRECTOR
ELL STUDENT
CENTER
go
in
peace
i
288
4F%
it r
CARLO ALBANO
BRUCE N.
ANDERSON
STEVEN R. ABRAMS MARTIN H.
ABRAMSON
DAVID E. ALLEN
JAMES R.
ANDERSON
RAYMOND G.
AHLBERG
JOHN W. ANDERSON
DWAIN A. AID ALA
BARRY J. ALPERT VINCENT H. AMARA
RICHARD A.
ANDERSON
THOMAS E.
ANDRESEN JR.
JOHN ANDREWS
GEORGE M.
ANDRZEJEWSKI
STANFORD W.
APGAR
289
MICHAEL J.
APPANEAL JR.
ELLEN L.
ARONOVITZ
JAMES E. BACHMAN
290
TOSCA APPEL
JOEL ARONSON
JAMES L. AUSTIN JAMS T. AVALLONE
JOHN H. BACON
SALVATORE
ARLOTTA
THEODORE R.
ASKEW
MARION L.
ARMITAGE
PHILIP M. ATWOOD
JOHN A. BADIALI
PAUL F. BAILEY
LINDA BAK
MAUREEN E. BAKER
PAUL J. BAKER
RICHARD D. BAKER RODERICK S. BAKER
KENNETH J. BANIS
JOHN K.
BARANOWSKY
CYNTHIA E.
BALTIMORE
PETER J.
BARANOWSKI
WALTER BARBER
291
HERBERT T.
BARCLAY
LAURENCE S.
BASCHE
292
JANE E. BARDH
SEBASTIANO J. BARI ELEANOR L. BARON
ANDREW F. BARRS PETER J. BARTHULY
DAVID B. BATEMAN
RICHARD A.
BAUMBER
BERNICE L. BATES CHARLES F. BATES
THOMAS A. BATES SUSAN BATESON
TERRENCE J.
GAVAN
NANCY L. BEAN
LINDA B. BEANE
293
CHARLES R.
BEARCE
LAWRENCE J. BELL
DARIA (SETZCO)
BENHAM
JOHN E. BEARDEN
RICHARD R. BELL
GARY L. BENNETT
GARY N. BERENSON PETER H. BERENSON
DAVID
BEARDSWORTH
GWENDOLYN M.
BELLIZEARE
PHILIP BENOS
LINDA L. BEAUVAIS
It
DAVID R. BENDER
SUZANNE A. BENOIT
JOHN L. BERGIN
RAYMOND E.
BERGLUND
294
PAUL R. BERGMAN
ARTHUR S.
BERLAND
ROGER A. BERUBE PHILIP S. BESSLER
SUSAN C. BICKFORD CLIFFORD S.
BILLINGHAM
HOWARD BERLIN
NICHOLAS A.
BEVILACQUA
LYN C. BILLMAN
RANDALL L.
BERMAN
HARRIET R. BIALEK
LAWRENCE W.
BISHOP
fkt
JOSEPH M. BISSANTI EDWARD J. BIVIANO SCOTT A. BLAIR WAYNE W. BLAIR
295
BARBARA A.
BLANCHARD
DIANE E. BOGAN ROBERT E. BOIG
JOHN R. BOISVERT RUTH G. BORK
HENRY C. BLASIUS JAMES E. BLOUT MARC S. BLUESTEIN
RICHARD L.
BOSCOMBE
KENNTEH J.
BOSHART
296
ALLEN L. BOSKA
DONALD T.
BOUFFARD
DEBORAH T.
BOURGET
it
WILLIAM L.
BOWDISH
JOSEPH P. BOWKER
RONALD L. BOWERS
CHARLES J.
BRACKETT
MAUREEN T. BRADY WILLIAM P. BREEN
297
ii
msBm
THOMAS F.
BRODERICK
PAULA M. BROWN
298
WH^^^^S
LARRY A. BRIGGS WILLIAM F. BRIGGS
GEORGE F.
BRONSKY
ROBERT D. BROOKS DOUGLAS H. BROWN
PETER E. BROWN
m
PHYLLIS M. BROWN ROBERT S. BROWN
SHARON D. BROWN
RICHARD D.
BRUHMULLER
EDWARD W.
BULCHIS
HERMAN M.
BRUCKNER
f>
/A
THOMAS A. BUFFA
JAYNE M. BULLOCK
299
I
CHRISTOPHER F.
BUONO
4m
DIANNE M. BUTLER
BRADFORD E. BUTT
ism
LEONARD J. BURKE STEVEN S. BURKE THOMAS W. BURNS
tik
DAVID S. BURPEE ROBERT L. BURR JAMES J. BURZYNSKI PETER J. BUSWELL
; >
KENNETH B.
BUTLER
PATRICIA BUTLER
PATRICIA A.
BUTLER
JANE B.
BUTTERFIELD
\ r I
RODNEY W. BYAM EDWARD T. BYRNE
300
JOHN M. BYRNE
d
IS
JOHNH.
CAFARELLA
4\M
THOMAS J. CAHILL
JOSEPH J. CALISTA
RICHARD W.
CADWALLADER
LAWRENCE B.
CAHILL
ROBERT B.
CALDERWOOD
At
JAMES F.
CALLAHAN
BARBARA A.
CAMPBELL
CLAYTON R.
CARLISLE
CHRISTOPHER E.
CAMPBELL
DONNA M. CARLON
ALBERTO B. CALVO GARY J. CAMERON PETER B. CAMERON
JANE E. CAMPBELL
EDWARD C.
CARLSON
THOMAS J.
CAMPBELL
RONALD M.
CARDOOS
STUART B. CARLSON
PETER D.
CARNICELLI
ALFRED C. CAROSI LARRY R. CARR
RONALD A.
CARRINGTON
302
RICHARD A.
CARUSO
WILLIAM X.
CASHINS
H
RICHARD J.
CELESTE
p -A
eg
BEVERLY J. CHAKO
DANIEL A.
CARVALHO
KENNETH F. CASSON
BARBARA A.
CENTOLA
RICHARD E. CASALI
ANTHONY J.
CATALDO
fa.
ROBERT A.
CERRONE
4ti
TITO CASCIERI JR.
JOSEPH P.
CAWLEY JR.
CHARLES T.
CHAGRASULIS
CARLETON E.
CHANDLER
WAYNE S. CHAPMAN
CHARLES J.
CHARLTON
303
WARREN W.
CHASE JR.
PHILIP A. CHIN
ANDREW W. CRISTO
Ilk
PAUL J. CIAMPI
HARRY J. CHEKOS
PAUL A. CHISHOLM
RICHARD F.
CHRISTOPHER
ANTHONY N. CIANI
MAUREEN P.
CHERNICK
HERBERT A.
CHOUINARD
CONSTANCE
CHRISTY
* wW
ANTHONY J.
CICCARELLI JR.
WENDY CHEN
TERRY L.
CHRISTENSEN
GERALD J. CHULPIS
RUSSELL C.
CIPOLLA
304
ROBERT A. CLANTON JOHN F. CLE ARY JOHN T. CLIFFORD LESLIE R. CLIFT
JOHN C. COCIO
JOSEPH C.
COLANTUNO
LORRAINE F.
COCCOLUTO
PAMELA J. COLE
HOWARD D. COHEN
ANTHONY R.
COLANGELO
JOHN H. COLLINS LINDA M. COLLINS
SUSAN G. COLLINS CAROL F. COMEGNO
CATHERINE L.
CONKLIN
DAVID L. CONLON
305
CHARLES E.
CONNOLLY
/
NANCY E.
CONNOLLY
LUCILLE R. CONTI ALAN H. CONWAY
MlM
STEVEN B.COOPER ANTHONY L. COPAS GENE A. CORMIER
ANTHONY J.
CORTIGLIO
JUDITH C.
COUGHLIN
THEODORE F.
COUGHLIN
JOHN P. COSTANZO RICHARD W. COUPE
JOSEPH M. COWAN
JANICE E.
CRAWFORD
JUNE A. CREEDON KEVIN E. CRISP
306
it
DAVID E. CROCKETT JAMES E. CRONIN
FREDERICK R.
CRUICKSHANK
4l%
!ap^
m \
KATHLEEN B.
CUDDY
ROBERT C. CUNEO WILLIAM W. CURRAN CLIFFORD E. CURTIS PAUL N. CUTLER
DONALD S. CYBULSKI HELEN L. CZEBINIAK ANDREW J. DABILIS PAULL. DADAK
ALFRED C. D'AGATA
FRED J.
DALESSANDRO
JAMES V. DALY ROBERT M. DANELL
307
m*
PAUL P. DANESI
BRIAN C. DAVIS
CHRISTINA M.
DEBYE
RONALD J.
DECRISTOFORO
MERRIAM C.
D'ANGELO
STEPHEN B.
DECATUR
STEPHEN A.
DECUBELLIS
CAROL R. DAURIA
JOHN W. DAWDA ROBERT A. DAWSON
£>
\
1
ALBERT A.
DECESARE
«M
4m
PAUL DEFILIPPI
km
JOHN R. DAVIES
THOMAS E.
DEBRUYCKER
JOANNE E. DECOTA
RONALD D.
DEFRONZO
308
JEAN E. DEMANCHE
RALPH R. DEPARI
f;
RICHARD A.
DEMELLO
JACQUES R.
DESJARDINS
CYNTHIA A.
DESMOND
it ft*
ROBERT R. DEFURIA DONALD DEGROFF MICHAEL S. DEIXLER JOHN L. DELNEGRO
VINCENT J. DEN AVE MICHAEL DENNIS
MICHAEL B. DEWIRE
PAULA D. DEWITT
PETER L. ROBERT L. DIBERTO PHILIP R. DIBLASI
DIBENEDETTO
309
LEONARD F.
DINNOCENZO
VERONICA A. DODD
ir
fHLl
fc
ROBERT J. DION DANIEL L. DIONNE
ELIZABETH J.
DOHERTY
\ i
\
\ \
ROBERT R. DILANDO ROBERT A. DIMEO JOHN A. DIMINICO
DOROTHY A.
DIPASTINA
ROBERTA G.
DINERMAN
d MM
ROBERT D. DINOZZI JOHN B. DINUOVO KENNETH P. DION
*k
WALTER A. DOBOSZ
PHILIP R. DOHERTY JOSEPH F. DOHERTY
310
* J gk
MICHAEL A.
DONAHUE
4
STEPHEN J. DONLON
«
4*
JOSEPH A.
DOUCETTE
ROBERT T.
DONALDSON
TIMOTHY E.
DONOVAN
PRISCILLA H.
DOUGLAS
MICHAEL J.
DORFSMAN
*■
JOHN J. DONEHUE BARBARA L. DONLEY
dtM
JEFFREY S. DORIN
MICHAEL S. DOW WILLIAM J. DOWICKI
DENNIS M. DOYLE
JOHN I. DRAGO CHESTER S. DRAKE DAVID E. DRAKE
311
dm
DANIEL F.
DRISCOLL
ROBERT G.
EGGLESON
'
dk
DAVID P. DROWN DAVID A. DUBOWIK STEVEN DUBOWIK
PHILLIP J. DWYER WALTER J. DZIADUL NATALIE J. EDGERS RICHARD B. EDSON
^fjUp '*■»■ F*
BARBARA E. ELKIND THOMAS W. ELLIS
DAVID B. ELLSBREE PAULINE M. ENG
ELLEN M.
ENGLANDER
ROBERT M.
ERRICKSON
312
i
NESSEM S. ESKINAZI JOHN M. ESSIGMANN
DOROTHEA
EVERGATES
STUART L. FARBER
4 J 4 J
CHARLES L.
FARBSTEIN
ELEANOR O.
EVDOKIMOFF
FELIX M. FABRIZIO JANET M. FAG AN FRANK T. FAIST SIDNEY A. FALTHZIK
^5^ f
FRANCIS J. FARDY GAIL K. FARING
AM
n
» _
JUDITH S. FARRELL MICHAEL E. FARRELL KEITH E. F ARRIS RICHARD T. FAUBERT
313
ALBERT C. FAUST
WAYNE D. FERNALD
FRANK M.
FERNANDES
ROBERT A. FERRIS JOSEPH A. FESTA
ALAN FEINBERG GERALD FELDMAN
JOHN FERNANDES
sill
PETER K. FICHTER
LAWRENCE R.
FERBER
PAULA A. FERREN
LINDA D. FINER
ANTHONY N. FIORE RONALD R. FIORE ARTHUR E. FISHER ARTHUR W. FISHER
314
RICHARD F.
FITZGERALD
ROBERT J. FLAVELL
Mm
EILEEN FLEISCHMAN
JOSEPH P. FLEMING
WILSON R. FLIGHT SUSAN FLOOD RICHARD A. FOGG JAMES E. FOLEY
ALANL. FORMAN STANLEY M. FORMAN JOSEPH F. FORTI JUDITH A. FORTIN
GUY M. FOSS
CHRISTOPHER
FOWLER
CHERYL L. FOWLER MARTIN H. FOX
315
ft
tM
STEVEN P. FRADKOFF TODD W. FRANGOLIS THOMAS J. FRANK
c>
STEVE L. FRANSEN GERALD F. FRANZE STEVEN J. FRASCA CLAIRE M. FRAZIER
GRANT T. FRAZIER ERIC J. FREDRIKSEN
ANDREA H.
FREEDMAN
BEVERLY A.
FRANKEL
ROBERT P. FREGAULT
TOBIAS A. FREETAS JOAN M. FREITAS
WILFRED W.
FREVE JR.
LINDA M. FRIEL
316
+ M M
KENNETH J. FRISBIE CHARLES R. FRITZ DANIEL V. FRITZSCHE JAY H. FROLICK
JAMES F. GAFNEY GERARD B. GAGNON HENRY J. GAGNON
GARY R. FRY JEANNE G. FRY AR LEONARD M. FUDGE ROBERT A. FULLER
ANGELA F.
GALLAGHER
g\k
GEORGE M.
GALLANT JR.
CARL A. GALLOZZI ROGER R. GAMACHE EDWARD G. GAMEL
317
ikife mih
JOHN W. GARDNER ROBERT J. GANGI ALBERT M. GARRICK HUBERT M. GARRITY
JOHN P. GATELY
▲ i
ANTHONY K.
GAVELIS
dA
JOHN J. GAVIN
A*
ROBERT P. GENEST JOHN K. GEORGE JR. STEPHEN H. GERIBO
PAUL W. GAYNOR
BRUCE S.
GERSINSKY
ELLEN G. GERVAIS
ROBERT J.
GESWELL JR.
STEVEN J.
GIACCHETTI
FRANCIS J. GIANINO
318
AM Am
JERRY G. GIGNAC STEPHEN R. GILMAN RODNEY H. GILVEY
t
JEFFREY G. GOLD JANET A. GOLDEN
STEVEN J.
GOLDMAN
NICHOLAS A.
GIORDANO
JOYCE J. GIRD WILLIAM C. GJEDE BURT R. GLASSMAN ALAN GODFRIED
LEONARD J.
GOLDSTEIN
DALE E. GOLDSTONE
PHILIP A.
GOLDTHWAIT
STEVEN B.GOODHUE
LORRAINE M.
GOODMAN
319
4 A %M
STEVEN M.
GOODMAN
GERALD B. GOODWIN JOHN P. GORCZYCA DAVID GORDON
f
•
\
p
«* j
JOHN J. GREEN JOHN P. GREEN
An
JONATHAN E.
GREENBAUM
DAVID M.GOREWITZ WILLIAM C. GORMLEY JOHN C. GORTON GARYB. GOSBEE
JOANNGRABON RICHARD S. GRACE NANCY H. GRAF ERROL GRAHAM
RONALD
GREENBERG
320
MARCIA S.
GREENBLATT
PAUL F. GRIGAS
KENNETH J. GUINEN
DONNA L.
GREENGLASS
CYREL J.
GRODENSKY
ALAN J. GULKO
LINDA C. GRESZKO
i
WILLIAM E.
GUNTHER
•
d\
ALAN R. GRIFFIN
RICHARD L. GROVER DAVID A . GUERRA
CRAIG A.
GUSTAFSON
KEVIN C. GUSTIN
WILLIAM HADDAD RONALD E. HADLEY
i. VI
GARY E. HAFFER
321
-\ "
JOHN E. HALADAY MARY A. HALE ROBERT M. HALL
DAVID W.
HAMILTON
STEPHANIA HANSEN JOYCE A. HARDIMAN BRIAN S. HARLOW
jr^
diA 4 A
ALLEN G.
HALVORSEN
x: \
JAMES M. HANDLEY MARY L. HANLEY SIRI M. HANNER
KATHLEEN F.
HARRINGTON
FRANK M. HARRIS RICHARD G. HARRIS MARY P. HARTIGAN
RICHARD W.
HARTWELL
322
1
^ ji j; :i ? :
/
■ ■Uhi
it
1.^
STEPHEN M.
HATTORI
CHRISTOPHER J.
HAYNES
ih
ROBERT E. HARVEY RICHARD M. HASSETT PHILIP C. HASTINGS PAUL J. HASENFUSS
I
JUDITH A. HAUGH JOHN W. HAVRANEK ROBERT T. HAWES
1k% ik\ iiM
BRYAN HAYWARD RICHARD J. HEAGLE DOUGLAS W. HEALD
WARREN HEATH JAMES D. HEELEN
JAMES R.
HENDERSON
ELIZABETH A.
HENDRICKS
323
JAMES I.
HENDRICKSON
DIANE E.
HENNESSY
VIRGINIA
HENNRIKUS
-:::.'!
•A
\
\
M
JAMES M.
HENRIKSON
ROBERT J. HERIOT MICHAEL J. HERLIHY HARRY M. HERSH BARBARA E. HERTZ
THOMAS L. HERZIG FRANCIS L. HEUSTON SUSAN F. HE YES JOHN C. HIGGINS
RONALD W. HIIRI JAMES W. HILL MARJORIE J. HILL JAMES E. HILLIS
324
I - '
■■ ■
JAMES B. HILTON
DIANE L. HOLDEN
BERNADINE C.
HOOD
Ait
FREDERICK J.
HOLLAND
JOHN W. HMURCIAK CHARLES J. HOAR
i* ifc. f
\
BRUCE W.
HOLMGREN
JAMES E. HOPKINS CRAIG W. HORNECK
RICHARD A.
HOFFSTEIN
ROGER W. HOOD JR.
RICHARD C.
HOWL AND JR.
4 J 41
SUSAN A. HUFFMAN JOANNE E. HUGHES RICHARD F. HUGHES ROBERT T. HUGHES
325
V **• jP
tit Mi */ A 4 J
DONALD D.HUNT FRANCIS J. HUNT JR. WILLIAM A. HUNT ROBERT C. HUNTER
O
t
ml mM
\
BENJAMIN J. I ACONO JOSEPH J. IORIO GERARD R. IRWIN DONALD ISAAC
ft-- [ L Jl ^ *- JP''
TIMOTHY J. JACKSON EDWARD L. JACKSON MARILYN J. JACOBS CYNTHIA JACOBY
NANCY JACOBY
MARSHALL L.
JAINCHILL
CHRISTINE A.
JAMULA
RICHARD G.
JANUARY
326
fs
4
\
DAVID R. JOHNSON
GLENN E.JARVI PAUL J. JASINSKI DIANA A. JASON JAMES J. JELLISON
r^
Ait trk
NILES F. JENSEN ALEXANDER H. JOE BARRY L. JOHNSON CHARLES E. JOHNSON
i&i
DOUGLAS A.
JOHNSON
FREDERICK W.
JOHNSON
LESLIE N. JOHNSON
_*__A
MARY D. JOHNSON MICHAEL T. JOHNSON RICHARD S. JOHNSON ROBERT R. JOHNSON
327
4 »<s*^
a
L
\
THOMAS A. JOYCE
1 d\k
MICHAEL J.
KAMINSKI
4tfc
SANDRA L. JOHNSON THOMAS F. JOHNSON WILLIAM A. JOHNSON GREGORY J. JOLDA
it
\
KENNETH A. JONES KENNETH R. JONES KENNETH D. JORDAN DAVID L. JORDAN
JOHN J. JUDGE ROBERT M. KALMAN SAJED KAMAL
ALAN L. KANTORSKI SUSAN P. KARAS
JOHN KARPINSKI
328
PETER C.
KATSOULAS
ELISSA KATLER
CONSTANCE L.
KAUFMAN
ALAN F. KAUL
iiM
EILEEN M. KEANE MICHAEL E. KEHIR FREDRIC R. KELLOGG HOWARD B. KELLY
RICHARD D. KELLY ROBERT A. KELLY
SHARON L.
KENNAUGH
JOHN S. KEPPLE
DONALD K. KERR JANET A. KEYES LLOYD S. KEYES DIANA KEIFER
329
ERNEST E. KILMAN
ik
KENNETH A.
KIMBALL
LAWRENCE R.
KIMBALL
\ H
PAUL K. KING
ii
BRIAN W.
KIRSCHNER
CHARLES P.
KIRICOPLES
RICHARD W. KING
EDMUND W.
KIRZNER
JOHN E. KITTLE JANICE KLANGOS JEFFREY A. KLEIN STERLING G. KLINE
-=£3*
KAREN A. KNAPP PAUL M. KNIGHT ROBERT KOCOR RICHARD P. COLE
330
\
m%
HERBERT KOLODNY CATHY D. KRAMER MICHAEL L. KRAMER ESTELLA F. KRIGMAN
f
**
MICHAEL K. KROLL ALLAN I. KUPELNICK ROBERT J. KURITSKY JEFF B. KURL AND
RAYMOND J.
KUZEDBA
DAVID A.
LABRECQUE
ALFRED J. LABUZ JAMES E. LACEY
STEVEN T. LADD
PATRICIA A.
LAFLEUR
STEPHEN C.
LAFRANCE
FRANK A.
LAFRAZIA JR.
331
A. 90
to
r
KATHLEEN M.
LANGDON
ROBEET B. LAGUE JOSEPH A. LAHUT RONALD A. LAJOIE
JAMES T.
LALIBERTE
A* 4k dk
JAMES C. LALONE PHILIP W. LAM PAUL A. LAMBERT STEVEN A. LAMPERT
l*** **y
i I
RUTH A. LAMPORT DAVID P. LANDI MARILYN A. LANDRY EDWARD P. LANG
BERNARD P.
LANGLAIS
RICHARD J.
LANGONE
ROBERT L. LANZ
332
STEVEN R.
LAPIERRE
KAREN LARSON
GERALD G.
LAWRENCE
it
FRANCIS J.
LAPLANTE
FUAT LATIF
WILLIAM F.
LAWSON
*M
**>
JOSEPH M.
LARDIERE
mA
MICHAEL J.
LAROSEE
*iA
M
JOHN A. LATTANZIO GERARD P. LAWLESS
MARY E. LEAHY JOSEPH E. LEBLANC
LAWRENCE J. LEE JR. RALPH W. LEGROW
STUART G.
LEIBOVITZ
mM
ROBERT J.
LEIBOWITZ
333
DAVID J.
LEMAISTRE
GERALDINE M.
LEONE
GERALD N. LEVINE
HARVEY V.
LEMOVITZ
RAYMOND D.
LEVASSEUR
6 i
L 1
:
\
MARVIN J. LEVINE
THOMAS LIBBY
DEBORAH S.
LIFFMAN
STEVEN R. LENZ
'Jk
V \ .HI
GEORGE E.
LEVESQUE
CHARLES
L'HEUREUX
GEORGE C.
LEONARD
JOSEPH P.
LEVESQUE
JAMES M. LIBBY
HAROLD K. LIM
DIANE K. LINCOLN
334
RONALD E.
LINDBLAD
EDWARD T. LISTON
JOSEPH T.
LONSDALE
f*^
At
ROBERT J.
LORINOVICH
JANIS N.
LITCHFIELD
Al
JOHN A. LOUD
£<
DAVID A.
LOMBARDI
JOSEPH A.
LOUGHRAN
ROBERT G. LOWNDS MARY A. LUCIANI RICHARD F. LUSIS BRYAN F. LYNCH
r
DENNIS P. LYNCH EDWARD M. LYNCH ROBERT E. LYNCH
KENNETH J.
MACARTHUR
335
th
FRANCIS V.
MACAULAY
SUSAN E.
MACKENZIE
JAMES M. MAFFA
EDWARD L.
MAHONEY
LEE R. MACDONALD
MARY F.
MACLELLAN
PAUL A.
MAGALETTA
\
RICHARD C.
MACFARLANE
J^^
JAMES M. MACNEILL
JOHN A. MAGUIRE
SERGIO MAIXNER
RICHARD J.
MAJEWSKI
RICHARD D.
MACHON
JAMES I.
MACWILLIAM
4
DENNIS C.
MAHONEY
RONALD G.
MALINAUSKAS
336
- \t
DAVID M.
MANSFIELD
/
MARY JO MALPERE ALAN K. MALTZ
CHARLES G.
MANNING
KARL A. MANTHEI WILLIAM F. MARANI
STEPHEN D. MARINI GERALD J. MARINO SANDRA Y. MARION
FRANK M.
MANSBACH
0
PETER
MARCAURELLE
HARVEY S.
MARKOWITZ
»
dtm
STEPHEN C. MARKS
VALERIE A.
MARSHALL
PAUL E. MARTELL JOHN R. MARTIS
337
ii
WALTER J.
MARUSA JR.
CAROL E.
MATULSKY
mif
ALFRED M.
MARZULLO
BARRY E. MASON
SCOTT J. MATHESON JAMES F. MATTHEWS JOHN C. MATTHEWS
JANE B. MATULSKY
RONALD J.
MAXWELL
jSW VwSS i
4*
FRANCIS R.
MASTRONE
4kl
LAUREN E.
MATTHEWS
RALPH K. MAYO
MARTHA E. MAYOR KEVIN M. McAULIFFE BONNIE A. McCALL WILLIAM McCARRON
338
EDWARD C.
McCarthy
ANNE MARIE
McCAVE
ROBERT G.
Mccormick
GLENN W.
Mcdonald
JOHN J.
McCarthy jr.
JAMES A.
McCLELLAN
ROBERT L.
Mccracken
kathleen a.
McCarthy
AM
JEFFREY T.
McCLURE
ISABELLE N.
McDADE
JAMES A.
McDonnell
ROBERT J.
Mcdonough
THOMAS P.
McCarthy
JAMES A.
McCONNELL
CHARLES E.
McDEVITT
4
peter s. Mcdowell
339
CAROL A.
McEACHERN
PAUL A. McGOWAN
JAMES F.
McEACHERN
C \
i ■ .
MM
ROBERT E.
McGregor
ROBERT F.
McGILLIVARY
!•
MARYM.
McGOVERN
I
ROBERT J. McGUE DENNIS J. McGURK
ROBERT A. McKENNA PHILIP P. McKINNIS JAMES P. McLARNON PATRICIA A. McWADE
HAROLD L.
MEADOW
RICHARD A.
MEDEIROS
HARESH R. MEHTA
RICHARD M.
MEISTER
340
VINCENT I.
MELENDY
DAVID P. MERELIS
\i
MICHAEL J.
MERENDA
RICHARD F.
MERRIKIN
LYNN P. MEYER
BARRY L.
MICHAELSON
DAVID R.
MIDDLEBROOK
JUDITH A.
MILGROOM
EUGENE J. MILIARD
JOHN C. MILLER
MARILYN A. MILLER SUSAN R. MILLER
JANE C. MILLIGAN
M
RICHARD E. MILLS RICHARD G. MILLS
PETER J. MIONE
341
4l
DAVID C. MISHALOF SANDRA W. MITCHELL ROBERT A. MOHLIN ROBERT W. MOISAN
RICHARD R. MOLOY
DANIEL K. MOON
i
ROBERT J.
MOSTECKI
JOHNM.
MONACO JR.
MM t
DONALD W.
MORGAN
I
4
HENRY W.
MOTEKAITIS
I
HOWARD L. MONSON
PAUL J.
MONTAGUE
MATTHEW P.
MORGAN
4l
CHRISTOPHER S.
MOSHER
SUSAN MOTTOLESE
CHARLES V.
MUELLER
342
MICHAEL G.
MUESSEL
DEBORAH A.
MURDZA
gA
NUNZIO
NAPOLEONE
n
ROBERT S.
MULLENS
ELEANOR J.
MURRAY
COSMO D.
NARDELLA
DANTE G.
MUMMOLO
JiM
RICHARD P. MUSE
THOMAS J.
NAUGHTON
CHERYL M.
MUNROE
CLEMENT NAGGAR
MARK D. NEIDORFF BARRY M. NELSON
CATHERINE M.
NELSON
RAYMOND E.
NEAL III
PETER A. NELSON
343
THOMAS M.
NIARCHOS
- I
\
RALPH F. NELSON GEORGE W. NESBITT ALAN B. NEVILLE
CAROL NICOLL ELAINE S. NEISEN
"^ xfc
CILE B. NODDELL MICHAEL L. NOLAN STEPHEN R. NOONE
CHARLES G.
NEWBOLD
IRENE NOAH
HERBERT L.
NOVITSKY
ANN T. NOWLAN
JANET M. NYHEN JOHN J. O'BRIEN
+M
JAMES W.
O'CALLAGHAN
344
EDWARD J.
O'CONNOR
WAYNE J. OPPITO
THOMAS P.
O'CONNOR
GEORGE A. OKO PATRICK J. OLES
111 I rl
....,...■
PETER P. ORLANDO
t
WILLIAM J.
O'FLAHERTY
mk
ROBERT A.
O'MALLEY
^M
DANIEL N.
O'ROURKE
DONALD F. O'HARA
FRANCIS R. O'NEILL
ROBERT K.
OSTERMUELLER
ANDREW E.
OUDERKIRK
GARY L. OWEN
DIANNE E.
PACCIONE
345
%
LYNN E. PAILLE PATRICK W. PALONE
ROBERT J.
PALUMBO
ilk
iih
CHESTER E. PARKER STANLEY J. PARKER
■ V
LARRY T.
PARKINSON
VIRGINIA K.
PARRISH
ROBERT J.
PASIONEK
MICHAEL F.
PASQUA
KENNETH W.
PANARO
JAMES A. PAOLUCCI SPYRIDON G. PETER G. PAPINEAU JAMES K. PAQUETTE
PAPADOPOULOS
THOMAS R. PARKS
ROBERT J.
PATUKONIS
346
KENNETH R. PAUL
MICHAEL A.
PEARSON
I
WALTER J.
PAWLOWSKI
1 - I
;;■:.
/
\ \ \
PAUL A. PEARSON
ROBERT J. PAYNE GLENN PEARSON
DOUGLAS C. PECK EDWARD A. PECK
WILLIAM F. PEFFER RHODA M. PENN
PASQUALE L.
PEPICELLI
DANIEL W.
PEREPELITZA
SANDRA F. PERILLE
ROBERT C.
PERRAULT
DENNIS M. PERRY DENNIS R. PERRY
347
lfc
LELAND A. PERRY GEORGE E. PESSOTTI MARJORIE G. PETERS CARL B. PETERSON
**^
KENNETH F.
PETERSON
EDOUARD A. PICHE
NORMAN S.
PETERSON
DOROTHY A.
PIERCE
m M
LOUIS H. PIAZZA
RAYMOND L.
PICARD
^
a :JmmI
KEITH W. PIERCE ROBERT C. PIERSON
JOAN B. PINK
JAMES J.
PINKMAN JR.
PATRICIA L.
PINTER
RAYMOND J.
PLANTE
348
<*#*»> r*fr
i »
SANDRA M. PLATT JEANNE E. POBER
STEVEN K.
PODALSKY
MM
CAROL L. POLLEY
*s
ALBERT A. PONDELLI STEPHEN E. POOLE DONALD T. PORTER VINCENT J. POTHIER
JOHN S. POTTER JR. WILLIAM H. PREETZ
iiM
STEVEN C.
PRENOVITZ
RICHARD S.
PRESTON
Ji it Jte If m I Hi
ANTHONY J.
PREVITE
KENNETH PREVITE RUSSELL F. PRICE JAMES J. PRINCE
349
JAMES L. PROST
LEE C. PUTNAM
mil
RICHARD F. QUINN
ft
WILLIAM C. PURDUE
JAMES F. QUINN
GERALD W.
QUIGLEY
BRADFORD E.
RANDOLPH
4'"k
BRIAN F. RATTIGAN
Was®
\%f\
f| !
■ |j
I 1
if i
\\\ I
II 1 I ■■MBH
11 1 * ■
1
11 i ■
1 !jj
ill.™
k
w
H]
< * 1
' S 1
. |j|i
1
* H ■■ 1
' -iil
• it
1 ■ |i
t
H 1
■
1
E*
' 1 1
it 19 M HB
i *
4 IB
350
WILLIAM J.
RAYMOND
JANET M. REIDY
ANNETTE C.
REPETTI
PATRICIA A.
REARDON
ELEANOR P. REILLY
RICHARD F. REILLY JAMES A. REMPIS
BARBARA B.
REYNOLDS
351
s
MICHAEL J. RICCIO
DAVID W. RING
RONALD S. RIZZO EDWARD J. ROBARGE
f~-t
CHRISTOPHER S.
ROBBINS
BARBARA L.
ROBERTS
RENALD A.
ROBILLARD
PETER W.
ROBINSON
MARILYN L.
ROBINSON
MARK RODMAN
EDWARD D.
ROCKOWITZ
FRANCIS J.
RODERICK
CAROL A. RODES
Mi '?
JOANNE ROGERS KENNETH F. ROGERS KENNETH S. ROGERS
SUSAN E. ROGERS
-
I
GEORGE W.
ROMANO
LAURENCE B. ROSE
BERNARD J. ROSS
354
MM
ALLAN A. ROGOFF
MICHAEL L.
ROMANO
STEVEN R.
ROSENBLATT
STEPHEN L. ROSS
m
GLEN J. ROKICKI
LORETTA A. ROSA
STUART R.
ROSENTHAL
*M mi
BRUNO J. ROVITO
■
f
JOHN A. ROWEY
ERIC RUDERMAN
PAUL E. RUSSELL
Mm..- .sm-.-r'J
MARSHAL A.
RUDMAN
BARRY A. RUSSELL BRUCE F. RUSSELL
1
GEORGE J. RUSSO
T.'
ROBERT A. RUCHO PETER A. RUDDICK
JEROME RUSS
GAIL RUSSELL
RICHARD R. RUSSO
355
BRUCE W. RYAN
rfl
JOEL M. SACHS
/
ROBERT M.
SADOSKI
ROBERT A.
SAFFORD
> -
WILLIAM H.
RYZEWIC
ANDREW J. SACKS
FRANCES L.
SADOWSKI
At At
CARL W. SABOLD
ROLAND J.
SABOURIN
DAVID S. SAFRAN
JACQUELINE A.
ST. GERMAIN
ROBERT G.
ST. PIERRE
356
/
ALFRED J. SALOIS
JOHN P. SALVUCCI DONALD L. SANTINI
ROBERT H.
SARGENT
ik
PAUL E. SAULNIER
f%,
i
JULIE R.
SANTOPIETRO
MICHAEL J. SARNO
WILLIAM E.
SAUNDERS
mm t
JOHN P. SAVARD
ROBERT W.
SCANTLEBURY
DAVID SCARBEAU
JEFFREY M.
SCHENKER
357
ROBERT M.
SCHERZER
JOHN P.
SCHNEIDLER
LAURENCE R.
SCHOENFELD
GEORGE D.
SCHONWALD
358
JEFFREY
SCHLOSSBERG
s
mm m wm
JOHN R. SCHNYER
*A*M
DAVE I.
SCHONBACH
CHARLES B. SCOTT
MARGARET A.
SEDLAK
JOSEPH
SELEVICIUS
I
FREDERICK W. ROBERT A. SEAVEY
SCRIBNER
LEONARD E. SEGAL
RICHARD M. SENESE
SANDRA L. SEPPALA JANET SESNOVICH
359
m
ftjjfc*
^^- , 4M^^^^^uMg|gjj|&f|g{!iis':
%
Pi
W
*s
<l
«& *««»»RB^
mmmmmm
fff
AM *k
PAUL M.
SEVERANCE
ft
ANNE W. SEYMOUR DAVID E. SEYMOUR JOSEPH J. SEYMOUR
NANCY L. SHAFER SUSAN C. SH ANKER SUSAN J. SHAW STEPHEN P. SHEA
STANLEY I.
SHECHTMAN
RAYMOND B.
SHEELY
JESSE D. SHER
RALPH W.
SHERWOOD
tfjfc
PAULF. SHIERS LOIS E. SCHNEIDER GERALD E. SHOIB JANE E. SHOREY
361
fl^^^Hl MBM
ANTHONY J.
SIMONELLI
ARTHUR A. SISTO
362
JEFFREY M. SHORR JOSEPH R. SILVERIO
ROLAND R. SILVERIO LINDA L. SIMON
ROSALIE SINGER
<
JOHN H. SLOAN
363
CHARLES C. SMITH
DAVID P. SMITH
EDWARD F. SMITH JEFFREY M. SMITH
ROBERT T. SMITH
WILLIAM B. SMITH BARBARA L. SMYTH
DONALD T. SOJA
364
JAMES H. SOMMER FRED J. SOPHIS KEVIN G. SORGI SILVIA A. SOTO
Alt
H 1 \t
ROGER O.SOUCY FRANK D. SOUDER RALPH A. SOUPPA ROBERT V. SPARKS
365
MARY C. SPIERS
DAVID H. STADNICK
RICHARD A. STARK
LAMONT E.
STALLWORTH
ROBERT A.
STASKAWICZ
RAYMOND S.
STEFANOWICZ
BRENT F. SPOONER WARREN G. SPROUL
MARIANNE F.
STANEWICK
«4 £M i
WILLIAM J.
STAVARIDIS
i*
GEOFFREY S.
STEINBERG
WILLIAM B.
SOUILLACE
DAVID J. STANTON
DAWNNE E. STEELE
HERMAN B.
STEINBERG
366
I tit
STEVEN
P.STEPAK WALTER P. STEPIEN CHARLES G. STEVENS JOYCE A. STEVENS
L i
JOYCE A. STEVENS THOMAS F. STEWART THOMAS F. STILLINGS
JEANNE M. STOLOS MARTIN L. STRAUS
RICHARD J.
STREGOWSKI
4M
WAYNE R.
STODDARD
CHARLES A.
STRUMSKI
Mt
RICHARD E.
STRZEPEK
JAMES M. STUBBERT
DANA C.
STURTEVANT
RONALD J. SUDOL
367
■i
MMmmmmm
368
JAMES M. SULLIVAN KAREN A. SULLIVAN
LAWRENCE
SULLIVAN
DAVID SUTTON
1
■
RONALD SYMANSKI
WILLIAM R.
SULLIVAN
ALISON
SWEATLAND
EDWARD J.
SZAVOICK
369
1 1 i
*M hsk
PHILIP S. TACKEL CLAUDIO M. TADDEO LEONARD E. TAGG CHARLES G. TAKACH
JEROME TAPPER
\ *
\ \
GREGORY R
TAYLOR
PAMELA A. TAYLOR SUSAN F. TAYLOR
iM
WILLIAM I. TAYLOR
KENNETH J.
TEICHER
44
CHARLES A.
THEOCLES
ROLAND J.
THIBAULT
KENNETH S. THOMAS CARL F. THUNSTROM HARRY N. TINGLEY
m\
NORBERT F.
TODTENKORF
370
'
V.
■"#■■
DAVID R. TOGNACCI
: x \* v
CARL W. TOLMAN
' 1
FRANK R. TORRES
4*
DANIEL M. TULLOCK
371
pfc
CARMELO J.
TURANO
JANE L. TURP
MARY C. TYLER
ROBERT B.
URQUHART
JOHN A. TURONIS
STEPHEN L.
TUTTLE
ROBERT E. TYLER
JUDITH A.
VAN ALSTINE
373
./ I IE J
RICHARD E.
VANDERPOEL
BRUCE B.
VAN DER VEER
FREDRIC R.
VAN DEUSEN
CHARLES V.
VELARDO
J.
I-' <£•
374
i
CHRISTINE J.
VERCOLLONE
MICHAEL G. VICARI
WILLIAM P.
VINCENT
ROBERT P. VTTALE
• ' - ■*
z
3 "5
AH
EDWARD T. VITONE
ROBERT C.
VOZZELLA
NANCY (SMITH)
WALDMAN
NANCY M.
VOGELSON
JOSEPH D.VRABEL
CHERYL WALK
DANA S. WALLACE
GREGORY W.
WALLACE
mm m
4l4
JAMES L.
VOLLMUTH
GREGORY A.
VRETTOS
4%
KENNETH G.
WALKER
MICHAEL E.
VOSBURGH
JEFFREY C. WAAL
GEORGE E. WALL
LINDA WALPER
ttik
JAMES R. WALSH
376
ELIZABETH J.
WARNKEN
ADAM W.
WASYLYSHYN
\ *&&<***
BERNARD P.
WEINBERG
A''
4\l
*%
ANDREA C. WARREN
BUNNIE M.
WATROUS
HOWARD R.
WEINBERG
ROBERT D.
WASSERMAN
MANUEL C.
WEINBERG
MICHAEL P. WALSH THOMAS P. WALSH SETH A. WANETIK FRANCIS M. WARNER
m J
mk *M
FRANK J. WASSILAK
CLAIRE A. WATTS ROBERT T. WATTS
♦
WALTER S.
WEINBERG
377
/ i
JERROLD M. WEINER JOHN K. WEISER MARK S. WEISMAN ROBERT L. WEISMAN
MARLENE R.
WEISSMAN
STEPHEN M.
WEISSMANN
ROBERT WERBY
I
JAY WENNEMER JANE C. WENTZELL
DAVID J. WEST ROBERT S. WESTON WILLIAM A.WHEELER
RICHARD L. WHITE ROBERT E. WHITE WARREN K.WHITNEY RONALD WILES
378
JOEL WILLIAMS
ffk
STEPHEN A.
WILLIAMS
MARSHALL B.
WILLIAMSON JR.
mk i
JOHN C. WILLIAMS JOHN R. WILLIAMS
THOMAS L. WISE WILLIAM E. WITZELL ROBERT J. WOLF
ROBERTA C.
WILLIAMS
i
LAUREL L. WILLIS DANA R. WILSON
THOMAS A. WOLF
LYNDA WOLFSON
STEPHEN F.
WOOLBERT
JAMES C. WOOLLEY JOAN E. WRIGHT
379
l^-^^^ftM
<m*,
\
BRUCE C. WYMAN HARRY J. YAFFE
MADELON F.
YARNELL
RAYMOND A. YASKIS
i mBBBm
DONALD C. YONIKA ALVIN YOUMAN JOHN R. YOUNG NEDDA D. YOUNG
JAMES C. YUAN DONALD J. ZALEWA BARRY I. ZEITMAN DANIEL M. ZELONIS
JAMES W. ZOLNER KENNETH J. ZUCKER
380
381
Ahlberg, Raymond C, Arlington, Mass., LA, History.
Dean's List 4. Alumni Pledge Program 3,4,5; Class
Board 2,3 (secretary), 4,5; Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5; In-
tramural Basketball 2,3,4; Rifle Club 1,2. Robbins
Library; U.S. Government DCASO.
Albro, Terry L., Whitesboro, N.Y., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 4,5. Pontiac Motor Division, G.M.C.
Allen, David E., Fairfield, Conn., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; President's Award 3,4; Tau
Beta Pi, Pi Tau Sigma; ASME 2,3,4; Engineering
Council 3,4; Husky Key 1; Student Union 2,3. Ford
Motor Co.
Amara, Vincent H., Hyde Park, Mass., Elementary
Education. Hyde Park YMCA; Research Calcula-
tions.
Anderson, Bruce N., Framingham, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 1. Auto Club 1,2; Biology Club 1; In-
tramural Basketball 2,3; weight lifting 4. U.S. Army
Natick Laboratories; Children's Hospital; Water's
Associates, Inc.
Andresen, Thomas Edward Jr., Swampscott, Mass.,
Business, Management. Dean's List 1,2,3,4. Society
for the Advancement of Management 3,4,5. Itek
Corp.; Andresen Transportation.
Apgar, Stanford Warren, Marshfield, Mass., Business,
Management. Crew Team Manager 1,2,3,4; Railroad
Club 1. First County National Bank; Warren Bros.
Roads, Inc.; Instrumentation Laboratory, Inc.
Applegate, Robert, Dorchester, Mass., Civil Engineering.
NUCES 4,5. Ernest W. Branch, Inc.; Harry R. Feld-
man, Inc.
Arlotta, Salvatore Jr., Bloomingburg, N.Y., Civil En-
gineering. ASCE 2,3,4,5; Chi Epsilon; Engineering
Council 4,5; Rifle Club 1,2,3. International Pipe and
Ceramics; Woodward-Clyde and Associates.
Armitage, Marion L., Burlington, Mass., LA, Journalism.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Academy 3,4; German Honor
Fraternity 3,4. Northeastern NEWS 1,2,3 (feature
rewrite editor); Huskiers 2,3,4; Outing Club 2,3,4;
Westminister Club 1. Lowell Sun; New England
Telephone.
Armstrong, Lanell I., Haverhill, Mass., Nursing. Section
Representative 1. Beth Israel Hospital.
Aronovitz, Ellen Louise, Brookline, Mass., LA, English-
Education. Dean's List 4. NEWS 1 ; Student Union 1 .
Brandeis Goldfarb Library; Univ. of Mass. Guidance
and Counseling; Tufts New England Medical Center.
Aronson, Joel, Dorchester, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5. Beta Alpha Psi 2,3,4,5; Inter-
fraternity Council 3. General Discount Corp.; Arthur
Andersen & Co.
Askew, Theodore Richard, Medford, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Dean's List. Counter Guerilla Group
2,3, Demolay Club 1,2, Eta Kappa Nu 4,5. General
Electric.
Atwood, Philip M., Needham, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE. Polaroid Corp.
Avallone, Janis T., East Boston, Mass., LA, Biology.
Class Board 1,2, Husky Key 1,2,3,4, Newman Club
I.B.U. Medical Center, Mass. Eye and Ear Infir-
mary.
Bachman, James, Fairfield, Conn., Business, Accounting.
Haskins and Sells.
Bacon, John H., Leominster, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Distinguished Military Student. ASME
2,3,4 (Junior vice chairman) 5; Student-Faculty Ad-
visory Committee 5. General Electric.
Bailey, Paul F., South Easton, Mass., Civil Engineering.
ASCE-BSCE 3,4,5. C.A. Pickering Associates.
Bak, Linda Ann, Greenville, R.I., LA, Medical
Technology. Dean's List 1,2,3. Medical Technology
Club 1,2,3,4,5; Yacht Club 2. New England Baptist
Hospital.
Baker, Paul J., Watertown, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5; Husky Key 4,5; IEEE 4,5;
Senior Week Committee 5; Pledge Program. Alvin S.
Mancib Co.; M.I.T. Instrumentation Lab.
Baker, Stephen L., Hanson, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 3,4,5. Society for the Ad-
vancement of Management 3,4,5; Intramural Basket-
ball 1,2,3. Rextrude Co.; Garland Corp.; I.B.M.
Barber, Walter, Gulph Mills, Pa., Business, Marketing.
Dean's List 4. Cross Country 1,2; Fenway Dorm
President 1; Marketing Society 3 (vice president), 4
& 5 (president). Sheraton Corp.; Pillsbury; Libbey
Owens Ford.
Barclay, Herbert T., Rockland, Mass., LA, Physics.
Dean's List. AIP 1,2 (treasurer) 3 (vice president);
SPS 4 (president). Sylvania; AVCO; Raytheon.
Bardh, Jane Ellen, Brockton, Mass., LA, Medical
Technology. Dean's List 2,3,4. Camera Club 2,3,4;
Medical Technology Club 1,2,3,4,5. New England
Deaconess Hospital.
Bari, Sebastiano J., Medford, Mass., Business,
Management.
Bates, Bernice L., Boston, Mass., Nursing. Dean's List.
Beth Israel Hospital.
Bates, Charles F., Avon, Mass., Pharmacy. Dean's List 2.
APhA 1 (freshman representative); Rho Pi Phi
1,2,3,4,5. Woodlawn Pharmacy; Westborough State
Hospital.
Bates, Thomas, Boston, Mass., Chemical Engineering.
Dean's List 4. New England Enzyme Center; Dyna-
tech RID Corp.
Baumber, Richard Alan, Quincy, Mass., Business, Indus-
trial Relations. Dean's List 1 . Gamma Phi Kappa 1 ,2
(pledgemaster), 3 (secretary), 4 (treasurer), 5; In-
tramural Basketball 1,2. The Foxboro Co.; The
Duplan Corp.
Bean, Nancy (Linwood), Manchester, N.H., Education,
Chemistry. Dean's List 1,2,4. American Chemical
Society 2,3,4,5; Choral Society 2; National Educa-
tion Assn. 5. Sanders Associates Inc.
382
Beane, Linda, Raleigh, N.C., Nursing. Dean's List 2.
Student Center Committee 2,3; Student Union 1,2
(president), 3. Beth Israel Hospital.
Bearden, John Edward, Arlington, Vt., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 3,4. Eta Kappa Nu; IEEE
2,3,4; Ski Club l.IBM.
Beardsworth, David, Old Satbrook, Conn., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 3,4. Phi Alpha Rho. Charles Pfizer Inc.;
Boston City Hospital.
Beauvais, Linda L., Winchendon, Mass., Boston Bouve,
Physical Education. Dormitory Counselor 3,4; Dor-
mitory Social Chairman 2; Women's Physical Educa-
tion Club 2 (class representative), 4. NCAA Summer
Sports Program.
Bell, Laurence J., Fall River, Mass., LA, History. Ac-
counting Society 1,2. Whitman & Howard Inc.
Bellizeare, Gwendolyn Marie, Dorchester, Mass., LA,
Modern Language. Afro-American Association 4,5;
Chorus 1 . New England Merchants National Bank.
Bello, Estella (Krigman), Framingham, Mass., Education,
English. Dean's List 2,3,4,5. Theta Sigma Tau
2,3,4,5; SNEA 2. Arthur D. Little & Co., Inc.; Bos-
ton Public Schools; Suffolk Franklin Savings Bank.
Bender, David R., Bergenfield, N.J., Electrical Engineer-
ing. AFCEA 2,3,4,5; Pershing Rifles 1. Square "D"
Co.
Benham, Daria Setzco, Maynard, Mass., Elementary
Education. Dean's List 2,3,4,5; Designed Class
Plaque. Weston Schools; H.H. Scott.
Benoit, Suzanne, Nashua, N.H., LA, Biology. Biology
Club 1,2,3,4; Ski Club 1; Women's Ski Team 1. Bio
Research Institute; Children's Hospital.
Benos, Philip Dean, Milton, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 4. PHANAR 1; SAM 4,5.
Stop & Shop; ETHICON.
Berenson, Gary, Little Neck N.Y., LA, English. Dean's
List 2,3,4. Chorus 1; Hillel 1; NEWS 2,3,4; Sigma
Alpha Mu 3,4 (secretary), 5; WNEU 4. WNAC-TV;
New York Times; Northeastern Registrar's Office.
Berenson, Peter H., Newton, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Max Starr Award in Public Accounting; Beta Alpha
Psi. Accounting Society 2,3,4,5; Rifle Club 2,3,4.
Internal Revenue Service; Haksins and Sells.
Bergin, John Lawrence, Norwood, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 3,4. Rifle Club 1. Morse
Shoe Co. ; Ames Textile Co. ; Foxboro Co.
Berglund, Raymond E., Worcester, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Amateur Radio Club 2,3,4; ASME 3,4.
Heald Machine Co.; Riley Stoker Corp.
Bergman, Bruce L., Circleville, N.Y., Civil Engineering.
Dean's List. Alumni Pledge Program; ASME (co-
chairman). New York State Dept. of Transportation.
Berland, Arthur S., Paramus, N.J., Chemical Engineering.
AIChE 2,3,4,5. E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc.
Berlin, Howard, Brookline, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Filene's Department Store; Emerson Radio of New
England.
Berman, Randall L., Milton, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. American Institute of Chemical Engineers
2,3,4,5. U.S. Army Natick Laboratories; High Vol-
tage Engineering Corp.; Electronized Chemicals
Corp.
Berube, Roger A., Salem, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List 4. Atwood & Morrill Co.; Sylvania Elec-
tronics Systems.
Bessler, Phillip Sidney, New York, N.Y., Electrical En-
gineering. Alpha Epsilon Pi 1,2,3,4,5 (rush chair-
man and athletic chairman); Huskey Key 1,2; Rifle
Club 1,2,3. Long Island Railroad; Sylvania Elec-
tronics Stystems; RCA Aero-Space Div.
Bevilacqua, Nicholas Anthony, Roslindale, Mass., Indus-
trial Engineering. AIIE 2,3,4,5 (historian);
American Society of Quality Control 2,3,4,5. E. Van
Noorden Co.; Hersey-Sparling Meter Co.
Bialek, Harriet Renee, Passaic, N.J., LA, Political
Science. Dean's List 1,2,3; Pi Sigma Alpha. Dorm
Counselor 3,4.
Billingham, Clifford Steven, Dedham, Mass., LA,
Journalism. NEWS 2,3; Photo Club 4; Rifle Club 1;
Section Representative 1 ; Advisory Committee to
Dean of Liberal Arts 4,5. Waterbury Republican;
U.S. Army Natick Laboratories; Natick Suburban
Press.
Billman, Lyn Criswell, Winchester, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Husky Key 1,2.
Bishop, Lawrence W., Westwood, Mass., Business,
Management. Phi Beta Alpha 2,3,4 (publicity chair-
man), 5 (sports chairman). Carters; Relief Printing
Corp.; Astron; Charles T. Main Corp.
Bissanti, Joseph Michael, Quincy, Mass., Education,
Modern Language. Boston Public Library.
Biviano, Edward J., Norwich, N.Y., Electrical Engineer-
ing. IEEE 3,4,5; Student Union 4,5. General Labora-
tory Associates Inc.; Baird Atomic Inc.; I.B.M.
Blair, A. Scott, Georgetown, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List 1,4; Beta Alpha Psi 3,4,5. Accounting
Society 3 (corresponding secretary); Beta Alpha Psi
3 (secretary); Counter Guerilla Group 2; ROTC
1,2,3,4,5. Haverhill National Bank; Continental Can
Co.
Blanchard, Barbara Ann, Dedham, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 3,4. Nu Beta 3 (secretary). Newton
Wellesley Hospital; Milton Hospital.
Blout, James, Newton Centre, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME 3,4. Northeastern University;
Honeywell.
Bogan, Diane E., Wakefield, Mass., LA, Modern Lan-
guage. Dean's List; Academy. Office of Educational
Resources; Graduate Placement Service, Northeast-
ern University; New England Confectionery Co.
Boig, Robert E., Norwell, Mass., Industrial Engineering.
Auto Club 1,2; Cross Country 1; Track 1. Parco En-
gineering; Merriman Inc.
383
Bork. G. Ruth, Brookline, Mass., LA, Philosophy. Dean's
List 4,5; Alpha Psi Omega. Chorus 1,2,3; Silver
Masque 1,2,3 (secretary), 4 (secretary). Newton
YMCA; Northeastern University Dept. of
Programmed Learning.
Boscombe, Richard, Swansea, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 2,5; Beta Gamma Epsilon (president).
Taft-Pierce Co.; Raytheon; Hospitals Laundry Assn.
Boshart, Kenneth, East Greenbush, N.Y., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 3,4. AIChE 2,3 (treasurer), 4
(vice-president), 5. New York State Department of
Public Works; Westuaco.
Boska, Alan L., Nashua, N.H., Chemical Engineering.
Dean's List 3,4. Raytheon Co.; Continental Can Co.
Bouffard, Donald T., Hartford, Conn., Business, Finance
and Insurance. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Beta Gamma
Sigma. Finance Assn.; Tennis Club. Aetna Life and
Casualty Co.
Bourke, Paul Francis, Sommerville, Mass., LA, English.
Boston Herald Traveler; Fort McHenry, National
Park Service.
Bowers, Ronald, Woburn, Mass., Business, Industrial
Relations. Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory;
Boston Stove Co.
Bowker, Joseph, Boston, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Newman Center, 1,2,3,4,5. Control Equipment
Corp.; Anelex Corp.; Philbrick/Nexus Research;
Ateledyne Co.
Braczyk, Paul J., Webster, Mass., Industrial Engineering.
AIIE 4,5. American Optical Corp.
Brady, Maureen T., West Springfield, Mass., LA, Social
Welfare. Dean's List. Dorm Floor Representative;
Dorm Counselor.
Breen, William Patrick, Norwell, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. ASCE 4,5. Lamont R. Healey Inc.
Brewster, Gordon A., Beverly, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Boston Society of Civil Engineering — Student
Chapter 3,4; Counter-Guerilla Group 2; Alumni
Pledge Program 3; Student Council Section
Representative 1; Surf Club 2,3. City of Beverly En-
gineering Dept.; Hardesty and Hanover, Engineers.
Briggs, Larry A., Framingham, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. IEEE 2,3,4,5; WNEU 1.
Honeywell Inc.
Briggs, William F. Jr., Highland, N.Y., Business, Indus-
trial Relations. Counter Guerilla Group 1,2,3; Husky
Key 2,3; Phi Kappa Tau 1,2,3,4,5. New York State
Department of Public Works; Northeastern Univer-
sity; IBM; H. Rothstein; B & M Corp.
Bristol, Loren, Canton, Conn., Civil Engineering. Met-
ropolitan District Commission.
Broderick, Thomas F., Dorchester, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. AIEE 2,4; Freshman Section Representa-
tive. Boston Gear Works; Raytheon Corp.
Bronsky, George, Mount Vernon, N.Y., LA, Biology,
Dean's List 3,4. Husky Key 3,4,5; Nu Beta 1,2,3.
Mount Vernon Hospital; New Rochelle Hospital.
Brown, Douglas H., Warwick, R.I., Industrial Engineer-
ing. Rifle Club 2,3,4; Rifle Team 2,3,4 (captain).
Armstrong Cork Co.
Brown, Phyllis M., Somerville, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; The Academy 4,5. Husky Key
2,3,4; Rifle Club 1,2; Sociology Club 1. Boston State
Hospital; Metropolitan State Hospital; Division of
Child Guardianship.
Brown, Robert Stephen, Newton, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 2,3. Hot Rod Club 2,3; Ski
Club 1,2. International Equipment Co.; R.M. Barnes
Engineering; M.F. Bryant Inc.; Instrumentation
Laboratories.
Brown, Sharon D., Waterbury, Conn., LA, Chemistry.
Dean's List 1,2,4. ACS Student Affiliate 1,2 (secre-
tary) 3,4; Class Board 1. Plating on Plastics
Research; MacDermid Inc.
Buffa, Thomas A., Torrington, Conn., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1 ,2. The Torrington Co.
Bulchis, Edward William, Hawthorne, N.J., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3,4,5; Eta Kappa Nu 4,5;
Tau Beta Pi 4,5. Beta Gamma Epsilon 1,2,3,4,5
(guard); College of Engineering Student Advisory
Committee 4; Husky Key 2,3; IEEE 1,2,3,4 (vice
chairman), 5 (chairman); IFC Sports 2,3,4,5; WNEU
1 ; Rifle Club 1 ; Sylvania; RCA.
Bullock, Jayne M., Brockton, Mass., LA, Medical
Technology. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; The Academy
3,4,5; Phi Sigma Society 3,4,5; Medical Technology
Club 1,2,3,4,5. New England Deaconess Hospital.
Buono, Christopher, East Boston, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Photography Club 4. T.R.G. Div., Control
Data Corp.
Burke, John F., Maiden, Mass., Business, Management.
Finance Club 3,4; IFC Representative 4; Phi Beta
Alpha 3,4 (sergeant-at-arms), 5; Professor of Mili-
tary Science Advisory Committee 5; ROTC
1,2,3,4,5. H.A. Johnson Co.; Instrumentation
Laboratories; Boston Redevelopment Authority;
New England Insurance Rating Assn.
Burke, Steven, Brookline, Mass., LA, Political Science.
Counter Guerilla Group 2; NROTCBA 1,2; Student
Union 2; ROTC Council 2.
Burpee, David S., Greene, N.Y., Electrical Engineering.
Burzynski, James Joseph, Bay City, Mich., Dean's List 4.
Ashland School System; Town of Danvers; Avis
Rent-A-Car.
Buswell, Peter J., Rutland, Vt., Education. Dean's List
3,4. Student Executive Committee 4; Track 1. Wil-
ton Public Schools; Waltham Public Schools.
Butler, Kenneth B., Wilmington, Mass., Business, Indus-
trial Relations. Harvard Trust Co.; Aetna Life &
Casualty.
Butler, Patricia Ann (Sullivan), Boston, Mass., Elemen-
tary Education. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Kappa Delta Pi
4; Phi Kappa Phi 4. Newman Club 1; Rifle Club 1;
384
Silver Masque 1,2,3; Yacht Club 4. Arlington Public
Schools, Revere Schools.
Butt, Bradford E., Everett, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Dean's List 2,4; Chi Epsilon. Civil Engineering
Society. Mass. Department of Public Works, Bureau
of Transportation Plan and Development; Aberthaw
Construction Co.; Camp Dresser & McKee.
By am, Rodney W., Wakefield, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Dean's List 1,3,4; Beta Alpha Psi, Gamma Nu
Chapter. Accounting Society. Mobil Oil Corp.; Mur-
ray Printing Co.; A.I. Shatswell & Co.
Byers, Sandra, Lawrence, Mass., Bouve, Physical
Therapy. Dean's List. Biology Club 1 ; Physical
Therapy Club 2,3. Lawrence General Hospital.
Byrne, Edward T., Peabody, Mass., Business,
Management. Intramural Basketball; Graduation Ex-
ercise 1969. Maynard Plastics; Keystone Custodian
Funds.
Cafarella, John H., Medford, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; Dean's List.
Counter Guerilla Group 2,3,4,5; Tau Epsilon Phi.
RCA, Burlington.
Cahill, Lawrence B., Medford, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3; Pi Tau Sigma, 4,5. Beta
Gamma Epsilon 2,3,4 (treasurer), 5; ASME 3,4,5;
Interfraternity Council 3,4 (treasurer). Arthur D.
Little Co., Inc.; NASA Electronics Research Center;
Nichols Dynamics, Inc.
Calderwood, Robert, Pittsfield, Mass., Civil Engineering.
American Society of Civil Engineers 3,4,5; Beta
Gamma Epsilon (vice president 4); Track 1. Petricca
Construction Co.; Fay, Spafford and Thorndike En-
gineers.
Calista, Joseph J., Kingston, Mass., Business, Finance and
Insurance. Dean's List 3,4. Finance Club. Eaton &
Howard, Inc., Aetna Life Insurance; Elliott Business
Machines.
Callahan, James F., Quincy, Mass., LA, Psychology.
Dean's List. Cambridgeport Savings Bank; Bresnick
Advertising Agency; Boston State Hospital.
Cameron, Gary J., Charlestown, NH, Chemical Engineer-
ing. Omega Chi Epsilon 4,5; Tau Beta Pi, 4,5.
American Institute of Chemical Engineers 2,3,4,5.
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
Cameron, Peter B., Reading, Mass., Business, Economics.
Economics Society 2,3,4 (treasurer); SAM 2,3; Bos-
ton Mutual Life Insurance Co.; Ford Motor Co.
Campbell, Thomas J., Waltham, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 1,2. Charlestown Savings
Bank, Ford Motor Co., RCA.
Cardoos, Ronald M., Boston, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Cauldron 5 (photo editor); NEWS 2,3,4 (photo edi-
tor); Pershing Rifles 1,2; PHANAR 2,3. Cabot
Corp.; Mass. Motion Picture; Instructional Com-
munications, N.U.
Carlisle, Clayton R., Hudson, Mass., LA, Political
Science. Rifle Club 1,2; Ski Club 1,3,4,5. Wellesley
Planning Board; Agency for International Develop-
ment; East Rochester Renewal Project.
Carlon, Donna Marie, Pittsfield, Mass., Nursing. Dean's
List 2. Ski Club 1,2. Pittsfield General Hospital;
Peter Bent Brigham Hospital.
Carney, William Robert, Paxton, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Camera Club 3,4,5. Shrewsbury Water
Dept.; Mass. DPW Research & Materials Div.
Carnicelli, Peter, Winchester, Mass., LA, Biology, Pre-
Med. Dean's List 3,4. Biology Club 1,2; Delta Sigma
Theta (secretary 2). Lahey Clinic; Mass. General
Hospital.
Carosi, Alfred C, Jr., Braintree, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,4; Distinguished Military
Student; Pershing Rifles Outstanding Pledge; As-
sociation of U.S. Army Medal; Professor of Military
Science Medal for Merit. AIIE 2,3,4,5; Class
Cabinet 2,3,4 (Constitution Committee, chairman,
Husky Dog Committee, Social Committee chair-
man), 5 (president); Nu Epsilon Zeta 2,3,4,5;
Pershing Rifles 1,2; Rifle Club 1,5; Scabbard &
Blade 3,4 (activities chairman), 5 (commanding of-
ficer); Special ROTC Study Committee 5; Student
Council 2 (chairman, Elections Committee, member,
Special Studies Committee), 3 (co-chairman, SCATE
Committee); 4 (Publicity Committee, chairman,
Conditional Exam Committee, Library Planning
Committee, University Planning Committee); Table
Tennis Club 1 . Foxboro Company; Ford Motor Co.
Carr, Larry R., Natick, Mass., Business, Management.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Beta Gamma Sigma Honor
Society 3,4. Intramural Basketball 2,3; SAM 2,3
(secretary), 4 (vice president); Table Tennis Club
2,3. Newton Savings Bank; Raytheon Corp.
Carrington, Ronald A., LeRaysville, Pa., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 3. Student Union 4,5; Yacht
Club 2,3,4,5. Sylvania Electric Products, Inc.
Carvalho, Daniel Anthony, Plymouth, Mass., Chemical
Engineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Omega Chi
Epsilon 3,4,5. AIChE 2,3,4,5. New England Enzyme
Center; Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.
Cascieri, Tito, Jr., Winthrop, Mass., LA, Chemistry.
Dean's List 1,2,4; Academic Achievement Award,
ROTC 1,2; Outstanding Sophomore ROTC Cadet 2;
Undergraduate Award in Analytical Chemistry 4.
NU Chapter, American Chemical Society 2,3,4,5;
National Student Chapter, American Chemical
Society 4,5. Gillette Safety Razor Co.
Cashins, Bill, South Boston, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Chi Epsilon. Rifle Club 2,3; Society of Civil En-
gineers 2,3,4,5; Society of American Military En-
gineers 2,3,4 (representative to the Council of
Professional Engineering Societies), 5. City of Bos-
ton Public Works Dept.; James P. Collins and Assoc.
Celeste, Richard J., Framingham, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Alpha Pi Mi. Raytheon Co.
Centola, Barbara A., Brighton, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 2,3,4,5; The Academy; Phi Sigma. Nu
385
Beta 3,4; Husky Key 1. Lahey Clinic Foundation;
Bio-Research Instiute; MIT.
Chako, Beverly J., Jericho, NY., Education, English.
Dean's List 3. Advisory Committee to Dean of
Women 2,3,4; Cauldron 5 (faculty editor);
Cheerleader 1,2,3; Class Board president 2,3,4;
NEWS 1,2,3; Student Center Committee 2 and 3
(secretary), 4; Winter Carnival co-chairman 3. The
Boston Globe; Northeastern University.
Chandler, Carleton E., Marshfield, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Basketball 1,2,3,4; Most Valuable Player
Award, Colonial Tournament. Thayer Scale; Syl-
vania.
Chapman, Wayne S., Peabody, Mass., Business Adminis-
tration. Orientation Committee 4; Phi Beta Alpha
3,4 (house manager), 5 (president); Rifle Club 2.
Maynard Plastics; George H. Dean Co.; New
England Subscription; H. Rothstein Co.
Chase, Warren W., Jr., Waltham, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List; Beta Alpha Psi (vice
president). Accounting Society 4 (recording secre-
tary), 5; Intramural Basketball 2; editor, Beta Alpha
Psi publication, "Balance Forward." Arkwright Mu-
tual Insurance Co.; Mass. Blue Cross-Blue Shield;
Ernst & Ernst, CPA; United Fruit Co.
Chekos, Harry James, Wakefield, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1. ASCE 3,4,5; ROTC; Radio Club
2. Gil-Bern Construction Co.
Chernick, Maureen P., Springfield, Mass., Elementary
Education. Easton Schools, Provident Institution for
Saving.
Chin, Philip Allan, Charlestown, Mass., Business Ac-
counting. Dean's List 3; Beta Alpha Psi. Accounting
Society 3,4,5. Boston Globe; H.P. Hood & Sons.
Chisholm, Paul A., Olean, NY, Chemical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,2,4. AIChE 1,2,3,4. Xerox Corp.
Chouinard, Herbert Allen, Hopkington, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,4. Society of Civil En-
gineers 2,3,4,5. Aberthaw Construction Co.; Town of
Walpole, Engineering Dept.
Christensen, Terry Lee, Bristol, Conn., Industrial En-
gineering. AIIR 4,5. The Stanley Works.
Chu, Justina Foon-Ling, Hong Chu. LA, English. Dean's
List 1. International Students' Forum 1,2, and 3
(vice chairman and secretary), 4 (chairman). Boston
Herald-Traveler.
Chuplis, Gerald James, Oxford, Mass., LA, Psychology.
Aetna Life & Casualty Co.
Ciampi, Paul Joseph, Watertown, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. ASCE 4,5; Chi Epsilon. Hayden, Harding &
Buchanan.
Ciarlone, Kenneth M., Lynnfield, Mass., LA, History.
AFCEA 1,2,3,4,5 (president); MARS 1,2,3; ROTC
Council 2,3.
Ciccarelli, Anthony J., Jr., Wakefield, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. ASCE; Judo Club 2; Rifle Club 2. Town
of Wakefield, Engineering Dept.
Clanton, Robert A., Beverly, Mass., Business
Management. Dean's List 1,3,4. Sociology Club 1.
Maynard Plastics, Inc.; Ford Motor Co.
Cleary, John F., Taunton, Mass., Chemical Engineering.
Dean's List 3,4. AIChE 2,3,4,5. Texas Instruments.
Clift, Leslie Robert, Greenfield, Mass., Business, Indus-
trial Relations. Intramural Basketball 1,2; SAM 3;
Ski Club 3,4; Tennis Club 3,4. State Street Bank.
Coccoluto, Lorraine Frances, Woburn, Mass., LA,
Medical Technology. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Academy
4,5; Phi Sigma Biology Honor Society 3,4,5. Alpha
Omicron Pi 2,3,4 (treasurer); 5 (Panhellenic
representative); Panhellenic Council 4,5 (vice
president). New England Baptist Hospital.
Cofer, Charles R., Norwood, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Pershing Rifles 1,2,3,4,5 (drill
team commander, company commander). Nortronics;
Eastern Gas & Fuel Associates.
Cohen, Howard D., Newton, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 2,3,4. Kent Laboratories; R.H. Barnes;
Compo Industries, Inc.
Colangelo, Anthony R., Cambridge, Mass., Business,
Finance & Insurance. Rifle Club 2. King's Depart-
ment Stores; E.F. Hutton & Co.
Colantuno, Joseph Charles, Marblehead, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Dean's List 1,3,4; Eta Kappa Nu. Syl-
vania, Veeder-Root, Raytheon.
Cole, Barbara Janet, Millbrook, N.Y., Boston Bouve,
Physical Therapy. Dean's List 1,2,3. Boston Bouve
Advisory Board 2,3 (secretary); Co-op Advisory
Board 3; Physical Therapy Club 3,4; Volleyball 1;
Wesley Club 1 . Mt. Sinai Hospital.
Cole, Pamela J., Natick, Mass., LA, Psychology. Dean's
List 1,2,3; Pi Sigma Alpha Award, Honors Program
1,2.
Collins, Linda, Waltham, Mass., LA, English. Dean's
List. English Lit. Society 2; Husky Key 2; Rifle Club
1. Waltham Schools, Independence National
Historical Park.
Collins, Malcolm B., Bronxville, N.Y., Business, Account-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3. Section Representative 1.
Collins, Susan G., Boston, Mass., Education, Chemistry.
Dean's List 1,2,4. American Chemical Society
1,2,3,4,5. Myerson Tooth Co., Eastman Gelatine
Corp.
Comegno, Carol F., Burlington, N.J., LA, English. Dean's
List. Alpha Omicron Pi 4,5 (historian), NEWS
1,2,3. Camden, N.J. Courier -Post.
Conklin, Catherine L., Swampscott, Mass., LA, English.
Dean's List.
Connell, Robert V., Milton, Mass., Boston Bouve,
Physical Education. Bouve Advisory Board (class
rep.) 3,4,5; Physical Ed. Club 1,2,3,4,5. Hayden Inn
School; Waltham Schools.
Connolly, James F., Brockton, Mass., Education, English.
386
Dean's List. Football 1,2,3,4; ROTC 1,2,3,4. Boston
State Hospital, Melrose High School; Camp North-
woods.
Connolly, Nancy Ellen, Wilmington, Mass., LA, Modern
Languages. Cheerleader 1,2,3,4. New England
Deaconess Hospital; Belmont Memorial Library;
Raytheon Co., Mass. Div. of Immigration.
Conrad, David R., Stoughton, Mass., Business, Industrial
Relations. Dean's List 2,3. Ford Motor Co., Eugene
Engineering Co.
Conti, Lucille, Walpole, Mass., LA, Psychology. Dean's
List 2,3,4. Wrentham State School; Metropolitan
State Hospital; Mass. Division of Child Guardian-
ship.
Conway, Alan Harold, Newton, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Accounting Society 3. John Hancock Mutual
Life Insurance Co.
Conway, Timothy J., Waterbury, Conn., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,3,4; Omega Chi Epsilon 4;
Tau Beta Pi 4. AIChE 2,3,4. McDermitt, Inc.;
American Cyanamid.
Cooper, Steven B., Lexington, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1 ; Tau Kappa Epsilon (secretary)
4,5. IBM Corp.
Copas, Anthony Louis, Newburgh, N.Y., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Omega Chi Epsilon
3,4,5; Tai Beta Pi 3,4,5. Class Cabinet 3,4,5; AIChE
2,3,4,5. Avon Products Corp.
Coppola, Justin John, Somerville, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. AIIE 2,3,4,5. MBTA, ECA, Honeywell.
Corbett, Robert J., Levittown, N.Y., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List. Long Island Railroad; Grum-
man Aerospace Corp.
Cormier, Gene Arthur, Oxford, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. IEEE 4,5; Track 1. General Electric.
Cortiglio, Anthony, East Haven, Conn., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Pi Tau Sigma.
American Society of Mechanical Engineers 3,4,5.
Armstrong Rubber Co., Avco Lycoming Co.
Costanzo, John P., Jr., East Haven, Conn., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3,4,5; Alpha Pi Mu; Tau
Beta Pi. American Institute of Industrial Engineers
3,4 (treasurer). Armstrong Rubber Co.
Coughlin, Judith, North Quincy, Mass., LA, Medical
Tech. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Academy 4,5. Alpha
Omicron Pi. New England Baptist Hospital.
Coupe, Richard W., Lewiston, Me., Business
Management. Auto Club 3,4,5; Society for the Ad-
vancement of Management 3,4,5 (president). David-
son Rubber Co., Ford Motor Co., Itek Corp.
Cranston, Christina Eve, Westbury, N.Y., Boston Bouve,
Physical Therapy. Dean's List 1,2,3. Bouve Advisory
Board 2; Physical Therapy Club 3,4; Ski Club 1.
Foxboro State Hospital; Norwich State Hospital.
Craver, Gary A., Schenectady, N.Y., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 3,4,5; Intramural Basketball 2,3. General
Electric Co., Gas Turbine Engineering Div.
Crawford, Janice Elaine, Edison, N.J., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Yacht Club 3. Bio-Research Insti-
tute, Mass. General Hospital.
Crockett, David E., Vallejo, Calif., Civil Engineering.
Dean's List 1. American Society of Civil Engineers
4,5; Underwater Society 1,2,3. Warren Bros. Co.,
San Francisco Bay Naval Shipyard.
Cronin, Denise M., Melrose, Mass., LA, Psychology.
Dean's List 2,3,4,5; The Academy 4,5. Husky Key
1,2,3, Inter-sorority Council 3; Theta Sigma Tau
(Lambda Delta Phi) 2,3,4,5.
Cronin, James E., Hingham, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Dean's List 3,4. Alpha Kappa Sigma; Marketing
Club 2,3,4. Bradlees, Inc.; Atlantic Richfield Co.;
Mobil Oil Corp.
Cruickshank, Frederick Robert, Jr., Cambridge, Mass.,
Business, Economics. Dean's List 4. Economics Club
3,4,5; Gamma Phi Kappa 2,3,4 (secretary), 5; In-
tramural Basketball, Football. Mass. Home Rule
Commission; New England Merchants National
Bank.
Cuddy, Kathleen B., Brighton, Mass., Nursing. Beth Israel
Hospital.
Curran, Joseph L., Framingham, Mass., LA,
Anthropology. Dean's List. Chess Club 3,4; Pool
Club 2.
Curran, William, Quincy, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Football 1,2,3,4 (captain).
Cybulski, Donald, Johnston, R.I., Business, Management.
Football 1 ; Indoor and Outdoor Track 1 ,2,3,4.
Metals and Controls, Inc., Div. of Texas Instruments.
Dabilis, Andrew J., Chelmsford, Mass., LA, Journalism.
Cauldron 4 (sports rewrite), 5 (sports editor); In-
tramural Basketball 1,2,3,4; NEWS 3 (sports
rewrite), 4 (sports editor). Lawrence Eagle-Tribune.
Dadak, Paul Louis, Dracut, Mass., Civil Engineering.
ASCE-BSCE Student Chapter 3,4,5 (program chair-
man); Counter Guerilla Group 1,2,3,4,5; ROTC
1,2,3,4,5. Stowers Associates.
D'Alessandro, Fred John, Galway, N.Y. Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME 3,4,5; Hot Rod Club 3,4,5; Ski
Club 5. General Electric Co.
Daly, James V., Dorchester, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 2,3,4,5. Mass. Department of Natural
Resources.
Danell, Robert Mark, Wakefield, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Alpha Pi Mu; Dean's List 2,3,4; Indus-
trial Engineering Honor Society. Surf Club 2,3.
General Tire and Rubber Co.
Danesi, Paul P., Jr., North Attleboro, Mass., LA, English.
Dean's List. Literary Society 4,5. Texas Instruments.
D'Angelo, Merriam, Wellesley Hills, Mass., Education,
English. Dean's List. Newman Club 1,2 (communica-
tions chairman) 3,4,5. Brandeis Library; Ford Foun-
dation; High Schools.
Daniells, Thomas, New Hamburg, Ont. Canada, LA,
387
Modern Languages. Dean's List. Hockey Club 2,3,4;
Spanish Club.
Davis, Brian C, Ashland, Mass., LA, Philosophy. Dean's
List 1,2,3,4. LA Student Advisory Committee 3,4;
Philosophy Curriculum Committee 3,4.
Dawda, John W., Dorchester, Mass., Business, Industrial
Relations. Sigma Alpha Mu; Rifle Club 1,2. Lum-
bermens Mutual Insurance Co.; Merchants Tire &
Distributors; Old Mr. Boston Distiller, Inc.
Dawson, Robert A., Hamden, Conn., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 2,3,4,5; Rifle Club 1; SAME 1; Student
Union 4. The Stanley Works; UniRoyal Inc.
Debye, Christina M., Sudbury, Mass., Elementary Educa-
tion. Kappa Delta Phi 4,5. Chorus and Choir 4,5.
New England Deaconess Hospital; Northeastern
University; Oberlin College.
DeCesare, Albert, Lawrence, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. American Mutual Liability Insurance Co.;
Davis & Furber Machine Co.
DeCristoforo, Ronald J., Lynn, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Airplane Club 1; Rifle Club 1,3. Allis
Chalmers Mfg. Co.; Northeast Airlines.
DeFronzo, Ronald D., Lynn, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List; Eta Kappa Nu; Society of American
Military Engineers Award; Tau Beta Pi. Alumni
Pledge Program 3,4,5; IEEE 4,5; Intramural Basket-
ball 3; Intramural Track 1; Class of 70 Cabinet
2,3,4,5; Scabbard & Blade 3,4,5. Allis-Chalmers
Mfg. Co. ; American Electric Power Co.
DeFuria, Robert, Lynn, Mass., Mechanical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; ASME 4,5; Pi Tau Sigma 3,4,
(treasurer), 5; Tau Beta Pi 4,5. N.A.S.A.
DeManche, Jean, Haverhill, Mass., Nursing. Beth Israel
Hospital.
DeNave, Vincent, Brooklyn, N.Y., Business, Industrial
Relations. Dean's List 1,2,3,4. Folk Club; Intramural
Basketball; Ski Club. Bloomingdales; New England
Subscription; St. Johnsbury Trucking Co.
Dennis, Michael, Wakefield, Mass., LA Political Science.
Ski Club. Boston Five Cents Savings Bank.
DePari, Sandra, Weymouth, Mass., Nursing. Dean's List.
Beth Israel Hospital.
Desgroseilliers, David F., Fitchburg, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List. Simonds Saw & Steel Co.;
Rooney Hunt Co.; John P. McMahon, C.P.A.
Desjardins, Jacques R., Bristol, Conn., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. Hockey Team 3,4. American
Optical Co.; General Electric Co.; A.W. Haydon Co.
Dewire, Michael B., Brookline, Mass., Education,
General Science. Dean's List. St. Regis Paper Co.
DiBenedetto, Peter L., Belmont, Mass., Business,
Finance. Finance Club 3,4. Lerner Co., Inc.
DiBerardinis, Louis J., Lawrence, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 4. AIChE 2,3,4. Harvard
School of Public Health; Mass. Dept. of Labor and
Industries.
388
DiBlasi, Philip R., Revere, Mass., Industrial Engineering.
Alpha Pi Mu; Dean's List 4. AIIE 3,4,5. Raytheon
Co.
DiLando, Robert R., Revere, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 2,3,4,5. Gregstrom Corp.; Market Forge
Co.
DiMare, Richard J., Revere, Mass., Business, Finance &
Insurance. Nu Epsilon Zeta. E.F. Hutton & Co. Inc. ;
Investment Companies Services Corp.; Seacraft Ind.
Inc.
DiMeo, Robert A., Melrose, Mass., LA, History. Dean's
List 3. Judo Club 1,2 (president). SNEA 3,4. Boston
Floating Hospital; Herrick, Smith, Donald, Farley &
Ketchum Inc.; Maiden Hospital; Northeastern
University.
Dinerman, Roberta Gail, Marblehead, Mass., Education,
Speech & Hearing Therapy. Dean's List 3,4,5. Dor-
mitory Council 2; Inter-Dormitory Council 2. Ab-
bott's of Boston, Inc.; Morgan Memorial Inc.
DiNozzi, Robert D., Roslindale, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List. Coordinating Committee for
Biafran Relief 4,5 (chairman). International Equip-
ment Corp.
DiNuovo, John, Palmer, Mass., LA, Psychology. Academy
5; Dean's List 2,3,4,5. Psychology Representative to
the Student Advisory Council. Aetna Life &
Casualty.
Dion, Robert J., Spencer, Mass., Business, Management.
Beta Gamma Sigma; Dean's List. Judo Club 3,4,5;
SAM 3,4,5. Ford Motor Co.
Dionne, Daniel L., Beverly, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Student Union Cabinet 4,5; Yacht Club 4. Batten,
Barton, Durstine, & Osborne Inc.; Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp.
DiPastina, Dorothy D., Readville, Mass., LA, Modern
Languages. Dean's List. Northeastern University.
Dobosz, Walter A. Jr., Stratford, Conn., Business,
Management.
Dodd, Veronica Ann, Middletown, N.Y., Education,
Humanities. Northeastern University; Wayland
School Systems.
Donahue, Michael A., Amesbury, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Beta Alpha Psy; Dean's List 4,5. Account-
ing Society 2,3,4,5; Auto Club 2,3; Judo Club 1.
Chase Shawmut Co.; Alfred I. Shatswell & Co.;
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Donahue, Richard James, Hanover, Mass., Business,
Marketing. Dean's List 2. Freshman Basketball
Marketing Club 4; Phi Kappa Tau (IFC rep. 4); Surf
Club 3,4. Boston Globe; Star Market; Bradlees.
Donaldson, Robert T., Billerica, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME 4,5; Beta Gamma Epsilon 2,3,
(treasurer) 4, (president) 5 ; Husky Key 3 ; Rifle Club
2. Vacuum Engineering Co.; Kleeberg Associates.
Donehue, John J., Brookline, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Pershing Rifles 1,2,3 (Operations); Surf Club 3.
Hitchiner Manufacturing Co., Inc.; Sheraton — Bos-
ton Hotel; New Notions, Inc.
Donlon, Stephen J., Brighton, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Beta Alpha Psi; Beta Gamma Sigma; Dean's
List. Accounting Society 3,4. United Fruit Co.;
Touche, Ross & Co.
Donovan, Timothy E., Brookline, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 2,3,4. NUCES 4,5. Abraham Woolf
& Associates, Inc.
Dorfsman, Michael J., Beverly, Mass., LA, Journalism.
NEWS 2,3,4,5 (editor in chief, news editor);
Presidents Advisory Committee 4 (sub-committee
chairman); WEEI; Beverly Times.
Dorin, Jeffrey Stuart, Waltham, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List; H.K.N. ; T.B.P. Alford
Manufacturing Co.; Sylvania; Gordon Engineering
Co.
Doucette, Joseph A., Jr., Wakefield, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. AIIE 4,5; Intramural Football 1. Western
Electric Co.
Dow, Michael S., Methuen, Mass., Civil Engineering. Chi
Epsilon 4,5; Dean's List. ASCE-BSCE 4,5; Class
Cabinet 1,2,3; Class of 70 Alumni Pledge Program
4,5; Football 1; Huskiers 1; Phi Kappa Tau 3,
(recording secretary), 4 (Executive Board) 5; Senior
Week Committee; Student Council 3,4,5. City of
Haverhill; John A. Volpe Construction Co.
Drago, John I., Medford, Mass., Mechanical Engineering.
ASME 2,3,4,5; Biafra Committee 3,4 (representa-
tive); Student Union 4,5 (chairman of Chapel & Con-
stitution Committee, Cabinet Member). Polaroid
Corp.
Drake, Chester Stephen, Framingham, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. ASCE 4,5; Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5; Rifle
Club 3. Boston Sand & Gravel Co.; Neal Mitchell
Associates; Whitman & Howard Inc.
Drake, David E., Needham, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 2,3,4,5; Canterbury Club 2,3. Columbia
Packing Co.
Dwyer, Phillip J., Scituate, Mass., LA, Elementary
Education. Boston State Hospital; Westwood High
School; Norwell Elementary School.
Dziadul, Walter John, Jr., Ipswich, Mass., Business,
Finance & Insurance. American Legion Award for
Military Excellence 4; Dean's List 4; Distinguished
Military Student 5; Professor of Military Science
Medal of Merit 4; ROTC Academic Achievement
Wreath 2. Pershing Rifles 1,2; Scabbard & Blade 3
(Outstanding Pledge) 4,5. Investment Companies
Services Corporation; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp.
Edelman, Robert Jonathan, Frederick, Md., LA, History.
Ethnomusicological Society 4,5 (president); Inter-
dormitory Council 1 ; Student Concern Committee 4
(co-chairman of cimmunications committee). U.S.
National Park Service; Oakland, Calif., Redevelop-
ment Authority.
Edgers, Natalie J., Boston Mass., Elementary Education.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Lambda Delta Phi 2,3,4,5.
Employers' Group Insurance Co., Inc.; Northeastern
University; Boston Public Schools.
Edson, Richard, Weymouth, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1 . The Foxboro Company.
Eggleston, Robert G., Jr., Framingham, Mass., LA, His-
tory. Class Cabinet Honors 1,2,3,4; Class Cabinet
1,2,3,4,5; Class Social Chairman 1,2,3,4; Junior
Prom chairman 4; Radio Club 2,3,4 (vice-president);
Freshman Orientation 4; Freshman Class Advisor 4;
Student Council 4. Framingham Trust Co.
Elkind, Barbara, Scotch Plains, NJ, LA, Biology. Dean's
List 1,2,3,4,5; The Academy; Phi Sigma. Muhlen-
berg Hospital; Rutgers University; Harvard Medical
School.
Elsbee, David B., Brighton, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List; Beta Alpha Psi 4 (treasurer); Beta
Gamma Sigma; Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Kappa Phi
Award; President's Award. Accounting Society
2,3,4; Student Advisory Committee to the Dean 3.
American Cyanamid Co.; Haskins & Sells.
Eng, Pauline M., West Roxbury, Mass., LA, Medical
Technology. Deans List 1,2,3,4; The Academy 4,5.
Medical Technology Club 1,2,3,4 (president), 5; Phi
Sigma 4,5. New England Baptist Hospital; New
England Deaconess Hospital.
Eskinazi, Nessim S., Mattapan, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. Basketball and Sporting Club,
(at the American University of Cairo, Egypt); IEEE.
Jackson & Moreland Div.
Evans, Dana, Reading, Mass., Business; Finance. Camera
Club 2,3; Huskiers and Outing Club 1,2 (vice
president), 3,4. Blue Cross-Blue Shield; Continental
Insurance Co.
Evdokimoff, Eleanor, Hyde Park, Mass., LA, Mathema-
tics. Husky Key 1,2,3,4 (recording secretary), 5 (vice
president); Student Center Committee 4,5 (vice
chairman). NASA; M.I.T. Instrumentation Lab.
Fabrizio, Felix M., Everett, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,4. IEEE 4,5; freshman section
representative 1. TRG Div. of Control Data; AVCO
Research Labs; Honeywell EDP.
Fagan, Janet M., Newton, Mass., Elementary Education.
Husky Key 2,3; Lambda Delta Phi (Theta Sigma
Tau) 4,5 (treasurer). U.S. Office of Education;
Waltham Schools; Northeastern University; Boston
Housing Authority.
Faist, Frank Thomas, Monsey, NY., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Phi Kappa Tau, Gamma Phi Chapter (charter
member) 2,3 (Rush chairman, Homecoming chair-
man), 4,5. Alpine Geophysical Assoc., Inc.; Sylvania
Electronic Products.
Falthzik, Sidney A., Swampscott, Mass., Business
Management. Hillel 1 ; Hot Rod Club 3,4,5; Phi Beta
Alpha 3,4,5 (treasurer); Rifle Club 1; SAM 3,4,5.
Loomis Sayles & Co., Hartford Insurance Group.
Faring, Gail Kingston, Randolph, Mass., Business
389
Management. Dean's List 3; Ford Award 4. Dean's
Advisory Committee (women) 3,4,5; Homecoming
Queens Committee 2 and 4 (chairman); Husky Key
1,2 (secretary), 3,4,5 (secretary); Leadership
Conference Committee 3; Mayoralty Chairman 2;
Winter Carnival 1 (Queen Committee chairman), 3
(chairman), Theta Sigma Tau. Employers' Group
Insurance; Second Federal Savings & Loan Assn.;
Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Farmer, Karl, Roxbury, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Track 1,2,3,4. Boston Edison Co.
Farrell, Judith Susan, Lincoln, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Dean's List 4. McCarthy for President Committee 3;
Sociology Club 4. Boston State Hospital; Metropoli-
tan State Hospital; Childrens' Village.
Farrell, Michael, Brookline, Mass., LA, Biology. Biology
Club 4,5; Chess Club 1,2; Photography Club 1,2;
Sailing Team 1; Ski Team 1,2,3,4,5. Boston Medical
Laboratory; Mass. Public Health lab; Camp Squanto.
Farrington, Paul J., Wakefield, Mass., Business, Indus-
trial Relations. Stoneham Savings Bank.
Farris, Keith, Rhinebeck, NY, Business Management.
Society for the Advancement of Management 3,4.
Garland Corp.; Ford Motor Co.
Faubert, Richard J., North Reading, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2. General Radio Company.
Faust, Albert C, Gardiner, Me., Business, Accounting.
Rifle Club 3. Mass. Dept. of Public Health; Jewish
Memorial Hospital.
Feinberg, Alan, Boston, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Dean's List 4. Advertising Club 2,3,4,5; Marketing
Society 2,3,4,5; Religion Seminar 4. Boston Globe.
Ferguson, Edward C, Maiden, Mass., Education, Social
Studies. Reading Memorial High School; Elliott P.
Joslin Camp; Melrose Public Schools.
Fernandes, Frank Mendes, Duxbury, Mass., Business,
Marketing. NEWS 2,3,4 and 5 (Photo Editor);
Cauldron 5. Cabot Corp.; Bradlees Division of Stop
& Shop.
Fernandes, John, Berkley, Mass., LA, Physics. AIP
1,2,3,4,5. Haywood, Haywood & Boynton, AVCO
Everett Research labs; MIT Instrumentation labs.
Ferrante, Joseph A., Framingham, Mass., Business,
Finance and Insurance. Phi Beta Alpha 4,5. Green &
White Construction Co.; Needham National Bank.
Ferren, Paula A., Onset, Mass., LA, Journalism. Dean's
List 3. Cauldron 5 (section editor); Journalism
Society 5 (vice president); NEWS 1,2; Student Ad-
visory Committee 5. The Cape Cod Standard Times;
NU Press Bureau; New England Telephone Co.
Ferris, Richard Anthony, East Boston, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Stevens-Arnold, Inc.; Raytheon;
Whiteley Hydraulics, Inc.
Ferris, Robert Anthony, East Boston, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Dean's List, 3. Control Data Corp.
Fichter, Peter K., Randolph, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Track 1,2,3,4. Hazeltine Corp.; Foxboro Co.;
Polaroid Corp.
Finer, Linda Dorothy, Sharon, Mass., Nursing. Advisory
Council to Dean of Women 1,2,3; Big Sister-Little
Sister Association 2,3; Class Board 1 (secretary);
Class Cabinet 1,2; class representative 1; Faculty-
Student Nursing Representative 2,3. Beth Israel
Hospital.
Fisher, Arthur Edward, New Haven, Conn., Business,
Marketing. Dean's List. Football 1; Marketing and
Advertising Society 4. Connecticut Bar & Restaurant
Supplies, Inc.
Fisher, Arthur W., Boston, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,2,4. Gamewell Co.
Flavell, Robert Joseph, Whitman, Mass., LA, English.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Academy 4,5; English Honors
Program 4,5. 1970 Cauldron 5 (managing editor);
Delegate, Mass. Colleges Democratic Convention 2.
Boston Herald-Traveler; Boston Globe, The Patriot
Ledger.
Fleischman, Eileen, Englewood, NJ, LA, Psychology.
Delta Phi Epsilon; Young Democrats 1. Marplan;
IBM.
Flight, Wilson R , Everett, Mass., Education, General
Science. Dean's List. SNEA 2,3,4,5; ROTC
1,2,3,4,5. AVCO/RAD; L. A. Donovan; Eastman
Gelatine; Lynnfield Schools.
Flood, Susan, Taunton, Mass., LA, Sociology. A Ph A
1,2; Dorm Counselor 4,5; Tennis Club 2,3; Tennis
Team 1. Aetna Life & Casualty Co.; Taunton State
Hospital; Weir Pharmacy.
Flynn, Thomas F. A., Jr., Wellesley Hills, Mass.,
Business, Marketing. American Marketing Assn.,
3,4; Computer Club 5; Economics Society 4;
Philosophy Forum 5; Ski Club 1,3. Pillsbury Co.;
Greybar Mfg. Co.
Foley, James Edward, Brockton, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Alpha Kappa Sigma 4,5. Wm. Filene's &
Sons; Strauss-Mann Ins. Assoc; Mutual Distributors;
USM Corp.
Forbes, Susan (Bateson), Westwood, Mass., Elementary
Education, Humanities. Dean's List 4. Husky Key
1,2; Student Union 1. Tufts University Medical and
Dental School; Natick Public Schools; Employers
Commercial Union Group.
Forman, Stanley M., Newton, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Tau Beta Pi 3,4,5; Eta
Kappa Nu 4,5. Computer Club 1. Honeywell EDP.
Forti, Joseph F., Beverly, Mass., Mechanical Engineering.
Beta Gamma Epsilon (vice president); American
Society of Mechanical Engineers 3,4,5; Husky Key
2,3,4; Rifle Club 2. Harvard Observatory; General
Electric Co.
Foss, Guy M., Wolfeboro, NH, Civil Engineering. Civil
Engineering Society 3,4,5; Surf Club 2,3. State of
New Hampshire Dept. of Public Works; Northeast-
ern University Dept. of Civil Engineering.
390
Fowler, Cheryl Leila, East Brewster, Mass., LA, Math.
Chorus 1,2; Silver Masque 2; Ski Club 4,5. AVCO
Corp; Arthur D. Little, Inc.
Fox, Martin Harold, Montville, Conn., Chemical En-
gineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers
2,3,4,5. General Dynamics Corp.
Fradkoff, Steven Paul, Newton, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. AIChE 1,2,3,4; DeMolay Club 1,2,3,4;
Rifle Club 1 . Skinner and Sherman, Inc., RCA Corp.
Frank, Thomas J., Lakewood, N.J., Business Marketing.
Dean's List 1,2,5. Alpha Kappa Sigma 3,4,5.
General Motors Corp.
Frankel, Beverly, Boston, Mass., LA, Sociology. Hillel 1;
Husky Key 1. Boston Aid to the Blind; Boston Float-
ing Hospital.
Fransen, Steve L., Reading, Mass., Elementary Education,
Math — Science. Dean's List. Goodwin Proctor and
Hoar, Attorneys; Boston Museum of Science.
Franze, Gerald F., Albany, NY, Civil Engineering. Dean's
List 2,3,4,5; Chi Epsilon 3,4 (treasurer), 5; Tau Beta
Pi 4,5. ASChE 2,3,4,5. Volpe Construction Co., Inc.
Frazier, Claire Marie, Waban, Mass., Education, Social
Studies. Dean's List. Waltham Schools; Waltham
YMCA.
Fredriksen, Erik J., Roslindale, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 3. Rifle Club 1; IEEE 5. An-
derson-Nichols & Co., Inc.; Baird-Atomic Inc.
Freitas, Joan Marie, Medford, Mass., Boston Bouve,
Physical Therapy. Dean's List. Husky Key 2;
Physical Therapy Club 3,4; UCAR 2. Maiden Hospi-
tal.
Freitas, Tobias Alan, North Dighton, Mass., Business,
Management. Plymouth Home National Bank;
Employers Commercial Union Insurance Group.
Freve, Wilfrid William, Jr., Woonsocket, RI, Power Sys-
tem Engineering. Dean's List 4. IEEE 4,5; In-
tramural Basketball 1; Intramural Football 1; Phi
Gamma Pi 2 (pledge master); 3 (sargeant-at-arms),
4,5. Montraup Electric Co.; Blackstone Valley Elec-
tric Co.; Brockton Edison Co.; Fall River Electric
Light Co.
Friel, Linda (de Lyon), Teaneck, N.J., LA, English.
Dean's List 1,2,3. Judo Club 1,2.
Fritz, Charles R., Jr., Winsted, Conn., Industrial En-
gineering. Phi Beta Alpha 4,5; IFC Representative
4,5. Ingersoll Rand; Hudson Wire Co.
Fritzsche, Daniel Victor, Ashburnham, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Chi Epsilon 5. Civil Engineering Society
3,4,5 (program chairman); NU Band 1,2; SAME 1,2;
ROTC Band Assn. 1,2 (area staff). Jackson &
Moreland; Crandall Dry Dock Engineers, Inc.
Fry, Gary Raymond, Cheverly, Md., LA, Political
Science. Distinguished Military Student. ROTC
Counter Guerilla Group 3,4 and 5 (deputy division
B. commander). City Planning Associates, Inc.;
Federal Power Commission.
Fryar, Jeanne G., Weymouth, Mass., Education, Modern
Language. Dean's List 3,4,5. Newman Club 1; Class
Cabinet 1,2; Husky Key 1,2,3. MIT; Revere Schools.
Gafney, James F. Jr., Ware, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 1,2,3,4 & 5 (representative to the En-
gineering Council); ACS 5. Barre Wool Combing
Co.
Gagnon, Gerard B., Manchester, N.H., Mechanical En-
gineering. Nominee for Pi Tau Sigma. ASME 3,4
(treasurer). Felton Brush Co.; New Hampshire
Insurance Co.; Sprague Electric Co.; Foster Beef.
Gallagher, Angela, Billerica, Mass., LA, Mathematics.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Academy 4. NASA.
Gamel, Edward George, Roslindale, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Chi Epsilon; American Society of Civil
Engineers 4,5. A.H. Harris & Sons Inc.
Gardner, John W., North Quincy, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3,4; Alpha Pi My. AIIE
2,3,4,5. Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co.; General
Dynamics Corp, Quincy Div.
Garrick, Albert M., Fall River, Mass., Business, Market-
ing. Dean's List 4. Class Board 3,4 (treasurer) 5;
Class Cabinet 3,4,5; Marketing & Advertising
Society 5. Outlet Co.; Grossman's Inc.; Manhattan
Shirt Co.; General Mills Inc.
Garrigus, Kenneth A., North Attleboro, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Dean's List 1 . Rifle Club 1 ; Rifle Team
3. Texas Inst. Inc.
Gavan, Terrence J., West Palm Beach, Fla., Business,
Marketing. Dean's List 2,3,4. freshman section
representative; Phi Sigma Kappa 2 (pledgemaster), 3
(vice president), 4 (president); President's Advisory
Council 4. Tufts Medical School; Fireman's Fund
Insurance Co.; Phillip Hankins Inc.
Gavelis, Anthony K., Westboro, Mass., Business,
Economics. Rifle Club 1. Boston Mutual Life
Insurance Co.; General Packets; National Archives
& Records Service.
Gersinsky, Bruce Steven, Yonkers, N.Y., Civil Engineer-
ing. Computer Club 1,2; Rifle Team 1,2. White
Plains Dept. of Engineering; E.L. Paulo; Chicago
Bridge & Iron Co.
Giangrasso, Patricia-Lane (Leary), North Andover,
Mass., Elementary Education. Burlington Campus
NEWS 1 (co-editor); Dorm Counselor 3,4,5; Rifle
Club 2; Stetson West vice president 2; Winter Car-
nival 4 (Queen's Court). U. of Mass.; Northeastern
University; National Commission, Cooperative
Education.
Gianino, Francis J., Revere, Mass., LA, Chemistry.
American Chemistry Society 1,2,3,4,5; Class
Cabinet 2,3,4,5; 100-Mile Club 1. Masury-Young
Inc.;GiletteCo.
Giardino, Linda, Bellingham, Mass., LA, Journalism,
Dean's List 2,3,4. Cauldron 4 (activities editor);
Literary Society 2,3,4; Pegasus 1,2.
Gibson, Warren F. Jr., South Glastonbury, Conn.,
Mechanical Engineering. Phi Kappa Tau 2,3 (cor-
391
responding secretary and executive board) 4 (execu-
tive board). Kenny Vacuum; Chicago Bridge & Iron.
Gignac, Gerard G., Dracut, Mass., LA, History. Counter
Guerilla Group 1,2,3,4, and 5 (deputy commander).
Haverhill Housing Authority; Lowell City Develop-
ment Authority; Baptist Day Camp.
Gilman, Stephen, Marshfield, Vt., Civil Engineering.
Dean's List 2,3,4,5; Chi Epsilon 3,4,5 (associate edi-
tor of Transit). American Society of Civil Engineers
3,4,5. Anderson-Nichols & Co.
Gilvey, Rodney Howard, Wakefield, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Rifle Team 2,3. AVCO Systems Div.
Giordano, Nicholas A., Everett, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME 3,4,5; NROTC Band 1,2. Cordell
Engineering Inc.
Girard, David Joseph, Beverly, Mass., LA, Political
Science. Jordan Marsh Co.; Maiden Redevelopment
Authority.
Glidden, Gary B., Waterville, Me., Business, Industrial
Relations. Blue Cross-Blue Shield.
Glynn, Kenneth P., Leicester, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 3,4,5. AIChE 2,3,4,5 (representative
to Organization of Professional Engineering Socie-
ties; Chess Club 1,2,3,4,5; Computer Club 1;
President's ROTC Study Committee 5; Rifle Club
1,2; Student Council 4,5. Uniroyal; Arthur D. Little,
Inc.
Godfried, Alan, Winthrop, Mass., Chemical Engineering.
Dean's List 2,3,4; Omega Chi Epsilon 3,4; Tau Beta
Pi 4. AIChE 2,3,4,5. Atlantic Gelatin Co., Inc.; Ar-
tisan Industries Inc.
Goetz, Andre L., Stoneham, Mass., LA, English. Medford
Public Library; Melrose Free Press; Employers-
Commercial Union Insurance Co.
Gold, Jeffrey G., Middletown, N.Y., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 3,4,5; Dorm Council 1. General Electric
Co.
Goldman, Steven Jason, Roslindale, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List 4. Computer Club 1 (secretary
& vice president). Industrial Stainless Steel Inc.;
Dolliff & Co.; Eastern Bakers Supply Co.; William
Burns International Detective Agency.
Golub, Joel H., New York, N.Y., LA, History. Dean's
List. Basketball 1,2,3,4; History Club 2,3; Yacht
Club 2.
Goodhue, Steven B., Freeport, N.Y., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Pi Tau Sigma 4,5
(recording Secretary); Tau Beta Pi 4,5. ASME 3,4,5;
Auto Club 1; Student Council 1. Long Island Rail
Road.
Goodwin, Gerald B., Beverly, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 2,3,4,5; Beta Gamma Epsilon 2,3,4,5;
IFC 3; Husky Key 3. Sylvania Electric; Shanco Plas-
tics and Chemicals.
Gorczyca, John P. Jr., Taunton, Mass., LA, Mathematics.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Rifle Club 1; Tennis Club 3.
AVCO.
Gorewitz, David M., Melrose, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. Table Tennis Club 1,2,3 (vice president) 4
(president). United States Envelope Co.; Waltham
Bag and Paper Co.
Gorin, Dennis Alan, Stoughton, Mass., LA, Sociology.
American Students for Israel 5; Husky Key 5;
Leadership Conference 5; Modern Sports Car Club
5; Track 5. General Discount; Boston Lying-In
Hospital.
Gormley, William Charles, Lynnfield, Mass., Business,
Management. Parachute Club 3,4; Student Activities
3. Jordan Marsh Co.; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp.
Gorton, John C. Jr., Peekskill, N.Y., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 2,3,4,5; Cross Country 1. General Foods
Corp.
Gosbee, Gary Bruce, North Reading, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Civil Engineering Society 4,5; Class
Cabinet 3; Judo Club 2; Rifle Club 2; Ski Club 1.
Aberthaw Construction Co.
Gozdeck, Peter J., Whethersfield, Conn., Business,
Finance and Insurance. Conn. Bank & Trust Co.;
Aetna Life & Casualty Co.; ADVEST & Co.
Graffeo, Anthony P., Medford, Mass.; LA, Chemistry.
Dean's List 3,4. Alpha Chi Sigma; American
Chemical Society 1,2,3,4 (vice president); In-
tramural Basketball; Sailing Club 3,4; Swimming &
Diving Club 4. High Voltage Engineering; Federal
Water Pollution Control Administration; M.I.T.
Green, John J., Fairfield, Conn., LA, Mathematics.
Gamma Phi Kappa 2,3,4,5. Armstrong Rubber Co.;
Barden Corp.; Olin Matheison-Winchester Western
Div.
Green, John P., Maiden, Mass.; LA, Political Science.
Alumni Pledge Program 2,3,4,5 (publicity chairman);
Class Board 1,3,4,5 (president); Class Cabinet 1,2,3,
4,5; Commencement Committee 5; Freshman Orien-
tation Board 2,4 (general chairman); Inter-Class
Council 3,4,5 (president); President's Advisory Com-
mittee 4; President's Planning Committee 2; Student
Council 1,2 (secretary). Maiden Redevelopment Au-
thority; R.W. Pressprich & Co.; John Hancock Life
Insurance Co.; Northeastern University.
Greenberg, Ronald, Boston, Mass., Pharmacy; Dean's List
4. American Pharmaceutical Assn. 4. Bailey Drug.
Greszko, Linda, Manchester, Conn., LA, Psychology.
Dean's List 2,3. Tennis Club 3. New England In-
surance Rating Corp.; Veteran's Administration
Hospital; Harvard Medical School.
Griffin, Alan Richard, Dedham, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. IEEE 4,5. Hersey-Sparling Meter Co.
Grodensky, Cyrel Joanne, Brookline, Mass., Nursing.
Beth Israel Hospital.
Grover, Richard Lee, Hicksville, N.Y. ASME 2,3,4,5
(secretary). Sanders Associates Inc.; Grumman
Aircraft Engineering Corp.
Guerra, David A., Quincy, Mass., Business, Accounting.
392
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Beta Delta Sigma. Accounting
Society 2,3,4,5; Beta Alpha Psi. Ernst & Ernst.
Gunn, Thomas G. Jr., Huntington, N.Y., Mechanical En-
gineering. Pi Tau Sigma. ASME 1,2,3,4,5 (En-
gineering Council representative); Engineering
Council 4,5. Ford Motor Co.; Triumph Corp.
Gunther, William Jr., Plainview N.Y., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,3. IEEE 2,3,4,5. Long
Island Lighting Co.
Gurman, Michael C, Marblehead, Mass., LA, Economics.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Economics Society 2,3,4. Deran
Confectionary Co.; Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.;
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
Gustin, Kevin C, West Roxbury, Mass., Business,
Marketing. Camera Club 1,2; Marketing & Advertis-
ing Society 2,3,4,5; Student Advisory Committee
4,5. John Donnelly Advertising; H.F. Livermore;
John C. Dowd Advertising; Mobil Oil Corp.
Haberlin, John P., Roslindale, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIEE. Masoneilan International.
Haddad, William D., Boston, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Dean's List 3. Accounting Society 2,3,4,5. Star
Market.
Hadley, Ronald E., Jacksonville, Vt., Mechanical En-
gineering. Auto Club 1 ; Young Republicans 3 (secre-
tary); Student Union 4 (Constitution Committee
chairman) 5. Sprague Electric Co.
Hagstrom, Glen Walfrid, Fitchburg, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Civil Engineering Society 2,3,4,5. Fitch-
burg Gas and Electric Light Co.
Hale, Mary A., West Roxbury, Mass., LA, Math. Dean's
List 1,2,3,4; Math Honors Program. NASA Elec-
tronics Research Center; United Fruit Co.
Hall, Robert M., Brockton, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,2,4. Fitchburg Gas and Electric Co.;
Concord Electric Co.; Foxboro Company.
Halvorsen, Allen G., Everett, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Beta Gamma Epsilon 3,4 (Social Chairman,
Secretary), 5 (Secretary); Ham Radio Club 1; IEEE
2,3,4,5; IFC 2,3. Advanced Management In-
struments, Inc.; Avco Missies Systems; Ion Physics
Corp.
Hamilton, David Ward, Melrose, Mass., Business,
Marketing. Dean's List 4. Advertising Club 3,4
(junior vice president), 5 (treasurer); American
Marketing Association 3,4,5 (treasurer); Society for
the Advancement of Management 2. Cabot Corp.; W.
T. Grant Co.; Fox Travel Agency.
Handley, James M., Roslindale, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Accounting Society 3,4. Thorp & Martin,
Inc.; Thomas E. Sears; Mass. Port Authority.
Hannaford, Rita Frances, Melrose, Mass., Boston Bouve,
Physical Therapy. Dean's List 4,5. Physical Therapy
Club 1,2,3,4. Norwich State Hospital.
Hansen, Stefania, Boston, Mass., LA, Philosophy. Dean's
List 3,4,5; Philosophy Honors Program 5.
Philosophy Forum 3 and 4 (president); "Philosophy
& Religion: A Symposium," 4 (editor).
Hardiman, Joyce, Warwick, R.I., Nursing. Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital.
Harlow, Brian S., Natick, Mass., Business, Marketing.
American Marketing Assn. 2,3, 4 and 5 (treasurer);
Advertising Society 2,3,4 and 5 (treasurer).
Framingham Trust Co., Bristol Myers; Rust Craft
Greeting Cards, Inc.
Harris, Frank, Watertown, Mass., Business, Economics.
Dean's List 1. Economics Society 2,3,4; Epsilon Zeta
3,4; Freshman Crew 1. Mitre Corp.; Philip B. Herr
& Associates; Oakland Redevelopment Agency;
Federal Water Pollution Control Administration.
Harvey, Robert E., Bridgeport, Conn., Power Systems En-
gineering. Alumni Pledge 3,4,5; Class Cabinet
2,3,4,5; IEEE 4,5. United Illuminating Company.
Hassett, Richard McGowan, Oceanside, N.Y., Civil En-
gineering. Tau Epsilon Phi; American Society of
Civil Engineers 3,4. New York State DPW; Charles
H. Sells Consulting Civil Engineers.
Hastings, Philip Clyve, Framingham, Mass., Power Sys-
tems Engineering. Eta Kappa Nu 4,5; Tau Beta Pi
4,5; IEEE 4,5. Boston Edison Co.
Hattori, Stephen M., Lawrence, Mass., Education,
Mathematics. Class Cabinet 3,4,5; Pledge 70, 4,5.
Raytheon Co.; Wang Laboratories, Inc.
Havranek, John W., Jr., Cambridge, Mass., Mechanical
Engineering. Aquatics Club 1,2; Rifle Club 1;
Sailing Club 4,5; Ski Club 1,2; Swimming Team 4,5;
Water Polo Team 4,5. Barry Controls, Inc.
Hawes, Robert T, Watertown, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. Chem. Eng. Honor Society, Dean's List 1,2,4.
American Institute of Chemical Engineers 2,3,4,5.
Cabot Corp.; Arthur D. Little, Inc.
Hayek, Marsha J. (Bacon), Cambridge, Mass., LA, Math.
Dean's List 4. cheerleader 1, Coed volleyball 1;
Society of Physics Students 4,5. Avco Everett
Research Laboratory.
Heagle, Richard J., Cornwall, Ontario, Canada;
Mechanical Engineering. Varsity Hockey 1,2,3,4;
ASME 4,5.
Heald, Douglas W., Needham, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Civil Engineering Society 4,5; Phi Gamma Pi
2,3,4,5 (vice president); Society of American Mili-
tary Engineers 2,3,4 (secretary), 5 (president). Town
of Needham Engineering Dept.; Mobil Oil Corp.
Heath, Warren, Marlboro, Mass., Mechanical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4. Heald Machine Co., Inc.; Dyna-
tech R/D Co.
Hendricks, Elizabeth, Marblehead, Mass., Education,
Speech Pathology and Audiology. Dean's List 3,4.
Alpha Omicron Pi; Sigma Alpha Eta 3. Working-
men's Cooperative Bank; Mass. Bay United Fund;
Lynn Public Schools.
Hennessy, E. Diane, Belmont, Mass., LA, History. Class
Cabinet 1,2,3,4; Student Council 2,3; Alumni Pledge
393
3,4. Independence National Historical Park;
Kendree & Shepherd Planning Consultants; Oakland
Redevelopment Agency.
Hennrikus, Virginia, Concord, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Dean's List 3. Newman Club; Sociology Club 2,3,4.
Wrentham State School, Emerson Hospital, Fernald
State School, Metropolitan State Hospital.
Heriot, Robert J., Teaneck, N.J., Chemical Engineering.
Phi Beta Alpha; AIChE 2,3,4,5. Avon Products, Inc.
Hertz, Barbara, Brookline, Mass., Education, Elementary.
Dean's List 2,3,4; Advisory Committee on Dormi-
tory Living; Dormitory Counselor 4,5; Outstanding
Freshman Award 1. Class Board 1 (secretary);
Student Council 2,3,4 (corresponding secretary);
Class Cabinet 1,2,3. Brookline School Dept. ;
Brookline Recreation Dept.
Heuston, Francis L., Waltham, Mass., Education, English.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Freshman Honors Award;
Honors Day Award 2,3,4; Phi Kappa Phi Honor
Society; President's Award 4. Edwards Junior High
School; Garfield Junior High School; Girls' High
School, Roxbury; Timilty Junior High School, Rox-
bury.
Higgins, John C, Worcester, Mass., LA, English. Dean's
List 3,4. Worcester County National Bank;
Worcester Telegram and Gazette Publishing Co.
Hill, David K., Natick, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List; Beta Alpha Psi. Accounting Society 4,5.
Spaulding Co.; Jordan & Jordan.
Hill, Marjorie J., Newton, Mass., LA, History. Dean's
List 3,4. Chamber Orchestra 3,4 and 5 (president).
John Hancock Insurance Co., Northeastern Univer-
sity; Raytheon Company; Service Technology Corp.
Hillis, James E., Arlington, Mass., Civil Engineering.
ASCE 3,4,5. Souza & True Structural Engineers;
Town of Stoneham, Engineering Dept.; Viking
Development Corp.
Hoar, Charles J., Waterford, Conn., Chemical Engineer-
ing. American Institute of Chemical Engineers
2,3,4,5. General Dynamics Corp., Electric Boat
Division.
Hoffstein, Richard A., Boston, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Dean's List, 4. Brockton-Taunton Gas Co.
Holland, Frederick J., Boston, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Robert Charles Engineering Assoc.
Holmgren, Bruce William, Ashland, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Dean's List 3,4. Civil Engineering Society
2,3,4. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.
Hood, Bernadine C, Methuen, Mass., LA, Political
Science. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Psi Sigma Alpha. Stet-
son East Dorm treasurer 2; Smith Hall, dorm
president 3.
Hood, Roger W., Jr., North Attleboro, Mass., Business,
Management. Sailing Club 2,3. Swank, Inc.; Crosby-
Ashton Valve and Gauge Co., Hanover Insurance
Co.
Hopkins, James E., Schnectady, N.Y., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3. American Institute of
Industrial Engineers 2,5; Husky Key 1,2,3,4; Tau
Kappa Epsilon 2,3,4 (vice president) 5. Schnectady
General Electric Co.
Horneck, Craig William, Uniondale, N.Y., Power Systems
Engineering. Alpha Kappa Sigma 3,4 (Pledge
Master) 5 (Grand Marshall); Armed Forces Com-
munications & Electronics Assn. 4,5 ; Student Coun-
cil 5. The Long Island Lighting Co.
Howard, Bradley F., Chestnut Hill, Mass., LA,
Journalism. College of Liberal Arts Advisory Com-
mittee, Journalism Dept. Representative 5.
Weymouth Art Leather Co.; Framingham News;
Ropoff Beny Studios.
Howland, Richard C. Jr., Boston, Mass., LA, English-
Journalism. Cauldron 4 (history editor) 5 (editor-in-
chief); NEWS 2 (feature editor), 3 (feature editor);
Journalism Society 5; Rifle Club 1,2,3; ROTC 1,2,3,
4,5; ROTC In Review 4 (editor), 5 (editor); ROTC
Greenleaves 5 (editor). The Patriot Ledger.
Huffling, Lawrence E., Andover, Mass., LA, Political
Science. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Delta Gamma
Chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha; Liberal Arts Academy.
Greater Lowell Area Planning Commission.
Hughes, Joanne E. (Eichert), Edison, N.J., LA English.
Silver Masque 3. Courier-News; WGBH Channel 2.
Hughes, Robert Thomas, Middletown, Conn., Mechanical
Engineering. Alpha Kappa Sigma 1,2,3 (grand
marshall), 4,5; National ROTC Band Assn. 1,2,3
(operations officer), 4,5; Rifle Club 2,5. McBee Sys-
tems Div., Litton Industries; New Britain Div.
Hume, John A., Somerville, Mass., Civil Engineering.
NUCE; Rifle Club 2. William S. Crocker, Inc.; J. M.
Construction, Inc.
Hunt, Francis J. Jr., Lexington, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 3. B.C. Ames Co.; Andonian
Associates; RCA.
Hunt, William Arthur, Gardner, Mass., Business, Market-
ing. Class Cabinet 1,2; Nu Epsilon Zeta 2,3,4
(treasurer), 5; Student Center Committee 2,3,4
(chairman), 5; Student Council 2,3 and 4 (president),
5. R. H. White's; W. T. Grant; Gillette; General
Mills.
Hunter, Robert C, Weymouth, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. Lockheed Missies and Space
Co. ; Raytheon Co.
Huntington, John L., Newton, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 3. Yacht Club 2; SAM 5.
Raytheon; Dennison Mfg. Co.; Mass. Electric Con-
struction Co.
Hutton, Peter F., Wellesley, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa
Nu. Mitre Corp.
Iacono, Benjamin J., Revere, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. National Society of Scabbard and Blade; Distin-
guished Military Student. Scabbard and Blade 3,4
(military liason chairman), 5 (company first ser-
394
geant); Society of American Military Engineers
1,2,3,4,5 (vice president); AIIE 2,3,4,5; Rifle Club
2,3; ROTC Council 4. The Riverside Press, Inc.
Jackson, Timothy John, Hamilton, Bermuda, Business
Management. Nu Epsilon Zeta 2,3 (secretary), 4. In-
ternational Typing, Ltd.
January, Richard G., Lynn, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,3. Counter Guerilla Group 2,3;
DeMolay Club 4,5. EG&G Salem Laboratory.
Jasinski, Paul J., Gardner, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List; Beta Alpha Psi. Accounting Society 4,5;
Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5; Husky Key 1,2,3,4,5;
President's Advisory Committee 4; Student Affairs
Committee 3,4,5; Student Council 3,4,5. Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.
Jellison, James Joseph, Jr., Reading, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Track Team Most Valuable Player;
highest point score. AIIE; Varsity indoor and out-
door track 2,3,4 (captain of both); freshman indoor
and outdoor track; Ski Club 1. Lewis Candy Co.;
Power Regulator Co. ; Eastman Kodak.
Jemison, G. Elliott, Norwood, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Alpha Sigma Mu. General Discount Corp.; Elec-
trodyne Co.; Honeywell Computer Control Division.
Joe, Alexander H., East Wareham, Mass., LA, Political
Science. Pershing Rifles 1,2,3,4 (Information Of-
ficer), 5 (adjutant); Rifle Club 1,4,5; ROTC Council
4,5 (editor).
Johnson, Anders Alan, Norwell, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers
2,3,4,5; Camera Club 2,3. Monsanto Chemical Co.;
American Cyanamid Stamford Research
Laboratories; U.S. Army Natick Laboratories.
Johnson, Barry L., Lexington, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; National Engineering
Honor Society 3,4,5 (co-chairman); National Elec-
trical Engineering Honor Society 4,5; Huskiers
2,3,4,5. General Radio Co.
Johnson, David Richard, North Attleboro, Mass., Elec-
trical Engineering. Dean's List; Tau Beta Pi; Eta
Kappa Nu. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship 1,2,3,4
(vice president); Underwater Society 3; Yacht Club
2. The Foxboro Co.
Johnson, Leslie Nan, Quincy, Mass., LA, Biology. Alpha
Sigma Tau 3,4,5 (corr. secretary); Omego Sigma 2;
Yacht Club 3 (treasurer). Mass. General Hospital;
Shriners Burns Institute.
Johnson, Mary D., Lynnfield, Mass., LA, Biology (pre-
med). President's Award 2; Academy 4,5; Phi Sigma
4,5. Newman Club 1; Tennis Club 3. Lahey Clinic
Foundation.
Johnson, Michael T., Indian Orchard, Mass., Power Sys-
tems Engineering. Institute of Electrical and Elec-
tronics Engineers 4. Western Mass. Electric Co.;
Northeast Utilities Service Co.
Johnson, Robert R., Lynn, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Ski Club 1 ; Yacht Club 1,2. Sylvania; RCA.
Johnson, Sandra L., New Fairfield, Conn., Civil En-
gineering. Homecoming Queen's Court 4. Alumni
Pledge Program 4 (dept. head); Art Club 2; Dormi-
tory Council 3 (vice president), 4 (president);
NUCES 3,4 (program chairman), 5 (vice president).
Danbury Engineering Dept., Edwards & Kelcy En-
gineering Consultants; Boston School Dept.
Johnson, Thomas Francis, Arlington, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Counter Guerilla Group 2,3,4,5; IEEE
4,5. Microwave Associates, Inc.
Johnson, William A., Farmingdale, N.Y., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,3,4; Alpha Pi Mu 4,5. A1EE
2,3,4,5. Pan American World Airways.
Jolda, J. Gregory, Webster, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Huskiers 4,5; IEEE 4,5; Tau Epsilon Omega 2,3,4
(chancellor), 5; Yacht Club 4,5. Amperex Electronic
Co.; Worcester Junior College.
Jordan, David Lindsay, Hingham, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2. ASCE 3,4,5; ROTC 1,2,3,4,5.
J. J. Henry Co.; General Dynamics.
Jordan, Kenneth D., Walpole, Mass., LA, Chemistry.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Academy 4,5; Phi Kappa Phi
2,3 (certificate recipient), 4,5; President's Award
2,3; Academy Award 1. American Chemical Society
1,2,3,4,5; Radio Club 1. Arthur D. Little, Inc.
Joyce, Thomas A., Everett, Mass., Civil Engineering.
NUCES 3,4,5. Boston Redevelopment Authority.
Kalman, Robert, Queens Village, N.Y., LA, English.
Dean's List; Alpha Psi Omega. Silver Masque
1,2,3,4,5. Marplan, Inc. ; The New York Times.
Kaminski, Michael, Somerville, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Dean's List 1 ; Beta Alpha Psi. Accounting So-
ciety 2,3,4. Continental Can Co.
Karas, Susan G., Lynn, Mass., Elementary Education.
Dean's List 2,3,4,5. Husky Key 4,5; Silver Masque
1; Theta Sigma Tau (Lambda Delta Phi) 2,3
(historian), 4 (publicity chairman), 5 (historian).
Danvers School System.
Karpinski, John, Dorchester, Mass., Dean's List 3. Worth-
ington Corp.; Stop & Shop, Inc.; Gillette.
Katsoulas, Peter C, Peabody, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. Dean's List; Alpha Pi Mu 3,4,5 (treasurer).
American Institute of Industrial Engineering 2,3,4,5.
Signal Mfg. Co.; Babco Products; Eastman Gelatine
Corp.
Katz, Bella G., Mattapan, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Employers' Group Insurance Co.
Katz, Sandra Gitell, Framingham, Mass., Education,
Speech and Hearing Therapy. Dean's List 3,4,5.
Hillel 1,2; Silver Masque 3. Boston Guild for the
Hard of Hearing; Needham Public Schools.
Kaufman, Constance Lee., Potomac, Md., Business,
Marketing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Beta Gamma Sigma.
Advertising Society 2,3,4; Dormitory officer 1 (vice
president), 2 (treasurer); dormitory counselor 3,4,5;
Library Committee 4; Marketing Society 2,3,4 (vice
president); Nominating Committee chairman.
395
Abraham & Straus; FDIC.
Kean, Eileen, Bellingham, Mass., LA, Sociology. Dean's
List 3,4. Newman Club 1; Sociology Club 2,3 (vice
president), 4. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital; Mass.
Mental Health Center; Metropolitan State Hospital.
Kellogg, Fredric R., Wycoff, N.J., LA, Biology. Dean's
List 2,3,4. Nu Beta 1,2; Camera Club 4. Bergen
Pines Hospital; Retina Foundation.
Kelly, Howard B., South Yarmouth, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List; Beta Alpha Psi. Accounting
Society 3,4,5. Continental Can Co.
Kelly, Robert A., Caribou, Maine, Mechanical Engineer-
ing. ASME 4. Great Northern Paper Co.; B. F.
Goodrich; Foster-Miller Associates, Inc.
Kepple, John S., Jamaica Plain, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Accounting Society 3,4,5; Intramural
Basketball 1 (captain); Rifle Club 1,2. Smith
Management Co.; Carter Rice Storrs & Bement, Inc.;
Brockton Taunton Gas Co.
Keyes, Janet A., Jamaica Plain, Mass., Nursing. Dean's
List 1. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital.
Keys, Lloyd Shipley, Jr., Baltimore, Md., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi.
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 4,5.
Department of Defense.
Kiefer, Diana, Westwood, N.J., LA, English. Dean's List.
S. D. Warren Co.
Kimball, Kenneth Alan, Marblehead, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 4,5. Nu Beta Biology Club 1,2,3,4. New
England Medical Center Hospital; US Bureau of
Commercial Fisheries Technological Lab, Biological
Lab.
King, Paul K., Arlington, Mass., Business Management.
Keystone Mutual Funds.
Kirzner, Edmund W., Lynn, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 3,4. AIIE 4,5. Gregstrom Corp.;
Electronics Corp of America; I.T.T. Lamp Division.
Kittle, John E., Gouverneur, N.Y., Chemical Engineering.
AIChE 2,3,4,5 (executive board 3,4,5); SAME
1,2,3,4,5 (president); Council of Professional En-
gineering Societies 3,4,5 (co-chairman 4,5). E. I.
DuPont; Sun Chemical Corp.
Klangos, Janice, Lynn, Mass., LA, Social Welfare. Dean's
List. Class Board 1; Huskey Key 1,2,3. American
Mutual; Job Corps.; Boston State Mental Hospital.
Klein, Jeffrey A., Bayside, N.Y., Industrial Engineering.
Dean's List. Gymnastics Club 1,2; American Insti-
tute of Industrial Engineers 4,5. Pall Corp.;
Raytheon Co.
Kline, Sterling G., South Hamilton, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,4. Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5;
Middler Weekend Committee 3 (chairman); Mascot
Committee 2,3, (chairman, 4,5). Souza & True Con-
sulting Engineers; Edward J. Tedesco Associates.
Knapp, Karen, Rochester, N.Y.; Nursing. Dean's List.
Rochester General Hospital.
Knight, Paul Marshall, Raymond, Me., Business
Management. Dean's List 1,2. Crew 1,2,3,4. State
Street Bank & Trust Co., Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp.
Kramer, Cathy, Ridgefield Park, N.J., LA, Sociology.
Dean's List 2. Dormitory Counselor 3,4; Smith Hall
social chairman 1; Stetson East secretary 2; UCAR
2. Boston Five Cents Savings Bank.
Kramer, Michael, Woburn, Mass., LA, Math. Dean's List
1,3,4. The Connell Company.
Kroll, Michael Karl, New Hartford, N.Y., LA, Physics.
Dean's List 4. Liberal Arts Student Advisory Com-
mittee 4,5; Society of Physics Students 2,3,4 (vice
president), 5. Bausch & Lomb Optical Co.; Rome
Cable Corp.
Kuhns, Linda Lee, Boston, Mass., LA, Psychology.
Transfer student from California Lutheran College.
Lambda Delta Phi (pledge mother).
Kupelnick, Allan I., Lynn Mass., Industrial Engineering.
AIIE 3,4,5; Intramural basketball 2,3,4,5; In-
tramural football 1,2; Judo Club 2,3; Ping Pong Club
4,5. Essex Survey; Eastman Gelatine Corp.
Kuzdeba, Raymond J., Cumberland, R.I., Industrial En-
gineering. AIIE 2,3,4,5. North American Rockwell,
Draper Division.
Labuz, Alfred J., Utica, N.Y., Chemical Engineering.
AIChE 3,4. Industrial Chemicals Division, Allied
Chemical Corp.
Lacey, James Edgar, Newburgh, N.Y., Business,
Management. Newburgh Weaving Mill.
LaFleur, Patricia, Leominster, Mass., Pharmacy. Dean's
List 3. American Pharmaceutical Association 1,5.
Barone's Pharmacy; Emerson Hospital.
LaFrance, Stephen C, Randolph Center, Vt., Chemical
Engineering. Crew 1; Ski Club 1,2. Monsanto Co.
LaFrazia, Frank A. Jr., Boston, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,4; Alphi Pi Mu 5. AIIE 3,4
& 5 (treasurer); SAME 1,2; GGG 2,3. Sylvania Elec-
tric; Honeywell Inc.; Peerless Photo Products, Inc.
LaHut, Joseph A., Troy, N.Y., Electrical Engineering.
IEEE 2,3,4,5. General Electric.
LaLone, James C, West Nyack, N.Y., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List; Alpha Psi Omega; Eta Kappa
Nu. AFCEA 1,2; Silver Masque 1,2,3,4,5. Orange
and Rockland Utulity Co. ; Sylvania Electronics.
Lampert, Steven, Quincy, Mass., Civil Engineering.
American Society of Civil Engineers 3,4,5; Rifle
Club 1; Sailing Club 3. Lamont R. Healy Inc.; Vik-
ing Development Corp.
Lamport, Ruth Ann, Waltham, Mass., Elementary Educa-
tion. Dean's List 3,4. Dean of Women's Advisory
Committee 4,5; Omega Sigma 2,3,4 & 5 (president).
Weston School System.
Landi, David P., Watertown, Mass., Elementary Educa-
tion. Dean's List 3,4. Wellesley Junior High School.
Lang, Edward P., Watertown, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
396
ing. AIIE 3,4,5; Crew 2,3,4,5; Debate Team 3,4,5;
Husky Key 3,4,5; Karate Club 1,2,3,4,5; section
rep.; Ski Club 1,2,3,4,5; Surf Club 1,2,3,4,5.
Ark-Les Switch Corp.
Langdon, Kathleen Marie, Boston, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Dean's List. Mass. Mental Health Center; Belcher-
town State School; Medfield State Hospital;
Northeastern University.
LaPlante, Francis J., Mansfield, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Chi Epsilon 4 and 5 (marshal); Tau Beta Pi 4 and 5
(Joint Engineering Council delegate); ASCE — BSCE
2,3,4,5. Metcalf & Eddy; Simpson, Gumbertz &
Heger; Universal Engineering Co.
LaRosee, Michael J., Watertown, Mass., Business,
Marketing. Dean's List. Advertising Society 4;
Huskey Key 1,2; Marketing Society 4; Student Coun-
cil 1 (section rep), 2; Nu Epsilon Zeta 1,2,3,4. Bos-
ton Woven Hose and Rubber Co.; General Mills, Inc.
Latif, Fuat, Nyack, NY, Civil Engineering. ASCE-BSCE,
4,5; Huskiers 1,2,3. Metcalf & Eddy; City of White
Plains Bureau of Engineering.
Laufer, Marcus, Vineland, N.J., Business Management.
Husky Key 3,4; Society for the Advancement of
Management 3,4,5; Rifle Club 2,4. Eastern Airlines,
Pontiac Motor Div., General Motors Corp.
Lawlor, John M., Fall River, Mass., LA, English-
Journalism. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5. Freshman Track;
Varsity Track 2,4,5. Fall River Herald News;
Southern New England Telephone Co.
Lawrence, Arthur, Peabody, Mass., LA, Social Welfare.
Class Cabinet 2 (historian); Hillel 2; Nu Sigma Pi;
Rifle Club 1 ; SNCC 1 ; Zeta Beta Tau (Gamma Psi
Chapter). New England Medical Center; AVCO
Corp. ; Westboro State Hospital.
Lawrence, Gerald G., Sudbury, Mass., LA Math. Class
Cabinet 4,5; Liberal Arts Student Advisory Commit-
tee 4; Outing and Ski Club 3; SCATE Committee 4,5
(chairman); Senior Week Committee 4,5; Student
Council 4,5. Polaroid Corp.
Lawson, William F., Medford, Mass., Business,
Management. Stop & Shop, Inc.
Leahy, Mary, Boston, Mass., LA, Economics. Dean's List
1,2,3; Economics Honors Program 3,4. Economics
Society 2,4. Federal Power Commission; Mass. Dept.
of Commerce and Developments; United Nations;
Sylvan ia Electronics.
LeMaistre, David, Attleboro, Mass., Business, Industrial
Relations. Golf Club 2,3,4 (captain); Homecoming
Comm. 3; Husky Key 1,2,3,4. Providence Mill Sup-
ply Co.
Lenz, Steven R., Danvers, Mass., LA, Political Science.
Basketball 2. Federal Water Pollution Control Ad-
ministration.
L'Heureux, Charles, Bristol, Conn., LA, Economics.
Dean's List 1,3,4; Honors Program 4,5. Dorm Coun-
cil 1 (secretary); Judo Club 2; NEWS 1,2 (feature
rewrite); SCATE 4 and 5 (vice chairman). General
Dynamics Corp. ; Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.
Libby, James Melvin, Abington, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3,4; Omega Chi Epsilon;
AIChE 2,3,4,5. Firestone Industrial Rubber
Products Co.
Liston, Edward T., West Roxbury, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME 2,3,4,5. Jackson & Moreland Div.,
United Engineers & Constructors.
Litchfield, Janis N., Manchester, Conn., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Alpha Mu, Tau
Beta Pi. AIIE 2,3,4 (historian), 5 (secretary); Alpha
Pi Mu 3,4 (recording secretary), 5. General Services
Administration; Torrington Co.; First National Bank
of Boston.
Lonsdale, Joseph T., Abington, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Omega Chi Epsilon
3,4 (treasurer), 5 (president); Tau Beta Pi 3,4,5
(treasurer); Phi Kappa Phi 5. AIChE 2,3,4 (section
representative), 5; Chess Club 1,2 (treasurer) 3,4,5;
Chess Team 2,3,4,5. Firestone Co.; Sun Chemical.
Loud, John F., Center Ossipee, N.H., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Camera Club 1,2,3,4,5 (president, treasurer);
Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5 (co-chairman, Husky Dog
Comm., chairman. Alumni Pledge); Student Union
2,3,4,5 (chairman, Program Committee). MIT In-
strumentation Lab.
Lovell, Edwin T. Jr., Rockland, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. ROTC Band 1,2. Hesse-Eastern Div.,
Norris Industries; NECCO Candy Co. ; Raytheon;
Metal Bellows, Inc.; Eugene Engineering Co., Inc.
Lowenstein, Gary, Hartford, Conn., Civil Engineering.
Town of Bloomfield, Conn.; Fraioli, Blum, Yessel-
man; Brunalli Construction Co.
Luca, Joseph J., Lexington, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List. Counter-Guerilla Group 1,2,3,4,5
(operations officer). Space and Tactical Systems
Corp.; Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Luciani, Maryann, Revere, Mass., Boston Bouve, Physical
Education. Dean's List. American Association for
Health, Physical Education and Recreation 3,4; Ex-
ecutive Board of Women's Phys. Ed. Club 3; In-
tramural Basketball 1,2,3; NU Band (featured baton
twirler) 1,2,3,4; Women's Physical Education Club
1,2,3,4; Girls' Clubs of Boston.
Lusis, Richard F., Williamsville, NY, Business
Management. Society for the Advancement of
Management 2,3,4; Phi Gamma Pi 2,3,4,5. Ford
Motor Co.; Marine Midland Trust Co.; Westinghouse
Electric Corp.
Lynch, Edward M., Norwood, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 4. Class Cabinet 2,3,4;
Rifle Club 2,3. IBM; R.H. Steam's Co.
MacArthur, Kenneth John, Ashland, Mass., LA, History.
Regional YMCA, Ford's Theatre.
MacDonald, Lee, Stoneham, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List; Pi Tau Sigma. ASME 4,5. Univer-
sal Industries.
397
Machon, Richard D. Randolph, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME 5; Rifle Club 1; Student Represen-
tative 1. Hazeltine Corp.; Foxboro Co.; New
England Water Service Corp.; General Dynamics.
Mack, Richard, Marshfield, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List. Ratheon Co.
Maclntyre, Jane Elizabeth Cambell, Walpole, Mass., Bos-
ton-Bouve, Physical Education. Badminton Club 2;
Gymnastics Club 1,2,3,4 (WARA chairman); Husky
Key 1,2; Modern Dance Club 1; Women's Physical
Education Majors Club 1,2 (executive board) 4.
Foxborough State Hospital; Curtin Pharmacy;
Wellesley Jr. High; Fisk Elementary School.
MacKenzie, Susan Elaine, Oxford, New Jersey, Boston
Bouve, Physical Therapy. Dean's List 1,2,3. Physical
Therapy Club 1,2,3,4. Cushing Hospital; Heath
Village.
MacLellan, Mary Frances, Cambridge, Mass., Elementary
Education. Dean's List 4. Husky Key 3; SNEA 2.
Arthur D. Little Inc.; Grover Cleveland Jr. High;
NU Dodge Library.
MacNeil, James Michael, Randolph, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Omega Chi Epsilon.
AIChE 2,3,4,5; Freshman Section Representative;
Freshman Social Committee; Rifle Club 1. Stone &
Webster Engineering Corp.
Magaletta, Paul A., Boston, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List; Lumbermans Insurance
Co.; Star Market; First National Bank of Boston.
Mahoney, Dennis Crane, Quincy, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. Chi Epsilon 4,5; Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Tau Beta
Pi 4,5 (president); ASCE-BSCE 3,4,5 (president);
Engineering Council 3,4,5. Warren Brothers Co.;
Metcalf & Eddy Inc.; Anderson-Nichols Co.
Mahoney, Edward, L., Belmont, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Chi Epsilon 3,4,5; Dean's List 2,3. ASCE-BSCE
3,4,5; SAME 2,3. Edwards & Kelcey.
Majewski, Richard Joseph, Housatonic, Mass., Industrial
Engineering. Dean's List 3. AIIE 2,3,4; Newman
Center 1; Rifle Club 1; SAME 1,2; Student Union
3,4; Yacht Club 3. Beloit Corp.
Malinauskas, Ronald G., Dedham, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3,4; Omega Chi Epsilon.
AIChE. Cabot Corp.; Cowles Technology Labs, Inc.
Maltz, Alan K., Bayonne, NJ, Power Systems Engineer-
ing. Dean's List. IEEE 2,3,4,5; Rifle Club 1,2;
WNEU 1,2. Public Service Electric and Gas Com-
pany.
Mangulis, Silvija A., Winchester, Mass., LA, Journalism.
Dean's List 2,3,4; Lutheran Club 3 (secretary).
Lowell Sun; Boston Redevelopment Authority.
Mansfield, David, West Newton, Mass., LA Drama.
Dean's List 1. Judo Club 3; Silver Masque 3,5. Unit-
ed Fund; General Atronics Corp.
Manthei, Karl A., Ozone Park, N.Y., Civil Engineering.
NUCES 3,4,5. Hardesty & Hanover; Fay, Spofford &
Thorndike Inc.
Marini, Stephen D., Quincy, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Accounting Society 2,3,4,5; Beta Alpha Psi 4,5.
General Dynamics; Ernst & Ernst.
Marion, Sandra Yvonne, Watertown, Mass., Business,
Economics. NU Chorus 2. Northeastern University;
Service Technology Corp.
Markowitz, Harvey, Boston, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 3,4,5; Ski Club 5; Sports Car Club 4; Surf
Club 3. D.J. Cutter Co. Inc.; Abrasive Products Inc.;
Armstrong Cork.
Marks, Stephen C, Everett, Mass., Business, Management.
Phanar Club 1,2,3. Charlestown Savings Bank.
Marshall, Valerie Ann, Dorchester, Mass., LA, Medical
Technology. Interfaith Council 3; Medical
Technology Club 1,2,3,4,5; Newman Club 3; Rifle
Club 2. New England Deaconess Hospital.
Marusa, Walter J. Jr., Quincy, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. AFCEA 1,2,3,4,5; Counter Guerilla Group 2;
Rifle Club 1,2. Hazeltine Corp.; Sylvania.
Marzullo, Alfred M., Hamden, Conn., Power Systems En-
gineering. Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5 (Homecoming
Board of Governors 3; chairman Mascot Committee
2,3; chairman Senior Week 4,5); Husky Key 3; IEEE
2,3,4,5; Newman Club 1,2,3,4,5. Daniel S. Gaidosz
P.E.; United Engineers And Constructors.
Mason, Barry E., Stoneham, Mass., Business, Accounting.
N.U. Band 1,2,3,4 (treasurer), 5.
Mastone, Francis Ralph, Everett, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List. Baseball 1,2; Football 1,2;
Leadership Representative to Impact 3; Phi Kappa
Tau 1 (house chairman), 2 (treasurer), 3 (Executive
Board), 4,5 (vice president, Brother of the Year);
SAM 2,3; Student Council 4,5. Northeast Airlines;
H. Rothstein & Co.; Brynal Hairpiece; Evlyen Hat
Co.
Matheson, Scott J., Woburn, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 4. IEEE 3,4,5; Pool Club 3. Boston
Edison Co.
Matthews, James F., Dorchester, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. IEEE. Teradyne Inc.
Matthews, John C, Milford, Conn., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List; Pi Tau Sigma. G&O Manufacturing
Co.; Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp.
Matulsky, Jane Barbara, Milton, Mass., Elementary
Education. Dean's List 2,3,4. Hillel 1,2; Theta
Sigma Tau 2,3,4,5. Workingmen's Cooperative
Bank; Dean's Office of the College Of Business Ad-
ministration; Coolidge School; Employers Commer-
cial Union Group Insurance.
Maxwell, Ronald J., Framingham, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List; Distinguished Military
Student. Counter Guerilla Group 2 (assistant S/4) 3,
(S/3) 4; Rifle Club 1. Coolidge Bank & Trust; Con-
tinental Can Co.; Sylvania.
Mayo, Ralph Kenneth, Swampscott, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 4. Nu Beta Biology Club 2,3. U.S.
Department of Interior.
398
McCarron, William J. Jr., Newton, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. IEEE 4,5. Cambridge Electric Light Co.;
Kennecott Copper Corp.; ITE Imperial Corp.
McCarthy, Edward C, Wellesley, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. Oilgear Co.; Sylvania.
McCarthy, Kathleen A., West Roxbury, Mass., Elemen-
tary Education. Dean's List; Kappa Delta Pi. Class
Cabinet 4; Newman Club 1,2,3,4,5; Rifle Club 1; Ski
Club 4,5. Sears; NU Office of Admissions; Natick
Public School System.
McCave, Ann-Marie, Agawam, Mass., LA, Journalism.
Dormitory Council 2 (program director); Interdor-
mitory Council 2; International Relations Club
1,2,3; NEWS 1,2; NU Young Republican Club 1,2
(secretary), 3 (vice-president), 4,5 (president); Spec-
trum 1. Holyoke Transcript; Patriot Ledger; Sanders
NEWS (Sanders Assoc. Inc.).
McClellan, James Arthur, Danvers, Mass., Business
Management. Dean's List 1. Scabbard and Blade
3,4,5; Rifle Club 3,4,5; ROTC 1,2,3,4,5; ROTC
Flight 5; SAM 3,4,5. Itek Corp.; Sylvania; Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.; First Medical Data Serv-
ice.
McConnell, James Allen, Broad Brook, Conn., Industrial
Engineering. AIIE 2,3,4. Standard Screw; Fairchild
Hiller.
McCorkle, Robert F. Ill, Stratford, Conn., Business,
Management. Dean's List 1,3,4. State National Bank
of Conn.; Sikorsky Aircraft.
McDade, Isabelle M., Braintree, Mass., LA, Biology.
Biology Club 3,4,5; Rifle Club 2. Lahey Clinic;
Children's Hospital Medical Center.
McDevitt, Charles E., Arlington, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. SAME 1 . Raytheon.
McDonald, Glenn, Houston, Tex., Mechanical Engineer-
ing.
McDonald, Paul Richard, Medford, Mass., Business,
Marketing. Football 1,2,3,4; Phi Alpha Rho. Clark
Steel; Brockton & Taunton Gas Co.; Keebler Cookie
Co.; Kraft Foods.
McDonnell, James, Waltham, Mass., Elementary Educa-
tion. Dean's List 2,3,4. Class Cabinet 1,2,3,4;
Student Center Committee 4, (chairman); Student
Council 3,4,5; Student Union 4,5. Boston State
Hospital; Way land Public Schools; Waltham Public
Schools; SCIP.
McDonough, Robert Joseph, Brockton, Mass., Chemical
Engineering. General Electric; Bryant Chemical
Corp.; Harvard University School of Public Health.
McDowell, Peter S., Wilton, Conn., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 3,4,5; Tennis Club 3 (instructor), 4
(president); Rifle Club 1,2,3; SAME 1,2. IBM.
McEachern, Carol A., Wellesley, Mass. Nursing. Alpha
Omicron Pi; Freshman Orientation Week; Rush
chairman; Senior Week Committee; Winter Carnival
Queen Finalist 5. New England Deaconess Hospi-
tal.
McEachern, James F., Braintree, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,4. ASME 5; Flying Club
2,3. Lockheed Missies & Space Co.; Raytheon Co.
McGillivray, Robert Francis, Medford, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Dean's List. Teradyne Inc.; A. Alford
Consulting Engineers Inc.
McGovern, Janice N., Lynn, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4. Newman Club 1,2; Sociology
Club 3,4. Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare; Jordan Marsh Co.
McGowan, Paul Alan, Natick, Mass., Business, Account-
ing. Newton Wellesley Hospital; Rosenthal & For-
man CPA.
McGregor, Robert, Saugus, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 4. Atwood & Morrill; General Elec-
tric.
McGue, Robert J., Quincy, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List; Etta Kappa Nu. RCA; Picker X-Ray
Corp.
McGurk, Dennis, Red Hook, N.Y., Business, Marketing.
Society for Advertising & Marketing 3,4,5; Yacht
Club 4,5. Arnold & Co.; Ludlow Inc.; Merriman Inc.
McKenna, Robert A., Winthrop, Mass., LA, English.
Freshman Crew; NURA 4 (secretary & Editor of
ILLIOPSOAS); Varsity Crew 2,3,4. Brockway,
Smith, Haigh, Lovell Corp.; NU Dept. of Continuing
Education; Lynn Daily Item; National Shawmut
Bank.
McKiernan, Anthony Leo, Jr., Randolph, Mass., Business
Industrial Relations. Dean's List. Knapp Brothers
Shoe Co. ; Armstrong Rubber Co.
McLarnon, James P., Quincy, Mass., Business Finance
and Insurance. Dean's List 3,4. South Shore National
Bank; John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance.
McMahon, Ronald Frederick, Stoneham, Mass., Business,
Accounting.
McWade, Patricia A., Medford, Mass., LA, English.
Dean's List 3,4. Tufts Medical & Dental Library;
Workingmen's Co-operative Bank.
Meadow, Harold Lee, Annandale, Va., Business,
Management. Dean's List. ROTC Pms Advisory
Council 4,5; SAM 5; Table Tennis Club 1,2,3
(president) 4. Sears; George H. Dean Co.; Federal
Power Commission.
Medowski, Glenn O., Sudbury, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1 . Ratheon.
Megerian, Hrair, Boston, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 2,3,4; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi.
Honeywell.
Mehta, Haresh, R., Ahmedabad, India, Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List. AIChE 1,2,3,4,5; Interna-
tional Students Forum 1 ,2,3 (co-chairman of activity
committee) 4, (chairman of activity committee) 5.
Revere Sugar Refinery; Harvard School of Public
Health; Boston Woven Hose & Rubber Co.
Merenda, Michael J., Everett, Mass., Business,
399
Management. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5. Phi Kappa Tau
2,3 (pledge master) 4, (executive board) 5; Student
Council 4,5. Eg & G Inc.; Ratheon.
Mermer, Kenneth C, Wantagh, N.Y., Business, Market-
ing. Dean's List. American Marketing and Advertis-
ing Society (vice president) 4,5; Phi Gamma Pi
2,3,4,5 (secretary & president). Sanders Associates;
General Mills Inc.
Middlebrook, David Randel, Dalton, Mass., LA, Physics.
General Electric.
Miliard, Eugene J., Lewiston, Me., Business, Manage-
ment. Delta Chi 2 (IFC Rep.), 3 (house steward), 4
(recording Secretary), 5 (president); Newman Club 1;
NEWS Staff 1; Rifle Club 1,4; WNEU Staff 1. U.S.
Gypsum Co. Inc.; Employers Commercial Union Co.
Miller, Marilyn, North Tonawanda, N.Y., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 2,4. Tufts New England Medical Center;
Childrens Hospital Medical Center.
Miller, Susan, West Roxbury, Mass., Elementary Educa-
tion. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Kappa Delta Phi; Phi
Kappa Phi. Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5; Student Executive
Committee (College of Education) 4,5. Scituate
Public Schools; NU Financial Aid.
Milligan, Jane, Medway, Mass., Nursing. Childrens
Hospital; Beth Israel Hospital.
Mills, Richard E., Concord, N.H., Business, Management.
Beta Gamma Sigma; Dean's List 1,2,3,4. Intramurals
1; Ping Pong Club 1; Rifle Club 1; SAM 2,3,4.
Sweethart Plastics: Ford Motor Co.
Mione, Peter J., Medford, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's
List. American Pharmaceutical Association; Delta
Sigma Theta. BU School of Medicine; Mass. General
Hospital.
Miranda, Gregory J., Walpole, Mass. Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List. Boston Edison.
Mishalof, David Charles, Manhasset Hills, N.Y.,
Business, Accounting. Dean's List 4. Track Team
1,2,3,4. Haskins & Sells; Pontiac Motor Division of
GM.
Mitchell, Sandra, Wishkin Manchester, N.H., Education,
Speech & Hearing Therapy. Dean's List 2,3,4. Mor-
ton Shoe Co.; Crotched Mountain Foundation;
Provident Institution of Saving; Manchester
Rehabilitation Center.
Moisan, Robert W., Newton, N.H., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Eta Kappa Nu 4,5
(recording secretary); Tau Beta Pi 3,4,5 (correspond-
ing secretary). General Electric; New England Elec-
tric System.
Moloy, Richard, Lexington, Mass., Business, Finance &
Insurance. Maiden Trust Co.
Moon, Daniel K., Watertown, Chemical Engineering.
Camera Club 2; AIChE 2,3,4,5; Gymnastics Club
1,2,3; IFC 4; Crew Team 1,2; Nu Epsilon Zeta;
Rowing Association. General Alloys Co.; Cabot
Corp.
Morgan, Donald W., Beverly, Mass., Business,
Management. Beta Gamma Sigma 4; Dean's Ad-
visory Board 4; Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Distinguished
Military Student 4; Military History Award 3;
Washington — Franklin Medal 3. Scabbard & Blade
3,4,5 (chairman of Military Liason); Student Council
Representative 1. Empire Carpet Corp.; Ford Motor
Co.; American Photocopy Co. Inc.
Mostecki, Robert J., Natick, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 1,2,3 (secretary), 4 (vice president), 5.
Perin Products Corp.; Sage Labs; Elliot Business
Machines.
Motekaitis, Henry William, East Granby, Conn., LA,
Biology. Dean's List 4,5; Biology Club 4,5; Water
Polo Club 5. Ensign-Bickford Co.
Mottolese, Susan, Garnerville, N.Y., Boston Bouve,
Physical Therapy. Dean's List. Physical Therapy
Club 1,2,3,4. Peter Bent Brigham Hospital.
Mueller, Charles, V., Beverly, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME 3,4 (secretary); Rifle Club 1,2;
SAME 1,2. Hotwatt Inc.; Sylvania Electric.
Muessel, Michael G., Newport, R.I., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List; Pi Tau Sigma 4,5 (president).
ASME 4,5 (vice-chairman); Engineering Council 5;
Rifle Club 1,2,3,4,5 (vice-president); Varsity Rifle
Team 2,3,4,5. Naval Underwater Weapons Station;
Industrial Magnetics Inc.
Mullens, Robert S., Slingerlands, N.Y., LA, Philosophy.
Dean's List. General Electric; King-Bison Realty
Co.; Adirondiac Mountain School.
Mummolo, Dante G., Brighton, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. AIChE 2,3,4; IFC 4; Nu Epsilon Zeta;
Rifle Club 3. State Department of Public Works.
Munroe, Cheryl Moss, Cambridge, Mass., Pharmacy.
Black Students Union 3; American Pharmaceutical
Association 3 (vice president) 1,2,3,5. Boston Lying-
in Hospital; Star Pharmacy Corp.
Murdza, Deborah, Woburn, Mass., LA, Math. Dean's
List. Alpha Sigma Tau (treasurer).
Muse, Richard P., Arkport, N.Y., LA, Chemistry. Alpha
Chi Sigma; Dean's List 2,3,4. American Chemical
Society 1,2,3,4; Intramural Basketball 3,4; Golf
Team 4; Swimming & Diving Club 4; Wrestling
Club 1,2. E.I. DuPont deNemurs Inc.; Arthur D. Lit-
tle Inc.
Naggar, Clement, Brookline, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Engineering Council 4; IEEE 2 (registration
committee chairman), 3 (publicity chairman), 4 (vice
chairman and program committee chairman); Radio
Amateur Club 2; Tennis Club 3. Weston-Rotek;
Cambridge Traffic Dept.; Electronic Development
Corp.; New England Electric Systems.
Napoleone, Nunzio, Wellesley, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. American Society of Mechanical En-
gineers 3,4,5. Dennison Mfg. Company.
Naughton, Thomas J., Lawrence, Mass., Business
Management. Dean's List 4,5. Intramural basketball
4; Society for the Advancement of Management
400
3,4,5. Process Engineering, Inc.; Nashua Corp.
Neal, Raymond E. Ill, Marblehead, Mass., Education,
Math. Silver Masque 1,2,3,4. Avco; MIT; Harvard;
Systems, Inc.
Neidorff, Mark, New Hyde Park, NY, Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List. American Institute of
Chemical Engineers 1,2,3,4; Hillel 1,2,3 (treasurer),
4; Zeta Beta Tau (charter brother). Union Carbide,
Inc.; Mobil Oil Corp.; Mass. Dept. of Public Health.
Nelson, Catherine M., Dover, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's
List 2,3,4; Phi Kappa Phi 4; Phi Sigma 3,4; The
Academy 4. Biology Club 4. New England Medical
Center.
Nelson, Peter Anthony, Milton, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Phi Beta Alpha 2,3,4 and 5 (Alumni Rela-
tions chairman); Student Council 1,2,3,4,5 (cor-
responding secretary. Radio Corp. of America.
Nelson, Ralph, Lynn, Mass., LA, English. J. S. Canner
Library Booksellers; Lynn Daily Evening Item.
Neville, Alan B., Somerset, Mass., Business, Industrial
Relations. Dean's List 3,4,5. Firestone Rubber and
Latex Products Co.
Newberry, Janice Elizabeth, Cranston, R.I., Boston
Bouve, Physical Therapy. Dean's List 3. Physical
Therapy Club 3,4. Foxboro State Hospital; Norwich
Hospital.
Newbold, Charles G., Jr., Framingham, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Dean's List 1. WNEU 2,3,4 (chief en-
gineer). New England Telephone and Telegraph Co.
Nicoll, Carol (Roop), Reading, Mass., LA, Medical
Technology. Dean's List; Nu Beta Chapter of Phi
Sigma 4,5. American Society of Medical
Technologists 2,3; Canterbury 2; Interfaith Council
3; Medical Technology Club 2,3,4,5; Rifle Club 3;
Student American Chemical Society 1 . New England
Deaconess Hospital.
Niesen, Elaine S. (Zuckerman), Quincy, Mass., Nursing.
Stetson West Representative 1 . Beth Israel Hospital.
Noah, Irene, Brighton, Mass., LA, Modern Languages.
Dean's List 3,4. Spanish Club 4. Pistorino & Co.;
Boston Redevelopment Authority.
Noddell, Cecile, Sharon, Mass., LA, Journalism. Hillel
1,2 (vice president); Chalkdust 2 (both at Boston
State College); Husky Key 3; NEWS 3,4. Patriot
Ledger.
Noonan, Robert, Winthrop, Mass., LA, Psychology.
Dean's List. AFCEA 2; Rifle Club 1,2; Scabbard and
Blade 3,4; Student Union 1; Tennis Club 2,3. Mass.
General Hospital; Mass. Division of Child Guard-
ianship.
Noone, Stephen, Lynn, Mass., Business, Economics.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Beta Gamma Sigma honor
society. Economics Society 2,3,4 (treasurer); ROTC
1,2,3,4,5. Loomis Sayles & Co.; NEL Equities Serv-
ices Corp.
Novitsky, Herbert Lewis, Glens Falls, NY, Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List. Flying Club 1,2,3; IEEE 3,4
(publishing editor), 5; Radio Club 1,2,3,4; Rifle
Club 2,3,4; Zeta Beta Tau. General Electric Co., Ad-
vanced Product Engineering Dept.
Nowlan, Anne T., Arlington, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's
List. Retina Foundation.
Nyhen, Janet M., Brookline, Mass., Education, Biology.
Dean's List, 4. Nu Beta 2,3,4. Lahey Clinic;
Employers Group Insurance Co.; Lexington High
School.
O'Brien, John J. Ill, Wollaston, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 2,3,4. Auto Club 3. H.A.
Johnson Co., Inc.; The Badger Co., Inc.; Shaw Fur-
niture Co. Inc.
O'Connor, Edward J., Weymouth, Mass., LA, History.
Cross Country 2,3,4; Track 1,2,3,4. Hale & Dorr;
Northeastern U.
O'Connor, Thomas P. Jr., Dorchester, Mass., Chemical
Engineering. American Institute of Chemical Engi-
neers 2,3,4,5; Camera Club 1,2 (executive officer), 3;
Computer Club 2; N.U. Engineers' Council 5. Barn-
stead Still and Sterilizer Co.; Factory Mutual Re-
search Co.
Oko, George A., Seymour, Conn., Electrical Engineering.
IEEE 2,3,4,5. Andrew Alfono Manufacturing Co.
Oles, Patrick John, Middletown, N.Y., Pharmacy.
American Pharmaceutical Association. J & J Drug &
Medical Service; Polak's Frutal Works; Bergen Pines
County Hospital.
O'Malley, Robert A., Wellesley, Mass., Business, Manage-
ment. Dean's List 1,2. Society for Advancement of
Management 3. Ford Motor Co.; F. Diehl & Sons
Inc.
Orlando, Peter Paul Jr., Concord, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Eta Kappa Nu; Tau
Beta Pi. E.E. Honor Society 4,5 (corresponding
secretary); Engineering Honor Society 4,5. General
Radio Co.
Ouderkirk, Andrew E., West Bridgewater, Mass., Elec-
trical Engineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Phi Kappa
Phi; Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; President's Award
2,3. IEEE 3,4,5; Lockheed Missiles & Space Co.
Owen, Gary Lee, Barre, Vt., Business, Accounting. Dean's
List 1,2,3,4,5; Phi Kappa Phi 4; Beta Gamma Sigma
4 (president); Beta Alpha Psi 4 (president). Account-
ing Society 3 (secretary), 4 (vice president). Auditor
of Accounts for State of Vermont; Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation; Pickard and Burns Elec-
tronics.
Paille, Lynn Ellen, Burlington, Mass., LA, English.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Student Union 2; Newspaper staff,
suburban campus. Wobum Public Library; Library
of Congress; Boston Globe; Reading High School.
Palumbo, Robert J., Wobum, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 4,5; Pi Tau Sigma 5. ASME
3,4,5; SAME 2; Car Club 3. E.G. & G. Inc.; R.C.A.
Paolucci, James A., Medford, Mass., LA, Economics. Phi
Alpha Rho 3 (sports chairman), 4 (executive board).
401
Mass. League of Cities and Towns; Medford Hous-
ing Authority; U.S.M. Corporation.
Papineau, Peter, Brooklyn, N.Y., Industrial Engineering.
Tau Kappa Epsilon 3,4,5 (bursar). New York
Telephone; First National City Bank.
Parker, Chester E, Lowell, Mass., LA, History. Chess
Club 2. Hougton Mifflin Book Publishing Co.; Bel-
mont Memorial Library.
Parker, Stanley Jordan, Mattapan, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List 1. Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Checker Taxi Co.; Main-LaFrentz & Co.; Lyband
Ross Bros. & Montgomery.
Parkinson, Larry T., Massema, N.Y., Business Account-
ing. Dean's List 1,3; Alpha Beta Psi 4,5. Accounting
Society 4,5. General Foods; Gillette Co.
Parks, Thomas R., Beverly, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Pi Tau Sigma 3,4,5
(secretary). Section Representative 1; ASME 3,4,5:
Christian Science College Organization 4,5. U.S.M.
Corp.; Bell Telephone Labs.
Parrish, Virginia Kay, Durham, N.H., Elementary Educa-
tion. State of New Hampshire Department of Voca-
tional Rehabilitation.
Pasionek, Robert J., Norwood, Mass., Business,
Management. International Business Machine Corp.;
MIT Instrumentation Lab.; Draper Corp.; Plymouth
Home National Bank.
Patukonis, Robert John, South Boston, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. Dean's List IEEE 3,4,5. Andrew Al-
ford Consulting Engineers.
Pawlowski, Walter J. Jr., East Hartford, Conn., LA,
Biology. Dean's List 2,3,4,5. Dormitory Council 1.
Pulmonary Laboratory, Hartford Hospital.
Payne, Robert J., Holliston, Mass., Education, Mathema-
tics. Auto Club 2,3,4,5; Camera Club 3,4,5.
Wellesley Jr. High School; Sylvania Applied
Research Laboratory.
Pearson, Glenn, Arlington, Va., LA, Chemistry. Dean's
List 1,2,3,4,5. NEWS 1,2 (art editor), 3,4; Camera
Club 4; Film Workshop 4 (president); Horn 2,3.
Food & Drug Administration, H.E.W.; Maxwell
House Coffee, General Foods; Arthur D. Little.
Pearson, Michael Alan, Glen Head, L.I., N.Y., Business,
Accounting. Dean's List 3,4,5. Sanders Assoc. 1,2;
Hurdman and Cranstown, Penney & Co. Certified
Public Accountants.
Pepicelli, Pasquale L. Jr., Boston, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. ASME (program chairman). Data Packag-
ing Corp.
Perepelitza, Daniel Walter, Nahant, Mass. Education,
Social Studies. Dean's List 3. NEWS 3,4,5 (art edi-
tor); NU Yacht Club 1,2,4,5. Young Republican
Club 1,2,3,4,5 (president). MIT Engineering
Library; Hood Sailmakers.
Perlman, Barbara Lynn, Highland Park, N.J., Elementary
Education. Dean's List 2,3,4. Newman Club 1,2;
Hillel; Sketch Club; Omega Sigma; NEWS 1,2;
Silver Masquel, 2; International Reading Association
2. Hamilton School; Jordan Marsh; Pollock School
for Emotionally Disturbed; N.U. Library; Jewish
Community Center.
Perlmutter, Richard, Boston, Mass., LA, English. Dean's
List 3,4,5. Cultural Activities Committee 2;
Billiards Club 2; English Dept. Arts and Letters
Series 4,5 (chairman); LA Student Advisory Com-
mittee Representative 4,5. Boston Globe; Provident
Institution for Savings, New England Press Associa-
tion; Aetna Insurance Co.
Perry, Dennis Michael, Plymouth, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Freshman Baseball; IEEE 1,2,3,4.
General Dynamics Corp.
Perry, Dennis Robert, Ipswich, Mass. Education, Social
Studies. Dean's List 2,3,4,5. Armed Forces Com-
munications and Electronics Assoc. 1,2 (secretary), 3
(president), 4 (treasurer), 5; Rifle Club 1. D.C.
Heathand Co.; Hamilton Wenham Regional High
School.
Perry, Leland A., Lynn, Mass., LA, Mathematics. Scab-
bard & Blade 4,5 (supply chairman); Counter
Guerilla Group 3,4,5; AFCEA 2,3. AVCO Corp.,
Missile Systems Division.
Pessotti, George, Stow, Mass., Business, Management.
Dean's List 2,3,4. S.A.M. 3. Ford Motor Co.
Peters, Marjorie G., Melrose, Mass., Education, English.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5. Freshman Class Publicity
Committee; NEWS 1,2,3 (news editor), 4 (managing
editor). N.U., Office of Educational Resources;
Winchester High School.
Peterson, Kenneth F., Lawrence, Mass. Electrical En-
gineering. Raytheon Company.
Peterson, Norman, Whitman, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5. ASCE-BSCE Student Chapter
4,5; Chi Epsilon 4,5. MIT; Liberty Mutual
Insurance Co.
Petralia, Annette, Winchester, Mass., Education Spanish.
Dean's List 4. Language Dept. Wellesley High
School.
Piazza, Louis H., Milford, Mass., Chemical Engineering.
AIChE 2,3,4,5. Dennison Mfg. Co.
Picard, Raymond L., Hudson, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Tau Beta Pi; Eta Kappa Nu; Dean's List; Phi
Kappa Phi; President's Award. University Band 1 ;
IEEE 3,4. General Radio Corp.
Piche, Edouard A., Hartford, Conn., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List; ROTC Academic
Achievement Award; Distinguished Military
Student. Rifle Club 1,2,3. The Hartford Gas Co.;
Ford Motor Co.
Piekos, Stanley D., Springfield, Mass., Business, Finance
and Insurance. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Beta Gamma
Sigma. Phi Kappa Tau 2 (IFC representative), 3
(board of governors and treasurer) 4,5; Finance
Society 4,5. Mass. Mutual Life Insurance Company;
402
Employers'-Commercial Union Group of Insurance
Companies.
Pierson, Robert, Richfield Springs, N.Y., Chemical En-
gineering. American Institute of Chemical Engineers
2,3,4,5; Intramural Basketball 3; Alumni Pledge
Program 4,5. Allied Chemical Corporation, Indus-
trial Chemicals Division.
Pinkman, James J. Jr., Chelsea, Mass., Business, Indus-
trial Relations. Dean's List 2. Sigma Kappa
1,2,3,4,5. Harris, Kerr, Forster & Co.; Cabot Corp.;
Investment Companies Services Corp.
Piatt, Sandra M., Maiden, Mass., Nursing. Mass. General
Hospital.
Pober, Jeanne E., Norwood Mass., LA, Sociology. Dean's
List 3. Silver Masque 2, Art Club 4.
Podalsky, Steven K, Maiden, Mass., Education, Social
Studies. Dean's List 3,4,5. Intramural basketball
1,2,3. Admissions Office, N.U.
Polley, Carol L., Nashua, N.H., LA, Sociology. Dean's
List 1,2,3,4,5. Academy 4. Suffolk Franklin Savings
Bank; New England Medical Center.
Pondelli, Albert, Somerville, Mass., Business, Finance
and Insurance. Dean's List. ROTC. Employers
Group of Insurance Companies; John Hancock Life
Insurance Company.
Poole, Stephen E., Winchester, Mass., Civil Engineering.
ASCE-BSCE; ROTC. Miller and Nylander.
Potter, John S. Jr., Somerville, New Jersey, Mechanical
Engineering. Scabbard and Blade. National ROTC
Band Association 1,2,3,4,5; N.U.B.I. Black and
Decker Mfg. Co. Inc.; Kamyr Inc. Shell Chemical
Co.
Power, Paul Dennis, Hyde Park, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Track 1,2,4; Cross Country 1,2,4. Mon-
santo Chemical Research; Metcalf and Eddy Engi-
neers Inc.
Pratt, Christopher G.L., Natick, Mass., LA. English.
Senior Class Cabinet 4; Senior Week Committee 4
(chairman of publicity); Silver Masque 3; Surf Club
3.
Preetz, William, Lynn, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,3. Rifle Club 2,3; Amateur Radio Club
3; Surf Club 3. Avco Everett Research Laboratory;
Eastern Microwave; Raytheon Missile Systems Di-
vision.
Prenovitz, Steven C, Randolph, Mass., Business, Finance.
Track 3.
Prescott, Douglas Thayer, Centerville, Mass., LA,
Mathematics. Huskiers and Outing Club 1,2
(president), 3 (treasurer), 4 (vice president), 5
(president); Huskier of the Year. United Fruit Com-
pany; Corporations Research.
Previte, Anthony J., Maiden, Mass., Education Social
Studies. Dean's List 2,4,5. Tau Epsilon Phi. N.U.
Audio-Visual Dept.
Previte, Kenneth M., Medford, Mass., Business, Finance
and Insurance. Tau Epsilon Phi. Arkwright; Boston
Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Company.
Prince, James J., Randolph, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List 2,3,4,5; Beta Alpha Psi 4,5. Accounting
Society 3,4,5. Boston Redevelopment Authority;
Brockton Taunton Gas Co.; Elliott Business Machine
Co.
Purdue, William C, Teaneck, N.J., Industrial Engineer-
ing. AIIE 5; Intramural basketball 3,4; Rifle Club
2,3. Schering Corporation.
Quinn, Cynthia (Desmond), Ipswich, Mass., LA, Math.
Rifle Club 1; Society of Women Engineers 1,2. Unit-
ed Shoe Machinery Corp.; NASA Electronics
Research Center.
Quinn, James F. Jr., Dedham, Mass., Business,
Management. Indoor track 1,2; Outdoor track 1,2.
Perin Products; William Carter Co.; Chas. T. Main,
Inc.
Quinn, Richard Francis, Boston, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 4. American Concrete Institute 4,5;
Silver Masque 1 ; Society for American Military En-
gineers 2,3,4,5; 100 Mile Club 2,3,4; NUCES
2,3,4,5; ASCE-BSCE 2,3,4,5. A.H. Harris & Sons;
County of Norfolk Engineering Dept.; Town of Mil-
ton Engineering Dept.
Rando, Thomas L. Jr., Newton, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 3,4; Eta Kappa Nu. IEEE.
Hypervon Industries Inc.
Randolph, Bradford Earle, Boston, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Cauldron 5; ROTC 1,2.3,4,5. Converse
Rubber Co. ; Metcalf & Eddy.
Rattigan, Brian F., Newton, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. Alpha Pi Mu 4,5. AIIE 2,3,4,5. Itek Corp.;
General Electric; William Underwood Co.
Reardon, Patricia A., Brockton, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4; The Academy 4,5; Phi Sigma
4,5 (recording secretary.). Nu Beta 1,3,4.5. Brockton
Veterans Administration Hospital.
Reid, Robert Frederick, Wethersfield, Conn., LA,
English. Dean's List 2,3,4. Distinguished Speaker
Series Committee 5; English Literary Society 3,
(vice president), 4 (president); Rowing Association 3
(vice president), 4 (president). Investment Com-
panies Services Corp.; Northeastern University; Bos-
ton Globe.
Reidy, Janet M., Boston, Mass., LA, Biology. Liberal
Arts Student Advisory Committee 3,4; Newman Club
1; Nu Beta 1,2,3,4 (vice president); Student-Faculty
Relations Committee 3. BU Medical Center, Hart-
ford Ins. Group, Children's Hospital.
Reilly, Eleanor P., Cambridge, Mass., Elementary Educa-
tion. Dean's List 2,3,4; Kappa Delta Phi. Education
Executive Committee 5; Newman Club 1,2.
Employers' Group Insurance Co.; Reading School
Svstem.
Rempis, James A., Arlington, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 4. AIChE 2,3,4. M.I.T. Instrumenta-
tion Laboratory.
403
Repetti, Annette C, Arlington, Mass., Nursing. Mass.
General Hospital.
Reynolds, Barbara B., Delmar, N.Y., Nursing. Peter Bent
Brigham Hospital.
Ricci, William Jay, Dorchester, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Badminton Champion 1969. Cambridge
Tool & Manufacturing Co.
Rizzo, Ronald S., East Boston, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 4; Phi Sigma Kappa 4 (president, secre-
tary, historian, editor); Rifle Club 1. Stone & Web-
ster Engineering Corp.; Northeastern University.
Robillard, Renald A., Peabody, Mass., Business,
Management. Society for the Advancement of
Management 3,4. Second Federal Savings and Loan
Assn. of Boston.
Robinson, Marilyn L., Dorchester, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Afro-American Assn. 4,5; Black Students' Union 3.
YMCA; New England Rehabilitation for Work
Center; Boston State Hospital; Roxbury Federation
Neighborhood Houses.
Rodes, Carol Ann, Waltham, Mass., LA, Medical
Technology. Alpha Omega Pi 3,4 (corresponding
secretary); Medical Technology Club 2,3,4,5. New
England Baptist Hospital.
Rodman, Mark, Canton, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's List
3. Judo Club 1; NUUS 1,2. B.U. Medical Center;
Harvard Medical School; Children's Cancer
Research Foundation.
Rogers, Kenneth F. Jr., Quincy, Mass., Business,
Management. Gamma Phi Kappa 2,3,4,5; IFC Sports
2,3,4,5; Intramural Basketball 1,2. Knapp Bros. Shoe
Manufacturing Inc.
Rogers, Susan Elizabeth, Plainville, Mass., LA, Sociology.
Dean's List 2,3. Croched Mountain Foundation;
New England Baptist Hospital; Employers' Group
Insurance.
Rogoff, Allan, East Islip, N.Y., Business, Finance &
Insurance. Bridge Club 2,3; Finance Club 3,4,5.
Cabot Corp.; Aetna Life & Casualty Ins.
Rokicki, Glen, Oak Bluffs, Mass., Industrial Engineering.
Dean's List. AIIE 2,3 & 4 (president), 5. Alpha Pi
Mu. Benthos Corp.; Ford Motor Co.
Romano, George W. Jr., Revere, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Rifle Club 1. M.I.T.
Romano, Michael L., Wallkill, N.Y., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Eta Kappa Nu; Tau Beta Pi. IEEE 3,4
(treasurer). IBM.
Rosenthal, Stuart R., Hull, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's
List 1,3,4. Nu Beta 2,3,4,5. Boston City Hospital;
Mass. General Hospital.
Ross, Bernard J., Milton, Mass. LA, Political Science.
Hale & Dorr; Loomis Sayles & Co.; Boston Globe.
Ross, Dean Thomas, Harrisburg, Pa., Bouve, Recreation
Education. First Student Representative to the
Recreation Div. of the American Assn. of Health,
Physical Education and Recreation 5; Greene Award
1969. Professional Recreation Organization 2,3,4;
Society for the Advancement of Management 1;
Student Representative to Mass. Assn. for Health,
Physical Education and Recreation 4 (treasurer);
Yacht Club 2. Aetna Life & Casualty.
Ross, Stephen, Waban, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Cauldron 5; Huskiers 5; Management Society 2,3;
Marketing and Advertising Society 4,5; Rifle Club
1,2,4; Sports Car Club 3,4,5 (president); Student
Union 3,4,5. General Dynamics Corp.; Star Market
Co.
Rothchild, Barbara T., Bethpage, N.Y., Education,
Elementary Reading. Dean's List 2,3,4,5; Kappa
Delta Pi 4,5. IRA 3,4; NAEYC 3,4,5; NCSS 5;
SNEA 4,5. Danvers Public Schools; Brandeis
University; M.I.T.
Roux, Judith Ann, Brockton, Mass., Nursing. Beth Israel
Hospital.
Rovito, Bruno J., Suffern N.Y., Chemical Engineering.
Dean's List 4. American Chemical Society 5; AIChE
2,4,5; Newman Club 1,2,3,4,5. Sun Chemical Corp.;
Union Carbide; Sylvania Corp.
Rowey, JohnA., Lincoln, R.I., Mechanical Engineering.
Dean's List 4. Rifle Club 3. Texas Instruments.
Rucho, Robert Anthony, Worcester, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 1,3. Delta Sigma Theta 1,2,3,4. Husky
Key 3,4; Nu Beta 4.
Ruderman, Eric, Wakefield, Mass., Business Administra-
tion. Suffolk Franklin Savings Bank; Stavisky &
Shapiro: Gillette Co.
Rudman, Marshal, Dorchester, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Hollingsworth & Vose; Abraisive
Products; Harvard College Observatory.
Russ, Jerome Gregory, Winthrop, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. AIChE 1,2,3,4; Chemical Engineers In-
tramural Track Team. Mass. Div. of Sanitary En-
gineering; K.L. Quinn's; Sterling Quality Products.
Russell, Paul Eugene, Wellesley, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 2; ASME 5. Sylvania Electric
Products Inc.; Andonian Associates.
Russo, John Louis, Dedham, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Model Railroad Club 2,3,4,5. IBM.
Ryan, Bruce W., Milton, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Dean's List 4. Advertising Club 4,5; Football
1,2,3,4; Marketing Club 4,5. Hart Electric Sign Sup-
ply Co., Inc.
Ryzewic, William Harry, New London, Conn., Civil En-
gineering. ASCE-BSCE Student Chapter 2,3,4,5
(treasurer); Council of Professional Engineering
Societies 3,4. General Dynamics Electric Boat Div.
Sabold, Walter Carl Jr., Ambler, Pa., Business Marketing.
Dean's List 2,3,4; Phi Sigma Kappa 1,2 (recording
sec'y), 3 (vice president), 5; Intra Fraternity Council
representative 3,4,5; Rush chairman 4. Mobil Oil
Corp.; Northeast Airlines.
Saccardo, Samuel, Medford Mass., Business, Finance and
Insurance. Phi Beta Alpha. Preston Moss and Co.;
404
White Weld and Co.
Sacks, Andrew J., Monsey, N.Y., LA, Mathematics.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Class Board 2,3,4,5; Math Club 2;
Student Council 4,5; Pledge 3,4. General Foods
Corp.
Sadowski, Frances L., Bellingham, Mass., LA, Modern
Language. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; The Academy; New-
man Club 2; Student Co-op Advisory Committee 4;
Speare Hall President 4. Northeastern University;
Dept. of H.E.W.
Safford, Robert A., Lynn, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Student Council 5; Cauldron 4,5; ASME 5;
Radio Club 4,5; Camera Club 5; Chess Club 5. Avce
Corp.
Safran, David, Brookline, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Table Tennis Club 1; Rifle Club 2; ASME 2;
Zeta Beta Tau 1,2 (sec'y), 3,4 (vice president), 5
(president). MIT; Army Materials and Mechanics
Research Center; Barry Controls.
St. Germain, Jacqueline Ann, Rochdale, Mass., LA, Polit-
ical Science. Dean's List 2. Inter -Sorority Council 2,
Inter-sorority rep. 2. Theta Sigma Tau; Lambda
Delta Phi.
Salois, Alfred J., Methuen, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List. Phi Alpha Rho (treasurer). Raytheon;
Sanders Associates.
Santini, Donald Louis, Winchendon, Mass., Business
Management. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; President's Award
3; Beta Gamma Sigma. Distinguished Military
Student 4; Superior Cadet Award 2; Ancient and
Honorable Artillery Co. Award 3; Academic
Achievement Award 1,2,3,4. Counter Guerilla
Group 1,2,3,4 (commander); Rifle Club 3; Student
Advisory Committee 3,4. Independent Lock Co.;
Abbott Equipment Co.
Sargent, Robert H., Kingston, N.H., Industrial Relations.
Dean's List 1,5. Husky Key 2,3,4,5; Economics
Society 1; Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5; Class Board 3,4;
Winter Carnival Committee 3,4; Homecoming 2,3.
U.S. Dept. of Labor; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp.
Sarno, Michael J., Jamaica Plain, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Rifle Club 1; AIChE 2,3,4,5. Metcalf and
Eddy; Barnstead Still and Sterilizer Co.; Samuel
Cabot Inc.
Saulsbury, Richard C, Tully, N.Y., Business Accounting.
Dean's List 2,3; Accounting Honor Fraternity. Ski
Club 1,2,3 (vice president), 4 (vice president); Beta
Alpha Psi 3,4 (treasurer); Accounting Society. Con-
tinental Can Co.
Saunders, William E., Walpole, Mass., LA, Mathematics.
Dean's List 1,2,4. Harvard University; South Shore
Service Bureau; Raytheon Co.
Scarbeau, David, North Adams, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Alpha Kappa Sigma 2,3 (secretary), 4,5.
Sprague Electronic Co.; Raytheon Co.; MBTA;
Mass. General Hospital.
Schena, Sharon L., Wilmington, Mass., Boston Bouve,
Physical Ed. Dean's List 3. Physical Education Club
1,3,4; Girls Varsity Basketball Club 3,4. Lawrence
YWCA.
Scherzer, Robert M., Wantach, N.Y., Finance and
Insurance. Phi Kappa Tau; Varsity Crew Team 3,4.
Marine Midland Grace Trust Co. of NY; Putnam
Management Co.; UPS; Investment Companies Serv-
ice Corp.
Schiess, Robert S., Leonia, N.J. LA, Biology. Dean's List
3. Wrestling Club 1,2,3; Nu Beta 2,3; Water Pole 3;
IFC rep. 3; Delta Sigma Theta 1,2,3,4 (treasurer).
Schlossberg, Jeffrey, Island Park, N.Y., Accounting.
Dean's List 2,3,4. Class Treasurer 2,3,4; Tau
Epsilon Phi; Class Cabinet. Haskins and Sells.
Schmidgall, Edward F. Ill, Wakefield, Mass., Business
Marketing. Crew 1,2,3,4. BB Chemical Corp.;
Chandler Co.; Carter-Rice.
Schneidler, John P. Jr., Palisades Park, N.J., Business,
Marketing. American Marketing Assoc. 4,5. St.
Johnsbury Trucking Co.; Marplan Research, Inc.
Schnyer, John R., West Yarmouth, Mass., Business
Management. Top Value Enterprises; Warren
Brothers Co.
Schonbach, Dave I., Southampton, Pa., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Tau Beta Pi 3,4,5
(vice president); Eta Kappa Nu 4,5 (treasurer). Ama-
teur Radio Club 1,2,3,4,5; Student Union 2,3,4,5;
Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5; IEEE 3,4,5; President's Ad-
visory Comm. 4; Mars Club 1. Picker Xray; G.E.;
Northeastern U.
Schonwald, George, Scotch Plains, N.J., Business Market-
ing. WNEU 1; Silver Masque 1,2,3,4. Martin Schon-
wald & Sons.
Schweiger, Marjorie, St. James, N.Y., LA, Social Welfare.
Dean's List 3; Intra Dormitory Food Committee.
Kings Park State Hospital.
Scopa, Joanne, West Roxbury, Mass., Forsyth Dental
Hygiene. Alpha Sigma Tau 3,4,5; Women's Physical
Education Club 1,2. West Roxbury YMCA;
Brookline Recreation Dept.; Peter Bent Brigham
Hosp.; Normandy House.
Scribner, Frederick W. Ill, Medford, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Dean's List. Track Team 1,2,3,4; Cross
Country Team 1; NUCES 2,3,4,5; Rep. Engineering
Council 4,5. George B.H. Macomber Co.
Seavey, Robert A., Canton, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Gamma Phi Kappa 2,3 (president), 4,5; ASME
3,4,5. Wall Industries Inc.; Sylvania; Lehigh Design
Co.
Segal, Leonard Eliot, Randolph, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Camera Club 4; WNEU 1,2,3,4,5; Class
Cabinet 2,3,4,5; ICC 4,5; IEEE 4,5; Senior Week
Committee 5. Brockton Edison Co.; MIT;
Masoneilian International.
Selevicius, Joseph Jr., Holbrook, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Rifle Club 1; Judo Club 1; AIChE
2,3,4,5; Joint Engineering Council Rep. 3,4,5. Paule
405
Chemical Corp.
Senese, Richard, Massapequa, N.Y., Business,
Management. Dean's List. SAM 1 ; Surf Club; Folk
Club; Intramural basketball. IBM; Marplan Inc.;
ICR.
Serrecchia, Louis A., Reading, Mass., Business,
Management. Football 1,2. Microwave Associates;
Hogan Tire; Jone's Motor; Defence Contract Ad-
ministration.
Sesnovich, Janet, West Roxbury, Mass., LA, Political
Science. Hillel 1,2; Husky Key, 1,2,3,4.
Severance, Paul Michael, Chelsea, Mass., Education,
Social Studies. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Academic
Achievement Award 1,2,3,4,5; Outstanding ROTC
Cadet in Mass. 4; Superior Cadet 3,4. Bronze and
Silver Achievement Awards. Pershing Rifles
1,2,3,4,5; Scabbard & Blade 3,4,5; ROTC treasurer
5. Reading High School.
Seymour, David Eaton, Amherst, Mass., Civil Engineer-
ing. Springfield Gas Light Co.; Fitchberg Gas &
Light Co.
Shafer, Nancy Lorraine, Rochester, N.Y., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List 4,5. Accounting Society 3,4;
Inter-Dorm Council 3,4. Cheate, Hall & Stewart.
Shanker, Susan Carol, Maiden, Mass., LA, Mathematics.
Dean's List 1,4. Math Club 2 (sec'y), 3 (president);
Class Board 2,3. W.R. Grace & Co.
Shea, Stephen, No. Andover, Mass., Business,
Management, Freshman Class Board; Tau Epsilon
Phi. Gerrity Co.; H.M. Sanders Co.
Shechtman, I. Stanley, Cranston, R.I., Education. Alpha
Epsilon Pi 2,3,4 (president), 5; Advisory Committee
to the Dean of Co-op. Foxboro Co.; Provident Insti-
tute for Savings.
Sher, Jesse, Hicksville, N.Y., Business, Management.
Dean's List 2,3. Student Council 3,4; Huskey Key 2;
Society for Advancement of Management 4,5; Tau
Epsilon Phi. W. T. Grant.
Shiers, Paul F., Boston, Mass., Civil Engineering. Dean's
List 2,3,4; Chi Epsilon 3,4,5 (secretary). Auto Club
1; Rifle Club 1; ASCE-BSCE 2,3,4,5; Engineering
Council 3,4. Mass. DPW; Metcalf and Eddy, Inc.
Schneider, Lois Elaine, Newton, Mass., Elementary
Education. Dean's List 4. Hillel 1,2,3,4,5; Dorm
Council 2,3; Food Comm. 4; Delta Phi Epsilon 3,4
(president), 5. Boston Globe; Whittemore Elemen-
tary School.
Shoib, Gerald E., Brockton, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. Society of Military Engineers 1,2,3; AIIE
2,3,4,5. Columbia Meat Packing Co.; General
Dynamics.
Silverio, Joseph R., Worcester, Mass., Civil Engineering.
ASCE 3,4,5. Shrewsbury Engineering Dept.; Robert
Charles Engineering Assoc, Inc.
Silverio, Roland R. Jr., Everett, Mass., Boston Bouve,
Physical Education. Dean's List 3,4,5. Football
1,2,3,4; Boxing Club 3,4,5; Mens Physical Educa-
tion Club 1,2,3,4,5. South End Boys Club; N.U.
Men's P.E. Dept.
Silverman, Stephen, Business, Management. Society for
the Advancement of Management 4,5. Bankers Leas-
ing Co.; D.C.A.S.R. U.S. Gov't.; Boston Safe Deposit
& Trust Co.
Simon, Linda Lee, East Syracuse, N.Y., LA, Psychology.
Dean's List 3. Judo Club 1,2,3; Psychology Club 3,4.
Simonelli, Anthony J., North Adams, Mass., Civil En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3. ASCE 2,3,4,5. Petricca
Construction Company.
Sipress, Leda, Union, N.J., Boston Bouve, Physical
Education. Dean's List 1,2,3; Kappa Delta Pi.
Women's Physical Education Majors Club 1,2,3,4.
YWCA of Greater Rhode Island.
Sirkin, Ruth E., Boston, Mass., Nursing. Dean's List 2,4.
Peter Bent Brigham Hospital.
Skinner, Raymond A., Wellesley, Mass., Business,
Management. Rifle Club 1; Class Board 2,3; Class
treasurer 2; Alumni Pledge Fund 3. Kemper
Insurance; Hotel Corporation of America; Parke-
Bernet Galleries.
Smith, Charles C, East Boston, Mass., LA, Mathematics.
Crew 1,2,3,4. Avco Corp.; Raytheon Corp.
Smith, Jeffrey, Hingham, Mass., Chemical Engineering.
Dean's List 4. Indoor Track Team 1 ; AIChE 2,3,4.
Tuft's University Enzyme Center; Firestone Indus-
trial Rubber Products Co.
Smith, Robert Thomas, Hyde Park, Mass., LA, Physics.
Physics Club 1,2,3 (treasurer), 4 (treasurer and vice
president). Avco Research Laboratories; Raytheon.
Soja, Donald Thomas, Chicopee, Mass., Business, Market-
ing. Dean's List 2. Biology 1 ,2. Track Team 2,3 ; Phi
Sigma Kappa 2,3 (historian), 4,5; Surf Club 2,3;
Marketing Club 3,4,5. Monsanto Chemical Co.;
Compo Chemical Co.; Morris Alper & Sons Inc.
Sommer, James Howard, Plainville, Conn., Industrial En-
gineering. Rifle Club 1; AIIE 2,5; Phi Gamma Pi 2
(social chairman), 3 (secretary), 4,5. The Stanley
Works; Hesse-Eastern Div. of Norris Industries.
Sophis, Fred J., Billerica, Mass., LA, Economics.
Micromatics Products Inc.; Ford Motor Co.
Sorgi, Kevin G., Milton, Mass., Education, Social Studies.
Dean's List 3. Alpha Kappa Sigma. Dept. of Ed.,
Bureau of Library Extension.
Soto, Silvia A., Brookline, Mass., LA, English. Dean's
List 3,4,5. Spanish Club 3,4 (president); English
Literary Society 4.
Soucy, Roger, Cumberland, R.I., Business, Management.
Souder, Frank D. Jr., Springfield, Pa., LA, Economics.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; The Academy; Distinguished
Military Student. Outing Club 2,3; Student Course
and Teacher Evaluation 4,5 (co-chairman); Rifle
Club 3. Langley Research Center (NASA); Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston.
406
Souppa, Bonnie (McCall), Swampscott, Mass., LA,
Medical Technology. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Phi
Sigma; The Academy. Medical Technology Club 4
(president). New England Deaconess Hospital.
Souppa, Ralph A. Jr., Westport, Conn., Civil Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 3. Track 1,2,3,4; Civil Engineering
Society 2,3,4,5. Malcolm Pirnie Engineers; Golder,
Gass Associates.
Spiers, Mary C, Boston, Mass., LA, English. Dean's List
4,5. Boston Globe Newspaper Co.; Edwards Junior
High School; New England Mutual Life Insurance
Co.
Sproul, Warren G., West Concord, Mass., Business,
Management. Counter Guerilla Group 2,3,4; Tau
Epsilon 2,3,4,5. Middlesex Institution for Savings;
Itek Corp.; New England Telephone Co.
Stanewick, Marianne, Roslindale, Mass., LA, Drama.
Dean's List 2,3. Silver Masque 2,3,4,5. Bio-
Dynamics, Inc.
Stanton, David J., Cochituate, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,4; Pi Tau Sigma 5. ASME
5; Auto Club 3; Surf Club 3; Student Union 4.
Lockheed California Co.; Raytheon Space and Infor-
mation Systems Division.
Stark, Richard, Needham, Mass., Business Accounting.
Tau Kappa Epsilon. Arthur Anderson and Co.;
Honeywell Inc.
Stavaridis, William John, Winchester, Mass., Electrical
Engineering. IEEE 3,4,5; Class Board 1 (president),
2 (treasurer), 3 (vice president), 4 (vice-president);
Alumni Pledge Committee (chairman) 3,4,5; King
Huskey Mascot Committee 1,2,3,4,5. Dynamics
Research Corp.
Stebbings, Timothy D., Attleboro, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List. SAM 3; Intramural
Basketball 1,2. The FoxboroCo.
Steele, Dawnne Elaine, Dighton, Mass., Elementary
Education. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5. Coed Volleyball 2;
Intervarsity 2. Pembroke Schools; Newman Center;
Taunton Schools.
Stefani, Russell V., Plymouth, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Pi Tau Sigma. ASME 3,4,5. Dynatech
Corp.
Stefanowicz, Raymond Stanley, Valley Stream, N.Y.,
Civil Engineering. ASCE-BSCE 2,4,5. Parsons,
Brinckerhoff, Quade & Douglas; Woodward Clyde &
Assoc; Hardesty & Hanover.
Steinberg, Geoffrey S., Newton, Mass., Business,
Management. Chorus 1,2; Class Board 3; Alpha
Epsilon Pi 2,3,4,5; Alumni Pledge Program 3 (chair-
man); Inter Fraternity Council 4,5; Freshman Orien-
tation Committee 2; Intramural Basketball 1,2. Syl-
vania Co.; New England Airlift Inc.; Raytheon Co.
Stepak, Steven Philip, Providence, R.I., LA, Biology.
German Club 4. Mass. Mental Health Center.
Stevens, Charles George, Williamstown, Mass., Chemical
Engineering. Dean's List 1,2,4. ROTC, Advanced
Corps. 3,4,5. Sprague Electric Co.; Mass. Division of
Water Pollution Control.
Stevens, Joyce A., West Medford, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 3,5. Boston Hospital for
Women.
Stillings, Thomas F., Pinehurst, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List. SAM. Sweetheart Plastics
Inc.; Ford Motor Co.
Stolos, Joanne, Saugus, Mass., Nursing. Dean's List 4.
Tufts New England Medical Center.
Storer, Jay D., Dedham, Mass., LA, English-Journalism.
Auto Club 1 ; Wrestling Club 1 ; Hot Rod Club 2,3
(president), 4 (president); Camera Club 4. Horizon
House Publishing Co.; Waterbury Republican; Peter-
sen Publishing Co.
Straus, Martin Louis, Brighton, Mass., Business, Market-
ing.
Stregowski, Richard J., Berlin, Conn., Chemical En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3. AIChE 2,3,4,5. Midland
Div., The Dexter Corp.
Strumski, Charles A., Norwood, Mass., Business,
Management. Ski Club 5. Cambosco Scientific Co.;
Forte Engineering Corp.; W.T. Grant Co.
Strzepek, Richard E., Pawtucket, R.I., Civil Engineering.
Surf Club 2,3 (vice president), 4,5; freshman section
representative; N.U.C.E.S. 3,4,5. D.P.W., Engineer-
ing Dept., Woonsocket, R.I.
Stubbert, James, Brockton, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's
List 1,2,3,4,5; Academy 4,5; Nu Beta 4,5. Judo Club
1; Biology Club 1,2,3,4,5. Brockton Veterans Ad-
ministration Hospital.
Sudol, William J., Woonsocket, R.I., LA, Psychology. Phi
Gamma Pi 2 (treasurer), 3 (vice president), 4 (pledge-
master). Medfield State Hospital; Butler Hospital;
Cushing Hospital.
Sullivan, Daniel P., North Attleboro, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List 1,2,4; Beta Gamma Sigma
4,5. Zeta Gamma Tau 1,2 (treasurer); Phi Kappa
Tau 2,3,4,5; Finance Society 4,5. Providence Mill
Supply Co.; Northrop Nortronics; Hallmark Cards.
Sullivan, Robert J., Charlestown, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. New England Telephone and Telegraph
Co.
Sullivan, William P., Scituate, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 3,4. IEEE 4,5. J.J. Henry Co.;
Raytheon Co.
Sweatland, Alison, North Windham, Maine, Boston
Bouve, Physical Therapy. Dean's List 3. Physical
Therapy Club 1,2,3,4. Cushing Hospital.
Syrakos, Paul A., Lynn, Mass., Mechanical Engineering.
Student Council 3; Dean's List 4; ASME 5. Atwood
& Morrill Valve Co.
Szavoick, Edward J., Jr., Otter River, Mass., Business,
Management. Rodney Hunt Co.; Roadway Express
Inc.
Szoc, Kenneth R., Gardner, Mass., Chemical Engineering.
407
Omega Chi Epsilon 3,4 (vice president), 5; Tau Beta
Pi 4,5. Huskey Key 1,2; AIChE 2,3,4,5. American
Cyanamid; Lilly Chemical Products.
Tackel, Philip Stephen, Monsey, N.Y., Industrial En-
gineering. AIIE 2,3,4,5; Class Cabinet 2,3,4,5. Ford
Motor Co.
Tagg, Leonard Edward, Weymouth, Mass., LA, Political
Science, freshman section representative; Young
Democrats 2,3 (vice president). M.I.T.; Quincy
Neighborhood Youth Corps.; Mass. State Senate
Committee on Rules.
Takach, Charles Geza, East Boston, Mass., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Beta Alpha Psi 4,5;
Beta Gamma Sigma 5. Accounting Society 3,4,5.
American Cyanamid Co.; State Street Bank & Trust
Co.; Lybrand Ross, Bronters & Montgomery.
Taylor, R. Gregory, Natick, Mass., Civil Engineering.
ASCE & BSCE Student Chapter 2,3,4 (secretary), 5
(president); Auto Club 1. MacCarthy Engineering;
Needham Engineering Dept., Department of Public
Works; Sepp Firnkas Engineering.
Taylor, William I. Jr., Easthampton, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List. Finance Club 2,3,4; In-
tramural Basketball 1,2,3,4; Society for the Advance-
ment of Management 2,3,4. Aetna Life & Casualty;
National Cash Register.
Thistle, Judith A., Melrose, Mass., LA, English. Dorm
Counselor 4; Dorm Treasurer 4; Newman Center 4.
Thomas, Kenneth S., Belmont, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. NU Band 1,2 (liason) 3,4 (manager), 5.
MIT Inst. Lab. ARK-LES Switch Co., Hyster Co.
Tingley, Harry N. Jr., Brant Rock, Mass., Business,
Marketing. Dean's List. Advertising Club 3,4; Alpha
Kappa Sigma; Marketing Club 3,4. Hallmark Cards
Inc.
Tobin, William Francis, Whitman, Mass., Business,
Management. Scabbard and Blade (executive of-
ficer); Football 2,3,4; ROTC 1,2,3,4,5. International
Equipment Co.; Mass. State House; American Photo
copy Equipment Co.
Torp, Jane, Rockaway, N.J., Nursing. New England
Deaconess Hospital.
Tullock, Daniel M., West Hartford, Conn., Electrical En-
gineering. Picker X-Ray Corp.; R.E. Phelon Co.,
Inc.
Turano, Carmelo J., Needham, Mass., Business,
Management. Rifle Club 2; Society for the Advance-
ment of Management 3,4. William Carter Co.
Turner, Patricia Anne, Dorchester, Mass., Bouve,
Physical Education. Dean's List 3. Bouve Dean's Ad-
visory Board 1; Co-ed volleyball 2,3; Newman 1,2,3;
Women's Basketball 1,2,3; Women's Lacrosse Club
3. Denison House.
Turonis, John A., Lawrence, Mass., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4,5; Beta Alpha Psi 4,5; Beta
Gamma Sigma 5. Accounting Society 3,4,5; Chess
Club 2. James & Page.
Tushman, Michael, Medford, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 3,4,5; Eta Kappa Nu 4,5; Tau Beta
Pi 5. Alpha Epsilon Pi 2 & 3 (executive board), 4,5;
Engineering Council 4,5; Ski Club 1. General Radio
Co.
Tuttle, Stephen L., Hampden Highlands, Me., Civil En-
gineering. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship 2,3
(president) 4; NUCES 2,3,4. Metcalf & Eddy.
Tyler, Mary C, Beverly, Mass., LA, Chemistry. Dean's
List 1. ACS 1,2,3,4; Cabot Corp.; Dennison Manu-
facturing Co.
Tyler, Robert E., Needham, Mass., Business,
Management. Dean's List. B.F. Goodrich Co.; H.A.
Johnson Co.
Urquhart, Robert B., Cranston, R.I., Business,
Management. Dean's List 3,4. UNICOM 4. Texas
Instruments; Gorham Corp.; Brown and Sharpe
Manufacturing Co.
Ursillo, John Anthony, Watertown, Mass., Chemical En-
gineering. Pershing Rifles 1,2,3,4 (commander);
Scabbard and Blade 3,4. Draper Corp.; U.S. Army
Natick Laboratories.
Van Alstine, Judith Ann, Lexington, Mass., Education,
Social Sciences. Dean's List 2,3,4; Kappa Delta Pi.
Wayland School System.
Van Der Veer, Bruce Bert, North Brunswick, N.J., Indus-
trial Engineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Alpha Pi Mu
4,5; American Institute of Industrial Engineers
2,3,4,5; Tau Beta Pi 3,4 (treasurer), 5. Johnson &
Johnson; Regina Corp.
Van Deusen, Fredric R., Kingston, N.Y., LA, Math.
Dean's List 3,4; Camera Club 1. Avco Corp.; IBM
Corp.
Vetstein, Sally, Boston, Mass., Education, English. Dean's
List 2,3,4; Silver Masque 1. Children's Museum of
Boston; Employers-Commercial Ins. Co.; Northeast-
ern U. — Dept. of English.
Vieari, Michael G., Boston, Mass., Civil Engineering.
Dean's List; American Society of Civil Engineers
3,4,5. City of Boston, Dept. of Public Works;
Aberthaw Construction Co.
Vitagliano, John A., Winthrop, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Ski Club 3,4; American Optical Co., Bio-
Medical Div.
Vitale, Robert Paul, Schenectady, N.Y., Electrical En-
gineering. Engineering Student-Faculty Advisory
Committee Rep. 4,5; Institute of Electrical & Elec-
tronic Engineers 2,3 (vice chairman), 4&5 (chair-
man). General Electric Company.
Vitone, Edward Thomas Jr., Clinton, Mass., Mechanical
Engineering. Dean's List 2,3,4; Pi Tau Sigma 4,5;
Tau Beta Pi 4,5. General Electric Co.; Industrial
Magnetics; Standard Fin Pipe Co.
Vollmuth, James L., Morristown, N.J., Business Adminis-
tration, Marketing. Dean's List 4. Resistoflex Corp.;
Schering Laboratories.
408
Vosburgh, Michael, Pittsfield, Mass., Engineering, Power
Systems. Dean's List 2; AFCEA 3,4,5. Rifle Club 1;
Western Massachusetts Electric Co.; Northeast Utili-
ties Service Co.
Vozzella, Robert C, Boston, Mass., Industrial Engineer-
ing. American Institute of Industrial Engineers 2,3,4
(treasurer), 5 (president); Council of Professional
Engineers (IE Rep.) 3,4; Rifle Club 1. General
Dynamics Corp., Quincy Division; Colonial
Provision Co.
Waal, Jeffrey C, Norwood, Mass., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 3; ASME 3,4,5. Worthington Con-
trols Co.; Masoneilan International, Inc.; Babcock &
Wilcox Co.
Waid, Martha Elizabeth (Mayor), Teaneck, N.J., LA,
Math. Dean's List 1,2,3. Continental Can Company
Inc.; Systems for Advanced Information Inc.
Waldman, Nancy Smith, Fryeburg, Maine, Nursing. New
England Deaconess Hospital.
Walk, Cheryl, Maiden, Mass., Elementary Education.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Kappa Delta Pi. Employers
Group Insurance Co.; Girls' Clubs of Boston; Read-
ing School System.
Walker, Kenneth G., Weston, Mass., Business, Marketing.
Advertising Society 3,4,5 (president); American
Marketing Association 3,4,5 (president); ROTC
1,2,3,4,5 (PMS Council); Sponsorship Committee —
International Student Forum 4,5; Tau Epsilon Phi 2
(IFC rep.), 3,4,5. J. Walter Thompson Co.; Libbey,
Owens, Ford Co.
Wall, George E. II, Lynn, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 4; New England Intercollegiate Sailing
Association 2,3,4,5 (vice president); Yacht Club
1,2,3,4,5 (commodore). Microwave Associates; Ion
Physics; G.E. Aircraft Engine Group.
Wallace, Gregory W., Westwood, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Husky Key 3,4,5. Honeywell, Inc., EDP
Division.
Walper, Linda, Sharon, Mass., Elementary Education.
Dean's List 2,3,4,5; College of Education Student
Executive Committee 4,5 (secretary); Husky Key
Society 3,4; Inter -Sorority Council 4; Lambda Delta
Phi 2,3 (corr. secretary), 4 (vice president), 5
(president); NEWS, Art Staff 2; Silver Masque 1.
Milford School System; Ford Foundation Teaching
Intern; Watertown School System.
Walsh, James R., Natick, Mass., Industrial Engineering.
Dean's List 2,3,4; Alpha Pi Mu. Fenwal Inc.
Walsh, Thomas Daniel, Newton, Mass., LA, Economics.
Hale and Dorr; First National Stores.
Wanetik, Seth A., Grand Blanc, Mich., LA, English.
Alpha Epsilon Pi; IFC Intramural Bowling 1,2,3,4;
IFC Intramural Softball 1,2,3,4; NEWS 1,2; WNEU
1,2. NU Press Bureau; New Concepts in Advertising;
Framingham News; Rochester Times Union &
Democrat & Chronicle.
Wasserman, Robert David, Chestnut Hill, Mass., Elec-
trical Engineering. IEEE 3,4; Rifle Club 1,2; Yacht
Club 1,2,3. Ferrotec Inc.; Raytheon Company.
Wassilak, Frank Joseph, Webster Groves, Mo.,
Mechanical Engineering. Dean's List 2; ASME
Student Section 3, 4&5 (publicity chairman); Crew
Team 1; NU Chorus 1,2,3. Hollingsworth & Vose
Co.
Wasylyshyn, Adam W., Jamaica Plain, Mass., LA,
Economics. Dean's List 4; Economics Society 3,4;
Intramural basketball 2,3. Avco Everett; Northeast-
ern University; Registrar's Office.
Watrous, Bunnie Mae, Wilmington, N.C., Elementary
Education. Lewes Special School System; King
Daughter's Hospital.
Weinberg, Bernard, Dorchester, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Bowling Club 1; IEEE 5; Rifle Club 1.
Philbrick-News Research.
Weinberg, Manuel C, Randolph, Mass., LA, Economics.
Hyde Park Savings Bank; National Shawmut Bank of
Boston.
Weinberg, Walter, Revere, Mass., LA, History. Dean's
List 3; Young Democrats. Urban Redevelopment,
Lynn, Mass.; Mass. Historical Society.
Weiner, Jerrold, Brighton, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 4; IEEE 3,4. Avco Corp., Missile Sys-
tems Div.; Raytheon Co., Equipment Div.
Weiner, Malcolm S., Lynn, Mass., Business, Management.
Society for Advancement of Management 3.
Microwave Associates; Sylvania Electric Inc.
Weiser, John Kent, Arlington, Mass., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List. Missile Systems Division of
Raytheon.
Weisman, Robert Lewis, Cranston, R.I., Business, Ac-
counting. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; Co-op Committee 2
(chairman); President's Advisory Committee 4;
SCATE Committee 3 (chairman); Student Council
1,2 (secretary-treasurer), 3 (vice president), 4
(president). William Underwood Co.; Stulin, Sage &
Winitzer; Ford Motor Co.
Weissman, Marlene Rhona, Randolph, Mass., LA,
English, freshman section representative. N.E. Life;
Brandeis U.; Emerson College.
Weissmann, Stephen Murray, Pennsauken, N.J., LA,
Psychology. Dean's List; Tolkien. Armstrong Rubber
Co.; Northeastern University, Dept. of Psychology.
Werby, Robert William, Brookline, Mass., Industrial En-
gineering. Dean's List 4; American Institute of In-
dustrial Engineers 3,4. Cambridge City Traffic
Dept.; ARO Manufacturing Co.; Armstrong Cork
Co.
Weston, Robert Sidney, Granby, Conn., Business, Ac-
counting. Accounting Society 1,2 (recording secre-
tary), 3 (vice president), 4 (president). Aetna Life
and Casualty Co.
Whalen, Roberta (Ferriani), Boston, Mass., LA, Biology.
Dean's List 1,4. Beter Bent Brigham Hospital; Bos-
409
ton University.
White, Richard L., Braintree, Mass., Chemical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; American Institute of
Chemical Engineers 2,3,4 (board member), 5
(president); Engineering Council 5; Omega Chi
Epsilon 4,5; Tau Beta Pi 4,5. Stone & Webster En-
gineering Corp.
White, Robert E., Delray Beach, Fla., Chemical Engineer-
ing. AIChE 2,3,4,5; Tennis Club 3. Avon Products,
Inc.
Wiles, Ronald, Laconia, N.H., Civil Engineering.
American Society of Civil Engineers 3,4. Structural
Concrete Corp.
Williams, Joel, Wakefield, Mass., Civil Engineering.
American Society of Civil Engineers 4,5; Counter
Guerilla Group 2,3,4 (team leader), 5; Rifle Club 2.
MIT Civil Engineering Materials Research Lab; An-
derson-Nichols & Co., Inc.
Williams, John C, Dorchester, Mass., Business,
Management. Black Students Union 3; Leadership
Conference Committee (co-chairman), 4; Publicity
Committee 3; Society for the Advancement of
Management 4,5; Student Council 3 (co-chairman of
Students' Rights Committee), 4,5; Student Court
Committee 3,4. Boston Globe; Johnson & Johnson.
Williams, Stephen A., Sharon, Mass., LA, English. NEWS
2,3 (copy editor), 4 (copy editor); Pershing Rifles
1,2; Boston Globe.
Williamson, Marshall B. Jr., Schenectady, N.Y., Chemical
Engineering. Phi Sigma Kappa, Varsity Football.
New York Dept. of Public Works; Harvard Univer-
sity; Artisan Industries; Loctite Corp.; Schering
Corp.
Willis, Laural, Holliston, Mass., LA, Sociology. Dean's
List 3,4,5; Dormitory Counselor 3,4,5; Sailing Club
2,3; Ski Club 1,2; Student Union 2,3; Unicorn 2,3;
Women's Ski Team 1,2. New England Medical
Center Hospital; Northeastern University; Aetna
Life & Casualty.
Wilson, Dana R., West Newbury, Mass., Electrical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2. Sylvania Electric
Products.
Wise, Thomas L., Boston, Mass., Electrical Engineering.
Dean's List 1,2,3,4; IEEE 3,4 (recording secretary);
Joint Engineering Council 4; Tau Beta Pi; Eta
Kappa Nu. MIT Instrumentation Laboratory.
Wolf, Thomas A., Lansdale, Pa., Industrial Engineering.
AIIE 3,4; Phi Gamma Pi. U.S. Steel; Leads &
Northrup; Philco-Ford.
Wolf son, Lynda, Sharon, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's List
1; Freshman Section Representative; Minutemaids 2;
Nu Beta Biology Club 4,5; Omega Sigma 1. Mass.
General Hospital.
Woolley, James C. Jr., Mahwah, N.J., Electrical En-
gineering. Beta Gamma Epsilon; EE Student Cur-
riculum Advisory Committee 4,5; IEEE 2,3,4
(program chairman), 5 (treasurer). Alpine
Geophysical Association; Raytheon Co.
Wright, Joan E., Clark, N.J., LA, English, Philosophy.
Dean's List 4; NEWS 3,4; Sailing Club 3,4. Boston
Globe; State Hospital in Waltham.
Youman, Alvin, Medway, Mass., LA, Political Science.
Dean's List 3,4; Pi Sigma Alpha. Mass. Attorney
General's Office; Mass. Dept. of Correction.
Young, Nedda, Boston, Mass., LA, English. Dean's List 4.
NEWS 2,3 (rewrite, feature editor), 4,5; Literary
Society 3. Hartford Courant.
Young, Robert A., Rumfor, R.I., Mechanical Engineer-
ing. Rifle Club 2. Texas Instruments.
Yuan, James Ching-Man, Hong Kong, Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 2,3; Pi Tau Sigma; Tau Beta
Pi. Singer Company.
Zalewa, Donald Joseph, Stafford Springs, Conn.,
Chemical Engineering. American Institute of
Chemical Engineers 2,3,4,5; Camera Club 4,5; Rifle
Club 1,2,3,4,5; ROTC 1,2,3,4,5. Uniroyal Chemical
Co.
Zehner, Mark H., Philadelphia, Pa., Electrical Engineer-
ing. Dean's List 2,3; IEEE. Naval Air Development
Center.
Zeitman, Barry, Newton, Mass., LA, Biology. Dean's List
1,2; Husky Key Society 3,4; Rifle Club 3; Sailing
Club 3. Cancer Research Institute; New England
Deaconess Hospital.
Zelonis, Daniel M., Hudson, N.H., Business, Accounting.
Dean's List 1,2,3; Accounting Society 2,3,4,5; Beta
Alpha Psi 4,5. Nashua Trust Co.; Hudson Service
Co.; Internal Revenue Service; Smith, Batchelder &
Rugg.
Ziegler, Jeffrey Alan, Lincoln, Mass., Mechanical En-
gineering. Dean's List 1,2,3,4; ASME 4,5; Pi Tau
Sigma 4,5; Tau Beta Pi 4,5. Ford Motor Co.
Zolner, James W., Belmont, Mass., Business, Finance.
Dean's List; Finance Club 3,4. John Hancock Mu-
tual Life Insurance Co.
Zucker, Kenneth, Brooklyn, N.Y., LA, Biology. Dean's
List 3 ; Center Committee 1 ; Class Board 2,3 (secre-
tary); Dorm Council 1; Radio Club 1; Spring
Weekend Committee 2; Student Center Committee 1 ;
Tau Epsilon Phi 1,2,3,4.
410
ROBERT G.
APPLEGATE
BRUCE BERGMAN
BARBARA J. COLE MALCOLM B.. COLLINS
CHARLES L.
FARBSTEIN
THOMAS F.A. FLYNN
JOHN F. BURKE
CHRISTINA E.
CRANSTON
PATRICIA L.
GIANGRASSO
ALAN L. GOSKA
ANTHONY P.
GRAFFEO
SANDRA BYERS
LOUIS J.
DIBERARDINIS
JOEL GOLUB
A M
MICHAEL C. GURMAN JOHN P. HABERLIN
RITA FRANCES
HANNAFORD
BRADLEY F. HOWARD SANDRA KATZ
LINDA L. KUHNS
411
ANTHONY
LAFRANCESCA
HRAIR MEGERIAN
BARBARA LYNN
PERLMAN
JOHN RUSSO
PAUL D. POWER
ROBERT S. SCHIESS
JUDITH THISTLE
MARCUS LAUFER JANICE N. McGOVERN RONALD F. McMAHON
^«*lS ^
CHRIS PRATT
MARJORIE
SCHWEIGER
h
JAMES J. MURRAY JANICE E. NEWBERRY RICHARD NOONE
ROBERT F. REID
TIMOTHY D.
STEBBINGS
1970: Protest Was Their Most
Important Product
7 must say I've always admired the high level of intel-
lectual life in Boston
-Dr. S.I. Hayakawa
SDS spokesman Eric Mann at NU (Courtesy, Boston Record
American)
It was 1970, and we were about to graduate. We were
bored, some of us, and angry. The Chicago Seven trial, a
newspaper field day for five months, was still going on, and
in Washington, Nixon was making state of the world
speeches, hinting and winking about troop withdrawals,
and nominating Carswell for the Supreme Court. In Boston,
a legislative commission was saying first that marijuana
ought to be legalized and, when that met with frowns, that
the penalty for possession should be a fine instead of a jail
sentence.
But the tumult that characterized our five years wasn't
over. In January, students including SDSers took great ex-
ception to the General Electric Company's plans to recruit
NU students on campus Jan. 27 and 28, and protestors
started scribbling their picket signs.
Student Council voted to support the university's open re-
cruitment policy until Pres. Knowles formed his violence
control plans without consulting student government. At
that, the council reversed itself, condemned Knowles'
"flagrant and persistent violations of the University Student
Bill of Rights," and demanded that the GE recruiter be kept
from campus.
Seven resolutions passed the council, whose members were
insensed by the university's request to the Suffolk Superior
Court for a restraining order. The court issued an injunction
barring six named students "and all persons acting with or
in participation" with them from coming on campus when
forbidden by the administration to do so, Knowles sent his
files off for protection, called the Boston police to protect
the "desires of the great majority of students," and the GE
recruiter came and went without much incident.
But the GE incident was only a prelude to the Hayakawa
riot, the first major outbreak of violence to hit Northeastern
during the Class of 70's five years. Newspaper estimates of
the number of protestors varied between 200 and 2,000;
the police blamed the demonstrators and the demonstrators
blamed the police for the violence. Hayakawa compared the
New Left with Nazis and the New Left compared Hayakawa
to Hitler; the Suffolk County D.A. investigated, and the
grand jury indicted ten students, some of them from North-
eastern despite Knowles' assurance that no Northeastern
student was involved, though some might have been "swept
up" in the confusion. 413
BUILDING
CONDEMNED
under Arucle2ft0P'«^ /III (****»
usedforoPP^-^tobeCOntea,ed
p* 1
iiii i
lilt
^5
1 ^fcl>
wl
ML 1'
f
41
X* €1 *
r*^
^
l •• ^H Jr <ttj «
1
!>'**- ** v ■ t- "%l^
1 i
5
•
415
Hayakawa and the Dirty Deeds
It was Hayakawa's hard-line, as president of San Francisco
State that brought out the SDS pickets against his speech in
the Ell Center auditorium as part of the Distinguished
Speaker series.
But as Hayakawa (and body guards) appeared on stage,
the crowd outside grew restless, threw rocks, and "incited"
the police into action.
The toll was $5,000 in windows, about 40 arrests, and
several injured on both sides. The NEWS (whose photog-
raphers had their cameras smashed and stolen in the melee)
interviewed some witnesses. Some of their comments appear
on these pages.
"I can only describe it as a police
riot."
— Dr. Robert Cord
". . . one of the policemen struck my
right arm with a billy club, I think he
was trying to break my arm."
— Malcolm Emory
"The first person brought in was accused of throwing rocks. He had six policemen drag him in, assaulted
him by kicking him and punching him. The detective was beating him over the head with a blackjack as he
was being handcuffed ..." _ . , _ „
— Darnel Rafferty
416
"If anyone was too slow, their reward was a crack on the head."
— Gerald Golden
There was a guy there with a motion picture camera. He was trying to take pictures, and the cops who
weren't holding kids kept putting their hands on the lens ..."
— Barbara Ferri, Richard White
7 was pushed to the ground. I got up after losing my glasses. As I was blindly stumbling around. I was
hit in the back by a policeman and also pushed into the wall. I then proceeded to the parking lot where
I found this fellow who had been clubbed over the head. He was apparently in a state of shock. I picked
him up and we walked into the lobby of Stetson East where we tried to get help. I wanted to call an am-
bulance for him, so I asked the two men who were at the desk if I could use the phone. They said, 'No,
you can't use it.' ..."
— Jim Seldner
STRIKE
over
Cambodia
See page
226
* *•
■.iV..,.-..| "'.<»•_
Each year, the Cauldron editors are accused of using
photographs which have appeared in other yearbooks
and which are outdated.
So, in keeping with tradition, here are our reused
pictures.
>
421
A Parting Shot
This is where the editors are supposed to have
their final say.
I would like to thank those people who sac-
rificed their time and energy to get their as-
signments done on time. Without them, this
book would not be what it is.
Truly, Bob Flavell deserves much of the
credit, for his time, talent and drive was a key
force behind this yearbook.
And to those photographers, whose pictures
we stole, and to the press bureau and Tom
Sprague, thank you.
Finally to my wife, who put up with me,
thank you, too.
I'd never do it again.
Rick Howland
Editor-in-chief.
424