Bostonia1950v23n5_web - OpenBU

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BU Publications
Bostonia
1949
Bostonia: v. 23, no. 1-10
Stout, Vic
Boston University
Boston University. Bostonia: The Boston University Alumni Magazine, volume 23,
number 1-10. 1949-1950. Archived in OpenBU at http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19702.
http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19702
Boston University
‡
BOSTON 班ⅦVE只∫丁TYクS
「O州D亡は’$ DAY
肌は8晴13,格4
“A聞看醐亡N丁皿Y因N珊丁U丁亡ON
開音的N IN A WO晴LD O「 T剛脚N§’’
Speakers of wo「Id fame, reCOgnized authorities in their
respective fields, W川be present to discuss the various tensions
distu「bing the world today.
MA晴8晴14
D肌押ON OF
DAN丑姐L. MARSH C揮APEL,
SCHOOL OF T臼EOLOGY B脚
c耽d S榊IARE HALL
CONVOα4押ON
Delaiied information conce「ning pa砧cipation and seclion§ fo「 †he discussions of
par†icula「 subiec†s wiIt be ava晶ble by Ma「ch口十may be had uしPOn aPPlica†ion a† †he
Presiden†一s o冊ce, 755 Commonwea皿AYenue.
SERVICE FHAT NEVE康I SLEEPS‥.Whatever the need or the hour, the telephone
is on the job-ready to take you where you want to go, quickly and dependably. Telephone
service is one of the few services available twenty four hours a day-Weekdays, Sundays
and hoIidays. Yet the cost is small-Within reach of all ‥. Bell Telephone System.
孫n 3訪。γi。l
ALUMNI DAY
0嵩盈
each year our Universlty designates as Alumni Day. The name has a
〉 doubIe meamng; it is a day ln Which the Universlty PayS tributeto its alumni and
the Alumni retum to honor the Universlty. As our magnificent University grows in size
and academic stature, this day becomes more memorable. Prominent members of our
alumnl grOuP in various fields of endeavor are honored on this day and it glⅤeS uS great
Pride to know them as o-ur OWn・ Most of us retum to the campus to renew our friend・
Ships, Our yOuth, and our faith.
Those of us who have made it a practice to be a part of Alumni Day each year
know the pride and amazement which we feel as each year shows us new wonders per・
formed・ We a量so know the joy of reunion with many who shared our youth when
Boston University was struggling and短growlng uP.
In a few short years it has grown
to be one of the world’s largest unive音rSities while still maintaining academic ratmg
among the highest. The pleasure of seemg faces Iong misslng from our sight, Claspmg
the hands of many whom we have almost forgotten, and reminiscmg and braggmg a
little are worth the retum・ We are becomlng aCCuStOmed to the miraculous growth and
magnificence of the Universlty, but new surprlSeS are in store for us.
Those who have not retumed for many yearslhave much to see. They will be
amazed, a little awed perhaps, but above all they wi11 know the pride, the joy, and the
friendliness that Alumni Day brings to all・ Their view of the magnificent buildings,
the grandeur that is Bo`StOn Universlty Wi宣l thrill them・ This year the beautiful now
Daniel L. Marsh Chapel will be dedicated to the man who more than any other is
responsible for the steady and tremendous growth and prestlge Of Boston Univer$1ty.
It is a buiIding almost incomparable among college chapels・ This year wi量重aIso mark
the comp宣etion of Dr・ Marsh’s 25th year as president of the Universlty.
A great number of individual class reunions are plamed this year, eSPeCially
among the five-year Classes. Great plans are in store for the program and all the details
Will be se′nt tO the alumni・ This year brings the halfway ma正of the twentieth century.
It is a year we wil=ong remember and one rich with significance・ Many thousands
Were PreSent last year and this year’s retum is expected to be much greater.
Alumni Day wi11 be a must on the calendar of all Boston University Alumni・ To
graduate from a universlty lS tO be forever a part of it. Its prestlge is your prestlge・
Its growth and honor academica11y and athletically enhance your standing as a graduate・ There is a responsibility to be met a賞so. A responsibi重ity to support your univer・
Slty, tO ra事Iy to its aid, and to become part of its active alumm grOuP. Alumni Day
glVeS yOu this chance’and those who have never retumed for this day are urged to do so.
Your class o鯖cers wi11 contact you and solicit your support and participation.
It is your day. It is your opPortunlty and privilege to make it a great day for
yourseIf and for Boston University.
音、臆・∴∴
図四囲函
写、-言を
助読’erSdy... Treasure Room ‥. University Scenes...Semanticist Speaks. ‥ Dr. Edgar S・ Brightman. ‥ Beta Gamma
Sigma ‥ ・ The Music’s the Thing … Fulbright Scholars . 5
A砧肋J毒. ‥ Dr. Pizzuto. ‥ Dr. VandenbeIt ‥. Li量lian Sals。
man … Mrs. George F. Wright … Rittner Brothers... Man,s
Oldest Disease.
13
Sports. ‥ Those Glittermg Sophomores, by Vic Stout . 17
A九肋訪れ盤e扉e耽, ・ 20
CJasses. ‥ Universlty … Law‥ ・Theo量ogy‥. Medicine. . 23
J的660 yαγds αu,ay fro耽読ctorγ,轟のo
BostoれUれ訪ersわy tracん肋eれIeαp Oげ
書方e乙γ肋αγ鳥s. Tんe Scαγle轟a73d W九五e
COl。r beαγerあきhe fγ0れ轟γ0砂うs “Dud,,
0,Leαrγ,仙九o eue融脚Ilγ録,音Oれ拐e γαCe●
6ミニ⊇)
STAFF: Arthur E・ Jenner・ A’27, Editor; Paul A. Pollock, SPR准, Associate Editor; Charles A. Poulson’Jr., S.PR,50, Class Notes Editor; Ralph
Norman, Staff Photographer. EDITORIAL BOARD: Mrs・ Virginia L. Tiemey, P,36; Mr. Da、・id Brickman, B’31/32; Mr. Clifton Fo賞lansbee, B・36;
Dr. Judson R. Butler, G,40; Miss Jane Donovan・ P’45. PUBLISHING DETAILS: No. 5’Volume XXIⅡ’February, 195O. Published monthly from
October through June inclusively by the BOSTON UN工VERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Member of the American Alumni C。un。il. Edit。.ial
O範ces: 308 Bay State Road, Boston 15, Ma,SSaChusetts. Entered as second-Class matter at the Post O範ce, Boston, Massachusetts, under the Act of
March 3’1879. Copyright, February, 1950, by the Boston University Alumni Association. Subscription: $2.00 per year, includ。d in th。 Annual
Alumni Fund Contribution. Single copy 25 cents.
抽e boo鹿, PaPers, Cmd pho書ographs con書a誼ed血拙s
room were mos書ge皿erouslY domfed bY S軸e Se皿a亡or
Edward C. Sfo皿e, L’00, Cmd a frusfee o白he Un王vers封Y.
It represe加s Sem書or S書one′s collecf王on of L血co砧cma
w茄ch Professor Kenne肋A. Bemard, A’27, aSSOC上a書e
professor o丑isforY′五as tccke皿脚der加s w血g becαLZSe
he js verY muC心血teresfed jn肋e Jヱfe of L王ncoln. The
roo鵬js parf of地e C五enerY LjbrarY Joca書ed o皿fhe軸心
#oor of C.L.A., and you wo出血od cmo脆er room on
the campus thaf js as qujef cmd as co皿d耽jve fo s弛dY・
TREASURE ROOM AT C.L.A. DEDICATED
BORTMAN COLLECTION EXHIBITED
Saturday aftemoon, December 3’marked a very inter-
COIonies・ In addition to the early American manuscr工中S
estmg ePisode in the history of the Universlty, and of the
and books displayed, Mr. and Mrs. Bortman have loaned
Chenery Library a=he Co11ege of Liberal Arts in particu工ar’With the dedication of the Treasure Room as a part of
more than郎ty pleCeS Of silver缶om their own magnificen七
CO重工ections. One case in the Exhibition was devoted entire_
the library. Fo11owlng luncheon served to nearly a hun-
ly [o examples of the work of Boston silversmiths, inc工ud-
dred distinguished guests in the Claflin Room, the assem-
ing Edward Winslow’John Goney, Andrew TyIer, Knight
bled group adjoumed to the珊h floor to see the exhibit of
Leverett and Jacob田urd・ A group of eigh七een pieces rep-
Americana which had been arranged in disp量ay cases
resented the smiths of New York and PhiIadelphia・ An-
under the direction of Professor Robert E. Moody, Professor of History in the Universlもy・
Other case was entirely devoted to the work of Paul Revere
and contained not only some unusually fine examp工es of
The Americana, the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Bortman
Of Newton (Mrs. Bortman is the former LIora Cohen,
his silver but also several engravmgS and an autograph
letter・ The siIvelr WaS P量aced in association with the books
C.L.A. 1919), WaS COHected with the purpose of i量lustrat-
and manuscrlPtS in such a way tha=he s亡ory of the owner
mg SeVera量aspects of the history and Iife of the American
Or maker was told in a graphic way・
CO-lonists in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Par置
Directly preceding the o鍋cia工opemng Of the出easure
ticu量arly in New England・ On display were first edi工ions
Room and foHowlng the speeches made by Dr・ Marsh, Dr.
Of the outstanding contemporary accounts
Of early New England such as Captain John
Smith,s Hisiolrγ, William Wood,s Neu) Englαnd’s Prospecら Thomas Morton,s Neu,
E71glおんCa冊のan, and Nathaniel Morton,s
Neu) EnglaJ}d,s Me桝or誼J; a grOuP Of extremeIy rare religious tracts言ncluding two
items of which onIy three copleS are known;
five of the famous Eliot Indian tracts and a
Co7}fessわn of Fα擁printed in the Indian
language. Among the manuscrlPtS Were a
Sixteen-Page autOgraPh letter of George
Washington, and several exceptlOna11y lmPOrtant manuSCrlPt VOIumes of reports and
Statistics of an o億cia工character relating to
England’s reIations with her American
Mr・ Bor加αれeαp陥れs po融8 0f加eres=o
A拘ed Aびerγ αれd J可ge C九α加8 A.鰹ome,
かめSきees of脇e U調香のer諦γ.
5
%あe秘碑
姦eのe4
Mi量ton Lord, Director of the Boston Pub量ic Library and
A committee of the Woman,s Council consistlng Of Miss
new量y e]ected president of the American Library Associa-
E・ Louise Richardson, Chairman, Mrs. Lewis O. Hartman,
tion, Dr・ Edge量l of the Library of the Museum of Fine
President, Mrs. Wesley T. Lee’Mrs・ Frank E・ Roberts, and
Ar亡s’and by Dr・ PhiIlips of Yale Universlty Division of
Mrs. CharIes A. Rome were in charge of the luncheon and
Fine Ar七s’Mr・ Bortman spoke briefly and interestlngly
tea’Whi]e in arranglng his Exhibition, Professor Moody
COnCemlng the deve量opment of his hobby: Americana.
WaS aSSisted by Mrs. Yves Henry Buhler of the Boston
Having been possessed of a mother who appreciated the
Museum of Fine Arts’Miss Mary D. Herrick, Associate
finer things of Iife’She brought her son up to realize the
Librarian of the Chenery Library, and other members of
beauty which was in all things’and taught him how to see
the Library S七aff. The Exhibition itself was open to the
and feeI those things which were beautiful and wonderfu].
PubIic from December 5 through December 16.
The public Iibrary and the museums in Boston were his
ear上y haunts, and as time progressed Mr. Bortman started
Noted Semanticist Speaks
his own coIIection of things in亡erestlng in the early history
Of his adopted country.
Mr・ Bortman had just retumed from a trlP tO Europe
On November 28, Dr. S. I. Hayakawa, WOrId renowned
and told some highlights of his trlP・ While in Rome, and
Semanticist, SPOke before approximateIy lOOO students at
also in France’he was asked, “What makes America
a monthly Genera重CoIlege assemb量y held in the New Eng・
tick?” His r尋Iy言n substance, WaS aS f。Il。WS: “Am。ri。a
Iand Mutual Auditorium. His subject, “Semantics and
ticks because fellows Iike you come to our country, take
General Education,
What you want of our civilization; glVe uS’Perhaps unwit-
dents because of their interest in general education and
was of particular interes=o the stu-
tmg]y’Of your own civilization, and the combination of
because aH the students have read his popular book on
Semantics, Langz4age jn Acめn, Which this year has been
aIl these ideas fuses to become the America as we know
revised in Lαnguage訪Thoz4ghi αnd Acめn.
it… ・ The Europeans are victims of their own nationalism.
We have a11 kinds living together, WOrking together舟ink-
mg tOgether, and while not aH kinds think alike, the fusion
Of thoughts makes America greater.” The European is
beginmng to wonder about America because of the fact
that we glVe, and give endlessIy, Without demanding their
art, books, e七C.言n retum・ And that very wondering is the
SPur that is making our posi七ion stronger with the average
PerSOn in aH of Europe・
Mr. Bor七man cIosed his speech with the presentation of
another manuscrlPt VOIume which he had just purchased
in EngIand after a three-year Period of negotiation: GeneraI Gage,s Letterbook for the year 1775’COnta皿ng his
OfficiaI correspondence w亜Lord Dartmouth for that year.
Mr. and Mrs. Bortman intimated that they wou]d add to
this coHection from time to time, SO that students and reSearChers in American拙s七ory couId answer for themSeIves雄what i七is tha亡makes America tick.”
Dr・ Pα的γ80耽7 G・C・, Dr・ S● I・ Hαγa鳥α撮〉α and
Dぐの′・ JαdsひれReのかα境er of G.C.
」・厭き〇九αrd Cαrおのれα融穣8のれD制房d do α脇○ ○手の肋・
A recognized authority, Dr・ Hayakawa discussed the im-
耽訪g “も㊤鋤ee重8 Cねs$e$プ当れ娩e Co耽m鋼S.
2・ A夢A融脚鱒O琉s αれd Profes$Or P鋤わB駒鳥e吊00虎0れ
POrtanCe Of understanding semantics to both the educated
肌腕骨e S加の弼Goode, pr壷d助けOf Sca南Keγ, CO喝の融α書跡
and the uneducated person・ The d珊culty of being under-
鵬$脇蹄頑鋼のf庇鍋弱of E巌のあれOn b壷g
StOOd and of understanding lS eVer PreSent regardless of
d細ed鋼ゐ0れOrαrγ耽e棚方er of Scαすe上だeγ.
the level of education reached by most people.
3・加He脇, reC輔弼0月948,s碗$脅Po興lar耽γeγ
A8砂のrd,即Se鴫Ge○r少e S諸肌αブ鋤・S勘e融,地霊949 e救
Semantics is important to the student in general educa-
われ・ Pa拐Gr砺n, PR,50, e強のr of庇“N鋤,8,,, cond妬ed
tion where departmenta=ines recede, and where the variOuS fields of study terid to merge. Through semantics the
4・ Frα職壷Daわらfα耽O職$∴∴CαrめO職お宅∴ofきろe Bo誓
語誹諾議諸島薄霧窮鵠:
Student Ieams to find the meanmg Of language common to
姉ofessのかW鵜の肋S α雅d Pα訪Gγ砺れS毒短九e3γ α脚ro脇.
al=ie量ds of endeavor’Which is an essen七ia量part of the
5・ Lの敢Beαrde乃(ce穣ずら鋤訪れer of庇George v. Bγ0鋤
碗棚r轟Tro訪・ Ge○r轡e V・ Bro伽・ Jr・ (ie砂, α職d George
Philosophy of general education・ Without this’Dr. Haya・
kawa maintains’the student must adopt a pseudo under・
6・姉“〇九のdo鋤,, α‥九e S・A・E・ fα庇r α融so職暗転
S亡anding of language’Which helps to perpetuate the gen-
7・ Pαγ‥fまあe lαγge加0喝…転A鵬por短軸‡.
eral confusion in the comprehension of Ianguage today.
笥
DR. EDGAR S. BRIGHTMAN
The mother]y’keen-eyed woman swung the door open
necessary,,, said Dr. Brightman,短to mention Christ in the
Wide and invited us in・ “Won,t you wai巾St a minute,”
United Nations・ In the first place it would offend Jews,
She said言`Dr. Brightman is upstairs with his doctor, but
Hindus’Moslems and Communists. In the second place it
he’11 see you in a few minutes.” We took seats in the
is better to Iive as God wanted us to live. That,s the thing
Warm, rOOmy haHway of the old yeHow and brown frame
to do・,, Dr. Brightman went on to say tha=he present
house on Braeland Avenue in Newton Centre・ In a typical
Christian Church is too in捕erent and dogmatic to ex-
Suburban neighborhood, Dr. Brightman,s home resembles
PreSS the real work of Christ. αWe should remember
no ivory tower9 is not isolated by yawmng chasms or un・
Bowne,s fundamentaI idea, `To be is to act., It foHows that
fordable rivers. Probably a little oIder than the average
action is always a matter of wilI,and without whoIehearted
home言t is American in essence, qua量ity and sp叫right
goodwill the foms and beliefs of religion mean nothing・,,
down to the cIothes tree in the ha賞l and the umbre量Ia stand.
寝There are two words that I detest.皿ey are `toIerate,
Mrs. Brightman caIled from the head of the stairs言`Dr.
and `bigoted・, I would want no one to tolerate me, for to
Brightman wilI see you now.” We mounted the broad
tolerate someone or something means to su紐er it’and there
Staircase to be greeted by Dr. Brightman as he strode out
is little if any respect for anyone if you suffer them. As
Of his tlny den. Those acquainted with Dr・ Brightman
for the word `bigoted,, I believe that anyone who uses the
might question the word寝strode’,クfor the good doctor is
WOrd can be accused of Iacking ln intelligence. Both words
Still recoverlng from a heart attack, but stride he did and
are a crime agamSt humamty.
grlPPed our hands firmIy in a handshake・ He apoIogized
that he couId no=ake us up to the third floor, but his re-
There was a p量easant interruptlOn When Mrs. Brigh亡man
brought in glnger ale and cookies. Dr・Brigh書man crunched
Cent i1量ness makes it necessary to avoid stair climbing・
a cookie and took up the conversation.
We started the pICture-亡aking・ Several shots were taken
“Our religion is a beIief both in the value of Iife and
and we moved Dr・ Brightman around from one spot to the
also a be]ief in reasonab萱eness’a belief in seeking the
Other・蛸e complied with our requests with aIacrlty and a
desire to help. It was hard to believe that he had recently
highest va量ues for us, and consequently a11 religious belief
been hospitalized for a heart condition.
Should be tested by reason・ If you are reasonable you
know you don,t know everything and that you may leam
In se賞ectlng a book with which to pose he picked a
StamP album・ Dr. Brightman polnted ou=hat his hobby
SOmething from the other person. It boils down to this:
Of stamp coIIectlng m匝ted his Iiterary career and even-
Religion is respect for persona]ity, individual, SOCial and
tuaIly led to his s亡udy of philosophy・ “DudIey L. Whit-
divine.
Speaking of the soon to be dedicated DanieI L. Marsh
marsh, a teaCher at Whitman High SchooI, Started me col・
1ectlng StamPS.工wrote my first artic]e for pubIication in
Chape重, Dr. Brightman commented: “It symbolizes the
1899.” Dr. Brightman was then 15 years oId and his first
SPirit of religion in that it wi量工be used by persons of al]
Of many successfuI efforts appeared in the Neu) yOrk
faiths. And it is a grand tribute to Presiden亡Marsh, Who
P脇ielisi・ During the year 1900 he had published 24
has done so much for the Universltye”
artic賞es and poems dealing with stamps・
Mention of the Universlty brought out a few of Dr.
The same Dud賞ey Whitmarsh also introduced the now
Brightman,s observations on the youth of today・ It was
famous philosopher to Borden Parker Bowne’s books on
good to hear someone of Dr・ Brightman,s intellectual
Phi量osophy. That this introduction bore fruit is evident in
Stature speak so we11 of today’s youth when so many are
the fact that the Borden Parker Bowne chair in phiIosophy
ready to condemn them without trial. “There is fu]]y as
at the Universlty lS nOW heId by Dr・ Brightman.
much hope in the young peopIe of today as when I was a
Dr. Brightman waved his am in a broad, aII-enVeldping
lad・ It was a common thing in the 19th century to see 2l-
gesture when we remarked that the den was fi11ed with
year・Old lads commanding their own ships and there’s no
books’mOstly on phiIosophy and stamps. “My Iibrary
reason on ea血why the young peopIe today can,t shoulder
upstairs is much larger and more compIete. All I have
the same responsibiIities if they are glVen the chance.”
here is what I am working with at present’” and he gave
Mrs. Brightman came in and looked anxiously at her
What can be best described as a Iazy susan bookcase a
husband・短Now don,t you tire yourself out,” she said. Dr.
twirL ``Right now I am working on three books: a reVi.
Brightman chuckIed, “I guess you know what that means.
Sion of my `Introduction to Philosophy’; a book on meta・
But before you leave I’d ]ike to let the people a=he Uni-
Physics’and I,m co量重aborating with Professor Frye in
VerSlty know that I,]l be back for the second semester,
Writing a book on the philosophy of science. I expect the
aIthough I won,t have as fuH a schedu]e as before. And I
book on metaphysics to be out in a year.”
might add that during my stay in the hospital I received
The conversation swung to christianlty in the modem
WOnderfuI treatment. HeIen Barwise, A,47, Came out and
WOrld and to the omission of the name of God and Christ
acted as speciaI nurse. I guess it’s true that Boston univer.
in the business of the United Nations. “I don,t beIieve it is
Slty Can PrOV王de anything・”
9
Beta Gamma Sigma
past. At present’tWO CBA graduates are on his sta鱒・
Seated at the head table were President and Mrs. Daniel
L. Marsh, Professor Arthur J. Sullivan, PreSident of AIpha
Initiates New Members
The Boston University Chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma’
Chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma and presiding a=he ban-
national honorary society for coHeges of business admin-
quet, Dean Atlee L. Percy and Mrs・ Percy (Dean E工sbeth
istration, held its amual banquet at Hayden Memoria量
Melville), Mrs. Everett O. Fisk言83, Dean and Mrs. Wil・
Auditorium recently and initiated 28 new members into its
liam G. Sutcliffe, and Professor Philip E. Bunker・ Presi-
ranks. Charles F. Rittenhouse, founder of one of the
dent Marsh extended greetmgS tO all, and Mrs. Fisk’
associated with the University for over 60 years, Welcomed
nation,s leading accountlng fims’WaS the feature speaker.
the new members with a brief message.
The AIpha chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma is the only
chapter in New England. Each member, in recognltlOn Of
his high qua皿cations’WaS PreSented with a key and
The Music,s The Thing
It was two years ago on February ls=hat Boston had
one more gem added to its cultural crown when the Lowell
Institute Cooperative Broadcasting Council aired for the
firs=ime over WMEX “The Music’s The Thing.” An in-
fomal music disoussion at first, With Dean Warren S.
Freeman commentmg On general music history’it has
developed into a full hour program featurmg the world,s
best music and many famous contemporary composers as
guests, With members of the faculties from the various
CO11eges actmg aS COmmentatOrS.
PγOfe$SOr Ar庇r J. Sα舶ね相調, Dr. MαrSh,肌. C虎のrわ§ F・
R初e職九〇αSc αnd Profes80r B撮れ鳥er.
Mr・ Rittenhouse, the gentleman whose name precedes
the Universlty Treasurer’s report’WaS formerly head of
the accountmg department at Boston Universlty’a POSt
now held by Professor Arthur J. Sullivan・ A holder of
degrees from Scio College’Ohio’Northeastem University
and Mt. Union Co11ege, Ohio, Mr. Rittenhouse is the
author of many books and texts and is past president of
both the Massachusetts Society of Certified Public Accountants and the Boston chapter of the National Associa-
tion of Cost Accountants. He has also been chairman of
the American Institute of Accountants Committee on Pro_
fessional Ethics.
Dr. Wαger, DeαれFr○○mαn, Dr. Ge3γ訪ger寄れd
In his address to the undergraduates and alumni gath-
ProIe$80r Hααge俄6c棚$$肋榔Sjc α‡仮も手のαdcαS‡.
In the main, Boston University has provided the talent
ered the veteran accountant and teacher emphasized the
need in accountants of a clear objective mind. “He must
and insplration for this program, Which has an ever in・
keep any sympathy he may have in the background. He
creasmg audience among music Iovers in the Boston area.
can,t be influenced. On the one hand he must serve the
Launched by Dean Freeman, the program has had a series
o鯖cers and directors, and on the other - the stockh61der,
Of distinguished commentators, including Professor Arthur
the bankers, the bondholders, and in an ever-increaslng
Hauge, General College, Dr. Paul A. Pisk, Universlty Of
respect - 1abor,” declared Mr. Rittenhouse. “He must be
Redlands, Califomia, Dr. Karl Geiringer, Who teaches
Without prejudice and without bias, and at a賞量times he
MasterpleCeS Of Late 19th Century Music a=he College of
must ca11 things as he sees them. Today he must be a
Music, and Dr. Willis Wager, Who came on the program
broadly educated man, nOt Only in the technical fields, but
in the fall of 1948 and has remained as commentator since
in a11 fields. I really believe that CBA is doing a very
then.
Dr. Wager, rePuted to be the most broadcast man in the
good job in this respect.”
The fomer accountmg department head then spoke
field of serious music commentary, discusISed modem
extemporaneously of his years in acoountmg, Of the hopes
mhsic and its composers for qulte SOme time, SuCh com-
and prayers that helped launch his little o鯖ce on October
POSerS aS Leonard Bemstein, Samuel Barber, Aaron Cope-
l, 1919. He credited many graduates of the Universlty
land, and William Wa]ton, Who composed the music for
With aiding him in investlgations he has conducted in the
Hamlet and Henry V, and many others.
10
Often, COmPOSerS WiII appear on the program with Dr.
Wager・ His first was NicoIas SIonimsky’Planist and
music c正ic’and there followed Emest B量och, a mOdem
Whose music has a Hebrew background・ On the program
With Mr・ B]och’Rabbi Charles S. Freedman, director of
Hillel Founda工ion, read pertinent passages of “Schelomo,”
a BIoch composition, in Hebrew, an innovation which was
weH received.
The work that LoweII Institute Cooperative Broadcastmg Council is doing lS indicative of the desire of progres・
Sive educators to glVe tO the radio audience not only what
they wan串ut what is of greatest vaIue to them. Although
the numbers of listeners is sma]l, they are appreciative,
not to mention critical. The programs have, What is conSidered in broadcasting circIes’Class “A” time, between
6:30 p.M. to lO p.M. Criticism and compIaints are received
The old mas工ers are not forgotten, nOt by a long shot.
Last summer, When Dr. Albert S。hw。itz。r Visited thg
United States for the celebration of Goethe,s 200th birth.
day amiversary’TMTT presented a recorded program of
Dr. Schweitzer playlng the music of Bach on the cIassical
and atもended to. A retired concert vioIinist wrote in after
a program featuring Randa]l Thompson’Say工ng that he
had played in the premier perfomance of Thompson,s
music and that he always felt that Thompson was a comer.
He further stated that he was甲eased that Boston is prlVl・
Organ in Sainte Aure]ie at Strasbourg, France. With Dr.
Wager was Mr・ G. DonaId抽arrison of the AeoIian Skin.
ner Company’designers and builders of organs・ Mr. Harrison explained the difference between the c量assicaI organ
leged to have such a radio program as `The Music’s The
皿ing,, and hope it will continue under its briHiant direc.
tor’Dr. Wager・,,
On the other hand, after a program featuring Hungarian
Of Bach’s era and the modem organ which’aCCOrding to
music’a Ieもter was received by an irate Romanian who
Mr・ Skimer言`has developed into an imitation of the
Wan七ed to know why TMTT didn・t ever pIay any Roma-
OrChestra.,, This program has one extreme]y attentive
nian music. The foHowlng Week TMTT featured Roma.
listener’aS Witnessed by the fac=hat said listener caIled
皿工an恥しISIC.
up and to量d Dr・ Wager that Dr・ Schweitzer had aIready
left the country to return to Africa・ It seems as though
Dr. Wager had mentioned in his introductory phrases短Dr.
Schweitzer’Who is now in the United States … ,, and the
SchooI Administrators Will Meet
listener wanted to keep the record straight・
Walter Piston, a member of the faculty at Harvard and
COmPOSer Of “The Incredible F`1utist,” was a guest on the
The American Association of SchooI Administrators
first anniversary program of TMTT and he expIained why
Wi量賞hold their annual meeting at Atlantic City, New Jer-
the barking of a `・dog” is incIuded in the recording of the
Sey, Sunday’February 26’a=he Madison Hotel. A short
PleCe・ The end of the number is marked by a camival
PrOgram has been arranged which wiH incIude a discus_
SCene and the various ins亡ruments of the orchestra imitate
Sion of雄New PIans for the SchooIs of Education.,, Mr.
the attendant noises of a camivaI midway・ A few bars
from the end there is a pause and an oboist in the orchestra
曲enry Perry of The Universlty PIacement wil=aIk on
SuddenIy and without any wamlng tO anyone uttered two
寝Current and Proposed Ventures in Service to Graduates.”
Sharp barks. He was reproved, tO Put it m皿y’by one
Dr. W・ Linwood Chase wilI speak on “University ReIat三on・
and a11’but when the recording was p重ayed back the barks
Ship to Education・
The dimer meet工ng wilI be heId in
餌ed perfectIy wi亡h the mood of the composition and so
the田otel Madison, and those who wish to attend the regthey remained as an integral part of “The IncredibIe
ular evemng SeSSion will be abIe to do so.
LoweII Ins血te figures it has about 18’000 regular lis.
teners covermg an area of Greater Boston, the coast of
Maine and eastern New York・ Since its inceptlOn in FebPlease reserve......-..・・・・・・--・・〇・〇・.--・・・・tickets for the New Eng]and
ruary of 1947 it has been on the air for a total of over 400
Dinner at $3.00 per person a=he Madison Hotel, Atlantic
hours, beginnlng With their first program entitled “We
Human Beings’
City, On February 26, at 6 p.M.
which was done by an all Boston univer.
Sity cast consistlng Of Ernest B. WaIston, WesIey N. Tiffney’G. Norman Eddy and Dr. Wi]Iis Wager. Lowe]] Insti-
Name
tute, directed by Mr. RaIph LoweIl’is supported by funds
from Boston CoI]ege, Boston univers工ty, Harvard Univer-
A ddres
Slty’Lowell Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technol.
Ogy’Northeastern universlty and Tufts CoIIege. It has
been recognized nationally by its recelVlng a Peabody
Award, an aWard simiIar in stature in radio to Pulitzer
Send to Miss Ida M. Johnston’Boston University SchooI of
Education, 84 Exeter Street, Boston 16車重ass.
PrlZeS in JOumaIism.
Make checks paγable ’o Miss Ida M. Johnston.
11
FULBRIGHT SCHOLARS GO ABROAD
Among the 600 Americans that have gone abroad to do
slty, Mr. Donald Oliver in the O鯖ce of Admissions’705
graduate work under the Fulbright Act are four Boston
Commonwealth Avenue言s the person to whom lnqulrleS
University Graduates-Victor Gelineau, A,49, SteIla Mal-
may be directed・
In the main, Students gomg tO the United Kingdom will
kasian, C’36, Esther Chapman, C’48, and Emest Jackson,
study the humanities and social sciences’While France and
A’48. Mr. Gelineau and Miss Malkasian have gone to
France, While Miss Chapman and Mr. Jackson will travel.
Italy have attracted a large number of students in the
The United Kingdom and France evidently provide the
fields of art, muSic and language teaching・ Others will
study mathematics and astronomy in Ho量land, anthropol-
greatest opportunities for advanced study’for 375 students
have taken up residence there’250 in France and 125 in
ogy and zooIogy ln the Phi工ippmeS; SOCioIogy and eco-
the United Kingdom, Which embraces England, Scotland,
nomics in New Zealand, and archaeo賞ogy and classicism in
and Wa量es. Other nations to which American scholars
Greece. Many students will go to the more famous univer-
Vtcめr A. Ge競れelα暮ら4,49,肌d S書e航Mα脆asiαn, G,36,鈍枕ed orl the “Jle de Fr撮れCel’’砧§書
0cかober重3めS加dγ撮れderきれe F訪br追加Ac‡・
have gone are Norway, 25; Italy, 140; The Ne音ther量ands’
sities, SuCh as the Sorbome, Oxford and Cambridge, While
25; Belgium, 22; New Zealand, 12; Greece, 12, and the
others have expressed the desire to attend smaller institu-
PhilippmeS 8.
tions of leammg ln Order to become better acquainted with
the language, PeOPle and customs of the country they are
Due to the do工lar shortage in the various conco壬dant
nations, Only 300 forelgn Students will visit the United
Visiting.
States for study. Their expenses for traveling will be paid
Fu巾her information concemmg the Fulbright Act may
for under the provisions of the act slgned by their respec-
be obtained by wrltmg tO The Institute of Intemational
tive govemments, but personal expenses must be bome by
Education, 2 West 45th Street, New York 19, N. Y., Which
the student or by prlVate Or gOVemmental agencies. This
receives applications from graduate students; The Con-
has necessarily limited the number of exchange students.
ference Board of Associate Research Councils, 2101 Con-
The selection procedure is not based entire量y on sICho量as-
stitution Avenue, Washington 25, D. C., Which receives
tic ability. Personal qualifications and the merit of the
applications from professors’SPeCialists and advanced re-
Student’s graduate work proJeCt enter into consideration.
search scholars; and the United States O鯖ce of Education
Over 8,000 inqumeS WeTe reCeived at the Institute of In-
(Federal Security Agency) , Washington 25, D. C., Which
temational Education in New York last year and sIOme
receives applications from teachers in elementary schooIs’
4,500 complete app賞ications were filed. In Boston Unive音r-
secondary schooIs, and junior colleges・
12
T脚ALI脚
WE SALUTE
DR. FRANK L. PIZZUTO9 Who came to音Our Shores a
PaStO音r Of St・ Paul’s Methodist Church, a POSt Which he
Stranger in 1913 and avai工ed himself
held until July’1948’When he became pastor of the Italian
Of the opportumty OPen tO all in these
Methodist church of Our Savior, South Boston. Three
Unite-d States, that of an education
more degrees were added in the interim: an S.T.B. from
and an eamed place in the sun.
Milton College in 1938, anOther M.A. from Harvard, and
his Doctor of Divinity from Milton in 1942.
Landing in New York City, the
A veteran of World War I, Dr. Pizzuto lectured on
young lmmlgrant headed for the home
Of a distant relative in Aubum, N. Y.,
Italian civilization at Boston Universlty tO SO量diers taking
Where he immediately embarkeld upon
the Amy Specialist Training Program. At present言n
an educational program, that of a spe-
addition to his duties as pastor, Dr. Pizzuto is an instructor
Cial course in English given a=he local YMCA. He also
Of Modem Languages at Northeastem Universlty・ For lO
joined a Presbyterian church his first Sunday in America.
years he taught Italian and Spanish at Su鱒0賞k Universlty.
Comlng tO Boston in the sprmg Of 1914, he transferreld to
It has often been said that to get something do音ne, glVe
an Italian Methodist church, and in 1916 was elected presi-
the work to a busy man・ Dr・ Pizzuto is a livingexamp量e of
dent of the Epworth League chapter・ He was made a local
the say工ng. He has served as chaplain from 1928-39 for
the Noddle IsIand Masons; he was president of the
Eastem Massachusetts Association of Teachers of Italian
PreaCher in 1917・ Meanwhile he continued his education,
attending an evenlng high school to finish his high schooI
(1945-47) , Chaiman of the Committee on Weekday Reli-
education・ He worked as a carpenter,s heIper during the
day, a trade leamed from his father, Luigi Pizzuto, Who
gious School, South Boston (1948-49) , and is a member of
the New England Modem Language Association and the
WaS a CarPenter in Italy.
National Education As,SOCiation of the United States.
His quest for higher education continued. In the fa賞宣of
1917 he entered East Greenwich (Rhode IsIand) Academy
Published works include寝ReIigione Di Dante
;雄Cate-
On a SCholarship and in Septembe音r 1919 he entered
Chismo Cr音istiano’
plus many artic量es in Zio諒Helγald,
Boston Universlty. Dean Ralph W. Taylor’then Registrar
Neu, Age Magazine, and many religious pamph量ets in
Of the Universlty, aided him in obtaining aid from the
Italian.
Professor Augustus Howe Buck Educational Fund as he
Dr・ Pizzuto has done much thus far in Iife; We Predict
did not have su鯖cient funds to continue. His excellent
that he will do much more. There are too few citize音nS Of
the caliber of Frank Pizzuto’and that means that busy,
marks were the prlmary factors in sec皿ng the aid.
fruitful days are forever ahead for the Italian boy who
He graduated with honors in 1923, having been elected
enriched America when he Ianded on her shores.
to Phi Beta Kappa before graduation・ He was appomted
JOHN M. VANDENB田L甘, Who, Since 1942 has been
a FelIow of the Fund for work at Harvard, but further
in charge of physical chemistry research for the Parke-
Studies were interrupted by sickness. A量so there was the
Davis and Company of Detroit, Michigan, One Of the
fu工甜ment of many requユrementS leading to various
nation’s largest phamaceutical houses. Dr. Vandenbe量t
giades of appolntmen七under his church. In 1927 he at。
received his M.A. degree from Boston Universlty in 1936,
tained full standing・ Prior to this he retumed to his home-
having maJOred in analytical chemistry under Dean
land to visit his parents. In 1926声he young schoIar
Ches七er M. Alter. Before comlng tO Boston Universlty,
married Santina J. Mazzarino and the two have become
Dr・ Vandenbelt received his B.A. from Hope College and
PrOud parents of four love工y chiIdren‥ Lois AmoId, 2l,
Went On tO reCeive his Ph・D・ from Michigan State Co=ege
L皿an E.’18’Evelyn A.’17, and Barbara E., 14.
in 1940. Of his work at Boston Universlty, Dr. Vandenbelt
Resumlng his quest for leamlng in 1927, Dr. Pizzuto
SayS the guidance received by the staff at Boston Univer-
received an M.A. from Webster University・ He became
Sity (Professor E・ O. Holmes, Jr・, ProfesISOr J. Phi量ip
13
the elucidation of the structure of the new anti-biotic
Mason, Miss Helen M・ Stevens and Miss Marguerite F.
Chloromycetin ・
Syner) was “extremely valuable and can hardly be over-
In addition to the tremendous responsibility mVOIved in
estimated.
his work, Dr. Vandenbelt was made chairman of the Com-
While working for his Ph.D.’Dr. Vandenbelt held the
mittee for Physico-Chemical Development in the Research
Parke, Davis and Company Research FeHowship in Phys-
and Development Section of the American Drug Manufac-
ical Chemistry from 1938-1940 under Professor D. T.
turers Association. He is the author of 19 pape音rS On the
Ewing of Michigan State. His thesis wo正was mainly in
physical properties of bioIogica11y ac七ive compounds.
ultraviolet spectroscopy and included studies of vitamins
The father of two chi]dren, Marcia, 7, and Billy, 6’Dr・
Kl,K2 and derivatives for Professor E. A. Doisy of St・
Vandenbelt met his wife, the former Gladys Bond, On the
Louis Universlty・ Upon graduation from Michigan State’
campus of Michigan State while she was working on her
Master,s degree in Home Economics. At present they live
Dr. Vandenbelt joined the Parke-Davis research organization・ His work today provides a service of special tech-
in a suburb of Detroit, Grosse Pointe Woods, Michigan・
nlqueS tO Other research groups on the sta任and coHabo-
A wide traveler, Dr. Vanderbelt has been in all but five
rates with them in the study of specific problems. Prin"
states of the Union, and spent the summer of 1937 at Old
cIPal functions include optical and physical measurements
Heidelberg Universlty・
on all kinds of bioIoglCa=y active or potentia11y active
To the layman, Dr・ Vandenbelt,s perseverance and devo-
compounds, SuCh as the electro-Phoresis of proteins言nfra-
tion to science smack of ability bordering on the genius,
red absorptlOn, POlarographic studies’emission spectros・
but in Dr. Vandenbelt,s words it has been the result of “the
copy and especially ultraviolet absorptlOn・
generous assistance of the research management here, the
Of maJOr COllaborative interest has been the correlation
unstinted help and cooperation of other staff members’
of structure and ultraviolet abs音OrPtlOn Of organic com-
and the untlrmg and loyal exertions of aH the individuals
in the physical chemistry group.
pounds. This recently became of great practical value in
C. L.A・ Alumna Made Nursmg Head
ヨ妬剣鋤糾0両肌
Albany, N・ Y., November 29. The appomtment Of
Mrs. George F・ Wright
Lillian V. Salsman, A,21, aS Director of Nursmg Services
A few of the members of the Boston Universlty
of the New York State Department of Menta量Hygiene has
Women,s Council who knew and loved Mrs. Wright during
been amounced by Dr. Frederick MacCurdy, Commis"
sioner. Miss Salsman, Who has been serving provisionally
her presidency of the Council’and who have bome her in
since early 1946, WaS aPPOmted November l from a newly
their hearts during the two years of her extreme su任ering,
established Civil Service list followlng COmPetitive exam-
wen=o worcester, January 5㍉o attend the loving rites for
ination for the position・
one who so Ioyally served her church, her clty’her clubs
Educated in Boston, Miss Salsman received her A.B・
and the Council. That she had an important place in the
degree at Boston Universlty in 192l, and her nurse’s train-
mg at New Erigland Deaconess Hospital, graduatlng m
clty life was shown by the more than 600 moummg friends
1925. She studied at Columbia University Teachers Col-
who crowded the beautiful church where she lay among
1ege, reCelVmg the M.A・ degree in 1935’after which she
the flowers which were a fitting tribute to the health of her
trained in the graduate schooI of psychiatric nursmg at
McLean Hospital.
From 1928 to 1934 Miss Salsman was superintendent of
nurses at the American hospital in Moulmein, Burma,
abundant living and her sweet influence・ Mrs・ Fi瓦’Mrs.
Miner, Mrs. MacCIoskey, Mrs. Allen, Mrs. Deerlng and
Dr. and Mrs. Roberts represented the Universlty’feeling lt
where she was active in educat工ng local nurses・ In 1943
she entered the Army Nurse Corps, SerVmg aS an instructor
a great privilege to honor her in death as we loved to do
in the Basic Training Center at Fort Devens and as direc-
inlife.
tor of U. S. cadet nurses, First Service Command. Fo11ow-
At the grave we stood with her bereaved friends’her
mg her release from military service’She visited mentaI
family and many friends amids=he glorious且owers that
hospitals in the United States and Canada’Studying meth-
were an epitome of her lovely life・ Beautifu11y’COura-
ods of treatment and nursmg Care and psychiatric nursmg
education. Her career also includes five years as super-
geously, 1ovlngly she had lived and so she died, a Sincere
intendent of nurslng at Hastings State Hospital’Nebraska’
Christian leader and a lovlng friend・
and two years as director of nursesふRing Sanatorium
Mary Hinckley Dearmg・
and Hospital, Arlington He音ights’Mass.
14
詔塑巨翌夏王墓憂
国懸麹園図四四
図四四回四囲
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MAN,S OLDEST DISEASE
By馳│eOdore M. Po批er, M.D.
Boston University Schoo案of Medicine
500, Of whom many do not devote their entire time and
For over forty thousand years arthritis has a触cted the
effort to rheumatism. A group of foresighted citizens,
human race. “Arthritis of the spme” is the diagnosis made
therefore言oined with leading physicians in 1948 to con-
in the twentie「th century on a
stitute the Arthritis and Rheumatism Foundation. Spon-
prehistoric man whose back-
sored by the American Rheumatism Association and the
bone to this date revea賞s the
Detroit Fund for Crippling Diseases, the Foundation is
stlgma Of rheumatism. After
designed as a pemanent voluntary health agency・
millenniums this disease still
The three objectives of the Foundation are:
WOrks torture among us.
l. A coordinated program of research and education in
Stuntlng and warpmg Our
the rheumatic diseases.
children, bending the aged,
rheumatism above all grlPS
2. The establishment of more effective methods of diag-
men and women a=he peak
nosis and of more facilities for treatment of patients.
3. Provisions for re-tralnmg and rehabilitation of those
of active life.
disab賞ed by the rheumatic diseases.
The number of people a胱cted with rheumatism is
larger than that of patients with heart disease’CanCer’dia-
The members of the Foundation have reasoned that the
betes, and tuberculosis a葵l taken together. Disability of
medical and economic problems of rheumatism warrant, at
this magnitude may be expected to cause serious social and
this正me, unfailing effort by prlVate initiative. Regional
economic waste. In time lost from work, rheumatism is
administration is deemed essential to success; SO is local
responsible for 97,200,000 days amually, a deficit equal
investment of funds raised locally. A survey of the whole
to 320,000 empIoyable persons rendered ineffective at all
field of the rheumatic diseases completed by the National
times. The taxpayer contributes to the糾28,000,000 spent
Research Council in 1948 enables the Foundation to corre-
for them each year in relief allowances.
late current investlgation and to detemine fruitful ap-
Rheumatism covers a large number of disorders affect-
PrOaChes for further study. Those suggested are:
mg the connective and supportive tissues of the body・ The
1. Basic research on the connective tissues. Funda-
O能cia量diagnostic standard lists abouもthirty categories of
mental studies of the arthritic patient as a sick
diseases in which arthritis (and inflammation of the
human being on the background of his total environ-
ment. Emphasis oll the personality structure of
joints) is a major or ar associate cIinical feature・ In some
of these, for instance m Certain types of infectious arthri-
Patients.
tis, COnSiderable progress has been achieved toward pre2・ Training of physicians, biochemists, PSyChiatrists,
vention and treatment. Not so with rheumatoid arthritis or
public health nurses, SOCio量oglStS and social workers
with osteo-arthritis. The fomer is responsib賞e for most of
for their specia賞applica亡ion to the problems of rheu輸
the crlPPling声he Iatter言f more benign, POtentiaIly affects
about 80% of all people past紳ty years of age・ The cause
3. Investlgation in the techniques of reconditiomng the
Of neither has been determined and no specific and cura-
advanced arthritic patient and development of facili-
tive treatmen七has been found for these chronic dis,eaSeS.
ties which wi11 enable him to work useful工y.
The best available therapy may be successful in the preVen亡ion of crlPP工ing defomitielS and the alleviation of
In the sprmg Of 1949 Doctors Hench, Kenda工l, SIocumb
Su倍ering. Only about 200 free beds are specifically allo-
and Po11ey reported the beneficial action on certain rheu-
Cated in the whole country to the study and treatment of
matic diseases of Compound E. This homone of the
rheumatism. These pemit fewer than l% of rheumatic
adrenal gland, later named CO正sone, is the firs=herapeu-
Patients to receive adequate carle and limit severely the
tic medium ever to五ave predictable, raPid and striking
PurSuit of clinical investlgation. The total yearly expen-
effects. A great deaI of investigative work on these hor-
diture for research in this五eld is estimated at $900,000, Or
mones and rlelated substances is now in progress. Before
about l/30th the amount the United States Govemment
their practical value as a treatment for certain types of
aIone approprlated for study of animal and plant diseases
arthritis can be ascertained, muCh effort and money need
during 1948.
be made available for clinical testmg.
These inadequate provisions do not serve to attract a
The appliclation of Cortisone and ACTH to rheumatic
Su鍋cien七number of students, Physicians and other medical
and a large number of other diseases has merely demon-
PerSOnnel to work in this field. At present, the profesSional body of American RheumatoIogists counts about
Strated the need for elucidating the pituitary-adrenal
mechanism in nomal and pathoIogical physioIogy.
16
さI,いI{:′寡「∫
THOSE GLITTERING SOPHOMORES
By V量C
STOU甲
Boston Universlty may nOt Win any national champIOn-
Had the Terriers managed to get by the Maryland and St.
Ships this coIIege year (though there are those who predict
Bonaventure games even wider recognition would havq
that Harry Cleverly,s hockey six will wind up m the
been accorded him.
NationaIs at CoIorado Springs come March) , but the T。r-
Agganis’most notab工e contribu七ion in his五rst year of
riers are presentmg a trio of the brightest sophomore
VarSlty footbaH was the fact that he was a 60-minute:
athletes in Eastem IntercoHeglate athletics.
Player in an age of speciaIists・ With 15 touchdown passes
(Lef=o r王g砂D轟F嬢erdd,肋掲; Ir訪g B協, 0塵h‥加。鋤・; D却eγ 。・Learγ,
q重くαr書er-肋桝er.
The three second-year平en tO Whom we have reference
he ranked third in the nation in this department behind
are Harry Agganis’bri工エiant sophomore quarterback on
Lex of WiHiam and Mary and O’Malley of the Universlty
Buff Donelli,s 1949 eleven; Jack Garrity, 23-year-Old, War
of Cincinnati.
Veteran whose torrid scorlng PaCe in the early season play
John Paul Garrity of Medford, Massachusetts, WaS PrOV-
featured the young New Eng賞and hockey campalgn, and
19-year-Old Dudley O’Leary’Who appears destined to be_
mg tO be the hottest co量Iege scorer the New England
COme One Of the nation,s ranking middle distance rumers
hockey league had seen in many yearlS. Centering an a1量-
before he marches down the center aisle and receives, his
SOPhomore Iine with Dick寝Red,, Ke賞Iy of Cambridge and
Sheepskin・
Jack Martin of Belmont a=he wings, Garrity had com-
The gridiron feats of the Golden Greek have been well
Piled a total of 17 goa量s and nine assists in the Terriers,
reported in this monthly publication as well as in the
first five games. Ag担st M.I.T. in Boston University,s
newspapers throughou=he land・ Off his sophomore per-
third game the slim second-year ath量ete scored six goa量s
and assisted in two others.
fomances’Agganis looms as a cinch for A11-America
honors before he graduates.
With 14 more games remammg On the Boston Univers-
As a sophomore he was named to practica=y aH the AH
Slty SCheduIe’the prediction was that Gamty WOuld easiIy
New EngIand teams and was one of the few New Eng萱and
Shade Bob Maker,s aH-time of 44 pomtS・ And there were
football players slng賞ed out for All-America mention.
SOme Who figured he had a chance to top the aH-time New
17
JαC鳥Garrさか,霊九e $Op九o・
肋ore撮7九おたきd.
CoαC九Do事`g魅αγ肋。nd書の溝s掘れgS Oぴer毒血
D香c鳥Pa夢肌ierら茄g九加肌per αれd九重`rdler.
Dic鳥F加をgerα肋nα鵬α Hαrびαrd肋の重● α=加
England college record of 78 pomtS POSted by Dart-
かαpeこ高α re○en‡ mee書.
mouth’s Jackie Riley a year ago.
tage, Prlmarily because the distance wasnl to his liking・
Regardless of whether he shatters any scormg reCOrds’
there’s no denylng that he is the brighest college player to
Indoors Raymond didn,t even enter O,Leary ln the first
come over the pike in several years. A graduate of Med-
freshman meet. But in the annual B.A.A. games Dud
ford high schoo「l, Jack served two years with the Air Corps
uncorked a splendid leg for the mile relay team and there
during the war and in 1947-48 played with the U. S.
gave first evide音nCe Of his potentialities・
When the outdoor season came along, Raymond brought
Olympic hockey team.
Married and the father of a four-year-Old son, Jack, Jr.,
him along sIowly; but in a meet with Providence College’
Tufts, Northeastem and HuntmgtOn School, Doug Iet him
Gamty this past summer developed and copyrighted a
hockey score book which is currently being used at a num-
go in a quarter-mile and the youngster was cIocked in the
ber of New England colleges and high schooIs. Next year
amazlngly fast time of 48.l seconds. That was the best
the book, Which is actually fuIfilling a long-felt need, WilI
quarter-mile run by a New England co量legian since Dick
be placed in general distribution throughou=he country・
Gi11 of Boston College ran a 48-SeCOnd qua巾er・
This wint6r Raymond hoped to have his sophomore star
The third member of the glittenng SOPhomore trio is a
down to l:13 for the 600-yard run・ That would be go¥Od
youngster who entered Boston Universlty unheralded・
Dudley O’Leary, SOn Of a Bosion Clobe court reporter,
enough for him to qualify for some of the special invita-
a七tended Milton high school and Huntington Preparatory
tion events, but Raymond does not propose to rush him
School, Where he partlCIPated in track, but no=oo briI-
into this type of competition too early in his co=ege
1iantly・
career. Thus his e任orts this winter wi11 be confined to
dual meets and runmng anChor on what probably will be
Coach Doug Raymond spotted the youngster while he
was competlng at HuntmgtOn, 1iked his graceful style and
the best mile relay team the Terriers have ever had・
Raymond, Who ran a l.11・8"SeCOnd 600 himself’rateS
interested him in attending Boston Universlty・
O’Leary as a definite OlympIC PrOSIPeCt・召If he continues
O’Leary reported for the freshman cross country team
to improve in the manner in which he has the past year,
his freshman year but didn’t show to any particu量ar advan・
JαC巌e肱“aγ高調br訪g§ Pe意e柑a轡gわ,重心e BC goa枕e, 0暮`轟
Of意九e ne書s.
L均γd Ro競れSOn doe§拐e sαme掘れg・ Mαggさの九adの
め棚g九動きg加, b地番暮れfor加は棚番dγ BC s融の0れ4-3・ Teい
r音iers 1ひ調see鳥re章〉eng〇品Feb手頃arγ重3 re肋α‡〇九.
18
Irび Hqγれ銃 〇九のrgeS
こか〇番心e BC defe耽れe
名0れe αれd (be夢oの
夢oo鳥 の九の‡九のppe職S.
T九e TerrこeirS SCOred,
b事の Referee B訪事
CJeαrγ r事`Jed 質職の
goαら’’αS α棚のがのS訪e
p競γer ula$ “訪 重心e
creα§e●ブタ
A招Brα融のαききe s概肌S拐e 45"γαrd購g九九肌dわs書o諦一
書のrγ. (Bdo撮,) H吃れ高柳岬er Bob Wγこき九α肋柳a鳥es沈e
baγ訪れe手αS九e j陥汚bardγ ge瞭0びer.
COme Close to world record figures in time.
he’11 be showlng his heels to the best in the country by the
time the Olympics roII arouIld,” claims his coach.
And,
added
F]anagan言`if Black doesn’t do it, tWO footbaHers, Lang
Another sophomore who is tabbed as a future great is
and Donahue, WiH.,,
Irving Black’6′2′′, 196 1b. weight thrower. In the recent
A native of Johnston, Rhode Island, Black already holds
infomal meet between Boston Universlty, Harvard and
the Universlty’s freshman record for the 12 1b. hammer`
Northeastem, Black tossed the 35 Ib. weight 49 feet 8%
throw of 176 feet and is a very capab]e perfolmer With the`
inches言n itself not exceptlOnal, but a feat in that it was
16 Ib. shot, discus and javelin.
the firs=ime any Terrier ath量ete had won a weigh=hrow-
So tab the names Agganis’Gamty, O’Leary and Black-
Before the spmg Of 1952 each of them may have written
mg eVent agamSt Harvard・ Ned Flanagan, eX-OlympIC
hammer thrower, former coach at Andover Academy and
new and excltmg PageS in Boston University’s athletic
PreSent Weight coach at the Universlty, SayS Black wiH
history.
Boston Univerlty Club of Boston
Gainmg Many New Members
Clever量y have delivered stimng PerOrations on hockey.-
Vin Cronin, Our PerSOnable and capable hockey coach, is
Slated to do a stint on his favorite pastime. Coaches of
The Boston University Club of Boston is well on its way,
Other sports have been invited to appear at Thursday
according to Ray Cook’POPuIar president of this flourish-
meetlngS.
1ng Organization・ With a membership exceeding two hun・
The clubrooms at Thompson,s Spa are open dai量y froml
dred graduates and fomer students of Boston Universlty,
eleven in the mommg through the dinner period in the-
and attractive headquarters on the second floor of the
evenlng・ Arrangements may be made at any time for
Thompson,s Spa buiIding on Washington Street in Boston,
groups or parties to remain unti=ate in the evenmg・
the stage is now set for an intensive membership drive and
The Boston Universlty Club of Boston offers a conve-
an expansion of activites.
nient place for Boston University Alumni and friends to‘
Pat Moran, PrOgram Chaiman, has arranged a series of
meet and eat・ Meals are consistent量y good and prlCe-S’
interestmg Iunch programs for the winter and sprlng Sea-
moderate. Drop m any day at lunch time or in theevemng
SOn・ These have been slanted toward the always interest・
- meet SOme Of your o量d friends and cIassmates - enjoy
mg SPOrtS PICture at Boston University・負Buff
Done11i
and become a part of this new phase of Boston Universlty-
has shown an overflow gathering movies of the much
actlVlty Which is currently being enJOyed by active mem-・
disputed Maryland game. Ike Bevins and Hockey Coach
bers of the club.
19
ALUMNI IN REVIEW
田園
servations, the philosophy of the natives’legend and fable
EARTH,S GRANDEST即VERS? by Ferdinand C・
of their history, all these add coIors to this wonderful
Lane. Doubleday and Company, Inc.’Garden City,
book.
N. Y. $3.75.
Bigness is the mood here, and there is a majestic sweep
“River action" is the theme of this book・ Ferdinand C.
of history, Written and. unwritten, that leaves the reader
Lane of We皿eet, Mass., has written a series of隼iver
with the feeling of the psalmist who wrote
biographies” that will bring hours of deligh=o a thought-
ful reader. Here are tales of swift rivers, Sluggish rivers,
Dr. Lane does not include all the rivers of earth. Just
rich rivers, rOmantic rivers’the largest rivers and the
because we know a little about some of earth’s lelSSer
longest rivers’SPeCtaCular, historic’dangerous and vener-
rivers, We Wish he had a section on寝The Rhone,
ated r音ivers.
Seine,
A river is excess water frowmg tOWard the sea・ Yes ‥ ・
“The
寝The Hudson, Comecticut or Merrimac.” How-
ever, he has only told the story of the寝grand
and a river is much more. “River valleys were the cradles
of earlv civilization.
what is man
that Thou are mindful of him?’’
rivers’but
for those he has created a “grand’’book.
Hundreds of huge cities today owe
Rev. F. A. Dyckman, S.T.’32・
their foundation and much of their growth to a river・
Rivers a任ect law, POlitics and even global economy・
THE UN案TED STA甘ES IN WORLD HISTORY, by
Superstition enslaves some river natives; religious rites
John B. Raye and Thomas H・ D・ Mahoney・ (McGraw-
center around other rivers, and splrltual and emotiona量
HiH Book Co., 1949.)
meamngS Clinglng tO rivers have for centuries shaped the
The emergence of the United States as a world power is
lives of millions of people.
one of the most important developments of the twentieth
EARTH’S GRANDEST RIⅤERS is a book of elemental
century・ Abandoning our traditional policy of isolation・
facts abou=he elements that fom rivers, but Dr・ Lane’s
ism we have twice engaged in great wars and have ac・
concem goes far beyond his interest in geoIogy or meteor-
quired tremendous forelgn COmmitments. Yet Americans
oIogy・ History and research lend enchantment to his writ-
are often qulte ignorant of the p量ace of the United States
1ng aS he prophesies短the Ganges will one day co」nquer
in the history of westem civilization, and are unaware of
Everest.,,寝Rivers tend to smooth out and flatten the virile
the slgnificance of our present extensive responsibilities.
uplands’” but they also tend to build up. For instance in
The text by Professors Rae and Mahoney, an OutgrOWth
1737 a seacoas=ower was built in France. Today lt is
four miles inland. Personalizing rivers’he says
of their course a七the Massachusetts Institute of Technol.
rivers
ogy, lS a neW attemP=O PreSent United States history as a
have a definite birth, display the energy of youth’the full-
part of world development. The authors start with a sur-
nビさC; Of lrla‡証tv工hen enter upon a tranquil old age . ‥
vey of westem civilization about 1500) and show clearly
a工d we Tamember rivers we have known. Poetic and pic-
that early American history was but a phasle Of Europe’s
tures甲e高津捕S add cham to many pages言・e・, “the Yel-
expansion・ They then trace the political and economic
low River iさ¥VO‘・en like a golden thread across an em-
evolution of America and Europe to the present, POmtlng
broidered _trn叩On the very background of Chinese
ou=he interrelationships of these developments.
history,” or宜e mighty river言n its battle with the m6un-
The book is well written and it reveals the authors’
tains, COnfoms to a一・oCky straitjacket but rages in pro_
broad understanding of modem civiIization・ However’
test,” or “Strung ll量車weIs upon its current is a chain of
one might question e音ither the co音ntent Or the title of the
great cities.
volume・ Fully one-half of the content is European, and
These short biographies of thirty-eight of EARTH’S
sometimes it is di鯖cul=o see the necesslty Of including
GRANDEST RIⅤERS are rea11y only thumb-naiI sketches
material with a very remote e任ect on American life・ Per-
of these powerful forces of nature. The rock fomations
haps with the exc量usion of some European political details’
that detemine the course of rivers fascinate Dr. Lane’but
room could have been fo.und for more consideration of the
he glVeS the rivers personality by recountmg their story,
American scene and the effect of the United States on the
often including explorers’ adventurers’ industrialists,
world - eSPeCially with respec=o our growmg eCOnOmic
natives and vi轟ors in the tale. The eating habits of the
might in the twentieth century・
people’tyPical agriculture along the banks’unuSual mar-
Desplte these suggestions Tんe U訪ed Siaies訪World
rlage CuStOmS’mOdes of transportation and re量igious ob-
20
H轟orγ is a competent work. It should be valuable as
basic reading m Certain coHege survey courses, and should
also be of great help to the casuaI reader with a desire to
OPen Visibi量ity ln-neighborhoods. `Who is my neighbor?,
is the old question answered in the Gospel most definitely
and with finality・
負Not power but Iove, and Iove through immediate and
understand our re工ationship to the rest of the world.
Francis G. Walett’History Department.
unquestioned action.
Mrs. Simkhovitch,s book brings to
HERE IS GOD?S PLENTY? by
the literature of social work nothing
Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch.
S七artling or new, but it does contribute
(New York: Harper & Brothers.
the sort of sanlty and perspec七ive that
$2.50.)
Wi工工always be needed・ Among ltS
Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch needs
Virtues is the fac=hat in not a slngIe
no praise from reviewers of her Iatest
Phrase of it does she descend to the
book to estab工ish her greatness as a
SOCial worker.短Mrs. S主m,, retireld in
1946 after 44 years of directmg the
PrOgramS Of Greenwich House SettIe_
ment in New York, Which she founded
With her husband in 1902.
Nevertheless, this book reveals
“釧伽名所的0弱り理事面星章同e
t匝くじfe章章的葛的t調筆鋒血書如月o庇
的〔〔陣容弛面,湖面細れ白州章振`r
即的te顧問曳き加e珊e印加軍拡即も
筒職,創動寄ff通じ印肌榊調卿洲闘面Ⅲタ
in splte Of its occasiona工repetitious-
洲も章かmore庇脚斑鳩あ 章りe
as she pIeased about a Iong吉rui工fuI,
卿的t8章子蜜0請じ章脚如,柵も鋤的棚
血r脚奴O=r鋤卯でe,肌血章r脚如
and purposeful Iife, and under seven
O筆脚両脚m脇晒e鰯関り.タ・
Chapter-headings has offered her conC工usions regarding education, houslng,
Laura Haddock.
(Reproduced by pemission of the Chris_
壷脇ScJence Mo17?iior, Boston, Mass.)
to ‡り鴫寄0もOf胴幽両面もer刺章クタ
章頼r卿I枇血如く8章中身復讐顧te寄筆
many of the elements of her greatness,
ness. Mary Simkhovitch has written
use of social workers’jargon.
go恥珍○○血糊タ“⑫同逆0的噸0肌
.寂壇的0鳩日ぼ⑪の脇的頭,,
Joseph Wagner
From the pages of the Duluth (Minneso七a) Heralld come words of pr空
and appreciation for the conductmg
talents of Joseph Wagner, Mus,32.
Since 1947 Mr. Wagner has been
leading the Duluth Symphony Orchestra and “has shown himself to be a
recreation, the arts, Welfare, COmmu-
friendIy and energetic man on the
nlty Organization, and religion・
POdium and an indefatigable crusader
She began as a gently bred girl in
for the contemporary composer・
Chestnut Hill’near Boston, and gradThis is Mr・ Wagner,s 25th year of
uated from Boston Universlty in the
SymPhony conductlng, and throughout
days when that institution was a
his enもire career he has been a Ieader
召small co量lege,, and its campus the
in bring工ng the music of American
Streets and theatres and libraries of
COmPOSerS tO the world. Last summer
the clty・
he conducted in Havana’Norway,
After a year in Gemany, She spent
Sweden and Fin]and. He conducted
ano七her year at CoIumbia Universlty
five programs in four countries, Pre-
and took up residence in the College
Sentlng 26 works of 20 American com_
SettIement as head worker. When she
POSerS. During his quarter-Century Of
married Valdimir Simkhovitch _ a
COnductmg exPerience Mr・ Wagner
Russ葛ian whom she had met at school
has directed 197 perfomances of lO9
in Berlin-She heIped him found
American scores by 66 composers, in-
Greenwich House.
Cluding 21 first performances.
These facts are onIy the scaffolding of what Mary
Says Mr. Wagner:毎I feel satisfied and encouraged that
Simkhovitch did・ She was a fighter for the poor. Out of
American composers are bending their elbows harder.
the securlty Of her own happy and abundant upbringlng,
They are tumlng Out mOre muSic both in qua量ity and quan-
She reached forth to aid others. When she went as a Sun_
tlty, and the problem is to get the music to the pe「ople・”
day SchooI chiId to a poor home in Boston, She was stirred
In Europe and Cuba’Joseph Wagner has served as a
not a工one to do something about that one home but to
musical ambassador, directlng attention to American
Study and find out what economic causes brought such
music. His success in this undertaking and in winmng
homes into existence. This breadth and depth of thought
respect and admiration as a musical director have re_
Characterized her career.
Warded him with an invitation to retum to those countries
Among the mature conclusions she reaches in her book
the nex=wo years for a series of summer concerts in aH
is this:雄It is not so much the tota]itarianism from afar
the prlnCipal cities.
that we must fight as the wiH to power a=he base of our
Iife in America’beginnlng ln the famiIy and comng tO
Aわ耽れ義DaγおCo棚れg・脇de aれγ plans?
21
"曹he one field that offered
exac七│y wha七We Wanted''
DuRING早e yearS I was in the Amy’I often
thought of ha、′lng a business of my own, and this
was in the back of my mind when I retumed to
civilian life.
Before the war I had worked for a large paint
company, and upon my discharge, I retumed to
them, SerVmg aS manager Of one of血eir stores. But
within a year I reslgned, mainly because what I really
wanted was a position where my mCOme WOuld be
measured by my ability鵜nOt by what someone
thought I was worth. And where I could exchange
my energy and talents for good living condi七ions for
my family’and for an unlimited opportunity for
me to earn.
Some serious, 1ong-range thinking brought me to
the conclusion that the one丘eld that o任ered exactly
what I was after was life insurance. So I contacted
a number of companies here in Bu紺o’and spent
several days studying their respective merits and
histories. I was impressed with the caliber of New
England Mutual men I met, and by the fact tha亡
this company had always led the丘eld in providing
liberal policyholder benefits.
That’s why I joined New England Mutual・ Now,
after my Home O範ce trainmg COurSe, and with the
valuable help of my General Agent and the many
aids o任ered to New England representa亡ives’I’m
making steady progress. I,ve go=hat business of
my own’and it,s providing the opportunity for me
Cha?・les J. Lyile md /amily, Buβalo, N・ y.
and」 the good living conditions for my family that
We,ve always wanted・
図四回図四
丁hese Bos青On UniveI-Si書y men CIre New話ngIand Mu†ua書
represen十〇tives:
Recent
graduates
of
our
Home
O範ce
traimng
COurSe,
although new to the life insurance business, eam aVerage
ThomasJ. Reid, ‘22, Salem
丘rst-year COmmissions of $36oo-Which, With renewal com-
Wheeler H. King, C・L.∪・ ,23, Gen・ Ag†・一New York
missions added, brings the total yearly mCOme aVerage tO
Philip B. §†ee看e,.28- Gen. Ag†・一Springfield
$57OO. From here, incomes rise in direct proportion to each
individual,s ability and industry.
John P. Wa†son, 134, Bos†on
Raγmond E. Desaulels一一4i - Bos†on
If you,d like information about a career that gives you a
business of your own’With no sIow climb up a senioritv
James G. §ummer§, ’48, Bos†on
ladder and no ceiling on eammgS, Write Mr. H. C. Chaney,
Henry W. Pra††一Jr.一〇48- Por十Iandl Ore.
Director of Agencies, 501 Boylston Street, Boston 17, Mass・
They can g,Ve yOu eXper‘ counseI on =しiving lnsurancel?-a un,quely Iiberai
帥d flexibIe life insurance p「ogram 'oilored lo冊your fomilyls needs.
THE NEW ENGし州D MUTUÅししIFE Ⅲ§UR州cE COMPANY
.鵬懇索窓
軍閥CLA鮒
1894
The only business transacted was the elec-
C.L.A.
FRANK W. KIMBALL, A,94, reCently
Two Boston UniversIty Singing
tion of our o鯖cers for the next five-year
gave St. John’s Methodist Church in Ded。
groups will perfom on nnetwork
broadcasts in February. On February
ham a cari工lon of Schulmerick electronic
5th, from 4:30 to 5:00 p.M., the Men,s
EIsie wou量d welcome any personal items
belIs `tO COmmemOrate 80 years of active in-
and Girls’’Glee Clubs wi11 combine
SO that she may have news for the Bosio毒a.
for a broadcast on the New England
regional network of NBC under the
direction of Dr. James R. Houghton.
Morrison Place, Somerville, Massachusetts.
terest in the music of St. John’s, On the part
Of three generations of the KimablI family
of Dedham.
1911
C.L.A.
Period・ They are: Mabel Lovell, PreSident,
and EIsie Ericson, SeCretary.
Write to her - Mrs. George Ericson, 11
1915
C.L.A.
This program is one of a series spon・
SOred by the Monsanto Chemical Co.
On February 26th, from 12 noon to
ESTER BRYANT (LURVEY) MAC-
12:30 p.M., E.S.T., Dr. H. Augustine’s
DONALD of Lancaster, Who has been town
Choral Arts Society wi11 broadcast
Clerk there since 1935, is also correspondent
ETHEL ELIZABETH UPHAM of Ja・
maica Plain is secretary at the Amold
Arboretum of Harvard University.
COaSt-tO-COaSt OVer the Mutual Broad_
for the Worcester Gazeite and the Clinton
CaSting System. These programs were
arranged by O. Leonard Press, B,44,
Radio Assistant in the Bureau of
Publicity.
Item.
1914
C.L.A. -
CLASS REPORT
1916
C.P.E.S.
ELIZABETH VAN SANT of Baltimore,
Maryland, is the executive director of the
Young Women,s Christian Association in
Lynchburg, Virginia.
By Miss EMILY P・ BURDON? Secre加y
8 Allston Street, Newtonville, Massachusettts
1918
C.P.E.S.
mother for Chi Omega Sorority a=he Uni・
The Class of 1914 met on Alumni Day,
VerSity of New Hampshire. She spends her
June 4, 1949, tO Celebrate its 35th anniver.
SummerS at home in Provincetown, 26
Mrs. Kendrick Robertson Bragg (LIL-
Sary・ It was a very pleasant occasion for
Brewster Street; Jennie Caswe工l Colby is in
LIAN CHAPLIN) of New York City, Who
those who gathered to enjoy Mabel Bigney
Oakland, Califomia・ Her husband is in poor
Love11’s hospitality. MabeI and her husband
hea賞th and that keeps her cIose at home.
Very graCiously opened their spacious home
in Newtonvilユe for our lunch and meeting.
She has one daughter; Hugo Jahn sent his
regrets; he is teaching at C.B.A.; Viola
EIsie Putney Ericson, Chairman, With Hazel
Ruggles and Emily Burdon served the
Where her activities center around her three
lunch.
Children, Who are completing their college
The following members were present:
Owen DeMars wrote from Washington,
COurSeS. Her husband was at the time in
is a free lance writer言s at present doing
research on o工d homes, and is getting a
COllection of pictures of omamental iron
used long ago, for publication.
1920
C.B.A.
FREDERICK E. BOWERS of Lym is
Iran making a communications, survey;
PreSident of the Lym Chamber of Com-
Bunker’Emily Burdon, Mary Cleveland,
Ruth MacAron Lang,s message came from
merCe.
Gladys Damon, Mary Edmands, Avis Sher-
Cheyenne, Wyoming, Where her husband
1921
bume Elliot’EIsie Ericson and George Eric-
has a church. Her older son graduated
Ed棚Ca房0れ
SOn, ’15, Cyrus Jordan and Celia Marshall
from the University of Wyoming in June
Jordan, A11ena Luce, LIoyd Marks and his
and the younger enters col工ege this fall;
New York’is associate executive secretary
John Larson sent a letter and very interest-
for the Methodist Board of Education, West
Wisconsin Conference.
E鯖e
Brown,
Claire
Bowman,
Marjorie
Wife’Emily Hinckle Ricker, Hazel Ruggles,
Mabel Scott Tumer, Dorothea Waltz, Bessie
Felsteiner White, Ruth Heseltine White,
E]sie Jordan Whitehead and her husband,
under attack by his Board though heartily
and of course Mabel and Stan工ey Love11.
SuPPOrted by public opm工On and in particlト
The one to come the farthest was Mary
Edmands from Washington. Mary is head
Of the editorial o錦ce of the Bureau of
EntomoIogy and P量ant Quarantine of the
Depar書ment of Agricu工ture. We appreci-
mg ClipplngS. As superintendent of the
Arizona State Hospital, Dr. Larson was
1ar commended by the regiona工medical di-
rector of the U. S. Public Health Service.
He withdrew from that position and is now
SuPerintendent of the Logansport State Hos-
ated the messages from those who found it
any of us to stop and say負he11o
West. MabeI Sargent Finley wrote from
on a trlP
Goodwin was kept away because of il工
Cleveland, Ohio, that she is teaching Eng-
health; Sophia Palm’s letter to音ld of her ex-
1ish.
her work at Oxford University and the UniVerSity of Hawaii as well as places near
Grad耽aめ
The State Board of Education announced
recently the appointment of Dr. FRANK-
LIN P. HAWKES, SuPerintendent of
SChooIs in West Springfield, aS State director
Of fair education practices in Massachu・
PitaI in Logansport, Indiana. He invites
impossible to be present: Edith Burchell
tensive and interesting trips East and West,
FERN E. SCRIBNER of Binghamton,
While we were at lunch we had a call
from Thomas Lineweaver in Chicago,
Illinois, tO eXtend his greetings to the group.
及digまo榔S Ed事JCa糠on
J. KIRKWOOD CRAIG, See Theo ,I2.
1922
Ed霊ICa房0れ
JENNIE L. HENDRICKS of Holden ,re_
Cently retumed from eight months in San.
home; Dorothy Rand Worman lost her hus-
We were sorry to learn of the death of Bar.
tiago, Chile, Where she worked on an edu-
band a few years ago and is now house
bara Bolles Coiteux.
Cational proJeCt.
23
P.A.L.
PEARL A. ELLIOTT of Waterville,
Maine, is secretary to the chief of the Federal Estate & Gift Tax Division, Collector
of Intemal Revenue, Augusta, Maine.
1923
C.B.A.
Bu鯖alo o鯖ce of the Liberty Mutual Insur-
エ926
ance Co. He is now living at 53 Danbury
Lane, Kenmore, New York.
LESTER F. STEVENS is supervising the
C.B.A.
manufacture of paper insulated cables at
the Okonite-Callender Cable Co., Inc., in
Paterson, New Jersey.
WALDO T. WORCESTER of Cape Eliza-
Mrs. Donald C. Fo耽ler (PAULINE LOW-
be軍h, Maine, aSSistant manager of the local
ELL) of Allerton is bookkeeper and financial secretary for the Household Nursing
Association in Boston.
ALBERT YAKUS, Who is now living at
Sales agency of the Union Mutual Life In輸
SuranCe Company, has been named to direct
Miss Mildred M. King, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John H. King of Brookline, became the recent bride of CORNELIUS P.
CRONIN, JR., SOn Of the Iate Mr. and Mrs.
Comelius P. Cronin of Lexington. The
ceremony was held in St. Lawrence’s Church
in Chestnut Hill. Upon retum from a motor
trip through the South, the couple will make
their home in Lexington.
Re薦gわ棚s Ed柳期成0れ
CHARLES E. TITUS of WeIIsboro, Pem-
501 Washington Street, Brighton, has been
Sylvania, is pastor of the FiI.St Methodist
in the slaughtering business since his grad-
Church there.
uation from C.B.A.
1928
C.L.A.
C.B.A.
The Reverend JOHNSON N. ARMIT-
LEONARD SPANGENBERG of Waban
STEAD is now minis工er of the Central
Methodist Church in Lawrence. Reverend
is vice-PreSident of Business Statistics Or-
Armitstead went to the Philadelphia Confer-
ganization, Inc., in Babson Park. Mr. Span-
ence in October, 1940, and served in Maho-
genberg lS also chaiman of the board and
noy City three and a half years as an amy
president of the United Stores Corpora高orl
chaplain with the rank of Major, Who saw
in New York.
Ed棚Ca房0れ
some combat seI.Vice. On being discharged
he served in Middle鴨own, Pemsylvania,
VINCENT SALA of New Britain, Con・
and Centenary Church in Lebanon, Pem-
necticut, Who is principal of Senior High
sylvania. He then retumed to the New
Hampshire Conference in which he had
school there, rePOlrtS that his extracurricuIar
churches in Hudson, Winchester, Rochester,
football players to Boston University. In-
and Nashua. All of these were Methodist
cluded among them are four varsity lads:
ChuI.Ches. His present address is: 1 Logan
George Sulima, Donald Wallace, Edward
Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts.
Mrs. Catherine C. Easton (CATHERINE
Sanda11, and Hugo Primiani.
C. PERKINS) of Indianapolis, Indiana, is
a guidance and reading teacher at Tudor
activities are sending good students and
Tわe基地〉の〇九αrm香ng dααg心意ers of蹄現先
Hoe部e Lαne, A’30, C a§S SeCreめrγ,
Hall school there.
Barbαrα, 5, αnd Be瞭eγ, 7.
FLORENCE MAE FRYE of South Had1ey Falls is a teacher of bioIogy and asISistant in audio-Visual aids at the high school
in East Hartford, Comecticut.
FRANK LAUREL PIZZUTO, minister of
the Methodist Church of Our Saviour and
instructor of modem languages at Northeastem University, WaS a reCent ThanksglVmg SPeaker at a united Thanksgiving
Service at St. Matthew and the Redeemer
Episcopal Church in South Boston・
及∈筋gio鵬Ed関ca扇0れ
Miss Marie A. MacMaster, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. William T. MacMaster of
is a graduate of Fitchburg Business College
and for several years has been in the empIoy of General Mills’Inc., and is currently
C.L.A.
tual sta債in April, 1943, and has been the
GORDON WINSLOW SMITH of Waterville, Maine, is associate professor of modem languages at Colby Co11ege in Water-
company’s outstanding representative since
tha=ime, Placing first nationally in volume
of sales for three years and second for two
years. He is the only Union Mutual reprepI.Oduction club for five years’and is a four-
Summer School of Languages which is held
year qua皿er for the National Qua工ity
on the Mayflower Hill campus of Colby
Award, amual recognition by the National
Association of Life Underwriters for quality
C.膨.A.
Ed棚Ca房0れ
NEWELL S. AMES of New Britain, Connecticut, has been appointed an accounting
instructor at the Hartford Institute of Ac・
counting. Mr: Ames has also taught at the
University of Comecticut in the evening
Methodist Church, and has been pastor of
several churches in the Worcester and
Nicho音las Junior High school there.
Spring丘eld districts. The couple will make
training a書Bridgewater State Teachers’Coト
their home in Townsend.
1ege, WaS a reCent Speaker at a meeting of
1924
the Taunton Mothers’Club. Her topic was,
高Your Child,s Mental Health In School and
Connecticut.
GARCIA E. RACIOT was recently pro.
moted to representative sales manager a=he
College・ 1930
underwriting.
ber of the New England Conference of the
cipal and head of the commercial depart-
Smith has been a member of the sta鮮 of
the recently established Colby-Swarthmo音re
of Mount Vemon, New York, is teaching at
ment at Meriden High school in Meriden,
ville. For the past two summers Professor
sentative to head the company’s leading
school.
H. CHANDLER JUNT is assistant prin-
Paper Company in Montreal, Canada.
nia. Mr. Worcester joined the Union Mu-
empIoyed as a secretary to Bemard W.
Doyle of Leominster. Mr. Fulton is a mem-
C.B.A.
mount, P. Q., Canada, is manager of overseas sales for the Canadian Intemational
the activities of the Maine firm in Califor-
Lowell, and the Reverend HERBERT F.
FULTON, PaStOr Of the Methodist Church
there, Were married recently in the West
Fitchburg Methodist Church. Mrs. Fulton
1929
C.B.A.
HENRY LAURENCE CULLEN of West-
Mrs. Rex M. Babbi耽(ABBIE J. SMITH)
Miss RUTH E. DAVIS, SuPerVisor of
CHESTER L. CONNERS of Medford is
prl強Cipal of the evening high school there
and a pas=reasurer of the Medford Plan E
charter organization.
LOUIS MAZER of Chestnut Hill is teach1ng COmmerCial subjects at Brighton High
school. He is also holder of the Gregg
Shorthand O鯖cial Award for 1949.
WH工TNEY SM工TH of Lexington is a
claim approver for the John Hancock Life
Insurance Company in Boston.
蹄e聴きo鵬Ed関Ca房on
The Reverend ALEXANDER L. CHAN・
DLER is a minister of the First Congrega-
tional Church in Hackensack, New Jersey.
Out.,,
1931
1925
C.P.E.S.
Mrs. Frederic Faris (MARY E. STEIN-
C.B.A.
ALLAN S. ANGOFF of New York City is
managing editor of ro耽orrou, Magaz読e
B工CKER) of Wheeling, West Virginia, is
published by the Garrett Publications, Inc.,
camping director at Oglebay Institute there.
there.
24
JAMES RUSSELL of Canton is assistant
E.C.C.
manager and underwntlng director for the
John Hancock Life Insurance Co., in Bos・
Hampshire, head of the tra飴c bureau of the
ton.
Mrs. James W. Vose (ROSE ELIZA_
BETH BERG) fomerly of Marblehead, reCent]y accepted a teaching position in the
Police DepartmeIlt’. WaS PrOmOted recently
lo the grade of sergeant by the Police Com-
The Reverend HUGO ALFRED BOUR_
DEAU of Tewksbury is pastor of the Tewksbury Congregational Church there.
Ed榔Ca扇o n
VINCENT SALA, See Ed,28.
」町境Sきc
AUBREY PANKEY言ntemationalIy ac・
CIaimed baritone) reCently presented a con-
Cert at the University of Maine, Orono, in
the Alumni MemoriaI Gymnasium. During
the past year Mr・ Pankey was in Europe
four months, Where he sang in 60 cities, in
Ed棚ca房on
Mr・ EDWIN A. COX, fomerly of Salem,
has moved to Ware, Where he is superintendent of schooIs in that town.
Mrs. Clarence Herbert Arber (MAR_
GARET LEW工A) of Hallowe11, Maine, is
director of Teachers’Registration Bureau
ARTHUR J. SULLIVAN of W。St R。Ⅹ_
Registration of Certified Public Accountants
that he has been granted his certificate to
PraCtice as a Certified Public Accountant.
P.A.L.
BERTHA MAY CORFIELD of Urbana,
Illinois, is a teacher of EngIish and rhetoric
Austra工ia and New Zealand. He has been
been teaching shorthand and typing in the
Junior College Extension Courses (night
SChooI) since last Frebruary (1949) , includ-
ing Summer Session. When she is not
teaching at the high school, Mrs. Bigelow
is secretary for the Girl Scouts and secre_
tary for the District Women,s Auxiliary
(Episcopal), Missionary District of the
Panama Canal Zone.
Rd3g30棚S倍d棚鋤訪0れ
Miss ALICE HARRISON of Boston, eXecutive director of the National Universalist
Youth Fellowship, WaS a recent guest
PreaCher at the Messiah-All SouIs Univer_
Salist Church in Port工and, Ma王ne. Her dis-
CuSSion pertained to youth problems.
also a member of the Bamstable Recrea_
tion Commission.
Grad事4aわ
BERTHA MAY CORFIELD, See P.A.L.
’32.
1935
C.B.A.
WILLARD BLAKE DIK of Wayland is
assistant secretary for the MutuaI Boiler In_
SuranCe Company of Boston. Mr. Dik has
the mixed hobby of coIor photography and
fammg, With two fams, One ten and one・
in Wayland.
GEORGE WILSON FRIER of Lynn is
teaching at Lynn Classical High school.
RUSSELL RICHMOND TAYLOR of
Alexandria, Virginia, is an organization and
methodists analysis specia工ist for the Mi工i-
tary Air Transport Service of the United
States Air Force.
C.L.A.
The Reverend JOSEPH C. HUNT of
Boston has accepted the call of the Hook.
CHARLOTTE PAULINE NEVERS of
Sett Congregational Church to become its
Foxboro’Who was recently promoted to the
paStOr.
rank of lieutenant in the U. S. Navy, is one
PAUL THOMAS of East Greenbush, New
York, PaStOr Of the First Methodist Church,
missioned in the regular navy.
is Conference director of adu工ts in the Troy
among the first group of women to be com_
KENNETH J. REARDON of Durham,
North Carolina, is
Conference.
PrOfessor of drama
and director of the
1933
蹄e掲わ関S Ed榔Ca訪on
C.B.A.
Members of the Quinsh王paug Women,s
Club and their guests recently heard the
Of safety services for the Cape Cod Chapter
Of the American Red Cross. Mr. Tulis is
half acres and the other twenty acres’both
at the University of I工linois there.
teacher in CristobaI, Canal Zone. She has
Quincy is an art teacher at Hingham High
SChool in Hingham.
JOHN R. TULIS of Bamstable is director
bury has rece王ved notice from the Board of
1owlng this he made an eighトWeek tour in
P.A.L.
Mrs. Henry W. Bigelow, JR. (RUTH
MARGUERITE KNAPP) is a substitute
Ed棚Ca虎on
and Placement for the State Department of
Education in Augusta, Maine.
most of the countries of that con亡inent. Fol_
SPOken of as a `Ccitizen of the wor]d.
LEONARD SPANGENBERG, See C.B.A.
28.
NELLIE CHARLOTTE SUZEDELL 。f
COmmercial department of the Norwell High
C.L.A.
C.諺.A.
mission there.
SChool・ The Voses are now making their
home in South Hanover.
1934
CHARLES D・ HURLEY of Nashua, New
Duke Players at
Duke University
there. Mr. Reardon
Mr. and Mrs. BERNARD N. SOLOMON
Reverend JOHN P. FITZSIMMONS of
Of Franklin, New Hampshire言ust m。Ved
PIymouth Congregational Church, Belmont,
into their new house on South Prospect
is also president of
Street there.
the Southwestern
give an original and humorous talk on
“Going A.W・0・L. With Two Chaplains.,,
GEORGE REGINALD TAMINOSIAN o士
Theatre Conference
He related true stories of experiences he
Newton is a labor market economist for the
in co1賞aboration with
and a Catholic priest had on their travels
Massachuset工s Division of EmpIoymen七Se-
the National Theatre
through Africa, the Near East and India.
Curlty.
1少32
Conference.
W. RANDOLPH THORNTON of Nash_
C.L.A.
Miss FRANCES GUERIN of East Bridge-
Vi11e, Temessee, is a sta鮮member of the
C。盤。4。
RANDALL M. SNOW of Racine, Wis-
Water has received an appointment to the
Charge of the administration o=eadership
COnSin, is assistant sales promotion manager
teaching sta任of Bridgewater State Teach_
SChoo]s. Mr. Thomton is also a member of
lor the Walker Manufacturing Company
ers Co]lege. She has been appoin七ed assist-
the Indiana Conference.
there.
ant professor in English.
C.L.A.
Sister Rachel (ELIZABETH HOS.
MER). of Versai11es’Kentucky, is principal
The Reverend ROGER BLANCHARD,
rector of Calvary
Of the Margaret Hall school there. Sis,ter
Episcopal Church in
Helena’a Religious Order in the Episcopal
Co]umbia, Miss。uri,
Church.
Rachel is a member of the Order of St.
亡on,hasbeenap_
Gγad暮(αめ
POinted executive
division of co音llege
ERNEST ALLISON SHEPHERD of
Contoocook, New Hampshire, is executive
director of the New Hampshire Commis-
WOrk on the Episco・
Sion on A賞coholism. He is also chaiman
Pal Church Nationa]
Of the National Conference of State AgenCies on AIcoholism.
Council.
Ed関Ca訪on
ELIZABETH ANDERSON of Buffa工o,
New York, is a lecturer a亡the City CoIlege
Of New York in New York City.
SISTER RUTH, O.S・A.’ Of ArIington
Heights’Who is princ主pal of St. Ame,s
SChooI, a Methodist bolarding school for
fomerly of Brock-
SeCretary for the
department of leadership education in
25
gir工s, rePOrtS tha=he gir工s last year (1949)
PreSented an outdoor perfomance entitled
“St. Francis,
in which the ]ife of the saint
WaS POrtrayed in a series of dance. Besides
しhe general curriculum, the schooI stresses
theatricals and interpretive dancing.
LLOYD E. SMITH of Malden is teaching
at Be工mont High school in Belmont.
Mrs. Frederick V. Simonds (MADELINE
CAROLYN JEANETTE STANN工S of
FRANCES O’BRIEN) of Dorchester taught
Springfield is at present teaching in the
chemistry and served as guidance counselor
Amory Street school・ She is teacher of the
to a11 college preparatory students at Water-
prlmary grades.
town senior High school during her last
years there, before her marriage.
SOULE of Seymour, Connecticut, is in
sor in the business administration depart・
New Hampshire.
C.L.A.
C.L.A. ,35.
WILLIAM J. EARLEY of Boston is a re・
相関§3c
search librarian for the Lever Brothers
LEWIS JOHN HULL, director of music
try minister trying to make his parish bet.
verhill, gaVe a reCent Organ reCital.
ter with his music. Last Lent he organized
1938
fしn interdenominational community chorus
C.B.A.
C.B.A.
ment at New England Co11ege in Henniker’
W. RANDOLPH THORNTON, See
for the First Congregational Church in Ha・
1936
ERNEST N. SEAVEY of Hi11sboro, New
Hampshire, has taken a position as profes-
Grad霊lαきe
ticut. Reverend Soule says he’s just a coun-
and presented Stainer’s αCrucifixion.
1939
C.B.A.
36.
charge of St・ Peter’s Church in Oxford, and
Christ Church in Quaker Fams, Comec-
have given her high praise.
MICHAEL G. THEODORE, See C.B.A.
舶●耶さc
The Reverend WILLIAM EMERY
cert engagements throughout New Endand
Ed暮ICa扇0れ
Grad関aわ
Company in Cambridge.
Miss EVエNIKE VLAMIS, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Athas Vlamis of Haverhill,
recently married NICHOLAS D. HARRIS,
son of Mrs. Katherine HaralambopouIos
and the late James Haralambopoulos also
of Haverhill.
A new accounting service business has recently been opened at South Portland,
Maine, by GEORGE A. BRACKETT. He is
Ed榔Cα房0れ
Lieutenant Colonel THOMAS EDWARD
GURNETT, U.S.A.F., Of Bethesda, Mary-
featuring all types of
Mr. Charles Augustine of Hamden, Con-
bookkeeping and ac-
necticut, has amounced the engagement of
land, is at present working toward his doc-
counting services,
torate degree in business administration at
including taxes, bill-
WILLIAM OSBORNE, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
the University of Maryland・ He recently
ings, CaSh and ex-
C. John Osbome of Brockton and Cordova,
pense analysis and
accounts receivable
Alaska. Miss Augustine is a manager of a
store in Bridgeport, Comecticut. Mr. Os-
flew around the world (40,000 miles in 40
days) on a management survey of the U.S・
Navy,s installations, On the sta鯖of Vice
and payable of
Admiral Robert B. Camey. He conferred
month-end and year-
w主th representatives of the Westem Union
end statements. Mr.
States, the president of Turkey, the king of
Arabia, the govemor of Ceylon and General
Douglas MacArthur.
ALBERT SHIFF of Malden is supervisor
and salesman for the Eastem Auto Parts
his daughter, Am Augustine’tO RALPH
bome is superintendent of schooIs in Plain-
field, Comecticut.
PHYLLIS ROBERTS, See Ed’49.
Brackett is a mem・
Mr. and Mrs. Amos G. Wheeler of Read・
ber of the National
Association of Cost Accountants and the
王ng have recently announced the engagement
of their daughter, MILDRED ELEANOR
Portland Junior Chamber of Commerce.
WHEELER, tO Her-
GEORGE H. HUBAN of Middlebury,
bert Earle Flanders,
Co., Inc., there.
Vermont言s director of publications and
son of Mr. and Mrs.
MICHAEL G. THEODORE of Jamaica
Plain is assistant manager of the Hotel
Minerva in Boston.
publicity at Middlebury College there. Mr・
Harold H. Flanders
Huban is also editor of the Middlebury
of Monmouth. Miss
Wheeler is on the
alumni magazine.
The engagement of Miss JULIA ELIZA・
BETH CLEARY, daughter of the late Mrs.
Julia Cleary of East Braintree, tO Francis
Cole 。f Milton was announced recently at a
sta鱒of the Augusta
Ed事ICa房0れ
P.A.L.
State Hospital as
PERRY S. S. JACKSON, fomer Scout
psychiatric aid・ Mr.
Executive of Pittsfield, is now the new
Flanders is a grad・
execuもive of the Katahdin Council in E11s-
uate of the NewEng・
worth, Maine.
family tea by her sister, Mrs. Joseph A. Car-
JOHN A. WHITEHEAD, SuPerintendent
roll of Weymouth. Miss Cleary is empIoyed
of schooIs in Duxbury, WaS reCentIy elected
as an executive secretary of the John Han-
to the position of superintendent of schooIs
cock Life Insurance Company, Boston・ Mr・
in Canton.
Cole is an assistant manager for the Quincy
branch of the John Hancock Life Insurance
Company.
1937
C.B.A.
P.A.L.
Miss LOUISE LILLIAN MOSESSIAN of
Medford is a teacher in the business department at Medford High schoo音l.
1and Institute ofEm.
balming.
Grad霊laめ
Mr. JAMES A. PATTERSON of Reading
is teaching Advanced Accounting Problems
in the Evening Division at Northeastem
U niver si士y.
P.A.L.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Chisholm (WILMA QUARMBY), Of Belmont have an-
相関sわ
Marine Lieutenant CoIonel PARKER R.
COLMER of Brook-
Miss EDITH STERNS, also a faculty mem_
line is currently at-
ber of the College of
tending the Senior
Music, reCently pre・
Course, Amphibious
sented a piano re_
Warfare School, at
cital in the Univer-
Mr. PHエLIP ROBINSON, Secretary, 2121
sity,s Little Theatre
Lincoln Road N.E., Washingto音n, D. C., C/o
One of Boston’s recognized musicians,
the Marine Corps
nounced the birth of their first child, a
school in Quantico,
in Boston. Miss
Virginia.
Stems, Who gave the
same recital in Times
Hall, New York, On
December 12, Chose
“Chaconne in D-
C.L.A.
RAYMOND H. WOODMAN of Newbury
Minor,, by BachBusoni to open her program, and cIosed it
is director of guidance at Brookline High
school. He was recently heard on a radio
with the `鯛ungarian Rhapsody, No. 13’
broadcast in an interview with the students
mond Havens, Robert Casadesus, and Alfredo Fondecaro. Reviews of her many con-
of that school.
by
Liszt. Miss Stems has studied with Ray-
26
daughter, bom November 5, 1949.
1 940
C.B.A.
Mrs. E. Widmayer.
The marriage of
Miss Pearl Georgia
Ripley, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs.Robert
W. Ripley of South
Boston, and ALLEN
W HEEL O CK
CLOUGH, SOn Of
Mrs. Ruth H. CIough
of Greenwood, tOOk
place recently at the
home of the bride’s parents. The fomer
Miss Ripley is an export secretary with the
Godfrey L. Cabot Company, Boston. Mr.
▼C]ough is an accountant with the Industrial
largest advertising agency, the J. Walter
Thompson Company of New York City. MI..
Stone is also a consultant to the U. S. Treas_
ury Depar工ment on bond advert工S工ng.
Plan, Inc., Of Boston・ After their trip to
Virginia’ Pennsylvania and Washington,
D. C., the couple will be at home in Green.
wood.
Miss Nancy B. Davis, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Abraham Davis of Dorchester, became
the recent bride of NATHAN I. RASER of
Scituate. Mrs. Raser is a graduate of the
C.P.E.S.
MARION E. STALLWOOD, See Ed,49.
E.C.C.
Hickock Secretarial school and is emp量oyed
in Boston・ Mr・ Raser is manager of the
Scituate Supply Company in Scituate Harbor.
At a recent double ring ceremony solemn-
C.L.A.
 ̄ized in the Blessed Sacrament Church, Ja ̄maica Plain, Miss Doris C. Kinahan, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. George Kinahan of Jamaica Plain, became the bride of Mr. CARL
 ̄L. RECCO, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John Recco
Of AubumdaIe. Mrs. Recco attended Bur_
rdett College.
Miss BESSIE ARGUS, Secretary, 29 Bar書-
lett Crescent, Brookline, Massachusetts.
DONALD E. HURFORD of Plymouth reCentIy joined the edito音rial sta鮮of the Enieγ_
prise, a Weekly newspaper in Fa賞mouth. Mr.
Hurford retumed to Falmouth fr。m New
York, Where he has been doing editing and
Ed棚ca訪on
M. MARCUS KILEY of Springfield, for
many years prmCipal of Techn主cal High
SChool, WaS reCentIy named assistant super・
intendent by the SchooI Committee and
Stands a possibility for the post of superintendent of schoo工s which wilI be relin_
quished by Alden H. Blankship.
WILMA QUARMBY, See PAL,39.
ELLEN MARIE SHEA of Wallingford,
Connecticut言s dean at the Lyman Hall
High school there.
Gradす`aわ
JOSEPH H. GOLEMME of Rockland has
been appo主nted an instructor in the Evemng
Division of Northeastem University.
Dr. MACK B. STOKES, fomerly of LinCOIntown’North Caro工ina, is teaching in the
SchooI of TheoIogy at Emory University in
Atlanta, Georgia.
research for book publishers. Mr. Hurford
WaS for釘teen months in the editoriaI de_
Partment of Funk & Wagna11s in New York.
Dr. FRANCIS G. WALETT of Saugus
has been instructor in history at CLA since
1945.
P九γ鵬A耽れe Jo音九職部0れ, dα関g加er of
Wαrγen J. Jo心耶めれ,A,42, αnd Idα La職d
Jo九ns書on, e肌A書名4, S肌桝es 撮,九の she
庇のrS Sheおmの訪gめC諒的訪れα互Ohわ,
訪ere九er dadか弱夢be切れpめγed α§ α
Hduca書きon
Mr・ WALTER RUDZIAK, Secretary,
Sαわs桝αn f。r拐e Wi棚の耽Cαγ柁音r Cの耽。
p αれγ●
Wareham Street, MiddIeboro, Massachusetts.
CHARLES M. DOHERTY of Medford is
ties within the Group Sa工es department and
PreSident of the Plan E association there.
Wi11 superv王se both the trammg and the
Cemed with Group Pension SaIes activi_
BERTHA ELIZABETH JOHNSTON of
OPeration of Group Pension SaIes persomel
Gainsville, FIorida, is supervIS工ng nurSe in
in the field. He will also continue to be
the Atachua County hea皿department.
directly engaged in Pension Sales activities.
ROBERT EDWARD SHEAHAN of Rock_
POrt is with the New England Te置ephone &
Telegraph Co., there.
A son, Robert Stanley, WaS bom to
Reverend and Mrs. STANLEY E. SMITH
Of Leonardville, New
Yo音rk, November 19,
C.L.A.
Mrs. G. S. DEWSNAP ofEast Natick was
recently granted a license to conduct a day
nursery at her home there.
C.P.E.S.
The wedding of Richard Ton主s, SOn Of
1941
1949, in St. E量iza-
C.B.A.
beth’s Hospltal in
Mrs. Frank A. Tonis of Brockton and Miss
MARY CATHERINE WINNE of Malden
WHITLEY AUSTIN CUMMINGS, Jr.,
Of Cambridge, is an insurance salesman for
the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance
Co., in Boston.
Utica. Their first
書ook pIace recently in Malden. Mrs. Tonis
SOn, David Les]ie, is
four years old. Rev-
ied at this University. Mr. Tonis has stud_
erend Smith is pas・
ied a=he University of Virginia.
tor of the Leo音nard_
The engagement of Miss Barbara June
Betts to Mr. KENNETH JOHN GARLAND
ville and Brookfield
Methodist Churches.
Of Belmont has been amounced by her par・
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Betts of Weston.
SuPer-Mare, Somerset? Eng寒and. Miss Betts,
Who makes her home with Mr. and Mrs.
C.B.A.
CLARENCE H. DAVIS of Mil書on is a
from House in the Pines Junior College in
Sales trainee’for the Signode SteeI Strap-
Nor書on.
Pmg Co., in Boston.
DUNCAN JOHN MACLENNAN of St。ne。
frey L. Cabot, Inc., in Boston.
HELEN G. MOYLAN of Cambridge was
G γad事la軍e
LOUIS SANDFORD GOODMAN of Kew
Gardens, New York言s an audio-Visual con_
1942
田mil Komsand of Brookline, WaS graduated
ham is an administrative assistant for God_
graduated from Bates Colユege and has stud-
ARCHIE CAMPBELL SMILES of Ja_
maica P工ain is assistant bank examiner for
the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
ARTHUR J. SULLIVAN, See Ed,32.
recently appointed dean of women at Edge-
ALBERT J. TAHMOUSH, Who is with
Sultant and executive director of Film Re_
SearCh Associates in New York City.
RAYMOND W. VANDERWYK of Wal_
tham is a teacher in bioIogy at the MassaChusetts Co11ege of Phamacy.
柑棚sわ
BERNARD GOLDSTEIN of Chelsea has
been appointed musical director of Temp工e
Emmanue量there. Mr. Goldstein is also ac_
tively engaged in wrltmg and arranglng
music and the teaching of piano.
WOOd Junior Co工lege
the Comecticut Gen_
in Barrington, Rhode
eral Life Insurance
N暮l rS耽g
IsIand, Where she
Company, Hartford,
has been head of the
SeCretarial depart-
Connecticut, WaS reCently transferred
Miss MARJORIE B. MEISNER of Peaks
Island, Portland, Maine, Who recentIy re-
ment for the past
from its Chicago
this past summer’Visiting England, Scotland,
three years.
branch o鯖ce to the
Norway, and spent several days in Stock-
home o鯖ce sta紐of
holm, Sweden, attending the Intemational
the Group Sales de・
Partment. Mr. Tah.
Congress of Nurses. From Sweden Miss
Meisner flew to New York and settled in her
moush will be con。
new home on Peaks Island.
JOSEPH STONE
Of Scarsdale, New
York,is a copywriter
for the world,s
27
tumed to the United States, tOured Europe
1943
now empIoyed in the United States Health
SON) of Dedham is a bookkeeper for the
C.B.A.
Service in Washington. Mr. Lehman is em・
Johnson Motor Sales, Inc., in Norwood・
Mr. and Mrs. BERNARD PLOTKIN of
Newton Centre have recently announced the
birth of a son, Steven Mark, bom December
16, 1948.
BALLARD BARTLETT STORY of Cape
Elizabeth, Maine言s an executive of the
Maine Specialty Company in Portland・
C.L.A.
Miss NANCY ANN PATRIQUIN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John N. Patriquin of
pIoyed by Leo Rocca’Inc.’Of Washington・
Mrs. Mario R. Stracqualursi (JENNIE C.
Mrs. Bruce Meulendyke (RUTH MU-
BONANNO) of Dorchester has been a ste-
RIEL CHADSEY) of Rochester, New York,
is a peychoIogist a=he Rochester Guidance
nographer with the John Hancock Mutual
Life Insurance Company for the past three
and one-half years. Her husband, Who re-
Center.
Grαd棚aきe
DALE E. STRONG of Mt. Valley, Iowa,
cently transferred缶om Northeastem Uni-
versity, is studying Insurance and Banking
at the College of Business Administration・
pastor of the First Methodist Church there’
1945
is president of the Iowa District Conference
C.B.A.
of the Board of Education.
1 944
GIoucester, has become the bride of John
C.歴.A.
Lattimer Bowen, Jr., SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. William P. Dutemple of
Whitinsville have amounced the engage-
John L. Bowen of Astoria, New York. A
double ring ceremony was perfomed a=he
JOSEPH L. WEIDER of Mattapan re-
ment of their daughter, Virginia Dutempleク
cently took for his bride Miss M. Bemice
to pHエLIP L. DENNETT, SOn Of Mr. and
rectory of the Holy Rosary Church in Houstcm Texas. Mr. Bowen, Who音a亡tended New
Cody of West Quincy. The bride is a graduate of the Chandler School in Boston. Mr.
York University, is employed by the Na-
Weider is a public accountant・ After their
tional Biscuit Company. The couple are
trlP tO Sea Island, Georgia’the couple plan
making their home in Houston, Texas.
RICHARD A. SILVER of Brookline is a
to live in West Quincy.
E.C.C.
BERNARD FRANCIS VALENTE of
Franklin is o飾ce manager and accountant
for the National Wadding Co., Inc., there.
Connecticut, became the recent bride of Mr・
C.P.E.S.
Miss CYNTHIA KELLEM, Secretary, 2l
Oldfields Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Ross of Shrews-
uate of Syracue University, is a landscape
architect.
bury have announced the engagement of
Ed関Ca虎0れ
Mrs. RoしSS’s daughter, Miss SALLY ANNE
FLETCHER, tO Robert L. He11ens’SO音n Of
血e Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Clarence E. He11ens,
a工so of Shrewsbury. Miss Fletcher is a
訪う,肋加s‡のき音蘭abo妨C九r轟肌αS,’’競れγ
B掘e D訪れne D榔fr偽れe, Se○肋Sめbe
§αγれg. S九e香sれe dの職g加er of Ednα
Bo撮dγeのす` D榔fresne, A’44.
phia, Where Mr・ Mansh is sales manager of
the Keystone Coat and Apron Manufacturing Corp., and the Gold-Tex Fabrics Corp.
He was graduated from Westem Maryland
College and did graduate work at the Universi軍y of Maryland.
The marriage of two fomer Winchester
Miss Rita R. DoIce, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Domenic A. DoIce of East Providence,
Providence.
Morton Helbraun of Nyack, New York, SOn
of Mr. and Mrs. Max Helbraun of Brooklyn,
New York. Mr. Helbraun, Who is a grad-
Canada the couple wi11 reside in Philadel・
sta鱒of the Winchester Public Library.
JOSEPH A. NOTARANTONIO, SOn Of Mrand Mrs. Joseph B. Notarantonio of North
Miss PHYLLIS LEVIN, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Elias A. Levin of West Hartford,
con House in Brookline. After ltheir trlP tO
Skidmolre College and is a member of the
Rhode Island, has become engaged to]
sta鮮personnel assistant for the Veterans
Administration in Bo-StOn.
Miss DOROTHY R. CARROLL of Lynn,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carro11 of
West Medway, and Sidney Z. Mansh, SOn Of
Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Mansh of Hagerstown,
Maryland, Were reCently married at the Bea-
Mrs. Homer Dennett of South Portland,
Maine. Miss Dutemple is a graduate of
C.L.A.
ELIZABEしTH F. CONLEY of Sanford,
Maine, is teaching at the Emerson SChool
physical therapist at Worcester State Hospital・ She is the daughter of the late Ray-
mond B. Fletcher. Mr. Hellens, Whose father is pastor of the First CongregationaI
Church, Shrewsbury, is a graduate of Brown
University. At present he is a research
assistan七in the physics department of Yale
University in New Haven, Comecticut・
t.here. Her subject is U. S. history for the
seventh and eighth grades.
C.P.E.S.
folks, Miss DOROTHY ELIZABETH GRIF・
Educa扇on
Miss POLLYANNA ANDEM, Secretaryク
23 Oak Road, Mil工on 87, Massachusetts.
FITH and Mr. Thomas Wal亡on Tucker, WaS
Miss NANCY J. KING o上Leonia, New
solemnized a=he New Hope Baptish Church
Jersey, has been appointed acting profes-
JOHN J. BANE of Cambridge has been
named to coach the Catholic High basket-
in Winchester. Mrs. Tucker is the daughter
sional worker for the Haverhill Girl Scout
ball team in Malden. Coach Bane, besides
of Mr. and Mrs. Hezekiah Gri綿th, nOW Of
Council.
teaching school in Charlestown, is an active
member of the New England Association of
Nursery Training SchooI of Cambridge Com-
Mr. and Mrs. R. BRUCE SCHNEIDER
of Westwood, New Jersey, have amounced
the birth ofa son, Leonard Douglas. Mrs.
munity Center. Mr・ Tucker is empIoyed by
Schneider is the former Mario音n Diane Han-
West Medford. Mr. Tucker is also of West
Medford. The bride is director of the
the Panther Pancho Rubber Co. They are
making their home in North Cambridge.
Footba11 O鯖cials and the Eastem Hockey
O鯖cials.
Mr. and Mrs. HAROLD HERSHF工ELD
of Chelmsford have announced the birth of
Ed耽ca訪0れ
Mrs. Jack Guyer (LOUISE SANTO-
Miss PHYLL工S MITCHELL, Secretary,
SUOSSO) of Rye, New York, is teaching at
P. O. Box No. l, North Cohasset, Massachu・
the Mamaroneck Avenue school in White
SettS.
a son, Seth Martin・ Mr・ Hershfield is prln-
cipal of the Cameron school in Forge Village.
SARAH JONES, See Ed’49.
1ege Woman,s Club of White Plains and the
mont, has joined the staff of the Vermont
Mrs. T. Douglas O. Stevenson (PRISCILLA BERRY) has retumed to Maine to
Teachers’Bowling League.
Agricul亡ural Experiment Station as assistant
]ive on a poultry farm there.
Miss MARGARET ANDERSON HUB"
BARD, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William
nutritionisも. Miss Merrow was formerly re-
Plains. She is also active in both the Col-
D. Hubbard of Brattleboro, Vemont, became the recent bride of George M. Leh・
man, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Lehman of
Washington, D. C., in a ceremony perfomed
in the chapel of the Centre Congregational
Church there. The former Miss Hubbard is
SUSAN B. MERROW of Burlington, Ver・
search associate with the College of Medicine, University of Vemont・
Grad榔a書e
FRANCIS G. WALETT, See CLA’4」.
P.A.L.
Mrs. Arthur P. Alユen (BARBARA JOHN・
28
Grad暮laめ
STEWART ANDERSON recently presented his tenting-American adventure,
“15,000 Miles in a Modem Covered Wagon’,,
at the Memorial Ha11, City library in Lowell.
It was the third lecture of the Parker・
Lectur6二City Library Cooperative series.
NANCY ANN PATRIQUIN, See CLA,43.
Soc香a自Wo γた
MILDRED ROBLIN of Brookline is
Training Supervisor of the University’s
Schoo工of Social Work s工udents in the Mas_
SaChusetts Memorial HospitaIs’ Psychoso-
and Mrs. David Harfield of Everett, became
Miss DORIS R. TROCCHI, Who has been
lhe recent bride of CARL S. DUBIN, SOn Of
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Dubin of Worcester.
in charge of publicity for the 1949-50 Brock_
ton Community Chest drive, reCently ac-
The ceremony took place at the Beacon
CePted a position as editorial assistant at the
House in Brookline. The fomer Miss Har_
field is a graduate of Mary Brooks Junior
College.
matic Clinic.
1946
C.B.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Verdi C. McFarland of San_
University,s bureau of publicity. Her new
duties include supervision of the staff of student reporters, COVe音rmg Student activities
Temple Emeth, Chestnut Hill, WaS the
SCene for the recent marriage of Miss BERNICE GOLDMAN, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Goldman of Brookline, tO
throughout the University and assisting in
COOrdination of the bureau’s news service to
Iocal’State’and national publications.
C.L.A.
Jord, Ma主ne, have amounced the engage-
EDWARD COHEN, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
ment of their daughter, Joyce EIaine McFarland, tO LARRY ELGART, SOn Of Mrs.
Benjamin Cohen of Chestnut Hill. Upon
FRANCES HORGAN BARNARD of
their retum from Miami, FIorida, the couple
Dorchester is now studying for a doc亡orate
Rena Elgart of Chelsea. Miss McFar工and is
W主ll make their home音in Brighton. Mr.
attending Curry College in Boston. Mr.
Cohen is a dealer in Chinese foods.
degree a=he University.
Miss BRENDA ERICSON, dramatic
SHAFFIE K. HAMSY, nationally promi-
reader and monoIogist, reCently entertained
Ilent hotel executive and fomer managing
members of St. Joseph’s Guild a=heir 20th
and Mrs. Wi11iam Horace of Boston, became
director of the Hotel Touraine, has been
named manager of the Hotel Avery in Bos-
Hotel in Greenfield・ Miss Ericson has taught
the recent bride of Dr・ Robert Siegel, SOn Of
ton.
VOice and diction a=he Cain Park Theatre
Elgart is studying for his mas工er,s degree
there also.
Miss AILEEN HORACE, daughter of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Max Seigel also of Boston.
Ed霊`Ca扇0れ
Sta任of St. Luke’s Hospital・ Dr・ Siegel was
graduated from Tufts College and Laval
University.
C.L.A.
Mr. and Mrs. George Camariato of West
Roxbury have announced the engagement of
their daughter, VINCENTA ANNA, tO
Robert Leon Gage, SOn Of the late Leon and
FIorence Gage of Strong, Maine. Miss Cannariato is a teacher at Strong High school.
Mr. Gage is empIoyed by the Forster Ma皿-
facturing Company.
Mrs. Panos Gineres of Lowell has an_
nounced the marriage of her daughter,
AURA P. G工NERES, tO Linvi11 F. Watson
in Cleveland, Ohio’and has also played in
Summer StOCk.
After a trip to Canada’Dr・ and Mrs. Siegel
Wil=ive in New Bedford, Where he is on the
anniversary dinner held at the Weldon
St. Am’s Church in Wo11aston was the
Setting for the wedding of Miss MARY
AGNES CASEY, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas M. Casey of Wollaston, tO Daniel
Joseph Sullivan, SOn Of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Denis J. Sullivan of Charlestown. Mr.
Sullivan is a graduate of Bos亡on Col工ege and
is now attending Tufts Dental College.
MARIE COTE, See Ed,49.
Mrs. Daniel Davis (MARJORIE T.
MILAZZO) of New London, Connecticut, is
a reading consultant and director of testing
in the New London public schooIs.
The Community Church in Osterville was
the scene for the recent wedding of Miss
EDITH L. NORDLING, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. G. A. Nordling of Brockton, and
JANE EDNA STEWART of New York
City, formerly a stewardess for the AmeriCan Airlines, is now an interior decorator for
the James McCreery Co. of New York City.
Mrs. Charles W. Tozier (VIRGINIA
TARR) of Winchester, Who is secretary to
the president of the Massachusetts Gear &
TooI Company in Wobum, SPen=en Weeks
touring Europe in the summer of 1948, Visit-
1ng England, Scotland, Holland, Belgium,
France, Switzerland and I亡aly.
C.P.E.S.
Mr. and Mrs. Gera量d F. Bracken of Water_
town have announced the engagement of
lheir daughter, JEAN ANN BRACKEN 。f
Glens Fa工ls, New York, tO Edward A. Dur-
Falls, and the late Mrs. Durling. Miss
gregational Church in Lowell. Mr. Watson,
Frederick D. Wetherbee, SOn Of the late Mr.
and Mrs. John D. Wetherbee of Osterville.
CLAIRE W. TORREY of Westminster,
Who studied a=he Univers王ty of Pemsylva-
Vemont’is an English teacher at Spring-
ical education at St. Mary’s Academy in
ma, is an instructor in anthropoIogy at this
field High school in Springfield, Vemon上
Of Phi]adelphia, Pennsylvania. The wedding
took place in the Moum Vemon S工reet Con_
University. The couple will reside in Boston.
舶棚$5c
With a短something old,,, an exquisite lace
DONALD L. SANFORD is minister of
handkerchief carried by her grandmother at
music a=he Broad Street Methodist Church
her wedding 50 years ago, Miss JEAN T.
MOWER, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo T.
Mower of Lowell, became the recent bride
Of Richard M. Sweeney of Westboro, SOn Of
Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Sweeney of Kittery,
Maine. Mr. Sweeney is a graduate of the
in Kingsport, Tennessee.
1947
C.B.A.
Mrs. PETER LAMANA, Secretary, 1311
East 53rd Street, Chicago 15, Illinois.
1ing, SOn Of Albert T. Durling of Hudson
Bracken is an instructor in health and physGlens Fa11s. Mr・ Durling is engaged in the
Photography business.
Miss ROSAMUNDE L. CIANFARANI,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Amando F. Cianfarani of Providence, Rhode Island, has beCOme engaged to Mr. JOSEPH G. D’ER_
RICO, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John F. D’Errico
Of Edgewood, Rhode Is工and.
CLASS OF 1947 - REUNION IN 1952
Mrs. WALTER H. RENEAR
is now empIoyed as a'Sales engineer with
DAVID K. ALLEN of Framingham is on
the teaching staff of the Gaugh SchooI of
the Bay State Abrasive Company in West-
Business in Springfield.
Hello ’47ers :
boro.
Word has been received that a son was
bom to Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS P. BOYLE
from so many of you during the past few
On Oc亡ober 28, 1949.
Weeks’but what abou=he other 50 per cent
Massachusetts Institute of TechnoIogy and
CHARLES JOSEPH SIEGEL of Dor_
Chester is a public accountant with the fim
taking a trammg COurSe at the Library of
Miss Sybil Manelis, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Mane]is of New Bedford, reCent]y married SAUL E. FREED, SOn Of Mr.
Congress in Washington, D. C.
and Mrs. Harry Freed of Fa工l River.
Of Hamburger and Weinrebe in Boston.
ROBERT B. SLOCUM of Brockton is
RODOLPH H. TURCOTTE of South Bil_
1erica is a resident in psychiatry a=he Veterans Administration Hospital in Bedford.
C.P.E.S.
Mrs. Barbara WinsIow Buker (McLETCHIE) recently moved to Reeds Ferry,
New Hampshire, Where her husband and his
father have a poultry fam.
E.C.C.
Miss Barbara H. Harfield, daughter of Mr.
Vineyard Haven, Massachuse耽s
Back again and it was wonderful to hear
Of our class? I know many of you aren,t
SO Very far away’but maybe my question-
naire never reached you. I am listing the
misslng PeOPle in the hopes that if you
ALAN EUGENE GOLDSMITH ofAllston
know of their whereabouts, yOu Will drop
is an advertlSmg COPyWriter for R. H.
me a line. As their questionnaires were
White’s in Boston.
no書retumed, I am assuming we either do
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton F. Rines of Gorham,
Maine, reCently announced the engagement
they are not interested in the Bulletin. Un-
Of their daughter, ANNA E. RINES of Bos"
not have their correct addresses, Or else
1ess I leam of their whereabou幅before the
ton, tO Eugene S. Martin, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. HaI.ry E. Martin of Portland, Maine.
next Bulletin, they will be dropped from our
Mr. Martin is a graduate of the Wharton
School of Finance and Commerce, Univer-
Margaret Alkins Newill, Tina Anderson
Schober, Phyllis Baer Brindis, Mary Berto-
Slty Of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
1et Adams, Jean Bracken, Roberta Breman,
29
mai工ing list. Here are our lost sou工s! !
Thereareother
Yvome Brustein Andersoln, Marcia Buddish
Zucker, Agnes Bullard Maglin, Ruthie Car-
clubs functioning
roll, Audrey Chambless, Rosamunde Cian-
but addresses of o鯖-
farani, Margaret Clark, Marion Conley,
cers are not avail-
Dorothy Coolican, Lucille Comacchia, Theresa Doda, Barbara Earl, Arlene Eisner,
able. Are there sev-
sey. Ann’s present occupation is being the
eral Sargenters in
mother of her seven months, old daughter,
Marianna Gillam, Selma Gordon, Shirley
your locality? Why
Deborah. Television is her hobby. Am
Green Steiman, Peggy Greenwood, Joan
no章 form a club?
writes, “We spen=he summer at Lake Aト
Gri鯖n, Jeanne Hammonds, Be耽y Jane Hill
Anne Kean, Of College of Notre Dame,
titask with my folks. Anne Woodman came
胸C脚部 謹謹書
also met Ruth Akabas recently and she sent
Fister, Gladys Jensenius, Mary Johnston,
Janet Kavanaugh, Virginia Kimball, Evelyn
places visited. Peg also says HeIen Kelos is
married and living in DeIaware.
ANN CHAPIN (Mrs Willard S. Little,
Jr.), 399 Lincoln Avenue, Orange, New Jer-
for a week and we had a grand time.” Am
Kirrane, Selma Wherlin Klass, Peg Lothrop,
Eileen McCarthy Donaghey, Mary McDonnell, Mary Meola Barker, Eleanor Packard
any infomation you would like.
Now here is the news of our classmates
writes that Lucille is married with the last
Ryan, Alberta Pierce, Anna Ratto, Eileen
in our創es at this date:
name of Smith now and lthat she has bought
her regards to the cIass・
LUCILLE CORNACHIA. Marion Dick
Reardon, Carolyn Sargent Slocum, Barbara
BARBARA ALLAN, 14 Shepley Street,
Skimer, Dolly Smith Adams, Mary Somes,
Aubum, Maine. Billie is teaching in the
Amy Spears, Ruth Taylor, Rose Terry,
same school again after a summer at camp
FLORENCE S. CUSHエNG, 77 Queen
Charlotte Thompson, Ame Wo音O音dman Cox・
and sounds very busy. She was my maid of
Street, Lowell, Massachusetts. FIo is a phys-
honor last June on the big day. Barbara has
ical therapist a=he Lowe11 General Hospl・
just bought a new Crosley sedan.
tal and spent her vacations and weekends
I was very pleased to have many of you
ask for information regarding your financial
BECKY ALLEN RENEAR, Vineyard
a new home which she is busy fumishing.
How about it, LucilIe?
this summer at lake and beach resorts.
status in the Sargent Alumnae Association
and in the class. Our representation in the
S.A.A. is very, Very POOr, about 18 per cent
Haven, Massachusetts・ Please don,t forget
MAR工ON DICK (Mrs. Fred Quist), 348
that address! I’m teaching again this year
Locust Avenue, Amsterdam, New York.
in fact, and right now with our co11ege
and managing ltO keep rather busy with a
Dick writes she is teaching in the Amster・
growmg, developing and changlng SO raPid-
new house, dog, and last but not least, hus・
dam Elementary School and her hobby is
1y, they need our support. Here is the honor
band. Lots of fun, though.
housework. (How many of us agree!) Blue
roll with dates of explration:
Expires in the /all ’49: Marie Mi11er,
Charlotte Thompson, Marita Meola, Amy
Spears; Spr脇g ’50: Patricia Bartlett, Mar-
tha Eldridge Butterworth;鋤mmer ’50:
Kanta Lou McKennon, Margaret Holman
Finbon, Marcia Buddish Zucker; /al1 50:
Marie Farre11.
The membership of the following people
expired with the last issue of the Quarterly
which was summer ’49: Margaret Clark,
Margaret Carroll Moon, Tina Anderson
Schober, Ru書h E. Taylor, Elizabeth Zand
Kelleman, Yvonne Anderson, Ruth Gibney,
Barbara Caplan Keiter.
If you are not on the list, how about a
check for $4.00 (紳.00 for S.A.A. and糾.00
for the class), Payable to Mrs. C. P. McHugh, 310 Spring Avenue, Ridgewood, New
Jersey.
For those still in lthe professional field,
you know Sargent has opened its own Placement Bureau, Which is an added reason for
DORYCE ARNDT, Gould Academy,
ribbons, gOld stars and all honors go to
Bethe量, Maine. “I have a super position ‥ ・
Marion for the very newsy letter she sent
almost ideal,
of her own free wi11! ! Here are excerpltS:
writes Dutch. She biked to
Montreal this summer, through four states
and Quebec in two weeks and is planning a
“We saw Edie Carpenter this summer. Gail,
longer trip next summer.
cutest girls I have ever seen.Edie is丘ne
her daughter, is a litt賞e doll, One Of the
PATRIC工A ANN BARTLETT, Veterans’
and hasn’t changed a bit. This summer I
Home and Hospital, Rocky Hill, Connecti-
have done up about鍋y-five quarts of di11
cut. pat is physical theraplSt in a deparト
pickles,暁n Pints of beets, 8 pints of car-
ment to rehabilitate the chronica11y i11. She
rots and I just bought a bushel of tomatoes
has been busy traveling in her ’46 Nash.
to put up. Wonders will never cease.
PATRICIA BOHM (Mrs. Elliot L.
Smith), 45 Billings Street, West Roxbury,
Massachusetts. Pat is head of the physical
bitious gal!
education department for Lesley College and
you will all be as pleased as I was to hear
the Lesley Ellis (private) school・ She has
of the birth of Judy’s son, John Edwards,
swapped her伍baby
Crosley for a Plymouth.
Last summer was spent between Lesley and
Hyde Park Y.W.C.A.
Am・
JUDY DONOHUE (Mrs. John Knorr),
515 Parkside Drive, Peoria, Illinois. I know
age two months. Congratulations, Judy.
They are planning to live in LOuisville,
Kentucky.
MAR工ON BRACKETT, 123 Cherry
MARTHA ELDRIDGE (Mrs. Howard J.
Street, Gardner, Massachusetts. Brac is di-
Butterworth), 15B Ve書Ville, Oxford, Ohio.
rector of physical education in Gardner and
Marty was married on June 4, 1949. Con-
has
gratulations and best wishes. She is phys-
bought an old car and am busy keep-
ing llt gOmg・
ical therapist at Fort Hamilton Hospital’
not forgetting your alma mater. For those
DOROTHY CADARIO (Mrs. Ronald M.
of us in the domestic field, it’s always nice
Jones), 103 Humewell Avenue, Newton,
and Middletown Hospital. Marty lived in
Aurora this summer and traveled to Wash-
to keep in touch.
Massachuse耽s. Dottie was a αlost soul” for
ington in September. GIoria Peck Hadley,
Many of you I know are ac.tive in local
many bu11etins and we are very glad to have
husband and parents went to her wedding
Sargent Clubs, and from reports, enJOy
her back in the fold. She was married to
in June and Peckie was matron of honor.
them immensely. If you are not already a
Ronald Jo音neS, a Student at Boston Univer-
member and are interested in JOlmng One
sity - C.B.A. on December 30’1948. She
of these, here are the people to contact:
is now Iooking for a job near Newton and
New York City, Joan Wright, 1719 Questin
is創Iing ln time as an artist’s model. Dottie
Road, Brooklyn; Baltimore, Elizabelth Ter-
saw Marcia Buddish and her husband in
ry, 3526 Meadowside Road, Bal工imore;
New York City.
Detroit, Mrs. Conrad Speck, 2288 Haggerty
BARBARA CAPLAN (Mrs. Irving J.
Highway, Walled Lake, Michigan; Boston,
Mrs. Prisci11a White, Sargent Co11ege, Cam-
Massachusetts. Barbara,s daughter, Leslie
bridge; Philadelphia, Susan Dawkins Clay-
Fay, is five months old and very sweet I’ve
Keiter), 237 St. Paul Street, Bro。kline,
Pemsylvania; Springfield, Am Ratto, 57
heard. Barbara says Leslie is her full-time
hobby. She also mentioned seeing FIo
High Street, C/o Mrs. Mower; Comecticut,
Cushing often.
Lorraine Caswell, Darien High School,
PEGGY CARROLL (Mrs. Howard T.
Moon), Hollywood, Maryland. Peg is spending her third year at Great Mi11s High
ton, l18 Homestead Road, Sta鱒ord Wayne,
Darien; Rochester, Dorothy Marks, 1026
Howard Street; Hackensack, Margaret
Barton, 9 Meade Avenue, Passaic, New
Jersey.
School. Her summer was spent traveling,
Chattanooga and Quebec being among the
30
EVELYN FARLEY, 156 Rockwe11 Ave・
nue, Plainvi11e, Connecticut. Lyn is physical
education director at Plainville High and
tennis, knitting and bridge are her hobbies.
MARIE FERRELL, 155 Hi11side Road,
Watertown, Massachusetts. Mif has been
teaching at St. Joseph Co11ege in West
Hartford, Connecticut, Since graduation.
She has seen many of our classmates in this
RUTH GIBNEY, 981 Summit Avenue,
Bronx 52, New York. Rik is sti11 at the
same place, lteaChing three days a week.
Tripp Lake Camp was again her residence
last summer. Now she is busy in a Y club
and sounds as interested and busy as ever
in sports.
JEAN GRAHAM, 3 Chaming Circle,
Cambridge, Massachusetts. Crackers is back
at Sargent as an instructor and has been
busy playlng field hockey as usual. Spent
the summer at camp Merestead.
MARY GRAY, 41 Roseland Terrace,
Longmeadow, Massachusetts. Mary is now
at Co11ege of St. Teresa, Winona, Mimesota.
SHIRLEY GUSTAFSON (Mrs. Robert
W. Chaseら312 Spring Street, Rockland,
Massachuset亡s.召Bob and I have been busy
bustling as ever? With her housekeeping ocCuPylng her free minutes.
KANTA LOU McKENNON, 2114 Mc.
Millan, Apt. 8, Dallas 6, Texas. Kandy is
teaching physical education at lthe Hocka_
day Prep School. At the time of wrltlng
Kandy’s hobby was負trying to get to New
Orleans for Mardi Gras.
What gay life
She is leading! ! Summer ’47 New Orleans.
‥. Christmas ’47 Califomia. ‥ and Mexi_
redecoralting our 180-year-Old house for a
CO ‥. SPring ’48 New Orleans. ‥ Summer
’48 New York, Connecticut, Canada, SleP-
year now and are enJOymg eVery minute of
1tember ’48 New Orleans. ‥ Christmas ’48
it.,,
MARGARET HOLMAN (Mrs. Russell
A. Finbow)’18 Cres㍗nt Avenue’Norwood,
Massachusetts. Peg lS Still phys王cal thera-
Pist with the Boston Visiting Nurse Asso-
Centre, MassachuSettS. Ruth is a busy
ass工Stant mmlSter’s
Wife, WOrking with
the church young
France, Switzerland, Italy, Holland, Scot1and・ In teaching she has 200 gir工s with
dance and tumbling clubs, αeven teach
Texas Universlty VS. Oklahoma University
game at the Cotton Bowl.
MAR工E MILLER, 214 Silver Street, BennmgtOn, Vermont. Marie’s hobby is social
Iife. She is teaching in the junior and
Senior high schooIs in BenmngtOn and spent
ANNE MURRAY, 860 Park Avenue,
BIoom丘eld, Comecticut. After spending the
Summer as head life guard at Palmer Streelt
Beach in Winchesterl Anne is teaching
agam for the third year. She too has seen
last fa]1 and visited the cape this summer.
many of our classmates - Maz, Mif, Peg
Saw Peg Lothrop and Jane Squire at Hyan-
Clark, Naomi, Olive, Lee, Gundy.
nis.
MARY JOHNSON., Pat Bohm Smith
are grand and the money is even better.
See `Jenry’Pouliart every now and then.
Guess what? I refereed a field hockey game
today! Some of the class know I dislike the
tives on the isIand are as I probably know
COunSelor at Camp Rondack, Schroon Lake,
New York.
apist since graduation. She flew to Bemuda
SChool mam, already. The people up here
them or at least Peter must if they know so
tlme.
at the Wa軍erbury Hospital as physica工ther-
and high schooIs. She writes言`This is my
third year at Groton and I fel=ike an ・old
New Orleans... summer ’49 England,
the summer as swimmmg and canoemg
has been empIoyed
Physical education in the elementary, junior
SPOrt! I’m anxi。uS tO know who your rela-
PeOPle much of the
PHYLLIS JOHNSON, 41 Bingham
Sltreet, Naugatuck,
Comecticut. Phyl
MARY OSBORN’Main Street, Gro-tOn,
Massachusetts. Mary is director of girls’
New York’Boston to Lannie,s. ‥ SPring ’49
hockey - HA!,, Saw “Mike,, Johnson at
RUTH JEHLE, 89 Ripley Street, Newton
PaSt issues of the bulletin. Thank you very
much! !
ADELAIDE NEAL (Mrs. Robert W.
Meikle), 181 Middlesex Avenue, Medfo《rd,
much about him.
EILEEN O’REILLY, 3747 Ault Park
Avenue, Hyde Park 8’Ohio. I’m glad you
finally discovered who Mrs. Walter Renear
WaS! Eileen is physicaI educator at Summit
Country Day, the first twelve grades, and her
hobby is Shakespeare. It was good to hear
from you after so Iong a time.
GLORIA JAYNE PECK (Mrs. Harold
M. Hadley), 30 B工ossom Avenue, Somerset
Centre・ Massachusetts.短After teaching for
a year in Indianapolis, Buck and I were
married and went to Bemuda. Last De_
Cember we moved into our own home. In
June we went to ohio for Marty’s wedding.
I am now busy with Junior League Work
and the Girl Scout camp committee. We
are bolth active in the Little Theatre.
G。If
and knitting are Peckie’s hobbies for the
REVA PERCIVAL (Mrs. U. J. Shiner,
Jr.), l17 E. Spencer Street, Ithaca, New
York. Reva is instructor in dance at Ithaca
Writes’召Lolly went to Califomia, WaS audi-
Massachusetts. Ad is busy being a house-
tioned for the Ice FoIlies and accepted.,,
Wife and an instructor at Boston U正versilty.
Congratulations!! We knew we’d see her
Ad writes,短Bob and I took a trlP tO Chicago
there some day.
for seven weeks this summer. Bob studied
ISABELLE JONES (Mrs. Edward Hen_
ry, Jr.), Stevens Lane, Middletown, Con-
at Garrett Biblical Ins由u'te in Evanston,
Il工inois, and I took a course and had a
tration and hope to finish this summer. We
necticut. Izzy is busy housekeeplng, SeW-
grand vacatio音n, tOO. Ann Ratto and I vis-
Went home to Texas this summer for the
mg and look王ng after her two-year-Old son,
Martin, Who is our class baby.
JANET KAVANAUGH. Dick tells us
Jan is married to Teddy and I,ve heard she
has a baby・ How about it, Jan, are lthese
rumors fact or fiction?
ited Cardy Sargent Sllocum and her son in
Aubumdale this summer. Cardy and her
SOn looked fine. I also saw Do11y Smith and
Babs Skinner while vISltmg in Detroit.
NAOMI NEWMAN (Mrs. Melvin Sma11) ,
8 Fairmont Street, Malden, Massachusetts.
MARGARET KEITH, 73 Standish Road,
Naomi is a housewife and writes, “I am a
Watertown 72, Massachusetts. Peg is spend・
leader of nine-year-Old girl scouts. They,re
ing her third year as supervisor of physical
quite a handful and keep me busy.”
educaltion in Chelmsford, SeVen SChooIs. She
HELEN NOLAN, 459 SchooI Street,
is busy with knitting and handwork in her
Athol, Massachuse工ts. Helen is spend主ng
free time.短Saw Ruth Taylor a while ago
her third year at Athol and her present
and she says she is enjoying her work in
hobby is α1ea丘ing to drive.
Laconia. Does anyone hear from Babs
Helen visited Illinois and Canada, Wash-
Skinner?,,
1ngtOn, D. C., in the sprmg and spent the
BETTY KIMBALL (Mrs. Burdett H.
Last winter
Summer CamPmg. Helen writes us that Bob-
Start, Jr.)’126 Warren Street, Apt. 17,
bie¥ Earl is at the Windsor School this year.
Brighton, Massachusetts. Kimmy is sltill at
Brighton Marine and is enrolled at B.U.
、tham 54, MassachuslettS. Olive is at Regis
night school・ Spent her vacation traveling
OLIVE NOLAN, 288 FIorence Road, Wa工-
College and α1oves it.
This summer she
CoIIege and her hobbies are a dance club
at ComeIユand following the Comell fooト
ball games.短I have been working on my
master’s at comell in Perso音mel Adminis_
firs=ime since we were married. Then we
drove out to califomia and saw Grand
Canyon, Yosemite National Park, etC. We
PaSSed thro音ugh Las Vegas a=wo a.m., and
the place was wide open. The onIy machine
that doesn’t pay off is the parking meter!,,
MARGUERITE ROSSO, 134 White
Street, Springfield, Massachusetts. Midge
is teaching at the Fores亡Park School in
Springfie賞d and her hobby is Charlie. She
Wi量l have her master,s degree in March
from Spring丘eld Co11ege. Her nights are
SPent in s[udy, “Weekends with Charles
Martin - remember?
Yes’We do, Midge.
Summer spent vacationing in Saybrook, Connecticut - beach ]ife! Anne Ra耽O is in
Springfield・. ‥ Amy Spears is in Spring-
field Y.W.C.A… ・ Ginny Kimball married
to Ray Johnson in August…. Joan Gri鯖n
teaching in Albany… ・ Thanks for the very
through Canada. Yes, Kimmy, I me章a nurse
WOrked in Wa]tham and spent her week-
from Brighton, Who was living where I did
ends at Nantasket. She writes: "I am cor_
the past two years. small world.
Charlie stop next time you are near the
responding secretary of the Boston Sargent
island.
BETTY LANAGAN (Mrs. Gordon Lee
C量ub and would be very glad to see our
Dawber), 24 Chauncey Street, Cambridge
Classmates at our meetmgS - uSually they
Massachuse亡ts. And all this time I,ve been
are held the first Thursday of each month.
SPe11ing DaWber with a U ‥. my humblest
Gundy Kirrane is Supervisor of Women,s
Pardons, Lamie. As Field Director of the
Camp Fire Girls, Lamie is as busy and
Recreation in Brookline.
Olive was one of
the nice peop工e who sent a check for the
3l
newsy reply’Midge, and I do hope you and
ANITA SAMUELS, Mrs. N. Greenblatt,
1345 Sperber Road, Faulaun, New Jersey.
Anita was married on June 19, 1949. Anilta
thinks that housekeeping is a lot more fun
than teaching. “See Yvome Brustein An-
derson often.,,
MURIEL SCOTT, 68 Maple Avenue, Wil一
MILDRED WEHRLY, 20 Bay View Ave・
1imantic, Comecticut. Scotty is teaching
nue, Bay Shore, New York. Millie is teach・
again in what seems to be the most popular
ing in Bay Shore and her hobby is trying to
ALICE E. LENAGHAN, See Ed’49.
A recent bachelor dinner was held in
stalte. Before this she was lteaChing in New
find some free time. “Spent this summer
Jersey. She says she is sorry not to have
written before, but how about some more
finishing my master’s degree and now have
news, Scotty. It was very nice to hear even
expect to finish it. AIso studying aviation
this much from you, though!
and German just for the heck of it. Was in
honor of RENATO EDMUND LEONELLI,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Filomeno Leonelli of
Providence, Rhode Island. Mr. Leone11i is
engaged to Miss Elena Ame Calabro,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Calabro
also of Providence. Miss Calabro is a grad-
Ginny Kimball’s wedding.”
uate of Rice and Pembroke Coll鴇e. She is
CARMELLA SOUSA (Mrs. Donald Guerin), 66 Riverside Heights, New London,
applied for my doctorate. Crazy, aS I never
ELIZABETH ZAND (Mrs. Leo D. Kel-
Conneoticut. Sis has been very, Very S音ick
leman), 188-OIA 71st Crescent, Flushing,
since lthe birth of her daughter and I know
New York. Liz is running her husband’s
we are all very happy to音hear she is on the
o鯖ce and assists him and his associate, Who
road to recovery. Here is her news about
is a general surgeon. Her hobby is raising
her daughter.待Maureen was a year old on
tropical fish. “Next summer we plan to
the second of September. She has been
travel to France and Italy. I hope toしdo
walking since May, has six teeth, SayS a
graduate work in French and English thi§
number of words and tries to talk so badly.
fall. My husband, Who is a natio音nally
She has been a wonderful baby since her
ranked fencer, Wi11 continue in competition
arrival. Oh, yeS, She weighs twenty-Six and
this year as well as o鯖ciatmg at many meets
one-half pounds and is thirty inches tall.,,
- 1ike West Point. We attended Mary
Thank you so much for your lo-ng letter, Sis’
Meola’s wedding in Wo、rCeSter On August
and I hope you are still feeling we11・
20th. Beautiful ceremony. She met her hus-
ELLEN SPILLER (Mrs. Martin F. Fagan) , 34 Prospect Street, Rockville・ Come?-
ticut. Ellen writes that her occupation lS
teaching and her hobby housekeeping・
雄Spent summer in Maine. Attended meeting
of Sargent Hartford Chapter Club
recently
band in Japan. He also is in the theatrical
丘eld‥ . . Arlene Eisner is with husband
and son Peter living in Bro-Oklyn.” Thanks
ELIZABETH WHEELWRIGHT, King
County Hospital, Seattle Washington. Liz
is a physical therapist at the King County
Hospital and her hobbies are skiing, riding,
P. Carpenter), 83 N. Main Street, Broadal-
photography and swimming. Since gradua-
old housewife and mother and I do Iove it.”
tion she has been across the United States
four times - Los Angeles, San Francisco,
Her hobby is αbring工ng uP Miss Sargenta of
Mexico, Seattle. “Having a wonderful time
1967鵜She’s so dam cute. Haven’t been
after working hours.”
bin, New York. Edie’s occupation is雄plain
any pIace to speak of, tOO dam busy keepmg
house and taking care of `SltOrmy.’I,d like
about five more JuSt like her・
They are in
a large apartment now and even had a big
vegetable garden this summer and did lots
of caming. Hope to start building next
Cranston, and Mr. Leonelli is instructor in
science and safety at Rice.
WALTER E. TAYLOR of Beverly was recently appointed minister of the Memorial
Methodist Church there. Mr. Taylor is a
senior at the University’s SchooI of Theol-
Ogy.
相関8香c
Miss FLORENCE LOUISE HEALD,
daughter of Mrs. Benjamin H. Heald of
Rockport, reCently became engaged to Mr・
Ronald Owen Aines, SOn Of Mrs. Herbert
Aines of Middlebury, Vermont. Miss Heald
did undergraduate work at Middlebury Col1ege. Mr. Aines attended the University of
Vermont.
for all the wonderful news Liz! ! !
EDYTHE UNDERWOOD (Mrs. William
and saw many members of the class of ’47・
a teacher at Kalen Junior High school in
So, Classmates, that is the end of the
P.A.L.
Miss BARBARA McNAMARA, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose J. McNamara of
Neponset, reCently became the bride of
David F. O’Neil, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. J.
Richard O’Neil of Brighton. For their honey-
moon trip the couple left for Chicago and
Califomia.
Miss SELMA ALICE WHITESTONE,
daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Mose White-
news for now and I do want to Ithank a11
stone of Brookline,
who helped so much to make this a very
was married recently
newsy bulletin because without your help
to Irving L. Lotto,
I could do nothing.
son of Mrs. Charles
BECKY ALLEN RENEAR.
P.S. New Year,s Resolutions:
l. I will join S.A.A.
2. I will join B.U.A.A.
1ine. Mr. Lotto was
nue, Arlington, Massachusetts. Nat is su・
3. I will send Becky news!
dett College. The
pervisor of physical education in Billerica.
Thanx! !
year. Yes, I agree, Edie,雄mairied life is
just plain wonderful !”
NATHALEA VINCENT, 104 Park Ave-
During lthe summer of ’48 she traveled from
’49 she wen=o New Brunswick and Halifax.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nicoll of Beverly
She also writes that Shirley and B. J. Hill
have recently announced the engagement of
are soon expecting bundles of joy.
their daughter, BETTE NICOLL, tO G.
ELIZABETH WADSWORTH, River
Street, Rockland R. F. D.’Massachusetts.
“Been very busy at home finishing and
adding on・ Went to Bingham’Maine, ltO be
a bridesmaid for Peggy Alkins. Stayed
three days but couldn’t leave two baby sons
too long.’’
DORIS WALTHER, 937 Helen Avenue,
Thomas Carleton, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Perley Carleton of Haverhill. Miss Nicoll is
empIoyed by Reid Brothers’Inc., in Beverly.
Mr. Carleton, Who is a graduate of Northeastem 山iversity, is empIoyed by the
United Shoe Machinery Co音rP.
RAYMOND J. TELFORD of Methuen, a
teller for the Broadway S.avings Bank there,
Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Lucky is physio-
has been unanimously appointed to the
therapist at the Veterans Administration
Methuen Municipal Retirement board・
巧ospital in Lebanon, Pennsylvania, and her
hobby is antiques. “S音ince graduation I’ve
acquired the antlque bug and have collected many valuable old pieces, SuCh as a
125-year-Old cupboard; bisque statues that
graduated from Bur-
couple wi11 make
E.C.C.
Bost。n tO San Francisco. In the summer of
E. Lotto of Brook-
Ed事`Ca房0れ
VICTOR A. CERVIZZI of Newburyport
is teacher and coach at Newburyport High
school.
their home in Brookline.
1948
C.B.A.
ANTHONY DALY, See SPR’49.
HERBERT SAMSON FINE of Lewiston,
Maine, is Program Manager (director) and
sportscaster for Station WCOU-WCOU/FM
in Lewiston.
Miss Harriet Isenman, daughter of Mrs.
Frances Fox Isenman of Mattapan, is engaged to Mr. MICHAEL STOLLER’SOn Of
Mr. and Mrs. Abram Sto11er of Dorchester.
Miss EIoise Frances Wood, daughter of
Mrs. Alma Adelaid Wood of Augusta,
Maine, has become the recent bride of
RICHARD DANIEL LINDSTROM of Boston, SOn Of Mrs. Theron H. Lindstrom of
Providence, Rhode Island. The fomer Miss
I’ve traveled a great deal, COVering the east-
MARTIN W. DONOVAN of Danvers, Who
recently received his Master of Education
em seaboard generally. I’m keeping up
degree from the,University, has been ap-
with my swimming, ltO。, and since gradua-
pointed to the faculty of Northeastem Uni・
tion have put on several water shows at
versity. Mr. Donovan will teach Business
cas轟magaZine, Boston. The couple is resid・
benefits in Lancaster, Pennsylvania・”
English.
ing at 8 Chauncey Street’Cambridge.
are seventy-five years old and many others.
32
Wood is a graduate of Bates College’Lewis-
ton, Maine, and is with the Veterans Administration in Togus, Maine. Mr. Lindstrom is sales manager of relet,Zsto7} Fore・
Mr. MELVIN W. MORRIS is now work_
AMELIA A. STUNDZA of Lawrence is
Mr. and Mrs. Browning W. Rogers of
mg in the o鯖ce of the Southem Railway
SuPerVisor of bond premium collections for
System in New York City. He is residing at
2010 Calyne Drive, Fair Lawn, New Jersey,
Saugus recently announced the engagement
the Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance
Of their daughter, Miss Marguerite E.
With his wife and year old son.
Miss IDA WAX, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
SamueI Wax of Arlington, became the re-
CHARLES SIEGEL of Lawrence is fac_
lory representative for CIolVer Cutting Die,
Lynn.
Company of Boston.
Rogers’tO Mr. HOWARD E. ELLS, also of
Cent bride of Raymond L. Suied, SOn Of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Suied of Tunisia, North
Mr. and Mrs. I. Stein of Dorchester have
Africa・ The ceremony was perfomed at
announced the engagement of their daugh-
Helman’s Party House in Brookline. Upon
Saugus. Miss Rogers is a graduate of Bradford Junior College and the Chandler Secretarial School.
Gγad棚aきe
MARGARET BARSAM of Worcester is
1,er, MOLLIE STEIN, tO MILTON S.
GLANZ, SOn Of Mrs. Jeanette Glanz also of
retum from a motor trlP tO New York and
teaching at the high school in Aubum,
New Jersey, Mr. and Mrs. Suied wil=ive in
Where she is adviser to the junior class and
Dorchester.
Arlington.
editor of the student magazine, Gγee7? Dome.
New Hampshire, fomerly with the Dennison
Manufacturmg Company, Framingham言s
now a student at Harvard Business School
in Boston.
FRANCIS G. WALLET, See C.L.A. ,4I.
C.P.E.S.
ROLAND T. T工BBETTS of Portsmouth,
RHODA FERN SIMONS, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Simons of Swamp-
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Bresnehan of Proc_
SCOtt, reCently married Irvin Berman of
tor, Vermont, reCen亡ly announced the en-
Whitman. The ceremony took pIace a=he
C.L.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Broderick of
Haverhill have amounced the engagement
Roof Garden of the Bradford Ho,te工. The
相関S育c
gagement of their daughter, MARGARET
ELLEN BRESNEHAN, tO John H. Curtis,
fomer Miss Simons is a script and con・
SOn Of Mrs. Charles Fox, a量so of Proctor.
t干nulty Writer for radio station WVOM in
At present Miss Bresnehan is mus王c super-
Brook工ine.
of
Visor in the public schooIs of Goshen, New
Michael’s College and North Adams State
and Irving D. Haseltine of Boston. Miss
Lebanon Valley College in Pennsylvania,
and Oregon State, is empIoyed as a chemical engineer at the General Electric Com_
Broderick is now Y-teen PrOgram director of
Pany in Lynn.
rector of research for the Vermont Marble
Of their daughter, BARBARA EMMA
BRODERICK, tO Irving D. Haseltine, Jr.,
SOn Of Mrs. Margarelt Hase工tine of Lawrence
Mr.
Beman,
a
graduate
the Lawrence YWCA. Mr. Haseltine, Who
MARJORIE LOUISE SMITH of Win_
attended Syracuse University, is associate
Chester is a physical therapist at the Liberty
boys’director of the Lawrence YMCA.
NEWTON M. LEE of LoIS Ange工es, Cali-
fomia, is sales reviewer of group insurance
for the Westem Home O鯖ce of the Pruden_
Mutual Insurance Company in Boston.
RUTH ELEANOR SPEAR of Brockton
is now attending Smith College, WOrking
for her Master of Science.
Ed榔Caききoれ
tial Insurance Company.
ELAINE BARKER SMITH of Schenec_
tady’New York’Who is a social group
WOrker on the staff oしf the Roxbury Neigh-
borhood House, SPent ]ast summer working
as a leader of the work group of the Unitarian Service.
ARTHUR GREGORY TASSEY of
Orangeburg, New
York, is working
itOWard the degree of
Doctor ofPhilosophy
in history at Colum.
bia University Fac・
ulty of Political
Science.
Announcement of
the engagement of
Margaret E. McGil-
1ivray to EDWARD
FRANCIS WHITE has been made by her
ParentS, Mr. and Mrs. John J. McGillivray
Of Watertown・ Miss McGi11ivray is a grad-
uate of the Somerville Hospital School of
Nursing.
E.C.C.
HERBERT F. SCOTT, Secretary, 53 Park
LEROY A. BRENDEL, head of the business education department of Beverly High
SChool, has been appointed state director
Of membership for Massachusetts for the
Eastem Business Teachers’Associati。n.
Mrs. EdwaI.d V. Cronin (MARY LOUISE
BOWEN) of Newtonvi11e is teacher of the
紺th grade in Newton Centre.
CLIFFORD J. FITZPATRICK of Brook_
line has been included on an eligibility list
established by the Civil Service Commission
for appontment as superintendent of the
Quincy Recreation Department.
ARNOLD R. HANSEN olf Hartford, Connecticut, is an instructor of engrav工ng draw-
mg and director of audio-Visual aids a=he
University of Connecticut Branch in Hart_
MAURICE L. HERMAN, formerly of
Chelsea’is teaching at P.S. 12, Manhattan,
Corlears Junior High school in Brooklyn,
New York. His address is 8699 Bay ParkWay, Brooklyn 14, New York.
Mr. and Mrs: Charles Sheldon of Water_
town have anI⊥OunCed the engagement of
their daughter, Miss JOAN SHELDON, tO
uated from Boston College.
Miss MOLLIE STEIN, See C.B.A∴48.
Lowel工, has exchanged mamage VOWS With
there.
General Co鵬ge
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis J. Sasso of Provi_
dence, Rhode Island, have announced the
engagement of their daughter, Miss Eliza・
beth Rose Sasso, tO Mr. G. CHANDLER
WILLIAM STELLBERGER of Bost。n
BEALS’SOn Of Mr・ and Mrs. George D.
has been named food and liquor control
Beals of Marshfie賞d・ Miss Sasso音is a grad-
manager a=he Hotel Lenox in Boston. Mr.
Stellberger has bee音n With the hotel f。音r the
PaSt four years.
KATHLEEN M. SIMOCKO of BridgePOrt, Connecticut, is director of music at
Brighton Academy in North Brighton,
Maine.
Mr. and Mrs. John Manning of Arlington
have announced the engagement of their
daughter, CATHERINE LOUISE MANNING, tO Gerhard S. Nentwig, SOn Of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Nentwig of Coral Gables,
FIorida. Mr. Nentwig is now comple書ing his
Studies a亡the University of Miami.
DOROTHY ROSE SPENCE of Milton is
a secretary and editorial assistant for the
Houghton Mi胱n Company in Boston.
EV工NIKE VLAMIS, See C.L.A. ’39.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Webendorfer of
Pi耽sfield, Maine, reCen)亡ly announced the
engagement of their daughter, EVELYN
JOYCE WEBENDORFER, tO Richard
Famsworth Aus正n, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles A. Austin of Groveland. Miss
Webendorfer is now supervising art in the
tin is atte音nding Northeastem University,
Where he is maJOnng in mathematics and
Physics. A summer wedding is planned.
Soc占a夢Wor鳥
Miss PRISCILLA W. TALLMAN o.f
Cranston, Rhode Island, has joined the sta鱈
Of the Medica量Service Depar亡ment of St.
Luke’s Hospital in New Bedford.
Chowski of Boston. Mr・ Dawson was grad-
P]ace in the Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox
Company.
William J. Dawso音n, SOn Of Mrs. John Mu-
Miss Cynthia Economopoulos, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George Economopo-ulos of
Plakas of Roxbury. The ceremony took
Teachers’Col11ege. He is now assistant di-
Public schooIs of Augusta, Maine. Mr. Aus-
ford.
S工reet, Brookline, Massachusetts.
NICHOLAS J. PLAKAS, SOn Of Mrs. James
York. Mr. Curtis was graduated from St.
uate of St. Xavier’s Academy. Mr. Beals at
PreSent is attending the University’s Law
School.
N棚r$脇g
FLORENCE MILLICENT BROWN of
Plymouth, New Hampshire, is assistant
Principal of the SchooI of Nursing at Mt.
Aubum Hospital in Cambridge.
E. RITA DAVIDSON of Des Moines,
Iowa, is a member of the faculty in the divi-
Sion of nurslng educatioln at Indiana UniV erSlty.
P.A.L.
Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel H. Bowering o]
Mattapan have mo音unCed the engagement
33
of their daughter, NATALIE BOWER工NG,
to Mr. Joseph P.
Carey, SOn Of Mr.
and Mrs. Patrick J.
Carey also of MattaPan. Miss Bowerlng
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Maurice Swain
DALY, SO音n Of Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Daly
Ph組brick of Waterville, WaS reCently united
Of Rutland, Vemont. The ceremony was
in marriage with LYSANDER RICH-
performed at St. Ann’s Church in Boston・
MOND, 3rd, Of Cambridge, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard E. Hill of that city. Mr. Rich-
The couple will make their home in New
York.
mond is engaged as a co鱒ee broker. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs.
is a member of the
Richmond is engaged in the nursing pro-
Joseph A. Will of
staff of the Fay Sec-
retarial School. Mr.
fession at the Lahey Clinic in Boston. Mr.
and Mrs. Richmond will make their resi-
nounced the engage・
Carey is a graduate
dence in Boston.
ment of their daugh-
of Holy Cross Col-
ter Louise Margue-
1ege, and is compIet-
THOMAS FRANCIS SHEEHAN is assistant sales manager of the Towers Moto.r
ing his studies at the
Parts Corporation in Boston.
THOMPSON, SOn
Harvard Business School. An early spring
wedding is plamed.
Henry J. Foley of Arlington recently an-
is a graduate of Boston Co11ege.
Simmons College.
Mr. and Mrs. Wi11iam J. Keveney of Yarmouth Port have announced the engage・
of John G. Thomp-
Mr. and Mrs. Lester L. Ivers of Reading
McMahon also of Arlington. Mr. McMahon
FLORENCE A. FITZPATRICK, tO John E.
rite,tO JOHN V.
son and the late Mrs.
recently announced the engagement of their
daughter, Miss Margaret Co11et Ivers, tO
Mr. HERBERT DANIEL WHITE, SOn Of
Mr. and Mrs. AdoIph J. White also of
Reading. Miss Ivers was graduated from
nounced the engagement of his niece, Miss
Squantum have an-
Thompson of Dor-
chester. Miss Will
碑r. Tho肋p§0れ
studied at Bryant
and Stratton SchooI.
Miss MARY T. WALL of Everett has
been been named assistant manager of the
S.P.蹄.
Stylon Corporation, Boston, New Eng工and’s
onIy ceramic tile manufacturing fim.
ment of their daughter, ELIZABETH
SARAH KEVENEY, tO Morton V. Cash,
Jr., SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Morton V. Cash
also of Yarmouth Port. Miss Keveney is
C.L.A.
Miss JOAN C.駐ROW増田NGクSecre細r.γ
55 May Avenue, Brock七on, Massachusetts
now empIoyed in the o鯖ce of the Cape Cod
Miss ELVA MALANEY DOWD, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Dowd ofWey-
Hospital. Mr. Cash is a耽ending an Army
Petroleum Research School in Jersey City,
New Jersey, While stationed at Fort Wads-
mouth, and John Emme耽 Ryan, SOn Of
WOrth, Staten Island, New York.
John P. Ryan and the late Mrs. Ryan of
Miss PEARL ARLENE LUCAS, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Lucas of North
cently at the Sacred Heart Church in
Rockville, Connecticut, Were married re-
Quincy. Mrs. Ryan is employed at the supersonlCS laboratory at the Massachusetts
Abington, became the recent bride of Paul
Crawford Ridder, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas A. Ridder of Quincy, at the First
Institute of TechnoIogy as a mathematical
research worker. Mr. Ryan, Who was grad-
Congregational Church in RockIand. Upon
retum from their wedding trip, the couple
uated from Harvard University, is em-
wi11 reside in Whitman.
pIoyed at the Pratt and Whitney Division of
the United Aircraft Corpo音ration, East Harト
SocあきWor鳥
ford, Connecticut. Mr. and Mrs. Ryan wiH
MILDRED ELEANOR WHEELER, See
make their home in Rockville, Connecもicut.
Ed. ,39.
MARGERY LOUISE GROUT of Spring-
1949
field is district director of the Springfield
C.原.A.
Girl Scouts, Inc.
Miss DOROTHY MOWER of Arlington
HARVEY N. ALBERTSON of Kansas
City, Missouri, SOn Of Irving Albertson of
the S. Albertson Company, is now associated
with the S: Alber書son sales force in Boston.
ALFRED E. BOURASSA of Salem is an
assistant to the department head of adver-
tising and sales promotion for the Carter Ink
Company in Cambridge.
(BrαdIoγd Loc鳥e Phoめ)
」惚r. αれd舶irs.粒ederきc鳥J. W九eeわr, Jγ.
Miss JOAN T. BUSHELL, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Bushe11 of Malden,
became the recent bride of Mr. FRED-
with a major in mathematics.
ERICK J. WHEELER, JR., SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Frederick J. Wheeler of Wakefield.
The former Miss Bushell is the society edi-
man of Stoughton, is a heart research tech-
Miss CATHERINE JULIETTE CARTER, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
tor of the Med!ord Mercuγγ. Mr. WheeIer
Gordon Carter of Newton, reCently became
is studying at Boston College SchooI of Law.
engaged to Mr. CHARLES EDWIN FULLERTON, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Meeker Fullerton of Milton. Miss Carter is
They are making their home in Malden・
Washington, D. C., is a salesman for Mur・
Miss Anna La(tini, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Latini of Quincy and ROBERT
E. ENGEL, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Henry B.
Moorhouse, also of Quincy, Were reCently
married in St. John,s Church there. Mrs.
ray & Heister, Inc., PaPer PrOducts, in Wash-
Engel was employed by the Boston Con-
in her third year a=his Univers主ty.
WILLIAM JOSEPH dHICOINE of
ington.
JAMES N. FLYNN of Newton is a claim
from [heir wedding trip.
Station in Boston.
at Temple University for the academic year
Miss Theo Ethel Cox, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank L. Cox of GIoucester, recently married JOSEPH WARREN LOVELL, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs Joseph W. Love11
of 1949-50.
of Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
appomtment aS an instructor in marketing
In a candlelight wedding performed at
the Bethany Baptist Church in Watervi11e,
Maine, Miss MARTHA JANE PHILBRICK,
MARCIA SPILBERG of Roxbury, Who
recent工y became engaged to Mr. AIvin Li鉦
nician for Harvard University a工the Beth
Israel Hospital. Mr. Liftman is attending
the University of Massachusetts, Class of
50.
HOWARD OL工VER STERNS, JR., Of
We11esley Hills is in his first year at the
Yale Divinity School in New Haven, ConnectlCut.
JEAN IDELLA THOMPSON of Phillips.
Maine, is teaching at Bridgewater Classical
Academy in Bridgewater, Maine.
solidated Gas Company. The coup工e will
make their home in Quincy, uPOn retum
adjuster for the Railway Express at North
THURSTON GRADEN recently received
recently left for the University of Minnesota to study for her Master of Arts degree,
Recently married were Miss SHIRLEY
SMITH, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
F. Smith of East Lymfield, and ANTHONY
34
C.P.囲.S.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Nowatzky of River
Edge, New Jersey, reCently amounced the
engagement of their daughter, DOROTHY
GRACE ELEANOR 'NOWATZKY, tO Mr.
Fred Martin Zinser, Jr.
GLORIA ISABEL VASILE of Milford,
who is executive director of the Girls’
Recreation Center of Taunton, has been, for
the past two summers, Senior counselor,
head of the dance department, at the CIara
Barton Camp for Diabetic Children.
Upon retum fro-m a trip to Miami, FIorida,
the couple will make their home in Bel_
E.C.C.
TAPLIN’SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Henry B.
Mrs. James J. Fahey of Readvi工le, former萱y of Dorchester, has amounced the
engagement of her daughter, Miss Mary
Fahey, tO Mr. LEO A. CARNEY, SOn Of
Mrs. Martin Camey of Roslindale.
Miss VIRGINIA SCHWER of Newt。音n
recently arrived in the Far East Command
and has been assigned as social hostess at
the Camp Bender Service to serve her first
tour of duty. Camp Bender, near Ota,
Japan, is the home of the 99th Field Artil.
1ery Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division.
MARIO J. INSANI of Marlboro is doing
Educa扇on
graduate work in teaching and coaching at
Mrs. Russell Steams, also of Wellesley, reCent工y amounced their engagement.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Lavin of Leom_
EVELYN WINIFRED UPDIKE of Balti_
inster have amounced the engagement of
more, Maryland, is an organist and choir
their daughter’Miss GLADYS LAVIN, tO
WalIace R. McKimon, SOn Of Mrs. Ethel
GILLIS, JR., SOn Of Dr. and Mrs. Freder主ck
and is doing graduate work in mathematics
Since his graduation, FREDERIC ROS-
SOMANDO of New Haven, Comecticut,
Co音llege, Columbia University. He is work`
mg in the Business Education department
evemngS a Week. He expects to completo
his master’s degree requirements in June.
G鋼era自Cの馳g㊤
and the Junior Philomatheia Club of Bos_
Mr・ and Mrs. Maurice Gomberg of Fall
SchoIOI of Education are now serving as in-
StruCtOrS for children of American personnel in Gemany, Austria, Japan, and Okinawa. Dean Donald D. Durrell of the Scho。1
Of Education amounced that the appointments for the 1949-50 school year grew out
Of a special series of Amy interviews held
last year a=he SchooI of Education. Those
Chosen from Boston University who are
Currently at their folreign teaching posts
are: KATHLEEN V. HARRINGTON, Fall
River; ALICE I. HAVNER, Framingham;
ALICE E. LENAGHAN, Fall River; and
PHYLLIS ROBERTS, Arlington; Austria:
RUTH M. McDONALD, Peabody; Japan:
MARIE COTE, Worcester; HELEN M.
Cranston,
Rhode
Island;
Of Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Anderson als。音。f
Melrose. The ceremony took place in the
First Baptis亡Church there.
P.A.血.
Miss PATRIC耳A HASKINS) Secγe如けy
652 Washington Street
Abington, Massachusetts
Business Co工lege in New York City, three
Of the Junior CathoIic C工ub of Wakefield
Thirteen women of Boston University・s
Plantinga of Melrose’reCently exchanged
has received an assistantship at Teachers
there. At present he is teaching at Riverside
SeCretary With the Nils V. Ne工son Company,
Miss MARY ELIZABETH PLANTIN_
GA, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
mamage VOWS With Cecil G. Anderson, SOn
Cently at St. Joseph’s church in Wakefield.
COttOn brokers, in Boston. She is a member
N霊`rS耽g
is on the sta節 of the Leominster Senio音r
High School. Mr. McKimon was graduated
from Massachusetts Institute of TechnoIogy
J. Gi工lis of West Roxbury, tOOk place re-
Previous to her mamage Mrs. Gillis was a
director at the Church of the Transfiguration in Baltimore.
McKinnon, also of Leomins亡er. Miss Lavin
MARCIA MILLER, See Lau, ,39.
Keane, daughter of Mrs. Thomas J. Keane
Of WakefieId, and FREDERICK JAMES
TapIin of Wellesley. Mi主s steams’mo音ther,
Columbia University in New York City.
a=his University.
The marr主age of Miss Barbara Ame
KIERNAN’
It wiIl be a spring wedding for Nancy
Elizabeth Steams and FRANKLIN PERRY
River recent工y amounced the ma正age of
their daughter, EUNICE RUTH GOM_
BERG, tO Gerald H. Mi11er, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs・ Leo Miller of Providence, Rhode
Island・ Mr・ Mi11er is a graduate of Provi・
dence CoIIege, and is associa亡ed in the in_
SuranCe and real estate business with his
father-in-1aw.
RICHARD DIAMOND RUGGLES 。f
Milton is at present finishing his Bachelor
Of Arts requirements at C.L.A言n contem_
P]ation of enteI`ing the University’s SchooI
Of Medicine. Mr. Ruggles is also working
as a swimmmg mStruCtOr for the Boston
CAROLYN RUTH BOGGS of Worcester
is a secretary for the Boston Paper Board Co.
WINIFRED M. BROWN of Haverhi11
WaS reCently appointed to ・the Essex County
Homemaking school faculty at Hathome.
Miss Brown, Who has been serving as a subS亡itute teacher in the Haverhill public
SChooIs, Wi11 be an apprentice teacher in
COOking.
JACQUELINE CLAIRE DERANY of
Lymfield is employed with Chambers and
Wiswell, Inc., an advertising agency in Bos亡on.
Miss M. GEORG工NE KENNEDY of
Medford has recently joined the faculty of
Milford High School in Milford, New
Hampshire. Her teaching duties include
Shorthand, tyPing, PraCtical bookkeep工ng,
and personal typing. She is also in charge
Y.M.C.A.
Mr. and Mrs. MATTHEW J. STOWELL
Of Lowell recently amounced the birth of a
SOn, Matthew John II.
of aud主o-Visual aids there.
SCHOOL OH LAW
1913
JAMES H. WALSH of West Roxbury
SARAH JONES, Manchester, Comecticut;
G rad重きα重ね
MARY E. OSBORNE, Rockland; VエOLA
ROBERT J. LUSENA of St. Johnsbury,
Vermont, is teaching French and Spanish
WaS reCenltly appointed manager of the
there.
industrial department there.
M. PERRAULT, Watertown; MARION E.
STALLWOOD, Bethel, Maine; and IRENE
C. WALLACE, Stoneham; Okinawa:
Mrs. MAE E. PATIAL of India was a
ALICE J. HENRY, Thomas亡on, Maine.
SPeaker a=he monthly meeting of the Low-
Miss BARBARA A. BURKE, daughter
Of Mr. and Mrs. W. Kenneth Burke of New
ell CoIIege Club, A.A.U。W., a=he Whistler
Bedford, WaS reCently joined in marriage
India.,,
With Donald A. Gi11is, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
A. Joseph Gillis also of New Bedford.
Miss JOAN W. DAUGHTRY of Boston
Home in Lowell. Her talk was on αLife in
Chamber of Commerce’s commercial and
1914
CoIonel SPAULDING BISBEE of Cape
E工izabeth, Maine, an Army and National
Guard o鯖cer during both World Wars and
between them, has been nominated to head
相関Sわ
The program at the Lunenburg Woman,s
Maine’s civil defense and public safety serVices. The o綿ce was created by the 1949
Club was featured with a piano recital by
legislature. Under the new law, lthe director
recently retumed to the faculty of Smith
Miss MARGARET E. MORELAND of B。S。
makes plans to mobilize a11 types of forces
University of which she has served for the
ton. Miss Moreland is also a teacher in
to handle suppression and relief work in the
PaSt three years. She retums to a higher
Boston.
event of disaster, Whether military or natu-
POSition on the staff. Miss Daughtry ob-
ELLEN LEILA STORMWIND of Brook_
tained her Bachelor of Arts degree at JohnSOn C. Smith University, Charlotte, North
Hunter Col工ege Graduate Scho音Ol, WOrking
Carolina, in 1946.
towaI.d her master’s degree in educa亡ion.
At the Church of Our Lady of Mercy in
Belmont, Mrs. CHRISTINE BANIOS
DRAKE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Banios of Nashua, New Hampshire, became
the recent bride of Mr・ Leo B. Moore, SOn
Of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. Moore of Cam_
bridge. Mr・ Moore was graduated from the
Massachusetts Institute of TechnoIogy.
lyn’New York, is at present attending
ral. His nomination was pos亡ed by Govemor
Payne of that state.
1921
WILLOUGHBY A. COLBY of Concord,
She is doing studen=eaching a=he James
Madison High School there, and is also a
the State Board of Public Welfare Problems
member of the Teachers’Symphony Or-
Of the Council of State Govemments. Mr.
Chestra of New York. In addition she is
Wi1loughby is also one of the comm主ssioners
PreParlng tO take the licelnSe eXamina亡ion
given by the New York Board of Education
to teach orchestra music in the day high
sch○○Is.
35
New Hampshire, is at present chaiman of
On Uniform State Laws for the State of
New Hampshire.
KENNETH C. TIFFIN is currently secretary of the Eastem Dog Club, Which
conducts the largest all breed indoor show
Mattapan in the main ballroom of the Hotel
in New England. Mr. T輔n is also presi-
Statler in Boston.
Rhode Island, Who recently passed the bar
examinaltions, is openlng an O鯖ce for the
dent of the Framingham District Kennel
ALEC C. STEIN of Salem recently
Club, Which conduots the largest outdoor
shows in New England, meeting amua11y
opened a law o億ce at 173 Washingto音n Street
JOHN CORBIN of Framingham was re-
there. Mr. Stein has been associated with
cently admitted to the practice of law, When
at Raceland in Framingham Centre. Mr.
Attomey Harry A. Simon for the past four
he appeared before the Uni書ed States Dis-
Ti鍋n and his wife, the fomer Celia Hop-
yearS.
trict Court fo音r the Dis′trict of Massachusetts.
kins, have been interested in breeding and
ralSlng Great Danes since 1934.
Judge FRANK W. TOMASELLO of Dorchester was recently instalIed as president
of the Italian American Charitable society
at the New England Mutual Hall in Boston.
THOMAS G. DIGNAN, fomer principal
o鯖cer of the Mystic and North Shore dis-
triots of the New Endand Electric System,
with headquarters in Malden, has left his
present posiltion to take over the presidency
of the New England Electric System’s larg-
est subsidiary company, the Narragansett
Electric Company in Providence, Rhode
1940
FRANKLIN FEINSTEIN recently an-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Comelius A. McAuli任e
nounced the opening of his o鯖ces for the
of Malden, became the recent bride of
THOMAS CHRISTOPHER QUINN, SOn Of
in Boston.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Quinn of Brighto・n.
Mrs. Quim・ Who w雪S graduated from Salem
Teachers’Co11ege, lS a member of the Glen-
wood School in Malden. Mr. Quim is a
PraCtlClng attOmey in Boston.
AUGUST C. TAVEIRA, New Bedford
lawyer and fomer member of the New Bedford schooI committee, WaS reCently named
by Govemor Dever to be judge of the third
district court of BristoI County at New Bed-
quarters in Providence.
ford.
is empIoyed as associate counsel in the law
department of the John Hancock Mutual
Life Insurance Company in Bo音SltOn. His
WOrk concems real estate investlgation covermg the forty-eight states.
1926
WILLIAM J. HICKEY, JR., Of Brook1ine, WaS reCently named by Govemor Pau量
A. Dever for the position of judge of probate and insoIvency for Norfolk County.
Mr. Hickey is former chairman of the Brook-
1 946
JANICE H. WILKINS of East Walpole
has recently opened o鯖ces for the practice
of law in Walpo(le Center Block.
1947
Miss Hilda Ruth Cohen, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Cohen of Newton Centre,
recentIy became engaged to Mr. SHER-
WOOD JORDAN TARLOW, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Isadore Tarlow of GIoucester. Miss
Cohen is now abtending Emerson College.
1 948
1ine Board of Selectmen.
GEORGE M. ABAGIS has announced
1929
Judge LOUIS W. FARLEY, PreSiding
the opemng Of his o鯖ces for the general
justice of the First District court in Fram-
practice of Iaw at ll Pemberton Square,
Boston.
ingham, WaS a reCent SPeaker on “Juvenile
Delinquency” before the members of St.
Bridget’s Holy Name Society at St. Luke’s
hall in Framingham.
JACKSON S. HOLTZ, neWly elected na-
tional commander of the Jewish War Veterans of the United States, WaS a reCent
guest speaker and guest of honor at the an-
mal dinner of the Bangor, Maine, Post 507,
Of the American Legion. Holtz is the first
JOSEPH G. D’ERRICO, See C.P.E.S. ’47.
Miss Mary Josephine McAuli鯖e, daugh-
Island. Mr. Dignan wi11 make his headMALCOLM C. SHERMAN of Marshfield
practice of law there.
ROBERT D. ASHLEY of Hudson is enrolled a=he University of London, in London, England, Where he is studying mternational Iaw.
LEONARD H. BARON of New Bedford
was recently admitted to practice when he
went before the U.S. District Court. Mr.
Baron also is teaching law in a lec調re
Series sponsored by the Massachusetts De-
general practice of law at 148 S亡ate Street
St. Paul,s Church in Cranston, Rhode
Island, WaS血e se耽ing for the recent marr工age Of Miss Lillian E. Dev工in, daughter of
Mrs. Emily G. Devlin and the late Mr・
Michael J. Devlin of Cranston, and Mr. EDWARD V. HEALEY, JR., SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Edward V. Healey of Providence. Mr.
and Mrs. Healey are now residing alt 246
Wesleyan Ave音nue in Providence.
NELSON L. KENDALL, JR., Of Gardner, has amounced the opening of a law
o億ce in the Stevens BIock, 316 Central
Street there.
JOSEPH H. RICHARDS of East Springfield has opened o鯖ces for the practice of
law at l15 S,tate Street there.
JAMES J. SCULLARY of Pittsfield,
who was admitted to the Massachusetts bar
in September, 1949, has opened o鯖ces for
the practice of law there.
F. ALBERT STARR of Cranston, Rhode
工sland, reCently opened o鯖ces for the prac-
tice of law in Providence.
LEON R. ZITOWITZ of Dorchester has
OPened an o鯖ce for the practice of law at
311 Main Street there.
SCHOOL OF舶EDすCすNE
1898
Bosto諒n γegretS ha涼ng pubHshed some
m最可orma房07? COnCem諒g Dr. VILMOT L.
MARDEN. Dr. Marde7?∴んas NOT csまab1isked cz7}γ u)Orkまれg classes ai Har凋γd Me窃cal ScんooI or Jhe Massachuseils Generαl
Hosp訪al.
1906
exclusive World War II veteran to command
the Jewish War Veterans. In addition to
his many duties, Mr. Holtz is a member of
partment of Education at the Free Public
Library there.
DENNY WOOD LIVERMORE of Fox-
DALE W. BROOKS of Newport, Ver-
boro is still in active practice and has been
the New England Advisoiry Council; AntiDefamation League; mOderator, Brookline
mont, WaS reCenltly admi請ed to the practice
Community Forum, member of Temple
Israel and Temple Brotherhood.
peared befolre the Supreme Court of the
1930
CHESTER A. HIGLEY has been elected
ltO the Cambridge Plan E City Counci.
1931
JOHN T. BURKE of Clinton has been
of law in the state of Vermont, When he apstate for its amual opening of the fall term.
JAMES T. DEVINE of Scituate is now
a special atltOmey for the Anti-Trust diviSion of the Attomey General’s o鯖ce in
Washington, D. C. Mr. Devine is also associated with the law firm of Devine and
EVERETT L GILES of Brunswick,
business for Chambers & Wiswell, Inc., ad-
Maine, has opened an o鯖ce for the general
1933
WH工TNEY SMITH, See CB.A. ’30.
1938
ALBERT SHIFF, See C.B.A. ,36.
1939
Miss MARCIA MILLER, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller of Bro)Okline,
recently married ROBERT YANOFSKY of
town physician for the past ten years and
Board of Health agent. Mr. Livermore is
also associated with the Foxboro State Hospital (mental) handling physical examinatlOnS.
1925
VORHA BALIMAN HAFFNER, former1y of AIlentown, Pemsylvania, has moved
O’Connell in Boston.
named vice-PreSident in charge of new
VertlSlng agenCy in Boston.
Since 1906. He resigned in 1947 after 26
years as schooI phys音ician. He has been
practice of law there.
JOHN A. MACDONALD, JR., Of Danvers,
was recently admitted to lthe practice of law
when he appeared before the federal bar in
to O耽awa, Kansas, Where she is establish-
1ng a general practice.
1931
Dr. NORMAN GILLMOR LONG has
been named residen青surgeon of the New
Eng工and department of Lumbemens Mu-
a ceremony in the United States District
tual Casualty Company, and American Mo-
Court in Boston.
torists Insurance Company. He will work
ALBERT J. TAHMOUSH声ee C.B.A. ’42.
1 949
ROBERT R. AFFLICK of West Warwick,
36
out of the Boston o飴ce of the companies’
headquarters for the six states comprising
the New England department.
1939
On a luxury Iiner last summer.
ARTHUR G. SIMONEAU of Marlboro
is State Medical Examiner, 9th Middlesex
Distriot, for Massachusetts.
1940
Dr. LOUIS SORRENTINO is巾aking a
COurSe in surgery at New York Universlty
G. BENNETT VANBUSKIRK of Lacon王種,
New Hampshire, a Methodist preacher, is
nOW SerVmg aS eXeCu音tive secretary of the
Post Graduate Medical School and resides
Reserve Pension Fund Campalgn for the
in East Orange, New Jersey.
R. TuRCOTTE,
New Hampshire Methodist Annual Confer_
ence. Mr. VanBuskirk has been on this
Who is a member of the active surgical sta鯖
Class Secretary.
WOrk for neary one year.
at Wa工tham Hospital and surgeon to the
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Anthony Scanlon of
Dr. RALPH MANKOVICH of Wa皿am,
medical department of The Massachusetts
Reading have announced the engagement of
Institute of TechnoIogy, is a member of the
the ]atter,s daughter, Miss Maria Frances
Medical Advisory Committee, an important
Subcommittee of the Waltham Chapter of
†he American Red Cross BIood Donor Ser_
Vice, Which has been organized as a result
Williams, tO Dr. EDWARD MOODY
COOK, JR.’SOn Of Mrs. Edward Moody
County District Department of the Massa_
Cook, and the¥1alte Dr. Cook of York Har_
Chusetts congrega亡ional Conference and
bor’Maine. The bride-tO-be, Who is plan-
Missionary Society a=he West Boylston
ning a July wedding, is a graduate of the
Congregational Church.
Of recent conferences between the Wal,tham
Red Cross, Waltham Hospital authorities,
Bryant Stratton SchooI of Boston. Dr. Cook
and medical professional groups. The mem-
is now a resident physician at the Maine
bers of this committee wi11 act as liaison
between the Chapter, hospitals in the Wal-
General Hospital in Port工and.
LOUIS VINCENT SORRENTINO of
「tham area, all medical groups, and the peo-
East Orange’New Jersey, is atltending New
Ple of the community as well as an advisory
York University Postgraduate School, tak-
COmmi耽ee to the over-all BIoIOd Service
ing a graduate surgery course there.
Committee.
MARGARET VENCKO of Binghamton,
New York’S工aff member of the Binghamton
City Hospital and the Charles S. Wilson
dean
of
the
fourteen
Me亡hodist
1891
The Reverend CHARLES HENRY
STOCKPOLE of Melrose, Who is now re正ed, joined the New England Conference
t10n.
in 189l・ Besides being pastor of Methodist
1944
Dr. LEONA R. NORMAN, daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. Samuel P. Noman of Mal-
Churches, Reverend Stockpole has been
den, WaS married recently to Dr. Edward L.
New Eng工and Methodist Historical Society.
Conference Biographer, President of the
Retired Association, and Librarian of the
Zarsky, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Heman J.
1902
Dr. ALLEN A. STOCKDALE of New
uated from Tufts Co11ege and Tufts Medical
York City, SPeCia=ecturer of the National
School・ They are residing at 249 Chestnut
Association of Manufacturers, reCently addressed the Springfield Industrial Associa_
1945
Dr. BETTY BAMFORTH recently at-
tion in the Gilbert & Barker Mfanufacturing
Company auditorium in West Springfield.
†ended a conference in New York, being a
His subject was,負Industrial Relations Are
I’ePreSentative of the Wisconsin General
Human Re量ations.,,
Hospital.
Stoughton is assistant resident in surgery
19l.2
The Reverend J. KIRKWOOD CRAIG of
Manchester, New Hampshire, Who is minister of the St. James Methodist Church there,
at the Quincy City Hospital.
has given 6l addresses between February,
1 946
WILLIAM ANTHONY SINTON of
1947
1948, and October, 1949, for the American
CLASS REPORT
Christian Palestine Commit,teeS Of Bost。n
Dr. HECTOR O. HIDALFO is no音W doing
Pedialtrics a=he Rodriguez General Hospi-
and New Yolrk on the Palestine Situation
before Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions, Exchange
tal in Fort Brooke, Puerto Rico. He has his
C工ubs’and other groups, Which took him
O鯖ce in Santurce, Puerto Rico.
into Maine, New Hampshire, Vemont, New
Dr. GENNADY E. PLATOFF is now a
first lieutenant in the United States Amy.
York State, Ohio, Indiana, North Carolina,
冒elephones皆e冨露盤ニ籍
訪n短。砂と免の。r d毒
“Flotoers bγ Wire-Gαara部eed沈e ”ercαrγ Waγ・・
240 Hu砧ng†0= Avenue Bos†on, Ma§S.
and FIorida;
Dr. HAROLD WHEELER is now a resi_
COMART JOHN MEKKELSM of Earli_
dent in pediatrics at CoIorado General Hos.
mort, Ca工ifomia, is minister of the Com_
munity Methodist Church there.
Pital.
Dr. ROBERT FRANKEL is assistant
resident in surgery at the Roo音SeVelt Hospi・
tal in New York City.
Dr. HAROLD OSHER is resident in
medicine a=he Boston City Hospital on the
5th and 6th medical services.
Dr. LE工CESTER JOHNSTON is assistant
resident in surgery at the Massachusetts
General Hospital.
Dr・ THEODORE短Ted
also
Churches of Altoona (Pennsylvania) in
Leadership Training.
SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY
the American Academy of A11ergy and a
Hill Avenue, Brighton.
Marys’PennsyIvania, is pastor of lthe First
Methodist Church there. Mr. Stevens is
RODOLPH H. TURCOTTE, See C.L.A.
member of the American Medical Ass。Cia"
Zarsky of Brookline・ Dr・ Zarsky was grad・
1919
JOHN MICHELL STEVENS of St.
46.
Memorial Hospital’is at present practlCmg
in the field of allergy. She is a組iated with
1918
The Reverend LIONEL A. WHISTON of
Worcester was a recent speaker at an afternoon session of the meeting of Worcester
POLOS began a
residency in psychiatry at the Meninger
CIinic on August l, 1949. Ted took two
Cruises to South America as ship surgelOn
1913
WALTER B. SPAULDING of Great
Falls, Montana, is executive secretary of the
Mon(tana Methodist Co音nference.
1914
-STANLEY WALKER WIANT of Green_
Vi11e, Ohio, is pastor of the First Methodist
Church there.
Picture Rock Ranch
SAYS
Plan Now An
APRIL VACATION
When the Desert is in its glory of
bl○○m
1916
The Reverend JOSEPH HENRY ARM_
GOOD FOOD) GOOD HORSES’GOOD FUN
BRUST of Statesvi11e, North Carolina, Who
is minister of a Methodist Church, is at
Pre§ent district supervisor there.
37
Win Sisson- B-24 Co「†aro, A「izona
1920
CHARLES EDWIN SCHOFIELD of
executive secretary of
the Council on Reli_
Nashvi11e, Tennessee, is with the Editorial
Division of the General Board of Education
gious Life.
of the Methodist Church. He is editor of
1927
LAWRENCE LARROWE of GIoversville,
adult publications.
1921
CARROLL D. W. HILDEBRAND of
New York, minister of.
Greencastle, Indiana, is president of the
Board of Christian Education and member
the North Main Street
Methodist Church, is
of the Northwest Indiana Conference. Mr.
president of the Board
of Education for the
Hildebrand is also professor of philosophy
and religion at DePauw University.
192,2
CHARLES F. BOSS, JR., Of Chicago,
I11inois, is executive secretary of the Com-
mission on World Peace of the Methodist
Church, and is a member of the Baltimore
Annual Conference.
FORREST A. GOODRICH of Pittsburgh,
Pemsylvania, is minister of the Trinity
Methodist Church there, and a member of
the PitltSburgh Conference.
JOSEPH W. THOMPSON of St Joseph,
Missouri, is executive secretary on the Board
of Education of the Missouri Methodist
Conference.
ROY COLE VANDEGRIFF of Cincinnati, Ohio, is minister of the Bethlehem
国図
。雇彬ぁぁ%
丁O YOU
Troy Conference.
RICHARD I).
LEONARD of Adrian,
UNI丁ED FARMERS DA!RY BAR
Michigan, is professor
」usT ACROSS THE RIVER FROM THE NEW Bos丁ON UNIVERS!丁Y
of religion at Adrian
CAMPUS,
ONE
B」OCK
FROM
BosTON
UNIVERSt丁Y
BRIDGE'
ADJACEN丁TO THE S丁OP AND SHOP.
College and member
‥.‰廻pんce在朝や
of the Michigan
Methodist Conference.
EGBERT CHAPPELLE McLEOD of
O
FOR
●
REF-RESHMENT '
AFTER
THE
GAME
OR
DANCE
O
FOR
LUNCH
pARKING
OR
FOR4OO
ASNACK
AuTOMOBl」ES
U証書ed F七「Ⅲe博すN訪E乃g競れd,五c・
Roxbury, Who is pas-
・・丁H且 BUSINESS COOPERA丁ION BUl」丁‥
tor of the Union Meth・
odist Church there,
has pastored churches in Atlanta, Georg1a’
WILLIAM T. WALLACE of East Providence, Rhode Island, PaStOr Of the Haven
and Jacksonvi11e, FIorida, and has been col1ege pastor jn Bethune-Cookman College
Methodist Church there, is Conference di-
and Wiley College. His son, Gerald Louis・
rector of adult work for the New England
is at present enro11ed at Harvard University・
Southem Conference of the Methodist
working toward his doctorate in the field of
Church.
Methodist Church 'there.
1923
ROBERT EDWARD BADGER of Rush-
1932
organic chemistry.
1928
CHARLES STOCKDALE HUMPSTEAD
ville, Indiana, is district superintendent and
member of the Indiana Conference of the
Methodist Church there.
Dr. ALLEN A. STOCKDALE, See rheo.
02.
1924
The Reverend LAURENCE H. BLACKBURN of Lowe11 is Chaiman of the International Relations Commitltee Of the Massa-
boards of Education and Missions for the
tendent of the Waterlo音O district and mem-
Pittsburgh Amual Conference.
ber of the North Iowa Methodist Confer-
FREDERICK A. DYCKMAN of Provi-
CHARLES E. TITUS声ee Rel轟o描Ed軌
dence, Rhode Island, is executive secretary
of the Board of Education for the New Eng-
1and Southem Methodist Cbnference.
1931
ELWIN H. SCHEYER of Tacoma, Washington, is executive secretary of the Pacific
1925
HERMAN DAVID BERLEW of New
sy工vania, is executive secretary for the
of Cedar Falls, Iowa, is district superin-
ca房0れ’26.
chusetts Council of Churches.
HOMER N. CLARK of Pit「tSburgh, Penn-
Northwest Methodist Conference.
ERNEST E. LAWSKE of Peru, Indiana,
pastor of the First Methodist Church there,
is president of the Board of Education of
the North Indiana Conference.
1933
EDWARD N. HOWE of East Smithfield,
Bedford is minister of St. Paul,s Methodist
HONARY E. TOWER of Nashville, Ten-
Church and director of youth work in the
nessee, is director of the audio visual de-
New England Southem Conference.
ORVILLE L. DAVIS of Greencastle, In-
partment and a member of the General
Board of Education there. Mr. Tower is
churches in East Smithfield, Wetone, and
diana, is an associate professor of religious
als。 a member of the New England South-
Big Pond.
education alt DePauw University. He is also
em Conference.
Pennsylvania, is pastor of the Methodist
1934
ERNEST ALLISON SHEPHERD, See
Grad. ’33.
LEON ROY STAPLEY of Middleburg,
New York, is a minister in the Troy Con宣erence and director of intermediate work
KIMBA」し, cI」MAN & CO.
1NSURANC寡
there.
1935
The Reverend THEODORE WHIMS
SHOEMAKER of Cincinnati, Ohio, WaS recently appointed pastor of the Auburn
Methodist Church there. Previous to his
appomtment Reverend Shoemaker was pastor for six years at Yellow Springs, Ohio.
OF A」」 K看ND§
Prior to that he served as minister for stu・
dents at the Wesley Foundation at Ohio
87 K掘りS重「ee書
sTANLEY
HENRY
O.
T.
MacMULLEN
DROHAN
KENNETH
C・
University.
W.
ROBERT
O?LEARY
FRASER
BOSTON
PAUL THOMAS, See Religto躍Ed霊JCa・
iあれ,32.
あ1936
JOHN L. WHITE of Oshkosh, Wisconsin,
is executive director of the Wisconsin Coll・
ference Council.
38
1938
ELMER W. RINKEL of Wichita, Kansas,
residence in the newly renovated rectory
rooms in St. John’s Episcopal Church in
Who is minister of the Bethel Methodist
Brockeon’Where Mr・ Boyd recently assumed
Church in Wichita, is director 。f adult
duties as minister-in-Charge.
WOrk for the Centra萱Kansas Conference.
W・ RANDOLPH THORNTON, See
C.L.A. ,35.
勧請剣叩〇両調
MRS. GEORGE F.
MAXWELL BOYER of Lakewood, Ohio,
WRIGHT, A’02,
is associate minister of the Methodist
Wife of George F.
Church there’and Cleveland district youth
1940
Wright, Universlty
director for the No音r置heast Ohio Conference.
GUY L. ROBERTS of Pittsburgh, Penn-
The Reverend JOHN W. COOK, Who is
Sylvanla, is a minister and Conference di-
Trustee, PaSt PreSident of the Bos.
finishing his work for a doctor,s degree at
rector of youth work in the Pittsburgh
ton University
this University’WaS a guest preacher at
Methodist Conference.
the Way工and Trinitarian Congregational
in Worcester,
Church. His theme was “Life Etemal.”
Mass.
ERNEST W. SAUNDERS of Sioux City,
Iowa, is professor of religion and chaiman
Of the Humanities Division at Momingside
Co工lege there.
THOMAS K. FARLEY of Los Angeles,
Ca]ifomia’is director of youth work and
member of the Southern Califomia and
1941
PAUL ALBENY of Kalamazoo, Michi・
Arizona Conferences of the Methodist
WILLIAM CHARON DENSON 。f Ticon_
1 946
ROBERT E. BERGMARK of San An_
tonio・ Texas’is associate pastor in charge
Of Christian Education a上the Laurel
(leroga, New York, is pastor and Conference
Heights Methodist Church in the South_
WeSt Methodist Conference. Mr. Bergmark
)′Outh director in the Troy Methodist Con-
is also a member of the New England Con・
ference.
LESLIE H. JOHNSON of Newton, PaS書Or
Of the Newton Methodist Church, is president of the Conference Board of Education
for the New England Conference.
HOOVER RUPERT of Nashville, Tennessee’is director of the youth department
and on the General Board of Educati。n in
the Kansas Methodist Conference.
1942
Major JOHN D. ERB, minister of the
Park Avenue Methodist Church in Worces_
ter, has been assigned to the United States
Air Force Reserve.
THOMAS ROGERS of Adrian, Michigan,
is associate professor of religion at Adrian
Col]ege there. Reverend Rogers is also a
member of the Detroit Conference, and
Part-time pastor of the Clayton Methodist
Church in Clayton, Michigan.
1943
The Reverend ALAN H. MOORE is the
new pastor of the Wesley Methodist Church.
MORRIS J. MORGAN of Mount P工eas_
ant, Iowa, a member of the Northwest In_
diana Conference, is acting head of the dePartment of religio¥n and philosophy at
Iowa Wesleyan College 「there.
1944
The Reverend LLOYD W. MULLIS of
Whitefield, New Hampshire, WaS reCently
appointed to the Whitefield-Jefferson MethOdist Churches there. Reverend Mu11is was
transferred to the New Hampshire Conference in 1948.
STANLEY E. SMITH, See Ed. ,4I.
DALE E. STRONG, See Gr&d. ’43.
GEORGE CARL WHIPPLE of Winfield,
at Southwestem co11ege last summer, is as-
Sistant professor of Bible and Religion
章here.
1 945
The Reverend and Mrs. CHARLES
BOYD’formerly of Stoughton, have taken
uary 7’1950, died suddenly at her home
in Bryn Mawr, Pennsy工vania.
November 26’1949, at Benson HospitaI
in Haverhil量・ Fomer state Representa-
tive and well known in Masonic circles.
One /Of Haverhill’s oldest attomeys, SerVed
On the Common Council and was chair.
man of the Republican clty COmmit「tee.
ARTHUR FRANKLIN CLARKE, C#L ’95,
On November 14, 1949言n a rest home.
ference.
The pastorate of Bethesda Lutheran
Lived in Brook量ine most of his life, and
Church in New Haven, Connecticut, VaCant
Since the resignation of lthe Reverend Mar_
had Iaw o鯖ces in Boston for many years
tin E. Carlson, October 15, 1949, WaS re-
PAUL V. CURRAN, e宛) ,夕4, On Novemb。r
before retiring in 1940.
CentIy創1ed by the Reverend PAUL A.
22, 1949’at Winchester Hospital. An ac-
LORIMER, PaStOr Of the First Lutheran
COuntant a=he Allcraft Company of Cam・
Church in Dorchester.
MILLER C. LOVETT of Medford is pastor of the Medford Hil○side Methodist
Church and Conference director of youth
WOrk. Reverend Lovett is a member of the
New EngIand Conference.
ROBERT HENRY McNABB recently of
the Methodist Church in Gueley, Iowa, has
moved to HonoluIu, Hawa主i, tO aCCePt a
Methodist pastorate there.
1947
The Reverend DONALD H. FREEMAN,
Who has been pastor of St. John’s Methodist
Church in Malden for the past two years,
recently res工gned to become pastor of the
Methodist Church in Fairview near Ho賞yoke.
The Reverend OTTO SCOTT STEELE,
bridge.
JAMES F. FARLEY, LL・B・ ’OI, On Novem・
ber 23・ 1949, at Boston City Hospital. Re.
tired lawyer, PraCticing law in Boston.
The Reverend WILLIS B. HOLCOMBE,
A・B・ ’90, On November 24, 1949, in Manorville’New York. Served as an Epis・
COPal cIergyman fo音r many yearS in Massa.
Chusetts. The Reverend HoIcombe served
as rector of St. James Episcopal Church
in New Bedford, and Christ Episcopal
Church in Plymouth, and ]ater became
rector of Grace Episcopal Church in
Riverhead, New York.
Dr. EATON SHAW LOTHROP,
On
November 23,
1949,
in
.D. ’25,
Portland,
Maine. Prominent Portland surgeon and
CO量lector of antlque automob主les.
JR., Of Lawrence, is a minister at St. Paul’s
Methodist there. At presen't Reverend Stee工e
The’
Reverend
EDWIN
BRACKETT
is working toward a Doctor of TheoIogy
YOUNG, rんeo・ ,09, On December 4, 1949,
degree.
at his home in Rochester, New Hamp-
1 948
ChapIain Captain MEREDITH PAT_
RICK SMITH of Marblehead, PaStOr Of
St. Stephen’s Methodist Church, has been
asslgned to the United StalteS Air Force Re"
SerVe. He is one of 557 chaplains, formerly
Shire. Retired Methodist minister, former
Chaplain of the New Hampshire State
Legislature and past grand chaplain of
the Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows in New
Hampshire.
OnのIoan status,, to the U.S.A.F., Who were
affected by the recent agreement bet高een
the Departments of Army and Air Force for
Don’重hesi書a書e宣O Send in宣O Bo高o"iα
any informa蹄o和し一abou章 you誌el書 or
exchange of personnel upon individual ap-
Kansas, Who臆de]ivered the Commencement
address at the summer graduation exercises
ALMY CHASE GRANT, A.B.,96, On Jan・
J. FRANK BATCHELDER, LL.B. ,97, On
Church.
gan, is an associate minister of the First
Methodist Church in Kalamazoo. He is also
a member of the Michigan Conference of
the Methodist Church.
Women’s Council,
YOur Cla§母ma宣es. The edi書OriaI sねff
Plicaltion for transfer.
The Reverend and Mrs. LAWRENCE S.
STAPLES of Jamaica P工ain announced the
Welcomes daねo量all貼nds, and wh与重e
i書may重ake a while for宣he in書or請種一
群o調書o app音ea章in p重王調書(we調ake音up
birth of a daughter’Doma Ruth Staples,
bom Apri1 4, 1949. At present Reverend
Staples is a specia工student at the School
Of Theology・ WOrking toward a higher
degree.
39
宣WO mOn宣hs ahead of霊he da番e on霊he
COVer)・ Pe梶Onal i重ems are瞭meless;
書hey alway容reねi調書heir news value.
Permanent Class Secretaries for Five-year Reunion Classes
Music
1935 Miss Constance Adno紐
2 Brenton Street, Dorchester
College of Business Administration
Schoo量of Law
1920 Miss Helen Schubarth
1900 Francis I. McCanna
454 Huntington Avenue, Boston・
49 Westminster Street
Providence, Rhode Island・
1940 Mrs. Frederick A. Harris, Jr.
66 Mlt. Hope Street, North Dighton・
1930 Mrs. John C. MacKay
13 Temple Street, Boston・
19105 William L. Pullen
14 Mayflower Terrace’Newton Ctr・
1945 Mrs. Milton Hackett
Box 948, Riverton, Wyoming・
1935 Mrs. Hugo J. Nelson
4 Middlecot Street, Belmont.
1910 Harry Silverman
10 State Street, Boston.
1940 Mr. Philip Robinson
Sargen章
1905 Miss Mary Ferguson
90 Hollis Avenue, North Quincy
1910 Mrs. Wi11iam H. Garland
The Tovlands
Plain Street, Mars輪eld.
1915 Mrs. Addison F. Crafts
Craftshome
323 Highland Avenue’RandoIph
1925 Miss E. Brenneta Andrews
372 South Highland Avenue
Pittsburgh, Pemsylvania.
c/o Mrs. E. Widmayer
2121 Lincoln Road, N. W.
Washington, D. C.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
9 Magnolia Avenue, Holyoke.
1945 Miss Cynthia Kellem
21 Oldfields Street, Roxbury.
Evening College of Commerce
1895 Miss Grace B. Day
46 Englewood Avenue, Brookline.
1900 Miss Grace Heartz
694 Main Street, Wobum.
1940 Miss E11en Egan
204 W. Brookline Street, Boston.
1925 Miss Ethel M. Allen
183 Beacon Street, BosltOn.
1945 Miss Shirley Lewis
12 East Broadway, Taunton.
1935 Mr. Eli Wolfson
l19 Sutherland Road, Brookline.
School of Medicine
1945 Miss Edith A. Halvorsen
50 Churchi11 Street, Saugus
1895 Dr. Mary R. Lakeman
lO8 Federal Street, Salem・
Practical Ar置s and Letters
1905 Dr. Alonzo「 J. Shadman
1925 Miss Margaret F. Walsh
32 Summit Avenue, Everett
1930 Mrs. Dale Ogden Reynolds
12 Court Street, Medford.
1935 Mrs. Paul Monroe
CO量leg○ ○f職hcral A競s
1935 Mrs. Dominic Agrippino
82 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston.
Springfield.
1940 Mrs. William Bosworth
82 Devonshire Street, Boston.
26 South 12 East Street
1935 Miss Miriam B. Hatch
138 Oak Grove High SchooI
60 State Street, Boston.
1920 Roy M. Robinson
1945 Mrs. Hozen Ackles
1930 Miss Norma Leavitt
435 Ft. Washington Avenue, N. Y.
1915 David Kelly
69 Day Street, Aubumdale.
1940 Mrs. Jack Shapiro
108 Hanover Street, Lynn
1945 Miss Margaret O’Hara
135 High Street, Medford
Forest Hi11s Hospita1
29 Morron Street, Jamaica Plain.
1915 Dr. Cecil W. Clark
363 Walnut Street, Newtonvi11e.
1920 Dr. Bamet M. Wein
471 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
1940 Dr. Isabel S. Money
17 Rockingham Road, Mattapan
1945 Dr. Marjorie Readdy
40 Bowdoin Street, Quincy.
1905 Miss He]en Stevens
1069 Central Avenue, Needham.
1910 Miss Sally E. Batchelder
43 Mt. Vemon Street, Boston.
1915 Miss Mima Bre音tSChneider
Nurses Home
SIChoo萱of Hducation
SchooI of Theology
1920 Mrs. Harry McGovem
1910 Dr. Edgar S. Brightman
75 Willowdean Ave., West Roxbury
1925 Miss Mary E. O’Connor
158 Highland Street, Taunton.
Malden Hospital, Malden・
Box 35, Newton Centre.
1915 Rev. Leroy W. Sltringfellow
6 Oak Street
Claremont, New Hampshire.
1935 Mrs. George P. Lowder
1920 Miss Helen F. Cady
166 Mountain Avenue, Malden.
ll Westbrook Road, Worcester.
1945 Miss Pollyama Andem
1925 Miss Dorothy Bullock
223 Park Drive, Boston.
23 Oak Road, Milton.
1920 Rev. A. J. Garfield Morgan
42 Bassett Street, Lynn.
1945 Rev. James K. Allen
415 Pearl Street, Brockton.
1930 Mrs. William S. Lane
19 Rich Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa.
1935 Mrs. David Weir
22 Norcross Point, Shrewsbury.
1940 Miss Theresa M. Benotti
188 Merriam Stre音et, Weston.
1945 Mrs. Charles F. Barrows
678 Common Street, Walpole.
Graduate School
1920 Mrs. RudoIph Rubandt
9 Shaw Road, Swampscott.
1925 Mrs. J. Clark Wyman
62 Richfield Road, Arlington.
1945 Miss Carolyn F. Dow
Peaks Island Station, Portland, Me.
Schoo賞of Religious Hducation
1925 Mr. Philip Landers
933 Pleasant Street
Oak Park, Illinois.
1945 Miss Beatrice Binder
185 Winchester Streelt, Brookline.
If any of these names and addresses are incorrect’Please inform the Alumni O鯖ce’308 Bay State Road, Boston 15’Massachusetts.
40
勧窺箸ゐ鶴
亀9輔is †he 「eunion yea「 for †he c!asses o=890十1895,丑駒⑱第
〇905, I910, I915, 1920,豊能覇占930, 1935, I940, 1945.
A successful Class Reunion is made pos§ibIe in a large measure by an ac†iYe
Class secre†ary. Acco「ding十o †he 「ecords in †he A-umni O鞘ce +he follow-ng
惰Ye-year C!asses have no sec「e†aries a† pre§en十:
l
l
t
音
SchooI of Educa十ion
!895
Schoo案ofTheoIogy I890
0 0 0 5 0 5
t
Commerce
量
o′ o′
l
EYeningCoiiegeof 1940
0 0
3 4
l
Adminis†ra†ion
8 o , o ′ o ′ o ′ o l
SchooI of Medicine
o ′ 0 - 2 3 3
Co!看ege of Busines§ i925
1900
漢925
CoIIegeofPhysicai 1920
I930
Educa†ion fo「
1935
Women, §a「genl
1940
SchooI of Law ! 890,
Religious Education 1930
and Social Work
1940
I 895
1925
1935
G「adua十e School
I930
1930
!935
I935
1940
lf a class secre†a「y ha§ been elec†ed fo「 any of +he§e Classes, Please no†ify
†he A看umni O怖ce・ If you would be w冊ng +o serYe aS SeCre十a「y pro +em in
One O白hese cla§SeS, Piease con†ac十†he:
BO§丁ON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI OFFICE
MISS PHYLLIS EMMA
308 BAY STATE ROAD- BOSTON I5, MASSACHUSETTS
∽c訂Q
象∵薫量
朝地
§軸OULD B=N T晴E§E P-O丁皿E§
馳曾晩を罵、審簑助,
MITT睡AT BOSTON UNlVER・
§lTY CLUB ROOMS
蹄鑓勤尋鵡㊦毒○○蓋︰寄尋r㊥㊥計
ALし_SPORT§ NIGHT COM-
PART OF TH U R§DAY G ROU十一一一一一一一一一一一一ニー=-J:心-臆-
AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY
CLUB ROOMS FOR A §HOW"
lNG OF THE F○○TBAしL
MOViE§. ONE OF MANY
REGULAR EVENT§ §CHED一
∪しED BY THE BOSTON UNI-
VER§lTY CLUB OF BOSTON
FOR MEMBERS AND GUESTS.
鞘
E INVITE EVERY GRADUATE OR FORM,ER STUDENT OF
ANY DEPARTMENT OF BOSTON UN!VERS!TYTO JOIN THE
駐0§丁ON閥N醐電離§囲TY C回田B O再臨OS丁O闇
CONVEN書ENT AND ATTRACTlVE HEADOUARTERS ARE LOCATED IN TH,E CLUB R○○M§ ON THE SECOND FL○○R OF
THOMPSON’§ SPA, 239 WASHINGTON STR蛙丁.
WHY NOT PLAN TO HAVE LUNCH OR DiNNER THER巳S○○N?
OPEN EVERY WEEK DAY FROM N○○N. ENJOY THOMPSON’S
円NE’F○○D AND SERViCE PLU§ THE PLEASURE OF EATiNG
WITH OLD FR肥NDS
APPLICATlON FOR MEMBER;HIP
AND CLAS§MATES.
BO§丁ON UNIVERS汀Y CLUB OF BOSTON
S臣ND YOUR APPしICATlON
軸O
圏
AddreiS
Dues; $2.00
Piease make check payabie †o Bos†on UniYerSity Club of Boston, and
maiI †o J. Osborne Hoimes. Chai「man of Member§hip. I Cou「† S†ree†,
Room 83. Bos†on.