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The Boston University Alumni Magazine. Volume 24
Boston University
OpenBU
http://open.bu.edu
BU Publications
Bostonia
1950
Bostonia: v. 24, no. 1-9
Stout, Vic
Boston University
Boston University. Bostonia: The Boston University Alumni Magazine, volume 24,
number 1-9. 1950-1951. Archived in OpenBU at http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19703.
http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19703
Boston University
l
l
Medica案Schoo言Aiumni:
The o龍cers of your Alumni Associatio音n Wish to express their thanks to you for your help in making the past
year the most successful丘nancially in the history of the A]umni Association. In a very quick yet impressive
audit’We Wish to call your attention to the po音Sition of your class in the race・ (graph・)
Dean Faulkner extends his thanks to the Alumni
Your Alumni Association in cooperation with the
Association for their help in obtaining the followmg
Medical School and the Massachusetts Memorial Hos-
PrOjects for血e Medical School:
Pjtals have co-financed the publication of the Boston
Equipment for the Department of
MicrobioIogy $7,000.00
Medical Quarterly. You will also be interested to know
that your Alumni Association gave a very successful
EqulPment for Visual Education ‘ 1,327.33
dinner to the Junior class last year・ In additio-n, a mOSt
Photographic supplies 83.78
delightful party and dinner was tendered to this year,s
EqulPment for Conference Room 24.28
freshman class on their first day at School.
" ̄ 〇一 〇〇 ●〇〇 〇一〇〇〇 〇〇一 〇〇一 〇〇 〇〇〇〇〇 ●- ,-〇 ° ●"- .一 一〇〇〇〇〇〇 ..一書- “○○ .〇〇 °〇〇 〇 〇 〇〇 〇一○○●〇一 °"- “〇〇 〇○○ ,- ●- 〇〇〇 li〇 °○- 〇一 °- li〇〇〇 〇一 °- l〇〇 °○○〇〇 〇 〇〇〇 〇- ○○ ●"-●〇〇 〇 〇一
寄主へ∴∴う
書冊謹⋮⋮器器落盤9之。認謹脚露盤認諾諾認諾認諾4 4。総譜3 4。認諾認諾鵠器0000002 。
…※ま誤ま誤まき蒜誌諜誌誌衰蒸器鵠禁誌課業器言誤言論蒸器薫誌蒸器器畿嵩
The University. ‥ Boston University’s schooI of Medicine ‥ ・ Dr. Clifton
Todd Perkins, Alumni President. ‥ The Financmg Of Medical Education . ‥ Research Activities at B.U.S.M‥ . Building a Strong
Alumni: O餓cers and Committees ‥. May 4, 1951, Scientific Program
‥ . Alumni Reminiscences . ‥ Growth of Our Medical School. ‥
Campus Aerial View. ‥ On Campus: WBUR Amiversary. ‥ Dr. Robert
E. Moody, Director of Libraries ‥ ・ United Nations Panel. ‥ Sargent College Musical. ‥ Boston University’s veterans Center ‥ ・
Dr. R. B. Hunter Appointed Lecturer. ‥ Social Hygiene Education
. ‥ Physical Education in Japan ‥ e Epsilon Chapter, Delta Pi Epsilon
‥ ・ Pictorial: ``First Day” at school for President Case. ‥ Dr. Brenton
R. Lutz and Cancer Research
The Alumni ‥ ・ Berlin: Russian Zone. ‥ Paragraph Pulpit ‥ ・ We
Salute Frederick W. Mansfield, Esq., L’02 . ‥ Alumni Association
Nominating Committee ‥ ・ Letters to the Editor..‥ Alumni Board
Of Directors Luncheon. ‥ Alumni in Military ServICe ‥ e The Hes-
A量umni in Review ‥. Extracts-The American Joumal of PsychoIogy. ‥
A Pen Picture of a Great Teacher ‥ . Unto The Hills
CIub News. ‥ Merrimac Valley Joint Meeting ‥ ・ Mi帖ord Club ScholarShips ‥ ・ Rhode Island Club Dimer .
Co嘗eγ; 0れ胱s ooαγ章0 c種の8S, Med S弛de動きJ重最榔S
Kr高名肋αれ, M’5重, Of LaooγeれCe, MαsS., S寄OpSあのCんα‡
読書九Dγ. Jα肋eS M. Fα重`視れeγ, DeαれOj拐e Bos演のれ
U競演eγS克γ S訪00事of Med3〇㍍e. (Co●,er bγ弟肋
厭γα巧S轟αガP九oきogγαp加r.)
Spo巾S. ‥ 1951 Football Slate... New England Ice Hockey Champs
. ‥ Spring Sports Schedules: Baseball. ‥ Crew. ‥ GoIf. ‥
Tennis . ‥.Track
39
Fγ0れ轟p裏eCe; To肋 Cα朋erOれ, B事訪dされg S霊`peγ訪"
書eれde競売 の章 雄e Sc九のo夢 of Medi〇㍍e, α証は∴be∴α
The Classes . ‥ University. ‥ Medicine, Law, TheoIogy ‥ ・ Engage←
fa肋講のγ 〆g事`re め の夢夢 Med Sc九〇の夢 grαds. To肋
αれd DeαれFa事`弛れer αγe S九〇秒れpO訪高地gき心e柳のγ
書o f九e Medあのさ Sc九00夢 Fα肋綿γ-肋Ore∴話のれ
重,800-きO B読Id A S書γ0れg Aわ耽れi.
ments ‥ ・ Marriages ‥ ・ Future BU’ers ‥ ・ In Memoriam... Our
A dvertis ers
GENERAL OFFICERS
President,Mrs.CharlesA.Tiemey,P’86 Vice-President,PaulR.Bergholtz,B’8l
棚減諾議音盤M’37 E器諾蔀蕊鵠諾彊豊。,hR.Pa.s。nS,A,20
ExecutiveAlumniSecretary,ArthurE.Jermer,A’27
STAFF: Arthur E. Jenner, A,27, Editor; George J. Aziz, PR,50, Associate Editor; Alan Miller, Class Notes; Evelyn Card, Club News Editor; Vic
Stout, B,31, Sports Editor; Jim Ryan, Dick Jenkins, Sta柾Photographers; Pasquale Diotaiuti, A’42, Sta紐Artist. EDITORIAL BOARD: Mrs. Virginia L. Tiemey, P,36; Mr. David Brickman, B,81/’82; Mr. Clifton Follansbee, B’86; Dr. Judson R. Butler, G,40; Miss Jane Donovan, P,45.
PUBLISHING DETAILS: No. 7, Volume XXIV, April, 195l. Published monthly from October to May and bimonthly June through September by
the BOSTON UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Member of the American Alumni Council. Editorial o餓ces: 308 Bay State Road, Boston 15,
Massachusetts. Entered as second-Class matter at the Post O餓ce, Boston, Massachusetts, under the Ac七of March 8, 1879. Copyright, Apr皿, 1951,
by the Boston University Alumni Association. Subscription: $2.00 per year, included in the Alumni Contribution. Single copy 25 cents・
43
擢
覇誓
Of haIld量ing LoIlg Dis車a皿ce
Ope細a書o営Toil DiくⅢng pI.OVeS a big he漢p in冒hese
busy dcIyS Of nalioncI案prepa「edness
Long Distance Iines are rea工ly hummlng these
days. There are many more calls than a year ago.
It makes for faster serv主ce - eSPeCialIy on calls
that fomerly were relayed through other cities.
More are from the Nation,s indus七ries and Armed
With so many more ca11s o皿血e Iines, i七,s a
Forces, hurrylng the country’s most important job.
mighty good thing that Opera七or To工l Dialing was
A big help in keep賞ng these ca11s movmg lS
developed and is now available a皿d in use in so
Operator Toll Dialing - a remarkable new tele“
many places・ About oIle-third of Long Distance
Phone development.
Calls are now being ha皿dled in this new way・
You glVe血e Long Distance operator the num-
It is just one of many ways m Which the growth
ber i皿the usual way・ She quickly presses several
and improvement of telephone service are now
keys and your call goes straight through to the
PrOVlng Of extra value to the Nation in these days
●
telephone you want in a dis七ant clty.
Of preparedness.
ANOTHER STEP FORWARD … Moγe伽d moγe teZep九one useγS訪α grO訪れg肋肋beγ 0/ mefγOpO脇aれClγeaS Ca競
れo撮, d壬aZ ToIZ caus萩γeC"o J.eaγbγ p弛ces de sa耽e “,ay庇γ djal Local cans … BEしし丁軋EPHONE SY§TEM
A α左肩偽l
Fellow Alum皿i:
MAY WE PRESE甲Our fellow alumnus’Harold C・ Case’re置
cently nnani弧o皿sly elected Presiden七①f Bost①n Universlty・ He
is remembered as a student wi鴨h wide interes七s and vision.
Through personal suffering and s七ruggle’血rough indomitable will
and great enthusiasm he has become a grea七leader of men. We
hail him as a worthy successor to our truly great presiden亡of the
PaSt quarter Century.
Dr. Case;
May we present the alumni of Boston Universlty? almost
100,000 in number, Iiving m all parts of the world, WOrking ln
aIユ宜elds and professions, Who by their tralnmg and disciplined
1ives are glVlng a leadership to prlnCiples of democracy and
brotherhood that is vital to our nation. We assure yo調our whole-
hearted loyalty and support in the great and cha11engmg yearS
●
JuS七ahead.
To you and your delightfu旺ami工y, We eX亡end our heartiest
welcome.
A胃U耽れ棚S
BUILD工NG A S甘RONG ALUMN工
S
冒
N
O
(See Pαge上5)
O
U N I V E R S I T Y
S C H O O L
O F
M E D I C 工 N E
T相田 t胴V田植SJTY
RECENT PROGRESS OF 甲田E SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Building upon the background
SPOnSibility of the practicing physi-
thought indicate the wisdom of co-
and foundations of one hundred
Cian to keep infomed of the new置
Ordinating the attack and study of
and two years, the SchooI of Medi-
est developments. To assist in this
SPeCific diseasese Each activity is
Ship of Dean James M. Faulkner,
PrOblem a post-graduate course in
medicine has been carried on dur-
thereby strengthened to the advan-
COntinues to e任ectively shoulder its
ing the past winter. The success o-f
Of the research and teaching pro-
dual responsibilities - the training
this course indicates its worth to
Of physicians in the art and science
the medical community・
grams in cancer under single leadership is bringing large benefits to
Cine, under the progressive leader-
Of healing and the seeking of new
While the School of Medicine
tage of both. The recent unification
the student as well as to the investi-
knowledge for the benefit of hu-
depends on the pa正time services
manity.
Of seasoned practitioners for much
Research facilities for this coordi-
ga亡or・
Advantageously located between
Clinical instruction, many deparト
nated program include the CytoIo-
the Boston City Hospital and the
ment heads and members of the
Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals,
]unior instructional sta任are音On a
gy Laboratory and Tumor Museum
Of the Mallory Institute of PathoIo-
the educational program profits
full time basis between the School
from this cIose proximity to two of
and its a鮒iated hospitals・ This has
gy at Boston City Hospital and the
recently completed Homone Re-
Boston’s great health institutions,
attracted outstanding leaders in the
SearCh Laboratory at the SchooI
rich in clinical material. In addi-
field of medical education and has
SuPPOrted jointly with MassachuSettS Memorial Hospitals. From
tion to the value derived from the
COntributed substantially to the ef-
teaching facilities at these two hos-
fectiveness of the teaching pro-
Pitals, the clinical faculty com-
gram・
PrlSeS PraCticing clinicians from
their two sta紐s.
these laboratories comes a constant
且ow of stimulating and up to date
The faculty is ever aware of its
teaching mate正ale Broad cancer
responsibilities to improve the value
research programs now in progress
With a student body of 270 and
and e群ectiveness of medical educa-
include studies of the chemical
a faculty practically identical in
tion・ Changmg PattemS in the diag-
COmPOSition of cancer’the possi-
number, the schooI carries on
nosis and treatment of disease re-
bility of transplanting cancers to
nomal undergraduate and gradu-
Sulting from new medical knowl-
Small animals where cIose study
ate programs. The students are rep-
edge and from broad social and
and observation is possible, and
resentative of a country-Wide音CrOSS
economic changes point the way to
the value of various hormones in
section of the men and women
new organization and method in
trainmg tO become physicians.
the training of physicians. Several
Special teaching facilities for this
SuCh developments have been re-
PrOgram include the Massachusetts
Cently carried out at the SchooI.
Pos章“Graduate Training
The greatly accelerated rate of
medical discovery du正ng the past
decade has made di鯖cult the re書
Cancer Hospital in Pondvi11e, and
cancer cases seen on the Home
Medical Service thus providing a
Cancer Program Coordinated
Current medical knowledge and
5
rounded clinical training in this imPOrtant field・
H⑱me Medica獲 Service
DR. CHF甲ON T. PERKINS,
Ano血er significant development
in the undergraduate program is
the reorganization, by the Division
ALUMニN工PRESIDENT
By WILLIAM MALAMUD, M.D.,押o/essor of Psyc枕αtry
of Social and Environmental Medicine, of the Medical District Serv重
ice・ Originally set up, Prlmarily, aS
a community service, teaChing ob-
With the election of Dr. Clifton
the other specialties can equal it
T。 Perkins as President, the Alumni
in scope and complexity. The Com-
Association of the School of Medi-
missioner of such an organization
Cine paid fitting tribute to an out置
must be not only a wise administra-
Home Medical Service provides a
Standing figure in the field of men-
tor and a financial expert, but must
rich educational experience and a
tal health and secured a capable
also be in constant contact with
high quality of medical care for the
leader to direct the work of this
Clinical progress and research de-
indigent sick. Under dose, eXPe正
active Association.
Velopments; he must be familiar
Dr. Perkins is Commissioner of
the Department of Mental Hy-
With hospital constructions in his
jectives have been added and the
enced supervision the student in
the Home Medical Service deals
wi血illness in a family pattem,
g工ene Of the state of Maryland・
leaming to use other community
Few men in this position of re-
hea工th services e任ectively. Thus he
SPOnSibility have possessed his expe-
develops an awareness of the basic
rience and personal qua雌cations.
social responsibility of medical
工n the ever widening horizon of
medical progress, With the rapid
PraCtice.
While this is a departure from a
field and have an understanding
Of socioIogical and psychoIogical
trends.
By temperament, native skill and
training, Dr. Perkins is most admirably suited for his position.
Born in Maine
traditional curriculum of medical
growth of knowledge and excursions into related fields of scientific
education, it serves a most desir-
endeavor, the task of directing and
able puxpose in developing in血e
COOrdinating comprehensive medi-
1901・ He received his preliminary
Cal programs presents an increas-
education in the public schooIs of
ingly overwhelming challenge to
velopment of this program has been
those who are called on to function
Famington and Rochester, New
Hampshire, and upon graduation
made possible by the Common-
in such capacities.
from high school in 1918’entered
young physician the insight necelSsary for the study of man. Full de-
wealth Fund.
Additional Surgical Facilities
Students who wish to gam an
experience of general practice in a
Clifton Todd Perkins was bom in
Aubum, Maine, On January 20,
This is particularly true in the
Bates College in his native state,
CaSe Of the physician who is called
and was graduated with the degree
upon to direct the intricate mech-
Of A.B. in 1922. He immediately
anisms of an organized State Men-
entered Boston University SchooI
tal Health Department, for few of
of Medicine and in 1926, reCeived
rural community have the oppor置
tunity
to
take
an
elec廿ve
two
months clinical clerkship at the Monadnock Community Hospital in
Peterborough, New Hampshire, Or
血e HugglnS Memorial Hospital in
Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. This
has given to many students a
clearer conception of the rewards
and satisfactions of general prac一
蹟ce.
The clinical facilities for the
teaching of surgery have recently
been augmented and strengthened
by the fomal designation of the
Third Surgical Service at the Bos-
ton City Hospital as a Boston University teaching service with a full
time Director of Teaching・
(Co脇働ed on page 20)
B.U.S.M. AI事`脚高知cep房0れfor Fre話肌eれ, S印書e肋be「,重950, α‡ Mα$§α〇九榔Se鵬
Me肋orこのI Ho$p加l.
6
his M.D. degree. His intemship
his services from other states, and
WaS graduated from Bates Co音llege
and residency m medicine at血e
On Janu竺y first, 1950, he becamf
in 1950, and has∴Since then em-
Massachuse壮S Memorial Hospitals
CommissIOner in Maryland, a POSl-
barked on a career of scientific re_
PrOVided him with an adequate
foundation for his future career,
tion which he holds now. Brief
SearCh and social s山dies. Many
though his period of service音in
honors came to him from various
and in 1928, heI entered the field of
王nstitutions of leamlng, and scien-
PSyChiatry at the Worcester State
tific societies・ In 1948, he was glV-
Hospital.
en an honorary degree of LL.D・ by
Boston University and in 1950, an
Menta案Disease Commissioner
honorary degree of Sc・D. by Bates
His progress there was rapid, be-
Colユege・ He has been a member
COmmg Assistant Superintendent in
and active participant in the activi-
1932’and continuユng in that capacties of professional societies’SuCh
rty until 1935. The unusual abilities which he exhibited in the vari_
as the American Psychiatric Asso-
Ciation, the American Medical As-
OuS aSPeCtS Of psychiatry led to his
SOCiation, the Ame正can Hospital
appointment as Assistant to the
Association, and o血ers・ He is past
Commissioner in the Massachusetts
Department of Mental Diseases. In
1937 he became the Chief Assistant
president of both血e New England
Society of Psychiatry’and the Mas-
SaChusetts Psychiatric Society.
in that department’and a year
His contributions to psychiatry
later, WaS aSked to direct the de-
Partment, first as Acting CommisSioner, and after a few months, aS
Commissioner.
For twelve years thereafter he
remained in that position, SOOn
PrOVing to be an outstanding figure in psychiatry’both in his own
Dr・ C的庇肋To捌Per厳鵬,舶,26
Maryland has been, he has already
PrOVen the justification of such an
appointment, having instituted and
maintained a most progressive program in his department.
range over a wide area of activities.
While in Worcester, he completed
and published the re音Sults of scien-
tific research・ His qua愉cations as
a clinician and teacher of young
PSyChiatrists are outstanding and
his contributions to the field of ad_
In 1928, he married Amie Mar-
ministration and hospital organiza-
garet Jackson of Massachusetts and
tion rank among the. highes七・ He is
to this union was bom his only
highly respected by his colleagues
daughter, Agnes Am, Who, fo11ow-
as a good doctor, and a loyal and
mg in the footsteps of her father,
devoted friend.
State, and in the country at large・
He guided the coursel Of the care
and management of the mentally
Sick through the di能cult pre-War
and World War II years with a skill
and e鯖ciency that were recognized
for their high quality at a time
When great strides were made in
the development of psychiatry
throughout the world.
'Goes to Maryland
He raised the e鯖ciency of perfomance in his丘eld to a new level,
fostered good medical practice, eX葛
Cellent administration and superior research investigations in the
institutions under his direction. His
report to the Govemor shortly be-
fore he Ieft Massachusetts was an
OutStanding contribution to血e
CauSe Of prevention and treatment
Of mental diseases, and was so acClaimed throughout the country.
The recognition that came to him
Aれ0碗er fr銃尻椛の職碓r猟e鰯軸敵-Dr.朽α輯〇号s C.且の耽嵐ちA$議畠綱呂互彊α巧
naturally resulted in requests for
Idおcαれ俄dα書e Ed抑αrd S飢,芯のf巌§ α○○e坪α職Ce bγ拐e cの耽耽海eeのめ
Ad柳香s§ioれ$心の沈e Bの§め職Uれ海er諦γ S〇九00胃of舶e就〇㍍e。
7
THE F工NANC工NG OF MED耳CAL EDUCAT工ON
By DR・ JAMES M・ FAULKNER, Dean, S(坊00Z o/ Me萌e訪e
The most urgent problem which
it wi1工requlre the support of a
1ikely that the doctors will carry
is facing medical education in the
large number of individuals and
the entire burden themselves,血e
United States is that of financial
this support will have to be contin-
COmbined support of the profession
SuPPOrt. This problem did not exist
uous year証ter year. will the
and the lay public may go far to-
SeVenty-five years ago when gomg
American public be wi11ing to un-
Ward easmg the burden. It would
to medical school meant merely at-
dertake this responsibility as a con-
Seem rather doubtful, however,
tending a series of lectures and
tribution t6 the general health and
Whether private annual giving
demonstrations. Many such schooIs
Welfare of the country? Certainly,
COuld be depended upon for con-
in America operated on a commer-
every attempt shou工d be made to
tinued adequate support through
cial basis and retumed a handsome
educate the public as to the need
good times and bad・
and to expIore all the potentialities
Federal aid to medical education
advent of the new sciences of pa-
Of private giving・ As a matter of
is being proposed as one way to
thoIogy, bacterioIogy, PhysioIogy,
fact, although not yet o能cia11v an-
assure immediate and substantial
and biochemistry which began to
nounced, this subject is receiving
SuPPOrt tO the medical schooIs at
eat up the tuition fees. Not only
the eamest study of a distinguished
this critical juncture. Senate Bill
did courses in these subjects re-
group of laymen, including leading
industrialists, Organized for the pur-
dorsed unanimously by the Senate
PrO丘t to their owners. It was the
qulre a lot of expensive equlPment
and installation but they necessitated a lot of highly specialized instructors. In order to keep these
men mentally alert and abreas亡of
the developments in their special
fields, it was necessary to allow
them time for research. Even in
the clinical fields it became necesSary tO emPIoy some key men on
a fu11 time basis and others on a
Part time basis to insure adequate
teaching.
Thus, COStS have skyrocketed
while income from endowments
has shrunk in purchase value and
the
new
tax
laws
have
v址ually
eliminated the very large private
S837, Which has recently been en-
Labor and Public Welfare Commit-
pOSe・
Medical Societies Vo章e Funds
That the medical profession is
alive to its own responsibilities in
this regard was shown by the ac-
tion of the American Medical AssoCiation in voting?500,000 of its
funds for the aid of the medical
schooIs. The Califomia State MediCal Society has added $100,000 to
this fund and a large number of
individual subscriptions have. come
tee, PrOVides for a payment to each
medical schooI of $500 for each
Student enrolled, Plus $500 for each
new student taken on above its
PreSent quOta. There is also a proVision for $10,000,000 annually for
new construction on a matching
basis. This Bill is very similar to
One Which was passed by the Sen-
ate last year but which died in a
House Committee - 1argely due to
American Medical Association op-
in・ If every physician contributed
$100 a year to the fund, there
WOuld be more than enough to
PQSition・
Federal Assistance
cover the total deficits of the
The Trustees of the American
schooIs. While it does not seem
Medical Association profess to fear
gifts and bequests. The e鮮ects on
govemment controI of medical eduCation through subsidization. The
the privately supported medical
SChooIs of the country have been
deans of the medical schooIs, Who
serious. The deficits in most schooIs
have had considerable firsthand ex-
are so large tha亡the prospect of
Perience with Federal assistance to
medical education and research,
raising enough endowment funds
to bridge the gap appears remote.
di任er sharply with the American
Source畠of Support
Medical Association on this point
To what sources, then, may the
and, in fact, they question whether
medical schooIs tum for financial
the American Medical Association
assistance? We may divide them,
is qua愉ed to speak with authority
On this subject. A recent po11 indi-
for convenience, into two catego-
ries - Private and govemmental.
The magnitude of the problem is
such that if it is to be soIved withOut reCOurSe tO the p中Iic tr鉾sury,
Ho耽e Med訪a夢Ser演ce coれfereれce§ αre
S卑pp地肌eれ肩ed bγ da勘 誘拐 轟の pa一
轟れ肩S’九o肋es,の九er色f。棚r意見-γe音αr S加重
de動蔦§ ad肋香れ軸erけeのき柳eれ雷撮れde軍書府e
Cわ§e 拙per章?轟。n Of pγecepめr§ aれd
facき初γ me肋bers.
8音
Cated that all but eight medical
deans were in favor of S387. What
the final outcome will be cannot
(Co脇鋤ed oれPage 9)
RESEARCH ACT工VIT工ES AT THE BOSTON UN工VERS工TY
SCHOOL OF MED工CINE
By LOUIS WE登NSTEIN, M.D., Ph.D.
A8SOC音義aめProfes$のr Of拙ed香c訪e
The pnmary function of a medi-
tions necessary in the integrated
these researches have attracted and
Sicians for the practice of medicine・
PrOgram Of undergraduate, graduate, and postgraduate teaching and
reveal the sincere faith of Federal,
In order to fu岨I totally its social
to carry on an investigative pro-
agencies in the promise of worth-
gram in which both graduate students and faculty had the oppor-
While accomplishment.
tunity to participate・
Of the work of each Department of
Cal school is the education of phy-
responsibility to the community
and nation, however, the modem
PrOgreSSive medical school must
recognize its obligation to go be-
Research in Progress
yond the training of doctors for
Included also in the description
the Medical School is the number
Of people engaged in the various
This paper wi11 not concem it-
investigations because one of the
Without denying the overwhelm-
self with the educational e任ort of
Very lmPOrtant PrOducts of any re-
ingly primary position of the edu-
the School as regards clinical teach-
SearCh program, in addition to the
cational e任ort on behalf of the un-
ing since this has already been dis-
COllection of factua] data, is the
dergraduate student of medicine, it
cussed in some detail elsewhere.
training of young men and women
PraCtice alone.
“e
COmmunity, Private and commercial
is nevertheless obvious that a med-
What I propose to do is to describe,
in the methods and technique of
ical school has at least three other
rather brie且y because of lack of
investigation. It is these young peo-
functions. These are ( 1) postgrad-
SPaCe Su鯖cient to present the com-
Ple who subsequently become inde-
uate training of physicians for im-
Plete detail, the researches which
Pendent investigators and maintain
and continue progress in research.
PrOVing and enlarging their knowledge of clinical medicine, (2) the
training of young men in the disci-
Pline of research and teaching m
the basic and clinical sciences, and
are now in progress in the Medica]
School and to point out, Where pos-
In the Department of Anatomy
Sible,血eir slgnificance to the na-
Dr. Arthur M. Lassek is carrymg
tion in war and in peace.
Out fundamental investigations in
I shall also note the sources from
the anatomy and function of the
(3) the carrying on of investigative
activities in both the basic sciences
Which financial support has been
Central nervous system・ He is cut-
made possible for the pursuance of
ting the dorsal roots of the brachial
and the clinical fields by the fac-
these investigations since such facts
ulty. To omit any one of these func-
POint up the wide interest that
Plexus in various combinations and
detemmmg the extent and type of
tions is to make the medical school
incomplete; tO Perfom them a11 at
their highest level of e飴ciency lS
to reach the ultimate goal of medical education.
The Boston University SchooI of
Medicine has for years made a seriOuS e任ort to perfom all of the func一
FINANC ING
(Co徹れued from page 8)
be foretold at this time・ My own
hope is that a balance will be
struck with substantial financial as-
Sistance commg from both Federal
and private sources. I believe that
SuCh joint support will put the medical schooIs on a solid footing with
a minimum risk of political interference.
DeαれJα耽eS M. Fa榔耽れer,財.D., aれd九誌8eCre書のrγ, Mお§財榔r拐Sα鋤,γeγ.
9
When man accidentally ingests food
Paralysis which occurs in monkeys.
Studies on the e任ect of midline in-
Which has been contaminated by
Cisions of the pyramida萱tract at
this organism・
Various levels are being made to
Studies on the production of lip-
ascertain the relationship of various
ids and of lipolytic enzymes by
PartS Of this portion of the nervous
SyStem tO SPaStic paralysis.
Out. Dr. Fabian Lionetti, in Dr.
These investigations are of im-
Walker’s Department, is investiga-
Staph. aureus are also being carried
ting lysozyme and its mechanism of
portance to the understanding of
the development of certain types of
action. This material destroys cer-
neuroIoglCal dysfunction in man・
tain bacteria and has also been im・
Dr. Lassek is assisted in his work
Plicated in some human diseases,
by two technicians and the investi-
e.g・, ulcerative colitis, by some in-
VeStigators. These rescarches are
gations are supported by the Medica] School and the American Medi-
of most fundamental interest to
cal Association.
the bacterioIogist, biochemist and
cliniciah. Most of these studies are
Department of Physiology
SuPPOrted financia11y by the O餓ce
Studies on problems of impor-
Fきrs‡- αnd second・γeaγ S細はde調書§ f暮`れ心e手
tance to military and civilian medi-
00轟Ie,榔,48,書eac九㍍g fdio撮,訪psγC九o夢-
cine are in progress in the Depart葛
書heiγ ed耽Cα扇0職の巌Ie Dr. George E融"
of Naval Research of the United
States Navy Department.
Og拐reCOrd$ e昆cけOCaγdiogra肋§めbe
され書eγpre書ed bγ eaC九s加de職種
Immuno量ogy and MicrobioIogy
ment of PhvsioIogy. Here, Dr. Earl
R. Loew and his associate Dr. Al-
Biochemistry are engaged in studies
In the Division of Immunochem-
bert H. Hegnauer together with
WOrking on the toxins produced, by
istry, Dr. Wi11iam C. Boyd is con-
SeVeral graduate students and tech-
Staphylococcus aureus, an Organism
tinumg his work on the blood
nicians are studying the e任ects of
Which produces human infection
groups of man・ Some of Dr. Boyd’s
low environmental temperatures
With very great frequency. These
findings in this field, eSPeCially his
On reSPiration and the circula-
investigators are attempting to
anthropoIoglC Studies, have at-
tion of blood. This work is of
Purify one toxic substance which
tracted international attention. His
amed forces of the country from
PrOduces hemolysis and another
Which is responsible for the severe
PreSent investigations center around
the production of blood group
the standpoint of leaming how ex-
diarrhea which occurs occasionally
SPeCific substances from nomal
the greatest importance to the
treme cold a群ects the functionmg
of man.
The slgnificance of this investigation to the military e群ort is evi-
denced by the support of this
PrOject by the United States Air
Force. Evaluation of various antihistaminic agents and the physiologlC e任ects of adrenergic blocking
drugs is being carried out under
the financial sponsorship of several
COmmerCial drug companies. This
WOrk is a continuation of the pIO-
neer work of Dr. Loew in the field
Of antihistaminic drugs and is of
great importance in the clinical
PraCtice of medicine particularly in
SOme Of the a11ergic diseases.
Biochemistry
Dr. Bumham S. Walker and two
associates in the Department of
S暮′per諒ed bγ Dγ. Ear夢舵. Loeの, c助けeγ,乃γ競"γeαr §脇虎れ肩S Fわ職梶調o
aれd Ro§aγio Sca音れd棚rα ○○れdαCきαれ∴eαperう7れeれ寝訪れe p帝Sioわgγ
lα心0rαめrγ.
10
human sources. This work is sup-
United States Public Health Serv-
POrted by the United States Public
Health Service.
ice.
Pharmaco量ogy
The Armed Forces EpidemioIogiCal Board is sponsoring the re-
The research studies in the De_
SearChes of Dr・ Geo徹ey Edsall and
Dr. Edgar E. Baker and their asso-
Partment Of PhamacoIogy are under the direction of Dr. George L.
Ciates in the Department of Micro-
Maison and have centered mainly
bioIogy, On immunization against
around evaluation of some of the
diphtheria. Studies are in progress
drugs which may be of use in
On the immune response of humans
lowemg the blood pressure in in-
to var土ous doses of diphtheria toxoid
dividuals with hypertension・ This
and the relation between prlOr im-
is one of the most pressmg PrOb-
mune status to response to immun-
lems in medicine today and the de-
Velopment of agents of value in its
ization・ This work is of the greatest
importance in the field of protec-
ずれomas Ca肌eγ0職のnd “frわれd’’毒胃胃be
tion against diphtheria in both the
fa肋拐αrわal夢B.U.S.柑. grads of沈e
Civilian and military populations
pas轟∴ねこγけγeαγS.
Particularly since in World War II
Which produce bacillary dysentery
many of the soldiers in various
in man are being examined・
treatment would be of great im-
POrtanCe in reducing the mortality
rate from heart disease, the commonest cause of death.
Dr. Ma土son and his co-WOrkers
PartS Of the world became ill with
this disease and because there was
Dr. Hooker and his associates in
who have numbered between
the Department of ImmunoIogy are
twelve and thirty have been con-
an increase in the incidence of
COntinuing their studies on some of
Centrating their e任orts on deriva-
this infection in some areas of the
the fundamental aspects of allergy・
tives of veratrum viride・ They have
United States sho血y after cessation
One aspect of these investigations
developed methods for standardiza-
of the war.
Which might be of great value in
tion of veratrum alkaloids based
Of great importance also are the
the clinical practice of allergy is
on the bloo′d pressure lowering
土nvestigations of the e任ect of corti-
an attempt to develop test tube
e鮮ects of these drugs in animals.
SOne On diphtheria immunization
methods for the detection and de-
The other physioIoglC and toxic ef-
Which are in progress in this depart置
termination of the quantity of rea-
fects of these drugs are also under
gin and neutralizing antibody ln
investigation・ This work is under
and di任erentiating the various
the blood of allergic people・ This
the sponsorship of a commercia]
Strains of the group of organisms
work is being supported by the
drug concem.
ment. New methods for classifying
Studies on cardiac arrest, an aCCident which occasionally occurs
during surgical operations on man,
is also under study and is supported
bv the Massachusetts Heart Association and the United State Public
Health Service. As many as thirty
people have been engaged at one
time or another on this project.
Psychiatry
Two main researches have oc-
cupied the attention of the Department of Psychiatry under the
direction of Dr. William Malamud.
Studies are in progress on the e任ect
of adrenocorticotrophic homone
and cortisone on mental disease.
Although no definite signs of beneDr.彬’αl‡e㌢ W. Je請er, prOlessor ofわgαI肋e倣c訪e, S事叩pleme調書Sのめc加はr音e
関われα deかじOnS毎の房0れOf α pa重心ologうca! specこmeれfoγ Leo職のγd C九αγ置
peれ轟γ and P心筋p B事`γ鳥e, bo沈拙’52.
1l
ficial results have as yet been obtained, the findings indicate that
other adrena] cortica] substances
ment of newer methods for the
five assistants are studying 血e
may be more useful.
management of surgical infections,
motor activity of the gastro-intesti-
The other project invoIves an
clinical studies in thrombo-embolic
nal tract in health and disease and
investigation of the psychiatric
disease and diseases of the peh-
are concentrating mainly 。n Cardio-
SPaSm and ulcerative colitis. In-
PrOblems in old age. With the inCreaSlng number of people in this
VeStigation of the in且uence of radia輸
COuntry living to an older age a
tion on the gastro-intestinal tract is
great many social and psychoIogica]
being sponsored by the Atomic
PrOblems of great importance have
Energy Commission. The e任ects
been created・ The high rate of
Of various sedatives in patients with
PSyChiatric disturbances in the
liver dysfunction and the metabo-
Older age groups has raised a se正
1ism of these agents are being de-
OuS PrOblem which is receiving, in
temined with the support of the
the Department of Psychiatry’the
Veterans Administration.
serious attention that it merits.
HematoIogy
Some of this work is being sup-
In the Division of HematoIogy,
POrted by the Worcester Founda-
research projects are being ca正ed
the Worcester State Hospital・
Out in the laboratories of Dr. Joseph
F. Ross and Dr. Charles P. Emer_
Hypertensive Studies
︼
﹁
SOn。 Dr. Ross and his co-WO・rkers,
圏
tion for Experimental BioIogy and
Crockett and Stuart Finch, are
Drs. Franklin Ebaugh, Jr., Charles
his co-WOrkers, Drs. George P.
-
Dr. Reginald H. Smithwick and
Dγ. Lo重量防e訪s書e訪,財,43
Dera Kinsey, and others’are COn-
tinulng their studies on hyperten-
Studying radioactive iodine in the
diagnosis and treatment of thyro-
Chester W. Howe’Douglas Famer’
Pheral vascularノSyStem・ A large
toxicosis and have collected data
number of technicians, nurSeS, SeC-
indicating that the uptake of this
Sion and the physioIogical changes
retaries and research fe11ows are
isotope is a much more accurate
as well as the clinical results of
engaged in the various phases of
diagnostic procedure than deter-
these researches which are sup-
mination of the basal metabolic
SymPathectomy. Some of the physiOIogical studies are being carried
Out in co-OPeration with the De-
Partment Of Medicine with the coOPeration of Drs. Robert W・ Wil-
POrted by the Smithwick Founda-
tion, the Evans Memorial Fund,
Brown University, the King Fund
hyperthyroidism is highly success-
and others.
’fu工and probably preferable to
kins and Franz J. Ingelfinger and
their colleagues.
rate and that the administration of
radioactive iodine to patients with
Surgery Or therapy with other anti-
Department of Medicine
thyroid drugs such as propylthiour-
The clinical studies on hyperten-
The research program in the De-
acil・ Other problems which are
Sion are of great significance be-
Partment Of Medicine is carried out
being mVeStigated are the chemo-
CauSe a large number of patients
by the physicians associated with
therapy of blood neoplasias’the use
have been fo11owed for a consider_
Of radioactive phosphorus in the
able period of time and the final
the Evans Memorial of the MassaChusetts Memorial Hospital and is
evaluation of the data wi11 yield
under the direction of Dr. Chester
Cythemia’detemination of blood
information of the greatest impor-
S. Keefer, the Wade Professor of
VOlume in man using erythrocytes
tance in an understanding of the
tagged with radioactive phos-
the e任ect of sympathectomy・ Stud-
Medicine in the Medical School and
Physician-in-Chief of the MassaChusetts Memorial Hospitals. The
Phorus, the mechanism of blood
formation usmg radioactive iron,
natural history of hypertension and
treatment of leukemias and poly-
ies on an adrenal tumor, Pheo-
investigations are carried out in
the surviva] and preservation of
Chromocytoma, Which produces
the various divisions of the Depart-
leucocytes, and the rate of tum-
high blood pressure are also in
ment of Medicine and will be de-
OVer Of iron in various enzyme
PrO greSS.
SCribed separately for each division.
studies.
Other investigations concem
themselves with the gastric secre-
Gastro-enterOIogy
tory mechanism in peptic ulcer, the
In the Division of Gastro-enter_
use of antibiotics and the develop-
OIogy, Dr. Franz J. Ingelfinger and
12
Radioactive Isotopes
This is the division in the Department of Medicine in which most of
-
Whitelaw, Charles W. Robertson,
the work with radioactive isotopes
Grouping Laboratory is aiding
is being carried out and a1l of the
丘nancia11y in some of the studies.
necessary h王ghly complex and ex-
The Research and Development
anism of ammonia fomation by
the kidney and its importance in
regulating acid-base balance is also
PenSive instruments necessary in
Board of the Amy’血e United
such studies are available. The in-
States Public Health Service, and
VeStigations of Dr. Ross and his
the Evans Memorial are support-
量mmunology
CO-WOrkers receive financial sup-
mg the work of Dr. Amold S. Rel-
POrt from the funds of the Evans
man・ In co-OPeration with other
In the Division of ImmunoIogy
Dr. Francis C. Lowell and his as-
being studied・
Memorial, the Atomic Energy Com-
divisions in the Department of
sociates Drs. Frank量in and Schiller
mission, and the United States
Medicine Dr. Relman is carrying
together with a number of other
Public Health Service.
Out SeVeral studies in human physi-
Physicians have been carrying out
OIogy which are of importance to
fundamental studies in the mecha-
Much of the investigation carried
out in the laboratories of Dr. Emer-
both civilian and military medicine・
nism of insulin resistance and of
son centers around the collection
One proj∞t entails the detemina-
asthma. They have prbduced re-
and preservation of human blood・
tion of the e任ects of acute anemia
Sistance to insulin in血e experi-
Studies on the separation and prep重
as may occur from severe hemor-
mental animal and have demon-
aration of the formed bloold ele農
rhage on the function of the kidney
strated the invoIvement of an im-
ments are sponsored by the Ameri-
and whether albumen solutions or
munoIogic mechanism・ They are at
can Red Cross and the Atomic
Energy Commission and have re-
Plasma can be used in place of
whole blood for transfusion without
ACTH and cortisone in the treat-
Sulted in the development of tech-
CauSing serious impalment in rena]
ment of bronchial asthma and have
nユqueS for the separation of ery-
function.
Shown that these agents have great
PreSent investigating the use of
throcytes, White blood cells, and
With the anticipated shortage of
temporary value in the treatment
leucocytes. The mechanism of the
whole blood in the event of a
of this disease and seem to act in
anemia which occurs in leukemia
ma事Or War Or Civilian catastrophe’
SOme mamer O血er血an by altering
and the excretion of various pig-
the determination of the value of
ments in this disorder are also be_
the patient’s a11erglC Or immuno-
工ng Studied・ Dr・ Emerson is also
Plasma or albumen as a substitute
for transfusion to relieve shock as-
1oglC StatuS.
CO-OPerating with Drs. Wilkins and
SumeS ParamOunt importance. In-
Relman on a project designed to
VeStigations of the e任ect of the
PurSued are respiratory acidosis
in bronchial asthma with the dem-
Other subjects which have been
determine the e鮮ect of anemia on
administration of adrenal cortica]
onstration that the administration
the function of the kidneys and on
homones on water and electrolyte
Of oxygen may be hazardous, the
blood 且ow. The Boston BIood
balance are under way. The mech-
use of aerosoIs in the study of al-
AdびαnCed s加はde着鵬のf拐e放ome猶e`轟αJ Ser壷e即r房c軽侮きe競reg訪ar conferences撮,軸Dr. Bernard鯵αn朋eプラα$の高城㊧即の掃§$のr
OI p§γC茄の桝γ, Dγ・ Henrγ J・鯵α鳥§ちC巌ef of沈e Ser壷e, SOC香の夢抑0高eγ8, n附§eS aれd訪er事1e§,競) COれS蘭er拐e担γ$香cαらpγ〇九〇わgさcα夢
のれ億socjα裏αSpeC柁Of肋edごcαi cαre.
13
lergen-induced asthma, the eosino-
Phil count during acute infectious
disease, Various investigations on
the cultivation of viruses, and the
Vital capacity of asthmatic patients
PrlOr tO and after an induced attack of asthma.
Cancer Program
the evaluation of antibiotic agents
Dr. Henry M. Lemon together
in various infectious diseases and
with Dr. Iver S. Ravin and their as_
studies of the mechanism of infec-
SOCiates are wo正ing on various fun-
damenta] aspects of neoplasia in
tion by the beta-hemo11ytic Strep-
tococcus and the relationships to
the division of the Department of
rheumatic fever and glomerulone-
Medicine devoted to the investi.
Phritis.
The exact dosage and time ingation of cancer・ They are study-
Cardiovascular Physi。logy
Dr. Robert W. Wilkins and six
mg, amOng Other subjects, the enZyme SyStemS Of tumors, the trans-
COllaborating physicians are carry-
Plantation of human cancers into
the mouth pouch of hamsters, the
mg Out reSearChes of the highest
chemica] characteristics of neo。
Order of importance in the DiviSion of Cardiovascular PhysioIogy.
terval for penicillin in the treatment of scarlet fever has been
worked out and it has been shown
that this drug can be administered
Orally with as good resuIts as are
Obtained by injection・ Clinical
Plasms, and the e任ects of treat-
ment with various endocrine prod-
S山dies relating to the use of pro-
Caine penicillin, Chloromycetin,
Studies on the clinical use of drugs
ucts, Particularly male and female
Which may be of value in reducing
SeX homones, On Certain types of
the height of the blood pressure in
cancer in man. These researches are
also in progress or completede Ex-
hypertension have been going for-
SuPPOrted by the United States
Public Health Service and the
Perimental streptococcal infections
have been investigated and various
Ward for several years and, although no specific’COnStantly active
Chemica] fractions of the Strep-
American Cancer Society.
tococcus prepared and evaluated
agents have yet been discovered,
SOme Of the veratrum alkaloids have
Shown some promise and other, POSSibly more e任ective drugs, are un-
der investigation・
One of the most important pieces
Of work done by Dr. Wilkins and
his co-WOrkers has been directed
aureomycm, and terramycln are
With regard to their physioIogic and
Infectious Diseases
In the Division of Infectious Dis-
PathologlC e任ects. The research in
eases at the Evans Memorial and
this division has been supported
the Haynes Memoria量 Hospitals,
financia11y by the O餓ce of Naval
under the direction of Drs. Chester
Research of the United States Navy
S. Keefer and Louis Weinstein, in-
Department, the Helen Hay Whit-
VeStigations have centered around
ney Foundation, the Massachusetts
towards the prevention of phlebo-
thrombosis in the legs and of conSequent Pulmonary embolism in
hospitalized patients. They have
Shown, quite clearly, that the use
Of elastic stockings in patients confined to bed is e任ective in reducing
Very markedly the occurrence of
these two complications of bed rest・
Other studies concem themselves
with the mechanism of diuresis
and antidiuresis, the physioIogical
mechanisms in hypertension and the
e任∞t Of sympathectomy on them,
the nomal and pathoIogical physiOlogy of the post-arteriolar vascular
bed, and the e任ect of anemia and
Plasma and albumen transfusions
On Cardiac output・ The investiga-
tions of this division are supported
by the National Heart Institute
of the United States Public Health
Service, the Life Insurance MediCal Research Fund, and by several
COmmerCial drug concems.
Pos吃γad職aわCの職rSeSきれ柳e働c訪e for prac‡訪れg p九γS巌aれ§ are∴aれe肌
pαnd訪g ed事ICα房0職のl seγ後)わe bγ B.U.S.棚. Dr. Heれrγ財. Le肌on, aS§轟a融
profes$Or Of medまc訪e, de拐ers a lec加re訪沈e EぴanS A肌p妨巌のけe a‡
MαSSaC庇§e鵬 弛e肋or香αJ H。8pわα富 め αCq事毒融 p九γS雷cわれs o諦れ 庇es‡
肌e沈ods of d毒印0$おのれd打ea加eれ書of dおeαSeS Ofき鋼seen訪geれeral
prαC轟e.
14
㌣
B.U.S.M. ALUMN工 ASSOCIAT工ON
ACT工VE IN SCHOOL SUPPORT
By DR. GEORGE LEVENE, Pγの/essoγ Of RαdわZogy
Wherever alumni of the SchooI
One Of the newest and most signifi-
of Medicine are located-in the
Cant developments is the Boston
meetings of the executive commit-
United States, the Americas, Eu-
Medical Qua正erly. This medical
tee are held throughout the schoo]
rope, Asia, Africa, Australia, and
]Oumal serves to keep alumni in-
year. Countless other meetings of
the islands of the sea - interest in
fomed of the interests and develop-
the various sub-COmmittees are re-
and support of the School is stimu-
ments at the school and to provide
lated and maintained by the B.U.
infomation of professional interest.
S.M. Alumni Association.
Association activities are directed
towards advancement and progress
distribution of血is joumal・ Further
several d描erent areas. There are
OPPOrtunity for post-graduate eduCation for alumni is provided by
programs for undergraduates, for
the alumni, and directly for the
the scientific programs which have
sch○○l.
become a regular feature of the
Amual Meeting in May.
A量umni
O能cers and committees for the
year 1950-51 are as follows:
President
Clifton T. Perkins ’26
First Vice置President
Ensio K. F. Ronka ’27
Second Vice-President
Kemeth Christophe ’28
S ecretary
Programs
In recent years, SeVeral new pro-
quired to e任ectively carry on the
activities of the Association.
The association cooperates with the
School and Massachusetts Memoria]
Hospitals in the publication and
of the school and are carried on in
New
directors elected amually. Monthly
A賞umni Fund
Ronald W. Adams ’83
Assistant Secretary
grams of benefit to undergraduates
In these days when medica工
have been inaugurated・ Among
SChooIs are hard-PreSSed financially,
these are an informal reception for
the annua量Alumni Fund assumes
freshmen held on the evening of the
a growing importance・ Not only do
first school day. This occasion pro-
the contributors to this fund make
Vides an opportunity for the new
available money for the above ac-
Student to meet the faculty in a non-
tivities, but are also of invaluable
academic atmosphere and to make
assistance in making it possible for
early acquaintance with his fel-
the School to purchase needed and
Nathan Fineberg ’30
Treasurer
Theodore A. Potter ’88
Auditor
Wesley T. Lee ’98
Annual Reunion Committee:
Nathan Fineberg ’30, Chair-
man
Ronald W. Adams ’83
lows. To assist the third-year Stu葛
desirable equlPment that otherwise
dents in making a decision as to
could not be made available. Re-
Margaret Blair-Hunt ’30
their course after graduation, an-
Cent PurChases included equlPment
Grant Dixey ’88
Other informal evenmg is held at
for the department of micro-bioIogy
which time information is dissemi-
and for visual education.
nated conceming the various types
Of hospital intemships.
The Alumni Association is man-
David Steams ’26
General Fund Committee:
William F・ Croskery ’37, Chair-
aged by an executive committee
In the field of alumni relations
COmPOSed of the o能cers and six
Heart Association, and several com-
SearChes is not, at the moment, aP-
ber of agencies with di任erent inter-
mercial drug houses.
Parent, SuCh work is of the greatest
importance since most of the meth-
ests that are suppo亜ng the wo音rk,
This brief review of the research
activities at the Boston University
Ods of treatment and diagnosis use"
SchooI of Medicine illustrate音S the
ful in clinical medicine today are
wide丘eld of varied interests that
merely the development and exten-
are under investigation・ As can be
sion of observations made first in
Seen, the studies range from the
the test tube or the experi甲enta]
most fundamental purely experi"
animal in the laboratory.
Grant Dixey ’38
glVeS PrOOf that the Medical School,
through its research programs, is
definitely fulfilling all of its obli"
gations as a center for medical edu-
cation at all levels and at the same
time is accomplishing a great deal,
through the gathering of important
mental to the most practical clinical.
A perusal of the subjects under
While the immediate practical ap-
Study, the number of graduate stu-
facts, tO advance knowledge in
Plication of some of these re-
dents invoIved, and the large num-
Medicine.
15
Finance Committee :
Samuel N. Vose ’18, Chairman
And鱒w D. Elia ’85
Louis G. Howard ’23
ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ALUMNI
ASSOCIATION OF THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
George Levene ’25
May 4, 1951
Theodore A. Potter ’38
Nominating Committee :
Margaret Blair-Hunt ’80, Chair-
SCIENT量FIC SESSION
Boston University SchooI of Medicine Auditorium
man
William E. R. Greer ,43
Bumham S。 Walker ’84
Publicity Committee:
William F・ Croskery ’37, Chair-
80 East Concord Street, Boston
This Program has been arranged in recognition of the lOth Anni-
VerSary Of Dr. Chester S. Keefer as Director of the Evans Memorial
Department for Clinical Research and Preventive Medicine, Massa-
Chusetts Memorial Hospital, and Wade Professor of Medicine, Boston University SchooI of Medicine.
Nathan Fineberg ’30
Ronald W。 Adams ’33
Bumham S. Walker ’34
Freshmen Reception Committee :
Bumham S. Walker ’34, Chair-
man
Directors :
Howard S. Reid ’29-1 year
David B. Steams ,26-1 year
William F. Croskery ’37-2
yearS
Ivan C. Pyle ’31-2 years
MORNING PROGRAM: 10:00 A.M. to 12:00 noon
DR. WILLIAM CASTLE, Professor of Me音dicine, Harvard Medical
Sch○○l
``spec脇青io郷Concerわれg fhe動ologg of P(功cgthemia Vera’,
DR. JoHN CuRRY, Associate Professor of Medicine, Georgetown
Univers ity
``curre毎Conce印O声he Mecha海sm of Cardiac A謝棚”
DR. MAXWELL FINLAND, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard
Medical School
“I硯のe解a伽d Pneumo海a’’
Luncheon葛12 :00 noon to l :30 P.M. -Massachusetts Memorial
H oir ital
Carl E. Trapp ’32-8 years
Raymond Vinal ’85-3 years
AFTERNOON PROGRAM: 2:00 to 4:00 P.M.
DR. J. MuRRAY STEELE, Professor of Medicine, New York University
“Bodg Water a性d極St,b-d初s宛周s,,
HELP WANTED !
ALUMNI LOST
The alumni o餓ce is endeav-
Onng to maintain an accurate
DR. FREDERTCK YoNKMAN, Medical Director of Ciba Pharmaceutical
Products, Inc., and Lecturer of PhamacoIogy’Columbia Uni-
VerSity College of Physicians and Surgeons
``Me性的Z Ggma鋤cs a犯d Men融Ggr鋤oわs,,
record of alumni and former
Students. Can you help Iocate
some of these members of血e
DR・ CHESTER S. KEEFER, Wade Professor of Medicine, Boston Uni-
VerSity
“Some Adt’a件CeS ;犯Therapeut宅c Research,,
Lost Legion? If your own address will change soon, Please
let the alumni o餓ce know at
ANNUAL MEETING AND BANQUET
EVENING PROGRAM - Hotel Statler
6:00 P.M. Infomal Reception and Social Hour
Missing from T’01:
Edward L Benedict
Samuel A. Brown
7:00 P.M. - DINNER
ANNUAL BusINESS MEETING - DR. CLIFTON T. PER-
Francis A. McCarty
KINS, President of the Alumni Association, PreSiding・
William H. Roberts
PRESENTATION TO DR. CHESTER KEEFER
Edmund S. Sugg
DR. DANIEL L MARSH, Chancellor of Boston Uni-
MED 1901 Lost Member§
Nathan Freeman
Doleman
Mrs. Richardson (Ama
Root Mann)
Thomas Emmett Walsh
VerSity
DR. JAMES M. FAULKNER, Dean of Boston University
SchooI of Medicine
Address by:
DR. HAROLD C. CASE, President of Boston University
16
㌢
MED工CAL ALUMNエSERVE亜UMANITY
By HELMUTH ULRICH, Med,ll, Professor E棚e萌us of財edjc訪。
The first fruits from the v主neyard
Of an educational institution are its
PrOfundo were in great demand・
his honor the Charles A. Powell
SCholarship Fund was established
graduates. Secumg neW knowl-
J. Emmons Briggs, Of the class of
1890 became Professor of Surgery
edge is a salient and essential ob-
and Surgeon-in-Chief at 。the Massa-
Those who made the supreme
jective of a medical school but the
Chusetts Memorial Hospitals. Fred-
SaCrifice while in military service
alumni contributions as practition-
erick P. Batchelder, ’9l, and Nelson
include Edgar F. `Haines, ’06, Mau-
ers of the art and science of healing
M. Wood, ’93, are Well remembered
rice L. Silverstein, ’23, Theodore K.
are a true measure of its success.
as teachers of physioIogy and in-
Boston University SchooI of Med-
Keith’’26, Lester D. Watson, ’28,
EduardエI. Ulrich, ’42, Joseph A.
icine may well take pride in the
Gadomski∴43.
accomplishments of its graduates.
Among the living alumni there
From the small begimmgS Of five
are many who merit honorable cita-
graduates to the present taxed ca-
tion for their noteworthy profes-
PaCity of more than雛ty’alumni
Sional and other activities. This is
Of the school have been of out_
not intended to be an inclusive list
Standing service to their Alma Ma-
as the memory of one man has defi-
ter and to humanity. Included here
n王te limitations. These names are
、さす
are those who come most easi工y
Prlmarily indicativel Wesley T.
and quickly to the memory.
Lee, ’98, has been of valuable serv_
John P・ Sutherland, ’79, One Of
ice to the School in many ways, aS
the ear工y graduates was Dean and
teacher, aS Trustee of the Univer_
Professor of Anatomy for more than
Sity, aS member of the General
a quarter of a century. His classmate Frank C. Richardson served
Board of Directors of the Alumni
Association and as Auditor of the
as Registrar of the school during
Assoc土ation.
Edward S. Calderwood, ’04,
Part Of that period・
Dr. Richardson was instrumental
工n the establishment of the Robert
taught anatomy in days gone by
Dγ. He石肌事l拐Ulγ3c九,猶ed,上工
Dawson Evans Memorial for Clini_
Cal Research and Preventive Medi_
Cine and through his influence Mrs.
1iam O・ Mann, ,92, SerVed as Super-
Evans endowed this great under-
intendent of the Hospitals.
takin g.
Horace Packard, an eminent sur-
and is an outstanding practitioner
Of intemal medicine. Leroy M・ S.
temal medicine respectively. Wil-
Other alumni who became note_
Miner, ’07, Who switched to the
PrOfession of dentistry’WaS Dean
Of Harvard School of Dentistry
from 1924 to 1944. Harold L. Bab_
WOrthv teachers at the School in_
COCk, ’10, Emeritus Professor of
geon, and Frederick B・ Percy, Pro-
Cluded AIonzo G. Howard, ’95,
OtoIogy, Whose nonmedical hobby
fessor of Medicine were graduated
Orthopedics; Edward E. Allen, ’96,
is herpetoIogy, aCted as Curator of
in 1880・ The Emerson Hospital in
anatomy; Frederick W. Colbum,
the Forest Hi11s section of Boston,
’97, OtOIogy; SoIomon C・ Fuller, ’97,
later to become the Private Pavilion
neuropathoIogy; David W. Wells,
Of the Massachusetts Memorial
’97, OPhthalmoIogy; Charles T.
Reptiles and Amphibians at the
Boston Museum of Natural History
and is now Honorary Curator.
David L. Belding, ’13, WaS Pro-
Hospitals, WaS founded by Nathan-
Howard, ’98, and Thomas E. Chan-
fessor of BacterioIogy and Experi-
王el W. Emerson of the Class of ’81.
dler’’00’Surgery; Edwin P. Rug-
mental PathoIogy for years. His
His classmate’George R. Southgles, ’00, Obstetrics; William H.
Textbook of Clinical ParasitoIogy
Wick was prominent in gynecoIogy
Watters, ’00, Pathology; Orville R.
is used as a textbook by numerous
and obstetrics. Another outstand_
Chadwell, ’03, Pediatrics; Alice S.
medical schooIs throughout the
mg Obstetrician was George H.
Woodman, ’03, histology.
land・ Sanford B. Hooker, ’13, an
Earl, ’84.
The late Charles A. Powell, ’13,
immunoIogist of note, is a member
George B. Rice’’86’OtO-1aryngol-
SerVed as medical missionary _in
Of the Editorial Board of the Jour-
Ogist was a faculty member for
China, Where he founded the Chao
nal of Immunology. Winfred Over-
many years. A member of the
Hsien Hospital. His book “Bound
ho工ser, ’16, at One time Commis-
Apollo Club his talents as a basso
Feet” was published in 1938 and in
Sioner of Mental Health of the
醗
Of UroIogy・ Under his competent
tutelage several recent graduates
have received special training in
ATTENT量ON _ ALUMNI
his field. Louis G. Howard, ’20,
OF THE SCHOOL
has followed his father’s footsteps
OF MEDICINE !
in orthopedics and is Professor of
Orthopedic and Fracture Surgery.
John D. Camp, ’22, is Chief of Ra-
dioIogy at the Mayo Clinic・ Nor-
l・ Send your amual Alumni
man W. Elton, ’26, is noted for his
Fund contribution to your
research in hepatic function and
Class agent or to Theodore
the mechanism of jaundice.
Clifton T. Perkins, ’26, Who suc-
Potter, M.D., 372 Marl-
ceeded Winfred OverhoIs`er as
borough Street, Boston 15.
Commissioner of Health of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
now holds a similar post in the
2・ Plan to attendAlumniDay
State of Maryland・
Finally, many Of the graduates of
-May 4・
recent years have shown ample evidence of continuous and increasmg
B皿L CROSKERY, M.D.
Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
talented activity’Whereby the pres-
is now Superintendent of St. Eliza-
tige and everwidening beneficent
beth’s Hospital, Washington, D・ C・
influence of our Alma Mater is as-
Samuel N. Vose, ’18, is Professor
A脇m海Fund Chairma雄
sured.
Brαきれ瑚aひe S脇d香e§ On ep練ep訪pαききe融S αnd nor肋a胃per80れS ○○耽prおe oれe p九ase of γeSeαrC九coれd霊IC彊d訪拐e EEG Lαb心γ Dr. I.
C九arゐs Kα撮f肋のれクαSS永弗の加pγOIessor of p§γC巌の打γ αndれe章`r。夢ogγ. Tecわれまc香an 舶αγge章γ 舶α読肋, αboゆe, Obseれ)eS 沈e 鋤心jec書
き方γO事軍g九のSCree職のS S九e operα‡e§拐e dec書roeれC印九のわgγαp九.
韓
F工FTY YEARS IN THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
By DR・ DAVID L・ BELDING, PγOfessor E肌err訪s of Bacめγ香oZogγ α融
Eαper王肋en融Pα拐0胃ogγ
This brief sketch can only touch
forecast future progress in this
upon some of the milestones that
regard喜the establishment of the
mark the progress of the Boston
Department of Pathology and Bac-
University SchooI of Medicine dur-
terioIogy and the development of
mg the past餅ty of its one hundred
laboratory and museum teaching
and two years. Much must be left
by Dr. William H. Watters and
untold and proper tribute camot
the modemization of the Depart-
be paid to the many notable fac-
ment of Biochemistry by Dr・ AIan
ulty members.
Ⅵ7. RoⅥ7e.
In the cIosing years of the past
Century the School reached its ze-
Increased Clinical Facilities
nith in the teaching of homeopathy.
Between 191l and 1920 the
During the first decade of the
School acquired increased clinical
twentieth century the school re-
facilities with the erection of the
mained as one of the few important
homeopathic schooIs aIthough there
Haynes Memorial Hospital for Infectious Diseases, the Evans Me-
WaS a gradual recession in the an-
morial Hospital for‘ Clinical Re-
nual number of graduates. As in
SearCh and Preventive Medicine,
and the Robinson Memorial Hospl-
many other medical schooIs instruction in clinical subjects overshadOWed preclinical training・ How-
ever, in this era two landmarks
tal for Obstetrics. With many faculty members serving in World
War I, the schooI continued to
盤職SSelJ E綿aめ富oo短 棚,5j 締れ度 且撮C粥e
Sc0調 M,52 rdα:持 され きたe Perさodこcα事
鰹oo肋of沈e舶edさcαl Sc九〇o夢L滑rαrγ.
function through the redoubled efforts of the remammg members.
With the gradual evolution and acCePtanCe Of aIユopathy, the school
relinquished its homeopathic prmCiples during this period and embraced the medical concepts from
Which has stemmed today’s miracu-
1ous progress in the conservation
and preservation of health.
During the third decade of this
Century, increasmg emPhasis was
Placed on the preclinical subjects
as was the practice in other medical
SChooIs. Student enrollment steadily
rose with the number of graduates
increasmg from a low of seventeen
to an average of forty. Preclinical
appointments were on a fulI-time
basis. The sta任of the MassachuSettS Memorial Hospitals’also hav、轡
廊e$eαrcわ§加d毒s d訪e○青edもγ Dr. Ge。γge L.舶aおon,ゐeadの卑見e p九αr肋α・
COlogγ depα手書肋eれち訪c九de e重)α九の房on ofれe撮) d棚gS for打eα章肌e融Of
厭g心境ood pγe§鋤re.きれ沈is e劣perimeれち訪約九香〇九沈e an香肋a夢のaS撮れder
mg Withdrawn from homeopathy,
carr土ed on the clinical instmction.
CO肋p重e書e aれe$露見e§iα αS deep as書心a‡鵬edね九地肌an鋤rgerγ,心わod pres一
助re αれd re§p香raわrγ肌寒`$C事`ねr acあわγ αre reCOγded on拐e鳥γ肋Ogrαp九,
Further Growth
夢e巧fro棚番. A職のr章雄c香a裏resp香raめr, γ香g加fγ0融, §棚れds reαみ加γ霊場e訪
れee虎寄. Bo重心夢心ese訪8舟榔肋の露のere des王gれed α書B.U.S.M. Ac枕0れ0f
Advances in clinical teaching and
i崩胆∴庇のrききs recorded bγ書見e Sanbo音rれ dec相のCαrdわgrap九, bαC鳥 昆布.
further growth marked the nine-
舵の重e of乃0抑Ofのきr fro肋枕e中れg§香s肋eα§耽red心γ拐e働くガ“lαCed珂0の
肌e彊r, r輩かreαr.
19
teen thirties. Members of the sta紐
Of Boston City Hospital became
faculty members and several serv-
ices of that institution became
teaching facilities. Followmg the
death of Dr. Alan W. Rowe, Dr.
Bumham Walker became professor
Of Biochemistry. Dr. Reginald Fitz
WaS aPPOinted Professor of Medicine in 1935 to be followed in 1939
T九e CaれCer梶e§ear訪ねの肋の番B.U.S.棚.,九eαded心γ Dr. Heれγγ M. Le肌o部
品0関れa‡∴鵬γd reαr fro肌le布,訪〇五de8, reαr, Doc書or$ Wα握eγ,只の訪れ,
Le肌on, A§i肌oび,陥§S Lα肌心eγちDr.防o轟; froれち胸s§ Naγdoれe,胸ss
Dα壷on,胸§§ Hagopiα職のれd舶ir§. Si肋oれ・
by Dr. Chester S. Keefer who simi-
tive Medicine was inaugurated
larly assumed the responsibilities
With the appointment of Dr. Wil-
of Chief of the Medical Service at
Massachusetts Memorial Hospital
and Director of the Evans Memo-
1iam Fleming as Professor of Pre-
ventive Medicine. The Department
rial Department・
ment of Microbio工ogy under the
珍■
1
Of BacterioIogy became the Departleadership of Dr. Geo餌ey Edsall
New Departments
The final decade of the first half
century saw substantial faculty
Dr. JsααC A$香れo章?,れsけ榔〇番or ね
changes and additions largely as a
枕oc九e肋さ8‡rγ, pαC鳥s あe わき0 重心e
result of retirements and the de-
れe飢〉 e夢ecけOpねのre壷 のppαγa加s,
Velopment of new departments, tO
のり械〇九 のp調 be 霊`8e原 訪 §脇dごes of
keep pace with new trends and
れOr肋α事 のれd cαれCerO耽S 房88事`e∴れ0叩
be訪g cond事`C‡ed訪重心e Hor肋oれe
盤eseαrC九Lα心orのめrγ.
Changmg thought. A new depart-
ment of Public Health and Preven-
Who succeeded upon the retirement
Of Dr. David L. Belding.
Major changes in the clinical
field included the appointment of
Dr. Reginald H. Smithwick as Professor of Surgery and the consoli-
dation of the Departments of ObStetrics and GynecoIogy with Dr.
Benjamin Temey, Jr., Professor in
Charge of the department.
Although replete with struggles
the past雛ty years have seen steady
PrOgreSS at the School. With ample
clinical facilities and an excellent
faculty, university support will
make future prospects bright with
PrOmise・
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
(Co偏れued from page 6)
With many years of worthy tradition, the Boston University SchooI
of Medicine looks forward with
COnfidence to an even more promisFo柳巾九γeαr S加はde職場蒔C鵬§ prO境e棚s of拐e ep振p轟p訪e融訪れDr・
ing future. A stature has been
I. C九のr夢es Kα霊.f肌伽職, SeCOれ寄rig加,九着訪g reg訪αr §e壷0れ§ OI沈e Se諺榔re
achieved which promises a leading
C′訪c. Aro事′れd油e書のbわ, T九o肌α§ Bγe耽れαれ, HαrO物W鵠0れクFrαれ展加部鵬)
AdoわんC′α耀0, αl′州’軸.
20
roll in the years that lie ahead・
跡
.s喜e雷雲等電場烏電8塞e宝輪①芯竜宮宅d墜∽電〇℃3 登aお3毒害∽ゝeや〇台⋮Sしぎ雫も雷e嶋Se飴
へ∽電場盲∽e韓や雫e葺も寒雲①S墓で霊SB貢で雷電やぶd∽eH含蓄鑑e噛∽e範①竜、e均的烹聖篭〇㌔鴫や竜まきさ3S
〇㌧
費
DR. ROBERT E. MOODY
NAMED NEW D量RECTOR
OF LIBRAR量ES
The president’s o餓ce has an-
nounced the appointment of Dr.
Robert E. Moody, a member of the
University’s department of history
for the past twenty-five years’aS
director of the University Libraries.
During the past quarter-Century
Dr. Moody has held many lmPOrtant posts at the University and is
Currently chairman of the Board of
Editors of the Boston University
Press, the Committee on the Bacon
Lecture5 on the U. S. Constitution,
the Committee on University Lec.シ
turers’and the Library Committee.
He will continue work in the Col-
1ege of Liberal Arts andn Graduate
SchooI with advanced students in
American History・
Having broad interests in faculty,
student and alumni activities, Dr.
Moody has served as faculty adviser of the HuB, Senior annual,
for 20 years’and edited BosTONIA,
alumni magazine from 1983 to 1935,
as director of the University’s
Alumni Association.
A graduate of Phillips Academy
in Andover, he received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Boston
University・ He attended the Gradu-
ate SchooI of Yale University where
“T九e Frうendlγ U毒のerS勘’’e諦eれded α
のαr肌のれd九ear野のd○○肋e轟のγepreSeれ・
心α房もes of 沈e U調香書ed Nの扇0鵬 の九〇
最前ed きれe ca肌p暮IS aれd ○○れdαCきe原 α
UN paれd rece加か S九o関れSeα柁d αre
Nor棚のれT九の肌αS,舶r§.朗eα職のr Roo8e・
びe巧Dr. Dαn拐L. MαrS九, U競れer諦γ
C九αれCdわr, Dr. A肋まγα C九の鳥rαひαr叫,
ad演$Or ‡0誼e UN deわga房0職fro肋Iれ"
diα, αnd Deαn Wa加r畑地dder, Ofまねe
S〇九ooさof T九eologγ,関心o pres王ded α§
肋oderα‡or ofき心e pαれeら九e梱れHαγdeれ
鱒α夢夢心efore α CapαCおγ α事`dわれCe. S同一
deれ‡ cの肋肋わ‡ee me肌心ers s九oのれ§‡αれd.
訪官のre, fro〃吊e布, W調香の肋Coo鳥,鰹〇・
be「‡ F訪れ, Jαれe書e K訪g, G棚S轟αひe Tod・
rαれ虎, Wαl‡er Frα§er αれd W調香の同
相αrたs.
22
J●
砂r.盤obe「書E.棚00み
1岬
he eamed a doctor of philosophy
degree.
A member of Phi Beta Kappa, he
is vice-PreSident of the Old South
Association in Boston, reCOrding
SeCretary Of the CoIonial Society of
Massachusetts, and a member of
the American Historical Association
and the Massachusetts Historical
Society. For his work as editor of
the Province and Court Records of
Maine, he was elected an honorary
member of the Maine Historical SoCiety.
He makes his home at 156 Fair
Oaks Park, Needham, With his wife
and two chiIdren.
困閣整霊湯圏圏図
黍cA器s墓
園詔蛋整蛋整璽蟹蛋整雪国
23
閏醗題閥
DR. R.駐. HUNTER
APPOINTED LECTURER
PROFESSOR?S BOOK
WORKSHOP ON
ON PHYSICAL EDUCATION
SEX GU田DANCE IN
A fomer presideht of the Royal
Medica丁Society and a Major in the
Royal Amy Medical Corp., 1939-
USED IN JAPAN
FAM囲LY LIFE
EDUCATION
Boston University, in cooper・
A book published by a Boston
45, Dr. Robert B. Hunter will be
ation with the Massachuse請s So-
Lecturer in PhysioIogy and Phar-
conduct at Boston a summer
WOrkshop on Sex Guidance in
used to instruct Japanese teachers
Family Life Education for three
in health and physica量education
Weeks starting Ju量y 9, 195l.
methods.
macoIogy at Boston University
SchooI of Medicine for 1950_5l. Dr.
Ciety foI. Social Hygiene, Wi重1
University professor is now being
Co"量eaders of the workshop
WiIl be Perry Dun量ap Smith of
the North Shore Country Day
SchooI in Illinois and Herbert
D. Lamson, teaCher and coun"
Se量oI. in marrlage at Boston UniVerSity.
There
wil量 be
lectures
and seminars, Iectures being
g量Ven by psychia車I.is置s, Pedia-
The textbook’ Written by Dr.
Leslie W. Irwin and entitled, “Cur-
riculum in Health and Physical
Education,’’has been translated in-
to Japanese and distributed to edu-
tricians, SOCiologists, and marCatOrS in Japan as a part ′Of the
r重age COunSe量ors.
This workshop is designed for
teachers in any field, administrators, ParentS, Iibrarians, re1igious workers, guidance counSe賞ors,
SOCial
workers,
nurSeS,
United States Amy s reorientation
PrOgram in that country.
Dr. IrwIP, PrOfessor of education
and any others who wish an
orientation
in
this
field. The
COurSe Wi量l carry either graduate
at Boston University’is the author
Of eight other similar textbooks on
Or undergraduate credit depend・
mg uPOn the work done. For
further
infoI‘mation
write
to
DirectoI. Of Summer Session, 725
CommOnWealth Avenue, Boston,
the elementary’high school and
COllege level・ He has also written
books on first aid and health edu-
Massachuse請s.
Cation.
Hunter was previously a lecturer
in therapeutics at the University of
Edinburgh and assistant director of
the Edinburgh postgr雀duate board
for medicine・ His publ主cations inClude articles on histamine, antihis置
tamine drugs’analgesic drugs, Vita-
man B12, anticoagulants. A11 have
been experimental studies in man.
His present research studies include
new anticoagulants, adrenergic
blicking agents and histamine.
At the University of St. Andrews,
Scotland, Dr. Hunter was Professor
Of Materia Medica, Phamacology
and Therapeutics, a lecturer in
Clinical Medicine and physician to
Dundee General Hospitals・ In addition to his membership in血e
Royal Medical Society he is a mem-
THE STUDENT UNI0N γeCe訪ed α万能αれC肋 もoos意 receれ母 fro肋
ber of the British PhamacoIogical
Ep弱0れC九ap記r of Del‡α Pj E型融on,九oれ0γαrγ frα‡ern函for gγad事`a‡e
Society, the Scottish Society for Ex-
S加d釧舶. T九e §OC香e母心e物轟αnれ職の夢d訪れeγのnd e脆c章われOf o姉cers
Perimental Medicine and a Fe11ow
in the Royal Society of Medicine・
α‡雷鳥e Ha肋ps巌re HoαSe. Sea書ed a轟き九e九eαd京α心わ00ere Ja肋es柑c置
Kenれα, Dea"朗sbeth Me妨脇e, Dr. JoJm A. Wa妬ace, Miss HeわれB棚rnS,
DeαれA〆ee L. PeγCy αrld Miss JreJ'e Ladd.
望4
P「es掘e加HαrOid C。 CαSe, S〇〇〇職d γig加タおれγOd霊`Ced bγ
Dγ・ Ma「s九めU毒のeγS砂TγeaS事`γeγ, Dr・ E・ Rαγ Speα「e, α書
Hこg勅書g短 of P「es綿cれ章 Cα8e,8 `碕rsき dαγ α‡
即ち のれあ A` ee L・ PeγCγ, ∽書手e肋e γig短, Deαれ Oj 拐e
TRADJTJON "-書Dr。 Dα毒e夢 E. MαrS鳥 丸gro。
Uれわersカツ.
dα○○S α ひeγγ∴prO耽読e融 がece of f事`「競れα「e
8〇九〇〇重’’00αS α職の筋cきαI轟の職d諒のたe fro肋D「.
Mars九㍍きんe Pres青deれ亮の夢O筋ce.
書の D「・ HαγOid C. Cα8e,れe調音 p「eαγ,きれ 書九〇
P「es3deれききのi O斯ce. T轟;e んお書0rj〇 〇九αこ〇 〇〇αS
職Sed (野拐e s吃れer Of沈e Bo8書0れUr毒のerS高γ
C轟の手書er αp〆こcα競0れ,読 書868.
PRES工DENT CASE,S ``FIRST DAY AT SCHOOL,,
AれROTCんo職のγ g軍`αγd sa九章e$ Pre8fdeれきCαSe αS九〇
おeS○○γ‡ed bγ C九αれCeiioγ Mαγ諒のれd Jα肋eS A手geγOS,
C○細説eγ, S加deれ書 手epγeSe地鳥のかe,あの 8きeps of MαγS九
Cんαpe裏 の九eγe S弛deれ書 γa夢タダ 00のS 九eid あ〇 秒e胃○○肋e
書見e れe復) PγeS3de7高.
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P九〇九の α鳥en j「o職工拐ゼナ○○i oI沈e S〇九00夢のf賞九eのめgγ訪0脚S Pαr鯵のf沌e
MαS書e事のf Ce「e肋の証e8・ He香れ書rodαced Dr. Mαr訪, 0晶〇 preseれ雷ed Prc$香deれe
4,000 s弛de加$ oじれの gのめe富ed oれ さ九〇 Pさの蒼α あり のゆ○○重 き九〇 れeOO Presさde加.
Hα「Oid C. Cα8e 書の 鳳e s書榔寄o競書8.
CANCER RESEARCH AT
been usmg the membraneous cheek
Research over many years by the
intemationally known scientist, Dr・
POuCh for the study of minute blood
Brenton R. Lutz, Chairman of the
VeSSels since 1946. With powerful
department of BioIogy at Boston
lighting, and high powered microSCOPeS they have been able to ob-
University, and his research team
serve the details of blood丑ow at
(Dr. George P. Fulton, Dr・ Donald
I. Patt, Mr. Alfred H. Handler,
Mr. Robert P. Akers and Mr. Dean
magnifications of 1200 times’and
F. Stevens), has led to a significant
development in the fi吐t against
PaSSage Of the blood elements (red
COrPuSCles, White coapuscles and
cancer, and to important discover-
Platelets ) through the capillaries.
take colored motion pictures of the
ies conceming the production of
They can watch the growth of new
thrombo-embolism in the circula-
b量ood
tory system・ (Each year in the
Planted cancer. When the new cancer
United States 625,000 persons die
has been su鯖ciently∴PrOVided with a
vessels
into
the
freshly
trans-
source of nutriment through these ves-
of circulatory disease and 300’000
se賞s, it grows amazing寒y fast. In two
die of cancer.)
weeks it grows 200 times the size of
Already several cancer research
the original piece of tissue implanted,
and at the end of one month it may
institutes are using their novel
D7.鯵.龍.且重職名
me血od of growing cancer’and a
be 5,000 times as Iarge. It is so malig・
considerable number of specialists
in the field of circulatory physiology from血e United States, Eng-
land and Scotland have visited their
ABOUT DR. LUTZ
laboratory to observe their new
technique of recording the activity
Dr. Lutz joined the sta鮮of the College in 1914. As an under-
of small blood vessels by means of
coIored motion pictures.
Cancer can now be grown in a
living membrane in a healthy ani-
graduate he was the co-author, Wi血Dr・ A・ W. Weysse, Pro-
fessor Emeritus of BioIogy, Of two papers on blood pressure re-
Ceiving editorial commendation in the Joumal of the American
mal, but paradoxically ``outside the
Medical Association. During World War I he served as a physiol-
body” for the practical purposes of
Ogist attached to the Air Force, and was the co-author of several
study and treatment. The cheek
pouch of the hamster provides the
・・soil.,, Into this thin-Walled sac
a malignant cancer Can be planted
with ease. It grows freely and
PaPerS On the compensatory responses of the human body to high
altitudes・ He tested out the first oxygen supply mask for aviators
at a simulated altitude of 80,000 feet. During the year 1928-29 he
WO正ed in Copenhagen with the late August Krogh’Nobel Prize
rapidly. Daily’the cheek pouch
Winner for his work on capillaries. At the bioIogical stations at
can be pulled out and the growing
Naples, Italy and at Mt. Desert Island, Maine, Dr. Lutz studied
cancer examined, meaSured, Photo-
Circulatory and respiratory re盟exes in丘sh and published several
graphed, and treated with chemicals, X-ray Or O血er therapeutic
means. It can be then tucked back
for further development・ Provi-
dentially, the hamster has two cheek
pouches in which it temporarily
stores food. The mother hamster
may tuck even her young into these
pouches and carry them to a safer
PaPerS leading to an explanation of the evolution of the carotid
Sinus mechanism, a regulatory process in the body which adjusts
heart rate and blood pressure when the standing position is as置
sumed from the recumbent. Work on small blood vessels was
濯
begun intensely after his retum from Europe’and his cancer
research was the direct outgrowth of the long experience and
SPeCial equlPment developed for research in blood vessel physiol○
○gy・
place, When her nest is disturbed・
Dr. Lutz and his co-WOrkers have
26
BOSTON UN工VERSITY
nant lhat it may spread throughout
Observed day after day・ (4) The tu-
Cheek pouch as a site for growing
the chest and abdominal cavities of
mor can be subjected to various ex-
CanCer have just been published in
Perimental procedures such as canCer inhibiting chemicals and irradi-
the joumal ``cancer Research,” the
Cancers in humans are believed
to be produced by growth-disturb-
ation without undesirable disturb_
sociation for Cancer Research. The
ing factors, SOmetimes chemical
ance of the rest of血e an平al. (5)
technical story of the reactions of
SuCh as irritating coal tar products
Transillumination for mlCrOSCOPIC
the animaI.
and smoke, SOmetimes living, SuCh
Study of early stages of growth and
as certain viruses, and sometimes
blood vessel supply is practicable・
Chemical balance of the body. The
(6) Tumors from other animals
have been transplanted into the
Original tumors used by Dr. Lutz
hamster cheek pouch with successo
glandular, Which may a鮮ect the
and his colユaborators were pro-
The novel technique, developed
duced by injecting carcinogenic
by Dr. Lutz and his group’Of re寄
hydrocarbon chemicals under the
COrding photographically血e con-
skin of hamsters. In four months
ditions of blood且ow at high magni-
malignant tumors developed, min-
fications has revealed the hitherto
ute pleCeS Of which were trans-
unknown fact that in advanced
Planted into the cheek pouches of
other hamsters. The new method
cancer the blood vessels in other
Of growing cancer has six important
advantages: ( l) Transplantation is
technically simple with nearly lOO
O餓cial organ of The American As-
T巌sおJのαn, ‡庇Sγrこのれ加耽§記r.
T加拐読切αlled 〇九ee鳥po耽〇九〇f拐e
九の肋S轟erお重心e “so枕"丸めのろさ〇九α
鎚訪g cαれCerおplαれ厄ed αれd §加dこed
心γ Dr. Lα雷名のれd械s cαれCer reSeαr〇九
番eα肋.
PartS Of血e body are frequently
Plugged or coated intemally with
thrombi and emboli consisting of
small blood vessels and the occur_
blood platelets. This may account
rence of thrombo-embolism associ_
for the tragic temination of cancer
ated with injury, bacterial infection
grow freely and symmetrica11y and
When it is allowed to grow unre-
and advanced cancer has recently
thus their exact size can be meas-
stricted.
Per Cent “takes.’’(2) The tumors
ured. (3) The same tumor can be
been published in Experimental
Details concemmg the hamster
Medicine and Surgery, and in CirCulation, the new JOumal of the
American Heart Association. Three
motion pictures have been pro-
duced. The first one in 1941, COPyrighted by the Trustees of Boston
University and sponsored by The
American College of Surgeons, has
been sold to over lOO Universities
in this country and Europe. The
motion pictures have been shown
before the American Society of
ZooIogists’The American Physio-
logical Society, The Association for
Cancer Research and The American
Association of Anatomists. , The
research on cancer and blood vesSels carried on in the department
Of BioIogy is being supported by
The American Cancer Society
( Massachusetts Division ) Inc., The
National Cancer¥ Institute and The
National Heart Institute of the
CANCER鰹ESEA梶CH TEAM - S重α耽d訪g, fro肋昆布,盤obe競P. A鳥er8,
DeαれF. Sきeひeれ§, Dr. George P. F証書0れ; 8eα‡ed, Aげr〇億H. Hαれ部er, Dr.
Bre融0れR. L事`お, α職d Dr. Doれα動き. Prα請.
27
United States Public Health Serv_
ice.
T脚ALI脚
BERL工N: RUSS工AN ZONE
By ALTHEA CRILLEY, CLA,47
When I帥ed out the application
there are very high - for example
blank for a military pemit to enter
a, man eamユng 160 macks a month
Gemany, I just laughed when I
must spend at least one-tenth of
Came tO the question about per-
his salary to buy a pound of buト
mission to enter Berlin. Since I
ter. Most stores are poorly stocked・
Only the goyemment-COntrOlled
to do with the Russians, I wrote a
OneS - the H-O’s (Handel-Organ-
big NO 血ere・ But since July
ization) o任er everything to their
When I arrived in Germany on a
CuStOmerS, but at exorbitant prlCeS・
工ll 録膚晴葛1﹂
Wanted to have as li血e as possible
Most of the East Berliners can
year’s fellowship for study at the
Only look at these things・ But the
University of Munich, I’ve been
to Berlin twice and have visited the
West Berliners with five times as
Russian sector many times・
much
money’
OnCe
they
have
Changed it, find things fairly m-
It was in September that I租ew
expensive. Now and then various
to Berlin for the丘rst time. Natu-
``sales taxes” are added in血e big
rally there are trains go音ing in that
stores. I was told that it was
direction, but when you can’t get
a pemit that allows you to pass
Stated as the money was being
through the Russian Zone, there’s
handed over that the “sales tax’’
Aわれeα Cγ調eγ, CLA’47
“.. . A演の肋 Bo肌b Harγγ and B諏・
nothing to do but岨y. At the cIose
of a vacation course in Munich
boardsう Bこ1めoαγds . . .’’
WaS for the poor unfortunate North
Koreans.
to leave our names and the time
The H-O has all kinds of stores
1in and signed up for that too・ The
We eXPeCted to be back with those
including restaurants where one
United States govemment paid the
in charge of the course. If we
Can eat quite cheaply. Exce11ent
expenses of a few students to at-
weren’t back on time, the various
Wines can be bought there, tOO,
tend this course since its main
O鯖cials of each country would be
many of them from Hungary・ Two
theme was the idea of a unified
notified and a protest would be
PerSOnS Can have a good meal,-
Europe and it was felt that this
軸ed with the Russians. Fortu-
POrk chops with vegetables, a glass
WaS tOO important a project to be
nately, nO PrOteSt WaS neCeSSary.
of beer each, then cake and co紐ee
I’d heard of a similar course in Ber-
blocked by Russian interference・
The first thing to do before go-
SeCtOr Where we had two large
houses at our disposal. It was ob-
Change your West marks into East
marks because no Westem money
Vious that people of a組uence had
is a11owed there. The rate of ex-
lived there before the war. Most
Change is usually about five East
Of us were quite excited about be-
marks for one West mark. When
ing in Berlin surrounded on all
for dessert for about twenty marks;
ALTHEA C榊LLEY holds a fe耽のs巌p from青he I仰・terγ)a青ionaI J栂雄視e of
Educa協oI弓or $青udg a吊he Ul海er訪g
M伽ich. Before脇e semes青eγ began She
)aS Pr海legedわo綴f Oberammerga七4,
Be楊草y,伽d other places o白面切es白/L)碗
an expenses paid. She 6s航海g海自α
eの
Sides by Russians, SO it wasn’t long
you stop to consider that the worker
in the Russian zone or sector eams
before everyone was heading for
about as much as a worker in the
Geγma型/. Sheねo性Zeat,e Of abse州ce
the Russian sector. Those of us
Westem part, but in East marks,
from U海a Co鵬ge, a branCh of SgγaCuSe
who had been in Munich went o任
then you can imag宣ne What kind of
dom諦0γg for tt)Omeγち Marie A硯O海e
HatJ$, 49 Kat肋aCh S青rasse, M脚′ich,
U海。e7's∂青g,のhere she fat/g加 Ge7'm伽
for机DO gearS・
toge血er. Before leaving we had
a life these people lead・ The prlCeS
28
l単裏店州田富﹁{
ing into the Russian sector is to
.叫.O﹁わ
The classes met in the Bri廿sh
but an East Berliner cannot a鮮ord
lice) and decided to stop admiring
When I was there in September
this on his 150-200 marks a month.
the building・ I knew I couldn’t
and October some policemen came
OVer armed and since that’s not
In American money you may cal-
leave too fast and didn’t like the
Culate that the two people have
idea of going sIowly, SO I山med
eaten for twenty-five cents. Some-
the comer ``quick-Slow.”
What si缶lar to our hot-dog stands
And what should be commg tO-
are the Wurststands, also under
Ward me bu=wo more VolkSpol-
Pem抽ed, they were arrested・
Their comrades retaliated and ar_
rested some West policemen as
they were riding in the subway
through Russian territory And so
the controI of the H-O’Where you
Pay tWO marks for a big roll’WurSt
By now my heart was beating
it went back and forth. I heard the
and mustard・ You see lots of peo-
around two hundred times a min_
loud speaker system at the last Rus-
Ple eating them, but as the Ger-
ute. I crossed the street to go back
Sian station telling the Vopos to
mans themselves say: ``Those peo-
to the bookstore and two cars full
get out because this was the last
Ple are West Beniners.”
Of police came along and nearly
democratic station・ Every day the
finished me.
SCOre WOuld be published in the
The fellows in our group bought
hats for forty marks and gloves
The boys had finally bought their
for twenty-five. I bought four創ms
books and I had to help carry
almost血ought I was Iooking at a
- 620 size - for nine marks, Or Iess
them. One of them took my purse
football score.
高 相 削 り 輸 l 動 農 機
血an餅ty cents・ Since we were
and we went o任 to the station.
students it was natural for us to
When we got there - anOther fel-
PaPerS葛SOmething like 35-24. I
Just about everywhere you tum,
you have the opportunrty of signing
up in protest against the atom
buy some books. The book paper
low and I - the first boy was miss-
isn’t very good, but nevertheless
ing・ We waited for him and when
One Can amaSS quite a library that
he did not show up, We Were COn-
Way. Some books that I bought for
vinced the Russians had him and
POWerS has its own house where
ten marks were the same prlCe in
that he would soon go on a sight-
its culture or examples of it are
Munich, but in West ma正s. Some
Seelng tOur tO Siberia. Then it
represented・ Lectures are given
of the fellows were students of Eco重
dawned on me that he had my
and movies are shown. I’d been in
nomics or Political Science and
PurSe With my passport, the only
bomb, eVen in the House of Soviet
¥Culture. Each of the occupation
SeVeral American Houses and de_
bought books by Marx, Lenin and
址ng血at could prove that I was
Cided to see their counterpart in
Stalin・ At Alexandeaplatz there is
a citizen of the U. S. A. We left
田ast Berlin. It wasn’t hard to find
a store that sells only Russian
quickly to report his disappear-
the place; it was all decked out
books, either in the original or in
ance. Whom should we meet while
Geman translation・ Every time
Walking up血e path but the lost
anywhere near the back part of the
in red bunting・ We did not go
we went into that sector I’d have
One? We were so upset that we
building because we knew all visi-
to don a disreputable old raincoat
let him have a very large pleCe Of
tors there were expected to slgn
belongmg tO One Of the fellows
our minds.
the anti-atOm bomb declaration.
That same evenmg We Were O任
We did visit the Stalin Room which
expression. This was necessary,
to the opera in ``our’’sector. My
WaS just covered with all kinds of
they told me, because =ooked so
nerves were almost completely
and assume a disgusted-Wi血-1ife
Pictures of him and facsimiles of
his school report cards to show how
Obviously American・ Had I known
gone since =eamed that the big
this particular day that they were
building I had been admiring was
after Russian books, I would have
the headquarters of血e People’s
COVered with a huge picture of
Stayed at home. In the store I
Police. So I was not too keen
him with the caption: ``Here he
asked for something by Goethe,
about gomg tO the opera・ There
is - the man of血e century:,
but naturally they didn’t have it.
Were also policemen there and I
Going back to signs, it seemed to
I couldn’t just stand there after
was so sure that one of them had
me that everywhere I Iooked all I
smart he was. One whole wall was
that, but had to leave the store.
his eye on me that I didn’t dare
COuld see was ``Ami (American) go
We had entered separately and the
leave my seat during the intemis-
home・’’ I finally heard it sung to
O音thers were still enthusiastically
S10n.
the tune of ``Tramp, tramP, tramP,
Sometimes some of the Eastem
the Boys are Marching one night
POlice get fed up with things in
their sector and seek sanctuary m
When I got Prague on my rad王o at
cided to take a walk. I tumed a
few comers and saw a huge attrac-
West Berlin. Every month there’s
PrOgramS beamed to West Ger-
tive building・ Then I caught sight
a li壮Ie notice in the papers about
many. Anyway, the tune is rather
Of a ‘few Volkspolizei (People’s po-
how many policemen come over.
CatChy and to my horror I’ve found
POuring over books. As I couldn’t
look in the store window, I de-
29
Munich. This station often has
GEDDES
myself singing: ``Ami Go Home” a
COuPle of times.
LECTURESHIP FUND
In the fall, Signs were plastered
Boston University inaugurated
all over the place about the Amer-
its Geddes Lectureship Fund with
ican aggressors in Korea. Riding
PaSt factories, yOu COuld read: “We
fight for peace wi血the five-year
Plan・” And a lot of campalgning
WaS being done for the elections
that were shortly commg uP. At
Christmastime and New Year’s
everyone was getting ready to celebrate the birthday o′f the East Ger-
man president, Wilhelm Pisc‘h.
Bookstores had their windows filled
With his speeches and articles. And
December was the month of SovietGeman friendship. If you didn’t
know it, yOu COuld read it on any
building you looked at.
Newsreel pictures of mangled
and dead in Korea were shown and
a brilliant start Friday, March 16,
都電訪容堰も詩論を参此参
When Louis Jouvet, One Of the most
謀允糊携嶋叩f銃壷士担中型鯵章一
distinguished representatives of the
を融命脈f調糊士劇場前努巾朋疲地場
French stage and screen, gaVe a
比重工場紺青青筋士蜘雪子明野疲
加わ地場融祖地心的卵卯.粒平良
dramatic recital in Hayden Hall・
After the recital, a reCePtion in
搬糊血雅章竜坤批祐子愛子榔抑調香
his honor was tendered him at the
餌場劉口中的f坤羅畑調参耽翫J
⑲ぬ鍬観ちfく蛇中心e郷調糊望
節薄み ⑰綿担脚融糊も抑蜘一
姦壷隣担血前夜率土e壷臓南扇施
昂姦綿糊轟群雄を...華中調糊
Faculty Club. An exhibition of
manuscripts, PrOgramS, and photo-
的臓劇蜘要諦∬∴ ‥即ぬ耽e舵蜘
des Room of CLA.
激慣ら鹿町糊糊的∬血脚∬舵頑1
批巧妙ぬ- ‥言郵血抑討青堀多
謝心理直弼拙参勤担崩哩調勝一
Who organized the exhibit, reCeived
請最厨参訪⑲ぬ,印面噸調豊
the whole blame was placed on the
野姦夢湘㌻調印地脈?
Shoulders of the American aggres-
①担鵬愛 と卿e地中“①串十条壷雌章 参細調理
sors. One main feature dealt with
三脚口調“窮境’’(野血穆部長牽沈工帥震攣r批
French plays’adaptations’POSterS,
graphs pertaining to contemporary
French drama was held in the Ged_
Professor Herbert B. Myron, Jr・,
material from the French Embassy
and the General Consulate in Bos_
ton as well as from individual au_
thors in France and translato音rS and
糊ら①踊堅調憎,工事館)牡1之軍_
the invention of the wireless tele-
PrOducers of French pIays in the
United States.
The contribution of Louis Jouvet
graph. I found that I had been mis-
and that of his company received
infomed all these years, aS it
SPeCial attention. Jouvet, a Veteran
WaSn’t Marconi who brought this
actor slightly over sixty, has his
about, but some Russian whose
OWn theatre in Paris.
name I forget. And while he was
doing址s he also discovered radare
On
All this, Of course, tOOk place in the
the
newsstands
was
dis。
Played a monthly magazine, U.S.A.
1890’s・ I couldn’t help wondering
祝Word a性d Pic古ure, SO I bought
What an e任ect on the people a
a copy and leamed a lot of amaz-
continuous diet of films with such
mg things about my country, - for
a communistic slant would have.
example that Indians are not al-
Every once in a while theaters in
1owed to attend any school・ Two
West Be亜n have a perfomance
Whole pages were devoted to President Truman whom they called
just for East Beriiners・ They pay
the prlCe Of admission in East
SeVere Plague of potato bugs and
``Atombomb Harry.” one page has
marks・ To prevent West Berliners
the Communists∴∴Said that the
him smiling and they quoted from
from cashing in on the cheaper
Americans had dropped these from
HamZef, Act IⅡ, Scene 2: ``That one
PrlCeS, the ticket purchaser must
show his identification from the
Planese So a picture was shown of
One day I saw the work day of
the two worlds’East and West, Pic-
tured on a bi11board. The Com_
may smile, and smile, and be a
hungry l距Ie potato bugs falling
villain.’’ Another article about the
from a plane with a big stars and
atom bomb and pictures of Japan-
Stripes painted on it. Anolther
ese vic宜ms is to be found in this
Place I saw a picture of McCIoy,
magazine and a picture of some
the American High Commissioner.
POlicemen carrying o往a striker
munists work for the pleasure of it
He said he felt at home in Ger-
SuPPOrtS the claim血at America is
and for peace. The ``other,, world
many・ This was inteやreted to
a police state.
WaS Amercia where the people
mean that the Americans were in
WO正ed to build planes for war.
Gemany for goode Undemeath
Last year Eastem Gemany had a
were the words: ``Ami Go Home.’’
30
From what I have seen and read
I know that it’s always gomg tO be
``our” brand of democracy for me!
(妨&んe細
FREDER工CK W. MANSF拙LD, ESQ., L’02
Which 36 years later conferred on
him the degree of Doctor of Laws.
上Ie is a charter member of the
Frederick W. Mansfield, L’02,
and for three years, from 1934 to
Boston attomey’reCeived the third
1937, he served as Mayor of Bos-
annual Rerum Novarum Award at
ton.
St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, at
1877, he is血e son of Michael Read
Bom
in
Boston
March 26,
the annual Green and White din-
American Law Institute, a PaSt
PreSident of the Boston University
Law SchooI Association, and from
1929 to 198l was president of the
Massachusetts Bar Association.
ner of the SchooI of Business Ad-
He is a trustee of Saint Eliza-
ministration held in the Co11ins
beth’s Hospital of Boston and holds
Memorial Auditorium on March
the distinction of being a Knight
17th.
Of the Equestrian Order of the Holy
Each year血e award is glVen tO
Sepulchre of Jerusalem, and is
the man who has made an out-
Chancellor of the Eastem United
Standing contribution towards the
States Lieutenancy of that Order・
establishment of management-labor
War, tOO, made its claim on him
relations in accordance with the
and he is on the membership roll
Papal encyclicals. It is named
Of the United Spanish War Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars,
``Rerum Novarum’’ from the first
two words in Latin of the encycli-
and the Kearsage Naval Veterans
Cal written by Pope Leo XIⅡ in
As sociation.
Mr. Mansfield practices law at
189l on ``The Condition of the
Working Classes.’’
18 Tremont Street, Boston. He and
Mr. Mansfield’s contribution has
his wife, the former Helena Eliza置
been truly outstanding, and this
award climaxes for him a long and
beth Roe, Whom he married in BosFrederic鳥事V.舶αれS〆e柑, Esq.
ton in 1902, live at 96 Bay State
Mansfield and Catherine McDon-
field, is a member of the firm of
Ough Mansfield・ He began the
Donovan, Leisure, Newton, Lum-
fruitful association in labor relations. He was counse工 for the
Massachusetts State branch of the
A・ F・ Of L., Serving in similar capac-
ity for unions a捌iated with血e
Road. Their son, Walter Roe Mans-
PraCtice of law in 1902 0n reCeiving
his LL.B・ from Boston University
bard and Irvine, New York City Attomeys.
State branch as well as for indePendent unions. From 1940 to
1945 he lectured on Labor Rela-
tions at the Boston University Law
School, and was a frequent lecturer
at the Young Men’s Catholic Asso重
ciation of Boston. He has drafted
considerable labor legislation and
is in demand as a speaker on labor
matters. He serves as a member
of the Boston Panel of the Arbitra-
tion Committee of the New York
Stock Exchange, and on the Motion
Picture Panel of the American Arbi-
tration Association.
His native city and state know
him well for the services he has
rendered them through血e years.
In 1914 he was treasurer of the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
T巌αれ肌のj mee訪れg Of枕e No耽読α訪れg Co肋肌海ee for geれerα夢o虜cers of
拐e A砧耽れ香A§§0℃近さo動のαS九〇贈receれ母α吊れe FαC耽J母C五心. Pre§e融
調ere, /「o肋, Iro職員からGrαCe A霊`b"m, Kα硯eeれP砧肋肋er, O拡oe Ndso・r.,
FloreれCe Pe枕erさck, A杭e Breれ職の職伽d Jeαれ0ろ,れem耽S. S章αれd訪g, /rom
lelちAr拐町E. Jeれれer, F. Gあれれ重‡訪鳥, C・ E肋er§0れFo持αれd S加地α競Goのd・
3l
や 湘操〆、 、、ふ 、¥“漆
篤
輪
May I, a friend of Dr. Harold Case,
newly elected president of Boston Uni-
VerSity, and of Mrs. Case, relate for New
England Methodists a story relating to
Mrs. Case’s childhood.
My husband was pastor at Newton
Center at the time when Mrs. Case,s
fa血er received his degree of Doctor of
Philosophy from Boston University. Dr.
Albert Kirk came from Kansas for this
academic occasion, bringing with him his
little daughter, Phyllis. They were our
guests in the beautiful new Newton Cen_
ter parsonage.
Mr. Parkinson took Phy11is, a Chaming
little child, tO the Commencement exer置
Cises. When her father’s tum came to be
invested with the honor and the hood,
my husband lifted the little child up high
in his arms so that she could see and re_
Wou看d you ever seriously consider bu組ding a home in
置he forest pictuI.ed above?
member this beautiful occasion.
She is now the new president’s wife!
Jack Hession, GC’50, and his pretty wife, Barbara, are
doing just that.
Life is very, Very interesting, is it not?
New England Methodists have the congratulations of nation-Wide Me血odism in
And what?s more:
the election of Dr. Harold Case to the
He is studying law
PreSidency of Boston University. His tal-
He is a prospective father
ented wife and family will be a real bless-
He,s sweating out a call from the Naval Reserves.
ing to you a11.
MRS. GEORGE H. PARKINSON,
Wilmette, I11inois.
In your May lSSue Of Bostonまα yOu Wi量賞read a量l abou=he
Hes畠ion? s.
( Repr海ed from Ziol'S Herald, Febγuarg
」4,ヱ9封.)
Pres蘭e蘭書Haro物C. CαSe, Ce動ter, heαd額α蘭e, COαS /ormα母誼oγOd章ICed to me暮れbers〆the 4ha耽読Boαrd o/朋recめrs伽α reCe同
比れ〇九eo職肋ee房れg a‡音九e U毒のerS函FαC事`さけC五b.
3雷
BOSTON UN工VERS工TY ALUMN工
工N MIL工TARY SERVICE
Edited By
MARGARET HOVNANIAN, C’45
Brown’Byron F.’Med?251 Capt・, Dir.
Med・ Div.’Military Sea Transportation
Service, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Budd, Char量es J., eXGC,5l, U. S.
Army.
Island (AV-12) % FPO, San Francisco,
C a虹f.
Curthbert, Mary E., eXP’38, M/Sgt・,
4600 WAF Sq., E N TAir Force Base,
CoIorado Springs, CoIo.
Bu龍um, A案bert I., eXB’54, branch
unknown.
Davis, Ches置er, eXE,54, branch un-
known.
鰹cき. Pe‡er B暮`rγ, A’48, G’49, Hq. &
Bunk, Esther A・, E’33/,4l, Capt.,
DeBilio, Francis D., T’45/G,49,
Hq. B書rγ. 229書見F.A. Bれ., 28‡心I可.
G-1 Sec. Hq. First Amy Headquarters,
Chap., 19th Infantry Regt., APO 24,
Dわ・クCα肋p A請erb榔rγ, Iれdわれの.
Govemor’s Island, N. Y.
San Francisco, Calif.
Burchstead, Wilbur, Jr., eXB,53,
Bury, Peter P., A,48/G,49, Rct.,
Adams, Richard B., eXE’52, P.F.C.,
Hq. & Hq. Sq., 8535th A B G, Ma血er
A F B, Mather Field, Calif. (Working in
the Air Force Information & Education
O餓ce as high schooI counselor. )
Agganis, Harry, eXE,52, P.F.C., H &
S Bn.臆M.B., Camp Lejeune, N. C.
Alarie, Pau量J., B’50, Ens., Navy Sup-
Ply Corps School, Bayonne, N. J.
Anastos, Emest A., eXGC’51, U. S.
Army.
Anderson, Richard L., SS’49, U. S.
Naval Auxiliary Air Station’ Whiting
Field, Milton, F量a.
AndeI.SOn, Robert L., L,50, Lt., Naval
Amphibious Base, Beach Unit #1, Coronado, San Diego, Calif・
Annese, Louis, eXGC,5l, U. S. Air
Force.
Aykroyd, Donald A., eXGC’52, U. S.
A重my ・
Bailey, Henry W., eXC’38, Sgt., U. S.
Amy’Camp Edwards’Mass.
Barret章, Norman F., eXB,53, Pvt.,
Service Battery, 84th F.A. Bn., 1st Pla-
toon, Fort Dix, N. J.
Beane, Robert W., eXC’5l, Seaman,
U. S. Fleet Sonar School’Key West,
FIorida.
Beaumont, Philip A., PR’50, Lt., lst
Air Force, Mitchell A F B’Hempstead,
L. I., N. Y.
Bekos, Char賞es, eXA’52, branch un-
known.
Berardi? Mario? eXC?50? U. S. Army,
53d O M Sub. Sup. Co., Fort Devens,
Mass.
B宣igh, Gerald J., eXGC,52, U. S.
Navy・
Bogan, John R., eXA,53, P.F.C.,
564th O. M. Clo. & Gen. Supply Depot’
APO 59, % P.M.,‘San Francisco, Calif.
Bouti量ier, John P., eXE’54, Pvt., U.
S. A. F., Lackland A F B, San Antonio,
Tex.
DeFanti, F. Richard, eXGC’52,
branch unknown.
bra血ch unknown.
Hq. & Hq. Btry’229th F.A., Br. 28th
Inf・ Div., Camp Atterbury, Ind・
Cann, No巾On W., eXGC’5l, 2nd Pla-
toon, Btry. B, 84th F.A. Bn., Fort Dix,
N.J・
D’Errico, Philip, eXGC,52, U. S.
Navy・
DeWolf, Charles, Jr., eXGC’52, U. S.
Air Force.
Do量son, Charles S., eXA,54, branch
unknown.
Camey, RichaI.d I., Jr., GC’49, Pvt.,
A. Btry. T980, 459 AAA AW Bn., Camp
Edwards, Mass.
Donahue, Charles F., eXA,52, Co. E,
A.O.C. Regiment, 8rd Platoon, Fort
Riley, Kans.
U. S. Air Force, Syracuse, N. Y.
Coburn, Edward D., eXGC,52, Pvt.,
Donnelly, John P., eXB,42, U. S.
Amy.
DoWnS, Rodney G., exGC,5l, U. S.
3743 Tng・ Sqd・ Flt. S-2’Sheppard A F B,
Army.
Chase, Haro量d B., Jr., PR,49, Lt.,
Wichita Falls, Tex.
Drummond, A. Foster, eXGC,5l, U.
Coburn, Stuart R., eXGC’5l, V. F.
S・ Navy・
916’Squantum N.A.S., Squantum, Mass.
Duggay, William C., E・,50, Lt., 7th
Co量e, Richard B., JI.., eXB’53, branch
Inf・ Regt. 3rd Inf・ Div., APO 468, %
P.M., San Francisco, Calif.
unknown.
Cole, Richard H., PR’49, Lt., O駈ce
Student Detachment, 8579th AAV CIC
Center, Fort Ho工abird, Ba咄more 19, Md.
Conlon, Richard D., eXB,53, P.F.C.,
Supply SchooI Cb・, Supply SchooI Bn.,
Camp Lejeune, N. C.
Connor, Walter, eXGC,52, U. S. Air
Egan, Daniel, eXGC’5l, Pvt., Plt. 45,
Co. N. 4th Recruiting Tmg., Parris Island, S. C.
Egan, Harry J., eXGC’48, Ensign,
Second O鯖cer - Steamship Exchequer
(U. S.) American Export Lines.
Farre賞l, Edward S., B’42, Maj., Hq.
3rd Bn., 15th Inf., % P.M., San Fran-
Force.
Converse? Herber置W.? eXC?50● Navy
fisco’Calif・ (At present he is command-
Air Corps.
1ng the 8rd battalion of the 8rd division
Cook, Char賞es, eXE’54, 42nd Bomb.
Sq., Carswell A F B, Fort Worth, Texas.
(Radar tail gumer on B-86.)
Cook’Harry, eXGC152? Pvt., Battery
B, 20lst A.F.A., Ba壮alion (SP), Fort
Bennlng, Ga・
in Korea).
Fel賞ows9 Phy量量is R.? P?47) Camp
Drake Composite Service Co., 8013th
Amy Unit, APO 613, % P.M., San
Francisco, Ca聯.
Fenno, A寒bert J., eXGC’52, U. S.
Cook, Trueman, eXGC,52, branch
unknown.
Navy.
Femandez, Don, eXB’53, Co. “K”
Crocker, J皿lian, L’49, Lt., O鯖ce of
the Post J.A. Headquarters, Fort Devens,
Mass.
U. S. C. G., RecelVlng Station, Cape
May, N. J.
Finlay, George E., Jr., eXGC’52,
Cross, John N., eXGC’5l, U. S. Amy.
Crotti, Alfred E., eXL’53, 1262nd
Med. Det.’U. S. Amy Hospital’Fort
Dix, N. J.
U. S・ Navy.
FIeming, Wi1量iam, eXGC’52, P.F.C.,
U. S. Marines.
Fletcher, Kenneth S., Jr., Med’43,
Cummings, Edward J., eXGC,51, Auroligist 3/c, O-I Division, U.S.S. Pine
33
Capt., U. S. Amy Hospital, Camp EdWards, Mass.
Folkins, Jack L., B,49, 2nd Lt.,
U. S. A. F., 4211-A 84th Street, Lubbock, Tex.
Fountain, Irving, eXGC’52, U. S.
Naサ
Frame’ Clovis A・) T142? Chaplain
aboard the U. S. S. LEYTE.
Fulton, Wi量liam, eXB’54, branch un-
known.
Gal皿cia, Milton G., eXGC’52, U. S.
Air Force.
Galvani, Carlo L., eXE’53, Pvt., Flt.
465 Squad・ 8708, LackIand A F B, San
Antonio, Tex.
Gardner, Robert W., eXGC’5工, U. S.
Air Force.
Gilson, Gordon K., eXGC,52, U. S.
Air Force.
Go量a, Anna E., eXGC’50, P.F.C.,
Keyes, Robert D., eXGC,52, branch
KinchIa, Robert J., eXB,52, branch
unknown.
King, WiI賞iam H., Jr., E’49, Lt.
(j.g.), Recruit Training Command, U. S.
Naval Training Center, Great Lakes, Ill.
Kinlin? Francis9 eXGC?52● U. S. Navy.
Lakey, Gardner, GC’49, branch un-
known.
Lang, Edward P., Jr., eXB’52, branch
unknown.
Teaching at血e Amy School, Fort Sam
Grattan, John J., eXGC’51, U. S.
Navy・
Gume置t, Thomas E., B’36/’37, Lt.
Col., Nava寒War College, Newport, R. I.
Hanna’Howard J., eXGC,48? Cpl.,
1700th A.T. Gp., 1784th A.T. Sqdn.
(A.E・) Box 644, Ke量ly A F B, Tex.
Harris’ Sidney E.? eXGC9519 Sgt.,
Lawrence, Richard, eXGC,52, U. S.
M arines.
Navy・
Hickey, Donald F., eXGC’51, U. S.
Amy ・
Hicks’DonaId H.? eXGC●519 Tyndall
A F B, FIorida.
Hinman, Frederick J., M,49, Lt.
(j.g.), Francis E. Warren A F B, Cheyenne, Wyo.
Hirsch, Richard B., SS’50, U. S.
Army, Fort Lewis, Wash.
Hoag, James H., PR,49, Lt., 6147
Lo皿is,
eXGC,52,
U.
S.
Moszka, Stan量ey, eXGC’52, U. S. Air
M。Watt, Frederick W., Jr., L,42/,49,
Ne量son, Andrew W., GC,49/PR’50,
YNT 2, USNR, U. S. Naval Receiving
Station, Phila., Pa.
Little, Allen K., eXB’52, U. S. Air
Force.
NeIson, Edwin W., Jr., PR’50, SoM
l/c, New Development Div., U. S. Fleet
Long, RobeI.t A., eXGC’52, U. S.
Navy・
Sonar School, Key West, Fla・ (Instruc-
めr)
McArdle, Joseph W., eXGC,51, U. S.
Air Force.
0’Brien, Arthur C., Jr., Med,48, 8700
Med・ Group, Ward ll, Lackland A F B,
McCar置hy, John F., eXB’53, Pvt.,
Fhight 666, 8705 Tmg. Sqdn.’Lackland
San Antonio, Tex.
O?Brien? George G・● eXEう53’Cpl.,
Hq. A.S.A. Pacific, APO 500, % P.M.,
A F B, San Antonio, Tex.
McDonald, James G., B,41, Lt。 Col.,
43rd Bomb. Wg. (M), Davis-Monthan
Lt., O餓ce of the Judge Advocate, Camp
Hentz, David, eXÅ,54, branch un-
Morrone,
Naval Justice School, Newport, R. I.
Marine Div., F M F, Camp Lejeune,
N. C.
known.
U. S. Air Force。
Force.
A F B, Tucson, Ariz.
Harvey, John J., eXB’53, U. S. Air
Mi量ler● Marvin? eXGC?5l, Pvt., Flight
535, Sq. 3726, Lackland A F B, San
Antonio, Tex.
known.
H & S Co. 2nd Bn.’2nd Regt., 2nd
Force.
Mi量量er● Lauder? GC)50? Cpl・, U. S。
Army.
Army.
Lineham,_ John F., eXGC’52, U. S.
Air Force.
duty as a comptroller. )
Houston, San Antonio, Tex.
Law, Donn B., eXB,53, branch un-
Lind・ Roy● eXGC952? U. S. Amy.
Gorman, RobeI.t H., eXGC,52, U. S.
SOn Field, Dayton, Ohio. (Assigned to
Monty, Joseph E., eXGC’52, Sgt.,
LaPlan置e? Teresa S.? Nur149? Capt.’
Osaka, Japan.
Gooding, Niles R., Jr., eXA,50, En§.,
Millard, Leslie C., B,27, Lt. Col.,
Air・ Force Headquarters’Wright-Patter-
X-Ray Technician’Osaka Army Hospital,
Naval Justice Schoo量.
Trg・ Sqdn. Flight 427, Lackland A F B,
San Antonio, Tex.
unknown.
San Francisco, Calif.
0’ConnelI, Edward J., eXGC,52, U.
S・ Navy・
McDonough, Edward J., L,49, 1st
Edwards, Mass.
0.’Leary, Mark, eXB,52, U. S. Air
Fo工ce.
O’Neil賞, John T., eXGC’52, U. S.
McDu鯖e, Mrs. N., Nur’47, U. S. Ma-
rine Hospital, Ellis Island, N. Y.
Navy・
Orsi, Francis J・, E’41, Maj., Trans-
McGreevy, Thomas J., eXE,52,
S.F.C., U. S. Army.
POrtation School, Fort Eustis, Va.
Pappas, John T., exB’54, Sgt., U. S.
McKay, Donald R., PR,50, SoM 3/c,
Public Infomation O餓ce, U. S. Fleet
Sonar School, Key West, Fla. (Asst. to
Public Inf. O餓cer.)
Marines.
Parsons, WalIace H., eXB’54, branch
unknown.
Patey, Edmund M., eXGC’52, Pvt.,
McKay, Robert T., eXGC,51, U. S.
Air Force.
Panama City, Fla.
PIan置e, Harley D., eXGC,51, U. S.
MacDonald, John R., eXGC,52, U.
S・ Navy・
Army.
Poulos, George, eXGC’52, U. S. Army.
Manning, Dan R., PR’48, lst Lt.,
Powers, Richard A., eXGC’52, P.F.C.,
A.G. Sec. Headquarters X・ Corps’APO
11th Maint. Sq., Carswell A F B, Fort
P.M., San Francisco, Calif.
Hoy, Edmond J., Jr., eXB,53, Pvt.,
909, % P.M., San Francisco, Calif.
Hamilton, Tex.
8705 Tm. Sqdn. Flt. 139, Lackland A F
B, San Antonio, Tex.
unknown.
Tactical Co血OI Sqdn., APO 970, %
Hu量eatt, Richard S., eXGC’51, U. S.
Air Force.
Mastrangelo, Louis, eXE’54, branch
Mattheson, Raymond T., A’42/T’49,
Capt., Chaplain’Sampson A F B’Ge-
neva, N. Y.
Jenkins, Edward, eXE’53, P.F.C.,
Ready, Harold J., eXB’52, branch
ALUMNI IN SERVICE
unknown.
If you have recently been
Force.
Joyce, Paul H., eXB’5l, Class No. 30,
Ream, David, eXGC,52, U. S. Air
Kans.
Kasabian, Vaughn A., eXGC,52, U. S.
Coast Guard.
Kaufman, Seymour A., Med,48, 1st
Lt., U. S. A. F. Hospital, Westover A F
B, Mass.
Kershaw, (He重en) Jean, Sar,44, 1st
Lt., Amy’Walter Reed Amy Hosp.’
8883 Stu. Sqd・ Box 78, Keesler A F B,
Biloxi, Miss.
Prov. Co. 247, A.P.O. 618, F.P.O., San
Amy O餓cer§ Cand・ School, Fort Riley’
ning, Ga. (Principle advisor to血e Com-
manding O餓cer. )
Rattray, Dona量d W., eXGC’51, Pvt.,
May, Howard C., eXGC’51, 3716 B.
Francisco, Cahf.
Preble, Charles E., Jr., eXB’45,
Capt., The Infantry School, Fort Ben-
Cal量ed
into
the
service,
Or
expect a call in the near
fu置ure, P賞ease let the alumni
o鯖ce know abou置it. In。
Clude name, rank, unit and
address.
Reu量ing, John A., Jr., A,50, Pvt.,
Lackland A F B, San Antonio, Tex.
Rieger, Grover C., T,49, 1st Lt., 1262
A.S.U., Fort Dix, N. J.
Rodley, James G., eXGC,51, Seaman
Recruit, U. S. N.
Rosenberg, Elliot H., eXB,53, Headquarters Co., First Army, Govemor’s Is-
Washington, D. C.
land, N. Y.
$4
ALUMNI IN
REVIEW
EXTRACT鵜THE AMERICAN
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY,
Vol. LXIⅡ, No.4, October, 1950,
P469. Muller, Theresa G., The
Nature and Direction of Psychiatric Nurslng: The Dynamics of
Human Relationships in Nursmg,
Philadelphia, LippmCOtt’1950.
$5.00
A GREAT TEACHER_
EBENEZER CHARLETON BLACK
Marion G. Goddette keeps with-
WOrth in objecting to the critic
Phee: her king can do no wrong・
“. ‥ that would peep and botanize
In her readable, little volume, A
Of the nurse reviewed in these pages
peur et $anS rerOCh6, the peerless
knight, ``y-Cladd in mightie armes”
Wi址n recent years’Professor Muller’s (Boston University SchooI of
Nursing) seems to this commentator to be the most competently
Ordered and written. It commands
the field of care and relief for the
PSyChiatrical patient. After an introduction upon the history and
the present character and standing
Of psychiat正cal nursmg, the author
helps the nurse to observe her role
and always ready to champIOn
truth and beauty・ And Miss
Goddette camot properly be critiCized for not doing what she never
intended to do. Her very omissions
intensify the portrait she painted
and wished to paint of her hero・
This reviewer found her picture
Stimulating partly because she preferred to draw attention to the un-
doubted courage and strength of
Cially directing her to the writings
and teachings of Alexander and
French, and other dynamists (taken
in the sense of the psychoanalysts).
Here she dwells upon four emotions: hate, fear, jealousy, and anguish. In accord with the best cur置
rent medical prescriptions, these
are ``dynamicalユy’’treated as un-
toward forces which a組ict the
Organism. The last section expounds
the art of directing psychiatrical
nursmg・ This art lo音Oks to the qual-
ification and education of the nurse
main point in the book is made of
青eacher. The achievements of Pro-
fessor Black as written into the
lives of the thousands of students
Who sat in his classes, added to the
VaSt numbers of persons of every
type who listened to him elsewhere,
Surely justifies his being so called・
The bare facts of his varied life
SuggeSt the source of some of his
POWerS. The youngest in a family
Of seven children, he was bom and
bred- aS have been so many dis-
of references which are set down
Manse, Where the BibZe, Shaたe-
at each chapter-end with specific
Speare, Sco印, and B“r性s associated
notation from page to page. What-
With but were not edipsed by the
ever is regarded as ``psychoIogy’’
and ``psychological” comes with the
medical sanction; a岨ough much
Of it ultimately derives from psy-
choanalytical teachings and prac-
tice and some from the application
Of tests, interviewmg, and statistics,
to problems of education, industry
and social work. The best of the
WOrk comes directly from the
knowledge言udgment and skill of
glory of Greece and the grandeur
of Rome. It was a home where hard
COmmOn SenSe WaS eXPeCted and
required to mix with the subtleties
Of Jevons’Logic and the old Greek
tragedies. In this home and at
Edinburgh University, Where he
graduated with distinction in the
distinguished Class of 1875, yOung
Black associated with men whose
names are still written large on
Fame’s etemal bead-rOll: graCious
its author.
and to the invention and conduct
Of curriculum and program・ A
Miss Goddette’s central theme is
that E. Charleton Black was a grea青
tinguished Scots-in a Scottish
as psychotherapist to ``underactive”
and ``overactive’’ patients, eSPe-
Upon his mo血er’s grave.’’
Pel‘ Pic青ure of a Grea青Teacher,
Ebenezer・ Charleton Black is $anS
Of血e books on the profession
her ``Achilles:’I stand with Words-
in the magnetic field of the biogra-
James M. Barrie; forever clamorous
“UNTO THE HILLS,”a
Carlyle; that epitome of scholarship’
David Masson; Guthrie Tait, a gen-
a search of many bibliographical
novelreviewedinourMarch
eration ahead of his time as a
SOurCeS, Which seem actually to
isISue,WaSPublishedbyVan-
mathematical - Physicist; Robert
tagePress,Inc.,230West41st
St.,N.Y.18,N.Y.
however, Should have explained
have been carefully scrutinized to
the great enrichment of the text.
The result appears in a multitude
L. Stevenson. (Miss Goddette,
When she mentioned that young
35
Black received his master’s degree
1arged opportunities in the音United
at the age of eighteen, he was re-
States and, in 1891, Came tO Oliver
CelVユng Only an ``undergraduate’’
Wendell Holmes’Hub of the Uni-
Richardson. To me, eVen Thomas
Carlyle, despite his assumption of
``mamishness,’’was deeply ``femi-
degree・ Edinburgh University, like
verse. Here in the Emerson Col-
nine・ In fact, I have a feeling that
Other Scottish universities, followed
1ege of Oratory, the New England
in seeking to explain the origin of
a Mediaeval tradition, and con-
Conservatory of Music, and HarVard Ulliversity he became a suc-
“cherchez la femme’’is a pertinent
CeSSful lecturer; but,丘nally, found
SuggeStion. But, at the same time,
ferred the master’s as the宜rst de-
gree・ )
the powers of many notable men,
Professor Black can be credited
in Boston University Co11ege of
SuCh persons will be found to have
With helping notably to put Boston
Liberal Arts, the great opportunity
What this reviewer was taught (he
University “on the map.” He be-
for the development of his genius as
is hopelessly Victorian) are strictly
came a teacher and lecturer known
a teacher.
“masculine’’ traits. E. Charleton
far outside Massachusetts. The im_
At this point, the reader- if he
Black did not always tread softly or
POrtanCe Of this achievement in no
has persisted this far - may tO his
Walk with ``the moon’s soft beauty
Way lessens the slgnificance of
advantage lay aside this paper and
and the moon’s soft pace・’’He was
those teachers whose work, though
leam from Miss Goddette directly
not only “among the prophets,’’but
SCarCely known outside their class-
about the achievements of her hero
also “among the herdmen of
rooms, is often of the most service
in his undoubted success as “a great
Tekoa,’’from whom he was great
to students. Nevertheless, the teach-
teacher’’and friend of those who
enough to leam greatly. When he
er, Whose work also attracts atten-
seek to know. The reader can listen
chose, he was a man’s man and, tO
tion elsewhere, glVeS the institution
to Professor Black in his high mo-
a wider field of recognition・ Pro-
ments in the college classroom; Sit
adapt a line from Cory’s HeγaCut鵬,
``could tire the moon with talking
fessor Black certainly did help by
among the privileged groups who
and send her down the sky’’after
his lectures and his publications to
attended his famous salons at Kirk-
the manner of burly, Sam Johnson・
make Boston University more than
land Street, Cambridge, SurrOunded
a local college.
To suggest that Professor Black
by ``an atmosphere of cordiality;”
took a11 knowledge for his province,
In this comection, his list of
hear him te11 of his wandering with
that ``every fortress he stomed
great b00たs became of interest far
his fisheman guide on Canadian
(factual or emotional) he took,’プ
and wide. Indeed, it might well be
lakes and rivers and his equally
that “his leam工ng knew no limita-
used today as the basis for a com-
Vivid accounts of sea ]OumeyS
tions,,’that “five minutes vyas su鯖-
Prehensive course on ``world Lit-
through the Mediterranean with
cient timel for him to know the
erature,’’which in various forms is
the much-enduring Odysseus; Or
food required by the mind he
being adopted by our colleges ev-
en〕Oy SOme Of his many, tO-the-
wished to feed,’’or that “he had no
From the University of ``King
POint witticisms and stories. In any
event, the reader will not go far
Students in the Bible from e。erg
James the Sixth of Scotland who
with Miss Goddette before he
angZe” is to damn unfairly with
disappeared in King James the
senses what Professor Black meant
OVerPraise the real attainments of
First of Great Britain,’’Black went
When he insisted ``this is a grand,
a real scholar. His well-known edi-
for a brief period to what is now
Old world if you have fa亜and pa-
tion of Hぴあo壷Shake叩eare sug-
Westminster College in London,
tience su鯖cient to know it.” And
next took an extended variation of
he will surely gain something of
gests such scholarship, but to imply
that he touched everything and
the continental “Grand Tour,’’and
Miss Goddette’s enthusiasm for her
``Great Teacher.”
erywhere.
retumed home to lecture for sev-
SuPerior in his ability to interes亡
“touched nothing that he did not
adom’’
is
to
make
a
statement
which is refuted by itself・ Profes-
Then, like so many of his fellow
But it seems to this reviewer Miss
Goddette is so enraptured-hypno-
Scots, he heard the West ``a-Ca11in’”
tized, Perhaps - by the magnetic
a teacher, Which he certainly was
and crossed to Canada and ``ob-
influence of her idol that, like Mrs.
- Ofthe best. To be a great teacher
is surely su鯖cient, for it is prob-
eral years at Liddesdale College.
sor Black considered himself to be
Servin’matters as they go,’’he wan-
Clemens, Who must needs make her
dered from Quebec to the still un-
Mark Twain appear as she wished
ably the highest type of service血at
developed prairie provinces, eVen
him to appear, She forgets that ``he`
any man is privileged to render to
事Ommg for a brief period the fa-
is all fault who has no/fault at all.”
his fellows. The reputation of Pro-
mous Canadian Mounted Police.
Possibly, Black was first ``a woman’s
fessor Black requlreS nO boIstering
Then’like so many residents of the
man.” That has been true of other
from a mythical supeman.
Dominion, he visualized the en一
notable丘gures∴SuCh as Samuel
$6
RoY DAVIS
HAVERHILL, LAWRENCE,
LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS
A reception and banquet will be
LAWRENCE, MASSACHUSETTS
The Boston University Alumni
Club of Lawrence held a meeting
士endered the 1951 Boston Univer_
Wednesday, March 28, in the
Sity graduates of Lawrence, Lowe11,
Y.W.C.A. in Lawrence. Fred Samia,
and Haverhill by the combined
Boston University Alumni Clubs of
Vice President in charge of Pro-
these three cities. The a任air will
grams, WaS Chaiman for the evening.
Plans were made for a dimer party
and general meeting in March・
I」OS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
The luncheon meeting of the’Los
Angeles Club vI:aS attended by ap-
be held at the Andover Country
PrOXimately twinty葛five members,
Club, Wednesday evening, Apri1
25.
Dr. and Mrs. Harold C. Case,
new President of Boston UniverSity, Will be guests at this occasion.
The committee in charge of this
dinner includes the followmg O能-
among whom were Professor Rob-
WASHINGTON, D. C.
ert E. Bruce, CLA’01 and Dr. I. H.
The St. Valentine Frolic of the
Krisling, Med’04. At that time, Val-
Washington Club held at The Ca$-
entine’s Day, Plans were made for
青Z。 in Maryland was attended by
Welcommg Dr. Daniel L. Marsh,
餅ty alumni and their friends. Many
Our retired President, at a dimer
new members were present, and
in his honor.
CerS Of the three clubs: Matthew J・
Stowell, and Joseph Nomandy of
Lowell; Mrs. Thomas Delva, John
Katsaros’Mary Guaetta’and Theo-
dore Schiavone, Of Haverhill; and
Fred Samia, Edward Keisling, Jr.,
George S. May, Norman Schwartz,
Bruno Pietucho任, and Mrs. Lewis
Schwartz, all of Lawrence.
The committee met in March at
the home of Mrs. Schwartz in Lawrence to arrange the dinner.
TERRITORY OF HAWAII
On the occasion of Dr. Daniel L.
Marsh’s visit to the Hawaiian Is-
lands to make the Charter Day
Address at the University of Hawaii
in Honolulu on March 27th, the
alumni of the Islands met for the
Organizational meeting of the Bos-
G事`eS瞭Of九oれ0γ a吊れe rece動烏R九odeきslα職d C五心D訪れer ooere re訪れg
ton University Club of Hawaii・ Dr.
De耽れおJ. Rober鳩, L’34,のf舵九ode Is夢α動d, SecOれd γこg加. S九o側れα自〆書
Pre§蘭eれ章 Dr. Dαれ拐 L.舶iar§九 〇f Bos轟on U耽れer訪)〆 a融 GoびerれOr
and Mrs. Marsh were honored
;s HoれOrable J事`dge Jeremこa九E. 0’CormdJ, L’08, aれd a‡ r;g加,舶orγis
Wa物肌aれ,舵九ode I8めれd C五b O耕ceγ. Fのr肌ore α心o巾Rhode Isわれd
Dれれeγ §ee相のrcあおs榔e Of BOSTONIA.
guests・
87
Dr. and Mrs. Dan土el L. Marsh
6th, at 6:30 P.M・ The program
hospital for a sprain of a muscle in
were the honored guests of the Bos-
chaiman’Stanley Heath, PrOmises
his left side and has retumed home.
ton University Club of Los Angeles
an entertaining evening.
on the evening of Saturday, March
17th. Mr. Saul I. Gass, Organizing
Chaiman of the Los Angeles group,
arranged the dimer meeting which
was held at the Ardmore House,
We are indeed sorry to report
that Dr. Deyo’PreSident, WaS in-
Jured in an automobile accident on
February 2. He was treated at a
ALBANY, NEW YORK
Boston University folks in the
Albany Capital District met on F正
day, March 9th, for a social gather-
3550 Wilshire Boulevard, in Los
ing・ The group met at the Petit
Angeles. This was Dr. Marsh’s first
Paris Restaurant at 9 P.M. Mrs.
visit to the West Coast since 1941,
and alumni from all parts of Califomia came to meet him, both at
this meeting and the dimer in San
Francisco.
M重器FO RD ,
MAS SACHUSETrS
grams’WaS Chaiman for the party.
The Bos置on University Club of
Milford has announced details
of the plans for scholarship
awards made possible by present-
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORN量A
Elda Jenkins, Vice President of Pro-
ing血e operetta, %Ruddigore.’’
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
On the 17th of February a meet-
There wi11 be three scholarships
ing of a committee from the Boston
On Apri1 3rd President Stuart W.
of $250 each. The scholarships
University Club of New York was
Lundberg and the members of the
wi11 be open to qualified studen章s
held at the Hotel Commodore at
San Francisco Alumni Club hon-
from Mi量ford, Hopedale, and
ored Dr. and Mrs. Marsh at a din-
Medway from any of the fo1lowing schooIs : Milford High School,
ner in San Francisco.
St. Mary,s High and Medway
NEW JERSEY
High School.
On Saturday, February 18th, Mr.
Andrew Gray, President of the New
list of standards incIuding a
York Club, WaS host to a committee
competitive scholastic aptitude
meeting jointly with representation
置est’Which wi1量make it possible
New Jersey Club, has announced
for commercia量ly"trained s置u-
alumni at the Robert Treat Hotel in
Newark. The date is Friday, April
club.
The awards will be based on a
George Deyo, President of the
another big dinner meeting for the
noon to discuss future plans for the
from the Boston University Club of
dents to compete; marks in high
New Jersey to plan a joint reception
school ; eXtra-Curricula activities ;
and dinner for our new president,
量eadership and financial need・
Dr. Harold C. Case, On May 4th.
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88
与P
o盤T
s
TERR工ERS FACE STIFF 1951 GRID SLATE
By VIC STOUT? Sports Publici置y Director
’ For the first time in Boston Uni-
Perhaps the N.Y・U. game will be
versity football history血e Terriers
next fall will play a lO-game foot-
ball schedule.
CoIonels, Predicts 血is intersec-
tional clash will sell out the loca]
Fhday evening a任airs.
Here’s a brief rundown on the
stadium.
1951 opponents:
Camp Lejeune - This is a dif-
The 1951 slate, the most ambi-
William and Mary - This will
ficult one to discuss since no one
tious ever tackled by a Boston Uni-
mark the third meeting between
knows what its persomel will be
VerSity footba11 team, lists five new
the two institutions. W and M
at this time. It can be safely stated,
laced the Terriers, 47 to 13, in
however,血at this Marine廿aining
1947 but last year Boston Univer-
Site will be represlented by an ex-
Srty eked out a 16 to 14 victory at
CePtionally strong team. A new
OPPOnentS - Penn State, University
Of Louisville, Camp Lejeune, Uni-
VerSity of Wichita and the.UniVerSity of Oregon. Temple re山ms
to血e Te正er slate after a year’s
abseme while William and Mary,
College of the Pacific, New York
Fenway Pa正Rube McCray lS in-
COaCh was recently asslgned to take
stalling血e T at William and Mary
over the team and it is understood
this sprmg and figures to field an
血at the Marines will play a num-
OutStanding team next fall・ Last
ber of college elevens this coming
University and Syracuse were
among the 1950 apponents.
The schedule:
Sept. 22 - at William and Mary
Sept. 29- at Penn State
year was Rube’s only losing season
Since he has been coaching, a Cir-
VerSity’s fu血re All America can-
cumstance which also applied to
didate is currently stationed血ere
our own Bu鮮Donelli. W and M
as
will be rough in its own back yard・
they’11 appear here is, Of course, a
Pem State-The Nitany Lions
Oct・ 5-at University of Louisville
Oct・ 12 - Camp Lejeune
Oct. 19 - College of血e Pacific
Oct. 27 - at Temple University
fa11・ Harry Aggan王s, Boston Uni-
are awfu11y tough to beat when
Playing at home・ And while Pem
State was below par last season,
you can expect Rip Engle’the
is
end
Tom
Lavery.
Whe血er
ma壮er of conjecture.
Co11ege of the Pacific - T址s
is one of the ‘nation’s tougher foot-
ball teams. The Terriers of last
fall can a壮est to that for COP wal-
Nov. 3 - New York University
fomer Brown coach’tO really come
Nov. 10鵜University of Oregon
up with something next fall・ Good
Out at Stockton. Bamng interven-
Nov・ 17 - University of Wichita
football players are available right
tion by Uncle Sam, mOSt Of the
Nov・ 25 - Syracuse University
It will be noted that the first
three games are listed as away
loped Bo-StOn University, 52 to 7,
can
members of the 1950 Pacific team
wager that he’11 get his share of
Will be back in action・ Larry Siem-
them.
memg, last fall’s coach at Pacific’
in
Rip’s
backyard
and
you
from home・ This is of necessity
University of Louisv組量e - An
Since Fenway Park is not available
up-and-COming team that last year
until after World Series’time. Two,
tied undefeated University of Mi-
and possibly three, Of the home
ami in the Orange Bowl・ Louisville,
has moved along to Arizona State
at Tempe with Jorge moving up to
the top spot.
Temple
Univer宙ty
-
AI
Ka-
of course, is the home of the Boston
wal, former Terrier line coach, has
The Camp Lejeune home opener,
Red Sox farm club and Eddie
been bui皿ng for two years at the
血e College of the Pacific game and
Dcherty, general manager of the
Philadelphia institution and it is
games will be played under li粗ts.
89
figured nelXt year Will be the best
number of excellent freshmen, Of
Conference team figures to be a
Since he took over the asslgnment
his own choice’mOVe uP for varsity
Whale of an attraction・ Oregon, a
Rose BowI competitor three years
there. This marks the third meet_
COmPetition. The Terriers have had
mg between the two universities,
a definite edge in this post-War
ago’is reported ready to challenge
Boston University winnlng the two
rivalry but things will shortly be-
again for the west coast title・
PreVious ones, 13 to 7 in 1948 and
gln tO equalize・ This intercitv
28 to 7 in 1949.
Series’incidentally, COuld develop
University of Wichita - Relatively unknown in the East, Wich-
New York University鵜The
Violets are definitely on the im-
into one of the top football attrac-
tions in the East.
ita is a Missouri Conference mem_
ber. Last season, With a largely
PrOVe under Hugh Devore. Last
University of Oregon - Play-
SOPhomore team, it won five, lost
year he had to take what was
handed to him. But next fall a
mg in the fastest competition west
four and tied one. Wichita de-
Of the Mississippi, this Pacific Coast
feated a good Detroit team (a Bos-
TOURNEy BOUND - Hαrry Cた卿erjy9s ]9軸Terrier Jce Ho諒ey sq霊lad se撮,ed叩沈e Neoo EngJaれd C九の肋pわれS厭p bγ脚力串
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ユ950-上95上 $eαSOれ.
40
ton Co11ege opponent next fall),
ferences and greeting people nearly
Wake Forest and North Carolina
tied Kansas State and lost a free_
15 hours each day ‥ ・ but he still
. ‥ The home season opens Apri1
SCOrmg game tO Oklahoma A and
found time to take in the last two
16 at Nickerson Field with Boston
M just to glVe yOu the idea that the
hockey games of the B.U. home
College a任ording the opposition
Kansas team is not exactly a push-
SeaSOn ‥. and he made a tremen_
. ‥ The team should do we11 since
OVe音r・ This game will be the feature
dous hit with the players when he
it is well heeled in pitchers.
Of the amual High SchooI Day in
dropped into the dressmg rOOm
The play of sophomore John
which more than two score bands
after the Northeastem win and con_
Poce of Norwood will be watched
Participate and several thousand
SChoolboy football players are
gratulated them … The new presi-
With particular inte音reSt this spnng
dent, Who has made a tremendous
guests of血e University.
impression on eve音ryOne Who has
Syracuse University - This
met him, is a real follower of athletics’loves to trout fish and plays
freshman and has never hit below
golf under lOO.
血e chamed.400 ma正in high
POSt-War rivalry is getting better
every year. Next fall the two teams
Will be battling for the BEANPOT
again. A year ago when the BeanPOt WaS first put up for competition Syracuse scored a 14 to 13
Victory over the Terriers and gained
POSSeSSion for a year. In the six
games to date Boston University
has won two and lost four.
What Bu鱈Donelli wi11 have next
fall to meet this fomidable array
Of opponents is, Of course, PrOb-
lematical. No one knows at this
POint just how heavily血e nation’s
military requlrementS Will drain his
PerSOmel. But as the Terriers began spnng PraCtice late last month
there was every indication that
Boston University would do all
right for itself next autumn. As
this was being w正ten the Eastem
In七ercolユegiate Athletic Association
had not taken action on the question of freshmen playing next fa11・
But it appeared to be a foregone
COnClusion that freshmen would be
Permitted to play. And if such is
the case it’s not betraylng any
SeCret tO State that a number of
likely置looking footballers are Bos-
ton University bound・ Incidentally’
fomer line coach Steve Sinko has
been called back by Bu任Donelli
to糾his o音ld job at Boston Univer置
Sity. Steve coached the line last
SeaSOn at Indiana.
Terrier Briefs
. ‥ The fomer American Legion
Player compiled the phenomenal
average of.657 in 12 games as a
Mark Apri1 21 as a Must Day
On yOur Calendar if you are in the
Vicinity of Nickerson Field.
SChooI or American Legion ball.
A number of the local colleges
are gomg OutSide Massachusetts
That’s the amual Varsity Club
for footbalユtalent血ese days. ‥
Field Day ‥ ・ Bu鮮Donelli is
but Bu任Donelli’s squad next fa11
COnducting a coaching clinic for
Will be drawn almost entirely缶om
COaChes in the mommg. ‥ In the
Massachusetts’bOyS ‥ ・ and the
aftemoon the varsity footballers
Only non-New Englander will prob-
meet an alumni team in a regula-
ably be the capable John Kastan
tion football game, the baseball
Of Glassport’Pa… ・ Tab血e name
team plays host to Dartmouth and
Of Cli任ord Blair’Hingham sopho-
Doug Raymond’s track team meets
more’aS a future track great ‥ ・
Tufts College, the best duel meet
The young man finished third in
team in New England. ‥ Entry
the IC4A meet in New York when
to the festivities is by tag obtain-
he tossed the shotput out over 47
able for a nominal fee. ‥ the pro-
feet. ‥ A week later he posted a
Ceeds are used by the Varsity Club
new field house record at the Uni_
to buy gifts and sponsor special
VerSrty Of Maine in the same event
events for our undergraduate var-
with a 47 foot l1薙inch e任ort. ‥
Sity lettermen.
The same day he threw the 35-
The basketba11 five wound up its
POund weight out over 61 feet for
SeaSOn With a seven-ten reCOrd, but
a world’s record only to have血e
that wasn’t bad considering it was
toss nul愉ed when he stepped ever
a largely sophomo音re team. ‥ Next
SO Slightly out of the circle.
year the Terriers sholuld have one
And here are several other Ter_
Of the best fives in New England
rier athletes to watch - freshman
with the freshman class contribut-
Tom Sexton of Brookline, unde-
工ng a number of outstanding play-
feated in the back stroke and an
ers to the varsity. ‥ Going into
N.E・A・A.U. junior and senior cham-
血e N.C.A.A. toumament at CoIo_
rado Springs Harry Cleverly,s five-
PIOn in the event … Dick Myerson
Of Win血rop’undefeated in the
year coaching record at Boston
147-POund wrestling event.
University was 8l wins against only
Capt・ Larry Sullivan of Watertown,
25 defe音atS, One Of the best records
CaPtain of the golf te音am and Oak-
Of achievement in the United
1ey Club champion. ‥ Right now
States.
the Terriers are getting their share
Cleverly’incidentally, tOOk a
Of New England’s top athletes and
WaS On the job at the University
group of 16 baseball players down
South last month for engagements
COllegiate athletic leader is becom-
OnIy a week and was attending con-
With Wo任ord, Davidson, Fuman,
mg mOre eStablished every year.
Dr・ Harold Case, Our neW PreXy,
41
Our POSition as a sec宜onal inter-
1951易1952
SPRING SCHEDULES
PZace
Oppo仰e硯
T6me
Piace
Oppone庇
Apri1
April
Nickerson Field, Weston 2 30 19 University
14 Brandeis University
of
Riverside Golf Course
Maine
Riverside Golf Course
Cambridge 4 OO 20 Harvard University
18 Harvard University
19 Northeastem University
Nickerson Field, Weston 4 OO 25 Boston
21 Tufts College
Nickerson Field, Weston 2 30 27 Brown
26 Wentworth Institute
Nickerson Field, Weston 4 OO 28 Colby Co11ege
80 Boston College
Nickerson Field, Weston 4
OO
M
May
Boston 4:00
8 Northeastem University
5 Brandeis University
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:00
8 Boston College
Nickerson Field, Weston 4:00
Riverside Golf Course
CoIIege
Riverside Golf Course
University
Riverside Golf Course
ay
l Holy Cross Co11ege
Riverside Golf Course 2:00
4 Springfield College
Riverside Golf Course 2:00
7 Worcester Polytechnic
Worcester Country Club 2:00
Institute
Medford 2:00
8 Tufts College
12 Massachusetts Institute
of TechnoIogy
me OOOOOOOOOO
Da青e
Da青e
耶 2 2 2 2 2
VARSITY GOLF
FRE「S HMAN BASEBALL
Riverside Golf Course 2:00
10 Clark University
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:00
ll and
Oakley Golf Course
18 New Englands
VARSITY BASEBALL
VARSITY TENNIS
March
19 Wo任ord
20 Furman
21
CoIlege
Spartanburg,
University
Davidson
College
So.
Greenville,
Davidson,
So.
No.
Carolina 2:00
Apri1
Carolina 2:00
14 Tufts College
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:00
19 University of Maine
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:00
Carolina 2:00
22 Wake Forest Co11ege Wake Forest, No. Carolina 2:00
20 Massachusetts Institute
Cambridge 2:15
Of TechnoIogy
23 University of North
C arolina
Chapel Hill’No. Carolina 2‥00
24 U詩誌嘉櫨na
Chapel Hill, No. Carolina 2:00
25 Harvard University
Nickerson Field, Weston 8:00
28 Colby Co11ege
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:15
3 Holy Cross College
14 Rhode Island State College Kingston’Rhode Island 2:30
4 Boston College
Nickerson Field, Weston 4:00
16 Boston College
21 Dartmouth Co11ege
11 University of New Hampshire Durham, N. H.
18and
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:30
23 ‘Tufts College
Medford 3:00
28 Tufts College
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:30
19 New Englands
FRESHMAN OUTDOOR TRACK
Chestnut Hi11 4:00
30 Boston Co11oge
Nickerson Field, Weston
9 Brown University
Boston 2:00
19 Northeastem University
Storrs, Connecticut
5 University of Comecticut
Cambridge 4:00
18 Harvard University
Worces ter
Chestnut Hill
2 3 3 3 4
April
0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0
May
April
磐。。rtm。u,h 。。11。g。 Han。V。r, N. H. 4:00
5 Northeastem University Nickerson Field, Weston ll:00
14 Brown University
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:30
21 Tufts College
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:30
May
5 University of New
5 University of Connecticut Nickerson Field, Weston 2:30
12 Colgate
University
Hamilton,
N.
Y.
Durham, N. H. 2:00
Hampshire
11 Syracuse University Syracuse, N. Y. 8:30
Nickerson Field, Weston 2:00
12 E.I.C.A.A.
2:30
19 Massachusetts Institute
of
TechnoIogy
Nickerson
Field,
Weston 4:00
許Lr。Wn 。niv。.Sit, Ni。k。rS。n Fi。1d, W。St。n 2:30
VARSITY CREW
21
March
21
University
Tufts
College
28 Harvard
of
Tampa
and
Nickerson
Holy
Field,
Cross
Weston 2:00
Cambridge 2:00
Tampa’FIorida
24 Florida State and Rollins College Winter Park’FIorida
堅univ。rSity 。fN。W H。mPShir。 Durham, N. H. 2:00
Apri1
12 E.I.C.A.A. Nickerson Field, Weston 2:00
21 M.I.T. and Harvard University
28 Comell and Syracuse University
Charles River
19 N.E.I.C.A.A. Springfield
Syracuse
26
19 E.A.R.C.
I.C.A.A.A.A. New
York
Apri1 21 VARSITY CLUB FIELD DAY at Nickerson Field,
May
Weston, Massachusetts
Princeton, N. J.
42
T脚CLA鮒
1905
Califomia, visited Honolulu last summer,
teacher at the Chapman Technical High
Where she renewed acquaintance with
School in New London, Conn∞宜cut,
HELEN B. MacNEIL, CLA’」2, Who is
ELIZABETH M. BRACKETT has
WaS aWarded a master of arts degree in
registrar of the University of Hawaii.
education.
been e16cted vice-PreSident of血e re-
Miss Bartlett is now teaching English and
C.L.A.
Cently fomed Chapter in Sarasota, FIorida, Of American Association of Univer_
Sity Women.
POlitical science at the East Los Angeles
Junior College in Califomia.
1913
1917
C.L.A.
C.L.A.
RUTH BARTLETT of Los Angeles,
C.B.A.
VERNON W. EVANS of Saugus, Su
Perintendent of Saugus SchooIs, WaS honOred recentIy by the Parent-Teacher’s
Ass6ciation in commemoration of his
thirty years service as Superintendent.
Mrs. PHYLLIS L. CANFIELD, a
1919
盤dきgさo鵬Ed棚Ca虎on
Time亜es fast. Let us
have your Reunion plans
The peop賞e of the Church of Christ
Uniori and Berea Community joined in
SO that we may include
honormg Mrs. ADA SIMPSON SHERWOOD on her ninetieth birthday. Mrs.
them in the general pro-
Sherwood taught in pubhc schooIs and
gram ・
Address mqulrleS tO R.
COllege, She is a writer and poet’a WOr工d
D. Weeks c/o the Alumni
trave皿er and director of religious edu-
O鯖ce’308 Bay State Road,
K entucky.
Cation at the Union Church in Berea,
Boston 15, Mass.
Many classes have al-
1921
Gγad事(αめ
ready made plans for
ALFREDO Q. GONZALEZ has re-
Alumni Day, June 2, 195l.
Cently been elected president of the
Some have their lunch_
Lopez Jaena Memorial College, La Paz,
edns planned and locations
IIoilo City, Republic of the Philippines.
boiOked - SuCh as:
His reputation as perhaps the leading
舶`dγ D. Wee鳥s, CBA,49
C.L.A・ 1911 - Mrs. Bertha Carr Pierce, 10 Orlando Ave.’Winthrop
52, Mass. West Harbor Room at Miles Standish.
C・L.A. 1906葛Miss Elizabeth J. Muaphy, 28 Monument St., W.
Medford 55, Mass. Faculty Club・
1950 - All Departments - Arthur Antonopoulos’34 West Bowers
蒜藍。講e豊轟蒜詰寄隷
Bamboo Flotc〉er (Dorrance, 1949). This
WOrk was mentioned in a recent issue of
BOSTONIA. It contains appreciative references to his experiences in the UniverSity. Recently it has been approved by
the govemment of the PhilippmeS aS a
St.’Lowe11, Mass. Silver Lagoon Room at Miles
Standish.
text for use in private and public col1eges・
C.LA・ 1896 - Miss Grace N. Brown, The Stratford, 11 E. 32nd St.,
1922
New York 16, N・ Y. College Club・
C.B.A.
C.L.A. 190l - Mrs. David D. Nickerson, 176 Glenwood Street,
Malden・ Boston University Commons.
C.L.A. 192l - Miss Grace Aubum, 308 Bay State Road, Boston
Mr. SIDNEY E. SHEPARD is Director
Of Sales, Automotive Division, Gatke CorPOration’in the Chicago’Illinois, O餓ce.
15, Mass・ Faculty Club・
P.A.L. 1926 - Mrs. H. E. Dalrymple’250 Franklin St., Melrose,
1923
Mass. Luncheon at Larz Anderson Estate, Tea at
C.B.A.
Copley Plaza Hotel.
P.A・L. 1941 - Mrs. Shirley W. Watson, 20 George St.’Medford,
LEROY F. HUSSEY of Augusta, Maine,
became the丑rst Republican to enter the
Mass. Faculty Club.
1952 campalgn for the govemorship of
M aine.
43
1924
Ed棚Ca房on
MYRTLE STRONG ALLEN was guest
States policy in the Mediterranean
Westem Massachusetts Electric Com-
world,”
Pany.
according
to
the
Reverend
HOMER J. ARMSTRONG, PaStOr of the
SPeaker at a meeting of the Swampscott
apolis’Who spoke on his recent trip to
Woman’s club, at the club’s headquarters
Palestine at Carleton College.
in the Swampscott Ionic Club・
Gγad棚aめ
Last year Mr. Amstrong toured Eu-
setts State Department of Education,
fifteen countries in all. “The Middle East
spoke on station WHAV, Haverhi11’On
is the most critical of all,’’he reports.
guidance in Haverhil工schooIs.
Topeka, Kansas’SPOke at the World Day
and are now blundering in the Middle
Of Prayer service at Grant Avenue Baptist church, in Topeka.
Dr. Shamon, retired president of Isa-
East. Hostility towards Americans is
bella Thoburn College, Lucknow, India,
Palestine, the land that produced Jesus
received the Kaiser-i-Hind gold medal
and
for distinguished service in India, by order
between division and animosity and has
Of H.M. King George in 1938.
become the powder keg of World War
1931
盤e晦まo霊場E血Cα訪m
probably more intense in the Middle East
than in any other part of the globe ‥ ・
o血er
great
prophets,
is
now
tom
II重.’’
HELEN K. MULCAHY of Lowell, is
vocational counseling in the Massachu-
rope’Asia and血e Middle East, Visiting
Dr. MARY ESTELLE SHANNON of
dean of girls at Lowell High School.
JOSEPH ARTHUR BEDARD, SuPervisor of occupational information and
“we have mishandled Far Eastem a鮮airs
P.A.L.
Ed棚Ca虎on
Judson Memorial Baptist Church, Minne-
The Reverend Mr. Amstrong has held
EUGENIA G. HELMS of Watertown,
director
of
the
Youth
and
Children’s
Center of Morgan Memorial’Which she
碧訪露詩語霊認諾靖
the Bo8青OlあTral)eler.
1933
pastorates in Duluth’Richmond Hill in
Long Island, Troy, Kansas’Coon Rapids’
P.A.L.
皿nois, and Everett, Massachusetts.
LILLIE EVELYN FARROW of Na1928
Friends and classmates of
ESTHER BRIGGS WHEELER,
PAL’25 were shocked to hear of
is
an
active
member
of
the
Gi昂
Scout Association of Na瞳ck. She re-
G γ側九a嘉e
MARY A. DRISCOLL of Lawrence
the sudden death of her husband,
has retired from teaching at Lawrence
Mr. Andrew Wheeler, On March 6
High School after more than thirty years
at their home in New York. Mrs.
as head of the English department.
Wheeler expects to reside at the
Cently re血ed after serving two years as
COmmlSSIOner.
1934
Ed榔Ca虎のれ
JOSEPH BENEDICT SHEA has been
“BARBIZON,” 140 E. 63rd Street,
New York, New York, after April l.
tick
1929
C.L.A.
detailed as an administrative o餓cer in
the district prlCe Stabilization o鯖ce in
Concord.
EVELYN P. BOYNTON, English in-
1926
Ed事あCa扇o n
JULIAN GOULSTON of Dorchester
has been appointed Head of the Commercial Department of the Jeremiah E.
Burke High School in Dorchester.
1927
C.B.A.
ARTHUR E. JENNER of Ashland, Ex-
StruCtOr at Colby Junior College, New
London, New Hampshire, is in FIorida
where she will spend the first part of her
sabbatica=eave from her college duties.
Soc香a管 Wor虎
PERSIS ANN GALLION is Girls’and
Women,s secretary at the Dorchester
branch of the Young Men’s christian
Association.
1930
E.C.C.
NORMAN F. PLANTE of Turners
Falls has been appointed assistant comp-
1935
C.B.A.
KENNETH W. ROGERS of Waban,
troller of the Westem Massachusetts
who is vice-PreSident and ̄ treasurer of
Companies and its chief subsidiary the
the West Newton Savings Bank, has been
ecutive Alumni secretary of Boston UniVerSity and president of the Algonquin
Council, Boy Scouts of America, has been
e工ected to the national board of AIpha
Phi Omega at its recent national con-
vention held in Des Moines, Iowa.
Ed棚Ca房on
INGOLF V. BOCKMANN, lecturer
and teacher, PreSented his latest kodaChrome motion picture’“Norway-1950’”
SPOnSOred by the Parent’s committee of
the Children’s own school, Winchester.
REVEREND GARL FEARING
SCHULTZ of Hyamis has創ed nomina-
tion papers as a candidate for SchooI
Committee.
Gγad榔α柁
``There is still time for a new United
44
appointed a trustee of the Horace Cou-
Nova Scotia in June, and to Montreal
Ed棚Cα房on
SenS Industrial Fund of Waltham.
JAMES CAPORICCIO of East Watertown, has been appointed principal of the
1936
C.B.A.
EDWARD J. McCAFFREY was ap-
West School, in Waukegan,皿nois, an
iustitution in which he had been eighthgrade teacher of history and physical education.
in July. Then-relax-after 址rty置Six
COnSeCutive years of active nurslng. That
is one vacation that was well eamed!
WINIFRED DRISLAND is Director
Of the SchooI of Nursing and Nursing
Service at the Cambridge City Hospital.
POinted acting postmaster of Concord,
M assachusetts.
Ed職Ca書きo n
WILBUR F. STORER of Dedham has
amounced his candidacy for the Recre-
ation Commission of Dedham.
Dr. RALPH T. NAZZARO has as_
1 940
1943
C.L.A.
Ed棚Ca房on
SAUL RICHMAN of New Bedford is
Dr. LEONARD JOLL of Plantsville,
executive director of the New Bedford
Connecticut, has been appointed state
Jewish Community Center, and executive
consuItant of communicative arts and co_
SeCretary Of the Jewish Welfare Federa-
ordinator of civilian defense for the State
tion branch in New Bedford.
Department of Education.
Sumed the position of director of research
for Texon, Incorporated of Sou血Had-
1 944
1ey Falls and RusselI.
HAVE YOU RESEIrVED
C.B.A.
HERBERT JENKINS of Marion, is
C.L.A.
YOUR TICKETS
1937
DOROTHY DRONEY, teaCher of for-
fo富
elgn languages in the Brookfield High
BOSTON UNIVERSITY
School, has reslgned her position to ac-
CePt a Similar position at Grafton High
POPS?
asplrmg for the post of SeIectman, AsSeSSOr, and member of the Board of
School, Brookfield.
JUNE 4
Public Welfare of Marion.
Ed事ICa房on
LOUISE E. MILLS of West Newbury
GeneγaきCo振宵e
1941
has創ed nomination papers for member-
Gγαd関αめ
Ship on the West Newbury schooI committee. She is a memberof the Massa+
WALTER L. BETHEL accepted a
POSition血rough the Institute of Intema-
tional Education to teach Music in MiyaZaki University, Miyazaki, Japan.
C.P.囲.S.
Mrs. HAROLD F. STOSE substituted
as assistant professor of speech and dramatic art’at the State University of New
rectors club, and past president of the
Jersey.
Winthrop Teachers association.
Mrs. T. J. Bauer (MARY SWEENEY)
has been appointed supervisor of the
Physical education department for girls
at the Scituate High School・
」岬棚S香c
LUTHER THOMPSON of Noroton
Heights, Comecticut, Well known in
Darien as the supervisor of music in the
local schooIs, has been reappointed as-
Chusetts Federation of Teachers, and a
PaSt PreSident of the Commercial Di-
N耽$耽g
N附8棚g
AMANDA SLOANE is Assistant Di_
Mrs. BLANCHE W. WITHERELL
rector of the SchooI of Nursing at New
England Sanitarium and Hospital in
(Ambrose) is vis誼ng in Salzberg, Aus-
Stoneham, Massachusetts.
tria, Where her husband is stationed.
ANNA SHAHEEN dces itinerant
She finds the cou巾y very interesting
teaching in BrookHne, Massachusetts.
Mrs. CATHERINE O. TRACY is Di_
and beautiful, Which o任ers a unique
Change from stateside Hving・ However,
rector of Public Heal血Nursing at the
they have an appreciation for the states
Rhode Island Department of Health.
never realized while living there.
Sistant conductor of the Norwalk Sym-
1945
1942
Phony Orchestra.
C.L.A.
C.鯵.A.
1939
C.L.A.
MYRON GREENSIDE of Dorchester,
a certified public accountant, has been
elected a member of the American In_
GEORGE W・ WHITE, a Captain in
the United States Air Force, is in an
Stitute of Accountants, national profes-
Pany. He led all of New England in the
Sional society of CPA’s.
total amount of life insurance protection
indus址al training program with the New
Placed in force with Penn Mutual during
Jersey Be11 Telephone Company・
C.B.A.
MAUR工CE TOBIN of Manchester,
New Hampshire is president of血e Home
1950.
Ed耽Cα虎0れ
THOMAS AYKRO工D has been ap-
POinted industrial arts instructor at James
Talcott Junior High School in West Hart-
SPOnSibilities of the Boston FIoating HosPital following her appointment to the
航鵬肋g
NEDRA SMALL is a teacher of Civics,
N暮鵬肌g
GENEVA KATZ of Wellesley Hills reCently took over the administrative re-
ford, Comecticut.
Apphance company of Manchester.
Gγad職α枕on
YALE GOLDMAN of Roxbury has
been named Man of the Year in Boston
for the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Com_
Mrs. MARJORIE MEISNER MILTIMORE was married November ll, 1950,
POSition of director. This institution,
Chartered in 1901 to operate a hospita]
boat for sick babies up and down Boston
History of Civilization, and Modem Eu-
to I. C曲on Miltimore. Their plans are
harbor during the summers, nOW Con-
ropean History at血e Spaulding High
to fix up their (very-Old-house) at Peaks
PrlSeS the pediatric u亜of the New Eng-
School in New Hampshire・
工sland
land Medical Center.
and
make
a
gardene
45
A
trip
to
boat to the building at 20 Ash Street
He lives in West Concord, Massachusetts.
RAYMOND LAWSON is a fire insurance underwriter with the Middlesex Mu-
Where it still operates.
tual Fire Insurance Company of Con-
In 1931 the service of the Boston FIoat_
mg Hospital was transferred from the
cord, Massachusetts. He is married and
MURIEL BURGESS WATT was mar-
has a daughter, Patricia Susan.
ried June 17, 1950, and is continuing
WARREN R. DAVIDSON is a legis-
her professional career at the Roger Wil1iams General Hospital in Providence,
1ative reporter in the Boston Bureau of
Rhode Island.
the United Press. He is married and has
a son, bom February 7, 1948.
MYRLEE E. CLARK is now Director
of Nursing and Principal of the SchooI of
VALERIE PARKIN, nOW Mrs. David
Nursing at the Memorial Hospital in
S. Wyman, is a secretary at the Medical
Pawtucket, Rhode Island. She is an active committee member of the state
Center Bookstore, at Columbia UniverSity. She was married July 23, 1949, tO
David Wyman, Who is now in his third
boards of the various nurslng Organiza-
tions and attended the Biennial of the
year at the College of Physicians and
Surgeons at Columbia.
American Nurses Association in San
GORDON V. MACKAY is working for
Francisco last May.
the Hoover Company’Of North Canton,
Ohio, in the field accounting department,
as a traveling auditor.
1946
SHERMAN DANIELS is account ex-
Ed棚Ca房o n
CHARLES M. CLARK of Haverhill
has been named director of physical edu-
ecutive and production manager for the
棚/Sg‡.財のrγ E. C事`意力be競PAL’38
Franklin Advertising Agency, Boston.
4600 W’AF Sqdれ., ENTAF Bα§e, Colo-
Sheman was married August, 1949, tO
rado Spγまれgs, Coloγ音αdo.
cation at the Jewish Community Center
LEONARD BONO is employed by the
1947
肘勘§香c
C.B.A.
NORINE ELIZABETH CUNNINGHAM of Concord has been named to the
music department of Milford High School
Your Next Class Reunion June 2, 1951
Mrs. PE,TER LAMANA, Secγe如γy
1311 East 53rd Street
in Milford.
Chicago, I11inois
JOSEPH C. FLANAGAN was recently
N棚rS耽g
Georgia Greenbert of Great Neck, New
York.
of Temple Emanu-El in Haverhi11.
appointed to the travelling auditors sta任
EmpIoyers’Liability Assurance Corpora-
tion, Boston, in the Executive Depart-
ment. He has been married six years and
haS three sons’ Peter, five years old;
Bruce’four years old; Gary, a mOnth
old.
OSCAR R. RUDNICK has his own
business, a Public Cold Storage Warehouse in Worcester, Massachusetts.
PASQUALE SANTILLI is a public
accountant with the C.P.A. firm Brown,
DOROTHY DAYTON MOREAN says
Of the General Electric Company in
Schenectady, New York.
She has nothing unusuar to report except
Mrs. Thalia Hoban, THALIA MAR-
a certified public accountant in Massa-
that she could probably write a book on
KANTE, is teaching shorthand, English,
and some accounting, at the University
Secretarial School. Her husband is at-
Chusetts. Pasquale has been married
three years to Josephine DeFilippis of
“What to do Until the Doctor Comes:’
Since most of her time is spent waiting
for her husband to come home. He is
Assistant Resident in Surgery at the UniVerSity Hospital, in Columbus’ Ohio.
tending CLA’Class of 1951.
SALVATORE J. BELLA is an assistant
years old’and Susan, tWO yearS Old, keep
PrOfessor of economics at Alfred UniverSity, Alfred, New York. He is married
and has a daughter, Theresa Maria, bom
her busy. Her advice to young women
February 8, 1950.
Dorothy says her daughters Am, four
about to marry doctors is: “Go ahead,
you’1=eam! ’’
IRENE NORTON is Instructor of
Nurslng at the Peter Bent Brigham Hos-
HoIridge and Company of Boston・ He is
Malden.
HARRY McLATCHY is with the Diabetes Branch of U.S.P.H.S. in Boston.
He is attending the SchooI of Public
Relations in the evenmg Classes. He is
an infomation speciahst with the Public
Health Service, Writes and edits work,
CORINNE TAPER is a secretary for
Publicity with newspapers, radio, and
the Commercial Credit Corporation in
television. He is married and has two
Boston。
children.
SANFORD I. BEIT is血e manager of
EVELYN M. BABB is studying at the
Pital in Boston.
the Cambridge’Massachusetts, Branch of
University of Florida working for her
Mrs. HAZELLE LOMAX FERGU-
Wilson Company Meat Packers. It is his
Master’s Degree in Education. She is
SON is Clinical Instructor of Tubercu_
responsibility to process and supply all
majorlng in business education.
losis Nursing at the Boston Sanatorium・
Wilson Branch Houses in New England
HERBERT J. CALLAHAN has re-
She tells us a工so that the stork arrived
With meat products. Sanford is married
to Ruth L. Freedman and lives in Cam-
Ceived his Master’s Degree in Education
With a son, Christopher, Iast August.
Mrs. MARGARET FARRELL HAAG
WantS you tO know she has a son, W皿am
Rheinhart’born Christmas Day.
DORIS HINDS is continumg here at
Boston University SchooI of Nursing as
Clinical Instructor of Medical-Surgical
NⅢSmg・
and is now head teacher at the Bowen
bridge・
School, Newton Center. He is teaching
RICHARD F. HILLIARD is in the
Claims Department of the Liberty Mu-
grades five and six.
tual Insurance Company’ Manchester,
concem of Fair-Maid Bread. He and his
New Hampshire.
famiIy are living in Houston’Texas.
JOHN D. LEE is o餓ce manager for the
PHILLIP N. TWOMBLY is with the
FRED A. LAWTON is a claim ad_
Seaboard Sales Corporation’ Wholesale
justor for the Massachusetts Protective
MARY THOMPSON, fomerly of Peter
Lumber Sales in Allston. Phillip IS mar-
Association’Incorporated・ He worked in
Bent Brigham Hospital, is a graduate
ried to Betsy Houser’a graduate of Tufts
the home o餓ce in Worcester for a yeat
Student at the Teacher’s college, Colum-
College. They have a son’Stephen’three
and a ha埋then transferred to the Pacifro
bia University. She says it keeps her
months old・ He reports that the boys
Coast Department, San Francisco’」Ca血
Very busy!
from the 1946-47 crew get together often.
fomia, July l, 1949. Fred is married to
46
BUNNY KNAPP,晩,S’47; they have a
CHRISTINE BURTT is working for
daughter’Candy’bom May 26, 1949.
the
They are Hving in Menlo Park, California.
LEO SONTAG is now an attomey at
League Federation Exchange’Incorpo-
New
York
Coopera瞳ve
Grange
rated, in Ithaca, New York.
Shire Street, Boston. Leo received his
NORMAN TARNOR is teacher of
Hebrew in a private schooI on the North
LL.B. degree from Boston University
Shore.
law. His o鯖ce is Iocated at 85 Devon_
SchooI of Law, and his LL.M. degree
Ed棚Cα虎0れ
from Harvard Law School. He is wait_
CLIFFORD JOSEPH FITZPATRICK
mg tO be reca11ed into the armed forces.
Of Brookline was recently appointed as-
CARL B. ANDERSON is a production
SuPerVisor with General Electric in
Schenectady, New York. Carl married
Sistant director of the Brookline Recre_
ation Department・
ROBERT WYLLIE of Wrentham was
KATHERINE LITTLEFIELD, PAL’47.
appointed teacher of mathematics at the
They have a son, Carl William, bom
Plainfield High School in Connecticut.
Apri1 7, 1950.
ALAN M. EDELSON is an attomey-
ELIZABETH BARTLETT of Wesト
at-1aw. He received his LL.B. degree in
POrt, Comecticut has assumed her duties
as new director for the Aspetuck Area
June, 1949, and is now a member of the
Girl Scouts. Among her many duties w王ll
Massachusetts Bar, United States District
be the trainmg Of over 200 adult volun-
Court Bar, and the United States Tax
Court Bar. Alan was married April 16’
1950’tO Sybil Abrams. They are now
living in Brighton.
SALVATORE J. MACCAGNANO is
WOrking with the Massachusetts Division
of Insurance as a senior actuarial clerk.
C.P.E.S.
Mrs. Jack W. Carpenter (EDITH VIRGINIA MAKEPEACE) of Malden is a
SeCretary at the Massachusetts Institute
Of TechnoIogy.
teers and the directing of Camp AspeTRAVELING FO蹄THE NAVY _の椛
Lま側烏ena海 Co柳耽aれder Rαndα夢夢 W.
Wee鳥s, USNR, b働けer鹿部0伽のS Rα耽れγ
Wee鳥s,九a$ beeれ0γ虎re音d読書o ac轟e
耽i拐aγγ Seγ演ce. He 九αS beeれ 雌。
Sjgned d事〃γ 00 0姉cer玩〇九arge坊鳳e
Naひγ’sれe撮, Mo枕le Eα九番b沈Un九Wee応
Occupation of Gemany.
sα〇九榔8e耽S.
School of Nursmg・
MARY W. KENNEDY of Mount Au_
named chief of the supply division in the
Civilian Defense of Attleboro.
graduate work in administration at Bos_
ton University. She is obstetrical superVisor at the hospital and serves on sev-
JOSEPH CIANCUILLI, a Senior at
eral committees.
DOLINA M. McINNIS, Our Alumni
Bates College, Maine, has been selected
Treasurer, is Nursing Arts Instructor at
to head the mathematics committee which
took part in the Science Exhibit at Bates.
Boston City Hospital・
ELEANOR P. DUFFY has accepted
REVEREND ALLEN R. HINGSTON
the position of executive director of the
Of Salem has accepted a call to糾the
Visiting Nurse Association of Eastem
Pulpit in the Episcopal church of Batavia, Illinois.
mand Historical Division sta鮪, aSSisting m
Of B軍壷れeS§ Ad肋毒的Ⅵ房のn (eがB,28
L’29)・ Heおα職の轟e of Eびeγe巧拙αS-
burn Hospital in Cambridge’is doing
Ed暮ICa虎o n
Grad棚aめ
GEORGE R. KAPLAN of Brighton is
With the Headquarters European ComWriting the history of the United States
Hospital, Boston. Theresa is working for
ROBERT F. CONLEY has been
POrt area・
の請eれded Bos轟0れ U毒のers香華,s Co鵬ge
her M.S. Degree at Boston University
E.C.C.
tuck, the Girl Scout Camp for the West-
のf Bos轟かれ㌔肋os書pqp事克γ心an初eαdeγ$,
MERRILL A. SYMONDS has been
appointed to instruct a new liberal arts
COurSe in American hterature that will be
introduced as required curriculum in the
medical secretarial school of Becker Jun-
ior College in Worcester.
Lα脚
BERNARD E. FRANCIS is the owner
and operatdr of the Hartford Law Book
Company in Hartford, Comecticut. He
is married and has three children.
N珊rS暮ng
JANET E. SMALL is Educational Di一
Union County.
Mrs. HELEN C. LaVEY is Director of
Teaching Service for Schoo量s of Nursing
N棚γS夢ng
in Milton, Massachusetts.
RUTH L. MITCHELL, Assistant Di-
1 948
rector at the School of Nurslng and
Nurslng Service, at the Nuhlenberg Hos-
C.L.A.
Pital in Plainfield, New Jersey, has started
ELIZABETH ANN SPEIGHT of
Part-time study at Teacher,s college,
Springfield has been appointed as English
Columbia University. She is planning to
go ful山me next summer and is working
for her masters degree. She is a charter
member of the newly organized Boston
teacher of the seventh grade in Andover
High School.
University Club of New Jersey.
MARGARET E. TIBBETTS is Direc_
tor of McLean Hospital SchooI of Nurs-
SAVE
mg and Nursing Service.
A. ROSE FRATANTUONO is assistant
JUNE 2nd
director of Nurses at the Quincy Crty
Hospita量・
THERESA A. HURLEY has a leave of
absence from her position of Assistant
FOR
ALUMNIDAY
Director, SchooI of Nursmg, Children’s
47
LOCALandI]I§TANT
PATRICIA CONWAY is now residing
rector at the Concord State Hospital
SchooI of Nursmg. She tells us that
in the sunny town of St. Augustine. She
eIlrOllment in their schooI of nursmg lS
writes, “I’m teaching at St. Joseph’s
on the increase, and that they recently
Academy, a beautiful place. However’
moved into a new ninety-three room
this is only the second year they have
PHO丁OGR△PHERS
nurses’residence.
JIMRYAN DICKJENKINS
O飴cialBostonUniversity
had physical education, and we need a
Specこの振れg訪Cαれd香dWe糊訪g8
ANNE WYNNE is in the Army and
great dea] more equlPment. Teaching
304BayStateRd.,COpley7-2614
stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
雛th through twe削I grades, Which is a
DOROTHY BOWERS is Mrs. Charles
little over 200 girls.’’
Fletcher Gatteys as of December 2, 1950.
PRISCILLA COOK GIBSON writes
She is an Army Nurse and her husband
is with the Air Force. Both are at San
Antonio, Texas.
that she is leavmg the East to go with
丁ony Vic
her husband to Dallas, Texas. Her hus-
丁o冊,SBA晴B帥S軸OP
band, Paul, graduates from M.I.T. in
CateringExclusivetytoSt軸de齢ts
June and will join the Procter and
Conve,n'ilentlyLocatedat
Gamb量e Company in Dallas.
S.P.髄.C.
ROBERT G. FULLER of Newburyport has been appointed press o餓cer of
Newburyport Post 57 AMVETS.
JEAN FEARNLEY is sojouming in
FIorida.
MARION GRIGALUNAS RAPSIS
wrote and said that March 5th is the date
Of a blessed event in the Rapsis family.
BARBARA JOAN HENDRICK, Who
American Red Cross in military hospital
SerVice. She began her work in November of 1950, With a training course at
has been editor of Netos Le坊er∴Since
Alexandria, Virginia' She is now sta-
September, 1949, reSlgned from that po-
tioned at the American Red Cross, United
sition on November 9, 1950, tWO Weeks
before her mamage tO George Sanford
of New York City. Miss Hendrick came
States Naval Hospital, Portsmouth’Vir-
to the Department of Public Health after
Templeton, and is busy supervISlng four
recelVmg her B.S. Degree from Boston
grade schooIs in physical education.
C.B.A.
University’SchooI of Business Adminis-
tration. While at Boston University,
where she majored in EngHsh尤nd ad-
Vertising, Miss Hendrick devoted a great
BosTONIA Taken By
Veteran’s
Administration
Hospital
in
Peekskill, New York.
JEAN MURRAY is pemanently reJANE McCRORY is working at the
Jersey City Medical Center.
a
friend
and
as
an
e鯖cient
mem-
ber of the sta紐.
C.P.E.S.
Yo皿r Next Class Re皿nion June 2,, 1951
LYNN WENTORF, Secretαry
Box 858 AIps Road
Paterson, R.F.D. #4, New Jersey
NADIA BARTON LEADBETTER is
doing recreational work in Baltimore,
Pんoゎgγαp九sこれ拐sお鋤e Of
BOBBIE MORAN is working at血e
University’s student magazine, The Beaco肌 Miss Hendrick’s co-WOrkers in the
24O Hun航g†on AYenue Bos†on, Mass.
GINNY MONNAT is still teaching m
Siding in Califomia・
Section of Health Information wi11 miss
薫朋戸昭二動腸_f紡
’●FI°WerS by W;′e-GuclrC面eed油e Me′CUry Woy’’
ginia.
deal of time to the production of the
as
Telephones #…霊‡磐;
DOROTHY MEAD is now with the
1949
her
6AHEMENWAYS丁.,BOSTON
DOROTHY NOWATZKY ZINSER is
WOrking in the Hackensack High School
in Hackensack, New Jersey.
CAROL PORTER is teaching swimmlng Classes three days a week at Sargent
」容M RY△N
D器CK JENKiNS
BOB CROWE
O億cial Boston University
PHOTOGRAPHERS
304 BAY STATE ROAD
COpしEY 7置2614
and is assisting Miss Kitchin and doing
CamP WOrk.
JANET DERBY is doing
work in Sioux Falls, South
BETTY JANE PULSFORD
in a new Junior High School
Girl Scout
Dakota.
is working
in Stamford,
NOR冒嶋田AS富国RN
UN量V国電S量冒Y
C onnecticut。
PHYLLIS SMALLWOOD wrote a
Maryland, While her husband is working
for his degree at Johns Hopkins.
ANN BORASCHI has a job up in New
letter about her stimulating work in St.
York State, and en]OyS it very much.
been busy with her dance groupo She
Louis. She expects to receive her Mas-
Sc檀’○○ふO了鼻血W
Ad捌It8勅も競α放d Wb捌e放
ter of Arts degree in August, and has
Day - Evening
and
PROCT∈駐 患 G血mBLe
PROCTER AND GAMBLE has several excellent openmgS in the
Advertising Department for young college alumni・ General busi-
G raduate
Programs
REGISTRATION
ness administrative ability, rather than literary or artistic skills,
is desirable. Location of the positions is in Cincimati executive
O能ces. Genuine opportunity for promotion・ Age: 23-80. Write to
EmpIoyment Division, The Procter and Gamble Company,
Gwyme Building, Cincinnati, Ohio, giving all pertinent infomation.
48
September 4-12, 1951
Early application is necessary
47 Mt。 Vernon Street
Boston 8, Massachusetts
Writes, “I had the dis血ction of being
Assistant Prbfessor of Nursing Education.
the first Negro guest instructor at Wash-
She is assisting with the integration of
ington University in December. I taught
Social and Health Aspects of Nursing.
She is hoping to go to Mexico next sum-
Primitive techniques and my dance group
mer with WINIFRED GIVSON of the
Perfomed・ The first week in April they
are appearmg at the Opera House in the
Boston University facuIty.
National Folk Festival, and the last week
RUTH ANN McDONALD is public
in April they will be featured for one
heaIth nurse Hillsdale County HeaIth De-
week.’’
Partment in Hillsdale, Michigan.
MILDRED M. MATTSON is working
MARIE SPASATO SZETELA was
married to Eugene SzetaIa on November
With the New Hampshire State Deparト
18. Marie and her husband are now
ment of Health as Pediatric Nursing ConSultant and is living in Manchester.
living in Indianapolis, Indiana・ On their
trip to Indiana, they hit an Ohio bliz重
MILDRED H. COURTEMANCHE is
Zard and were stranded two days, but
back at Faulkner Hospital, Jamaica Plain,
fina11y managed to snow shoe out to Indi-
as Science Instructor. Incidentally’She
ana. She writes’“Cooking lS Certainly
is a member of your Alumni Board.
an adventure for me, but `pete’seems to
be enJOylng it, SO it can’t be too bad.,,
SKIP THORNER is teaching at Athol
PFC・ Wa庇eγ比Boの職e, Jr., B,50
S妬き0れed α番 Wr香g加一Pa請erson A. F.
Bα$eタDaγ書on, 0筋0.
and enJOyS her work very much.
LUCILLE HOOD of Rockland
Heights has been appointed physical
therapist whose prmCipal duty is the re-
education of muscles of polio patients in
Hampshire county.
Grad棚aめ
THEOPHILO VINCENT of Fall River
has completed a five hundred page, tWO
VOlume translation of the Income Tax
Laws of Brazil, for the Forelgn Tax Law
Association of New York.
Mrs. JAI DATT PATIAL of Pakistan,
a native of India and a Methodist Cru_
Sade Scholar, SPOke in the High Street
Methodist Church vestry. The Women,s
Society of Christian Service of the church
SPOnSOred her ta量k. Mrs. PatiaI spoke on
India.
ELIZABETH C. CONNELL was
e工ected to teach English at the Ware
High School.
ELISABETH C. CONNELL, Who was
a member of the Worcester High SchooI
for seventeen years, has left to take a
POSition as teacher of English in a Spring輸
field high school.
N棚γSきれg
Your Next Class Reunion June 2, 1951
SHIRLEY A. EGANI Secrel書のγy
2 Montgomery Avenue
Nashua’New Hampshire
ANN J. PITTS is staff nurse at the
Cushing Veterans Administration Hos-
mittees in state nursmg Organizations.
ELSIE N. AUSEIUS is Surgical Super-
Clinical instructor to clinical consumer of
Visor at the Worcester City Hospital and
Orthopedic nursmg.
is plannlng tO take a few courses in
MARGARET PUTNEY is Educational
Director at the Lawrence General Hos_
Pital in Lawrence, Massachusetts.
THELMA WARD is assistant director
at Melrose Hospi七al School of Nursing・
MARTHA E. ROGERS is director of
Nurses and nursing education at the Ring
Sanitarium, in Arlington.
BERYL M. STEVENS is science in_
StruCtOr in Wethersfield, Connecticut.
FRANCES T. TOMASUNAS is as_
Sistant director of nurses at Hahneman
Nursing Education this semester. In her
SPare time she takes cooking lessons and
SmgS With a Lithuanian Chorus.
LILLIAN REINERS is Director of
Nurses and PrincIPal of the School at
Norwalk Hospital in Connecticut. She
Plans to complete the requlrementS for
a Master’s degree in Hospital Adminis-
tration at New York University this year.
MURIEL B. VESEY is Director of
Nurses at the Children’s Medical Center
in Boston.
Hospital in Worcester. Participation in
MARY E. CHENEY, fomerly of the
the professional organizations, Catholic
Boston Psychopathic Hospital, is now
Nurses Council, and classes at the
COOrdinator for nursmg Students a捌iaト
Worcester Art Museum provide other
mg in Psychiatric Nursing a=he Toledo
Channels of activity.
ALICE ROBINSON became superintendent of nurses at the Boston State
State Hospital・ She is on the staff of the
Ohio State University.
TOINI SIITONEN MAINIERO is
“gammg eXPerience” in her maJor field,
Hospital・
GERTRUDE PENTHENY is now
Pediatric Nursing, by carlng for her son
Mrs. James C. Fraser and lives in Bucks_
Michael, age four months. Toini’s hus-
band is with the First Marine Division in
POrt, Maine.
TERESA LaPLANTE joined the regu1ar amy followmg graduation. She is
Now a captain, teaChing in the Amy
School at Fort Sam Houston, San An-
tonio, Texas.
PAULINE MOORE is assistant direc_
tor of nurslng education at the MetroPOIitan State Hospita賞・
LENA M. PLAISTED is enJOymg her
Korea.
DORIS JOHNSON O’NEILL of ConCOrd, New Hampshire’is a specia=ec-
turer in Nursing Education for the UniVerSity of New Hampshire Extension
Service. She is active in the New HampShire State League of Nursing Education
and enJOyS Painting m Oi量s, hooking rugs’
and collecting cook books in her spare
WOrk at the University of Vermont as
FRANCES BATES is in Hingham, and
is head nurse in one of the Iocal hospitals.
ELEANOR A. EMERSON, fomerly
Nursing Arts Instructor a=he Brockton
Nurses at the Salem HospitaI in Sa工em・
Nursing in New Hampshire. She also
SerVeS aS Chairman of two or three com_
to prevent any alteration in her title from
Pital in Framingham.
Hospital, is now Assistant Director of
LYDIA A. BEANE is Director of
Nurses at the Laconia Hospital Schoo工of
GERTRUDE WALDEN is sta鮮nurse
The CIass of 1950 cha量.
量enges c量asses of the past five
RACHEL FANNING is supervisor of
On a pOSt-Surgical ward at the Cushing
Veterans Administration Hospital in
Framingham・
years to an a請endance con-
MILDRED RICHARDS is clinica]
1ege Infimary at poughkeepsie, New
test at Alumni Day this June.
SuPerVisor in the Obstetric Division of
York.
An Alumni Banner wi重賞be
Baldwin House, Which is the Vassar Col葛
WILLA DEE TROESTER is clinical
awarded as a trophy to the
ESTHER H. READ of Rockport is
Assistant Professor of Nursmg at the
Winnmg C量ass.
Wayne University in Detroit’Michigan.
instructor in orthopedic nursmg, Porト
1and, Oregon. She is leammg tO Ski and
Eastem Maine General Hospita量・
She is a member of various professiona]
Writes that she keeps her fingers crossed
COmmittees and has especia工ly enJOyed
49
working on the Fullbright Scholarship
at Chatham High School, and Margaret is
Committee the last two years.
at Graduate School.
MARTHA L. SKARABOTTA works
PAUL JOHNSON of Mi量ton is at
with a能Hate students in the Communi-
Graduate School, WOrking on his Master
land City Hospital・ She says most of their
of Arts in French. He is a Graduate
Assistant in the French Department
experience is with poliomyelitis patients.
SuPerVISmg Study in the Geddes Modem
Martha is also instructor in Orthopedic
Language Room。 Paul recently became
Nursmg for Basic Students.
AMY G. NURSE is studying for her
engaged to Betty Osmond of Dorchester,
a Junior at Gordon College.
cable Disease Department of the Cleve-
Master’s degree at Columbia University
DOROTHY JUNE PORTERI, Of Wil-
and has as her classmates; HELEN
braham, tO JOHN B. SIMPSON, Educa-
AIKENS, DOROTHY DIXON, MARY
THOMPSON, and FRANCIS RUSSELL.
青ioタイ50.
By the way, Amy says she misses B.U.
C.B.A.
STEWART BARTLETT ANDERSON
S.P.蹄.C.
recently lectured to the Swampscott
SID DIMOND, SPRC, instructor of
Woman’s club. His lecture, “15,000
Radio at the SchooI of Public Relations
and Communications, and writer-PrO-
MiIes in a Modem Covered Wagon’’is
ducer of the World Wide Broadcasting
T九oma§ P. S撮)eeれe拐Jr.
Foundation,s “Freedom Speaks’’series of
PFC. Mαr訪e§--e章アαC暮`a書ed万O肌K0reα
PrOgramS, reCently narrated the program
which was broadcast from Dover, New
Hampshire.
読書九fro§あわe, Lわer訪!ec房on,巧めαnd
p職e事l耽。nia.
traveled with their own canvas home,
COOked
their
own
mea工s
and
slept
on
hard ground or bed boards in their car
throughout the 15,000 mi工e joumey.
He is a regular contributor to Na擁onaZ
It was part of a goodwill program
which originated on the openmg day of
THOMAS DEVINE is teaching Eng輸
the amual Dover Trade Fair sponsored
1ish and music, at the Solomon Lewen-
by the Dover Lions club・
the story of two New Englanders who
berg Junior High School in Bost竺Tom
This half-hour program of the World
is very much interested in AIumnl aCtivi-
Wide Broadcas七ing Foundation was tape
ties’and when he isn’t busy correcting
recorded last Monday and beamed to
homework and tests, he’s an ace reporter
Europe over the powerful facilities of
for BOSTONIA. The next two i七ems are
station WRUL.
his∴COntributions.
Geographic Magaれe, and had an article
and 24 coIor pictures of the址p pub-
1ished in the June, 1949 issue.
LOUIS J. DOUGALL of Worcester
has been appointed associate consultant
in the Industrial Bureau of Chamber of
Commerce. He will help sales production
and transportation consultants with particular emphasis in aiding small indus-
AMALIA GOURDIN LINDAL of Ice-
JOHN FOOTE has been doing some
land and her husband hope to be visiting
interesting things since June・ After a
the United States during 195l after
successful summer with the Stock Com-
spending a year and one-half in Iceland,
JOHN J. MOYNIHAN, Jr. has been
appointed second lieutenant in the Medi-
Pany a七Falmouth, John went down to
Cal Service corps of the Organized Re-
their home.
1950
C.L.A.
Your FIRST Class Reunion
June 2, 1951
JACK H. SHAPIRO, Secr助αγy
ll Taylor Street
Saugus, Massachusetts
New York City to live the life of a Bohemian, COntinue studying the drama, and
enlarge his circle of contacts in the the-
tries change over to defense mobilization.
SerVe COrPS.
atrica] world. There he has met such
P.A.L.
exciting personalities at Uta Hagen, and
Stark Young, the drama critic.
Your F量RST Class Reunion
HAROLD DeBRUYN is at the UniJ皿ne 2, 1951
VerSity of Bu任alo completing work to-
wards his Master of Arts degree・ He also
IRENE L. ROMAN, Secγe加ry
is doing social work in Bu任alo.
GRACE McCARTHY of Holbrook is
9 Stanley Street
Dorchester, Massachusetts
CLEMENT E. LACOSTE of Salem
teaching the雛th grade in RandoIph.
has been accepted into the University
She too’has her eyes open for items to
HALINA DASZEWSKI of Dorchester
SchooI of Medicine.
MARTIN B. CURRAN of Norwood
to be used in BOSTONIA, and writes
is now working for the Medical Director
has assumed his new duties as a member
of the Board of Trustees of the Morrill
Memorial Library followmg his recent
about two of her friends, ANNE COLLINS of Quincy, and MARGARET ST.
CAROLYN LANDY of Newton Center
LAWRENCE of Brockton. Anne is teach-
has just recently retumed to the States
mg mathematics and physical education
from a nine-Week址p to Israel・ She
Visited the ruins of Pompeii, the Acropolis
elec瞳on to that position.
DOLORES CLARKE announced the
in Athens’and the Isle of Caprl On her
Way tO Israel・ At the present time Caro-
OPenlng Of a violin studio at her home,
1yn is teaching Hebrew at the Temple
1ocated at 162 Benedict Road, Pittsfield,
Massachusetts.
Of the New England Electric System・
Is your class go量ng tO Win
ALFRED A. DYBIEC and NATHAN_
IEL S. PRESTON are both down at the
the William Fairfie量d War"
University of Pemsylvania on Samuel S.
Fels Scholarships in Govemmental Ad-
重S aWarded annual量y to the
ren Cup this June? The Cup
Emanuel in Newton.
JANE E. McGAW and DONALD R.
PALMER were married at 22 Mace Road,
Hampton, New Hampshire on December
23, 1950.
c量ass′ having the largest per-
ROSE MULA of Waltham is now
NANCY LEE HORNE, Of Hyamis,
centage of its members pres"
to Edwin R. Rubenstein of Jersey City,
en青0n A萱umni Day. Las置
WOrking at the Dewey and Almy Chemical C6mpany in Cambridge.
New Jersey.
year’s winner was the Clas8
minis tra瞳on.
MORRIS GALLANT, Of Chelsea, is en-
0f 1900.
DOROTHY MARCHETTA is teaching
at the Hartford High School, in White
River Junction, Vemonto
gaged to Norma Brodsky of Malden.
50
JOAN SCOTT of Weston is a secretary at a Cambridge School.
One Of the training-teaCher sta鮮at the
Washington School in Lowell.
IRENE A. SUCHECKI, formerly of
Dorchester, is now teaching Eng]ish and
logical sciences and medical nursmg at
Geれeγ訪Co枕ge
COmmercial subjects at the Custer High
School, Custer, Montana.
ROBERT M. MARSH of Chelsea re_
ROSE M. WOLOHOJIAN is teaching
business subjects at the Bridgewater High
School in Bridgewater, Massachusetts.
CAROLYN LANDY, Of Newton Center, to Edward Levens.
謹豊謹藷韓謹話
II虹nois. He is currently a student in the
Graduate Department of SocioIogy in the
University of Chicago.
FRANK AMADO, JR., Of Fairhaven reCently was graduated from Boston Uni-
C.P.E.S.
VerSity General College and is now aト
ELEANOR J. MARRONE, CPES, to
William T. Welch.
tending Ohio State University, majoring
in air transportation.
Grad棚aめ
Park, tO Wilham J・ Johnson of Readvi11e。
CLORINDA LAURETANO of Med_
Bennington’Vermont High School, has
been selected to play lacrosse with an
All-American girls, team which wi11 tour
the British Isles.
the St・ Mary,s Hospita賞, Walla Wa11a,
Washington. Her husband Alvin Cline,
Who will be remembered by sone as the
Public speaking instructor they had at
SPR, is Assistant Professor of Education
at Whitman College in Wa11a Walla,
Washington.
CYNTHIA DeWOLF is sta任nurse in
Oak工and County Health Department,
Pontiac, Michigan. More nurses are
needed, Cynthia writes, for the generalized county program・
MABEL A. E. JONES is assistant
SuPerVisor of operating room, Veterans
NORMA J・ WRIGHT, CPES, Of Hyde
ford and physical educa宜on instructor at
Mrs. GENA BAMFORTH CLINE is
SuPerVisor of health, ius厄uctor of bio_
GABRIEL Di BATTISTA was reCently appoin亡ed to the position of Head
Of the Social Studies Department at the
Mi工ford High School.
DANIEL NORTE was appointed asSistant in Christian Education and Youth
Work at the Central Baptist Church in
Administration Hospital, Rutland Heights’
Massachusetts.
HARRIET M・ KANDLER was apPOinted director of nurses and prmCIPal
Of SchooI of Nursing Boston Psychopathic
Hospita量, July l, 1950.
C. MILDRED KENNEALLY, aSSisト
ant director of Pittsfield Genera量Hospita]
Schoo工of Nursing, Pittsfie工d, Massachu.setts’has recentIy been elected chaiman
Tiverton.
Ed棚Ca虎0れ
几q棚sきc
Of curriculum committee for Westem
Massachusetts League of Nursing Educa-
RICHARD GAGLIUSO of Berlin, New
Hampshire has been hired as band leader
tion. Extension courses, Sketching classes,
at the Robert Gould Shaw House in Rox_
b甲y, On February 16 and 17・
and instructor in instrumental music at
Other activities.
BARBARA L. MASON appeared as
Ruth in the play “Rope” which was held
EDWARD HARACZ of Fall River,
Physical instructor at the Henry Lord
書謹碧nS霊霊蒜盤t諾‡
laus Society of the Po轟sh Roman Catho-
St9Phens High Schoo] in Rumford,
Maine.
RUTH M. SULLIVAN has been in
the United States Navy since last August. She holds the rate of Lieutenant.
The Reverend HOLLIS W. HAST_
]ic Union of Fall River.
RICHARD FRENCH of Stoneham,
INGS of Taunton was guest preacher at
has been appointed to a position as speech
the New Castle Congregational Church in
therapist in the Lym public schooIs.
Portsmouth, New Hampshire・
RICHARD M. AHERN has been
named to the faculty of the East Douglas
KATHERINE F. KEARNEY was ap-
boro’has been given the leadership of
PrOfessiona工and student nurslng grOuPS
藍諾碧雲霊と謹霊議p蒜
紫等豊1豊eparation of nurses
ELEANOR ADAMS LOIJA is direcMed丘eld.
N棚r§夢ng
EDITH BERRY’Clinical Supervisor
POinted as a member of the State Teach_
ers College faculty in Lowell. She is
LILLIAN LIND, director of nurses
at Sturdy Memoria賞Hospital, in Attle-
tor of nurses Med肘d State Hospital, in
High Schoo′l in Webster. He is instructor
of mathematics.
Church group work cons龍ute some of her
at the Beverly Hospital, in Beverly言S
engaged to Gordon W. Estes of that city.
They plan to be married early this sprmg・
Mrs. E. CLAIRE HEALEY of Ridge-
慧豊島誉豊a鴇u諾
University, Where she expects her master’s this sprmg Of 1951.
Soc香a夢 防or鳥
COLIN KERR of Sharo・n, reCently was
K題MBA臆し,G顕しMÅN & CO.
the guest speaker at the Rotary Club of
Sharon. His address was entitled `・progress in Education.’’
IN S URAN CE
1951
OF ALL KINDS
Ed耽Cα書き0れ
CHARLES W. LAMONTAGNE of
Amesbury has obtained a position as
87椛夢砂劫℃e轟
teacher in the Newton, Massachusetts,
SChoo量system.
STANIEY ①.随竃c髄ULI4EN
KEⅣN圏Ⅲ W. OI長田A職Y
Ⅱ田ⅣRY甲. DR①田AⅣ
C.獣①RRR甲田櫨A§圏は
相関$ ic
ROBERT J. KINGSTON of Salem
盤①S甘①N
recently was accompanist for Sally Ann
Doremus, gueSt artist, at the Salem Phiし
harmonic concert.
軸
1937
1943
SPeaker at the openmg lecture of the
Dr. RAYMOND BATES BUKER, for-
The Reverend RAYMOND S. PROUDFOOT was guest speaker a=he opemng
service of the 1951 Methodist Lenten
elgn SeCretary Of the Conservative Bap-
series at the North Methodist Church in
with their Children’s Religion’’at the
tist Foreign Mission society, WaS reCently
Fall River.
SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY
1925
series
for ``parents
who
are
concemed
Grace Episcopal Church’SPOnSOred by
guest speaker at the First Baptist Church
the Norwood Council of Churches.
1939
Reverend CLAUDE H. VOORH田IS,
Of Glen E11yn’Wheaton, Illinois.
Reverend JOHN A. HUFFMAN of
1927
Dr. WALTER L. HOLCOMB was
Cambridge, PaStOr Of the Comerstone
PaStOr Of the East Saugus Community
Church, WaS the guest preacher at open-
Baptist Church, and an author, Who re-
ing Lenten services at the Saugus Meth-
Dr. HAROLD C. CASE, neWly-
cently returned from a 25’000 mile tour
odist Church.
elected president of the University, has
of Palestine, PreSented an illustrated lec-
been named to the corporation of the
ture at the First Methodist Church of
New England Deaconess Hospital at the
Everett.
On his recent two-mOnth tour qn the
annual meeting of that body・
Near
East
Reverend
Hu缶man
was
on
a
writing assignment for the Christian Life
1929
Magazine and visited ten countries.
Reverend ALBERT H. BALLER of
Greenfield has reslgned as pastor of the
is servmg aS PaStOr at the Aldersgate
Heath Union Church’effective Apri1 1.
Methodist Church in Mi租intown, Penn-
The Reverend D. OWEN BRUBAKER
Sylvania.
1931
1940
The Reverend HOWARD E. TOWER
is director of the Audio-Visual Deparト
The Reverend Dr. HENRY E. HELMS,
SuPerintendent of the Morgan Memorial,
ment, Division of the Local Church,
WaS the prmCipal speaker at the observ-
Methodist Board of Education. He repre-
ance of World Day of Prayer sponsored
sents the Division of the Local Church of
by the Missionary Committee of the
the Joint Sta任of the Radio and Film
Everett Federation of Women’s church
Commission of the Methodist Church,
Societies, at the First Congregational
Church.
and in the Protestant Film Commission
and the Protestant Radio Commissiop.
1941
Mr. Tower has held pastorates in Fa11
River, North Attleboro, Osterville, and
JOHN B. OLDS recently gave an address at the annual Founders’Day Ves-
B正dgewater, Massachusetts.
dation at the First Methodist Church of
the Oregon State College in Corvallis,
Oregon.
1946
Mr. JAMES HAROLD THOMAS of
Bangor, Maine recently conducted a
Series of evangelistic services at 血e
Church of Christ in Bangor.
The Reverend EVANS E. CRAWFORD’PaStOr Of the Pond Street Baptist
Church, and a member of the United
Negro College Fund, 0鯖cially opened
the 1951 appeal in Rhode Island for supPOrt Of the fund which provides scholarShips and facilities for the thirty-tWO eCO-
nomica11y hard-PreSSed Negro colleges
and universities.
1947
Reverend RUEL WILLIAMS BEACH
Of Ellsworth has been appointed chap-
Northfield SchooIs, SPOnSOred each year
1ain of the Department of Maine’A.L.
Reverend W. RALPH WARD, JR., Of
by the Nort臆eld-Hemon Clubs of Bos-
Pittsburgh has opened a $500,000 ten-
ton and held in the Mount Vemon Con_
year church improvement program for
gregational Church, Boston. He was also
burgh・
SWOm in as a member of the SomervilIe
Recreation Commission.
Mount Lebanon Methodist Church, Pitts-
The Reverend EARL W. RIDDLE is
minister to students at the Wesley Foun-
Per’Which commemorated the birthday
Of Dwight L. Moody, founder of the
1935
1945
1948
Reverend QUENTIN R. LEISHER of
Hingham is engaged in special missionary
PrOmOtion for the American Board・ He
is making an administrative tour of the
work of the American Board in the PhiL
ippine Islands and Japan. On his return
trip Mr. Leisher will stay in Honolulu and
remain there in a special speaking and
visitation of the churches of the Islands.
㊨‡細釦舶勧舶卸町湘導
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
1949
The Reverend NORMAN L. SMITH,
A Ne撮, Hngさαれd I鵬的繭on
PaStOr Of the Fourth Christian Church,
foγ Eひerγ Ba放鳥訪g αnd T珊§きSer扇ce
1icly ordained to the work of the Christian
North Westport, Massachusetts, WaS Pub-
O糎rs血沈0§e訪ねres柁d α Cのrd轟きn諦a書きonめ
Ministry on January 28, 1951, at the
Trinitarian Congregational Church, Taun-
dおc鵬Sまきs fac崩巌§
ton, at the joint request of the two
Churches, the fomer being the one he
serves, and the latter his home church.
TWO CONVENIENT UPTOWN OFFICES AT
58上Bo帝京のれS左and碑のS$. Aぴe & Bの諦s書o職S書.
HAROLD BENTLEY of Gardner is
director of Dorcester Junior College, and
recently addressed the students there at
a student assembly.
MAIN OFFICE: State and Congress Sts.
UNION TRUST OFFICE : 24 Federal St.
1950
The Reverend RICHARD W. TAY_
LOR is pastor of The Methodist Church
Member FedeγのきDepo諦J棚uク‘ame Ooγ少Oγa雄o?乙
in Ludlow, I11inois. At the same time he
5畠
is taking advantage of a scholarship to
Study at the University of Chicago.
Dr. GEORGE ALBERT FALLON,
minister of the Wesley Methodist Church
Of Worcester, WaS One Of three guest
1940
PAUL H. GALLIGAN, CBA, tO Patricia Ellen Shortall, both of Canton。
the Waltham Council of Churches.エn
addition to being the speaker at the ge皿
RUTH LORETTO LOFTUS, Edt/Ca一
棟0巧Of Winchester, tO William Warren
Tunnicli任e of Watertown.
eral chapel period, Dr. Fa11on addres§ed
1942
OSCAR PLUZNICK, CBA, Of Port-
necticut was ordained recently in a
1and, Maine, tO Selma Cohen also of that
SPeCial ceremony at GuiIford, Vermont・
City.
1943
1935
Dr. ANDREW D. ELIA was the doc_
tor who delivered the Allen quadruplets.
certainly
surprised
when
JULIUS LESTER TATELMAN, ECC,
Of Mattapan, Sylvia Arlene Turetzky of
Dorchester.
the
GERTRUDE MAE JOHNSON, Gγaduaきe, Of Whitman, tO Joseph A. Carie1lo
Of New York City.
Barre, Vemont, tO Phyllis Elizabeth
Towne of Newport, Vermont.
to an ear重y X-ray there was to be triplets’
but nature outwitted science this time.
Dr. WILLIAM J. DEVLIN was apPOinted a senior sta鱈member at Wesson
Mater血ty Hospita工 and chaiman of
to Harvey F. Hodsdon of Nahant.
WILLIAM G. GIBSON, CBA, Of
Greenwood, tO Constance A. Pelland,
also of Greenwood.
NANCY L. COUSENS, PAL, Of Salem,
to Kenneth Leigh of Fall River.
1945
fourth baby came,” he said・ According
REVEREND RALPH L. HIRTLE,
1 949
Theologg, tO Janice Elaine Bird of Plym-
Outh, New Hampshire.
HELEN MUNICK, PAL, Of Malden,
to Sidney Werber of Milford.
EILEEN G. WOOD, PAL, Of Lexington, tO H. McAldu紐of Arlington.
ROSE MARIE TARTARO, PAL, Of
Watertown, tO Dr. John A. Rodlico of
Pediatrics.
1946
1945
DR. HOWARD J. POTTER is openmg an O餓ce for the practice of Pediatrics
in Lexington。 Dr. Potter is on血e sta鮮
at the Chi工dren’s Medical Center and
Plans to teach there two mommgS a
week.
PATRICIA ANN KLISKEY, EdtJCation, Of Ashland, tO James Crandall
White, also of Ashland.
LOUISE ARAKELIAN, PAL, Of
Watertown, tO SAMUEL ZOURANJIAN,
CBA’49, Of Jamaica Plain.
1947
Captain KURTLAND LORD is a doc-
ARNOLD ALBERT ZIEFF, CBA, Of
tor in the United States Army’and is
Brookline’tO SyIvia Louise Rubino任a量so
stationed in Alabama.
of Brookline.
Dr. MITCHELL E. KFOURY was
CHARLOTTE DUBINSKY, PAL, Of
COnfimed as city physician for a tem
Brookline, tO Howard B. Bensusan of
Of two years, e鮮ective February lst in
Quincy.
GORDON O. MACKAY, CBA, Of
Watertown, tO Barbara Tomkinson of
the city of Salem・
Akron, Ohio.
ENGA GE棚ENT S
MARY ELIZABETH McGOWAN,
CLA, Of Wobum, tO Lawrence Russell
1929
MARSTEN LINSLEY, CBA, Of Bran-
Byron also of that city.
ford, Connecticut’tO Sarah E. Cogswell
1 948
of Grafton.
PATRICIA BROWNING WHITE,
1932
CLA, tO Lieutenant John S. Tewksbury,
HILDA JANE THACHER, Edt/Catiolち
Of North Dartmouth, tO Leonard B. Gifford of Salem.
ETHEL ELEANOR STRAUSS, ECCク
to Max Fishman, both of Lym.
JAMES W. GARDNER, CLA, Of Boston’tO Mary T. Coneys of Weymouth
Landing ・
MARIO NORIS, CBA’tO Betty Gose
Of Denver, Co工orado.
1937
tO
Arthur
Ray
1939
LOUISE HORATIA LESTER, CPES,
ferson, tO Mabel O. Hammar of Worcester.
CAROL AUDREY LECHTHALER,
SP只, Of Wol賞aston, tO Kenneth Millard
Hills, Jr. of Winchester.
MARY J. McPHILLIPS, ECC, tO
William H. Totman, both of Brockton.
RICHARD P. MILLER, CBA, Of Milton, tO Eleanor Ruth Hunt also of Milton.
THERESE Jo NOBILIO, Muszc, Of
Roslindale, tO John Peter Curran of Roxbury・
MARTHA ANN JACKSON, SW, Of
Watertown.
White of Augusta, Maine.
ALICE MILDRED YANCEY, SP只ク
Famham of Washington’D. C・
SHEILA MICHELL HURST, CP留S,
Of Sherbom, tO Judson M. Goodnow, Jr.
of Princeton, Massachusetts.
DOMINIC J. BUCCA, CBA, Of Jef-
Searsport, Maine, tO Conrad Gooda工e
to Ruth L. Barron of Salem.
BARBARA’MAY KIMBALL, PAL, Of
Mason, both of Wheaton, Illinois.
United States Marine Corps’ both of
JEROME I. LUNDER, CBA, Of Lym,
Vemont,
Lawrence.
LORRAINE KIELY, CLA, tO Ted
1 949
Burlington’
ALICE HOLLANDER, CPES, Of
Stamford, Comecticut, tO WilHam F.
BARBARA E. NASH’CBA’Of Lym,
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
was
工sland.
GEORGE J. GLADDING, CBA, Of
ROBERT J. SIMMONS, CBA, Of
Wakefield, tO Christina Nute of Boston.
“I
RITA BENTO, Music, Of Onset, to
Wi11iam G. Fries of Riverside, Rhode
Noble of Noroton Heights, Connecticute
Interest Group I on the subject, “Forces
Behind Church Union.”
DAVID McGARRY of Putnam, Con-
MURIEL L COHEN, GC, Of Brook1ine, tO Dr. Jacob Peretsman of Somerville.
1941
SPeakers at the Sunday session in the
University of Life series sponsored by
MAE FALK, CLA, Of Leominster, tO
Edward Sandler of Newton.
Of Brockton, tO Captain Warren S. Nester of Harrison, Maine.
AMBROSE DEFLUMERE, GC, Of
Revere, tO ELEANOR ANNE WAT_
HARRIS L. MILES, CBA, tO Roma
Claire Flanzbaum, both of Revere.
WALTER C. AHERN, JR., CBA, tO
Zita Madeline Cox, both of Belmont.
CONSTANCE CARLTON, GC, Of
Greenwood, tO Herbert Cobb of Harvard.
BARBARA RUTH BROADBENT,
KINS’ Ntmng’ ’50, Of Peterborough,
Nu翻れg, Of Merrymount, tO Edward A.
New Hampshire.
Corey of Braintree.
SALVATORE J. DENICOLA, ECC,
Of Cambridge, tO Fred Allen Wing of
Of Medford, tO Rose Bove of New York
Newton.
City.
MARIE LENTINO, PAL, tO Walter
B. Ward, Jr., both of Arlington.
DORIS LEE FIEDLER, CPES, Of
5$
Hastings-On-Hudson’New York’tO David
of Newton, tO Joanne Blood of Wellesley
H. Gilbert of Boston.
Hills.
MARGARET ALICE POWERS, PAL,
of Brockton, tO Robert H. Mazzola of
DOROTHY PATRICIA CONNORS,
JOAN HODGDON, CLA, tO Harlow
Thomton Munson of Westwood.
ALLAN BRUCE MACGREGOR, Laの,
Quincy.
NORMA SILVERMAN, GC, Of Lawrence, tO Morton Freedman of North
of Haverhi11, tO Nancy MacFarland Covey
Adams.
CECILE COREY, PAL, Of Caribou,
Maine, tO John E. Chiaverini of Provi-
Rita Ann Masse, bo血of Watertown.
dence, Rhode工sIand.
of Shrewsbury’tO Recruit Wi岨ed L.
FRANCES MARY CALIA, PAL, Of
West Somerville, tO Dr. Joseph C. Fabbrico咄of Bellingham.
MINNA BASSOK, SS, Of Hartford,
Connecticut’tO Murray Leonard Yogel
1953
PAL, Of Sharon, tO Wilmot Allen Hiscock, II of Boston.
Of Wellesley.
RAYMOND C. O’MALLEY, GC, tO
BARBARA CLAIRE BURNS, CPES,
Caron of East Mi11bury.
BARBARA RUTH WIGGIN, PAL, Of
Quincy, tO Noman Charles Burre11, also
Of that city.
ROBERT P. MATHIEU, SW, tO Jane
1922
F・ Corley’both of Providence’Rhode
of Brookline.
First Lieutenant EDWARD J. McDONOUGH, Lat。, Of Portland, Maine,
to Catherine A. Callahan of Worcester.
JOHN M. SHAW, IⅡ, Educa青ion, tO
Joanne P. Hodgman, both of Reading.
HELEN C. DAHILL, PAL, Of Arling-
Island.
CHARL田S W. PETTENGILL, La復ら
HELEN POUCH, Edt/C鋤01ちOf Staten
Island, New York, tO Frank H. Hinckley,
of Greenwich, Comecticut, tO Mrs。 Mad-
eline Webster, also of血at city. He is
a senior partner of the Greenwich law
Jr. of Bamstable.
GEORGE H. CUMMINGS, JR., Gγad重
t,ate, Of West Roxbury’tO Eleanor M.
ton, tO Anthony M. Farinacci of Walpole.
WILLIAM F. SHANAHAN, CBA, tO
Gage of Waterbury, Vermont.
Margaret Jane Mulvey, both of Swamp賀
Boston, tO Hertz N。 Henko任of Jersey
SCOtt.
City, New Jersey.
firm of Hirschberg, Pettengill, Strong’
and Deming.
ELEANOR FINSON, Educa青io仰, Of
1929
EUNICE O’NEILL, CPES, directoress
Edt/Cafio7ち Of Braintree, tO Frances
SPR, tO Claire Marie McCauley’both of
of the National Catholic Community
Service club in Rome, Italy, tO G. R.
Dowe11 Videto of Andover.
Boston.
Brunst, foreign editor of the Na宜onal
FREDERICK H. BRANDENBURG,
JAMES LAWRENCE McCARTHY,
MARY J. McPHILLIPS, ECC, Of
ESTELLE ANNE COOPER, PAL, Of
Brockton, tO William H. Totman of
Dorchester, Rubin Sugaman of Quincy.
ROBERT CHARLES CARR, CBA, Of
Stoughton.
MARTHA ANN JACKSON, SW, Of
Winchester, tO Conrad Goodale White
Belmont, tO Edith Tobin of Hanover.
of Rockland, Maine.
Charles L. Calef, both of Lynn.
LORNA STACKHOUSE, PAL, tO
HERBERT W. CONVERSE, ECC, Of
Catholic Welfare Conference News Service.
The wedding took place in Va宜can
City’and after the wedding the newly-
weds were received in audience by His
Holiness Pope Pius XII at the Vatican
PaIace.
Arhigton, tO Ruth Janet Batchelder of
1950
FRANK HERBERT WALKER, GC,
Of Hingham, tO Priscilla Jessie Dowd
a工so of that city.
DOROTHY MAE LUGTON, ECC, Of
Needham, tO Richard Burton Conley of
Saginaw, Michigan.
ELAINE MURIEL SLOANE, CBA,
of Somerville, tO Theodore S. Samet of
Brookline.
JEROME L HANDMAN, ECC, tO
GIoria Bemice Kaplan’both of Spring一
五eld.
JOSEPH PATRICK DOUGHERTY,
Educa青io,ち Of Newington, Connecticut,
to Mary Louise Casey of Hartford, Con-
GEORGE C. HARMER, GC, tO
Marion R. Howard, both of Lym.
Ensign NILES R. GOODING, JR.,
CLA, Of Somervi11e, tO Ame L. Mulvey
Chevy Chase, Maryland・
JOHN C. MACONE, GC, Of Concord,
to Margaret Osgood also of that city.
WILLIAM MURRAY MORTON,
ECC, Of Bridgeport, Comecticut, tO
Patricia Houghton of Weston.
JUDSON M. GOODNOW, JR., ECC,
of Princeton, tO Sheila Michell Hurst of
Sherbom.
JOHN JAMES THOMSON, Educa〇
JOAN ALINE BALDWIN, PAL, tO
1951
MARY SCHWENDEMAN, ECC, Of
Avon.
LOIS GREEN, CLA, Of Malden, tO
Sidney Greenberg of Roxbury.
DONALD HOWARD HICKS, GC, Of
Greenwood, tO Marion Jean Easterbrooks
of Wakefield.
JOHN M. BARRY, CLA, Of Nashua,
New Hampshire, tO Marguerite Rioux,
Bridgewater, tO Dorothy M. Johnson of
Brockton.
1938
Sergeant HENRY WHITNEY
BAILEY, ECC, Of Nashua, New Hamp-
shire, tO Donna Hersey Ripley of
Wellesley Hills.
1939
MILDRED JANE STONE, ECC, Of
also of that city.
New Bedford, tO AIfred V. Brown of
JANET ADELAIDE CARLSON, PAL,
of North Dartmouth, tO Robert F. Gill of
South Dartmouth.
Cranston, Rhode Island.
1952
Of Lym.
ROBERT NELSON GILMORE, SW,
1936
ROY L. WASHBURN, ECC, Of East
mont.
才ioれ, Of Lym’tO Lois Am Landers’also
NORMAN J. GRANT, CBA, tO Ame
M. Murtha, both of Melrose.
Beverly, tO John P. Comors, also of this
town.
Frederick D. Hatfield, Jr., both of Bel-
Milton, tO Francis Hervey Palardy of
Newton Center’tO Susan Lee Moyer of
1934
DORIS HEMLOW HOARE, CBA, O葺
of Edgewood, Rhode Island・
PエIYLLIS KAUFMAN, CLA, Of Chesト
WILLIAM M. BREED, JR., CBA, Of
JOSEPH V. GIBERTI, CLA, tO Anne
Lucille, both of Middleboro.
necticut.
nut Hill, tO Harris Leshefsky Edelman
of EHdns Park’ Philadelphia, Pemsyl-
1933
Reading・
CAROL WINEFRED BURNS, CPES,
of Shrewsbury, tO John H・ Graves of
1943
Dr. BERTHA E. CURTIS, Medic紡e,
Of Worcester, tO JOHN SHEPARD PERKINS, CBA’36, Of Boston.
DORIS LEONARD, CLA, Of St.
East Millbury.
54
Petersburg, tO AIvin Richard Mayer of
O賞d Greenwich, Comecticut.
WINIFRED MARY BROWN, PAL,
Of Haverhi11, tO Burt Joseph Barret亡aIso
Of that city.
BARBARA LEE STEVENS, EdtJCa一
1 944
秋m, Of Plymouth, tO Herbert Bradford
ELVA ELIZABETH MARSHALL,
CBA, Of Melrose? tO Eldred Hopkins of
Na瞳ck.
Wright, Jr. of Marshfield.
ANNA MARIE DOYLE, Educa青ion,
Of Milton’tO John Russo of East Milton:
IRVING KELMAN, ECC, tO Naoml
1 946
Schwartz of Chestnut Hill.
BERNADINE McCUSKER, Gradu-
CBA’88, have announced the birth of a
a青e, Of East Braintree, tO Walter Gutter_
1950
SOn Of Weymouth・
IRENE JOAN CARBONARO, PAL,
Of Lawrence, tO Joseph J. Faro of Methuen.
MARY LOUISE DOBIE, CBA, Of
1938
Mr. and Mrs. GEORGE H. HUBAN,
WILLIAM HILTON WRIGHT, CBA,
Of Pittsfield, tO Anne Elizabeth Johnson
SOn, Kevin, On December 15, 1950. Mr.
Huban is Postmaster at Middlebury’Vermont, Editor of the Middlebury Col工eg㊧
A工umni Magazine, The Nett’$ Le青ter, and
Public Relations consultant for Middle_
also of Pittsfie賞d。
ROBERT HENRY CURRAN, CLA,
bury College. Mr. and Mrs. Huban have
Jackson Heights, Long Island, tO James
Of West Roxbury’ tO Claire F弛zabeth
two other chiIdren, George夕Jr., and
Joseph Flanagan of Pittsfield.
O’Reilly of Roslinda工e.
Stephen.
ELINORE YOUNG, CPES, Of Newton
Center,
tO
R叫h
Mezza
of
Anaheim,
Califomia.
RONA LEE COHEN, PAL, Of Onset,
to Elliot Rayman of Boston.
HELEN KETOLA’CLA’Of Sudbury,
。u苦E舎N認諾F諾器謹y蒜
Branch, Missouri.
to Richard Kurt Rockstroh of Union, New
Jersey.
ROBERT NELSON GILMORE, SW,
Of Milford, tO Joanne BIood of Wellesley
1 947
DIANA REPECKA, PAL, Of Shrewsbury, tO George H. Listowich of Ster量ing・
MARSHALL EISENBERG, CBA, Of
Springfield, tO Eleanor Davis of Miami
Hi工ls.
RICHARD STEVENS TURNER,
SPR’Of Wellesley Hills, tO Ruth Jane
Seminatore of Wobum.
JOHN MOSES FEELEY, CBA, Of
Springfield, tO Jean P. Ne重son of West一
Beach, F量orida.
LEICESTER SARGENT JOHNSTON,
Medic海e, Of MeIrose, tO Joan Constance
Kelly of Framingham・
1948
GEORGE MICHAELS, Latt), Of Newton, tO Barbara Gilda Ete]man of Whiト
ELENA ANTOINETTE GIOVE, SPRク
Of Boston, tO VICTOR F. PARSONS,
CBA’5」, Of Aubumdale.
PATRICIA ALLEN, CPES, Of Grove丁and, tO Paul Channell of Beverly.
1949
ELEANOR F. HOWE, Educqtion, Of
Waltham, tO Barbara Ruth Hi量賞of Be工_
Thomas H. Casey, Jr., Of West Roxbury’tO BARBARA CLARE KELLEY,
PAL, Of East Milton.
CHARLOTTE READ ELWELL,
詳言霊。豊富ぷ晋。鴬yke’both
Mr. and Mrs. George Heinz Kunstadt
( HILDA F. LEITER, Graduate’48 ) have
announced the birth of a son, Robert
Marvin, On January 24, 195l, in Boston,
Massachusetts.
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Berman (RHODA
RUTH JANES, Educa青i。n, Of Danvers,
FERN SIMONS, CPES’48) have announced the birth of their first chi量d, a
of Sharon.
SOn, Andrew David, On December 8,
MILDRED ARNOLD CRABB, CPES,
CBA’50, Of North Weymouth・
NICHOLAS STEPHEN HADDAH,
EUGENE A. SWENSON, Educa海n,4L
SP最, Of Salem, tO Ann Marie Marshal
both of Manchester’New Hampshire.
Mrs. Swenson is presently teaching at
of GIoucester.
LEONARD T. CHASE, CLA, Of
the Scottsdale High School in Scottsdale,
Worcester, tO Caro工G. Appelbaum of
West Hartford, Comecticut.
BARBARA CLARE KELLEY, PAL,
Of East Milton, tO Thomas H・ Casey, Jr.
Of West Roxbury.
CHARLES PAUL SONTZ, ECC, Of
Lym’tO Sy工via Hyman of Somerville.
MARGARET CATHERINE GOGAN,
1950’a=he Union Hospital in Lym.
ずN棚“E舶0掻IA朋i
“A7td, dou眈Ze平t,鵬o fhemねgわe柳
A雄e fわaきbearS m伽O毎aけrα窃
In脇ose gγeaき0節ces拐a青suiき
The fuZZ-gγOtt)n eγきergie8 Of heat)elt.
“Bのきfheg and tt,e hat’e $hake’吊oa
ds,
T祝groのめgのiれきersありのSめもり3
0ur paきhs町e i両he胸dsのeお印oの,
Altd栃e;rs m u
discol)ered Zo"d$.,,
(Taたe,弓rom fhe Preside?桃AγmuaZ Repo毎
October, J950. )
EDITH VIOLA BLOOD, B.S.’4L on
February l’195l, at the Parkway Hospl-
tal in Boston. Miss Blood taugh=he
grammar schooIs in Berkeley and Revere
and was a teacher at the Southem Junior
High School in Somerville for over twenty
yearS.
JANE BROOKS BRENNAN, Educa-
CLA, tO WILLIAM JOSEPH CASSIDY,
HELEN K. BEDELL, GC9 Of Wil-
January 19, 1951。 Their son was three
years old in January.
to WILLIAM A. ROCKETT, CBA’49,
Am McKeough’both of Central Fa11s,
CLA’50, both of Lym.
1 947
Mr. and Mrs. Penneth M. Cline (LUhave amounced the birth of their second
Child and first daughter, Joan Beth, On
JOHN WILLIAM FULTON, ECC, Of
Rhode Island.
Dewell of Greenwich, New York.
On January 22, 1951, at the Long Beach
Hospital, Long Beach, New York.
CILLE R. GLASSER, Educafio需47)
IRENE WOLANSKI, CBA, Of New
Bedford, tO WALTER KOSARICK, JR.,
CHASE, JR., SPR, Of Worcester, tO Janet
(AMY DRYER, CPES’46) have an-
nounced the birth of a son, John Daniel,
JEAN GOULD, PAL, tO RICHARD
Milford, Comecticut.
erett, tO Natalie HoIzman of Medford.
Lieutenant HAROLD BEVERLY
1946
Mr. and Mrs. Edward KavazanJlan
SCHENKER’CBA’50, both of Holyoke.
Jr. of Wel工esley Hills.
Arizona.
SHELDON B. BERSHAD, SS, Of Ev-
Faris, On January 23, 195l, in New
Haven, Connecticut.
Dr. G. ROBERT BALER, Medic初e,
Of Brookline, tO Nancy Appel of Lynn.
to Allen StanIey Murphy’both of New
HELEN J. DOBRAS, Educ脇0れ, tO
(PATRICIA CADIGAN, CLA’42) have
amounced the birth of a son, Michael
丘eld.
North Billerica, tO Charles W. Homeyer’
JAMES SHANNAHAN, Latt), tO Alice
1942
Dr. and Mrs. George T. Armstrong
1952
ALFRED EDWARD GLENNON,
mington’ tO Raymond D. Ouellette of
CBA’Of Manchester, New Hampshire, tO
Dracut.
Marib′n Elena Wylie also of Manchester.
55
青io諦0, On February 6 at her home on
105 Mar工borough Street, Boston. She
WaS the founder and president of the
Mary Brooks Junior College, Boston.
GRACE M. CLARK, e畑’27, On Jan-
uary 20, 1951, in West Medford・ She
硯, On December 24, 1950, in Vermil-
Dr. Roberts retired from the Norwich
was a teacher at the Somerville Public
1ion, South Dakota. He was dean of血e
deanship in 1932 fo11owing twenty-five
SchooIs for forty years and was assistant
University of South Dakota Law -Schoo]
years in that position and a total of forty
in charge of the Highland School at West
since 190l.
years as a faculty member。
Mrs. Fred A. Howard (LIZABETH D.
Somerville for twenty years.
Judge LUKE B. COLBERT, LL.B・’07,
On February l, 195l, at his home in
LEONA W. SAMPSON, A.B.’22,
MILLER) M.D.’92, On January 23, 195l,
A.M.’24, On January 17, 1951, at her
in Stoneham, Massachusetts.
home in Rockland. She was a French
teacher at the Rockland High School for
thirteen years.
Marblehead. He served as town counsel
ANNE E. NEWELL, e紅A’97ク On
and was trial justice from 1983 to 1942.
January 16, 1951, at her home in Aga-
He was an outstanding attomey in the
Essex County, and an active member in
the Bar Associations.
Wam. She taught for many years in the
JENNIE YOUNG FREEMAN, A.B・,
’00, On February l, 1951, at her home in
LUCEY G. PEABODY, A.B:79, On
January 12, 1951, in Machias, Maine.
Court and State Commissioner of Labor
She
his
Glendale, Califomia.
The Reverend SALVATORE GIAM_
BARRESI, A.M.’29, B.R.E.’24, S.T.B.
’25, On January 23, 195l, at a Convales-
SER, LL.B.’97, On January 26, 195l,
City and in the Monson and Warren
at his home in Everett. A former bahk
public schooIs in Springfield.
o鯖cial, justice of the Malden District
was
the
principal
of
the
Cuェtis
Peabody School for forty years。
The Reverend Doctor W. R. PO胃〇一
cent home in Providence, Rhode Island.
Brigadier General E. LEROY SWEET-
Annie Brown private school in New York
and Industries, General Sweetser began
military
career
in
1893 with
the
Massachusetts MiHtia. From 1893 to
1913, he rose from private to general. In
HAMUS, S.T.B.’06, On January 18,
World War II, he headed one of the
He had been pastor of the Italian Meth-
1951, at St. Cloud, FIorida. Dr. Pol-
Everett draft boards and was recently
Odist Church in Boston for twenty-five
hamus was well known as the author
appointed Civil Defense Director by the
years, before serving as pastor of the
Of The Unt)e楊柳g of Je鋤s Ch,栂, also as
Mayor.
Broadway Italian Methodist Church in
Providence, Rhode Island, for the past
pastor of prominent churches in Ohio,
Tennessee, Louisiana, Texas and Mis-
eight years.
dictine Hospital in Kingston, New York.
Dr. CHARLES AUSTIN POWELL,
IVAN HOLMES HARLOW, LL.B.’26,
died February 6, at Camey Hospital after
JANE KATHERINE WARD, B.S・’85,
on December 81, 1950, at the Bene-
She was director of physical education at
M.D.’」3, On December 28, 1950, at his
the Myron J. Michael Junior High SchooI
a Iong illness. Mr. Harlow was bom in
home in Brighton. He retired as assist-
since 1988.
Norridgewock, Maine, and for the past
ten years had been United States claims
ant administrator of the Massachusetts
manager for the Massachusetts Bonding
and Insurance Company.
REVEREND JOSEPH WAYNE HASKELL, Theoiogg’36, died February 18,
in Nashua Memorial Hospital, Nashua,
New Hampshire. For the past five years
he was pastor of the First Congregational
Church in Milford. He was also secre_
tary and superintendent of the New
Hampshire Universalist State Conference
and director of the New Hampshire State
Bible Society.
SHELDON ATWELL JONES, LL.B・
’27, On February 4, 1951, at the Melrose
Hospital. He was a prominent Melrose
and Boston attomey’a member of the
Bellevue Gold Club and had been active
in its a任airs for some years. He was a
member of the Fidelity lodge of Masons,
the Melrose Unitarian Church, and the
Boston and Massachusetts Bar Associations.
Mrs. CHARLOTTE M. JUDD Imis,
Memorial HospitaIs, and endeared himself to Boston’s chinese after serving as
a medical missionary in China. He is
the author of a bock entitled Bou仰d Feef,
CHARLES D. WATSON, LL.B.’86,
on December 17, 1950, at his home in
Burlington, Vermont. He served as a
member of the Vermont Public Service
Commission in 1918, and during the
which relates his experiences as a Medical Missionary.
prohibition era, he served as United
CHARLES M. QUINT, LL.B・’03ク?n
member of血e law fim of Watson and
December 14, 1950, at his home m
North Reading. He was active in civic
McFeeters for many years, and a mem-
a揮airs and at one time held the o鯖ce of
States commissioner. He was senior
ber of the St. Albans Rotary.
LILLIAN T. WILKINS, A.B.’97, A.M.
’06, On January 6, 1951, at her home in
town counsel。 He was a鯖1iated with the
Good Samaritan lodge of Masons in
Lymfield Centre. Miss Wilkins was for
Reading, Of which he had been a mem-
more than twenty-Six years an inspector
ber for飾ty置five years. He maintained
at the Boston Custom House, doing
law o鯖ces in Boston.
much of her work also at the docks,
Dr. HERBERT R. ROBERTS, A.B.’92,
where she assisted in supervising bag-
on December 27, 1950, at the Mayo
gage examinations and in血e surveillance
Hospital in Northfield, Vemont. He
of suspected smugglerse Previous to her
was dean emeritus of Norwich Univer-
appointment as custOmS inspector she
sity and acting president of the military
had worked in the o鯖ce of the state tax
co11ege during World War I. President
c。mmissioner
of the Northfield Trust Company, he
was also a former Vermont legislator.
Latin in the Arlington and the Wakefield
and
had
earlier
taught
High SchooIs.
bume Fa11s.
The Boston University Alumni Association presents annually two medals,
-
would appreciate your suggestions
-
き
I Nominate
○
-
I Nominate
-
the Alumni Medal for outstanding service to the community.
t
ticut home’On February 10.
ALICE ISENBURG MUNCH, eばAL
’27, died in her West Hartford, Comec-
the Alumni Medal for outstanding service to Alma Mater.
○
1and.
き
hill・ He fomerly lived in South Grove-
The committee charged with the responsibility of making the choice
○
at the Pentucket Nursing home, Haver-
○
WOOD, TheoIZogg’」L died February 16
SerVice to community
-
REVEREND WILLIAM MAG-
one to an alumnus for services to Alma Mater and one to an Alumnus for
-
chusetts.
CHARLES A. WHITNEY, S.B.’89,
On February 6, 1951, in Upton’Massa-
I
-
CHARLES H. AUTHIER, e矢上L’上9, On
-
808 Bay Sta亡e Road, Boston 15, Massachusetts
⋮
﹂
"
-
MARSHALL N. McKUSICK, LL.B.
Mail to Chairman, Alumni Awards Comm距ee
-
29, 1950, at his home in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania.
cerning your choices.
き
JOHN C. RINK, A.B.’03, On October
please feel free to give the committee any pertinent information con-
,
October 22, 1949, in Sanford, Maine.
“一一〇〇〇〇〇-〇〇〇〇〇○○〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇〇一一-〇一〇○○〇〇〇〇〇〇“-“
56
き l さ ’ , i ` ` , き き ○ ○ - 〇 〇 〇 - ○ ○ 1 I l l - 〃 - I - 1 e - , ● , ●
⋮
CPES’00, On January 3, 1951, in Shel-
BOSTON UN工VERSITY 1951
SUMMER TERM
場左胸最m
May 28 to July 7
Designed to provide an additiona.1 opportunity for regularly
enrolled students to accelerate degree programs, SPeCial students and students from other colleges・
LS。m。rSめn . . . July9t。August18
Boston University’s thirty-SeVenth amual Summer Session o任ers
a broad and varied program of courses to meet血e needs of
undergraduate and graduate college students, VeteranS, teaChers, SChooI o鯖cials and persons interested in pursuing colユege
WOrk for self-improvement.
Moro th肌30=oursos will I10 0fforo冊y t漢10 r鴨ular Univorsit再a伽lty
a雨sto冊y spooialists in脚io田s fiolds
Students admitted without examinations to the Summer Tem・ Classes are organized on a
One-SemeSter basis’and are equivalent in method, COntent and credit to courses o紐ered
during the regular academic year.
Credit obtained may be applied toward degrees. Credits are also ordinarily accepted by
Other co11eges and universities.
Foγ further祝fol・ma擁on胸筋e
●
Boston Universlty Summer Tem
685 CoMMONWEALTH AvENUE
BosTON 15, MASSACHUSETTS
1
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「∴聾藷託葦葦護護諾料
A且町MN‡ DAY
‥ Promises to be the outstanding Alumni event at Bos“
●
+On Universlry m yearS. ‥
‥ A working committee of prominent and active Alumni
is ′PreSen叫engaged in preparmg yOur full day’s pro"
‥ The Committee includes:
DR. JOHN P・ LINDSAY, T’41, Chaiγman
ALLEN E. CLAXTON, T’26
ALICE C. TAYLOR, A’11
GRACE E. AUBURN; A’21
SHIRLEY WATSON, P’41 `
NICHOLAS E. APALAKIS, B’81
HOWARD GILSON, A’41
MRS. MARGARET K. WELCH, P’26
MRS. VIRGINIA TIERNEY, P’86
ARTHUR E. JENNER, A’27
HARRY L. CLEVERLY, E’37
MRS. ELEANOR R. COLLIER, E’29
WARREN S. FREEMAN, Mus’32/E’37
COL GEORGE K. MOODY
JAMES E. NESWORTHY
‥ If you are interested in assistmg With Alumni Day
plans? COntaCt yOur Chaiman or committee members
th丁Ough the
脚紺馴‖醐書棚鵬題珊 蝿脚舶 鵬紳肌胴竃東川
●
308 BAY STA貰E 龍0Å恥
. B①STON 15, MASSA錆IUSEl門IS
甘e量筆銅Qpley了・2100圏xt・ 3雛
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