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Bostonia1949v23n3_web - OpenBU
Boston University
OpenBU
http://open.bu.edu
BU Publications
Bostonia
1949
Bostonia: v. 23, no. 1-10
Stout, Vic
Boston University
Boston University. Bostonia: The Boston University Alumni Magazine, volume 23,
number 1-10. 1949-1950. Archived in OpenBU at http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19702.
http://hdl.handle.net/2144/19702
Boston University
田
か 〇〇〇〇〇
十一一子 千十 一
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日
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BANQU話題AND R漢C話P丁題ON
Hayden Memo「icI題Audi†oriu軸
§A丁URDAY, DEC且MB要R冒O冒h
7 P.M.
★
朋要重曹
A巾Boy題e′§ Figh†雪ng Te「「ie「§
Va「si†y TecImS and Coaches
§害重
器he §econd Annual Presen†a†ion of冒he
Geo「ge V. B細ow油
Me軸o「icI書AwcI「d
報国AR
Nd亜on。8案y K油own §po鵬Expe鴨
RES冨RVE
Your Ticke細S Now
(Ove書冊ow wi書一ecIきin †he Co軸mons cInd co軸e青O HcIyden for speake着s)
器量CK即§皐2.75 each,看cIX inc寡uded
P書ease mcIke checks pcIyab!e曹O Bos冒On Universi†y C案ub of Bos†on・
§丁UD要N丁T題CK間§車器.50 ec鵬h,鴫X inc8uded
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冒e書. CO 7細2]OO,話x冒. 385
岬∈魯魚刷6S AN Aβ朋千Uし
〇千日∪卿的0
The man who comes to instalユor
repalr yOur telephone brings some七hing
more to your home than equlPment,
tooIs and e能ciency.
He brings courtesy and consideration
and a genuine desire to please・ ’
He treats your home and the things
in it as carefulユy as though they were
his own-Cleans up and puts everything
back in place when he9s丘nished.
He brings along the rea賞ization that
he is the representative of thousands of
telephone men and wome皿you may '
never see-alユworking together to
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
g工Ve yOu簡endly9 COnStant工y improv工ng
telephone service a七reasonable cost・
±秀nと三訪。V乞。I
Sometimes a footba11 season can,t end soon enough for some of us coaches, Par_
ticularly when the gomg lS rOugh. But the conclusion of our 1949 campalgn last
month was accompanied with a feeling of remorse, for I can honestly say that this past
SeaSOn VaS One Of the most enJOyable that I have experienced in a11 the years that I have
been coaching・
If we enJOyed a successful season this fa案l, it can be attributed pnmarily to the
eamestness and cooperative splnt Of the members of the varsity squad. Our boys
Wanted to pIay footbaH and they wanted to win・ And they realized that to accomplish
that mission there would be plenty of hard, grueling hours of preparation invoIved・
The men accepteld the challenge and the resu工ts were Justly deserⅤeld・
The backbone of this 1949 team was provided by the senior baH players「○○-Capt.
Art Boyle’Dave Barrett, Irving Heller, Walt Anderson, Bill Crisa五, George Winkler,
John Toner, Pete Samo, A寒Stewart, Car量Rapare1工i, Lou Beardell, Dick Morrissey,
John Simpson, John O’Neil and Ed Sandall. The majority of these men had played at
Boston Universlty before I arrived・ Each of thelm PrOVed a sp工endid leader in his own
right and provided the experience and steadying influence so essential to a wimmg
team. All of them have made memorable contributions to Boston Universlty football.
The juniors on our team likewise contributed heavily to whatever success we may
have attained this season・ And the sophomores more than measured up to the high
hopes I had for them・ Fortunately’We Were able to glVe Our SeCOnd-year men mOre
WOrk this season than under norma量circumstances, and I feel con鋤ent that the /eXPe-
rience they have galned wiH prove invaluable next season.
I would like aIso to pass aIong a word of appreciation to the freshman group・
Many aftemoons血ey were arrayed against the varslty m SCrimmage, and caliber of
the competition they a任ordeld was another important contributing factor.
Bamng SOme unforeseen development, I see no reason why Boston University
football camot continue to improve. Next season we wi11 have a splendid nuc宣eus
available in the retummg Juniors and sophomores and a number of freshmen wiH
figure prominently in our 1950朋heme・
In conclusion I would like to express my appreciation to the members of the
`-
athletic and coaching sta任, faculty’Students and alumni who have supported our foot・
ball program so enthusiastica量ly・ It was this cooperation of everyone concemed that
made this 1949 season one that I wi1=ong cherish.
(ヽ
∠冤%d
劃
●
Universlty
Uれ読切訪y ‥ . Latin-American Institute
Char工es A. Rome. ‥ Gangware... Grac′e Aubum
. ‥ Professor Oddy ‥. Club News ‥. Radio.
Aha肋れf. ∴ We Salute
Letters to the Editor ,
Commons .
.
Judge Jemie Loitman Barron
We Remember
Club News
11
.
A競mれ吊れRe扉eの. ‥ Bangkok Editor
The Human
●
Venturein Sex, Loveand Mamage . .
16
Spo鵬... Review of Sportsby Vic Stout.
18
Cわsses. ‥ University
A gγOup O恒,i轟er spo確e融九鵬ねsぉα‡
the C.P.E.S. cα肋P α轟Peまeγboroug駕
Medicine. ‥ Theology
Paragraph Pulpit. ‥ Law
InMemoriam . . . . .
21
Ne砂Hα肋が巌re, Se轟O妨foγ α dαγ Of
轟九r綿ls, Sp訪露α7鷹c巌躍.
(Fro融おp己e ce)
The season of Christmas is upon us
〔《∋
and Bosめれiα takes this opportun重ty
to
wish
the
entire
a量umni
body
a
MERRY and JOYOUS CHRIS曹MAS.
STAFF: Arthur E. Jemer, A,27, Editor; Paul A. Pollock, SPR,48, Associate Editor; Charles A・ Poulson, Jr・, SPR’50, Class Notes Editor; Ralph
Norman, Sta癒Photographer. EDITORIAL BOARD: Mrs. Virginia L. Tiemey, P’36; Mr。 David Brickman, B’31/32; Mr. Clifton Follansbee, B’36;
Mr. Juds。n R. Butl。r, G,40; Miss Jan。 D。n。Van, P’45. PUBLISHING DETAILS… No. 3, Volume XXHI, December, 1949. Published monthly from
October through June indusively by the BOSTON UN工VERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Member of the American Alumni Council・ Editorial
o鯖ces: 308 Bay State Road, Boston 15, Massachusetts. Entered as second・Class matter at the Post O鯖ce, Boston’Massachusetts, under the Act of
March 3, 1879. Copyright, December, 1949, by the Boston University Alumni Association. Subscription:?2.00 per year言ncluded in the Annual
Alumni Fund Contribution. S'ingle copy 25 cents.
鞘敬譲轄離隔懇輩蟻酸
●
Univers lty
ヽ
・←
Pens Latin American Prog営a壷
With the Honorable BenJamin Cohen, Assistant Secre-
reservoir for the future deveIopmen七of economic re-
tary-General of the United Nations’heading a program of
SOurCeS and cultural advancement・ Latin America ap-
distmguished speakers, President Daniel L. Marsh and
Professor Maurice Halperin, director of the Latin-Ameri-
wha七the charter of the United Nations should contain.
Peared a=he San Francisco Conference with clear ideas of
Can Program in ReglOnal Studies at Boston Universlty
Currently, three Latin"American delegates have been sit-
OPened the program a=he College of Liberal Arts.
tlng m a grOuP Which is formmg eVentua量codification of
A recent appointee to the Universlty faculty, Dr. Hal-
intemationa=aw for the world.
Perin instituted an initial research program in which Sao
The Latin-American republics are being mCOrPOrated
Paulo’through its Goveinor, Dre Adhemar De Barros, the
into President Truman’s program for technica工assistance.
Universlty Of Sao Paulo and leading business and civic
Give them the technical assistance and you can open pos-
instituti叩s of the state will cooperate with Boston Univer-
Sibilities of investments which are not now gett工ng Su鯖cient
Sity・ He emphasized in his talk短that Boston Universlty
PrOfit in other parts of the world.
become not only an institution endowed with the best inStruCtional fac曲ies in the Latin-American field, but also
an important center of Latin-American research and of
inter-American cultural exchange・ As such it aims to con-
The main interests of Latin America in the United
Nations are threefold: (1) intemational peace and organization, (2) formulate new principles of social progress;
insure fair tre如ment of a工l races, COIors, SeXeS and creeds
tribute in the largest sense to the promotibn of the well-
in Latin-American groups; (3) establish better economic
being and securlty Of the Westem HelmlSPhere’by foster-
COnditions by making lt POSSible for people of good will
●
mg mutual understanding and good will between its
northem and southem parts・
in any section of the world to come and五nd an opportu●
mty for development and betterment.
寝Our Latin-American program is organ-
ized on the basis of the so-Called reglOnal or
area groupmg Of studies, an aPPrOaCh deVeIoped largely as a result of experience
derived from wartime research on forelgn
areas・ By this approach the fundamental
academic disciplines such as history, geOgraphy, eCOnOmics, SOCiology’ anthropol-
Ogy, gOVemmelnt, Philosophy and literature
●
are interlocked and focused on a glVen reglOn Or area・
Dr・ Cohen,s speech’Which highIighted
the openlng day ceremonies’had this to say
about Latin America:短Latin American re-
Pub量ics are playlng Wi七hin the United
Nations a ro量e of such growlng lmPOrtanCe
that Latin America is faced with the prob1em of training people to face the respon-
Sibilities that have faHen on her shoulders.
Latin America represents today the greatest
L切れr勧高Dr・ Or夢のndo Jorge A闘r・ Corれe明Pro佃soγ腕章牢Ce H小暗rれ
dわecめr of肋e Uれきびer§砂,s Lα競れ〃A肌er淀αn Prog事・α肋うDr. BeれJα削れCo九eれ,
Assお棚胸章Secre加γγ"Gのerのき0fめe U融蘭Nα書toれS; Dr・ C夢αr?nCe H・鰐のr訪g・
Hαrひαrd; W. Ndson B耽肋p, pr-eぷde耽, N切ひ留れgわれ原Pαれ"A肋er霊CαれSo。轟γ, αnd
Professor Sα肋棚d B. Wα鯵肌αれ.
′0
● ●
B oston
寝You can quote me as saymg,
replied Len Press,
On The Air
Through radio, Len explained, Boston University can
a∬able young Assistant in Radio to Mrs. Col工ier in the
ca11 a耽ention to its aims and activities. And while.its aims
Publicity Bureau, ``that the Army had nothing to do with
and activities are declared, thel Universlty also contributes
my entermg the radio field.” That statement was in answer
to the public service that radio o任ers the listener. The size
to the question, “Did your work in the Army Signal Corps
and the quality of the Universlty faculty enable it to o紐er
in組uence your choice in a life work?”
the broadcastlng COmPanies experts in almost any field of
“As a matter of fact,” he continued, “I chose radio be-
human endeavor. Panel discussions and round table con.
CauSe I wanted to write, and found tha=ype of writing
ferences are programs which requlre eXPertS, and this the
more to my liking・
Unive-rSlty has liberally provided.
Then there are times when sensible, Objective discus-
Len, Or aS O鯖cial University即es record him, O. Leonard
Press, Came back to the Universlty after his war service,
Sions of controversial subjects should be held for the ben・
recelVmg his degree from the College of Business Admin一
efit of the public. This the Radio departmelnt Wi寒l arrange・
istration in June 1947. He took quite a few radio co‘urSeS,
Student discussions and activities also form a part of the
and his liking for the五e宣d was so grea=hat he decided to
OVera11 radio pICture. a=he University.
take his master’s degree in radio. If all works out as Len
Special events within the Universlty are also special
has planned, he, along with his charmmg Wife, Will receive
events of great interest to those outside the Universlty, and
his M.S. in Radio next June.
for that reason convocations’Founders’Day and Commencement exercises are broadcast from year to year・ Last
June, WBZ, the Natio↑nal Broadcasting Company out量et for
Boston, broadcas=he Open House held at the President’s
house in conJunCtion with Alumni Day. A coas=o coast
hook-uP WaS arranged when Trygve Lie’SeCretary-general
Of the United Nations’Roland Hayes, famed American
tenor’and Arthur Andrew Houck, PreSidelnt Of the Univer-
Slty Of Maine’discussed雄Education for World Peace,
a
roundtable group moderated by Dr. Marsh・
Nationwide audiences are hard to reach, and when a
national program comes to Boston University it is
made very welcome・ For example: last April, the A王r
Force did a broadcast from the Optical Laboratories. The
United States Amy band under the leadership of Captain
Hugh C・urry gaVe a COnCert from Hayden Memorial in
March, aS did Vaughn Monroe and his Camel Caravan
PrOgram. Len feels that we should have more of these in
the future, but a=his date plans have not yet jelled.
Len has done an exce11ent job in theI Radio Department,
LeれPres§, RαdiわA§S短α加(r追加),訪細めC瞭A鵬群れFredeγ,
the proof being that Boston Universlty COntributes to
U耽れers吋de心α‡訪g coα〇九, before α reCeれ厄broαdcα$き.
many more programs now than formerly, also that radio
PrOgram PrOducers are more and more looking to Boston
←搬豊藍落盤詣,鵠盈務管藍盈鷲嘉霊
Universlty for material and participants.
●
Cα耽pのS, Sαれ広さαgO, C肋e, Sc九の0夢of N耽rS訪g; Dr. Co九eれ;
The Radio Departmelnt WaS formed in the sprlng Of
ToγのF榔eれ各α槻dα, Sαれ技のgO, C九綿e, S〇九。0夢of N撮rS訪g; Dr.
1946 and was headed byEdwin H. Gim・ He he工ped launch
H偶をer訪; Mr$. Noれα Aれdγ香の§0晶, P脚的§ Are書棚S, C脇ei;
the infant proJeCt, and in 1948 Len took over. It has be-
Dr. Adrjα§O夢α,鱒のr砂のrd. (2) Dr. Ceわs‡e Aれdrαde, Hα抑ar駕
Dr・茄dαr; Robe塙S産別のb.γ, Christian Science Monitor;
COme an important part of the University’s publicity pro-
Jαγ耽e A名eびedo Rodr培耽統, Co耶拐of鯵rα弱, Bo綿0れ5 Dr.
T九o肋αS W. P訪肌er, Yα脆; Dr. E肌翫o W調eれS, Vαれderb耽;
gram, for the radio is medium that reaches into the mosしt
Dr. Hα巾er訪. (3) Heαd地境e, T抑S書ee$ D訪れer, Oc轟のber重量.
remote of areas・ Since Boston University lS a large and
(4) Toγα F棚e彬の闘α,舶αr加Sep蘭のedα. (5) Dr. C九αr夢e§
Wαg夢eγ, Co地肌枕α; Jαれe§ McGoひeγれ, Uれ桝セd Fr訪Co耽・
important segment of the educational wor量d, its activities
pαれγ; DeαれC九es書er N. A庇r;舶rs. George C. Sあα肋C鳥タNe抑
Eれ〆αれd Pα職。A肋er王cαれ∴So壷邦男 Perrγ D. Keα競れg, Firs書
are front page news’and radio deals only in front page
Nα虎0れα夢Bαれ鳥of Bosめれ; DeαれW職位耽G. S暮融枕がe; Pro"
features. It is to this end that Len Press is working, under
Ies§のr Sα肋撮d 財・ Wαα肋のれ. (6) Fre訪れの do諸 肌eir
the able guidance of Mrs. Co11ier’tO te1量the pub量ic of
“beαれ言es’’ゎJ〇九れ0,鯖のrα訪Hαγd勧請舶e耽or弛裏o心もγ,肋αr亙
Boston University.
れgめc eれd of Ire訪れのれ``壷原のc崩れα技bれ.タ,
・$
囲
Charles A・ Rome to be on Superior
Court Bench
in addition to trustee that Judge Rome has accepted. In
his undergraduate days he was president of the student
POmtment Of Charles A. Rome,
trustee of the Universlty, tO the
COunCil of Law School and upon graduation continued his
Superior Court of Massachu-
Law SchooI Alumni Association. He became an instructor
ac七lVlty m the Universlty by being made secretary of the
se七ts. A former assistant United
at Law School and the chairman of the President Marsh
States District Attomey, Mr.
Portrait Committee.
Rome has distmguished himself in the Iegal field since he
In 1946 he established the Charles A. Rome Scho賞arship
graduated cum laude from the SchooI of Law in 1926.
Fund for students who display毎character’ability and
Judge Rome received his A・B. from Harvard University
future promise.”
and served as a sergeant in the Army durlng World War I.
The Honorable Charles A. Rome has proven to be a
He was quoted in an interview’uPOn his appomtment, that
loyal and devout alumnus, and, this abo一Ve a11, an eameSt
寝Boston Universlty lS a Part Of my life・
His devotion for
呪 i ﹁ し 雪 - - - i 才
As Bosio扇n wen=o press we
Were Pleased to hear of the ap-
and capable citizen of these United States.
the Universlty is amply proven by the number of positions
●
Edga工P・ Gangware New Band Director
One of the newelSt members of the Boston Universlty
faculty lS ta11, broadshouldered Edgar Gangware, an im-
POrtation from Northwestem Universlty, Evanston, I11inois’Who will take charge of the Universlty Marching and
Concert Bands. Mr・ Gangware replaces Professor Warren
S. Freelman, Who was recently appolnted Dean of the Col-
lege of Music.
Bom and raised in the Big Ten section of the country,
27-year-Old Edgar Gangware has had a varied career. He
received his B・S. from Wittenberg College, Sprmgfield,
Ohio, and his Bachelor.of Music from the same school.
Then fo賞lowed 44 months in the infantry, and upon dis-
Charge. Mr・ Gangware wen七to Northwestem Universlty,
Where he was in charge of that institution,s band and re-
Ceived his Master of Music degree. He is married to the
former Dorcas Euama of Little Rock, Arkansas.
Mr・ Gangware is delighted by the splrlt and cooperation
Shown by members of the Universlty Band・寝I have no
囲
doubt,” he declared in an interview, “that our band wiH be
the best in the East in time. At present, due to a lack of
uniforms’Our numbers are by necesslty limited, but this
Situation I am sure will be remedied.
He added that the
band will enJOy a full season of appearmg at athletic con一
tests and partlCIPatlng m COnCertS・雄In fact,
Mr・ Gang・
Ware COntinued,毎I’d like to see their last engagement of
the year be the June Commencement.”
T九e U耽れer訪γ’s鵬のbαnd d訪ecめr, Edgαr P. Gαng〇
秒αre,の九o α万eαdγ九α$肋αde書見e U耽れer訪γ bα音nd oれe
Of拐e be$吊れ書見e EαS雷.
Professor Oddy Retums
Grace Aubum Honored
From France
Marking the completion of thirty years’devoted service
to Boston Universlty, Miss Grace E. Aubum, eX A’21, WaS
tendered a party by her co-WOrkers of the Boston Univer・
Finding Professor John Oddy in the SchooI of Practical
slty Alumni Association. Miss Aubum was first hired by
Arts and Letters invo工ved clat七erlng down long corridorsl’
the Universlty m 1919 as a part-time assistant・ In 1921
mountmg Stairs, gOmg through imumerable doors and
she became a clerical assistant in the Alumni Bureau,
七wistmg COnneCtmg halls・ Finally, after descending a final
PrOgreSSmg tO her present position of Associate Director
of Alumni Funds and Associate Director of Associations.
flight of stairs and facing three blank do'OrS (feeling somewhat like the hero in the story “Thel Lady and the- Tiger”) ,
She is also in charge of the Universlty China and other
the right one was opened and Professor Oddy extended an
●
Universlty materiaL
invitation by saying “Come in・”
The veteran history professor had spent 16 months in
Europe and England on a Sabbatica1 1eave’uSing France
as a sort of headquarters・ The trlP WaS SPent mainly in
furthering his knowledge in classical archeology・ He
s,tudied a=he Universities of Paris and Poitiers, making
occasional forays in七o Belgium, Spam, Italy and Englande
Most of his time, however, WaS SPent in the south of France
in the vICmlty Of Nimes studying the archeo漢oglCal ruins
in that area.
Of particular interes=o the American citizen is the reac-
tion of the Frenchman to the Marshall Plan and the
politics of the United States. Professor Oddy had this to
say abou=he French famer: αHe is not a Communist’
definitely no七・ The farmers have accepted the Marshall
Plan with enthusiasm, for it has meant much in the mod・
emization of the French farm for some and the complete
recovery from the ruin of the war for others・ The farmer
in France is extremely well o任・ He has an abundance of
foold and on the average is weH equlPPed with money・
Politica1工y they lean towards De GauHe, although his
(De Gaulle) errors in the past言nsulting Roosevelt for
one, have made them hesitate before placing power in his
hands. The late President is highly respected in France
and De Gau11e’s insult is remembered with shame.
Present a=he party with the sta任were: Assistant Dean
雄On the other hand, the white coHar wo正er, the' miner
Of Women Marian Parsons and Mrs. Frank Gillis, Wife of
and the railroad wo正er are underpaid and the deva寒ua-
the director of Alumni Funds. President Daniel L. Marsh
tion of the English pound has done no.thing to alleviate the
Sent COngratulations and regre,tS in a letter stat工ng that he
COuld not attend. The Boston Universlty Club of Boston
situation.” The Professor gave an example: “There was a
Sent a gift and the Alumni Association gave Miss Aubum
strike of railway workers at Renoir・ The strikers wanted a
guarantee of 15,000 francs a week, a Sum COmParable to
30 roses.
糾2.00 a week in American currency. The coal miners get
NATIONAL CI∬B NEWS
17,000 francs a week. This is equal to糾4.00 a week・ If
Over 50 members of the Boston Universlty Club of
the pnCeS Of essent主al commodities were equal to that pay
SOutheastem New Hampshire made the trlP tO Boston for
scale many of France’s problems would be soIved・ Those
“Homecommg Day” festivities…. And from Charlotte,
commodities, however, are in the same prlCe SCale as
North Carolina, COmeS a rePOr七from A. Grant Whitney
American food products. Labor blames Capital and
tha=he newly fomed North-South Carolina club held a
dimer meetmg a=he Mecklenburg Hotel in Charlotte last
The professor observed that French luxury ltemS’Which
October 28…. Evelyn Card, Our Chamm・g and e綿cient
are the only products exportable and salable in the United
Capital blames Labor・ The・ SOlution is yet to be found・
Associate Dire)CtOr Of Clubs, is anxious for news from our
States, COntinue to be out of the pnCe range Of the average
nationwide clubs. Don’t hesitate to write to her, teHing of
United States‘citizen, Pr〇、bably one of the reasons why
your commg 1950 program and what events your club
French economy lS nOt fully on the road to pre-War
has held in the past.
PrOSPerlty・
●
9
The national elections in the United States last year
Were Of prlme interest to France? COmmented the professlOr・
The campalgnS Were followed closely, and when President
Truman emerged victorious there was much reJOIClng・
The French fel=hey knew Truman, and Dewey, the RePublican candidate’WaS muCh too vague. The Russians
Were Pluggmg Dewey, and even the Americans in France
Were COnCeding the victory to Dewey・ This pessimism on
the part of the Americans was frightemng・ The French
figured a Dewey victory would mean a backward slide in
forelgn relations. Spirits improved the mommg Of No一
vember 5th.
Another reason for the delay in fulユrecovery in France
is the very human dislike of paylng taXeS・ This dislike has
almost reached the digmty Of a profession in the land that
Caesar once divided into three parts’and in the agrlCultural reglOnS it is a fineIy developed art according to Pro一
fessor Oddy. Aside from the natural aversion to the taxPayer, the French were forced durlng the war by the
desire to survive, tO OutWit the Geman tax coHectors.
Havmg become very proficieht in do-dging taxes, the
invoIved in both present and future problems of Europe.
farmer in particular has continued this habit into post-War
Our work marked the re-eStablishment of pre-War COntaCtS
●
life・ Unfortunately’French tax laws are Iacking m enforc一
as weH as the making of new friends. In Gelsenkirchen,
mg POWerS’and so the French govemment is deprived of a
the thriving Fraz4elnSChule seems a symboI of hope for the
great deaI of income that it is entitled to have.
future; this alert group of young women offer visible hope
This enlightenmg bit of infomation concluded the in・
that some signi丘cant core of Geman young life survives
terview and we carefully picked our way back through the
the assau賞t of the late High Command-nOt Only a mili-
maze of corridors’halls and doorways’and emerged,
tary command, but a command upon the heart and soul of
Whole and unscathed, On St・ BotoIph Street.
the people.
These engagements brought a large number of urgent
invitations to us to re亡um for the summer of 1949. In
Letters to the Editor
SOme Places we were almost compelled to promise to
retum as a condition for being permitted to leave. En-
406 Kenyon Avenue
gagements for the summer include one with the S初de融en-
Wilmore’Kentucky
ge柵e諒de in the Universlty Of Tuebingen, Where our host
April 14, 1949
is Professor Dr・ Friedrich von Huene, infomal meetings
Dear Mr. Freeman:
a=he Universitie(S Of Erlangen and Heidelberg, engagements a=he Fra弘e鵜ch訪e in Ge量senkirchen, and possibly
Since Bosio扇α is interested both in keeplng in contact
With alumni’and in intemational affairs’I am writing to
also the one in Aachen, and services in the churches in
COVer aCtivities of the past few months・ This past summer,
Gelsenkirchen, Wassenberg, Stuttgart, NuembeTg, Wies-
my husband, Dr. Harold B. Kuhn and I (Ame W. Kuhn,
baden, Siegen, Schwelm, Bie工efeld, Bochum, and Neustadt.
Durlng the summer months we hope also to slip away
Grad’42) traveled in Europe, Primari工y to ful帥speaking
for two or three days a=he Festival at Salzburg, and as
engagements in Gemany, and as we11 to attend the Lon-
burgh, and the World Council of Churches in Amsterdam.
few days with friends in Italy・ If possible, I will try to
Send at ]east a brief repor=o Bosion訪from the other side.
The general situation which prevai工s in the three westem
ZOneS Of Gemany is too we11 known to most readers音tO
Yours cordia量ly,
requlre eXtenSive comment. Our work was with both
Ame W. Kuhn, G’42.
Churches and schoo工s’PrlmariIy m COmeCtion with the
Landesk訪che.
The response of the Geman people was universa11y
Letters to the Editor are always appreciated by the
hearty・ In every place, We found crowdeld churches - in
Bos青o扇a sta任・ Your experiences on your job, yOur VaCa"
Gelsenkirchen, Stut七gart, Dortmund, Schwelm, etC. We
tion, Or hobby makes good reading to fellow aIumni・ Keep
made our headquarters in the Ruhr area, One Of the most
七he letters comlng, and if you can accompany them with
heavily destroyed sections’and one which is ine)Vitably
good pictures, all the better.
10
﹂ ㌣ - - - ⋮ - - - ヂ
Well to visit Mr・ Kuhn,s relatives in Zurich, and spend a
don Yearly Meetmg Of thこSociety of Friends in Edin-
関脇A鼻妻翻紺離
WE SALUTE
NICHOLAS E・ APALAKIS1 0r’aS he prefers to be
Student House of Representatives and a member of the
known, Nick・ This salute is no=endered Nick because- he
Rifle Team.
has recently comered the stock market, Written a best
Graduatmg from the College of Business Administration
Seller, Or broken the wor工d,s record for flagpole sitting・ It
in 1932’Nick went to work as a reporter for the Stoneham
is glVen be-CauSe Nick is one of the most untiring, enthu・
Press・ From there he wen=o the New England Telephone
Siastic members of the Alumni body・
and Telegraph Company, and this, his 16th year of service
With the company’finds him a service manager.
The outstanding feature in Nick’s University activities
has be‘en his devotion to the footba11 team. All too clear
and bitter in his memory are the defeats, mOre bitter is the
attendance a=he games, gameS Where the members of the
footba11 squad outnumbered the spectators・ Ardor un-
dampened, Nick continued to attend the games, and the
PaSt footbaII season is a silent salute to his boosltmg Of the
football team.一
The Alumni Association is indebted to Nick for the
SPade wo正he has done in orgamZmg the Boston UniverSlty Club of Boston・ He is音SeCOnd vice-PreSident of the
club. Other Alumni activities include director of the
Varslty C量ub, the Board of Directors of the Alumni AssoCiation representmg the Co11ege of Business Administra一
tion, Chaiman of the Homecommg Day Committee; and
Vice-Chaiman of the Student Union Building drive・ All
this in addition to innumerable civic activities.
Durlng WorId War II he was a lieutenant in the Army
Air Corps.
If further conclusive evidence need be presented to
estab工ish Nick’s devotion to the University this detai賞
A native of Stoneham, N主ck was active in varslty SPOrtS
Should be the clincher. Several times, When the footba賞量
and school activities while attendillg Stoneham High
team played away from home, the- first person to greet
SchooI’PartlCIPatmg in footbaH and hockey, and a mem-
their eyes upon descending from train or bus was no=he
ber of the debating team・ In his senior year he was a
athletic director of the rival universlty, but-yOu gueSSed
class o鯖cer.
it-Nick.
This exce11ent cooperative schooI splrlt reaChed into his
CO賞量ege life when Nick revived varslty boxmg m Boston
●
Universlty・ A sport which had lain domant for eight
News of the various Boston Universlty Clubs throughout
years gamed recognition as an intramural sport in Nick’s
the nation wi11 appear regularly in Bosionあ. Be sure that
●
Junior year, and was accepted as a varslty SPOrt the fo量low-
your club secretary sends in all comlng e'VentS; P工CtureS,
lng year With Nick as manager. He was a member of the
too言f possible.
1l
J棚dge BαrrO耽れ加r加d王c珊r。besのきBo$‡0れM事`調香cわα夢Co肋・‡ L記rαrγ.
Judge Jennie Loitman Barron
After perusing the Alumni O鯖ce即es on Judge Jennie
Contrary to American custom, London Juvenile British
Loitman Barron, We fully expected to meet a woman
judges are not required to be lawyers, Justice Henriques
geared to an atomic energy machine. But she wasn,t. She
being the head of a famous settlement housel, and Lady
WaS, however, geared to a human heしart and mind that hive
CoIville, a lady-in-Waiting to Queen Mother Mary.
WOrked for mankind since she五rst sltePPed into public
SIowly they worked south on the continent. Judge Bar-
賞ife upon her admittince to the Massachuset七s Bar in 1914.
ron told of the many women lawyers in France and how
We五rst met Judge Barron early in October for an in-
Strange it was to see practicing attomeys wearmg black
terview leading to this story. She apoIogized profuse工y
robes before the bench, SOmething that is wom only by
that she could glVe uS Only甜teen minutes that day since
judges in the United States. They observed the great
an unforeseen Iegal matter had sprung up. Would we
COme back another day? We would and did and spent a
years of occupation by the Gemans and civil war have
bene丘cial two hours with her.
reduced the populace to extremes in poverty. Judge Bar-
POVerty in Italy and Greece, Particularly in Greece where
ron reported tha=he Italians seem to be sIowly recovermg
Her appearance is amazmgly decelVmg・ About five feet
from the effects of the war.
tall, Judge Barron has been on the bench of Boston Mu_
It was in Israel that the Barrons spent most of their time
nlCIPal Court since December 1937, the first and only full-
and where, aCCOrding to Judge Barron∴`one of the greatest
time woman judge in Massachusetts. To list her civic and
miracles in modem times is taking place.
PhilanthropIC aCtivities would leave no space for the rest
“In Israel,” said Judge Barron言`there is real de-
Of this story・ Be it enough to say that she was graduated
from the C〃011ege of Liberal Årts in 1911, Went On tO th。
mocracy and brotherhood. There is an excellent reason
SchooI of Law to receive her LL.B. and LL・M. Followmg
for this; they are practical idealists・ Israel was fought
her admission to the Massachusetts Bar, Judge Barron was
for and founded so that Jews a11 over the world might
admitted to practice before the United States Federal Dis-
have a homeland, SO that another 6,000,000 Jews would
trict CIOurt and the United States Supreme Court. She is
not be forced into the Dachaus and ’Buchenwalds of the
Credited with more “firsts” than a Maγ輝鵬「 descendant.
PaSt decade・ Desplte their fervor to establish their home-
Three smgle spaced, tyPeWritten sheets list her accom一
1and, the Israelis have not forgotten the minorities in their
midst・ It is not uncommon to see Abyssinians, Yemenites,
Plishments.
Arabs and Christians line up at the out-Patient department
The year 1949 has seen Judge Barron and her husband,
Of a Jewish hospital.”
Samuel Barron, Jr., a graduate of Harvard Law School,
Materially and spiritually the Jews have rejuvenated
Visit 19 forelgn COuntries, Which inc賞uded most of the
the Near East・ Spiritua量ly they have brough=he word,
Caribbean and Central American Republics and most of
“Shalom,” which means peace, tO the people in Je・ruSalem.
Wes七em Europe. The trip through Southem American
Peace means a great deal to people who have been per-
WaterS taken during our winter months saw the two Bos-
SeCuted for centuries, Whose chants reveal the sorrow that
tonians greeted by judicia賞luminaries in every country,
has saddened their lives for centuries・ But regardless of
topped o鱒by a reception by the President of Panama.
their austerity diet, Which, aCCOrding to Judge Barron,
“makes the English diet seem like a seven-COurSe ban・
Last summer’s trlP WaS tO England, France, Switzer●
land, Ita量y, Spaln, Greece and Israel. It was a ten-Week
quet,,, they sti工案receive between 500 and l,000 refugees
trlP,皿ed with the drama of everyday life, drama that
each day. We asked if Israel would not have to limit this
ran from a reglmental dinner in the House of Lords in
VaSt influx of people, due to an economic saturation. Judge
London to witnessmg the extlnguishing of a forest fire
Barron answered us in this manner:
by young Israelis・
寝I met a man about forty years old on′ the docks one
Mr・ Barron insisted tha=he first side trlP in England
day・ He was doing longshoreman,s work・ Another ship-
WOuld be to Oxford・ He was entranced by the ancien七clty
load of refugees was landing. I acked言How are you
that is devoted to education and culture, and by the buiId・
golng tO feed them all?’He replied, `See my be萱t・, It was
mgS that lend so much to the Ieammg gamed within. The
in its last notch. He said simp案y’‘I can pu11 it tighter.’
Barrons found that everyone’from coal miner to nobility,
This, Judge Barron says, is the phi賞osophy that pervades
eats the auste正y diet・ Naturally they met a great many
all Israel, the philosophy of sacri宜ce and suffering for
PerSOnalities in the legal profession in England, amOng
Whom were Chief Justice of the Juvenile Court, Basil
the weH-being of a11.
Materia11y the Israe量is have progressed rapidly・ Since
●
HenrlqueS and Lady Co賞vi11e, also on the same bench.
● ●
80’000 refugees stiⅡ 1ive in tents, housmg lS number one
13
国王百の
因習
/〆〆
On the prlOrlty list of construction in Islrael. And after
We Remember :
the homes come the schooIs・ Each Israeli is very conscious
Of the role education wiエユplay ln this new nation・ Educa一
Frieda Eaton Roberts
tion, from the kindergarten level to the universlty level, is
●
StrOngly stressed・ In the past year oveir 600,000 books
Were SO量d. This is better than one book for each inhab"
As December wiエユbe the second anniversary of thel PaSS一
itant・ Already Israel has its lecture halls and opera per-
mg Of Frieda Eaton RobertsゥCLA,34, We Wish to think
formances. They speak with pride when they polnt Out
back and remember some of the events that spelled
the Chaim Weizmann Institute of Research, named for the
“Frieda.” Because to think of Frieda or be with Frieda
first president of Israel and one of the pIOneerS in the
meant a glVe and take of laughter・ We like to erase from
fight for a national homeland.
mind her last months of sickness and pam and remember
her with the happlneS'S and galety that were orlgmally
Infant morta賞ity has been reduced from the highest in
● ● ● ●
hers.
the world to the second lowes七rate in the world, SayS
Judge Barron, by the untiring work of American women
through Hadassah, an agenCy fomed by the late Henrietta
Szold (who received an honorary degree from Boston Uni-
VerSity), tO build hospitals in Jerusalem. Over 275,000
American women regularly contribute to this fine charity
and the results are shown in the above re`COrld. Ma賞aria is
under controI. The endemic diseases that a鮎c=hat part
Of the world are being conquered by rigid enforcement of
S七rict hyglenic standards.
When asked if this state of practical idea]ism would
CO撮tinue, Judge Barron answered with a五rm,寝Yes.” Her
● ●
reason: eXCeHent child trammg・ She told of a little desert
COmmumty She visited・ Through hard work the settlers
●
had irrlgated the surrounding land and had succeeded in
ralSlng a number of trees. A丘re started up m the midst
Of the trees one day・ The fire一五ghting与orce consisted
mostly of children・ They were trained for that specific
duty・ Each one in the communlty WOrked, for it was co一
OPeration and only that, that could make Israel sluCCeed.
She cited another elXamPle・ The same children had a
lovely swimmmg POOl in the village・ It was built entirely
by them’though it took seven years.
We walked towards the exit of the Iibrary of the Boston
Bom in 1911, the daughter of Mr・ and Mrs・ Ralph A・
MunlCIPal Court where our interestlng talk had taken
Eaton of Dedham, Massachusetts, Frieda entered Boston
Place・ As we shook hands’the Judge said one thing more:
毎I want to emphasize’
she said,雄one thing・ We in
Universlty m 1930. She was one of those energetic, neVer
● ●
tmng, COllelglately active girls who flash through their
America’Who have glVen time and money towards the ful・
COllege careers with a talking mtereSt in everything and an
帥ment of the Zionist movement, have glVen aS Ameri“
active interes-t in many things・ Durlng her college life she
CanS・ We gave as did the Irish when Ire工and was su錆er-
WaS Class president’PreSident of PanhellemC, PreSident of
mg, aS did the Italians durlng the post-War Period・ We
the YWCA’held o能ce in several Jother coHege clubs, WaS
love America and would not leave it・ But we recoghize
a member of various boards and cabinets, and an active
the plight of Jews throughou=he worId, Who have suf-
ヽふ,
member of Gamma Phi Beta sororlty・ AIways a girl in a
fered so much, eSPeCia11y since the days of Hit工er・ It is
the duty of every humane person to help Israel; the sole
hurry and with too much to do’Frieda co-uld usua工ly take
relfuge for the remnants of Jewry, Who have nowhere else
t主me out for one more thing, doing all cheerfully and with
to go. In doing so, We are also streng七henlng the only
After recelⅥng her A・B. degree in 1934, Freida took a
democracy m the entire Middle East.
teaching position in her home town, Which she heId unti1
Her handshake was fim, this mother of three, this
1939・ D皿ng those five years she bontinued her active life
kindly, brown-eyed woman, Who has done so m読h for all
in Dedham and ou七side・ She enJOyed travel and took
races and religions.
SeVeral trips to New York, tO Montreal, a COaSl=O COaSt
trlP Of our United States’a trlP tO England, Scotland
Contribute to your Al取mni Fund now.
and the Scandinavian countries.
14
In 1939 Frieda Eaton married Philip Roberts, Whom
I have the music
She had known since childhood・ C「hurch step pICtureS Of
for the entire schooI
the couple and their寝choir” appeared in a11 Boston news-
SyStem, Plus a 7th
PaPerS’for the wedding was unlque enOugh to catch public
grade English class.
inte音rest. Her entire class of sixth graders, gOWned in choir
The music includes
robes’gathered excitedly m the church to slng at their
a high school band
teacher’s wedd王ng・ This had been at Frieda,s special
and chorus, a Junior
lnVltat工On.
The new home of the Roberts was in the small New
high girIs’ chorus,
the grade s-Chool
Hampshire town of Campton, Where Frieda sti⊥l managed
to keep busy・ She organizeld a troop of Girl Scouts言ni-
music, and a music
tiated a dramatic circle’taught Sunday School再1ayed the
Club, qulte a bi七for
Vio量in for church services, WrOte a little on the sidel and
a schooI of 300, With
read as much as possible・ All this with time out for three
less than 70 in the
daughters in seve-n yearS … Cynthia Alice, Janet Elizabeth
high school incIuded.
and Phy量lis.
I was blessed with a
In the eu量ogy to come a few years later’an Orlglnal qulP
brand new music
Of hers seems to adequately sum up Frieda’s attitude
room, lined with
toward life a=his period:寝Because my hinds are- in dish"
Celotex, lighted with
Water, my mind needn’t be.
P巌すむE. Jeずα棚財,舶鵬,49.
fluorescent lamps, a
In February of 1947 began a series of il工spells for
linoleum floor, risers, StOrerOOmS, etC. It is now the best
Frieda - hospital visits声ests’OPerations - almost a year
Of intemittent pam・ However, until her death in Decem-
room in the whole school. Though I’ve been here but a
ber of that year’Frieda mar]aged to retain her character-
month, I enJOy the place’for there is plenty of outside
istic concem for others and her very五ne sense of humor.
actlⅤlty’gOOd huntmg and丘shing・ If a person doesn,t
●
Those who knew her and admired her in college were
mind rain, it,s a good place to be! !
Shocked to hear of her untimely death, and even after two
Sincerely,
years miss her and think of her often.
Philip E. Jerauld, Mus’49.
The influence of such a life as this does not end but
becomes a perpetual memoria案, insplrmg a量l who knew
and admired her; and through this insplration making us
●
aH stronger, better for havmg known her・
Commons Squared Away
Change is progress and the changes currently gomg mtO
Box 294
Petersburg, A工aska
e任ect a=he Universlty Commons mean progress towards
October 2, 1949
a larger and more comfortable seatlng CaPaClty ln the
Boston Universlty
establishment. ‘
Alumni Association
Leonard Taylor’Universlty SuPerintendent of Buildings
811 Boylston Street
and Grounds, rePOrtS that the new additions- Will me-an
Boston 16, MasISaChusetts
OVelr 20’000 square feet of room for students durmg the
day and banquets at night・ In the process of renovation,・
Dear Sir:
necessitated by the cIoisters to be constructed between the‘
I am a June graduate of the CoHege of Music, and would
College of Liberal Arts and the SchooI of TheoIogy, the‘
like to have the alumni magazine sent to the above address.
SOuthem el賞of the Commons’COVerlng 1600 square feet,’
This is my丘rst position, and I am the music supervisor
WaS knocked off. But additions to the Commons add up
for the Petersburg schoo工s・ Petersburg lS in southeastem
to 6124 square feet・ The new southwest comer dining
A工aska, in the音Center Of the sa工mon and shrimp丘shing
room will serve as a students’dining room durlng the day
industry, and is Iocated on one of the many islands that
and as a prlVate dining room, aVailabIe for Universlty
make up this part of Alaska・ The cIimate is not what most
functions,ユn the evenlng・ It wiエl sea亡about 200. The
PeOP工e think of when Alaska is mentioned, for down here
faculty dining room wi11 be doubled in capaclty・ When
We have lots of rain言n fact, nearly every day, and in the
the last nail is nailed and the wet pamt SlgnS remOVed, the
Winter the. temperature seldom goes below zero. The
new Commons will be able tb accommodate all the students
“rugged” winters of Alaska shou賞d be associated with the
and faculty, With four prlVate rOOmS aVailable for}
interior, Which is several hundred miles north of here.
banquets.
15
Alumni In Review
aware. But Alex MacDonald was a graduate of the class
BANGKOK EDITOR, by ALEXANDER MACDONALD.
of 1929.
Published by the MacMillan Company. $3・00.
He had graduated with a degree in Joumalism and for a
A=he conclusion of WorId War II, Alex MacDonald,
year or two worked on New England newspapers: the
B,29, found himself sitting m a Siamese palace named
BosioJt PQSちPau庇Cke青Posi and the Br訪gepしOri Posi・ He
Suan Kularb. It was one of those allegorical palaces that
had been promised a job on/the old Neu) yOrk World・
When the crash came, the World took a high dive out of a
many dream of but felW See・ It had a roof of brown and
green tile and the comers tumed up like Arabian slippers.
Of marble pi11ars it had scores and a genuine tlger rug
Greeley,s advice and went as far West as it was possible
that looked as寝though the animal had slipped and fallen
for a newspaperman to go and still make a living・ He
like that, limbs outspread, On the mirror-1ike surface (of
bought a steerage ticke=o the Hawaiian Islands’landing
the floor).
鉛細種掃-宴由で瑚ルル川iy冒寛へ
financial skysICraPer and so did Alex’s job・ He took Horace
on the island of Oahu, and devoted his first few months to
But even thes-e fantastic surroundings did not
●
being a night watchman and masterlng the intricacies of a
erase the words of the naval despatch he held in his hand・
He was to report to Washington for discharge from the
surfboard at Waikiki Beach. On the side, he wrote a gossIP
service. Åle一Ⅹ MacDonald’s memories of Washington were
column about Waikiki folk for the Siar-Bz41le高調. The suc-
not of the fondest. It had cost him $80.00 a month to rent
cess of the column forced him into a sta任job. Almost im-
a room over a restaurant in Georgetown. It had a mangy
meldiately he lef=o go on a seashell huntmg eXPedition・
Tha=ook a year, and upon his retum he stayed only long
gray rug and the couple that lived next door threw things
at one another at odd hours of the day and night. Besides,
e音nOugh to e-am Su鯖cient money for steerage passage to
Washington was full of young me・n looking for jobs and
Japan・ December 7, 194l, found him in Honolulu once
dissoIving into the anonymlty Of govemment service・ In
more. Five days later he was wearmg naVy blue’and was
Bangkok, he leased a palace tha七outshone a Hollywood set’
commissioned in 1942.
When Alex had raised the money for his dream he was
had a score of servants at his beck and call, a desk the size
of a plng-POng table and rich foods in which he reveled,
faced with the problem of presses・ There was an old
for %0.00 a month. Then there was the newspapeman’s
Japanese printing press tumed up by Chavala’Whose full
etemal dream, that of ownmg and publishing his own
name was Nai Chavala Sukumanchand. This Universlty
newspaper・ In the United States the proJeCt WOuld mean
of Wisconsin graduate was more valuable than Robinson
tens of thousands of dollars; in Siam his few thousands,
Crusoe一,s man Friday・ Alex describes the presses as毎strict-
saved from his pay as a Lieutenant-Commander in the
1y Rube Goldberg・
OSS, matChed or doubled by a few thousland by Siamese
motors that ran │hem had been stolen. The composmg
businessmenうWOuld launch the idea into the stream of
room was eveIn WOrSe. What type remained had to be
●
reality.
They needed extensive repalrS and the
melted down and recast. The rubber rollers on the presses
had to be replaced・ Problems mounted before one word
His cable to the Navy Personnel Department caus音ed
comment, but his reques=o be discharged in the Orient
had been plamed, nOt tO Say Prmted・
wds approved and the joyous day transpire'd in Manila,
The clty rOOm, COmPOS音mg rOOm and press room of the
PhilipplneS. The Navy Chief Petty O鯖cer’the Base Com一
Bangkok Pos轟(an independent paper) were established in
Sanuk Palace・ It was a palace equa11y impressive as Suan
papers a1=ooked at MacDonald suspICIOuSly・ All of
Kularb. To fix the presses, the all-knowmg Chavala se-
them, tO a man, Wanted to retum to the land of Thanksgiv-
cured the release from a detention camp of the Japanese
mg dinners, footba11 games’and coo工, CrlSP autumn days.
engmeer Who had operated them durlng the war・ He was
Alex MacDonald was not a neWCOmer StruCk by the sur-
the only man in Bangkok who could do the job・ It was
face beauty of Siam. Besideshis years as an operative in
arranged for him to stay in Siam instead of being repatri-
the OSS in Siam, he had worked on the Honolulu Sま-ar-
ated. The Japanese was happy・ His home town was Hiro-
BzJlle房n, hunted sea shells on the shores of the South
shima. So Kawasaki and his partner Akuzawa went to
Pacific Islands, tOOk a steerage trip to Japan and China,
work. Alex wen=o work formmga City room sta紐・ When
where he leamed to speak Japanese. He was aware of the
the Ba-ngkok Post came out on the street on August l’
B-29-1ike fomation of mosqultOeS, and the constant threat
1946, four months after Chavala found the presses, the
of cholera, dysentery, malaria, and dengue fever・ It was
sta任was composed of an ex-Forelgn LeglOmaire’Kar量
part of the daily life in Siam. The utter lack of system in
Melchers; a Falsta組an character of Siamese extraction
transportation or communications’the petty graft in every
named Prapon Angsukasikam, Who was fat’lazy and ex-
man, high or low; Of these things Alex MacDonald was
tremely capable in reporting po]itical news; Nai Thawi
16
竜一喜田骨壷S照標題-﹁
mandant and the Admiral who fina11y slgned the discharge
Maitrichit, Who preferred to be ca11ed Mr. Hicks, and
The analytic mind of the author is shown in the mamer
Daroon Varadhilok’a yOung lady who wanted to be the
in which he detaiIs a number of problems methodically
Brenda Starr of Bangkok. Pil賞ai Guptal and Yao Sunthi-
and loglCa11y・ His listmg Of answers to problems by
yoon completed the staff.
means of numbered paragraphs is most valuable. Un-
And so Alex MacDonald jumped into the slimy but
fortunate賞y’tO this revielWer, the smoothness of the wrltmg
-rapid movmg WaterS Of Siamese JOumalism, Which knew
is marred by frequent references to footnotes and by
no ethics excep=hose of e.xpediency・ It is a strange world
Parenthetical explanations. A certain amount of dramatic
Where solemn yellow-rObed Buddhist prleStS b工ess the
SuSPenSe is cleverly mtrOduced by reference to particular
PreSSeS before the pmterS gO tO WOrk’Where an elephant
PeOPle and their problems・ The author does not glVe a
COmmitted suicide because its trunk was defomed, and
quick and ready solution because such ready-made solu-
litt工e丘shes五gh=o a bloody end for no other reason than
tions are not possible. The device serves to hold the
t〇五ght.
reader,s attention so that he wi11 fo11ow’With growlng
Mr・ MacDonald reports that no one in Siam has ulcers
Curioslty’the variou♀ OutCOmeS’both satisfactory and un-
because of the national philosophy, found in many Eastem
Satisfactory, that are suggested. The objectivity of this
COuntries’that of寝mai ben rai,
inethod should encourage the reader who has a problem,
which means neve,r mind,
Or things will surely be better tomorrow. Mr. MacDonald
to think it through in altemative solutions applicable to
Should know’for he’s been managmg editor of the paper
his particular case.
for thiee years now and he hasn,t even the seed of one, and
It is apparen=hat the pub賞ication of the much pub-
that’for a managmg e'ditor’is a minor miracle・
1icized Kinsey report played its part in detemmmg Dr・
P. A. Po11ock.
Bertocci to write his book・ His discussion of shortcommgS
THE HUMAN V圏NTURE IN SEXうLOVE’
Of the report is most opportune at a period when many
AND MARRIAGE? by Peter A. Ber置occi
young people are perhaps us工ng misinterpretations of the
repor=o bo寒ster up their own impulsive adventure in sex
Dr・ Bertocci approaches a di臆cu量t subject matter with
behavior.
a most impressive sincerlty. It is eviden=ha=he author
The omission by Dr・ `Bertocci of any discussion of the
has pondered problems of love and mamage and as he
COnCePt Of鋤b窃肋alめn seems unfortunate to this reviewer.
himself states several times in the preface, the book is the
This matter of sublimation of sexual impu賞ses has been
OutCOme Of some strong personal convictions. The author
recognized of such importance tha=he National Research
addresses his wo正to `∴ ・ yOung PeOPle who want to
Council is contemplating some investlgations regarding
WO正out, aS far as possible’a reaSOned answer to their
Sublimation・ Incidental案y’Dr・ Be巾OCCi shares with many
questions and doubts. ‥,, but to this reviewer the book
Other writers the error of overemphasizing the emotional
WOuld seem more suitable for the use of parents who want
to aid their children in a sound viewpoln=OWard their
PrOblems of the male rather than the fema量e in our
SOCiety・ This- is due in par=o the use of the masculine
SeXual progression rather than for the use of the ado-
PrOnOun When both sexes are meant’but also’I suspect,
1escents themselves・ The style of the work is not such as
because the mores of our society mVOIve an emphasis upon
to attrac=he average adolescent reader nor is the vocabu-
the sexual role of the malel’Who is thought of as the ag・
lary a=he level of -the teens or early twenties. T“he vol“
gressor and initiator of sexual be-havior.
ume is -Obviously the product of discussiohs with young
To this writer, the greatest value of Dr. Bertocci’s book
PeOPle in the course of the writer’s teaching and coun-
is for the parent and educator. It can serⅤe them as a
Seling but I have the feeling, from my own e・ⅩPerience in
SOund basis for helping the young person to plan his own
this area’that most of the people with whom Dr. Bertocci
負Human Venture・
Here are some answers to questions
discussed the material are average and probably superior
in inte11igence. They are probably co11ege students’mem-
that are reasonable and important in terms of our cu量ture.
bers of church and young people’s groups and adult edu-
There is an invitation to think ou=he individual philos-
Cation classes - a Selected and especia11y serious minded
OPhy of life in long-range temS・ There is a happy em-
POPulation. Hence the material in雄The Human Ve-nture,,
Phasis upon inc量uding sex with a賞l of living, Or knowlng
SPrlngS from the intellectual approach and the work will
and experienclng lt aS a Part Of an integrated pattem of
be suitable for discussion groups, for the individual who
individua=iving rather than as a departmentalized seg-
is conscious工y trying to work out a phi量osophy of life, and
ment of behavior that has no beamg On the tota賞per-
for the reader capable inte11ectua11y of dealing with the
SOnality. This is a皿Otable approach to sex adjustment
VOCabulary and concepts of the text. It is unlikely that
and mamage PrOb工ems鵜tha=he reader wi11 be helped to
this book wi11 attract a broad section of the adolescent
develop a basic life philosophy which wiH give him con-
Public for whom it has been devised. Furthemore, this
tentment and happlneSS for himself; COn蘭ently under-
VOlume will not attract adolescents who have gotten into
take The Hu77弛れVeJ}轟ure, and pass on an even better
serious emotional di鯖culties because of its intellectualized
Philosophy to those dear to him.
LOWELL S. TROWBRIDGE.
treatment of the subject matter.
17
set. Before the season was over his name and fame had
been spread in nearly every sportlng SeCtion in the
COuntry・
Harry needed no press agen=o extol his talents. He
WrOte anOther chapter in the Agganis story everly time he
threw a pass・ He was a two-Way ball player in a day of
SPeCialists.
The publicity showered upon thel brilliant sophomore
POSSibly overshadowed the fact that Mr. Bu任Donelli had
qulte a ball club without him. Buff’s 1949 team was a
SuPer〃bly conditioned one, aS Witness the dearth of serious
mJuries durmg the campalgn・ It was brilliantly coached
and a hamonious unit. That such an organization could
be cre-ated within three short years that Donelli has been
in charge was truly amazmg, Particularly when it is conSidered that Boston Universlty OPerated within the poli一
鯵e重ねひe轟orれ0ち重心おお加§轟の§耽α枕SeCあれOf血e上9,000-
Cies of the National Co11eglate Code.
●
p晶s c事・O撮,d 拐のけ α耽ended 沈e 歴o$めれ U耽れeγS砂-Wes轟
V香rgわきα ga耽e.
By V工C STOUT
Bo-StOn University Sports Pubユicity Direetor
Sixty-tWO yearS is a long time to wait for the development of a nationa11y recognized football team, bu=hat’s
how long it has taken Boston Universlty tO aSSume a POSi一
tion of national importance in the plgSkin firmament・
Since 1887 when a group of students organized the first
Bos王on Universlty eleven, nO Terrier team has ever been
brack料ed with the nation,s leaders - until this fall of
1949.`
The Terrier campalgn Which drew to a cIose several
Weeks ago was a notable one from several s七andpomtS・
Not only had Boston’廿niversity reached a stage in its
football development where it need ask no quarter from
any co工lege team in the Iand, bu=he season also marked
the emerge音nCe Of the Terriers’first potential All-America
football player - Harry Agganis・
As this was being three一五ngered on the Corona, the All-
American selections had not been announced. And the
PrObability was that Agganis, Since he is only a sophOmOre, WOuld rate behind some more experienced col1ege players. But there was little doubt in anyone’s mind
but that Agganis would be genera11y acclaimed as one of
the greatest football players of his era before he graduates.
Cαp桝訪れA塙鯵oγ地肌eeおを九e Co晦α柁Cαp掘れαnd書九e
The youngster’s press raves were terrific from the ouト
九eαd referee aI出he卿re-gam○ ○OわめSS香重唱Cere耽Onγ.
18
The Terr王er successes on the gridiron, however, Were
not gamed without accompanylng PrOblems. Most notable
He工ler’s Ioss wi11 hurt, for the Revere senibr for two
●
One was that of scheduIing・ Boston Universlty WaS being
years has been one of the ranking tackles in the East.
●
glVen the deep freeze trelatment by many of the leading
Eastem colleges. Most coaches wanted no part of the upand-COmlng men of Donelli・ The ducking was evident in
Other sectors’tOO・ But the time is not far distant when the
Terriers will be matching blocks and tackles with the best
of them.
Knight a量so played a lot of football this past season.
Primiani should be one of the nation’s better tackles in
his senior year’While sophomores Czerapowicz, Miller
and Sitter丘gure to be exce工lent tack量es with a year of
VarSlty eXPerience behind them・ D,Errico’anOther C-ran-
StOn, R・ I・ boy’and Dobias of Greenfield, Mass., Wi量l
definitely be in the contention for startlng aSSlgnmentS・
● ●
GUARDS
Losses-Dave Barrett, AI StelWart, Lou Bear・
dell
Retuming--Lou Salvati’ Joe ParbagaHo,
John O’Neil, Pat Donahue
Freshmen-Conrad O’Connor, Gerald Keane
Loss of Barrett and Beardell will be felt, for
both of them have been outstanding the pas=hree
years・ The guard situation remains bright, however’for Salvati should have his greatest year and
SOPhomore BarbagaHo is a de丘nite comer. O,Con-
nor and Keane could both help ]mmenSely.
CENTER
Losses「Capt Art Boylel, Ed Sandall
Retuming--Jim Lyons’John O’Grady, Henry
Migliozzi
Freshmen-John Hurstak
Lyons wil=ike工y step mtO the spot vacated by
the capable Art Boyle’While O’Grady and Mig1iozzi wi工l provide capable replacements. Hur-
Co晦αめgame ; Hα桝α壷L耽鳥er §COO瞭0卵αC妨.
Stak’fomer Dorchester拙gh great,丘gures to be
right in the contention for a startlng aSSlgnment・
● ●
MeanwhiIe there was every reas'On tO believe that next
year,s team would be every bit as good as this year,s
eleven - PrObab工y better・ Analyzlng the pICture by posi一
tion, here’s the 1950 situation.
ENDS
Losses-Walt Anderson, BilI Crisa丘, George
Winkler
Retummg--George Sulima’Tom Lavery,
Tom Oates
Freshmen-John Hughes’Bob Capuano
Anderson and Crisa五wiH be sIOreIy missed.
They were two of the丘nest defensive wmgmen in
New England・ The end group, however, WiH be
at least on a par with the 1949 squad, With freshman Bob Capuano’205-POund Crans'tOn, R. I.
freshman, Slated for stardom.
TACKLES
Losses」rving HeHer, John Knight, Dick
Morrissey
Retum工ng-Hugo Primiani, Ed Czerapowicz,
Karl Mi工ler, Troy Sitter
Freshmen-Len D’Errico, Bob Dobias, Ed
Giovenatti
QUARTERBACKS
Losses-John Toner
Retummg-Harry Agganis, Bi工l Pavlikowski
Freshman-Pete Lasinskas
Garrity, member of the 1947 Olympic team, John Ke11ey,
The erudite Toner will be missed next season. He not
only was a capable quarterback’but he was a bulwark on
member of the A.H.A. team last season, and Jack Martin
defense and acknowledged to be one of the smartest play-
of Belmont, Dartmouth transfer.
ers on the 1949 eleven・ Agganis, aS a Junior’Should be
BASKETBALL - The hoop prospects are none too
little short of terrific and Billy Pavlikowcki should have a
bright. Coach Vin Cronin, aPPOinted last summer, in-
banner senior year・ Lasinskas’a Norwood, Mass・, fresh・
herits the same group of men who compiled an unimpres・
man, Will glVe the Terriers another capable passer and
sive record of six wins in eighteen starts a year ago・ Thus
PrObably their best punter.
judgment on the capable Cronin (he’s the fellow who
tumed ou=hose champIOnShip teams year after year at
HALFBACKS
Somervi=e High School) should be withheld at least a
Losses-Carl Raparelli, Pete Samo
Retummg-Bob Whelan, George Luker, Charles
Hanson, George Faulkner, Don Wallace
year・ He has assembled this fall one of the mos=alented
freshman groups in the history of the UniverlSlty・
Retuming lettemen are ClaPtain Joe Sheehan, Dick
Freshmen-Titus PIomeritus, George Schultz, Nils
Lynch, Ken Rickson, Anibal Oliver, Ed James and Charles
Strom
Donelli will probably have more talented halfbacks at
Luce. Cronin has canvassed the college this fall in an
his disposal than any coach in the East・ The holdovers
effort to uncover several new additions and it is likely
from the 1949 team will have plenty of help from the
several men will bob up before the season is under way・
freshman group. And we,11 predic=hat little Titus
He also plans to fom an intramural basketbal1 1eague in
PIomeritus, the Lowell freshman, Wi11 be the people’s
the hope of discovermg neW talent・
choice.
TRACK - The capable Doug Raymond is elated over
FULLBACKS
the spiked shoe prospects′and feels that the Terriers wi11
Losses-None
definitely make their presence fel=his winter. With Dud
Retuming-Charley Kent, John Kastan, Joe Czar重
O’Leary, a 48・1 quarter-miler’tOPPmg the list of run・
nota, Joe Lamana
ners, Raymond is also Iooking for grea=hings from Cort
Freshmen-Sam Pino, Bob Bru綿e
Elis and Tom Heise, dashmen; Dick Fitzgerald, Bob
Kent and Kastan rated highly durmg the 1949 season
Foley, AI Roberts, Johmy Phillips and Nick Drascovich
and should be even more capable next fall・ They,11 both
in the middle and distance runs; Tabor Bolden and Bill
be glVen Plenty of competition by the 190-POund fresh・
Gardiner, likely mile relav men; and hurdlers Dick Pal"
man pino, Who is one of the hardest-driving fu工lbacks
mieri and Art Braithwaite.
ever to report at Nickerson Field・
Ted Flanagan, former Andover Academy weight coach’
In analysIS, the 1950 eleven has tremendous possibili-
is assistmg Raymond this臆year and he already has a num-
●
ties. With a number of talented freshmen commg uP,
ber of men shattermg eXIStmg Boston Universlty reCOrds.
there’11 be s○○me battles for regular asslgnmentS - JuSt
Outstanding in the weights have been Irving Black, Jimmy
the thing that Bu任wi= need to keep his upperclassmen
Lang and Wayne Evans・ In the pole vaul=here are two
hustling・
potentia1 14-footers, Jerry Loring and Jose Barbosa’
The outlook is fairly bright in the other fields of Bos-
●
Olymplan from Puerto Rico・
●
[on Universlty athletic endeavor this
winter.
HOCKEY- For three years the Ter・
riers have been denied the invitation to
the National Collegiates. This could be
the year・ Coach Harry Cleverly has 14
lettemen retumlng from last year,s
squad which won 15 out of 22 starts. The
freshmen will contribute a number of
outstanding hockey players.
Veteran goalies are Captain Ike Bevin,
Dick Bradley and Larry Beecher・ Re-
tummg defensemen include Walter Anderson, Bill Jurglevich, Joe Czamota and
Bob DupulS. Forwards are Ed Cahoon,
IrⅤing Haynes, Dana Hixon,Mike Caslali,
LIoyd Robinson, Bob Bell and Carl
Wennberg.
Notable additions wi11 include Jack
George W訪朗er, §書e耽rずerr王-eγ eれdl be訪g助虎蘭γ 〇九の§〇億もγれe Wes‡ V香rg揖α
書eα耽. F諒の夢§COre; BosめれU耽れers勘52"Wes書V言rg訪さα 20・
20
・{議鋭膿開閉剃鯉縄関鯛
1897
In Christ Church, Cambridge, Miss Jean
Frances Becker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
C.L.A.
Karl Franz Becker of Cambridge, became
CLASS REPORT
the recent bride of Mr. CHARLES NOR_
MAN FAY, Of West Newton, SOn Of Mrs.
The Class of ’97 held its 52nd reunion on
Alumni
Day,
June 4th,
by
meeting
Charles Edward Fay and the late Mr. Fay
for
of Brookline. The former Miss Becker at.
luncheon a鴨the Co11ege Club.
The president, Mrs. Edward B. Clarke,
tended the University of Virginia, Charlottesvi11e, Virginia. Upon retum from a
PreSided, and_ Called on each member to
bring us up to date on the news. For the
most part it consisted of doing the _Same
things we had always done these past years,
but Grace Pearson had made a trip to Texas,
and had_ Visited the Grand Canyon before
retum工ng tO the East.
Eleven cIass members and three guests
Were PreSent. Class members were: Mrs.
Edward B. Clarke, Mrs. Murray G. Day,
Mrs. Charles Chase, Esther Dodge, Emma
Ripley, Mr. J. Everett Pearson, Laua
G工over, Mrs. J. Wesson Phelps, Lilian Wil-
kins, Mrs. William C. Merrill, Mrs. A. A.
Holden.
We were glad to have as guests: Maude
Howe Phelps, daughter, Mrs. Edward Barry,
Dorcas Shelton, a fomer member, Who
graduated in ,98, and is a削iated with that
Class, and Lilian Wilkins, sister, Mrs. Wil・
kins.
We
⑪冊鵬如r加I庇タ徴t f〔章如,清輝
meet
again
next
year,
if
our
Plans are carried out.
VIOLA M. DAY,
Class Secγeiary.
1少07
Newton.
章的0鋒t拒〔面餌場珊00面章噌基調努雪
高唱脚高樋調タ棚もe f別間O鵬もク
g復関脇, t調t短調購for調0如∬f鵬
両側両地も8鯵釦車種脇f即もeクo巾tりc
章血it如f両肌tク.節f o調鯵章即時的場
1925
C.P.E.S.
The North ̄ Eastham Play School recently
OPened for its third year at the home of
Mrs. John B. Reed, Jr. (MARY ETHEL
TRAYNOR).
柵も血叩喜如磐もe脚叩棚卸to per雪
蹄e晦まo鵬Ed事JCa扇0れ
如鵬タ0冊冊e商oft飢復調邸噌
調oも言t調嶋陶蜜t巾もe復職如直I庇も
1igious Education a=he Old South Church
即調動O鴨もetterタ穣章O如同調eet山場
in Boston.
を面的輯r印面帥Iクe庇t允章的〔章同州タ
寄晦e触岬的r軸調的t復rγ章輝的.勧f
t昨夕も8 tO叩帥卸章寄調鵬的l血鮪筆録=
調関脇タit南棟如r融〔噸靴如Orむ
`t劫0両種もe復砂皿的0岬.‥.狼e雪
wi量l
trip to Europe the couple will reside in West
霊廟叫が庇如tt胸章肌的書o描e t恥t
Mrs. NORMAN ERB is/ director of Re.
1926
盤e祷香o関$ Ed榔Ca房0れ
The Reverend GEORGE W. WISEMAN
Of Lisbon, New Hampshire, WaS a Visiting
PreaCher at a preaching mission conducted
by the Fairhaven Memorial Church in Pittsburg, New Hampshire.
1927
伽Otりe鯵t夕鶴e o章地肌柵耽卿鮒剛鵬
C.B.A.
的同坤卿章OX血加c.
一勧卿一命かf地的郊璃班肌肌
C.L.A.
Mrs. HAROLD W. LEGRO of Salem re.
MORRIS BAKER, Who served as chairman of the Malden division of the 1947
Jewish Appeal, has been named a vice-Chair.
man of the Metropolitan division of the
Cently completed two years as president of
- - - - 1 ・ ○ ○ 書 く I
Appeal.
the Peabody Woman’s Club, Which she has
JULIAN J. BURNCE, Publicity director
for many years been cIosely associated with.
i 、 ・ ・ - - う - , 震 動 “ 悌
Of the Gilchrist Company, reCently ad・
1914
dressed the Arkwright Store Owners and
C.L.A.
Sales Promotion Managers at the Hotel
Dennis, Atlantic City, New Jersey. Mr.
A new member of the English department
Bumce’s subiect pertained to sales promo-
at Melrose H主gh School is Mrs. VEST R.
tion and policy plaming of the advertising
主
KEENEY of Winchester.
軸
budget.
i
l
i
i
i
-
1921
-
Ed棚Ca房0れ
,
i
l
i
i
i
C.B.A.
i
Miss GRETCHEN MAY KINGSLEY,
daughter of Mrs. Famy L. Kingsley and the
i
i
i
-
HAROLD T. HOUSTON of Andover is
(
i
treasurer of the Bo-1ta Co., in Lawrence.
late Frederick L. Kingsley, WaS reCently
married to George Edward Brock of Glen
Ridge, New York.
-
工924
C.B.A.
Re枕gわ榔$ Ed棚Ca房0れ
ARTHUR L. BROWN has become a
Miss MILDRED TOWLE of Waltham has
member of the law丘m Hale, Sanderson,
Bymes & Morton, 49 Federal Street, Boston.
arrived in Honolulu, Where she has resumed
21
her duties as secretary in the executive de・
I'artment Of the Intemational Institute
there.
1928
HENRY C. WATERS of Marblehead, regional representative of the New England
Region Rent ControI o鍋ce, is the new di-
rector of the Essex County area.
C.L.A.
Mr. HYMAN MENDEL KAUFMAN of
Malden has been appointed to the faculty
Of the Evening Division of Northeastem
University. Mr. Kaufman is teaching business administration.
1929
C.L.A.
Mrs. EDWARD D. MAY, JR., WaS reCent1y welcomed as a member of the Walton
Of constructive management aids for smalI
and medium-Sized banks, by NORMAN T.
SHEPHERD, COmPtrOller of the Haverhi11
National Bank, has just been published by
the Bankers Publishing Co., Cambridge.
The book was originally written as a thesis
ers’Co11ege in Kirksville, Missouri.
Sity, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
1931
C.L.A.
Presenting a personal philosophy in a
Vivid and inspiring manner, Dr. PETER A.
BERTOCCI, PrOfessor of philosophy at the
College of Liberal Arts, analyzed “The
Challenge of Love, for students at a recent
assembly held at Endicott Junior College,
Beverly. We11 known for his consultative
Connecticut.
1934
C.B.A.
JOHN HAROLD DUGAN and Mary Ida
PaStOr Of the First Congregational Church,
Wa皿am,
WaS
a
reCent
gueSt
PreaCher
Mon主ca, Califomia. Mr. Dugan is empIoyed
by the Northrup A王rcraft Co., Hawthome,
Califomia.
at
Ed榔Ca虎0れ
the Boylston Congregational Church in
Miss JESSIE GOULD of ContobcoIOk,
Jamaica Plain.
RIEL COX, a director of a school of retail-
Miss CLAIRE DUPLESSIS has been
made a member of the Meriden College
Club, Meriden, Comecticut.
ers Co11ege of Commerce in New Britain,
Foley were recently married in `Santa
Rd占gわ耽Ed事`Ca扇0れ
College Club of Brockton was Miss MU-
the Wind for Fall?,,
as associate professor of education at Teach-
the Schoo賞of Banking at Rutgers Univer-
A recent speaker for the members of the
ing in Boston. Her subject was “What’s in
as assistant superintendent of schooIs in
Wa皿am for two years, has assumed dutie,S
PreParatOry tO Shepherd’s graduation from
The Reverend HAROLD G. LELAND,
has been elected to the faculty of the Teach-
Ed榔Ca扇0れ
a book
STUART ERNEST DEAN, Who served
in the Brandeis University Tower Building.
Dr. AMY V. ALLEN of Denton, Texas,
field has been named executive director of
the West Springfield Neighborho-Od Ho「uSe.
E.C.C.
“Commercial Bank Management,
Co11ege Club, When they held their meeting
用d関Ca房0れ
C.P.E.S.
. Miss KATHERINE V. LONG of Spring・
1932
New Hampshire, is on the faculty of the
Concord schoo-1s, Concord, New Hampshire.
Ed棚Ca房0れ
Miss Gould is kindergarten teacher at the
Miss ANNE M. HARNEDY of Andover,
Principal of the Shawsheen and West Center
Conant School there.
1935
SChooIs, has been appointed one of the
Ed関Ca房0れ
judges in the prize essay contest sponsored
by the Community Chest, Ro‘tary Club, and
Kiwanis Club of Gieater Lawrence.
HARRY A. BEEBE, former assistant
Principal at North Quincy Junior High
School, has taken over the duties as prin・
Grad榔αきe
The Reverend J. OSBORNE CROWE of
Cipal of the Central Junior High School in
Quincy.
the Community Church, Pepperell, has ac-
Mrs. DORIS MARSTON of Cape Ned-
CePted a call to the Ancient First and South
dick, Maine, is conducting a class, “Writ-
CongregatioInal Church in Ipswich.
JOHN S. SHEPARD has entered the inSuranCe business at Franklin, New HampShire, Where he is conducting the Shepard
ing for Fun and Profit,’’in the Portsmouth
YWCA, Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
LEO TARUTZ of Brockton is principal
of the Brockton Hebrew School.
Insurance Agency as representative of
Travelers companies.
1936
Bertocci illustrated his talk of personal
1933
C.B.A.
Values, grOWth, love, and marriage with the
C.L.A.
WOrk with student seminar groups in the
fields of psychoIogy and philosophy, Dr.
actual experience of young people he has
met and counseled in his teaching and lecturing.
C.B.A.
Lieutenant LOUIS J. BALBONI, SuPPly
COrPS, USNR, Of Bridgewater has been
assigned to the Pacific Command Petroleum
o鯖ce as assistant to the PCPO. Prior to re-
POrtlng tO the Paci丘c組eet headquarters.
Lieutenant Balboni served as assistant
naval a耽ache at Rome, Italy, and on the
sta鮮of the commander in chief naval forces,
Eastem Atlantic and Mediterranean at London, England.
PICTURE ROCK RANCH
Snuggled among the saguaro, Cholla and
Palo verde in the foothills of the
Tucson Mountains.
GOOD FOOD, GOOD HORSES,
GOOD FUN
fo重the active
For the more leisurely inclined
Basking in the Sunshine, Picnic§ Or
Lieutenant CoIonel JOHN E. SMET of
Medford is presently se音rVing as coordinating
O鍋cer with the 313 Replacement Depot at
Fort Dix, New Jersey.
C.B.A.
CHARLES J. KAPPLER of Manchester,
Comecticut, has beeln aPPOinted assistant
PrOfessor in business management at Hillyer
Colユege in Hartford, Comecticut.
FORREST E. MASON, JR., Sales de-
At a candlelight ceremolny in the Dane
Congregational Church, Beverly, Miss
BETTY HERNDON, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. B. Waller Hemdo-n Of Beverly, became
the bride of Mr. ALLAN PHILIP BART.
LETT, SOn Of Mrs. Isabel Bart工ett, also of
Beverly. The coup賞e will reside in Beverly.
J. CLIFFORD GEER was recently named
teacher of chemistry and physics at Need・
ham High School. In addition to classroom
duties, Mr. Geer serves as supervisor to the
Student Council.
相関3c
Partmen鴨 SuPerVisor with Booma Breled,
Inc., Lym, has accepted the co-ChairmanShip of the EmpIoyee Division of the Greater
Lym Community Fund Campaign to secure
1950 funds for the 27 Red Feather Services.
Miss Dorothy M. Hixon of Melrose,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar W. Hixon
Of Lynnfield Center, became the recent
bride of JAMES F. SMALL of Malden.
Mrs. Sma11 was graduated from the State
Teachers’College a亡Bridgewater. She is a
teacher in the Peter Bulkely School, Con-
COrd. Mr. Small is empIoyed as an accountant by a Boston insurance company.
Miss MILDRED E. TAFT is a prolfe‘SSOr
ROBERT D. KING was recently selected
SuPerVisor of music in the Easton scho-OIs,
North Easton.
P.A.L.
Miss HELEN M. KELLY of Cambridge
has gone to Erie, Pemsylvania, tO teaCh a
COurSe in speebh and drama at Mersyhurst
Colユege there.
1937
C.L.A.
The Reverend JAMES P. CLEMENTS,
fomerly of Revere, and now of Tyler,
Texas, WaS elected Bishop Su餌agan of the
Quiet Rest.
Of accounting and mathematics in the
Episcopal Church in Minnesolta reCently. If
F雄ee乃棚番les I「o肋TαCSO"
SChool of secretarial science, Bryant-Strat-
he accepts the positio「n, he will be assistant
WIN SISSON ’24 CoRTÅRO, ARTZONÅ
ton Business School, Prov主dence, Rhode
to Right Reverend Stephen E. Keeler,
Island.
bishop of Minnesota.
22
Miss Beverly Dorley, daughter of Mrs.
Roy Dorley of Quincy, reCently mirried Dr.
NAIF L. SIMON, SOn Of Mrs. Eva Simon
also of Quincy. The fomer Miss Dorley
WaS graduated from Quincy Hospital School
Of Nursing, and has been a nurse anesthetist
Sity・ Mrs. Ladd at present is organist and
Choir director of the First Presbyterian
Church in Quincy.
1941
C.B.A.
JOHN SHERMAN MYERS, an aCCOunt
executive with Chambers & Wiswa11, a Bos-
at the hospital. Dr. Simon is director of
anesthesia at Quincy Hospital.
ton advertising agency, WaS a reCent gueSt
C.B.A.
PAUL B. CROWLEY of Lowe11 has been
SPeaker a=he Sharon Rotary Club.
WILLIAM J. SULLIVAN of Boston is an
appointed to the editorial sta鮮 of The
instructor in the department of business ad-
Lou)ell Szm and The Lou,ell Smdaγ S肌
ministration at Becker Junior College in
Mr・ and Mrs. Arthur J. Trinque of Ran-
Worcester.
doIph have announced the engagement
Hd棚Ca房on
Of their da早ghter, Miss Arlene Frances
FRANCIS J. ORSI of Columbus, Ohio,
Trinque, tO ARTHUR JAMES McGRATH,
SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. William J. McGrath
instructor at the Transportation O鯖cer
Of North RandoIph. A spring wedding is
School, Fort Eustis’Virginia, has been pro-
moted to the rank of Captain in the United
Planned.
States Army Transportatioln Corps.
Ed事ICa房0れ
Mr. THEODORE BENTTINEN is teach_
LAWRENCE FURBUSH of Freeport,
ing plane geometry, algebra, and general
Maine’folmer Principal of Freepo-rt Junior
mathematics in the junior high and high
High Schoo「l’has been appointed principaI
scho.oIs in Falmouth.
Of the Campus Scho-Ol at Gorham State
Teachers’Co11ege, Gorham, Maine.
相関$育c
舶rs.留. S. F訪s一書e訪(Gerαi陥れe B訪"
derl B,399糊肋も九er dα棚g見場rブE耽れ
Joαn, 2.
BERNARD E・ WILLIAMS is supervisor
Of music in the public schooIs of Laconia,
WaS reCently appointed as head of the skills
New Hampshire.
department at the Bay Path Secretarial
1938
C.L.A.
Dr. ANTHONY ARENT of Worcester
has opened an o能ce for the practice of
王ntemal medicine in the Park building there.
School in Longmeadow.
M鵬育c
Mr. and Mrs. MERRILL COOK of
Ho鮮man and EDWARD A. SUDENFIELD,
Ed棚Ca房0れ
PERRY S. S. JACKSON, Scout execu_
tive of the Berkshire Coun亡y Counc主l for
the past five years, reCen工ly resigned his
POSition to become chief Scout executive of
the Katahdin Area Council, With headquar-
ters in Bangor, Maine.
THOMAS A. WOOD of Hancock, New
珊mpshire, has been appointed principal of
the LincoIn School in Livingston, Montana.
1939
E.C.C.
University’department o-f Social Relations,
WOrking toward a doctorate in clinical psyChoIogy. At present Mr・ King is an in・
StruCtOr in psychoIogy and associate in
COunSeling
in
the
Perso皿nel
Bureau
at
birth of a daughter, Doma Marie.
shire.
1940
C.L.A.
JOSEPH R. WALKER of Everett recent重
1y passed the MassachuselttS State bar ex_
The marriage of Miss Francis Cohen,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Cohen of
Worcester, tO LOU工S SACKS, SOn Of Mr.
and Mrs. Benjamin Sacks of Revere, tOIOk
Place recently at the So-uthem House in
Broolkline. Mrs. Sacks is a graduate of
amlnat工O-nS.
C.B.A.
field of Lynn, Were reCently married in
Mattapan.
been studying for the past year at Harvard
Dartmouth Co11ege’Hanover, New Hamp・
Miss ANNA HOFFMAN, Of Peabo」dy,
SOn Of Mrs. Ester and the late Jacob Suden.
human re賞ations at General College, has
Danielson, Comecticut, have amounced the
E.C.C.
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Abram
Gγad関脇e
FRANCIS W. KING, former instructor in
SimmolnS College and Simmons SchooI of
St. John’s Church, Clinton, WaS the scene
Social Work. The couple wil=ive in Re-
for a recent wedding, When JOSEPH L.
Vere, Where Mr・ Sacks is) On the teaching
JUDGE, JR., SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. J. Law.
sta紐of the Ga獲甫e工d School.
rence Judge of Worcester, tOIOk for his
bride Miss Josephine I. Freel, daughter of
Patrick J. Freel and the late Mrs. Mary
Freel of Clinton.
相関$育c
GERARD T. AMIRIAN has left General
College, Where he was instructolr in social
SCience during the past year, and has now
S工DNEY KAPLAN, folrmerly of New
York City, has been named instructor in
English at the University of Massachusetts
主n Amhers[.
Ed霊青Caまき0n
MILDRED E. TAFT, See CBA ,33.
In St. Paul’s cathedral, Miss HENRI-
亡aken up the duties of his new appointment
to、 the administrative poISitio-n Of Secretary
Of Admissions for the College of BusinesIS
Administration and the Evening College of
Commerce.
SARKIS KURKJIAN, SuPe音rVisor of
music in Bridgewater for the past five years,
DANIEL DECOURCY of Lawrence is
ETTA TOWNSEND, daughter of Mr. and
has been named to a similar position in the
teaching social science at the Murd。Ck
Mrs. Emest Townsend of Manchester, beCame the bride of the Rever.end W. Ashley
Haverhill schooIs.
High School in Winchendon.
RAYMOND E. JENKINS of Foxboro
N関rS肌g
Hawley of Marlboro・ Dr・ Hawley, Who has
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. McCook of Marl-
has been appointed head of the bus主ness
degrees from Yale’Co'1umbia, and Colgate-
administratioin department of A]1iance Col-
boro have amounced the engagement of
universities, d主d graduate work at Harvard,
1ege in Cambridge Springs, Pennsylvania.
thelir daughter, E工LEEN R. McCOOK, RN,
Rochester, and Temple Universities・ They
to Raymond A. White, SOln Of the late Mr.
and Mrs. John T. White of Dorchester.
Ed霊dCa房0れ
JAMES CAPORICCIO of Forest Lake,
I量linolis, is a teacher a=he Wal賞kegan High
Will make their home at Holys Trini亡y Rec-
tory in MarlboIrO.
Miss McCo-Ok is the director o-f nurs,eS at
相関$育c
the Framingham Union Hospital. Mr. White
In Fuller Chapel of the Second Church
is the New England representative for the
Miss BARBARA HILL of Reading has
in Newton, West New亡on, Miss HAZEL
been remedial teacher for eight years in the
BLEAKNEY, daughter of Mrs. Robert L.
Stadium Manufactumg Company of Baltimore, Maryland.
School, Waukegan, IⅡinois.
Public schooIs in Needham.
Gγad榔aめ
Miss MARGARET DICK of Springfie]d
BIeakney of Ne「edham and the late Mr.
Bleakney, became the recent bride of Mr.
Nathaniel Hunter Ladd of Boston. Mr.
Ladd was graduated from Harvard Unive、r-
23
P.A.L.
Miss MARGARET ELEANOR ALKINS,
daughtelr Of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Alkins
Of Skowhegan, Maine, became the recent
bride of William Joseph Newill, SOn Of Mr.
Dolan studied a亡Su鮮olk University. Upon
1945
and Mrs. Edward Newill of Indianapolis,
retum from a正p to Canada, the couple
Indiana.
wi11 make their home in Winchester.
C.L.A.
SocjaさWor鳥
WARREN K. BRAUCHER of Worcester
has been appoin工ed case supervisor for the
Worcester Children,s Friend Society.
ton has taken a position as instructor of{
ALLAN PHIL工P BARTLETT, See Ed ’36.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Wrelm O-f Quincy
have recently amounced the engagement of
1942
their daughter, Miss IRMA JANE WRENN,
to Mr. JOHN PATRICK COWAN, SOn Of
C.B.A.
雄The Tax Collector and Yolu,
Miss MEREDITH L. ARNOLD of Brockか
Ed棚Ca訪0れ
was the
subject olf JOSEPH D. KALICKA, Holyoke acco音untant, at a reCent meeting o.f the
Lions club in the Roger Smith hotel in
Holyoke.
E.C.C.
ALBERT G. SWEETSER has been ap-
the la鴨e Mr. and Mrs. Miller Cowan of Con-
Thomaston High School in Thomaston,
Winchester have announced the engagement
of theiir daughter, Miss PHYLLIS EVANS
DANA O. WEBBER oしf Dighton has bee・n
named new superintendent of schooIs of
HuntlngtOn.
the scene for the recent wedding of Miss
HELENE STROUT, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Elmer Stro)ut Of Co-nCOrd, and
HELEN MAR工E SHRIBMAN, tO Dr. Clyde
Becker Junior College in Worcester.
E.C.C.
Recently married were LESHE GLADYS
Edward Curran, SO音n Of Mrs. Mildred Cur-
FINN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albe`rt
ran of Sacramento, Califomia. Dr. Curran
Fim of Winthrop, and Frank Goldman, SOn
Mrs. Frances Shribman of Salem has announced the engagement of her daughter,
graduated from Sacramento College, San
Franciscoi State College and Leland Stam・
ford Unive'rSity, and is now a professor at
1iam Forman Dunbar and the late Mr.
Dunbar of New York City. Mr. Dunbar is
a graduate of Bowdoin College, Brunswick,
and
New
York
Universi亡y.
The
Ed関ca房0れ
Soc香a夢防or鳥
Miss DOROTHY WILSON, CaSe WOrker
with the Springfield Child Guidance Center,
was a recent guest speaker at the third an・
皿al Conference on Marriage and the Fam-
where Mr. Dunbar is on the faculty of
ily in Northampton. Miss Wilson’s subject
Trinity-Pawling School.
was αIntegrating the Child into a Happy
Family Life.”
C.L.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Ohligschager of
LaSaIle, IⅡinois, have amounced the en-
gagement of their daughter, Lymis, tO
ROBERT T. JAMES, S-On Of Mrs. Geo葛rge
H. James of Newport, Rhode Island. Miss
Ohligschlager is a graduate of the WesIey
Married recently a=he U. S. Naval Hos-
Hemessey
of
Lym,
and
Mrs. Be’njamin Hershberg of Brookline.
1ege. A January wedding is plamed.
E.C.C.
In the Cathedral of Holy CroISS, Bosto′n,
Miss Kathryn I. N. Dolan, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas J. Dolan of Forest Hills,
became the bride of EDWARD G. MA-
CLA ,44.
XENOPHON D. MICHOPOULOS of
Ed棚Ca房0れ
be in the English department.
Miss White attended Hebrew Teachers’Col-
Grad榔aきe
XENOPHON D. MICHOPOULOS, See
Lowell has been appointeld direc七or of guidance in tbe public schooI system of Dan一
BERNARD HERSHBERG, SO-n Of Mr. and
department at Bradford Junior College in
Haverhill.
where the couple will make their home.
VerS.
daughter, Miss Beatrice Rose White, tO Mr.
has been named head of the home economics
Leonard is statio"ned in Washington, D. C.,
tion Co11ege in Worcester. His duties will
have amounced the engagement olf their
at that time members of the sta績 at the
Dana Hall SchooIs, Wellesley. Miss Conning is now head of the Co11ege of Music at
in the Navy Nurse Corps since 1944. Dr.
been appointed to the faculty of Assump-
Mr. and Mrs. Hymon White of Brighton
C′ONNING and Mrs. Marion Symonds, both
Dr.
toin. The bride, a registered nurse, has been
ROBERT FURLOTTE of Waltham has
Center was started by Miss KATHERINE
the University of Washington, Seattleタ
CagO, Illinois.
ED E. BALMFORTH, Lieutenant, U. S.
munity venture, eStablished in 1947. The
Washington.
Miss CLARA M. SISSON of Brookline
Memorial Hospital Schooll o-f Nursing, Chi・
Army, is on maneuvers in Japan with the
17th Infantry Regiment.
ning of the third seaso】n Of an unusual com-
1944
pital chapel in Chelsea, Where Miss Barbara Finn Hemessey, daughter of Mrs.
Elizabeしth
West Riding Music Center marks the begin-
C.L.A.
WALTER GOULD LEONARD, SOn Of Mrs.
Hattie Leo,nard and Walter Leonard of Nor-
C.B.A.
also emPIoyed by the First National Bank
of Boston. The couple reside in Lynn.
The recent opening of fall classes at the
COuPle wil1 1ive in Pawling, New York,
1943
of Mrs. Dora Goldman ofLym. Mr。 Goldman is attending Su任olk University and is
Su鮮olk University.
Wi11iam Weir Dunbar, SOn Of Mrs. Wil-
Maine,
Greenwich, Comecticut, is an instructor i恥
a耽ended the University of Hawaii, WaS
The First Parish Church, CoInCOrd, WaS
BERRY, tO Albert Franklin Webber, SOn
of Dr. and Mrs. M. Carroll Webber of Port1and, Maine.
Mrs. RUTH TOWERS SUND of Oldi
the department of secretarial science at
P.A.L.
Mr. and Mrs. RALPH A. STRETZ and
C.P.E.S.
Mr。 and Mrs. Phair Edmund Conrad of
Maine.
of Russell, Montgomery, Blandford, and
Univesity.
son, tO Mr. Louis A. Post, SOn Of Mr. and
C.B.A.
WOODROW MERICER is principal of
the School union for the comprising towns
tion as instructor in govemmen七at Miami
Canton have amounced the engagement of
their daughter, Miss R工TA JANICE JOHN-
Miss BARBARA HILL, See Ed’39.
pointed as instructor of eco-nOmics at Nor。
daughter, Margaret Am, fomerly of Keene,
New Hampshire, have moved to Oxford,
Ohio, Where Mr. Stretz has accepted a posi-
West Bridgewater.
Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Charles Johnson of
Mrs. AdoIph Post of Wes亡Roxbury.
nellsville, Pemsylvania.
wich University, Northfield, Vemont.
Ed棚Ca構0れ
French and Spanish at Howard Seminaryヶ
GWENDOLYN BOWERS of Methuen is
an instructor in the English de-Partment at
the Rhode Island SchooI of Design, Providence.
BERNARD J. DECOURCEY of Stratford,
Connecticut, has been named assistant pro-
fessor o.f education at Amold Co11ege in
Milford, Co-meCticut.
GEORGE L. TAYLOR, JR., Of Beverly,
and folr the pas=wo years coach at Milford
High School, has been named coach of
basketball and assistant coach of fooltball at
LOOF, SO↓n Of Mr. and Mrs. George Maloof,
Spaulding High School in Rochester, New
Jr., also of Forest Hills. The former Miss
Hampshire.
24
10鴛A嘉種n
きりI§TÅⅣT
P.A.L.
Paul James O’Comell, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Miss VエRGINIA LEE BEAUMONT,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Beaumont
department at Rhode Island State College.
Wi11iam H. O’Comell also of Taunto里Were
Miss CATHER工NE KELLY, daughter of
recently uni亡ed in marriage at St. Mary’s
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D. Kelユy of Bridge-
Of Arlington, reCently became engaged to
Church there. Mr. O’Connell is a graduate
POrt, Comecticut, has exchanged vows with
Philip H. Stockford of Wakefield, SOn Of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stockford of Island
Falls, Maine. Mr. Stockford is now com-
Of St. Anselm’s College in Manchester, New
John V. Zorzy, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Vasilios
Hampshire, and Boston Col丁ege. He is prin-
Zorzy also of Bridgeport. The eeremony
Cipal of the Oak Grove School in Wareham.
took place in the Holy Trinity Greek Ortho-
Pleting studies a=he Bentley School of AcCOunting and Finance, Boston.
1946
C.L.A.
ESTELLE HELEN BOUGESS, daughter
dox Church there. The former Miss Kelly
Of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Sheman of
is director of the Bridgepor亡Junior Red
Everett, WaS reCently married to Dr. Evere耽
Cross. Mr. Zorzy is now a s亡udent at the
Meyer Ho任man, Chelsea dentist, and son of
University of Bridgeport. ノ
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ho鮮man of Chelsea.
Mr. and Mrs. ARTHUR FENTIN of
Mrs. Ho鮮man is a past president of the
Newton Centre have announced the birth of
a daughter, Carolyn Ann.
Junior Auxi工iary to the Jewish Women’s
Miss Lucy Am Leonardi, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Salvatore Leonardi of Lynn, has
been united in marriage with JAMES ED-
Health Association・ Dr・ Ho鱒man is a grad-
WARD COPPOLA, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
uaもe of Tufts Dental School.
Joseph Coppola of Revere. The ceremony
took place in St. Joseph,s Church in Lym.
C.B.A.
ALVIN C. TAMKIN of Dorchester is
SerV工ng aS CO-Chairman of the Dorcheslter
District Division in the 1949 campaign of
the Combined Jewish Appeal of Greater
Boston.
E.C.C.
Miss D工ANA MARY ELLEN DEPRATTI,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John DePra比i of
The fomer Miss Leonardi is empIoyed by
Athol, has been united in marriage with
Station WCOP in Boston. Mr. Coppola is a
Bruce E. Hamlett, SOn Of Mr. Roger Ham-
1ett of West Royalston, in the Church of
PraCtlCmg attOmey in Revere.
The engagement of Janet Louise Lipp-
Our Lady Immacu賞ate in Athol. Mrs. Ham-
man, daughter of Mr・ and Mrs・ Irving O.
1ett was formerly secretary to the advertis-
Lippman of West End, New Jersey, tO
Mrs. Marion Tibbetts of Waterboro,
Maine, has amounced the engagement of
ing manager of the Salada Tea Company,
DAV工D ISRAEL MEISELMAN, SOn Of Mr.
Boston. Mr. Hamle耽is a senior at Brown
and Mrs. Samuel Meiselman of Boston, has
her daughter, Norma Jean Tibbetts, tO
University, majoring in IPeChanical engi-
HARRY GUY KENT, SOn Of Mrs. Martha
E. Kent of We11esley Hi11s.
been amounced by her parents・ Miss Lipp-
neering. The couple will reside in Provi-
man is a research assistant in the Plaming
dence, Rhode Island.
Division of the University of Chicago. Mr.
Meiselman is studying for his doctorate in
LEWIS WARD is Newman Alumni Club
Miss F「RANCES WILCOX of Fa11 River,
daughter of Mrs. Lucy F. Wilcox, WaS re-
PreSident of the New England Province of
the Newman Club Federation in BostOn.
Cently engaged to Robert Bosworth Percy,
Ed棚Ca房0れ
son of Mrs. Rober亡D. Pa亡terson of Provi_
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas- M. Casey of Wol1aston have amounc6d the engagement of
dence, Rhode Island. Mr. Percy is attending Yale University. Miss Wilcox is sec-
economics there.
C.B.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gunnard of Westboro
have announced the wedding of their daugh亡er, Miss Marilyn Harrington Johnson, tO
their daughter, Miss MARY AGNES CASEY, tO Mr. Daniel J. Sullivan, SOn Of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Denis Sullivan of Charles_
town. Mr. Sullivan is a graduate of Boston
retary to the director of the Brown UniVerSity News Bureau.
College, and is now attending Tufts Dental
College.
Announcement has been made of the As.
Bouve-Boston SchooI of Physical Education.
SOCia軍ion of ROGER B. CHAMPAGNE
Mr. Eager is associated wi亡h his father and
With Representative Peter B. Gay in tife
grandfather in G. F. Bond Co., Marlboro.
CHARLES M. CLARK is the new executive director of the Methuen You工h Center.
PRISCILLA L. HAYDEN of Somerville
has res工gned as case worker in the Somer-
ViIle Family Service Association to become
assistan=o the director of Information Ser_
Vice of the United Co抑munity Services of
Metropolitan Boston.
Mrs. MANUEL MARE of Newport,
Rhode Island, is teaching s亡enography and
typing at the Newport Business and Secretarial School there.
C.P.E.S.
Miss RUTH R. McCARTHY of West
Medford recently retumed to New York,
1947
C.L.A.
PraCtice of law at 5 Main Street, Taunton.
Firs亡Lieutenant LEWIS S. CLEMENT,
JR., Of Ipswich, has been assigned to Tyndall Air Force Base, Panama City, FIorida.
Miss ELIZABETH J. HOFFER, daughter of Mrs. A. L. Ho鮮er of Reading, WaS re"
Cently united in marriage with Francis J.
ROBERT HENRY EAGER, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry P. Eager of Marlboro. The
CeremOny WaS held in the Westboro Congregational Church. Mrs. Eager a耽ended
Mr・ and Mrs. Nat Gould of Brooklyn,
New York, have amounced the recent wedding of their daughter, Enid Valerie, tO
ALAN EDWARD KNIZNIK, SOn Of Mr.
and Mrs. Maurice Kniznik of Waltham.
The marriage took place a=he Park Sheraton Hotel, New York City.
Bansfield, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Redmond
Miss EVELYN RUTH KRAVIT, daugh-
Bans丘eld of Lym. The former Miss Ho鮮er
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kravit of Brook-
is a teacher of languages a=he Brookfield
1ine’reCently became engaged to Mr. ALVIN
High School. Mr. Bans丘eld, Who graduated
from Manhattan College in New York City,
is also a teacher in the high school in Brook一
JEROME CLARK, SOn Of Mrs. Russell
Clark and the late Mr. Clark of Boston.
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Webber of Providence, Rhode Island, have amounced the
台eld.
Where she is head of the physical education
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel P. Horgan of Dor-
department at Mount St・ Mary,s Academy
Chester have amounced the marriage of
on the Hudson River.
亡heir daughter, FIRANCES ROSELLEN
SOn Of Mr・ and Mrs. Jack Meiselman also
HORGAN, tO KENNETH J. BARNARD,
Of Providence. Miss Webber is a gradilate
son of Mr. and Mrs. Burton L. Bamard of
Of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
四囲圏
NORMA MARIE BLACKBURN, See
Mus ,39.
P.A.L.
Miss JULIE WHITE AHERN, daughter
Of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel F. Ahem of West
engagement of their daughter, Judith Leah
Webber, tO MICHAEL S・ MEISELMAN,
PIoyed in the administrative department of
Miss HELEN JANE MULLINEAUX,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Forrest
the Institute of Living, Hartford. Mr. Bar
Mullineaux of Waban, became theノrecent
nard has been a member of the English
bride of Mr. ROBERT JAMES HENRY,
Meriden, Comecticut. Mrs. Bamard is em・
Roxbury, became the recent bride of John
Francis Hesketh, Jr., SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
John Heske亡h of Revere. The wedding took
BL舶睦R観言Ⅲ巨P鍋田O蛸PA鞘
Place in St. Theresa’s Church in West Rox-
血U朗勝田取
bury. The couple will make their home in
West
Roxbury
upon
retum
from
a正p
through Maine and Canada.
Miss BERYL BORDEN, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Borden of Taunton, and
“Eγeγγ嘉hわg from SprαCe tO Mahogany,,
409鍋紺y St「由BO湘勘朋鵬§,
Telephone HAncock 6-9730
Branch Yard: Squantum St., Norfolk Downs
25
Telephones
KEnmore 6-2076
6-2077
†KEnmo千e
d読信砂と死,鵬γ J毒
``Flou,erS bγ Wire-Gz,ara卑eed ’he MeγCαrγ Waγ,・
240 Hun十ing十on Avenue Bos†on. Mas§.
SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. James Henry of Fitchburg. The couple will reside in Rochester,
New York.
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Donovan of Brook-
Houlton Chamber of Commerce, Houlton,
bom of Wa工tham, has been announced by
Maine. │ノ
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sheldon
Miss JANET CONTE is instructor in
Italian at the International Institute, Law-
1ine, have announced the engagement o)f
their daughter, Miss Mary Jane Donovan,
to Mr. PAUL POWER, JR., SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Power of Arlington. Miss Dono-
Miss CaroI P. Wilton, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry G. Wilton of Arlington be-
van is a graduate of Regis College in
Came the recent bride of JAMES H. KALOGEROPOULOS, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Weston.
Heracles Kalogeropoulos of Lowell. The
C.P.E.S.
The engagement of RHODA FERN
SIMONS to Irvin Berman, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Berman of Whitman, has been
Smart of Waltham.
Mr. and MI.S. Leslie Patterson Hinds of
West Medford recently amounced the marriage of their daughter, JEAN HINDS, tO
Emmett McKee Johnson, Jr., SOn Of Mr.
Emmett McKee Johnson of Wichita, Kan.
SaS. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson reside in Norman, Oklahoma, Where he is attending the
University of Oklahoma.
former Miss Wilton attended Burdett Business Co11ege. Mr. Kalogeropoulos is study-
JOHN J. LEARY, JR., Of Worcester has
ing for his doctorate at the University of
Chicago.
been appointed instructor in the business
administration department at St. Joseph’s
Miss PAULINE V. KNOTT of Beverly
announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph B. Simons of Swampscott. Miss
has been awarded a scholarship to cover
Simons is empIoyed at radio station WVOM
in Brookline. Mr. Beman is a graduate of
POSt-graduate study in medical social work
under a training program for which $400,000
Miss Grace G. Greene, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James F. Greene of Medford, WaS
ha§ thus far been granted by the National
recently married to LOUIS L. PELLE-
Lebanon Valley College and Oregon State
College. He is a chemical engineer with the
General Electric Company, Lynn.
E.C.C.
College in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The Reverend Allen Kuusisto of St.
GRINI, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pellegrini of Framingham. Mr. Pellegrini is em-
John’s Lutheran Church, Peabody, reCently
PIoyed as a public accountant in New York
Foundation for王nfantile Paralysis.
read the marriage service for his daughter,
City. The couple w主ll make their home in
Miss MIRIAM KUUSISTO, and Richard
New Jersey.
brated when Miss Lillian Francis Parillo,
Rhodes Wilton, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Stan-
daughter of Mr・ and Mrs. Alasandro Parillo
1ey N。 Wilton of Salem. Mrs. Wilton has
The recent wedding of Miss Ruth FitzGerald, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry K.
of Framingham, became the bride of AL-
been on the faculty of the Templeton
FRED V. CÅRDIFF, SOn Of Mrs. Anne T・
School in Baldwinsville for the past year.
FitzGerald of Quincy, and WARREN
RUGG, SOn Of Mrs. Mary Rugg of Rock-
Mr. Wilton is a graduate of Harvard Uni・
1and, tOOk place a亡Our Lady of Good Coun-
Achland,s first fa11 wedding was cele-
Cardi髄of Framingham Centre.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hirshberg of Worcester
versity. He is a direct lineal descendant of
sel Church in Rockland. The former Miss
have announced the engagement of their
Capt. Richard Glidden of the New Hamp・
FitzGerald is a graduate of the Massachu・
daughter, Miss HELEN HIRSHBERG, tO
shire coIonial forces and of Lieutenant
SettS SchooI of Art and is emp工oyed by the
Selwyn Z. Barron of Pittsburgh’Pemsyl-
James Locke, a Massachuse請s Minute Man
vania, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. David S. Barron
of Brookline. Mr. Barron is a graduate of
E. T. Slattery Co., Boston. Mr. Rugg i§ de.
Partment head of the Personal Book Shop,
Boston. The couple will be at home oln Bea-
daughter of Mr・ and Mrs・ George B・ Saun・
in the Revolutionary days.
BETTY L. LIEDER of Brookline, New
Hampshire, has been elected to the faculty
Of the Ashby schooIs.
RICHARD J. LYNCH of Saugus has
ders of West Newton, became the recent
been appointed principal and teacher of the
bride of Lawrence David Chap611e, SOn Of
Central School in Saugus.
is teaching English and history at the Hampshire Country School in Rindge, New
Hampshire.
Northeastem Univer§ity.
Miss MARY ADRIENNE SAUNDERS,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Chapelle also of West
ical education at the Carter School, Chelsea,
Bemard,s Church there. The former Miss
is head of the athletic group a=he YWHA
Saunders is assistant buyer at Grover Cro-
in Chelsea.
TON TELFORD GARDNER, Were reCently
married at ceremonies held in the Roslin・
Grαd関qめ
Miss Norberta Maziarski, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Maziarski of Fal]
GWENDOLYN BOWERS, See Ed’44.
River, and EDWARD ABISALA, SOn Of Mr.
1ingham, has been named prlnCipal of the
East Natick grade school.
E.C.C.
Miss Beverly Joan Anderson and CLIN.
C.B.A.
nih’s in Waltham, Where Mr. Chape11e is
A. JOSEPH DAMPLO, fomerly of Bel-
Mr. IRA SM工TH, fomerly of Brighton,
Miss RUTH MADOW, teaCher of phys-
Newton. The ceremony took place at St.
also empIoyed.
COn Hi11, uPOn retum from a trip to Provincetown and Ohio.
dale Unitarian Church in Roslindale. The
former Miss Anderson is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Hugo John Anderson of
and Mrs. Michael Abi一
Sala of Bridgewater,
were recently married
ARTHUR FENTIN, See CLA ’46.
in Holy Cross Church
BERNARD E. WILLIAMS, Se、e
in Bridgewater.
鵜’37.
舶鵬香c
Mr. and Mrs. George Shaw Fobes of Bel-
Mr. and Mrs. Saul
Hurvitz of Rochester,
。瑳
mont have announced the engagement of
New York, have an-
their daughter, SALLY JUNE FOBES, tO
nounced the Tengage-
John Livingston Lowell, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Earle Lowe11 of Stamford, Con-
ment of their daughter,
J‰ぁぁ%
Miss Bonnie June Hurvitz, tO SIDNEY B.
CUTLER, SOn Of Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Cutler
of Quincy. Miss Hurvitz
丁O YOU
necticut.
Mrs. Andrew P. Savche鱒of Northfield
has recently amounced the engagement oI
her daughter, GLORIA MARY SAVCHEFF, tO Mr. Eugene Gancarz.
Socさa夢Wor鳥
LAWRENCE GAUGHAN is working
with the Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children in Boston・
attended Russell Sage
College in Troy, New
York, and was graduated from the Fisher
School in Boston.
1948
The marriage of
DAISY FORTEN of
C.L.A.
Lexington, tO Newell C.
LOUIS P. ABRAMS of Northvi11e, New
York, has been appointed secretary of the
Dearbom, SOn Of Mr.
and Mrs. H. C. Dear26
UNI丁ED FARM岳RS DA冒RY BAR
」us丁ÅCROSS TH且R!V且R FROM THE N且W Bos丁PN UN量VERS〇十Y
CAMPUS. ONE B」OCK FROM Co丁丁AG日FARM BRIDG日, ADJA.
CEN丁TO THE STOP AND SHOP.
.‥幼e肱Ipん∽ゐ雌
● FOR REFRESHMENT ' FORしUNCH OR ▲ SN▲CK
●
AFT且R
THE
GAME
OR
DANCE '
pARKING
FOR
4OO
AuTOMO甘ILE3
U五番ted地肌e購サN高枕担呪d,血c・
●●丁HE BUSINES§ COOPER▲丁!ON BUl」丁●●
SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Emest Renaud of
a senior at the University of Masねchusetts
Southbridge・ The couple will make their
in Amherst.
home in Southbridge.
Grad榔aわ
HARRY BOTSFORD of Winthrop was
GERARD T. AM工RIAN, See
recently elected physical education director
躍’4」.
KENNETH BARNARD, Se'e CLA ,47.
The Granville Baptist Church was the
in the Milford schooIs, Milford, New Hampshire.
SCene for the recent wedding of Mis$ Cece1ia Hansen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
WALTER G. DROGUE of Swampscott,
teacher at Swampscott High School,, has
been promoted to first lieutenant in the Or-
Charles Hansen of Granville, and PHILIP
MARSHALL, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Marshall also of Granville. Mrs. Marshall,
ganized Reserve Corps of Massachusetts.
MAURICE F工LLER of Lowell was re-
a gradua亡e of the University of Massachu-
Cently appointed to the teaching sta鯖of the
SettS, has been empIoyed as an assistant
Williamstown High School, North Adams.
Chemist at the Strathmore Paper Co., in
EUGENE J. KELLY of New Haven, Con-
Woronoco. Mr. Marshall has recently been
nec亡icut, instructor in marketing and sales
appointed principal of the Granville Village
at Babson Insti亡ute, for the pas=wo years,
School.
has been appointed assistant professor of
Miss RUTH F. RICHARDS of Framing-
economics and business administration at
ham has been awarded a fellowship by the
Clark University, Worcester.
The engagement of ALICE MARIE
New York State Division of the American
Cancer Society for Public Health educa・
O’DONNELL, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.
tion, at the University of North Carolina,
Bemard O’Domell of Newton Centre, tO
Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
Recently married in St. Brendan,s
Dr. John Robert Pracher of Denver, CoIo-
rado, SOn Of Mrs. John Pracher of Monroe,
M溝e αnd Joe Pr訪cち$。耶Of舶r. αれd
舶rs. Pe柁r Pr訪c香(Doro書かF. Vわα一
就職0, P,4ヱ, 39c).
Wrentham, and Mr. Gardner is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Wright Gardner of
Mr. and Mrs. HARRY F. SMITH of
Manchester, Comecticut, are PrOud parents
Of their second child, a girl, Marianne
Brookline. The bride was graduated from
Louise. They have another daughter, Eliza-
the Massachusetts Memorial Hospitals
School of Nursing, and is employed in the
interior decorating fim of C. B. Swift and
Company of Boston. Mr. Gardner is asso-
year at the school. He is also the junior
VarSity football coach there.
Miss LILLIAN GOLDBERG of Boston
has recently married HOWARD AXELROD
also of Boston・ Upon retum from their trip
to Canada, the couple wil1 1ive in Boston.
C.P.E.S.
At the home of Dr. Swa鯖eld at East
Alton, New Hampshire, PRISCILLA JANE
JONES, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Jones, WaS married at a /double ring cere-
mony to Richard J. Puleo, SOn Of Mrs. Ama
Puleo of Norwood. The fomer Miss Jones
is a physiotherapist. a=he Quincy City HosPital. Mr. Puleo IS a Student at Lowe11
Technical School.
and Mrs. William E. Slattery of Dorchester,
Who became the bride of Francis Joseph
Ruane, SOn Of Mrs. Sarah E. Ruane of
Clinton.
BERNHART R. SNYDER of Baltimore,
beth Frances, age three years. Mr. Smith
is teaching business subjects at the ManChester High School, this being his second
Ciated with Crandall and Hicks Company
二n Boston.
Church, Dorchester, WaS Miss MARY
PAULINE SLATTERY, daughter of Mr.
Louisiana, and the late Dr. Pracher, has
been amounced by her parents.
Maryland, is continuing his studies for a
Ph.D. degree in mathematics at the Johns
Hopkins University. Mr. Snyder is also
teaching as junior instructor there.
Miss DORIS MAE WHEELOCK has re_
柑鵬きc
Cently become engaged to John Otis How-
Mrs. RITA BENTO, meZZO-SOPranO, WaS
ard, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John Howard of
a guest artist at the amual Harp Concert
South Easton. A spring wedding is plamed.
PreSented by the Custance Harp School in
Onset.
Geれera胃Co鵬ge
WILLIAM DEVEAU of Everett is in_
ANNA HOFFMAN, See ECC ,38.
Miss Prisci11a Holman, daughter of Mrs.
Ethel Cox Holman of Melrose, became the
StruCtOr in music at Salem High School.
Miss CYNTHIA BEVERLY FREEMAN,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Freeman
recent bride of DAVID CROCKER EL_
Of Brookline’reCently became engaged to
DR工DGE, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Harold L.
Mr. Julius Kaplan, SOn Of Mrs. Elah Kaplan
Eldridge of Wareham. Mrs. Eldridge is a
and the late Mr. Kaplan of Dorches亡er. Mr.
graduate of the New England Baptist HosPital Training School for Nurses, and has a
POSition at the Cooley Dickinson Hospital
Kaplan is a graduate of Northeastem UniVerSity, School of Business Administration.
in Northampton。 Mr・ Eldridge is a亡present
have amounced the marriage of their
Mr. and Mrs. J. Leo Carp of Brookline
Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Moore of Cleve1and, Ohio, have announced the engagement
Of their daughter, EVELYN ALICE
MOORE, tO Robert Clayton Richardson,
SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Encell C. Richardson
Of Shaker Heights, Ohio. Mr. Richardson
is a graduate of the University of Michigan,
Am Arbor. Both Miss Moore and Mr.
K8MBAL」, C漢LMAN & CO.
営N§URANC寡
Richardson are on the faculty of the Shaker
Heights Junior High Schoo工.
O寡 AL」 K漢NDS
Ed棚ca扇0れ
ANGELO ANNACONE of Medford has
87矯めリS加ee書
joined the faculty at Swampscott High
School・ He is in the mathematics depart-
ment there.
At the Universalist Church in Cranston,
STANLEY
O.
離ENRY
T.
Rhode Island, Miss RUTH ETHEL BAINTON, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W.
MacMULLEN
DROHAN
KENNETH
C.
BOSTON
Bainton/Of Cranston, WaS reCently united in
mamage With Stanford Warren Renaud,
27
W.
O’LEARY
ROBER甘FRASER
daughter Roberta, tO Mr. IⅤAN S. JACOBS,
J. Gi11igan of Malden, became the bride of
WORTH EDDY, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Jacobs of
C. Howard Smith Jr., SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
C. H. Smith of Medford. Mr. and Mrs.
Smith wi11 reside in Washington, D. C.,
Byron E. Eddy of Touisset, tO George Fen-
and Emerson College. The couple will
where Mr. Smith is a senior at Ca七holic
WaS graduated from Rhode Island State Col・
make their home in Brookline.
Un王versity.
lege, and the University of North Carolina.
Allston. Mrs. Jacobs attended the American
Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York,
ton Rice, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Lon V. Rice
Of Saunderstown, Rhode Island. Mr. Rice
The Reverend and Mrs. H. Leon Maso置
The engagement of their daughter, Miss
Dr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Meehan of Lowell
VetSky of Winthrop have announced the
MARY VIRGIN工A LAWLESS, tO John J.
have amounced the marriage of their
marriage of their daughter, JACQUELINE
ANETTE MASOVETSKY, tO Mr. JOSEPH
Cli鱒ord, Jr., has been amounced by Mr.
daughter, Carmen R. Meehan, tO EDWARD
and Mrs. Thomas E. Lawless of Dorchester.
J. SANDERS of Northampton, SOn Of the
Mr. Cli錆ord, SOn Of John J. Cli鮮ord of Bel-
late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Sanders of Dor-
GINDSBERG of New York City. The
COuPle are making their home in New York
mont, WaS graduated from the Massachu-
Chester. Mrs. Sanders, a PSyChiatric social
Ci章y.
Se耽S Institute of TechnoIogy, Cambridge.
worker at the Veterans Administration hos-
Miss ESTELLE MORRISON of Medford,
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Frank E.
Pital in Bedford, WaS graduated from Regis
College and Boston College SchooI of So-
Morrison of Wakefield, and Lee Donald
Cial Work. Mr. Sanders is a psychiatric so-
Burton, lieutenant juniQr grade, U.S. Navy
Air Corps, Of Johnsville, Pemsylvania, SOn
Cial worker at the Veterans Administration
hospital in Northampton.
of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Driver Burton of Salt
1 949
Lake City, Utah, have been uni亡ed in mar-
C.L.A.
rlage at a Candlelight service in the First
Miss Ethel Mae Hunt, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Hunt of Eastport, Maine,
Congregational Church chapel in Wakefield. Mrs. Burton is a graduate of the
Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital School
became the recent bride of ROBERT
HUTCHINSON BUKER, SOn Of Dr and
Of Nursing, Hanover, New Hampshire, and
Mrs. Richard S. Buker also of Eastport.
The ceremony took place a=he Washington
Mr. Burton attended the University of Utah.
He has been in the Navy Air Corps for
Street Baptist Church there.
SeVen yearS.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Dowd of Wey-
In a candlelight setting at Calvary Epis-
mouth have amounced the engagement of
COPal Church, Danvers, Miss LO工S TRUE
THURLOW, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
their daughter, Miss ELVA MALANEY
Henry P. Thurlow of Danvers, WaS united
in marriage with George Boone Schwarz,
Of East Braintree. Mr. Ryan is a graduate
DOWD, tO John E. Ryan, SOn Of John Ryan
Of Harvard University. He is empIoyed by
son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A. Schwarz of
Pra耽and Whitney, Hartford, Connecticut.
White Plains, New York. Prior to her mar・
riage, Mrs. Schwarz was supervisor of music
Miss LUCY HASTINGS of Shrewsbury
in the public schooIs of East Hartford, Con-
has been appointed to a new position of
necticut. Mr. Schwarz is a graduate of
mathematics teacher, Which has been created to broaden the curriculum iIl the
Wentworth Institute and is currently emPIoyed as a technician a=he General Electric plant, Schenectady, New York.
P.A.L.
舶r. Gerα弛Tor心org, Jr. (D0rお
MγeγS, P,44),読脇巌s加のC九αr柳訪g
dのす略かers, ]αne αれd CαrO胃.
In St. Anthony’s Church, Cohasset, Miss
Mr. and Mrs. Richard King Mercer of
JEAN F. ANDERSON, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph C. Anderson of Cohasset,
Brighton have amounced the engagement
became the bride of James F. Higgins, SOn
of Mr. an(上Mrs. Ch註les F. Higgins of
South Boston. Mr. Higgins graduated from
the Bentley SchooI of Accounting and is
empIoyed by a Boston insurance firm.
Miss PHYLLIS LOUISE D工CKEY,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hazen Dickey of
Milton and Marvin Frederick Behrens, SOn
Of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas F. Behrens of
Grand Rapids, Michigan, Were married reCently in the First Parish Church in Milton. Mrs. Behrens is empIoyed as secretary
to the television technical supervisor of Sta-
Of their daughter, BARBARA MAR工ON
MERCER, tO Hartwell Elmore Blan鴨on, SOn
of Mrs. Hartwell S. Blanton and the late
Mr. Blanton of Spartanburg, South Caro1ina. Mr. Blanton is a gradua亡e of Clemson
College, and the Massachusetts Ins由ute of
TechnoIogy.
DOROTHY EHZABETH MONARCH,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lesもer William
Monarch of Ma耽apan, became the recent
bride of ARTHUR ENN工S PARROW, SOn
of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Edward Parrow of
Milton, at S工. Angela’s Church in Ma亡もapan.
Orleans schooIs.
Mr. THOMAS CARSON JACKSON of
Roxbury is a member of the Princeton The・
OIogical Seminary in Princeton, New JerSey. He is a candidate for the ministry of
the Presbyterian Church in the U. S. A. and
has been ’under the care of The Presbytery
of Boston.
LIEBIE KABLER has been elected to
teach in the Roosevelt School, Revere.
Recently engaged were WILLE EDITH
LÅWRENCE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Ray Lawrence of Lawrence, and
Ralph Irving Johnson also of Lawrence.
Mr. Johnson was graduated from Calvin
Coolidge College in Boston. Recently Mr.
Johnson completed work on his brachelor
Of education degree a=he College of Puget
Sound in Tacoma, Washington, Where dur王ng that time he introduced a course in the
S.P.蹄.
tion WBZ in Boston. Mr. Behrens, Who is
a graduate of Wittenberg College, Spring-
DAVID W. GARDNER of Belmont has
field, Ohio, is a news analyst at Station
been appointed as the new editor for the
He is grand basileus of Tau Kappa Beta,
WBZ.
Belmont Heγald there.
national inter-raCial fratemity. The couple
At one of the recent fall weddings held
by candlelight in the Marke亡Street Bap-
tist Church, Amesbury, Miss RUTH ELIZABETH ELLIOTT, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Luther H. Elliott of Amesbury, became
Miss Maria Portia Athanasopoulos,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Athana-
SOPOulos of Wobum, and HARRY A. KO-
Of the University of New Hampshire, Where
they will continue their studies.
Mr. and Mrs. William Grant MacKenzie
Of Quincy, have amounced the engagement
Of their daughter, Miss JEAN MACKENZIE to F. Mansfield Young of Cambridge,
Of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary in
Wobum. The couple wi11 make their home
in Wobum.
tion, Malden, Miss RUTH ELEANOR GILI+IGAN, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
has been accep亡ed by the Graduate SchooI
NIARES, also of Wobum were recen亡ly
the bride of Henry G. Haynes, Jr., SOn Of
工n the Church of the Immaculate Concep_
“The Negro ih Uni亡ed States History.
united in marriage at the orthodox church
Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Haynes of Aubumdale.
Adul亡Education program of the college on
Soc舌a∂ Woγ虎
Christ Church, Swansea, WaS the scene
for the recen鴨marriage of Miss JANE BOS-
28
SOn Of George R. Young of Hartford, Connect工Cut.
C.B.A.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Donald Bowman of Mid_
d量ebury, Comecticut, have announced the
Cialized courses in federal and s亡ate taxa.
engagement of their daughter Nancy Clarke,
tion and sysもem building.
lock is a graduate of H主ckox Secretarial
School and Mr・ Pollock, a Chemical engi-
to Mr・ GARRY NUGENT BEAN, SOn Of
At the Church of the Assumption in
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edward Bean of Mel_
rose. Miss Bowman is a senior at Bouve_
NashuaうNew Hampshire, Miss Bessie Vasi-
Sity, SchooI of Engineering・ The couple is
1as, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nicho工as
residing in New York.
Boston SchooI of Physical Education, a削i-
Vasi工as of Nashua, WaS reCently united in
ated with Tufts College.
marriage wi工h EMANUEL A. SIFAKIS,
WILLIAM C. CALVERT of B。StOn has
VOlunteered to serve as associate director in
the current Red Feather campaign drive in
the Brighton district.
DAVID T. CONLIN of Springfield has
accepted a position with the genera工agency
Of the Monarch Life Insurance Co., there.
SOn Of Mr・ and Mrs・ Anthony Sifakis of
工n Our Lady of Assumption Church, Os-
recen亡ly left for a year,s study at the Uni-
recently united in marriage with EDWARD
VerSity of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Miss Joan Elizabeth Dome工Iy, daughter
Of Mr・ and Mrs. James P. Dome11y of Lex主ngton, WaS married recently in Sacred
Heart Church in Lexington to CHARLES
FRANCIS VAUGHAN, JR., Of Bos工on. The
Phi工adelphia, Pemsylvania.
former Miss Donnelly is a graduate of Colby
Cently took for his bride Mary V. McLaugh1in, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John McLaughlin of Cambridge. The ceremony was
performed in St. Peter,s Church in Cam-
bridge. Mrs. Hassett is empIoyed by the
telephone company, and Mr. Hasse七t is in
the United States Postal Service.
FRANCIS IHEINTZ of Beverly, in rela-
Junior College.
Miss Lucilユe Gendron, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. WiIfrid Gendron of Fall River, became the recent bride of JOHN J. WIT_
KOWSKI, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. John Wiト
kowski, aIso of Fa1工River, in St. Mathieu,s
Church there. Mrs. Witkowski is empIoyed
by the Frank X. Perron Insurance Agency.
Mr. Wi七kowski is also associated with the
Perron agency as an insurance broker.
terv土lle, Miss Dorothy Elizabeth Walsh was
JOSEPH BENNETT of Hyamis.
Second Lieutenant LESTER BERN_
STEIN’formerly of Malden, has assumed
duty as assistant athletic o鯖cer at the
Army Medical Center, Washington, D. C.
DEL ALBERGHINI of Somervi11e has
been appointed assistant physical director
Of the YMCA in Cambridge.
JOSEPH DZENOWAGIS of Bridgewater
has been appointed to teach and conduct a
Physical education program in the Middleton schooIs.
An out賀Of-tOWn Wedding took pIace re-
Cently in St・ Bemard,s Church, White
Plains’
New
York,
When
Miss
ELLEN
MARY GEACH, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wi賞liam Geach of White Plains, became the
C.P.E.S.
tion to his position as statistician of the
Un主ted States Labor Department in Boston,
Hd榔Ca訪0職
Miss ANN H. TOMOLONIS of Worcester
THURSTON H. GRADEN of Worcester
ROBERT A. HASSETT of Boston re_
ARTHUR ENNIS PARROW, See PAL
48.
Ayer.
is instructor of marketing at Temple UniVerSity SchooI of Business Administration in
JOSEPH GINDSBERG, See Mus ,48.
neer, is a graduate of Northeastem Univer-
Mr. and Mrs. Lester L. Andrews of Lex-
bride of Eugene Lawrence Blackwe11, SOn Of
Mr・ and Mrs. Hugh L. B工ackwe工l of Roslin-
recently started a tour of the capi亡als of the
ing亡on have amounced the engagement of
dale・ The fomer Miss Geach is teaching
New England States.
亡heir daugh工er, Miss DORIS ELIZABETH
主n Natick. Mr・ B工ackwell is a graduate of
Miss ARLENE V. HOLLISTER, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Ho11ister of
ANDREWS’tO Mr・ Mil亡on W. Bishop, Jr.,
Bos青on College.
SOn Of Mr・ and Mrs. Mil亡on W. Bishop of
Manchester, Comecticut, WaS reCently
united in marriage with GROVER MAX-
S亡oughton・ Mr・ Bishop was graduated from
Miss MARY-JEANETTE HURWITZ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel M.
Marionapolis Col]ege, Thompson, Connec-
Hurwitz of Cohasset, reCently became the
WELL DERRY, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Ches-
tlCut.
bride of Phi工ip Gerard Murray, S)On Of Mr.
ter Derry of Alユston・ The ceremony was
Miss V工RGINIA A. CROSSMAN of
and Mrs. Wil工iam M. Murray of Hull. Mr.
Performed in the Center Congregational
Brock亡on is physical education insもructor in
Murray is a graduate of the University of
Church in Manchester, Comecticut.
the junior and senior high schooIs in Fair_
South Dakota, Vemilion, South Dakota.
Miss Constance Wheeler, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Herman H. Whee工er of Newton
High賞ands, reCently became engaged to
DONALD THAYER JORDAN of Falm。u亡h.
The wedding of Miss Jane Maria Mar_
Shall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L.
Marshall of Whitinsville, and HENRY
CARPENTER LARRABEE, JR., SOn Of
Mr・ and Mrs. Henry C. Larrabee of Gor-
EDWARD KOSKELLA of Sharon has
fie賞d, Maine.
JEAN FEARNLEY of Fall River is the
new hockey coach for the girls at Foxboro
byterian Church in WhitinsvilIe. Mrs. Lar_
rabee is on the s工a紐of the New England
Deaconess Hospita量, Boston,. and Mr. Lar-
rabee is emp工oyed by the First Na工ional
Stores, Inc., in Portland, Maine.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Browne of Revere
Miss LAURA M・ HEINICKE of Holyoke
has begun her duties as instructor of physical educat主on a=he junior and senior high
SChooIs at Anacortes, Washing亡on.
Miss NATAL工E A. HOWARD of Brock_
DAHL’JR・, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Carl H.
Lindahl of Malden. Miss Browne studied
at Regis College and WinsIow Secretarial
School・ The wedding wi11 take p工ace in the
Miss E工eanor Ruth Grossman, daughter
ter, reCently became engaged to Mr. EUGENE L. NOTKIN, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Notkin of Roxbury. Miss Grossman is
a graduate of the Boston Medical School.
PETER A. SALOMONE of Maynard has
registered a=he Bentley SchooI of Account.
mg and Finance’Where he wiエl take spe-
High School in Belfast, Maine.
DOROTHY M. MAURIELLO has been
appointed to the faculty of the Henry Waitt
Junior High School, Revere.
Miss PHYLLIS ANNE SINGER, daughter of Mr・ and Mrs. Harry Singer of Chest.
CatlOn.
nut Hi11, has married Saul Hyman, SOn Of
Miss PATRICIA LEYDON of Newton
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hyman of Dorchester.
has been appointed physical education su・
PerVisor of girls a七H主ngham High School,
Hingham.
Miss IRMA MARDER has been apPOinted heal亡h educa亡or on the sta任of the
Norfolk County HeaIth Association, the
亡uberculosis organization in Quincy.
E.C.C.
In the Tabemade Congregational Church,
Sa工em, Miss Rachel Merilyn Whitney,
Of Mr・ and Mrs・ Jack Grossman of Dorches_
elected to teach social studies at the Crosby
Where she is an instructor of physical edu-
have announced the engagement of their
daughter, Lois Maureen, tO CARL H. LIN-
Sharon Playground for the past summer.
ROBERT LAING of Wollaston has been
High School.
ton recen工ly lef亡for Summit, New Jersey,
ham’Maine, tOOk p]ace in the United Pres-
been physical education director of the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emes亡CIaflin
Whi亡ney, WaS reCen亡ly married to Mr. WIL-
BUR MARSHALL DAVIS, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. A. Lawrence Davis of Beverly.
The recent marriage a=he Aperion Tem-
Geれerab Cの鵬ge
GROVER MAXWELL DERRY, See CBA
49.
Miss CORNELIA ERKELENS of Sharon
丁ecently completed a course in Flemish art
at the Netherland Institute of Higher Art,
Where she has been staying in the palace of
the count at The Hague.
A new member of the business depart・
Ihent at Nasson College, Portland, Maine, is
Miss MARIE A. R. LACHANGE of San_
ford, Maine’Who has been appointed in-
StruCtOr and conducts courses in advanced
transcrlPtion, 0鯖ce machines, aCCOunting,
business mathematics, and education.
Ple of Miss ROSE GRUMAN, tO Walter
Pollock, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham
Dr・ Kendig B. Cully, PaStOr Of the First
Po11ock of Dorchester, has been amounced
Congregational Church in Haverhi11, has re-
Miss HELEN M. LAURILA, aSSistan=o
by the bride’s parents, Mr・ and Mrs. Hy-
Signed to accept a post at Schau餌er Col・
man Gruman also of Dorchester. ,Mrs. Pol_
1ege, Cleveland, Ohio.
29
N榔r§事れg
相関S香c
Lasker quotes. The book is bublished by
the H. W. Wilson Company, New York.
It has been recently announced that the
Miss LOIS M. HARDEN of North Attle-
schooI committees of the towns of Province-
boro has accepted a posi亡ion as clinical
town, Truro, and Well組eet have selected
teaching supervisor in pediatrics at the
EGIDIO BISCEGLIA as music supervisor
General Hospital of Fresno County, Fresno,
yoke has been named a contact man for the
for the school year 1949-1950.
Califomia.
Boston Por青Authority on an appointment
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mace of Lym have
announced the marriage of their daughter,
Miss PHYLLIS M. BREAULT, tO Robert
M. Shaughnessy, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Michael J. Shaugnessy of Worcester. Mr.
Shaughnessy is supervisor of music in the
public schooIs of Putnam, Connecticut・
Miss MARY FROST of Green丘eld has
accepted a position as music supervisor in
the schooIs of Laconia, New Hampshire.
NORMAND A. GINGRAS of New Bedford recently sailed aboard the liner Amer-
Miss JOANNA K. KENNIS of Andover
is on the sta任of the Lawrence General HosPi七al as assistant science instructor.
Miss HARRIET MARJORIE ARCHER,
daughter of Mrs. Stephen C. Archer of
Fisher of Boston, SOn Of Mrs. Eva Fisher of
Templeton, in a double rmg CeremOny at
the Cathedral of the Pines, Rindge, New
Hampshire.
THURLOW D. CANNON of Avon has
tca, for a year of music study in Paris,
been appointed as assistant to George H・
Huban, director of publicat主ons and pub-
Plymouth, has been appointed to the sales
division of the Baldwin Piano Co., Boston.
Miss FRIEDA HACHBAUM, teaCher of
pianoforte, is on the faculty at the South
End Music School.
Recently appomted as supervisor of music
in the Orono public schooIs in Maine is
RICHARD H. HAGUE of Waltham. He
1icity at Middlebury College, Vemont.
EDWARD J. FAIVRE of Adams is in the
continuity department of station WMNB in
North Adams.
Arlington Advocate.
Miss MARY PACKWOOD of New Bed-
will supervise and direct the instrumental
lessons and the high school band and or-
where she is studying for her Master o壬
the schoo工s.
SHERMAN P. HALL of Fitchburg recently assumed his duties as instructor of
music and English at the Williams Memorial High School in Stockbridge・
EDWARD HANJIAN from Lym is new
music supervisor for the Bridgewater
1928
ARTHUR L. BROWN, See C.B.A.’24.
1930
FRANK W. BJORKLUND of Norway,
Maine, has been appointed to the post of
Fimish Honorary Vice-Consul of Finland
in Norway, Maine, With jurisdiction in the
states of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont.
1933
SETRAK MINAS of Medford is teacher
of commercia=aw at Medford High School
and instructor in economics in Northeastem
University.
PHILIP D. O’NEILL of Ar工ington has
been named advertising manager of the
ford has entered Columbia University
.Graduate SchooI of Joumalism, New York,
chestra, aS Well as the vocal music in all
jointly made by Judge James R. Nolen,
Chairman of the Authority, and Gov. Paul
A. Dever.
Baldwinville, became the bride of Francis
France.
LOUIS A. GIOVANETT工, fomerly of
1924
Attomey HOWARD W. SHEA of Hol-
1936
Active in comection with the Combined
Jewish Appeal is GEOIRGE J. ELBAUM of
Newton Highlands, Who is on the Speaker’s
Bureau this year.
1939
A耽omey BENEDICT F. F工TZGERALD,
Science degree.
Mrs. Charles Brown of Cambridge has
JR., Of Greenfield, has amounced the open-
announced the marriage of her daughter,
ing of his o錦ces for the practice o=aw at
Gertrude May, tO JAMES SHEPARD
278 Ma主n Street there.
WATT, SOn Of Mrs. George Wa耽also of
Cambridge. The former Miss Brown is empIoyed as membership secretary at the Cam-
bridge YMCA.
schooIs.
At a recent meeting of the Milton CoOperative Bank, the board of directors
elected DONALD M. JACKSON of Milton
as their attomey.
1941
Socこa夢Woγた
MARY HARTUNIAN of Allston has
THEMISTOCLES αTIM,, MANTALOS
Miss Hartunian has been appointed as as-
SUMNER N. GREENBERG has been
appointed director of aotivities a=he Jew-
of Brockton recently retumed home after
sistant on the University’s faculty, and is
ish Community Center in Brookline, an
law practice, his thirst for travel and ad-
opened a piano studio there. At present
working toward a MaSter of Music degree.
Miss HARRIET G. HAYES of Natick is
the new soprano soloist at the Wellesley
Congregational Church.
Miss AMEL工A E. KENDRICK of Wor-
cester has been named a/ muSic teacher in
a削iate of the Assoofated Jewish Philan-
thropies.
seven and a half years’absence to start his
venture quenched・ Tim retumed on the
USS Geしれeral Paicんon his丘rst visit to his
THELMA KARP of Malden has been
family since he was shipped overseas in
appointed to the sta紐of the Hartford Jew-
1942 with an amy engineers’battalion. He
iSh Community Center, Hartford, Comec-
has visited all the countries of Western
ticut, aS PrOgram aSSistant.
Europe.
the public schooIs at Atlantic City, New
1942
SCHOOL OF LAWp
Jersey.
EUGENE J. MALONE of Cranston,
Rhode Island has been named to the faculty
of Emmanuel College in Boston, Where he
is conducting the college orchestra and
teaching string instruments.
Miss MIRIAM NEWTON, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Simon Newton of Chelsea,
recently became the bride of Alfred Abra-
ham Greenbaum, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Moses
Greenbaum of Malden. Mr. Greenbaum is
a senior at Harvard University, Cambridge.
Miss THERESE J. NOBILIO has an-
1894
cently amounced the marriage of their
daughter, Harriet, tO STANFORD L.
PATRICK J. GARVEY has amounced
STROGOFF, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
that he wi岨retire at the end of this year
Strogo鮮of Worcester. The couple will re-
as a member of the Holyoke SchooI Com-
side in Worcester.
1 946
mittee.
1900
Mr. and Mrs. William Warwick of Dover
Special Justice and Mrs. WINFIELD
TEMPLE of Marlboro recently observed
have amounced the marriage of their niece,
their 48th wedding amiversary a=heir summer home at Lake Boon.
A耽omey ROBERT SUMNER PHILLIPS
1920
nounced the opening of her music studio in
Roslindale Square.
Mr。 and Mrs. Isidor AIpers of S-alem, re-
In a scholarly textbook by Dr. Bruno
Miss Joyce Elaine Lord of Medfield, tO
of Milford. The ceremony took place at
St. Mary’s rectory in Milford.
1947
αJust For You,,, a concert recently pre-
Lasker, nOted cultural anthropoIogist, just
Attomey ARTHUR J. DE FUSCO of
sented by GLORIA STRICKLAND, Which
issued under the title αDemocracy Through
Lawr叩ce is one of three judges who wiu
featured modem and classical music, WaS
Discussion,
preside over the prize essay contest spon-
held at Saugus High School for the benefit
is cited as an authority in血e field of
of血e piano fund there. MARILYN HUD-
speech. He is Dr. JOSEPH G・ BRIN of the
a Boston University professor
SON of Fall River was the a∞OmPanist for
SchooI of Public Relations facu賞ty, from
the solos.
whose “Speech and Human Relations” Dr・
30
sored by the Community Chest, Rotary
Club, and Kiwanis Club of Greater Law-
AttomGy LOLA GLAZERMAN has been
一一一′/
appointed chairman of the Women,s Divi-
teacher at the John Cheverus School in
Sion for the 1950 Community Chest Cam.
Boston.
Palgn. Attomey Blazerman’fomerly asso・
Ciated with the law depa巾ment of the John
Mrs・ John T. McManus of Providence,
Rhode Island, has amounced the engage-
Hancock Insurance Company and the law
firm of Horovitz and Petkun of Boston, is
ment of her daughter, Miss Jane Margaret
McManus, tO Mr. JAMES HENRY DUFFY,
now prac轟cing law in Lawrence.
SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick H・ Du鮮y o士
BETTE S. and REYNOLD F. PARIS of
North Weymouth have been admitted to the
PraCtice of Iaw by the Federal Bar. Believed
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Beman of
Of their daughter Gilda S. to HARVEY B.
KRAMER of Greenfield. Miss Berman
gaged in the general practice of law under
Studied at Northeastem University and
Hickox Secretarial School.
Amouncement was recently made ’of the
engagement of Miss E工eanor Mary Roe,
ALVIN C. TAMKIN, See CBA ,46.
Miss June G. Fine, daughter of Mrs.
Ruth L Fine of Brighton, WaS reCently
daughter of Mrs. John C. Roe of Pittsfield,
to JOHN FRANCIS SHEA, SOn Of Mr. and
Mrs. John M. Shea of Dalton. Miss Roe has
married to Mr. NORMAN S. WEINBERG,
been a member of the faculty of Central
at home in Boston.
Junior High School, Pittsfield, WaS graduated from Georgian Court College in LakeWOOd, New Jersey, and the Katherine Gibbs
School in New York. Mr. Shea is asso_
Ciated with his father in the practice of law
in Pittsfield.
The engagement of Miss Hilda Ruth
Cohen to Mr. SHERWOOD JORDAN TAR_
LOW of GIouceslter, has been amounced by
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cohen of
Newton Centre. Miss Cohen is now attend_
ing Emerson College.
1 948
GEORGE M. ABAGIS of Everett was re.
Cently admitted to the Massachusetts bar.
事′
FRANC工S H. AYER recently amounced
the opening of his law o鯖ce at 40 Centra]
Square’Keene, New Hampshire.
ROBERT D・ ASHLEY has been accepted
On a SCholarship at the Academy of Inter・
national Law at the Peace Palace of the
Intemational Court of Justice, The Hague,
Nether工ands.
The Allenwood Yacht club-in Burlington,
Vermont, WaS the scene for the recent wed.
ding of Miss STELLA BLOOMBERG,
daughter of Mr・ and Mrs. Hyman BIoomberg of Bur工ington, and Donald Hackel, SOn
Of Mr. and Mrs. Myer Hackel also of Bur1ington. Mrs. Hackel is a member of the
Vermont and Massachusetts bars, and has
PraCticed in Burlington. Mr. Hackel at-
also of Brighton. Upon retum from their
trip to Miami, FIorida, the couple will be
1 949
MARVIN A. ALBERT of Boston has
OPened an insurance o鯖ce in the Third Na-
tional Bank building in Springfield, Where
he handles al1 1ines as a broker.
ROGER B. CHAMPAGNE, See CLA ,47。
JAMES EDWARD COPPOLA, SeぐCLA
47.
PAUL CRETEAU of Farmington, New
Hampshire, WaS reCently admitted to the
New Hampshire bar and is practicing law
in association with Judge ErroI S. Hall
DれSo裏oれBoγれめれ,舶,03,あ0肋§加0
章her9・
露Opわきes ofねs重さ榔耽れer,sびαCα競0恥
FRANCIS M. FOLEY of Holyoke was
among the successful candidates to pass the
Massachusetts state bar examinations.
RICHARD D・ KARB of Framingham re_
Of Pacific Palisades, Califomia, have an-
nounced the birth of a son, Mark Kandolin.
1943
tice of law with Hi工ton and Hargraves in
the Hemenway building there.
RICHARD KELLY of Somervi11e was
recently swom in as attomey in Su往olk
Superior Court.
NICHOLAS PANTELAS has announced
the opening of his o鯖ces for the practice of
law
at
142 Main
Street,
Nashua,
united in marriage in historic King,s ChapeI
in Boston.
BERNARD COHEN of Brockton was re_
Cently swom in as a member of the Massa_
chusetts bar.
Miss Mary A. Kelly, daughter of Mrs.
Joseph E・ A・ Kelly and the Iate Mr. Kel量y
Of East Boston, WaS reCently united in marriage with JAMES S. O’CONNELL, SOn Of
Mr. and Mrs. Dan主el J. O,Connell also of
in surgery at Tufts Medical School and
also fellow in surgery at the Boston City
Hospita工, attaChed to the fourth surgical
SerV重Ce. 1
946
WALTER GOULD LEONARD, See CLA
Miss Helen F. McImis, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Comelius A. McInnis of Dorches_
ter, became the recent bride of LEO SUL.
LIⅤAN’SOn Of Mrs・ Margaret Sullivan of
PIoyed in the Boston o締ce of the U. S.
North Carolina, and KENNETH W. BLAISDELL, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs. Harvard W.
BIaisdell of Ellsworth, Maine, Were reCently
Dr. S. ALBERT SARKISIAN of Cam.
Pel工o has been appointed as research fellow
New
Hampshire.
Evere境. The former Miss McImis is em.
Miss Joyce EveIyn Van Slyke, daughter
1941
Dr. and Mrs. ELWOOD HATHAWAY
examinations and is associated in the prac-
duated from Middlebury Co11ege. They will
OfMr. and Mrs・ P. E. Van Slyke of Wilson,
Dr. Boγ融0れ搬e§ 訪舶‡. Ver動のれ,
Wα§械れgめれ.
Cently passed the Massachusetts state bar
tended the University of Vemont and gradmake their home in Burlington.
Service, Inc・, reCently organized plan for
insurmg Surgical costs.
Brookline have announced the engagement
in this area, Mr. and Mrs. Paris are en_
fices in North Weymouth.
Comecticut, has been appointed director of
medical services of the Connecticut Medical
Cranston, Rhode Island.
to be the only husband and wife practicing
the fim name of Paris and Paris, With of・
1 940
Dr. WILLIAM H. HORTOIN of Windsor,
’44・ 1 949
Miss Barbara Rogerson, daughter of the
late Edward Greenleaf Rogerson of Milton,
became the recent bride of Dr. ROBERT
COLEMAN DEAN, SOn Of Mr. and Mrs.
Treasury Department. Mr. Sullivan is em-
Robe串R. Dean of Silver Hills, New Jersey.
PIoyed by the Travelers Insurance Company
in Boston.
tist Hospital, Louisville, Where the couple
SCHOOL OF肘EDJC重NE
Dr・ Dean is an inteme at the Kentucky Bap・
will live.
SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY
192包
Doctor and Mrs・ FRANK E. BARTON,
While traveling in Europe this summer, un-
expectedly met another Boston University
medical school graduate, Dr. ARTHUR
BERNARD SERINO, Who, With his family
Were SPending some time abroad. The unexpected meeting was in a market place in
Capri・ 1936
1928
GEORGE W. WISEMAN, See Rel尋ね鵜
Ed霊凋αiあれ,26.
1943
Dr. CHARLES W. FISHER, Who is now
living in Spokane, Washington, is professor
Of sociology at Whitworth Co11ege, and asSOCiate pastor of the Central Methodist
Church there.
The Fitch Clinic in St. Johnsbury, Vermont, reCently amounced the association of
CARROL OSCAR MORONG, formerly
Of Newburyport’is now in charge of the
East Boston. The former Miss Ke11y isくa
Dr・ FRED C・ BARALD in the practice of
Peddie School for Boys in Hightown New
graduate of Regis Co11ege and has been a
rad王oIogy.
Jersey.
3l
菅田
The Reverend HOWARD P. WEATHERBEE, ad interim minister of the West Con-
The Reverend Gene Loubach spent the
son has been teaching chemistry, bioIogy
summer at Wokapa Camp in South Athol.
and physics in the local high school.
been elected to full membership in the
Hall there. Reverend Weatherbee’s subject
Though Gene will be taking a few hours
at the SchooI of TheoIogy this fall, he will
act as director of Religious Education in
was,雄This Side and the Other Side of the
West Medford Congregational Church.
gregational Church, WaS a gueSt SPeaker at
the Peabody Rotary Club in the Masonic
Brother Robert Vowler has been working
Iron Curtain.,,
in the Milesburg Methodist Church in
1946
Having accepted an “unexpected and unsolicited call
from the Congregational
Church in Acton, the Reverend H. BEN
SIMMS recently read his resignation to
Ralph Steele was ordained Elder and has
Northwest Indiana Conference in June. Mr.
Steele has accepted a Conference appoint-
ment at Bethel Methodist Church, Indianapolis, Indiana. He has been taking addi-
Pemsylvania.
tional schooI work at Garret Seminary;
The Reverend John Jenkins has served a
small church in Plymouth this summer, and
he hopes to stay near Boston and work for
these credit hours are to be applied toward
an S.T.M. degree.
GERALD LAMOTTE,
Cねss Secγeiarγ.
his P丘.D.
Parishioners of the Second Congregationa工
Church in West Newbury.
The Reverend CLARENCE G. SPELL-
An associate pastor of Napa Methodist
Church in Califomia,“ Reverend Richard
、"種
The Reverend GERALD C. LAMOTTE
of Acushnet, PaStOr Of the Acushnet Meth-
MAN was recently appointed new pastor of
Toothaker writes of having many wonderful
odist Church, has been appointed to the
the Methodist Church at Laurel and Park
City, Montana.
experiences.
hospital chaplaincy of the Inter-Church
Brother Lewis Beckford joined the Maille
Conference on Trial in May, and has been
appointed to the York Village Church, York,
Maine.
Council of Greater New Bedford.
1947
LUTHER E. TYSON recently preached
Mr. and Mrs. William Ellsbury Benua of
Columbus, Ohio, have amounced the en・
gagement of their daughter, Miss Ame
FIoyd Benua to the Reverend JAMES
a Rally Day sermon, his first o鯖cial sermon
The Reverend Donald Douglass continues
as qssociate minister of the Congregational
his task in Centerville Methodist Church
STUART UDY, SOn Of the Reverend and
in Lowe11・ It is his intenti叩to take another
Mrs. George Stuart Udy of Berry, New
year of schooling.
South Wales, Australia. Miss Benua com-
Church in Needham.
1948
Miss Evelyn M. Burton, daughter of Mr.
William Blessing has been ordained
pleted two years at Bryn Mawr Co11ege in
EIder and was received into full member-
Pemsy工vania,
and Mrs. Harry E. Bur工on of West Chelms-
Ship in the Northwest Indiana Conference
Pomona Co11ege, Claremont, Califomia. Mr.
ford, WaS reCently united in marriage with
in June. He has accepted a Conference ap-
Udy is a graduate of Sydney University in
pointment in Newton, Indiana.
Australia, and is minister at Dorr Memorial
Methodist Church in Lymhurst. He is
亡he Reverend WARREN M. ROBERTS, SOn
of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Roberts of
Waynesboro, Pemsylvania. The ceremony
took place at the West Chelmsford Methodist Church.
A newly appointed pastor of Wesley
Chapel in Fayettevi11e, North Carolina, is
亡he Reverend Eamest Ma耽ison. Mr. Matti一
and
is
now
a
student
at
studying for his doctorate a=his University
and Harvard.
The Reverend MEREDITH P. SM工TH,
pastor
of
the
Slt.
Stephen’s
勘と駒脚∬譲的
Methodist
Church in Marblehead, WaS a gueSt PreaCher
at the services at Laurel Park, Northampton. The worship services were held in conjunc亡ion with the Christian Life Institute
for senior high school young people.
1949
CLASS REPORT
Recently accepting an appointment to
Porter Church in East Weymouth, WaS
Reverend Frank McMi11en. He will con-
EDWARD W. BLODGETT, LL.B.’99, On
Mrs. Victor M. Buck (MAUDE HODGE-
September 18, 1949, at the Framingham
LAND), B.R.E. ’29, On September 2,
Union Hospital after a long i11ness. Presiding justice of the First District Court
1949, a=he Jeames Hospital, Fox Chase,
Philadelphia, Pemsylvania. A Methodist
of South Middlesex county for 30 years,
missionary to the Belgium Congo, Africa,
until his ret王rement in February, 1949.
JAMES F. CAVANAGH, LL.B. ’09, On Sep-
tember 17, 1949, at Whidden Memorial
Hospital in Everett. Fomer Senator and
tinue his studies at the SchooI of TheoIogy.
Our class agent, the Reverend Nevitt
one"time con丘dante of the late President
Coolidge.
Smi亡h, Will continue in graduate work at
JOSEPH J. CORBETT, LL.B. ,β5, On Octo-
the SchooI of TheoIogy. Everyone should
ber 7, 1949, at his home in Nahant. Re-
send his yearly contribu工ion to Nevitt at
血ed justice of the Massachuse耽s Land
745 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston 15.
The Reverend William Johnson has accepted a call to Oakridge, Oregon, in the
foothills of the Cascades.
The Reverend Norman Crewson was mar-
ried to Alma Deane on June 9, 1949. The
Reverend Mr. Summerville perfomed the
Court.
Retired senior s馳筈e車at Lowell General
Hospital and a p]Oneer in x-ray and
Maine conference for 50 years.
ALFRED E. P. ROCKWELL, M.D. ’99, On
HAROLD M. SMITH, C%L ’I9, On Septem-
ber 25, 1949, at his summer home in Rye,
New Hampshire. Former speaker of the
New Hampshire House of RepresentatlVeS.
M. REGINA SULLIVAN, C宛E ,45, On Octo-
ber 3, 1949, at her home in West Roxbury.
High SchooI Institu工e, Battle Ground, In-
Teacher in the Dedham scho・OIs for more
diana, in June. Reverend Howe11 was re-
September lO, 1949, at his summer home
minister who serⅤed the denomination’s
Moming Watch devotional speaker at the
cently united in marriage to Louise Baker
the Artium Baccalaurei Honoris Causa by
the University.
p主tal, Portland, Maine. A Methodist
Worcester.
an appointment at Raub Methodist Church
in Indiina. He will work on a Ph.D. at
Chicago University. Mr. Howell was the
Louis, Missouri. He died with eight others
of his crew in a mission over Magdeburg,
Gemany, March 3, 1945. He was awarded
in North Holdemes争New Hampshire・
June 19, 1949, at Memorial Hospital,
American Youth Hostel Group.
The Reverend Forest Howell has accepted
aimen in the National cemetery at St.
September 15, 1949, in a PortIand hos-
place in Robinson Chapel.
Brother James Udy has been in Europe
A.B. ,46, naVigator, Of Watertown, WaS
recently interred with five of his fellow
JOHN HENRY LAMBERT, M.D. ’99, On
DWIGHT F. FAULKNER, eガheo. ’01, On
CeremOny, Which was the last one to take
since graduation. Jim is in charge of an
for餌teen years.
Flight O鯖cer ARAM G. KADEHJIAN,
than 20 years.
radioIo gy.
W工LLIAM J. MAHONEY, A.M. ,42, On Oc-
tober 8, 1949, at the Symmes Arlington
Hospital, Arlington. Teacher of English
in GIoucester High School for the past
three years.
JAMES H. M血AUGHLIN, LL.B. ’27, On
Sep工ember 29, 1949, at his home in Cam-
bridge. Wobum attomey and assistant
clerk at the Fourth District Court, Wobum.
CHARLES O. RICHEY, LL.B. ’02, On Au-
gust 30, 1949, in his fam home at Ottawa
JOHN J. WALSH, LL.B. ,92, On September
Lake, Michigan. Founder and fomer
on September 3, 1949, in Stidham Methodist
17, 1949, in Boston. Prominent attomey
president of the Port Lawrence Title &
Church, Lafayette, Indiana.
and fomer Boston city o鯖ciaI.
Trust Co., Toledo Ohio.
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