PDF - University of New Hampshire

Transcription

PDF - University of New Hampshire
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This Book Is Dedicated To
Death, a mysterious abstraction that few of us
feel until it reaches the bottom of our own exis­
tence. Every last gasp of breath in a living being is
felt by many who think that their own existence is
infinite, who think that their lives shall continue irregardless of fate. But it is when the death of a com­
patriot appears unexpectedly before us that the
foundations upon which we structure our own lives
become shaken. The termination of life is most
cruel when it could have been prevented, when the
living and the breathing of another human being is
smothered by idiocy and distrust. When a life is
taken because of the structures of an organization,
living itself becomes futile in the minds of those who
desire freedom in their own existence. If a person,
young or old, dies with the knowledge that his or
her day to day activities have given him or her per­
sonal fulfillment, then he or she died living his or
her life to the fullest. But if a person dies because of
inconsideration and his or her own lifestyle be­
comes a sham, then his or her death must be
viewed as disastrous.
Rothe
University, of New Hampshire
Library
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5
Today, January 31, 1971, the University of New
Hampshire is presenting an Honorary Doctor of Sci­
ence degree to General Melvin Zais, presently Op­
erations Director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the
Pentagon, and past Commander of the 101st Air
Force in Vietnam. As Commander of the 101st, Gen­
eral Zias, in the spring of 1968, made the fatal deci­
sion to capture what came to be known as Ham­
burger Hill. This battle resulted in the deaths of over
1,000 American soldiers and Vietnamese. General
Zias, in making the decision to take the hill, ignored
National Security Intelligence advice and was fully
aware of the impending massacre. One thousand
Americans and Vietnamese died as a result of this
battle and furthermore one month of intelligence
was lost, thus resulting in more deaths. It is noted
that this was General Zais’s only major operation
while commanding the 101st. Only General Zais
knows how much his personal desire for promotion
influenced his decision.
We ask you, General Melvin Zais, with careful
consideration of the value of each human life, can
you justify your degree and society’s praise for you?
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What we have here is a question. Yes, that is what it
is. A question of utmost importance. One that is to
decide between life and death, between war and
peace, between equality and inequality, between
poverty and wealth, between black and white, be­
tween love and hate, between humanity and in­
humanity, between facism and democracy, between
the individual and the institution, between freedom
and slavery, between man’s destruction and man’s
conservation. It is a question that will be decided by
us. We are people of the world, we hold part of the
world’s fate in our hands. And in the end it will be
the people who will have decided the question and
history will be the witness.
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We are the hollow men
We are the stuffed men
Leaning together
Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!
Our dried voices, when
We whisper together
Are quiet and meaningless
As wind in dry grass
Or rats’ feet over broken glass
In our dry cellar.
-T.S . Eliot
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And it was something he couldn’t put his finger on, something
he couldn’t cognitively set straight. It was this something that
bothered him at certain irregular hours of the day.
Now was one of them.
The conversation, the quick glance, the strange note, the wave
of the arm, the phone call—which daily rite was it? was it any of
these? all of these?
Was something lacking maybe?
He figured that to be part of it, maybe the whole thing. Empti­
ness: that common, grim reality left when all the illusions become
transparent and dissolve, even the most meaningful, even the
best loved.
Even oneself.
He looked through his eyes, through their concave lens from a
deep, unknown somewhere inside of him, and knew another illu­
sion. Shadows within, as without; he stood on the wrong side of
the fire, wishing only to know, to learn, if only for an instant, the
truth; not the emptiness, and not the shadows.
R. Wesson
—
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Its A Beautiful Day
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After the lines were drawn and the sides were
taken, the opponents faced each other and shouted
their political programs to the people of the Granite
State. Paradoxically, as a result of last spring, the
University was commonly referred to as a strong­
hold of academic and social liberals who were un­
dermining the state
The manner in which the New Hampshire people
became polarized was bound to adversely effect the
State and the University -regardless of who be­
came Governor.
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‘Happy taxes to all: Our opponents were right!’ ”
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Christ was a virgin, fashioned as a man,
And many of his saints since time began
Were ever perfect in their chastity.
I’ll have no quarrel with virginity.
Let them be pure wheat loaves of maidenhead
And let us wives be known for barley-bread;
Yet Mark can tell that barley-bread sufficed
To freshen many at the hand of Christ.
—The Canterbury Tales
Performed by Rob Inglis
Allied Arts
October 1970
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rS
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As a result of the four Kent State Uni­
versity killings last spring the state of
Ohio grand jury indicted twenty-five
students and faculty members in an at­
tempt to repress students across the
country, and to lay the blame for the
killings on the Kent State University
community. Bill Arthell, Kent State stu­
dent, commented: “ the grand jury said
the students committed the crime. In
other words, the grand jury is saying
that the students committed suicide on
Taylor Hill on May 4, 1970.
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Commencement—February, 1971
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I ll
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Winter Carnival—February, 1971
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^ fl Joint Treaty of Peace 8 ^
B E T W E E N T H E PEOPLE O F T H E U N ITED S TA TE S ,
S O U T H V IE TN A M & N O R TH V IE TN A M
Introduction
Be it known that the American and Vietnamese people are not enemies. The war is carried out in
the name of the people of the United States, but without our consent. It destroys the land and the
people of Viet Nam. It drains America of her resources, her youth and her honor.
We hereby agree to end the war on the following terms, so that both peoples can live under the
joy of independence and can devote themselves to building a society based on human equality and
respect for the earth. In rejecting the war we also reject all forms of racism and discrimination against
people based on color, class, sex, national origin and ethnic grouping which form a basis of the war
policies, present and past, of the United States.
P R IN C IP LE S O F TH E JO IN T T R E A T Y O F PEACE
AM ERICA N S agree to immediate and total withdrawal from Viet Nam, and publicly to set the date by
which all U.S. military forces will be removed.
Vietnamese agree to participate in an immediate cease-fire, and will enter discussions on
the procedures to guarantee the safety of all withdrawing troops, and to secure release of
all military prisoners.
AM ERICA N S pledge to stop imposing Thieu, Ky and Khiem on the people of Viet Nam in order to
ensure their right to self-determination, and to ensure that all political prisoners are released.
Vietnamese pledge
elections, in which
any foreign troops,
political freedom of
to form a provisional coalition government to organize democratic
all South Vietnamese can participate freely without the presence of
and to enter discussions of procedures to guarantee the safety and
persons who cooperated with either side in the war.
A M ERICA N S and V IE TN A M E SE agree to respect the independence, peace and neutrality of Laos and
Cambodia.
Upon these points of agreement, we pledge to end the war. We will resolve all other
questions in mutual respect for the rights of self-determination of the people of Viet Nam
and of the United States.
As Americans ratifying this agreement, we pledge to take whatever actions are appropriate to implement
the terms of this joint treaty of peace, and to ensure its acceptance by the government of the United
States.
The terms o f this treaty were worked out in December 1970 in discussions among representatives o f the United States
National Student Association and leaders o f the national student unions in Saigon and Hanoi.
118
Here we are at the window. Great unbound sheaves of rain wan­
dering across the mountain, parades of wind and driven silver
grass. So long I’ve tried to give a name to freedom, today my
freedom lost its name, like a student’s room travelling into the
morning with its lights still on. Every act has its own style of free­
dom, whatever that means. Now I’m commanded to think of
weeds, to worship the strong weeds that grew through the night,
green and wet, the white thread roots taking lottery orders from
the coils of brain mud, the permeable surface of the world. Did
you know that the brain developed out of a fold in the epidermis?
Did you? Falling ribbons of silk, the length of rivers, cross the
face of the mountain, systems of grass and cable. Freedom lost
its name to the style with which things happen. The straight
trees, the spools of weed, the travelling skeins of rain floating
through the folds of the mountain—here we are at the window.
Are you ready now? Have I missed myself? May I fire from the
hip? Brothers, each at your window, we are the style of so much
passion, we are the order of style, we are pure style called to
delight a fold of the sky.
—Leonard Cohen
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120
LAOS-February, 1971
121
Flowers and Bullets
Of course: Bullets don’t like people
who love flowers.
They’re jealous ladies, bullets,
short on kindness.
Allison Krause, nineteen years old,
you’re dead,
for loving flowers.
When, thin and open as the pulse of conscience,
you put a flower in a rifle’s mouth
and said,
“ Flowers are better than bullets,’’
that
was pure hope speaking.
Give no flowers to a state
that outlaws truth;
such states reciprocate
with cynical, cruel gifts,
and your gift, Allison Krause,
was the bullet
that blasted the flower.
Let every apple orchard blossom black,
black in mourning.
Ah, how the lilac smells!
You’re without feeling.
Nothing. Nixon said it:
“ You’re a bum.”
All the dead are bums.
It’s not their crime.
You lie in the grass,
a melting candy in your mouth,
done with dressing in new clothes,
done with books.
You used to be a student.
You studied fine arts.
But other arts exist,
of blood and terror,
and headsmen with a genius for the axe.
Who was Hitler?
A cubist of gas chambers.
In the name of all flowers
I curse your works,
your architects of lies,
maestros of murder!
Mothers of the world whisper
‘O God, God’
and seers are afraid
to look ahead.
Death dances rock-and-roll upon the bones
of Vietnam, CambodiaOn what stage is it booked to dance tomorrow?
Rise up, Tokyo girls,
Roman boys,
take up your flowers
against the common foe.
Blow the world’s dandelions up
into a blizzard!
122
Flowers to war!
Punish the punishers!
Tulip after tulip,
carnation after carnation,
rip out of your tidy beds in anger,
choke every lying throat
with earth and root!
You, jasmine, clog
the spinning blades of mine-layers!
Boldly,
block the cross-hair sights,
drive your sting into the lenses,
nettles!
Rise up, lily of the Ganges,
lotus of the Nile,
stop the roaring props
of planes pregnant
with the death of children!
Roses, don’t be proud
to find yourselves sold
at higher prices.
Nice as it is to touch a tender cheek,
thrust a sharper thorn a little deeper
into the fuel tanks of bombers.
Of course:
Bullets are stronger than flowers.
Flowers aren’t enough to overwhelm them.
Stems are too fragile,
petals are poor armor.
But a Vietnam girl of Allison’s age,
taking a gun in her hands,
is the armed flower
of the people’s wrath!
If even flowers rise,
then we’ve had enough
of playing games with history.
Young America,
tie up the killer’s hands.
Let there be an escalation of truth
to overwhelm the escalating lie
crushing people’s lives!
Flowers, make war!
Defend what’s beautiful!
Drown the city streets and country roads
like the flood of an army advancing
and in the ranks of people and flowers
arise, murdered Allison Krause,
Immortal of the age,
Thorn-Flower of protest!
—by Yevgeny Yevtusshenko, Russian poet.
First printed in Pravda, Communist party newspaper.
Translation by Anthony Kahn for CITY LIGHTS BOOKS.
Copyright 1970 CITY LIGHTS BOOKS.
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I am that bird
in lonely flight
Soaring the skies.
The angry sea
lunges for the shore
And my cry is muffled
In the everlasting grey.
-e g w —
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Tribute to Malcom X—February, 1971
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After all, we pay only $800 per semes­
t e r .. . The state assumes very little re­
sponsibility for educational aid . . . The
good teachers get fired . . . The bad
teachers get promoted . . . Students
have no say in tenure policy . . . There
are too few courses . . . Or there are
too many students . . . They build more
expensive dorms . . . Students pay
higher dorm rents . . . People are mov­
ing off campus . . . And they build and
they build . . . And they spend and they
spend . . . And they hire . . . And they
fire . . . Have they forgotten us . . .
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ALCHEM EDIAf ^
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WIND FROM THE EAST
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WIND FROM THE EAST
AMERICA IS HARD TO SEE
WIND FROM THE EAST
YOJIMBO
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SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL
The television stations represent the ruling class of America—the
class that owns the means of production. In effect, they are the
ruling class, so they are rarely going to put anything on—only ra­
rely, and only in the guise of simple liberalism—that seems to be
against their better interest. A licence from the Federal Commu­
nications Commission is simply a licence to manufacture money
and exploit the American people. It has nothing to do with free­
dom of expression, nothing to do with art, nothing to do with
freedom of politics. These people are sausage makers: they’ve
taken the twenty-four hours of the day and cut them up to be
sold in fifteen-minute links.
—from Emile De Antonio, Radical Film Maker
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Complete text of statement
Katari
to University Senate yesterday
Preamble: We, the people of Katari, recognizing
the full implications of our presence on the UNH
campus, find it necessary to disassociate our­
selves from the Black Student Union and other
University-manipulated organizations in order to
insure our physical, cultural, and educational
survival.
We feel that we have a right to insure our
freedom of choice in all areas of concern to
Black students and to defend our lives and
principles against any attackers.
Since current efforts to incorporate Katari
into existing University organizations have proved
to be unworkable, and since we believe that the
question of our existence to be non-negotiable,
we hereby declare Katari to be an organiza­
tion of Black students who relate to survival
through self-defense.
WHAT WE WANT
1. We want Katari to be autonomous and free
from the bureaucratic structure of UNH.
We believe that there have been and will
continue to be attempts to control and man­
ipulate Black students at UNH.
2. We want all Black students to be exempt
from the existing disciplinary process at UNH.
We believe that we should be judged by
our peers, as white students are. We de­
fine “ peers" as people from a similar
socio-economic, educational, and cultural
background. Such peers would have better
understanding and insight into the problems
of Black students since they have shared
similar experiences.
3. We want to matriculate at this University
free from intimidatio by administrators, faculty,
police, etc., and an immediate end to the so­
cial and psychological castration practiced here.
In short, we want to be treated like human be­
ings.
We believe that the existing educational
structure propagates itself on a subliminal
level of caste and class. But we refuse
to subordinate ourselves to individuals who
adhere to the “ step-father" syndrome and
who treat us as though it is they who ul­
timately determine our destiny.
4. We want to be able to raise funds on this
campus to implement our educational programs
and other innovative community-based projects.
We believe that not only have attempts been
made to manipulate us through use of UNH
funds, but that the people who administer
those funds regard us as welfare recip­
ients.
PROPOSAL: We want a body composed of Black
people from the community, Black faculty, staff,
administration, and students, along with rep­
resentatives from the white community (students,
faculty, administration, and staff) to renegotiate
future Black student- UNH affiliations.
In conclusion, we want peace, freedom, and the
opportunity to provide for our own security.
We want to retain our identity and self-aware­
ness and to eliminate the duality that exists between Black college students and the constitu­
ents of the Black community.
(signed by 29 students)
Fall, 1970
Tom Hayden
The Mime Troupe—February 1971
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Mk
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in Just—
spring when the world is m u d luscious the little
lame balloonman
whistles far and wee
and eddieandbill come
running from marbles and
piracies and it’s
spring
when the world is puddle—wonderful
the queer
old balloonman whistles
far and wee
and bettyandisbel come dancing
from hop-scotch and jump-rope and
it’s
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spring
and
the
goat-footed
balloonMan whistles
far
and
wee
—e.e. cummings
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mm
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April 3, 1971, we marched on Manchester. “ It is
we the living who must continue the struggle
against the oppressive structures of our society. We
have been imbued with the anguish and wisdom
that cheap death brings, for we are fortunate to be
alive.”
—F. Rothe
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Rennie Davis spoke to the students at the University of New
Hampshire on April 14 to encourage them to participate in MAY­
DAY activities, both locally and in Washington, D.C.
“ We will assemble the most massive peoples lobby in Ameri­
can history, but it won’t be the regular tie and jacket lobby,
where you wine and dine Senators. What we have in mind is
10,000 people in the halls of Congress, 5,000 freaks in the cafe­
teria of the Commerce Department, and marches out to the C.I.A.
Headquarters.
“ On MAYDAY we are going to issue an ultimatum to Richard
Nixon: If the government of the United States does not stop the
war, then we will stop the government of the United States.
“ We will use massive civil disobedience to disable the Ameri­
can government until the People’s Peace Treaty is ratified by
Congress.
“ Seventy-three per cent of the American people agree with the
content of the treaty, although it hasn’t been translated that way
by the Gallup Poll. The American people agree with the Viet
Cong, not Richard Nixon.”
—Rennie Davis
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If our people
one tribe
at a time,
all w ill be
killed.
They can
cut off our
one by one,
but if
W 6 iirl l l
Come to
May 1-7
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tilt
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Beginning May 1, 1971, exactly one week after 500,000 Ameri­
cans had marched on Washington, D.C. to end the war, another
people’s peace army invaded Washington, D.C.
They demanded an end to the war.
The war has not ended.
They demanded a guaranteed annual income for the poor.
There has been no guaranteed annual income established.
They demanded an end to racism.
Racism still exists.
They demanded that political prisoners be freed.
Political prisoners remain in jail.
They demanded that the government stop the death machine.
Instead, the government came to get them. Arresting them by
the thousands, the government attempted to jail the people in or­
der to make Washington safe for business as usual. It was the
largest mass arrest in the history of the American people. They
proved to themselves and to others that they were ready to be
jailed for what they believed. Civil disobedience has become a
tactic, no longer a concept.
Change will not come without a struggle.
The struggle has begun.
MAYDAY 1971
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i i' i i S7‘i
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ss£al
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\
IV
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Peter Jurasik—Hennessey Theater—May, 1971
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i
as a Silen t and
at School
the habits of a student;-...! used to
feet if undignified f 0
"
do any manual labor,
socb afi shouldering |
my o
u /p
lu g g a g e ,
at that time if
seemed
m
bt e
that the infe IfecTvalS
were the only r
clean ^n s’onsfr)
the world, and the
wortens and
peasants
,
seemed
rather dirty beside them.
— — =^
having become a revolutionary, i found
wyself infhe same ranks as the workers,peasants
and soldiers of the revolutionary atnuj... icgme to feel that
it was those unremolded intellectuals mho werA unclean as
compared -to the workers and ^ sa n ts, whi le the workers
and peasants are after all -the cleanest -persons-e\jen
though itieir hands arid their feet are smeared
with cow duvy.
^/d/{b1'S^'TubJ&
The Rebel
I am come of the seed of the people, the people that
sorrow,
That have no treasure but hope,
No riches laid up but a memory
Of an Ancient glory.
My mother bore me in bondage, in bondage my
mother was born,
I am of the blood of serfs;
The children with whom I have played, the men and
women with whom I have eaten,
Have had masters over them, have been under the
lash of the masters,
And, though gentle, have served churls;
The hands that have touched mine, the dear hands
whose touch is familiar to me,
Have worn shameful manacles, have been bitten at
the wrist by manacles,
Have grown hard with the manacles and the task­
work of strangers,
I am flesh of the flesh of these lowly, I am bone of
their bone,
I that have never submitted;
I that have a soul greater than the souls of my
people’s masters,
I that have vision and prophecy and the gift of fiery
speech,
I that have spoken with God on top of His holy hill.
And because I am of the people, I understand the
people,
I am sorrowful with their sorrow, I am hungry with
their desire:
My heart has been heavy with the grief of mothers,
My eyes have been wet with the tears of children,
I have yearned with old wistful men,
And laughed or cursed with young men;
Their shame is my shame, and I have reddened for
it,
Reddened for that they have served, they who
should be free,
Reddened for that they have gone in want, while
others have been full,
Reddened for that they have walked in fear of law­
yers and of their jailors
With their writs of summons and their handcuffs,
Men mean and cruel!
I could have borne stripes on my body rather than
this shame of my people.
244
And now I speak, being full of vision;
I speak to my people, and I speak in my people’s
name to the masters of my people.
I say to my people that they are holy, that they are
august, despite their chains,
That they are greater than those that hold them,
and stronger and purer,
That they have but need of courage, and to call on
the name of their God,
God the unforgetting, the dear God that loves the
peoples
For whom He died naked, suffering shame.
And I say to my people’s masters: Beware,
Beware of the thing that is coming, beware of the
risen people,
Who shall take what ye would not give. Did ye think
to conquer the people,
Or that law is stronger than life and than men’s de­
sire to be free?
We will try it out with you, ye that have harried and
held,
Ye that have bullied and bribed, tyrants, hypocrites,
liars!
by Patrick Pearse (1879-1916)
Executed Easter Rebellion, 1916
245
those who hear, forget
those who see , remember
those who do, understand
Thought Collage: "The Counter-Culture vs. The Es­
tablishment” (to coin two new phrases)
Where have all the flowers gone?
—gone to plastic everyone.
Where have all the hippies gone?
—gone to head shops everyone.
chological warfare the counter culture was sold,
lock, stock and barrel, to Madison Avenue. (No
wonder alot of people have gone back to the farm
and locked the Gate.)
"Get a Peace of the Action—Buy a Ford”
‘‘Don’t cop out on yourself—smoke Vantage
cigarettes”
It seems that the counter-culture got going on the
idea that the dominant culture was artificial, to say
the least. It developed its strength and sense of
brotherhood from the symbols it created and the
meaning people put into those symbols. However,
symbolitis grew like a cancer (after all, who does
have the right to wear or wave the American flag?)
So it seems that fadism is just about all that is left
to fight facism or the dangers of it that all the seers
seem to see springing up around us. What has hap­
pened to the counter-culture is that it has become
inflicted with the same pavlonian, non-thinking re­
sponsiveness to advertising, myths and symbols as
the dominant culture. Now all you have to do is go
to your local head shop and buy your beliefs and
values—all neatly packaged and shiny.
PARANOIA
It used to be when you were standing on the side
of the road with your thumb out and a car came by
with a bunch of longhiars in it—you knew you had a
ride. (A superficial (?) sense of brotherhood maybe
but always a ride anyway). It’s getting so the only
way to get a ride alot of times is to wait for bored
traveling salesmen to pick you up—which is okay,
mind ya, but all them freaks with their four thousand
dollar automobiles, fully equipped with stereo tape
decks and the latest in far-out groovy tunes, just
keep passin’ ya by—too busy, ya see, goin some­
where pretty important, goin’ to make a deal ya see,
and anyway, you might be an agent or some­
thin’.
"The Dream is over” —J. Lennon
"Step right up! Step right up! Come one, come all
to the greatest show of the 20th Century. It’s called
the counter-culture and there’s only a few seats
left—so don’t be late!” Here’s how folks—Send
$35.00 to Guru-West, Inc., Ltd., Boston, Mass. and
you will receive (money-back guarantee), your own
charter membership to the counter culture. Now
that’s not all folks! Listen to our special of­
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by Bill Schultz
250
Who Wields the Knife:
A Case Study of the University’s
Firing Procedures
continent and how that relates to English and
American literature.
“ I think also it is pertinent here to realize that
when Mr. Richardson, the chairman of the depart­
ment, hired me he knew I had completed three
years of graduate work at Indiana in comparative lit­
erature. The prase is now that Mrs. Van Duym only
has a BA and therefore should not be consid­
ered—this is simply not true.
“ So I prepared for the senior members a fourpage type written report on my courses. I said to
both the acting chairman and the man representing
me that I was not interested in publications at this
time and that I decided not to complete my thesis
because I didn’t feel ready for it at this point. I
would, however, prepare the research I had done
for my courses—I had created four or five different
types of courses for freshmen and for 600-level
courses and I thought the work that had gone into
that was equivalent to research work.
“ Another thing that I did was emphasize that the
man presenting my case look into the acquisitions
I’ve made for the library. I have been ordering com­
parative literature texts for the library these past five
years. When I first came here there were no books
relating to comparative literature and no trans­
lations of foreign works. Although I do not have a
degree, it does not mean I am unaware of relevant
scholarship.
“ During the time my case was to come up a lot of
students wrote recommendation letters. Since there
was a student representative for the first time on the
senior member committee, he was able to commu­
nicate to other students that my decision was com­
ing up. For the first time students were able to act
before the decision was made; whereas formerly all
these decisions were reacted to after the fact. Inter­
esting information about what goes into a faculty
decision was revealed when students went to visit
several senior members before the decision was
made. One senior member said he really did not
know why Mrs. Van Duym wanted to stay; she knew
the PhD requirement and she shouldn’t even be
considered. Another senior member felt that he
really didn’t know very much about her and he had
always considered her as the wife of Mr. Van
Duym—I almost became not a person. Another sen­
ior member resorted to slander and said that I was a
grad school drop out.
This article was prepared from a series of inter­
views with three faculty members who had been
dismissed from the university or who had been de­
nied tenure and whose cases had been seriously
questioned throughout the university community by
students and faculty during the past year. What fol­
lows is quoted entirely from interviews with Pene­
lope Van Duym of the English Department, Richard
Ingersoll of the Sociology Department, and Peter
Savage of the Political Science Department. In con­
clusion, each of the three faculty members was
asked what he or she felt the implications of such
decisions were for the university.
PENELOPE Van DUYM
“ My case in the department was brought up in
February of this year, when I told my chairman that I
would like to be seriously considered for promotion.
The chairman at the time was the acting chairman
and he said that he saw my case as being hopeless
but that he wanted to present objective material to
the senior members so that they could decide with
some kind of facts before them rather than deciding
through gossip and hall conversation. The senior
members chose one person to present my case and
he talked with me several times so that he could
present information about me. The senior member
presenting my case asked me to present any mate­
rials I had, but also said that he saw the situation as
hopeless, but that he would present the case any­
way. I had no assurance that the material I
presented was really adequately distributed.
“ I tried to explain why I should be seriously con­
sidered for promotion. One reason was that al­
though I didn’t have my PhD (and I realized the de­
partment valued that as a requirement) the
department had made an exception by its own
rules—it had promoted the head of Freshman Eng­
lish to an assistant professor without a doctoral de­
gree. So I thought that since they can make ex­
ceptions in one case, maybe they could make an
exception in my case. The response was that I was
a different case and could not be an exception. I
taught literature and people who taught literature
should have PhD’s. I also tried to explain my repre­
sentative that the kind of courses, the 600-level
courses, the comparative literature courses that I
was teaching were courses that were needed. My
courses were in great demand because people are
interested in knowing what’s happening on the
251
much about this because I’ve only realized it in the
past year—that there is a certain strong feeling
about certain types of women in the English Depart­
ment. For example, I think you begin to see that
women really have no place in the English Depart­
ment when you see that the senior members are all
men and that anytime a woman gets close to being
promoted or given tenure, she is excluded from the
department structure. The senior members are hir­
ing new women now at the instructor or assistant
professor level, so you have subservient people for
another three or four years, whereas they are hiring
men as associate professors. The women who man­
age to serve the five or six years of time it takes to
be considered are the ones who are rejected for the
new com ers to the departm ent. Interestingly
enough, now that an interest in comparative liter­
ature has been created, the graduate staff has
taken it over and I am no longer needed.
“ I think that the kind of women that this depart­
ment would recognize as competitive with the kind
of men in the department are women who are going
to play the masculine, aggressive role or women
who are going to be completely submissive. That is, I
am referred to as a naive but very nice person—you
know, a sort of innocuous description of somebody
who is there and rather pleasant to see in the halls
but doesn’t really count in terms of a person or in
terms of the courses that she teaches. I think that
although this attitude towards me may be uncon­
scious, somehow it does exist and expresses itself
in many ways.
“ A negative decision in my case, I think, implies
that certain kinds of teaching are really irrelevant or
certain kinds of teaching are not worthy of being
considered. That is, to be a scholar one needs to
specialize and if as a teacher you are interested in
expanding material for your students, you are al­
ready cutting your throat in a ‘professional’ sense.
The very fact that I spent time creating courses was
a suicidal act and I knew it at the time.
“ I think another implication of the teacherscholar emphasis is that the audience for the
scholar is not directly the student, it is one’s in­
tellectual peers who read criticism on something
and respond to it. So that makes the student only
an indirect recipient of the teacher’s information
and the course material is not necessarily related
directly to what the student needs or is not varied
for the student’s interest because it is a product of
something else. I think that what is happening here
is that there is a very rigid rule being set up and that
means individuals are not being considered as indi­
viduals. Somehow, once you get interested in an
immediate class situation you are diametrically op­
posed to what your colleagues want you to do as a
professor and that, of course, leads them to say
that you are not qualified. I think that their whole
concept of professionalism implies that you cannot
be a good scholar in class.’’
“ Students acted by writing over thirty letters of
recommendation about my courses and giving
these to the senior members via the student repre­
sentative. In addition, course evaluations for Eng­
lish 651 were available to the senior members. In my
case, none of these student opinions were listened
to seriously. The decision for my promotion was a
negative one, almost unanimous, and since I wasn’t
granted promotion, this is automatic dismissal for
the year after next. The entire procedure indicates
that course evaluations and student recommenda­
tions only count if the senior members first approve
of the faculty member in question. Even the docu­
mentation I provided of work I’d done on courses
was slighted. This means that any evidence is used
arbitrarily—the senior members tend to fit the evi­
dence into their image of the ‘teacher-scholar’. For
them, the scholar is rigidly defined as one who per­
forms for his peers through publications and re­
search. I think there are many other ways to define
scholarship: one can do serious research for
courses, one can explore new teaching methods,
one can be scholarly within the confines of the
classroom. But I was told that I didn’t fit into the
plans for the ‘future of the department’.
“ I suppose I could go to the Faculty Welfare Com­
mittee but I don’t think that would get very far be­
cause one needs to reach the tenure stage to be
considered as a dismissal case. I have been ex­
cluded before I’ve reached that stage; it means that
instructors can be automatically terminated and
therefore have no rights of appeal. Other alterna­
tives for change might be working through the fac­
ulty or student caucuses of the University Senate.
As it stands now, there is no way for a faculty mem­
ber to be recognized and promoted for teaching
ability at the undergraduate level.
“ Now I think another issue is the attitude towards
women in the department. I’ve never really said too
252
tion sent to Professor Palmer from the Director of
the Program on Alcohol and Drug Abuse that was
never shown, yet they informed me that my re­
search was below average. I was told that my teach­
ing was ‘average’, even though I presented them
with a letter indicating that I had been nominated
for the professor of the year award, in terms of
teaching. They said my service was not exceptional,
when at that time I was Chairman of the Under­
graduate Curriculum Committee and Social Psy­
chology Graduate Committee. In current eval­
uations, Professor Linsky wrote that all three
chairmen had indicated that I was incompetent in
this position and did not handle the job to their sat­
isfaction, yet the first two years I was in this position
I was appointed by the chairman. A year and a half
ago when I found I was not going to get promotion
or tenure I went to Professor Linsky, then chairman,
and offered to resign as the Undergraduate Chair­
man. He said he wished I would reconsider. Cer­
tainly if I was incompetent in that position he should
have accepted my resignation. Another example of
their justice is evidenced by my being accused by
some department member as doing a poor job of
scheduling; the particular semester referred to,
scheduling was handled by Professor Linsky, my
function being consultation with him, relating how I
had done it in the past.
“ More justice: In conversation with Vice Presi­
dent Mills, in the presence of Professor Dewey, I
asked him to reevaluate my position, and he made it
clear that in a tenure case, denial of tenure was not
considered negative; (really?) that it was not de­
cided on the basis of ‘charges and opinions’ but
was made on the basis of ‘overall judgment of the
situation’. I fail to see the distinction between
‘charges’ and ‘judgement’. He also said at this
meeting that the administration did reverse deci­
sions and had done it quite often. I told him as a so­
cial psychologist I know when a person takes a
stand on an issue, even when contrary evidence is
RICHARD INGERSOLL
“ Being an effective teacher has been and is my
primary objective in life. By effective teaching I
mean enhancing the student’s motivation to learn,
about sociology, nature, or any other area. I have
held this goal since the age of 20. Obtaining my BS
and BA degrees from Central Michigan University I
also earned a secondary teaching certificate. The
type of teaching which most interested me was at
the college level, thus the decision to go on to grad­
uate school. Teaching, to me means going beyond
the classroom material, getting students to value
knowledge, rationality and understanding, motivat­
ing students to apply the learning process to all sit­
uations even after he has left the classroom.
Today’s student could obtain factual knowledge on
his own, therefore if all I did in class was to present
facts, I would be under-estimating the intelligence
and capabilities of the student. For this reason I try
to relate certain cognitive information to the stu­
dent’s past experiences so the knowledge becomes
meaningful to him.
“ It is well documented in correspondence with
this university that my primary aim was not profes­
sional mobility. By this, I meant that if I decided to
come to UNH I wasn’t coming here as a stepping
stone to a more prestigious position. Since they
were aware of these goals, I feel they have fallen
down in their obligation to me. I turned down more
lucrative offers in favor of UNH because I felt they
valued teaching and it seemed they had struck a
balance between teaching, service and research
. .. I did not know then that research meant publica­
tion. I have copies of this correspondence, yet dur­
ing evaluation for promotion and tenure their
copies were not brought forward.
“ It is disconcerting to realize that I will have to
send my children to be educated by people whose
definition of justice fluctuates depending on the sit­
uation. Three years ago I initiated a request for pro­
motion and tenure. I had a letter of recommenda­
253
action with him I developed an extremely negative
image of Professors Bobick and Dewey. This was
done subtly; before I had a chance to get to know
as individuals I formed a negative conception of
them.
“ Three years ago when I asked for promotion and
tenure, a three man committee turned down my
request. I asked Professor Palmer for his personal
evaluation of me which he refused to give. I knew
without the recommendations of the chairman there
would be no promotion or tenure. I knew then there
would be an anti-lngersoll campaign, as there had
been anti-Bobick/Dewey campaigns. I talked it over
with my family and we decided to stay and fight it
out, even though I was told at the time by Professor
Linsky (again, no witnesses) that if I went quietly I
would get very good recommendations. I am con­
vinced that if I submitted my present vita to this uni­
versity without subjective evaluations attached that
I would be hired on the spot as an associate profes­
sor. I have a federal grant, beginning in 1972, for
$76,000, $54,000 of which is for student support at
the university where I am teaching.’’
PETER SAVAGE
“ I came here three years ago after teaching at In­
diana for four years. I was hired here as an asso­
ciate professor without tenure and normally tenure
decisions are taken, under AAUP rules anyway, the
seventh year. This is my seventh year of teaching so
the university decides whether to keep me or not.
It’s a very complicated story with a great deal of un­
raveling to be done. Much of the story lies not in the
formality of the steps taken but in the informality,
the politics and interplay behind those steps.
“ The tenured members of the department met
early in December, without the chairman who was
indisposed. So, the remaining tenured members
met and dealt with their responsibilities under the
rules, namely, the question of my tenure and other
personnel matters. My merits and demerits were
discussed, a vote was taken and the vote at the
meeting was unanimous to recommend tenure. The
results of that meeting were transmitted to the
chairman who was still indisposed, who had not
made any personnel files available to the tenured
members of the department. Then the chairman for­
warded all the pertinent correspondence together
with his own negative recommendation (unseen
and undiscussed with his tenured colleagues) to
the Dean of Liberal Arts who then gave it to the Col­
lege Promotion and Tenure Committee who made a
negative recommendation and passed it back to the
dean. The dean made his recommendation to the
vice president, on to the president and the Board of
Trustees—all negative decisions.
’“ The negative decision was handed back to me
some time in April or May. I then asked for an ap­
peal. The university has no appeal mechanism but
agreed to reconsideration. This was inadequate but
later presented, it is difficult for this person to
change his psychological set. He said he hoped I
didn’t think the administration fell into this category.
Was he saying that the people in the administration
do not fall in the same category with other people? I
guess I couldn’t debate that.
“ More UNH justice: I was expected to go through
certain procedures, none of which I could find writ­
ten down anywhere. According to the faculty hand­
book I have fulfilled all the criteria for promotion
and tenure. Faculty Welfare, being made up of pro­
fessors who make the original decisions, is more
faculty than welfare. I spent days running around
preparing letters to be submitted to this person or
that person and then received a letter saying Fac­
ulty Welfare had exhausted its ability to be of service
to me. Assistant Professors are not entitled to a
public hearing regarding promotion and tenure.
Isn’t that unconstitutional? Every citizen has the
right to a public hearing; to face his accusers and
refute—except at UNH. Unfortunately, with four chil­
dren, two of college age, I haven’t the financial as­
sets for a court fight.
“ About the power structure: The President and
the acting Dean of the College of Liberal Arts said
they did not have the power to interfere with depart­
mental affairs. This can only mean that all the power
in the university rests in the departments, which
makes all administrative positions figureheads.
“ My ‘mistake’: I feel in the search for knowledge
there is no hierarchy. I assume in an intellectual dis­
cussion that the validity of the argument rests on
the logic, knowledge and research of the individual
and not on his rank. I do not feel that because I
have a PhD it would be impossible to learn some­
thing from a student. In terms of administration,
running of the department, decision making, I feel
the chairman or full professor carries weight, but in
intellectual pursuits, rank should make no differ­
ence. This is a philosophy I cannot and will not
change. I would suggest that the self defined
‘scholars’ read about the anthropological concept
of ethnocentrism. The sociologist, supposedly an
expert on small groups, formal organizations, inter­
personal behavior, fads, fashions and customs is
not aware of the fact that as an individual and a so­
ciologist he is involved in these areas as much as
those he studies. The majority of sociologists are in­
capable of objective self evaluation. They are in­
capable of developing what George Herbert Mead
called ‘generalized other’ and what Weber was
saying when he talked of Verhestehn.
“ The beginning: My negotiations with the depart­
ment started with Professor Palmer. When I came
for an interview, I was alone with Professor Palmer,
(therefore this cannot be verified as there were no
witnesses) and he told me if I agreed to come to
UNH for the money they had to offer that I would get
raises and promotion as quickly as possible. I was
dependent on Professor Palmer. Through my inter­
254
was used because it can with some stretch of the
imagination be seen as a local remedy. This re­
consideration consisted of a review of the material
and new supporting material taken by the very
same people who made the original decision in the
first place. The reconsideration is complete and
there stands the same negative decision. That’s the
situation as it stands now.
"The Faculty Welfare Committee has become in­
volved in the second consideration, simply keeping
its eye on the process rather than dealing with the
substance, and they have now informed me that
their function under what tenure rules there are is
now fulfilled. The remedies left to me now are the
local AAUP, the national AAUP, which has been in­
formed of the case, and any outside legal action
which I might wish to take alone or in concert with
ther tenured members of this department. That’s
the stage we’re at today—the end of June.
"Now, why this negative decision? I have my own
explanations for it which probably do not accord
with other peoples’. The vote was seven senior ten­
ured members against one tenured member, the
chairman of the department. In support of my own
case, letters were received from probably 25 out­
standing political scientists across the country and
internationally and while I have not seen the letters I
understand they were highly supportive.
"The case against me I can only get in bits and
pieces. First of all the whole proceedings in the vari­
ous correspondence explaining the exchange be­
tween the dean and myself and the tenured mem­
bers contain a series of allegations, none of which I
have ever been allowed to confront. Let me give
you some of the allegations. One, it is said that the
five junior members of this department wrote letters
to the dean protesting that I had in some way during
my three years here and their three years threat­
ened them professionally. These charges were
never made specific and I have no chance to an­
swer them. Second, a set of allegations have to do
with my ‘irresponsibility’, specifically, that I allowed
students in the Merrimac Valley Branch course
which I once taught to smoke cigarettes in the
classroom and that I was late for a number of ses­
sions. Those are two of the charges. There are
other vague charges of professional irresponsibility
floating around, various hints of ‘secret’ information
held by the administration detrimental to my case
which had not been made apparent to any tenured
members of the department or made public to any­
one else. What this is I really do not know.
"It appears that the chairman of the department
painted a very good portrait of me which is almost
in its entirity false. For instance, one of his accusa­
tions against me which he presented to the tenured
members of the department, I am told, was that my
vita was inflated and to a large extent inaccurate.
The associate Academic Vice-President was quoted
publically as saying that I had never been in Rho­
desia nor had I done those things in Rhodesia
which I said I had done. The tenured members of
the department asked me then to try to substantiate
every item on my vita which I did within 36 hours,
trying to get together what documents I could. This
I found to be a very demeaning experience, but
none the less was done. So that removed one of the
charges from the chairman’s repertoire.
"The chairman had never made available to the
tenured members of the department his negative
letter about me to the administration and he has
never made my personnel file available. There have
been a whole series of procedural and due process
violations in this case. I have a particularly strong
case for tenure based on the normal criteria applied
to this university. One of the ironies is that if the cri­
teria they are trying to apply to me in terms of
teaching, research and service to the university and
local community were to be applied to this campus
generally you would find the ranks of most of the
social science departments deceminated—they
would simply disappear.
"These kinds of things have a larger meaning. If
the senior and tenured members of a department
whose collected experience and wisdom is to be
overridden in a like fashion without due accord to
proper procedures and*without due weight for their
opinions, it means that there is no protection for
any faculty member at this university. There are no
appropriate appeals procedures currently. It means
that even if people meet the frequently quoted cri­
teria of publication and good standing in their pro­
fession that it can be dismissed or otherwise used
according to the whim of the administration. In
other words the university then becomes in the po­
sition of a private employer which can hire and fire
at will. Not, you would agree, conducive to a schol­
arly, intellectual and learning environment.’’
In conclusion, and in answer to the question
"What do you feel are the overall implications of
such dismissals for the university community?’’ the
three faculty members interviewed answered as
follows.
255
The Food Co-operative
Penelope Van Duym: “ My case is different from sev­
eral other cases in that I have asked to be consid­
ered solely for teaching purposes and I have not
published or gotten a degree and have done so
openly. And for that reason I think most people
thought it ridiculous that I even be talked about in
the department as a serious person in the faculty.
There is always the lament—‘How can we judge
good teachers.’ I think that is one of the laments that
makes people feel they cannot judge good teachers
and that it is a terrible problem but we can’t do any­
thing about it therefore we can only judge on pro­
fessional things and on publications and so it really
becomes an excuse. I don’t think they want some­
body who is solely interested in the teaching thing
because it brings no rewards for the university.’’
Richard Ingersoll: “ Those individuals who do not
question the system, or authority, or rank—even if
they are incompetent as teachers, researchers, or
in terms of service—will get promotion and tenure.
The faculty most affected by this kind of injustice I
would describe as independent thinkers, noncon­
formists, and those who get their primary means of
gratification through interpersonal interaction
rather than in status. No one in a power position ac­
cepts the responsibility of his decisions. You hear
‘it’s the way things are’ or ‘it’s the system’ or ‘I don’t
have the power’. At some point, someone has to
say ‘yes, I made that decision; it is my responsibility
and I will stand behind it’. Until that time, faculty
concerned with teaching, education, service to the
state and not concerned with status, position or
power must get together and form some kind of fac­
ulty organization to prevent future miscarriage of
justice.’’
Peter Savage: “ I do not think this case was so very
much about the freedom of an individual faculty
member to make his personal political preferences
public. What it does mean is something different. It
means that you have to be very guarded and very
cardful in what you do and say around campus; that
you cannot become a scholar, an academic, an in­
tellectual, a teacher without one eye on T-Hall. This
makes you half of what you really ought to be and
what you ought to be to the students and to the
state of New Hampshire. It will mean that there will
be an atmosphere on campus in which people will
start to do things in their professional lives which
are dictated more towards creating a favorable im­
age of themselves in T-Hall. For instance, it is quite
clear that over recent years people have tried to
publish, they have not tried to teach because teach­
ing is not rewarded. So my feelings are, I will pursue
the case because I think that justice demands that
other people be satisfied, particularly the students
and my tenured colleagues, the members of the
faculty to whom this can happen and will happen
unless matters are brought very rapidly under con­
trol by the new president and perhaps the new
dean.’’
The idea for the Food Co-operative formed early
in February, 1971, and the first meeting, which con­
sisted almost entirely of young people with some
students included, was held at the Stone Church in
Newmarket. Someone had obtained information
concerning where a Food Co-op in Boston bought
its food and how it operated. A produce wholesaler
in Chelsea, Pastan Brothers, Inc., would take an or­
der Tuesday evening, and the produce would be
waiting, piled on the loading ramp at the ware­
house, on Wednesday morning. Each week’s price
list (prices vary from week to week) would be re­
layed to us every Saturday morning by way of a
phone call from Gus. (Gus is the guy who sells the
food.)
The decision of the meeting was to “ get it to­
gether” for the following week. And so on Wednes­
day, February 10, the first order of food came to the
Stone Church in Newmarket. The order, for about
$100 worth of produce, was delivered in a Vokswagon bus, which someone had volunteered for the
occasion. The quality of the food was excellent and
the prices were way below retail prices.
On Wednesday, May 12, food came for the
thirteenth week in a row to the Stone Church. The
order was for about $1,831 worth of produce and
was delivered in a sixteen-foot U-Haul truck!
Needless to say the Co-op has grown phenom­
enally in thirteen weeks, and without getting into
percentages could be the envy of some capitalist
interested in growth rates. However, this would be
the only aspect of the Food Co-op that he would
view favorably. Many of its essential elements he
would view with alarm. For example, it subverts a
vital part of the profit system by making all the par­
ticipants share in the “ middleman and retailer”
phases, thus eliminating them. This is profoundly
against competitive capitalism. Also subject to
great suspicion is the fact that the whole operation,
massive as it has become, with “ branches” in Dur­
ham, Concord, Dover, and Portsmouth, rely almost
totally on volunteer energy. The sole exception is
the position of coordinator, created democratically
in a general meeting of the Food Co-op, which
pays $20 per week. (About one dollar per hour.)
And finally for the most observant capitalist, per­
haps most dangerous of all, the Co-op is, after
thirteen short weeks, no longer just youth-oriented
(and hence in his eyes unstable and destined to
crumble), but has reached out to the whole of the
communities in which it operated, encompassing
particularly large numbers of elderly, working
class, and poor people. What if the Co-op taught
them they did not need him? Would not his days
be numbered?
The Food Co-op has this contribution to make.
256
was at that time the predominant area for drug
abuse in the state of New Hampshire. We held a
meeting on April 5, 1970 for the general public, and
it proved to be very successful. We had twenty-two
hundred people there with a turn away crowd. With
all the support we had gained from the public we
were able to raise just under $75,000 in less than a
year.”
In order to get a picture of what the program ac­
tually does, the GRANITE then spoke to Dave Sand­
burg, former director of the storefront and Odyssey
House staff member, and Frank Whipkey, level four
resident and supervisor of the house.
Dave Sandburg; “The Odyssey House store­
front in Portsmouth opened in July of 1970. Three
main functions were first identified. First, the store­
front was to be used as a base for a preventive drug
education program. The second function of the
storefront was identified as serving as a general
counseling center, not just limited to people with
drug problems. The third function was to serve as
an Odyssey House pre-induction center. (At that
time the people who wanted to go into the program
had to go through the storefront in order to be re­
ferred to the New York Odyssey House part of the
program.) In a little over a year of operation the
storefront saw over 1500 people, and approximately
half of those people were there for counsel on their
problems, or were parents concerned about their
children's problems. Also during this period the
storefront averaged fifty to sixty phone calls per
week.
In my five months with the storefront I saw a great
variety of people involved with the drug problem.
Perhaps a majority of the young people we saw
were between the ages of thirteen and fifteen. A
typical case was a girl from Dover, who had used all
drugs including heiron. We also saw people as old
as thirty-two. This particular individual had used
LSD over a period of ten years. We did not find a
majority of either male or female.
We discovered that there is a great deal of misun­
derstanding about drugs. People have very limited
knowledge concerning the drugs that they are us­
ing. One of the great myths that exist in New Hamp­
shire is that if you don’t use heiron, then you are not
in trouble.
We also found that for every young person that
came in he had a parent or parents who also had
problems. And the problem usually had to do with
the confusion on both parts of how to confront
each other about what was going on. We had thir­
teen year-old children literally tell their parents
they were using drugs, but in most cases the par­
ents never picked up on it. They would either get
very angry, or they would be understanding to a
fault. In either case the child was not given an
accurate confrontation by the parent.”
At this point Frank Whipkey talked about the gen­
eral structure of the Odyssey House.
Odyssey House
Odyssey House is a drug rehabilitation program;
the first of its kind to come to New Hampshire. To
get some background information on the program
the GRANITE spoke to Arthur F. Brady, Portsmouth
business man, chairman of the New Hampshire
Odyssey House, and the man most responsible for
the efforts to bring Odyssey House to this state.
Arthur F. Brady: “ I am a person who has been in­
terested in the growing drug problem for the last
three and a half to four years. In the spring of 1968
a survey was done in the Portsmouth School Sys­
tem. Ordinarily, I do not have much faith in surveys,
but this one was snapped on students the first thing
Monday morning. Out of about 1300 students sur­
veyed, the figure was about thirteen percent using
drugs. The most important thing, though, was that
eleven percent claimed that they did in fact want
help.
During this time a former drug addict from Boston
was brought into the area, and advised us that pro­
fessionals were not needed because they would
turn-off the drug user. At the same time, however, a
small group of citizens got together, mostly profes­
sionals, and they felt that the use of the former ad­
dict alone was a poor approach. The final decision
was that the ex-addict alone was not enough to
handle the problem. If he were to become ill, and
had to be taken out of the house, we were left with
absolutely no control.
Sometime later I went to New York with Father
Deklin of the Rye Beach area because he had a
brother at Odyssey House in a three and a half
month training program. This was Brother Joe
Riley. After visiting New York and seeing how highly
structured it was, I could see that if any rehabilita­
tion success was to be achieved it was through a
program like this.
We then got together a group of citizens to do
something for the Seacoast area, since this, we felt,
257
two. In the house we do all the work ourselves. We
have different departments, and when a person be­
comes a level two he becomes an assistant depart­
ment head. After this he may become a level three
and head of a department. When a person be­
comes a level four he usually becomes supervisor
of the house or of the storefront. As supervisor of
the house he runs the whole house and is in
charge of all the activities. After level four a person
becomes a candidate-out and a paid staff member
working along with the professional staff.
In each facility there are about four professional
and four ex-addict staff members. Today Odyssey
House has about 110 staff members, half of which
are professional and half of which are ex-addicts
who have graduated the program.
Frank Whipkey: “ Odyssey House is basically set­
up as a very rigid and highly structured program.
When a person first joins the program he starts at
the stage which we call a ‘candidate-in’. As a candidate-in, a person will do all the physical labor in the
house, and mostly deal with his attitude and behav­
ior before going into therapy. A person will remain a
candidate-in for usually six to eight weeks. After this
period a person will have his ‘probe’, which is his
first contact with group therapy. If he passes the
probe he becomes a ‘level one'. As a level one he
continues to do most of the manual labor in the
house and learns how to use the tools of the house,
such as confrontation and encounter groups and
learns how to use group therapy.
After a person proves this he becomes a level
A Conversation With Jonathan Kozol
Editor’s Note: This conversation with Jonathan
Kozol, the author of “ Death at an Early Age” and
nationally known educator, took place over two ap­
ples, an orange and a round table in the Storefront
Learning Center on 90 West Brookline Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts.
In the following conversation Jonathan wanted us
to be sure that we stressed that these were his per­
sonal views and not those of the Storefront Learn­
ing Center.
Early in April at 8:15 in the evening we pulled up
in front of a brick building that was well plastered
with bright colored pieces of plywood and posters.
In the middle of the wooden doorway was a sign
that said something about a “ council” but the rest
couldn’t be made out in the darkness. Just to the
right of that there was a sign about three feet by
five feet that had “ The Storefront Learning Center”
printed in old English Lettering.
After about a five minute wait, a faded yellow Volkswagon pulled up in front of us and the person
who climbed out introduced himself as Jonathan.
He looked about thirty with wired rimmed glasses
and wore a tattered sweater, dark brown corduroys
and dirty suede boots with his pants stuck inside.
After introductions we climbed a subway-like
stairway to the second floor where the entrance to
the Storefront Learning Center was.
258
ing so they go the country and learn to be happy
with their wife and kids and so the freedom school
is replaced by the free school, but the free school is
a very non-political kind of school.
“ I think that’s something we have to fight with
now. That’s my main thing: to wage a battle to politi­
cize those schools. I don’t know how to go about
that yet, but that is the thrust of my thinking right
now.”
“ This type of euphoric country free school is, in
its own way, super American because it is based on
the old idea that you can bring about important
change without having to pay a price for it. They
don’t realize that what they are doing is made pos­
sible by the Vietnam War and by the existence of
the ghetto. Of course, they get angry when you say
that. They’ll say, ‘I’m not killing anyone and I’m not
a slumlandlord, but they would not be doing what
they are doing if there were not police who locked
people in the ghetto. Completely apart from all that,
it is one country and nobody has the right to dis­
affiliate himself.
“ That’s why The Greening of America, Charles
Reiche’s book, is so popular. It was a book aimed at
the American market, perfect for this moment. Not
that it is not an intelligent book in many ways, but
the ultimate message of the book is pernicious. It’s
saying that everything can change and nobody has
to pay a price. Nobody has to put their bodies on
the line. We don’t need any Ghandis or Thoreaus;
we don’t need any more Malcolm X’s, we just go out
and make love in the meadows and everything will
be all right.”
John went on to stress that to try to keep educa­
tion free from politics is virtually absurd as well as
impossible. To emphasize this we talked about the
public school system as a form of state in­
doctrination, and contended that everything that
happened within the public school system was a
subtle form of manipulation. We went on to cite ex­
amples of political manipulation as he saw them.
“ Generally, we think of political manipulation in
the public schools as being a very obvious thing.
For example, patriotic lies like Manifest Destiny or
construction of the Pan-American Highway to bring
Gulf stations to the poor of Latin America. But now
I think it has more to do with things that are less
easy to pin down.
“ For instance, the kinds of words that are avail­
able to you in school. There are a lot of nouns avail­
able in school that have to do with ‘suffering’, but
there are very few verbs that have to do with the act
of causing suffering or exploitation.
“ In other words, thousands of poor black kids ex­
ist in America in a seemingly uncaused state of
being, known as deprivation, but we do not say that
Daniel Moynihan deprives poor children of the right
to eat. There are very few verbs which have to do at
all with the connection between Daniel Moynihan
controlling the economic funds and the resulting
Inside, our attention was drawn to the large
poster of the alphabet (A, for Africa; B, for Black, H,
for Huey Newton, etc.), a fish aquarium with a
poster above it indicating a few people’s guesses
at how many it contained, and assorted tables
that seemed to contain people’s creations in var­
ious stages of completion.
In the corner of the room where the windows
were high on a wall which seemed to hug posters
and cabinets and shelves to it, was a small round
gray wooden table with four straight-backed chairs
around it. It was there, with the curtains flapping to
an open window near the ceiling, and the inter­
mittent rain spattering on the glass, eating two ap­
ples and an orange, that we talked.
“ My main thought about schools and the alterna­
tive learning movement is the part that ideology
plays in education. In the public school system the
administrators and the education school people
say, ‘pedagogy, learning and teaching is one
thing—politics is something different. Now you kids
keep politics out of school!’ This, I think, is an
enormous deception because this is pretending
that school is not already political. What they mean
is to keep unfashionable politics out of school. They
also mean keep only our kind of politics in school.
“ Everything that we do or say with children in­
volves an ideology. No matter how inconspicuous
the teacher is, even if the teacher doesn’t open her
mouth, just by the way he or she looks, is an adver­
tisement for some kind of ideology. Even the archi­
tecture of the school conveys an ideology.
“ The syntax that schools allow also conveys an
ideology. Schools that discourage children from
writing their essays in the first person (you know,
they always say, don’t use the first person except in
your conclusion), they’re just upholding what I call
the third person ideology. And, of course, revolu­
tions are not made by people in the third person.
This is a syntax of conservatism.
“ I think that the idea of getting kids out of the
public school system into almost any kind of al­
ternative is a very radical beginning, but I do think
that the society recognizes that. I think that we
would be very naive to think that there are not
people in Washington who have thought ahead of
the implications of the alternative education move­
ment. I think that society’s major strategy for han­
dling what looks like a dangerous movement is to
try to divert us into a rebellion made of love, grass,
sweetness and the Whole Earth Catalogue; to sort
of lead us into a simulated rebellion.
“ A free school of that kind wouldn’t be selling pa­
triotism anymore, but it wouldn’t be doing anything
to undermine it either. It creates an individual mar­
ket for itself which is very attractive. A lot of people
going into these commune free schools are very
nice people, who went through the civil rights
movement and were kicked out when the Black
Power began. They’re tired of marching and picket­
259
custodial function (which locks us up for twelve
years so we can’t do anything until we are well in­
doctrinated). Associated with this is the certifying
function which gives us a degree at the end of six­
teen years to prove that we are well indoctrinated.
Those three functions are the absolute keystones of
American citizenship. The two party system, the
managed market, Richard Nixon’s stability—the
status quo all depend upon those functions being
performed well.”
Toward the end of the conversation John tried to
give us an idea of the kinds of solutions for the
problems that we had been talking about. He men­
tioned that these ideas were things that he had
been thinking about recently, but he added that the
time had come for people like himself and John Holt
and others to stand behind some of the things that
they were advising other people to do.
“ The ideal answer would be if the alternative edu­
cational movement could break away from the pub­
lic schools and develop an operation which is not
custodial or indoctrinational nor credentializing in
nature in any important way, and yet still glue to­
gether enough bogus trustee boards to provide
competitive accreditation.
“ Some people will say by doing that you are vali­
dating the credentials by imitating them. But my
thinking is that on the other hand you are in­
validating them by duplicating them without having
to have paid too high a price to get them. I think that
it would be what Che calls using the weapons of the
oppressor to defeat him.”
fact of the thousands of starving black kids in this
nation.”
“ After we peeled the orange, we continued talk­
ing, but this time about the University and higher
education in general.
“ The purpose of higher education, as I see it, is to
furnish you with a list of credentials to exist in the
society. The credentials are proof that you sat still
long enough to get them. It isn’t really what you’ve
learned but the only thing they prove is that you sat
still for twelve years in front of the flag in a certain
kind of situation everyday. If you get credentials af­
ter sixteen years, then you are even more important
because then you are qualified to teach others how
to sit through it.
“ The longer that you have done it, the more it in­
dicates your willingness to sacrifice your own im­
pulses and your own convictions. The more creden­
tials you get, the more vested interest that you have
in believing that they mean something. On the other
hand, if you drop out of it into a situation where you
have no credentials with which to function in so­
ciety, then the only place that you can function will
be up on the country free school, or else as a street
person which really, I think, doesn’t solve any prob­
lems, but rather adds to another oppressed
minority.”
John continued to express his views on what he
saw as the functions of the public school system as
a form of political indoctrination.
“ I think that the ideological, indoctrinational func­
tion of the public schools is associated with the
From McConnell To Bonner
Accomplishments of the McConnell administra­
tion include the establishment of the Merrimack Val­
ley Branch in Manchester, the creation of the
Whittemore School of Business and Economics, the
building of the New England Center for Continuing
Education, and the merging of a faculty senate and
a student senate to form a single University Senate
consisting of representatives from the student
body, the faculty, and the administration of the
University.
McConnell cited as necessary changes in the
running of the academic system (course content,
methods of instruction, grading systems, require­
ments for graduation and the calendar), devel­
opment of the three branches of the University
(Keene, Plymouth, and Merrimack Valley), practical
solutions to the University’s financial crisis, and a
definition of the place of the University within the
community.
“ While a new form of University government has
been introduced, this is only a formal expression of
a new spirit which pervades the campus. A reeval­
A quiet, peaceful, modest man who omits any ref­
erence to title and introduces himself only by his
name, has left his office one year before his time to
make room for changes and innovation, and to give
the new administration a chance to prepare for the
future. Sociologist, economist, former consultant to
several government agencies, and fifteenth Presi­
dent of the University of New Hampshire, John W.
McConnell, is retiring to Trumansburg, New York.
McConnell, at age 64, foresaw the need for
change in many areas of the educational system,
and the University in particular, and felt that the
man responsible for carrying out these changes,
should be actively involved in their planning and in­
itiation. McConnell has gracefully bowed out, leav­
ing his successor, Dr. Thomas N. Bonner, former
vice-president and provost of academic affairs at
the University of Cincinnatti in Ohio, with a growing
financial crisis, a restless student body, a con­
servative state legislature resistant to progressive
change, and a press bent on destroying anyone as­
sociated with the state university.
260
uation of student, faculty, administration and
trustee relationships is required from the vantage
point of fresher and more youthful perspectives,”
explains McConnell of his early retirement.
Bonner, author and historian, was challenged
with what is probably only the first in a long series
of attacks, simply because of his association with
the University, from state officials and the New
Hampshire press. The smear campaign began upon
his announcement of his appointment, when Sena­
tor Norris Cotton (R-NH), on the floor of the U.S.
Senate in Washington, D.C., denounced Bonner for
his previous political association with Democratic
Senator George McGovern.
Cotton raged, ‘‘McGovern and his associates are
. . . promoting disrespect for the Congress, imped­
ing the President in his efforts to end the war and
encouraging our enemies to refues to negotiate for
peace. To me it is incredible that the Governor and
the trustees of the University of New Hampshire
should, at this, of all times, take action capable of
such far-reaching interpretation. I regard it as a
blow to every one of us here who is striving desper­
ately to promote peace and a decent respect for au­
thority.” Editorials in support of Cotton’s statement
quickly followed in the Manchester Union Leader
and Foster’s Daily Democrat.
In interviews with representatives of the Univer­
sity of Cincinnati community, Bonner appears as
concern for the student, willing to listen, innovative,
and rational, a typical historian characteristic. He
encourages experimental teaching and ‘‘genuine
innovation which is aimed at improving the teach­
ing-learning process.” According to Richard Baker,
director of community relations at the University of
Cincinnati, ‘‘Bonner anticipates needs and de­
mands and this is what makes him innovative.”
Bonner, whose primary interest is the history of
medicine, received his PhD from Northwestern Uni­
versity in 1953 and has served as lecturer, profes­
sor, and chairman of history at various colleges and
universities. His secondary interests include socio­
intellectual history and recent American history.
‘‘While it is true that universities as such cannot
take official stands on controversial, political and
moral questions, I believe that there is no reason
why encouragement cannot be given to individual
professors, departments, or institutes, who have
good educational reasons for doing so, to become
more involved in the problems of the community
. . .” stated Bonner.
It would be interesting to learn why universities
cannot be officially outspoken, to know what is con­
sidered a good educational reason, and to discover
how a person can make himself useful in a commu­
nity if he has been isolated from it throughout his
educational career and forced to keep himself unin­
volved with controversial issues. Presenting the an­
swer to this is only one of the challenges Bonner
will be facing during his stay at UNH.
Bonner’s rationality has been termed a ‘‘limita­
tion” by Bud Park, associate professor of history at
UC. Park feels that not all students trust Bonner’s
rational approach.
Bonner names his biggest contribution at UC as
the creation of the College of Community Services
which is ‘‘aimed specifically at training persons on
the campus for roles of leadership in the communitv.” He is quite concerned with the feelings of
blaco niudents and faculty. ‘‘The most important
problerriV«°*n had to face here is how to develop an
educationaf formate on campus in which black stu­
dents and faculty feel genuinely they are a part of
the educational community here.”
Larry Bonhaus, student university senator at UC,
said, in speaking of Bonner, “ . . . he is definitely
progressive and open-minded. After knowing him
for four years, I was unable to draw a distinction be­
tween a person’s being liberal and one’s being pro­
gressive. If they (the critics) are calling him a radi­
cal, then they are certainly confusing being radical
and being courageous.”
It remains to be seen whether Bonner’s being
merely courageous without being radical, will be
sufficient to enact the changes which are so des­
perately needed at the University of New Hamp­
shire.
—by Sharon Curran
261
In-State Tuition: $1,000!
such as the carrying of Mail to Keene and Plymouth
via the library truck instead of through the mail.
As negotiations with the Legislature became criti­
cal, the image of the University and particularly of
students became an issue in Durham and around
the state, and predictably the Manchester Union
Leader became once again the focal point for in­
genious distortions of events on campus. The ap­
pearance of Rennie Davis was an ideal opportunity
to recreate the state-wide paranoia that was ramp­
ant during last year’s visit of the “ Chicago 3” , and
the Union Leader didn’t disappoint its readers. The
message was not lost on the University administra­
tion and although the appearance of Davis was not
prevented, McConnell was highly critical of the tim­
ing of the visit, when he discussed the image of the
University in his April speeches.
“ The invitation to Rennis Davis to speak at the
University, publicized by the Union Leader this
morning, will make the job more difficult if not im­
possible. Many legislators will look at this invitation
as further evidence of the irresponsibility of stu­
dents, faculty, and administrators alike, and will not
be persuaded to support any measure, financial or
otherwise, which is favorable to the University.
“ I think I have demonstrated through the years
my complete support for academic freedom and an
open campus, but I realise that in a conservative
state like New Hampshire the exercise of such free­
dom exacts a very high price indeed. Complain as
we may, that people don’t understand us, or what a
University is all about, their dissatisfaction with the
University is a fact of life.”
Although the outgoing president pledged the Uni­
versity would “ use every weapon at our disposal to
fight for the funds needed to maintain this Univer­
sity” , he remained adamant in his conviction that
the University should not become a political force in
state politics.
“ Perhaps it would be wise to leave our traditional
neutrality to work politically for a better New Hamp­
shire. Our primary function however, is not that of
conducting a political crusade. As individuals you
are free to carry out any kintl of political program
you see fit, but as a University our first responsibility
is to offer the best possible education to our stu­
dents within the limits of the resources made avail­
able to us.”
Not surprisingly, all the support that the Univer­
sity could muster wasn’t enough to win against the
rapidly collapsing fiscal structure of the state and
on May 4, the University got some idea of how
limited its resources might be.
On that date, the House Appropriations Com­
mittee made Governor Peterson’s cut look mild in
comparison, when they recommended the Univer­
sity System budget request be cut 35%. This cut
would leave a budget of $26,045,799 or an increase
of $1,360 more than the last biennium’s appropria­
tion. Since increases in cost of living expenses re­
“ It’s going to be a rough year.” That comment
from Allan Prince, special assistant to the President
on the University budget, may well be the under­
statement of the year as the University System ap­
pears to be heading towards the worst financial
crisis in its history.
The total operating budget request for the Univer­
sity system of Durham, Keene, Plymouth and the
Merrimack Valley Branch was $39.9 million, which
represented an increase of 53% over the appropiation for the 1969-71 biennium. This request in­
cluded a “ catch-up” factor for the last biennium
which was also slashed by the New Hampshire Leg­
islature and which caused the reduction of some
necessary programs such as maintenance and up­
keep of plant and equipment.
The first indication of impending trouble came
with Governor Walter Peterson’s budget message
to the Legislature in which he proposed a $6.5 mil­
lion cut in the University System’s request. At this
stage however, there was still hope that the Legisla­
ture would avert a major state financial crisis by
creating new new forms of taxation, and University
officials, whatever their private doubts about the fi­
nal outcome, refused to make public speculation
about possible cuts in University programs. Offi­
cially, the University still expected to receive its full
budget request.
This attitude became unrealistic however when
the State’s business profits tax, which was de­
signed to replace the archaic stock-in-trade tax,
produced only one third of the expected revenue,
which had already been pledged to the local com­
munities. Together with the Legislature’s refusal to
initiate a much-needed system of broad-based
taxes, it became obvious that the University System,
along with all other state-funded agencies, would
suffer a massive cut in its budget.
President John W. McConnell held meetings with
staff, faculty, and students early in April to discuss
implications of what he termed the “ disastrous”
budget situation. McConnell, never noted for scare
tactics or strong language in previous University
crises, used such terms as “ dangerous situation”
and “ major crisis.” He warned everyone that a fis­
cal belt-tightening was forthcoming although he de­
clined to committ himself to a specific program.
One immediate action that was taken however, was
a freeze on hiring of all University employees. Uni­
versity officials said the “ essential nature” of each
job would be reappraised before granting per­
mission to replace University employees.
Other cutbacks followed rapidly as the Academic
Planning Committee drew up a list of priorities. The
cuts ranged from reduction of upkeep and mainte­
nance of the plant and equipment to token gestures
262
quired $800,000 more than the last biennium, this
recommendation would actually result in less real
income to the University, than the 1969-71
appropriation.
Prince said the cut would result in “ the general
detioriation of the programs and physical plant of
the University.” He also pointed out the cut would
automatically scratch the proposed School of So­
cial Work, which had been budgeted as a separate
request.
McConnell said the University might have to con­
sider deleting courses not essential to majors and
predicted a rise in the number of faculty leaving
UNH to get more secure jobs.
Student reaction to the budget crisis was min­
imal. While most students predictably took no inter­
est in the affair, those that were concerned saw little
way to influence the legislators. Nor did they re­
ceive great encouragement, most of whom prob­
ably hoped that students would stay as far as pos­
sible from Concord. The political and financial
implications of the appearance of Rennie Davis
produced some dialogue, but as one student put it,
“ we’re tired tried of being told we shouldn’t do this
or that because it’s a budget year,” and Davis ap­
peared as scheduled, despite M cC onnell’s
chastisement.
As the semester finished, the budget request was
still not finalised, but one thing was already clear;
students would return to UNH in the fall, with the
highest in-state tuition rate for a state college, and
the second highest out-of-state tuition, and face the
prospect of less course offerings and more over­
crowded classes.
changed anyone’s mind; while the bums, crumbs,
loafers and dirty, permissive ne’er-do-wells of the
People’s Army were cast down because the system
had reacted just as their main people had predicted
it would.
What was lost was that in this land where we have
to beg people to register to vote, 7,000 persons,
count ’em 7,000, had gone out and incurred arrest
for something they believe in. In addition, they’d
turned this capital city into a simulated Saigon with
the choppers flying all over, the armed men every­
where, and the fear that at any moment something
worse, something bloody might happen. They’d
cause chaos in Georgetown, the opulent gathering
place for so many of the powerful and influential
people who made this war or failed to oppose it.
The statusquotarians are gloating that the ur­
chins with anti-tear gas rags around their necks
didn’t overthrow the state. They can’t focus in on
who their opponents are, although the filthy funkies
left signs on the walls that say. Like this one Freak
Central on Vermont Avenue: “ Peggy—If and when
you get out, please let’s get together before I
split—Maybe Thursday. I’m staying at a place on the
corner of blank and blank Street NW. Things will be
alright. Don.” Or noted on a wall in the Municipal
Court zoo: “ To Walter Archibald—Your wife is now
at the Superior Court lockup. Please get in touch if
you can. Grace.”
These are the people who kicked Washington in
the pants, people with exams to take, jobs to go to,
with families to love, with all the same drives that
make the rest of us curse politics and the govern­
ment for absorbing so much of our time, money and
energy. They differ only in degree from the govern­
ment worker in the straight suit and the attache
case at 19th and Pennsylvania who couldn’t control
himself and suddenly began helping the crazy filthies drag trash cans out on the Avenue to block
the road.
What’s happened in Washington the past few
days has been more than to show the intensity of a
growing number of people’s feelings. It has also
demonstrated that if these people come back in yet
larger numbers they can paralyze this city, or at
least turn it into pancake batter.
They’ve had it on the ropes, exhausted the police
force until it has begun to lose its normally good
discipline and indulge in indiscriminate and promis­
cuous busting of most anybody young looking dif­
ferent. It’s made the judicial system malfunction by
showing that when you arrest that many people
there’s no way on earth of keeping up with the pa­
per work or preparing enough evidence for a trial.
The government here has been reduced to sweep­
ing the streets, rumbling through with huge tractortrailer jail-vans, mobile Bastilles that suck people
off the sidewalks into improvised pens and camps
where there’s no toilet paper but heightened
bitterness.
—by Jonathan Hyde
WASHINGTON: ON
THE ROPES
The Marines were securing the Washington
Monument and turning it into Firebase Martha;
there were troops on the bridges across the Poto­
mac; the police were zipping and zooping around
the town in the squad cars chucking tear gas cannisters out of the windows, and the Newzak all­
news radio station was reading triumphant official
communiques proclaiming the government had
been saved, the Republic yet stood and the flag still
flew. The President would not be deposed by some
19-year-old college student from Teaneck, New
Jersey.
The nature, composition and intent of the freaks
making up the foot soliders in the Army of Peace
was widely and widely misunderstood. The reac­
tionaries were yelling that the shaggy-frizzies were
in cahoots with Hanoi, which was true enough but
beside the point; the liberals were, as is their wont,
being reasonable and complaining how this hadn’t
263
As noteworthy is the change in the internal or­
ganization of this demonstration. In times past a few
leaders or groups with small memberships have
called for an action at a particular place and time
and hoped someone would come. That hasn’t been
the case this time. Instead, in a number of parts of
the country there has been intensive prior organiza­
tional work.
This is the reason that the charging and rushing
of the gendarmerie hasn’t had the effect of in­
stantaneously scattering the thousands here.
Driven from the parks, driven from the college
campuses the naughty nasties have repeatedly re­
formed, regrouped and gone ahead with their
peace-making mischief. Also by working in squads
of 10 or so, romantically called affinity groups, the
ragamuffin rabble have been able to throttle the im­
pulse to fight back and intensify the violence.
They haven’t trashed (torn up) the city, although
there are some rough characters in town who are
aching to smash the glass of the ruling class.
They’ve kept the violence to the minimum of drag­
ging garbage cans into the street, that kind of thing,
when they could have done a lot more.
Not every part of the country is tightly organized,
nor has everyone who came here been part of a
self-discipline group, but where you got it, in Texas,
Michigan, Upstate New York, the Boston area, you
got stamina and the restraint that put the require­
ments of tactics above the acting out of anger.
Should this kind of organizational work continue
and spread, the activist element of the Peace Move­
ment will be able to carry out a kind of antiwar Tet
Offensive in the Capital. They will be in a position to
sneak in thousands of people to live in sympathetic
local homes and conduct harassing operations over
a period of days or weeks in order to bring about a
crisis.
A crisis is what they seek, a crisis that will put the
government in the kind of bind that will force it to
respond in some more important way than arresting
people. It is a volatile kind of politics, loaded with
potential danger; that thousands of people would
play it is a sign of what Johnson/Nixon have
brought us to.
For those of us who want peace but shrink back
from such things, we ruminate that the people ar­
rested for blocking traffic here have already spent
nearly as much time in jail as Calley has for Mylai.
—Nicholas von Hoffman
The Washington Post
.once inside the gVaduation machine;
-l-he students receive their diplomas,
to do vutfh them as fhetj please.
Janet Ackley
Carol Adam
John Adan
Kathleen Agrodnia
Michael Agrodnia
Shirley Ahern
Jane Albee
Brenda Albert
Geoffrey Aldrich
Joan Alexander
Rosemary Aliberti
Pamela Allard
Donna Allen
Jane Allen
Daryl Alosa
Bruce Alter
Deborah Ames
Eleta Ames
Arthur Amidon
Albert Andersen
Donald Anderson
Karen Anderson
Nancy Anderson
Linda Andrews
Sydney Andrews
Shirley Apostal
Artemis Apostle
Susan Ashelford
Jerrianne Ashley
Antonio Ayala
266
Carolyn Bailey
David Bailey
Barbara Baird
Shirley Bald
Helen Baldassare
Lorna Ballam
Anne Ballard
Mida Ballard
Kevin Barry
Jerome Barry
Bruce Barton
Dean Bascom
Marcia Bascom
Susan Bascom
Janet Bavicchi
Marilyn Bayrer
Adrian Bean
Patricia Bean
Susan Beaudet
Janet Beckingham
Jayne Beetz
John Belcher
Margaret Belletete
Pamela Benham
Donald Bennert
David Bentley
Barbara Bertrand
Deborah Bertrand
Julie Berube
Richard Betz
267
Marcilla Billerman
Marilyn Billings
Linda Bishop
Susan Blain
Stephen Blaisdell
Katherine Blajda
Nancy Blake
Roger Blake
Joan Blecatsis
Ann Bobotas
Harry Boghigian
Thomas Bonito
Walter Borowski
Nancy Borton
Constance Boucher
Gerald Boucher
Louise Boulanger
Patricia Bowe
Patricia Brauer
Barbara Breton
Sandi Brewer
Lois Brierly
Bruce Brouillette
Barbara Brown
Wyatt Brown
Manette Brunault
Sam Bruno
Carol Bryan
Barbara Burns
John Buswell
268
Steven Buttrick
Margaret Bveddeman Steven Bveddeman
Robert Burbank
Elizabeth Buss
Crawford Butler
Edward Campbell
Kevin Canty
Sharon Byus
Martha Caddick
George Call
Michael Callaghan
Dorothy Carlson
Walter Carlson
Elizabeth Carro
Penelope Cary
Normand Cassista
Sheri Cavanaugh
Maria Ceddia
Robert Cellupica
Margot Censullo
Estelle Chabot
Ruth Chamberlin
Truman Champagne
Brenda Chapman
Maynard Charron
Nancy Chase
Mercie Chick
269
James Cassidy
James Clark
Susan Clarke
Elaine Clement
Christine Cobb
Jeanne Cohn
Marie Colamgelo
Carolyn Colgan
Alix Colitas
Carol Collins
Susan Collins
Carol Comstock
Ann Conners
Anne Conroy
Christine Consales
Jane Conway
Roberta Conway
Larry Cook
Susan Corgrove
Catherine Corriere
Marc Corriveau
Michael Costa
Lance Costello
Joseph Couture
Robin Cox
Christine Craigin
Walter Crandall
Robert Crane
Beth Crockett
Joanne Croft
Jack Cronin
270
Susanne Croteau
Linda Cullen
Virginia Cummiskey
Edward Dale
Paul Daley
Jane Dallinger
Pamela Daly
John Damon
A. Charles Daniels
Paul Daniels
Kip Darling
Peter Dascoulias
Linda Davis
Catherine Dea
Michael Delaney
Penny Demarest
Norman Desfosses
Elizabeth Devine
Joan DeVittori
Donald Dewhurst
Dana Dickey
Kathleen Dillon
Carol DiMartino
Thomas Dimitriadis
Susan Dinsmore
Nancy Dix
Karen Doggett
Rachel Doiron
David Dominie
Susan Donabedian
271
Sally Dotzauer
Thomas Dowling
Jennifer Doyle
Roger Duguay
Cheryl Dumm
Susan Dunwoody
Janice Dupont
David Duquette
Gail Durant
Jon Durfee
Joseph Durlach
Deborah Durland
Kris Durmer
Cindy Dwane
Kathleen Dwyer
Mary Eastman
Richard Eastman
Eileen Edmunds
Ruth Eichell
Christine Emery
Toshiko Endo
Karen Erickson
Carleton Erskine
Marios Evriviades
James Fairbairn
Sandra Fall
Peter Fan
Diane Farmer
Jean Farrington
Anita Fell
272
Katherine Ferioli
Nancy Fetzer
Christopher Ficke
Shawn Finnegan
Martha Finnigan
William Fisk
Sally Fitz
Judy Fitzmaurice
William Fitzmaurice
Mary Flaherty
James Floyd
John Foley
Joseph Foley
Andrea Folsom
Richard Folsom
Sharon Ford
Maurice Fortier
Susanne Fortier
Roger Fortin
Roger Fournier
Nancy Jo Fox
Genevieve Fraser
Susan Fredette
William French
Nancy Frost
Patricia Gabriel
Deborah Gagne
Gerard Gagne
273
Robert Gagne
Paul Gagnon
Richard Gagnon
Kathleen Gambell
Linda Garland
Diane Gaucher
Gloria Gervais
Cathy Getty
Peter Glynn
Teresa Gosnell
Sylvia Gale
Patricia Gallagher
John Gauthier
Carole Geller
Daniel Gerstein
Charles Gibson
Diane Gibson
Sheldon Gleich
Wayne Glines
Mary Gobbi
Arthur Goldsmith
Arthur Goodwin
Richard Gordon
Charlene Goselin
Patricia Grady
Christine Grahn
Richard Granger
Barbara Graves
Mark Gray
274
Kathleen Gaidmore
Pamela Gregoire
Carolyn Greer
Jeffrey Gribetz
Patricia Griffin
Nancy Grimwood
Cynthia Grubbs
Donald Guertine
Pamela Hadsel
Ann Haggert
Edward Hall
Edward Hall
Judy Hall
Lawrence Halleran
Amy Hancock
Peter Handy
Patricia Hannigan
Linda Hardy
Judith Harmon
Carol Harris
Cathy Harris
Eileen Harris
Mary Harris
Joan Harrison
Christian Hart
Mary Harte
Bette Hartford
Susan Harwood
Ann Hassett
Betsey Hatch
Margaret Haughton
275
Lucy Haward
George Hayden
Kathleen Hayes
Ruth Herbert
Daniel Hibbert
Virginia Hickey
Edward Hill
Linda Hill
Diane Hillier
Jay Hillier
Enid Hilton
Diane Hober
William Hodgdon
Jeffrey Hoey
Alan Hoffman
Sherry Holbrook
Beverly Holmberg
Christopher Holmes
Virginia Holt
Charles Hood
Richard Hopgood
Phyllis Hopkins
Joanne Howard
Elaine Howe
James Hudson
Laurel Hudson
Cheryl Hughes
276
Deborah Heinonen Mary Anne Hemphill
Margaret Ann
Hendrick
Kim Hunt
Robert Hunt
Sarah Hurlburt
Pamela Hurley
Wendy Hutchins
Claudia Islieb
Timothy Ivers
Susan Jacobsen
Susan Jacobson
Jeffrey Jaeger
Peter Jodion
Robert Jodrey
Barbara Johnson
Carolyn Johnson
David Johnson
Judith Johnson
Judy Johnson
Kristine Johnson
Joy Johnston
Margaret Jonas
Kenneth Jones
Patricia Jordon
Steven Jordon
Ralph Joyce
Thomas Jutras
Cheryl Kamman
Charlene Kane
277
Elaine Keating
Richard Keating
David Keefe
Audrey Keenan
Steven Kelley
Cecelia Kelliher
John Kelly
Thomas Kemp
John Kendall
Kari Kimball
Monica King
David Kittridge
Lynne Klacsman
Edwin Kline
Douglas Knapp
Deborah Knight
Lynn Knight
Richard Kopely
Alex Kossakoski
Gail Kounelas
Elizabeth Kuczewski
Richard Kwor
Linda Labnon
Dennis LaBranche
Diane Labrie
Thomas Lacey
Sally Ladd
Constance Lafond
Louise Laquerre
Nelson LaMott
278
Elizabeth Lamp
Patricia Lane
Diana LaRoche
Sandra Larson
Phillip Laurent
Karen Lang
Mary Lange
Marilyn Langford
Greg LaPierre
Karen Latourette
John Latson
Donald Laliberte
Robert Laurence
Stephany Lavallee
Ellen Lavery
Mary Lavery
Ronald Leclair
Norman Lesmerises
Janice Lesieur
Caroline Lewis
Michele Lisowski
Richard Lot
Anne Lovett
Sally Lyman
Kathy MacDonald
Brian MacLean
James MacNeary
Betsy Madden
279
Patricia Learned
John Maier
Judith Maine
John Magoon
Judy Malcolm
Susan Malcolm
Douglas Mann
Cathy Marden
Daniel Mariaschin
Peter Markos
Deborah Marrs
Richard Marshall
Alfred Martin
Deborah Martin
Anna Martinez
Janice Martinson
Jeffrey Mason
Richard Maurier
William May
Suzanne McAvoy
Cathy McBride
Kevin McCaffrey
Archie McCall
Marcia McCann
Janet McCormack
Jeanne McDonald
Norma McGonis
Michael McHugh
Clyde McKay
Rosemary McGrath Nancy McGuinnes
280
Timothy McSheehy
Jocelyn Mead
Susan Meader
Allison Mears
Dennis Menard
Normand Mercier
Russell Merrill
Jocelyn Messier
John Minichiello
Ann Minicus
Alan Mohle
Jane Mohrman
Alan Moisan
Richard Moore
Stephen Moore
Robert Morehouse
Barry Morgan
Paula Morin
Patricia Morin
Beth Morissette
Janet Morse
Nickolas Motowylak
Gail Moynihan
Mary Lee Moynihan
Susan Mullare
Elizabeth Munson
Stephen Munton
James Murphy
Gail Nadeau
Jean Nadeau
281
Paul Nadeau
Dee Nagel
Lesley Neily
Libby Nelson
Richard Jay Nelson
Frannie Ness
Linda Nickerson
Joanne Nickless
Susan Noel
Margaret Nudd
Charles Nystedt
Carolyn Oaks
Beverly O’Brien
Roderick O’Connor
Susan O’Connor
Ralph Odell
Gwen Olsson
Sandra Olsson
Seiji Ono
Maurice Oullette
Susan Oullette
Mary Page
Diane Palmer
Donna Palmer
David Papenfuse
Carol Paradis
Elizabeth Parker
Elaine Palmer
Elaine Papageorge Victoria Papageorge
282
Stephen Parker
Carl Patterson
Barbara Pavlidis
Cynthia Pederson
Margaret Pelczar
Derinda Pell
Susan Pelton
Judith Penniman
Colette Pepin
Colleen Pepin
John Pepin
Lucy Pepin
Nancy Pepin
Sally Perkins
Jean Perrault
Marcia Perrault
Donna Peterson
Kate Peyser
Barbara Phillips
Mark Phillips
Susan Phyllides
Peter Piattoni
Roger Pierce
Constance Pipe
Jeffrey Pitman
Dana Place
Marie Rose Planchet
Carole Plenty
Marcia Pooler
John Porter
283
Elaine Pouletsos
Susan Pouliot
Pamela Pow
Robert Powers
Gene Powers
Nancy Powers
Scott Prentice
Patricia Priest
Marsha Printy
Linda Prockniewicz
Claire Prout
Mandy Provencher
Carolyn Prybylo
Pamela Pumpelly
Jenny Quig
Kathy Quigley
Anne Quimby
Susan Raduazo
James Rafferty
Maria Ragonese
Steven Rammer
Douglas Rayner
Ellen Regan
Steven Regis
Inga Regnell
Peter Repas
Burton Reynolds
C. Hamilton Rice
Deborah Rice
Trudy Rice
284
Ann Richard
Junette Richey
Susan Roberts
Dwight Robie
Ann Romatowski
Terrence Rosi
Linda Richmond
Lauren Ring
Laura Robak
P. Scott Roberts
Kathleen Robinson
John F. Rockwell
John Rogers
Norman Rogers
Charles Rossoll
Andrea Roulx
Richard Rourke
Sandra Routhier
Paula Sanborn
Gail Sandberg
Albert Sanders
Barbara Scholl
Richard Schroeder
Diane Schuette
Timothy Roy
Jean Sanford
Gerard Savard
Falko Schilling
285
William Schultz
Michael Schwotzer
Bette Jo Scott
Carol Scott
Arthur Scruton
Gayle Sears
Martha Sears
Patricia Sears
Linda Selby
Daniel Shaffer
Michael Shaffran
Christine Shaterian
Stephen Shaw
Denise Shea
Dennis Sheehan
Linda Sherwood
Joan Shuttleworth
Deborah Siena
Paul Sinibaldi
Rosalie Sirois
Gerald Slack
Joan Slavin
Bruce Sloan
William Smagula
David Smart
Deborah Smith
Douglas Smith
Edward Smith
Herbert Smith
Kathryn Smith
286
Raymond Smith
Richard Smith
Ruth Smith
Ellen Snow
Wade Southwick
Diane Spiro
Dorothy Stanilomis
Lily Stanlich
Margot Stearns
Patricia Stearns
Robert Stevenson
Beverly Stiles
Cindi Stimpson
Richard Stone
Linda Streeter
Henry Surprenant
Keith Swartz
Charlton Swasey
Cynthia Sweet
Wayne Symington
Judith Syria
Matthew A. Szopa, Jr.
Cheryl Tamm
Joan Tancrede
Donna Tarte
Diane Taylor
Dorothy Taylor
Lois Terry
David Tetreault
James Theophilos
Ann Thompson
Patricia Thompson
Judy Thurrell
Gordon Tibbetts
Deborah Tilton
Carolyn Jo Tkacz
Jonathan Torrance
Gary Toussaint
Lesly Towle
Thomas Towle
Richard Traister
Marguerite Truby
Linda True
Peter Trufant
Louis Turcotte
Lorraine Twombly
Martha Tyler
David Unger
Judy Upham
Steven VanderBeken
Thomas Varney
Carol Veilleux
Joanna Wakefield
Wendy Wakefield
Louise Walbridge
288
Mary Jane Wallner
John Wagner
Nick Wallner
Diane Walker
Patricia Walker
Linda Washburn
Sally Walker
Laurel Welsh
Harriet Waterhouse William Waterhouse
Gayle Wareham
Elizabeth Warren
Ellen Warrington
Peter Waysville
Peter Weathers
Claire Weber
Joan Webster
Marcia Weidknecht
Natalie Wensley
Richard Wesson
Karen Whalen
Kurt Whalen
Susan Whalen
Walter Wheeler
Linda Whitcomb
Susan Whitcomb
Maureen White
Martha Whitten
Edward Wilbur
Suzanne Wilbur
Barbara Wilkie
Ann Willcox
Deborah Williams
Margaret Wilmot
289
Carolyn Wilson
Greta Wilson
Robert Winot
Paul Winters
Sandy Winters
Gail Wolfe
Douglas Wood
Lloyd Wood
Kenneth Wood
Peter Wood
Cynthia Woodman
Jayne Woodward
Donald Wrigley
Susan Yetman
Lorey Zahn
Sheila Zahn
Linda Woodward Margaret Woodward
Charlotte Zmachinsky
Donna Zoller
James Zoller
290
291
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I
IN MEMORY OF
Albert C. DiPrizio
Bradford C. Drowne
Bruce A. Estey
Glenn T. Maxey
Alan B. Shiro
Ellen L. Silverman
John T. Takesuye
Maurice P. Wood
Class of
Class of
Class of
Class of
Class of
Class of
Class of
Class of
293
1974
1971
1972
1971
1972
1972
1974
1972
ACCIAVATTI, SIMONE EDWARD
16 Cross St.
Beverly, Mass.
ACKLEY, JANET ANN
Oak Hill Rd.
Concord, N.H.
ADAM, CAROL BELL
3 Corona Ave.
Nashua, N.H.
ADAMS, BRUCE WILLIAM
9 Almond St.
Manchester, N.H.
ADAMS, ROBERT FRANCIS
81 Gold St.
Manchester, N.H.
ADDORIO, RONALD PAUL
46 Sheffield Rd.
Portsmouth, N.H.
AGRODNIA, MICHAEL ANTHONY
Box 165
Berlin, N.H.
AHERN, SHIRLEY MARIE
RFD 2
Plymouth, N.H.
AIETA, ROBERT ALAN
Box 143
Ctr. Harbor, N.H.
AIKEN, BARBARA JEAN
37 Oak Street
Newport, N.H.
AKERMAN, BRADLEY WALLACE
92 Rockhill Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
AKONTEH, BENNY AMBROSE
Foreign Student Adv.
Durham, N.H.
ALBEE, JANE LOU
920 Symth Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
ALBERT, BRENDA JOY
7 Fifth St.
Dover, N.H.
ALDRICH, GEOFFREY MASON
588 West St.
Keene, N.H.
ALEXANDER, JOAN PERRY
373 Main St. P.O. Box 72
Salem, N.H.
ALIBERTI, ROSEMARY
24 Sutton Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
ALLARD, PAMELA ANN
133 Biron St.
Manchester, N.H.
ALLEN, DONNA JEANNE
4 Morrill Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
ALLGEYER, EDWARD JULIUS
Box 41
Suncook, N.H.
ALOSA, DARYL SALVATORE
4 Grove St.
Concord, N.H.
ALTER, BRUCE WARREN
265 Linden St.
Manchester, N.H.
AMES, DEBORAH TERESA
47 Concord St.
Peterboro, N.H.
AMES, ELETA DUNSTAN
Box 222 RFD 1
Stewartsville, N.J.
ANDERSEN, ALBERT GEORGE
RFD 1
E. Kingston, N.H.
ANDERSON, DONALD GEORGE
Box 176
Pittsburg, N.H.
ANDERSON, KAREN REBECCA
Box 272
Meredith, N.H.
ANDREW, MARGARETTE W.
147 Woodland Rd.
Hampton, N.H.
ANDREWS, SYDNEY STEWART
10 Broad Ave.
Concord, N.H.
APOSTAL, SHIRLEY JOAN
7 Pearl St.
Concord, N.H.
ASHELFORD, SUSAN E.
489 Oakview Dr.
Orange, Conn.
ASHLEY, JERRIANNE
P.O. Box 195
Enfield, N.H.
BABBITT, VIRGINIA ELLEN
48 Convent Ave.
Norwich, Conn.
BAILEY, CAROLYN PUTNAM
15 Dresden Rd.
Hanover, N.H.
BAILEY, PAMELA JEAN
Depot Rd.
East Candia, N.H.
BAIRD, BARBARA YAEGER
P.O. Box 62
Portsmouth, N.H.
BAKER, CHRISTINE EMERY
Box 697 No. West St.
Charlestown, N.H.
BALD, SHIRLEY LUCILLE
12 Merrimac St. Apt. 2
Concord, N.H.
BALDASSRE, HELEN LUCY
171 Jalbert St.
Berlin, N.H.
BALL, DONALD ROBERTS JR.
Main St.
W. Hampstead, N.H.
BALLAM, LORNA MAY
Box 75
Salisbury, N.H.
BALLARD, ANNE MEREDITH
38 Haven Rd.
Portsmouth, N.H.
BALLARD, MARGARET STOKES
81 Rhode Island Ave.
Newport, R.l.
BALLESTER, GEORGE B. JR.
Old Landing Rd.
Durham, N.H.
BALLESTER, JUDITH JOHNSON
Old Landing Rd.
Durham, N.H.
BALLOCH, STEVEN MARK
2570 Tuscarawas Rd.
Beaver, Pa.
295
BALLOU, MARY BRAGG
53 Summer St.
Keene, N.H.
BALLOU, WILLIAM WESTON
Concord Hill
Keene, N.H.
BARRY, JEROME JOHN
119 Shore Drive
Nashua, N.H.
BARRY, JOSEPH STANLEY F.
RFD 2
N. Rochester, N.H.
BARRY, KEVIN MICHAEL
3 James Ave.
Somersworth, N.H.
BARLETT, DANA NELSON
Pollard Rd.
Lincoln, N.H.
BARTLETT, WILLIAM S. JR.
4 Heather Lane
Hampton, N.H.
BASCOM, SUSAN DIANNE
Hemlock Rd.
Charlestown, N.H.
BASCOM, MARCIA LOU
Graydawn Farm
Alstead, N.H.
BAVICCHI, JANET MARIE
2 Claflin Rd.
Brookline, Mass.
BEAN, ADRIAN LEE
Hare Rd.
Farmington, N.H.
BEAN, PATRICIA ANN
N. Main St.
Wolfeboro, N.H.
BEAUDET, SUZANNE MICHELE
2301 Collingwood Rd.
Alexandria, Va.
BECKINGHAM, JANET AVIS
13 Birchwood PI.
Dover, N.H.
BEDELL, STEVEN MICHAEL
1098 Maplewood Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
BEETZ, MARY JARVIS
Mast Rd. RFD 1
Durham, N.H.
BELCHER, JOHN CHARLES
60 Edgewood Rd. Ext.
Durham, N.H.
BELLETETE, MARGARET E.
223A Elm St.
Amesbury, Mass.
BENHAM, PAMELA ANN
20 Richardson Dr.
Dover, N.H.
BENNERT, DONALD M.
517 Smyth Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
BENNETT, SPENCER LEE
1 Elm St.
Henniker, N.H.
BENTLEY, DAVID MORRILL
Forest Rd.
Wolfeboro, N.H.
BERRY, SUSAN ELIZABETH
8 Myrtle St.
Somersworth, N.H.
BERTRAND,BARBARA ANN
346 Madison Ave.
Berlin, N.H.
BERTRAND,DEBORAH SUE
22 Stark St.
Nashua, N.H.
BERUBE, HELEN ANNE
105 Dexter St.
Manchester, N.H.
BERUBE, JULIEANNE P.
P.O. Box 64
Rollinsford, N.H.
BERUBE, ROBERT PHILLIP
10 W. Green St.
Somersworth, N.H.
BETOURNE, GARY ALAN
Box 243
Belmont, N.H.
BETZ, RICHARD LORIN
50 Fox Circle
Keene, N.H.
BICKFORD, HARRY RANDALL
18 Valleyview Dr.
Essex Jet., Vt.
BILLERMAN, MARCELLA L.
54 Orchard Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
BINGER, WILLIAM HOLT
144 Broadlawn Dr.
N. Kensington, Pa.
BISHOP, LINDA DOTSON
16 Richardson St.
Rochester, N.H.
BISHOP, TED LEROY
Box 362
Amherst, N.H.
BLAIN, SUSAN ELIZABETH
Box 61
Enfield, N.H.
BLAISDELL, STEPHEN JOHN
Brentwood RFD 1
Exeter, N.H.
BLAJDA, KATHERINE J.
242 Walnut St.
Manchester, N.H.
BLAKE, MICHAEL EVERETT
RFD 1
Orford, N.H.
BLAKE, ROGER ELLIOTT
84 Cross St.
Salem, N.H.
BLAKE, NANCY ALEXANDER
18 Brooks Rd.
Paxton, Mass.
BLAZON, GERARD PAUL
81 Poor
Manchester, N.H.
BLECATSIS, JOAN ELIZABETH
34 Reservoir Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
BOBOTAS, ANN
49 Peabody Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
BOERI, KENNETH R.
RFD 2
Whitefield, N.H.
BOGHIGIAN, HARRY CHARLES
42 Marshall St.
Nashua, N.H.
BOOTH, JANICE HOLBROOK
1176 No. Main St.
Laconia, N.H.
BOROWSKI, WALTER P.
LS1 Forest Park
Durham, N.H.
BORTON, NANCY EILEEN
52 Prospect St.
Milford, N.H.
BOUCHER, CONSTANCE JANET
17 Ardon Dr.
Hooksett, N.H.
BOUCHER, GERALD PAUL
1261 Hooksett Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
BOULANGER, LOUISE DIANE
77 Wight St.
Berlin, N.H.
BOUTIN, TOMAS HAROLD
7 Corbin Ave.
Gorham, N.H.
BOWIE, PATRICIA ANNE
Box 86
Lisbon, Me.
BOYDSTON, SUZANNE E.
RFD 2
Lancaster, N.H.
BRADLEY, CLAIRE CELESTE
36 Newtown Ave.
Stratford, Conn.
BRAUER, DEBORAH SHAW
1709 Paper Mill Rd.
Meadowbrook, Pa.
BRAYTON, KENNETH D.
2 Birch Rd.
N. Hampton, N.H.
BRETON, BARBARA ROSE
2 Haskell Ave.
Rochester, N.H.
BRETON, ROLAND LEON
70 Hall St. Apt. 2
Manchester, N.H.
BREWER, SANDRA LEE
RFD 1
Durham, N.H.
BRODERICK, PATRICIA LEONE
398 E. High St.
Manchester, N.H.
BROUILLETTE, BRUCE C.
65 Park St.
Exeter, N.H.
BROWN, BARBARA JANE
12 Muse Terrace
Salem, N.H.
BROWN, DENNIS HARVEY
Box 13
Danville, N.H.
BROWN, MARY KATHRYN
Cutts Rd.
Durham, N.H.
BRUCE, THEODORE WILLIAM
8 School St.
Exeter, N.H.
BRUDER, GRAHAM KENT
581 5th Ave. E.
Owen Sound, Ontario
BRUNKHORST, WILLIAM EARL
9 Fletcher St.
Winchester, Mass.
296
BRUNO, SAMUEL WALTER
3 Hampstead St.
Salem, N.H.
BRYANT, ALAN D.
Pembroke St.
Suncook, N.H.
BRYAN, CAROL POOLE
RFD 2
East Holden, Me.
BRYER, JOHN GILMAN
624 Exeter Rd.
Hampton, N.H.
BUCKLEY, THOMAS F. Ill
P.O. Box 154
Sheffield, Mass.
BUEDDEMAN, MARGARET CORIN
Q3 Forest Park
Durham, N.H.
BUEDDEMAN, STEPHEN SCOTT
Q3 Forest Park
Durham, N.H.
BURBANK, ROBERT MONROE
105 Pleasant St.
Concord, N.H.
BURKE, EDWARD JOSEPH
P.O. Box 116
Rindge, N.H.
BURLEIGH, BARBARA LUNDT
6 Hayward PI.
Hudson, N.H.
BURNS, BARBARA A.
8 Edgewater Ave.
Laconia, N.H.
BURNS, JOHN MICHAEL
Burns Lake
Whitefield, N.H.
BURNS, NANCY E.
19 Old Rochester Rd.
Dover, N.H.
BURTT, MARTHA ELLEN
RFD
Gossville, N.H.
BUSWELL, JOHN W.
83 Whitewall Rd.
Amesbury, Mass.
BUTCHER, ROBERT ARTHUR JR.
16 Woodland Dr.
Nashua, N.H.
BUTLER, CRAWFORD PITTROFF
4D Sadquada Apts.
Whitesboro, N.Y.
BUTTRICK, STEVEN COLBY
21 Newbury Rd.
Ipswich, Mass.
BYERS, WILLIAM GORDON
Box 183
Durham, N.H.
BYUS, SHARON LEE
4 Keats St.
Nashua, N.H.
CADDICK, MARTHA GALE
30 Cherry Rd.
Kingston, R.l.
CADY, JANET L.
2162 B. Eastern Pkwy.
Schenectady, N.Y.
CALL, GEORGE M.
60 East St.
Claremont, N.H.
CALLAGHAN, MICHAEL DENNIS
Tingley St. RFD 3
Rochester, N.H.
CALLAHAN, DANIEL FRANCIS
105 Front St.
Exeter, N.H.
CALLAHAN, JEAN THERESA
Box 38
Troy, N.H.
CAMANN, PETER JONATHAN
10 Union St.
Littleton, N.H.
CAMERON, ELIZABETH D.
629 No. River Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
CAMPBELL, PETER JOHN JR.
270 Pleasant St.
Concord, N.H.
CANTY, KEVIN JOHN
15 Broad St.
Nashua, N.H.
CARBONNEAU, SARAH LEE
28 Pleasant St.
Littleton, N.H.
CARD, PETER JOHN
65 Lewis St.
Manchester, N.H.
CARLSON, DOROTHY JEAN
67 Clark St.
Glen Ridge, N.J.
CARON, EDWARD F.
10 Wilson St.
Manchester, N.H.
CARPENTER, WILLIAM T.
Thursty Hill
Pittsfield, N.H.
CARROS, ELIZABETH SOPHIA
19 Park St..
Rochester, N.H.
CARY, PENELOPE JAYNE
41 Buckingham Dr.
Billerica, Ma.
CASCADDEN, CREG WILLIAM
8 Oak Hill Ave.
Littleton, N.H.
CASE, SYLVIA C.
Rt. 7 Box 7559
Bainbridge Is., Wash.
CASSIDY, JAMES MICHAEL
41 Bradley St.
Concord, N.H.
CASSISTA, NORMAND A. JR.
5 Lin. Lew. Dr. Apt. 20
Derry, N.H.
CATE, ROBERT IRA
46 Dover Point Rd.
Dover, N.H.
CATTO, ALAN ROSS
114 Third St.
Noranda, Que., Can.
CAVANAUGH, SHERI LEE
P.O. Box 135
Kittery Pt., Me.
CEDDIA, MARIA RITA
58 William
Medford, Mass.
CELLUPICA, ROBERT PAUL
80 Winter St.
Laconia, N.H.
CENSULLO, MARGOT ANN
214 S. Franklin Ave.
Pleasantville, N.J.
CHABOT, ESTELLE FRANCINE
28 Fayette St.
Somersworth, N.H.
CHADWICK, PHILIP HENRY
RFD 2
Dover, N.H.
CHAIKIN, LEWIS BARRY
Autumn St.
Dover, N.H.
CHAMBERLAIN, RUTH ANNE
18 Dunklee St.
Concord, N.H.
CHAPMAN, BRENDA L.
104 School St.
Lebanon, N.H.
CHARRON, MAYNARD GEORGE
4 Eastern Ave.
Amherst, N.H.
CHASE, DAVID STANLEY
91/2 Washington St.
Concord, N.H.
CHASE, MARK IRWIN
Shaker Hill Rd. RFD 1
Enfield, N.H.
CHASE, NANCY BATCHELDER
24 Garfield St.
Exeter, N.H.
CHILDRESS, BARBARA LYNN
1820 McGougan Rd.
Fayetteville, N.C.
CLAIRMONT, RICHARD ERNEST
Box 113
Gilmanton, N.H.
CLARK, SUSAN LOUISE
Box 289
Newcastle, N.H.
CLEMENT, ELAINE
7 Westfield St.
Nashua, N.H.
CLIFFORD, WAYNE A.
RFD 3
Laconia, N.H.
CLUKAY, DAVID DOUGLAS
Old Street Rd.
Peterborough, N.H.
COBB, CHRISTINE SUZANNE
52 Barrett Lane
Wycoff, N.J.
COHN, JEANNE S.
24 Cresent Place
Cranford, N.J.
COLANGELO, MARIE LOUISE
14 Hough Rd.
Belmont, Mass.
COLE, FORREST GORDON
RFD 2 Box 147
Dover, N.H.
COLE, JOHN W.
Washington
Exeter, N.H.
COLE, MARGARET A.
Washington St.
West Boxford, Mass.
COLLINS, BRIAN EDWARD
106 Wendell St.
Winchester, Mass.
297
COLLINS, CAROL ANN
10 Delaney Ave.
Dudley, Mass.
COLLINS, JAMES A. JR.
41 Rutland
Dover, N.H.
COLLINS, SUSAN RHODA
Box 365
York Beach, Me.
COMENDUL, MICHAEL JOSEPH
103 N. Adams St.
Manchester, N.H.
COMSTOCK, CAROL ELIZABETH
13 Davis Ave.
Durham, N.H.
CONANT, DAVID STOUGHTON
Dell St. Box 253
Charlestown, N.H.
CONROY, ANNE ROSEMARIE
44 Holland Ave.
Demarest, N.J.
CONSALES, CHRISTINE KAY
Baltrusrol Way
Springfield, N.J.
CONWAY, ROBERTA PAULA
Box 237
Bartlett, N.H.
COOK, LARRY EARL
2837 Sumerfield Rd.
Winter Park, Fla.
COPPLESTONE, JANICE ANNE
RFD 1
Sanbornville, N.H.
CORRIERE, CATHERINE MARY
8 Museum Rd.
Beverly, Mass.
CORRIVEAU, MARC ALBERT
RFD 3
Laconia, N.H.
CORRIVEAU, ROBERT R. JR.
RFD 2 Box 105D
Laconia, N.H.
CORSON, JERRY DENNIS
Box 264
E. Rochester, N.H.
COSGROVE, PETER FRANCIS
RFD 3
Rehoboth, Mass.
COSGROVE, SUSAN GAGNE
P.O. Box 924
Rochester, N.H.
COSTA, MICHAEL ALBERT
68 Columbia St.
Quincy, Mass.
COSTINE, COLIN MARK
Box 14 RFD 1
Dover, N.H.
COTE, ALLEN GENE
156 Mission Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
COTE, BRUCE LYLE
343 Rolling Rock Rd.
Mountainside, N.J.
COUGHLIN, JOHN F.
Box 337
Durham, N.H.
COURNOYER, EDMOND HENRY
11 Millard St.
Pembroke, N.H.
COUTERMARSH, STEPHEN J.
RFD
Etna, N.H.
COUTURE, JOSEPH NICHOLAS
3 Varney St.
Somersworth, N.H.
CRAIGIN, CHRISTINE RUTH
126 Greenacre Rd.
Westwood, Mass.
CRANDALL, WALTER M. Ill
Apt. 104 5110 8th Rd. S.
Arlington, Va.
CRANE, ROBERT TRYON
5 Lawson Rd.
Cape Eliz, Me.
CROFT, JOANNE MURIEL
301 Main St.
Somersworth, N.H.
CRONIN, JOHN DOLIN
83 Capisic St.
Portland, Me.
CROSIER, VERNE BENEDICT
Triangle Farm
Plainfield, N.H.
CROTEAU, SUSANNE J.
56 Autumn St. Ext.
Rochester, N.H.
CUMMINGS, GEORGE CLUNIE
48 Carpenter St.
Manchester, N.H.
CUMMISKEY, VIRGINIA JANE
69 Pako Ave.
Keene, N.H.
CURRIER, ANNE REED
Ossippee, N.H.
CURTIS, RHAYNA LYN
4 Columbine Dr.
Nashua, N.H.
CZARICK, ROBERTA HEBB
444 Brackett Rd.
Rye, N.H.
DABILIS, SOTERIOS A.
47 Vine St.
Nashua, N.H.
DAGOSTINO, RICHARD
364 Weston Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
DALE, EDWARD M.
Box 491
Durham, N.H.
DALEY, PAUL RAYMOND
12 Williamson Ave.
Berlin, N.H.
DALY, PAMELA GAIL
7 Belmont Circle
Hampton, N.H.
DAMON, JOHN C. JR.
3 Court St.
Dover, N.H.
DANE, DOUGLAS PRESTON
18 Cranmore Lane
Melrose, Mass.
DANIELE, SHARON JOE
282 Maple St.
E. Longmead, Mass.
DANIELS, ARTHUR CHARLES
4 Sixth St.
Dover, N.H.
DANIELS, DOUGLAS VANAKEN
Box 68
Lemont, Pa.
DARLING, ROBERT MARTIN
RFD 1 Mast Rd.
Durham, N.H.
DASCOULIAS, PETER GEORGE
RFD 1 Colby Rd.
Tilton, N.H.
DAVIES, JOHN H. JR.
Box 213
Sunapee, N.H.
DAVIS, BEVERLY J.
P.O. Box 251
Durham, N.H.
DAVIS, LINDA ROSE
Chester Rd.
Raymond, N.H.
DAVIS, PAULINE RUTH
Box 234
Meriden, N.H.
DAVIS, PHILIP THOMPSON
Davis Ct. Ext.
Durham, N.H.
DAVIS, ROBERT E.
P.O. Box 251
Durham, N.H.
DAVIS, ROBERT WM.
144 Sophia St.
Peterboro, Ont., Can.
DEA, CATHERINE PEARSON
174 Hale St.
Beverly, Mass.
DEE, JOSHUA
416 Lafayette St.
Salem, Mass.
DEFILIPPI, CARL AUGUST
155 Canal St.
Leechburg, Pa.
DEIMEL, GEORGE DAVID
826 Cranberry St.
Erie, Pa.
DELANEY, MICHAEL HILLAS
294 North St.
Manchester, N.H.
DEMAREST, PENNY JO
42 Hartman Rd.
Amherst, Mass.
DEMINNA, PAULE JEANNE
32 Roy Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
DENNIS, RICHARD CHARLES
Box 595
Durham, N.H.
DESFOSSES, NORMAN ARMAN
269 Walnut St.
Manchester, N.H.
DESILETS, ROCK ALBERT
207 Main St.
Pembroke, N.H.
DEVITTORI, JOAN
53 Washington St.
Rochester, N.H.
DEWHURST, DONALD A. JR.
12 Rennie Dr.
Andover, Mass.
DICKEY, DANA SCOTT
Springfield Rd.
Charlestown, N.H.
DICROCE, ANTHONY F.
Box 435
Lynn, Mass.
298
DILLON, KATHLEEN MARY
26 Oxford St.
Winchester, Mass.
DIMARTINO, CAROL E.
511 Lincoln St.
Franklin, Mass.
DIMITRIADIS, THOMAS G.
33 Hobart St.
Penacook, N.H.
DINARDO, JIMMIE VINCENT
4 Kirkland St.
Dover, N.H.
DIXWELL, LESLIE
398A High St.
Stratham, N.H.
DOHERTY, MICHAEL PATRICK
72 Batchelder Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
DOLAN, FREDERICK
13 Locust St. P.O. Box 414
Rollingsford, N.H.
DOLE, PETER ALAN
11 Osgood Ave.
Claremont, N.H.
DOMINIE, DAVID R. II
3 Pinewood Rd.
Lexington, Mass.
DONABEDIAN, SUSAN LOU
272 Lawrence Rd.
Salem, N.H.
DORR, HOWARD A. JR.
23 Cedar Road
North Hampton, N.H.
DOTZAUER, SALLY
Harbor Road
Sands Point, N.Y.
DOUCET, LEO JOSEPH
28 Cedar Street
Laconia, N.H.
DOUGHERTY, KATHLEEN M.
Route 4
Northwood, N.H.
DOUGLASS, BARBARA LEE
Bethel, Me.
DOWLING, THOMAS EDWARD
Kearsarge Street
Warner, N.H.
DOWST, CHRISTINE L.
Goboro Road
Gossville, N.H.
DUBEAU, GRETCHEN STULL
P.O. Box 7^4
Concord, N.H.
DUBOIS, ARMAND A. JR.
Box 87
Franklin, N.H.
DUGUAY, ROGER LUCIEN JR.
424 Riverdale Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
DUMM, CHERYL ANN
Box 593
Henniker, N.H.
DUNWOODYM, SUSAN MILLS
Os Aceur Shape
APO New York
DUQUETTE, DAVID ALBERT
16 Courtland St.
Nashua, N.H.
DURANT, GAIL DOROTHY
154 Manning Street
Manchester, N.H.
DURFEE, JONATHAN RICHARDS
16 Wisconsin Ave.
North Masspequ., N.Y.
DURGIN, JUDITH ANN
43 Wilson Road
Portsmouth, N.H.
DURLACH, JOSEPH EDWARD
8812 78th Street
Woodhaven, N.Y.
DURMER, KRIS EDWIN
Parker Station
Goffstown, N.H.
DURLAND, DEBORAH
P.O. Box 203
Peterboro, N.H.
DUSSEAULT, ANDRE
Pincrest Trailer Park
Exeter, N.H.
DWANE, CYNTHIA ANN
30 Lynnbrook Road
Lynnfield, Mass.
DWYER, KATHLEEN RAE
163 Melbourne Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
DYER, MICHAEL ALLEN
Winnicutt Road, Box 55
Stratham, N.H.
DYRKACZ, SHARON MACEY
26 Little Pond Road
Concord, N.H.
EAST, JOANNE WRIGHT
10 Bretton Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
EASTMAN, RICHARD EDWARD
RFD 4
Laconia, N.H.
EASTMAN, MARY L.
8 Sycamore Street
Hudson, N.H.
EDMUNDS, EILEEN SYLVIA
Pittsfield Road
Chichester, N.H.
EICHELL, RUTH ANN
Potter Plantation, N.H.
ELLIS, EUGENE GEORGE
84 Stetson Ave.
Swampscott, Mass.
ELMORE, DAVID GOODWYN
Oak Heaven
Exeter, N.H.
ELWELL, CHARLES WILLIAM
56 Red Coat Lane
Manchester, N.H.
ENDO, TOSHIKO
Foreign Student Advisor
Durham, N.H.
ENMAN, LINDSAY CAROL
518 Manchester Street
Manchester, N.H.
ERSKINE, CARLETON RICHARD
77 Exeter Road
Newmarket, N.H.
ESCHENHEIMER, LISEiTTE
260 Olney Street
Providence, R.l.
EVANS, ROBERT S.
Box 25
Atkinson, N.H.
EVRIVIADES, MARIOS L.
Foreign Student Advisor
Durham, N.H.
FAIRBAIRN, JAMES E.
45 Winchester Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
FAN, PETER RONG CHO
Foreign Student Advisor
Durham, N.H.
FARDSHI, SHEH KAMRAN
Foreign Student Advisor
Durham, N.H.
FARMER, BRUCE D.
601 Central Ave.
Dover, N.H.
FARRINGTON, JEAN LOUISE
40 Fourth Street
Berlin, N.H.
FEELEY, CLARK JAMES
60 Rockcroft Road
Weymouth, Mass.
FELL, ANITA CHASSE
72 Main Street
Newmarket, N.H.
FERIOLI, KATHERINE LOUISE
34 Braunecker Road
Plymouth, Mass.
FERNALD, DAVID BAILEY
Deerfield Road
Nottingham, N.H.
FETZER, NANCY ELLEN
RFD #1
Wilton, N.H.
FICKETT, ROBERT K. JR.
RFD #1
Newmarket, N.H.
FIELDS, RICHARD RANDOLPH
7 Shirley Ave.
Goffstown, N.H.
FINNEGAN, SHAWN ANN
327 Air Div. Box 518 APO
San Francisco, Calif.
FINNIGAN, MARTHA EVANS
12 Elvir Street
East Lynn, Mass.
FISHER, EDWARD G.
293 Central Ave.
Dover, N.H.
FISK, ROBERT FRANCIS JR.
Heights Road
Stratham, N.H.
FISK, WILLIAM NELSON
28 Doris Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
FISKE, DANA ROSS
Drinkwater Road
Hampton Falls, N.H.
FITTS, JOHN ALAN
Caverly Apts.
Durham, N.H.
FITZ, SALLY ANN
64 Glenwood Ave.
Dover, N.H.
FITZGERALD, DENNIS HUGH
10 Elm Street
Gorham, N.H.
FITZMAURICE, JUDITH
Valley Road
Walpole, N.H.
FITZMAURICE, WILLIAM B. JR.
Valley Road
Walpole, N.H.
299
FLAHERTY, MARY ELIZABETH
38 Lebanon Street
Winchester, Mass.
FLEMING, THOMAS JOSEPH
163 Oak Street
Manchester, N.H.
FLEMING, WILLIAM M. Ill
R.F.D. #1 Box 176
Dover, N.H.
FLETCHER, WILLIAM CHARLES
Bow Lake
Strafford, N.H.
FLOYD, JAMES LESLIE
1 Ripley Road
Hanover, N.H.
FOGG, LLOYD CHARLES
2 Strafford Ave.
Durham, N.H.
FOLEY, JOHN MATTHEW
38 Walker Street
Laconia, N.H.
FOLEY, THOMAS P. JR.
8 Birchwood Place
Dover, N.H.
FOLSOM, ANDREA JANE
18 Lawrence Road
Salem, N.H.
FOLSOM, RICHARD WESLEY
Box 25
Newbury, N.H.
FORD, JOHN ROBERT JR.
19 Laurel Lane
Hampton, N.H.
FORD, LUCY ANN
RFD #1
Peterboro, N.H.
FORMISANO, ROGER ANTHONY
14 Mariette Drive
Portsmouth, N.H.
FORTIER, MAURICE LIONEL
133 Park Street
Berlin, N.H.
FORTIER, SUSANNE MARIE
467 Madison Ave.
Berlin, N.H.
FORTIN, ROGER EDWARD
9 Seventh Street
Nashua, N.H.
FOURNIER, ROGER EDWARD
Main Street
North Haverhill, N.H.
FOWLE, DOUGLAS ALAN
Antrim Road
Hillsboro, N.H.
FOX, NANCY JO
Box 76
Dublin, N.H.
FRADETTE, PATRICIA ANN
167 Moore Street
Manchester, N.H.
FRANGOS, JAMES COSTAS
10 Sunset Drive
Dover, N.H.
FRANK, JAMES STEWART
RFD #1 Wapping Wood Road
Rockville, Conn.
FRANKLIN, PAMELA G.
Packers Falls Road
Durham, N.H.
FREDETTE, SUSAN RITA
175 Salem Street
Manchester, N.H.
FRENCH, JAMES LESTER, JR.
78 Gray Street
Manchester, N.H.
FRITZ, JAMES B.
47 Grove Street
Yalesville, Conn.
FULLER, DAVID E.
160 View Street
Franklin, N.H.
FULTON, GARY ARTHUR
181 Elwyn Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
GABRIEL, PATRICIA ANN
54 Hough Street
Dover, N.H.
GAGNE, DEBORAH FENCER
23 Estabrook Road
Wollaston, Mass.
GAGNE, GERARD DAVID
Forest Park Apt. JS3
Durham, N.H.
GAGNON, PAUL MICHAEL
7507 Marbury Drive
Washington, D.C.
GAIDMORE, KATHLEEN ANN
122 Cushing Road
Dover, N.H.
GALE, SYLVIA ELIZABETH
8 Cooper Drive
Nanuet, N.Y.
GALLAGHER, PATRICIA ELLEN
40 Russell Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
GAMBELL, KATHLEEN A.
Box 347
Enfield, N.H.
GARLAND, LINDA ELAINE
RFD #1 Box 428
Dover, N.H.
GARLAND, WALTER MILLIGAN
378 Maple Street
Farmington, N.H.
GARRETT, BETTE HODGDON
8600 Cherry Valley Lane
Alexandria, Va.
GATS, BETHANY MARGARET
1395 Islington Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
GAUCHER, DIANE ELAINE
70 Manchester Street
Nashua, N.H.
GAUTHIER, JOHN ALLAN
220 Pleasant Street
Laconia, N.H.
GELLER, CAROLE LESLEY
Box 17
Nottingham, N.H.
GEORGE, ERIC ROBERT
Box 162
Port Crane, N.Y.
GERSTEIN, DANIEL DAVID
364 Miller Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
GERVAIS, GLORIA JEAN
RFD #1
Warner, N.H.
GETTY, CATHY HOWARD
Davis Ave. Road RFD #1
Swanzey Center, N.H.
GIAIMO, FRED JOSEPH
87 Fairmount Road
Lake Parsippy, N.J.
GIBSON, CHARLES ANTHONY
17 Rosewood Ave.
Salem, N.H.
GIBSON, DIANE GERTRUDE
49 Eldridge Street
Lebanon, N.H.
GIKAS, JANE ELIZABETH
1288 Hall Street
Manchester, N.H.
GILMAN, ANN
40 Crestmont Ave.
Millinocket, Me.
GLEICH, SHELDON
54 Maiden Lane
Bergenfield, N.J.
GLENNON, THOMAS ALFRED JR.
4 Wheelwright Ave.
Exeter, N.H.
GLINES, WAYNE MURRY
8 Greenwood
Whitefield, N.H.
GOBBI, MARY PRISCILLA
477 Circuit Road
Portsmouth, N.H.
GOLDSMITH, ARTHUR A. Ill
40 Kellogg Drive
Wilton, Conn.
GOODWIN, ARTHUR O. Ill
390 Bartlett Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
GOOKIN, SANDRA K.
RFD #1 New Boston Road
Goffstown, N.H.
GOSELIN, CHARLENE MAE
Box 334
FitzwiNiam, N.H.
GOSELIN, CHERYL ANN
P.O. Box 334
FitzwiNiam, N.H.
GOSNELL, TERESA JEAN
4819 Indian Lane, NW
Washington, D.C.
GOVE, JAMES PHILBRICK
RFD #1 Brentwood
Exeter, N.H.
GRAHN, CHRISTINE ANDREA
RFD #1 Route 13
Goffstown, N.H.
GRANT, ROBERT ALLEN
15 Cowell Drive
Durham, N.H.
GRAVES, GARRETT VAN A. JR.
4 Juniper Lane
Nashua, N.H.
GRAY, MARK A.
73 Portland Ave.
Dover, N.H.
GREELEY, SHERRIE ANN
60 Woodland Ave.
Laconia, N.H.
GREENBERG, LOUIS L.
39 Profile Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
300
GREENLEAF, DAVID ROGER
RFD # 3
Brattlboro, Vt.
GREGOIRE, PAMELA HELEN
P.O. Box 48
Wilton, N.H.
GRIBETZ, JEFFREY ISRAEL
35 High Street
Exeter, N.H.
GRIFFIN, FREDERICK W. JR.
199 North Adams Street
Manchester, N.H.
GRIFFIN, PATRICIA ANN
Box 122
Portsmouth, N.H.
GRIGAS, JOHN JOSEPH JR.
141 College Drive
Brockton, Mass.
GRISWOLD, JOY KIMBERLY
6 Eagle Lane
Simsbury, Conn.
GRUBBS, CYNTHIA LOUISE
Box 155
Jaffery, N.H.
GUERTIN, DONALD GEORGE
8 Farley Street
Nashua, N.H.
GUIMOND, RICHARD NORMAN
529 Howe Street
Manchester, N.H.
GUNN, MARY ELIZABETH
29 Farnum Ave.
West Lebanon, N.H.
HAALAND, ANDREW C.
17 Main Street
Durham, N.H.
HACKLER, MATTHEW EDWARD
RFD #1
Keene, N.H.
HADSEL, PAMELA GLADYS
Warwick Stage
Orange, Mass.
HAGGART, ANN G.
131 Hastings Ave.
Keene, N.H.
HALL, EDWARD BROOKS
Old Milford Road
Brookline, N.H.
HALL, EDWARD WHITFORD
Hall Ave.
South Merrimack, N.H.
HALL, JUDITH FREESE
38 Ridge Road
Concord, N.H.
HAMMOND, GEORGE WILLIAM
6 Evergreen Road
Hampton, N.H.
HANCOCK, AMY BARBARA
Maple Ave.
Atkinson, N.H.
HANDY, PETER ALLEN
Box 550 Laurel Lane
Durham, N.H.
HANNIGAN, PATRICIA ANN
Sleepy Hollow Road
Atkinson, N.H.
HARDY, LINDA KAREN
RFD #1
Wilton, N.H.
HARMON, JUDITH ELLEN
3 Gill Street
Exeter, N.H.
HARRIS, CAROL LOUISE
RFD #5A
Gardiner, Me.
HARRIS, CATHY ELLEN
Laurel Street
Peterboro, N.H.
HARRIS, EILEEN MARY
24 Williams Street
Nashua, N.H.
HARRISON, JOANN ELAINE
Walker Road, RFD
Kennebunk, Me.
HARRISON, RONALD W.
6 Pinkerton Street
Derry, New Hampshire
HARTE, MARY ELEANOR
225 Colonial Drive
Portsmouth, N.H.
HARTFORD, BETTE BRIDGE
16 East Grant Street
Woodstown, N.J.
HARTNETT, MARTHA JANE
128 Oak Street
Manchester, N.H.
HARTY, PATRICK HENRY III
8 Savoie Street
Manchester, N.H.
HARWOOD, SUSAN ELIZABETH
23 Burleigh Street
Waterville, Maine
HASCALL, HOLLY JAN
144 Granby Road
South Portland, Me.
HASSETT, ANN PATRICIA
RFD #1
Gorham, N.H.
HASTINGS, STEPHEN
Box 174
Gilsum, N.H.
HATCH, BETSEY ANNE
30 Old Reservoir Road
Wethersfield, Conn.
HAUGHTON, PEGGY LEWISE
Box 248
Center Sandwich, N.H.
HAUSE, ROBIN KAY
202 North Spring Valley Road
Wilmington, Del.
HAWARD, LUCY TAIT
49 Winds Orchard Road
Wellesle Hills, Mass.
HAYDEN, GEORGE FRANKLIN
63 Leandre Street
Manchester, N.H.
HAYES, KATHLEEN MARY
12 Hoyt Street
Manchester, N.H.
HEIDEL, BARBARA A.
Broad Street
Hollis, N.H.
HEINONEN, DEBORAH ANN
3 Deacon Road
Bedford, N.H.
HEMPHILL, MARYANNE
7 Knollwood Terrance
Caldwell, N.J.
HENDRICK, DAVID WILLIAM
Star Route
Plainfield, N.H.
HERBERT, RUTH IRENE
Londonderry Road
Windham, N.H.
HIBBERT, DANIEL LESLIE
21 Parker Street
Laconia, N.H.
HICKEY, JOHN AUGUSTINE JR.
46 Shirley Road
Waltham, Mass.
HICKEY, VIRGINIA K.
350 Highland Ave.
Winchester, Mass.
HILL, DAVID CECIL
RFD #1
Ashuelot, N.H.
HILL, DIANE
Kirtland Street
Warner, N.H.
HILL, DONALD S.
Pembroke Street
Suncook, N.H.
HILL, EDWARD WILLIAM
25 Federal Street
Brunswick, Me.
HILL, LINDA C.
Route 2
Dunbarton, N.H.
HILLIER, DIANE MARSTON
177 Hobart Ave.
Braintree, Mass.
HILLIER, JAY DOUGLAS
Mechanic Street
West Bennington, Vt.
HILLMAN, ALFRED K. JR.
Route 2
Dover, N.H.
HILTON, ENID RANDALL
649 Central Ave.
Dover, N.H.
HIBER, DIANE ISABELLE
30 Symmes Road
Winchester, Mass.
HODGDON, WILLIAM W.
MS2 Forest Park
Durham, N.H.
HODSDON, ROBERT HAYES JR.
3598 Main Street
Somersworth, N.H.
HOEY, JOHN EDWARD
Box 204
Belmont, N.H.
HOEY, JEFFREY SCOT
40 Maple Street
Gonic, N.H.
HOFFMAN, ALLAN LEWIS
29 Corey Road
Malden, Mass.
HOLBROOK, SHERRY LOU
1358 North Main Street
Laconia, N.H.
HOLMES, CHRISTOPHER H.
Box 95
Seven Valleys, Penn.
HOLT, VIRGINIA LEE
Lyndeboro Road
Wilton, N.H.
301
HOOD, CHARLES HENRY
Box 206
Charlestown, N.H.
HOOPER, RALPH TREVETT
Winnacunnet Road
Hampton, N.H.
HOPGOOD, RICHARD DUNCAN
372 Ridgewood Ave.
Glen Ridge, N.J.
HOPKINS, PHYLLIS P.
13 Sprague Center
Portsmouth, R.l.
HORAN, BRIAN MICHAEL
214 Bell Street
Manchester, N.H.
HORWITZ, NANCY DROUIN
48 Cushing Street
Dover, N.H.
HOWARD, JOANNE ELIZABETH
717 Bent Lane
Newark, Del.
HOWE, ELAINE H.
66 Dearborn Ave.
Hampton, N.H.
HOWLAND, J. PETER
274 Main Street
Cumberland, Me.
HOYT, STEWART MICHAEL
Star Route
Nottingham, N.H.
HUDSON, JAMES HOWARD
40 West Bow Street
Franklin, N.H.
HUGHES, CHERYL RAE
160 Knickerbocker Road
Dumont, N.J.
HUMMRICH, RICHARD CHARLES
23 Millbrook Road
Beverly, Mass.
HUNT, ROBERT F.
Westwood Road
Georges Mill, N.H.
HURLBURT, SARAH ELLEN
42 Partridge Road
Duxbury, Mass.
HURLEY, PAMELA MASON
36 Oakmount Circle
Lexington, Mass.
HUSS, MARK D.
Deer Hill Road
Brentwood, N.H.
HUTCHINS, WENDY RUTH
34 Spring Street
Whitefield, N.H.
ISLIEB, CLAUDIA LYNN
55 Clarendon Ave.
West Hartford, Conn.
JACKSON, RICHARD S. JR.
93 Taylor Street
Nashua, N.H.
JACOBSEN, SUSAN DANE
18 Cranmore Lane
Melrose, Mass.
JACOBSON, ARTHUR THEODORE
Box 217
Bartlett, New Hampshire
JACOBSON, SUSAN JANE
1229 Rose Street
Plainfield, N.J.
JACOBY, CAROL F.
Box 659 Bagdad Road
Durham, N.H.
JAEGER, JEFFREY JAMES
27 Dixon Drive
Woodbridge, N.J.
JARRELL, EDWARD GERARD
Alpha Tau Omega
Durham, N.H.
JARRETT, ROBERT DAVID
166 Locke Road
Rye, N.H.
JEFFERSON, PATRICIA ANN
32 Lafayette Street
Hopwell, N.J.
JENKINS, VICTORIA MARBLE
186 South Place
Corning, N.Y.
JENNINGS, DALE MARTIN
Box 68
Tamworth, N.H.
JOACHLM, LINDA JEAN
17 Blake Street
Newburgh, N.Y.
JODREY, ROBERT FOSTER
43 Milbern Ave.
Hampton, N.H.
JOHNSON, ANNA KRISTINE
53 High Street
Berlin, N.H.
JOHNSON, BARBARA ANNIE
North Haverhill, N.H.
JOHNSON, CAROLYN ANNE
26 Dryden Road
Basking Ridge, N.J.
JOHNSON, DAVID CHARLES
6 Cummings Street
Hudson, N.H.
JOHNSON, JUDITH ANN
22 Downing Street
Laconia, N.H.
JOHNSON, JUDY ANN
27 Souhegan Street
Milford, N.H.
JOHNSTON, JOY LEIGH
417 West Jefferson
Morris, Illinois
JOHNSTON, SUSAN RUTH
144 Elm Street
Thomaston, Conn.
JOLY, ROBERT JAMES
32 Park Ave.
Claremont, N.H.
JONAS, PEGGY ANNE
2 Montana Plains
Hunt Station, N.Y.
JONES, JOHN KENNETH
Linden Street
Exeter, N.H.
JORDAN, MICHAEL WILLIAM
3 Crestwood Terrance
Nashua, N.H.
JORDAN, STEVEN JAMES
Box 103
Twin Mountain, N.H.
JOSLIN, THOMAS HANCOCK
Portsmouth Ave.
Exeter, N.H.
JOYCE, RALPH RICHARD JR.
75 Greene Street
North Andover, Mass.
JOYNER, CHRISTY LOU
16 Knight Street
Milford, N.H.
JUTRAS, THOMAS ANTHONY
410 Donald Street
Bedford, N.H.
KALTSAS, DIANE LACHANCE
92 Pine Street
Rochester, N.H.
KAMMAN, SHERYL ANN
Route 2
Concord, N.H.
KANE, CHARLENE MARY
391 Colonial Drive
Portsmouth, N.H.
KEATING, ELAINE ISABEL
7 Pearl Place
Franklin, N.H.
KEATING, RICHARD JOHN
70 Portland Road
Kennebunk, Me.
KEEFE, ANN LOUISE
333 Belnap Street
Dover, N.H.
KEENAN, AUDREY ELLEN
43 Berkeley Street
Reading, Mass.
KELEHER, DAVID GERARD
97 Edgebrook Road
Framingham, Mass.
KELLER, THOMAS WOODBURY
36 Shore Drive
Laconia, N.H.
KELLEY, STEVEN MICHAEL
359 Willard Street
Berlin, N.H.
KELLIHER, CECELIA THERESA
373 Union Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
KEMP, THOMAS EARLE
Eaton Parkway
Meredith, N.H.
KENDALL, SHERMAN BOOTHBY
55 Post Road
North Hampton, N.H.
KENNEDY, JOAN POWERS
Box 552
Durham, N.H.
KENNEY, DAVID THOMAS JR.
215 Portland Street
Rochester, N.H.
KENNEY, JOHN FRANCIS JR.
Box 44
Crabtree, Penn.
KIBLER, MARY CHRISTINA
East Road
Westville, N.H.
KIDDER, DAVID HOLLIS
Burpee Lane
New London, N.H.
KIDDER, RICHARD STONE
18 Brooks Street
Winchester, Mass.
KILLAM, DUDLEY B. JR.
Westside Drive
Atkinson, N.H.
302
KILLAM, SUSAN
4 Pleasant Street
Goffstown, N.H.
KIMBLE, JOHN CARLSON
841 California Ave.
Pittsburgh, Penn.
KIRBY, JOHN FRANCIS JR.
Watchtower Road
Contoocook, N.H.
KIRWAN, HARRIETT COCHRANE
RFD Newmarket Road
Durham, N.H.
KITTRIDGE, DAVID GRANT
RFD # 2
Littleton, N.H.
KITTREDGE, WAYNE FULTON
Buck Street, RFD #1
Suncook, N.H.
KLACSMANN, LYNNE FRANCES
160 Mohawk Trail
Wayne, N.J.
KLINE, EDWIN DAVID
35 Douglas Drive
Norwalk, Conn.
KNAPP, DOUGLAS GEORGE
813 Murray Street
Elizabeth, N.J.
KNIGHT, DEBORAH ANN
RFD #1
Keene, N.H.
KNIGHT, CAROL LYNN
239 Melrose Street
Melrose, Mass.
KNOWLES, CRAIG ELLISON
117 High Street
North Billeric, Mass.
KOOL, RICHARD
P.O. Box 426
Durham, N.H.
KOPRLY, RICHARD A.
Route 2
Dayville, Conn.
KOSSAKOSKI, ALEXIS JOHN
49 Sixth Street
Dover, N.H.
KOUNELAS, GAIL SOPHIA
1115 Hayward Street
Manchester, N.H.
KRITON, JENNIE NICHOLAS
375 Medford Street
Manchester, N.H.
KRYSIAK, EDWARD FRANCIS
8 Goward Place
Lowell, Mass.
KUCZEWSKI, ELIZABETH R.
1034 Wellington Road
Manchester, N.H.
KUMMER, ALAN WILLIAM
30 Libby Ave.
Hicksville, N.Y.
LABNON, LINDA LEE
207 Willard Street
Berlin, N.H.
LABRANCHE, DENNIS HENRY
Westville Road
Plaistow, N.H.
LABRIE, DIANE CAMIRE
Route 3, Box 86
Dover, N.H.
LACEY, THOMAS JOSEPH
RFD # 5
Laconia, N.H.
LACHANCE, ALBERT JOSEPH
5 Sudbury Drive
Nashua, N.H.
LADD, SALLY ANN
RFD # 8
Concord, N.H.
LAFOND, CONSTANCE ELAINE
2 Rockwood Center
Bedford, N.H.
LALIBERTE, DONALD ERNEST
41 Dexter Street
Nashua, N.H.
LAMOTHE, ROBERT ALLEN
149 George Street
Keene, N.H.
LAMP, ELIZABETH ANN
401 College Ave.
Haverford, Penn.
LANE, LESLEY EARLE
Route 8, Swanzey Center
Keene, N.H.
LANE, PATRICIA ANNE
1046 Belmont Street
Manchester, N.H.
LANG,KAREN CORSER
69 Clinton Street
Concord, N.H.
LANGE, MARY LOUISE
42 Indian Head Road
Riverside, Conn.
LAPINE, BARBARA A.
24 Deerfield Place
Beacon, N.Y.
LARGY, DAVID FRANK
RFD #1 Milford
Amherst, N.H.
LARKIN, JOHN FRANCIS
528 Beech Street
Manchester, N.H.
LAROCHE, DIANA
Old Street Road
Peterboro, N.H.
LARSON, SANDRA GAY
3 Erin Place
Orono, Me.
LATOURETTE, KAREN SAWN
14 Hall Ave.
Nashua, N.H.
LATSON,JOHN
124 Weyford Terrance
Garden City, N.Y.
LAURENCE, ROBERT PRANG
45 Bellevue Road
Swampscott, Mass.
LAURENT, PHILLIP
650 Main Street
Keene, N.H.
LAVALLEE, STEPHANY M.
44 Champlain Street
Manchester, N.H.
LAVERY, ELLEN CASTLEY
6874 Frambrook Drive
Cincinnati, Ohio
LAVERY, MARY BRIDGETT
117 Bowman Street
Manchester, N.H.
LAWRENCE, BRADLEY
227 Linden Street
Manchester, N.H.
LEADBEATER, MARY MORRILL
Gould Hill Farm
Contoocook, N.H.
LEARNED, PATRICIA ANN
96 Milville Street
Salem, N.H.
LEAVITT, KENNETH CHARLES
Kings Highway
Wolfeboro, N.H.
LECLERC, ROGER LAWRENCE
425 Coos Street
Berlin, N.H.
LEE, RICHARD ALLEN
25 School Street
Hanover, N.H.
LEGENDRE, RONALD ARTHUR
One Varney Street, Apt. 2A
Dover, N.H.
LEMAY, DONALD FRANCIS
Etna Road
Lebanon, N.H.
LERICHE, ARNOLD LOUIS, JR.
85 Belnap Street, Apt. 4
Dover, N.H.
LESIEUR, JANICE ELAINE
8 Raven Street
Nashua, N.H.
LESMERISES, NORMAN JOHN
408 Boynton Street
Bedford, N.H.
LEVINE, MILES EDWARD
45 Crest View
Manchester, N.H.
LEWIS, CAROLINE ELIZABETH
16 Arbutus Ave.
Braintree, Mass.
LITTLE, DANIEL GARVIN
360 Robinson Street
Binghamton, N.Y.
LITTLE, STEPHEN JAMES
1258 Ocen Blvd.
Rye, N.H.
LOF, RICHARD JOHN ADDISON
RR 2 Box 59 Storrs Road
Storrs, Conn.
LORD, DAVID ALAN
110 Thurston Street
Riverside, R.l.
LORDEN, JOHN MICHAEL
Prospect Street
Enfield, N.H.
LORENZ, WILLIAM J. JR.
Box 532
Durham, N.H.
LOVETT, ANNE ELIZABETH
257 Pleasant Street
Laconia, N.H.
LUPO, VINCENT LOUIS
112 Cardinal Ave.
Albany, N.Y.
LYMAN, SALLY HARGRAVES
Box 189
Franconia, N.H.
LYON, JAMES EDWARD
Route 5 State Street
Auburn, N.Y.
303
MacDONALD, ALEXANDER F. JR
I Birch Drive
Dover, N.H.
MACKAY, DENNIS CHARLES
611 1/2 Central Ave.
Dover, N.H.
MacKENZIE, MARYBETH NUTE
I I Highland Ave.
Littleton, N.H.
MACLEAN, BRIAN LEE
4 Thompson Road
Hampton, N.H.
MacNEARY, JAMES WHITE
44 Stratford Road
New Shrews, N.J.
MADDEN, MARY ELIZABETH
4999 Hawaiian Terrance
Cincinnati, Ohio
MAGLARAS, MICHAEL
92 Cocheco Street
Dover, N.H.
MAGOON, JOHN N.
45 Main Street
Exeter, N.H.
MAIER, JOHN ROBERT
Apt. 1 25 Ceres Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
MALLEN, PETER RAYMOND
131 Woodbury Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
MANN, DOUGLAS ROSCOE
Route 1
Concord, N.H.
MARCHAND, FRANCIS JOSEPH
176 Migeon Ave.
Torrington, Conn.
MARDEN, CATHY ANN
131 Woodbury Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
MARGULIES, FRANCES KATE
RFD #1 Deering
Hillsboro, N.H.
MARGOLIS, NADIA
Ryegate Woodland Road
North Hampton, N.H.
MARKOS, PETER GEORGE
8 Renaud Ave.
Dover, N.H.
MARONSKI, FRANCIS GREGORY
595 South Main Street
Nashua, N.H.
MARQUIS, GREGORY PAUL
RFD # 3
Laconia, N.H.
MARRS, DEBORAH LOUISE
Timberlane Drive
Merrimack, N.H.
MARSHALL, JULIE KENNETT
22 West Main Street
Conway, N.H.
MARSHALL, RICHARD RICHARD
2 Locust Drive
Kingston, R.l.
MARTIN, ALFRED ARTHUR
4 Prospect Park
Lancaster, N.H.
MARTIN, DAVID SEWELL
P.O. Box 19
Fitzwilliam, N.H.
MARTIN, DEBORAH A.
15 West Diane Drive
Keene, N.H.
MARTINEZ, ANNA
Hammond Road
Thiells, N.Y.
MARTINSON, JANICE ELEANOR
5 Beechmont Street
Claremont, N.H.
MASON, JEFFREY ROBERT
Box 87
Salem, N.H.
MATHRE, BARBARA
1 Juniper Court
Norwich, Conn.
MAY, WILLIAM CHARLES
8 West Brook Drive
Nashua, N.H.
MAYNARD, STEVEN LUCIEN
56 Manchester Street
Nashua, N.H.
MAYVILLE, LYNN A.
New Road
Newmarket, N.H.
McAVOY, SUZANNE BETTE
Box 229
Littleton, N.H.
McBRIDE, CATHERINE MARY
Box 93
Campton, N.H.
McBURNEY, HOLLIS E. JR.
Seavey Street
North Conway, N.H.
McC a f f r e y , k e v in A u s t in
10 Midchester Ave.
White Plains, N.Y.
McCALL, ARCHIBALD RICHARD
604 Clinton Plains
Belford, N.J.
McCORMACK, JANET LEE
27 Kingston Drive
Nashua, N.H.
McCRILLIS, RICHARD J.
144 High Street
Somersworth, N.H.
McDERMID, MICHAEL L.
Box 303
Stratham, N.H.
MCDONALD, CATHY ALYCE
32 Bramble Lane
Riverside, Conn.
MCDONALD, JEANNE
15 Pinecrest Road
Weston, Mass.
m c d o n n e l l , m ic h a e l b o g a r
1607 Crestmont Drive
Harrisburg, Penn.
m cdonoug h, sally j .
724 Central Ave.
Dover, N.H.
McELREAVY, LARRY
266 Elm Street
Claremont, N.H.
McGONIS, NORMA VARNEY
8 Blake Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
McGUINNESS, NANCY RUTH
350 High Street
Somersworth, N.H.
MclLWAINE, ARCHIBALD G.
40 Cushing Street
Dover, N.H.
McKAY, CLYDE FRANK III
1 Douglass Way
Exeter, N.H.
McKAY, DENNIS ROBERT
421 Herbert Street
Orange, Conn.
McKONE, PETER LANE
200 Silver Street
Dover, N.H.
McNAMARA, RANDA C.
71 Delaware Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
McSHEEHY, TIMOTHY JAMES
RFD #1
Tilton, N.H.
MEAD, JOCELYN GAY
RFD # 3 Brown Hill Road
Concord, N.H.
MEADER, SUSAN JOY
49 Edgewood Road
Durham, N.H.
MEARS, ALISON BLISS
Box 17
Nottingham, N.H.
MENARD, DENNIS ALAN
1 Taylor Lane
Portsmouth, N.H.
MENZIE, JOHN J. JR.
12 Sunset Drive
Atkinson, N.H.
MERCIER, NORMAND ALFRED
14 Alpine Ave.
Hudson, N.H.
MERRILL, RUSSELL GREGG
Elm Street
Milford, N.H.
MERRILL, WILLIAM E.
7 Pine Knoll Trailer Court
Durham, New Hampshire
MERTINOOKE, PETER ELLIOTT
Highland Road, RFD #1
East Kingston, N.H.
MERWIN, SANTINA LACAVA
Durgin Road, Star Route
East Barrington, N.H.
MESSIER, JOCELYN ANNE
40 New Gate Center
Manchester, N.H.
METIVIER, DONALD E.
356 Marlboro Street
Keene, N.H.
MICHELSEN, LINDA S.
104 Cross Street
Keene, N.H.
MILES, DANIEL STEPHEN
40 Ladd Hill Road
Lynn, Mass.
MILES, PETER WILLIAM
22 Prospect St.
Tilton, N.H.
MILLER, CAROL LOUISE
358 So. Main St.
Attleboro, Mass.
MILLER, GARY A.
131 Mystic St.
Medford, Mass.
304
MILNE, JONATHON
3 Weatherby Rd'.
Hanover, N.H.
MINKUS, ANN E.
1348 Farmington Ave.
W. Hartford, Conn.
MITCHELL, JAMES KARL
10 Grove St.
Gonic, N.H.
MITCHELL, SANDRA JOYCE
S. Main St.
Pittsfield, N.H.
MOHRMAN, JANE MELISS
295 Hopmeadow St.
Weatogne, Conn.
MOISAN, ALAN CURRIER
RFD 2 Newton
Plaistow, N.H.
MONAHAN, DAVID LEO
300 West Main St.
Littleton, N.H.
MOORE, BRADLEY
100 Fremont St.
Manchester, N.H.
MOORE, HAROLD ELLIOTT
Berwick Academy
So. Berwick, Me.
MOORE, MARLEEN MEHLHORN
70 Grove St.
Dover, N.H.
MOORE, RICHARD ALAN
RFD 3 Box 219
Laconia, N.H.
MOORE, RONNIE DARRELL
Christmas Island
Laconia, N.H.
MOORE, STEPHEN JAMES
179 Perkins Row
Topsfield, Mass.
MOOREHOUSE, MARIE E.
35 Lil Nor Ave.
Somersworth, N.H.
MORANG, RALPH EDWARD
171 Cable Rd.
Rye, N.H.
MORIN, PATRICIA MARIE
992 Union Ave.
Laconia, N.H.
MORIN, PAULA FRANCES
Box 841
Salem, N.H.
MORISSETTE, ELIZABETH A.
69 Western Promenade
Auburn, Me.
MOROZ, KAREN
220 Main St.
Claremont, N.H.
MORRILL, JOHN BRADLEY
31 Penacook St.
Penacook, N.H.
MOTOWYLAK, NICHOLAS JR.
56 South River Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
MOYNIHAN, GAIL ELIZABETH
617 Hevey St.
Manchester, N.H.
MOYNIHAN, MARY LEE
255 Howe St.
Methuen, Mass.
MUDGE, MERILYN R.
71 Mace Rd.
Hampton, N.H.
MULLINER, BETTE MAE
P.O. Box 77 Grove St.
Antrim, N.H.
MUNSON, ELIZABETH MARY
19 Raleigh PI.
Willingboron, N.J.
MUNTON, STEPHEN V.
178 Aldrich Rd.
Portsmouth, N.H.
MURDOCH, SALLY FERGUSON
Dwight Rd.
Marshfield, Mass.
MURDOCH, WILLIAM LEO
1 Connors Rd.
Peabody, Mass.
MURPHY, JAMES ARTHUR
17 Dudley St.
Reading, Mass.
MESSER, JOYCE MUSCHIETTE
62 Lake St.
Laconia, N.H.
NADEAU, GAIL BRENDA
39 McKean St.
Nashua, N.H.
NADEAU, JEANNE IMELDA
89 Main St.
Norway, Me.
NADEAU, PAUL FRANCIS
7 Reed St.
Manchester, N.H.
NAGEL, DENNISE MICHELLE
105 S. Newark Ave.
Ventnor, N.J.
NALETTE, ROBERT RICHARD
259 Notre Dame Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
NEILY, LESLEY REHM
KS2 Forest Park
Durham, N.H.
NELSON, ELIZABETH JANE
12 Sunset Dr.
Manchester, N.H.
NELSON, RICHARD JAY
1374 Chestnut St.
Manchester, N.H.
NESS, FRANCINE LAUREL
40 Watchung Ave.
U. Montclair, N.J.
NICKERSON, LINDA MAE
Hill Rd.
Walpole, N.H.
NICKLESS, JOANNE
19 Lincoln St.
Manchester, N.H.
NOEL, SUSAN K.
2 Herrick St.
Nashua, N.H.
NORRIS, JUDITH ANN
7 Greenview Rd.
Groton, Conn.
NOTTAGE, SHEILA
13 Sparrow Dr.
Livingston, N.J.
NOVELLO, FREDERICK C.
RFD 1
Durham, N.H.
NUDD, MARGARET HELEN
RFD 1
Tilton, N.H.
NYSTEDT, CHARLES MELVILLE
57 Cunningham Dr.
S. Hamilton, Mass.
OAKS, CAROLYN P.
Box 626
Conway, N.H.
O’BRIEN, BEVERLY JANE
524 Broad St.
Portsmouth, N.H.
O’CONNOR, RODERICK HOWARD
110 Henry Law Ave.
Dover, N.H.
O’CONNOR, SALLY DAVIS
Norwood Farms Rd.
York Harbor, Me.
O’CONNOR, SUSAN MARY
18 Melville St.
Augusta, Me.
ODELL, JON DUDLEY
394 Norway St.
Berlin, N.H.
ODELL, RALPH HERBERT JR.
RFD Amherst
Mt. Vernon, N.H.
OHLER, SUSAN DUDLEY
Pleasant St.
New London, N.H.
OLBERG, ROBERT OLIVER
Box 268 27 Florence St.
Dover, N.H.
OLSON, RICHARD E.
Grandee Hill Mobile
Durham, N.H.
OLSSON, GWEN SIGRID
42 Chester St.
Nashua, N.H.
OLSSON, SANDRA CAROL
42 Chester St.
Nashua, N.H.
O’NEIL, ROBERT E., JR.
Mt. Vernon Ave.
Hyanis Port, Mass.
ONO, SEIJI
Foreign Student Adv.
Durham, N.H.
ORFIELD, AMORET PELLERIN
Box 411
Raymond, N.H.
ORGAZ, CAROL ANNE
45 Blossom St.
Keene, N.H.
O’ROURKE, TERENCE DAVID
R 2 Box 189
Dover, N.H.
ORTON, MELVIN THOMAS JR.
Box 533
W. Harwich, Mass.
OULLETTE, MAURICE J.
51 Fifth St.
Dover, N.H.
OWEN, ROBERT EARLE
41 Bridge St.
Colebrook, N.H.
PAGE, DOROTHY O’BRIEN
30 Park Court Apt. 13
Durham, N.H.
305
PAGE, MARY PATRICIA
Troy Rd. RFD 1
Keene, N.H.
PALMER, DIANE LOUISE
18 Delwood Ct.
Ramsey, N.J.
PALMER, ELAINE
Kensington RFD
E. Kingston, N.H.
PAPADOPOULOS, BETSY ANN
3 Coolidge Ave.
Dover, N.H.
PAPAGEORGE, ELAINE
322 Orange St.
Manchester, N.H.
PAPAGEORGE, VICTORIA
43 Prospect Hill
Burlington, Vt.
PAPENFUSE, DAVID CHARLES
19 Westlund Ave.
Keene, N.H.
PARADIS, CAROL ANN
4 Bremer St.
Manchester, N.H.
PARANTO, RONALD PAUL
72 Main St. Apt. 2
Newmarket, N.H.
PARENTEAU, PIERRE JOSEPH
91 Elkins St.
Franklin, N.H.
PARKER, ELIZABETH AVERY
4413 Harrison St. N.W.
Washington, D.C.
PARKER, STEPHEN EARL
25 Belmont Ave.
Keene, N.H.
PARKS, RICHARD DANA
318 Grove St.
Dover, N.H.
PARROTT, LAWRENCE ROBERT
P.O. Box 503
Durham, N.H.
PATERSON, PAMELA E.
897 Stanton Ave.
Baldwin, N.Y.
PATTERSON, CARL
112 Gerald Dr.
Vernon, Conn.
PAVLIDIS, BARBARA ANNE
435 Oak St.
Manchester, N.H.
PEARSON, GRAY WAITE JR.
399 Main St.
Keene, N.H.
PEARSON, WALTER GEORGE
Folsom Rd.
Ctr. Ossipee, N.H.
PEDERSON, CYNTHIA ANN
Charlestown Rd.
Claremont, N.H.
PELCZAR, MARGARET
RFD 2
Meredith, N.H.
PELECH, BERNARD WILLIAM
River St.
Hinsdale, N.H.
PENNIMAN, JUDITH M.
RFD 2
Goffstown, N.H.
PENNIMAN, RICHARD S.
P.O. Box 103
Sanbornville, N.H.
PEPIN, COLETTE MAE
59 Kensington Rd.
Portsmouth, N.H.
PEPIN, COLLEEN RAE
59 Kensington Rd.
Portsmouth, N.H.
PEPIN, JOHN A.
47 Stone St.
Concord, N.H.
PEPIN, LUCILLE MARIE
57 Dexter St.
Nashua, N.H.
PEPIN, NANCY ARLINE
80 Smyth Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
PERKINS, BEVERLY ELLEN
4 Spring Hill Rd.
RFD Concord, Mass.
PERKINS, JOHN C. JR.
330 East High St.
Manchester, N.H.
PERKINS, SALLY KATHRYN
198 Maynard Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
PERRAULT, JEAN
Box 37
Silverlake, N.H.
PETERS, JOHN DOUGLAS
7 Hancock St.
Dover, N.H.
PETERSON, DONNA MARY
24 Rundlett St.
Concord, N.H.
PEYSER, KATE WASHBURN
26 Broad St.
Rochester, N.H.
PHELPS, SUSAN J.
7 Green St.
Lebanon, N.H.
PHILLIPS, BARBARA ANN
RFD 2
Newport, N.H.
PHILLIPS, MARK GREGORY
100 Grover St.
Beverly, Mass.
PIATTONI, PETER F.
364 Main St.
Gorham, N.H.
PIERCE, CALVIN JUDSON
Old Metting House Ln.
Norwell, Mass.
PIERCE, ERNEST WARREN
61 Windemere Ctr.
Braintree, Mass.
PIERCE, ROGER A. II
1320 Mammoth Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
PIERCE, STEVEN DOANE
P.O. Box 33
Campton, N.H.
PIKE, PAUL HENRY
1 Newton St.
Dover, N.H.
PINDRUS, DEBORAH ROSE
898 Central Ave.
Dover, N.H.
PIPE, CONSTANCE ELIZABETH
63 Main St.
Fryeburg, Me.
PLACE, DANA WAKEFIELD
124 E. Main St.
Tilton, N.H.
PLANCHET, MARIE ROSE
10 S. Fruit St.
Concord, N.H.
PLOURDE, DENNIS ANDREW
5 Chapel St. Apt. S 12
Newmarket, N.H.
POLIQUIN, ALFRED T.
Elm
Epping, N.H.
POOLER, MARCIA J.
So. Shore Rd.
Lochmere, N.H.
PORTER, JOHN CLIFTON
Hardy Hill
Lebanon, N.H.
POULETSOS, ELAINE
64 Harrington Ave.
Westwood, N.J.
POULIOT, SUZANNE M.
479 Madison Ave.
Berlin, N.H.
POW, PAMELA DAYLE
147 Bismarck St.
Manchester, N.H.
POWERS, GENE WHEATON
14 Lawrence St.
Concord, N.H.
POWERS, NANCY M.
28 Middlesex Ave.
Reading, Mass.
POWERS, ROBERT FRED
477 Laurel St.
Manchester, N.H.
PRENTICE, ELIOT SCOTT
446 Mass. Ave.
Acton, Mass.
PRIEST, PATRICIA JANE
188 No. Bend Dr.
Manchester, N.H.
PROCKNIEWICZ, LINDA J.
6 Dartmouth Lane
Rochester, N.H.
PROUT, ELIZABETH CLAIRE
13 William St.
Andover, Mass.
PRYBYLO, CAROL ANN
9 Meadow Dr.
Springfield, Vt.
PUMPELLY, PAMELA ELLEN
295 Powers Dr.
Jesup, Ga.
PURDIE, GEORGE WILLIAM
349 Myrtle St.
Manchester, N.H.
QUIGLEY, KATHLEEN
81 Woodchester Dr.
Weston, Mass.
RADUAZO, SUSAN ANGELA
27 Green St.
Gardner, Mass.
RAFFERTY, JAMES WILLIAM
27 Chartrand St.
Manchester, N.H.
306
RAMMER, STEPHEN J.
24 Boston Harbor Rd.
Dover, N.H.
RAMSEY, JAMES LELAND
78 High St.
Littleton, N.H.
RANDALL, MICHAEL ROSS
1335 Chestnut St.
Manchester, N.H.
RAYMOND, CHARLES H.
5 Chapel
Newmarket, N.H.
RAYMOND, JAMES BURROUGHS
581 Hanover St.
Manchester, N.H.
RAYNER, DOUGLAS ALAN
233 Denmark St.
Berlin, N.H.
REGAN, ELLEN JOSEPHINE
216 Bartlett St.
Portsmouth, N.H.
REGAN, RICHARD M.
212 Pleasant
Wakefield, Mass.
REGNELL, INGA LINNEA
RFD 1 Box 471
Rochester, N.H.
REGIS, STEPHEN DARRELL
391 Beacon St.
Manchester, N.H.
REILLY, CAROL MORSE
Stratham RFD
Greenland, N.H.
REPAS, PETER GEORGE
4 Kathryn Ct.
Plattsburg, N.Y.
REPETTO, ANDREW WILLIAM
Stagecoach Rd.
Durham, N.H.
REYNOLDS, BURTON HOLMES
Box 21
S. Lyndeboro, N.H.
RHODES, ALFRED WILLIAM JR.
163 Paul Revere Rd.
Needham, Mass.
RHODES, DONALD BRUCE
Kingsbury Rd.
Walpole, N.H.
RICE, DEBORAH SHAW
28 N. Main St.
Hooksett, N.H.
RICE, TRUDY ANN
Topside
Rindge, N.H.
RICHMOND, DENNIS
831 Belmont St.
Manchester, N.H.
RICHMOND, LINDA B.
18 Beechwood Rd,
Basking Ridge, N.J.
RICKER, RONALD CLIFTON
436 Broad St.
Portsmouth, N.H.
RILEY, SUSAN J.
Wentworth Park
E. Wolfeboro, N.H.
ROACH, PETER JAMES
80 Allison St.
Concord, N.H.
ROBAK, LAURA WOLTERS
29 Hill St.
Dover, N.H.
ROBERTSON, DAVID BRUCE
7 Grove Ave.
Sanford, Me.
ROBICHAUD, ROBERT R.
17 Wentworth St.
Dover, N.H.
ROBINSON, KATHLEEN
35 Park St.
Rochester, N.H.
ROCHE, DAVID HARTLEY
218 Locust St.
Dover, N.H.
ROGERS, NORMAN FOSTER
5 Light Ave.
Lowell, Mass.
ROMATOWSKI, ANN BARBARA
Qtrs. C. Pnsy.
Portsmouth, N.H.
ROSI, TERRENCE F.
Main St.
Cloebrook, N.H.
ROSSOLL, CHARLES F. Ill
Box 505
Lincoln, N.H.
ROULX, ANDREA JEAN
Gilmonton Rd.
Belmont, N.H.
ROURKE, RICHARD BRUCE
RFD 1
E. Barrington, N.H.
ROUTHIER, SANDRA THERESA
303 Mani St.
Somersworth, N.H.
ROY, ERNEST WILLIAM
362 School St.
Berlin, N.H.
ROY, TIMOTHY ROBERT
2 Sullivan St.
Nashua, N.H.
ROY, WILLIAM CLAYTON
269 Hanover St.
Lebanon, N.H.
ROYCE, PETER WILLIAM
7 Kennedy Dr.
Hooksett, N.H.
ROZEK, JAN LOUISE
Riverside Dr.
Berlin, N.H.
RYAN, LINDA LEE
854 Fifth Ave.
Berlin, N.H.
ST. LAWRENCE, GREGORY LEON
277 Pioneer Rd.
Rye, N.H.
SAGRIS, CHRITINE ANN
Little Harbor Rd.
Portsmouth, N.H.
SAMA, JUDI JOHNSON
939 Maplewood Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
SANBORN, MURRAY HAVEN
Sanborntonton, N.H.
SANBORN, PETER DONALD
Pittsfield Rd.
Chichester, N.H.
SANBORN, REBECCA RAE
Lower St.
Orford, N.H.
SANDBERG, GAIL ELLEN
24 Valley Rd.
Weymouth, Mass.
SANDERS, ALBERT N.
214 Dover Point Rd.
Dover, N.H.
SANDERS, CENTER D.
Newmarket Rd.
Durham, N.H.
SANFORD, JEAN ELLEN
9 Alcott Rd.
Lexington, Mass.
SASSEVILLE, DENNIS ROLAND
3539 Creekview Ctr.
Stone Mt., Ga.
SAUNDERS, ROBERT F.
35 College Terr.
Oneonta, N.Y.
SAWTELLE, ERICK DAHL
Fort Hill Rd.
Gorham, Me.
SAWYER, HARRY JOSEPH
Stratham Hts.
Stratham, N.H.
SAWYER, ROBERT E., JR.
16 Grappone Dr.
Concord, N.H.
SCHAVONE, RICHARD MICHAEL
5 Bent Ave.
Cochituate, Mass.
SCHILLING, FALKO A.
73 B St.
Manchester, N.H.
SCHMIDT, JAMES WILLIAM
Box 284 Squam Lake
Holderness, N.H.
SCHOLL, BARBARA ANNE
Meadow Lane
Atkinson, N.H.
SCHROEDER, RICHARD EDWIN
240 Donald St.
Manchester, N.H.
SCHUETTE, DIANE M.
444 Grafton
Berlin, N.H.
SCHULTZ, WILLIAM HENRY
Anytown
U.S.A.
SCHWOTZER, MICHAEL ALAN
6 Swain Ct. P.O. Box 497
Hampton, N.H.
SCOTT, CAROL MAY
Box 199 Rte. 1
Plaistow, N.H.
SCOTT, WALTER EDWARD
574 Belmont St.
Manchester, N.H.
SCRUTON, ARTHUR W.
Rt. 2
Rochester, N.H.
SEARS, PATRICIA HOLLY
3 Wellington Ave.
Dover, N.H.
SELBY, LINDA MOREAU
210 Beech St.
Cranford, N.J.
307
SHAFFER, DANIEL JAY
1609 Alsace Rd.
Reading, Pa.
SHAFFRAN, MICHAEL JAMES
4 Dolphin Way
Riverhead, N.Y.
SHARON, DONALD C. JR.
RFD 1
Tilton, N.H.
SHATERIAN, CHRISTINE MAY
90 Ridge Rd.
Rutherford, N.J.
SHATTUCK, GEORGE
So. Danville, N.H.
SHAUGHNESSY, MICHAEL E.
386 Vinton St.
Manchester, N.H.
SHAW, STEPHEN HARRISON
6 Barrymeade Dr.
Lexington, Mass.
SHEA, DENISE ANNE
22 Ellison St.
Jaffrey, N.H.
SHEEHAN, THOMAS D.
River View Rd.
New Castle, N.H.
SHEE, ROBERT CHALKEY
N. Racebrook Rd.
Woodbridge, Conn.
SHERMAN, JOHN A.
Northwood, N.H.
SHULTS, SUSAN SCHUYLER
65 Center St.
Ft. Plain, N.Y.
SHUTTLEWORTH, JOAN
7 Dianne Rd.
Stoneham, Mass.
SIDERIS, JOHN EVAN
8 Mooreland Ave.
Concord, N.H.
SIENA, DEBORAH RENNEE
Olympus Pkwy.
Middleton, Conn.
SIMEK, GARY JOHN
1137 Third Ave.
Schenectedy, N.Y.
SINIBALDI, PAUL RAYMOND
4 Wentworth Ave.
Berlin, N.H.
SIROIS, ROSALIE ELAINE
RFD 1
Norridgewk, Me.
SKILLEN, JAMES CROFT
14 Bellevue Ave.
Claremont, N.H.
SLACK, GERALD CHARLES
27 Osborne Ave.
New Prov., N.J.
SLAVIN, JOAN MARGARET
Box 531
Osterville, Mass.
SLOAN, BRUCE ALDRICH
Newfields Rd. RFD 1
Exeter, N.H.
SMAGULA, WILLIAM HENRY
23 Clifford Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
SMART, DAVID ALAN
100 Marne Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
SZWED, LAURA SMART
Box 385
Durham, N.H.
SMITH, EDWARD WILLIAM
RFD 1 Middle Rd.
Dover, N.H.
SMITH, HERBERT CHARLES
Sanborn Rd.
E. Kingston, N.H.
SMITH, KATHRYN LYDIA
17 Lincoln Ave.
Lynnfield, Mass.
SMITH, RAYMOND MAURICE
1174 Hayward St.
Manchester, N.H.
SMITH, RICHARD BENNETT
58 Elm St.
Lancaster, N.H.
SMITH, RUTH A.
Box 411
Wilton, N.H.
SNOW, ELLEN MARY
61 Holly Lane
Portsmouth, N.H.
SNOW, SUSAN MARY
4 Stacy St.
Saco, Me.
SOUCY, NORBERT J.
238 Highland St.
Portsmouth, N.H.
SOUTHWICK, WADE O.
160 Lafayette Rd.
No. Hampton, N.H.
SPAULDING, EDWARD ALBERT
35 Outlook Rd.
Wakefield, Mass.
SPIRO, DIANE
335 Hanover St.
Manchester, N.H.
SPLAINE, JAMES R.
83 Willard Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
SPRAGUE, THOMAS RATHBURN
2 Whitley Rd.
Exeter, N.H.
STAHLMAN, DONN ARTHUR
148 Maclay St.
Milroy, Pa.
STANILONIS, DOROTHY ANN
46 N. Reading St.
Hooksett, N.H.
STANLICK, LILE ELIZABETH
217 Mt. Hope Ave.
Dover, N.H.
STAPLES, JAMES PETER
RFD 1
Tamworth, N.H.
STEARNS, MARGOT
Stevensville, Md.
STEARNS, PATRICIA ANN
111 Delaware Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
STONE, CAROLYN STEINER
30 New York St.
Dover, N.H.
STEPHENSON, JOHN WILLIAM
11 Bixby Ave.
N. Andover, Mass.
STEVENS, LEONARD PAUL
86 Whittier St.
Dover, N.H.
STIMPSON, CYNTHIA ANN
41 Marguerite St.
Manchester, N.H.
STIMSON, PAULINE ANN
Cotton Mtn. Rd. RFD 2
Wolfeboro, N.H.
STOKEMAN, GEORGE BROOKS
323 Silver St.
Bennington, Vt.
STOKES, WILLIAM RUSSELL
10-12 Mill Rd.
Durham, N.H.
STONE, GORDON D.
19 Hough St.
Lebanon, N.H.
STONE, RICHARD CHARLES
60 Highland Ave.
Claremont, N.H.
STORY, JANET ELIZABETH
44 Mt. Vernon St.
Dover, N.H.
STORY, THOMAS GARLAND
96 Lake St.
Salem, N.H.
STREETER, LINDA MARIE
Box 43
Canterbury, N.H.
SULLIVAN, MICHAEL SHAWN
Main St.
Epping, N.H.
SUTHERLAND, KENNETH I. JR.
27 Langdon St.
Plymouth, N.H.
SWAN, JOHN GUILFORD
145 Rockland Ave.
Portland, Me.
SWARTZ, KEITH N.
85 Profile Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
SWEET, CYNTHIA LOUISE
I Reading Ave.
Shillington, Pa.
SWEETSER, WENDELL JR. E.
I I Chestnut St.
Exeter, N.H.
SWIFT, M. ROBINSON
18 Birch Hill Rd.
Hooksett, N.H.
STRIA, JUDITH MARIE
9 South St.
Troy, N.H.
SZOPA, MATTHEW ANDREW JR.
26 Jewett St.
Manchester, N.H.
TAKACS, ANTONY PAUL
P.O. Box 108
Durham, N.H.
TAKU, FUMIO
Huddleston Hall
Durham, N.H.
TALBOT, RICHARD GORDON
RFD 2 Box 51
Laconia, N.H.
TALLMAN, ARTHUR VAUGHN
P.O. Box 364
Rye Beach, N.H.
308
TANCREDE, JOAN SIMONTON
RFD 4
Concord, N.H.
TAYLOR, DOROTHY CAROL
37 Fairmont St.
Lakeport, N.H.
TAYLOR, JOAN ELIZABETH
347 Lenni Rd. Ivystone
Glen Riddle, Pa.
TAYLOR, JOEL NASON
Storrs Hgts. Rd.
Storrs, Conn.
TELLIER, THOMAS DONALD
1 Bonnie Dr.
Exeter, N.H.
TERRY, LOIS MULCAHY
49 Applevale Dr.
Dover, N.H.
TETREALT, DAVID JOHN
20 Faculty Rd.
Durham, N.H.
TETREAULT, PAUL STEPHEN
251 Sagamore St.
Manchester, N.H.
THEROUX, CHARLENE RUTH
18 Williams St.
Nashua, N.H.
THOMPSON, ANN LOUISE
Pawtuckaway Rd.
Raymond, N.H.
THOMPSON, MARGUERITE R.
Northwood Ridge
Northwood, N.H.
THOMPSON, PATRICIA HALL
35 Pilgrim Rd.
Bristol, Conn.
THORNTON, MARLENE ANN
1067 Cilley Rd.
Manchester, N.H.
THURRELL, JUDITH
College Rd.
E. Wolfeboro, N.H.
TIBBETTS, GORDON GEORGE
32 Orange St.
Farmington, N.H.
TILTON, DEBORAH
60 Holman St.
Laconia, N.H.
TISDALE, DONALD J.
151/2 Broadway
Dover, N.H.
TODD, SANDRA
Brick Top
New Boston, N.H.
TORRANCE, JONATHAN STUART
112 Fourth Ave.
Warren, Pa.
TOUSSAINT, GARY RICHARD
4 Tenth St.
Nashua, N.H.
TOWLE, LESLEY ELIZABETH
15 Oriole St.
East Providence, R.l.
TOWLE, THOMAS NATHAN
N. Chichester, N.H.
TRAUM, KENNETH
748 Lancaster Rd.
Ridgefield, N.J.
TRAVIS, DONNA MARIE
Nottingham, N.H.
TREMBLAY, ROCH G.
160 Kimball St.
Manchester, N.H.
TRUBY, MARGUERITE F.
52 Highland St.
Fedding Hill, Mass.
TRUE, CAROL CADIEUX
Box 86
E. Hampstead, N.H.
TRUE, LINDA BECK
90 Woodcrest Dr.
Melrose, Mass.
TUCKER, STEVEN P.
Q2 Forest Park
Durham, N.H.
TURCOTTE, LOUIS C.
79 Portland Ave.
Dover, N.H.
TURNER, ANN H.
65 Profile Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
TUVESON, ARTHUR GOSTA
34 Cabot St.
Portsmouth, N.H.
TWOMBLY, LORRAINE CAROLE
Rte 1
Andover, N.H.
TYLER, MARTHA EUNICE
RFD 1
Keene, N.H.
UGARTE, MICHAEL
2 Dana Rd.
Hanover, N.H.
UNGER, DAVID RAYMOND
59 East Side Dr.
Concord, N.H.
VALLIERE, LENWOOD E.
P.O. Box 123
Candia, N.H.
VALWAY, DONNA THERESE
Hopkinton Rd. Rte 1
Concord, N.H.
VANDERBEKEN, STEPHEN JOHN
185 Cushing Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
VARNEY, THOMAS WILLIS
Rt. 1 Box 119
Rochester, N.H.
VAUGHTER, HELEN S.
36 Pine St.
Exeter, N.H.
VEILLEUX, CAROL ANN
262 Northern Ave.
Augusta, Me.
VINCENT, JAMES PETER
25 Washington St.
Rochester, N.H.
VIOLETTE, SUSAN MARIE
541 Middle Rd.
Portsmouth, N.H.
VOGEL, PETER MICHAEL
Box 224
Hollis, N.H.
WAGNER, JOHN ALFRED
Durham Rd.
Dover, N.H.
WAITE, CHERYL BEHR
RFD 2 Box 137
Dover, N.H.
WAKEFIELD, JOANNA
26 Sunset Dr.
Northboro, Mass.
WAKEFIELD, JOHN ALAN
75 Auburn St.
Concord, N.H.
WAKEFIELD, WENDY
RFD 3 Londonderry
Manchester, N.H.
WALBRIDGE, LOUISE MARION
Williamston, Vt.
WALKER, DIANE KATHLEEN
12 Barry St.
Dover, N.H.
WALKER, PATRICIA ANN
12 Barry St.
Dover, N.H.
WALKER, SALLY A.
62 Winnicut Rd.
N. Hampton, N.H.
WALKER, THOMAS A.
Towle Farm Rd.
Hampton, N.H.
WALL, JANET KELLEY
Box 28
Durham, N.H.
WALLNER, NICHOLAS A.
5 Madbury Rd. Apt. 2
Durham, N.H.
WALLNER, MARY JANE
5 Madbury Rd.
Durham, N.H.
WALSH, FRED CHASE
40 Pleasant View Rd.
Arlington, Mass.
WALSH, LAUREL JANE
Drinkwater Rd.
Exeter, N.H.
WANZER, PAULA
15 Mill Rd.
N. Hampton, N.H.
WAREHAM, GAYLE
4 Rainbow Rd.
Marblehead, Mass.
WARRINGTON, ELLEN MARY
9 Shattuck St.
Nashua, N.H.
WASHBURN, LINDA LEE
31 Bradley Ct.
Jaffrey, N.H.
WATERHOUSE, WILLIAM JOHN
9 Irving St.
Salem, N.H.
WATKINS, ROBERT T.
79 Woodburn
Keene, N.H.
WAYSVILLE, PETER JOSEPH
46 Main St.
N. Walpole, N.H.
WEBER, CLAIRE
138 Silver St.
N. Granby, Conn.
WEBSTER, JOAN SHIRLEY
10 Elm Ct.
Rumford, R.l.
WEIDKNECHT, MARCIA ELAINE
1798 Patricia Ave.
Willow Gr., Pa.
309
WEISSBECKER, S. KURT
16 Woodland Rd.
Weston, Mass.
WENSLEY, NATALIE RICHARD
188 Second St.
Dover, N.H.
WERNER, WALTER R.
Old Coach Rd.
New Boston, N.H.
WESSON, RICHARD KENNETH
44 Amherst St.
Nashua, N.H.
WESTON, ROBERT WILLIAM
22 Waters PI.
Valley Stream, N.Y.
WETHERELL, WILLIAM H.
Forest Pk. N1
Durham, N.H.
WHALEN, SUSAN FRANCES
Forest Park D2
Durham, N.H.
WHALL, DAVID WILLIAM
113 Oakdale Ave.
Manchester, N.H.
WHEELER, WALTER SCOTT
32 New Rochester Rd.
Dover, N.H.
WHEELOCK, WILLIAM W. JR.
5 Silver St.
Rochester, N.H.
WHITCOMB, LINDA ANN
35 Lafayette St.
Quincy, Mass.
WHITCOMB, SUSAN ETTA
RFD 1
Littleton, N.H.
WHITE, CAROLE LYNNE
RFD 1
Pittsfield, N.H.
WHITE, MAUREEN JAYE
28 Fourth St.
Dover, N.H.
WHITE, PAUL H.
35 Salter St.
Portsmouth, N.H.
WHITE, SAMUEL LEWIS
Dutchmans Pond
New London, N.H.
WHITTEN, MARTHA CHASE
35 Josslyn St.
Auburn, Me.
WHOLEY, SHAWN E.
96 Highland St.
Portsmouth, N.H.
WIGGER, THEODORE JOHN
3090 Browns Valley Rd.
Napa, Ca.
WIKELIUS, CYNTHIA STONE
13 Hemlock Dr.
Lunenburg, Mass.
WILBUR, DAVID MERRILL
N. Hampton Tr. Pk.
N. Hampton, N.H.
WILBUR, EDWARD ROY
126 Maple Ave.
Claremont, N.H.
WILBUR, SUZANNE CARR
165 South St.
Claremont, N.H.
WILKINS, ROBERT BRUCE
Grand Hill Rd.
Mt. Vernon, N.H.
WILLCOX, ANNLOUISE
93 Governor Dr.
Scotia, N.Y.
WILLHAUCK, GEORGE ALAN
Box 191
N. Hampton, N.H.
WILLIAMS, DEBORAH EDITH
Wallum Lk. Box 191
Pascoag, R.l.
WILLIAMS, KATHERINE M.
76 Browning Ave.
Nashua, N.H.
WILMOT, MARGARET ANN
20 Bellevue Ave.
Claremont, N.H.
WILSON, DOUGLAS JAMES
1 Laurel Rd.
Lynnfield, Mass.
WINGO, GARY ARTHUR
14 Myrica Ave.
Rye, N.H.
WINOT, ROBERT LEON
10A Hill St.
Dover, N.H.
WINSHIP, SALLY HEALD
Royal Garden Blvd. 7 Apt. 1
Concord, N.H.
WINSLOW, RONALD ARTHUR JR.
44 Oak Ridge Rd.
Reading, Mass.
WINSLOW, RUSSELL EVERETT
RFD 2
Littleton, N.H.
WINTER, PAUL RAYMOND
Spruce St.
Rollinsford, N.H.
WINTERS, SANDRA LOUISE
4461 So. Columbia
Tulsa, Okla.
WOJCIECHOWSKI, FRANK
144 Kings Highway
Hampton Beach, N.H.
WOLFE, GAIL EDITH
Box 82
Raymond, Me.
WOLFE, LAURA EVELYN
Box 167
Durham, N.H.
WOLFF, KATHERINE M.
10 Follen St.
Cambridge, Mass.
WOOD, DOUGLAS SCOTT
Box 131 Grennich Rd.
Hardwick, Mass.
WOOD, KENNETH DAWSON
Stonehenge Rd.
Kingston, R.l.
WOOD, LORETTA ANN
Wash Pond Rd.
Hampstead, N.H.
WOOD, PETER G.
33 Perley Ave.
Lebanon, N.H.
WOODMAN, CYNTHIA ANN
Box 601 Terrace Ave.
Meredith, N.H.
WOODMAN, SCOTT EARL
430 Richards Ave.
Portsmouth, N.H.
WOODS, STEPHEN JOHN
95 Sherwood Lane
Raynham, Mass.
WOODWARD, DOUGLAS GORDON
P.O. Box 144
Durham, N.H.
WOODWARD, JAYNE MARGARET
Old Dover Rd. RFD 3
Rochester, N.H.
WOODWARD, LINDA KAY
Box 194
Dublin, N.H.
310
WOODWARD, MARGARET OLIVE
Concord Rd.
Durham, N.H.
WRIGHT, PETER KIMBALL
Hardy Hill RFD
Lebanon, N.H.
WRIGLEY, DONALD JAMES
Rose Ave.
Westville, N.H.
YETMAN, SUSAN GAIL
27 Newbert Ave.
S. Weymouth, Mass.
YORK, PAUL FRANKLIN
24 College Ave.
Gorham, Me.
YOUNG, JOHN RICHARD
68 Payson Ave.
Rockland, Mass.
YOUNG, WILLIAM STEVEN
46 Hough St.
Dover, N.H.
ZABRISKIE, RALPH A., JR.
260 Ash St.
Manchester, N.H.
ZAHN, LOREY KATHLEEN
Savage Rd.
Milford, N.H.
ZECHEL, WILLIAM DOUGLAS
9 Beverlee Dr.
Nashua, N.H.
ZELONIS, MARK E.
Box 37
Hudson, N.H.
ZMACHINSKY, CHARLOTTE A.
23 Glenwood Rd.
Fanwood, N.J.
ZOLLER, DONNA DEAN
Dame Rd.
Durham, N.H.
ZOLLER, JAMES ALEXANDER
Dame Rd.
Durham, N.H.
311
number one
north of boston
and
still growing
^ m o sk e a g
Savings
Bank
Manchester • Bedford • Goffstown
Member F.D.I.C.
312
IAFOLLA CONSTRUCTION
CO., INC.
Peverly Hill Road
Portsmouth, N.H.
Tel. 436-4432
P R O F E S S IO N A L
IN D U S T R IA L
A U D IO V IS U A L
Hovey’s Camera Shop
•E V E R Y T H I N G P H O T O G R A P H I C ”
AREA COD E 603
436-2336
436-2480
436-5033
8 6 C O N G R E S S S TR E ET
P O R T S M O U T H , N . H. 0 3 8 0 1
Compliments of
NEW HAMPSHIRE
WELDING SUPPLY
CO., INC.
Distributors for
Airco — Ohio — Pureco
Industrial Gases and Liquids
Flow Control and Cryogenic Equipment
921 South Willow St.
Manchester, N.H.
Tel. 625-9757
D. D. B E A N & SONS CO.
JAFFREY, N. H„ WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
ST. CESAIRE, QUE., JAM AICA, W. I.
313
THE SUNCOOK BANK
SUNCOOK, NEW HAMPSHIRE
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
W hatever you want most is worth saving for.
CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES
FROM
NASHUA’S COMMERCIAL BANKS
$
BANK OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, N.A.
NASHUA TRUST COMPANY
COLONIAL TRUST
Members Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
314
Congratulations Class of ’71
CAMP DRESSER & McKEE
faiTTliS
HORN
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
One Center Plaza
Boston, Mass. 02108
COM
Tel. 617 742-5151
RESTAURANT
Q
PROCTOR ACADEMY
Andover, N. H. 03216
flavor-fresh
A College Preparatory School
for Boys
FLAVOR FRESH OF NEW HAMPSHIRE, Inc.
Mr. David Fowler, Headmaster
ROSS FURNITURE CO.
38 3rd Street
U T IL IT Y A N D
GENERAL CO NTRACTORS
Dover, New Hampshire
R O U TE 2 3 6 . K IT T E R Y . M A IN E
M A IL : P. O . BO X lO II
P O R T S M O U T H . N EW H A M P S H IR E
03802
T E L E P H O N E 2 0 7 - 4 3 9 -9 2 1 0
Open Every Nite Til 9:00
WEEKS-CONCORD
WEEKS
CONCORD
INC.
Compliments of
“The Dairy People”
HENDRIX WIRE & CABLE CORP.
Serving central
New Hampshire
Milford, N.H.
328 No. State Street
Concord, N. H.
315
THE UNH BOOKSTORE
On Campus - at Hewitt Hall
All textbooks • paperbacks • fiction-nonfiction
Supplies - for classroom • drafting • art
Compliments of
RAY F. MacDONALD AGENCY
DURHAM TRUST COMPANY
Insurance - Real Estate
3 MADBURY ROAD
DURHAM, N. H. 03824
1 Madbury Road
Durham, N. H.
Member FDIC
H. R. HAINES CO., INC.
PIC ’N PAY SUPER MARKET
MOBIL PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR
Better Quality - Greater Variety
Friendly Service
NEWMARKET & DURHAM
800 Islington Street
Portsmouth, New Hampshire
(Next to N. H. State Liquor Store)
659-3781
868-5536
316
ASSOCIATION OF GENERAL
CONTRACTORS OF AMERICA
WITH HEARTFELT PRIDE - WE SALUTE YOU ON
A MOST SPECIAL OCCASION
INTEGRITY*
NEW HAMPSHIRE CHAPTER
ASSOCIATED GENERAL CONTRACTORS OF AMERICA
317
MADE
Compliments of
IN KEENE
THE EXETER BANKING CO.
THE EXETER COOPERATIVE
BANK
ROCKINGHAM
NATIONAL BANK
USED THROUGHOUT
THE WORLD
To
identify
and
their
packages
products
completely
and at low cost,
Members FDIC
manufac­
turers throughout the world
MAR machines, type
use
and ink.
...
BEST WISHES
TO THE CLASS OF 1971
Everything industry needs
for profitable marking
since 1911
...
NORTHEAST ELECTRONICS
CORPORATION
MARKEM
MARKEM
Concord, New Hampshire
CORPORATION
KEENE. NEW HAMPSHIRE, U.S.A.
TAFT BUSINESS MACHINES INC.
Winthrop H. Taft
342 Lincoln St.
Manchester, N.H. 03103
Tel. 624-4031
PIZZA
DEN
•
THE
Best Wishes from
Keg
Room
"T ta d u ia
Federal Savinqs
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION I
Main Street
DURHAM, N.H.
157 Main St., Nashua, N. H.
868-2485
318
Yankee ingenuity and modern Engineering
Techniques. . . blended to provide "New Horizons"
for tomorrow's engineer, chemist and technician
at
DAVIDSON
RUBBER COMPANY
'New Products and New Processes"
our theme for the 70's.
The Davidson Microcellular GTO Bumper,
an automotive product of the 1970s.
DAVIDSON RUBBER COMPANY INCORPORATED
FARM IN GTO N AN D D O V ER NEW HAM PSHIRE
A Division of
m Wnukamaj
C O R P O R A T IO N • D E T R O IT , M IC H IG A N
ESTABLISHED 1Q57 • MANUFACTURERS OF POLYURETHANE PRODUCTS
ji>ports aith
- #
=
Apparel
for
— --------
Rabies Sc (fmtlmcu
EDWARD H. QUIMBY CO., Inc.
(Hoilege jS’ijcp
362 CENTRAL AVENUE
DOVER, N. H. 03820
^ rair (JHc<3Initre
This Is Our 60th Year
ADDING M ACHINES
TYPEW RITERS
CASH REGISTERS
DESKS. CHAIRS. ETC .
D ICTATIN G MACHINES
imrljam
EVERYTHING
FOR T H E
U P-TO-D ATE OFFICE
PH O N E 742-3515
OR
742-335 1
319
F ID E L IT Y UNION LIFE
9 n iM A c m c e
G w u u m
u ___________
Home Office— Dallas, Texas
in New Hampshire, Durham, Keene, Manchester, and Hanover
REALTORS— BUILDERS
PARK COURT - DURHAM, N . H . 03824
TELEPHONE (603) 868-2351
m
WEEKS
ICE CREAM SHOP
BEST WISHES AND THANKS
TO THE CLASS OF ’71
Fine Food — Ice Cream Specialties
FRANKLIN THEATRE
Dover — Somersworth
Traffic Circle
320
Compliments of
A
CERTW E0
^
YO U N G ’S DONUT AND
COFFEE SHOP
GEM010GTST
The Pleasant Place
to Dine
Anytime
Registered Jew elers A m erican Gem S ociety
460 CENTRAL AVENUE — PHONE 742-1749
DOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE
SINCE 1914
48 Main Street
Durham
CENTRAL PAPER
PRODUCTS CO., INC.
Compliments of
Brown Ave. Industrial Park— 350 Gay Street
Manchester, N.H. 03103
Tel: 624-4064
COMPLETE PAPER, PLASTIC AND
JANITORIAL SUPPLIES
for the
INDUSTRIAL, INSTITUTIONAL AND
RETAIL TRADE
Fred B. Kfoury, Jr.— Class 1964
Richard J. Kfoury— Class 1968
HARMO KENNELS
CHEZ POOCH
Anna H. Mosher
Rte. 101-A Amherst, N.H. 03031
AN INVITATION TO THE GRADUATES
In this age of rapid change and complex challenge, one of New Hamp­
shire’s greatest resources is its well-educated young people. Public Serv­
ice Company of New Hampshire, and other industries in the Granite
State, provide diverse employment opportunities and invite you to join
with us as we work to maintain and strengthen New Hampshire as a
fine place in which to live, work and play.
PUBLIC SERVICE
Com pany/t)f New Hampshire
321
A bank tends to measure its assets in
numbers of dollars. But that is a mere
bookkeeping convenience.
£oct|ft
You are our most important asset.
CENTRAL AVENUE AT FIRST STREET - DOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE 03820
Q
friuttut? need*
ok t6e
..
f >
BANK OF
NEW HAMPSHIRE
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
it’s the nearest to you
and, best to SERVE you
only 4 miles aw ay
...
» ENVELOPES
» INVITATIONS
' STATEMENTS
• LETTERHEADS
• OFFICE FORMS
• RUSH BROCHURES
• ADMISSION TICKETS
• NUMBERED COUPONS
• WEDDING INVITATIONS
• Or whatever your printing needs
NEWMARKET PRESS INC.
MANCHESTER • CONCORD • NASHUA • CONTOOCOOK • HILLSBORO • HUDSON • MERRIMACK
Across Rexall Drug
Newmarket, N. H.
Let you be warned .
..
Telephone 659-3722
once tried, then always
Congratulation*
Wholesale Distributors
• Air Conditioning — Refrigeration parts & supplies
• Water Coolers
• Tubing, copper & brass fittings
60 Beech St.
D IA M O N D
N A T IO N A L
Manchester, N.H.
CORPORATION
LUMBER & BUILDING MATERIALS
“ THERE’S A FUTURE FOR YOU AT DIAMOND.”
Dover Retail Location— 225 Locust St.
Rock St., Portsmouth
355 Court St., Laconia
Main Street, No. Conway
Center Street, Wolfeboro
322
Keene, New Hampshire
7 he Friendly Bank at
the Head of the Square
MEMBER F E D E R A L D E P O S I T
INSURANCE CO R PO R A TIO N
MEMBER FEDERAL
RESERVE SYSTEM
INTERSTATE RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT
CORPORATION
Food Service Equipment — Janitors’ Supplies
37 Amoskeag Street
Manchester, New Hampshire
IDEAL FOOD STORE, INC.
THE STRAFFORD BANKS
Highest Quality Groceries, Meats and Produce
“Your Opportunity Banks”
7 Madbury Road, Durham, N.H.
Dover, N. H.
Telephone (603) 868-2121
Members FDIC
BEER
TONY’S BICYCLE SHOP
a n d G a n v p u i,
64 Main Street
Durham, N. H. 03824
Schwinn
Sales and Service
10 Fourth St.
Dover, N. H.
OFFICIAL DISTRIBUTORS
UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Call Dover 742-0494
CLASS RINGS
323
Helping people
communicate
is our business...
we’re PAPER PEOPLE
A multi-faceted company manufacturing
Dello Printing Papers — Triad Office Papers — Vanity Fair Household Paper Products
Campbell Envelopes and Stationery — Corrugating Medium — School Supply Products
f lU K IM W B B M .
A SUBSIDIARY OF
DIAMOND INT. CORP.
Groveton, New Hampshire 03582
We'd be the first
to admit that
there's no more
important building
in America
than the building
of character
in our youth.
Latest U.N.H. showcase, by Davison,
reflecting an association with the
university that began over forty
years ago.
Stoke H all
Gibbs H all
Babcock H a ll
•
•
•
Stillings H all
•
Engelhardt H all
Library Addition
•
Devine H all
•
•
H unter H all
Sawyer H all
•
Scott H all
N . E . Regional Center For Continuing Education
DAVISON
CONSTRUCTION CO ., IN C.
G EN ER A L C O N T R A C T O R S • M A N CH ESTER , NEW HAM PSH IRE
325
things g o
better,!
^ w it h
Coke
SAVE •SAVE •SAVE
Yam
Si Fab ric Dept.
4 oz. skein
hand knitregularly
ting yarn
to $1.19
Choose from wools, orlon, wintuk
and other fibres; myriad of colors
— after Coke, after Coke.
After all, Coke has the taste you never get tired of.
COKE
TAB
FRESCA
Fabric remnants valued to
$5.00 per yard. <
As low as <
Great variety of woven wools,
double knits, cottons.
Choose from plaids, solids,
stripes, jacquards
*ia
THE COCA-COLA BOTTLING
PLANTS, INC.
PANDO RA FACTORY STORE
Canal & D o w Sts. Manchester
Plenty of Free Parking
Vis
Sanford, Maine
Compliments of
Massachusetts G as &
Electric Light Supply Corp.
933 Islington Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
Tel. 436-6920
F. L. MALONE, INC.
321 Dover Point Road
Dover, N.H.
New H a m p s h ir e
HIGHWAY HOTEL
at the
Crossroads of New Hampshire
134 Motel Rooms
Coffee Shop
Lounge
Heated Pool
T.V ., Phones
Jets. Rtes. 3-4-9-202
Where there’s more to see— more to do— and more to
326
enjoy.
SENIOR PICTURES
by
Mr. Norman Benrimo
of
WARREN KAY
VANTINE STUDIO
Boston, Massachusetts
327
New H a m p s h ir e
HIGHWAY HOTEL
C
o
9
at the
Crossroads of New Hampshire
134 Motel Rooms
Coffee Shop
— after Coke, after Coke.
Lounge
Heated Pool
T.V., Phones
Concord, N.H.
603-225-6687
After all, Coke has the taste you never get tired of.
Where there’s more to see— more to do— and more to enjoy.
COKE
TAB
FRESCA
Compliments of
Massachusetts G as &
Electric Light Supply Corp.
THE COCA-COLA BOTTLING
PLANTS, INC.
933 Islington Street
Portsmouth, N.H.
Tel. 436-6920
Sanford, Maine
Tired of the same old skinny sandwiches?
Try a Stud, or a Pinto, or a Mustang at
A. H. RICE
THE STABLE
3 Chestnut Drive
Bedford Business Park
Bedford, New Hampshire 03102
“Home of the Fat Ones”
draft beer and hearty sandwiches
603-472-3512
4 CANAL STREET
NASHUA, N. H.
AUDIO VISUAL TOOLS OF LEARNING
Tom Pappademas, prop.
328
ROBERT B. HARRISON
J . P. G R IF F IN , IN C .
AGENCY
INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS
Res. Sterling Melendy Lebanon, N.H. 448-2773
General Contractors
INTERSTATE HIGHWAY
Serving the Connecticut River
Valley over 40 years
PORTSMOUTH, NEW HAMPSHIRE
D IA L 4 4 8 -3 2 1 1
TELEPHONE 436-3020
( u ld m io m )
V m h ?«v
An Equal Opportunity Employer
H
COMPLIMENTS OF
PRIOR INC OF
NEW ENGLAND
□
Buy Where You Get
Specialized Truck Service
I NTERNATIONAL
HARVESTER
21 STILLINGS STREET
BOSTON, MASS.
»«« /n«w*
24 HANOVER ST.
LEBANON, N.H.
Upstairs in New Commerce Bldg.
INTE RNATIONAL TRUCKS
435 ELM STRE:ET
02210
Telephone 623- 8873
MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE
John W. Merrill “ 48” Manager
GET YOUR ASS IN BARRINGTON!
at
WHITTEMORE'S BURRO RANCH
Canaan Road
Barrington, New Hampshire
BEST ASS IN TOWN
329
330
IT’S TOO BAD I WRITE AND WASTE
A THIN SLICE OF SOME TREE’S GRACE.
I know that I shall never see
A billboard lovelier than a tree,
Except of course when it is so
The mighty billboard lies flat and low.
Upon the ground in majesty
Due to expert carpentry,
I see the poles all cut in half
And feel my gut about to laugh.
With courage, bravery and keen insight
Midnight warriors wage the fight
With axes, saws, and pounding hearts
Attack the poles, grunt and fart.
They climb in cars almost dead
Then a beer and off to bed,
Till another night’s foamy drunk
Suggests a billboard must be sunk.
And so the axe across this land
Is being passed from hand to hand,
The call is heard, the deed is done
No one sleeps till the battle’s won.
331
332
333
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Carolyn Anderson—Pages 1, 236
Linda Behringer-11, 12, 14, 15, 32, 33, 36, 40, 44, 46, 50, 60, 70, 74, 78, 80, 87, 88, 107,
137, 146, 165, 170, 183, 184, 186, 207, 214, 229, 246
Lisa Buss—252
Robert Butcher-4, 45, 75, 105, 136, 168, 172, 173, 193, 211, 258, 332
Bruce Cadarette—264
Norman Desfosses-5, 6, 18, 20, 22, 24, 25, 26, 35, 41, 69, 76, 77, 79, 89, 93, 104, 108, 110,
111,132, 147, 155,157,166, 167,169, 171,174, 189,194, 195, 215, 216, 217, 230, 253, 255
Marios Evriviades—10, 13, 59, 72, 81, 83, 86, 96, 97, 109, 133, 134, 144, 158, 161, 164,
166, 181, 200, 206, 209, 231, 294
Thomas Gage—28, 62, 188, 198
Alison Greene—43, 200, 201
Peter Hendrick—66
Johnathan Hyde—112, 185
Jay Jeffery—202
Dieter Ludwig—2, 120
Mike Mistretta—8, 9, 243, 249, 250, 265
Ken Oras-30, 31, 38, 39, 42, 56, 57, 58, 64, 65, 71,91, 98, 99,102, 114,116, 117,130, 152
160, 162, 163, 177, 178, 179, 190, 191, 199, 210, 232, 233, 234, 235, 237, 238,
239, 240, 241
David Parker—127
William S chultz-17, 19, 21, 23, 84, 156,192, 196,197, 219, 220, 221, 222, 224, 225, 226, 227
Gerry Smith—126, 135
Nick Wallner—51, 52, 53, 82, 90, 94, 115, 124, 125, 131, 139, 148, 149, 150, 151, 180,
193, 201, 205, 212
Beth Warnock—34, 113, 128, 204
Ric Wesson—330
Eric W hite-73, 213
334
1971 GRANITE Staff
Editor-in-Chief
Photography Editor
Associate Editor
Associate Editor
Business Manager
Senior Editor
Literary Editor
Secretary
Art Editor
Advertising Manager
Spiritual Advisor
Robert Butcher
Norman Desfosses
Norman Desfosses
Lisa Buss
Ed “ Duke” Kline
Pat Hannigan
Uncle John and Paul Daniels
Alice MacKinnon
Mike Mistretta
Ric Wesson and Deborah Brauer
Morris
Staff Photographers
Marios Evriviades
Bill Schultz
Ken Oras
Linda Behringer
Special Thanks to:
—Nick Von Hoffman for permission to reprint his
May Day Commentary from the Washington Post
—Penny Van Duym, Hidde Van Duym, Richard Ingersoll,
and Peter Savage for their interviews, time, and trust.
—Dieter Ludwig and Dispatch News Service International
for permission to reprint his photos taken in Viet Nam.
—Citylights Books for reprint of Yevgeny Yevtushenko’s
poem, “ Flowers and Bullets” .
—Joe Donovan, close friend and Wm J. Keller Inc. sales representative
—Norm Benrimo, close friend and Senior Portrait Photographer
—Fred Rothe, close friend.
—Johnathan Kozol, for his time and all we learned from him.
—George Teehan and Ray Greene for a little sanity
— Leo Lessard for cleaning it all up, and bringing us all
back home.
335
The 1971 GRANITE was produced in an edition of 5,000 copies
in Velvatone Lithography by Wm J Keller Inc of Buffalo, New
York. Text type is in 8 pt. and 10 pt. Helvetica. Headings are in
Helvetica. Senior biographies are set in 8 pt. Helvetica. Senior
portraits by Norman Benrimo. Reproduction is in Velvatone
Black Ink on 80# Regular Finish Blue White Navajo Opaque
Text manufactured by Mohawk Paper Mills, Inc. of Cohoes, New
York. Cover, manufactured by Shelby-Craftco, Joliet, Illinois, is
silk screened in white on Bradford Linen.