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In another moment Alice was
through the glass, and had jumped
lightly down into the Looking-glass
room. The very first thing she did
was to look whether there was a fire
in the fireplace, and she was quite
pleased to find that there was a real
one, and blazing away as brightly as
the one she had left behind. "So I
shall be as warm here as I was in the
old room," thought Alice: "warmer,
in fact, because there'll be no one
here to scold me away from the fire.
Oh, what fun it'll be, when they see
me through the glass in here, and
can't get at me!"
Lewis Carroll
drawings on inside covers by Ralph Steadman
UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT
ELLEN ADELSON
Editor-in-Chief
SAL LOMBARD!
DAVID FEINMAN
Associate Editors
STEVEN DAREN
Sports Editor
JACK LEVINE
Business Manager
ANNE MCALOON
MARY DEBORAH MACLEESE
Copy
DAVID FEINMAN
RANDY PHILIPPI
PHOTOPOOL
Photographers
LAURA MORAN
Executive Secretary
DAVID RUBELMANN
Cover Design
SPECIAL THANKS: Sol Wolman and Photolab,
Advisor Don Friedman, Delma Studios, Hank
Hansis, Charles Fishell and Central Mailing,
the lovely ladies at the Control Desk, Charles
Kaufman, Debbie MacLeese, David Feinman,
and Jim Strong for tolerance.
"But 1 don't want to go among mad people," Alice remarked. "Oh, you can't help that," said the Cat: "we're all mad
here. I'm mad. You're mad." "How do you know I'm mad?" said Alice. "You must be," said the Cat, "or you wouldn't
have come here."
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A University can be no more and
no less than what an individual
chooses it to be.
"I wish I could manage to be glad!," the Queen said. "Only I can never remennber the rule. You must be very happy,
living in this wood, and being glad whenever you like!" Lewis Carroll
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photographs by David Feinman
/An issue is never black and white but. . .
shades of gray
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THE F.S.S.O. A PLAY IN THREE ACTS
THE SETTING:
Chosen by the student body in a referendum last
spring to replace the Associated Student Govern-
ment (ASG), the Federation will be the "principal
and officially recognized instrument of student gov-
ernance" for the undergraduates at the University,
according to its constitution.
The Federation represents the student body
through three major divisions: the Student Activities
Union (formerly the Student Union Board of Gover-
nors), the Commuters' Union, and the Resident Stu-
dents' Union (formerly, the Inter-Area Residents'
Council). The chief executive officer of each Union
will automatically sit on the Central Committee,
while the chairman and five members are elected at
large fromtheundergraduate community.
The old New England custom of open town meet-
ings will be a vital part of the new system of repre-
sentation. Besides working through the unions
which represent particular student interests, stu-
dents may also appear before the Central Commit-
tee in a monthly town meeting "to address the
committee on any topic," according to the
constitution.
THE HISTORY:
Before or during the three main acts, the FSSO accomplished
some lesser-known but nonetheless eye-opening acts Stu-
dent Union Rooms were opened, Phone lines were opened,
All night library study was opened, files were opened, and the
Comm'uters Union was opened.
THE CAST:
Bart Russell First chairperson of the FSSO
who retired mid-year after a vigorous but
exhausting career.
Larry Lopez (and friend) Second chairperson
whose qualities of leadership put the FSSO in the
headlines and made sure it was kept there.
THE PLAY:
ACT I
ACT II
ACT III
Women And Their Rights
Bookstore vs. Book Exchange
Anthropology: Racist?
WOMEN: SHOUTING FOR A GREATER VOICE
Women's Demands
1 . Acknowledge the Greater Women's Council as representative of
women on campus.
2. Create positions of Equal Employment Opportunity officer and
director of Women's Studies Program.
3. Create Women's Studies Program.
University President Cienn W. Ferguson met for two hours with a del-
egation from the Women's Center Thursday afternoon to discuss pro-
posals for a day care center, women's studies program, and future plans
for the Women's Center.
He said he is currently meeting with groups and administrators on the
women's situation, "so I can understand the nature of the issues. "As far
as specific actions it will take me time because of a problem with re-
sources, especially money and job vacancies," Ferguson said.
Specific goals have been set for UConn's Affirmative Action Plan for
the elimination of bias in hiring practices, according to Ferguson.
"I have to take each issue and move on it," the president said. "I have
to get us from point 'A'to point 'B'."
Cathy Belanger, member of the Women's Center delegation, said
Ferguson was "open to ideas and wants to help." She described the
president as "willing to understand us and work with us."
Conn. Daily Campus
President Ferguson's refusal to acknowledge the Greater Women's
Council is one more example of an unwillingness on the part of the
administration to deal with a democratic representative organization.
Since its inception in Sept. 1 973 the underlying philosophy of the Great-
er Women's Council has been and continues to be one which affords all
women on campus equal opportunity to voice their opinions on perti-
nent issues. Through the Women's Studies Collective, Political collec-
tive, Feminist Health Collective, Advisory Collective (which are compo-
nents of the Greater Women's Council) and the Women's Center,
feminists are actively engaged in improving the status of women in the
university community. Why does President Ferguson continue tonegate
the importance of this group when it truly represents the majority of
women active in securing their lawful rights? Why does he instead
choose to deal with the "lesser" Women's Council a small selective
group of women?
Coalition
THE BOOKSTORE: ACTION FROM GRIEVANCE
STORRS One of the hottest selling items at the Follet book-
store on the University of Connecticut campus is posterboard for
making picket signs.
And ironically, one of the picketers' chief targets is the
bookstore.
The outlet here is the largest of Follett's seven college book-
stores on the eastern seaboard. It is also the most criticized and
maligned.
Manager Cliff Ewert, who readily admits the store makes mis-
takes, says Follett has always been a target of student anger and is
a favorite whipping boy of the student newspaper. But the book-
store, hesaid, is not the giant "ripoff" detractors claim.
Campus-wide complaints at a peak this year have prompt-
ed an intensive UConn review of the bookstore's operations.
Ewert says he spends a lot of his time reading official studies on
the bookstore and tracking down what he calls "unfounded"
complaints leveled at Follett in those reports and through the
student newspaper.
Public hearings on the bookstore begin Wednesday, and
UConn President Glenn W. Ferguson promises to have a recom-
mendation for the board of trustees by the end of this semester.
But according to Ewert, as long as Follett is on the UConn cam-
pus, there will probably be the cloud of controversy. The issue is
philosophical, he says, and will not likely be resolved.
The privately run bookstore has been locked into that political-
philosophical struggle ever since it replaced a faltering school-
run store 1 1 /2 years ago.
"The students just don't want a private bookstore or any
other privately run service (including the cafeteria) on cam-
pus," Ewert says.
A coalition of student groups is demanding that Follett be
kicked off campus and that UConn either bring back a school-run
operation or set up a cooperative.
Follett's zone manager John Balagna says the UConn outlet is
by far the most criticized of his seven campus stores. He said if the
trustees themselves had initiated the idea rather than the Ether-
ington Commission, the issue may not have burned for so long.
Balagna and Ewert insist that Follett has no more problems than
would any type of bookstore. They say their book prices are com-
petitive and their deliveries are dependent upon uncontrollable
factors such as tardy faculty orders and publishing house red
tape.
Balagna also denies the bookstore is out to exploit students on
so-called "garbage" items such as mugs, tee-shirts and teddy
bears. "We only sell what the students want. In fact, we even get
criticism from alumni that we don't stock enough of the gift items
(sweat shirts, mugs, etc. with the UConn seal)," he says.
Ewert says Follett's admits mistakes and that he moves to cor-
rect problems as soon as they are proven legitimate. "But we're
taking a black eye from erroneous complaints even when we're
right," he adds.
He said he doubts if the apparent campus-wide discontent will
ever swing over to Follett's favor but that an "accurate" review
will show the bookstore is the best alternative at the lowest cost to
the student.
"A review of the bookstore is good," he added. "I've never
been against that because it can help us be a better service."
He said book prices are the same everywhere and that the pro-
fessors and not Follett's are to blame if a student has a $1 00 or
more book bill.
Other variables, hesaid, are:
Seventy per cent of the faculty turned in book orders for this
semester late. That causes delays.
Follett's has increased textbook space by 786 square feet, trade
books by 1 0 square feet and supplies by only 46 square feet.
Fluctuating enrollment may leave the bookstore with fewer
books than are needed for some courses, but it also works the
other way. Follett's gets stuck with ordered books which are nev-
er bought.
"So, we're the villains," Ewert said. "And we can't react be-
cause we're a guest of the University. We didn't ask to come here,
we were invited. The students can't fight the trustees or the gov-
ernor, so they fight the bookstore. I guess they always will."
reprinted from Hartford Times
Follette's Folly
We strolled through the campus bookstore Monday and found a well-
stocked facility ready to serve almost any student need.
A student can start his day with the toiletries available at the drug
counter, and then dress in new blue corduroys with matching polo shirt.
The pants are available in the new, boutique-like gift shop. Lettering for
the poloshirt can be had for a mere 1 0 cents a letter.
A woman student can adorn herself from a wide selection of earrings
on salefor $2 or $3, depending on her tasteor budget.
Keeping well-supplied with snacks is no longer a problem. The book-
store will rent you a refrigerator. Although the bookstore is not yet sell-
ing salami to stock it, you can pick up some tasty white chocolate for
study-time munchies. The red licoricesupply is running low, however.
Oriental tea sets for evening relaxation are going at bargain rates, also
in the gift shop area. For added atmosphere, you can sip your tea by the
light of a variety of scented candles.
After your tea you can roll whatever you want in one of the three
brands of cigarette papers displyaed at thetobacco counter.
We found the bookstore geared to supply every student's leisure-time
wants. Students in Mathematics 1 04, Psychology 1 32 or almost any num-
ber of English and anthropology courses should have plenty of leisure
time too. About the only thing the bookstore doesn't have in adequate
supply is books.
But if you can't find your math book or some literary classic you've
always wanted to read, don't worry. You can always drown your troubles
in some freshly poured tea. That's at Follette's Folly, in the gift shop
turn left at the polo shirts.
Conn Daily Campus
Students lack textbooks during
bookstore rush
Students, faculty assail
bookstore for poor service
Demonstrators picket bookstore
Co-op bookstore FSSO goal
Federation book exchange
attracts heavy support
ANTHROPOLOGY: DEMONSTRATIONS AND ARRESTS
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Anthropology Demands
1 . We demand that there be one Anthropology Dept. and that means no
Biocultural Studies Dept.
2. We demand that the Administration accept Jean Aigner's resignation,
and that Dennison Nash be instated as acting head of the Anthropology
Dept.
3. We demand no cutbacks.
4. We demand that the administration reappoint Tony Kroch.
5. We demand that the administration reappoint Cair Tourtellot.
6. We demand that President Ferguson go on record in favor of support-
ing new positions for Minority Studies and Women Studies in the
department.
7. We demand that the democratic structure of the department be rein-
stated immediately.
if
photographs by
Randy Philippi
David Feinman
ANTHROPOLOGY SPLIT YIELDS
TWO DEPARTMENTS.
After meeting this week with two groups of faculty members from the
Department of Anthropology, Robert W. Lougee, dean of the College
of Liberal Arts and Sciences and Kenneth G. Wilson, vice-president for
academic programs, announced Tuesday that effective immediately the
department will be divided into two new departments for an experi-
mental period of two years. The new departments will be known as so-
cial anthropology and biocultural anthropology.
The experiment will provide a two-year moratorium on internal disa-
greements within the anthropology department, Wilson and Lougee
said. The two new departments will be reviewed in 1 975-76 and, unless
further action is taken then, they will be recombined in 1 976-77.
Two main reasons were given by Lougee and Wilson for the action:
Interviews and correspondence with most of the department's
graduate students and a number of undergraduates convinced the ad-
ministration that the work of many students was being interfered with
by disagreement within the department over organization, administra-
tion, personnel, and a number of other issues.
Fundamental disagreements over curriculum and the relative
roles of various subdisciplines within the department made it impossi-
ble, in the view of some faculty members, for parts of research and grad-
uate training programs to prosper in the present setting.
WHAT IS A BIOCULTURAL DEPT. AND
WHY WE ARE OPPOSED TO IT?
Biobehavioralism explains all behavior in terms of it's supposed ge-
netic base and has several dangerous social implications. Its reasoning
leads to the conclusion that people who are workers are genetically suit-
ed to be workers and that people who govern are genetically suited to
govern. In a society which promotes racial and sexual inequality, biobe-
havioral research provides "scientific" justification for perpetuating
oppression, lobotomies, and even genocide, based on peoples sup-
posed innate abilities. Furthermore, any action taken through social ac-
tion is portrayed as sheer folly and doomed to failure from the outset. In
the words of a resolution passed by the American Anthropological Asso-
ciation, "we strongly condemn the attempt to present virulent racism
under the guise of scholarly 'scientific' research."
The Coalition
- Conn. Daily Campus
First Meskill ..
After presenting a thoughtful lecture on governmental functions here
Thursday, Gov, Meskill turned around and patronized his audience with
outrageous statements on higher education in Connecticut.
According to the governor, he saved the state's higher education by
initiating a tuition tax on students attending the state colleges and Uni-
versity. He said there is no way to justify a tuition-free education, and
that if he did not institute a tuition, higher education would have been
subjected to the wrath of the state's citizens.
Before the governor leaves office, we should all thank him for saving
us fromthe rioting masses.
As if his tuition statements weren't enough, MMeskill rationalized
cutting the University's budget requests by saying, "I don't see any obli-
gation to set the pace for higher education in the nation." The governor
needn't worry about setting the pace. Connecticut is 49th out of 50
states in percentage increases for higher education over the past two
years.
It was appropriate for the governor Thursday afternoon to quote Lyn-
don B. Johnson, who said, "Politics is the art of the possible." Meskill's
announcement earlier this week that he will not seek re-election con-
firms that in politics, even miracles are possible.
then Babbidge
And then came Homer Babbidge. At the invitation of the Board of
Governors, the former University president, made his return here
Thursday night with great enthusiasm.
In his campaign speech in the Student Union Ballroom, the candidate
for the Democratic nomination for governor, spoke on the subject he
knows and loves best, higher education. He said there is nothing he
would rather dr as governor than eliminate the tuition tax. But he
knows the legislature won't repeal it, and is proposing a tuition waiver
for freshmen and sophomores, instead. We can only hope he makes it to
the governor's mansion to implement his proposal.
Meantime, however. Dr. Babbidge must worry about finding at least
20 per cent of the Democratic convention delegates to win a primary
fight for the nomination. It is unfortunate the enthusiastic support from
college students does not usually make great impressions upon old-line
politicians.
courtesy of Conn. Daily Campus
THE PRESIDENCY
On May 1 , 1 973, the University of
Connecticut Board of Trustees an-
nounced the appointment of Glenn W.
Ferguson as the ninth President of the
University. By the time the class of 1 974
returned to campus for their senior year,
Ferguson had assumed his duties, taking
over from Edward V. Gant, Acting Presi-
dent for thirteen months after the resig-
nation of Homer D. Babbidge.
Ferguson, U.S. Ambassador to Kenya
from 1 966-69, moved from the jungles of
Africa to the Jungle of Storrs following
detours to New York and Massachusetts.
He served as Chancellor at Long Island
University for one year and he was Presi-
dent of Clark University from 1 970-73.
Ferguson is also a former Director of
VISTA (Volunteers in Service in America)
and he helped set up the Peace Corps in
Thailand.
On September 1 1 , 1 973, Ferguson
presided over his first official meeting as
UConn President when he assumed the
Chairmanship of the University Senate.
Two weeks later, he addressed the uni-
versity community in his Fall Convoca-
tion and asked for help in evaluating re-
alistic and relevant goals for UConn. He
said, "May I suggest that we ignore our
minor differences, create a spirit of uni-
ty, and devote our attention to the tasks
at hand."
Breaking with the tradition of an elab-
orate inauguration for a new President,
Ferguson requested a ceremony recog-
nizing the strengths of the university
rather than one individual. Installation
was, therefore, at the Undergraduate
Commencement Ceremonies on May
1 2,1 974.
This year of change also included the
release of funds for the new library, in-
stitution of experimental dormitories,
preliminary action to remove the Follett
Bookstore from campus, efforts to pro-
duce an acceptable Affirmative Action
Plan (AAP) and responses to non-violent
demonstrators at Gulley Hall.
The same academic year that marked
the end of formal association with
UConn for many in the Class of 1 974 also
provided the university with a new head
a man to guide the college environ-
ment of future classes.
photographers
Randy Philippi
David Feinman
METANOIA DAY
The first East Coast rally to be staged on
a University campus calling for the im-
peachment of President Nixon was held
on the Student Union mall.
About 750 persons listened to student
speakers air their views on the Nixon ad-
ministration and Watergate for an hour
and a half. Pantomimes depicting the
Watergate break-in, the Watergate cover-
up and the removal of Nixon aides from
the White House staff were acted out.
One pantomime drew a parallel be-
tween the statement "I will not resign,"
made by John W. Dean III, former White
House Council; John D. Ehrlichman, for-
mer Nixon aide; John N. Mitchell, former
Attorney General; Harry R. Haldeman,
former Nixon aide; and Spiro T. Agnew,
former Vice President; before their resig-
nations from the Nixon administration and
Nixon's present position that he does not
intend to resign.
The forum, after the scheduled speech-
es were completed, was opened to infor-
mal speeches from rallying students.
ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION
THE INNER COLLEGE
The Inner College has existed for five years
as an on-going experiment in alternative edu-
cation at UConn. This experiment is a result of
the philosophy that students know/what their
own educational needs are. The purpose of
this program is to provide students with an
educational environment which is responsive
to their learning needs. This responsiveness is
insured because students design the environ-
ment, which includes both administrative and
academicstructures, themselves.
This year students elected to orient their
learning around group, or collective, learn-
ing. The idea here is that some students learn
more in a cooperative rather than a compet-
itive setting. This group learning centered
around the Interest Collectives which were
for students who were studying different
areas of the same general field. The collec-
tives were thee: Artists' Collective, Alterna-
tive Education Collective, and Social and Po-
litical Awareness Collective. Several projects
grew out of these collectives. The Artists'
Collective taught crafts at the Sunday Work-
shops; the Alternative Education Collective
tutored in Willimantic. There were many
more projects.
Involved students and faculty have ex-
pressed the belief that the Inner College pro-
vided UConn with a much needed alterna-
tive. UConn has seen new ideas about educa-
tion and students in the program have found
an education which meets their needs.
Sunday Workshop Series
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GRADUATION 74:
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Storrs by Day
The Police
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The Dormitory
Academics
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A CONSCIENTIOUS CALENDAR OF EVENTS OF INTEREST
TORRS BY DAY
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Tug of War (above)
Homecoming Apple Dunk
Halloween (below)
Ice Sculpture Winner (left)
Beer Fest (above)
Derby Day Mud Box (below)
ww^
The newest members of
the University of Connecti-
cut's Police Department
have long hair, good teeth
and long, busy tails. Their
names are Tommy and Zsa-
bon and they are the animal
half of the University of
Connecticut Mounted
Police.
Robert C. Nilesen, head of
the police department's spe-
cial services unit, said there
are many advantages in us-
ing mounted police. The
campus is "laced with 23
miles of roads, but there are
many places that a patrol car
cannot easily reach, such as
the centers of large dormito-
ry quadrangles and com-
plexes of academic
buildings".
Another objective is to
"provide more effective po-
licing through increased
coverage and visibility. From
the saddle a police officer
can see and be seen from
great distances," he said.
However, the major
objective of the mounted
unit will be to encourage a
closer relationship between
the students and the police.
Previously, it would be a
rarity if a student ap-
proached a policeman to
talk, but now they want to
pet the horses and ask why
the police are patrolling on
horseback. People first dis-
cuss the horse, than start
complaining about the park-
ing situation.
courtesy of Conn. Daily Campus
THE STUDENT UNION
>Jl ( ir*Ta
THE DORMITORY
OR LIFE IN THE JUNGLE
f ^
- ' ' *
PLAY AND ART IN EARLY CHILDHOOD
The reading assignments include chapters on
"The Finger Paint Experience" and "The Benefits of
Water Play" and some students have been observed
digging in the mud of Storrs for worms, but CDFR
281 "Play and Art in Early Childhood" isn't a
class of college students whose interests have revert-
ed to nursery school. Rather, the course is con-
cerned with understanding and knowledge of crea-
tive activities which will satisfy the needs of children
in their play experiences in art, science and social
sciences.
Clyde A. Jones who teaches the course said it is
aimed at "the nitty-gritty of how to handle kids." He
said most of the students in the class plan to work
with children in the future and this course is an
opportunity for them to do everything the children
do.
Assigned projects include planing nature trips and
preparing bulletin boards. At least three times dur-
ing the semester, the students observe 3, 4 and 5
year old children who are in the Creative Experi-
ences Group, which meets at the CDFR building on
campus.
Jones said the course stresses "originality and
creativity." In classroom labs, "The students experi-
ment with materials and find new ways to do
things," he said.
CHILDREN'S LITERATURE
Originally thought to be one of the University's
foremost "guts", Children's Literature, under the
guidance of Professor Francelia Butler, has evolved
into possibly the most interesting and positively the
most creative offering of the English Department.
Spiced by a series of extra and interdepartmental
speakers and taught by an individual truly interested
in scholastic examination of children's classics, the
"Kiddie Lit" course attracts students of all majors
who combine their diverse talents and interests to
comprise a productive and enjoyable group. Fables,
short stories, plays, skip rope rhymes, and books
constitute the literary output of the English 200 stu-
dents. Plays are produced by the class at semester's
end.
A decidedly worthwhile class taught by an out-
standing individual.
FENCING FOR THE ACTOR
"Fencing for the Actor" begins with a brief history
of fencing, but soon students are holding foils and
practicing the basic positions disengage, extend
and lunge. At the end of ten weeks, they have
learned how to adapt their skill to the stage. In the
final four weeks of class, the students, depending on
their skill, choreograph scenes or dances involving
fencing.
Classes are coed. Professor Michael Gregeric said
there are very few parts for women, but "Fencing is
an excellent indirect means of preparing the actor."
FHe said the value of the course is the similarity of
intellectual discipline and timing required for acting
and fencing.
The one credit course has not been offered in the
past three years because of time and budget limits.
PUPPETRY
Frank Ballard is a man who comes with or without strings attached, which
surprises many people. Mr. Ballard is UConn's, and for that matter, the nation's
foremost, expert in puppetry. "But," he explains, "Puppetry is far more than
just the stringed marionettes most people associate with the art."
There are also rod puppets supported from below on rigid supports; shadow
puppets projected against a back lit screen; and of course the old reliable hand
puppet from everybody's youth, which is worn like a glove.
In addition to his teaching duties, Ballard has directed a number of puppet
plays for the Department of Dramatic Arts. These include "Puppet Pas de
Deux", "Pehouchka", and most recently "Peer Gynt", a major production in
the Harriet Jorgensen theatre. This production utilized the talents of student
actors who supplied voices as well as energy to the puppets. Ballard described
his student actors' jobs as more difficult than "straight acting" because of the
physical limitations of the acting area, and because, with few exceptions, each
actor must handle two or three roles (and puppets).
Mr. Ballard exhibited some of his creations which are, in a word, masterful.
They are handmade bit by bit from the handcrafted costumes to the
handpainted eyebrows. One realizes from even a short look around the busy,
crowded studio, that these puppets are not the product of technology and
expensive machinery, but the accomplishment of a man who knows both his
craft and his art.
pfci^tographs by John Xrgi%as
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Rapp's Delicatessen, Rt44A, Mansfield, Ct.
The smell of cucumbers treated by various brines and
herbs permeate the air; the cacophonous symphony of
the pinball plays on; and the roast beef keeps on coming.
Although Rapp's sandwiches lack the cultivated "sioppi-
ness" of the big-city deli, they do lend a welcome change
to cheeseburger-weaned tastebuds. And the chance to
quaff a dripping pitcherful of hearty ale with your repast
should be taken advantage of. Often.
The Campus Restaurant, Route 1 95, Storrs, Connecticut
A university meeting place sincetime in memoriam,the
Campus is the sighting ground for most of the cliques
peculiar to the Storrs area. The first buds of bohemian life
were awakened in the Campus and nurtured by its infor-
mal grassroots atmosphere and the dregs of university
hippie life still clump down the worn stairs for a cuppa.
An unfortunate change has taken place, however, with
the liberalization of E. O. Smith's disciplinary code the
Campus is overrun with hip high school students who are
under the misbegotten impression that they are the
creme de la creme of their educational system. Nonethe-
less, the Campus is visually entertaining and has one ace
in the hole by serving the best (and only) Chinese food in
the area.
The Student Union Snack Bar, Stu-
dent Union Building, Campus.
A rather colorless and unexciting
decor characterizes the Snack Bar
but its physical deficits are aptly
outweighed by its primary asset
convenience. Central to the major
departmental buildings as well as the
library and the proverbial hub of all
student activity the Student Un-
ion the Snack Bar rapidly serves a
steady stream of rushing customers
and rushed coeds.
A close second to convenience on
the list of attractive qualities is the
Snack Bar jukebox a monument
of stylistic engineering and, not
coincidentally, the cheapest nicke-
lodeon in Tolland County.
m..
Lou's Original Snacks, Route 32,
Eagleville.
Allie and Lou John are themselves an
institution with the University. Operating
both the Eagleville Package Store and
Lou's they've found their ways into the
hearts of thousands of UConn students
through both the stomach and the liver.
While the package store remains un-
changed, the restaurant has undergone
some drastic alterations in the past few
years. Formerly a lovably dingy and al-
most hygienically suspect short-order
diner, Lou's has been renovated into a
restaurant respectable enough for the
family on Parent's Day. Though the physi-
cal characteristics have changed (even the
famed Subway pinball suffered a recent
demise), however, the fare remains gusta-
torily pleasing and a Big Bazoo or a Jimbo
can be gotten for a pretty reasonable
price.
Spiro's Restaurant and Bar, Route 32,
Eagleville.
Spiro's has a history covering evolution
from a small diner to a small diner-night-
club. Its two distinct personalities, that of
a pizza house and that of a bar-disco-
theque, are pretty well developed, with
separate rooms establishing the inde-
pendence of the two services. Frequented
by both university and townspeople the
restaurant caters to a mixture of hip youth
and apres bowling parties. Snide asides
about "not being able to tell the boys
from the girls" are occasionally uttered.
Choices from the Italian menu are gener-
ally tasty and the pizza, when not burned,
is a four-star item. Live entertainment on
Friday & Saturday nights, no cover charge.
Open 1 1 -1 AM, Monday through Thurs-
day, 1 1 -2:00 Friday and Saturday and 1 1 -
1 1 :00 Sunday.
Blood and Bones, Rt. 32, Merrow, Ct.
Blood and Bones has undergone a se-
ries of geographic as well as physical
changes since its opening. Originally
stressing the informal to a great extent
(waiters sitting at your table, chattily tak-
ing an order), the accent now is on quality
dining. Full course meals at full course
prices and a more sophisticated dining
area are the latest innovations. These
changes are fairly recent, however, and
the new character has not yet had a
chance to establish itself in the communi-
ty. Time will tell.
Chuck's Steak House, Rt. 32, Mer-
row, Ct.
One of a chain of nationally-
known restaurants. Chuck's is Storrs'
most tasteful and relaxing dining
area.
Housed in a large, renovated barn,
the restaurant neatly avoids cramp-
ing the clientele. The restaurant's
designation as a "Steak House" nec-
essarily limits the menu (creatively
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painted on an old Lancer's bottle)
but your steak will be prepared to
taste and served by a speedy and ef-
ficient staff.
Two bars enhance the atmosphere
of Chuck's a cocktail bar and a
salad bar. One makes waiting for a
table easy and the other makes it
worthwhile.
Lobsters dancing nightly.
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Sundown Inn, Route 32, Willington, Ct
Sundown's main function in the com-
munity is that of weekend entertainment,
although it is also handy as a weeknight
meeting place. The casual, saloon atmo-
sphere has deteriorated a bit in the way of
upkeep since Sundown moved into Blood
and Bones' former environs, and the graf-
fiti decor of the booths has a decided
amateurish quality about it, which may
partially account for the apparent de-
crease in Sundown's restaurant activities.
But on Saturday nights the parking lot still
extends far up and down Route 32 giving
positive testimony to the weekend
atmosphere.
SHABOO INN Conantville Road, Mansfield.
This structure formerly housed "The Old Mill Mo-
tel." In 1 971 a group of enterprising young men trans-
formed it into the area's focal point for top entertain-
ment, it is stocked with bar, pinballs, pool table, rather
shabby rest rooms (which extensive imbibation render
luxuriously accomodating), and a repertoire of per-
formers which tops any in a forty-mile radius. Its
uniqueness in the area has an unfortunate side effect
weekend crowds as thick as treacle fill the building
and make dancing, as well as ambulating, a difficult
feat. Week-nights, however, afford the visitor a com-
fortably quiet opportunity to drink and chat with
friends or relax alone. Bar hours 1 2-6 PM daily reopen-
ing at 8 PM till 1 AM Monday, Tuesday (no music), 1
AM Wednesday, Thursday (with music), 2 AM Friday,
Saturday (with music) and 1 1 PM Sunday (with music).
Cover charge with entertainment.
1 V- ^
ANTIQUES
yourself in the midst of 300 assorted chairs, dozens of
tables, bureaus, sundry chaises, victrolas, mirrors, rugs,
bottles, jars, ad infiniturn. Then enter a house whose 1 3
rooms are chock full of every type of historical memo-
robilia conceivable. And when an item catches your eye
and convinces you that you've been looking for it for
years, go ask Fred how much he wants for it just de-
scribe it to him he has a mental catalogue of every-
thing on the grounds. You won't realize until after you
leave how the very atmosphere of the house influenced
your purchase. And who knows? You may have actually
gotten your money's worth.
photographs by Roger Canfleld
Fred Tomasko, Antiques, Route 32, West Willington,
Connecticut.
There's a magician down on Route 32. He can make a 1 5 year
old coffee table seem like a mid-Victorian boudoir vanity with
many a tale to tell. He can conjure a history for a silver spoon that
would give it lineage somewhat akin to that of Princess Grace. He
can sell a vase worth $7.00 for $1 5.00 and a self-satisfied customer
will walk down the driveway smugly contemplating the great bar-
gain he just made. Fred Tomasko is not an out-and-out sham, but
he does have a lot of mysterious forces working for him. Place
JAM ES
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DOROTHEA JOYCE
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photographs by Barry Rimler
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photographs by Ron Rape
RNOLD MOSS
""Actor, director,
producer, writer,
educator
photographs by David Feinman
Theatre. Mr. Moss first performed as an Indian
in Peter Pan (Civic Repertory Th., N.Y.C., 1 929)
and appeared in productions with this group
(1 929-31 ).
He made his N.Y.C. debut as the Page Boy in
Wonder Boy (Alvin, Oct. 23,1 931 ); followed by
Antonio in The Fifth Column (Alvin, Mar. 6,
1 940); Fernando in Hold On to Your Hats
(Shubert, Sept. 1 1 , 1 940); Ishmael in Journey to
Jerusalem (Natl., Oct. 5, 1 940); Howard Ingram
in Flight to the West (Guild, Dec. 30, 1 940);
Count Czarniko in The Land Is Bright (Music
Box, Oct. 25, 1 941 ); Prospero in The Tempest
(Alvin, Jan. 25,1 945); Walter Burns in The Front
Page (Royale, Sept. 4, 1 946); Malvolio in
Twelfth Night (Empire, Oct. 3, 1 949); Glouces-
ter in Louis Calhern's King Lear (Natl., Dec. 25,
1 950); toured in a one-man show. Seven Ages
of Man (1 952); appeared as the Society Man in
The Time of Your Life (NY City Ctr., Jan. 9,
1 955); and Col. Janik in The Dark Is Light
Enough (ANTA, Feb. 25,1 955) .
He played Creon in the Salute to France pro-
duction of Medea (Th. Sarah Bernhardt, Paris,
June 1 955); for the Amer. Shakespeare Festival
(Stratford, Conn.), the King of France in King
John, and the Duke of Vienna in Measure for
Measure (June 1 956) , and repeated the latter
role (Phoenix, N.Y.C, Jan. 22,1 957). He was also
director of the Professional Acad. Workshop.
For the Whitall Poetry and Literature Series,
he produced, directed, and appeared in Walt
Whitman's Leaves of Grass (Library of Congress,
Washington, D.C., 1 956); produced, directed,
and played Prospero in The Tempest (1 957);
produced with the Th. Guild, and played Ber-
nard Shaw in Back to Methuselah, which he
also adapted (Ambassador, N.Y.C, Mar. 26,
1 958).
He appeared at the Brussels (Belg.) World's
Fair (1 958); as actor-director headed the Shake-
speare Festival Players in a national tour spon-
sored by Sol Hurok (1 959); for the Whitall Poet-
ry and Literature Series, played the Duke of
Vienna in Measure for Measure (1 958); Armado
in Love's Labours Lost (1 959), was the Narrator
and played Mark in E.A. Robinson's Tristram
(1 960), appeared in the title role in King Lear
(1 960), Malvolio in Twelfth Night (1 961 ), in the
title role in Macbeth (1 962), and in several roles
in Come, Woo Me! (1 963).
Films. He made his debut as Lt. Achmed in
Temptation (U, 1 946); subsequently appeared
in The Loves of Carmen (Col., 1 948); Reign of
Terror (Eagle-Lion, 1 949); Border Incident
(MGM, 1 949); Kim (MGM, 1 949); Mask of the
Avenger (Col., 1 951 ); My Favorite Spy (Par.,
1 951 ); Quebec (Par. 1 951 ); Viva Zapata! (Fox,
1 952); Salome (Col., 1 950); Casanova's 6/g
Night (Par., 1 954); Bengal Brigade (U, 1 954);
Jump Into Hell (WB, 1 955); Hell's Island (Par.,
1 955); and The 27th Day (Col., 1 957).
Television and Radio. On radio, he served as a
staff announcer for CBS (1 931 ); and performed
on such programs as N.Y. Philharmonic Sym-
phony, Columbia Workshop, Great Novels,
Spoon River Anthology, Archibald MacLeish
Program, Thomas Jefferson Series; was heard in
roles in the Great Plays Series, and also per-
formed in daytime radio serials.
He performed on the first color television
dramatic shows for NBC and CSB, and has ap-
peared on Studio One (CBS), Suspense (CBS),
Th. Guild on the Air (CBS), G.E. Th. (CBS), You
Are There (CBS), Alfred Hitchcock Presents
(CBS), The Rifleman (ABC), and Going My Way
(ABC).
Discography. Mr. Moss acted the role of Jason
in Medea and adapted and narrated Stravin-
sky's L'Histoire du Soldat (1 961 ). In the album.
Come, Woo Me!, he narrated, directed, and
played in a series of courtship scenes from the
works of WilliamShakespeare (1 964).
photograph by Ron Pape
Subject to Fits
Dance College
My Fair Lady
The Effects of Gamma Rays
MY FAIR LADY
My Fair Lady by Alan J. Lerner and Frederick Loewe,
directed by Dr. Nafekatter will launch the season. This
musical adaptation of Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion com-
bines delightful songs and dances with the drills and les-
sons which transformthe cocoon into the butterfly.
The Cast
Henry Higgins TomJarus
Eliza Doolittie Deborah Carlson
William Dombrowski Alfred P. Doolittie
Tom Kremer Colonel Pickering
Joe Billone Freddy
THE EFFECTS OF GAMMA RAYS
ON MAN-IN-THE-MOON MARIGOLDS
The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Mari-
golds by Paul Zindel will be the second production.
"Gamma Rays"won the Pulitzer Prize in Dara Drama in
1 971 .
The play is an intense study of a family relationship set
in motion by an acerbic mother and her affect on her two
daughters. Zindel craftily contrasts the fate of man in the
moon marigolds (being genetically destroyed under
gamma rays in an experiment) with the fate of the tor-
tured Hunzdorfer family.
Handling the profound task of bringing Zindel's char-
acters to life is the challenge being met by Dr. Leon Bailey
of the Department of Dramatic Arts. Dr. Bailey and his
cast of five women have been deeply involved in the de-
velopment of Zindels play experiencing many exciting
moments in the process. Zindel's play offers the direc-
tor and actors a great opportunity for creating a experi-
ence rarely matched by other contemporary dramatists.
at 8:1 5 p.m.
Tuesday, December 4
Thursday, December 6
Sunday, December 9
Saturday Matinee, December 8 at 2 00 p m
DANCE COLLAGE
Dance Co//age exemplifies a variety of styles and dance
genres. Seventeen to twenty pieces, ranging from ballet
to jazz are presented. Folk and modern dance are also
included in the program, and several pieces have been
choreographed by individual students.
The dance groups presented are: The Jazz Movers,
Orchesis, and the Dramatic Arts Dance Staff.
PUPPET PAS DE DEUX
Puppet Pas de Deux consisted of two short plays. The
Toymaker, by Martin Stevens and OAD created by Ste-
phen Brezzo.
The Toymaker has been translated into a number of dif-
ferent languages, and has gained recognition by practical-
ly all religious and educational groups in the United
States. First performed in 1 949, this classic shows the
charm and simplicity associated with traditional solo hand
puppet production.
OAD is an experimental venture into all aspects of
puppet theatre. Dramatic unit is explored through the
abstract construction and study of form, color, sound, and
movement.
By presenting a philosophical analysis of the aspects of
dramatic structure in a dramatic form, Steven Brezzo in-
volves the audience in a new appreciation of drama, and
puppetry.
A new play by Tom Dulack. Shubert New Play Series
February 1 5 23 No Sunday performance
Curtain at 8:1 5P.M.
Harriet S. Jorgensen Theatre, University of Connecticut
For Ticket Information, call 429-291 2
GOING AWAY
The world premier of the season was Going Away by
Tom Dulask directed by Dr. Michael Gregoric. The play
has been quoted as being "one of the most dynamic dra-
matic works in the history of theatre." In this contempo-
rary American drama, the auth.or probes deeply into the
lives of a steel worker, his wife, and two sons, all of whom
are dynamically engulfed in a familiar communication
gap. Against the steel environment of the city, Mr. Dulack,
paints a vivid portrait of a family struggling in a world of
lost opportunity where the long range goal is selfishly sac-
rificed for the sensual and the material.
SUBJECT TO FITS
In the fourth play of the season is a comparatively new
an innovative piece entitled Subject to Fits by Robert
Montgomary. This is a response to Doestosvsky's The idi-
ot and received overwhelming acclaimwhen it premiered
in New York recently. Under the direction of Master of
Fine Arts candidate Mark S. Graham this production will
undoubtedly move the audiences.
Harriet S. Jorgens en
Theatre,
The Univ ers ity
of Connecticut
M arch 22 - 30
Curtain at 8: 1 5 P.M .
No Sunday
Perf ormances .
For ticket
inf ormation
cal l the
Box Of f ice
at 429- 291 2.
The Univ ers ity of Connecticut
Department of Dramatic Arts
April 1 2 - 20. Curtain at 8: 1 5 P.M .
Harriet 8. Jorgens en Theatre.
Group Rates Av ail abl e.
For inf ormation Cal l 429- 291 2.
KING LEAR
The last production in the Jorgensen Series was King
Lear by William Shakespeare and was directed by and
starring the eminent Broadway actor Arnold Moss. Mr.
Moss was an artist-in-residence in the Department of
Dramatic Arts this year and will bring some of his profes-
sional techniques and skills to our educational setting.
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HOOPSTERS
HOPPING
Connecticut Basketball Coach Dee Rowe and his exciting basketball play-
ers made an almost unbelievable pre-season dream come true, and the
coach appears on the brink of realizing the ambition he made known when
he was given thetask of leading the Huskies five seasons back.
Speaking to a November press conference on campus, Rowe astonished
the media assemblage when he said he and his "team feel this could be the
year. We hope to make it to the NIT (National Invitation Tournament). We
would liketo play a major opponent in a major tourney."
Back in 1 969, when he assumed his role at the reins of the Huskies, Rowe
said his ambition was "to bring Connecticut basketball back to the presti-
tious position it enjoyed when my long-time idol, the late Hugh Greer,
coached UConn to 286 wins over a 1 7-year span a career which listed at
least 1 6 wins during 1 5 seasons, four of them 20-game winners." Greer
coached from 1 946 until he died suddenly in 1 963.
Reviewing the recent campaign, Connecticut stunned tourney co-favorite
St. John's (its 1 951 NCAAtormenter the first year UConn received a postsea-
son bid) and missed out on further NIT glory on a Boston College despera-
tion shot just threeseconds before the final buzzer.
That closed out the season with a 1 9-8 record, the 1 9 wins the most by a
UConn team since Fred Shabel's 23-3 mark in 1 964-65. It was also the first
time Connecticut received a post-season tourney bid since the '67 club lost
to Boston College in NCAA opening round action, 48-42.
The future indeed looms much brighter than in recent years since it also
was Rowe's third winning season, the second in succession. A freshman, two
sophomores and a junior were included in the starting lineup.
The only senior starter was 6-1 guard jimmy Foster who registered double
figures in scoring in 26 of the 27 games played. He led the team in scoring
with a 1 6.3 average, led in assists with 1 1 4, was the top field goal percentage
shooter among the starters (47.3 per cent), and he scored a single game high
of 31 points. He was named to the CBS-NIT all-star team, the only non semi-
finals player so honored.
Foster had 27 points to lead his team in the St. John's win and his 20 against
Boston College included two closing moments baskets which restored
UConn leads.
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The Huskies posted many victories
which might be categorized as "big-
gies." First of all, UConn toppled
Manhatten, a team which later went
on to win the ECAC Holiday Festival
& was a post-season NIT team.
Other post-season tournament
teams which felt the bite of the
Huskies during regular season action
were Syracuse (NCAA) at Syracuse,
breaking a 35-game home victory
string; Massachusetts (NIT), and Bos-
ton College (NIT), as well as St.
John's in the New York glamour
event.
Opening the year with a 4-4 rec-
ord and closing out with 1 5 wins
over the final 1 9 games, the Huskies
streaked to nine straight wins at one
point; and they made it a complete
sweep of all New York State teams
they played Manhattan, Colgate,
Syracuse, Columbia and St. John's.
They also avenged earlier year
losses the second time around with
Holy Cross, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire and Rhode Island. Only
once were they outclassed and that
was against Pittsburgh, an eventual
NCAA team; but UConn was ahead
of Pitt by a point with 1 5 minutes to
play. All other losses were by eight
points or less, excepting the triple
overtime defeat at Rhode Island.
Defensively, Connecticut allowed
the opponents but 70.8 points per
game, a drop of 7.3 from the previ-
ous year's figure. Offensively, the
team scored on an even 45 per cent
of its shots from the floor, compared
to a 41 .7 per cent figure for the op-
position. The futility of the oppo-
nents' shooting is emphasized by the
fact 1 32 more attempts at the free
throw line were given to rival
shooters.
Individually, Cal Chapman, a se-
nior spare at the end of the year,
became the ninth Husky to reach
the 1 ,000-career plateau, closing out
with 1 ,023 points.
Foster gained All-Yankee Confer-
ence first team honors and a second
team All-New England spot in addi-
tion to All-Razorback and All NIT
honors.
Among other individual honors
reaped by team members was Tony
Hanson's designation as the Yankee
Conference Rookie-of-the Year and
the naming of Earl Wilson to the
Yankee Conference second team.
Connecticut's 1 9-8 record was the
third best among new England's 1 6
major teams and John Thomas was
New England's sixth leading reboun-
der with 1 0.4 per game.
That mark placed Thomas fourth
in the Yankee Conference while
Foster was fourth in Yankee scoring
with 1 6.3 per game and Wilson was
fifth in rebounding, with 8.3.
Connecticut was runner-up to
Massachusetts in the Conference,
with a 9-3 Yankee record.
The Season
UConn Opp.
1 02 Yale 88
85 Holy Cross 91
80 Harvard 52
72 Massachusetts 79
76 Manhattan (o/t) 72
63 Pittsburgh 83
80 VMI 78
70 New Hampshire 76
66 Colgate 58
61 Syracuse 60
69 Vermont 56
63 Columbia , 56
79 Maine 69
91 Boston Univ. 78
67 Vermont 60
71 Holy Cross 68
93 Maine 71
70 R.I. (3 o/t) 80
79 Mass. (o/t) 76
72 New Hampshire 62
66 Georgetown 67
82 Rutgers 89
72 Rhode Island 55
77 Boston College 69
94 Boston Univ. 71
82 St. John's* 70
75 Boston College*
*National Invitational Tournament
76
THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1973-74 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM
Front Row, from left: Al Weston, Ed Harrison, Rick DiCicco, Rod Bass, Curt Johnson, Jimmy Foster,
Dennis Cole, Trainer Ralph Mansell.
Back Row: Head Coach Dee Rowe, Asst. Coach Dom Perno, Earl Wilson, Ken Wright,
Gary Custick, Cal Chapman, John Thomas, Roger Lawton, Pat Sibilia, Rich Semo,
^L. CA 1- J CJ.
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when a football team enjoys the
kind of success the University of
Connecticut did this season, records
are bound to fall. And fall they did.
The Huskies, who finished 8-2-1
and Yankee Conference champions,
established 1 0 new marks and tied
six others, highlighted by their eight
wins, a high against strictly collegiate
opposition. Furthermore, the
UConns, under first-year Head
Coach Larry Naviaux, defeated ail
three of their major college foes, the
first time that has happened since
the Yankee Conference was formed
in 1 947.
Both losses were to tournament-
bound teams, Delaware and Lehigh,
selected for participation in the
NCAA Division II playoffs.
Six individual season standards
have new owners. Eric Torkelson,
senior fullback from Burnt Hills,
N.Y., overtook Vin Clements in
three rushing categories. "Tork" had
276 carries, 1 ,245 gross yards, and 1 ,
233 net yards, and demonstrated
great reliability by totaling only 1 2
yards in losses.
Torkelson also matched another
Clements mark with 33 carries in one
game. He topped the 1 00-yard pla-
teau in seven contests, and paced
the team to a total of 580 rushing at-
tempts, 1 4 more than the 1 957
squad.
Freshman placekicker Greg Sinay
grabbed two season highs. Sinay, of
Norwich, booted seven field goals in
21 tries, and added game records of
three three-pointers made and four
tried.
Two other offensive players tied
recently set standards. Sophomore
End Allan MacLellan of Tewksbury,
Mass., caught eight touchdown pas-
ses, tying a Vin Russell Mark, and
punter Bernie Palmer, a Naugatuck
freshman, punted 63 times to equal
Bob Mugford's 1 966 effort.
The offense did not have a lock on
the glory, however. Sophomore
safety Rich Fenton had a season high
of seven interceptions, including
three against New Hampshire, tying
a game record. He led the team to a
season tie with the 1 958 and 1 970
teams, which had 1 9 interceptions.
The Husky Defense held their foes
to an average of less than 1 3 points a
game (while averaging 1 9 them-
selves) enroute to an 8-2-1 record.
Only three teams Lehigh, Dela-
ware, and Rutgers ^ managed to
score three or more touchdowns
against the UConns, and two (Lehigh
and Delaware) are now bowl-
bound.
Connecticut was especially stingy
in Yankee Conference play. Six
league opponents tallied only five
TDs, one on an interception, versus
the Huskies, who yielded just 43
points to them.
Linebacker Don Thompson, a ju-
nior from Bogalusa, La., ranked as
the top defender with 70 tackles and
26 assists for 96 points. Thompson
was a demon on pass defense, too,
with five interceptions for 95 yards,
two quarterback sacks for 31 yards,
and one pass deflection. He also
recovered three fumbles and re-
turned one for a touchdown.
The other starting linebacker,
Brian Usher, a senior out of Stam-
ford, was second in tackling points
with 87 on 64 stops and 23 assists. He
was second in pass deflections with
five.
Rich Fenton, a sophomore safety
from Enfield, was best against the
pass. He picked off seven enemy ae-
rials (including three in one game,
both UConn records) for returns
totaling 1 63 yards, and also was first
in pass deflections with 1 1 .
Perhaps the team's most versatile
defender was sophomore Middle
Guard Joe Corbo of Waterbury.
Corbo was in on 79 tackles, had six
sacks for 40 yards, and was number
one in fumble recoveries with five,
blocked kicks with four, and tackles
for minus yardage (1 3 for 51 yards).
A pair of ends who shared playing
time on the flank opposite Co-Cap-
tain Barry Krom, of Rhinebeck, N.Y.,
tied for most quarterback sacks with
eight. They were seniors Cary Calvi-
no of Wanaque, N.J., whose sacks
totaled 84 yards, and Gene Newman
of Maynard, Mass., whose sacks
measured 48 yards altogether.
Three other senior defensive play-
ers scored. They are cornerback
Mike McCarthy of Oak Bluffs, Mass.,
who returned one of his two inter-
ceptions for a touchdown and line-
backer Alan Shaw of Braintree,
Mass., and Tackle Paul Connor of
Rockland, Mass., who were credited
with safeties.
9 i9^ i
CONNECTICUT VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM - 1973 - Yankee Conference Champion
Front row, from left:
Second row:
Third row:
Fourth row:
Fifth row:
Sixth row:
Back row:
Steve Schainker, Bill O'Neil, Paul Scaffidl, Dave Ellis, Al Spagnuolo., Barry Krom,
Rich Foye, Scott Branning, Eric Torkelson, Bob Robustelli, Mark Kreymborg, Brian Usher,
Mike McCarthy.
Willie Richardson, Bruce Thompson, Bill Maver, Alan Shaw, Ron Mansfield, Gary Calvino,
Leo Nardi, Pete Kodys, Curt Wyatt, Fred Sporck, Bob Bundy, Pete Cathey.
Perry McFadden, Walt Kukulka, Marty Bird, Wes Spears, Ed Nolen, Kevin O'Donnell,
Jeff Theodoss, Brad Rock, Allan MacLellan, Manny Sasser, Joe Corbo.
Paul Connor, Calvin Brown, Ray Giguere, Mike O'Roark, John Laverty, Mike Pucko,
Rich Lee, Lou Mancari, Kei-th Simmons, Rich Fenton, Ramon Sanchez.
Don Thompson, Jim Dumont, Barry Baker, Bernie Palmer, Leroy Williams, Ron Johnson,
Henry Reed, Steve Sheridan, Greg Sinay, Dave Sorrell.
Dave Robeson, Joe Torre, Les Solomon, Lou Allen, Gary Roegiers, Jim Bailey,
Gene Newman, Ray Jackson.
Assistant Trainer Ralph Mansell, Assistant Coaches Mark Svencer, Red Kelin,
Joe Giannelli, Chris Palmer, Head Coach Larry Naviaux, Assistant Coaches Dave Zimmerman,
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foot- Torkelson, following a record breaking
ball season, gathered the following post season
laurels: New England Coaches' Player-Of-The3|
Year, All-Yankee, All-New England, All-Eastj
Going over 1 00-yards in rushing eight different^
times, he entered the UConn rushing record
books with 1 ,233 yards and 276 carries. As a ju-
nior he set New England return records, taking
26 returns for 527 yards. A forestry major, he
was drafted and signed by the Green Bay Pack-
ers. He was also honored by the Connecticut
Sportswriters Alliance as the Connecticut Col-
legiate Athlete Of The Year.
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D. Thompson {VC-91 )
recovering fumble by J.
Jennings (Rutgers-76).
Thompson runs 20 yards.
Thompson scores TD.
Mancari (UC-1 8) handing
off
Torkelson {UC-23)
running
Torkelson (UC-23) scoring
TD after 1 8 yd. run
Thompson, the first of three football playing brothers to enroll at Connecticut,
won All-Yankee honors two seasons as a cornerback. Just recently he was
signed to a professional contract by the New York Stars of the World Football
League and looks forward to its season opener in July.
Don Thompson, a junior linebacker on the
Yankee Conference champion Connecticut
football team, is quite a forecaster whose own
performance this past fall has surpassed all of
his expectations.
The Bogalusa, La., resident who majors in
business at Connecticut was interviewed by
the student press on campus after spring
practice. "I hope to make the All-Yankee
Conference team as a right linebacker," he
said. "And as for the team, I know we can go
at least 8-3."
This week Thompson did much better than
make All-Yankee Conference. He was named
to the Eastern College Athletic Conference all
star team, appearing on a list of 22 players
which included Heisman Trophy winner John
Cappelletti, among others. The ECAC com-
prises over 200 colleges along the Atlantic
seaboard northward from Maryland to New
England.
Also, the Connecticut team closed out with
a record of eight wins, two losses and a tie
the best in theschool's history.
Don Thompson, who stands 5-1 1 and
weighs 200, contributed greatly to that suc-
cess. He lead the team in tackles, with 70, red-
dogged five times to add 45 minus yards to
the opponents' totals, assisted on 26 tackles.
Also, he deflected one pass, intercepted five
for 95 yards. He sacked the quarterback twice
for 31 yards, recovered three fumbles and
blocked a kick.
You might say football ability comes natu-
rally to Don Thompson because his father,
Aaron, was a two-time All-America halfback
at Southern University in Louisiana. Eventual-
ly, he played for the San Francisco Forty-Ni-
ners of the National Football League and he
currently coaches football at Wesley Ray High
in Anger, La.
Two of Don's brothers are also quite in-
volved in football. Aundre, an All-State full-
back and linebacker under his father's tute-
lege at Wesley Ray played on the UConn
freshman team; and his other brother, Bruce,
was an All-Yankee defensive back for the
UConn team, two years.
Thompson didn't return home last summer
to Bogalusa, La. Instead, he stayed in Hartford
and worked for the Aetna Life and Casualty
Company as a management-trainee.
"It gave me a chance to check out the pros
and cons of the life insurance business," he
said. "But the real reason I stayed up here was
because my job back home fell through."
Thompson chose to play football for Con-
necticut thanks to the persuasion of Ken Ver-
don, a UConn alumnus. "I wanted to get away
from the South, and wanted a good academic
environment," hesaid.
He feels he made a wisechoice.
Larry L. Naviaux, Head Football Coach
Further recognition was accorded the successful Uni-
versity of Connecticut football team when it was an-
nounced this week that Coach Larry L. Naviaux has been
named Kodak College Division Coach of the Year for Dis-
trict One (New England).
Naviaux was named for this honor following a post sea-
son vote of district members of the American Football
Coaches Association. He was presented his award at the
Coach-of-the-Year Awards Dinner before some 1 ,200 col-
lege football coaches in San Francisco, Jan. 1 0. A similar
honor was accorded him by Yankee Conference coaches.
Naviaux, in his first year as head coach, directed the
University of Connecticut football team to its "winning-
est" season while steering his team to the 1 973 Yankee
Conference championship en route to an 8-2-1 record.
In addition to winning the Yankee Bean pot on a 5-0-1
record, Naviaux saw his footballers defeat all "major"
opponents on the slate Yale, Rutgers and Holy Cross.
The only losses were to Lehigh and Delaware, both post-
season tournament entries.
Perhaps the secret to his success was the ability to make
the most out of talent on hand. He seemed to make the
right decisions along the way while at the same time in-
stilling a winning attitude and spirit. He was able to keep
the tremendous enthusiasm alive and gradually built it
into a sound foundation for what he hopes will be contin-
ued success at UConn.
Naviaux (pronounced NAV~33o) came to Connecti-
cut on March 1 7, 1 973, with ten years' coaching experi-
ence, four of them as head coach at Boston University
where he guided his first team to a 9-1 record and a post-
season invitation to the Pasadena Bowl in California. The
regular season record was the finest in BU's history.
Reared and educated in Nebraska, Naviaux is a gradu-
ate of the University of Nebraska where he was a halfback
on the football team and served two seasons in a coaching
capacity.
Following his spectacular debut as a head coach in 1 969,
Larry was accorded many honors. He was selected the
College Division Coach of the Year by the American Foot-
ball Coaches Association and his team was chosen No. 2
for the Lambert Trophy, behind Penn State, as well as No.
1 in New England. He was also an assistant coach in the
Coaches Ail-American Game in 1 970.
Born in Lexington, Nebraska (1 2/1 7/36), Naviaux won
1 2 letters at Lexington High in football, basketball and
track as well as all-state honors in basketball. He lettered
four years at the University of Ivfebraska, 1 955-58, where
he played right halfback.
Following graduation, he was an assistant freshman
football coach in 1 959 and a varsity assistant backfield
coach in 1 960. Then he served as offensive backs coach,
1 961 -63, at Southwestern Louisiana where he was also
head baseball coach in 1 963.
He next moved to Boston University, in 1 964, as offen-
sive backs coach, winning a promotion to offensive co-
ordinator in 1 968, and the head coaching job in 1 969. His
overall record as head football coach at BU was 1 9 wins,
20 losses.
Naviaux is married to the former Sharon Airy of Grand
Island, Neb., and the couple has four children: Kimberly
Ann, Jeffrey Lee, Shawn Michell, and Andrea Sue.

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HOCKEY
The University of Connecticut hockey team closed:
out its season with the most wins ever in that sport with
a 1 5-1 0 record (.600 winning percentage). The previous
high in victories was 1 3 in 1 967-68, and the 1 0-6 (64-65)
record (.625) remains as thetop percentage figure.
Coach John Chapman's skaters put together a win
streak of five games while annexing the Wesleyan invi-
tational Hockey Tournament championship early in
the season and later followed with four in a row at the
end of January.
The UConns displayed a very impressive offense,
scoring 5.6 goals per game, with six different players
putting ten or more goals into the nets.
Joe Marashio, a senior from Woburn, Mass., topped
ail point-makers, with 1 4 goals, 26 assists, for 40 points.
Right behind him was junior Bobby Brieig of Warwick,
R.I., with 1 9 goals and 1 9 assists for a 38 total.
Another senior. Captain Tom Dockrell, from Clin-
ton, N.Y., was third with 1 7 goals, 20 assists and 37
points; while freshman sensation Tommy Dyroff of
Highland Falls, N.Y., came in fourth with 20 goals and
1 5 assists for 35. Also reaching the 30-charm circle of
scorers was sophomore Mark Davis, out of Oswego,
N.Y., with 1 6 goals and 1 5 assists for a 31 total.
Gene Cufone, a junior from Seymour, was the sixth
man with a twin-digit goals figure, getting 1 3 scores
and 1 1 assists for 24 points, just a shade behind senior
Ray Ferry of Pascoag, R.I., in the scoring. Ferry's figures
were 7-21 -28.
Lou Parker, a sophomore from Norwood, Mass.,
handled most of the goalie duties, giving up an average
4.1 goals per game and coming up with an average 26.0
saves as the net minder.
: l f
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: ^ i/.
THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1973-74 VARSITY HOCKEY TEAM
Front Row, from left: Louis Parker, Ross Wisutskle, Capt. Thomas Dockrell, Raymond Ferry,
Joseph Marashlo, Howard Neckowitz, Charles Sebestyen.
Robert Cifrino, George Wooster, Robert Breig, Gene Cufone,
Richard Dyroff, Kevin McGarry, Frank Roche, Thomas Dyroff,
Michael Grainsky.
Head Coach John Chapman, Asst. Coach Rick Andrews, Thomas Adams,
William Denehy, Steven Balaban, Edward Pierce, Scott Inman, Mark Davis,
Asst. Coach William Gammell, Trainer Thomas Pike. ,
Second Row:
Back Row:
Season
uc OPP UC OPP
6 Trinity 1 5 Lowell Tech 4
4 New Haven 1 1 4 Bryant 1
5 Babson 6 3 Army 7
3 Bowdoin 1 1 M.l.T. (cancelled)
8 Colby 6 4 Wesleyan 3
7 Amherst 3 8 Amherst 3
9 Nichols 2 2 Vermont 6
6 Wesleyan 4 1 Massachusetts 7
9 Trinity 5 5 Lowell Tech 7
0 Williams 3 3 Hamilton 8
1 St. Ansel m's 5 1 2 Holy Cross 4
1 0 New Haven 3 7 Babson 2
3 Holy Cross 2 5 Wesleyan
8
Won 1 5 Lost 1 0
THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1973-74 VARSITY SWIMMING TEAM
(Yankee Conference Champion)
Front Row, from left:
Second Row:
Third Row:
Back Row:
j.*^-^,r^;ui>-.
William L. Owens, David J. Darigo, Thomas R. Kascak, Tri-Captains Gregory S. Wolff,
Robert L. Duff and John F. Sharry, Marc S. Seleznow, John H. Theroux.
Kevin G. Rupee, David E. Tillman, Richard J. Dambach, Peter F. Sisca,
Kevin T. Murray, Scott P. Newman, James B. Lodigiani, James M. Fellows,
Asst. Coach Edward Becker.
Asst. Coach Capt. John R. Hall, Richard E. Weaver, Richard J. Lewis,
Thomas E. Ncsal, David A. Peterson, Harold F. Lawson, Stephen McNally,
David iis, John R. Cilfone, Head Coach Peter J. McDevltt.
Thomas E. Barrett, John W. Tobin, John A. Brady, Donald F. Sheak,
Karen Herbert, Steve J. Doxsey, Jamie P.D. Bernard, Martin E. Solomon,
Bruce A. Sweet. v, (_.;., , ... --^:--, >.^r'--, , . . ... . ^.-, , ;....^-;
'. ^^i^.^?::^:ii^ii*J(H:;
SWIMMING
while compiling an 1 1 -7 dual meet record, the Univer-
sity of Connecticut swimming team set five varsity and
seven freshman records and went undefeated in Yankee
Conference competition.
Coach Pete McDevitt's natators, in addition to winning
their second successive Yankee title, scored 1 88 points for
a third-place tie in the New Englands held at Providence.
Co-Captain Greg Wolff led the team in scoring by accu-
mulating 1 20 points during the regular campaign and
adding 28 more in the New Englands. Greg also helped
the 400 freestyle relay to tenth place. The versatile Vernon
senior competed in nine different events and set a variety
record of 5:01 .1 0 in the 500 freestyle.
Once again, UConn divers Bruce Sweet and Tom Kas-
cak of Trumbull, and Jack Sharry of West Hartford placed
in the New Englands finals. They won first, third and
eighth, respectively, in the one-meter competition with
Sweet adding a second place in the three-meters while
Sharry was tenth.
Noting the team improvement, from sixth to third in
the New Englands, Coach McDevitt remarked, "There is
evidence further improvement may be expected next
year. Of the 21 swimmers who participated in the champi-
onships, 1 5 will be returning.
"Not only will our new record holders return, but it
appears they will be joined by the finest freshman team
ever to enroll at the Storrs campus. We are hopeful over
20 outstanding high school prospects nnay join us."
The most noteworthy accomplishment of the team was
an upset victory (60-53) over unbeaten Bowdoin. After
losing the opener to powerful Brown, the Huskies won all
eight remaining home meets which included identical 59-
54 verdicts over strong Maine and Vermont.
The new individual records were credited, as follows:
50 freestyle Freshman Jay Cilfone, Torrington (21 .79),
Varsity and Frosh record.
lOOfreestyle Jay Cilfone (49.51 ), Frosh record.
500 freestyle Senior Greg Wolff, Vernon, (5:
01 .1 0), Varsity record.
500 freestyle Freshman Jim Fellows, East Hartford
(5:09.88), Frosh record.
1 ,000 freestyle Freshman Jim Fellows (1 0:37.6), V
& F record.
1 ,650 freestyle Jim Fellows (1 8:03.50), Frosh
record.
1 00 breaststroke Freshman Rick Weaver, East
Longmeadow, Mass., (1 :01 .97).
V & F records.
200 breaststroke Rick Weaver, (2:1 2.93), V & F
records.
VARSITY SWIMMING (1 1 -7)
48-65 Brown
69-23 New Hampshire
81 -32 at Amherst
71 -49 Rhode Island
46-67 at St. John's
25-87 at Army
25-88 w/Colgate
72-40 at Worcester Tech
59-54 Maine
49-64 at Williams
59-54 Vermont
34-79 at Springfield
76-36 Central Conn.
80-33 Holy Cross
82-31 Babson
49-64 at Southern Conn.
73-40 at Massachusetts
60-53 Bowdoin
3rd New En glands
CROSS COUNTRY
TRACK
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THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT VARSITY CROSS COUNTRY - 1973
Front Row (left to right): Bruce Clark, Fran Brough, Bob McCusker, Pete Bortolotti, John Hunt,
Fred Stelgert, Bill Cantin, George Divine.
Manager John Fredj Rich Carlson, Pete Ananla, Al Hlnchliffe,
Eric Krathwohl, Jim Kelsh, Bill Finlayson, Brian Devin,
Sal Pappalardo, Coach Bob Kennedy.
Dave Rivers, Greg LeBlanc, tarry Polansky, Marv Beninson,
John Scott, Glenn Sullivan, Frank Dailey, Paul Barrett, John Smith.
Ta-ff Wn-.T-T-ol- Poro TtaCiffr, <ifp\!e- Curwa . Paul ViTT. Ifpn HnnPT.
Front row, from left:
Second row:
THE UNIVERSITY OF CONKECTICUT 1974. VARSITY TRACK TEAM
John W. Braccio, William C. Brewer, Robert J. McCusker, Peter J. Bortolotti,
Brian V. Devin, John H. Scott, Bruce W. Clark" , John. H. Hunt, Francis A. Brough.
John G. Mouratidis, Charles A. Cornell, Keit-h A. Wilcox, Heyward Woodward,
Daryl C. King, Michael R. Goe, Steven E. Hulme, Frederick W. Steigert,.
Robert P. Kowalczyk, Curtis T. Walker, David A. Peterson, William G. Thbrne.
Manager Richard Carlson, Head Coach Robert E. Kennedy, Louis E. Allen, Herman E.Bigel
Craig A. Hill, David A. Rivers, Thomas P. Kelley, George W. Divine, Karl E. Molitoris
John G. Acosta, Michael C. Wrubel, John D. Ciminello, Alex Nishball, Coach William P.
Kelleher, Asst. Coach William Parkton.
Andy F. Bessette, Richard K. White, Roger J. Gilman, Richard A. Lowe, Kurt A.
John A. Novak, Clifford Bardliving, James A. Reilly, Alan B, Hinchliffe
David J. Mazur, Michael J. Guerrera.
Lorenze
Victor,W.Civ
Although the final 1 2-9 record doesn't appear to be so
glowing the University of Connecticut baseball Huskies
had a few bright spots this season.
The UConns had an 1 1 -5 record in New England com-
petition and they toppled Providence, a team in conten-
tion for tournament selection, among others. These in-
cluded the humiliation of Yankee Conference champion
Rhode island by 1 3-0 as well as a win over runner-up New
Hampshire and two verdicts over last year's champion
Massachusetts.
Junior Jimmy Tycz of Plantsville was the leading hitter,
stroking a .371 batting average on 23 hits in 62 trips to the
plate. The outfielder also led the team in runs (1 8), two
base hits (5), and walks (24).
First-Baseman Tom D'Arminio, a sophomore from
Hackensack, N.J., had most hits (25); and he led in runs
batted in with 20. The lefty swinging hitter had a unique
accomplishment in that he appeared at the plate 95 times
and did not strike out. He was almost as good afield, han-
dling 1 95 chances with only one error.
Henry Sander, a third baseman from Glens Falls, N.Y.,
had most triples with (3); while Brad Linden, the only se-
nior on the team, of Hillsdale, N.J., led in home runs with
two of thesix made by his team.
Shortstop Greg Biercevicz, a Shelton freshman, had
most strike outs (1 2) and most stolen bases (3).
in the pitching department, freshman Tom Germano of
Torrington hurled most innings (58 and one-third) while
sharing the most wins column with Worcester junior John
Baldwin, each having 4-2 records. Bladwin struck out 44 in
40 innings while Germano fanned 43.
Relief specialist Jack Taylor had the best earned run
average, (0.94), but he also had most losses, four.
Connecticut finished in a tie for third place in the Yan-
kee Conference with Maine, each posting 4-3 records.
.f - '
UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1973 VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM
Front row,
Back row;
from left: Tom D'Arminio, Jim Brasile, Ed Harvey, Tri-Captalns Charley Horan, John Ihlenbur^
and Brian Herosian, Brad Linden, John Baldwin, Steve Lake, Steve Mooney.
Assistant Coach Andy Baylock, John Tokarz, Nick Warren, Henry Sander,
Peter Gelderman, Jack Taylor, Jim Tycz, Sean McLaughlin, Coach Larry Panciera.
B
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" * . r. ' - a>
THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT VARSITY SOCCER TEAM - 1973
Front from left:
Second row:
Third row:
Yankee Conference Champion
Terrance L. McSherry '76, Stephen C. Sorota '76, William C. Cooke '74, John E. Joy '74
Peter Rice '74, Captain Jon D. Demeter '74, T. John Tagaras '74, Brian R. Foster '75,
Philip H. Whitehead '74, John A. Young '76, Ronald A. Evans '74.
Matei G. Schlechta '76, Thomas B. Shepard '75, Timothy R. Hunter '75, Wayne A. Mones '75,
Alain J. Loriquer '75, Frantz Innocent '75, A. Maurits Schippers '75, Gregory K. Nicholls
Richard S. Lishin '75, Lloyd S. Grant '75, George J. Ducach '76. Leonides Tsantires 77.
Assistant Coach Keith J. Connors, Morris L. Reich '76, Robert E. LaBarre '76, Jan U. Leth
Manager Robert S. Metsack '74, Stephen A,
Head Coach Joseph J. Morrone.
'75.
'76.
Cooke '76, John R. Blomstrann '76, Gary F. Cirullo
76,
. A- - i: - .: aS, i*il ^ .' S^ , ;?- ^ ' i
Varsity Ski Team (L TO R.)
Jack Schwartz, Allene Crepeau, Brad Kahl, Peter Rose, John Sobanik, Spencer Stuart (co-captain), Paul Kurtz, Ed Gilleran (woman's coach), Bill
Levin, Ed Page, Scott Painter, Frank Peterson, Dave Ritchie (co-captain). (FRONT) Coach John Catania, Atomic Rep. Jim Thomas, (missing) Deb-
orah Thompson, Linda Hardy, Laurel Biechel, Emily Thorpe, Ron Eigenbrod, Doug Rapport, Jim McCrath, Phil Newburg, Bruce Salzinger, Jim
Rowlett.
SCORES
(W2 L 9)
uc OPP
3 Rutgers 1 7
9 M.I.T. 3
4 Boston College 1 0
6 . Holy Cross 1
1 Brown 6
3 Massachusetts 1 6
4 Tufts o/t 8
4 New Hampshire 9
6 Williams 9
4 Springfield 5
1 Wesleyan 1 5
THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1974 VARSITY LACROSSE TEAM
Front row, from left:
Middle row:
Back row:
Robert R. Bonn, S.Roderick Griffith, Carl R, Iberger, Co-Capt. Sheldon Randall,
Co-Capt. David J. Antoniazzi, James J. Astoria, Robert T. Mayne, Francis J. Gibbons.
Asst. Coach Robert Rotella, Richard R. Toubman, Karl A. Zielinski, Arthur R. Sasso,
William D. Crowe, Edward W. Nolin, Frank J. Sabo, Ross Blechman.
Manager Robin J. Rivard, Michael A. Czorniak, Adam B. Simon, James M. Oaffey,
Kenneth Howes, III, Roy^I. Cohen, Raymond E. Kawata, Asst. Coach Robert West,
Read Coach Nathan Osur.
POLO
Front row, from left:
Back row:
THE UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1974 TENNIS TEAM
Gary E. McGrath, Donald A. Mattran, Lawrence A. Kahn, Capt. George E. Ulrich,
Robert J. Norton, L. Peter Young, Peter H. Gruen.
Manager Joan Bernstein, Keith G. Weindling, Peter A. Fegelman, B.Geoffrey Burnham,
Scott A. Inman, William R. Talbot, Head Coach John Chapman :.;:,
VARSITY WRESTLING
(7-1 1 )
0 -48 at Massachusetts
6 -42 w/Yale
1 8 -27 at Hartford
25V2-1 8 at Bowdoin
251 /2-31 w/Amherst
251 /2-241 /2 w/Maine
3 -48 Rhode Island
24 -1 8 Brown
1 5 -27 at Dartnnouth
1 5 -1 9
w/Tufts
31 -1 8
at Wesleyan
54 - 0
at Holy Cross
9 -30 at Coast Guard
0 -46
at Springfield
4th
at Yankee Conference
1 4 -30 at M.I.T.
1 5 -21
New Hampshire
41 - 6 Lowell Tech
5 -42 Boston University
5th NewEnglands
THE UNIVEKSITY OF CONNECTICUT 1973-74 VARSITY WRESTLING TEAM
Front Row, from left: Jeff Granowsky, Doug Winter, Co-Capt. Howard DeMonte, Paul Stelner,
Co-Capt. Jeff Borak, Robert Leighty.
Second Row: Peter Vancisin, David Penchoff, Richard Bronfman, Richard Plllsbury,
Dean Steele.
Back Row: Head Coach Nate Osur, Peter Cathey, Manager Richard Mogensen;
George Smith, William Ruocchio, Robin Rivard, Blair Ludemann. _ -:,-,.:
WHAT' S NEW ON THE SPORTS SCENE?
STREAKING
what we're seeing in the news is a tiny, not very vocal, minority, who
do not represent a true cross-section of Americans, who are looked
upon by the majority as an irrelevant, if amusing, bunch of exhibitionists
who would all go home if TV and press coverage were denied them.
And all that goes not just for Congress, but for streakers, too.
A movie could best bring streaking into focus. Picture this: It's 1 968.
Students are marching by R.O.T.C., chanting and tying up traffic. Hel-
meted policeon horseback gallop into the crowd, their clubs beating on
the heads of the students, who are screaming and running. As the stu-
dents run, we fade out, and fade in with a scene shot at the same loca-
tion today. The students have not stopped running; traffic is still tied
up. The only difference is that the police are peaceful and the students
are naked.
We won I
Sure we didn't help the Indochinese or the poor very much, but who
ever does? The point is that Mitchell, who once had 1 0,000 kids arrested
by picking up the phone, is now allowed one call, and Youth is wild in
the streets, free to embare-ass police as the hardhats prance in naked
imitation above them. You can change the systemfromthe outside.
I have heard the theory that streaking arose from the disappointrtient
over the comet Kohoutek. Students attached such importance to the
predicted streak across the sky by a heavenly body that when it failed to
appear they were driven to "act out" the hoped-for event with their
own. This would not be the first case of celestial fixation (cf.
"mooning").
More likely, streaking represents the last gasp of the reactionary ethos
of the attachment to the body. Now the machines dothework, comput-
ers do the thinking and ping-pong is played electronically on TV
screens, the body has been relegated to the status of a recreational
vehicle.
It is also true that streaking can be viewed as a manifestation of cultur-
al absorption, or the "Ginger-ale Tastes Like Love Syndrome", by which
any new social force is digested and absorbed into the existing society.
Thus, the metamorphosis fromfreak to streak.
When the freaky is Middle-Americanized, it's New'ed, it's Improced
and it's fast, fast, fast. Your typical naked hippie dopesters were consist-
ently languorous, bathing together, smoking together, lying around
touching, all of this generally undertaken in or near a forest. Streaking's
not pastoral; its modern, brisk, efficient.
"Streaking begins and ends in controlled circumstances," notes a dis-
appointed sensation-seeker. "As soon as it's over, it's like it never hap-
pened." Streakers seem well-disciplined, judging by the photos in the
press. They always run in step, with the leg closest to the camera raised
as the shutter is snapped, You get the feeling the streakers scrub and
spray themselves before and after, and there couldn't be less hanky-
panky at a meeting of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
The Establishment equanimity in the face of streaking can be laid to
the consensus that it's non-sexual (phew!) or even anti-sexual (hear!
hear!), and certainly apolitical (bravo!) behavior.
Not everyone is unconcerned, however.
A few Cassandras have been heard, if not heeded. Streaking has been
condemned as "destroying the moral fiber of our community" and
called "a signpost on the road to the ruin of Western society." Really,
running naked through the streets is not the sort of conduct you asso-
ciatewith therise of the Roman Empire.
It may get worse. Streaking is going toevolve. It cannot stand still. "It's
reached the point where it's losiing that Quixotic romanticism", one
observer complains. "I've seen just about all the photos I want to of
scholars' buttocks, smart-asses, wisecracks, call them what you will. The
thrill is gone."
But the trerid is toward longer and longer streaks, and eventually a
threshold will be crossed whereby not just the duration but the funda-
mental nature of the act will have changed. Streakers will essentially be
leaving their clothes off, and thus de facto "dropping out", as they will
not be admitted to establishments which require attire. They'll have to
cast about for something to do while nude, if only to pass the time.
There's no telling what will come next, but after Wesson Oil arid rolling
donuts they might come around to "tuning in" or "turning on."
At that point, we can expect the discovery that streaking causes chro-
mosome damage in beagles and is suspected of being funded by foreign
governments.

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ACTIVITIES
' *. y, it
OUTING CLUB
i ^
KUNG FU
DANCE COLLAGE
INTERNATIONAL FAIR
CAMPUS COMMUNITY CARNIVAL
CENTRAL TREASURER
Centrallreasurer Jim Strong
Assistant Tom Bendronitis
Secretary Rinda Reiss
COMMITTEE ON
ORGANIZATIONS
Tom Bendronitis
Assistant Central Treasurer
Bob Wiggins
Committee on Organizations
EXPERIM ENTAL COLLEGE
" TMMWpiji.I^uj.",.,
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
Jeffrey Granoff President
Rocky Brown
Beth Katz
Cureley Cole
Revis Cox
Denis Magnoli
COMMUTERS UNION
President
Vice-Pres.
Treasurer
Secretary
Larry Cuertin
ChrisBecker
Todd Yaun
Al Bergeron
^2
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r^ ^ P ^
H^ ^
^KJLVJnl '^ *'*^^ ^91
a- '
1 1
9- ^ : - ^ ^ '
-"'>,:''Js
Commuters Union
Bake Sale
WHUS
Rick Liftig
Bill Walker
Nelson Checkoway
Program Director
Chief Engineer
Station Manager
NUTMEG
Associate Editors
Sports Editor
Copy Editor
Photographers
Ellen Adelson
Editor-in-Chief
Laura Moran
Secretary
Jack Levine
Business Manager
- David Feinman
- Sal Lombard!
- Steve Daren
- Anne McAloon
- Randy Philippi,
- David Feinman,
and the staff
of Photopool
PHOTOPOOL
President Carl Smith
Vice-Presidents Louise Krasniewiez
Brian Sherman
John Tregilgas
BobBeles
Buzz Kanter
^^^K.'
Lenny Govoni
^ I^ B'
. Sue Burke
' cm4^^:mi ^^i ,M ' ^j^^
THE
UNIVERSITY
OF
CONNECTICUT
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
The Alumni Association made good prog-
ress this year in achieving its primary func-
tion .. . assisting The University of Connect-
icut in attaining and maintaining greatness
in all areas of endeavor. The Association was
established "to promote the interests of The
University of Connecticut and a mutual
helpful relationship among alumni, the fac-
ulty, and the student body; to promote a
greater fellowship among University alumni;
and by fostering a more helpful relationship
and strengthening the fellowship between
the people of the State of Connecticut and
The University of Connecticut."
Alumni need not travel to the rolling hills
of Storrs to get involved in alumni activities.
In fact, alumni are able to participate in pro-
grams offered by one of the twelve area
alumni chapters. Activities sponsored by the
chapters range from social get-togethers to
service programs.
All alumni and their families are cordially
invited to return to campus in the spring for
Alumni Weekend. Of special interest to
alumni is the Golf Tournament, the Alumni
Awards Luncheon, and Class Reunions.
The traditional service of the Association
to the University and our alumni has been
ongoing. Our Finance Committee has care-
fully screened requests for appropriations
and funded numerous projects. The Pro-
gram and Services Committee has run suc-
cessful tours to many interesting places in
the world at relatively low costs and the
Alumni Life Insurance Program has been
adjudged to be one of the best in the nation
with more than 30 million dollars of insur-
ance in force.
W^' ^.
^^^
In 1 963, the Alumni Annual Giving Program was estab-
lished with the themeof "Margin for Excellence." The
program's basic purpose is to provide funds to meet cer-
tain needs of the University which are not fully provided
for by State appropriations. These things are generally
concerned with projects or people or both essential
to the University's continued quest to be of greater serv-
ice and for ever increasing excellence in education.
Allocations of Annual Giving Funds are directed to help
support such "Margin for Excellence" projects as the
Public Service Internships, special collections for the Li-
brary, the Fine Arts Collection, Campus Beautification
Projects, Athletics, and Faculty Awards for Excellence,
among other activities.
The records of the 51 ,000 member Alumni Association
are maintained in the Office of Alumni Relations. During
the current year these records were placed on a data pro-
cessing tape system.
It is impossible in this space to relate all the activities of
the Alumni Association. It is clear, however, that our work
has just begun. With your support, the Association will
continue to serve The University of Connecticut and the
people of the State of Connecticut.
-^iS^
CONNECTICUT DAILY CAMPUS
The following pages are a tribute
to those students who have sweated,
slaved, or breezed through four
years at the University of Connecti-
cut. We have chosen to present our
bit of memorabilia as a special edi-
tion of the Connecticut Daily Cam-
pus which, for many students during
their four years, has served as the
sole link between academia and the
"real world." (often described as
"that place way out there").
atttpuB
Serving Storrs Since 1 896
STORRS, CONNECTICUT
parity raid
Oct. 18,1971
A significant number of larcenieswere
reported thisweekend. The missing merchan-
dise was braSi panties and pantyhose. Five
hundred male students marched across the
UConn campusto South Campusearly Fri-
day morning and demanded underwear.
Dean Manning later commented that it took
place "in the classictradition ofold collegiate
panty raids:"
nixon announces
cease-fire
Jan. 24,1973
by Mark Fisher
President Richard M. Nixoiv announced
last night that an agreement hasbeen reached
with Nforth Vietnam to end the Vietnam
War:, '
fssoproposal
is approved
by 76 percent
Mar. 23,1973
More than 76 per cent of those who voted
in yesterday's campus-wide referendum on
whether the proposed Federation of Students
and Service Organizationsshould be adopted
asthe newstudent government at the Univer-
sity ofConnecticut favored the adoption.
asg president resigns in protest
Nov. 30,1972
by Mark Fisher
Associated Student Government (ASG) President David
Kaplan announced hisresignation during last night'sStudent
Senate meeting. He resigned in protest of what he called "the
complete mockery the CDC (Connecticut Daily Campus) has
made of public opinion" and "the elitist, closed group of stu-
dentschosen to redraft student government."
"I am resigning in protest of the proposed FSSO, (Federa-
tion of Studentsand Service Organizations), that to me repre-
sent fascism in structure and powerlessnessin action, " he said.
"I am resigning in hopesthat if my name wasthe rallying
point of student disinterest and apathy, maybe some of the
general student apathy will d, ie with me."
Kaplan, admitting that the ASG had become "crippled, crit-
ically injured, and could be led no further, " pleaded with other
ASG membersto resign with him in order to revivify student
government without tainting government proposalswith ASG
sponsorship.
Editor'snote: It wasrecently discovered in the UConn ar-
chivesand the now-defunct constitution of the ASG, a much
over-looked bylawrequiring either A) Impeachment proceed-
ingsto be carried out annually or B) In lieuthereof, the volun-
tary resignation ofthe chief executive, eg. President, Chief
Poncho, Dictator, or Number One Son.
Serv ing Storrs Since 1 896
the dream is over-
Mar. 16.1971
Once upon a time there wasa dream. A dream that if you
took four yearsof your life and spent them behind a set of Ivy
wallsyou would emerge and be greeted by a job and all the
security promised a college graduate.
The dream also said that youwould be able to get soriie kind
ofclean non-manual labor for work. Over the years, youcould
acquire a small belly which youmight try and work off mow-
ing the lawn of your split level house. And, if anything went
wrong, youcould alwayscall the repairman, even though they
cost so much, but the lifestyle promised security and that was
most important.
Unfortunately, something went wrong and the market for
jobs, what there isof it, isglutted by all those with the same
dream. In our age oftechnology feware prepared to touch life
with their hands. They do not understand the construction of a
house, the mechanicsof an auto engine or the basicsof a heat-
ing system.
The graduate isnowfaced with a situation that isgoing to
force him to find alternative waysof making a living. Many
have already started, forming small businessesor finding a job
where they have to work with their handsrather than their
heads.
The high degree of specialization in our economy hasleft
many with little for security.
lettersto theedi tor
Vi rgi ni a vi rgi n
Nov. 22,1972 ' .
To the Editor:
I have a niece attending your
school. I shall not reveal her name
for fear she will be scoffed at, called
Priscilla Prude and Virginia Virgin
and other such appellations.
However, she isone of the for-
tunate girls. She isimmune to this
hideousage and itsscarlet values.
Her long brown limbs and tender
bosom will not be despoiled by
some lusting lout out for a cheap
nighfsadventure.
But what sort of age isthisthat
permitsinstitutionsof higher learn-
ing to passout birth control pills
willy nilly, that allowsstudentsto
cohabit without penalty?
Howlong can our debaunched
society go on ignoring the massdis-
tribution of films like Marjoe,
pocket bookslike The Story of O,
or more recently DoHnsky'sMind
One. Howlong can obnoxiousdisc
jockeyscontinue to play recordings
extolling drugsand urging girlsto
"bang the whole gang."
Young people, I ask you to take
a moment! Pause, reconsider your
peril. Save yourselves. Turn your
backson the licentiousnessaround
you.
And dear editor I ask you, please
print my letter. Allowone shaft of
sunlight to pierce the gloom of "the
stone zone."
Sincerely,
J.Arthur Gorham III
LosAngeles
Dec.5,1972
david is saved
To the Editor:
Father Millstein, editor of
the Daily Campus I am writing
to younowbecause I need your
forgiveness. You are the true
source. I haysread your edito-
rialsand realize it isthrough
you and your thought that I
will find the way. I read your
editorial last Friday and I now
see the truth in it. I have been
misled asyou say. I have gone
astray. I should never have
criticized those I felt were^
wrong nor should I have ever
hoped to make thingsbetter.
I first realized your special
power, your special gift from
above, when youso righteously
demanded in aii editorial that
there be no rain that particular
weekend. And it wasso. And
the football game went on,
thanksto youFather Millstein.
I have been a fool not to be-
lieve your every printed word. I
knowI have changed though. I
shall read the Daily Campus as
gospel every morning. I shall
make no waves. With your
guidance, I knowI can still be
saved.
Sincerely (asare
all my other letters
youwon't print),
David Kaplan
bill X. Carlson lives on
Mar. 14,1972
by Barry Berman and
William Faraclas
In the beginning God created Bill
Faraclas, Barry Berman, and some oth-
ers. He (lid hot create Bill Carlson. Bill
Carlson wascreated Bill Faraclas, Bar-
ry Berman and some others.
However, thismyth isexcusable since
neither did God create the Associated
Student Government. Although one
time the ASG did exist asa workable
entity, it isnot a viable form of govern-
ment at thistime, ergo for all practical
purposeswe have senators, presidents,
meetings, even minutesexplaining the
folly, but no government.
In contempt of thishoax we created a
counter hoax. Studentsfor Carlson,
Commutersfor Carlson, Alumni Quad-
rangle for Carlson, were formed to send
an apparently ideal candidate to the of-
fice of ASG President.
We brought Bill into the publicarena
with a letter to the Editor of the I>a/ / >'
Campus siaying, "Who isBill Carlson?"
and "Why hashe dominated student
attention for the past fewdays?" People
began to believe that Bill Carlson had
been dominating student attention for
the fewdaysprior.
By word-of-mouth, people became
aware ofthe amazing character and his-
tory of our hero. Singlehandedly, Bill
Carlson had brought the gynecology
department to the UConn Health Cen-
ter (thusthe slogan: "A Pill in the
Morning isa Vote for Bill Carlson");
he had raised money for the Campus
Community Carnival; he had given
Senator Alan Barth the idea for a twen-
ty-four hour student union; he lobbied
in Washington, DC during the
1970 Student Strike; and currently he
waswinning the battle for lowering the
age of liiajoity in Connecticut to 18
years, thusmaking UConn a "wet"
campus. In short, he wasthe perfect
candidate.
Editor'sNote:
Mr. Carlson is not available for
comment at thistime ashe isbeing held
prisoner in the Bolivian rain forest.
ttli^Editol
" Well ^BJjllfi^ljsft^gain^ doing their
thing distsibuting crap! They're still
trying to "*olish JROtC" aUhouglp
they-still haven't exjplained adequately
to nwNwhjiaie United Statesdoesn't;
need an Arj^ or an Air Forcej)r if it
, , ^ ||l g|||)||iie4il l l RM R*if f l ^ ^
-officersget an education at the Univer-
sity of Connecticut. , ; " "i,
"Supjport the striking GM workers."'
Can joij imagirie whaUwoufd happen if
thos/ 5 WWC'Veteran workersever met
up.j(io&.e'w^itfi a btin'ch of radical;
SDSers? So howdo thy propose to
"^support their loving wor^fers?-r. .'that's
right.- screwthe'student^by not per-
. minting them tojntejviewjjie-^neral
Mot#s.r^gentat|fe:; ; " '-"'--^^
was
going'to^beTarrested'for.tiispolitical
views;he-ywEWiid; have Ifcen arrgsteti and
locked up long Igo, Sober is-aceused of
inciting arfiot anjd'.desVnjying ihe tax-
payers'prppert^"
The "attacks" on theBladrPanther
garty are "racist" in the same way as
the FBI raidsOTi, the Minutemen and
the Klu-Kluskofs. Toa^-lByiv of the
worrd'"s problems'ar-e^xaused by the
promotersof hate and violence.
TTiig lettecwpn't change tilingsat all.
SDS will have their demonstration and
inundate the S.U. Mall with verbal
horse-crap .. . like I said that'stheir
thing. "*
Sincerely,
.i Jack A. TaAert
Nvv. 10,1970
To the Editor: , - . _
'This^s3ir|c;ted towardsThe Campuseditor and anyone el^ who
hasbeen lecl to ^diys..that politically OTientatedjjeople have Iqsl "''
their grasp onto'themeahing oflife. ^. ,
flowcome-nobody asked me about the weather? I tell it like this:
dig that beauti'fol sky andfeed tjiy brpthdrsand sisters, wiSnder m a
tlowered field and cut off the fist that beatson you. Hold child close <
'^in your arms*and.take to the streetsto fight for youffitliHanitx, write
love poems aijd bittex, warnings, .make l&ve and off the pigs, '
Ideology? Hell no. Ideblogy that serves the pbeple, hell yes!* .
Hypocrisy? Don't lay that rajy on^me. Life isgood, bad, happy, mad
ashell, beauty and the beast -standing side by side each emerging as
itsown circumstagcei warrant. A tirne for love, a time for hate. Can"
youDIG that????? - -" ^-. .- "* -^j
High or low, big or* small, there will alwaysbe those Wbo have
trouble|jM^^g their scene. For them there are those whaan do
it. I da^^^^HyM||ta|||||el tt.but just can't get it out to the people
OUt^^^^^^^^^^^^Etosether for once and for allT
Peggy \^t*i|L^
tentire denied meskill defends tuition
Mar. 28,1973
by Mark Franklin
Marcia Liebefman, assistant profes-
sor of English, said she wasofficially
notified Tuesday that the Board of
Trusteeshad voted to deny her applica-
tion for tenure.
Lieberman said she is considering
"grievance procedures" against the de-
cision but said she would "wait for
answersfrom Acting President Edward
V. Gant and membersof the Board of
Trusteesto lettersI have sent."
A university spokesman said, "We
do not comment ever on those who are
denied tenure." The spokesman said
the reason for the university'ssecrecy
wasthat "oftentimespeople are embar-
rassed by tenure decisions."
Gail A. Shea, assistant provost, said
she "finds the situation very
disturbing."
Lieberman earlier indicated she
might appeal the decision, possibility to
the courts. -
Lieberman'stenure case hasbeen one
of the causesof a dispute between the
UConn administration and some
UConn feminists. "Reinstatement of
Marcia Lieberman with promotion and
tenure" wasthe first demand of an ulti-
matum given to Gant when about 50
demonstrators broke up a meeting in
hisoffice on Feb. 19 and gave him the
demands. It wasalso a major demand
issued during the eight hour occupation
of GuUey Hall on Feb. 20 by 21 demon-
strators, and during the Feb. 21 demon-
stration outside GuUey Hall that wais
attended by some 120 persons.
Mar. 25,1971
By THOMA S J. MESKILL
Governor, State ofConnecticut
Special to The Campus
One of the rallying criesof the
younger generation, and one that I
endorse wholeheartedly is"Tell it like it
' is ." . ' , . ...' ^ '
I appreciate the opportunity to do
just that with regard to my tuition pro-
posal. I hope UConn students, particu-
larly those who have rejected my pro-
posal out of hand, without ever really
studying or understanding it will take
the fewminutesrequired to read this
explanation through to itsconclusion.
Essentially, my proposal isbased on
the conviction that Connecticut'sal-
ready overburdened taxpayers should
not be forced to pay the cost of college
educationsfor those who can comfor-
tably afford to meet such costs
themselves.
Connecticut is presently in the
throesof itsworst financial crisis. The
state isleaving a $250 million trail of
red ink asit dragsitself from the cur-
rent budget period.
This deficit situation will obviously
have a tremendouseffect on every state
endeavor, including education efforts.
In order to insure that quality educa-
tion continuesin all of our institutions
of higher learning, I have found it nec-
essary to propose increasesin tuition at
the state colleges, conimunity colleges,
technical colleges, and for the first time,
tuition at the University of
Connecticut.
I was faced with the question
should we cut back on newenrollments
and newprogramsat these institution,
or should we raise or begin a newtui-
tion so that present and newservices
can be offered? I chose the latter be^
cause of my personal commitment to
quality education in thisstate.
The tuitionswhich I propose would
generate approximately $36 million in
additional revenue for Connecticut. A
total of $18 million, or half of thisreve-
nue would be used to finance and devel-
op an entirely newscholarship fund for
needy students. Any student who claims
that my proposal will force him to leave
school just doesn't understand my pro-
posal. No student would be denied the
right to attend an institution Of higher
education because he could not afford
thecost.
Again, thank you for giving me the
opportunity to discuss my tuition
proposals.
doneiko cleared of misuse of funds
Mar. 18,1971 - -
By MA RYJA NE MUSSELMA N
The Student Senate voted 5 to 4 last
night to acquit ASG President Judy
Doneiko, charged with misuse of funds.
The chargesarose after MissDonei-
ko attended a convention asPresident
of the ASG last September and
"charged her registration and transpor-
tation expensesto her President'sCon-
tingency Fund budget." The impeach-
ment proceedingswere begun by Sena-
torswho alleged that she had been spe^
cifically informed not to use these funds
for convention expenses.
Sherman said that MissDoneiko had
not acted, ascharged, "in flagrant vio-
lation" of the ASG Constitution. He
said that she wasbeing tried for violat-
ing the Finance Policy of the Senate,
which he contendsis "not a related
document under the circumstances of
impeachment."
He stressed that the nature of a con-
tingency fund leavesthe individual ex-
pendituresof fundsup to the discretion
of the executive.
( i
new majority'' livens up local ba^^
oaas accuses uconn ofracism
Feb. 2,1973
by Deb Noyd
The UConn Organization of Afro-
American Students(OAAS) accused
the University of racism in a public
statement focusing on the findingsof a
report on employment discrimination
here, issued by the U.S. Department of
Health, Education and Welfare
(HEW);
OAAS said that findings showing
only two per cent of-the University
employesare from minority groups"is
indeed ample groundsto accuse the
University of racism."
OAAS demanded a "detailed docu-
ment from Acting President Edward V.
Gant stating exactly what stepshave
been taken and are being taken to erad-
icate the present conditionsof discrimi-
nation at thisUniversity.
According to an OAAS spokesman.
"The HEW report wasconclusive and
suggestsa radical departure in employ-
ment practices."
Oct,ll.I972
by Regina A . Ferrara .
One of these daysif you decide to
drop in at either Spire's, Rapp's, the
Barn Or even Shaboo, you'll notice that
there are quite a few younger faces
there. No, it'snot because you're get-
ting older, it'sbecause they're getting
younger. The drinking age waslowered
last weekend nationwide giving 18 year
oldsthe right to drink. Not only can 18
year oldsdrink, they can also enter into
binding contracts, own property, and
vote, among other rights.
Needlessto say, many different peo-
ple are looking at the situation in many
different ways. Individualswho are 21
and older have also been affected by the
lowering of the drinking age. Before the
lawwaspassed many were asked for 21
I.D.'s; that wasalright . . . but now
many that are over twenty-one are
being asked for I.D.'sto prove that they
are over 18 .
Thisfact hasirritated more than one
person I have talked to. A senior (over
21) related thisincident: "I went to Spi-
ro'swith a couple of my buddies, one
was27 with a wife and a child, and we
were asked for proof for 18 !" He had a
similar experience trying to buy a six-
pack in the Shdp-rite in Willimantic,
when thisconversation ensued.
. Checkout: "Youeighteen?"
21 year old: "No, " A funny look giv-
en by the checkout girl, "I'm twenty-
one."
Checkout: "Well then I guessit's
alright."
court action delays
food service transfer
Jan. 17,1973
by Mark Fisher
Although UConn's Trustees
voted 7-4 last Dec. 15 to subcon-
tract University operated food
servicesto a private firm, legal
action by state employees' unions
hasdelayed the changeover from
state to private operation.
The California-based Saga
Corporation, which wasawarded
the food service contract by the
trustees, wasoriginally scheduled
to take over on Jan. 15. However,
a temporary injunction halting the
transfer wasissued by State Su-
preme Court Justice Leo Parskey
until he can hear a suit brought by
the Connecticut State Employees
Association (CSEA) against the
Board ofTrustees.
vegetarians get
meal plans
Oct. II. 1972
The following isa statement from
the UConn Division of Housing and
Food Servicesconcerning vegetarian
dorms:
"If you wish to participate in the
vegetarian meal plan, please sign up
in Room 1 -Hall Dorm by Thurs-
day, October 12, 1972. We recognize
that the notice time isshot but we
are attempting to implement the
plan asquickly aspossible.
nopartitions
Oct. 13,1971
Because of a sheet metal workersstrike, the bathroomsin Hale
and Ellsworth have no partitions between the toilets. At first
embarrassed, the residentshave learned to relax and enjoy the
view. With the strike ending two weeksago, it ishoped partitions
will soon be installed. See story page 5.
co-ed move
stirs mixed reaction
Nov.l-3.1972
by Pete Lord
In the past, Northwest Quadrangle (the old fraternity quad.) hasbeen
called everything from a "zoo" to "the only place on campuswhere there's
some fun On weekends." It dependson your point ofview.
Next year, though, the stereotypes will have to change. Northwest
Quadrangle isgoing coed.
The coed, later identified asHellen Bedd, denied any (carnal) knowl-
edge ofthe affair.
While some studentsdrool over the move to coed liv-
ing, othersjust brush it off.
university senate
adopts new calendar
May5,197i
ByPEGGYMCCA RTHY
A fall semester beginning after Labor Day and
ending before Christmaswill be a reality at UConn
in 1972, according to the University Senate which
adopted the Growth and Development Gommittee's
report on calendar revision at itsmeeting Monday.
The newcalendar, containing 13 monthswasex-
plained by Prov. Gant. "The 13th month will give us
time to organize registration in a way which ismuch
more meaningful to the student body." The name of
the 13th month ^ Gantuary.
' ^*2s'*'^i='"'
THE GRADUATES
Lennart Andre
Agricultural Economics
Lucille Baierwick
Horticulture
David Blacker
Natural Resource
Conservation
Roger Canfield
Natural Resource
Conservation
Kenneth Carpenter
Natural Resource
Conservation
Albert DeLuca
Agricultural Economics
Stanley Dynia
Aquatic Biology
John Fain
Environmental
Horticulture
COLLEGE OF
Alan Fish
Environmental
Horticulture
Thomas E. Francis
Natural Resource
Conservation
Elie Ganim
Ornamental Horticulture
Terese Holm
Food Science
Edgar Hurle
Natural Resource
Conservation
Craig Johnson
Natural Resource
Conservation
John Kehoe
Nursery Management
Laurie Elizabeth
Kirkpatrick
Animal Science
AGRICULTURE
Jean Kucia
Pre-Veterinary
Medicine
Thomas F. Ladny
Natural Resource
Conservation
Sandra Lander
Animal Science
David Linton
Pre-Veterinary Medicine
Gary Lull
Animal Science
George A. McCleary
General Horticulture
William McComb
Wildlife
Dawn McLevy
Animal Science
Eileen Meiseles
Nutritional Science
Peter Mendler
Nursery Management
Roland Nadeau
Nursery Management
Roberts. Nichols, Jr.
Plant Science
COLLEGE OF
Marc Paulhus
Animal Science
Lana Pryde
Pathobiology
Christine Reynolds
Animal Science
Eugene Sansone
Horticulture
Nancy Sawicky Marc Seleznow
Environmental
Horticulture
Thomas Sheldon
Animal Science
Clifford R. Smith
Agricultural Engineering
Sally L Smith
Nutritional Science
Mario Soussou
Agricultural Economics
Marcia Stygar
Animal Science
Gary Sullivan
Agricultural Engineering
AGRICULTURE
George Taylor
Nursery Management
Maria Tulman
Animal Science
Cindy Wolpin
General Agriculture
Karen Wolski
Animal Science
Deborah Jane Yedziniak
Animal Husbandry
Michael Zaiewski
Nursery Management
Robert Zaicek
Agricultural Economics
Louis Zarrella
Animal Science
..,0^'
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Albert Acayan
Management Science
Michael Ahearn
General Business
Behshid Amini-rad
Accounting
David Antoniazzi
Finance
Kenneth Avena
General Business
Deborah Baker
General Business
Glenn Barlow
Marketing
Richard Bartholic
General Business
SCHOOL OF
Brian Bassaline
Marketing
Christina Beer
Business Administration
Thomas Berarducci
Industrial Administration
Michael Bielonko
Accounting
Morris Bilanceri Geraldine Blair
General Business
James Blair
Real Estate
Mario A. Blanca
Industrial Administration
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
James Boccuzzi
Finance
Gary Booker
Real Estate
Deborah Brady
General Business
Kevin Bransfield
Finance
Stanley Brenner
Accounting
Kenneth E. Brostek
Marketing
Thomas Brzezinski
Accounting
Michael Burnham
Business Administration
Paul Buzzelli
Accounting
Marcos Cabrera
Business Administration
Robert P. Callas
Marketing
Anthony T. Camarco
Finance
SCHOOL OF
Frank Cappabianca
Finance
Thomas Chymbor
Production Management
Richard Clapp
Marketing
Alan Cocconi
Marketing
Peter Cooper
Industrial Administration
Peter Csere Charles Cunniff
General Business
Michael Davignon
Accounting
Carmine DeStefano
General Business
John DiCioccio Jr.
Manpower Management
and Labor Relations
Thomas DiDio
industrial Administration
Charles DiMaria
Business Administration
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Thomas Doughtie
Industrial Administration
Thomas Downey
Marketing
Robert Duff
Marketing
Charles Eshbach
Marketing
Kenneth Pass
General Business
Patricia Patch
Marketing
William P. Pellows
General Business
Anthony Perro
Pinance
Raymond Perry
Marketing
John Fijal
Insurance
Joseph Pish
Accounting
Neal Pitzpatrick
Pinance
SCHOOL OF
Kent A. Freshour
Accounting
Cynthia Grant
Executive Office
Management
Howard Grant
Accounting
Beth Green lees
Executive Office
Management
Jason Griska
Accounting
Anthony Gugliotti
General Business
George S. Harrison Patrick Healey
Accounting
Breland Holley Gary Holmes Frederick Howe Paul Hoyt
Marketing Accounting Managerial
Behavior
Industrial Administration
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Donald Humphrey
General Business
Peter Huonker
General Business
Lauren Hurwit
General Business
Carl Iberger
Accounting
Kristin Ibsen
Accounting
Mary Anne Jackson
Accounting
Patricia Jordan
General Business
Dana Jositas
Finance
David Jositas
Finance
Dan Junior
Business Administration
Joel Katzman
Finance
John Kendall
Marketing
SCHOOL OF
Daniel Kentler
Finance
John C. Kittreli
Marketing
Robert Klein
General Business
John Kolaj
Business Administration
^^^
Thomas Koppermann
General Business
Claire Kostora
General Business
Thomas Kupfrian
Real Estate
Frederick Landwehr
Accounting
Thomas Larsen
General Business
Robert LaSaracina
Accounting
Terry Lashin
Business Administration
Lester D. LaShombe Jr.
Accounting
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Philip Lebov
General Business
Jefferey Lejfer
Finance
David G. Lenihan
General Business
Albert D. Lenkiewicz
Marketing
Vincent LeRoy
Insurance
Arthur Levy Dennis Littiefieid
Management Science
Marjorie Loomer
Marketing
Luther S.McBride 1 1 1
John E. Makowski James Maroney
Jane Marrone
Accounting
Marketing Finance Executive Office
Administration
SCHOOL OF
Natale Messina
Accounting
Brian Meyer
Accounting
Cynthia Meyer
Marketing
Arthur Miller
General Business
Glenn Mitchell
Finance
Walter R. Moffitt
Insurance
Donald Mondani
Accounting
J '-'/' V--
tJi- ""
V^ "^ -
v ^ ' **: - : : :
** *"
- - , *' - ""7 '
Robert Montrose
Insurance
WilliamJ. Monty
Management Science
Nick Morizio
Real Estate
Andrea Mozur
Management Science
John Nejfelt
industrial Administration
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Richard J. Nemetz
General Business
Richard Norcross
General Business
David Norrie
Marketing
David Nunes
Finance
Patrick O'Connor
Finance
Robert Ohrt
Accounting
Dennis Page
General Business
Brian J. Paradee
Finance
Richard Pentore
General Business
Barry Peterson
Marketing
Ellery Plotkin
Accounting
Celeste Poulin
General Business
SCHOOL OF
Theodore Powaleny
Business Administration
Donna Pranka
Accounting
Francine Przybysz
Executive Office
Administration
Rehato Lourenco
Quiterio
Accounting
Michael Raflowitz
Marketing
Wendy Reeves
Accounting
Peter Rice
Industrial Administration
Paul Rieur
Finance
Jchard Rizzi Stephen Russo Claudia St. Hilaire Bruce Salzinger
Marketing Manpower Mangement & Executive Office Genera! Business
Labor Relations Administration
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Karen Sanders
Accounting
Samuel J. Saverine
Accounting
Carl Sawyer
Accounting
Walter Schleicher
Finance
Suzanne Schrang
Finance
Gregory D. Schroen
Finance
Thomas Serricchio
Marketing
Lawrence G. Siedman
Accounting
Anthony Smeriglio
Accounting
Daniel Socci
Marketing
Frank]. Socha
General Business
Gregory Starr
Accounting
SCHOOL OF
Wayne Staschke
General Business
James Strong
Management Science
Thomas Sturgess
Finance
Kevin Sullivan
Industrial Administration
Robert Patrick Sullivan
Finance Accounting
Frank Swigut
Marketing
Karen Szablowski
General Business
Wayne Tessmann
General Business
James S.Thibeault
Production Management
Margaret Tomey
General Business
TomorrTosun
Marketing
Nick Vitti
Accounting
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Thomas Wallace Jr.
Risk & Insurance
Gregory Wegh
Production Management
Howard Weinstein
Accounting
Carol Wensley
Accounting
iSttiiiwr*!
J. Cornel West
Insurance
Charles Whitehead
Marketing
Frank M. Whitman
Accounting
Janis Wiedenheft
Real Estate
Anne Wischnia
Accounting
Lawrence R. Zarrella
General Business
Robert Zigmond
General Business
IgT'
Michael Zubretsky
Marketing
i^ ^
^r^l
- , f >
>H.
Ti.
James Aleksunes
English
Louis Alien
Physical Education
Kathryn Anasovich
Elennentary Education
iilUiiiJ!ij;i!;ji;;;
Barbara Anderson
Home Economics
Dianne Anderson
Physical Education
Karen Anderson
Nursery Kindergarten
Kathleen Anton
Elementary Education
Edward Argenta
Biology
SCHOOL OF
Lillian Aurigemma
Elementary Education
Marcy Banisky
Elementary Education
Joan Barbarito
Elementary Education
Sharon Barlow
Elementary Education
William R. Bartholic
Rehabilitation Services
Donna Barton
Business Education
Linda Bates
Special Education
Andrea Belanger
Nursery/Kindergarten
EDUCATION
Eleanor Bessette
Math
Cynthia Anne Blace
Physical Education
Debra Bogatz
Elementary Education
Lawrence Bojarski
Secondary Education
Rosemary Bowler
Elementary Education
Patricia Brennan
Child Development and
Family Relations
Mary Ellen Broderick
Elementary Education
Francis Brough
Physical Education
Janet Brumfield
Music
Linda Burriesci
Education
Barbara Cadwalader
English
Donna Camilleri
Physical Education
SCHOOL OF
Jaye P. Cammisa
Home Economics
Donald Carusello
English
Maureen Casey
Math
David Caufield
English
Joanne Cerino
Nursery/Kindergarten
Arlene B. Cheney
Physical Education
Susan Chipperini
Elementary Education
Candice Ciarcia
English
Catherine A. Ciarfella
Elementary Education
Ellen Cohen
Music
Victoria M. Curran
History/Sociology
Debra Dandurand
English
EDUCATION
Sandra D'Angelo
Music
Debby Dannenberg
Elementary Education
Alan Davis
Education
Lynda Dean
Elementary Education
Fiorella DiFelice
Elementary Education
Jacqueline Dion
Elementary Education
Jane Dombrowski
Elementary Education
Priscilla Donley
Special Education
Danielle Driscoll
Education
Madonna Dukeley
Elementary Education
Sue Epstein
Nursery/Kindergarten
Susan Pagan
English
SCHOOL OF
Bonnie Feingold
Elementary Education
Marylou Fernandes
Education
Maureen Fisk
Child Development
Elizabeth Flanagan
Elementary Education
Christine Fromme
Music
Thomas Garry
English
Sharon Georgi
English
Kathy Gesek
Physical Education
Gerri Ann Goldberg
English
Terri Sue Goldberg
English
Sharron Goosman
Nursery/Kindergarten
Wendy P. Goren
Elementary Education
EDUCATION
ife^- -.:;.
Ellen Grabarek
Physical Education
Lynnell Green
Spanish
Susan Grise
Spanish
Maureen Gritz
Biology
Lynda E. Guevremont
Elementary Education
Rose Guglielmo
Math
Mary Hall
History
Nancy Hall
Physical Education
Dudley Hamlin
Music
June E. Hardy
English
Faith Harvey
Education
Anne Heliotis
English
SCHOOL OF
Diane F. Horan
Elementary Education
John Hornyacic
Elementary Education
Jack Huber
Biology
Sharon Johnson
English
Diane Kagan
Nursery/Kindergarten
Carol Kana
Home Economics
Franklin Kaunitz
Music
Robert Kilmurray
History
Dieter Kita
Chemistry
Linda Kopcinski
French
Deborah Kraut
English
Barry M. Krom
Special Education
EDUCATION
Maryann Jane Kuchy
Home Economics
Margaret Kucz
Elementary Education
Carol Ann Labutis
Math
Elizabeth LaFramboise
Music
' ^^Wi mx .-^
Jamie Lang
Elementary Education
Terese Lettiero
Math
Maureen Liske
French
Lorraine Lucia
Home Economics
Catherine McCusker
Math
Nancy Mack
Child Development and
Family Relations
Deborah Mackey
Physical Education
Joseph Marashio
Physical Education
SCHOOL OF
Loreen Marcarelli
Nursery/Kindergarten
Frances Marconi
Math
Pamela Marrotte
Elementary Education
Maureen Martino
Elementary Education
Mary Jane Mathieu
Home Economics
Daniel May
Physical Education
Joanne Messer
Social Studies
Caroline Meyer
Music
Barbara Miller
Math
James Mirakian
Music
Harriet Molod
Social Studies
Cathy M. Morelli
English
EDUCATION
Vicki E. Morgenstern
Special Education
Christine Moulton
Elementary Education
Bonnie J. Murray
Math
Michele Mursko '
Nursery/Kindergarten
Dessi J. Nesmith Jr.
Elementary Education
Donald Nicholson
Physical Education
Donna L. Nicholson
Physical Education
Douglas Niedzwecki
Education
Wendy Novak
Elementary Education
Elaine Nyarady
Math
Catherine O'Brien
Nursery/Kindergarten
Mercedes O'Donohue
French
SCHOOL OF
Jane Ogorzaiek
Home Economics
Sandra Olderman
English
Kenneth Olesnevich
Recreational Services
Judith Olschefski
Elementary Education
Arlene Olson
Physical Education
Cathleen R. Orr
Physical Education
Kathleen Owens
Political Science History
Elaine Palermo
Special Education
Debra K. Palmer
Education
Karen Parsons
Family Life
Margaret Aldrich
Partridge
Special Education
Carolyn Peterson
Elementary Education
EDUCATION
Joan Pizzoferrato
Elementary Education
Marie Ann Ponzillo
Home Economics
Claudia Preye
Elementary Education
Elizabeth Price
Elementary Education
Michelle Puder
Special Education
Mary Ellen Reale
Elementary Education
Patricia T. Reilly
Special Education
Rinda Reiss
Recreational Services
Jan Richards
English
Dale A. Riedinger
Elementary Education
David Ritchie
Physical Education
Jeannette C. Rohn
Education
SCHOOL OF
Sarah j. Roohr
Health Education
Cynthia Rose
Elementary Education
Robin Rosen
Health Education
William Ruocchio
Education
Donna Rutland
Health Education
Laurie Ann Salva
Biology
Barbara Sanders
Child Development
Rita Sarnowski
Social Studies
William Scarlata
Math
Lynn Scott
Nursery/Kindergarten
Patricia Scott
Elementary Education
Stephanie Shute
English
EDUCATION
Janet Sikorski
Math
Blanche Marie Somma
Elementary Education
David Sorrell
Physical Education
Steve Stavrou
Physical Education
Barbara Stearns
Elementary Education
Brenda L. Stigall
Math
Brenda Surks
Elementary Education
Thomas Taft
Math
George Tuttle
Education
Donna Ursone
Elementary Education
Russell Valvo
Physical Education
Leslie Walker
Special Education
SCHOOL OF
Marie Walla
Home Economics
iris Wallock
Elementary Education
Lesley Weiner
Math
Elizabeth Weston
Elementary Education
m \
Mary Ann White
Social Studies
Carol Woitke
Home Economics
Barry Yearwood
English
Joanne Zimmer
Recreational Services
Myra Zuar
Special Education
EDUCATION
Richard Albani
Civil Engineering
Joseph T. Badyrka
Chemical Engineering
John Barchewski
Chemical Engineering
George William Benedetti
Civil Engineering
Michael Benoit
Civil Engineering
John Best
Electrical Engineering
Allen Boyce
Computer Science
Ernest Brand!
Civil Engineering
SCHOOL OF
Anthony Caraglio
Mechanical Engineering
Edward Chacho
Engineering
Gary Cholakian
Electrical Engineering
WilliamColonis
Chemical Engineering
Richard Dappen
Civil Engineering
Gerald DeGaetano
Chemical Engineering
Norman P. DeLeon
Civil Engineering
Gerald Dembiczak
Civil Engineering
ENGINEERING
Howard DeMonte
Civil Engineering
David DiCamillo
Chemical Engineering
Anthony William DiSalvo
Civil Engineering
Robert Eber
Mechanical Engineering
James Eschert
Civil Engineering
James Francoline
Chemical Engineering
Daniel Garaffa
Computer Science
Paul E. Gosselin Jr.
Civil Engineering
Structures
Ronda Greene
Computer Science
Gary Guasco
Mechanical Engineering
Ken Harrison
Civil Engineering
Richard Hawley
Mechanical Engineering
SCHOOL OF
Anton Hebenstreit
Electrical Engineering
Richard W. Howard Jr.
Civil Engineering
John Humeston
Civil Engineering
Peter A. Johnson
Civil Engineering
Richard Johnson
Structures
Eugene Kazan
Electrical Engineering
Jeffrey Keefe
Civil Engineering
Kevin Keegan
Electrical Engineering
Kenneth Klonoski
Electrical Engineering
David Knowles
Civil Engineering
Swavomir Kosak
Computer Science
Dean Kraska
Civil Engineering
ENGINEERING
Edward J. Krasnicki
Mechanical Engineering
Peter Krusiewiez
Engineering
Richard Kubica
Computer Science
Edward Kunay
Electrical Engineering
Duane Labreche
Civil Engineering
David Layman
Civil Engineering
Steve Lozyniak
Civil Engineering
CarlineLutynski
Civil Engineering
Structures
John W. Marciniec
Electrical Engineering
David Mierzejewski
Civil Engineering
John Edward Mitchell Jr.
Mechanical Engineering
Robert E. Narus
Civil Engineering
SCHOOL OF
Theodore S. Nordmark
Civil Engineering
Steve Paquette
Civil Engineering
General Business
Robert Payne
Mechanical Engineering
John Pennell
Electrical Engineering
Leroy Puffer
Electrical Engineering
James Ray
Computer Science
Richard A. Raymond
Civil Engineering
William Raymond
Electrical Engineering
Wiifried Riesterer
Civil Engineering
Charles J. Rooney
Civil Engineering
Peter J. Rubino
Civil Engineering
William Salwocki
Civil Engineering
ENGINEERING
William Schade
Mechanical Engineering
Mark Schneider
Civil Engineering
Richard C. Shea
Electrical Engineering
Paul Sinisgalli
Civil Engineering
Robert J. Sokolowski
Civil Engineering
George Adam Stein
Civil Engineering
Richard Szewczak
Structures
Hugh Tansey
Mechanical Engineering
Richard Thibeault
Electrical Engineering
Paul S. Vaughan
Mechanical Engineering
David Zavednak
Electrical Engineering
Gad Zooks
Engineering
Ellen Adelson
Graphic Design
Joan Baffo
Music
James Battle
Painting
Sharon Block
Drama
Lynn Marie Clark
Sculpture
Susan Cooke
Music
Kathryn Cotnoir
Printmaking
Gail Delaney
Painting
SCHOOL OF
Ronald Goulet
Drama
Doris Holz
Music
Diane Kapral
Painting
Robin Konovitch
Art
Kevin R. Leonard
Dramatic Arts
Sharon McKinley
Music
Richard Mawhinney
Graphic Design
Melissa Meredith
Mendall
Art
FINE ARTS
Arthur Morenz
Art
Paul O'Connell
Music
Leonardo Pieterse
Painting
John Storta
Sculpture
Debra Anderson
Child Development
and Family Relations
Susan Avery
Home Economics
Linda Beauregard
Child Development
^:u
Sue Blanchette
Child Development
and Family Relations
Katherine Busick
Clothing/Textiles
Judith B. Chymbor
Child Development
and Family Relations
Barbara Coleman
Fashion Design
Margaret Copeman
Clothing/Textiles
Interior Design
SCHOOL OF
Ronald D'Andrea
Child Development
and Family Relations
John Dandrow
Child Development
and Family Relations
Suzanne David
Home Economics
Deborah DeSantis
Interior Design
nita Deskus David Doiron Catherine Dougal Diane Dougall
Retailing Family Economics Clothing/Textiles Child Development
and Management Interior Design
HOME ECONOMICS
mB
Teresa Drew
Child Development
and Family Relations
Kathleen Enos
Child Development
and Family Relations
Judith Erwin
Child Development
and Family Relations
Mary Ann Gallagher
Child Development
and Family Relations
Margaret Gillen
Clothing/Textiles
Jennifer Gittelman
Child Development
and Family Relations
Miriam Radville Goldberg
Child Development
and Family Relations
Patricia Noel Grandieri
Art
Marjorie Gregory
Foods and Nutrition
Maryann Greos
Child Development
Lynda Griffin
Child Development
and Family Relations
Patricia Grondin
Child Development
and Family Relations
SCHOOL OF
Eugenia Harmon
Merchandising
Patricia Ann Harris
Child Development
and Family Relations
Nancy Hein
Child Development
and Family Relations
Esther Heifer
Child Development
and Family Relations
Juanita Jackson
Child Development
and Family Relations
Judy Kanachovski
Child Development
and Family Relations
Colleen Kilcoyne
Child Development
and Family Relations
Judith Koncki
Child Development
and Family Relations
Barbara Kotlarz
Child Development
and Family Relations
Lillian Licwinko
Foods and Nutrition
Dorothy Lustig
Child Development
and Family Relations
Kathleen McManus
Foods and Nutrition
HOME ECONOMICS
Martha Muldoon
Interior Design
Patricia O'Brien
Child Development
and Family Relations
Dorothy J. O'Reilly
Child Development
and Family Relations
Ruth Ouellette
Child Development
and Family Relations
Helen Pappas
Child Development
and Family Relations
Laurie Parnell
Apparel Merchandising
Deborah Peterson
Home Economics
Ellen Pollack
Child Development
and Family Relations
Nadine Prusik
Fashion Merchandising
Donna Rapan
Retailing
Susan Rashba
Child Development
and Family Relations
Regina Raugalis
Child Development
and Family Relations
SCHOOL OF
Karen Jane Ricciardi
Interior Design
Theresa Rossi
Child Development
and Family Relations
Elinor Minnick Sanford
Foods and Nutrition
Donna Santoro
Child Development
and Family Relations
Victoria Saunders
Fashion Merchandising
Gail Scanlon
Clothing/ Textiles
Interior Design
Sheryl Segal
Clothing/Textiles
Linda A. Silverman
Early Childhood
Education
Carol Stolper
Interior Design
Donna Tyrseck
Clothing/Textiles
Interior Design
Deborah Walsh
Apparel Design
Stephanie A. Wargo
Apparel Design
HOME ECONOMICS
Marcia Weaver
Clothing/Textiles
Interior Design
Linda Welch
Child Development
and Family Relations
Heather Wheeler
Apparel Design
Nancy Wickett
Apparel Design
Janie Williams
Clothing/Textiles
Interior Design
Bernadette Abramek
Sociology
Mary Ackerman
Psychology
Patricia Adamcek
Chemistry
Adrienne Aitro
Spanish
Linda Alesio
History
Keith Almeida
Biology
Claudette Anderson
Psychology
Lloyd Anderson
Economics
COLLEGE OF
Paul Anderson
Economics
Joseph P. Arnone
Political Science
Aram Parker Aslanian
Psychology
Kathleen Aspromonte
Sociology
Harvey Atwood
Biology
Susan D. Audietis
Sociology
Roberta Austin
Psychology
Gail Avena
English
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Bonnie Babrow
English
Darlene Bailey
Political Science
Aurora A. Baixauli Jennifer Baker
Anthropology
Matthew Baker
Biology
Mark Balas
Political Science
Constance Ballhaussen Lynne Bassett
Spanish
Daniel Bates
Political Science
Susan Beauchemin
Psychology
David Beaulac
Speech Pathology
John Behling
Psychology
COLLEGE OF
Richard Benesevich
English
Robert Benjamin
Psychology
Gregg Benson
Biology
tileen Berk
English
Allan Bernheimer
Sociology
David Bessette
Physics
Elizabeth Biase
Math
Imogene E. Bigley
Chemistry
Andrew Billings
Psychology
Aaron Birt
Political Science
Harry Lance DeBois Birt
English
Richard Bitwinski
Psychology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
^I^^^^^l
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Paul Blair
Economics
Jane Blakeslee
Biology
Nan Blanchard
English
James Boccuzzi
Biology
Patricia Bollettieri
Math
Gregory Bonetti
Psychology
Bruce Borders Peter Bortolotti
English
Thomas Boscarino
Political Science
Jennie Brantner
Psychology
Sherry Braun
Biology
Kenneth Brown
Geology
COLLEGE OF
^e^^. Z-
Robert Brown Vincent Bruzzese
Biology
Kerry Bryant
Biology
Michael Buchek
Biology
Bradford Buck
History
Robert Bundy
Biology
Barbara Burns
Psychology
Sondra Burrows
Sociology
Alan Burstein
Economics
Donald Buscarello
Geology
Thomas Cadden
Political Science
Dean Caloutas
Biology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Marcia B. Campbel
Psychology
DennisCantwell
Biology
PriscillaCard
French
Philip Carloni
Political Science
Nancy Carlson
Speech Pathology
Karen Carney
Speech Pathology
Patricia Carrier
Botany
LeeAnn Caroll
Math
Christine Case
Speech Pathology
and Audiology
Steven Casey
Political Science
Joseph A. Cassis III
i'sychology
iw^srvj ' t
Richard Castiglioni
Political Science
COLLEGE OF
Glenn Catherwood
Political Science
WilliamCerino Marjorie Rothschild
Chabot
Biology
Thomas J. Chapin
Cynthia Chapman
English
Helene T. Charlinski
English
Janet Chayes
Political Science
Lea Chayes
Zoology
Mitchell Chester Brian Chiffer
Math
Richard Chojnacki
Political Science
Victor Cifarelli
Math
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Raymond W. Cirmo
Speech
Ori Clare
Psychology
Fredric Clement
Biology
Nancy Grace Clifford
Psychology
Marilyn Colanero
Psychology
Patricia Coleman
Speech Pathology
Catherine Margaret
Collins
Biology
Michele Conlon
Biology
Kevin Connors
Political Science
James G. Conway
Spanish
Don Cook
English
Kevin P. Cook
Political Science
COLLEGE OF
Dale Corey
Mathematical Statistics
Diane Cotrone
Psychology
Charles Cowles John Creagan
History
David Creaser
Economics
David Crompton
Political Science
William Cullen
Biology
Janet Czepiel
Math
Laurie Dahlberg Jill Dakin Margaret Damon David Darigo
Speech Pathology Spanish French Math
and Audiology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Edward Dascanio
Sociology
Joao DaSilva Richard Davis
Psychology
Sheryl Ann Davis
Sociology
Richard Debowsky
Biology
Alan Decker
Microbiology
Frank DeLeo
Psychology
Linda Delfino
English
Pedro Francisco Delgado
Sociology
Robert DeMaio
Biology
Jon Demeter
Chemistry
COLLEGE OF
Joan Dempsey
Spanish
Emelia DeMusis
Biology
Joan Dengrove Arturo Diaz
John Dibble
History
Thomas Diesel
Political Science
Nancy DiLaurenzio
Chemistry
Mark DiLoreto
Biology
Laurie Jean Dittmann
Speech Pathology
and Audiology
Kathryn Dixon
Anthropology
Joe Donovan Lucille Douglas
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Robin Dowling
Sociology
David Dreifuss
History
Deidre DuBissette
Biology
Michael Duffy
Philosophy
Laura Dupnik
Biology
David E. Dwyer
History
Donna Dziobek
Math
Robert Edwards
Biology
Lynne Eigler
Physics
Robert Erickson
Physics
Stephen Erickson
Biology
Suzanne Evans
Biology
COLLEGE OF
Christine Faust
Psychology
Randolph V. Fenn
Psychology
Robert T. Ferrante
Biology
Thomas Ferrelli
Math
George Fikus
Math
Pamela Fitch
Chemistry
Stephen Fortes
English
Gary Fortier
Philip Franchini
Psychology
Joanne M. Frasca
History
Clarisse Frechette
Biology
William Frederick
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Helaine Friedlander
Sociology
Peter Gaccione
Math
Pamela Gadzik Thomas Gaffey
English
Sari Gaier
Speech Pathology
Dennis Gamache
Political Science
Jeffrey C. Gammons
Biology
Brian Garceau
Philosophy
Linda Gelinas
English
WilliamGentile
Economics
Donald Gergler
English
Martha Germanowicz
Spanish
COLLEGE OF
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Genette Gerow
Sociology
Francis Gibbons
Geography
Dennis Girard
Microbiology
Jeanette Girard
Microbiology
David Glasser
Political Science
Jefferson Glassover
Psychology
Kevin C. Glennon
History
AdeleGold
French
Joel Goldberg
Biology
Richard Goldstein
Biology
Brian H. Goode
Economics
Arnold Goodman
History
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Gwendolyn M. Goodwin
English
Richard Grandpre
Economics
Jeffrey Granoff
Biology
Nicholas Greci
Geology
Edward Greene Gayle Greene Charlene Gregory S. Roderick Griffith
Sociology Latin American
History
Sociology History
Robert Grossman
Psychology
Lee Grubelich Larry J. Guertin
Sociology
Jon Guglietta
Ecology
COLLEGE OF
Richard Gustafron
Biology
William H. Hamilton Jr.
English
Carol Jean Harlow
English
Leslie Harned
Sociology
pv _^
Linda Hart Dorothy Hass
Sociology
Richard H. Hass
Biology
Donna Hayden
Biology
James Heenehan
Political Science
Theodore Hendrickson
Communication/
Art
Nancy Hermanowski
English
Joanne Heslin
English
ARTS AND SCIENCES
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Terry Hodge
Social Psychology
Diane Hoethke
Sociology
Ellen M. Holowiak
Biology
Allen Howard
French
Karen Howard
Speech Pathology
David Roy Hewlett
Biology
E. J. Hoyer Jr.
Political Science
Robert Hughes
Anthropology
Steve Hulme
Biology
Michael Hunt
English
Susan Irvine
English
Peter Itzel
Economics
COLLEGE OF
Nancy Izbicki
English
Ann Rene Jacobs
French
Stephen Jasek
Biology
Peter Jasinski
History
Ann Jastemski
Communications
Jill Jensen
Sociology
Gail M. Jessel
English
David Johns
Biology
Claire Johnson Gary Johnson Kathryn Johnson John M.Johnston
History Political Science Psychology/
Pre-med
Psychology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
p
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Charles Kaiko
Speech
Michael Kaminski
Political Science
Robert Kania
Biology
John S. Karlak
Geography
Debra A. Karnasiewicz
Biology
Thomas Kascak
Biology
John Kasinskas
Biology
Clifford Katz
Biology
Gary King
Sociology
Thomas Klinka
Philosophy
Paula Knox Ronald Koczon
Political Science
COLLEGE OF
William Kohlhepp
Biology
Merryl Kohn
Biology
Donna Koniecki
Political Science
Paul Konkol
Anthropology
Cheryl Krajcik
English
Jeffrey Kramer
Sociology
Sandra Lea Kriniske
Math
Diane Kriss
Biology
James Krodel
Math
Brenda Krutolow
French
John F. Ksiazek
Biology
Karen Kushner
Economics
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Fred Kuzma
Economics
Kenneth Labak
History
John LaCourse
Biophysics
Sharon L. Laliberte
Math
Jennifer Lamb
Biological Sciences
Candace A. Langevin
English
Gary Langevin
Microbiology
Paul LaRue
English
John Lautier Alfred LaValley Gail M. Lawson Rosemary Leary
English/Industrial Psychology Philosophy English
Administration
COLLEGE OF
Sandra Lebovitz
Sociology
Marilyn Lebowitz
Political Science
Guy Lefor Kenith Leslie
Urban Studies
Jack Levine
Economics
Jonothan Levine
Biology
Robert Levine
English
Joel Lincoln
Biology
Thomas Lindberg
Anthropology
Gayle Linkletter
English
Gail A. Linskey
English
Gerald Liskom
History
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Salvatore Lombardi
Economics
Michael London
Speech
Ronald Lootsma
Philosophy
Ann Marie Lucas
Speech Pathology
Elizabeth Lytton
English
Anne E. McAloon
History
Kathleen McBrien
Speech Pathology
Claire McCarter
Psychology
Thomas McGuire
History
Deborah McKeivie
Sociology
Robert]. McKnight Jr.
Political Science
John W. McManus
Biology
COLLEGE OF
John Howard McWilliams
Anthropology
Christina Mackie
English
Brian Maher
Public Administration
Katherine M. Maher
Psychology
William Makucin
Math
Joseph M. Maltese
Psychology
Kathryn Manchuck
English
Armando Manduca
Math
Lynne Maquat
Biology
Nicholas Marchetti
Political Science
Martin Marcus
Psychology
Carol Martin
Psychology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Louisa Martin
English
Nicholas Matiuck
Biology
Kenneth W. Mayo
English
Janet L. Mazanowski
English
Peter Meccariello
French
Sarah Megson
Speech
Theodore Meleky
Math
Steven Meltzer
Biology
Gary Mena
Philosophy
Patricia Messina
Speech Pathology and
Audiology
Daniel Miezejeski Donald Mikolasy
Economics
COLLEGE OF
Robert Miles
Biology
James Millard
Math
Robert Miller
Biology
Cynthia Mills
History
Candice Minor
Psychology
Dale Misiek
Biological Sciences
Susan A. Moeller
Speech Pathology
Richard Molaskey
Thomas A. Molloy
English
Kari Molochko
Psychology
Maria Monaco
Political Science
DeniseMonahan
Speech Pathology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
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Ann Marie Monson
Biology
Linda Moore
Psychology
Laura Moran
Biology
Beverly Blow Morrison
English
Thomas Moss
Sociology
Patrick Mullin
Sociology
Kenneth Mullings
Sociology
Gerald F. Murphy
History/Music
Michael Musco
Philosophy
Barbara E. Nelson
Sociology
Nina Nepor
Russian
Hayden Nichols
Psychology
COLLEGE OF
Thomas Niedzwiecki
Political Science
Andrey Nikiforov
Biology
Brian Nordstrom
Psychology
Carol Norris
Biology
Jane Nowak
History
Deborah Noyd
English
Anne Nunzianto
Biology
Kevin L. O'Donnell
History
Adedeji A. Odutola
Microbiology
David Ogrean
English
Nancy Orbuch
Biology
Judith Orrill
Speech Pathology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Michael Osborne
History
Anna Marie Pace
English
Judith E. Padian
Biology
John Pallatto
English
Robert Paquette
Math
Judith Parks
English
Suzanne Parrington
Sociology
Linda Partesano
History
Alfred Pascarella Jr.
Biology
Paul Pastore
Psychology
Deborah Paturzo
Math Statistics
Elaine Paul
Biology
COLLEGE OF
Edward Pavilik Jr.
Biology
Robert Pellettier Roseann Pelliccione
Political Science
Irven Penn
Speech Communication
Henry Perez
Sociology/Anthropology
John Person
Psychology
Kent Peterson
Psychology
Randal Philippi
Sociology
Raymond Piascik
Political Science
Sandra A. Piooli
Political
Science/Psychology
Edith Platt
English
Michael Pletscher
History
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Robert Pongonis Kevin Rons Deborah Possidento Denise Poulin
Geology Speech Pathology
and Audioiogy
French History
Daniel Presnick
Math
Barbara Price
Biophysics
Gary Pront
Sociology
Diana Prysner
Economics
Robert E. Pudney
Sociology
Cheryl Pulaski
Psychology
Deborah Rady
English
Paula Radzviiowicz
Botany
COLLEGE OF
James Ragno Jr.
Biology
Sheldon Randall
Psychology
Lois R. Rasmussen
French
Arthur Ready
English
David C. Reeve
History
Gary Renna Richard Repay
Economics
Robert Reynolds
History/Political Science
Sharon Reynolds
Psychology
Cynthia A. Riccio
Psychology
Ellen Rinaldi
History
Martin S. Roberts
Biology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Frank W. Rockhold
Statistics
John Rodger
Speech Communications
Eileen Rodman
Sociology
Rhina Rodriguez
Biology
Lorin Rogers
English
Timothy Rooney
English
Christine Rose
Psychology
Pamela H. Rowling
Mark Roy
Political Science
Daniel Ruggiero
French
Theresa Salvador Frances Satula
Math
COLLEGE OF
Joseph Saydlowski
Biology
Karen Sayers
French/Foods and
Nutrition
Andrea Sherman
Economics
Gary Shettie
Political Science
Carl W. Shields Jr. Susan Shillo Neal Shindel Jean Sirico
Philosophy of Math Biology Psychology
Religion
Anton J.Skell
English
Peter Skolem
Psychology
Michael Smeraglia
Math
Deborah Smith
Sociology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Donna E. Smith
Speech Pathology
Glynis Smith
Psychology
Joyce E. Smith
Sociology
Rita Smith
Italian
David P. Solomon
Political Science
George Sparks
Psychology
Pamela H. Speirs
English
Paul Spencer
Biology
Joan Spodnick Terra Staley
Speech Communication
Royal Stark
History
Frederick Steigert
Geology
COLLEGE OF
Richard Stephani
Anthropology
Kathryn N.Strachan
Speech Communication
Karen A. Stuart
Speech
Nancy Sudik
Psychology
Mark L. Suplinskas
Biology
Richard Surwilo
Political Science
Craig Sweeney Daniel Taggart
Anthropology
ChristinaTalentino
Art History
Sharon Tarantino
Psychology
Susan Taroschuk
Microbiology
Kathleen Temple
Sociology
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Karen Thibodeau
English
Diane Thompson
Speech Pathology
Robin Titus
Psychology
Stephen Torrey
Psychology
Jonathan Trambert
Chemistry
1
Harry Tramontanis
Communication
Keith Trapasso
English
Anthony Tricarico
Psychology
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David Turek
History
Jon B. Turula
Chemistry
Frieda Linger
Political Science
Don Vagnone
Psychology
COLLEGE OF
Marga Vidbergs
Psychology
Ingrid Vissak
History
William A. Walker
Biology
Dennis Walsh
Political Science
Linda Walsh
Speech Pathology
David Weller
Economics
Robert George Wetmore
Political Science
Abraham Wexler
Biology
Roberta M. White
Speech
Chauncey Williams
Economics
Steven Williams
Biology
Barbara Jan Wilson
English
ARTS AND SCIENCES
Karen Winograd
English
Zbignieu Woznica
Psychology
Jeffery Wrubel
Biology
Todd Yaun
English
June R. Young
Sociology
Michael E. Young
Political Science
Robert Young
Sociology
Thomas Youn^
Sociology
Charles Zacharias
Economics
Jo Ann C. Zadrovecz
Microbiology
Paul E. Zakowich
Biology
Linda Zaieski
Anthropology
Alicia Zide
English
Matthew Zuckerman
Speech
147 40 6359
Kathleen M. Alward Suzy Anderson
Faye Armstrong Leslie Berry
Julie Blank Katurah Bryant Karen Buraczynski Lucille Capuano
SCHOOL OF
Louise Carvalho Gloria Casale
Elizabeth Chamberlin
I ^ J:
Janice Chance
Diana D'Angelo Cecelia Ducale Laura Cox Dzurec Roberta A. Elmore
NURSING
Diane Fairchild Roslyn Garlonsky Maureen Giuffre
Robin Goldstein Mary Ann Gorczyca Gail Grohn Carolyn Haggerty
Regina Holler Beverly Hrivnak Rosalind Johnson Patricia Koltko
SCHOOL OF
Susan Kopcha Erika Kuzmics Barbara jean Leddy Claudia Litke
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Katina Loukides Debra Lucibello Janet Lukacs Edilma Lynch
Diana Mailoy Nancy J. Manning Anne C. Marucci Christine Matthews
NURSING
Betsy Constance Mauritz Elizabeth Maurutis Cynthia Meinsen Barbara Miller
Donna Mitchell Christine Nycz Florence Oberly
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Frank Kopulski Christine Peacock Suzanne Peck Janet Przech
SCHOOL OF
Kathleen Renkiewicz Liana Ross Sandra Santoro Dorothy Sibley
Deborah Smith Nancy Smith Shelley Stone Wendy Sutherland
Donna Verno Barbara W. Wagner Shelley Wallisch
NURSING
ChesterA. Woffardlll
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Suzanne Bartow Beatrice Beaudette
Barbara Jean Bell Sharon Benson
Sharon Bragdon Mary K. Burke Ruth Louise Dale Carol A. Davidson
SCHOOL OF
Donna DeFilippo Lynne Dralle
Denise Drazy Wayne Fellabaum
Medical Technology
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Maryellen Ferguson Carol Gannon
Medical Technology
Christine Cove Diane Griudzien
Medical Technology
PHYSICAL THERAPY
Marilyn Hamlin Paula Haney Maryellen Harvey Janice Holm
Barbara Jacob
Medical Technology
Sandra L. Johnson Ruth Jones Cynthia Kabat
m
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Robert Kane Katherine Lynn Kosturak
Medical Technology
Susan Ladd Mary Ann Lodi
SCHOOL OF
Eileen Mclsaac Susan B. Mack Judith Mackay Paula Medeiros
Rosalind Mirizio
Medical Technology
Janet O'Brient Catherine Parsons Irene Perkowski
Valory Ramsdell Barbara Rogan LaurineSantilli
Medical Technology
Janet Scepankaski
PHYSICAL THERAPY
Linda Skaroupski Marlene Skorupski Stephen Snow John Swiberski
Karen Tolman Robin Tousey Cynthia Vuoio Barbara Waldron
Diane White Charlotte Winokur Julie Wochholz Susan M. Young
SCHOOL OF
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Betty Zarrella
PHYSICAL THERAPY
Robert Paul Abbe Sandra Boris
Karen Brown Brian Hotchkiss
Janice B. Lavoie William Machnicz
SCHOOL OF
Lois Reynolds Alexander Sibicky
Janet Stepka David Stoner
Marc Summerfield Robin Swatyu?
(3rd row 2nd from left)
PHARMACY
ALAN R. EM M ERTHAL
1 952-1 974
Associated Student Government: Student Senator 2,3
Public Information Committee 2,3
Student Input Committee 2,3
Finance Committee 2,3
Interim Finance Committee: (Interim Government) 3,4
Inter Area Residence Hall Council: Area Representative 1 ,2,3,4
Treasurer 1 ,2
Vice President 3,4
Chairman Roomdraw Committee 1 ,2,3,4
Co-ed Dorms on Campus 1
South-Northwest change 3
Bylaws and Constitution 1 ,2,3
Area Government Committee 3
Damages Committee 1 ,2,3
F.S.S.O. Metanoia Committee Chairman 4
University Metanoia Committee 2,3,4
Metanoia Chairman of Metanoia Days May 1 2th, 1 972 2
January 30th, 1 974 4
Floor Government: President 4
Vice President 2,3
Intramural Chairman 2,3
Social Chairman 2,3
Dormitory Government (Beiden Hall): President 3
Vice President 2,3
Floor Representative 2,3
WEBB Council: Treasurer 2
Dormitory Representative 1 ,2,3
Intramurals: Basketball 1 ,2,3,4 Captain 1 ,2
Softball 4
Swimming 4
Badminton 1 ,2,4
Track 4
Medieval Drama Society: Assistant Producer 4
Though nothing can bring back the hour of Splendor in the
Grass, of Glory in the Flower;
We will grieve not, rather find strength in what rem ains behind
William Wordsworth
THE GRADUATES
ABBE, Robert Paul, 26 Wilbert Dr., West
Springfield, Mass. Concert Band, March-
ing Band, Pep Band, President-UConn
Marching Band 4.
ABRAMEK, Bernadette J., 1 1 4 Carriage
Hill Dr., Newington, Ct. Ski Club 1 , Dean's
List, Urban Semester.
ACAYAN, Albert, 71 G Foster Dr., Willi-
mantic, Ct.
ACKERMAN, Mary, 8 Kaye Plaza, Ham-
den, Ct.
ADAMCEK, Patricia, 370 Spring St. Ext.,
Glastonbury, Ct. Honor's Program.
ADELSON, Ellen, 51 White Meadow Rd.,
Rockaway, NJ. Editor Nutmeg '74, Layout
editor Connecticut Daily Campus.
AHEARN, Michael, 268 Tollgate Rd., Glas-
tonbury, Ct.
AITRO, Adrienne, 1 24 Curve Hill Rd.,
Chesire Ct. WillimanticTutorial 2,3,4.
ALBANI, Richard, 49 Huckleberry Rd.,
East Hartford, Ct. Kappa Kappa Psi Presi-
dent 4, Pep Band, UConn Husky March-
ing Band Uniform Manager, President 4,5,
Tennis 1 , Intermural Sports, American
Society of Civil Engineering, Chess Club
1 .
ALEKSUNES, James, 91 Mapleton St., Hart-
ford, Ct. Hartford Tutorial.
ALESIO, Linda, 24 Hillside Ave., Wappin-
gers Falls, New York. Phi Alpha Theta.
ALLEN, Louis, 1 9 Mechanic St., Windsor,
Ct. P.E.S.O. Club, Boning Club, Three
Guys Saloon Club-Bar Club, Football 1 ,2,
3,4, Gazell's Basketball 2,3,4.
ALWEIDA, Keith, 4 East Bishop St., Water-
ford, Ct. Judo Club 3, Outing Club 4.
ALMIN l-RAD Behshid, Tehran, Iran.
ANASOVICH, Kathryn, 53 Emma St., Sey-
mour, Ct.
ANDERSON, Barbara, Huckleberry Lane,
East Hampton, Ct. Alpha Lambda Chapter
of Phi Upsilon Omicron Home Economics
National Honorary Professional Fraterni:
ty, Stewardess'3.
ANDERSON, Claudette, 1 21 Donaldson
Rd., Buffalo, New York. Assistant Direc-
tor-Black Voices of Freedom 1 ,2,3, Direc-
tress-4.
ANDERSON, Debra, 1 33 Lawrence St.,
Hartford, Ct. Intervarsity Christian Fellow-
ship, Concert Choir, Secretary-Hartford
Branch Photography Club, Senior Citizen
(Salvation Army), Director Summer Fun
Program (Salvation Army), Camp
Counselor.
ANDERSON, Dianne, Abby Drive RED
#1 , Hebron, Ct. Pi Lambda Theta.
ANDERSON, Karen, 32 Pioneer Dr., Po-
quonock, Ct. Cheerleader-Hartford
Branch, Staff member "lntercourse"-stu-
dent newspaper Hartford Branch.
ANDERSON, Lloyd, RFD 2, Lisbon, Ct.
ANDERSON, Paul, 1 3 Spring Brook Rd.,
Avon, Ct. WHUS Traffic Director, WHUS
Executive Board, WHUS announcer/staff
member, UConn bowling league /
"States" 3,4.
ANDERSON, Suzy, Random Rd., Old
Greenwich, Ct.
ANDRE, Lennart, RR1 Box 1 1 4, Sterling,
Ct. UConn Flying Club.
Treasurer, Campus Christian Foundation.
ANTONIAZZi, David, Christian Hill Rd.,
Glendale, Mass. Football 1 , Baseball 1 ,
Lacrosse 2,3,4, Captain 4.
ARGENTA, Edward, 70 Sunset Terr, South
Windsor, Ct. Soccer 1 , BN 2,3,4.
ARMSTRONG, Faye, 7 Barreh Rd., Lexing-
ton, Mass.
ARNONE, Joseph, 91 Russell St., Waterbu-
ry, Ct. Intramural Sports 3,4, Belden Hall
Dorm Council Secretary 3, South Carolina
House President 4, Urban Studies Club 3,
4, Fencing Club 3.
ASLANIAN, Aram Parker, 1 62 Pershing
Rd., Englewood Cliffs, N.J.
ASPROMONTE, Kathleen, 2896-86 St.,
Brooklyn, N.Y.
ATWOOD, Harvey, Wppdomg Jo;; Rd.,
Bethany, Ct.
AUDIETIS, Susan, 5 Crystal Terr., Water-
bury, Ct. Tutor Mansfield Training
School.
AURIGEMMA, Lillian, 1 9 Crestwood PL.,
Shelton, Ct. Basketball Intermurals, Vol-
leyball Intermurals, Ski Club Student
Counselor, Freshman Representative,
Social Chairman.
AUSTIN, Roberta, 41 8 Mill St., Southing-
ton, Ct. Volunteer Mansfield Training
Center.
AVENA, Gail, 1 1 1 5 Hartford Rd., Water-
ford, Ct.
AVENA, Kenneth, 5 Hayes St., Waterford,
Ct. Track team1 ,2,3.
ALWARD, Kathleen M., 1 0 Salem Rd.,
Westport, Ct.
ANTON, Kathleen, 1 71 Brent Rd., Manch-
ester, Ct. Mansfield Tutorial, Willimantic-
AVERY, Susan, 5 Cedar Island Rd., Clin-
ton, Ct.
B
BABROW, Bonnie, 8 Ridge Rd., Bloom-
field, Ct.
BADYRKA, Joseph, 44 Leone St., Water-
bury, Ct. Football 1 , Intramurals Basket-
ball, Softball, American Institute of
Chemical Engineers.
BAFFO, Joan, Huckleberry Acres, Wilton,
Ct.
BAIERWICK, Lucille, 56 E. Weatoque St.,
Simsbury, Ct.
BAILEY, Darlene, 1 73 Earl Ave., Bridge-
port, Ct.
BAiXAULI, Aurora, 21 Tremont St., New
Britain, Ct.
BAKER, Deborah, 60 Riverview Rd RED
#3, Willimantic, Ct.
BAKER, Jennifer, 26 Wildwood Dr., Bed-
ford, Ma. Ski Club, Sailing Club, Anthro-
pology Club.
BAKER, Matthew, New Haven Rd. Pros-
pect, Ct.
BALAS, Mark, 50 Concord St., Stratford,
Ct.
BALLHAUSSEN, Constance, 447 Parker
Ave., Meriden, Ct.
BANISKY, Marcy, 43 Byrneside Ave., Wat-
erbury Ct.
BARBARITO, Joan, 1 60 Denslow Hill Rd.,
Hamden, Ct. Willimantic Tutorial Staff
Member and Tutor.
BARCHEWSKl, John, 53 Wilson Ave.,
Meriden, Ct. A.I.Ch.E.
BARLOW, Glenn, Old Colony Rd., East-
ford, Ct. Alpha Phi Omega, Delta Sigma
Pi, Skating Club, Campus Community
Carnival, Intervarsity.
BARLOW, Sharon, 50-1 6 31 st Ave., Wood-
side, N.Y. Board of Governors-Black Expe-
rience Committee, Orientation Commit-
tee 1 971 -2, High School Day 71 -72, Hart-
ford Tutorial Program, O.A.A.S.
BARTHOLIC, Richard, Maynard Rd.,
Brooklyn, Ct.
BARTHOLIC, William R., 1 2 St. Lawrence
St., Manchester, Ct.
BARTON, Donna, 82 Tower St., Worces-
ter, Ma. PiBeta Sigma.
BARTOW, Suzanne, 21 5 West Rocks Rd.,
Norwalk Ct. Dolphinettes 2,3, Field Hock-
ey 1 ,4, S.A.P.T.A. 3,4.
BASSALINE, Brian 753 Fall Ave., Union-
dale, N.Y. Manager Lou's Citgo, Cross
Country 1 , Indoor Track 1 ,2,3,4, Track 1 ,2,
4, Student Senate 2, Dorm President 1 ,3.
BASSETT, Lynne, Qrtrs, E Pnsy, Ports-
mouth, N.H.
BATES, Daniel, 41 1 Lewis Rd., New Britain,
Ct. Student Union Rats.
BATES, Linda, 524 Boston Post Rd., Madi-
son, Ct. Dean's List, House Council, Floor
Representative Crawford C. Freshman
Counselor, Mansfield Tutorial.
BATTLE, James, 1 78 Frisbie St., Middle-
town, Ct. Black Voices of Freedom Choir.
BEAUCHEMIN, Susan, 71 Academy Hill,
Derby Ct.
BEAUDETTE, Beatrice, 22 No. Main St.,
Hooksett, N.H. Women's Swim Team 2,
Basketball Intramurals 3, Softall Intra-
murals 1 ,2, CCC Committees 1 ,2,3,
S.A.P.T.A. Affiliation Committee.
BEAULAC, David, RFD#1 Dayville, Ct.
Alpha Phi Omega, UConn Marching
Band, Executive Chairman, 1 974 Campus
Community Carnival, National Student
Speech and Hearing Assn.
BEAUVIEGARD, Linda, 49 Yale Dr., En-
field, Ct.
BEER, Christina, 1 4 Talcott Ave., Rockville,
Ct. Pi Beta Sigma, ASC Staff, Dean's List,
Hollister B House .Council.
BEHLING John, 73 Town Hill Ave., Danbu-
ry,Ct. PsiChi.
BELANGER, Andrea, 41 Trull Lane East,
Lowell,-Mass., Phi Upsilon Omicron
secretary.
BELL, Barbara Jean, 89 Overlook Dr., Val-
halla, N.Y. SAPTA Social Chairman Dorm,
South Campus Council Representative.
BENEDETTI, George William, 1 0 Arthur
St., North Haven, Ct., Tau Beta Phi, Chi
Epsilon Honors Civil Engineering Fraterni-
ty, President American Society of Civil
Engineers, American Public Works Assn.
BENESEViCH, Richard, 1 2 Mt. Hope Apts,
Mansfield, Ct.
BENJAMIN, Robert, 23 Wildwood La., .
Wantagh, N.Y., Merry Pranksters,
Deadheads.
BENOIT, Michael, 943 West Blvd., Hart-
ford, Ct. Chi Epsilon, 3,4, Tau Beta Pi 3,4,
Scabbard and Blade 3,4, Amer. Society of
Civil Engineers 3,4, Rifle Team 1 ,2, Persh-
ing Rifles.
BENSON, Gregg, 1 48 McKinley Ave.,
Norwich, Ct. Ellsworth Hall Floor Repre-
sentative 3, Rep to Hilltop Council 3,
Treasurer of Hilltop council 3, Chairman
4.
BENSON, Sharon, 29 Ledgewood Dr.,
Danvers, Mass.
BERARDUCCI, Thomas, 49 Herald Dr.,
Bridgeport, Ct. Basketball 2, Football 1 ,
Baseball 1 ,2, Intramural Basketball 3,4, In-
tramural Softball.
BERK, Eileen, 70 Southwell Rd., Wethers-
field, Ct. Honors Program, Alpha Lamba
Delta, Archery Club 3,4, Fencing Club 3,
Block and Bridle Club 4.
BERNHEIMER, Allan, 43 Seminole Cir.,
West Hartford, Ct. Baseball 1 ,2, Intramural
Sports Softball, Basketball, Paddleball.
BERRY, Leslie, 30 SoundviewDr., Easton,
Ct.
BESSETTE, David, Brooklyn Rd., Box 1 95,
Canterbury, Ct.
BESSETTE, Eleanor, 1 00 Elm St., Stoning-
ton, Ct.
BEST, JOHN, 38 Smith St., Torrington, Ct.
Ets Kappa Nu-Beta Omega Chapter, Presi-
dent, Tau Beta Pi, WiliimanticTutorial.
BIASE, Elizabeth, 84 Henry St., Manches-
ter, Ct. Pi Mu Epsilon, Phi Kappa Phi.
BIELONKO, Michael, 937 East St., Suffield,
Ct. Tennis 1 , Accounting Society 3,4.
BIGLEY, Imogene E., 89 McKinley St., Nu-
tley, N.J. Phi Kappa Phi, Skating Club.
BILANCERJ, Morris, 1 24 Hill St., Waterbu-
ry, Ct.
BILLINGS, Andrew, 8 Halladay Ave., Suf-
field, Ct.
BIRT, Aaron, 456 Howard Ave., New Ha-
ven, Ct. Jazz Movers, Heritage, Black
Voices of Freedom.
BIRT, Harry Lance Dubois, 456 Howard
Ave., New Haven, Ct. Black Student Alli-
ance, Organization of Afro-American
Students, Black Communications Center
Bulletin, Intramural Program 1 ,2,3,4, Bel-
den Judicial Board 1 , Outreach Counse-
lor, UConn Summer Program4.
BITWINSKl, Richard, 578 Brooks Bridge-
port, Ct. Resident Assistant, UConn Rug-
by Club 4, Yggdrasil Volunteer.
BLACE, Cynthia Anne, 484B Radmere Rd,
Chesire, Ct. Field Hockey Captain 1 ,2,3,4,
Basketball 1 ,2,3, Softball 3,4, Vice Pres. of
Dorm 2.
BLACKER, David, 1 25 Seeret Lake Rd.,
Avon, Ct.
BLAIR, Geraldine, 1 553 Bryant Ave.,
Avon, Ct.
BLAIR, James, 57 Lakewood Ave., Manch-
ester, Ct.
BLAIR, Paul, Woodstock Valley, Ct.
BLAKESLEE, Jane, 476 Clintonville Rd.,
North Haven, Ct.
BLANCA, Mario, 1 976 Kossuth St., Bridge-
port, Ct.
BLANCHARD, Nan, 206 Patton Dr. Che-
sire, Ct. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Assistant
Stewardess Crandall A.
BLANCHETTE,.Sue, 1 29E Lakeside Blvd.,
Waterbury, Ct. Intramural Volleyball 4,
Intramural Baseball 4, Brock First Floor
Treasurer 4.
BLANK, Julie, 727 Pine St., Forestville, Ct.
Sigma Theta Tau.
BLOCK, Sharon, Greystone Rd., Terry-
ville, Ct.
BOCCUZZI, James, 52 Barmore Dr., Stam-
ford, Ct. Intramural Basketball and Base-
ball 3,4.
BOCCUZZI, James, 22 Varmor Dr., New
Britain, Ct. Sigma Chi, Pro Consul, Base-
ball 2.
BOGATZ, Debra, 71 Highland St., New-
ington, Ct.
BOJARSKI, Lawrence, 477 Burnside Ave,,
East Hartford, Ct.
BOLLETTIERI, Patricia, 44 Skyline La.
Stamford, Ct.
BONETTI, Gregory, Lexington Ave., Tor-
rington, Ct.
BOOKER, Gary, 1 232 Bedford St., Stam-
ford, Ct.
BORDERS, Bruce, 44 East Dr., Livingston,
N.J.
BORIS, Sandra, 434 Pomeroy Ave., Meri-
den, Ct. Lambda Kappa Sigma, Mortar
and Pestle, Student American Pharma-
ceutical Assn.-President 4, 5, Secretary 2, 3.
BORTOLOTTI, Peter, 60 N. High St., Fox-
boro, Mass. Cross Country 1 ,2,3,4, indoor
Track 1 ,2,3,4, Outdoor Track 1 ,2,3,4.
BOSCARINO, Thomas C, 1 5 Rosemont
Ave., Wilson, Ct. House Pres. 4, Student
Counselor 4, West Campus Council 4,
Social Chairman 3, Intramural Rep. of
House 1 ,2, Intramurals 1 ,2,3,4, Floor Rep
1 .
BOWLER, Rosemary, 491 Broad St., Wind-
sor, Ct. Student Senator ASG, staff mem-
ber "intercourse" newspaper.
BOYCE, Allen, 35 Eldredge St., Chatham,
Mass. Tau Beta Pi, IEEE, Eta Kappa Nu.
BRADY, Deborah, 97 William St., Stam-
ford, Ct.
BRAGDON, Sharon, Apt 34 Woodlawn
Apt. , Mansfield Center, Ct. Student
American Physical Therapy Assn.
BRANDL, Ernest, 41 4 Huckleberry Hill
Rd., Avon, Ct. Chi Epsilon, Wrestling 1 ,2,
Hucky Scuba Club.
BRANSFIELD, Kevin, 65 DenQuarry Rd.,
Lynn, Mass. Varsity Hockey 1 ,2.
BRANTNER, Jennie, 28 Cheney Dr., Storrs,
Ct. Mortar Board, Social Chairman Beard
A5.
BRAUN, Sherry, RFD#1 , Brandon, Vt.
BRENNAN, Patricia, 1 27 Brookfield Dr.,
East Hartford, Ct.
BRENNER, Stanley, 1 2 Marcus Rd., West
Nyack, N.Y.
BRODERICK, Mary Ellen, Kelly Rd., Mid-
dlebury. Conn.
BROSTEK, Kenneth E., 41 7 Washington
St., Norwich, Ct.
BROUGH, Francis, 54 Herbert St., Somer-
set, Ma. Cross Country 1 ,2,3,4, Track 1 ,2,3,
4.
BROWN, Karen, 1 81 Harvey St., Taunton,
Mass. Lambda Kappa Sigma, Mortar and
Pestle Society, S.A. phA.
BROWN, Kenneth, 20 Old Farm Rd.,
Dan bury, Ct.
BROWN, Robert, 63 Baird Court, Strat-
ford, Ct.
BRUMFIELD, Janet, 400 Corona Ave. Apt
B7, Valley Stream, N.Y. Univ. Concert
Choir.
BRUZZESE, Vincent, 83 Andrews St., Meri-
den, Ct. Wrestling team 1 , Karate Club 1 ,
Soccer Intramurals 3,4.
BRYANT, Katurak, 1 0 Grindstone Lane
Sudbury, Ma. OAAS House Council 1 ,2,
Black Voices of Freedom Choir 1 ,4.
BRYANT, Kerry, 389 Brown's Rd., Storrs,
Ct. Softball 1 ,2,3,4, Hockey 3,4, Basketball
4.
BRZEZINSKI, Thomas, 1 72 Toas St., Shel-
ton, Ct.
BUCHEK, Michael, 71 Morro St., Oakville,
Ct. Resisdent Assist. Vice Pres. Webster
House 3, Pres Webster 3.
BUCK, Bradford, 1 5 Powder Ridge Rd.,
Enfield, Ct. Phi Alpha Theta, Phi Kappa
Phi, Rep. to Area Student Gov.
BUNDY, Robert, 55 Greene Ave., Nor-
wich, Ct. Freshman Football, Basketball,
Baseball, Varsity Football 2,3,4.
BURACZYNSKI, Karen, 789 Worcester St.,
Wellesley, Mass. Sigma Theta Tau, Phi
Kappa Phi.
BURKE, Mary K. 27 Ocean Dr., West Stam-
ford, Ct. SAPTA.
BURNHAM, Michael, 533 West Avon Rd.,
Avon, Ct.
BURNS, Barbara, 284 Brimfield Rd., Weth-
ersfield, Ct. Mansfield 1 , Hartford Tutorial
2,3.
BURRIESCl, Linda, 1 1 1 Rockspring Rd.,
Stamford, Ct.
BURROWS, Sondra, Bronson Dr., Middle-
bury, Ct.
BURNSTEIN, Alan, 1 21 Oakwood Dr.,
New Britain Ct. Intramurals Basketball 2,3,
4, Softball 3,4.
BUSCARELLO, Donald, 38 Cliffmont Dr.,
Bloomfield, Ct. UConn Geology Club.
BUSICK, Katherine, 59 Church St., Clin-
ton, Ct.
BUZZELLI, Paul, 66 Wood St., Waterbury,
Ct.
CABRERA, Marcia, 1 8 Essex Lane, Bloom-
field, Ct. Delta Sigma Pi.
CADDEN, Thomas, 80 Spruce St., Meri-
den, Ct., Pi Sigma Alpha, Basketball Intra-
murals 3,4, Tennis 4, Political Science Dis-
tinction Program, intern to State Senate.
CADWALADER, Barbara, 81 4 Coolidge,
Ave., Woodbridge, N.J. Pi Lambda Theta.
CALLAS, Robert P., 873 Washington Blvd.,
Stamford, Ct. Marketing Club.
CALOUTAS, Dean, 51 7 Whalley Ave.,
New Haven, Ct.
CAMARCO, Anthony T., 275 Brown St.,
Hartford, Ct. Tappa Keg Omega, Treasur-
er of Hilltop Council 2.
CAMILLERI, Donna, 28 So. Adams St.,
Manchester, Ct. Gymnastics Club 1 ,2,
Gymnastics Team 2,3.
CAMMISA, Jaye P., 692 Bunker Hill Ave.,
Waterbury, Ct. Phi Upsilon Omicron,
Dean's List.
CAMPBELL, Marcia B., 94 Ferguson Rd.,
Manchester, Ct. Wade House Social
Chairman 3, House President 4, CCC
Chairman 3, United Towers Organization
Social Chairman 3, Vice president 4,
Freshman Counselor 4.
CANFIELD, Roger, 1 1 2 Stratford Dr., Co-
lonial Heights, Va. Photopool.
CANTW.ELL, Dennis, 2601 Deerdell Ln.,
Reston, Va. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Univ of
Conn Concert Band 1 ,2, UConn Marching
Band 1 ,2,3,4.
CAPPABIANCA, A. Frank, 725 High Ridge
Rd., Stamford, Ct., Delta Sigma Pi, UConn
concert Choir, Co-Social Chairman Con-
cert Choir.
CAPUANO, Lucille, 21 North Walnut St.,
Waterbury, Ct.
CARAGLIO, Anthony, 1 46 Meadowside
Rd., Milford, Ct. Pi Tau Sigma-Vice Presi-
dent 4, ASME, Intramurals Baseball,
Volleyball.
CARD, Priscilla, Grove Beach Rd., West-
brook, Ct.
CARLONl, Philip, 1 1 -7 Northford Rd.,
Branford, Ct. Pi Sigma Alpha, Photopool,
Sailing Club 1 ,2, Ski Patrol 3.
CARLSON, Nancy, 227 Fairview Ave.,
Hamden, Ct. Phi Kappa Phi.
CARNEY, Karen, Box L-8 Lincoln Dr.,
Gales Ferry, Ct. Willimantic Tutorial.
CARPENTER, Kenneth, 50 Auburn Rd.,
West Hartford, Ct.
CARRIER, Patricia, 95 Edgemont Ave.,
West Hartford, Ct.
CARROL, Lee Ann, 63 Pippin, Dr., Glas-
tonbury, Ct. Math Club, Freshman Stu-
dent Counselor 3,4.
CARUSELLO, Donald, 1 26 Boyden St.,
Waterbury, Ct. Phi Beta Kappa, Intramural
Softball 3,4, BOG Travel Committee 4,
Chandler House Social Committee 4,
State of Conn. Scholar 1 ,2,3,4.
CARVALHO, Louise, 1 246 Baldwin St.,
Waterbury, Ct. Tau Pau Epsiion AAPBC.
CASALE, Gloria, 1 25 Sorrento Ave., East
Haven, Ct. Freshman Cheerleader, North
Campus Quad Council 1 .
CASE, Christine 577 Treat Lane Orange,
Ct. Choral Society.
CASEY, Maureen, 61 Orient St., Meriden,
Ct. Phi Kappa Phi, Skating Club.
CASEY, Steven, 21 Summit St., Bristol, Ct.
Beiden 3rd Floor President, Justice of the
Peace.
CASSIS, Joseph A. III., 5 Alma Rock Rd.,
Stamford, Ct. Tau Epsiion Phi-vice presi-
dent. Psychology Club, Karate, Judo, Bios-
is Club, Cooking Painting, Student
Marshall.
CASTIGLIONI, Richard, 1 5 Taylor Ave.,
East Haven, Ct. Pi Sigma Alpha, Phi Kappa
Phi, Football 1 , Lacrosse 3, University Sen-
ator 3, House Council, House Judicial
Board, Intramurals.
CATHERWOOD, Glenn, B-1 2 August Hill
Apts., Mansfield Ctr., Ct.
CAUFIELD, David, 53 Cheney Dr., Storrs,
Ct.
CERINO, Joanne, 1 42 Grandview Rd.,
Fairfield Ct. Floor Rep., House Council,
South Council Representative.
CERINO, William, 35 Manchester St.,
Hartford, Ct.
CHABOT, Marjorie Rothschild, 44A Mt.
Vernon Dr., Rockville, Ct. Spurs, Beta
Beta Beta, Women's Center Staff.
CHACHO, Edward, 29 Johnson Place,
Monroe, Ct.
CHAMBERLIN, Elizabeth, 46 Churchill
Rd., Wethersfield, Ct.
CHANCE, Janice, 88 Elizabeth Ave.,
Bloomfield, Ct.
CHAPIN, J. Thomas, 20 Clyde Rd., Manch-
ester, Ct.
CHAPMAN, Cynthia, 95 Pool Rd., North
Haven, Ct.
CHARLINSKI, Helene T., 41 Northbrick
Lane Wethersfield, Ct. Student Commis-
sary for Board A& B.
CHAYES, Janet, 34 Grandview Dr., Ridge-
field, Ct.
CHAYES, Lea, 20 Jeffrey Lane Bloomfield,
Ct. Social Action Chairman Hillel, Willi
Tutorial, Ski Club.
CHENEY, Arlene B., 57 Old Town High-
way, East Haven, Ct. Gymnastics Club 1 ,2,
Gymnastic Team 2,3,4.
CHESTER, Mitchell, 1 1 Norman Dr.,
Bloomfield, Ct.
CHIFFER, Brian, 1 97 Williams St., Glaston-
bury, Ct. Swim Team, Scuba Diving Club
4.
CHIPPERINI, Susan, 88 Pleasant Valley
Rd., Groton, Ct. Gamma Sigma Sigma.
CHOJNACKI, Richard, 40 Curtis St., Nor-
wich, Ct.
CHOLAKIAM, Gary, 1 79 West Rocks Rd.,
Norwalk, Ct. Scuba Club, Karate Club.
CHYMBOR, Judith B., 1 45 G Foster Dr.,
Willimantic, Ct. Phi Upsilon Omicron In-
tramural Softball 1 ,2, Basketball 3, Mans-
field Volunteer.
CHYMBOR, Thomas, 1 45 G. Foster Dr.,
Willimantic, Ct. Intramural Hockey, Soft-
ball 3,4.
CIARCIA, Candice, Jones Hollow Rd.,
Marlborough, Ct. Gymnastics 1 ,2, Trea-
surer 2.
ClARFELLA, Catherine, 1 82 Plymouth St.,
Holbrook, Mass. Mortar Board, Phi Kappa
Phi, Tau Beta Sigma, Mansfield Tutorial,
Willimantic Tutorial 2, UConn Marching
Band, Dean's list.
CIFARELLI, Victor, 43 Elm St. Rockville, Ct.
Math Club.
CIRMO, Raymond, 65 Huntington Circle,
Hamden, Ct.
CLAPP, Richard, Lake Street Coventry, Ct.
Flying Club, Marketing Club.
CLARE, Ori^ 23 Seneca Rd., West Hart-
ford, Ct. Psychology Club, Lacrosse Team,
Social Chairmen.
CLARK, Lynn Marie, RFD#4 Box 1 1 , Cov-'
entry, Ct.
CLEMENT, Fredric, Kelly Rd., Vernon, Ct.
CLIFFORD, Nancy Grace
COCCONI, Alan, 49 West St., Bolton, Ct.
Delta Sigma Pi.
COHEN, Ellen, 1 64 Penn Dr., West Hart-
ford , Ct. University Singers, Concert
Choir, Gilbert Sullivan Society, Yoga
Club.
COLANERO, Marilyn, 409 Lincoln Ave.,
Paulsboro, New Jersey. Intramural Volley-
ball 4, Judo Club, Norwich State Mental
Hospital Volunteer 4.
COLEMAN, Barbara, Box 3, Fitchville, Ct.
Pres-Crandall C, Pres BattersonC. Assist-
ant Stewardess, Butterick Rep.
COLEMAN, Patricia, 40 Main St., Broad
Brook, Ct. Alpha Lambda Delta, Phi Beta
Kappa, Mansfield Tutorial.
COLLINS CATHARINE Margaret, Boland
Wood Heights 4-A, Mansfield Center, Ct.
COLONIS, William, 28 Cj Cheney Dr.,
Storrs, Ct.
CONLON, Michele, Phi Beta Kappa, Al-
pha Lambda Delta.
CONNORS, Kevin, 25 Winter St., Ansonia,
Ct. Young Democrats 3,4, Urban Studies
Club 3,4, Pres. 4, Student Patrol 4.
CONWAY, James C, 1 0 Sokol Rd., So-
mers, Ct. Football 1 , Rugby 2,3, House
Vice president, Spanish Club.
COOK, Don 46 W 75th St. N.Y.N.Y,
Concert/Record Reviewer for CDC,
"Wings Are Sprouting"-Experimental
College poetry release. Summer Volley-
ball Programs 1 ,3, Summer Water Polo 1 ,3,
Intramurals Hockey 1 ,2,3,4, Softball 2,4,
Football 2,4, Volleyball 3,4, Cross Country
2, Choral Society 4, Summer Landscape
Crew 1 ,2,3, Apple picking Crew, Nat-
chaug Ornithological Society 1 ,3,4.
COOK, Kevin, 1 771 Everett Place East
Meadow, N.Y. Sigma Chi, Football 1 ,
House Vice President, House Steward 3,4,
Co-Chairman Greek Council 3,4, Dean's
List.
COOK, Susan, 397 East Rd. Bristol, Ct.
UConn Chamber Singers, Concert Choir.
COOPER, Peter, 9 Overlook Dr., Ridge-
field, Ct.
COPEMAN, Margaret, 42 Ridgecrest, Dr.,
Westfield, Mass. Phi Upsilon Omicron,
Skating Club, Stewardess 4.
COREY, Dale, 67 Peck St., Norwich, Ct.
Badmitton 2, treasure McMahon Dorm.
COTNOiR, Kathryn, 24 Sycamore Rd.,
Norwich, Ct.
COTRONE, Diane, 965 Shippan Ave.,
Stamford, Ct. Honor's Program, Honor's
Scholar 3,4, Dean's List, Psychology Club,
Jogging Tennis, Swimming, Kung Fu,
Karate.
COWLES, Charles, 97 Branford, St.,
Manchester, Ct.
CREAGAN, John, Rte 1 Hdly Rd., Tolland,
Ct. Phi Kappa Phi, History Dept. Cirricu-
lum Committee.
CREASER, David, 520 Kanuga Trail, Or-
ange, Ct.
CROMPTON, David, 8 Morton, St., Staf-
ford Springs, Ct. Soccer 1 ,2,3, Intramural
Baseball 1 ,4, intramural Basketball 1 ,3,4.
CSERE, Peter, 21 Highland Ave., Portland,
Conn.
CULLEN, William, 67 Sherwood Ave.,
Bridgeport, Ct.
CUNNIFF, Charles, 57 Cardinal Dr., Meri-
den, Ct. Swimming Team 1 ,2,3, Manager.
CURRAN, Victoria M., 1 91 Crystal Lake
Rd., Stamford, Ct. intramural Basketball 1 ,
2,3,4, Tennis Club 3, Dorm President 1 ,
Fire Marshall 2, Mansfield Training School
Volunteer 1 .
CZEPIEL, Janet, 42 Bellaire Manor, Crom-
well, Ct. Pi Mu Epsilon.
D
DAHLBERG, Luane, 1 65 Irving Ave., Tor-
rington, Ct. Delta Chi Theta, FSSO Fi-
nance Comm, Elections Committee,
POW/MIA CRISIS-President, Mansfield
Tutorial.
DAKIN, Jill, 1 0 Lilac St., Windsor, Ct.
Spanish Club Member, Dean's List.
DALE, Ruth Louise, School Street, North-
field, Mass. Mortar Board, Dorm Secre-
tary 2,3, Red Cross Bloodmobile Donor
Room Aide, Skating Club 1 ,2, Modern
Dance Club, SAPTA 1 ,2,3,4, Counseling
Program, Mansfield Volunteer 3.
DAMON, Margaret, 44 Hillcrest Ave.,
Derby, Ct. French Club 1 ,2,3,4, Deans List,
Departmental Honors Fellow 4.
D'ANDREA, Ronald, 41 Lockwood Rd.,
Riverside, Ct.
DANDROW, John 1 4 Carroll Ct., East
Hartford, Ct. UConn Flying Club 3,4,
UConn Bicycling Club 2,3,4, UConn Fig-
ure Skating Club 2,3.
DANDURAND, Debra, 30 Montclair Dr.,
East Hartford, Ct. Social Chairman 1 ,2,
House Vice President 2, CCC Chairman 1 ,
2.
D'ANGELO, Diana, Cook Rd., Walling-
ford, Ct.
D'ANGELO, Sandra, Cooke Rd., Walling-
ford, Ct. Choral Society, Community
Band.
DANNEMBERG, Debby, 21 1 Wayne St.,
Bridgeport, Ct.Willimantic Tutorial, BOG
Publicity Committee, Photopool, Dean's
List.
DAPPEN, Richard, 257 South Rd. Groton,
Ct. Chi Epsilon, Tau Beta Pi, American
Water Works ASsn.
DARIGO, David, 5 Puritan Lane, Newing-
ton, Ct. Swimming 1 ,2,3,4.
DASCANIO, Edward, 1 7 Williams Rd.,
Bolton, Ct.
DA SILVA, Joao, 1 05 Grove St., Nauga-
tuck, Ct.
DAVID, Suzanne, 80 Farmstead Ave.,
Mystic, Ct.
DAVIDSON, Carol A.,. 21 Crestview Dr.,
North Haven, Ct.
DAVIGNON, Michael, 1 091 Meriden Rd.,
Waterbury, Ct. Delta Sigma Pi, Account-
ing Society, Financial Steward of Stowe C.
DAVIS, Alan, Deforest Dr., No. Branford,
Ct.
DAVIS, Richard, 1 24 Crystal Lake Rd.,
Stamford, Ct. Director-Mansfield Tutorial,
Member Intertutorial Council.
DAVIS, Sheryl Ann, 1 1 1 Jefferson Ave.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. OAAS-Public Relations
CommSociology Club.
DAY, Rosemary, Ranson Hall Rd., Wol-
cott, Ct.
DEAN, Lynda, 1 4 Eastwood Rd., Norwalk,
Ct. Social Chairman 3, House President 3,
4, Treasurer West Campus Council 4,
Chairman CCC Hollister A 1 ,3,4, Fresh-
man Counselor 4.
DEBOWSKY, Richard, No. Moodus Rd.,
Moodus, Ct. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa
Phi, Skiing Club 3,4, Skating Club 3,4.
DECKER, Alan 86 Rollins Wood Dr., Stam-
ford, Ct. Photographer CDC.
DE FILIPPO, Donna, 77 Park St., Putnam,
Ct.
DE GAETANO, Gerald, 31 Crescent Pi.,
Smithtown, N.Y. UConn filmSociety.
DELANEY, Gail, 21 Balawender Dr., Nor-
wich, Ct.
DELEO, Frank, 1 2A Palmer St., CosCob,
Ct. Honor's Scholar, Univ. Scholar, Phi
Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, Intramural
Sports, Softball 2,3,4, Soccer 4, Basketball
3,4, Hockey 3,4, Mansfield Tutorial,
Dean's List.
DELEON, Norman, 4805 Forest Oaks Dr.,
Greensboro, N.C. Track 1 , Resident
Assistant.
DELFINO, Linda, 1 06 Waverly St., Water-
bury, Ct.
DELGADO, Pedro-Francisco, 60 Gilmore
St.#24 Bridgeport, Ct.
DELUCA, Albert, 44 Northwoods Rd.,
Stamford, Ct. Golf Team 3,4, House Presi-
dent 2, Intramural Sports, Willimantic
Tutorial.
DEMAIO, Robert, 1 77 Homestead St.,
Manchester, Ct.
DEMBICZAK, Gerald, 1 4 Bloomfield Dr.,
Fairfield, Ct. Tau Beta Pi Amer. Soc. of
Civil Engineers.
DEMETER, Jon, P.O. Box 1 61 , Southport,
Ct. Soccer 1 ,2,3,4, MVP 2, Captain 4.
DEMONTE, Howard, 50 Stanford Dr. ,
Hazlet, N.J. Wrestling 1 ,2,3,4, Captain 3.
DEMPSEY, Joan, 90 Concord St., Hamden,
Ct. Phi Kappa Phi, Willi Tutorial.
DEMUSIS, Emelia, 1 5 James St., East Ha-
ven, Ct.
DENGROVE, Joan, 1 050 George St. New
Brunswick, N.J.
DESANTl-S, Deborah, 1 1 Southgate Rd.
Waterbury, Ct. Secretary American Insti-
tute of Interior Designers.
DESKUS, Bonita, 282 Dart Hill Rd., So.
Windsor, Ct.
DESTEFANO, Carmine, 1 63 Woodvale
Rd., West Haven, Ct. Outing Club 1 ,2,
Fencing Club 3,4.
DIAZ, Arturo, Walden Apt 1 4, West Wil-
lington, Ct.
DIBBLE, John, 79 Madison Ave., Waterbu-
ry, Ct.
DICAMILLO, David, 384 Wormwood Rd.,
Fairfield, Ct. Tau Beta Pi, American Insti-
tute of Chem. Engineers.
Dl CIOCCIO, John Jr., 20 Fulton Rd.,
Manchester, Ct.
Dl DIO, Thomas, 7 Middle St., Ansonia,
Ct. Alpha Phi Omega, CCC.
DIESEL, Thomas, East Rd. Storrs, Ct. Tennis
4, International Stu. Assn.
DEFELICE, Fiorella, 64 Victory St., Stam-
ford, Ct.
DILAURENZIO, Nancy, 35 Bonvicini Dr.,
Torrington, Ct. ASG Corresponding sec-
retary-Torrington Branch.
DILORETO, Mark, 78 Shenfield St., New
Britain, Ct. House Treasurer, Intramural
Basketball 2,3,4.
DIMARIA, Charles, 58 Highland Park En-
field, Ct. Pershing Rifles, Scabbard and
Blade, Varsity Baseball 1 ,2, Intramural
Basketball 1 ,2, Intramural Softball 3, Army
ROTC, Army Flight Training.
DION, Jacqueline, Gunner Dr., Brooklyn,
Ct.
DISALVO, Anthony William 321 Oak-
wood Ave., West Hartford, Ct. Chi Epsilon
Fraternity.
DITTMANN, Laurie Jean, 1 7 Front Ave.,
West Haven, Ct. House Council Rep.
Food Committee Rep. Norwich Hospital
Volunteer.
DIXON, Kathryn, Baker St., Norwich, Ct.
DOIRON, David, 1 6 Hutchins St., Daniel-
son, Ct. St. Thomas Aquinas Music 2,3,4,
Director 4.
DOMBROWSKI, Jane, 20 Green Brier Rd.,
Norwich, Ct.
DONLEY, Priscilla, 1 3 Fairlawn Ave., Mid- .
dietown, N.Y. Cheerleading.
DONOVAN, Joe, 21 Reynold Ave., Mon-
son, Mass.
DOUGAL, Catherine, 99 Maryland Ave.,
Chicopee Falls, Mass. Phi Upsilom Omi-
cron. Student Counseling Chairman,
Assn. Women's Student Council.
DOUGALL, Diane, 55 Glendale Dr., Wat-
erbury, Ct.
DOUGHTIE, Thomas, 59 Woodridge Dr.,
Cheshire, Ct.
DOUGLAS, Lucille, 36 Plainfield St., Hart-
ford, Ct.
DOWLING, Robin, 263 Lalley Blvd., Fair-
field, Ct.
DOWNE^fThomas, Box 408 Saugatuck St.,
Westport, Ct. Cross Country 1 , Track 1 .
DRALLE, Lynn, 40 Nevinwood PI Hunting-
ton Station, N.Y. Intramurals Mansfield
Tutorial, SAPTA, Chairman of Course
Evaluation Committee.
DRAZY, Denise, 6 Amherst Rd., Andover,
Ma. Gymnastics 1 ,2, Dance Collage 3,4,
International House 1 .
DREIFUSS, David, 39 Normandy Rd., Clif-
ton, N.J. Phi Alpha Theta, Alpha Phi
Omega, CCC Executive Board.
DREW, Teresa RFD#2, Canterbury, Ct.
DRISCOLL, Danielle, 39 Hornadale Dr.,
Norwich, Ct., Intramural volleyball 3,4,
Varsity softball 3, Social Chairman 3,
Dorm president 3,4, McMahon Council
Treasurer 4, Ski Club 4.
DUBISSETTE, Deidre, 1 35 Woodbure Rd.,
Stamford, Ct.
DUCALE, Cecelia, Running Brook Lane,
' Norwalk, Ct.
DUFF, Robert, 41 Chaffeeville Rd., Mans-
field Center, Ct. Freshman Swimming 1 ,
Varsity Swimming 2,3,4.
DUFFY, Michael, Hudson Dr., New Fair-
field, Ct. Rock Haven Art Society.
DUKELEY, Madonna, Washington Rd.,
Terryville, Ct. North Campus Council Sec-
retary 1 , UTO Secretary 4, Freshman
counselor 3, Dean's List.
I DUPNIK, Laura, 78 Autumn Ridge Rd.,
Trumball, Ct. Bridge Club.
DWYER, David, 44 Wedge wood Dr.,
Waterbury, Ct. Political Science Club.
DYNIA, Stanley, 8 Wilstar Circle Enfield,
Ct. Fisherman's Club.
DZiOBEK, Donna, 1 6 Allen St., Terryville,
Ct. Honor's Program, Phi Kappa Phi.
DZUREC, Laura Cox, 62 Northwood Apts,
Storrs, Ct. House Council 1 , TauPi Upsi-
lon, Choral Society.
EBER, Robert, 1 071 Still Hill Rd., Hamden,
Ct. American Society of Mechanical Engi-
neers, Faculty Senate Courses and Curri-
cula Committee, Marching Band 4, Stu-
t dent Senate 2,3, Chairman Cultural
Committee, Chairman Constitutions
Committee, College Republicans, Young
Republicans, Young Americans for
Freedom.
EDWARDS, Robert, 40 Coe Ave., Port-
land, Conn.
EIGLER, Lynne, 1 744 Arrowhead Dr., Mar-
tinsville, N.J. Alpha Lambda Delta, Sigma
Pi Sigma, Phi Kappa Phi, Dorm President
2,3,4, Department Honor's Fellow 3,4,
Freshman Counselor 2.
ELMORE, Roberta A., 54 Orchard St., Apt
Z East Hartford, Ct.
ENOS, Kathleen, Miner Ave., Waterford,
Ct.
EPSTEIN, Sue, 71 3 Willow Way, Narberth,
Pa. Alpha Lambda Delta.
ERICKSON, Robert, 36 East St., Plainfield,
Ct.
ERICKSON, Stephen, 37 Springdale Rd.,
Wethersfield,Ct.
ERWIN, Judith, Strawberry Park, Thomas-
ton, Ct.
ESCHERT, James, 6 Lvcerne Dr., Stafford
Springs, Ct., Chi Epsilon, American Socie-
ty of Civil Engineers, Husky Scuba Club.
ESHBACH, Charles, 691 E. Pleasant St.,
Amherst, Ma. Marketing Club, Baseball
Manager 1 , Sports Information Dept.
EVANS, Suzanne, Smith St., E. Hampton,
Ct. Tau Beta Sigma. March-Band 1 ,2,3,4,
Pep Band 2,3,4, Concert Winds 1 ,2,4.
FAGAN, Susan, 7 Reed St., Rockville, Ct.
Alpha Lambda Delta, Phi Kappa Phi, Hill-
top Council 3, Freshman Counselor 3.
FAIN, John 3, Hatch St., Mystic, Ct. Alpha
Zeta.
FAIRCHILD, Diane, 58 Mt. View Dr., New-
ington, Ct.
FASS, Kenneth, 1 1 5 Quinseyxn Dr.,
Bridgeport, Ct. Intramurals, Photopool,
BOG Social Committee.
FATCH, Patricia, 242 W. Mt. Rd., W. Sims-
bury, Ct. Marketing Club, Intramurals 3.
FAUST, Christine, 575 W. Woods Rd.,
Hamden, Ct. Mortar Board, Willimantic
Tutorial, Norwich State Hospital
Volunteer.
FEINGOLD, Bonnie, 41 Fuller Dr., W.
Hartford, Ct.
FELLABAUM, Wayne, 43 Glendale Rd.,
Enfield, Ct.
FELLOWS, William F., 370 West Ave.,
Norwich, Ct.
FENN, Randolph V., 1 77 Mayapple Rd.,
Stamford, Ct. WHUS discjockey.
FERGUSON, Maryellen, 36 Lake Ave.
Leicester, Ma.
FERNANDES, Marylou, 65 Ludlow Rd.,
Windsor, Ct.
FERRANTE, Robert T., Box 203 Ledgemere
Apt., Mansfield Center, Ct.
FERRELLI, Thomas, 2603 N. Main St., Wat-
erbury, Ct.
FERRO, Anthony, 51 3 Pepper Ridge Rd.,
Stamford, Ct.
FERRY, Raymond, 1 9 Marion Ave., Pas-
coag, R.I., Conn. Daily Campus, Freshman
Hockey, Varsity Hockey 2,3,4.
FIJAL, John, 69 Hillcrest Ave., West Hart-
ford, Ct.
FIKUS, George, 26 High Hill Rd., Walling-
ford, Ct.
FISH, Alan, 21 6 Broad St., Plainville, Ct.
FISH, Joseph, 70 GeorgeTown Rd., Bristol,
Ct. Scabbard and Blade.
FISK, Maureen, 51 Francis Ave., Hamden,
Ct.
FITCH, Pamela 1 Old Hill Farms Rd., West-
port, Ct. Phi Kappa Phi.
FITZPATRICK, Neal, Black Walnut, La.,
Bristol,Ct.
FLANAGAN, Elizabeth, 203 Ledyard St.,
New London, Ct.
FORTES, Stephan, 2420 Whitney Ave.,
Hamden, Ct. Co-Editor Contac, Director
of Black Media, Resident Assistant .
FORTIER, Gary, 444 Alexander Rd., New
Britain, Ct.
FOSNOT, Mary, 85 Hunting Ridge Rd.,
Greenwich, Ct.
FRANCHINI, Philip, 1 97th Foster Dr., Wil-
limantic, Ct. Intramurals, Willimantic Tu-
torial, Table Tennis Club, Psychology
Club.
FRANCIS, Thomas E., 1 56 Maple St.,
Manchester, Ct.
FRANCOLINE, James, 44 Chester St., Hart-
ford, Ct. Treasurer Dorm, A.I.C.H.E.,
Intramurals.
FRASCA, Joanne M., 30 Dara Rd., West
Caldwell, N.J. Phi Alpha Theta, Alpha
Lambda Delta, VolleyBall, Rep. to United
Towers Organ. ASG Academic Standards
Committee, Scholastic Standards Com-
mittee. Dean's List.
FRECHETTE, Clarisse, Apt 1 6-C Crystal
Ave., New London, Ct. Dorm Treasurer,
Skating Club.
FREDERICK, William, 331 Glen St. New
Britain, Ct. Lacrosse 1 , Dorm Social Chair-
man 3, Dorm Steward 4, Scuba Club 4.
FRESHOUR, Kent A., 1 03 Herrman St., W.
Springfield, Ma. Accounting Society.
FRIEDLANDER, Helaine, 202 Roxton Rd.,
Plainview, N.Y. Honor's Program, Depart-
mental Honor's Scholar, Norwich Hospi-
tal Volunteer, Yggdrasil Volunteer, Willi-
manticTutorial.
FROMME, Christine, 1 6 Nod Road Clin-
ton, Ct., Tau Beta Sigma, Mortar Board,
Dorm assn. Stewardess, Dorm assn. Social
Chairman, Marching Band, Wind Ensem-
ble, South Campus Council, M.E.N.C.,
House Council.
GACCIONE, Peter, 539 Westbrook Dr.,
Peekskill, N.Y. WHUS Radio Staff, Intra-
murals 1 ,2,3,4, House President.
GADZIK, Pamela, 44 Fermwood Rd., New
Britain, Ct.
GAFFEY, Thomas, 32 Woodlawh Ave.,
Bloomfield, Ct.
GAIER, Sari, 40 Northbrook Dr., West
Hartford, Ct.
GALLAGHER, Mary Ann, 1 54 Baltic Rd.,
Baltic, Ct.
GAMACHE, Dennis, 85 ives St., Williman-
tic, Ct. UConn Veterans Club, Commuters
Union, Windham Republican Town
Committee.
GAMMONS, Jeffrey C, 270 Stratton
Brook Rd., West Simsbury, Ct.
GANIM, Elie, 2429 North Ave., Bridge-
port, Ct. Intramurals, Inter-Area Resi-
dents Council 4, Horticulture Club 2,3,4,
Resident Assistant, Northwest Quad So-
cial Coordinating Committee-Vice
President.
GANNON, Carol, 8 Timothy Rd., Nor-
walk, Ct.
GARAFFA, Daniel, 21 7 Conn Ave., Stam-
ford, Ct. Tau Beta Pi-Vice Pres., Eta Kappa
Nu, Intramurals 3,4, Member IEEE.
GARCEAU, Brian, 274 Mansfield Ave.,
Willimantic, Ct.
GARLONSKY, Roslyn, 1 47 Diamond St.,
New Haven, Ct. Tau Pi Upsilon, Hillel, Ice
Skating Club.
GARRY, Thomas, Greyhollow Rd., Nor-
walk, Ct. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Lacrosse 1 .
GELINAS, Linda, 35 Shad Row, Suffield,
Ct.
GENTILE, William, 26 Trumpetbrook Rd.,
Waterbury, Ct.
GEORGI, Sharon, 1 1 0 Valley Rd., Groton,
Ct. AWS1 ,2, ASG2.
GERGLER, Donald, Box 37 98 Middle
Tpke, Mansfield Depot, Ct.
GERMANOWiCZ, Martha, 31 Charles St.,
Stamford, Ct.
GEROW, Genette, RFD#6 Box 64, Led-
yard, Ct.
GESEK, Kathy, 40 Emma St., Seymour, Ct.
Dorm Social Chairman 4, Dorm Treasurer,
Women's Lacrosse Club, Archery Club,
Folk Dance Club, House Council, Student
Counselor, Gymnastics Club.
GIBBONS, Francis, 1 26 Fifth Ave., Strat-
ford, Ct. Arnold Air Society, Lacrosse 3,4,
AFROTC.
GILLEN, Margaret, RED 2 Box 57 Stoning-
ton, Ct. Dean's List, Student Designer 3.
GIRARD, Dennis, 28C Dartmouth Rd.,
Storrs, Ct.
GIRARD, Jeannette, 28C Dartmouth Rd.,
Storrs, Ct.
GITTLEMAN, Jennifer, Star Route Mans-
field Depot, Ct. Phi Kappa Phi, Band, Hil-
lel, Yggdrasil.
GIUFFRE, Maureen, Satan's Kingdom ,
New Hartford, Ct. Sigma Theta Tau.
GLASSER, David, 1 50 Frederick Pi., Ber-
genfield, N.J. Shalom Group, Hillel Trea-
surer, UConn Young Democrats, Win-
dham Hall Treasurer.
GLASSOVER, Jefferson, 67 Birch Hill,
Weston Ct. Dean's List.
GLENNON, Kevin, C, 58 Lexington Rd.,
West Hartford, Ct. Spanish Society, intra-
murals, Equestorian Club, Outing Club.
GOLD, Adele, 380 McKinley Ave., New
Haven, Ct.
GOLDBERG, Gerri Ann, 1 09 South Main
St., West Hartford, Ct. Social Committee
Chairman, Coed Council, Freshman
Counselor, Hillel Volunteer Norwich
State Hospital.
GOLDBERG, Joel, 850 N. 29th St. Allen-
town, Pa. Honors Program.
GOLDBERG, Mirian Rodville, 1 9 Deer
Park Rd., Simsbury, Ct.
GOLDBERG, Terri Sue, 1 09 South Main
St., West Hartford, Ct. Freshman Counse-
lor, Social Committee Chairman, Social
Committee Hillel, Volunteer Norwich
State Hospital.
GOLDSTEIN, Richard, 1 0 B Knollwood
Acres Storrs, Ct.
GOLDSTEIN, Robin, 289 Rt. Lebanon, Ct.
GOODE, Brian H., 1 5 Wells Ave., East
Hampton, Ct.
GOODMAN, Arnold, 3 Old Village Rd.,
Bloomfield, Ct.
GOODWIN, Gwendolyn, M. 763 1 08th St.,
Brooklyn, N.Y. OAAS.
GOOSMAN, Sharron, 1 1 5 Quinsey Dr.,
Bridgeport, Ct. BOG-Co Chairman Social
Recreation Committee.
GORCZYCA, Mary Ann, 1 76 Church St.,
Wethersfield, Ct.
GOREN, Wendy, 3 half Mile Common
Westport, Ct. Pi Lambda Theta, Mansfield
Tutorial, WillimanticTutorial.
GOSSELIN, Paul E., 49 Foster St., Meriden,
Ct. American Society of Civil Engineers,
Intramurals.
GOULET, Ronald, 1 902 So. Main St. Fall-
river, Mass. Nutmeg Summer Playhouse.
GOVE, Christine, 71 Balfour Dr., Spring-
field, Ma. SAPTA 2,3,4, South Campus
Council 3, Blood Mobile 1 ,3,4.
GRABAREK, Ellen, 36 Pheasant Dr., Meri-
den, Ct.
GRANDIERl, Patricia Noel, 37 Clapboard
Ridge Rd., Danbury, Ct.
GRANDPRE, Richard, 820 Chase Parkway,
Waterbury, Ct.
GRANOFF, Jeffrey, 33 Farnham Ave., New
Haven, Ct. President Student Union
Board of Govenors, Cheerleader 2, Story-
mimers 2,3, Hillel, Shalom, Folk Dance
Club, Indians, Cabaret, Fiddler on the
Roof, Dance Collage 73.
GRANT, Cynthia 86 Everett St., West Ha-
ven, Ct. Marching Band 1 ,2,3, Black
Voices of Freedom Gospel Choir 3,4.
GRANT, Howard, 88 Oak St., Manchester,
Ct.
GRECl, Nicholas, 232 Nod Road, Avon, Ct.
Assn. Student Commissaries Board of
Directors 4, House Steward 4.
GREEN, Lynnell, 270 Pepper Ridge Rd.,
Stamford, Ct. Spanish Club, House Vice
President.
GREENE, Edward "Bud", 27 Hull St., An-
sonia, Ct.
GREENE, Gayle, 6 Glidden Ave., Lowell,
Mass. Phi Alpha Theta, Mortar Board, Jr.
Dolphinette's 3, Skating Club 4, Dorm
Treasurer 3, Dorm Secretary 3, Unidos
Amigos, Dining Council Chairman.
GREENE, Ronda, 23 W. Hayland Lane,
Stamford, Ct. Eta Kappa Nu, Tau Beta Pi.
GREENFIELD, Sharon Smith, 3 Elm St. Wil-
limantic, Ct. Alpha Phi Theta Alpha Phi,
Nutmeg Summer Theater.
GREENLEES, Beth, 1 3 Prospect St., Terry-
ville, Ct.
GREGORY, Charlene, 45 James St. Danbu-
ry Ct., Mansfield Tutorial.
GREGORY, Marjorie, 396 Cornwall St.,
Hartford, Ct.
GREOS, Maryann, 21 Everett St., New Brit-
ain, Ct.
GRIFFIN, Lynda, 771 Ogden St., Bridge-
port, Ct. Black Voices of Freedom.
GRIFFITH S. Roderick, 21 2 Huntington St.,
Shelton, Ct. Pershing Rifles, Lacrosse 1 ,2,
3,4, Intramural Hockey, Resident Assn.
GRISE, Susan, 785 Farmington Ave., Far-
mington, Ct. Spanish Club, Dean's List.
GRISKA, Jason, 31 8 Woodtick Rd., Water-
bury, Ct. Pres. Accounting Society, Sena-
tro ASG, Outing Club, Photopool, Moun-
taineering Club.
GRITZ, Maureen, 5 Water St., Warehouse
Point, Ct.
GRIUDZIEN, Diane, 27 Peach Orchard
Rd., Prospect, Ct.
GROHS, Gail, 73 Gale Ridge Rd., Easton,
Ct.
GRONDIN, Patricia, 1 37 Canterbury Tpke.
Norwich, Ct. Ski Club, Student House
Council.
GROSSMAN, Robert, 1 3 Warren St., Mer-
iden, Ct. Intramural Basketball 2,3, Nor-
wich State Hospital Volunteer 3,4.
GRUBELICH, Lee, 41 1 Westwood Hill,
Wethersfield, Ct.
GUASCO, Gary, 1 5 Circle Dr. Ext. Green-
wich, Ct. American Society of Mechanical
Engineers.
GUERTIN, Larry J., 1 86 School St. Putnam,
Ct. Commuter's Union, Public Relations
Director, Chairman, FSSO.
GUEVREMONT, Lynda E., 1 58 Tumble-
brook Dr., Vernon, Ct. Pi Lambda Theta.
GUGLIELMO, Rose, 47 Wilson St., Stam-
ford, Ct. Phi Kappa Phi, E. Stevens Henry
Award, Univ. Scholar 3, UConn Bowling
League.
GUGLIETTA, Jon, East Shore Blvd. Union-
ville,Ct.
GUGLIOTTI, Anthony, 376 Berkeley Ave.,
Waterbury, Ct.
GUSTAFRON, Richard RFD#2 Box 49,
Old Lyme, Ct. Intramural Ice Hockey 3,
Tutor Summer Programs 3,4.
H
HAGGERTY, Carolyn, 733 Washington St.,
Middletown, Ct. Trap and Street Club 2,3,
4, Vice president 4.
HALL , Mary, 255 Britannia St., Meriden,
Ct. Phi AlphaTheta,WillimanticTutorial.
HALL, Nancy, 303 Pershing Ave., New
Britain, Ct. Intramurals 2,3, Volleyball in-
terscholastic team. Lifeguard and Building
supervisor for girl's gymnasium.
HAMILTON, William H., 1 78 Larkin St.,
Stratford, Ct.
HAMLIN, Dudley, 1 007 River Blvd., Suf-
field, Ct.
HAMLIN, Marilyn, Country Club Ave.,
Adams, Ma. Writer CDC, Intramurals,
Freshman counselor, SAPTA.
HANEY, Paula, Box 204, South Bear Hill
Rd., Chaplin, Ct. South Campus Council
Rep. 2, SAPTA Ways and Means Commit-
tee, MTS Volunteer.
HARDY, June E., 22 East Main St. Mystic,
Ct. Charter Club, Russian Studies
Program.
HARLOW, Caroll Jean, 1 6 Oakland Ave.,
Milford, Ct. treasurer Alsop A, Photo-
pool, Dean's List.
HARMON, Eugenia, 393 Bunker Hill Ave.,
Waterbury, Ct.
HARNED, Leslie, Kibbe Rd., Ellington, Ct.
HARRIS, Patricia, 22 Partridge Rd., Gro-
ton, Ct. Vista Day Care Volunteer, Brown-
ie Scout assistant leader 3.
HARRISON, George S., 4 Richie Lane,
Yardley, Pa.
HARRISON, Ken, 399 Schoolev's Mtn.
Rd., Hackett's Town, N.J. Football 1 , Lech-
erian Society.
HART, Linda, 1 3 Applewood Rd., Bloom-
field, Ct.
HARVEY, Faith, 1 755 Elm St., Stratford, Ct.
HARVEY, Maryellen, 36 John St., Trum-
ball, Ct. Phi Kappa Phi, SAPTA Chairman
Library Committee, Student Counselor,
Dorm Vice President.
HASS, Dorothy, 607 South Oak St., Falls
Church, Virginia. Layout editor CDC 1 ,2,
Dolphinettes 3,4, Intramurals 1 ,2, House
officer 1 ,2, Resident Assistant 3,4, Public
Service Internship 3.
HASS, Richard H., 6B Gallup Lane Water-
ford, Ct. CDC Sports Writer 2, Sports edi-
tor 3.
HAWLEY, Richard, 58 Reservoir Sr., Be-
thel, Ct. American Society of Mechanical
Engineers.
HAYDEN, Donna, 6 Highland Park, En-
field, Ct.
HEALEY, Patrick, 20 Fairview Terr., Derby,
Ct.
HEBENSTREIT, Anton, 35 Carroll St., New
Britain, Ct. Eta Kappa Nu, Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
HEENEHAN, James, 1 40 Gary Rd., Stam-
ford, Ct. Dorm Pres. 1 , Chess Team1 ,2,3,4,
Conn. Pirg 3,4.
HEIN, Nancy, 21 Briarwood Rd., Farming-
ton, Ct.
HELPER, Esther, 1 40 Centerbrook Rd.,
Hamden, Ct. Phi U, Shalom Pres., Hillel
Secretary, Israeli Dance Group.
HELOITIS, Anne, Richards Ave., Norwalk,
Ct.
HENDRICKSON, Theodore, 54 Grove St.,
New London, Ct.
HERMANOWSKI, Nancy, 89 Bernard Rd.,
Kensington, Ct^
HESLIN, Joanne, 235 Kenyon St., Hartford,
Ct. Social Chairman 1 ,2, Freshman Rep. 1 .
HODGE, (Terry) "T", 645 W. 1 60 Street,
New York 1 0032, Heritage-Black Drama
Group, OAAS, participation in C Service
Groups.
HOETHKE, Diane, 31 4-A Oakville, Ave-
nue, Waterbury, Conn. 06708. Volunteer
at Norwich State Hospital, Member of
Community Group at Perception House,
Member of Sociology Club.
HOLLER, Regina, 21 Fair Sailing Road,
West Haven, Conn.
HOLLEY, Breland, 1 59 Hawthorne Drive,
Apt. 1 0A, New London, Conn. 06320. Av-
ery Point 2 years. Basketball.
HOLM, Janice, 22 Lowell Avenue, Hol-
den, Mass., 01 520. SAPTA, Mansfield
Tutorial.
HOLMES, Gary, 1 00 Bailey Road, Rocky
Hill, Conn. 06067. Husky Scuba Club (3,4),
Treasurer (3), Accounting (4).
HOLOWIAK, Ellen M., 405 Booth Hill
Road, Huntington, Conn. 06484.
HOLZ, Doris, 700 Franklin Avenue, Mas-
sapequa. New York, 1 1 758. Concert
Choir, Folk Dance Group, Resident
Assistant.
HORAN, Diane F., 55 Ridgewood Road,
Lk. Hayward, Colchester, Conn.
HORNYACK, John, 253 Peck Lane, Or-
ange, Conn. 06477.
HOTCHKISS, Brian, 60 Stanton Avenue,
Winsted, Conn., Drug Abuse Education,
Pharmacy Yearbook Photographer.
HOWARD, Allen, Watchaug Road, So-
mers. Conn., 06071 . Member: UConn's
Junior Year in France Program.
HOWARD, Karen, 93 Peck Lane, Hamden,
Conn., 0651 8. Mansfield Training School,
Hartford Tutorial.
HOWARD, Richard W., Jr., 1 4 Bayview
Place, West Haven, Conn. 0651 7. Intra-
mural Soccer, Softball, Basketball, Swim-
ming, Track.
HOWE, Frederick, 8 Holmes Ct., Darien,
Conn.
HOWLETT, David Roy, Storrs Road, West
Willington, Conn. 06279. Biographee in
The National Student Register, UConn
Student Union Board of Governors:
Committee Chrmn (2) President (3), NEC-
ACU-i delegate; Ad Hoc Sub-committee
of University Senate; Federation of Stu-
dents and Services Organization: Elec-
tions Committee (4); Ski Club; Intramural
Sport; UConn Concert and European
Tour Choirs; Gilbert and Sullivan Society;
D.J.'s Dance Band; Storrs Congregational
Church Choir; Willington Republican
Town Committee.
HOYER, E.J., Jr., 82 Knob Hill Drive, Ham-
den, Conn., 0651 8. Connecticut Monthly,
BOG Monthly Newspaper, Circulation
Manager (4).
HOYT, Paul, 31 Ivy Street, Stamford,
Conn., 06802. Alpha Phi Omega, Student
Government (2), BOG Coffee House
committee member.
HRIVNAK, Beverly, 1 1 0 Split Rail Drive,
Cherry Hill, New Jersey.
HUBER, Jack, 843 Durham Road, Walling-
ford, Conn., 06492, Intramurals: Softball,
1 ,2,3,4, Soccer, 1 ,2,3,4, Basketball, 1 ,2,3,4,
Track, 1 ,2. Kentucky House Vice President
(2), House President, (3).
HUGHES, Robert, 1 03 Cottage Street,
New Haven, Conn. 0651 1 .
HULME, Steve, 1 7 Vista Drive, Lincoln,
R.!., 02865. X-Country (1 ,3), Track (Indoor,
1 ,2,3,4), Outdoor (2,3,4).
HUMESTON, John, 21 Van Buren Street,
Beacon, New York., 1 2508. ASCE, Chi Ep-
silon. Wrestling, 1 ,2,3.
HUMPREY, Donald, 20 Treat Rd., Glaston-
bury. Conn. 06033.
HUNT, Michael, High Street, Coventry,
Conn., 06238.
HUONKER, Peter, 1 1 Hillhurst Avenue,
New Britain, Ct., 06053.
HURLE, Edgar, 71 8 Meriden-N. Waterbury
Rd., Southington, Conn., 06489. UConn
Rugby Club, UConn Forestry & Wildlife
Club.
HURWIT, Lauren, 332 Auburn Road, West
Hartford, Conn. 061 1 9.
IBERGER, Carl, 40 Jefferson Avenue, Port
Jefferson, L.I., New York, 1 1 776. Lacrosse
1 ,2,3,4.
IBSEN, Kristin, 20 Mill Street, Shelton,
Conn., 06484, Skating Club.
IRVINE, Susan, 31 Hilltop Drive, Trumbull,
Conn. 0661 1 .
ITZEL, Peter, 21 7 Talltimbers, Glastonbury,
Conn.
IZBICKI, Nancy, 282 Norwich Avenue,
Taftville, Conn. 06380.
JACKSON, Juanita, 239 Trumbull Avenue,
Bpt., Conn. 06606. OAAS, 1 ,2,3,4; S.A.B.U.
2.
JACKSON, MaryAnne, 929 Newfield Ave-
nue, Stamford, Conn., 06905. Who's Who
Among Students in Arrferican Universities
and Colleges (1 974), Represented UConn
at Accounting Seminars by Beta Gamma
Sigma in Washington, D.C., Manager of
SBA Christmas Party, Promoted SBA to
incoming freshmen. Cheerleader (2) Bas-
ketball intramurals (3), Founder and Presi-
dent of Prof Business Sorority (4), Ac-
counting Society Member (3,4), House
Council Representative (3), Tutor in Alge-
bra, Stat, Trig, Accounting.
JACOB, Barbara, 1 57 Ryegate Terr., Strat-
ford, Conn., 06497.
JACOBS, Ann Rene, 20 Mayfair Road,
Bloomfield, Conn-., 06002. Junior Year in
France.
JASEK, Stephen, 33 Hale St. Ext., Rockville,
Conn., 06066.
JASINSKf, Peter, 1 60 Bridge St., Ware-
house Pt., Conn., 06088. Phi Alpha Theta,
Russell Dorm Secretary, intramural Base-
ball & Bowling Teams.
JASTEMSKI, Ann, 1 7 Sagamore Road,
Meriden, Conn., 06450. Inner College
(1 ,2), Experimental College Staff (1 ,2),
Marketing Club (4).
JENSEN, Jill, Old Marlborough Rd., E.
Hampton, Conn., 06424. Phi Kappa Phi,
Honors Program.
JESSEL, Gail M., 20 Ann St., Jewett City,
Conn., 06360.
JOHNS, David, 3 Chamberlin Drive, W.
Haven, Conn. Belden Five Basketball
Team, Heterosexual League, Carter
Member.
JOHNSON, Claire, Cross Brook Rd., New-
town, Conn. 06470.
JOHNSON, Craig, 1 683 Willard Avenue,
Newington, Conn., 061 1 1 .
JOHNSON, Gary, 1 67 Englewood Drive,
Orange, Conn., 06477. Intermurals, 1 ,2.
JOHNSON, Kathryn, 62 Brookside Drive,
Darien, Conn., 06820. Mortar Board Trea-
surer (4), Dorm Intramural Chairman (1 ,2,
3), Dorm Intramural Sports (1 ,2,3,4), Dorm
President (3,4), House Council (3,), Mans-
field Tutorial (1 ), Willimantic Tutorial (2,3,
4), Staff (2,3), Freshman Counselor (4),
A.W.S. Bridal Fair (1 ).
JOHNSON, Peter A., 5 Harrison Drive,
Cromwell, Conn., 0641 6. Chi Epsilon.
JOHNSON, Richard, R.R.,#2, Box 208,
Woodstock, Conn., 06281 . American Soc.
Civil Engineers, Society of Manufacturing
Engineers.
JOHNSON, Rosalind, 31 Ardmore Rd.,
Stamford, Conn., 06902. OAAS, House
Council.
JOHNSON, Sandra L., 85 Riverside Ave-
nue, F-4, Stamford, Conn.
JOHNSON, Sharon, 1 37 Dale Street, Stam-
ford, Conn., 06902. Black Voices of Free-
dom Choir, Heritage Theatre Workshop,
English Tutor, Modern Dance.
JOHNSTON, John M., 1 94 No. Taylor
Avenue, Norwalk, Conn., 06854. Arnold
Air Society, President; The Pistol Club.
JONES, Ruth, 9 Eton Rd., Livingston, New
Jersey 07039.
JORDAN, Patricia, 8 Eighth Avenue, Wa-
terford. Conn., 06355.
JOSITAS, Dana, 5 Indian Trail, Darien,
Conn., 06820. BN (2,3,4).
JOSITAS, David, 5 Indian Trail, Darien,
Conn. Soccer (1 ).
JUNIOR, Dan, 208 Seitz Drive, Camillus,
New York. 1 3031 . Football (1 ), Baseball
(1 ,2).
K
KABAT, Cynthia, 26 South Street, Hatfield,
Mass., 01 038. SAPTA 1 ,2,3,4.
KAGAN, Diane, 76 Hamilton Drive, Ros-
lyn. New York., 1 1 576. Phi Upsilon Omi-
cron. Dorm Vice-president 2, Ski Club,
WillimanticTutorial, Mansfield Tutorial.
KAIKO, Charles, 1 06 Woodhaven, Storrs,
Conn., 06268. Coordinator UConn
Experimental College Video Group.
KAMINSKI, Michael, 41 Grandview Ter-
race, Hartford, Conn., 061 1 4. Student
Union Rats.
KANA, Carol, 63 Church Street, Green-
wich, Conn. 06830. Student Counselor,
Dorm Secretary.
KANACHOVSKI, Judy (Ms), 1 9 Grand
Street, Greenwich, Conn., 06830. Norwich
State Hospital Volunteer, Willimantic
Tutorial Volunteer.
KANE, Robert, Jefferson Street, Waldo-
boro. Me., 04572. Delta Chi, SAPTA, Na-
tional Athletic Trainer's Assoc, Student
Athletic Trainer (Univ. of Maine at Gor-
ham 1 ,2), Student Athletic Trainer (Univ.
of Conn. 2,3,4), Eastern Athletic Trainer's
Assoc.
KANIA, Robert, 1 9 Wendy Lane, New
Britain, Conn.; Sigma Chi, Treasurer
Inter Fraternity Council.
KAPRAL, Diane, 3 Old Pt. Road, Milford,
Conn.
KARLAK, John S., 4 Karlak Street, Sey-
mour, Conn., 06483. Student Senate 2,3;
University of Connecticut Marching and
Pep Bands.
KARNASIEWICZ, Debra A., 27 Mc-
Clintock Street, New Britain, Conn. Alpha
Lambda Delta, Honors Program, Phi Kap-
pa Phi, Scuba Club 4.
KASCAK, Thomas, 1 9 Laurel Street, Trum-
bull. Conn., 0661 1 ; Swim Team 1 ,2,3,4.
KASINSKAS, John, 323 Wilson Street,
Waterbury, Conn.
KATZ, Clifford, 5 Shepard Road, Bloom-
field, Conn. Student Member Universi-
ty Senate Course & Curriculum Commit-
tee, College of Liberal Arts Course and
Curriculum Committee, Member of Traff-
ic Court.
KATZMAN, Joel, 1 499 Dieman Lane, East
Meadow, New York., 1 1 554. Phi Kappa
Phi, Beta Gamma Sigma.
KAUNITZ, Franklin, 2 Gem Drive, Wtby,
Conn. Resident Assistant 3,4.
KAZAN, Eugene, 1 83 Lawn Avenue, Stam-
ford, Conn., 06902. IEEE 3,4; Young Amer-
icans for Freedom 3,4; Folk Dance Club 3;
Modern Dance Club 4; Eastern Orthodox
Christian Fellowship 3,4.
KEEFE, Jeffrey, 231 Housatonic Avenue,
Stratford, Conn.' 06497. Intramural Sports.
Sports.
KEEGAN, Kevin, 31 Colony Avenue,
Trumbull, Conn., 0661 1 .
KEHOE, John, 1 64 Hubbard Road, Hart-
ford, Conn., 061 1 4. Horticulture Show 72-
73; Horticulture Club 72-74; Intermural
Basketball 72-74.
KENDALL, John, 91 South Street Ext., Bris-
tol, Conn., 0601 0.
KENTLER, Daniel, 249-44 1 47 Road, Rose-
dale, New York., 1 1 422. Track 1 ; Intermur-
als 1 ,2,3,4; House Treasurer.
KILCOYNE, Colleen, 33 Pleasant Street,
Riverside, Conn., 06878. Training Staff
Yggdrasil: The Drop-in-Center; Group
Facilitator for Yggdrasil: The Center for
Personal Growth.
KILMURRAY, Robert, 85 Lexington, Ro-
chelle Park, New Jersey., 07662. Freshman
Football, Intramural Basketball, Tappa
Keg Omega.
KING, Gary, 23 Transit Street, Wtby,
Conn. Vice-Pres. and Political Chairman
of OAAS, Executive Committee of Sociol-
ogy Department.
KIRKPATRICK, Laurie Elizabeth, 1 1 3 Ni-
chols Avenue, Stamford, Conn., 06905.
Horse Practicums 2,3,4.
KITA, Dieter, 746 W. Main Street, New
Britain, Conn., 06053. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi
Kappa Phi.
KITTRELL, John, 3092 Culver Road, Roch.,
New York., 1 4622. Swimming 1 ; LaCrosse
1 ,2,3.
KLEIN, Robert, 56 Carlyle Road, W. Htfd.,
Conn., 061 1 7. UConn Marketing Club
Treasurer 4; House President 3,4.
KLINKA, Thomas, 1 28 Hollow Wood Lane,
Byram, Conn., 1 0573.
KLONOSKI, Kenneth, 21 Norwood Street,
Torrington, Conn., 06790. IEEE, Intramural
Soccer 1 ,2,3,4.
KNOWLES, David, 466 Riverdale Drive,
Stratford, Conn., 06497. Chi Epsiion Ed, 6,
7; Tau Beta Pi, Treasurer 7,8; Scuba Club
2,3,4,5,6,7,8; Skeet Club 1 -6.
KNOX, Paula, 1 1 300 Trout Brook Drive.,
West Hartford, Conn., 061 1 9.
KOCZON, Ronald, 50 Sunbright Drive,
W., Meriden, Conn.
KOHLHEPP, William, 21 8 South Mill Rd.,
Princeton Junction, New Jersey; Mc-
Conaughy Hall Judicial Board 1 ; Intra-
mural Hockey 3,4; Ski Club 1 ,2,3,4.
KOHN, Merryl, 42 Chapel Hill Drive, Fair-
field, Conn., 06430. Beauty Queen
Woodhaven Apartments.
KOLAJ, John, 422 Park Street, Bridgeport,
Conn., 06608. Flying Club
KOLTKO, Patricia, Bemis Street, Terry-
ville. Conn., 06786. Tau Pi Upsilon.
KONCKl, Judith, 73 Sunset Avenue, Meri-
den, Conn. Dean's List.
KONIECKI, Donna, P.O. Box 3, Storrs,
Conn., 06268. Gamma Sigma Sigma, Ar-
nold Air Society, Phi Sigma Omega, Vol-
leyball Intramural Team 1 ,2; Treasurer
Total Concern 4; Secretary Total Con-
cern 2,3; Secretary, Gamma Sigma Sigma
3,4; Secretary President's Advisory
Committee on Physically Handicapped
Affairs; Dialogue, Mansfield Tutorial;
WillimanticTutorial.
KONKOL, Paul, 1 88 Bullard Street, Hol-
den, Mass., 01 520; Freshman Ice Hockey
1 ; Varsity Ice Hockey 2,3; Rhode Island
House Secretary 2,3,4; Anthropology
Club 4; Anthropology Undergraduate
Committee4.
KONOVITCH, Robyn, 6 Skinner Drive,
Bioomfieid, Conn., 06002.
KOPCHA, Susan, 47 Allen Street, Terry-
ville, Conn., 06786. Hollister B-Vice-Pres.
2; Tau Pi Upsilon, Secretary Tau Pi Up-
silon 2.
KOPCINSKI, Linda, 406 Tunxis Avenue,
Bioomfieid, Conn., 06002. Alpha Lambda
Delta, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi.
KOPPERMANN, Thomas, 235 Mideon
Avenue, Torrington, Conn., 06790. Bas-
ketball 1 .
KOSAK, Swavomir, 24 Standish Street,
Hartford, Conn., 061 1 4.
KOSTORA, Claire, 69 Riverbank Drive,
Stamford, Conn., 06903. Pi Beta Sigma.
KOSTURAK, Katherine Lynn, 1 70 Arrow-
head Place, Stratford, Conn. 06407.
KOTLARZ, Barbara, 1 55 Sterling Street,
New Britain, Conn., 06053.
KRAJCIK, Cheryl, 1 69 Monroe Road,
Trumbull, Conn., 0661 1 . Honors Program
1 ,2,3,4. Dorm Council 3.
KRAMER, Jeffrey, 55 Lexington Avenue,
Wtby, Conn., 0671 0.
KRASKA, Dean, 1 22 Cameo Drive, Wili-
mantic. Conn., 06226.
KRASNICKI, Edward J., 37 Clover Drive,
W. Hartford, Conn., 061 1 0. Pi Tau Sigma,
Tau Beta Pi, UConn SwimTeam 1 ; ASME.
KRAUT, Deborah, 1 4 Bailey Road, Fair-
field, Conn., 06430. Dean's List Mortar
Board, Who's Who in American Universi-
ties and Colleges, Chairwoman-Student
Union BOG, Travel Committee; Gover-
nor-SU BOG, Tennis Club 4; Interviewer
on 1 974 Nominating Committee-SUBOG;
News Reporter-WHUS; Tutor-Mansfield
Training School; Dorm. Social Rep; Legal
intern with the Tolland-Windham Legal
Assistance, Inc.; Drama Club; Represent-
ative at the National Entertainment Con-
ferences on behalf of UConn.
KRINISKE, Sandra Lea, 500 Carolyn Court,
Eden, N. Carolina. Associated Student
Commissaries Bd. of Dir., Secretary (3),
Treasurer (4); Freshman Counselor 2;
Chairman 4; Beard A Vice-Pres. 1 ,2; Math
Club, Mansfield Tutorial.
KRISS, Diane, Ratlum Mt., Rd., Collins-
ville. Conn., 06022. ASG Treasurer 2;
Torrington Branch of UConn 2
(Yearbook).
KRODEL, James, 1 8 So. B Street, Taftbille,
Conn., 06380.
KROM, Barry, 54 Violet Place, Rhinebeck,
New York, 1 2572. Football 1 ,2,3,4; Captain
4; Intramural Basketball Gazelles 2,3,4.
KRASIEWiCZ, Peter, 20 Somerset Street,
Weth., Conn.
KRUTOLOW, Brenda, 95 Middle River
Road, Danbury, Conn., 0681 0.
KSIAZEK, John F., 239 McGrath Court,
Stratford, Conn., 06497.
KUBICA, Richard, 276 Abram St., Strat-
ford, Conn., 06497. Sigma Phi Epsiion, Eta
Kappa Nu.
KUCHY, Maryann Jane, Nathan Hale
Drive, Coventry, Conn., 06238. Phi Upsi-
lon Omicron.
KUCIA, Jean, 91 Filley Street, Bioomfieid,
Conn., 06002. Alpha Lambda Delta; Alpha
Zeta, Phi Kappa Phi, Riding Club.
KUCZ, Margaret, 7 Linden Place, Rock-
ville. Conn., 06066.
KUNAY, Edward, 71 Elsie Street, Torring-
ton, Conn.; Beta Omega Chapter of Eta
Kappa Nu, UConn Student Branch of IEEE,
Secretary, Jefferson House 4.
KUPFRIAN, Thomas, E-200 Midland Ave-
nue, Paramus, New Jersey, 07652. Football
1 ,2,3.
KUSHNER, Karen, 64 Steele Avenue,
Somerville, New Jersey. House Pres. 1 ;
Resident Assistant 3,4; Chorale Society 2,
3,4.
KUZMA, Fred, 226 Pershing Avenue, New
Britain, Conn., 06053.
KUZMICS, Erika, 48 Wilbur Street, Hart-
ford, Conn., 061 06.
LABAK, Kenneth, 83 Park Avenue, En-
field, Conn., 06082. Phi Alpha Theta,
House Pres. Fairfield Hall 4; Student
Counselor 4; Social Committee Res. Fair-
field Hall 3,4.
LABRECHE, Duane, 21 0 Monson Road,
Stafford Springs, Conn., 06076. Chi Epsi-
lon, Tau Beta Pi, Track 3; American Soc. of
Civil Engineers, Students International
Meditation Society.
LABUTIS, Carol Ann, 5 Francis Avenue,
Enfield, Conn., 06082. House Council
Representative 2,3.
LACOURSE, John, 63 Lafayette Street,
Norwich, Conn., 06360. U.S. Coast Guard
Auxiliary.
LADD, Susan, 23 Gem Street, Skowhegan,
Maine, 04976. Mansfield Tutorial 1 ; Hart-
ford Tutorial 2,3; SAPTA 2,3,4.
LADNY, Thomas F., 46 Circle Drive, Wind-
wor Locks, Conn., 06097. Alpha Zeta, For-
estry & Wildlife Club 1 ,2,3,4.
LAFRAMBOISE, Elizabeth, RED #1 , No.
Grosvenordale, Conn. Tau Beta Sigma,
Conn. Music Educator's Association,
Marching & Concert Bands, Concert
Choir.
LALIBERTE, Sharon L., Box 577, RED 5,
Gales Ferry, Conn., 06335. Scuba Diving
Club, 4; UConn Women's Field & Track
Team4.
LAMB, Jennifer, 73 Society Road, Niantic,
Conn., 06357. Tau Beta Sigma, Circolo It-
aliano. Marching Band.
LANDER, Sandra, Cisar Road, Willington,
Conn. 06268.
LANDWEHR, Frederick, Great Pasture
Road, West Redding, Conn., 06896. Ski
Club, Intramurals, Accounting Club
Member.
LANG, Jamie E., 1 0 Turner Road, Stam-
ford, Conn., 06904. Intramural basketball,
baseball 1 ,2,3; Mansfield Tutorial, Hart-
ford Tutorial.
LANGEVIN, Candace A., 1 6 Babcock Ave-
nue, Plainfield, Conn., 06374. Kappa Al-
pha Theta.
LANGEVIN, Gary, 65 Clarendon Avenue,
W. Htfd., Conn., 061 1 0. Physics Club.
LARSEN, Thomas, 39 Ridge Street, Green-
wich, Conn., 06830.
LARUE, Paul, 525 Birch Street, Forestville,
Conn., 0601 0. Floor Rep. Hurley Hall 1 ;
Vice Pres. Lafayette House 2; Secretary
Webster House 4.
LASARACINA, Robert, Sandy Lane, Apt.
78, Norwich, Conn., 06360.
LASHIN, Terry, 29 Sampson, W. Hartford,
Conn.; Intramural Soccer 3,4; Intramural
Basketball 3,4; Marketing Club 3,4; Ski
Club 3,4.
LASHOMBE, Lester D., Jr. 68 Park West
Drive, Rockville, Conn. Delta Sigma Pi,
Internation Professional Fraternity, Trea-
surer 4; Veterans Club, Marketing Club,
Accounting Society.
LAUTIER, John, 50 Yale Avenue, Torring-
ton. Conn. Basketball 1 ; Intramural Bas-
ketball 2,3,4; Softball 3,4; Soccer 3,4;
Hockey 3; WEBB Council Rep. from Bel-
den 4; WEBB Food Committee 3,4; North
Carolina House Sports Coordinator.
LAVALLEY, Alfred, 23 Stinson Place,
Windsor, Conn., 06095.
LAVOIE, Janice B., 4 Collimore Road, East
Htfd., Conn. Rho Chi.
LAWSON, Gail M., 1 24 S. Grand Street, W.
Sfld., Conn., 06093. Ron Savage Karate
Academy 4.
LAYMAN, David, 7 Adrion Avenue, Rock-
ville, Conn. 06066. Chi Epsilon, ASCE.
LEARY, Rosemary, 1 1 5 HartI Drive, Tal-
cottville. Conn., 06066.
LEBOV, Philip, 92 Barnett Street, New
Haven", Conn., 0651 1 ; Shuttle Bus Driver.
LEBOVITZ, Sandra, 1 09 Ballard Drive, W.
Htfd., Conn., 061 1 9. B'nai B'rith Hillel
Executive Board Cultural Committee
Chairman, Member Executive Board
for Freshman Counseling.
LEBOWITZ, Marilyn, 1 7 Seneca Road, W.
Htfd., Conn., 061 1 7. Phi Kappa Phi.
LEDDY, Barbara Jean, 34 Sawka Drive, E.
Htfd., Conn., 061 1 8. Deans List 1 971 ,
1 973.
LEFOR, Guy, 39 Pond Road, Ridgefield,
Conn., 06877.
LEJFER, Jefferey, Old Hebron Road,
Colchester, Conn., 0641 5. Shalom Group
1 ,2,3,4; President 2.
LENIHAN, David G., 1 1 5 Maplewood
Avenue, W. Htfd., Conn., 061 1 9. President
Hilltop Council 3; Rathskeller Commit-
tee, Resident Assistant.
LENSIEWICZ, Albert D., 1 5-1 3th Street,
Norwich, Conn., 06360. Marketing Club.
LEONARD, Kevin R., 53 Bretton Road, W.
Htfd., Conn., 061 1 9. FSSO Elections
Committee 1 974; 2nd Place FSSO
Chairmanship 1 973, Vice President Fair-
field Hall 5-9 Association, Student
Counselor.
LEROY, Vincent, 39 Campfield Avenue,
Hartford, Conn., 061 1 4.
LESLIE, Kenith, 34 Bates Road, Manches-
ter, Conn., 06040; Lacrosse 2,3; Vice-Pres-
ident Urban Studies Club.
LETTIERO, Terese, 1 88 Sandquist Circle,
Hamden, Conn., 0651 4. Delphinette Swim
Club 1 ; Gymnastics Team 1 ,2,3,4; Orches-
is Dance Club 1 ,2,3,4; Gymnastics Team
President 3-4; Participated in (2,3,4) and
choreographed (4) "Dance Collage."
LEVINE, Jack, 207 Park Avenue, Bloom-
field, Conn. Yearbook, 1 974.
LEVINE, Jonathan, 34 High Path Drive,
Windsor, Conn., 06095. Phi Kappa Phi.
LEVINE, Robert, 5241 Main Street, Trum-
bull. Conn., 0661 1 . CDC Reporter; In-
tramurals 1 ,2,4; Dorm VP Buckley Hall
Pres. (2,3), ASG Student Senator 2,3; Vice-
Chairman of ASG Finance Committee 2;
lARC Member (3), ASG Concert Commit-
tee 2,3.
LEVY, Arthur, 37 Huntington, Apt. 3E,
Hartford, Conn.
LICWINKO, Lillian, 30 Council Ring
Drive, Bristol, Conn., 0601 0; Hollister B
Treasurer ^972.
LINCOLN, Joel, 64 Blachley Road, Stam-
ford, Conn., 06902; Hillel Board Mem-
ber 3; Comm Pirg 4; Buckley Judicial
Board 1 , Choral Society 1 .
LINDBERG, Thomas, 36 Day Street, New
Britain, Conn. 06051 .
LINKLETTER, Gayle, 1 8 Park Avenue, Old
Greenwich, Conn., 06870. JUNIOR YEAR
ABROAD Universite De Rouen 3; Honors
Program 1 ,2,3,4.
LiNSKEY, Gail A., 33 Farm View Drive,
Guilford, Conn., 06437.
LINTON, David, 1 7 Rosetree Lane, Tren-
ton, New Jersey, 08638. Intramural Basket-
ball 3,4; Intramural Tennis 2,3.
LISKE, Maureen, 794 Kearney Place, Para-
mus. New Jersey, 07652. Alpha Lambda
Delta, Semester Abroad Rennes,
France.
LISKOM, Gerald, 66 Henry Avenue, Strat-
ford, Conn., 06497.
LITKE, Claudia, 32 Jericho Road, Middle-
bury, Conn., 06762.
LITTLEFIELD, Dinnis, Wildwood Road,
Storrs, Conn., 06268. Phi Kappa Phi Honor
Society.
LODI, Mary-Ann, West Street, Box 1 37,
Bolton, Conn., 06040. SAPTA.
LOMBARDI, Salvatore, 1 1 4 Barton Street,
Torrington, Conn., 06790. Nutmeg 1 973,
1 974.
LONDON, Michael, 1 53 Leffingwell Ave-
nue, Wtby., Conn., 0671 0. Conn. Profes-
sional Chapter, Sigma Delta Chi, Wtby.
Republican & American News Stories,
Dorm. Rep. on North Campus Council 3;
WHUS News Staff.
LOOMER, Marjorie, 676 Palisado Avenue,
Windsor, Conn., 06095.
LOOTSMA, Ronald, 45 Eiro Street,
Manchester, Conn., 06040. Philosophy
Club.
LOUKIDES, Katina, 880 Bayberry Lane,
Orange, Conn., 06477. Tau Pi Upsilon.
LOZYNIAK, Steve, 1 042 Stillwater Road,
Stamford, Conn., 06902.
LUCAS, Ann Marie, 88 Orchard Street,
Bridgeport, Conn., 06608. Intramurals 1 ,2,
3,4; Dorm Social Chairman 3; Freshman
Counselling Chairman 3.
LUCIA, Lorraine, 1 4 Lincoln Terrace, Mer-
iden, Conn. Alpha Lambda Chapter of Phi
Upsilon Omicron.
LUCIBELLO, Debra, 34 Butternut Lane,
Meriden, Conn. Judo Club 2.
LUKACS, Janet, Fernbrook Drive, Brook-
field, Conn., 06805.
LULL, Gary, 93 Hemlock Street, Manches-
ter, Conn., 06040.
LUSTIG, Dorothy, 52 Indian Hill Avenue,
Portland, Conn., 06480. Willimantic
Tutorial.
LUTYNSKI, Carline, Juggernaut Road,
Prospect, Conn., 0671 2. A.S.C.E.; A.C.I.,
Faculty Inner College (Weaving).
LYNCH, Edilma, 341 6 Gunther Avenue,
Bronx, New York, 1 0469.
LYTTON,' Elizabeth, 8 Forest Hills Drive,
W. Htfd., Conn. Phi Kappa Phi.
M c
McALOON, Anne E., 221 Brown Street,
Hftd., Conn., 061 1 4.
McBRIDE, Luther S., Ill, 26 Chatham St.,
Hartford, Conn., 061 1 2. Delta Sigma Pi,
OASS, Black Voices of Freedom, Cross
Country 1 ,2,3; Track 1 ,2,3; Chairman
Education Committee OAAS 3,4; Big
Brother and Member Shaboo, Tutorial.
McBRlEN, Kathleen, South Road, Port-
land, Conn., 06480.
McCARTER, Claire, 30 Demarest Avenue,
Emerson, New Jersey, 07630. Phi Kappa
Phi, Moryarboard, Yggdrasil the Drop
In Center, Resident Assistant.
McCLEARY, George A., Guernseytown
Road, Watertown, Conn., 06795, Horticul-
ture Club.
McCOMB, William, 20 Austin St., Suffield,
Conn., 06078. Intramural Soccer 3,4; Stu-
dent Counselor 4.
McCUSKER, Catherine, 5025 Broadway,
New York, New York, 1 0034. Varsity Bas-
ketball 1 ,2; Guitar Group.
McGUIRE, Thomas, 1 1 7 Bayberry Lane,
Rocky Hill, Conn., 06067. Phi Alpha Theta
Historical Honor Society.
MclSAAC, Eileen, 234 Vernon Street,
Worcester, Mass., 01 607. Mansfield
Tutorial.
McKELVIE, Deborah, 98 Hartford Avenue,
Wethersfield, Conn., 061 09.
McKINLEY, Sharon, 401 Middle Road,
Farmington, Conn., 06032. Music Dept.
Student-faculty relations committee.
Concert Choir (Secretary), Concert Choir
(Librarian), Gilbert & Sullivan Society,
Collegium, Gamma Sigma Sigma.
MCKNIGHT, Robert J., Jr., 24 Indian Pass,
Greenwich, Conn., 06830. Football 1 ,2
(Stamford Branch), Photography Club 1 ,2;
Veteran's Club, Shotokan Karate Club 4;
FSSO, ASG (Stamford Branch 2).
McLEVY, Dawn, 2834 Redding, Fairfield,
Conn., 06430. Riding Club 3,4; Little Inter-
national Livestock and Fiorse Show 3,4;
Student counselor 4.
McMANUS, John W., Box 1 91 , Belden
Flail, Univ. of Conn., Storrs, Conn., 06268.
Biology Tutor, UConn Summer Program,
Skin-diving Teacher Kramer After
School Program, UConn Marching Band
1 ; UConn Rangers.
McMANUS, Kathleen, 249 Byram Road,
Byram, Conn., 1 0573; Phi Kappa Phi.
McWILLIAMS, John Howard, 24 Center
Street, Canton, Mass., 02021 .
M
MACHNICZ, William, 23 Avenue E, Bea-
con Falls, Conn., 06403. Intramural Bas-
ketball 4; Student American Pharmaceuti-
cal Assoc, Connecticut Society of Hospi-
tal Pharmacists.
MACK, Nancy, 1 566 Hartford Tpke, No.
Haven, Conn.
MACK, Susan B., 1 35 Riders Lane, Fair-
field, Conn., 06430. President Holcomb
Hall, APTA.
MacKAY, Judith, 68 Woodland Road, Ash-
land, Mass., 01 721 . SAPTA.
MACKEY, Deborah, 1 9 Carriage Drive, So.
Windsor, Conn., 06074. Phi Lambda Theta,
Hale Dorm Treasurer 2, Freshman Coun-
selor 2, Swim Club 2,3.
MACKIE, Christina, 67 Crescent St., Wtby,
Conn., 0671 0.
MAHER, Brian, 39 Fairway Avenue, Del-
mar, New York.
MAHER, Katherine, 1 07 Cornwall, Chesh-
ire, Ct., 0641 0.
MAKOWSKI, John E., 1 3 Elton Court,
Norwalk, Conn., 06851 . American Mar-
keting Association 4; Baseball 1 ,2 (Stam-
ford Branch), Treasurer Eddy Hall 4;
WEBB Council 3; Soccer Intramurals 3,4;
Softball Intramurals 3,4; Ski Club 1 ,2,3,4.
MAKUCIN, William, 34 Silver St., New
Britain, Conn., 06053.
MALLOY, Diana, 31 Featherbed Lane,
Branford, Conn., 06405.
MALTESE, Joseph M., 1 59 Jones St., West
Haven, Conn., 0651 6; Intramural Basket-
ball 1 ,2,3,4; Softball 3,4; Tennis 3,4; Hand-
ball Tournament, Psychology Club, Film
Society 1 ,2,3,4.
MANCHUCK, Kathryn, 97 Sweet Briar
Road, Stamford, Conn., 06905.
MANDUCA, Armando, 266 Wheeler
Avenue, Bridgeport, Conn., 06606. Phi
Beta Kappa, Judo Club 2,3,4.
MANNING, Nancy J., 83 Fanning Avenue,
Norwich, Conn., 06360. Sigma Theta Tau,
Dorm President Hale Hall (1 971 -72),
Secretary Hilltop Area Residence Council
(1 971 -72).
MAQUAT, Lynne, 383 Sport Hill Red.,
Waston, Conn., 0661 2. Alpha Lambda Del-
ta, Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi.
MARASHIO, Joseph, 57 Garfield Ave.,
Woburn, Mass., 01 801 ; Hockey 1 ,2,3; As-
sistant Captain.
MARCARELLI, Loreen, 98 Chestnut Drive,
Derby, Conn., 0641 8.
MARCHETTl, Nicholas, 229 Stonegate
Rd., Southington, Conn., 06489. Pershing
Rifles, Arnold Air Society, Scabbard and
Blade, Pistol Club, Vice Pres.
MARCINIEC, John W., 5935 Paint Valley,
Rochester, Mich., 48063. Phi Eta Sigma, Eta
Kappa Nu, Tau Beta Pi, Karate Club, Cam-
pus Crusade for Christ.
MARCONI, Frances, 1 82 Elm St., Windsor
Locks, Conn., 06096.
MARCUS, Martin, 4 Pinney Rd., Bloom-
field, Conn., 06002; Norwich State Hosp.,
Volunteer.
MARONEY, James, 248 Plains Rd., Mil-
ford, Conn., Dean's List 3,4,5,6,7.
MARRONE, Jane, 33 Briarwood Drive, N.
Branford, Conn., 06471 . Beta Gama Sigma.
MARROTTE, Pamela, Rte. 66, Box 1 04,
Columbia, Conn., 06237.
MARTIN, Carol, 4B Cedar Circle, Beacon
Falls, Conn., 06403. Skating Club 3; Nor-
wich State Hosp. Volunteer, Dean's List 1 ,
2,3,4.
MARTIN, Louisa, 3529 Eastchester Road,
Bronx, New York, 1 0469; Black Voices of
Freedom, Business Manager, Uniform
Manager, Student Counseling Program
Executive 3,4; OAAS, Afro-American Cul-
tural Center Committee 4; Big Brothers
(Coordinator) Fall, 1 972.
MARTINO, Maureen, 94 Mohawk Drive,
E. Htfd., Conn., 061 08.
MARUCCI, Anne C, 1 55 No. Walnut St.,
Wtby., Conn., 06704.
MATHIEU, Mary Jane, 75 Glenbrook
Road, W. Htfd., Conn., 061 07. Phi Upsilon
Omicron, Asst. Stewardess, Willi Tutorial,
Ski Club.
MATIUCK, Nicholas, Evergreen Farm,
Southbury, Conn., 06488. Phi Kappa Phi,
National Honor Society, Flying Club,
Board of Governors Travel Committee,
Skating Club.
MATTHEWS, Christine, 1 5 Page St., Mil-
ford, Conn., Nursing.
MAURITZ, Betsy Constance, 1 5 Andrew
Road, Eastchester, New York; Gamma
Sigma Sigma, Women's Varsity Alpine Ski
Team, Women's Track Team.
MAURUTIS, Elizabeth, 203 Ledgeside
Avenue, Wtby., Conn., 06708.
MAWHINNEY, Richard, Hearthstone
Drive, Riverside, Conn., 06878.
MAY, Daniel, 48 Castle Street, Plymouth,
Mass. Football 1 .
MAYO, Kenneth W., 68 Pratt St., Bristol,
Conn., 0601 0.
MAZANOWSKl, Janet L., Terryville Rd.,
Harwinton, Conn., 06790, Honors Pro-
gram 1 ,2,3,4; Sailing Club 1 ,2; Women's
Racing Team Captain 2; Choral Society.
MECCARIELLO, Peter, 76 Byrneside Ave-
nue, Wtby., Conn., 06704. Skating Club,
Worker at St. Thomas Aquinas Chapel &
Center.
MEDEIROS, Paula, 91 Bassick Cir., Stough-
ton, Mass., 02072. Mortarboard, Orchesis.
MEGSON, Sarah, Church St., Amston,
Conn., 06231 .
MEISELES, Eileen, 4 Calumet Avenue,
Rockaway, N.J., 07866. Mistress of Ismene.
MEINSEN, Cynthia, 25 Underbill Rd.,
Hamden, Conn., 0651 7. Synchronized
Swimming 1 ,2; House Council 1 .
MELEKY, Theodore, 1 1 3 Patterson St., Tor-
rington. Conn., 06790. Pi Mu Epsilon
Honorary Mathematics Fraternity, Physics
Club.
MELTLER, Steven, 92 Whiterock Drive,
Windsor, Conn., 06035. Phi Kappa Phi.
MENA, Gary, 83-09 41 st Avenue, N. St.
Petersburg, Fla., 33709. Council of Human
Rights and Opportunities, Committee
Against Racism, Puerto Rican Student
Movement.
MENDALL, Melissa Meredith, 72 Grove
St., Plympton, Mass., 02367. Symphony
Orchestra 2,3,4; Folk Dancing 2; Vice
Pres. Brock Hall 3,4; Student Counselling
Chmn. Brock Hall 3; Student Counselor
Brock Hall 2; Brock Hall House Council 2,
3,4.
MENDLER, Peter, 48 Arden Road, Trum-
bull. Conn., 0661 1 . Intermural Basketball
1 ,2; Horticultural Show Co-Chairman,
Horticultural Club1 ,2.
MESSER, Joanne, Fieldstone Rd., Boook-
field. Conn., 06804. Stewardess.
MESSINA, Natale, 62 Walter Lane, Ham-
den, Conn., 0651 4. Accounting Society,
Football 1 .
MESSINA, Patricia, 2 Hillside Ave., Sey-
mour, Conn., 06483.
MEYER, Brian, 353 Hill St., Hamden,
Conn., 0651 4. Professional Fraternity
Delta Sigma Pi, Skating Club 3,4.
MEYER, Caroline, 3 Cedar Crest PL, Nor-
walk, Conn., 06854. Symphony Orchestra,
Concert Choir, Collegium Musicum.
MEYER, Cynthia, 1 4 Oak Hollow, Bran-
ford, Conn.
MIERZEJEWSKI, David, 82 Peter Parley
Row, Berlin, Conn., 06037. ASCE, Amer.
Water Works Association, PHI KAPPA
TAU.
MIEZEJESKI, Daniel, 76 Plains Rd., Deep
River, Conn., 0641 7.
MIKOLASY, Donald, 1 0 Outlook Dr., Dar-
ien. Conn., 06820. Soccer 1 , Hockey 1 .
MILES, Robert, 1 6 Elm Drive, Newton,
Conn., 06470.
MILLARD, James, 1 4 Sage Park Rd., Wind-
sor, Conn., 06095; Southern New England
Weather Service 1 ,2,3; Freshman Counse-
lor 4.
MILLER, Arthur, 1 85 Warpas Rd., Madi-
son, Conn.
MILLER, Barbara, 1 321 Sheldon St., W.
Suffield, Conn., 06093.
MILLER, Barbara, 1 2 Lakeshore Dr.,
Brookfield, Conn.,'06804; Tau Pi Upsilon.
MILLER, Robert, 260 Harvester Rd., Or-
ange, Conn. 06477. CONN PIRG, BOG,
Intermural Basketball 1 ,2,3; Tennis 1 .
MILLS, Cynthia, 31 Chichester Rd., New.
Canaan, Conn., 06840.
MINOR, Candice, 1 41 Norfolk St., West
Haven, Conn. Afro-American Students,
Heritage Black Voices of Freedom,
"Tommy" (Dancer), Jazz Movers, Award
(1 st runner up Derby Queen), Great
White Hope.
MIRAKIAN, James, 30 N. Union Avenue,
W. Haven, Conn., 0651 6.
MIRiZlO, Rosalind, 38 Haviland St., Bris-
tol, Conn. 0601 0.
MISIEK, Dale, 474 Denslow St., Windsor
Locks, Conn., 06096. Basketball 1 .
MITCHELL, Donna, 1 66 Fairfield Avenue,
Stamford, Conn., 06902. Women's Track 1 .
MITCHELL, Glenn, 30' Beverly Circle,
Greenville, R.I., 02828. Track Team 1 -4.
MITCHELL, John Edward, Jr., 1 3 Brook St.,
Seymout, Conn., 06483. Pi Tau Sigma
National Mechanical Engineering Honor
Fraternity.
MOELLER, Susan A., 55 Orangewood,
West Derby, Conn., 0641 8.
MOFFITT, Walter, R., Lisbon Rd., Canter-
bury, Conn., 06331 . Delta Sigma Pi, Intra-
murals 1 ,2,3,4, BOG 2; Dorm Social Chair-
man 3; Commuter's Union 4.
MOLASKEY, Richard, 25 Pierrepont Drive,
Ridgefield, Conn., 06877.
MOLLOY, Thomas A., 66 Pt. Bch. Dr., Mil-
ford, Conn., 06460. Kappa Kappa Psi, Sec-
retary 3, Treasurer 4; United Towers Or-
ganization 3,4; Sousa House Vice Pres. 4.
MOLOCHKO, Kari, 1 7 Vista Terrace,
Cheshire, Conn., 0641 0. Kappa Kappa
Gamma, Dolphinettes 1 .
MOLOD, Harriet, 22 Lincrest St., Syosset,
New York, 1 1 791 .
MONACO, Maria, 2 High St., Derby,
Conn. 0641 8.
MONAHAN, Denise, 67 Rowland Drive,
E. Htfd., Conn., 061 1 8. Willimantic Tutori-
al, BOG Travel Committee, Representa-
tive to South Campus Council.
MONDANI, Donald, 37 Two Brook Rd.,
Wethersfield, Conn.
MONSON, Ann-Marie, 1 4 Chestnut Hill
Rd., W. Simsbury, Conn. House Vice Pres-
ident 2; House President 3; Assistant
Stewardess 4; Mansfield Tutorial 3.
MONTROSE, Robert, Plank Rd., Prospect,
Conn., 0671 2. Intramural Volleyball 3,4;
Intramural bowling 4; UConn Skating
Club, Paddle Ball, Volleyball, Bowling,
Social Chairman.
MONTY, William J., P.O. Box 331 , Central
Village, Conn., 06332.
MOORE, Linda, 34 Taunton Lk. Dr., New-
ton, Conn., 06470. Choral Society.
MORAN, Laura, 374 Burton Rd., Beacon
Falls, Conn. Rho Chi Honor Certificate,
Dean's List, Amer. Ph. Assn. Student
Chapter, Secretary ASG, Secretary Nut-
met 1 974, The Garden-Media
Presentation.
MORELLl, Cathy M., 1 8 Green St., Wtby.,
Conn., 06708. Litchfield Nature Center
and Museum 2,3,4; Friends of the Silas
Bronson Library 4, South Campus Council
Social Chairman 3,4; Mansion Pres U-
Conn Branch Newspaper 2; Prof. Singing;
UConn Chorus 1 ,2; Acting Group of Fegal
Pig; Hartford Revit. Core. 2.
MORENZ, Arthur, RFD#3, Hill St., Bristol,
Conn., 0601 0.
MORGENSTERN, Vicki E., 71 Mitchell
Avenue, Plainview, New York, 1 1 803. Pi
Lambda Theta, Student Counselor, Mans-
field Training School Volunteer, Tutor
Conn. State Welfare Department.
MORIZIO, Nick, 42 Crest St., Wethers-
field, Conn., 061 09. Bowling League 1 ,2;
Intermural Soccer & Volleyball 3,4; Trea-
surer 4.
MORRISON, Bevedy Blow, 48 Meadow-
brook Lane, Willi., Conn., 06226.
MOSS, Thomas, 50 Pegasus Drive, Groton,
Conn., 06340.
MOULTON, Christine 396 Valleybrook
Rd., Orange, Conn., 06477. Freshman
Cheerleader.
MOZUR, Andrea, 1 590 Poquonock Ave-
nue, Poquonock, Conn., 06064. Skating
Club 4; Gilbert & Sullivan Society 2,3.
MULDOON, Martha, 83 Brent Road,
Manchester, Conn., 06040.
MULLIN, Patrick, 9 Meadowbrook Lane,
Freehold, N.J. Basketball 1 ,2,3.
MULLINGS, Kenneth, 261 W. Hazel St.,
New Haven, Conn., 0651 1 . OAAS.
MURPHY, Gerald F., 1 655 Asylum Ave.,
W. Hartford, Conn., 061 1 7. Pres.
Sprague Hall 3; Pres. East Campus
Council 2,3,4; ASG Student Senator 3;
Representative lARC 2,3,4; Member
Committee on Scholastic Standards 3,4;
UConn Marching Band 4; UConn Pep
Band 4; "A United Family" & "Two Hours
in Eqhesus" 2; Phi AlphaTheta 3,4.
MURRAY, Bonnie J., 280 Lantern Road,
Stratford, Conn., 06497.
MURSKO, Michele, 1 6 Barbara Lane, W.
Haven, Conn., 0651 6. Badminton Interm.
1 ; Stewardess of Dorm 4; Mansfield
Volunteer.
MUSCO, Michael, 1 1 94 Windsor Avenue,
Windsor, Conn., 06095. Philosophy Club;
UConn Hartford Branch /ntercourse Staff
Member; Intermurals 1 ,2,3,4; Kentucky
House Champions, Social Committee 1 ;
ASG 2.
N
NADEAU, Roland, 1 4 Sylvia Drive, Moos-
up. Conn. Horticulture Club; House
Council, East Campus Council; Dorm
Mailman.
NARUS, Robert E., 1 08 Victoria Rd., New
Britain, Conn., 06052. Pres.: Chi Epsilon,
Member Tau Beta Pi, Intramural Baseball,
Basketball, Co-Editor for ASCE (American
Society of Civil Eng.).
NASINNYK, Stephen, 45 Penn Avenue,
New Britain, Conn., 06052.
NEJFELT, John, 525 Slater Rd., New Britain,
Conn. 06053. Intramural Soccer and Soft-
ball 3; Professional Fraternity Delta
Sigma Pi.
NELSON, Barbara E., Route 67, Roxbury,
Conn., 06783.
NEMETZ, Richard J., 83 View St., Byram,
Conn.
NEPOR, Nina, 81 Sinclair St., Windsor,
Conn., 06095. Russian Club.
NESMITH, Dessi J., Jr., 24 Durham St.,
Hartford, Conn., 061 1 2.
NICHOLAS, Hayden (Nick), Middlebury
Rd., Watertown, Conn., 06795.
NICHOLS, Robert B., Jr., Box 36, George-
town, Conn., 06829. Chess Club.
NICHOLSON, Donald, East St., East Gran-
by. Conn., 06026. Basketball 1 ; Soccer 2;
Lacrosse 2; Zeta Psi.
NICHOLSON, Donna L., East St., East
Granby, Conn., 06026. Manager Field
Hockey Club 4; Basketball 1 ,2,3,4 Cap-
tain 3,4; Softball 1 ,3,4; Field Hockey 2; JV
Basketball Coach 4; Intramural Council &
Referee 3,4.
NIEDZWECKI, Douglas, 54 Cross Rd.,
Waterford, Conn., 06385.
NIEDZWIECKI, Thomas, 28 McNeil Terr.,
Stratford, Conn., 06497. Mansfield Tutori-
al 2.
NIKIFOROV, Andrey, 29 Bryand Drive,
Livingston, N.J., 07039. Indoor Track 1 ;
Lacrosse 1 ,2; Resident Assistant 3,4.
NORCROSS, Richard, 21 Edgemere Ave-
nue, W. Htfd., Conn., 061 1 0. Intramural
Football.
NORDMARK, Theodore S., 1 30 Hyde Rd.,
W. Htfd., Conn., 061 1 7.
NORDSTROM, Brian, 228 Gwen Rd.,
Meriden, Conn., 06450. intramural
Basketball.
NORRIE, David, 223 Louisiana Ave., Bris-
tol, Conn., 0601 0. Student Counselor,
Marketing Club; Colt House Treasurer.
NORRIS, Carol, 46 Sunset Dr., Shelton,
Conn., 06484. Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Beta
Kappa, Skating Club, Honors Program.
NOVAK, Wendy, Camp Westwood Rd.,
Greene, R.I., 02827. intramural Basketball
2; Volleyball 3; R.A. 3,4.
NOWAK, Jane, 3433 Clubland Dr., Mar-
ietta, Ga., 30062. Intramural Sports 1 ,2,4;
Spanish Club, Forecaster for the South-
ern N.E. Weather Service.
NOYD, Deborah, 224 Foote Rd., South
Glastonbury, Ct., 06073. News Editor
CDC 3; Features Editor CDC 4.
NUNES, David, 1 1 2 Allen PL, Htfd., Conn.,
061 06.
NUNZIANTO, Anne, Harrison Rd., No.
Branford, Conn. Intramural Volleyball 1 ,3,
4; Softball 1 ,4; Member Conn. Entomo-
logical Soc. 4; CCD Religious Instructions
3 St. Thomas Aquinas.
NYARADY, Elaine, 5 Benedict St., Nor-
walk. Conn., 06850. Bowling Club 3;
Branch Bowling Club 1 ,2; Nursery School
at Cong. Church.
NYCZ, Christine, 1 93 Bassett St., New Brit-
ain, Conn. Tau Pi Upsilon.
o
OBERLY, Florence, 1 03 Simsbury Dr., Itha-
ca, N.Y., 1 4850.
O'BRIEN, Catherine, 36 Poplar St., Wtby.,
Ct. Tutor Mans. Training School 2; So-
cial Chairman.
O'BRIEN, Patricia, 1 1 Carroll St., Stamford,
Conn. Mans. Training School, Tutor.
O'BRIENT, Janet, 4 Birch Hill Rd., Dan-
vers, Mass. House Pres. 2; R.A. 3,4; Library
Committee Co-Chmn. of SAPTA.
O'CONNELL, Paul, Sterline City Rd.,
Lyme, Conn.
O'CONNOR, Patrick, 28 Willowbrook Pi.,
Stamford, Conn. Delta Sigma Pi, Account-
ing Society Member.
O'DONNELL, Kevin L., 1 80 Edgewater
Ave., Bayport, N.Y. Sigma Chi Frat., Var-
sity Football 2,3,4.
O'DONOHUE, Mercedes, 250 New Ca-
naan Ave., Norwalk, Ct. Tau Beta Sigma,
Marching Band 1 ,2; Junior Year in
France.
ODUTOLA, Adedeji A., 62 Modupe John-
son Crescent, Surulere, Lagos, Nigeria.
Co-ordinator of African Student Assoc,
Vice Pres. International Student Assoc,
BOG Black Experience Committee.
OGORZALEK, Jane, Main St., Rockfall,
Conn., AHEA.
OGREAN, David, 49 Storrs Heights Rd.,
Storrs, Conn. Deans List 1 ,2,3,4; CDC
Film Reviews 4; Sports 4; Freshman Soc-
cer 1 ; Semester Abroad Junior Year
England.
OHRT, Robert, 275 South St., #26, Rock-
ville. Conn. Delta Sigma Pi, Secretary
Accounting Society 4.
OLDERMAN, Sandra, 235 Benham Hill
Rd., W. Haven, Ct.
OLESNEViCH, Kenneth, 20 Fennbrook
Rd., W. Htfd. Tennis Team, Social Chair-
man, Recreational Service Assoc.
OLSCHEFSKI, Judith, 32 Kimble Ave.,
Wtby., Conn. Dean's List, Danish Student
Exchange Program; Women's Billards
Championship 3; Willi. Tutorial 4; Nor-
wich State Hosp. Volunteer 3.
OLSON, Arlene, Old Marlborough Tpke.,
Portland, Conn. Alpha Lambda Delta,
Swim Team 1 ,3; Softball 3; Skating Club 4;
Ski Club 1 ,2.
OPULSKI, Frank, 96 Robindale Drive,
Kensington, Conn. Steward 3,4; Skating
Club 1 ,2,3.
ORBUCH, Nancy, Williams Crossing,
North Franklin, Conn. Folk Dancing 1 ,
Shalom Group 2.
O'REILLY, Dorothy 68 Edgewood Circ,
Southington, Ct. ASG 1 ,2.
ORR, Cathleen R., Latches Lane, Apt. 51 4,
Merion, Pa. Tennis 2,3,4; Hockey 1 ,2,3;
House Pres 1 ,2; Social Chairman 3.
ORRILL, Judith, 47 Carpenter Ave., Meri-
den, Ct. House President.
OSBORNE, Michael, RR #1 , Box 67,
Mansfield Ctr., Ct. Phi Alpha Theta
President 4; Pairanoid Productions 3.
OUELLETTE, Ruth, 1 1 1 St. James St., W.
Htfd.,Ct.
OWENS, Kathleen, 49 Hewlett St., Wtby.,
Conn.
PACE, Anna Marie, 99 Pilgrim Ave.,
Wtby., Conn.
PADIAN, Judith E., 34 Blacktwig Pi., Stam-
ford, Ct., Alpha Lambda Delta, Phi Kappa
Phi, E. Stevens Henry Award.
PAGE, Dennis, RFD Maple St., Danielson,
Conn. LIConn Vets Treas. 3,4; Sport
Parachute 1 .
PALERMO, Elaine, 1 1 7 Kelsey St., Wtby.,
Ct., Mansfield Tutor, Student Counseling
Chmn.
PALLATTO, John, 280 State St., No. Haven,
Conn. CDC, Managing Editor, CDC.
PALMER, Debra K., 36 Lake Shore Dr.,
Brookfield, Conn.
PAPPAS, Helen, 22 Fourth Ave., Wtfd.,
Conn.
PAQUETTE, Robert, 4 Brook RD., Enfield,
Conn. Arnold Air Society, Wrestling 1 ,2.
PAQUETTE, Steve, 1 784 Main St., E. Htfd.,
Conn. Concert Choir 1 ,2,3 Soc. Chmn.
4; Gilbert & Sullivan Society 3; R.A. 2,3;
Football 1 ,2; Intramural Softball & Basket-
ball 1 ,2,3; Dorm Rep. 1 ; ASCE 4,5.
PARADEE, Brian J., 7 Fairmont St., Weth-
ersfield, Ct.
PARKS, Judith, 74 Hull St., Ansonia, Conn.
OAAS, H.S. Day Committee.
PARNELL, Laurie, 28 Northridge Ave.,
Torrington, Conn. Marketing Club.
PARRINGTON, Suzanne, 5 Highwood Ln.,
Westport, Ct. NHS Volunteer.
PARSONS, Catherine, 234 Ranch Trail,
Williamsville, N.Y., 1 4221 . SAPTA, St.
Thomas Aquinas Folk Group.
PARSONS, Karen, 37 Andrea Ln., Avon,
Conn.
PARTESANO, Linda, 1 37 King Philip Dr.,
W. Htfd., Ct. Dorm Pres. 3.
PARTRIDGE, Margaret Aldrich, Frency
Meadow Rd., Springfield, Vt. Univ. Schol-
ar, Phi Kappa Phi, Swarthmore College 1 ;
Mansfield Training School Girl Scout
Leader 2; South Campus Rep. 2; Htfd.
School Volunteer Assoc. Tutor 3.
PASCARELLA, Alfred, Jr., 2770 86 St.,
Brooklyn, New York, Deans List.
PASTORE, Paul, Suite 21 4, 640 The Vil-
lage, Rodondo Beach, Calif.
PATURZO, Deborah, 38 Cheney Dr.,
Storrs, Conn., 06268. Freshman Counse-
lor, Intramural Softball.
PAUL, Elaine, 1 8 High Ridge Rd., Rock-
ville. Conn., 06066. Alpha Lambda Delta,
Phi Kappa Phi, Dorm Pres. 3,4.
PAULHUS, Marc, 26 Hillcrest Rd., Enfield,
Conn. Cross Country, Danforth Scholar-
ship recipient.
PAVLIK, Edward Jr., 96 Red Oak RD.,
Bgpt., Conn. Intramural Chairman 2,3;
House Social Chairman 3.
PAYNE, Robert, 56 Ocean Ave., Milford,
Conn. Cross Country 1 ; Indoor Track 1 ;
Outdoor Track 1 .
PEACOCK, Christine, Peaceable Ridge
Rd., Ridgefield, Conn., 06877.
PECK, Suzanne, 1 3 Darlene Ave., Pitts-
field, Mass.
PELLETTIER, Robert, 37 Betty Rd., Enfield,
Conn.
PELLICCIONE, Roseann, 67 Plymouth Rd.,
Stamford, Conn.
PENN, Irven, 36-1 1 Northern Dr., Fair
Lawn, N.J. BOG Marshall Group Leader,
ASG Student Opinion Committee, Food
Committee, Buckley Hall.
PENNELL, John, Apt. 237, 40 Olcott St.,
Manch., Conn. IEEE.
PENTORE, Richard, 1 46 Ellsworth Blvd.,
Kensington, Conn. Lacrosse 1 .
PEREZ, Henry, 570 Pearl Harbor St.,
Bdgpt., Conn. PRSM, Indoor Track 2.
PERKOWSKI, Irene, 1 50 Hickory St., Bgpt.,
Conn.
PERSON, John, 1 7 Shirley Drive., South
Chatham, Mass., 02659.
PETERSEN, Barry, 34 Dale Place, Stamford,
Conn.
PETERSON, Carolyn, 35 Brookside La.,
Vernon, Conn.
PETERSON, Deborah, 1 1 Quarry Dock
Rd., Niantic, Conn.
PETERSON, Kent, 1 09 Cindy Ln., Berlin,
Conn., 06037.
PHILIPPl, Randal, 1 82 Broad St., Manch.,
Conn. CDC Photographer.
PIASCIK, Raymond, 1 26 Hyde St., New
Haven, Conn.
PIETERSE, Leonardo, 1 39 Litchfield Rd.,
Watertown, Conn.
PiOOLl, Sandra A.,-1 1 0 Phyllis Dr., Nauga-
tuck. Conn. NSH Volunteer.
PiZrOFERRATO, Joan, 85 Roslyn St.,
Htfd., Student Counselor 4.
PLATT, Edith, 21 9 Ledgemere Apts., Mans-
field Center, Conn. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi
Kappa Phi, Univ. Scholar (English Dept.).
PLETSCHER, Michael, 1 08 Beech St., Bris-
tol, Conn.
PLOTKIN, Ellery, 53 Fox Hill Rd., Stam-
ford, Conn. Babbidge for Governor
Volunteer.
POLLACK, Ellen, 79-25 1 50th St., Flushing,
New York.
PONGONIS, Robert, 1 334 Main St.,
Tewksbury, Mass. God Bless, Love,
Pongie.
PONS, Kevin, 221 Birch St., Forestville,
Conn. National Student Speech & Hear-
ing Assoc, Steward, Freshman Counselor
4; ASC Rep.
PONZILLO, Marie Ann, 62 American
Street, Wtby., Conn. Phi Upsilon Omi-
cron. House Council 2.
POSSIDENTO, Deborah, 1 8 Sunset Lane,
Wolcott, Conn.
POULIN, Celeste, Shenderson Dr., E.
Htfd., Conn.
POULIN, Denise, 52 Dart St., Htfd., Conn.
POWALENY, Theodore, Beaver Brook
Rd., Lyme, Conn.
PRANKA, Donna, 664 No. Walnut St.,
Wtby., Conn. Accounting Soc, Prof. Bus.
Sorority, Skating Club 4; Treasurer Alsop
A.
PRESNICK, Daniel, 1 79 Martin Lane, Or-
ange, Conn., 06477.
PREYE, Claudia, 4 Lark La., Norwalk,
Conn. Cheerleading 1 ,2 Stamford
Branch, Badminton Intramurals 3; Trea-
surer 4, Fiscal Committee 3.
PRICE, Barbara, 81 0 Vauxhall St., Ext.,
Wtfd., Conn. Honors Prog.
PRICE, Elizabeth, 92 Spring St., Windsor
Locks, Conn.
PRONT, Gary, 887 Barry Drive, West, Val-
ley Stream, New York. Ski Club, Volun-
teer State Comm. on Human Rights,
Intramural Hockey, Sociology Club.
PRUSIK, Nadine, 1 73 Dayl Drive, Kensing-
ton, Conn. Sec. Hamilton 3.
PRYDE, Lana, 1 67 Dudley Drive, Fairfield,
Conn. Gamma Sigma Sigma, Alpha Zeta,
YAP, Intramural Basketball, Volleyball,
Softball 1 -4.
PRYSNER, Diana, Vantassell Dr., Gales
Ferry, Conn. Vice Pres. 3, Pres. 4 (Beard
A.).
PREZECH, Janet 24 Forest Dr., Newington,
Conn., 061 1 1 .
PRZYBYSZ, Francine, 1 6 Maple View Dr.,
Wolcott, Conn. Pi Beta Sigma, Pi Beta
Sigma Sec, 4; Treasurer Wade House 3.
PUDER, Michelle, 23-D, Knollwood
Acres, Storrs, Conn. Mortar Board
President, Exec. Board of Council for Ex-
ceptional Children.
PUDNEY, Robert E., 1 86 Elm St., Meriden,
Conn. Intramural Bowling 1 ,2,3,4; United
Towers Organization Rep. 3,4; Student
Couns. Chmn.4.
PUFFER, LeROY, 254 Lombard St., New
Haven, Conn.
PULASKI, Cheryl, Ross Hill Rd., Bradford,
R.I., Treasurer, House.
Q
QUITERIO, Renato, Lourenco, 51 Madi-
son Ave., Hartford, Conn. Vice-Pres. No.
Carolina House 2,3, Pres. 4; Floor Rep.
to Hall Council 2,3,4; WEBB Rep. 3,4;
WEBB Treasurer 3; Portuguese-Brazilian
Club Treas. 3,4; WEBB Sec. 4; PBC Vice-
Pres., 4; SCAQ Rep. 3; Chairman Bel-
den Hall Student Counseling 4; PBC Con-
stitutional Committee 3,4; Alumni Quad
Plant -In Member 4; Student Court Alum-
ni Quad Constitutional Committee 4;
Rangers ROTC 1 ,2; CYO, Accounting So-
ciety 3,4; Intramural Soccer, Softball, Bas-
ketball, Swimming, Volleyball 2,3,4.
R
RADY, Deborah, 1 42 Vernon Ave., #83,
Rockville, Conn.
RADZVILOWICZ, Paula, 234 Norwith-N.L.
Tpke., Uncasville, Conn.
RAFLOWITZ, Michael, 1 64 Woodvale Rd.,
W. Haven, Conn. Football 1 ; Intramural
Swimming 3, Softball 3,4; Soc. Chmn.
Eddy Hall 3; President Eddy Hall 4; Ski
Club 1 ,2,3; Marketing Club 3.
RAGNO, James Jr., Box 258, Mansfield
Center, Conn. Phi Kappa Phi, Intramural
Ice Hockey 1 .
RAMSDELL, Valory, RED #2, Summit Ave.,
Farmington, Me. Intramural Basketball 1 ,
2,3; SAPTA 3,4 Affiliations 3, Heart
Fund Drive 3; Bloodmobile 1 ,2,3,4.
RANDALL, Sheldon, 64 Helen Ave., Plain-
view, New York. Soccer 1 ; Wrestling, La-
crosse 1 ; Lacrosse 1 ,2,3,4 Captain 4;
Soc. Chmn. R.A.
RAPAN, Donna, 9 Partridge La., Bloom-
field, Conn..
RASHBA, 49 Underbill Rd., Hamden,
Conn. R.A. 4; Htfd. Tutorial 1 ,2,3; Urban
Semester.
RASMUSSEN, Lois R., 35 Carson Ave.,
Oakville, Conn, French Club and Drama
Club.
RAUGALIS, Regina, 32 Hans Ave., Wtby.,
Conn.
RAY, James, 1 0 Andrews Rd., Ropsfield,
Mass. Eta Kappa Nu, I.E.E.E.
RAYMOND, Richard A., 435 High St.,
Mystic, Conn. ASCE.
RAYMOND, William, Sunset Apts., #1 A,
Bolton, Conn.
READY, Arthur, 1 7 Walnut St., Middle-
town, Conn. Black Media Newscaster.
REALE, MaryEllen, 22 Amaryllis Ave.,
Wtby., Conn. House Council.
REEVE, David C, 84 Wheeler Rd., Weth-
ersfield. Conn. Hall Pres. 4; East Campus
Council Rep. 3,4.
REEVES, Wendy, 9 Crocus Lane, Norwalk,
Conn. Pi Beta Phi, Mortar Board, Business
Staff CDC, Traffic Advisory Committee,
FSSO, Greek Council, Accounting
Society.
REILLY, Patricia T., Box 1 27, Mantoloking,
N.J. Alpha Lambda Delta 1 ,2; Mortar
Board 3,4; Pi Sigma Alpha, Pi Lambda The-
ta 3,4; Phi Kappa Phi, Executive Comm.,
Council for Exceptional Children 4; Sail-
ing Club 2.
REISS, Rinda, 221 High St., Petersburg, Va.
Tennis Team 2,3,4; Cheerleader 1 .
RENKIEWICZ, Kathleen, 481 Canterbury
Tpke., Norwich, Conn. Tau Pi Upsilon.
RENNA, Gary, 43 Norwegian Wood Apts.,
Tolland,Conn.
REPAY, Richard, 55 Pierce Ave., Bdgpt.,
Conn. Intrannural Basketball, Soccer and
Bowling.
REYNOLDS, Christine, 8 Wallace St.,
Cromwell, Conn. Horse Judging Team.
REYNOLDS, Lois, 1 1 6 Hickory Lane, Nau-
gatuck. Conn. Lambda Kappa Sigma 2,3;
Mortar and Pestle Soc, 3,2; Tau Beta Sig-
ma 1 ,2,3; Marching Band 1 ,2,3; SAPHA 1 ,
2,3; Ct. Soc. of Hosp. Pharmacists 3; Stu-
dent Faculty Relations Committee (Sch. of
Pharm.) 2,3.
REYNOLDS, Robert, 29 Willington Oaks
Apts. Storrs, Conn. Thames Yacht Club
Secretary, Technical Service UConn
Musician.
REYNOLDS, Sharon, 1 Richlee Rd., Nor-
walk. Conn. Mortar Board, Co-Director
Willi Tutorial 3; Choral Soc, 1 ,2,4; Psy-
chology Club 4; SIMS 2,3,4.
RICCIARDI, Karen Jane, 48 Osage Lane,
Noank, Conn. Student Member of AID
Transfer Advisory Board, Festival by the
Sea Comm. S.E. Branch.
RICCIO, Cynthia, 54 Hamlin Dr., W. Htfd.,
Conn. Branch Newspaper 1 ,2; Orienta-
tion Comm. S.E. Branch 1 ,2; Student Ac-
tivities Committee 1 ,2; WEBB Council 3,4;
Watson House Council 3,4; Student
Counselling Chmn. 4.
RICE, Peter, Chimney Rd., Watertown,
Conn. Soccer 1 ,2,3,4.
RICHARDS, Jan, Box 1 32 So. Woodstock,
Conn.
RIEDINGER, Dale A., 930 So. End Rd.,
Southington, Conn. Wtby. UCONN Cho-
rus 1 ; Willi Tutorial 3; N.E. Social Studies
Conf., Boston 3.
RIESTERER, Wilfried, 40 Griswold St.,
Manch., Conn. ASCE.
RIEUR, Paul, 1 0 Terrace Ave., Riverside,
Conn.
RINALDi, Ellen, Mt. Vernon Drive, East
Granby, Conn. Mortar Board, Phi Alpha
Theta, Pi Sigma Alpha.
RITCHIE, David, 1 60 Barberry Lane, Meri-
den. Conn. Soccer 1 ,2; J.V. Lacrosse 2,3;
Ski Racing Team 2,3,4; Captain, (3), Co-
Captain (4) Ski Team.
RiZZi, Richard, 25 Hanrahan St., Stam-
ford, Conn. American Marketing Assoc.
ROBERTS, Martin S., 1 7 Harriet Lane E.,
Darien, Conn.
ROCKHOLD, Frank W., 61 Pond Place,
Cos Cob, Conn. Dean's List 2,3,4; Dean's
Roll 4; Intercollegiate Soccer (1 ,2); Intra-
mural Softball 1 ,2,3,4; Soccer 3,4; Basket-
ball 2,3,4; University Red Cross, First Aid
Instructor.
RODGER, John, 1 22 Blaine St., Passaic,
N.J. Baseball 1 ;WHUS.
RODMAN, Eileen, 40 Henry St., New
Haven, Conn. Dean's List 3,2; House
Council 3; Vice President 4.
RODRIGUEZ, Rhina, Turnpike Rd. (P.O.
Box 477), Somers, Conn.
ROGAN, Barbara, RFD #1 , Box 27-D,
Gales Ferry, Conn. Rho Chi Certificate 1 ;
Dean's List 1 ,2,3,4; Bloodmobile Donor
Room Aide 2,3; MTS Pt. Volunteer 3;
Heart Fund Drive 3; SAPTA, SAPTA Li-
brary Committee 3,4; Phi Kappa Phi.
ROGERS, Lorin, 240 Noroton Ave., Dar-
ien, Conn.
ROHN, Jeannette C, 1 7 Prospect St.,
Stamford, Conn.
ROOHR, Sarah J., 1 08 W. Granby Rd.,
Grandy, Conn. J.V. Field Hockey 2;
House Treasurer 2; intramural Rep. 2;
Vice Pres. Vinton House 4; Chairperson
Glass Recycling of Vinton House 4.
ROONEY, Charles J., 1 6 Condict St., Jersey
City, N.J. Chi Epsilon, House President 4;
Coed Council 4; Intramurals 3,4.
ROONEY, Timothy, 535 Clinton Ave.,
Bdgpt., Cohn.
ROSE-, Christine, 32 Jefferson Park Rd.,
Madison, Conn.
ROSE, Cynthia, 31 Sherwood Rd., Stam-
ford, Conn. Co-chairman Campus
Community Carnival for Merritt A-3.
ROSEN, Robin, 21 Charlesmount Ave.,
Quincy, Mass., Yggdrasil.
ROSS, Liana, 89 Spruce St., Milford, Conn. '
ROSSI, Theresa, 26 Berkshire Rd., Rocky
Hill, Conn.
ROWLING, Pamela H., 88 Dawes Ave.,
Hamden, Conn.
ROY, Mark, 8 Wightman Place, Cromwell,
Conn. WHUS News Director 3,4.
RUBINO, Peter J., 84 Pearl St., Torrington,
Conn. Steward, Secretary ASCE 3,4; Ass't.
Treasurer of ASG 1 .
RUGGIERO, Daniel, 1 1 Summer St., En-
field, Conn.
RUOCCHIO, William, 1 6 Cardinal Dr., E.
Htfd., Conn.
RUSSO, Stephen, 82 Benson St., New Brit-
ain, Conn.
RUTLAND, Donna, 298 Enfield St., Htfd.,
Conn. Intramural Basketball, Secretary
Black Voices of Freedom.
ST. HILARIE, Claudia, Mile Hill Rd., Tol-
land. Conn. Pi Beta Sigma.
SALVA, Laurie-Ann, 1 1 9 Bridge St., Ware-
house Pt., Conn. Gamma Sigma Sigma,
Mortar Board, Dorm Vice Pres. 3; Gamma
Sigma Sigma Ass't. Pledge Mother 3.
SLAVADOR, Theresa, 1 42 Park Terrace,
Hftd., Conn.
SALWOCKI, William, Bx 455, McMahon,
UConn, Storrs, Conn. Chi Epsilon
Chapter Secretary, ASCE, House
President.
SALZINGER, Bruce, 1 1 0 Eva Drive, Lido
Beach, New York. Ski Team 3,4; Judo Club
1 ,2,3; Jr. Year Abroad.
SANDERS, Barbara, 1 1 8-30 205th St., St.
Albans, New York. Phi Upsilon Omicron.
SANDERS, Karen, 65 Jamaica Ave., Plain-
view, New York. Phi Kappa Phi, Student
Counselor 2,3.
SANFORD, Elinoc Minnick, 1 1 Hillcrest
Dr., Avon, Conn. Dean's List 4.
SANSONE, Eugene, 1 81 Elm St., No. Ha-
ven, Conn.
SANTILLI, Laurine, 1 5 Rose St., Wtby.,
Conn.
SANTORO, Donna, 61 Ferrone Ave.,
Wtby, Conn.
SANTORO, Sandra, 5 Richard La., Pros-
pect, Conn. Tau Pi Upsilon.
SARNOWSKl, Rita, 9 Meadow St., Terry-
ville. Conn. Dorm Pres., Treasurer, South
Campus Council, Freshman Counselor.
SATULA, Frances, 87 Trenton, Pawtucket,
R.L North Campus Council Vice-pres. 1 ,
Avid Hockey Spectator.
SAUNDERS, Victoria, 1 01 Crystal Lake Rd.,
Stamford, Conn.
SAVERINE, Samuel J., 1 09 A Foster Dr.,
Willimantic, Conn.
SAWICKY, Nancy, Lebanon, Conn.
SAWYER, Carl, P.O. Box 801 , Groton,
Conn. Delta Sigma Pi, Accounting
Society.
SAYDLOWSKI, Joseph, 520 Harard Ave.,
Enfield, Conn, intramural ice Hockey 3,4.
SAYERS, Karen E., 7 James St., E. Haven,
Conn. Skating Club, McGovern Commit-
tee, Running, Junior Year in France.
SCANLON, Gail, 2 Eagle La., Simsbury,
Conn.
SCARLATA, William, 50 Oak St., Dedham,
Mass. Intramural Soccer, Basketball, Soft-
ball and Volleyball, House Vice Pres. 2.
SCEPANKASKI, Janet, 8 Bushnell St., Pe-
quabuck. Conn. Skating Club SAPTA.
SCHADE, William, 32 Hoyt, Darien, Conn.
SCHLEICHER, Walter, 27 Rival Ct., E.
Htfd., Conn.
SCHNEIDER, Mark, 850 Oxford, Ct., Val-
ley Stream, New York. Chi Epsilon, ASCE,
Wrestling 1 ,2; DormVice President.
SCHRANG, Suzanne, 33 Beechwood Rd.,
Old Lyme, Conn. Stamford Branch Cheer-
leader 1 ,2; Outing Club.
SCHROEN, Gregory D., 7 Lynn Court,
Darien, Conn. Scabbard & Blade, Delta
Sigma Pi (Chancellor), Debate Club (Pres-
ident), Young Republicans (Sec).
SCOTT, Lynn, Great Hollow Rd., West
Cornwall, Ct.
SCOTT, Patricia, 1 60 Bunce Rd., Wethers-
field, Conn. Pi Lambda Theta, Ski Club,
Willi Tutorial.
SEGAL, Sheryl, 40 Lawrence St., Everett,
Mass. Hillel.
SELEZNOW, Marc, 1 704 Arbor View Rd.,
Silver Spring, Md. Alpha Zeta (Treasurer
4), Varsity Swimming Team 1 ,2,3,4; Hilltop
Council, Student Marshalls, Horticulture
Club.
SERRICCHIO, Thomas, 245 W. Broad St.,
Stamford, Conn. American Marketing
Assoc, Stamford Branch Baseball (Cap-
tain), Voted MVP in Baseball 2; Intramur-
als3,4; Raising Racing Pigeons.
SHEA, Richard C, 1 4 Deer Run Road, Wil-
ton, Conn. IEEE.
SHELDON, Thomas, 1 601 Sheldon St., W.
Suffield, "Conn. Alpha Gamma Rho, Ski
Team 2; Varsity Baseball, S.E. Branch; In-
tramural Soccer 2,3; Basketball 3,4; Base-
ball & Softball 3; Dairy Club, UConn Dairy
Judging Team 3.
SHERMAN, Andrea, 305 Old Oaks Rd.,
Bpt. Conn.
SHETTLE, Gary, 323 Alexander Rd., New
Britain, Conn. Sigma Chi, Football 1 ;
Rugby 2,3,4; Intramural Basketball 1 ,2,3,4;
Rugby Club President.
SHIELDS, Carl W., Jr., Allentown Rd., Ter-
ryville. Conn. Student Peace Organiza-
tion, Appalachian Awareness.
SHILLO, Susan, 1 27 Roosevelt Ave., Nor-
wich, Conn. Intramural Softball 1 ,4; Vol-
leyball 4; Floor Rep. to House Council,
Floor Sec-Treasurer 2.
SHINDEL, Neal, 202 Harbor View South,
Lawrence, New York.
SHUTE, Stephanie, 438 Gardner St.,
Hingham, Mass. WHUS Staff (News) 2,3,4;
Alumni Quad Judicial Board 3.
SIBICKY, Alexander, RFD#3, Box 204,
Norwich, Conn. Student Skating Club 1 ,
2,3; President 2,3.
SIBLEY, Dorothy, Old Quarry Rd., Guil-
ford. Conn.
SIEDMAN, Lawrence G., 1 9 Fairway Dr.,
Wethersfield, Conn. Bowling Team 1 .2.
SIKORSKI, Janet, 238 Main St., S. Glaston-
bury. Conn.
SILVERMAN, Linda A., 28 Pioneer Dr., W.
Htfd., Conn.
SINISGALLI, Paul, 1 6 Bernside Dr., Bristol,
Conn. Chi Epsilon, Tau Beta Pi, Chi Epsi-
ion (Vice President), ASCE.
SKAROUPSKI, Linda, 1 8 Brookside Dr.,
Bristol, Conn. APIA.
SKELL, Anton J., 21 7 Cedar Lk. Dr., Collins
Lakes, Williamstown, N.J. Football 1 ,2;
Mansfield Tutorial.
SKOLEM, Peter, Great Hill Pond Rd., Port-
land, Conn.
SKORUPSKI, Marlene, 292 So. Washing-
ton St., Plainville, Conn. SAPTA.
SMERAGLIA, Michael, 36 Judith La.,
Wtby., Conn.
SMERIGLIO, Anthony, 35 Roosevelt Ave.,
Stamford, Conn. Intramural Softball 1 ,2,
3; Basketball 2; Accounting Society.
SMITH, Clifford R., 27 Mapleview Dr.,
Wolcott, Conn.
SMITH, Deborah 1 ., 1 41 Union Ave. #2,
Bpt. Conn.
SMITH, Deborah, 1 30 A, Wtonington St.,
Htfd., Conn. Sec. OAAS, Black Voices of
Freedom 1 ,2,3,4.
SMITH, Donna E., 25 Pilgrim Dr., Port Jef-
ferson, New York. Choral Society 1 ,2;
Skating Club 4; House Treasurer 1 ,2.
SMITH, Glynis, 80 Amsterdam, New York,
New York.
SMITH, Joyce E. 31 33 N. 23rd St., Phila., Pa.
SMITH, Nancy, 21 -69 23rd St., Long Island
City, New York. Tau Pi Upsilon.
SMITH, Rita, 382 Burnside Ave., E. Htfd.,
Conn. Phi Kappa Phi, Dean's List 3.
SMITH, Sally L., 1 4 Fales Rd., Dedham,
Mass.
SNOW, Stephen, 567 Pine St., Whitman,
Mass. Football 1 .
SOCCI, Daniel, 47 Depinell Ave., Stam-
ford, Conn. Beta Gamma Sigma, Football
Team (Club Stamford Branch), Baseball
Team Stamford Branch, 1 ,2; Photopool,
American Marketing Assoc.
SOCHA, Frank J., 81 Sound Breeze, Gro-
ton Land Point, Conn. Baseball 2.
SOKOLOWSKI, Robert J., 21 May St.,
Ansonia, Conn. Intramural Softball 4; Inst.
of Traffic Engineers Student Member.
SOLOMON, David F., 80 Van Cortlandt
Park, South, Bronx, New York. CDC
Sports Editor.
SOMMA, Blanche Marie, 9 Ramona Ave.,
Wtby., Conn. YAF.
SORRELL, David, 336 Whippany Rd.,
Whippany, N.J. Football 1 ,2,3,4.
SOUSSON, Mario, 31 Chilton, Cam-
bridge, Mass.
SPARKS, George, P.O. Box 277, Storrs,
Conn. St. Thomas Aquinas Music and Lit-
urgy Group, AEP.
SPEIRS, Pamela H. Homestead Circ, Old
Lyme, Conn.
SPENCE, Paul, 250 Peck Ave., W. Haven,
Conn. Intramural Track 1 ; Soccer 2;
Swimming 2; Basketball 3.
SPODNICK, Joan, 1 47 Cedar Knoll Drive,
Stfd., Conn.
STALEY, Terra, RED #1 , Latham Rd., W.
Willington,Conn.
STARK, Royal, 50 Barbara Rd., Vernon,
Conn.
STARR, Gregory, 360 So. Quaker La., W.
Htfd., Conn. Accounting Society.
STASCHKO, Wayne, 64 Whitlock Ave.,
Plantsville, Conn.
STAVROU, Steve, 1 80 E. Main St., Bergen-
field. New Jersey. Wrestling 1 ; R.A. 4.
STEARNS, Barbara, 1 8 Dingletown Rd.,
Greenwich, Conn.
STEIGERT, Frederick, Peck Rd., Bethany,
Conn. Track 1 ,2,3,4; Cross Country 1 ,2,3,4.
STEIN, George Adam, 45 Roxbury Ct.,
Niantk, Conn. Chi Epsilon, ASCE.
STEPHANI, Richard, Rte. 3, Old Wtby Rd.,
Southbury, Conn. Anthropology Club
(Vice Pres.) 3; Advisory Committee
Anthro. Department 4.
STEPKA, Janet, 1 822 Reservoir Ave., Bpt.,
Conn.
STIGALL, Brenda L., 48 Mountain View
Ave., New Milford, Conn. House Pres. 2,
3; House Council 1 ,2,3; U.T.O. Secretary
3.
STOLPER, Carol, 1 800 Blvd., New Haven,
Conn. Student A.I.D.
STONE, Shelley, 1 4 Elizabeth Dr., Manch-
ester, Conn.
STONER, David, 79 Coolidge St., Irving-
ton, N.J. Photographer Capsule 74.
STORTA, John, 68 Vergason Ave., Nor-
wich, Conn.
STRACHAN, Kathryn N., 40 Hoyt St., Dar-
ien, Conn. Drinking Beer, Partying.
STRONG, James, 1 Lenape Trail, Chatham,
N.J. Ice Hockey 1 ; Central Treasurer FSSO
4.
STUART, Karen A., Amidon Ave., Ames-
bury, Mass. Intramural Volleyball 2; Skat-
ing Club 1 ,2,3,4.
STURGESS, Thomas, 1 4 Kent Court, Mans-
field, Center, Conn. Phi Kappa Phi, Vets,
Commuters Union, Marketing Club 3.
STYGAR, Marcia, 367 Boswell Ave., Nor-
wich, Conn. Block & Bridle, Skating Club,
Alpha Zeta.
SUDIK, Nancy, Holton Rd., N. Franklin,
Conn. NHS Volunteers.
SULLIVAN, Gary, 1 39 Park Lane Road,
Milford, Conn. ASCE, Fencing Club.
SULLIVAN, Kevin, 1 1 Deason Hunt Dr.,
Acton, Mass.
SULLIVAN, Robert Patrick, 82 Porter St.,
Bpt., Conn. Cross Country, Track, Ski
Club Treasurer.
SUMMERFIELD, Marc, 24 Gisele Ave.,
Ocean, New Jersey. Marching Band 1 -4;
Pharmacy Yearbook Editor 5.
SUPLINSKAS, Mark L., Box 1 30-A, Falls
Rd., Moodus, Conn. Teacher Experi-
mental College, Mansfield Tutorial.
SURKS, Brenda, 40 Autumn Drive, Mon-
roe, Conn.
SURWILO, Richard, 57 Jessup St., Stam-
ford, Conn. House President 3.
SUTHERLAND, Wendy, 38 Klarman Dr.,
Hamden, Conn. lARC, WEBB Council.
SWEENEY, Craig, 90 Baldwin Poad,
Manchester, Conn.
SWIBERSKI, John, 1 1 7 Algin Dr., Middle-
bury, Conn.
SWIGUT, Frank, 66 Landers Rd., E. Htfd.,
Conn. Marketing Club 3; President Mar-
keting Club 4; Intramural Softball and
Basketball, Who's Who Among Students
in American Universities and Colleges 4.
SZABLOWSKI, Karen, 1 43 Oswegatchie
Rd., Waterford, Conn.
SZEWCZAK, Richard, 71 Oak St., New
Britain, Conn. Chi Epsilon.
TAFT, Thomas, 75 Sulik Terrace, Stratford,
Conn.
TAGGART, Daniel, 233 Blue Ridge Dr.,
Manchester, Conn. Environmental Con-
cern 1 ,2,3; Anth. Club 2,3,4; Promotion
and Tenure Committee 4.
TALENTINO, Christina, 1 9 Mariners Lane,
Stamford, Conn. Phi Alpha Theta.
TANSEY, Hugh, 1 21 Olcott St., Manches-
ter, Conn. Pi Tau Sigma, Tau Beta Pi.
TARANTINO, Sharon, 22 W. Main St.,
Stafford Springs, Conn.
TARASCHUK, Susan, 1 9 Cashman Place,
Kensington, Conn., 06037.
TAYLOR, George, Rte. 82, Salem, Conn.
Intramural Baseball and Soccer, Horticul-
ture Club.
TEMPLE, Kathleen, 45 Country Club Rd.,
Wethersfield, Conn. Softball Team 3;
Field Hockey Team 4; Undergraduate
Sociology Club 4; Outing Club.
TESSMANN, Wyane, 366 W. Avon Rd.,
Avon, Conn.
THIEBEAULT, James S., RED #2, Sugar Hill
Rd., Tolland, Conn.
THIEBEAULT, Richard, 1 1 0 South Second
Ave., Taftville, Conn., Scuba Club.
THIBODEAU, Karen, RED #3, Box 94,
Storrs, Conn. Fencing 2; Spanish Club 2;
Medieval Society 4.
THOMPSON, Diane, Route 6, Windham
(North), Conn. Dolphinettes, NSH
Volunteer.
TITUS, Robin, 1 40 Blue Ridge, Manches-
ter, Conn. Mansfield Tutorial 1 ,3,4; Sailing
Club 2; CDC 1 , Psychology Club 2.
TOLMAN, Karen, RED #1 , Box 244,
Keene, New Hampshire. SAPTA.
TOMEY, Margaret, 34 Aiken St., Norwalk,
Conn.
TORREY, Stephen, 24 Mimosa Dr., Cos
Cob., Conn. Intramural Swimming (1 ,2,3,
4); Paddleball (2,3,4); Volleyball (3,4);
Outing Club 3,4; House Treasurer 3,4;
Karate Club 3; Biosis 4.
TOSUN, Tomorr, 56 Alison Ave., Chesh-
ire, Conn. Intramural Softball 2.
TOUSEY, Robin, 66 Bob White Lane, Wil-
ton, Conn. Swim Team 2; Social Chmn. 2,
3,4; UTO Vice President 3 and President 4,
lARC.
TRAMBERT, Jonathan, 3 Live Oak Rd.,
Norwalk, Conn. Ski Club President 4;
Alpha Phi Omega, Corresponding Secre-
tary 2;. WillimanticTutorial.
TRAMONTANIS, Harry, 38 Wepawaug
Rd., Woodbrige, Conn. WHUS
TRAPASSO, Keith, 1 8 Palm St., Bridgeport,
Conn. Film Society, The Medieval Drama
Society.
TRICARICO, Anthony, 57 Brooklawn St.,
New Britian, Conn. Zeta Psi.
TULMAN, Maria, 220 Boston Tpke., Bol-
ton. Conn. Marching Band 1 ,2.
TUREK, David, 25 Janet Drive, E. Htfd.,
Conn. Pershing Rifles, LT. Colonel.
TURULA, Jan B., 54 Thornton Rd., Roch-
ester, New York. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi
Kappa Phi, Lacrosse 1 ,2,3.
TUTTLE, George, 1 6 Karen Ave., Wolcott,
Conn.
TURSECK, Donna, Town St., E. Haddam,
Conn. Cheerleader 1 ,2 at Middlesex
Community College, Ski Club 2.
U
UNGER, Frieda, 68 Clark St., Long Beach,
New York. Pi Sigma Alpha, Hillel Trea-
surer, Committee Chairman, Assoc. Stu-
dent Commissaries Dorm Rep., Campus
Community Carnival Dorm Chmn.
URSONE, Donna, 80 DeLeo Drive, Stam-
ford, Conn. Bowling League 1 .
V
VAGNONE, Don, 1 6 Hoover Rd., River-
side, Conn.
VALVO, Russell, 200 Liberty St., Fredonia,
New York. Indoor & Outdoor Track 1 ,2,4;
Intramural 1 ,2,3,4; Archery Club Team 3,
4; R.A. 3,4.
VAUGHAN, Paul S., 6 Crest R., Granby,
Conn. ASME, Ski Club.
VERNO, Donna, 1 N. Barnes St., Wtby.,
Conn. Tau Pi Epsilon.
VIDBERGS, Marga, 240 Kensington, River
Edge, New Jersey. Alpha Lambda Delta,
Phi Kappa Phi, Mansfield Tutorial, UTO
Lecture Chairman.
ViSSAK, Ingrid, Barbara Manor Apt., West
Willington, Conn. Student Counselor 2;
Student Counseling Chairman 3.
VITTI, Nick, 70 London Lane, Stamford,
Conn. Intramural Baseball 1 ,2; Basketball
1 ,2,3.
VUOLO, Cynthia, 74 Herkimer St., Water-
bury, Conn. SAPTA (Course Evaluation
Committee), South Campus Council (Sec-
retary 3), Ski Club 3,4; Coordinator SLAC,
Medieval Drama Society.
W
WAGNER, Barbara W., Hemlock Dr., Kil-
lingworth. Conn., 0641 7.
WALDRON, Barbara, 231 Grove Ave.,
Vernon, New Jersey. House Pres., Vice
President of Gamma Sigma Sigma 4;
Freshman Counselor 2,3.
WALKER, Leslie, 30 Bradley Brook Dr.,
No. Granby, Conn. President of Norwich
State Hospital Volunteers 4.
WALKER, Willilam A., 91 Northill St.,
Stamford, Conn. WHUS Chief Engineer.
WALLA, Marie, W. Side Pond Road,
Goshen, Conn. Phi Upsilon Omicron.
WALLACE, Thomas Jr., 1 7 Sun St., Enfield,
Conn.
WALLISCH, Shelley, 61 1 Roosevelt Blvd.,
Paramus, N.J. SigmaTheta Tau.
WALLOCK, Iris, 91 Strawberry Hill Ave.,
Stamford, Conn. Zeta Psi, Freshman
Queen Contest, Open Classroom Pro-
gram, Judy Board, Dorm Rep., Jr. Year in
Eng.
WALSH, Deborah, 1 799 Jennings Road,
Fairfield, Conn.
WALSH, Dennis, 53 Ardmore Rd., Manch-
ester, Conn. Freshman Soccer 1 ; Varsity
Soccer 2.
WALSH, Linda, 404 Aljen Avenue, Led-
yard. Conn. Student Counseling.
WARGO, Stephanie, 433 Prospect St.,
Wethersfield, Conn.
WEAVER, Marcia, 3722 Hayes St., N.E.,
#204, Washington, D.C. Presidential
Scholar.
WEGH, Gregory, Washington Road, Ter-
ryville. Conn. Candidate for Admission to
Beta Gamma Sigma, Degree with
Distinction.
WEINER, Lesley, 8 Rose Terr., Wayne,
New Jersey. Gamma Sigma Sigma, Mortar
Board, Campus Community Carnival Ex-
ecutive Board, Willi Tutorial, House
Council, Hillel, Freshman Counselor.
WEINSTEIN, Howard, 1 1 8 Lloyd Dr., Fair-
field, Conn.
WEKH, Linda, Mountain Spring Rd.,
Rockville, Conn.
WELLER, David, 423 Pequot Avenue, New
London, Conn.
WENSLEY, Carol, 21 Riverside Lane, River-
side, Conn. Delta Sigma Pi, Accounting
Society, ASC Rep., Dorm President, Ass't.
Stewardess, Student Counselor.
WEST, J. Cornel, 1 54 Stoner Drive, W.
Htfd., Conn. Pres. Youth for Nixon and
Young Republican Club, Treasurer for
YAF, Debate Club.
WESTON, Elizabeth, 1 547 Redding Rd.,
Redding, Conn. Phi Kappa Phi, Dorm
Treasurer.
WETMORE, Robert George, 92 Candle-
wood Lk. Rd., New Milford, Conn. Alpha
Phi Omega, Kappa Kappa Psi, Pi Sigma
Alpha, Phi Kappa Phi, Marching Band,
Concert Band 3; Pub. Director for Cam-
pus Community Carnival 2,4; House Sec-
retary 4; Public Service Internship Sum-
mer 1 973, Honors Scholar.
WEXLER, Abraham, Route 66, Hebron,
Conn.
WHEELER, Heather, 67 Benjamin St., Old
Greenwich, Conn.
WHITE, Diane, 534 Washington, Glouces-
ter, Mass. SAPTA, Student Liason Adv.
Committee, Drop-in Center.
WHITE, Mary Ann, 1 1 2 Bushy Hill Rd.,
Granby, Conn. Mortar Board; Mortar
Board Historian 4; Assoc. Student Com-
missaries Board of Directors, Rep. 3;
House Sec, 3; Musician for St. Thomas
Aquinas Chapel Center 1 ,2,3,4.
WHITE, Roberta M., 38 Walnut St., Nauga-
tuck. Conn. Archery Team 3; Archery
Club Instructor 4.
WHITEHEAD, Charles, 83 Irene Drive,
Vernon, Conn.
WHITMAN, Frank M., 1 1 Saddle Road,
Norwalk, Conn. Bowling 1 ,3,4; Photopool
3,4; Accounting Society 4.
WICKETT, Nancy, 6 Koury Court, W. Ha-
ven, Conn. Phi Upsilon Omicron 2,3;
Chaplain 4; Cheerleader 1 ; Vice Pres.
POW/MIAC.R.I.S.I.S.3.
WIEDENHEFT, Janis, 35 Chipman Drive,
Cheshire, Conn. Intramurals 1 ; House
President 3; Freshman Orientation Coun-
selor 2; CCC Chairman and Committees
1 ,2,3,4; Real Estate Intern Program, UTO
Re. 3.
WIGHT, Betty Ann, 2 Anthony St., Willi-
mantic. Conn.
WILLIAMS, Chauncey, 895 Shennecossett
Rd., Groton, Conn., Honors Program,
Arnold Air Society.
WILLIAMS, Janie, 27E Dutch Pt., Conn.
Black Experience Committee.
WILLIAMS, Steven, 72 Shady Knoll La.,
New Canaan, Conn. Phi Kappa Phi, Soc-
cer 1 .
WILSON, Barbara Jan, 589 North St., Mil-
ford, Conn. Phi Kappa Phi, Softball, Vol-
leyball Intramurals 1 ,2,3,4; Dorm Presi-
dent 3; Ski Club Vice President 3,4; Medi-
eval Drama Society, lARC 2; South Cam-
pus Council Chairman 2,3.
WINOGRAD, Karen, 305 So. Park Dr.,
Woodbridge, NJ. Phi Kappa Phi.
WINOKUR, Charlotte, 296 Alden Ave.,
New Haven, Conn.
WISCHNIA, Anne, 435 Lakeside Dr.,
Stamford, Conn.
WOCHHOLZ, Julie, Pinecrest Lane, Dur-
ham, NH. Alpha Lambda Delta, Mortar
Board, Executive Board Member of SAP-
TA 3,4; Affiliations Committee of SAPTA
3,4; Donar room aid of Red Cross.
WOFFARD, Chester A. Ill, 30 Scott Dr.,
Bloomfield, Conn. Tau Pi Upsilon, Chair-
man of Committee for Psychiatric Nurs-
ing, Student-Faculty Laison Committee 3,
Resident Assistant 2,3,4.
WOITKE, Carol, 1 56 Tudor St. Waterbury,
Conn. Member of Judicial Board 3, Talent
Show, Play "The Hobbit" Drama Club,
Dance Club 3.
WOLPIN, Cindy, PO Box 1 25, Coventry,
Conn. Paste Up and Night Editor for Con-
necticut Daily Campus, Gamma Sigma
Delta, Women's Center, Choral Society.
WOLSKl, Karen, 44 Miner Ave., Water-
ford, Conn. Alpha Lambda Delta, Phi
Kappa Phi, Judo Club 3, Block and Bridle
2,3; Outing Club 4, Associated Student
Commissary Representative.
WOZNICA, ZBIGUIEU, 1 1 9 Mapleton St.,
Hartford, Conn. Bowling League 1 , Chess
Club 1 ,PaiLum Club 1 .
WRUBEL, Jeffrey, 24 Sycamore Rd.,
Bloomfield, Conn.
YAUN, Todd, Rt. 1 2, Dayville, Conn.
Commuters Union.
YEARWOOD, Barry, 1 87-40 Mangin Ave.,
St. Albans, N.Y.
YEDZINIAK, Deborah, 294 Connecticut
Ave., Newington, Conn, intercollegiate
Riding 2, Dorm President 2, Stewardess 4,
French Club 2,4; Block and Bridle Club 2,
4; Livestock Judging Team 4.
YOUNG, June R., 79 Orient St., Meriden,
Conn.
YOUNG, Michael E., 35 Hartford Ave.,
Enfield, Conn. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa
Phi, ConnPirg Member, Part in "Cat on a
Hot Tin Roof", Hartford Br.
YOUNG, Robert, 1 0 Ward St., Waterbury,
Conn. The Black Voices of Freedom Gos-
pel Choir 1 ,3,4.
YOUNG, Susan M., 75 Dorton Rd., Ken-
sington, Conn. Member of SAPTA.
YOUNG, Thomas, 1 48 Willington Ave.,
Stafford Springs, Conn.
ZACHARIAS, Charles, 46 Elliott Rd.,
Trumbuli, Conn. Sigma Chi.
ZADROVECY, Jo Ann C, 545 So. Benson
Rd., Fairfield, Conn. Varsity Volleyball 4,
Treasurer ASG Hartford Branch 2.
ZAKOWICH, Paul E., 1 1 81 East St., Suf-
field. Conn. Honors Scholar, Honors Ad-
visory Committee, Honors Program, Fac-
ulty Scholarship, Phi Kappa Phi, Original
research paper published in the medical
journal "Transfusion." Resident Assistant,
East Campus Council, Committee of the
Living-Learning Center. Tennis Club, Ski
Club, Bowling Club, Intramural Football.
Theatrical production crew of "Rasho-
mon," science club. Library Aide, Chem-
istry research and lab assistant, Hematolo-
gy research aide. Hartford Bushmen Staff,
graduated early in. December.
ZALESKI, Linda, 38 Edgemont Ave., West
Hartford, Conn.
ZALEWSKI, Michael, 454 Barlow St., Bris-
tol, Conji. Intramural Basketball 1 ,2; Hor-
ticulture Club 1 ,2; Chairman Nursery
Management Exhibit of Horticulture
Show.
ZAICEK, Robert, West Willington, Conn.
ZARRELLA, Betty, 45 Windsor Rd., Shel-
ton. Conn. SAPTA.
ZARRELLA, Lawrence R., 30 Bouffard
Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Steward of Dor-
mitory, Member Board of Directors of
Associated Student Commissaries.
ZARRELLA, Louis, 30 Bouffard Ave., Wat-
erbury, Conn. Block and Bridle Club,
UConn livestock Judging Team.
ZAVEDNAK, David, 1 0 Addison St., An-
sonia. Conn. Tau Beta Pi, Eta Kappa Nu,
Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers.
ZIGMOND, Robert, Hyde Ave., Rockville,
Conn. Soccer 1 , Marketing Club 3,4.
ZIMMER, Joanne, 3 Bonnyview Dr., Liv-
ingston, N.J. Intramurals Volleyball, Bas-
ketball, Swimming, Softball 1 ,2,3,4; Resi-
dent Assistant 3,4; St. Thomas Aquinas
music, liturgy, art committees 1 ,2,3,4;
Recreational Association 3,4; Delegate to
NESRPS3.
ZIDE, Alicia, 1 1 Edgewater Hillside, West-
port, Conn. Experimental College, BOG
Travel Committee.
ZUAR, Myra, 1 3 C Mt. Vernon Dr., Rock-
ville, Conn.
ZUBRETSKY, Michael, 240 Ledgemere
Apts., Mansfield Center, Conn. Market-
ing Club.
ZUCKERMAN, Matthew, 7 Shermor
Place, New London, Conn. Basketball and
Softball intramurals, Z.O.O.
DORM S
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DAVID A. BONNEY PETER A. FEGELMAN WILLIAM D. ANDERSON KEVIN D, FITZGERALD KENNETH W. WENDT ROBERT W. BOULEY DONALD E. SHEAK PATRICK J, CANNATA
u
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C
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UCONN
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inn
Books, Supplies, and many
other things. . .
H JCkmn^^Bookstotts
BRAND- REX COM PANY
A PART OF AJ<ZDna INC.
WILLIM ANTIC, CONNECTICUT 06226
BRAND
REX
FISH
PISCES
EXOTIC FISH
COMPLETE AQUARIUM SUPPLIES
SMALL ANIMALS BIRDS
DRYGOODS
ROUTE 32
WILLIMANTIC PLAZA
WILLIMANTIC, CT.
423-941 5
UNIVERSITY M USIC STORE
b
I RT1 95
1 UNIVERSITY PLAZA
^^STORRS,CONN.
KNOWN FOR PERSONAL SERVICE
AND A COMPLETE SELECTION
OF RECORDS AND TAPES.
OPEN DAILY 1 0-1 0
SAT 1 0-7
RECORDS TAPES SHEET MUSIC
ACCESSORIES
TICKETRON
We' re not jus t a bus ines s ...
... but a participant in all kindsof business.
Aerospace, construction, manufacturing,
banking, farming. Youname it, we're
involved.
We're involved with people too. All
kindsof people. Working, playing,
moving, growing.
Most of all, we're involved in change.
Constant change in the livesof people...
in the world of business. We think it'sour
ability to change that haskept usgrowing.
Today, we're one of America'slargest
corporate enterprises. Eight billion dollars
in assets. Three billion plusin annual
salesvolume.
We'd like youto growwith us. We can
offer career opportunitiesin many areas,
some of which will probably surprise you.
Contact our college relationsofficer
when he visitsyour campus. Or write
D.K. DeWard, Director of Employment,
Personnel Administiration Department-D4,
The TravelersInsurance Company,
One Tower Square, Hartford, CT 06115.
*.
THE TRAVELERS
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M&F
Insurance by
THE HARTFORD
THE HARTFORD INSURANCE GROUP HARTFORD CONNECTICUT
ANNULLI
CONSTRUCTION CO.
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
1 47 HALE ROAD
MANCHESTER, CONNECTICUT 06040
Builders of the Graduate
Center
Bringing You The Newest In
Fashion Merchandise in Each One
Of Our Exciting Stores
Hartford West Hartford East Hartford Vernon Wethersfield
Windsor Old Saybrook Enfield Avon/Sinsbury Westfarms
M ICHAEL J. GRESH PAINTING CO. INC
523-1 81 4
COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL RESIDENTIAL
OUR INSURED PROFESSIONAL SERVICES INCLUDE ALL TYPES
OF INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR PAINTING, SAND BLASTING,
STEEPLE JACK SERVICE, WATER PROOFING,
MACHINE REFINISHING, TUCKPOINTING
John F. Gresh, President
1 34 Elmfield Street
West Hartford, Ct.
YEARBOOK
PORTRAIT
PROGRAM
STORRS,
CONN.
Your Campus Record Shop
BEST WISHES
Behind Post Office
Tel. 429- 0443
SPIRO'S RESTAURANT AND BAR
RT32, EAGLEVILLE
DANCING NIGHTLY
LIVE ENTERTAINM ENT
THURS., FRI., SAT. NIGHT
HOT
PIZZA
GRINDERS
LUNCH SUPPER
TO COM PLEM ENT
YOUR M EAL-
BEER* WINES LIQUORS
THE COLLEGE BOOTERY
M ANSFIELD SHOPPING PLAZA
STORRS. CONNECTICUT 06268
TEL. 203- 429- 6701
PEPE FARM S INC.
1 01 RESERVE ROAD
HARTFORD, CT.
061 1 4
MANCHESTER PACKING
INC.
Manufacturers of Quality
Meat Products and Provisions
BOGNER'S
A Name You Can Rely On
CONGRATULATIONS
STAN' S AUTO PARTS
1 527 W. M AIN ST.
WILLIM ANTIC, CT.
IN STORRS ITS
THE PIZZA HOUSE
RT1 95, STORRS
RT1 95
OPEN 9AM-MIDNIGHT
FRI. AND SAT. TIL 1 :00
NEW HOOT
757 MAIN ST.
WILLIMANTiC
M ARKLAND' S GARAGE
J66p Route 1 95, Storrs , Connecticut
Serv ing the Univ ers ity area
^
By
Rioae Hom es
ft Division OF ^S) m vnns RRODUCTS com PRnr
Steve Hodovan Bidg. Co.
605 A Middle Trpk.
Storrs, Ct. 06268
Compliments of
B & D Package Store
At the Four Corners
Storrs, Ct.
Congratulations
UConn Auto Parts, Inc.
Mansfield Shopping Plaza
Rt44A
Storrs, Ct.
429-6446
MARTY S S E RV ICE CE NTE R
M ARTIN SAUER
FRONT END ALIGNMENT, GENERAL REPAIRING,
TUNE UP, TIRES. BATTERIES,
ACCESSORIES
ROUTE A4A
STORRS, CONN. 429- 1 333
Fireside Spirits Shop
Mansfield Shopping Plaza
Storrs, Connecticut 06268
Phone: 4 29-5880
Keg Beer Delivered
MANSFIELD
SHOPPING
PLAZA
Storrs, Conn,
Phone: 429-5880
Keg Beer Delivered
Congratulations From the Crew
of:
KIM'S GARAGE
Rt 1 95 & Dog Lane
Storrs, Ct.
429-8242
BEST WISHES
T&S
Bras s & Bronze Works , Inc.
Wes tbury, L.I., New York
CONGRATULATIONS
SPIKE' S GULF SERVICE
STATION
1 25 NO. EAGLEVILLE RD.
STORRS, CT.
vac i^Mmmca m&i
A round The World Shopping A drenlure
Framed Art
Gifts And Jewelry From
Over 70 Countries & TFie U.S.
Rt 1 95 Storrs, Ct.
429-7742
amBPican
thms d
Complete Line of Vending & Amusement Services
CONGRATULATIONS FROM
M ANSFIELD SUPPLY
1 3 BRITTON DRIVE
Bl oomf iel d, Connecticut
Tel ephone
243- 1 461
RT1 95
STORRS, CT.
Rt1 95 Storrs,Ct.
429-0001
Foreign And Domestic Car
Service
Road And Wrecker Service
Used Cars
Larry Tangari
1 4 DOG LANE
STORRS, CT.
QUESNEL AUTO BODY
HOLIDAY SPIRITS
M AKE HOLIDAY SPIRITS YOUR ONt STOP FOR
ALL YOUR PARTY NEEDS
>HONE 429 - 7786 Larges t Sel ection in the Area
FEATURING
A WIDE ASSORTM ENT OF DOM ESTIC & IM PORTED
WINES AS WELL AS SPIRITS AND BEER
DISCOUNT ON
CASE PURCHASE
GIFT
WRAPPING
M ASTER CHG
ACCEPTED
HOLIDAY M ALL RT 1 95 STORRS
OPEN 8 to 8
M ON thru SAT
252 STAFFORD RD. (RT 32)
MANSFIELD, CT.
WATER &
AIR
Willimantic,
Ct.
Stop in and
see our
exotic
plant room
HUSKIES RESTAURANT
Pizza and Brew
COCKTAILS
ITALIAN DINNERS
GRINDERS
PHONE 429- 2333
CONGRATULATIONS
Rapp's Delicatessen Inc.
M ans f iel d Shopping Pl aza
Storrs , Ct.
DARK and LIGHT DRAFT
BUDWEISERONTAP
KING HILL ROAD
STORRS,CONN.
" SERVING THE STORRS COMMUNITY SINCE
1 954"
COM PLIM ENTS OF
UNIVERSAL FOOD STORE
1 3 DOG LANE
STORRS, CT.
Congratul ations From
PHIL' S
1 0 Dog Lane
Storrs , Ct.
OLLE GE TH.
!
232- 1 065
ELECTRIC INC. .
ONE BURR ROAD. BLOaMFIELD, CONN. OeOOZ
JERRY GLAZIER 24 HOUR SERVICE
CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF 74
FROM
i
CREATORS OF UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT
CLASS RINGS
JAM ES M . DWYER
ONE PICKWICK LANE
OLD SAYBROOK, CONNECTICUT 06475 PHONE: ( 203) 399- 6877
PATRONS
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Paradee, 7 Fairmont St.,
Wethersfield, Ct. 061 09
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Choinski, 1 9 Oakland Ave.,
New Britain, Ct. 06053
O. Bertil Hugo, 328 Curtis St., Meriden, Ct.
Mrs. Judith E. Hugo, 328 Curtis St., Meriden, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Hoyer Sr., 82 Knobhill Dr.,
Hamden, Ct.
Cathy H. St. George, 95 Loomis Dr., West
Hartford, Ct.
Edward J. Perkowski, 1 50 Hickory St.,
Bridgeport, Ct.
Desi Nesmith, 24 Durham St., Hartford, Ct.
Mrs. Toynell Nesmith, 24 Durham St., Hartford,
Ct.
Dessi Nesmith, 24 Durham St., Hartford, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Herman R. Somma, 9 Ramona Ave.,
Waterbury, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Shillo, 1 27 Roosevelt Ave.,
Norwich, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Louis J. Thibeault, 1 1 0 South 2nd
Ave., Taftville, Ct.
A. Dabkey, 41 Round Hill Rd., Meriden, Ct.
Dr. & Mrs. Max Taffel, 1 02 Seymour Rd.,
Woodbridge, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Weller, 423 Pequot Ave.,
NewLondon, Ct.
Colin F. Hamlin, 1 007 River Blvd., Suffield, Ct.
Mrs. James E. Richards, Sr., South Woodstock,
Ct.
Dr. & Mrs. George Talis, 1 23 Union St., Natick,
Mass.
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Gentile, 26 Wilkenda Ave.,
Waterbury, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph F. Marashio, Sr., 57 Garfield
Ave., Woburn, Mass.
Mrs. Evelyn Schade, 32 Hoyt St., Darien, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. George Thorne, RD 1 , Annandale,
N.J.
Gladys Aslanian, 1 62 Pershing Rd., Englewood
Cliffs, N.J.
Mr. & Mrs. Henry D. Miller, 1 85 Warpas Rd.,
Madison, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. James L. Rose, 32 Jefferson Park Rd.,
Madison, Ct.
Mr. William Johnston, 1 94 North Taylor Ave.,
South Norwalk, Ct.
Dr. Salvatore Musco, 1 1 94 Windsor Ave.,
Windsor, Ct.
Warren C. Baldwin, MD, 42-A Deering St.,
Portland, Maine
Mrs. Newton S. Gordon, 54 Hamlin Dr., West
Hartford, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Stoll, 1 9 Brodman Dr.,
Stamford, Ct.
Thomas A. Larsen, 39 Ridge St., Greenwich, Ct.
Col. & Mrs. M. W. Reiss
Mrs. Anne L. Roberts, 51 2 Boston Rd.,
Middletown, Ct.
John Bunevich, 1 55 Academy Ave., Waterbury,
Ct.
Isabel Bunevich, 1 55 Academy Ave., Waterbury,
Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Lucien Langevin, 65 Clarendon Ave.,
West Hartford, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Walter Zavednak, 1 0 Addison St.,
Ansonia, Ct.
Lloyd S. Grant, Main St., Hebron, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Johnson, 1 683 Willard Ave.,
Newingtion, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Roland G. Gioia, 291 Terhune Dr.,
Wayne, N.J.
Mr. & Mrs. John Bassaline, 753 Fall Ave.,
Uniondale, N.Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Milton Levine, 207 Park Ave.,
Bloomfield, Ct.
John Hornyack, 253 Peck Lane, Orange, Ct.
Gerald DeGaetano, 31 Crescent PL, Smithtown,
N.Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Earl J. O'Brient, 4 Birch Hill Rd.,
Danvers, Mass.
Don D. Colanero, 409 Lincoln Ave., Paulsboro,
N.J.
Marcy D. Stango, Waterbury, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Andre J. Belanger, 41 Trull Lane,
Lowell, Mass.
Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Howard, 1 4 Bayview
Place, West Haven, Ct.
Elissa A. Curran, 1 1 Park Place, New York, N.Y.
G. Frank Curran, 1 1 Park Place, N.Y., N.Y.
Hazel C. Curran, 1 1 Park Place, N.Y., N.Y.
Vicki Curran, 1 1 Park Place, N.Y., N.Y.
Albert J. Poulin, 52 Dart St., Hartford, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Terrence Dowling Jr., 263 Lalley
Blvd., Fairfield, Ct.
Little John's Mover's, 1 50 Pomeroy Ave.,
Meriden, Ct.
Mrs. Charles Heineman, 28 Harvard Ave.,
Avenel, N.J.
Mr. Charles Heineman, 28 Harvard Ave.,
Avenel, N.J.
Gerald J. Dembiczak, 1 4 Bloomfield Dr.,
Fairfield, Ct.
Professor & Mrs.Cornelius J. Scanlon, 2 Eagle
Lane, Simsbury, Ct.
Marc Gerard Savard, 40 Homecrest Ave.,
Slatersville, R.I.
Mr. William C. Ireland
Mr. & Mrs. R. J. Kilmurray, 85 Lexington Ave.,
Rochelle Park, N.J.
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Krusiewicz, 20 Somerset,
Wethersfield, Ct.
Paul O'Connell, Sterling City Road, Lyme, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Arnold Torkelson, Brunt Hills, N.Y.
Mr. & Mrs. Karl T. Hendrickson, 54 Grove St.,
New London, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Edward Konkol, 1 88 Bullard St.,
Holden, Mass.
Mr. & Mrs. B. Humeston, 21 Van Buren St.,
Beacon, N.Y.
Harold D. Casey, 61 Orient St., Meriden, Ct.
Mrs. Ophelia M. Tyler, 90 Hamilton Ave.,
Stratford, Ct.
Mrs. Virginia Pizzoferrato, 85 Rozlyn St.,
Hartford, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Julius Parks, 74 Hull St., Ansonia, Ct.
Mutt, Burt, & Coop, 1 23 Main St., Anytown, USA
Barry Rimler, 1 8 Bailey Rd., New Rochelle, N.Y.
Lessenger Real Estate Agency, Stafford Rd.,
Willimantic, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. Francis A. Delfino, Sr., 1 06 Waverly
St., Waterbury, Ct.
Altna Veigh, Rt 1 95, Storrs, Ct.
Mr. & Mrs. George R. Wetmore, Candlewood
Lake Rd., New Milford, Ct.
Katherine L. Kosturak, 1 70 Arrowhead PL,
Stratford, Ct.
', : =*%
Temporarily..
OUT OF
GASOLINE
Open foryour
otherdriving
needs.
>
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As the Knight sang the last words
of the ballad, he gathered up the
reins, and turned his horse's head
along the road by which they had
come. "You've only a few yards to
go," he said, "down the hill and over
that little brook, and then you'll be a
Queen ..."
Lewis Carroll
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