Bentley University Scholars @ Bentley

Bentley Historical Publications

Winter 1970

Volume 12 Issue 04 - Winter 1970

Bentley University

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CONTENTS

1. Alumni President' Corner

2. Rae Ander on elected dean emeritu

2. Dr. inclair appointed dean

2. Bentley Coll ge in .E.C.A. movie

3. Two n w tru te elected

3. Five new corporator nam d

4. Plac ment opportunities available

4. ew faculty m mber introduced

5. Faculty get promotion and advanced degree

5. Experimental Theater pre ent 'J.B."

6. Alumni meeting are varied

6. Harry C. Bentley M morial ervice held

7. Bo. ton hapter of AA hold eminar

7. Hayden Foundation halJenge reache $80 000

7. Legi lative parley held

8. Prof. Kiely jn tructor for internal auditor

9. Beta Tau Alpha

10. Delivery of health care m the eventie

12. 1960-70 - Dynamic decade for Bentley College

14. Bentley quintet high- coring outfit

l 7. Through the Years

25. In Memoriam

Member o( AMERICA ALUM I COU NCIL President's Corner - N ational Alumni Association

This column marks another inno­ was a presentation of the College held at the Early Bird Reception of vation - my observations and re­ curriculum today as presented by the the 1970 Class Reunion. port of the national executive com­ deans of various departments. It was 6. Special ote - The Bentley mittee meetings and activities to a most stimulating pre entation and Experimental Theater held a three date. brought us up to date with the aca­ day performance of a serious drama demic schedule of the College. entitled "J.B." Saturday, December CHAPTER OJIBRATIONS 13, was designated Alumni ight Arthur H. Brickett, chairman and the extent of your support for s a re ult of intensive effort and this faculty and student activity was much work, Arthur and his co-chair­ indicated by your presence. man, Walter Hyla have coordinated 7. Under active consideration is a and organized a full chedule of joint Undergraduate-Alumni func­ chapter meetings. From October 1st tion to get to know our future mem­ to D ecember 4th, fourteen chapter ber . Thi program will be an­ meetings were held from an Fran­ nounced when completed. ci co, Lo Angeles, and Phoenix to yracu e, ew Hamp hire, and PLA TO ATTEND TIIESE AC­ . Also included were several TIVITIES. GET TO KNOW YOUR chapter meetings in Metropolitan BE TLEY ASSOCIATES, PAST , a well as Connecticut and - PRESE T - FUTURE. Rhode Island. Details of these PUBLIC RELATIO SIDNEY H. TUSHIN events may be found in the chapter Lorraine Fitzpatrick news column on page six. Plans to We have be n meeting regularly We have establi bed a public re­ every month ince June to plan and hold additional meeting thi winter and in the pring are well under way. lations function to dis eminate in­ to carry out our program for the formation concerning the Executive year. Our meetings are held on the PROGRAM AND PLANNI G William A. Burke, chairman Committee in the local papers in co­ third Tue day of each month in the operation with Don Waterhouse, Faculty Dining Room of the Student An enjoyable and interesting sea­ son can be realized by attending the Bentley College Public Relations Di­ Center. The e meetings are open to rector. all members of the Alumni Associa­ function prepared by this commit­ tion who might be interested in ob- tee. REUNIONS erving their national organization at 1. Ice Follies at the Bo ton Gar­ Waldemar H . Thomae den on Sunday, February 15, 1970 work. Plans for the five year class re­ at special rates for Bentley, courtesy unions ending in "5" and "0" are Let roe tell you something of your of Trustee Edward Powers, Pres­ national committee chairmen and now being promulgated. Because of ident of the -Arena graduation exercises being held on their activities. Corp. campus at the same time there has ANNUAL GIVING 2. A Sports Night to be held in been consideration given to holding William F . Staples, Jr., chairman March in conjunction with the ath­ the Reunion in late May or even The first program was a highly letic program of the College. earlier in the year. This has not been successful breakfast meeting in 3. An Evening at Pops in the finalized and an expression of your honor of the members of Omega early part of May. Final date await­ interest and desirei would be most Beta Omega held Sunday, October ing scheduling by the Boston Pops useful to the Reunion Committee. 19, 1969. As you may be aware, Orchestra. This program will be membership in the Omega Beta alumni oriented and is usually over­ EXECUTIVE MEETINGS Omega Society is awarded upon a sold. Get your reservations in Beginning in September, we have minimum gift of $50 to the Annual promptly, when notified. been holding early dinner meetings, Giving Program. For those gradu­ 4. Career Day for Seniors - In dutch treat, which have enabled us ates who have been out of school for the works - Planning to coordinate to have guest speakers from the fac­ five year or less, a minimum gift of this event with the Placement De­ ulty to keep us current with the situ­ $25 annually will afford them mem­ partment of the College headed by ation at the College today. The dia­ bership in Omega Beta Omega. The Ray Sundstrom. logue was stimulating and allowed highlight of the breakfast program 5. Meet the Faculty - To be ( Continued on page 25)

1 dean emeritus is also an alumnus of the College and holds bachelor's and Rae Anderson elected master's degrees from Suffolk Uni­ versity. He distinguished himself in College's dean emeritus 1939 when he was awarded the Mas­ sachusetts Society of CPA'S Gold T he Board of Trustees of Bentley at his request, as senior vice pres­ Medal for the highest grade in that College has elected Rae D. An- ident and dean of the College to re­ year's CPA ex:amination. He also turn to teaching. received the American Institute of A member of the Bentley adrnin­ CPA's Elijah Watt Sells Gold Medal istra tion and faculty since 1940, for the highest grade in the United Dean Anderson coordinated the con­ States. struction activities of the College's Dean Anderson, who is director of new $15 million Waltham campus. Waldo Bros. Co., is a member of He will continue in this capacity un­ ( Continued on page 9) til the final details relating to the I 04-acre site are completed. Dean Anderson joined the Bentley faculty Bentley College after ucce sful careers as a senior in 'cool school' RAE 0 . ANDERSON accountant with Charles F. Ritten­ derson as dean emeritus of the Col­ hou e & Co., now part of Touche N. E. C. A movie lege. Ro s & Co., and as auditor with John professional film-making crew Dean Ander on, who is also pro­ Hancock Mutual Insurance Co. A spent four days on the all-elec­ fessor of accounting, wa named In addition to being a trustee and tric Bentley College campus Jast fa)l dean emeritu after tepping down a corporator of Bentley, the new filming scene for a sound motion picture being produced for the Na­ Dr. Sinclair appointed tional Electrical Contractors Asso- dean of Bentley College The Bentley College Board of of the College, aid Dr. Sinclair has Trustees has appointed Dr. John proven to be an able member of the M. Sinclair as dean of the College. faculty and administration during his Dr. Sinclair, who has been affili- years at th e College. "We are pleased Dr. Sinclair will continue to serve in this vital posi­ Bentley students smile for the cameraman as tion," the president said. "His fine a professional film -making crew photographs administrative abilities will be used a class in session. to the fullest degree as Dean of the ciation. College." The 12 - 15 - minute, fuJI - color A native of Rumford, Me., where sound movie, which will be entitled he was graduated· from Stephens "The Cool School," will seek to High School, Dr. Sinclair is a gra­ show that advanced electrical tech­ duate of Bentley and received his nology can produce schools with an B.S. degree from Bowdoin College. environment that is responsive to OR. JOHN M. SINCLAIR He was awarded his master's degree student learning needs. The movie ated with the College for 22 years, from and his doc­ is being made under NECA super­ was named to the position after torate from Harvard Graduate vision and produced by RFG Asso­ serving as acting dean since July 1 School of Business Administration. ciates, Inc., of Hollywood. following the resignation of Rae D. Dr. Sinclair, a certified public ac­ Bentley, the only college to be Anderson as senior vice president countant and certified data pro­ fe atured in the film, was selected on and dean to return to teaching. cessor, was a senior accountant for the basis of its strong electrical tech­ In commenting on the appoint­ Stewart, Watts & Bullong of Boston nology and architectural attractive­ ment, Thomas·L. Morison, president ( Continued on page 9) ness.

2 Two new trustees elected rwo new trustees have been elec- years and has his own CPA prac­ firm of the Somerville and Malden ted for five-year terms by the tice. His experience al o includes companies. He reside at 39 Sewall Bentley College Board of Trustees, that of executive secretary, cost ac­ Woods Road, Melrose. according to an announcement by countant, and income tax director G. Frank Smith, chairman of the of a private corporation. board. Mr. Thoresen, executive vice pres- the Brookline Taxpayers Associa­ tion, a 11'1 mber of the Finance Com­ miltee of the Cambridge YMCA, and a member of the Executive Oub of the Boston Chamber of Com­ merce. He reside at J 48 Willard Rd., Brookline. Mr. Jacobson is second vice pres­ ident of the ew England Life In- urance Co. In addition, he is an associate member of the Greater Bo ton Real Estate Board and a member of the Building Owners Management Association. He lives at 5 Apple Hill Lane, Lynnfield. Mr. MacNeil, who is president of Newly elected Trustees receiving congrotulotions from President Morison (second left) ond G. Frank Smith, (far right) chairman of the board, are Carl E. Thoresen, (left) E35, and Charles the Ark-Le Switch Corporation, is E. Di Pesa, (second right) E20. al o director of the ewton-Waltham The newly-elected members are ident, treasurer, and director of Bank & Trust Co., trustee of the Charles E. DiPesa, E 20; and Carl both the Con olidated Paper Box ewtoo-Wellesley Hospital, and di­ E. Thoresen, E 35. Co. of Somerville and Moody Box rector of the Perpetual Benevolent Mr. DiPesa, a resident of Milton and Packing Co. of Malden, is also Fund. He resides at 45 Lansing Rd., and Scituate, has been in the public vice president and director of Katah­ West ewton. accounting profession for about 43 din Industries, Inc., Carlisle, parent l'vlr. Suttenberg, partner in the public aceounting firm of Ernst & Ernst, is a trustee of the Boston Five new corporators Brandeis Club; a member of the President's Council at Boston Col­ lege ; and a tru tee of the Combined named during meeting Jewish Philanthropies. He resides Five new corpora tors were elected Windsor Rd., Waban. at 5 Montrose St., ewton. for five-year terms at the annual Mr. Holtz, who is a partner in Newly elected corporators catch up on latest meeting of the Bentley College Cor­ the tax department of Arthur Ander­ alumni news. They are (I.,) George W. Gib­ son, Lawrence L. Suttenberg, Gerald J. Holtz, poration on October 18. sen & Co., is also vice president of D SJ . anti ~nrrv O J"r"h•n'I F ,11 Those newly elected are George W. Gibson; Gerald J. Holtz, D 53; Harry 0. Jacobson, E 38; Norman E. Mac eil; and Lawrence L. Sut­ tenberg. Mr. Gibs·on, who heads Deland, Gibson & Wrye, Inc., is also a colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve, was chief of staff of the 94th Infantry Reserve Division for 13 years, and was honored by the Employers Life In­ surance Co. by being named agent of the decade for the period 1959- 1969. He makes his home at 230

3 Placement opportunities available A wide-range of attractive oppor­ placement programs, but is designed Sundstrom said. tunities are proce sed each year to be an electronic means to help Regular office hours are 8: 30 through the Bentley Placement Of- expedite work with alumni, Mr. a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Evening hours at the Wal­ tham campus are Mondays, by ap­ pointment only, from 5-6 and Thur day from 5-7. Evening hours are maintained at the Boston facil­ itie each Tuesday from 5-7.

COLLEGE SPONSORS TAX FORUM Bentley College is plea ed to announce that on February 2 and 3, 1970, it is sponsoring a Tax Forum in conjunction with other professional organizations. The intent of the Forum is to provide detailed information regarding the provisions of the new Federal Tax Reform Bill -of 1969, whic1t contains many far-reaching changes in the Internal Revenue Code. The Forum i expected to become an annual event and will be a function of the newly-formed Bentley College Institute of Tax­ ation. For more detailed information on the February meeting write to Daniel F. Sullivan, assistant professor of accounting and administrative coordinator for the Forum, at Bentley Raymond F. Sundstrom, (left) placement di rector ot the College, reviews employment opportunities with John M. College, Beaver and Forest Streets, Waltham, . Schuhle, assistant director of placement. fice, according to Raymond F . Sund­ strom, placement director. Mr. Sundstrom said an alumnus New members of faculty returning from military duty or for other reasons desirous of seeking new position opportunities, would be are introduced at meeting given full a i tance by his office. r en new faculty members were in­ ginning of the fall semester. Available positions on file through troduced and a newly formed Included were five assistant pro­ the Placement Office range from Faculty Executive Council was fessors, Larry R. Dolinsky, mathe- office staff members to high execu­ tive positions. Mr. Sundstrom, who said his of­ fice can and wishes to be of ser­ vice to alumni employers also, add­ ed that any Be.ntley graduate inter­ ested in assistance from the Col­ lege's placement service can call 891-2167 or write to him or John M. Schuble, assistant placement di­ rector. To further expand Bentley place­ ment services, the CoUege entered into an arrangement two years ago Officers of the newly-elected Faculty Executive Committee discuss their new duties. They ore with a new computerized program (1 -r) Dr. Gregory H. Adomion, profenor of low and chairman of the Deportment of low, vice called GRAD, which places gradu­ chairman; Mrs. Edna G. Frank, assistant professor of mathematics, secretory; and Dr. Charles ates' qualification before employer M. Sullivan, professor of econom ics, chairman . throughout the country. Thi pro­ elected during a faculty meeting and matics; Anthony G. Eonas, manage­ gram doe not upplant existing luncheon at the College at the be- ment; John C. Hegarty, mathematic ;

4 Irvin M. Parsons, economics; and F. Nonnan Totten, Jr., history. Lecturers and instructors intro­ Faculty get promotions duced were Richard E. Wilson, man­ agement; Roland C. Stahl, philoso­ and advanced degrees phy; Allan Spock, law; Miss Karen Shroeder, mathematics; Richard L. £ ight Bentley faculty members in part-time to full-time status with the Cross, accounting. Also greeted was seven areas of study have re­ rank of assistant professor include Miss Stephanie B. Griffin, library ceived promotions, and five have Miss Harriet I. Hollenberg, govern:­ cataloguer. earned advanced degrees. ment, and Mrs. Mary E. Sullivan, Mr. Dolinsky received his B.S. Those promoted to full professors economics. degree from and include Dr. Gregory H. Adamian, Faculty members who have re­ his M. S. degree from Ohio State; law; Paul H. Forrestal, accounting; ceived advanced degrees include Mr. Eonas reecived both his B.S. Dr. M. Francis Reeves, philosophy. William P. Flynn, who received an and M.B.A. degrees from Northeast­ Those advanced to associate profes­ M.B.A. degree from Northeastern ern University; Mr. Hegarty received sor include John J. Hawkins, bibli­ University; Marshall J. Jeannero, an A.B. degree from ography; Dr. George Ellenbogen, a Ph.D. degree from Tufts Fletcher an M.S. degree from the University English; Dr. Marshall J. Jeannero, School of Law and Diplomacy; of Maryland; Mr. Parsons received a economics; Dr. Herbert L. Sawyer, Daniel F. Sullivan, an M.B.A. de­ B. A. degree from the University of government; and Dr. Alint V. Vara­ gree from ; Iowa and an M.A. degree from Bos­ ghese, English. Promoted to assist­ George Ellenbogen, a Ph.D. degree ton College; Mr. Totten is the reci­ ant professor is William P. Flynn, from Tufts; and Herbert L. Sawyer, pient of a B.A. degree with honors accounting. a Ph.D. degree from Tufts Fletcher from Hendrix College, Ark., and Two professors appointed from School of Law and Diplomacy. S.T.B. degree cum laude from Bos­ ton University, 'and an M.A. degree N ewly-formed Experimental Theater from Boston University; Mr. Wilson earned his B.A. degree at Haverford College, Pa., and his M.B.A. degree presents "J.B." at Bentley College at Boston University; Mr. Stahl special alumni night on Dec. 13 of English at the College. The cast earned an A.B. degree at Baldwin­ A was designated by Bentley Col­ under the direction of Dr. De~e Wallace College, Ohio, and S. T. B. le.ge's newly - formed Experimental and John S. Nicholson, instructor of and Ph.D degree from Boston Uni­ versity; Mr. Spock received LL.B and M.B.A. degrees at Northeastern University; Miss Schroeder received her A.B. degree from Emanuel Col­ lege and her A.M. degree from Bos­ ton College; Mr. Cross received his B.S.A. degree from Bentley College; and Miss Griffin received her A.B. degree from Middlebury College, Vt., and M.S. degree from Simmons College. Elected to the Faculty Executive Prof. Lawrence Ruark in dramatic Committee were Dr. Gregory H. scene from ploy "J.B.", presented Adamian, professor of law and by Experi menta l Theater ot the College. Professor Ruark por­ chairman of the department; Dr. trayed the leading role of J.B., Charles M. Sullivan, professor of on American businessman. economics; Dr. Redmond J. Allman, Theater for viewing its first produc­ English, consisted of members of the professor of government; Walter C. tion, "J.B.", by Archibald MacLeish. Bentley faculty and student body. Grover, Jr., professor of manage­ Shown four consecutive evenings, Presented in the auditorium of ment; Dr. James Kiley, professor of the play, described as one of the Lindsay Hall, the play, which is a English and chairman of the depart­ most powerful presented in the modem and existential version of ment; Dr. M. Francis Reeves, pro- United States, was produced by Dr. the Biblical story of Job, strove to ( Continued on page 9) Paul C. Deane, associate professor ( Continued on page 16) s Alumni meetings are varied Members of the Bentley College ings in the Eastern Area. Alumni Association who have at­ Among them was the meeting of tended meetings this fall and winter ( Continued on page 8)

Officers of the Rhode Island Chapter smile approval of fine attendance at their Novem ­ ber meeting. They are (photo above 1-r) Mario S. Aubrifi, past president; Charles T. Kaull, incoming president; Samuel M. Ger­ stein, corporator; and Nicholas Picchione, trustee.

President Morison (center figure in top left photo) presents citation to Charles Caron for his dedicated loyalty as president of the Southern Califoraia Chapter. Chapter offi ­ cers are 0-r) Harold Chiasson, vice president; George Sidhom, secretary-treasurer; and Lorry Dick, vice president. On hand to hear Trustee Edward J . Powers (left in bottom left photo) address the South Shore Chapter were 0 -r) President Morison, Honored Alumnus Arthur W. Moffatt, Dean Emeritus Rae D. Anderson , ond Chapter President John Pyne. Metnorial service• held at founder's graveside At the request of the late Harry tary, Cambridge. C. Bentley, founder and first presi­ His widow recently joined with a Or. Arthur W. Kennedy, professor of history dent of Bentley College, his remains few friends of long standing at a and chairman of the department, talks with alumni at Maine Chapter meeting. They are (top photo, 1-r) Robert C. Hunt, executive alumni secretary; Or. Kennedy; Emil Northrop, president of the Maine Chapter; Carle Gray, vice president; and Fred LeBlond, secretary. In center photo, members of the Merrimack Valley Chapter pause during their meeting for picture-taking. They are (seated 1-r) Melvin Marchesi, Paul Abate, and Joe Lan­ non; (standing 1-r) Harold McPhee, Jerry O'Connor, John Collins, George Adyns, Gor­ don Burgess, and Dick OiBurro. Members of the Women's Chapter (bottom picture) enjoy lunch ot their fall meeting.

share a common advantage, that of being completely informed of the Assembled for a brief dedication ceremony at the grove of Horry C. Bentley are 0-r) Henry Y. growth and progress of their alma Porter, assistant vice president for finance and director of financial aid ta students, Mrs. Louise mater. C. Bentley, President Thomas L. Morison, Mrs. Morison, President Emeritus Maurice M. Lindsay, Robert W. Kimball, vice president for development and secretory of the College, Dr. John M. In thi regard, Robert C. Hunt, Sinclair, dean of the college, Robert C. Hunt, executive alumni secretary, and Mrs. Sinclair. executive alumni secretary for the were cremated following bis death brief dedication ceremony at the college, has been a tireless worker. in ovember, 1967. grave. The simple stone reads: Ever ready with bis beautiful slide The ashes are buried at the base and interesting commentary on the of a pine tree on a gentle slope over­ Harry Oark Bentley new campus, Mr. Hunt has been a looking a small pond off from Aza­ 1877 - 1967 familiar figure at most of the meet- lia Path in Mount Auburn Ceme- Founder of Bentley College

6 Boston Chapter of NAA Several subjects discussed during holds seminar on campus legislative parley An accounting seminar sponsored Flow, ' "EDP - Internal Control Air pollution, the electoral college, last fall by the Boston Chapter, and auditing," and "1969 Year End and women's role in politics National Association of Account­ Tax Planning." were subjects under discussion at the ants, was held at Bentley College. Serving as chairman were I. Carle­ Legislative Institute held recently at The event included a dinner fol- ton Luke, Geodyne Division, E. G. Bentley College. The institute was sponsored by the Massachusetts Federation of Busi­ ness and Profesional Women's Clubs. Speakers at the day-long confer­ ence included State Representative Marie E. Howe of Somerville; Mrs. Margaret Lynch of Cohasset, chair­ man of the Electoral College Studies Committee, Massachusetts League of Women Voters; Dr. William Participants in seminar at Bentley College sponsored by the Boston Chapter, National Associa• Feder, Department of Environment­ tion of Accountants discuss program. Chapter President Robert L. Rosenblatt is flanked by Harold E. Roberts (left), college controller and a past chapter president, and James L. McGrath (right), al Sciences, University of Massachu­ chairman of member participation. setts, Waltham Field Station. lowed by four concurrent sessions. & G., International, Inc., George B. Other speakers were David Stand­ Seminar topics included "Re­ James, Continental Leasing Co.; Wil­ ley, executive director, Boston Air ports for Operating Management," liam Carroll, Lybrand, Ross Bros. & Pollution Control Commission, and "Techniques for improving Cash ( Continued on page 9) ( Continued on page 9) Hayden challenge Career Conference campa.ign advanceJ to $80,000 mark T he 1969 Annual Giving Program had reached the $80,000 mark toward the Hayden Foundation Challenge Grant goal of $300,000 as this issue of the Alumnus went to press, according to a report by Wil­ liam F. Staples, Jr., drive chairman. "The early response to our initial announcement of the program has been excellent," Mr. Staples stated, "and we are confident that the bal­ High School guidance personnel attending fall career conference at the College discuss Bentley's academic program with Donald A. Hankinson (left), associate director of admissions. Group ance will be raised by the June 30, above includes counsellors from Littleton High School, Cl -r) Ronald Burt, Louis Morelli, and 1970 target date." William Masuk. The Hayden Foundation made accepting the Challenge Grant, ex­ will be used for a number of pro­ this generous second grant of $100,- pressed the sincere appreciation of jects, including the library clock 000 on a 1-for-3 basis following a the College for this continued en­ tower; equipment for the science visit to the Waltham campus by dorsement by the Foundation of our laboratories, library, and auditori­ their trustees. educational and development pro­ um; plus exterior grounds work at President Thomas L. Morison, in grams. Funds from this campaign the Waltham campus.

7 and chairman of the board of Dome Publishing Company, Inc., Provi­ Prof. Kiely instructor for dence, and Samuel M. Gerstein, D 34, a member of the College corporation and president of Red internal auditors sen1inar Fox Ginger Ale Co., Providence. Dr. James J. Kiely, professor of porting." Included in the evening activities English at the College, was the The seminar concluded with a was election of officers. They are instructor of a four-part seminar buffet luncheon in the Faculty Din- Charles T. Kaull, D 35, president; Edmund J. Carlone, D 30, vice pres­ ident; Ann C. Noyes, D 52, secre­ tary; and Jerry S. Sansiveri, D 60, treasurer. On Nov. 10, the Northern Cali­ fornia Chapter met at the Engi­ neer's Club in San. Francisco. Presi­ dent Thomas L. Morison was guest speaker and spread the good word to the wec;t coast on Bentley's progress. Attending with him was Mrs. Morison. The meeting chair­ man, Donald G. Whittemore, D 28 conducted the election of new offi­ cers. Those elected were Hugh G. Dr. James J. Kiely (left) smiles approval as Miss Dorothy Halloway (second left) and William Mclelland (second right) receive certificates from John H. Trefry, Jr., upon completion of course Bradwell, D 28, president; John H. sponsored by the New England Chapter, Institute of Internal Auditors. Wilson, E 40, vice president; and sponsored by the ew England ing Room where certificates were James F. Stephen, D 57, secretary­ Chapter, Institute of Internal Audi­ distributed by John H. Trefrey, Jr., treasurer. tors. president of the Institute and an The Southern California Chapter Held at the college on four Satur­ E 41 alumnus of Bentley College, to held its meeting on Nov. 12 at the days during the fall, the seminar was those who had completed the course. Rodger Young Auditorium, Los An­ on the subject, "Management Re- geles, Calif. Guests; of honor were President and Mrs. Thomas L. Mori­ Chapter meetings Providence. Among those attending son. After showing slides and speak­ ( Continued from page 5) with Mr. Hunt were Nicholas Pic­ ing on the College, President Mori- the Merrimack Valley Chapter on chione, D 24, trustee of the College ( Continued on page 16) Nov. 3. Following the regular ses­ sion at which Mr. Hunt spoke on the progress at Bentley, the guests Presidents - past, present took a tour of Holihan's Brewery, the Chapter meeting place for the evening. The meeting of the Rhode Island Chapter was held on Nov. 5 at the Metacomet Country Club, East

NOTE President Emeritus Maurice M. Lindsay is at home making a fine recovery from a recent heart con­ dition. We know he would be pleased to hear from his many alumni friends. Those wishing to correspond with him may send Grant U. Meyers, national president of the National Association of Accountants, welcomes two former national presidents at the N.A.A.'s Fiftieth Anniversary celebration held in the main mail to 78 Princeton Rd., Arl­ ballroom of the Sheraton-Plaza Hotel, Boston, by the Boston Chapter of the N.A.A. They are ington. Thomas L. Morison (left), 1967-68 president and Clinton W. Bennett (right), who served as president in 1948-49.

8 Legislative parley ( Continued from page 7) Attorney William S. Abbott, former White House Fellow and director of the U.S. Department of Agriculture Programs for Asia. Daniel F. Sullivan, assistant pro­ fessor of accounting at Bentley, also participated in the program, which was arranged by Mrs. Elma H. Lart­ men, legislative chairman of the Massachusetts Federation of Busi­ ness and Professional Women's September of 1922, Byron C. Fraternity. He served two terms as Clubs. Jn Houghtaling, a first year student President and in 1930 was elected N.A.A. at Bentley School from Elmira, N.Y. . lumni Secretary, a po t which 40 ( Continued from page 7) conceived the idea that a fraternity years later be still holds. During the Montgomery; and Alan LeBovidge, dedicated to the principles of high long period of inactivity for the Fra­ also of Lybrand. Discussion leaders scholarship and good fellowship had ternity from 1943 to 1958, he con­ were Norman F. Boucher, Granger a definite place in the student life of tinued to function as the ·one link to Leasing Corp.; Daniel Cotte, Ly­ the comparatively new school. Ac­ the graduate members of the organi­ brand; and Robert S. Regan, also of cordingly, he sold his idea to five zation. The fir t Fraternity House Lybrand. fellow students and Frank C. Berry, was opened at 1071 Beacon Street, Kenneth W. Berry, Martin A. Hines, Brookline, in September, 1927, and Faculty ( Continued from page 4) A. Lincoln Snell and Kenneth P. Til­ operated at that location until June, fessor of philosophy and chairman ley joined him in the organization of 1932. In the fall of that year, the of the department; Dr. Herbert L. the Beta Tau Alpha Fraternity on Fraternity House was moved to 287 Sawyer, associate professor of gov­ October 22, 1922. Each contributed Kent Street, Brookline, and remain­ ernment and chairman of the depart­ his share in writing the constitution, ed one year at that location. Due to ment; Dr. Roger K. Warlick, associ­ finding an appropriate name and all the depression which adversely af­ ate professor of history; Dr. Badri the other details necessary for the fected the enrollment, it became M. Aghassi, associate professor of forming of a fraternity. Mr. Bent­ necessary to move to smaller and Science; Dr. George Ellenbogen, as­ ley was ske!)tical about the need for less expensive quarters. Consequent­ sociate professor of English; C. Rob­ fraternities in the school, but did not ly, a third house was opened at 1083 ert Sprich, assistant professor of Eng­ oppose them. Beacon Street, Brookline, in the fall lish; Bernard H . Adelman, assistant "Hoot", as Byron Houghtaling of 1933. Unfortunately, it became professor of philosophy; and Mrs. was called by all of his friends, was necessary to vacate the premises in Edna G. Frank, assistant professor cho en President at the first meeting Fehruary, 1943 and the Fraternity of mathematics. held at the Brookline rooming house disbanded soon after, due to condi­ Dr. Sullivan was elected by the where he was living. Two weeks tions brought about by World War committee as its chairman. Dr. Ada­ after his graduation, on June 25, II. mian was named vice chairman, and 1924, he was killed by a bolt of In 1932, Mr. Bentley asked Mr. Mrs. Frank, secretary. lightning while bathing at North Porter to serve as Graduate Coun­ Eastman on Cape Cod. He had been selor to the Fraternity. In that ca­ Dean Sinclair married the night of graduation and pacity he operated the Fraternity ( Continued from page 2) was honeymooning when his tragic Houses on a high plane. He was for­ before joining the Bentley faculty in death occurred. tunate through most of this period 1943. For five years during the The late Gilman C. Harvey, an in having the excellent services of early 1950's he was corporate inter­ accounting instructor at the school, Mrs. Viola Jamieson as House Ma­ nal supervisor for General Motors served as the first Faculty Advisor to tron. She was a tower of strength Corp. in Detroit before returning to the new group. It was largely and is fondly remembered by all of Bentley. through his good offices that many the students who knew her in that Dean Anderson of the problems of th0se early days long ago era. As a result of his di­ ( Continued from page 2) were met and solved. rection and counseling, the general many professional and educational In the fall of 1924, Henry Y. Por­ affairs of the Fraternity were admin­ groups and is the author of numer­ ter, upon becoming a member, be­ istered effectively throughout this ous books in the accounting field. gan his Jong association with the (Continued on page 16)

9 • Delivery of health care 1fl Following is a reprint of the dedication addre.u delivered by Anthony J J Rourke, MD, an E27 alumnus ofBentley College, at St. Luke's Hopital Medical Center, Phoenix, Arizona, Oaober 18, 1969. 8. The ui cide rate among youth under phy ician's cost with the hope that his 20 has more than doubled in the last productivity could be increased without decade. a personal penalty. Mc erney reports that a 3 percent increase in the physicians' Economic productivity would equal the se"ices of While many health planners fly blind all phy icians graduating in one year. Crit­ regarding the economic of health care, it i of medical care charge fragmentation i well for u to add a few facts in thi of ervice and lack of organization. They area a well. From 196 1 through 1965 ho - recommend as olutions an increase in pita! care co ts incr ased 6 percent per group practice, the development of a new Anthony J.J. Rourk , year while in 1966 and 1967 the increase category of personnel trained to be doctors' M.D., E 27 amounted to about 16.5 percent a h year. assistants and a greater delegation of phy- recently as 1947 annual expenditures icians' duti . Ho pital Con ultant for health amounted to 10 billion dollars Let us look at all other personnel in the ew Rochell , York while today they are 55 billion; and a health care field as they relate to the next pre,•iously reported, r. ohen feel they decade. They represent in many in tances will reach 100 billion in a decade. highly specialized and organized profes- Magnitude It i not diffi ult to ee from the few ionals, anxious to p e"e and improve facts related that the n d is great, the co t their privileges and curiti . If the co t The present annual e penditure for all tremendou and both are giving every evi­ piral i to be slowed down some very pro- health care in the ni ted tat amounu dence of accelerating rapidly as more and found tudy must be carri d out as to how to 55 billion dollars and former e retary more p ople become involved. many and what typ of p rson are needed Cohen of Health, Education and W !fare to deliver the care of the future. If demand proph izes it will go to 100 billion dollars earch for e, r M thod for health care increases as proph ized it per year during the ne t d cade. It now i apparent that training of nurses and repr ents 6.5 p rcent of th Gro ational Like all great movements in history, earch for newer method of delivery of paramedical personnel will need to be in­ Product and he £e I hy 1980 it will r p­ er ed and accelerated. e will need a r ent 8 to 10 percent. health care has d veloped many fa cets. We find two hoot of thought, on greater degree of organized part.icipation Foreca ting thi ,·olume of health care among doctors, nurs , governing board for the fu ture should tir every worker in maintaining that health care i a right for everyone while the other identifi it as a and admini trators in each of our health the health field to the tremendou job ervice units. ahead of us. While the former ecretary privilege. In the past, while it remained a reports that 30 percent of our population privilege, demand did not create an un­ We will need greater technological in­ has no health coverage, and that 50 million bearable drain on faciliti , manpower or novation as well as newer patterns of doing have inadequate coverage he feel con­ operating dollars. a right, the require­ old tasks. This change is well under way fidl'nt that by 1976 the entire population ments of a total health y tern will accen• and we are beginning to see the acceptance will be covered with ome type of compre­ tuate the problem of upply and demand, of automated laboratories, computers, shar­ hensive health in urance program. even without con idering newer methods of ing and grouping of ervices, better staffing one review the literature from the delivery. of emergency departments, convenience pens of sophisticated author , a few fa ct.~ It becom more apparent daily that foods, central laundries, automatic mate• are ufficient to focus one' attention: change i inevitahle and that a new pattern rial handling sy terns, etc. But, alas, we 1. In 1965 there were no comprehen ive will evolve. It would eem prudent to li ten need greater cooperation among the pur­ community mental health centers; in 1969 to what i being aid by the con umers and chasers of health care, the governmental there will be 429. their representativ before d igning new and voluntary agencies, and the representa­ 2. From 1964 to 1968 twelve new medical vehicl . Over and over again we read and tives of labor in their organizing and nego­ schools opened repr enting three tim the hear that health care hould be: Acces- tiating activi ties. number opening betwe n 1954 to 1963. ible, vailable, cceptable, dequate, There has been much time expended in 3. By 1976 there will be a 45 percent Economical, Organiz.ed, Dignified and Uni­ ear hi ng for the incentive which would increase in medical gradual over 1963. versal. nd th e term are applied to tabilize co ts while delivering more care 4. There are 72.7 physicians per 10,000 health care for the opulent as well as th and maintaining quality. Where the incen­ population in our low t ratio tale while di advantaged. tive lies to bring back the day when one our highest ha 212. l. If the lated objectiv of total coverage gave a day's work for a day' pay no one 5. Among the nation of the world which o cur there will be two methods open for know . Where the incentive lies to change report mortality rates the nited tat delivery: one, a partnership of government attitudes that condone use merely because tamb: with voluntary agenci similar to the some plan includes the coverage i equally a. 15th in infant mortality. Medicare program; or two, a totally gov­ as elusive. b. 17th in longevity of men. ernment owned and operated health car c. 10th in longevity of women. tern. There are advocates of each method Caution 6. Blue Cross reports in its studies of and each with what they consider logical The very thought that many of our citi­ Inner Cities, Appalacia, and pani h sp ak­ reason . However, it behooves us to earch zens are not getting health care while it is ing areas that the disadvantaged have: at once for newer methods to reduce th available to others is sufficient to create a a. 4 times as much heart di ease. nation's total expenditure for health re- ground swell for action charged with a high h. 6 times as much nervou and men­ gard! of who pay the bill. level of emotion. uch emotion may blind tal trouble. us to an approach that will build well and c. 8 times as many visual defects. Labor Co ts result in plans that will endure. To plea d. 3 tim as many orthopedic defects. Health services are a labor oriented a - for some caution in the decade ahead is not 7. The National In titutes of Health tivity with about 70 percent of every ho - to be against motherhood or virtue. estimate that there are 10 million school­ pita! dollar going into payroll while in A word of caution pecially in expecta­ age children with some type of emotional other branches of health service the per• tions is ably described in an article by Eli problem. rentage i even higher. Let us look at the Gin berg, Ph.D., which appeared in the

10 • they will be related to the community care we must find substitutes which cost hospital even when not located on the hos­ less. Greater experimentation is peeded in pital campus and, secondly, that the public writing health coverage contracts 'to allow the seventies demand for representation and participation greater benefits for ambulatory care. All in policy and administration cannot be too often in the past, the patient has had Journal of the American Public Health denied. Like all other health services the two choices: to remain ambulatory and pay Association in May 1969. There is much in con umers are joining the ever-increasing the charge or to be hospitalized and the his article worth readin,:: but to touch a cry for accountability and dignity in the carrier pays the charge. He needs a method few highlights should be sufficient to stim­ delivery of care at the neighborhood level. of receiving the service as he protects his ulate your interest. He refers to the greatest own resources while not exploiting the third gains of the past in health being due to party. Public Health activities of improving milk, Medical Practice water, sanitation, industrial accident pre• Evidence has been mounting that prepaid Some are admitted to expensive hospital group practice has turned in a record of an beds for services which could be delivered vention and immunization. He look to the at less cost in some other manner. Some greatest gain to come from the po ible appreciable reduction in utilization. This has led to a great push to increase thi who are hospitalized legitimately, for whom control of automobile speed, cigarette there can be no other satisfactory substi­ smoking, overeating, ingestion of drugs and method of practi ce. Whether this will occut or not you may rest assured that the focus tute, stay longer than necessary in an acute alcohol. care bed. For this group we need greater He cautions against the total acceptance is now on better organization of what has been termed fragmented 5ervices. Dr. Lorin expansion of extended care beds, skilled of the often-repeated statement that im­ nursing care beds, home care and other proved care is a good investment and cites E. Kerr reported in 1968: the following areas where little may be l. Since 1958 group practice has ex­ related but less costly health facilities. expected as of today: panded at the annual rate of 16 percent. l. Common cold - major cause of 2. About 33,000 phy icians are members Automation absenteeism. of approximately 4,300 groups of which Automation has just begun to scratch the 2. Alcoholism - destroyer of talent. one in even derives some or all of its urface in the health service field, but it 3. Heart disease and cancer - main income from prepayment. holds great promise. It has been referred cause of death in middle life. 3. Each year about 1,200 more physicians to a a technological innovation. Its use 4. Accidents - toll of youth. join establi hed group or start new ones will_ touch such areas as counting blood, With great courage in the face of today's o that, conceivably, by 1975 at least 25 testmg laboratory pecimens, multi-screen­ debate, he chaltenges the arguments that percent of all phy ician will be in group ing tools for physicians, transporting mate­ we aren't doing as well a other nations of practice. rials, monitoring vital signs, spanning miles the world in the morality and morbidity The day of ingle di ea e oriented service for consultation services, making pay­ coreboards. He encap ulates hi caution in i rapidly pa ing. checks, controlling inventories, billing ac- the single statement: "Don't be assured Tomorrow's doctor will probably dele­ oun~, locating empty beds in multiple that higher expenditures for health are gate more and more of hi time-con urning hospital towns and a ho t of other activ­ likely to be reAected in lower morality." activities to specially trained a istants, ities. It will result in more accurate and This caution hould remind us of the thereby increa ing his productivity. Duke fa ter collection of pertinent information collateral areas involving the degree of University and the University of Colorado to guide a newer ystem of delivering health, housing, employment, family plan­ have already started training courses toward health services. ning and education. These, too, will need this objective. ongoing research and development. Areawide Planning The problems of our health care system Personnel As a voluntary activity this has been have been identified. A word of caution to Becau e health care is labor oriented ob erved more often in its breach. But pres- the approach necessary and the results to much research i needed to explore ways ures are mounting every day to bring it expect has been recorded. It seems inevit­ and mean to tructure our manpower pat­ abo_ut by _compulsion_. Control by scarcity able that the nation is moving toward new tern. Duties need to be reviewed and cour­ as 1t applies to hospital beds is being em­ approaches for a delivery system of the ageous innovator must be ready to break braced by many who feel it is the one and future. It i my sincere hope that short­ with the past and experiment with the only method of slowing down the cost of term solutions will be avoided if they future. In any event, the need for personnel care. While areawide planning is often become roadblock to a ounder long-term will increase greatly, but it is an ill wind thought of as relating only to expansion, approach. that doesn't blow ome good, for with this another equally important area is the per­ increase will go greater and greater job petuation of institutions or services too Place of Tomorrow's Hospital opportunities for the disadvantaged as well small to be effective. Vested interests and The hospital is gradually evolving into as other . As we concern ourselves with local pride have greatly impeded any im­ the center of health services for the com­ increased productivity of the physician, we provement in this area. I fear that a de­ munity. Its emergency suite has already have many more acres of diamonds in our livery method to be as effective as its become, in many areas, the community backyards among the health personnel planners wish will eventually mandate health center for those needing help with­ other than physicians. Increasing their these units lo merge or else. out a family physician, or when he cannot productivity will have to come from a be reached. This unit will be and must be psychological or moral motivation. While Partnership for Health developed with better space, equipment, there is a demand for public accountability While this usually refers to legislation personnel and medical staffing. While the for health services, is it too much to ask for comprehensive health planning it would details of patient-doctor-hospital financial for personnel accountability for produc­ seem to have a greater connotation to me. arangements will be worked out in different tivity? There needs to be a better partnership ways, the focus of activity will be fixed among public health, mental health, and at the hospital with ready access to the Comprehensive Care our traditional diagnostic and curative diagno tical facilities and to readily avail­ Much di atisfaction has occurred be­ health services; between the generalist and able consultations. cause health services have not been related the specialist; between prevention and or coordinated. The system that treats the cure; between the university medical teach­ Neighborhood Health Clinics soma but not the psyche or the system that ing center and the community hospital; delivers medical care but not dental care between government hospitals and the pri­ These seem inevitable and only time will vate sector; between the social thinkers tell whether the concept is sound and they leaves much to be desired. The public is tired of episodic care with catastrophic and the medical thinkers; between the will survive. Clinics without medical staff­ people who set the policy and administer ing will not succeed. Clinics with poor or co ts and is demanding comprehensive care and catastrophic coverage. the hospitals and the medical staffs who inadequate medical staffing will not suc­ set the pattern of the utilization; between ceed. Clinics with poor or inadequate the government and the third parties who medical staffing will lead to mediocrity. Utilization spend money for care and the institutions However, the idea has become so firmly Utilization of a more expensive modality which incur the bills; between the knowl­ implanted that I am confident many will of health service than necessary is not a edgeable people willing to work on health be built, but it is my sincere wish that they right of a subscriber just because it is care problems and those who wish repre­ be initiated under carefully controlled contained in his contract. However, it sentation for representation!s sake; and methods of experimentation. There are two should be his privilege to avail himself of factors that appear to be ettled: first, that it when indicated. Especially in hospital ( Continued on page 25) · ll Bentley College advanced drama- tically in both academic and physical areas during the 1960's­ 1960-70 - Dynamic de probably the most eventful and dy­ namic decade in the history of the College. From the achievement of College status to the move to a new $15 mil­ the Lyman Estate property in Wal­ lion suburban campus, Bentley took tham consisting of more than 100 many giant strides during the I 0- acre . Ground breaking for a new I year period and looked to the future campus took place in 1965 and three with optimism. year later the ite including 12 1 In 1961, Bentley School, then lo­ cated in Boston, wa granted the right to confer baccalaureate de­ grees, thus changing its name to Bentley College. Bentley wa elected, in 1966, to institutional membership in the ew England As ociation of College and Secondary School , Inc. and ac­ credited. Under the rules of the a o­ ciation, it wa the fir t opportunity

Participating in ground-breaking ceremony at Waltham campus in 1965 were Cl-r) President Morison, then Waltham Mayor Austin D. Rhodes, and Deon Anderson. Bentley's M,.rison

Thomas F. Gilbone (second from left), president of Gilbone Bldg . Co., general contractor of the Waltham campus construction project, presented 12 symbolic keys to President Morison during dedication program in 1968. Witnessing the exchange were Deon Anderson (left) and Robert C. Weaver, Secretory of Housing and Urban Oevelop111ent and principal speaker at climactic program. to apply for accreditation after the imultaneously-constructed buildings College had broadened its curri­ was ready for occupancy. A three­ culum to a four-year program. day dedication program in ovem­ Physically, the College took one ber, 1968, climaxed the move to the When the College celebrated ist 50th Anniversary Shortly o in 1967, this giant-sized birthday coke was dis­ r- of~ of the boldest strides in the history of uburb . played during the Golden Anniversary program at iy 5 American higher education. Early The College was saddened in 1967 the Sheraton-Boston Hotel in Boston. Sen. Edward .Ce C M. Kennedy was the principal speaker during the who wos in the decade, Bentley purchased by the death of its founder, Harry C. event, which drew more than 1,200 alumni. several C

12 .ecade for Bentley College

Bentley, at the· age of 90. A mem­ of the period by Thomas L. Mori­ orial ervice was held at the Old son, who succeeded Maurice M. outh Church, Copley Square, Bos­ Lindsay as president in 1961. As ton. the decade drew to a close, President Bentley College was led for most Morison, who also served a term as national president of the ational As ociation of Accountants, asked to be relieved of the presidency of the ollege no later than June of 1971. Playing a key role in the growth of Bentley wa Rae D. Ander on, enior vice pre ident and dean and coordinator of the giant construc­ tion project. In 1969, Dean Ander­ on tepped down from hi admini - trative po t to return to hi fir t love - teaching.

ley's three presidents are shown in left photo above. Thomas L. n (left) •ucceeded Maurice M. Lindsay (right) in 1961. In r is fou and first president Harry C. Bentley. Top photo at shows ent Morison as he accepted the presidency of the onal Association of Accountants, a position he held for the 1967- irm of the 68,000-member organization.

Topping-out ceremony during Octob,er, 1967, signalled key point in construction of the new Waltham campus.

Heavily-laden student heads for dormitory room during activities officially opening cam­ pus in fall of 1968.

THE B OARD OF T RUSTEES, THE P RESIDENT. THE DEAN. ANO THE FACULTY

BENTLEY C OLLEGE o, ACCOUNTING ANO rlNANCI'. BOSTON. ,._AUACHUSETTS

TAKE "-IIASURI!: IN ANNOUNCING THAT THE COLLEGE HAS 91.CN ELECTED TO INSTITUTIONAL MCMOEASHI ..

AND ACCRCOITCD ev THC

EW ENGLAND ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGES ANO SECONDARY SCHOOLS INC

OECCMlll:A J:_ 1965

·ly after Founder Harry C. Bentley died in November, 1967, at the The College achieved accreditation by the of 90, a - •morial service was held at the Old South Church, New England Association of Colleges and y Squa Boston . Part of the gathering which attended the Secondary Schools, Inc. in December of 1966. :e can n in the photo above. The tribute ta Mr. Bentley, The new Waltham campus looked like this (in It was the first opportunity for the College was also the College's first president, included eulogies from aerial photo above) when it opened for classes to apply after achieving college status in al College officials. during October of 1968. 1961.

13 The return of the Bentley College basketball team to one of the highest scoring quintets in the country has highlighted the winter sports scene. Falcon quintet As the Alumnus went to press, the Falcons were 6-1 , boasting a five-game winning streak. In addition, coach Two new coaches were ready to begin their seasons Al Shields' charges had surpassed the 100-mark on on the winter program. five occasions. Norman Darling of Woonsocket, RI., landscape The only blemish on the Falcons' slate was a setback architect for the campus master plan at the College and to powerful Long Island University in a game that wa the man in charge of designing Bentley's future athletic televised in three states. development, is the new ski coach. Bentley was ready to embark on an industrious sched­ Darling, a graduate of the Rhode Island School of ule for two holiday tournaments. The Falcons were Design, plans to approach coaching from a mechanical slated to play four games in five nights. They were to point of view. participate in the Boston State Cod Fish Bowl, then plane to Findlay, Ohio, to compete in the Findlay Christmas Tournament. Led by junior Ray Andersen of Winthrop (20 points and 18 rebounds per game) and sophomore Phil eedle of Middletown, Conn., (18 points and 15 rebounds per game), the Falcons were averaging 96.7 points a game, as opposed to 82. 7 for the opposition. Ander en, who hit a ingle-season mark of 501 points last year, wa playing a trong shooting game and was harp off the boards. eedle, who did not play high school ball because of open heart surgery, was meshing the net con istently with his accurate shots from the foul line. Also encouraging to coach Al Shields was the fine play of three other sophomores, Scott Conrad of ashua, Leading the Bentley College basketball team are Don Moorhead, left, of Brr' tree, and Chris Arciero, right, of Medford. In the middle is coach Al Shi .H., Joe Canty of Somerville and Lucius Childs of Moorhead and Arciero are returning after missing the 1967-68 season. M Newark, N.J. head played in only four games after injuring a knee and Arciera took time Helping the Falcons of late has been Co-Capt. Don out to devote more time to studies. Moorhead of Braintree, who hit double figures in the first game and then slipped under double digits for the next four games before hitting 24 and 25 points, re- pectively. "We were a young team at the start of the season," aid Shields, who brought an excellent 91-40 record into the current campaign. "I thought we would start slowly and then come on, but we've developed a little faster than I expected." The Falcon freshmen also were boasting a winning mark, having dropped one game in five outings. Coaching the frosh is Bob Walker, the first alumnus to return to Bentley as a coach. Walker, who was Bent­ ley's MVP for three years and its captain for two years, is a holder of three rebounding records at the College. One of his records, most rebounds in a game, wa eclip ed by eedle against ewark Engineering earlier in the campaign. eedle pulled down 32 rebounds to hatter Walker's record by five. Discussing some pre-match plans are tennis coach Al Harrington and junior captain Ken Gurney. The Falcon netmen posted o 3-2 fall record and are look­ Walker, an accountant with the Educational Division ing forward to an excellent spring with several underclassmen playing. of Damon Engineering, was receiving outstanding efforts from three performers, 6-1 Jim Fuerst of Schenectady, .Y., 6-4 Bert Hammen of Scar dale, .Y., and 6-5 "I hope to approach coaching from a mechanical point Frank Cleary of Dorchester, who played for the 1967-68 of view," said Darling, who succeeds Edward Wondo­ tate champions, Boston English High. lowski, who has taken a year's leave of absence.

14 t sets early high-scoring pace

The Falcon skiers were scheduled to start their wrapup in the Union Invitational Meet at Schenectady, league season on Jan. 17. .Y. John Maxson, who coached the cross-country team The fall season proved very successful for the Fal­ to a 7-6 season, was preparing hi') charges for a Jan. cons. All three teams, golf, tennis and cross country, 10 opening in the K. of C. Meet at the Boston Garden. emerged with winning seasons. Meets also on tap include participation in the BAA The golfers were just one man away from an unde­ Meet at Boston Garden, the Amherst Relays, a tri-meet feated eason, according to coach Lou Flumere. The with Tufts and Boston University, the ICAAAA at the Falcon linksmen compiled a 10-6 record, highlighted by new Madison Square Garden in ew York and the a second-place finish in the Little Four Intercollegiate Golf Tournament. These brother combinations met Brother combinations were an unusual sidelight to in the foll . Emmanuel Flumere, left, and his brother, Lou, coaches the sea on. Playing for Bentley were freshmen twin coaches of Brandeis and Bentley. Brother Mark and Mike Saracino of Rye, .Y. In the middle ore tw ins Mike a nd Mark Saracino, Bentley freshmen. When Bentley and Brandeis, winner of the Little Four competition, met each other, another brother combination met. Lou Flumere i the Bentley coach and his brother, Emmanuel, coaches the Brandeis golfers. Ironically, Bentley and Brandeis are both located in Waltham. Although only freshmen, the aracino brothers, re­ lated to golfing immortal Gene Sarazen, were standouts and hould help the program along in the future. Perhaps the mo t outstanding individual of the fall was another fre hman, Bob Pei er of We t ayville, .Y. Pei er helped the Falcon harriers to a 7-6 record, winning eight of nfoe races, many in record times. ,e In bi fir t race, Pei er e tablisbed the new course record of five miles with an excellent time of 25: 32. He concluded the season in spectacular fashion, win­ ning in 24: 45 again t the University of Maine's Port­ land branch toeclip e his own mark by 47 seconds. The tenni team posted a 3-2 slate and buoyed by a number of undercla men, including junior captain Ken Gurney of Arlington, hould be tough to beat in the pring.

At top is freshman cr()ss country sensation Bob Pe iser of West Soy­ ville, New York, who won eight of nine races. At right, the toll meet the short. From left, Chris Arciero (S-8), Scott Conrod (6-7), Phil Needle (6-9) and Mike White (S-9). Arciero is one of the co­ captains for the successful bas­ ketball team. The other three a re or promising sophomores. k-

Before Bentley College met Newark College of Engineering on the Falcons' annual visit to the New York-New Jersey area, Luci us Childs, a sophomore from Newark, met with coach Al Sh ie lds to discuss some pre-game strategy. Ch ilds is o graduate of re nowned Weeuohic High, known for its basketball powerhouses.

15 Play After a long career in business, Robert C. Hunt and Dean John ( Continued from page 5) Mr. Porter became a member of the M. Sinclair were guest speakers at emphasize the universal significance administrative staff of the school in the meeting of the New York City of that story. The play centered January, 1958. Through his efforts Chapter held at the Park 100 Res­ around two actors who took the roles and those of John M. Sinclair, Beta taurant, N.Y.C. Also in attendance of the Lord and the devil, and J.B. Tau Alpha was reactivated on May was Maurice E. Goldman, trustee of an American businessman. 8, 1958 as a non-sectarian, scholastic Bentley College and vice chairman fraternity. The long hiatus was at of the board of Congress Factors The presentation by the Experi­ an end and the active membership Corp., New York, N.Y. mental Theater is the first full-length of the Fraternity has carried out the production to be made by the group, The Northwest Connecticut Otap­ past traditions of high scholarship. following a program earlier this year ter held its meeting at the Anaconda Their record of achievement in all which included excerpts from three American Brass Country Club, areas is unsurpassed by any other plays. Naugatuck, Conn., on Dec. 4. Dean student organization in the College. TaJcing the leading role of J.B., Sinclair outlined the important de­ Profes or Russell C. Eldridge, one wa Lawrence B. Ruark, assistant velopment of the Department of of the 1958 reactivating group, and professor of history. Dr. Deane and Management at Bentley and Mr. Professor George A. Rawcliffe have Prof. Nicholson played Nickles and Hunt showed slides of the College. served as Faculty Advisors for the Mr. Zuss respectively. An election of officers was held and past several years and their guidance those named were Louis J. Schuster, Students appearing in the play and counsel have been a large con­ D 27, president: Albert C. F1Schang, were Mark B. Skaletsky and Adam tributing factor to the general excel­ D 49, vice president; Walter M. Pleszowski as Roustabouts; Richard lence of the organization. Horvay, D 57, treasurer; Henrietta B. Torgan as Distant Voice; Miss The active membership is formu­ A. Carisio, D 59, secretary. Vivian L. Freeman as Mary; Town- lating plans for the 50th Anniversary end D. Thorndike as David; Miss Two meetings attended by Dean celebration in 1972 when it is Caryn Schacter as Rebecca; Miss Sinclair were held in Florida. On hoped that a large number of its al­ Toby J. Bernstein as Ruth and Ma­ Jan. 6 the Western Florida Chap­ most 500 living alumni members bel; John F. O'Brien as Jonathan; ter held its meeting at the Louis will attend. Mi s Maureen A. Hickey as the Pappas Riverboat Restaurant, Tam­ Girl/Mrs. Botticelli; Elliott Hessel­ The current officers who are guid­ pa, Flo., and on Jan. 8 the Miami son as Bildad; Christopher Beltrami ing the destinies of the Fraternity Chapter gathered at the Holiday Inn, as Zophar; and Donald E. Wetmore are as follows : Miami International Airport. as Eliphaz. President - Thomas L. Keon In reviewing the chapter meetings Vice Pres. - Gerald T. Reilly Mrs. Diane Ruark, wife of Prof. held this fall, Mr. Hunt has made Recording Sec. - Ruark, was cast in the role of Sarah. the observation that chapters show­ Stephen A. Baker ing the greatest growth are the ones Serving in non-stage capacities Cor. Sec. - Michael A. Patterson where wives join their husbands in were BruceiGoldman, set design; An­ Treasurer - Robert E. Meunier attending meetings. In this regard, thony Fisher, lighting; Mr. Skaletsky, Chaplain - Robert L. Vachon the Maine Chapter has had the most Mr. O'Brien, and Miss Joan Weil. Alumni Secretary - success, the best example being set publicity and tickets; Miss Hickey Henry Y. Porter by Rose and Ralph Wilkinson who and Miss Weil, make-up; and Mrs. have been faithful attendees over Marguerite Daly, program cover de- Chapter News the years. ign and masks. ( Continued from page 8) Perhaps other chapters can follow son installed the new officers. Those the example of the Maine Chapter Beta Tao Alpha installed were Charles M. Garon, and achieve the same success. (Continued from page 9) D 48, president; Harold W. Chias­ period. The ten years at the last son, D 62, vice president; Larry E. Beacon Street location were most Dick, D 61, vice president; and Public accounting is the fastest productive ones. Beta Tau Alpha George Y. Sidhom, E 68, secretary­ growing profession in the United had become a leading Fraternity in treasurer. States, according to the American the school and its members easily Saddleback Inn, Phoenix, Ariz., Institute of Certified Public Ac­ won aU honors in any scholastic was the meeting place of the Phoenix countants. The Institute's figures competition. As a result of this, Mr. Chapter. Chairman of the meeting indicate the number of CPA's Bentley, originally a skeptic, had be­ was Scott G. Argersinger, D 45, who probably will double to more than come the greatest booster for the introduced President Morison, guest 200,000 by 1990. Fraternity. speaker for the evening.

16 Through The Years r'l\ GEORGE D. CRANE has G. JOHN MEEHAN, 39 Monroe Lane, a . ociated with General Motors, United 'J.J2 3 resigned as Lynn city audi- West Yarmouth, has been appointed to fill Fruit Company, and the Atlantic and tor. The resignation was anticipated due to the approaching 70th birthday of the veteran city official. Thomas McGovern, Lynn city councillor, noted that Mr. Crane "has done wonderful work for the city and has been a grand fellow and wonderful friend to all of us." Home: 567 Easter Ave., Lynn. r'l\. VERTNER A. RUGGLES, 'J.J29 187 Kingsley Ave., Staten Island, N.Y., has been named an assistant vice president in the Employee !3enefit Operations Section of the Fiduciary Oepartments of Banker's Trust, N.Y. r'l\ C. EDWARD HALL. JR., 'J.J31 has been appointed to the po ition of controller at the Morton Ho pita], Taunton. Home: 66 Bed­ ford St., West Bridgewater. BERNARD I. MC !NERNEY, 227 Pine­ hurst Rd., Wilmington, Del., has retired from Dupont DeNemours, Wilmington. Q FRANK SIEGEL, 19 Thor-

ROLAND B. CLARK, JR., 11 vacancy on the Yannouth finance com­ 033 1257 Florida PL, Anaheim, mittee. Mr. Meehan, a Yarmouth summer Calif. is accounting manager• resident since 1920 and a permanent resi­ Aztec Division of Golden West Air Ter­ dent since 1968 following his retirement minals, Inc., Long Beach, Calif. from active business at 65 in 1967, has beeu WILLIAM HENDERSON, D 34

17 WILLIAM HE DERSO , 4 Pilgrim Rd., Internal Revenue ervice, Field Audit eral a, ings and Loan ciation, !so ton. Wakefield, assistant treasur•r of R.M. Brad­ Branch, Philadelphia, Pa. ley & Co., Inc., has been named administra­ f::> FRA K A. W. MORRISO , tive vice president of the Bo ton-based real HE RY BRE T, 7316 Peb­ l0.'- 0 153 West Rocks Rd., Norwalk, estate lirm. The post has been created to bleford Rd., Fort Worth, Tex., .., onn., has been promoted to meet the company's needs in a growth and is vice president- ales of Trin­ the newly-created position of general comp­ expansion period. Mr. Henderson. who al o ity Forms Co., a division of Tandy Corp., troller of The Board of Mi ions of the has been named secretary to R.M. Bradley's Fort Worth. United Methodi t Church. executive committee, joined the firm in 1945 following outh Pacific duty with the ID 'EY H. TUSHI , na­ American Division of the U. . Army engi­ tional president of the Bent• A reception and t timonial dinner neers, an off hoot of the famous Yankee ley ollege Alumni Associa­ were recently tendered to MICHAEL J. Division. Director and finance committee tion, has been named vice president of Rand POWELL, E 40, on the occa ion of his chairman of the Farragut Cooperative Bank, J ndu trie , Inc., Bo ton. retirement from the Ma achusetts Bay he al o erves as a i tant treasurer and di­ In addition to hi degree from Bentley, Transi t Authority after 38 year of serv­ rector of both the Boston Management Corp. Mr. Tushin received a B. . degree from ice. and RMB Corp. In addition, he i a former l ortheastern University, where he was an Rentley College staff member. honor irraduate. In addition, he is the reci­ pient of the igma Ep ilon Rho Honor Fra- 1ernity Award for highe l scholastic stand­ WILLIAM E. MILLER, 99 West Emer­ ing, the Merit Award by the Bo ton hap- son L, Meleo e, has been elected executive vice president of ecurity teel and Wire 1er, Administrative Management ociety Works, Inc., Tewksbury. and h been listed in three Who's Who book. Home: 100 Brew ter Rd., Waltham. fA JAME J. DOYLE, 536 ROY H. A DER ON, 72 'J.J3 6 Fletcher ircle, Lake Forest, Pond t., eedham, has been Ill., has been promoted to 0 39 named a vice president at vice president of International Harvester Fenwal Incorporated, Ashland. Company.

EUGENE C. FLETCHER, 45 Riverside AvP, .• Hudson, .H., has been promoted to budget analyst in U. . ivil ervice at Port mouth, .H., aval hipyard.

,X CLA YTO F. JO E , )I. 'J.J37 gemeine Ma chinenbeau Ge- ell. chaft m.b.H & o., Dcrf­ flingerstrasse 15, A 4021 Linz, Austria, bas b en transferred from Heald Machine om • The gala social event. which took pany, Worce ter, to a newly acquired com­ place at the tat! r•Hilton Hotel, wa · pany in Linz, Au tria. attended by more than 500 person , with John E. Powers, clerk of the Ma achu­ LEROY D. UTTER, 6803 Robin Rd., setts upreme Judicial Court, acting a Dallas, Tex., has been elected president of toastmaster. Texlite Industries, Inc., Dallas. Mr. Powell, who i al o a member of the Bentley College Corporation, joined the MBT A organization 31 year ago as a me enger and rapidly progr ed to one of the top po itions, that of trea­ surer, a post he has held since 1959. Mr. Powell has retired from his posi­ ROY H. ANDERSON , E 39 tion with the MBTA to accept the po t of executive director of the $50 million Mr. nder on' r ponsibilities include MBT A Retirement Fund. The Retire­ accounting, company-wide y tern integra­ ment Fund, a completely eparatc en­ lion, procedures, and data proc ing. He tity from the MBTA, i administered by ha beP.11 c-ontroll r ince 1962 and ha been n retirement board comprised of mem­ • ociated with Fenwal since 1950. Pre­ bers of both the working force and man­ ,·ious po itions at Fenwal were a istant agement. The Fund has grown to such ~eneral sales manager and a ~i tant indu ·­ an extent since its inception in 1947, trial ale manager. that the servic of an executive ad­ REI O A. TUO fA E , 5 Haywood Rd., ministrator are required. >\cton, ha been promoted to the rank of Among the guests attending the din­ Colonel in the U.S. rmy Reserve. ner was The Rev. Michael Walsh, SJ., president of Fordham University and EARL E. RCHIBALD, 52 former president of Bo ton College, a on titution Ave., o. Wey­ cousin of the guest of honor. (1)-40 mouth, has been elected Mr. Powell resides at 69 odman Hill LEROY 0. NUTTER, 0 37 trea· urer of the new Investors Bank & Trust Ave., Dorchester. Co., Boston. Formerly die company's vi pr ident and national sales manager, Mr. utter ha JO EPH W. BOUDREAU, 104 Perley WILLIAM J. PRUYN, 458 been associated with Texlite for the past Ave.. oncord, hos been appointed budget Dover Rd., Westwood, has ten years in an exe utive capacity. Prior officer of Mount aint Mary College, Hook­ been elected vice president­ to joining Texlite, he gai ned experience in ett, .H. ·ales of Boston Gas. the purcha ing and marketing management HARRY F. CARLSON, 166 Richards LEO E. RO A , 38 Forest SL, Peabody, fields while with General Electric Company. ve., o. Norwalk, Conn., has been named has be6n promoted to semi-senior accountant In addition to his degree from Bentley Col­ vice prnsident, ecretary, and a director of by State Auditor Thaddeus Buczko. lege, Mr. utter holds a degree in engineer­ Nestle Trading Corp., Stamford, Conn. ing from Carnegie In titute of Technology. EDWARD A. WEED, 140 Pleasant SL, ARTHUR L. PEARSON, 77 Waverly St., Wakefield, has been appointed senior tax YD EY . PARLI , 601 E. Wadsworth Arlington, has been elected executive officer officer of Bo ton afe Deposit and Trust Ave., Philadelphia, Pa., is group supervisor, and secretary-treasurer of the econd Fed- Company.

18 JOSEPH TUDLEY, 7 Lee t., Wakefield, has been pro­ moted to chief accountant by ~late Auditor Thaddeus Buczko. JOHN W. TREFRY, JR., 172 Hamilton Ave., Quincy, has been named assistant con­ troller for payroll and general services of Howard Johnson Co.

WALTER G. COR ORA , D 42, 180 Middlebrook Farm Rd., Wilton, Conn., member of the Bentley College Corpor­ ation, has been named to the newly­ created position of enior vice president - finance and administration of Emery Air Freight, and to its Board of Directors.

PAUL BURR. D 47, (right ) has been Burr has been in accounting and finance appointed president of the Framingham for the pa t 14 year and is presently ommunity oncerts. A member for six wi th the Massachusetts Mutual Life ln­ year , he i hown with Charles J. Pat­ ~urance Company in tl1e Charlered Life terson, (left) outgoing president, di . Underwriter Program. Home: 530 Grove cu ing a new cla ical recording. Mr. t., Framingham.

ha been appointed treasurer of E.T. Cook, FRA KLIN B. HIG ETT, director of Inc., excavating con tractor in Pontiac, Mich. marketing for the Knott Hotel Corpora­ PAUL F. REY, 65 Whit­ tion, and former treasurer of the Bentley ing t., Lynn, ha been pro­ College Alumni A ociation, ha been elect­ moted Lo emi- enior ac­ ed president of the Hotel ales Ianagement countant in the Mas achu etts tate Audit A ociation at their annual convention held Department. in Houston , Tex., Nov. 24. EDWARD A. CIAMPA, 21 Dartmouth H l\1A has over 4,000 members from 73 WALTER G. CORCORAN, D 42 t., omerville, has been re-elected to the countries and ha 60 chapters throughout omerville Board of ors. the world. In addition, they have 12 chap­ Mr. orcoran, who ha been secretary­ treasurer of Emery si nce 1952, has been PAULE. GERHARDT, 28 Hillside Ave. , ters at colleges throughout the United n vice president since 1962. The new ~outh Hadley, ha been named director of ' tates and two in Ireland. position places him in charge of ac­ linancial services for Worthington Corpora­ Mr. Hignell, formerly director of sales counting, finance, corporate affairs, pur­ tion's Construction Equipment Division, for the heraton-Boston, i a member of chasing, claims, rates, and tariffs. Holyoke. the ales Marketing Executives Interna­ A certified public accountant, he was a member of the audit taff of Price­ KIRK AHARONIAN. 4 tional. In 1967 he was named national Waterhou e & Company in ew York Westlund Rd., Belmont has Hotel Sales Manager of the year by the prior to joining Emery Air Freight. He been p r o m o t e d to trust ociety of Innkeepers, Washington tate is secretary-trea urer of Bradley Facil­ officer of the late treet Bank and Tru t UniYersity. Home: 923 Linwood Ave .. ities, Inc., a cooperative cargo terminal Company, Boston. Ridgewood, N.J. venture located at Bradley Field, Wind­ sor Locks, Conn., as well a ecretary­ treasurer of the Emery Educational Foundation. The new senior vice president is a member of Kiwani and associate direc­ tor of the Wilton Office of the Union Trust ompany of Connecticut ; trea­ surer, the Wilton Library Association: trea urer, Wilton High chool Scholar­ ship ommillee: director, orwalk av­ ings ociety; and chairman of the Re­ tirement Board of the Retiremen t Plan for Employees of the Town of Wilton.

GEORGE L. ROE LER, 1677 DelMonte Way, Mor­ aga, alif., i trea urer of the John Breuner Company, Oakland, Calif. WILLI M J. MATTHEW , 380 Front t., Weymouth, ha been named a i tant control- RI HARDE. GOULD, D 48, (right) award both jobs to Mr. Gould. Mr. ler with responsibility for all restaurant ac­ who ha been named Executive ecre­ Gould i currently employed in the elec­ counting for Howard Johnson Company. tary-Town Accountant in Reading be­ tronic data proc ing divi ion of Honey­ gins tran ition of town records with well, Inc., Waltham. Home: 450 Old lI K THRY N. VED- Iloyd H. tewart, town clerk. The Board onnecti ut Path, Wayland. DER, 3170 Orchard Lake of electmen voted unanimously to Rd., Keego Harvor, Mich.,

19 hy the wampscott Board of electmen. Home: 4 learns St., Swampscott. HAROLD J. GREE E, 46 Tenney t., Georgetown, has been appointed by Gover­ nor Francis argent as administrative assis­ tant to the governor. Mr. Greene will be re­ ·pon ible for recommending appointments to tate ervice. I RICE A. LEHRM has been pro- moted to corporate controller of Arlan D - pa rtment tor , Inc., ew Bedford. Home: 11 hady Lane, ew Bedford. HEYWOOD . '[C LEOD, 8 Mountain View t. , Montpeli er, Vt., has been named an a i!'tant controller of ational Life Jn. surante ompany of Vermont. In addition, :\fr. '[ Leod a tax peciali t, has been el ect­ <' d a ompany omcer. He joined ational Life in 1949 as an auditor and was trans­ lerrcd to the controller' department in 1958. FRANKLIN B. HIGNETT, D 48 ROBERT WOODCOCK, D 49 Mr. McL od, in addition to his studies Ill 11 RD W. R LX i busin man- at Bentley, ha taken cour es a{ the Uni­ PETER . B BI has been promoted to uger of Hill horough ounty, .H. In his ver ity of Vermont, th e International Ac­ an officer of th e Merchan ational Bank, pr ent position he i respon ible for all cou ntants o iety, La alle Extension Uni­ Manchester . . . H., in the Data Processing fiscal and financi al record and procedures. versity, and Dale Carnegie Institute. Dept. He ha been as ociated with the bank since 1966 in data programming operations and will now be the manager of that divi­ sion. Mr. Babic ha been engaged in data processing operation for more than 15 year and prior to hi affiliation with the bank wa employed by the ew Hamp hire Insurance Group. He ha condu ted Work- hop eminars on the automation of insur­ ance agency hilling and retail accounts re­ ceivable operations and i a member of the Data Processing Mana gement A ocia­ tion. Hom : 18 Bert t., Hook ett, .H. ADOLF G. CARL O has been named tru tee of the Moreland Hill chool, Ken­ sington, onn. LEO V. DO OHUE, Connecticut Com­ mi sioner of Finance and Control, recently participated in a panel discussion on state and local tax structures at Fairfield Univer­ sity's fi rst Community Forum in the campus center Oak Room in Fairfield. Mr. Dono­ hue ha& been an employe of the state for 23 years and has a ted as Governor Demp­ JOH K. E CLI H, D 48, is the . hown per hed on th e fender of one of ey's personal representative in transporta­ new owner or th e hevrolet dealer hip the fi rm's new ar is their daughter, tion matters, particularly the New Haven located at 329 Ja kson t., and 66 wan Joyce, who recently entered the ninth Railroad, and as vice chairman of the Tri- . t., Methuen. With him in photograph grade at Pingree chool, outh Hamil­ tale Tran portation Com mi ion. Home : above i hi wife, Marie, who is also ton . The English's reside at 18 unset 30 Chid ey Rd., Avon, Conn. co-owner of the new busin . Also Rock Rd., Andover. PAUL F. KEATI G has been named vi ce president and controller at H.H. Scott, He admini ter the ounty Employees ln­ YL VE 'TER M EIL, 12 Flonun St., Inc., Maynard. Home : 14 Wheatland St., ~urance Program, co-ordinates all county Walpole, has been promoted to the newly Peabody. budget requ t , and o-ordinate all major C" reated position of controller of Madison purchasing requirements for the Board of Industries, mithfield, R.I. EDWI D. OLIVER, 773 Dennis Dr., Commis ion ers. Home: 35 Little ve., Man­ ROBERT WOOD O K, director of pa­ Orange, Conn., has been appointed spedal che ter, .H. ti ent relations at Danbury Ho pita!, Dan­ assistant on the administrative staff of WSM bury, Conn., is the new president of the orporation, Boston. GEORGE ABBOTT , 1316 American Guild of Hospital Credit Man­ Fenwick Lane, ilver pring, ROBERT N. RA MU E , 3 Young agers. He wa elected at the Guild's Na­ Rd. , Weston, has been named assistant con• Md., is sy tern accountant tional In titute held recently in Atlantic with the Contracts and Grants Finance An­ troller of plants for Howard Johnson Com­ ity, .J. pany. alysis Branch, Office of Financial Manage­ Mr. Woodcock spoke on the topic, "In. ment, Office of the Director, ational ln- ten ified Ho pital Collection ervice," to AMBRO E F. REI HALTER, 1420 titutes of Health, Bethesda, Md. 250 credit managers representing ho pitals Liberty t., Braintree. was recently awarded in 24 states. the title FLMI (Fellow of the Life Manage­ WAI.LACE A. BI KLEY, The purposes of the Guild are to keep ment Institute) by the Life Office Manage­ a i tant treasurer of Pren­ member informed about hospital credit ment Association, an educational organiza­ tice C o r p . , Ken ington, matters. Conn., has been elected treasurer of the tion of the life insurance industry. Mr. company. Home: 118 Butternut Ln., Ken­ JOHN L. ALLEN, 136 Reinhalter is assi tant treasurer of Boston sington. pring t., Walpole, has Mutual Life In urance Company, Boston. been elected assistant trea­ c,, LBERT CIBLEY, 8 Varich KEITH A. CALLAHA has been ap- ~urer an d general manager of accounting at (!:) Rd., Waban, has been ap­ pointed to the posi tion of town accountant Bo ton a .. 50 pointed vice president, mar- 20 keting, at Le hmere . ales of ambridge. appointed a istant trea urer of Chemicals Mr. Cibley has been with Lechmere for Productq orp., Ea t Providence, R.I. 19 years, hi entire retailing career, most Home· 18 h t., toughton.

GEORGE C. JOHNSON, E 51 mg department in January 1955. Previous FRA I W. WHITE, (left) D 49, lected for a n wspaper. While he wa a ignments with the company include su­ who recently celebrated a 25th anniver- working for a department store, he got pervi or of ost accounting, upervisor of ary with the Colonial Bank and Trust a chance at hi fir t job at the bank. l!eneral a counting, general office manager, Company o{ Waterbury, Conn., re­ The bank was mall and President Au - and a ~i tant controller-Building Materials ceives a gift from Burtow Hemingway, tin Adam interviewed him, a young ter Group Accounting. Mr. Johnson i a mem­ bank director. in hi " unday best" and awed by it all. ber of the £a achusett Route 128 Chap­ Mr. White came to Colonial as a mail Mr. White wa happy in his part-time ter, ational ociation o{ Accountant hoy when he wa 17 and ince then his job after chool. It paid him 70 a ,ind a former board member and trea urer progr has been a teady one to the 'llonth. He wa curious, too, alway of th Walpole hapter, Arn ri can Red top position of pr ident. -,ticking his no e over someone's should­ Cross. ·ow 42, Mr. White, in thinking about er to learn more. his life at the bank, reflects that the l-U bort areer wi th the bank was •ear~ have given him a philosophy about interrupted by a tour with the U.S. hi job. Total commitment, he calls it. avy, then a brief time back at the 13ut loo ely translated it imply mean bank, and then oH again to Bentley Col­ work. lege, where he picked up the bighe t And that he does. No jumproping or grades ever recorded in accounting. jogging before breakfast, it's just up His return took him to Thomasville, and get to work. Conn., where he et up Colonial's first All hi work ha been done the hard branch in ix months. It was the key to way, touching every important job in a bright future. the bank. There were 14 in 25 years. ay Mr. White, "Every day I've bet:n In that time, the bank ha changed from in this bank ha been a challenge, ome- some 30 employees and 15 million in 1hing new and ornething different." a ets and one office, to 600 employees And obviously, the combination of a 242 million in assets, and 24 branches. vibrant approach to his job, a native The challenge tarted before he wa curio ity, and unrelenting work has paid 16. He peddled magazine and later col- off.

EARLE W. BUZZELL, JR. has been appointed trea urer o{ uperior Pet Products, Inc., a Bo ton-ba ed firm which markets HE RY M. HOOVER, JR., E51 has toys, treats, and grooming aids for pets. been elected to erve a two-year term as G. EDWARD DRAY ha been appointed councillor of Ward 2 in Waltham. Mr. ,·ice president, finance, o{ ervair Incor­ Hoover unseated the incumbent coun­ porated, aircraft ground handling and build­ cillor and won by a 249 vote plurality. ing maintenance corpoeition, headquartered Mr. Hoover is past president of tht­ at Logan Airport, Boston. Home: 130 Auck­ Lakeview Park ociation, served for la nd l., Dorchester. t.he pa t two year as chairman of the THOMA E. O'BRIE , 7927 Mitchell Mac rthur chool PTA committee of Farm Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio, has been pro­ budget and finance, and is presently on moted to manager-materials cost evaluation the board of directors as trea urer. at General Electric ornpany, Cincinnati. Active in scouting, he was cubmaster at t. Pierre' Pack 255 and at Mac­ ROBERT C. OL O ha been named as­ Arthur chool Pack 263. si tant district commissioner for Hingham in the Great East District, Old Colony He i chairman of the Ward 2 com­ ouncil, Boy couts of America. Home: 8 mittee and is al o on the executive Amber Rd., Hingham. hoard of the WaltJ1am Democratic Com• mittee. ALBERT 0 . ClBLEY, E 50 Mr. Hoover i employed a export f:Y GEORGE C. JOH O , 66 manager at Ealing Corp., Cambridge. recentl y a merchandi ing manag r. He has ([) ~ 1 Highland t., Walpole ha Married to the former Claire Copan also I ved in ale and buying capacities J been appointed corporate ac- of ewton, he makes his home at 85 with the firm . counting manager for Bird & on, Inc., East Bowdoin Ave. Waltham. GORDO H. H RGREAVE has been Walpole. He joined Bird & on's account-

21 RICHARD J. MAC DONALD, 14 Adams ROBERT L. ASHTON, 22 St., Melrose, has been appointed general GORDON G. LYFORD, D 55, 18 Wimams Ave., Lynn, has parts manager of the Major Machinery Eustis Pkwy., Waterville, Me., has been joined Plymouth Shoe Ma­ Company, Hudson. elected to the office o( assistant trea· chinery Co., Inc., as their controller. surer of Keyes Fibre Company, Water­ NEWMA M. DORSEY, ville. PAUL L. CONNOLLY, 7 Pleasant St. C.L.U., of 28 Hillandale Rd., Beverly. has been awarded the degree of Ashburnham, has been ap- master in business administration at uifolk pointed district manager of the Metropoli• University. tan Life Insurance Company of Gardner. DONN R. INGLIS. a bank examiner with JOHN . LIPKOWSKY, 26 Drury Lane, the Office of the Bank Commi ioner for the Wakefield, bas been appointed to the facul­ past eight years, has been elected an a ist­ ty of , No. Andover. A ant treasurer of the Amoskeag Trust Com­ certified public accountant, he was named pany, Manchester, N.H. Mr. Inglis resides to the rank of assi tant prof or in the at 47 Nourie Park, Manchester. Division of Bu iness Administration. CLU"FORD E. MYATT, 10 Amati ta Bu­ DEAN E. CORROW has rare, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico, has been bt:en appointed assistant ~dmitted as a partner at Em t & Ernst. con troller at Mercy Hos­ pitaJ, pringfield. Home : Chestnut Hill MI JEA L. OUTHER, Rd., Montague. 25 Willow Rd., Hanover, has been promoted to assi tant to ALBERT A. DAIGLE, 106 Mt. Washing­ the controller at Howard Johnson's, Wol• ton t., Lowell, i operating a business in la ton. public accounting and in all types of in­ surance and real estate with hi wife and EDWARD J. KI G, execu­ live children. Hi offices ar located at 313 tive director of the Massa­ Willard t., Dracut. chusetts Port Authority, in GORDON G. LYFORD, D 55 a recent address to the ewton Rotary JOH, W. HOWLA D, 29 Douglass St., Club, outlined some of the considerations He has been employed by Keyes Revere, ha !.ieen promoted to a i tant co­ to lie studied before the con truction of a Fibre Company since 1962, mo t recent­ ordinator, y tern ervices in the Policy­ second airport for Bo ton i undertaken. ly as financial accountant. Prior to holders ervice Admini tration divi ion of Among those mentioned was the fact that 1962 he was a ociated with Ernst & John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance o. Logan Airport is operating at only 70 per Ernst, a national accounting firm. cent of capacity ; 30 to 35 per cent of the A native of Dover-Foxcroft, Mr. Ly­ GEORGE E. ARAFIA , 19 Co ttonwood current traffic at Logan is short-haul flights ford is a certified public accountant Rd., Wellesley, has been named manager of to and from New York and Washington and and a member of the American Institute the Waltham office of the Internal Revenue al ternate means of tran portation, such as of CertiCied Public Accountants, Na­ ervice. high speed trains, might become available; tional A ociation of Accountants, Amer­ and the po ibility of the development of ican Accounting ociation, and Maine VTOL (vertical takeoff or landing craft). ~ociety of Public Accountants. Mr. King joined the Ma port in 1963. Mr. Lyford i a member and past president of the Waterville Kiwanis WALTER B. MCCARTHY, Club, a member of the First Congrega­ 25 Indian Hill Rd., Medfield, tional burch, a former member of received bis M.B.A. degree Waterville Area Community Chest, a from Bab on College. commissioner of the Upper Kennebec Regional Planning Commission from NORBERT K. CAREY, 38 Waterville, and a national director of Pine Hill Rd., Lynnfield, the Bentley College Alumni Association. has been named assi tant controller for generlli accounting and taxes of Howard Johnson Compan:y. ARTHUR T. CONNELLY, 14 Westlake Rd., ·atick, has been promoted to senior underwriter in the group pen ion under­ writing division of John Hancock Mutual Life In~urance Company. CHARLES A. HEATH has been ap­ pointed comptroller of Butler Automatic Machine, Inc., Canton. Home: 373 Walnut t., East Bridgewater. EDWARD F. GIBBONS, E 57 JOSEPH M. COLLI , Jere­ Q EDWARD F. GIBBON , 25 miah Rd., ewtown, Conn., (0 ~ 7 Glendale Rd., Marblehead, has has been appointed pecialist J been elected vice president in marketing accounting for the specialty and controller of United Fruit Company. appliance department of General Electric's Mr. Gibbons joined United Fruit in Octo­ Housewares Division, Bridgeport, Conn. ber, 1966 and was elected controller the fol­ lowinl? year. Previou ly he was associated HENDRICK DE MOOR, 15 Fort umter with Mc ord Corp., Bentley ollege, and Dr., Holden, i~ manager, financial planning W.R. Grace and Company. He is a mem­ and con trols, Norton ompany, Worcester. her of the American In titute of Certified Mr. DeMooc was formerly the regional con• Public Accountants, the Massachusetts So­ troller Latin America and anada, orton ROBERT L SMITH, E 55 ciety of Certified Public Accountants, and InternationaJ, Inc., Worcester, a subsidiary the National Association of Accountants. of 'orton Co. ;>rel ently a mortgage loan officer, personnel director, and ~ecurity officer. Prior to his JOSEPH J. GILOOLY, JR., has been ROBERT L. SMITH has been elected Waltham Federal aHiliation, Smith was an lected assistant vice president in the Com­ vice president of Waltham Federal aving as istant treasurer and mortgage loan officer mercial Loan Department of the Colonial and Loan Association. Mr. Smith began his of the ampello o-operative Bank in Bank and 1:rust ompany, Waterbury, ~ervice with Waltham Federal in October Brockton. Home : 36 Ellis Ave., W. Bridge­ Conn. Home: 75 Dyer Ave., Comnsville, 1968 as an assistant vice president. He is water. Conn. 22 MISS CAROLYN J. MARKS, 61 Web­ ster St., N. Quincy, is chief accountant at Butler Automatic Machine, Inc., Canton. ,7\ RICHARD E. COLBERT, 'J.J~ 8 64 Bay State Circle, orth J Abington, has been promoted to systems co-ordinator in the field office administration department of John Han­ cock Mutual Life Insurance Company. PAUL J. COMERFORD has been named an assistant vice president and comptroller of the First Bank and Trust Company of Wellesley. Home: 27 Walton t., Wake­ field. DONALD C. DWYER has been appoint­ ed director of academic advising at Berk­ shire Community College. Mr. Dwyer is also business advi er in the Evening Pro­ gram. Home: 31 Kensington Ave., Pitts­ field. LEO R. GAUTHIER, 68 Mt. Vickery Rd., RICHARD A. CHARPENTI ER, D 59 ANDRE L. DER Y, D 59 Southboro, has been appointed comptroller of Mister Donut of America, Inc. Mr. RICHARD A. CHARPENTIER, D 59, Lice of public accounting under the firm Gautllier is a certified public accountant 395 orth Bend Drive, and A DRE L. name of Charpentier and Dery, Certified and was vice president of udbury Foot­ DERY, D 59, 509 Merrimack t., both Public Accountants, with offices at 507 wear in Lynn before joining Mister Donut. of Manchester, N.H. have announced the Cen tral t., Manchester. formation of a partner hip for the prac- BRYANT F. NICHOLSON has passed the Massachusetts CPA examination. Home: 89 Mason Terr., Brookline. ROBERT RONDEAU, West St., Uxbridge, ager, U. . Plywood, Champion Papers, Inc., ha been promoted to assistant trea urer of Fairfield. ROBERT H. SHA UGH NESSY has been Reed & Prince Mfg. Co., Worcester. ANDREJ. GERVAIS has been appointed named manager of the newly established controller of the Copper Thermometer Com­ Boston branch of Keyboard Training, Inc. f:.> MI S BARBARA COLLI S, (060 338 Manet Ave., Quincy, has pany, Middlefield, Conn. Home: 42 Rogers KTI is the nation's company specializing in Rd., Fairfield, onn. on-site training of keyboard equipment oper­ been appointed controller at ations to improve skills and increase pro­ Wentworth In titute, Bo ton. BARRY HARTSTONE, 14 Lyman Rd., Framingham, has been elected a member of ductivity and accuracy. Home : 53 Glen­ DAVID L. HANSON, Bed­ mere Cir., Reading. the Administrative Management ociety by ford t., Lakeville, has been the directors of the Bo ton Chapter. Mr. ROBERT B. WHITHAM, 3920 Avalon named controller at Goddard Hartstone is assistant vice president of Put­ Rd., Albuquerque, N.M., is professor of ac­ Memorial Hospital, Avon. nam Management Co., Inc., Boston. counting at the University of Albuquerque. JO EPH D. MC GONAGLE, DAVID LUNT has been pro­ EDWARD COOPERSTEIN 248 Fox Hill Rd., Bu_rlington, moted to office manager of has been elected president of has been elected presid6nt of 063 Hendrie's, Inc., Milton. Home: the Brotherhood of Congre­ The New England Tank Truck Association. 95 orman Rd., Brockton. gation Agudath Achim. HENRY E. ORMA DE, 15 RICHARD J. GAGNON has ROBERT J. O'LEARY, 21 Henry St., East Providence, been promoted to the posi­ Bates St., Follboro, has been R.I., has been appointed a tion of co t accountant at promoted to manager at full time instructor of accounting at Su_ffolk the Androscoggin Mill of International Norfolk County Trust Company, Foxboro. University. Paper Company, Lewi ton, Me. Home: 102 Depot t., Livermore Falls, Me. RICHARD VEINOT, 10928 W. 91st St., CHARLES F. THOMPSO , 107 Grove Overland Park, Kansas, has been promoted t., Melro. e, has been appointed a i tant WILLIAM A. SMITH was recently nam­ to chief accountant of the Kansas City 9rof or of economics and management at ed controller for Medical Products at Dow Office of the Employers' - Commercial Lowell Technological Institute. Coming, Midland, Mich. Home: 6 E. Camp­ bell Ct., Midland, Mich. Union In urance Co. BERNARD BLACK has been JOHN R. WILSON, 403 Colonial Dr., appointed business manager of EDWARD P. DARRAUGH, SteubenviUe, Ohio, has been promoted to the John on Clinic, Beverly. a econd Lieutenant in the director of finance, Rust Craft Broadcasting Home : 16 Heath Rd., Peabody. U.S. Air Force, has been Co., Steubenville. awarded silver pilot wings upon graduation JORDAN T. BURGESS has been pro­ at Vance AFB, Oxla. Following specialized f:.> MISS LORRAINE FITZPAT- moted to vice president and cashier at the aircrew training at Qther bases, he will be (0 ~9 RICK, 11 Moraine St., Bel- Commonwealth National Bank. Home: 10 assigned to Bien Hoa AB, Vietnam, for J moot, national alumni secre- Walker Rd., No. Andover. duty in a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. tary, was recently voted a member of the Boston Chapter - Niaional As ociation of ROBERT CHUTE, 5591 WINSTON F. FEURTADO, Soµthem Accountants by the Board of Directors. Miss 063 Windemere Lane, Fairfield, Towers, Apt. 50,55, 5,eminary Rd!, Alexan­ Fitzpatrick is employed as an accountant Ohio, is accounting man- dria, . Va., was recently commi ioned a for the firm of H & W Agency of Boston. AN INTERESTING NOTE JOHN J. SCANLON, 46 Ellis St., Wo­ burn, has been promoted to administrative The following Bentley alumni have combined their practices with accountant in the Accounting Research Seidman & Seidman and will continue under the name of Seidman & Division, John Hancock Mutual Life Insur­ ance Company. Seidman, 15 School Street, Boston, Massachusetts. WILLI AMT. REEVES, Lillian A. Call, CPA, E 65 Sten G. Nyberg CPA, E 25 RD2 Charlton Rd., Ballston Howard F. Greene, CPA, E 24 Gerald R. Rubin, CPA, D 47 060 Spa, N.Y., has been electecl treasurer of Ter Bush & Powell, Inc., by Elwynn J. Miller, CPA, E 49 Samuel S. Weinrebe, CPA, E 37 the company's board of directors.

23 Lieutenant in the U. . avy. He is present­ ly attached to the taff of the Chief of Naval Operation in the Pentagon. ROBERT A. FI HER, 35 Ames t., Quincy, i oordinator of the Bu in De- partment at Rockland Hi gh chool. TEPHE J. HF.R HM , has passed the real tate board examination for broker. H will be tting up hi real estate offic.e in his home at 54 R xford t. , Matta• pan. D VID G. KE EDY ha been appoint• ed a i tant ·ontroller of In trumentation Laboratory, Inc., Lexington. He joined the company a an a C'o unting assi tant and wa later promot d to c t manager. He i urrently auending Bo ton niversity for hi master in Busin dmini tration de­ gree. Mr. Kennedy and hi wife, the former Judith R. A he of Belmont make their home at 106 Poplar t., Watertown. JA OB J. MA A IA , 24 nion t., Watertown, has been promoted to manage­ ment ·taff as supervi or at Peat Marwick, i\'litchell & o., Bo ton. ROBERT J. W LKER, D 67, in a · e di tinction of JO EPH . HREIBER, II, MR lll tion photo (above) taken two years ago vard three years. 6217 mbt. pt. GP (P Fl, APO an ,,,h n he captained the Bentley varsity Bentley's captain for two Franci co, i presently a First Lientenant ha ketball team ha returned to the col­ year , Wa th e Outstanding serving with the United tales ir Force a,; Atl1let a ior year. Home: 1·lub manager of tlte officer' op n m . lege a fr hman basketball coach. Mr. ~ 42 Belmo ille. The club has more thnn 700 member and alker, a standout from 1964-67, is 100 hine,e national mploye . the £ir ·t alumnu to be appointed as a

WILLI M ULLIVA is excel ... it ha placed you among the elite office manager at Davy in the andidate Bri1md :· Home: 39 Chic­ he v r o I et in Top field. kering Rr., orwood. Home: 39 Willow t., 'lelro e. KARL E. H RTWELL ha received the P L J. 1: ROTTA, 9 Army Commendation Medal while servi ng 066 Cornell t.. rlington, ha with the 82nd irhorne Divi ion in Viet­ been promoted to G 11 au- nam. pee. 4 Hartwell earned the award ditor, cquisition 'lanagement udit for meritoriou ervic "hile as igned to the Branch, AF Auditor General Representa­ Radar ection, Headquarter Battery, 2nJ live, Han om Field, Red ford . Battalion, 321 t rtillery of the division"s 3rd Brigade. Home: Gra y Hill Rd., Old JOH G. G HA , 19 O\"er­ 066 nor Fuller Rd., Billerica, has Lyme, Conn. pa ed the .P.. Examina­ ROBERT !\1:. M L IHJLL i now lo­ tion in Massachusetts. cated in Puerto Rico with General Tire of TEPHE D. DI 10RE, Puerto Rico, In . Horne: Lodi Esquena 25 Franklin ve., WJtjte Milan, C4 ilia Capri, Rio Piedras, Puerto Plain , .Y., enior finan­ Ri co. cial analy t in the Jell-O Division of Gen­ ROL ' D L. OUELETTE, 22 hild t., eral Food , W tchester, .Y., has been ad­ i\ugu ta, Me., has been commi ioned a sec­ vanced to a istant prod u ·t manager on new ond lieutenant upon graduation from the products. officer candidate chool at the U.. Army Miss Beverly Ann Enos became the bride field Artillery Center, Ft. ill, Okla. HAROLD J. BURKE, E 68 0£ WILLIAM L. F BIA O, Lake hore ALAN R. W RT , 5 Dairy t. , Fort Dr., Peabody on Aug. 9. M.B.A. degree from Loyola Univer ity of Plain, .Y., has recently completed train­ Chicago and .B.A. degree from l. John's GEORGE B. TRAPALI , 16 Oak Ridge ing at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., and at Fort College in Bo ton in addition to hi B .. Rd., alem, .H., bas h en promoted to a • ill, Okla. He i attending th e combat engi­ degree in accounting from Bentley. pon ~i Lant comptroller of the Lawr n e Eagle­ neering Officer Candidate chool at Fort completion of hi studies at Bentley, he Tribune. Belvoir, Va. ~pen t four years in public accounting with Ernst & Ern t in Bo ton. He joined F.H. PAUL M. CROWLEY has irman First la CLAY C. RICE, 93 Warren St., Con­ Prince al ewport in 1955 and was trans• been selected as th e " Brig­ 068 £erred to Chicago in 1958. ade oldier of the fonth" cord, .H., i a member of a un it that ha earned the U . . Air Force at FL Benning, Ga., where he is in O.C.S. LA RE T G. DUBE, JR., 2 and assigned to the Headquarters Company. Outstanding Unit Award. Airman Rice, an accounting-finance speciali t at the 370th Em ley Ter., Methuen, has His citation, presented by Col. Robert M. enli ted in the U.S. Army Piper, reads . . .. Technical chool, Sheppard AFB, Tex., will wear a di tinctive ervi e ribbon to mark for three years and is receiving his basic "You have been elected a the Brigade training at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. oldier of the Month. . . . The attainment hi affiliation with the unit, which was cited for meritorious ervice. of this high honor reflect great credit upon CLIF"FORD L. WJLSO , 17 William you and your unit and is in keeping with HAROLD J. BURKE, 23 Concord Dr., Rd., o. Reading, has been awarded the In­ the traditions and ideals of th United Oak Brook, Tll., has been promoted from as­ dividual Proficiency Plaque upon gradua­ "tales Army." istant secretary and controll r to the po i­ tion from ba ic combat training with Com­ The citation continues, "The fa t that you tion of a i tent to th e president of F. W. pany D 10th Baualion, l t Brigade, U.S. were selected above your contemporaries is Prince & Co., Inc., Chicago, Jll. Mr. Burke, Army Training Center, Infantry, Ft. Ben• truly an honor and indicates your desire to a certified public accountant, holds an ning, Ga.

24 Health care 8. In ntiv for reducing costs. ey, pre ident of the Senior Cla s; ever in hi tory ha o much been in (Continued from page 11) planning to d ign new health sy terns at Ed Laramee, president of the Stu­ between the economi ts and the sociolo• one tim nor have o many people been dent Council; and Don Wetmore, gi ts. involved. There i mu h good in what is being editor of the Bentley newspaper; Summar advocateJ, while Lh re i al o much danger joined u in an informative two-way in creating a new method of delivery In our plurali tic society we have made without the ehicl to deliver. Learning discus ion before and after our busi­ great strid in every area of health care. from the problem of fodicare, we should ne s meeting, which wa enjoyed by Admittedly, many pattern of medical care have identified the need to plan the me­ exi ts, many method of medical practice chani and financing before we authorized all. abound, and many method of paying the the delivery. bill or of building facilities are u ed. Gaps A you can ee, we are moving do remain between and among the many method . e are now entering a new era Pre ident' me sage forward in aJl area to timulate in which there i a head of team building ( Continued from page 1) alumni activity. We are open to up to force a newer method of delivery ugge tion at all time , and wel­ which would emphasize: an opportunit for an exchange of l. Expan ion of prepayment group prac­ come any comments you may have. view prior to the r gular executive tice. Let u hear from you. 2. More organization of all health serv• cornmitt e meeting. i . 3. Better utilization of manpower and Our eptember peaker wa Dean facilities. John M. inclnir who di cu ed fu­ 4. Wider repr en tation and participa­ tion of con umer . ture plan concerning the faculty. ~ilntau Qr. ~aru.ey 5. lo r location of cUnic in con umer The peaker in October wa n ighborhood . ~ IL ,t • H RVEY, D 25, of Charles 6. D ire for uni er al healtl1 coverage. Father Arthur Brown, director of Riv r Pk., Bo ton, retired treasurer 7. ontinued allention to quality. and director of Hawkridg Broth r o., tudent affair , who gave us in ight fald n died on eptember 26, 1969. into the need and de ire of the stu­ lu .it.entnrinut dent . We had no peaker in ovember, D 21 faurice H. Donovan but our invit d gue t , Peter Her- D 22 Edward P . Frazier D 23 \! alter D. Murphy E 23 Earle D. Martin D 24 Harr F. Rose E 24 We ton B. B lch r 3Jn!irpq ,. mnmatt harle 'NL Raw on Ri hard . Ri gby .y:i' EPIL P. RO l 1 , E 39, of 29 Elm ~t., D 25 Dr. John J. Brennan Iilton, died unexp ctedly on . eptember ilman . Harv y 5, at th Milton Ho pital. Jo eph R. 1ongiat D 26 Harmon R. wan on D 27 harl F. forton D 28 orman L. ron on William J. arin D 29 Harold Howlett amuel . haloub D 30 l ou«Ja 1. Cray Donald B. 1a Killi gan John J. Walli E 27 Philip Ortolani fr. Harvey, a certified puhlic accountant, E 31 John {. B rglund wa · executi rew- D 32 Herb rt . h rwin Ta nd the rp., C orge T. ·eator bot Donald Young r, I d uc - D 33 Abraham . achman ter lem ia hool, James . Horton [a T II and, D 35 John B. O'Rourke aft d m ti y, harles . Rhod J r. taught there and al o i oard Roland . Thayer of Dir ctor . D 3- Byron D. McLellan D 38 Thoma J. orion He wa a .P. . ince 1923 and wa o- E 38 Edward . K nn y cial d with a number of a counting firm E 39 Jo ph P. Roman in the nation. Earl W. leeth fr. Roman wa vice president and con­ A long- time friend and a o iate of Harry D 43 Thomas J. Mc uliffe troller of Bay late ervice o., Bo ton. He . Bentley, fr. Bentley once aid of him, E 47 John P. Roge , Jr. wa al o pa t pr id nt of the Brookline " 1r. Harvey i a very en thu iastic and rlhur R. wanb rg Rotary lub, a m mber of tl1e ational magn tic teacher ... i popular with stu­ E 49 Jo eph P. 1cEttrick A ociatfon of ccountants, and financial dent and obtain excellent r ult ... v ry E 50 John 'L 'I ' ulfing chairman of th anamore Di trict of Bo • few men have had the ombination of year D 51 Michael P. Ma kell ton ouncil, Boy out of merica. He wa of ucc {ul teaching experience coupled' E 51 Frederick H. Brewer also active in the Bentley Alumni ocia­ with year of practical experien e in pro­ D 54 Edward F. Fleming tion and a pa t pr ident of the Greater fe ional a counting." D 55 Kent E. 'I hitten Bo ton hapter. Mr. Harv y leaves hi wife, Helen M. D 57 William J. Dare y He i urvived by hi mother, Mr. Helen (Parson ) ; two on , Gilman ., Jr., of E 57 lfred E. Rei h I (T do, ki) Roman of Milton, hi wife, Owen boro, Ky., and William H. Harvey~ E 59 Kenn th A. Jaqu Mr. Helen . ( krzpin ki) Roman; and a i tant dean of the Bo ton niversity D 65 John 0 . Perkins two on , Jo ph P. Roman, Jr., of Milton, hool of ommuni ation , and ix grand­ and Edward . Roman of orth dam . children.

25 Bentley College Family Night

Sunday, F bruary 15 - 6 p.m. at

Th Fabulou Ship tad and John on' Ice Follies of 1970

P etite P ·g Flcmin, Medalist and three-time , oriel Firn,rc kating Ch a mpion. Boston Garden

,------·------~I l\l ai I to: Please send me...... 1 e follies ticket · for B entley Famil ' Da , unday, Feb. 15, 1970 al 6 I' .M. I I BE 'TLE\' fA\I IL\' II.\\' o. of eats R egular Price Bentley Price Amo1111t of heck I I Boston Garden, :"i o11h tation I 5.50 4.50 I Boston, .Ma». U:! 114 I "4.50 '3.50 I I I l'leme Complete 3.50 2.i5

' 1.25 Ciaos: D...... E ...... 2.50 I ' ame ...... I R ewember tu enclose check ( pay11 ble I trcet ...... I to Do.11011 Garden) and return en· I • I 1 velope (se/f-addresseil amt slmnprd). Cny or Town ...... , ,.,, ...... Zip Code ...... 1 I ------· ------·I (Cut Ot1t a 11 cl i\lail 1ow)

CHOI E E T have been set a ide fo1· YO on unday, FEBR RY 15 for the extravagan t 6 P .M. performance. Plan tO bring our favorite peopl t0 thi BE TLEY FA~HLY DAY! Through the work of our Al umni sso iation and the courtesy of the Boston Garden, ti ket are again available at bargain rates ( ·ee above) for our graduates. tudents, fa ult , taff ... and th ir wive, children, sweetheart, and friends. Ticket · ma be ordered BY JI IL O I LY. Orders mu t rea h the Bost011 Garden b February 8. Che ks hould b made payable to "Boston Garden."

1o limit on the number o f tickets ou ma buy. I o limit on the pleasure OLL will r ceive! Let' · t0p la t ear's attendan e of more than 800 alumni and friends. -IPED PLEA E Er CLO E ELF-ADORE E D, TA RET R N R on and indy Kauffman, E VELOPE TOE PEDlTE R ET R OF YO R TICKETS. fil,rure Sk:uirw Champs.

On' T n tJ 3 1 S 3 H J tJ I Ii\ l13cJ1S 3~\/ 7 ·ssvw ·wvHlWM 0 O O ~ 1 ~ 03A1 II ,1 9 l dV 6886S ON 11Vf!l3d fl OC: I ~OVIJ l ::,v~OHl s:it:CJ Ol\fd t>SLW 'WVH11VM 39V1S0d Sn ·ssvw 9"!10 ll~O"lld NON 133US UA V38 00S NOIJ. Vl:>OSSV INwn,v A31.1.N38