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SUN
The Suffolk University News
March 2010 Vol. 36, No. 2
Da Zheng’s “Silent Traveller”
Biography Inspires Exhibit
Chiang Yee and Da Zheng never met, yet their
lives have interesting parallels.
Both were born in China but moved to the
West to pursue higher education. Though of
different generations, they shared a fascination
with art, literature and education.
Zheng, an English Department faculty
member, first learned of Chiang Yee when a
friend sent him Yee’s English-language book
on calligraphy, initially published in 1938.
Zheng, then studying in Shanghai, worked with friends to translate
the volume into Chinese.
Zheng moved to the United States in 1986. One day a book on a
friend’s coffee table caught his eye. It was called The Silent Traveller
in Boston, and on the cover was a watercolor of Park Street Church,
a landmark Zheng had not yet seen.
“I saw the name Chiang Yee and was amazed,” said Zheng. “I didn’t
know that the author of Chinese Calligraphy was also a travel writer.”
The artist-author piqued Zheng’s interest, and he began to read
more about him. Zheng’s research is focused on Chinese-American
literature, and Yee, who covered art, travel, memoir and children’s
stories in more than 25 published books, made a fascinating subject.
In February Zheng published Chiang Yee: The Silent Traveller
from the East, a cultural study of a man who spent more than half
his life in the West writing and illustrating a series of travel books
from the point of view of an outsider looking in.
“This is a book I really put my heart into,” said Zheng. “To a
large extent I was writing about someone like myself.”
Yee was a close friend of historian and Boston Athenaeum
Director Walter Muir Whitehill, and the illustrations for The Silent
Traveller in Boston are now in the Athenaeum’s collection. The
Athenaeum has allowed the University to reproduce them for an
exhibit at the Adams Gallery.
Louisburg Square, illustration from The Silent Traveller in Boston,
by Chiang Yee. (Courtesy of Boston Athenaeum)
The exhibit Chiang Yee: The Silent Traveller from the East,
celebrating both the author of the Silent Traveller books and
Zheng’s comprehensive study of his life and times, will run from
March 26 through May 30.
Zheng will speak on “Chiang Yee, the Boston Athenaeum,
and Cultural Understanding” at 6 p.m. Thursday, April 15, at
the Boston Athenaeum.
Center Spearheads Efforts to Teach Advocacy Skills at U.N.
Laura Roskos and Amy Agigian of the Center for Women’s Health
and Human Rights will offer experience in the art of advocacy at
the United Nations through sessions to be held in conjunction with
the 2010 Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference and the
meetings of the Commission on the Status of Women.
The 20 participants chosen for each session will gain
temporary delegate status, attend official and non-government
organization (NGO) sessions, and contribute to the documentation of both official and NGO meetings at the United Nations in
New York.
In addition to learning about negotiation, advocacy points and
networking, practicum participants complete several assignments,
the most important of which is to create an advocacy project when
they return to their home campuses.
“We teach the women how important citizen engagement is,”
said Roskos. “They figure out the ropes, learn how to network
with NGOs, meet government officials and participate in turning
specific proposals into documents that can be adopted by U.N.
bodies. This success empowers them to engage in successful civic
campaigns in their home environments.”
�Faculty Publications
Edward G. Bartick, Chemistry and Biochemistry, and Patrick
Buzzini, have published a chapter “Raman Spectroscopy
in Forensic Science” in the Encyclopedia of Analytical
Chemistry, 2009.
James Cataldo of Accounting and
Morris McInnes, associate dean of the
Sawyer Business School, had a paper “The
Role of Fair Value and Transaction-Based
Accounting Measures in Firm Valuation”
published in Chinese in Kuaiji yanjiu
(Accounting Research), Issue 7.
Tom Connolly, English, published
three major essays, “Critics,” “Eugene
O’Neill” and “Long Day’s Journey into Night” in Broadway:
An Encyclopedia of Theater and American Culture. He also
published an article “From First Nighter to Essayist: The (dis)
Establishment of/and Drama Critic John Mason Brown” in The
Journal of American Drama and Theatre, Vol. 20, No 3.
Lisa Coyne, Psychology, has published
a book The Joy of Parenting: An Acceptance
and Commitment Therapy Guide to
Parenting in the Early Years, 2009.
Colette Dumas, Management and
Entrepreneurship, published “KaBloom
Explodes on the Scene” with Beverly
Kahn, Jafar Mana, David Hartstein, and
Gina Vega in Case Research Journal, 30 (1).
Giana Eckhardt, Marketing. Her paper “A Brief History of
Branding in China” (co-authored with Anders Bengtsson) was
published in the Journal of Macromarketing, Nov. 2009.
C. Gopinath, Strategy and International Business. His
opinion column “Google is upset with China” was published in
The Hindu Business Line on Feb. 1, 2010.
Liz Drexler-Hines, Health and Wellness Services. Her
article “Peer Education: Is it Working?” was published in
College Health in Action, the American College Health
Association’s newsletter.
Peter Jeffreys, English. His edition of C.P. Cavafy’s
Selected Prose Writings will be published by the University
of Michigan Press this spring. The volume, which is part of
the University of Michigan’s series Writers on Writing, will
be jointly published in the United Kingdom as part of the
University of Birmingham’s Modern Greek Translations Series.
It is the first English translation of Cavafy’s prose works to
date. Also, Jeffreys’ book The Forster—Cavafy Letters: Friends
at a Slight Angle was reviewed in the Dec. 4, 2009, London
Times Literary Supplement (TLS) and will be translated into
Greek and published by the Ikaros Press (Athens) this summer.
T he SUN is published by:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-8447
sun@suffolk.edu
2
SUN
Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Managing Editor
Nancy Kelleher
Staff Writers
Karen DeCilio
Tony Ferullo
Design
Heather Clark
Micky Lee, Communication and Journalism. Her article
“Revisiting the ‘Google in China’ Question from a Political
Economic Perspective” will be published in China Media Research.
Raul and Carlos de la Fuente Marcos, Physics, Madrid
Campus, published two articles: “Not an open cluster after
all: the NGC 6863 asterism in Aquila” (co-authored with
Christian Moni Bidin and Giovanni Carraro) in the European
peer-reviewed journal Astronomy and
Astrophysics Vol. 510, Feb. 5, 2010, A44;
and “Drag-induced resonant capture in a
multiplanet scenario: An application to 55
Cancri A” published in the peer-reviewed
journal New Astronomy, Vol. 15, Issue 2,
Feb. 1, 2010, pp. 260-273.
Amy Marks, Psychology, has published
the book Immigrant Stories: Ethnicity and
Academics in Middle Childhood, 2009.
Susan Orsillo, Psychology, has
published a book, Mindfulness- &
Acceptance-Based Behavioral Therapies in
Practice, 2009.
Sebastian Royo, associate dean of the
college and director of the Madrid campus, has published “Reforms Betrayed?
Zapatero and Continuities in Economic
Policies” in the journal South European
Society & Politics Vol. 14, No. 4, Dec. 2009.
Yong Xue, History, had a Chinese-language column
“Zhōngguó yào l ǐ ngd ǎo ‘Jiǎ npái Shìjì’” (“China Must Lead
the ‘Emissions Reduction Century’”) published in the Jan. 18,
2010, edition of South Du Weekly. It was also translated into
English and posted on the Web site, European Tribune.
Vietnam Honors Marchant
English Professor Fred
Marchant displays the
Commemoration Medal
for the Advancement of
the Arts and Literature
in Vietnam awarded
during a ceremony held
on the eve of the 2010
International Conference
on Vietnamese Literature
in Hanoi. Marchant, with
Nguyen Ba Chung of the
William Joiner Center, has
published a translation
of From a Corner of My
Yard, the earliest book by
the beloved Vietnamese
writer Tran Dang Khoa.
(Photo by John Gillooly)
�New Faces
Please welcome our newest employees:
Genevieve Butler, Rappaport Center
Laura Chapman, Rappaport Center
Edwige Elysee, Academic Access and
Opportunity
Andrew Esposito, Student Financial
Services – Colleges
David Gibbs, Law Clinical Programs
Mary Gillis, General Counsel Office
Dulcineia Goncalves, Law Clinical
Programs
Joanna Kreisel, Provost’s Office
Paul Lyons, General Counsel Office
Jan-Marie Murray, Advancement
Sheila O’Leary, General Counsel Office
Lindsay Sheldon, Mail Services
Tiffany Sisko, Financial Aid – Law School
Michael Smith, Academic Access and
Opportunity
Year of the Tiger
Enjoying the 2010 Chinese New Year celebration are Education and Human Services Professor
Allan Tow; R. Scott Reedy, Center for International Education; Professor Ronald Suleski,
director of the Rosenberg Institute for East Asian Studies; Marguerite Dennis, vice president for
Enrollment and International Programs; Dan Wu, Center for International Education; and English
Professor and Asian Studies Program Director Da Zheng. (Photo by John Gillooly)
Potpourri
Robert Allison, History, was named an
honorary member of the Massachusetts
Society of the Cincinnati. The officers
in the Continental Army founded the
Society of the Cincinnati in 1783 to
honor Washington, whom they compared
to Cincinnatus, a Roman general who
gave up power and returned to private life
after saving the Republic. Membership is
limited to descendants of Washington’s
officers, though occasionally the Society
will honor a citizen with membership.
William Berman, Law School, received
the Community Project of the Year
Award from the Chelsea Human Services
Collaborative in recognition of the work
that he and his clinical students are doing
in Chelsea for tenants in foreclosed properties who are facing eviction.
Peter Jeffreys, English, gave lectures
promoting his recent edition of the E.M.
Forster-C.P. Cavafy letters, The Forster—
Cavafy Letters: Friends at a Slight Angle,
at the Greek Consulate in Boston and at
King’s College in Cambridge, England. He
will be speaking at Brown University and
the Greek Embassy in Washington D.C.
in April.
Lydia Martin, NESAD, and student
Tyler Tornaben, volunteer their time to
teach arts and crafts workshops at the
Heritage Apartments, a government
subsidized residence for the disabled in
East Boston.
Samantha Moppett, Law School.
Her poster “Acknowledging America’s First
Sovereign: Incorporating Tribal Justice
Systems Into the Legal Research and Writing
Curriculum,” selected by The Association
of American Law Schools (AALS) Section
on Legal Writing, Reasoning, and Research,
was presented at the AALS meeting held in
New Orleans in January.
Jeff Rhind of University Media
Services and Dania Swartz were married
on Dec. 16, 2009.
Yong Xue, History, appeared on the
National Public Radio program “On Point”
discussing the recent confrontation between
Google and China.
Job Shadow Day
Breana Mullins and Daedre Bolton, seniors
from Charlestown High School, shadowed
Frank Conte, director of communications
for the Beacon Hill Institute, during the
annual Job Shadow Day sponsored by the
Boston Private Industry Council and the
Boston Public Schools.
Lydia Martin’s valentine project.
Fe b r u a r y 2 010
3
�TO YOUR H E A L T H
No More Excuses…
Eat Your Breakfast!
If you are someone who thinks you don’t
have enough time to eat breakfast, think
again. We often spend our mornings running around getting our families ready for
the day, yet we forget ourselves in the mix.
Most of us know the benefits of feeding our
children breakfast: They will concentrate
better in school, have fuel for the day to be
more physically active and have fewer sick
days from school. Why don’t we apply the
same rules to ourselves?
Skipping breakfast decreases your
metabolism and makes it harder for you
to concentrate. This ultimately leads you
to snack impulsively later in the day. Why
not try some of these healthy and quick
breakfast ideas to start your day off on the
right foot?
• Smoothies are great options. Blend
low-fat yogurt with fruit (frozen or fresh
is fine), put it in a travel mug and go.
• Whole grain cold or hot cereals can
satisfy you for hours.
• Whole grain bagels with a little
peanut butter can keep you full until
lunchtime.
• Try baking a batch of bran muffins or
even hard boil some eggs the day before.
You can easily grab one in the morning.
Even if you are short on time, quick
and flexible options can give you plenty of
healthy ways to put breakfast back on to
your “To Do” list.
Of course, always speak with your medical provider about any health concerns you
may have.
Haiti Relief Effort
The campus community was quick to
respond to the devastation wrought by
the earthquake in Haiti, with faculty and
students from all three schools coordinating
efforts through SU ONE: Helping Haiti
Together.
SU ONE activities had raised $1,600
by late February, according to Dave
DeAngelis, director of Student Leadership
and Involvement.
As part of the effort, Facilities
Management has organized a campus
bottle and can drive, with collection bins in
the lobbies of each campus building.
4
SUN
Joshua Cheney and Yvette Velez step it up before starting their workday.
(Photo by John Gillooly)
Fitness Buddies Get Workday
off to an Energetic Start
Early-bird habits, an affinity for exercise and a convenient workout facility have created
an informal exercise group at the Rosalie K. Stahl Center.
Associate Dean of Students Rich DeCapua usually starts the workday at the
first-floor fitness room at 73 Tremont St., where he is likely to encounter regulars
Marguerite Dennis, vice president for Enrollment & International Programs;
Yvette Velez, director of Off-Campus Housing; Joshua Cheney, associate director
of Residence Life and Summer Programs; and Kinga Pastuszak, assistant professor
in the Counseling Center.
“The same group is always there,” said DeCapua, who arrives around 6:30 a.m. “We
kind of have a system of going from one machine to another.”
The fitness area is equipped with weight-lifting and aerobic exercise equipment and
offers lockers, showers and televisions. It is open morning through night to University
employees for a one-time membership fee of $20.
“I try to get in there five days a week, and I love it,” said DeCapua, an avid runner
who averages 50 miles per week and has participated in five marathons. “I feel much
better after working out, both mentally and physically. You feel more energized and
refreshed, and that helps you work better. ”
Dennis, too, talked about the energizing aspect of the fitness center.
“Working out here helps me to set the tone for the day,” she said. “It’s very convenient and a wonderful benefit of being in this building.”
Said Velez: “I’m fully awake after working out; it motivates me. Exercise always
helps to relieve stress in a person’s life. You need that outlet, especially in the cold
weather when it’s not that easy to run outside.”
�
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Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN), vol. 36, no. 2, 2010
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2010
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SUN
The Suffolk University News
May 2010 Vol. 36, No. 3
NEASC 2002 Effort Leads to Book Award for Bob Dugan
Responding to the 2002 NEASC selfstudy led Sawyer Library Director Bob
Dugan on a professional journey that
culminated recently in an award for
his book Viewing Library Metrics from
Different Perspectives: Inputs, Outputs,
and Outcomes.
The University is once again at
the data-collection stage of the New
England Association of Schools
and Colleges accreditation process,
providing an opportunity to examine
how well Suffolk is fulfilling its mis
sion, according to Vice President of
Academic Affairs Janice Griffith, who
is heading up the NEASC self-study
for 2012.
The American Library Association’s
recognition of Dugan’s book as the
winner of the 2010 Greenwood
Publishing Group Award for the Best
Book in Library Litera ure can serve
t
as inspiration to committees formed to
implement the self-study.
Viewing Library Metrics from
Different Perspectives, co-authored by
Dugan with Peter Hernon of Simmons Bob Dugan holds a copy of his award-winning book, an
College and Danuta A. Nitecki of
outgrowth of the 2002 NEASC accreditation process.
Drexel University, grew out of Dugan’s
(Photo by John Gillooly)
efforts to respond to NEASC Standard
7, Library and Other Information
based management information system
Resources, for the self-study submitted in
(SMIS) of library metrics.
2002. Dugan began developing a new means
He was able to develop basic tables so that
of organizing information about the library’s
the library could determine, for example,
holdings, one that has become a model for
how many books it owned and how many
other university libraries.
circulated.
Dugan, working with Assistant Director
“When we began our building program,
Becky Fulweiler, developed a statisticalwe could tell definitively how many books
we had and how much shelving we
would need, so we didn’t underbuild
or overbuild,” said Dugan. “We
also know the days and hours we’re
busiest, and that means we can staff
accordingly.”
Some fun facts that SMIS has
revealed about the Sawyer Library:
• The library’s busiest day is the first
Tuesday after Labor Day
• More than half of library usage
occurs from outside the building
• For every $1 the University spends
on the library, it returns more than
$8 in services
Now, as the University readies for
the next accreditation cycle, Duggan
said the NEASC form “will take us
about three minutes to complete,”
because all the necessary data is in
hand.
“We can show how far we’ve pro
gressed since the last self-study, and we
can show support from the University,”
he said. When the NEASC site team
arrives on campus, “we don’t have to
say, ‘This library is a good library.’ We
can show them what we do.”
“The NEASC self-study encour
ages us to explore what the University
is doing well and how we can
improve,” said Griffith. “The dynamics of
higher education have shifted rapidly in the
past two years. The recession and changed
leadership in Washington have resulted in
some new paradigms. A thorough self-study
will be extremely beneficial in helping us
plan for Suffolk University’s future.”
Living on the Dock of the Bay
David DeAngelis never has to worry about mowing the lawn
around his house, because he doesn’t have one. A house, that is.
DeAngelis lives on a sailboat at the Constitution Marina in
Charlestown. The place he calls home is 40 feet long, has the USS
Constitution as its neighbor and was built “for speed and comfort.”
His fascination with boats began at an early age.
“I grew up in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, in a boating family,”
said DeAngelis, the director of Student Leadership and Involve
ment. “I bought my first boat when I was 14 years old, a 13-foot
Boston Whaler. From that point on, I got ‘the itch,’ as they say in
the boating world.”
Continued on page 4
�Faculty Publications
Eric Bellone and Graham Kelder,
Paralegal Studies program, Education and
Human Services. Their article “Drug Court
Contract Issues under the Model Drug
Offender Accountability and Treatment
Act” was accepted for publication in the
International Law and Policy Review.
Melanie Berkmen, Chemistry and
Biochemistry. Her research “Cytoplasmic
acidification and the benzoate transcriptome
in Bacillus subtilis” with collaborator
Joan Slonczewski of Kenyon College was
published in the journal PLoS ONE, Vol. 4,
Issue 12, 2009.
Tom Connolly, English, has published
the book Genus Envy: Nationalities,
Identities, and the Performing Body of Work
(Cambria Press).
Micky Lee, Communication and
Journalism. Her article “Google ads and
the Blindspot Debate” will be published in
Media, Culture, and Society.
Lydia Martin, NESAD, showed her oil
painting, “La Estrella: Portrait of Jemima
Pierre,” at the Catharine Lorillard Wolfe Art
Club member’s exhibition at the Broome
Street Gallery in SoHo, New York City. The
portrait is part of a series of works Martin
is creating based on the Mexican children’s
card game, Loteria. On hand for the recep
Potpourri
Eric Bellone and Graham Kelder,
Paralegal Studies program, Education
and Human Services, presented a paper
“Drug Court Contract Issues under the
Model Drug Offender Accountability
and Treatment Act” at the International
Association of Law and Policy in
Washington D.C.
tion was Martin’s
former student and
Suffolk alumna
Jemima Pierre,
who posed for the
painting holding the
La Estrella card.
David
Silverstein,
Business Law and
Ethics. His article,
“The Rule of Law
Metric,” with
research assistant
Dan Hohler,
was accepted for
publication in the
American Business
Law Journal.
Lydia Martin and Jemima Pierre at the Broome Street Gallery exhibit.
Ronald Suleski,
director, Rosenberg Institute for East Asian
Studies. His book review “故都新貌: 遷都後
到抗戰前的北平城市消費 (“The Old Capital
in a New Guise: Market Consumerism after
Moving the Capital South to the Beginning
of the War of Resistance against Japan
[1928-1937]”) was published in the Journal
of Oriental Studies, 42. 1–2, pp. 215–218,
(2010). University of Hong Kong and
Stanford University. He also wrote the intro
duction to 從哈佛看中國: 中國問題學術演講
集 (China Seen from Harvard: A Collection
of Essays from the China Study Seminar).
Beijing: People’s Publishing House, 2010.
Bryan Trabold, English. His
article “Walking the Cliff’s Edge: The New
Nation ’s Rhetoric of Resistance in Apartheid
South Africa” was published in College
Composition and Communication, Vol. 61,
No. 2, December 2009.
Sustainability Plan in Place as Campus Celebrates Earth Day
The Suffolk University Sustainability Committee has released a
draft Campus Sustainability Plan to serve as a road map for cam
pus environmental initiatives.
The plan resulted from discussion among several departments
about how to integrate sustainability into planning and operations,
according to Erica Mattison, campus sustainability coordinator
and Sustainability Committee chair.
“We have been able to take many ideas from committee mem
bers and others and turn them into actionable items,” she said. “As
we strive to become a more sustainable institution, there is a value
in having a written plan to help prioritize and guide our efforts.”
The plan, which is available through the Sustainability Web
page — www.suffolk.edu/sustainability — describes recent
achievements, sets goals and outlines strategies. It addresses issues
that include green building practices, energy and water conserva
The SUN i s publ ished by:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-8447
sun@suffolk.edu
2
SUN
Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Managing Editor
Nancy Kelleher
Staff Writers
Karen DeCilio
Tony Ferullo
Design
Heather Clark
tion, waste reduction and recycling, environmentally preferred
purchasing, sustainable dining, and education and outreach.
Feedback from the campus community is welcome.
Last month marked the 40th celebration of Earth Day, and the
Moakley Archive and Institute and the Sustainability Committee
co-hosted Boston Harbor Islands: Past, Present, and Future. The
panel discussion highlighted the creation and ongoing manage
ment of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park and the groups
that made this transformation possible, including environmental
organizations, state and federal agencies, and elected officials.
Awards and recognition
The University’s efforts on behalf of sustainability were recog
nized when its employee education program on waste reduc
tion and recycling earned a Gold Achievement Award from the
Environmental Protection Agency’s WasteWise Program.
Suffolk also made the Princeton Review’s newest guidebook,
Guide to 286 Green Colleges.
In the latest RecycleMania, the national collegiate waste
reduction and recycling competition, the University placed 28th
of 267 schools in the Grand Champion category, which measures
waste reduction and recycling. This placed Suffolk in the top 10
percent for the first time since it began participating in 2007.
field of developmental education for the
adoption and dissemination of standards
of best practice and program recognition
through the Certification Program.” She
co-founded the national Certification
Program assuring high standards and best
practice of higher education academic sup
port programs across the country and was
The Center for Crime and Justice
editor of the original 1995 NADE Guides
Policy Research and the Jericho Circle
for Best Practice of Learning Assistance and
Project presented “Wearing the Scarlet
Developmental Education Programs and
Letter: A Symposium on Challenges
co-editor of the 2009 revision.
and Possibilities for those with Criminal
Bryan Trabold, English, delivered a
Backgrounds” featuring Fran Fajana from
paper “Memoirs, Counter-Narratives, and
the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute.
the Cold War: Mandela, Menchu, and
Tom Connolly, English, is a weekly
Satrapi” at the Conference for College
commentator on “The Callie Crossley
Composition and Communication in
Show,” WGBH radio FM 89.7. He contrib
Louisville, Ky. The paper examined
utes to the “Ragtime” segment, discussing
the rhetorical dimensions of memoirs,
the tabloid treatment of news stories and
specifically how they can offer alternative
commenting on popular culture. The show
historical narratives to those offered in
is also available on the WGBH Web site.
American history textbooks.
CAS Dean Kenneth S. Greenberg
Da Zheng, English. At the Asian
A worker guides an enormous slab of granite
was named an Organization of American
American Studies Conference in Austin,
sidewalk into place in front of the Modern
Historians Distinguished Lecturer for
Texas, he chaired a panel “Understanding
Theatre. The old stones from the sidewalk
2009-2010. As part of this program,
Asian American History through Life
and theater facade have been restored and are
Greenberg delivered the keynote lecture at
Stories” and delivered a paper “Ragged
now being reassembled. The residence hallthe Eighth Annual MU-KU Conference
Verse and the Chinese Diaspora.”
theater-gallery complex on lower Washington
on History – A Joint Meeting of the
Dmitry Zinoviev, Mathematics
Street will open this coming fall. (Photo by
Departments of History at the Universities
and Computer Science, delivered a
Gordon King)
of Missouri and Kansas, held at the
keynote address “Social networks: from
University of Missouri on April 16. His
Carrier Pigeons to Facebook” at the 4th
topic was “Nat Turner: A Slave Rebellion in History and Memory.” Spring International Conference on Knowledge Generation,
History Department News: Chair Robert Allison received
Communication and Management in Orlando, Fla. He also gave
the James M. “Jimmy” Kelly Award for Community Service at the
a technical talk “A Game Theoretical Approach to Modeling
South Boston Citizen’s Association 130th Anniversary Evacuation
Information Dissemination in Social Networks” and published a
Day Banquet in recognition of his work with the South Boston
namesake paper in the conference’s proceedings. The paper was
Historical Society. He also served as a judge in the Military
written in collaboration with department colleagues Honggang
Zhang and Vy Duong.
Historical Society of Massachusetts’s ROTC essay competition.
Staff and students were soaked as they rode with the South
Boston Historical Society in their Duck Boat in the Evacuation
Day/St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Carolyn Corretti will deliver a
paper “Marital Relations in Calvin’s Geneva, 1542–1549” at the
Sixteenth Century Studies conference in Montreal this October.
Pat Reeve was the keynote speaker at the opening of the Lawrence Please welcome our newest employees:
Heritage State Park exhibit commemorating the sesquicentennial
RuQayya Abdul-Baseer, University Police
of the collapse of the Pemberton Mill in 1860. A documentary
Gabrielle Aydnwylde, Public Management
film that examines the catastrophe includes commentary by
Jillian Bywell, Sawyer Business School Graduate Programs
Reeve. She also was interviewed by WERS radio (88.9 FM) for
Nicole Dussault, Advanced Legal Studies
an International Women’s Day broadcast that explored American
Mia Friedman, Rappaport Center
gender roles past and present.
Bibiana Gonzalez Viana, Information Technology Services
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the college and director of
Rachel Laisne, Registrar’s Office – Law School
the Madrid campus, presented “The Global Crisis and the Spanish George Leehan, Health & Wellness Services
Financial System” and “The Political Economy of Spain: From
Peter Mollo, Advancement
Boom to Bust” at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Norman Mourtada, Information Technology Services
CAS Associate Dean Emerita Susan Clark Thayer was
Douglas Saphire, Law Career Development
honored as a pioneer and trailblazer by the National Association of
Allison Strem, Law Support Services
Developmental Education (NADE) for “Meritorious service to the
Christopher Teague, Law Career Development
A Puzzle in Stone
New Faces
M a y 2 010
3
�TO YOUR H E A L T H
Pedaling Along the Road to Improved Health
National Bike Week—May 17–21— offers a chance to make a
positive change for good personal health, a fatter wallet and a
healthier planet.
For those living within biking distance of work, commuting on
two wheels can be a great option. Bicycle commuting incorporates
regular exercise into the day without the necessity of even having to
think about finding the time. In addition to decreasing the cost of
the daily commute, cutting down on driving trips by even a little
bit can do a lot to decrease air pollution.
Learn more about the University’s efforts to support biking to
work at www.suffolk.edu/offices/19868.html.
Cycling can have tremendous health benefits that include
decreasing cholesterol, blood pressure and the risk of heart attack.
Many people find that cycling also can help lower stress levels and
increase overall feelings of wellbeing.
Before hopping on the saddle, would-be cyclists should check
out a local bike shop for tips about what kind of bike is appropriate.
A well-fitted helmet is an essential piece of gear, and no one should
ever ride without one.
A check-in with a health care provider is also a good idea
for those who have any concerns about adding cycling to their
repertoire of physical activities.
Dave DeAngelis at home on the Nan-Sea in Charlestown. (Photos by John Gillooly)
Dock of the Bay
Continued from page 1
Eight years ago, DeAngelis moved to the Constitution Marina from New Haven, where
he was working at Quinnipiac University.
“Most people would simply pack up the moving truck and drive to their next location,”
he said. “I, on the other hand, untied my dock lines and sailed north for three days.”
His C&C cruiser racer is equipped with all the comforts of home, including two
bedrooms, a kitchen, living room, bathroom, two flat-screen televisions, electric and propane
heat, and hot running water.
“I live on the boat twelve months a year, and I love it,” said DeAngelis. “It’s a normal
house, except that it’s in the water. And I have as perfect a waterfront view as you’re ever
going to get.”
During the winter his boat is covered in shrink wrap to protect it from the elements.
However the boat truly comes to life in summer, with sails, flags and the freedom to cruise
the open sea.
“I boat every weekend in the summer,” said DeAngelis. “The people at the marina, who
are all ages and from all walks of life, are great, and we all get along. We socialize together
in our own little world or floating village.”
Living so close to the USS Constitution does have its challenging moments.
“The cannon goes off at 8 a.m. and sunset every day,” said DeAngelis. “Let’s just say that
you better be ready for it.”
4
SUN
�
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The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
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SUN_vol36no.3_2010
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Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN), vol. 36, no. 3, 2010
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2010
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUG-003.001: Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN)
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Suffolk University
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Suffolk Publications
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PDF Text
Text
SUN
The Law School Class of 2010 proceeds into the Bank of America Pavilion.
The Suffolk University News
July 2010 Vol. 36, No. 4
Brothers Edwin and Alan Dillaby. (Photos by John Gillooly)
Family Atmosphere Highlights 2010 Commencement
Alan and Edwin Dillaby always have been close, but their bond as
brothers reached new heights when they graduated together from
the University in May.
“It is an honor to be graduating with my brother,” said Alan,
staff assistant in the Public Management Office, who graduated
cum laude with a BSBA in accounting. “I would be in a very different place if it weren’t for his insight.”
Said Edwin: “Graduating with my brother is something very
special that not many siblings get to do.” Edwin, senior coordinator
in the Human Resources Office, graduated summa cum laude with
a BSBA degree in management. “I feel that working and attending
school together has kept us even closer.”
Edwin will continue in the Sawyer Business School’s MBA program, beginning this summer. Alan plans to apply to the school’s
Masters in Accounting program, with the goal of becoming a CPA.
There was more “brotherly love” at commencement, as
Christopher and David DiGuardia received master’s degrees in
Communication and Journalism and Mental Health Counseling,
respectively.
Christopher, who also earned his undergraduate degree in
Communication and Journalism from Suffolk, and David are the
sons of Bob DiGuardia, a longtime Suffolk employee who has two
Suffolk degrees, and his wife, Mary, who has three.
“Suffolk University has been part of my family since I came
here in 1973,” said Bob, director of applications in the Information
Technology Services Department. “My boys have literally grown
up here, walking the halls of Suffolk since childhood. We are all
grateful to Suffolk for the many opportunities it has afforded us.”
Continued on page 4
Camille A. Nelson to Become Law School Dean
Camille Nelson
Distinguished legal scholar Camille A. Nelson
has been named dean of the Law School, effective
Sept. 1.
“Camille Nelson joins us in sharing a
longstanding conviction that the potential for
excellence is unlocked when doors are opened
to people of ability from all backgrounds and
circumstances, and I am confident that she will
continue the Law School’s mission of opportunity,” said President David J. Sargent. “She is
committed to public service and the pursuit of
social justice, and we expect that the Law School
will flourish through her energy, collaborative
leadership style and vision.”
Nelson most recently was a professor of law at
Hofstra University School of Law. She earned her
law degree at the University of Ottawa Faculty
of Law and a master of laws from Columbia
Law School.
“Suffolk University Law School is an incredible
place, and I am honored to be joining its ranks,”
said Nelson. “It is a community of engaged scholars,
dedicated teachers, involved alumni, hard-working
professionals and exceptional students.”
�Potpourri
Barbara Abrams, Humanities and
Modern Languages, presented a paper
based on her new book, Le Bizarre and
Le Décousu: French Eighteenth Century
Origins of the Concept of Marginality, at the
American Society of Eighteenth Century
Studies conference in Albuquerque, N.M.
Erika Gebo, Sociology, was awarded
two grants from the Massachusetts Office
of Public Safety and Security to help
Massachusetts communities address youth
and gang violence.
Gordon King, Facilities Planning
and Management, participated in “The
Creative Band-Aid,” a panel discussion
on the improvement of campus facilities
in this fiscally constrained era, at the 31st
annual No Name Conference hosted by
the University of Illinois at Chicago. He
was invited by Tsoi/Kobus & Associates,
the designers of the Suffolk University
Law School, Sawyer Library and 73
Tremont Café. The facilities planning
conference brings together more than 100
college and university administrators,
designers and builders to share ideas, best
practices, trends and current issues related
to the design, construction and management of higher education campuses.
New Faces
Please welcome our newest employees:
Christine Adams, Marketing
Richard Arnold, Health & Wellness
Services
Jessica Bonzek, Law Career Development
Amy Dumouchel, Sawyer Library
Catherine Emmons, Advancement
Christine Haigh, Rappaport Center,
Law School
Kelsey McGuffie, Public Management
Wanda Rodriguez, Law Clinical Programs
Emily Shaer, Public Management
Alexa Simeone, Orientation and
New Student Programs
Alicia Vinal, Health Administration
T he SUN is published by:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-8447
sun@suffolk.edu
2
SUN
Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Managing Editor
Nancy Kelleher
Suffolk University will host the conference
May 15–17, 2011.
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of
the college and director of the Madrid
campus, presented “La Crisis Global y el
Futuro del Capitalismo” at the XXXV
International Spring Colloquium of
Universidad Nacional Autonoma de
Mexico (UNAM) and at Centro de
Investigación y Docencia Económicas
(CIDE) in Mexico City. The lectures
were organized by the U.S. Embassy in
Mexico. At UNAM, Royo was interviewed
on the radio for Macroeconomia Magazine
and Radiorama. He also was interviewed
by León Krauze of Televisa’s En Vivo in
Mexico City and by Noticias UnivisónNueva Inglaterra, a nightly Spanish news
station for New England.
Sean Solley, Interior Design, presented
a paper “The Second Oldest Profession”
at the Design Principles and Practices
conference hosted by Common Ground
Publishing and the University of Illinois in
Chicago. The lecture can be seen in two
parts on YouTube at www.youtube.com/
watch?v=t-ESiWoaDwo and www.youtube.
com/watch?v=wQxr4quCLmU.
President David J. Sargent meets Kaia Lynne
Gatlin on her first campus visit. Kaia was
born April 20, 2010, weighing in at 8 pounds,
4 ounces. Dad Greg Gatlin, director of Public
Affairs, mother Erica and sister Emilee couldn’t
be happier.
Faculty Publications
Edward Bander, Law librarian emeritus, has published The Hidden History of Essex Law
School, a fictional novel about a law librarian who writes two centennial histories of the
law school, the real one and the one the dean asks him to write. (Trafford, 2010). Since
his retirement in 1990, Bander has written two plays with his daughter, Lida Bander, The
Lottery and The Test. He is currently working on a play about people in assisted living.
Adam Glesser, Mathematics. His article “Control of transfer and weak closure in
fusion systems” with Antonio Díaz, Nadia Mazza and Sejong Park was published in
J. Algebra 323, 2010, no. 2, 382–392.
Erika Gebo and Carolyn Boyes-Watson, Sociology. Their article
“Reconceptualizing Organizational Change in the Comprehensive Gang Model” with
Sayra Pinto Wilson was published in the Journal of Criminal Justice, June 2010.
Donald Levitan, retired professor of public administration, has published The
Massachusetts Millennium (Alrain Books).
Thomas McGrath, Humanities and Modern Languages. His review of “Titian,
Tintoretto, and Veronese: Rivals in Renaissance Venice,” the exhibition held last year
at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, appeared in Renaissance
Studies, Vol. 24, No. 3 (Dec. 2009), pp. 437–444.
Sean Solley, Interior Design. His paper “The Second Oldest
Profession” was accepted for publication in Design Principles and
Practices: An International Journal of Design Theory.
Staff Writers
Ronald Suleski, director, Rosenberg Institute for East Asian
Karen DeCilio
Tony Ferullo
Studies. His review of the book Homosexuality and Manliness
in Postwar Japan was published in The Gay & Lesbian Review
Design
Worldwide, XVII.3, May–June 2010, p. 37.
Heather Clark
�What’s Old
is New Again
Workers painstakingly reassemble the restored
marble, sandstone and brownstone components
of the historic Modern Theatre facade. The
grand arch, rebuilt from the refurbished original
stones, is anchored by the careful placement
of the keystone. Next up is the marble slab
engraved with the Modern Theatre name.
The facade restoration is the centerpiece of a
Suffolk University project that will create a new
downtown residence hall, theater and gallery, to
open in fall 2010. (Photos by Renee DeKona)
Artwork Bodes Well for New Building
With guidance from artist Gowri Savoor, students received an experiential lesson in Indian
culture by creating a rangoli, one of the most popular art forms in India, inside the lobby
of the Donahue Building.
“I wanted my students to understand how folk traditions in India continue to exist today
and how an Eastern tradition and cultural memory can be transplanted to Western ground
and still be meaningful,” said Afshan Bokhari, assistant professor of Art History at the New
England School of Art and Design, who invited Savoor to campus.
In India, rangolis are commonly created outside homes to consecrate ground and to
ensure prosperity and success. The Suffolk rangoli was meant to bless the 20 Somerset St.
site of the planned New England School of Art & Design and “to ensure the future building’s successful completion and longevity,” said Bokhari.
Gowri Savoor and Afshan Bokhari in front of the
rongoli (Photo by John Gillooly).
J u l y 2 010
3
�Commencement
Continued from page 1
2010
✫✫✫
Photos by John Gillooly
Annamaria Mueller, alumni relations assistant at Suffolk University Law
School, received her BA in Sociology, graduating alongside her daughter,
Kimberly Cambria, who earned a BS in Sociology, with a Crime and Justice
track.
Nearly two years ago to the day, also in the Bank of America Pavilion,
Mueller received an associate’s degree with her daughter, Melissa Cambria,
who received a BSBA degree.
“My daughter, Melissa, and I made a pact a few years ago that we would
graduate at the same time,” said Mueller. “Like the first time with Melissa,
Kimberly and I also had a plan to graduate together this year. It was a lot of
time and hard work, but it’s all worth it in the end.”
Suffolk University and Suffolk University Law School awarded degrees
to a total of 2,461 students at commencement exercises on Saturday, May 22,
and Sunday, May 23.
Cory A. Booker, mayor of Newark, N.J., addressed Law School graduates,
and the commencement speaker for the undergraduate ceremony was Dr.
Paul Farmer, who has devoted his life to treating impoverished patients in
Haiti and other underdeveloped nations.
Wycliffe “Wyc” Grousbeck managing partner, governor and CEO
of the Boston Celtics, addressed the Sawyer School of Business graduate
commencement.
Suffolk University alumna Karen B. DeSalvo, MD, MPH, MSc, professor
of Medicine and vice dean of Community Affairs & Health Policy at Tulane
University School of Medicine, addressed those receiving advanced degrees
from the College of Arts and Sciences.
Kimberly Cambria and her mother, Suffolk Law
Alumni Relations Assistant Annamaria Mueller.
Justice John M. Greaney, director of the Macaronis Institute, salutes the crowd as he receives
his honorary law degree.
David Gallant, director of Undergraduate Advising
and Commencement 2010 Alumni Marshal.
4
SUN
�Assistant Dean of the College Sharon Lenzie and family with daughter Laura Liberge and son Brian Liberge
of Information Technology Services.
Joshua Magararu of Mail Services.
Public Management’s Erin McLaughlin.
Vice Presidents Francis X. Flannery, Janice C. Griffith, Marguerite J. Dennis and John A. Nucci; Provost Barry
Brown, Chairman Andrew C. Meyer, Jr., Mayor Cory Booker, President Sargent and Vice President Chris Mosher.
Vice President/General Counsel Paul Lyons and
Vice President Nancy Stoll.
Lt. Ramon Nunez and Chief John Pagliarulo.
Interim Law Dean Bernard V. Keenan.
J u l y 2 010
5
�✫
Commencement, continued ✫
Employee Graduates
James Alexander, BS
Kristen Bourque, Certificate,
Paralegal Studies
Laura Chapman, BSBA
Edwin Dillaby, BSBA
Alan Dillaby, BSBA
Loren Doucette, MED
Leah Doxtader, MSA
Mishell Fortes, MBA
Erica Lewis-Bowen, MSCJ
Joshua Magararu, MSCJ
Erin McLaughlin, MSCJS/MPA
Annamaria Mueller, BA
Jill Pierce, MS
Lark Rissetto, MA
Laura Chapman of the Rappaport Center for Law and Public Service and family.
Mishell Fortes of Law School Support Services.
Bob DiGuardia of Information Technology Services and his wife, Mary, with sons David
and Christopher.
Students Migline Pierre, Philvie Daniel and Stephanie Bonbon, all of whom hail from Haiti, with
Dr. Paul Farmer.
6
SUN
Kenneth Feinberg accepts honorary law degree
from President David J. Sargent.
�The Hon. Bernice Donald receives honorary law degree.
Erica Lewis-Bowen of Graduate Admission.
Boston Celtics CEO Wycliffe “Wyc” Grousbeck and Dean William J. O’Neill, Jr.
Chairman of the Board Andrew C. Meyer, Jr., Mayor Cory Booker, student speaker Jasmine Ortiz
and President Sargent.
Dean Kenneth S. Greenberg and honorary degree recipient Charles
Burnett at the Summa Dinner.
Dr. Karen L. Bollinger-DeSalvo and President Sargent.
J u l y 2 010
7
�Finding Balance through Wellness Challenge
Suffolk University became SO FIT University
from March 29 through
April 27 during the
second annual Wellness
Challenge for employees and students. The
30-day challenge is a
program created and co-sponsored by the
offices of Health & Wellness Services and
Human Resources.
The SO FIT challenge focuses not
on physical health alone; it is based on
“finding balance” in health and wellness.
The challenge uses the traditional model of
wellness, which incorporates social, intellectual, physical, spiritual, emotional and
environmental wellness as a framework.
SO FIT participants formed teams of
faculty/staff, students or a combination;
filled out weekly wellness score sheets; and
submitted them to the SO FIT team captains for scorekeeping. Points were accrued
for a range of health and wellness activities,
such as exercising, recycling, healthy eating,
limiting caffeine, and more. At the end
of the 30 days, a luncheon was held for
participants, with awards and prizes for the
top scores in each team category.
A large part of the SO FIT challenge was
participation in designated wellness events.
Many events were hosted or sponsored by
departments on campus, demonstrating
that if we think about wellness in a
holistic framework, we have many campus
SO FIT Cookbook and Recipe Challenge
Human Resources and the Office of Health and Wellness Services are putting together a SO
FIT Healthful Recipes Cookbook for the University community.
Members of the community are invited to share their favorite recipes for healthy appetizers, entrées, side dishes, desserts, smoothies or drinks. Entries should include the nutritional
information as well as the source of the recipe, i.e., Cooking Light magazine. Go to http://
recipes.sparkpeople.com/recipe-calculator.asp to calculate the nutritional information. One
recipe in each category will be highlighted in the cookbook as a “SO FIT Winning Recipe,
”
and the entrant will receive a prize. The University’s wellness ambassadors will choose two
recipes in each category to be prepared by a test team and then select the winners from that
group. Submissions must be sent to lanthony@suffolk.edu by Monday, Aug. 2.
The 2010 wellness ambassadors are Tim Albers, Judy Benson, Terry Bishop, Lou Brum,
Wendy Cimino, Jessica DaSilva, Victoria DeBassio, Marty Elmore, Jackie Gould, Maria Guerriero, Nichole Kaye, Janine LaFauci, Sharon Lenzie, Theresa Malionek, Keren McDowell,
Judy Reynolds, Vivian Rosado, Betty Sanes, Dhan Shrestha, Jonathan Talley, Janet Wolk
and Joe Wolk.
resources to help us find our balance.
Some highlights of the SO FIT programs
were: Mindfulness Meditations (Interfaith
Center), Build-A Lunch Workshop (Health
& Wellness), Service Day (S.O.U.L.S.),
Creativity as Self-Care (Counseling
Center), Laughing Your Way to Wellness
(Dr. Sushil Bhatia) and Fun Food Facts
with Trader Joe’s (Human Resources).
More than twice as many employees
participated in the challenge this year:
239 people completed all 30 days of the
challenge this year, compared to 102 in
2009. Individual participants logged an
average of 60 points per week by attending
wellness activities, working out, and generally being balanced and healthy, compared
to last year’s 58-points-per-week average.
The winners of the 2010 SO FIT
Challenge were:
• Faculty/Staff: Team SUPD (Sgt. Betty
Sanes, Mikhail Ilin, Dhan Shrestha,
Capt. Michael Ryan)
• Student: Team Da RAs (Arianna
Gulbus, Mike DiCairano, Sarah Veator,
TJ Golden, Stephanie Zito)
• Combination: Team Grad Admissions
(Judy Reynolds, Theresa Bishop, Kaitlyn
White, Rosanna Wan, Laura Kroh,
Mara Collins, Ellen Driscoll)
• Spirit: Team Wii Not Fit (Joe Wolk, AJ
Meyers, Mary Lally, Jeff Lane, Heath
Whelan, Craig Keller, Rachel Scott,
Ashley Ciampa, Nohara Lopez, Julie
Elias, Shirley Alexander-Hunt)
• Highest Individual Score: Judy Benson
Loud and Clear
Brian McDermott of Information Technology
Services outfits Gov. Deval Patrick with a
microphone as Patrick prepares to speak and
take questions as the final guest of the 2010
Gubernatorial Speaker Series presented by the
Rappaport Center for Law and Public Service.
Patrick made news across the country during
the forum when he used the word “sedition”
in discussing people “rooting for failure” in
their opposition to President Obama. (Photo by
John Gillooly)
8
SUN
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SUN_vol36no4_2010
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN), vol. 36, no. 4, 2010
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2010
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUG-003.001: Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN)
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
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SUN
The Suffolk University News
September 2010 Vol. 36, No. 5
New Ram Logo Continues Tradition of Athletic Spirit
The new Suffolk University Ram
is an imposing, yet majestic,
beast, born of a trans-Atlantic
collaboration between a University
art director and a top British
illustrator.
The University unveiled the sleek new athletics logo this month.
“It’s a wonderful modern version of what’s been a great tradition
for the University,” said Nancy Stoll, vice president for Student
Affairs. “It will give a real boost to the athletics program in terms
of visibility.”
The old Ram logo has served the University well since it was
created after the student body decided in 1950 that athletes would
compete as Rams rather than Royals.
The Ram image hasn’t had a major makeover in decades, and
the old icon’s level of detail makes for difficult reproduction on
clothing and in other materials. Stoll and others felt it was time to
consider a cleaner, more contemporary look.
Student Affairs turned to the Office of University
Communications, and Art Director Donald Suthard began the
process of creating an updated spirit logo.
Suthard had a sense of what a new icon should convey.
“First, I knew I wanted something that respected the animal,”
Suthard said. “Something that was
majestic, that was not cartoony.”
He also wanted a modern image
with simple lines, making for easier
and higher-quality reproduction.
After trolling through online portfolios Suthard came across the
work of Chris Mitchell, an internationally known illustrator based
in England.
“He had exactly what I was looking for,’” said Suthard.
“He was very experienced doing animals, and his animals
were beautiful.”
Mitchell has designed logos and other artwork for familiar
global brands, including Schweppes tonic water; and sports teams
such as England’s Tottenham Hotspur soccer club.
His drawings have an imaginative, identifiable and expressive
style, and the artist has a way of taking the essence of what he’s
representing and whittling it down to simple, striking shapes.
Collaborating through e-mail, Suthard sent the illustrator a
video of rams butting heads to emphasize that the new logo should
be aggressive and show action.
Continued on page 4
A Milestone for the Residential Campus
The University’s fourth residence hall opened as
students returned to campus, providing 200 beds in a
LEED Silver building that combines cutting edge construction and historic reconstruction in one facility.
The residence hall is the fourth to come online since
the University began the transition from a commuter to
a residential campus when it opened the 150 Tremont
St. residence hall to students in 1996. The Modern
Theatre residence hall also houses a theater and gallery.
“We have realized an important goal, as the
University is now housing 25 percent of its full-time
undergraduate students,” said John Nucci, vice
president for External Affairs. “This is good for the
city, which wants to preserve neighborhood housing
for city residents and revitalize the downtown area, and
it’s good for the students, because they have a safe and
convenient place to live, study and congregate.”
The residence hall is built on the site of the historic
Modern Theatre, Boston’s first movie house, and
the theater’s historic facade has been restored and
rebuilt. A celebratory opening will take place in early
November.
Rod Waters, director of Residence Life & Summer Programs, checks out a student
room in the new Modern Theatre residence hall as move-in day approaches. (Photo
by John Gillooly)
�Potpourri
John Berg, Government, was awarded the
Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement
Award from the American Political Science
Association in July. He presented “The
Left and Obama in American Politics” to
the Capitalist Crisis and Socialist Revival
panel at the Vienna conference of the
International Political Science Association
in June.
Simone Chun, Government. In June,
she delivered “Northeast Asia: Legacies of
Force and Prospects for Reconciliation”
at the Conference on Regional Peace
Building: The Korean Peninsula and
Northeast Asia at Lingnan University in
Hong Kong and “Capitalist Crisis, Organic
Intellectuals and Socialist Revival in the
21st Century” at the International Political
Science Association Conference in Vienna.
Richard DeCapua, Student Affairs, was
quoted in the June 13 issue of The Chronicle
of Higher Education in an article “Student
Services, in Outside Hands.”
Roberto Domínguez, Government,
has published two book chapters:
“Contributions of NATO and the EU to
European and Global Governance” in The
United States and Europe in a Changing
World; and “Las Relaciones Exteriores de
Massachusetts e Illinois” (The External
Relations of Massachusetts and Illinois)
in Regionalización y Paradiplomacia: La
Política Internacional de las Regiones.
He presented, “After Lima 2008: How
Effective Are the EU-Latin America
Summits” at the XXVIII International
Congress of the Latin American Studies
Association in Rio de Janeiro in June.
Weddings: Julia Collins, Archives, married Tim Howington on May 30.
Karen Corey, External Affairs, married Kevin Kelley on June 17. Brian Gowdy,
Vice President-Treasurer’s Office, married Kate Fillo on May 29. Liz Orlando
of Disability Services served as maid of honor.
C. Gopinath, Strategy & International
Business. At the Knowledge Globalization
Conference in Dhaka, Bangladesh in
May, he presented a paper “Perceptions
of Globalization: Exploratory Evidence”
with co-authors Christin Murphy, Antonin
Ricard and Jayshree Suresh; and conducted
a faculty development workshop on Exper
i
ential Learning. He also presented “Decision
Making in the Context of Globalization”
to the Madras Management Association in
Chennai, India in June.
Peniey McClary, Law School, was
named co-chair of the Law Schools Special
Interest Group (SIG) for The Association
for Continuing Legal Education (ACLEA).
This organization is devoted to the performance of CLE professionals.
Samantha Moppett, Law School, presented “Teaching the Third Sovereign: How
and Why to Include Tribal Nations and
Courts in Legal Writing Courses” with
Tonya Kowalski of
Washburn University,
at the 14th Biennial
Conference of the
Legal Writing Institute
in Marco Island, Fla.
in June.
Bob Rosenthal,
Communication and
Journalism, appeared
on the Fox25
Sebastian Royo with students from the Universidad Nacional de Rosario. Boston Morning
News on June 30
speaking about the
The SUN i s publish ed by:
Russian spy case.
Sebastián Royo,
Office of Public Affairs Executive Editor
Staff Writers
associate dean of the
73 Tremont Street
Greg Gatlin
Karen DeCilio
Boston, MA 02108
Tony Ferullo
college and director of
Managing Editor
617-573-8447
the Madrid campus,
Nancy Kelleher
Design
sun@suffolk.edu
taught “The global
Heather Clark
2
SUN
crises and the future of capitalism,” an
intense PhD course at the Universidad
Nacional de Rosario in Argentina, as part
of his Fulbright Senior Specialist Program
grant. He also gave a series of lectures at the
university and in the city of Rosario.
Kristin Sarkisian,
President’s Office,
met Mario Lopez at
the 7News Health
care Health & Fitness
Expo and received
Kristin Sarkisian and
a copy of his latest
Mario Lopez
book, Extra Lean.
Ron Suleski, Rosenberg Institute for
East Asian Studies, was featured in China
in the Eyes of Harvard: Interviews with
the Experts on China Issues in Harvard
University in the volume “Culture and
Academics,” pp. 49–66. The editors clearly
noted his move from the Fairbank Center
to the Rosenberg Institute for East Asian
Studies. “Chinese scholars all know the
name of the Fairbank Center,” he said, “and
they need to be aware that serious academic
study of China is also ongoing at Suffolk.”
David Yamada, Law School, was elected
National Executive Committee Chair of
Americans for Democratic Action. He
presented the keynote address “Workplace
Bullying and the Law, 2000-2010: A
Global Assessment” at the 7th International
Conference on Workplace Bullying and
Harassment, hosted by University of
Glamorgan, Cardiff, Wales in June; and
presented “The Adult Educator as Public
Intellectual” at Adult Education as Social
Education Revisited: Perspectives on the
Work of John Ohliger, a symposium in
conjunction with the 2010 annual meeting
of the Canadian Society for the Study of
Adult Education in Montreal.
�Faculty Publications
Darlene Chisholm, Economics. Her
paper “Product Differentiation and FilmProgramming Choice: Do First-Run Movie
Theatres Show the Same Films?” with
Margaret McMillan and George Norman
of Tufts University, was published in the
May 2010 issue of The Journal of Cultural
Economics.
Jerry Gianakis, Public Management, has
published “What Hath the GASB Wrought?
The Utility of the New Reporting Model:
A National Survey of Local Govern ent
m
Finance Officers” in Volume 22, Issue 2 of
the Journal of Public Budgeting, Accounting
and Financial Management. The research was
co-authored by Professor Howard Frank of
the Florida International University.
Micky Lee, Communication and
Journalism. Her article “Localizing a global
amusement park: Hong Kong Disneyland,”
co-authored with Anthony Fung, Chinese
University of Hong Kong, has been reprinted
in the book Cultural Adaptation (Routledge).
Her book Free information? The case against
Google will be published by the Common
Ground in the fall of 2010. Lee was invited
by the editors of Feminist Media Studies to
contribute an essay on feminist political
economy of communication to the tenth
anniversary of the journal.
Raul de la Fuente Marcos and
Carlos de la Fuente Marcos, Physics,
Madrid Campus, published an article “The
New Faces
Evolution of Primordial Binary Open Star
Clusters: Mergers, Shredded Secondaries,
and Separated Twins” in The Astrophysical
Journal, Vol. 719, No. 1, 10 August 2010, pp.
104–118.
Ariel Markelevich and Lewis Shaw of
Accounting. Their article “An Analysis of
the Israeli XBRL-Adoption Experience,”coauthored with Hagit Weihs of Brandeis
University, appeared in the July 15 issue of
Haaretz, one of Israel’s largest newspapers.
The Hebrew version of the story was published in The Marker, the major financial
newspaper in Israel.
Quentin Miller, English, published
an essay “On the Road with the Final
Four…Writers” in The Chronicle of Higher
Education in July. His reference volume
essay on T.C. Boyle was published in
American Writers (Gale/Scribner’s reference,
2010, 17–32); his review of Peter Caster’s
book Prisons, Race, and Masculinity in
Twentieth-Century U.S. Literature and
Film appeared in Callaloo (Summer, 2010:
564–566); and his guest-edited special
issue of Obsidian on James Baldwin was
published in summer 2010.
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the
college and director of the Madrid campus,
published “Portugal and Spain in the EU:
Paths of economic divergence (2000–07)”
in the Portuguese journal Análise Social,
Vol. XLV (195).
Please welcome our newest employees!
Michelle Auerbach, Provost’s Office
Elizabeth Basset, Student Financial
Services—Colleges
Dominique Cadet, Dean’s Office—
Law School
Robert DeStefano, Budget Office
Melanie Funken, Center for International
Education
Brittany Garner, Residence Life—
Somerset
Suzanna Haggstrom, Facilities
Management
Jason Harris, Academic Computing—
Law School
Robert Hodge, Law Library
Kayley Kravitz, English
Jesse Martin, Law Library
Alvin Nguyen, Residence Life—
150 Tremont St
Edward Smith, Student Financial
Services—Colleges
Justin Sultzbach, Mail Services
Dmitry Zinoviev, Mathematics and
Computer Science. He published a paper “A
Game Theoretical Approach to Modeling
Full-Duplex Information Dissemination”
with Vy Duong in the Proceedings of
the Summer Computer Simulation
Conference-2010. Zinoviev presented the
paper at the conference.
Stefanescu Receives NSF Grant
From Hong Kong to Boston
Twenty-three students from the City University of Hong Kong spent
this summer improving their English skills and learning about the
historic city of Boston as part of a new, six-week program sponsored
by the University’s Center for International Education. Students
Theresa Tsui and Henry Lo attended English classes, led by Elaine
Pascale and Ruth Collins of Second Language Services.
The National Science Foundation has awarded Math & Computer
Science Professor Dan Stefanescu a three-year Research Experience
for Undergraduates (REU) grant.
The $320,000 grant establishes the University as a national REU
site for undergraduate students from across the country to study
advanced topics and conduct high-quality research in computer
science.
“This is quite a prestigious grant, and I’m very excited to receive it,”
said Stefanescu. “It shows all the good work we perform here in our
department, in addition to enhancing Suffolk’s national reputation.”
Stefanescu and Math & Computer Science Department colleagues Dmitry Zinoviev and Honggang Zhang and Sukanya Ray
of the Psychology Department will lead students in conducting
research projects that investigate various aspects of massive online
social networks.
This is the second major grant awarded to the Math & Computer
Science Department. Last year, Assistant Professor Honggang Zhang
received a five-year, $400,000 NSF grant, “CAREER: Unstructured
Dynamic Overlay Networks and Strategic Users,” to perform
computer networks-related research.
S e p t e m b e r 2 010
3
�Change of Season…
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Now is a
great time to get
energized and
prepare for the New
England weather
we all know is right
around the corner.
Here are some helpful tips for a safe
and healthy season:
Be careful walking and driving. As
the days get shorter and we get back
into our school and home routines, it’s
important to stay aware of what’s going
on around us.
Have chimneys professionally inspected
and cleaned before use. Imperfections in
the base could lead to carbon monoxide
being released into the home. Soot
buildup or birds’ nests could lead to fires.
Have furnaces cleaned to ensure that
they work efficiently.
Check and replace the batteries in smoke
and carbon monoxide detectors. Replace
smoke detectors that are more than 10
years old. Replace carbon monoxide
detectors that are more than 5 years old.
Check windows for leaks and install any
existing storm windows.
Prune trees now if the branches are too
close to electrical wires or the house.
Winterize cars: Replace wiper blades;
put an ice scraper/brush in the trunk.
Have cars serviced on schedule.
Keep up with or get started on exercise.
Happy Fall!
Strength in Numbers
The University Police Department participated in the 24th annual American Parkinson Disease
Association Walk-A-Thon to support colleague Greg Grande, center, who has Parkinson’s
disease. (Cory Brett Photography)
Community Engagement Celebrated
The Office of External Affairs this fall will publish the first of what will be annual
reports on the University’s community engagement efforts.
Suffolk University Community Engagement 2009-2010: Culture, Citizenship,
Service provides highlights of the University’s service-learning efforts, volunteer
outreach and cultural offerings. It features the good works of faculty, students, administrators and staff in a colorful booklet.
“This publication shows the University’s commitment to being a good neighbor
and putting its expertise to work for the greater good,” said John Nucci, vice president
of External Affairs. “It will be a valuable communications tool as the University works
with the community and city officials on issues of mutual interest.
New SU Ram
Continued from page 1
“Donald Suthard, in briefing me, knew
what he wanted and stuck by his vision,”
Mitchell said. “It was clear that the new
identity, whilst being a flagship for the
Athletics Department, had to be proudly
endorsed by the students and unite them
in their sporting endeavors. A modern,
powerful, dynamic, illustrative ram icon
was required while projecting an air of
style and prestige.”
Mitchell provided rough sketches of a
new ram image, which were shown, along
4
SUN
with the old icon, to student athletes and
others. The overwhelming consensus was in
favor of the version with the ram in an oval.
Suthard points to the work Mitchell did
with positive and negative space.
“With the hooves and tail, there are
expressive lines, just some beautiful work
he does there,” he said. “It’s bold, dynamic,
clean and immediately recognizable.”
The Suffolk University Bookstore
expects to begin stocking clothing and caps
with the new Ram logo in early October.
Meanwhile, plans are under way to
design a custom-made Ram mascot that
will reflect the Athletic Department’s
updated look.
Suthard stresses that the old Ram logo
will not be put entirely out to pasture.
Many alumni remain attached to it. And
there are precedents for old and new logos
that co-exist: Patriots fans can still buy
merchandise with the classic Pat Patriot
logo in addition to garb with the team’s
current logo.
�
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The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
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SUN_vol36no.5_2010
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Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN), vol. 36, no. 5, 2010
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2010
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUG-003.001: Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN)
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Suffolk University
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Text
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PDF
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English
Subject
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Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
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<p>Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.</p>
Suffolk Publications
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PDF Text
Text
SUN
The Suffolk University News
December 2010 Vol. 36, No. 6
Curtain Rises at Modern Theatre
Theatre Department Chair Marilyn Plotkins at the Modern Theatre opening
ceremony. Student performers sing Meet Me Tonight at the Modern, Marie
during the community open house. (Photos by John Gillooly)
The historic Washington Street theater once described by Marilyn
Plotkins, chair of the Theatre Department, as “a magnificent
ruin,” is back in business.
The University unveiled the new Modern Theatre in early
November with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and community
open house bringing a brand new performance space to Boston’s
Theater District.
The Paramount Theatre and the Opera House are the other
rescued “jewels” in the area.
“This part of Boston has now become a destination. This
is part of a larger revitalization that has been dead for so many
years,” said Plotkins.
At the open house, members of the University community
and passersby toured the theater and lobby gallery and enjoyed
featured performances by students, including a rendition of the
old song, Meet Me Tonight at the Modern, Marie.
In an interview with the Boston Globe, Plotkins stressed
the advantages of the 185-seat jewel box theater. “The idea is that
you could do intimate performances that really focus on words
and language. We provide the intimate experience that can only
be had in a small theater. Rather than saying, ‘Why aren’t we 600
seats,’ let’s celebrate the fact that we are one of three theaters on
lower Washington Street built to do different things well.”
“The programming will be modeled after what one might
find at the 92nd Street Y in New York City,” she added.
The Modern Theatre at Suffolk University has planned an
inaugural season of programming that—like the theater itself—
is intimate in scale, thoughtful in content, and contemporary
and innovative in approach. It will focus on three themes: performance, cinema and conversation
Continued on page 3
T he 2010 Deans’
Reception
Professor of History John Cavanagh and
wife Beth Graham take a moment before
entering the Museum of Fine Arts to
celebrate his 40 years of dedicated service
to the University at the Deans’ Reception,
an annual event honoring faculty,
administrators and staff. More photos,
pages 4, 5 and 6. (Photo by John Gillooly)
�Potpourri
Frank Barrett, External Affairs,
Adam Nelson, Athletics,
was named to the Downtown
and wife Deb welcomed their
Boston Business Improvement
fourth child, Cooper, on Aug.
District’s (BID) Neighborhood
18. He joins brothers AJ and
Advisory Board.
Jack, and sister Mollie.
Eric Bellone and Graham
John Nucci, vice president
Kelder, Applied Legal Studies,
for External Affairs, was elected
presented their paper “Contract
to the Downtown Boston
Issues and Specialized Courts:
Business Improvement District’s
The Price of Admission” at
(BID) Board of Directors.
the Annual Conference of the
Sebastián Royo, associate
North Atlantic Business Law
dean of the college and direcAssociation in Boston.
tor of the Madrid campus,
Sara Chadwick, NESAD,
presented “From Boom to
presented a session for prospecBust—The Spanish Financial
tive members of the National
Sector and the Global Crises”
Association of Schools of Art
at the University of Victoria,
and Design (NASAD) with
British Columbia, and “Portugal
Karen Moynahan, associate
in the European Union—The
director of NASAD, at the
Limits of Convergence” at
Karen Clarke and Jeanne Kopacz, NESAD, received first place honors at
association’s annual meeting in
Izmir University in Turkey.
the 2010 American Society of Interior Designers (ASID) New England
Cincinnati, Ohio.
He also presented “Portugal
Design Excellence Awards. Clarke received the Residential First Place
Darren Deegan, University
and Spain: The Global
for a kitchen design project, and Kopacz was awarded Contract First
Police, has been appointed
Crisis and the Challenges of
Place for a corporate office over 10,000 square feet.
Crime Prevention Officer.
Economic Reforms” at the
Victoria Dodd, Law School,
U.S. Department of State and
“Reforms Betrayed: Portugal
has been nominated a fellow of
and Spain in the EU” at the
the American Bar Foundation.
annual meeting of the American
Jacinda Felix Haro,
Political Science Association.
Diversity Services, was elected
to the Higher Education
Lew Shaw, Accounting,
Steering Committee of the
and Paul Tanklefsky, Career
Commonwealth Compact.
Services and Cooperative
Peter Jeffreys, English,
Education, participated in the
is the associate editor, Arts &
Hub on Wheels bicycle event to
Humanities, for the Journal
help support Technology Goes
of Modern Greek Studies (The
Home, a training program that
Johns Hopkins University
helps Boston Public School
Press), the official journal of
students receive the technology
the Modern Greek Studies
skills needed to succeed in
Association.
today’s world. Other Team
Antjelina Newman, Evan Miglorie, Lew Shaw and Paul Tanklefsky
Jessica Krywosa,
Suffolk participants were
University Communications,
students Antjelina Newman
presented “Web Analytics: Answering the Right Questions (for
and Evan Miglorie, president of Suffolk Bikes.
higher ed)” at the Stamats SIM Tech Conference in Las Vegas.
Allan Tow, Education and Human Services, was named to the
Quentin Miller, English, delivered a paper on John Updike and board of the Chinese Historical Society of New England.
Jack Kerouac, “Rabbit Running on the Road” at the first biennial
Carole Wagan, Advanced Legal Studies, has accepted an
John Updike Society conference in Reading, Penn. The next
appointment to the American Bar Association’s Section of Legal
biennial conference will be held at Suffolk in June, 2012. He also
Education and Admissions to the Bar newly formed Committee
was named to the editorial board of The John Updike Review, the
on Conferences.
inaugural issue of which will be published next year.
Mitchell Weisberg, Strategy and International Business,
delivered a keynote address “The Role of Print Media in the Digital
Future” at the Conference on the Future of the Regional Press in
T he SUN is published by:
Puerto Delgado, Azores, Portugal.
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-8447
sun@suffolk.edu
2
SUN
Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Staff Writer
Tony Ferullo
Managing Editor
Karen DeCilio
Design
Heather Clark
�Faculty Publications
C . P. C A V A F Y
selected prose works
translated and annotated by Peter Jeffreys
Eric Bellone and Graham Kelder, Applied
Legal Studies. Their article “Contract Issues and
Specialized Courts: The Price of Admission”
was accepted for publication in the Business Law
Review, June 2010.
Victoria Dodd, Law School, has published
the second edition of her education law treatise
Practical Education Law for the Twenty-First
Century (Carolina Academic Press 2010).
Peter Jeffreys, English, has published
his translation of C.P. Cavafy’s Selected Prose
Works (University of Michigan Press). It is
the first English translation of Cavafy’s prose
writings ever published and appears in the series
Writers on Writing. He also published an article
“Performing in Prose: Cavafy’s Πεζά and the
Problematics of Style” in Imagination and Logos:
Essays on C.P.Cavafy. The volume is part of a
new series, Harvard Early Modern and Modern
Greek Studies (Harvard University Press).
Micky Lee, Communication and Journalism.
Her article “A feminist political economic
critique of the human development approach
to new information and communication
technologies” will appear in International
Communication Gazette.
Richard Torrisi, International Business.
His paper “Transition Economies: A Calculus
of Competitiveness” (co-authored with
GokhanYslu) has been accepted for publication
in the Journal of Applied Business and Economics.
Da Zheng, English and Asian Studies. His
article “Chiang Yee, the Boston Athenaeum,
and Cultural Understanding” was published in
the Chinese Historical Society of New England
Newsletter (fall 2010, vol.16, no.1, pp.15–17).
Modern Theatre
Continued from page 1
The season opened with “Flamenco @ the Modern,” presented
by Casa Patas, the internationally acclaimed flamenco artists,
and featured dancer/choreographer José Barrios in In Case Dawn
Breaks with special guest, legendary jazz trumpeter Arturo
Sandoval.
Additional programming will include a reading by F. Murray
Abraham of The Last Will and the Actors’ Shakespeare Project’s
production of Antony and Cleopatra, featuring Paula Plum.
The theater will host a documentary film series with DocYard
Productions, and its “Conversations” lineup includes comedian
Lewis Black and Daily Beast political journalist Peter Beinart,
The grand facade of the historic theater, Boston’s first
designed specifically for showing movies, has been painstakingly
restored, stone by stone, and reconstructed as part of the Modern
Theatre and 10-story residence hall built in a setback above the
theater.
The interior of the theater also draws on the original. Tonyaward-winning theater scene painter and designer John Lee
Beatty created a mural design for the stage house walls, inspired
by colors and themes from the earlier theater.
Meanwhile, the first exhibit in the lobby gallery features
artifacts from the original movie house and vintage photographs
of the building.
The spirit of the old Modern Theatre is alive and thriving on
lower Washington Street.
Books from Japan and Korea
Ron Suleski, professor and director of the Rosenberg Institute for East
Asian Studies, and Acting Sawyer Library Director Rebecca Fulweiler
accepted a collection of books for the Sawyer Library’s East Asian
section. The books were donated by the Japan Foundation and Wontak
Hong, professor emeritus at Seoul National University in Korea.
D e c e m b e r 2 010
3
�Deans’ Reception 2010
40-Year Honorees
John Cavanagh, History
Joseph Cronin, Law School
Jack Hajj, Math & Computer Science
Harvey Katz, Psychology
John O’Callaghan, Government
30-Year Honorees
Linda Brown, New England School
of Art & Design
Paul Curran, University Police
Gregory Curtis, Information Technology
Robert DeFillippi, Strategy &
International Business
Rosemarie DiBiase, Education & Human
Services
Tyrone Johnson, University Police
Joanne Joseph, Law Registrar
Celeste Kostopulos Cooperman,
Humanities and Modern Languages
Thomas Finn, Law School
Paula Fleck, Bursar, Student Accounts
Russell Murphy, Law School
Steven Spitzer, Sociology
Susan Sweetgall, Law Library
Elizabeth McDowell, Career Services &
20-Year Honorees
Neldy Arsenault, Facilities Management
Sarah Carroll, Education & Human
Dan Stefanescu, Math & Computer
Cooperative Education
Carl Merrill III, Biology
Joyce Miller, Advancement
Irina Peterburgsky, Math & Computer
Science
Services
Professor of Psychology Harvey Katz.
Vicki Croce, Biology
10 Year Honorees
Dahlia Alexander-Bryan, Academic
Thomas Dellicicchi, Academic
Computing
Kevin Austin, Mail Services
Rosetta Baetzel, Law School
Registrar’s Office
Andrew Beckerman-Rodau, Law School
William Berman, Law School
Andrea Bishop, Information Technology
Susan Bonvouloir, Enrollment &
Retention Management
Ron Boston, Information Technology
Yvens Boucicaut-Louis, Law Library
Timothy Brown, Ballotti Learning Center
Luis Brum, Law School Dean’s Office
Richard Buckingham, Law Library
Courtney Carrabino, Chemistry &
Biochemistry
Lori Cawthorne, Human Resources
Lisa Celovsky, English
Craig Christensen, Electrical &
Computer Engineering
Pamela DeMeo, Payroll
4
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Computing
Christopher Diblasi, University Police
Sonia Didriksson, Sawyer Library
Lawrence Flynn, Law Library
Michael Gianetta, Sawyer Library
Patricia Hogan, Physics
Kristi Jovell, Law School Financial Aid
Brett Kinney, Law School Financial Aid
Erica Lewis-Bowen, Graduate Admission
Anne Macdonald, Information
Technology
Christine Maher, Sawyer Business School
Graduate Programs
Catherine McCabe, Marketing
Brian McDermott, Information
Technology
David Medoff, Education &
Human Services
Ian Menchini, Law Admission
Quentin Miller, English
Richard Miller, English
Science
Laurie Umansky, History
Meera Venkatraman, Marketing
Venus Williams, Student Leadership
Elisabeth Moes, Psychology
Samantha Moppett, Legal Practice Skills
Jonane Nicolas, Law Library
Ana Perez Rivera, Sawyer Business School
Graduate Programs
Ronald Perreault, Academic Computing
Polievkt Perov, Physics
Carol Powers, Human Resources
Melanie North Powers, Law Library
Kathryn Rodrigues, Math &
Computer Science
Marc Rodwin, Law School
Karan Sandhu, Budget Office
Wesley Savick, Theatre Arts
Robert Smith, Law School
Pedro Valentin, University Police
Carmen Veloria, Education &
Human Services
Leigh Worrick, Facilities Management
Photos by John Gillooly
�Anne Macdonald, managing associate director,
Information Technology Services.
Kristi Jovell, director, Law School Financial Aid,
and Law Dean Camille Nelson.
Bursar Paula Fleck and staff members Lindsay Robichaud, student loans
and collections coordinator; Danny Luu, assistant bursar; Eric Sacca, student
accounts representative; Dorothy Barry, counselor; and Ann-Marie Ormond,
campus card assistant.
Linda Brown, professor and program director,
Foundation Studies, NESAD.
Patricia Hogan, associate professor, Physics,
and Sarah Carroll, associate professor,
Education and Human Services.
John O’Callaghan, associate professor of government, and
College of Arts and Sciences Dean Kenneth S. Greenberg.
Law Professor Thomas Finn, Susan Sweetgall, associate director of the Law Library, Law Dean
Camille Nelson and Law Professor Robert Smith.
D e c e m b e r 2 010
5
�Deans’ Reception 2010, continued from page 5
Professor of Sociology Steven Spitzer and College of Arts and Sciences Dean
Kenneth S. Greenberg.
Christine Maher, assistant director of MBA
programs, and Sawyer Business School Dean
William J. O’Neill Jr.
Acting President and Provost Barry Brown, Karan Sandhu, associate budget director, Maureen
Stewart, budget director, and Vice President-Treasurer Francis X. Flannery.
Neldy Arsenault, locksmith, Facilities Management, and Vice President
for External Affairs John Nucci.
6
SUN
Robert DeFillippi, professor of Strategy and International Business
and co-director, Center for Innovation and Change Leadership,
and Sawyer Business School Dean William J. O’Neill Jr.
Joyce Miller, AIS manager, Advancement, and Vice President of
Advancement Chris Mosher.
�EAP2 Offers Debt Relief
It’s getting to be that time of
year… plenty of celebrations and
inevitable overspending. Rather
than assuming debt is just a part
of life, this could be the year for
change.
Take advantage of one of
the exciting new and cost free
benefits for faculty, staff and
members of their households.
The Employee Assistance Program (EAP2), offered
through The Wellness Corporation, provides a wide
variety of short-term counseling and referral services,
including budget planning and debt management.
Here are some other tips to help get started:
■■ Track spending. You might be surprised about
where your money is going.
■■ Don’t use credit cards if you don’t have money to
spend. You will end up paying more in finance
charges and late fees.
■■ If you don’t have enough money to purchase
gifts, why not be creative and tap into your own
talents? People love baked goods or handmade
gifts. Maybe someone in your life would appreciate some help around the house or just a nice
visit from you.
■■ Start saving now for the future. See if you can set
aside even a little bit each month.
No matter what you do, try your best not to get
overwhelmed. Making small changes along the way
can have a big impact. Enjoy the season!
EAP2: New Assistance Program for Employees
The University has introduced a new service for employees, the Employee
Assistance Program (EAP2), a confidential and voluntary counseling and
referral service, provided free of charge to faculty, staff and members of
their households. The plan is offered to help employees manage the problems, challenges and issues in their work and personal lives.
The acronym EAP is used in most literature explaining employee assistance. At Suffolk the program will be called EAP2 to distinguish it from the
University’s Emergency Action Plan which is referred to as EAP
.
The services are available through The Wellness Corporation, with
licensed counselors providing assessment, short-term counseling and,
when appropriate, referrals for marital/family relations, emotional difficulties and problems caused by alcohol and/or other drug abuse.
The short-term counseling meetings are limited to three sessions
per issue or per family unit, but continuity of care between the EAP2 and
Suffolk’s health plans is maintained to assure that continuing counseling
may be covered under the health plan for eligible services.
The EAP2 replaces the excellent counseling service provided to
employees by the University Counseling Center for a number of years. The
Counseling Center must focus attention on student service. However, the
staff remains available to employees who wish to consult, discuss referrals
or other matters.
EAP2 also offers financial planning services, budget or debt assistance,
legal consultation and referral services, new parent transition coaching, and
health coaching through “Healthy Start. In addition, the EAP2 will replace
”
the child care and eldercare assistance previously offered by WarmLines.
In September all eligible employees received a letter explaining EAP2.
Additional information is available on The Wellness Corporation Web site:
www.WellnessWorkLife.com or on the link from the Human Resources site.
To access services call 1-800-828-6025. Licensed, trained counselors are
available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to provide assistance.
Human Ribbon
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month kicked off with more than
300 members of the University
community donning pink T-shirts
and forming a human ribbon to
show their support for the fight
against breast cancer. “This
is the ninth consecutive year
participating in Breast Cancer
Awareness Month at Suffolk
and it has gotten bigger and
bigger every year,” said Norine
Bacigalupo, a professor in the
Communication and Journalism
Department and a breast cancer
survivor. “It has pulled the
whole school together with
everyone in the community
becoming involved.” (Photo by
John Gillooly)
D e c e m b e r 2 010
7
�Performing Arts Director
Takes Center Stage
Kristin Baker, director of the Performing Arts
Office, has been named president of the board
of directors for Stage Source, The Greater
Boston Theatre Alliance.
Baker is the first woman to be elected to this
position, and will serve a two-year term. She
will step down as co-chair of the organization’s
education committee (which she has served for
the past four years), but will continue to have a
hand in its operations.
In her dual role at Stage Source and Suffolk,
Baker hopes to connect University students
with the Boston area’s burgeoning theater scene
through Stage Source membership discounts,
internship opportunities and free tickets to
shows. She also hopes to bring a series of panel
discussions relating to careers in theater to
Suffolk students.
“It’s a bit intimidating, but I’ve inherited a
very successful operation and a track record of
10 years of budget balance and surplus,” said
Baker. “I’m hoping over the next two years that
we can continue that growth.”
Stage Source provides leadership and services
to advance the art of theater in the Greater
Boston region by uniting a broad network of
theater artists, theater companies and related
organizations.
Honored With Heritage Medallions
The University recognized the commitment of four people who made outstanding
contributions to the life of the University through its 2010 Heritage Medallion
Ceremony on Sept.21. Those attending included honorees Charles P. Kindregan, faculty
member, associate dean, and director of the Center for Professional Development,
Law School and Kenneth F. Garni, retired director of the Counseling Center and chair
of Psychological Services, College of Arts and Sciences. Family members accepting
the medallions posthumously were Patricia E. Tucker for her sister Marjorie C.
Kelleher, director and associate director of Adult and Evening Studies for Enrollment
Management, director of leadership gifts and grants officer for the Development
Office, and administrative assistant, President’s Office, and Jay Linnehan for his father
James F. Linnehan, chairman of the Board of Trustees, life trustee, term trustee and
first alumni-elected trustee. (Photo by John Gillooly)
Emergency Plan
Updated
The Incident Command core team reports that
the University’s Emergency Action Plan has been
updated. The plan contains the protocols for
emergency campus response and other emergency data as well as information about the Incident
Command team. It can be accessed by faculty,
administrators and staff through the tab “SU
Emergency Plan” on the MySuffolk portal. The
format is a searchable WIKI platform for easy
access to information by topic. For more information, e-mail Risk Manager Karen Kruppa.
Café 73 Opens in Stahl Center
Tracy Fersan of the Center for International Education and Sara Port of Undergraduate
Admission, grab a snack at the newly opened Café 73 in the Rosalie Stahl Center.
Café 73 is a convenient location for employees and students studying in the library to
purchase coffee and food. Hours are 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. (Photo by
John Gillooly)
8
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�
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SUN
The Suffolk University News
March 2011 Vol. 37, No. 1
Working Together for a Better Campus & Community
Collecting Evidence in Support of Self-Study
Carnegie Classification Recognizes Service
More than 100 members of the University community are directly
involved in preparing for the New England Association of Schools
and Colleges reaccreditation, which offers the University an opportunity to reflect on its accomplishments and challenges since
its 2002 NEASC accreditation.
The NEASC review process has become more stringent in the
intervening years due to increased concerns expressed by the public,
policy makers and educators on the quality of higher education,
according to Vice President for Academic Affairs Janice Griffith.
In addressing the issue of quality, the self-study will discuss
the University’s implementation of student learning assessments
that better enable it to understand how well students are meeting
expected learning outcomes.
Donna Qualters, chair of the Education and Human Services
Department and director of the Center for Teaching Excellence,
has joined Griffith in the reaccreditation effort. She serves as special
assistant to the president directing the committees and participants,
who will complete the self-study process before the University is
visited by the accreditation team in 2010. University faculty, administrators and staff were invited to engage in the self-study through a
survey made available in January and early February.
“The survey enables us to see how well people perceive various
operations within the University” and is part of an ongoing effort
to improve communication on a day-to-day basis, an issue touched
on in the previous assessment, said Griffith.
The self-study is based on 11 standards of excellence.
“The NEASC standards offer valuable guidelines to institutions in self examining their effectiveness in achieving their
mission,” said Qualters. “Therefore this self-study process allows
us to determine our most successful practices and ways in which
we may need to improve.”
In addition to a steering committee, there are subcommittees
working on each of the standards, which address:
■■ Mission and Purpose
■■ Planning and Evaluation
The University has earned the Carnegie Foundation’s
Community Engagement Classification, which recognizes “the
mutually beneficial exchange of knowledge and resources”
between the institution and the community.
“This achievement is the result of a University-wide effort,”
said Carolina Garcia, director of the S.O.U.L.S. Community
Service and Service Learning Center., who, with University
Archivist and Moakley Institute Director Julia Howington,
initiated the effort to collect and analyze data for the Carnegie
Classification application.
Work on the application began two years ago and revealed
a depth and breadth of community engagement that went
beyond what any single person or department had previously
recognized.
“The wonderful thing about the Carnegie application process was the collaboration among all three academic units and
the central administration as they documented and analyzed
information about a multitude of community engagement
efforts,” said Assistant Provost Suzanne Gallagher.
Continued on page 3
Camera Shy
Academy-award-winning director Michael Cimino strikes a playful
pose during his appearance at the Modern Theatre. He engaged
in a conversation with author and Distinguished Visiting Scholar
James Carroll following a screening of his film Year of the Dragon.
The new theater is proving to be a smash hit on Washington Street.
Story Page 7. (Photo by Ken Martin)
Continued on page 2
�Grant Funds Forensic Research
Edward Bartick, director of the Forensic Science program, has been
awarded a grant by the National Institute of Justice for “Evaluation
of Statistical Measures for Fiber Comparisons: Interlaboratory
Studies and Forensic Databases.”
The one-year grant funds a collaboration among three universities and three police laboratories: Suffolk University and the Crime
Laboratory Unit of the Boston Police Department; the University
of South Carolina and the South Carolina State Police Laboratory;
and Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis and the
Indiana State Police Laboratory.
The University will receive $152,000 of the $490,000 grant to
fund student researchers and the purchase of a microspectrophotometer and other equipment.
The microspectrophotometer is used in forensic science to
digitally measure the spectra of microscopic samples.
Each university receiving a portion of the grant
is responsible for contributing to the development
of a database and will perform round-robin studies
to compare accuracy of results and statistical data.
Findings will be shared within the group.
“The students will benefit because they will have
a working experience with trace evidence and learn
firsthand how fibers are analyzed, and they will
have been a part of this potentially ground-breaking
research.” said Bartick.
Bartick, the first director of Suffolk’s forensic
science program, spent 20 years as a research scientist
in the FBI Laboratory’s Counterterrorism and
Forensic Science Research Unit. His courses include
Introduction to Forensic Science and Trace Evidence.
While he says that the popularity of forensic science
will endure, he does not get caught up in the hype of
such television programs as CSI.
“On the first day of class, I tell my students that
Professor Edward Bartick is involving students in research using the new
this is not a TV show,” said Bartick. “I tell them that
microspectrophotometer purchased through a grant from the National Institute of
Justice. (Photo by Meghan Van Vuren)
this is about the real thing.”
Carnegie Classification Continued from page 1
The process was long and involved, said Garcia. “We appreciated how helpful people were and how willing they were to provide
information. We found a lot of passion and commitment to the
work being done in the community, and that comes across in the
excellence of programs” ranging from the Law School’s clinical
programs to the Connections to College mentoring program.
The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
primary classification effort rates all universities nationwide, while
the Community Engagement Classification is voluntary.
“Attaining the Community Engagement classification improves
Suffolk University’s national profile, which is helpful as we pursue
private foundation grants,” said Michelle Auerbach, director of
Research and Sponsored Programs.
“The Carnegie Classification provides evidence of the kind of
commitment to community service and public outreach that external
funders look for,” said Howington. “The hope is that this classification will put us in a better position to fund new community engagement programs and continue funding those we have in place.”
The SUN is publi she d by:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-8447
sun@suffolk.edu
2
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Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Managing Editor
Nancy Kelleher
Staff Writers
Karen DeCilio
Tony Ferullo
Design
Heather Clark
Carolina Garcia and Julia Howington spent more than a year working
with people across campus to compile information about community
engagement for the Carnegie application. (Photo by Joe Viamonte)
�Brustein Awarded National Medal of Arts
President Barack Obama presented the National Medal of Arts to
Robert Brustein, Distinguished Scholar in Residence at the College,
during a White House ceremony in early March, citing his contribution to the American theater and to the development of theater artists.
The citation read at the East Room ceremony as the president
presented the award praised “Robert Brustein for his contributions
to the American theater as a critic, producer, playwright and educator. As founder of the Yale Repertory Theatre and the American
Repertory Theatre and Institute and as the theater critic for The
New Republic since 1959, Mr. Brustein has been a leading force in
the development of theater and theater artists in the United States.”
Brustein first came to the University’s College of Arts and
Sciences as part of the Distinguished Visiting Scholars program
in spring 2006. He became a full-time faculty member in spring
2007, assuming the role of a Distinguished Scholar in Residence.
He has lectured on Shakespearean tragedies, directing, and
theater criticism. In fall 2007, the Theatre Department produced
his play, The English Channel.
“We are delighted that the nation is bestowing laurels on
Robert Brustein, especially for his role as an educator,” said Suffolk
University Acting President and Provost Barry Brown. “He has
changed the face of American theater, and he brings vitality to the
University’s Theatre Department as he imparts his vast reservoir of
knowledge to new generations of students.”
In addition to Brustein, National Medals of Arts were awarded
to pianist Van Cliburn, sculptor Mark di Suvero, poet Donald Hall,
musician and producer Quincy Jones, author Harper Lee, musician
Sonny Rollins, actress Meryl Streep, singer and songwriter James
Taylor and the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival.
“The National Medal of Arts recipients represent the many
vibrant and diverse art forms thriving in America,” said National
Endowment for the Arts Chairman Rocco Landesman, whose
Robert Brustein with President Obama during National Medal of Arts
ceremony at the White House. (Photo by Ruth David, courtesy of the
National Endowment for the Arts)
organization manages the selection process. “From criticism to
literature, music, poetry, sculpture and theater, these honorees’
devotion to shaping and sharing American art is unrivaled, and I
join the president and the country in saluting them.”
The president also awarded the 2010 National Humanities
Medals. Recipients were Library of America founder Daniel Aaron,
historian Bernard Bailyn, historian Jacques Barzun, novelist and environmentalist Wendell E. Berry, scholar Roberto González Echevarría,
American Council of Learned Societies President Emeritus Stanley
Nider Katz, author Joyce Carol Oates, biographer Arnold Rampersad,
author Philip Roth and historian Gordon Wood.
Self-Study Continued from page 1
Organization and Governance
The Academic Program
■■ Faculty
■■ Students
■■ Library and other Information
Resources
■■ Physical and Technological Resources
■■ Financial Resources
■■ Public Disclosure
■■ Integrity
The accreditation process involves
the collection of an enormous amount of
data and culminates in a campus visit by
NEASC’s Commission on Institutions of
Higher Education on Oct. 21–24, 2012.
Details about the University’s standards,
subcommittees and the NEASC study
guide may be found at: www.suffolk.edu/
offices/41207.html.
■■
■■
Pulling their Punches
Micky Ward and Dicky Eklund horse around with Athletics Director Jim Nelson during
Round 1 of their appearance on campus. The Lowell boxing brothers whose story was told
on film in “The Fighter” met with students at the Regan Gymnasium, then spoke at the C.
Walsh Theatre. They appeared a few days after the movie won two best supporting actor
Oscars and a month before the movie’s producer, David Hoberman, is scheduled to engage
in the “Conversation” series at the Modern Theatre. (Photo by John Gillooly).
M a r c h 2 0 11
3
�Potpourri
Barbara Abrams, Humanities and Modern Languages, and
Michel Boiron, director of CAVILAM, an intensive language program in Vichy, France, were guests at the French Embassy luncheon
at the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages.
For 10 years, Suffolk students have studied at CAVILAM during
the summer. Boiron visited the University last semester and met
with students in the French program.
Robert Allison, History, was named to the board of trustees of
the USS Constitution Museum. He delivered a lecture on “Boston
and New England: Culture and Economy” at the Center for Global
Humanities at the University of New England in Portland, Maine.
Steve Becker, Web Services, had an exhibit of his fine-art
photographs featuring landscapes, seascapes and more intimate
scenes of Wareham, New England and the Oregon coast on display
at The Gallery at WCTV in Wareham.
Rachael Cobb, Government, presented a paper “Can Voter ID
Laws Be Administered in a Race-Neutral Manner? Evidence from the
City of Boston in 2008” (with James Greiner and Kevin Quinn) at
the 2010 Midwest Political Science Association meeting. The paper
won the Robert H. Durr Award for the best paper applying quantitative methods to a substantive problem in political science.
Tom Connolly, English, led a “talk-back” after the performance
of Eugene O’Neill’s A Moon for the Misbegotten as a guest of the Nora
Theatre Company at the Central Square Theater in Cambridge.
Carolyn Corretti, History, presented a paper “Marital Relations
in Calvin’s Geneva, 1542–1549” at the Sixteenth Century Society
and Conference in Montreal.
Victoria Dodd, Law School, is a member of the executive committee of the Education Law Section of the Association of American
Law Schools for 2011–2012.
Michael Duggan, Office of Enrollment Research and
Planning, presented a session “What’s New in IPEDS” at the
annual New England Association of Collegiate Registrars and
Admission Officers (NEACRAO) conference in Newport, R.I. He
is finishing up his term on the American Association of Collegiate
Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO) Institutional
Research Committee and continues to serve as a reviewer for the
Journal of College Student Retention: Research, Theory & Practice.
Thomas Garafalo, Office of Environmental Health & Safety,
participated in a question-and-answer session at the Institutional
Recycling Network training seminar with representatives from
Boston College, Northeastern and Harvard. He was asked to
attend because of the University’s reputation of having some
of the top universal waste-recycling programs among area
universities.
Julia Collins Howington, Archives and Moakley Institute,
presented a paper “Conflict and Change on Capitol Hill: Bringing
Behind-the-Scene-Stories to the Internet” at the Oral History
Association annual meeting in Atlanta.
Peter Jeffreys, English, presented a paper “Traces of Walter
Pater in Cavafy’s ‘Shakespeare on Life’” at the C.P. Cavafy
International Congress at the University of Cyprus, Nicosia. He
also spoke on his new translation C.P. Cavafy’s Selected Prose Works
at the University of Michigan’s Kelsey Museum of Archaeology.
Lester Lee, History, presented a paper “Race and Resistance:
King Ja Ja of Opobo and the Politics of Revitalization in the
Niger Delta, 1869–1873” at the 6th Black Atlantic Community
Conference at Central State University in Wilberforce, Ohio.
4
SUN
Michel Boiron and Barbara Abrams
Steve Becker’s “Oregon Beach”
John Cavanagh has retired after 40 years of teaching history at the
University. On his last day of class, colleagues, family and friends joined
the affable professor for a bagpipe-led procession from his classroom at
One Beacon Street to a farewell luncheon in the Rosalie Stahl Center.
He also presented a paper “The Bonny (Niger Delta) Civil War,
1869–1873” at the Great Lakes History Conference at Grand
Valley University, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Kameika Murphy, History, presented “Currents of Liberty:
Revolutionary Émigrés and their Contributions to Afro-Caribbean
Civil Society, 1775–1838” at a colloquium at Clark University.
Continued on page 6
�Art School to Offer MFA in Interior Design
The New England School of Art & Design will offer a studiobased Master of Fine Arts in Interior Architecture beginning
next fall.
“The MFA in Interior Architecture will provide students with
an opportunity for advanced intellectual pursuit and to develop
leadership skills in the field of interior architecture,” said Karen
Clarke, co-program director of Interior Design. “We intend to keep
the program very small and specialized, with an opportunity for an
educational or professional practicum.”
The 60-credit, post-professional MFA degree program is
designed for students with a first professional degree in interior
design, architecture or other closely related fields.
“There is a demand for qualified interior design educators and
experienced design researchers throughout the country,” said Clark.
“Top-10” in Interior Design
The announcement of the new program came on the heels of the
art school’s being named one of the “Top 10” interior design programs in the United States at both the undergraduate and graduate
level by DesignIntelligence magazine.
The November/December 2010 issue of the magazine included
the New England School of Art & Design on its “2011 America’s
Best Architecture & Design Schools” list.
“We take great pride in being recognized nationally for who we
are and what we do,” said Chair Bill Davis. “Being ranked among
some of the best-known institutions throughout the country is a
tribute to all the hard work, creative talent and committed effort
demonstrated by everyone at NESAD.”
Galleries
Adams Gallery on Moakley’s Legacy
The Adams Gallery features an encore showing of John Joseph
Moakley: In Service to His Country in collaboration with the
Moakley Archive and Institute. Supplementary material illustrates
the many activities that continue the late congressman’s spirit of
service 10 years after his death.
The exhibit In Service to His Country debuted at the Adams
Gallery in November 2001 and has traveled throughout
Massachusetts in subsequent years. Through photographs, artifacts and papers, the exhibit conveys the story of a South Boston
youth’s formation into a statesman, shaped by his experiences
in the neighborhood, as a Seabee in World War II and serving
the people he represented in elected office at the city, state and
national levels.
The Archive and Institute continue to promote the causes
Moakley championed through a range of activities, including
policy forums, research activities, an oral history project and
annual service-learning trips to El Salvador.
Student Exhibits at SU Gallery
The Suffolk University Art Gallery features rotating exhibits of
student work through May 23.
The Stephen D. Paine Scholarship exhibition, featuring the
work of students entering their final year in studio art programs at
Boston-area colleges, runs through March 19. The scholarship was
established in 1999 by the Boston Art Dealers Association to support these students, and the University has hosted the scholarship
exhibit for many years.
New England School of Art & Design student work will be
shown from late March through May, as follows:
■■ Foundation Student Exhibition, March 27–April 7
Reception: 5–7 p.m. Thursday, March 31
■■ Graphic Design, April 9-22
Opening Reception: 5–7 p.m. Friday, April 15
■■ Fine Arts, April 24–May 6
Opening Reception: 5–7 p.m. Friday, April 29
■■ Interior Design, May 8–May 23
Opening Reception: 5–7 p.m. Friday, May 13
Moakley and Boston Harbor, where his efforts spurred cleaner waters,
the Boston Harbor Islands National Park and development of the South
Boston waterfront.
Matryoshka
nesting dolls
from the
Moakley
Archive depict
Soviet leaders.
M a r c h 2 0 11
5
�New Faces
Faculty Publications
Please welcome our newest employees:
Jill Abrahams, Advancement
Chioma Adaku-Griffin, Executive Education/Lifelong Learning
Michelle L. Badger, Advancement
Angela Coletta, Advancement
Christine Chiaramonte, Assistant Treasurer’s Office
Stephen W. Cotter, Facilities Management
Philip L. Cunningham, Advancement
Mary A. D’Entremont, Law School Registrar’s Office
Justine D. Flynn, Sociology
Daniel M. Gomes, Information Technology Services
Katelyn M. Lewis, Sawyer Business School Graduate Programs
Kathryn E. Linder, Center for Teaching Excellence
Tristam K. MacDonald, Math & Computer Science
Christopher T. Milto, Academic Access and Opportunity
Emma O’Leary, Economics
Robert W. Roetger, Advancement
Nora Sidoti, Theater Arts
Paul D. Tran, Undergraduate Admission
Tonya Williams, Information Technology Services
Khaled Amira, Finance. His paper “Competition among
Stock Exchanges for Equity” (co-authored with Mark
Muzere) has been accepted for publication in the Journal of
Banking and Finance.
Gloria Boone and Cynthia Irizarry, Communication
and Journalism, have published “Spanish Content on
Hospital Websites: An Analysis of U.S. Hospitals in
Concentrated Latino Communities” (with Linda Gallant)
in the Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication,
Vol.15, 2010.
James Cataldo and Alex Yen, Accounting. Their manuscript “Ratings Users Beware: Using Information from the
Credit Default Swap Market to Validate Credit Assessments”
was accepted for publication in the CPA Journal.
Cynthia Irizarry, Communication and Journalism,
published the case study “Where does it hurt? The
impact of gender diversity in a medical practice” in Case
Studies for Organizational Communication: Understanding
Communication Processes, 2010, Oxford University Press.
Charles Kindregan and Maureen McBrien, Law
School, have published Assisted Reproductive Technology: A
Lawyer’s Guide to the Emerging Law and Science, 2nd ed.,
American Bar Association.
Micky Lee, Communication and Journalism, has contributed eight keywords to the forthcoming Encyclopedia of
Gender in Media (Sage). She will present a paper “The Bodies
of Chinese Women Gymnasts in the Beijing Olympics”
(co-authored with Courtney Smith) at the International
Communication Association conference in Boston in May.
Quentin Miller, English, has published two review essays:
on Gary Amdahl’s novella collection I Am Death in the fall
2010 issue of The Review of Contemporary Fiction and on
Magdalena Zaborowska’s study “James Baldwin’s Turkish
Decade: Erotics of Exile” in Comparative Literature Studies,
winter 2010. He also published “James Baldwin’s Critical
Reception” in the collection Critical Insights: James Baldwin,
pages 95–109 (Salem Press) and a short story “3 × 2” in the
online journal Prick of the Spindle vol. 4.4. It is available at:
www.prickofthespindle.com/fiction/4.4/miller/3by2.htm.
Susan M. Orsillo, Psychology, has
published The Mindful Way through
Anxiety: Break Free from Chronic Worry
and Reclaim Your Life (co-authored with
Lizabeth Roemer).
Gerald Peary, Communication and
Journalism, who is a long-time film critic for
the Boston Phoenix, is writing feature articles
on film series, film history and related topics for the Sunday
Boston Globe. He has published pieces on Elaine May, Orson
Welles, Ingmar Bergman, Charlie Chaplin and Chinese
filmmaker Lou Ye, among others.
Potpourri
Continued from page 4
Gerald Peary, Communication and Journalism, was named
general editor of the University Press of Mississippi “Conversations
with Filmmakers” series. He served as president of the International
Film Critics Jury at the Mannheim (Germany) Film Festival and
spoke at a Dartmouth College conference on the nature of film
festivals. Peary’s feature documentary, For the Love of Movies: the
Story of American Film Criticism, played on the Documentary
Channel in February at the end of a run of 55 public screenings
around the world.
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the College and director
of the Madrid campus, presented “Public Administration and
Globalization” at the Universidad Pablo Olavide in Seville, Spain.
Jeff Stone,
Athletics, was
inducted into the
Athletic Trainers
of Massachusetts
(ATOM) Hall of
Fame at the 63rd
annual meeting of
the Eastern Athletic
Trainers Association
in Philadelphia, Penn.
Ronald Suleski,
Jack Baynes, former head athletic trainer at
Rosenberg Institute
Northeastern University, and Head Athletic
for East Asian
Trainer Jeff Stone.
Studies, was cited in
Japan’s Diamond online magazine article “Other than Animation,
Interest in Japan is Low. Americans are looking forward and are
worried about the Chinese.” (“アニメ漫画以外で日本への関心は低
い。
米国人は”前向きに”中国人に心惹かれている」
東アジア研究の重
鎮が見た日米中三角関係の深層 ーロナルド スレスキー サフォー
ク大学東アジア研究所所長に聞く”).
6
SUN
�In the News
Suffolk University faculty, administrators,
students and programs are featured regularly
in local and national media. The time and
effort they give to help promote the
University is greatly appreciated. The following offers a sampling of recent media mentions. A more comprehensive list of “Suffolk
In the News” is available on the Public
Affairs Web site.
Boston Globe, Feb. 17, 2011: Men’s
basketball player featured in “Pepdjonovic
putting up some numbers at Suffolk.”
Boston Globe, Feb. 16, 2011: Ford Hall
Forum lineup and author Dennis Lehane’s
appearance at the Modern Theatre cited in
“Names.”
Sing Tao Daily, Feb. 11, 2011: The
international Chinese-language newspaper
reports on Maxine Hong Kingston’s book
reading at the Modern Theatre.
Boston Globe, Feb. 7, 2011: Academy
Award winning director Michael Cimino’s
appearance at the Modern Theatre featured
in “Names.”
WCVB-TV, Feb. 6, 2011: Alumnus
David Denninger, a lieutenant in the
Massachusetts National Guard, is featured in
the series “Assignment: Afghanistan.”
FOX25 Boston, Feb. 4, 2011:
Communication and Journalism Chair Bob
Rosenthal discussed the crisis in Egypt.
New England Cable News, February,
2011: Student reporters on the air collecting
sidewalk interviews for “Suffolk in the City.”
ABA Journal, February, 2011: Law
Professor Andrew Perlman is quoted in
“Seduced: For Lawyers, the Appeal of Social
Media Is Obvious. It’s Also Dangerous.”
New England Cable News, Jan. 31,
2011: History Department Chair Robert
Allison offered a perspective on the crisis
in Egypt.
New England Cable News, Jan. 30, 2011:
Professor of Management and Entrepreneur
ship Magid Mazen discussed the political
upheaval in Egypt.
WCVB-TV, Jan. 30, 2011: Law School’s
clinical program cited in “City Line” segment
on domestic violence.
The New York Times, Jan. 7, 2011:
Student connects with Colorado boyfriend
from “dream college” in Boston.
WGBH-TV, Jan. 6, 2011: “Greater
Boston” segment on The Modern Theatre.
C-Span, January 2011: Students question
policymakers during academic seminar series
in Washington, D.C.
Author Dennis Lehane offers advice to would-be writers and discusses the films adapted
from his books following a screening at the Modern Theatre. (Photo by Ken Martin)
Modern Theatre in the Spotlight
About 100 people were lined up outside the Modern Theatre in mid-February,
hoping for a chance to see author Dennis Lehane following a series of screenings of
movies based on his books.
“It was really cool to see that the line had a mix of students, people from the
community, and faculty and staff,” said Marketing and Special Projects Supervisor
Nora Sidoti.
Lehane’s appearance in conversation with Professor Gerald Peary had sold out
quickly online, but, because there usually are no-shows for free performances, the
theater was able to accommodate those waiting, said Sidoti.
Through a broad range of programming based on the themes of Performance,
Conversation and Cinema, the Modern Theatre is drawing a wide range of patrons
as well as media attention.
The inaugural programming schedule was devised through the collaboration
of members of the Theatre Department with chairs of other departments, faculty
and upper administration, according to Abbie Katz, a Theatre Department faculty
member serving as Modern Theatre programming manager.
The programming includes new concepts along with longtime favorites.
“We can do more with some of these events in the Modern Theatre,” said Katz.
“The flamenco ensemble Casa Patas has performed many times at the University, but
this year we were able to add internationally known jazz trumpeter Arturo Sandoval
to the program.”
Katz said each success stimulates additional ideas for programming and
networking.
The theater is booked most days and nights, both with University classes and
public events.
February was movie month, and this month will be devoted to preparing for the
March 31 premiere of Car Talk: The Musical!!!, written and directed by Professor
Wesley Savick and inspired by the NPR radio call-in show of the same name.
“I’m most excited about Car Talk,” said Sidoti. “It has many students involved,
and they get to work in a professional environment and celebrate the University’s
new performance space.”
M a r c h 2 0 11
7
�Higher Education Consortium
Introduces Healthy You
Suffolk University has joined with Boston Consortium of Higher
Education peers in a new initiative to encourage faculty and staff
to live healthier lives. Called HEALTHY YOU, the program is
designed to emphasize individual choice and responsibility through
a voluntary program that focuses on wellness. This effort will include, and expand upon, the University’s already popular Healthy
Mondays and the SO FIT Wellness Challenge. Healthy Mondays,
running in the fall, and the Wellness Challenge, running in the
month of April, are a joint effort of Health and Wellness Services
and Human Resources. “To Your Health,” the SUN article focusing on health issues, also will become part of the Healthy You
program. Watch your e-mail and mailbox for more information as
HEALTHY YOU and the SO FIT Wellness Challenge unfold.
This month’s SUN article focuses on nutrition.
National Nutrition Month Offers Food for Thought
March marks the beginning of spring and National Nutrition
Month. This is a great time of year to focus more energy on
making healthier food choices after a particularly long winter.
Many of us try to eat healthy foods and have chosen to eat more
conscientiously by choosing a lower-fat diet, local produce or
more natural foods. But how much do we really know about the
health benefits of specific foods? Taking the time to learn about
how particular foods can help you improve health or maintain
an already healthy lifestyle is a huge step toward a nutritionally
balanced life.
Did you know that avocados, broccoli, carrots and tomatoes
are known to combat certain types of cancer? Foods such as
pomegranate juice, barley and yogurt may help prevent Type 2
diabetes. Fish has been proven to help reduce the risk of developing heart disease. Salmon, herring and albacore tuna are all
packed with Omega-3 fatty acids, which help lower cholesterol
and blood pressure levels. Red and purple grapes may help lower
elevated blood pressure and may reduce certain risks, such as
blood clotting and blood vessel narrowing. Fruits and veggies
with dark skins are high in natural antioxidants. Spinach is a
powerful vegetable loaded with antioxidants and an alphabet
soup’s worth of vitamins (A, B2, B6, C, K). Make sure to wash it
thoroughly before use or buy organic.
Before you give up coffee in favor of a healthy lifestyle, think
again. Coffee can have some surprising health benefits, such as
reducing the risk of diabetes and some cancers. Too much caffeine, however, can lead to sleep disturbances, bone density loss
and anxiety, so it is best to drink it in moderation.
In Memoriam
Law Professor Emeritus Thomas J. McMahon
8
SUN
Honoring Martin Luther King, Jr.
Acting President and Provost Barry Brown with John L. Jackson, Jr., the
Richard Perry University Professor of Communication and Anthropology
at the University of Pennsylvania, the keynote speaker at the annual
Martin Luther King, Jr., luncheon hosted by the Office of Diversity
Services to celebrate the life and legacy of the late civil rights leader.
(Photo by Dan McHugh)
Campus Publications Cited
The CASE District 1 2011
Communication Awards recognized the Suffolk Alumni Magazine
(SAM) with silver in the magazine
categories of Best Design and Best
Overall Magazine. The Association
for Women in Communications also
honored SAM with Clarion Awards
2010 in the categories of Best Overall
External Magazine, circulation of
100,000 or less, and Most Improved
Magazine, external publication.
College Magazine Earns National Recognition
The Suffolk Arts+Sciences magazine IMAGINE issue received five
EDDIE awards from FOLIO, the largest competition for magazines, which recognizes the best in editorial and design excellence.
The awards are:
Supplemental Annual/One-Shot, Single Article
■■
■■
■■
Gold for “Urban Activist”
Silver for “It Says Love”
Bronze for “Capital City Classroom”
Supplemental Annual/One-Shot, Web site
■■
Silver—the magazine’s blog/Web site placed second to a
Newsweek site.
Supplemental Annual/One-Shot, Full Issue
■■
Bronze
�
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SUN
The Suffolk University News
April 2011 Vol. 37, No. 2
Successful Playwright Can Even Make a Car Talk!!!
Wesley Savick doesn’t pretend to have any magic formula that has
led to his success as a playwright and director.
The Theatre Department professor, who has received rave
reviews for productions on campus, in the Boston area, and
throughout the country, says he approaches each project with an
open mind, a creative spirit and a thirst for knowledge.
“Every show demands its own material, tone and characters,”
said Savick. “There are so many different things that have to come
together to make it all work. It’s a true learning experience for me
from beginning to end.”
Savick has directed more than 100 professional productions,
as well as writing the book and libretto for an opera based on the
life of Liberace. He also has created theater pieces based on Edgar
Allen Poe, the medieval mystic Margery Kempe, former U.S.
Ambassador George F. Keenan, and historian and social activist
Howard Zinn.
While his shows have educated people and made them laugh,
cry and wonder, there is one thing that Savick hopes each production will deliver.
“I want to touch an individual’s human spirit,” he said. “I want
them to leave the theater excited and refreshed.”
Savick’s latest show, Car Talk: The Musical!!!—the first production created for the new Modern Theatre—played to sold-out
houses from March 31–April 3.
Savick wrote and directed the musical comedy inspired by the
hit National Public Radio show of the same name.
Ray and Tom Magliozzi, aka Click and Clack, the co-hosts of
NPR’s “Car Talk,” first appeared on the Boston airwaves in 1977.
Their radio call-in show, which offers automotive know-how with
an air of hilarity, was picked up by NPR for a nationwide audience
in 1987.
The play sends up classic Broadway songs about love and
relationships. It shows how the psychological and the mechanical
intertwine in much the same way that the “Car Talkers” do week
after week on their NPR radio show.
Savick describes Car Talk: The Musical!!! as “an unlikely marriage between Broadway musicals and automotive advice.”
Continued on page 2
Athletic Hall
of Fame Class
Six athletes, one team and an administrator will be honored during the Hall
of Fame induction dinner on Saturday,
May 7, at the Royal Sonesta Hotel in
Cambridge.
The third Athletic Hall of Fame class
includes:
■■ Patricia Brown, who founded,
coached and played for the women’s
basketball team in the early 1950s.
She has three Suffolk University
degrees and worked as the Law
School librarian before retiring in
1992. Brown also played professional women’s baseball.
■■ Ron Cinelli, an outstanding athlete
and consummate team player on
both the baseball and basketball
teams in the 1960s.
■■ Evan Crockford, hockey center from
1997 to 2001 and the Rams fourth
all-time scoring leader with 116
points (86 goals and 80 assists). His
Continued on page 2
Job Shadow Day
Deron Smith, a junior at Charlestown High School, shadowed Frank Conte, director of
communications for the Beacon Hill Institute, during the annual Job Shadow Day sponsored
by the Boston Private Industry Council and the Boston Public Schools. Smith learned about
the institute’s public policy work in taxation, regulation and forecasting. During his visit, he
participated in a meeting that highlighted how the institute would apply its technical expertise on
issues such as job creation and small business and what policy recommendations might emerge.
(Photo by Jarred Gould)
�Junior Faculty Development Program
Welcomes Albanian Law Lecturer
Hall of Fame
Continued from page 1
The Center for International Education has collaborated with the Law School to
sponsor the University’s first junior faculty member under the aegis of the U.S. State
Department’s Junior Faculty Development Program.
Flutara Tafaj, a lecturer who teaches civil procedure and arbitration in the Department
of Civil Law at the University of Tirana, Albania, has been here for several months.
“I’m really enjoying my work here at the Law School,” she said. “The different teaching methodologies in different kinds of classes are very interesting, and the professors
and students have been extremely supportive. I am learning a lot and consider myself
lucky to be part of this wonderful program.”
The State Department works with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
and the American Councils for International Education to provide Junior Faculty
Development opportunities.
“The goal of the program is to contribute to the development of higher education in
participating countries,” said Saeeda Wali Mohammed, director of Internationalization
Services at the University. “To this end, it provides opportunities for university-level
professors demonstrating strong potential for leadership with training in curriculum
development and teaching methodologies.”
Law School Associate Dean Steve Hicks is Tafaj’s faculty adviser during her stay.
“The Junior Faculty Development Program offers us the opportunity to develop
international relationships with other law faculties through the personal experience
of a teacher in a different legal system learning about our curriculum and our degree
programs,” said Hicks. “It is very gratifying to be able to enrich the academic career of a
young law teacher with exposure to our educational program.”
When she returns to the University of Tirana, Tafaj plans to develop a course in
mediation, based on her study of the curriculum and the courses taught at Suffolk. She
also hopes to promote mediation for the benefit of the legal system of Albania.
career goals and assists rank third
and fourth, respectively, in
the school’s record books.
■■ Noreen McBride (Keenan): a
four-sport athlete who competed in
basketball, baseball, volleyball and
cross country. In three years she
scored 1,075 points for the Rams
basketball team.
■■ Patti Ann Stanziani (Cooper): the
number one singles player in each
of her four years for the tennis team
was co-captain and MVP during
each of her last two seasons.
■■ 1996 Women’s Softball Team,
which captured the Great Northeast
Athletic Conference championship
with a 3-0 victory over the U.S.
Coast Guard Academy.
To be awarded posthumously:
■■ Ucal McKenzie, who as a senior
was captain and MVP of the
soccer team.
■■ Lou Connelly, the University’s
first full-time public relations
director and sports information
director from 1967 until his 2003
retirement.
Successful Playwright
Continued from page 1
When he’s not teaching, writing or
directing, Savick enjoys doing crossword
puzzles, listening to jazz and riding his bike
around Boston. After spending most of his
adult life in the theater, he continues to
have that burning desire to face new challenges, inspire others and feel good when
that audience applauds.
“I’ve been doing this for a long time, but
I still have that passion to keep going,” said
Savick. “I love my job and I can’t see myself
doing anything else.”
Wes Savick makes a point during a “Car Talk”
rehearsal. (Photo by John Gillooly)
T he SUN is publi shed by:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-8447
sun@suffolk.edu
2
SUN
Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Managing Editor
Nancy Kelleher
Working Together
Staff Writers
Karen DeCilio
Tony Ferullo
Help the Suffolk University Police Prevent Crime
Design
Heather Clark
Dial 8111 (on campus) or 617-573-8111 or 617-573-8333
SEE IT! HEAR IT! REPORT IT!
�Curtain Call for Faculty
Health and Wellness Services Director Richard Arnold
and Vicki Karns of the Communication and Journalism
Department played key roles in the Performing Arts Office’s
10th Pioneer Performance Series production.
This year’s show was Bare: A Pop Opera, which is set in a
Catholic boarding school and tells the story of two students
struggling with their homosexuality.
This was the first production for Arnold, who played the
role of the priest, and the fourth for Karns, who starred as
Claire, the mother of one of the lead characters.
Karns has had roles in Performing Arts productions of The
Vagina Monologues, The Laramie Project, and The Exonerated.
“It was amazing. The script was phenomenal, and it was
just an incredible experience,” said Karns, who added that
she was “blown away by the poise and dedication” of the
young actors.
New Faces
Richard Arnold plays a priest in Bare: A Pop Opera, and Vicki Karns takes
on the role of a student’s mother. (Photos by Dan McHugh)
Please welcome our newest employees:
Linwood Abbott, Information Technology Services
James Belding, Information Technology Services
Keith Erickson, Communication and Journalism
Potpourri
Faculty Publications
Tom Connolly, English, was appointed to the editorial board of
The Ostrava Journal of English Philology, an international journal that publishes articles on linguistics and the literature and
culture of English-speaking countries. It has recently established
itself as a leading scholarly publication in Central Europe. The
journal is published by the Faculty of Arts of the University of
Ostrava, which is the nexus of a group of universities in Germany,
Hungary, Slovakia and Poland.
Quentin Miller, English, was on the introductory plenary
panel at the conference “James Baldwin’s Global Visions” held in
February at New York University and the Schomberg Center in
New York City.
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the College and director
of the Madrid campus, presented “Lessons from Portugal and
Spain in the EU after 25 years: The Challenges of Economic
Reforms” at the University of Miami and “Crunch Time for
Spanish Financial Institutions?” at the European Union Studies
Association biennial international conference in Boston.
Dmitry Zinoviev, Math and Computer Science, chaired a
session and presented “A game theoretical approach to modeling
information diffusion in social networks” at the Sunbelt Social
Networks Conference in Florida.
The University’s Center for Crime and Justice Policy
Research and the Jericho Circle Project sponsored “The Hard
Road Home: Welcoming Ex-Offenders Back to the Community.”
The event featured Lyn Levy from Span, Inc., who outlined
reentry issues encountered by former prisoners as they try to
reestablish themselves in the community.
Elif S. Armbruster, English, has
published Domestic Biographies:
Stowe, Howells, James, and Wharton
at Home. The book explores the domestic realities that underscore the
authors’ Realist fiction and provides
an innovative, architectural lens
through which to study the lives
and literature of four of America’s
best-known authors.
Melanie Berkmen, Chemistry
and Biochemistry. Her article
“Efficient Gene Transfer in Bacterial
Cell Chains” was published in the journal mBio, March/
April 2011.
Thomas McGrath, Humanities and Modern Languages.
His article “Dominicans, Franciscans, and the Art of Political
Rivalry: Two Drawings and a Fresco by Giovanni Maria della
Rovere” was published in Renaissance Studies, Vol. 25, No. 2,
April 2011, pp. 185–207.
Quentin Miller, English, published a work of flash fiction
“Carney” in Flashquake, Spring 2011: www.flashquake.org/
index.html.
Alasdair Roberts, Law School. His book The Logic of
Discipline: Global Capitalism and the Architecture of Government
(Oxford University Press in 2010) received an honorable mention
from the Section on Public Administration Research (SPAR) of
the American Society for Public Administration.
A p r i l 2 0 11
3
�Personal Health Questionnaire Offers Valuable Analysis
The University is introducing the new “HEALTHY YOU” personal
Health Questionnaire (HQ), a tool designed to provide the information needed to get and stay healthy and thus enjoy life to the fullest.
Employees covered under the University’s Harvard Pilgrim
Health Care plan may access the online questionnaire.
To be eligible for a “healthy” raffle, employees must complete the
HQ by Tuesday, May 31. Prizes include a Kindle with a gift card
for healthy reading; iPod nano with exercise add-ons; Community
Supported Agriculture share; in-home healthy cooking class; healthy
meal delivery; Spafinder gift card; afternoon tea at the Boston
Harbor Hotel; healthy snack basket; healthy cooking basket; and a
fitness basket.
The “HEALTHY YOU” HQ is an easy-to-use, confidential
questionnaire, which takes about 20 minutes to complete. It asks
basic questions about health history and lifestyle, with some items
specifically addressed to health issues for men and women.
The HQ also requests basic biometric information (height,
weight, blood pressure) and basic blood test results (cholesterol
and glucose levels). Those who missed the biometrics screening on
campus can get this information from their physicians.
Why are these numbers important? Height and weight are used to
calculate body mass index, an indicator of whether weight is at a healthy
level given height and gender. High blood pressure can damage arteries,
heart and kidneys, leading to hardening of the arteries. High cholesterol
can lead to life-threatening illnesses, such as coronary artery disease,
heart attack or stroke. High blood glucose may indicate a health risk
related to diabetes and other conditions.
Once submitted, the HQ analyzes responses and produces a
confidential, personalized action plan. The report will include suggestions for health screenings and information about wellness and
other programs.
A report summary may be printed and used in consulting with a
physician. Those whose reports indicate a high risk in any category
may opt for a confidential phone conversation with a health coach
offering a program tailored to improving their health.
The HQ is voluntary and easy to access on the Harvard Pilgrim
Health Care secure Web site: www.harvardpilgrim.org/suffolkuniversity. Log on or create an HPHConnect.
Information provided on the HQ is strictly confidential. Those
without access to a computer may call the Human Resources Office
for assistance.
The HQ results are provided only to the individual who
completes the questionnaire. The University will not receive this
confidential information, and completing the HQ will not affect
health plan eligibility or benefit payments.
University Awards
& Honors
Preservation Massachusetts will recognize
the University’s efforts to preserve the
Modern Theatre with a Paul E. Tsongas
Award, to be presented in May. The organization’s 2011 preservation awards honor
higher educational institutions that have
“embraced preservation into their educational identity.”
Meanwhile, National Jurist magazine
listed the Law School among those nationwide that have made “an above-average commitment to public service.” The magazine’s
Best Public Interest Law School rankings are
based on law schools’ offering one or more
public interest clinics, personnel dedicated
to overseeing public interest programs and
a loan repayment assistance program.
The Princeton Review has selected
Suffolk University for inclusion in The Best
376 Colleges: 2012 Edition.
The Modern Theatre project is cited as a
preservation model for Massachusetts colleges
and universities. (Photo by Peter Vanderwarker)
4
SUN
save the date
Spring Fling
Thursday, May 12
4:45–8 p.m.
Rosalie Stahl Center
9th floor
�
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SUN
The Suffolk University News
June 2011 Vol. 37, No. 3
Commencement 2011 Imbued with Family Spirit
Shirley Michel of Student Services
Jason Riccio of the Sawyer Business School and Joseph Wolk of the College
Registrar’s Office (Photos by John Gillooly)
Some things are better the second time around, and, for
University employees Jason Riccio and Joseph Wolk, that
holds true for their University graduations.
“I’m more excited now than the first time I
graduated,” said Wolk, senior registrar’s assistant in
the Registrar’s Office. “It means a lot more to me this
time—academically.”
“Working during the day and going to school at night
is definitely a balancing act,” said Riccio, an academic
adviser in the Sawyer Business School. “I feel graduating this time is more of a relief and brings a sense of
accomplishment.”
Riccio and Wolk were awarded master’s in education
degrees May 21 at College graduate commencement exercises, but that’s not the only thing they have in common.
Riccio graduated from the University in 2003 with a
BS in Media Studies, while Wolk graduated in 2007 with
a BS in Sociology and Theatre. Both were hired by the
University immediately after earning their degrees.
Both second-time graduates are proud of their Suffolk
University roots and consider the campus their home
away from home—for good reason.
Wolk’s office in the Donahue Building is next door
to the Student Accounts/Bursar’s Office, where his wife,
Janet, a 2007 graduate, works as the office coordinator.
They met here, started dating in October 2008 and
were married less than one year later. Today, they are the
parents of a 6-month old daughter, Chloe.
Riccio’s office on the eighth floor of the Sawyer
Building is a brief stroll from the Rosalie Stahl Center,
where his wife, Cathy Bright, works as a counselor in the
Graduate Admission Office. They met here in 2005 and
were married in 2010.
Continued on page 4
Acting President Gives Overview of the University
Acting President and Provost Barry Brown
presented detailed updates on University
affairs at open town hall meetings this past
spring, moving forward with an initiative
of involvement with faculty, administrators,
staff and students.
As part of a plan to increase discussions
and dialogue throughout the University
community, Brown presented an overview
of University retention, growth and
finances, describing how each affects the
planning for our future.
He also discussed the importance of
preparing students to become active alumni
and asked those attending the meetings to
help change the culture of the University so
that students are encouraged from day one
to establish lifelong bonds to our institution.
A number of participants submitted
questions beforehand, and Brown
incorporated points derived from their
correspondence into his presentation.
The four town meeting sessions
attracted nearly 250 members of the
University community, and the conversation between employees and the acting
president has continued. Brown has met in
small groups with interested faculty, staff,
administrators and alumni.
“Keeping the lines of communication
open and the dialogue ongoing within
the University is important to all of us,”
said Brown. “The discussion needs to be
open, direct and continuing so that the
entire University is involved in planning
Continued on page 8
�Visiting Scholar Receives Poetry Prize
Poet David Ferry, a Distinguished Visiting Scholar in the College
since 2009, has won the 2011 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, which
recognizes the extraordinary lifetime accomplishments of a living
U.S. poet.
The $100,000 prize is sponsored by the Poetry Foundation,
publisher of Poetry magazine, and is considered one of the most prestigious awards given to American poets. Ferry will donate the money
to social service organizations that he has supported in the past.
The poet has taught honors seminars on classics and translation
in the University’s English Department each semester since fall
2009. Ferry also is a regular guest lecturer in poetry classes, and
he gives readings of his works at the University’s Poetry Center.
He will return for a third year as a distinguished visiting professor
in fall 2011.
Potpourri
Barbara Abrams of Humanities and
Modern Languages and Gloria Boone of
Communication and Journalism co-authored a paper “Memory and Transcendence
of Place and Time in Online Holocaust
Memorials,” which they presented as
part of a panel on Digital Horizons of
Remembering War and Conflicts at the
Third Global Conference on Digital
Memory in Prague.
Six faculty members participated
in the Asian Studies: Traditions and
Transformations Conference in Boston.
Simone Chun, Government; Micky
Lee, Communication and Journalism;
and Chris Westphal, Education and
Human Services, presented papers on
the panel “Globalization: Labor, Trade
Union, and Constructed Citizenship.”
The panel was moderated by Da Zheng
of English. At separate sessions, Gertrude
Hewapathirana, Education and Human
Services, presented the paper “Lived
Experience of Successful Entrepreneurs in
Sri Lanka,” and Ron Suleski, Rosenberg
Institute for East Asian Studies, gave a
PowerPoint presentation about his detective
work in tracing and analyzing a Chinese
family’s genealogical history against the
backdrop of the Republic Era.
“David has found a new life with these Suffolk students,” said
Visiting Professor of English George Kalogeris. “The students
really seem to love him, and he has a great relationship with them.”
Ferry, a professor emeritus at Wellesley College, has been
working on a new translation of Virgil’s Aeneid while at Suffolk
University and is now on the sixth book of the 12-volume epic.
His books of poetry and translation include His Epistles of
Horace: A Translation; Of No Country I Know: New and Selected
Poems and Translations; The Eclogues of Virgil; The Odes of Horace:
A Translation; Dwelling Places: Poems and Translations; Gilgamesh:
A New Rendering in English Verse; Strangers: A Book of Poems; On
the Way to the Island; and The Limits of Mortality: An Essay on
Wordsworth’s Major Poems.
Eric Bellone, Applied Legal Studies, presented data on his research on the “Impact
of Videoconferencing on in-Court Attorney/
Client Communications” at Northeastern
University.
Tom Connolly, English, has been named
to the editorial board of The New England
Theatre Journal.
Bob DiGuardia, Information
Technology Services, opened the technical
session of the National Datatel Users group
conference in National Harbor, Md.,
with his presentation “The Only Person
Who Likes Change is a Wet Baby.” The
presentation was featured in the DATATEL
DIRECTIONS newsletter.
Heather Hewitt, Sawyer Business School
MBA-North Campus, received the Jerry
Loy Outstanding Director Award from the
Greater Haverhill Chamber of Commerce in
recognition of her outstanding contributions
to the success of chamber events.
Nina Huntemann, Communication
and Journalism, spoke on “Rethinking
Video Game Violence” at Central College
in Pella, Iowa.
Patricia A. Reeve, History, presented
“Bone and Sinew of the Republic:
Antebellum Workingmen Assert the Right
of Person” at Gender and Health: Histories,
an international symposium at the University
of Waterloo, Canada, and funded by the
Canadian Institute of Health. Symposium
papers will be published as an anthology in
2012-2013. She also chaired and commented
on the panel “Teaching Tragedy” at the
conference Remember the Triangle Fire,
which was sponsored by the Labor and
Working Class History Association and
marked the centennial of one of the nation’s
most infamous industrial disasters.
Maureen Stewart, Budget and Risk
Management, and Karen Kruppa, Risk
Management, presented the development
and training of the University’s Emergency
Action Plan as part of a panel “Navigating
and Nurturing Your Emergency Response
Team” at the University Risk Management
and Insurance Association Northeastern
Regional Conference at Babson College.
Quentin Miller, English, delivered the
paper “Beale Street and Other Alienating
Spaces” at the seventh Race and the TwentyFirst Century Conference at Michigan State
University.
T he SUN is published by:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont Street
Boston, MA 02108
617-573-8447
sun@suffolk.edu
2
SUN
Executive Editor
Greg Gatlin
Staff Writer
Tony Ferullo
Managing Editors
Nancy Kelleher
Karen DeCilio
Design
Heather Clark
Law School Dean Camille Nelson met
Gov. Deval Patrick at the Women of Color
Committee Judges Reception at the John
Adams Courthouse in Boston.
�A Job Well Done
Vice President -Treasurer Francis X. Flannery
and his extended family celebrate his retirement
from the University. A large contingent of current
and former employees, trustees and colleagues
joined them to pay tribute to Flannery’s 47
years of dedicated service. “The two words this
University stands for, honesty and diligence,
perfectly describe Frank Flannery,” said Michael
Dwyer, retired assistant treasurer, who worked
with him for 41years. Flannery, who was named
trustee emeritus, said he will continue to be
involved with the University as an active member
of the board of trustees. He began working at the
University the day after he received his Suffolk
MBA degree. (Photo by John Gillooly)
Benjamin Powell, Economics, was
elected president of the Association of Private
Enterprise Education (APEE), an international
association comprised of scholars in economics, political science, philosophy, business,
history and related disciplines who have a
common interest in studying and supporting
a private-enterprise system. He recently
organized the association’s annual conference, which studied
institutional evolution towards freedom and prosperity.
Bob Rosenthal, Communication and Journalism, appeared
on the Fox25 Morning News May 2 to analyze the national
and international political ramifications of the killing of Osama
Bin Laden.
Sawyer Business
School professors
Laurie Pant,
Warren Briggs and
Gail Sergenian
were feted by
colleagues at a retirement party at the
Downtown Harvard
Club.
Ron Suleski, Rosenberg Institute for East Asian Studies, was
a discussant on a panel “Constructing a Multi-Ethnic Utopian
Culture in Manchukou, 1932–1945” at the annual conference
of the Association for Asian Studies in Honolulu. He also
moderated a workshop panel on “National Historiographies” at
Empire and Beyond:
Manchuria in the
Modern World at
Harvard University.
Retired Marketing
Professor Joe
Vaccaro was at the
2011 Athletics Hall
of Fame dinner with
son Paul Vaccaro, who
served as emcee for the
evening’s festivities.
David Yamada, Law School, was profiled in the Spring 2011
issue of ADA Today, the membership magazine of Americans
for Democratic Action, a Washington, D.C.-based public
policy advocacy group. Yamada is chair of the group’s executive
committee.
Dmitry Zinoviev and Vy Duong, Math and Computer
Science, served as judges at the Massachusetts State Science Fair,
high school division, at MIT.
The 48th annual conference of the Eastern Academy of
Management, hosted by the Sawyer Business School and the
University, was held on campus May 11–14. Jodi Detjen,
Management and Entrepreneurship, and MBA student Victor
Davidson won the CASE Fellows Award for their case “Dynamic
Research – The Challenge of Acquisition.” The “Best First
Time Submission” went to Meera Venkatraman, Marketing,
and alumnus Sean Zinsmeister, for their case, “I am hungry: I
sought, I found, I redeemed.” Sheila Webber, Management and
Entrepreneurship, and SBS Associate Dean Laurie Levesque
served as vice presidents of local arrangements for the conference.
Webber also was elected Eastern Academy of Management
secretary-elect for 2011–2012. Ben Ngugi of Information
Systems and Operations Management was named associate editor
for technology for The CASE Journal.
The Student Government Association recognized the
following faculty and staff members at its annual Leadership
Awards banquet:
Outstanding Coach
Adam Nelson – Men’s Basketball
Outstanding Administrator of the Year
Craig Cullinane, Diversity Services
Outstanding College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Member
Rachael Cobb, Government
Outstanding Sawyer Business School Faculty Member
George Moker, Entrepreneurship
Outstanding New England School of Art and Design
Faculty Member
Lydia Martin, Foundation Studies
Unsung Hero Faculty/Staff
Dave DeAngelis, Student Affairs
J u n e 2 0 11
3
�Commencement
2011
Photos by John Gillooly
Continued from page 1
Employee Graduates
As expected, it was a family affair for Riccio and Wolk on
graduation day. When they walked across the stage to receive their
Suffolk degrees—for the second time—they were cheered on by
their loved ones, including Wolk’s grandfather, Milton Wolk, a
1958 Suffolk alumnus.
“It’s great that my parents and grandparents were there,” said
Wolk. “They’ve always pushed me on the importance and value of
receiving a good education.”
Suffolk University and the Law School awarded degrees to
2,454 students at commencement exercise, May 21-22.
William “Bill” Bratton, a security expert who has led the
nation’s largest police departments, and his wife, television personality and trial attorney Rikki Klieman, addressed Law School
graduates.
The keynote speaker for the undergraduate ceremony was Jeff
Glor, a onetime WHDH-Boston television reporter who now is
news anchor for “The Early Show” on CBS.
Greater Media Chair and CEO Peter H. Smyth addressed the
Sawyer School of Business graduate commencement, and Joaquín
Almunia, vice president of the European Commission, the EU
Executive branch, addressed the College of Arts and Sciences
graduate students.
Ranjan Budhathoki, BSBA
Cum Laude
Christopher Buscaglia, LLM
Baltazar Carranza, BSBA
Michael Ciaburri, BSBA
Daniel Connolly, MED
Constance Delano, MBA
Daniel D’Onofrio, MA
Kyle Dooley, MED
Alan Dillaby, MSA
Edwin Dillaby, MBA
William Feldman, BS
Stephanie Fougy, MS
Mikhail Ilin, JD Magna
Cum Laude
Kevin Kelly, MED
Casey Kennedy, MED
Joanna Kreisel, MPA
Tram Lai, MPA
Undergraduate Commencement exercises honorary degree recipients Peter Smyth, Jeanette Clough,
Jeff Glor, Joaquín Almunia and Marshall Sloane; Trustees Brian O’Neill and Tara Taylor, Acting
President and Provost Barry Brown, Trustees Carol Sawyer Parks, Jill Gabbe and James Morris
4
SUN
Jeremiah Mankin, BS
Kelsey McGuffie, MSCJS/
MPA
Shirley Michel, JD
Chaz Mungalsingh, BS
Tiffanie Pierce, MED
Russell Prentice, EMBA
R. Scott Reedy, MED
Jason Riccio, MED
Marc Rotondo, LLM
Jessie Schloss, MBA
Emily Shaer, MPA
Bijaya Tamang, MSCJS
Colleen Wheaton, MED
Joseph Wolk, MED
Michelle Young, BS
Vice President and Treasurer Francis X.
Flannery
�Michael Ciaburri of Information Technology
Services
Chairman of the Board Andrew C. Meyer, Jr., Law School Commencement speaker Rikki Klieman
and Law Dean Camille Nelson
Brothers Edwin and Alan Dillaby
The Hon. John E. Fenton, Jr., salutes the crowd
after receiving his honorary doctor of laws degree.
Law School Commencement speaker William Bratton
Joseph Wolk of the College Registrar’s Office
with wife Janet Wolk of Student Accounts/
Bursar’s Office and their daughter Chloe
Jason Riccio of the Sawyer Business School
and wife Cathy Bright of Graduate Admission
J u n e 2 0 11
5
�Commencement
continued
Law School honorary degree recipients John E. Fenton, Jr., David Chesnoff, Rikki Klieman, William
Bratton and Therese Murray; Trustees Gerard Doherty and Michael George, Acting President and
Jessie Schloss of Facilities Planning
Provost Barry Brown, Law Dean Camille Nelson, Chairman of the Board Andrew C. Meyer, Jr.,
and Trustee James Morris
Sawyer Business School Graduate
Commencement speaker Peter Smyth
Casey Kennedy of Payroll and R. Scott Reedy
of the Center for International Education
6
SUN
Connie Delano of Web Services and Sawyer
Business School Dean William J. O’Neill, Jr.
Undergraduate Commencement speaker Jeff Glor
College of Arts and Sciences Graduate Commencement speaker JoaquÍn Almunia, College Dean
Kenneth Greenberg and Acting President and Provost Barry Brown
�Faculty Publications
Susan Atherton, Business Law and Ethics, published
“Shareholder Derivative Challenges to Boards’ Executive
Compensation Decisions: The Impact of Case Law and
Regulations After Disney” in the Business Law Review.
Eric Bellone and Graham Kelder, Applied Legal
Studies, have published two papers: “Labels Matter:
Branding Theory in Higher Education and Naming
Patterns in Legal and Paralegal Studies Programs” and
“Goals of the Paralegal Educator: Beyond the Basics” in
the peer-reviewed The Empowered Paralegal Professionalism
Anthology, Carolina Academic Press, 2011.
Linda Brown, Foundation Studies & Fine Arts, had
an exhibition “Habits of Growth,” featuring sculptures
with living plants, at the Kingston Gallery in Boston.
Krisanne Bursik, associate dean of the College, and
Julia Gefter, doctoral student in Clinical Psychology, have
published a co-authored manuscript “Still Stable After
Linda Brown’s Vehicle/Array 2011
All These Years: Perceptions of Sexual Harassment in
Academic Contexts” in the peer-reviewed Journal of Social
Psychology, 2011, 151(3), 331-349.
Susan Orsillo, Psychology. Her book The Mindful Way though
Anthony G. Eonas, Business Law and Ethics, and Erin M.
Anxiety: Break Free from Chronic Worry and Reclaim Your Life is
Secord published “Exploring the Creditor’s Duty of Reasonable
being translated into Spanish, German and Finnish.
Care Under UCC Article 9 Amidst Recession and Revision” in the
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the College and director
Oregon Law Review.
of the Madrid campus, has published “Lessons from Portugal
Jerry Gianakis, Public Management. His article “Critical
and Spain in the EU after 25 years: The Challenges of Economic
Questions for the Transition to Defined Contribution Pension
Reforms” in Spain in the European Union: The First Twenty-Five
Systems in the Public Sector,” co-authored with Howard Frank
Years (1986–2011).
and Milena I. Neshkova of Florida International University, has
Lydia Segal, Business Law and Ethics. She co-authored, with
been accepted for publication in the American Review of Public
L. Gideon and M.R. Haberfeld, “Comparing the Ethical Attitudes
Administration. His paper “Innovations in Public Sector Supply
of Business and Criminal Justice Students” in Social Science
Chain Management” with Cliff McCue of Florida Atlantic
Quarterly.
University, will be published in the Journal of Public Procurement,
Miriam Weismann, Business Law and Ethics. Her paper
Vol.12, No. 1, 2012.
“Achieving the Goal of Credible Regulatory Oversight” was
“Charles Burnett: The Power to Endure,” a film retrospective
accepted for publication in Academy of Legal, Ethical and
featured at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, included
Regulatory Issues. It also received the Distinguished Research
the Suffolk-affiliated documentary “Nat Turner: A Troublesome
Award at the Allied Academies Spring 2011 International
Property.” The film is the product of collaboration between
Conference.
Charles Burnett, a 2010 Suffolk honorary degree recipient,
Dmitry Zinoviev and Vy Duong, Math and Computer Science,
College Dean Kenneth Greenberg, and Frank Christopher,
published the paper “A Game Theoretical Approach to Broadcast
a 2009 Visiting Scholar in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Information Diffusion in Social Networks” in Proceedings of Spring
The three collaborators wrote the film, with Greenberg and
Simulation Multiconference, Boston, April 2011. Zinoviev also wrote
Christopher acting as producers and Burnett as director. It was
the chapter “Information Diffusion in Social Networks” for Social
screened nationally on PBS in 2003 and has since been shown in
Networking and Community Behavior Modeling: Qualitative and
film venues across the world, including the Louvre in Paris.
Quantitative Measures, IGI Global 2011.
Poynton Receives Counselor of the Year Award
The American School Counselor
Association has named Timothy Poynton
the 2011 Counselor Educator of the Year.
Poynton is an assistant professor of
Education and Human Services and director of the School Counseling Program in
the College.
“We are delighted that Tim Poynton’s
outstanding contributions in the field of
school counseling have been recognized
by an organization with worldwide
influence,” said Dean Kenneth Greenberg.
“Students in our Education and Human
Services Department benefit from his
teaching and research, but Tim’s influence
extends far beyond our campus to benefit
professionals across the nation and around
the world.”
Poynton said that “while teaching is
central to the mission and identity of
Suffolk University, the supports provided
for faculty to engage in research and
professional service activities were key to
my being chosen for this award. As such, I
view it as acknowledgment not just of my
contribution to the profession of school
counseling, but our contributions.”
J u n e 2 0 11
7
�Faculty Share Tech Ideas
at University Symposium
The University’s first Technology Symposium in May drew
more than 90 faculty and staff, who heard a keynote speech
from Chris Dede of Harvard University and were able to choose
from among 20 different presenters and 10 different breakout
sessions.
The Symposium, co-sponsored by the Office of the Provost
and the Center for Teaching Excellence, showcased faculty
integration of technology into teaching and encouraged crossUniversity sharing of knowledge. It was organized by a committee representing the three schools’ Academic Technology offices
and is expected to become an annual event.
In his talk, 21st Century Learning: Implications for College
Teaching, Dede, who is the Timothy E. Wirth Professor in
Learning Technologies at Harvard, described how faculty can
redesign higher education to offer students the skills they need
for 21st century work and citizenship.
Breakout session topics included “Making the Most of
Classroom Technology,” “Interactivity in Online Courses,”
“Blogs and Learning,” “Visual Technology,” “Podcasting and
iTunes,” “Social Media,” “Getting Started Teaching Online,”
“Web 2.0 Course Design,” “Paperless Courses,” and “Innovative
Data in Business.”
Those attending also had opportunities to experiment with
programs and applications on three iMacs that showcased
Suffolk faculty blogs and online course materials.
“The feedback we’ve been receiving from participants
tells us that this symposium met the needs of a lot of Suffolk
teachers who are incorporating innovative technologies into
their classrooms,” said Symposium Committee Member Katie
Linder, assistant director of the Center for Teaching Excellence.
“Not only were participants able to see what others are doing,
but they were also able to ask questions and share their own
experiences in cross-disciplinary discussions.”
Professor Elected to Committee
English professor Thomas Connolly has been elected to the Marblehead
School Committee for a three-year term. He stressed his experience as a
Suffolk educator throughout his campaign, which he believes was a plus
with voters.
State of University Continued from page 1
our future. The town hall meetings were an important first step
to provide information and context, but I really benefited from
listening to the comments and concerns of the community as well
as hearing what people see as the principle goals of this wonderful
University.”
Brown has since met with each of the faculties of the three
academic units and plans to continue the dialogue with additional
sessions throughout the University after the start of the fall semester.
Questions or comments about the state of the University may be
addressed to him at president@suffolk.edu.
8
SUN
Meanwhile, the University is regularly updating information
about the presidential search through a dedicated Web page located
under the About Suffolk tab—www.suffolk.edu/about/45872.html.
The page provides ongoing updates on the University’s progress
along the search timeline and includes a job description.
�
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October 2011
From the Editor
Today, Suffolk University News –
you know it as the SUN – launches a
dynamic and reader-friendly digital
edition that puts the latest employee
news and features at your fingertips.
We have kept the content and
regular features that we know have
been appreciated in the print edition
for nearly 40 years, including our
Potpourri of employee news, Faculty
Publications and New Faces items.
But the new, digital SUN also offers
an updated look, with more color
photos and live links to additional
content in a format that we hope will
save a few trees. Going forward, you
will find links to photo galleries and
video, as well as news coverage of
the University, its employees and
students in the Suffolk in the Media
section.
A digest of news and features
clicks through to the full stories, and
there is a PDF of the current issue
online for those who want to print a
version.
We welcome and encourage
your input and feedback. And please
share your story ideas, in person, by
phone or through sun@suffolk.edu.
We hope you enjoy reading the
new SUN online.
Greg Gatlin
Executive Editor
A Unique Opportunity to Bond with Students
Alternative Spring Break Trip Offers Perspective on Employee Mission
The University exists to
educate its students, yet
some employees seldom
come into direct contact
with the students they
serve.
Alternative Spring
Break offers a way to
bridge that gap, and
S.O.U.L.S. is now
recruiting facilitators to
travel with student
groups who will
volunteer their services
for a week next March
Kathleen Peets, third from left, works alongside
in home-building,
students building a Habitat for Humanity home in
Texas.
environmental and
advocacy projects across the country.
“Alternative Spring Break is an opportunity unlike any other to really get to
know Suffolk students and to get a powerful sense of why we’re here,” said
Kathleen Peets, director of Creative Services, who lived and worked with a group
of students on a Habitat for Humanity project in Wichita Falls, Texas, last spring
and hopes to join an Alternative Spring Break group again this coming year.
The Alternative Spring Break program has grown exponentially since 1998,
when a group of 12 students dedicated their spring break vacations to helping
others. By 2010, there were four service trips, and that number doubled in 2010,
with more than 100 students participating. This year, S.O.U.L.S. seeks members
of the professional staff to work with student leaders on 12 Alternative Spring
Break trips, according to Service Learning Director Carolina Garcia.
“This is a life-changing experience for our students, and they build
camaraderie around their goals,” said Dean of Students Nancy Stoll. “I hope that
staff and faculty will look at accompanying the students as an opportunity they
want to take advantage of.”
Stoll noted that Human Resources reaches out each spring to encourage
employee participation in Service Day.
Continued on page 8
�Faculty Publications
Khaled Amira and Georges Tsafack, Finance.
Their paper “What Drives International Equity
Correlations? Volatility or Market Direction?” coauthored with Abderrahim Taamouti, was accepted for
publication in the Journal of International Money and
Finance.
Wyatt Bonikowski, English, had an interview and
the short story “Bible Camp” published in SmokeLong
Quarterly, an online journal of flash fiction.
Darlene C. Chisholm, Economics, contributed a
chapter on the economics of the motion-pictures industry
in A Handbook of Cultural Economics, second edition.
Contributors provided analyses of economic activity and
institutions related to broadcasting, heritage, publishing,
opera and other performing and fine arts.
Paul Ezust, Math & Computer Science, and son
Alan Ezust have published
the second edition of their
book Introduction to Design
Patterns in C++ with “QT.
Natalia Beliaeva,
Finance, had her paper
“Pricing American Interest
Rate Options Under the
Jump-Extended ConstantElasticity-of-Variance Short
Rate Models,” co-authored
with Sanjay Nawalkha,
accepted for publication in
the Journal of Banking and
Finance.
Carol Dine, English. Her poem “The Trench” was
published in the anthology Poems Against War: Bending
Toward Justice. The poem also was referenced in editor
Gregg Mosson’s essay “American Poetry: Process as
Vision and Social Change.”
Lauren Nolfo-Clements, Biology, has published
an article “European Rabbits as Potential Least Tern
Nest Predators” in Northeastern Naturalist, 2011: 18(2).
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the College and
director of the Madrid campus, has published “Portugal
and the Global Financial Crisis” in the journal
International Labor Brief, Vol. 9, No. 6, June 2011.
Ronald Suleski, Rosenberg Institute for East Asian
Studies, has been collecting old hand-written booklets
called chaoben抄本 from flea markets in China since
2004. These writings document the lives of China’s
common people from 1850 to 1950 and often show poor
calligraphy due to the writers’ limited formal education.
Although the libraries in China and Chinese scholars are
not interested in them, Suleski believes the chaoben
should be treated as cultural artifacts. In an effort to
draw attention to their value, Suleski has published an
article “Popular copied books from the late Qing and
Republican period” (“WanQing Minguo shiqi de minjian
chaoben 晚清民國時期的民間抄本”) in the Library
Journal of Shandong (Shandong tushukuanxue kan
山東圖書館學刊 ).
Ellen Shostek
Sklaver, NESAD,
published a book Aleph
Finds Her Voice, the
story of a young Hebrew
girl who could not speak
up. Sklaver’s friend
Paul Theodore, a fellow
graduate of NESAD’s
class of 1979, illustrated
the book. The two
reunited last year after losing touch for 30 years.
Aimee Williamson, Institute for Public Service.
Her article “Assessing the Core and Dimensional
Approaches: Human Resource Management in Public,
Private, and Charter Schools” was accepted for
publication in Public Performance and Management
Review.
Technology Survey Results
THE SUN IS PUBLISHED BY:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont St.
Boston, MA 02108 sun@suffolk.edu
Executive Editor: Greg Gatlin
Managing Editors: Nancy Kelleher, Karen DeCilio
Staff Writer: Tony Ferullo
2
University employees were invited to take a
technology survey last spring. The results have been
analyzed, and the ITS and Academic Technology
departments have responded to the feedback with
several initiatives, including new training sessions, a
wireless network upgrade and a reevaluation of the
Blackboard Learning Management System.
The results of the survey and the response were
detailed in a memo sent to the University community
on Oct. 4.
�Gift of Maine Riverfront
Property Will Expand
Scientific Research
& Creative Endeavors
The University has received the gift of an
expansive property on the Penobscot River in
Maine that will be used for scientific study and
research and to provide a location for future arts,
humanities, and creative and professional
education and endeavors.
The property, about 30 miles north of Bangor
in Passadumkeag, provides the University with its
second academic location in Maine. The inland
riverfront facility will complement the environmental,
biological and physical studies taking place at the coastal
Friedman Field Station on Cobscook Bay in Washington
County.
The Passadumkeag property consists of more than
80 acres of farmland and forest along more than 1,000
feet of Penobscot riverfront, with additional frontage
along smaller streams. The facility was developed at a
cost of $3.5 million in 2004. It includes residential
buildings and structures that will support future research
and academic programs.
“This is an extraordinary gift that will serve to
measurably enhance our science programs,” said Acting
President and Provost Barry Brown. “The facility will
provide our students and faculty with untold
opportunities for scientific research as well as
workshops, retreats, seminars and intensive study in the
humanities and arts, as well as a location for programs
for our professional schools. As an urban institution
serving students of promise,
we must afford our learning
community opportunities to
expand their horizons in the
broadest range of
educational, research and
creative settings. We are
very grateful for this gift and
the confidence that it
demonstrates in our future.”
The University
envisions a range of study
taking place on the property.
With 86 acres of field,
pasture, forest and river
frontage, opportunities for wildlife exploration,
environmental monitoring and biological study are
boundless. The location is ideal for research into wind,
solar, water and geothermal energy.
Looking forward, the facility has the size and
potential to serve the University in many ways,
including student and faculty retreats, workshops and
summer projects in areas such as writing, theater,
communication, law, business, and fine and applied arts.
The University’s other Maine property, the R.S.
Friedman Field Station, provides a living laboratory for
observing and studying marine life in a pristine coastal
environment dominated by the dramatic tides of
Cobscook Bay. For more than 30 years, science students
and faculty have used the facility to extend the reach of
undergraduate and graduate scientific programs and to
study and experiment in a broad range of the biological
and physical sciences in a natural environment.
"The new property in Maine will offer wonderful
opportunities to enhance the education of our students
and the research of our faculty.
When we add this property to
our already thriving coastal
science facility in Maine, we
are now in a position to offer
our community the best of
both worlds: everything that a
great urban institution can
provide supplemented by a
rich rural environment for
special programs in the
sciences, the humanities, the
social sciences and the arts,"
said College Dean Kenneth
Greenberg.
3
�Potpourri
Ken Cosgrove, Government, received a Fulbright Fellowship to Canada for the fall semester to study the impact that
political and party systems have on political marketing in the United States and Canada. He is the Fulbright Research
Chair in North American Integration Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa, where he teaches a graduate class on
political marketing.
Erika Gebo of Sociology and Brenda Bond of the Institute for Public Service were awarded two grants from the
Massachusetts Executive Office of Public Safety and Security to assist the communities of Boston and Springfield in
The personal papers of
Professor Emerita Margaret
Collins Weitz of Humanities
and Modern Languages -shown above wearing the
French National Order of Merit -are now available to researchers
through the University Archives.
addressing gang and youth violence issues. Gebo also received a
separate grant to work with the Tri-City area of Fitchburg, Leominster
and Gardner to address the same concerns.
Adam Glesser, Mathematics, presented “Innovative Assessment
Techniques” at the Teaching Professor Conference in Atlanta and
“Second Sight: A Journey Through an Ethereal Classroom” at the
Suffolk University Technology Symposium.
Jessica Krywosa, University Communications, presented
“Measurement: It’s even more important than social media!” at the
Stamats Integrated Marketing Conference in Chicago.
Kristin Polito, Executive MBA Program, was elected to a threeyear term on the board of trustees of the Executive MBA Council.
Bob Rosenthal, Communication and Journalism, analyzed the
politics surrounding the debt-ceiling crisis on the New England Cable
News and Fox25 Morning News programs.
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the College and director of the
Madrid campus, presented “From Boom to Bust: Global Lessons from
the Economic Crisis in Spain” at the Council for European Studies’
International Conference of Europeanists in Barcelona, Spain.
New Faces
Please welcome our newest employees:
Rebecca Bishop, University Communications
Brian Bram, Provost’s Office
Lucinda Bratini, Counseling Center
Andrew Cioffi, Disability Services
Heather Cleveland, Student Accounts/Bursar
Jordan Cogswell, NESAD
Jana Cox, Financial Aid, Law School
Caroline Davis, Residence Life and Housing
Odie Fakhouri, Management and Entrepreneurship
Michael Fisch, Dean’s Office, Law School
Christopher Ford, University Police
Emily Fritz-Endres, Dean’s Office, College
Ethan Haslett, Information Technology Services
Alexis Lamb, Counseling Center
Robyn McMicken, Residence Life - Somerset
4
Jennifer Mele, Dean’s Office, College
Jeffrey Morris, Student Affairs
Lindsay Nichols, Sawyer Library
Jenifer Park, English
Jason Parker, Academic Access and Opportunity
Francisco Peguero, Math and Computer Science
Kristen Salera, Institute for Public Service
Ingrid Sarmiento, Counseling Center
Christopher Scanlon, Residence Life - 10 West St.
Yasmin Solomon, Communication and Journalism
Latisha Taylor, Institute for Public Service
Lauren Vermette, Psychology
Keith Waak, Residence Life – 150 Tremont St.
Jennifer Woods, Dean’s Office, Sawyer Business
School
�Suffolk University & Sovereign Bank Announce Collaboration
Annual scholarships to fund international study
Suffolk University Acting President and Provost Barry
Brown joined with Jorge Morán, president and chief
executive officer of Sovereign and Santander U.S.
country head, earlier this month to announce a
partnership that will award annual scholarships for
international study beginning in the spring of 2012.
Sovereign, a subsidiary of Banco Santander, will
collaborate with the University to award 10
scholarships yearly to students here and abroad. Ten
percent of the scholarships will be awarded to low-tomoderate income students.
“Through its Santander Universities program,
Sovereign Bank is opening doors across the globe for
our students,” said Brown. “We are extremely grateful
to Sovereign for the confidence that its gift
demonstrates in this University and the impact these
scholarships will have in expanding the educational
horizons of our students.”
Barry Brown and Jorge Morán shake hands during event announcing
international scholarships collaboration. (Photo by John Gillooly)
The initiative is made possible by Santander
Universities, a corporate social responsibility program
created by Banco Santander to advance the bank’s goal of expanding knowledge and experience globally.
More than 950 colleges and universities in 15 countries receive support through Santander Universities. In 2011,
Sovereign will fund 775 scholarships and dozens of special academic programs at 23 colleges and universities in the
United States.
“We believe that the best investment for the future of society is in higher education,” said Morán. “We are very
pleased to have this opportunity to support Suffolk University’s commitment to bring an international perspective to
tomorrow’s leaders.”
Line Bruntse:
Organs,
Orphaned
At Suffolk University
Art Gallery
Line Bruntse is a Danish
sculptor and installation
artist.
In her work, Bruntse
explores changes in the
way we communicate
and the distance that
separates people.
The exhibit will run
through Nov. 5, 2011.
The artist will give a
talk at 1 p.m. Thursday,
Nov. 3.
Honored with Heritage Medallions: The University recognized the
commitment of five people who made outstanding contributions to the life of the
University through its 2011 Heritage Medallion Ceremony on Sept. 20. Those
attending included Acting President and Provost Barry Brown, honorees Glen A.
Eskedal, retired professor and chair, Education and Human Services; Warren G.
Briggs, retired professor of Information Systems and Operations Management;
Joseph P. McEttrick, professor of Law; and Life Trustee Lawrence L. Cameron.
Paula Connelly Albanese accepted the medallion on behalf of her late father
Louis B. Connelly, retired director of public relations and sports information.
(Photo by John Gillooly)
5
�HUMAN RESOURCES
Healthy You
Ninety employees covered under the University’s Harvard Pilgrim Health Care plan completed confidential personal
Health Questionnaires in May. The HQ is designed to provide personalized information for getting and staying healthy.
Participating faculty and staff received confidential personalized action plans, which
included suggestions for health screenings and information about wellness and other
programs. They were encouraged to participate in lifestyle coaching tailored to improving
their health, and those with chronic conditions were offered resources to help in managing
their conditions.
All 90 were entered into a raffle for healthy prizes. The winners are:
Laura Piscopo, Advancement: Healthy Cooking Basket
Josh Cheney, Residence Life, Yonnie Chin, Information Systems & Operations Management, and Ben Sigda,
Modern Theatre: Fall Vegetable Share/Community Support Agriculture from WorldPeas
Ann Marie Holland, Payroll: Healthy Habits Meal Delivery
Jeff Farland, Student Financial Services: Kindle
Jessica Krywosa, University Communications: Afternoon tea gift card for the Boston Harbor Hotel
Judy Couture, Information Technology Services: iPod Nano
Erica Lewis-Bowen, Graduate Admission: Healthy Cooking Class
Helen O’Brien, Sawyer Business School: Fitness Basket
Gerry Richmond, English: Healthy Snack Basket
The HQ effort was part of Healthy You, introduced last spring to encourage faculty and staff to live healthier lives.
The voluntary program, offered in collaboration with other colleges and universities in the Boston Consortium, focuses on
wellness and offers a series of health management initiatives designed to help employees understand, improve and
maintain their health.
Healthy Monday
Healthy Monday activities resumed this month, with Human Resources helping
employees start the week on a healthy path by offering nutritious snacks and other
incentives.
Healthy Monday is a national public health campaign that encourages people
and organizations to use Monday as a day to promote behaviors that will increase health
awareness and actions that will end preventable disease.
Retirement Plan Update
The Human Resources Office and TIAA-CREF/Fidelity have notified employees who participate in the University’s
retirement plan about changes to the investment lineup scheduled for March 2012.
The retirement plans section of the Human Resources Web site lists all available funds and a schedule of the weekly
information sessions and monthly individual consultations with TIAA-CREF and Fidelity representatives.
There are several retirement-related educational programs scheduled this year, including a TIAA-CREF program for
new investors, market update program by Fidelity and a TIAA-CREF presentation for individuals approaching retirement
as part of the “Celebrating 65” series.
For more information, contact Liz Berman or Denise Wholley by e-mail or call 617-573-8415.
ADP Self Service
Human Resources has added a new resource for managing and accessing payroll information. ADP Employee Self
Service. Those who have used ADP iPay to view pay stubs and W-2 forms may use the same log-in information to reach
the Web-based program. Complete instructions for new users are available on the Human Resources Web site.
6
�Modern Theatre Receives Preservation Award & LEED Silver Designation
The National Trust for Historic Preservation is the latest
organization to honor the University's Modern Theatre
residence hall project. The Trust gave the University a
Preservation Honor Award for contributions to the
revitalization of lower Washington Street.
The artful combination of preservation and new
construction in the Modern Theatre residence hall also
was recognized with a 2011 Preservation Achievement
Award from the Boston Preservation Alliance.
These awards follow the announcement that the
project has earned a LEED Silver Rating in
acknowledgment of its sustainable design, construction
and operation.
The Modern Theatre project was one of 23 award
winners honored on Oct. 20 at the 2011 National
Preservation Awards ceremony in Buffalo, N.Y. A local
celebration of the award was held at The Boston Opera
House on Oct. 24. Co-recipients were the Boston
Landmarks Commission, The Boston Opera House,
Boston Parks and Recreation, Boston Preservation
Alliance, Boston Redevelopment Authority, ElkusManfredi Architects and Emerson College.
“Suffolk University is honored to receive the
National Trust for Historic Preservation Award for its
restoration of the Modern Theatre,” said Acting
President and Provost Barry Brown. “The University has
been a proud partner in Boston’s efforts to revitalize the
Lower Washington Street Theater district while
preserving the historic integrity of landmark buildings
and bringing a new sense of life, culture and activity to
this area.”
Marilyn Plotkins, John Nucci, Mayor Thomas Menino and
Gordon King celebrate National Trust Preservation Honor
Award. (Photo by John Gillooly)
Earlier in October, the Boston Preservation Alliance
honored the Modern Theatre residence hall development
with a Preservation Achievement Award honoring
outstanding accomplishment in historic preservation and
compatible new construction.
The LEED designation and the preservation awards
are the latest recognitions for the Modern Theatre
building, which also has earned the following:
Paul E Tsongas Award from Preservation
Massachusetts
American Institute of Architects New England
Design Award
Building Design + Construction’s 2011
Reconstruction Silver Award
Special Recognition for University’s Social Commitment
The University has been named to the President’s Higher Education Community Service
Honor Roll for the second straight year.
The Corporation for National and Community Service selects colleges and universities
for the honor roll based on a series of selection factors, including the scope and innovation
of service projects, the extent to which service learning is embedded in the curriculum, the
school’s commitment to long-term campus-community partnerships and measurable
community outcomes as a result of the service.
Students at Suffolk University contribute many thousands of hours to the community
each year through service-learning classes, legal clinics and other volunteer activities.
Community-service efforts are organized by Suffolk's Organization for Uplifting Lives
through Service (S.O.U.L.S.) and the Rappaport Center for Law and Public Service. These
service entities help connect student volunteers with children, businesses, shelters and civic
groups in activities that strengthen communities and improve individual lives. Faculty and
staff also join in many volunteer efforts.
The Corporation for National and Community Service collaborates with the U.S.
Departments of Education and Housing and Urban Development, Campus Compact and the
American Council on Education in selecting the annual honor roll.
7
�Paul Tanklefsky and some of the students working on a 2010 Alternative Spring
Break project in Meridian Miss.
Alternative Spring Break
Student leaders Lina Rodriguez and Sam
Cana flank facilitators Kathleen Peets and
Ryan Roberts during a visit to the waterfall
for which Wichita Falls is named – which
happened to be dry during the ASB visit.
Continued from page 1
“This is reflective of the University’s commitment to civic engagement, which is important to the life of the
institution and the education that we give our students,” she said. “Just as the institution encourages participation in
Service Day as part of one’s engagement in the University, we hope that supervisors will support employees who want to
participate in Alternative Spring Break.”
Paul Tanklefsky, director of Career Services and Cooperative Education, has signed on for his fifth Alternative
Spring Break trip this coming spring. Last year was his second in Meridian, Mississippi, where he said “it feels like
family” working with the local Habitat for Humanity staff.
“It’s literally the best week of the year for me,” he said.
While Tanklefsky has plenty of contact with students as he counsels them about careers, he said that “you get to
know them in a different way when you’re with them 24/7. There’s a special, lasting bond. When we see each other
around campus afterwards we connect with hugs and high-fives and quickly catch up on our lives back in Boston.”
For Peets, getting to know the students also helps her professionally as she works on recruiting materials for prospective
students.
“We’re always trying to understand what makes a successful Suffolk University student and what is the right fit,” she said.
As she got to know the students on the Texas trip, she learned that they all had jobs; many were first-generation Americans
and the first in their families to attend college; and all got as much as possible out of the experience.
“They showed that the sort of students Suffolk was founded for exist in a modern form,” said Peets.
Both Tanklefsky and Peets also see student retention as an added value of the Alternative Spring Break program.
“They find a cohort and establish relationships,” said Tanklefsky. “Many stay involved in S.O.U.L.S., and it
becomes a meeting place for them. You see reticent freshmen and sophomores come into their own working on a community
project, and the next year they’re leading a trip.”
There is no cost to trip facilitators, whose role is to support the student leaders. Professional staff who are interested in
applying to serve as Alternative Spring Break facilitators may contact Tim Albers, assistant director of Service Learning
8
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Suffolk University Records
Description
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The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
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Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN) electronic edition, October 2011
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2011
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Series SUG-003.001: Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN)
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Suffolk University -- Periodicals
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November 2011
Accolades Rain Down on University
School of Art & Design
Boasts No. 3 Ranking,
‘Most-Admired Educator’
DesignIntelligence magazine named
Karen Clarke one of the 25 mostadmired educators of 2012 and
ranked the New England School of
Art & Design No. 3 in the nation on
its America‟s Best Architecture &
Design School 2012 list.
Clarke, who has taught for 15
years at NESAD, is co-director of
the school's Interior Design
program and the sole proprietor of
an award-winning interior design
firm that specializes in residential
and commercial interiors.
"I am very honored to be
recognized among these educators,"
said Clarke. "This could not have
happened without the dedication of
our faculty & administration, the
support of the University and our
very talented interior design
students."
In determining the school‟s
ranking, the magazine cited both the
undergraduate and graduate interior
design programs as among the “Top
10” best at preparing graduates for
success in the interior design
profession. The design school rose
from fifth place on the list in 2011.
“We are proud to have once
again been recognized as one of the
Continued on Page 8
Colleagues gather as Stoll named "Outstanding Dean"
Dean of Student Affairs Nancy Stoll was honored with the Scott Goodnight Award
for Outstanding Service as a Dean at the 2011 National Association of Student
Personnel Administrators, or NASPA, regional conference.
A contingent of University friends and colleagues traveled to Sturbridge to see
Stoll honored for her “innovative response in meeting students‟ varied and emerging
needs, effectiveness in developing junior staff members, and leadership in
community and university affairs.”
“As Suffolk University has grown, Nancy has been in the forefront of meeting the
needs of our students with innovative programs and personal attention to each and
every one of our undergraduate and graduate students,” said Acting President and
Continued on Page 7
Set Inspired by Once-Devastated Modern Theatre
The sparkling new stage of the Modern Theatre became a beaten-up wreck once more
at the hands of award-winning set designer and Theatre Department faculty member
Richard Chambers for the student production of Doctor Faustus. Story, Page 3
�Faculty Publications
Da Zheng, English. His book Chiang Yee: The Silent Traveller from the East (Rutgers, 2010) won the
Chinese American Librarians Association's "CALA 2010 Best Book" award in the Adult Fiction and
Non-fiction category.
Afshan Bokhari, Art History, has published “Imperial Transgressions and Spiritual Investitures:
A Begam's „Ascension‟ in Seventeenth Century Mughal India” in the Journal of Persianate Studies
(Special Issue), 4 (2011), 86-108, and "Between Patron and Piety: Jahan Ara Begum's Sufi Affiliations
and Articulations" in Sufism and Society: Arrangements of the Mystical in the Muslim World, 1200-1800 C.E.
She also was interviewed for the Academic Video Series “Treasures of Islam,” a two-hour
documentary for PBS about the visual and material legacy of the Muslim world, scheduled for release
in 2012.
Carol Dine, English, was awarded a $1,000 grant from the Money for Women/Barbara Deming Memorial Fund,
Inc. for her poetry manuscript Sutures: Poems on Art and War.
Jonathan Haughton, Economics, has published Living Standards Analytics: Development through the
Lens of Household Survey Data, co-authored with Dominique Haughton.
Quentin Miller, English. He published two articles on prisoners and prison literature: "Vital
Visions: On Teaching Prison Literature" in the volume Teaching Law and Literature, part of the Modern
Language Association‟s "Options for Teaching" series and "Invisible Citizens: The Rights and Lives
of Prisoners" as part of ABC-Clio's "Enduring Questions: Daily Life Through History" series. Miller
also published an essay "Separate and Unequal in Paris" in James Baldwin: America and Beyond.
Sue Orsillo, Psychology. Her book The Mindful Way through Anxiety, coauthored with Liz Roemer, was awarded the Self-Help Book of Merit Award
from the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies. She also published “The Effect of
Values Affirmation on Psychological Stress” with S.J. Czech, and A.M. Katz in Cognitive and Behavioral
Therapy (2011) and “Relationships among social anxiety, self-focused attention, and experiential
distress and avoidance” with D.M. Glick in the Journal of Cognitive and Behavioral
Psychotherapies, 11, 1-12.
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the College and director of the Madrid
campus, has published the book Portugal in the 21st Century: Politics, Society, and
Economics.
Gerry Richman, English, published an addendum to an article he wrote 30 years ago, "'Swa cwæð
snottor on mode' (Wanderer 111) Once Again" in Geardagum XXX (2011): 31-33.
Ronald Suleski, Rosenberg Institute for East Asian Studies, published a review of the Chinese
language book Wang Yongjiang yu Fengtian sheng zaoqi xiandaihua yanjiu
王永江與奉天省早期現代化研究 (Wang Yongjiang and Early Modernization in Fengtian Province), in the China Quarterly, Sept.
2011.
Rosie Sultan, English, has written a historical novel, Helen Keller in Love, Viking Press 2012.
David Yamada, Law School. His blog, Minding the Workplace was named one of the Top 50 workplace blogs by
Organizational-Psychology.org.
THE SUN IS PUBLISHED BY:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont St.
Boston, MA 02108 sun@suffolk.edu
Executive Editor: Greg Gatlin
Managing Editors: Nancy Kelleher, Karen DeCilio
Staff Writer: Tony Ferullo
2
�Doctor Faustus Set Designer Inspired by Once-Devastated Modern Theatre
The sparkling new stage of the Modern
Theatre went retro, becoming a beaten-up
wreck once more for the student
production of Christopher Marlowe‟s
Doctor Faustus staged in mid-November.
Award-winning set designer Richard
Chambers, a member of the Theatre
Department faculty, drew his inspiration
in part from visits he had made to the
interior of the derelict Modern Theatre
before it was razed and transformed into
a new showplace with a restored façade.
As his colleagues met to plan the
production, Chambers was drawn to
photographs of abandoned buildings that
Director David Gammons, who has
joined the faculty as a guest lecturer this
year, brought to the table.
“I liked the look; it reflects the
corruption of the soul,” a major theme of
the Faustian legend of a demented genius
who strikes a terrifying bargain with the
devil,” said Chambers.
Before the University replaced the
ruin of the Modern Theatre, the caved-in
roof had been left open to the elements
for decades, and the interior was rotted
beyond repair.
“I remember going in and being
captivated,” said Chambers of the onceglamorous derelict. “It was lit with work
lights … you could hear dripping water
and the sounds of pigeon wings."
Chambers incorporated peeling
paint, plaster oozing through lathe, and a
hole-pocked floor into the Doctor Faustus
set to bring home the sense of the title
character‟s humanity being stripped away
through the wiles of Mephistopheles.
The lighting and sound effects also
highlighted the wreckage that serves as a
metaphor for the depths to which Doctor Faustus sinks.
Chambers, who has designed more than 150 productions in the Northeast, is the recipient of two Elliot Norton
Awards and three Independent Reviewers of New England awards.
3
�Service Awards – 2011
The annual Service Awards formally recognize those employed at the University for 10 or more years. A slide show of the
celebration is online.
This year‟s recipients include:
40 YEARS
William Davis
New England School of Art & Design
Anthony Eonas
Business Law
Walter Johnson
Physics
Joseph McEttrick
Law School
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
30 YEARS
Victoria Dodd
Law School
Marc Greenbaum
Law School
John Holley
Sociology
Paula Jordan
Law Library
Ronald Brunelle
Assistant Treasurer's Office
Gloria Boone
Communication & Journalism
Gerald Peary
Communication & Journalism
Mawdudur Rahman
Accounting
Alberto Zanzi
Management & Entrepreneurship
___________________________________________________________________________________________
20 YEARS
Alade Olukotun
Guillermo Saldarriaga
Linda Ceder
Mary Anooshian
Facilities Management
Facilities Management
Financial Aid - Law School
Philosophy
4
�10 YEARS
Barbara Abrams
Humanities & Modern
Languages
Shirley Alexander-Hunt
Registrar's Office – Colleges
Pauline Alvarez
Dean-College of Arts &
Science
Nicole Aresco
Student Accounts/Bursar
Julie Baker
Legal Practice Skills
Judy Benson
Academic Access and
Opportunity
Corin Bourque
University Police and
Security
Roxana Canales
Marketing and
Communications
Jonathan Castrillon
Facilities Management
Wayne Chin
Theatre Arts
Darlene Chisholm
Economics
Regina Clinton
Student Accounts/Bursar
Diane D'Angelo
Law Library
Constance Delano
Information Technology
Services
David Gansler
Psychology
Gerasimos Gianakis
Public Management
Richard Gregg
Health Administration
Elisabeth Healy
Legal Practice Skills
Sabrina Holley-Williams
Law Library
Matthew Knowles
University Police and
Security
Sheila McCarthy
Counseling Center
Danielle LaVita
Law Support Services
Andrew Mulherin
Sawyer Library
Michelle Ann Lemay
Student Financial Services –
Colleges
Patrick O'Hanlon
Information Technology
Services
Laurie Levesque
Dean-Sawyer Business
School
William O'Neill
Dean-Sawyer Business
School
Annestine Lewis
Law Support Services
Andrew Perlman
Law School
Viviana Leyva
Undergraduate Admission
Domenic Piazza
Facilities Management
Richard Limone
Academic Computing College of Arts & Science
Jeffrey Pokorak
Law School
Nohara Lopez
Registrar's Office – Colleges
Praneeth Machettira
Information Technology
Services
Sara Dillon
Law School
Anthony Marks
University Police and
Security
Melissa Diplacido
Advancement
Carol Flores Milagros
Wallace Frank Marosek
New England School of Art
& Design
Dean-Sawyer Business
School
Leon Martinez
New England School of Art
& Design
Marie Fratto
Law Support Services
Johanna Porter
Physics
Sara Porth
New England School of Art
& Design
Jay Rosellini
Humanities & Modern
Languages
Marjorie Salvodon
Humanities & Modern
Languages
Michael Schneider
Marketing and
Communications
Jane Secci
Communication &
Journalism
Sanaul Sharif
University Police and
Security
Jack Shields
Sawyer Business School
Undergraduate Programs
Ellen Sklaver
Sawyer Library
Mikhail Spivak
Academic Computing College of Arts & Science
John Sullivan
Facilities Management
Yvette Velez
Student Affairs
Terrence Wells
Career Services/Coop
Education
Thomas Whalen
Accounting
Walter White
University Police and
Security
Felicia Wiltz
Sociology
Dmitry Zinoviev
Math & Computer Science
Rachel Scott
Registrar's Office – Colleges
5
�Illianna Monet
McCartney
Bob and Cameron DiGuardia
Bob and Rylan
Rosenthal
Sebastian Leon-Kelton
Potpourri
Congratulations to these employees on the new additions to their families:
Corin Bourque and Michael McCartney of the University Police Department on the birth of their daughter Illianna Monet
McCartney on June 22.
Bob DiGuardia, Information Technology Services, and grandson Cameron DiGuardia, who was born on Sept. 12, weighing 5
pounds 4 ounces.
Bob Rosenthal, Communication and Journalism, and grandson Rylan Rosenthal, born on Nov. 5.
R. Harrison Kelton, Humanities and Modern Languages, and wife Elizabeth Leon-Kelton, welcomed a son Sebastian LeonKelton on Aug. 24. He weighed 10 pounds, 4 ounces.
Janet Wolk of the Bursar‟s Office won the Magic 106.7 Friday
Coffee Break contest for Sept. 23. The radio station delivered Dunkin‟
Donuts coffee, bagels and donuts to the office and took the photo at
left for its website. Celebrating with Wolk are colleagues Regina Clinton,
Betania Andoh, Lindsay Robichaud, Heather Cleveland, Eric Sacca, Rita
Mooney, Annette Iebba, Paula Fleck, Danny Luu, Nicole Aresco, Kevin
Kelly and Emily Krugick.
Afshan Bokhari, Art History, was awarded a research fellowship
by the Palestinian-American Research Council to study female identities
in Palestinian contemporary art. The research was used to organize an exhibition of 20 female artists titled “Unframed/Framed”
at Birzeit University Museum in Palestine.
Kathryn Jackson, Counseling Center and Psychological Services, presented a paper on “Literature, Development and the
Therapy Hour: Experiences of a University Counseling Center Psychologist” at the 28th International Psychology and the Arts
Conference at the University of Roskilde in Denmark.
Elif Armbruster, English, hosted Latina writers Suzan Colon, author
of Cherries in Winter, and Galina Espinoza, editorial director of Latina Media
Ventures, at her Honors Seminar in Latina Literature. The women spoke to the
students about Latina authorship and literature, Latinas in the media, and politics
and gender and LGBT issues related to Latinas.
Peter Jeffreys, English, was elected to the executive board of the Modern
Greek Studies Association, an interdisciplinary scholarly organization in North
America that promotes the study of the language, history, politics, economics,
society, and arts of Modern Greece. He also lectured on "Cavafy‟s Byzantium: The
Poetics of Exquisite Decline” at Yale University's Institute of Sacred Music
Colloquium and its Hellenic Studies Program, Department of Comparative
Galina Espinoza, Elif Armbruster, Suzan Colon
Literature.
Sue Orsillo, Psychology, served on two grant review panels: a special
emphasis panel for the National Institute of Health on “Conflicts and Eating Disorders” and the Center for Integration of
Medicine and Innovative Technology Innovative Grants Program.
Bob Rosenthal, Communication and Journalism, appeared on Fox 25‟s morning and evening news programs on Nov. 8,
discussing the presidential campaign and Herman Cain's press conference, which addressed accusations of sexual harassment.
Continued on Page 8
6
�‘Outstanding Dean’ Nancy Stoll Honored by NASPA
From Page 1
Provost Barry Brown.
“We would not have
reached our national
and international stature
without her help.
Under Stoll‟s
leadership, the
University has created
the Residence Life
Program, the
Performing Arts Office,
the S.O.U.L.S.
Community Service
Center, the Disability
Services Office and the
Diversity Services
Office.
She also guided the
Nancy Stoll and the many colleagues who were on hand to applaud her recognition by NASPA.
Division of Student
Affairs development of the SU101 First Year Experience course, improved student activities and orientation programs, increased
varsity athletic programs, and boosted support and visibility for Leadership Development programs.
“Nancy is the kind of leader that every institution hopes to have – dedicated, innovative, compassionate, helpful,
supportive, and a delight to be around,” said David DeAngelis, director of Student
Leadership and Involvement.
‘Nancy is the kind of
“Despite her busy schedule, she always finds time to meet with students and attend
leader that every
their events.”
institution hopes to
“When I think of the phrase „even one person can make a difference,‟ I think of the
impact that Nancy has had at Suffolk University.”
have – dedicated,
The spotlight also fell on Stoll‟s leadership in 2004, when she received the Mary E.
innovative,
Tobin Award for Outstanding
compassionate,
Achievement and Inspirational Leadership
from the Massachusetts Association for
helpful, supportive,
Women in Education.
and a delight to be
Stoll attended the multi-day NASPA
around.’
conference with members of her staff as
she does every year. She admits to
becoming a little emotional when her
--Dave DeAngelis
name was called during the awards
ceremony.
“It was a complete surprise and, yes, I shed some tears,” she said. “I was very
touched to be recognized for my work by colleagues around the region.”
Stoll was even more delighted when she found out that a group of University
employees were on hand to applaud her as she received the award.
“That was something special to me,” she said.
She credited her Student Affairs team for making possible the circumstances
that led to the award.
“This is not about me,” she said. “I want to share this award with my staff.
Nancy Stoll receives NASPA award,
After all, they‟re the ones who make me look good.”
presented by colleague Ann Coyne.
7
�NE School of Art & Design Boasts ‘Most-Admired Educator’ and No. 3 Ranking
“Top 10” Interior Design programs in the nation,” said Bill Davis, chairman of the University‟s
art and design school. “Last year was the first time we made the “Top 10” list, but we knew that it
would not be the last. In fact, we moved from the fifth position to the third position at both the
graduate and undergraduate levels. We are working hard to make number one in the near future.”
The magazine cited both the undergraduate and graduate interior design programs as among the
“Top 10” best at preparing graduates for success in the interior design profession. The design school
rose from fifth place on the list in 2011.
In honoring Clarke DesignIntelligence, a bimonthly report from the Design Futures Council,
followed an annual tradition of recognizing excellence in education and education administration by
naming 25 exemplary professionals in these fields.
Thousands of design professionals, academic department heads and students advised the
DesignIntelligence staff as it selected the 2012 class of role models from the disciplines of architecture,
industrial design, interior design and landscape architecture.
Karen Clarke
New Faces
Please welcome our newest employees:
Lindy Briggette, Dean‟s Office, College
Celine Browning, NESAD
Rachel Cardillo, Modern Theatre
Brett DiMarzo, Graduate Admission
Janice Evans, Financial Aid, Law School
Andrea Gimler, Dean‟s Office, College
Naomi Gutierrez, Psychology
Marina Lavrov, Sawyer Business School
Jade Mishler, Sawyer Library
Sarah Morales, Undergraduate Admission
Yussel Rosario, Information Technology Services
Michael Smith, Academic Access and Opportunity
Katherine Sticca, English
Shannon Trudelle, Dean‟s Office, Sawyer Business
School
Julie Waclawik, Modern Theatre
Potpourri
From Page 6
Carmen Veloria, Education and Human Services, spoke on “Deconstructing and Re-Constructing Deficit Discourses
Related to Children and Families” at the University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Education‟s Children, Families and
Schools fortnightly lunch.
David Yamada, Law School, has joined the editorial board of New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource
Development, a refereed journal published by the College of Education at Florida International University.
In Memoriam
University Police Officer Greg Grande
8
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SUN_11_2011
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN) electronic edition, November 2011
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
2011
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUG-003.001: Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN)
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.</p>
Suffolk Publications
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/16c4f9c08045e48c48e33c2ea77718a7.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=lgTBBdAfvH9gHELJIUiWvOFp1GRmQ6LnIp0zZ8tTZqHj-j12pRzpT5ScwjkCNrk5J5d9OeTiKJP7vYxryS1cnJ2spTXW4X9MblysDNhYsVs6Elwe6cpGiQrigIKq0HGGqG8sQqoRX7AETBt3w-WzZUIZZ-r5uCY6L25uFqiITOMrYjobFfRCk3OrRpryr5ld01TtZiGN3W81D5zFFLSaP4tsEMvoxeUEI547zcYdRTp8UiHffzrkAxmUARwEENAKwVc9O6LdM9OOhxR-B7LenTF2DEXwHOhWz34bx3nt2KTBMObU-h8ZVODPGoXmKpgrWaAWm%7EtdWAvRHCw-7gDnsQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
2a8c22afb36e0bf9bfe507bc3fb5745b
PDF Text
Text
March 2012
President Shares Vision for University
Seeks participation from community during initial campuswide forum
President James McCarthy‟s
first campuswide forum a
week after officially joining
the University generated an
enthusiastic dialogue, and he
was greeted with warm
applause as he took the stage
at the C. Walsh Theatre.
McCarthy confirmed his
commitment to the
University‟s historical mission
of access and excellence,
described the professional
route that brought him to
Suffolk University and laid out
the challenges he aims to
address in the coming weeks,
months and years.
NEASC accreditation
On the immediate
horizon are the NEASC self
study and strategic planning.
The NEASC self-study
is under way, and the
president has received an
extension, postponing the
reaccreditation visit to
October 2013. During the
forum, he urged members of
the community to read the
self-study and specifically of
what issues will be raised
and recommendations
made,” said McCarthy.
Turn to Page 4
Campus Reacts to First Meeting with New Leader
“He was very forthcoming, and you can tell he did his homework because he knew
a lot about us. He touched upon the four key areas I feel are most important:
communication, collaboration, cooperation and transparency.”
– Jim Wallace, director, Facilities Planning & Management
“Suffolk University has a great future ahead and an excellent leader to move the
institution forward. While change and innovation are in the forefront, Suffolk‟s
fundamental values of access and opportunity are holding on strong.”
– Lucia Calderon, research compliance officer
Turn to Page 4
“I talked with a number of my colleagues immediately following the forum, and
everyone was upbeat and optimistic about President McCarthy‟s remarks. … He
�Potpourri
Darlene C. Chisholm, Economics, presented a paper, "The Boundaries of the Firm in Creative Industries: Evidence from
Motion-Pictures Financing and Production," co-authored with George Norman of Tufts University, at the UCLA/Bruce
Mallen Scholars and Practitioners Workshop in Motion Picture Industry Studies at the Anderson School of Management.
Karen Kelley, Government and Community Affairs, and husband Kevin welcomed a daughter
Mabel Juliet Kelley on Nov. 25. She weighed 6 pounds, 15 ounces.
Charles Kindregan, Law School, spoke on Constitutional Issues as to Donor Waivers in
Surrogacy Cases at the fall 2011 meeting of the American Bar Association Family Law Section in
Nevada, where he received a plaque noting his contributions to the A.B.A. Publications Board. He
also discussed recent developments in assisted reproduction law at Case Western Reserve Law School
and served as a moderator and presenter at the Law School‟s Advanced Legal Studies program on the
new Massachusetts alimony statute. Kindregan was named to the West Philadelphia Catholic High
Mabel Juliet Kelley
School Hall of Fame in December 2011.
Tryan L. McMickens, Administration of Higher Education, Education and Human Services. At
the March 2012 National Association of Student Personnel Administrators (NASPA) annual meeting in
Phoenix, he will present “Racism Readiness” at the Emerging Scholars: A NASPA Faculty Fellows
Research Symposium. McMickens also will be honored as a runner-up for NASPA‟s Melvene D. Hardee
Dissertation-of-the-Year Award. In addition, his paper “Conveying knowledge, resources, and
opportunities for doctoral students of color” was accepted for presentation at the annual meeting of the
American College Personnel Association in Louisville, Ky., in March.
Sebastián Royo, associate dean of the College and director of the Madrid campus, organized and
moderated a roundtable: “The Spanish Election: Challenges for the New Government” at Harvard University‟s Center for
European Studies.
Tony Ferullo, Public Affairs. Ferullo, who coaches the boys varsity basketball team at the Mystic
Valley Regional Charter School in Malden, was named Commonwealth Athletic Conference Coach of the
Year. The team posted the best record in school history, 17-3, and finished number one in its division for
the first time.
Jane Secci, Communication and Journalism, received a Champion Award from the board of
directors of We Can,Women‟s Empowerment Cape Area Network, for outstanding service to the
community at the organization‟s tenth anniversary celebration. Secci volunteered as We Can‟s interim
executive director for one year to restructure the organization, create new policies and procedures and raise funds.
Ron Suleski, Rosenberg Institute for East Asian Studies, attended the monthly meeting of the Royal Asiatic Society
China in Shanghai. Suleski is past president of the Asiatic Society of Japan.
Tom Vales, Electrical and Computer Engineering, presented a high-voltage show at the University for middle school
students from the Eliot School in the North End. The presentation generated ideas for the students‟ science fair projects.
THE SUN IS PUBLISHED BY:
Office of Public Affairs
73 Tremont St.
Boston, MA 02108 sun@suffolk.edu
Executive Editor:
Greg Gatlin
Managing Editors:
Nancy Kelleher
Karen DeCilio
Staff Writer:
Tony Ferullo
New Faces
Please welcome our newest employees:
Lauren Addesa, Peer Mentor Program
Claudia Andrade, Public Management
Paulette Giambalvo, Health & Wellness Services
Meghan Kenney, Student Leadership & Involvement
Jaclyn Lavers, Rappaport Center for Law and Public Service
Gregory Massing, Rappaport Center for Law and Public Service
Desirae Mix, Undergraduate Admission
Betty Munoz, University Police
Honey Nichols, Executive Ed/Lifelong Learning, Sawyer Business School
Wayne Nordstrom, Help Desk, Information Technology Services
Brenda Pedrick, Dean‟s Office, Sawyer Business School
Nicole Price, Dean‟s Office, Law School
Jessica Rosa, Management and Entrepreneurship
Bianca Vieira, Student Financial Services, Colleges
2
�Our Own Karate Kid
Brian McDermott is the mild-mannered assistant chief
information officer and director of Media Services by
day, but he trades in his business attire for a totally
different uniform once he steps out of the workplace
environment.
In the evenings, McDermott uses his mind and
body to kick it up a notch – literally – by indulging a
passion for karate.
“Martial arts is all about self-defense, providing
you with the knowledge and the necessary tools to
protect yourself,” said the University‟s Karate Kid.
“Learning the different techniques, combining speed
and power, is what it is all about.”
McDermott, an alumnus, has long been
interested in karate. He began taking lessons when he
was 12 and then again at 22, but he never fully
committed to the sport until six years ago when he
envisioned a game plan to ensure that he would succeed.
“I convinced my wife to join me in taking
lessons,” said McDermott. “I figured that if we went
through this together, there was no way I was going to
quit.”
After five years of training four to six days a
week year-round, McDermott and his wife, Crystal,
received their first-degree black belts in Kenpo Karate
last year.
“We tested at the same time, and it was the most
physically challenging and grueling day of our lives,” he said. “Overall, it was a very rewarding experience, because
we accomplished what we set out to do.”
The McDermotts routinely practice their skills at home.
“We always wonder what the neighbors think when we battle each other and the shades are down,” he
laughed. “Our instructor calls it „McDermott Couples Therapy‟ and says that no one goes after it like we do.”
Karate has helped McDermott to become a more confident and disciplined person, he said.
“Like anything else, the more time and effort you put into something, the better you get,” he said. “When
you work hard and see the results, you feel good about yourself.”
Working and furthering his education through the University‟s Executive MBA Program keeps McDermott
busy, but he and Crystal find time to perfect their craft by continuing their lessons in the 10 degrees of black belt as
well as by teaching karate to others.
“This is our passion and we will be involved in karate forever,” he said. “We love it.”
3
�President Shares Vision for University
From Page 1
McCarthy said he will launch a strategic planning process
by March 1, to be concluded by the end of the semester
with the full engagement of the campus community.
The data collected during the NEASC process “lay
the foundation on which the strategic plan can be based,”
he said. “It is very important that all of us contribute our
perspectives on where the University should go.”
Town meetings, committee work and other vehicles
will afford many opportunities for community
participation, he said.
In discussing challenges and opportunities facing
the University, McCarthy touched on:
The balance of cost containment and adequate
resources
Creating a student center: “The discussion of
locations for a student center is focused on
something that can be done on relatively short
notice.”
Engaging alumni: “Far too few give back to the
University.”
Raising money for scholarships and eventually for
facilities
Enhancing use of technology for student learning
Administrative structure: “There will be faculty,
staff and student participation in the recruitment
of all senior administrators in the future.”
“It is important for all of us to realize that the
challenges facing Suffolk are the same challenges that
universities across the nation and the world also face,” said
McCarthy. “We need to make sure we engage with
colleagues at other institutions. We‟re all in this together.”
Opening up a dialogue
During a question-and-answer session with the
assembled faculty, administrators, student and staff,
Athletics Director Jim Nelson asked if McCarthy will be
guided by a report and recommendations on University
finances prepared by the Pappas Group.
“That is a very important question,” said McCarthy,
who noted that Acting Vice President & Treasurer
Danielle Manning will join him for a future forum focusing
on financial issues.
“We will certainly be informed by the report,” he
said. “You used an important word: „recommendations.‟
It‟s likely that we will accept some recommendations and
act on them, but not others.”
When asked about his vision for the University,
McCarthy said that the “fundamental mission and
structure of the University” are sound. “The fundamentals
4
are not going to change,” but he will work to “do
everything better” within that structure.
The president said he sees the value of centralized
purchasing and decentralized curriculum.
Reaction on Campus
From Page 1
I feel these forums are incredibly exciting because
people in the Suffolk community –
students, faculty and staff – can share ideas and
suggestions and learn what‟s going on. I was proud of
the students‟ questions and their level of interest. And
I though President McCarthy was great, and his sense
of humor very refreshing.”
– Anita Sen, office coordinator, Theatre
Department
“I‟m very heartened after listening to what President
McCarthy had to say. He was very frank and seemed
open and accessible.”
– Sara Chadwick, director of administrative
services, New England School of Art & Design
“I talked with a number of my colleagues immediately
following the forum, and everyone was upbeat and
optimistic about President McCarthy‟s remarks. … He
seems like a genuine and cheerful type of guy and he‟s
what the school needs.” – Ronald Suleski, director,
Rosenberg Institute for East Asian Studies
“The communication by President McCarthy was
thorough and to the point. His sense of humor was
outstanding, and his humility really impressed me. I‟m
looking forward to working with him as we engage all
of our students from different and diverse aspects.”
– Amy Fisher, campus minister
President McCarthy's talk revealed preparedness and
an understanding of questions asked, as well as a
personalization of response and a sense of humor
… gaining the confidence of those to whom he
will provide leadership on our campus.”
– Jim Nelson, director of Athletics
�Faculty Artwork Delights Stahl Center Staff and Visitors
Denizens of the upper
floors at the Rosalie Stahl
Center have the daily
pleasure of viewing
original artwork on loan
from New England
School of Art & Design
artists.
The work, in a
variety of media, is on
display in the corridors of
the 12th and 13th floors
of the Stahl Center
through July 30.
Katie Linder,
director of the Center for
Teaching Excellence,
particularly enjoys seeing
the abstract paintings by
Paul Andrade each day as
she steps off the elevator
on the 12th floor.
“I appreciate that
there‟s faculty artwork on
display, and it‟s quite
appropriate that people
see faculty work as they
come and go from the
Center for Teaching
Excellence,” said
Linder.
The exhibitors are
faculty members Harry
Bartnick, Bebe Beard,
Lydia Martin, Susan
Nichter, Steve Novick,
Deborah Weisberg and
Andrade as well as Fine
Arts student Silvi Naci.
Katie Linder pauses to admire a painting by Paul Andrade,
part of an exhibit of New England School or Art & Design
artists at the Rosalie Stahl Center.
The artists loaned
their artwork for the
enjoyment of the wider
university community.
Faculty Publications
Krisanne Bursik, associate dean of the College, and
Suffolk University alumna Mandi White-Ajmani,
PhD, have published their co-authored manuscript
“What Lies Beneath: Dogmatism, Intolerance, and
Political Self-Identification” in the peer-reviewed
Individual Differences Research, 2011, 9(3), 153-164.
Peter Jeffreys, English,
received the 2011 National
Translation Prize awarded by
the Greek Ministry of Culture
for his translation
of C.P. Cavafy’s Selected Prose
Works (University of Michigan
Press), the first edition of the
Greek poet‟s prose writings to
appear in English translation..
Allan Tow, Education
and Human Services. His article “From Take-Out
Counter to Podium:
Journeys into Public Life” was published in the
Chronicle of the Chinese Historical Society of New England,
fall 2011, Vol.17, No.1, pp. 811. It describes several
activists in New England who
were owners of Chinese
restaurants including the wellknown China Pearl in Boston‟s
Chinatown.
Quentin Miller,
English, published “A Criminal
Power": James Baldwin and the
Law (The Ohio State
University Press, 2012). The book examines
Baldwin's entire career in the context of the law, using
the frameworks of Critical Race Theory and prison
literature to trace Baldwin's shift in thinking about the
way law shapes African American lives and American
culture more generally.
In Memoriam
Carol Maggio, office manager, Athletics
5
�
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Text
THE SUFFOLK UNIVERSITY NEVVSLEITER
Published by the Public Relations Office
Louis B. Connelly, Director
Volume 11
Number 4
May, 1982
SAWYER BUILDING DEDICATION HIGHLIGHTS CHARTER DAY
For business entrepreneur Frank Sawyer, it was the boyhood dream come true
or as he noted, a climb "from the base of Beacon Hill to the top." For Suffolk
University, it was one of the notable days in the university's history thanks,
as President Daniel H. Perlman observed, to Frank Sav;ryer, "a generous benefactor
whose faith in this institution and whose deep understanding and appreciation
of its mission is a source of strength to all of us charged with fulfilling the
promise of Suffolk University."
Thus, on April 29, the university's Charter Day, the Frank Sawyer Building at
8 Ashburton Place was dedicated with more than 400 guests in attendance, including Gov. Edward J. King, State and City officials, members of the Board of
Trustees, faculty, administrators, staff, alumni and students .
Sawyer, at the behest of Board Chairman John S. Howe,
ceremonies, climaxed the program by strolling from the
Place to unveil the lettering "Frank Sawyer Building."
and yellow balloons floated skyward and the spectators
who presided at the
platform on Ashburton
Simultaneously, blue
stood and applauded .
Sawyer, in his acceptance address, noted that he was proud to "share my
material blessings with one of the great American institutions of learning,
namely Suffolk University." The founder of Checker Taxi Co. and co-chairman
of the board of Avis, Inc. was the largest single contributor to the university's successful Campaign for Excellence.
Directing his talk to the student body, Sawyer urged them to follow "three
simple rules" if they wish to enjoy successful careers: "hard work, honesty,
and emulation of successful people . "
"Young people of today have ample opportunity because from your generation
come the replacement of today's leaders in the arts, sciences, politics,
commerce , education, law and the religious," Sawyer said. But, he warned,
"These are the days of study and preparation where no blemish to personal
reputation should be permitted to occur that will leave a stain on one's
opportunity for tomorrow." He urged the young people to "broaden your horizons and take advantage of the opportunities and the potentials that exist . "
(Continued on Page Three)
�THE SUN 2
President's
Corner
As Commencement draws near and the
academic year comes to a close, it is
natural to reflect on some of the
University's accomplishments since
September.
The expansion and improvement of our
physical facilities has been almost
unprecedented in the 76-year history
of the University. Our move into, and
dedication of, the Frank Sawyer Building was not only a highlight of the
year, but a milestone in our history .
The University's second Prime 750 Computer, and related terminals and
"software," quickly became an essential component of instructional equipment . So thoroughly are our facilities
and computer being utilized that it's
hard to remember what we did before .
The year witnessed the successful
completion of our "Campaign for
Excellence" in which we raised $3.5
million . Funds came from alumni,
faculty , trustees, the corporate and
philanthropic community and friends
of the University. We received several
government grants: $250,000 under the
Developing Institutions programs, nine
graduate fellowships for women and
minority students in Public Management,
and a grant to conduct the CLEO program for disadvantaged students planning to enter Law School. The CLEO
program will be conducted at the University again this summer.
We strengthened the University's
faculty and administrative staff with
a number of significant appointments .
The faculty were involved in a wide
variety of professional activities and
completed a long list of publications,
as well as maintaining the highest
standard of teaching excellence .
The task forces appointed as part of
the self-study process, preparatory to
our visit from the New England Associa-
tion next fall, have c ompleted their
work and have submitted their reports .
A new core curriculum has been
approved for undergraduate students
in the College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences and a joint JD/MPA de gree prog ram approved in Law and Management .
A construction contract has been
signed and work has gotten underway for
new Biology and Com~uter Science laboratories, new Arts and Sciences faculty
offices and classrooms, a new lounge
for the University's faculty and another
for Law students, offices for the Law
Review and the Transnational Law Jou rnal ; and a new wing of the Law library.
This work, taking place in t he Archer
and Donahue Buildings, will be completed this summer.
We have commissioned our architects
to survey all of our building s and to
recommend what needs to be done over
the next five to ten years to keep
them in good repair and restore them
to the general level of quality of the
Sawyer Building.
The Long Range Planning Committee has
been re-established and a corrrrnittee
formed to implement a comprehensive
staff development program: the
"Higher Education Management Institute . "
Space precludes extending this list
of activities and accomplishments.
Suffice it to say that it has been a
banner year for Suffolk University . I
am grateful for your help in making
Suffolk University a model for excellent
and economical urban higher education.
I hope to see most of you at Commencement on Sunday, June 13 . Have a
pleasant summer.
�DEDICATION (Continued from Page One)
THE SUN 3
Sawyer was joined on the platform by
his wife, Mildred F. Sawyer, for whom
the new four-level colleges' library
was named, and his daughter, Carol
Parks, who joined her father at the
microphone to conclude the address.
"God bless America, God bless Suffolk
University, God bless its faculty and
students, God bless us all," Sawyer
concluded.
President Perlman pledged that no
building in American higher education
will be used more intensively or for
better cause, promising that the building "will be well and earnestly used by
students, faculty, borrowers of books
and tappers of keyboards from before
eight in the morning until after 11
each evening."
Frank and Mildred Sawyer await opening ofprogram.
Perlman said that the 12-story
building "gives this institution the
space it needs to serve students of all
backgrounds and all ages and to foster
academic excellence."
Gov. King paid tribute to the university in his remarks and praised Sawyer
for his generosity.
Judith M. Dumont, an MBA student representing the student body, said
Suffolk University "has quality and
class in every sense of the word . The
leaders listen and they care and they
are willing to make changes to adapt
to the times."
A look after the unveiling.
Following the dedication exercises,
a luncheon open to all of the Suffolk
community was held in the third floor
dining room, faculty dining room and
School of Management's Conference Room.
One of the touches that pleased
Sawyer most was the 8 by 4 foot ice
sculpture set up in the dining hall and
carrying the inscription "Sawyer
Building, Suffolk University" and the
school seal.
The dedication day marked the 45th
anniversary of Suffolk University
receiving its charter from the State
Legislature.
Frank Sawyer addresses audience as Governor Edward F. King and President Perlman look on.
�THE SUN 4
HIGGINBOTHAM, PARKS WILL BE
COMMENCEMENT SPEAKERS
Judge A. Leon Higginbotham Jr.,
circuit judge for the United States
Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit,
Philadelphia, Penn., will deliver the
commencement address to Suffolk University Law School graduates on Sunday,
June 13 at 10 a.m. at the Hynes Veterans' Auditorium.
At the 2:30 p.m. exercises of the
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
and School of Management, Gordon Parks,
noted photographer, Life Magazine,
playwright and novelist, will give the
commencement address.
President Daniel H. Perlman will confer degrees at both exercises. Approximately 430 law degrees will be awarded
while at the afternoon exercises 690
degrees will be conferred in CLAS and
SOM.
Judge Higginbotham, a former member
of the Federal Trade Commission,
received his LL.B. from Yale Law School
in 1952. He is currently a law professor at University of Pennsylvania
and on the faculty at Wharton Graduate
School. A former U.S. District Court
judge for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania, he is the recipient of
numerous honorary degrees from universities throughout the country.
Parks, a World War II correspondent,
won wide recognition as a photographer
for Life Magazine and was named Photographer of the Year in 1960. He was
Life's first black photographer.
He
has also been a fashion photographer at
Vogue Magazine.
He has written a number of novels including The Learning
Tree, based on his boyhood and translated into nine languages. He also
composed the theme for that book as a
movie and in Hollywood directed the
movies Shaft, Shaft's Big Score, Super
Cops, and Leadbelly.
Parks' new novel, Shannon, was published by Little, Brown and Company.
Class marshals for the exercises will
be The Hon. Frederick V. Gilgun, J.D.
1957, for the law school, and William C.
Lepelley, BSBA 1957, for CLAS and SOM.
41
ALUMNI BOARDS HONOR HARRY ZOHN,
MIKE LINQUATA FOR S.U. SERVICE
All three university alumni boards
(Law, MBA/MPA, and General Alumni
Association) honored two former alumni
trustees at a receotion in the Alumni
Lounge, 8th floor,-Sawyer Building on
May 19.
Cited were Harry Zohn, B.A. '46, professor of German at Brandeis University,
and Michael L. Linquata, B.S.B.A. '50,
owner of the Gloucester House Restaurant.
Both served three year terms as alumni
trustees and long have been active in
alumni activities. Zohn was chairman
of the Liberal Arts and Sciences Committee while Linquata served as chairman of the Building Committee.
James Brown, B.-S. '78, president of
the University Alumni Council, presented
Zohn and Linquata with plaques recognizing the contributions of both to
alumni and the universitv during their
service on the board of trustees.
Among those in attendance were all
past and present alumni trustees.
They were James F. Linnehan, J.D. '56,
Joseph B. Shanahan, Jr., B.A. '72, J.D.
'75, Judge James J. Nixon, J.D. '55,
David J. Saliba, J.D. '52, and Frank A.
Sablone, B.S.B.A. '70, M.Ed. '71.
�THE SUN 5
DEDICATION REMARKS
BY FRANK SAWYER
When I was asked to speak on this occasion I
found myself confronted with a dilemma. Not
having had a formal education I thought to myself what could I possibly say that would be
of interest to a group of highly intellectual
educators. I concluded that it would be an
exercise in futility.
I then decided that it would be more appropriate to address my remarks to the student
body of Suffolk and based on my experience to
offer some suggestions, recommendations and
guidelines that could serve as encouragement
and act as an inspiration to the student body
to launch a successful career.
the northwest corner is the building named after
John W. McCormack,who was for years the speaker
of the United States House of Representatives,
and on the corner of Bowdoin and Cambridge
Streets is the building honoring the memory of
Leverett Saltonstall,who was a two term governor
of Massachusetts and a distinguished member of
the United States Senate representing our
Commonwealth for many years, all of whom were
warm, valued and intimate friends of mine and
I am especially proud that my wife and I will
be honored in perpetuity in a similar manner
through Suffolk University.
I was always proud to say that I was born in
the shadow of the old North Church and I was
brought up in the shadow of the State House on
Beacon Hill. It was a long way from the top of
the hill where we now meet.
As a youngster I did all the things boys in
the North End and the West End did - shine shoes,
hustle newspapers, run errands and so forth.
After a hitch in the United States Navy, my real
It has been said that you have only one
start was as a cabdriver where I first drove for
chance at the great adventure called life and
an old established company for twenty-five cents
an hour with a union card too, which I still
the good Lord has given us the will to do and
it is up to each individual to use that will
carry. The method of compensation seemed less
for a constructive or destructive career. The
than ideal since hard work brought no greater
choice is up to each one of us to make it note- reward to the driver than to the man who took
worthy or mediocre. It is not my intention to it easy. I resolved to do something about it.
dwell on generalities or superlatives. I want I bought my own car and than a couple of more.
to talk to you about what I believe is utmost
In the early 1920's I founded Checker Taxi Co.
in your minds and that is the basic values and To start with it was a small fleet and mindful
of my experience and limited compensation as a
rules to launch a successful career.
cabdriver, I was the first in the cab industry
anywhere to innovate a policy of a commissionable
Personally, I am most grateful for the good
fortune and the divine blessings that have
pay scale whereby a driver could determine by his
been bestowed upon me, both spiritual and
own efforts what the reward would be for his
labors. A cabdriver in those days was held in
material. I have been blessed with a good
less than high esteem and his public image left
wife, three lovely daughters and many grandchildren, and I think it is noteworthy to men- much to be desired. Through an educational protion that come October of this year, with the
gram we taught the driver courtesy, honesty,
help of God, my wife and I shall be celebrating safety and cleanliness which he implemented by
way of a superior service. This formula proved
our 55th wedding anniversary.
successful and in a comparatively short time,
It is with a great deal of pride that I share through rapid growth of the company, between
attrition and acquisition of competing companies,
my material blessings with one of the great
Checker became the oldest and the largest in New
American institutions of learning, namely
England.
Suffolk University, to the extent that those
who lack the means may receive an education
I hope you don't consider this as boastful or
that would otherwise be denied them. Within
sight of this building are three buildings
self-serving but is recited only to point out to
which memorialize and perpetuate the memory of the young people that the opportunity for a sucthree late, lamented and dearly beloved Massa- cessful career still exists and it can be achieved
chusetts statesmen. On the southeast corner of by following three simple rules: 1. hard work,
Ashburton Place was the Massachusetts residence 2. honesty, 3. emulation of successful people.
of our martyred President John F. Kennedy. On
(Continued on Page Six)
�DEDICATION REMARKS (Continued from Page Five)
Hard work needs no explanation. Honesty can
be defined in three ways: namely moral, intellectual and financial. A financially dishonest person will ultimately be discovered.
There are laws and penalties for violations
of these laws. There are no laws against
moral or intellectual dishonesty. This type
of dishonesty is a betrayal of confidence and
trust placed in an individual and is detectable only by the emotional sting that it inflicts when it is discovered. Word does get
around which will blight the career of the
most brilliant person. Emulation of successful people who have already found the formula
will bring its own reward. And always remember
that the key components for the success of any
endeavor is honesty and people and a strong
resolve not to yield to temptations that offer
a temporary expedient. You must have a sense
of human values, of human needs, of human aspirations and a respect for the dignity of the
individual. Your success will be dependent on
people whether they be employees, associates
or customers, in any field of endeavor you
choose . No man or woman can do it all by themselves.
Moral honesty impresses people with whom you
deal. You should surround yourself with
people who have a high sense of morality, integrity and credibility whether they be
associates or employees. This is of the utmost
importance. In any field of endeavor,dedicated
career people are the prime ingredient for
success. The true leader must motivate and
inspire the best people obtainable and then be
fair with him or her whether it be a small
office or a large corporation.
Young people of today have ample opportunity
because from your generation come the replacement of today's leaders in the arts, sciences,
politics, commerce, education, law and the
religious. These are the days of study and
preparation where no blemish to personal
reputation should be permitted to occur that
will leave a stain on one's opportunity for
tomorrow. It has been proven that the truths
set forth in this paper are as valid today a s
they were yesterday and will be in all your
tomorrows . They should be indelibly implanted
in your hearts and minds and never be forgotten. You must go forward with vigor and
determination in a competitive world, you must
broaden your horizons and take advantage of the
opportunities and the potentials that exist.
You must think positively because the only
things that you will accomplish are the goal s
THE SUN 6
and objectives you conceive in your own mind .
It gives me a warm and satisfying feeling to
know that a boyhood ambition has been realized.
I have figuratively climbed the hill of life
and literally climbed from the base of Beacon
Hill to the top. Many things have happened on
the way, some sad, some glad, with many temptations, some difficult to resist, but if not
resisted, you would hear the oft told remark,
"There but for the grace of God go I."
In conclusion let me remind you the future
belongs to your generation. It wi ll be in your
hands and under our free enterprise system
the opportunities still exist. My best advice
is to make the most of them . If you follow the
rules, your possibilities for success can be
endless.
Thank you.
Ji
1r
CAFETERIA OPEN DURING SUMMER
The University's third floor cafeteria
in the Sawyer Building will be open
throughout the summer serving full
course meals.
According to ARA Manager Stan Reed,
the cafeteria will serve four days a
week from 8 a.m . - 5 p . m.
One hot
entree will be served at lunch.
The cafeteria will be closed Fridays
as well as Saturdays and Sundays.
The Donahue Building cafeteria will
be closed throughout the summer, but
will open again in the fall.
Management will also be making
available small catered oarties in the
Sawyer Building during the summer.
The dining room, brightened by the
appearance of philodendron and fern
plants for the Sawver dedication, and
overflow 5th floor · conference room
and third floor faculty dining room
handled more than 400 diners for the
Charter Day dedication.
if
�THE SUN 7
SUFFOLK HEMI PROGRAM UNDERWAY
WITH GOALS AND MEETINGS SET
Suffolk University's Higher Education
[anagement Institute for professional
levelopment for administrative staff
.snow underway with a series of task
:orce meetings and sub-committee proj!Cts.
The task force has been broken down
.nto sub-committees which will focus
,n the following areas: marketing of
:he program; calendar and module
L
dministration; and coding arid needs
Lssessment, according to Pam Scricco,
L
ssistant dean in SOM and chairman of
:he marketing committee for the pro;ram.
The Task Force, made up of 15 members
,f the administration, met with Presilent Perlman, Vice President Flannery,
L Deans Sargent, McDowell and
nd
~onayne to discuss the purposes of
:he program, part of support Suffolk
tas received under Title III of the
[igher Education Act. It is the first
,fits kind presented at the univer:ity.
Goals and responsibilities estab.ished:
- Enhance the personal and profes:ional development of administrators
L staff members (through opportunind
:ies, environment, resources for
!nrichment and growth).
- Enhance institutional excellence .
- Encourage administrators and mana;ers to identify with Suffolk Univer:ity's ideals and institutional goals .
- Broaden the understanding of the
tniversity's organization and functions
Lnd stress the importance of interlependence of these functions .
- Examine key elements of the manage1ent process and their application to
:he management of Suffolk University.
- Explore questions and problems
relating to human behavior in the
academic environment, including organizational theory, interpersonal relationship and personnel management.
- Improve managerial effectiveness
by development of skills that are
useful to managers in the performance
of their responsibilities.
- Develop Suffolk University's human
resources, foster an awareness of each
person's value and dignity and encourage personal enrichment as part of
professional development and career
enhancement .
Any questions concerning S. U. -HEt-U
should be addressed to Associate Dean
Joseph IL Strain, chairman of the program.
LAW SCHOOL WILL AGAIN HOST
CLEO SUMMER INSTITUTE
Suffolk University Law School has
been selected for the second straight
year to be one of seven law schools from
throughout the nation to host a CLEO
(Council of Legal Education Op~ortunity)
summer institute for economically and
educationally disadvantaged students.
The program will run for six weeks
beginning June 20 and again be under
the direction of Russell G. Murphy,
professor of law. It will cover the
Northeast region. Some 30 graduating
college seniors, certified by the
national CLEO office in Washington,
D.C. as potentially qualified for law
school admission, will participate in
the program.
The institute's faculty will include
Murphy, Attorney-at-Law Wayne Budd,
Atty . Diane Wilkerson-Mills, law clerk
in the Supreme Judicial Court, Robert
Ward of the Suffolk County District
Attorney's Office, Professor Ralph
Smith of the University of Pennsylvania
Law School, Judge Roderick Ireland of
the Juvenile Court of Boston, and Profs.
Richard Perlmutter, Gerard Clark, and
Clyde Lindsav of the Suffolk faculty.
:fl:
�THE SUN 8
Pictorial
~
CITED FOR SER VICE - Former Alumni Trustees Michael L. Linquata
(left) and Dr. Harry Zohn received plaques from James Brown, president
of the University Alumni Council, for service to alumni and school. (story
on Page Four)
~. '~t' }'; ;-.,
'.- 2'
~
ON LOAN - Presidenl Daniel H. Perlman accepts several volumes
which are par/ of the $2100 worth of books and microfilm dealing wilh
black American history loaned to the Collection of Afro-American Literall/re by the National Park Service. The collection is housed in the
Mildred F. Sawyer Library. With Perlman are (left-right) Dr. H. Edward
Clark, professor of English, Dorothea Powell. site manager, Boston
African American National Historic Site, Nalional Park Service, Hugh
Gurney, superintendenl, Bos/on Na1ional Historical Park. National Park
Service, Byron Rushing, presidenl, Museum of Afro-American His/ory,
and College Librarian Edmund G. Hamann .
OUTSTANDING STUDENT - Effie Pappas of Allston received lhe
Outstanding S/uden/ Award/or her participation in school acliviliesfrom
Ac1ivi1ies Direclor Duane Anderson during Recognition Day ceremonies.
Pappas is a senior majoring in philosophy.
DAMN YANKEES - Admissions Director Bill Coughlin leads Spring/est
lroupe in a reenaclment of /he famous "You Gotta Have Heart "from /he
Broadway hil Damn Yankees. Spring/est was a smash a~ain in 1982.
SUMMA GRADS HONORED - Among those honored at the sixlh
annual Phi Beta Kappa recognilion ceremony for summa cum laude
gradua/es were (le/I-right) Shirley M. Thompson, Raymond F. Perkins,
Virginia M. Gray, (President Perlman), Stephen D. Flynn, and Maria G.
Buccio.
�THE SUN 9
>ersonnel Page
ratio over 105 with distinguished performance - 7-10%; fully competent 5-8%; acceptable - 0%."
PRESIDENT NAMES ASSISTANT
CHECK SS EARNINGS RECORD!
Personnel
reminds faculty and staffers that periodically (usually every five years) they
should obtain a printout from Social
Security to insure that earnings have
been properly credited to one's account.
If you wish, you can make this request
on a special form available in the Personnel Office.
Dr. Diane Rudnick of Chestnut Hill
has been appointed assistant to the
president of the university, Dr.
Daniel H. Perlman has announced.
Dr. Rudnick, a member of the faculty
at Wentworth Institute of Technology
since 1974 and head of the Department
of Social Sciences and Humanities there
from 1974 to 1980, assumed her duties
on June 1.
OPEN ENROLLMENT FOR HEALTH INSURANCE
PLAN - June is "open enrollment" month
for the Harvard Community Health Plan
and the John Hancock Group Insurance
Plan.
If you are eligible for insurance
but failed to enroll for either plan,
you may enroll in the Harvard plan for
membership, effective July 1.
She did her undergraduate work at
Vassar College, receiving a B.A. in
history in 1958. She earned a master
of arts degree in history from Boston
University and her Ph . D. in American
Social History from Boston University
in 1971.
If you're presently enrolled in the
' Harvard plan and wish to switch to John
In 1980, she was selected as an Amer- Hancock,-you may do so provided you sign
ican Council on Education Fellow and
for enrollment before June 15 . Again,
served as assistant to the president
I membership is effective July l, 1982.
of Southeastern Massachusetts Univer! Call Personnel for enrollment informasity.
She has also been an evaluator
tion.
for the New England Association of
1
Schools and Colleges and authored a
!
number of publications in her field.
Effective July l, the university
will change to a direct claims processing service under the John Hancock
The
Personnel Office has released guideGroup Insurance Plan. All group health
lines to department heads for support
claims must be submitted directly to
staff annual increases for July, 1982
the John Hancock Claims Service Center.
to June, 1983.
This change should speed up processing
considerably and help reduce related
Karen Hickey, personnel officer, says,! paper work and record keeping.
Employ"As in the past, the actual increase
1 ees will receive complete filing infor each staff member will be granted
structions and appropriate forms in June.
based upon appraisal of the staff member's performance and the position in
Philip Therrien of
his or her salary range . .. While 10 per
Lynn, utility person, Physical Plant;
cent of your department's current salGeorge Lawson of Somerville, mail clerk,
ary budget has been allocated for annu- Mailroom; Annmarie Cienava of Boston,
al increases, the following should be
evening supervisor, Sawyer Library;
considered in making increase recommen- Cecelia Ricci of Beverly, secretary,
dations:
For staff with comparative
College Placement; Mauri Wirtanen of
ratio of 85-94 with distinguished perNashua, N.H., purchasing clerk, Accountformance - 10-13%; fully competent ing; and Marcy Kamin of Watertown, sec8-10%; acceptable - 5-7%; comparative
retary, Counseling Center.
ratio of 95-105 with distinguished performance - 9-12%; fully competent JL
7-10%; acceptable - 5-6%; comparative
"
l
I
I
NEW CLAIMS PROCESSING UNDER HANCOCK
PLAN -
SUPPORT STAFF SALARY INCREASES -
NEW EMPLOYEES -
�THE SUN 10
Potpourri
It's good to see Asst. Dean PETER
SARTWELL back on campus after a bout
with hepatitis . . . Buoyed by the success of the faculty-staff basketball
game, MAUREEN DOOLEY of the Vice President's Office and BOB DiGUARDIA of Data
Processing are putting together a softball/volleyball outing June 6 at the
M.I.T. Softball Field at 1 p.m. There
will be a $3 charge for adults and $1
for children and the menu will include
hamburgers, hot dogs, corn on the cob
and watermelon. Call Bob at 421 or
Maureen at 401 for additional detail& ..
Law Prof. CHARLES KINDREGAN is a member
of the Mass. Bar Association's Task
Force on Model Rules of Professional
Conduct which is examining the issues
and making recommendations in the ABA's
proposed code. He also has an article
on conflict of interest in the Law
Office Management section of the California State Bar and Franklin Pierce
College of Law has published his views
on law and bio-technology. . .
the faculty of the 8th New EnRland
Municipal Clerks Institute held on
the campus of Salve Regina College in
Newport, R.I. . .
President DANIEL H.
PERLMAN has been nominated to serve as
a member of the board of directors of
the Beacon Hill Civic Association.
The oresident was also elected to the
board of directors of a Chicav,o-based
organization, "The Education Network
for Older Adults," a group that encourages colleges, universities and
others to provide educational opportunities for older adults such as senior
citizens. . .
The Biology Department
is seeking to again host the Eastern
Colleges Biology Conference in 1984 to
mark the 25th anniversary since Suffolk
first hosted it in 1959 . .
JACK HAJJ of Mathematics is Boston
coordinator for the Faculty Committee
for Human Rights in El Salvador which
recently held a symposium at Harvard
on the problems in that country . . .
JOHN LOFTUS, a 1977 law school grad,
was featured on a May 16 segment on
CBS's top-rated TV show "Sixty Minutes."
Loftus, associated with the Boston
law firm of Bingham, Dana and Gould,
has authored a book claiming immigraGERALD PEARY of Journalism was a
tion to the United States of Nazi war
regional judge for the Student Academy
criminals. . .
It has become an
Awards, sponsored by the Academy of
annual success, nothing but. SpringArts & Sciences in Hollywood . He also
fest's Salute to Broadway was a fastlectured at Kirkwood Community College, moving, happy package and ALBERTO
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, "On the State of
MENDEZ, LAURIE COOK, LARRY BUCKLEY, et
Film Criticism. . . "
DEMIR YENER and
al, can take bows again for superb
WARRE~ BRIGGS of SOM presented papers
efforts in putting it all together . .
at the Northeast meeting of the AmeriFRAN BURKE of Public Management knows
can Institute of Decision Science in
that the Celts Larry Bird has few bad
Washington, D.C. Briggs was elec~ed
games so when she picked him as the
editor of the proceedings. Also in at- star of the March 31 game she wasn't
tendance was GREG JIN, chairman of the
surprised when her name was drawn for
Computer Information Systems Department a $25 Stop & Shop gift certificate.
ment ... SUSAN THAYER, assistant direcBird also received a gift certificate,
tor of the Learning Resource Center,
which should helo him with the grocery
has been elected president of the 2000- bill. . .
Welcome to ALISON STEPHENS
i:aember aassachusetts Reading Associaof Brighton, new staff assistant in
tion and was also awarded the Sarah E.
School of Management, replacing Sharon
Chase liemorial Scholarship Award by Del- Penta who resigned. Stephens holds a
ta Kappa Gamma International. And KEVIN B.A. from University of Hashington and
LYONS of the center presented a paper
an M.B . A. from University of Utah.
"Learning Style : The Need to Know,"
at the Hass. Reading Association's
(Continued on Pag e Eleven)
annual conference. . .
SOM's DON
LEVITAN and K. GREGORY JIN were among
�POTPOURRI (Continued from Page Ten)
THE SUN 11
On June 4 , 50 members of the Suffolk
family will spend the day at sea off
Boston waters . PRESIDENT PERLMAN will
head the group sailing on the Re g ina
Maris . The Ocean Research and Educational Association extended the inv itation as part of Suffolk's new affiliation with OREA . The trip will include
oceanographic sampling activities.
Participants will include students ,
staff, faculty, alumni and trustees .
The ship will leave Boston at 9:30 a . m.
and return at 4:30 p . m. with lunch provided . For additional information,
call ext. 347.
DR . ART WEST of
Biology was elected president of the
Massachusetts Bay Marine Studies Consortium, Inc . Twenty-two colleges,
universities and non-formal educational
institutions belong to the consortium . . .
BARBARA LISCHINSKY, a graduating senior
in the Biology department , has been
appointed to the Title III position of
biology lab technician. She succeeds
SANDRA CLARK who recently resigned.
"Facilitating Career Development in
Women" at the New Eng land Chapter of
the Association for Women in Psychology Annual Conference . .
And BEN
DIAMOND of SOM has been elected vice
president of the North Atlantic Business Law Association, a division of
the American Business Law Association .. .
The Career Planning and Placement
Office and the Accounting Department
recently joined forces to host a
reception on campus for public accounting firms from the Greater Boston area.
The event was the first of its kind to
be held at the university . . . SOM
Prof. MICHAEL ARTHUR chaired a syr.iposium
on "The Teaching of Self-Awareness" at
the May 13 meeting of the Eastern Academy of Management at which he also
presented a paper entitled "Shapin~
Self-Awareness : The Impact of the
Teacher's Role .
" Our sympathies
this month to DR . WILLIA~1 SAFAKIAN on
the death of his wife, Rev. Dr. Mabel
Sahakian, pastor of Riverdale Congrega. tional Church in Dedham, and to S . U.
I Assistant Director of Physical Plant
K. C. TSENG of SOM presented a paper
j ED FARREN on the loss of his dad,
entitled "The Impact of Inflation on
Edward Farren, Sr. . .
Best of luck
Stock Prices" to the annual meetings
f to SOH Asst. Prof. CHA~LES E. DAVIS
of Eastern Finance Association in
who recently resigned to assume the
Jacksonville, Fla. April 22-24. . .
position of associate professor and
History PROF . EMERITUS ED HARTMANN
director of the HPA ;,>rograr!l at the
presented an interesting history of
University of Wyoming . . . And conPhi Beta Kappa at the ceremony honoring 1gratulations to Dean of Students D.
Suffolk's summa cum laude graduates . . ·j BRADLEY SULLIVAN and Journalism Prof.
CHUCK DAVIS of Public Management and
, DICI( BP......'\.Y, who were honored recently
the University of Miami's Jonathan West ! as outstanding administrator and outco-authored an article "Merit and Pub standing faculty member by the Evening
1
lie Sector Collective Bargaining:
/Division Student Association at their
Accommodation or Conflict?" accepted
Recognition Night dinner held at the
1
for publication in an upcoming issue
157 Restaurant . . . And that's SUNdown
of the Journal of Collective Negotia 'for the academit year. Have an enjoytion s.
LISLE BAKER of the Law
able sum.mer. See you in September. . .
School was recently honored by the
Newton Conservators as Environmentalist
#
of the Year in recognition of his work
as a Newton alderman, which led to public acquisition of the 71-acre Chestnut
Hill Country Club as a public golf
course recreational area .
DR .
PAUL KORN and DR . NANCY MATTEI represented Suffolk at the Conference on
Training and Development in Higher Education hosted by Harv ard on Hay 3 and 4.
Mattei presented a workshop entitled
I
I
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
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SUN_vol11no4_1982
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN), vol. 11, no. 4, 1982
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
May 1982
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUG-003.001: Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN)
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.</p>
Suffolk Publications
-
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Document
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Dublin Core
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SU-1837
Title
A name given to the resource
Feature story about the dedication of Suffolk University's Sawyer Building, 1982
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1982
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUG-003.001: Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN)
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Description
An account of the resource
Story from the Suffolk University Newsletter (SUN), vol. 11, no. 4, May 1982
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University--School of Management
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Buildng dedications
Sawyer, Frank
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
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<p>Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.</p>
Sawyer Business School
Suffolk Publications
-
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PDF Text
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DEAN AND FOUNDER
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GLEASON L. ARCHER, LL.B., LL.D.
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THOMAS J. BOYNTON, President
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
1906-1937
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THOMAS J. BOYNTON is widely known to the public
from his long and honorable career at the bar and his
distinguished pu b lie service as M ayor o f E verett,
Attorney Genera\ of the Commonwealth and United
States Attorney for the district of Massachusetts. In
his active and kindly career thousands upon thousands
have learned to know and bless him for his wise and
disinterested counsel and aid.
But Suffolk Law School has special reason to be
grateful to him and to offer him today her meed of
honor. For more than a quarter of a century this institution has been a large beneficiary of the unselfish
devotion characteristic of Thomas J. Boynton.
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Twenty-eight years ago, when Suffolk Law School
was less than two years of age, he was the chief speaker
at the closing exercises for the year. He has participated prominently and invaluably in every Commencement in her history since then. He has been President
of the Board of Trustees since the school was incorporated. Every law degree ever issued by Suffolk Law
School bears his signature.
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He is the revered and beloved friend of every Suffolk
man. He has poured the wealth of an exceptionally
benign personality into their service from the humblest
days of the school to the present hour. His mellow
tones and eloquent tongue have lent dignity and charm
to our public exercises. His illuminating humor and
sage advice have cheered and inspired our departing
graduates. His unaffected humanity has revealed to
all the worthiest and truest Americanism.
Suffolk Law School is profoundly grateful to President Boynton. She is indeed fortunate that he is able
and willing to carry on in her service, that her students
will continue to enjoy his wise and benevolent guidance in the perplexing years that are upon us.
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Suffolk Law School in paying honor to Gleason L. Archer, its Dean
and Founder, honors itself. Educational annals contain few instances
of such devotion to an institution and to an ideal as will be found in the
thirty years of service that Dean Archer has rendered to the school
which he created alone and unaided in September, 1906. He did not
realize when he opened an humble evening law school in Roxbury that
it would one day become the outstanding educational institution which
it has already become. He did realize, however, that ambitious and
worthy young men were being denied opportunity for legal training
solely from economic necessity which obliged them to work for a living.
"Archer's Evening Law School," as he called it in 1906, was to minister
to such men. Then when the magnitude of the public need was apparent the present name of Suffolk Law School was adopted.
For eight years at great personal sacrifice, he bore unaided the
financial burden of maintaining the struggling school, taking the risk
again and again of borrowing money on his personal credit when his
assets were character alone. The last three years of that period found
him devoting time and energy to the limit of unusual capacity to the
task of winning legislative approval for Suffolk Law School. When the
charter fight was won and the School developed to the point where
its financial success was assured Dean Archer conveyed by deed of gift
to the Trustees named in the charter all his proprietary right to the
School which he had created with such toil and travail through the
years, thus to make it a permanent institut:on of strictly public character in which no individual could have any personal ownership. Since
that date Dean Archer, though but a salaried official, has repeatedly
ventured all his worldly goods and even his life insurance to tide the
school over financial crises. He did this when the school purchased
45 Mt. Vernon Street; again when it built its annex there in 1915 and
yet again in much greater measure when an ambitious building program
was undertaken in 1920 on the site of the present school home. Every
promissory note or obligation undertaken by Suffolk Law School in
this building enterprise was a joint and several obligation signed by
Suffolk Law School and Gleason L. Archer as an individual. At one
Jime more than half a million dollars of such obligations were outstandg; yet today Dean Archer's financial prudence and skill have enabled
e School to redeem all but a fraction of its obligations.
Page seven
�His administration of the School has been marked from the b
ginning by considerable initiative, originality, and practical good sens
He has demonstrated rare talent in the choice of teachers and counselo
from the legal profession and in selecting able administrative officers.
He has achieved teamwork to a high degree in faculty and admin
tration, and has encouraged the utmost personal development of
associates by entrusting to each full responsibility for his task and
giving each complete freedom to perform in his own way the dutie
assigned. The faculty and officers of administration are unhampere
by academic red tape or constraint upon originality and initiative i
the pursuit of the main objects of the institution. Each is confident i
the security of his tenure so long as his performance measures up tot
needs of the institution. Six members of the Faculty have been teachi
continuously for over fifteen years, one of them for twenty-one year
and another for twenty-eight years. The Dean himself has been teac
ing from the beginning.
Dean Archer early enlisted as trustees the aid and counsel of some
the greatest lawyers of the Commonwealth, distinguished both for leg
attainments and experience in high office, among them the late Gener
Charles W. Bartlett, the Hon. James H. Vahey, and Hon. Wilmot
Evans, and their active survivors, former Attorneys-General Thom
J. Boynton, James M. Swift, and former Congressman Joseph
O'Connell. One of the latest recruits to this distinguished group
Joseph E. Warner, who became a Trustee while serving as Attorne
General of the Commonwealth and while continuing as an active me
ber of the Faculty on which he has served for many years.
From its lowly beginning it has grown to be one of the leading la
schools of the country in service, efficiency, and numbers. Its growt
has repeatedly required moving to larger quarters, and its library a
other facilities have correspondingly improved.
The present school home on Derne Street opposite the rear wing
the State House is an impressive four-story building occupying t
south end of the entire city block between Temple Street and Ridgewa
Lane and extending back one hundred and fifty feet, affording spacio
lecture halls, auditorium, and library accommodations. The buildin
already has an aggregate seating capacity for eighteen hundred studen
and it is so constructed that additional floors may be added if int
future the institution expands, as we hope, into "Suffolk University."
Suffolk Law School and all its graduates affectionately acknowledg
a debt of gratitude to the resolute man who in youth conceived a visio
of helpfulness to his fellow men and for three decades has striven
mightily and successfully to translate that vision into an everlasti
monument of service to humanity.
1906-07
THOMAS J. BOYNTON, President
CHARLES 'vV. BARTLETT, Vice-President
GLEASON L. ARCHER, Treasurer
\VIL.MOT R. EVANS, JR., Clerk
JosEPH F. O'CONNELL
JAMES H. VAHEY
SUMNER ROBINSON
1936-37
. Arlington, Mass.
OMAS J. BOYNTON, President
Massachusetts, former Attorneyformer U. S. Attorney for
General of Massachusetts
Boston, Mass.
ES M. SWIFT, Vice-President
Massachusetts, Commissioner to
former Attorney-General of
arrange the General Laws
ASON L. ARCHER, Treasurer
Boston, Mass.
Dean and Founder, Suffolk Law School; President, Suffolk
College of Liberal Arts and Suffolk College of Journalism
M J. ARCHER, Secretary
Director, Department of Research and Review
Middleboro, Mass.
Boston, Mass.
former Congressman from Massachusetts, National Committee on Uniform State Laws, American Bar Association
PH E. \;VARNER .
former Attorney-General of Massachusetts
Taunton, Mass.
RGE A. FROST*
.
.
.
.
. West Newton, Mass.
President, George Frost Company, Boston, Mass.
* Deceased, 1936.
Page nine
Page eight
�1936-37
GLEASON L. ARCHER, LL.B., LL.D., Professor of Law.
History of Law.
Dean and Founder of Suffolk Law School.
HIRAM J. ARCHER, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Constitutional Law.
Director, Department of Research and Review since 1915.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1907.
HERBERT S. AVERY, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Bankruptcy.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1923.
Law office at 153 Milk Street, Boston.
MARK CROCKETT, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Sales.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1927.
THOMAS F. DUFFY, LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law.
Bills & Notes. Partnership. Wills & Probate.
Landlord & Tenant.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1917.
Law office in Waltham.
ENRY P. FIELDING, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Criminal Law. Agency.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1921.
Former Assistant District Attorney of Suffolk County.
Assistant Attorney-General of Massachusetts.
Law office at 6 Beacon Street, Boston.
OMAS J. FINNEGAN, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law.
Torts. History of the Law. Sales. Equity & Trusts.
Bankruptcy. Partnership. Domestic Relations.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1927.
Law office at 40 Court Street, Boston.
Page eleven
The first composite picture of the Suffolk Law School Faculty was taken twenty years ago. Of
twelve members in the original body three are still on the teaching staff of Suffolk Law School
appear in this group-PROFESSOR YORK, HIRAM J. ARCHER and DEAN ARCHER.
�WARREN A. FOGARTY, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Constitutional Law. Evidence.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1927.
Law office at 6 Beacon Street, Boston.
ARTHUR V. GETCHELL, LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law.
Real Property. Equity & Trusts.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1922.
Law office at 74 India Street, Boston.
LEO J. HALLORAN, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Equity & Trusts. Wills & Probate.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1922.
Law office at 40 Court Street, Boston.
WILLIAM H. HENCHEY, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Torts. History of the Law.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1921.
Former Mayor of Woburn.
Former head of Legal Department of U. S. Internal Revenue.
Law office at 85 Devonshire Street, Boston.
LEO W. HIGGINS, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Carriers.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1930.
Law office in Quincy.
JOHN L. HURLEY, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Contracts.
Appointed to Faculty in March, 1919.
Former Assistant Attorney-General of Massachusetts.
Law office at 19 Milk Street, Boston.
WILLARD P. LOMBARD, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Corporations. Domestic Relations.
Appointed to Faculty in April, 1931.
Member of firm of Stover, Sweetser & Lombard, 18 Tremont Street,
Boston.
JoHN A. McCARTY, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Deeds, Mortgages & Easements.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1934.
Law office at 10 State Street, Boston.
Page twelve
K A. MENTON, LLB., Professor of Law.
.
:Massachusetts Plead"m~ & p ract1ce.
.Appointed to Facult?' m August, 1933.
Law office in Cambndge.
TRI C
A · PARKS, LLB., Professor of Law.
.
Workmen's Compensat10n Law.
.Appointed to Faculty in 1915.
Chairman, Industrial Accident Board, State House, Boston.
BP H
XANDER R. SMITH, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Deeds, Mortgages & Easements.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1922.
Law office at 10 State Street, Boston.
ODORE E. STEVENSON, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Real Property.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1935.
Law office at 73 Tremont Street, Boston.
GER A. STINCHFIELD, B.S., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Criminal Law. Agency.
Appointed to Faculty in December, 1935.
Deputy Clerk, U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
PH E. WARNER, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law.
Constitutional Law.
Appointed to Faculty in December, 1922.
Former Attorney-General of Massachusetts.
Law office at 11 Beacon Street, Boston.
NETH B. WILLIAMS, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Conflict of Laws & Carriers. Contracts. Evidence.
Appointed to Faculty in November, 1930.
Law office at 89 State Street, Boston.
Insurance.
WYMAN, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Massachusetts Pleading & Practice.
Appointed to Faculty in 1920.
Law office at 44 School Street, Boston.
CHESLEY YORK, LL.B., Professor of Law.
Corporations. Bills & Notes. Landlord & Tenant.
Appointed to Faculty in September, 1908.
Assistant U. S. Attorney for Massachusetts.
Law office at 11 Beacon Street, Boston.
Page thirteen
�1909
To be the President of the Suffolk Law Alumni Association on the
Thirtieth Year Jubilee of the School is not alone a unique privilege and
honor; it is an honor and a privilege magnified and exalted by the
character and achievements of the Dean and Founder of the School.
53 Lee Street, Cambridge, Mass.
ROLAND EDWARD BROWN
GEORGE Lours BusH
1 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
CARL COLLAR
GEORGE ARTHUR DOUGLAS
*JAMES FRANCIS O'BRIEN
1910
The lustre of Dean Archer's career the Alumni Association reflects
and appreciatively and affectionately attests.
LEWIS AUSTIN ADAMS
Thirty years Dean Archer has held invitingly
opportunity to young men.
Thirty years of inspiration to ambitious youth!
EMANUEL COHEN
OLE MARTIN DAHL
ROBERT TIMOTHY HEALEY
BERNARD JOSEPH KILLION
CHARLES FRANCIS MURPHY
Thirty years of idealistic devotion to the hope for educational oppor-
HARRY NAYOR
EDWIN LEROY WEISCOPF
709 Hammond Building, Detroit, Mich.
JAMES BERGEN
ERNEST PALMER BRADSTREET
1397 Beacon
73 Tremont
6 Beacon
11 Beacon
Street,
Street,
Street,
Street,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Boston,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
5 Knapp Street, Boston, Mass.
tunity for all in the field of law l
Thirty years that have proved the possibilities of indomitable will,
sterling character and unflinching courage in the heart of a man devoted to the building of a great institution of learning.
In the spirit of the Founder, the Alumni Association invites its
members, Suffolk undergraduates and the public to this observance of
our Thirtieth Anniversary.
The Alumni Association commends the Trustees and Faculty of th
School for their untiring devotion from the beginning to the present
day.
To Dean Archer above all others the Alumni Association extend
felicitations. To you, our Dean, our hearts go out. Fortunate indee
are we and the institution that is our Alma Mater, that you have bee
the guiding intellect and steadying hand through all the troublo
years.
May you continue your great work until fruition of your
tional ideal is as fully realized as human nature and human
permit.
B. J. PARTICELLl
1912
JosEPH ABBOTT
(LARENCE WILFRED BOSWORTH
ATRICK STEPHEN BRODERICK
OHN THO,iIAS Coy
A.c'1:ES JOSEPH CRONIN
ICHAEL FRANCIS CURRAN
ILLIAM GREGORY DOLAN
HUR GEORGE EASTMAN
PETER HERON
CHAEL JOHN HORAN
N EDWARD HOWARD
CIE DODGE JORDAN
HOLAS STANISLAUS LAWLESS
RAHAM LELYVELD
AM EDWIN TUTTLE
FRANCIS WELCH
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
110 Pleasant Street, Framingham, Mass.
25 vVilson Avenue, Malden, Mass.
111 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
158 Riverside Avenue, Medford, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Central Post Office, Boston, Mass.
320 Union Street, Rockland, Mass.
(Now in U. S. Army)
80 Barnstable Street, Swampscott, Mass.
1913
141 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
SELL CLUCAS
JOSEPH FLYNN
FRANCIS HALEY
AS FRANCIS HOLLAND
DEUS ALEXANDER KITCHENER
JOSEPH MCSWEENEY
N ALDEN MORRILL
Boston Globe, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
* Deceased.
Page fifteen
Page fourteen
�Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
MICHAEL RUANE
FRANK LESLIE VICCARO
1 State Street, Boston, Mass.
MYER LINDA
WILLIAM MARSHALL, JR.
*BERNARD MATTHEWS
CHARLES S. McEvILLA
*JOSEPH FRANCIS McGRATH
(LL.B. DEGREES FROM THIS DATE)
1914
LOUIS ABRAHAMS
JOHN E. BAILEY
HENRY BENJAMIN PICKMAN BETTS
EVERETT RYDER CAMPBELL
"WILLIAM JOHN COLLINS
WILLIAM GREGORY DOLAN
GEORGE ARTHUR DOUGLAS
FREDERICK DUGDALE
} AMES PETER HERON
PERCIE DODGE JORDAN
JAMES JOSEPH MACKERMAN
JOSEPH ARMAND MARCHARD
WILLIAM JOSEPH McNALLY
Lours EUGENE p ASCO
MYRON PROCTOR PEFFERS
*PHILIP ROSENBLUM
MICHAEL RUANE
HIRAM LOVELL SKINNER
GEORGE MADISON WASHING TON
JOHN FRANCIS WELCH
GEORGE WARREN AYER
ANDREW JAMES HALE BICKFORD
EDGAR RAYMOND BREED
HARRY ERNEST BURROUGHS
FRANK LEO CAREY
ISAAC STEVENS COLLINS
JAMES HERBERT CURRIN
CHARLES ANTHONY DECOURCEY
CHARLES AUGUSTINE DONAHUE
JAMES CHARLES FITZPATRICK
RICHARD ROCHE FLYNN
- - ----}OSEPH EDWARD GRANAHAN
230 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Mass.
7 Central Square, Lynn, Mass,
24 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
84 State Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
1915
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
218 South Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
14 Tyler Avenue, West Medford, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
362 Essex Street, Lawrence, M
52A Broadway, Somerville, Ma
22 Pearl Street, Boston, M
323 Hildreth Building, Lowell, Ma
Room 123, State House, Boston, Ma
101 Billings Road, North Quincy, Ma
*JOHN FRANCIS HALEY
JOSEPH BASSETT HAMMOND
THOMAS VREELAND JONES
JAMES THOMAS KIRKBY
*WILLIAM McCARTHY
JOSEPH ANDREW MURPHY
vVILLIAM FRANCIS O'DONNELL, JR.
WILLIAM OWENS
LEOPOLD FRANCIS QUINN
HARRY GARRETT SELIGMAN
25 East Street, Melrose, M
294 vVashington Street, Boston, M
1916
KARL GRANVILLE BAKER
OLE MARTIN DAHL
EDWARD NATHANIEL DAHLBERG
JOHN HAROLD DREW
THOMAS FRANCIS DUFFY
Page sixteen
* Deceased.
10 Newbury Street, Boston,
43 Tremont Street, Boston,
177 State Street, Boston,
14 Central Avenue, Lynn,
81 Washington Street, Salem,
MAURICE ELI GOLDBERG
ISADORE JAMES GORNSTEIN
JACOB ISRAEL HANFLIG
GEORGE Fox HoGAN
PATRICK FRANCIS JOYCE
40 Court Street, Boston,
30 State Street, Boston,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
294 Washington Street, Boston,
12 Market Square, Amesbury,
JOHN LAWRENCE MURPHY
CHARLES SEBASTIAN O'CONNOR
11YRON PROCTOR PEFFERS
88 Tremont Street, Boston, M
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
106 Main Street, Brockton,
53 State Street, Boston, M
680 Main Street, Waltham, M
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
238 Cabot Street, Beverly, Mass.
30 Boylston Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
27 School Street Boston Mass
11 Pemberton Square: Boston: Mass:
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
IsAAC MosTOW
JOHN JOSEPH MURPHY
ISADORE EDWARD PARETSKY
WILLIAM BURTON STILES
WILLIAM BANCROFT WALKER
1917
89 State Street, Boston Mass
31 St. James Avenue, Boston: Mass:
14 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
14 Cent:al Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
24 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street Boston Mass
DAVID COHEN
222 Walnut Avenue' Revere' Mass.
MICHAEL ABRAM COPLAN
294 Washington Street' Boston' Mass.
WILLIAM EDWARD CUNNINGHAM
127 Walnut Street Wakefield, M ·
SEYMOUR CHANDLER DICKIE
1007 Hyde Park Avenue, 'Hyde Park', Mass.
.
ass.
JOHN JAMES DREA
134 F airmount Street Lowell Ma
JOSEPH EDWARD DWYER
'
ss.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN EVARTS 500-501 Peoples Savings Bank Bldg ·• H' ol yo k e, M ass.
84 State Street, Boston Mass
BERNARD EYGES
3 Annapolis Street, Roxbury' Mass.
NEWMAN CARDINAL FIELDING
32 Hopkins _Street, Hartford: Conn:
SEPH G. HASSELBACK
City Hall, Chelsea, Mass.
EORGE FRANCIS HEDERSON
GEORGE MELVILLE BLANDFORD
FREDERICK BREEN
MAURICE EDWARD CASSIDY
JosEPH BERNARD CLANCY
MELBOURNE EDGAR COFFIN
RLOS SANFORD HOLCOMB
ILLIAM JAMES LEONARD
OLD LIPKIN
ILLIAM FRANCIS McGOWAN
THEW LEE McGRATH
IS KEEGAN MCNALLY
JOHN MULLEN, JR.
ARD LEONARD PAINE
AM HENRY p ARKER
ALOYSIUS p ARKS
T RIDDLE POLLOCK
IS COGGSWELL PORTER
IAN DAVID RAINEY
RGE BRINKERHOFF RANSOM
LIAM ALDEN ROBART
PH FRANCIS ROGERS
TIN DOUGLAS ROSENFIELD
EMERY SEAVER
AS CHARLES SHORT
RICK FREEMAN SMITH
L JOSEPH SULLIVAN
y TERMINIELLO
MORTON TOOLE
LESLIE VICCARO
WATERMAN
1 State Street, Boston Mass
1140 Columbus Avenue Roxbury' M ·
'
ass.
294 W as h mgton S treet, Boston,' Mass.
·
11 Beacon Street Boston Mass
Clerk, Municipal Court, Cha~lestown' Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston: Mass:
10 Tremont Street Boston Mass
Room 272, State House: Boston: Mass:
Navy Yard, Boston Mass
39 McLean Street, Boston' Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston'. Mass:
7 Arlington Street Newton
740 M am S treet, Waltham '
·
'
186 Ruthven Street Boston'
242 Cabot Street,' Beverly:
Ma
ss.
Mass
Mass.
Mass:
51 Cornhill Boston Mass
67 G Street, South Boston' Mass·
270 Broadway, Revere'. Mass:
12 Market Square, Amesbury Mass
1020 River Street, Hyde Park: Mass:
* Deceased.
Page seventeen
�1919
1918
SAMUEL BLACKMAN
HARRY GREENLEAF BLAZO
JOHN BAPTIST BOUDREAU
*ERNEST WILLIAM BRANCH
*STEPHEN CLIFFORD BRESNAHAN
GEORGE SABIN BRIGGS
JOHN JOSEPH CALLAHAN
ARTHUR GERALD CHISHOLM
MARTIN PATRICK CUMMINGS
JAMES HENRY DOOLEY
JOHN CHARLES DRISCOLL
HARRY STANLEY FAIRFIELD
FRANCIS JOSEPH FALVEY
PATRICK JOSEPH FERGUS
JOHN JOSEPH FINNERTY
JOHN GREGORY FITZGERALD
CHARLES GILFIX
FRED GILLESPIE
WILLIAM GOLDBERG
THURE HANSON
JOHN FRANCIS HARDY
*JOHN JOSEPH HEFFERNAN
ELWOOD ASA HOWE
JOHN LAWRENCE HURLEY
ARTHUR NATHAN lLLMAN
FRANCIS JOSEPH KALINAUSKAS
JEREMIAH FRANCIS KILEY
PETER VINCENT MAGGIO
MANUEL MEL VIN MARGET
JOHN JOSEPH MARKEY
STEPHEN AMBROSE MCALEER
FRANK DONALD McCARTHY
PETER JOSEPH McCARTHY
DANIEL JOSEPH MCGILLICUDDY
JAMES PERCIVAL McNAMARA
BENJAMIN FRANCIS MCQUADE
*"WILLIAM JOSEPH MONAHAN
JAMES IRVING MOREHEAD
JOHN JOSEPH MURPHY
JAMES PATRICK AUGUSTUS NOLAN
CHARLES EBEN NORDSTROM
CLEMENT AUGUSTINE NORTON
PHILIP PATRICK A. O'CONNELL
JOHN NEVILLE O'DONOHUE
"EDWARD PAUL O'HALLORAN
THOMAS EDWARD PATTEN
*FAMAGUST SIPPING PAULSON
DANIEL THOMAS SHEA
EDWARD THOMAS SIMONEAU
JOHN JOSEPH TOBIN, JR.
DANIEL Lours TUMULTY
JOSEPH JAMES TWITCHELL
WALTER HART WATSON
FREDERICK PAUL WELSCH
JACOB WISSER
LEO WYMAN
49 Winthrop Street, Roxbury, Mass
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass'
449 Broadway, Everett, Mass:
26 Avon Street, Cliftondale, Mass
29 Union Street, Peabody, Mass·
93 Elliott Avenue, West Newton, Mass·
3 Auburn Place, Charlestown, Mass·
33 Broad Street, Boston, M
112 Antrim Street, Cambridge, M
6 Atherton Street, Braintree, M
361 Third Street, South Boston, Mass
Room 707, Statler Building, Worcester, Mass'
Holmes Avenue, Dorchester, Mass·
20 Bedford Street, Lexington, Mass:
1180 Raymond Boulevard, Newark, N. J.
18 Dorrance Street, Charlestown, Mass
69 Chambers Street, Boston, Ma '
125 Eastern Avenue, Worcester, Ma
294 Washington Street, Boston, M
131 State Street, Boston, Ma
22 Beacon Street, Boston, Ma
25 Pemberton Square, Boston, Ma
414 West Broadway, South Boston, M
9 Concord Street, Natick, M
427A Broadway, Everett, M
Station WDAY, Fargo, No. D
51 Monument Avenue, Charlestown, Ma
% United Drug Company, Boston, Ma
60 State Street, Boston, M
North Postal Annex, Boston, M
9 Pleasant Street, Malden, M
16A Ashburton Place, Boston, M
6 Taunton Street, Somerville, M
11 Pemberton Square, Boston,
433 Centre Street, Jamaica Plain,
14 Symphony Road, Boston,
Commonwealth Pier, Boston,
40 Court Street, Boston,
15 State Street, Boston,
235 State House, Boston,
59 Ellery Street, Cambridge, M
186 Main Street, Marlborough, M
1094 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, M
22 Main Street, Peabody, M
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
16A Ashburton Place, Boston, M
24 Milk Street, Boston, M
27 School Street, Boston, M
44 School Street, Boston, M
• Deceased.
Page eighteen
M
M
M
M
M
21 Nevada Street, Winthrop, Mass.
,'\JI.RON ALLEN
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH HENRY AMSBURY
15 Grove Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE APPLEBJ\.UM
1114 Commonwealth Avenue, Allston, Mass.
CIJf\.RLES JJ\.SON AUSTIN
10 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIJN HENRY BJ\.CKUS
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIJN JOSEPH BARRY
Clerk's Office, Superior Court, East Cambridge, Mass.
fREDERICK CLIFFORD BEAN
47 Irving Street, Boston, Mass.
SJ1.MUEL ARTHUR BERENSON
28 Thane Street, Dorchester, Mass.
IRVING EDWJI.RD BERMAN
48 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
T!Jf\.NJ\.S TREMEL BODI
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
ETER CELESTINE BORRE
69 North Common Street, Lynn, Mass.
JI.WRENCE JOSEPH BRODERICK
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
DWJI.RD NoRMJI.N BRODY
Pemberton Building, Boston, Mass.
CYRIL FITZGERJ\.LD BUTLER
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
EORGE FRJ\.NCIS CAHILL
131 State Street, Boston, Mass.
FJI.EL CERVINO
4 Leicester Street, Brighton, Mass.
osEPH GEORGE COHEN
Navy Yard, Boston, Mass.
ours BERNJ\.RD CONNELLY
243 State House, Boston, Mass.
JI.VID W J\.RREN CREELMAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
IJOMAS AQUINIS CRONIN
639 East Sixth Street, South Boston, Mass.
JI.LTER PATRICK CUNNIFFE
ILLIJ\.M JOSEPH DELAHANTY
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
NNETH CLYDE DUNLOP
134 Waverly Street, Everett, Mass.
PH G. ERICKSON
428 Huron Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
AR EVENSON
92 Boylston Street, Malden,~Mass.
MJ\.S BERNARD EYGES
8 Broad Street, Nashua:N. H.
NISLJI.US FIJAL
~ 3 Blossom Street, Woburn, Mass.
N EDWARD FITZGERALD
195 Sheridan Avenue, Medford, Mass.
ERT DANIEL FOUNTAIN
168 Dartmouth Street, Boston, Mass.
RENCE EDWARD FULLER
N FRANCIS GILBERT
NLEY LOWNEY GRABOWSKI
ERT AUSTIN HALL
49 Bellevue Street, Lowell, Mass.
!STOPHER JOSEPH HALLIGAN, JR.
Barristers Hall, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM HALLORAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
crs GARDNER HATTIE
516 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
IAM VASSALL HAYDEN
Barristers Hall, Boston, Mass.
ERT JACKSON
9 Clifton Street, Somerville, Mass.
s RussELL KrNG
34 Marshfield Street, Roxbury, Mass.
B KLINE
29 Revere Street, Boston, Mass.
OLD MYER LICHTENSTEIN
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
H LINHARES
1348 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
GERALD LONG
Old Colony Trust Company, Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE MACCUBBIN
Clerk's Office, Superior Court, Boston, Mass.
FREDERICK MANNING
18 Tremont Street Boston Mass
FRANCIS MEAGHER 712-718 Barristers Hall, Pemberton Squar~, Boston', Mass:
IAM PATRICK MORRISEY
53 Central Street Lowell Mass
ARD :NTHONY MURPHY
7th Floor, Federal Building,' Boston'. Mass:
D RANCIS ANTHONY MURRAY
11 Pemberton Square Boston Mass
rs J °;1LN O'CONNELL
618 Boston Street, W~st Lynn' Mass.
'
, .
H , 0 EARY
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
LIUS PATRICK O'SHEA
746 East Fourth Street, South Boston, Mass.
W JOSEPH PETERS
33 High Street, Lynn, Mass.
R WHITING PORTER
y JOSEPH PRITCHARD
5 Estralla Street, Jamaica Plain. Mass.
BENJAMIN RANDALL
18 Hubbard Avenue, North Cambridge; Mass.
*Deceased.
Page nineteen
�ABRAHAM CHAIM ROME
MICHAEL EDWARD ROSENZWEIG
JOSEPH Russo
GEORGE AUGUSTUS SCHEELE
MICHAEL JORN SHERRY
SAMUEL SIDLOFSKY
PETER JORN SILSBEE
GEORGE DIXON SINCLAIR
EMANUEL MAX VICTORSON
JOHN RICHARD WALLACE
WILLIAM VALENTINE WALLBURG
JOHN BENJAMIN WENZLER
446-447 Old South Building, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
54 Norman Street, Boston, Mass
117 Court House, Boston, Mass·
42 Oak Street, Peabody, Mass:
160 Washington Street, North, Boston, Mass
96;/, Blackstone Street, Boston, Mass:
225A Highland Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
39 Mermaid Avenue, Winthrop, Mass
33 Oneida Street, Lynn, Mass:
160 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
514 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
1920
MAURICE NOEL ABRAHAMSON
THOMAS JOSEPH BARRY
MAURICE BERNARD
MAURICE FRANK BODNER
THOMAS JOSEPH BOLAN
JOSEPH FRANCIS BONNER
CHARLES NATHANIEL BRONSKI
WALTER FRANCIS BRYSON
JOHN FRANCIS BURKE
WALTER BENJAMIN BUSHWAY
DANIEL CARAMANICO
GEORGE Lours FRANCIS CHAPMAN
EDWIN ADAMS CHENEY
JOSEPH HARRY CINAMON
SAMUEL COHEN
MAURICE EDWARD CONDON
EDWARD }AMES CONLON
THOMAS LA WREN CE CONNOR
FRANK SALVATORE DIMENTO
DENNIS ALOYSIUS DOOLEY
*RICHARD PATRICK DUNN
HARRY EDWARDS
NELSON EDWARDS
JOHN HUBERT FARLEY
JOHN HUGH FURFEY
}AMES PATRICK GALLAGHER
JOHN THOMAS GIBBONS
ALBERT BENJAMIN GOLDMAN
ARTHUR CORNELIUS GRANVILLE
WILLIAM GRIFE
LEO JOYCE HALLORAN
MARTIN HAMILTON
EDWIN MATTHEW HARKINS
CHARLES EDWARD HARRINGTON
CHARLES THOMAS HUGHES
FRANK }AMES HURLEY
NATHAN NOAH HURVITZ
GEORGE KATZ
EDWARD }AMES KEIRAN
FRANCIS JOSEPH KELLEY
WILLIAM }AMES KELLEY
WALTER MELVIN KENDALL
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
89 Florida Street, Dorchester,
24 School Street, Boston,
92 Western Avenue, Lynn,
632 Broadway, Everett,
140 Stanwood Street, Roxbury.
5 Cornwallis Place, Waltham,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass
Mass:
Mass,
Mass,
Mass.
Mass.
170 South Street, Jamaica Plain,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
98 Blue Hill Avenue, Roxbury,
185 Devonshire Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
Mass,
M
M
Ma
Ma
20 East Cottage Street, Dorchester, Ma
7 Water Street, Boston, M
24 Castleton Street, Jamaica Plain, M
100 Chauncy Street, Boston, M
161 Devonshire Street, Boston, M
51 Cornhill, Boston, M
164 Harvard Street, Newton, M
277 Washington Street, Newton, M
107 Green Street, Boston, M
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
103 H Street, South Boston, M
123 Holland Street, Roxbury, Ma
40 Court Street, Boston, Ma
18 Milton Road, Brookline, Ma
5 High Street, Medford, Ma
791 Purchase Street, New Bedford, Ma
20 Madison Street, Somerville, M
12 Drayton Avenue, Dorchester, M
16 Elm Street, Chelsea, M
12 Crowell Street, Dorchester, M
51 Cornhill, Boston, M
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, M
Court House, Malden, M
106 Pleasant Street, Attleboro, M
* Deceased.
Page twenty
Jo:S:N BALTZAR KNUDSON
f;pMUND FRANCIS LANDERS
].VlARTIN JOHN LEE
C:S:ARLES ISADORE LEWIN
f{ERBERT FRANCIS LYNCH
fRANC!S PATRICK MADDEN
GEORGE BERTRAM MAHAN
C:a:ARLES EDWARD MALLAHAN
WALTER VALE McCARTHY
JAMES FRANCIS McGOWAN
].VlICHAEL McGOWAN
CORNELIUS ALOYSIUS McINTIRE
JosEP:S: AGOSTINO MERENDA
GEORGE ANDREW MOONEY
EDWARD FRANCIS MYERS
:MARTIN JOHN NEARY
OHN FRANCIS NOLAN
HN THOMAS NOONAN
PH EDWIN NOWELL
RNEST O'CALLAGHAN
:a:oMAS POWER O'CONNOR
ANIEL FRANCIS O'KEEFE
ROMAS PENTA
!RAM PORTER
NATHAN RIDER POWELL, }R.
ERNARD DAVID ROSENBERG
RL LINWOOD SARGENT
SEPH LEONARD SHAWMUT
N DONALD SMITH
BERT MOYER STALEY
IS GOTTLIEB STONE
PH SWARTZ
p ATRICK TIERNEY
NK ISADOR TOBIN
EL MATHEW WEENE
EL WEINER
P ANDREW WELSH
BLANEY XIMINESS
ARD ARTHUR YOUNG
719 South Flower Street, Los Angeles, Calif.
20 Hancock Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
99 Chauncy Street, Boston, Mass.
26 Waverly Street, Roxbury, Mass.
48 Eighth Street, Cambridge, Mass.
Room 37, State House, Boston, Mass.
254 Bussey Street, Dedham, Mass.
54 Forest Street, Roxbury, Mass.
33 Chelmsford Street, Dorchester. Mass.
70 State Street, Boston; Mass.
856 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
520 LaGrange Street, West Roxbury, Mass.
16 Sargent Avenue. Somerville, Mass.
14 Clement Street, Malden, Mass.
1 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
9 Ingraham Road, Wellesley, Mass.
51 Bullard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
718 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
238 Purchase Street, Boston, Mass.
294 ·washington Street, Boston, Mass.
817 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
vVebster Road, Kendall Green, Boston, Mass.
115 Crawford Street, Roxbury, Mass.
1246 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
1369 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
162 Babcock Street, Brookline, Mass.
262 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
170 Summer Street, Boston, Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
28 Pearl Avenue, Winthrop, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
62 Bessom Street, Lynn, Mass.
1 Sagamore Street, Dorchester, Mass.
1921
D EDWIN BEALE
S ISAAC BECKER
T DODGE BILLINGS
D WII,LIAM BOHM
RD EUGENE BRADLEY
HENRY BRENNAN
EDWARD BROWN
S }EFFERSON BROWN
S JOSEPH CANAVAN
RANCIS CARROLL
JOSEPH COLBERT
JOSEPH COOKE
rt:rs BERNARD COTTER
N RoscoE COUNCE
0SEPH DEVLIN
Ludlow, Vt.
50 Main Street, Clinton, Me.
26 Akron Street, Roxbury,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
21 Egremont Road, Brookline,
82 Devonshire Street, Boston,
Savings Bank Building, Quincy,
177 State Street, Boston,
40 Court Street, Boston,
137 Newbury Street, Boston,
40 Court Street, Boston,
370 Seventh Avenue, New York,
44 Champney Street, Brighton,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
N. Y.
Mass.
* Deceased.
Page twenty-one
�110 Williams Avenue, Hyde Park, ~as~.
FRANK JOSEPH DONAHUE
206 Essex Street, Boston,
ass.
FREDERICK WILLIAM DONAHUE
109 Union Park Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES CHRISTOPHER DONOVAN
148 State Street, Boston, Mass.
HowARD MATTHEW DowD
405 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
JAMES HENRY DRONEY
80 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
HoMER AusTIN DURGIN
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
JORN J osEPH ENRIGHT
440 Beach Street, Revere, Mass.
CHARLES WILLIAM FERMOYLE
88 Suffolk Street, Malden, Mass.
Lours MORTON FLASHENBERG
559 Broadway, Everett, Mass.
WALTER RuFUS FLINT
531 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
JAJ,IES LEO FoLEY
323 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
PHILIP JAMES GALLAGHER
132 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
Lours BERNARD GLIXMAN
.
d
t
Berkeley Street, Boston, Mass.
ANDREW JOSEPH GOREY
Police Hea quar ers, 154
*ROBERT EDWARD GRANDFIELD
WILLIAM HENRY HENCHEY
CHARLES VINCENT HOGAN
JAMES FRANCIS HOLLORAN, JR.
ROBERT HENRY JAMESON
DAVID LASKER
FRANCIS RAYMOND LAWLER
THOMAS SHAW LAWRENCE
ARTHUR GEORGE LEDWITH
Lours VINCENT LENNON
FRANK JOSEPH LINEHAN, JR.
JORN FRANCIS MADDEN
JOHN EDWARD MAHONEY
HENRY JOSEPH McCARTHY
LEONARD WILLIAM McCLAY
ALBERT AMBROSE McDONALD
JORN FRANCIS McLAREN
THOMAS JOSEPH MENTON
FRANCIS PATRICK MURPHY
NATHAN NADELMAN
JOSEPH MARTIN N OVER
*WILLIAM HOLLIS ORMOND
SAMUEL BIERSTEIN PEARLMUTTER
EDWARD LAWRENCE PRAGUE
FRANK PRESTERA
*GEORGE HENRY PRIESING
PAUL RECORD
JOSEPH JORN SARJEANT
CHARLES HENRY SAVAGE
VINCENT ROGERS SAYWARD
SAMUEL JAMES SCOTT
THOMAS BERNARD SHAPIRO
SAMUEL SIDMAN
GEORGE HENRY SPILLANE
PETER MALONE SULLIVAN
RICHARD CHARLES TIGHE
GEORGE ROLAND VANASSE
*JAMES EDWARD WALSH
CHARLES OLIVER WILLIAMS
PERCY FULLER WILLIAMS
82 Devonshire Street, Boston,
7 Central Square, Lynn,
22 Church Street, Woburn,
250 Main Street, Marlborough,
19 Milk Street, Boston,
122 Beacon Hill Avenue, Lynn,
272 Tremont Street, Malden, Mass.
36 Wenonah Street, Roxbury, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
44 Wallis Street, Beverly, Mass.
106 Berkley Street, Lawrence, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Bo~ton, Mass.
127 West Street, Qumcy, Mass.
41 Rosedale Street, Dorchester, Mass.
450 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
117 Court House, Boston, Mass.
8 Dunkeld Street, Roxbury, Mass.
53 Shirley Avenue, Revere, M
53 State Street, Boston, Ma
85 Church Street, Whitingsville, M
40 Broad Street, Boston, Ma
11 Beacon Street, Boston, M
144 Dudley Street, Rox~ury, Ma
216 Farragut Street, Qumcy, Ma
333 Washington Street, Boston, M
54 Walnut Street, Chelsea, M
145 Munroe Street, Lynn, M
89 State Street, Boston, M
58 Edison Park, Quincy, M
333 Washington Street, Boston, Ma
40 Court Street, Bosto:1,
West Dennis, M
*Deceased.
Page twenty-two
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
1922
DWIGHT LEONARD ALLISON
199 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES }AMES BAILEY
372 Meridian Street, East Boston, Mass.
FREDERICK ALANSON BARTLETT
6 South Washington St., North Attleboro, Mass.
FRANK BECKMAN
42 Lawrence Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
ARTHUR IRVING BURGESS
1364 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
FRANCIS EUGENE BURKE
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE EUGENE CARTER
51 East Street, Dedham, Mass.
*ANDREW JACKSON CASEY
PETER JOSEPH CHI CARELLO
32 Eliot Street, West Medford, Mass.
WILLIAM DAVID COLLINS
45 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE RANDOLF CONNOR
98 Balboa Street, Mattapan, Mass.
ROBERT w. STEWART Cox
142 Berkeley Street, Boston, Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS DALTON
45 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES HENRY DIGNAN
89 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
DANIEL JOSEPH DOHERTY
377 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH DONOVAN
599 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
JEREMIAH FRANCIS DRISCOLL
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
,,WILLIAM EDWARD DUNNE
Van Dusen Harrington Co., Minneapolis, Minn.
ARTHUR VINTON GETCHELL
74 India Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS GILMORE
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
MosIER BARNET GOLDBERG
678 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
LEON GOLOSOV
39 Robson Street, Jamaica Plain. Mass.
WILLIAM VINCENT GORMLEY
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
FERGUS WILLIAM GRIFFIN
30 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
HARRY GROSBAYNE
JAMES JOSEPH HARRINGTON
70 Pine Street, New York, N. Y,
UEL HARRIS
52 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.
RY THOMAS HARTMERE
10 High Street, Boston, Mass.
HIRO HAYASH!
26 Arlington Street, Cambridge, Mass.
UEL JACOBSON
101 Suffolk Street, Malden, Mass.
MAS FRANCIS KERRIGAN
N WILLIAM KING
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
N VINCENT MAHONEY
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
N JOSEPH MALONEY
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
RICE CHARLES MCNULTY
91 Henley Street, Charlestown, Mass.
OTHY JOSEPH MOLLOY
100 Summer Street, Boston, Mass.
ND LESTER MORRISON
99 Main Street, New Canaan, Conn.
RT CHARLES MANGAN MULCAHY
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM NEWMAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
IAM LAWRENCE NOLAN
27 Lakehill Avenue, Arlington, Mass.
H NUTILE
17 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
K THOMAS O'CONNELL
210 Lincoln Street, Boston, Mass.
K WHITE O'REILLY
Hillside Avenue, Dedham, Mass.
RUSSELL p AAKONEN
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
W HARRIS PATON
79 Boardman Avenue, Melrose Highlands, Mass.
EL LEO PEITCHEL
6 Beacon Street, Boston. Mass.
LD ALBURN PERRY
77 Quincy Street, Medford Hillside, Mass.
!CK HENRY REINSTEIN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
ATRICK RYAN
12 Litchfield Street, Brighton, Mass.
ENRY SPENCE
46 Florence Street, Roslindale, Mass.
ONY SPILLANE
27 Roseway Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
LEO STACEY
10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
REY STORKE
150 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.
ILLER STUART, JR.
9 Cedar Street, West Somerville, Mass.
lfATCH STURTEVANT
40 Central Street, Boston, Mass.
•Deceased.
Page twenty-three
�/
45 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
DARIEN STEPHEN TERRILE
23 Bloomingdale Street, Chelsea, Mass.
50 Sea Street, North Weymouth, Mass.
GUY HOLCOMBE TRESILIAN
JACOB WEISS
RussELL HOWARD WRITING
1923
ELLIOT ANDREW BARTLETT
JOHN MARTIN BOYLE, JR.
JOSEPH WILLIAM BUCKLEY
THOMAS FRANCIS BURKE
JAMES JOSEPH CAFFREY
MORRIS CAPLAN
JORN MICHAEL CARNEY
JAMES AUGUSTINE CARRIG
JEREMIAH AUGUSTIN COAKLEY
DOUGLAS MONTAGUE COLLINS
JOSEPH FERGUSON CONNELLAN
JOHN PHILLIP CONNOLLY
ROY EDWARD CONNOR
JAMES KENNETH CONROY
ARTHUR DANIEL COOPER
WALTER FRANCIS COSTELLO
JAMES JOSEPH Cox
FRANK lsADORE DANIELS
JOSEPH DENTE
ROGER EDWARD DEVENEY
JOHN JEROME DONAHUE
CHARLES JOSEPH DONOVAN
JORN ANDREW DOOLEY
EDWARD LEO DOYLE
TIMOTHY JEROME DRISCOLL
JAMES HENRY DUFFIN
THOMAS ANTHONY FINN
THOMAS FRANCIS FITZPATRICK
JOHN JOSEPH FOSTER
JAMES JOSEPH Fox
/'EDWARD JOSEPH GARITY
DANIEL JOSEPH GILLEN
ARCHIBALD ALEXANDER GILLIS
MAX GOLDSTEIN
SAMUEL GOLDSTEIN
EDWARD ALOYSIUS GORMAN
ROY WILSON GUILD
LAWRENCE ENOCH HANSON
45 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.
1053 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass.
Chamber of Commerce Building, Boston, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, Mass.
53 Intervale Street, Roxbury, Mass.
2352 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
54 Ellery Street, Cambridge, Mass.
17 Guild Road, Dorchester, Mass.
38 Batavia Street, Boston, Mass.
Bank Comm. Office, State House, Boston, Mass.
598 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
131 State Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Shephard Street, Cambridge, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
148 State Street, Boston, Mass.
27 Temple Street, Quincy. Mass.
154 Palmer Street, Arlington, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
143 Main Street, Maynard, Mass.
456 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
16 City Square, Charlestown, Mass.
711 Main Street, Waltham, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
23 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
Court House, Boston, Mass.
144 Concord Avenue, Belmont, Mass.
19 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
143 Third Street, Chelsea, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
56 Amherst Street, Cambridge, Mass.
362 Washington Street, Brookline, Mass.
49 Boylston Street, Malden, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
LEO ALAN HARRISON
EUGENE ALBERT HUDSON
JAMES MICHAEL JosEPH HURLEY
BRONISLAS AMBROSE JEZIERSKI
JOSEPH PETER JIENUSHEVSKY
JAMES SAMUEL KENNEALLY
MYER WILLIAM KETTLEMAN
HERBERT LEWIS KUHN
WILLIAM HENRY LALLY
CLARENCE ADOLPH LINDSKOG
FREDERICK WOLCOTT LOVEJOY
15 Ashburton Place, Boston, Ma
344 Geneva Avenue, Dorchester, M
35 Centennial Avenue, Revere, M
294 Washington Street, Boston, M
681 Main Street, Waltham, M
109 Marvin Road, Melrose Highlands, M
Nashua, N
678 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, M
JOHN WILLIAM LYONS
*LEO MoosEAK MAKSOODIAN
* Deceased.
Page twenty-four
6 Beacon Street, Boston Mass
FRANK WILLIAM MANNING
622 Columbia Road, Dorchester' Mass.
GEORGE HENRY MAYNARD
25 Congress Street, Lynn' Mass.
JEREMIAH GEORGE McCARTHY
19 Hunter Street, Dorchester: Mass:
JAMES MAXWELL MCELROY
419 South Station, Boston Mass
THEODORE CHARLES MCELROY
124 Stevens Street, Lowell'. Mass:
EDWARD JAMES McKINLEY
700 Cregg Building, Lawrence Mass
AUGUSTINE PATRICK MCMORROW
75 Federal Street, Boston: Mass:
EDWARD JOHN MEAGHER
51 Cornhill, Boston Mass
THOMAS JOSEPH LEO MEEHAN
607 City Hall Annex Boston' Mass.
EDMOND JAMES MILES
144 Dudley Street, Roxbury° Mass.
FRANKLAND WILLIAM LAMBERT MILES
100 Nashua Street, Boston' Mass.
DANIEL MARTIN MOORE
Federal National Bank Building , Bo st on,'M ass..
W
.
EARL MALCOLM MORRISON
294 ashmgton Street Boston Mass
.VINCENT MOTTOLA
20 Pemberton Square' Boston' Mas .
JAMES ASHTON MULHALL
141 Milk Street'. Boston: Mas::
PATRICK JOSEPH MULLANE
DANIEL FRANCIS MURPHY
309 Fairburn Building ' Lowell ' Ma ss.
GEORGE EDWARD MURPHY
.
Post Office, Boston Mass
JORN JOSEPH N EVULIS
13 Richards Avenue ' North Attleb oro,' M ass..
THOMAS ROBERT NORTON
19 Congress Street, Boston Mass
HENRY JOSEPH O'BRIEN
147 Milk Street, Boston' Mass.
FRANCIS JAMES PERRY
199 Washington Street Boston' M .
Lours EDWARD RESTIERI
101 T remont Street,' Boston ' Mass
ass.
DAVID E. RICHMOND
410 Stevens Street, Lowell: Mass:
JAMES PATRICK HENRY ROANE
46 Burtt Street, Lowell. Mass.
PAUL JOSEPH ROANE
73 Tremont Street, Boston: Mass.
SEBASTIAN RUGGERI
17 Court Street, Boston Mass
EDLAND DONALD SAVAGE
44 School Street, Boston'. Mass.
CHARLES THOMPSON SEXTON
308 6 B
Boylston Street ' Boston , Ma ss..
JOHN FRANCIS SMITH
eacon Street, Boston Mass
GEORGE P. STONE
18 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass·
ARTHUR VINCENT SULLIVAN
20 Pemberton Square, Boston'. Mass:
.BERNARD TITLEBAUM
*JosEPH GEORGE TOLAND
106 Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
JOSEPH MICHAEL VERACKA
Court House, Cambridge Mass
MICHAEL EDWARD VIOLA
31 St. James Avenue, Boston' Mass.
SIDNEY STANLEY VON LOESECKE
11 Beacon Street, Boston' Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS WALLACE
242 State House, Boston' Mass.
;WARD EVERETT vVETHERELL
75 Fe?eral Street, Boston'. Mass:
WALTER WHITE
280 Mam Street, Fitchburg Mass
SSE EVERETT WILSON
199 Washington Street , Boston', M ass..
ROMAS ZINITI
1924
UEL BACHERMAN
TON BATES BAILEY
MAS HOWARD BARRY
ROLL HILTON BEERS
RLES BERENSON
ARLES HENRY BOLSTER
HONY AUGUSTINE BONZAGNI
ARD MICHAEL BRADLEY
MAS HENRY BRESNAHAN JR
NCIS JOSEPH BUCKLEY '
•
LIAM CHARLES BURKE
ETT HENRY BYRNE
FRANCIS CALDWELL
PATRICK CAREY
4 Washington Avenue, Chelsea
100 Franklin Street Boston'
'
'
24 S h
c ool Street, Boston
89 Broad Street, Boston'
43 Tremont Street, Boston'
140 Federal Street, Boston'.
100 Nashua Street, Boston
20 Kilby Street, Boston'.
53 State Street, Boston
48 Chestnut Street, Charlestown:
Ma
M ss.
ass.
Mass
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass:
Mass
Mass:
District Attorney's Office , Court H ouse, Boston Mass
10 Mt. Auburn Street, vyatertown'. Mass:
.
Ames Bmlding, Bath, Me.
* Deceased.
Page twenty-five
�778 East Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH AUGUSTINE CAULFIELD
98 Blue Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
ALBERT WILLIAM CHAPMAN
14 Morrison Road, Braintree, Mass.
ARTHUR GROVER CLEVELAND CHAPMAN
73 Hancock Street, Boston, Mass.
ALDEN MILTON CLEVELAND
*JOSEPH MICHAEL COFFEY
834 Moody Street, Lowell, Mass.
FRANCIS PAUL CoGGER
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH CONCANNON, JR.
131 Warwick Street, Boston, Mass.
ERNEST DECATUR COOKE
RAYMOND JOHN COTTER
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
EDWARD AUGUSTINE CRONIN
671 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
DANIEL JEROME CROWLEY
151 Highland Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
JOHN JAMES CROWLEY
Room 136, State House, Boston, Mass.
DANIEL JOSEPH CURREN
134 Ashland Street, Roslindale, Mass.
JAMES FRANCIS DALEY
176 Andover Street, Lowell, Mass.
THOMAS ALOYSIUS DELMORE
28 Calvin Street, Somerville, Mass.
JAMES CHARLES DONAHUE
10 North La Salle Street, Chicago, Ill.
HARRY JAMES DOOLEY
City Hall, Cambridge, Mass.
ALBERT THOMAS DOYLE
180 Boston Street, Boston, Mass.
MATTHEW HENRY DOYLE
1430 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass,
GEORGE STARKEY DREW
234 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM HENRY DUGGAN
268 Washington Avenue, Chelsea, Mass,
JAMES JOSEPH DUNPHY
100 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN HANCOCK EATON, JR.
*WILLIAM HENRY EGAN
294 ·washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES SAMUEL ELLIS
7 Arborway Court, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
GEORGE BARTLETT FARRELL
198 Walnut Street, Lawrence, Mass.
JOHN EDWARD FENTON
Room 825, 18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
EDWARD ISADORE FINKS
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JACOB FINKS
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH KIERAN FINN
875 Broadway, Chelsea, Mass.
MARK LEO FLAHERTY
43 Fayette Street, Cambridge, Mass,
MICHAEL JOHN FLAHERTY
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
LOUIS ISAAC FLEISCHMAN
418 East Sixth Street, South Boston, Ma
ALFRED JAMES LAWRENCE FORD
LaFayette Street, Salisbury, Ma
GEORGE Ross FRENCH
317 E Street, South Boston, Ma
JOSEPH BARTHOLOMEW GAIL!US
419 South Station, Boston, M
FRANK FosTER D. GIACOMO
130 Bowers Street, Lowell, M
WILLIAM LEONARD GILLIGAN
83 Summer Street, Chelsea, M
ISADOR GILLMAN
1 State Street, Boston, M
SAMUEL GOLDMAN
73 Tremont Street, Boston, M
WILLIAM FANTON AMBROSE GRAHA1!
General Electric Company, Lynn, Ma
RONALD HALEY
113 Munroe Street, Lynn, M
AXEL HERMAN HANSON
18 Chase Street, Dorchester, M
HERBERT JAMES HICKEY
136 Federal Street, Boston, M
HARRY SIDNEY HORNE
729 Old South Building, Boston, M
MORRIS HOROWITZ
245 State Street, Boston, M
WILLIAM CLINTON HYLAND
60 Congress Street, Boston,
OTIS ELLIOTT JOHNSON
53 State Street, Boston,
THOMAS HENRY KANE, JR.
40 Court Street, Boston,
TIMOTHY FRANCIS KELLEHER
16 Howes Street, Dorchester,
JAMES FRANCIS KELLY
8 Church Street, Woburn, M
EDWARD JAMES KIRK, JR.
649 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge,
EDWARD ALBERT KOLLEN
43 Tremont Street, Boston, M
ALAN KRAVITZ
EDWARD AUGUSTUS LACEY
294 Washington Street, Boston, M
JEREMIAH JOSEPH LANE
Kingfield,
ELMER GEORGE LAWLER
Hopkinton,
WILLIAM HAROLD LEAHY
* Deceased.
Page twenty-six
JosEPH LEWIS
100 Concord Street, Framingham Mass
WALTER JOSEPH MACDONALD
232 Main Street, Brockton' Mass·
JOHN WHITMAN MACLEOD
196 Washington Street, Chelsea' Mass.
CLARENCE EDWARD MARSH
237 F'
,rst S treet, Melrose ' Mass ·
1419 C
JosEPH GEORGE MAZUR
ommonwealth Avenue, Brighton' Mass·
JOHN FRANCIS MCAULIFFE
18 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
THOMAS PATRICK McAWEENEY
378 St
'
·
264 Washington Street ~~~~hStCrehet, !Boston, Mass.
JoHN JAMES McCARTHY
19l
. '
,
ar estown Mass
JosEPH WARREN McCARTHY
Merrimack Street, Haverhill: Mass:
JOHN JOSEPH McDONOUGH
57 Fessenden Street, Portland Me
JosEPH PETER McFARLAND
1448 Standard Building, Cleveland 'ohi;
LEWIS }AMES MCHARDY
45 Forest Avenue Portland Me
MICHAEL DANIEL McLAUGHLIN
48 Stanley Street, D;rchester Mass.
JAMES FRANCIS MOLLOY
154 H' h 17 Bay St reet, W atertown,' Mass,·
S
JoHN }AMES MORIARTY
,g
treet, Shawsheen Village Mass
JOHN LEO MORRIS
401 Barrister's Hall Boston' Mass.
PHILIP IRVING MURRAY
120 Boylston Street: Boston' Mass.
DANIEL WILLIAM O'BRIEN
. 15 Beacon Street, Boston' Mass·
CHRISTOPHER }AMES O'BYRNE
231 Main Street, Brockton' Mass·
GEORGE FRANCIS O'KEEFE
38 Arborway Street, Jamaica Plain' Mass.
FRANK JOSEPH PENNEY
43 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
RODERICK JOEL PETERS
6 ~eacon Street, Boston: Mass.
Lours PHILIP RABINOVITZ
294 Washmgton Street Boston M
.
117 C
'
, ass.
LEO AUGUSTUS REED
ourt House, Boston Mass
EDMUND FRANCIS RICHARDS
15 Proctor Street, Peabody: Mass.
CHARLES PHILIP RILEY
65 Chestnut Street Lowell Ma ·
19 T
'
,
ss.
RUSSELL SULLIVAN RILEY
remont Street, Boston ' Ma ss.
.
JosEPH FRANCIS ROARKE
C ,ty Hall, Lowell Mass
JAMES JOSEPH RYAN
330 Summer Street, Boston' Mass.
ROMAS LEO RYAN
18 2J6 'i:alnut Street, Newtonville: Mass:
AN!EL SALTZMAN
art Anderson Street, Boston, Mass.
WEN MARTIN SANDIFORD
Room 577, South Station, Boston, Mass
RRIS SCHNEIDER
12 Pearl Street, Boston Mass.
JAMIN LEWIS SCHWALB
18 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
RY SHATZ
43 Tremont Street, Boston' Mass.
RT KANNAH SHIMELOVICH
100 Milk Street, Boston: Mass.
TER GODDARD SHUTTLEWORTH
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass:
ARDINO SILVA
IS STONE
6 _Beacon Street, Boston, Mass
rs JOSEPH TAGUE
U;on Square, Somerville, Mass:
S FRANCIS TEEHAN
3 arren Avenue, Boston Mass
DAN JENNINGS THORUP
100 Franklin Street , Boston', M ass..
B
T GERARD TIERNEY
11
10 Mount Aub eacon Street, Boston, Mass.
NY T. TUTTLE
Federal Building Devuornh~treeSt, Watertown, Mass.
FRANCIS TWOHIG
'
ns ire treet, Boston, Mass
ND YOUNG URQUHART
120 Boylston Street, Boston Mass.
JOSEPH WALSH
324 Common Street, Belmont' Mass.
AM FRANCIS WALSH
109 Center Street Roxbury' M
·
18 T
'
'
ass.
ALFRED WARREN
remont Street, Boston Mass
NORMAN WINKLER
11 Pemberton Square, Boston: Mass'.
i~
1925
:jOSEPH AGNEW
GEORGE ALLBEE
B FRANCIS BARRY
3425 Washington Street, Jamaica Plain M
20 Pemberton Square , Boston' Mass.
A
, ass.
40
B~:TE~~wrcz, Room 5, Five Cents Savings Bank B~~~1!s StNreet, Boston, Mass.
1 mg,
ew Bedford. Mass
53 State Street, Boston,' Mass.
Page twenty-seven
�JAMES T. BERGEN
MARTIN BERKAL
HOWARD GURNEY BERRY
RUSSELL VINCENT BLAINE
HARLAND ALBERT BLOOD
HARRY BLOOMBERG
WILLIAM AUGUSTINE BRADY
MELVIN FARNSWORTH BREED
MEYER BROMFIELD
JOSEPH WILLIAM BUCKLEY
MARK JOSEPH BUTLER
LEO JOHN CARELLA
WILLIAM HENRY CAREY
SYDNEY GEORGE CARPENTER, JR.
FREDERICK JOSEPH CASEY
JosEPH DAVID CASEY
MICHAEL JOHN CASEY
BYRON SANDERSON CASWELL
ARTHUR LEO CAVANAGH
MAURICE HENRY CAVANAGH
FRANCIS GREGORY CLAFFIE
NICHOLAS CONSTANTINE CocKINOS
WILLIAM PATRICK CODY
BENJAMIN COHEN
DEXTER SAMUEL COHEN
AMEDEO 0MBERT0 COLLARI
FRANCIS XAVIER COLLINS
Vno CoMPERCHlO
JosEPH PATRICK CONATY
JOHN JOSEPH CONNORS
EDMUND HANLON CORRIGAN
FRANK BERNARD COUGHLIN
JOHN JOSEPH CRIMMINS
JOSEPH STANISLAS CROWLEY
EUGENE LAWRENCE CUNEO
NEIL THOMAS CURRAN
JOHN WALL CUSSEN
PATRICK JosEPH DALEY
FREDERICK HENRY DAVIS
JOHN JOSEPH DELANY
ANATOLE JEAN DEMERS
ROBERT LA WREN CE DEVINE
FRANCIS JOSEPH DILLON
WILLIAM PHILIP DOHERTY
EDWARD JAMES DONAHUE
CHARLES STEPHEN DONOVAN
WILLIAM HENRY DONOVAN
MICHAEL JOSEPH DRAY
SIDNEY LANGDON DROWN
HENRY MICHAEL DJJGGAN
JAMES LESLIE DUNN
FREDERICK FARLEY
JOHN THOMAS FARRELL
MYLES JOSEPH FERRICK
HAROLD JAMES FIELD
LEO MAXWELL FINEN
ABRAHAM ALAN FINKELSTEIN
703 Hammond Building, Detroit, Mich.
70 Washington Street, Salem, Mass.
16 Woodlawn Avenue, Mattapan, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Nashua, N. H.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, _Mass.
Fairfax Apartments, Phil_adelph1a, Pa.
188 Pleasant Street, Arlmgton, Mass.
28 Lynde Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
461 Main Street, Walt'.1am, Mass,
1400 Hancock Street, Qumcy, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Bost~n, Mass.
32 Main Street, Franklm, Mass.
Sec. and Exchange Com., Washington, D. C.
7 Central Square, Lynn, Mass.
Amesbury Street, Lawrence, Mass.
46
271 Waverley Avenue, Waterto:'fn, Mass.
7 Davis Square, Somerv_1lle, Mass.
7 Davis Square, Somerv11le, Mass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
250 Stuart Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
2A Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass,
l 79 South Street, Boston, M
103 Saratoga Street, East Boston, M
915 Post Office Building, Boston, M
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, M
101 Pine Street. Woburn, M
153 Pleasant Street, Norwood. Ma
793 Main Street, Malden, M
681 Washington Street, Norwood, Ma
40 Broad Street, Boston, M
73 Tremont Street, Boston, M
18 TremontStreet, Boston, M
40 Central Street, Boston, M
27 State Street, Boston, M
12 Warwick Road, Brookline, M
212 West Street, South Weym?uth, M
42 Antwerp Street, East Milton,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
109 Brookline Avenue, Boston,
16 Colonial Avenue, Dorchester,
177 State Street, Bos~on,
28 Calvin Street, Somerville,
1219 River Street, Hyde Park,
State House, Boston,
34 Pleasant Street, Newburyport,
153 Brighton Avenue, Allston,
44A Joy Street, Bo~ton,
57 North Main Street, Fall Rive~,
85 Yale Street, Medfor '
11 Pemberton Square, Bos~tt'
191 Merrimack Street, Haver I '
7 Central Square, Lynn,
10 Post Office Square, Boston,
SAMUEL FINN
RAYMOND ANTHONY FITZGERALD
£pMUND THOMAS FLANAGAN
Jof!N EDWARD FOLEY
osEPH FRANCIS FORD
HENRY DAVID GAFFNEY
AZIZ JOHN GANEM
JoHN HAMLET GILBODY
lvfANUEL LEAL GOMEZ
FRANCIS JOSEPH GREELEY
ROBERT ALVAN GREENE
JAMES EDWARD GRIMES
JosEPH ANDREW GUAY
WESLEY CLEMENT HALEY
FREDERICK PAUL HANFORD
WILLIAM GERARD HARBER, JR.
ORRIS HARRIS
ATTHEW THOMAS HAYES
f!N HENRY HIGGINS, JR.
EO WELLS HIGGINS
CHILLE JOHN HILB RUNNER
LIAM JOSEPH HINES
RICK WILLIAM HOAG
H IGNATIUS HOLLAND
EPH GARDNER HOLMES
N HENRY HOOLEY
HAEL FRANCIS HOURIHAN
ES JOSEPH HUGHES
IS JOSEPH HUR.NEY
RD HURWITZ
IAM COLLINS HUTCH
NICHOLAS JANE
RD FRANCIS JOHNSON
KALUS
OBERT KASPER
RUFUS KEACH
FRANCIS KEENAN
D JAMES KELCH
S JOSEPH KELLEY
FRANCIS KILDUFF
AR.REN KILLAM, JR.
IGNATIUS KING
KING
OSEPH LANE
OHN LAUNIE
AUGUSTINE LEARY
NCIS LEARY
SEPH LEHAN
ES LEONARD
AX LEWIS
USTIN LINCOLN
cus
NCIS LONG, JR.
SEPH MAGUIRE
MAGUIRE
NOS
IS MARTIN
44 School Street, Boston, Mass.
41 Eastern Street, Allston, Mass.
9 Bailey Street, Lawrence, Mass.
5 Buck Street, Newburyport, Mass.
72 Park Avenue, Winthrop, Mass.
46 Amesbury Street, Lawrence, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, Mass.
488 Pleasant Street, New Bedford, Mass.
1348 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
49 Mt. Everett Street, Dorchester, Mass.
8 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
245 State Street, Boston, Mass,
1458 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
54 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
305 Winthrop Street, Winthrop, Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
31 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
143 West Squantum Street, Quincy, Mass.
Central Post Office, Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
35 India Street, Boston, Mass.
4 Auburn Terrace, Waltham, Mass.
163 West Springfield Street, Boston, Mass,
22 Williams Street, Ayer, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
49 Milwood Street. Dorchester, Mass.
Room 314, 53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
705 Statler Building, Boston, Mass.
Havana, Cuba
1 State Street, Boston,
40 Broad Street, Boston,
8 Railroad Avenue, Beverly,
15 Otis Street, Lowell,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
709 Post Office Building, Boston,
110 Milk Street, Boston,
439 Main Street, Melrose,
105 East Cross Street, Norwood,
161 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston,
323 Seaver Street, Roxbury,
92 Abbott Street, Lawrence,
Room)503, Post Office Building, Boston,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
10 Arnold Circle, Cambridge,
7 Willow Street, Lynn,
294 Washington Street, Boston,
Egypt,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
13 Hall Street, Jamaica Plain,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
53 State Street, Boston,
661 Stevens Street, Lowell,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
JOSEPH FINKS
Page twenty-nine
Page twenty-eight
�JAMES PATRICK McARDLE
J OSEPH CORBETT Mc CART
CHARLES JosEPH M cCARTHY
JOHN M cCORMACK
FREDERICK ALBERT McELROY
EDWARD J AMES McGRATH
CHARLES J AMES McKENNA
JOHN DANIEL M EDEIROS
HERBERT M ELLING
J AMES LEO MINITER
JOHN FRANCIS MITCHELL, JR.
JOHN JOSEPH MONAGLE
GEORGE HENRY MORAN
WALTER HERMAN MURPHY
. .JOHN ANDREW IGN ATIUS NAGLE
JosEPH FRANCIS O'BRIE N
GEORGE ANTHONY O'CONNOR
H ARRY JOHN O'REILLY
FRANK Lours 0RFANE LL0
WILLIAM VINCENT O 'SULLIVAN
MAXWELL ROB ERT P ARK
CHARLES ADAMS PERRY
RODERICK SILVEIRA PERRY
MARTIN WILLIAM POWERS
THOMAS JOSEPH POWERS
J AMES WILSON PRENTICE
RALPH WALL ACE PROUT
ISRAEL R ESNICK
EDWARD MARTIN R EARDON
J OSEPH D ENNI S RE ARDON
HOWARD VINCENT REDGATE
SYLVESTER ALFRED REHHIAL TER
MAX R E ISER
JAMES JOSEPH RILEY
JORN THOMAS RILEY
FOREST H ARVEY RO BI NSON
HERBERT L EWI S ROBINSON
JOHN JOSE PH ROCHEFORT
JAMES P ATRICK ROSE
. SIDNEY RosENBERG
JULIUS RosENGARD
JOHN SANTORO
FREDERICK ADAMS S CHWER
ARTHUR JosEPH SCULLY
HENRY SELVITELLA
GUY ALCIBIAD ES SENESAC
WILLIAM FRANCIS SHANAHAN
WILLIAM H E RBERT SHANNON
MAX SHAPS
FRANCIS LEO SHEEH AN
ALFRED CALLISTUS SHEEHY
WILLIAM FRANCI S SHEEHEY
NATHANIEL SIMMONS
NELSON DRUE Sr:MONS
CHARLES SKLADZIEN
JOHN LEONARD SMITH
Lours HENRY STEINBERG
JAMES FRANCIS STYNES
Page thirty
12 Robin son Street, Lynn, Mass .
14 W ashington Street, Eastport , Me.
27 School Street, Boston, Mass.
88 T esher Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
131 State Street, Boston, Mass.
106 Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
145 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Lombard Street, Baltimore, M d.
2925 South Vermont Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif.
44 School Street , Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street , Boston, M ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, M ass.
73 Rock Avenue, East L ynn, M ass.
542 East Fourth Street, South Boston, M ass .
53 State Street, Boston, M ass
22 Fort Hill Avenue, Lowell, Mass.
40 Cornell Street , Arlington, Mas; ,
838 Lexington Road, Elizabeth, N . J.
917 Fifteenth Street, N.W., W ashington , D. C.
33 Elm Street, Chelsea, Mass.
Camden, Me.
799 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
44 School Street , Boston, Mass.
Commonwealth Pier, Boston, Mass
14 Summer Street, Saugus, Mass·.
Quincy, Mass,
·
WILLIAM LEO S ULLI VAN
JOSEPH ANTHONY SVAGDYS
ALLEN NEWMAN SWAIN
JOHN PARIS SYLVIA
LELAND p ARKER SYl\IMES
J AMES EDWARD TETLOW, JR.
CHARLES LEO THEBEAU
JO RN FRANCIS THORNTON
JOR N J OSEPH T IERNEY
.
MICHAEL TOBIN
WALTER HOWARD TOOKER ..
JAMES ARTHUR TOOLE
.
CHESTER BRAINARD TRAVERSE
ROG ER FELIX T URNER
STEPHEN C HARLES VISHINSKAS
HERB ERT GARDNER· WALDER
fREDERICK RI CHARD WALSH
JoH N RICHARD WALSH
PETER JOSEPH WALSH
HENRY WILLIAM WALTER
ALFRED CLI F TON WALTON
SAMUEL JAMES WEI NER
JosEPH CHARLES WELCH
JosEPH ALOYSIUS WHELAN
JOHN THOMAS V,THITE
DAVID WILLIAM WHITMORE J
' R.
SAMUEL GEORGE ZACK
309 Fourt13 S~~:~~ SJreeth,B
Boston, Mass.
, out
oston Mass
.
58 School Street Dedham' M
31 M"lk S ,
' ass.
1
E
treet, Boston Mass
608 Wheeling Bank xt~a~ Place, Springfield'. Mass '.
an 7;u~t Bld_g., Wheeling, Va.
4 A r ornhill, Boston, M ass.
6 Boston /iac~oad, Brookline, M ass.
, South Boston, Mass.
351 S
ummer Street L
M
137 H arvard A
, ynn, ass.
20 Wa uchusett St::::eF Clarem?nt, Calif.
B
, orest Hills, Mass.
761 roadway, Everett, Mass.
18 T
63 ~n:io~ Street, Boston, Mass
45 Cherr~~ treet, Brockton, Mass:
18 T . treet, Cambridge, Mass.
40r1mont Street , Boston, Mass.
road Street, Boston, Mass
7 S h
44 Central Squ are, L ynn, Mass.·
c ool Street Boston M
40 Co t S
'
' ass.
185 Devon ~r t reet , Boston, Mass.
jtreet_, Bost~n, Mass.
87 School
11 H
' amaica Pla m Mass
A
a rvest Street, Boston'. Mass.
203 M a m Street, Milford M .
7 Central S
' ass.
31 E h
quare, Lynn, Mass.
•
xc a nge Street , L y nn, Mass.
s:~:~:
Mid-Year, 1926
42 Upland Road, Quincy, Mass.
42 Upland R oad , Quincy, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston , Mass.
37 Adams Street, Malden, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
Gillette Safety R azor Co., Boston, Mass.
3 Stratford Street, W est Roxbury, Mass.
85 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Granite Road, Saugus, Mass.
490 Washington Street, Brighton, Mass.
85 Perham Street, W est Roxbury, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street , Boston, Mass,
481 West William Street, San Jose, CaJil,
185 D evonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
3 Meridian Street, East Boston, Ma
136 Central Avenue, New Bedford , Ma
Probate Court, Salem, Ma
53 State Street, Boston, M
88 Tremont Street, Boston, Ma
36 Bates Aven ue, Winthrop, M
742 Broad Street, E ast Weymouth, M
3 Benson Street, Brighton, M
Denmark Inn , Denmark,
Mashpee, M
Slater Building, Worcester, M
207 Essex Street, Boston, M
20 Pemberton Square, Boston,
16 Union Square, Somerville,
ARTHUR J AMES BROWN
JOHN PATRICK CONNOLLY
MICHAEL J OSEPH CRONIN
WARREN ANDREW FOGARTY
JAMES FRANCIS McGEE
T. ANTHO NY M ILLER
JAMES JOSEPH MURRAY
MOSES H . NAHIGIAN
OMAS FRANCI S NEALON
RANCIS JOSEPH O'LAUGHLIN
OSEPH LESTE R SHEA
Room 320, 40 Broad Street Boston
'
,
373 State H
ouse, Boston,
14 Ut" S
6 Bica treet, Lexington,
eacon Street Bo t
,
s on,
6 2 Maverick Street , E ast D edham,
M
ass.
Mass.
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.
30970 Washingto n St reet, Salem,
Kittred
80 H
gSe Street, Roslinda le,
avre treet, East Boston
59 Berkeley Street Bost '
31 St. J a mes A venue,' Boston,
on,
Mass.
Mass.
M
Mass.
ass.
Mass.
1926
IP A BRAMOVITZ
NRY JAM ES ALLEN
ALTER ADOLPH ANDERSON
THUR ABRAHAM BAKER
TH~ HARRISON BAKER
HITAKER BAKER
MON BAKER
ARD D ARCY BARRETT
ERT AR THUR BARRETT
1AM H LEN BARTLETT
UR AL
ENRY BASTIEN
J OSEPH BEATTY
RT JOSEPH BENKOSKI
Es BMAX WELL BENNE TT
D
IRvERTRAND BENNISON
ING BENTON
20 Pem4~erto_ Square, Boston, Mass
n
95 Waltham
s~:~~, ~
eet,NBoston, Mass:
est ewton, Mass.
622 Morton Street, Dorchester
39 Somerset Street, Boston,
43 Tremont Street Boston'
52 E l S
,
'
40 Kenwood m treet, Quincy,
6 South Washington St . tStNreet, Dorchester,
ree , orth Attleboro
185 Main Street ' M ar lb orough ,
,
M
Mass.
Mass.
ass.
Mass .
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.
34 Warwick Road ~uth;utton,
125 Homestead St estR ewton,
reet, oxbury,
8204 ~as~n Street, Boston,
ar Avenue, Natick,
N. H .
Mass.
Mass
Mass:
Mass.
Page thirty-one
�WILLIAM JOSEPH BIRMINGHAM
NORMAN STEPHEN BLANCHARD
LOUIS BoBRICK
JOHN HENRY BoGRETTE
JOHN CHRISTY LEE BoWMAN
JOHN JOSEPH BRADLEY
JOHN J OSEPH BRADY
HERBERT ANDREW BRIMNER
WALTER JOSEPH BROWN
EDWARD JOSEPH BUSHNELL
PAUL J OSEPH CAHILL
MALCOLM K1RK CAMPBELL
CHARLES TIMOTHY CAVANAGH
FRANCIS XAVIER CAVANAGH
THOMAS BRONISLAUS CrnsINSKI
ALBERT JULIUS COHEN
JOSEPH p. COLLINS
ANDREW FRANCIS CONNELL
ANTHONY JAMES CONSOLMAGNO
GEORGE EDWARD CONSTANTINO
CHARLES TIMOTHY CRONAN
JOSEPH BOYLE CUNNINGHAM
JOHN JOSEPH CURRAN
PETER FRANCIS CURRAN
JAMES EDWARD CussEN, JR.
JOSEPH FRANCIS CussEN
FRANCIS EDWIN DEADY
JAMES FRANCIS DELANEY
JORN JOSEPH DELANEY
JORN FRANCIS DEVER
GEORGE THOMAS DOLAN
MoRRIS DoLNICK
HARVEY LEROY DONALD
EDWARD DONOVAN
CORNELIUS J OSEPH DRISCOLL
HERBERT FRANCIS ELKINS
JOHN STRANTON FEENEY
FRANCIS PATRICK FENTON
PATRICK JosEPH FINLAY
THOM AS JOSEPH FINNEGAN
WILLIAM HENRY FINNEGAN
JOSEPH JORN FLANAGAN
JAMES JosEPR FLYNN
JORN J OSEPR FOLEY
__ALF.RED DANA FOSTER
FREDERICK ALBERT GAGE
JOHN JOSEPH GALLAGHER
PATRICK EMMET GAVIN
ALBERT CLEMENT GENNACO
DAVID JOSEPH GIBBONS
*ARTHUR EUGENE GILMAN
HYMAN GOLDMAN
EDWARD WARREN GOODALE
OLIVER FRANCIS GREEN
SAMUEL HARRY GuRVITZ
GEORGE FRANCIS HAGGERTY
JAMES MELROSE HAMILTON
18 Church Street, Peabody, Mass.
87 Wallace Street, West Somer:'ille, Mass.
678 Massachusetts Avenue , Cambridge, Mass.
910 Statler Building, Boston, Mass.
Park Square Building, Boston, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
153 Arlington Street, Framingham, Mass.
Bailey Street, Lawrence, M ass.
214
37 West Street, Medford, Mass.
17 Pleasant Street, Malden, Mass.
1108 Pleasant Street, Worcester, M ass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
Davis Square, West Somerv!lle, Mass.
7 Davis Square, West Somerv1lle, Mass.
7
4 5. Charter Street, Salem, Mass.
30 State Street, Boston, Mass.
lOO Summer Street, Boston, Mass,
101 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
l 87 Fulton Street, Medford, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
60 Congress Street, Boston , Mass.
l8 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Mt. Auburn Street, W~terto"'.n, Mass.
274 Chestnut Avenue, Jamaica Plam, Mass.
10 East Fortieth Street, New York, N. Y.
63 2 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
4 3 State House, Boston, Mass.
Welton Road, West Roxb~ry , Mass.
7
Warwick Road, Brookline, Mass.
12
Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
11
Pleasant Street, Dorchester, Mass.
143
32 Leston Street, Mattapan, Mass.
70 Galen Street, Watertown, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston , Mass.
Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
294
l41 Milk Street, Boston,. Mass.
3l6 Court House, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
77 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Ma
9 Pleasant Street, Malden, Ma
88 Francis Street, Roxbury, Ma
72 Cleveland Street, Melrose, M
26 Falmouth Street, Lawr: nce. Ma
44 Dana Street, Cambridge, ~
Travellers Insurance Co., Salem, M
14 Campbell Avenue, Revere, M
75 Federal Street, Boston, M
93 Main Street, Brock~on, M
365 Washington Street, Somerv1lle,
294 Washington Street, Boston , M
27 State Street, Boston,
111 Highland Avenue, Winthrop,
580 Blue Hill Avenue, DorcLheste{i,
68 A Street . o,~e '
merv1lle,
78 Bay State Avenue, So
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
J oIIN KELLEY
•WILLIAM JAMES KENEFICK
ALFRED EDWIN KEOUGH, JR.
ANSELMO KRIGGER
JoIIN THOMAS LANE
JAM ES FRANCIS LAWTON
Lours BENJAMIN LEVENSON
FRANK GEORGE LICHTENSTEIN
225 Boulevard Street, Melrose,
South Armory, Boston,
6 Scollay Square, Boston,
260 Tremont Street, Boston,
10 State Street, Boston,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
185 Devonshire Street, Boston,
1 Dexter Row, Charlestown,
164 Broadway, Cambridge,
165 Friend Street, Boston,
1391 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston,
15 Van Winkle Street, Dorchester,
3 Woodlawn Street, Boston,
Post Office Box 174, Woburn,
29 Webster Street, Lynn,
212 Cross Street, Lowell,
8 Pierpont Street, Peabody,
80 Peterborough Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
141 Milk Street, Boston,
10 State Street. Boston,
2 Boylston Street, Brookline,
230 Cypress Street, Brookline,
165 Broadway, New York.
820 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge;
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
N. Y.
Mass.
MosEs LUBETS
JosEPH BENEDICT LYONS
P. AusTIN MACCORMACK
JOSEPH FRANC IS MACDONALD
CHARLES HE NRY MACKIE
HARRY EDWARD MACLEOD
TI!UR JOSEPH MAHONEY
GGO MAIOCCHI
OBN DANIEL Mil.LONE
NIEL EDWARD MARTIN
ATHAN FRANC IS MASTERSON
ES CRAWFORD MAXWELL
RED AUGUSTINE McDAVITT
EL!US EDWARD McLAUGHLIN
RD JOSEPH McLAUGHLIN
EL FRANCIS McNEIL
EL J AMES · MEANEY
ARD MOLONEY
OND WALLACE MOORE
HERBERT MORSE
GE HENRY MULHOLLAND
ONY MULLIGAN
ARTHUR MURPHY
DENNIS M URPHY
EDGEWORTH MURPHY
IMOTHY MURPHY
0SEPH MURPHY
GERARD NAGLE
FRANCIS X AVIER NAGLE
N NATHAN
JONAS NEWCOMB
EXTER NORTON
lLLIAM NORTON
123 Millet Street, Dorchester,
66 Main Street, Lowell,
16 Garrison Avenue, \Vest Somerville,
11 Koscinsko Street, Peabody,
97 Central Street, Lowell,
56 Eutaw Street, Lynn,
20 Pemberton Square, Boston,
17 Becket Street, Ashmont,
98 Howard Avenue, Dorchester,
112 Hall Place, Quincy,
44 School Street, Boston,
5 High Street, Medford,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
* Deceased .
* Deceased.
Page thirty-two
10 Jerome Street, Dorchester,
11 Harol<l Street, Somerville,
Post Office Box 513, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
162 Lowell Street, Peabody,
73 Tremont Street, Boston,
4 Naples Road, Salem,
12 Milton Street, Attleboro,
48 North Street, Quincy,
67 Cleveland Street, Arlington,
12 Harvard Terrace, Allston,
42 Homes Avenue, Dorchester,
171 Riverside Avenue, Medford,
112 H Street, South Boston,
390 Main Street, Worcester,
215 Court House, Boston,
45 Milk Street, Boston,
J ollN JOSEPH HARRINGTON
JosEPH EDWARD HARRI N GTON
WIL BUR GARLAND HAYWARD
REMA JORN HENDERSON
J ollN HENRY HIGGINS
J osEPH ALLAN HINES
WILLI AM MICHAEL HOAR
F. WILLIAM HOCHBERG
RAYMO ND JACKSON HOITT
WILLIAM FRANCIS HORGAN
WILLI AM CHARLES HoRNEMAN
ALFRED LEO HUTCHINSON
J ollN JOSEPH IRWIN
RUSSELL HENRY JACKSON
DAVID JOSEPH KATZ
EoWARD VI NCENT KEATING
Page thirty-three
�TIMOTHY FRANCIS O'BRIEN
I GNATIUS J EROME O'CONNOR
THOMAS J OHN O'CONNOR
MAX l sAAC 0MANSKY
CHARLES LEO O'REILLY
ALVIN Lours OsTROWS
ROYAL BARTLETT PATRIQUIN
CHARLES Lours PERRIELLO
GUY THOMAS PISCOPO
ABRAHAM WILLIAM PLOTKIN
STEPHEN BRADYS PRODAN
WILLIAM FRANCIS PUMPHRET
GEORGE THOMAS PYNE
J AMES FRANCIS QUINN
J AMES FRANCIS QUIRK
FRANCI S XAVIER ALBERT READDY
R EUBEN RESNICK
HENRY LUPTON RESTALL
MATTHEW LAWRENCE RING
J OHN J OSEPH RIORDAN
Lours J OHN ROAZEN
EDWARD CHARLES ROSENBERG
J ACOB HAROLD RosENGARD
CHARLES EDWARD RoWE
FRANCIS WILFRED RUEL
EARL EDWARD RYAN
ORVIS HOUGHTON SAXBY
FRED CARMEN ScANGA
J AMES FRANCIS SCANLAN
PHILIP SELETSKY
J OSEPH HERBERT SHARRILLO
MICHAEL J OSEPH SHEEHY
FREDERICK A U GUSTUS SHERWOOD
REVASHANKER MAGANLAL SHUKLE
BARNEY SHUMRAK
HARRY BENJAMIN S IMONS
J AMES HENRY SMITH
CHARLES VINCENT STATUTI
BRUCE ATWOOD STEVENS
EDWARD J OHN SULLIVAN
JOSEPH BENEDICT SULLIVAN
J AMES EDWARD SULLIVAN
SAMUEL HENRY SULLIVAN
ROY FERNANDES TEIXEIRA
MAX WILLIAM TITLEBAUM
·WILLIAM FRANCIS TRAVERS
ABRAHAM SAMUEL V r GODA
Lours VILLANI
NORMAN AUGUSTUS WAL KER
WILLIAM PINKERTON WALKER
FOREST H ENRY WARD
LEO J OSEPH W ASKELEWICZ
GEORGE J EREMIAH WATTERS
SAUL WEINBERGER
MARTIN JosEPH WELCH
JAMES JOSEPH WINSTON
JOHN EDWARD WINSTON
FRANK WILLIAM ZINITI
Page thirty-four
46 D artmouth Street , Everett, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
43 State House, Boston , Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
60 Bragdon Street, Boston , Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
Hall Street, Mansfield, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
466 Main Street, Athol, M ass.
10 Sheafe Street, Cha rlestown, M ass.
20 Cliff Aven ue, Winthrop, M ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, M ass.
60 Thorndike Street, Cambridge, M ass.
18 Hayward Street, Mi!ford, M ass.
14 Belvoir Road, Milton, M ass.
Chambers Street, Boston, Mass.
133
51 North Aven ue, Melrose Hi ghlands, M ass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Mt. Vernon Street, Charlestown, Mass.
44
Columbia Road, Dorchester, Mass.
531
40 Court Street, Boston , Mass.
Harvard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
180
Main Street , Marlborough, Mass.
50 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
Dudley Street, H averhill, Mass.
10
Main Street, Stoneham, Mass.
375
57 Hull Street, Boston, Mass.
Belton Street, Dorchester , Mass.
19
Wolcott Street, Dorchester, Mass.
34
Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
20
Eighth Street, South Boston , Masi,
211
615 East Sixth Street, South Boston, Mass.
520 Beacon Street , Boston, Mass.
10 Yeoman Street, Revere, Mass.
268 Washington Avenue, Che.lsea, Mass.
1348 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
420 Huntin gton Avenue, Hyde Park, :ass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, ass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Samoset Street, Dorchester, Ma:,
1326 Columbia Road, South Bost on, :a .
1 Beacon Street, Boston, ass,
20 P emberton Square, Boston, Mass
173 Arlington Street, West Medford,:::
185 D evonsh ire Street, Boston.' M
Milo,
30 Court Street, Boston, M
'st et Boston, M
Beacon Chambers, M yrt1e re ' B t O n M
100 Boylston Street, os '
t Newton, M
1271 Washington Street, W es
kl' e M
72 H arvard St reet, Broo ind, M
25 Raymond Street, Medfor ' M
Room 43 State House, Boston,
24 Federal Street, Boston,
.
S
t Boston,
199 W ashington tree •
Mid-Year, 1927
ARTHUR WELLESLEY ATKINSON
EDWARD PETER BACIGALUPO
MA URICE MYER COHEN
WILLIAM MICHAEL DALY
R AYMOND LEO FOYE
THOMAS HOWARD G ILROY
RALPH L EROY GREENE
SrMO N GRINSPOON
FREDERICK J OHN HARRIS
D A.YID CHARLES HENRY
WILLIAM JOSEPH MACHALE
H A.RRY J ACKSON WARD
6 Mark Lee Road, Needham Heights,
29 Cha rter Street, Boston,
161 Devonshire Street, Boston,
313 Union Street, Lynn,
81 Beacon Street, Lowell,
28 Carney Street, Medford,
19 Greeno ugh Avenue, Cambridge,
73 Tremont Street, Boston ,
73 Tremont Street , Boston,
259 Washington Street, Boston,
84 State Street, Boston,
138 Brighton Avenue, Allston,
Mass .
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
1927
WILLIAM LYONS AHERN
.EDWARD ANKELES
WILLIAM ARONOFF
EDMU ND J OSEPH AVALLONE
] A.MES EDWARD BAGLEY, JR.
] A.MES G REGORY BARRY
LEO VI NCENT BENNETT
JsRAEL BERMAN
KE ELAH BouvE
JOH N J osEPH BOYLE
]A.M ES PATRICK BUCKLEY
NORMAN BUNSHAFT
EUGENE FRANCIS CANNEY
FRANCIS LAWRENCE CARAHER
JiU!ES DENNIS CARNEY
FRA.NCIS JOSEPH CARROLL
JOSEPH J AMES CARTY
LEO J OSEPH CASEY
EDWA.RD THOMAS CAULEY
FRANK J OSEPH CAVANAGH
JOSEPH RICHARD CLEARY
JOH N JOSEPH COAKLEY
THOMAS ALF RED COLLINS
HUGH JOSEPH CONWAY
ARK V. CROCKETT
IDNEY S OLOMON CROSS
AROLD DEVER CUNNI NGHAM
AVID D AVIDSON
AMES JOSEPH DEVLIN
OMAS P. DILLON
lLLIAM ESAU DINGWALL
NRY FRANCIS DUGGAN
NRY CHARLES DusTEN
HOLAS J OSEPH DYNAN
UEL EISENSTADT
R FEDOSINK
S JOSEPH FELONEY
DAVID F E NTON
LEO FENTON
H FINE
N PARKHURST FISKE
ARD JOHN FITZGERALD
145 Pleasant Street, Dorchester, Mass.
23 School Street, Danvers, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
SO State Street, Boston, Mass.
32 Bacon Street, Waltham, Mass.
72 Edwin Street, Atlantic, Mass.
10 Dennison Street, Roxbury, Mass.
7 Water Street, Boston, Mass .
240 Albany Street, Cambridge, Mass.
7 Willow Street, Lynn, Mass.
191 Merrimack Street, Haverhill, Mass.
3 Lamartine Street, J amaica Plain , Mass.
15 Orchard Street, Revere, Mass.
588 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Mass.
18 Chapel Street, Canton, Mass.
30 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
14 Beckett Street, Dorchester, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
Federal B uilding, Boston, Mass.
718 Huntington Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
19 Linden Street, Norwood, Mass.
57 Farragut Road, South Boston, Mass.
42 Railroad Aven ue, Beverly, Mass.
207 Manthorne Road, Boston, Mass.
82 Pleasant Street, Ma lden , Mass.
59 Ashford Street, Allston, Mass.
21 Oneida Street, Boston, Mass.
53 Bernard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
794 Tremont Street , Boston, Mass.
9 E lm Street, Peabody, Mass.
65 Wareham Street, Medford, Mass.
118 Norfol k Street, Cambridge, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston , Mass.
772 Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
59 Granville Road , Cambridge, Mass.
32 Ossipee Road, West Somerville, Mass.
18 Archdale Road, Roslindale, Mass.
304 Main Street, Fitchburg: Mass.
115 Central Street, Auburnda le, Mass.
49 Pacific Street, Fitchburg, Mass.
P age thirty-five
�EDSON LINWOOD FoRD
Thomas A. Edison School, Boston, Mass.
JoHN THOMAS FoRD
84 Avon Street, Somerville, Mass.
EDWARD JosEPH Fox
80 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
----iosEPH LEO GAGEN
30 Romsey Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH GEOGHAN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
HARRY GEORGE GILBERT
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM ROBERT GILMAN
36 Burnside Street, Medford, Mass.
MATHEW ALLEN GoLBURGH
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, M ass.
JosEPH DAVID GOLDBERG
ABRAHAM GOLDENBERG
70 State Street, Boston, M ass.
EDWARD MAURICE GOLDMAN
36 Whiting Street, Lynn, M ass.
RICHARD IRVING GOTTLIEB
10 State Street, Boston, M ass.
ALBERT CLARENCE GRAUPNER
17 Mineral Street, Reading, M ass
FREDERICK JoHN HANSBERRY
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass:
ARTHUR WARREN HANSON
11 Barnes Road, Newton, Mass.
40 Central Street, Boston, Mass
LOUIS SAMUEL HARRIS
FRANCIS AUGUSTINE HART
34 Buswell Street, Lawrence, Mass:
FREDERICK GERARD HART
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass
JAMES JosEPH HAYES
448 Ashmont Street, Dorchester, Mass:
EDWARD PHILIP HUGHES
14 Bartlett Street, Somerville, Mass.
JAMES LEE HUGHES
89 Essex Street, Lynn, Mass
JoHN BERNARD HYNES
31 Milk Street, Boston, Mass:
HARRY ILLMAN
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
ELLIOTT WILLARD JACKSON
Gilchrist Company, Boston, Mass.
ARTHUR LESLIE JOHNSON
16 Dartmouth Street, Everett, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
LOUIS KARP
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MORRIS KAUFMAN
}AMES HENRY KIERAN
21 Briggs Street, Salem, Mass.
MARTIN STEPHEN KILGALLON
63 Chestnut Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
JACOB KLEIN
29 Cummings Road, Brighton, Mass.
ARTHUR FRANCIS LAURIAN
209 Wauchusetts Street, Forest Hills, Mass.
ROY WILLIAM LAWSON
9 Ed~on Street, Brockton , Mass.
JoHN JosEPH LEAHY
1 Perth Road, Arlington, Mass.
JOHN HENRY LEE
177 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH LETORNEY
33 Oak Street, Boston, Mass.
IsADORE MEYER LIBMAN
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
GERALD THOMAS LISTON
151 Magazine Street, Cambridge, Mass.
EVERETT HAROLD LYNCH
104 Pearl Street, Middleboro, Mass.
JOHN ALEXANDER MAclNTYRE
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
CLIFTON EUGENE MACK
626 Federal Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.
JosEPH M. MAGALDI (Western Union Building) 230 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.
FRANCIS BARTHOLOMEW MAHONEY
321 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass,
FREDERICK ALOYSIUS MALONE
25 Benefit Street, Waltham, Mass,
LAWRENCE PATRICK MANNING
82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
CASIMIR MARCOU
14 Powder House Terrace, Somerville, Mass.
MAX MARKS
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MAX LAWRENCE MATT
121 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JEREMIAH JosEPH McCARTHY
62 Williams Street, M edford, Mass.
JoHN THOMAS McCLUSKEY
33 Woodbine Street, Roxbury, Ma
JosEPH MARTIN McDONOUGH
6 Beacon Street, Boston, M
JAMES LOMBARD McLEAN
CLIFFORD OTIS MILLER
DAVID SAMUEL MILLER
EVERETT HALE MILLER
JAMES JOSEPH MORRIS
NICHOLAS MoscATO
DANIEL JosEPH MURPHY
JOHN JOSEPH MURPHY
Page thirty-six
145 South Street, Boston, M
1 Beacon Street, Boston, M
1 Cedar Street, Roslindale, M
60 Pemberton Square, Boston, M
19 Princeton Street, Medford,
154 School Street, Watertown, M
11 Pemberton Square, Boston,
~
6 Beacon Street, Boston Mass
I{ENELM MICHAEL MURPHY
24 S~. 6eters Street, Jamaica Plain'. Mass:
WILLIAM PAUL MURRAY
evelan? Street, Cambridge, Mass.
GU STAVE ADOLPH NICKERSON
McKinley School, Revere Mass
WILLIAM HENRY O'CONNELI.
18 Beckett Street, Peabody'. Mass:
FRANK ROBERT O'KEEFE '
F . G . Magrane Co., Lynn Mass
ARTHUR FRANCIS OSBORNE
1167 Broadway, Somerville' Mass.
JosEPH DAVID PATE
6 Beacon Street, Boston' Mass.
LEONARD PORETSKY
153 Jefferson Avenue Everett' M .
JOHN ERNEST QUIGLEY
104 Ad
S
'
, ass.
p ams treet, Dorchester Mass
THOMAS ALFRED QUINN
66 rospect Avenue, Norwood: Mass:
J oHN JOSEPH RILEY
137 Orange Street Chelsea M
ARTHUR FRANK ROBINSON
.
1 State Street Boston ' Mass.
J{ERBERT DANIEL ROBINSON
ass.
R oom 1802, Post Office B m"Id'mg,' Boston ' Mass
PATRICK GEORGE ROCHE
19 Milk Street, Boston' Mass.
HARRY RosE
82 Pleasant Street Malden' M
.
MAX RHODES ROSENBLATT
20 Me h A
•
, ass.
re
venue, West Roxbury, Mass.
(HARLES CHRISTIAN ROTHFUCHS ]R.
8 Alfred Road Arlington M
FRANK HENRY ROWLAND, JR. '
73 T
'
'
ass.
remont Street Boston M
GEORGE SYLVESTER RYAN
24 S h
'
'
ass.
c ool Street Boston M
NATHAN SALLOP
25 S
'
'
ass.
. achem Street, Lynn, Mass
THEODORE ANTHONY SCRIVEN
294 Washington Street Boston M
.
JACOB SHACTMAN
221 S
,
'
ass.
tate Street, Boston Mass
PHILIP N. SIMPSON
24 Milk Street, Boston' Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS SMITH
9 Lynn Street, Chelsea' Mass.
BENJAMIN SNYDER
53 State Street Boston' M
·
SAMUEL SPIRO
I · S
•
, ass.
55 r / R
72
osec air treet, Dorcheste M
DANIEL VINCENT SULLIVAN
r,
ass.
42 p d v·
on
iew Road, Arlington Mass
JAMES EDWARD SULLIVAN
469 B
d
'
·
HARRY HARVEY TOLTZ
United States Quarantine s/ot~ wa arcus Hook Pa
.
a wn, My, Chelsea, Mass.
THOMAS LEO TULL y
117 Winthrop Street • Taunton , M' ass..
FRANCIS JAMES TUMMON
B
6 eacon Street Boston M
PAUL CLEMENT WALLACE
55 p
h
S
•
, ass.
urc ase treet, Danvers Mass
(HARLES JAMES WALSH
195 Ashmont Street Dorchester:'- M
,
JOHN JACOB WALSH
6 Beacon St~eet Boston·,. Mass.
WILLIAM JAMES WALSH
40 C
'
'
ass.
WESTON COLBY WALTER
25 C ourt Street , Boston ' M ass.
entral Square Lynn M
OBERT LOUIS WEINER
1010 c
•
, ass.
entral Street ' Lowell . M ass.
DMOND EUGENE WELCH
c·
tty Hall, Peabody Mass
ILLIAM AUGUSTINE WELCH
85 D evonshire Street Boston' M
.
RLES JOSEPH WHELAN
89 S
'
, ass.
tate Street, Boston, Mass.
NNETH BRECK WILLIAMS·
Mid-Year, 1928
V!D LOUIS BLOOMFIELD
lJL WILLIAM CAREY
ARD JOHN CARR
CE A. DANFORTH
NARD JOHN DAVIDSON
URICE DAVIS
!AM EDWARD FITZGERALD
H DELLA GROTTE
PETER HAMILTON
M ISRAEL REINSTEIN
GE BRADFORD HOGAN
FRANCIS HOLT
S FRANCIS HURNEY
JOSEPH LAVIGNE
43 Tremont Street Boston
21 Park Vale Avenue' Allston'
18 Tremont Street' Boston'
69 Beacon Street' Boston'
8 Cha l s
•
,
r es treet, Dorchester
25 Pemberton Square Boston'
22 Sever Hill Road Medford'
121 Tempi St
s'
,
1677 C
e reet, omerville
ommonwealth Avenue, Brighton'
6B
S
. '
eacon treet, Boston
Overbrook Drive Wellesley'
·
'
32 p·1 gnm Road, Marblehead ,
1
52 St. Mark Road, Dorchester'
305 Muglean Building, Lowell'.
M
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
ass.
ivI
Mass.
Mass.
ass.
Mass
M
.
ass.
Mass
M
.
M ass ·
M:::·
Mass:
Page thirty-seven
�JOSEPH LEVY
EDWARD LONG
HENRY CORNELIUS LYNCH
CHARLES B ERNARD MAHONEY
,
y
THOMAS WILLIAM ODA
N FERDINAND 0DERMAN
J OH
WILLIAM FRANCIS REGAN
MAX RICHMOND
JOHN TEAGAN
294 Washington Street, Boston, :ass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
ass.
d R 0 ad West Medford, Mass.
147 Playstea
h. e' Street Boston, Mass.
68 Devons ir
'
M
599 Central Street, Lowell,
ass.
th
288 Commonwea1 Avenue ' Boston, Mass.
d M
14 Main Street, Peabo y,
ass.
43 Tremont Street, Bo~ton, Mass.
48 Bigelow Street, Cambridge, Mass.
1928
et Dorchester, Mass.
d M
31 B urgoyn e Stre '
JAMES MORTIMER AHERN
7 Valley Place, Medfor , ass.
WILLIAM MARTIN ANDERSON
1 Broadway, Taunton, Mass,
ARISTIDES ANDRADE
71 Bellingham Street, Chelsea, Mass.
BENJAMIN DAVID AVAN
214 y, Essex Street, Salem, Mass.
Lours ELIOT BAKER
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
C
brid e M
DouGLAS WHITE BARLOW
JosEPH BARRETT
g ' M
2 20 Norfolk Street, am
*WILLIAM
RY BEIGIN
88 Broad Street, Boston,
WILLIAM ~E~ZBACHER BIRNBACH
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
MAURICEJO~EPH BLANCHETTE
22 Sterling Street, Medford,:
GEORGE C
!INE BLASI
40 Water Street, Boston,
OLINDO ARi'.
BOWKER
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
ARNOLD JosEPH
AN
H'll Avenue Dorchester, M
ARTHUR BRENN
921 Blue 1
'
l' d
J
ORN
MORRIS BRODERICK
72 Hewlett Street, Ros m a 1e,
CHARLES
B RBA-NK
S
t North Attleboro,
THEO~ORE A~~!~u:uR~EN.
47 North Washingto~O ;:~e~al Street, Boston, M
FREDERIC~ ;ARD BURKE
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
;::;i,~::
M:cHAEL BURKE
E WIN VINCENT CAHILL
D
L
CANTY
JOSEPH EO
p
R FRANCIS CARBONE
ETE
WILLIAM CASHEN
GEORGE. EDWARD CocHRANE
CHARLES
PH COLE
J
osE
CoLLINS
~~:r.I!~s;:WARD CoMER
JOSEPH CONLON
ANDREW MICHAEL CONNORS
EDWARD STEPHEN CONNORS
J EREMIAH
LAWRENCE CoRMAC K
FRANCIS PA-TRICK COYNE
J osEPH M. ICHAEL CRONIN
J osEPH
JEREMIAH JAMES DACEY
JOHN JosEPH DALY
J HN MARTIN DALY
S~MON JOSEPH DARIVOFF
JoHN WILLIAM DAVIS
JosEPH HENRY DEROMA
JOHN HENRY DEVLIN
J 0 H~ WATKINS DINEEN
T
MAS DOBBYN
EDWARpD HpOSHERIDAN DOHERTY
JOHN HILI
HENRY THOMAS DOLAN
T MAS JosEPH DONAHUE
E~~ARD DAVID DONOVAN
707 Adams Street, ~~~~h;r:~:::
41 Dunster Road, Jam
S l
M
21 Jackson Street, a em,
A
e Roslindale,
386 Hyde Park venu ,
B
73 Tremont Street, oston,
72 Empire Street, Lynn,
Robey Street, Boston,
2
14 Butter Street, Lawrence,
29 Dillingham StreHet, Dor~h:sst~:·
154 State ouse,
•
90 Ames Building, Boston,
40 Court Street, Bo~ton,
.
369 Columbia street , Cambridge,
50 Federal Street, Boston,
79 Centre Street, Rohxbury,
A
Dore ester,
4 Davidso~ ven~e, t Boston,
294 Wa~hmgkto;t :ttiaverhill,
54 Merrimac
re ' M Iden
129 .Medford S~::~• W:ipole:
97 Umon Str?et, treet Boston;
82 Devonshire S Wollaston
145 East Elm Avenue,
Quine)"
44 Faxon Avenu:, Bosto
18 Tremont Stree '
1
10 Phdps Street, Sdafe
Me
35 Sheridan Avenues mervi
21A Russell Street, West o
* Deceased.
Page thirty-eight
ALBERT J osEPH Dowm'is
25 Linden Street, Waltham, Mass.
EDWARD PATRICK DOYLE
272 State House, Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH FRANCIS DRAY
28 Clifford Street, Readville, Mass.
ARTHUR }AMES DUGGAN
138 Newport Street, Arlington, Mass.
ARTHUR ] OSEPH DWYER
10 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
JsADORE MORRIS EPSTEIN
26 Evelyn Street, Mattapan, Mass.
JAMES JOSEPH FAY
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIIN FRANCIS FEENEY
155 M Street, South Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE DUBOIS FERGUSON
32 Verchild Street, Quincy, Mass.
*ANTONIO ] OHN FERRAND!
JEREMIAH FINN
11 John Street, Chelsea, Mass.
GEORGE THEODORE FINNEGAN
960 Park Square Building, Boston, Mass.
DAVID EDWARD FITZGERALD
34 Olcott Street, Watertown, Mass.
JAMES EDWARD FITZGERALD
8 Corning Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH FRANCIS FITZGERALD
26 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
JoIIN STEPHEN FLANAGAN
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
AMES THOMAS FLYNN
303 Watertown Street, Newton, Mass.
RANK BOARDMAN FREDERICK
50 State Street, Boston, Mass.
RRIS FULMAN
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
ARLES LEO GAFFNEY
Room 6, Little Building, Boston, Mass.
RANCIS ] OSEPH GALLAGHER
140 Pleasant Street, Arlington, Mass.
o JOSEPH GANONG
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
ERNARD FRANCIS GATELY
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
FRANCIS GATELY
133 Redlands Road, West Roxbury, Mass.
UR EDMOND GAY
65 Worth Street, New York, N. Y.
JOSEPH GENNACO
27 East Nilsson Street, Brockton, Mass.
D GERSTEIN
27 School Street, Boston, Mass.
HOLMAN GILBERT
1 State Street, Boston, Mass.
ERICK ] OSEPH GILLIS
23 Summer Street, Lowell, Mass.
RLES FRANCIS GLENDON
1435 Commonwealth Avenue, Brighton, Mass.
ERT JOSEPH GOGUEN
43 Gotham Street, Somerville, Mass.
B GOLDMAN
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
.
PATRICK GORMAN
170 River Street, Dedham, Mass.
H FRANCIS GRADY
10 North Washington Street, North Attleboro, Mass.
RD JOSEPH GRAMER
28 Thornton Street, Roxbury, Mass.
S }OHN GREEHAN
140 Line Street, Somerville, Mass.
AUGUSTUS GREENE
689 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
ANDREW GRENIER
8 Thetford Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
IN LEWIS GROSSMAN
724 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
HADGI
110 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
] OSEPH HAGERTY
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
K HAIGIS
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
GARRETT HARRINGTON
64 Porter Road, Cambridge, Mass.
AN HARRIS
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
HIRAM HAWLEY
42 Barrett Street, Revere, Mass.
260 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
60 Reservoir Street, Cambridge, Mass.
PAUL HEGARTY
14 Spring Park Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
ALTER HussEY, 7 Willow Street, Central National Bank Bldg., Lynn, Mass.
RARD HYLAND
52 Ames Building, Boston, Mass.
JAQUES
80 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
173 Porter Street, Stoughton, Mass.
39 Chambers Street, Boston, Mass.
ORUCH KARP
3 Bridge Street, Haverhill, Mass.
SEPH KEATING
31 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
L
104 Congress Avenue, Chelsea, Mass.
. KELLEY
24 Topliff Street, Dorchester, Mass.
* Deceased.
Page thirty-nine
�19 Myrtle Street, Boston, Mass.
JORN GEORGE KELLEY
*JosEPH PATRICK KELLY
MICHAEL .J osEPH KELLY
GEORGE CHRISTOPHER KENDALL
JORN JOSEPH KENNEDY
GEORGE RICHARD KENNEY
DAVID ANTHONY KEOHAN
HARRIS KING
WILLIAM WALTER KIRLIN
MAX KLATZKIN
JOSEPH Lours KLINE
MICHAEL MARION KOLODZIEJ
EGIDIO LEO RALPH LAVELLE
JOHN LANDY LAWLER
CHARLES EDWIN LEAHY
ALBERT WARDWELL LEE
Lours LEEDER .
LEO JORN LEMIRE
ROBERT J. LEUPOLD
ABRAHAM LEVEY
BENJAMIN EDWARD LEVIN
ABRAHAM SHELL LEZBERG
J ULIUS LIBERMAN
EDWARD GEORGE MADDEN
JAMES FRANCIS MAHER
ROBERT JOSEPH MAHER
CHARLES WILLIAM MAHONEY
lsAAC MARGOLIS
PHILIP MASSARELLA
EDWARD PHILIP McCABE
WILLIAM FRANCIS McCLELLAN
HAROLD LEO McCORMACK
*CHARLES FRANCIS JosEPH McCUE
DANIEL JosEPH McEACHERN
YSIUS McELANEY, JR.
ALO
J AMES
JOHN JOSEPH McGEE
JoHN JosEPH McG1NN
MAN McGRATH
CHARLES HER
H
LAWRENCE PATRICK Mc UGH
WILLIAM JOSEPH McSWEENEY
GURDON IRA MEAD
WILLIAM JosEPH MEANEY
MANUEL D' ALMEIDA MEDEIROS
PATRICK ARTHUR MENTON
HARRY LINCOLN MILLER
RALPH STANLEY MILLER
EDWARD JAMES MORAN
RICHARD CHARLES MuLRO~.
HENRY Ar;oYSIUS MURPHY .
JOHN STEPHEN MURPHY
WALTER JOSEPH MURPHY ..
CLARENCE ATWOOD NADO
EVERETT WARREN NELSON
HERMAN NEWBURG
THOMAS WALTER NORTON
THOMAS JOSEPH O'DALY, JR.
249 Waverly Street, Belmont, Mass.
3 Dilworth Street, Boston, Mass.
A
e Boston, Mass.
107 Massachusetts venu .' Plain Mass
23 Clive Street, J ama1ca
. '
.
venue Somerville, Mass.
18 Norwoo d A
'
B
M
20 Pemberton Square, oston, ass.
131 State Street, Boston, M ass.
21 Second Street, Framingham, Mass.
. ton Street Boston, M ass.
294 W ash mg
' 1· gt
M
78 Orvis Road, Arm on, ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
t Street Dorchester, Mass.
'
B t
M
44 Lyn dh urs
448 Beacon Street, os on, ass.
uare Concord, Mass.
•
M
M onumen t Sq
17 Verrill Street, Mattapan, ass.
107 Gainsborough Street_, Bost~n, Mass.
155 South Street, Jamaica Plam, Mass.
47 Portland Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
361 Walnut Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
129 Adams Street, Malden, Mass.
Castle Street, Cliftondale, Mass.
12
City Hall, Boston, Mass.
42 English Street, Salem, Mass.
162 Park Street, Beverly, Mass.
167 Mt. Vernon Street, Dover, N. H.
200 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
Main Street, Waltham, Mass.
77
196 Main Street, Broc~ton , Mass.
d Street Cambridge, Mass.
398 Port Ian
'
B
M
43 Hancock Street, oston, ass.
8 Park Street, Peabody, Mass.
89 Cross Street, Randolph, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
49 Federal Street, Bos_on, Mass,
t
Sears Building, Boston, MMass.
.
R d Somerv1lle, ass.
121 Liberty oa •
B
Me.
7 Hammond Street, _
angorM
A
e Cambridge, ass.
1430 Massachusetts venuS' t Boston Mass.
73 Tremont tree ' .
I ' M
et Roshnda e,
16 Ce d ar St re '
h'll Ma
92 Webster ·Street, Ha~rl I ' Ma
30 Squantum Street, East I ton, M
503 Haverhill Street, Lawrnc~, M
70 Mudge Street, y_n ' M
t Somerville,
303 Beacon Stree ' . I d M
B . tree High an s, ,,
Standish Avenue, _
ra1Sn
t Brockton, in
106 Mam tree •
M
53 Arlington Street, Lynn,
West Roxbury,
20 Maple Street,
Dorchester,
Revere,
11 Stockton Street , ffi
Revere Post 0 ce,
JAMES DANIEL O'HEARN
TIMOTHY JOSEPH O'KEEFE
WILLIAM CYRIL O'MEARA
RICHARD p ARMENTER
J osEPH PETER PHELAN
EDWARD ISADORE PERKINS
VINCENT EDMUND PICHULO
VITALI PoDOLSKY POTTER
WILLIAM ALLEN POTTER
WILLIAM MICHAEL PRENDIBLE
HENRY EDWARD QUARLES
(HARLES RAYFORD QUINN
WILLIAM GARLICK REED
WILLIAM PATRICK REILLEY
JAMES AMBROSE REILLY
URBAI N ROBERT
NATHAN ROSENFELD
JosEPH ROTHSTEIN
JOSEPH RusscoL
DAVID JOSEPH RYAN
JoHN JAMES RYAN
THOMAS JOSEPH RYAN, JR.
TIMOTHY GLEASON RYAN, JR.
WILLIAM JOSEPH RYAN
JosEPH S AKLAD
SAMUEL DANIEL SAMPSON
VINCENT LAWRENCE SCANLON
EDWARD JOSEPH SEGAL
(HARLES WILLIAM SEIBERT
JOSEPH SERAFINI
HARRY SESNOVICH
PAUL SHAPIRO
EDWARD FREDERICK SHERLOCK
(LARENCE CLIFTON SHOREY
ARRY SILVER
AYID SILVERSTEIN
NER ROY SISSON
ILLIAM PATRICK SLATTERY
ERARD JOSEPH SMITH
ILTON IRVING SMITH
NJAMIN SNOW
ORRIS SOKOLOVE
BERT ABRAHAM SPIZER
UEL HAROLD STANDEL
FELIX STEFANSKI
UNO AUGUSTUS SULLIVAN
BERT PATRICK SULLIVAN
CK JOSEPH SULLIVAN
MAS JOSEPH SULLIVAN
OTHY LAWRENCE SULLIVAN
TIN EDWARD SWEENEY
TAYLOR
RT KENNETH TAYLOR
G ANDREW TEBO
FRANCIS THOMAS
E LAWTON THOMPSON
PETER THORNTON
T FRANCIS TILLSON
45 Merrimack Street, Lowell, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
217 Franklin Street, Quincy, Mass.
Heard Building, Phoenix, Ariz.
9 Marshall Street, Medford Hillside, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
568 Warren Street, Roxbury, Mass.
1565 Washington Street, West Newton, Mass.
Court House, Boston, Mass.
6 Scollay Square, Boston, Mass.
32 Pine Street, Woburn, Mass.
150 Causeway Street, Boston, Mass.
708 Cregg Building, Lawrence, Mass.
53 Howard Street, Brockton, Mass.
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, Mass.
189 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
728 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
82 Huntington Avenue, Boston, Mass.
100 Nashua Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Whitney Avenue, Beverly, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston , Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
14 Arlington Street, Malden, Mass.
31 St. James Avenue, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Reddy Avenue, Hyde Park, Mass.
220 Common Street, West Quincy, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
19 Edgewood Street, Roxbury, Mass.
23 Claflin Road, Brookline, Mass.
34 Chester Road, Belmont, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
23 Wendell Avenue, Brockton, Mass.
11 Pemberton Square, Boston, Mass.
440 Park Drive, Boston, Mass.
201 Belgrade Avenue, Roslindale, Mass.
108 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, Mass.
71 Campbell Avenue, Revere, Mass.
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
4 Reed Street, Arlington Heights, Mass.
236 C Street, South Boston, Mass.
7 Hardy Street, Salem, Mass.
31 Ivy Street, Boston, Mass.
1 State Street, Boston , Mass.
52 Patten Street, Forest Hills, Mass.
28 Larch Street, Brighton, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
27 State Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
18 Shailer Street, Brookline, Mass.
41 Mt. Vernon Street, Boston, Mass.
219 Grant Avenue, Medford, Mass.
482 East Eighth Street, South Boston, Mass.
36 Orchard Street, West Newton, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS O'DAY
* Deceased.
Page forty
Page forty-one
�67 Rindge Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
103 Clayton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
184 Lowell Street, Somerville, Mass.
108 St. Botolph Street, Boston, Mass.
26 Park Street, Attleboro, Mass.
78 Humboldt Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
62 Central Street, Hudson, Mass.
209 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
155 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
197 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
Security Trust, Lynn, Mass.
52 Ames Building, Boston, Mass.
15 Norwood Avenue, Newton Centre, Mass.
248 West Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
2 Sears Street, New Bedford, Mass.
1412 St. Peters Avenue, New York City, N. Y.
36 Normandy Street, Roxbury, Mass.
JOHN MICHAEL TOBIN
GEORGE PAXTON TOWLE
THOMAS REED TUTTLE
ALBERT ANDREW UTO
JEREMIAH ANTHONY WADE
SOLOMON 'vV AKSTEIN
FRANCIS MARTIN WALSH
JAMES GREGORY WALSH
ROBERT EMMET WALSH
JAMES EDWARD WARD
MosES WASSERMAN
MICHAEL JOSEPH WATMAN
WILLIAM BERNARD WELCH
DONALD MITCHELL WHITE
THOMAS HENRY WHITE
EVERETT CHESTER WILLIAMS
WILLIAM GEORGE WOLPERT
HAROLD PHILIP
Y OFFE
Mid-Year, 1929
THOMAS N. ASHTON
GIACOMO AucELLA
WILLIAM N. BIBEAULT
ROBERT WITHINGTON BLOSSOM
FRANCIS XAVIER BRUTON
SYDNEY BucKMAN
HERBERT E. CARLSON
FRANCIS FREDERICK CARMICHAEL
JAMES GABRIEL CURRAN
LAWRENCE EDWARD DuANE
_BENJAMIN WILLIAM FREEDMAN
HENRY JAMES GAFFNEY
FORREST LITCHFIELD GouLD
MANUEL MARTIN GouLDEY
BERNARD JAMES GRAHAM
M. EDWARD HAYES
NELSON FrsCHER HERMANCE
GEORGE THOMAS HOLMES
MAURICE LANGBORT
FRANK GusTAVE LAUREANA
BARNEY LEZBERG
JOHN FRANCIS MAHONEY
STEPHEN JOSEPH MATTALIANO
Lours THOMAS McCABE
JOHN JOSEPH McCARTHY
FRANK M. McCLosKEY
DANIEL HENRY McGuNIGLE
FRANCIS JOHN MINTON
WILLIAM FRANCIS NEARY
CORNELIUS WILLIAM O'CONNELL
FRANCIS VINCENT O'CONNOR
JOHN EDWARD O'KANE
ARTHUR DANIEL O'LEARY
MICHAEL JOSEPH RANO
ARTHUR WALLACE REILLY
ERIC RICHARD
GEORGE DEWEY SCULLY
Page forty-two
Room 601, 20 Somerset Street, Boston, Mass,
26 Reservoir Avenue, Revere, Mass119 Washington Street, Quincy, Mass74 State Street, Boston, Mass747 Washington Street, Quincy, Mass18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
104 Barristers Hall, Boston, Mass.
106 Pleasant Street, Dorchester, Mass.
1 State Street, Boston, Mass.
57 Fayston Street, Roxbury, Mass.
117 School Street, Quincy, Mass.
Central Square, Cambridge, Mass.
737 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
101 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
4 Lincoln Court, Saugus, Mass.
105 Blue Hill Avenue, Milton, Mass.
111 Atlantic Avenue, Revere, Mass.
32 Leston Street, Mattapan, Mass.
14 Kirkland Street, Boston, Mass.
102 New Woodcliff Street, Roxbury, Mass.
42 Appleton Street, Everett, Mass.
313 Washington Street, Newton, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
264 Washington Street North, Charlestown, Mass.
57 Faxon Street, East Boston, Mass.
7 Lyman Street, Beverly, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
15 Wollaston Terrace, Dorchester, Mass,
110-116 Bank Street, Waterbury, Conn•
187 Lowell Street, Arlington Heights, M
4 Mary Street, Binghamton, N.
110 Milk Street, Boston, Ma
10 Charles Street, Marlborough, M
42 Thaxter Street, Hingham, M
DANIEL ARTHUR TOOMBS
FRANK BROWN WHITING
GRAFTON ALEXANDER WOOD
PAUL ZERRAHN
*WILLIAM H. JACKSON
254 Copeland Street, Quincy, Mass.
Central Trust Company, Cambridge, Mass.
Los Angeles, Calif.
1929
1374 Massachusetts Ave nue, Cam!mdge, Mass.
.
109 Hi hfi Id
g e Road, Arlmgton, Mass.
18 G~ B~acon Street, Boston, Mass
ARTHUR ELLSWORTH B ALFOUR
4~ Hall~:e~nS~~::, ~eedham, Mass:
OHN ALLEN BENJAMINSEN
J
4 Wellmgton Hill St
' Mattapan, Mass.
WYMAN BERENSON
7H
reet, attapan Mass
FREDERICK JOSEPH B ERNACCHI
C
253 tden Street, Dorchester'. Mass:
HARLES y OUNG BERRY
rant Street, Weymouth, Mass.
JOHN WEBB BEVERSTOCK
4 Water Street, Boston Mass
J OSEPHAT CYPRIEN BLAIN
'
·
17 D oone A
1028 Dorchester A venue,DMattapan, Mass.
CHARLES SILINGER BLA KENEY
129 C venue, orchester, Mass.
J OHN PHILIP BOGAN, JR.
27 Park lurt House, Boston, Mass.
EVERETT NOEL BOUCHER
27 T 'd
venue, Cambridge, Mass.
GEORGE JOSEPH BOYER
n ent Avenue Winthr
743-744 Little B 'Id.'
op, Mass.
RICHARD KNOTT BOYLE
194 North Beacon St mt iWng, Boston, Mass.
ROBERT MICHAEL BOYLE
ree , atertown M
ANIBA DA SILVA BRANCO
161 Devonshire Street , Boston', Mass.
ass.
A
(HARLES DANIEL BURKE
. I rmdy Base, Boston, Mass
(HARLES AUGUSTUS CALLANAN
2 air
294 W Fh' an St ree t ' B oston, Mass ·
ANTONIO JESUS CARDOZO
as mgton Street, Boston Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS NICHOLAS CARROLL
38 State Str t R
'
·
Boston Police Head
tee , evere, Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS CASEY
quar ers, Boston Mass
WILLIAM JOSEPH CASEY
'
·
44 Lawndal S
47 Bellevue Ro ~ treet, Be~mont, Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS CASSIDY
95 B
d a ' East Bramtree, Mass.
PERCY CATTON
arnar Avenue, Watertown Mass
STEPHEN FRANCIS CAULFIELD
162 c
40 Market Street • Lynn', M ass.·
:RTHUR ANTHONY CENTRACCHIO
20 M 'd'
ourt Street, Boston Mass
ASQUALE ARMAND CERVIZZI
en ian Street, East Bos
'
.
54 Hollingsworth St ree t , M attapan Mass.
ton, Mass
JOHN J. CHENEY
HECTOR FELIX CICCHETTI
43 Tremont Street, Boston' Mas~·
JAMES MADISON CLARY
140 Federal Street, Boston' M .
, ass.
7 Fla St
MARK JAMES CLEARY
140 Wood1!!d ;;et, Cambridge, Mass.
JOHN THOMAS COAN
115 H' hl d
reet, Lawrence, Mass.
JOHN A. COLBERT
ig Can Road, Somerville Mass
ALBERT COLE
·
38 7 entral S quare, L ynn,' Mass.
M . S
EDWARD MAURICE CONLEY
am treet, Amesbury Mass
Orro CORKUM
20 F 53 Joy Street, Boston'. Mass:
iDWARD HENRY COSTELLO JR
enwood Road, Boston Mass
IMOTHY CHARLES CREAN '
•
.
20 Eastburn Street Bri ht '
g on, Mass.
421 Hildreth B 'Id''
FREDERICK ROBERT CROWLEY
191 M .
m mg, Lowell, Mass
~HILIP MICHAEL DEBIASIO
3r~mack Street, Haverhill Mass.
DWIN LEO DELANEY
ssex Street, Cliftondale: Mass:
WALTER GERARD DIMMOCK
18 Tremont Street, Boston M
ass.
4 Homestead Pl ace, Ch ar Iestown , Mass
ROMAS FRANCIS DONOGHUE
ORNELIUS PATRICK DONOVAN
55 Franklin Street L
' M ·
, ynn, ass.
44 Glenburnie Road W
0SEPH DANIEL DONOVAN
estN ew y ork N y
124 West Seventy-second St' reet, Roxbury, Mass.
ARRY HOM Dow
GINALD VALENTINE DOWNS
173 Hancock Street Quincy' M. .
65 B
'
' ass.
OMAS HENRY DUNN
road Street, Salem Mass
130 B
ANK ALBERT FARRELL
rookfield Road ' Winth rop,' M ass.·
HOWE COOLIDGE AMEE
HAROLD EUGENE AND
EARL AUERBACH
ERSON
* Deceased.
Page forty-three
�CHARLES EDWARD FARREY
WARREN FRANCIS FENLON
ARTHUR BERNARD FERRIN
WARREN GEORGE FERRIN
PAUL MARTIN FINAN
LOUIS FINE
ROBERT FINN
EVERETT IRVING FLANDERS
PHILIP FLEISCHER
ROGER MICHAEL FOLEY
-WILLIAM FREDERICK GALLAGHER
BERNARD ELI GERSON
OMAR JOSEPH GIGUERE
HENRY LOUIS GILMAN
JOHN JOSEPH GINNETTI
BENJAMIN L. GOLDENBERG
CHARLES 'WILLIAM GOLOBOY
DANIEL ANTHONY GRANT
ALBERT GREENWALD
MAYNARD ROLLINS GREGORY
HARRY GROB
J
BENJAMIN JOHN GUARINO, R.
EDMUND HENRY GUNTHER
FRED WESLEY C. HANDY
EDWARD JOSEPH HANRAHAN
FRANCIS DAMIAN HARRINGTON
EDWARD JAMES HAYES
SAMUEL HECHT
HAROLD G. HERSCOVITZ
RAYMOND ANTHONY HOLUB
LEO HURWITZ
MAX HURWITZ
SAMUEL HAROLD KALISH
FRANCIS ANTHONY KELLEHER
ROBERT JOSEPH KELLIHER
JOHN JAMES KENNEDY
JOHN MICHAEL KENNEDY
WILLIAM MICHAEL KERWIN
DAVID KoRISKY
ABRAHAM BENTLEY KURTIS
RALPH WOODBURY LAKIN
}AMES GREGORY LANE
GEORGE VINCENT LARKIN III
}AMES HENRY LEEDHAM,
JOSEPH LESBERG
ABRAHAM LEVINE
JULIUS JOSEPH LEVITAN
BARNETT LEWIS
JEREMIAH A. LINEHAN
LESTER ENOS LOHNES
HOWARD PAUL LUCIER
HUGH ROBERT MARAGHY
HAROLD MARKEL
EDWARD JOSEPH MATTHEWS
ALBERT EDWARD MAYKEL
}AMES MCCAFFREY
JosEPH H. McCAFFREY
ARTHUR JOSEPH McCARTHY
110 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
E t Boston Mass.
1141 Saratoga StredetS,t aest Boston: Mass.
88 Broa
re ,
141 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
25 Pemberton Square, Boston ' Mass.
M
40 Harold Street, Roxbury, Mass.
24 School Street, Boston, ass.
24 State House, Boston, Mass.
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, MMass.
ass.
18 Whitredge S tree t ' Dorchester' Mass.
b 'd
C eron Avenue, Cam n ge,
32A am Holden Street, Lowell, Mass.
26
19 Broadway c·ire 1 Lynn ' Mass .
e,
35 Grape Street, Malden, Mass.
.
186 Mam Stree t , Marlborough, Mass.
M
1 B eacon Street • Boston, M ass.
.
185 Devons h tre Street , Boston, M ass.
40 Court Street, Boston, ass.
10 Florence Avenue, Allston, Mass.
Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
294S
d' h Street Dorchester, Mass.
3 tan 1s
' amin ham, Mass.
53 Laurence Street, FrC bgr1'dge Mass
.
p b t East am
'
·
Registry of . ro a ep, k Newtonville, Mass.
15 Washington ar •
M
110 Milk Street, Boston, ass.
43 Tremon t St reet ' Boston, Mass.
.
1 M
76 5 South Street, Roslmda e, ass.
1 k Street Dorchester, Mass.
44 Have o~t Aven~e Brookline, Mass.
'
M
38 Summi
43 Kilby Street, Boston, ass.
A enue Boston, Mass.
126 Massachu~etts st\et Roxbury, Mass.
M
254 Qumcy r '
101 Milk Street, Bos~on, ass.
12 Munroe Street ' Somerville, Mass.
d N H
54 South State Street, Concor ' M. .
56 Batterymarc h St ree t • Boston, Mass.
.
92 Washington St ree t , Lynn ' Mass.
80 Boylston Street, Boston, ivtss.
73 Tremont Street, Bo~ton, Mass.
140 Main Street, Qu~ncy, Mass.
62 Pleasant Stree t , Q umcy · Mass.
1 State Street, Boston, ass,
30 Purchase Street, Milford, :a
103 Park Street, Attleboro, a
1 Beacon Street, Boston, :a
20 Pemberton Square, Boston, M
80 Boylston Street, Boston,
43 Homestead Street, Roxbury, M
17 Oakville Street, Lynn, M
Vine Street, Weymouth, M
4 South Broadway, Lawrence,
R m 65 City Hall, Boston,
oo.
, A
Roxbury,
22 Westminster venue, . Plain M
8 Oakdale Street, Jamaica ter' M
332 Main Street, Worces , M
31 St. James A ven Ue ' Boston,
.
42 Crescent Stree t , Cambndge,
n
23 Oak Street, Charlestow ,
COLEMAN AUGUSTUS McDONOUGH
FRANCIS JOSEPH McFARLAND
]AMES FRANCIS McGILL
GEORGE EDWARD McGUNIGLE
RAYMOND OTis McKENZIE
ALBERT ]OSEPH McLAUGHLIN
JOSEPH FRANCIS McLEAN
ARTHUR PHILIP MCLELLAN
WILLIAM SARSFIELD McNARY, JR.
ARTHUR LEWIS MEYERHOFF
NATHANIEL HYMAN MICHAEL
JOEL LEWIS MILLER
MICHAEL MILLER
MORRIS MILLER
JAMES FRANCIS MONAHAN
ANGELO MORELLO
EDMUND GILLESPIE MORIARTY
JOSEPH THOMAS MULCAHY
FRANK LEO MULLETT
LEROY CLIFFORD MURCH
EDWIN MICHAEL MURPHY
-HENRY MICHAEL MURPHY
REGINALD ] OSEPH MURPHY
JOHN AUGUSTUS MURRAY
CLARENCE LORING MYETTE
FRANCIS PATRICK NAZZARO
MICHAEL NEEDLE
Lours NEYMAN
THOMAS NICHOLSON
MICHAEL JOSEPH NOLAN
CHARLES WELLINGTON NORTON
JOHN BAPTISTA NUNES
RAYMOND DANIEL O'BRIEN
PHILIP DANIEL O'CONNELL
MICHAEL FRANCIS O'CONNOR
LAZARUS 0Gus
ARTHUR AMBROSE O'SHEA
ABRAHAM p ANITCH
PHILIP p ARKER
SHERMAN HENRY PEPPARD
ALEXANDER EDWARD PERRIELLO,
JOSEPH WILLIAM POLLARD
MAURICE PRAGER
SAMUEL RAPHEL
THOMAS EUGENE REGAN
AXWELL HERBERT ROBINSON
HENRY ROGOVIN
ERBERT W. ROSEN
AUL EDWARD ROWE
RNEsr ENRICO RUBINO
BERT MILTON RUDMAN
lIGUST SAARELA
0 SAMUEL SACKS
RY SAFFIE
IUs JOSEPH SAKOWICH
RON l. SANDERSON
NK RAPHAEL SANTOSUOSSO
WARD JOHN SAUNDERS
]R.
148 State Street, Boston, Mass.
44 Melville Avenue, Boston, Mass.
Summer Street, Ashland, Mass.
Room 704, 70 Cornell Street, Boston, Mass.
46 Lowell Street, Malden, Mass.
56 Cheltoy Street, Cambridge, Mass.
6 Summer Park, Dorchester, Mass.
44 Harding Avenue, Belmont, Mass.
84 College Road, Chestnut Hill, Mass.
6 Wave Way Avenue, Winthrop, Mass.
98 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
619 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
519 Lawyers' Building, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
23 Pennsylvania Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
City Hall, Waltham, Mass.
12 Pearl Street, Medford, Mass.
81 Washington Street, Salem, Mass.
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
86 Albion Street, Boston, Mass.
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
50 State Street, Boston, Mass.
112 Poplar Street, Boston, Mass.
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
606 Westford Street, Lowell, Mass.
Room 920, Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
206 Essex Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
459 Washington Street, Brookline, Mass.
600 Wyman's Exchange, Lowell, Mass.
74 Highland Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
416 Washington Street, Somerville, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
123 Aspinwall Avenue, Brookline, Mass.
179 Lincoln Street, Boston, Mass.
47 Portland Street, Boston, Mass.
7 Gray Circle, Arlington Heights, Mass.
540 Gallivan Boulevard, Dorchester, Mass.
9 Taylor Building, Taunton, Mass.
111 Westminster, Providence, R. I.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
410 Fairburn Building, Lowell, Mass.
12 Pearl Street, Boston, Mass.
160 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
130 Chestnut Street, Cambridge, Mass.
Hanover Street Post Office, Boston, Mass.
38 Clark Street, Medford, Mass.
9 Arthur Street, Maynard, Mass.
121 Rosseter Street, Dorchester, Mass.
30 Courtland Road, Mattapan, Mass.
41 Jefferson Street, Cambridge, Mass.
143 Franklin Avenue, Chelsea, Mass.
71 Granite Street, South Braintree, Mass.
23 Summer Street, Lowell, Mass.
Page forty-four
Page forty-five
�15 Linnaean Street, Cambridge, Mass.
WILLIAM FRANCIS SCANLAN
NATHAN JACOB SCHNEIDERMAN
SAMUEL SELETSKY
MORRIS BENJAMIN SHAPIRO
JOSEPH LEONARD SHAW
Lours SHOWSTACK
RALPH SIEGEL
SIDNEY BERTRAM SIMMONS
THOMAS SINCLAIR
FRANK SPEAR
VINCENT N. STATUTI
lsADORE HENRY STERN
JOSEPH MICHAEL SULLIVAN
WILLIAM LEAVITT SULLIVAN
WILLIAM CHARLES SUTHERLAND
JOSEPH LEO SWEENEY
BERT TAYLOR
Lours THERAN
JAMES FRANCIS TOBIN
TERRY LEO TOBIN
GEORGE HENRY TOOLE
EUGENE OscAR TURCOTTE
JOHN KENNETH TURNER
JAMES JOSEPH TWOHIG
JOSHUA JAMES VERNAGLIA
MYER VERNICK
WILLIAM ELMER VoYE
CHARLES HAWTHORNE WALTERS
CARLOS FREDERICO WEIMAN
EDWARD WEINER
NATHANIEL PHILIP WHARTON
Lours G. WHITCOMB
HARRY ELWOOD WILBUR
FRED LEO WILLIAMS
FRANK PETER WILTRAKIS
EDWARD R. WINE
SIDNEY CHARLES WINSTON
WILLIAM JOHN WooDS
MAURICE WOOLF
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
135 Washington Street, Dorchester, Mass.
129 Concord Street, Framingham, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
159 Coolidge Street, Brookline, Mass.
536 East Fourth Street, South Boston, Mass.
49 Waverly Street, Everett, Mass.
49 Ashley Street, East Boston, Mass.
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
650 Albany Street, Boston, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Box 102, Dedham, Mass.
1205 Brook Road, East Milton, Mass.
80 Bay Street, New Bedford, Mass.
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
316 Court House, Boston, Mass.
60 State Street, Boston, Mass.
156 State Street, Boston, Mass.
523 Fletcher Street, Lowell, Mass.
674 Washington Street, Brookline, Mass.
76 West Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Conant Hall 26, Cambridge, Mass.
118 Elm Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Woolson Block, Springfield, Vt.
5 Hancock Street, Boston, Mass.
185 Main Street, Marlborough, Mass.
267 Fuller Street, Dorchester, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Cornhill, Boston, Mass.
383 Broadway, Somerville, Mass.
107 Trenton Street, East Boston, Mass.
Mid-Year, 1930
WILLIAM ANDREW AHLGREN
JOSEPH ADDISON ALDRED
CYRIL GEORGE BENNETT
VINCENT JACOB CELIA
CLIFFORD ZENAS CHRISTOPHER
AARON COHEN
MAXWELL COHEN
RAYMOND MICHAEL CONWAY
HENRY HERMAN DEITCHMAN
JAMES CORNELIUS DOYLE
MARTIN RICHARD DURKIN
MAX FELDMAN
FRANK JEFFERSON GIFFORD
WILLIAM GOLDENBERG
NELSON STONE KAPLAN
RALPH JAMES KARCH
Page forty-six
15 Summit Road, West Roxbury, Mass.
12 Middlesex Avenue, Reading, Mass.
223 West Springfield Street, Boston, Mass.
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
83 Stults Road, Belmont, Mass.
19 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
80 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
56 Grant Street, Milford, Mass.
72 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
65 Suffolk Avenue, Revere, Mass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
50 Essex Street, Chelsea, Mass.
21 Spruce Street, Dedham, Mass.
6 Lorne Street, Dorchester, Mass.
70 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Littleton Street, Chelmsford, Mass.
]OHN ALBRO KENNEDY
FRANCIS XAVIER LANG
WALTER HENRY McLAUGHLIN
HENRY ]AMES MULLIGAN
]OHN THOMAS O'NEILL
WILLIAM H. RAFFERTY
HAROLD ARTHUR ROGERS
BERNARD SINGER
NATHAN ]OSEPH SOKOLETSKY
MARTIN JOHN TASHJIAN
ARTHUR HOWARD VICKERSON
]AMES JOSEPH WALSH
CLAUDE SEYMOUR HARTWELL
] OSEPH ABO RN
LEON ABORN
MARK SHERMAN ABORN
SAMUEL M. ABRAMS
THOMAS F. ALLEN
DEWEY GEORGE ARCHAMBAULT
HAROLD NORMAN ARCHER
] OHN FRANCIS ASPELL
KARL WATSON BAKER
DANIEL ]AMES BEGLEY
WARREN EDGAR BENSON
GEORGE BERNSTEIN
MORRIS BERZON
CHARLES ] AMES BLACK
Lours J. BoRRE
EDWARD GERALD BOYLE
EDWARD THOMAS BRADY
GEORGE I. BREEN
* GEORGE ELDRIDGE BROPHY
ROBERT MANSFIELD BROWNE
THOMAS ] OSEPH BURKE
] OHN ] OSEPH BUSH
HENRY CULLINAN BUTLER
WILLIAM HENRY BUTLER J
HAROLD AUGUSTINE CAH~LI~·
] AMES ELMER CALLAHAN
]OHN ]. CALLINAN
]AMES ]OSEPH CANNON
RALPH CARCHIO
ERNEST WILLIAM CARLSON
THOMAS HAROLD CARR
JOSEPH CARVER
JOHN ] OSEPH CHAPMAN
PHILIP ALOYSIUS CHAPMAN
EL y HERMAN CHA YET
JOHN ELMER CHISHOLM
Juuus BERNARD CLAYMAN
SAMUEL H. COHEN
FRANCIS XAVIER CONNELLY
:ETER WILLIAM CONNORS
ALPH HENRY COOPER
EDWARD ]AMES COUSINS
44 Amo~y ~treet, Cambridge, Mass
11 p69 H1lls1de Street ' Bos t on, M ass .
b
em erton Square Boston M
41 p
'
, ass.·
earl Street Boston M
37 B
d
'
' ass.
25 Parklan~oa way, T~unton, Mass.
25 B
M
Street, Brighton Mass
ryn awr R oa d , W ellesley ' Mass ·
19 F owIer St
D
'
·
281 Black t
S reet, orchester, Mass
10 Ca;ir1?-e treet, Fall River, Mass:
891 Hyde p kl Street, Somerville, Mass.
ar
venue, Hyde Park Mass
75 Federal Street Boston' M .
'
' ass.
45 M"lk S
treet, Boston, Mass.
I
1930
18 Tremont Street Boston M
18 T
'
, ass.
1
remont Street, Boston, Mass.
8 Tremont Street Boston M
18 T
'
, ass.
remont Street Boston M
1F d
'
' ass.
e era! Street Boston M
197 p
k
'
, ass.
awtuc et Street , Lowell , M ass.
.
Great Pond, Me
6 Woodv1lle Street, Boston M .
72 Palfrey Road Belmont' Mass.
17 Rush s
'
, ass.
644 Hyde Park A treet, Som~rville, Mass.
38 p k V I venue, Roslmdale, Mass.
ar
a e Avenue, Allston Mass
51 Chelsea Street Everett' M .
h
' ass.
116 Murdock Street
6R
' ng ton, Mass
olyVRoad, Jamaica Plain Mass.
l . alle y R oa d ' Woburn,' Mass ·
20 M ernam Street , somerv1lle M ·
·
ass.
397 Commonwealth A venue, Boston , Mass
6 Queen Street, Dorchester' M .
5 c1· street, Atlantic ' Mas
ass.
Ive
4 Woodstock Avenue ' Allst on,'M ass
s.
60 State Street Boston M
·
4 Merrymount Av
w' I
' ass.
81 Kilb enue, o laston, Mass.
care of Second Nation;! ~reelt, BBoston, Mass.
an ,, oston Mass
52 Broad Street, Salem' Mass.
80 Freeport Street Boston' M .
331 F anem·1 S treet, Brighton , M ass.
'
144 M · S
, ass.
am treet Milford M
11 W
S
'
, ass.
15 Dalrymple
MMass.
4 Es
ds
, ass.
mon
treet, Dorchester Mass
40 Court Street Boston' M ·
40 C
'
' ass.
20 p b ourt Street ' Boston , M ass.
em erton Square Boston M
5 H' h
,
' ass
. ig Street, Medford, Mass.
78 Manon Street, Somerville M .
11 B
S
, ass.
eacon treet, Boston Mass
Brayton Road, Brighton' Mass.
ortland Street, Lawrence' M .
, ass.
294 W h"
as mgton Street Boston M
145 Bartlett Road ' Winthro P,' Mass.
ass.
B.
s:::et,t~{:~a%:;~~~·
:i
* Deceased.
Page forty-seven
�Westland Avenue, Boston, M ass.
24 5 State Street, Boston, Mass.
High Street, Medford, Mass.
5
143 State Street, Boston, Mass.
Radcliffe Street, Dorchester, M ass.
89
Arthur Street, Winchester, M ass.
29
67 Milk Street, Boston, M ass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, M ass.
Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
231
l41 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
Essex Street, Lawrence, Mass.
Century Street, Medford , Mass.
47
Washington Street, Newton, Mass.
277
131 West Street, Hyde Park, Mass.
40 Vvater Street, Boston , Mass.
City Hall, Boston , Mass.
Parker Hill Avenue, Boston, Mass.
74
THEODORE FULLER CoWAN
RICHARD FRANCIS CRONIN
JOSEPH THOMAS CUMMISKEY
CHARLES JOSEPH CURRAN
CHARLES ARTHUR CUSICK
PHILIP PORTER DEVER
FRANK STEPHENSON DEWEY
DONALD SAMUEL DIBUONO
CORNELIUS FRANCIS DINEEN
JOHN ZAVIER DOHERTY
FRANK VINCENT DOLAN
THOMAS BERNARD DONNELLy
THOMAS FRANCIS DONNELLy
JOSEPH LAWRENCE DONOVAN
TIMOTHY JosEPH DONOVAN
MAURICE PATRICK DoWNEY
JoHN PAUL DOYLE
*BERNARD EDMUND DUFFY
WALTER A . DULLEA
EDWARD FRANCIS DUNCAN
NEWMAN OSBORNE DURELL
PHILIP J oSEPH DURKIN
PETER DWYER
WILFRED DWYER
ISADORE ROBERT EcTMAN
ABRAHAM EINSTEIN
ALBERT DANIEL FANNING
VITO FAZIO
CARL FEINBERG
HARRY GEORGE FELDMAN
HENRY MELVIN FERRICK
FRANK FIALKOW
JOHN FRANCIS FINN
JOSEPH FLEMING
GORDON JOHN FLINK
PAUL HENRY SNOW (FOLEY)
THOMAS RUSSELL FOLEY
Louis ARTHUR FORTI
FREDERICK FRANK
CHARLES WILLIAM GAFFNEY
JOHN HENRY GALLAGHER
WILLIAM FRANCIS GALVIN, JR.
ABRAHAM MORDECAI GAMERMAN
ROYAL RAYMOND GILES
BERNARD GINSBURG
DAVID GINSBURG
JAMES ARTHUR GLYNN
ELY GOLDSTEIN
JACOB JAY GOTTLIEB
JOSEPH JACOB GOTTLIEB
DANIEL FENTON GRAY
GEORGE M. GROH
BERNARD LEONARD GROSSMAN
LAWRENCE ROGER GROVE
JOHN WILLIAM GuiNEE
Louis GuRMAN
GERSHOM DAVIS HALL
EDWARD CHARLES HALLY
Page f orly-eight
37
80 Sudan Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Parker Terrace, Dorchester , Mass.
Lambert Avenue, East Lynn, Mass.
26
Washington Street, Salem, Mass.
125
26 Cortes Street, Boston, Mass.
Summer Street, A_ndover, Mass.
53
237 Shirley Street, Wmthrop, Mass,
Orkney Road, Brooklme, Mass.
18
6
7 Melvin Street, Wakefield, Mass.
Kerwin Street, Dorchester, Mass.
15
Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
18
Moody Street, Waltham, Mass.
210
Pearl Street, Stoughton, Mass.
31
Rockland Street, Cant?n, Mass.
257
10 Wisconsin Avenue, Somer~1lle, Masa.
43 Highland Avenue, Cambridge, Masa.
48 Governor Winthrop Road, Somerville, ~asa.
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
30 Wareham Street, M edford, M
18 Tremont Street, Boston, M
14 Kingman Road, Somerville, M
l6 Pine Street, Stoneham, M
54 Mountain Street, Malden,:
24 School Street, Boston,
Montvale Avenue, Woburn, M
24 School Street, Boston, :
11 Beacon Street, Boston, M
6 Broadway Square, Boston,
113 Boylston Street, Malden,
A nue Boston,
.
•
S ·t 3 185 Huntmgton ve
m e '
18 Tremont Street, _Bost~~·
6 Post Office Building, Spnngfie '
H' h
Mattapan,
R oom 32 ,
926 Cummins ig way,
ton
185 Devonshire Street.' Bops\ . '
J ma1ca a1n,
78 Rockview Street, a A r gton,
33 Alton Street, rB1n t on,
as
· h
20 Pemberton Square,
Harw1c,
hester,
17 5 Adams Street, D ore
• Deceased.
517 Granite Street, Manchester, N. H.
GERARD ADRIEN HAMEL
519 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
CHESTER DAHL HANSEN
117 Bowdoin Street, Dorchester, Mass.
fREDERICK ALOYSIUS HARKINS
16 Sewall Street, Lynn, Mass.
WILLIAM DALY HARRINGTON
110 School Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
JOHN ANTHONY HART
Room 855, 10 Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
RAYMOND EVERETT HENRY
109 Summer Street, Stoneham, Mass.
RICHARD HORNE HERSAM
Canton Street, Westwood, Mass.
JOHN DAVID HODGDON
6 Eliot Crescent, Chestnut Hill, Mass.
JoHN PATRICK HooBAN
192 Woodward Street, Waban, Mass.
JOHN RAYMOND HORGAN
Dorchester High School, Girls, Boston, Mass.
EoWARD EVERETT HUNKINS
7 Belmont Street, Charlestown, Mass.
MAURICE MEADE HURLEY
70 State Street, Boston , Mass.
MAXWELL SOLOMON H URVITZ
l}f Front Street, Salem, Mass.
PHILIP HURWITZ
98 High Street, Charlestown, Mass.
GEORGE EDWARD IRVING
857 Dorchester Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
REUBEN JAFFE
40 Broad Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES AUGUSTUS KANE
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JULIUS KAPLAN
53 Main Street, Woburn, Mass.
ROBERT KAPLAN
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
LoUIS I. KARLIN
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
PHILIP KASTEL
264 Meridian Street, East Boston, Mass.
JsRAEL IRVING KATZ
75 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.
LOUIS FRANK KATZ
75 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.
REUBEN KATZ
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MORRIS ROBERT KAUFMAN
69 Deering Road, Mattapan, Mass.
NATHAN AARON KA y
43 Hawkins Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM JOSEPH KEANE
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
FRANCIS R. KEENAN
55 Circuit Street, Roxbury, Mass.
JosEPH P. KELLEY
44 Central Street, Somerville, Mass.
GEORGE JOSEPH KING
7 Willow Street, Lynn, Mass.
LEO ALAN KING
109 Clark Street, Clinton, Mass.
RICHARD S. KIRBY
33 Ashfield Street, Roslindale, Mass.
WALTER THOMAS KIRLEY
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
OUIS KOBRIN
State Prison, Charlestown, Mass.
OBERT GORDON Koen
107 Elm Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
DIAN SEYMOUR KRAMER
90 Shawmut Street, Chelsea, Mass.
ILLIAM J. KRA WCZUN
80 Waltham Street, West Newton, Mass.
!ES JOSEPH LALLY
96 Raymond Avenue, West Somerville, Mass.
:UCIAN HUBERT LARUE
20 Mill Street, Abington, Mass.
BERT LATHAM
68 Marlborough Street, Chelsea, Mass.
OB LEADER
1051 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass.
THUR JOSEPH LEARSON
199 Park Drive, Boston, Mass.
OMAS MILLETTE LEARY
AND OMER LEBLANC
825 Main Street, Westbrook, Me.
30 Gordon Street, West Somerville, Mass.
RLES JOSEPH LEHAN, JR.
RGE HENRY LEMAY
Room 205, Old Post Building, New York, N. Y.
HAEL SALVINO LESPASIO
100 Nashua Street, Boston, Mass.
IAN EARL LEVINE
30 Angell Street, Dorchester, Mass.
NEY LEVISON
540 Warren Street, Roxbury, Mass.
EL LEWITON
41 Harvard Street, Dorchester, Mass.
EDWARD LYNCH
11 West Cottage Street, Roxbury, Mass.
JOSEPH MACDONALD
111 Robeson Street, New Bedford, Mass.
GILES MAHLER
42 Horace Road, Belmont, Mass.
TON PHILIP HARRY MAJOR
4 Columbus Square, Boston, Mass.
ES FRANCIS MANNING
30 Chester Street, Danvers, Mass.
y J0SEPH MA THEWS
6 Bowdoin Square, Boston, Mass.
I!. FRANK T . McCABE, U.S. Army
3 Lewis Street, Newton, Mass.
M JoHN McCLUSKEY
100 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
Page forty-nine
�AMES JOSEPH McCusKER
J
WARD McDERMOTT
WALTER ED
JoHN JOSEPH McGEE
RODERICK McKINNON
PAUL REVERE McLEAN
CHARLES MILLER
CHARLES HIRAM MooRE
WALTER J. MoossA
LESTER BERTRAM MORLEY
JOHN PATRICK MULDOON
EDGAR CHARLES MUNDY
WILLIAM TIMOTHY MURPHY
GEORGE ALFRED MURRAY
HAROLD ALOYSIUS MURRAY
RALPH ROBERT MusTO
JoHN JosEPH NEARY
FRANK EMIL NELSON
STANLEY SIMON NEWBERG
ARTHUR WILLIAM NOLAN
DAVID BARRY NOONAN
LEONARD NoVICK
RuBIN NovINSKY
FRANCIS CHARLES O'BRIEN
REGINALD WILLIAM O'BRIEN
WALTER THOMAS O'DONNELL
LEO JosEPH O'KEEFE
FREDERICK JOSEPH O'NEILL
FRANK p AL UMBO
BRUNO JOSEPH PARTICELLI
SAMUEL PEARL
CHARLES EDWARD PELTIER
ISRAEL PERRY
NORMAN ALLEN PLUMMER
WILLIAM JosEPH POLEN
ALAN THEODORE PoLGREEN
PETER JOSEPH PoWILATIS
JOSEPH EUGENE REILLY
NICHOLAS EDWARD REPPUCCI
BERNARD S . RESH
ARTHUR EDWARD_ RICHARDSON
BERNARD E. ROBINOVITZ
SAMUEL ROBINSON .
RICHARD HENRY ROCKETT
GEORGE E. ROGERS
JULIUS RoMMELL
CHARLES MoRRIS RosENFELT
JOSEPH RUBIN
ARTHUR FRANCIS RusH
HUBERT !THEL RYAN
ARTHUR SANDBERG
JOSHUA lsAAC SEIDMAN
JORN L. SERRA
SAMUEL SHAPIRO
EDWARD D. SHARKEY
WALTER WILLIAM SHARP
MARCUS LEON SHERIN _
SAMUEL WILLIAM SHERMAN
ABRAHAM BERNARD SHORE
Page fifty
121 Elm Avenue, Malden, Mass.
48 Garden Street, Brighton, M ass.
45 Aberdeen Street, Newton, M ass.
1024 North Shore Road, Re:'ere, M ass.
h d Street North Cambndge, Mass.
73 Ore ar 18 Trediont Street, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
332
Post Office Square, Boston, Mass.
10
295 Minot Street, Dorches~er, Mass,
W hin ton Street, Forest Hills, Mass.
as
g Custom House, Boston, Mass.
3801
302 West Broadway, South Boston, Mass.
181 Pearl Street, Newton, Mass.
"d'
264 M en 1an Street , East Boston, Mass ·
Bellevue Street, Newton , Mass.
247
35 Fellsview Avenue, Medford, Mass.
75 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston , Mass.
109 Child Street, Jamaica Plam, Mass.
_
Sun Building, Lowell, Mass.
805 806
t Ave nue New Bedford, Mass.
85 1 Acush neNewbury 'Street, Boston, M ass.
137
174 North Street, Boston, Mass.
30 Waverley Place, Mel:ose, Mas,.
19 Lurton Street, Qumcy , Mass,
Winter Street, Arlington, Mass.
78
Franklin Street, Belmont, Mass.
30
. t n Street Waltham, Mass.
204 L exmg o
'
1 Dustin Street, Peab_ody, Mass.
eet Cambndge, Mass.
105 Montgomery Str '
M
24 School Street, Boston, ass.
Hillis Avenue, Greenwood, Mass.
7
South Boston, Mass.
302 West B roa dway ,
M
Elm Square, Andover, ass.
s uth Boston, Mass.
501 Southampton S treet, o
B t
Mass.
18 Tremont Street, ~s .on,
t;!~~\i:~:~~~~~::·, :::
1_ 3 St. A;f
0
76 Sheridan Street, Lynn, M
420 Main Street, Woburn, ~
28 Moffatt Road, Salem,
21 Sewall Street, Marblehead,~
91 Walker Street, Cambridge, M
. R d Dorchester,
584 Colum b 1a oa t • Dorchester, M
36 Hansborough S tree ,
Chelsea M
10 3 Bloomingdale Street , Boston,, M
St re et '
150 Causeway
H arvar d , M
t Boston, M
. S
185 Devonshire tree '
·ne M
West Somerv1 ,
31 Gorham Street,
R xburY M
25 Huckins Street, o b y'
S
t Rox ur '
2132 Washington tSree , t Boston,
27 State tree '
d Dorchester,
47 Semont RoaS' t Boston,
27 State tree ,
r
Dorcheste ,
159 Devon Street, Dorchester,
64 Nightingale Street,
]VloRRIS SHULTZ
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
]VlosES SHYAVITZ
3 Washington Street, Haverhill, Mass.
SAMUEL SIEGEL
7 Marshall Terrace, Brookline, Mass.
SAMUEL SLAVINSKY
12 Hansborough Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JosEPH JOHN SoNIGAN, JR.
32 Washington Street, Peabody, Mass.
SIDNEY SPIEGEL
126 Essex Street, Malden, Mass.
EDWARD P. J. SPILLANE
48 Huntington Street, Brockton, Mass
J oHN JOSEPH STELLA
197 Salem Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES EDWARD STILL
12 Electric Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
RoGER ADAMS STINCHFIELD, 1602 Post Office Bldg., United States Court, Boston, Mass.
MAURICE SuALICH
296 Dudley Street, Boston, Mass.
EUGENE HENRY SULLIVAN
66 South Main Street, Providence, R. I.
JAMES HINES SULLIVAN
52A Maple Street, Danvers, Mass.
JoHN FRANCIS SULLIVAN
245 State Street, Boston, Mass.
JoHN HENRY SULLIVAN, JR.
263 Court Street, Dedham, Mass.
WILLIAM EDWARD SUPPLE
59 Elm Street, Charlestown, Mass.
JEROME SuVALLE
43 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
SYDNEY SWARTZ
185 Campbell Avenue, Revere, Mass.
WELLMAN YouNG TAYLOR
37 Churchill Street, Milton, Mass.
GEORGE EDWARD THOMAS
143 Co urt Road, Winthrop, Mass.
LOUIS TOBIN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH LAWRENCE TULLY
State House, Boston, Mass.
MicHAEL PHILIP VISCONTI
144 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
THOMAS EDWARD vVALKER
7 Goddard Road, Brockton, Mass .
WILLIAM FREDERICK WALLS
16 Poplar Street, Chelsea, Mass.
JosEPH F·RANCIS WALSH
56 Montvale Street, Roslindale, Mass.
THOMAS ALOYSIUS WALSH
101 M ilk Street, Boston, Mass.
JoHN J osEPH WARD
5 Lynnville Terrace, Dorchester, Mass.
JoHN LAWRENCE WARD
1 Walker Street, Peabody, Mass.
RALPH WEINBERG
128 Fuller Street, Brookline, Mass.
GEORGE FREDERICK WEIR
23 Hazelhurst Avenue, West Newton, Mass.
JACOB WHITKIN
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
WILFRED WILD
198 Garden Street, Lawrence, Mass.
MAYNARD OSBORNE WITHERELL
Rehobeth, Mass.
MYER JoHN WOLF
90 Lawton Street, Brookline, Mass.
ORN ALBERT WRIGHT
15 Hutchinson Street, Winthrop Highlands, Mass.
YDNEY ZUKER
45 Thornton Street, Revere, Mass.
Mid-Year, 1931
ES EDWARD ANGOFF
ES J OSEPH BOYLE
OMAS ARTHUR BOYLE
MUND JAMES BURKE
CARTOOF
ORGE EDWARD COLEMAN
BERT MORRISON DOLAN
N ALoYsius DONOGHUE
RY EIGNER
ERT WOODBURY EMMONS
UEL SOLOMON EVANS
S ALONZO FARMER
ARD HUDSON FISHER
B GARBER
RD E. GOODALE
ERICK BERNARD HAYES
JOSEPH HOGAN
L WILLIAM HURWITZ
S EDWARD KELLEY
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
18 Tremont Street, Boston,
356 Center Street, Dorchester,
826 Nantasket Avenue, Allerton,
Kendall Square Building, Cambridge,
42 Oxford Road, Newton Centre,
334 Bay State Road, Boston,
64 Halifax Street, Boston,
325 Summit Avenue, Brighton,
Ames Building, Boston,
76 Vendale Street, Brookline,
3 Waban Street, Newton,
Boston Terminal, Boston,
23 Central Avenue, Lynn,
1 Beacon Street, Boston,
61 Old Harbor Street, South Boston,
379 Beacon Street, Lowell,
10 Bismark Street, Mattapan,
814 Washington Street, Stoughton,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Page fifty -one
�JOSEPH JAMES KELLy
JOHN FRANCIS KENNEY
FRANCIS JOSEPH KILLCOYNE
FRANK HENRY LANE
GEORGE LEARY
FREDERICK NELSON Lrss
MURDOCH KE NNETH MACLEOD
ROBERT BURNS MANNING
vVILLIAM MANOWITZ
RICHARD FLOYD MARTIN
JOHN JOSEPH McCARTHY
WILLIAM E. MELLEN
FRANK PEVERIL METCALF
STEPHEN A RTHUR MORRISSEY
,
PATRICK JOSEPH ODONNELL
LEONARD OLIVIER
NATHAN PARNES
JACOB MORRIS ROSENBLOOM
JAMES RICHARD ROURKE
PAUL HENRI THEREAULT
JOSEPH STEPHEN VAHEY
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Tremont Street, Boston, :ass.
19 Whitney Avenue, Bever!~, Mass.
51 Marston Street, Medfor ' Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Bo~ton, M:::·
11 Hobomack Road, Qumcy, M
.
616 Trapelo Road, Bel11;ont, M:::·
320 Squantum Street, Qumcy, M
.
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
Street West Roxbury,
ass.
96 LaGrange S
' Street Boston, Mass.
245 tate
'
M
24 Boehm Street, Lawr1;nce, Mass.
. d e Street Cambndge,
ass.
390 Cambn g St eet Worcester, Mass.
80 Webster r
,
M
et Dorchester,
ass.
30 B arry Stre '
d M
70 I · ton S treet , Ne w Bedfor , ass.
rvmg
d I R ad Mattapan, Mass.
55 Goo a e O •
M
29 0 cean Street , Beverly, M ass.
105 Chester Avenue, Chelsea,
ass.
.
304 Mernmac k Street • Lowell, Mass.
M
ass.
18 T remon t Str eet • Boston,
1931
1 Beacon Street • Boston, Mass.
M
BERNARD NATHAN ABRAMS
d Street Framingham, ass.
300 Howar
t s' treet Boston, Mass.
CHARLES ABNER ADAMS
18 Tremon
'
M
THEODORE FERNANDEZ ALCAREZ
t Street Attleboro,
ass.
Pleasan
'
Boston Mass
SIMPSON BENJAMIN ALPERT
, M ·
294 Washington Street,
JOSEPH Lours AvAN
'Id'
II
3 18 Bronson Em mg, Attleboro, M ass.
ROYAL PACKER BAKER
.
24 Mernmac k Street ' Lowe ' M ass,
.
ARCHIE BARLOFSKY
Street Qumcy, ass.
206 East Squantumt Street' Boston, Mass.
RICHARD JAMES BARRY
260 Tremon
'
M
JOHN EDWARD BARTON
'Id'
New Bedford, ass.
21 Merchants BWankh:Smtonmgtreet Brighton, Mass.
MILTON ELWOOD BORDEN
15 6 as mg
'
M
HAROLD THOMAS BOWKER
10 Tremont Street ' Boston, M ass.
WILLIAM FRANCIS BROPHY
.
St reet ' Dorchester, M ass.
116 A mandme
vVILLIAM EDWIN BUCKLEY
904r 18 Tremon t Street ' Boston, M ass.
PAUL THOMAS BURKE
Room
,
B "!ding Boston, ass.
824 Park Squ~re Stm t Rockland, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH CALLAHAN
Umon ree '
CHARLES LAW RENCE CALLANAN
"Id"
Mass
803-804 Cregg Bm mg, Lawrence, Mass.
JOSEPH CHARLES CAMPIONE
St eet Taunton,
·
24 North PleasantSt rt Wollaston, Mass.
ALBERT MONROE CARR
163 Clay ree '
M
WILLIAM HAY CLARK
Worthen Street, Chelmsford, M:::·.
RALPH PORTER COATES
333 Washington Street, Bostrn, d Me.
ALBERT ABRAHAM COHEN
89 Market Street, Port an M' '.
ISAAC EDWARD COHEN
ass.
·
M · Street L eomms ter '
30
am
W , S merville, Mass
RICHARD COMERFORD
1023 Broadway,
est o Boston Mass,
ERNEST BENJAMIN COVENEY
' M
3 1 St. James Avenue,
THOMAS JOHN COYLE
18 Tremont Street, Bosto~, M
MICHAEL JOSEPH COYNE
137 Princeton Street, Medfor '
CHARLES vVILLIAM DICK
R oom 708 , 125 Milk Street, Bostond,, M
Medfor
JOHN JOSEPH DOHERTY
h'll M
35 Sheridan Avenue,
J AM~S FRANCIS XAVIER DONAHUE
.
191 Mernmac k St re et ' Haver t 11 ' M
JOHN JOSEPH DONDERO
8 Merrimack Street, Low~ ' M
EDWARD TURNER DONOHOE
116 School Street, Jamaic~Pl:~~·
JOHN JOSEPH DUNN
24 School Street, os
' M
MAX FELD
h A
ue Allston,
1212 Commonwealt
ven , Malden, M
DANIEL JOSEPH FERN
4 1 Clayton Street,
GEORGE FINGOLD
Page fifty-two
]AMES EDWARD FITZGERALD
247 Willow Avenue, Somerville, Mass.
WILLIAM PATRICK FITZGERALD
47 Pleasant Street, East Walpole, Mass.
EDMUND BARTHOLOMEW FLAHERTY
13 Monmouth Street, East Boston, Mass.
SIDNEY GOYENS FLETCHER
37 Norfolk Road, Randolph, Mass.
FRANK BENJAMIN FOSTER
61 Main Street, Bangor, Me.
BENJAMIN GARGILL
24 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
ELMER EDWIN GEORGE
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
LEROY RALPH GERSKOVITZ
86 South Street, Boston, Mass.
ROBERT GILMAN
45 Greenock Street, Dorchester, Mass.
JACOB GINSBERG
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
MAURICE SAUL GLASER
1 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
MAX CHARLES GOLDBERG
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
NICHOLAS ]OSEPH GRACE
United Trust Company, 1 Federal Street, Boston, Mass .
JOSEPH EDWARD HALEY
Washington Street, Holliston, Mass.
LAURENCE FRANCIS HALEY
1578 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
MAURICE LIVINGSTON HALEY
1578 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS HANLON
11 Eleanor Road, Arlington, Mass.
JOSEPH BERNARD HARRINGTON
ARTHUR HAVEY
57 Osgood Street, Salem, Mass.
Summer Street, Kingston, Mass.
GEORGE IRVING HILDRETH
15 Oxford Street, Somerville, Mass.
*DAVID FRANK HOLLAND
CHARLES HENRY ]AYES
10 State Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN HENRY JOHNSON
182 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
VICTOR BRYNOLF JOHNSON
332 Commercial Street, East Braintree, Mass.
MARTIN FRANCIS JUDGE
23 Trull Street, Dorchester, Mass.
SAMUEL KATZ
71 Bellingham Street, Chelsea, Mass.
HENRY EDWARD KEENAN
691 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, Mass.
EDWARD GERARD KELLEY
15 Varnum Street, Arlington, Mass.
LEONARD FRANCIS KELLEY
34 Canal Street, Maynard, Mass.
GEORGE RUSSELL KEOUGH
817 East Fourth Street, South Boston, Mass.
ARTHUR XAVIER KOERBER
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM HODES KOPLOWITZ
228 Warren Street, Allston, Mass.
VICTOR EMANUEL LANDSTROM
43 Barden Hill Road, Middleborough, Mass.
NICHOLAS S. LAWLESS
Lours HARRY LETVAK
73 Rockaway Street, Lynn, Mass.
HERMAN LEVENTHAL
101 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
CHARLES ANDREW LINEHAN
Rindge Technical School, Cambridge, Mass.
SIDNEY HAROLD LITNER
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
JORN FRANCIS LOMBARD
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN ] OSEPH LYNCH
7 Appleton Street, Everett, Mass.
ALEXANDER JOHN MACDONALD
39 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM CHARLES MAIERS, 3RD
Room 357, State House, Boston, Mass.
EDMUND VINCENT MALONEY
53 State Street, Boston, Mass.
JOSEPH K. MATTHEWS
862 Fifth Street, South Boston, Mass.
FRANK ]OSEPH McCARTHY, JR.,
41 Dorr Street, Roxbury, Mass.
RICHARD ]AMES McCAULEY
45 Newman Street, South Boston, Mass.
HUBERT LEo McLAUGHLIN
367 High Street, Lowell, Mass.
JAMES JOSEPH MCMANAMY
Brighton Post Office, Boston, Mass.
JoHN JOSEPH MULDOWNEY
306 Sutton Street, North Andover, Mass.
ROLD DANIEL MULLEN
19 Nicholas Avenue, vVatertown, Mass.
ILLIAM DOJl,IINIC MURPHY
62 Prentiss Street, Watertown, Mass.
lNFRED EDWIN NIXON
28 Dorset Street, Dorchester, Mass.
NK J 0SEPH NOR.MILE
TON KINSMAN NOWELL
D ALBERT 0BERHAUSER
WARD ANTHONY O'DONNELL
NNETH LORRAINE PAGE
LLIAM PERRY
* Decea.sed.
71 Lowell Street, Methuen,
137 Newbury Street, Boston,
76 Chestnut Street, Boston,
39 Bushee Street, Attleboro,
366 Centre Street, Dorchester,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Page fifty-three
�HENRY JOSEPH PHILIPS
MAURICE EDWARD PITCHEL
FRANCIS vVILLIAM PIWCUM
ANTHONY JOSEPH PROVENZANO
SOLOMON REISNER
LEON PAUL RESERVITZ
STOUGHTON JAMES R1cm1I0ND
FRANK CYRIL ROHDE
DIMITRY GEORGE RoMANOW
Lours RuBINSKY
FRANK MARTIN SAMUELS
PATRICK JOSEPH SAVAGE
Lours SEVELL
IRVING SHAPIRO
MICHAEL SAMUEL SHAPIRO
EDWARD HENRY SKUSE, JR.,
JORN l. SMITH
DANIEL JOSEPH SULLIVAN
JOSEPH BRENDON SULLIVAN
GEORGE FRANKLIN SWASEY
KARL TRIS
WILLIAM JOSEPH TUMMON
HAROLD DONALD ULRICH
ANGELO RALPH VACCARO
JAMES JORN OLIVER VALERI
WILLIAM ANGELO VrscOUNTE
FREDERICK DONOVAN WALSH
JAMES LEONARD WILLIAMS
LEONARD FRANKLIN WILLIAMS
HENRY LESTER ZIEGEL
8 Morrill Place, Lynn, Mass.
28 Deckard Street, Roxbury, Mass.
71 Forest Hills Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
91 Union Street, Everett 1 Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
106 Main Street, Brockton, Mass.
90 Maple Street, Malden, Mass.
1100 Park Square Building, Boston, Mass.
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
16 Union Street, Holliston, Mass.
1 Grosvenor Place, Boston, Mass.
98 Bristol Road, Medford, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Medford, Mass.
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
35 Charlotte Street, Dorchester, Mass.
12 Clarendon Avenue, West Somerville, Mass.
67 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
14 Middlesex Road, Newton, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass,
59 Richfield Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Rear 117 Winthrop Street, Taunton, Mass.
69 Canal Street, Boston, Mass.
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
24 Pleasant Street, Lynn, Mass.
535 Main Street, Woburn, Ma
24 Bartholomew Street, Peabody, Ma
73 Williams Street, Concord, M
160 Lisbon Street, Lewiston,
68 Devonshire Street, Boston, M
1\iid-Y"ear, 1932
SAMUEL R. ARNO
WILLIAM B. BAKER
AUGUST L. BURDA
JOSEPH COULTER
ABE M. EsKovrTz
FRANCIS J. Fox
JOHN F. GREIG
Lours S. HANFLIG
GEORGE F. KEEGAN
CHARLES J. KERWIN
ANGUS M. MACNEIL
*HAROLD L. NYHAN
IRVING M. ScHKOLNIK
JAMES B. SULLIVAN
JAMES J. VAHEY
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Ma
11 Beacon Street, Boston, M
18 Boylston Street, Jamaica Plain,
92 Tremont Street, Boston,
6 Parkman Street, Boston,
151 North Main Street, Mansfield,
l8 Terne Road, Adams Shore, Quincy,
68 Devonshire Street, Boston,
32 Ravine Road, Melrose,
14 Wolcott Road, Brookline,
294 Washington Street, Boston,
929 A Blue Hill Avenue, Dorchester,
lO Nevada Street, Dorchester,
104 Riverside Street, Watertown,
1932
WYMAN OSCEOLA ARBUCKLE
LEON ARONSON
SIDNEY ARONSON
!TALO Lours BALDINI
ALLEN CROSBY BEAN
ALLINE CHESLE BEARS
RAYMOND MITCHELL BEFORD
PETER LEONIDAS BELL
JOHN BELTON
DANTE ARTHUR BERTOLAMI
Page fifty-four
10 Spruce Street, Braintree,
199 Washington Street, Boston,
278 Humboldt Avenue, Roxbury,
6 Smith Block, Framingh~m,
14 Upland Park, Somerville,
114 Walworth Street, Roslindal
110 West Main Street, Marlboro~g
47 Cedar Street, Somerv
Main Street, Tewksb~
55 Atherton Street, Somerv1l
STANISLAUS ]ORN BISCOE
FRANK HERBERT BISSETT ]R
ARTHUR SNOW BLANCHAR~ ]~
ALBERT Rm,u BOUSQUET '
·
VINTON DUANE BOWEN
HARRY BRAll!S
DONALD PARDOW BRENNAN
NORMAN BRIGHTON
RICHARD ALDEN BROWN
] ORN FRANCIS BUCKLEY JR.
SAUL ]ACOB CAGAN
,
SARO ALFRED CAMPISI
JAMES ]ORN CAMPOBASSO
LAWRENCE PETER CAPODILUPO
WILLIAM EDWARD CAREY
VICTOR PHILIP CHANDLER
ANTHONY ] OSEPH CHIPES
JOHN ROBERT CHRISTIAN
IRVING SAMUEL CHYET
JOHN EDWARD CLARKE
ARTHUR ] OSEPH COHEN
HARRY ROBERT COHEN
DWIGHT PETTEE COLBURN
LAURENCE ]AMES COLLINS
JAMES HENRY CONNINGTON
FRANK WILLIAM COPPINGER
JOSEPH XAVIER CORBETT
FRANK JOSEPH CRONIN
HERBERT ] OSEPH CRONIN
CHARLES RAPHAEL CROWLEY
HERBERT ERNEST CUMMINGS
OHN TOBEY DAGGETT
AUL ROBERT DAILEY
OHN ]OSEPH DANEHY, ]R.
Yl\!OND ] OSEPH DEVETTERE
RL FREDERICK DIEMER
UGH FRANCIS DOHERTY
HN JOSEPH DOHERTY
HN PATRICK DOHERTY
RGE LEON DONAHER
ES ANDREW DOYLE
ES EDWIN DOYLE
ES HENRY DUGGAN
T WILLIAM DULLEA
H vVILLIAM FENNESSEY
N ELMER FISHER
FRANCIS FITZSIMMONS
PATRICK FLAVIN
IEL FRANCIS FLYNN
s Fox
IAM MARTIN FRASER
]OHN GALLIGAN
ARTHUR GAL VIN
]AMES GALVIN
RT HAYDEN GARDNER
FRANCIS GATELY
JosEPH GEORGE
ES ]OHN GILBERT
17 Upham Street, Malden Mass
18 Eire~ Road, Watertown: Mass:
328 Blue Hill Parkway, Milton, Mass.
46 Lafayette Place, Salem, Mass.
43 Tremont Street Boston Mass
23 Lamoille Avenue, Bradford'. Mass:
218 Court House, Boston, Mass.
Non S~ch Park, Wellesley, Mass.
73 River Street, Hudson, Mass.
45 Moore Street, Somerville Mass
222 Cabot Street, Beverly' Mass.
32 Rich Street, Waltham'. Mass:
44 Decatur Street, Arlington, Mass.
32 Munroe Street, Somerville Mass
12 Jefferson Street Lynn' Mas~·
154 Lynnfield Street, P~abody'. Mass.
455 East Seventh Street, South Boston Mass.
116 Walnut Street, Somerville' Mass.
387 Norfolk Street, Dorchester' Mass·
18 Tremont Street Boston' Mass.
294 Washington Street'. Boston: Mass:
25 Wayne Street, Roxbury, Mass.
2 Pleasant Street Sharon Mas
78 Melrose Street, Arlington: Mas:·
p
B
40 Central Street, Boston, Mass:
. O . ldg., U.S. Vet. Bureau Boston Mas
40 Court Street,' Boston ' Mass
s.
431 Broadway, Everett' Mass.
25 Granville Road, Cambridge' Mass.
96 Sheridan Avenue , Medford' Ma ss.·
,
40 Broad Street, Boston Mass
117 Hammond Road, Belmont: Mass:
28 Seaverns Avenue Boston Mass
150 Almont Street, D;rchester'. Mass:
16 Grove Street, Milton Mass
176 Federal Street, Boston'. Mass:
14~ Winn Street, Woburn, Mass.
98 Harnson Street, Leominster, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston Mass
580 Second Street, South Boston' Mass.
194 Evespart Street, Dorchester' Mass.
86 Main Street, Saugus' M·tss.
10 Pleasant Hill Avenue, Dorcheste/ M;ss.
73 Tremont Street, Boston'. Mass:
l98 Arborway, Jamaica Plain Mass
74 Chapman Street, Wollaston' Mass.
134 Lexington Street, Auburndale: Mass:
1601 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
60 Braebourne Road, East Milton Mass
294 yYashington Street, Boston: Mass:
7 Lmnaean Street, Cambridge Mass
110 Milk Street, Boston' Mass·
29 Holman Road, Waban: Mass:
707 Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
283 South Avenue, Whitman, Mass.
101 Brow~ Avenue, Roslindale, Mass.
1694 Mam Street, Springfield Mass
108 Greenwood Street, Dorchester: Mass:
* Deceased.
Page fifty-five
�FRANK GoLDMAN
JoHN EoWARD GooDmcow
BERNARD GEORGE GoRSUN
GERALD FRANCIS GRAVEL
R ALPH ANTHONY V. GRAZIANO
CBARLES Jos"B GRIB><N
______-, JoHN JosE>H Gms«N, JR.
MITCHELL GEORGE HADGE
59 Nightingale Street, Dorchester, Mass.
33 Belvoi< Road, Milton, Mass,
70 State Street, Boston, Mass.
109 Queensbury Street, Boston; Mass.
20 Willard Avenue, Medford, Mass
78 CoDg<'SS St,eet, Portsmouth, N . H
B•Y St,te Building, Law<ence, M ass.
11 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JM<ES EDWARD HARRmoroN
62 Porte< Road, Carob<idge, M,ss.
GEORGE ALBERT HENDERSON
39 Charles Street, Boston, Mass
Wn.aUR GUSTAVE HoWNGSWORTH
8 Be,ron St<eet, B~ton, Mass:
71 St. Rose Street, J amaica Plain, Mass.
39 R evere Street, Boston, Mass.
54 Playstead Road, Newton , Mass
Jo•• AuousTUS H uTCH<NS
14 Kingman Road , Weymou<h, M,ss:
SAMUEL MICHAEL lANZITO
211 Main Street, Milford, Mass.
SILAS J ACOBSON
22 Eastern Promenade, Portland, Me.
Jo sEPI:l WILLIAM J ENNINGS
6 Naples Road, Salem , Mass.
SIDNEY L EO KARAN
76 Westmoreland Avenue, Arlington , Mass.
ABRAHAM MoRRIS K AMENASI:l
31 Blossom Street, Lynn, Mass.
HAROLD K ARP
135 Yeoman Avenue, Medford, Mass.
THOMAS FRANCIS K ENNEY
10 High Street, Boston, Mass
wn.uAM K <ARS<S, JR,
3 Washington Street, H,ve<hill, M,.:
CHESTER WILBUR KNEELAND
43 Anderson Street, Boston, Mass.
H AROLD FREDERICK LAMPRON
103 Moreland Street, Roxbury, Mass.
MARCELLUS DUNTON L EMAIRE
43 Taunton Green, Taunton, Mass.
R UBIN LIP SKY
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
]ORN To<oTHV LooNEY
185 Devooshi<e St<Ocl, B~ton, Mass.
WILLIAM PAUL LYONS
11 8 Maverick Street, Chelsea, Mass.
HoRATIO SEYMOUR LYNESS
140 Federal Street, Boston, Mass.
KENNETH FREDERICK MAclVER
109 Scituate Street, Arlington, Mass.
EDWARD DENNIS MAHONEY
139 Kendrick Avenue, Quincy, Mass.
NORMAN FRANCIS MAXWELL
650 Metropolitan Avenue, Hyde Park, Mass.
BARNETT MAZOW
449 Walnut Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
PHILIP JosEPH McCALL
207 Boxford Street, L awrence, Mass.
JoHN ] AMES McCARTHY, Room 24, 264 Washington St,eet Nmth, Chadestown, M••·
VICTOR PAUL McDAVITT
108 Aberdeen Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
D ANIEL THOMAS HORGAN
H AYWARD SANDERSON HoUGI:lTON
H UBERT JORN HUGHES
Massachusetts Institut e of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
HAROLD FRANCIS McDoNNELL
WILLIAM VINCENT McDONOUGH
381 Salem Street, Medford, Mass.
EDWARD McGoNAGLE
24 School Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE KENNETH McKENZIE
809 Park Square Building , Boston, Mass,
H AROLD R ussELL McLEAN
52 Bancroft Avenue, Reading, Mass,
JosseB J\LaERT McQmLLAN
JACOB Loms MEYERS
PAUL Loms M<NAGUA
HARRY MucHE~
ANTHONY FREDE'<tCR MoBU.<A
]A=s GERARD MoRRtS
HuGB GRRGORY MuRPHY
Jos•'" LAWRENCE Mu"BY
STrnrnN Auomrrus MuRPHY
Iav<NG NEWBURG
w,w,,. FRAN"' O'BtUEN, ]a.
RoBERT LEONARD O'CALLAGRAN
THoMAS JoSEt'H O'MALLEY
HERBERT STANWOOD O'NEILL
Tn<OTHY GERARD QssonN
Page ftf ty-six
63 Goodeoough St<e<t , Bdghton, M"'
6 G\enwaY St<eet, Do<ehes<e<, 185 D evonshi<' St,eet, Boston, 1326 Blue Hill Avenue, MattaP'°• 108 Fells Avenue, Medfo«I, M,.
215 Chades St<eet, B~ton, M,_
194 T,apelo Road, Belmont, 34 Montebello Road, Jamaie> Plain, M
1 Pope Se,eet, Hud~n, M
21 Dminda Ci,de, Lynn , M
43 D<ew Road, Belmont, M
8 G"nd View A~nue, Medio<d,
\05 West Glenwood A~nue, Hyde PM>
216 Almont Street, Mattapan,
Front St,eet, Weymouth,
MILTON COBURN p AIGE
E
ARL ALBERT PALLOT
HARRY PAVAN
EDWARD L AWRENCE p
E DWARD FRANCIS Q OWER
*LOUIS RAY
UINN
ALBERT ULYSSES R OSA
J ORN D ENNIS RING
CHARLES NEIL Ross
ROGER ANDREW SALA
EDWARD SANDLER
J OHN WILLIAM SAVAGE
GEORGE SAYERS
FRANCIS SCANNELL
J ACOB J OSEPH SCH NEIDER
J ORN J OSEPH SEAMAN
R EGINALD DURWARD S EAVEY
L EONARD S REINFELD
H ENRY NATHAN SILK
LESTER ALEXANDERS
ALAN SKLAR
IMPSON
30 Hopkin s Road A I'
72 Peterborough Str~et r ~ngton ,
284 W t S
' oston,
1137 Massachusetts Aa er treet, Quincy,
venue Ca b 'd
R ear 49 W
'
m n ge,
est Street ' N ewto n,
NATHANIEL ELI SL AVIN
ARTHUR MARTIN SMITH
EUGENE FERDINAND S MITH
ANTONE FELISBORTO S
ELTON EUGENE STE NVES
OUZA, JR.
DWARD ROBERT T HORNTON, J R
E
J\LVIN A T
• OLTZ
'
EDWARD L ESLIE TR
JACOB TRUST
AVERS
JAMES HENRY T URNER
WILLIAM CAL VIN T YREE
LESLIE BLYTHE VAU GHAN
J AMES ABBOTT VAUGHN
LEONARD GEORGE V ELISHKA
S
.;MUEL ABRAHAM VERNON
ALTEJR J OSEPH WALDRON
J OHN OSEPH WALSH
LAURENCE J OSEPH W
WILLIAM FRANC IS W ALSH
FRA
F
ALSH
NK ERDINAND W
ISRAEL SHEPARD W ALTERS
HA
ERMAN
ROLD WIDETSKY
SmrH BURTON w ILLIAMS
RALP \i
S H "1,J ALDO WILSON
/ ~IUEL WINETSKY
HEODORE W ILLIAM ZIEGLER
THEO
DORE C
ARL ZIRSCH, JR.
Mass.
Mass
Mass.
·
Mass.
M ass.
20 Meridian St
12 Pond Vie:e;t, !ast ~oston, Mass.
1395 Hancocko . Arlmgton, Mass
Sat
reet Q ·
M
·
.
103 Mam Street ' N orth' Aumcy, M ass.
da ms
eacon St t B
, ass.
1 B
1372 H ancock s /ee ' o~ton, Mass.
84 State St::e~, Qumcy, Mass.
11 Manchester Road eB, Bos~on, Mass.
' rooklme Mass
232 B
•
roadway Ch 1 '
22 H d S
'
e sea, Mass
Y e treet R
·
Court House F' e.vere, Mass.
6 Beacon S ' armmgton , Me.
114 State S~~:e~, Boston, Mass.
106 Grafton S
e , Boston, Mass
127_North Wash'
treet, Arlington Mass.
mgton Street B
'
·
Homestead St
' oston, Mass.
57
17
reet, Roxbur M
State Stre t B
Y,
ass.
7
23 Stickney R de
oston, Mass.
492 Division St oa , edford, Mass
reet Fall R'
M
·
35 Essex Street L
iver, ass.
839 Elm Street
aw
hren ce, Mass.
167 W I
' a nc ester N H
a nut Street Ch I ' · ·
J ohnswood R d ' . e sea, Mass.
89
1 St o~ ' Roshndale, Mass
2679 Washin gtoatS t treet, Boston, Mass.
e
n reetRb
·
0
97 Overland Road' W ~ ury, Mass.
100 Franklin Str~et ; tham, Mass.
100 M'lk
' oston, Mass
Lucier & Dowd 41 S h i Street, Boston Mas .
'350 Cc ool Street, Nashua ' N H .
s
ross St
' · ·
120 Paul Gore Sreet, Malden, Mass.
199 Washington S~reett, BBoston, Mass.
N'ICh o Is Avenue ree ' oston ' M ass.
W
21 T k
'
atertown Mass
uc er Street M'l
'
·
97 T en Hills Road S '
I ~on, Mass.
11 B
' omerv1lle Mass
1 ~tcotn SStreet, Boston: Mass.
518 B ay State Build' treet ' B ost on, Mass.·
a e
m g, Lawrence M
.
ass.
111 M a m St reet ' GI oucester,' Mass
53 St
32 T'
ate Street, Boston M
.
imson Street E t L
'
ass.
107 Water St;ee:\o?tnonn,, MMass.
'
ass.
M
M
M id-Year, 1933
ILLIAM M. BAGLEY
ORRIS F INN
RAHAMA G
AREN
, ANS
CE KARELITZ
OMAS J · K ELLY
AX S
· PORTNOY
UEL W · STANTON
WARD D · STEELE
670 Bennington Street, East Boston
1 Beacon Street B
'
40 H a rlem Street D , hoston,
2F
, ore ester
ord Street H
. ,
10 Fairway Street ' averh1ll ,
278 Bates Street N' MBattapan,
' ew edford
'
62 John son Street L
79 Milk Street 13 y nn ,
' oston,
* Deceased.
Mass.
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.
Mass.
M
ass.
Mass.
Mass.
Page fifty-seven
�1933
MILTON IsADORE ABELSON
H
Street Mattapan, Mass.
41 osn_ier
' W rcester, Mass.
87 Plantation Street, o
GEORGE ABOUMRAD oMB
.
. h School Roxbury, Mass.
FRANK WIPPICH BAJ~nior Master, Roxbury Mem~~1a~~~~ry Stree~, Medford, Mass.
B
h.
Street Boston, M ass.
WALLACE JOHNSON AL\
2374 Was mgton treet 'Newton, Mass.
JoHN LESTER BALLANTYNE
20 St. Jame~~dford Hillside, M ass.
PIERRE BELLIVEAU BoUDREAU
58 Catting St~:tt,Street, Dorchester, M ass.
AMEDEE RAYMONDE
24 Assa B
64 West Groton, Mass.
MICHAEL OWLER
ox '
h t
M
B WMAR
Mellen Street, Dore es er, ass.
J AMES
RALPH BURTON
39
East Boston, Mass.
EDWARD WILLIA~~!i:::: JR.
1189 Benni~g;~~k~~r;~~~et, Arlington, Mass.
THOMAS Lo¥::~GH BURNS
60 Federal Street , Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE
B RR
Street Dorchester, Mass.
WILFRED FRANCIS u
69 O ~ean
Marlborough , Mass.
RTRAND CADIGAN y
5 Mechanic Street,West M e df or d , M ass.
C
T
J OH N BE
FAY EDWARD JosErASE~RE
31 Baxte\2 e;:t~~~ Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM FRANCIS CIERI
1 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JosEPH ANTHONY C HEN
Tilden Road, Scituate, Mass.
O
EDWARD ISRAEL
A
ue Roxbur y, Mass.
FRANK MERLON CoLE ELLY
106 Mt. Pleasant ~e;tre~t Portland, Me.
THOMAS BENNETT CoNN
Suite 502, 97 Exchrg ue D~rchester , Mass.
MORRIS Cox
1744 Dorchester t~e~v~nue Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM CHARLES CRAY
412A Massachuse s St eet' Boston, Mass.
L
CROPP
6 Beacon r '
70 Washington Street, Shalem, ~ass.
NEILL E;;:DERICK CULLINAN
FRANCIS
D
h
Street Dore ester, ass.
DANIEL IGNATIUS ALY
43 Wrent. a~
t Marlborough, Mass.
JosEPH D'ARRIGO D
Y
186 Mfffm Rtr:~ 'Jamaica Plain, Mass.
O
'
GEORGE EDWARD EWE
50 I ey
C bridge Mass
TIMOTHY CHARLES DoHERTY
169 SWpringfSt~e;~~ee~mAllston', Mass:
G
ON DUFFY
35 est or
'
M
JoHN ORD
F LON
448 Broadway, Chelsea, ass.
WALTER JAMES AL
Broadway , Chelsea, Mass.
448
WILLIAM FELDMAN
O Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
°
AJLEX::D~:i~:G;~ANAGAN
osE
HARRY FLASHENBERG
R
CLARENCE BAXTFER F~tE
WILLIAM PAUL ULL
---=---GEORGE VALPEY GAGE
EDWARD NuTE GELLER
JAMES VINCENT GGIBLIN D
MARK RussELL IFFOR
FRANCIS JosEPH GILL
DWARD FRANCIS GILLIS
E
N
SAMUEL GoLDSTEI
JosEPH GRAGLIA
Y
RA~:~o'i:~~~~~T~~REENE
t~RALD FRANCIS GRIFFIN
ABRAHAM GROSSMAN
____,. FREDERICK JosEPH HADGE
JAMES LAw HALEY
SUMNER LYONS HALEY
J osEPH HANLON
REDMOND
HARRINGTON
JAMES FRANCIS
OSEPH BERNARD HARTE
}oHN PATRICK HENNESSY
JOHN DICKSON HEWITT
Page fifty-eight
73 ¥remont Street, Bsostn, ~:::·
a em,
·
221 Essex Street, Salem, Mass.
Avenue
1~J'1;~~;~ Street, Beverly, Mass.
Dorchester, Mass.
57 Milton Avenue, arlborough, Mass.
56 Emmett Str.ee~M d Belmont Mass,
22 ~e~tm~;tr~:t 'Arlington', Mass.
139 e or
Str~et Boston, Mass,
74 BlackstoneR d Medford, Mass,
230 Lawrence Soa , t Boston Mass.
53 State tree ,
' M ss.
ffice Building, Boston, a
1510 Post O School Street, Boston, Mass.
;~:~~~:
1/iremont ~tr~et,
~all,
801 Pemberto~. Bu~t:e~' Boston, M
24 East Brook
C;mbridge, M
74 Kirkland treeNewburyport, M
29 Marlboro Stree~ t Somerv1lle, M
18 Day Street, ;~reet Boston, M
6 Beacon
' B ston
89 State Street , 0
'
h I Street Boston,
24 Sc 00
D~rchester,
1744 Dorchester Avenue,
~t /
Room 215, Court House, Boston, Mass.
ALBERT HENRY HINES
Bedford Inn, Bedford, Mass.
RoY Lours HODGSON
129A Wilson Road, Nahant, Mass.
ALBION LuscoMB HoGAN
26 Kenelworth Street, Malden, Mass.
RALPH GRAF HOWLAND
119 Exchange Street, Portland, Me.
HYMAN JACOBSON
800 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
JACK HEATHER JOHNSON
36 Franklin Street, Malden, Mass.
MAXWELL KAHN
100 Nashua Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES HENRY KANE
545 Beach Street, Revere, Mass.
ABRAHAM L. KAPLAN
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
RONALD HYSON KEDDY
89 State Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM FREDERICK KEITH
20 Somerset Street, Boston, Mass.
RAYMOND JOSEPH KENNEY
265 Lamartine Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
WILLIAM HENRY KEYES
44 School Street, Boston, Mass.
HENRY GERARD KIGGEN
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
JAMES JOHN KILEY
28 Fairmont Street, Lawrence, Mass.
VICTOR JOHN KRUKONIS
30 Wright Avenue, Medford, Mass.
ALBERT VINCENT LABELLA
110 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE MAURICE LA FLAMME
19 Ronan Street, Dorchester, Mass.
SAMUEL MILLER LAKIN
51 Deering Street, Reading, Mass.
ELDRED WILSON LARKIN
Post Office, Amesbury, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS LARNARD
45 Pleasant Street, Newburyport, Mass.
CORNELIUS FRANCIS LEARY
Doane Street, Cohasset, Mass.
BENJAMIN LECLAIR
28 Madison Street, West Medford, Mass.
JOHN JOSEPH LEE
Elliot Street, Beverly, Mass.
PHILIP WESTLEY LEFAVOUR
252 Beacon Street, Somerville, Mass.
GEORGE ANGELO LENZI
205 Old South Building, Boston, Mass.
JULIUS LEVOWICH
6 South Huntington Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
ELLIOTT LEWIS
390 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
GEORGE LIAN
272 State House, Boston, Mass.
LINWOOD IRVING LOCKE
19 Irving Street, Melrose, Mass.
FREDERICK CARROLL LOVE
5 Regina Road, Dorchester, Mass.
WILLIAM ALBERT MACLELLAN
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
ROBERT MUIRHEAD MAC RICHIE
36 School Street, Leominster, Mass.
EDWARD FRANCIS MANNING
17 5 Main Street, Rockport, Mass.
HENRY LURVEY MARSHALL
49 Upland Road, Attleboro, Mass.
JOHN JAMES MCCARTE
5 Venner Road, Arlington, Mass.
EDWARD AUGUSTINE McDONALD
17 Pleasant Street, Woburn, Mass.
HAROLD JAMES McHUGH
5 Wallace Court, Charlestown, Mass.
PETER ALEXANDER MCMULLAN
707 South Street, Roslindale, Mass.
JOHN KEEN MCNUTT
17 Court Street, Boston, Mass.
DAVID HAYES MERRIAM, JR.
273 Washington Avenue, Chelsea, Mass.
ARTHUR ABRAHAM MILGROOM
261 Church Street, Marlborough, Mass.
JAMES JOSEPH MORAN
153 Central Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS MORIARTY, JR.
Second National Bank of Nashua, N. H.
JOSEPH FABIAN MORIARTY
195 Dana Avenue, Hyde Park, Mass.
JOHN FRANCIS MORLEY
436 Norfolk Street, Mattapan, Mass.
DUDLEY JOSEPH MULRENIN, JR.
834 Broadway, Chelsea, Mass.
0SEPH WILLIAM MURPHY
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
THUR LAWRENCE MURRAY
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
USSELL JOSEPH O'BRIEN
14 Derne Street, Boston, Mass .
lllOTHY JOSEPH O'LEARY
451 Warren Avenue, Brockton, Mass.
WIN WALTER OLSSON
18 Kirkland Street, Boston, Mass.
ARIO ORSINI
15 Scottfield Road, Allston, Mass.
WARD CARTON PATCH
22 Claremont Park, Boston, Mass.
SEPH RODRIGUES PEREIRA
43 South Main Street, Waterbury, Vt.
EST CLIFFORD PERKINS
Naval Hospital, Chelsea, Mass.
AR JAMES PHILLIPS
GENE FROST PROCTOR
13 Irving Street, Melrose, Mass.
Page fifty-nine
�315 High Street, B~rlin, N. H. .
109 Antrim Street, Cambndge, ~ass.
34 Randlett Park, West Newbton, Mass.
JAMES PATRICK QUINN
ROBERT JOHN REARDON
GEORGE LAURIAT REYNOLDS
TERENCE FRANCIS RILEY
BENJAMIN DOUGLAS ROMAN
SAUL RICHARD ROSEN
JOHN FRANCIS SANTINO
DANIEL SEXTON
THOMAS WILLIAM SHEEHAN
Lours SHUMAN
NATHAN SILVER
ABRAHAM SPIGEL
CHARLES STEINBERG
HAROLD WESLEY STEVENS
MosES SoLO}II0N STROCK
PHILIP STROME
GUY TASCHETTA
JOHN JOSEPH TOBIN
THOMAS FRANCIS TOBIN
NAZZARENO ANTONIO TOSCANO
"
CLINTON H ERBE RT TUTTLE
JEREMIAH JOSEPH TWOMEY
FRANCIS EDWARD WALSH
FRANCIS AUGUSTINE .WELCH
ALBERT LEWIS WELLMAN, JR.
HARRY WHEELER
ARNOLD RICHARDSON .WHITE
GERARD STICHFIELD WILLIAMS
LAWSON .WRIGHT
R d W t Rox ury,
ass.
123 ManthorBne oa 'streeest Dedham; Mass. .
48 arrows
,
.
lue Hill Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
1027 ~ H om~ A v enue , Dorchester, Mass.
B
M
135 Harvard Street, Ever~tt, ass.
78 Walnut Street, Natick, Mass.
.
Mass.
100 Fran kl m Street ' Lawrence, ]v
148 State Street, Boston, lass.
263 Norman d Y Street ' Dorchester, Mass,
·d
lvI
tt Avenue Cambn ge,
ass.
415 Massttf ;:o~lawn St;eet, Everett, Mass.
78 Franklin Street, Brockton, Mass.
193 Bolton Street, Marlborough, Mass.
177 State Street, Boston, Mass.
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
67 Bloomfield Street, Dorchester, Mass.
enue 'Watertown, Mass.
3 L ang d on Av
'
11 1\1
8 Duren Avenue, Lowe , ass.
Court House, Lawrence, Mass.
156 Sixth Street, Cambridge, Mass.
260 Tremont Street, Bos~on, Mass.
. .
Mass.
16 F airv1e w Avenue ' Readmg, lv
18 Tremont Street, Boston, Iass.
43 Taunton Green, Taunton, Mass,
1 Broad Street, Bethel, Me.
77 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
Mid-Year, 1934
LEROY ALLEN ANDERSON
ERNEST KRUSE EDIE, JR.
H ORACE NICIIOLAS FORMICHELLI
EDWIN STANLEY KUNDSIN
THOMAS EDWARD LEEN
ASPER SHERWOOD MooRADIAN
:lvrLLIAM EDWARD MoTHERWAY
RUSSELL BROWN PERKINS
SAMUEL SAVAGE
WALTER THOMAS WALL
ROBERT .WILLIAM WALSH
40 Court Street, Boston, Mass'.
425 Hancock Street, North Quincy, MM
89 State Street, Boston,
71 Pratt Road, Squantum, M
124 Milton Street, Dorchester, M
25 Central Square, Lynn, M
84 Baldwin Street, Charlestown, :
22 Beacon Street, Boston,
615 101 Milk Street, Boston,
Room 75'y, School Street, Milford, M
41 Longfellow Street, Dorchester,
1934
FRANK A~IERENA
WILLIAM L. ANDERSON, JR.
GEORGE BELLI, JR.
LAMBERT HENRY BIGELOW
ROBERT ERNEST BOWERS
HERMA.N BRENNER
FRAN~LIN CHAPIN BRONSON
ALFRED LIAN BuNAI
NICHOLAS CANNISTRARO
JOHN JAMES CARTY
DAVID COHEN
JAMES F RANC IS CRONIN
Page sixty
5 Laurel Street, Evere~t, :
69 Arborway, Jamaica Plam,
141 Milk Street, Boston, M
223 Main Street, Marlborough,
62 'Weir Street, Taunt·~t'
131 Orchard Street, Somerv1 e,
176 Federal Street, Bo~~o:,
94 Oxford Street, Cambn g '
t Watertown,
452 Pleasant S tree '
Boston,
154 Berkeley Street,
6 Beacon Street, Boston,
82 Alexander Street, F r amingharn,
HENRY CUTLER
216 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
GEORGE vVILLIAM DANA
Room 4, Dana Block, Franklin, Mass.
JOSEPH J. DELANEY
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
AoUNEY WAFA DEJANY
11 Bulfinch Street, Boston, Mass.
CARL FRANCIS DELUCIA
294 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN EARL DrcK
74 Sacramento Street, Cambridge, Mass.
BERNARD MICHAEL DOHERTY
11 Hobart Street, Brighton, Mass.
BERNARD GERARD FERGUSON, Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., Park Building, Boston, Mass.
LEO FRANCIS GARVEY
14 Lebanon Street, Winchester, Mass.
MAURICE GELL
41 Wellington Hill Street, Mattapan, Mass.
BENNIE GOLD
342 Crescent Street, Brockton, Mass.
ALBERT EVERETT GOODHUE
18 Dysart Street, Quincy, Mass.
DANIEL FRANCIS HARRIS, JR.
23 Riverside Avenue, Gloucester, Mass.
GEORGE FRANCIS HOWARTH
55 Franklin Street, Watertown, Mass.
CHARLES EDWARD HUGHES
110 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
JOHN BERNARD JENNEY
102 Overland Road, \,Valtham, Mass.
MAURICE PATRICK JENNEY
6 Hawthorne Lane, Concord, Mass.
LEO H. JONES
2 Saunders Street, Salem, Mass.
RICHARD EDWIN KNOWLES
3 Taunton Green, Taunton, Mass.
LEO KORNFELD
6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLIAM JOSEPH LAFAY
101 Marlboro Street, Chelsea, Mass.
JULIAN CAPEN LORING
Accord Post Office, Hingham, Mass.
LAuRrs WILLIAM MACPHAIL
1179 Boylston Street, Boston, Mass.
TIMOTHY JOSEPH MAHONEY
48 Harvard Street, Charlestown, Mass.
THOMAS LEo McCom,IACK
306 Hyde Park Avenue, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
*PETER GERALD IVIcGAFFIGAN
HENRY LEONARD MORLEY
115 North Beacon Street, \,Vatertown, Mass.
BRENDON CHARLES !VI URPHY
324 Adams Street, Newton, Mass.
FRANK DAMRELL NEILL
38 Bradlee Road, Medford, Mass.
WILBUR FRANCIS NIXON
353 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
RoY CHARLES PAPALIA
22 Mt. Auburn Street, Watertown, Mass.
EUGENE p ASTER
24 Antrim Street, Cambridge, Mass.
FRANCJ:S THOMAS REARDON
109 Brookline Avenue, Boston, Mass.
WALTER R. SARGEANT
17 Wellington Street, Boston, Mass.
WILLARD IRESON SAVAGE
183 Essex Street, Boston, Mass.
ISIDOR SERLIN
190 Magnolia Street, Dorchester, Mass.
ERNARD THOMAS SEXTON
90 Washington Street, Charlestown, Mass.
SADORE SrL VERMAN
311 Blue Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
RK EDWARD SMITH, JR.
Fort Clayton, Panama
X STERN
88 Cabot Street, Beverly, Mass.
ARRY T ABACHNICK
49 Jones Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
!LIP THOMPSON
319 Washington Street, Boston, Mass.
UPERT C. THOMPSON, JR.
58 Prospect Park, Newtonville, Mass.
AX TUTTLE
61 Chelsea Street, Boston, Mass.
UGENE DAVID WEINBERG
80 Elm Hill Avenue, Roxbury, Mass.
LAN GOODWIN vVHITEHEAD
85 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
HN DENNISSON vVILCOX
135 Main Street, Nashua, N. H.
YRON vVRIGHT
160 Congress Street, Boston, Mass.
Mid-Year, 1935
NCIS J 0SEPH BAXTER
zro BONACCORSO
RY LACK
!AM PATRICK RYAN
ARD \,VEBSTER SMITH
RGE LAWRENCE \,VHITE
81 Sherman Street, Lowell, Mass.
7 Chelsea Place, East Boston, Mass.
3 Malden Street, Everett,
502 Belmont Street, \,Vatertown,
37 Main Street, Rockport,
93 Union Street, Newton,
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
Mass.
* Deceased,
Page sixty-one
�1935
WILLIAM ALTMAN
JOSEPH HENDERSON BENGER
WILLIAM MILLER BENJAMIN
EDMUND JAMES BLAKE
WALTER FRANCIS BRADY
JOHN LEO BRENNAN
NELSON GREGORY BURKE
CHARLES FRANCIS CANAVAN
AMERICO RALPH CATALDO
CARL ALFRED CHRISTOFFERSON
CLARENCE DUDLEY CLATUR
ARTHUR BENEDICT CORBETT
EDWARD GEORGE CUNNALLY
AVERY PAINE CURRIER
FREDERICK THEODORE DELESKEY
THOMAS LAWLOR DOUGHERTY
EUGENE FENTON
DANA WALKER FISHER, JR.
JAMES ALOYSIUS FLAHERTY
EDMUND PATRICK FLEMING, JR.
RALPH AUGUSTINE GALLAGHER
JAMES BERNARD GIBBONS, JR.
DAVID IRVING GOLDBERG
ERNEST JOSEPH GOODALE
LEO ALFRED GOSSELIN
RALPH EMERSON GOTT
JOSEPH PATRICK GRAHAM
JAWDAT MAHMUD HABIB
GEORGE HAFFTY
MICHAEL JOSEPH HARNEY
JOHN PAUL HOGAN
NORMAN BENJAMIN HOYT
JAMES TOBIN HYNES
SAMUEL ISAACSON
WINTHROP LENTH JEWELL
JOSEPH EMHOFF JONES
JOSEPH FRANCIS JORDAN, JR.
Lours Eu KATZ
JOHN JOSEPH KELLY
HARRY FRANCIS KENNEY
MosES SAMUEL KLEIN
HASKELL ARTHUR LAMPKE
FREDERICK TOMPSON LARRABEE
THOMAS HENRY LAVIN
NATHAN LERNER
RAYMOND MARCH
HAROLD ARTHUR McAsKILL
ARTHUR MARTIN McCARTHY
JOSEPH STEPHEN MEANEY
JOHN JACOB MINKIN
WILLIAM EUSTIS RUSSELL MURRAY
RICHARD HENRY NOLAN
GEORGE HERBERT NooNAN
CHARLES HERBERT NUTTING, JR.
GENERINO ALFRED PoLCARI
JAMES ROBERT RAFFERTY
GEORGE HERBERT ROBERTS
Page sixty-two
141 Homestead Street, Roxbury, Mass.
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
72 Walnut Street, Arlington, Mass.
460 Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
147 Milk Street, Boston, Mass.
1002 Federal Building, Boston, Mass.
312 Broad Street, Providence, R. I.
1383 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
33 Tuckerman Street, Revere, Mass.
185 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass.
100 Seyon Street, Waltham, Mass.
53 Chelmsford Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Winthrop Square, Boston, Mass.
1400 Hancock Street, Quincy, Mass.
305 Cherry Street, West Newton, Mass.
6 Columbia Park, Milton, Mass.
57 Abbott Street, Lawrence, Mass.
48 Rockview Street, Jamaica Plain, Mass.
28 John Street, Valley Falls, R. I.
52 Central Street, Somerville, Mass.
94 Dean Avenue, Franklin, Mass.
215 Court House, Boston, Mass.
495 Eastern Avenue, Lynn, Mass.
40 Ashland Street, Dorchester, Mass.
Bellingham, Mass.
137 Washington Street, Malden, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.
Jerusalem, Palestine
311 Main Street, Worcester, Mass.
41 Pearl Street, Dorchester, Mass.
695A Boulevard Street, Revere, Mass.
1871 Central Street, West Roxbury, Mass.
489 West Main Street, Northborough, Mass.
Suite 7, 40 Clearway Street, Boston, Mass.
110 Crescent Avenue, Melrose, Mass.
73 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass.'
14 East Cottage Street, Boston, Mass.
373 Washington Street, Boston, Mass,
127 Middle Street, Braintree, Mass,
366 Lebanon Street, Melrose, M
454 Washington Street, Haverhill, M
47 West Street, Boston, M
Bucksport,
32 Priest Street, Leominster, M
95 Canal Street, Boston, M
256 Blue Hill Avenue, Milton, M
1383 Hancock Street, Quincy, M
197 Clarendon Street, Boston, M
276 Washington Avenue, Chelsea, M
6 Beacon Street, Boston, M
Beach Road, Salisbury, M
1950 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston,
866 Fifth Street, South Boston,
Ridge Road, Sharon,
1 Beacon Street, Boston,
250 Norwell Street, Dorchester,
Seventh and Mateo Streets, Los Angeles,
DOMENICO ] OSEPH R
EDWARD Roy SAcHs usso
383 Reservoir A
258 Marion Streetve~ue, :evere, Mass.
17 B
h' ast oston, Mass
eac Road L
M
.
• ynn, ass.
37 7 Cohannet St
129 Concord Stree reet, 7:aunton, Mass.
231 Main s;;t;ai;mgham, Mass.
920 Western A e ' rockton, Mass.
118 Kendall Street ;enu?, Lynn, Mass.
4 Nazing C~u ~ammgham, Mass.
606 Bay State Build. r ' Roxbury, Mass.
6 B
mg, Lawrence Mass
eacon Street, Boston' M
J
, ass..
76 Coolidge Stree:rralem, Palestine
262 Washington Str;et a;rence, Mass.
342 Harrison Ave
'Boston, Mass.
nue, oston M
6 B eacon Street B
ass.
.
, oston ' Mas
M am Street Grat '
s.
30 State Street' B
on, Mass.
, oston, Mass.
NELSON FRED SCHLEGEL
JOSEPH EDWARD S
C
HEEHAN
G ARL ALBERT SHERIDAN
EORGE Eu SHUL:rv!AN
CHESTER \VARREN S MITH
OSEPH SPINAZOLA
BERNARD GEORG S
JAMES JOSEPH S E
TEINBERG
ULLIVAN J
S AUL DAVID SwARTZ
'
R.
J
HIKMAT TAJ!
WILLIAM EMMETT T
] OHN HAROLD VARN~~RNEY
FRANK V OLINI
ZARAH \VEJNSTEIN
EDGAR ] OSEPH W
Lours WINER
ELLS
Mid-Year, 1936
WINFIELD SCOTT C AVANAUGH
T ROMAS FRANCIS G IBSON
F RANCIS ] OSEPH L F
A OUNTAIN
A LLAN K ENNETH M AC I VER
C HARLES SUMNER M L
C AUGHLIN
T ROMAS FRANCIS O'D ONNELL
HARVEY EDWARD SNOW
IRVIN WELENS
89 Broad Street Bosto
49 Federal Street' B
n, Mass.
119 A119 Main Street, 'Bi~J~~~;tass.
375
ppleton Street A I'
' Me.
Mt. Auburn Stree ' r m!!"ton, Mass.
15 Harbor View
CSambndge, Mass.
, quantum M
Main Street Natick' ass.
16 Griffin Street
h
, Mass.
' et uen, Mass.
Stre:t
M
1936
THOMAS EDWARD A NASTASI
A BRAHAM ALFRED A
NKELES
E DWARD ]AMES AUSTIN
ALEXANDER ALBERT A
VOLA
PAUL ]AMES BARRY
.;LENN WASHINGTON BARTRAM
ROMAS TURLEY BECKER
WALTER CHARLES BELL
]AMES RUSSELL BOHAN
YRON ROBERT BORAKS
HOMAS HENRY BUCKLEY
DMUND RICHARD BURKE
HARLES ALOYSIUS C
OHN A
AMPBELL
NGUS CAMPBELL
DMUND Eu
ENRY R
PLIO CAPODILUPO
OYAL CARLEY
ASQUALINO F p
DIE F
.
HILIP CARUSO
RANKLIN CLEVENGER
LIAM Jo SEPH CONNOLLY
TER L
HN p ours DESTEFANO
ATRICK DOLAN
ILLIAM CHARLES E
RGE FINE
LLIS
RDON FLAHERTY
Ncrs Jo
JAJI.
SEPH FORTUNATO
1IN AL VIN FRIEDMAN
378 Centre Street , D ore h ester M
1 D ustin Street p b
, ass.
15 Harnden Ro
ea ody, Mass.
267 Havre Street Ea ,tMBalden, Mass.
41 M ascot Street D hoston , M ass.
' as
, ore ester M
33 Cherry Street L
' ass.
16 Mt. Vernon Street D'dhynn, Mass.
50 J
' e am Mass
996 W
·
oy Street, Boston' M ·
ashmgton Street , GI oucester ' M ass.
14 H ayes Road R I'
' ass.
198 Centre Avenu~ ;~.mdale, Mass.
491 Pleasant Street 'w mgton, Mass.
637 D di
' orcester, Mass
. u ey Street, Bost 0 M ·
7 Hillside Park S
. n, ass.
55 H II S ' omerv11le, Mass
1163 Dorcheste~ A/reet, BBoston, Mass:
.
enue, oston M
7 En d1cott Street
, ass.
36 Salisbury Road ,_Joston, Mass.
24 Upham Aven
' ewton, Mass.
4 Friedane Terra~=· gorctester, Mass.
218 Common Str~et o; fster, Mass.
99 Quincy Street , R a 6ole, Mass.
27 Summer Stre~t ~x ury, Mass.
142 Madison Avenue' e:vere, Mass.
82 Stanley Avenue M'Qdufmcy, Mass.
.
, e ord M
'
ass.
38 P me Street T
' aunton, Mass.
d
Page sixty-three
�PERRY STANLEY FURBUSH
ERNEST RUSSELL GA VIN
JOH N AMOS GIFFORD
FRANK GLAZER
MORRIS HYMAN GOLDMAN
LORING Dow GooDALE
FRANCIS BERNARD GREELISH
FREDERICK GEORGE HARMS
ROGER J AMES HUSTON
ARTHUR AUGUSTUS JE NKINS
EDWARD J OHNSON
GABRIEL KANTROVITZ
HYMAN KAPLAN
THOMAS JOSEPH KELLEY
ELI YALE KROVITSKY
ROBERT JOSEPH LARKIN
JO SEPH LOUIS LEONARDI
EDWARD HAROLD LIBERTINE
WALTER TRISTRAM LUNDEGREN
DONALD FRANCIS LYNCH
JAMES WILLIAM MACKEY
WALTER J OHN MALLOY
EDWARD THOMAS MARTIN
JOHN JO SEPH McDONOUGH
tFRANK E. McINTIRE
HENRY FRANCIS MCKENNA, JR .
LAWRENCE J OSEPH MOORE
BART EDWARD MULCAHY
SIDNEY DAVID NADLER
EDWARD THOMAS NEDDER
THOMAS MATTHEW NEWTH
MICHAEL FRANCIS O'CONNOR
ROLAND HENRY PARKER
FRANCIS GEORGE PATRICK
HENRY PERLMUTER
ALBERT GEORGE PETERS
ABRAHAM IRVING PORTNOY
EDWARD FRANCIS QUIGLEY
WALTER KAUKO RAUTIO
ARMANDO RICUPERO
JOR N JOSEPH RISOLDI
LAWRENCE DOMINIC RYAN
OSEPH L. SALA
ROBERT SCHNEIDERMAN
ANTONIO SERRA
ANDREW PATRICK SHEEHAN
BURTON MALCOLM STEVENS
EDGAR WHITING STILES
CHARLES EUSTIS STOCKBRIDGE
GEORGE THOM, JR.
MILLARD HARRIS TIBBETTS
WILLIAM J OSEPH TIBERT
CARROLL NATHAN vVHEELER
ROBERT EDWIN WISEMAN
VICENTE MARQUIS FoRTICH ZERDA
tJ
20 Main Street, Somerville, Mass.
37 Harvard Street, Arlington, Mass.
533 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.
10 Paxton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
745 Morton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
208 Fuller Street, Brookline, Mass.
94 Sydney Street, Dorchester, Mass.
271 Roxbury Street, Roxbury, Mass.
9 Hosmer Street, Marlborough, Mass.
82 Main Street, Reading, Mass.
26 Berkshire Street, Swampscott, Mass.
39 Baird Street, Dorchester, Mass.
9 Greendale Road, Dorchester, Mass.
43 Emerald Street, Medford, Mass.
622 Morton Street, Dorchester, Mass.
46 Sedgewick Street, J amaica Plain, Mass.
36 Buswell Street, Lawrence, Mass.
214 Quincy Avenue, Braintree, Mass.
213 Washington Street, Marblehead, Mass.
71 Toxteth Street, Brookline, Mass.
128 West Spruce Street, Milford, Mass.
418 Ashmont Street, Boston, M ass.
50 Lexington Street, West Newton, Mass.
628 South Street, Roslind ale, Mass.
36 Armory Street, Wakefield, Mass.
34 Fayette Street, Cambridge, Mass.
105 Radcliffe Street, Dorchester, Mass.
42 Avalon Road, West Roxbury, M ass.
66 Floyd Street, Dorchester, Mass.
35 Readville Street, Readville, Mass.
55 Thomas Road, Swampscott, Mass.
11 Fenwood Road, Roxbury, Ma'ss.
10 Fairmount Street, Winchester, Mass.
19 Dartmouth Street, Taunton, Mass.
23 Evelyn Street, Mattapan, Mass.
343 Oak Street, Lawrence, Mass.
642 Walk Hill Street, Mattapan, Mass.
20 Central Street, Ashland, Mass.
24 Victor Street, Fitchburg, Mass.
106 Bremen Street, East Boston , Mass.
11 Everett Street, Beverly, Mass.
377 Main Street, Biddeford, Me.
1 Pebble Street, North Adams, Mass.
48 Wolcott Street, Dorchester, Mass.
25 Huckins Street, Roxbury, Mass.
Room 343, 7 City Square, Charlestown, Mass.
137 Summer Street, Fitchburg, Mass.
14 Lovell Street, North Weymouth, Mass.
Oakland Avenue, Hanover, Mass.
21 Woodland Court, Lawrence, Mass.
48 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Mass.
50 Granite Avenue, Dorchester, Mass.
5 Park Street, ·Boston, Mass.
30 Chatham Street, Cambridge, Mass.
34 Rutland Square, Boston , Mass.
t February
Page sixty-four
1937 Graduate.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk University Records
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk University Records collection covers all aspects of the university's history and development from 1906 to today. The materials include: Presidents' records, photographs, audio and video recordings, memorabilia, and university publications. Learn more about the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/academics/libraries/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/records-of-suffolk-university" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">collection</a> at our web site.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Law Alumni Directory, 1906-1936
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUG-005.001 Box 1
Relation
A related resource
Find out more about our collections on <a href="http://www.suffolk.edu/explore/24550.php">our website</a>.
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University--Law School
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Suffolk University--Alumni and alumnae
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SU-1851
Alumni
Suffolk Law School
Suffolk Publications
-
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PDF Text
Text
•
TI£ SIFf(U JOOIIW.
VOL , 1-33, 1936·1978
Every effort h•• been ' uda to •• ..~l• • co-.pl•t•
run of Suffolk University ' • st ude nt newsp•per, Irreaulariti- ■ in · nuaberin& , hovt:wr , M..ke it dittic~lt
to detendne vhe:the:r •or ~ce:rt"d.n volu.a an coapl•U .
Pro!N.bly publJ.ahed but lllaain& are the followln& iHUH 1
Vol. 1 1 • no. l , 3- 5 , ltlfl-1117?
Vol. 7 • no. 11, K,,rch or April 1'50,
Vol. 11, no . 1. 111 .. ltSJ.
1
!!' Api-11 1112.
:~: !~: ~:: io
-~!~
.; ...,,'
PouibU ePbliah•4, but a!adn&, ..,.. concludin1 nuabeN
of YOl. S, 191111-IJt aJ\cf vol. 11, 1911, aM YOt. 1.1_. no. I,
J •~o ~ • • ·
.- - -
--
llrhtly the Su!tolk-Joul'nal chan1ed its title
1
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o~!~
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becauH the iuue ia wholly devoted t o • subject appearing
in the ~ at that time.
•
.
.
Gratitude h expraased t o. the l,,ln iveraity Arch ive ■ and
to D. Bradley Sullivan , Dean o f St udent ■ , tor th·eir aui ■"tffflc• in a ■ Habling a• co■plete • tila of the newapa,per aa
po ■ aibl!f-,
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
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English
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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SuffolkJournal_19Sep1936_vol1no1
Title
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Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 1, 9/19/1936
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936
Creator
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Suffolk University
Source
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Subject
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Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
A language of the resource
English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_19Oct1936_vol1no2
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2, 10/19/1936
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Source
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/b3444a65c72c9ac7999a581faf7e3d6b.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=pLcZuPhwaOv-wR-DISz7Rs1vC7Dii%7EIL39ItA%7EIJ3AC6dqmNasQxDtqAB6b4dD78SNyK8lxEBGUqKNKyOwWCMT8F0RFDynT5KZ0xFjQimLTXavvsUYl8V0RwxWxvY3FOSZkcvU4Iq9c8mOgmrDt0VYI2ipm-E0dYVf3aXapVD%7E5u-lOiUKDquPrE9dZrBuvcDAkCJF3f2l7jj-%7EtyAf59%7E-93zyDokXbYYMjQhbOJTyOm0pP3%7E3dK9X1pxExr9wdFg0IbiQ5Ifagyha2ZZGKoKV63gtBVPJ%7E-rK2ifCSgMMg7LmfsJMQAyOewrebkjJI0jA3a2CvvPrjO7tO6Oc-uw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
7a84944bbe0eaf31122c195224af6859
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
A language of the resource
English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_19Nov1936_vol1no3
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 3, 11/19/1936
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Source
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/1b91767ba5dce5ec3f1968b2db724b9f.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=TdM41oKwiSzSQNHQRn2Ha7FmFglnmkR1allSFDwg5uU7Lf2HqMuTLUw4z2G1I1dhe7XLVcjzA4KliuUv82M8MzKhZJxY4SFzhXRldF3tmftCbfaE0QEGbh5qk0AM7-Y75-hEjVfNatm1%7EdnD01MY0MBh14EE-f4npmnGdbKZgLgvo0lnNI1Mkl3PulOn7lPyQrT6KpmrkK%7EmflgLd9hKdjWuoaCQzi5C6GfkEjmYtlut3L6AGnNBVxSmKbUd%7EacmudkoX3y3ZMSX05lMgvzJXHez8cIzuIJTeYl4%7EAbUwR9HjJPLAEJ3vJvy6kHZ3mcbADVl-4LVE%7ECy72xGzxP3Mw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
110887c971d4a243020c17b361c64d1c
PDF Text
Text
LJie SUFFOLK ·JOURNAL
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· uoSTON . ~IA SSAC I-I USET'TS
THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY BANQUET HELD
\Great Gatheripg of
Alumniat
Kenmor~
Dean Archer Lauds
Loyal~yuf
Faculty
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FRANCJS 'F KfJ.J.El'. '28 .
SPEAKS
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
A language of the resource
English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_19Dec1936_vol1no4
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 4, 12/19/1936
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936
Creator
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Suffolk University
Source
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
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Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/769d694561a2e16e6f454a0d999854ce.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=uZj5ll4nvurMyd8jRmTeLVuD4ZRXIKcXdVUByOg8%7EGwbxpC%7EpDXEQeitsoxNY9YdyD%7E6knCUNFExKb2u09t-jx8nLVsyxptkl1LZ7sRCsrtOpsL064o53khtoOFiacIkyILmUwFIHwR9KPv-idLWygGa7HMqN1Igkfy7gBn6pnuTBa10-wVBkwc656P8tPXw8AteURwUBmc2e1GqXhzoyoYHgmwbXXYGY%7EwYaQoR4QnrsBYqCf7HzMNOf%7ETWR6Ip-dchCdGBoYVpw5R9te5wSNaNFddhHuLxQrvanyOOCBfa16z0PuXOxa41EZVcJ%7EyU2Hv53c3rpVMbwAX-FMpmig__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
A language of the resource
English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_19Jan1937_vol1no5
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal Vol. 1, No. 5, 1/19/1937
Date
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1937
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Suffolk University
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
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The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
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PDF
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English
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Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
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Suffolk Publications
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
A language of the resource
English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_19Feb1937_vol1no6
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 6, 2/19/1937
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1937
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
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English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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SuffolkJournal_22Apr1937_vol1no8
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 8, 4/22/1937
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1937
Creator
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Suffolk University
Source
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Subject
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Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
A language of the resource
English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_19May1937_vol1no9
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 9, 5/19/1937
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1937
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
-
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
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The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
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English
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Identifier
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SuffolkJournal_16Jun1937_vol1no10
Title
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Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 1, No. 10, 6/16/1937
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1937
Creator
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Suffolk University
Source
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
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Text
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PDF
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English
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Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/4ae00c2de6668f9ab325b4ac2e4313bf.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=cqODlZV4rd4Jg3AqYKWV1Jvi5fDaTotgQ9nailjDVl3wAq3qowdlG2cVHWvWuBoEV4cpjj%7EQVuDTgIN5zVt%7EDgEFM-Ot9vNkz02qFTrhqBXdbNbp-13pxobSGf9BoJjr4MTbwaNMJKBxtK9GhY9xciote2HDEXKkLj1JMHPhog0IVFZ2SbUVj9cqXbYdRvdi5E-VVZz6dMo1d0p2%7E-JEFkCXnSel6y-4BdVLwIkE%7EmY8y673FX1M3ddaZ1eKJOaqVwarOSWMfZc6kvnqYoS6BlV7UGdnj2C5rBR9lGHsItgKnAfVIeB%7ETeWqlHkCnwAAT5zKQtch%7EwG9s2Bi-rA1Hw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
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English
Document
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_29Sept1937_vol2no1
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal, Vol. 2, No. 1, 9/29/1937
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1937
Creator
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Suffolk University
Source
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Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
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Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Suffolk Journal
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1991
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The Journal published weekly, is distributed across campus and Beacon Hill. Managed and produced by undergraduate students, the Journal provides news coverage, both on and off campus, entertainment and sports stories, editorials and reviews.
The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Language
A language of the resource
English
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
SuffolkJournal_19Oct1937_vol2no2
Title
A name given to the resource
Newspaper- Suffolk Journal Vol. 2, No. 2, 10/19/1937
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1937
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Suffolk University
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Suffolk University Records
Series SUH/001.001: Suffolk Journal
Description
An account of the resource
The Suffolk Journal, the student newspaper of Suffolk University, has been in publication since 1936. The digital files posted are scans from Suffolk's microfilm collection which covers 1936-1940, 1946-1995. The quality of the microfilm varies, meaning that some of the images might not be entirely clear and some text might not be machine readable. Paper copies are available at the Moakley Archive.
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Suffolk University
Suffolk University -- Periodicals
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Student organizations
Suffolk Publications