College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA)
- Class of 1964
Page 1 of 328
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 328 of the 1964 volume:
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W f,,Z,,,, ,,,,, , ., 4 f .,, ' :J jf,jvff..'.7'-' nzjww w fy 2 K f1,gy,Y, ,, , f '13 YW! :fa gpngfc f nm, M,-uqvm-1-vu ,L Q, W. .Q-1-1-v- 7 ' 1- lI,I+I IXI X u.....M .H ,, , THE PURPLE PATCHER l964 College of the Holy CTUSS Worcester Massachusetts STAFF Editor ..... ..... P hilip Nobile, '64 Business Manager . . . . Douglas J. Fraser, Jr., '64 Photography Editor . . . . Charles L. J agoda, '64 EDITORIAL BOARD Faculty Editor, Jeremiah P. Casey, '64, Assistant Faculty Editor, Carl Sylvester, '64g Sports Editor, David F. Hart, '65, Undergraduate Editor, William S. Richards, '64, Senior Editor, Ronald J. Coulter, '645 Senior Section Layout Editor, Victor L. Ridder, '64, Copy Editor, Joseph H. Ballway, '64, Cover and Endleaves, George W. lVloran, '64g Class His- torian, Peter lVI. Collins, '64, Assistants to the Editor, Wil- liam J. Lynch, '64, Robert J. Dumouchel, '64, R. B. Miller, '64, George M. Kuetemeyer, '65, Francis M. Buckley, '66, Patrick E. McDermott, '66. PHOTOGRAPHY BOARD Francis J. Scholz, '65, John A. Zaia, '64, John T. Moran, Jr., '64, Herbert M. MacDonald, '64, Donald T. Gallagher, '64, Igigzhard J. Feeney, '66, John J. Marxer, '66, Edwin S. Irwin, BUSINESS BOARD Circulation Manager, Paul E. Bates, '64, T. Ross Kelly, '64, Thomas C. McIntyre, '64, Richard J. Conley, '64, Joseph P. Kelly, '54, R0bert E. Cronin, '64, Anthony N. DeMaria, '64, Philip S. Corbett, '64, Ronald A. Rispo, '64, Homecoming Chairman, Tracy G. McGinnis, '64g Advertising Manager, Raymond S. Zierak, '64, Patrons and Contributors, Thomas J- McFadden, 643 Accountant, David J. Callahan, '64. CONTENTS THE YEAR NINETEEN SIXTY-FOUR . . 6 ACADEMIC HOLY CROSS ......... 50 The Academic Year, The President, The Deans, Administration, Faculty, Development at Holy Cross. A , ACTIVITIES ..... ....... 1 10 Academic, Service, Politics, Discussion Clubs, ROTC, Religion, Publications, WCHC, Music, Drama. ATHLETICS ............. 148 Football, Rugby, Basketball, Hockey, Swimming, Fencing, Wrestling, Track, Tennis, Golf, Sailing, LaCrosse, Baseball. THE GOOD MEN ......... . 182 Undergraduates, 19641 Class History, Class of 1964. 3 N Q-. .N -xgixw xx Ql- xx X Q s is N r N fs 6 Q .X A NR SX SX X Q S XX Sin S A X S X N xr X N S ,CSX Qx X E S if Q --Q ,X Sf X XS 4 x T X X N Swx X X RX 'sv XX X , N ,X X Q ,X NX it . S wx A X Q S S Bishop Benedict Joseph Fen- wick, Who, niagnanirnously despising fortune and World- ly honors, enrolled himself, in his youth, in the Society of Jesus .... He erected and endowed the College of the Holy Cross, Where at his de- sire, his body noW lies. En- deared to all by his justice, kindness, and good Works, he died August lO, 1846 aged 63 years lO months 8a l7 days. ' s ..,., . X1 , . . 5. 2 . V A 'Md' .. M j J ' fun- 1 - iffelfkli. 'Q-5 - 4- wh - , Q 'f ' qi Nil-4 . ' L ..5s,.5v. . 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'S X Xxx - v I X A 'wiv- xx xx . .Q xfgyr xx kgxx S L X Q V XX gg . X . X X 6 xx - S S Q xxx X WW. 59, tl Xi A Q- A pr- 5 wif - yx W x 9 .MW X X5 W GX is -Xxqxg siQ x -wx N V N sf QQ ,Q Q X ' QR. xfxxkxxkkmgxk ASX Q 5 5XiqN A X x W X x Swv NX x ,gxigl 1 NA , Q , Y. ii xg?-KQQ 5 . TX M X Q pYN,gN: KXXK Tn gf ax Q SY-xxx , 552 f Q 4 NX g 5 ,f - A 4 A x X ff a , XX Q Q ,Xa ,. I X 5' X K X AVGVSTINE MICHELANGELO CGLVMBVS - AQKEMPIS COPERNICVS BELLARMINE CHARLEMAGNE HILDEBRAND PATRICK - DANTE JVSTINIAN -THOMAS AQVINAS - BUSSVET BENEDICT 'CERVANTES CRYSQSTVM - FRANCIS ASSISI - CQNSTANTINE GVTENBERG - PASTEVR -,,..,,...,. .,..-.-,-1-ugg1mvg-erglne-e- -- THE ACADEMIC YEAR The academic life is only a part of being at college, nevertheless, for a variety of obvious reasons, it is receiving more attention from school authorities than any other area. The new way of running freshman orientation is a good example of this emphasis. This year, for the first time, a concrete effort was made to introduceuthe fledglings to the academic side of the school. Over the summer they were assigned the reading of three books, ,The Lonely Crowd, The Lord of the Flies, and The Late George Apley, which would be dis- cussed in a series of small, informal seminars during orientation week. Provided with facul- ty moderators and student leaders from the Cross and Scroll, the meetings gave the fresh- men an opportunity to observe what a college classroom should be like. But more important was what the books themselves taught. Al- though the three of them bear little resem- blance to one another, they do possess in common some very strong opinions about the nature of modern man and the social environ- ment within which he lives. ' Prescinding from what these books were saying, the freshmen began to think on a dif- ferent level-the critical level. It was easy to see that the school attracted people from pre- dominantly the same background. Also, the College itself has a certain character: it is a Jesuit institution taught by the Jesuits, set in Worcester, and, by comparison, heavily dis- ciplinedg moreover, it is somewhat isolated from the world outside. Some freshmen found themselves almost as determined as George Apleyg others saw freedom of development within the structure of the place. Whatever their speculations, they were taught early to think about the environment of Holy Cross and to create a meaningful response to it. The results of such- innovations will become apparent in the future, they will provide for the college of tomorrow. 'X' 'K' 'X' 45 if ln a school free from the publish or per- ishn pressure, faculty publications are always welcome.. ln 1963, a distinguished first ef- fort was offered by Fr. Paul Kiley, S. J., of the Philosophy Department. Human Possibili- ties, as he says on the cover, is a dialogue in contemporary thinking, a creative attempt to describe the rhythm and interdependence of . F' .ilffzirrrerg Fr. Kiley defends putting Human Possibilities on the bibliography for his philosophy courses. modern philosophy. By relating some of the major ideas of twelve different philosophers, from William James to ,lean Paul Sartre, he gives an excellent introduction to the temper and direction of thought on contemporary man. When asked what made him write the book, Fr. Kiley replied that 'git developed from my own desire to coordinate what l was studying. ln doing this, I found it easier to understand the many different philosophies of our own day. The attitude of Fr. Kiley is a good example of the new direction that philosophy is taking at Holy Cross. X. 99 ye '76 -I- 55 Along with other developments, the movies have taken their place as one of the distinc- tive SINE QUA NON'S of modern life. Be- cause of their ability to convey the very cur- rent of existence, they are quickly becoming not only the most indicative, but also the most popular art form of the twentieth century. ln order to furnish an appreciative view of the development and possibilities of cinema, sev- eral programs are now offered on campus. The Best Film Series, organized by Fr. Gallagher, presents a wide variety of recent foreign movies, running the gamut this year from Trufiaut's The 400 Blows to Fellini's La Dolce eq: Alec Waugh reminisces at Healy coffee hour. The Chinese Opera prepares backstage in Fenwick. Vita. They also offered a Bergman festival 10 the spring. Another series which attracted some atten- tion was the group rented from the Metro- politan Museum of Modern Art. Begun last year under the direction of Mr. Happe, and continued this year by Professors Callahan and Dorenkamp, it focused in the first semes- ter on the early American film, offering most notably, the pioneer efforts of D. W. Griffith, Birth of a Nation and Intolerance. For the second semester, an international symposium was gathered which spotlighted different French, German, and Italian productions. The Story of Gosta Berling with Greta Garbo headed the bill. -I' 'X' -I' 'I' 'I' The most important events, outside of classes and sports, that a school runs are lectures. This year, more speakers came to the campus than ever before. The Gross and Scroll, while lacking the big names of a year ago, presented a well-rounded program of ten lecturers. Enthusiasts were balanced with humorists, philosophers with poets, and theo- logians with Irishmeng still, very few season tickets were sold and by the end of the year there were people questioning the expense of the series. Perhaps the group needed a poli- tician. The first speaker of the year, appearing on October 8th, was the English author Alec Waugh. Flaunting a bright yellow vest and wearing evening slippers, he reminisced about the novelist and his place in modern society. Primarily, he saw him as a skillful craftsman who collects data and constructs plots for the entertainment of his readers. To an audience brought up mainly on American expatriates, it was all a little Victorian. Nevertheless, in his appearance and in his staunch manner of address, he conveyed a great deal of charm, it was almost as though a piece of the British Empire had stopped by to talk for a night. C. Northcote Parkinson appeared two weeks later to add a few anecdotes about the East- West situation. His ambiguous wit may not have been very informing, but it was teasing and provocative. Asked afterwards in the cof- fee hour if he had any special giveaway to indicate when he was joking, he replied bland- ly, I am always seriousf' Two more speakers followed in the first semester. Their topics were the two most pressing issues of the day, segregation and nuclear war. The first mentioned, Harry Golden, didn't pull any punches. Using the microphone as if it were an organic extension of himself, he carefully, with a niethodic de- votion to facts and melodrama. explained the sltuation of the Southern Negro. Almost RS homespun as his cracker'-barrel publications. he caused a little disappnimm,-nt at mst. but gfaflllally his message of prejudice and dis- sent got itself across. The students wont lm,-It Celluloid art critic Dr. Dorenkamp. The Negro problem in America is really a white problem according to Harry Colden. to their rooms with a little more indignation in them. On the issue of nuclear war, Norman Cous- ins delivered a moving and eloquent address to a small gathering in Kimball. Contending that the neglect this problem has met is un- pardonafble, he tried to instill in the audience a respect for its proportions by citing coldly the overkill capacity of the United States military arm. '4Each year this arsenal grows larger and larger, it is a problem your gener- ation will have to deal with-if we are not annihilated before then. The big attraction of the Cross and Scroll in the first semester was the Chinese Culture Festival. For three consecutive nights in No- vember, the history and traditions of China came under a close scrutiny before surprising- ly large crowds. On the first night, Chih Meng, Director of the China Institute in Man- hattan, examined perspectives in Chinese his- tory. A person who can trace his own ancestry back to Meng the Great Scholar fB.C. 372- 2891, he gave a largely factual account of the different dynasties that have ruled China since ancient times. The next night, the crowd moved over to the darkened atmosphere of Fenwick Theatre for a dramatic performance such as most had never seen before. A brother-sister team en- acted different scenes from Chinese Opera. 57 Moving about the stage with the stylized ca- dence of a Greek chorus, they blended beau- tifully the effects of costume and voice with the essential stillness of the art. For the on- lookers, the evening was puzzling, but one of enchantment. On Thursday, Dr. Paul K. T. Sih, the Director of Asian Studies at St. John's University, closed out the festival with an analysis of the different spiritual traditions that have formed the Chinese mentality. With the unfortunate death of Fr. Gustave Weigel in December, the series lost one of its outstanding speakers. He was replaced by a prominent local Protestant clergyman, Rev. Mr. Kenneth Bath, who attended the Vatican Council last fall. Other speakers for the second semester included Stephen Spender, Sean O,- F aolain, and Hans Conreid. In order to provide the layman with a deeper understanding of the many changes that are taking place in the Catholic Church, the Christian Encounter Lecture Series was founded a year ago by Charles Crofton and Fr. Joseph Donahue. This year, under the direction of Robert J. Dumouchel, the series presented seven speakers, who addressed themselves to everything from the Catholic college to the Catholic liturgy. ln November, Msgr. John G. Clancy, a personal associate of Pope Paul VI for a number of years, drew a very revealing portrait of the new Pope and Wwwaaf A09 lul-o-4-f' 58 the government that he operates. In late Jan. uary, Fr. Edouard Bone, a Belgian anthro. pologist, spoke on the work of Pierre Teil. hard de Chardin before a large audience in Kimball. He was a personal friend of the late Jesuit. Two weeks later, the noted convert from Providence College, Dr. Paul van K, Thomson, offered some excellent insights into the problem of Christian unity. Among the other lecturers in the second semester were Dr. William J. Nagle, a ranking official in the State Department, James O'Gara, the Man. aging Editor of Commonweal, John Mannion, the Executive Secretary of the National Li- turgical Conference, and Adrian van Kaam, editor of the fournal of Existential Psychology and Psychiatry at Duquesne University. In the short time of two years, it was apparent that the Christian Encounter had not only achieved many of its aims, but also become a permanent part of the setting at Holy Cross. 'K' 'X' -K -lf -lb Despite the increased emphasis on all these additional programs, the center of the aca- demic life at Holy Cross remains more than ever in the classroom. In the course of the past year, some revolutionary changes have occured in this area, and more are promised for the future. It is the result of work done by the Academic Advisory Council. Headed by Dr. Vincent lVIcBrien of the Mathematics Department, the committee is currently com- pleting the first major revision of the cur- riculum in over twenty years. They began their study in the fall of 1962, concentrating first on the core curriculum of the school. After hearing the testimony of practically everyone on the faculty, recom- mendations were submitted to the adminis- tration in May of the following year. The President and both Deans studied the report during the summer and fall and then in De- cember announced their first decisions. In the future, underclassmen will only be 1'8- quired to carry five half-courses per semester, also, the combined philosophy-theology IC- quirement for graduation will be reduced from forty credits to thirty. It is believed that other areas of the curriculum will shortly be revised. In addition, at the present time, each department is submitting a plan of studies to the committee. According to Dr. lVlcBrien, the final phases of this curriculum revision will not be completed for some years yet. In most academic concerns, the betterment of Holy Cross is a gradual process. Each year the faculty increases in quantity and quality, more scholarships are given, Bild Pmgrams like Special Studies serve the student body more effectively. A man with an excel- lelll perspective on this process is Dr. William ar. TL- , . lf MN. 5 X .. ya Nag: fd lx f'q 'X fzfl' Y 127' hy! 'ffilffl F, L 'IE'- ,vf-:'irQ v- , '. u ..,.. ps' . Il? .J- r ' 'H f Tiff-. L'-m K-' 4.4M-H . nv ,jk FQCOE' v ' ', 4rv1'Y'h- v-UA, LA- FP reoifi in DE' auf. IH be IC' - pr' ff1E:i--' of fe' :,' 1 J 'muff'- l , ed Wi nl? bf e. fam diir lc' EQII. the on WH -prrrftl Bath U- aid wi. and stud eDl , PXCEI' tiiliifi Dr. Crattun. one of Holy Cross' best and Ill -.yo .l. iifllllllll. no. ll mcnibcr ol the History De- tHLll'lllll'Ill for over twenty yeurs. ln 1961, he was counuissioncil to write il history of the College. llurring delays, the book will be published sometime this summer. llr. Crattan agrees that the chan es in re- U 8 cent yours have been startling, but he is mind- ful of the long history ofiHoly Cross. He rary was opened that a new age had dawned for the College. Likewise, the develop- said that when Dinand Lib in 1927, it seemed then ost popu- lar teachers. speaks with authority on the College's past and iuturc tense. - ' '-'rs 'W' 'ww V' i W Q Q r- fq ' K 2 l 2 t 1 a s 3 X 5 2 t 2 vi' ii yy , s ft, 'W 1 ment of the different departments, in the thirties was a very significant occurence. We must remember that all of these advances have contributed to the Holy Cross of today. What We are undergoing now is another ad- justment in thinking, or more -properly, a fiowering out from the past. It is an evolution- ary movement, not a revolutionary one. Free- dom under guidance remains our prime edu- cational principlef, ,..C : 1 U i F 'e S B N 3 'a I Y fri 1 5 mf is 'Z by Y A331 if? M 1 :MJ E ' i 7 if , , 5451, s- JP ' :f if- L' i f PE ' I '.' sfgfgfg' 1 , 'if sl, ,gs 147 ' av ' N -mv 42,5 ff '1Wk,. ' b 1 I 'w',1:1.ggQf'f - 0113! N- -M X N, X- 7 O . E' I fi a, i I 1 af ,T f L is 5 - s. .x Ng, I x ef - wtf SX, W f KX ffm, xr ty ,W f 7!' , WW Q w XMAS Z .,,,, F ,, H ..7,,., ,, ' X14 i. W ' , , ,W ,, f 5 W, f W 'iff' f 2 W f f f X f X f 4 iQ Q, 7 .4 W f f 7 A Awww Xxwq , f, if ff Z ,4 Z C f 4 ,, , iw f 4 ,m z' 9 '. Xi. K, 'R 1' 42 fig W Egg f M 9 2 4 Z Uf 2 M X 6 6, f V ,f f W 4, fa fp ,Z X Wi, , gf, J, ,, W ' f K 4 W ' f, f Graduating magna cum laude from Holy Cross in 1938, Fr. Swords entered the Jesuit Order and has since pursued a wide variety of scholarly and administrative interests. He studied mathematics at Harvard for two- years and made his tertianship in 1951 at Rathfarn- ham Sastle in Ireland. Appointed to Holy Cross in 1952 as an instructor in mathematics, he has since served in many different capaci- ties here, first as Director of Admissions, then as Chairman of the Department of Mathe- matics, and finally as director of a number of institutes sponsored by the National Science Foundation for high school teachers. In 1960, Fr. Swords was named president of Holy Cross College. He inherited a Holy Cross that had a long and proud history of academic excellence, nevertheless, he felt there was room for im- provement in the response that the College was making to many of the demands of the new age. Although the school was still domi- nated by the lrish Catholic suburban student, there was a difference in them: they were second generationv Americans, reasonably affluent, and very well assimilated into the national character. That national character was a very confusing one, manifesting itself on the one hand, in the increased pursuit of intellectual interests, and on the other, in the deterioration of many traditional values. To the freshmen at the beginning of the year, Fr. Swords acknowledged: You and your con- temporaries are so beyond the ken of our ex- perience that you are casuing us to dousome basic rethinking--and, if that is not a miracu- lous change, I do not know what could be. ln this one sentence, he expressed not only the n 7 change that has come about 1n today s student, but also the new critical attitude that the ad- ministration has taken towards the IT10th0dS of educating that student. 0 . h The adaptation to the complexities of t e 3 e and to the needs of the student has had 5 . many visible manifestations. One of the 1110513 ambitious has been the strengthening of the facultYS during the last foul' Years, Over fort? o new professors have been added, many them laymen with the special training required 61 to meet today's needs. Another has been the curriculum revision that Fr. Swords has un- dertaken. Under the direction of the Academic Advisory Committee, this will be the first major change in the curriculum in over twenty years. Their first recommendations, released earlier this year, made it apparent that the curriculum will be drastically reduced in com- ing years, and that an increased emphasis will be placed upon elective Work within the de- partments. Beyond these immediate academic changes, Fr. Swords has also supported and encouraged many other activities on campus, notably the recent revival of the Drama Society, the establishment of a reputable Honors Program for the gifted student, and the various under- graduate research programs in mathematics and the natural sciences. He has also aided directly programs like the Christian Encounter Lectures Series, which endeavor to make Holy Cross more representative and current in its expression of what the Catholic college stu- dent is thinking. His largest undertaking, of course, has been the 320,400,000 Development Fund. Its pro- motion, quite naturally, has involved a great deal of his time. He has spent much of the year away from Mount St. James, talking to various lay leaders and addressing most of the forty-eight alumni chapters in the country. ln addition to these speaking trips, there are also the many weeks that he must devote to attending various Jesuit and non-Jesuit edu- cational association meetings. Despite the increasing demands that his schedule makes upon him, Fr. Swords has found time to reflect upon the purposes and principles of Catholic education in this period of transition. He has eloquently argued for the last four years that while the accidents and the means of Holy Cross education are chang- ing, the principles and end-goals remain sub- stantially the same, namely, the fostering of a commitment to the Christian values of life. His own contribution to this process has been of the greatest significance for the future of Holy Cross. THE DEANS Since Fr. Maurice Reidy's appointment as Dean in 1962, the once pristine terrazzo of Fenwick l n0W daily receives the scuff marks of humanity. Where students had seldom tread, they now freelY Visit the office of the Dean to discuss matters large and Small- lt is to Father's solution of cordiality, as II1llCh the mark of the man as the office, that the dialogue owes its current success. Fr. Reidy entered the Jesuit Order after one year of study at Georgetown University. He received his Ph.L, in philosophy Cl939l and his S.T.L. in theology H9451 from Weston College. After a period of scho- larship at the Institute of Historical Research, Uni- versity of London, Father came to Holy Cross as Associate Professor of history. The following year he finished his dissertation and was awarded ia Ph.D. in history from Harvard. He has written reviews for America and the Harvard Law Review. ln 1955, he published his study of Bishop Lancelot Andrewes. Yet it is Father's personality as much as his back- ground which has fostered the new milieu of the Dean's Office. By nature, Fr. Reidy is a politic, friendly individual, quiet in manner and thoughtful in approach. And such, by consequence, is the atmos- phere of his office. Coupled with Father's own insist- ence on the worth of student views, it has brought student-administration rapport to a rather high level. Fr. Reidy's further disposition to promote the au- tonomy of department chairmen has given the faculty a stronger position in academic concems. I ex- pect the chairmen, in turn, to be open to the ideas of their teachers . . . I think it is also important to note that the head of the Academic Advisory Council is a layman. The Dean's Office is the focus for information gathered and services rendered by the school adminis- tration. It is to the credit of Fr. Reidy, a thoughtful notetaker even during student interviews, that the successful operation of the oflice belongs. To the average student the Assistant Dean of Studies is a man for all seasons. Counselor of the academically afflicted and patient advisor to thou- Sands. Fr- .loseph F. Donahue, SJ., occupies the most Public position in the adniinistrationg somehow in the midst of all this activity he manages to remain calm and attentive to the needs of the student before him. After ordination in June, 1950, Fr. Donahue served as Assistant Principal of Cheverus High School in Portland, Maine, for a year. 1953 began a seven year Stat' in the Boston College Theology Department where he taught scripture and collaborated on the biblical study, An Old Testament Study Guide. He was appointed to his present position at Holy Cross in 1960. Since his Holy Cross coming, Fr, Donahue has be- Come well known for the progressive role he plays Wlthin the school. For the last two years he has been the driving f01'Ce behind the Christian Encounter Le - ' 1- ' . - cture Strict-, Nflllt-ll brings to the campus many new vo' -' ' - - N . .lies Speaking Ill the Lztlholic lliurcli. Besides ac- llv . ' , . . C Y SUPIJOIUNQQ. the liturgical vltangcs that are cur- lGm1y.u'ldUWdY 111 bl. .loscpli s Lliapcl, lu' also has J Christian ee - - . . - - - - . - It lllblllllllillldl in bringing about the benunar in 1 lvorslllll llvlml during sccomi si'im'sh'r for IWTWSIS of thi- xv0l'l'CSlQ'l' llioci-sv. fx- rr yy 1 Wm ,-AG!! 7 The perfect dean of men would possess a compu- ter's impartiality in dispensing justice-with mercy programmed in. To a remarkable extent. Holy Cross' own dispenser of justice, Fr. Charles Dunn. Sl., has succeeded in emulating this diliicult ideal. Fr. Dunn came to Holy Cross in l96O after three years as Assistant Principal of Cheyerus High School. His background includes B. C. High. an A.B. and an HA. in philosophy from Boston College. and three years at Baghdad College. Over the past four years. Fr. Dunn has managed to master the details of his ofhce, which handles everything from matters of life and death to the bulletin boards in the D. O. twhich you can occasion- ally find him reading in detail on a slow nightl. At the same time, he has had a hand in the major changes in Holy Cross life. including liberalized late lights, the easing of restrictions on upperclassmen, and the Senior Prefect program. But to his mind the job is just beginning. As Dean of Men. he has come to know most of the students on campus, and to know many of them well. Along the way. he has uncovered a few tendencies he deplores: the unfounded rumor, for example, which becomes a subject of heated debate in the Student Congress, or the student complaints about college discipline which conceal a dislike of all discipline. But the more he knows about students and student life, the more complex his job becomes. Individual cases become problems to be counseled as well as disciplined. And the responsibility for student wel- fare-what he eats, where he sleeps, where and when he studies-occupies more and more of his time. T0- Y, he feels that his function is not merely to police the CamPllS, but to ensure a proper atmosphere for Student Studi His concern is the environment of education. da r ' uqfe' J' -ef ' V 1. fi! rf' I-okv, ...- . ,.f5' E x x s wwwwf X f My S Q U U ,S.. X C WU JOHN A. MURPHY, JR. Assistant Registrar M.Ed., Univ. of Massachusetts FRANCIS A. JONES Bursar B.C.S., Northeastern Univ. . fi., J A WILLIAM J. 0'CONNELL Registrar M.A., Clark Univ. BERNARD J. McMANUS Special Projects 'iiss.iMWQ,g3 YSSQ-as . frfhms BIOLCGY Dr. Bandakoppa T. Lingappa, Assistant Professor of Biology, was born in a village near Sagara Shimova 7 23 District, Mysore State, India. Dr. Lingappa took both his Bachelor's and Master's de Sciences at Banaras Hindu University and a Ph.D f . rom Purdue in 1957. After further post-doctoral re- search in mycology at the University of Michigan and grees in Agricultural teaching at Michigan State, he moved East in 1962. Apart from the acquisition of an excellent instructor d an research scientist, Holy Cross also gain d ,, e a 27,400 doll-ar National Science Foundation Grant with the arrival of the man fro is being used by Lingappa to study self inhibitors in the spores of fungi, He is ably assisted in rese h arc c by his sa.ri-clad wife, also a Purdue Ph.D. and author of a Kannada no m India. The two year grant vel, Theevada Asc. ln this Lingappa tells of a still untranslated work, Mrs. young Indian girl's struggle for ed ucation. Although Theevada Asc fUnfulyiZled Ambitious! was a popular success in India, Mrs. Lingappa left for America be- fore it could he reprinted. 66 as 3 l The fungi the Lingappas have cho Glomerella, the common cause of rot in apples. After growing the fungi in sufficient quantities, they plan to extract the self inhibitor and study its composition. A further understanding of the self in add to the body of knowledge about the growth and limitation of cells which is i ul tbl sen to study iS hibitor will ma ui e in biological and cancer research. Dr. Lingappa cites the addi- tion of a constant temperature room in O'Neil Hall as the ' ' sine qua non of his research. Now he can con- trol the temperature, light and humidity which will allow greater accuracy and precision in his experiment. On top of his research, Dr. Lingappa teaches gen- eral botany and microbiology. Concerned with the dearth of student interest maintains that the excell s in graduate biology. 110 ence of the pro-inodical cur- riculum should not prevent his students from con- sidering teaching and biological u-sean-ln as possible professions. REYJ05 Pr: -fffltff. PV' M. Tun K, lil . . - M .af iff.. N . --fa-- ws fr-fi-.ffe as -- - 1 fi ' i A ' I ' Ls.. .'.viii3.nu,B6tiGkii535L1a f1 t - - 1-'51 ' ' REV. JOHN W. FLAVIN, S. J. Associate Professor, Biology Chairman, Department of Biology S.T.L., Weston College Ph.D., Brown Univ. Assistant Professor Biology ROBERT S. CROWE WILLIAM A CAMPBELL Associate Professor, Biology Associate Pro essor Biology PhD' Iowa State Univ. 67 CHEMISTRY Assistant Professor of Chemistry Wil- liam F. O'Ha.ra took his Ph.D. in 1961 from the University of Virginia. Follow- ing post-doctoral research at Carnegie Institute of Technology, Dr. O'Hara be- gan his tenure at Holy Cross. Beyond his teaching load, which in- cludes graduate advanced thermody- namics and general chemistry, Dr. O'Hara is presently working on a ther- modynamic interpretation of various or- ganic mechanisms with an 11,600 dollar grant from the ACS Petroleum Research Fund. Although he lauds the absence of a publish or perishv attitude at Holy Cross, insisting that undergraduate re- search without strong leadership is nearly valueless, Dr. O'Hara still finds time to publish. His most recent paper, ionization of o-Allylphenol and o-Pro- pylphenol and Intramolecular Hydrogen Bonding, is an analytical treatment of the physical properties of organic com- pounds. ANDREW P. VAN HOOK Professor, Chemistry .Vol photographed JAMES J. TANSEY Associate Professor, Chemistry M..-X.. lfniv. of Toronto t V Q. OLIER L BARIL C C-- 'Y i ,o Ph.D., - - New York Umv- D. Pf0fCSS0r,C11emfSff,f 4:1-iomcl-i J. till,-RRI-.bl ' ' rv f- r rt - --,fm ire ctor of Chemical Roseau-I1 Ph-D-, Clark Univ. NLS.. 68 U KMM' , ,.f'.1 .Wt K ll--X 11h-ll-lxuosf .U 19.4 U 1 t . r H 5 i 'raphed PLYSEY ir. Chemi I Toronto REV. BERNARD A. FIEKERS, S. J Professor, Chemistry Ph.l..., Boston College Ph.D., Clark Univ. RICHARD B. BISHOP Research Associate Graduate Chemistry Department M.S., College of the Holy Cross PAUL D. McMASTER Assistant Professor, Chemistry Ph.D., Clark Univ. ROBERT W. RICCI Assistant Professor, Chemistry Ph.D., Univ. of New Hampshire REV. JOSEPH A. MARTUS, S. J. Associate Professor, Chemistry Chairman, Department of Chemistry Director, Graduate Department of Chemistry Ph.L., Weston College Ph.D., Clark Univ. CLASSICS Fr. Harry Bean has been a .lesuit for a half century. For the last thirtY'tW0 of thfise years he has lived in Beaven Hall. During that time he has become known as 21 man who ran a mile a day until he was fortY. and as a man committed to definite Principles and opinions: the high quality of Holy Cross students, the value of humor, Tom Jones, and independent thinking. Hg was baptized a Roman Catholic at the age of five when his parents converted from the Episcopal Church. '4I've always kCPt ,fi pretty good Protestant strain. It WHSIIY until two years ago that he gave 21W3Y.a King James Bible he had won as a prize U1 an English Episcopal Sunday School. In 1961, I went back to the same place in Eng- land, stayed with the Catholic pastor of that area, and left it with him in case I ever get canonizedf, In 1907, his family returned to this coun- try where he completed grammar SCh001- After Boston College High and H Yeafis work in the Massachusetts State House he joined the Society of Jesus. Fr- Bean Te' members his first encounter with Holy Cross men: From the day that I entered the Jesuits I was always impressed by the fel- low novices who came from Holy Cross. But I never saw Holy Cross until 1 taught at Boston College. I had a high regard for the College because of these men. They had a certain bond or spirit which only the blind could fail to see. In 1932 he was trans- ferred to Holy Cross. It lived up to ex- pectations after a year or so. This is a tough place in the winter and it should surely make men out of boys. Fr. Bean teaches medieval Latin, sopho- more Latin, and, until recently, a course in sophomore rhetoric. He has assigned Tom, Jones in the latter courses for the past fif- teen years 'ibecause it is a classical social ry Fielding satire of the time in which Hen lived. It's such a long novel that nobody would read it unless assigned. Once they have, they're glad for the reading. His penchant for the study of wit and humor, even in his Latin cour ses, is legen- dary, 1 think that the appreciation of wit a d h ' ' n umor IS proportionate to how much intelligence you have and the quality of r is also proportionate ains you have. The very fact that every philosopher since Aristotle h . . as investigated the nature of humor shows that it is a vl bl ' rational nature. your sense of humo to the amount of br aua e property of mans 77 Fr. Bean's tastes stand of other faculty members. He comes on l c ear sunny days to track meets and on cold rainy ones to rugby games. He plays choral chants in his La length upon the Celts, P J. D. Salinger. His views o apart from those tin courses and talks at adraic Colum, and n Holy Cross students are no less tempered: I have al- students of today are not ways said that the capable of as much prolonged hard work as were the students we had ix He attributes this the whole country. the self-discipline mar, spelling, in subordinated toda . Tl 1 the thirtiesf' to a softening trend in They're not amenable to of fundamentals. Cram- a wordgprecisionmare Y lat places me with the temporis acti crowd! MI would like to believe that the students have a greater desire to read than did the students of years ago, They certainly lun... to read more now. But ll don't know whether lt comes from within or not. 440mg thing l like about this College latel i l-' '- ' y S Ili- P0111-Y l1Olll Ill discipline :mtl 70 tix mo now there! sht stu l tlnn 7 'H -Al lk' E tf studies of t'Ilt'OllI'1IQIl1lg.l indixidnnl initia- '0. 'llhirty years nge they ntentoretl and nitored every ttetivity of the students: : more responsibility en the iulders of the indivitlnztl student. l-Xen in the mttttt of tt K ending lvoolxs. l think the dent should lie nlwle nntl lie free to intlee ' lx fellows twenty years 1 ' ' .t ' - - t.. . - ' ' lx-5 -t .. . - - . tltl ot t-ltltt tn ll C ttholtt tolltgt sltonltl hnxe the eltqttgtetet' llltl IIllllllllltN nlhtttnt to tltttdt tot thtnt Stl s nh Vt'-K ' ether they tngtt et' nttx n-I tt-'nl this or that lmelx, We shenltln't he een slt l 'Ili Silllllp tnnst .tntl tnnst net. gtte they not twenty xt-Att 01,1 ' ' - N . ltettt tltent luke men U 'WWI' llllx Nt.ltS in the lt'-ntl tnntntttnttx lt. lleqtn lt-t nt tw vt lest ltts xt-ttt ' X- lttttl ttttt ll. IS tt weleotnt tntn t X . ,. REV. JOSEPH M. F. MAR1 UE, s. J. , pmfmo, CMJ. Q REV. ROBERT F. BANKS, s. J. PIID-, J 1 y k- , U - . n Instructor, Classics 1 0 me Op mb mv Chairman, Department of Classics S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Fordham Univ. Q. REV. WM. T. DONALDSON, S. J. REV. PAUL F. IZZO, S. J. REV. JOHN J. SAMPEY, S. J. Associate Professor, Greek Professor, Latin Professor, Latin S.T.L., Weston College S.T.L., Weston College S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Boston College M.A., Boston College Ph.D'., Gregorian Univ. REV. JOSEPH D. AHERN, S. J Professor, Latin M.A., Gonzaga Univ. 7 W -S ix 4 f 0 X W k,. .N ff, -E ,f Wf X: f' W f 1 , WW, 'V 4 'i 3 0: f uv' x ln 1958 Mr. Ransford Palmer left the .lamaican Customs Service to study at Marquette University. After receiving his Bachelor's degree he stayed on for his M.A. at Marquette with the aid of a teaching assistantship. At present he is Completing his doctorate at Clark Uni- versity while teaching a course in eco- nomic principles to freshmen at Holy Cross. He intends to return home for a teaching career and possibly engage in .lamaica's political life. Acutely sensitive to the economic Hefids Of his country, Mr. Palmer is writing his dissertation with the aim of eva in expandi luating the role of foreign investment ng economies. His feeling is that the developing nation has to resist lhe allurements of consumer goods until It has established an indestructable basis of p1'ima1'Y industry. This conviction be- liomef' Personal with Mr, Palmer, since 6-Sees his own country as a case in his hobby, photography, has P01nt. Even arf application. He explains, People mfght Wonder when they see me taking pictures of freeway interchanges, inter- :Sins Of city streets, and public maic:1iZS..But some day back in .la- ha d 'mlght find them useful as first fl evidence of the American way of doing things? ECONOMICS At one time or another in the course of four years every economics and accounting major meets Reginald Smith, Associate Professor of accounting and business law. The acquaintance is most certainly not con- fined to the classroom, and not only for the duration of a course. More often it grows to include informal talks in his oflice and continues through the following semesters. Mr. Smith took his Bachelor's and Mas- ter's degrees at Boston University and had his practical apprenticeship in several areas before coming to Holy Cross in 1946. He acquired his earliest experience auditing for a number of utilities. Wartime found him attached to the Bureau of Naval Per- sonnel where he helped write manuals on accounting, distribution, and inventory pro- cedure. He was a member of a three-man team which went on the road preparing teachers to train personnel with these man- uals. He has continued to keep abreast of new developments in accounting by audit- ing at income tax time. Mr, Smith is a mem-ber of the Worcester School Board, and former Vice Chairman at the Wachusett Regional High School- the first regional high school in the state. EDWARD PERAGALLO Professor, Economics and Accounting Chairman, Department of Economics Ph.D., -Columbia Univ. N ot Pictured REV. THOMAS F. CAHILL, S. J. Associate Professor, Economics S.T.L., Weston College M.B.A., Columbia Univ. On leave REV. HUBERT C. CALLAGI-IAN, Associate Professor, Economics Ph.D., Catholic Univ. S. J. BERNARD W. McCARTHY Professor, Accounting M.A., Clark Univ. REV. FRANK PETRELLA, JR . Assistant Professor, Economzcs Assistant Director, Special Studies Pro ram RAYMOND F: x. oA1e1IL1,, S, J, SPrf'0If6SSQr, Economics - - J-, Weston Colleen, M.A., Catholic Ilnif: On leave Ph.D., Notre Dame Univ DONALD A. KING JAMES A. CROSS Instructor, Evononzics Assistant Professor, Economics MA., Clark Univ. Ph,D,, Univ. of Wisconsin -X xy Nxf' X-f' 75 JOHN J. O'CONNELL Assistant Professor, Economics and Accounting M.B.A., Boston Univ. JOHN J. REID Assistant Professor, Economics Ph.D., Univ, of Virgini-a ENGLISH AND FINE ARTS The nineteenth-century backwater that was Holy Cross when Francis Drumm entered it is the opening Pafenthesls on a remark that is now four dCCadeS long. The graduate who was invited back in to correct senior examination papers in ethics and psychol0gY uwith a bit of English teaching thrown in has seen with astonished eyes the pas- sage of a full third of the history of the College, all but that first year of it spent in the sole business of teaching. He has often during that time been a student himself. He audited undergraduate courses in English given by the idio- syncratic Copey at Harvard in 1923 while enrolled at the Graduate School of Educationg he spent four summers at the Columbia University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and passed with decent success the two examina- tions for the Master's degree, only to finally have to lay aside efforts at a thesis which proved an unrewarding use of money, time, and eifortg he returned to school in 1941 to take courses in Milton from Douglas Bush at Harvard. There are many images scattered throughout: he remembers the railroad station in Ayer, Massachusetts, where he worked for a year after high school in order to be able to afford a college education-the bill for the second se- mester of 1919, at the College of the Holy Cross, 322750, the magna cum laude oration he delivered in Fenwick Hall at his graduation in 1922, where I improved the occasion by giving a fantastically smug oration on the value of idealistic youth to a world, excepting the audience, made up of corrupt el- ders, the wooden barracks at Camp Devens which he saw going up in 1917, and in which, at the age of forty-two, he anticipated his role as a private in the United States Army, 406th Regi- ment, 102nd Infantry Division. During this remark Mr. Drumm has initiated seven courses in English litera- ture of the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuriesg they have filled the blank page between the turn-of-the- century English program which featured The Hound of Heaven and the elec- tive courses which today draw able stu- dents to postgraduate work. It has all been written quickly. Four decades have gone by in the content. ment of doing what he most wanted t o do, to read and to teach. Although he finds it difficult to distinguish very h s arply between successive college en. g erations, he has noticed over the years a growth in their degree of intellectual h. . . sop 1st1cat1on, together with a per-Ce . P' tible growth in the stature of Holy Cross from respectability to reputability. o t 'f f?fiTIiY'?i'2?limit--if-f-1-fy 1 . 4 rf-4.114-' rflsasrr.,-Rofimtic ' we-rv 113114,-f at -1 f 5 John Paul Reardon, Lecturer in Fine Arts, is deeply concerned with the lack of intellectual contact with art in college programs and IS seeking to remedy that situation at Holy Cross Through exhibitions and lectures Mr Reardon hopes to stimulate more participation and awareness in the fine arts One of the lm portant reasons for the lack of intellectual support with what has been going on in C art world for well over half a century IS I C conservative educational indoctrination in ar that has been paramount in our schools Professor Reardon is an exacting craftsman who devotes a great deal of attention to correct technique and mastery of materials. He prefers to work in the semi-abstract, occasionally dabbling in the abstractg this allows him to express a depth of perception and interpreta- tion of the matter. ln his favorite subject, the urban scene, he conveys something of the his- tory and nostalgia of the setting in the cool color key characteristic of his work. Mr. Reardon is respected by his stl1d6I1tS because he does not seek to restrict their vary- ing artistic personalities with his own Prefer' ences of expression, but strives to develop each according to his own talent and inclination. He is, however, a firm believer in the 'ibasicsv of Painting and requires a firm grounding in drawing, design, and aesthetic philosophy. Through his dedication and mastery of artis- tic technique, he has gained the McCandliSh Lithographic Prize and places at numerous New England showings including the Wor- cester Art Museum and the Boston Arts Festi- val. Fourteen of his watercolors have been Chosen by the Ford Motor Compani' for its collection of contemporary American art. Dr. Leon 'Lewis is a scientist of sorts, Every English department has one or more technicians, men who handle the language as a lan- s, that's my job here. Dr. Lewis is discontent with guage, he remark classifying used words, and he is at pains to develop verbal logarithms to streamline communication. lmprovisations range from new terms for coffee recipes- Why should we say cblackf 'black with one Sllg3.I',, 'regular,' and the rest when a single word would do for each tYPC?n'-'Io 'Hsothers' or 'bristers' for the concept of brother-and- sister, for which we have no single term. Dr. Lewis received his A.B. and M.A. at Boston College and his Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin, preparing as his thesis a text of Mary Magdalen, a late Middle English miracle play, He Worked as a. cab driver, longshoreman, and surveyor before coming to Holy Cross in 1959. At present he teaches courses in the history of the language, sixteenth-century literature, and Old English. Classes with Dr. Lewis tend to be informal- I think umlauting verbs is kind of fun, don't you? -and encourage synthesis of the past and present- football cheers are observed to be in the same tradition as Anglo- Saxon spells, both being based on the myth that repeated nonsense syllables will affect things beyond the speakerls control. Dr. Lewis welcomes what he terms the development of Holy Cross as a school in the world. Isolation is impossible and of doubtful value even as an ideal. Nor does he fear bigness in education, noting an inevitable and growing resemblance between the university and the corporation. He would, in fact, carry it a step further. The edu- cational institution has to be run in a more businesslike way. For example, no corporation would let its physical plant lie idle for three months of the year. There is room, as well, for new approaches to make teaching more effective. We're still teaching the way Aristotle taught, ltis a perfectly good method, but that's not to say there aren't othersf, Dr. Lewis, off-campus interests include bird watching, reading of all kinds, and membership in several humanitarian organizations, notably the Society For the Alleviation of Subliminal Frustrations. X K x,... N Q. V K 5. Q,-F4 .1210-.2 . ' , lip' .ref-Q 4 Offs! 1 I - V. t -Q ,. -4- , , ff , ,Q11y'- .-' - 9 ga. gg-fa KH gf ' .,- . -1' - 1 .A 'Z . f . 5: .5 a Q . . - , -.A ' ,:.!9fL' 49--.. ,,' .'- , . . lbifp .1 . ' x..- 9 . 1'f --- .' 'ds-'.4:v'4 .K'gw,' 'gav- 5 , - 'gf :.3f7 u.-L' 1353224 1- 01145. - 13-o'iy.g5-n ,, .l 9 A Q -5 ,QI-.4 T B, 1. -. --if -'55 + ..- f- ,.-,ag q3,.,1,-1.'C5.- m , ,gr . - -, ff-. ps- L- ff' 18' ai ,Vu 1 '-1? JE- ':, L , ' - lf? sh' 0 N ' ' ,A ..'f..,f- ,. N J' S - 3 -T' 5 33 ' A X ' ,,- Gia.:-. xl'-lasgi QQ r'1'?f2-,. . 3- + ' 3'3VAr?,1d?-ffgtkgtl 53- If ,iv 4 , rf,- mh,-.-:.:,. f. 9 - X Q 11 I' if x,4.ii ' Q A V.. , A 584 -5+ vu- F Wx A Nx ABXXA , 1 ,W A - W X x Q' xxx . wx ,W 'Q YR, .QQ .s 'S 'Y' if 51 ? ig, xg., 1 .li 5 2 If i I 1 . -.. wx Ag, x W xxx X iw N S 'N K x r. 9' :N I , A .fy F krftgf-:ft f..'fi lvrif-ffl. X ' ,. L . . ' f f, I V S' ' x ' ' . i:,z'T ' mp: 'Ja 1 fs.: ' C+ ,Q . uawgswf x . W 'K .. kr 2. . rf N N Nm S . 1: 4 1 ,xxx - . Q, , w qQ,.Qjs,.:.1'3' A. Q15 ff ru ,T ,v ' fs Aft-I t.. L I ' x. in-,,' 'Ft as 1 . MM... M.-.4q X1 N . Y, xx -1-xx wx OX . xx -X S vX X XY N. X . -uid X QQ S A xx S S SI X. qv r. fy' ' 5 'fa 5-N 4 + A Q in P E Ax, ., .X x X NN' Q xmxw N X XX X XQX XX l SX NNN wx x . , KX F X N Qs QX, SX SQA, . . ,-N:-1... x x ' K, gr: 'E -X .gvW',..' QQ. -, S I Q X figkfvf ' 'Jx1N3u L 1 QQQX -S SYXQ' xx ALDO FORTUNA Instructor, English M.A., Johns Hopkins Univ. REV. PATRICK J. CUMMINGS, s. J WILLIAM H. MCCANN P'0fm0',E'1gflS'1 . . U ' . Professor, English M A , Georgetown n1v M.A., Boston Univ. REV. JOHN F. DAILEY, S. J. Assistant Professor, English M.A., St. Louis Univ. 2 sN.1.2S X Xwsw REV. PAUL G. McGRADY, S. J. Instructor, English S.T.B., Weston College M.A., Middlebury College S 3 E E 5 s 3 x l S . 5 . F s Q REV. JOSEPH S. SCANNELL S J Assistant Professor English and Fine Arlfs GEORGE V GOODIN S16 lli., lglfeston College Assistant Pro fessprx L',,g.j,'S7, ' ' 'r Oston College Pll.D., lllllv. of lllimiig 80 X-Nw.. . Eikixx y., If x'v, -, P so 'vii f P' ,gs Vs' gl ,,,. fa-4? Warren Schiff Samuel Van Valkenhurg Assgciate Professor, .HiStQI'Y Visting Professor, Political GE0gI'3PhY Ph.D., Univ. of Cal1f01'I11a Ph.D., Univ. of Zuric v Q1 X . so f Q X is f Y N 3 X' S X W if X , , 'M . 'fag . R ,As -N is X X Rev. William L. Lucey, S. J. Associate Professor, History S.T.L., Weston College Ph.D., -Georgetown Univ. Rev. Gerald A. Kinsella, S.J. Associate Professor, History S.T.L., Weston College James F Powers . I t ' ' M.A., Georgetown Univ. ns rumor' Hlst ory M.A., Univ. of Virginia JAMES T. FYLNN Instructor, History MA., Boston College REV. OWEN P. McKENNA, S. J Associate Professor, History S.T.L., Weston College M.A., St. Louis Univ. EDWARD J. KEALY Assistant Professor, History Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univ. S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Boston College REV. F. o. COREQEEN s J Oglllrllfctflflff,-3I5Iff?:fy0N Professor' ZS y M.A., Notre Dame Univ. 5 1 1, J N 'N xv: : X n- xfef ,val 1- U .X .QARR X 5 vl r , Us X ! -x Q. X p s ek v e Q, . . X . .r. - - ,s In ' vb 5 MATH EMATICS y , 1 if , ' A , - , f ' ' Wu WZQWW , ' i Associate Professor of Mathematics Dr. Patrick Shanahan asserts that some of Bertrand Rus- sell's mathematical ideas are overstatements. I believe all the areas of mathematical work have some practical applicability. The relation need not be to physics, chemistry or engineer- ing, but may be related to some other mathe- matical problem, which is sufficient in itselff' Dr. Sha.nahan gnaduated from Notre Dame in 1953 and took his Ph.D. four years later from the University of Indiana. At Holy Cross, Dr. Shanahan teaches lower division modern mathematics and revolving courses in advanced calculus and algebraic topology. This year he also directs the undergraduate research pro- gram in an investigation of a complex un- solved problem in his specialty, algebraic topology, ln January of 1963, he published Introductory College Mathematics, which is now being read as a basic mathematics text at Holy Cross. However, his courses are often taught without a textbook, primarily on the major level, and this free method allows him to join his students in the learning process. Dr. Shanahan has loud praise for the Holy Cross Mathematics Department and Chairman McBrien, who, in his opinion has forged the department into one of the best among under- graduate schools in the country. X x X N 1 x X: 1, N x, X sb .ES as A Q S x N S N Sf 4 S-6 QS N' N15 'fi x Q 5 W v . x S .QZAQXM . SS L M X V Q 5 JP. 0 A NQN My zu-ua 1 xmas XNSXZTB N' , 1 1 if x Y - H 1-6 sg Y s xfn ,.X, , l . 3. . xx 5 Q., S K X X KX xv s A b X ' '. 4 1. B gr a A Q 12 5 l MODERN LANGUAGES When Jacob Hen-Tov was sixteen he fought for the establish- ment of an Israeli State in Palestine. Now in his first year as Visiting Assistant Professor of Russian Studies, Mr. Hen-Tov does sole battle with trafiic between Worcester and Boston. Commuting two times a week from Brandeis where he is com- pleting doctoral work in Near Eastem Studies, Mr. Hen-Tov comes to bolster the Russian program at Holy Cross while Mr. Burke Cpreviously the Collegels only Russian instructorl finishes his Ph.D. at Brown. Although he is only thirty-two, his academic background and professional experience are immense, Mr. Hen-Tov holds six academic degrees which range from a 1956 Teacher's Cer- tificate from the University of Jerusalem to a 1960 Master of Law from Harvard Law School. He also has two-Master's de- grees in Near East and Russian Studies from Brandeis and Harvard. Before emigrating to the United States in 1958, Mr. Hen-Tov was a practicing lawyer and journalist in Israel where he was founder and director of the Israeli Institute of Inter- national Economic Relations. Mr. Hen-Tov feels the College is unique because of its spirit. He further appreciates the dignity of the Holy Cross student as opposed to the ill-mannered undergraduates he has sometimes observed in other colleges. He does, however, criti- cize the absence of academic aggressiveness: Students here are intelligent, but apathetic. Presently Mr. Hen-Tov is being wooed by several colleges for a permanent position. But for the next year at least, he will continue to teach Russian Studies at Holy Cross. Mr. Richard Kopp, Instructor in French, took his Master's degree from the University of Iowa. Moving east, he expects his Doctorate from N. Y. U. this June. But Mr. Richard Kopp is indeed a native New Yorker, having received his A.B. degree in French and Spanish at liberal Liberal Arts Queens Col- lege. Theatre, opera and concerts, therefore, number most naturally among his various in- terests. Especially drama, it seems: in 1960 while at a special teachers' session in reading and translation at the Sorbonne, Mr. Kopp attended sixty theatrical performances' in as many days. After three years at Holy Cross, he founded his own troupe on campus- The French Players -and directed a F ourberies de Scapin of undisputed critical acclaim. More. OVCT, if Mr. K0pp's interest in the drama is verified by the many affiches de thedtre plas- tered up in his oiiice, it is further demonstrated On the Stage Of Pedag0gY where he punctuates his surveys of French literature with his ebullient and gesticulative good humor. YSLLE PRES! A PB. SI varitek! JUAQE ga- A 1s sc. :ss .A RICHARD J. BOURCIER Instructor, French M.A., Laval Univ. REV. A. R. DESAUTELS, S. J. Associate Professor, French Chairman, Department of Modern Languages Advisor, Foreign Students and Foreign Study S.T.L., Weston College Ph.D., Univ. of Paris JOHN F. McKENNA Associate Professor, French Ph.D., Fordham Univ. CHARLES A. BAKER, JR. Assistant Professor, French Ph.D., Univ. of Illinois EUGENE F. DALEY Instructor, German M.A., Boston Univ. S. EDWARD FLYNN Professor, Spanish and French 'Ph.D., Fordham Univ. WILLIAM F. BOWEN Professor, French M.A., Clark Univ. 89 m sl kiss? ,.- - it UF W ii cugwl' ' J . uv - - P if : ,'l'P FEW' 5 I '1 'Wu- xbigi PHI J. Ralph versity L be a ph he wrot Smirh. Z1 economi broader Smith's philosop this asp Dr. I theology losophy preferen entire w a philos necessity ticularly Dr. Li borderin and his sidered clude a llmbrellg clear da: rx' Q , PHILOSCPHY J. Ralph Lindgren was in his last quarter at Northwestern Uni- versity School of Business when he realized that he wanted to be a philosopher. He became one at Marquette University where he wrote his doctoral dissertation on the social thought of Adam Smith. Smith's writings would seem at first to be attractive to the economist in Dr. Lindgren, but he is quick to point out the broader implications that become obvious to anyone familiar with Smith's life. He considered himself a philosopherg he taught philosophy. Economists are just getting around to acknowledging this aspect of his workf, Dr. Lindgren teaches metaphysics, cosmology, and natural theology to juniors, and the history of Greek and modem phi- losophy to seniors. Two considerations underlie his method-his preference for small class groups and the importance of reading entire works rather than excerpts. ln a textbook you don't read a philosopher, you read what someone thinks about him. The necessity of synthesis is another factor behind this opinion, par- ticularly in thinkers who have thought in terms of systems. Dr. Lindgren is especially intrigued by the areas of philosophy bordering on political science. He has been published in Dialogue and his Early Writings of Adam Smith is presently being con- sidered at the University of Chicago Press. His other interests in- clude a Malthusian family, a collection of unusual pipes, and an umbrella which can be seen hanging unopen from his neck on clear days. According to Acting Chairman of the Philosophy Department Fr. John Dennis Crowley, S..l., the purpose of philosophy at Holy Cross is to give the student a Weltanschauungg to prepare him for his triple relationship with God, his fellow man and the world. Fr. Crowley also insists on keeping our systematic philosophy which can be supported by the histori- cal approach only if conclusions are reached. In his mind such an investigation provides a preamble to ethics. Fr. Crowley entered the Society of Jesus from Boston College in 1936 and was ordained in 194-6. He holds a Weston Ph.L. and S.T.L. as well as a Master's from Boston College. After two missionary years in Jamaica fwhere he also taught at the Uni- versity of the West lndiesl before Tertianship, Fr. Crowley stayed four years at Fairfield University. He joined the faculty at Holy Cross in 1954- and recently established a philosophy major in the curriculum. Next year Fr. Crowley will travel to the Pontifical Gregorian University for further studies in ethics. s .in 3 lg ga... may-s r-We g an Mi. ...... .... . . N ...-. .. , L . . . X. t WN he if X REV. JOHN C. DEWING S. J , . JOHN F. KILEY Instructor, Philosophy Assistant Pr0feSSOf, P71ll0S0P7W S.T.L., Weston College Ph.D., Unlv. of Ottawa M.A., Weston College REV. JAMES J. DROHAN, S. J REV. JOSEPH J. SHEA, S. J Professor, Philosophy S.T.l..., Gregorian Univ. M.A., Boston College . REV. FRANCIS B. S ul ' Assoczate Professor, Philosophy ARJFANJ S J S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Boston College Professor, Ethics J K l S.T.L., Weston College Pll-D-. Gregorian Univ. JOHN J. LYNCH Associate Professor, Philosophy Ph.D., Fordham Univ. CLYDE V. PAX Assistant Professor, Philosophy Ph.D., Univ. of Notre Dame ms' uw ,, A E ff-s-S .X K if REV. EUGENE J. HARRINCTON, S. J Associate Professor, Philosophy S.T.L., Weston College On leave NET! N? in R MAB f wi wi xx Q e 4 732 PHYSICS Dr. Roy C. Gunter, Jr., Associate Professor of Physics 7 is the most recent of three young Doctors to join the Physics Department since 1960. With a wide back- ground in industry and long experience in teachinv' Q1 Dr. Gunter brings an established practical and theoretical Held-knowledge to Holy Cross. After graduation from Bowdoin in 1938 and a sub- sequent Ph.D. from B , , U sics at Clark for over a decade. Dr. Cunter's sludics in electronics and optics th Corporation of Amerie oston University he tauvrlit phy- en took him to the Hudio a where he directed in-house 96 research and lecliuical planning. llis association iviih RC.-X cucmupusscd such 1'esv:ircl1 fields as uucm- wave Optics and iucusi1rcuu'ui ul radioactive tall-Olll at thc Nevada lost sitc. Outside the l1ll50l'lllUl'y. llr. l1uulci s iiitcwsis rnugi' from ll0t'll'y lliuuir Klmwaiiii :mud li-vlwrl llmmiiiigl lo mountain vliuihiui the has smiled mos! Ol ill' While hl0llIllillIlSl. llc liws on qi iqirui iu kflizirlivli Wlll'l'U his wife luv.-.Is lmuii-s Iwi qi hnlwhx. llc llils Iwo sous and :1 daiiigxlihw' unix .iiiwmliiigp NXlic:110 ' 1 V ,F 5-.-4 1 REV. JAMES K. CONNOLLY, S. J. REV. ROBERT B. MMDONNELL, S. J. Professor, Physics Associate Professor, Physics Chairman, Department of Physics Coordinator, NSF Programs S.T.L., Weston College S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Boston College M.S., Harvard Univ. YW REV. THOMAS J. SMITH, S. J. Administrator Professor, Physics MA., Georgetown Univ. RAM SARUP Associate Professor, Physics Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Univ. EDWARD F. KENNEDY Associate Professor, Physics Ph.D., Notre Dame Univ. PSYCHOLOGY In the summer of 1962, Dr. Paul Rosenkrantz joined the Holy Cross faculty as Assistant Director of the Counseling Center and Assistant Professor of Psychology. His empathetic man- ner and probing intellect have made him at once one of Holy C 5 ross most popular professors. Dr. Rosenkrantz was born in Moscow in 1916 and lived in s family moved to Florida. Lodz, Poland, until 1932 when hi After dropping out of college for twenty years Cduring which time he worked as a maintenance and industrial electrician as well as sundry other jobs, served in the Merchant Marine in World War 11, married, and fathered three daughtersl, he entered Springfield College in 1956. His wife's work in a bacteriology research team provided the necessary financial aid. ln two years he graduated summa cum laude with a Wood- row Wilson Fellowship. He was then able to complete further studies in personality and social psychology at Clark University in the summer of 1961. He gained clinical experience by volunteer work at Clarkis Psychology Clinic and part-time assistance at the Worcester Youth Guidance Center. Although Dr. Rosenkrantz, a Jew, had previously experi- enced the Catholic academic world only through secular hear- say, he has come to respect and appreciate the mentality of the Jesuit faculty. He considers their calibre of dedication, flexibility, and high level of intellectual activity quitg note- worthy. Dr. Rosenkrantz is also much impressed with the atmosphere at Holy Cross for the practice of counseling. 4'There is all amazing understanding of the problems of counseling. The confidentiality aspect of the clinical relationship has W0fked out as well here as at any school. He describes part of the d a - , cc ' stu ents dilemma. There is a problem of being at all HSC when there is great ability for handling responsibility and objection to a situation which doesn't permit it. This exiSIS in school, at home, and in life generally. I think it should be examined and faced and its implications understood. The understanding and U g genuine sense of dignity he has for the student is evident side it. His dedication t willingness to be available to the inconvenience. His reali chologists. 'cl believe much of counseling is intuition. There 15 knowledge but a feeling is 1 in the counselor-client relationship and out- o the students is displayed in 1115 in often at great personal stic approach to counseling is unique among PSY- . I g iecded to apply it in each situation and each situation is new. Each man is unique and each Pl'0b' lem in the truest sense is uniquefi l-le realizes that Sl1l'k'0SSi-llllfi applied science is an art. l'm really not scared to silt' that I donit know. If being a scientist is understanding order. tht-n how can we with our own limitations presume to understand the tolalif-Y of that order. There is a soarclr for a relationship of order. U i I I SOCIOLOGY Thomas P. lmse, Chairman of the Department of Sociology, was born in Milwaukee, took his Ph.B. and M.A. degrees at Marquette University, and his Ph.D. at the University of Maryland. He has taught at Eastern Michigan College, the University of Mary- land, and Canisius College, where he was Chairman of the Department. ln 1954-, he spent the summer with the Warner-Swasey Company in Cleveland on a Foundation for Economic Education grant. While at Canisius, he was research director of the Buffalo Metropolitan Area Survey, and director of the ln- stitute for the Study of Contemporary Problems in the Social Order. Dr. lmse is a Fellow of the Ameri- can Sociological Society and a member of the Execu- tive Council of the American Catholic Sociological Society, He is the author of several monographs in the area of Urban Sociology and, in 1962, published The Professionalization of Business Management, a book examining a trend 'iimplicit with 'significance to the occupation of business management and to the overall economy. In addition to an imposing set of credentials, Dr. lmse has brought to Holy Cross a thoughtful philoso- phy of his discipline. Sociology, to me, is a typically liberal arts course in the ancient tradition. Although a relatively young field, Hit is an area of thought and concern that man has been studying since the earliest scholars? The Sociologist is basically a spe- cialist who is focusing on one of the many things tha.t were encompassed under the medieval concept of philosophy. 6'We are concerned with learning truth in human experience just as any other discipline. For Dr. lmse, the academic life represents the richest thing a man can do. alt affords the inde- pendence of the important things of one's life- namely one's mind and activity. And this is the essence of academic freedom-the ability to think and say what you want to as a man. Teaching for Dr. lmse is fun. And student con- tacts extend beyond the classroom. As an advocate of increasing social, or non-academic, contacts with students, Dr. lmse feels that encounter with the stu- dent mind is, perforce, keeping young intellectually. Wllile still in his first year at Holy Cross. Dr. lmse has found the atmosphere rich and rewarding. However, he believes something might be added: 'Tm foursquare in favor of coeducation. Why? Because you get a better education. This is life. We deny all week that this is a bisexual species. yet on the weekend we go to extraordinary lengths to prove that, in fact, it is a bisexual species. 031' QV R x M QNX v KX W, x fff, ' .W ,,, ,A I . .fzxz,,.,.1 , . .: 3. V . 51 Q2 fax X, , xf Q U 4 f R N . x Q News x X x X . X x .,-.....,,,,A X X Q'-+mwM.4., .NN QAWQ X wtf' xffx wx X ,Zh xx .5 Q -4 'fa 'N X 715W w.WX.,WNx i S- X ,f Ls x xi , Q Ny x ., ' YN, XSBA' X fw x kgx J Q 7 Swv w', 4 f,Mg .-'aw 'V .. 2' .pg M' f i Z fx AX l7Nv'!Q x 'Qfvfv rfkff X V, '..5,i 3.1.x NX -x FVgQy4w kfwkisf - ' N, ' 1 , Y- ., ' fm 131 - Op':Nm1v1'f Qd4.1nqb x'swK iff f' , fQwQ f w fn 13: . Q . ...,:..:..- W Q W X Q N - X 'bu ' X AX J XX NA .Y- i 1 , WM iw ' ' 0 wwf, S f 2 ' 2 ffm Qs-X XX N ff N f x SX I X ww 1 . , 355 ' I V 'sv 4 ' 1 ' v ' 1 N! . ,gf v V Q ,,,f1f'i'q ' . , .fff V .7 MN s' , ,. fy. 1 X gf , P . ' xjif f f-,L Q '-v1yv,.v-. . ,, -V , . Q1-v-mx-.-Q-. . ..... .... -. .,.... . -. af X -- '- -4' The life of John I. McGrath, S. J., takes its g101'Y from a vital interest in the new spirit of the Church. His chief professional interest is the burgeoning study of biblical criticism. A prim3I'Y S01-ITCC SCh01a1', he wrote as his doctoral thesis, Through the Eternal Spirit, an historical, exegetical evaluati0I1 of VCTSCS 13 and l4- of Chapter 9 in St. Paul's Epistle to the Hebrews. - In the classroom Fr. McGrath experimf-BIIIS with 3 methodology geared toward making theology m0r6 meaningful to the student who must gain insight. To stimulate insight he encourages recasting time- worn terms to discover new perspectives OH their meaning. Above all, he encourages students to share their insights and learn from their fellows. Fr. McGrath does not believe in merely master- ing a theology course. Learning should be con- sidered a dynamic process of sifting ideas or a uni- form expansion of the mind, not a glueing together' of new blocks of knowledge. For this reason, he holds little hope .for the lecture-notation method of education. Fr. McGrath also speaks out on the state of creativity at Holy Cross. There are areas where there is provided an atmosphere for creativity, and each year the atmosphere improvesg however, it is still not what it should be. Because of the school's heritage and the image of the good boy from the large, conformist family, those who are a bit advanced are open to much criticism from fellow students and faculty. A I The apostolate of this enterprising disciple is not limited to scholarship. In the prisons of New Eng- land the priest has shown the meaning of the pas- toral nature of the Church. Convinced that even the rejects of society can assist the salvation of others, Fr. McGrath has taped several frank interviews with convicts who hope their stories will prevent young probationists from joining their lonely world. Theology, for him, is not an abstraction, not an enclosure of defined theses, It may even be con- sidered a behavioral science. Either God is working in and through his instruments, and this can be measured, or He is not. If not, the theologian must find out why and remedy the situation. TH EOLOGY Senior ethics Professor, Fr. .lohn P. Haran, S, J., is basically a traditionalist, but he sympathetically endorses the changes demanded by a worldion the move. High on his list for ecclesiastical uup-dating are meaningful mitigations of the Church's laws on fasting and on the Index. Fr. Haran came to Holy Cross on a one year sabbatical from Weston Col- lege, where he had been Dean of the Theology Faculty for the previous eight years. When Worcester became a diocese in 1950, Bishop Wright appointed him Diocesan Censor, a member of the Diocesan Examining Board and the Synod. Fr. Haran stayed on at Holy Cross. As a former Chairman of the Theology Department, he introduced the course in Ecumenism, anticipating the cur- rent interest in that subject by a decade. He is now a member of the Academic Advisory Council. Fr. Haran is a teacher of the first order. His classroom technique is basically lecture, but he revels in a good debate. And debate he must with the polemic seniors who challenge the Fagothey ethic. Fr. Haran takes exception to the natural law as the last word in moral formation. He sees greater importance in the Christo-centric orientation of moral life, with its stress on the dignity and freedom of the individual who is eager to meet the challenge of personal responsibility. If there is a Crusader cult, Fr. Haran is a charter member. He is an ardent fan of Holy Cross athletics lsometimes he even attends practice sessionsl, but balances this interest with an impressive attendance record at lectures in Kim- hall Auditorium. He lives for the improvement and success of the students at Holy Cross and of Holy Cross itself, , st l l 102 NK Q sx!Nf0'NNxQx R Zi gi SX . XX., X . 1 Y kms wi .. QQ -Q w NN Q X fn' 4 XNQQ. X ff 1 1 W I 4, 4, ,, x .Q -A-.w,,,,, Awww W A , ff W Q0 my ,rf in if 5 X 5 7 2 M N' rs--1 , 'W - X lf, if . i - ' ' l.f '5S'W'f 'YP ..., 5 rv' -...,.NN..,....e. . W.. .s..,,5..,,...l,- .,...W.......--L-.......g......Mf.. WW., . ...f.......... W. . .............-....-......,., , ...... , .... X..X.X... .. . ., l FRANK J. MINNI Instructor, Theology M.A., St. Louis Univ. '1-.u-.,,,,.,,x REV. WILLIAM J. V. E. CASEY, S. J. Professor, Theology S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Boston College , X A N . . V lx REV. WILLIAM J. CASEY, S. J. l Professor, Theology S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Boston College REV. LEO A. O CONNOR, S. J. Professor, Theology S.T.L., Weston College M.A., Boston College REV. EUGENE D. McCARTHY, S. J. A 171-9tTllCt0f, Theology REV. JAMES D. CROWLEY, S. J. REV. JOHN E. BROOKS, S. J. S.T.L., Weston College Instructor, Theology Instructor, Theology M-A-, B0St0H College M.A., Boston College S.T.D., Gregorian Univ. is il O 5, S. J. W. ' 1 x wx r 1 ,il J in 2. .E is Mk VJ M -.. ..- 9 5 Isl Yin J ,,.,- COLLEGE CHAPLAIN '-u-, ,,I' Way back in 1917 when Wilson was making the world safe for democracy, Fr. Francis J. Hart, S. J., entered Holy Cross. After fresh- man year, Father joined the Society of Jesus to begin what has become almost a half cen- tury's venture in charity. F r. Hart spent his novitiate at St. Andrew- on-Hudson and studied philosophy and theol- ogy at Weston and Woodstock Colleges. He taught as a scholastic at Boston College High and returned to Holy 'Cross in 1932. That year when intramural football was introduced at Holy Cross Fr. Hart found his great interest. He added basketball to the program the next yearg and, most importantly, he added his own personality, In spite of a world war and a perennial scarcity of referees, Fr. Hart has kept the intramural program clicking with friendly exercise and good fellowship. 105 Fr. H-art's memories are many: Bill Osman- ski emerging from substitute to star, the tac- tics of former Dean of Men John Blackjack,' Reid, S. J., and the Old Crusader social spot, Danny D,ugan's -where freshmen got partial refunds when they left early to meet curfew. Student Counselor, lettered in 1946 on Fr. H-art's door, recalls the days when he was pas- tor to the school and celebrant of the com- munity Mass. Guidance programs and Mass schedules have changed since then, but Father still retains his ubiquitous counseling duties. He organizes re- treats, coordinates a mission collection, and is the man to see when you break a punching bag or want to borrow a football. The growth of the College has turned his familiar world over many times, but he remains a minister to his men. DEVELOPMENT AT HOLY CROSS Enduring values and new dimensions, the Mass and organic chemistry in juxtaposition -this is the cover of the Holy Cross Develop- ment Fuiid brochure, and within its pages is mapped out a 20.4- million dollar program for survival to greatness. In the late fifties a general reassessment in education took place. College administrators realized the World War II boom babies were growing up and the necessityof preparing for the enrollment onslought they promised. Dras- tic and farsighted measures had to be taken to provide funds, facilities, and qualified profes- sors to cope adequately with the anticipated spiraling attendance. It was also the time of King Sputnik, and the worth of the humanities in the space-race world was again under serious fire. For Holy Cross, with its relatively poor endowment compared to some other liberal arts colleges, it was almost a question of to be or not to be, and if to be, in what manner and by what means. ln 1960, Sidney G. ,Tickton of Harvard formally published his incisive report on the condition and dilemma of the small liberal arts college, Needed: A Ten-Year College Budget. He outlined the urgent need for re- appraisal, radical change, and most im- portantly, a ten-year projection designed to match facilities with future needs. At Holy Cross the decision was made definitely not to become a university and to remain in essence small, Catholic, and-liberal. A conjectured maximum enrollment of about- 2000 de- termined the administration's long range look. The Ratio was again reaffirmed, but it would be same-diferent. The development program really got ' off the ground in the spring of 1962. By that time the professional fund raising firm of Hogan Winters, of Rye, New York, was already polling leaders in the three major alumni complexes, Worcester, New York, and Boston. Their survey indicated alumni endorsement of a development program, and implied that approximately twenty million dollars could actually be raised if roughly one-half Came 106 directly from the alumni. Hogan Winters aided the administration in setting up the Development Oflice and are still being re- tained in an advisory capacity. I Mr. James Cobb, '39, acted as first Director and was followed in December of 1963 by Mr. William F. Tonne, '51, formerly Director of Development for the College of Saint Elizabeth, Convent Station, N. J. Rev. William L. Keleher, S. I., '26, a former presi- dent of Boston College, was designated Co- ordinator, the administration-fund'raiser liason man. Simultaneously the College hired Mr. Lewis B. Songer, ,55, to head the Omce of Public Relations. The administration ,then commissioned the architectural firm of Eggers and Higgins, Inc., to draw up a flexible campus master plan, showing Holy Cross projected into 1972. At the same time the Development Office began preparing literature and programs designed to open hearts, minds, and synchronously, checkbooks. Late in April of 1962 the Fund sponsored a gigantic kickoff dinner, complete with a green and white circus tent on the quad for the delight of the most influential invited alumni. The affair was a spirited success and capped perfectly the announcement that over 1,000,000 dollars had already been pledged towards Alma lVIater's needs. At that time the fifteen regional chairmenf, and numerous area captains received their papers and were assigned spheres to influence. The Fund, after the dinner, was rolling. In the fall of the same year the administra- tion, retracing steps, hired Taylor, Lieberfeld, and Heldman, Inc., specialists in maximum college space utilization, to undertake a Pakachoagian efficiency study. Several weeks, measuring tapes, and stop watches later, one building dropped out of the 1972 picture entirely. The Behavioral Science Building was not to be a separate entity, but was to be absorbed into structurally sound O'Kane, Priority of construction was changed- notably the Student Center was placed second rather than fifth, and the immediate aim of interg P the .gl-5 -fuss ber of merly rge of . Rev. presi- -d Co- liason d Mr. Bce of 1 then Eggers Hexible Cros ne the stature mindif nnsored with 3 lad for invited and at OYH pletlgffd at time LIIICIOU5 :IS and e lillllfl iiniim' .berfeldf aijlnllm take 3 1 weflff ter, one piCU1T ling W E s T0 be 0-Kat df 1 fefond .im of aflge - sv Six . 5 is .xii - . -gs--s S .lt . N , , ll 4 . I ek. 1 'Q i 5 2 4 . i N in 45 Development Staff meeting' Donald A Dewey A ' ' ' ' . c I - - , sslstant Director of Public Relations' Matthew P Ca h D t f Al gund, Iifiwls B. Songer, Director of Public Relations, Rev. William L. Kelcher, s.J.,, Coordinator ol'IalDa1:E:ldpnile.iii:JrW7,1ll1a:nii'u MOHHC, llictoruof Development, James A. Keenan, Jr., Assistant Director of Developmentg Mrs Juamta L Volkavltch Office aflager- Ot plctured: William F. Reilly, Consultant, Hogan Winters Co., Frank Gallagher, Director of Alumni Placement Bu P03115 John F. Roche, President of Hogan Winters Co., Consultant. making Fenwick and O'Kane available as soon as possible was determined. The progress of the program seemed to hinge on getting the Jesuits out of Fenwick, and construction Of their residence and the iniirmary began last fall and is currently in progress. HOWever, the construction and renovation of the physical plant is only half the program, for 10 of the 20.4 million will form an in- vested endowment able to produce in excess of 400,000 dollars annually for increased faculty salaries and student scholarship aid. Of the available funds, two-thirds will go for the students. APP1'0Ximately one-half of the total 20.4 million will come from the alumni, and the balance from trust and corporate funds, estates, etc. The Development Oiiice conjec- tures that of the alumni, only 60W to 70'Zn will contribute at all, and 20'Zn will con- tribute over 90'Zn of the alumni total. Mr. Cobb and company unraveled several schemes whereby college-directed philanthropy can be rewarding, profitable, and sometimes almost merry, considering the tax benefits derived when giving in one of several proper ways, especially in a time payment plan. One pro- gram which is going particularly well is the 6'lVlemorial Gift Plans for a certain sum of money, the donor has a right to name or dedicate a particular endowment unit. The therapy room in the Infirmary went for twelve payments of 1,500 dollars, the elevator for a total of 25,200 dollars, the Arts and 107 Crafts Room in the Student Center Building for a total of 10,200 dollars. To name and endow an assistant professorship requires twelve time payments of 16,666 dollars. This pay-to-name system will speckle the new buildings with a host of bronze plaques, tangible expressions of concern for the con- tinued advancementw of the College. The first stage of the Fund, 7,500,000 dol- lars, should be reached this year, financing construction of the Student Center, the Faculty Residence-Infirmary, and the renovation of Fenwick and O'Kane. One of the lesser known facts of the de- velopment program is its emphasis upon Wor- cester. In his report, Sidney Tickton pointed out a continuing trend toward collegiate at- tendance near one's home, primarily for economic reasons. It is getting too expensive to go away to school. The administration intends to make up the difference between the projected 2000 enrollment and the present 1850 in Worcester-area day students. The priority of the Student Center fwhose many facilities will replace the alternately gre'en and brown ex-cage udayroomvl, and plans for increased acceptance of local academic talent correlate Holy Cross' desire to let the Wor- cester community participate more fully in the College's future. ' The Public Relations Office is quick to point out that already Holy Cross has given much to the Worcester area. It is actually Worcester's sixteenth largest business, annually spending over 4,000,000 dollars. One fifth of the area,s medical men, and one fourth of its lawyers and public school teachers attended Holy Cross. A Gazette editorial at the an- nouncement of the Fund stated: Since the founding of Holy Cross in 18413, the Wor- cester community has gained much from the College on Mount St. James. Many of our citizens have been educated there. The achieve- ments of its students and alumni, both athletic and academic, have brought credit to our community. Its classrooms have been the scenes of many institutes and cultural programs which have enriched the lives of many in Central Massachusetts. As a private college, Holy Cross has been able to experiment and pioneer in many ways which are, perforce, more difficult for public institutions to under- take. Holy Cross has spoken clearly about what it needs to face the future. The College deserves support as it moves forward to meet those needs? The Fund-men have invited major area industries to support the Development Pro- gram with approximately eleven dollars per employee. This eleven-pei , is the gift basis of the 'Tail' Share Plan. and ghguld raise better than 375-000 dollars toward the P 111 i the first stage of 7,500,000 dollars, as Worcester corporate industries contribute indirectly to the betterment of their community by invest- ing directly in Holy Cross. The Fair Share and the Memorial Gift Plans are just two of the many programs which the Development Office has undertaken to obtain the means to support and guarantee Holy Cross' striding toward greatness. The highly organized team of men who are work- ing for the future of the College have ulti- mately one dual object in mind: to preserve the justifiably cherishable values of Holy Cross, and to foster the establishment of those values in new dimensions. It is a heartfelt commitment. They are helping to nourish the flowering of an ever newer dynamism in Catholic education here, which constantly seeks to better prepare its young men to come to grips with their age and to leave a marked infiuence for good upon it. This Catholic generation fancies itself a new one, as indeed it is, but its roots are firmly traditionalg and it is the embodiment of this tradition that seeks to condition the creativity and adventuresome hunger for per- fection that is so necessary for the progress of mankind. Perhaps it is ridiculous to think of one small College's desire to prosper as being a search after the epic, but there are some here now who see a significance in their action fr beyond its present scope. The 2.7 rnillion College Infirniary and Jesuit Residence is scheduled for completion in 1965. .F ff E Q E I I Q M. 1 '! ,, QQ, -.ah f 1 W., - W K. f U' 1 x ' . , -gf we 5 .2 A N .. Y . wp., .V ' -dev . ' if ,Q E '. -1. I -,ai lv i-.0 ,W V, se a MS' 1 nf: ff .1 f -wefffiif e V- , 1 A 'gimp-no-1 V mf , 2 Q,,' f , ' V f--1 ,A N- Zf ',?fUS W' W1 f',.'-WH -n 'f'4 , , lr . ap.. U Q : .4-..:,-s.'f51ri lv ,qwrjf V 1, . S - ,Z 4 , A . v .t -ff' ,M ..,,.. ,..,.W.,-W-W-f-W wf.-mvv-wzf-ffrf'-wfff-'ff f f f x H 1 1 , 'i i 1 4 . 1 1 4 1 1 F I I I 1 W' .xi ,XL Q I Xu, A., , A ff .' rx X I! if WL' vi. a jlv 1 1 .g, -' K ' v 'ti i . aff' ,f fi'- ,f 4 1 Q e- I, e Q '4,,.. I 5 'Mi-1PY ' 'YL Cross and Scroll entourage: Tom McClew, Chairman Tim Dacey, Sat- urday Revlew Editor Norman Cousins, and Moderator Rev. Walter Shea, S. J, CROSS AND SCROLL ln the past few years the Cross and Scroll has gloried in presenting some rather signifi- cant personalities of the times: Dorothy Day, Robert Frost, Martin Luther King, Hans Kung, Barry Goldwater. However, this yearis program of speakers lacked the big name and the overall audience response was appalling- Several of the lectures could have been given in a classroom as well as in Kimball. At- tempts were made for James Baldwin, Aldous Huxley, and James Reston, but several factors intervened. Without the prCSCI1CC of these H1611- the Cross and Scroll could be content only Chinese Culture Fes- tival. This three day affair of lectures and opera was the idea of moderator r. Walter Shea S, J., who is greatly interested in uthe with the success of the 113 importance of educating ourselves in a knowl- edge of the non-Western world to give our philosophy a broader outlook. In the coming seasons Fr. Shea hopes to bring similar fes- tivals to the campus. V Again this year the perennial What are we? question was raised in the Society- 'cushersf' ucodkie pushersf' or cosmopolitan humanistsw? The search for meaning and function went on again with no dehnite answers. However, taking falling attendance and interest by the horns, the members sug- gested several sure-fire innovations. The twelve-space big-name docket will slide to about four, and attempts will be made to garner significant regional speaking talent di- rectly, instead of getting stuck in agent red tape. Smaller, more intimate talks will prob- ably be held with specialists in a particular field-a greater series of narrow but intensive COVCI'3.gCS. -.- N 4...-,.-..-Q,-r, f:.f.s.:.w+--.-wr: k '- ,. LLL.X , - . . - -w--Q vm . L . .. . f xX.... - -XXX- 'gf - s. . xm5g.fl . 3 3 . . - . A ,... X... . ik: ,s,,,,, -.mf fs ' . 1 . - . K ...X . .... ..... , ,...,,,...-..sZZ1......:.f::::t A '-'7 '- 'M-Q-w-N' A- . 4' ,..,.L. .. ...... Qg,,..:.,...w-.......f-53551 ..x. ..X., I .,,,,..1fg::. ....x. .. A ' V . . . . , . . -AW... --x--X- .... ..,X ,g,...... xx N . .. X my A K sg' . F ,gi nfa ..,. ..... x.... . - - x gk K X x , kk i K K. X5 x . X 4,,....,- ' d T' D Dan Stella and Bob Prink. BJF debaters Bill Juska Bob Sawyer, Al Service, Presi ent lm acey, , Debating President Timothy J. Dacey has called this a rebuilding year. lt started with only two experienced senior debaters-Dacey and Vice President Don Blanford. Brandeis was written off as a total loss and only fair showings were logged at St. Joseph's and Tufts. The beginning of the second semester was the time for reappraisal and search for a new combination. While most freshmen be- gin at novice tournaments and move up slowly to varsity competition in their junior and senior years, Research Director J. Gregory Mooney, '66, and Richard Garcia, '67, began travelling to major tourneys at Harvard and Northwestern. By the middle of March they had developed far enough and fast enough to 114 make the elimination rounds at Dartmouth and Georgetown against competition from as far D D away as Southern California. They work d well together, complement each Other, ag are learning quickly. Dacey sees them as 3 . Y very promising team. They may start R Hel' trend in debating, most debaters favor H look of clerk-like sobriety-they look like longshoremenf' Adding to the year of disappointments WHS the cancellation of the annual High School Debating Tournament one day before sche- duled. A German measles epidemic fO1'Ced the sad tourney director liob Prink to inforlll sixty-five schools that the illl'CC dill' event would not be held. 1 E 1 2 s 7 pi- .? .,,, 'Q' 2 'lex 'W ,. sSX f' 'W WWW W :UK ' -xxx -Q-.150 nv 3 '14 1 fvkw rl . K ' ' 4:--X .' A H , lo- yi f . 1 1 QAQ ,q.x U Q' .SGH - xx m L' Q T, A 0 35 - Qi, ' . i l ' s Swine p7 n s NY ,Ad S- -., Q N s uf! :fix .Q X. XRS xxx. si 'J E Q 'Ft ,V . . , S -1 GI AZ'-' li K. Rx xi 5 Q n . . ? xx NM' Q K I X- .4 X' N X X Nb S E , K i Q a ' B - Wax wr , W: N. N Q 'rf a'f I .1 . L . ,lv . ss, 3 . . . vi ev' ,. x - 4, .A ,.-f..1r4,'Qg:f'fi 37131-X, K ' w A!.,r2AzQ7r':sf, 'K 'f ' ' : 4- ' 'W' A V' ' 1 ' ,. 'V , , A WH' , W M Nfffx- 4 , , .25 , 2 S if Mya Sikkim awk 5 . SSAX WSN-XX ,,Lw,L.i, ,, .. f, 4f'ff:,-fx, .- .V Q1 x f 'A X , M, 16,-7 Qc' , , f 4 QL ,L y vjgf f giizif wwf if ' '62 '-f.w:'ZA ' ,1,'f:1,,g , , L fx ',' wif! ' ' vi 's515'fW A , . 7727! X 4, , VZ, M,-1. . W K WW W' H fvxx Q mix . XV . X N f wx... f is ? H ----r-. - ' '- fm'-'v ., .... '.-. -. -.. ls-f-ve-'H' -'r' ' H. 0 - Club mixer. Stoic impressario Stu Long. B'etween IPS at llilllg OUTING CLUB We are willing to sponsor anything as long as student interest is shown -so said the colossal Outing Club President Stuart I-Iueyn Long. This year the Outing Club did just that. But the proof of the sponsoring was in a pudding that sometimes fell flat. The Vil- lanova train, the ski slope, and the Mardi Gras Weekend got lost in negotiation. Despite the setbacks, Long and his 'clrish Mafia gave great aid and comfort to the social bodies on campus. The Outing Club started the season with the booming punt of kickoff weekend. In reluc- tant partnership with the Student Congress Lew Gottlieb's Traveling Hootenanny was brought to the field house for some rocking and clapping high-price celebrity entertain- ment. After the hey-la-dee-la-dee-lan was over the audience was too tired to dance. But the Club allowed no respite. The next eve- ning ,Flip and the Flippers turned somer- saults at the Third Annual Victory Dance. Kickoff weekend was a financial and presti gious success. With over two thousand al ledged dollars in its coffers and co to match, the Outing Club was anxious for bigger killings. nfidence In a controversy largely fanned by the Crusader, Long was pitted against Congress P 'd ' res1 ent Bob Shields for control of campus social activities. It seemed the Outinn- Club D was ' ' . trymg to move in on Congress ten.,- John Crattan loses in gut contest. tory. Said Long: If no one else does, we will sponsor the busses to the mixers and home basketball games, and even have pre- game buffetsf' Said Shields: 'Tm amazed that they should even dream of moving in and taking over something the Congress has been doing well. After Long's social plans were officially announced, Shields placed no Ob- jection except that the Outing Club be re- sponsible to the Congress as the Central governing body on the campusf, He also cri- ticized the Club for amassing a two thousand dollar profit for a three hundred fifty dollar investment in the Victory Dance. The next week an aroused Stu Long blasted the Con- gress in an angry letter to the editor. He denied excessive profits and retorted that 'iii is unfortunate that the Student Congress can- not Put on a similar affair without liavillt-'5 it turn into a horror show. lt was a grand and foolish quarrel ending in stalemate. Shields relinquished the social sphere of the Congress to the better promoters of the Outing Club. but insisted on the WSU' latory power of the Congress. Meanwhile the Outing Club grew to its largest ltl0IlllWf5lllll H300 PlllSl. spent two thousand dollars 111 Subsifll' and emersied as the social 0l'i5lll Off campus. Although relvaptizetl the lil-lli Club bi' the new l'resitlent. Nike Voss. the Oltl llul' mg i-llllw owes its rclwirtlt to Stuart lt. 1--'HS' dcr- ,. 1... r. x JL 1 .... td WLT YL, ,. 5'l fl-- -J C Q- if me U' C 0, or E uw it ai ft aflft ' emi le 334. follow me fff' mlffi ow affix MU? e GM L LU POLITICS All holding hands, the three major political clubs on campus decry in unison the common disease which has struck the student body this year: political apathy. After this, they then go their separate ways. The Young Democrats, under the leadership of Charles Abdella, bolstered their cause with lectures by several prominent men-Dr. David Todd fAmerican Civil Liberties Unionl, Dr. Robert Wood fProf. of Political Science, M.I.T.J and Lieu- tenant Covernor Bellotti CMassachusettsJ . The Young Mules carried on a campus crusade to collect signatures for Massachusetts Constitu- tional Reform by calling for a Constitutional Convention. Throughout this year of political lull, plans were being made for stepped-up ac- tivity during the fall of election year. On the outside looking in were the Young Republicans who are for the most part waiting for next year. Because this was an off year politically speaking, and because they were on the losing team, the Young Elephants oc- cupied themselves mostly with building up their internal structure and trying to gener- ate political interest on the campus. Roger Desautels, Young Republicans' President, gives as their main function: to offer the student the ability of expression on political views and the correct guidance of his opin- ions through instruction by books, pamphlets and other devices to what we believe to be the true original American philosophy of politics? Standing to the right of these two giants is the Conservative Club, which, under the direction of Michael Burke, has developed from a virtual paper organization into a real, live thing. Their avowed end is the promulgation of the ideas of Conservatism and, as much as people will let them, to put them into practice. They will support any candi- date, regardless of party, who subscribes to the Conservative political philosophy. On cam- pus, their biggest task is to make the word conservative respectable fwithout, however, making the word understoodj. One Of their original aims was to affiliate with the YAF. 5UlUWATER,fF7 . y 'MRETIRE Ti KZNNEDTE AU'li20'64. lm' DW' lm W Conservative Mike Burke contemplates things on the right. i-4 U C5 rn :- E. S I C'D B' N 11. an Sb c- Q.. SL F HQEDSUP-TEES Q IDE illltlllit -sw X f.r XI1ff.., 4 Z6 ...'. ..f,,,,,,,,,,,W,,,,,.. , , , ' Unfortunately, the Club was denied YAF afhliation because the administration ruled that some points of the YAF Sharon State- ment are opposed to Christian ethics. ln the Words of President Burke: 6'We believe in an ideal, based on the dignity of man and the tradition of America. We exist to spread this ideal in every possible way. This year our main difliculty was to gain acceptance for our position, to convince the student body that ours is neither un-Christian, nor old- fashioned, nor a joke. l I-ri tenant governor Bellotli of Massachusetts tells why he won't challenge Governor eu Peabody next November. Sggid'Z1Itfg'5IEffl0lf6f01:,er-Scrunlon-Sxnilh-Nixonf-I.odgv Young Republicans Irf' . r ey' em L0mbm'd0a Blu Jacobs. Bull Mvlfnrrmx. Paul bhvrm-llh 9' President Roger Desautels. 122 N 'Uwe -WQMAQ5 x Kiki, I 'Q 'll N f ifw if' The Presidents: Frank Shea, Jack Dineen, Tim Murtaugh, Bob Murphy and Don Romano. THE PRESIDENTS Presidential politics at Holy Cross is an ap- peal to the social instinct. No real issues are at stake. The best man promises the best social platform, and if he has personality to boot, his election is assured. From freshman year the candidate aligns himself along the two bases of spirit and social committees. He moves in with the Prom Prelude sophomore year and starts his bid for the Purple Key. And out of the Key come the junior and senior class presidents. Natural athletes have natural ad- vantage, good grades can be an asset, but the non-intellectual, if not the anti-intellectual, is to be preferred. Occasionally a maverick will break the image when his class gets in the mood. Only then does the presidential syn- drome become interesting. J ack Dineen was that kind of maverick. His off-campus lounge proposal caught the fresh- man mood of '66, Campaigning against two opponents of different reputation, Mike Mc- Guire and Dick Murphy, Dineen offered a clear choice to the voters. When McGuire and Murphy split the anti-Dineen forces, Jack walked into office on his off-campus promise. Most knowledgeable observers held no chance at all for the lounge. But Dineen was con- vincing, and the Dean of Men had allowed it as a legitimate issue. The place of contention was an old ballroom in Worcester consisting of several rooms and a few pool tables. The twelve hundred dollar yearly price tag would be met by a three dollar membership dues. Dineen's elaborate lounge report was sub- mitted to the Disciplinary Board with mixed optimism. The reply was negative, but Dineen 123 was congratulated for his excellent presenta- tion. Later the same semester Frank Shea re- ceived an overwhelming mandate as the class of '66 sophomore president. He pledged to restore confidence in leadership, but after the excitement of the Dineen regime nothing seemed to stir the sophomores. .lunior class president Tim Murtaugh came out on the short end of the primary several votes behind the favorite, Dan Stella. But he kept up his campaign and finally won the elec- tion. Besides the normal run of picnics, ban- quets, and dancing, Murtaugh has inaugurated a floating college bowl tournament and judo course. In the fall, he petitioned Fr. Dunn for junior car permission and was turned down. Spirit is up, though, in the class of ,65 and Murtaugh takes the credit. The senior class presidency is a different type altogether. Spirit and social activities seem rather unsophisticate the fourth time around and gripes become the major area of concern. Senior President Bob Murphy sued successfully for an adjustment of the senior class schedule which had called for first and second periods each day. He also extended the program bringing representatives of gov- ernment agencies and business firms to the campus earlier in the year. The traditional Hundred Days debacle was again a fine affair under Murphyls purview. if Former sophomore president fclass of '64-J Don Romano was chosen honorary freshman president. His chief duty was bringing along the first year man from incubation to Holy Cross adolescence. D P'sel1o Cthird from leftl Speaks about S3I'll'6 at Aquinas Academy meeting. an 1 DISCUSSION CLUBS The discussion clubs at Holy Cross are an amalgam of weekly, biweekly and monthly meeting groups Qsome never meet at alll of varying degrees of success. Their appeal is limited as their effect is often not at all. This year the Aquinas Academy invited twenty-five seniors to join in periodic discus- sions of philosophy. Yet President Chuck Rea- gan is lucky if five members attend. Much good philosophic fare is missed when a talk like '4Kierkegaard's Theory of Faith and Pas- sion is delivered to only a few. The History Academy is another small group. Despite the large number of history majors in the school, it can boast only a ten- man membership and five are freshmen. This year the topic of discussion was World War I. Holy Cross, Interracial Justice Club, The Bishop Healy Forum, this year underwent radical structural and functional changes. The erstwhile, almost memberless discussion club took preliminary steps to become actively in- volved in the civil rights issue by afiiliating with the Northern Student Movement, and by attempting to inaugurate several NSM-devel- oped programs in the Worcester area. The NSM tries to aid the culturally deprived and economically depressed in the urban ghettos of the North by providing them with the skills necessary to effectively participate in the deni- ocratic process. Its program centers around youth-oriented tutorial programs intended to confront the serious educational inadequacies of the central city, and to overcome the insti- tutionalized desperation, despair, and disad- vantage of its residents. The NSM also active- ly supports, with personnel and money, the other civil rights groups, especially the Stu dent Non-violent Co-ordinatinw C g .ommillcv 12-1 me- bu- W0 see stu' P is 1 Bee and peel T fron lame know Hou itive S. J., C: Grot Stud Mac Chai inf or every lihrai book FAD ful Q 01111114 P0pul dtnie TDCI1. dar liingf hall f c0DSiq Pllhvk 1 uf'-Unr llmph ln, 'K ha bl' ar and ls inf SI: ,. dm at LSNCCJ. The biggest problem this year, according to Forum President Bob Miller, was just establishing lilies of communication with the Worcester community and the civil rights movement in general. Once this was done, the pilot organization began to adopt NSM programs to Holy Cross, unique situa- tion, and to offer outlets for the students, awakening interest in social justice? The John Colet Society offers students in- terested in the practice of education an op- portunity to gain an acquaintance with the teaching profession. In first semester Mr. Maguire held informative sessions on the philosophy of education. The Sociology Club was one that did not meet at all. lt may become a. valuable, low- budget activity if it begins to produce research work. President Tom McClew would like to see the club design and execute sociological studies on and off the campus. Perhaps the most important discussion club is the St. Thomas More Pre-legal Society. Besides its run of lectures by law school deans and mock trial, it is the sine qua non of pros- pective law students. The International Relations Club suffers from a low budget. President John Pittoni lamented the inability to get more than a few knowledgeable speakers on foreign affairs. However Dr. Van Valkenburg gave an author- itive talk on Malaysia and Fr. J. V. E. Casey, S. I., spoke about his trip to Russia. CADG CCollegiate Affairs Discussion Groupj was created as a committee of the Student Congress during the presidency of Mac Buckley. In its two years of existence Chairman Bob Sawyer has sent requests for information and for changes to practically every office on the campus-the Deans, the library, maintenance, the dining hall, and bookstore to name a few. Sometimes all CADG seeks is information. Only after care- ful committee investigation does C'ADG rec- ommend. lts recommendations are usually popular. Sometimes requests are completely denied: general late light permission for fresh- men, midnight Mass, afternoon Mass on Sun- day, cars for juniors. Other times CZADG ob- tained part or all of its requests: The Kim- ball meal suggestions, the AA liason, the cur- riculum reports, the silverfish problem, and several others. Many proposals are still under consideration: curriculum changes, dining hall punch cards, support for minor sports, 303' demic calendar, allowing day students to eat lunch with -boarders. In all these areas CADG seeks to carry out itS basic aim: to provide a guided, responsi- ble and effective outlet for student Opinion and ideas, to bring the request for changes the students want before the proper authori- ties and ask for them. Bob Miller, President of the Bishop Healy Foruxn CADG Chairman Bob Sawyer researches on silverfish 125 .. ni.. . . . l X X. X TX SX 0-5 -rf -eff Y-'J X X SX TQ X S XX. N Col. James T. Murray Squadron-Arnold Air Society: Chris Hoppin, Bill Reimer, Commander Kevin Booth, Chris Curry, Ed Nigro, Frank Moran. 126 ROTC '4Outstanding is a word used in military installations from Gitmo to Otis to denote anything from exceptional excellence to sar- castic disapproval. lt is used in the former sense for the 1963-1964 AFROTC unit at this College. Senior cadets returned from Summer Training Units where seventy-five percent of them ranked in the top half of all the units in the nation. They welcomed freshman re- cruits to the ranks more than two hundred and twenty-five strong-the largest in 1'6- cent years. Compared with the choice of thiS unit as the Arnold Air Society Area A-1 Headquarters for the second consecutive year and the successful commission of twenty-iivc 2nd Lieutenants. the traditional Military Ball was anticlimactic. The Arnold Air Society. under Cadet Major Kevin Booth, achieved prominence with itS Homecoming display of hliedcheck Charlie. and its rank as the top squadron in the New England area. These glories were not witl1011t prosaic and social accompaniment. Monday afternoon drills. numerous reviews. 5liX pl1Y5i' Cal training in the gym. lectures. movies. testing. lllood Drive competition. as well H5 bllllqllcts. the Corps picnic and formal Nllill' inifdllu-alll have their part in a year of train- ina for il Pl'0SPcctive otlicer in the l7.S. Air Force. Cadet Captain liicliard Wagner. '05- .I . uint-iff' t -9 M1 r, 'A I... Ek-U' Q. M . inthe .uni hunfbf ch0lff on Am 5 nftfudve in f fwclllltii 0 BL GM Wi S i rf- Midshipman Commander Kane militantly checks his staff. Who is the Naviest of them all? Combined naval and civilian review. WM, 127 moved the Drill Team a step ahead by intro- ducing British Drill maneuvers at the V.M.l. game. ln the course of the academic year the Cadet Group enjoyed Orientation Flights to Texas and Florida as well as the Spring Training Weekend at Otis A.F.B., Mass., as preparation for Summer Camp. All of this was organized under Group Commander Cadet Colonel Edward Nigro, Deputy Group Com- mander Cadet Lt. Colonel Christopher Hoppin and Special Assistant to the Commandant of Cadets, Cadet Colonel ,lohn Lausten. They and Chaplain Fr. C. J. Dunn, S.,l., ofliciate at the final review and presentation of awards. Based on the fundamental principle that leaders are made, not born, the NROTC unit tries to develop oflicers from the midshipmen- students. Academic, military and social means are blended to instill in the prospective offi- cers a combination of professional knowledge, self-confidence and poise. The required three- credit course in Naval Science and the two- hour weekly drill encourage this directly. The desired military philosophy is also encouraged by activities stressing competitive instincts on the unit level. ln its attempt to function extramurally the unit, under Midshipman Commander Richard Kane, has reinstalled the NROTC basketball team, which under the mentor-coach Lieuten- ant Moser achieved a winning season. The annual trip to Pensacola gives midshipmen interested in aviation an opportunity to ob- serve flight training facilities and participate in several Hights themselves. Each year Marine- motivated midshipmen spend three days view- ing basic training at Parris Island, S.C. A small enclave of prospective Marines subdivide into the Semper Fidelis Society. This new group fosters the rough and tumble ugung- ho attitude of the uleathernecksf' The service activities for the Naval ROTC unit are the responsibilities of the Trident So- ciety. lts members officiate and administrate the spaghetti dinner, professional movies, and the picnic. They also support the Navy Band, Cross Current, and Cross Current Annual. The military activities of the year are cul- minated in a joint review of the Navy and Air Force before the President of the College. Q X X ff f W 4 ' 76 X I ,, , M X , f ,,, U f f f Wy, f, 7 f' ff 7 I V 1 W , f W, WO, V 0 , c' A VV , X53 - X 'G X ww- ' wi AX 5, 4 Q 5 1 Q5 Q Xx T i .x .X wx iv R Nb AQ x S ,kg y , V? ffxq 'Q . Ls xv X, Q B! - as , n fi' ' ITN. xv sf 0 f aff , M f 0 1 l 1 'W SODALITY i Sodality Director Fr. Labran. I The Sodality at Holy Cross has successfully penetrated into the Worcester community and yet its apostolate has hardly been felt pn campus. This dilemma has weighed heav1lY upon the mind of the Sodality in the past year. The members of the Council, who ad- minister its affairs along with the Director, Fr. Labran, have been acutely aware of the lack of communication between the Sodality and the student body as a whole. Their con- cern with involvement is but one aspect of a probing self-consciousness, a critique Of goals and methods, an ideal and an image. Beneath the well-organized surface, the ques- tions refuse to disappear. The two basic elements of the Sodality are the personal and collective spirituality of the members, and the apostolate directed towards others. A delicate balance must be maintained between the two. Within the apos- tolate itself, the traditional corporal works of mercy must be weighed against the impli- cations of the fundamental intellectual com- mitment of the contemporary college student. Integral to this question is the tension between individual initiative and communal effort. ln its continual re-examination of these difficul- ties, the Sodality places confidence in a deeper stability which must itself perennially be analyzed and renewed. Within the framework of the Common Rules of sodalities in general, the observant critic will perceive in the Sodality at Holy Cross a high degree of efficient organization. With the active support of the College administration, it has placed its established program upon a secure basis. Customary activities continue normally from year to year. lt attracts many interested underclassmen and retains enough of them to keep its membership comfortably around one hundred. The structure does not show signs of weakening-indeed, some mem- bers have complained that everything pro- ceeds too smoothly. The Council, nevertheless, is afraid that the Sodality is misunderstood by the student body, and that this situation limits the effectiveness of the Sodality on campus. flt must be ad- mitted that a bulletin board displaying clip- pings on CORE and SNCC alongside the ratings of the National Legion of Decency can COHVCY all equivocal impressionj The Coun- cil recognizes that the popular attitude to. wards the Sodality as a way of life is at best one of indifference. This knowledge has given rise to a certain defensiveness, a desire to have the Sodality regarded as something dynamic' and worthwhile. The brochure for gg-Zjfsclglgttginsaxiildzjiigt if uiililore Excellent l . e summa cum aude graduate . . . the Blaik Memorial foot- ball award winner . . . the class president . . . d - . an others who, armed with such diverse 130 talents and accomplishments, chose the more excellent way. However admirable the more excellent way may be, it is not significant in the popular conception of the Sodality. Even though the sodalist may regard the sodality as a way of life which transcends the college years, the casual observer pictures it primarily as another extracurricular. He associates it with the apostolates which it conducts in the Wor. cester area, and he identifies it with the soda- lists whom he knows. The social apostolate in the community in- volves most of the members of the Sodality. Some of them provide recreation and activi- ties for exceptional children. They also ar- range days of recollection for handicapped and retarded boys and their fathers. Others work with inmates of the State Mental Hospital. Groups of sodalists make regular visits to the long-term patients at St. Vincent's Hospi- tal and City Hospital, and to the senior citizens at Providence House. At Friendly House, a neighborhood social center, sodalists organize and coach boys in basketball and other sports. Students at Holy Cross find that these experiences are at least as beneficial for them as they are for the people they help. The day student Sodality tutors delinquent girls at the Worcester Detention Center. At John Augustus Hall, a reform school for boys, its members conduct small classes in religion. All of these projects are run almost exclu- sively by sodalists. Other students who might be interested are often unaware that the So- dality would like to share its work with as many non-members as possible. At St. Anne's Orphanage and Lincoln Neighborhood Center, however, both sodalists and non-sodalists pro- vide male companionship for fatherless boys. Each boy is given a big brother who works only with him. Boys and brothers engage in sports and in cultural and social activities. A similar situation exists at Nazareth Home, a residence for boys from six to fourteen years who have emotional or personality problems. Here an even greater degree of cooperation obtains, for about three-fourths of the Holy Cross men involved are not members of the Sodality. No one would dispute the evident worth of the foregoing activities. At the same time. there has been growing within the Sodality H marked emphasis on the intellectual apostolate. This trend goes beyond the truism that every member's primary apostolate is his acadelllif Career. It encourages sodalists to engage ac- tivell' in the creative exchange of ideas through campus media and other channels- Witllill the Sodaliiy' it has fostered new GX' perimenls and expanded older ones. Tllrough the Speakers' Bureau. for example. Holy Cross sodalists are sent to talk to lliilll 'NH . 'i f 'vvves, .S ff ior Mike Boyce teaching current events at the Worcester Detention Cen 131 ter. School sodalities from Maine to Washington, ?.C. They try to convey to their audiences the new looki' and the dynamic commitment to- wards which they strive at Holy Cross. Tentative endeavors on a somewhat higher plane include the Academy's informal discus- sions between faculty members and students, and an embryonic involvement with problems of civil rights. Regardless of the success or failure of specific projects, it appears that many more apostolates of a similar nature will be tried. What the Sodality is and what it accom- plishes depends on its members. The members expect that the Sodality, as an organization and as a way of life, will help them to grow as Christians and will give them an opportunity to share this growth with others. The means of formation and growth is the Ignatian spiri- tuality of a mature commitment to the bap- tismal promises strengthened and renewed by the daily exercises of Mass, meditation, and spiritual reading. These ought to be supple- mented by the resources and implicit encour- agement of the Sodality itself. The particular Marian character of Sodality life is taken for granted, but like much of the rest it must be developed gradually by the sodalist. Fr. Labran, Director of Sodality, is respon- sible for whatever success the Sodality has in conveying these difficult concepts to its own members. His chief concern is to foster an in- tellectual, optimistic spiritual life in the sodal- ists. In directing the Sodality, he 'must main- tain a rather delicate balance of prudence and restraint, as far as possible leaving the initiative and administration to the student of- ficers. He does this by lending his influence and advice on matters of principle, and letting the Council follow its own lead from there. Well into its second century, the Sodality at Holy Cross has much to its credit and is en- gaged in many worthwhile activities. But it seems to be conscious of falling short in vital areas even as it seeks to clarify its goals and to fulfill them more perfectly. Ed Mullin, the 1963-64 prefect, offers the following summa- tion: The Sodality is constantly concerned with progressg we look to improvement of our organization, of our relationship to our mem- bers, of our influence on our milieu. We strive for a virile and adult approach to Christian activity in todayis worldf, 4+ ee + The Confraternity of Christian Doctrine pro- vides religious instruction for young Catholics in Worcester parishes. The services of these seventy-odd men are invaluable to the pastors. Besides filling a critical need, they enjoy a unique opportunity to further their own gen- eral education. So great was the enthusiasm for the Confraternity's work that President Jack Bien had more applicants than he could place. PURPLE PATCHER The Purple Patcher has the odd distinction of having its editor chosen by the junior C1355 council. Every year this group goes into deep caucus without much appreciation for the yearbook art and somehow comes out with a reasonable, although risky, decision. When they turned over the '64 Patcher to Phil No- bile, there was immediate reaction. insisting that the new editor would not allow a 'cfairn treatment of the College, a band of dissidents printed a half thousand flyers urging the class to sue the council for reconsideration. How- ever the flyers were interceptedand the con- troversy lingered only a while. Although the impeachment proceedings were rather foolish, they did emphasize that the '64 book Would be diflierent futotally lacking in yearbook clichel' as the editor put itj. Yet on the surface no two recent Purple Patchers are as similar as the '63 and '64 books. Last year Kevin Keogh established a meaningful form which subsequent books All the Czar's horses and all the Czaris men get together in rare group picture: Editor Philip Nobile, Ron Coulter, Bill Richards, George Moran, Carl Sylvester, Vic Ridder, Jerry Casey and Bill Lynch. could adopt. There seemed no sense to the radically dissimilar Patchers that followed one another in the past. The consistently line Harvard and Dartmouth books hardly ever make departure from the previous year. Per. fection may come with experimenting on the same form and this is what the '64 Patcher attempts. There is a resemblance in the covers. AC. tually the '63 cover was almost repeated. But when a suitable religious design was submitted, the editor was quick to employ it along with a change in texture. Otherwise the color, title front and back cover crosses are identical. The order of the ,63 book was kept with some rearrangement fclass history preceding the seniors, academic section after the campus sectionl. Apart from these similarities, the '64 Purple Patcher is meant to be a great dis- tance from its predecessor and more akin to the ideas fbut not the formj of the vastly unpopular ,62 book. This latter Patcher had .. , , ,K 55 sg X. KL A r 4 is Xf b s.. . R - 132 xx 5 .Q ax my 5-gl .K ,P . -AE H. Q , '35 wir. . UQ- lfl Di, ly. 1 TN ni ., we D, . . if., fre. Q. B . ' ' Q QT'-ipxv --.431 ew, . iw MTL ' N. i yu ' v L'-A 15' ' Lui v , . Lellllwlll W-. if' 'Q S'l ':. 'MA 'C . v .Qi he Nw g. 4. , t nib, r-Q.. 1- rike! US- l.' . f kdilg if Wir , . ISF' r. cm. Soft sel.l Patcher business staff: Tom McFadden, Dave Callahan, Business Manager Doug Fraser, and Ray Zierak mood, however, its heavy copy and photo- graphic problems unfortunately marred mass acceptance. Perhaps the ,64 Purple Patcher differs most with last year's book in pure theory. For in- stance, the 364- edition does not make the campus section a newsreel of the year, inter- spersed with humorous captions and in- jokes. CThe Crusader does as much.j It is just not significant to record what Cross and Scroll speaker spoke in what month. A the- matic presentation would seem to capture the year more meaningfully. And what about the academic life of the College? The 764 Patcher gives Holy Cross, partial raison d'6tre an eight page treatment where it had none before. The activity section is loath to use the standard group pictures which here are reduced. Also each organization is treated critically rather than with general niceties. For these and other reasons this is a diiferent book. The yearbook business at Holy Cross suf- fers from one glaring defect: it has no or- ganization outside the senior class. Every year the Patcher graduates en masse and an untrained and untried group has pI'CCi0uS little time for an unhurried appraisal. There seems to be an exclusive useniorityw abellt the book that prevents the underclassman from gaining any experience-a situation which definitely retards the book. This year a few, but hardly enough, non-seniors were invited on the staff. Editor Paul Mayer. THE CRUSADER Volume XXXIX of The Crusader was a crazy hodgepodge of derring-do journalism: the editor-in-chief resignedg another editor left under protestg the satire issue fThe Crude Satyrj was a blatant violation of good taste and apologies were done, and finally the Cdl tor1al board gave up and publlshed the Crusader as a magazine after a two month moratorlum 1n January of this year The whole affair began with the surprising appolntment of assistant sports edltor J oe Mc GIIIIIISS as top man It 1S unusually rare for a sports writer to s1t at the editor s desk, and even rarer to reslgn after seven ISSUCS But for the sake of greater ISSUCS MCGIHHISS took the wiser course Durlng his short and happy relgn, many changes made the Crusader a more readable Weekly The news department became more lnterpretive under the direction of news edltor Bob Egan fwho also resignedl For centuries the newspaper allowed the most horrendous news copy to appear in its pages An act1v1ty would send in copy full of facts on names, dates and places and th1s often would be prlnted verbatim However, inter pretlve news runs the constant danger of sub Jectlvlty When a Crusader reporter chose to lnterpret a talk on education before the John Colet Society by Dr Paul Schwe1tzer the speaker himself objected to the dlstortlon In a letter to the editor He wrote The Omml si OH of some of mY C0mments gives an effect of slanting, and the changing of wording here and there finadvertent I am surel gives H false tone to my comments and one that l deplore. An editorial admitted uit is all very sticky business, and hoped the Crusader was 'cstumbling along the right pathf' Features editor Phil Nobile added to the plight of Volume XXXIX with his own resignation After some provoklnff Dissent columns and an all around features build up, he qlllt the paper protesting the moderators censorship of a specific piece By the time of the eighth issue, five members of the managing board had resigned The Crusader had been kr1OCkCd off its horse, it remalned the task of Paul Mayer to start the gallop again Mayer Joined the newspaper two montl1S before as Bob Evans assistant He was the only senior on the staff w1th any kind of CK peuence and he employ ed it is ell May er was aided in the news department by KCV111 Roche This latter day editor had never WHY ten for the paper before but he was a coll tant late night X1qltO1 to the office in lone rk May er sufwested that any one up Q e so often would fit nicely into a news or s schedule Tom lllrflexs pitched 111 OI ures and Dfne Hut took oxer for DSW Ryan in sports After in l1llNSElLOll1E' tllllq n the Crusader xx ls oil ind runmnf' Wg 1 e new fum fimslud out the wines Cf ll ICllllllxll1lL stibilllx Ihr IIIIIONIUOU' xodurcd Ill BllkllllllNN truuu mn QP 1 fur mu iou his put in DIN llolf S un 1 ll wlumn up uu r fl if fel, Lord C I . V 0 ' . D 0 . . 7 ' L l . . . , . . . . , , Q - . n D ' 1 . Q. V . Y , , I . . Y V ' : ' . - V . I . W ' S . . V. . Q I ' 1 I' t . . , l l ' Cla ' V r of 5 ' -V no y ' 'V . Ts : J I edit , . ' ' 1 ' . A ' l 1 t - ' - feat g V 1 - - Y. 'C - ' - - X . Y - , 'z . ' . . . L -- ' S ' f t , ' tio , S ' '13 la i 5 ' fm' 1 l Tll , V 1 ' ig 'g - ' It it L . . ' , W'tl 'r z a w :L 1 'T 2' 'll 5 . ' ' im-c - ' it -2' - -- '- X k'f tl , cc . .. . l ' ' Hllil I F Y ' ' 1' Nj 1 , 1 'l X ll- - f l0h's 8f'0il1's Undx- mt-- -Q li nl l l34 ing here gives a e that I all very :der was Features light ol gatiou. mms and quit the nsorslllp -e eiglllll board ocked of Paul monllli 'as The of BX' 'ef WHS . Kevin r Wil' 3 COD' lower up so a news in 01' r Dale ,fansi- again' rneiler ations 6 reef ,Ord if is ss sn T WNx .nr . . . 2 X 5 s is . . 3 XX i 3. xi X X-.xi ' X K X X 1 s s X N il Tix 10 IV WW f .W WW' fd Of se is x - . X X X Q. -+: 'l. i Q ies .- s X , XS --Q 1 as l l Q . l Lord of the Files, Kevin Roche, checks news story for historical perspective. The dissenter, Phil Nobile, strikes out. Pl10l0graphy editor Jim Arpe and layout editor Tom Fogarty c0ll2b0l'Hf6- LCD' 97 ' h 1ssent wit its cryptic humor. Popular reaction was small and ,lim Murphy feven- tual successor to the space with Nadir i wrote to the editor: May I suggest that Mr. Nordloh not be content with being 8f9ths under water but rather treat his readers to a full immersionfl George Kuetemeyer's Cine- ma criticized the screen with some amazing observations. And the editors created a space of their own, Top Drawer Right, for those little bits of information too good to let by: 6'Until 1957 Worcester was the largest indus- trial city in the world away from navigable water. Unfortunately the achievement of the staff was marred by the May satire issue. The editors were quick to contrition and apolo- gized for going beyond uthe bounds of chari- ty and even good journalism. The Crusader bounced back with perhaps its finest issue just before vacation. The insert which was in preparation for over a month contained arri- cles by Mr. Happe, then Director of Drama, by the editor of The Loyola News, Peter Stien- fels, on the Notre Dame Scholastic contro- versy, and a very interesting piece criticizing Holy Cross, A View From the Midstf, which was denied publication in the Purple Patcher by its moderator. The Crusader slowed down a bit at the be- ginning of the new year. It was lively in spots, but the editorials were weak and the 4'Com- mentariesw boring. Phil Nobile was back dis- senting again with the same vitriolic response from his critics. When Nobile's first column catalogued some anon-swingingl' elements of the College, Chuck Jolly charged him with pseudo-intellectual dissent for dissent's sake, which should be expected only from schools without the benefits of a daily Mass, Mamie Reilly, and the Cross and Scroll. But Nobile kept on doing battle with Purple sacred cows and had two columns reprinted in The Yale Daily News and The Moderator. Volume XXXIX of the Crusader stopped its presses November 21st, and did not appear again until the week before exams. The senior editors took that long to produce the Crusader in magazine form. They had planned the magazine over the summer and hoped to in- troduce it much sooner. But a myriad of budgetary problems arose. Finally they had to be satisfied with a one shot try in their last issue. Although the magazine was nicely done, it seemed a wasted effort. The administration could not be Wooed to finance the proposed venture and the junior staff members were not moved. But at least Mayer, lVlcGlew and Roche went out the way they came in-un- expectedly and with flourish. THEE PURPLE In his second issue, Purple Editor Dave Nord- loh stepped out of the literary battlement for a statement: They fthe Purple writersj are not exhibiting just a Catholic or classical pas- sion for the easy well-learned abstract, but rather a deep desire to say something which may either embrace or reject their heritage but which in any case has become a personal commitment. This statement was unneces- saryg but it had to be said for the sake of the perennial antagonists. The Purple has never been a mass magazine and much of the son is mere misunderstanding-too much . IS TCR. expected. Young writers are seldom terribl good writersg few are even tolerable. Ang young critics are less good and less tolerable The only way then for the reader to approach the Holy Cross literary effort is to Suspend judgement. Occasionally a good piece of in. dicative talent will be published, but the three. quarters of a century old Purple still awaits 3 writer of more than quarterly iinpol-tance. The Purple escapists: Assistant Editors Pete Collins and R. B. Millerg Editor Dave Nordloh and Art Editor George Moran. 'fi vw .Qu ,ala ' .VY3 rdf. ',: ' '4 Y' l 15 5 S is i 4' 'sg it v ,fx 4 X , . Yi' 136 4 .Ni i .. was ,, s as fig! r. Ygi-Q 4, ff K Engineer Phil Corbett on WCHC's turntable. WCHC WCHC is the sleeping giant among Holy Cross media. Broadcasting from high up in Fenwick to a potential audience of two thousand, the radio stationis possibilities are immense: Wor- cester radio oilers little to mature listening tastes and 640 seems a logical spot on the dial for the campus masses. This year Station Manager Roger Desautels recognized and ex- ploited WCHC's appeal with appropriate gusto. His timetable of music, news, sports and personality attempted a catholicity in pro- gramming. Just about any sound except rock and roll land George DelVloreJ could be heard from nine in the morning to midnight on WCHC. The late eleven to twelve slot became prime time for the station. After the eleventh hour news and ,l im Gavin's sports commentary, the 137 personality shows took over. Phil Nobile started oil the week with Dissent on the Air. Voted WCHC's most popular show in last spring's poll, N obile's open phone invited open season on anything-moderators, Purple Key, Student Congress. Dave Nordloh interrupted the purple scenery on Tuesday evenings with quip-a-minute mien. Between records, Nordloh would offer up humorous sacrifices like a read- ing of The Holy Cross Story starring Stu Long. Later in the week Don Blanford pan- dered to the folk music afficionados and Pete Collin's jazz was played for the melancholy. Eventually Desautels would like WCHC to go FM. Forms will be sent shortly to the Fed- eral Communications Commission and the proposed Student Union will house the new studios. X NN ess S S MUSIC x0 ax. 'N .N It was the year of Baez, the Beatles, and Bach's Greatest Hits, although no one could quite tell which was to be taken least serious- ly. The caf and corridors throbbed with var- ious shades of music and non-music for the laymen, but for the more-than-laymen there were the Glee Club, the Marching Band, and the Folk Music Club. The Glee Club moved into new quarters in lower O'Kane as the neo-Appalachian music 138 hall was razed to make room for the Faculty Residence and lnfirmary. The squalid atmos- phere did not change the organization. llijw' ever. lts purpose remained that of Slllglng good music well and liking it. RenditionS ranged from Handel to musical comedies. Rnd audiences were everywhere enthusiastic. The members' own satisfaction can bc gauged by the small percentage of drop-outs in om' Of the most demanding extracurriculars on cam- wus. I The Clee Club experience is taxing because its director, Frederick S. Mirliani, expects the Singers to exhibit enthusiasm and energy to match his own. Three rehearsals a week are standard operating procedure. The repertoire this year, though small, was larger than last year's. The Club works on one basic program with enough extra arrangements to provide suitable variety. The Glee Club has another purpose as well: it is a potent force in the public relations work of the College. Its success in this area has been gratifying. Yet this year there were ten fewer concerts than average. Much of this discrep- ancy was due to difficulties in scheduling. And a Western trip was cancelled because of lack of funds. The calibre of work remained high, however, largely through the efforts of Student Leader Dave Nordloh. In recent years one of the most widespread criticisms levelled against the Glee Club stemmed from the lack of performances on cam- pus. This year steps were taken to remedy the problem. The group performed at the Parents' Weekends and the Christmas Banquet in con- junction With the Annhurst Glee Club. Selec- tions from the latter concert were broadcast on Christmas day by Worcester's WAAB. In addition, the traditional spring concert was scheduled again, after a yearis lapse. This year the Paks, led by Ray Guillette, increased their number to a dozen by opening their ranks to juniors. Membership was prized: three-fourths of the candidates had to be re- fused. The Paks, chosen for the blending quali- ties of their voices, practice at least twice a week, besides fulfilling the demands of the Glee Club. Their selections are drawn from many sources in modern music-folk numbers, calypso, Negro spirituals, and standards-sung mostly in four-part harmony. As a part of the Glee Club, the group does about 60'Zp of its work with the Club in its concerts. However, their independent per- formances are several, the group is well known on the college weekend circuit. A highlight of the first semester was a weekend spread between Manhattanville, Marymount, and Duchesne. The second semester included par- ticipation in the College Music Festival in Hartford with similar groups from the Ivy League and its female counterparts. Music, of course, plays an integral part in the liturgy of the Catholic Church. The recent trend toward emphasis on the liturgy has given prominence to the College Choir. Led by Paul Mulready, the Choir assists at eleven ojclock Mass every Sunday, and at noon Mass Tuesdays and Thursdays. Member- ship, while not as selective as in the cases of the other vocal groups, has I1CVCfthele55 Doon Mirliani directs at the Christmas Banquet. Paks, Tenor Nick Parker leans into mike at Freshman Orientation with assist from Phil Dixson. Q x O1 X X X Q S ' Q x I 7 S X NX A f 5 5 .Q fig 0.+' Q x zfs - sf, , , if NPS? i Sw X X 5 .fi f 5 xi? S Q ,P S 'Hi X54 N I fig R Vu W N I 5 A 1 N I i U B! 1 F 1 I 'I Ll Y N1 U E .. il 'I ii I N u E s I U F I P Nm N 1 9 I 1 1 w r , ' ' ' vf ' f I , ,., ' 'f,,', ' rf '1',I--7,1',Tu'-'f,1i7'.'--7',1,t.j',,-.ffr.. gl: 1, .V ,'-5-'. -.3 , ., X S .- . . . X v . , ' . - ,-' r ,,- -- -:I-: -'frf' .-111 in--,:1.,.g':1 '- - f.-K 1,1--g. f ' . nf-1-1 ,. .,. ul , 'X I' x . ' .' A . . V I . ,, . In A. . J., , . . ,, . , l .1 Q L A.L,,.,' fV....L,, i V, 1.1. :V-,.,.-N ,H1,,... . ,, Q, ,V --Z :Zh 1- -V .V ., - , C ,. , , - , , - f . ,--- '1 , - 1 '.-'.i1a .M ' ,' 5'-.fy V-4,111 , .A+-, .J ,,-,L-,Q-:,'..g.f,. :f11.'A-A.-',1,,,-N. .Mn - , .-,- ..,-..-.,.. .- ,- .A- .. ,,.1,,,. . , .. , A ,. . . .- , I - Q94 in-.r -. I 1 D K P 9 I Q 5 6 Director of Drama Mr. Herson reads scene study chart in a calm blocking rehearsal. DRAMA There were those who murmured disconten- tedly about the sometimes different, some- times bearded ones. There were those who slumbered on the opium dream of sport pages and the Daily News. Yet, this year there were those who heard, perhaps for the first time, the bittersweet song of the theatre, the ucele- bration of the nobility of human nature. Rising from an overwhelming apathy for the fine arts, the Holy Cross Drama Society has, miraculously enough, witnessed an exuberant rebirth. The quality and number of student actors have risen sharply, Sunday workshops have been inaugurated with a great deal of success, the physical and technical limita- tions of the Fenwick Theatre have been im- proved extensively, with complete remodeling scheduled for this summer. A unique rebirth such as this has received its dynamism from two men filled with a grand enthusiasm. Without slighting the es- sential element of intense student interest, it must be admitted that without the drive of Mr. Kenneth Happe and Mr. Edward Herson there would have been no theatrical revival. Upon his arrival at Holy Cross in 1961, Mr. Happe immediately took upon himself the task of renewing interest in an activity essen- tial to the complete realization of a liberal arts education-the ritual song, the rhythm of light and shadow, the theatrical dance. The Drama Society, at this time, seemed to be mottled with the illness usually termed 'cstudent apathy. Yet, the root of the prob- lem also extended to the lack of interest on the part of the administration, the faculty, and the Worcester community. In just two years, Mr. Happe accomplished what would have taken four Ph.D.'s, especially trained and hired for this task, five years. Perhaps it was his creative sense, or his technical skill, or his inexhaustible energy that could speed him frenetically from the center of the auditorium to the proscenium to the light board to the loft and to the dressing rooms . . . perhaps it was a combination of all three. At any rate, when Mr. Happe announced last year that he would leave his post and return to Yale to complete his doctoral thesis, Holy Cross had a fairly competent Drama Society, well received by the administration, faculty, various publications, the community, and some students. ln a sense, this was a time of crisis in its rapid evolution. Although Mr. Happe had done a great deal to insure its importance in the collegiate milieu, there was little in the way of an established. tra- dition that it could fall back upon with his departure, for he was the tradition of the Society. After several weeks of canvassing and in- tensive interviewing, a new director, Mr. Ed- ward Herson, was selected. His background work at St. Louis University and his gradu- ate studies in theatre at the University of Illinois indicated that the Society would once again be moved in its progression towards excellence. ln a sense, his selection was tinged with humor. Mr. Happe, developed in the throbbing environment of the New York area, often enjoyed exclaiming: Has any- thing good ever come from west of the Hudson?', Mr. Herson, propelled by the same exuberant, wit-filled psyche, would probably question the existence of the real order east of the Mississippi. His theatrical perspective is enmeshed in the same dedicated ascent to the perfection of the liberal arts tradition. His basic premise which seems to motivate his actions, again, is identical with that of his predecessor: '4That a college dedicated to the arts that make men free could get along without a living theatre is unthinkable. Mr. Herson has quickly recognized the ex- istence of the seemingly concrete-molded block of student apathy. While admitting that the ultimate foundation of this phenomenon has been the typical American lack of in- terest in the fine arts and consequent immer- sion in professionalism, he observes that 'cthe students cannot blame their environment . . . they must now take the responsibility that is theirs. But the responsibility has not been delegated to the student body alone. For Mr. Herson will not content himself with a half- hearted attempt on the part of the Drama Society to communicate what may be the essential truths of free men. The dance and the song, the gesture and aside, the sound and silence, the scenery and lighting and musical accompaniment must function to- gether in perfect harmony. With this deep- seated commitment before them, the mem- bers of the Society have responded success- fully. The labors of this season have been labeled professional by local critics and ob- servers from nearby colleges. The 1963-1964. season opened with Death of a Salesman, the bitter rebuttal of Arthur Miller to the traditional conception of the tragedy as the ritual slaying of the great- souled of noble rank. The intensive demands that realistic theatre places on an actor were, for the most part, successfully achieved. There were no gimmicks, -no surrealistic or absurd conventions which the actors could hide behind. They were equal to the task. Charles Thompson, with the exception of his portrayal of Peter in The Zoo Story rele- gated to Abit parts in past productions, suc- cessfully interpreted the role of Willy Loman which has 'been placed second only to Hamlet in difficulty of execution. While he could not play an old man, Thompson brilliantly evoked the tragic condition of middle age, the feel- ing of a man still potent who senses the for- est burning around him, who knows that none of the connections in Hartford or Boston or New York will come to pay homage at his grave, who knows that the wind and first snow will cover him, who knows that every- one will quickly forget. Willyis wife Linda, the leader of a sort of Greek chorus, Whispering the conscious and unconscious agony of a tortured soul, was portrayed with delicate feeling by ,lean Her. son. Vlfhen the actress originally cast as Linda dropped out of the play the night before the first dress rehearsal, Jean, essentially a dra- matic ingenue, in less than a week took upon I think there's a law in Massachusetts about it .... Willy Lo- man CChuck Thompsonj fears discovery with the Woman from Boston CGloria Slilithyn 144 X hcrsell' with u conhdenl professionalism the dillicull art of the character actress. The roles of the salesniaifs sons, Biff and Happy, were exceptionally well carried by Joseph Santan- icllo and ,lay Helfrick. Santaniellois interpre- tation of the once idealistic quarterback bathed in gold and now soul-sick offspring filled with Wanderlust left little to be desired. Helfrick's portrayal of Willy's salesman-son captured the feeling that he too, unknow- ingly trapped in the idyllic ethic of the men who would sell themselves and their sports equipment to an unfeeling and cold universe, would someday awake entombed in the same absurd sickness unto death. He would be en- tombed in the consciousness of his father that could fearfully and tearfully reflect upon a once spring-green and foolish optimism Better far than any metaphor could ever, ever be. Louisa Cjean Hersonl displays girlish mod- esty against the lyricism of Matt CMike Daceyj in the OH-broadway long run, The Fantasticks. 5 1119 I. 'fix 'Bda 9? z.f'?fQ5'1 .v 3 i A lat, .. .I ,Heli . D Y' is .Q vw 'L ' Q Ning. v ix .ii 4 vi , I 1 s '-Q -4, ,.i ' Tar? fi Q A-S ' . -tl is ,,4t'L?1' ' :Fritz L xr.-X' .vt t. .5511 i . 3 1 a i -fi ,151 7,f..' .1 ,-ff' l . .. ' , ,Am I H A 40' .il 'Ne Bellamy fCMike Stringerj buys a rape with moral support from Huckleby CTom Tebbensj in The F antasticks. The Workshop Theater appeared in November with Anouilh's Becket. Henry IV Uoe McDermottJ dons penitential garb at Conossa. ga y Lg 12' 32? T 1 if H ' 2 i 3 'j Q , ' -ff: 4.., .n.n,,-..-- - - -- . -,,,,Av,g:4L14-WV V , ,Y Y W ' -art... ,.,,,,,,, 1,,, . W ff 5- - r--- --M fc- -- ------ N-...-,.. that could never be realized in his tenement existence. i The supporting cast, usually weak in even small-scale productions, in Death of an Sales- man was uniformly excellent. Thomas Teb- bens fCharleyJ and Roger White fCharley's son Bernardj were perfect foils for the tragic Loman family, for they served as his only friends and cruel symbols of what Willy's life might have been. Philip Nobile fUncle Benj, bathed in green floods, part of Willy's unreal memory, competently evoked the days long since past, when men could go into the jungle thin-pursed and come out rich. It Was his bold Whisperings that propelled Willy in search of a great soul, a nobility that must be his, the whispers that sent Willy screaming to his death. Peter Christelman fHoward Wagnerj , Joseph McDermott fStanleyD, Mrs. Gloria Smith fthe Womanl, Connie Ledoux fMiss Forsythej , and Sue Meyers Uenny and Lettal more than adequately rounded out the cast, and the technical excellence of Denis Williamson's lighting and Sam Krug's stage managing reinforced the tone of profession- alism Which had been captured in less than four weeks of rehearsal. The second fall production, Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt's anti-musical, The Fantas- zicks, made such an impact upon the College that Business Manager Harry Schramm had, for the first time, to Worry about a sellout rather than a half-filled theatre. This delight- ful satire on every literary genre from ro- manticism to realism to the absurd impressed local reviewers so much that they labeled the production 'cprofessional rather than colle- giatefi And, for three nights, the big ugly barn reverberated as if with one long loud laugh. D Michael Dacey and Jean Herson, playing the roles of the Boy and Girl. conformed perfectly to the Romeo-Juliet archetypes. Dacey, with no acting experience behind him. was more than adequate as the young lover. -.... ....,...... .............-....e..c....c.,....... ment even 'Sales- Teb- nrley's ragic only 'illy's Uncle 7illy's days :o the :h. It Willy L must mins oward , Mrs. .edoux ry and nut the Denis L stagC ession- 5 than .es and F'anta-S- 2011059 In had- sellollf ielight' om T05 PICSSC :led the I c0llC' ag loud ,formed betyves' nd him' Even in Othello rehearsal Mike Stringer and Pete Christelman become their characters. continually puzzled with the disturbing prob- lem that uthere is this girl. Jean Herson was the ideal ingenue, swooning in the romantic dream world wrought by Dacey's poetizing. There were, then, this boy and this girlg but there was, too, a wall of lime and mortar mixed, and fashioned by their fathers who, harkening back to the code of Provengal troubadours, felt that love would come quickly with this artificial separation. These courtly Machiavellis were boisterously cari- catured by Thomas Tebbens, wielding deadly pruning shears, and Michael Stringer, fiercely grasping a watering can for his thirsting cumquats. There were, then, this boy and this girl, their fathers and a wall. Enter one omniscient narrator and gallant-Kenneth Moynihan, the manis man, the woman's se- cret beloved, the cynic of cynics, clothed in black from his boots to his hat, with a red silk kerchief clinging sensuously about his neck. Although Moynihan, like Dacey, had never acted before, his soft speech, mellow baritone and ease of gesture held the varied elements of the narrative in a cohesive whole. Every good romance must have a rape, the boy must lose the girl, the 'boy must win the girlg and his triumph must be celebrated with a lawn party. Enter Peter Christelman, an aging thespian, and James Murphy, his com- pany of one half-breed. Christelman, gestur- ing wildly in his cotton long johns, and Murphy, grasping his tattered headdress and groaning, shuddering, and gasping in the throes of a slapstick ritual death, provided the comic highlight of the entire play. Indeed, the Worcester Telegram celebrated their per- 147 fect buffoonery with the claim that they 'cout- keystoned the Keystone Copsf' Slipping si- lently among the protagonists, antagonists, rapists, lovers, half-breeds and cumquats was Denis Williamson, the ever-present Mute who procured all of the props for the production from a hugh black box. Again, the technical aspects of the play were finely woven into the professionalism of each performance. Paul Sullivan's superb lighting became as much a character as any- one on stage, setting up in light, shadow and color the syrupy romance of the first act and the cynical realism of the second. The musical accompaniment, directed by Charles Blanch- ard, created an aura of the simple beauty. and wild bravado that were continuously juxta- posed throughout the play. Between the performances of Death and The Fantasticks, Thomas Tebbens, a quite promising student director, produced a short- ened version of Anouilh's Becket. Art Steele fBecketj and Joseph McDermott fHenry IIJ were outstanding in this existential chronicle of Man, his God, and the Absurd Wind. All of the other roles were also filled by eager and talented freshman apprentices. With the season half over, and the dress rehearsals of Othello starring Michael Strin- ger as Othello, Peter Christelman as the diabolical Iago, and Connie Ledoux as Des- demona coming along quite well, it would seem that the Society has responded to Mr. Herson's challenge of perfection and pro- fessionalism. The evolution of the art that 'fmakes men free has moved forward this year with a grand exuberance. 1 I I ! I I i P 5 s -a x i x 1 1 xx n X s 5 P D it Qi. -it wg. I' A ' 9 5 Z X n , wr ,V V . X., ' x - - 'X X , 'w . ' , N m ' 1 E' V' ax .W 4 U 4 nl 0 - , , V- X 5- , , A W V' 'V - I. .' 'v f 5 V. AV ' . x Vu V V I 6 D .fx x I H. V5 ,www A ,' 2. x. Y 'Q QV ' I V ,WW K 3 5 V fs ' V x V .9 , . ar ' .- . 0 ' 'V 3 . . 'K -. , . .3 f ' ' , U' .Q V A I Vow X N V: VV. VL! f vw R 'Si ' ' I' F, sfff 7 I . . .. J V V Y .. ,s x , .' . A X ,V Q Q ,. . I V ' 4 1 .- -4 D- Y. Z. O I Fl x4 sf' ,,, ull yf 12' .. - -4 if so eq V 4 ,., ,V Q, M F? 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L..-,,--.,- - -,,..:M..v...--...1- x- ' FOOTBALL 4 Many passes never came. igtxpg W' ' in 1 s IX . .IN Sxxteff-s'z At the beginning of every athletic season, the amateur experts sit down and attempt to predict how their favorities will fare. As in everything, there are the optimists and the pessimists. At the outset of the Holy Cross football season, the optimists foresaw suc- cess-as high as an 8-2 season. Their oppo- sites saw failure, predicting as low as 4-6. But as realistic as the pessimists tried to be, none of them could envision anything as bad as 2-6-1, but that was what the fates of football had decided. It was the first losing season for the fall sport since the 1954 record of 3-7. But by the yardstick by which success is measured at Holy Cross, the losing season was not an unsuccessful season, for traditional opponent Boston College was upset in the finale, 9-0. Throughout the season, frustration was ob- vious at every turn, but in the midst of the despair, one man loomed above the others as a consistently fine performer-Captain and center Jon Morris. Others had their good and bad games, but Morris, one of Holy Cross' best linemen in its long football history, could not be disparaged. At the end of the season he was the first draft choice of the Green Bay Packers and the second choice of the Boston Patriots, with whom he eventually signed. Only time can tell how great an influence he will have on the'success of the Patriots, but, as the best offensive center in America in 1963, he will not go unnoticed on their roster. 150 ' Sometirnes holes were there . Buffalo inaugurated the season on a trying and tieing note, and victory went to neither contestant via a 6-6 count. The Bulls brought a record of five consecutive shutout victories into Fitton Field, including their first two contests of the 1963 campaign. The game pro- vided more than one surprise, the most pleas- ant was the play of the members of the HC forward wall, They carried out their assign- ments with unexpected finesse, blocking and tackling at mid-season form. ln the first half, the Bulls were limited to four first downs and but 48 total yards, twice they had to resort to quick kicks to remove themselves from situations deep Within Holy Cross territory. Neither squad was able to register a score in the first three quarters, although each su- stained strong drives which fell short. The visitors, however, drew first blood in the final period when an eight play, 46-yard drive reached fruition. The extra point attempt failed. It appeared that their shutout string would be preserved inviolate, but starring qb John Wheatoii resurrected an heretofore neg- lected weapon, the forward pass, and guided the Purple 89 yards in five plays after the subsequent kickoff. ,lim lVlarcellino tallied the six points when he received a 31-yard pitch from Vffheaton. An attempt for the seventh and decisive point was unsuccessful when the ball bounced harmlessly off the left upright. The play of the opening game provided a confident ll0lC-rlilll that was discordantly Hatred the following week against Syracuse, The Orangemen administered one of the worst defeats ever inflicted on a Holy Cross football team as they ran the Crusaders off the field through a -L8-0 drubbing. The first time the Crusaders had the ball, they advanced to the Syracuse 32, but a fumble abruptly ended this drive. The second time the Crusaders had the ball, they advanced nowhere and a blocked punt-touchdown ended the afternoon. The rout was on. Seven different men scored for the victors, and their superiority in all phases of the game was all too evident. Coach Ben Schwartzwaldefs bag of tricks was a veritable cornucopia and featured a handoff off a full- back pitch that caught the Crusaders looking more than once. The panic button was not pressed, however, for it was the feeling that all bad football had been scourged from the sys- tem of the squad and that the ire of the play- ers at being beaten so badly would spur them on to stronger efforts as the season progressed. But the ubad football theoryi' was proven wrong the following week as a winless Boston University aggregation secured their first and only triumph of the year by an 18-6 margin over the Purple. The first frame did see re- venge footballf, but thereafter, despite a second 'period score by John Wheaton on a three yard rush, the Terriers dominated the game. HC had threatened once in the initial stanza when they penetrated to the opposi- tion's eleven, but an incomplete pass stalled that drive. BU scored first, in the second fifteen minute segment, after recovering a dropped punt on the Holy Cross 25. The half- time seore stood at 6-6, and the ledger read 12-6 at the three quarter mark and 18-6 at the end, Throughout the second half the Cru- sader quarterback 'tested his right arm and found it wanting, but still he used the legs of his backfield mates on only three occasions. The following week the squad whose dream died on the same field of battle a year pre- vious tried to interrupt the dream of their hosts, but Dartmouth was in no mood to be disturbed, and they fought their way to a 13-8 victory. The Holy Cross line rejelled in this losing effort, and the defense was excel- lent, but all that the offense could contribute was a lone touchdown with an accompanying two point conversion. The Green scored first. They had moved to the Holy Cross five yard marker and from that point four tries were theirs for glory. Three plays later and the glory was being given to the defense, but Dartmouth was not to be denied. They aban- doned their running game and in an unor- thodox move utilized the Knute Rockne innovation to score. The clock ticked on in its inexorable way toward thirty and intermis- sion, and the situation became desperate. Poli- castro replaced Wheaton on a fourth and eleven-and passed for a first down. On the 1 A Frustration on the sidelines. . . . and a disappointing one. next play he h1t Jim Gravel on the two and the Junior halfback had a short Journey to success. Not wanting any part of a second tie, Policastro elected to try for the two points and tallied them himself by slashing through the right side. Thus the first thirty minutes. Holy Cross never could quite shift into high gear after their fifteen minutes in the locker room, and most of the second half was played in their territory and mainly consisted of the defensive brand of football. The only points registered in that span were Green as a touch- down pass was ust lofted over the upstretched reach of Ion Morris, and thus victory came to the Indians. The Crusaders returned to Worcester to face a quartet of alumni and their mates from the Quantico Marines. Dr. Anderson pulled a big surprise and started Fran Coughlin at the helm,,. and the junior mite led the Purple to their best effort thus far, although they were defeated 7-6. The first half was score- less as HC contained their visitors' ground attack, but they were themselves unable to infiltrate the enemies' goal, although they did manage to reach their four yard stripe on one occasion. After a Marine field goal at- tempt fell short, at the start of the second half, Coughlin reared back and hit ,lim Gravel on the HC 40, and the speedster raced to the Quantico six before he was overhauled from behind. Four plays later and the Crusaders had a six point bulge, resulting from another Coughlin-to-Gravel aerial. The extra point at- tempt was wide, and thus matters stood. The Marines, however, refused to be humiliated by the artistry of this little signal caller and proceeded to inaugurate a sustained drive of their own. Using ex-Penn State fullback Dave Hayes on line smashes for most of the yard- age, qb Tom Singleton slowly and deliberately guided a seventy yard sustained drive that was culminated when he followed a bevy of blockers into the end zone The k1Ck for the extra point was successful and once again the Crusaders found themselves on the short end of a score. They did not want that situa- tion to remain, however, and Coughlin started throwing again. The march reached the Marine thirty, but, on a fourth-and-two situa- tion, a quick flat pass was dropped, and the Leathernecks were relieved to take over and run out the clock. Thus is was mid-season, and the record stood at O-4-1. The student body was disap- pointed, and cries were raised from vociferous undergraduates that heads must roll, notably those of the supervisory personnel. The Wildcats of Villanova came next, and they also Won next, defeating Holy Cross 22- 14. The Purple amassed a fourteen point lead in the first half but then Watched as this was whithered away by a combination of Vil- lanova alertness and their own mistakes. HC dominated the statistics, but the only thing that counts is what the scoreboard has to say. Coughlin scored all of the Crusader points, but end Dick Kochansky ate up most of the yardage. on the scoring drives via his pass receptions, ten in all for the day. Near the end of the first half, the 'Cats tallied their first marker, and the end was added in the drastic four minutes after intermission. The opening kickoff was returned 99 yards down an unguarded sideline, and, when the sub- sequent Villanova kick was dropped by a Purple receiver, the victors took advantage of the situation and completed their only pass of the afternoon for their third and winning touchdown. These opening minutes completely demoralized Holy Cross, and they were never able to mount another effective attack. The defense, albeit with two lapses, limited VMI to three first downs, and the offense, sparked by Coughlin's two TD tosses to Kochansky and a .lim Gravel two-point re- ' pw. X 'aff ' ' Aw. , . 1 X .K xv'X'59zM-Sxilvl W w I .. sf 3 . I g s'l::s1n-n-mpg, Qvnnnnuir inning xqnua ' ' S S can x ,A xxxx 1- Q xy - L.--- . Sf 'aff Q K xxx X vf.v '. Q ww X. w iw. f NN sf fx- x , 'inn-nf' X . X x x Q , K 'X - x NN ,NX ,mn 1 NNY' .Al- , S l X XSY K Awww-QW Rx 'v X L4 . W x E SN X 'X' x . -X ww wXNg 1 x Q xxx xx S 1 1 X ' X QNQK X ww N , NX 4 5 ' Q 7 Q S A y wk SW N ew 'N-P 'N N 4 4 . Q. A X Q',-' I x x Hxulx N U 3 GX x . f' 4 5 'f5?4f , . X64 -4 .f .Q '4 A X fs I I K I I Ii il ' Q I f 'K gf ' - xx .- 'L A114 4 'NN -: H X- 1 . ax- ! x 1 , , . , . .K . ? ' D - .. K 4 K, X s x.X. w N I 1? 1 i f x lv wi?- A I ' ' fcxgiik S ' 'x , N' . .y - X N 'X na-sfg' 'x 1 ' nf' ' - 'U ,' s . ,ga 'VL W - -Q. Y -035035 SS-TW. X ' ' ka A Q9 .Rm f x K' . x . R N M X' Aaxfxix Q. ,f. SYM. K W L 3, Q- 4.1 AQ .-4 FJ .' If l--x ae .,, ,ga A pu is if -e fr pf 3513 Q I 1 I i i r X 5 ,AWWMFWW Jim Gravel, behind some fine blocks, cuts into the open. Six Marines vs. one Crusader. Reserve guard Charlie Tarasiewicz inter- cepted an errant aerial four plays later and streaked forty lines down the sideline to finish the scoring for the afternoon. Thus a 1-6-1 slate and the reasons prof- erred by a small coterie of students for hold- ing an impromptu lynching party of an in- animate representation. But there was still one game to play-the traditional season finale against the Eagles of Boston College. BC journeyed to Worcester with a 6-2 slate, and they were favored by from ten to fourteen points. They had Jack Concannong they had justified confidenceg they had female cheer- leaders . . . FOOTBALL SCORES 6 Holy Cross Buffalo 6 48 Syracuse Holy Cross 0 18 Boston University Holy Cross 6 13 Dartmouth Holy Cross S 7 Quantico Marines Holy Cross 6 22 Villanova Holy Cross 1-L 14 Holy Cross VMI 12 28 Penn State Holy Cross 1-L 9 Holy Cross Boston College 0 s inter- rr and inf? to V proi r I1old- an in- Qill one Enak re. BC ie. and Jurteen ey had cheer I 110 6 DSS 0 DSE 6 DSS 8 ass 6 use 14 NH 12 0 14 0 .. C7 ,ce if wkw X G'-., W fff' , -f ' Mm , , 449, 4, .- ,A ,. ,, fl, ,ff 1 ' ' '9 Z , -51,1 VV 35,1 , 4 , M fr wx 1 , X W N g,, 3l N Y A Q KW XXX 'X ew xvf A muddy game for mighty men's muscles in a set scrum. RUGBY The Hedgling Holy Cross Rugby Club has been making rapid advances toward national recognition. In its brief history the club has scored impressive victories over such estab- lished units as the Boston Rugby Club, Har- vard, and Brown. The end of the spring season last year saw the graduation of top forward Dennis Golden and several other key club members who had led the team to a fine 9-4-1 record. This fall hopes for the outcome of a rugged schedule had fallen somewhat. Under the lead- ership of Captain Ed Hagerty, however, a spirited, well-disciplined Crusader team quick- ly developed into a formidable outfit. First year man John Mauer and kicker Tom Mul- ss? cahy provided an effective scoring punch, while Pete McGuirk and Bob Healing supplied line strength. By mid-season, the team sported a 3-1-1 record. Credit for the organization and improve- ment of the squad must be awarded to the men themselves whose only rules for condi- tioning were self-made. The club's president, Chris 1VlcGratty, worked incessantly on the teamis behalf but his efforts were for the most part unpublicized. The team ended up the fall season with a 7-3-1 record. The determination shown by the ruggers throughout the year and the addi- tion of several gridders to the squad augurs well for the spring season. Front row: Walt Eisen, John Cordon, Dane Coodfellow, Pete Jaques, Jim Hanson, John Polk, Joe Nicholson, Tom Meehan, Larry Hobbs, Jim Callahan. Second row: Mike Kil- lion, Mike Desmond, Mike Keyes, Larry Broglio, Tom Mulcahy, Reg Ballantyne, Phil Sul- livan, Jack McKenna, Bob Healing, John O'Brien, Tom McFadden, John Mauer. Third row: Mark O'C'onnell, Jim McBride, Harry Leent, Steve Bowen, Mike Buckley, Jay Shee- han, John Leary, captain Ed Hagerty, Bill Butler, John Tully, Pete McCuirk, Jim King, .lim Cerwin, Neal Bente, Chris McCratty. 2 Q I .. fig X- Q . lb Xx 1 x XX SN Ax X X V' FN r u .F 1 W 'Z' .15 4 1 f . I. 1 1 5- Nxpfg QF a 5 -M1 A .. 4. i fi .QW q 25 5 ft 1 1 11' e., ' - 1 Li 1 V 4 I y 1 s . W w I I 'r Becht snares a rebound. have never beaten Holy Crossl came the 'gdowni' of a loss to Seton Hall. The Pirates headed Holy Cross only five times throughout the game, but the fifth time was the only one that mattered. HC had the ball and a two point defecit with seventeen seconds left, but an attempt by Lloyd Hinchey to add five minutes to the game was blocked. I Losses to Yale and Detroit, the latter in the Motor City Tournament, played the bread role around a jelling conquest of UMass. The Elis had too much hustle off the boards and Holy Cross too little between the boards to give Yale a quite convincing victory. John Wendelken came through with 344 points as the Crusader attack was unified and the high- ly-regarded Redmen bowed in defeat. ln De- troit, the Titans utilized rebounding superior- ity and torrid hands to race to a fifteen point half-time advantage. Although Holy Cross overcame their first half coldness and tallied 45 in the second half, Detroit succeeded in adding one to their intermission margin. Holy Cross emerged with third place in the Motor City Tournament by downing Western Michigan as Wendelken and Greg Hochstein hit when it mattered to give Holy Cross some breathing room. WM had drawn within two midway through the second halfqafter being behind by ten at the twenty minute mark. The seesaw was remounted, however, and wins over Dartmouth and AIC alternated with de- feats by URI and Dartmouth. The last never should have happened. A Lloyd Hinchey basket was missed by the official scorer, which Front row: Bud Knittel, John Wendelken, Tom Jordan, Ward Becht, co-captain Pat Gallagher, co-captain Joe Kelly. Rear: Coach Frank Of- tfillg, Jim Cu.:-ran, Greg Hochstein, John Hayes, Matty O'Connor, Lloyd Hinchey, Tom Mounk- hall, Richie Murphy, John Sullivan, nlanager Norbert Knapp. . . .TS N .l -Xiu' 4. -5 vs teflgj. DOT' 1 Lf... ALE! ' -l'1. ' ..x...Q-Q lefl lj v .n. in the ester: hstez: some n two being Q. The ning th de- never nchey' wl1lCl1 . Tom agher. - Of- ayes. Iounk- tnager t uoultl liave given IIC the victory by Ong tmlttl- lloly Cross never should have let the Crt-en eonie within twenty in what has to be regarded as the blaekest spot of the season. The two teams from Boston took the bus forty miles up to W0l'CCSt61', but their rides back must have seemed quite a bit longer. lill. ranked second in New England at the time. lost in the longest game ever played in the Worcester Auditorium. It took four over- times before the court could be cleared and the lights turned out. The Terriers' Randy Cross poured 41-elf points through the orange circle. but this was not sufficient to offset the team performance displayed by the Purple. W'endelken7s clutch shooting, a Ward Becht tip-in, and the defense of Bud Knittel all con- tributed to the ulcer-producing victory. BC looked as if Bob Cousy had brought the wrong team-his junior varsity-in a Crusader rout. Holy Cross jumped off to a quick 18-8 bulge, and the Eagles were never able to draw any closer than seven throughout the remainder of the contest. At that point John Sullivan and a possessed Lloyd Hinchey sparked a 23-4 advantage to send the game beyond reach. Jim Curran produced eleven of Holy Cross, last 13 points, not missing on three shots from floor and five from free stripe. At Madison Square Carden Holy Cross bowed to an altitudinous aggregation from NYU. Barry Kramer and Happy Hairston were literally too much for the Crusaders- about four inches so-and their rebounding strength caused a sad trip across the street at gameis end. But just then, as NIT talk began to fade into nonreality, Holy Cross started Winning consistently. First it was Assumption. The Greyhounds had a 12-0 slate coming into the Auditorium, but nature and Holy Cross abhor vacuums, so that zero was changed to one. Assumption played a fine game and pulled to a ten point advantage with only 11:00 remain- ing, but an uninterrupted 13-point Crusader streak with Richie Murphy in the pivot gave Holy Cross the momentum to break their Crosstown rivals' spirit. The boards told a Purple story in this game, and Murphy and Knittel each had fifteen to pace a 69-57 ad- vantage. This was the only regular season loss suffered by Assumption, which ended the year ranked as the number two small college team in the country. Sullivan drives the lane. Hinchey fouled by Austin- 7 A W xx 1 ,W ' ' Cf 'V W , JW f N Xsh x f X G x 1,vr,., 1 40011, , A xii ww I ff , ,V , ' ' f fffii gf gk 021.55 ,,:, 01 ,JW , ,. 1.-.TG 'nga 1 4, M er ,f . , X Sm, Vf if ? f X x BASKETBALL SCORES Holy Cross St. Michael,s Seton Hall Holy Cross Holy Cross St. Anselm's Ya e Holy Cross Holy Cross UMass Detroit Holy Cross Holy Cross Western Michigan Holy Cross Dartmouth Rhode Island Holy Cross Holy Cross AIC Dartmouth Holy Cross BU Hol Cross Boston College Holy Cross Assumption Springfleld UConn A UConn Georgetown BC Holy Cross Holy Cross Fairfield lken goes low to lut Hinchey. X ue, 'edt HO Hotilif with 2 ful 562 and fl Ulfe O Nev partia Agsocl Sltf 51 burdel thgmsn Aftf 10-5 W the P Worce was S1 icemel by On Clark Purple The outcon Althot in teri ellorts mitted the ne Purple Rid? Holy 1 ton Str Crusac ing. 9- The the le sv 11 has le S X in Pram E k Rig Q HOCKEY Hockey returned to the Crusader sports scene with a new coach. subsidation and a succes- ful season. Preseason optimism was borne out and the line showing augurs well for the fu- ture of the sport at Holy Cross. New coach Mel Masucco was able to gain partial support for the team from the Athletic Association. Although it was not made a var- sity sport, hockey lost most of the financial burden which had been paid by the players themselves. After inaugurating the campaign with a 10-5 victory over Worcester Junior College, the Purple could only gain a 3-3 tie with Worcester Tech. The middle of the schedule was spiced with four straight victories. The icemen proved their class by winning three by one goal margins. After conquering the Clark contingent with ease the embattled Purple upset league leader Burdette 2-1. The Christmas layoff did not affect the outcome of HC's first contest of the new year. Although the Crusaders enjoyed a Wide edge in territorial play, only the alert defensive efforts of Ted Carey and E. J. Welch per- mitted them to defeat Nichols, 6-5. Dean was the next opponent to fall before the streak- Purple six, losing 2-1. Riding the crest of a four game Win streak, Holy Cross Went into a tail spin against Bos- ton State and the Harvard Junior Varsity. The Crusaders made creditable efforts before los- ing, 9-5 and 6-1, respectively. The 1964- campaign ended with an upset in the league playoffs at the hands of Nichols, 3-2. Thus it was, but behind them the team has left a legacy for future hockey at HC. HGCKEY SCORES 10 Holy Cross Worcester Junior 5 3 Holy Cross Worcester Tech 3 6 Clark Holy Cross 3 2 Holy Cross Burdette 1 Holy Cross Nichols 5 Holy Cross Dean Junior 1 Holy 5 Holy 1 Holy 2 Holy 2 Holy 2 Holy 2 Front row: John Bruch A d McElane Don Morrissey, Al Kearney, Mike Addessa, Dick Cragg, Fred Macchi, Jack Hodges, ,Ioe Trombley n Y ya , Back row: Dan Colemail, Paul Doyle, Terry Doyle, Jim Lally, Dave Hession, Bob Moran, Ted Carey, captain E. J. Welch, Ferd Ke y red Macchi, coach Mel Masucco. SWIMMING The Holy Cross swimming squad featured several record breakers but a losing record in nine winter encounters that netted a 4-5 slate. The two highlights include, oddly enough, a win and a loss. The victory was that over Tufts, always one of New England's best, while the loss was by a narrow margin to U- Mass, a long-standing swimming power house. Senior co-captains Jeff Bandrowski and Tom Monahan were the steadying, consistent influences on the team, and they had excellent support from sophomore newcomers Pat Dietz, Tom Foley, and Bob Somma. Foley joined with junior Frank Bongiorno to give Holy Cross ua strong individual medley combination, while Dietz and Somma sparkled in the free style sprints. Bandrowski in the 200 yard free style and the 200 yard butterfly and Monahan in the 500 yard free style led the quartet that eclipsed past HC standards. Dietz was per- sonally -responsible for three new records, in the 50, 60, and 100 yard free style, while Foley broke the 200 yard individual medley mark. Diver Flash Gordon was a consistent winner, losing only once in his senior year. SWIMMING SCORES Catholic U 87 HC 68 50 Manhattan 58 Holy Cross 54 UMass 54 Holy Cross 53 Holy Cross 49 Worcester Tech 67 Southern Conn. St. Peter Holy Cross Babson Holy Cross WIC Tufts Holy Cross Holy Cross Ted Rippert in the free style. l grant row: Co-captains Tom Monahan, Jeff Bandrowski. Second row: John Cordon John McDermott, Marty O'Malley Ian ousa, Ted Rippert Frank Bongiorno Joe Hegenbart H h Shi I h J h C , l M ' ,' Third row: Walt Eisen, Chris O'ConneIl, Mike Keiser, :I'orri1gFoley.e S, coac 0 n arro i manager arvln Devoei Pat Dietz' .' ',-rf-. FEI Aften surre- of Cl: ker a the e thong they Han and At so R with con the STCSS N 001111 team iec Iaugl Of rl adol flutes In Ns' 91 6, Pete Perie is Co latte, of If r .rf N if FENCING After one year in the grave, fencing was re- surrected first semester under the leadership of Chuck Reagan. With the help of Nick Par- ker and lay Staflier, ucoachw Reagan taught the elements of fencing to fifteen novices. Al- though they began scheduling late in the year, they did manage to arrange matches with Harvard, Brandeis, Bradford-Durfee, MIT, and Trinity. At last the nasty word had to be spoken, so Reagan went before the Student Congress with a plea for funds. Stu Long immediately contributed an emergency grant on behalf of the Outing Club. After due process, the Con- gress also allotted a generous loan. Now fully equipped, they Were ready to COInpete-almost. They lacked only an epee team. Paul Coughlin learned the specialized technique of epee fencing out of a book, then taught the rudiments to the other members of the team. Before Christmas vacation the adolescent team, respectably equipped and questionably trained, journeyed to Harvard. III winning a moral victory I although losing 21'6l, five men who had never before com- Peted Won individual bouts against the ex- perienced Crimson fencers. Since the team IS composed of seniors and freshmen only, the latter are being groomed to take over the job Of teaching next year's team. Fencing, the Oldest sport at Holy Cross, has been reborn. - '.:. 1 fa-,,,,ag-.u.4s.,.. .. . WRESTLING The Holy Cross Wrestling Club ended its sec- ond year with a disappointing 0-2-1 record and an equally disappointing lack of recogni- tion and support by the AA. Founded, coached and captained by Ken Brennan, the club scheduled matches with BC, Emerson and Brandeis. The Eagle squad, afforded full recognition and a coach, revenged their previous year's loss to Holy Cross by a 28-7 count. The match took place immediately after Thanksgiving, and the 'untutored Crusaders were not in the best of shape for the revenge-minded Eagles. The1'20-20 Emerson tie was achieved when Greg Smith pinned his opponent in the un- limited weight class. The 21-11 loss to the Judges. was a humiliating experience, since it was their first win in intercollegiate wrestling. Throughout the season the club grappled with several problems, including equipment shortage and a lack of suitable practice space. But wrestling has achieved a start. Only men who are willing to keep themselves in condi- tion and to practice daily can givethis most grueling of sports the status it deserves at Holy Cross. Ken B'rennan's attempted escape from referee's position is countered by Ray Traver. Front row: Dick Keenan, Pete Benotti, Ron Bernard, Lee Freedheim. Back row: Mike Terry, John Leary, Greg Smith, Ray Traver, captain Ken Brennan. Not pictured: Bob Clare, Tom Gilliam, John Zaia. N l T l tial Fie of Thi any incl Col soli 3.6 tool ond inte sopf witl plac Bill tean T opel by z nine undn start was mini soph close heel: and sixte ing are was to ow- Tl: when lake rowa a fe spgt mo Hrst tion is roume, TRACK Fall brings falling leaves and football to Fitton Field, but it also brings out the hardiest breed of Purple tracksters-the cross-country men, This year's edition had a so-so 2-2 slate, but any season in any sport is a success when it includes a victory over the Eagles of Boston College, This went to the HC harriers by a solid 24-37 margin. BC's Phil Jatris won the 3.6 mile event, and the Maroon and Gold also took a third, but Rob Clarke grabbed off sec- ond place and his teammates filed over un- interruptedly from fourth to ninth places. The sophs did most of the scoring for the victors, with Clarke, Bill McDonald, and Bartolini all placing up high, sandwiched around Captain Bill Facey's fifth place finish. This was the team's first win in three attempts, however. The thin-clads had dropped the seasonls opening meet to a powerful Providence squad by a 15-50 score, getting shut out of the first nine finishers. The Friars had two meets under their belts, along with a month's head start in the practice department. Captain Facey was the first Crusader to cross the line, a minute behind the winner in tenth place. The sophomore brigade followed him home very closely with Clarke and Bartolini right on his heels in eleventh and twelfth and McDonald and McPhee close behind in fourteenth and sixteenth. The Friar's practice schedule, open- ing back in August when all good Crusaders are savoring the last few weeks of summer, was too much of a head start for the Purple to overcome. The same sad tale prevailed five days later when Holy Cross traveled to Springfield to take on the Gymnasts. The good guys nar- rowed the count a little this time, picking up a few of the higher spots for a 19-36 final. Bobby Clarke paced the Purple team over the four and a half mile course with a fourth place, only twenty seconds behind the Winner. Again '66 showed the way. Besides Clarke, McDonald in sixth, Bob Bartolini with a sev- enth, and Walt McPhee at the number nine spot showed well. Bill Facey chased the young- sters home, finishing tenth. Back at home on friendly Pakachoag, the now Well-hardened Crusaders made BC their first victim. Everyone improved his times in this satisfying win and bettered them again in the season's finale vs. UConn. Holy CIOSS placed seven of the first ten finishers as the 25-34 win evened out the season's record. Bill Facey led the Crusaders home with a third place finish, but Bartolini, Mathews, Racine, McDonald, McPhee and Bergin all slipped in with the first ten. The 1963-64 indoor track season opened OH an auspicious note at the K of C meet in Bos- f0I1 with an impressive win in the two mile Bob Credle hits the wire in anchoring the mile relay to a victory in the NEAAU. 169 aaa-f... W fp! - -,av-'cf .- .' -. -4-fi 9- 1-W - .if - ' 1 1 .-fvf. 3 o w ,fi- V l I I l .l l w 1 l -.. ..,, relay. The pace did not hold and due to muscle which was won by the unbeatable Hayes of 1 pulls and other assorted aches and pains, I ones. 600 especially Co-Captain Lorin Maloneyis foot From here the team shuffled off to Madison mill fracture, HC had its troubles on the rest of Square Garden for the Millrose Games. ln I1 the winter Circuit, New York the two relay teams improved their gay. Maloney suffered a hairline fracture of a times by a couple of seconds, but to no avail. in f bone in his foot the day after Christmas and The two mile team was nipped by the same thir wore a cast until the middle of February. Brown team they had beaten in Boston, de- leap Thus Bart Sullivan had to shake off the loss spite a brilliant 1:52.7 anchor leg by Bartolini as 5 of his captain and dip deep into his bag of who nudged out Harvard's runner for second. 100 coaching experience to mould a winner. After The mile relay had HC in a fast heat with Bari many times trials and hours of practice, Villanova and Manhattan. Although Co-Cap- Wal Sullivan came up with a team of three sophs tain Dick Maiberger, R. B. Miller, Bill Hack C and a junior-Bill McDonald, Bob Bartolini, and Chris Shea ripped off a fast 3:21.5, they , in 1 Walt McPhee and Bob Credle. With these could do no better than third. Kevin 0'Brien, y Spee four and Kevin O,Brien, Holy Cross' Mister this time high-jumping, almost made it a 1-2 1 incl Versatility, Sullivan invaded Boston Carden finish for Tom Duffy-trained high jumpers. l hih for the curtain raiser-the K of C meet. The He barely missed at 6' 10 , which would have relay foursome avoided numerous trallic ams given him a second behind John Thomas. As mile in the big field to come out on top, leaving it was the Holy Cross record holder went over d Brown, URI, Northwestern, Providence and easily at 6' S . an 4 Harvard in their wake. The mile team didn't Back in New England the next week the ' a W fare as well, although they were in against thin-clads regained their winning form with a WZS faster competition, finishing behind Morgan bang, waltzing away with the NEAAU crown. S in State and Maryland State. Kevin O'Brien was The Crusaders scored a fat 31M points, 14- term in against the best in the 45 yard high hurdles more than their nearest competition. Bob coml and showed enough for a fourth in the event Credle won the award as outstanding athlete ' N33 First row: Tom Comerford, co-captain Lorin Maloney, assistant coach 'Tom DuHy, coach Bart Sullivan, co-captain Rich Maiberger, Bob 1 Shua Bartolmi. Second row: Bob Clarke, Tim Racine, Bill Hack, Gerry Colbert. Third row: Bob Credle, R. B. Miller, Brian Flatley, Walt McPhee, must Chris Shea: Fourth row: manager Lester Lovier, Larry Lague, Kevin O'B'rien, Pete Seward, Mike Hannan. Fifth row: Dick Lague, Bill Facey, qual- Mlke Scolllns, Bob Swanton. Sixth row: Don Gallagher, Gary Santini, Bill McDonald, Jim McGuire, Bill Sullivan.. cred team with breai tllOl1j Pie, shori after cover In pionl were self tefll an name Fbllfv. ni if Dirk l4u.Bili. of the meet due to his walk-away win in the 000 and his swift anchor leg on the winning mile relay team. In the field events. muscular Mike Harman gave the Cross a good start with three points in the shot-put. Richie Maiberger snatched a third in the broad jump, and Kevin O,Brien leaped 6' 6 to win the high jump. Witli this as a starter, the boardmen rolled it up. The 1000-yard race was all Holy Cross, as Bob Bartolini just nipped teammate and classmate Walt McPhee for the medal. Credle hung up a new record of 1:1436 in the -600-yard run as he turned on the speed and pulled away from the crowd. The irrepressible Mr. O'Brien then followed up his high jump win with a third in the hurdles. To finish up in grand style, the Crusader mile relay team of Maiberger, Hack, Seward, and Credle rolled to an impressive victory in a twenty team field. Credle, running anchor, was a close second when he got the stick. Showing no effects of his earlier record-shat- tering 600, he again ran away and hid on his competitors. Back for another shot at New York in the NYAC Games, Bart Sullivan was forced to shuliie up his relay team a bit because of muscle pulls suffered by Chris Shea, his best quarter miler, and Bill Hack. By moving Credle and Bartolini down from the two mile team, Bart felt he had a good combo to race with Villanova and Georgetown. A tough break put the Crusaders out of the chips though. Bartolini, running third for the Pur- ple, had the baton knocked out of his hand shortly after taking the pass. He scrambled after the elusive stick, but by the time he re- covered it the race was over for Holy Cross. ln the Carden again for the NAAU cham- pionships, line performances by HC athletes were drowned in a welter of talent. Bob Credle started off well in the 600, beating world record holder George Kerr in the trial heat. Credle ran into tough luck in the finals though, as .lay Luck tripped Credle and him- self at the first turn. Both watched the rest of the race, captured by Charlie Buchta, '63, running for Quantico. Kevin O'Brien fell vic- tim to .lohn Thomas again, finishing fifth despite a fine 6' 7 leap. In the winter's first dual meet, Harvard proved to be too much in every department for the Crusaders, taking eleven firsts in thir- teen events. Only Pete Seward in the 600 and the mile relay team prevented a shutout by the lohnnies, who rolled to a 75-32 count. The same sad story prevailed when the Pur- ple forces journeyed to Brownis spacious Held- house. The Crusaders could muster only four iirsts in losing to the powerful Bruins by a 65-35 score. Kevin O'Brien in the high hur- dles, Walt McPhee in the 1000 with a spar- kling 2:l5.7, and liquid Bob Credle in a cage Xia. Lorin Maloney darts forwardg R. B. Miller looks back Kevin 0',B'rien goes over for a third in the IC4-A's O HC vs. Morgan State in the IC4A mile relay. record 1 :12.3 600 were the only runners to grab a first, while Mike Hannan took the final one in the shot. ' After a spectacularly successful winter season 11962-63l led by Captain Charlie Buchta, the Purple track team was forced to do without this brilliant performer for the en- tire spring. Buchta's fantastic versatility was sorely missed in the dual meets, as the Cru- saders could picklup only one win, against Dartmouth, while losing four and tieing Brown. In the season's opener against UMass, then soph Kevin O'Brien put on the kind of show he had made habitual in his freshman year. Kevin won his specialty--the high jump -and both hurdle events and took third place in the broad' jump. Rich Maiberger was an- other one-man show, taking the 220-yard dash and seconds in the 100-yard dash and the broad jump. Lorin Maloney with a first and a third, and a 1-2-3 sweep in the discus, engi- neered by Colbert, Lombardo, and Pellgrini, were the only other high spots in the 73-62 loss. Colbert's 149 foot throw broke his own meet- record of a year's duration. The Purple came a little closer to a victory near the end' of April with a 70-70 tie at Brown. The big feature of this encounter was soph Carl Pellegrini's school record discus throw. The former National High School Champ unloaded a 157' 7M heave to break Tom Henehan's 1960 record. Richie Mai- berger pulled a triple to lead the HC scorers, winning both dashes and the broad jump, while Kevin O'Brien survived an upset in the high jump by teammate Kevin Rick to pile up two wins and a second, besides combining with Mailberger, Maloney, and Noering for a relay win in the last and tying event. Against always-potent Harvard, a team com- ing olf 100 point victories over Dartmouth and Princeton, the Cross came out on the short end of an 88-61 margin. The Johnnies 172 sWCPl th' to Put th bers? a firils 111 ' Malollef fast 51.1 313589 mile felaj The O1 the Indi1 wiLh15li cisi0I1- ll 2wm2 contribul wh? 0 0'Brien 1 and Carl Earlier his Medf ination rl he took tl Back 1 Prom Wi before a 6966. 0 machines three evel record oi Kevin we events, sc 120 high place med ln the 1 nine of f Card. ,lac his now Carl Pelle ers from ein nm While the bles of th the only lhoroughl Well HS th. But thi. light swii England i pionghips Picked ul beige! na Uilluted , lllllrien il In th look Word in 0 lm balnltn t ckmen ideals' Fl C Cms.n- l llmad . 24, snlljr r lgllnsl xl wlhvhn :rm of llnnm I Suppl the jgiwlin, hginninii' :intl lwoqjjjll- I-lm to put the ki1'llSiltlt'l'S in ai lunl way. ltit-It hlni- lxtxrticl' again piled up the points with three tirsts in the dalshcs and broad jump, and Lorin jlalnnev took his third consecutive -t--1.0 in 3 fast 51.11 clocking. Toni Nocring craslicd out ti 1153.0 win in the S80 and anchored the two- mijc rt-lay tt-3111 to an easy win. The only win of the season came against the Indians of llartniouth. Rich hlaiberger yyjth 1014 points led the squad to a 76-64 de- cision. Maiberger won the 100 in 9.7, the Q20 in 21 fiat and the broad jump and also contributed the first leg of the winning mile relay. Other multiple winners were Kevin O'Bi-ien in the high jump and the 120 highs and Carl Pellegrini in the discus and shot. Earlier that morning Maiberger had taken his MedCATs, but the long grind in an exam- ination room didn't seem to bother him once he took to the cinders. Back to Fitton Field for a sunny Junior Prom Weekend, the Purple forces bit the dust before a balanced Springfield team by a close 69-66. O,Brien and Maiberger, the scoring machines, turned it on again. The latter won three events for the fourth time, setting a meet record of 10.1 for the century in the process. Kevin went him one better by winning three events, setting a meet record of 15.2 in the 120 high hurdles and tucking away a second place medal besides. ln the final dual meet of the season BC won nine of Hfteen events on the White Stadium card. Jack-of-all-trades Kevin O'Brien pulled his now habitual triple plus a second, and Carl Pellegrini prevented BC's George Desnoy- ers from topping Kevin with four wins. Pelle- grini nudged Desnoyers out in the discus while the BC strongboy was making a sham- bles of the rest of the weights. But these were the only bright spots of the meet, as BC thoroughly dominated the running events as well as the weights. But things abruptly changed when the spot- light switched from dual meets to the New England intercollegiate track and field cham- pionships at Orono, Maine. The Crusaders picked up six first places, with Rich Mai- berger nailing down two of them. He also con- tributed a second place finish to the cause. OiBrien in the high hurdles, Torn Comerford in the lows, and the frosh medley relay also took firsts. The frosh set a New England meet record in the process. When the IC4-A's came in June, the Purple tFHCkmen piled up their highest point total in years. Eleven points were hung up by Holy Cross, led by Rich Maibergeris first in the broad lump, setting a new school record of 24 6 in the event. Kevin O,Brien was up against the best in the high jump and l1iS 6' 6 effort netted him a third. The mile relay team of Noering, Maiberger, Credle, and Maloney also took a third with a swift 3:12.7. Front row: Pete O'Brien, Pete Carton, Pete Kiernan, Bill Pizzi, Dave Ryan. Back row: Derm Gately, Charlie Parker, John Hurley, coach Nick Steele, Dick Byrne, captain Dave Bernardin. Pete O'Brien serves TENNIS p The 1963 Holy Cross tennis team must be classed with the best Crusader squads in many a year. After an impressive opening victorys over Babson, the racketeers fell to an excellent Springfield outfit, 8-1. But from that point on the team was unstoppable, winning its next eleven matches to end the season with a fine 12-1 record. Captain Dick Bernardin teamed with his number one and two singles players, Pete O'Brien and Dick Byrne, to give the Cross some of the best tennis played in New Eng- land. The streak included several well-played victories over favored opponents. Among these, the 5-4 triumphs over UlVlass and Trinity, both Eastern standouts, were partic- ularly satisfying. Throughout the year, Pete Carton and Dave Ryan more than held their own against stiii' singles competition, while Charlie Parker, Bill Pizzi, Dermot Gately, and Pete Kiernan pro- vided excellent doubles play, frequently over- coming the underdog label. The final victory 174 of the season, a 6-3 setback of Tufts, indicated that the team's momentum was still high and gave promise of another successful season this spring. In addition to the return of most of the key players from last year, Doug Fraser, Paul Freeman, and John Hurley are expected to add further depth and potency. TENNIS SCORES Holy Cross Babson 0 Springfield Holy Cross 1 Holy Cross Providence 0 Holy Cross UMass 4 Holy Cross UConn 4- Holy Cross Trinity 2 Holy Cross Brandeis 2 Holy Cross Fairfield 1 Holy Cross Merrimack 2 Holy Cross Brown -L Holy Cross UNH O Holy Cross Worchester Tech 1 Holy Cross Tufts 3 G0 The d1 Kjnne Spring the If Weiss Last h0W61 and 3 all U again Cross evidel Franl and 1 came Lhelo ln C.C., port Cross teen. amou ships Th ports and featu at Pl The Ho Academg K W3 , -X . I furley, e.. indicatl as ason H3051 Gi 5 Fragi- matt: l mon ll Img Q ence Il vias it Ion, 1. nity 2 dei, S! Held A wg if UW l NH ll 'eg af' X GOLF The disappointments suffered by Captain Mike Kinne and the Holy Cross golf team in the '63 spring schedule are softened considerably by the hopeful expectations of Captain Tom Weiss for a significant improvement in '64, Last year's team's record of 2-10 was not, however, without its moments of satisfaction and accomplishment. Such was realized when all members won their respective matches against Vermont. Yet, even in defeat, Holy Cross showed spurts of stardom. This was evidenced by the fact that team members Frank Cangemi, Dick Keegan, Paul Provasoli, and Pat Gil and the duo mentioned above came within one point of capturing five of the lost matches. In post-season play at windswept Tacona C.C., Keegan's qualifying score and the sup- port of Kinne and Cangemi brought Holy Cross a third place finish in a field of four- teen. Earlier, Weiss led his team to an equal amount of success in the Eastern Champion- ships. The expectations for improvement are sup- ported by the return of five of the first six and a more evenly matched schedule, which features a greater percentage of home matches at Pleasant Valley C.C. The Holy Cross Raven class Academy Championships. 1 sloop in the Coast Guard 7 W Clockwise from left: Paul Provasoli, Tom Weis, Frank Cangemi, Joe Lewis, Gary Habansky, Ray I-Iyer, Chuck Dobbins. Missing: Dick Keegan, Pat Gil, captain Mike Kinne. 175 SAILING ln spite of the fact that it receives minimal recognition and even less publicity, the Holy Cross Sailing Club continues its determined tack toward success. The sailing season is divided into spring and fall chapters. This past fall and last spring, however, must be classified as hard-luck periods for the Cru- saders. Nonetheless, they did achieve an ex- cellent third place showing in the MAISA flVliddle Atlantic Intercollegiate Sailing As- sociationi in Washington, D.C., against the best teams in the nation last spring. The 1963 fall season fell somewhat short of expectations. At the Coast Guard Academy Sloop Championships, Holy Cross seemed to be in excellent position for a high finish, but they were informed late in the meet that a false start had disqualified them earlier. The present Commodore of the club is Quentin Walsh, who succeeded Chris Mc- Cratty between semesters. First row: Pat Mattingly, Pat Kelly, Jim Marcellino, Dick Walsh, Steve Shea, Dick .Maloneye Gefffge Allen, .106 O,Neil, Tom Garrity. Second row: Jack Farley, John Tully, Lawrence Prybylsky, .M1k6 MClJel'm0U, JOC C0f1S.tafl' tini, Tom Meehan, Walt Eisen, Ron Dower, Dave Weston, Harry Egner, Frank Bonglorno. Thtrd row: Coach Phil E- O'Connell, '32, manager Tom Tracy, Tom Gehrmann, Bob Stuart, Rick Kerwin, Fred Macchl, Mike Hennessey, J ay Dugan, John Mee, Bob Hastings, Harry Lent, Jim Beale, Mike Ryan, manager Jim Donnally. LACROSSE Pat Mattingly on a fast break. ln recent years lacrosse has taken massive strides towards establishing itself as a major sport at Holy Cross. The 1963 edition of the Holy Cross lacrosse team was mainly respon- sible for this upsurge in student participation and interest. Their aggressive combination of skill and speed won them compliments where- ever they played. Although ending up with a mediocre 5-5 slate, the record is not indicative of the en- tire season. The loss of key men for the second half of the schedule was a decisive factor in the complete reversal of the first half record. The fast-starting Crusaders were hopeful of re-establishing the Purple at the summit of intercollegiate lacrosse as in the days of All- American Tommy Greene, Opening up against a Middlebury team which had already played three games, the Crusader stickmen notched an impressive 8-41 victory. An inspired Holy Cross team returned from intermission and wiped out a 5-3 deiicit to upset MIT, 7-6, as the effective goal tending of .lohn Farley enabled the Purple to streak to its second straight conquest. This comeback was typical of the determination which marked play throughout the season. After a relatively easy 8-3 defeat of Wes- leyan, the Crusaders suffered their first loss of the season at the hands of Harvard. The .l0hnS, always a perennial power in Eastern circles, opened up a 6-2 lead, ubut Holy Cross led by the efforts of Pat Mattingly and Rolf Dower, fought back valiantly. Although hard Pfessmg the Crimson netminder throughout , D the final two Peflods, Holy Cross nonetheless finally did succumb, 9-7. An offensive-minded Purple Squad Glob- bered a weak Nichols team, 10-2, but the next four games did not produce such happy re- sults. The second half of the season opened with the Crusaders losing a 10-8 contest to a powerful Brown aggregation. The quick- starting Purple opened up a 6-3 halftime lead, but they were unable to make it stand. They succumbed before the assaults of the Bruins despite the three goal efforts of Mike Hen- nessey and Dick Maloney. The worst was still to come as the stickmen dropped a squeaker to UMass, 6-3, and then suffered their most embarrassing defeat of the campaign in losing 17-9 at the hands of the Dartmouth lndians. Leading 5-4 at half- time, the Crusaders collapsed after the break and gave up 13 second half goals. HC was unable to contain the University of New Hampshire's potent attack, and the latter's power made easy prey of the visiting Purple forces en route to an 11-3 victory. The Holy Cross stickmen ended the season with a convincing 15-8 rout of cross-town rival Worcester Tech. Once again Pat Mat- tingly paced the HC attack, scoring SCVCH goals and assisting on two others. The 1964+ team shows excellent potential and indications point to a successful season on an expanded twelve game schedule. A LACROSSE SCORES Holy Cross Middlebury Holy Cross MIT Holy Cross Wesleyan Harvard Holy Cross Holy C1-055 Nichols Brown Holy Cross UMass Holy Cross Dartmouth Holy Cr0SS New Hampshire Holy Cross Holy Cr0SS Worcester Tech n. UH? 'vii mir :ilk :lint kr Hr- uh: nddf 'fed 'I 9 at Ei C ilk: HBE.-3 md it rule tori. gs., 59101 1 3525 :flu ,r uffllni 2 ,l if My ,N -N 121 ,9 431 ,Sl x up issi 'S N f sssrswsi- .s...X N Ace huflel' Dick Joyce throws a strike from out of the football stands. BASEBALL The success of the 1963 baseball season de- pends on your point of view. A club that wins the Regional Championship for the second straight year, attends the World Series of college baseball for the second straight year, and wins the series with Boston College cannot be called a failure. A team that has a returning regular at every position and is touted as having the best pitching staff in the country, but which loses ten games, some of these to mediocre opponents, can hardly be called a roaring success. Neither sweeping plaudits nor wholesale deprecations are in order for this team. They started the season optimistically, fought hard in each game they played, reigned supreme in New England, left scars on the nation's best, and f1r1iSh6d with no regrets. The season was a series of in- dividual battles to be fought and Won. Embarking on the defense of their New England championship, the Crusader Dine faced Connecticut and Ithaca College, both of whom had just returned from impressive 177 southern tours. UConn caused little trouble, faced with Dick J0YCe7S 13--strikeout per- formance and Jim Holloran's booming four- baggers, and went under, 6-1. lthica was not so tame, and handed Don Riedl the first loss of his college career, 9-5, thus beating the Cross nine for the second year in a row. Mike Skane's season opener on the mound and Timmy Murtaughis bases-loaded triple crippled Assumption, 12-0. Riedl got back to his winning ways against Dartmouth, sup- ported by Hank Cutting, whose single scored captain Tony Capo in the first and provided the margin of victory in the 2-1 contest. After Dick Joyce incurred his first loss against Providence on an unearned run, 2-1, the Crusaders bounced back against American lnternational to give Biedl his second triumph. Big John Peterman cracked three of his team's 14- hits in the 8-2 conquest of A. I. C. For the second straight year, Holy Cross clobbered Boston U. by 18 runs, this time the count read 19-1, and ,lohn Peterman raised his ' A as - Tom Jordan goes in low to score against B.C. average to .448 while knocking in six runs. Lowly Brown upset the overconfident Cross, 9-3, and Don Riedl was knocked out of the box for the first time in his career while his mates left 13 men on base. Harvard gave Joyce a run for his money, but the soph pre- vailed, 2-1, helped along by some gift runs donated by the Johnnies. Joycefs next outing was easier as Peterman and Paul lVlorano powered the Crusaders to a 10-1 win over Providence. Don Riedl walked in the winning run to beat himself, losing to UMass, 2-1, in ten innings. Amherst provided a doormat into the regional playoffs, yielding to the Purple batsmen, 15-1. Paul Symeon racked up a one-hit masterpiece which was aided by the slugging of Capo, Morano, and Cutting. Boston College hosted Holy Cross in the opening round of the Eastern playoffs and endured a fatal doubleheader, Joyce was bril- liant in the first game, receiving help from Hank Cutting in his 4-0 victory over Jack Concannon. Murtaugh and Holloran provided the margin of victory the next day in an HC 7-4 triumph. When nothing was at stake, BC was able to gain a 6-3 decision in the annual Memorial Day classic at Fitton Field. It was all Murtaugh in the two-game sweep of Providence which gave Holy Cross the New England crown and the ticket to Omaha and the College World Series. In the first game, an 11-0 shutout twirled by Dick Joyce, Murtaugh blasted two triples and a double for 7 RBl's. ln the second fray, the chunky backstop joined Hank Cutting and Paul Morano in a 7-4. victory credited to Ed Wid- ronak. Omaha was now in the bag, and a let. down ensued. Dartmouth was victorious, 6-35 Yale eked out a 3-2 decision, and BC won for the second time with the pressure off, 3-0, Pressure or no pressure, the Eagles dropped the next one in a Purple landslide, 17-2. Heading out to Omaha for the fourth time in HC history, the Crusaders met with grief in their very first encounter. Missouri, be. hind the dazzling speed of sophomore Bruce Weber, shut out the forces of St. James, 3-0, Still alive according to the double elimination rule, Holy Cross next met Southern Cal in a cliffhanger. Behind 6-41 with two down in the eighth, the Crusaders rallied for one run but couldn't get the tying run with men in scoring position. Tim Murtaugh, who came off the turf with a spike wound in the neck to drive in a run in the third, symbolized the never-say-die spirit of the team. In the cool, exact language of the record books, however, it is recorded that Holy Cross was eliminated from the NCAA Baseball World Series in two games, losing to Missouri, 3-0, and to Southern Cali- fornia, 6-5. It may be that it is better to speak only the language of the record books. The season had finished with only three more victories than defeats, but this team had been regional champions twice, had been to the World Series twice, and had achieved more than is told in the phrase H13 and 10. First row: Jim Cravel, Jim.Holloran, captain Tony Capo, Bill Prizio, John Peterman, Mike Skane, Joe Armstrong. Second row: John Wendel- ken, Hank Cutting, Don Rledl, Ed Widronak, Tim Murtaugh, Jim Bidwell, Rick Manning, Paul Symeon. Third row: manager Tom Cradler, Tom Jordan, B111 Sexton, Paul Morano, Tony Arena, Dick Joyce, Bud Knittel, Hop Riopel, coach, XX- . F QI' 14 N0 shffl W :fthe staff is 01 5 nl 1964 tion ne f DT: well Wi the l l00,ll andl ciflinf dnyb young playl Cross .ha to ssh sorntl prone He nine 11 well H of 5 vi nerr by He Stn all oth perfom Prnwidf lege, bf lfil HUF, J- Kilim JN on Um lm I M n Nui Amid the pre-season encomia which the NCAA Oficial Collegiate Baseball Guide showered OH the 1963 Holy Cross baseball team, especially perspicacious was the remark, the Crusaders boast a tremendous pitching staff, perhaps the best in the country. There is only one other team in the country which is more deserving of such a prediction-the 1964 Holy Cross baseball team. The predic- tion should add, however, that not only do the Crusaders have the best staff in the coun. try, but also a young man who may very well be the best pitcher in the land. When Dick Joyce was but in high school, the Boston Red Sox offered to pay him 100,000 dollars if he would come to Boston and play baseball for their team. After de. ciding that his college degree would some. day be worth more to him than Boston's gold, young Joyce decided to get his degree and play baseball at the same time. He chose Holy gross andhhe has lnever regretted this choice. s a sop omore ast year, Joyce was ready to establish himself as one of the main rea- sons that Holy Cross can still claim national prowess in at least one sport. He pitched often for the 1963 Crusader nine fmore than 75 inningsi, and he pitched well f0.94- earned run average and a record of 5 wins and 3 lossesj, Two of his defeats were by one rung both of these were unearned. He struck out 80 batters, nearly as many as all other HC pitchers combined. His best performances included a 4--hit shutout of Providence and a 3-hit shutout of Boston Col- lege, both coming in playoff games for the NCAA Reglonal Championship. Paradoxi- 031155 -10YCC,S prime effort of the year, also against Providence, was a one-hitter which he 1051 OU an error in the bottom of the ninth. There.1s every reason to expect that Dick JOYCG will lmprove upon his fine season in 1963, but one man alone does not rate the Hppellation best in the country for a whole Staff' The Holy Cross pitching staff would be 31112 extremely good one even without Joyce. ree 561110157 one other junior, and three Teputable but untested sophomores comple- ment a corps of moundsmen which may drive 0PP0Si11g hitters to despair. The three seniors 1351 year twirled a combined record of 5 vic- Elories W1t11Ol1t a defeat, potentially foremost fim0I1g these was southpaw Mike Skane. His tifsf SEIU was brilliant as he blanked Assump- lon' Oldmg them to four hits and whifiing S6 f1PP0I1cnts. However, an elbow injury 1L1SLa1ned during the game prevented him from a Ing another start all season. Now sup- p0Se'11Y fCCovered from this ailment, Skane Zguld be 3 .top contender for the first or fini SPOY 111 Hop Riopel's staff. au SYII1eon started in style last year. I . an fgslifst appearance he was credited with Victory against Boston U., during which he fanned eleven Terrier batsmen. A devotee of the old, original 'cslaughterf' Symeon made his second try a 15-1 massacre of Amherst, allowing only one hit to the losers and clinching a regional playoff berth for Holy Cross. Ed Widronak, the third senior on the squad, also compiled a perfect 2-0 log last spring. Making his debut as a reliever in the final game of the Eastern Regionals, Ed ignored the pressure and salvaged a 7-4 victory over Providence. Taking his cue from teammate Symeon, Widronak pitched the Cross to a 17-2 burial of BC as the Cru- saders preppcd for the World Series in Omaha, Nebraska. lf the Holy Cross fireballers perform suc- cessfully this season it is probable that much of the credit will belong to Timmy Murtaugh, whose father Danny knows a few things about the game of baseball, too. A powerful man with a bat, Murtaugh is one of the best catchers now playing in college ranks. While backing up the Crusader pitchers last season, the Chester, Pa.-product batted .312 and was second on the team in runs-batted-in with 14-. His bat was at its most electrifying during the crucial two-game series with Providence Col- The Tower on the Heights did not smile on the endeavors of her sons this day as Holy Cross took a double header, 4-0 and 7-4-. Coach Hop Riopel gives Captain Jim Holloran his new stealing signals. Dick Joyce starts for first after a sacrifice hunt. lege for the regional crown. He lashed out three triples, a double, and a pair of singles for an RBI total of ten. ln the first contest he tied an NCAA tournament record with back-to-back triples, his 7 BBl's in that tilt just missed another record by one. The stocky receiver will be joined by some other potential fence-busters, among them team captain Jim Holloran. ln the opening game of the year against Connecticut, the rugged leftfielder poled two 400-foot homers over the left-field fence in Fitton Field, the first time the trick had ever been turned. His .313 average at the plate was second among the regulars, and he led the HC sluggers with three round-trippers. Several juniors will be breaking into the starting lineup this year, verifying their shin- ing performances in substitute roles last year. Rick Manning should have second base sown upg his .500 average and six RBl's came in only eight appearances in 763. Against BU his bat brought four teammates home with scores and much of the same is expected this year. ln this same fray, two other juniors, then but mere sophs, appeared onthe HC horizon. Bud Knittel and John Wendelken, resting from a season on the hardwood, made sterling contributions in the 19-1 debacle. Knittel hit three times in four appearances, Wendelken hit in every one of his three at- bats, including a two-run triple. Wendy will probably join Manning in the infield, taking over at shortstop, while Knittel is a prime candidate for Tony Capo's vacated center- field position. It is most probable that some talented sophomores from last season's mediocre fresh- man baseball team will work their way into at least a few of the starting berths in Hop Riopel's lineup. Although the pitching staff is replete with stars, it is hard to conceive that Tom Corsac, Eliot Klein, and Denny Dwyer will be relegated to intramural softball. An- other area which doesn't appear to be lacking depth is the ensemble of Crusader catchers. Besides Murtaugh, sophs Bill Grannan and George O,Brien have shown formidable bat- ting power. .lohn Kerry, one of the prime frosh batmen, could conceivably succeed John Peterman at the hot corner while Tom Kiley is a good chance for first sacker. This then is the aggregation of baseball players who will determine whether or 110i Holy Cross wins its third straight New Eng' land crown, whether or not Holy Cross I6- turns to Omaha for the third successive ap- pearance there, and whether or not the l0SS of Riedl and Capo, Cutting and Petermalla Arena and Prizio, will be too staggering to Offset in a year. The outcome will be up to them, working out the season nine at a time- We leave all further prophetic encomia i0 the Collegiate Baseball Cuticle. ll.. r , AJSQQJ 911: ri: , '- 'FL ., . .xv . .. . :HV xr- i N, t 3.. r ' Mrs' L ill' Q1-,R . MX, lffjlyri F - , ' 'Q Q:-, it lf? th , limi: .r'--. , - 3 Qlll'3t1t +L, . ' kj Oni-ltjrft hows:-W ug 5 -Ulf' ' r . Field. Q: Fei turned- Xxx. vw N . nd LEC? 1' lltf slugs? 5k lim? into if 533 their roles lsr W loml lease sore lillls Garnet i. rtgainn lil' tri honre ini is expecteclrh other juniors. ed on the HIQ hn llendellez. ardwood. male l9-l deharle. r appearances: if his three at- fre. Wendynil infield. taking tel is a print 'seated center- some talented mediocre fresh- their way itll? berths ill HOP itching frat if . conceitf that Denny DW 1 softball- All to be l3ClilHii ader catchers, and le bil' of the Prime . Succeed Jolt ile Tom Granllan wrlllidab Kilfi er. f baseball n 0 ot etllff Of H hr New Bug' ' Cr055 le' Ol? . .ucceseite HP n0f th an nd PCWU tg ' 2 will beg W, e lot' ine at mia to CO erl Br-XSEBALI, SCORES 6 Holy Cross UConn 9 Ithaca Holy Cross 12 Holy Cross Assumption 2 Holy Cross DL11'l1l1OUtll 2 Providence Holy Cross 3 Holy Cross AIC 19 Holy Cross Boston University 9 Brown Holy Cross 2 Holy Cross Harvard 10 Holy Cross Providence 2 UMass Holy Cross 15 Holy Cross Amherst 41. Holy Cross Boston College 7 Holy Cross Boston College 6 Boston College Holy Cross ll Holy Cross Providence 7 Holy Cross Providence 6 Dartmouth Holy Cross 3 Yale Holy Cross 3 Boston College Holy Cross 17 Holy Cross Boston College 3 Missouri Holy Cross 6 Southern Cal Holy Cross TALL Dffnf PM-.' :gg t ' 'A . f y - ' ' H f , K- g ,.,.. n-,1'Qf4' ,. H X r. , - y N I as, n-.IW 'L' is Y e ' l ' , .' .- 7 . '71 I I V1 t lf . . .t .. , X- M me 4 f W n , 'K ,gf 'A + H ,.., , H rx I I W 1 ,M 1 ,7 I I Tom J0l'dan shows a good eye and lets a high one go by for a ball It was a lonely day for the BC scorer, since all he could hang up for BC was HO . 41 I f 4 if MP- V Qi AU 1 8 4 I i Qs, Q. wx' 'I fp , .I 'F' 'F 'A -'P I N Nx n X w Lv lil 1 if x X ,X l fx L Qx I xv, ,1 'I N s ,AY A we F vw . , 0 f , 5 z' X' x ll ll U .pov- A ' rs- 3 K .N -. 'W 3 . V' .N 1 K- . X 5 5 U ' h :fl . 5 sf' fi ' 0 Yi-l 1 3 N ' . x k X - TQ 'M . 3 X X ' ' . A . K Q '- X xi 1 . x Q -i j i 1, b , i Lush?-- gf g 3 - . 3 1 t , 3 -i ' S K. tvs' 45: f . ' , I, X J K . ,, .Q I. 5 , , 585- ul - Q W1 Q is . fi + ' ff , gag fi 'W ! 8 i L. ,L .anna ' 5321 g 2 ' fb, 2 6 vu Y ' i N 5. . . fl- -Vg ' I 1145! ai .. saw I 1 . A J b ' -' 3 f i 1 -f 'sh I .v-chem.-N T , Q S - 's Nb -- ed. . 5 M.: +i bt , P 950' WW- FE Ulf! ggi' 2 -A .gs CLE 'Ts 2 7 -- 5 .' xl-' 'IT I 1, 11.1-, V- , X. Q ' jj, 3 f- f A 2 , . 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Set high on a precipice in back of Beaven and hid in front by a birch forest, Wheeler Hall is an aloof brick mother to quintuplet floors of freshmen. Like most mothers, Wheeleris perfections increase at a distance. From almost any vantage point it seems the fairest visual flower of dence halls. But closer scrut unaffectionate interior facade. Inside Wlieeler th a shucldering mixture f all the rcsi- iny reveals il cold. beyond its llnwlcss C corridor colors clash in tS'l o grcy and crcanng thc ctw... so fig: - 'wht brotm stairwclls mount with a luwllfll ll? . . this . . .... gtpwr. In touch otlsctttng thc MJ'E3l'fll N l s Q -X , .1 frpslnnvll battlc of tmtt colors tht .ilnnatcft is one . - X :rr - sccli thclr own mlccoraliwll' Hu pflsl nd tlip , - X . na ost-apo L.ongrutulntlotlr ll' -lflo l - x -' C' Storm 'llrooln-rs.u Hfilnlcnl lfvlllllllgc Milli-Tltc Qro CollcL1c. Slf'l'll ll Slwmlmf is if will-1 lo zwvorltlfsf lfincst Notllxaiu Inctlulliott wit U Xyltq-Ulq-1. V I , ix i in H5 Xxlllcclct' glocs on stqmtliltgl mfllllclf.ll,-lilltctt intcrior cornplcxion. lt l'l'l?l flux lm xsorft nolicc. sr? X.. i. . I , , 'G w-:NZ J Z, g jill WHEELER I: Seated: Jim Quinn, John Craddock, John Heuisler. Standing: John Bent- ley, Mark Mathieu, Rick Berube, Bob Plasse, Mike Berry, John Bogosian, Harry Blake, John Burke, Dave Zamierowski Cprefectj. , ' A WHEELER I: John McGovern, Ed McCusker, Steve Sawyer, Dan Lucia, Andy Alessi, Brian Maher, Jim Bridenstine, Pete ski KY L ' A n wi .'. 5 , rt!! 1 is u E v' 1 ,I af' .. , , Lf' .tr 3' 4 ,, fli- ,., A,- t'54'w A ' 1, .q-jlfil' i - 11'- -'ff ,M ' 4'f'. .tb I ,. ,t .uf r 1 LSI' 'ff jlicijg vii- sp. an gf' 5 , if f., fly, Przybyla, Dave Henry, John Anderson, Max Brennlnkmeyer, Mark Lawrence, Paul Lambert, Bill Dooley Cprefectj. WHEELER III Hank Nocella, Joe Tepas, Pat Mattingly fprefectj, Phil Howe, Terry Flynn Pierre Shevenell, Tim Jette Stan Deptula, Paul Nedza, Paul Callaghan, Larry Tully, Gerry Butler Frank Roche Gene Russo, Joe McDermott, Gary Squier WHEELER II: Bob Flynn, B111 McEachern, Jim Nagle, Blll Bamnann, Rich Pedersen, John Miles, Bill Ronev, John Denney, Mike Monjoy, Carl Spltznagel, Don Bussman, Ted Mechley, Tom Peter, Chris O'Connell, Rich Matarese, Gerald Mulligan llfike Chamberlain Tim McB 'd 9 I'l C Wayne Sassano, Tim Nangle, Terry Scanlon, Al Bongiorno. , , -7 pail X S ll X 1 1 r t E 186 t WHEEI son, Ric Morrissf 1 I' ,Q 1' xx wx xxx X wx x 1 x .XXX N. .ix W NN x N xv- xx X X 4 xx Rx ,Rx s xx Q Q 4--Q x NS. X x fp.-v. 'WW' v. :XXVXXX N.. . W 1 W s N 55 Xa 5 x .Mx . xx x X 1 -. ESX X xx --Q N-x .XX . . 'gg yi N 'K N. x . XS, .X AS ...fx s . 14' 1 .Y M. A.,,4..l. wxx--.-W'- ' . 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Q '- .:,.N.s,x gl fixflffg .WHEELER IV: John Power, Don Mullare, Bill Earls, Art Peoples, Jim Fallon, Charlie Peltier, Jim Sciacca, Jerry Cox Cprefectj, John Maher, Glenn Cunningham, Dick Egan, Steve 0'Leary, Nick Falzone, Larry Wilson, Dave McDonough, Ed McDermott. WHEELER V: George Spellman, Jack Ward, John Timxnermann, Bob Massey, Greg Freeman, Ed Whittemore, John Foraste, Joe DeCourcy, Dave Whalley, Sam Shoen, Bob Czachor Pat Meehan Gerr Vo e P t S h J' Sh Joe Silvia, Tom Decker Cprefectl. e , Y y r, e e c merge, 1m ea, Jack McAllister, Ray Weaver, John Tunney, ,,,gZ IRQ, ,Wax w IFF? 5 x . ir! NF , Dx S-' .sk N J X f X ,X x AX ,-bs,gyY?Q?i K is - K N ,i X is K in X ixxssfg . xi S ,wwf Rxf. 'f -Q xx N X A . I -K K s fp XQNN , s xnxx? x X- 'S , - .'ii J If AN - 'VJ Ml M ' J X 1 Nfxf'lxsl'l . I ,xi .Sq gas X,-5 . h s X swiss N. is , is X .,, w f 1- P W K fbi 'sl' -'Q A' X N ' X nal. X Nail or v . , ,. LN X ., -Qs X .Y ., - ,WM scream E P' -' wg M . X X 1 X P P ,.,.v- 'P I ' 'N re , A I I ' K 1 t M: V5-: -1 f.. ,, ,,u.,I x .. A r A -91, PM gm K, zix J l '?fFif f2 '.l,f -N. x'?3fgflx3- ' if-x N Kaffe lx i X-'ffl L0'if lli5lZ ',lz 'P 'Noi-PSQLMM' Mi: I'fQis..f ww-W i i 'l'YNl'a lfii'xi 1 ' uf Q' .1 -, A Q - V4 - To - si - silk '- :...2.7 is-.,,lf3'fm'i -,3w.,l, '-T hifi- 'i'fiS,Q'3fWf' J-3 ix-'Nl '+V' Q' s i ' Lrg' ef xl sf . ..1 QM Kg -A' 1 wsfef-1 ,xg x- , - - , N . X .i 1 . . O f Ab! 4' V J, .N.L551y'VM ,sk im.,-K ,lv lj, xl X MM xl. .. .K lx X. NN X.. MN 4'-Qc I X lx xx, -vm K IN, Xa ,. s A is . 'iv P' Courcr, Funner, BEAVEN HALL Heroic cultures, say the classical scholars, comprise tribes on the borderline of barbar- ism, on the thresh atmosphere of Beaven Hall is som ilar situation. It is both the most cozy and most crude h old of civilization. The ehow a sim- ouse on campus. Like a pri- mordial battleship in mothballs, it stands in epic greatness. When the Freshman Orientation program was streamlined, Beaven was not, yet Beaven retains a unique orientation of its own. lt is small and it is not particularly appealing at first sight. It Welds tight-knit groups in short order Without academic incest. If you live in Beaven, the intramural odds are against you. It is a healthy feeling and a good Way to start. If there is a prodigy made in the turbulence of freshman year at Holy Cross, either a group or an individual, it is often made in Beaven, at least more often than the odds would dictate. Above all, from its corner suites and false porches to its unpredictable milk machine, Beaven Hall is personality. It is not an im- personal mill. The steps of its stairways are as rutted as the Oregon Trail, and they are hardly less mythogenic. 4 . WIQQ basl-' A - QL- itll 3 3 2 ,gf-15? Q , .Nga ' X3',:.'iT X QE Qgjx. X Xa. X , , W1 M X. ,l .. X n S ., nl 5 . X AM X..x - , f. I . X ,.,.:,.. M :.,.w.::gi 5- ? M -:NWN . XX. x V Q x , 1 , M x Y xgx Mn, K .2 S 2 , XF 1 f 5 . S . Q Q uf, , 1, . I 5, , ' N .. .Ag -I ,n- ,f- -- ff ' 'W '.fKfv +153 Sf? 6 W , , . ,- , ,ff s 4 l I K , 1 r . ,W . ,N Qs ' t : , ' sf .3 'L: V7 Wm qxi 'QW QI' ' Q V. . ,, 7 W1 , .xr V4KA1jv,i.:,-W: 4 ff- 'Q' . . . X , .A -.V ' 'ir , X X 4 1 .lf .Nag Q. ' ,M 'V'-U, it-lx: ' I Qi ,QQ .. f 'J ,-N. ' A 4 , 1 .A v 2 fpvuifxxg' 1,9 ,. 1: Y 4. r . ',tL ,f - X w , W ' 1-19 4' va . A wr' -' 5-Rf. '1' NN' . . -. - REQ J? Y f 'ki gk- in-' r sf 7? v f .Q I 'N' ,V .1 New 2 .5iH.axiL ? k V f if f 1 I gf tif 9 ,Eff lx r V715 . , A 0 if -a ff' Q L if L A Q kgs S1g:,m?.' 14' ff, ,L X - 'f' 12'3f?F' 2.,,:,, l I ggi? , . .., Tlx Q A k . 'L ,,,, , , ff, A a ' 4 .-v-wiv-15 X , K, 4 -NQg,,,g.gq.egg1T'- , is sV1f35':-7i':' I ' . dw fy ' m vi, ,K , .xxgitwsf vs- ..fQ'b'y eww, df: s ' 'avg ' .,-F' I 4- : , 1 ' ,. Q,,, I , -'NN ' -.iff-a ETL-2 -Vifsw 1. - PLL. ,- . 4, w at Ng- ' K'-. -arf i . -...sq -5. ld 3 A R, -fv' . . , 1 WI Xa x ii , 3: X Nf. '-vi .' X C ., . . ffx f' we - N ' r . f xk x M .gg -- - . w .4 Wx. . fwlx? A Hu. ht x ' xxgx' S. x fx- .x My 5 X 5 f SX . gm X s .X Y ,E 7 X x K lx. k.xk..x. M NxSgiSR,i:x . m ,xy 5 Q - s .Nl ,Q-N X x ' ' x X X- rx ,, w,X vs X p x qgl.. x N A 3-.xixqxj 'xn- i -xx 1' . N , .X Xa. , X1 Xxgfpi-X,. k Q X x NX x xx x X X X G Yi A.,-.---Q Q-x.,., '-Ag Q1 f lg: f .3g,gx X -N 3, , R- Q ' K' . .QQ ggi x K A . -. N. 'XL H ,tv xx X -- .-.' ' . N .xx T' 1 mm,-Qxx N,-j nf X SQN X N L1 -:l1iHx1':4 -?gu:A.g.-,-.,.g,:.f.g!,g'x.-.fa.4--a......f-,....--..A.- .1 1,1 ,...n.l W N x Wfgxxigg X S x x 4 .4.,ap a 1 I Ax P 7:-I-ff ' A ,,.,--1' V -- -,,..-1-' , d I fi 'Zn BEAVEN III: Jim Norton, Tom Gilligan, Tom Parciak,I Bob Naylor, Ben Iris, George Spelvin, Mike Maloney, Jim Brett Mike Lam- bert George Lawton Dominic Balestra George Deptula Cprefectl John Landis Basil Shammas Joe Kour Bill Mana ,Gre L ons ' . . . ' . ' . f ' V 'v John Slndoni, Brian Kavanaugh. Belund bars: Jim Hyman, John Vinson. , 9 g y i G I A 4 1 191 I Y CR055 ARM WUMB Showing three floors in front and six in back, Carlin Hall is a unique adventure in split- level living. It offers a panoramic vision of the Worcester valley, and, sharing the charm of the valley, it overlooks the town like a ce- ment chalet nestled on an asphalt alpine slope. Inside, the creak of its six or so swinging doors conjures quaint memories of bygone Worcester bars and corridor brawls. D-ue to its central location Carlin is the nerve center of many important campus ac- tivities. To Hunk a French oral, for instance, a Crusader must pass through Carlin's historic tower doors. When a representative is expelled from a raucous Student Congress meeting, Carlin's doors are the threshold of his exile. The central location of the building has other aspects. Distraction is indigenous. Car- lin distracts stray dogs and high-school girls on scavenger hunts. Shoeshine boys make the scene, and Quinsig girls in search of an impromptu hootenany have been known to haunt the lower floors. The upper floors are dangerous only at night when the native sophomores awake. At this time of day, the curious may observe 192 them performing the colorful rituals of com- munal academic living, These natives show a courage peculiar to their environment. It is impossible to predict whether the Carlin showers will be running hot or cold. Similarly, the metaphysique of the building is extremely turbulent. Heated, spas- modic updrafts come and go with the more than 5,000 classes which meet on the lower levels each semester. Eerie sounds emanate constantly from the foundation regions of the building where Madame Le Blanc holds sway in the salon des langues. ln short, the decep- tive calm and stateliness of Holy Cross' House of Usher is complete, except for tarn. The curiosities of Carlin's Havor change with each sophomore class. This year, for in- stance, biology seminars sought out the exotic atmosphere of Joe Harasirnowicz's second- Hoor room, complete with aquarium. During Homecoming, Carlin saw the dramatic rape of the Mighty Meg. She was the sopho- mores' twenty-foot mock-up of a megaphone, hidden in a Carlin classroom and abducted in the night by a band of junior classmen. Next year, '66 will hopefully move higher up the hill and Carlin will have a new flavor. lm- to .ict ing the as- Dre -ver .ate he HY P. SC ge in- tic d. HS pe 0. C: in 61' I. CARZLIN I: .Charles Maloney, John Paterson, Mike Madden, Bill Dowling, Matt Byrne, Joe Shilinga, Mike Maguire, Ed Costa, Brian Mo- Menimen, Blll Crannan, Jim McGough, Bill Haynes, Ray Danahy, Geoifrey Currall, Tom Materna, Pete Larmour, Roger Boule, Rich Holi- han, Rich Blaber, Bob Murphy, Mike Dacey, Marty Kelly, Larry DeMooy, Bob Gillis. ivffwuxxibw , , Ge g 0'B ' , J hn Conway, Jim Romano, Jim Duke. Seated, back: Lewis Ainoruso, CARL? II. Seat'i'ih1f'lt'lZ5'e J0cli'neBlaseTlBIick TVIorin, Frank Mattingly, Richard Liguori, Dave Tondow. Standing: lbe gyilzxhi aiflrslggan Jim Ruliie, Pete Lynch, Joe McWillian1s, Steve O'Neill, Ron Ferreri, Joe Trombly Cprefectj. , 7 193 ,Vhn an M, gsm ' X ha, 5 1.5 ,Aff Viz-6' c t x l Ni Nba B... xxf w -s .- NX X u fQx ' . 6305+ A.. , 'U .3 J - W T' ' KA:-?'x' SW, 1 sl rf! at ,Jw +49 4-'. . -.'-QYZW 'lx H4 - . A -4--.4.Q,sg 'eg : 8, i ., f 'fi 15' A' lr A. if f- ,.,.. - K -w -1 .-l7!f'f'-ug ' 5 Y - '. --11. Jpf,,J. ,P f 37 ,If I -1, . X15 fb, w,.!ffL7Q',,o .53 . -L . ' ,A. X4 1 I A 2 V , if iq il M ' V Sig .1 X if fn? . 5+ - 'S 0 a N 'IX . Q 4 A L Q X iv ' 4 1 A 9 ., tv Q , ' , ij ' wif ' 1 4 'ffeigfq . X . . N, whiff N ' E M -w .1 - X,-I 18- -up Q' X f . .. L,,,Z,2i'i?4'?fs . , xt 3 1 nf Lv: . f1? f,4 'Q f N- Q I xi k . ., N x . ra 9 -., ygkxl, 'K-Zgfss. ' , q AX ,x xx V x- it--,.,5 xs4.k - ,, N R ,rw ' ., nf ' M- f Q . P A+- V ,gg Q: -X3 Q 5 . 5 f :sf , 4, .. ,f ' ' v . I - .Q . 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SMX Q XX A , tw GX fi XIXM-5 N --.X X V XX . wks.: X A4 A 3, ,4 v,-fn Ye' - X- .- Qgffkw -m'- '--g , -X N -' L X , X h ,K E K F ' - Wa, uf., s X . 1: ' N 1 v' X t 5 X 1 a X S22 X V is m X 3 5 in-u if X x J ' 0 I E S X ' x Nix F 4 ls X s U ' , Q ff-X Q X X X X J Q x XX 4 ' -N ' wg is 5 5 b 9 Q5 A f ' 6 , X ' Q NX X, s S , A Q ll w 2 X 9 f ' Q fs X 4 Q Q QX x A F K xl 3 - X X, XK Q f A s S. - 'L ' 9 c X 1 . . 5 1 X QS - '5 .1 - f i X S L X Xxx ' ' Q 'M X h 5 ' ' ,sw V ' Q 1' is W 3. 'E' 'NK U' 1 A A .X GQ X N X X ,, X E A in f X ' A f wwf A . X 'v - X ' E f , .MA N 1 X if mg X Wi Xxx QS X 5.9 O S , X Ax x, -X N N X 3 ,QX A 4 K , 5, A ,X ,ku X QX X X, X K Q- i f 1 44,6 I Q, xv Y Q A ,f X, K gglgbsli ixqklgggmggx K X xxx, jwxx X b ,X -fy :ax , 3 Q N ,N , f f ff W' - . R Q , Xf .X X M: X . 2 . H N QR If , ,. ' A' lf' n 2 N45 NX fx ff X Q , a w M 'X ' 'X ' RIN H X X ,, , , 3' . , 5 b Q. , , Ak ,S , , Q X K s X r x 1. x 'fl 'f X' A Q' s Mfx + X ' ' Qx X -x Vi' Y Q su ' 'Wg '11 4, L fn I X v- lv Nr X X 'it X Q lx! J ' XX X ks A'-'XY X ' 'N X X a f 4 x W Xa Q 'H ,si is 'X X1 X 1 - ff Jw - 2. 'v X 2 fir A Y 4 IN 'J X ' X 'li K X K ,' ,Qi 4 ,A f , .pr 1 N, ,wk , ' l w W , ,, ,, XX h -FW, ,,, .... X V-,-1--V - , H, X X, .--- -A---- K X I 1 ,wgim ' TV X .X ,--- '- ' Unbothered by decisions of graduate school, military service and ultimate things, Han- selman residents enjoyed a year of games and organized irresponsibility. There was the high- ly developed, architectonic contest between the Puerto Rican National Army and the Irish Republican Army of Worcester. The P.N.A. was led by Ceneralissimo Jorge Gon- zalez, Adjutant Major Jaime Marcellino, and Commandant of the Air Force, David Drohan while the I.R.A.O.W. was captained by Mike Duffy and Bill Sullivan. There was also an Armed Neutrality under Bill Ahmuty. The conflicts often consisted of verbal abuse at fifty feet against an individual or a group. Treaties and pacts multiplied between the fac- tions: no physical violence or desecration of the opposition's official notices was allowed. Within two weeks, an internal power struggle and attempted coup ffetat by Commander of the Navy Bob Hastings broke up the P.N.A. Their Chaplain, Fr. Fallon, relaxed with the end of hostilities, and other endeavors came under consideration. Besides the expected diversions of shaving cream fights and bridge, such imaginative games as Millebourne, Monopoly, a Cribbage Tournament and the College Bowl attracted students to the lounge. But none of these could claim the fame or import which ac- companied the plot to hang Doctor Anderson in effigy which was hatched on Hanselman II. The gamesters welcomed the spring season with an all-out snowball extravaganza which encompassed most students on campus at the time. Hanselman suffered broken windows and shallow bruises until they came up with a strategic coup. Peter Sughrue recreated his classic imitation of Dean Dunn, and ques- tioned the intrinsic morality of snowballing. He succeeded in dispersing the opposition until they noted inconsistencies with the voice and cassock. He was bombarded and the combatants retreated into the dorm to regroup and plan the biggest game of all, the Junior Prom. MCaN9Y ' fd I5 HANSELM llermott, l berry, Bob Bill Jacob: Burke. ' 7 C, EQ Q X ,,. ..,. wh-is A 9' ,M- l ? 'fegsyg I zz? Q ix 51? Y-I HANSELMAN I: First row: Mel Swiney, Bob Cotter, Jeff Hodgman, Jerald Hassett. Second row: Mike Mc- Dermott, Frank Morrissey, Bruce Shreves, Hal Grams, Bill Borst, Peter Giuliano. Third row: John Henne- berry, Bob Liuzzi, Tom Kenny, Al Simpson. Fourth row: Cliff Cbur, Jim Gavin, Ed Lanfear, Robert Haluska, Q , Bill Jacobs, Paul Sabatos. Fifth row: Fred Chairsell, Chris Cruenther, Jack Haggerty, 'Bill'Nealon, John Burke. , , ' - f ' ' lan . . : P B d it , Malcolm Fraser, John Leary, Lloyd IIlI1Cll8y, Tony Pan, Brian Quin. , g1A1jiSEEJMilIjrIIl3iaflf5::lf:wHal.:lF SISZE Eejrge Dowdall. Second row: Mike Duffy, Frank Bonglorno, Frank Delmonico, Balb Qodds Nfike Scollins Clem llIcCowan., Joe Ilegcnbart, John Connorton, John Karpinski, Pete Sughrue, Bob Crim- 0 9 9 mins, Chuck Thompson. 199 X Q- ' gf x v x fra hfiinbgx 9 , 7 , ' '11 X ,A:, ' X, 'Rf' IWW 4'QQ 5', M 'FT435 ff- f W2 7! i ,Y ,H wwmw,-d,w,X, ,W ...XXXW A qw- wwf- 'f'1 g W,YwV,X,M,r,,.,,,,:, .XXX ---X--X Y X X X . X X I I k X XS, -A X , Q w M! Y 3 i S X V . X Q. X SEX g' ++fX-vw - X1 XXXX 0 X .... .3-Xi ,,,fXf1X XXXXXXXX + W-Lag, kg V LA-5 3 3 XX X I . . , out X gm Xi fe---X X XX X Q VH., '- XX Y,,, 'X s ' X X ' . 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Rx X 55? .XX Q I ,K g - Q y ' X X X - , 1 X gg X, X e X5gf:AsXX X. f ' NX SN iw A 3-X I ' Q ff Xe N .X X f X ' iff Y- : X , XX i X t :ISM - g N A X X ssl? NXXXX X' X ,X ' .s X X X y C' fn vw nw X Qs sk ,il . ,L XX Q1 f :fs X XX 3 X S 'X X M ,XM is X . , y L x X ' ,v . , X XXX X , , , X K L L - N , . X X X x Q ff X1 ii EX XM. V .V XX 4 , s '!' XA ffl ly, 23' K , X W 4 f ' AMWQ, f , I if LW 4 I - Y f 3 Xt X ,Xa X X QNX NX Q. XX- fi X an x X s. X XX i XXX XX X' 'L X X.,X X XXX. -A X X isgfsw N XXX X XXF M N E1 Xi S x XSX X X X5 ,X 35 3 Rf X ' X ww ' i X X X I X lin X xx YQ S CLARK HALL Clark Hall is the challenge to live better- conventionally. Newness is ualikenessf' Clark offers both, with a sprinkling of luxury. There are now four summit houses. Hanselman and Lehy are elder siblings of the Healy-Clark twins. And a flower to the freshman who can tell them apart. Clark looks down on nearly everything, which is another Way of saying it is situated upon one of Pakachoagas uppermost plateaus. Immediately below is the sad structure where- from umaintenancel' operates. The winds blow colder over, under, around, and through Clark. It is approximately 219 steps removed from Holy Cross' quadrangle, which is exactly the distance required for a breeze to churn itself into a gale. It is blighty cold in Winter. Warm air does not always rise. Compensations do not abound, but they do occur. There is that sprinkling of luxury. Amid the panelled-wall splendor of Clark's lower parts, the Crusader transforms common- place into controversy, and the Purple waxes poetic, more or less. The sound in the lounge is stereophonic, andthe furnishings of said lounge are miracles wrought from synthetic plastic. The TV room is comfortably spacious. It is often an excuse for communal gaiety, so it is often closed. Silveriish have been known to inhabit Clark. Relatively harmless in se, they have tended in the past to excite a shameful furorl among the transients. The tenants of Clark are upperclassmen- wise to the Ratio, among other things. Their collective home is a four-floored world of 339 li: ff fr 9. S , gm Q i x it cement blocks. Their individual abodes are marked by sameness, expediency, and two windows. True, the color 'of the walls varies from, room to room, but in cycles of four and in nice pastels? But if the architectural environment is hardly ingenious, not so the inhabitants. .Clark has 'Screaming Jayi' and his sound syndrome, ready to oblige at the slightest provocation It offers Fran Coughlin and the damning dialect of South Boston. And then there was Dan Georgianna's motorcycle: incongruous as it rested in the middle of Room 312. There were many more notables over the last nine months. Some were persistent scholars, but all enjoyed the incident fand there were manyl that was worth a laugh, or a second thought, or maybe even a memory. s 201 1 Q2 f pf i ' ity- .ef I ffl , ,.- P: C4 it 'E laxi' i v I V .. ..w,......-... . ......,,, X 1 Q si Q fl! f Q. Q R ' 1 1' if I . Q , Q yu i ga E 'A l K X NFXQXX f X ' sw : . , N. X Nw! 1 . . 5 , ' x 5 W N1 w I I i 3 1 l 1 3 . V V X ' f fn Q X g . f U X l , ' YN' 3 P Nr 1 , 5. 3 , 5 y. X ' f ' my A Q , 6 l i ' I 'f I! 5 F' - 15 il ,V ef t lx' Wi 51 , ' e 1 , ,x kkkk , L 5 V' ' ' En' ff ' 1 Q 2, N ' 5 xji fi, t 'KK f , N w r 5 g 'W F we ZZ ' V ' fi ,,,, I Q: , i Q .sw , W 3 l 1 I I L 4 M 1 'Wig Q , SS Si fw is ff ,V V AR- - NN . xx 5,5 k 1 W3 ? f f f 1 of Jgif Q xy, 2 ff ' 4 .X J . x I ' :U 2,1 .3 ,,,,. L.Fg,'i,4 am - xl Xi x r. f, 1 - x ' , X-ma Z'?w'fQu-K-f , , N In u 'sp . .W . t A ,3KN5.'m5,,,, ,XR 4 kg I 1 X ,5 mix 3,5 XX x V K , w ,, N ky ig? . ,, .xii V is A Ll 5kL15XL...X X f , .. - M! wma' A x . x . x , N .3Rgx,,'.2Xg .s .xjgjhg ,K '...N ... , , :A .S ws-s, X f.L:3Z'ixm.:'. ,.44if'2: 'X , . .-A .wh x rl S Q vw Q Q M A I X A N: Q XL Q55 L x f P - A .Mix g ff?-I X X X ix l 1' O- yj me Fx - x .- ilk g H, ' ' ' ' - Y ' ' -' ' ' ' A -..-.,,,,,A.-. ., V , X N at OFF CAMPUS Off-campus living is a splendid escape from the rigors of Holy Cross discipline. Across the street from the College there are no pre- fects, lights out or check-ins. For ten dollars a Week, the adventuresome Crusader can claim his niche of privacy awayxfrom the maddening group therapy of the dorms. But not everyone is allowed this boon. It seems you must botch up a bit to get it, that is, the off-campus boarder somehow has not been up to snuff. The College Street freshman either applied late or Wrote Holy Cross as a second choice. The upperclassman makes his excuse less in- 204 X X as s . s s xS Q Y xxx is.- nocently. He has either been on and asked to move off, or he has been on and told tO move off. There is also the transfer student who wants to move on, but must stay off for a trial period. ln any case, there has never been anyone who after movino' off has m0VCCl on again. 'O But all is not advantage oli campus. A first period in Alumni can be most disheartell- ing. Telephone calls often get waylayed ill The shulile. And don't dare leave a message fOr someone to get .in touch with you. The man oil' campus is just out of the mainstream. OFF Con X Xin xx 'X . X -r HX. x ,sir he ' 'Qxkifw XXX xi X ks , A gn. - Md .-Y 'X I. s LX f W ,if s ---1 .. , XM f 1 ...X V - A X1 ' .sf f. X X ri. 1, -J-f ill? X .X'-it :gif X 5, el :XX 'S X X 53 TX xx Q xi --'X N xg Q' 1 K 9 . '5T'Fbx'kf A X tqkkx XX .5 A' ' xX , is X X, .. X N' X. 8 'fx f x f X . .-Xixm A QSM. Ns. xg Y sy- NX? wifi -S352 X. Q. x XX XX X: gk '. ,XXX :.' ,,X 'Q ,f .5 gx XX ,. -mfs F k t-1-ls' - 'I f' -X. Wa 3 . l r f- 'Je ,. I 14' .Q . yi--i L Q2 X V 4.' 1 -P' ,- ,X .,,. 4 ' N A ,,,, X f 1 if V :X P -- ' A-Q? . B Yjbiii ,N . I-v J X QE... xx X B N f XC' X X N T AE' i :ug 1 X x,N3 s M UB :X XX- wif. X-Q N ii: qsx :lg -w Q gur- , 1' :nie Wwvwrff M 5 31 ff 'QW' wwf fk X 5 X is ik?-i x . fa' 1 -.. 'r E., x . H Xa - --amn- LNF 'x 4 1 gf I X X. ,S sv X .. .gy X +5 X X Q 'X S 3 5? X X 3: X S NS X 5. xl XX X X -if 8 , A l' xxx. -sgx. ir' 'X N Xi -af .ff -uli S95 pn.. --,X .X mmm ' A1-va rv-!!e'm-nH.,,.-.4h----,.1-rm: . A-...f.-V -X f --V- ff WORCESTER For approximately 190 Crusaders, or ll? of the student populace, Holy Cross immediately connotes the day room. This den of Worces- ter men is located in Lower Carlin, with its butt-concentrated floors, continuous bridge frays, tall lockers and day-behind bulletin boards. These quarters serve as the locus of the pre-class, post-class and cutting class do- ings of the townies. And perhaps it may be said that the homliness of the day room is somehow thematic of the day student situa- tion at Holy Cross. For there is not a mood of harmony between boarder and non-boarder. A Worcester student lives two lives-at home with member-of-family chores and at college with its own peculiar demands. He cannot devote himself to the sole occupation i gy ,,,,,, of campus life and his time is rationed. Ob- viously then, the commuter must partake less of Holy Cross than the dorm resident. The undergraduate warp and Woof must get along without his direction, and too often without even his participation. flilxcept for the chair- manship of a political club and the leadership of the AFROTC unit, no day student heads any organization, and very few hold positions of importancej The resident fears depending on a man he must go searching for and the day student himself must go to much extra bother. Because of this lack of communica- tion the Worcester undergraduate often feels slighted. But in a college like Holy Cross where residents live so closely together there seems no simple solution for the situation. KV K 'Q 1 v, ' s 'Xi WI chi noi WORCESTER DAY STUDENTS: First row: Jack Brouillard, Paul Marchant, John Bogdan, Steve Rojcewicz, Bill Ferguson, Mike Hut- chins, Jack Rogers, Bernie Smith. Second row: Rich White, Frank Moran, Dick Wickham, Stan Zapatka, Howie Gilmore, Matty O'Con- nor, Chuch Ellsworth, Roger Benoit, Owen Wood. 207 .X n:a.,.. - Y I S 4 sX i D 'N Il Z ! f ets, for meals, for laundry, for the john. Some of us waited, our feet growing puffy in too new shoes. Others grew sick of it or just let it go, risking the ominously worded slips of various colors in November or the spring. .lust about the time we grew tired of squinting at the poly- glut of books new and used we were delivered a new magazine. It was a surprise. A freshman newsletter was dictated by tradition, and this was one of the first tradi- tions we juggled. For in place of the newsy, crew-cut Link of yore appeared the Kaleidoscope, a quasi-literary rag and an irreverent one to boot. Our first targets were our first sights on the hill-the Purple Key orienters and the kindly but detached dicta of the administration. Some were needlessly hurt. They saw ingrates where they merely had something new on their hands. lt's time for a change, the editors had proclaimed, We are not making fun, we are making funny. As freshmen, looking out of new eyes, rimmed with respect, we can see established institutions or established people that have reached the satirization point. So we poke fun. The new class sensed movement and promptly hitched itself to the vehicle. After a hard look at things we were apt to laugh, Sometimes at people, but more often at the underlying ridiculousness of ourselves and just about everything else. Above all we did start by laughing. Which isn't a bad way. We were the penultimate class to live in O'Kane, Fenwick, and Campion Halls. All three were primeval, and the last, we heard, had been slated for demolition during one of the Roosevelt administrations, although no one was saying which. .lust as we were accommodating ourselves to sub- marginal existence the College announced plans for two dorms on the models of Lehy and Hanselman. From our windows we watched the two buildings take shape and anticipated two years in modern rooms. We discovered Worcester. About to be proclaimed an All American City, it featured half a dozen movie housesg a large, dirty, and astonishingly cluttered bookstore, a small bookstore, also dirty, that didn't seem to care, and with the advent of cold weather an assortment of floppy plastic Santa Clauses lurching over the Common like bloated birds. There was, however, an outstanding art museum. The law of averages demanded at least one attractive building. The class assimilated Massachusetts well enough to elect John F. Kennedy in the mock Presidential balloting. We were more resolute than the nation, piling up for the BOS. ton Irishman nearly twice the Nixon total. Parents' Weekend meant various things to various people, For some there was the perverse delight of touring squalid rooms with the board of relatives. For others it was the mute self-consciousness of parents confronting professors at a dry social. And there was that football game-the most impressive of our four years. As half-time scores caromed around the nation, announcers asked for double- checks of the 6-0 score reported from Worcester. It was the real thing, if short lived. Holy Cross was outplaying mighty Syracuse. ln the second half, the embarrassed 50 point favorites ground their way to a 15-6 victory, but failed to lessen our enthusiasm for an underdog team that put in an afternoon of outstanding football and left the behemoths of Syracuse twitching like galvanized frogs. As autumn became winter we packed Fenwick Theatre to see In Hoc Keg, the last senior musical to be staged at Holy Cross. We found we weren't the only ones laughing and stored up a cache of in-jokes for reference. Our first experience of the BC rivalry was a 16-12 success just before the pre-Christmas bluebook flurry. As the vacation approached, the Purple Key granted us autonomy as a class and we elected the first staff of class officers, headed by Tim Hayes. Bishop Flanagan received a Holiday maga- zine subscription at the Christmas banquet and reciprocated with what we thought was an appropriate gesture. Before the echoes of the music died we scrambled off for a day- longer vacation, leaving behind a snowbound campus that seemed festive for the first time. Early in the new semester the College was visited by a roadshow known as Operation Abolition, a bit of propa- ganda in defense of the House Un-American Activities Com- mittee, complete with filmed riots and wry commentary by Fulton Lewis, Ill. The question-and-answer period in Lehy Lounge turned into a debate with the arrival of several protesting students from other Worcester schools who were identified variously as Bolsheviks and liberal Democrats in the following days' discussions of the evening. The striking fact was the relative silence of our own students in an important discussion in our midst. Perhaps, we WOH' dered, we were a little parochial, perhaps a little t00 smug in our tight little collegiate islandg perhaps there was a great deal happening on the outside that we had the fight and duty to engage. We started asking the questions that would continue through our last year on the hill. lf was the right time to ask them. Spring bI'0ught thought of NIT, and those lucky and hardy enough undertook New York's most boisterous weekend since the Civil War Draft Riots. Upon our return we f011nd Worcester heralded by the National Municipal League .35 one of eleven All American Cities, and a long-standing m' Joke was born. Toward the end of March, Bob Sl1ieldS, 3 P0l1'f1CHlly minded debater, was elected Student Congress Treasurer, beginning his eventual climb to the C0nf-ness Presidency. Two of our number-bald Kit Carson and bushy Chuck Jagoda-broke into show biz in the Drama Society's presentation of Reclining F igure, May was crueler than April. .lanuary's finals had been an ordeal, but now the sun shone in an enticingly clear Sk through dirty windowsg and the adolescent leaves mocked us. There would be other warm days, we assured ourselves- a few faint souls compromised by attempting study on the lawns and were lost. But most of us gritted our teeth and deferred the pleasure, even though it seemed we were los- ing something irretrievable. As the end approached our stray thoughts seduced us. Good meals. A beach. A lucra- tive job. A girl. Two weeks . . . six days . . . forty-eight hours . . . this time tomorrow l'll plop down on the grass and sleep. Then, in a spasm of desperate cramming, it ended and we had to remind ourselves there wasn't any more studying to do. The day before Memorial Day we cleared out, leaving dust, and twisted hangers. II Ours wasn't a notably arrogant sophomore class. The word was that second year was the hardest. lt was. We were the first class to experience the full force of the new administrations ambitious plans for academic im- provement. The first sign was a toughening up of regula- tions and studies. This we felt immediately. But as more and more plans were revealed we felt a little disappointed that We wouldn't be around for the icing. Early in the season we struck back with the Villanova victory dance and left the school a standard for measuring any future riot. As one observer described it: The pictures reveal an indescribable chaos of twisted limbs and con- torted faces, brought about by engagement in some secret species of fertility dance. The bodies of the participants are being torqued or twisted violently, probably in reaction to the primitive musical cacophony being sounded through- out the place of Arms. No one even noticed when Dan Pisello, injured in the crush, leapt from his ambulance and twisted off for more. October brought the debut of a long overdue Counseling Center in connection with the projected psychology depart- ment. Apart from conferences and testing, it provided a Sequence of attractive secretaries and Drama Society talent. The snow came early that year and stayed long. The deli- Cacy of Thanksgiving's half-inch fall became gross slush by Christmas. We were cloyed before the holiday SeaS0H 9-Hd impervious soon after. Life moved indoors to the caf- where cults began to solidify. There were cliques fOr the llterati, the ROTC, the bridge players, the athletic teams- A few even developed geographically around hom6'f0WH newspapers. When you got tired of your peer group, there was always the parimutual running nightly in Wheeler, where you could drop a dollar or two on the mouse of your choice amid the hoarse cheering of touts with colds. Dorothy Day and Barry Coldwater spoke back to back for the Cross and Scroll. The campus grew more political as the Crusader took to publishing a current affairs section and the administration blocked the establishment of a YAF chapter. Meanwhile we were needled by Dave Nord- loh's morning radio show fuVengeance is mine, saith the Nord. j and Phil Nobile's new 6'Dissent column. Midyear saw the formation of the Senior Prefect Program and the opening of the Dinand Library stacks. Even'Kim- ball Hall Enterprises risked an innovation by serving some- thing called chop suey on Sunday nights, though some swore it was nothing more than elbow macaroni. In Feb- ruary the editors of Time published an assessment of Cath- olic education that angered some and satisfied others, yet seemed somehow already a thing of the past. Spring brought elective choices and, a little later, Stu Long and A1 Lee representing '64 in the olympics on the quad- rangle. Grendel Halfcoat appeared, an obscure hero whose adventures were serialized on the DO bulletin board to advertise the soph Prom Prelude. lust as We clutched for finals the Crusader featured an arcadian drawing of what Holy Cross would like about 1975 but, mo-re concerned with stubborn facts, we took a walk through the mud to the nearly finished rooms of Clark and plotted another year. In third year it seemed we returned to a different college. The daily Mass requirement, withering a year now, was formally a thing of the past. Check-in regulations were loosened and their enforcement tightened. And as we dragged our living equipment into Hanselman and Clark, the one smelling of Clorox and the other of newly finished woodwork, we discovered a new caf under our noses, complete with laundromat. ln the new caf that year the bearded, snowcapped juniors snarling their mom- ing coffee sensed a new dispensation at work. Something old was dying. The former tautology of student-adminis- tration antagonism was giving way to a frenzy of experi- mentation and development. One of the the most startling realizations that fall was that Holy Cross had a first-rate drama group. Starting with a Sanguine Oedipus and a gaudy Boy Friend, the troupe reHected the brilliance and versatility of the desperate little man from Yale, Ken Happe, 358, who kept it popping. We waited for the spring and another look at Stringer's Falstaff in Part II. Through the fall we Watched the installments of a lurchmg football season and an extraordinary team that somehow never got moving. When they were good they WCIC VCTY good-self-consciously at Harvard, riotously. at Colgate- But when they weren't so good the roof fell in, as in the painful Syracuse game. Against UConn limmY Holloran ran a startling 88-yard touchdown so we could swagger to Boston with our accustomed verve. But BC was big and ready, denying us the win that would have made the sea- son. That same week, however, the basketball team revved up with a heart-warming 84-66 rout over AIC. The more optimistic already saw NIT in neon, but the New England climate discourages extravagance and there were many blank scoreboards to be filled. .lust before Thanksgiving we jammed the fieldhouse to hear Martin Luther King, who gracefully eased us from our well fenced home to an outside World that needed work. He told us time was neutral. We were responsible for it, he said, giving us another of the painful moments that had been becoming rather f requent-the anxious real- izations that home and college weren't going to nurse us forever. Anything novel, from a clear day to an axe murder, lends color to the bleak New England winter. That winter it was the tiddly-wink team, a junior creation that caught on for a facetious moment and even won a few tournaments. Led by Phil,Nobile, the team gave prominence to several of the campus more improbable athletes including ,lim Glimm and Nick Parker. They boasted a number two ranking after Harvard but lost disastrously to the sober thinkers of our own Student Congress, who withheld its charter as an offi- cial campus organization. The team di d b tl young with the fzzld. C a mp Y and The weekend before Christmas vacation saw '64, put on Yule Crepuscule, a dry run for the Prom and the lush t mixer in memory. The bash, augmented with birch Xniejg trees fwhere cut?l and a suspiciously boisterous if lu Santa, put us in a holiday mood an agonizing week Cailfflyy The new year brought control of the paper For the fi time since Kaleidoscope, ,64 was runnin a ' Ist publication. Like a pinwheel, it sent offgspalrilciblcfli ciampus the too close and cumulatively gave a little light-caiit Stung casionally wittyj columns, specials on the theology di fat. ment and campus creativity, fiagrantly twisted Vaii' th headlines, angry rebuttal letters-brassy and sophomgiiy but readable for the first time in years. The b C Editor Joe MCGIHHISS resigned with other meriibeaisrblfp staff. Paul Mayer became Editor only to be jolted b h resignation of Features Editor Phil Nobile who changes excessive moderator censorship. The paper limped out the semester only to be given a final kick. by administration objections to a rather mild parodyedition. It was a rough year for all the media. Signs asking, Vllbafs this about George DelVlore? appeared after the disk jockey's dis. missal from WCHC after a dispute with the Station Man- ager about musical taste in programming. Another exodus ensued and the situation degenerated into a truly silly chaos. The Purple continued to weather charges of obscur- ity and personal selection policy. Its tactic of ignoring such charges insured stability and prevented a flood of resigna- tions. Even the sacrosanct Purple Patcher would be shrouded in controversy when some deputized members of the class printed flyers asking for impeachment of the editor. After reading week we found the snow almost gone. The gray residue beside the taller buildings diminished each day, producing rivulets that became noisy whirlpools at the manholes. We watched and hoped the erstwhile snow- flakes swooshing into the sewers were the last we would see. And one faintly green day we chanced a trot to class without coats. The spring brought new debate on NSA and the antagonists, Bastien and Dumouchel, were from our own ranks. The Congress again voted membership d0WI1 and some wondered whether it wasn't emulating its proto- type. Came the Prom. It was a long time coming. Eight months back, after a weeli of sleepless nights devoted to interviews, the class councll had chosen as Prom King a wiry, darkheaded pSYCl10l0SY major with a taste for high comedy and a knack for the soft sell. Presently things began to happen as a lllllldfffd and a half weary juniors gave varying amounts of their time against a bucolic triduum in May. Class of ,64 Was for the first time acting as a vibrant if ragged unit. Call Thea do it, asked a fatherly and liable administration, can af these cults and sub-cults support a high budget prom? thought so and did it in spades. Despite 11056-1'l1I'lI11ng wk and the removal of the chairman and his date we llfan rs. deeply of our last underclass weekend and became S6l110 The Summer Oozed Past, usuallY Without our notice, until the painfully clear mornings of late August warned 115 0 another loss and another challenge. But the feehug wad less melancholy than resignation, for this had all llappejled before many times. Perhaps, we considered, summers 111 been 0VC1'1'ated all along. Perhaps theY weren't the Jolrgut interludes they seemed from February's distance, ju father nothing more than lulls between the burstS Of Pal . . 15 In ii gleat throb. We repeated: Euphoria, YOU and me qui s. eva pla the Me Pai We the clio cou cepi We that care ine: rem in tl plio eatin and that It w cont Sellit tfYi1 all e insol Cfissi A di the 1 of gl Who 556111 Carli to 10: Nt.. day j flat E-it day' ahve all it s for a H bel lbw, the I I As seniors we expected more of the same. We were wrong. Like it or not, we felt our interests and anxie- ties move outside the gatesg it was time now that we should start going. For one thing, we had mobility. With Cars all things were possible. The circle of Ephraim's and the Fed- eral stretched now to Boston, Hanover, New York-where ever you could go and get back by Sunday night. New places appeared and became familiar-Kenmore Square, the Hilltop, Natick's Mr. Donut, the slow-down ruts at the Merritt toll booths, Marlborough Street, Wellesley, the Paxton Inn. We confronted decisions and felt the dizziness of freedom the ancientry had been so long warning us of. Some of the choices were agreeable. Now we would elect theology courses. A few had to opt between Levis and a beard. KAC- ceptable apart, together they became somehow offensivej We could even pick our diploma style. But the decisions that mattered were painful. It was the time to stew about careers and grad schools, about jobs and money and the inexorable draft. We remet the multiple-choice ordeals remembered so fondly from high school. Neatly classified in three-digit numbers, we attacked the paper work of ap- plication. fOne school had a form for applying for appli- cation forms.j Deadlines were met, ambitions contracted, and at one time or another each of us discovered abruptly that his mind wasn't on Holy Cross now. It was, withal, a good year. The best of four. Bob Murphy convinced the Dean that first-period classes were ugly for seniors, and class schedules began to look less physically trying. A pizzeria opened on campus, turning Luigi's into an exclusive senior club and angering Luigi. Waugh, Park- inson, and Cousins came to talk, along with a highly suc- cessful Chinese Culture Festival. A dispute arose between Congress President Shields and the Outing Club's Stu Long over jurisdiction in the area Of chartered buses and mixers. Another occurred when the Wl10's Who selections were questioned. But somehow they Seemed less important than they would have a few months earlier. The present was already past, and no one wanted to lose much sleep over it. November 22nd was a clear day in the 50's. It was.a Fri- day and many of us were planning weekends, setting up dates, catching up on laundry, writing overdue .letters- EHCI1 Of us will remember exactly what he was doing that daY- It was the day of the President's murder. Its signific- ance was so massive, the shock so wrenching, that we knf2W all the circumstances would be burned into our mem01'1eS fOr all time. There was no public display. We felt instead 3 ballast of depression that dulled the pOStP0Ued.BC VIC' t0fY- quieted Christmas, and brought maturity a giant steP closer- It was the most disruptive death of our time and the central fact of our senior year in college. Sixty-four's last Crusader appeared as a magazine. A rash of collegiate magazines had appeared over the past year- the Moderator, the New Generation, Notre Dame's Schol- astic. The Crusaderis own policy had been to stress inter- pretations and comment rather than news. Most of the facts were knowng readers watched instead for the Ryan and Hart columns, the faculty sketches, and the specials. The new Crusader was well written and sharply laid out, al- though no one claimed it was anything but a beginning. But when the junior class took over from Mayer, Roche, and company, they reverted to the old journal form for reasons of their own, and one of 64's most promising in- novations became a white elephant. Around February most of us started counting days, for it was now just a matter of time. Even for those who listened to the perennial warning that this was an eight-and not a seven-semester college, there was a finality in the all-but- complete transcripts we ordered and the recommendation letters being forwarded by mentors who were becoming friends. And there just wasn't that much urgency any more. The hundred days party made us almost alumni. Then Lent came, bringing for most of us our first experience of the strictures of fast, but bringing as well the promise of warm weather and a long reading week around Easter. We began to recognize the faces We greeted walking to dinner and spotted some new grass in the unslushed strip running from Kimball to Fenwick. Then we were gone. We went to Florida from which the dirty snow and the sand had been removed. In April and May there were rays to be had on top of the hill fthough the Dean of Men urged the maintenance of Ha collegiate atmospherenj. Between sun treatments we reserved motel rooms, apportioned tickets, and arranged for our academic gowns, unused since a swim at the 9-20, to be pressed for our guest, President Lyndon B. Johnson. In mid-,I une we graduated from a green and fragrant col- lege from which the dirty snow and the sand had. been re- moved. A college that wasn't experiencing a hurricane. We'll see one another again. In two's and three's. most likely-at the Biltmore bar, at a party in Boston, ln the stands at a football game, at a wedding. And whenever there are two or three of us gathered together we won t be talking about the all-nighters or the dawn patrols or the loneliness of the night's cold in New England.,The conscious has places for such things. But we won t be s1ng- ing about Mamie Reilly or Mother Kimball either. On the Contrary, we started by laughing and we ll play it out that Way. W-6,11 remember Jagoda's Turkish Bath and Nordloh s program, Giuffra at the Garden, and the tlmes people reached that satirization point. We were that kind of class. CHARLES A. ABDELLA B.S. Political Science 765 Grafton St. Worcester, Mass. Sophomore Class Vice Presi- dent, Student Congress, Class Council, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, YDC, Executive Chairman, Outing Club, Sen- ior Brother Programg Wor- cester Clubg Junior Prom Corn- mittee Chairman. JOSEPH AIETA, III B.S. History 8 Barry Park Dorchester, Mass. Sanctuary Society, Vice Pre- fectg IRC, Vice President, Bos- ton Clubg Hockey, Manager. VINCENT J. AMAB B.S. Mathematigl 67 Poe Ave, Newark, N, J. Crusader, WCHC, K of C, Mathematics Club, John C 1' SOCICty3 Outing Jeri? et Clubg Rugby, 7 Sey CHARLES F. AMELIN A.B. Mathematics 165 Ingleside Ave, Worcester, Mass, Deanis List 3' Math t' W Club? YDCg Outing enCl1ub:S Worcester Club, JOHN L. ANDRONIC A.B. Classics A 50 Fellows St, Boston, Mass. Olltinff B I Merriiiiack uVi1lley0S6ITSb 3 SKY Football. 214 4 JAMES F. ARPE B.S. Physics 812 Robertson St. Wauwatosa, Wis. Crusader, Photography Eclitorg Physics Societyg Outing Clubg Chicago Clubg Military Ball Committeeg AFROTC, Special Services Oflicerg AFROTC Drill Team. BRIAN P. ATKINSON B.S. Psychology 88L3gEi0?lIf 'gel WILZIQM R ATTRIDGE CCDg Marching Band, Drum 7 W3IIL?slfEgcErXj:6 M-Hj01 Trident Societ , Y Worce t M l1glSl331l5Eg5l'3H1ui.C 0 m U1 3 I1 d 6 I' g1t1tE:1flgbClub sTerrusteZSSWorces ROBERT PETER BACON B.S. History Shelburne, Vt. YRCg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg AFROTC. JOSEPH H. BALLWAY, JR. A.B. Mathematics 229 Monticello Dr., N. S racuse N 'Y Y 1 1 - - - . Purple Patcher, Copy Echtorg Sodalityg Sanctuary SOCICWS Mathematics Clubg YDC, EXCC utive Boardg Outing Clubg CCH tral N. Y. Club. 215 4 r l fi-,Q .ii W PETER JAMES BARRETT AB. Pre-Medical 125 Arlington St. Haverhill, Mass. Purple Key, K of C, Advocate' Sanctuary Society, Biology So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Merrimack Valley Club, Vice President, Junior Prom Committee, Var- sity Football. 7 JEFFREY A. BANDROWSKI B.S, Chemistry 382 Berkshire Rd. Ridgewood, N. .l- Cross and Crucible, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program? Metropolitan Club? . Julllor Prom Committee, Swimming, Co-Captain, German Club. TERRENCE J. BARNICLE ALB. Political Science 14- Winslow St. Worcester, Mass. St. Thomas More Society, Out- ing Club, Worcester Club. A. SIDNEY BARRITT, III AB. Pre-Medical Honors 311 Garfield Pl, Brooklyn, N, Y, Deanls List 1, 2, 3, Crusader Cross and Scroll, Sodality, Secretary, Milieu, Biology SO- C1etYS Outing Club. n 9 I 216 I J yi JOHN F. BARRY B.S. History 161 Oxford St. Hartford, Conn. Sanctuary Society, IRC- St Thomas More Society, MDC, Olltlng Club, Hartford Club. PHILIP L. BARRY 14.3. Pre-Medical 169 Corey St. W. Roxbury, Mass. Purple Paicher, WCHC, Engi- neering Manager, Biology So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Boston Club, Modern Language Excel- lence Award. Engi- Y So- Senior Foston Excel- JOSEPII H. BAs'r1EN 13.3. History 41-676 N. 35th St. Arlington, Va. Wl1o's Who, Student Congress, Blood Drive Chairman, Eiicecu- tive Assistant to the President, Glee Club, St. Thomas More Society, Conservative Club, YRC, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Chairman, Dixieland Club, Class Council, junior Prom Committee. PAUL E. BATES AB. Pre-Medical 1505 Bedford St. Rome, N. Y. Wllols Vilho, Pur le Ke p y, Stu- dent Congress, Purple Patcher, Circulation Manager, Sodality Biology Society, Senior Broth er Program, Central N. Y. Cluby .Iunior Prom Committee. K. of C, Sanctuary Society, GEORGE G. BAXTER, III B.S. Physics 123 N. Long Beach Ave. Freeport, N. Y. BJF Debating Society, CCD, Sanctuary Society, Physics So- ciety, Outing Club, Trident Society, Board of Governors, NROTC, Batallion Staii, Stu- dent Prefect. ROGER V. BARTHOLOMEW B.S. Physics 910 Laurel St. Rome, N. Y. Sodality, Sanctuary Society, Physics Society, Central N. Y. Club, AFROTC, Cadet Major? NSF Grant. EDWARD G. BECHT B.S. History 2198 Troy Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. Outing Club, 1VIetropol.itan Club, Varsity Basketball. THOMAS P. BEGLEY A.B. Spanish 71 Governor St. Springfield, Mass. Student Congress? fufpl? Patcher, Cross and Scroll, CCD, Vice President, 101111 Colet Society, YDC, Executive Board, Outing C1ub2,Seg1g5 Brother Program? Sprmg 6 Clubs Boston Club, Homecom- ing Committee. I sn- JOHN R. BIEN B.S. History 143 Ontario Ave. Holyoke, Mass. Class Council, Purple Patcher, CCD, President, Springfield Club, President, Rugby. DONALD F . BLANFORD AB. Pre-Medical Honors 2425 Kensington Ave. Buffalo, N. Y. Dean's List, 1, Crusader, WCHC, Director of Announc- ers, BJF Debating Society, Vice President, Drama Society, Bi- ology Society, Outing Club, Homecoming Committee, Jun- ior Prom Committee, German Club, Modern Language Excel- lence Award, Folk Music Club. JAMES R. BOEHLER A.B. History 238 Alphonse St. Rochester, N. Y. WCHC, Sodality, Sanctuary Society, St. Thomas More So- ciety, Outing Club, Rochester Club. KEVIN E. BooTH A.B. Economics 3 North Ave. Niantic, Conn. CCD, Economics Club, Secre tary, St. Thomas More Society, Military Ball Committee , Freshman Football, RugbYS AFROTC, Arnold Air Society Commander. WILLIAM JOHN BLEICHERT B.S. Accounting 3412 Irwin Ave. New York, N. Y. Dean's List 3, K of C, Grand Knight, Sanctuary Society St Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Metropolitan Club Freshman Basketball, Fresh man Baseball, Student Prefect .lohn J. Crowley Purse. .2 152' Spf. ' Q 1 W., . ff f Q' JOHN M. Bopp A.B. Pre-Medical 1 Fraser St. Pelham, N, Y, Biology Society, Outing Metropolitan Club. RAFAEL B. BORRAS B.S. Biology Club 3 Box 9123 Santurce, P. R. Biology Societyg Outing International Club. THOMAS J. BOWEN, JR. B.S. English 42 Leicester Rd. Marblehead, Mass. Student Congressg St. Thomas More Societyg Outing Club, Boston Club. Club 3 MICHAEL E. BoYcE B.S. Psychology 92 Lynton Rd. Albertson, N. Y. Dean's List 3g Purple Patcherg Conservative Club, Outing Clubg Metropolitan Club, Tri- dent Societyg NROTC, Semper Fidelis Society, Psychology Club. as Xi .A S FRANCIS X. BOYLAN A.B. English 15 Electric Ave. E. Greenbush, N. Y. YDCg Outing Club, Eastern N. Y. Club, President, NROTC. ANDREW E. BRENNAN B.S. English 611 Second St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Purple Patcher, WCHC, St. Thomas More Society, Con- servative Club, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Club, Military Ball Committee Chairman, Junior Prom Committee, Yacht Club, Vice Commodore, Trident So- ciety, NROTC, Company Exec- utive Ollicer, O'Kane Art Ex- hibition. KENNETH C. BRENNAN B.S. Economics 12 Elmwood Ave. Rye, N. Y. Glee Club, Outing Club, Sen- ior Brother Program, Wres- tling, Captain. GERARD F. BROCKLESBY B.S. Political Science Treble Cove Rd. Billerica, Mass. Class Council, K of C, Glee Club, Cross and Crucible, IRC, St. Thomas More So- ciety, YDC, Executive Board, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Merrimack Valley Club, Secretary, Boston Club, FRANCIS J. BRODERICK B.S. Biology 174 Bell St. Manchester, N. H, BJOJOQSY S0CiCfy, Outing Club, Merrimack Valley Club. Junior Prom Committee. MICHAEL J. BROWN B.S. Natural Sciences 6 Abbott St. Worcester, Mass. Deanis List 3, Student Con- SFCSSS John Colet Society, President. X ss NA r X .. .S NXN X NSS iff- W V, , mug,--.3-x.xM PAUL E. BRUNELL AB. History 39 May St. wf0l'CCSlC1', Mass. Outing Club: Worcester Club Junior Prom Committee. . K N S 5 SSSSTQ SX Sac is x .x X X Qs xx sg N X is s Qs X Xxx X sg .. X, xxss 5 - Rx x X RICHARD L. BURDEN B.S. History 26 Herbert Rd. Braintree, Mass. IRC, Outing Club, Boston Club, Homecoming Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee. THOMAS H BUTLER WILLIAM J. B.UTLI:R B S Economics B.S. Englislg, 162 Spring St 684 Gentry P r. Oranoe N J Lancaster, a. Outlng Club Boston Club, SfJflalitY3 Sf- Thglin1S.MEreUEO: Jers6Y Club Iunlor Prom c1etY5 Outing u ' ua Y' Commlttee Varsity Football. AFROTC' MICHAEL E. BURKE A.B. History 30 Snake Brook Rd. Wayland, Mass. Dean's List 2, 3, Student Con- gress, Purple Patcher, WCHC, Director of Announcers, CCD, K of C, Marching Band, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, Con- servative Club, Chairman, YRC, Secretary, Outing Club, Boston Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee. BENJAMIN A. BURRELL B.S. Mathematics 37 Whitman St. New Britain, Conn. Purple Patcher, WCHC, CCD, Mathematics Club, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Hartford Club, Freshman Base ball. RICHARD F. BYRNE B.S. Economics 74 Puritan Ave. Forest Hills, N. Y. Crusader, Economics Club, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, s Q ,Ar -,gs is Junior Prom Committee Chair- man, Freshman Basketball, Tennis, Co-Captain. EW rig: ia..- rrrr .. N JOHN J. BYRNES B.S. Biology 107 Lounsbury Ave. Waterbury, Conn. WCHC, Sanctuary Society, Biology Society, Physics So- ciety, Conservative Club, New Haven Club, Rugby, Yacht Club. DANIEL J. CACCHIO B.S. Accounting 6 Thompson St. Morristown, N. J. Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Jersey Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee. DAVID J. CALLAHAN B.S. Accounting 107 Creenhedge Dr. Camillus, N. Y. Purple Patcher, Accountant, WCHC, Advertising Manager, K Of Cs Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Central N. Y- Clubs Junior Prom Commit- tee, Accountant. n 222 ROBERT J. CAHILL A.B. Chemistry 129 Fairview Ave. Brockton, Mass. Student Congress, Glee Club, Paks, Varsity Quartet, lnter. collegiate Chorale, Choir, John Colet Society, Vice President, Boston Club, Junior Prom Committee. . LEONARD P. CALLAHAN B.S. Physics 74 Western Ave. Lynn, Mass. Physics Society, Outing Club, Yacht Club, Trident Society, NROTC. N ' Xx JoHN P. CANAVAN AB. Greek 55 Lefurgy Ave. Hastings-on-the-Hudson, N. Y. John Colet Society, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Metropolitan Club, Homecom- ing Committee, Junior Prom Committee, Hellenic Tradition Seminar, Latin Sight Reading Prize, Greek Sight Reading Prize. PAUL F. CAREY B.S. Economics 266 Burncoat St. Worcester, Mass. Economics Club, Blakely Labor Academy, Outing Club, Junior Prom Committee. PHILIP LoUrs CARON B.S. Economics 35 Freeland St. Worcester, Mass. Outing Club, Worcester Club. EDWARD J. CASEY B.S. English 342 Main St. S. Grafton, Mass. Student Congress, CCD, John Colet Society, YDC, Outing Club, Worcester Club, Fresh- man Football. 223 JEREMIAH P. CASEY B.S. Chemistry Honors 21 Burgoyne St. Elmwood, Conn. Dean's List 1, Class Council, Purple Patcher, Academics Edi-, tor, Crusader, Cross and Scroll, Cross and Crucible, President, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Hartford Club, Homecoming Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee. PAUL D. CASHION A.B. Pre-Medical 27 Liszt St. Boslindale, Mass. Dean's List 2, 35 BiolOgY SO' cietyg Boston Clubg JUUIOT Prom Committee. MICHAEL C. CASSILY B.S. Physics 255 Washington St. Brewer, Me. WCHCg Physics Societyg YDCQ Outing Clubg Maine Club. JOHN E. CHADWICK, JR. B.S. Physics 198 S. Cherry Grove Ave. Annapolis, Md ANTHOYY P. C WCHC, Business Directorg K B.Sl PsychoIlIcig1ylESE Of C3 Physics Societyg Conser- 2238 Gunther Ave Vative Clubg Outing Clubg New York N. Y. ' Dixieland Clubg Trident SO- Outing Clubg 3 Metropolitan CfetY3 NROTC, COITIIUUHICR- Clubg Junior Prom Committeeg tions Officer. Psychology Club. aff WVWW avg wt Fw Q, ,, JOHN A. CEGALIS B.S. Psychology Turkey Hills Rd. Granby, Conn. Crusaderg WCHCg Biology So- cietyg Outing Clubg NROTC KMCJ , Company Executive Oili- cerg C ross C urrent, Editorg Semper Fidelis Soeietyg Psy- chology Club. JOHN NlICHAEL CHOVANIEC A.B. English 20 E. Fourth St. Mount Vernon, N. Y. Purple Patcherg Crusaderg BJF Debating Societyg St. Thomas More Societyg Outing Club? Senior Brother Programg MCT- ropolitan Clubg HOmCCOm1Hg Committee: Junior Prom Com- mittee Chairmang Yacht Club- RAY! 115.1 9 Wo Koffio Ley Club: NROTC. ' Oliver: Nl' Pm .43 3133 Phd.. HCHC M.. 005135 lim Hb: Slam: lun H1311 RAYMOND CINCO, JR. B.S. Political Science 94 Cutler St. Worcester, Mass. K of C, Outing Club, WO1'CCS- ter Club, Trident Society, NROTC, Company Executive Oflicer, NROTC Drill Team. PAUL A. COGHLAN AB. Classics 8120 Hennig St. Philadelphia, Pa. WCHC, Music Director, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Philadelphia Club, Ger- man Club. PETER M. COLLINS ALB. English 10 Acorn Lane Larchmont, N. Y. Purple Patcher, Purple, Asso- ciate Editor, Outing Club, ,lun- ior Prom Committee, WCHC, Cross and Scroll. WILLIAM J. COMCOWICH B.S. English 256 N. Main St. Ansonia, Conn. Crusader, Marching Band, Dance Band, Aquinas Circle, Blakely Labor Academy, Out- ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, New Haven Club, Homecoming Committee, Class of 1967 Executive Committee. GERALD E. COLBERT B.S. History 218 Main St. Boylston, Mass. Senior Class Vice President, Class Council, Sodality, Day Student Prefect, Worcester Club, Varsity Track, Hockey. WILLIAM MICHAEL COLI B.S. Sociology 191 Algonquin Dr. Warwick, R. I. Outing Club, Bristol County Club, JV Lacrosse, Sociology Club. RICHARD J. CONLEY B.S. English 82 Concord St. Portland, M6- studenf Congress WCHC9 John Colet SocietyS Outing Club, Maine Club. PHILIP J. CONNELL, JR. B.S. Accounting 359 West Ave. Darien, Conn. WCHC, Glee Club, Economics Club, Outing Club, F airfield County Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee. PETER J. CONNELLY B.S. History 153 Hinckley Rd. Milton, Mass. St Thomas More Societ . . y, Outing Club, Boston Club, Rugby , Trident Society NROTC. JAMES M. CONNOLLY A.B. Economics 62 Seasongood Rd. Forest Hills 75, N . Y, Student Congress, Outing Club, 226 I THOMAS J. CONNOLLY ALB. Economics 62 Seasongoocl Rd. Forest Hills 75 N Y Choir! Economics Club: Out- ing Club? Metropolitan Club- .lunior Prom Committee: Yacht Club. THOMAS R. CONSTABILE, JR. A.B. English 230 Pelham Rd. New Rochelle, N. Y. St. Thomas More Societyg Out- ing Clubg Metropolitan Club 7 Homecoming Committeeg Jun- ior Prom, Executive Assistant. A JAMES P. COONEY B.S. History 2 Duff St. Watertown 72, Mass. Purple Patcherg K of C3 Mathematics Clubg YDCg Out- ing Clubg Boston Clubg Var- sity Trackg Trident Societyg NROTC CMCJ, Platoon Lead- erg Semper Fidelis Society. PHILLIP F. CORBETT A.B. Pre-Medical The Crossway East Acres Troy, N. Y. Class Councilg WCHCg Purpleg CCDg Choirg Biology Societyg Outing Clubg Junior Prom Committeeg Freshman Foot- ballg Hockeyg Fencing. J oHN M. COSTELLO A.B. Classics 15 Glenburnie Rd. W. Roxbury, Mass. Biology Societyg Economics Clubg St. Thomas More So- cietyg Outing Clubg Boston Clubg Varsity Footballg Fresh- man Track. DONALD E. Core 13.5. Biology 91 Everett St. Rockland, Mass. Biology Societyg Outing Clubg Boston Club. JOHN M. COUGHLIN, JR. B.S. Accounting 22 Ferdinand St. Worcester, Mass. Sodality, YDC, Worcester Club, AF ROTC. RONALD J. COULTER B.S. History 70 Hillvale Rd. Albertson, N. Y. Class Council, Purple Pdlfdlef, Senior Section Editor, K of C, Trustee, IBC, St. Thomas More Society, YDC, Outing Club, Homecoming Committee, Military Ball Committee, .lull- ior Prom Committee, Trident Society, NROTC QMCD, Pla- toon Leader, Semper Fidelis Society, Folk Music Club. FRANCIS J. COVELLI A.B. Pre-Medical 138-15 58th Ave. Flushing 55, N. Y. Glee Clubg Biology Sociefys YRC, Outing Club, Metro- politan Club, Boston Club, Modern Language Excellence Award. S 1 JEROME W. Cox A.B. History 600 Bidgely Ave. Annapolis, Md. Dean's List 3, Purple Key- 7 Class Council, Purple Patcher' St. Thomas More Society, Outi ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Dixieland Club, JV Lacrosse, Trident Society, Stu- dent Prefect. FRANCIS T. CRIMMINS B.S. Chemistry 32 Sussex Lane Worcester, Mass, Cross and Crucible, Vice Presi- d , 4 . . ent, AFROTC, Training OHL Cer, Arnold Air Society. 228 ROBERT E. CRONIN A.B. Pre-Medical 9908 S. Hoyne Ave. Cl' ff Ill. Bioloon Sncago 1 , oy 0CiCtY5 Uuting Club: Senior Brother Program, Chi. Cago Club, Vice President. CHRISTOPHER X. CURRY B.S. Physics 2606 Evans Dr. Silver Spring, Md, CCD: Physics Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Programg Dixieland Club: AFROTC, Per. sonnel OHicerg Arnold Air So- cietyg Freshman Class Hom e- coming Display, Chairman. DANIEL W. DALY B.S. Political Science 8 School St. Bradford, Pa. Purple Patcherg CrusaderS Choir, St. Thomas More So- cietyg Outing Club? Homecom- ing Committee, .lUI110f Prom Committeeg Freshman Foot- ballg Western Pa. Club. s. TIMOTHY I. DACEY, III AB. English Honors 216 Fifth Ave. Westover A.F.B., Mass. Dean's List 1, 2, 3, Crusader BJF Debating Society, Presii dent, Cross and Scroll, Chair- IHHII. JOHN R. DALPHIN ALB. Sociology 14 Autumn Lane Matawan, N. J. Purple Patcherg CCD, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Homecom- ing Committee, Sociology Club, Western Pa. Club. sr NICHOLAS P. DECARLO B.S. History 3141- S. Orchard Rd. Syracuse, N. Y. WCHCg Choir, IBC, St. Thom- as More Society, Senior Broth- er Programg Central N. Y- Club, Varsity Basketball. 229 THOMAS J. DECKER B.S. Biology 60 Greenvale Ave. Yonkers, N. Y. Sodalityg Biology Society, Stu- dent Prefect. ROBERT J. DELVECCHIO ANTHONY NICHOLAS DEMARIA B.S. Chemistry 51 Park Lane Trumbell, Conn. f Sodality, Cross and Crucible, Outing Club, Fairfield County Club, German Club, Vice Presi- F X 2 ! il dent. 3 1 l 5 1 f 1 4 l 4 . GEORGE E. DEMORE 5 14.3. Classics 310 Summit Ave. 1 Syracuse, N. Y. y WCHC, Sports Director, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, y Central N. Y. Club, President, Homecoming Committee Co- Chairman, Junior Prom Com- mittee Chairman, Sanctuary 5 Society. 5 ! 4 Prom Committee. ALB. Pre-Medical 17 Plank Rd. Bayonne, N. .1 . Student Congress, Class Coun- cil, WCHC, Biology Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother A Program, Jersey Club, .lunior BERNARD H. DEMPSEY, JR. h B.S. History ' ' -12: In. 3243 Klingle Rd., N. W. 5f.l'i,-,il Washington, D. C. Slikm St. Thomas More Society, Out- JOHN F. DENVIR ' N Iqbal ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- B.S. Economics Honors gram, Dixieland Club, Varsity 10341 S. Hoyne Ave. :EQ Football, Freshman Track, Chicago, lil. 2731- 5 AFROTC, Arnold Air society, choir, Chicago Club, Junior it Student Prefect. Year Abroad. fhipm in JIS Junior ROGER J. DESAUTELS ALB. Modern Language -118 Sherman St. Fall River, Mass. WCHC, General Manager, B.lF Debating Society, Sanctuary Society, Conservative Club, YRC, President, Boston Club, French Play. GEORGE S. DEPTULA B.S. Psychology 228 Sherwood Ave. Syracuse, N. Y. Dean's List 2, 3, Junior Class President, Who's Who, Pur- ple Key, Chairman, Student Congress, Class Council, Cru- sader, Sodality, Sanctuary So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Freshman Basketball, Freshman Baseball, Sophomore Spirit Committee, Co-Chairman, William Garvey Award, Student Prefect, Cen- tral N. Y. Club, Psychology Club. Louis J. DESANDRO B.S. Sociology 2013 Tac. Ftr. Wg., A.P.O. 120 New York, N. Y. Freshman Glee Club, Biology Society, Outing Club, Metro- politan Club, Military Ball Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee, AFROTC, Sociology Club. JAMES M. DEVINE B.S. Chemistry 237 Ninth St. Schenectady, N. Y. Cross and Crucible, Outin Club, Eastern N. Y. Club. MARVIN J. DEVOE B.S. Economics 25 Westvale Rd. Milton, Mass. WCHC, Assistant Station Man- ager, Physics Society, Eco- nomics Club, Outing Club, Boston Club, Military Ball Committee, Swimming, Man- ager, AFROTC, Administrative Oflicer. ROBERT B. DIETZ ALB. History 38 Parkwood Blvd. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. WCHC, St. Thomas More So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Homecom- ing Committee, Junior Prom Committee, Varsity Lacrosse. PHILIP R. D1XsoN A.B. English 614 E. Grant St. Appleton, Wis. Student Congress, Class Coun- cil, Drama Society, Sodality, Glee Club, Paks, Outing Club, Trustee, Homecoming Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee Chairman, Cheerleader. JOSEPH A. DONOVAN A.B. Psychology 354 Fourth Ave. Troy, N. Y. Sodality, Sanctuary Society, Freshman Glee Club, Marching B-311d9 Outing Club, Eastern N. Y. Club, Treasurer. WILLIAM J. DOOLEY, JR, ALB. Pre-Medical 452 S. Seventh Ave, W. Bend, Wig, Sodality, Milieu, K of C' Sanctuary Society, Biology Soi CMV? Outing Clubs Chicago Club, Cheerleader, Student Prefect. 7 CHARLES R. DOBENS B.S. Modern Language 789 Maple St. Manchester, N. H. Drama Society, Outing Club, Merrimack Valley Club, Mili. tary Ball Committee, Golf, G1'Ollp Operations Officer, AFROTC Drill Team. PETER J. DORAN AB. History 121 Roxen Rd. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Sophomore Class Secretary, Who's Who: Purple Key, Treasurer: Student Congress, Class Council: Crusader, Sanc- tuary Society: St. Thomas More Society: Outing Club? Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Club: Junior Prom Committee: JV Lacrosse: Class Social Committee, Chair- man. -ss is ' :sei X X 'ENS 'llllge H. 13 Cllllng lbg Mili. fl Golfg perations l Team, I E, Y. :cretaryg C Kell: ongreiii irg Sanc- Thomas mg Mei- al' Prom Crosse? e, Chalf' , THOMAS B. Down A.B. English 237 LaGrange St. Boston, Mass. Senior Class Treasurerg Class Councilg Outing Club, Trusteeg Senior Brother Programg Bos- ton Club, Secretary-Treasurerg Homecoming Committeeg ,lun- ior Prom Committee Co-Chair- mang Golf, Managerg German Club. MICHAEL W. DOYLE A.B. English 6456 Morris Park Rd. Philadelphia, Pa. Crusader, Managing Editorg Outing Clubg Philadelphia Clubg Junior Prom Committeeg NROTC. RONALD E. DOWER B.S. Psychology Grove St. Canaan, Conn. Sodality, Vice Prefectg CCDg Sanctuary Societyg Senior Brother Programg Junior Prom Committeeg Varsity Lacrosseg Rugbyg Student 'Prefectg Psy- chology Club. JAMES F. X. DOYLE B.S. Accounting Harbor Rd. Sands Point, N. Y. Purple Patcherg WCHCg Eco- nomics Clubg Blakely Labor Academyg St. Thomas More Societyg Conservative Clubg YDCg Outing Clubg Metropoli- tan Clubg Military Ball Com- mitteeg AF ROTC, Comptrollerg AFROTC Drill Team. TERENCE M. DOYLE , B.S. Accounting 3 Maura Ct. Waterville, Me. WCHCg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg Maine Cluhg Hockey. ROBERT J. DUMOUCHEL A.B. English Honors 667 Harris Ave. I Woonsocket, R. l. Student Con ress Secretar ' g 7 Yr Purple Patcherg Crusaclerg BJ F Debating Societyg Cross and Scrollg Drama Societyg History Academyg YDCQ Senior Broth- er Programg Bristol County Clubg Kaleidoscope, Co-Editor. ROBERT 1- EGAN ALB. Economw-S 305 N. Forest Ave- Rockville Centre, N- Y' Dean,s List 33 Purple KEY? Class Councilg Crusader, Man' aging News Editor, St. Thomas More Society? Olltmg Chfb' Metropolitan Club3 JHHQOF Prom Committee? Class Splut Committee, Chairman. WALTER M. EISIN, JR. AB. Philosophy 12516 S. 91st Ave. Palos Park, lll. Soclalityg Aquinas Circleg Out- ing Club, Chicago Club, Fresh- man Trackg Varsity Lacrosse, Swimming, Rugby. WILLIAM BROWN FACEY, JR. B.S. Physics 371 Pine St. Holbrook, Mass. Sodalityg Physics Society, John Colet Society, Outing Club, Boston Club, Military Ball Committee, Varsity Track, Cross Country Captain, AFROTC, Assistant Personnel Officer. JOHN J. FARLEY, III AB. Economics 101 Ocean Ave. Massapequa, N. Y, Class Councilg Sanctuary S0- cietyg Blakely Labor Academy, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Clubg Junior Prom Committee, Var- sity Lacrosse, Co-Captain, Honorary Secretary, Class of 19675 Student Prefect. 234 .wxxw NOW, . . Nxfiik X, . 1-is X L ,,. sq -ss fs QX X- is QE: gg x if - I 5 Q PAUL FARLEY B.S. Economics 17 Hampton Rd. Brockton, Mass. Student Congress, Class Coun- Clli K Of C, Chairman of Coun- c1l Activities, Glee Club. Ac- countantg St. Thomas More SOCICIYS Outing Club: Senior B li rot. cr Program: Boston Club. Presiclentg Homecoming Com- mllteei Junior Prom Commit- tee. MICHAEL J. FASCO B.S. Biology 14- Lincoln St. Granville, N. Y. Marching Band, Dance Band, Biology Society, Outing Club. WILLIAM R. FEHLNER B.S. Physics Honors 46 Van Buren St. Dolgeville, N. Y. Dean's List 1, 2, 3, Crusader' 5 Soclality, Sanctuary Society' Marching Band, A'uinas Cir Ll - cle, Physics Society, Mathe- matics Club, Outing Club 7 Homecoming Committee, Jun- ior Prom Committee, German Outing Club Varslty Football Club. Varsity Lacrosse RAYMOND M. F INo B.S. History 31 Fairview Ave. N. Plainfield, N. J. Purple Patcher, WCHC, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, Sen- ior Brother Program, .lersey Club, Sociology Club. RAYMOND B. FLANNERY, II AB. History 24 Wadsworth Ave. Winthrop, Mass. ' Sanctuary Society! Marching Band, IRC, John Colet S0- ciety, Outing Club, Boston Club, Concert Band. 235 7 PAUL P. FLYNN B.S. Social Science 21 Eureka St. Worcester 3, lVlass. Glee Club, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, YDC, Outing Club, Wlorcester Club, Junior Prom Committee. MICHAEL T. FLOOD B.S. Chemistry Hon0fS 1954 Cottage Grove Dr. Cleveland Hts., Ohio Dean's List 3, Freshman Glee Club, Cross anddCruciblC5 Cross anal Crucible, Editor, YRC, Outing Club, Ohio Club. MICHAEL S. FLYNN A.B. Sociology 5412 Blackstone St. Chicago 15, lll. C rusacler, Assistant News Edi- tor, YDC, Outing Club, Trustee, Chicago Club, Home- coming Committee, Junior Prom Committee, Fencing, Manager, Sociology Club. THOMAS F. FOOARTY LUKE M. FOLEY AB. English 4 Emerson St. Worcester, Mass. Student Congress, Class Coun- cil, ,lohn Colet Society, YDC, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Worcester Club, Junior Prom Committee. , BERNARD J. F L 22AiBi Enlihslgd B.S. HiSl0I3f EY P llderva eR 11 Thorndyke Rd. Cmsadermlil encetdj ' u . WOI'CCSl61', Mass. tol Couni gimlgjll J 1t01',PBr1s- Student Congress: lX'1illll6'IllllllL'S Commiuegf. u , unlor rom Club, Outing Club, Wfowestel. Club, Golf. i .J X .1 I-I ls P y WFS ' 'fx A if-mjj, X 937-LW 5, fy., A 1'-311 4.., ., N.F '- Ts A-s ' Nrlvflam foun- 'DC' Jthei lub, JOSEPH JEROME FRANK B.S. History 4-02 Piercefield Dr. Syracuse, N. Y, Purple Patcher, Crusader Homecoming Committe Institute Representative. Choir, History Academy, Outi ing Club, Central N. Y. Club' ' D e, Juni 1or Prom Committee, Rugby, Yacht Club, Student Marketing D . ----- - ... i-.,i-... --. ....... Ay?-w:wa+?-11:5-: DOUGLAS J. FRASER, JR. 14.3. Pre-flfedical 69-60 108th St. Forest Hills, N. Y. Pur l P p e atcher, Business Man- ager, BJF Debating Society, Biology Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee Co-Chairman, Tennis, Honors Program, 2. 3-mzzmriafznm -',- --Q:-A-ff --:eel JOHN A. F RAUENHEIM, JR. B.S. Social Sciences 75 Ruskin Rd. Buffalo, N. Y. WCHC, Economics Club, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, Con- servative Club, YRC, Outing Club, Western N. Y. Club, Homecoming Committee, Mili- tary Ball Committee, Account- ant, Junior Prom Committee, Yacht Club, Trident Society, N ROTC. A. PETER FRANK AB. Pre-Medical 53-53 207th St. Bayside, N. Y. DONALD T. GALLAGHER B.S. History 12 Midchester Ave. White Plains, N. Y. Purple Patcher, Metropolitan Club, Varsity Track, Trident Society, NROTC. CCD, Sanctuary Society, Biol- ogy Society, Outing Club, Met- ropolitan Club, Boston Club, Homecoming Committee. JOHN J. GALLAGHER B.S. Biology 94-80 Ridge Blvd. Brookl n 9 N Y y , . . K of C, Biology Society! PhYS' ics Society, Outing Club- XX. PATRICK W. GALLAGHER B.S. History 6213 Parkridge St. Cleveland 9, Ohio John Colet Societyg Outing Clubg Varsity Baskethallg Var- sity Baseball. PATRICK R. GIL B.S. Social Sciences 71 Northfield St. Greenwich, Conn. Mathematics Clubg Golf 3 Tri- dent Society 5 NROTC. FRANK P. GILLIGAN, JR. B.S. Psychology 12 E. Township Line Rd. Havertown, Pa. Crusader, Circulation Editorg YDCQ Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg Philadelphia Clubg Junior Prom Committeeg Varsity Footballg Psychology Club. NORBERT 1. GILMORE AB. Pre-Medical 15 Green Acres Dr. Burlington, Vt. WCHCg Biology Societyg Out- ing Cluhg Fencing. LEE S. GIUDICI B.S. English 272 Great Rd, Bedford, Mass. Bt. Thomas More Societyg Out. Ing Clubg Boston Clubg Mili- tary Ball Cornniitteeg Junigr Pf1'0rr1 Cornmitteeg Trident SO- CICWS NROTC. PETER M. GIUFFRA . JAMES Y GLIMM ANDREW H GONYEA 161 Park St 96 St tf gd A A B Psychology Montclair N 'J G d ra or Ve 20 Wells St d C .bl DYH, Y, NSS Purple Sanctuary Somew clee Club Choir ourm Club A.B. Hzstory A B En hsh K of C3 Bioloo gociet' . C ar en City N Y Plattsburgh N Y an ruc1 eg lstory A d- V ' L U emyg YRCQ Outing Clubs 43-1 T- arsity acrosse Psychology Club sey Club. JOHN C. GORDON ALB. Pre-Medical 14-03 Bedford St. Rome, N. Y. K of C, Biology Societyg Out- ing Clubg Central N. Y. Clubg Homecoming Committeeg ,lun- ior Prom Committee, Cheer- leader, Captaing Swimming, Rugby, AFROTC, Outstanding Freshman Cadet, Arnold Air Society. EUGENE W. GRABOWSKI B.S. Biology 29 Alling Ct. Kensington, Conn. Biology Society, President, Outing Club, Senior Brother Programg Hartford Club, V106 President, ll1I1i01' Prom Com' mitteeg Freshman Track- 239 THOMAS V. GRADLER A.B. Classics 1195 Union St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Purple Patcher, K of C, Sanc- tuary Society, St. Thomas More Society, YDC, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Boston Club, Homecoming Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee, Varsity Football, Manager, Varsity Baseball, Manager. JoHN E. GRADY, JR. B.S. English 11-02 Weston Rd. Wellesley, Mass. Purple Patcher, Crusader, Out- ing Club, Boston Clubg Junior Prom Committee. lNTICHAEL J. GRANEY AB. Pre-Medical 58 Ellicott Ave. Batavia, N. Y. Student Congress, Purple Patcher, Sanctuary Society, Glee Club, Choir, Secretary, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Homecoming Com- mittee, Junior Prom Commit- tee. JOHN P. GRATTAN AB. History 66 Old Town Crossing Southampton, N. Y. Student Congress, K of C, His- tory Academy, Outing Club, Vice President, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Military Ball Committee, Freshman Track, Trident So- ciety, NROTC QMCJ, Platoon Leader, Semper Fidelis Society, President, Wrestling. F. WILLIAM GREGORY, J R. ALB. English 99 Pelham Rd. Rochester 10, N. Y. Class Council, Glee Club, Out- ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Junior Prom Committee Co-Chairman. JAMES H. GRIFFIN A.B. English 78 Cushing St. Waltham, Mass. Purple Patcher, Crusader, K of C, Sanctuary Society, Mathe- matics Club, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Boston Club, Homecoming Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee. Rn-MQW JB. Pre-. l2 13111 Auleboro. Dfmig ll Leader: Yarsi K' rlfir: Biologt SC' Gab: Boson Club EY 'I Pllfplg Societvg Cretari-3 Brother 5: Com- Ionlmit. R X SQ RAYMOND A. GUILLETTE A.B. Pre-Medical 12 13th Sr. Attleboro, Mass. Dean's List lg Clee Club, Paks, Leaderg Varsity Quartet, Choir, Biology Society, Outing Clubg Boston Club. LESTER M. HADDAD, JR. Advanced Placement in Georgetown Medical School 5005 Wickett Ter. Bethesda 14, Md. Student Congressg Biology So- cietyg Senior Brother Program, Cheerleader. EDWARD B. HANIFY B.S. Political Science 30 Clairemont Rd. Belmont, Mass. BJF Debating Society, Sanc tuary Societyg IRCQ YDCg Out- ing Club, Trusteeg Military Ball Comniitteeg Junior Prom Com- mittee Co-Chairmang AF ROTC, Cadet Captain. R R. EDWARD F. HAGERTY B.S. English 35 Chestnut Ave. Larchmont, N. Y. Outing Club, JV Lacrosse, Rugby, Captain. ROBERT C. HANNON B S Biolo . . gy 58 Hillcrest Rd. Belmont, Mass. CCD, Biology Society, Outing Clubg Boston Clubg Homecom- ing Committeeg Varsity Track, Manager. JAMES C. HANSON A.B. Pre-Medical 2515 E. Lake Bluff Blvd. Shorewood 11, Wis. Biology Society, Outing Club Senior Brother Program, Chi cago Clubg Homecoming Com mitteeg Freshman Track Rugby. 1 JOHN F. HANSON A.B. Spanish 72 Cates Lane Worcester, Mass. CCD, Glee Club, YDCg Senior Brother Programg Worcester Club, Junior Prom Committee. JOHN P. HARAN B.S. Political Science 3 Village St. Worcester, Mass. Sodalityg St. Thomas More So- cietyg YDCQ Junior Prom Com- mittee Co-Chairmang Freshman Football. TIMOTHY G. HAYES B.S. Economics 1078 Parkside Dr. Lakewood, Ohio Freshman Class President, Stu- dent Congress, Athletic Affairs Chairman, Class Council, Eco- nomics Clubg Outing Club, Treasurerg Ohio Club, Home- coming Committee Chairman, Freshman Baseball. JAMES W. HEALY B.S. Accounting 910 Chippewa Lane Wilmetter, Ill. WCHCg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Program, Chicago Club, President, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee, Varsity Lacrosse. 242 FRANCIS J. HARVEY, JR, AB. History 216 Townsend Ave. Pelham Manor N. Y 45. XY , 3-3: ::. . ,LJ . lsiuff-5-' ' WCHCg Biology Society, His- fskfi Cr tory Academy, YDCg Outing Club, Fencing. 'uv .fg,' D llfif i 67:11 'Elf LII .fy-vu ,. V-r Y -I P -4 v, f . N: 1 th Y.. J-- l-Yilff. P L. ...... .X TY, JR. V Ave, Y. Y. iffftz HE. :Z Outing STEPHEN I. HEMENWAY A.B. English 12 Woodbine St. Worcester, Mass. Deanls List 2, Class Council, Purple Patclier, Sodality, Day Student Vice Prefect, John Co- let Society, YDC, Outing Club, Worcester Club, Junior Prom Committee, French Excellence Award, English Excellence Award, Rhetoric Academy. on r Q .1 YW, ll. R was Q X H. JoHN HENDLEY B.S. Biology 110 Argyle Ave. W. Hartford, Conn, Biology Society, Outing Club, Yacht Club. 243 1V1ICHAEL HENNESSEY B.S. History 153 Cypress St. Brookline, Mass. .lohn Colet Society, Outing Club, Boston Club, Varsity Football, Manager, Trident So- ciety, NROTC, Varsity La- crosse. THOMAS M. HENNESSEY, JR. B.S. English 37 Cabot St. Winchester, Mass. Purple Patcher, Crusader, Choir, St. Thomas More Socie- V ty, Outing Club, Boston Club, Junior Prom Committee Chair- man, German Club. ROBERT P. HICKEY, JR. B.S. Accounting 4117 Broadway Ave., W. Watertown, N. Y. St. Thomas More Society, Out- ing Club, Homecoming Com- mittee, Junior Prom Commit- tee, NROTC. I' E 13 E? l I i i GEORGE H. HILL, JR- A.B. English 11 Chicapee St. Worcester, Mass. CCD, Mathematics Club, .lffhfl Colet Society, YDCQ Outing Club, Worcester Club. GERALD B. HILLENBRAND ALB. English 540 Aldine Ave. Chicago, Ill. Purple Patcher, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Chicago Club, Yacht Club, Monsignor Joseph Kava- naugh Medal, Art Club. 1V1ICHAEL R. HOLLAND A.B. History 1541 Metropolitan Ave. Bronx 62, N. Y. WCHC, Choir, Marching Band, Biology Society, St. Thomas More Society, Con- servative Club, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Club, Homecoming Committee. DANIEL N. HOLLERAN B.S. English 31 Streit Ave. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Oean's 1,ist 2, John Colet So- CICWS YDC, Outing Club, Met- ropolitan Club. pp.. . DAVID G. HOLBORN B.S. English 68 Berkeley Ave. Yonkers, N. Y. Senior Brother Program, Jun. ior Prom Committee, Varsity Football, Varsity Baseball. JAMES F. HOLLORAN, JR. AB. Pre-Medical Honors 4114- Military Rd. Wvashington 15, D. C. Alpha Sigma Nu, President, Whois Who, Purple Key, Cross and Scroll, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Dixieland Club, Treas- urer, Varsity Football, Varsity Baseball, Captain, Student Pre- fect. ll B. Deanls 1 ciefyi Junior . ficiency WILLU 8.3. 3 C frog ,ESM Sub: 3911101 .llldem PM MICHAEL J. HoNEs B.S. Physics Honors 25 Upland Rd. Corning, N- Y- Deanvs List 1, 2, 3g Physics So- cietyg Senior Brother Program! Junior Prom Committeeg PrO Hciency Award in Russian. CHRISTOPHER J Hop U . PIN B.S. History - Political Science 1252 Benton Ave san Jose, Calif. ' Purple Patch . erg Sanctuary So- ciet ' y, Clee Clubg Choirg IRC Outing Club S 3 pringfield Clubi Homecoming Committeeg Mili- t . ary Ball Committee Chairmang Junior Prom Committeeg AFROTC, Armed Drill Team Commander, Information Offi- eerg Arnold Air Soeietyg Nor- ton Company Award as 0 ut- standing Basie Cadet. JAMES J. HORAN B.S. Economics 510 E. Mill Rd. Flourtown Pa Economics Clubg Cuting Clubg Philadelphia Clubg Trident So- eietyg NROTC. 32 Cedar St. W E. H 2 RD Taunton, Mas? , J N D. P. HUBBARD IIBTSilLChemisclgfA Bi010SY SOCICWS Outlnguclgub' B.S- H3-ggry - Political SCZCHCC 8 Charles St. Senior Bfofhef Program' HS: 1160 Dorroll St Batavia, N. Y. tol County Club, Secretirly, Grand Rapids Mlch Cross and Crucibleg Outing Boston, Club? HOIFeiE?om? St. Thomas More Society Out Club5 Senior Brother Pr0gT3mS Commltteeg Junlor F0 ing Club! Chlcago Club Student Prefect. mittee' T RAYMOND T. HYER B.S. Accounting Barkers Point Rd. Sands Point, N. Y. St. Thomas 1V1ore Societyg YRCQ Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg Metropoli- tan Clubg Homecoming Com- rnitteeg Junior Prom Commit- teeg Golf. BERNARD F. HYLAND, JR. B.S. Accounting 10 Tupero Rd. Worcester, Mass. Conservative Club. MICHAEL J. HUESTON, J R- A.B. Physics 1958 Beacon St. Waban, Mass. Purple Patcherg Sanctuary S0- cietyg Physics Societyg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Program? Boston Clubg Trident Socletyg NROTC. MICHAEL F. HURLEY ALB. Pre-Medical 51 Curtis Rd. Milton, Mass. WCHCg K of C3 Biology So- cietyg Outing Clubg Boston Club. CHARLES L. JAGODA AB. Greek 75 Wilton Rd. Huntington, N. Y. Student Congressg Class Coun- cilg Purple Patcher, Photogra- phy Editorg Crusaderg Drama Societyg K of Cg Marching Bandg Outing Clubg Metropoli- tan Clubg Junior Prom Com- mitteeg JV Lacrosseg Kaleido- scope, Photography Editor. ANDREW S, JANIK B.S. Biology 1010 Buttonwoods Ave Warwick, R, I, ' C1-oss and Scroll, K of C. Bi Ology Societyi jguf fllll, Editor, Outing Club. Sen 101' Brother Program. 7 F. KENNETH JENSEN A.B. History 104-37 200th St. Hollis, N. Y. DC-2111's List 3, Crusader, Lay- out Editor, Sodality, Sanctu. ary Society, Choir, YDC, Out- 1I1g.Club, Metropolitan Club, Senior Brother Program, CHARLES N. JOLLY B.S. Political Science 2 Maxwell Rd. E. Brunswick, N. J. Purple Key, Class Council, K of C, St. Thomas More So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Jersey Club, President, Junior Prom Com- mittee, Class Spirit Committee, Co-Chairman. CHARLES C. JORDAN A.B. English 101 Marine Ave. Brooklyn 9, N. Y. Economics Club, Blakely La- bor Academy, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committee, German Club. THOMAS AQUINAS J ORDAN B.S. Economics 209 Elm St. Bangor, Me. Economics Club, Blakely La bor Academy, Varsity Basket ball, Varsity Baseball. KENNETH G. JosEPH B.S. History 122 Kendig St. Worcester 10, Mass. Junior Class Vice President, Purple Key, Class Councilg WCHCg Sodalityg Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Worcester Club. JOHN H. KAVANAUGH A.B. Pre-Medical 5 Monterey Rd. Worcester, Mass. Class Council, Purple Patcherg Outing Club, Senior Brother Programg Worcester Club, Ju- nior Prom Committee. RICHARD R. KANE B.S. Political Science 17 Rancle Dr. Wayne, N. J - Purple Key, Senior Brother Program, Jersey Club, Mili- tary Ball Committee Chairman, Junior Prom Committeeg Tri- dent Societyg NROTC, Bat- talion Commanderg Semper F idelis Society, Student Pre- fectg Outstanding NROTC Freshman Contract Student. PHILIP F. KARPEL B.S. History - Political Science 38 Cromwell St. Hamden, Conn. Purple Patcherg St. Thomas More Society, Mock Trial Chairmang YDCg New Haven Club, Junior Prom Committee, Rugby. NORBERT W. KEARNS, J R. AB. Pre-Medical Honors 111-22 116th St. Ozone Park 20, N. Y, Dean's List 3g Sanctuary Sgci- etyg Choirg Biology Society Outing Club. 248 7 BRIAN J. KELLY B.S. History . 223 Independence Dr. Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. Student Congress, Purple Patch- erg Senior Brother Program, Boston Club, Junior Prom Committee, Freshman Football. JOSEPH P. KELLY 13.5. History - Political Science 837 Hudson St. Hoboken, N, J, St. Thomas More Society, Out- ing Club, Senior Brother P1-0. gram, Jersef Cl b J U 3 Junior Prom Committee, Varsity Bas- ketball, Who's Who. Louis G. KELLY ALB. English 6045 Rossmore Dr. Bethesda 111-, Md. John Colet Society, YRC, Out- ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Dixieland Club, Junior Prom Committee, German Club. sei .s.i Y . e .-i Q e JAMES M. KENNEDY B.S. History Champlain, N. Y. Outing Club? Junior Prom Committee. K GEORGE F. KERINa JR- B.S. Accounting 15 Yates AVC- Waterbury, Conn. . K of C, Outing Club, Tennis. T. Ross KELLY B.S. Chemistry Honors 824 N. Campus Way Davis, Calif. Purple Patcher, WCHC, Cross and Crucible, Outing Club, Se- nior Brother Program, Cali- fornia Club, President, Cheer- leader, Concert Band. RICHARD GERARD KERWIN AB. English 146-18 45th Ave. Flushing, N. Y. Sanctuary Society, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club? Metropolitan Club, Homecom- ing Committee, Junior Prom Committee, Varsity Lacrosse. HARRY W. KEUPER, JR. ALB. English 82 Southview St. Fort Thomas, Ky. Glee Club, Choir, Marching Band, St. Thomas More So- cietyg Outing Club, Homecom- ing Committee, Junior Prom Committee, Yacht Club. , f .N X i as JOSEPH H. K1LL1oN B.S. Chemistry 282 Edgehill Rd. Milton, Mass. Sanctuary Society, Outing Club, Boston Club, Varsity Football, Varsity Baseball. DAVID G. KIRK B.S. History 20 Morse Rd. Newton, Mass. Economics Clubg Outing Club Boston Club, JV Lacrosse? Hockey. , , fl 'fs JAMES R. KIRK B.S. Biology 715 Maple Ave. DuBois, Pa. Biology S0CietY, Treasurer. 250 NORBERT T. KNAPP B.S. Chemistry l290 Bay Ave. Bay Head, N. J. Cross and Crucibleg YDCg Out- ing Clubg Jersey Clubg .ll1I1i0f Prom Committeeg Varsity Bas- ketball, Manager: German Club. i ii l- ima? 'UC Brwklfn Q Lifl J iii Ciffle ,ll gi Ollllng .zmpohran liill Club' Nflpkl N ii 1 Milk -WC it X R Pllyi g. 'Bifniyx x A . ' liffxvl, ig, N .. VW lnzfu ' 0. -. tx LW!-QL. X .5 R, X :'ilT'7s', ' 1, '-M-IM.. Xia C ' - X fm-,N Mila. X -Hia. ml ll SSC ' b. ARTHUR JAMES KRENER 19.5. illatlzcnzafics 9917 Third Ave. Brooklyn 9, N. Y. Dean's List 1, 2, 35 K of C 1 Aquinas Circle, Mathematic Club, Outing Club, Trustee Metropolitan Club, Swimming Yacht Club. PAUL A. LACAMERA PSyCh0l0gy, W68 Read Sf, inthrop Ma as , . a SS. Ouiijnbo- 21110, Class Council? P me .lubi Senior Bf0ther rogiam, Boston Club. Home . 7 ' Sonnng Committee Chairman- u mor Prom, General Chairi man, Psycholou C n Soc1alChairmaiii.y lub' Class F' NORMAND W. LAFONTAINE B.S. Chemistry First St Cr N- Crosvenordale, Conn, cliiivqind Crucible? Outing , orcester ClubgM'1't Eau Massa A?F2i22tQ0mmanderg Arnolci M. LAURENCE LAGUE B.S. Political Science 53 Weaver St. W. Warwick, R.1. IRC, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Bristol County Club, Varsity Football, Var- sity Trackg Amateur Radio So- ciety. 251 ' ' ' f.- JOHN J. LAMBRECH B.S. Physics 168 Meadbrook Rd. Garden City, N .Y. CCD, Glee Club, Physics So- cietyg Senior Brother Program, Sodalityg Outing Club. SANTO M LANAVA B.S. Economics 66 Kenberma Rd- Worcester, MSISS. Freshman Class Vice President? Class Council, Biology Soci- ety, Economics Club, Blakely Labor Academy, Outing Club? Worcester Clubg Junior Prom Committee. JEROME M. LANNAN A.B. English 87 Orchid St. Floral Park, N. Y. Sodalityg Sanctuary Society, Prefectg Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Junior Prom Committee, Choir. BRUCE L. LAR B.S. History 111 Airlie St. Worcester, Mass. NROTC. osE JOHN P. LAUSTEN NORMAN J LEBLANC B S Economics - - BS Accounlzng Bevonahw d OO S 9 Martel St Stamford, Conn. Wolcestel M ass Who's Who, K of Cg St. Thom- as More Society, Outing Clubg FairfieldCounty Club, Military Ball Committee Chairman, J un- ior Prom Committee, AFROTC, Group Commander, Arnold Air Society, Honorary Treasurer, Class of 19675 Outstanding Air Science Ill Cadet. A o,.,a,.-:.fx-.+:-'-- ra-UH 4 5 z ALAN D. LEE JLB. Pre-Medical 59 Bobinwood Rd. Norwood, Mass. Boston Club, Vice President 7 Homecoming Committee Chair man, Junior Prom Committee Rugby, German Club, Presii dent, Biology Society. Wl1o's Who, Class Council, K of C: Outinff Club Tru 7 CHARLES L. LEUSSLER B.S. English 295 Reedsdale Rd. Milton, Mass. CCD, St. Thomas More Soci- Cty, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Boston Club' Military Ball Committee' Trii dent society, NROTC qivicp, Semper Fidelis Society. CHESTER J. LEWANDOWSKI B.S. History 96 Dorchester St. Worcester, Mass. Physics Society, IRC, Outing Club, Worcester Club, Military Ball Committee, AFROTCS Al nold Air Society, Area Com- mander, Award for Proficiency in Russian. ROMAN T. LEWICKY B.S. Biology V 2932 W. 14th St. Cleveland, Ohio Biol0gY Sociefys Outing Club' JOSEPH R. LEVIS B.S. Economics 99 Cambridge St. Lawrence, Mass. K of C, Blakely Labor Acad- emy, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Merrimack Valley Club, Junior Prom Committee, Golf, Boston Club. RICHARD W. LEWIS B.S. Economics Park Ave. Highland Mills, N. Y. W C H C, Economics Club, Blakely Labor Academy, Out- ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Military Ball Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee, AFROTC. i 4 GEORGE F. LOEHFELM, JR. B.S. Biology 601 Seventh St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Student Congress, Sodality, Sanctuary Society, Biology So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Freshman Spirit Commit- tee, Chairman, Folk Music Club. PETER J. LoMBARDo, JR. A.B. History 17 Redmont Rd. Stamford, Conn. Class Council, Crusader, WC- HC, C-lee Club, Secretary- Treasurer, Paks, Choir, YRC, Treasurer, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Fairfield County Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee, AFROTC. STUART J. LoNC AB. Pre-Medical 3217 Patterson St., N. W. Washington, D.C. Student Congress, Class Coun- cil, Purple Patcher, K of C, Biology Society, YDC, Outing Club, President, Senior Brother Program, Dixieland Club, Homecoming Committee Chair- man, Junior Prom Committee Chairman, Yacht Club, Ath- letic Association Liaison Offi- cer, Who's Who. 254 MICHAEL P. LoMBARDo B.S. Modern Language 61 Perrine St. Auburn, N. Y. Varsity Football, Varsity Track. WILLIAM J. LYNCH B.S. English 217 New York Ave. New Brunswick, N. J. Dean's List 2, 3, Purple Patch- er, Campus Life Editor, Cru- sader, St. Thomas More So- ciety, Outing Club, JCFSCY Club, Homecoming Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee Chairman. 6 X I HERBERT 35. 17 Fal Portla- ean's Lift ther, .l0l1! :ing Clllb! imitteeg T QOTC, Pla ROTC Drill . P511 1 111 PM -5 rllnnlB8I1 'lilfffgwnu lzlglli lliride l Sllch0l0g llicmn p 3-5. HERBERT M. MACDONALD 61 Pmimst A' B.S. History . . -i Mm.N.Y. 3J'SIly Wunu J. LW BS. English 217 New York Ave. New Bn1nswiclQN'l' i fs List 2, 35 Pufllmi :UDPU5 Life Editor, ft' Q- ': SL Thomas More T Homecoming 'Junior Prom Comm i ifa E l 47 Falmouth St. Portland, Me. Deanis List 2, 33 PUVPIC Patcher, John Colet Society, Outing Club, Military Ball Committee, Trident Society, NROTC, Platoon Leader, NROTC Drill Team. PAUL J, MADIGAN B.S. Psychology 22 Sunny Bank Rd. Watertown, Mass. Physics Society, Outing Club, Boston Club, Trident Society, NROTCg Psychology Club. LEONARD THOMAS MACISAAC JOHN NOEL MACKESSY B.S. Economics B.S. Biology 8 Wh' A . ltcomb Lane 601 N. Broad St. Hlngham, Mass. Elizabeth, N. J. Outing Club, Yacht Club, Freshman Class Secretary, Bio- 0'Kane Art Exhibit. l S ' - ' ogy' oclety, Senior Brother Program, Jersey Club, Student Prefect, National Science Re- search Grant. JOHN W. MAHER B.S. Economics 12 Saratoga Rd. Auburn, Mass. Economics Club, Blakely Labor Academy, Outing Club, Mili- tary Ball Committee, Hockey, AFROTC, Arnold Air Society, Worcester Club. mall. RONALD THOMAS MAHEU B.S. Economics 7 Lenox Circle Lawrence, Mass. Outing Club, Trustee, Merri- mack Valley Club, President, Junior Prom Committee, Var- sity Football, JV Lacrosse, Trident Society, NROTC KMCJ , Semper F idelis Society, Treasurer. RICHARD L. MAIBERGER B.S. Biology 2082 Edenwald Ave. Bronx 66, N. Y. Dean,s List 1, 2, 3, Biology So- ciety, Treasurer, Senior Broth- er Program, Metropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committee, Varsity Track, Co-Captain. DAVID M. MALONE B.S. Political Science 604 E. Gansevoort St. Little Falls, N. Y. Glee Club, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Eastern N. Y. Club, Homecoming Com- mittee, Junior Prom Committee. LORIN M. MALONEY A.B. Classics 269 Railroad Ave. Norwood, Mass. CCD, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Boston Club Varsity Track, Co-Captain. MARTIN G. MALSCH B.S. Physics 80 Roseland Ave. Waterbury, Conn. Physics Society, New Haven Club, Swimming. PATRICK T. lVlANEY B.S. History - Political Science 201 N. Ballston Ave. Scotia, N. Y. K of C, St. Thomas More So ciety, Eastern N. Y. Club, Var sity Football, JV Lacrosse, Rugby, Student Prefect. Am Fr Student may : Politan 1 coming Prom C :K T. MANEY T - Political Science Ballston Ave- itia. N. Y- Tliomas More 50' n Y. Club5 Vaf' ll' lv Lacr0SS95 lellt Prefect. ARTHUR R. MARCHIANO B.S. Biology 2341 Pulis Ave. Franklin Lakes, N. J. Student Congress, Biology So- Cletyg Outing Club, Metro politan Club, President, Home- coming Committee, Junior Prom Committee. it W -WWW.. ' 'wfwkywi ROBERT G. MANNINC B.S. Accounting 22 Caspian Way Dorchester, Mass. WCHC, CCD, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Bos- ton Club. GEORGE E. MANSFIELD AB. Economics 428 Brook Rd. Milton, Mass. Dean's List 3, Class Council WCHC, CCD, Marching Band Outing Club, Boston Club, Ju nior Prom Committee. PATRICK H. MATTINGLY A.B. Pre-Medical Honors 7107 Laverock Lane JosEPH J. MATELIS B.S. Economics 5324 Farguhar Lane Dallas, Tex. Outing Club, Dixieland Club, Homecoming Committee, Mili- tary Ball Committee, Junior Prom Committee, NBOTC. Bethesda, Md. Dean's List 2, 3, Freshman Class Treasurer, Purple Key, Student Congress, Class Coun- cil, Crusader, Aquinas Circle, Biology Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Dix- ieland Club, President, Junior Prom Committee, Varsity La- crosse, Co-Captain, Student Prefect, Folk Music Club, President. S BN XXX X 1 x-f.-T xxx X. . Q PHILIP J. MCCAFFREY B. S. Biology 2 Highland Bd. Atkinson, N. H. K of C, IRC, Secretary, John Colet Society, History Acad- emy, St. Thomas More Society, Merrimack Valley Club, Tri- dent Society, NROTC, NROTC Drill Team. JoHN G. MAURER B.S. Biology 14-37 Central Ave. Memphis, Tenn. Sodality, Biology Society? Oul- ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Dixieland Clubi Ohio Club, JV Lacrosse, Rugby- PAUL E. MAYER B.S. English 155 Rockaway Ave. Garden City, N. Y. Crusader, Editor-in-Chief, 4, Who's Vlfho. PETER MCCARREN AB. Pre-Mealical 552 Bergen Ave. Jersey City, N. J. Class Council, CCD, Biology Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Jersey Club, Treasurer, Homecoming Com- mittee Chairman, Junior Prom Committee, Freshman Foot- ball, Yacht Club. 258 JOHN MCDERMOTT ALB. Pre-Medical 629 Andes Dr. Fairfax, Va. Biology Society, Cross and Crucible, Dixieland Club, Ju- nior Prom Committee. WILLIAM E. MCCARRON ALB. English 119 Atlantic St. Marblehead, Mass. Dean's List 3, YRC, Outing Club, Military Ball, Co-Chai1'- man, AFROTC, Group Inspec- tor, Arnold Air Society. 1 CCD ills 1 gram HOI11l lan' Prom ciety Q all .lu- THONAS l. lVlCFADDEN AB. Psychology 3414 Lorraine St. Plattsburgh, N', Y, Purple Patcher, Choir, Outin ' D Club: Senlor Brother Program, Eastern N. Y. Club, Psycholoe Club. Dy BRIAN E. MCGEE B.S. Political Science 122 Freeman St. Hartford, Conn. .lunior Class Treasurer, IBC, St. Thomas More Society, Presi- dent? YDC, Hartford Club, President, Military Ball, Chair- man, Junior Prom Committee Chairman, Arnold Air Society, AFROTC, Unarmed Drill Team Commander. JOHN B. MCDONALD, JR. B.S. History 24 Narwood Ave. Merrick, N. Y. CCD, Glee Club, Choir, Out- ing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Metropolitan Club, Homecoming Committee, Mili- tary Ball Committee, .lllHi0f Prom Committee, Trident SO- ciety, NROTC. JOSEPH R. McG1NN1s B.S. English 3 Greenacres Lane Rye, N. Y. Student COngrCSSS Purple Patcher, Crusader, Editor-in- Chief, 3, Physics Society, .lohn Colet Society, Outing Club, Metropolitan Club? Junior Prom Committee, FrCShH1HU Track. THOMAS J. MCGLEW BS. Sociology 15 Fair St. Meriden, COBB- Crusaaler, Features Editor, Cross and Scroll3 S0Ci010aY Club, President. 259 TRACY G. MCGINNIS B.S. Mathematics 144 Murray Ave. Goshen, N. Y. Homecoming Weekend, General Chairman, Junior Prom Com- mittee CO-Chairman, Student Prefect, VVhO's Who. DANIEL J. MCGRATH B.S. Psychology QMZ Essex St. Bangor, Me. Physics Society, Outing Club? Trident Society, Board of Coy- ernors, NBOTC5 NROTC DMU Team 3 Psychology Club- R. MICHAEL MCGRAIL B.S. History 6 Welch Ct. Cherry Valley, Mass. Student Congress, Vice Presi- dent, CCD, John Colet Soci- ety, YDC, Outing Club, Wor- cester Clubg Military Ball Com- mittee, AFROTCQ Arnold Air Society, Executive Oflicer. CHRISTOPHER F. MCGRATTY B.S. Economics 250 Cedar Ave. Islip, N. Y. Freshman Glee Club, Choir Blakely Labor Academy, Presi identg Outing Club, Metropoli tan Club, Homecoming Com mittee, Rugby Club, President- Coachg Yacht Club Commo doreg Trident Society, Chair- man, Board of Governors' NROTC qtvicp, Battalion Staffi STEPHEN A. MCGRATTY AB. History 755 Waddington St. Birmingham, Mich. Choir, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, YRC, Outing Club, Michigan Club. 260 . ,. ..,. a-.::.v1w-ns.a- :-.- ---H JOHN M. MCGUINNESS B.S. Matlzelnatics 23 Oak Dr. New Hyde Park, N. Y. Mathematics Cl b u g Senior B h - rot er Progifun. KEVIN J. lVlCGUIRE AB. History 34--37 72nd St. Jackson Hts., N. Y, Crusader, WCHCg K of C Deputy Grand Knightg Outing? Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Homecom- ing Committee, Junior Prom Committee. PETER P. MCGUIRK B.S. Mathematics RD. 1, Box 426 Bel Air, Md. Mathematics Clubg Outing Club, Dixieland Club, Fresh- man Basketballg Semper Fi- clelis Society, Vice President. THOMAS C. MCINTYRE AB. English 117 Walter St. Roslindale, Mass. Purple Patcherg Biology Soci- etyg YDCg Outing Club, Bos- ton Club, Homecoming Com- mitteeg Junior Prom Com mittee. ANDREW J. MCKENNA AB. French 78 Bay Dr. Massapequa, N. Y. Dean's List 2, 35 Metropolitan Club, Junior Year Abroad. RICHARD F. MCKENNA AB. Psychology 7 Melba AVC- Auburn, Mass. . Class Council? Choir? Outmg Club, Senior Brother Program, Co-Chairmana BOSt0n Clubg Homecoming Committee Chair- man, Junior Prom Committee Chairmang Senior Class Social Chairman, PSYCITOIOSY Club' hi BRUCE R. MCLAUGHLIN B.S. Psychology 107 E. Lenox St. Chevy Chase, Md. Mathematics Club, Economics Club, YBC, Outing Club, Se- nior Brother Program, Dixie- land Club, Military Ball Com- mittee Chairman, Junior Prom Committee, Trident Society, THOMAS G. MCMAHON ALB. Political Science 26 Nassau Ave. Malverne, N. Y. Junior Class Secretary, Class Council, Blakely Labor Acad- emy, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committee: PETER J. McOsKER B.S. English 27 Cole Ave. Providence, B. 1. Purple Patcher, Crusader, Out ing Club, Bristol County Club, German Club, Cheerleader. NROTC, Executive Officer, Cross Current, Co-Editor, Psy- chology, Club. ROBERT N. MEALS B.S. English 25 Sherwood Lane Burnt Hills, N. Y. WCHC, St. Thomas More So- ciety, Military Ball Committee N ROTC. JOSEPH F. MEROLA, JR. BCS. Mathematics 114 Church St. Waltham, Mass. AF ROTC. Clee Club, Dance Band, Math- , ematics Club, Boston Club, Freshman Track, Yacht Club. 1 PHILIP J. METRES, JR. AB. Psychology 290 Hicks St. Brooklyn, N. Y. Sodality, Sanctuary Society, Vice Prefect, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Club, Military Ball Committee, Cheerleader, Tri- dent Society, NROTC, Platoon Leader, Student Prefect, Psy- chology Club. , teto . . Q . SXN Sox s N sf s S X S XX X x W R WILLIABI D. Marzci-:R RIM B.S. Political Science E35 I51:glxglfSYS BFEAIIZCISI MILZLER 66 Lincoln Ter. 28 Woodland St. i i6 iisliciillftgcgince T: Out- Leominster, Mass. Worcester, Mass. Auburn clVlass. V Club- CCDg YDCg Wol-Qester Club. Student Congressg Cross and IRCg ,lunior Pr6m Committee' jer ' Crucibleg YDCg Outing Clubg NRQTC. i ' Worcester Clubg NROTC, As- sistant Communications Officer. ROBERT B. MILLER 14.3 . English 1941-18 Raymond St. Maple Hts., Ohio Student Congressg Purpleg Cross and Scrollg Bishop Healy Forumg Outing Clubg Varsity Track. ERNEST M. MITTLEHOLZER BCS. Biology 95 Woodland St. Tenafiy, N. J. Biology Societyg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg Met- ropolitan Club. THOMAS J. MONAHAN B .S. Biology 69 Bentwood Rd. W. Hartford 7, Conn. Biology Societyg Outing Club, Senior Brother Programg Hart ford Clubg Homecoming Com mitteeg Swimming, Co-Captain. ANDRE R. MONTMINY DANIEL LEO MooNEY GECEZE lyl?ZRAN AB. Pre-Medical B.s. Physics S ' thug if Rd 157 Madison Ave. 243 French St. tone urc . Berlin, N. H. Fall River, Mass. Llttle Comptonellillt P Glee Clubg Biology Societyg K of C5 PhySiCS Socieiys Out- Purple PatCh?r5 WC ' Outing Club. ing Clubg Homecoming Com- Plea Art Eflltom ross all mitteeg Junior Prom Com- Scrolls Outmg Club? 'Junior mittee. Prom Committee Chairmang O,Kane Art Exhibit Awards. JoHN T. MORAN, JR. B.S. Chemistry 11706 Larimore Bd. St. Louis, Mo. Purple Patcherg WCHCg Cross and Crucibleg Cross and Cruci- ble, Assistant Editorg Physics Societyg Mathematics Clubg Outing Clubg St. Louis Clubg Physics Society Undergraduate Research Project. JosEPH F. MORIARTY, JR. AB. Classics 64- Bessemer St. Springfield, Mass. Marching Bandg Outing Club' Springfield Clubg .lunior Prom Committee. J ON N. MORRIS A.B. English 4003 Rosemary St. Chevy Chase, Md. Who's Who, Crusaderg Sanc- tuary Societyg St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Varsity Football, Captain, Freshman Baseball. DANIEL J. MOYNIHAN, JR. BHS. Sociology 2 Mount Hope Ter. Worcester, Mass. Dean's List 3, Purple Patcherg DAVID S. MOYNIHAN B.S. History 4 Homer St. Worcester, Mass. St. Thomas More Society Senior Brother Program, Wor- YDCg Outing Club, Worcester cester Club, President, Junior Club, Junior Prom Committee Prom Committee, Trident Soci- ety, NROTC, Sociology Club. THOMAS M. MULCAHY, JR. A.B. Pre-Medical 182-48 Avon Rd. Jamaica 32, N. Y. Biology Societyg Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Clubg Rugby- EDWIN M. MULHOLLAND, JR- A.B. History - Political Science 240 DeMott St. Rockville Centre, N. Y- St. Thomas More Society, Out- inv Club, Metropolitan Club? Hclimecoming Committeeg Ju- nior Prom Committee, Fresh- man Basketballg Trident Soci- etyg NROTC KMCJS Semper Fidelis Society, SecrGtafY9 In' 14 b 11 M.v.P. tramural Bas et E1 265 PETER G. MULLANY B.S. English Stockbridge Rd. Great Barrington, Mass. Outing Club, Berkshire Club, President. DANIEL A. MULLIN B.S. History 21 Hutchinson Rd. Arlington, Mass. Senior Class Secretaryg Whois Whog Class Council, Purple Patcherg Drama Society, IRC3 YDCg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg Boston Club, Homecoming Committee Chair- mang Junior Prom Committee Chairman. EDWARD M. MULLIN, 1 R. ALB. Pre-Medical Honors 212 Brooklyn Ave. Massapequa Park, N. Y. Dean's List 1, 2, 3, Sodality, Prefectg Biology Society, Secre- tary, Senior Brother Programg Metropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committeeg Student Pre- feet. PAUL A. MULREADY B.S. Biology 114 Overbrook Rd. W. Hartford, Conn. Glee Club, Social Chairman, Choir, Director, Biology Soci- etyg Outing Clubg Hartford Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Committee. THOMAS KENNEDY MULVIHILL B.S. Biology 26 Lynacres Dr. F ayetteville, N. Y. JAMES A. MURPHY B.S. English 217 Highland Ave. Biology Society, IRC, Outing Club, Junior Prom Committee. 266 Ridgewood, N. I. WCHCg Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Cllllifi Jersey Clubg AFROTCg German Club. ROBERT G. MURPHY A.B. History - Political Science 58 Montgomery Pl. Brooklyn, N. Y. Senior Class President, Whois Who, Purple Key, Student Congress, Class Council, WC- HC, K of C, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Met- ropolitan Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom, Co- Chairman, Sophomore Prom Prelude Chairman, Varsity A A Football, Student Prefect. WILLIAM R. MURRAY B. S. Psychology 315 Hollywood Ave. Tuckahoe 7, N. Y. WCHC, Sales Manager, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Homecom- ing Committee, Military Ball Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee Co-Chairman, Trident Society, NROTC, Psychology Club. STEPHEN S. NASUTA A.B. Psychology 241- Ahern Ave. Windsor Locks, Conn. Class Council, Glee Club, Paks, Outing Club, Springfield Club, Military Ball Committee, Junior Prom Committee Co- Chairman, Fencing, AFROTC , Psychology Club. s l l l l I l l 1 l is . , S. JAMES NELSON, JR. B.S. Accounting 5353 Beard St. Minneapolis, Minn. Dean's List 2, Economics Club, Outing Club? Chicago Club5 0 . u- Homecoming COIIIITIIUCCS -J nior Prom Committee. r EDWARD M. NICRO B.S. History 35 Oak Ave. Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club, Military Ball Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee, AFROTC, Deputy Com- mander, Arnold Air Society. 267 T , ..-... - wwsirst 8,5 . 2 ROBERT E. NIST A.B. Pre-Medical 1111- Gray Ave. Syracuse, N. Y. Crusader, Outing Club, Central N. Y. Club, Junior Prom Com- mittee, Freshman Basketball. 5 PHILIP R. NOBILE B.S. History Honors 23 Marion Rd. Belmont, Mass. Who's Who, Student Congress, Purple Patcher, Editor-in-Chief, C rusader, Features Editor, WC- HC, Cross and Scroll, Drama Society, Milieu, Associate Edi- tor, Aquinas Circle, Publicity Director, History Academy, New Generation, Editorial Board, The Moderator, Corre- spondent, Tiddlywinks, Captain. dition Seminar. ketball. DAVID J. NORDLOH ALB. English Honors 7775 Surreyhill Lane Cincinnati 43, Ohio Deanis List 1, Whois Who, Class Council, Crusader, WC- HC, Purple, Editor, Cross and Scroll, Glee Club, Student Leader, Paks, Student Leader, Varsity Quartet, Choir, March- ing Band, Outing Club, Ohio Club, Junior Prom Committee. JOHN J. O,BRIEN ALB. Pre-Medical Honors 33-70 168th St. Flushing, N. Y. Cross and Scroll, Biology So- ciety, Outing Club, Junior Prom Committee, Hellenic Tra- JOHN JosEPH O'BRI1:N, JR. B.S. Biology 14 Bucare Santurce, P.R. Deanis List 1, 2, 3, Delta Ep- silon Sigma, Biology Society, Outing Club, Freshman Bas- 268 Ni - 1, -- --:vu-nz.-.X ,,ia4:-u.'-1- - ' ' 0 DENNIS H. O,BRIEN B.S. Mathematics Honors 111-52 N. Edgewood Rd. Lake Forest, Ill. Dean's List 1, 2, 3, Delta Epsi- lon Sigma, Aquinas Circle, Mathematics Club. PETER J. O,BRIEN A.B. Pre-Medical 33-50 158th St. Flushing, N. Y. Biology Society, Outing Clubg Metropolitan Club. PETER MICHAEL 07BRIEN B.S. Economics 125 Alta Ave. Yonkers, N. Y. Crusader, Economics Club, Metropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committeeg Tennis, Co- Captain. Worcester Club. THOMAS P. O,CONNELL B.S. English Glenwood Gardens Yonkers, N. Y. Student Congress, Class Coun- cilg Purple Patcherg Crusader, Purple, Outing Club, Metro- politan Clubg Junior Prom Committee Co-Chairman. KEVIN M. O7CONN0R A.B. Pre-Medical 84-26 Charlecote Ridge Jamaica Estates, N. Y. ' 269 JOHN F. O,CONNELL AB. Economics 86 Plantation St. Worcester, Mass. Dean's List 33 Blakely Labor Academy, YDCg Outing C ub 'wiv Rex ya., N S R 'N 'SY v x KA- . LAWRENCE M. O7C0NN0R B.S. Economics 14-76 Page Blvd. Springfield, Mass. Purple Keyg Purple Patcherg Marching Band, Student Direc- torg Dance Bandg YDCQ Out- ing Clubg Senior Brother Pro- gramg Springfield Clubg Junior Prom Committeeg Trident Soci- etyg NROTC, Company Com- manderg Concert Band, Student Directorg NROTCBA Bands- man of the Year Award. PETER D. O7CONN0R 14.3. Economics 32 F arlow Rd. Newton, Mass. Purple Keyg Student Congress Class Councilg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg Bos ton Clubg Military Ball Com mitteeg Junior Prom Commit- teeg JV Lacrosseg Rugbyg Tri dent Societyg NROTCQ lntra murals Commissioner. 9 JOSEPH F. O,NEILL, JR. B.S. English 22 Evelyn Rd. W. Islip, N. Y. St. Thomas More Societyg Out- ing Clubg Metropolitan Clubg Homecoming Committee Chair- mang Junior Prom Committee Chairmang Varsity Lacrosse. THOMAS J. ORBACZ B.S. English 14-80 Parkchester Rd. Bronx, N. Y. K of Cg Blakely Labor Acad- emyg Outing Clubg Metropoli- tan Clubg Junior Prom Com- mitteeg German Club. MARTIN J . O'MALL1-:Y AB. Political Science 23 Barnard Rd. Worcester, Mass. IRCQ YDCg Outing Clubg Worcester Clubg Swimming. RICHARD J. O,REILLY AB. Pre-Medical 24- Claremont Dr. Short Hills, N. .l. Dean's List 3g Purple Patcher, Glee Club, Publicity Directorg Palcsg Varsity Quartet, Leader, Biology Societyg Senior Broth- er Programg Homecoming C0111 mitteeg Junior Prom Commit- teeg Intercollegiate Chorale. . we X 'gn jllltfi F15 EROTC- lerg .WRC 1.ldAir S' NICE A.. X11 - Cv Cross am laliis Bi 112: Ime I I i,-Q RICHARD H- ORPHEUS JOHN P' USULLIVAN: JR- JEREMY M. PAPANTONIO AB. Political Science 251-06 57th Ave. Little Neck, N.Y. lRCg Outing Cluhg Metropoli tan Clubg Military Ball Com derg AFROTC Drill Teamg Ar nold Air Society. NICHOLAS L. PARKER AB. Pre-Medical 118 Vauxhall St. New London, Conn. Cross and Scrollg Clee Clubg Paksg Biology Societyg Fenc- l illgg Intercollegiate Chorale. A.B. Economics ' 6 Hammond Rd. AQ 7121168 Falmouth Foreside, Me. Yonkers N.Y. . CCDg Economics Cluhg Blakely WCHC. CCD? ,Outing Club . Labor Academyg Outing Cluhg Metropglitan Club, mitteeg Flying Cross, Editorg ' AFROTC, Squadron Comman- HENRY S. PARTRIDGE ALB. Pre-Medical 4-101 Harrison St., N. W. Washington, D. C. Crusaderg CCDg K of C5 Biol- ogy Societyg Outing Clubg Dixieland Clubg Varsity Foot- ballg JV Lacrosse. JOHN W. PEPPER A.B. Pre-Medical 10 Atlantic Ave. Beverly, Mass. K of C5 Glee Clubg Outing Clubg Boston Clubg Fencingg Yacht Clubg Choirg Biology So- ciety. JAMES MACARTHUR PERRY B.S. Mathematics Honors 117 Pine St. Gardner, Mass. Deanis List 35 Sodalityg Math- ematics Clubg NSF Undergrad- uate Research. JOHN M. PITTONI B.S. History 51 Watts Pl. Lynbrook, N- Y- Glee Clubg IRC, Presidentg .SI- Thomas More SocietY5 Outmg Clubg Senior Brother Programg Metropolitan Club. J OSEPH A. PoL1cAsTRo B.S. Political Science 150 Barnard St. Highland Park, N. .1- IRCQ Outing Cll1bS Vafsitbl Footballg Freshman Baseballg Jersey Club. JOHN P. PERUGINI A.B. Pre-Medical 1063 North Ave. New Rochelle, N. Y. Student Congressg Biology So- cietyg Outing Clubg Senior Brother Programg Junior Prom Committeeg Choir. Q iiwffh NX X DANIEL M. PISELLO, JR. B.S. Chemistry Honors 41 Underhill Pl. White Plains. N. Y. Deanis List 1: Cross and Cru- cibleg Outing Club: Fencing: German Club: Junior Year Abroadg Art Exhibit: Modern Language Excellence Award. fc' I-fifxkx -'-i Q ' JOHN F. POLK, JR, Mathematics T-84 Hopkins Rd, Aberdeen Prv. Cds., Md, Purple Patcherg Crusaalerg Sanctuali' S0CiCfyg Mathemat- ics Club? Outing Clubg Rugby Secretary. L 7 PHILIP J. POWER B.S. Chemistry 3 Commodore Rd. WO1CCStCf, Mass. Cross and Crucibleg Economics Clubg Outing Clubg Worcester Clubg Varsity Trackg German Club. RUDOLPH P PRICE JR B S Psychology 2662 E Allegheny Ave Philadelphia Pa CCD Physics Society Out 1ng Club Philadelphia Club Homecoming Committee lVlIlI tary Ball Committee Trident Societyg NROTC, Company Commanderg NROTC Drill Team Commanderg Semper F1- dells Societyg German Club, Psychology Club. ROGER L. PRIMEAU B.S Biology 312 Pleasant St. Paxton, Mass. Biology Societyg Worcester Clubg Junior Prom Committee. PAUL ROBERT PROVAS B S Biology Union St Marlboro Mass Biology Society' Outing Senior Brother Program ton Clubg Homecoming mittee Chairmang Junior OLI Club os- Com- Prom Committee Co-Chalrmang Golf, Hockey. ANTHONY R PULLANO RALPH R. RACICOT T W. P ' - Hoff. P..-IZf.ii.1liAN0 AB. History ,B-S Biology 343 Pearl St 38 Bennett Ave. 11 Wakefield St. Kinffston N Cranston, R. l. WCbStef, M355- Biology Sogetyf 01.6110 Club. IRCQ John Colet Societyg His- Cross and Crucibleg Worcester 7 C 7 Senior Brother Programg East- t0IY AC21dCmY- Club' ern N. Y. Club. JOHN P. RAKO A.B. English 16 Everett St. Tuckahoe, N. Y. Purple Patcherg Crusaderg WC- HCg Outing Clubg Metropoli- tan Clubg Military Ball Com- mitteeg Junior Prom Commit- teeg Trident Societyg NROTC. WILLIAM RANKIN B.S. Physics 183 Delmar Ave. Glen Rock, N. J. Military Ball Committeeg NR- OTC QMCD, Company Com- manderg Semper Fidelis Soci- ety, Secretary. CHARLES ELLIS RIZAGAN AB. Philosophy 1056 N. Market St. Wichita. Kan. Deanis List 2. 3: Aquinas Cir- cleg Fencing. Captain: Junior Year Abroad. 114051 is F. l B'S.Chfm1!f 10 Nlilic Lynbnj-01 Koi C: Clff Cl Crucible: Oulinc Brother Progra-'Z Clubg Junior Pr COT St. S. Worcester THOMAS F. REDMOND B.S. Chemistry Honors 10 Milton St. Lynbrook, N. Y. K of C, Glee Club, Cross and Crucible, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committee. JOHN J. REGAN A.B. Pre-Medical Honors 131 Maple Ave. Atkinson, N. H. Dean's List 1, K of C, Biology Society, Outing Club, Merri- mack Valley Club, Homecom- ing Committee. MICHAEL H. REILLY A.B. Pre-Medical 34.-23 84th St. Jackson Hts., N. Y. Glee Club, Biology Society, Outing Club, Metropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committee. VINCENT J. REILLY, JR. A.B. Economics 2508 McGovern Dr. Schenectady, N. Y. K of C, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Eastern N. Y. Club, Junior Prom Committee, JV Lacrosse. PAUL A. REISING, JR. A.B. Pre-Medical Honors 3121 Joseph St. New Orleans, La. Deanis List 1, Sodality, Sanc- tuary Society, Glee Club, Li brarian, Biology Society Homecoming Committee, Ju nior Prom Committee. 7 ROBERT F. RENSELAER B.S. Economics 137 Driscoll Ave. Rockville Centre, N. Y. Biology Society, Economics Club, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Homecoming Committee, Military Ball Committee Chair- man, Junior Prom Committee, AFROTC, Squadron Command- er, AFROTC Drill Team, Ar- nold Air Society. JOHN A. RICE, JR. B.S. Economics 761 Gabriel Dr. St. Louis, Mo. Economics Club, YRC, Outing Club, St. Louis Club, President. FRANK M. REUTER B.S. Engli-Sh 118 Parker Ave- Hawtliornev N- -1' , John Colet SocietY3 Outmg Clubs Jersey Club? German Club. HOWARD F. REZNIK B.S. Physics 981 Howe Ave. Shelton, Conn. Sanctuary Society5 Physics SO' ciety, YRC, Outing Club? New Haven Club. WILLIAM S. RICHARDS B.S. Political Science Honors 140 Loomis Dr. W. Hartford, Conn. Dean's List 1, 2, 3, Delta Ep silon Sigma, Purple Patcher, Undergraduate Editor, WCHC, Program Director, Cross and Scroll, Outing Club, Hartford Club, Homecoming Commit- tee, Student Prefect. 276 KEVIN G. RICK B.S. Psychology 1878 E. 12th St. Brooklyn. N. Y. CCD, Outing Club: Junior Prom Committee: Varsity Track, Yacht Club: NROTC LlV1Cl 3 Semper Fidclis Socictv: NROTC Drill Tcmu: Psvcllol- ogy Club. I VICTOR LYTLE RIDDER, J R. B.S. History 619 .lames St. Pelham Manor, N. Y. Purple Patcher, Layout Editor, Crusader, Milieu, Layout Edi- tor, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Clubs .lunior Prom Committee, JV Lacrosse. TIMOTHY F. RIDGE AB. English 29 Westminster Ave. Portland, Me. Biology Society, Outing Club, Maine Club, Homecoming Committee. MICHAEL E. RICHI ALB. English 27193 Bagley Rd. Olmsted Falls, Ohio Dean's List 1, 2, Mathematics Club, Homecoming Committee Chairman. KEVIN THOMAS RILEY B.S. History 9 Vinal Ave. Scituate, Mass. K of C, St. Thomas More So- ciety, YDC, Outing Club, Se- nior Brother Program, Boston Club, Junior Prom Committee. ERIC T. RIPPERT AB. Pre-Medical 1900 S. Eads St. Arlington, Va. 77 WCHC, Biology Society, IRC, Dixieland Club, Junior Pr0m Committee, Swimming. ' Z RONALD A. R1sPo A.B. Economics Honors 1075 E. Ridgewood Dr. Cleveland, Ohio Glee Club, Marching Band, Economics Club, Blakely Labor Academy, St. Thomas More So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Ohio Club, Homecoming Committee, Ju- nior Prom Secretary. G. KEVIN RocHE A.B. History 55 Fairview Ave. W. Warwick, B. l. Crusader, News Editor, WCHC, Sales Manager, Drama Society, Publicity Director, Bristol County Club, Treasurer, .1 u- nior Prom Committee. DONALD F. RoMANo B.S. History 1720 Crilly Ct. Chicago 14-, Ill. Sophomore Class President, Honorary President, Class of 1967, Whois Who, Purple Key, Student Congress, Class Coun- cil, Crusader, St. Thomas More Society, Vice President, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Co-Chairman, Chicago Club, Junior Prom Committee Chair- man, JV Lacrosse, William Garvey Memorial Award. JAMES M. Rosa B.S. History 4-725 Idlewood Ct. LaPorte, Ind. IRC, Outing Club, St. Louis Club, Junior Year Abroad. J ON A. RUPPE A.B. Psychology Honors 2806 E. 128th Sr. Cleveland 20, Ohio Deanis List 1, 2, 3, Outin Club, Psychology Club. DAVID F. RYAN B.S. English 28 High St. Katonah, N. Y. Purple Patcher,Crz1sader, Sports Editor, Clee Club? Choir, St. Thomas More Soci- ety: Tennis, AFROTCg A1'I10ld Air Society. ENDA J. RYAN THOMAS F. SCANLON, JR. B-S Physics B.S. History 40-22 67th St. 4. Tara Lane Woodside 77, N- Y- Worcester, Mass. CCD? K Of C9 Physics Soci- YDC, Outing Club, Worcester CWS Outing Club, Metropolitan Club, Yacht Club. Club, Boston Club. WILLIAM W. SCHMITT B.S. Accounting 111 Ruskin Rd. Eggertsville, N. Y. Dean's List 1, 3, Conservative Club, YRC, Outing Club, Se- nior Brother Program, Western N. Y. Club, President, Military Ball Committee, Junior Prom Committee, JV Lacrosse, Tri- dent Society, NROTC, Platoon Commander. JOHN V. SCUDERI AB. English 3327 85th St. Jackson Hts. 72, N. Y. Purple Patcher, Biology SO- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Junior Prom Committee. ANTHONY J. SCHAEFFER A.B. Pre-Medical 2128 Ridge Rd. Highland, Ind. Dean's List 3' Pur le Patcher 7 P I CCD, Treasurer, K of C, Treas- urer, Biology Society, YDC, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Chicago Club, Homecoming Committee, Ju- nior Prom Committee. RICHARD C. SEWELL B S Accountin . . g 21 Loockerman Ave. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Economics Club, Outing Club, Metropolitan Club, Homecom- ing Committee, Junior Prom Committee. PAUL SHERMAN AB. History 140-81 Burden Crescent Briarwood, N. Y. Dean's List 3g Student Con- gress, Crusader, WCHC, Ac- count Executiveg Cross and Scroll, CCD, IRC, Conserv- ative Club, Treasurer, YBC, Treasurer, Outing Club, Met- ropolitan Club. ROBERT E. SHIELDS AB. Psychology 265 School Lane Springfield, Pa. Alpha Sigma Nu, Vice Presi- dent, Whois Who, Purple KEYS Student Congress, President, WCHCg BJF Debating Society, St. Thomas More Society, YRCg Outing Club, Senior Brother Programg Philadelphia Club, Vice President, Junior Prom, Vice Chairmang Student Prefect. TIMOTHY J. SHORTEN AB. Political Science 57 Cambridge Ave, Garden City, N, Y, St. Thomas More Society, Con. servative Clubg YRC3 Outing, Club, Metropolitan Club? Rugby. , ..,.,,,.,., . , ,ww--R ' 5 f 'iff' 1 -ps-fu f RWQJfQ ' 1 , 'FWZW ' M -f ROBERT K. SKANE BS. History ll Gale St. J h Cwaltham, Mass. 0 I1 Olet Societ - ' 0, Clubg Boston Cluyi Outmb Prom Committeeg Varsity Base- ball. 153 Junior FRANCIS X. SMITH 13.5. --1 CC0l1IIfI.IIg 116 Sununer St. lvorcester. Mass. YDC: Outing Club: Worcester Club: Frcslunun Football: lv Lacrosse. IGH? ia, 494 4 Te-if Glee l Club1E'f0.n0 Ciubi Semi Miliwfl' 32 dent Swett Team- IC I -L Royy lhis. . 11:0-. PN' M Nix w. l:i.g.,, 'O N 1 ' :R - l lil. R. ' x bf -Zfxl X, u. i, 'M -nw g N ' - L . 10' 1 b yi. ' - J Q I Rh. .L-ll! Swerkl 'idse X -if S .ye T Fx X. y t' qdqehw IlllRC: ' 311 Y. Gr 1, . 5 7 I JOHN J. SMITH AB. Economics 494 Maple Ave. Teaneck, N. J. CCDQ Glee Club, Mathematics Clubg Economics Clubg Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Military Ball Committee, Tri- dent Societyg NROTC, Drill Team. X Q? X xg wr SY E I' 5, Qs' S1 JOHN R. SMITH B.S. Psychology R.D. 1 Tunnel, N, Y, . , Biology Society, Out- Ing Club, Southern Tier Club, Homecoming Committee, Ju- nior Prom Committee, Trident Society, NROTC, Psychology Club. WCHC- arf- '-,,-ff- ' I ROBERT I. SMITH B.S. English 1625 R St., S.E. Washington 20, D.C. DAVID A. SPINA B.S. History 334 Plymouth Ave. Brightwaters, N. Y. s Physics Society, Outing Club, Publicity Chairman, Senior Brother Program, Dixieland Club? Military Ball, Navy Chairman, Junior Prom Com- mittee, Trident Society, Vice Chairmang NROTC, Battalion Operations Ofiicerg Student Prefect. Dean's List 3, Mathematics Club, St. Thomas More Soci- etyg Outing Club, Metropolitan Club, Homecoming Committee, Military Ball Committee Chair- man, Junior Prom Committeeg Golf, Manager, Trident Soci- ety, NROTC. 281 NNN QS? New yt ssiosk xx Q X11 XT XXXQSQ PNN X55 'X J i .X XY, Ears J N SFX N XS 5 xSG tN M . ANS Q S Eseial at ts t . XV 'Self' . SSM QS X X 955 Q1 N I . fmt... JAMI-:s M. SPoNzo ALB. Pre-Medical 81 Hunter Dr. W. Hartford, Conn. Biology Society, Outing Hartford Club. Club I as 75 YE X 0 RAYMOND J. SPRINDZUNAS B.S. Sociology 10 Diamond St. Worcester, Mass. Dean's List 3, Physics Society, YDC, Worcester Club, German Club, Sociology Club. JOHN P. STAFFIER A.B. Economics 19 Breed St. E. Boston, Mass. Outing Club, Boston Club, Fencing. JERRY T. SULLIVAN B.S. Physics 7 Summit Ave. Little Falls, N. Y. Physics Society, Mathematics Club, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Eastern N .Y. Club. THEODORE F. SULLIVAN B.S. Mathematics 19 Parkview Circle Bethpage, N. Y. Purple Patcher, Crusader, WC- HC News Director' Sodalit 7 , Y, Sanctuary Society, Mathemat- ics Club, Outing Club. MICHAEL J. STRINGER AB. History 799 Forestlawn Dr. Marion, Ohio Student Congress, Drama So- ciety, President, Outing Club, Ohio Club, Junior Prom Coni- mittee, Varsity Football, Best Actor Award, Student Prefect. THOMAS E. SULLIVAN A.B. Modern Language 76 Cottage St. Fall River, Mass. CCD, Sanctuary Society, Out- ing Club, Boston Club, Yacht Club, Junior Year Abroad. ,ls ,- 1 1055 ' Hifi'- QQ me X ul -Cris iw Q IL 55. Lam K. Mm E1 l -la fl 4 tidy, ,gm N' .xx S1 INCER Y Di ra-ma So. lg Cllllwr U11 Com. llli Best prefect l rt- lt . 1 ll J l l l l l A l J 1 l l JOHN F. SUSSILLEAUX HS. En lislz CARL J. Hgngrs 831 N. Rebecca Ave. Scranton 4, Pa. Deanls List 2, Purple Patclzer C C D, Sanctuary Society, Ch0ifS Biology Society, Out- R ing Club, NSF Undergraduate Research Program. SYLVESTER g PAUL J. SYMEON 101 Greenbush Rd. B.S. Economics Tappan, N. Y. 243 W. Broad St. Crusader, Outing Club, Metro- Stamford. Conn. politan Club. DAVID C. TASSINARI B.S. Economics 17 Thomas St. Kingston, Mass. Mathematics Club, Economics Club, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Boston Club, Military Ball Committee, Trident Society, NROTC. Outing Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee, Varsity Baseball, Fair- field County Club. ROBERT F. THOMAS B.S. Biology 514 Harris Ave. Woonsocket, R. 1. Purple Patcher, WCHC, Biol- ogy Society, Outing Club, Bris- tol County Club, Homecoming Committee, Junior Prom Com- mittee. THOMAS F. TIGHE, JR. B.S. English 10 Rand Rd. Salem, Mass. YDC, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Boston Club, JV Lacrosse. ' ' 1 , w gm .t S i .e-. t'r' M RICHARD T. TRACY A.B. English 83 Windsor Ave. Brightwaters, N- Y- c Sodalityg Outing Club, Senior Brother Programg PMetrcg1Ol1- tan Clubg Junior rom om- mittee, Yacht Club? NROTC' THOMAS A. TRACY, JR- A.B. History 927 Oakwood Dr. Falls Church, Va. Class Councilg Purple Patch- erg CCD, Mathematics Clubg YDCQ Outing Club, Dixieland Clubg Homecoming Commit- tee, Junior Prom Committee CO-Chairman, Varsity La- crosse, Manager, AFROTCQ German Club. RAYMOND C. TRAVER, J R. B.S. Biology 11 Lilly St. Newburgh, N. Y. Biology Society, IRC, Outing Club, Homecoming Committee Junior Prom Committee, Ger- man Club. JOSEPH S. TROMBLY ALB. Modern Language 99 Middlesex St. N. Andover, Mass. WCHCQ K of C3 St. Thomas More Society, YDC5 Outin Club, Merrimack Valley Club? Varsity Baseball, Manager, Hockey, Manager, Student Pre- fect. WILLI.'XBI S. Tuoucur B.S. Biology 28 Calumet St. New liedford. Mass. Purple Patvlzcrg Biology Soci- ety: Outing Club: Bristol Couu ty Club: lrlomvvomiug Com- mittee Clmirmun: junior Prom Committee. ROBERT P. TRUDEL B.S. Economics 24-4 Strawberry Hill Stamford, Conn. Crusczderg K of C, Warden and Lecturerg Outing Clubg Junior Prom Committeeg Fairfield County Club, Vice President. VINCENT J. TUMMINELLO B.S. Biology 130 Rockspring Rd. Stamford, Conn. Sodalityg Biology Societyg Out- ing Clubg Fairfield County Club. J. TERRENCE TURNER B.S. History 69 Elm St. Hudson Falls, N. Y. K of C5 Economics Clubg St. Thomas More Societyg YDCg Outing Clubg Eastern N. Y. Clubg Boston Clubg Junior Prom Committee. is -Y 2' V ,fr , N V ' Q si iv wi I QSWQI swat. 1 . J its X Q Q SYN 1 1 N QR sz 1 - ,1 L5 sz ev Qs. 1 I Q tw R .X as , ag- . ' ' sw Q 1 N R8 , I ,. .F if f' xr x 1 ir 5 S: i K , s , .X as S QQ X t X S -Sr- RAFAEL V. URRUTIA, JR. B.S. Biology 211- Caoba St. Santurce, P.R. Biology Societyg IRCQ Outing Clulbg International Club. L. VINCENT USERA B.S. History 128 Jonathan Rd. New Canaan, Conn. Sanctuary Societyg Marching Bandg Biology Society? Gutiflg Clubg Fairfield County Clubg Military Ball Committee Chair- mang Fencingg AFROTC. ALEX C. VELTO B.S. History 2112 Starling Ave. New York, N. Y. Sodalityg John Colet Societyg Varsity Footballg Student Pre- fect. PATRICK J. VETRANO B.S. Political Science 16 Maple Ave. Pelham, N. Y. IRCg Outing Clubg Metropoli- tan Clubg Varsity Football' 7 Trident Societyg NROTC. NICHOLAS A. VINER AB. Pre-Medical 1410 Oak Ridge Rd. Stratford, Conn. Dean's List 2g Drama Society, Publicity Directorg K of C5 Biology Societyg Fairfield County Clubg Homecoming Committeeg Junior Prom Com- mitteeg Modern Language Ex- cellence Awardg German Club. l ROBERT J. WALAT B.S. Biology Honors 58 William St. Chicopee F alls, Mass. CCDg Biology Societyg Biology fournal, Co-Editorg Outing Clubg Springneld Clubg Ger- man Club. .if Mx, .Mari x sf .lfifi-TV X X N Sv N --2 N. e -fx-A .pw - 1 QX X Q-Q Q1 S FX ,A XX S Qi X A X X N X s S xr X X ks if .mcg i si: THOMAS F. WALL B.S. English 15 Middlesex Ave. WOI'CCStCf. Mass. us Tw ' Pg. 1- DHA.: 1.5. H xax -1 'T '.Br1cgn. .M-li. :- Sodalityg Worcester Club. Nvy DAVID S. WARDE ALB. History 323 Matfield St. W. Bridgewater, Mass. Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Co-Chairman, Boston Clubg Junior Prom Committee, Trident Society, Semper Fidelis Society, Publicity Chairman, Student Prefect. JOHN H. WEEKS, JR. B.S. History E. Waterboro, Me. Physics Society, Outing Club, Maine Club. MICHAEL J. WALLINGFORD B.S. Biology 2 Delaware Ct. Watervliet, N. Y. Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Eastern N. Y. Club, Homecoming Committee, Ju- nior Prom Committee. FRANCIS MOREHOUSE WALSII A.B. History 19 Pitney Ave. New Providence, N. J. Class Council, C rusader, His tory Academy, Outing Club, Jersey Club, Junior Prom Com mittee Co-Chairman, Class Ban quet Chairman. THOMAS J. WEISS B.S. Economics 2 Mack Rd. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Economics Club, IRC, Outing Club, Metropolitan Club, ,Iu- Captain. nior Prom Committee, Golf, EDWARD J. WELCH, J R. f1.B. Pre-Medical 16 Eton St. Springfield, Mass. Outing Club, Springfield Club, Homecoming Committee, Ju- nior Prom Committee, Hockey. J oHN F. WHEATON B.S. Economics Route 87 Columbia, Conn. Worcester Club , Hartford Club, Varsity Football, Fresh- man Baseball. WILLIAM R. WHITE AB. Pre-Medical 93 Rockledge Rd. Bronxville, N. Y. Dean's List 2, 3, Biology So- ciety, Outing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Swimming. JOHN J. WHITEHOUSE B.S. Biology 312 First St. Scotia, N, Y, WCHCS K Of C, Sanctuary So- C19tY3 BiOl0gy Society, Outing Club, Eastern N. Y. Club, Milf. tary Ball Committee, Cheer- leader, NROTC QMCJS Bat, talion Staff, Semper Fidelis Society. 288 DAVID D. WHELEHAN B.S. History - Political Science 76 Kensington Rd. Garden City, N. Y. Purple Patclier, K of C, IRC, St. Thomas More Society, Out- ing Club, Senior Brother Program, Metropolitan Club, Homecoming Committee Chair- man, Junior Prom Committee Chairman. '-fi. q3 59 . XG I 5350 EDWARD F. WIDRONAK AB. Pre-Medical 45 Slocum Rd. Jamaica Plain, Mass. Biology Society, Outing Club, Boston Club, Junior Prom Committee, Varsity Baseball. RAYMOND T. WOJCIK B.S. Economics 177 Monitor St. Brooklyn 22, N. Y. Sanctuary Society. JOHN A. WROBLEWSKI ALB. Pre-Medical Honors 1091 Lorimer St. Brooklyn 22, N. Y. Deanis List 2, Crusader, Biol- ogy Society, Outing Club. ARTURO A. YDRACH B.S. Biology 817 Avenida Fernandez 11111005 Santurce, RR- Biology Society, Outing Club- 289 RAYMOND D. WRENN B.S. Physics 60 Lockwood Dr. Watertown, Conn. W C H C, Chief Technician, Physics Society, Physics four- nal, Editor, Outing Club, New Haven Club, NROTC. J OHN A ZAIA A B Pre Medical 317 Main St Oneida N Y Dean s List 3 CCD K of C B10 logy Society Senlor Brother Pro gram Central N Y Club Home coming Committee Junior Prom Committee Fencing Wrestling DAVID S. ZAMIEROWSKI A.B. Pre-Medical 154 Crestwood Dr., N.W. Grand Rapids 4, Mich. Dean's List 2, Who's Who, Pur- ple Key, Vice Chairman, Purple, Milieu, Choir, Dance Band, Bio- logy Society, Outing Club, .lun- ior Prom Committee Co-Chair- man, Student Prefect, Parents' Weekend, Chairman, Class Coun- cil RAYMOND S. ZIERAK B.S. History Honors 43 Locust Ave. Amsterdam, N. Y. Dean's 1, WhO,S Wl10g Pur. ple Key, Secretary, Class Council, Purple Patcher, Advertising Man- ager, St. Thomas More Society, Outing Club, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Eastern N. Y. Club, Vice President, Junior Prom Commit. tee Co-Chairman, Parents, Week. end, Co-Chairman, Junior Spirit Committee, Co-Chairman. l 290 WILLIAM R. GARVEY March 3, 1943 June 28, 1961 gllll 11100111111 Uunminv 1-'llllll1Ol'llll111l9 Nleuw L A q 1 orum qui nos praecesserunt lgiguo fidvi. cl dornlixlnl in somuo pacis. 1 1 E? . ef 5 YY, I REV- DAVID. J- MQRANQ S- J- REV. THOMAS A. SHANAHAN, SJ. I I Born November 11, 1893 D1ed September 15, 1963 Born June 244, 1895 Died June 26, 1963 , i i J i 291 f K I P V w r i 'A ve ' E 1 w 9 1 X I 1 1 1 ,f L ,A J . XE 3 1 2 H xg:-wnWr ar v'r vvm-vw-zvv-'-R li, ... -mv L -wx L 'gi .X- ,Ne ,v. . x 1 , 1 C' 1. 5. , X X k 'SX X wr X X X K . . X Lx XX. .XX1 K XS X X Xi X S W . QQ X . X Q X X . X X W X XX v . Q X X NX XXXX X Xa XX X 5 XX XX X XXX Six X NX ,.3 W, .0 1 v . 1 91 i o XX Ak 4 X l sY ...N .pw . Ll tin W X . ' -A ki V' ' N. N, XX- XT . . T X X . W 5, ox- lx s Ns , W 'I X ' N! X 5 0 0 ' - N8 S 'X 57 'S w X A S X A X QNX kg - h'V - 44 W' X sg 1 3 Q X f' Q ,F N .M ,. ,y Xx wx W i Ji 1 E. Q Z1 ffxiw Q I ,f is m KG ind Mrs A af ' , ff x - ,Q 'QS Rfk Sq fa 2 ff 4, wi FY S ,., Li' ggi if . fx A WC FQ A S s. , 5' SQ dh, Ma. .E X N X XQ ,f 'K 1,5 mv wi A N S wig X K Ax X N W? SE S Q ifzsw ef Jlw Q. Q .mx A Q NSA A--r gn Q S fm rwkx 'AT 95? s Q- WK WA QM W., 2 A 1 NNE ,VT 'if x 5140 X 1 4. it df 0 N fe F ': ' f i 1 I fimg E . 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AW. :E and l' rrsrss Mrs. Donald F. 0'Brien Mrs. John 0'Brion W L. ff, NN xx A,v,. 1 1 s ,,.,....... .46i Q M f-6 S in I 9 I A+ ix! rf mg- 'ik' xi A N Hx rwfw XXX?-x.,,.n RQ Vi X N X is B . . PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. Jeremiah W. 0 C0nnor ' W 3 X x MSX W K O . C andXMrs,?Stgn1ey E Orbacz A , Q Q ' Q W W X v M 4. X R f fybf, fy ,,,, , X Mr. and rs. J. usse X e11Ly r f W ff r , , X rr ,r r Q f f T lr x Xxxx M' ,,,, ,, , g W W W Q F' XFN fum, fn-'wiv 0 M .-Xb X l MW ' Q f X I X ' W' ' , 5? Wwalter B. , W , ,f 5 x.xx M- Mwlx NA, 7 ' X T ' ' -J-X .GfW, fWMWwf,fWffwv A W I W, X, emwfm K, . r N335 ,V X 1 I mmk- M ! XV ,, f W L A 2 Q 2 7 f if M N r WN WW r d M r P -1 Q .5 f xy , I WM ,, Ja, WMM DP- all PS- 311 614131111 rf 'f ww : M? we WwWf,g,,2, , ffgy,,f 9, ,J - ,WM r r A . A X w 1 gg M W, y xx w . W -' . E-1v.,, x', .Aj y ,TQ-+L V., 'W ,ig . W f . . Y-xi 1 Mrs. Thomas Provegzano f W ' fn If , my , W Q ,f m 5, 47314 , x all . all ,if Y 1 and fx lW 'W '9W'?s! .M nf,-. 4 , . K4 :U ,Q K, 22355. ' A Jax- ' . 'az-Q ,K 2 Y ,v --?v 3? ,fm ,f,.,5f-.w:.'iu-w:,S f . , . .-'ggl,:+rr:'.wmww.-Q:--P-H' 1 4 X L R . - , 4.?zanlr,.,qf-pau-uv-f Q . Wwpmwsk-551 r fx QM, , Q. f F' .W ' L .vi ,fn 1 :-.f lf 1 . A A- , 1 1.15 N .- 4-.A Q , M- W A. f M1 f f Q wif f 414 , xv ,Q ff if xg , O1 figvux f ivy., ,W 272 1 V , , 4 Af ff A , ff if f 2 Z f 1 2541 as VW Mx . ,H M 44,6 :VW I A , QW M IQ Q Xi , fa , iff , , W sg ywwi -W ,. f- ? -S Y-as ir f M ef Q 41.- 1 f- 1 '-'w-f,xf.- K. AXQHQ, rv-RE Q., x: fwfts Q kf77'T 14 ' r A., ,-4-.sv .-,- '.-'WQY ' 'W ,-M -H v .Q RUDNICK 81 MEAGHER COMPANY Compliments COLD STORAGE of 58-64 Bridge Street - 55 Millbrook Street A FRIEND WORCESTER, MAss. WORCESTER FRUIT COMPANY Par-veyors of all FRANK AND CHARLES CAl.I.AHAN Fresh Fruits and Vegetables 7 WINTER STREET WORCESTER, MASS. CONGRATULATIONS and SINCERE GOOD WISHES UI.RICI'I BAUNIANN HUW0l'fl1, New Jersey l 298 Si 4' ,12- ii- J Y 'v .uf . ,, fx. , y A 5 .1 1 , Q 5 . , iz - E 5 if X2 P ., Y ., ' ' Yi ' L NIH V592 ' S ,V i ' ' I 552 gl g ,X . I . EC 5 mx K V - A 1. iT,:8.x3 iS '.'! 'ViL,T3!S c.vq3af5x,JM5 . .. jk -i-vim thi' K x A, xx kk 5 , .4 -. X555 li L ' ' n, 11 1 3 1. it sa as 14, WHRX . -wb, 1 x r 1 s K U Q A A- A x.g,l3.,X Mfg . x 3 x.:iX-SQZQNYEWV S5' ...,-.N -f-, rf H- 1 f ik -,:- ?,1,-, ....,., 7. J. G. uuvuoms s. SON, INC. George F, Blqke, Inc, Steel HEATING E . d C ta t 5 METALS-INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES ngzneers an on r c or WORCESTER BOSTON 70 Quinsigamond Avenue Worcester Best of luck to the men of '64 WORCESTER OXY-ACETYl.ENE The Home Prescriptions Built SUPPLY COMPANY 1000 Southbridge St. 2nd Floor Slader Building 390 Mam Street WORCESTER WORCESTER, MASS. GRANGER CONTRACTING COMPANY, INC. General Contractors COMMERCIAL at INDUSTRIAL REPAIRS AND 340 Main Street W MAINTENANCE orcester, Mass. 300 Fc Sn 122 C I PL I Y I f I' .- .2- vii? 4 sfgzqj it 'A' : sf - -.3 I JV Best Wishes and Good Luck 1 2 to the , C . V2 este' , 'I , fthlih my no l CLASS OF 1964 , J swx -Fw ff! .T -. . J' ' 'Q J I ,qi V I I fi CONSOLIDATED BLEACHING I COMPANY FOR AN AFTER THE GAME SPECIALTY TRY THE o WORCESTER TELEGRAM WONDER BAR RESTAURANT o THE EVENING GAZETTE Slfffflllllzlng zn Real Italzan Pzzza and Spaghettz . SUNDAY TELEGRAM Full Lrcense Prrvrleges Pasquale BlSCCg1l2. Prop Stations WTAG AND WTAG FM 122 Shrewsbury Street Worcester Mass Central Supply Company Claflm Donahue PLUMBING HEATING FUEL OIL an . Domestlc 0 Industrxal WATER SUPIJLIES Under the Thermometer 60 Mechamc Street PL 56121 Worcester Mass 301 F f I i :SA . , ! l 'QI , 9 1 Y X d ' 4 39-41 Waldo Street L' gg 11 Canterbury Street up Z T .5 3 National Glass Works 119 Shrewsbury Street 372 Park Ave. WORCESTER, MASS. 93 Boston Textile Company Importers and Wholesalers of Dry Goods David H. Leahy - John F. Leahy Summer Street Boston, Mass. Compliments of . . . INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIERS OF WORCESTER 212 SUMMER STREET WORCESTER, MASS. KESSELI 8a MORSE COMPANY Builders and Masons Supplies Tile and Floor Covering Installations 242 CANTERBURY STREET WORCESTER 3, MASS. COMPLIMENTS OF . .. ACME ROOFING COMPANY AUBURN, MASS. Known the nation ofvef as WORCESTER'S FINEST RESTAURANT Free Parking Banquets for Every Occasion CHARLES K. DAVIS-President JOHN K. DAVIS-T7'EdS1lf6f JAMES K. DAVISTGENETHI Manager PUTNAM 8g THURSTON'S RESTAURANT 19-27 Mechanic Street Worcester PL 3-5427 OZ VN ipef 1 393 COMPLIMENTS or LEE MILK One of the Best in Worcester County WASH BURN-GARFIELD CO. 0 milk at its finest ' service nonpareil Pipes - Valves - Fittings - Steam and Industrial W. H. LEE MILK COMPANY Supplies and Heating Equipment 55 Harlow Street 167-171 Commercial Street WORCESTER WORCESTER, MASS. PL 2-2029 PL 2-6920 Everything in Travel Ware Pratt Company Rail - Steamship - Airlines Men's and Boy's Clothing McEvoy Travel Bureau 398 Main Street Worcester, Mass- 36 Elm Street PL 6-4691 Wholesale Distributor Driftwood Motor Inn Electrical Supplies Lighting Equipment Route 9 Boston Turnpike A' C' Bowler company SHREWSBURY MASS. 69 Green Street WOICCSTCY, Mass' VL 2-8911 X 303 E I be sl li i Compliments of CAPITOL THEATRE WORCESTER, MASS. ARROW CAB TWO-WAY RADIO 24 Hour Service PL 6-5184 A C' Howe - Whitney Lumber Worcester, Mass. V DEERFIELD PRESS WORCESTER, MASS. WALTER J. BROWN, JR. E Den Class of '59 'w ab Associates of Worceste Compliments of FRASER MANUFACTURING coMPANY, INC. 142 WEST 14TH STREET NEW YORK 11, NEW YQRK S ul E i ! 1 l f BEST WISHES FROM NEW ENGLAND'S LARGEST Worcester Federal Savings AND LOAN ASSOCIATION RAYMOND P. HAROLD, President Dedicated to Thrift and Home Ownership Since 1877 S11--1'-'X HOME OFFICE-22 ELM ST., WORCESTER BRANCH O Resources over ONE QUARTER BILLION DOLLARS FFICE-1243 MAIN ST., SPRINGFIELD Worcester Bus Company Best in Chartered Service MARK INC. NATURAL SHOULDER CLOTHING 330 Main Street PL 7-4150 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS for CLARK HALL and HEALY HALL COGHI.IN'S 163 Summer Street Worcester NOTIS PIZZA CAMPI ON HALL Ext. 483 Congratulations and Slncere Best Wlshes To the Class of 1964 STUDENT CONGRESS ROBERT E. SHIELDS President R. MICHAEL MCGRAIL Vice President FREDRICK W. ASSINI Secretary JOSEPH H. BASTIEN V Executive Assistant J. KEVIN MCVEIGH Treasurer HQWMXINIED mamma sauna-DL-Dun? cm umm Q ' :Q F - 'Q ffi-'FJ '1 7J4'1. ..ffi'1-PPL-1I27.221.d.Q2iY2Ii5,Tlf1ff-I-C?535175 , sf? :HQTPQQ1 r iEi1 Tf i -fr'-.1 - 1 -.14 -- .- . '- I .,i' 1. ivsq.-'M 12 -Yxf-f-fZi'1f11'5gg':'-1.-..-.'-1- Q -'.'c' 7 -'-ifLi':.- L r'-' -5.-1-. f gazif,--H' 121-.-.LeL lf7f'-.'.'. T,L f:iY .1zF'!:'-fin... 1 2 1 --1 ' -A in '. X - -A f 1- :A :-'-1' 1,-mv if- 'c. :--if,-fix:--,1.:-Q., sig ft?-:3'L-Cffsfi 1 lf zfqffffqff-1.1zJE':f:2-1:f,G:3:'1fff-2--'J54:51.-L1-11:-?V' :Y fecal f- 'A' 1 '- . ' ' ' '.5.- ' - Q4 ' , 1 1.450-1'-A .riirf-,.i' -lj i-212,-5:-3-ff'-121 . 2: 2- E -' -1-EL Ljri-2-F: 2333515 5.1: 3:22-44: :,-gf, -1, :i -'1 I ' -, J. '- ' , 'wf f 1-'-'1'-f.1-f L- -:V-L - i...- ' -' f A.rfrf.1f.fZQ2-:,f- Fgif -.ta-pfsrfez. ,,.::'.': -.-.-,saff fr-1- .4 , ' 1 --1 : -' --- - ' .1 N . 4 fx v , f . yr' -fd?-.'.:4gg,f.-If 1,1pf-1'-,-,f'jf,51' . 5fL1':f1 -,. zgvf, 1.'1f:..-g1,gA-41-ig., ,,-2g':f!',, ,-fifg :.-jf-' l ': . A V 4 7 N ' -' 1 VF '3d1f'5T. S2C9':'3,fffii:?ZL33 -951256-Y .213 13:55. Y '11 '- , ,QL Q ' 5 5 ' ' ' 4-:ji -T-:'fl'if?:'gfYg,ll-Lili' f:J!','fj'L. 'i . ---. .V.,A- comllllmenfs of COLLEGE sooxgmkf STUDENT and LOAN LAUNDRY i is Q s 5 s if X if 1 Q 5 f 5 xx .wma ,,,, x Q 2 X XX N N s . X Y? B5 N , X f X wg Q 3 f S 5, , K 3 Q, N.,..W,. W, if 1 5 ith 3 Wayan 'X N if , A x M 4 uadulf' 3 M Q Qs ia N1 i . 3 2- i H. v 'X I I J I 4' '.. v I o A . 5 5 f s-M nv WW Xwilm' w Q R SS iv N' N. f 'AQXWC' VM fm Q .. 'l'n1el1TS Inves THE GUARANTY BANK 81 TRUST COMPANY HANRAHAN 8g CC., INC. Ser-ving the Banking Needs of Central Massachusetts MEMBERS With OFFICES in Boston Stock Exchange Midwest Stock Exchange American Stock Exchange QASSOCJ Worcester-Auburn-Grafton--Leominster 332 Main Street 8 Foster Street Southbridge-Sturbridge WORCESTER, MASS-. - MEMBER F.D.I.C. PL 3-4741 As pioneers in the Development of Medical Reimbursement Insurance, we are happy to have had the privilege of formulating a plan for the students of Holy Cross College. College, School and Camp Department JOHN 40 C. PAIGE 81 COMPANY Broad Street-Boston PORTLAND, MAINE, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, ATLANTA, GEORGIA 5 NEW YORK John F. Watson Waldo M. Hatch Anthony Faunce Daniel A. Carpenter, Jr. Norman A. Ferguson H. Curtiss Dietrich Theodore P. Whittemore, Jr. Robert K. Watson 312 if S XY, 3 mf! Congratulations and Best Wishes to the CLASS OF 1964 PRESIDENT Frank Shea VICE PRESIDENT James Coghlin SECRETARY ' Robert Wozniak ' TREASURER John Egan SOPHOMORE CLASS COUNCIL John. Wgrfhley Frank Cassulo William Juska Tony Taylor Richard Liguori Emil Jaworek David Duvarney Joseph T miner Jack Dineen ART ANDREOLI, 1958 YOUR GUARDIAN AGENT Art has been of service to many of the graduates of Holy Cross in setting up their insurance programs. Now and in the future call or write to Art. He will assist you and your families with all of your needs for life, health coverage, pension plans, and group insurance. JOSEPH W. NORTON, C.L.U. '31 MANAGER THE GUARDIAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA 725-726 Commerce Bldg. Worcester, Mass. PL 3-8195 suu.lvAN, GARRITY AND DONNELLY INSURANCE AGENCY, INC. 21 Elm Street Worcester, Mass GEORGE F. SULLIVAN, '34 CHARLES F. DONNELLY, '11 GEORGE F. SULLIVAN, JR., '60 THE CALLAHAN BROTHERS Best Wishes and Good Luck fo the CLASS OF 1964 Compliments of CLASS OF I967 JAY MCLAUGHLIN President AL BARBER Vice President MIKE CHAMBERLIN Treasurer ANDREW MISSETT Secretary 314 N 'Q w m X , .N , -N ww lx x f A WSW I x fx, ll 'ix W .sw 5 31 g fm 5 F ff-r fx - . X 2 ' V kr sr 52 . ,A , f vw 'TX x w 5 F- 'X if' - L fy Qbliwl v Lx-.Xi L V Q 7 f in N- s - Tir? Q-fx 5 lv Z 'ax I xx - Vx gg gf f. ,S 'V Q Mw, ?' N W .,......x . X vi X V ,MQNXX f JL N H A AN ' S in 4' v5 x Y ' . . 4 fi 'V i S 'Q X . is 3' . 1 Qzfei ' .. I 3 . A Q4 X RQ E ,r . 4' zfxifsi X ,. I, N! XL X M F55 N33 5 5 - N .+'x PN' Q35 ff' xg VH! 3-21? , 3 M 44335 , , tfip'-,P 4-Q' , Vfkx .,A.,3E'f,gQM Q 5 'tax -QJSY. xxx, A 5 31f'3f',r'XE'.r'a ' 4 Q -. l U A BEST OF LUCK TO THE CLASS OF 1964 Worcester Undergraduate Club Rev. John J. Kirvan, C.S.P. Compliments of Rex Paper Box Company, Inc. FOLDING PAPER BOXES 38 Stillings Street Boston, Mass. EDWARD J. WALSH, '43 . X fagkafi i. F . kiegeafi V .. ix X3 1 ,fiXQkiVfix5: - -!'sTiA,.s L4 'l .sf XW.i ft xv, .jggsstkh 9 . . Q A 'J V, '- ' F' 0 , 9 'P 2 ' ' M., M .. 2 1. J N: YI. 1 5 XA Z5 O vi. K , . 1 um X ,-vb.: ' ia ,ram X'-X1 x --. 1 w. .. Fish, r V G x .. . f :N ' x, QL 1 x :gi - s ' sis: ,f fu. - ' V D - '-Q-4.1.9 1 I Y lb FM, f. . Mg ' T .Q xv., 6 ' , N-if 15 o' -'qi-:-' ' ' ,Q ' s 4' , mv - ,n A ff' ' :' 54 . -v ' f -- ..' X J 0 up t li, xi . b J' Q QQ ww .-, Qin., U ' Sf , mais . -2 fL f..' . f x Mx- H sg u ds: A Q . .T 4- . Xxx e . 0 f . gpqof e, o'u1'lNe-3:l.us Q- g, 6 . ' ' R . .- A ' . ,A o ' .. , 0 A jx Q 'Ml q Q4 f . .Q A LL.x X Q. 0 . A . , . Y fi S '. - -3, . A 'g J' g if 5 - -:aa :- .gif Q f ', R . , , A .. f O ' A . ,t X . Q . , ' .3250 :M ' a ' ' -.' - 'v K T . , Q I . Q at 1 -0:-I - ' 2 ' . - 1 A 5: Q Q t fs Q 1, xx x i M, . . ' , '-Q - -f '3' J ? S THE WARREN KAY VANTINE STUDIU, INC. Officially Serving THE 1964 PURPLE PATCHER 132 Boylston Street Boston, Massachusetts 318 fl That's th Today we have s equipped plants in the country. And fine ve always been an important art P of our business. Our craftsmen believe in quality and strive to produce the I best in th f 5 INE PRINTING SINCE 1887- It e story of Foote 8: Davies. one of the most modern and be t Yearbooks ha e Industry. Our excellent printing doesn't just happen- it's a combination of production research, craftsmanship, and painstaking supervision. FOOTE 8a DAVIES 0eZMyfqlwu0.Qoof DIVISION OF MCCALL CORPORATION 764 MIAMI CIRCLE, N.E. ATLANTA 24, GEORGIA 0 pm i t -H QE N774, Q OE E 5 E 5 E . 5- ' 5 E J E 'NCE 158 f f E.:i5.:- , J--:U ES, 5 1 I - f S N -a'-,a:- , 5 5? , E T Esizzggiifigfss - X : 3 551 Eg ' III .9 ' I A : .Q-:xg EEEE:-Ssgszggi : i ' I 5 . I E I I , E ,-,et , Mfllmfffff fm I I ' f 71.52 E I I-12 -. 'fif w': x 2,.,-EEEEEEEESE. 5:55 if if 'rii55 '!I H i ' i i -' E 'LI -'ff '3s -' Q' 'sia iiiisiiiiiiiin I f-?'3f '-ji.. s- Q' i '- we 1 -it ri' M'i'f'7'-. Af ' A '- '-2--,gieff z.: r'.i-'z.L2.LLf.-1' K i , ,L L -- 1 vw 'J' LG .V 'f'x-'...1fix-X3-..,,'F.I'-4 .I A . .1 .5-.31-,...,.- .., .-H. . 5' E - ' Lf. :Q-,Fi --'J ' QL- ' ig N J- ABOUT THE 1964 PURPLE PATCHER VOLUME LVI The end leaves of this volume are taken, from the painting- View From the Railroad Yard by George Moran, '64. It WaS especially commissioned for the 1964 Purple Patcher. The artist has been awarded a First and Second Prize and the P'opu- lar Prize in the 1963 Holy Cross Art Exhibition. The cover de- sign is also the work of Mr. Moran. The painting in the photograph on page 41 is entitled- Painting-1956 by Gerard Schneider. lt was presented to the Worcester 'Art Museum in 1956 by Hobart Ames Spaulding. The 1964 Purple Patcher appreciates the kind permission of Louisa Dresser, Curator of the Museum, to reproduce the work. The text of this book is set in Bodoni type. lt is the creation of Giambattista Bodoni, the Baskerville of Italy, whose print- ing achievements spanned the end of the eighteenth and the be- ginning of the nineteenth centuries. This edition of the Purple Patcher has been printed on oil'- set lithographic press on 80 lb. Warren's Enamel Dull by Foote and Davies, Inc., of Atlanta, Georgia. The cover is by The Kingsport.Press of Kingsport, Tennessee. Themajority of the photographs appearing in the 1964 Purple'Patcher have been taken by the staff. Senior portraits and formal. group pictures were taken by the Warren Kay Van- tine Studios of Boston, Massachusetts. The 1964 Purple Patcher owes its achievement to mapy people. This listing of names must remain an insuliicient, al- though grateful tribute to their generosity: Fr. Laurence R. Skelly, S.J., faculty advisor to the Purple Patcher, William E. Sloane, Jr., of Foote and Davies, Mrs. Camille Johnson and Bruce Clark of Warren Kay Vantine Studios, Mr. James M. Mahoney, '37, Assistant Librarian, and the staff of Dinand Li- brary, Lewis B. Songer, '55, Director of Public Relations, and Donald A. Dewey, Assistant Director of Public Relations, John P. 1-lerlihy and Maureen E. Kenney. Writing credits: The Academic Year, Robert J. Dumouchel, '64, Devel- opment At Holy Cross, Robert B. Miller, '64, Soclality, Francis M. Buckley, '66, Drama, George M. Kuetemeyer, '65, Photography credits: the picture of President Kennedy on page 28 is used with the permis- sion of World Wide Photos, the Glee Club photographs on pages 139 and 140 are by James F. Arpe, '64, the picture from Othello on page 147 IS by Mel Boudrot, the football pictures on page 157 are used with the courtesy of Frank Mclntire. - ' ' ' 1 . , f 3 . , -. V ' V , 5.4 , Iv. v ll :ff- .,, x It W 'M an T' 4 A 'Q 'N N A u , A t ,, Q 3' N . I n , v x i R 'N W '- , 1-. 4 f V. . A '- ffl 4 . F, uf ff , . 51 1 Ji ' . .h.......,.,,-.A... .,...., ,. P' r V . w Q I. x W. 1 ' 1 ,Q-if K ff , Q. X 'Z 1 4 f 4 1 , :rv 1 1 w f .fm , , . if-gi:,Qrf:E1f,:wffije'ii1,5 if 3-wifywxxwy-A,: few' , y,,,.-XM. ,V . 4 . - ' Q ' ' 4' - WX' ff'-S' . VA , MJ, : f '.- , - - 1 1.f- , ix v X ,fag cf ., xv ' , V v..fi3k?f4'7fSW f Q? ?g.wgqfi'2z:g 14.. f 1 x,k,,g3i.-p . gwfbfg 3 .zffwSw,fg 1- -4 Q 4 X Q uf Uiww- .nm Q,,1 ,, V '?7'?V65ZWlf'T55?W1 Neff v y . f- ' L mx.-41 fqyfgizf-, ,Q 39q,,,S , ' .c X 4,,wfugw.f.4, r .H , Q123P9'xi'lf5fT 'fZQ'QrL?'1 V5 ' - ' I V: riff . 1 ff 5T,j?5if?f 1f57. 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