College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA)
- Class of 1970
Page 1 of 402
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 402 of the 1970 volume:
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-57- , I YQ I V u 1 IP . in r ' A 7' ' I ' 11 Y,'. I , ,U ,F fx 1' 'l f ,f Q4- , ' Ir ' H -1-if ' W2 A I W il'fm:l A, 2 w ' 'X I 5,1-4-L. rm! . .djs 'S ,I Y e w I , 543-1 K X Nt? . It is not the critic who cou nts not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood 1 Y I' who at best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement Tw ff! .r' .'-,U 1 PPE' ' . .-A -H, . : ,M .. - f .- Q' , L Eff . -ASQEY. Z X V 1 PF I P X and who at the worst if he falls at least fails while daring greatly V s R A X ' so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls 1 4 lt is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out how the strong man stumbled, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes short again, who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, and spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst if he falls, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat, DONALD I. REARDON IOSEPH A. TWAROG IAMESI. DOREY CHRISTOPHER M. FOLEY RICHARD T. SERVICE WILLIAM C. GALLAGHER H. CHRISTOPHER KENNEY DENNIS L. KENNELLY DANIEL P. KEATING MARK I. EARLEY THE 1970 PU RPLE PATCH ER Editor-in-Chief WILLIAM F. GGTHA Business Manager IAMES I. KANE Associate Editor T. KEVIN BURNS Q at .Jr 5TR1KE. v0 ' f Q -,.gnll '-2 'wx Y' .xl l x lg., s can be no settl hat we need is to to trust that thing is to in their con if down with past ways, no complacency over past to listbh, to let other be other, and meet him on meetings will generate new and richer meanings? P ues open, to see things not merely in thqig, relationships, theiiifcapacity to complemehll -x' - Q 'hd reinforce'one another! ff r-'tial .r ' i ri p? ' ,. nn rr yu, CN Q ... as . fl T . ,Libra . .'l7Q'f,: I 4 Piet -n When did it really begin? What was the first sign that Holy Cross was to have, just before Christmas, 1969, one of the most decisive weeks of its 125-year history? Was it the walkout of the black students, or the conviction of the Holy Cross 16 for violation of the campus rules on demonstrationsg or was it the original confrontation itself? Perhaps it really began at the December 1 faculty meeting which was to consider the issue of an open campus, though afterwards many doubted that the issue had been dealt with adectuately, if at all That meeting was of course preceded by the visit of the Marine recruiters, ln addition to objecting to the lvlartnes because of their role in the Viet Nam War, members of the Revolutionary Students' Union saw them as the front ltne ot the imperialist, exploitative foreign policy of the United States The HSU is another name for the SDS, a group which first formally appeared at Holy Cross in the fall of 1968 after another long, hot summer - this time Chicago was the primary focus ot attention Expression ol student opinion against the war was not completely new at Holy Cross. The previous spring had witnessed the McCarthy phenomenon in Worcester, along with reaction to the assassination of Martin Luther King and the increased recruitment ot black students to Holy Cross, Perhaps it somehow began as much as 10 years ago, as Holy Cross tmpeicepttbly began to move away from its rigid, classical curriculum, its Tridentine religious orientation, its monastic dorm life, and Raymond J, Swords became the 24th President of the College As one of his first acts, Fr. Swords asked about 30 students not to return to the campus after the summer, Now that same man, in that week in December, granted amnesty to sixteen students who had been suspended for the remainder of the academic year by the College Judicial Board, Crises, in particular, and historical events, in general, are the product of the inextricable course of events and the actions of given individuals at critical times, It was society, which Holy Cross reflects in its own Jesuit, liberal arts way, with its problems, fissures and complexities, that set the stage for the events of the week, Individuals, by their actions, were able to reflect upon that society and transcend the limitations of the absurd theatre of legalisms and intransiitent principle and give meaning to the situation. lt was, in a real way, the response ofa person, Raymond Swords, to other persons, the individual Bldcl, students, which brought the crisis to an end. His was the truly Christian response Any other response would have been out of character for the school and-for its President, Those of us at Holy Cross claim to interact with persons and learn as individuals, giving not only of our knowledge but also of ourselves. His decision was a moral one - ln this as in all human decisions, the morally right course ot action is also the honorable one. lRJS, lb October 19693 In retrospect, the mosaic of that weelf is composed ot personal vignettes interspersed with decisive actions taken by recognizable individuals. lt was, alter all, the radical clown the hall and the quiet, longahaired fellow in Intermediate French who put their Who pn.- y, .K W -v,s:f-.u- 5 A L. --':'...---... el 1 . .XF I N:'. -' K 'WIA . - 'Q . I , x 49 1 ' A . 4 'lx Q Ml: I1 f .. iffmm FRI? -.' .f J .' i.. I 1 . ' ' nb, .1 ' f ,q Mw4f.fjj. , . M .,. ill' 1 I ,v . ,x I, .w ' gf -J , sqft- QP f v1 lt ' mas- . ,,n .,1 , Q :. ,., C O 'P n os- I-M406 A Fiixw A NIM? 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'f1aimf:-f-fv'-'W- 1 , ' 4---fm - - 21- Lf-144 ' 1 - Sw ff . 5 L- lf- Q ' 1: .,f'1 f?ai ' li -. - -, -. 5- nf-,' .1'. 'rw- H ' 1 efzreiaff 1 ,:f:1:gQ6,LQ1., -4- ' . --. 1 ,V-. . ,Q ,,-. . :. . :I , jsgfgnl-3?f?,-L4 ' :W .W ' L 1 -'.1afg.f-11x-Q:-ligfi 4. . , 1. vfqjfvgquigi'-,G-: ,':s , C ,::,.J1,5L,1 -A 1-.Q!.v,. - fY1 fi112-anti? Q ' '- 1 H-:v: E1.'Q'e'1'ixQ f- f.Q fa-gg,-,fag I Vw.:,.:zQXQ5,l5 - K ,131 P, I-,,-YW X ,,:,-,gui nQ3?.'1 2 . 5 71111 , V ' X' - vw 1 - 'KL -Q ' . , 1 L Q.. K Tr- KEEP RIGHT N J! Y! 5 I I' yi' V '1'. Zim. if academic careers on the line in the confrontation. lt was the senior chemistry major who sought an interview. It was the very human and humane dean of men who had to ask for passage, request the G.E. recruiter to leave and testify to what he saw. lt was the young professor and the corridor chaplain who sat in judgment. It was the wide-eyed, unbelieving assistant dean, witness to all night meetings, trying to comprehend what was happening to many of the students he knew, some whom had not only a malaise, but also a blackness and a conscience that could not be compromised. They were unusual daysg a peculiar weekend. Some students and faculty members returned for their Monday classes, found them empty and wondered what happened while they were gone - what really happened, They, like the people outside the campus, may never know. Was the issue the Marines or open campus or G.E. or racism? The local press called for a hard line, some alumni angrily wrote overtly racist letters, ending their financial support of the College. The president of a prestigious liberal arts college in the West remarked privately that, by his action, Raymond Swords was making the already precarious position of the college president even more difficult. But on campus, things were seen from an entirely different perspective. The view of the president was unique: he was concerned with what had transpired but his perspective was not completely circumscribed by the border of the campus. The crisis committee , a group of advisors organized before the G.E. incident, met with Fr. Swords intermittently from Friday after- noon to slightly more than half an hour before the Sunday announcement. The personalities in the room shifted from time to time, one person leaving now, others joining the group, including Dr. John Scott of the Worcester Human Flights Commission, who served as special mediator, and Ffev. Archie Smith, who joined the group early Sunday morning. The group was uncommonly candid in its discussions and more or less isolated from the events of the rest of the campus. Even as the students assembled Sunday in Hogan moved from a call for amnesty to strike to a free university, it became clearer as time went on that the decision would ultimately be that of one man alone. The decision to grant amnesty to the black students was reached early Saturday evening. Dr. Scott made his presenta- tion of the situation and gave his advice as to the appropriate action. Fr. Swords said little, occasionally asking for clarification, through it all he was a considerate host - making sure all had enough coffee. l-le was obviously tired from meeting all day with the Trustees and was, more than anyone else, aware of the gravity of the situation, including the implications and ramifications of any action taken. One of the Trustees was also there for most of the deliberations, giving his advice as a lawyer and making observations asa genuinely concerned and knowledgeable alumnus. It was not difficult for the group to reach a consensus. lt was apparent from what Dr. Scott had said that the Black students were determined to leave l-loly Cross, as they announced Friday at their news conference. It was clear from what Fr. Swords said later that he was impressed with the sincerity of those students he knew who were involved. While he might not have been able to understand completely all the ramifications of what was at stake, he realised that if a Senior Fl.A., on his way to law school, and a serious, Junior pre-med. could leave school, jetisoning all that they had worked for at l-loly Cross, there had to be some validity to the Black students' statement that they had been the victims of de facto racism. Late Saturday night discussion turned to the problem of the white students involved. There were a number of alternatives suggested, though no real consensus was reached. At 3 AM. it was decided to break off the discussion. Fr. Swords directed that the lights be left on, to avoid suspicion, all left Loyola by various doors to avoid the woman from the press in the vestibule. At lO A.lVl. Sunday, when the deliberations resumed, a definite shift in position occurred. Now, a member of the group, a man of amazing stamina, made a short statement that seemed to clarify the situation, endorsing Dr. Scott's original recommendation. After this, it was only a matter of time before most of the group had talked and reasoned its way to the final solution. One man played the devil's advocate throughout - he forced the rest to clarify, flesh out and support their position. After questioning each of the group privately and informally at lunch, Fr. Swords apparently reached his decision. The statement that Fr. Swords was later to read was written in sections, by different groups, to be edited and revised by him, The statement was designed to maintain the integrity of the judicial system and the dean of men's staff, and still reeadmit the suspended students to the school by Presidential amnesty - not a mitigation of guilt but a suspension of sentence. At first Fr. Swords had been reluctant to make the announce- ment himself, later he saw it was his responsibility. The delibera- tion had been an ordeal. For those who saw from the start what ,. l -M'0 f-52+ : Y ! 1 'll 1, J. if spa..-,f the final solution was to be, it was less tiring. In the beginning, Fr. Swords had no clear idea of what the outcome would be. Only once did he show any doubt or hesitation. On the stairs of Loyola, leaving for the ride to Hogan in the gently falling snow, he requested: Now let's say a prayer that this is the best thing. In Hogan, the situation was tense. The group had worked itself to the position that it would leave if amnesty were not granted. There were no Black students in evidence, though two BSU spokesmen were present, They had known the night before what the decision was to be. The suspended white students sat in the lounge in a circle on the floor. The nervous humor and revolutionary rhetoric had now vanished in an atmosphere of tense anticipation. With characteristic wit, Fr. Swords began his an- nouncement: Only 198 days. . The audience remained quiet for the duration of the announce- ment. At the end, the hall resounded with a hearty, yet solemn standing ovation. Back stage and in the auditorium there were men of Holy Cross in tears, exhausted, relieved and joyful that somehow a settlement had been reached. This was the first time that a crisis at Holy Cross reached the level of a major campus disruption. That it occurred was perhaps unfortunate. Holy Cross could have avoided most of the more difficult aspects of the crisis if the school had not made a sincere l white liberal and perhaps belatedl effort to recruit Black students. The events of that week were unique in many ways. All the activities were completely non-violent. The tactical move of the black students - the walk-out - was perhaps the ultimate weapon, a master stroke. The response of the student body was also unique. Flarely has such a united student body emerged from similar situations elsewhere. This sense of unity was not unanimous A number of faculty members objected to Fr. Swords' action on either procedural or substantive grounds. Only time will reveal the effect this week had on the make-up and attitude of the faculty. A week of years after the G.E. confrontation, the first semester of the Free University came to an end after prolonged discussion on a wide variety of topics. Some students found they had an extra week of vacation to work or ski. A telling number of other students, however, stayed on to try to understand what had happened and to grope toward solutions. The emotional aspects of such occurances give rise to many expressions of sincerity and to much easy talk. It remains to be seen whether the furor of the first section of the Free University will have been drowned in mid-year holiday cheer. Hopefully, there will be more lasting effects evident in the many semesters at Holy Cross to come. If there is to be a difference, it will be up to the students, the people who live and study and smoke and drink at Holy Cross. The leader-type Seniors, the Freshmen with their malaise, the pre-med, the Sophomore, and the prospective Fenwick scholar must join with the individuals who will emerge with recognizable identities from the faceless mass at Holy Cross, the all too silent majority, who will have to pluck up and tear down, to build and to cultivate. J, Day 5- if X There's a kind of native curiosity on the students' part. They feel the way they get a lot of the material is not actually relevant to their main concern, the quality of our society, the quality of life. It seems to me that ed- ucation at any particular time, if it's really to function as an education, has to begin with the kinds of prob- lems facing society at that stage of its development. lf they come here and all of what they have prescinds from this, then naturally they're going to feel that this is all irrelevant. It's one of the great words novv, it's a clichef Students are getting a certain amount of truth, but there's no real creative process going on here. Unless we can face the kinds of concerns that are ac- tually theirs, what they are really curious about and bring all the disciplines we have in some sense to bear upon this, then I don't think vve're really doing anything. S' Sl 'Wu 'f3 9:K 'it The idea that the college is a collection of students and faculty interested in the same goal of undergraduate education seems lost in the depart- mentalized atmosphere of the college. The editors of the Purple Patcher sponsored a symposium of faculty members which revolved around the question of the importance of a philosophy of education in this atmosphere. Dr. William Andruchow of the Chemistry Department, Dr. S.E. Flynn of Modern Language, Dr. Kenneth Happe of Classics, Dr. Ftobert Johann of Philosophy, Dr. Jerome Judge of Economics, and Dr. Thomas Lawler of English participated in a candid, unrehearsed discussion which opened with this question - ls a teacher more than a professor of a certain discipline? Flynn: Well, personally, l'm a professor of languages. But I prefer the word teacher to the word professor. Professor has a certain pompousness to it. I hate to be called professor. Happe: I would object to one word here, and that is discipline I think that I would disagree with Dr, Flynn. I don't think that I just teach the Greek language: I teach a way of life, which is K. Happe's way of life. And you would get exposed, hopefully, to forty different men's way of life at this college. Flynn: But don't you have to teach them the past participle before you can teach them your way of life? Happe: That's in addition. Flynn: What is a way of life? Happe: It is the zeal which I have included in the subjectg you are as enthusiastic about Spanish as I am enthusiastic about Greek literature. Flynn: That's not your way of living. Happe: Oh sure it is, enthusiasm is a way of life. Judge: We have over-emphasized this question of discipline. It seems to me that what we are saying is that all those disciplines are supposed to come together in the student. l'm not sure that we know what the student is. I don't think that our system is conducive to inducing, educere , from the student. So I would think that, at the moment, the student is the central thing at the college. And to me, I-Ioly Cross is an institution of which I am always suspicious for it is necessary for me to work with other people in the institution. When the institution becomes greater than myself, I tend to buck it. It's only here to support me in this endeavor -to present my resources to the student. Lawler: I agree with that. I think that a teacher's primary obligation should always be to to the student. Happe: Not to the discipline? K Lawler: I would almost go so far as to say that. The body of literature that you are reading really has no significance unless you are reading it with somebody. I more and more look upon my philosophy of teaching as reading books with people and giving them my ideas as they are giving me their ideas. Flynn: You're not serious? But are you interpreting or misintere preting? What are you doing? Lawler: I am very often misinterpreting and if it is good teaching, they are discovering my misinterpretations. Then they are really learning something. I think an inexperienced teacher is sometimes the very best kind of teacher you can have. Flynn: I-low can you dissociate yourself from your discipline? Judge: Well, there is no dissociation. I think the integrity of this approach lies through the medium of the discipline. There are other things than the discipline itself: the life of the student here, in it's total ramifications. lt's something which I can touch upon - by my experience, education, and maturity - through the discipline. Flynn: I think we're confusing the idea of discipline. I would feel it is my duty as a Spanish teacher to see if I can cultivate in my Spanish students the love and admiration that I have for the Spanish language. I realize that in many of their lives, the Spanish language is a very minor thing. If I can give them a year or two of pleasant Spanish instruction, in which they will carry away an idea that there is really something here, then I think that I have done a great deal for them. I think that's also involved in my personal discipline, of my Spanish material. I think it is sort of pre- sumptuous to say that l'm going to give this group of young men my philosophy of living. lVly philosophy of living may be a very objectionable one. Happe: Well, I think they should be exposed to all sorts of, you know, objectional philosophies, so they can object, I don't know. Johann, you're a philosopher. Johann: l'm trying to see where we are going here. Maybe you want to say something of your conception of the need for interdisciplinary approaches to some things. Part of what was said here is the idea that the college is, or could be, a kind of resource, a context of resources for the students and for their development, to open up their possibilities. I think part of the complaint is that the disciplines are, and the professors of the various disciplines are, kept out of touch with one another, In other words, the student presumably has a complex of problems and a number of interests which could be forwarded and developed, and which call upon the various departments, which should be there, it seems to me, as tools. Too often, I think, we isolate ourselves from one another, and there really isn't an advance in the students. And this idea of making the student the center of this thing, as suggested before, I'm in favor of it It would have to be a kind of community of inquiry, in which all are learners to some extent. lVIy impression of the students this year is there isn't any great interest in the academic. I don't find a tremendous interest here, on the student's partp partly because of our effort, and perhaps because the structure is inappropriate. Judge: Take for instance the class thing, vvhich I think is passe. I think of wider education experiences and participation. If the student wants to do a course here in conjunction vvith three different disciplines, vvhy not? Happe: What about biology and chemistry? Do they have interdisciplinary courses. ls that possible? Andruchow: This gets back to this idea, vvell, to use the vvord. discipline, subject matter for example. Let's use that vvord instead of discipline. My primary responsibility is tvvofold, and it would be difficult to cut them apart. lt's one to my subject matter and to my students. In the classroom my prime responsibility is to chemistry. I don't talk about the social problems of the vvorldl I don't talk about the economic problems of the vvorldg I don't talk about any of the philosophical problems confronting us. Yet on the other hand, if a legitimate opportunity presents itself, and it can present itself, where a group of students as a body request me to present my vievvs on a matter, I vvill do it. Happe: But the guy that is hired at Holy Cross, I presume, would be someone, I hope, vvho vvould be different from a teacher at the University of Chicago graduate school. Andruchow: I vvould hope I would be able to help the student outside of class vvith any number of problems he may bring up to me, and not necessarily in chemistry. Johann: This may be a bit unfair, but vvhat would you say is the role of chemistry as a discipline in education? Andruchow: Well let's make it even a little broader. Let's say vvhat the role of science is in education. And I think it's an important question novvadays as everyone seems to put the blame on science for our problems, And really, vvhen you look at science itself, it's neutral, like any other discipline. In science vve pursue truth, as any other person does, lt's the people handling the products of science which make it so terrible, and l think it has to be an integral part of education. If you go in and sit and talk about hovv bad the world is, you have to realize vvhy it's so bad, What it really comes dovvn to is simply the mishandling of scientific, or maybe I should say the technological, developments of man over the past fifty years. And you can get a tremendous amount of technical 3. . 3 1 P. i 54 2 E. 5 Y 1' f ability, and ways and means by which we can solve the materialistic problems, yet we have not advanced one iota spiritually in this time. If a philosopher or a sociologist or even a person in language or classics is going to talk about how bad science is, he has to understand what science is all about. And once he understands this, maybe he won't throw stones so rapidly. Judge: lt's not the technology - it's not the question of the scientist, I am a scientist too. But we have no control in the social-ethical aspect. Our economic system has no device by which we can say that what we are doing here - maximizing our effort in this way or that way - is good for society. Happe: I just wondered, do you expect the college to make an evaluation on society. Well, just this moral thing came up Monday at the faculty meeting concerning an open campus. Flynn: Well, I was surprised to hear that word moral , weren't you? I haven't heard that word in about five years. Happe: lt's coming back. I had a question on one of my first quizzes after reading Plato's Republic and Aristotle's On Educa- tion. I said What do you think is the target, the goal, of a college education? I would say of seventy of them, ZIOM, expect a moral training when they come here in October of their first year. I think I'm even underestimating. I'd say even more. You'd be a good one to answer this question, ls the I-loly Cross student changing? l mean you 've been here God knows how much longer than all of us put together. Flynn: I think the student body is changing, I think, at the moment, we have the poorest student body l have ever seen at this school. I think there is the greatest lack. They are the most difficult students to stimulate. You can entertain them and they love it. But to actually stimulate them you have to put your head through the blackboard. But I don't think they are to blame, I think they are being trained by young teachers, perhaps in prep schools and high schools, who themselves are a result of this flabby training. That's why I don't shudder at the word discipline, I think what we need is more discipline, particularly for freshmen. Johann: I'm not really sure it's that simple. But l really feel that the great effort being expended here, so far at least, and l've only had a few months here, but the same thing holds true at Fordham where l've been before, is really by and large going down the drain. lt's a kind of wasted effort. I don't see any real growth going on here in terms of our interaction with them. And how do you come to grips with this problem? You think about it, you go along with the system pretty much. And they'II talk about it. I have a large class, I'd say in philosophy they're a little bit too large. So their big thing was, let's break it down - there's not enough contact. So I broke it down into discussion groups. They don't want to say anything, they have nothing to say. They don't know how to come to grips with the problem. Judge: For two years now, almost two years, l've decided to blow the gaff. And I have a senior section where you're free for one year. And what I'm finding out is, the students say, Well, no one has ever asked me what I want. But what I am interested in here is the habit aspect, the period of discovery of the human thing. Now when he touches me on something contingent to my area, I move into that area. lf I don't have the information, l'll get it someplace, you see. This is the tactic I'm trying to explore. Flynn: But how do you do this with sixty students? Judge: I had sixty-seven last year, you see. When you get a student working, you don't have to worry today, tomorrow, or Thursday morning. He begins to boil, and, I think this is greatly possible. Flynn: Suppose he's going completely down the wrong way? Judge: So what, this is experience. Flynn: You don't mind if he winds up ignorant. Judge: I don't. Let him chance his life. Flynn: Well, I think that's a very dangerous philosophy. Judge: It is. That's why I love it. Johann: Well, maybe there's another way of putting it, that wouldn't sound so dangerous. But there's a kind of native curiosity on their part, the difficulty is the way they get a lot of the material is not actually relevant to what their main concerns are. I think that's one of the main concerns here at Holy Cross, part of what was manifested in our discussion at the faculty meeting the other day, this idea that there is a concern with the quality of our society, the quality of life. There is some idea that the college itself is not facing up to. I went to a student dinner and it's like a record, you can get any place at any time by pressing a button and all the evils about the institution all come out. Now these are concerns in some sense which are extracurricular concerns. These are the things they talk about, these are the things that occupy them. And then they've got all the class material, and by and large, it's irrevelant to what they spend their time thinking about. Now it seems to me that education at any particular time, if it's really to function as an education, has to begin with the kinds of problems facing society at that particular stage of its development. These boys have it by osmosis, it's in their bones. These are their concerns, worries, and perplexities, If they come here and all of what they have prescinds from this, then naturally they're going to feel that this is all irrelevant. lt's one of the great 'A .52 iff' rl :s-gf' A. MI. l g.:L,-'r .Z :J-b . ,. A M. 'bfi , 5,1 S , L A 'ef- ,- AW J D- .2-Y, 2 ff' I words, it's a cliche'now, but it is irrelevant to what they're going to be, to the shaping of their lives in the future. They're getting a certain amount of truth, but they can get by using all the tricks of the trade. You can get passing grades here very easily with a minimum amount of work. But there's no real creative process going on here. Now is it simply their fault? I don't think so. I don't believe it's simply ours. We ourselves are victims of the system. But the thing is, unless we can face the kinds of concern that are actually theirs, the kinds of things they are really curious about, and bring all the disciplines to bear upon this, then I don't think we're really doing anything. Flynn: I think we're sitting around in these classrooms talking and talking and talking, but yet, we're not teaching. This school is awash with talk, and coffee and there's very little teaching going on. Happe: To talk with you is an education, in one hour, you're so full of crap . .. Flynn: I think that we have developed a very unhealthy philosophy on this campus. For the past five or six years the question has always been - What's wrong with Holy Cross? . Lawler: lt's not a question of what's wrong with Holy Cross. lt's a question of what's wrong with American colleges. l-le isn't going to find anything better any other place. Flynn: That's the point - plunge into American education, and drown. A flow of words and there's nothing in them. That's what they're getting in the classroom. That's the type of term papers they're writing. No content. And, I think, content comes first. Johann: You get the sense of separation between their educational process and the things that they're dealing with themselves all the time. It just can't be the content, divorced from the context. I think we've lost the sense of context in our education. And what we're more and more aware of is that the organization as synthesis is on the active level, it's not on the theoretical level. And therefore, it's in response to concrete problems. lt's in response to the concrete shape of our lives, and therefore, we bring our different disciplines to bear on these problems to which they're relevant. Flynn: Don't you think the problem is the learning problem? Johann: We have been engaged very much in giving answers to questions they're not asking. In other words, you can't supply something for which there is no need. Now, if you're going to have learning, you're going to have to start where the problems are, and as they are felt in experience. We don't do that, for example, setting up the whole curriculum completely independent of what the student's actual interests and problems are. This is what we've always done. We're still doing it. We're revising our curriculum, and in terms of what are we revising it? There is a sense - but not just a sense - that something is wrong with our society. We all share in that. But have we begun to think, how can you come to grips with it? And where, if any place, but at the university should that thinking be going on? What universities are really doing that? A Student: One thing I can say from people I know is that there's a lot of kids who go to class, come out of class and who'Il say, big deal, what's it mean to anything l'm going to do when I get out of here. Lawler: This really upsets me. I really feel there are too many students here who just are not interested. And I don't think, al- though I've been knocking the system, it's entirely the system's fault. I don't think it's entirely my fault as a teacher. I think there are just too many who won't accept the fact that, damnit, you ought to be interested in African history just to be interested in it. Happe: I think they do it from a feeling of guilt. They feel we have corrupted them into career orientation since junior year in high school, and they write their goddamn I-loly Cross application that says, what's your major going to be? Who knows? A pimply-faced sixteen-year-old kid knows what he's going to be when he's thirty-two? This crap should have gone out of the system long ago. Flynn: Thank you, Putney Swope! Johann: ls it not true that an educational institution should, I would believe one aspect of it certainly, be in the context of communication and a common inquiry. You try to maximize a context which they don't have elsewhere, otherwise there's no reason for having schools. Happe: Maybe we should all close down. Johann: l'm not trying to suggest that I, in any way, have the answer. I am aware of a problem herejand it does seem to me that it calls for a radical reconstructing of our educational procedures. But how you go about it, l'm not sure. Lawler: Wasn't it the superintendent of the Springfield schools who said last week, and it's an astounding statement from an American public school system, he said we can keep the old methods if we want, but if we're going to keep the old methods. we're going to have to have policemen in the corridors. Either we get new methods or keep the old methods with police, because we're not going to be able to teach in the old way unless you have policemen. -' 'nr x -3'-fi 4 4 ., v . , -J, ,Q . A X- X, L sv' 5 'Qi is I , ix fi' .9-f 'w mu? In V, McBrlen H. Struyker-Boudier 1 -'ll-g ik E. Callahan HU, f , , 1 7 Jl ' 11-1-' f E, Kennedy I P' 'ii- 1 is 1: if I. xl Devlin N 4045 I ,.,.-ff' ari -'1'bf'W ' v 1' L' Zb- vw IQ .J 4 ' :sl 'f 'li '4 J, Flavin ws.,,.x ,1- if F. Tangherlini X f x F x f XE, f , 1 EE nv-s 123' Q1 Q-sb... Fl. MILLSPAUGH What is needed is less emotionalism and more careful thought on the many problems facing us. All sectors ofthe nation need badly to start thinking with their heads instead of their hearts. Understanding, acceptance, and a willingness to compromise for the greater good is a primary requirement. E. Hayes A, Mahonev s. Y. 1 Sl E. Herson gx He sly Q. N. Lamoureux Holy Cross ended a decade of change under Father Swords in a most appropriate fashion last fall. What had originally been little more than a formal dream to improve the College was at last beginning to be realized in terms of new attitudes, values, and interests. What had been at first little more than an awareness that we had to change quantitatively - build more buildings, attract more students, and hire more teachers - was starting to assume qualitative proportions. What had originally been conceived more out of fear was beginning to find a basis of hope. What had been undertaken by an inward looking community in a smug society was being carried on by a more professional association in a deeply-troubled country. In short, we are on our way, and are beginning to learn that the course is more treacherous than we had anticipated, our destination further away than ever. We all have regrets, but we know that we can do nothing but push on. The evidences of our condition are manifold. Structurally, the College is vastly changed from what it was ten years ago. Its Jesuit community, administration, faculty, and student body are becom- ing identified as functionally separate estates. Each is seen as having its own realm of authority, and its own special competence. The Jesuits are concerned with the community's spiritual needs, a task of considerable frustration when confronted by a highly secularized environment. The faculty is increasingly expected to provide direction for the students not only in the achievement of a career but also in realizing the good life by both instruction and example, objectives particularly difficult at this time because of the agonized state of our society. The students are the concern of the other three estates, and they can best function by knowing as many of the students' needs as possible. The College, in short, cannot be a matter of science, but of art. The administration, to the anger of many of its alumni, and to the chagrin of many of its friends, has increasingly recognized this role. Fiule and objective administration are giving way to consultation and need. We have recognized that we can neither be a despotism nor a democracy. The College's achievement of this condition was graphically illustrated during the December disturbance. In the months leading up to the confrontation, there was a considerable effort, mainly by Jesuits, to judge the dissident elements of the increasingly structured student body - i.e., the kids on pot, the opponents of Americas oligarchic, imperial system of government, and the students who are hostile to the Church - as having no place here because they are not Holy Cross men. There was hardly any greater recognition of the fragmented character of the student body by the faculty. By both estates, the open campus issue in general, and the General Electric recruiting in particular, provided a matter of sufficient principle for a showdown, especially since the troublemakers seemed to be one and the same. ln preparing for the confrontation over General Electric recruiting, the administration went to great pains to meet the challenge. Its strategy and tactics were only adopted after consultation with a wide range of campus interests. At the actual confrontation, the only surprise element was the confusion caused by the presence of unexpected students, both pro and con. An improvised identification process had to be adopted, one which resulted in a disproportionate number of Blacks being selected from the crowd. While the culprits were waiting to go before the Judicial Board, administration assurances were made that they would be allowed to make the widest pleas to try to justify their behavior. When this proved unfounded, and the students involved were, in effect, expelled, the Blacks walked off, and the majority of white students went on strike. In this situation, the administration decided to intervene. In a most courageous manner, it set aside the decisions, and called upon the community to consider its own state. In doing these things, the administration rested its case upon the strongest legitimizing considerations - i.e., conscience and objective opinion - in order to pacify the Jesuits and the faculty. While their immediate reaction was hostile - e.g., some Jesuits acted as if Father Swords had just assassinated the Pope from ambush, and would have shut down the school to avoid such a travesty, and some faculty members thought that the school should stand up for principle, and that their classes were the most important events that could happen to their students - calm ultimately prevailed. Rather than behaving like Harvard, lVlIT, and Columbia, with their lists of proscribed students, court injunctions, and police depart- ment numbers, we had emerged from our most severe crisis as a renewed community. For most, there seemed to be an increased respect for the character and needs of others. The future will not be easyg it never is. Quite probably, it will have crisis and problems even more confounding. Nevertheless, if we survive as a college, and survive we must, I think that we can say, as few American communities can, that 1969 was one of our finest hours. T. Ford .. ' L2 C tinker J. Mayer A .nl C-3:51 3170 I ill ' .-li H il J. Maguire -rs. L' - -- ' - I .M ffijgh- .l gulf? v 'P 7 - -5 A ' vi Nei? yi.. - :vw-'V 'Haw' , , , . .. 43'7 g Ks I 4 M C Pal - f e J Science seems novv to be riding on the crest of the economic vvave. People in other areas are chagrined, and rightfully so, that they are not getting more financial support. On the face of it the sciences have to spend more on laboratories and equipment. Even though you may have twice as many English majors as science directed-people, the latter still cost more. Novv either you face this expense or you drop science completely, and I don't think you can afford to do that. J. lVlartus ff' T545 'v 'T V. f, ,,,s5,.,c.,1,Hv l 4 J- ShaV - f. ii-45 1 a, 4.44 - L 4,3 5 -in 43...-..I. 1.- aiu:-. -i-.1 J. Flynn W X C. Lundberg I s ,-Mega va? - ' -1 .Q .. NX5'-,sfwwhv ' Q ' 'Qi , - wg ,if ,f 'X .fra 9-- I To think all of society is determined by economics is a simplistic vievv. As fond as I am of Marxian theory and as much as l'm a student of Marx, I can not accept his theory of history. I really believe in a complex vvorld, a general equilibrium vvorld, where all variables f economic, political, and social - are interrelated. lt is a very difficult vvorlcl to deal vvith because there are no easy solutions, F. Petrella Toward nightfall he was back in the city walking toward the castle. Agnes lived under those towers and high roofs, his beautiful regal mistress, who looked so proud but who could nevertheless lose herself, aban- don herself completely in love. He thought of her with joy, and gratefully remembered last night. To have been able to make that marvelous woman happy he had needed his entire life, all the things women had taught him, his many journeys, his needs, wandering through the snow at night, his friendship and familiarity with animals, flowers, water, fish, butterflies. For this he had needed senses sharpened by ecstasy and danger, homelessness, all his inner world of images stored up during those many years. As long as his life was a gar- den in which such magic flowers as Agnes bloomed, he had no reason in the world to complain. mfs 1,- Jv- 4-..,'2 1 PT' 1:'Af2fnjr,1 MW H. bfgvfsdi W . 1 ff? ME i1'4?W5WE 1f my g, , -mmm, ,..-M11 'Tft'7E- .Wwf'f-wt 'YN , wuqmwmv. 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X ' Jus V' V' -.. 1.1 ' K ., ,gf 1 1 ' - -F X F AH, W. Gotha, president, Glee Club WE 'PN , fin 5 W V sf 3' f , I S Y , , 4' ' . i ' 1 ' 'a iii 1 ,C 1 fs' W:-Q' Q A ,127 'Z S53-. 7- 'vi .1 1 Wi- -un-... , 'Q ' 'IZ' ',. f , ,, .'. , zggzlf il.. 4,1 glf,l '- , V' ,I A,:?.?'xf:,An , if-vurklg Q. nj J ! flvdi' Mb I' 5' X ,JIU 'e3'1f'lY V vial '-'I 1' I .' :A fig. eff!! , . 51 104.1 1 is fivfix-.4. , iwff- Z -11-11' , 4 ...S lfffi :signin , ,If ful ' 1 . 1 4 JULY: There was a great deal of work to be done in setting up the Congress. lt became apparent that the work would have to be done this summer, in the hope that Student Government could become meaningful. But after Commencement, when the dorms were locked up, I had no place to live...l commuted from Boston until Alumni Saturday was over, and a week later returned with my solution to my housing problem: the tent . . . My first nights in the tent were not unpleasant. . While the College, like any other institution, needs govern- ment, it should also have as many of the qualities of the anarchist's utopia as possible, because it is built also on the notion of each man's responsibility for his own knowledge, utterance, work, behavior, and freedom. That's got to be the flavor of the College. . OCTOBER: We are calling for a periodic moratorium on 'business as usual' in order that students, faculty members and concerned citizens can devote time and energy to the important work of taking the issue of peace in Vietnam to the larger community. On October 15th, participating members of the academic community will spend the entire day organizing against the war and working in the community to get others to join us in an enlarged and lengthened moratorium in November. . .Join the call . . NOVEMBER: A Student Government, if it has any justification for existence at all, is purposeful so long as it endeavors to interject an element of energy, freshness, novelty, and immediacy into the life of its campus. Its central problem is one of inertia. Student Government must try to summon its campus into motion. Viewed wrongly, its task is seen as the destruction of apathy - the search for an issue which will unite the student body, eliminate their lethargy, abolish their indifference. This view supposes single-mindedness of the students. This approach only subjects them to more manipulation than they already experience by molding each student's interests into the pursuit of the one cause. The role of Student Government, properly conceived, is not destructive but creative. lt must concern itself with the creation of a mood - a mood that will engage each student, that will engender a feeling that each student's thoughts and efforts are meaningful, a feeling that he can make things happen. For mood is forever being sliced, cut, stamped, ground, excised and obliterated from our lives by the totalitarian nature of our society. The mechanics of mood is what Student Government is all about. It is a mechanism which, to be effective, must serve very diverse interests. ln six months it can appoint fifteen percent of the College Senate, give out free punch, study curriculum, subsidize SDS, set-up a Draft Center, do community action, change registration, organize a Moratorium, live in a tent, etc., etc. But do not understand me too quickly. I don't see this semester as anything more than a turning point. Vlle have begun to create something here, but this new mechanism has to do more to deal with the life style and direction of the College. Let this semester be a propaedeutic for the future . . DECEMBER: Blacks are distrustful of white Americans. Curiously enough, the whites of whom blacks are most distrustful are not the racist bigots whose political conservatism oppressed blacks for so many years. lt is the white liberal and the white radical whom blacks distrust most. The conservative bigot seldom hesitates to make clear his unequivocal opposition to concepts of greater rights for blacks and, in this respect, he can be trusted to be consistent. His terms are clear. Seeing themselves as more enlightened, the white liberal and the white radical are quick to condemn the racists' insensitive irrationality. Although their respective philosophies proceed from relatively different premises and employ different strategems, both the liberal and the radical present grave dangers to Black initiatives to solve Black problems. Consider the liberal. All too often, the liberal white's commit- ment in the area of civil rights is inversely proportional to his commitment to his own personal life. The liberal can be expected to be a stalwart champion on the forefront of the struggle only as long as there is no direct threat to his family, his home, his job, or any other aspect of his security. To Blacks, the fair-weather liberal is of little value. Inconsisten- cies in the liberal's commitment indicate an hypocrisy which makes it difficult for Blacks to believe much of what he says. This credibility gap concerning the white liberal's commitment to Blacks is what impedes his effectiveness in the Black movement. While the liberal weighs his own interests against those of the Blacks, the radical uses the Black movement as simply another vehicle for fermenting the revolution. The radical seems to have no genuine interest in the Black movement, seeing it as simply another forum from which to harangue the establishment. The radical can demonstrate for peace in Vietnam on Monday, occupy an administration building Tuesday through Friday, and join the welfare mothers' protest on Saturday. The radicals' vascillation is a function of his search for a cause and as a result the radical fails to reach the stage of total commitment to anything except revolution. This arouses Black distrust. The radical's presence in the Black movement is counter- productiveg to the extent that he is able to inject peripheral or unrelated issues, the particular problem with which the Blacks may be attempting to deal is overshadowed. The liberal has much to offer the Black movement. But the Blacks are rightly distrustful of the liberal's paternalism: though liberal to the point of including the Black in Black-assistance projects, the liberal usually seeks retention of the decision-making power within the project. The radical must be considered by Blacks in their planning of approaches to particular problems. His inclusion is undesirable because of his limited attention span, his desire for the public eye, and his failure to think plans through. But his exclusion creates the danger of unbargained for lateral support of dubious value. VVary of the liberal's paternalism, the radical's pueralism and the absence of total commitment with both, the Black has turned to his own Blackness, recognizing that his only vested interest is completely intertwined in the fact of his Blackness. T. Dougherty JL. 91312751 :. -3 -'f 71',.' 4 V . QS 11-51515 1453 iw we 2' 'A ' ' 'W GU TN - F Meyer, stat 0 mar1ager.WCHC Radio ,T , ..... ,,., ...... Z I ' , +5773:::::::: Y. Z... me gem I ri ' . Us 11.1 xg.- '-is i ,Q 7 L I A ..-I. . , ix I x , Q X --A.- , , -V4 ...AL 'V 2 r .r, F xx. x-W 'N up ,fl- J Day, chairman, Cross and Scroll Society '-T 1?TPQ'.'1 :L 'f'f44f:2F-fsfr- -f 1--:!W'.?rf-C5 1 Z . ' 'e 'Q min! ,rf .V -. 1 , 1 I ,V .1 f .Q .gf .J-af., 1165 :if 'f fx- vjiffrik ' wife-X 1- cv af, 1 1 -,gf : v ' ' ' 'Q , , V L xx -A ,A.-15, , -JI -L Q., , 1 wifi. -11 . if A , Q, 4. , -yi 1 ti. I - X Student unrest, the Black revolution and outrage against the vvar have all required prolonged gestation periods at Holy Cross. Lengthy intervals of time, sometimes years, have separated their bursting forth from the initial eruptions at other campuses. Holy Cross has displayed a pronounced tendency to ripen at a slovver pace than many other, larger and more heterogeneous colleges. Yet, as Holy Cross approached the end of the sixties, this time-lag vvas being irretrievably narrovved. The complacencies of 1966 seemed distant and artificial in the face of the intense realities of the nevv decade. In the space of only four years, Holy Cross made up a lot of ground, One aspect of this time-lag can be discerned in Holy Cross' attitude tovvard the arts. Artists must take their places at the vanguard of society, offering nevv perspectives, reordering the old, and continually redefining our apprehension of ourselves. But Holy Cross is not a center of the arts and does not consciously produce artists, Thus, the institution must act as a distributor to the students of vvhat is most easily called culture. The rapidity with which nevv thoughts and trends are transmitted to the students as vvell as the breadth and quality of their exposure to the traditional cannot be uniformly controlled. Variable factors such as the resources and disposition of the institution and the vigor and open-mindedness of its members inevitably insure some sort of cultural time-lag. This is especially true of a school like Holy Cross where none of the aforementioned variables are predictable. Film is a particularly apt example of hovv this cultural time-lag has been somevvhat reduced during the past four years. The first film shovvn for freshman orientation in September of i966 was Jules Dassin's He Who Must Die, a turgid and insufferable, modernized version of the Christ story, a choice that reflected many of the college's in loco parentis attitudes. For film to be taken seriously then it had to contain equal portions of Christian mythology and humanistic uplift, A neat contrast can be made vvith one of the last films that vvill be shovvn this year, Claude Chabrol's Les Biches, among other things, a sensitive study of sexual deviation. Hovvever, this change in scheduling habits can be deceptive, Not as many, by far, vvill go to see Les Bfches because it is by the great Chabrol as vvill go because of the subject matter. Although films are often shovvn four nights in almost any vveek, film is still regarded by most as peripheral entertainment and not as a serious art form. There is still a strong unsophisticated element that vvill loudly demand nudity in an exquisite Japanese film like Gate of Hell or conversely declaim the corrupting influence of Godard's attack on bourgeois society in Weekend. The more serious films of the more esoteric lat least for Holy Crossl filmmakers are still supported by a small coterie. But the coterie has expanded in four years, The ten vvho vvould have gone to see Bresson's Trial ofJoan of Arc in 1966 today would probably number forty. Jean-Luc Godard, the most influential filmmaker of the sixties, is just being tested on Holy Cross students, but vvith predictably luke-vvarm results. The time-lag is being closed but not so swiftly or suc- cessfully as on the socio-political front. The answer perhaps will lie in film education. Holy Cross is presently not conducive to the filmmaker or the film student. If the increased interest in film at Holy Cross is a belated parallel to that displayed throughout the nation, the state of Fenwick Theatre has similar external points of reference. In four years, the development of Fenwick Theatre has followed the traditional diagram given to tragic dramas. It rose up with its renovated theatre, solidified itself on Volpone and Guys and Dolls, blazed brilliantly with Marat!Sade and A Funny Thing. . . and settled into decline with a skein of lightweight comedies. Now, in its crisis of confidence, Fenwick Theatre dangerously resembles the present condition of the Broadway theater. A steady diet of bland comedies, braced every now and then with a prestige drama, will neither sustain veteran theatergoers nor engender new ones. Fenwick Theatre, at first, seemed more successful than Broad- way, in that it managed to outlast its competitiors. Student production in Limbo coffeehouse flourished for only a little more than a year. Without a framework, prolonged guidance or any decent showplace, interest faded away. Centralization became even more complete with the amalgamation of Clark University and the Entr'actors of Worcester into Fenwick Theatre. But more power paradoxically indicated less influence. Theatre going, never very strong, became more institutionalized and remote. The vibrance and alternative of non-Fenwick produce tions was missing, students felt shut out and interest has declined. However, there is a possiblity that the trend will reverse itself. The Freshmen Apprentice Program offers a change, an attempt at a grass-roots theatre linked with a solid training in the classical and traditional, that is more in keeping with the times, more in keeping with the attempt to break down the barriers between the people and the theatre. Today, Fenwick Theatre faces the unenviable task of establish- ing a balance between the relevance of the contemporary theatre and the permanence of past dramatic achievements. Whether they will succeed, of course, remains to be seen. For nearly all the years of its existence, the Cross and Scroll Society has served as the chief cultural agent for the campus. It has provided lectures, recitals and concerts, injecting a bit of light onto a rather dark area. However, in the last few years, with the formation of a separate Fine Arts Committee in Hogan, the Cross and Scroll has concentrated on acquiring lecturers. Honest efforts have been made to obtain balanced programs and a free interchange of different ideas. As a result, the lecturers' styles and ideas have ranged from the passivity of an Andy Warhol to the sublimity of a Eugene lVlcCarthy, each stimulating in his own way vital intellectual discussion. One of the major innovations of recent years has been the symposium, a concentrated and prolonged discussion and debate of one issue by a panel of distinguished thinkers in that field. The future of Christianity was at issue one yearg another year, an examination of the role of dissent in a free society was coupled with a look at the emerging Black Arts. All in all, the Cross and Scroll Society provides the most immediate means for confronting the campus with the new and controversial ideas that are essential for any kind of intellectual life. The rude reception Barbara Deming's lecture on Vietnam provoked three years ago would be unthinkable today. A lot of minds have grown in the intervening time and the Cross and Scroll has undeniably had a hand in this. It seems evident that, in many cases, a carefully chosen Cross and Scroll program is a powerfully effective deterrent to the cultural time-lag. If the cultural time-lag in film, theatre and ideas can be computed in months and years, the lag in the appreciation of the fine arts of music and art at Holy Cross would be a large multiple of those other measurements. To be sure, the glee club and the Worcester Music Festival are venerable institutions, having served for a long time as oases in a musically parched wasteland. But sufficient relief was not forthcoming until Hogan Campus Center was finished in l967. For the first time the fine arts possessed a permanent repository: a recital hall on the fifth floor, ample space for mounting art exhibitions and a student committee to program fine arts events on a regular basis. lt has not been an easy task to overcome the campus' built-in antipathy to definably 'cultural' matters. But even with limited resources and feeble student response, the Fine Arts Committee has presented numerous concerts and recitals by both professional and student artists each year. The quality of the programs has varied, but the enthusiasm, sophistication and taste with which they have been presented have remained constant. Student-faculty photography exhibits and intercollegiate art exhibitions were some of the committee's innovations and have, in a small way, served to lessen the gaps between students and the arts. Correlative to the rise of the Fine Arts Committee at Holy Cross has been the emergence of the Worcester Fine Arts Ensemble. While associated with Holy Cross, the Fine Arts Ensemble was a visible representation of the nascence of interest in the arts among the students. From a wobbly start at a Christmas concert three years ago, the Ensemble has matured greatly, gaining confidence and expertise with each outing. Their two concerts of Italian Baroque and Contemporary Music last year were the brilliant fulfillment of a great potential. They have since become indepen- dent of the college, but they maintain their value as a symbol of the promising future that the fine arts have at Holy Cross. ln sum, the expansion in interest and enthusiasm that the arts have generated in the short course of four years has been remarkable. The cultural time-lag between the attitudes of Holy Cross and the intellectually-aware segments of society has begun to decrease. Yet there is the danger that within the framework of four years the progress might seem more prodigious than it really was. Much ground remains to be made up. Only a systemic ap- proach will work. The anti-intellectual and anti-cultural barricades have received only their first battering. J. O'lVlealy ,A Hi-7-LL ng Qx Morgan, editor-irvchief, Crusader I x fa- 'is-f fi if J. Dorey, managing edito ii +A. A. ' NNI? if .948 v ' lay ,D x' 'L' 4 x A' :ws Q . . .sfrvr 4 . , N 3' ,Nr si , V4 uf, . K, X I vvkiff td. I x J' :Hzlxlf sr. A I ?AI.xINk ' N 'I v 1' Q ' 431 in 'lf I ,-.jgf' T .x .N .J 6 fv'vif AA , , In qw wg 4, f ?fVi'QJ'JI 'LQ W. Gundling, photography editor C. Foley, news editor 36 .nl V gi mnuun Q X , Y' .V 1 Ai- .7 .. If Q 1-AN IF' ,f V1 . .U . ,,,.,, 1 wig .fum-5 'Q wi. R A QR, 4 xg . bl -a v -.4 ,M NHL .., '- 1'xf ' - .-rf-ff VL K' 'Pb':V?'k . 'J V!-! Sqj-L' .. ' -- P, ' P' '. + vi ' x , 4 9.1, , 4- . we , 1 -. ' . . .So i is.,-,,f'Q1L,., XW. Lp-, ,, ,y , K W 4. 4. , X -Q -' .-Q-aff' A 1' .55 -'M-sag. .w.'+' i J. Lvmuxnrd, bkxltnl lmvC0rw'nm.1vxd:-r .I-an hillb- 4,1-1, x, . F:1f '4 ,I , Af i-.' ,. me-f-is I , . , Sf , '.', 4'-s '- H ' . 5. n.f- ', JH. .' YQ'-f' - mn ll ursmem , uw if .1 lfsgll . 1, ,v,,.. ,.-fl. A 'af f ,SL .i'C'.CIv'r XE' K fi -I' -4-,,4.' :- Q-A ,a . 7, on , . Q . -Q' -,w'QfX .f',2.1,, f .'. M4 ' V Y -3'-'wg-: r?.',,,va4L.1 .: gp-QM I' fum' -1' ' 'f-'fn - 1. ,., - A r- .J-L. ll J ' ' -' - : f - .4 .Q 1-'JH' 'A- V T. ' A 5, ' .- Q . , - .. - .-cr' ,rvrcu .. ' gt i,.:,f l ' . - A54-mf Ai -54-, .A:A,.'-',.,.',q .,. 1,1 aft-'ff ' 'W ,. +..,,:-- -' -n -.11 ,- ,mx 7 ' .vfi ' 'pq , 1 1, -.sn ,J vj -g, 4 we-.A U .. V,-J. . .v-' fi-'Q ,.. ,-. .4 y-fi-V ' 14-rv ' ..1 L1'N ' .,:f, 4--ti .. ,v-19' 'Ge 'ja ,. -- - - ,,,5f,r ',.N8,,7j ,5j,. ffQ...'pt -' - Aiagfi. Vg., -'H . -- . -J . .,:--.f.,- -vnu. ,. -fp, -.. Lu qP 93nlnf:.7,?'J 9:' 'J'-bi' ' 5 ' 'A .g' -. ,': 9-' ',-,?: f1'9.',,, NJ ' . w- 'L 'fp--airs-' if-,.:-:A f H-wr: xi QL. '-'I 'V' ,L fi 'QI 'uni ' , 1 'ffzgrfvi' T -'. . kv' MAL.: 1 75 'K . - -'- vc,N 3.4, my I ' - -MER.. 'Q : WP Q J sfiizxvquv-. . AA . 1 h .. 1 -. .fi film.. giizifli gen' Z' 519' - -1 .ln-.ra I-45.4.1 N iiiiii .raumsx N f FULLUUU UHUEH5 G 9 T. Travers, D. Conway, co-chairmen, Junior Prom RMU? x W .Sn E. Reutemann, president, 1843 Club 1, if ig- 'K 52 .W 3 5 ' 9 P I When I entered Holy Cross a few years ago, like any typical freshman, I was anxiously awaiting what was supposed to be one of the most significant experiences of my life. The college education I was seeking was to advance me both economically and socially. This education was to make me a better man. As one of two Black men in the Class of '70 entering a predominantly white school, I was especially lucky, for my so-called self-improvement would result from a white education, the best. ' H Though I was Black and my Blackness was the determining factor of my actions in life - as it always has been and will be -l soon found that I was Ralph EIIison's invisible man. I was not seen as a Black man, and neither were the other seven Black students at Holy Cross. The mere fact of our presence told the white students we were different from other Black men, that our aim was to eventually assimilate into white society, there to remain content and thankful that we few were allowed to do so by the munificent white man. My first two years of Holy Cross were lonely. Even though I had many friends among my peer group, I didn't feel like part of the school. I could not become the shining knight on the gleaming white charger. The mixers, the football games with Mamie Riley and Old Black Joe were not intended for my enjoyment. I was at Holy Cross to run and study and be happy about that. lt's true five more Black students were admitted in my sophomore year, but the now baker's dozen were still invisible. I will honestly say I had accepted my cross. I knew I had to receive a college education and four years was not a lifetime. I think a turning point in my life and those of many Black students throughout the nation was the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. His assassination affected my life-style at Holy Cross. From the words Martin Luther Coon has been assas- sinated echoing in Mulledy to the administration's denial of funds to send two student representatives to the funeral in Atlanta, I became more convinced of our Black invisibility on campus and the insensitiveness of many toward us. Of course there were the prayers and petitions and some sincerity, but most people didn't give a damn. Why should they, he was only a Black. As part of a new dedication to the rights of man and in memory of Martin Luther King, Holy Cross - like many other institutions throughout the land - attempted to rectify her mistakes of the past. In the Class of '72 twenty Black freshmen were admitted, and forty more were added in the Class of 73. With the for- mation of a Black Students Union, a new and powerful voice has been heard on the campus, and justice will be done. With the increase of Black students and their presence in every area of Holy Cross life, things had to change and will continue to do so. White students can no longer expect Black students to carry the proverbial cross - and why should they! The younger Black student does not thrive on sincere thoughts and polyphonic promises, but on action. This was evident in mid-December '69, when rather than hear the Oh, I'm sorry's the Black students were willing to give up the precious Holy Cross education to be free men. The Black students entering Holy Cross today, as I did four years ago, have come to Holy Cross seeking not only the same education I did, but an education and environment that includes them as well. They have not come to destroy but to help construct. The Black student not only here at Holy Cross but throughout the nation has become the catalyst for change. The Black students are opening the window of education to fresh thought, their interests being not only academic but pragmatic. Because of these interests, courses are being re-evaluated for their meaningfulness and their value in society today, and new areas are being opened for study. If any institution claims to be truly educational, it must realize that the Black student is an essential and legitimate participant in this process. Acknowledging this, Holy Cross must continue to bring in not only Black students, but students of all backgrounds. Besides admitting these students, other things will have to be recognized. Holy Cross cannot expect the Black student to continue to give, but must be willing to allow him to do what he must. If the student comes to Holy Cross and does not associate with white students, if he doesn't want to fit into this Holy Cross mold, understand why. The Black student today is his own free Black man. I think Holy Cross is now starting to realize that her value system and her priorities must change. She has an obligation to her students to prepare them to live in the world and to become part of the family of mankind, not just part of the family on the hiIl. Holy Cross in the past has produced leaders in every field, and she will continue to do so. But if her graduates turn their backs on mankind, Holy Cross has failed. There is more to life than eating, sleeping, breathing, and material wealth. lf someone asked me why I chose Holy Cross I would not know. I hope in the future I will. A. Martin -f f- s ff x J -'41 wt' ' A-A wi' 1 Ei 6 srl -I 1 gg in ,A -' ' f:f1?f? j I K 2 - J me Foley, copy editor, J. Dorey, literary editor, J. Tvyarog, layout editor, K, Burns, associate editor. JS - x 1 1 - .' ' v N-ffl i ' '- I -v ll: Ill , A'b ' , 5 .. H ' ' ,.H ,Z - . . 'ihhll 'Mo 9 ' in an 4134g1,..,4,51., ft -.ggi nff '- I '.l.,nHwpm Qt BAA, A 1 sl 4 g,.,g E125-QE ' '.,. '. L,, ' ., I In leg 1-tif' ,Al If .tt .LV xj...Qrv-23, ... .'.x.it,.-.Fgg P Q' Y 'A Pa ' -'H sg- lx 1' .. l,7:1!.,.,.'-. 0.4 jAg1.l'2f, .A , 1 pin' ffl -..J , 9 XI' 4? z -AA 4. . -LA. U .Il Quinn 'lam' .e. '. I .A,l.,L.l4, 1- I In A A .0 a- Mui - ,154 . 1 : ,guggg -- . v- x . , A K b I I ' .s I . .vu' f , b, u ' '. , . Qs, .,,, ., . .,,, - ' 14' - 1 ,Ji B 91' 1 ' I an r 71 . . 4 . , , 4 f A .. vs . ' f,' R 'r .s. , , . 1 .v-'.-, I . ,,, 4 ,,.s-173, ....h' r r -Aggz 'D -'wi-47 ' x. ng g bww-K,-.I-f, , .14.,,.g1:. .A ,...f I P. Poggioli, editor-un-chief, Today T-, fig Q Q.:-1 3 Suas- - V- -:rg , .+- -.'1-N ff ful 1-Sv 9-4, aqgL. '72se ' wr. YA-NP' mfg, , . wg rr' --4 5.1- Z F? Tabacco, presudent, AED .f' I? S... N. 4, SIN Qi k- :VA .g a 1-.3. L I . 2. -N-, s 4. fu - W, X- 15? I 'V E5 V SWF SE? 355 'Av' EL fix I HJ ax? Y -sag 2 'F' 'EL ., P 3' 255' if .54 I H ev ,5,. - u x n f , .- 5 N . ,. , ,, , Jr . 'Q 'ff ' A JM. ii .X-'-.'-Airfzxr Q.-'IQ -' .--,,'-. -:ZVZS-rZ ..,-'l. 21 ky ' s -1-, ' ' , , ' -gtk-' 55- - ,xg-.-.-,j Q-. 3, --.ff-.-'Ji .TAS 2'-2-1 ,y , A-915 Jlfmgfbg g' ms:-a v f . s- :' ,' vf, - , --, ,-'.,f.. ' A . -,fr gy:-.-1:wf,q,fa'aEL:? ., Q XY' -13' .,1-T23- z'l'frx' Aflxfi' f' 'i f'b!1Ts.4' .ai 4 '- N',,:-:3'-5n,z-'bSa',A.,--- .gfr- '-'A' f --g ,n f . 5 g,1S1wEf:g5ssp5e4:fZvi g .Q 11,-g A 2.15.35 yr-,-.V'f:aNf3iUg:g4?, M? 'sk -1-A4854 'f'f'21f- ff v A win . .. ., kj? , . qf fgpiy 59,2-'R 1 if, .PSF 5.6 73 .g , .,Q:-4.f -fQ:f -'-I UZ-5' -jffxg -' ifiiw 3? , : . W- 5 ,-,,v:-54, rf-1:1 Gs x5 X Mg F lad 4551 2 1 ,, av on x 4 '- x v x . l Q , '11 xx gg, ,fx X A riff ' 9' K x v R .gr f' ' iff . - K a,i'.,r,f:'- , ,Z f,lfuQQ., A .-WA ' t . - w 'ff V A ,- 3Q517!5' 'Lf L .1 ca. rg 53, Q ., ..,,.9,. . L ' . 3-7-Q 57. , 5 '!3,s'5 A , . --t . 593' ':.- ' ...J , - inf'-Qfjui' ' ,S-Nr: ' f.-'YG . , J. I -4-u .- 4 Y -I' The time you won your town the racef We chaired you through the market placeg Man and boy stood cheering by,f And home we brought you shoulder high. Today, the road all runners come, Shoulder high we bring you home,f And set you at your threshold down,f Townsman of a stiller town... Eyes the shady night has shutf Cannot see the record cut, And silence sounds no worse than cheersf After earth has stopped the ears: Now you will not swell the routf Of lads that wore their honors out, Runners whom renown outranf And the name died before the man. So set, before its echoes fade, The fleet foot on the sills of shade, And hold to the low lintel upf The still-defended challenge cup. And round that early-laurelled headf Will flock to gaze the strengthless deadfAnd find unwith- ered on its curlsfThe garland briefer than a girl's. At the outset the 1969 edition of the Holy Cross baseball team was characterized by enormous potential. The Crusaders had lost a minimal amount of talent from the team that had compiled a 12-6 record the previous year. Returning were the powerful bats of Captain Pat Bourque, firstbaseman Phil O'Neil, outfielder Flick De Angelis, and thirdbaseman Bill Crowley. The team was going to be known not only for its offensive punch, but also for its exceptionally strong pitching, Jim Conlon, Bill Close, Bay Bussiere, and Dave Kolick formed a group of hurlers that, on paper, looked unbeatable. But things don't always follow form in the world of sports and the outstanding Crusader potential was never fully realized. As a unit the 1969 HC baseball team played well below pre-season expectations. lvluch talk had centered around the squad's chances for a berth in the District One playoffs and an eventual trip to Omaha, Nebraska for the College World Series. Holy Cross looked like one of the better, if not the best, teams in New England, and when Coach Bob Curran began his indoor drills in late February there was nothing to dispell the notion that the Crusaders were a first-class ballclub. lt appeared as if they had all the tools-hitting, pitching, defense, and maturity. Bill Close got the season off on the right track as he hurled the Crusaders to a 9-4 victory over a scrappy Yale nine. Though he threw 144 pitches in seven innings of work, Close looked as if he would be ready for the important games ahead. The team had played a hustling, aggressive game against Yale and it seemed that Assistant Coach Balph Baymond's talks were paying off. The trio of Bourque, O'Neil, and De Angelis combined to drive in six runs in the victory over the Elis. There was little reason to believe that things would be any different throughout the rest of the season. But luck began to frown on the Crusaders as the injury bug took hold. Jim Conlon, who was probably the best lefthander in New England, developed what was later diagnosed as tendonitis in his pitching arm, but he continued to exhibit the determination that was so much a part of him. Things became worse when Conlon's righthanded counter- part, Bill Close, also developed an acute case of tendonitis. Close also fought back, but it was in vain. The Crusaders were also plagued by a lack of offensive punch and frequent defensive lapses. Senior Bay Bussiere and Junior Dave Kolick pitched well, but without the solid hitting that was supposed to keynote the team, the hurlers were not quite equal to the task. Yet, they continued to pitch well in spite of all the misfortune. As the season progressed the Crusader juggernaut became permanently derailed. Neither Conlon nor DeAngells was able to approach the status which made them choices for the District One All-Star Team in 1968. The potential was certainly there, but the question revolved around the depth at which it was hidden, Phil O'Neil uncovered a modest amount of that elusive quantity. Phil finished the season as the team's only .300 hitter as he compiled a .316 average and was named to the District One All-Star Team. Both O'Neil and Captain Pat Bourque eventually signed profes- sional contracts, O'Neil with the St. Louis Cardinals and Bourque with the Chicago Cubs. lvlisfortune first struck the Crusaders in the season's second game, a 5-1 loss to Amherst in which three HC errors led to all the Lord Jeff runs in the eighth inning, and it continued to strike Coach Curran's team at key points throughout the rest of the campaign. Holy Cross went on to register important victories over Hanfard, Connecticut, and Bhode Island, but these triumphs were more than offset by heartbreaking losses to Tufts, Brown, Providence, Springfield, and Boston University. All season long the Crusaders had difficulty in winning the close ones. The pitching held up fthe team's EBA was 2.89l but the hitting i.203l and fielding l.954l left something to be desired. When the smoke had cleared on the disasterous season, the Crusaders had lost the entire three game set to arch rival Boston College. This stands out as a first in the history of the series for either school. Holy Cross finished with a disappointing 7-12 record, but there were some bright notes. Many of the young and talented Sophomores and Juniors logged valuable playing time. Pitchers Bob Pitochelli, Chet Piskaldo, Dan Leyden, and Bob Doyle, catcher Dan Capen, infielders Ed Litwin and Bruce Corrigan, and outfielders Paul Bendick, Jack Noll, and Jim Sharp all picked up experience. Help should also be forthcoming from last year's strong freshman team. Hard-throwing lefthander Mike Pazik and in- fielders Ty Brennan, Stan Grayson, and Tom Gifford are among the Sophomores who could help the Holy Cross varsity in 1970. With a sound nucleus returning, the hope is that the spring of 1970 will see the Crusaders return to the form which has made them a perennial power in New England baseball circles. 'nga' -ff f '-T'-. 5xF-u wx-1-QS'- 5 L M , . . 'Q ' 'Ill' - .,, . 24, 4. b Will. QQ , B N x'- -' Y 'i, Pg Q-sxr- 5 A.. 15-. 1 -J-wlx ' x - 3' A it ,- -, ,ax .wi f '? seAf f 'SFI 'H' 'EQ yt-J - ix.-'-my .27-'T H-.. .3 ,,'s. . . F-h.i1'f-'f I -af 'Q' ' ..aQ 'f., E--5 s. :Tyra-'j-rf IK' S ,- ' 1 I-'wx .-1. ggrffzf BJQQUQ?-Q .- I '.'rE ,,.-ui ' .- V' S -'J' ,2'4'- . -- , q,kl:'w4'1' ' . , - V- me . ff 1 . '.A.f ,,gg,- ' Iwi, . . . ws- u In the New England Intercollegiate Tennis Championships, held after the conclusion of the regular season, Holy Cross finished fourth out of a long list of top-flight teams. Only Harvard, Amherst, and Yale managed to top the Crusaders in the final tally, Juniors l-lughes and Mayotte both fared well in the competition, giving quite an indication of what can be expected of them in their final season, when Holy Cross should finish higher up the New England tennis ladder. Hughes, Mayotte, Young, Bier, and Schick are all sound and experienced collegiate players, and with help from underclassmen such as Fran Sablone and Tom Carey they will provide Holy Cross with a 1970 tennis team that could easily be the best in the school's history. Tennis, a sport always short on publicity at Holy Cross, proved to be long on talent during the 1969 season. Coached by Nick Sharry, the Crusader netmen set a school record by putting together a string of 21 consecutive victories. The Crusaders began their streak during the 1968 season and remained unbeaten until they were edged by Massachusetts and Amherst during the latter stages of the 1969 campaign. Five talented members of the Class of 1970 provided the spark for the team. John Hughes, Holy Cross' top singles performer and one of the best players in New England Collegiate ranks, powered past his competition throughout the season. Even though he always faced the opposition's top player, Hughes usually took command and set a fine example of consistency for the rest of the squad. In a brilliant display of his court skill, Hughes defeated Amherst's top player in an exciting home match in May. The number two spot in singles play was manned by John Mayotte, a teammate of Hughes' since their high school days at Springfield Cathedral. While he never geared his game to the exhibitions of power that Hughes displayed, Mayotte's accurate placements and tricky changes of pace continually forced his opponents into many errors. Marc Young, a talented netter from Cincinnati, played in the third singles position. Young also paired with Mayotte to oppose the top doubles team of the rival squad. The fourth and fifth singles spots were held down by Steve Bier and Art Schick, who easily disposed of most of their opponents. The tall and powerful Bier also played well as Hughes' doubles partner, while the quick and agile Schick performed primarily in singles competition. Paced by the efforts of these five skillful Juniors, the team swept through its early matches with little difficulty. Squads from Connecticut, Tufts, Boston College, and Providence provided only light competition for HC's netters, while Fairfield, Stonehill, Worcester Tech, and Brandeis also proved to be easy prey for the Purple. When the team went against opponents of a higher calibre, the skills of Mayotte and Hughes often proved to be the deciding factors in Crusader triumphs. A close and temperefilled victory over Fordham, a perennial power in New York City tennis circles, provided one of the highlights of an exciting season. Thus, Holy Cross came into its final matches against Trinity, Wesleyan, Massachusetts, and Amherst with a perfect record and plenty of momentum. All of these important matches were played at home and spectators were treated to many fine displays of tennis skill. Hughes and his teammates swept past the tough squads from Trinity and Wesleyan with little trouble, Then, perhaps because they were looking too far ahead to the Amherst match and the New England Championships, the Crusaders were upset, 5-4, by the Redmen of Massachusetts. Several days later the dejected HC squad bowed to powerful Amherst, 6-3. fe xx Y, X :' f ,.f ' X iA7,q:':1'--'fill 'W 1 ,y'k,9,fLz1,b1lL!:,f:',:w. ,s 'f' - V I 5, .. v-5, , ,, ,- , .. ,-. . X. , M. Jkjp' it ,,,i,i --ec ,. V J , -1115 -Q- . .f 'If' w-3,-14 121.'I'47f.J','lsL.f45'f'.V ' 5ii x'1i,1:' ' ' L x U N X X AW K Q H X X L I' 'W I I I y X 4 .., ' ' M s -. sf , +-g, The spring of 1969 constituted a rebuilding period for the Holy Cross crew. The season itself was marked by much disappoint- ment, but the fact that there were fifteen Freshmen and only three Seniors on the squad evidenced promise of greater success in the next several years. The HC crew, under the leadership of Coach John Foley and co-captains Rich Rizzolo and Mike Greene, began its spring campaign on April 12 at the Grimaldi Cup Regatta at Orchard Beach, N.Y. The Crusaders ran into a familiar problem at Orchard Beach as their performance was hindered by a lack of sufficient water time on Lake Ouinsigamond. With Don Reardon at coxswain, the varsity took fourth place out of six teams, while the junior varsity and freshman boats each placed third. Holy Cross was back in action on April 26 in the Worcester City Championships, a regatta in which Worcester Tech loomed as a heavy favorite. The Crusaders got off to a fast start, but they eventually lost the lead and wound up finishing second, three seconds behind the victorious crew from Tech. The varsity crew's strong showing was coupled with junior varsity, frosh, and fourth boat triumphs. The Alumni Cup, held May 3 at the University of Massachu- setts, found the HC crew at a great disadvantage. Rowing against the current, the Holy Cross varsity, junior varsity, and freshmen all came in second to Massachusetts crews that were familiar with the tricky waters of the Connecticut River. Gene Nowell moved into the varsity coxswain spot in this race. The Crusaders finally seemed to jell in the Dad Vail Champion- ships in Philadelphia on May 10. The varsity and -freshman boats qualified for the quarterfinals against the good competition, but they got off to slow starts in these all-important heats and failed to make it into the finals. Overall, Holy Cross finished 13th out of the 35 competing schools. Last fall the Holy Cross crew rowed in only one race-the Head of the Charles Regatta. Competing against many of the best crews in the East, the Crusaders finished sixth in an eight boat field and missed third place by only nine seconds over the three-mile course. The HC oarsmen, led by Senior co-captains Tom Sullivan and Larry Chick, Juniors Joe Swerdzewski and Rich Tonry, Sopho- mores Mark Sullivan and Neil Cleary, and Seniors Don Allegra, and coxswains Gene Nowell and Don Reardon, showed great promise for the spring of 1970. This past winter the Holy Cross rowers made use of a calesthenics and weightlifting program, with hopes of compen- sating for the fact that Lake Ouinsigamond, the Crusaders' training site, is usually frozen over until the latter stages of March. The Worcester City Championships, the Rusty Callows, and the Dad Vail Championships are among the regattas in which the HC oarsmen were scheduled to compete this spring, The Holy Cross crew has a bright outlook for the future. Coach Foley's roster includes four freshmen who rowed on championship crews at St. John's High School in Shrewsbury, so it appears that the Crusaders have the potential to maintain, or even build upon, their tradition of strong, winning crews in the years that lie ahead. , bn A ,Q , -4,- aes.- -ge 1 MH R 1 W if ' g n..f, Y, . H- ..., ,,: . V,-A-1-f 3,-1, :V L.. , -i, -Rg Q.-1 ,-, .3 ' ,- , Y -. , -.., -ig. A -xi .+ , M.- .-'QX - 2.x 1' i x-,,L ' 1- nl I 3 'Q-, - -Y 1- i4--,. .-,.- - X v- Y x.,....- - - ,K X -bgxi. x -i . T ' 1:s', 'tal 1 .1 , The Holy Cross lacrosse team ended its 1969 season with a disappointing 4-8 record. The team was hindered by inexperience, injuries, and a late start due to a snow-covered field and inclement weather, but it did start out strong and looked as if it would have a highly successful season. During Easter vacation the Holy Cross stickmen travelled to Washington, D.C. to participate in the Cherry Blossom Tourna- ment. The trip was a highly profitable one as the team completely outclassed Boston College and Georgetown to take home the tournament championship, ln the Cherry Blossom's opening round Holy Cross clobbered BC, 16-2, as Mark Doherty scored five goals and Kevin Tepas added three. The following day the Crusaders copped the title as they shut out Georgetown, 5-O. Tepas led the way for the Purple with two goals while Doherty chipped in with four assists. Thus, the season began on a highly optimistic note, but, unfortunately, the Crusaders' good luck remained in the Upper South as the team managed only two more wins during the duration of its season. The relatively young Crusader stickers played well throughout most of their campaign, but their efforts were not enough to defeat such New England lacrosse powers as Massachusetts, Trinity, and Harvard. The loss at the hands of Trinity proved to be one of the biggest disappointments of the season, The Crusaders led, 3-2, at halftime but Trinity came back to gain an 8-5 victory. The team's top effort in the latter portion of the season came in its 8-1 victory over Connecticut. Doherty, the team's leading scorer and one of the top attackmen in the Northeast, picked up three goals and Dick Anastasi scored two to pace the Purple in its rout of the Huskies. Late in the campaign the Crusaders edged Nichols, 6-5, as Doherty tallied twice. The 1969 season was not an artistic success, but the program is gaining strength each year and the outlook for 1970 is promising. The graduation of Neil Hourihan and Kevin Tepas, last year's co-captains, and goalie Tony lvloscati will be heavily felt, but the return of lVlark Doherty and Dick Anastasi, the co-captains for 1970, along with veterans Hillary Benz, Tom Kehoe, Jim Bevilacqua, Lou Bevilacqua, Jim Courtney, Tom Walmsley, Jim lvlahon, and Tim Harrington should provide the nucleus for a strong team. Holy Cross will journey to Washington to defend its Cherry Blossom title and all signs are pointing toward an improvement on last season's 4-8 mark. One essential factor in the lacrosse team's improved prospects is the fine coaching of Dr. Sam Wylie and Father lVlaurice Beidy. Dr. Wylie, a former lacrosse mentor at Nichols College who has also coached in the annual North-South game, is now in his second season as head lacrosse coach at Holy Cross. Father Fieidy has been coaching lacrosse for over a decade, it was mainly through his efforts that the sport was introduced and developed at Holy Cross. He now serves as an assistant varsity and freshman coach. il X .4 v 'X 49. 1 ,5 y N ,j -f 'll ,f T -4 ,ge L . ' :qu .Af- ,ll 'rv'-R' n I ' , A. , 1 af, . 1 4, w an 1 A - M .fx , . Z V. 'X ,, , , I Q J . 5 3 . Y Q 01 an . 1 1 ' X u , v -, , -' an I W lltygl . bi 14 vu., K X. X-A. V ,ff 'iii'- Disaster struck the Holy Cross sports scene in the autumn of 1969 as an outbreak of hepatitis among the members of the varsity football team forced the Crusaders to cancel the major portion of their grid season. A nine page word and picture account of Holy Cross' hepatitis-shortened 1969 football season follows Pre-season predictions for the 1969 Holy Cross football team were certainly varied, but not one of them approached an anticipation of the events that were to transpire in what could be called the season that was, or almost was. The 1969 Holy Cross record was no wins, two losses, and eight cancellations. The cause was hepatitis, a disease that had been virtually unknown on this campus until last October but is now all too familiar to anyone even remotely connected with the College, The outbreak of the hepatitis epidemic among the members of the Crusader football team resulted in the cancellation of the 1969 season after the second game. The members of the student body learned in the hardest of possible fashions just what an autumn N without football is really like, but there was some consolation as Purple stalwarts soon began pulling for a heretofore unknown team in Sacramento, California as if it were their own, Thus, the story of the truncated 1969 Holy Cross football season reached its climax on a warm Monday afternoon in early October, but it had its begining on a snowy Saturday morning in February. On February 1, 1969 Holy Cross announced the hiring of William G, Whitton as its new Varsity Football Coach. Whitton replaced the controversial Tom Boisture, who had led the Crusaders through a stormy 3-6-1 season in 1968. The new HC mentor faced an immense task, but he plunged into his labors in hopes that they would soon bear fruit. Whitton assembled a capable group of assistants, and the new HC coaching staff soon entered the recruiting wars and began preparations for the 1969 season that was only several months away. Along with these and other tasks, the coaching staff also found time to talk. Whitton and his aides talked to students, faculty members, and anyone else who was interested enough to listen concerning the way they intended to run the football program at Holy Cross. They also talked to the players, and through this communica- tion they alleviated many of the misunderstandings that had served to undermine team morale under the previous coaching regime. By the end of the spring the situation was beginning to brighten. Team spirits were high and student optimism was fairly widespread, considering the disasterous events of the previous season. Summer vacation came and went, and before long the end of August had rolled around and the team reported back to begin pre-season practice. lt was now time to begin translating into action the plans that the coaches had been formulating over the summer. The closing days of the month of August were thus marked by the long-awaited start of practice for Whitton's first Holy Cross team. ln retrospect, this period carries an even deeper impor- tance-for these were the days in which the varsity players became infected with the hepatitis germs that would force their season to come to an early end. As those familiar with this story know, the water system on the Holy Cross practice field proved to be the source of the infection. Hepatitis has a four to six week incubation period however, and there was no way of knowing that disaster was lurking in the immediate future. The nightmare was yet to come and during the month of September the Holy Cross players and students had only one goal in mind, to Beat Harvard . Co-captains Tom Lamb and Bill Nloncevicz and their teammates had labored for almost five weeks and everyone on the squad felt that victory would come in the opener if the Crusaders could put all their skills together in Coach Whitton's new and intricate system. Harvard was tough, but the Crusaders were prepared and optimistic. The Crimson wanted no part of any Purple Power dreams on that September day however, and their i3-O margin of victory tells the story of the game. Both teams demonstrated sluggish offenses and tough defenses, but the Crimson appeared to be just a little bit better on both platoons. Neither team was able to score in the first quarter as Harvard would make two or three first downs and stall, while Holy Cross would run three plays and punt. The second period started as the first ended, but a Frank Champi to Pete Varney pass set up a one yard touchdown smash by Tom lvliller. Flichie Szaro converted and Harvard had a 7-O lead. The game reverted back to its original pattern and the lone Harvard score stood up at halftime. The Purple had a new leader in the second half. He was Sophomore quarterback Howie Burke, who had been promoted to the number one spot when Junior Mark lvlowatt strained ligaments in an ankle while running for the Crusaders' initial first down late in the second quarter. The team fared no better under Burke, even though he did manage to pick up several first downs with his passing. Harvard was to score again though, on a Bay Hornblower to John Ballantyne aerial, and even the most stalwart Crusader fan knew l' that the issue was settled. The 13-O final score left Coach Whitton and his staff with many questions, and seemingly little time in which to find the answers. Dartmouth, the Crusaders' next opponent, would present quite a challenge. The Indians were the favorites to win the lvy League championship and their solid defense would present a great challenge for the Crusader offense that would be led by the promising, but inexperienced, Howie Burke. At this stage the coaches and fans were primarily concerned with the progress of lVlowatt's injured ankle and Sophomore flanker Ed Jenkins' bruised hip, and another problem, which the local press described as a flu bug , went relatively unnoticed. In the days following the Harvard game the news that Sophomore defensive end Bob Cooney had come down with hepatitis was lost in the shuffle. But as the week progressed new lists of players afflicted with the bug appeared and many began to expect that trouble might be brewing. By Thursday evening the cat was out of the bag as the news that seven members of the team had come down with hepatitis hit the campus. The remaining members of the squad received gamma globulin innoculations the following morning, but four more players became ill before, and shortly after, the team arrived at Hanover, New Hampshire. Word of Holy Cross' plight began to spread on Friday, and the Crusader squad that took the field on Saturday was decimated to the extent that every betting man in New England knew that Dartmouth as an eleven point favorite was the best wager in the land. The final score on that cold and windy Saturday was 38-6, with Holy Cross on the short end of the stick, and many trivia buffs will always remember that it was an eleven yard pass from Burke to Sophomore tight end Dan Harper that produced the only points of the Purple's hepatitis-shortened i969 season. Coach Whitton can always claim a moral victory however, solely for the fact that he and his troops played the game despite all the difficulties they were facing. The team returned home and blood tests revealed that all the varsity players and coaches were carriers of hepatitis germs. On lVlonday, October 6, i969 Athletic Director Vincent G. Dougherty made what he called an inescapable decision and cancelled the eight remaining games on the Holy Cross varsity football schedule, Thirty players and managers, along with trainer Jack Scott, ultimately contracted the disease, while the other members of the squad were isolated in Hanselman until the danger period passed. Thus, the Holy Cross season that was, or almost was, came to an abrupt and untimely end. However there is one bright postscript to the affair. The gesture of sportsmanship which the players at Sacramento State College made in dedicating their season to the stricken Crusaders is un- matched in the annals of sport. Holy Cross' only varsity football victories last fall were achieved by Sacremento State and the hon- orary O'lVlelia Trophy which the Holy Cross Club of Boston pre- sented to the players at the West Coast school served as a fitting tribute to the team that adopted Holy Cross in its time of need. 4 X r .i'3'- .A ffl 1 'W 4--4. ,g gill AF ,-!l,LJQ1 1 ,.-ruff ag, ,,,,f-wx l,.,,D..i,'Jf.x,. , -- ' vm. , F.-4 x. f V1'4f..?:f of :Aff bf'-,-.. lg.. - vm A 93,8 we +4 91111: it .MN As Toastmaster Thomas Dowd said at last December's O'lVlelia Award Dinner, lf Bill Whitton had told me that Holy Cross would lose only two football games in 1969, I wouldn't have believed him . This statement contains just about all the humor that can be found in the situation surrounding last year's Holy Cross football team. The outbreak of hepatitis had its obvious effects on everyone at Holy Cross, but, as one would expect, it was a particularly harrowing experience for the members of the team. For the Sophomores and the Juniors it meant the loss of a valuable year of varsity competition. Next year's Juniors will be playing with only five college games under their belts, three of which were freshman contests from the 1968 season. It was a great burden for the underclassmen on the team, but those who were hit the hardest and in the greatest number of ways were the Seniors, most of whom have now seen their football careers ended eight games sooner than they had expected. At this writing lmid-Decemberl the Eastern College Athletic Conference and the Administration at Holy Cross had not made a definite decision concerning the possibility of granting an extra year's eligibility to the members of the squad. However, most of the team members from the Class of 1970 had made definite plans for the upcoming autumn and it is probable that the vast majority of this year's Seniors will not return next fall even if they receive permission to do so. One Senior looking forward to next fall is flanker Ed lVlurphy. Ed came down with one of the worst cases of hepatitis and he was forced to drop out for the 1969 fall semester. He will be here next autumn however, and he intends to play football if he is granted eligibility. Tom Lamb and Bill lvloncevicz, the co-captains of the 1969 team, are both considering a possible return to the HC gridiron. Bill still has some pre-dental requirements to fulfill and he will return to Holy Cross even if he does not receive permission for another season of football. In looking back at what happened in the fall of 1969 the members of the Holy Cross football team, those who were confined to the Infirmary and those who were quarantined in Hanselman, are grateful to all those who were helpful and showed concern for the players' health and for the future of football at Holy Cross. Special thanks, of course, should be given to the players and coaches at Sacramento State College who dedicated their 1969 season to Holy Cross. The efforts of lvlike Carter, Coach Flay Clemons, Sports Information Director Phil Dynan, and everyone else at Sacramento State did much to raise the spirits and hopes of the Crusader gridders during their autumn on the sidelines, The visit that Lamb and Moncevicz paid to Sacramento and the trip that Carter, Clemons, and Dynan made to Worcester helped cement a bond of friendship that will always unite the football players at Holy Cross and their compatriots at Sacramento State. bf' 'xx QV 5 L 'Wg ch. - -.l X Cv. Mp- The hepatitis epidemic that struck the Holy Cross varsity football team in 1969 created a situation never before seen in the annals of Crusader sports. The cancellation of the varsity football season made it necessary for the freshmen to alleviate the hunger pains of Purple pigskin buffs. First year Head Coach Jack Whalen and his capable assistants, the veteran Fran Donaher and former Holy Cross quarterback Phil O'Neil, rose to the task by presenting the Hill with an exciting, if not always victorious, freshman team. ln light of the absence of varsity football on lVlt. St. James arrangements were made for the HC frosh to play all their games in the home confines of Fitton Field. After suffering a 14-O shutout at the hands of Boston College in their opening game the Crusader Cubs came back to trounce Brown, 44-7. The outlook was bright for the final two games, but the season ended on a bleak note as Coach Whalen's team dropped a 21-7 decision to Rhode Island and closed out the campaign with a 44-12 Homecoming loss to Dartmouth. The Cubs were plagued by opening game mistakes in their loss to Boston College but they performed with the proficiency of a well-oiled machine when they faced Brown just five days later. The HC frosh completely dominated the Bruin freshmen as they moved the ball well both on the ground and in the air and rolled up a total offense of 430 yards. Halfback Joe Wilson, who rushed for 78 yards, split end Jack Von Ohlen, who caught two touchdown passes, and quarterback Jerry Lamb played the major roles in the convincing triumph over Brown. The HC freshmen were unable to duplicate their victory over Brown however, as they finished the season with losses at the hands of powerful frosh elevens from Rhode Island and Dart- mouth. In retrospect it can be said that a lack of sufficient depth lay at the root of many of the troubles which the Crusader Cubs encountered enroute to their 1-3 season. Several linemen were forced to perform on both offense and defense, and this proved to be a decisive factor as the ovenfvorked HC offensive line showed signs of fatigue in the latter stages of several games. The team did not compile a winning record but there were numerous individuals who did show promise for the future. One standout was Bob Veague, a 235-pound offensive tackle who could step into a starting role for the varsity next year. Tackle Bill Haag, guard Tony Konieczny, and center Mike Lehman are other linemen who might see action for a recuperated Crusader eleven. Much credit can also be given to the offensive backfield. Strong-armed Jerry Lamb, the brother of varsity cocaptain Tom, proved to be a quarterback capable of making the big play, Lamb hit on 19 of his 63 aerials during the season for a healthy 334 yards. Joe lVlarc Aurele, who handled the Crusader Cubs' place- kicking chores, also saw considerable service as Lamb's backup man. The running backs also showed much promise as hard-running Joe Wilson and swift Roberto Orellano rate as potential starters in next season's opener against Temple. Wilson picked up 186 yards in 29 carries, while Orellano rushed for 269 yards in 41 attempts to pace a strong Holy Cross ground attack. Versatile Rich Pelletier is another player who could see considerable varsity action as he ran, punted, caught passes, and also filled in as a defensive back for the frosh. One of this fall's top Sophomores may be fullback John lVlele, who saw action in only one frosh game because of a knee injury. Steve Hickey held down the fullback spot after lVlele's injury and he was also a regular at linebacker. Rangy wide receiver Jack Von Ohlen was the principle target for Lamb and lVlarc Aurele. Von Ohlen demonstrated fine speed and eye-opening moves as he caught 16 passes for 260 yards and he looms as the dangerous deep receiver that Holy Cross has been attempting to uncover in recent years. On defense, the Cubs also displayed some fine performers. Tackles Buel lVlcOuay 1230 lbs.l and Doug Hahn i225 lbs.l, and quick middle guard Jon Weston anchored the center of the line, making it difficult for HC foes to gain yardage through the middle. Hahn was also named the recipient of the Johnny Turco Award as the outstanding player in the Homecoming tilt against the Dartmouth freshman. In the secondary cornerbacks Steve Johnson and Kevin Frawley, rover Jim Hughes, and safety Colin Clapton made it a difficult chore to pass against the HC frosh. Hughes demonstrated a particular knack for making the big play. Wilson, Veague, and Von Ohlen were the freshmen with whom Coach Whalen was most impressed. The frosh mentor feels that these players, along with several others, have a good chance of breaking into this fall's starting varsity lineup. Thus the 1969 freshman football season served a dual purpose. It helped provide some consolation for the loss of eight varsity games to the hepatitis epidemic and it also aided the development of a group of players who will be a welcome addition to Bill Whitton's 1970 varsity squad. 4 I I' , , cm- :megs-' ?1f':+mz mm ' -:Ai-:ow fr my ffaf WXQS .jx ,Ag wig, s - --Q .gr .Q Y.,-p---1-r'vQvgf Q' 4,- fd. 'M . bvbwff. . ,ynf-Q--'N' .sl-gist, -L' I V W , -9 , ' 5 1, 4 I. 2 fr, I Q, 3-' E JD? 'f 'Oahu ' Q xg? gxltgb As relationships formed on the intramural field are often the most treasured, the intramural program is, in a sense, the most important of all the athletic establishments at Holy Cross. This is so not only because it embraces the largest number of people, but also because it provides the only athletic outlet for many students, The football season began on a warm afternoon in September and ended on a frigid day in late November, darkness and cold winds managed to make the playoffs resemble that famed Green Bay-Dallas clash weatherwise if not in the calibre of play. The league was divided into four divisions, whose champions met in the playoffs to determine the ultimate victor. Each of the division races was closely contested, with one notable exception: Mulledy ll-W, whether coincidentally or not, handily beat back all attempts to dispute their winning stature. The champions were strong both on offense and defense, and it was this overall balance that allowed them to defeat teams that appeared stronger. Their offense was sparked by John Doyle at quarterback. While not the best passer in the league, nor the best runner, Doyle performed well enough to win the most valuable player award for the league. George Hill played only the last two games of the regular season and the playoffs, but during this period his sparkling receptions from an end position, as well as his mobility at safety, proved to be very valuable in the lvlulledy ll machine. Other top performers for the winners included Bruce Corrigan, Al Lombardy and Bob Butler in the line and Dan Nugent in the backfieldi lVluIledy ll's championship opponent, lvlulledy I-W, did not have an easy path to the finals. This club, paced by quarterback Chip Hoar and his ends Jimmy and Lou Bevilacqua, needed to take a pair of tough ones from Lehy ll along the way. The Mulledy I club featured a strong pass-rush anchored by Timmy Harrington, Hillary Benz, Bob Kelley and Dean Brannigan. They gave lVlulledy ll battle in the finals, but the champions' overall balance prevailed. The two other division winners, Hanselman Ill and the Besident Assistants, were also blessed with some fine individual talent, though neither could match the overall team strength of the two finalists. Hanselman was led by end Kevin Plunkett, who made the big receptions all season long. He was aided by quarterback Bruce Dauer and end-safety Terry Hawk lVlcCarthy, who was perhaps the league's best defender. The Ft.A.'s were led by the commissioner, George McGuane, a picture passer and a Scrambler, who just didn't have the supporting cast necessary to garner the title. Fran Sablone and Tom Mulvihill were fine receivers, but the team as a whole lacked the consistency, especially on defense, so necessary to win the title. This year's frosh crown was captured by Alumni lll as they defeated a spirited Carlin lll crowd. Scott Nicki and Bon Cozzone were top passer-receiver combination for Alumni, while Carlin had people like Tom O'Neill, Bill lVlcKernan and lvlike Walsh. Commissioner lVlcGuane described the season as totally rewarding in experience working with the people, especially Father Hart, who has done more for the overall well-being of the Holy Cross community than anyone will ever know. The intramural basketball program at the college involves some 72 teams plying in five basic leaguesi Upper class AA, A and B and Freshman A and B. The teams in the various leagues vie for playoff spots throughout the season and then the two-week final playoffs in late March cap the program for the year, This year's action saw the emergence of a number of strong clubs, and the overall play was perhaps the most spirited in recent memory. The AA league features the strongest clubs in the program, the teams in it are picked by the commissioner on the basis of current strength and past performance, The two top powers this year were Hanselman IV and Wheeler l. Both teams were comprised of a lot of names familiar to followers of Holy Cross athletics, both in basketball and football. The Hanselman team came out with a strong backcourti Neil Byan, former frosh basketball player, and Kevin Lambert. Their forwards were Larry Haley, also an ex-freshman player, Mike Jordan and Pete Straton. Wheeler I, on the other hand, was smoother than Hanselman, but lacked some of their muscle, especially on the boards. This team was stocked with a large number of players from the i968-69 fresman club, and the style they exhibited on the floor was stamped with the fine coaching of their former mentor, frosh coach Frank lVlcArdle. The big scorer was Tim lvlurphy, who did most of his damage from the outside, other gunners were Pete Kennedy, Ti Brennan and John Harrington. Bob Cooney, Dan Harper and Steve Hickey took care of the rebounding and the necessary muscle underneath the hoop, Other top clubs in the AA division were Lehy ll with Bill Cox, Tom Bowes and Tommy Vaccariello and Hanselman Ill paced by Kevin Plunkett and Ed Nagy. The A league featured some excellent talent, although most of their clubs didn't field teams as deep as those in the AA division, The two top clubs were Healy lll and Lehy lll. The Healy lll club had former frosh players Dave Hagen and Tom Wickles to take care of their offensive load, Lehy had Dan Leydon, a strong forward hurting the opposition on the inside, while little Bob Simmons killed them from the outside with his good shooting. In the upper class B league, there was a great deal of balance and no one team really stood out. However, Mulledy I had a lot of people who had played good B league basketball in their intramural career, and this one club seemed a potential champion. Concerning his experience as basketball commissioner, senior Fred Minelli quipped, At least I don't have to worry about merger talks or bidding wars. ln all seriousness, though, the season has been a lot of fun for me, and most of all it has given me the opportunity to work with Fr. Hart. If one notices that both commissioners claim that the best thing about their job is associating with Fr. Hart, one needn't be surprised. This last comment has been the reaction of many commissioners' and for that matter many students who have come into contact with this man. Intramurals might go on without Fr. Hart, but without him, his warmth and cheery manner, his undying concern with the welfare of the student athlete intramurals just wouIdn't seem the same here at Holy Cross. :lf n s fv-A v Y 4 X , ' f N14 , xr--1.f,w , . :L+-'Q n31't1'w:':...:., -,.,,- W'I . ,, , , . 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Ngfcs-gfs0Qsf349c.yQ.w.4e-,x4-f-ca-.,,4.w-:.1.w.ma.LqJQ ' ' 1' ff ff, ,.,, s .M-0,5 F ...,,.,,1,,, .-my uw .Q ' Hr -H','.:: 2 -A , '-' 'K - . -.uw1w'g,!T' -. 4-ffm .- '-'-- - '4 , , A mm- ,....-xg H , I qqggfws-15'-fxw.v,f:-'nn?v..V:gp1,,5-s.-K-,-Q,-.---QQ ' ' W' 4---N2 - ,xv9,:'-. .- .. .1 .V , 'ff .,-, ' 7f:555?7'5' .f - - 2.-f75 ff9'Y4'M'h 7 '4' 'J?4'ffA5l fl' xl , .,4......?.-...-3fI,:L'E:g-..,:..,...-w4,,,Li.'Lc'a,.TQf3Lf.......-,..'' .,g,g,.,.,, nf--N.--., V f , '- -' - '-Qllhlf' -fy,-gg. f-fp!-1-gi -WLS ' , rr'--Q5 5m,Lu'.v,:.fs,Q.ip4 '4 1'455'f---wg .1.-1:,.x,u,f pam ,Q,4,'f-Y ,-bran--r .. '. ,, -1 X, . ,.:. ,1 , , Jaw X 'Urns--Q 'wiv-. Q Gr -.-as 1 -s. Nl., .- , '- 'f - A A , t . ,,.,., qu.-A ,,., ..A :- qw' -,, .I - , ' .- - -1--5...-.1-.Q.......f,,....... K, F ,H ' .- ,, ,' 1 . Q Y 741,15 V V- 3 Q V 1 ,W 'il - 'J 1 4 . -1 I 'X-J ,wgq , ' I. '.' ffm: . , ffl 351, lt all started on a Monday night, December 1, 1969. For all intents and purposes, it all ended on a Monday night,'Maich 2, 1970. ln between, a lot happened in that other winter sport at Holy Cross. Much of it had to do with the extraordinary performance of one man. Yet, in the final analysis, it was a whole team, an entire organization of men unified by a common goal which was responsible for providing some thrilling moments. The first Monday night fell on December's first day in 1969. That evening at the Worcester Arena the Holy Cross Crusaders got the Worcester College Hockey League season off to a fast start by bombing Asusmption College, 9-2. In that game, and in the majority of those to follow, one individual would make his presence felt on the ice more than any other. That man was Larry Murphy, a truly inspirational leader. Holy Cross fans will long remember Murphy as the player who once this season scored four goals in a two-minute and 11-second period during one game. They will remember him as the man who was named to a weekly Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference Division ll hockey team and as the one who scored over 100 career goals at Holy Cross. The Crusaders went on to capture another Worcester College Hockey League title this season, but what transpired on that other Monday night, exactly three months after the first, prevented the Holy Cross hockey team from putting frosting on their league-title cake. On that evening, a spectacular goaltending performance by Worcester State College's Jim Gorman snapped the 41-game unbeaten streak which the Crusaders owned in the WCH L. The netminder allowed only one shot - a tip-in by Larry Murphy at 9:42 of the third period - to get past him. ln all, Gorman turned back 46 Crusader drives in guiding his club to a 4-1 victory over the Purple. But by the time this game came up, Holy Cross had al- ready clinched the Worcester College Hockey League title. Against a trio of technical institutes, the Crusaders proceeded to win two out of three games. The Purple dropped a 2-1 decision to Lowell Tech but bounced back with a 3-2 triumph over Worcester Tech. Larry Murphy tallied twice, with assists going to his brother Bill on both goals. Owen Clarke notched the other Crusader score. It was during their game with MIT that Larry Murphy scored four goals in a two-minute and 11-second span to lead his club past the Cambridge sextet, 7-2. Also helping Holy Cross boost its record to 5-2-1 at that point were Busty Walsh, Chip Hoar, and Ed Fleutemann, each of whom tallied a goal, as well as Tom Carey who came up with three assists. The Crusaders next split two games in New Hampshire. They first lost to Lowell Tech, 43, in Nashua, while in Manchester they bounced back with a hard-fought 4-1 victory over St. Anselm's. It was against Worcester Tech that Larry Murphy set a Holy Cross scoring record by registering his 99th and 100th career goals in the third period to lead the Crusaders past WPI, 4-2. After the University of Connecticut skated to a 5-1 win over the Purple, the Crusaders traveled to Cambridge for the MIT lnvtation- al Tournament. There they dropped their first game, 52, to Trinity before coming on strong with a 10-1 triump over Wesleyan and a 4-0 shutout over host MIT. Against Wesleyan, Bill Murphy banged in three goals while Tom Carey had a pair along with four assists. Other scorers for HC were Ed Fleutemann, Joe Doyle, Chip Hoar, Jim McManus, and Rusty Walsh. Following a 5-4 loss to Amherst, Holy Cross, aided by a tie-breaking goal from Ed Beutemann, skated past Nichols College, 6-4. Salem State and UConn then defeated the Crusaders by identical 8-3 scores. Next a powerful Bowdoin hockey team blitzed the Purple, 10-1. The victory enabled Bowdoin to clinch first place in the ECAC Division ll competition. Pat Norton was in the nets for Holy Cross and emerged with 62 saves in a losing effort. The Crusaders then lost their fourth in a row, their biggest losing streak of the season, when UMass shut them out, 9-O. In the first game of the season, Larry Murphy garnered four goals and three assists to lead the Crusaders, coached by Bill Kane and his assistant Bob Skinner, in their 9-2 triumph over Assump- tion. Tom Carey, only a sophomore, pitched in with three goals and two assists to aid in the Holy Cross cause. The Purple applied the pressure all night long on the Greyhounds as they drove 46 shots toward the net. Assumption, meanwhile, could manage only 16 shots. A five-goal third period iced the game for the Crusaders. In a near carbon copy of their opening game win over Assumption, Holy Cross made it two victories in a row by routing New Haven College by an identical 9-2 score. Once again the Purple was paced by the high-scoring duo of Carey and Murphy. Holy Cross deserted the friendly confines of the Worcester Arena and met defeat for the first time this season when they were rudely dumped, 11-5, by Boston State College at the Boston Arena. The hosts fired at will on Crusader goalie Fred McCready, who did a creditable job in turning back 63 shots. Offensively, Larry Murphy was the Crusader standout with a three-goal hat trick and an assist in a losing effort. Holy Cross' 34-game winning streak in league play was snapped at the Worcester Arena when Nichols College, inspired by the world's only skating buffalo - their mascot - and a large partisan crowd, battled the Purple to a 5-5 overtime standoff. The dreams of Worcester State for an upset and supremacy in the Worcester College Hockey League were shattered, for the time being anyway, when Holy Cross skated off with a 4-1 victory over the Lancers in the first encounter between the two rivals this season. The contest was played before a crowd of 600. Sparked by a brilliant performance by Larry Murphy, the Crusaders were able to lift themselves from the throes of their four game losing streak. Skating against Babson Institute, the dynamic center posted another hat trick, with his final goal of the night being the tie-breaker in the PurpIe's 4-3 triumph. Holy Cross met its Waterloo in the aforementioned game in which they were upset by Worcester State, 4-1. The Crusaders did have another regular season game remaining, but they never did seem quite recovered from their loss to State as Babson, a victim to Holy Cross just five days earlier, prevented the Crusaders from finishing their regular season with a winning record. X W 1. , :zz ' x -WS . 1, wg, ' 4 jf. . f x f Ni '- wr xz7 v I I ,h 1 gan-..-ww fl -1'? L ' , 1.0 - ,, - .. .s,:-. -,L H- -Z, . N, S nn, ' ' .J6:.z. .aw ' wxugx Q... 3 gl ?r -er Aw' iff 43 al '.g Q.1,g, Disappointment was the keynote of the 1969-1970 Holy Cross basketball season. Although the squad finished with a creditable 16-9 mark, most observors noted that the Crusaders did not win a single big game all season. This meant that the club's 16 victories came for the most part at the expense of schools with basketball programs inferior to the one at the Cross, while the losses were inflicted by clubs rated higher than the Crusaders prior to the opening of the season. The experts proved to be correct in their assessment of the talents of the Purple. This is not to downgrade the season, however, for the year did see some fine basketball on the part of the Holy Cross aggregation. lt has been some time since a Holy Cross squad had five men average in double figures: this year's club had them in starters Bob Kissane, Buddy Venne, Jack Adams, Stan Grayson and Don Sasso. Not very often does a shooter with the eye of a Buddy Venne come along to dazzle the bewildered defenders with his unerring accuracy from the twenty-five-foot range. Barely has this campus seen a big man with the grace and agility of a Bob Kissane who could hit the fifteen-foot jump shot or the spinning layup with equal aplomb. Ballhandlers who complement their floor skills with marksman- ship as .lack Adams does are few and far between, while frontcourtmen with the quickness of a Stan Grayson or the strength of a Don Sasso are the dreams of most any coach. Thus there were signs of individual skill and talent, but the club never seemed able to put it all together to garner a truly big victory. Thanks to some very favorable scheduling by Coach Jack Donohue the Crusaders opened the season at home with two of New England's better small college teams, Stonehill and St. Michaels. These two clubs were scheduled to offer the Crusaders a preliminary test before their journey to Madison Square Garden to meet highly touted Columbia. The games turned out as do most tune-up affairs of this sort. In each case the underdog visitors stayed with the Purple in the early going, but eventually fell to the overall strength of the Crusaders. Soph Buddy Venne paced Holy Cross in both encounters with 27 and 26 points, respectively, and he demonstrated the kind of outside shooting that would make opposing coaches lie awake at night attempting to figure out ways to shut him off. So with a pair of victories under its belt the club moved to New York to duel the Lions of Columbia, a pre-season pick for the Ivy League crown. The Purple led early in the contest, but Columbia heated up to take a seven point lead into the dressing room at the half. The Lions stumbled and the Crusaders tied it at about the 14 minute mark of the second half, but Columbia came back to take a 92-68 decision. Larry Gordon came off the bench to top the winners with 28 points while Kissane had 22 for the Purple. The Purple prepped for the Charlote invitational at Christmas- time by taking their next three games in a row. Yale fell by an 88-85 score with Venne leading the way with 30 markers. Next it was a trip to Boston and a 78-76 squeaker over pesky North- eastern. ln this one a Kissane jump shot from the foul line at the buzzer provided the margin of victory that the Crusaders needed. Connecticut came up the pike from Storrs and absorbed a 122-104 defeat at the hands of a Crusader team that turned in its best effort of the season. Venne demolished the Huskie zone with his bombs while Kissane and Adams chipped in with some timely points on their own. Venne wound up with 37 points to lead an offense that looked as potent as any in the land. Playing Davidson is tough enough, but when you play them on their home court in the opening round of their Christmas tournament, you know you're in for a rough evening. Neverthe- less, the Crusaders could have whipped the Wildcats in Charlotte last December had they played anywhere near their potential. Unfortunately Coach Donohue's chargers were far from their best and the Wildcats, paced by Mike Maloy and Jerry Kroll, took a 90-76 decision. The Purple took third in the tournament by whipping Providence, 72-68, with Kissane leading all scorers with 29 points. Kissane and Sasso dominated both backboards after the Friars' Bay Johnson left the game on fouls midway through the second half. After leaving Charlotte the Crusaders travelled to Washington for New Years and a 76-75 loss to Georgetown that saw the Purple trail all the way and then fall just short at the end. The following evening Holy Cross, still smarting from the loss to the Hoyas, came back to take a 76-66 win over Catholic University. An overtime loss to Bhode Island at Kingston didn't do much to perk up Crusader spirits despite a 40-point performance by Bob Kissane. However, just when spirits were at their lowest on the hill the Crusaders came through with a six-game winning streak that started the post-season tournament talk all over again. First came a come-from-behind 89-85 win over always tough Fordham with Kissane hitting for 29 points. Then a superb effort netted a 104-89 triumph over Syracuse with Kissane once again topping the point parade with 26. Then it was Colgate falling, 96-90, followed by a 95-72 win over local rival Assumption in the easiest Crusader victory in that series in recent memory. Springfield's Dennis Clark got 50 points but the Purple escaped with a victory over the Chiefs by a 89-88 margin. Boston College came back from a halftime deficit to tie the score but the Purple managed to edge the Eagles, 72-70, at Boberts Center for their sixth win in a row. The Duquesne game was the first contest which the fans viewed as a key to a tournament bid. The Dukes trailed the Crusaders at the half, but came back to win, 82-72. Seton Hall had trouble with fouls and fell 107-102 as Venne and Kissane each had 30 points. Massachusetts looked like the Class of the Yankee conference and the Bedmen played that way against the Purple in an 83-66 win that saw the emergence of Julius Erving as one of the best players in the East. Victories over Fairfield and Boston University set the Purple up for the toughest part of the schedule, Providence and St. Johns on the road and Boston College at the Worcester Auditorium Unfortunately the Purple dropped them all and did not secure the post-season bid they had worked for and wanted so much. 4' ..1 ...- ,f,,,, ,,,. '.-lb fm- . .xr I' A-Q an- ...Lf LH ' 5 - ,, - W -- Q .rl . A 5 O ... Q - V he t If i xg, N K Q ..i ., q Mr-- rk' X. ,,,,,x gk us. - v M 1734. I Wu... .q ,ap -1 If L-. I 5 I 4 X 9 of ,px :,f 'L i V 'W lm .-.K A 'SN .p 5 Our track saga begins in the cold, dreary days of March, 1969, when Crusader track coach Tom Duffy said of the upcoming outdoor season, Our main goal is to win the New Englandsf' Though the trackmen were unable to capture a single dual meet due to their traditional weakness in the field events, they achieved the goal that Duffy had mapped out for them at the start of the season. As a result, the overall year can hardly be viewed as a disappointing one. The Purple harriers opened their season in traditional fashion by ptirticipating in the Boston College Flelays. Although inclement weather forced the cancellation of the meet after five events, it did not stop the Crusaders from notching a pair of victories. Art Dulong took the individual two-mile, and the long jump team of Nick Byan, Clarence Thomas and Ed Fanning captured their event After a tight 79-75 loss to Brown at Providence, in which Dulong captured both the mile and the two-mile, the Crusaders tasted defeat at the hands of Springfield by a 79-71 margin. In this affair Dulong Captured a triple in the 880, mile and two-mile, but his efforts, combined with several other gutsy performances by Purple runners, could not match the overall depth of the host Chiefs, especially in the field events. The final dual meet of the season saw Boston College engage the Crusaders, the Eagles came away with a 95-54 win. There were. however, a few bright spots, Art Dulong paced the Purple to 1-2-3 sweeps in the 880, mile and two-mile. This was the story all year long, strength in the middle and long distances, but weaknesses elsewhere. The season ended on a triumphant 0016, though, as the thinclads tied the Coast Guard Academy for the New England title cll1UlOOk home the trophy on the basis of a coin flip. Once again it was strength in the running events that paved the way to victory. Dan O'Donnell won the quarter, while Joe Jamieson and Art Martin placed 3-4 in the 880. Then Dulong swept the mile and three-mile, and the crown seemed within reach. Ed Fanning came up with his best effort of the season and took second in the broad iump. The title hinged on the last event, the mile relay, and the Crusader squad of O'DonneIl, Byan, Martin and Jamieson cap- tured the event and the New England crown. Tl-lE STORY of the winter came on Jan. 31 when Art Dulong upset a star-studded field in the Hunter Mile at the BAA Games in the Boston Garden to take the event with a record-shattering Ll 01.1 clocking. In the process he outdistanced mile greats like John Mason and Sammy Bair with a final quarter mile drive that left the Garden patrons, as well as Crusader track buffs, wondering when Art would crack the magical four-minute barrier. The Purple's crack two-mile relay team again rated among the best in the East. The squad of Art Martin, Jim Walsh, Kieran Donavan and Dulong was victorious at the Philadelphia Track Classic and captured a second and a third at big meets in New York and Baltimore. Coach Duffy's crew competed in five dual meets in addition to the New England Championships this season. Y I Y 4 ffm K W ff , 14,5 DET -J , 1, - ' ', 1:-4-QL2..,,LQ S ' 'i . fQ'.i1w' ' x ' ,, t .-iff ,'V'A'-33, 'I -mf-uw !z,,B'4,l-.- Himhhh 'L zur' .. W- 1w'sf i,43Ly.x,-V. f 5 ,. ' .' A Fx . AFX, V .n '.' f' Va. wi L M V. ' P' A ' .,,Ru. Q - , 8 k vi' . .- :. ,Q An early series of disappointing losses, a strong post-season showing, and the consistent brilliance of Art Dulong were the keynotes of the 1969 cross country season for Holy Cross. The Crusaders opened the season on Sept. 26 when they faced Connecticut at home. The Huskies had won the New England title in 1968 and they showed that they had lost none of their prowess as they defeated Holy Cross, 22-33. Dulong crossed the finish line first as he covered the Crusaders' new 5.2 mile course in 25:11. Whus, the season began on a negative note and the trend continued when the Crusaders defeated Boston University but bowed to Providence and Central Connecticut in a quadrangular meet. The Purple harriers recorded their biggest triumph of the regular season several days later when they downed Springfield College, 23-32. The Purple's luck turned sour however, as they dropped close meets to Boston College l27-29l and Northeastern l26-291. The team now sported a dismal 2-5 record but some consolation could be found in the performances of Dulong, who continued his as- sault on the records books. V In the final regular season meet the HC harriers suffered a 24-31 defeat at the hands of Massachusetts. Several Crusaders had been hampered by illness and injuries throughout the season and the team was not at top strength when it faced the Bedmen. Dulong proved that he was in excellent condition though, as he sped over his home course in 24:29 to shatter the record he had set in the season opener against Connecticut. The New England Championships possessed all the ingredients for an exciting cross country run, but the conditions at Franklin Park on the afternoon of the race were far from excellent. A cold. steady rain had been falling thorughout most of the day and the course was covered with mud. Many veteran observers described the conditions as the worst they had ever seen in the meet's 40 year history, but the race went on and the events developed as expected. ' The Friers nipped the Crusaders, 75-77, but the Purple still had much to be proud of in its third place finish as Senior Bill Gallagher i16thl, Soph Kieran Donovan l17thl, Senior Art Martin l2lst1, Junior Dick Fahey i22ndl, Junior Bob Borbet i24thi, and Senior Jim Walsh l39thl all finished high up in the field of more than 180 runners. One week after their strong showing in the New Englands the Crusaders ran in the lC4A Championships at Van Cortlandt Park in New York City. Dulong, who had won this race as a Sophomore in 1967 and finished second as a Junior, regained the title as he covered the five mile course in 252068. The Crusaders finished sixteenth in the race for the team title, placing them near the middle of the standings. Dick Fahey was the second man to finish for the Purple. With his New England and lC4A triumphs Dulong once again established himself as the top collegiate distance runner in the East. Following these two victories Art went on to reaffirm his standing as one of the premier runners on the national scene. In late November Art finished fifth in the NCAA Championship Meet at Van Cortlandt Park and placed fifth at the AAU Championships which were held this year at Detroit, Michigan. Last fall's cross country season was a highly successful one for Art Dulong, but his triumphs were not unexpected, for victory had been a part of Art's life even since he began running in his hometown of Bandolph, Mass. With a 4204.5 mile and the national high school three-mile record to his credit Art was sought after by such track powers as UCLA, Southern California, and Villanova, but he chose to attend Holy Cross. Art entered Holy Cross in the fall of 1966 and for four years he served as the mainstay of the school's track and cross country programs. As a freshman Dulong earned immediate recognition as he went undefeated through eight dual cross country meets and placed third in the New England Freshman Championships. His biggest triump came at the lC4A Championships where he recorded a runaway victory. Following the cross country season Art became ill with pneumonia, but he returned to competition in March and won the invitational Freshman Mile at the NCAA Indoor Championships with a time of 41048. As a Sophomore Dulong finished second in the New England Cross Country Championship and won the lC4A title in record time. He soon became afflicted with mononucleosis however, and he was sidelined for the major portions of both the indoor and outdoor seasons. Art regained his health before his Junior year and he embarked on a highly successful cross country season in which he finished first in the New England's, second in the lC4lA's, third in the NCAA's, and second in the AAU Championship Bun. Dulong's high AAU finish qualified him for a berth in the annual New Year's Eve road race in Sao Paulo, Brazil where he placed sixth in an international field of 320. Later in the winter Art captured the mile and two-mile titles at the New England Indoor Champion- ships and the two-mile at the lC4A Indoors. He also finished third in the three-mile at the AAU lndoors and thus qualified for a place on the United States team that competed in meets in Moscow and Kiel, West Germany in March, 1969. Dulong continued to pile up the honors in the outdoor season as he won the mile l4:04.li and three-milel13144.6l to lead Holy Cross to a tie with the Coast Guard Academy for the New England Championships. He also finished sixth in the three-mile at the NCAA Championships. As a Senior Art has added the 1969 New England and lC4A Cross Country titles to his collection of laurels and he has also distinguished himself during the first half of the indoor season. Art set a New England record with a 4301.1 mile at the Boston Athletic Association Games and he has registered triumphs in the New York K. of C. Games two-mile l8:42l, the Baltimore All-Eastern Games mile l4:05.1l, and the Louisville Mason-Dixon Games mile i4:03.3l. Art is now approaching his competitive peak and it appears that he will be a fixture on the national track scene for several years to come. Many athletic greats have attended Holy Cross over the years. With the victories that he has personally won, Art Dulong of the Class of 1970 is well deserving of a place near the top of any list containing this school's most outstanding athletes. J f ,QJ fx 'X -- f -fffg'-,:3?W rv .4 WW '-5 ,. . K E? FF .-any S E B? --- 'E E' J -..w.4',JY. 'ph . .fxff 4 . ?'.,.'f. - 4 - .. ., l ' ' ' x l ,tj -,1, :CQ I 4 . I v, 3 ,-1 ,-. 1 X w 4.2 , - . - , 0 , A k 1--f9Q2Y7.f' 5 A . . ,tp w-.- ,is '1'5 Y,-.3?'x muy.:- 2 ' -- 407 -A, .cm H . w.. - - :'-i---Y Y +1l',gMI'Q33,,g--,gQiz5,, ,JH , ,xl , W 1 ,:.: x 'f 'J . ,Q ,,4 51. V f ' - A .,-Ll, 'f Qrf ,V ' - I 952 'va . f ,' ' , , ,4 'ff 4'1.., 1 . A--u,,.f,,,-,, 1 , ,+f- ...Q- The 1969-70 Holy Cross swimming season saw the mermen change their status, from a varsity team to a club, Coach Paul Parenteau and his assistant Ernie Smith, both in their fourth year on the Hill, felt that this was a necessary move due to the small number of men on the squad, as this year's team had only sixteen. Standouts for this season's aquamen were coecaptains Herman Dick and Tom Ryan. The latter was particularly impressive in breaking a pool record for the backstroke at Bridgewater State College. Dick was the Crusader's top man in the freestyle as well as a top notch performer in the breaststroke. Other seniors on the squad included Lou Bevilacqua, one of the area's top divers, Dave Smith and Bob Howard. Joe Donelan, a freestyler, fared well this past year, also setting a pool record at Bridgewater State, while freshmen Matt O'Tooie and Pete Berns were pleasant surprises as they picked up points in most of the meets. The financial hardships which faced most of the minor sports at Holy Cross often make it necessary for the participants to be very dedicated and resourceful, as well as talented. Such was the case of the Crusader ski team and its cocaptains Mike Dugan and Tom Mofferr, a pair of juniors. The team, only in the fourth year of its existence here, competed in the Thompson Division of the New England intercollegiate Ski Council. The team raced the likes of Rhode Island, AIC, Stonehill, St. Anselms and powerful Lowell Tech. Each weekend during the season saw a slalom race on Saturday followed by a giant slalom on Sunday. Total times for each team were added and standings were compiled for both races. Thus you could have different winners in each event. Competing on the Holy Cross A team were Dugan, Moffett, Jim Sparkes, John Doherty, Frank Daly, Lou Bevilacqua and Frank Hartig. The B squad featured Scott Daly, Bob Hodson and Bob Rogers, all freshmen, wno gave the team great promise. Commodore Jim Courtney and the Crusader sailing team had a delightful spring cruising the waters of Lake Quinsigamund, Narragansett Bay and the Charles River. The Crusaders partici- pated in a large number of regattas and fared well just about everywhere they went. This spring the team will travel to New London to sail against the Coast Guard Academy and their forty-four foot yawls. Vilhilt Courney and vice-Commodore Tom Riley will attempt to regain the Jesuit Cup from Georgetown. The team had a number of participants throughout both the spring and fall, including Skip Sweeney, Mike Luciano, Brian McCurdy, Mike Goode, Marty Gauthier, Bob Kelley, Jim Bevilacqua, Dick Layton and Jim Kavanaugh. The 1969 golf team had a disappointing season with a record of five wins and nine losses. This poor performance was partially credited to poor weather conditions early in the season. Captain Dick Cunney, Tony D'Agata, Bob Frank, Larry Duda, and Frank Hessian were graduating seniors from last year's squad, while Bob Elliot, Rick McDerrnot, Pete Koch and Fred McCready comprised the remainder of the team. This year's upcoming edition of the team appears to be more promising. Captain Bob Elliot will return along with veterans McDermot, Koch and McCready. New faces will include Scotty Crichton, Steve Kelleher, John Cooney, and a pair of promising sophomores, Mike Cawley and Bob Bouldrice. This past summer Elliot won the New Hampshire Amateur crown, and then teamed with Mike Cawley to take the Ponkapoag, New Hampshire member-guest honors this fall. Also, the team as a whole finished ninth out of a twenty-six team field at the ECAC fall tournament at Burlington C.C. Thus the strong fall showing, along with a tournament in Miami during the Easter vacation, provides grounds for optimism for the upcoming campaign. V There was as yet no animal which was more akin to the gods than these, none more capable of intelli- gence, none that could be master over all the rest. It was at this point that man was born: either the Creator, who was responsible for this better world, made him from divine seed, or else Prometheus, son of lapetus, took the newmade earth which, only recently separated from the lofty aether, still retained some elements re- lated to those of heaven and, mixing it with rain water, fashioned it into the image of the all-governing gods. 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It was the month for things to die, but we were just wrinkling the first fold of skin. Things, intangible and elusive, change and become tendrils which root us. Like rings of a tree, we grow outward. There were facts, systems, laws, and tables of weights and measures. Be, to-be, beingness, being-inrthe-welt. Emma Bovary. The Battle of Lepanto. Lab. We did not question these facts, because it was a customary cross, and that custom was to be ours. Our teachers gave us counsel, and lent us eyes. There were long unexplored corridors in Carlin basement, Fenwick Ill and IV, Haberlin and O'Neil. We were given a rule book, a 6O'watt light bulb, and unlimited credit at the library, and told we had four years to finish. There were 657 contestants for the Class of l97O, and we all swear that we had the best and the worst of them on our corridor. We remember things by who was there. Not all of us were on that corridor in that dorm, but it was the first of many. The first of many was a motif which was quickly expanded, and just as soon died when we had acquired the habit. It may have started with an all-nighter, a bluebook . . .an election of a corridor representa- tive. . . a class president. . .a football game - with the Orange- men, the Big Green, the Terriers, or the Eagles. . .a regular weekend. . . Kimball movies at 7:30 and 9:00 . . .a Saturday night fieldhouse mixer. . . Limbo.. .a big weekend - starting at the airport, or Newton, and many places in between, and ending back there two days later. . .a lecture. . .a concert. . .a first to Art Dulong. The object was to make it, to be there when it happened. and to watch it through to the end. There were some times when we were with friends and they made it happen. And sometimes we had to go it alone, when no one could help us. The times they are a-changing , lf there are changes, we are their parents. In the world, we sat next to things. In college, we saw things through headlines, moving images, and ideas. There was the distant sound of the drum, and a timpani of voices asked us - Perhaps you have learned it without book, But I pray, can you read anything you see? We started with small things, like the history lines at registration, and moved outward in concentric circles. And when we were told that some of us wouldn't make it, we wondered whether it was do to the frustration of that first line. We were that naive, or so we like to tell ourselves. We spent time on guided tours of our model library, but who needed a guided tour to find out where the pool hall was, downtown Worcester, and a few eateries we would patronize. No, these were learned by experience. lt was experience that QOT many of us through those first semesters. Upon returning to Holy Cross after the summer of IQ67, a pleasantly surprised student body was given the revelation that drinking was now permitted in the dormitories, smothering an issue that had caused no little consternation the year before. lt's not that drinking is permittedp it's just that it isn't forbidden, they told us, and what did we care? Student power was something to be read about in the Sunday Times, and if we could get concessions from the administration without a struggle, well, so much the better. C From the day suitcases were unpacked and posters hung in strangely unfamiliar rooms, sophomore year set the scenario for a power struggle between the old and the innovative, a year which ignited the embers of change that were to glow in future times. It is the past as prologue which inevitably found itself subject to somber reflections on less enlightened times. Clark was a daring experiment, but many resigned themselves to living in the venerable Wheeler for yet another year. Paternalism was the word of the day, and on a chilly evening'in October, Dr. John E. Shay, Jr., the recently appointed dean of students, announced to an uncertain crowd assembled in Fenwick's shadow that parietal hours for Homecoming lnoon to I p.m. and 4 to 8 p.m. on Saturday, and noon to 6 p.m. on Sundayl would not be extended. And as the currents of campus politics, now freed from the demeaning alcohol business, now found themselves thoroughly immersed in a feminist syndrome, October also saw the violation of a virgin campus by thrill-seeking coeds from the familiar list of proximate women's colleges. No one seemed to mind the girl sitting next to him in class, but the concept of a coed-Holy Cross seemed only slightly less mindboggling than before. The spectre of Andy Warhol in Kimball added a bizarre note to the largely mundane occurances of the day. As the year progressed the quality of life at Holy Cross was in the forefront of campus discussions. Something was missing, we said, and Clark's experiment with a house system, in an attempt to fill that gap, proved to be a harbinger of its campus-wide implementation, lt gave us what we thought was our first taste of student power, and if it lacked the rustic gentility of Ouincey House in Cambridge, it was still better than Alumni. Campus discussions were also turning to the activist group that seemed to be centered in Wheeler which dared to use the word radical, and reports of the Student Action Committee's sit down demonstra- tion in O'Kane against the Dow Chemical Company, the Fast for Peace, and Peter Benner's announcement that the group would seek to form an SDS chapter on campus generally fell on hostile or indifferent ears. In January The Crusader could only report that the basketball team showed pride in its unfortunate encounter with UCLA, but Hochstein still scored 22 off the ubiquitous Alcindor. A mid-season resurgence and eleventh-hour NIT hopes were doomed to frustration, and afterwards Dr. lVIcl3rien issued the report on athletics which was to establish his notoriety. In February the parietals issue was resurrected and the plans for a movement to effect mass violations was squelched when Fr. Swords told an emotional audience in Hogan that the present parietal hours granted are a concession as far as l am concerned. That month the Drug Symposium exposed the campus to the theoriticians of the drug subculture, and their opponents. Those with pink eyes and hair resting selfeconsciously on ears suddenly became more conspicuous, and many hours were spent in smoke-filled rooms discussing paranoia and the bearded narc washing transoms in Wheeler. ln lvlarch Holy Cross dove into the political and social vortex which was to subsequently shake the country's very foundation. The enthusiastic reception given to Eugene McCarthy in Hogan was encouraging, and then Johnson dropped out. But Martin Luther King was shot, and on a crisp April afternoon we marched to the Worcester Common, heads fixed solidly on the pavement below us. It was our fight now, we said, and a scholarship program was created. 1968-69 marked the College's 125th anniversary, which is as good a theme as any for interpreting the year's events. Harvard's President Nathan Pusey told us in October that liberal education is coming alive again, burgeoning new life informs it. Representa- tives of over 300 colleges and universities attended the anniversary convocation, as did not quite that many students. The birthday motif pervaded December's theology symposium, featuring Jesuit philosopher Bernard Lonergan: we were assured that Christianity had a future. Brooks succeeded Guindon as dean, and proclaimed that the College should adopt a stance of openness, of being ready to risk change, development, and growth. Fr. Swords invited students to join faculty committees, they accepted. Tuition was hiked to 52000, but of the financial situation Fr. Nolan remarked, There is still hope. Tom Boisture departed, Bill Whitton arrived. The College commissioned Arthur D. Little to study its athletic policies and public image, the Goals Committee tendered its report. That year Holy Cross tried to extrapolate its past into the future. Randall Caudill won a Rhodes scholarship, the ColIege's third, four seniors were named Woodrow Wilson fellows. Ed Siudut and the basketball team went 16-8, no NIT, maybe next year. The Cross and Scroll presented black-power advocate Nathan Wright, Clive Barnes and Russell Baker of the New York Times, and distinguished poet Robert Penn Warren. If reflection keynoted the first semester, action highlighted the second. 1300 students petitioned on behalf of Hen-Tov and Rust, who had been fired from the political science department, and BOO demonstrated in the corridors of Fenwick. Students invited themselves to sit on tenure committees and vote in the College senate, the faculty accepted. Coeds were snowed in in February and voted in in lVlay, as Coed Week attracted over 200 guests to rooms vacated for their occupancy and the faculty registered an overwhelming vote for implementing coeducation in 1971. A new student government constitution was created and with it an lnterhouse Congress, Tom Dougherty was elected its first chair- man. Student activism had transcended parietals and the eight-cent donut, but was not to remain riveted to tenure and coeducation. Nascent were deeper and more divisive conflicts: the SDS harassed the Marines in March, in April the black students, 20 of whom enrolled in September, secured a black corridor. Holy Cross in May was far different from Holy Cross the previous fall, indeed the previous 125 years - far more different than anybody realized. What can we say is ours, is mine , after four years, what do we stamp as individual? Certainly no one is thinking like this when September of senior year comes around. We think in numbers and the seeming maturity which another year will test. There are five hundred and forty-six of us, and that is what defines us as a class. And that's what this is, a class history. Each of us will have a claim in centerfield, and we can only recall the events and the people which put claims upon us this year. Even to speak of a we is an anachronism, for we are spread out all over the campus and Worcester. Sort of an urban sprawl. This year, the campus seems more like a small city. The style of the campus is people, they are its,greatest asset, even though they are as interesting, engrossing, or as dull and banal as people elsewhere. There are more of them, and you see it in the long lines at Kimball, and the new houses la dubious name for off- campusl along Southbridge, and on top of Fenwick and the old Limbo. Lines at the bookstore are as ever. But if there have been any changes, it has been in the people. All different sizes, shapes and colors. Of course, it's because we are seniors that we see these things, for there is a pleasure, usually short-lived and very often painful, in knowing that we now have more time than ever to do what we vvant, but yet there is less time to do it. So we go through with the registration lines, fake the cards and start another year. Things were going smoothly, too smoothly. Perhaps in anticipa- tion, the mild plague that struck down the footballers and cancelled the remaining season made us realize that there were more things outside the gate than we knew. There were other records, like Art Dulong's wins in the New England and the lC4A Cross Country. All the victories weren't on the playing field only, as the October 15 wedding of people, college, and community in peace indicates. On the outside, there was still a war. Little did we know that there was one brewing inside. If one read the newspaper, you noticed the articles by black students. They wrote them, and even got national publicity, while everyone else was talking about life-style . Another lvloratorium came and went, another Coed day, another report by the ubiquitious Dr. lVlcBrien. There were confrontations where rhetoric soon became action. One elicited charges of racism, which lead to the walkout, and the rest is recent and vivid history only too well-known. To some, it seemed whatever glories the College ever achieved were dwarfed by that uncertain weekend. But the outcome to anyone living after the Enlightenment was the greatest achievement. But, after all, there were still exams to take, a new semester, a Free University, and the dying off of winter to celebrate. 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PQ? 13 I A 3,A l nfs- ....,..., fl. g. H , f--N L 1 Y. 7 'H'--3 Y' -IF 1 T , 111. 1.1 1111711 .: vn7 .L ut Y NV v P' ' ' .1 ,1 . 'P -Y Q: Z 4- l ' if? ' ' . 5 ,R . I ' 'QL X I ' , 53' IU 5-is A :UQ- -1 S...- -EX 1 .477 mmflffi lmnrmnit irdmmn 4 4 'il y Y ff Y VQYSHY 1 1 -,N -Qt.. Q ' fi U lj.. L Q L ., ' q r y , . ' dw - . 5 . , 'A 3 ly! , ,X W ' vg fm Y, M. Q- I. ,s .M M. , J. V V, . J, 5 I 1 4 UTM, t 'I' 4 'f 3 '1T.'gi' li fx. 9'f gg . L . '.,'- 'A '---fl RICHARD H. INBRIIAIIR .M JUN-1 .rata W9W mmvhh. M ' 2 T' wwiw :f0hiDh9nex?!!BBOBl lcziigtimwfli -Cli1BQf'lIdBn1iB3liN79iIlB Uiiifin 1108mTne?WVQ6H3, Ciisimlfbf Emil:- als, News Oifeclof. Aillllfblllh Manager 'RAR K A. BEEHTBJEJAH ..I Fl3T3q .DMB FINWNCIEZ 1GQKiHNl3- 10W'fUhM5QBiHisrIasasM .vslzsllsw wso3o2 :dul3 rbnamq gms1go1'l b8O'IdA - .rnssT M2 :mssT PETER JOHNRVEWHM ,M ZBMAL .9618 him!! !ICrqmrainWiQe Bud. -will etbiwsma R53 .vdgufl g:las1T v1ie1sV :annum Lab -,.'15?:i WILLIAM F. SQSWUVWIOKT a-asaaer.m1rnf1isnamf1n4'nan.xnnim- :rmmfk noimmsuimi , , , 2 :l1o!?an3laIsnns3 zzmsemefl gnwl' .A nisrqs3-03 .sao1aaJ adult!- . I 1 ., , ., , ' -Lua. ' K , ' V' M1 if ' V-W,-w - 1 v . , L ,'S5?fi ' off WV, -swim! ,. if 'tw . E .'r 1 . P, 'Fit .,'.f f' 2- 3 ,,, +, if ..A 'b '- ' ',.1tf:'v' ,' ' ts ' ,N W Q E, wus, gmqi- - ' , -'V ' 1 JM,.jg HENRY f a MALIJDW wsuvm A A 'tlflganmsx .smismfismmus 'Eil'5Gl1'6DSlf'N8Hh :SFW5Bi5i.2.'l!8SES sM -U12 rmsbiasfl ,noliaqi s3lsCl no1oim0 .llmo2 bns aeo1D nnemmevoa :nab ,duI3 rnabuJ2 lsnoiaamemi g1s1uass1T -QD ,senimmob Nadmiii gnsmwisna vgoloi:zo2 :dulD aaimanooi INHWUBHD 9468- .mflsflif wmlflhifflliil abhfqaygfadmmv :ms-19019 1855618 wig ihdff, .uname :vdgnm v' ' -155073 in-J - Ps f 4, 1 p . -' ll. iv , r ,, 'lr ' L .'--M... ' , 4 , . -- A A. - A , La . Iiaefuheru: Cms till! Cmdhis Gb, Aloha Eosil-on Chulldry Shi! N'Nb0fY Cnmmihm: HHH' Ulf! 11103. Social X QE Miliury bl Senior f1 MICHAEL FRANCIS ADDONIZIO A.B. English, 6 Fairfield Street, Haver- hill, Massachusetts, Dean's List 3. Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: John Augustus Hall Program, Senior Brother Program, Varsity Crew, Intra- murals. DONALD THOMAS ALLEG RA A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical, 15 New York Avenue, Hawthorne, New Jersey, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Hospital Com- mittee Chairman, Biology Society, Student Faculty Blood Drive, Chair- man, Senior Brother Program, Fresh' man Basketball: Varsity Crew, Intra- murals. Ml CHAE L CHAR LES AUBE A.B. Economics: 637 Penobscot Street, Rumford, Maine, International Relations Club, Economies Club, Rug- by. FOREST E. BAKER, lll CHARLES JOHN AHEARN A.B. History, 189 Lake Shore Drive, Marlboro, Massachusetts, Freshman Hockey, Varsity Hockey. ALBE RT W. AMONDO LARE A.B. Philosophy, IO Allaire Street, Bronxville, New York. EDWARD E. BABYAK JR. A.B. History, 565 8th Avenue, Troy, New York, NROTC, Northeast New York Club, Senior Brother Program, Rugby, Freshman Baseball. KENNETH C. BALDYGA A.B. Biology, 764 Mockingbird Lane, A.B. Economics, Accounting, 94 Audubon, Pennsylvania, Biology Society, Varsity Track. Standish Street, Worcester, Massachu- setts, Dean's List 1,3, Worcester Undergraduate Club, Economics Club, WCHC, Business Manager, Sodality. FRANCIS PATRICK AHEARN A.B. Modern Languages, 94 Union Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey, Young Democrats, Student Govern- ment, Purple Patchen' French Club, Italian Club, Spanish Club, Freshman and Varsity Track, Freshman and Var- sity Soccer, Intramurals. RICHARD ANASTASI A.B. Mathematics, 309 Onondaga Street, Corning, New York, Dean's List 3, Academic Evaluation Report, Young Democrats, Central New York Club, Lacrosse, Co-Captain 4. WILLIAM BAEZ-SACASA A.B. Economics, Colonia Mantica, Managua, Nicaragua, Dean's List 1,25 Omicron Delta Epsilon, President, Stu- dent Government, Cross and Scroll, Treasurer, International Student Club, Chairman, Kimball Committee, Co- Chairman, Economics Club, Sociology Club. JAMES CAR L BALLWAY A.B. Modern Languages, 229 North Monticello Drive, Syracuse, New York. RALPH l.AlELLO - A.B. English, 3 Lyons Avenue, Farmingdale, New York, Senior Brother Program, Intramurals. PAUL M. ATANASIO A.B. Political Science, 219-76 Street, Brooklyn, New York, NROTC, Semper Fidelis Society, President, Trident Society, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Crusader, Fenwick Theater, Intramurals. J PETER L. BAG LEY A.B. History, 34 Oxford Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts, Junior Year Abroad Program, French Club, Soccer Team, Ski Team. JAMES M. BANOVSKY A.B. Chemistry, 12 Weeden Drive, East Greewich, Bhode Island, Intra- murals, Varsity Track, Rugby. ANTHONY M. BARCLAY DAVID L. BARRASSO JOHN J. BARILLA A.B. History: 171-24 Ashbey Avenue, A.B. History: 67 Central Avenue, A.B. English: 56 North 17th Street, Flushing, New York: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Student Government: CCB of D Special Events Committee: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals: Freshman Basketball: Varsity Basketball, Co-Captain. RICHARD H. BARRY, JR. A.B. Psychology: 59 Willard Avenue, Springfield, Massachusetts: Student Government Public Relations: Cru- saderg Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: WCHC, Director of Editori- als, News Director, Assistant Station Manager. MAR K A. BEERT A.B. Economiw: 18660 Algonac, Detroit, Michigan. Braintree, Massachusetts. WILLIAM F. BARRY Wyandanch, New York: Dean's List 3: Student Government: Soccer: Fencing. RONALD JAMES BATES A.B. History: 115 Parker Street, Man- A.B. Philosophy: 1505 Bedford Street, chester, Connecticut: Young Demo- Rome, New York. crats, Student Government: Intramurals. HENRY I. BELCH,JR. A.B. History: 132 Commonwealth Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts. PETER JOHN BENNER JOSEPH RALPH BENOTTI A.B. History: 7 Crown Ridge Road, A.B. Chemistry, Pre-Medical: 152 WellesIey,Massachusetts. Washington Street, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts: Cross and Crucible Club: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Chemistry Student Advisory Committee: Fresh- man Lacroxe.. WILLIAM EMI LE BELL A.B. History: 89 Park Holm, Newport, Rhode Island. THOMAS IVIICHAE L BERNARD! N A.B. English: 49 School Street, An- dover, Massachsuetts: Purple Patcherj Commencement Committee: Hogan Fine Arts Committee: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: Lincoln Center, Social Action. MICHAEL FRANCIS BARRY A.B. Sociology: 74 Essex Street, Saugus, Massachusetts: Biology Club: Sociology Club: Academic Evaluation Committee, Chairman, Sociology: Sodality: Senior Brother Program: Squash. WILLIAM E. BECKIVIAN A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 6 Clifford Street, Middleboro: Massachusetts: Dean's List 2, Alpha Epsilon Delta. JOSEPH PETER BE LOTTI A.B. Modern Languages: 10 Lowell Avenue, Watertown, Massachusetts: NROTC, Battalion Communications Officer: Trident Society: Flight Pro- gram: Purple: Yacht Club: Flying Club: Military Ball Committee, Photographer: Senior Brother Program: Junior Prom Committee. PAUL F. BERNIER A.B. 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Q99I2ifT!mO3 mem 'duI3 anoirslsifi Isnoirsmsrnl gmswg vrizu-:V gllsdiooq nsmr'laa'H gvdgufi .llsdiooil FRANCIS P.mTJa'5E EEQQQHAWOL -Qev,v2E.1eammxv vBw.argeQgHg1,wz, 21neaQQbgmf?aHnQefegme.lQ'vmuq3f lEU+15I?R!f2QL.38- 6!!19Jf'?'tudfbiSlf 863914: Aplggggiyjmgqggigpiq 19179018 wins? ' .eanimmoib anniazjmbA mah JAMES MncH9Q!!3.QsHAw4X BVWAW IAM-MHMBQ SQBA. QMSMMPMQD 1rmBvt3oi1uQaaiM amd: -nimweQs v1mfbA webi-HQave9!njm3: xdwwmmmbsgwnsmiwimqhhawig Qqmsgriifmgggwneil :s1lsG sqqsbl srlqlA '0'1q 1sd1o18 1oine2 ga-leyslq odmi.I mcnq 1oinuL 'mdaxsq emxuq gmswg -. .asirimmoil FRANCIS A. ei'inM!'9'f?,-+9 -1' WHO'- -B'?BF' E'?E7m6l?R:95sdzli'B?G9?1.rQ'aQ. fP0Q'A1Hi9?' M3523Lhbfel!ls:59HFnBH'9, QBQf?f?LfP:de?F'8fF+Z,f,.RQE?EMfik'F,pEV5133 -0 lq gnivlzl 1mssT sliifl Qmss Hi1O .msaT gnimmivmfd 1ms1Q menu v. BuxeL3QW09 3AM0HT MQUWUWQQH SEQIAQNGLZHQEIQ1 -9:6 Z3zsvQ1d7eXnvw4',Mn9!B99Qe6Hase4sW 1Sq alaiwnsrl :bso1dA 1seY 1oinuL :S Iaij :f1oqsH noirsulsvil cimabs:JA 11sIser1T .nisIqsCJ .lledrs:1asEI nsmdaswfi oewrxus ra CAMEEQQQ -L 33-'HAH3 -mwfzwgnmm ssgmwmwg ?!1Je?adJbJ'HagSQLQngelBg w .JndmQjSsummzJfd..sPf0edAmXsfemBe Gun Cluhj Track: Intramurals. WAYNE ALAN BEUGG A.B. Sociology: 629 Oak Valley, Saint Louis, Missouri: Student Government: Sociology Student Advisory Commit- tee, Vice-Chairman: Sociology Club: Alpha Kappa Delta: Fenwick Theatre: Limbo Players: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Purple Patchen' Junior Prom Committee. JOHN J. BLEWITT, JR. A.B. Economics: 32 Glen Park Road, Glen Ridge, New Jersey: Knights of Columbus, Grand Knight: AFROTC Drill Team: Rifle Team: Flying Pro- gram: Swimming Team. THOMAS BOWES A.B. English: 3001 Henry Hudson Parkway, Riverdale, New York: Dean's List 3: Junior Year Abroad: Fenwick Theater: Academic Evaluation Report. Freshman Basketball, Captain. CHARLES J. BRETT A.B. History: 2925 28th Street, N.VV., Washington, D,C.: Dean's List I. Junior Year Abroad: Intramurals. LOUIS JOHN BEVI LACOUA A.B. Economics: 8 Beverly Road, Great Neck, New York: Economics Club: Senior Brother Program: Junior Prom Committee, Chairman: Mulledy Social Committee: Limbo Players: Yacht Club: Intramurals: Flying Club, Treasurer: Ski Team: Sailing: Lacrosse. Freshman Swimming Team: Varsity Swimming Team. STEPHEN JOSEPH BIER FRANCIS CORTLAND BISHOP A.B. Classics: 84 Chatham Place, West A.B. Psychologvl 136 Elm Street, Hampstead, New York: Student Southampton, New York: Psi Chi: Government: Senior Brother Program, Emerald Shield Society: Purple NROTC: Freshman Tennis Team: Var- Patcher,' NROTC. sity Tennis Team: Intramurals. JAMES ANTHONY BOESEN JON N. BONSALL JOHN JOSEPH BOUCHER A.B. Mathematics: 29 Van Buskirk A.B. History: 78 Silver Brook Road, A.B. English: 254 Lake Avenue, Avenue, Stamford, Connecticut: Milton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Worcester, Massachusetts. Dean's List I,3: Pi Mu Epsilon: Chess Club: AEC Report. GARY STEPHEN BRACKETT A.B. History: 94 Harnden Avenue, Watertown, Massachusetts: Student Government: Resident Assistant: Pur- ple Key Society: Martin Luther King Scholarship Committee: Commence- ment Committee: Senior Brother Pro- gram: International Relations Club. Rugby: Freshman Football: Varsity Football. JOHN ROBERT BRITT A.B. English: I8 Whittaker Street, Springfield, Massachusetts: Dean's List, l,2,3: Knights of Columbus, Senior Brother Picnic Committee: Stu- dent Admissions Committee. Academic Evaluation Committee. JOHN W. BRADLEY,JR. A.B. Political Science: 4 Prospect Hill, Cromwell, Connecticut: Crusader: Stu- dent Government: Tutoring Program, Junior Year Abroad, THOMAS F. BRODERICK, Ill A.B. Biology: 93 Abbott Road, Wel- lesley Hills, Massachusettss. J. DEAN BRANNIGAN A.B. History: I0 Webb Road, North Tarrytown, New York: Young Repub- licans. J. MICHAEL BROWN A.B. Classics: 172 Rockland Street. Brockton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,3: Glee Club, Student Director: Paks: College Choir, Director: Limbo Players: Eta Sigma Phi, Treasurer: Italian Club. JOEL PHILIP BROWN A.B. Economics: Silver Street, Gran- ville, Massachusetts: Economics Club: Christian Action Committee: Pith Magazine, Senior Brother Program: SPUD. EDWARD JAMES BURKE A.B. English: 12 Leonard Street, Mil- ford, Massachusetts: Holy Cross Band, Drum Captain, Officer 3, Student Director 4: Worcester Intercollegiate Symphonic Band: Worcester Club: Rugby: Emerald Shield Society: Saint Thomas More Pre- Legal Society. THOMAS KEVIN BURNS A.B. English: 25 Beverly Avenue, Al- bany, New York: Dean's List 1,2,3: Glee Club, Secretary: Purple Patcher, Associate Editor: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: Senior Brother Program. JOSEPH H. BYLINSKI A.B. Economics, Accounting: 79 Sey- mour Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2.3: Worcester Under- graduate Club: Economics Club: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Military Ball, Program 3, Accountant 4. CARL LAURENCE BUCHHEIT A.B. English: DeForest Road, Dix Hills, New York: Crusader, Assistant Editor: Fenwick Theatre: Junior Year Abroad: Emerald Shield Society. JOHN FRANCIS BURKE, JR. A.B. History: 512 Pine Street, Roselle, New Jersey: AFROTC: Flight Indoc- trination Program: Junior Program Committee: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals. THOMAS J. BURNS A.B. History: 76 Shadycrest Drive, East Hartford, Connecticut: NROTC. JAMES PATRICK CAHI LL A.B. Biology: 129 Fairview Avenue, Brockton, Massachusetts. CLIFFORD MICHAEL BURKE A.B. English: 12 Jackson Street, New- buryport, Massachusetts: NROTC: Drill Team Commander: Senior Brother Program: Junior Prom Com- mittee: Intramurals. TIMOTHY F. BURKE, JR. A.B. English: 305 Evergreen Drive, Waverly, Pennsylvania: WCHC, Depart- ment Head: Eta Sigma Phi: AFROTC: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals. LAWRENCE JOSEPH BUTLER A.B. English: 571 Spring Forest Ave- nue, Jacksonville, Florida: Crusader: Purple. FRANCIS PATRICK CALLAHAN A.B. Economics: 7 Kingston Street, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Judicial Board: Rugby: Intramurals. JAMES MICHAEL BURKE A.B. History: 256 Copeland Street, Brockton, Massachusetts: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Young Democrats: Freshman Lacrosse: Intramurals. FRANCIS A. BURNS, JR. A.B. Economics: 84 Central Street, Foxboro, Massachusetts: AFROTC, Commander: Freshman, Varsity Crew. MIGUEL V. BUXEDA A.B. Political Science: General P.O. Box 276, San Juan, Puerto Rico. DENNIS D. CAMPBELL A.B. 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A Ms.,-.1,L.t . ., 3 r . ' - '- ' .' ' .. . , 21, 1 ' - Y I f4:4g,1.gq3,Q.wA i. . , 5 ,..',.ff11 9, ' - 5 ' . 1 ' 1 A -I . la Q' ' k li if -' , V-1. EI ',!llbiSh: Quads: lmrtnnuale. JAMES. H. CGLLINQBAHD .H VIHQL -xo1uT .sbiA noirssiosfl ,noi3aA Isise2 nsiJahr13 To 'YHHISTSITHOU :gni .snilnolil o..- Qi- GREGORY NGEA?UIM Gnmge Streel. Wes: .m.eeus. Fbfsicf-.1 Assistam, Smdafw' Gnvcrnmem, Vvwcfsxer Esc' Cam Tumrmg Pr-ugmm. Ski Tear-1. xiM'..x Players, Fenvwx Themf-5 rtaidu Cut Clam Hfwse Su- 'ai CN!ifI'l-BH JAMES F CGQJBOVHTA TFEBDR -til' . ' Elmlh Blu L2,3.42 Glea Clubg Ckafi Houie Judfum Buarrr Theology Studia Advisofv Committee: lniremurafl, Camdn: Youth Council Advnsof. . - uv ' 1 1: 'li 'Q A avg,'i'jf,l- gf-.:'i'e.lfi 1 .r-,X :Q 5 3 .2 ' - 1 ' G ' , . ,W , M . '- f' 'MO 'uv . ' ' , U JOHN M, LZOLfllH3SfF039fH'I330lh .smsfmmwnsvzammmam-he. C'7v7 WIil?fJf Ccntfaxevrnitu of Quvssman D',i.i4n.-- AFROTCL Semm Bfolhel 'ff' ur . w, Vu nl Club: lv'-uqsvmrais ',L .1 ,.-3,5 H Jwwvmsmna IIMDBIB , ' A ' Skkblfwwf .ol1im3r1uMMi'3f- :1a1uase1T .harm mciwq' moinulf :1s1uassmTfv1sra1os8 :1s1uass1T aaslCJ 1oim:iL Leeryimmofi .wsbnsmmoil quo1B vmqs0 ,DTOFFIA mmm-mm' .ji rmmls f:Lg?gdi.I2' 3-life . :urge ' 5159 mmms gia ' X , to 1m'anib1O-of! .aimodiwlsd .dul3N 1dasY zassnimmib b . DUN H ,. x lDFM45fSfll?93f ae.mmmqmv-.ww ww Uk:-e-no: 4: .l1'0Ytii7fL1'l'LJYI'!,r1Gi1l17 . fu-Urairrfwiv. Purple Patches? Emerald Shield fdlqx Thomas Mon Frenzy: uw Pro swf SrfMQfiei3'f!Qvvlig, 'QTL n Y ' -silvi . wr. 'I- - JI'-Qi, . V' 1' 4 1 x ik D V 4.1 , Q., , - V. : 1 ' - a 1 f..4w .V 1 'I . I '-' - ' 'T ' ,-,' jr' JAMES J. -BIN mittee: Yadn Cmb. fvmdore 4: Lacrosse. V Shield Prom . 1 NL. , Y l, . , '. ' :LV . 4 iw.. . ' .Qs W . eh . 'C ' Y' 1. f. Q. v TffK?'-'F sf . 4 115 '-. 'Q xl I W' n ' YV' 1 .Lsfi -sl Jiffy ,. ,,1 v 15144 fx' l ? ', -'iIff:5? V: 'f1:'F,.., 2'-lg. ?au9mI5ma.at' i E 1 4 ga 3 - -iii?-i5'vr.'. ' - - '1' 'lZ i4 i'! 'lx 4- mann . Y ' 1, ---K' -c ' , AWSUIY Tuck. lntr-mnQs: Younh Republicans rms - Society: Snior 1 -. Ram L: LQ:T:j'iq!rn E rfb' ' V .. ' . rw- ff ai T' . 'iw-'iiv'1Qf,, .bv 31:5 - : 'fg f' th -Hg 1 5 . , EDWARD F. CAMPBELL A.B. History, Fiddlers Green, Hunting- ton, New York, DONALD R. CAVANAUGH A.B. Philosophy, 114 Worcester Street, West Boylston, Massachusetts. LAWRENCE MARIO CHICK,JR. A.B. Economics, 9 Beaver Drive, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club, Freshman Crew, Varsity Crew, Intramurals, MICHAEL KEVIN CLARE A.B. Economics, 605 Linden Place, Cranford, New Jersey, Head Resident Assistant, Purple Key Society, 1843 Club, Senior Brother Program, 100 Days Committee, Chairman, Hockey. PAUL JOSEPH CAREY A.B. Sociology, 10 Harberton Road, Leicester, Massachusetts, Sociology Club, Intramurals. JAMES F. KAVANAUGH A.B. Political Science, 22 Delano Way, South Dartmouth, Massachusetts, Dean's List 3, Student Government, Nazareth Area Big Brother Program, Young Democrats, Co-Ordinator of Committees, Yacht Club. EUGENE L. CHRZANOWSKI A.B. History, 620 Locust Street, Roselle, New Jersey, Dean's List 1,2,3, Senior Brother Program, Referees Association, JAMES JOSEPH CLARKE A.B. English, Pre-Medical, RFD ffl New Boston Road, Sturbridge, Massa- chusetts, Sodality, AFROTC, Senior Brother Program, Yachting Club. FRANCIS V. CATAN IA A.B. Sociology, 19 McKinley Street, Maynard, Massachusetts. JOSEPH CER RETANI A.B. Economics, 20 Vestal Avenue, Binghamton, New York, Students for a Democratic Society, WCHC, Junior Prom Committee, Business Manager. ROBERT JOHN CIMPRICH A.B. History, 15 Lloyd Court, Nutley, New Jersey, Dean's List 1.3, Purple Key Society, Mathematics Student Advisory Committee, Math Club, Sec- retary, Treasurer, Pi Mu Epsilon, Secretary-Treasurer, Junior Prom Committee, Junior Class Treasurer, AF ROTC, Deputy Group Commander. MICHAEL P. CAVANAGH A.B. History, 101 Olney Avenue, North Providence, Rhode Island, Resident Assistant, Saint Thomas More PreeLegal Society, Junior Year Abroad, Intramurals. JOHN R. CHABOT A.B. English, 265 Elm Street, Marl- boro, Massachusetts, Dean's List 2, Social Action, Recreation Aide, Tutor- ing, Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. MICHAEL J. CIPOLLA A.B. Psychology, 6293 North Kolmar, Chicago, Illinois. MICHAEL BRENDAN CLOUGHERTY ROBERT ATHY COLE A.B. Political Science, 111 Walnut Street, Manchester, New Hampshire, Dean's List 3, A.B. Psychology. Pre-Medical, 16 Sur- rey Lane, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. ANDREW D. COLEMAN JAMES MICHAEL COLEMAN A.B. History: 43 Driftwood Lane, A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 760 Trumbull, Connecticut: Saint Thomas Sequoia Trail,Maitland, Florida. More Pre-Legal Society: Northeastern New York State Club: Junior Prom Committee: Senior Brother Program: Crusader: Intramurals. JAMES H. COLLINS A.B. Economim: 3 Great Pond Road, Wenham, Massachusetts. GREGORY Nl LES CONNOLLY A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 179 La Grange Street, West Roxbury, Massa- chusetts: Resident Assistant: Student Government: Worcester Boys' Club Tutoring Program: Ski Team: Limbo Players: Fenwick Theatre: Italian Club: Clark House Social Chairman. JAMES F. COSG ROVE A.B. English: 402 May Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 'l,2,3,4: Glee Club: Clark House Judicial Board: Theology Student Advisory Committee: Intramurals. Catholic Youth Council Advisor. JOHN M. COLLINS A.B. Sociology: 37 Vincent Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Alpha Kappa Delta: Sociology Club, Treasurer: Sociology Student Advisory Committee: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: AFROTC: Senior Brother Program: Yacht Club: Intramurals, Manager. JOHN FRANCIS CONNOLLY, JR. A.B. Psychology: 32 Hurlcroft Road, Milton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3,4: Psi Chi, Historian: Purple Patcher,' Stu- dent Government: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Intramurals. PETER L. COSTIGLIO A.B. English: 60-il Broadway, Wood- side, Long Island, New York: Intra- murals. ROBE RT W. COLEMAN A.B. History: 97 Lincoln Avenue, Car- bondale, Pennsylvania: Young Demo- crats: WCHC: Glee Club: Junior Prom Committee: Emerald Shield Society: Senior Brother Program. SEAN J. CONLON A.B. Political Science: 56 West Har- wood Terrace, Palisades Park, New Jersey. DONALD PATRICK CONWAY A.B. History: 36 Lumae Street, Spring- field, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: 1843 Club, Trustee, Public Relations Director 4: Junior Prom Committee, Co-Chairman: Purple Patchen' Emerald Shield Society: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Springfield-Holyoke Club, Presi- dent. JAMES J. COU RTNEY A.B. Political Science: Sunview Drive, Glen Cove, New York: NROTC: Trident Society, Chairman: Junior Prom Committee: Military Ball Com- mittee: Yacht Club, Secretary 3, Com- modore 4: Intramurals: Sailing: Lacrosse. JAMES FRANCIS COLLINS A.B. English, Pre-Medical: Superin- tendent's Residence, Meadowbrook Hospital, East Meadow, New York: Dean's List 3: Crusader: Junior Prom Committee, Secretary: Varsity Lacrosse: Senior Brother Program: Emerald Shield Society: Alpha Epsilon Delta. RICHARD J. CONNER A.B. English: I9 Simpson Street, Newton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2: Mulledy House Newsletter, Assistant Editor: Senior Brother Program: Emerald Shield Society: Crossroads: Junior Prom Committee. JOHN DAVID CORRADO A.B. Political Science: 94 Oakland Street, Medway, Massachusetts: NROTC, Flight indoctrination Program, Trident Society, Military Ball Committee, Co-Chairman: Yacht Club: Varsity Track: Intramurals: Young Republicans: James Madison Society: Senior Brother Program: Kniyhtwatch, Photography Editor: Student Govern- ment. WILLIAM J. COX A.B. 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JUST' 2' iff ff., ,been maven luscl Sorxpnailgna .a.A gzffseuffdiiezsih TETHEHSH f Fri2WBSQVl ,lasdiiesgff kyffbev filvrgqiaeba' yrizwsv ' twasana mmrlaswf41f':n'isPf5em Ispil-swq eww! 5Bmorf'FA-fnIs2 'f0In92 QIHSITTDTSVOQ 1nebuI2 1YIsi:io2 .mswgmq 1sri1o18 V A , VWJJIGZVIACI .CI VIHOL ,L Q Lung- .H -svAfdsss8 bnug2 Q88 qdailgrfgi ,8.A ViIUQi155f1H03': ,d'3M'ffE35i5 1 tSiC' feibh -- X-1,-V: '-'- 1 1' .,le1',- 11 .:Ios1T v1u215V zllscflfbzlaia nsnidzsfzl . Wg- i i Cmsaqffr' .Amir A :, 9 .,f,f, sf.-..:z--e ' fi-x.-in b I 17--.!m',l,. I qu V-I, 1: b..2f!4S9K'f?1?9yV'3'H3G3FH -sxgA pia1r1uolV1T,E E9 Iwi pnqoil SA '?4,E.h I5Qxiii,51s'iafSKQQfW'iQEiisaux'J :S,S.r 1aU lsiasq2 ,G To 833 gznsaiIduqsFl gnuoY asmor1T 1nis2 :ear1immo3 zInsv3 nsmdzswq :v1sioo2 lsgej-SFI s1oM aoimono::3 gIlsdsas8 vria1sV :IlsdeasS .noliaqil sIlsO no1aimO :duI3 FRANCIS VINCENT CREEDEN,JR. PATRICK J.CREEVY JOSEPH S.D.CHRISTOF,JR. A.B. English: 48 Wycliff Avenue, West A.B. English: 745 Michigan Avenue, A.B. History: 2624 Middle Road, Roxbury, Massachusetts: AFROTC, Wilmette, Illinois: Dean's List 1.2.3, Glenshaw, Pennsylvania: Junior Year Winter Weekend Committee: Student Cros and Scroll Society. Abroad: German Club: Freshman Bas- Government: Senior Brother Program. ketball: Varsity Basketball: Freshman WILLIAM GRANT CROWLEY A.B. English: 103 Paul Revere Road, Needham Heights, Massachusetts: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Baseball. Captain: Freshman Soccer: Varsity Soccer: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Student Government: Senior Brother Program. JOHN P. DANSDI LL A.B. English: 336 Sound Beach Ave- nue, Old Greenwich. Connecticut: Freshman Basketball: Varsity Track. FREDERICK J. DEANGELIS A.B, Economics: 635 Mountain Ave- nue, Revere, Massachusetts: Dean's List 1.2,3: Crusaden' Purple Patcherg Young Republicans: CCB of D, Special Events Committee: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Baseball: Economics Club: Omicron Delta Epsilon. ALFRED THEODORE CULLEN Lacrosse: Intramurals. HUGH PAUL CULVERHOUSE A.B. History: 2208 Grand Boulevard, A.B. English: 10 Wildwood Avenue, Schenectady, New York: Dean's List 3, Worcester, Massachusetts. History Club, Secretary 4: Young Democrats: Saint Thomas More Pre- Legal Society: Crusader. BRUCE A. DAUER A.B. Psychology: 92 Kendall Drive, Ringwood. New Jersey. JOHN MICHAEL DECICCIO A.B. Mathematics: 222 Walter Street, Fall River, Massachusetts: Dean's List 1,2,3: Honors Program: Fenwick Scholar: Pi Mu Epsilon: Math Club, President: Student Mathematics Advis- ory Board: Cross and Scroll Society. J. MICHAEL DAVIS A.B. History: 14 High Street, Pena- cook, New Hampshire: NROTC, Supply Officer. FREDERICK H. DEGNAN A.B. Modern Languages: 458 Alling Farm Road, Orange, Connecticut: Dean's List 1.2,3,4: Alpha Sigma Nu: Resident Assistant: Senior Brother Program. TIMOTHY J. CROWE A.B. Psychology: R.D. 1 Sherry Road, Saint Mary's, Pennsylvania: NROTC: Rugby: Flying Club: Yacht Club: SPUD. JOHN FRANCIS DAIGLE A.B. History: 15 Parker Hill Avenue, Milford, Massachusetts: Holy Cross Marching Band: Holy Cross Concert Band: Student Government: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Pur- ple Patcher,' Emerald Shield Society: Married Students Association. JOHN TERHUNE DAY, JR. A.B. English: 17 Beechwood Terrace, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.: Dean's List 1.2.33 Fenwick Scholar 4: Alpha Sigma Nu: Honors Program: Head Resident As- sist. 4: BJF Debating Soc.: Purple Patchen' Pneuma, Editorial Bd.: Stu- dent Action Comm.: The Crusader, Editorial Bd.. Curriculum Comm.: Mar- tin Luther King Scholarship Comm: Cross and Scroll Soc.: Chairman: Col- lege Educational Policy Comm.: Eng- lish Student Advisory Comm. JOHN VINCENT DEITCHMAN A.B. Physics: 12068 Brookmill Road, Los Altos. California: Dean's List 1,2,3: Physics Student Advisory Corn- mittee, Chairman: Physics Society: Alpha Sigma Nu: Sigma Pi Sigma: Rugby. THOMAS F. DELANEY, JR. A.B. English: 157 Saint Paul's Place, West Hempstead, New York. ROBERT DESAU LNIERS A.B. History: 155 High Street, South- bridge, Massachusetts: Student Government: CCB of D, Fine Arts Committee: Emerald Shield Society: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Rugby: Olympic Co-Chairman: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals. TERENCE K. DICKINSON A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 798 Lakeside Road, Birmingham, Mich- igan. PAUL ROBERT DOLAN A.B. Economics: 45 Longmeadow Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Student Government: AFROTC: Wor- cester Club: Purple Patchen FRANK C. DEMASI A.B. English: 202 Edward Street, Schenectady, New York: Crusaden' Purple Patchen' Senior Brother Pro- gram: Emerald Shield Society: North- eastern New York Club: Freshman Track. i N ROBERT DeSHAY A.B. Economics: 1216 East Gwinnett Street, Savannah, Georgia: Martin Luther King Scholarship Fund, Student-Faculty Committee: SPUD, Program Director: Black Students Union, Senior Brother Program: Eco- nomics Club, Omicron Epsilon Delta. WILLIAM HAVI LAND DICKINSON A.B. Political Science: 29 Country Club Circle, North Scituate, Massa- chusetts: Limbo, Personnel Manager: NROTC, Drill Team, Executive Of- ficer, Battalion Adjutant and Public Affairs Officer: Intramurals, Field- house Commissioner. MICHAELJ. DONAHUE A.B. Political Science: 1189 Somerville Street, Manchester, New Hampshire: Dean's List 1,2,3: Head Resident As- sistant: Student Government: Honors Program: Student Personnel Policies Committee: Ad Hoc Committee on Housing, Chairman: Intramurals: Ad- missions Recruitment: Emerald Shield Society, Director: Junior Prom Com- mittee: Purple Key Society: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: 100 Days Committee. STEPHEN THOMAS DEMERS A.B. Sociology: 30 Boyd Street, Wor- cester, Massachusetts: Alph Kappa Delta, Vice-President: Student Advi- sory Committee, Sociology, Chairman: Sociology Club: Worcester Under- graduate Club. JAMES G. DEVOTO A.B. Classics: 7151 Cambridge Road, University City, Missouri. ANTHONY V. DI PASOUALE A.B. English: 26 Montgomery Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: NROTC: WCHC: Junior Prom Business Commit- tee: Young Democrats: James Madison Society: Worcester Undergraduate Club. ROBERT EDWARD DONAHUE A.B. Economics: 17 Mildred Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club, Athletic Director: Economics Club: Intra- murals. JOHN M. DEMICCO A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 3 Ash- land Street, Jewett City, Connecticut: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Psi Chi: Italian Club: Student Government: Sodality: Sanctuary Society: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: Intramurals. HERMAN JUSTUS DICK, JR. A.B. Political Science, Pre-Medical: 232 Huron Avenue, Sheboygan, Wis- consin: Dean's List 1,2,3: Swimming Team, Co-captain: Alpha Epsilon Delta. MARK J. DOHERTY A.B. Sociology, Pre-Medical: 651 East 79th Street, Bloomington, Minnesota: Sociology Club: Crusader: Senior Brother Program: Emerald Shield So- riety: Student Government: Intramurals: Olympics: Wrestling: Lacrosse, Co-Captain: Freshman, Var- sity Football. THOMAS S. DONNE LLY A.B. Biology: 34 Revere Street, Hol- brook, Massachusetts. T' f.i .N -. v - --, .x..:-.l,vvT -5 FRANCIS VINCENTOSTKESHEHIQQI OL' 1 ' 'K - i ' ' ' fi 'I MgwMHw nM5PMMlg :vriIsbo2 :msmmsvoa !nsbul2 :duI3 io vrinusiswinofi zvrsiooa v1surons2 .elswmsunl :9ni1moCl nsiiei1rI3 Vi'ILl,I,fXf1C-RANT C!3'O'i fLfiV .HL .PIDICI ZUTZUL VIAMFEIH AB En 'fH 103 Paul Revere Road iilgexmiiwiqggiiwiiia iiaisiiiaiiseiw FFA!Y.iifA59Vf3 dii?9vai4wmHpsi?9 igfaiismiw?-'4QhSiLn'234,0s.Qs?Owm2fve3 f4'lQl'5q3'Ka fmqwin niqismsihparef IT i'-UL'iCl,', 'Sui-ievwl Govern 1-wig, F-ru .mw ' RJ-3151-. . :'Hfi YT i lTl?. xl ' 1 'J VTHQHOQ .LQIHAM 23423 'WS'EfEQ1E5jr5l-5i,fi'f1i2'g6ib'15'8g5'QPA ye, i -4 .v feenwut 1, --Cf!liF!'. srwbx- fNHf5Qraav'MQsgPzagaw0QiQ f?F? aa,1 . mms? 'asbszm gdulirb vgoloi3o2 -02 blairi2 bls19m3 gms1go'iq 19riro18 ginsmmsvoii !nsbu12 :Visio 3gnilIa91W :z3iqmVIO gzIs1ums1!nI -1sV .nsmda-af! :nis1qsCJ-03 .9320'l3B.l .llsdloofi wie 'RE DE 'X U4 +.'rHMi5ibEd'P2 aAivioHr Nimgigsse 5iav255igE'QQ,E5g?3gf2igA Hue. V friiillii, :HSBC ug 5. eiiovgd Lisi 1,151 CfUQfN.'sg-'Tia afc rf V-Duriq E2pi,L,-Kiln'-S CCB of D, Snfrxfial EVENTS 'iCirv'irviiI'-22' baint 'Tflumas Mme Pre-Legat Scwciew, Frmhmari F!-aselmllg Varmy Bnsmbaii Lmnnmics Ciubg Omicfof- Della Epsilon. xE 5515fi!a 3 i i i ifi VV . Q 5: xiii 68?-' 6 rffa . if 299 -iv A 1na u32 zrns i y ggoiv' r,,sltIeG gnsm1isrD .YQOlOi302'.B5i'iimH1054 moz -1sbnU 1s1aso1oW 1du!3 v90laiso2 .dui3 sdsubsng ,ALF RED THE-JDORE IQ . L LEM: OTOVBG .0 ZEIMAL D-.B Histc-rv: D08 Grand Boulevard. Hislorv Cli1bfi1'ig iqXTi?WHiQp Cleww-ual-5. Jain: Thomas More Pm LH pl fC'C3r!!'y' Ewug Aa55i1555Aqio .v vmonfrvm Q??1'nsF?Xt3ggiin1gE3r1ggA.6E ig2I?lhf1QfrzEiA 12I!N SM .1s1asa1oW '1immo3 aasniau8 mowq woinul. QUHDVV noeibsM asmsl. :z1s1aomeO QnuoY gas! aysubsigwsbnu 1s12eo1oW :vrsioo2 .duI3 J ':NJ5'ffHK5lb6J Tn aaron Ad ah, azerSr. Ffrrfn1z5,N5f'53:'iQ' ifimgsefaw? HA va'efJ1Q?.isgS2ia5fasBfm iemeazsw 52iaf,? ?', BUUL i.saFga1zPE1BiQ.U pasgffinil-iHudenr9iirs,?n,eaia..fsQe3ee4rG my swag cum and Suoll swsei5,5 'm ! - E -' 1 .LS S... . . 10- H- ., , ,, 4 ., I .i-gg! I fi. y 21,5 54. 5, I :rati,,7 i.,1ff'1v:51Ffi9f7,. X ihimihf-2' A l,:,f?f:i'f'A-viifqijal'-Iiiiij-j.'gi'iainfztigilfxf Alf: A Assam' 2 --g m , A Q - kiqgums ' A . Kg? i' ' ' ' dp,m.:g,qgg , 'f'I,A3blS15fY1 ' 'gms-ig U f1smr1zs1:l :duIQ' IMGY wsM msnese .:I:ls1T ' 'CH PAUL CULVE Rl-IGUSE M. ff. is.. io Mamma KWH mQiSiLii?if O 0f'5' -S-A riih lvl zsigmoail .r1snmsva2 .iss112 ,bnuq qidanslor1o2 gimibl 1amuJ ,CIUQE :ss11immoZJ vrluasfl-msbw2 arnsbu12 :IosI8 fl0!35'liG msfigmfi -oo? :ms1go1'1l 1sr'l!o18 mins? qnoinu .urls-G noiiaqii nmairnO :duI3 aaimon LE1'5EW5l5if2J?Q'l5li,i3J IVAH MAIJJ iw Y. i to i ree . '- Woqwgg ha r ,?lo'u duf3 :xsgsns srmoausq ,odmiJ gariseurio -TO svizuosxil ,mssT lli1C! ,IJTOFWI ailduq bns 1ns1uibA noilsnsfl ,193iT -blsiil ,alswmsnnl Q1soi?YO a1is1iA .1anoiazimmoCJ sauod FREDERICK 0-3LB'sgh6a!.L.f3AH3IM Zswgidoqf , Q g 1 'EA are r i b o A I t Y li lc my S i sgsaggqi jrgsiqrgnwgio g il u1? i2 asfmglfi lsnnoawscl msbu12 qmmgowq no ssnimmoll aoH bA xssnirnmoib -bA galsmmswrnl :nsm1isr1D .gniauoH blairla blswamil :fnamsimasfl anaiesim -moi! mamq 1oinuL 110W .y1'aiq02 mise maine? vsbl alqii1iI1':ss!mim OOF maine? iggsikenq snoM'-AEMQHT .sstfimn1Q3ui1sG ,' Q 'Lrg :Z r . ,V ., 4. K. JOHN FBAN'1Li,Ql-HQLE: AQ ff mwQSQi3.,e, 'Qs mama 11iGHi292nAB5i ?rJII MWEWRD Mgr' . .e 'JBFUOTH JOHN fER ih' d'51 aawsmar WH F- .ci-Haiaimsf2glsP ' S .54 Honors Program: Hem nisidem 755'-9' sist. 4: SJF Debaling Soc.: Purplb Parc-het Pharm. Eauiwrial Bd.: Stu- dent Action Commg 'Mp cfUQdQf, Edilorial Bd.. Curriculum CMlTi.1Mlr- tin Luther King Scriollfihip,-C0mm.: Cross and Scroll Soc.: Chsirlhinz CD4- lege Eduzmionll Policy Cnnuil.: Eng lash Sli-HSM AUWMIY COME!- Junw viuugiitg JUN as ' A afqgmiin Ebaifw 1 'A 1 -'u i uaifiiiaii L 'SERV -. ::y, Alpha Sigmdh X u Wu Rudiv. -s'- . , Ji A .:,. ' .-r'ni x -can -.qv 1 QA K 1 X 1 1' ' 1311111 f 2 Ii 2 'vw' l 1XfTff 54SX-is fgyrgjfm mm. NAS WW 1' w',L K lx X gi ,-4. 1 i -'ily fs? gi? . WH at .:1.:.1i :E 'fm-f5'ff3.f-,..q::Ngv . 1, '.,.ZL 1 -' M ., .:,.?a,sss1,aegeaz9'-.xii ww 21 e1iseifI:2i12e!.5r -' I vi . ,n -l -1- 113455 2 A f' A 2 '. Mft A ,.., T. 1 A , . -1 DPut-Qs. Puma- Hemi hum efpgg-mv Amon Ceefu. Da1WU an- 'lW l1T E '. fx - - 5, ff'-'WL E 9543565 Huaauam i 'vw E : s v HW e'Yl'iE?W f ' ammmwearaiwmsmvrmhe seuorhsxnl qaninontl nsirahrlb in .asnimmo3 QOHSHEUTOOD lsiaoi W QQ JUSCW F' 5589-Halas L ha9erEMBeWJili1BSiW3fkii'4 '?E'A fL'9 2?2B53? .,., . V Oc-Queno, WCHC, Engineermg Direc- ICN N455 R- F'f'SH0.nJa ..e BUHTEFIA l I I . ' ! Iv H i . ' I '?Qifnio1b'Sbo4I?--v4riz'?hNF'f:?r1506E'lfW6S noe Pre-.adenfz A1nha,,5ypaw5Qgv igrra P- Zngrwa, Prrfancs Student Ad- .fisnrv Committee. Vice Cnairnun: Academic Eval-uauon Reonn, Physics -.g 1 , VE ,. . .1 :maj ' maffqef . 1-if ' ' s V E viii xv C W-E5! - WWW A QHAQVGS 'MSM ,fc - 1 m,6' gl ' IH ' ' K I 'SDMK-ef 906511 ' ' -3, fp ' l f Qhsodem Asdikramg Eucpsqznios Cnib: if-sun Thowm More Fm-top! Sodetvz- P'+.u'Ne Athletic ?.s'nm Organization. --ruuf mr-. tnrramuutx,'Rolf:'ee ' Z NAUON F5IN'f516EfiU6i5SumaA1a 'LrEnw51N2'E!!s Qi mmm sam Esusmmo' . 985552 d?f5'8uBo':lfr'.U.e 96'3!F.'?'z' me rnedaw Pfebenlal A5fmmy61E'mi,t mince, f,h.mfnan, Aloha Epsfion Delta. Tfxeasnmrrt Lrmbo. Siudem 'Em-Ev'- 'uno, APROTC: SHIKI wr 4-.far Nqnn ' , . nh K ' U QL! . .I Fwf-1 'OHM F' Fnzihmw JE 12, ' 14 ' . F Km' lx H '- ,A ., Y, i X . Tlf ifg, . M9903 Vlfamsil 331503 inietqsiwa Chairmang Spninf Brother Pfqggng E' 1 E31 '. wr Glee C1ub:QhCuAa H , g,hL1 gk -1 V . . 1 Y. 'L rv A .G U h J 4- K v - gr V Q. 4 .3 . IQ - F. Q. it , I - Q vp AR 1 bs f w ul: -' -:FIGS 110NbEl E 'gm semi' Emnomg:s. tZmbv:' ' mmm: cm: .wmufu umiwpl 51211313 cum: vnmmumqk 'G an . ., , .F . -::n-'b- 8 Vamqgfr 4fFEH l': 9'5f 1 H f' 5 ' - -' . -, . Q L T':1vl5.1ff':r1j1V 'L 6-5 f' -uf-Y A: X . F?-' vw 7' -J:1'14n'5'?5i:-'ir' 'A , sqE. i s-g g 'Z Advisory Committee: 1' 1- micsC1 u- ' mum C1ubg4WurKBf.TBOv5' Chai' Tutoring Progmm. ' 'gl .. rn.: .. ff 'ig 4' 4.31:-A . - :-W . -as 34 t '- ., 'q P' - .N 5' 'X T:FtA8HQmV3 nBYflr'la5F-I is SHAWN MI CHAE L DONOVAN A.B. English: 52 Laurel Street, Con- cord, Massachusetts. JEFFREY MARC DOWD A.B. Mathematics, Economics: 342 Hitching Post Road, Orange, Connecti- cut: Dean's List 1,3: Mathematics Stu- dent Advisory Committee: Academic Affairs Committee: Intramurals. WILLIAM F. DREXLER A.B. Economics: 1009 North George Street, Rome, New York. RICHARD S. DUFRESNE A.B. History: 35 Buick Street, Spring- field, Massachusetts: Resident Assist- ant: Limbo, General Manager: Purple Key Society: Education Student Ad- visory Committeej John Augustus Hall Society. JAMES J. DOREY A.B. History: 300 Standish Drive, Syracuse, New York: Resident Assist- ant: History Student Advisory Com- mittee: Purple Patcher, Literary Editor: Hanify Lecture Committee, Chairman: Vietnam Moratorium Corn- mittee: Crusader, Managing Editor: Alpha Sigma Nu: Intramurals. WILLIAM F. DOWLING A.B. History: 55 Outer Rock Drive, Greenwich, Connecticut. PAUL S. DRISGU LA A.B. English: 603 South Madison Street, Rome, New York: Dean's List 2,3: Crusader: Providence House, As- sistant Director: Freshman Baseball. EDWARD PATRICK DUGAN, Ill A.B. History, Fine Arts: Mohawk Drive, Tribes Hill, New York: Italian Club: Senior Brother Program: Contra- ternity of Christian Doctrine: Worcester Intercollegiate Symphonic Band: Holy Cross Band: Freshman Track: Varsity Track. LOUIS MATTHEW DOUGALL A.B. Economics, Accounting: 11 Dar- by Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Inter- national Relations Club: Young Republicans. EDWARD F. DOYLE A.B. History: 53 Woburn Street, Med- ford, Massachusetts. JACQUES E. DUBOIS, JR. A.B. Mathematics: 483 Woodland Road, Woonsocket, Rhode Island: Dean's List 3: B. J. F. Debating Socie- ty: Intramurals. CHARLES E. DUGGAN A.B. English: 4 William Street, East- hampton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Freshman Soccer: Varsity Soccer, Co-Captain. THOMAS J. DOUGHERTY A.B. Mathematics: 87 Shawmut Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. MICHAEL F. DOYLE A.B. Economics: 155 Craiwell Avenue, West Springfield, Massachusetts: Fresh- man Swimming: Varsity Swimming: Senior Brother Program: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: lnterhouse Social Coordination Committee. STEPHEN J. DUFFY A.B. History, Pre-Medical: 1538 Chapel Court, Northbrook, Illinois. ARTHUR L. DULONG A.B. Psychology: 224 Warren Street, Randolph, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Psi Chi: Varsity Cross Country: Varsity Track. STEPHEN l. DWYER A.B. English: 3619 46th Street, Metairie, Louisiana: Student Govern- ment: Sophomore Class President Stu- dent Judicial Board: Kimball Commit- tee: Junior Prom Committee: CCB of D Public Relations Committee: SPUD: Purple: Purple Patcherf Community Action Center, Director: Pizz, Editor: Plth, Editor. GEORGE E. ENGDAHL, JR. A.B. English: 125 Whiting Street, l-lingham, Massachusetts: Freshman Soccer: Freshman Hockey: SPUD: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals. JOSEPH F. FERRARA A.B. English: 38 Broadman Parkway, Jersey City, New Jersey: Knights of Columbus: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: WCHC, Engineering Direc- tor. JAMES R. FIENUP A.B. Physics, Mathematics: 2957 Bellerive Drive, Saint Louis, Missouri: Dean's List l,2,3: Physics Society, Vice President: Alpha Sigma Nu: Sigma Pi Sigma: Physics Student Ad- visory Committee, Vice Chairman: Academic Evaluation Report, Physics Chairman: Senior Brother Program: Glee Club: Chess Club. WALTER ROBERT DZIOKONSKI A.B. Psychology: 229 Main Street, Clinton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 1,2,3: NROTC: Chess Club: Knights of Columbus, Recording Secretary. CHARLES H. EPPINGER A.B. Economics, Accounting: North Spencer Road, Spencer, Massachusetts: Resident Assistant: Economics Club: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Purple Athletic Service Organization, Chairman: Intramurals, Referee. NALTON FRANK FERRARO A.B. English, Pre-Medical: 2935 Gibson Street, Schenectady, New York: Dean's List 1: Student Pre- Medical - Pre-Dental Advisory Com- mittee, Chairman: Alpha Epsilon Delta, Treasurer: Limbo: Student Government: AFROTC: Senior Brother Program. JOHN F. FITZGERALD A.B. Psychology: 60 Atherton Street, Somerville, Massachusetts. MARK J. EARLEY A.B. English: 185 Liberty Road, Englewood, New Jersey: Crusader: Purple Patcher,' Fenwick Theatre: Drama Group. GERALD FRANCIS FALVEY A.B. Economics, Accounting: 13 Blaine Avenue, Worcester, Massachu- setts: Economics Club: International Relations Club: Worcester Under- graduates Club: Intramurals. VINCENT J. FERRI A.B. Economics: 58 Mohawk Street, Waterbury, Connecticut: Dean's List 2,3: Knights of Columbus: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Economics Student Advisory Committee: Economics Club: Italian Club: Worcester Boys' Club Tutoring Program. CHRISTOPHER M. FOLEY A.B. History: 8917 Montgomery Avenue, Chevy Chase, Maryland: Dean's List 3: Crusader, News Editor: Purple Patcher, Copy Editor: Fenwick Theatre. RALPH T. EARP A.B. Psychol0QV: 12 Brookside Lane, Saint Louis, Missouri. JOHN JOSEPH FALVEY A.B. Mathematics: 659 Yalesville Road, Cheshire, Connecticut: Academic Evaluation Report, Editor: Senior Brother Program. JOHN JAMES FERRY, JR. A.B. History: 123 Newton Street, Meriden, Connecticut: Dean's List 1,2: NROTC, Flight indoctrination Pro- gram: Trident Society: Flying Club: lntramurals: Senior Brother Program: Military Ball Committee. JOHN FRANCIS FOLEY A.B. History: 36 Kingston Road, New- ton Highlands, Massachusetts: Inter- national Relations Club, President: Young Democrats: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Today: Pith: Orient Express: Academic Evaluation Report: Student Government: Student Mobili- zation Committee: Senior Brother Pro- gram. 5' I 0 'Y K 5 w1,pA l 'I J iwsxum Eamon CPf.:.irnNaHQ Vmmam mime: Cma-Jer, vwmgiamg Edina: !'1!p'g1 g,vqn.a -Htl, l :s4:1v urg.95, A W QQ' ,, .1-4 , - gg U 3 - 4 L. . , -. JL FFFQEY mM3WCJ!WU'lq320L VIHOL muivaals'tmQE3f.g,:z1Q1efnan11sM .BLA rwfmiwsnnwdxmimmhy.ben-H . 'nolibi vmodtefl. unissuiaui-:simf1bsoA vm mm.-'-, ims'vgn'Haed1mB.'voine2 -.iigrlx Lil' 'I'-r.'f'r'. ir 1' . 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QQIAWQQ swarm-wxmr wfgnailwqss, ng:-gn, A ' ' ' 'Y 'w'n:51':f-Y Efbviernrewii, 5843 EAR! mzvm, L'.!..:3' N!-YOTG, SEMO! Bfkiflmf Prog! -' -'12 ' EVSN 'UNE Wnniwmlfyfn .- X' l K uarw, CDCYOBIWY Rocomggz N064 uf'HCN1 Purpb Paeehor: Lemiq Hwang Q-eniuf 91-:rlhar Pvogliwa GUr9r:vvx'f!1J C0'V1!iBfGFHM 'Gsm mmee, freasumr: mifKj,'60ffl88 MEM Prevteysl ',Smr.gm!y, ' 1 V ' A 13' xf , and 1 MH' , . I ul .1 A g fa! M1 H, gEvH'!4, -. 1 ' ty.. ,4 r1QrfM5ca ' f .D 1diiQ.Qa' T' v ' W -HI' V . giw- ' . M M ,Y ' 'nr lv- sg, g' -Y J' 1 4 .- N J . -5 gf if ' 4 --1 . - - , :.,4'-1.0- L, Qvagummmmwmrgvms ziernimaxmtine Fhazrman. uasebah, ' ' ' T.. , -:E'?A 7'k ufifi V - un -'Q ga-1 wif. 1 1 T ,F '- ' J Ll Y tv J: Q 9 'WWI' r VW-'IHAEL Decorations treg Limbo: gniZi1hivbA Adwsxy rioumm Commitk: Junior Prom Undergraduate JAMES W, FO LLETTE A.B. Biology: Warden's Residence, Stormville, New York: Glee Club. Social Chairman: Paks: Cheerleaders, captain: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals: Biology Society. WILLIAM LEO FOX A.B. Political Science: 92 Brattle Street, Woroester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: NROTC, Flight Indoc- trination Program: International Rela- tions Club: Senior Brother Program: Intramural Staff: Purple Patcher, Cir- culation Co-Manager. THOMAS CHAR LES GAFFNEY, JR. A.B. History: 318 Sunset Boulevard, Wyckoff, New Jersey: Emerald Shield Society: Junior Prom Committee: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals: SPUD: Purple Patcher, Advertising Manager. WILLIAM CARROLL GALLAGHER A.B. English: 4 Summerhill Road, Auburn, Massachusetts: Track: Cross Country: Purple Patcher, Under- graduate Editor. JOSEPH W. FOOTE A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 2037 Brian Drive, North Merrick, New York. BRIAN LAWRENCE FRECHETTE A.B. Philosophy: 1748 Farmington Avenue, Unionville, Connecticut: Glee Club: Fenwick Theatre. ARMANDO V. GALELLA, JR. A.B. History: 40 Depeyster Street, North Tarrytown, New York: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals: Rugby: Squash Club: Emerald Shield Society: New York Met Club. ROBERT E. FORTlER,JR. A.B. Political Science: 43 Summit Ave- nue, North Smithfield, Rhode Island: Fenwick Theatre: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: Young Democrats. JAMES F. FREER A.B. History: 7733 Sotherden Drive, Liverpool, New York: Purple Patcher, Sports Editor: Crusader, Sports Editor: Freshman Track: Intramurals: Student Government Athletic Affairs Commit- tee. EDWARD GALLAGHER,JR. A.B. English: 15 Karyn Terrace East, Middletown, New Jersey. MICHAEL E. FOSTER A.B. Political Science: 475 Wilmot Road, New Rochelle, New York. MICHAELJ. FUCCI A.B. History, Pre-Medical: 19 Loud Road, Holbrook, Massachusetts: Italian Club: Crusader: Young Demo- crats: Senior Brother Program: Intra- murals. THOMAS R. GALLAGHER A.B. History: 5605 Lockwood Road. Cheverly, Maryland. MARTIN M. GAUTHIER WALTER N. GAVRY PAUL GEBUHR A.B. Economics: Route 6, South Well- A.B. English: 5 Ormond Avenue, Fort A.B. Economics, Accounting: 817 Lin- tleet, Massachusetts: Young Demo- Johnson, New York: Dean's List 1. den Avenue, Wilmette, Illinois: Rugby: CVHTSI Secretary: Economics Club: Gun Purple Patcher, Accountant. Club: Yacht Club. DONALD J. GENTILE A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 17 Trow- bridge Lane, Shrewsbury, Massachu- setts: Dean's List 2: Alpha Epsilon Delta: John Augustus Hall Program. PATRICK JOHN GLYNN A.B. Political Science: 6380 Over- brook Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania: Student Government, Senior Brother Program: AFROTC: Semper Fidelis Society: Varsity Crew: Golf: Intramurals. ANTHONY S. GRAEFE A.B. History: 2829 Forest Drive, Des Moines, Iowa. DAVID DU NCAN G RAVES A.B. Political Science: 120 Prescott Street, Clinton, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club. PHI LIP JOSEPH GEOGAN A.B. History: 72 Union Street, Rockland, Massachusetts: Sodality, Sanctuary Society, Prefect: House Re- ligious Committee: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: James Madison Society. W. BRIAN GOLDEN A.B. Political Science: 1515 East Gibson Street, Scranton, Pennsylvania: Junior Year Abroad: Basketball, Man- ager: Intramurals: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Senior Brother Pro- gram. ROBERT CABEL GRAHAM, Ill A.B. Economics: 16 Green Acres, Washington, Indiana: Dean's List 3: Student Government: 1843 Club: Eco- nomics Club: NROTC: Senior Brother Program. KEVIN HANEY GREENE A.B. History: 437-72nd Street, Brook- lyn, New York: Fenwick Theatre Com- pany, Company Recorder: WCHC: WICN: Purple Patchen Limbo Player: Senior Brother Program: Student Government: Commencement Com- mittee, Treasurer: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society. DONALD JAMES GILBERT A.B. English: 1 Harrison Court, Rochester, New Hampshire. MICHAEL ADRIAN GOODE A.B. Political Science: P.O. Box 524, Port Jefferson, New York. JAMES ALEX G RATTAN A.B. Chemistry: 12 Kerschner Lane, East Brunswick, New Jersey: Dean's List 1,2,3,4: Chemistry Club: Chem- istry Student Advisory Committee, Chairman: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Baseball. MICHAEL THOMAS GREGORY A.B. Economics, Accounting: 15 Ruthven Avenue, Worcester, Massa- chusetts: Dean's List 3: Economics Club, President: Economic Student Advisory Committee: Economics Cur- riculum Committee: Purple Patcher: Junior Prom Committee: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Intramurals. EUGENE HARRY GILLIN A.B. History: 1200 Concord Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania: Purple Patcher, Development Manager: Head Resident Assistant: Student Govern- ment: Junior Prom Committee: Saint Patty's Personnel Party, Chairman: Limbo, Board of Directors: Today, Business Manager: 100 Days Commit- tee. WILLIAM FRANCIS GOTHA A.B. Political Science: 250 Poplar Ave- nue, Springfield, Massachusetts: Purple Patcher, Activities Editor 3, Editor-in- Chief 4: Glee Club, President: NROTC, Drill Team, Operations Officer 4: Military Ball, Chairman: Junior Prom, Decorations Chairman: Fenwick Thea- tre: Limbo: Senior Brother Program: 100 Days Committee. WILLIAM J. GRATTAN, lll A.B. Sociology? 45 Saxon Road, Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Sodality: Purple,' Intramurals. ALAN B. GRINC A.B. Sociology: 1710 Edward Terrace, Union, New Jersey: Dean's List 3: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Sociology Club. Qlr A ,Q l l: 7 3 1 434 T' ,Q '-R. A 1153- f.f5fm':w.,fwf Q gp 4' iff: T QQ , ta , , .gm ,ge 4 3355 1. vm. 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History: 7 Lee Avenue, Scituate. Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,3: Cru- sader: WCHC, Department Head. Biology Society: SPUD: CCB of D Fine Arts Committee: History Aca- demy: Intramurals. FRANCIS EDWIN HARTIG A.B, Physics: 2 Ridge Avenue, Natick. Massachusetts: Sociology Club: Philos- ophy Club: Senior Brother Program. Limbo, Entertainment Manager: Skiing Team: Varsity Hockey: Sailing Club. WILLIAM DAVID HELM A.B. Economics: 10 May Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Intramurals. donia, New York: Dean's List 3: Pur- ple Patcher,' Crusader: Holy Cross Band, Business Manager: Worcester Inter-Collegiate Symphonic Band: Crusader Dance Band: WCHC. WILLIAM J. HANLON DALE T. GUTEKUNST FRANK D. HAINES ROBERT H. HALEY A.B. History: 36 East Avenue, Cale- A.B. Political Science: l6 Old Smithy A.B. BioloQV: Pre-Medical: 43 Rad- Lane, Wethersfield, Connecticut. cliffe Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts. JOHN T. HARAN, JR. A.B. Economics, Accounting: 79 A.B. Economics: 90 Brookline Street. Beechwood Street, Cohasset, Massa- Needham, Massachusetts: Dean's List chusetts: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal 2,3: Omnicron Delta Epsilon: Society: Chess Club: Gun Club: Bowl- Crusader: Young Democrats, Vice- ing Team. President: Economics Club: Senior JOSEPH M. HEALEY, JR. Brother Program. THOMAS J. HEALY A.B. Classics: 244 Forest Street, A.B. Psychology: 21 Cape Cod Lane, TIMOTHY J. HARRINGTON A.B. Economics, Accounting: ll Virginia Hill Road, Holden, Massa- chusetts: Dean's List 3: Lacrosse: Rug- by: Economics Club: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Intramurals: Yacht Club: Student Government. GEORGE C. HEITZMAN A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 2002 Kearney, New Jersey. Milton, Massachusetts: Junior Year Euclid Avenue, Syracuse, New York: Abroad: Student Government, Psi Chi: Senior Brother Program: Rug- by. WILLIAM HERMAN WILLIAM JOSEPH HICKEY SEAN THOMAS HIGGINS A.B. Economics: 129 Webb Street, A.B, Sociology: 166 Church Street, Weymouth, Massachusetts: Ski Team, Saratoga Springs, New York: Dean's List 3: Sociology Club: Alpha Kappa Delta, Treasurer: Judo Club: Senior Brother Program, A.B. History: 4 Fairview Avenue, East Williston, New York: Semper Fidelis Society: Varsity Football: Emerald Shield Society: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Rugby. RICHARD J. HODGSON A.B. English: 814 East Phil Ellena Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Senior Brother Program, Co-Chairman: Knights of Columbus: Crew. ROBERT MICHAEL HOWARD A.B. Economics: 12 Pwehurst Street, Trumbull, Connecticut: Junior Year Abroad: Crusaden' Swimming Team. KEVIN MICHAEL HUME A.B. English: 60 Maple Avenue, West- bury, New York. JAMES LAWR ENCE IMSE A.B. Modern Languages: 19 Myrtle Street, Westboro, Massachusetts: CCB of D Fine Arts Committee: Crusaden' Purple Patcherg Fenwick Theatre. JAMES MICHAEL HOGAN A.B. English: 72 High Street, Exeter, New Hampshire: Dean's List 3: Stu- dent Government: Limbo: Married Students Association, Director. DAVID MICHAEL HOYE A.B. History, Pre-Medical: 32 Cedar Street, Taunton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Sailing Club: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Senior Brother Program. GLENN W.S. HUMPHREYS A.B. English: 685 Morris Street, Albany, New York: Glee Club, General Manager: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals. JAMES PAUL JALIL A.B. Economics: 255 Graphic Boule- vard, New Milford, New Jersey: Worcester Area Big Brother Program: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Young Demo- crats: Student Government: Intra- murals. MIKE JOHNSON HOOVER A.B. English: 57 Plymouth Drive, Scarsdale, New York: Fenwick Theatre, President: Limbo, Public Re- lations: Student Lecture Series, Chair- man: WCHC, Business Manager: Sanctuary Society, Lector: NROTC: Married Students Association. JOHN K. HUGHES A.B. History: 2021 Center Street, Northbrook, Illinois: Dean's List 1,2,3: Fenwick Scholar: History Student Ad- visory Committee: Crusader, Editorial Board: Hanify Lecture Committee: Cross and Scroll Society: Senior Brother Program. JOHN PAU L HUSSEY A.B. History: 929 Sheridan Road, Wil- mette, lllinois: Student Government: Resident Assistant. PIERRE DAVID JARRY A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 3 Elnora Drive, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Biology Society: Gun Club. JOHN M. HORAN A.B. Political Science, Pre-Medical: 101 Knollwood Road, Rockville Centre, New York: Dean's List 1,2,3: Honors Program: Intramurals. JOHN P. HUGHES A.B. Economics: 41 Garfield Street, Springfield, Massachusetts: Varsity Tennis Team, Co-Captain. LAWRENCE MICHAEL IACOI A.B. History: 22 Linden Street, Wes- terly, Rhode lsland: Dean's List 2,35 Assistant Head Resident Assistant: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Varsity Track: Purple Key Society: History Academy: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Rhode Island Club: Rugby: Intramurals. MICHAE L D. JEANS A.B. Mathematics: North Main Street, Plaistown. New Hampshire: Dean's List 1,2,3: Head Resident Assistant: Senior Brother Program: Alpha Sigma Nu: Pi Mu Epsilon: Mathematiw De- partment Advisory Boardi Junior Prom Committee: Mathematics Club: Intramurals. I ' f'5 Chairrrdn. V 'X ll , f ,L 'IQ . A.. AVm L.wWLQg5Haun1.q MHOL 1' A 3-sB'RPEQ '25aiP19?9t2Q2i!:sxQ4Q 6:uQIE5'BF5?PlV' us9'SiTB6'imZ- wcbrziefqf-Qaeiz-1m5AT2iPfaaE. .Givens Sociefw- bPL'Ch CCE -J! 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P5 T55 1!-- REBEL , . ,-XL --:- .' - ' gp I M ,N,: 1 1 '. .,'g3 gi 1Ly Wangsser, as-.ur Club: lnmingtional 1 Presndem. Sam Thavvus Mare Legal Socielyg -Guess -Quin: Club. 'mmm Clutx 4Fnm-:ing ' U' A ' . 45, . . 1 ' ,:, -, N- 4 X ' . Q: E' L' .iff ' ' ' f I I ' K' I .. . ,-' . ' Ii . 'V 4 ' . WGBH m-MAGIQEEPWFP -W vw-ws ' ' BAL-52' ' '1' ' 3 . A rhunus. Emdf'H9'QBIlfm5s'!L-2815? vm:-Cizmcellof: Varsity- Foothzilf'-P415 :pam 9-1 me Memllhgwieltafdad. V. . . v V' 1 Qirx I YM' 336, i-'Q ,, X ',' 1 W. ,.l5-'ra ,-r 5.5 Ls . ' - . 7. , .M , ,L,g,,t 1 ,A,.r,- '. '4 4.1 'aux-JL' .4 451 .J . ,,,, ffl!! soeswr news n.m2alRQll.'MuM nwmesw KUNG mswwv nLrr1,SQ Hmhy. J1:rviI1l :'Xf'Y'Clflb 'li-iles, f ' 1 ' a . A ,ur mv. -'JN T'2.,x:.:f1 --.-r,N,.,,. , 1 A- . , n f 1 , , + F ' , 4 . x .Q 9 Y x 1 1 G wi f 57 f 1 ' s 1+-. . 1 ' 1 , ww .FM I... . ,n .. .- , ,L An nygkun Mg -,,. - . - r Q, qwq .xt , 9- ? ' -M9 ' M' ?' 1' Y ' 5, fvz:-.F Yv.ll, , -5721 -A . -fimmoii qfl.uoY :duID N ',,a gf, .Fl DAVID V. JENNINGS, III A.B. Economics: 3275 North Hackett Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Eco- nomics Club: Saint Thomas More Pre- Legal Society: James Madison Society: Young Republicans, Secretary: Junior Prom Committee: Rugby: Squash: Yacht Club. DOMINIC JAMES KEATING A.B. Classics: 1516 Jefferson Avenue, Dunmore, Pennsylvania: Eta Sigma Phi, Secretary: Sanctuary Society: Stu- dent Government: Co-Ed Week: Mar- ried Students Union: Intramurals. ROBERT O. KELLEY, Il A.B. Political Science: 56 Arah Street, Manchester, New Hampshire: Dean's List 3: Intramurals: Junior Prom Com- mittee, Homecoming Queen Commit- tee: SPUD: Yacht Club: Young Democrats, Italian Club, MICHAEL ANTHONY KELLY A.B. History: 21 Ricker Terrace, New- ton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,3: Alpha Sigma Nu: History Academy, President 4: Young Democrats, Crusader: Saint Thomas More Pre- Legal Society. STEPHEN JUTRAS A.B. History: 87 Pleasant Street, Cran- ston, Rhode lsland: Senior Brother Program: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Varsity Track. THOMAS J. KEEFE A.B. Physics: 15 Midland Drive, Wal- tham, Massachusetts. THOMAS J. KELLEY A.B. Mathematics: 16 Marion Avenue. Millbury, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Senior Brother Program. PAUL F. KELLY A.B. Political Science: 18 Leslie Court, Londonville, New York. JAMES JOSEPH KANE A.B. Economics, Accounting: 6127 Forest Glen Avenue, Chicago, Illinois: Dean's List 2,3,4: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Alpha Sigma Nu: Resident Assistant: Student Member, Faculty Budget Committee: Teaching Assist- ant, Economics Department: 100 Days Committee, Financial Man- ager: Senior Brother Program: Com- mencement Committee: Purple Patcher, Circulation Co-Manager 3, Business Manager 4. ' BERNARD VINCENT KEENAN A.B. Psychology: 7 South Richard Street, Milford, Massachusetts: Head Resident Assistant: Student Govern- ment: Freshman Lacrosse: Varsity Lacrosse: Psi Chi: Senior Brother Program. TIMOTHY D. KELLEY A.B. Sociology: 7008 Heatherhill Road, Bethesda, Maryland: Dean's List 3: Crusader: WCHC, News Director: Young Republicans: CCB of D Public Relations, Chairman: Sociology Club, Treasurer: Alpha Kappa Delta: Sociol- ogy Student Advisory Committee: Union of Politically Concerned Stu- dents: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society. DENNIS LAWRENCE KENNELLY A.B. Political Science: 5006 Benton Avenue, Bethesda, Maryland: Dean's List 1,2,3: Athletic Affairs Council. Co-Chairman: NROTC: Intramural Commission: Crusader, Assistant Sports's Editor: Purple Patchen' WCHC, Knights of Columbus: Inter- national Relations Club: Young Demo- crats: Senior Brother Program: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Freshman Football Manager. THOMAS JEFFREY KANE A.B. English: 31 Marlboro Street, May- nard, Massachusetts. FRANK A. KELLEY, III A.B. History: 717 Kent Road, Kenilworth, Illinois. JAMES EDWARD KELLY A.B. Political Science: 922 Remington Road, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania: Dean's List 3: WCHC, Pop Music Director: Freshman Soccer: Young Re- publicans, Treasurer: Senior Brother Program: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society. J.H. CHRISTOPHER KENNEY A.B. English: 179 Ash Street, Brockton, Massachusetts: Dean's List l,3: BJF Debating Society: SPUD: Purple Patcher, Faculty Editor. JOHN A. KENNEY THOMAS M. KERKERING FRANCIS J. KITTREDGE A.B. English: 544 Maison Place, Bryn A.B. English, Pre-Medical: 8348 A.B. History: 29 Heroult Road, Mawr, Pennsylvania: Rugby: Crusaden' Orange Center, Alexandria, Virginia. WOrCSSI9r,M8SSHClWUS9TTS- Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society. DAVID KOLICK A.B. History: 26042 Kennedy Ridge, North Olmstead, Ohio: Dean's List 2: Homecoming Committee: Senior Brother Program: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Baseball: Intramurals. ROBERT JOSEPH KURCZ A.B. Economics: l7W244 Scheel Drive, Hinsdale, Illinois: Chairman, Great Brook Valley Tutoring Program: Canterbury Street School Tutor: SPUD: Senior Brother Program: Fresh- man Football: Varsity Football: Michael A, Cunnion Sophomore ofthe Year Award: Freshman Baseball. THOMAS F. LAMB A.B. Economics: Richmond Street Chesire, Massachusetts: Varsity Foot- ball, Co-Captain: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Emerald Shield Society: Intra- murals. DONALD FRANCIS KORNACK A.B. BiolOQV, Pre-Medical: I2 Bishop Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Biology Society: Alpha Epsilon Delta. EDWARD FRANCIS LABELLE,JR. A.B. Chemistry: 42 Deerfield Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Cross and Crucible Society: Fenwick Theatre: Student Mobilization Committee. DENNIS LANE A.B. History: IOO South William Street, Johnstown, New York: Dean's List 3: Purple Patcher. PETER J. KOSEL A.B. Economics: I3 Mohawk Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Economics Club: International Relations Club, President: Saint Thomas More Pre- Legal Societyg Chess Club: Flying Club: Yacht Club: Fencing. ROGER R. LACOSTE A.B. Sociology, Pre-Medical: 60 Bullard Street, New Bedford, Massa- chusetts: Emerald Shield Society, Vice-Chancellor: Varsity Football: Pro- gram for the Mentally Retarded. ROBERT LOUIS LAPOINTE, JR. A.B. History: 763 Montgomery Street Manchester, New Hampshire: Intra- murals: Rugby: Junior Prom Com- mi ttee. WILLIAM C. KLElN,JR. A.B. Political Science: 55 Circle Drive, RFD 2, Riverhead, New York: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Senior Brother Program: Junior Prom: Purple Patcherf Homecoming Commit- tee: Yacht Club. EDWARD J. KOSTKA A.B. History: 7 Farrell Street, Cumber- land, Rhode Island: Pith,' Fizz, Co- Editor: Kimball Committee: Com- munity Action Center. JOHN J. LAHEY A.B. History: 99 Coolidge Road Worcester, Massachusetts. JOHN J. LARGESS A.B. English: 193 Corwin Road Rochester, New York. I I r I , - .f , , , ,, J f '. .f 'v-k -Ja f f Q' ' J' . 1 H1 H,-1.4 xl, :L r V-fJ!faf'f.f'-+ fi A H.. ,',,- 'u H 'L' G,-.Nl '. f '-.' I 1 v- U 4 u I x 4 a .1 4, ' M , A . Q .' .. 'Sf , ' . fm aww-Q Yacht Club. T DOMINIC JAlvaEfQ9Fj3Qbf!g4g139AwQ3 Guilnilawisswxdfnbnwvtwrxwvmaawcem Mmm -5aN'isbMa1ia's6saaSunnsz Ehio5fffi5mmfSas1w1nearSnDewioSlae df-f-1 Gow-sfweasmagffsomnkwmam Iliad Eeuglews uwon hwlramuv -is Mata' 1 'WL' UYEIHAJ .L vu-noL Qbaofi ffawsofwm Smaspglfsg ani Later If ' f ' 'T5i'be15f1E .1s:Qf:?fdW Lqgx gt Orvlmqmrals' lUl7hX'pfLslY14-,QITP 'NIIIPFL H'5'v'r:1 n1'l'-H19 :zllfiiil 'Qomnm tae. SPUD 'v' :dvi CMI' '-'sung LJEfPs5'l.1'e. IlfJu.,+z ' ' nl: W'- 4-I L MW'lfe'Q9bnm1.L vn-:OL fiminviiswmeb Paw' Muna Nam W- WS'-f'J '1!9n9vl9Ll,4dfHsrisdH NUM Sugfm Nu: HUM-yy Acade-wry, Presiderf 4. Young C191-nngqsg Crusader Saim Mamas M-are Pre Liga! imiarv X X 1 ,B ,, 'ff' . 'M' - v, - J., '-1r.2':.3: '.,. 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Gu-femrvef-n.f.1c+ed tbuemijltaea Today, Lufs :vc Small rocietyz Engiivrr S-xuf sw-1 nnuiaswrv Commune, Cmirrmw YE warm .L I.iiGf1NH03.l Fl MHDL QMBMIISIME HH -ERN. :BMW ::lid9KJ1n1BUW5bsBfi6zfz:l-?I.3bSdil4' 1'?f9iw8flagsJfs'1q Btnmbimruodllwffnidt: Iktirosil -rw iaiiavkzflidttdlsnwhdaif lwllev, '2u5'I-.- Serum 8rm7'iQ1lgB0- gram, l'1:'.u,1.nu?. 1 uw we MABBWKDIIJ. QL NAM 18iYDWL19ooVB67eJ'Uf :Quan ,mm Qxsemqm-nam' . '-mdk-hmwiwnma -aivbA 1nsbu12 vgoluiiB Inblimlg. mebua2 :almumt-mul' :Hannon mUlUOi11lLI3 vgoloi81oi M' N H -Qwfmmg fI9Y'lHf98f ,-' g, QgQ 32,t'7',,b?,m .1 W ' U tv., ,yu - .L - 1 rr- '- '-rs V' k 'yr :TM rt.: , ' , f. . 1' 1 li 1 ,f: '? - , 9 X047 , - 4. ,D 4 .QL K 'f - - ' 1 Q 'V . . ,IN DAVID J,-' V, ,wa 1 1 4, '- ,A ' -, wg, 1 1 ': Yil. . 1 ' 41' if f 'Mfr' yfgr f ambmsctorz Rugwf- A A if-n f. V .,, ,a 4 Wx ,,. f - A,.Q1r, '- . Y. .4 41 v. CWW-55fH- .wW mwv 'A ' amy 2 .6,,qQffnng,Mmy' ' ' 4' f .senimmamlua mmm 1 . H wwf ' ' -i1' 'Q'.!-, af5 --Lfuvg Fzgfgdk -,ij smnpi ' Q Mg A V, .f .I+ ff-n f l o'T': ,f, ,- '1,' gj..,. 1 ,L 1. '.lEf,.'j: ' jg- - I '1,.,, .,xf are '- 1: .,-ffzgfhi' , , 5 Graaff M0ssmmdfnHdhn 1 Pndlen' Swdhmiiowhmsnt. ' 1 Brother Program: -Umbra: inning - .71 , ' k ' 'v' Q ., Q , 1- fn 'E f 'L ,w .A fit, Q :' .? . Eb A -pf, ..!. :LQ ly' uk-IJ, 'Qi' A 4 , .. if: 3 5 ',1'lF 'T '4 ,- Al ,-I -.7 is-A , as 7-31,1 -Q ARTHUR F. LARIEVY, III A.B. Political Science: 410 Mower Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Fencing: Kimball Committee, Chair- man: Student Government: Com- munity Action: Senior Brother Program. RAYMOND THOMAS LARIVIERE WILLIAM TIMOTHY LARNEY ANTHONY HOWARD LEA A.B. History: 62 Florence Street, A.B. History, Pre-Medical: 18 Oak A.B. English: 319 Pacific Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts. Brook Road, Osining, New York: Oedarhurst, Long lsIand,New York, Dean's List 1,2,3: Intramurals: Senior Brother Program. KEVIN J. LEARY ROBERT F. LEGENDRE,JR. EDWARD F. LENOX,JR. A.B. Mathematics: 12 View Street, A.B. Biology: 33 Meadowbrook Road, A.B. English: 508 Great Plain Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List Brunswick,Maine. Needham, Massachusetts: Dean's List 1,2,3,4: Fenwick Scholar: Math Club, 3: Resident Assistant: Student Govern- Vice President. ment: Intramurals: English Student JAMES F. LEONARD A.B. History: 42 Bailey Street, Lynn, Massachusetts: NROTC, Battalion Commander: Rifle Team: Flight Indoc- trination Program: Semper Fidelis Society, Secretary: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Military Ball Committee. DENNIS MICHAEL LIBBY A.B. Political Science: 5 Woodland Drive, Cohasset, Massachusetts: Young Democrats: Lacrosse: Intramurals. JOHN F. LEONAR D A.B. Political Science: 360 Sing Sing Road, Horseheads, New York: SPUD: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Rugby. MATT J. LI KAVEC A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 2063 Waterbury Road, Lakewood, Ohio: Dean's List 1,2,3,4: Fenwick Theatre: Biology Society, President: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Biology Student Advis- ory Council: Intramurals: Student Representative for Biology Curriculum Revision Committee. Advisory Board: Wrestling, Tri- Captain: Freshman Track. STEPHEN LEVESOUE A.B. English: 18 Sheffield Road, Dan- vers, Massachusetts: Resident As- sistant: Judicial Board: Glee Club: Intramurals. EDWARD J. LITWIN A.B. History: 69 Shannon Road, East Hartford, Connecticut: Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball: Intramurals. EDWARD FRANCIS LEONARD A.B. English: 225 Shaw Avenue, North Abington, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,32 Knights of Columbus: Homecoming Committee: Intramurals: Education Department, Student Advisory Committee: Freshman Tutor- ing Program: Senior Brother Program. VICTOR A. LEWANDOWSKY A.B. History: 173 Railroad Avenue. West Haverstraw, New York: Freshman Football: Varsity Football. DONATO A. Ll UZZI A.B. Economics, Accounting: 100 Fenno Street, Waltham, Massachusetts: NROTC: Intramurals. ROBERT K. LIVERNOIS PAUL FREDERICK LOFGREN ALFRED A. LOGUIDICE A.B. History: 33 Fairmount Avenue, A.B. History: 45 Stark Road, A.B. Sociology: 37 Newcastle Drive, Southbridge,Massachusetts. Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester Mount Kisco, New York. PETER BRUCE LONGOBARDI A.B. Economics: 58 Arlington Street, Franklin, Massachusetts: Dean's List l,2,3: Omicron Delta Epsilon. MICHAEL C. LUCIANO A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 2089 North Avenue, Bridgeport, Connecticut: Biology Society: Yacht Club: Fresh- man Track: Freshman Lacrosse: Var- sity Lacrosse: Intramurals. MARK LEO LYNCH, lll A.B. Mathematics: 146 Blake Street, Mattapan, Massachusetts: Junior Prom Committee: WCHC: James Madison Society: Intramurals. Undergraduate Club: Senior Brother Program: Intramurals. GARY FRANK LORUSSO A.B. Modern Language: Cricklewood Lane, Norwalk, Connecticut. ROBERT LUPTON A.B. History: 46 Mount Vernon Place, Newark, New Jersey: James Madison Society, President: Piedmont Tutoring Project. ROBERT J. MADRUGA A.B. History: 58 Friend Street, Gloucester, Massachusetts. SALVATOR E J. LUCCA A.B. English: 33 Farmstead Road, East Hartford, Connecticut: Student Government, Coed Committee: Today: Cross and Scroll Society: English Stu- dent Advisory Committee, Chairman. KENNETH J. LUSNIA A.B. History: 5227 West 45th Street, Parma, Ohio: Dean's List l,2,3: Con- fraternity of Christian Doctrine: Education Student Advisory Com- mittee: Sodality: Senior Brother Pro- gram: Intramurals. EDWARDG.MAHER A.B. History: 1260 Holly Road, Wantagh, New York: Purple Patcherf Junior Prom Committee: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society. ROBERT PHI LIP LOMBARDI A.B. English: 30 Elliot Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List, 2,3: Student Government: Worcester House, Chairman: Student Admissions Staff. DAVID G. LUCIANO A.B. Physics: 43 George Street, Arling- ton, Massachusetts: Physics Society: Italian Club: Providence House, Assist- ant Director: Rugby. CHARLES H. LYNCH, JR. A.B. PscyholO9Vi Ill Bradford Lane, Syracuse, New York: Purple Patchen' Student Government: Intramurals: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Freshman Track: Varsity Track. BR IAN T. MAHON A.B. English: 88 Dryden Drive, Meriden, Connecticut: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Purple Patcherg Student Government, Senior Brother Program: Limbo: Intramurals. SHIV Btviihi V V5P'.i ,' Q, 55V U1 J: LEAMVIAIOUJ .310 IVACI uaywmmamwihw mvfmm adaaamimscmswpeaem .rm 449 ' , adutQ'n6lsaI. Wg, , pf., .ydguFl,a1oms1iO ms .n-U65 , f IEAJHBPWJ .H ZSJFIAHD .IIN hidhmB'4YTUMVmDWW825'.3r1'4. 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Tri- Cnpmmg Freshman Tran., STEPHEN Leyasmnui wagon .mmmaasv mx- nmi'bsMhwsI:L:vmnsL iiellvqatfswdln- gniw1uT Jndmhei9i3.vadkiae65l9v!5ihz2 Irwtren-n.1ral.f, ,yggimq Q, eovmho .QTHBQQH .mQxa4f'sbn:qiFBHafrsvw1Bbhg.QQvm Han hard, an.er1.n,vafszfv Bunn. smnmiqils. . I' V -' .r Y A lx x . fl..-T' 'fy . -.- .'- 1 .Q r W Q-' 5 l, LJ- 'QW .J I ju' f xp, . '- 'gr . f Q . - - 4 N. 9 ,.. 1l', ' V' .1 . 4- . .44 -, f7'vj:E .' . K n h 1 lk ' H' ' X in ' . 4' K-.-,.-L-hs. .P ., .. 1.1 ,FL 1 .- v -1 - Ll 2.3, mppayasnsamwaai , C0mmTi1ad!-'ln M g Educarforr Denafwunt. Sluhht Adwsurv Commiueez Frgshman Tultof- Zrmg Program: Senior Bfdf-h9f'Pl'OQ3m. 4 V ' 'Ir , ', '4 ' ' , . M: , ' .ex f'- ' . 'rf-N .-,IT I, , ' 1 1 1 .1 Lg ,l . N l -V, ' f . --,....: JJ' . .. . ww . Q.- K 4 . , WCYOR A. 11Px'-aBD?l ':lsoil5Wl- A ' fMmsme32fs11mmuhU9w1wMWJN -Hmhmfuliombavz -1sV :sazmssi nsmriamil 1193115 nsfn .alswumswnl ,zezaowsgl Wie .-4 4, 'b A 1, Y . ' - I 4 ' ' . Va- ..,. V a!,4'1-g .'+-1Z. Nm. fl 195' fm .. 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' 1 . i 'gc , , - - .4 1 5 aofwmo J.1asmmeu4f.1gwQmngQQ 2wlvww Gm1riBeH uweiii' 5501534191 dhmindulaaoxsxlhmmdndi: 135594 Nazare-sh Home for BUWQHHBUIBWL hy ek 1 . f wmauamuumaumme eamom mamam mm1msdQeBwmiumgpiv1iizpA9.Wvd Hliifql Id!-ll9Mli:lN3WlUllt3 Christan Eflfountef. AUD BRsA0FSl4hlQJSMlQf9T'Aai3ABQH3'1 rail aPnesC1 :aww maze: 1senimmo3 -a'iis1fTA'5ineBbA v1oQivbA rnabuiz eegmgggl n16.1mMi 1nIaa1oW Qnsmmieln aisliimmog zmswgmq gniwtuf du!Q, 'aydQ .noliaqa uM isqwgaurg magngmggi ' N1 ' WN rf -5. ' ', A v tad'- S' rw fi-'fi r V L53 f fgj!g,gg, u T. g 2, vs ,K , . gs -, a 1 .- Ji -.' -'f - .Sk .-wflwa- JAMES F. MAHON DENNIS M. MAHONEY A.B. History: 3805 Review Place, New A.B. History: 6 Pleasant Street, York, New York. DENNIS WILLIAM MAKI A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 48 Crest Circle, Worcester, Massachusetts. Alpha Epsilon Delta: Psi Chi. Worcester Undergraduate Club: Fresh- man Basketball. THOMAS ANTHONY MARCUCCI A.B. History: 63 Glenmoor Drive, East Haven, Connecticut: Freshman Foot- ball: Varsity Football: Rugby: Intra- murals: Current Affairs Club: Italian Club, THOMAS GAI TON MAR U LLO A.B. Modern Languages, Mathematics: 30 Rampasture Road, Hampton Bays. Long Island, New York: Dean's List l,2,3: Academic Affairs Committee: Modern Languages Student Advisory Committee, Chairman: Worcester Boys' Club Tutoring Program: Crusader: Yacht Club: Pi Mu Epsilon, Sharon, Massachusetts. JOHN T. MALONEY A.B. History: 10 Northern Court, Troy, New York: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Rugby: Freshman Track: 1843 Club, Trustee: Senior Brother Olympics, Co-Chairman. THOMAS R. MARTELL, JR. A.B. Fine Arts: 242 Pleasant Street, Concord, New Hampshire. JAMES MASCIARELLI A.B. Psychology: 12 Granger Road, Westboro, Massachusetts: Worcester Undergraduate Club: SPUD: Freshman Wrestling: Varsity Wrestling. PAUL M. MAHON EY A.B. English: 3530 39th Street NW, Washington, D.C.: Dean's List 1,2: Fenwick Theater: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Student Govern- ment: Intramurals. CHAR LES ANGE LO MANGANO A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 11 Stebbins Drive, Tuckahoe, New York: Dean's List 3: Alpha Epsilon Delta, Psi Chi: Psychology Student Advisory Committee: Biology Society: Senior Brother Program. ARTHUR N. MARTIN, JR. A.B. History: 101 North 18th Street. East Orange, New Jersey: Curriculum Committee: Academic Affairs Com- mittee: Resident Assistant: Presidents Council: Martin Luther King Scholar- ship Committee: Film Committee: Senior Brother Program: Student Government: Black Students Union, Chairman: Varsity Cross Country: Var- sity Track, Co-Captain. JAM ES ROBERT MATTHEWS A.B. English: 1242 Southampton Road, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Academic Affairs Committee: Senior Brother Program, Co-Chairman: Var- sity Crew: Student Government: Limbo Players. PHILIP ANDREW MAHONEY A.B. Economics: 29 Lothrop Street, Beverly, Massachusetts: Young Repub- Iicans: Senior Brother Program. WILLIAM PHILLIP MARA,JR. A.B. History, Pre-Dental: 24 Oscar Street, Stamford, Connecticut: Clark House Social Committee: Knights of Columbus: Soccer Team, Captain: Intramurals, THOMAS PHILIP MARTIN A.B. Classics: 19193 Montrose, Detroit, Michigan: Dean's List 1,2,3: Honors Program: Purple Patchen' Eta Sigma Phi: P.A.S,O.: Intramurals. JOHN BOSSIDY MAYOTTE, JR. A.B. Political Science: 79 Maplewood Terrace, Springfield, Massachusetts: Student Government: Varsity Tennis: CCB of D Fine Arts Committee. EDWARD F. MCCARTHY, JR. A.B. Mathematics: 180 Manchester Road, River Edge, New Jersey: Holy Cross Band, Secretary: Worcester Intercollegiate Symphonic Band: Senior Brother Program: AFROTC. MICHAE L FOLEY MCGANN A.B. History: 105 Spring Garden Street, Hamden, Connecticut. GEORGE MCGUANE A.B. History: 95 Glenwood Street, Lowell, Massachusetts: NROTC, Mili- tary Weekend Publicity Chairman: Lowell Club, President: Purple Patcherg Crusader: WCHC: Student Government Athletic Affairs Commit- tee: intramural Football Commis- sioner: Freshman Baseball: Lacrosse. JAMES F. McMANUS,JR. A.B. History: 23 Miller Road, Farm- ingdale, New York, TERENCE P. MCCARTHY A.B. Political Science: 302 Village Drive, Syracuse, New York: Dean's List 3: Student Government: Intra- murals, GREGORY J. MCGARRY A.B. English: 47 Continental Road, Schenectady, New York: Resident As- sistant: Intramurals: Clark House Public Relations: Junior Year Abroad: Purple Patcherg German Club, GEORGE HUGH MCKENNA A.B. Economics: 23 Old Towne Road, Lynnfield, Mass.: Economics Club: St. Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Young Democrats: Senior Brother Pro- gram. JOHN H. MCMANUS A.B. English, Pre-Med: 5602 Parkston Road, Washington, D.C. TIMOTHY F. MCCARTHY A.B. Economics, Accounting: 25 Abington Street, Worcester, Massachu- SSIIS. JOSEPH THOMAS MCGAR RY A.B. Modern Languages: 18 Whitman Street, Bloomfield, New Jersey: Dean's List l,3,4: Student Government: Registration Committee, Chairman: Varsity Wrestling: Varsity Lacrosse: BJF Debating Society: Student Activi- ties Committee. WI LLlAM P. MCKENNA A.B. Economics, Accounting: 17534 Corinthian Drive, Encino, California: Economic Student Advisory Commit- tee: Economics Curriculum Commit- tee: Economics Club. PAU L THOMAS MCNAUGHTON A.B. Economics: 137 North Court, Roslyn Heights, Long Island, New York: Resident Assistant: NROTC: Trident Society, Secretary 2, Athletic Chairman 3: Senior Brother Program: Economics Club. STEPHEN JOHN MCDONOUGH A.B. History: 36 Green Street, Water- town, Massachusetts: Senior Brother Program: Rugby, EDWARD J. MCGEACHEY, Ill A.B. Psychology: 150 Percival Street, Portland, Maine: Dean's List 2,3: Student Government: Psychology Stu- dent Advisory Committee: Psi Chi: Nazareth Home for Boys Project: Rug- by. PAUL V. McLAUGHLlN A.B. Chemistry: 236 Genesee Park Boulevard, Rochester, New York: Freshman Swimming: Varsity Swim- ming: Fenwick Theatre: Limbo: Christian Encounter. BRIAN E. MCOSKER A.B. Political Science: 305 Hope Street, Providence, Rhode lsland. DEN N13 IMYBHUABSDM .L OHAWO3 Qlikmimwwmd? .GBP Mrgdloda-QEHQGSA 68:9 v vazuv. vnsscler zsniehtwcbnelrnbfi AIQq'9ol5d:ni2Q:3ndBmievoEF:insBw2 Wham' Sserfimmdb -1V163ivbNrrn9b '2rgliFlE?.1sbiniS5yoB 101 smoH rhewsssvl .yd TNA- -'-' A-'3 '-NTAHQHUUABSMLVLIUACI 61159 ?'69eehe0- ' 2Vi12id55rWJ N 585A 5I9K'JY, QVQWG' f19!E5H50FW 'HBYBVBWUS umiwa :www f -zgviinwmawennsmrfassq ?odnii.4 C:-s1!ssH'F+' -xaiwhbwf Egnm CNN .1sInuo:JnEI nsi1ai1rD ,,. , M. 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Bfialsaiwhdnefl .oamImiQv3m,8-Qev 'i3B432i,qMJlmw5sHly,R'!l ilH9nYl :msmmev0Q:eneb4Lv3,unsniaaA nxnah1 veifslmuq :n1aie2ifHmQ9.N1iumlfaumQf mme L-fl,-u,zbs1T nsmdzenfl :vfsiooZ 4,1 .. 1VlI94HWllM'VlHOL HAIMEIFEIL .wiNiN1s.sw1wA1vamClB0 4f!2He'1S-yikkn 1943.5 32541-1 dmsS0,,-tbmewdeseum :,x f..wwwaQEamn.Qmaxm li 1 ffl L ,-Juv.: .A-l1'w'5-.rfy -'Orr-r 11'm W 1 1.1 muoaxmom.-wvMoHTwA .wma mmesg rm fmnmmvewaam, vmS10'v1isustf+s2snT15uihuihmQCneih 'r vll'bg Ev.. Holy CFU? CikuJ'17 1.4! N1-u'.agy.f NROTC, F15-gist P10 -A -v- Vw-Jffsilfr 'ntsuoilz-gut.: Sym- : ' 'Lug r I . 1 x mu, NROTC. Kngrfnpgph, Edimf- ,r.-Chicfg Senior BfQfl'f'!1A'PfPf3I'l1I Commpnoemqrvt Cofigy-iihqiqlf Unra- fnurals, f' ' X ,I ,A 1, P4m,LaPQUIBU8ilA4UAq -mg .-1l.Q1!361Sds3Yi95 5QuH ,, ww am,-1. cwrmuamsmlw v MA-BWM 4ilA!iR'!M UWAWUHSW 'Snww54mffPiahe43.aeai9ail1! gvqgiaq2:,6g5q4.1,ggS s1oM 'BBYUOHT M583 -sum Logsoidb To dum H013 ytolel.. -aimmoii IBTUITYSTIH' :sa1a19H .alefnirn .NsdPsJlaEE To wnoiz. IHHWUUINQMTVHDUEV BIIESUS' , 5 :tIhl9nem'lli'lI.Ohfl1taI:irItD f .HBHHSB YNEIBV 1ll5d983a , r vi ,FQ f' , ,wif L X, JQIQ-gglfi A , ,, I . bf ltlq i W JAMES MI CHAE L MEEGAN A.B. Biology: 29 Howe Avenue, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Biology Student Advis- ory Committee: Biology Society: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Senior Brother Program: Yacht Club. ARMAND PAUL MICHAUD A.B. Economies: 75 Pearl Street, Law- rence, Masachusetts. FERDINAND MICHAEL MINELLI A.B. History: 6361 Kildare Avenue, Chicago, Illinois: Sodality, Lacrosse: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Holy Cross Club of Chicago: Intra- murals, Referee: Intramural Commis- sioner ot Basketball. EUGENE VINCENT MOLLICONE A.B. English: 93 Barbara Street, Provi- dence, Rhode Island: Italian Club: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Baseball, RONALD N. MENARD A.B. Modern Languages: 135 Worcester Street, West Boylston, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,3: French Club. RICHARD K. MILLER A.B. Sociology, Pre-Medical: 26 Clare- mont Avenue, Rye, New York: Resi- dent Assistant: Student Government: Drug Inquiry Commission: Purple Key Society: Freshman Track. JEREMIAH JOHN MINIHAN A.B. English: 49 Dyer Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,3,4: WCHC, News Director. ANTHONY W. MONACO, III A.B. Psychology: llll Canyon Bluff, San Antonio, Texas: Varsity Crew. JOHN P. METZGER A.B. History: 5555 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois: Freshman Football: Student Government: Rugby, Treasurer. JOHN JOSEPH MILLERICK A.B. Mathematics: 43 Shirley Road, Waltham, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2: Resident Asistant: Freshman Crew: Varsity Crew: Junior Prom: Senior Brother Program: Student Govern- ment. E. THOMAS MITCHELL A.B. History: 223 Edgewater Drive, Needham, Massachusetts: Freshman Soccer: Varsity Soccer: Freshman Track, JOSEPH M. MONACO A.B. Physics, Pre-Medical: 274 Main Street, Saugus, Massachusetts: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Psi Chi: Resident Assist- ant: Crew: Sodality. FRANK R. MEYER A.B. English: 93 Maple Street, Rosyln, New York. JAMES M. MILLIGAN A.B. English: 88 Dunster Road, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts: Resident Assistant: Crusader, Copy Editor: 1843 Club, Trustee: Commencement Committee: Emerald Shield Society: Student Government: Junior Prom, Ticket Chairman: Clark House News- letter, Co-Editor: Young Democrats: Economics Club: Freshman Hockey. THOMAS EDWARD MOISAN A.B. English: 625 Palisade Avenue, Cliffside Park, New Jersey: Dean's List l,2,3: Fenwick Scholar: Alpha Sigma Nu: Sodality: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine: Cross and Scroll Society: Senior Brother Program, DENNIS MICHAEL MONAGHAN A.B. Economics: 25 Venus Road, Syosset, New York: Knights of Colum- bus, Recording Secretary: Crusader: Purple Patcherj Economies Club: Intra- murals. BERNARD J. IVIONBOUOUETTE A.B. History: 150 Gay Street, Nor- wood, Massachusetts: Assistant Head Resident Assistant: Student Govern- ment, Sophomore Class President: Limbo: Junior Prom Committee, Queen Chairman: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, Chairman: James Madison Society: Semper Fidelis Society: Purple Patchen' Freshman Crew, Freshman Track: Varsity Track. JOHN ROBERT MORGAN A.B. Psychology: 114 Huron Street, Springfield, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,3,4: Psi Chi: Contraternity of Christian Doctrine: Sodality: Intra- murals. PETER M. MUDD A.B. English, Fine Arts: 274 Broad- view Avenue, New Rochelle, New York: Dean's List 3: Junior Year Abroad. JOHN JOSEPH MULKEEN, JR. A.B. Economics: 731 Edison Avenue, Bronx, New York: NROTC, Executive Officer: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Senior Brother Program: Rugby. WILLIAM D. MONCEVICZ A.B. History: 79 Frankton Avenue, Brockton, Massachusetts. CHRISTOPHER J. MORIN A.B. Biology: 237 Lagrange Street, West Roxbury, Massachusetts. JOHN E. MUENCH A.B. Political Science: 61OWashington Street, Wilmette, Illinois: Dean's List 1,2,3: Honors Program: Fenwick Scholar: Alpha Sigma Nu: History- Political Science Student Advisory Committee. KEVIN P. IVIULRY A.B. History, Pre-Medical: 80 Lexing- ton Street, Westbury, New York. BRUCE FRANCIS MORAN A.B. Mathematics: 33 Crowningshield Road, Worcester, Massachusetts: Stu- dent Advisory Committee Department of Education: Worcester Under- graduate Club. RICHARD A. MORIN A.B. Economics, Accounting: 28 Inwood Road, Auburn, Massachusetts: Dean's List 1,2,3,4: Intramurals: Omlcron Delta Epsilon: Worcester House Council. NEAL L. MUHILLY A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 18 Buswell Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts: Biol- ogy Society: Young Democrats: Biology Student Advisory Committee. DAVID RICHARD MU LVEY A.B. History: 18 Atkinson Avenue, Stoughton, Massachusetts: Holy Cross Marching Band: Holy Cross Concert Band, Manager: NROTC, Flight Pro- gram: Worcester Intercollegiate Sym- phonic Band. DAVID MORGAN A.B. History: 56 East Genesse Street, Auburn, New York: Eta Sigma Phi: Crusader, News Editor 3, Editor- in-Chief 4: WCHC, Advisory Board: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Emerald Shield Society: Young Demo- crats: NROTC, Knightwatch, Editor- in-Chief: Senior Brother Program: Commencement Committee: Intra- murals. PHI LLIP J. MUCHA A.B. Economics: 29 Yeaton Street, New Britain, Connecticut. THOMAS J. MULAK A.B. English: 187 Monrovia Street Springfield, Massachusetts: Crusader, Film Committee. THOMAS A. MULVIHILL A.B. History: 35 South Well Road Wethersfield, Connecticut. blswsmil -wgiba ,mggmmum monvu :arm Agmswgmpmmwa ioiobz rlemana 'S11'fff!'f9lI7ilmTlDQ nnbmanihsmmna ,, A ' ' F-'.zIs1um , xl 'I 4 , . - I V- xr AFWNL' PAUL QL ql.l.JlHCI - 4 I. A ' , Lam 'W' -'Mi 559?Y55i?95nnoD .nisri-48 weld ffmfwaf- f--'smwruamm agwfmmafeafffswamfrm !effssnn?rQewfwbi9wvme Sam lhofnas Muni- : i 9Wm Holy CI'-DSS C'J'm nf CV. -rw 'nim- mur'-J., fl-1'igf,:,2, l'u,r,2'u,v,. KU'-vr.lf siofev -iz! 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'- sunt qarsnomsfl umm? gvteisw ,almumw -V',f Pf fire'-, Wdjwhf , X .I rrf'i ' l'. ' xl DJ. ANTHONY F. MURI A.B. Political Science: 99 Summit Drive, Cranston, Rhode Island: Resi- dent Assistant: 1843 Club: Crusader. ROBERT EMMET MURPHY A.B. Economics: 132 Greenwood Ave- nue, Rumtord, Rhode Island: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Economics Club: Eco- nomics Student Advisory Committee: Limbo, Personnel Manager. PATRIC K NATARELLI A.B. Sociology: 4 Tanglewood Road, Scarsdale, New York. STEPHEN J. NEUBECK A.B. Economics: 10137 Dallas Ave- EDMUND D. MURPHY, III A.B. History: 1296 Mammoth Road, Dracut, Massachusetts: Sodality: Stu- dent Government: NROTC: Intra- murals: Freshman Track, Varsity Track: Freshman Football, Varsity Football. THOMAS FRANCIS MURPHY, JR. A.B. Economics, Accounting: 7 Walnut Hill Drive, Worcester, Massa- chusetts: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Eco- nomics Club: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Yacht Club. THOMAS JOSEPH NEAG LE A.B. History: 1428 Ackerson Boule- vard, Bay Shore, New York: Senior Brother Program: Worcester Area Big Brother Program: Intramurals. CHRISTOPHER E. NEWTON A.B. Economics: 3053 Dealvan Drive, JOHN J. MURPHY A.B. Economics: 18 Fox Den Road, West Simsbury, Connecticut: Dean's List 3: Resident Assistant: Student Government: Purple Patcher, Circu- lation Manager: Ad Hoc Committee on Hosing: Purple Key Society, Chairman: AFROTC: 1970 Military Ball, Chair- man: 1968 Parent's Weekend, Business Manager: Senior Brother Program. PATRICK J. MURRAY A.B. English: 114 Chester Street, Hart- ford, Connecticut: WCHC, Executive Assistant: Crusaderp Eta Sigma Phi: Emerald Shield Society: Worcester Area Big Brother Program: Intra- murals. MARK BERNARD NEGIP A.B. History: 14 Batten Street, Webster, Massachusetts: Senior Brother Program. EDWARD DAVID NICOLLS A.B. Philosophy: 30 Gates Road. nue, Silver Spring, Maryland: Senior Bel-nor,Missouri. Shrewsbury, Massachusetts. Brother Program: Theology Student Advisory Committee: Academic Evalu- ation Committee: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. LAWR ENCE JOHN MU RPHY A.B. Sociology: 26 Wyola Drive, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Senior Brother Program: 1843 Club: Freshman Hockey: Varsity Hockey, Co-Captain. THEODORE C. NARDIN A.B. History: 27-14 163 Street, Flushing, New York. ROLAND NENTWICH A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 100 Bristol Road, Fayetteville, New York: Resident Assistant: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Psi Chi: Central New York Club, Treasurer: Knights ot Columbus. RICHARD D. NICHOLSON A.B. History: 736 North King Street, South Windsor, Connecticut: Resident Assistant: Freshman Lacrosse: NROTC: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Young Democrats: Intra- murals. MAR K RAFTR EY NOBLE A.B. Economics: 148 Country Drive, Weston, Massachusetts: Dean's List 2,33 NROTC: Student Government: Senior Brother Program, Young Demo- crats, Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Boston Club, Economics Club: Junior Prom Committee: Winter Weekend Committee: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. RONALD JOSEPH NUZIO A.B. History: 26 Hickory Staten lsland, New York, Avenue, JOSEPH JAMES O'HARA A.B. Economics: 11340 Willow Hill Road, Chesterland, Ohio: Dean's List 2,3, Honors Program, Intramurals: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Purple Key Society, Parents' Weekend Co- Chairman: Senior Brother Program. MICHAEL O'NElLL AB, Philosophy: 176 Waldo Place, Englewood, New Jersey. JOHN BYARD NOLL A.B. History, 40 Washington Street, East Orange, New Jersey: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Baseball, lntramurals, NROTC: Trident Society: Senior Brother Program. WILLIAM THOMAS O'CONNOR A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 14 Monticello Drive, Paxton, Massachu- setts: Alpha Epsilon Delta, Psi Chi, Gun Club, Vice-President. EDWARD HYDE O'HEARN A.B. English, 49 Washington Street, Ayer, Massachusetts. PETER J. O'NElLL A.B. Mathematics: 42 Park Avenue, Natick, Massachusetts, JAMES MCIVOR NORRIS A.B. History: 58 Willow Street, Gar- den City, New York: Purple Patcherf WCHC: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Senior Brother Program. JOHN FRANCIS O'DAY A.B. English: 25 Almont Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3, Education Student Advisory Com- mittee, Worcester House Council, Worcester Undergraduate Club. PHILIP THOMAS O'LEARY, JR. A.B. English, 53 Eunice Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts: Dean's List 1,2,3, Honors Program. JOHN PAUL OPPEDISANO A.B. Mathematics, 61 Winthrop Street, Springfield, Massachusetts: Freshman Basketball: Freshman Track. EUGENE FRANCIS NOWELL A.B. Mathematics, 82-22 266 Street Floral Park, New York, AFROTC Military Ball Committee, Entertain- ment Co-Chairman: Varsity Crew, Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, Purple Patcher, Assistant Under- graduate Editor, Intramurals. 1 1 RICHARD J. O'HALLORAN A.B. Political Science, 42 Street, Westbury, New York. Butler JOSEPH O'MEALY A.B. English, 541 Beach 130 Street, Belle Harbor, New York: Dean's List 1,2,3, Fenwick Scholar: Honors Pro- gram, Crusader, Alpha Sigma Nu: Eta Sigma Phi, Cross and Scroll Society, CCB of D Fine Arts Committee, Aca- demic Affairs Committee: Faculty Film Series Committee: English Department Student Advisory Com- mittee, Swimming Team. EDWARD J. OSOWSKI A.B. English: 60 Upland Street, Worcester, Massachusetts, Dean's List 1,2,3, English Student Advisory Com- mittee: Martin Luther King Scholar- ship: Day Student Coordinator: Worcester Undergraduate Club. i9Y,? . , if--4 , .. .An -,. . ' rygrrfvf--1-E 1' Qliadf I ' E 'Ffav?P5Ji A ,, f j' aw ry U W' WNW. Y ' ana' riwnogxgg- W. ,A V 913 ymim X:nsih1isrD-Q3 :v1siju2 legal!-sJ5La1b!y1:asmor1T :hifi -1sbnU rns!aia2A bthdatei BXQXUW .alswumsunlx g1orib5 ersubs1Q ,ROSE 3103511351 AHJ6 Yi GH AHS I FQ msudhecsnommaw owersmsoamn- mm, Rumibufl Wbhk!f.v1rJdr95V0.frueI2ITBx Calm Ensrlon: Eumgfxucs Ch.-Lu Eco- nqmics Student Advisor-,' Co1r.vnir1eE: Limbo, Personnel Thzrmyer. F'MP1f'i+' 'MTARE.lA3M'o Hqaeou ,fad-haSosnlf19s9af Fha Jifsmgni Bam. siiyfshdeofesssovvwsm .wodwsv-4 suse -019 a1onoH Q'Il5lO!'1D2 zloiwnsil QSSJ 513 :UM smQi2 sr1qIA ',vahszm3 gmswg :vJsioo2 H0132 bns Q00 gidq smgi2 -saA gesnimmob anA ani? Cl io 833 vlluosq :Sf-mimmoil a1isHA oimeb riailgnil :saIJirnmo3 aai1e2 mliil -mol? v1oaivbA !n9bu12 rnam11sq9G .mssT gnimmiw2 Lserlim STEPHEN J. 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Chair' When: I968 Parent'sMleekend4'V 'ness Manager: Brgher ' 1 Ni m 4 4' ' ., -3 u i , gg.-Y ' I 1 PATHIEHIADMOWMOHT MAIJJ IW M.B.:EnibhM5-6194 t, PEW -fIlfuth2aEl1l1f3eovi1eaQ1 .oBad0mdNh :iNB:std9htxsdM2sadeUa1BtasrQI1Bz2x?J!bt: Emerald Shkldaiadiaeww .MMDLQLG Area Big Brother Program: inim- V? 111315. MA R K BUWDNBHCIDVBIIVFI Cl Fl AWCJ3 .russia rmmnaswmsnmpnasrem. Vwbster, MSSSIUWIIJFBBUSGM MVA! Hr-Jlher Prcngrum. E DWARD DAVI D.Nll3D'UDSL FIEITHW Arbevkhiltllrnbbg gfsnmrsnmn HBA. Shrewsbury, Masadausisaslvf ,alairslll 1s11mW J-.1, ' yi, ,I-Gvfeukv 'f rl. fl ' - Q 1 sg' ivfe' I .!, .Q 1, ftb...' , 'iii THE00QfEIrE L10JAMQH fMW'f W?9iH3?5 1viWH5FQ'Ef Fmihing, Neqphwmviw .bnsfihnkrqsg ,. ' If C 3 nommo NSBUKWXCBSMAL HQBEOL lHIrB.w0HiW fDh8viJ Ehiuhbdbniz .800 1B'dS'e5hd3wdaiH6L'QhSi1tlla9108v.UmS: :Elasmamrn WSSHFEQUIQ Akmaol-Ensign sB9l!aaIhiJ8hin6lit-Jqisl' -6Ehasbrml96WghtenfdieRlmbwsiao2 .mswgoufl 1srlro18 1oins2 :r1sm1isr13 u FHCHAR D D. Nl '3AHDlM mm-mmm am miuvmwsfm, South WindSMY D lssistami Freshman Latrxogai NROTC: Saint Thomas More Pre-Lhghl Sociervz Young Democrats. Imra- murals. Y ' ' -s, I ' W- - ? r - 4: if ' an . ' l P , ' ' I ml.. 'ZVIWVL3 V 43 I . I 1 q gg 1 ' ' f 5 I' ,....r A q ,. ' gr 4 ,, , , gf, -S' ,b ' - ' . ' - , 'in - 5 3' .7 jf '--' Qin- lk. Q ' r '?L '. - I 3.2-lg :A ,E . 1-'. ll- 1- LLL.--,Ii 'b ' 'A 4 l L' I an A- fr : T ...Qs ' ' ' A I' . l L Y T.. .4 - 1. J..nf'!annrld'-sh . V 5 . 5' A - ,. . .1 -.- , ,. ,L ' 1, , -- ,, -ai 1 me' 1,45 V? 1 'wwf' ,I 3.6 and Rum Club: Intramural h 1 ', 'Q' L . v.'l'i,1 ' 5: ' ' '4'Av : Pt, .9 gf . r . , . irfq, .N .-.- . - 5 p , ', . . 39352, , '- .0 ' ' -new 16i1Is3mGlx1Ac:k!lSfI11isrl3 ssnimmdi -msvoa !nsbu12 :msigof-'I TSHIOTB nuEJ Lzudmuloib To aidginbl gmsm Isi::o2 SAUQH :hsl3 zmsbiagwq ,dul3 .zlswmsmml qganifnmoii bns ws u.1Am J. HEIDQIHQOQQBQEHMHQL. Q3'1'I V dem Aizwwmenwzrauuea 'nlfaf Llrilh mn-pew muuaaauw .A navara .wia,wmmnaaenanamnil-rape 1aaunuaaweiameauf15rn:q!ppAuaQ ' V ' ' Program. .,.- H. 1 'J , , X f, .- - . - ff 5, - .E-5. I 4 si 1' 2 Q5 ' 53 ?I.,,w. .' W 4 , mow-mm fiuibhanle. Photo Editor. 'I . S ,Z Fisv -21 , ,'L. :ammo , .Q K 2- ' f Q, Qsneimoofvmmvmeurmmw ' , .rmgamsm01Q'mm MHS Svvs-N Omni 30.45071 NAU lwiefsmlaa wr, mu uflltfw ' w' . n. 5 ' I: , I. v-if 'u-..wx6hug- l.-1 -'vswjgkr BHK I gr rqgsimriomn, -Q:i'A,'A .Lg-x A ifffx. 'br vu- ' 7 - V Q1' JflY'!,--1 Jffgugf'-AAU, Y vii' 'AQ 'YW I SN Committee: ., .1 Gammiuw: Senior Bmiher Program: hwamurais. vijw, 'frzml f-JN' 1 ,' . 4 X 5 ' ' TT' . , tgp f 1 gf ax r igs, - ,Wgfr..JJLf Kfjgibgjv an, ' , ,. -- ., , , , -,.....,w1-, ' ' v , ,SALT w V , 4 Ei ? A M 1 I , 1 ' M f y . v- r , - ' .,.v 4- - . .- sltife . , ,f.'3,J,, ...I . l .II :Z I ,'. -5 3, i'4,u-K.'?e' 3 , 1 D ,.,1-,J 3-. .vjhlc V ' wqm+suaa,. . R1 A w w . y ay.. ,v W 3 5 4' ...,.-? K X - duel ' ., V' '-'H I . . Q . Mons cm smiw Pmggqn may om: amd. 5 Q 1, , I ,Q 5 . ,v!'.Q':+gQ h 'Q-In g f,m,4.r f4-41, - 7 -. . J-5, Vw .,. at .',!u'W-4,vV,l .j ,L:Q,3gs.Yg. .Im H Yami-Qwg1vL2:-H N160 Wim. -.Q TT ' ,. . . ,QN 'YiLL . Scgmani .Z-.l g uuw1wg59g?.w'? W' jg Q :- f 1 H1 . gr? ' 7 ' 1,4 '-.4 Sung lv, . v 1.1 -as ff-'F ,jf 2 sgwr., 15,3 M4-L . . .3314 ,uw .- r.1.y4,'NWff'7'J2f' g 111' A 4 -,wr 4-qfn .-. Wil' V . 41.-:'l.vy.Y.w ...K .,. 4. , am- xgwrflaki Q,-' . l m -. U n n m . iffy' 'Vt fiimifv ' r- ' 5 . , , Q -1 K 1 Hd vi, u ...H 'W , 4,5 3+ Wh! Q, , n 6 AY., :D bs' QV: ,I tra! 9-54, a . w. , '-wk -.,.. , Sp, kv. ' W. HF ' L35 1' ' ' a sl' rv vi n ' JOHN M. O'SU LLIVAN A.B. English: 3015 V Place, Southeast. Washington, D.C. ROBERT DANIEL PANE A.B. Classics, Pre-Medical: 64 Engle Street, Tenafly, New Jersey: Dean's List 2: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Worcester Undergraduate Club: Rugby: Track. JOHN PHE LAN A.B. History: 17 Seeley Drive, Albany, New York: Dean's List 3: Economics Club: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Purple Patcherf Crusader. CHESTER R. PISKADLO A.B. Economics: Worcester Under- graduate Club, Secretary 1, Treasurer 2, Vice-President 3, President 4: Worcester House, Social Committee Chairman: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Baseball: Intramurals. MICHAE L A. O'SULLlVAN A.B. English: 6 Hammond Road, Fal- mouth, Maine: Dean's List 1,2,3: Honors Program: Student Govern- ment: Squash Team: Emerald Shield Society. MICHAEL CAVENEY PARKIN A.B. Psychology: 385 Ludlow Street, Portland, Maine: Dean's List 3: Fresh- man Football: Trident Society: College Choir Organist: Intramurals: Student Advisory Committee: Senior Brother Program. ROBERT G. PIEPUL A.B. Mathematics: 162 High Street, Amherst, Massachusetts: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Rugby. ROBERT J. PITOCCHELLI A.B. Economics: 23 Dale Street, Haverhill, Massachusetts. DAVID GUY PAGANO A.B. Classics: 251 Country Club Road, Cheshire, Connecticut: Dean's List 1,2,3: Eta Sigma Phi: Classics Student Advisory Committee: Holy Cross Band: Dance Band: Woodwind Choir. EUGENE W. PEARCE A.B. English: 15 Sumner Street, Ros- lindale, Massachusetts. ROBERT JOSEPH PIOR KOWSKI A.B. Biology: 153 Park Avenue, Dere by, Connecticut: Dean's List 3: Biology Society: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Biology Student Advisory Committee: Intramurals: Senior Brother Program. ROBERT PODOLAK A.B. Mathematics, Pre-Medical: 4016 Saul Road, Kensington, Maryland. PAUL M. PAINE A.B. Political Science: 609 Shrewsbury Street, Holden, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: SPUD, Program Director: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society. KENNETH RAYMOND PERVIER A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical: 67 Crest- view Drive, Southbridge, Massa- chusetts: Biology Society: Alpha Epsilon Delta, Physical Rehabilitation Committee Chairman: A.E.D. Senior Brother Program: Student Govern- ment: Knights ot Columbus: Gun Club, President: Clark House Social and Cultural Committee: Intramurals. JOHN PISCIOTTOLI A.B. Mathematics: 370 Green Street, Weymouth, Massachusetts: Educa- tional Student Advisory Committee: Senior Brother Program: Purple Patcherj PASO: Intramurals: STEVEN A, POSSELL A.B. History: 5 Gable Road, New City, New York: WCHC: Italian Club: Junior Prom Committee: Clark House Social Committee: James Madison Society. HAROLD DAVID PRICE A.B. Economics: 278 South Avenue, New Canaan, Connecticut: Dean's List 3: NROTC: Alpha Epsilon Delta: Omicron Delta Epsilon, Admissions and Rules Committee: Economics Club, Intramurals. EDWARD ANTHONY READY A.B. History: 7 Westwood Road, South Edston, Massachusetts: Senior Brother Program: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Rugby: Intramurals: Freshman Track. WILLIAM J. REID,JR. A.B. Economim, 12 North Ward Ave- nue, Rumson, New Jersey: Dean's List 3: Omicron Delta Epsilon, Economics Student Advisory Committee, Aca- demic Affairs Committee: NROTC: Intramurals, ANTHONY RICHARDS A.B. English: 1596 Rugby Road, Schenectady, New York: Crusaden Student Government: Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Senior Brother Program. PETER FRANCIS PURCELL A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical: 819 State Street, Schenectady, New York: Dean's List 2,3: Alpha Epsilon Delta, Vice-President: Psi Chi, Vice-President, AFROTC: Biology Society, Lacrosse: Senior Brother Program. DONALD JOSEPH REAR DON A.B. Modern Languages: 426 Clement Road, Jenkintown, Pennsylvania: Var- sity Crew: Crusader, Photo Editor: Purple Patcher, Photo Editor. THOMAS H. REILLY,JR. A.B. English, 33 Rutgers Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts, Glee Club: Varsity Sailing, Yacht Club, Vice Com- modore: Freshman Sailing Coach: Cheerleaders: Student Government: Mill Swan Project, Mulledy House Newsletter: Intramurals. JOHN ALFRED RIPP, III A.B. Physics: 19 Old Westbury Road, Old Weastbury, Long Island, New York, Physics Society: Student Evalua- tion Committee, Senior Brother Program: Rugby: Freshman Crew. ROBERT STEARNS OUINN A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical, 23 Yorktown Drive, Springfield, Massa- chusetts: Dean's List 3: Biology Society: John Augustus Hall Program: Senior Brother Program, Varsity Crew. KEVIN FRANCIS REED A.B. English: 3050 Foxhall Road, North West, Washington, D.C.: Dean's List 3: Resident Assistant, Student Government, Academic Evaluation Re- port, Associate Editor: 125th Anniver- sary Committee, Student Services Committee: Senior Brother Program, Intramurals. LOUIS HENRY REISS A.B. Biology: Hickory Lane, Gates Mills, Ohio: AFROTC: Biology Society, Alpha Epsilon Delta: International Re- lations Club, Senior Brother Program: Holy Cross Band. FREDERICK PETER RIVARA A.B. Biology: 40 Doughty Boulevard, Lawrence, New York: Alpha Epsilon Delta, Alpha Sigma Nu, Biology Society, Yacht Club. THOMAS J. RAFFERTY, Ill A.B. Economics: 11 Flagg Street, Worcester, Massachusetts, Dean's List 3, Intramurals: Worcester Club. DAVID EDMUND REGAN A.B. English: 131 Cedar Street, Wallingford, Connecticut, Freshman Baseball, Rugby: Intramurals, Emerald Shield Society, Secretary: Married Stu- dents Asociation. EDWARD C. REUTEMANN A.B. Economics, 94 23rd Street, Troy, New York: Freshman Hockey Varsity Hockey: NROTC: 1843 Club Secretary 3, President 4. FRANK L. ROBILOTTO A.B. English, 475 Veterans Highway Smithtown, New York. I 1 ' Q 'YJ ' W F' V- 'Y ', ' 'P' , T 'N - ff 4 1- . . 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'Y A - -V -pf '- - F ,Winsor 2 . 11, -f ur Fishman Football, , .- , ' ' 1 Man Q. sums 334-HP-H3 saws, .mlm 'smuryif rmimnepil nHaB. NWS, . . M nA :ansoilduqeFl gnuoY acrnsmmaxmw -mf! -neurons 1nineZ4h5ii1ksa1T ,dmv .msg .W .fx- , 1 D 'tvs new a rw MMSH 3383191-ZAMQHT wis3.asvb1Q1Maae9LmsBlmI1f1MH-'A -HM? gv1ei::o2 legal-919 s1oM, aemOr1T io airiginil ugbgauw 'AQIMBQS nsiIai1riD Yo YIiff1BIS'ITl'303i iqudrnualbw -1sV qQnimmiw8 nsmdaefifl :enilirzna gduI3 griilis2 znistqsll ,gnimmiwa vm .alqwumsfbfni Rosen G THA mu, 095.54-vswweamufswniqwsiadh mme 15855 IEHIEF' M89 'UWGF ' HRM? GWRU-D2 gmswgmfl 19113018 1oins2 :mem .als-vumsunl :ainnsT vxiewsv zrnsbiasff fivzk 4-. 6,3 67.2 l f..Lii.,v 1-1 '1'f,u - iff- .7 F '1 L v . 'Tag , 5 1? , . - 1, X ,F .. . . .V I' A M ' Y 44 , :Jar JOSEPH F. ROGERS A.B. English, 1 Wabash Avenue, Worcester, Massachusetts, SPU D. JAMES CHAR LES RYAN A.B. Economics, 11 Diana Drive. Canton, Massachusetts, Student Government: Young Republicans, Art Club, Treasurer, Senior Brother Pro- gram, THOMAS PIERCE RYAN A.B. English, 237 Rockingstone Ave- nue, Larchmont, New York, Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, Purple Patcherg Crusaden Knights of Columbus, Contraternity of Christian Doctrine, Freshman Swimming: Var- sity Swimming, Captain, Sailing Club, Intramurals. ARTHUR GENE SCHICK A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical, 1190 Van Curler Avenue, Schenectady, New York, Alpha Epsilon Delta: Biology Society: Nazareth Big Brother Pro' gram, Senior Brother Program, Squash, President, Varsity Tennis, Intramurals. PETER P. ROJCEWI CZ A.B. Sociology? 135 Endicott Street, Worcester, Massachusetts, WCHC, Sports Director, Alpha Kappa Delta. Secretary: Sociology Club: Sodality: Purple Patcher,' Worcester Club: Senior Brother Program. JAMES FRANCIS RYAN, JR. A.B. History, 111 Fairview Avenue. Jersey City, New Jersey, Rugby. Young Democrats, Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, NROTC2 Senior Brother Program, Lehy House Social Committee. WILLIAM ANTHONY SANTULLI A.B. History, 79 Stratford Road, West Hempstead, New York, Dean's List 2,32 WCHC: Senior Brother Program, NROTC: Trident Society, Military Ball Committee, Entertainment Chairman. Crusader, Intramurals: Student Government, Omicron Delta Epsilon. VICTOR C. SCHLITZER A.B. English, 12 Parker Road, Fram- ingham, Massachusetts, Resident As- sistant, Crusaderf Freshman Hockey, Varsity Hockey: WCHC, Senior Brother Program. RAUL ARISTIDES ROMERO-RUIZ A.B.Mathematics, A.P.T.O. 1742, Panama QA, Panama. NICHOLAS E. RYAN, JR. A.B. Economim, Pine Valley Road, Upper Brookville, New York, Resident Assistant, Student Government, Senior Brother Program, Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, Freshman Track, Varsity Track, Co-Captain. ANTHONY M. SARNO A.B. English, 441 Highland Avenue, Newark, New Jersey. FREDERICK MARK SCHNELL A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical, 9201 Elsmere Drive, Parma, Ohio: Alpha Epsilon Delta, Academic Chairman, Sodality, Dean's List 1,2,3,4, Resident Assistant: Biology Society: Junior Prom Committee, Chairman, Varsity Baseball. JAMES WILLIAM ROSSEEL A.B. Mathematics: 49 Chamberlain Parkway, Worcester, Massachusetts: Resident Assistant, French Club, Crusader, Freshman Football, Varsity Football, Junior Year Abroad, NROTC. ROBERT M. RYAN A.B. Economics: 5 Park View Drive, Worcester, Massachusetts. WILLIAM T. SCANNELL A.B. Mathematics, 43 Iraquois Street, Roxbury, Massachusetts. DAVID J, SCHOETZ, JR. A.B. English, Pre-Medical: 5671 South Kurtz Road, Hales Corners, Wisconsin: Resident Assistant: James Madison Society, Secretary, President, Student Government, Head House Councilor: Ad Hoc Committee on Housing, Vice- Chairman, Student Personnel Policies Committee, Alpha Epsilon Delta: Intramurals. JOHN G. SHULTE A.B. Sociology, Pre-Medical: 9258 Lawndale Avenue, Evanston, Illinois, Dean's List 3, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Senior Brother Program, Purple Patcher, Patrons and Contributions Manager, Junior Prom Committee. DANIEL A, SEELIVIAN A.B. Economics, Accounting, 911 East Circle Drive, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. PAUL V. SHANNON A.B. History, 240 Salisbury Street, Worcester, Massachusetts, Dean's List 3, St. Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, Intramurals, Worcester Undergraduate Club. JOHN T. SHEEHAN A.B. Sociology, 3400 Marvine Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania, Junior Prom Committee, Senior Brother Program, Student Government. JOHN M. SCHWARZ RICHARD W. SCULLY A.B. Mathematics, Pre-Medical, 172 A.B. English, 76 Abbott Road, Washington Street, Norwich, Con- Dedham, Massachusetts. necticut, Knights of Columbus: Intra- murals. RICHARD THOMAS SERVICE A.B. History, 215 Adams Street, Brooklyn, New York, Glee Club, Publicity Director: Purple Patcher, Graduate Editor, Purple Key Society. JAMES BRIAN SHARP A.B. Political Science, 154 Wat Pros- pect Street, Waldwick, New Jersey, Senior Brother Program, Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, Intramurals, Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball. TIMOTHY O'GRADY SHEEHAN A.B. Political Science, 28 Dogwood Drive, Easton, Connecticut. ROBE RT S. SEWARD A.B. History, 17 Stonehenge Rockville Center, New York, national Relations Club, 1843 Club, Worcester Undergraduate Club, by, Intramurals. CHARLES ALBERT SHAW Rug- ROBERT J. SECATORE A.B. History, 587 Washington Avenue, Chelsea, Massachusetts, Biology Society, Gun Club, Biological Journal Committee, Senior Brother Program, Freshman Football, MARK C. SHACK Road, A.B. History, 10 Valley Road, Saint Woburn, Massachusetts. Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, Inter- TIMOTHY SHEA A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical, 240 A.B. Mathematics, 93 Burncoat Street, Smithfield Road, North Providence, Rhode Island. THOMAS J. SHORT A.B. Economics, 1610 Melrose Ave- nue, Havertown, Pennsylvania, Stu- dent Government Athletic Affairs Commission, Vice-Chairman, NROTC, Drill Team Commander, Semper Fidelis Society, Economics Club, Young Democrats, Sodality Mission Drive, Co-Chairman, Military Ball, Senior Brother Program, Philadelphia Club, Varsity Cross Country, Varsity Track. Worcester, Massachusetts. ROBERT GREGORY SIMMONS A.B. History, 314 Vesta Court, Ridge- wood, New Jersey, Intramurals, Senior Brother Program, International Rela- tions Club, Bridge Club, New Jersey Club. . of . .., W J- nw'-w , -1 v- 1 . . . 4,915-ff, 55:5 ST, 33, - V-Li ,T . . L: ' 'A-52. '.V V --ii i ,f ,j, - E. , UQ. 1.. Yun., A .N ...Ely , , ,f,x, 3 4- . I n-4 , 5 lui.. f gf ? Burp wd rcds1Hfi5. Q, . f Q, V3 44 lsmuol. Isoigolziiil' : um -nuii 322:02 Sports Diremori Alpha :ms1go1'l wsd1o18 1oinaB tsattirfarviuii .nsdmoq nsmnmfl Jw--in w UUA -LQL. 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T!-AQKEEQMHRMMQW-'MA Mvfavfnmamww'-Wwma Q sw 9 amP?i'h5fiaaSA?rS5CYB1R5ib'1'EH- Gow.-mn-emg Hnchw Tue-n,f apr: Your-3 DE1'i0 ,fSlSQ lntrbfflufdi MANY. t. iUOf5g3l0,-F2 -Ljgggggn- xgfam1m ,. .mm uw sw11rmq1gu'W Qnawanfr' M:?Pf'1B'J' wemsa Jadm Pwfisfgemwfefbiuiim' ffscwsmnaiaamawriqrnsmwwsmwm QAM' amwifsusvw-f, -.iRf'W:Bn , , TF',safemnw.m51 To wmsswiflg ,ZJfHZJW. j?iH1G?3ii2 -soiv ,duiD 8158! :a125fu11uon'nA .zmabiwdfl Q thi' Uv n' . .Y- , . . 4 - V. og .. 'Y '5 fs1 A 17 -v K, PAUL JOSEPH SKOWRON DAVID STICKNEY SMlTH,JR. LAWRENCE REDMOND SMITH MICHAEL JOHN SOJA A.B. Political Science, 202 Pearl A.B. Economics: 4012 Primrose Road, A.B. Economics, 601 Austin Street, A.B. Mathematics: 90 Devens Street, Street, Enfield, Connecticut, lntra- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: WCHC, Park Ridge, Illinois, Dean's List 2,3,4, Indian Orchard, Massachusetts. murals, Holy Cross Band, Bowling Rugby, Freshman Swimming, Varsity Omicron Delta Epsilon, Student League, International Relations Club, Swimming, Senior Brother Program, Government, Judicial Board, Eco- Worcester Intercollegiate Orchestra, Young Republicans, Treasurer 3, As- nomics Club, Ad Hoc Registration Senior Brother Program, Saint Thomas sistant Secretary 4. Committee, Intramurals. More Pre-Legal Society. ANTHONY SPINELLA ROBERT PAUL STALI LONIS JOHN P. STEUTEMAN A.B, Biologv, Pre-Medical, 15 White A,B. Mathematics, 145 Copperfield A.B. Biol09V: 6 Goucher Avenue, Street, Hartford, Connecticut. Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. Worcester, Massachusetts. ROBERT J. STOKES A.B. Mathematics, 455 Red Chimney Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island, Dean's List 1,2,3, Honors Program, Pi Mu Epsilon, Mathematics Club, Senior Brother Program, Fenwick Scholar. LAWRENCE W. STRANG PETER HUNT STRATTON A.B. History, 4 Wilson Street, A.B. Political Science, 45 Derman Rochester, New Hampshire. Street, Rumford, Rhode Island, Var- sity Football, NROTC, Senior Brother Program, Emerald Shield Society, Var- sity Track, Intramurals. KENNETH W. SULLIVAN THOMAS J. SULLIVAN GARY EDWARD SWAN A.B. History, 725 Washington Ave- A.B. History, 33 Holman Street, A.B. Psychology, 384 Henry Avenue, nue, Wilmette, Illinois, Resident As- Shrewsbury, Masachusetts, Dean's Stratford, Connecticut, Saint Thomas sistant, WCHC, Director of List 3, Resident Assistant, Senior More Pre-Legal Society, Young Demo- Announcers, 1843 Club, Vice- Brother Program, Junior Prom Com- crats, Young Americans for Freedom, President. mittee, 1843 Club, Varsity Crew, Co- Crusaderf Worcester Tutoring Program, Captain 4, Student Government, 100 Intramurals. TERENCE PATRICK STEWART A.B. Mathematics, 15000 Carrolton Road, Rockville, Maryland, Dean's List 1,2,3, Saint Thomas More Pre- Legal Society, Young Republicans, Campus Center Board of Directors, Commencement Committee, Junior Year Abroad. JAMES A. SULLIVAN A.B. Philosophy, 596 Laurel Street, Longmeadow, Massachusetts, Dean's List 2, Academic Evaluation Report, Editor, Philosophy Student Advisory Committee, Sullivan's Weekly, Editor, Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. JOHN C. SWEENEY, JR. A.B. English, 31 Davis Road, Port Washington, New York, Flying Club, Varsity Lacrosse, Intramurals, Yacht Club, Treasurer 3, Secretary 4, Sailing Club, Senior Brother Program, Junior Prom Committee, AFROTC, Winter Weekend Committee, Emerald Shield Society, Purple Patchen ROBERT J. TABACCO A.B. English, Pre-Medical, 130 Man- ning Boulevard, Albany, New York, Dean's List 1,2,3, Student Govern- ment, Northeastern New York Club, President, Alpha Epsilon Delta. Pres- ident, Alpha Sigma Nu: Premedical Predental Advisory Board. RAYMOND FRANCIS TESI, JR. A.B. History, 18 Rugby Avenue, Staten Island, New York, Confrater- nity of Christian Doctrine, College Choir: Sodality. WILLIAM EDWARD TAYLOR,JR. A.B. History, 215 Metropolitan Avenue, Roslindale, Massachusetts! Dean's List 3, Student Activities Board, Senior Brother Program, Young Democrats, Treasurer 2, Vice-President 3, President 4, Varsity Golf, Intra- murals. MARK LOUIS THIVIERGE A.B. Mathematics, R.F.D. 1, Dover. New Hampshire, Pi Mu Epsilon, Senior Brother Program, Glee Club, Treas- urer. JOHN DAVID TEBBEN A.B. Psychology: 1064 West Market Street, Lima, Ohio, Italian Club, NROTC: House Social Committee: Current Affairs Club, Senior Brother Program, Emerald Shield Society, Freshman Football, Varsity Football, Freshman Track, Varsity Track, Rug- by, Intramurals. LEONAR D W. THOMAS A.B. PsychoIOQV2 409 Orange Road. Montclair, New Jersey. PHILIP T. TIERNEY MYLES Tl LLOTSON DONATO A. TOMASELLO A.B. English, 114 Farlow Road, New' A.B. English, 208 Davis Street, New A.B. English, 23 Merrifield Street, ton, Massachusetts: Dean's List 33 Bedford,Massachusetts. Worcester, Massachusetts, Worcester Drug Inquiry Commission, Purple, Undergraduate Club, Italian Club, Rugby. Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society, 1843 Club. JAMES A. TRACY A.B. Sociology: 42 Fairfield Terrace, Short Hills, New Jersey, Dean's List 2, Resident Assistant, Philosophy Stu- dent Advisory Committee: Rugby, Secretary. RAYMOND F. TRAHAN A.B. Political Science, 47 Harrington Street, Southbridge, Massachusetts. THOMAS A. TRAVERS A.B. Psychology, Pre-Medical, 5 Rock- away Avenue, Rockville Centre, New York, Psi Chi: Senior Brother Program: Purple Key Society, Treasurer, 1843 Club, Trustee, Junior Prom, Co- Chairmang Intramurals, MICHAEL J. TERLIZZI A.B. History, Pre-Medical, 6 Rena Street, Worcester, Massachusetts, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Purple Patcher,' CCB of D Special Events Committee, Academic Evaluation Committee, Senior Brother Program, Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Student Govern- ment, Worcester Undergraduate Club. LU KE E. THOMPSON A.B. Chemistry, 77 Middlesex Avenue, Swampscott, Massachusetts, Student Government, Hockey Team, Manager, Young Democrats, Intramurals MARK E. TOOHER A.B. Political Science, 2 Darby Place, Glen Head, New York, WCHC, Young Democrats: SPUD, Senior Brother Pro- gram, Junior Prom Committee, Purple Patcherg Student Government, Sailing Club. GASPER TRlNGALE,JR. A.B. English, 7 Neck Street, Wey- mouth, Massachusetts. f1Si18i1ff3 To idqlfl 1eJas91oW :mem .emrncrw SPEMQQEIMOHT -3 39'U-' 'REf9?VG58'R?.'bQ5fP'LY.5e53IPiim?H5MH+fb EWP2934 A?!!2?8f'iZ'3FP09m.-4!R?ZqmSW3 QTSQSUSM ,mseT vs:laoH :!nsmn1svoD zls1ums11 nl :a3s1:aornsCI g n u0Y r-055 H1 J, QTWRQHOOT 3 WHAM -3f?Q'q'xgQ1SE!vSvwDf'12?3 QSPJIHQMS-Pv WW 995JRWu,1wYwePM-QPSPHJQQOQ P15 M3918 '!Q5f'?g5GN3g'i35'UMmi0: thaw?-4?9'limm,0QQmo1qoQ!BvLcame 9!l5,!i6?eM9m19vQQf1nebvf3f.1a9Ms'N .duID ' at .mm J3 ff5H'Pfi3JfW55!T F'3 '3A9 wl??PP3, 339.292 93. -H-.6 '-li, Y'1rlfv'vx-WZ hd, si-lz...,n, wif.-+ , Swv-:mr nal w'-r '1,I'Jf'I3 V915 3 f,.1..LLf, kim?- Vrrffiqf. - ::las1T nsrnriesnil , .aIs1ums1ml :yd s,--' ROSE m PA3N'9i9hlrTa QV!-0531-W103-' 1129.99 wameam rwwedwgawie Road, KN'ofccsler H5!33mM ' A W RU-1 :9:'df33AMD5R3A OTAWOU -355373 P'f!i1i3F?M .ES1.vf19i5Bf'35n8JrX w1amyQw, Q ,1s1asa1oW :duID nsilsrl :dul3 e1subs1g1sbnU 1v1si::o2 lsg-al-919 a1oM asmoriT !nis2 .dul3 CDST 'mcvuws J. SQHQYQ-RN -A ZAMOHT -mf' fwspsnpwys .wqwwm.A. wwwmxuaa s1uwQgm,myAwe lme-iw? 1vflsQaQn1P'f1q3,a114M?q salsa! -wif +Pve2.9aaI,,v?maPQ w99-f:'aawH- svkfpqlgi UEIHHP . Jmanr- 5' 'vm-.v545?wBfSu5Nxm5mf'Bffg Bw.-' Comm -H-xo. ' slr?-9 7' .M Jo'-on P. SQQBQLWHNAZIUOJ PIHAM A9s9Ga.BmEk? Hr 'islvwndfwlrwaie wiGe3siEf!4i01hEsuM1i8emidBamsH wsvl -zsswT .dulZJ ssla zrnswgouq 'IBMOYIH .191u DFTER HUNT SMEIQTOGIIIT 23-WM ws!! -JP6Iih3r.5V5lieBQ5' 2118911169 Street, Rumi , mv Sigmbakl. Y-JHOTCL 'amor Brother Progmrvg Emerald Snmld Sofiew: Var- six-. Track, lf1lf,mL.raIs. -:mv EDWKWUGWRPB CMOMYAFI s ,axraalfwvaiswt 'd!1i1NF3FfQR'lLQ 1-:Tv re Pre-Legal must-,u Young Dew,- uavsg Young A11-encans 'Of Freedom: Crusader Worn-sae: Tutoring Program: !nlmf'rmf:xI3. '1Q1!!'?'Q9Bw5fE49?lmH6nifjlQ5ueBa9. LI. , , if 'fi 9 5,4 il -3 fl,, . rename . Q ,V an wif' ' mwazg imc mwawyiau- Legal Somew' Campus Cemec Brgard-' of Diietlorsi Conimencemem Commmee: Junior Year Abroad. 9- , .' 'IW 6 Y I . JAMES A. SULLNBWHEIIT .T QLIIHCI -N90 Bhlqhhiflifwibhiukk - ' ' Mllnlniflilkbigit Edstor: Philoemphy Smdem Adfdpfi Com .'f- Hee: Suit.-.affs Weekly, Edilbrj Cannaier:1m,' of ChfISU3l1 Doctrine. .nom c, SWEENQYQNEIT -ASBMAL 9i6mIrqifmCrQaa1Hbau1fl5lPi'fb1mdBp 'v6siNf'fma'Qr!3e: 4dWWr69m5T' m9SfmQ cm, semof swim mgfamsmnvi Prom commune, Amore: wanief Weekend Conmmiu-ig Erriqmqi smug: Socie1v:Palrgfq.PtHFf,,f f'f':',g r M - - LQ . . - ,- -. ,' ...' 'D v' iffy nu 1 y'.. QV' :M , 1 1-ni .-1 A- ..'+ .,.Vf. Y ' 1 'MV' .N nr- s.- -n 'L .V v ' HT W'a'?J 'f'f5f43f'1 a !q--N ' m , , .rf- ' , -- .-fn. - Q-, n 7 - 'll' - ,, .1 ff- ,q ,ibn , -2 f gp ke 'Aff 4, . . ,Q K M g ,. 1 f + .,. Nwff-3 1-,GN '.1 L W - - , .r.. -il -4 - Q? X K .l ..fN 'f E ,iflff 5- E: f , . f1'f?'1?ff:-'g..-if, l' xiii if I A 165 l' u. 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Bnxygnlpioge f-48595, mamma - am192l:m:val3sMiwwgIuli8r asv' zvaslaommsmrismilvzmsmmwoil- --'l--f f V v-'1 J QVBMBDHAMM I-'l vu ,IBB v1s1iliM 19f'f'20'lH' 1oina3. as .- 'J' rT' ,.,QgV PMMEIT F. WHEISBMAL H3135 faidiedhhis-lgQnsNasM ,notgniznbl rrigi-mtlu2t crnswgmq a1onaH 5.2.3 vsbl elqmq :uw smgia mam aaenimohf' 1oinuL :msmmsvoil rmbu12' Mains? :1ns1aiazA mebiasH abso1dA wsav .ssnimmoll gniau0H JOHN FTWHWGVSHGMANHTEMMBH fwiem. HBWQISBE mmvr1mif.:Wn :21wvd g -fvwlm1f8L'suev1Qg aqublfammnami Pnaymipl F3059 1sdlQ,1Hfn00uB3mo'ia.qE1S6wQwcmiunGz lSnMmWSmmfvzwhTfmiQiwnn8- qam, PAQQ, .alsxumemml qvraiau2 MARC mm-1 3355539 .1lm!2EnQiis!Is87EHulB0!2iHlflUW. :UWWiIfMm.:atlllilmI:1MMs Ho H0!!fUE9QBlIf'J51Q4lUlalYB1Kmf Crusader Eaimraai Board: Cammanol- frusmComn1iuee-. Gmc-rman. , , L.. r ' HUGH MARTIN TURK A.B. History: 52-40 39th Drive, Wood- side, New York: Dean's List 2: Holy Cross Marching Band: Holy Cross Con- cert Band: Worcester Intercollegiate Symphonic Band: Intramurals, Referee Staff: Italian Club: 1969 Military Ball, Publicity Committee: Senior Brother Program: AFROTC. PETER JAMES VAGHI A.B. History: 4225 Dresden Street, Kensington, Maryland: Dean's List 1,2,3: Honors Program: Fulbright Nominee: Alpha Sigma Nu: Purple Key Society: Student Government: Junior Year Abroad: Resident Assistant: Housing Committee. KENNETH ANDREW WAITT A.B. Economics: 850 North Main Street, Brockton, Massachusetts, Dean's List 3: Economics Club, Omicron Delta Epsilon: Senior Brother Program: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Intramurals. JOSEPH ANTHONY TWAROG A.B. History: 1439 Northampton Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts: Dean's List 3: Crusader, Layout Editor: Purple Patcher, Layout Editor: Senior Brother Program: Junior Prom Com- mittee: CCB of D, Fine Arts Commit- tee: Springfield-Holyoke Club, Vice President: Commencement Commit- tee. MICHAEL JOHN VANELLI A,B. History: 170 Hastings Place, Syracuse, New York: Crusader, Business Manager: Senior Brother Pro- gram, Picnic Chairman: Junior Prom Committee: Intramurals. PAUL J. WALLACE A.B. Mathematics: 592 Stony Hill Road, Wilbraham, Massachusetts. PETER EARLWALSH J. RUSSELL WALSH A.B. History: 90 Randall Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: NROTC, Worcester Undergraduate Club. A.B. Sociology: 6 Sylvan Road, Beverly, Massachusetts: Student Government: Freshman Hockey: Var- sity Hockey, WILLIAM M. VACCA A.B. English, Pre-Medical: 1033 Avon Road, Schenectady, New York: Purple Key: Northeastern New York State Club, Vice-President: Junior Prom Committee: Senior Brother Program, Student Government: Alpha Epsilon Delta. THOMAS J. VIGGIANO A.B. History: 108 Pamrape Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey. THOMAS H. WALMSLEY A.B. History: 84 Granite Avenue, Milton, Massachusetts: Freshman Football: Varsity Football: Lacrosse, Wrestling, Co-Captain: Knights of Columbus, Warden: Senior Brother Program: Chairman, Olympics. WILLIAM E. WALSH,JR. A.B. Physics: 31 Dougherty Street, Manchester, Connecticut: Rugby, Pres- ident: Purple Key Society: Sailing Club: 100 Days Committee. THOMAS J. VACCAR I ELLO A.B. History: 33 Wood Terrace, Albany, New York. VITO A.VlRZl A.B. English: 73 East Central Street, Worcester, Massachusetts: Worcester House Council: Worcester Under- graduate Club, Vice-President: Italian Club: Holy Cross Marching Band. JAMES OWEN WALSH A.B. History: 5 Brookside Drive, Hamden, Connecticut: Freshman Cross Country: Varsity Cross Country: Freshman Track: Varsity Track: Saint Thomas More Pre-Legal Society: Intra- murals. WALTER CHARLES WANCZYK, JR. A.B. Economics: 93 Bay Road, Hadley, Massachusetts: 1843 Club: Freshman Baseball, PAUL BUDD WEBSTER ROBERT E.WELLlNGTON FRANK J.WERBER ROBERT C. WERCKLE A.B. Physics, 11119 Pine Street, A.B. History, School Street, North A.B. English, 87 Beach Road, Great A.B. History, 430 East 20Street, New Lynnwood, California, Glee Club: Woodstock, New Hampshire, Fenwick Neck, New York, Dean's List 2,3, York, New York, Kelly Square Paks, Kimball Menu Committee, Chair- Theatre. Junior Year Abroad, Limbo Players. Project. man, Limbo. CHARLES STEPHEN WHELAN,JR. ALAN JOHN WHITE ELLIOTTJEROME WHITE EMMETT P.WHlTE A.B. Sociology: 425b Salisbury Street, A.B. English, 17 Chadwick Street, A.B. Economics, Worcester Road, A.B. History, 39 Knowles Road, Wor- Worcester, Massachusetts, Dean's List Worcester, Massachusetts, Dean's List South Barre, Massachusetts, Dean's cester, Massachusetts. 3, Academic Affairs Committee, Stu- 1,2,3. List 3, Math Club, Economics Club. dent Activities Committee, Sociology Student Advisory Committee, Fine Arts Student Advisory Committee, Sociology Club, President. MlCHAELJ.WHITEHOUSE RICHARD H.WIDAK STPEHEN R.WlLLAND A.B. Biology, Pre-Medical, 298 Pond A.B. Psychology, 747 Thorndale A.B. History, 29 Cleveland Avenue, Street, Braintree, Massachusetts, Road, Clifton Heights, Pennsylvania. Worcester, Massachusetts. Dean's List 2,35 Alpha Epsilon Delta, Biology Society, Rugby. KENNETH F. WlTHAM A.B. History, 2 Ida Street, Tewksbury, Mass. TIMOTHY J. YENTSCH A.B. Political Science, 633 Washington Avenue, Havertown, Pennsylvania, Dean's List 1,35 History-Political Science Student Advisory Committee, Knights of Columbus, CCB of D Special Events Committee, Young Re- publicans, SPUD, Economics Club. GREGORY P. YORK A.B. Economics, Accounting, 34 Bay View Drive, Portland, Maine, Junior Prom Committee, Homecoming Com- mittee, Knights of Columbus, Yacht Club. JOHN F. Wl LSON A.B. Psychology, 10008 Clair, Sun City, Arizona, Dean's List 1,2,3, Special Studies Program, Fenwick Scholar, Psi Chi, Psychology Student Advisory Board, Senior Brother Pro- gram, PASO. MARC RICHARD YOUNG A.B. English, 6755 Hudson Parkway, Cincinnati, Ohio, Dean's List, 1,2,3, Honors Program: Varsity Tennis, Crusader Editorial Board, Commence- ment Committee, Chairman. g Mmmrv aan, -Similar 510915 U4 ' A ' A ' ..,' if Q' ' , ' Q12 R 4-was vacuum A Uiayama Kinsmgwr-. N 'waM 1,23 Htnnm PYUQPBNX Fulilfrlyfl Nfsmone-S. Alpha Sigrwa Pin: Purpui Key Sonia-H, Stu-Jem C54-we-rnrr-dv. Junior Yam Abram, Rvaz-dam Assrstabl. H0n,g5e'1g!2Ov,n !ltE8s L PIE!-mi T':i'A+xDii6:M0ggQW1q W-'QL mi .ibn 'sonar mbudfsva Mem Qssrf-rzrlfewisamw. zaivifwusvrts 555515165919 Y eansnrz-LS :SSW Qnmfienaiwz?-ndihse zb4daB? Sinai-:HA Sw:is'I','. lflif-0'1L'l'fv-li -QZAQ :mme F5 ff H EF-8lI'U9'M-EPBIAHDIH nam namwsnmpweaipsrmgnsvam Mmm! mana-fsiemmlwhaiib Btmnslwwuuvmfnbilllvimmqnolf -eonsmmo3 Zliisoi lihfnibil WBVAUWQ .nsrmisflb ,ssnimmuii mum , -f fa'r ri ' . 014 . ,I . f..x . ,ly 4 C . V J. . 511+ 4 'TJ ':t'34?v l- fr. '4 4 A . J xg- R. - qu wma, Pima: Chaimed: fkl Q, Cxsmrvfmfa ifmarmhmls. ' - 5 el r ' NL A ' 1' S, . PA'-'i if SSA lanhluuw .fmanawffa fsuvmmwsmmssaffmnsadn-A.aib1 Read, SNWIDYQQ UW , ,fig--5' f 41 ' . 5' . 41 RUSS-E'Q,L WANM1 iimmuaniswnmnnqismgagmiihw Etuevgnmuqefnoihvs W' J aihsmaxmu. meow it . U 1- .5fe',! 7,11 vQ ..! ' -vi!! -. .ifdf . . 4 IP ' I 'h MQ- Ml , JJ Q, ' V 2 4 I VVIQ . U . vw 11:35 V - biaji- fig: 1 of 4 ' ' . mu 13: p - 1 V x g, ' , Q- .f ,164 gb f-T , 1' . L 4 J, ' 'B-if .,J,v '-gf-', 'VEQ1 ' - em A 'J +-1 1 A , ng .N ' .- 4, rf., 'tq 331. ' V ' A Q- -f 5 1 -,.' Hy-W 1 , U, -, ..' .- .,'.I .AAR .ju iris' V I' Q' Q, ' Q in V: .V--,,.'f: ',s. .1 ..,. . 1 . - . W'2sJ' J, 4 X 'r 31'-9314. ' M .uw V ' 9 'f.'4T5',.14'4 'L Y Aff. -wa! L 'WfSv? ?e1fGwfMnmHv'1v Fooztaib. Vqgixy Ffnutjgiig uqrosu: Co-Cavfanqg ' Knigrui of cm,-Mmm. .gf-sw :swam WIUTZ ChairrQr1, GYYWQOQ. A ' . 1 .fe.3e.'fT if l 21-31-Q-. .i! B03 lsiasqi aansuilduq . ,L H. I . , Q . ' Qi Q , .Lu I 4 1,31 ,lb az:-f ix 'I' 80 on- ubp ior I will forthwith set down in writing that voluntary idea of a better education, in extent and comprehension far more large, and yet of time far shorter, and of attain- ment more certain, than hath yet been in practice. The end then of learning is to repair the ruins of our first parents by regaining to know God aright, and out of that knowledge to love him, to be like him, as we may the nearest by possessing our goals of true virtue, which being united to the heavenly grace of faith makes up the highest perfection. But because our understanding cannot in this body found itself on but sensible things, nor arrive so clearly to the knowledge of God and things visible as by the orderly conning over visible and inferior creature, the same method is necessarily to be followed in all discreet teaching. Milton i BEAVEN HOUSE The events of this year, a turning point in the history of Holy Cross, brought home to many of us a number of latent problems. l-low the campus reacted speaks for the education and maturity of each one of us. lt was the newer elements of the campus community who actually reacted with more maturity than their campus elders. The freshmen in Beaven House are indicative of this maturity. That house, Beaven, has been used traditionally as a freshman domicile. Lacking in decor and comfort, the house's fiftyaseven- year-old structure is again manned by underclassmen with those select upperclass FfA's whose task has also been, traditionally, to help mold these fledglings into intellectual and social residents. This year, their task was more difficult. This year's freshman class is drawn from that special segment of American society - the 1969 American high school. With what's happening in the country, this group proves to be more capable of coping with society than their elder conservative, and, at times, less sophisticated fellow students. These people, new to college, are mature in the ways of interaction that are so needed. There was no great social activity in Beaven House this year, rather, the social concern and personal awareness of the members was evident. That entire value systems have changed in Beaven is a noteworthy event. Now, the freshmen are fresh in name only, as the year's events made manifest. So far this year Beaven has purchased a spirit duplicator, started a weekly house newspaper, The Beaven VVrag and purchased an altar. Many serious proposals are presently under consideration such as volunteer work with orphanages and preparing the natural amphitheater behind the house for extensive use in the spring. Escape from house confines was a must in former times - escape to the plush carpets and prestige of upper campus living. Unbelievably, to these comfort seekers there exists a campaign among the current house members to remain there for the rest of their academic years. There has been both tension and unity, action and reaction this year, but, as is evident, this year's freshmen need not read to discover what is happening in society or how to react to it. The December events were a disaster to many of us, but an opportunity for expression for some. These newer members of the campus community question everything and trust only their contemporaries for the most part. Special mention belongs to the Resident Assistants as a great part of Beaven House. Maybe the institution of RA's is crumbling, but those in Beaven are faced with these socially aware individuals who are not interested in the values they may have understood to be a part of Holy Cross. These upperclassmen have successfully both led and left alone their charges and tried to instill a degree of administrative capacity in the house council members, the result is successful cooperation with the administration and the campus at large. It remains to be seen if they will bring to the rest of the campus the maturity that these men have lived with and observed. 1 v 5 l r .-gp-1 , .- Q R. 1 x 'S r N ? E K WHEELER HOUSE Manning the western frontier of the Holy Cross campus, Wheeler House resembles many other Tudor dormitories. lts imposing facade, resembling more a Biltmore Hotel than residence hall, is the last of the traditional buildings on campus and has evolved with an interesting history. What happened in Wheeler was more a cause for the attempts at campus-wide house integration than anything else. For the structured type of on-campus living was never more severe than in the old Wheeler. Never a melting pot, the house would acquire freshmen from the lower campus houses and still maintain a stable population of upperclassmen, except seniors. This system resulted in a stagnancy that left little room for house activity. The class of 1970 was greeted in 1966 with the cry for parietal hours lwhich sent many scampering for Webster's Thirdl, followed by an appeal for house integration. The latter aim has finally been effected campus-wide, and has made possible the basis for houses like Wheeler. A certain amount of interior renovation made Wheeler a more comfortable dwelling for the hundreds of Stephen Daedalus's that descend yearly to the house. This title is appropriate because the undergraduate years spent within the confines of the house are still those years of hopeful searching, to come to a full realization of what life at l-loly Cross entails. From the penthouse level of Wheeler, one may oversee the seven hills of Worcester, but hopefully no one will attempt to make his flight from this height before coming to terms with his values and goals. The under- graduate lives spent therein are lives in transit, and this must be realized before an understanding of the ways of house members may be attained. Wheeler has experienced some very major changes this year and plans continued change in the future not only to keep abreast of the improvements being made in community life on campus but to lead the way to further improvements, A considerable portion of resources was allocated for the complete revamping of the social room, The Brickskellar, so that no longer is Wheeler inferior in its physical plant, but instead may now offer an alternative to the mixer atmosphere that exists on the hill. The unleashed ferocity of Wheeler's intramural battalions speak well for the type of house cohesion desired by the house system innovators. In the fall, these athletic, Don Juans engaged the St. Joseph's College contingent. Rumor has it that these latter female athletes made monkeys of our gorillas. Later, the victors were hosted and toasted at The Brickskellar, which was to become a house tradition as the year wore on. And even later, these same St. Joseph stalwarts called it a night in the vacated fifth floor suite of Wheeler itself, Such an episode speaks for the social success of the house. The path Wheeler l-louse has chosen toward a more mature and fulfilling life style is carried beyond the social sphere into the various committees that have been established. The cultural committee scheduled a speaker from the counseling center for a series of lectures. The spiritual committee planned a meal lVlass and a lecture by the distinguished Dr. Preston Ftoberts. That is the attitude that campus remodelers hoped would evolve - that no longer would there be a stuck in Wheeler syndrome, but rather a coordinated system with effective councils. This house retains the old dormitory atmosphere, with classrooms on the lower floors and student residences above, but has success- fully complied with the aims of the integrated house system. The spirit within the house itself is of innovative change, of increased freedom and responsibility. Unfortunately, Stephen Daedalus had no real friends to work out his problems with. , ' Y 5 1 5 A xv- P '-1? to I . ,f - vflhfegt' XXI Irv,-. 'vw FY' FN m S --in 'Wi U H122 1:x1f-aussie l '-IN flfiiii ww HANSELMAN HOUSE Hanselman and Lehy houses are fraternal twins, for they were the first houses built on the hill in 1954. From the greenhouse which they overlook, they seem to be mirror images of each other. Even though they do share the same courtyard, they have grown to be two distinct houses this year. Hanselman already had advantages over many of the other houses since a good number of its residents had been there two or three years. Consequently, there were many who knew each other, and new residents readily picked up the strong friendship alliances. This sense of community was tried and tested early in the year when the hepatitis epidemic broke out. The nickname The Hospital was soon applied after the quarantine stranded many of its residents. This was a situation where the house had to provide for the common needs of its members. As all houses, it concentrated its efforts on the social aspect as the best means to meet those needs. And as the construction of the social room was the one immediate goal of almost every house, Hanselman was no exception. The Boar's Head lnn replaced another,older room and was quickly put to use. This sense of living together affects not only Hanselman's social outings but also appears in the effective, working relationship with the Inter-House Congress, where Hanselman is very prominent. Whether a house can attain a certain distinction after a year remains to be seen, but at least a certain image stands out. HanseIman's image is that of a place of residence for many of the movers, whether in the house or outside it, of campus activi- ties. In addition to the community that they have already established there, these people go a long way towards making the house a working community with the other houses. ln this respect, Hanselman is different from some of its brother houses. From the early days of the house movement through its inception, a prominent desire of many of the students was to have the houses work on both levels. Unanimity or sameness doesn't really matter when there are common needs to be met. Within the community of Hanselman, behind the monolith of the system , one can find the atmosphere of friendly participa- tion which makes the system work. Hanselman, like all houses, is built around its people, and it is highly individual. lndividuality - a distinctive style of life -this is what is lacking throughout the entire system. C3 4 '1 LEHY HOUSE Lehy House was the first upper-campus house, constructed in 19541 and named for a former president of Holy Cross, ln that year, Lehy and Hanselman houses dominated the acreage of the upper campus and were surrounded by an orchard, a pine grove, and some tennis courts. The houses were a good distance from Kimball, but were proximate to the chapel, so that the mandatory seven o'clock mass was easily attended. Through the sixties, however, the focus of campus life shifted, and with new construction, Lehy House was no longer a northern outpost. But it was a model for its four fellow houses, arranged on the hill by l962. Always an upperclass house, Lehy has come to typify the changes in campus living undergone rn the last five years, and as a result, has a reputation of being one of the more liberal campus houses, Liberal describes l.ehy's approach to both social life and social problems. Since compulsory classes were eliminated one finds the house members sleeping later f often as a direct result of the legendary Lehy bashes. The house has played a far greater role, however, as host, This year the Lehy social committee sponsored buffets, social hours and discussion groups, presented old films, and brought noted campus personalities to periodic bull sessions The offfcampus doings also merit the liberal label, but from a different pOlnt of view. Lehy house's associations actively engaged rn outside social work, one of the most noteworthy being the Appalachian Appeal Committee. This group sought to organize a Christmas relief program during the first semester, and to create a fund for support of students working in this area rn the summer, The latter objective is being attained by contacting local business firms. Such a committee exemplifies the goals that many house members have evinced. As the potential of the house system lies in the successful cooperation of individual residents, we may concur with one individual in Lehy who observed that the stability of Lehy makes possible the coordinated efforts of its groups. The orchard, pine trees and rolling fields are gone from Lehy's vicinity, their space usurped by parking lots, The colleges expansion has been completed, however, and the current arm of the community is to increase the Statute of the house system. Here we have witnessed the ideal situation - where the house works for its own advancement its own advancement and that of others, -M rl PS ft 1 iw., 'Str-v f , 5 NS iw.. 17' uQ ALUMNI HOUSE The house is ugly as only an old red brick building can be. Outside, it is a mottled, birthmark redg inside, the charm of the brick vvears off by the time you have trekked up to the third floor. Yet it has a spirit that is lacking in the federal Gothic of the upper campus: it makes up in enthusiasm vvhat it lacks in style. Mostly though, the house is old, and cantankerous, and it takes some time to learn hovv to survive the swinging doors, the hissing radiators, and the rarefied air of the third floor. Why do they call it the third floor it it's five flights up? First impressions are disheartening- lVlan, the first thing I did vvas to buy rat poison. But the people make up for it- There are some really good guys here. There's this guy vvho averages five shovvers a day, and the first thing back from Thanksgiving he takes a shovver. He didn't even unpack. . . .One of Ernie's goldfish died, so vve had an Irish vvakeg about midnight, vve went up the chapel steps in a funeral procession. Gary lan RAI: These guys are much more politically aware than vve were as freshmen. They come here with concern uppermost in their mind, With house autonomy and the llfloratorium, they are all turned on by the vvhole thing. Kevin lanother RAI: Vile pretty much run the gamut from YAF to RSU, and from hedonist to puritan. I guess you could characterize the House as activist. Gary: Horny activist. 511 rp 'folyglyn - uf AKY !,' J W2nn',JVallun.1l !,u,ml1 , fl' - '-ff? 33:1-1 M. v r 'w , -z 6:11 f -Q :rg .152 3 1 l n 1 mn VL.. 3 -run ,ilk 1 L.. ,... 27 'W If 3, I v I 4 H XY pfhx CLARK HDUSE Unlike the neophyte units of the league of houses comprising the campus residence system, Clark House is a symbol of an earlier stage in the modernizing process at Holy Cross. Three years ago, the idea of the socially autonomous dormitory, the house , was conceived with the intention of immediate implementation: amid flurries of flyers, questionnaires and speeches, Clark House was born. Entrance was competitive, and though the criteria for selection were occasionally dubious, a spirited group was enlisted by the end of that school year. The chosen entered their house rooms in September, l967, the remainder of Holy Cross was converted to self-governing houses a year later. In that year, Clark was the only house on campus, and a sense of their uniqueness led to a series of struggles by the students against the restrictions imposed by outside rules. Attempts by Clark to establish its own parietal regulations and to handle its own disciplinary cases caused much campus debatet was Clark, as a house, exempt from rules regarding campus dormi- tories: and, if not, why trouble to call it a house and make it autonomous? In other words, the first house was entering its inevitable struggles with the coexisting dorm system. This Septem- ber, with a reorganized Student Government, brought the triumph of the house system and the first Inter-House Congress. The current spirit of the Clark student varies, of course, with individuals. Some of those new to the house feel that it is once again just another place on campus. Thus the following view: Sure, you can say that Clark House has come a long way, but so did Magellan, and they both ended at their starting points. However, one of those involved at the inception of the house movement answers, Most guys can make their jokes about not giving a damn, but the turnout for social and athletic events always says otherwise. Clark is the best supported 'house' at Holy Cross! Some reasons for the latter sentiment can be seen in the social committee, which ran several parties early in the semester to introduce the students to one another, in the speaker program, which made good use of the Clark lounge, and in the establish- ment of a Sunday mass for late night attendance. The Clark lounge has been a meeting place for many organiza- tions on campus other than those specifically connected with the house, including the Counseling Center, and stands both for the needs of Clark students and those of the college community. As the first house, Clark became the proving ground for the house system that has evolved on campus. There were admitted mistakes and important precedents set that have facilitated for others the passage from dorm to house living. lt became obvious from the Clark experience that the more viable social situations necessary for personal and community growth could only be effected with the adoption of a general house structure. Whether it was the infamous Colonel Casino party nights, or the Orphans parties, or the Theatre Group productions, Clark House always seemed tofbe ready, waiting, and willing to open its doors to the entire campus community. 9 N 4 . . if Q MA- fi-ffi 'f T 1 1 . . .. ii' 'T iff C x ' 'M Psln 4. .l !.':'..,,-N. ,-A 'f .5215 iff ' ,4',,.-' Q 1 xl A A -:px 43: -I-G-,- H, 'Z f-, ' . 1 Kp ' Z:Q '.o r':- 45,1 'RX' 5 r x,.' 5 0 , xx' Q L-1' 'x .......,q--nu 1 , . Yiwu-A ..-- M- --. Q.-f Q N ll' Ns., Q1 -1..-,H -ga-.f - in .4 Qs 1,- 4 ,'r cousin 1. -.-Q ooccoo- . -no - '-1 uy '-'H 2' ,mm -Q WORCESTER HOUSE There are seven hills in Worcester, and this house occupies all ot them, The sizable membership ot this unique house, the invisible men ot Holy Cross, coexists with the campus residences, haunting the campus by day and withdrawing by night. Though they are 1004, of the student body, their isolation has curtailed their participation on a campus where interaction is a by-word. However, with the founding ot Worcester l-louse, they are able to utilize the school and its environs to better advantage, And since the tall semester's turning point , they have evolved into a unified and collectively active organization, The day student's mobility greatly exceeds the boarder's, and provides him with opportunities throughout the area. These are advantages which otter both freedom and responsibility: he can enjoy the social and cultural facilities of both the campus and the city, because he is involved in them both, And he constitutes an historical link with the College's commitment to liberal arts education in Worcester. Though day students may at times seem invisible, they are a highly prominent group. The l-louse has a tight-knit unity that is the envy of other houses, and is gaining prestige as a viable organization. The membership has always been cohesive, as reflected in their traditional activities. Venerable institutions like the Turkey Bowl and powerful intramural teams, have been extant for years. Once combined with their present status as one of the better organized houses, their desire for a permanent meeting place on campus should transform the house from an autonomous group to an integral and vibrant part of the campus. Integral because Worcester is part and parcel of l-loly Cross, as are its residents, the members of this l-louse, And vibrant because Worcester l-louse represents the concerns and the people of a small, industrial city which Worcester is. -Ms- -. -.rf I LM .- nnaq, - - ,-.. X i t Q- Q. -Q. 1 P + WF in 1 Q an -Q Q fx - ---. -., ...,. -...,, Z -.gm -,. .-.-.---v.-......-.....,,..... . . , .- .. -.1 ..-...-. CAMP FENBRIDGE Camp Fenbridge is an amalgam of the three newly renovated dwellings-Campion, Fenwick and Southbridge Houses-which were devised to bivouac the excess of 1969's influx of freshmen. Each exists independent of its brother house, and each is a unique experiment in itself. Campion is that imposing structure on the facing page which has proven hospitable to Irish workers, pizza entrepeneurs and Limbo's hosts, and has now graduated to house status. A small residence, with accommodations for 33 freshmen and a resident wizard, the completely remodeled structure is one of the campus's older buildings, Barring levitation proceedings, the ideal autonomy of Campion combined with its harmonious living atmosphere appears to constitute a successful housing endeavor. Fenwick House encompasses the fourth floor of Fenwick Hall and the entire east wing of the same building, the rest of the structure houses the College's administrative complex. Fenwick is the most ancient of any campus domicile, bearing even the scars of a last-century fire, and has traditionally housed a segment of the College community. Until three years ago, the Jesuit faculty lived on the same fourth floor, moving with the opening of Loyola Hall. Now that 60 freshmen haunt the upper floor between O'Kane and the Fenwick art studios, these upper reaches still remain aloof from campus life and strife. Eastward dwell nine seniors in a com- plex of apartments beneath the art department. Known as the ghetto, Fenwick East is the locus of the campus draft-counseling center and a late-night football league. Its members will scatter in June to such diverse locations as Mexico, Canada, England, and South Vietnam. The ghetto is just a happening, remarks one of its membersl walking in and out is like flicking a radio on and off. Southbridge House crouches beneath the Mount St. James timber line, with the mighty Blackstone throwing an impregnable barrier between it and the campus. One of Vllorcester's five thousand three-deckers, its edifice overlooks the major traffic artery between the campus and downtown Worcester. lts residents are faced with a Kafka-esque climb to the castle, a trek which only the Worcester winter can outdo, and which only perfect class scheduling can facilitate. The house's grim exterior belies an accommodating interior, these off-campus freshmen are relatively comfortable. Each of the three residences possesses advantages for future consideration, and each has more than compensated for a lack of large-scale house life by establishing an autonomous spirit within the College community. The stop-gap measures necessitated by the overflow of boarders have provided ample information for future coordination of offacampus living space and on-campus utilities. Each house developed a government independent of the other and more significant because of its neophyte status. Contrary to legend, Camp Fenbridge is not a Y.lVl.C.A. summer camp. The phrase will in all probability disappear with either the continued growth of House prominence or the establishment of more viable solution to the off-campus syndrome of invisibility. P, ,.,.-. 11 5' - 44 gf-igt'F:f5l , ..,4-1, NA -' 'F . 'S':,Q?'Af K X ., 1 121 ' -N.. :X -yi-5 ,I 2 f,gxR'z'4 , L.,-swf . 3.-if 'ffl' ,vii .r 'rw-. via. X '. fxtw wf-ffgi H1 .4.... .A ,.,,ALikli!.M. - .lr 3? Q 1 1 1 5 . 4 1 I -55- r, L r ,., - 'f ..- -M 'vb' 7 'P .v - '. ' ' if' . ' 3:4 , ' '. T- .a ,,-:',s LV:-0---L. ,- HEALY HCUSE The most important determinant of what a college will become is the type of individual it attracts. The most important determinant of what a house will become is the possibility it affords these individuals to live harmoniously together in a microcosm of society. A microcosm Healy House is. Its residents include Black students, Latin Americans, leftist and rightist politicians, Fenwick Scholars, varsity athletes, and the Lunar Club. On harmonious living, however, the jury is out. The question is whether the diverse groups of the House can transcend the barriers naturally dividing people of conflicting values, to develop a mutually profitable exchange of attitudes and experiences. Such a fundamental value cleavage was delineated by a Black student in analyzing the significance of Healy IV: lt has been often said that Holy Cross College is a microcosm of the United States. Prior to this year, such a statement was completely fallacious - if not false - as far as Black students were concerned, However, some reality was salvaged when Healy IV was declared 'the Black corridor.' The removal of Black students from predominatly white middle-class corridors mitigated the devastating effect of the alienation which not only affected our academic lives, but our entire metaphysical being. This environmental change freed the Black students from the unnecessary pressures inherent in assimila- tion, and provided the relaxed, fraternal atmosphere which is not only conducive to studying but also to founding a dynamic and effective college community. Healy IV boasts of few, if any, exclusive or exceptional qualities. Along with the rest of Holy Cross, we have our athletes, scholars, and politicians. Though college for the students on Healy IV is a serious exercise, it is not considered an end in itself. Nor are post-graduate work or endeavors regarded as more important than living as men. Healy IV students have no claims to perfection, but we do wage an all-out war against the artificial world which Holy Cross inhabits. ln short, as far as positive comparisons go, 'the Black corridor' provides us with a view of life that is obviously closer to reality than that of Holy Cross College, and we unanimously choose the humanness of the other over the material gain assured by 'formal' education, fortune, and deception. In addition, other intergroup tensions characterize the House. Some success in assuaging them has been achieved by the social events conducted in the Lantern Room, which is operated each weekend by House members. Featuring the J.B. at the piano, the room functions as the social center of the House. Its facilities have served a wide range of activities, from a champagne party to coffee-and-donuts on Sunday night. Also promoting House unity are a program of guest speakers organized by a committee of the House Council and the celebration of weekly IVlass by Fr. Robert lVlaclVliIIan of the second floor. Healy House is Holy Cross in microcosm. Like Holy Cross, it is moving, but in what direction we are not sure. 'UE'-1 4 .,f ,Z f 1 ff J CARLIN HCDUSE The cornerstone of Carlin House has a suspicious crack running the length of its ruddy brick facade. lt hints at a past and possibly a style of life that are no longer extant, lingering on only in a number of grey-headed memories. The once verdant Carlin garden long ago gave way to a parking lot: the terrace facing the west has suffered the ravages of time and has accepted the years of disuse with a covering of litter, Even the basement club, simply dubbed The Carlin Room, which once echoed with high-pitched voices, now echoes the occasional monotones of a few professors and students. To discover any vitality in Carlin one must seek the rarefied air of the three top resident floors. By day Carlin just seems like myriads of overheated classrooms, with thousands of feet eroding the steps of the lower floors, at night, however, one can look up to the top three floors and realize that Carlin does have occupants other than the lVlodern Languages. It is a house as well. Carlin may indeed face a quad which is no longer the center of campus activity, but this isolation is somewhat compensated for by the elan with which Carlin residents manage to pursue their lives. Carlin was always a leader in some respects, it housed the first of the ubiquitous social rooms, whose sheer elegance and conviviality introduced the predominant mode of entertainment on the campus. With the opening of the Campus Center that room suffered the same fate as the rest of the buildingg it, too, appeared abandoned and disused. Recently, however, Carlin House has been involved in returning some of the former activity to its environs. Although it is a freshman house, its programs have lived up to the aura of a Bacchanalian grove which Carlin residents seem to enjoy, No one is complaining, at least, that Carlin isn't really a part of the house systemg this is probably due to the feeling of community enthusiasm that thrives there. This enthusiasm has always thrived there - even when there were no such things as houses - and Carlin, living a double life as a resident house and a classroom building, has had to face the problem of not enjoying the total use of its own environs. The dilapidated condition of a building can certainly dim anyones enthusiasm, particularly that of a freshman. This is unfortunate since a freshman house, especially, should serve as an introduction to the entire house system. No one has ever claimed that dwelling in one of these lower campus houses is a thrill, but if freshmen are to be effective members of the campus community their houses must be more than livable. The men of Carlin manage to overcome the conditions supported by that suspicious corner- stone crackp they do make it more than livable. Various living conditions, like Carlin's, can affect a change for the better. Every house has a potential in its members, but the manner in which that potential is deployed, if at all, always seems to make the difference. While nobody favors a rundown physical plant, things can be done to provide that elusive enthusiasm which Carlin House is successfully developing. iff -sx I L ,. k, SW! 7 4 . Y ii r V6 'D x A QV. ,,..'., Y 1 x. N ,4-s- 21 'IK 5 I . ' ' , I QI ,L s Q4 if f g Xa I I -N V- x V k 5. K f.s .M '-1 '- ol ' ii P QI 'r !'.- N 'A ibff MULLEDY HOUSE J lVlulIedy House has no chiseled concrete bearing it's name, nor any patron saint. lt is so big that it doesn't need a name over the door, and was really never considered hallowed ground. The house itself mixes concessions to modernity while still incorporating all the old features. These concessions include a resident house master, Dean Maguire, carpeting, and a certain social prestige as the in place to be on campus. But it is the size of the house which really distinguishes it from any other on campusg sometimes you feel that you need a compass to find east from west. This year, the house tried to break the unwieldly size of the house to manageable units, but the participatory democracy attempted in the fall elections soon became discreet politicking. And as a result, there still remain the old corridors. lvlost things originate there anyhow, lll has always held an honorable place in intramurals, as it still does. And IV is a mini corridor which defines its own lifestyle. On I, there is a solid core of two-year residents. lVlulledy has always been prestigious as a residence, but has made moves to be more egalitarian in scope. It is no longer a stoppingsoff place for seniors, and a few fortunate juniors. Consequently, its country-club atmosphere has changed and its social orientation has adjusted itself. Though it is still a nickname for a particular brand of highlife, it is no longer just organized wine, women, and song. There have been edifices built to house this type of organized activity, even though everyone can do these things in their rooms. Consequently, lVlulledy's social room strives for that convivial look of a fraternity. The brashness and pungency of the room seems built in as a permanent feature of the room. But that type of entertainment seems militated against by the size of the housep and just as the lounge, with its fabulous parquet floor and the front desk, which was always a great place to meet people late at night or weekends, were gathering dust, so did the social room after a few events. The size of the house is the most considerable problem, as a glorified dorm, lVIulledy has all the drawbacks of the other dorms, covered over with the gloss of a few modernizations. There are definite problems which it has to face in order to function as a house, and until somebody comes up with a way to make lvlulledy operable, it will still seem like a floating hotel which just landed on the hill. In EL- a,l 5334 Ill 5151 lm ax PM ll B31 an V E-. , 4 Ili E E ix g ig, Y' , 1 H . 1 t rm X E 5 I5-14 E in 1 E IH , ' ll iw. 5 ii I ll Stills- ,Ji 'LL?'f,'1lLZ 'li b:1'M 'lffgi 'Ii-1' 'Ilia' ,... 'umm ' Oval! v1 Vaal Nw' GI Q'-37 ' -un s.. -W +-Q. ': U KW' Q- X xxx X yr Q. - 'f'-ini, uw Looking back to the spring of l969 when I took over the office of Editor-in-Chief, I had rnuch fear of all that had to be accomplished, as well as respect for a publication that is the final commentary on all that takes place at Holy Cross in a given period of time. But it was not long before hours of tedious debate over concept and format yielded a highly designed yet freely con- structed book, demanding research into new layout concepts, a square graphic page upon which to display a particularly high grade of photography, and an increased amount of carefully constructed copy to provide commentary for the predominantly pictoral essays. As I continued to consult with the Editorial Board concerning the design of the book, I became increasingly aware that this book would involve tremendous amounts of money, and it was from this point on that I learned to appreciate the expertise with which Jim Kane managed the finances of the book. In addition to this, That's the point-plunge into American education, and drown. A flow of words and there's nothing in them. That's what they're getting in the classrooms. S. Flynn I feel certain that I tapped every ounce of patience that Kevin Burns possessed lat one timel to deal with the demands of the Associate Editor's position, having to act simultaneously as assistant editor, managing editor, copy supervisor and secretary. I knew from the beginning that the concept we had devised for the yearbook would involve new techniques and a higher degree of quality control in design, copy, and especially in photography. I soon discovered that my Editor of Photography, Don Reardon, had gone to great lengths to educate himself in processing and reproducing high grade photography to more effectively serve as my principal land most often my onlyl technical advisor. My dependence on Don's photography staff for most of the content of the book was obvious even to the most removed observer, but the demands of quality and the pressures of time were known to few others, and thus their dedication went largely unnoticed even to the Editorial Board. Designing the book was time-consuming and challenging, and Jay Twarog as Layout Editor of the book organized all the concepts we debated over at length, and converted these into tangible layout patterns when the book went into production. While Jay was figuring out percentage of white space per page, to afford the photography the maximum impact value possible on the square sheet, I diverted my attention to the printed word. It was my intention very early in the production to enhance the yearbook with a sufficient amount of copy to balance the graphic appearance created by the large photographs and the square page. In addition, I had begun to develop a long-range concept of the yearbook, which involves its meaningfulness long after the Class of 1970 has graduated, and indeed after the reader has looked over the photographs for the fifth time. With these thoughts in mind, I asked Jim Dorey to become Literary Editor of the book, Chris Foley, Copy Editor, and lVIark Earley, Assistant Literary Editor. Together, we were able to change the nature of the copy in the Faculty Section to a printed symposium form, initiate coverage of student opinion in the Activities Section, cover the story of as many sports as possible, and identify each house separately by its members and activities. Each individual section of the yearbook presented its own particular challenge. Rick Service compiled data for over ninety per cent of the Class of 1970 for the Graduate Section, and confronted the additional problem of laying out this vast amount of information on as little space as possible. The answer lay in the block layout for the photos and the parchment overlays for the biographical information. Bill Gallagher constructed the House Section to promote house individuality and identity, and so employed members of each house to photograph and write their own coverage. The result was an image of house life that is neither limited to weekends nor indiscernable from house to house. Chip Kenney, Faculty Section Editor, together with Mark Earley, Assis- tant Literary Editor, and the Faculty Section staff had the arduous task of editing and reorganizing information from a faculty symposium into an orderly printed conversation, and of creatively representing all the faculty departments. Dennis Kennelly lwell known as the Deacon l with much help from Jim Freer, constructed a sports section that points up the tragedy of an interrupted football season, the potential of our basketball and track teams, the triumphs of one of Holy Cross's greatest athletes in the person of Art Dulong, and the satisfaction derived from participating in the intramural and minor sports programs. Dan Keating realized early in the fall that total coverage of all the activities on campus was, to say the least, idealistic, and more practically, impossible. He relied on the organizations themselves to supply him with enough coverage to represent accurately both the formal and unstructured activity on campus, and was innovative in publishing student opinion in the areas of govern- ment, the Black community, and Fine Arts. While the liberal weighs his own interests against those of the Blacks, the radical uses the Black movement as simply another vehicle for fermenting the revoIution. T. Dougherty l would now like to turn from the editorial staffs to the business staffs, which did exceptionally well in making the production of the yearbook financially successful. The task of expanding our sources of income became Gene Gillin's, our newly appointed Development Manager. I am convinced we found two of the most hard-selling salesmen in Tom Gaffney and Bernie Monbouquette to head up our Advertisement staff. Tom more than doubled last year's income for the book, and made full use of our newly acquired rights to the yellow pages in the campus phone book. We were able to set up a tuition payment plan for the cost of the book to compensate for the much-needed raise in price. With this program, Bill Fox, Frank DeMasi and the Circulation staff were already ahead of last year's quotas at mid-term. Still another source of income was our patronfcoritributor program which John Schulte organized for Jim Kane. John topped all our expectations and landed a sizable income from a particularly large list of patrons. I would also like to thank Paul Gabuhr for his work as accountant in organizing the tremendous number of expenditure and income transactions that were part of Jim Kane's daily responsibilities. There are still several individuals who contributed to the quality and diversity of the yearbook who lie outside the Editorial and Business staffs. I am grateful for the time given to the staff by If we survive as a college, and survive we must, I think that we can say, as few American communities can, that 1969 was one of our finest hours. T. Ford those faculty members who took part in our Symposim, to Mrs. Silvestris of the Personnel Offfice for typing most of what was recorded, and to Mark Earley, who did much in the way of organizing the typed version into readable copy. I thank Dr. Ford both for his contribution to the Faculty Section and for what he has done to enhance that about which he writes. I also wish to thank John Day for his commentary in the Strike Section, as well as Tom Dougherty, Joe O'Mealy and Art Martin for their remarks in the Activity Section. We are indebted as well to the staff members who helped the Editors of the House and Sports Sections compile the written copy necessary for their desired coverage. Several members of the Administration went out of their way to aid many different facets of the operation. I would like to thank Fr. Swords and Fr. Nolan, as well as Fr. Pomeroy and Mr. Henry Ftoy, all of whom helped us set up our tuition payment plan, and to computerize much of our curculation work. I would like to personally thank Fr. Swords for his continual interest in the production of this year's book. With help from Mr. Pat Sheehan, most yearbook ads will now appear in the yellow pages of the campus phonebook. In addition I would like to thank Miss Donna Wrenn of the Personnel Office for helping with occasional secretarial work. I would be truly remittant if I did not remember the constant assistance of Mr. John Duffek and Mr. Peter Balesano, and I am indeed indebted to Mr. Ernest Reopel, Mr. Flichard Welch, and Dr. Edward Callahan for assisting Bick Service in organizing the publishing party for the book. I have saved Fr. Alfred Desautels until last, as Jim Kane and I are very grateful for his time and assistance as moderator. We would also extend our appreciation to Mr. Arthur Kohler of Woodland Publishing Co., Inc., for his patience, assistance, and excellent sales service throughout the year. The editorial and business staffs of the 7970 Purple Patcher wish to acknowledge all those who supported us through Advertising, Patronships and Contributions. William F. Gotha Editor-in-Chief of the 7970 Purple Patcher WILLIAM F. GOTHA Edfmr-in-chief J AM E S J . K AN E Business Manager T. KEVIN BURNS Amociate Editor DONALD J. REARDON JOSEPH A. TWAROG Editor of Photography Layout Editor JAMES J. DOREY CHRISTOPHER M. FOLEY Literary Editor CDDV Editor RICHARD T. SERVICE WILLIAM C. GALLAGHER Graduate Editor House Editor J.H. CHRISTOPHER KENNEY DENNIS L. KENNELLY Faculty Editor Sports Editor MARK J. EARLEY DANIEL P. KEATING Admissions Publication Activities Editor PHOTO CREDITS: William Gundling, assistant editor, Timothy Burke, Matthew Byrne, Tony Caputo, Michael Connair, Peter Cuneo, James DeVoto, John Gadala-Maria, Gary Grant, Dale Gutekunst, Thomas Hennessy, Robert Hodson, Robert Howard, Gary Lednar, Thomas Lyons, Edward McDowell, Michael McGann, Gregory McGarry, Stanley Orr, Michael Perley, John Phelan, James Robert, Hiroshi Ueda, Luis Zapata. LAYOUT STAFF: Stephen Dwyer, assistant editor, Donald Conway, Darryl Derbigny, James DeVoto, James Hayes, Fritz Kolb, Robert Morgan, Frank Provenzano, Michael Trimboli. LITERARY STAFF: Mark Earley, assistant editor. GRADUATE STAFF: John Connolly, assistant editor, Michael Gregory. HOUSE STAFF: Eugene Nowell, assistant editor, James Duckett, Kevin Forth, Robert Gorman, Edward Kattany, Craig Metroka. FACULTY STAFF: Dennis Mahoney, assistant editor, Mark Tooher. SPORTS STAFF: James Freer, assistant editor, John Burkhardt, Donald Conway, Richard DeAngelis, Kevin Hadlock, Thomas Hickey, William Kelly, Charles Lynch, Michael McGann, Ronald Rashford, Peter Rojcewicz, Thomas Rutkowski, Joseph Winters. ACTIVITIES STAFF: Kevin J. Connors, assistant editor, Anthony Barthelemy, Albert Keefe, Dennis Yesalonia. DEVELOPMENT: Eugene Gillin, manager. CIRCULATION: William Fox, manager, Frank Demasi, assistant manager, David Bowen, Brian Cleary, Frank Daly, David Dean, Timothy Donahue, Charles George, David lmmen, Stephen Thompson. ADVERTISEMENTS: Thomas Gaffney, manager, Bernard Monbouquette, assistant manager, Patrick Ahearn, Thomas Broderick, William Daly, Paul Dolan, William Klein, Kevin Greene, Brian Mahon. PATRONSXCONTRIBUTIONS: John Schulte, manager. ACCOUNTANT: Paul Gebuhr. Copy Creditsi Page 16, Robert O. Joahann, Building the Human,' Page 26, Robert O. Johann, October, 19695 Page 66, Hermann Hesse, Narcissus and Goldmund,' Page 132, A.E. Housman, To An Athlete Dying Young, g Page 192, Ovid, Metamorphoses lBook ll: Pages 194-195, James Dorey, Mark Earley and Christopher Foley: Page 230, John Milton, Of Education. ygguusn-1 t-:Q-,gig-gg-it .4 ,tx- PJQT ug-:4'v it, SPECIFICATIONS The three-hundred and twenty four page 7970 Purple Patcher was printed by the Woodland Publishing Company of Waltham, Massachusetts. The cover, 160 point board with Cordoba grain and a black overtone rub, was produced by the Delmar Company of Charlotte, North Carolina. The paper used for the endleaves was sixty-five pound lvlanadnock Velum, opaque cover-fancy finish, and was embossed by the John French Company of Stoneham, Massachusetts. For the color section, eiqhty pound Warren's Lustro Offset Enamel was used, and for the rest of the book, eighty pound Manadnock Velum opaque. One hundred and fifty line screening was employed for all halt-tones, and pure black ink was used throughout the book. The body type was ll!l3 Univers Light, while the headings were 18-36-point Optima. The book was bound by Robert Burlin and Sons of Boston. There are twelve color pictures in the book. These were run on a 25 x 38-inch sheet-ted Harris LWO Four-Color Press. Seventeen-hundred copies of the yearbook were initially printed. The Warren Kay Vantine Studios of Boston were responsible for the senior portraits. A Purple Patcher Publication SPECIAL THANKS TO THE 1843 CLUB S - -:NJA-r-r T', I A' 4 fl, Z, ,1xij15:M?+4: ' , - ,- - -- fi wwf, I ,-my Y T f 1, . ,- ' - . 1 , . 4 - ' 'I -' ,'f V ' - 'W ' '- -if .,. .- 337557 if ,hfigiffigf 'T P ,E If iw I Q. 43 3 15 S 4 JIPQQ KELLY SQUARE TIRE MISS WORCESTER COMPANY DINER ARTHUR CHAIR RENTINCI GUARDIAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY v J. .J sq, L 1... - asxtvyo Y A' 'gn- vh.....' R.. uf- - , gr.. ' .. ' .4 -qr.,.. .-,, - ww . .l ' 4-Y, at-H 'AL -,' - .503 . :Lg 1, 1 .. U 94 'Ln z M- ' ' -' , - .J , Mfg- - O AQ N r - life!-x' . X A ,. .fx ,- .4,,, 1.- f ua...- - Av Ca' ,A BU ' 4-Z ' w ALADAN VACUUM CUSTOM FENCE CO., INC CLEANERS SEAMON TRAVEL BUREAU HOLY CROSS COLLEGE CLUB OF NEW YORK HOLY CROSS COLLEGE BOOKSTORE HOLY CROSS GLEE CLUB '-sf cfs? PM x l ig-'Y' ' 4 A P .A ,L ' 'Q x,' '- ' A i'-e.. . . . ff,-t'fy -'MRA-t.'5yx. - -.,- . Fur 'Qs f Nixtlkf- ,'?K '. s- .- -Qui., 1 ' SPECIAL THANKS TO ALUMNI BEAVEN CARLIN CLARK HANSELMAN HEALY MU LLEDY WHEELER AIRLINE-LEWIS VENETIAN BLIND CO. ATAMIAN VOLKSWAGEN INC. A. C. BOWLER HOLSTROM'S PACKAGE STORE W. H. LEE PURPLE KEY SOCIETY WORCESTER TELEGRAM AND GAZETTE Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Bier, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Blewitt Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Bowes Dr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Broder James F. Burke Robert L. Clare, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Crowe Mr. and Mrs. K.R. Dickinson Ralph K. Earp, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Babyak Mr. and Mrs. John M. Banovsky Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Belotti Norbert Benotti Mr. and Mrs. Fernand A. Bernardin Elizabeth L. Blewitt Julia M. Blewitt Mr. and Mrs. John J. Boesen Mr. and Mrs. Peter Brackett Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brett James C. Brown Mr. and Mrs Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Charles R. Bucheit, Jr. Francis A. Burns Thomas F. Burns . John F. Cavanagh L.J. Cerretani Mr. and Mrs. S. Chrzanovvski Jeannine Cimprich Dr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Cipolla Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Cole Dr. and Mrs. William J. Collins Mr. and Mrs. Stephen F. Conner, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alfonse J. Corrado Frederick F. Courtney Dr. and Mrs. Francis V. Creeden Mrs. James J. Cullen Mr. and Mrs. John E. Daly Mr. and Mrs. George J. Decelles Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Deitchman Thomas F. Delaney Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. DeMasi Mr. and Mrs. Roger A. Demers Leo C DeVoto, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. H.J. Dick Mr. and Mrs. Francis L. Donahue F.L. Dorey Patrick A. Doyle Dr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Duffy Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Duggan Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dziokonski Joseph Earley Fred l-l. Eppinger Mr. and Mrs. John J. Falvey, Jr. Mario Ferri Mr. and Mrs. John J. Ferry Mrs. Albert F. Fitzgerald Dr. and Mrs. Albert F, Fleury Dr. and Mrs. Harold A. Flynn Robert E. Fortier ic CONTRIBUTORS Mr. and Mrs. James F. Foley Dr. and Mrs. Carol A. Gebuhr Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Geogan Mr. and Mrs. James T. Glavin Mr. and Mrs. Clark Hodgson Mrs. James J. Kane Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Keating Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Lupton Mr. and Mrs. John P. Madruga PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. Francis H. Freer T.C. Gaffney Mr. and Mrs. Armando Galella, Sr. Mrs. Thomas R. Gallagher Mr. and Mrs. William M. Gallagher Mr. and Mrs. Maurice D. Gauthier Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. G Dr. and Mrs. Harry J. GiIlin,Jr. lynn E.A. Golia Mr. and Mrs. William L. Gotha Mr. and Mrs. Jerome F. Grattan Walter L. Greene Mr. and Mrs. David Haines Mrs. Patricia M. Hanlon Frank E. Hartig Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Healey Mrs. Catherine I. Healy Joseph E. Howard C. Jacob Jalil Cathryn Jarry Mr. and Mrs. Stuart F. Jeans Mr. arid Mrs James F. Kavanaugh Mrs. Thomas J. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kenney Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence W. Kennelly Edward Kostka Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. La Belle, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Leonard, Jr. Joseph E. Litwin Mr. and Mrs. Rocco V. Liuzzi Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Lofgren Mrs. Fred Longobardi Frank Lorusso Rosario S. Lucca Mark L. Lynch, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Maher Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Mahon Mr. and Mrs. Francis X. Mahoney Paul D. Maloney Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mangano William P. Mara, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Martell Ann Mascitelli Mr. and Mrs. George L. McCarthy Robert J. McDonough Mr. and Mrs. L.V. McGarry Mr. and Mrs. George H. Mc Kenna Mr. and Mrs. J.L. McLaughlin Kathleen A. McManus George P. Miller William P. McKenna G.S. Paul Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Rivara Mr. and Mrs. Pierce J. Ryan Dr. and Mrs. Paul V. Shannon Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Stokes George F. Sullivan Donald Vaccariello Mr. and Mrs. Lee McNaughton Dr. and Mrs. John A. Meegan Dr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Minor Mr. and Mrs. William A. Morgan Wilfred Morin Mr. and Mrs. Morgan C. Muench Mr. and Mrs. John J. Mulkeen Teresa Mulvihill Mr. and Mrs. John J. Murphy Mrs. Thomas F. Murray Almerindo Natarelli Maurice Negip Joseph M. Nentwich Mr. and Mrs. R.J. O'Halloran Saverio L. Oppedisano Mr. and Mrs. John M. O'SulIivan Chester J. Piskadlo Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. William Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Elizabeth P. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Reiss J. Reid Edward C. Reutemann John H. Richardson Roche George H. Ryan James F. Ryan Peter Santolli Dr. and Mrs. Anthony M. Sarno Mrs. G. Victor Schlitzer Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Schnell Mr. and Mrs. George J. Schulte Dr. and Mrs. Cornelius J. Shea B.J. Skowron Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. David S. Smith Eugene L. Stewart Edwin H. Svmn John C. Sweeney, Sr. Anthony J. Tabacco Mr. and Mrs. Silvio Terlizzi Thomas M. Tierney, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. E.W. Tooher Dr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Vacca Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Vaghi Frederick Viggiano Francis S. Walsh William E. Walsh Walter C. Wanczyk, Sr. Mrs. Leo Hobin Warren Whitehouse -IS gzw' - JF- . I w I , -. 475- , H , . +- ' I' I - . I , , V4 I'1I A If ,, '-4- . - ' I .II .IE I jr I I ' ' H ' I: 'I' 2 ' 3 5-,I ,I-H .I-I I-I I-I. 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