,il ffm M 1976 AZUWUR Edited by J. R. Drexelius, Jr. Hold fast to dreams For if dreams die ' Life is a broken-winged bird That cannot fly. Hold fast to dreams For when dreams go Life is a barren field Frozen with snow. Langston Hughes Canisius College b Buffalo, New York f 1 4208 ony... iii 'H+ Time present and Time past are both perhaps present in time future, and time future contained in time past. If all time is eternaily pressed All time is unredeemable. -T.s. Eliot L- X 'E 2 fn 33 W gf 25 'fvliiv 4. A A fa? Ev, fl, 2 fx 'Sf gf :wefg.'--Y., frm, Ls- , ' ' H? ' h ff 3.1 3 Q f E5 mfgfaiswg' bgfgeffg Ngfffgw V ' if ' :i :'f 4 ,'1?l51 J .Q 555 1 -. : ff .N : H: J-'fir fu'f.,uih 21 , V if2ff'a'CT??a9f135 i,,'w.s,-i'i his fr aw si . 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A graduate of Buffalo's East High School and the University of Buffalo, Dr. Zobel was a resident of the West- ern Nevv York area since he was four years old. His teaching career began at UB in 1946, vvhere he taught until he joined the Canisius staff in 1971. ln addition to his other duties at Canisius, Dr. Zobel vvas the project coordinator of the Small Business ln- stitute Student Counseling Program in conjunction with the U.S. Small Busi- ness Administration. Dr. Zobel was a noted lecturer and much of his written work has appeared in national journals. James E. Duggan, an employee of Canisius College since 1946, dies sud- denly Sunday evening, February 1, 1976 at his Pierport Avenue home. Mr. Duggan served as director of the CoIlege's Placement and Testing Office from 1946 to 1974. ln Decem- ber of 1974 he assumed his duties as a Counselor in the College's Career De- velopment Center. ln 1962 Mr. Duggan was named the liaison officer for the Peace Corps and Federal College Internships at Canisius. Mr. Duggan was the recipient of the Bene Merenti Medal at the May, 1975 commencement ceremonies, signifying recognition of his years of service to Canisius. Dr. David J. Gorman, an associate professor of history at Canisius Col- lege, died February 3, 1976 at his Vllordvvard Ave. home after a lenghty illness. He had taught at Canisius for 20 years. Dr. Gorman vvas an active member of the Canisius College Faculty Senate, the History Society, the William H. Fitzpatrick Political Science Lecture Committee and the Council to the Dean of the School of Business Ad- ministration. In addition to being the author of historical revievvs, Dr. Gorman vvas a member of the American Historical Society, the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society and the American Association of University Professors. Dedication: Dr. Charles A. Brady i Charles Brady was born in Buffalo's Black Bock section on April 15, 1912-at the approximate moment of the sinking of the Titanic. Later he was to say-only half jokingly-that this probably determined his bent toward epic subjects, both in his serious criticism and in his creative writing. In any case, his birth at that moment was anything but a disaster for Canisius College. Dr. Brady has spent his life at and with Canisius. He is a graduate of Canisius High School and of Canisius College. He joined the Canisius College English Department in 1935 and this semester caps 41 years for him on the faculty here. The city of Buffalo is dotted with his pupils. He has taught and touched thousands of students across two generations. He has, on occa- sion, taught sons and daughters of former students. And he has taught many who went on to be teachers themselves. On Election Day each year he has made it a rule of thumb to vote for the candidates whom he has taught. lVlost recently, however, he has often had to choose between two former students. Perhaps the greatest symbol of his deep involvement with Canisius is the centenary history, Canisius College.' The First Hundred Years. Written over a period of years, the book required massive research through piles of old records. Unlike many a school history, it is not a boring compilation of historical fact upon historical fact. lnstead, the book is written in an impression- istic style which captures the past and present spirit of Canisius College as well as that of the entire Niagara Frontier. Dr. Brady has always said that what the old Romans called pietas and genius loci - that is, a love for a locality and the sense of the spirit of place therein-is the formative impulse in his prose and poetry. For example, he often reflected on the fact that just beyond the fence of his childhood home on Humboldt Parkway was the site of the Six Nations Council Glade where, as late as 1812, the Iroquois took their decisions for peace or war. In 1967, Dr. Brady celebrated an allied association-that his first grandson had Seneca blood, and belonged to one of those Indian nations-by writing Keeper of the Western Gate: For D.J.D. That poem subsequently won the Cecil Hemley Memorial Award, the Poetry Society of America's most prestigious prize and, in his own estimation, the highest honor Dr. Brady ever received. And he has received many. There is a distinct Canisius flavor to a number of these. He was awarded the LaSalle Medal upon graduation from the College. ln 1970 he was the recipient of the Canisius Alumni Association's Peter Canisius lVledal. He has been named to the Canisius High School Hall of Fame. His second Bene lVlerenti medal, denoting an additional 20 years of distin- guished service to the College was bestowed upon Dr. Brady at the College's 109th Commencement ceremonies last year. Canisius, however, has not been alone in honoring its favorite son. Dr. Brady attended Harvard University for graduate study and earned his lVl.A. there. In 1954, LelVIoyne College awarded him an L.H.D. Earlier he had held the Candlemas Lectureship at Boston College, and had given Notre Dame's Summer Lecture in the Humanities. On different occasions he has also spoken at both the State University of New York at Buffalo and the State University of New York College at Buffalo. In 1963 Georgetown University made him the recipient of its President's lVledal. Since 1945, Dr. Brady has been a book reviewer for The Buffalo Evening News. His own caricatures have often accom- panied his Saturday reviews. In addition, he has been, at various times, on the review staffs of the New York Times, the old Herald Tribune, Thought, Renascence, America, The Lamp, The Sign, The Catholic World. Beyond his criticism for newspapers, Dr. Brady's literary essays are to be found in standard critical antho- Dr. Brady's wife, Eileen, was on hand to accept an award for her husband from Fr. Demske at last year's graduation. A second Bene Nlerenti medal denoting 40 years of distinguished service to the College was presented logies all over the world.The best known ofhis longer critiques are studies of Cooper, Nlarquand, Sigrid Undset, the Volsungasaga, Charles Williams, C.S. Lewis. One of the three letters which Lewis wrote to Dr. Brady has been printed in the 1967 collection, Letters of C.S. Lewis. Dr. Brady's record of creative achievement is as long and as formidable as that of his academic and critical careers. He has had four novels published: Viking Summer, This Land Fulfilled, Crown of Grass and Stage of Fools, a biography of St. Thomas lVlore, which went into multiple editions, including a paperback issue, and outsold any Dutton book on the 1953 publishing list. The titles of his books for children are Cat Royal, The Elephant Who Wanted To Pray, The Church Mouse of St. Nicholas and St. Thomas More of London Town. For older children there is Sword of Clontarf and The King's Thane. A Catholic Reader is a per- sonalized anthology and Wings Over Patmos is a book of poetry. Several of his short stories and poems have been anthologized, some for the blind. One short story which he wrote while still an undergraduate at the College, The Foot That Went Too Far, inspired the appear- ance ofthe fabled Griffin on our campus. iSee page 34.l Yet despite all the foregoing, Dr. Brady's eminence has es- caped the notice of many students. This is due to his precarious state of health which has often kept him away from the campus in recent years. Dr. Brady has been in declining health since the late 1950's and has only managed to carry on his college lecturing under strictly controlled conditions. Early this semester, his health took another turn and he was hospitalized. Precisely one week after his release from intensive care, Dr. Brady was back teaching, in his own living room, a final course before his retire- This tribute cannot begin to tell it all. Dr. Brady was named an Outstanding Citizen of the Year by The Buffalo Evening News in 1970. During his high school and college days, he was one of the premier tennis talents in the Buffalo area. He chaired the English Department at Canisius for nearly 25 years. He has taught in several other departments as well, including languages and his- iry. As he used to tell his classes, if literature was his business, history was his passion. That fact is manifest in his numerous works of historical fiction. No, we cannot tell it all here. Still, while all of this establishes Dr. Brady's eminence, we must express his specialness as well. Last fall, the AZUWUB received a letter from Dr. Brady's colleagues suggesting that we consider dedicating the 1976 year- book to him because: His imprint is lastingly upon the best elements in Canisius and in the Buffalo community. The letter mentioned Dr. Brady's career as a teacher, novelist, poet, scholar, and critic. The missive ended: All of this leaves out the most important fact about him which is that his is one of the richest human spirits of our place and time-he is truly great-hearted. We suggest that your choosing him would dignify us all. And we suggest, further, that our choosing him does dignify us all. -E.B. ment. CHARLES A. BRADY A. B. lt is not easy to be critical with a critic and even more difficult to give a thorough, literal treatment of a literary man. But this is our pre- dicament, for it is a well known and acknowl- edged fact that Charlie is a litterateur and critic of note, far beyond the confines of our own little circle. Though perhaps head and shoulders above any graduate of Canisius in the literary field, his dis- tinctions are not therein limited. As a student of the languages, he has been outstanding. French seems to be his favorite study. Debating, fraternal affiliations and dramatics have come under his extensive activities. Well might we enter on a discussion of how he approaches the personifica- tion of Newman's gentleman, if we didn't think we were intruding on a gentleman's mod- esty. We expect great things of Charlie. Coffin Clubg Sodality, 1, 2, 3, 45 Quarterly, l, 2, 3, 45 Editor-in-Chief, 45 Azuwur, 3, 4, Associate Editor, 41 Academia, l, 2, 3, 4g Intercollegiate Debating Team, 43 Dramatic Club, l, 2, 3g Class Medal, l, 2, 3g Tennis Team, 2, 3, 4. even as the symbo, Dr. Brady unleashed on The prophecy of great things in the 1933 AZUWUR proved to be right on target. Canisius during his undergraduate days-the Golden Griffin-appeared to tender his personal congratulations. 27 1 870-1976 An Abbreviated History of Canisius College by Charles A. Brady On September 5, 1870, Canisius College opened its doors for the first time in a small, tW0-Story brick structure, a former bookstore, situated at 434 Ellicott Street. Except for a preliminary paid announcement, the event went unnoticed in the Buffalo press which was busy listening to the clangor of such more distant happenings as Sedan's falling before the Prus- sian armies and the capture of Napoleon lll. Because of the city's large German and smaller, though still sizable, Alsatian population, there was intense interest in the progress of this first German Blitzkrieg against France. The generic interest was at its highest pitch, most probably, within the small faculty of the fledgling college. Bismarck's greatest triumph was at hand, and, oddly enough, the presence of these European founders of Canisius-German Dutch, and German-speaking Swiss Fathers-was in great part a reflex of the anti-clerical forces which had converged in the Bismarkian Kulturkampf and which were destined to gain even more momentum after the victory of 1870. As a matter of fact, a certain number of northern European Jesuits had been resident in Western New York as early as 1848, the occa- sion of their coming to the Buffalo area a schism within the Buffalo Catholic diocese re- sulting from a jurisdictional clash between the Buffalo ordinary, Bishop John Timon and the trustees of St. Louis' Church, the mother church of the Buffalo diocese. They had been sent there originally, at Timon's request, by the French Provincial of the New York-Canada Nlission, the Jesuit administrative entity serving as their host in the New World. At the Buffalo bishop's instigation, after he had placed St. Louis under formal interdict, they built St. Nlichael's, the Jesuit church on Washington Street between Tupper and Chippewa which, rebuilt very much according to the original plan after the disastrous fire of May 23, 1962, remains to this day one of the city's best loved landmarks. Once the schism had been healed, Timon, as energetic as he was politic, moved to a second objective he hoped to achieve through Jesuit instrumentality. He wanted Catholic higher education, on both seminary and lay levels, for Buffalo and its environs. Jesuit college educa- tion, which derived directly from the University of Paris even as did Oxford and Cambridge and, in America, Harvard and Yale, had an admirable reputation. So Timon brought his considerable powers of diplomatic suasion to bear on the French-born first superior of St. lVlichael's, Father Joseph Durthaller, who had once taught Gustave Dore' the celebrated illustrator of Cer- vantes, Dante and Swift. As a sensitive human- ist, Durthaller was well-disposed toward the project. ln fact, if circumstances had been just a little different, Durthaller might well have been the first president of a Buffalo-based Jesuit college founded under French auspices rather than German. Even as things turned out, he may be regarded as the spiritual founder of the new school which would bear the name of a famous post-Reformation Dutch Jesuit, St. Peter Canisius, whose name also survives in several European Jesuit institutions of higher learning. So-as had been true of Harvard, too, in its beginnings-there was a religious intention be- hind Canisius' foundation, one summed up in the Jesuit motto: Ad maiorem Dei gloriam. To the greater glory of God. Hn Christi Gloriam had appeared on Harvard's seal in 1650.l The new college was part of a Buffalo-sited Mission to the Catholic German-Americans of the Unit- ed States, and one that, initially, had been accepted with reluctance. To tell the truth, the whole prospect of a Mission itself had daunted these expatriate German Fathers at first. When they balked at the magnitude of the enterprise unfolding before them, Durthaller prodded the then Father General, Peter John Beckx, S.J., into ordering them to accept the assignment. On July 4, 1869, Father Peter Spicher arrived in Buffalo to take possession of the newly cre- ated Missio Germanica Americae Septentriona- lis, i.e., the North American Mission of the German Province. Within two years the Mis- sion's jurisdiction extended over a positively imperial range of territory: the American shores of the Great Lakes excluding the dioceses of Chicago and Milwaukee, but including those of Buffalo, Flochester, Erie, Cleveland, Marquette, Detroit, St. Paul, La Crosse, and Green Bay. Soon after, a vast expanse of Indian mission land-a parallel with Dartmouth's original Indi- an mission springs to mind-was added: first among the Arapaho of the Wyoming Territory: then, more enduringly, among the BrUle and Ogallala Sioux of South Dakota. ln the end, it was the College which turned out to be the sole surviving creation of the German Mission's far-flung empire. Their uni- cum collegium Germanicum in Civitatibus Foederatis they fondly called it-the single German college in the United States. Before the end of Canisius' first year, the student body had swelled from an entering twenty-five to thirty-four. Except for one manifestly Gallic name, one Irish, and two Welsh, the other thir- ty names were clearly either German or Alsa- tian, a circumstance which made the founding year a nightmare for the College's first Dean of Men-he was called Prefect of Discipline in those days. On the street and in the classroom German boy warred against Alsatian all during the Prussian siege of Paris, and after, too. On a comparative scale, Canisius' student unrest was actually greater in 1870 than in 1970. Until 1912's dedication of Old Main, the building which, in its present extended form, still remains the focal point of the present Main Street campus, Canisius College and Canisius High School had been a single continuum, both spatially and academically, within the old Wash- ington Street campus. President Theodore Van Flossum, S.J., 1883-1888, whose term of office had witnessed the first baccalaureate degrees, also presided over the College's first Master's degree in 1887. A second was granted in 1890: and, after that, from time to time. It was not until the 1930's, however, that this particular post-baccalaureate degree began to play a systematic part in aca- demic planning. If the contrast between the early period's rigorous qualifications for the B.A. and the M.A.'s much looser requirements affronts the contemporary sense of fitness, it is important to remember that this was the nine- teenth century when an Oxford Master's hood depended upon a prescribed number of dinners in hall and a specified tally of tankards of beer: and when, as the saying went, all a Harvard man needed to secure his Master's credential was to pay five dollars and keep out of jail. Although not notably successful as an ad- ministrator, Van Ftossum made two other im- prints on the evolving institution, both of these growing out of a Newmanesque theory of edu- cation with an almost exclusive accent on the liberal arts. He established Philosophy as a com- pulsory part of the classical curriculum: and he downgraded the complementary commercial curriculum which had been an original compo- nent of the school in its foundations. This rela- tive disparagement of the commercial side con- tinued during the term in office of Van Rossum's successor, Ulric Heinzle, S.J., 1888-1891. After the academic year of 1893-1894, the third year in office of President John I. Zahm, S.J., 1891-1896, the commercial curriculum was abandoned, not to be revived until 1926 when an accounting major was of- fered for the first time, an innovation coincid- ing with America's burgeoning business ethos after World War I. However explicable as a short-run policy, in the long run the jettisoning of the commercial course proved an unfortunate move, economi- cally speaking. The restoration in 1926 was a long step forward in a journey that, quickening its pace in the 1930's and accelerating still further during the 195O's, reached its current culmination in the inauguration, in February, 1969, of a Master in Business Administration program. It must be understood, of course, that until 1926, the Canisius involvement in business courses had been basically on the high school side of the college-cum-preparatory school con- tinuum. All told, during the thirty-seven years of German control, there were eleven presidents counting Swiss-born, Dutch-educated Augustine A. Miller, S.J., 1905-1912, who bridged the last German and first American administrations. Of these eleven presidents, the first six were Ger- man-born, the eighth English-born, the eleventh a German-speaking Swiss, and the three Ameri- can-born were all of German extraction. Henry Behrens, S.J., 1872-1876, stands out among them for both color and strength of personali- ty. Born six months after Waterloo, Behrens had enjoyed a European career, military as well as pedagogical, that calls for a sagaman to do it justice. The fourth president, Swabian Martin Port, S.J., 1877-1883, had been a classmate of Lord Acton's: the eighth, Englishman James A. Rockliff, S.J., 1897-1898, a classmate of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's. Though his term as pres- ident was a short one, Rockliff continued to exert an effect on the College's destinies after he became head of the Buffalo Mission. The European provenance of these Founding Fathers was at once a strength and a weakness. While their erudition and culture were formida- ble, the language barrier, as Rockliff often pointed out in letters to the Father General, proved a serious one. Moreover, American youth, in this day of Thomas Bailey Aldrich's Story af a Bad Boy and Mark Twain's Tom Sawyer, did not exactly take kindly to German concepts of discipline as enforced by a seeming- ly limitless pool of Franco-Prussion War veter- ans who kept turning up to fill the post of Prefect of Discipline. Nor did they think either drill or calisthenics acceptable substitutes for the team games that, increasingly, were played in the Yard, as it came to be called, of the red-brick structure at 651 Washington Street which, built during 1871-1872, housed Canisius College until 1912 and Canisius High School until 1948. Gradually the paramilitary mystique that, for one brief interlude, had even extended to uniforms and kelpis gave way to the nascent athletic mystique that had begun to sweep American campuses during the eighties and nineties. Each Thursday-Thursday was the day appointed for communal recreation on the part of the students and boarders alike-the entire student body marched down Main Street to the then semi-rural demesne known as the Villa, at the corner of Jefferson Avenue, which was maintained, among other things, as a kitchen farm for the downtown college. Aside from its triple utilities as provisioner, retiring ground for Jesuit personnel, and grassy playing field, the Villa, bought by Behrens in 1873, at a price his immediate successor, President John B. Less- man, S.J., 1876-1877, considered exorbitant, proved a fateful purchase fraught with enor- mous consequences for Canisius' future. Out of it came the eventual site of the main part of the College today and a geographical determination of the modes any physical expansion was henceforth destined to take. Except for the contiguous areas now occupied by the Physical Education complex, the Delavan Health Science and Computer Center, several departmental of- fices on immediately adjoining streets, Alumni Hall, and two supplementary residence halls on Main Street, where the College structures prop- er now stand, enclosing an inner quadrangle, was once the Villa. Buffalo sports-lovers, whose J a 27 St. Peter Canisius memories stretch back to the quarter century from 1920 to the end of World War ll, remember it as the site of the College's vanished outdoor football stadium. The scholastic regimen was a Spartan one with each hour of the academic day parcelled out between eight a.m. and five p.m., and twen- ty-one hours of outside preparation demanded. lThe Harvard average, during these German years, was thirteen.l lt was an education weighted heavily on the classical side according to the historic Jesuit theory codified in the Ratio Studiorum, a set of methods that by 1920 had already begun to be honored as much in the breach as the observance, and one that eroded rapidly in the decades following. Greek and Latin poetry in the vernacular, plus the rhetoric of Demosthenes and Cicero also in the vernacular, the whole structure crowned by the great Periclean dramatists and leavened by his- tory with a post-Reformation bias, enjoyed the kind of primacy they had known in eighteenth century England. lf, judged by contemporary standards, the methods were pedantic, the stu- dents worked hard: and they read the right books. The Canisius Centennial History, a bit brash- ly perhaps, describes the German period as VaIhalla on Washington Street, situated in cultural time half way between the Nibelun- genlied and the Adventures of Hans and Fritz. It was much more than that: its musical culture, pun., M. Saint Ignatius sends Canisius to Germany especially, was extraordinarily rich. Under the Swiss composer-conductor, Professor Ludwig Bonvin, S.J., the music department maintained, in addition to a band, three full orchestras, one of these a symphony orchestra numbering, at its high point, fifty-two members. Bonvin's predecessor, W. Wallrath, S.J., had actually produced-it would seem in pirated form- Wagner's last opera, Parsifal, on April 27, 1887, five years after its Bayreuth premiere and better than sixteen years before its controversial Met- ropolitan Opera production. The text, however, described as a medieval melodrama, was by the Canisius polymath, Anthony Guggenberger, S.J. The German Province's final connection with its Buffalo offshoot was also Wagnerian, though the closing key was the key of Gotter- diinmerung, not Parsifal. After the formal dis- solution of their American province, which took place on September 9, 1907, the Fathers of the Buffalo Mission carried back to Germany the original records, in crabbed German script, of their long connection with the College, the High School, St. Michael's, and the Mission generally, leaving meticulous copies in their place. ln midsummer of 1944 the bomb at- tempt on Hitler's life, on the part of the Graf von Stauffenberg and his fellow officers, mis- carried. Because the Graf had been Jesuit edu- cated, the headquarters of the South German Province were put to the torch. In the ensuing holocaust, the original Canisius documents for 1870-1907 went roaring to the sky. As elsewhere on American college campuses, it was World War I which proved the catalyst of rapid and far-reaching change, beginning with the overnight conversion of the Main Street campus into a short-lived military establishment for nearly two hundred Canisius members of the Student Army Training Corps. Since the Armistice took place less than six weeks after October 1, 1918's induction day, it was the Canisius old boys who did the fighting in the War that became for American participants their myth-in-action. Letters, redolent of a curiously touching romanticism and now pre- served in the College archives, came from them in trenches, airdromes, base h0SDif3lS- Of The three hundred Canisians who saw service, twelve died, four of them in action. To cele- brate the demobilization of the Canisius S.A. T.C., on December 30, 1918, the alumni hon- ored the student soldiers at the first major social function involving the student body on what might be described as an adult level. lt was a portent of the many changes in collegiate life-style that would now mark the 1920's. One of the earliest manifestations of World War l's huge displacement of social gravity was an unprecedented expansion of college enroll- ment destined to be halted only briefly by the Depression and World War ll. An early reflex of the trend in question was the initiation, on July 12, 1919, of the Canisius Summer School. That same autumn an Extension School, operating on a regular basis, appeared, the nucleus of what would later become a flourishing Evening Session and a populous Graduate Division. Orig- inally conceived of as a series of service courses for the Catholic teaching religious of the area, the new Schools almost immediately outran this intention. From this point on, Canisius began to supply a surprisingly high percentage of the Niagara Frontier's teachers and adminis- trators on the public school plane, a proportion that kept pace with the College's steady output of lawyers, physicans, dentists, and ecclesias- tics. Along with most other American institu- tions of higher learning, Canisius proved a little tardier in acknowledging its responsibilities for professionalizing business. Nevertheless, 1926 witnessed the initiation of systematic business curricula. Until February 14, 1928, fraternities, tolera- ted but never fostered by the administration, had perforce assumed responsibility for the Col- lege's social life-an ingrained conservatism, where a mingling of the sexes was concerned, had been carried over intact from the German period. Now, through the first annual Junior Prom held in the Statler Ballroom, the College officially entered the Jazz Age in the city where, only two decades before, Scott Fitzger- ald had spent his boyhood. Despite this official relaxation of a long-standing tabu, social ma- chinery, over the nextdecade,remainedlargely in the hands of the fraternities which main- tained clubrooms in such divergent places as the Park Lane and certain Burchfieldian mansarded mansions on Linwood Avenue. By filling this social vacuum, whatever their other shortcom- ings, the Greek Letter societies marked an evo- lutionary stage in the College's progress from an invertebrate social organization. What doomed them in the end, at Canisius as elsewhere, was their being grounded on a principle destructive of true fraternity, that of caste and ethnic Apartheid. By the 1960's the social pendulum had swung full circle, and most of the social affairs were held in campus facilities. lf the College, in that decade had been reluctantly driven to abandon its old in loco parentfs stance, by way of compensation it had become the students' social arbiter. Taken together, the twenties and thirties may be said to have enclosed five symbolic events and one physical thrust into a pattern of future expansion. The events were these: two outdoor Passion Plays on a positively Max Rein- hardtian scale: a gathering momentum in the direction of that period's will-o-the-wisp, big- time football, a policy that eventually was to prove abortivep the College's acknowledgement of the canonization of its patron, St. Peter Canisius, whose earlier beatification had played its due part in the establishment of the Canisius ethos, 1930's public commemoration of the 'vm' l MQW' Canisius in 1870 fern lk. . Nl h 3j,.,.'Z 'n ' -f ff at Q ' sh ui' 1 4 f ,j s H, : ii ..- mtg ll , f I 1 f- ' 4' .U wg H 1 qi. fs' i - A 1 9 ' 3. 1 1 -'i- --. ' '47 Y ' im Canisius in 1872 ?'v fi ig 'uf va- iv' T Canisius in 1876 31 .Petrsirli R53 two thousandth anniversary of the birth of Ver- gil whose Aeneid had been, for centuries, the archetypal book of the Jesuit curriculum but would be so no longer, the College's participa- tion, on a major scale, in the 1932 centenary celebration of Buffalo's incorporation as a city. The material advance, heralding the massive building program of the next three decades, was the opening of the Horan-O'Donnell Science Building. Except for the unsuccessful football policy, each of the happenings in this parabola of event was a mernorializingof the past and of the traditional. ln sharp contrast to this same dis- carded rhythm, 1969-1970's stocktaking within the Canisius centennial year - and a backward glance was but a part of the Centenary's trans- actions - represented the only major considera- tion of the past's impact upon the present which the College had engaged in over the inter- vening three decades. Moreover, hindsight per- mits a tracing of a curve of tendency from sacred to secular which was to grow more strongly underlined in the years immediately preceding the beginning of the 1970's. When the 1920's began, Canisius was still a religious college in an extremely sectarian sense, its fac- ulty largely, its administration - except for the office of the Registrar - totally clerical. Over the next half century, gradually at first, then at a rapidly accelerating pace, the faculty became mainly lay with Catholic affiliation no longer a shibboleth for entrance even into the depart- ments of Theology and Philosophy. Laymen achieved key positions within the administra- tion and came to dominate the Board of Trus- tees. Insofar as Canisius remained a Catholic college, it did so in an ecumenical, Chardines- que sense - a contributor to The Canisius Pa- pers, a sheaf of centennial year essays, preferred to style it a Christian college: and even this circumscription was not a restrictive one. The De- partment of Religious Studies, for example, which superseded the older Department of Theology, and which had announced a lVlaster's program before the beginning of the Centenary year, the staff numbered, among others, a Pro- testant theologian, the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Western New York and the Rabbi of Temple Beth Zion. The two Passion spectacles, given during the summers of 1920 and 1923, marked both the midpoint and, to date, the most ambitious ef- fort within a continuing dramatic tradition. lThis is by no means the same as styling them the apex, a title which, even though comparison is always invidious, might well be reserved for the Shakespearean cycle produced by the Cani- sius Little Theater in the now demolished band- box stage located within old Canisius-on-Dela- van during the years just after the Second World War.l The Passion Plays represented over attempts to relocate the Oberammergau tradi- tion within the geographical context of Western , 1- s 3,3--if ax f ff 9, yi 1 ws 1. 'iff K ' fyfs f'f'l '. .si '9- fx ff , 1 X , . X . New York. If the times had been propitious, they might conceivably have made Buffalo what the two Stratfords, of Canada and Con- necticut, were to become three decades later. ln the upshot, the grand, but very costly, concep- tion on the part of President Michael J. Ahern S.J., 1919-1923, had to be cut back. The sump- tuous open-air theater built in the rear of Old Main, with an electrician from New York's Theater Guild to operate the light panel and Beerbohm-Tree's former stage manager as regis- seur, seating four thousand at its capacity and accommodating upward of a hundred thousand people during each of those two summers, was .5 ,Q 7 -sf' r ' f . ..v ,. ,--1 ,. :al ' ll. . af 5 ,X 1 i v demolished in the fall of 1923. The camels, imported for the Nativity Tableau, which had grazed on the Villa grass from lVlay to Septem- ber, became permanent residents of the Buffalo Zoo. The great adventure was but a memory. The attempt to field big-time football in- volved an even greater financial drain, though the fact was not officially recognized until Feb- ruary 8, 1950, when, after thirty-one years of intercollegiate competition, President Raymond W. Schouten, 1947-1952, announced the aboli- tion of the sport. There were contributory rea- sons in addition to the brute fact of the heavy monetary loss. The Buffalo Bills had come to command the Frontier's imagination as, during the 1920's, the 1930's, and the latter years of the 1940's, the cleated warriors of the Little Three once had. Buffalo's uncertain autumn weather had also played a part. Generals Rain, Snow and Cold had brought Western New York College football to its knees. Nevertheless, those three decades had been glorious ones in local sports annals. Though football had been accorded intra- mural cognizance shortly before America's en- try into World War l, its first regular intercol- legiate schedule had had to wait until the aca- demic year of 1919-1920 when, with Hymie Bleich as pioneer coach, eight games were booked: Hobart, Hamilton, Rochester, Alfred, Bonaventure, Theil, St. Lawrence, Niagara. The decade in which America's sports mystique would be, overall, at its height was just begin- ning. Never again would the popular imagina- tion feel quite so unsophisticated an admiration for athletic heroes who, professional or ama- teur, were still thought of as contestants in an Olympiad rather than a gladiatorial arena. For a brief span, amateurs gained the popular affec- tion as they never had before and, most likely, never would again. The good genius who pre- sided over Canisius' sports destinies in these years was a professor of chemistry, Dr. James Crowdle, for thirty-three years Graduate Man- ager of Athletics. During this long period Crow- dle was responsible for two crowning achieve- ments. He was chief architect of the Little Three Conference composed of Canisius, Niaga- ra and St. Bonaventure, the most exhilarating sports combo the Niagara Frontier ever man- aged to put together. lTechnically, it was not a conference: but the association was, if any- thing, even more intimate than that of a con- ference.l lt was his shrewd judgement which, by siring the double-header basketball program, brought big-time basketball to Buffalo for the thirty-five years preceding the arrival of 1970's professional team, the Buffalo Braves. Four years before the twenties began, the coming cult of coaching personality was anti- cipated when the College retained its first for- mal basketball and baseball coaches in the per- sons of Ray J. MacDonald and Eddie Russell, former Montreal outfielder. Baseball, Canisius' first recognized sport - this happened in 1903 was to retreat before the advances, first of basketball, and then of King Football. It enioyed a recrudescence after World War ll, though hardly to the point of regaining its former primacy: and is still being played now. The golden age of Canisius basketball began with Earl Brown who provided the recruiting dynamic that brought the College into the mainstream of basketball's postwar advance. Brown was succeeded in 1947 by Joseph P. Niland, 1948-1953, number one in a triumvi- rate of young coaches, which would also num- ber J. Joseph Curran, 1953-1959, Robert A. MacKinnon, 1959-1972, John R. Morrison, 1972-1974, and John McCarthy, 1974 to pre- sent. Under their cool, intelligent tutelage Cani- sius teams became familiar staples in Madison Square Garden, reaching the N.I.T. final once and achieving a berth in NCAA play for three consecutive years. James Naismith had invented his game in response to the weather exigencies of Springfield, Massachusetts, where, as in Buff- alo, falls were brief and springs late. lt is one of the factors which has always rendered basket- ball the most viable of collegiate team sports in northeastern cities. One of sport's most potent allies is the sportsman's nostalgia for past feats, a human impulse satisfied by 1963's inauguration of the Canisius Sports Hall of Fame which, up through 1975, had installed thirty-nine members. Sport is also a sovereign cement for alumni relations. But there are tides in student interest, and one of the great unresolved problems of American college life is that of inducing student participa- tion on something more than a purely spectator basis. Counteracting the ominous signs of de- creasing student interest during the troubled sixties, there were two favorable portents in Canisius affairs. Student-initiated club foot- ball, simon-pure amateur and operating at a minimal expense, returned in 19665 and this year varsity football returned. ln 1969, through the comprehensive facilities of a magnificent new Athletic Complex, for the first time Cani- sius found itself in a position to realize the desideratum Harvard's great Percy Haughton once simply phrased as athIetics for all. It would be too much to say that all difficulties had been circumvented. Nevertheless, there was some hope that the delicate equipoise Canisius' ninth president, John B. Theis, S.J., 1898-1901, had enunciated in a Latin letter on January 30, 1900, was finally within reach: Ludos ration- abiliter restringimus. That is: We are keeping sports within rational bounds. On the other hand, a swelling tide of professionalism men- aced the old amateur mystique of sport as a liberating experience for body and spirit, one wherein love and need are one. Only the future will tell whether the Griffin, the Canisius totem animal, would succeed in his task of shielding a harmonious evolution of an athletic ideal for both varsity and intramural partici- pants. lContinuef p. 36l s tm f 1 .. 1. 1 'Kimura it rv-YV X154 A h-1.iQ.' 5 ,,g' ff- w r . 1 . f r-, ,iq . I 5 ,gVVur'.,l ., -vf-wr.-t-..i viii, lei 'full gr F -les--.1-1-tr--PEL' s N ,fer is 1. -.iq or ,,,,.,,- 4,., .. me I n 5.1! -' na. 1 .Q J lj, ' :. g ,SEI , A Q If ,' V '- A , . ,T ,Sl A ,ll Q.-' t f A 'til , i f . il9',..f . , ij 'fl' 5--'E 'si - ' 'Z - ' -'Q A W f -lf' ,Q 5. . 3.5.1. - NEFF! :T S I '1 ,iii wig. 'F If JJL' ,sk .- F. M - f' X j Vg- th .D s A L Y 5L '.hh'Qf .ll 1 f if 3 . P? Sai. 4' 1 'Q,,....'5 ,' ' lift- ' iv afggr ' - ff 'S K --1'-LB' ' , t 455,-nf Mi... ,K I rs X 'eq N gn, I V ., swan 'Em 5 I ,Q 1 1' 6-f Stk, L .M K 33 as ' I EIS TUBE WSWS - EPIQBRADY You can have your Chihuahas, Plranhas, Horned Frogs or lguanas. The best all-around athletic mascot in the business today has to be the beast adopted by Canisius- the Golden Griffin. -Steve Weller Buffalo Evening News This column is called Griffin On The Wing. This newspaper is known as The Griffin. Athletic teams at this college are referred to collectively as the Golden Griffins. This much we know. What follows is a history of how the griffin came to rest its wings here at Canisius. Let us proceed, from the known to the unknown. A griffin is a mythological beast, with a lion's body and an eagle's head and wings. Hopefully, this uncomplicated definition is not an unknown for any Canisius student. lAlthough, a number of years back, a freshman was under the mistaken impression that Griffin was the surname of some prominent alumnus who had donated money in order to have the teams named in his honor. Which, when you consider the Canisius scheme of things, was not an unreasonable assumption.l Perhaps the very best anatomy of a griffin's sporting utility comes from the continuation of Steve VVelIer's quote above: The Griffin is a creature with the head and wings of an eagle, which is partiotic: the torso of a lion, which gives the student body a feeling of securityg and most important, the changeable personality ofa chameleon, which keeps the coach from getting complacent. as as as THE LEGEND of the griffin predates Christianity, though our fabulous creature was to become a symbol in Christian art. The Canisius history-Canisius College: The First Hundred Years-pro- vides the following information: One of the high points of European poetry is that part of Dante's silver Purgatorio where, on the banks of the river that winds through the Earthly Paradise, there passes the Pageant of the Griffin. The Griffin of the City of God, which draws the Church's chariot of triumph, is a symbol of the Hypostatic Union in Christ of the two natures, human and divine. The bird part is divinity's incorruptible gold,' the beast part is red and white for humanity's flesh and blood lt is the most K i l 1 1 i augustly appropriate of symbols' and this haunting imaginative quality may be the reason why, of all heraldic monsters, the Griffin seems at once the nearest and most remote, the most incredible, yet most believably realistic. A case might even be made out for griffins being at least as easy to believe in as pteranodons and pterodactyls. What if there are no griffin fossils extant? There are pawprin ts of their making all over the world's major m ythologies. ln its pre-Christian time, the griffin carried very different connotations. According to the Britannica, in the natural history of the ancients, the griffin was supposed to watch over gold mines and hidden treasure. When strangers approached, the guardian griffins leapt upon the scavengers and tore them apart, thus chastising human greed and avarice. The legend of the griffin goes as far back as the fifteenth century before Christ. In classical mythology, the griffin was supposed to have pulled the chariots of Jupiter, Apollo, and Nemesis. During the Middle Ages, however, the griffin underwent a serious identity crisis. To some it was know as the emblem of the devil, and witches were said to have invoked the help of griffins to defend themselves against torturers. Still, the Christian symbolism has prevailed. -K' -16 -ll' THE EXACT circumstances under which the griffin flew to Canisius have never before been revealed completely. First, let us once again consult the Canisius history: Though the problems of when and where the Griffin began his reign as King Herald of the Canisius College Coat of Arms are not easily settled, the whence is easy to establish. Out Griffin flew to us from the prow of LaSalle's lost Griffon, U79 Flying Dutchman of the Great Lakes, which disappeared after making a safe voyage from the Niagara River to the Strait of Detroit LaSalle's ill-fated caravel, the first ship ever built on America's inland seas, with its 45 tons and five cannon, had its beakhead adorned with a flying Griffin, and an Eagle above it, in honor of the two heraldic beasts on the armorial bearings of the great Frontenac. According to Edward L. Staton in the Courier Express Maga- zine of July 1, 1973, Rene Robert Cavelier de La Salle wanted to obtain the rich fur-bearing land of the west for France. Destitute of funds and knowing that New France would have to be the outlet for the rich fur region, La Salle allied himself with Count Frontenac, who was governor of New France at the time. It was in honor of Frontenac, his powerful business partner, that La Salle named his ship Le Griffon, as Frontenac's family Coat of Arms had a griffin in it. The Canisius history illuminates: lt is one of history's minor ironies that he lLaSallel should more than once have said of his Griffon that, through it, he would make Frontenac's beast-insigne fly above Loyola's Wolf and Kettle. LaSalle had been Jesuit-educated, but later was at odds with them over policy in New France. 4 as X LaSALLE was among the first white men to see Niagara Falls: and it was the same mighty Falls which caused him great prob- lems in building his ship. A seven mile portage was required to carry the materials past the Niagara to an impromptu boat harbor up the river. It took three months to finish the vessel, which was a rough product at best. The ship reached the Strait of Detroit successfully, and it was loaded with 12,000 pounds of furs. However, it disappeared without a trace on its return trip. Staton elaborates: What happened to the Griffon has long been a matter of speculation. LaSalle believed that the pilot and the sailors scuttled her... Among the Jesuits there was the belief that the Griffon was driven ashore by a gale and the crew was murdered and the vessel plundered by lndians. llt is nonetheless clear that Canisius always intended to spell the word with its lN ending, despite the implications from time to time that the French ON suffix would be more proper. Fr. Clayton Murray, the College Archivist, has addressed that ques- tion. Would those who were searching for a symbol have taken as such a ship which floundered in a storm on its maiden voyage? Hardly an inspiring symbol. The animal, on the other hand, is a symbol of courage and vigilance. Fr. Murray also points out that one can conceive of many animal griffins, while, if the members of the teams owed their name to the ship, they would better be called Griffonauts. The Canisius history also deals with the problem of griffins in the plural. One must say a Griffin, since, unlike the Phoenix, there is more than one at a time, even though it is not yet settled what their collectivity should be called. On the analogy of flight of eagles and pride of lions, one might suggest a flourish, a rally, a gathering, even, in view of their implacable faces, a masque of griffins. -X' -K' -K- K .Ku J 7 ,, The LaSalle Medal marked the first official appearance of the Griffin at Canisius. lN ANY case, the appearance of the Griffin at Canisius has been shrouded in as much mystery as the disappearance of the Griffon on the Great Lakes. We know that it was in 1932 that Canisius first cast its La Salle Medal, which has been given out at every Commencement since. We also know that the first student honoree was Charles J. Wick, and that the second was Charles A. Brady. The suggestion for placing a griffin on the medal was very likely made by Fr. Harold C. Gardiner, S.J. We know further that the medal marked the first official appearance of a griffin at Canisius. We said at the outset that we would go from the known to the unknown. All of the foregoing was, in one form or another, known. Let us proceed to what has been, up to now, an un- known: how was it that the La Salle Medal, with its griffin, came about at all at Canisius? In the November, 1931 edition of a now-defunct journal, the Canisius Monthly, a short story entitled The Foot That Went Too Far appeared. The story was the first in a series of Frontier Vignettes which the Monthly started in order to commemorate Buffalo's one hundred yearsasacity. According to the Monthly itself, the Frontier Vignettes were designed to bring home, in some small degree, the wealth of modern Buffalo's historical heritage. lt may be regarded as a small part of Canisius College's contribution to the coming centennial. 'K' 'X' -X- THE STORY concerned the life of La Salle, and included a section on the building of the Griffon. Witness this passage from the story: A ship was gallantly beating up the Niagara River, against the head winds, a ship that carried two tall topmasts, and five guns, 'two were of brass and three Harquebuze a crock,'and it flew the white Bourbon flag. From the beak started that winged Griffin which was borne in the arms of Frontenac. And faithful Tonty was on the deck. La Salle's eyes were wet. Something of his heart's blood had gone into shaping that craft, during those long black months between his driving of the first bolt, midwinter, and today when she sailed her maiden voyage. Rene Robert Cavelier had built his boat the Griffon. It seems certain that this piece of historical fiction, which contains the first reference to a griffin here at Canisius, stirred imaginations on campus. For it was only six months later that the La Salle Medal was instituted. Clearly, the medal was a direct reflex of the short story. There then followed a chain reaction. The first place that the Griffin alighted was on the Masthead of this newspaper. Soon thereafter Canisius teams began to be re- ferred to as the Griffins. The Canisius history continues: For Canisius athletics the Griffin totem provided as sovereign a gold- plumaged aegis as the gold-tasseled, goat-shaggy shield of Zeus himself, a protective relationship that first began before the middle-thirties. Once the Griffin had been loosed at Canisius, it was here to stay. But it was the short story which provided the spark. Says the author, It was just one of those serendipitous things, a felicitous occasion, a gracious chance. The Canisius Griffin was born in the November, 1931 Canisius Monthly. There is a very good reason why the existence of this historic short story has been till now unknown, why it was ignored in the Canisius history. The authors of Canisius College: The First Hundred Years and The Foot That Went Too Far are one in the same man, Charles A. Brady, an English professor here at the Col- lege. lt was out of a sense of excessive modesty that Dr. Brady neglected to tell of his short story in his history. But l can get away with it. Because the guy happens to be my father. Editor's Note: This column has been reprinted from an October edition of The Griffin because of its relevance to the theme and Dedicatee of this book. Change, gradual but palpable, characterized the academic side of the 1930's and 1940's. Until the closing years of the thirties the most memorable teachers had tended to be clerics. Three Jesuit culture-heroes are cases in point: John La Farge, son of the great American painter, who taught English and classics in 1907, the last year of the German regime, Har- old C. Gardiner, later to be literary editor of America as well as of the New Catholic Ency- clopedia, who served in the same capacity be- tween 1929-19325 and John Courtney Murray, theologian of freedom and principal author of Vatican ll's Declaration on Religious Liberty, who taught Theology in several separate sum- mer sessions at the end of the 1930s. The fact that the now separate New York, Massachusetts and Maryland provinces constituted a single hyphenated province into the 1920s - the ar- rangement held for Maryland and New York into the 1930s - meant that, during those decades, the College had been able to draw upon a triply, then doubly, rich pool for its Jesuit personnel. Slowly but surely the balance shifted to the lay side after that until, by the 1960s, the preponderant maiority of Canisius teachers were no longer clerical, even though the original Jesuit Ieaven continued to work gratifyingly in this new dispensation. All in all, however, the lay professor, once very little more than what Oliver Goldsmith had called a gentleman usher, was distinctly in the ascen- dant. Developments during and after World War I had given the sciences a fillip that, over the succeeding decades, meant a continuous expan- sion in Canisius Physics and Chemistry, for their own sakes as well as prerequisite courses for the M.D. The approach of World War ll brought with it an allied curricular innovation that was to have far-reaching consequences, both short-term and long-term. At the request of the then director of the Buffalo City Hospi- tal, Dr. Walter S. Goodale, Canisius agreed to divide with the University of Buffalo responsi- bility for the academic courses mandated for the City Hospital School of Nursing's R.N. Out of that ad hoc arrangement came an unex- pected chain of results. One was an almost immediate connection with the nursing pro- grams of certain other area hospitals. Another was a Nurse Cadet contract toward the end of World War ll which salvaged a fiscal crisis at a time when registration had fallen off to virtual- ly the vanishing point with the few available civilian students serviced by a skeleton staff of teachers and administrators. For a short period, during the 1950s, the Canisius program evolved into a full-fledged Nursing School equipped to offer a B.S. in Nursing. Without possibility of outside subsidy, however, the amplified offer- ing proved too costly to continue. An unforeseen development, of really major significance, may be laid at the door of the Nursing Program. ln retrospect, it appears to have been an evident, if inadvertent, milestone on the road to full coeducation. The expanded Extension Program of the 1930s - and this process had actually begun just after World War l - had brought women onto the campus in the late afternoon, early evening, and Saturday morning hours. Now students, faculty, and administration alike grew used to the presence of young women at all hours of the academic day. The sixties were to witness the penulti- mate stage of this circuitous process which took the form of a half decade of technical evasions of the letter of the admissions law. Transfers from Extension to day school status were sanc- tioned by the Dean's office, with the business curriculum serving as the underground railway breaching the wall of exclusion in this almost fifty year advance toward the granting of full official academic recognition to the second sex. lOnce comfortably matriculated as a business student, it was possible to transfer to any of the other curricula.l By the fall of 1965 Canisius was finally a full-fledged coed college, some- what behind Harvard in this respect, but some- thing in advance of Yale, Princeton, Hamilton, Colgate and Kenyon. Dr. Whateley's too long accepted Oxford principle about a woman's being a creature that cannot reason was given the triumphant lie by the Canisius Dean's list, 1965-1970, a record of feminine intellectual prowess culminating in the Commencement of 1970 where six out of the eight graduates at- taining summa cum laude rank were female. The Nurse Cadets did not constitute the time Laying the cornerstone of Old Main, .lune18, 1911. 36 only military establishment maintained by Can- isius during the years of the Second German War. The College also served as the academic base for a continuously changing contingent of Air Force Cadets. In and out, at the fixed statutory intenlals, the waves of blue-clad train- ees, four hundred at a time, came and went: from Brooklyn, the South, the lVlidwest, the Far West. They barracked at the hastily con- verted one-time Nlasonic Consistory on Dela- ware Avenue, gained their first flying hours at an airdrome operated by the College, drilled and ran their vigorous obstacle races at the Villa, and studied in the classrooms of Old Main where otherwise, only a dwindling pool of civil- ian 4Fs worked according to an accelerated schedule of trimesters. Continued in the early post-war years and, for one overlapping year, elongated into a tetramester, this produced the odd anomaly of the Centenary Commence- ment's being the hundred and fourth. lVlean- while, the Canisius gownsmen who would nor- mally have sat beside these fellows of theirs, as well as the graduates of fighting age, marched and flew and lived and died in every theater of the gigantic conflict. The Alumni War Records Office under its director, Canisius Archivist J. Clayton lVlurray, S.J., faithfully kept the long and stirring tally of that Canisius lliad. In all, one thousand six- ty-three Canisius men served in the armed forces. Sixty-two of these died for their coun- try, among them a faculty member, Captain Nliquel Rafael Rodriguez, Chairman of the De- partment of Mathematics, who at fifty was lost at sea somewhere off Africa. Two Canisius Jesuits served in the Chaplain's Corps: James l.. Shanahan, S.J., later Provincial of the Buffalo Province, and John L. Shea, S.J., who returned to head the Department of Economics. Dr. Aus- tin C. lVlcTigue, commissioned during World War I, played an active role in Civil Defense during this Second War of the Nations. Dr. James H. Crowdle received a citation for his scientific contribution to the American war ef- fort - it paralleled one received for World War I. Hundreds of Canisius warriors were wounded. Many survived prisoner-of-war camps. Five hundred and ninety - virtually a mathematical third W were commissioned as officers. Not counting citations, Good Conduct medals and combat infantrymen's badges, over three hundred awards for valor were conferred on a hundred and thirteen Canisius soldiers. After the victory of 1945, with America an empire, albeit a not altogether willing one, there were other wars whose issues were not quite so simple as they had been in 1917 and 1942. Though Canisius men were to fight in Korea, that stalemated conflict did not touch the College closely. The tragic American mis- adventure in Vietnam, however, which had served as chief catalyst for the chain reaction engulfing American campuses from Berkeley to Cornell, did not pass Canisius by. Up to 1967, the fairly infrequent Canisius student demonstrations had tended to center about the classic complaints common to the student condition - there was for example, a cafeteria crowd-in protesting the quality of the daily cuisine. After 1967, they became in- creasingly political. Petitions were circulated: and certain members of the faculty joined the various student causes. With The Griffin, the student newspaper, as its spearhead, the Stu- dent Government, no longer a mimic parliamen- tary arena, showed itself skilled in the new techniques of encounter - confrontation seemed too strong a word to apply to the students' general respect for due process - there were exceptions, naturally - and to the countervailing humorous resilience displayed by the administration. When the rising curve of angry disillusion against what seemed to the students the ambiquities and sequent frustra- tions of national policy reached its apogee on the day after the deaths of the four students at Kent State, the ensuing triune rapport among students, faculty and administration was so close knit and so devoid of excess that the faculty spontaneously found it possible to con- gratulate the students publicly in a paid adver- tisement published in the Buffalo Evening News on Nlay 15, 1970. While the admissible extent of nascent student power remained an open issue as the fall term began in September, 1970, there was a reservoir of good will on all three sides that boded well for the adjustments that the future would necessarily have to bring. As elsewhere in the Eastern academic world, R.O.T.C. membership diminished at the College during 1968-1970. Nonetheless, up to the fall of 1970, student activists had not made it a serious target of complaint. For one thing, membership was no longer compulsory by the time the issue became a fighting one. For another, from its inception in 1951 R.O.T.C. courses had never counted toward academic credit at Canisius. For still another, there was a counter-climate of opinion also operative, ex- pressing itself temperately in favor of an institu- tion that, in more than one way, continued to suit the ethos of a portion of the Canisius constituency. lVloreover, under its local sporting sobriquet of the White lVlachine, the College's military unit, year by year, went on garnering a respectable number of drill and rifle prizes. ln fact, where competition was the criterion, the Drill Team trod close, percentage-wise, on the heels of the Varsity Debate Team which, main- taining along Canisius tradition of success in this forensic department, placed third in 1969's na- tional rankings and first in 1970. All these marches and counter-marches were a far cry from the way things were when the first returning G.l.'s invaded the Ivory Tower in 1946. With registrations booming generally, not only faculty but classroom space, too, were at a premium. lThe faculty bull market would show no signs of flagging until January of 197O.l One reflex of this situation was the College'sfirst territorial expansion in almost half a century. Temporary classrooms in the form of rhom- boid-shaped wooden hutments, painted gun- boat gray and stretching from the Science Building almost to the corner of Hughes and Meech, proved inadequate to accomodate the enormous student onrush. To supplement them, the College purchased the buildings and K . .,,, i rtfr 294 W +54 arr ., - 7 ' ll I -., ill: .... as RJ- ' 'ff- qgl!,,5-.- f-ff- ,-- - r 4- ll In ll H Old tion. lVlain During Various Stages of Construc- grounds belonging to the old Sisters Hospital fronting on Main Street at Delavan, the present site of the Canisius Athletic Complex - prior to its final abandonment and subsequent demoli- tion, the structure was to serve in a series of other capacities, including housing the Little Theater, the R.O.T.C. offices, and, briefly, the Business School. To renovate the facilities for G.l. classroom purposes the State Emergency Housing Grant Board allotted a grant to Canisi- us which was challenged by a Buffalo attorney, Henry Adsit Bull, who had construction halted through an injunction charging a breach of the New York State principle of the separation of Church and State. On June 11, 1948, after almost a year's litigation, the New York State Court of Appeals upheld the decision of the lower courts dismissing the suit. In a sense, Mr. Bull had won an extra-judicial verdict, though the fact was not apparent at the time. It was to become clear in retrospect that the whole dispute and its aftermath had both underlined and furthered a process of seculari- zation that, within two decades, was to bring Canisius to a point of non-sectarianism which it had taken the great originally Protestant colle- giate foundations of America almost two cen- turies to arrive at. The spring of 1970 was to witness a sequel to Mr. Bull's action, this time with Canisius as the plaintiff. Excluded from the Bundy program which provided state mon- ies for the relief of financial stringencies within the private colleges of the State, Canisius sued for a reversal of the decision of State Education Commissioner Ewald B. Nyquist that theinstitu- tion did not qualify for assistance, the grounds of the suit, as stated in the court hearings, that it was not dominated wholly or in part by the Catholic Church. Depression first, and then war, had dictated that Presidents James P. Sweeney, S.J., Francis A. O'lVlalley, S.J. and Timothy J. Coughlin, S.J., 1941-1947, should conduct holding opera- tions in the important areas of academic policy and physical growth. Now the relative affluence of the post-war period provided one of the propulsive forces behind an enormous expan- sion, both functional and esthetic, of the physi- cal plant, as well as of the flowering of an already fine faculty into a finer one. Over its first century Canisius had known three basic architectural styles, with the early Villa's pastoral freshness complementing the first phase and counterpointing the second. These were, in order: the red brick of Washing- ton Streetp the creamy - as it aged, near Oz-yel- low, of Old lVlaing the contemporary mode of glass-and-stone. Yet, for all the eclecticism of its later buildings, the College remained recog- nizably the concept it was when, early in the 1910s, the dome first rose like a white zucchet- to crowned by a gold cross. The first of Cani- sius' modern builders was Buffalo-born Ray- mond W. Schouten, S.J. - of its twenty-two presidents up to 1970 three were Buffalo-born and five alumni. President Schouten launched his building program with Loyola Hall, the seemly Jesuit faculty residence which closes the side of the inner quadrangle abutting on East- wood Place. His second project, the Chapel of Christ the King, was formally dedicated on the Feast of St. Ignatius, July 31, 1951. An exqui- sitely conceived Romanesque building well suited to the masculine genius of the military or- .sff.uXKiK Canisius Today der that founded Canisius, it remains the crown jewel of the campus. Across from it, stone right hand lifted in benedication, as natural a spirit of Canisius place as the Puritan divine John Harvard of Harvard, a heroic statue of St. Isaac Jogues appears to bless this Chapel for Col- legians. Philip E. Dobson, S.J., 1952-1959, contin- ued to build Canisius' city of the intellect. His twin achievements in glass and stone were the Andrew L. Bouwhuis Library named after the Jesuit director of the Library from 1935-1955: and, across from it, the Administration Building which commemorates the memory of Registrar Daniel T. Bagen whose connection with the College had spanned the years from 1920-1963. The first of two splendid residence facilities, Frisch Hall, memorializing John A. Frisch, S.J., Canisius' and Johns Hopkins' eminent biologist, came into simultaneous being with the hand- somely appointed and comfortably flexible Stu- dent Center four years after James J. lVlcGinley was installed as president. The second student residence, Bosch Hall whose name keeps in memory the personality of a fiery Catalonian cleric, Raymond G. Bosch, Professor of lvlodern Languages from 1932-1967, was ready for the fall term of 1968 during the current presidency of James M. Demske, S.J. Father Demske's time in office has also wit- nessed, in September of 1969, the opening of the massive Athletic Complex: and, in 1970, the completion of the College's most controver- sial structure, the Faculty Tower, which stands between Bagen and the Bouwhuis Library in front of Old lVlain, altering a Buffalo vista of some sixty-two years. Two converted apartment structures on Main Street near by, Campion Hall and the old Alumni Hall, were modified to cope with an overflow from the campus residences. Alumni Hall found commodious quarters on the west side of Main at Humboldt Parkway. The large former Tele- phone Building on Delavan near Jefferson un- derwent extensive renovation in 1969-1970 to equip it for the business office, the Computer Center, and the Departments of Biology and Psychology. The Eastwood offices of the En- glish Department were also abandoned some time after the Tower was ready for occupancy. All in all, it is a compact urban campus, and a very lovely one. Location has become destiny in another way than could have been envisioned by the builders of Old Main. As the College's second century dawned, Canisius' geographical situation, no longer semi-rural as in 1912, but now on the very edge of the Inner City, clearly cast the school for an important role in the emerging epic of Negro America. As President Dobson had established a bridgehead within the downtown community of business and banking and President McGinley had firmed up lines of communication with the alumni, it fell to Presi- dent Demske's lot to make a collective, Char- dinian leap forward into a new-found and, no sooner found than imperiled, human communi- ty of black and white. To keep pace with the advances in brick and mortar, President Dobson's regime had found it necesary to effect, for an institution still nine- teenth century in organization outline, a tech- nocratic revolution that proceeded by blue- print. Among other things, this necessitated a setting up of guidelines for a faculty continu- ously being both amplified and upgraded. Be- fore the marking time induced by the Depres- sion and World War ll, there had been a gradual but definite growth under Presidents Peter F. Cusick, S.J., 1923-1929, and Rudolph J. Eich- horn, 1929-1934. To the outer eye, however, things had not altered much from the day of President George J. Krim, S.J., 1919-1923. Change now began to occur at what seemed a rate of geometrical progression, not least in the composition of the faculty. lt was now crystal- clear that the balance of power had dipped in the layman's direction: and no longer the Cath- olic layman necessarily. lAlmost from the be- ginning, of course, there had been non-Catholic members of the faculty, but up to now the faculty had tended to be preponderantly Catho- lic.l By the beginning of the sixties the staff roster had become multi-denominational with Prostestants, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists in its ranks. By the spring of 1969 at least a quarter of the faculty belonged to other religious tradi- tions than the Catholic. At the same time, fol- lowing the national trend, the economic situa- tion bettered for the Canisius professoriat at large. To illustrate this enormous shift in educa- tional gravity: in the Golden Jubilee Year of 1920 there had been seventeen faculty mem- bers in all, only four of them lay, to accomo- date a student body of not quite two hundred. On the eve of the Centennial Year there were one hundred and sixty-six fulltime faculty, one hundred and thirty-one of these Iaymen and women, plus eighty part-time teachers of whom seventy-six were lay, and the all-round enroll- ment had mounted to the neighborhood of five thousand. A similar parabola had been de- scribed within the administration with the Ex- ecutive Vice President, the Director of Student Personnel, the Dean of Admissions and Rec- ords, the Director of the Graduate Division, the Deans of Men and Women, the Director of the Library all lay. In fact, the very term, lay, had virtually become a historical curiosity. The only offices still reserved - and out of tradi- tion, too, not out of statute - for Jesuits were those of the Dean of the Faculty, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, and the President: and, even for these heretofore sacrosanct pre- serves, there were signs that the situation could easily change in the predictable future. Speak- ing before the Canisius chapter of the A.A.U.P. on December 6, 1966, President Demske star- tled his audience with his response to a query about the future direction of the College: A dramatic difference might well come in the top control of the College .... Will we even have a Jesuit president in ten years? The greater diversification of faculty degrees has been another index of fundamental change. In addition to those standbys of the immediate past, the greater Catholic graduate schools, doctorates from Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Ox- ford, the Sorbonne, Chicago, Cornell, Vienna, Louvain, Leipzig, California,Southern Califor- nia, Toronto, Penn State, the University of Pennsylvania, Syracuse, Wisconsin, Michigan, Northwestern, Nebraska, Rutgers, became com- monplaces among Canisius faculty credentials. October, 1968, saw the election of a Faculty Senate, a circumstance that proved of immense utility during the student crises of 1969-1970. A history of the College might almost be writ- ten in terms of the evolution of faculty ameni- ties, with the early forties marking the first great breakthrough when wives were included in the annual Dean's Dinner for the Faculty. It was to President Dobson's day that the instruc- tional staff owed the cozy institution of the Faculty Coffee Room which at once became the center of common room conviviality. There is a temptation, when writing college history, to confine one's chronicle to bricks and mortar first, after that to presidents, and finally to faculty, without touching, except as a pure abstraction, a college's raison d'etre, students, and that student-extension in time who are the alumni and alumnae. Since the University of Buffalo's College of Arts and Sciences did not get underway significantly until toward the end of the 1910s, Canisius, as the only male liberal arts college within the city limits for the preceding half century, carried extra responsi- bility for those studies which traditionally have been prerequisites for the professions of law, medicine, dentistry, teaching and the sacred ministry. The successful discharge of this obli- gation was reflected in what might almost be thought of a disproportionate percentage of Canisius-trained attorneys, jurists, physicians, dentists, teachers, and priests, to say nothing of an occasional minster here and there. From the beginning, it also served as a breeding ground for political leaders on federal, state and munic- ipal levels. Many graduates elected business ca- reers in addition as executives and experts - in 1968, out of the College's living seven thou- sand, five hundred alumni, some five hundred were accountants. By the second half of the 1930s, with Canisius chemists and physicists already making their mark in industry and sec- ondary teaching, a sizable number of Canisius men had begun to opt for careers in university and college teaching. After the middle fifties, this particular rate of advance notably accelerat- ed. Even though colleges had always been orga- nized for the sake of the students for whom they acted in loco parentis, it was during the 1960s and 1970s that college students came into their own in a special sense as a kind of Fifth Estate. At Canisius, as elsewhere, courses proliferated and, with this burgeoning of outlet, opportunities for later graduate advancement also increased. Woodrow Wilsons, Danforths, National Science Foundation Fellowships, Regents Medical Scholarships, Fellowships in general were won in increasing numbers. For the first time, black students exerted a percepti- ble impact as fully funded Martin Luther King Scholarships made their appearance in 1967. One sign that the macrocosm of the outer world was more and more visibly affecting the microcosms that were the colleges was the fact that, in the Canisius language laboratories, Russian had joined the old, once exclusively preferred Western European tongues. Curriculum reform produced a positive ex- plosion within the once inveterately conserva- tive departments of Theology and Philosophy where the post-Johannine strains within Catho- licism were naturally felt most acutely. Aquinas retreated, the Existentialists gained ground. To paraphrase the English statesman on Socialism, they were all Existentialists at Canisius in those decades. Or almost all, since Thomism still mar- shaled its defenders. After the post-1914 retreat of classic studies in the Latin and Greek vernac- ulars, English and American literature had been the chosen conduits through which the stream of imaginative culture had flowed most freely. Between 1950-1970 the English Department took a broadened view of its commitments to the literary stream of the present as well as to an age in which criticism had become a major activity. lt was, at the same time, hospitable to the new trends in cinema and multa-media. An immediate result of all this ferment was the installation of two honors degrees: on a general levelg on the level of the various major concen- trations. No longer was college mainly a com- bination of social credential and anthropologi- cal rite de passage, though it would have to be admitted that the new tribalism of 1967-1970 was adding a few anthropological innovations of its own. At the same time as the relationship between instructor and instructed - and this was especially true of the younger staff mem- bers - became a more organic one, the campus turned into a literal Chautauqua of outside lec- ture possibilities under the aegis of such entities as the Fitzpatrick Chair in Political Science, the Polish Chair, and the Academic Lectures Com- mittee, supplemented by the independent offer- ings of the various departments. All this change in no way involved a repudia- tion of past values. When the Centennial year of 1970 came to its end, the supremacy of the liberal arts, though shaken, still remained. Another thing that had stayed intact, though hardly unchanged in expression, was the fact that, amid all the hub-bub, Canisius humanism had never surrendered God for the sake of an illusory self-sufficiency. It taught Kafka in its literature classes with great sympathy, but its philosophy went far beyond Kafka's world of masks. Above all, perhaps, it maintained a phi- losophy of death as well as life. At Canisius, however new the garb in which it went forth, the old liberal mystique continued to strike a necessary delicate balance between an institu- tion of higher learning as a generator of new knowledge and as a transmitter of old wisdom, while never ignoring the student-generated de- mand for engagement in the vital issues of the day. lf it accepted - as it did - the cult of the absurd within bounds as a corrective of yester- day's false heroics, it insisted, at the same time, on remembering that man's life also needed overtones of myth, magic, compassion and heroism. With the Zeitgeist effectively seculariz- ing the sacred on every side, Canisius had at- tempted a subtler thing: to sacralize the secular. Only the future will tell whether the effort had proved successful. CANISIUS COLLEGE ORIENTATION 2001 MAIN SI BFLO. N.Y. 14208 I 'Maud 40 wg., A E 2, ', .4 ,,.1- -N .-- New ' il x X N x- .- QA 43 1 4 a I , , 7' 71+- V , K . , , f , 1 , 9. Ya 1 ' Q A iw' -J 554 x A ,syn .J m i sf ' 'Y g, K 'Y A V ,MA SEV ' H. K 'f-.M ,4-W' fy 90. nwf' Q 4 Q ,, 'Q W MQ 1 X 1 X x Q. 4 ' v wwf 3 x 'Q SQ: s . X ,R K S. NX , sf 'K 'Q- X.. A-'4,ff! M,-,Q f1 m Maur in NMFA 'Q' YQ-sf! -- ' fix 9 Q , . , Mi Ap 5 fz 92 'Ni if f ' J 45 x .ik ,mt .-fl wa-'Nl ,vm ,MJW 75 W if . I. , LM nv aff A AZ! 46 .5 XM QL ,. A ,wmv s ff' 'WAV 'Vic- 'L fx 4- NX Q f . , 5 f t ' M ff ' Xi 1 2 J a ,-:L K L E . 2 K FA 5 WR W M M,Y w , N, xg . .-.k , - if-.sr Q .11 , . is W W L far U X .-uw X A K: EQ q ,.:- Q if .vw-wwswdif. is .' N. Q . M K A, . S . , -' - AMA G++ 5 xr,-Mai? JQXQK - ., S 55 .i -Mr' V . LS as K K N- My ...gy x.. K x x Q 7 ' Y' L: Y ,. . 'QQSQN re, fujjfgn H' ,wik as X , . , ,k s-5 ' ,va Q, ss ix Q if R K 'I VK wfm A W N Q' 5 r W Q xg, ef ., Q ffl? - +A- Q ' A Q ,Q A .Q ik. AX QNA Thomas lVlurphy, Chairman of the Board, General Nlotors, Seventh Annual Business Awards Dinner, October 28, 1975 sponsored by the Canisius College School of Business Administration. . Donald Freed, sponsored by the Campus Programming Board, October, 1975. Lectures '75 Stewart Udall, former Secretary of the Interior, sponsored by the Political Science Association of Canisius College. ,.. 1 X 318 7. , V .. Q. .t .:,. , ,, 11. tg gt ts My xkk+?'vwfxQ ix t X? iii'-5-R ' ' 1'-N s. . Qt Q iw W ,Q E2 , tt sw s is X Q is? ,E XP s xr 4, 'N' ,, tissl' A s .Q .. Q- E gfgfffe Senator Edmund Muskie,sponsored by the William P. Fitzpatrick Chair of Political Science Lecture Series. 924 gd. 5' r i P . FQXQ-S Q it aww ks- ks ' Ax n rf AROCC Association for Research of Childhood Cancer CANISIUS COLLEGE Religious Studies Center BUFFALO AREA COUNCIL OF CHURCHES ROSWE LL PAR K Memorial Institute f X l i!' XX X! If N V xx A CHlLD'S DEATH ELISABETH KUBLER Ross Friday, October 24, 1 975 yur' ' as .W ,,,. Us 1 4 A ff MWMWN ,M f Wm mr: Q I , gf 1 is 'fn i f 'M 4, 69' J, 5 E212 Q , , Q 1 L W4 ,,,,, .41 my in ,ZA, H J ju, 'lf' 1 jgf ' I4zi .a ww ' ,ffl 'QJVEWQQ V. S . ,M Q. W nf A 'Vx VKX ' f, N -Z , ..,.,,, ,K .2 If: 2 A I xy 3,53 ' 1, X1 1 QV X mg .gf -1, 1 ry - K - ' ' ' ,f K , ff 2 ' 'J M xqfllif-lb-EX Y w f, ,y.., 4- ,y 1 Z, x . 75' 5,3 ,fn , , , L www Q! as Nba Xiiiv OX 4, f , - ,, in W 5 A iw Xi N ,X 9 as X M M at W X' 'Q Bl snklmxl '- g, V WW Iwi if qhzu A Q V Q XX xx3lv 11 X N f' Vx ffffffx X, g,,p,wj5f,f fl M gay ,A iffiff ff ,Q A, ,J gifW fy JFK 3? My . x ET? ,jf ,ff ,X ff KM ' Memories, 1976 Military Ball The Diary of Adam and Eve 4 sy 5 3 ' K K M Wm x K -Ss--feb5?w W-. ag f 40... ... 4. 5 f 1 V 'N U 4 W1 'jf , ,,,, , 'kgm W ,pl -' 11 1, Mf11m'3 -f' 3 - Mm... ' ff 'iii - , my ,T ' V A K ' 4 . ' . U 6 A V 56 Uncle Percy's Tea Party . 8 I 5 ,w Mew , s ,A K - K Q 1 .1 1 -x XOR, 4. .. fi Yi LID, .5 Yi' J W ,ww 57 N +,. Julian Bond, sponsored by the Campus Programming Board of Canisius College. Lectures '76 Senator James D. Buckley spoke to a Canisius crowd in February. 5, 'WI' Q 'I Q A? D 1 S' E53 gr? K Presidential hopeful, Senator Henry Scoop Jackson spoke to a Canisius crovvd, April 1. 58 C22 IVliIt Jackson, sponsored by The Jesuits Artist in Residence Program, and the Afro-American Society. Ii i . 2 s 2 gif 3, 3: E if N if s M 3 1 ,el ii FN 'N R .T QNX NRM AWN I if . iff p ,. MW! ,L ,, K 32 ' i X I 2 S55 F H, f gg f 4,.,, WK? Vw, W QW Z 47 sg if S. 555 S X? 4 ws, II! 5 n V5 ,,.- 41 1 . 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Q S vi Z f'i?f.J?Ltw:wTi,2Jfi 'PffiEfi,WW ' W We W,-, 5, .,.,, .M v,,, 1Vwvf'zw ww af' f,f:g,'ffis.,'?5'zf rff!W53?M?Qf' ,:e1?2aWWff'f ffcii?viwfQ!5p,i 1 ff5?r4?ff1?wifs2i,'- 25552s.'?21:s.5rg.'r4ffff' L wizpw,w fw25ffwQ215e.,'f'5f 4 1fx57S'ia:i.'fJZ3! x Z? 1ib!i11Z3's f 2 ff3,,,.,,-eff, i :fs?5?fef55Z:1ef5?pQ,gi,Qs.i?f,, wa in ws1ef'WwAmIx..'e:f H we,.wf.:4w. fw2ewsf.wfffwere.2 , r .4 fMears,iqrfafiwefggihzf ,, sf5,w3,,f2frfyiiff, if fy vm?fewyf5:a'isJfvfe!22 wfv . wffvezigiwifwze Y 'f5:U,'?!5if:' ff' 'Kwan ,W-2535liiE:i2fWfi:fiff'f'ffifa' , i ,pmgw 2 W, ,.,,,...,w,.....,,.... 2 J 2 .ei fi, 4 ,ff-sff::t.f.,cii ' .A,,Wi, V:,, ,,,, if Hamm . fy fevw,Affeizwfew.fWf5:1fwii 2 Above, Rev. Edward F. Nlaloney, S. J., Acting President, Fall '75, Vice President for Academic Affairs. Right, Very Rev. James Nl. Demske, S. J., President. 0, 2 Q f Q r af3,f,,?, 3 fig, rgaxst 8 , ' 5 X fr 2, fe, 2 2 f 1 2 3 32 8 3 i , U2 Hgrefg P '53 1? Q gg V2 a 7: 2 5 K Q 3 f, an iw M Q, Y PP 1 f 3 s 25 P' wa Q Y 3 :R Q 2 2 5955132 , 1-iii ,Q 'ef 1? W K 3 gf f W 5 sw Q 3 ix Y ,H if ,,52,g, . ,W . W .V ,ff fm f-:ffi-,m'yy,.7f4 3 Q ? me 2 ? Hg A 3 ? Q e yi' vi 324 D' Ay G P X 3 Q 5 Q 2 Kai t ii e X ' ' ew HM N e ? 18' 4. fi Q Wi S, , 1. 1-Q! fini. 'QQ W N Q Il Q fl Rf N Q. AR M Q25-N , Www, i Wwwww 2 , ,, . F, ,ff . 2 if .J if W 64 .. ,MWW T5 ' we ve,..,M,,, Upper Left, George NI. Martin, Vice President for Administrative Affairs. Upper Right, Edward B. Gillen, S.J., Assistant to the President for Planning. Left, Jack Heckinger, Vice President for Business and Finance 'Y 'f 0! U J'f-' I-v RW Upper Left, Lillian M. Levey, Dean of Students. Upper Right, William T. Brooks, Associate Dean of Students. Right, Joseph F. Bieron, Ph.D., Dean ofthe College of Arts and Sciences, Anthony B. Brzoska, S.J., Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences is mga.. 550' ,S ., .,... .t.t . .t,...,...s.ww., .. .- ss.. .,k. Q ... 'N Q Q- a' ..,..,.w-' ,Zh aYi tf ':.s.,..wv' w,'.,,,,ux,wM,,,t .... Pi, yv .v W...---- w,r+vv'w . ,.....s-v-' n 1.-wwf . Q . , . -ow' sf- .xzi f 1. rw-'w'f'f11:as +I if .,,-, , MM, Y., l,C w.,jssMs,Q'+.a lv, v- ,. V a-N., Ws-C'+J '+e.f WM-A ,jg 5-:DNN N 'sc 'wp 'f+.,.., 'ww 5 1 is-. NNNM -,,, ut. Mm., Q .5a..:s.. We-.-.Qu 'vu MM- fn Q. ,, , is-N, W.. -H., 4 Q. 1 Swine-2.1M-iIIl1'. X sw..f.gtgf.a,- L A- Y 3 f is Upper Left, Bernard L. Martin, Ph.D., Dean ofthe School of Business Administration. Upper Right, J. David Valaik, Ph.D., Dean ofthe Office of Continuing Studies. Lower Left, Donald J. Murphy, Ph.D., Director ofthe Education Division. Lower Right, Frank V. Daley, Assistant Director ofthe Education Division. I - Q Upper Left, Donald Then, Director of Public In- formation. Upper Right, Mary Lou Littlefield, Director of Publications. Right, Dennis Marco, Director of Alumni!Alumnae, with a friend. 15? N-Nkx X ' ' Q 'fit-Rt , t Q es.. F 5 X t 11 n 5 O1 5 M Q5 ,. A 'Qsq.' M N xg- w..,.,f , g..f.f, . f 5 '3 ffl ti S if 5 CHQ K 3 Stl K I' 1 ' 5 W 5 Q Q' S Q 5 A seg . Q- any -0. 55332 xQ . Q if ' .fi tt.. xii uw Q55 Upper Left, Ronald H. Luczak, Development Officer, Special Events. Upper Right, Charles Schmidtke, Ph.D., A.l.D.P. Coordinator. Lower Left, Daniel P. Starr, Ph.D., Director of Athletics. Lower Right, Daniel N. Hurley, Director of Sports Information. 69 if s ...gf wr 4 Below, Daniel Wnek, Registrar. Right, Penelope H. Lips, Director of Admissions. Left, Patricia E. Zasadil, Manager of Flestudent Center. Right, Nicholas J. Connolly, S.J., Director Campus Nlinistry. 70 ft Ronny Lucas and Peter Laux Director of the brary Above Anthony Bellia Dlrector of Flnanclal Upper Left, George IVI. Binner, Director' of Career Deve1opment84 Counseling Center. Upper Rfght, Paul J. Dugan, S. J., Campus Ministry. Right, Joseph E. Foreman, Director of Security. 'Uv f 5 'S A is ,Q in 517 :71 'J Left, in lieu of Dr. Thalia P. Feldman, Chairman, Art History. Lower Right, Rev. J. Clayton lVlurray, Archivist. Below, Walter G. Sharrow, Ph.D., Pre-Lavv Advisor. ,fi Accounting John C. Abramowski Paul D. Amico B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting 'Wx .ve C 7 for DR. DANIEL E. O'KEEFE, Chairmang MRS. BARBARA H. BROCK, DR. JOSEPH R. COPPOLA, DR. RAJABALI KIANI 74 David G. Boehm B.S. Accounting William J. Bogner B.S. Accounting David F. Budniewski B.S. Accounting Salvatore Buscaglia Charles K, Caputy B,S. Accounting B.S. Accounting 75 Gary J. Cutler B.S. Accounting Timothy B. Cox B.S. Accounting Marie T. Carroll B.S. Accounting my 4.1 nv Michael J. Donohue B.S. Accounting Brian H. Eckert Q B.S. Accounting Howard N. Czapla Paul R. Diviak B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting Deborah A. Denz James L. Domres Paul M. Ertel B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting 76 Paul C. Frascella BS. Accounting 77 Peter J. Gross Joseph A. Haslinger Mark Gevex B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting Elizabeth A. Hays Steven R. Hughes B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting Robert F. Jagodzinski Joseph F. Jay B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting 78 Sandra A. Kazmierczak William Nl. Kingston John S. Kropski B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting Rodney J. Krysztof B.S. Accounting R0b9Yf J- Laughlin Catherine M. Langan Paul D- La Croix B-3 Accounting B-S. ACCOUHUHQ Bs. Accounting 'QQ t ii Susan M. Lulek Richard D. Maguder Karen M. McCaf'ferty B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S, Accounting kkky K X John M. Meinzer Annette M. Miechowicz Susan M. Mucha B.S. Accounting B.S, Accounting BS. Accounting James Hannon B,S. Accounting 80 'lv Raymond M. Nowicki B.S. Accounting numnnnnuumumumMuxunllllmwU1wxw1wxwllllllnnuuuxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxmlnllnnnnmuuuummuuuw wwuwXwuwwwmnuummmuuwummwmumumuwuum .M nnAWHHYXRXXXXXXIXKHRXHKNNWWWUWIIW n n nnnvnvnvvvvvvvvvv nmrmwwwv111nrrmwwllwwwwwmwmmmwaw W' W nnnnvnvvvvvvvv '1H'1'''''''wwJN''1YNAIKHKNHWNNWW' WW W YLN0NDllUllllNklllllllll1lllNRM W??1w nnn nn wnn rn 81 EUXNKWKK1YllllllllllllllllhNHKllHlllNNNWWllllMlllllllilll 6 ,Q Q Frederick J. Piasecki BS. Accounting Camellia R. Pirrone B.S. Accounting Charles F. Ritchie Robert F. Rung Michael J. Sammarco B,S, Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting 82 av- Anthony Serra Joseph V. Siemienowski James P. Stabel B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting John S. Stewart Paul J. Suor Robert M. Vaccaro B,S. Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting 0 Y -, L H.. W Harry D. Vandermeulen Marian Tagliarino B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting 83 The future does not belong to those who are content with today it will belong to those vvho can blend passion, reason, and courage in a personal commitment. - Flobert F. Kennedy Russell J. Ward Robert J. Wick Donald T. Williams B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting B.S. Accounting Steven A. Wood B.S. Accounting '? Audrey A. Zawadzki B,S. Accounting 84 Biology svn. WDW . igk -we f f fi uf .N-an-n-an heunnnisniuunm Seated, Dr. Allan Alexander, Chairman: Dr. Katherine P. Treanor, Dr. S. Chidambaram, IVls. Colleen Argus, Dr. I. Joan Loarch. Standing, Dr. Vincent Stouter, Dr. Kenneth R. Barker, Dr. Robert F. Blasdell, Dr. Joseph Tomasullo. Gary J. Alexander Philippe J. Aliotta Frank C, Barnaghuk B.A. Biology B.A. Biology-Sociology BAA. Biology 85 2, he Brian J. Bauer Edward Kelly Bartels Michele A. Bieron B.A. Biologv B.A. Biology B.A. Biology A : . .'., A I Nw, W Q ,y.,V ,11, , ,LV ll!! Q X an z'fA up it 1935 i im V 4' V K V ' W2 ' f 5 its! f btw va - f 1 bi Q' 1 y 3 O I 'Q 1 V I f , ' Donna Bitka 4 -yll y- A 1 B.A. Biology , Q 5 E 4 A, wi m y Lg 'ls lwl- David Nl- CaSmUS Kevin D. Chaisson Susan M. Celatto B-A Bl0'0QV B.A. Biology B.A. Biology 86 M. Paula M. Dalessio B.A. Biology Paula C. Doro Mary F. Driscoll B.A. Biology BA. Biology - E Maureen P. Donley B.A. Biology David J. Durante Carol A- Dralek B.A. Biology B-A l3l0l09Y B ...M . y k. V ,v , ' ,., 87 1 'The consent of the governed is basic to American democracy. If the governed are misled, if they are not told the truth, or if through official secrecy and deception they lack information on which to base intelligent decisions, the system may go on - but not as a democracy. f David Wise, The Politics of Lying HW- 1 R , Dino A. Graziano Judith A. Flaherty B.A. Biology BA. Biology Linda M. Feldman B.A. Biology r X ll Gary Gardali B.A, Biology 88 Charles B. Gelia B.A. Biology i 255132352 y Robert Gianforcaro ' fi? B.A. Biology Michael D. Gleeson Richard D. Gruntz B.A. Biology-German B.A. Biology Mary M. Haag Joan M. Haas Michael F. Hartney B.A. Biology B.A. Biology BA, Biology 89 Michael P. Hennessy William Jaremkg B.A. Biolo9V B.A. Biology William P. Hayes Thomas M. Kaminska Colleen M. Kane B.A. Biology B.A. Biology BA. Biology-Psychology Michael F. Helmicki BA. Biology-Psychology sur 90 JA.: 'Ulf Marlene J. Krawczyk B.A. Biology Donna M. Lastowski BA. Biology Micheal C. Kaufman Stephen M. Kilbridge John J. Li Puma BA. Biology B.A. Biology B.A. Biology Peter J. Macauder John A. lVlilIer B.A. Biology BA, Biology 'i John P. Miller James D. Mullin BA. Biology BA. Biology Melanie Nlurawski Philip A. Mure BA. Biology BA, Biology 92 ...L Mlm 537 M-'! 1 Donna M. Oehman Michael E. Palumbo B.A. Biology B.A. Biology A w,,y,W Daniel E. Plachta David Pileri B.A. Biology B.A. Biology 93 John S. Paroski BA. Biology Anthony F. Perna B.A. Biology Matthew W. Pielecha B.A. Biology Eric C. Redmill John A. Frisch, S. J. David P. Roberts BA. Biology-Nursing B.A. Biology .gs Richard C. Russo Madonna K. Saia Thomas W. Schenk BA. Biology B.A. Biology B.A. Biology 94 Claudia M. Schnorr James A. Sloand Lynn M. Steinbrenner B.A. Biology B.A. Biology B.A. Biology-Nursing Joseph A. Sciandra B.A. Biology , ya Q IB ', 'Aw Bethany L. Symes B.A. Biology James M. Shaw B.A. Biology Nicholas Tiberia B.A. Biology 5335.255f'ii:i5'55'?'55E99F??f'JPQQLBZGL .- - - - J-fr raw- --M...-xg'.--:.--..-Jw. ..,.,...:.--,.,...,.,...9,--.--..-.N--- --,,--if ----.--,...f-..---R-ff-,iv -Q,-:rw-,.a,.o - --f2..wr' 'mm--2 -f fn-u --15155-fi3'5i'4 ?i1'S245-ffJfS'?W: . J .,.Q4,.-.n,-.wg-..4., .7 al.. - ,U -3.42- -7' NI'if??.v2-'iigwri' -'-'-H.--.---rw-....,,...,... . . , ' ff ...P HW .. .,. , , , 'lr - . .H .. . 5 an .. -. ffwg,.,2,,f.MW.-,..-r..:..,1W,.:..f,-5-..-V.:af-1-Am-.,-.5 32-vmizggffwg hifi?-,--A gi--is-gf? ya:- nfmrwi-Q 2,ai-:1Q'1.-1.--,-:Q-f .-rw-:mc-Q Af. 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Bozer Anthony P. Catalano B.A. Biochemistry BA. Biochemistry B.A. Biochemistry QI! 3 f L. l 4 James T. Conway B.A. Biochemistry ii Dianne L. Cookfair B.A. Biochemistry . 98 ,E X X if Eric R. Dahmer Dennis M. Durma BA. Biochemistry B.A. Biochemistry M? R - Robert G. Guenther James J. Hederman BA. Biochemistry BA. Biochemistry fl 'xt me-mar.,-..,...,, A ..... ,... ,.,,,t.. iii. H. ,,,,,.,,,.......v --..,.,.,4 S ...x t at if, 1 i 99 Bio-Chemistry J Michael G. Martin Joseph W. Pav BA, Biochemistry B.A. Biochemistry 100 g o , Kenneth R. Ronzo BA. Biochemistry H-f Allan M. Weiner BA. Biochemistry Chemistry Seated, Fae Johnson, Ramon A. Salomone, S. J., Chairman. Standing, Paul J. McCarthy, S. J., Dr. James E. Van Verth, Tom Stabler, Dr. Philip D. Heffley, Dr. Richard E. Stanton, Dr. William F. Zapisek, Dr. Joseph F. Bieron, Dr. Frank J. Dinan, Dr. Raymond Annino Ronald J. Costanzo Joseph F- Bi9f0l1, Ph-D- Brian J- Harrigan. B,S. Chemistry B.S. Chemistry '59 B.S. Chemistry-Physics 'lOl l think democratic peoples have a natural taste for liberty, left to themselves, they will seek it, cherish it, and be sad if it is taken from them. But their passion for equality is ardent, insatiable, eternal, and invincible. They vvant equality in freedom, and if they cannot have that they still vvant equality in slavery. They vvill put up with poverty, servitude, and barbarism, but they will not endure aristocracy. - Alexis De Tocqueville Peter J. Harrington Nlark P Her0n BS. Cl19rT1iSIry B S Chemistry Mallfeen G- L-Ynch Berkley D Turner B.S. Chemistry B S Chemistry f f fn ,N .av f ga: -W1-aim, . W , . mf ., f f, 'fa' ' 5 , ,.,.,5, A, t, iff' 0 MWM J , 1, 1 , . 4, Y , , 'SS' ,fa-W 2 i E 5 2 Marcus A. Bembenista BA. Communications-Political Science Robert V. Gibson B.A. Communications-History Seated, Dr. Bruce R. Hammond, Dr. William J. Howell. Standing, Marilyn Stahlka'Watt, Dr. David R. Fendrick, Chairman. Communications ' 'HMT ' 'NZ?? ? 'I if f' ' i . A i 4 A Z ii ' 7 -Ziffij, 103 Economics! Finance Seated, Dr. Ronald R. Reiber, Dr. Alan I. Duchan, Dr. Lawrence J. Nlinet. Standing, Larry D. Stokes, Dr. John S. IVlurphy, Dr. Lawrence W. Franz, Chairman, Robert H. Neubeck, S. J., Dr. Daniel C. Falkowski. 104 4,57 Thomas C. Aiken Robert P. Duplicki Stephen Fu BA. Economics B.A. Economics B.S.ECOr10miCS Douglas Hamberger BA. Economics John L. Langer B.S. Economics 105 William A. Lorenz B.A. Economics Patrica Connelly B.A. Elementary Education X if Ann M. Corto B.A. Elementary Education Nancy M. Duggan B.A. Elementary Education We sm, g , iita Diane R. Dulski BA. Elementary Education ww , as f , y , i E Y - 1 , W Deborah J. Gazda BA. Elementary Education Coretha Hampson B.A. Elementary Education 106 Education .vi-'t ENR! Barbara B. Little, Assistant Professor of Elemen- tary Education Jean E. Harris Gretchen A. Hetzelt Patricia M. Higgins B.A. Elementary Education B.A, Elementary Education B.A. Elementary Education 'WWI W Michele A. Manzella ,,'L - B.A. Elementary Education , . W. J Marian M. Gray, Associate Professor of Elementary Education Debra L. Hudson B.A. Elementary Education t fi Mi Ann Marks Marcie A. Masterson B.A. Elementary Education B.A. Elementary Education 'IO7 ll! 2 , s 5 6 is Patricia A. McCarthy Rosanne Mendola Barbara J- Nesbitt B.A. Elementary Education B.A, Elementary Education B.A. Elementarv Education Marcia M. O'ConneI Lawrence Onusz Susan NI. O'Shaughnessy B.A. Elementary Education BA. Elementary Education BA. Elementary Education 108 E'-fm..lLai ,Je Diane L. Pearson Christine A. Pietka B.A. Elementary Education B.A. Elementary Education a1fti,it W rf iw NX Daisy L. Royster B .A. Elementary Ed ucation Norman D. Schroeder Florence Francescone B.A. Elementary Education lVl.S. Education Mark M. Schuetze Patricia D. Velocci B.A. Elementary Education BA. Elementary Education 109 April M. Sciandra B.A. Elementary Education Karen M. Swierat B.A. Elementary Education Physica! Education Faculty: Kneeling, Dr. Carl P. Bahneman. Standing, Cynthia M. Kaczmarek, James Sylvis, Mrs Ellen C Smithson, Paul E. Bieron, E. Robert S. Cilly BA. Physical Education Patricia Fosbrink. f . of ' 'vb Gary D'Andrea Eileen Dumansky BA. Physical Education B.A, Physical Education 110 Stephen C. Hackett Patricia L. Hoffman B.A, Physical Education B.A. Physical Education We ff,' a, , f .V - f ,, f 1 A, i, ,. 51. , f jr, My hi Robert Jachimowicz B.A. Physical Education Cheryl F. Jones Cynthia M. Kaczmarek Geraldine M. Keenan B.A. Physical Education B.A. Physical Education B.A. Physical Education 1' 111 Karen S. Klose B.A. Physical Education Archangel L. Muscato Lorraine A. Norman B.A, Physical Education B.A. Physical Education Mary T. McGowan B.A. Physical Education The collegialspirit of Canisius con- , f f sf ., . . . I tributes to the unique campus quality of community , a term often over used X-4' k,-' ll- , ., ., ', , yt and misunderstood but none the less 1 fil . . . . rg 1 .-- applicable. Controversies arise, misun- -'ffg.ig',lfg ' : : ' derstandings ensue, however, that ' is nebulous spirit of community remains. 'w :it W' . . . . 3 X There is a certain invaluable loyalty here gi' X? at Canisius, one which we should never is underestimate and always appreciate. i--- - Mrs. Ellen Smithson f , , ,ssl Nt . . :skis ,..t ,F ,.., we ,... Ronald J. Patenaude B.A. Physical Education . 5... , Q - in Paula M. Spengler Nicholas V. Silvestri Bernard M. Perillot B.A. Physical Education B.A. Physical Education B.A. PhYS'C3l Education 112 'tm Eric A. Stumpf Terry L. Whieldon Deborah S. Zboch B.A. Physical Education BA. Physical Education B.A. Physical Education 2-'Nw L' Lenore M. Timmel B.A. Physical Education -I - gi P, 3 ng- - 'Ht- Patricia M. Walsh BA. Physical Education 113 its auf Thomas J. Caulfield, Ph.D. B.A. History '54 --, ,A .fi W, Faculty of Secondary Education: Seated, H. Fredrick Fox, S.J., Dr. Thomas W. Fitz- simons, Standing, Dr. John T. Kilbridge, Dr. Paul A. Young, Chairman, Dr. John A. Demerly. David L. Borden B.A. Social Studies Education Chester A. Tumidajewicz Mary Lou Suozzi John D. Kinney B.A. Social Studies Education B.A. Social Studies Education B.A. Social Studies Education 114 ,,,..- fff,. ':.'1- ' 'M , M. x.x.A. fi'-L Sister Mary Delaney Special Education ff A Dr. Thomas J. Caufield Counselor Education English l William P. Adams Peter F. Brady B.A. English B.A. English 'MMM 'wmv ff' , NWMMW. W4-wr 116 x Neil T. Burns B.A. English my gy X David F. Ceccarelli B.A. English Chelly A. Dumper! B.A. English Kneeling, Dr. Frank P. Riga, Charles A. Ernst. Standing, Dr. Edward J. Zimmerman, Lawrence J. Nieman, Dr. Kenneth M Sroka Albert P. Bartlett, S.J., Dr. Joseph P. Lovering, Dr. Roger Stephenson, Dr. Richard J. Thompson, Joseph T. Sandman, Melvin W Schroeder Chairman, Dr. David A. Lauerman, Dr. James C. Dolan. Catherine A. Fidler B.A. English-French Kenneth M. Sroka, Ph.D. B.A. English '65 117 Timothy J. Fox B.A. English 9 i 'K Janice G. Gallivan Elizabeth C. Geroger B.A. English B.A. English 6' James C. Dolan, Ph.D. James J. Pelletier B.A. English '56 B.A. English Donna J. Pastecki Walter A. Nosek B.A. English B.A. English 118 Franeoise LeLarge B.A. Engl ish-French Ronald H. Luczak B.A. English '72 fi Paul T. Mott Stephen M. Nosek Patricia A. Mc Nally B.A. English B.A. English B.A. English .M --.. Marianne D. Kmetz B.A. English Jean M. Graziani Michael M. Golebiewski John G. Kilbridge B.A. English B.A. English B.A. EngIish4History 119 James L. Dugan S.J. David E. Perlowski Peter J. Schifferle B.A. English B.A. English '64 Kathleen M. Phelan B.A. English B.A. English John T. Petrie B.A. English James D. Schultz B.A. English John J. Mc Carthy Robert J. Schaefer Maria B. Scrivani B.S. English '56 B.A. English B.A. English-French 120 .Q-.qnsslwF'lfM Suzanne E. VanDooser B.A. English L. . - N wily' if Beverly A. Warren B.A. English Y' .v ER i ,: X me . l ff? ,ff Mark L. Sisti Cindy L. Skrzycki Edward J. Zimmerman, Ph.D. B.A. English B.A. English V B.A. English '50 121 History John F. Batt B.A. History Erik L. Brady B.A. History Seated, Dr. Francis J. Walter. Standing, Dr. James S. Valone, Dr. Sean C. Murray, Nicholas J. Sullivan, S.J., Dr. Edwin L. Neville, Dr. James A. Duran, Dr. Daniel P. Starr, Dr. J. David Valaik. Terrence Daley Daniel P. Starr, Ph.D. Michael Z. Dick B.A. History B.A. History '58 B.A. History 122 Ann Anderson B.A. History The Griffin B.A. History Paul P. Fitlpaifittk Daniel J, Kicingki B.A. History Adele N. Frohe B.A. History B.A. History Like most American colleges founded in the last century, Canisius is the resul- tant of historical vectors long since played out. For reasons economic and ideological its trustees have - pious pro- testations to the contrary notwithstand- ing - repudiated its Catholic and authori- tarian past and parts of its liberal arts tradition, and have embarked on a cir- cular quest for redefinition, and excercise in futility in which trying to get there is billed as all the fun. Having prudently abandoned their ancient, untenable claims of pursuing excellence or edu- cating the whole man, the administrators have settled for insuring institutional sur- vival, staging reportable events, projecting newsworthy profiles, and beating off power grabs from below. Adequate enough within their special areas of com- petence, the teachers, by occasionally 123 Teresia B. Jovanovic B.A. History-French John F. Krahling B.A. History grasping at governance, playing politics, and slighting research and instruction, have set their auditors a model of the meaningless maneuvers in which they themselves will soon engage the commu- nitv at large. Young, vibrant, somewhat unlettered, mostly uncomplicated, and in- sufferably selfish and amiable, the stu- dents, by ambitioning marks rather than wisdom, have often associated themselves unwittingly with the majority of their progenistors and foreseeable progeny. But, for all its warts, grimy urban Cani- sius, better than its ivy-encrusted, greens- warded, or statebankrolled competitors, has introduced its burly, beer-swilling, free-loving Buffalonian clientele to the realities sordid and otherwise of Ameri- can in these depressed and slovenly seven- ties. - Edward T. Dunn, S.J. Robert J. Licker Joseph F. Lo Pinto Joseph M. Mancuso B.A. History B.A. History B.A. History S ,,,.. ,Ns ,,,,... - ,,,,,... - ..,, .,., , ,, ,..,.Ti, ni, .- Charles O'ConnelI Ruben D, Pacer Ann T. Perham B-A- Hi5t0 V B.A. History-Communications B.A. HistorY Steve R. Rainey Christopher K. Reed Eugene A. Rudzinski B.A. History B.A. History B.A. History - Political Science John G. Provost B.A. History George E. Schmidt B.A. History Robert F. Pernatt B.A. History - Political Science Robert D. Schultz B.A. History Francesca G. Sciandra David M. Sicoli B.A. History B.A. History-Political Science Robert G. Shaw Jeremiah J. Sullivan B.A. History B.A. History :52f1f ' , I ,:::5 1 '1f3fEff:3:g:5, :I -:-zgiaizizizf 'X -'-:-.-3:5:3:5:!:1:-.- ' . - n '.' ' .' ' ' ' ' s a' 'sign'-'-'fe ' ..:::-:-.. :-:-::.-555m-:- .5-:-:rs , '- - . .-.':-:-:-:-:-:-.- -:-: -:-:-:-: ' ' '. - g.g.:.:.g.j.' - :.:.:.g.g.:.g.g. I '.'.' -.-.'. g.:.:.:.g ' '.'.j. j.j.:.- - :.:.:.:.:.. . . :.j.:.:.:.'.' '.' '.:.j.j. . 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Ifiizfi'-5:'fT:3:5:1?5:3:f:1:5S:351:Ef:1:Q:2'., 1:1'.5:5:1:1:- '1:?:2'1:5:2:2:E:2:2:E:2:E: ' -' 3.52: ifiiifsfffizffiffzzdf55?-sl.-'-.:'f':1E3E55'i52:2:EIEIEZEEWI. 352525251 -.-222221515-1' g.g.g.gI::gf.-'.g .-.g.gIg.g.g.g.g.g.g.g :.--.g.g.g.g.g.g.g.g.:.g. . . .,.,.::g:g:g:,: 35:35:31 2E1E252S1:25rEi'EE5E12E2SrE2E25fE1E2E2.5E., 1r1r11 - '515:g15q-1- ' :I-5:5:5: 5151235123512iffifffizffififlfifffffff3255: - - 'I:?z5:Q:f:- , iii-f5'E2E1E2i'5!E' -.Q.1.j.:.m'.jf:.'.'.'i'.:S:i:E .: .. -:-:-:-: ':5:-Z- 1:5:f: . 'fffl-. ...:.'.'.'.'. '. .' . Q ' ' 'EE ' '::.:.:1:1gIjI:Zj. ':E::IE ' '.-.j.j.j.j.:.j.j.. :Q '.'.' .:.Q.:.-4.1.1. '.j.j. .:.'. .'. . .'.S:E:5:'.. '.:. ' .'.'.'.:.:.j . . . . ' .,.5:5:5:125E5E2:5:5:5:5:5:5. . ' . - 2:s:s:srs5:::2Es:.:s:s:es:f: - :s- -3. . . ' '.'-'.'-'.'.'.'.'-'.'v'-'.'.'-G 1 n '.'.:.:.j.:.:.:.:.'.'.'.j.:,'.'. Q . '... . . ' . . . . zrsszrf . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' '5f?2?EfEr?E5E '- -2--2-22-. . :-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:. . . .:-: .' . . .'.:q:n:-:Q-:.:.:.:. '.:.:.... . I .o:a:u:. .Wg ..... ,.., ' 25.-.-:-:-:5:5:3:5:3:-:7:- :-:-:-:- '-'-:-:-:Y: '-:-:-'-:-'-:-:-:-:-:-:-' ' ':1:ff5:553:2:2:5:3:' ' 213212: :2:2:f. 1 -' :-:-:-: -:-:-:-:- ' . ' ' . . 'jfffzf ' .j.j.:. :.:.:.:.' ...' '.'. I :-:-:-: -:-:-:-:-' Eric J. Tarbox John C. Wagner John J. Krieger B.A. History B.A. History B.A. History 126 . . .ai Management 81 Marketing Y, .X Seated, Dr. Jay A. Vora, Dorothy Mason. Standing, Dr. Jacky Knopp, Raymond W. Vegso, Eugene Becker, Alexander Farkash, Dr Sigmund P. Zobel, Chairman. Joseph F. Basil Samuel J. Bumhalo Sandra V. Cook B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing 127 As long as the connection subsists be- tween his reason and his self love, his opin- ions and his passions will have a reciprocal influence on each other . . . The diversity in the faculties of men, from which the rights of property originate is not less an insuper- able obstacle to a uniformity of interests. The protection of these faculties is the first object of government. From the protection of different and unequal faculties of ac- quiring property, the possession of differ- ent degrees and kinds of property immedi- ately results: and from the influence of these on the sentiments and views of the respective proprietors, ensues a division of the society into different interests and parties. - The Federalist Derrick Ross Doro Richard J. Flanagan 35- Marketing B.S. Marketing Albert J. Deritis Martin C. Donzi, Jr. Matthew D, Geo,-ge, B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing Stephon A. Driggers B.S. Marketing Anne M- EQN' Monica M. Iwanski B-S Marketing B.S. Marketing F.i.T. 128 ,QW-3,x . Deborah J. Krzystofik B.S. Marketing Marcus Kubiak B.S. Marketing Stephen Jovanese Leslie A. Juron Anthony L. Manzella B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing Earl D. Martin Joann G. Meade Mary Jo Peterson B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing Gary D. Rossel Teresa M. Rupp Deborah M. Sills B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing B.S. Marketing 130 Joseph A. Williams B.S. Marketing Raymond S. Adornetto Bruce M. Augustyn Donald J. Billoni B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management William M. Blake B.S. Management N gif John E. Boland David R. Bordonaro David M. Cantwell B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management 131 Lydia M. Gherghetta John R. Gibson Lawrence J. Goldsmith B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management Gabriel G. Greco Micheal A. Guerra Salvatore J. Gullo B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management AMW W 'W ,MA mb, Donald J. Hettinger Thomas A. Labert Michael Liwicki B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management Christine M. Lojacano B.S. Management David D. Martins, B.S. Management 5 EX Michael L. Markarian B.S. Management Joseph M. Mattei B.S. Management ---- W K Stephen P. Mikolaiczyk B.S. Management ,rf M at 'Nil xx -ws, M, We .amz ' V N' Lawrence J. Mortek U B.S. Management 3 Mark E. Myers William S. Nadolny David L- N0'f0 B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management 134 Timothy O'Brien James Olek Michael A. Owczarzak B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management Thomas A. Pearson James M. Pepe Thomas A. Pleto B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management ,f Robert J. Potozniak B.S. Management 135 David C. Redlinski Vicnent J. Reilly Thomas F. Robinson B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management Patrick G. Rowe B.S. Management Tyrone A. Ruffin Terrance P. Ryan Mark D. Sackett B-3- Management B.S. Management B.S. Management 136 Charles J. Sardo' B.S. Management Salvatore Schiavone B.S. Management Kirk W. Schifferle Gary T. Sfeir B.S. Management B.S. Management Peter J. Sinclair Robert Wunsch B.S. Management B.S. Management v...,, 137 fb John D. Specht Donald J. Steele John M. Szczepandski B.S. Management B.S. Management B.S. Management QT' x r -, 'x N . , . , ' N x , , . K' , 5 u X . A M X I ' Q' ev 1, I QL n iv f. 4 Michael Warner B.S. Management x 4X Terrance R. Wellinzohn B.S. Management 138 i fiix. as Q ah' 'D 'Ml A I w 3213 Raymond H. Witzleben B.S. Management Timothy J. Wright B.S. Management Alan J. Wueller Paul J. Wypijewski B.S. Management B.S. Management 139 Donald R. Yager B.S. Management Mathematics Lynn A. Fronzak B.A. Math , .L Lawrence J. Andres Frank Barnet B.A. Math-Physics B.A. Math G-A .. 1 1' Susan R. Malczyk B.A. Math Seated, Dr. Donald Girod, Dr. Richard H. Escobales, Dr. William M. Huebsch, Chairman, William T- Schlaefih Dr. Richard L. Uschold. Standing, Robert A. Haus, S.J., Michael P. Strzelec. BA' Math 140 9 N Q Theresa M. Renaud B.A. Math Mickeal Urbank B.A. Math Diane M. Wade B.A. Math 141 Richard T. Wlosinski B.A. Math Modern Languages 5 i 3 Charles Pearsall B.A. Spanish Xf Seated, Dr. Michael Burtniak, Timothy J. Burke. Standing, James J. Mc Goldrick, Raymond L. Girard, Dr. Robert Hagspiel, Dr. Wilma A. Iggers, Dr. Raymond J. Clough, Chairman. Ronald J. Groh man H , ' B.A. G I E , .EMM fm e T ma n Sharon E. Brown Mary Julie Bukowski B.A. French B.A. French is-f Suzanne Graczyk Katherine M. Mc Carthy Christa M. Schober B.A. French B.A. French B.A. German 142 Z 7 M WM. 5 er f 3 S at In is Lower, Dr. George J. Lavere, Chairman, Dr. John E. Kelly. Upper, Dr. Herbert J. Nelson, Dr. Stanley L. Vodraska, Dr. Ralph P. Joly. Philosophy After some years of measuring success by numbers - more stu- dents, more faculty, more buildings - the College is now pressed to do better rather than more. Canisius' success now clearly and properly depends on a faculty and staff striving to improve the quality of its service to students and, through them, to the community. But it also depends heavily on graduates convinced of the quality of their education and ready to help the College maintain and better itself. For in the end the College will be what its students and graduates enable it to be. - Dr. Herbert J. Nelson t.a.vi,ii,m Thomas Mc Carthy Dennis Mc Mullen B.A. Philosophy B.A. Philosophy-Religious Studies 144 4,- Qf' fi' 5 QI' is 5 xi. gig , s s . James M. Demske AB. Latin '47 +53 E.. 'Q' v Jacquelyn Mc Craig B.A. Classics Dr. David B. Deitz, Chairman, John J. Jennings, S.J. Classics Sandra White David B. Deitz, Ph.D B.A. Classics B.A. Classics '57 145 Physics Joseph G. Addonizio James P. Castracane B.S. Physics B.S. Physics Seated, Dr. Keith J. Hartman, Standing, Dr. Daniel F. Dempsey, Chairman, James J. Ruddick, S.J. James C. Lauffenburger, Ph.D. Joseph S. Songin B.S. Physics '60 B.S. Physics 146 Psychology n-Q... .-r. Dr. Frank A. Merigold, Dr. Donald L. Tollefson, Chairman, Dr. Dewey J. Bayer, Dr. Judith E. Larkin, Dr. Richard N. Weisman, Dr. -larvey A. Pines. Louisene A. Aiken John Barnet B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology 147 Wulluam M Bukowsku Louus D Burguo Michael H. BurzYnSki B A Psychology B A Psychology B.A. PSYCh0'09V John S. Crabbe B.A. Holiday lnn '70 Mary Beth Del Russo B.A. Psychology Dawn R. Denson Karen M. Hojnacki Michele M. Landry B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology 17 my Barbara G' Eye Ellen Nl- Kelsey Marian J. Lazzaro B.A. Psychology B.A. psychology B.A. Psychology Dennis J. Grell B.A. Psychology 149 Ronald W. Maron B.A. Psychology X J 9 ,L 'lsgiisx John G. Mrozek 1 :A. B.A. Psychology - I Y NNW -M - - P- ' , V N ,. . 'fmmwf-ff' Michael R. Nasca my K B.A. Psychology i i Christy P. Patterson David A. Rivera Susan M. Scibetta B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology BA. Psychology 150 X ,3 cl Reginald A. Scott Gale R. Schultz Judith A. Sipior B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology4Accounting li, Rhea J. Simmons MHYY Ellen sh3n'eY Jamei L- SPBDCEY B.A. Psychology B.A. PSVCl10l0QV'Er19lish B.A. Psychology Daniel J. Wnek B.A. Psychology '70 151 gpm .. il? Jeffrey J. Stoltman Edward G. Teeran John P. Turkasz B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology B.A. Psychology 5 ,mr -gf:-L Mwmwfmwf mavuwww ww' V wr' Wu .awww mx x ., 5 wg ,,, ,,,o,,. lyvv 'WWE----3 Nadine P. Warren B.A. Psychology ,, -lv 152 Richard D. Zylka B.A. Psychology Religious Studies ,gm M L Left to Right: Dr. Trevor Watt, Donald J. Murphy, S.J., Susan Nl. Koteras, David S. Toolan, S.J., John D. Garvey, S.J., Joseph T Angilella, S.J., Francis V. Courneen, S.J., Nls. Dorothea Brooks, Frederic J. Kelly, S.J. Patrick J. Donahue David Galvnek B,A. Religious Studies B-A RCHQWUS Studies 153 Political Science Lee R. Berkovits William L. Continelli B.A. Political Science B.A. Political Science Q .rl N' Seated, Dr. Minoru Yanagihasi, Dr. Peter J. Galie, Chairman, Dr. Michael V. Haselwerdt. Standing, Denis J. Woods, S.J., Robert J. Nelson, S.J. 154 Thomas G. Daley B.A. Political Science J. R. Drexelius Jr. B.A. Political Science Matthew Gorman B.A. Political Science nw-'K G. Daniel Newland B.A. Political Science 'W' Wim.. Sf Timothy T. Mc Quade B.A. Political Science A 4 f l , ':. l A Sam Jakes Lawrence F. Korzeniewski Edith L. Matricardi B.A. Political Science B.A. Political Science B.A. Political Science 155 Veronica M. Parry L. William Paxon John W. Sparks B.A. Political Science-Urban Studies B.A. Political Science B.A. Political Science 1. Thomas J. Todaro Anthony D. Vullo Donna M. Vullo B.A. Political Science B.A. Political Science B.A. Political Science 156 Sociology-Anthropology 5 -ie Nancy J. Caputy B.A. Sociology-Anthropology i Patricia J. Clayback . . - B.A. S I I -A th I Jesse E. Nash Jr., Dr. William H. Jarrett, Chairman, Robert A. Lorenz. oC'O ogy n mpc ogy Mary P. Coppola Fritz Sharon J. Grimm John P. Hanavan B.A. Sociology-Anthropology B.A. Sociology-Anthropology B.A. Sociology-Anthropology 157 Susan H. Lichterfeld Pam S. Rybak Alan M. Rzeznik B.A. Sociology-German B.A. Sociology-Anthropology B.A. Sociology-Anthropology f 'll' fd ' Q 4' I ff Sharon A. Savannah Gary M. Schuster Betty A. Woloszyn B.A. Sociology-Anthropology B.A. Sociology-Anthropology B.A. Sociology-Urban Studies 158 W, .,,.,, Ginny Scahill Right, What You Get . . . Below, Where it will get you!! 2 ,L fwwwff B.A. In B.S. a, ,wh 4 Vfwwi Q , , Q- ,W Q Q , ,f , I Q Q 2 . 5: ,X 1 ' ' Z H 4 ,, - ,, ly ' Q , 2 fy ' 9 , ' YZ ef 9' 5 'gf , Sz Vg? Q Q 1 W , T 3 ' 1 f h 'A Wag an-L 1 M,, ' miie aw ww ' 159 X IA ,, 'S F f Ulf If Q 'luring ww 2 x 1' R 3- 'Y'N'M 5 Y A W i ,,.. , . , , -A-Qllimx .. .......... ,,.- - . 5 .1 .1 .:. .- K V 'L SY? YW 5' Q54 -Z' y ..:::.+ .. . 'l ' S' QR- - i : .. 'X X E k.k: K . .... K m b X x ,K, 5, , , ,, ,LV , ,, , ' Z V .fin V av varsity Football CANlSlUS 12 JOHN CARROLL 26 Griffs bow out in heartbreaker . . . last game for 26 seniors. . . titan-toed Calandrelli keeps Blue Streaks at bay. . . in- juries... rain... Griffs on defense... Clevelanders punch over TD as half ends... second half sledge-hammer bucks pierce Griff forward wall for 3 TD's . .. Blue 81 Gold offense gets underway too late . . . Sweeney snags aerial for first score ... Willis squirms 53 yds to set up Ferraro's TD plunge. . . season ends, on low note. Azuwur '50 184.5 0 sq 57 FQ. gg, 5 giisrg-533 ' f ,-is QF-axxjfidl i , T Q 'Ua4w'ie3..,S2 ' to 55 fs' '- S2 as Q30 W73ilB,5lgs1?XL30if'i - r 95, vs tr 1 ., 5 , , gr 41 5' 40 42 - 1 o, ,, V Q W, H as , g A ,th 'ri iq V, ag s. Ki -i i' , i i o',s' After a 25 year hibernation period, varsity football as sanctioned by the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Association ar- rived back in the Canisius College Athlet- ic scene and was greeted by an over- whelming enthusiasm. Head Coach Bill Brooks and assistants Paul Bieron, Gene Topey, Cravene Givens, Gene O'Connor and Tim Lauffen- burger sent nearly 150 aspirants through late August workouts and by early Sep- tember the group was pared down to a managable 86 players. A few holdovers from last year's 5-3 club football team gave the Griffins some experience in their phasing-in year but Coach Brooks relied mainly on freshmen and transfers to compile a creditable 544 record. Coach Brooks found a powerful offen- sive backfield in transfer quarterback Tony Kozak, transfer fullback Tim Eberle and tailback Herm Silmon. Freshman Jerry lVlann from Lewiston-Porter bat- tled Kozak all year for the top quarter- I 'M it S gs S . Q 'S' 5 X 1. 3113, -Q. is N X V .S :vi 1 Egg , A ii . x 1 . , . Q'NQ? 'K'1' 2 my 55 me 5. Qi 4, ,. . ,, . ... x- ...., N QQ f ,,S.. . Q., , , ., .. K.. J. s :Q Y X Q we .my Yi f wg.. s' I MX? Q5 xii fff G+ .kg N- CN. 4+ 5. X.. X ' is R i f allovved only 11 points per game. ln- cluded among the fine defensive efforts vvere convincing shutouts of Deuqesne, St. John Fisher and Siena. Linebackers Dan Ferrentino, the team's other co-captain anchored their defensive unit along vvith Ray Jarmarch, but linemen Bob Jachimouvvicz, John Specht, Joe Delaney and Dale Bennett more than held their ovvn in the battle of the trenches. ln the defensive hackfield, transfers Tom Cavallaro and Warren Debievv, ineli- gible for varsity contests, provided some exciting moments against the club teams while rookies Jan Kurzanski 84 Dave Geraci and returnees Nick Silvestri vvere left to battle more experienced foes. 'Km il' '11, .3q?,.:QvMJ5I .Mr . I a - , J :l V 1. -, ' . f 1' 1 fhggj- ' G, Q - QNX! . 164 qs A 4 1 r M ,..w,. 13, , - - -.- 7 v '- , 't' up -5 ' 1 Y wil-d 1 1 vtifk' xr ' u...- s X 17 . ,'l of ,I ai . - ,, e . QTL. , Y Q be U , The season opened on a misty night at J.C. Stone Field outside Pittsburgh as the fired-up Griffins ransacked the Duquesne defense for 28 first half points and coasted to a 41-O victory. Canisius first varsity opponent in 25 years was the University of Rochester, and the Yellowjackets ruined the Griffs' home opener, 18-17. Even in defeat, the infant Griffins impressed most observers with their play against an established var- sity opponent. Three club patsies were next for Coach Brooks and Company. St. John Fisher fell easily, 49-O. Oswego State succumbed 35-6 on homecoming day and Siena fell prey to the high powered Griffin offense, 35-0. The Griffs slumped and dropped three straight contests. Varsity teams Platts- burgh State and Brockport took advan- tage of Canisius inexperience and misdeeds to score hard fought wins. Plattsburgh withstood a fourth quarter rush by the Griffs to win, 29-25 while Brockport 165 ki capitalized on 9 Griffin turnovers to grind out a 26-12 decision. Upstart club foot- ball team Niagara, which went on to a club football bovvl, surprised the Griffs, l7Y'lO in Hyde Park. 'Yet, the Griffs regrouped and ended the season the vvay they began: with a victory. On a cool November afternoon, Tony Kozak directed a late Canisius drive to eke out a 25f21 vvin over Rochester Institute of Technology. Kozak moved the club 89 yards in the final tvvo minutes vvith Geraci hauling in a 36 yard re- ception to set up tvvo Ed VVoIovviec touchdown plays. It was the Griffs' first victory over a varsity opponent. In evaluting the success of the prog- ram, Athletic Director Dr. Daniel P. Starr vvas well pleased. We set out to establish a varsity football program and it's time vve accomplished that goal. Coach Brooks, characterized by his unbounded enthusiasm and unlimited S 5 Q E it :S ,.-v-Q54 0-not-.-.f-4., , w-..- -audi Sf 54 19 E, Val 1 3 , 0 L i x 5' ' ligfg' ,Y Ps 'Q 'fix Q x 2, 752 5 fin i f s k will 'f . M ! N fs' It 4: 4 5 SFJWX' f E 'WEN v-. i , E 3 25 i energy, vvas even more ecstatic about the success of the program. Viewing the ven- ture from his alter-ego role of Associate Dean of Students. Brooks remarked, All in all vve involved nearly 1021 of the stu- dent body. Given the fact that Division lll football prohibits athletic scholar- ships, Brooks emphasized that his players were student-athletes vvho played the game because they loved it. For the future, Coach Brooks has 20 of 22 starters returning and over 60 play- ers in total coming back. In assisting the head coach and his staff began an active recruiting program immediately after the season, aimed at tapping the very best resources of the area's 113 high schools. In evaluating the team, Coach Brooks concluded, We were in our first year of the program, vve had a 5-4 record and vve realized that first vvin over a varsity oppo- nent. I think vve had a hell-uv a season. 'E ll Q. Ei W 5 7 Zi fi. C 'i 'E i gg 169 1 n K 'f,, ,Q fi-82:5-sg-t.g,-t kkkh- I iffjgig ei-fllfwsbk W , ,, ,. ww., A.., .. Y , L , -' ai . S f , ' ,Q L ', mf' r f- 7 5 1 , ,W , -N 170 fw : A J' 1' ' - W Y. iii , AE. . f. , . 5 - A 1 4 f X . , . , XR k . . x. gg is , 'S 7 . Q ww if 7 X A Sk, . K g .f 3 K N . 1 K K N Q5 x . N 555 .- x N - gf' . 7 , . maxi? ,- ,K.gWf Sb ' mf . k 1 if , as Q 'aw Q. ,app P Q 5' is 3 . 'S H .. QSM gp. Sv in 9.- . . S J , , Q 34 Cross-Country yi fx in ., ah ww Zz nn- V I5 5 ff I A f Q Z? 5 lfx If if, ' X , , f,, Q 4 ww' 4 :AKAI YI if 4 , r f 'Q 4 if K M ze W, 1 ,1 . xv, ,NW, V 4? QS' +15 A A M 1 NC' m.m.13.Y ?fff-'r.eJq mb-n 1 ww, Wil WH? Tennis e re 2' 5 Q v r HQ Q it YS:-ra-.......iv ,-,,. w,,,4 T N People were talking about this group of ath- letes even before the Canisius Tennis Team stepped out on to the courts for their first match. But what had been celebrated as The Year of the Golden quickly turned into a season that could hardly be called 14-carat. lnexperience, frustration, injuries and disap- pointment all combined to throw a wet blanket over the squad's hopes of retaining their 74-75 Little Three Title and rank of seventeenth among eastern schools. However, 1975-1976 was not without its euphoric moments as any of the Goldens doz- en-or-so fans, who were carried to emotional heights and depths amid a cacophony of giggles and yawns, could attest. Coach Terry lVlcMahon singled out Flick Infanti, Bob Fahey, John lVlil- ler, Bob Duplicki, Ray Witzleben, and Bob Kolarczyk for their outstanding play while the team's Captain, Damian Courtin, singled out himself. At any rate, the 75-76 Goldens can be characterized by an old cliche: Amateur sport at its best. The high hopes of the 1976 Canisius Baseball Griffins were dimmed a bit when ace pitcher Paul Anthony signed a professional pact vvith the Pittsburgh Pirates, but sec- ond year coach Pete Leo should still have a strong returning cast. This year's squad should be cen- tered around returning lettermen Vinny Guadgna, Nick Silvestri and pitcher Bill Leonard with lVlike Geraci and Harry Vandermeulen providing needed support. With a fevv breaks from the vveatherman, the Griffs should be able to look torvvard to another successful sea- son. Baseball -lil' x S psig Y'-95-in rf' fi '4 ff 1 '15 ' if Women's Volleyball in , .J ., 1 3 'Fir W, wr mg M Soccer qi jf? Q-Q-4 FEE? 1? 1 S Q Hs 2, L ' E ii E 31 '5 5a ' l Basketball use 11m.L. 180 if 4-,jx 1' Y 1 fi J,-1 QQ X kin! 61. ...--g, ..-vwp :IQ IL ' r'M'Hfwff, ,.s,,W,, ' V. ,. an s,W.,W...WW.s..,,,,,,..,',.,.m W ' ' ,,q,,,0g,f,f,f,f,f A iiff , A ' iQ'?fVJf?Uh2rivW -4 V , , f ' if ' ' ' ' ' ' V' ' l I ts J. V The Griffs Are Alright! The Griffs Are Alright! That unlikely cheer first surfaced from the dorm block during the New Hamp- shire game in January and the refrain subsequently became the rallying cry of the 1975-76 Canisius College basketball season. The Griffs Are Alright! There is a danger that in analyzing the four-word phrase its meaning may be overstated, its effect undermined. The risk must be taken here because the impli- cations of that one simple cheer are most important. Two years ago the Golden Griffins reigned as champions of the Little Three. Last season, the Griffs boasted a lineup of Top Twenty talent the likes of which has never before been seen on this campus. And yet, no one would have ever labeled those Griffs as alright. The word would never have entered your mind. Their talents far exceeded the simple term alright. And their actions off the court were certainly not alright. Several ugly incidents caused an antagonism be- tween many students and these non-al- right Griffins. Even more crucial was the fact that this collection of potential All Americans tended to associate only with each other. There was rarely so much as a casual relationship between the stud on the court and the student in the stands. But no more. The Griffs Are Alright! This cheer was a genuine, spontaneous response on the part of a small, dedicated band of Griff-fans. The dorm block was the one glittering exception to the ram- pant aloofness which bathed the rest of the Aud on Saturdays. After the stunning upset of Little Three foe Niagara University, the NU stu- dent newspaper said: The Griffs played 182 , ,,,.. , -..M sz, a J 4 over their heads and the Eagles were be- low par. Canisius was further encouraged by the vocal support of the student body, something that is lacking at NU. They may be rowdy, classless and smashed, but God love 'em. Rowdy and smashed they were, no doubt. But the members of the section proved they were definitely not class- less when, at the season finale, they pre- sented plaques, which they had paid for themselves, to the three graduating se- niors: Craig Prosser, Tim Stokes and Billy Leonard. The Griffs Are Alright! Unlike the sentimental Thank You Sabres, lwhich was a cheer of forgive- ness after the overmatched, young Buffa- lo hockey team had lost to Montreal in its initial Stanley Cup competition several years ago! this chant was not intended to say that losing was alright. To the con- trary, it was first heard at a victory, and it f , L X x 1 ss - 1 C X. 1315- K X , - 1 gist. 'S s 'KL' w f 1 V ' was repeated at victories throughout the remainder of the season. The fact that it became equally applicable for losses was accidental, but important. The fans and players cared very much whether Canisius won, But if Canisius lost, in the end it didn't matter. They cared, but it didn't matter. That's an important distinction. The Classic in Rochester. Canisius lost the fi- nals 91-89 to Utah in overtime, but not before a bench-emptying brawl, a super- lative performance and a disappointing finish that found John Sommers knocked unconscious at the buzzer. The Griffs had given everything they had. And still there was room for partying afterward, drink- ing beers out of the Runner-up Cup which very nearly was tossed 15 floors into the Genesee River. They cared - very much - but in the end it didn't matter. The Griffs Are Alright! After one particularly frustrating loss, one of the Griffs sat slumped over a bar stool staring at his case of OV splits. I hate losing, he muttered, his face con- torted painfully. l really hate to lose. I wasn't used to losing in high school and l don't like it. But what can you do? We try, that's for sure. It was for sure. Last year Canisius posted its best rec- ord since 1966-67 and was booed. This year Canisius ran up its worst record since 1970-71 and was cheered. The difference was this: instead of some sort of professional farm team, Canisius fielded an aggressive squad which made up in fight and hustle what it lacked in height and individual talent. The student fans had kids they knew out there and they responded. One Griff discussed the phenomena very late one night at the Park Meadow. How could anyone hate a team like us? the Griff asked in between beers. You have to love us. We hustle all over the court. lf we can't stop somebody we hack them. We may not always win, but we're always trying. And, hell, we've won some really surprising games. Indeed, the statement was made soon after the 72-70 ambush of Fairfield. Som- mers cashed a layup in the final seconds to complete the astounding upset after Canisius had trailed by as many as 18 points. The fact that the Stags later stag- gered the Griffs by 107-87 in the lVladison Square Garden Classic only made the original upset all the more impressive. There were other big wins. Road tri- umphs were registered over Rochester and Colgate. The first two games played at the Koessler Athletic Center were con- quests of St. lVlichael's and Sienna. And an anti-hero was born. Buffalo Evening News sportswriter Alan Per- gament infuriated the fans with an appar- ent disdain for the abilities of the Golden Griffins. When he picked the University of Buffalo to beat Canisius by three points, the Griffs thrashed UB by 33. The so-called Canisius Singers serenaded Pergament for the first of several times 5 I Q , , ,A . ,,, 4. 1 X ' ' 35.325 bij .. ISIU5 1 H? a I A N., i. ki V 'tg VX. f. 184 -, My i W 4 X Ft over the course of the season - Good- bye Pergy, Goodbye. . Shrugged Alan, I guess l'm boosting circulation. The Duquesne game was especially satisfying to Co-Captains Prosser and Stokes, since both hail from the Pitts- burgh area. The upset was one of the many reasons that these close friends will long be remembered as two of the pre- mier players in Canisius history. Before the season, one pundit sland- ered the Griffins: This team should be the biggest joke in Little Three history. But it didn't work out that way. Canisius beat Niagara in what the Eagles' Frank Layden felt was one of the great Little Three upsets of all time. And the Griffins stayed close in two and a half of the other matches in the mythical confer- ence. Canisius was no joke. The Golden Griffins closed out their skein of victories with an impressive mar- tyring of the Saints - St. Joseph's of Philadelphia - to forge a surprising 10-17 record. lVlost prognosticators had figured on only half that many wins. But they had neglected one fact. The bunch that played this year honed their modest skills last season by practicing against all that talent. In fact, had it not been for a three game stretch at mid-season when some of last year's trouble leaked over into the 'X ' X MN -. 'X .. use . ., sys- -- .N-:1.t:-.A-t. N. x....... ., ....-- - . ::,.,,r current campaign lthe Kenny Kee tribula- tionsl, Canisius might have climbed close to the break-even level. Incredible. One of the things mentioned by Cani- sius' Task Force on Intercollegiate Ath- letics last year was that students could not identify with or relate to the basketball team. What those words mean isn't clear, exactly. But what is clear is that you could sit down with members of this season's squad and have a beer, or several. Billy Leonard, Mike Walton, Timmy Hartnett, John Sommers, Mark Spitler, Craig Prosser, Tim Stokes, Bene Stevens, Dave Spiller, Bill Dressel, Alan Richard- son, Bich Fredericks, Tim Eberle, Jeff Stoltman, Greg laconis, Coach John lVlcCarthy. The Griffs Are Alrightl The importance of all of this is the hope it gives for the future. The Canisius College basketball program has been ailing for a number of years now. The crowds began failing in the middle '6O's. The program was mortally wounded when Bob IVlacKinnon had the rug pulled from under him on lVlay 12, 1972. The NCAA probation looked like a death blow. The anemic attendance this season left the panicked faithful checking for the vital signs. 186 xfilarwkk se cr , C .,,.-msnmim f L-f gall' mmm if s H, .. Nm ,wk ar 6 W X ik. fm . A 53 nga ,MQ ar.. 1' ' . W -iFl1Qi'S.fLAiTmW- X .. . ' Eff- ' rv A Q .1,3..3k,1M -A 1' fgq 32 He X A A 93551 an Xxx E5 'X lf, ..a b' ' 4 - 93 Qs. ,I wk, K L mf- . if 1 5 my ' n ,355 , No af, L ,giyi 0 , Q1 Iss few! I 'S fy it ag,-,101 'P W' W 87 :ff , - V47 'gas Xxqf, i QE!! , Q. , , 9 3 Q fax-A I as XQ1-- - ffki. I -,.L. S Q Q sf L XJ Q sf. i 3 gm X .. - .Q ww . . F f ' - Q-iwvwy-1 -QQ Ns -. , .. .X-X . A X Q95 LLLLL. N xv 125 X 1 .. ..Lk 'i. ff-.M W an YS? W S J .V. Basketball W1 0 A w. swff-'M. ?' wi :Tff5fk'LV21- ...,. ,saw W -- L ,Y S We ifsf :iz voqqq 191 4' gym 3 Www 4 WN, Y' my ah niv- ffif' if i Pep Band Na+ cg., ,.,, ,. ,J .4 'QW Q YA I , I J '. f4 fWiM W' A ff' CN 3 ' 'N , 'l M . fm , ,, ,WW ,mggw KX A K we , , , ,mgg K , , f 5 ,ea M f W ' .1 193 Cheerleaders That Championship Season - for the second year in a row - was put on ice by the Canisius College Golden lce Grif- fins. The culmination of the club's season came in the championship final, a 5-2 conquest of host Geneseo State. The Ice Griffs had swept to an undefeated cam- paign last year, but had faltered momen- tarily at mid-season this year. Losses to Geneseo and Gannon put a scare into the faithful, but Canisius regained its winning form and breezed through the playoffs to its second straight crown. The ample Griffin scoring power came from the forward lines of Tom Kaminska, Pete Eimer and Paul LaCroix, Joe Busca- glia, Kevin Barnett and Marty Agiusg and Bob Wick, Brian Bauer and Jeff O'Don- nell. The blue line corps was headed by Bob Zotora, Capt. Gary Cutler, John Graziana and Dan lVluller. And the goal- tending chores - the last line of defense - were ably handled by Ron Grohman and Bob Goulding, with Tom Barnett in reserve. Although seven of the Griffs will be lost to graduation, next season's edition figures to be just as exciting. Members of the 'B' team are anxious to fill in and join a club which will be after its third con- secutive championship -the hat trick. an-3 H 195 v Y My gegi: K SSW E 5 2 W ,,,. 1. , , fmwwnunn N ,N- K . MACK iN LOBBY EQTQQQQQE J Y if My 96 9 an ,wwf if Rf W Q K. x.. -Q Ss. Q- i. N.. 1- 5 'f lf y Ni s ' fi 52 Q i mix? 'N -Q, 5 5- Women's Gymnastics Ummm They did it again. The Canisius Women's Gymnastics team bounded, flipped and pirouetted its way to a second straight New York State Championship title this season. Denise Tenney, Kathy Alevras and Carol Reynolds swept the top three all-around places in the competition, while Bernie Garlock placed fifth. Sharon DePeters and Valerie Roe are also members ofthe team. Once again, the Women's Griffnastics proved that it is the most successful team on campus. National honors were also garnered by the team which participated in various national competitions. But the best news of all was this: everyone returns from this young team, It may be that the best is yet to come. Mwma-rw-Q S X X N si' g 1 X 4 I 3 1 X - N- -. nf :QN:.g:1 X-+ks,M'-Aif.:-zgwuzx Q, X- .Af.,1-xx. K - N -- - - , Y imsfwwf- N 1 X -6,11-N N. -Qx,:,.m-if i ka rl ,. . - -. , X N M a x i 202 ii , I f ' , .X A .,,g Q V A ,Q - ,Q-1, iii .41 441:- Q, , . kin .HQ Q wt ix Z af if -vi. av 4 WU. . R L L K . ,Q .... ,.., i I Am, M 'ki 5 ff- -N wkggig 1'-gg-iwxwfis fgmxigei ' -w, -W1 ' Wlwmvr Q31 X f My N- H - 1 V, L 'k if ' X - ww ig ,,, f . ?'W'k' K A Q .- . 4 X Q WfqfM,,AsxsVWsW .M U W k . ., v . x ,K .Mme Mi X V 4 , ,,, 'W W 4 2 jk ,.. A,,A -.A k x sk Q . X s K W Y N 1 .f t ' X' Q + -ef., S I. rf 'ff X Q Q 5 + R, w K5-ie R W Q is W ,, , ,. , . N M X .. z: . wr - , - .. . . 'H an . Q K i K X. L ig 1, M m l V':g3v A .,g 7.gLh24.b Riga., J xg . Q2 , 4 H ' .. J - 3 , 6 X- W' ' X - vm F .. Q1 .5 - -sf iffmy, f fwq we I1 V-. ' we , , ,AW- W ff an am M ' Vw W NWA 1 A Swimming 5 , 204 ,MP , wzww - is Jw 'W'- ..,: ,. D L 35 JA.. 'L K -nw X X wr - - ' fi ' X N ew fgiw s K . .. ,,. -1 . wav -:lf -W4 A Q ,X - ' vu 4' Nm-n......,. M 598' x-fffmi any 20 Dr. David B. Dietz, a Classics professor in his tenth year at Canisius, is the Canisius club hockey coach. He is also the AZUWUR Coach of the Year. Dr. Dietz emerged from a host of other candidates for the honor, including,' John McCarthy, who guided the basketball team to a stronger showing than the experts deemed possible: Al Stumpf, who led the wom- en's gymnastics team to a second straight State title,' Jim Decker, who piloted the swim Griffs to the first winning record in their seven year historyf and Bill Brooks, who coached the first varsity football unit at Canisius in a quarter of a century. Call me a cook, not a coach, protested Dr. David Dietz with an amiable smile after his designation as AZUWUR Coach of the Year. I make sure all the people come together who want to play, then mix up a recipe so that everybody is happy. As far as the term coach, that's really not used properly. Because, techni- cally, I am the faculty advisor of a club on campus. 'Coach' is only an analagous term for my position with the hockey club. But cook or coach, Doc Dietz is the fellow who stands behind the bench at Canisius hockey games calling the shots: sending out lines, pulling goaltenders, and exhorting his forces. Still, if he insists on the culinary tag, he might as well have been the author of the l Hate To Cook Book because he claims: In short, I'm a reluctant coach. For years I've been asking around to see if there's anyone else on campus with a hockey background, either to be an assistant or to take over all together. The burdensome part is not the coaching. Only about Il3 of the time I spend on club hockey is on the ice. 206 It's the scheduling, the book balancing, the administrative chores which become more and more burdensome since I do have a full teaching load. The time has been the biggest problem. But when there's a vacuum of coaching people and a job to do then I feel I have to do the best job I can. I honestly think it's important because we have a lot of dedicated kids who really vvant to play. I've learned as I've gone along. If he calls it learning, then he can add another doctorate to his Classics degree. Canisius won its second straight Finger Lakes Collegiate Hockey League championship under his tutelage this year. This is only the third year that the Golden Ice Griffins have been a part of the FLCHL, one of the state's more established leagues. But it wasn't as easy this time around. This was a dangerous year because we had a set team, Doc Dietz explains. We had an easy time last year when we swept through the league undefeated. This season we had all kinds of complacency as a result. For awhile there we hit the skids and lost a few in a row, but we came out the better for it. When you start losing two things can happen: you can either fall apart or pull together. Fortunately, it worked out in our case. Canisius has not lost any Little Three matches under Doc Dietz. Those games do have a special little edge to them, he admits. But really, Bona and Niagara haven't had real good s ss ii af 3 Q teams. The real special team for us has been St. John Fisher. The first really bad loss we ever had was to them, 17-2. But we beat them 3-2 the next year, the first established team we beat. And we haven't lost to them since. Last season the scores were 8-1 and 50 in the regular season and 7-0 in the championship playoff. But the hockey club consists not only of the A team, which is the one out there garnering all of those championships. There is a B team and intramural hockey, too. These varied ingredients are what prompts Doc Dietz to insist he is more cook than coach. Whatever the budget is, we have to accomodate everyone who comes out, he asserts. We get S7700 and raise about S3000 on our own. If we only had to spend it on the 20 guys on the 'A' team I suspect we could waltz over everyone in our league. We buy five days of ice time a week, but the 'B' team takes it for two of those days. This a club. We spread the budget, the ice time and our resources around 50 guys, lt would make things easier just to work with the 20 guys, but that has not been our goal in the past and l'd be reluctant to change that now. Doc Dietz sees nothing strange about a Classics professor doubling as a hockey coach. lVly tradition places an emphasis on excellence in all things. Anyone who is dedicated to doing some- Coach of the Year: Dr. thing well is an artist, whether he's writing an essay or shooting a puck. The Greeks said that a person who makes a vase, a person who writes a play: both are artists. Socrates was a stonecutter and many Greek writers were also generals. But this is the age of specialization. We have a way of compartmentalizing where we have to choose one certain career. lt's not good. ln Plato's Republic we find the classic concept that music should be taught for the body and gymnastics for the soul. Remember now, though, I didn't just sit down one day and conclude, as a rational decision, that l would like hockey. I've played it all my life. I've been a player, coach and administrator. lt's a lot of fun. Doc Dietz did cite one intriguing parallel between his two areas of expertise, mythology and hockey: lVluch mythology revolves around the 'quest', which is just another way to say victory or championship. The championship is the Golden Fleece that every hockey team strives to capture. Dr. David Dietz has his professional life neatly balanced be- tween the Classics and hockey: with his Aenefd in one hand, his Victoriaville in the other. David B. Dietz 207 v0y,pw.fMv V-ai 208 'W .k 0'--X X W is S :Q S gm? -. 'W -E 1' Q-war' s '- 1' JN FN KN Women's Basketball ,A Ng, ff -1 Q ,, '- WWW f 'M 40 wk Mgr Intramurals ,QS . L ,, Q 675 '11, ' Q fm. K x K f'-mr .kr-'Q W V -fd fl-W F X w----- . .. K -gfxffwfw . yn , H. 'NWN-A 4-f., 31130: I f My ., Women's Gymnastics Soccer Kathy Alevras Sharon DePeters Bernice Garlock Carole Reynolds Valerie Rowe Denise Tenney Coach: Al Stompf Golf Team Don Doctor Tim Hartnett Larry Onusz AI Gollniewicz Jim Fell John Crawford Mike Pearson Coachi Fr. Torn O'Conner Track Will Dunbar Ed Gunn Eric Redmill John Kropski Larry Kavanaugh Jim Lyon Reggie Scott Rock Krystoff Bob Walsh John Mumm Tom Avallone Derek Prier Sergio Baes Dick Cartwright Jayne Carmichael Mitch Stessing Ed Oggrzacy Eugene Caccatore John Perssee Joe Haslinger Chet Morrow 212 Dick Jones Coach Daniel N Hurley Marty Loesch Emery Rogers John Hurley Tom Occhiuto Hasirn Cosovic McKinley Cummings Dave Bachman Ed May Dave Moran Rich Courtney Ed Hurley Sid Cosovis Nick Tiberia Mark Strassel Desde Weisenseder Tim Baker Craig Main George Tumpaloff Ron Costanza Coach: Mike Gomez Women s Tennis Theresa Bonanne Karen Box Jayne Gilbride Cathy Giles Marion Giroux Geri Keenen Patti Kieffer Mary McGowan Helen Planinsek Men's Bowling Team Fion Kryrcum Brian Carrier Karl Wagner John Stewart Chuck Caputy Rick McCarraher David Fern Joe Sacco man no Arky Muscato Dave Bordonaro Gary D'Andrea David Voland Tom Belavia Larry Varecka Dave Roberts Coach: Debbie lwaniak-Genora Women' Bowling Team Linda Hanley Pat Hoffman Pat Markiewicz Geri Keenan Paula Spengler Mary Pieczyi Karen Golombek Lenore Hardie Cross Country Will Dunbar Ed Gunn John Mumm John Kropski Chris Connley Bob Walsh Men's Tennis Team Fiich Anderson Joe Brodnicki Damian Courtin Bob Fahey Art Donley John Miller Peter Shields Bob Kolarczyk Bob Duplicki Nick Casseri Ray Witzleben Coach: Terry McMahon Varsity Basketball Mark Spitler Billy Leonard Mike Walton John Sommers Craig Prosser Tim Stokes Dave Spiller Timmy Hartnett Bill Dressel Rene Stephens A sf K2 , .-.t,.s.i.sSkiw8iL?s., .M .au-m.s.-walk . .a a-.V Alan Richardson Rich Fredericks Tim Eberle Jeff Stoltman, Manager Greg laconis, Manager John McCarthy, Coach Joe Niland, Asst. Coach Jerry Falgiano, Asst. Coach A, Alan Alexander, Trainer ' Zeviefsfavamaiswvmaiim, , MMV rr Women's Volleyball Baseball Nick Silvestri Ed Arcara Jim Lauden Harry Vandermeulen Mike Geraci Mark Alperia Vin Guadagna Niel O'Connor Jim Kane Mark Banes Phil Rosinski Brian Johnson Joey Gentile Jerry Przybylski Jim Topper Larry Emminger Kevin Tucker Bill Leonard Paul Anthony Brian Schultz Coach: Pete Leo 4 Swim Team Captains: Jim Conway Vincent Reilly Jonathan Cardith Jack Conway Jack Deasy Marty Donze Doug Hamberger Brian Hanley Anne Kirsch Mike McCarvilIe Timothy McQuade Paul Noel Ronald Patenude Flobert Pernatt Sal Peretore Bill Ouirke William Schlearth Mark Smith Mark Spang Managers: Patty Walsh Andy Bozer Coach: Jim Decker Carrie Ann Andolina Eileen Dumansky Missy Fava Caren Jachimiak Geri Keenan Patty Kieffer Karen Klose Janice Kowalski Mary Jo LaMastre Meg Lyons Marg McDonnell Sue Margerum Lori Norman Nancy Pustulka Cathy Stonish Women s Basketball Jane Carmichael Cathy Cronin Cathy Giles Caren Jachiniak Debra Johnson Pat Keiffer Mary Jo LaMastre Mary McGowan Carol Murdock Lori Norman Mary Ellen Shanley Coach: Kathy Bromer Rifle Team Wayne Miller Shawn Schultz John Beyer Lynne Ratke Joe Gugino Greg Reid Lee Berkovits Dan Sherman Dennis Hogan Coach: William Biniszkiewicz Football Team Bill Aman Joseph Anderson Paul Balbierz Peter Baumgardner Patrick Beha Dale Bennett Gary Bissell Angelo Botticelli Dave Bretl Albert Bruno Glenn Burch Tom Cavallaro Dave Cleland John Connelly Jerry Cushman Anthony DaDante Warren Debiew Joe Delaney Chris Dudzinski Michael Duffy Harry Duleck Tim Eberle Ernest Felder Dan Ferrentino Gregory Funk David Geraci Michael Geraci Steve Hackett John Hassler Dwight Hicks Frank Hill Chester Izydorczak Robert Jachimowicz Ronald Jachimowicz Mark Jackson Brian Januszkiewicz Raymond Jarmack Brian Johnson George Joustra Mark Kavanaugh Stanley Kaznowski Mark Kensy Anthony Kozak Jan Kurzanski Kevin Logan James Lyon William Mancuso Jerald Mann John Masiello Daniel Massa Sam Mitchell Kevin Murphy Peter Palmisano Bernie Perillo Ronald Robinson Kenny Rusin Robert Scharlock John Shevat James P. Shields Nicholas Silvestri David Skibinski Herman Silmon Kenneth Smith John Specht John Steblein Greg Stryczek Michael Szczepanski Fred Tarron David Tartick Thomas Taylor Joel Tillman Harry Vandermeulen Mark Weisensal Mark Werheim Terry Wheildon James Whitlark David Wolff Herman Wooten Ed Wolowiec Mark Zalemski Dwight Young Donald Carr Daniel Sommer Coach: William T. Brooks Varsity Hockey Martin Agius Kevin Barnett Thomas Barnett Brian Bartels Brian Bauer Donald Buffamanti Joseph Buscaglia Robert Cleary John Crowe Gary Cutler Martin Downey Peter Eimer Frank Fedele Brian Fisher John Graziani Donald Goralski Robert Goulding Tom Kaminska Paul La Croix Daniel Muller Jeffrey O'DonnelI Robert Saraceno Robert Wick Rick Zinter Robert Zotara Coach: Dave Dietz i i i 215 5 Q Q 2569 661321 32 fl, i ,wk K K Xa ANL A .. .K 75 Q W X , V was wx. . gk .. . QW 5.2.-. Nfwfrgn f . 6' .X as w,Q,,Q.x XS, gym 5 3, T- 'Liege 2' A M' -A K. V. A.:k . wwf .ff Qzlkgu- X gx - we gg, fiN?.f'GlQ5':. Xl? S- mix x X . 2 .Q , -.. , J Nm 9:-r u Q ,tiff N XV Y . as i Q , 1 , Kei Q. K X PENN E 'Wigs X , ' X ji M ,,,,A W W-I k,:w,mWW,, , , I, :- J, s, A ,,,, n f ff -rf gal W E Q Academia Dave Casmus, President Varsity Team: Rob Schwaab Rick Werder Mike Klak Lou Ann Szematovvicz Jim Alexander Judy De Santis Gerald Ford Coaches: Lynne Monaco Kathy Kaczmarek Canisius College Big Band Director: Tom Horst President: Mike Martin Vice President: Dave Pileri Secretary!Treasurer: Jim Shaw Dave Bartley Jeff Brown Mike Cascio Stu Conover Bob Domorouski Mike Frank Stu Hauver John Loevver Rick Maryel Craig Pavvlewski Jim Pendolino Terry Peppas Dan Plachta Eric Tarbox Dave Voght Greg Was Chess Club Robert Duplicki, President Jim Spencer, Vice President Steve Mechtler, Secretary!Treasurer Wayne Becker Lee Berkovits Frank Barnet Bobby Fischer John lggers Jean Stanley Dave Alexander Matt Yee Steve Kruk Tim Baker Sied Cosovic Tom Capuano Greg Mank Susan Becker Boris Spasky Peter Bilka Tom Riley Carl Gibson Charles McGuire Economics! Finance Club President: John L. Langer Vice President: Douglas Hamberger Frank Sahlem Mike Marciniak Faculty Advisor: Ron Reiber, D.F. Members: Robert Rung Cathy Langan Kate Trautman Lu!-Xnn Limburg Mike Kingston Michael Sammarco Kerry M. Langan English Club! Show Your Own President: Frank Sahlem Vice President: Lucella Dumpert Treasurer: Terri Loveland Secretary: Tim Fox Staff: Mary A. Martinello Mary Bryant John Leszak John Mumm James Hannon Michele Braun Bob Durante Mike Verschneider Martha Bouquin Lynne M. Ratke Kathy Kelly Jean Graziani Mary Ellen Burke Leo Hunter Mary Lou Cammarano Heather Loveland Moderator: Dr. Ken Sroka Gold Key Club Pam Rybak Donna Pastecki Michele Landry Debby Hudson Debbie Bridge Debbie Krzystofik Jane Brookbank Edie Matricardi Maureen Conley Mary Ellen Shanley Anne Cleary 218 Glee Club Laura Heimback Tim Fox Mike VerSchneider Nancy Kotaska Cheryl Glenn Helen Gipson Maggie Kraus Maureen Ray Billy Young Robert Shaw Nick Casseri Norman Schroeder Diane Cookfair Karen Hojnacki Donna Wozniak Mattie Arnold Gerry Bereziu k Jackie Burge Laurie Childs Pat Cookfair Milann Dittman Nancy Gabalski Kathy Hirsh Linda Hirsh Mary Janiga Mary Alexan Kryjak Nora Lageman Mary Magee Judy Nlahimeister Wiieen Ray Lissa Steiger Kathy Strum Mary Lou Wyrobek Elaine Yardborough Tony Benson David Collins Doug Cooktair Mark Grzywna Paul Norton Terry Pappas Brian Quinones Craig Steger Karl Wagner David Wellington Director: Ms. Iris Stevenson Quadrangle Editor: Frank Sahlem Ass't Editor: Terri Loveland Secretary: Mary Martinelli Treasurer: Lucella Dumpert Advisor: Fr. A. Bartlett Jean Graziani Martha Bouquin Mary Bryant Michele Braun Lambda Chi Omega President: Ann Marks Vice-President: Pat Higgins Secretary: Jane Griffin Treasurer: Debbie Gazda Maureen Denecke Judy DeSantis Linda Giagnacove Pat Kieffer Mary A. Kryjak Patty McCarthy Margaret McDonnell Michele Prospero Lillian M. Levey Melanie Slazyk Lou Ann Szematovvicz Betty Woloszyn Debbie Zboch Phi Gamma Nu Sorority- Omega Chapter Angie Blanco, President Grace Taylor, Vice President Susan Zablotny, Treasurer Maureen Sheehan, Secretary Debbie Denz, Pat Marckiewicz, Pledge Captains Donna Ferrucci, Kathy Emmanuele, Sergeant-at-Arms Susan Bak Mary Bryant Marie Carroll Mary Ann Caves Madeline Devenny Milann Dittman Maryanne Fiebelkorn Nancy Gabalski Cindy Holly Jo Ann Howes Kathy Kraus Susan Lulek Pat Flevolinsky Laurel Rohan Condy Fioyster Kathy Samsel Cathy Schrader Davene Stuart Cindy Smith Karen Wasielewski Math Club Co-Presidents: Susan Malczyk Theresa Renaud Vice-President: Bruce Reopolos Secretary: Mark Mercier Treasurer: Michael Uschold Reach John Batt John Bardenett Ann Marks Pat Higgins Rick Battaglia Judy Keele Jane Baker Maureen Denecke Joe Marusak Pat McCarthy Betty Woloszyn Margo Fischer Michael Sansano Mark Barnes Spike President-Bob Kniejski Treasurer-Brian Ouinones Socialeliathy McCarthy, Paul Fitzpatrick Public Relations-Dorri Giles Culturale-Mary Ellen Shanley Sports-Mike Duffy Special Affairs-Denise B uscitto Juan Aguilar Peter Brady Steve Brady Jane Brookbank Jim Castracane Anne Cleary Debbie Dearlove Maureen Denecki Debra Hudson Steve Hughes Mary Pat Kelly Patty Kieffer Cindy Landry Patty McCarthy Gerry O'Neill Sue O'Shaugnessy Donna Pastecki Michelle Prospero Nancy Whiting Pat Rowe Betty Woloszyn Bob Guenther Rick Hederman Joe Johnston Jim Maxwell Teresa Machusak George Schmidt Nancy Valenze Mike Xapsos Jane Baker Paula Dhanda Sheryl Lamm John Martin Tom Pearson Jim Pelletter Joanie Stadler Tracy Boyle Nancy Higgins Lou Ann Szematowicz Mary E. Kelly Bob Gibson Peter Fox Cindy Palmer Michelle Landry Joe Marusak 219 WVOC General Manager: James T. Hannon Program Director: Jeffrey Wolfers Chief Engineer: Daniel Fiega Secretary: Kathleen Sherry Technical Consulants: The 94 Associates Div. of Schwedlebaum Industries Faculty Advisor: Dr. W. J. Howell Dale Bennett Tony Benson Ken Casseri Mike Cloos Jerry Cushman Debbie Dearlove Bill Dugan Vince Ferreli Bernie Heinze Mike Lewicki Steve Miller Bill Morrish Brian Murphy Dan O'Keefe Mike Orzel Vito Passero Dave Richards Dwight Rountree Fran Saisa Jeff Sonier Mark Spang Dianne Spang Mike Spang Jeff Stoltman Tim Traskos Bob Yetto Jim Lyon Jon Metzger Chelly Durnpert American Chemical Society President: Mary Magee Vice President: Diane Cookfair Secretary: Maureen Lynch Treasurer: Andrew Bozer Who's Who Among Students At American Colleges And Universities Brian Bauer, Gene Rudzinski, Laura Heimback, Tony Catalano, J. R. Drexelius, Mike Burzcynski, Jim Castracane. Missing: William Bukowski, Marie Teresa Carroll, Maureen A. Conley, Alan R. Cross, Eric R. Dahmer, Gabriel G. Greco, Mary M. Haag, Karen M. Hojnacki, Deborah L. Hudson, Christine M. Lojacano, Michael G. Martin, Mary T. McGowan, Donna J. Pastecki, Camellia R. Pirrone, Patrick G. Rowe, Peter Schifferle, Maria B. Scriuani, Mary Ellen Shanley, Terry J. Whieldon, Deborah S. Zboch. Erik Brady refused to show up. 220 5,1'v,,?1 ' 'Z f ' 4 'fm y, If '16 Y fl r ,Way if af if 'fl Row 1: Michelle Bieron, Sandra White, Joan Stadler. Row 2: Diane Cookfair, Karen Wasielewski, Jim Conway, Tim Cox, Pat Donohue, Rhea Simmons 221 P . ii, X 64 E... Robert S. Cynthia L. Skrzycki. Kniejski, William Doggan, ,mg CX Daniel B. Wopperer Fw' X M. Ver N, X,iX W.. N Q Q onica Parry, G. Daniel Newland, Betty A. Woloszyn, David D. Martin, Ann T. Perham, 2 3 5 S , -:sw 1 3 ........J' 5 s 3 gps Philippe J. Aliotta Suzanne E. VanDooser, Dorothy A. Giles. 222 L: Phi Alpha Theta W' i L gm k . Sill? Seated: Charlie O'ConnelI, Dr. Walter Sharrow, Jim Schultz, Teresia Jovanovic. Standing: Dave Sicoli, John Batt, Gene Rudzinski, Jeff Houston, Bob Licker, Eric Tarbox, and Phil Battaglia. Missing: Melissa Marr, Mary Lou Suozzi, Sally Murphy, Robert Schultz, Chris Reed, Ann Perham, Ben Gagliano, Sean Sullivan, Mark Schutz. XxOLUTf QA! 6 -1 z 5 al cc 2 A7 3 P76-1916 223 DiGamma Society Q my W W . .,, eff My wwf MW ,. WMM.. m,,..WW Q P., nf, . ' ..,M.Wm,,,.,.,,,...,,W.,, . ,,,,. .ff 'nf-i.a4n 44Mx W M A ,.. cr as -gin 'N-1' wif Row 1: M. Veronica Parry, Teresia R. Jovanovic. Row 2: Anthony Serra, Michael H. Burzynski, Eugene A. Rudzinski, Patrick G. Rowe. Row 3: James P Butters, David M. Cantell, J. R. Drexelius, David D. Martin, Erik L. Brady, Cynthia Skrzycki, Anthony P. Catalano, Robert D. Racer, Betty A. Woloszyn. 224 , ' N K , ff k O' n0'0'0'0'o'v I' nl, I 3' - , . . uuyi 3i.GammaSoci f'------g--- -- - 6 -a fl QP' , XL -j?lL0 'V V, Below: Michael Liwicki Susan Rehak Ch , , ristine NI Lojacono Sean Sullivan Nhssm E P William B k ' u owski. f MM' Above: Kneeling: David Duff,Jim Sloand, Laura Heimback, Ken Flonzo. Standing: Donna Las- towski, Donna Oehmann, Sue Scott, Mary Haag, Margaret McDonnell. Right: Flow 1: Gary Gardali, Michelle Bieron, Donna Grazek, Paul Nasca. Row 2: Joe Hederman, Tracy Boyle, John LiPuma, M.D., Judy Flaherty, Mary Eder, Flay Wassel. Missing: William Hayes, David Dickman, James Headerman, Thomas Foels, Dan Malone, John A. Miller, James Mul- lin, John Paroski, Robert Perez, Matthew Piele- cha, Thomas Schenk, Lynn Steinbrenner, Dan Sherman, Pat Wilkosz, Dan Wopperer, Denise Ruscitto. Beta Beta Beta 4418 ,J r, I 'ln-... 226 .my 1,4 ,W SW N jr W, www W M Psi Chi Seated: Sue Scibetta. Standing, L to R: Karen Hojnacki, Judy Sipior, Dr Toilefson, Lou Aiken, Dr. Bayer, Mary Beth DelRusso, Crazy Bill Hayes Margaret Werick, Mike Helmicki, Mike Burczynski, Rhea Simmons, Bill Rider esq. Afro American Society 'igv9e!w N ,. ,. sk . . ff ' ,gf-H , 1 , f gi A A 1 QQ f kiss Q- 1 .L--- A -L.- A M1 ' X . , f Q' A x b Qt ..:L .. rv' QR I 'i QA nm, aff!! 228 z , A ,ZW W WY 5 5-BA 4 3 Q Y Q. 1 f K AW , M . Q Fi 'Wu 2 29 'S Sv L f' J W W 1 N mm, ,Mn ET: D. CU D. D. CU 1 cu .: .E- 4 E5 o agement S an M , 7 4 , 5 2+ 7 , v 3 1, , 2 Nvlwinmlm Phi Gamma Nu 231 Y g i E' Q il fyneeie ibm? American Chemical Society NM Accounting Society L6 Cerclc Francis x. A-is ' N x Lamba Chi Omega ,mf-'4 f23i', ,g f ffm- 2-ft-1 W' 57 rf A a LihQ1QfNJS.? jak ajft? 53 N653 '33 513' is gsm 51, IF I, , e,, QZQQE3 fl? Resident Hall Council 236 ' 2 Y 4fwfz1:'-.'y- 1 ' ff Gold Key 4 i i E B 2 ' x WWW l 'N H. Q X,'s. 237 j'm,4, fu ,f , X 17 SPIKE Q. Campus Programming Board 5 E in ? ,FAA 4.2 K-rf ,-I. .4 , 1 IL x 1 v 1 Y r , Q . ,1 1 , 4 Af x V? f 1 1 1 1 3 A I 238 s 4- f,1 4 -Q! ' ,o-fo., , 0 uxi. A my Rf Q. A- . Q5-fx 4 1 f ,.,, --f f M f K Q.f',,gQ,,:2L..-:,gfXfz1fX--Mfisilv N . L' A W-1 'X N ii., A MMS K - M ,K 'L-f-my M Glee Club Gospel Choir , A ? . . i T' A A ., -...,....LJ-Ln-I nb ,., . M!! .....,.....4-an-- ,,......4- , 241 W +16 QQ NH Big Band -. fu 242 ik Q 3 ,,., 2 K rg-as sfgg X3 , , 243 fg W7 XXX .Af ' A.,...-f,.. N an . .. .. gg, zz -V If ' L 1 L if A555535 K 1 4 su I wg? Q L,-wiv Q Q' A 46 - 9 -vwgxwi ' '- . + ' ' f 55 A it x 'r 0 -1. , Y X wk M 'X gm'5i213,gg1gh. N Q xi . M S9 W Q A S S is . 5, I, 5 me A 3 if I - FL 'MA A BSR Q Q - S. .GX 2 e , 5 , 2 2, ,Z , , F9 ff 3 we 552, , fn Q in V4 as V, 7' , x.f. ff X, .J 2? ici' ' kv . I If H iff-24 .ve z. If 2 3 I ' 5 I , A ,A V 'IV , ,A I e v g r 1 -1lLwf:X15 4 HQ' 'W , ke' 455' 7 ? V hw Eg 1 Undergraduate Student Assembly i f xx Above Left: Senior Senators, left to right, Bill Bukowski, E. Kelly Bartels, Tony Serra, Dave Durante, J. R. Drexelius. Above Right: Sophomore Senators, left to right, Larry Kavanaugh, John Hurley, Donna Ferrucci, Don Clayback Missing, Nancy Wutz. Left, left to right, Freshman Senators, Jeff Sonier, Vito Pessero, Joe Perez, Jane Baker, Missing, Mary LaNasa. Economics Club ROG 1 K Q Q k if ., , . W A 'Q , ' J 411.1 n fr... 5 fm -JJJ-JJ '-'-w--.. C.C.T.V L44' Y 247 W hr lEriffin Words of Thougf I find the three maja ministrative problems on a pus are sex forxthe stqg athletics for the alumni, parking for the faculif' - Clark err Chancellor, l VOLUME XLVI, NUMBER 2 CANISIUS COLLEGE, BUFFALO, NEW YORK 14208 mon, ssrremsek 11 -ni ' 3 NNW' X Q' N 248 if N x may I ii 5 x A .' N' 1 5 fl RK.P Opposite page: far left: Cindy Skrzycki, Edi- tor-in-Chieh Lower left, Erik Brady, Sports Editor, Right, John Hurley, Managing Editor kX,. 249 Upper left: Kevin Brady, Business Manager , above, Dan Wopperer, Art and Graphics Editor Left, E. Roger Stephenson, Moderator. 1 1 my-nv-mul!! fir ...A-E Q ,f K A 1 Eff ' N ' J 'rs .xx My I . 1 2 E 4Qiw,N Top: Bill Hirsch, Photo Editor, above right: lVlike Hasels- E1 N L4 vverdt, moderator, above: Maria Scrivani, Feature Editor. ix 's ' , Opposite page, lower left: Larry Vilardo, News Editor, Ann liking Perham, Feature Editor, far right: Bill Cunningham, Copy xx A' Edna t ix ,.,- 250 ,fi AEN? x, 4 N11 H A li , I w Q, ,- -046' 5 Q elh ffs baga e ,mmelgar V Ni 4535, m in Y -ff f L sf is f 'ii I, 3' ULU Av 3 g XL.. N . . L. . 5 E W..A x .. 5 ' , Q X 42' i' Q? 254 Q QK V t 3 fl R, if QMSEQ 'fs Q-. . , ..,,... -Y' .. gi A E ..i,fQ' E --..... S3 4 L . Siem.,-215 Q ,2: h 'Mx 4 Q gA .f v O, 1 ur SXS-,fx 255 L Clkdmk OCJGCUU GGBW QQ if 258 X. :S-' 4 'fJ. 1'- 'K ' Q MTA 'S' T x ' - . i I ' . :fi iff sw. X N- V K -af -A . ' J wfiwi, N Q Q. N 1. , ,A J ,Q :NJ .sv 1 'A -Q 3 'FWF' 260 XM ,, X wvSNd'l i + 5 Q gr ssmz mg f Z A f,fff 22 ri ZQQJ 5 E Z jg vp -, . i X 'Q ., M. MW. .. W M2 V E, 2 Nu 4. My ,., .. ,S . , X .ig-iifzs xx--S ' X N iv aus lf ifkflf 5 e QV' sfliifgf ic? KA. lim 2 K 54 '-N in Q X t fQ L A -k X Q Gif 'ftfl ' - A i i Lei H ,ip Zi.. K ., . -,fc --.--- 1 X ' a., , , -if 'X 1 5 uf ': . Q -' . ' t --,- .. . 3 S K + A sg Q .E J ' S ' Q' vf - h Kg! E . ,,:: ,IM .,,. L N W K Q? X Y A H KL: . 'V' ' L' -- '4'-7 V - ..,. E ...:, ,. . in X L ' - Q ,.- H gr: N - L -':: Q . .,,. an H , 1 gm L f ? mmf? f i N A ' Q hiv '6- ggk . x x vi K xxx af, 72 1557 . ,.' ff, ,wf-ff' Q 'V Q 263 x a, K. W, , ,,L5ygq,v 'kk N-vm Hts .mn 'Six fy? 265 X X 1 W- U ,-,. ix. ,W - .. i W ,X ' x. L V' K XL I .mx . W f -. .' ' ,':, ' .- Q ' Y X, 1 -Q ' ,F fwiiifsftrx N 266 45 S73 X 267 MVN Nw Y vw nu. .L,- K N -- 2 A 7,3-1 W, MM R ff, :QW 31. mf: 1 'suv Abramowski, John C. 4 Mayfair Ct. Cheektowaga, NY Adams, William D. 741 Jamison Rd. Elma, NY Adamski, Richard S. 2307 Bender Ct. Buffalo, NY Addonizio, Joseph G. 24 Fox Chapel Court Williamsville, NY Addonizio, Mary K. 24 Fox Chapel Ct. Williamsville, NY Adornetto, Raymond S. 211 Floss Ave. Buffalo, NY Aiken, Louisette A. 948 Virginia Dr. Alden, NY Aiken, Thomas C. 948 Virginia Dr. Alden, NY Alexander, Gary J. 95 Tremont Ave. Kenmore, NY Aliotta, Philippe J. 205 Marine Dr., Apt. 6E Buffalo, NY Amerson, Dee Ann M. 421 Glenwood Buffalo, NY Amico, Paul D. 430 Crescent Ave. Buffalo, NY Andres, Lawrence J. 13918 Buffalo Rd. Collins, NY Anthony, Paul J. 45 Grant Lancaster, NY Augustyn, Bruce M. 191 Greenway Blvd. Cheektowaga, NY Barbera, Joseph F. 41 Pries Ave. Buffalo, NY Bardenett, W. John 125 Robineau Rd. Syracuse, NY Barkley, Jr. Fred S. 365 Landon Buffalo, NY Barnashuk, Frank C. 75 Ingham Ave. Lackawanna, NY Barnet, Frank 745 Tacoma Ave. Buffalo, NY Bartels, Edward K. 151 Lebrun Rd. Amherst, NY Basil, Joseph F. 600 Klein Rd. Amherst, NY Batt, John F. 554 Sweeney St. N. Tonawanda, NY Bauer, Brian J. 33 Fancher Ave. Kenmore, NY Bembenista, Marcus A. 106 Nash Ave. W. Seneca, NY Benten, James R. 104 Medina St. Buffalo, NY Berkovits, Lee R. 830 Bay 8th St. West Islip, NY Bieron, Michele A. 320 Davidson Ave. Buffalo, NY Bilka, Peter A. 20 Sunset Dr. Hamburg, NY Billoni, Donald J. 134 Tremont Ave. Kenmore, NY Bitka, Donna M. 72 Goodrich Rd. Lackawanna, NY Senior Directory Blake, William M. 84 W. Oakwood Pl. Buffalo, NY Boehm, David G. 517 Highland Pkwy. Kenmore, NY Bogner, William J. 51 Royal Ave. Buffalo, NY Boland, John E. 98 Fairchild Pl. Buffalo, NY Borden, David L. 801 Blossom Lea Dr. Alden, NY Bordonaro, David R. 5040 Broadway Depew, NY Bowers, Douglas A. 92 Slate Creek Dr. if 2 Cheektowaga, NY Boyle, Maureen T. 264 Smith St. Lake City, PA Bozer, Andrew S. 768 Parkside Buffalo, NY Bradley, Patric J. 505 Dove St. Dunkirk, NY Brady, Erik L. 371 Deerhurst Kenmore, NY Brady, Peter F. 417 Beach 126 St. Belle Harbor, NY Brown, Bennie 536 Swan St. Buffalo, NY Brown, Sharon E. 461 Masten Ave. Buffalo, NY Budniewski, David F. 47 St. Louis Ave. Buffalo, NY Burkowski, Jr. William 39 Jewett Pkwy. Buffalo, NY Bumbalo, Samuel J. 45 Kingston Ln. Cheektowaga, NY Burgyio, Louis D. 294 Vermont St. Buffalo, NY Burns, Neil T. 104 Summit St. Batavia, NY Burzynski, Michael H. 419 Cherokee Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Buscaglia, Salvatore 172 Albany St. Buffalo, NY Butters, James P. 215 Enez Dr. Depew, NY Cantwell, David M. 109 Hughes Ave. Buffalo, NY Caputy, Charles K. 159 Eiseman Ave. Kenmore, NY Carroll, Margaret M. 36 Brost Dr. Buffalo, NY Carroll, Marie Therese 6160 W. Quaker St. Orchard Park, NY Casmus, David M. 123 Penn Ave. Sinking Spring, PA Castracane, James P. 5075 Hillcrest Dr. Clarence, NY Catalano, Anthony P. 17 Marwill St. Albany, NY Cavanaugh, Patrick M. 58 Soules Rd. Hamburg, NY Ceccarelli, David F. 55 Norfred Dr. Lackawanna, NY Celotto, Susan M. 21 Louvaine Dr. Tn. Tonawanda, NY Chaisson, Kevin D. 11677 Parkwood Dr. Mailla, NY Chameli, Carl M. 238 Irving Terr. Kenmore, NY Cilley, Robert S. RD 1 Woodhull, NY Clayback, Pat J. 157 Iris Ave. Buffalo, NY Conley, Maureen A. 108 College St. Clinton, NY Connelly, Patricia 93 School Rd. Kenmore, NY Connors, James P. 237 Mackinaw St. Buffalo, NY Continelli, William L. 411 Ashland Ave. Buffalo, NY Conway, James T. 100 Evergreen Dr. Tonawanda, NY Cooke, Sandra V. 97 Parkside Ct. Buffalo, NY Cookfair, Diane'L. 11 Fairlane Ave. Tonawanda, NY Coppola, Mary P. 181 Walton Dr. Snyder, NY Corto, Ann M. 4591 Abbott Rd. Hamburg, NY Costanzo, Ronald J. 1265 Culver Rd. Rochester, NY Cox, Timothy B. 96 Hillcrest Dr. Wayne, NJ Crane, Kevin L. 118 Pries Ave. Buffalo, NY Cutler, Gary J. 199 Fairways Blvd. Amherst, NY Czapla, Howard N. 224 Woodland Dr. Kenmore, NY Dahmer, Eric R. 344 Thorncliff Kenmore, NY Dalessio, Paula M. 104 Davey St. Buffalo, NY Daley, Terrence J. 130 Forrest Way Camillus, NY Daley, Thomas G. 130 Forrest Way Camillus, NY Dandrea, Gary A. 4458 Dorchester Rd. Blasdell, NY Davis, Annie M. 188 Northland Ave. Buffalo, NY Davis, Lawrence F. 145 Greenaway Rd. Eggertsville, NY Delrusso, Mary E. 6 Main St. Lincoln Park, NJ Denson, Dawn R. 183 Orange St. Buffalo, NY Denz, Deborah A. 504 Walton Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Deritis, Albert J. 8 Terrace Dr. Apalachin, NY Devincentis, Emil N. 126 Goethe St. Buffalo, NY Dick, Dennis John 535 E. Amherst Buffalo, NY Dick, Michael Z. 20 Belmont St. Buffalo, NY Dinan, Ann M. 146 Calvert Blvd. Tonawanda, NY Dinki, Daniel J. 77 Armbruster Buffalo, NY Disanto, Gary L. 100 Summit St. Batavia, NY Diviak, Paul R. 649 Harlem West Seneca, NY Doctor, Donald 19 Paul Pl. Buffalo, NY Domres, James L. 193 Treadwell Rd. Tonawanda, NY Donley, Maureen P. 1460 Rice Rd. Elma, NY Donohue, Michael J. 180 Lawrence PI. Orchard Park, NY Donohue, Patrick J. 2001 Main St. Buffalo, NY Donohue, Thomas R. 288 Argus Dr. Depew, NY Donze, Martin C. 6 Caryl Lane Philadelphia, PA Doro, Paula C. 335 Lebrun Buffalo, NY Drazek, Carol A. 6125 Breed RT 2 Camillus, NY Drexelius, John R. 1129 Whiteheaven Rd. Grand Island, NY Driggers, Stephen A. 26 Mar-Del Way Williamsville, NY Driscoll, Mary F. 8550 Howard Dr. Williamsville, NY Duggan, Nancy M. 44 Argosv Dr. Amherst, NY Dulski, Diane R. 50 Peace St. Buffalo, NY Dumansky, Eileen 62 Brinton St. Buffalo, NY Duntpert, Lucella A. 53 Crescent Ave. Buffalo, NY Duplicki, Robert P. 143 Wanda Ave. Cheektowaga, NY Durante, David J. 1485 N. French Rd. N. Tonawanda, NY Durma, Dennis M. 156 Peter St. Buffalo, NY Dziurbejko, Marcia 206 Collins Ave. Buffalo, NY Eckert, Brian H. 195 Bentham East Buffalo, NY Ertel, Paul M. 121 Carlyle Ave. Buffalo, NY Eye, Barbara G. 472 Dartmouth Ave. Buffao, NY Fayson, Janice M. 165 Chester St. Buffalo, NY Fecteau, Francine D. 130 Woodside Ln. Liverpool, NY Feldman, Linda M. 8500 Stahley Rd. E. Amherst, NY Fell, James K. 6760 Bear Ridge Rd. Pendleton, NY Ferraro, Joseph J. 74 Vern Lane Cheektowaga, NY Ferrentino, Dan T. 7 Blair Lane West Seneca, NY Fidler, Catherine A. 277 Country Shire Dr Rochester, NY Fitzpatrick, Paul P. 441 Beach 126 St. New York, NY Flaherty, Judith A. 35 Stutson St. Rochester, NY Flanagan, Richard J. 450 Beach 125 St. Belle Harbor, NY Fox, Timothy J. 44 Century Dr. Buffalo, NY Frascella, Louis J. 245 Prospect Ave. Hamburg, NY Frascella, Paul C. 87 Randall Terr. Hamburg, NY Fredo, Louis A. 208 Wardman Kenmore, NY Frohe, Adele N. 2474 Eggert Rd. Buffalo, NY Fronczak, Lynn A. 12 Leonard Post Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Fu, Steven Colow 2001 Main Bosch Buffalo, NY Funk, Allen R. 1890 Marjorie Dr. Grand Island, NY Gagliano, Bennett A. 2775 Colvin Blvd. Tonawanda, NY Gagliardi, Gloria J. 483 Niagara Falls BI. Amherst, NY Gallivan, Janice G. 149 Calvin Ct. N. Tonawanda, NY Galonek, David 275 Brompton Rd. Buffalo, NY Gardali, Gary Box 88 Brantingham, NY Gazda, Deborah J. 85 Homesgarth Cheektowaga, NY Gelia, Charles B. 5105 Elmcroft Clarence, NY Genet, Mark R. 64 Airview Terr. Depew, NY Georger, Elizabeth C. 23 Beard Ave. Buffalo, NY Georger, Matthew D. 23 Beard Ave. Buffalo, NY Geraci, Michael J. 221 Hi-View Terr. West Seneca, NY Gherghetta, Lydia A. 63 Sunrise Terr. W. Seneca, NY Ghosen, George T. 347 Forest Ave. Buffalo, NY Gianforcaro, Robert L. 197 Bonnie Brae Dr. W. Springfield, MASS Gibson, John R. 114 Temple St. Avon, NY son, Robert V. riddle Path Rd. ds Point, NY mme, Gary F. ' Crescent Ave. falo, NY eson, Michael D l-7 Darrow Pl. v York, NY dsmith, Lawrence James I Maple Ave. nburg, NY clstein, Gary I Minnesota St. falo, NY ebiewski, Michael M. l Goodyear Ave. :falo, NY lonka, George P. J1 Main Bosch :falo, NY rman, Matthew 1 -H2 Box 577 terford, NY iczyk, Suzanne Banko Dr. Jew, NY iss, David C. Cleveland Dr. nmore, NY iy, Gwendolyn 5 Northampton St. ffalo, NY iziani, Jean M. l Briarhurst nawanda, NY aziano, Dino A. Marylou Lane pew, NY eco, Gabriel G. :iero St. leton, PA ell, Dennis J. 5 Angelacrest Ln. lst Seneca, NY ennell, John C. lestrip Rd. ing, NY iffin, Thomas J. Birchfield Dr. iterbu ry, CT imm, Shawn J. 3 Turner Ave. ffalo, NY ohmann, Ronald J. Godfrey St. ffalo, NY oss, Peter J. 96 Roberts Rd. som, NY untz, Richard D. Alder Pl. ffalo, NY enther, Robert G. W. Beach Rd. nkirk, NY erra, Michael A. Seabrook Ave. ffalo, NY Ilo, Salvatore J. Fargo Ave. ffalo, NY mlak, Joseph S. 4243 Freeman Rd. :hard Park, NY ag, Mary M. 0-87 St. agara Falls, NY as, Joan M. Schuele Ave. ffalo, NY ckett, Stephen C. 7 Knowell Rd. millus, NY mberger, Douglas 5 Linwood Ave. ffalo, NY mpton, Coretha 5 Oxford Ave. ffalo, NY navan, John P. D Lebrun Rd. ffalo, NY Hanley, Brian P. 20 Brookline Dr. Utica, NY Hannon, Dennis V. 74 Tampa Dr. W. Seneca, NY Hanzly, Mark J. 2267 Seneca St. Buffalo, NY Harper, Robert M. 36 Landon St. Buffalo, NY Harrigan, Brian J. 217 Highgate Ave. Buffalo, NY Harrington, Peter J. 416 East 26 St. Brooklyn, NY Harris, Jean E. PO Box 810 Buffalo, NY Hartney, Michael F. 156 Sterling Ave. Buffalo, NY Haslinger, Joseph A. 227 S. Forest Rd. Buffalo, NY Hayes, James F. 9 Wildwood Buffalo, NY Hayes, William P. 217 Parish Dr. Wayne, NJ Hays, Elizabeth A. 108 Larchmont Rd. Buffalo, NY Hederman, James J. 1642-11th Ave. Brooklyn, NY Helmicki, Michael F. 17 Yvonne Ave. Cheektowaga, NY Hennessy, Michael P. 6227 Brown Hill Springville, NY Heron, Mark P. 62 North Dr. Eggertsville, NY Hettinger, Donald J. 167 Texas St. Buffalo, NY Hetzelt, Gretchen A. 30 Rockland Rd. Tonawanda, NY Higgins, Patricia M. 14 Westover Rd. Verona, NJ Hoffman, Patricia L. 679 Parkhurst Blvd. Kenmore, NY Hoinacki, Karen M. 109 Gorski St. Buffalo, NY Hudson, Deborah L. 202 Locksley Rd. Syracuse, NY Hughes, Stephen B. 67 Clinton St. Batavia, NY Hurley, John P. 353 Chapman Pkwy. Hamburg, NY lwanski, Monica M. 1572 Meadow Dr. Alden, NY Jablonski, Janice T. 71 Jane Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Jachimowicz, Robert 151 Browning Dr. Hamburg, NY Jagodzinski, Robert E. 52 Shepard Buffalo, NY Jakes, Sam 303 Northampton St. Buffalo, NY Janiszewski, Eugene M. 51 Trudy Lane Buffalo, NY Jaremko, William 41 Greeley St. Buffalo, NY Jay, Joseph F. Jr. 42 Orchard PI. Buffalo, NY Jetter, Cassandra 358 E. Utica Buffalo, NY Johnson, Beverly A. 664 Woodlawn Avenue Buffalo, NY Johnson, Brian E. 41 Knowlton Ave. Kenmore, NY Johnson, Robert E. 91 Almont Ave. West Seneca, NY Jones, Cheryl F. 42 Richmond Ave. Buffalo, NY Jovanovic, Teresia B. 208 Orchard Pl. Lackwanna, NY Juron, Leslie A. 651 Deerfield Dr. N. Tonawanda, NY Kaczmarek, Cynthia M. 388 Esser Ave. Buffalo, NY Kaminska, Thomas M. 50 Ellwood Ave. Kenmore, NY Kane, Colleen M. 256 lvyhurst Cir. Buffalo, NY Karpie, Michael J. 43 Peoria St. Buffalo, NY Kaufman, Michael C. 25 Stutzman Rd. Bowmansville, NY Kazmierczak, Sandra A. 81 ldlewood Dr. Orchard Park, NY Keane, Timothy P. 30 Britt Ave. Buffalo, NY Kee, Kenneth 2001 Main St. Buffalo, NY Keenan, Geraldine M. 190 Kings Hwy. Snyder, NY Kelsey, Ellen M. 78 Tillinghast Pl. Buffalo, NY Kempker, Robert E. 273 East St. Buffalo, NY Kicinski, Daniel J. 126 Mansion Ave. Cheektowaga, NY Kilbridge, John Gerard 657 Niagara Blvd. Fort Erie, ONT Kilbridge, Stephen M. 657 Niagara Blvd. Fort Erie, ONT Kilburn, Kenneth III RD 118 Milton Terr. Ballston Spa., NY Kiley, Thomas P. 92 Beach Dr. Prospect, CT Kingston, William M. 254 Argonne Dr. Kenmore, NY Kinney, John D. 44 Euclid Place Buffalo, NY Kintzel, James R. 136 Densmore Ave. Buffalo, NY Kisloski, Kenneth R. 95 Greeley St. Buffalo, NY Klose, Karen S. 180 S. Wrexham Ct. Tonawanda, NY Kluwe, H. Theodore 1306 Delaware Ave. Buffalo, NY Klycek, Alfred T. Jr. 55 Electric Ave. Buffalo, NY Kmetz, Marianne D. 16 Mercury Lane Levittown, NY Knox, Cheryl A. 120 Meyer no 41522 Amherst, NY Kondraschow, Reas M. 348 Gibson St. Buffalo, NY Korzeniewski, Lawrence F. 136 Atlantic St. Sloan, NY Krahling, John F. 41 Woodward Ave. Buffalo, NY Krajewski, Robert J. 37 Yvette Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Krawczyk, Marlene J. 3 Mildred Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Krieger, John J. 118 Legion Dr. Kenmore, NY Kropski, John S. 25 Princess Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Krysztof, Rodney J. 57 Wheelock Buffalo, NY Krzystofik, Deborah I. 260 Lincoln Ave. Dunkirk, NY Kubiak, Marcus 647 Highland Ave. Kenmore, NY Kurczaba, Sister Mary Renee 101 River St. Salamanca, NY Labert, Thomas A. 3123 George Urban Depew, NY Lacroix, Paul D. 295 Paradise Rd. E. Amherst, NY liihood, Michael E. 84 Crestwood Ave. Buffalo, NY Landry, Michelle M. 229 Winstead Rd. Rochester, NY Lang, Jr. William R. 2001 Main St. Box B41 Buffalo, NY Langan, Catherine M. 68 Hancock Ave. Buffalo, NY Langer, John L. 339 Parker Ave. Buffalo, NY Larkin, Ann T. 290 Irvington Dr. Tonawanda, NY Lastowski, Donna M. 483 Mill Rd. West Seneca, NY Laughlin, Robert J. 59 S. Century Rd. Buffalo, NY Lawson, Jeffrey 119 Mapleridge Ave. Buffalo, NY Lazzaro, Marian J. 1464 Hertel Ave. Buffalo, NY Leica, Joanne M. 23 McGurk Ave. Blasdell, NY Leonard, William M. 2001 Main St. Buffalo, NY Levy, Carolyn R. 920 Glenwood Ave. Buffalo, NY Lichterfeld, Susan H. 175 Merrimac Buffalo, NY Licker, Robert J. 114 East Winspear Buffalo, NY Lipuma, John J. 62 Warner Rd. Depew, NY Little, Michael A. 230 Niagara St., Apt. 2 Buffalo, NY Liwicki, Michael 62 Academy Rd. Buffalo, NY Lobascio, Debra A. 260 East Maplemere Buffalo, NY Lojacono, Christine M 80 School Rd. Kenmore, NY Lopinto, Joseph F. 316 Grand Central Amityville, NY Lorenz, William A. 81 Elmsford Drive W. Seneca, NY Lulek, Susan M. 484 Fruitwood Terr. Williamsville, NY Lynch, Maureen G. 2011 Colvin Blvd. Tonawanda, NY Lysiak, Rodger R. 17 Cliff St. Buffalo, NY Macander, Peter J. 83 lvyhurst Rd. Amhearst, NY Maghran, Michael P. 165 Jewett Pkwy. Buffalo, NY Maguder, Richard D. 285 Willett St. Buffalo, NY Malczyk, Susan R. 501 Lein Rd. West Seneca, NY Mancuso, Joseph M. 58 Claremont Ave. Buffalo, NY Mancuso, Richard J. 119 Herkimer St. Buffalo, NY Manzella, Anthony L. 489 Lebrun Rd. Amherst, NY Manzella, Michele A. 25 McCamley St. Buffalo, NY Marciniak, Michael D. 40 Concord St. Buffalo, NY Markarian, Michael L. 217 Grimsby Rd. Tn. Tonawanda, NY Marks, Ann 43 Point Dr. West Dunkirk, NY Maron, Ronald W. 4171 Legion Dr. Hamburg, NY Martin, David D. 109 Hughes Ave. Buffalo, NY Martin, David H. 170 Cherrywood Dr. Williamsville, NY Martin, Earl D. 15 Avon Dr. West Seneca, NY Martin, Michael G. 19 Berkley Dr. Lockport, NY Martinelli, Mary A. 636 Grant St. Buffalo, NY Marusak, Joseph J. 108 Princeton Ave. Corning, NY Mascari, Michael 908 Elmwood Ave. Buffalo, NY Masiello, Michael A. 1336 West Ave. Buffalo, NY Masiello, Vito D. 621 W. Delavan Ave. Buffalo, NY Masters, Douglas S. 96 Jasmine Ave. West Seneca, NY Masterson, Marcie A. 443 Braxmar Rd. Tonawanda, NY Matricardi, Edith L. 56 Monterey Rd. Tonawanda, NY Mattei, Joseph M. 13952 Bloomingdale Akron, NY Mazurkiewicz, Frank 10 Petan Cheektowaga, NY McCafferty, Karen M. 143 Densmore Ave. Buffalo, NY NlcCarter, Ronald 605 Woodlawn Buffalo, NY McCarthy, Kathleen M. Merlau Rd. East Aurora, NY McCarthy, Patricia A. 141 Hamlin Ave. East Aurora, NY McCarthy, Thomas J. Jr. 326 Whitfield Ave. Buffalo, NY NlcGowan, Mary T. 404 6th Ave. Belmar, NJ McLaughlin, Joseph J. 416 Woodward Ave. Buffalo, NY McMillin, Marc M. 345 Chestnut St. Lynnfield, MASS NlcMulIen, Dennis P. 275 Brompton Rd. Williamsville, NY McNally, Patricia A. 97 Hughes Ave. Buffalo, NY McQuade, Timothy T. 252 Eden Buffalo, NY Meade, Joann G. 35 Sanford Rd. Fairlawn, NJ Meinzer, John M. 65 Glenside Ave. Kenmore, NY Mendola, Paul F. 217 Bedford Buffalo, NY Mendola, Rosanne 217 Bedford Ave. Buffalo, NY Miechowicz, Annette M. 700 Terrace Blvd. Depew, NY Mikolaiczyk, Stephen P. 851 Klein Rd. Buffalo, NY Miller, John A. 31 Kingsgate Rd. Buffalo, NY Miller, John P. Box 56 Knapp Creek, NY Mitchell, Thurman B. Jr. 215 Riley St. Buffalo, NY Montgomery, Kevin P. 72 Greenfield St. Buffalo, NY Mortek, Laurence J. 1136 Maple Rd. Williamsville, NY Mott, Paul T. 23 Mill Brooks Dr. Wilbraham, MASS Mount, Heather K. 17 Crescent Ave. ih Buffalo, NY Mrozek, John G. 15 Benson Dr. Lancaster, NY Mucha, Susan M. 129 Barnard St. Buffalo, NY Mueller, Michael P. 41 Marilyn Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Muller, Daniel T. 74 Foxpoint Dr. W. Williamsville, NY Mullin, James D. 467 Foch Blvd. Mineola, NY Muravvski, Nlelanie J. 52,Roxborough Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Mure, Philip A. 1 155 Amherst Buffalo, NY Murphy, Sally A. 35 Sunset Lane Orchard Park, NY Muscato, Archangel L. 1525 Eggert Rd. Buffalo, NY Myers, Mark E. 15 Quincy Ave. Lancaster, NY Nadolny, William S. 72 S. Pierce St. Buffalo, NY Nanna, Lewis D. 102 S. Prince Dr. Depew, NY Nasca, Michael R. 84 Ardmore Pl. Buffalo, NY Nastaga, Paula M. 46 Rejtan St. Buffalo, NY Naumowicz, Edward D. 97 Norwood St. Buffalo, NY Nedelkov, Joseph J. 1729 Electric Ave. Lackawanna, NY Nesbitt, Barbara J. 1039 East Ferry St. Buffalo, NY Newland, George D. 567 Third Ave. Troy, NY Nikiel, Suzanne M. 26 Theodore St. Buffalo, NY Norman, Loraine A. 435 Fisher Rd. West Seneca, NY Norris, Mark R. 324 Swan St. Dunkirk, NY Nosek, Stephen M. 371 Central Ave. Lancaster, NY Nosek, Walter A. 371 Central Ave. Lancaster, NY Noto, David L. 54 Parkhurst Dr. N. Tonawanda, NY Nowicki, Paul J. 837 Beach Rd. Cheektowaga, NY Nowicki, Raymond M. 74 Warsaw St. Cheektowaga, NY 0'Bara, Ronald J. 395 Pine Ridge Rd. Buffalo, NY O'Brien, John Joseph 259 Burmon Dr. Orchard Park, NY O'Brien, Timothy 606 Lake Ave. Lancaster, NY O'Connell, Charles 178 Anderson Pl. Buffalo, NY O'Connell, Marcia M. 118 Woodbridge Ave. Buffalo, NY O'Connor, William V. 141 Leonard St. Buffalo, NY Oehman, Donna M. 8750 County Rd. E. Amherst, NY Olek, James 16 Houston St. Depew, NY Onusz, Lawrence 222 Eastland Pkwy. Cheektowaga, NY Oshaugnessy, Susan M. 94 Fiddlers Lane Latham, NY Owczarzak, Michael A. 84 Pierce St. Buffalo, NY Pacer, Robert D. 76 Girard Ave. Cheektowaga, NY Palmisano, Peter B. 1002 Sherman Ctr. Utica, NY Palumbo, Michael E. 11813 Manitou Dr. Alden, NY Parafinczuk, Gary A. 51 Ellis Dr. West Falls, NY Parker, Linda M. 263 Laurel St. Buffalo, NY Paroski, John S. 572 Payne Ave. N. Tonawanda, NY Parry, M. Veronica 90 Hamilton Bl. Kenmore, NY Pastecki, Donna J. 105 Vine St. Batavia, NY Patenaude, Ronald J. 79 Marine Dr., Apt. 11B Buffalo, NY Patterson, Christy P. 88 Fillmore Ave. Buffalo. NY Pav, Joseph W. 86-10 251 St. Bellerose, NY Pavlock, Mark D. 326 Springville Ave. Eggertsville, NY Paxon, Leon W. 4781 Crittenden Rd. Akron, NY Pearsall, Charles F. 111 Southside Pkwy. Buffalo, NY Pearson, Dianne L. 131 Easton Ave. Buffalo, NY Pearson, Thomas A. 25 Linwood St. Valhalla, NY Peck, Timothy J. 19 Honouras Lane Cheektowaga, NY Pelletter, James J. 710 Washington Ave. Dunkirk, NY Pepe, James M. 53 Colden Ct. Cheektowaga, NY Perham, Ann Theresa Mill Street Woodhull, NY Perillo, Bernard M. 249 Ferndale Ave. Kenmore, NY Perlowski, David E. 12 Exeter Dr. Baldwinsville, NY Perna, Anthony F. 720 Seventh St. Buffalo, NY Pernatt, Robert E. 49 Cantwell Dr. Buffalo, NY Persichini, Joseph A. 400 Columbia Depew, NY Peterson, Mary J. 226 California Dr. Erie, PA Petrie, John T. 450 Walton Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Pettit, Larry R. 167 Crstmount Apt. 471 Tonawanda, NY Phelan, Kathleen N. 97 Hughes Ave. Buffalo, NY Phillips, Marie M. 143 Ava Lane Williamsville, NY Piasecki, Frederick J. S. 1407 Townline Rd. Elma, NY Pielecha, Matthew H. 2165 Abbott Rd. Lackawanna, NY Pierpaoli, Richard F. 73 Lamson Rd. Tonawanda, NY Pietka, Christine A. 242 Straley Ave. Buffalo, NY Pileri, David 601 Lynbrook Tonawanda, NY Pirrone, Camellia R. 169 Dorchester Rd. Buffalo, NY Plachta, Daniel E. 1548 Jamaica Square N. Tonawanda, NY Pleto, Thomas A. 4163 Main St. Buffalo, NY Porto, Paul J. 709 S. Huth Cheektowaga, NY Potozniak, Robert Joh 87 Detroit St. Buffalo, NY Potter, Howard H. 20 Verona Buffalo, NY Pritchard, Robert D. 74 Russell Ave. Buffalo, NY Procyk, Diana C. 671 W. Ferry St. Buffalo, NY Prosser, Craig J. 1819 Sidney St. Pittsburgh, PA Provost, John G. 786 Richmond Ave. Buffalo. NY Rainey, Steve R. 972 Williamson Rd. Horsham, PA Redlinski, David C. 122 Avery Pl. Cheektowaga, NY Redmill, Eric G. 9835 Clarence Ctr. Clarence Ctr., NY Reed, Christopher K. 4800 Ridge Lea Rd. Buffalo, NY Reid, Richard G. 52 Gardenwood Lane Buffalo, NY Reilly, Vincent J. 161 Kimberly Ave. Buffalo, NY Renaud, Theresa M. 78 Homesgarth Ave. Buffalo, NY Rider, William T. 167 Knowlton Ave. Kenmore, NY Ritchie, Charles E. 122 Ashland Ave. Buffalo, NY Rivera, David A. 855 W. Chestnut St. Ontario, CAL Rivera, Michael P. 930 Metcalfe Bronx, NY Roberts, David P. 217 Auburn Ave. Buffalo, NY Robinson, Thomas F. 190 East Amherst Buffalo, NY Ronzo, Kenneth R. 2376 Culver Rd. Rochester, NY Rose, Bernadette A. 49 Shoreham Blvd. Buffalo, NY Roseboro, Derrick E. 251 Sedar St. Buffalo, NY Rosel, Gary D. 45 Susan Lane Buffalo, NY Rowe, Patrick G. 2001 Main St. Bosch Buffalo, NY Royster, Daisy L. 104 Fougeron Buffalo, NY Rudzinski, Eugene A. 202 Meadow Brook Pkwy Cheektowaga, NY Ruffin, Tyrone A. 11 Echols Lane Buffalo, NY Rung, Robert F. 6 Morris Ave. Buffalo, NY Rupp, Teresa M. 130 Stoneleigh Kenmore, NY Rusin, Ronald F. 45 Mills St. Buffalo, NY Russo, Richard C. 10718 Mileblock Rd. N. Collins, NY Ryan, Terrance P. 95 Welwyn Circle Kenmore, NY Rybak, Pamela S. 31 Clifton Ave. Batavia, NY Rzeznik, Alan M. 29 Lynnette Ct. Cheektowaga, NY Sackett, Mark D. 48 Wellington Ct. Williamsville, NY Sahlem, Frank S. 61 N. Forest Rd. Williamsville, NY Salem, Frank A. 4674 Newton Rd. Hamburg, NY Sambrotto, Anthony J. 18 Minnetonka Buffalo, NY Sammarco, Michael J. 6494 Cloverleaf Dr. Lockport, NY Sardo, Charles J. 63 Villa Buffalo, NY Savannah, Sharon A. 287 Cedar St. Buffalo, NY Scarcello, Peter P. 1051 Abbott Rd. Buffalo, NY Schaefer, Robert J. 32 Bennington Rd. Snyder, NY Schenk, Thomas W. 43 Wayne Terr. Cheektowaga, NY Schiavone, Salvatore 80 Ferndale Ave. Kenmore, NY Schifferle, Kirk W. 24 George St. Depew, NY Schifferle, Peter J. 122 Chalmers Williamsville, NY Schlaerth, William T. 181 Roycroft Blvd. Snyder, NY Schlager, Karen A. 33 Meadow Stream Dr. Snyder, NY Schmidt, George E. 166 Tremont Rd. Lindenhurst, NY Schnorr, Claudia M. 6079 Webster Rd. Orchard Park, NY iober, Christa M. St. Marys St. tcaster, NY iroeder, Norman D. Harrison Ave. more, NY luetze, Mark M. Allenhurst Dr. ffalo, NY iultz, Gale R. 48 Wehrle Dr. Iiamsville, NY iultz, James D. Jr. tisius College B70 ffalo, NY iultz, Robert D. 25 Winding Lane rence, NY iulz, Brian L. Wilmington Ave. awanda, NY tuster, Gary M. E Reiman St. falo, NY andre, April M. Olney Dr. W. ffalo, NY andra, Francesca G. Parker Ave. falo, NY andra, Joseph A. E Elmwood Ave. falo, NY betta, Susan M. 5 Greenaway Rd. ffalo, NY ott, Ada R. 0 Woodlawn Ave. ffalo, NY Ett, Ralph W. 0 Staley Dr. mburg, NY Ett, Reginald A. Hamlin Rd. ffalo, NY 'ivani, Maria B. 4 Richmond Ave. ffalo, NY wir, Gary J. 7 Huxley Dr. ffalo, NY afer, David A. i0ntario Dr. ektowaga, NY nley, Mary E. 22 University Ave. pnx, NY aw, James M. 57 Lockport Olcotl lwfane, NY aw, Robert G. 0 Berkley Rd. lliamsville, NY elton, Pamela T. Laurel St. lffalo, NY erwood, Jeffrey W. Chardon Dr. leektowaga, NY :oIi, David M. 9 James Dr. wiston, NY Siemienowski, Joseph V. 170 Miller St. Buffalo, NY Sills, Deborah M. 787 Military Rd. Kenmore, NY Silvestri, Nicholas V. 100 Carmolite Dr. West Seneca, NY Simmons, Rhea J. 247 Laurel St. Buffalo, NY Sinclair, Peter J. 57 Bathhurst Dr. Tonawanda, NY Sipior, Judith A. 380 North Ave. N. Tonawanda, NY Sisti, Mark L. 106 Paul Dr. N. Tonawanda, NY Skrobacz, Joseph L. 298 Tremont Ave. Kenmore, NY Skrzycki, Qfnthia L. 450 Winspear Buffalo, NY Sloand, James A. 1466 Kensington Ave. Buffalo, NY Smith, Jeffrey A. 333 Hedstrom Drive Snyder, NY Sommersdorf, William J. 2001 Main St. Buffalo, NY Songin, Joseph S. 300 Bedford Ave. Buffalo, NY Sparks, John W. 418 Virginia Buffalo, NY Specht, John D. 8495 Stahley Rd. E. Amherst, NY Spencer, James L. 118 Arend Ave. Williamsville, NY Spengler, Paula M. 117 Cushing Pl. Buffalo, NY Stabel, James P. 185 Oakvale Blvd. Buffalo, NY Steele, Donald J. 8795 Woodside Dr. Clarence, NY Steiger, Lissa A. 148 McKinley Ave. Kenmore, NY Steinbrenner, Lynn M. 54 Rinewalt St. Williamsville, NY Stevralia, Daniel J. 26 Timberline Dr. Huntington, NY Stewart, John S. 39 Sugnet Ave. Cheektowaga, NY Stokes, Timothy L. 1137 Marelda Ave. Donora, PA Stoltman, Jeffrey J. 71 W. Cavalier Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Stone, Jeffrey A. Box 1059 Bayard Ex. Seneca Falls, NY Stouter, Vincent P. 548 Baseline Rd. Grand Island, NY Stumpf, Eric A. 428 Braxmar Rd. Tonawanda, NY Sullivan, Jeremiah J. One Knoerl Ave. Buffalo, NY Suor, Paul J. 116 Huntington Ct. Williamsville, NY Suozzi, Mary L. 107 Chateau Terr. Snyder, NY Swierat, Karen M. 343 Olmstead Ave. Depew, NY Symes, Bethany L. 11 Millard St.. Dundee, NY Szczepanski, John M. 180 Nakomis Pkwy. Cheektowaga, NY Talamo, Mary L. 19 Abbotford Buffalo, NY Tarbox, Eric J. 3594 Main St. Collins Ctr., NY Teevan, Edward G. 26 Sachem Lane Uncasville, CT Temmons, Brendell F. 930 Northland Buffalo, NY Thomas, William M. 15 Brookville Ct. Tonawanda, NY Thompson, Patrick J. 264 Harrison Ave. Tonawanda, NY Tiberia, Nicholas S5324 Roberts Rd. Hamburg, NY Timmel, Lenore M. 149 Davey St. Buffalo, NY Tkach, Robert O. 20 Baker Court Lackawanna, NY.. Todaro, Thomas J. 28 Delaney Ave. Buffalo, NY Tomaselli, Albert M. 44 Massachusetts Ave. Buffalo, NY Tomes, John G. 75 Tyler Buffalo, NY Trometer, Michael K. 8267 Vernon Circle Williamsville, NY Trueheart, Thomas J. 68 Adams St. Buffalo, NY Tumidajewicz, Chester A. 286 Church St. Amsterdam, NY Turkasz, John P. 107 Academy Buffalo, NY Turkon, David S. 2194 Nia. Falls Blvd. Tonawanda, NY Turner, Berkley D. 4541 W. Overlook Dr. Williamsville, NY Uhteg, Lois E. 16 Traymore Ave. Buffalo, NY Urbank, Michael Fairview Dr. Gowanda, NY Utz, Laura M. 27 Federal Ave. Cheektowaga, NY Vaccaro, Robert M. 90 Massachusetts Buffalo, NY Vandermeulen, Harry D. 148 Geary Buffalo, NY Vandooser, Suzanne E. 43 Carlyle Ave. Buffalo, NY Vanduser, Mark A. 4050 Staley Dr. Hamburg, NY Vavonese, Stephen P. 1112 Rugby Rd. Syracuse, NY Velocci, Patricia D. 239 Longnecker Buffalo, NY Vullo, Anthony D. 115 Theresa Ct. West Seneca, NY Vullo, Donna M. 115 Theresa Ct. West Seneca, NY Wade, Diane M. 447 Auburn Ave. Buffalo, NY Wagner, John C. 313 Lakewood Pkwy. Amherst, NY Walsh, Patricia M. 348 McKinley Ave. Buffalo, NY Walton, Michael R. 80 Lorraine Ave. Buffalo, NY Ward, Russell J. 2539 Genesee St. Cheektowaga, NY Warner, Michael 28 Woodland Rd. West Caldwell, NJ Warren, Beverly A. 334 Mortimer St. Buffalo, NY Warren, Nadine P. 234 School Rd. Kenmore, NY Wassel, Raymond A. 47 Schuyler St. Amsterdan, NY Weiner, Allan M. 126 Wood Dale Dr. Ballston Lake, NY Wellenzohn, Terrance R. 4227 South Park Ave. Blasdell, NY Werick, Margaret M. 169 Lancaster Buffalo, NY Whieldon, Terry J. 94 Orchard Ave. West Seneca, NY White, Karen T. 221 Pershing Ave. Buffalo, NY Wick, Jr. Robert J. 97 Ebling Ave. Tonawanda, NY Wilkosz, David M. 2001 Main Bosch 192 Buffalo, NY Williams, Donald T. 78 Gallatin Ave. Buffalo, NY Williams, Joseph A. Jr. 207 Madison St. Buffalo, NY Willis, Michael L. 378 Florida St. Buffalo, NY Witkowski, Nancy L. 54 Second Ave. No. Tonawanda, NY Witzleben, Raymond H 1201 Bailey Ave. Buffalo, NY Wloskinski, Richard T. 175 Wagner Ave. Sloan, NY Wochadlo, Nlark J. 173 Rochelle Park Tonawanda, NY Woloszyn, Betty A. 516 Central Ave. Dunkirk, NY Wood, Steven A. 53 Fairoaks Lane Cheektowaga, NY Wopperer, Daniel B. 50 Grant Rd. Snyder, NY Woz, Robert P. 40 McNaughton Cheektowaga, NY Wright, Timothy J. 483 Southside Pkwy. Buffalo, NY Wueller, Alan J. 32 Montfort Dr. Cheektowaga, NY Wypijewski, Paul J. 488 Doat St. Buffalo, NY Yager, Jr. Donald R. 16 Narragansett Rd. Buffalo, NY York, Velma V. 619 Hopkins Dr. Buffalo, NY Yuen, Anthony M. 25-36 148 St. Flushing, NY Zawedzki, Audrey A. 92 Brown St. Lackawanna, NY Zboch, Deborah S. 947 Central Ave. Dunkirk, NY Zgoda, Camille A. 117 Liddell St. Buffalo, NY Zylka, Richard D. 1066 Maryvale Dr. Cheektowaga, NY E K ,, , ,l 17WC, ,,,W, , WLQWWWV ., 1, pnmKwffw wff ,, fi, Q 2 ff 'K mllmnua Z W L Y , x I X V fa A. 5 ,, WP fef A , ,U W Q , ' ,Wh , GW ,,,,,A.eg'SQ, . 4 4 f V f ,. f 4 4 ff' , I fm, -4 ,,.,f ,sw , f,,,M,wv Dan Wopnerer 11 Vi Why. L Maria Mc Lellan John Paroski 1. 5 5. ,J V-,,f ,,, Z Q f ' ' if Ginny Scahnll V- W V Q ' lm- f -1 9 I 06 'Off' 9 2 , , 4, ,,f ff , , , ,gif . ,, ,, Mama- Anfm, . J . ,.,Y,.. ,.A.,M.,, ,.f, . ,, S S NKX xjw' X Nix 1 I N1 Ax x ff 275 iwklfxl Mm.. S1!!G!.5! 'N , :Sq qwww W ...x 'wanv--5.7, Mws- my . .,, LM K WN Q- .6 H. A. ,-i i K5 is ! ' Qi .5 3 ik EA 23 g Q ig W f i f il aww E 5 if ,..,Lq . I E1 Q JPY 'A 1 Q he 1 They always said it was the hardest thing to write... now I believe it. Ducha, The Wren and John all tole me how hard it was to write this letter. I used to laugh and say that it couldn't really be that hard. It is. How do you express the type of emotion that you feel for a bunch of people who have worked, sweated and bitched in the monumental effort of putting together a yearbook? How do you thank them with the impartiality of print when you want to reach out and love them with all your soul? I can only try. We started out twelve months ago to build a yearbook, a good one. Only you can decide quality, but I saw true dedication exhibited in so many ways. It all started twelve months ago, in true Canisius tradition, over some beers at the P.M. Bert Rung and I had a discussion about the impending Bicentennial. Out of that drunken chat grew the theme of this book: revolution, evolution, life revolving and evolving in a circular pattern. Bert was also a great moral support and, once in a while, was even around to tell us how much money we had left. But Bert the Business lVlanager's greatest contribution came, fittingly, at the Meadow. As Summer gave way to Fall, Joe Saccomanno and Dan Wopper- er started to expand on the theme. Joe was always a great photographer, but his ideas and techniques made him a greater photographer and an even more valuable friend. Dan's art work was extremely important, too. Yet, for me, his greatest contribution was his ability to see the total picture, to see how each individual layout fit in the whole course of the book. His comments and criticisms were listened to and valued. After learning layout from Sandy Ticen, Eileen Duch and Barb Goracke, I thought I could do it all myself. As the first deadline approached, I discovered the folly of such ideas. I also discovered a young and eager layout staff. Thank the Lord for Sue Behak, Suzy Van Dooser, and most especially, The Fearsome Foursome Plus One: Camille Kane, Roberta IVIure, Carol Jasen and Helen Planisek plus Kevin Brady. Their work was a welcome and pleasant surprise. Without pictures there is no book. Under the direction of Tim lVIcOuade the photo staff cluttered our office with negatives, proof sheets and some high quality photographs. Mark Pinker, Karen lVIize, Bill I AnimaI I Hirsch, Anne Cleary, Jo Jo Hederman and Peter IVlulIauer were the crew who provided the pictures which are this book. The senior and faculty sections are always difficult assignments. I was fortunate that John Paroski did an outstanding job as Senior Editor and that Carol Jasen did likewise as Faculty Editor. Carol was able to overcome the inherent scheduling conflicts that invariably arise when dealing with an entire faculty and their various classroom commitments. Getting shots of all the clubs on campus can be a nasty chore even under normal conditions. But a scheduling foulup gave lVlaria lVIcLellan only two weeks to complete the job. I am still at a loss trying to figure out how she managed it. Erik Brady was Sports Editor isort ofi and with the help of Tim IVlcQuade and Dan Hurley, Canisius' superlative Sports information Director, the section somehow pieced itself together. However, Erik's penchant for handing assignments in moments before the deadline - or more likely, moments after 4 gave me a few extra gray hairs and another ulcer. It would be impossible to single out everyone who made the 1976 AZUWUR a reality. But there are four people who must be singled out: Ginny Schill, for all her bitching, was so important. Her constant aggravation and teasing made life-under-the-deadline easier for us all. Helen Planinsek acted as my secretary and all-round helpmate. She kept me organized and on my toes and A on occasion - stone drunk. IVly brother, Joe, with his easy going style and Aquarian outlook on life, taught me how to look at this world. I really didn't understand what he said until he was gone. This is as much his book as it is mine. Then there is my father, who brought me up right. To all these people, and all the other people whom I can never hope to single out, it's your book. Enjoy it. Treasurer it. Take pride in it. usb., .... I And take care, y be an fb mf wg,,,'i, A A,,A,,,L, - J ...L A , M 2 HV Azuwur '76 John R. Drexelius, Editor-in-Chief Joe Saccomanno, Associate Editor for Photography Sue Rehak, Associate' Editor for Layout Helen Planinsek, Administrative Assistant to the Editor-in-Chief Mary Lu Littlefield and Paul Dowling, Advisor ection Editors Erik L. Brady, Sports Editor Carol Jasen, Faculty Editor Maria McKeIIan, Activities Editor Tim McQuade, Photo Editor John Paroski, Senior Editor Robert Rung, Business Manager Ginny Scahill, Copy Editor Dan Wopperer, Art and Graphics Editor Special thanks to Bill Sloane, Dave Gentile and Bob Anderson of Delmar Printing Co., Mrs. Held and Carl Tandoi of Varden Studios, Laurel Appler, Pat Zasadil, Mrs. Levey, Dan Hurley, Dr. Charles A. Brady, Rev. J. Clayton Murray, S. J. and Rev. Paul McCarthy, S. J. Staff Jayne Arnold Jim Bartels Kevin Brady Tony Catalano Anne Cleary Dominic Cortese Damian Courtin Jim Crean Norm Debbior Mike De Marie Steve Driggers Elaine Duffy Arthur Eve Margaret Fisher Nancy Gabalski Kim Gettins Dorri Giles 279 Don Glena Barb Goracke Joe Hederman Bill Hirsch John Hurley Charlie lsenhour Camille Kane Gloria Korta Bob Morcelle Rebecca Martin Karen Mize Maura McGillicuddy Peter Miiellauer Roberta Mure Tim Murphy Will Novak Jim Pelletter Mark Pinker Anna Marie Riley Gene Fludzinski Sue Scott Kate Scully Mary Ellen Shanley Karen Slazek Dan Smeragliuolo Dave Smith Alice Spisiak Peggy State Larry Vilardo Suzanne VanDooser Kathleen Victor Karl Wagner Alice Welch Forrest Whitlark Colophon The 1976 AZUWUR was prepared by the students of Canisius College, financed by the student tax of the Undergraduate Student Assembly and printed by Offset Lithography by the Delmar Printing Company, a divi- sion of Republic Corporation, Charlotte, North Caro- lina. The opening 16 pages of the book are printed on Warren Cameo, a high gloss paper. The remainder of the book is printed on 80Ib. consolidated dull enamel offset stock. The cover art is drawn by Daniel B. Wopperer and printed on 80lb. ice-white cover stock. Body copy is 10 pt. Univers with two point leading. Photo Credits The opening section is 11 pt. Univers with 2 pt. leading. Senior names and lists are 8 pt. Univers with 1 pt. leading. Headlines are 30 pt. Univers. Cameras used to photograph the 1976 AZUWUR included Minolta 135 mml, Honeywell Pentax 135 mml, Nikon F2 135 mml, Konica 135 mml, Canon F2 135 mml, Kowa-Six 1221 x 2211, Mamiya C 330 1221 x 2711, and Koni-Omega 1221 x 2320. Lens Focal lengths ranged from wideangie, 28mm, to a 85-205 zoom telephoto. Senior portraits were photographed by Varden Stu- dios of Rochester, New York. Press run was 1,900 copies. J. R. Drexeliusz p. 1, 3b, 4, 7, 11d, 12b, c, 13, 14b, 15e, h, i, 18, 20, 21, 22, 35b, 40, 41, 44, 45, 50d, g, 62h, 63e, i, 81, 84, 98, 111, 126, 143, 159, 161b, 191e, f, 194a, 195d, 226, 235, 239d, h, 241, 242, 243, 246b, 248b, 3, 2499, 250, 251, 155i, 265, 283e, f, h, 284, 285, 286b, 287f. Joe Saccomanno: p. 2, 15f, 24, 46, 47, 52, 53b, c, e, 54d, f, 61g, 124, 161f, h, 181, 182, 184b, 185a, 187, 188, 190, 191c, d, 192, 193, 208, 209, 223, 233, 239f, 255f, h, 256e, 262c, 263e, 264, 266b, 288. Bill Hirsch: p. 5, 6, 14d, 23, 51, 53d, 56, 57, 61d, 100, 164b, 173, 189b, 194b, 195d, 196b, 197f, 202b, 203, 246a, c, 247, 248b, c, d, 249f, h, 287d, e. Tim McOuade: p. 78, 79, 80, 99, 119, 129, 156, 161e, i, j, 164a, c, 165d, e, 166a, b, 167e, 170b,c,172,174,175,177,178,179, 200, 201, 202a, 212, 213, 214, 215, 127. Jo-Jo Hederman: p. 10, 14a, c, 15e, g, 210, 211, 256d, 258a, 260, 261, 266a, 268. Tony Catalanoz p. 8c, d, 9g, e, j, i, 61f, 620, 63f, 116, 166c, 167d. Nlark Pinker: p. 161d, 195c, 196a, c, d, e, 198, 199, 206, 207, 263h. Anne Cleary: p. 62g, 77, 125, 136, 234, 256b, 258c, 267. Karen Mize: p. 3c, 116, 151, 263f, 282a, b, d, g. Peter Muellauer: p. 58c, 132, 227, 244, 245. Kevin Brady: p. 8f, 9a, 162. Dominic Cortese: p. 11c, 12a, 58a. Steve Driggers: p. 16, 17. Mark Spang: p. 204, 205. Jim Pelletter: p. 19. Bill Bukowski: p. 58b. Dan Smeragliuoloz p. 76 Mary Ellen Shanley: p. 210a. Carl Wagner: p. 176. Tim Murphy: p. 257. Carol Jasen: p. 269e. Sue Rehak: p. 148. Fr. Paul McCarthy S.J.: p. 2860. Other candids, Faculty and Club shots by Dave Smith, Charlie Isenhour, and Will Novak of Varden Studios. Divider Art by Dan Wopperer. 0 ' - -wsu. .rf 'Q U w Huw 3 'lv 1 . , H S ' in-f ' 4 'I'-L-'! ' J .J 2 2. J Q 5 ' - W . w. W' -- ., al Q: .-' -Q I Jw, 4--'f' - - ' ' Joe . J Y -Q I M ' l 5 U' I .1 ' ,. -,. 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