College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA)

 - Class of 1932

Page 1 of 434

 

College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1932 Edition, College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1932 Edition, College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 434 of the 1932 volume:

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A A X U 1 ' ' l l QV: 1 A l ' - f'4H7AG-Mwlf-'qiiivii.mv-ffl:L X fl Zvi ..s'?- Sw Z ' ' e P- ' - ' - ' l ' i N l 5. ,K M:fgj4g:w,f :5i.-Q' ' , if g?e 'fg:5wi,,j: L,.A A- ' ' I. , , ' l I' o. ' 5 W so l 'ew ,. ,, lf -f 1-- , ,mtv ww, :.,,- 9 gf 1 Y - ,,:':2g3p AQ ' , i 'V v,gvY',vi , ' ' r jr .' .5 7,4 535-'fm,3. ww-..v.,.. , - -f' ...f-ri ff-'1 M ...-f-- fr- ' e e . nl ,aw ,xiii 7 , ,- z -4,7 ,.:,.Y. r .1 mflbfe Pvzifbwf Published by the Senior Class of Holy Cross College I I J -15 f f, To Mr. Francis A. Drumm Professor of E12 glish Literature who as profound scholar, inspiring teacher, and prince of gentlemen, has exerted upon the students of Holy Cross such a strong influence toward humanis- tic refinement, this volume is devotedly inscribed-in grateful recognition of past achievement, in praise of present excel- lence, and as a spur of encouragement unto future zeal. f? ?.f W lr New bg !! knifixfk' ms if ,gig Z M aww M. 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YV: f 'ml pi f ,,...,., Q V , J ff' Wmi ., --. - ' ' ' , '- ff - ' ' ?IE'1gfF , NP: ww' J 4 YV 4 -3- A A I Y . -n,3:...:,- l,..,. X 4 , ' ' W 'H' ' . N H A N ,I 'I M F, If Y .,, .., K: , A L11 U, .. 2 ' ' I.-Y' 5. ig ., f ,. 4 --'- t ,V 'wr r L ' 'N 1'-1'. si-i '5 'Fi'- N .V K- . 1 l 0 , .i ii 41,511 'J ,.1 ,,3 I 'L '--1. ' ' ' -3 t-.AI -,MAJ 'l J . , r ' - - --1v-.-.-.i-.-- . s - l H Y f - ff ,,:,-ca,--lm if u b ' ' N ' J l li li Qi HE Foreword l 'i pl i This volume is a book of retrospect. To p ' Q recapture from the dusty crevices of Ionic ily Y capitols the classical spirit of old Holy i Mi, l Cross, and make it live again as it did i amid the sweet, fresh newness of the .i Hi i infant worldg to preserve in all their LL -C,...,,,4L ,li-. .WWW it l . 1 wil I i I 7 ,g . ll r Y Il i ' -M :Tix is 'ala Q ,qu-' 3 v 15 ' 'Q - 1 Ll ,, J y a l A .. . , J. iii . H R'-L H51 .-4 , .l 5 ,. N, .'?. W 1 ,ff kg: Jr . ,, ,. , i . 'w-..1' i ffl! l 1- W 1 '-' -' J, V l V ll in wholesome, youthful vigor these halcyon college days about to be torn from our calendars at the foot of Linden Lane- this is the dual aspiration of our PURPLE PATCHER. A labor of love, a legacy from Hellas, a golden repository of the stuff of pipe-dreams,--may its covers forever be as doors opening back to two rich Saturnian epochs. A ' .,.- 1 .-.-- ill! as-1:15. K r ' : fyywp ,- - ' 'il' 'f zgi ' A WWI.. us ill! 'Sz' '-'- 1 ' . ' fx! i ,- - 1 Z2 ,,. 6 , MZ! 1 O O v ' Elf' 'l is J iq NR-NNQJQ ,Ez-E 24 Q : v A Y X ,K .-3,4 df - - B721 gi W 1 , .-.M I , , , . ..,., 2 BOOK ONE . . Campus BOOK TWO . . Faculty BOOK THREE . . Classes BOOK FOUR . . Activities BOOK FIVE . . Athletics BOOK SIX . . Humor BOOK SEVEN . . Advertisements ff J' 2.2.24 X ff .' 1 . A' - if 7 -4 W - A V ' xxx f ig , -4 .5 f ' .Ulif 5' L K U! '.'V I - 1 l1f? 3-x 1 ' , . ' Ying' ., i5:'22E j,,Zi,,.5w..1' X, 'N f 1 ,I '11 T53 ' T1 cm 1:1 el X. J Nga 1 4: 41 W . 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Fax HH eigi e 6 ll ml ' K, EaMM7HHU f -g- ra Sala in Q Q t Sing HERE on these farther shores of the rnany-sounding sea, in the heart of our grand Commonwealth, the sacred fire of a past great age is kept forever burning, and in the bustling campus which aclorns the lordliest of VVorcester's hills, the ruined pillars of an- cient Athens have found their restoration. CAMPUS r hx v. 2 v Q M M X , . fry' A 3311 76 5 'WMU A . ,U 5 N9 Y 45 73 uw, v I pg- 47.7.-P-f..- -. . . , 1 '-V, vf, e Q4 8,9 'ff Li7ZdE7Z Lane Gaia The Plaza I e B Esc:- The Yard if f 1-f' f ' W V Dimmd Library Ji'F,x'fi 2fQ'g xrfir 'A g L: A . E I -? Q, Jn V14 A 'f Ml fu - ,Q A' - J y I y -X ? ,' f 5 ,a -mb A 1 W ' J .Q LIULI gil, T - A J I, 11. i .I 7 , 1, 1 'Fi 'wif ihrfih 54 FYQQVEI 1 A 1 H' V1 L rl I Ilf' K lil:-ix u 'I' I Kali E391-f M, -1 f'u,g, ps 'A V ' -V' A 1' Fin :iff 'i'!fAS! 'I X K , 45 JN ' ' f if X , ' J Y fp' 4. :V ' . 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' '?YMi!Ti15'Qfiu -P1-'f 'V .1357 EW -'.,'-iVail'f Vw -?V'-ifff5:'Ev'VV3V Pg-VfVVf'I'TfKVE4E1ffliIif:V'1-3i'fQH?G'.1.?-!,'f5-fEaL3??Vf-Jifhiz .''.U'7 Ai15iT'i''?if2!'iV 1i::ezV--1594-1 :fVfi'3V7z'1,.V5.5W'41 ' LV'i LV--V-lVVVgl'V'+'?'f5lZi- VV--7? Qifffls VV- s. . V144 I . , .. V, . Vai 1 hr V... TV. ,. . V., .. .. VV... V, .. ,V ., ,, ,, E45 . .,xf5:Vi5gLl-,Ht AHLVAJ ...ul H1 1 .,.VVzqe1V1A .:IV1!,,JqA11q?:Tq.:.4?A-QFVEVA ,AM V ,VH lm . V,:-.Tm..i! ,1:V,m.V,V,.- JV. . -hVVVgr.nV-Jmw -ilfwil -11 .Lil-.W ,:E.V 3-f-f iiag. 4 t'-'liilim .i'.??'5?5ff3'lZV5'Q'f'?l f-515 ., f ..fflf!'V!L TV. V. 'T'5Vi1+'-W ', f.2V'??'2i ff' -QWEHVA. i4!gS,-57l ',Efed1--?z'- I N - .snipnns ,. raw: ' -- - Y- 1--1-1- N we gud ls, 1 s 6 I 4 NP L If fi ' S' ' V frail: ,, A Z . R 'Q wvft A a wv .m, 4,w ti 0 a mwwef+-v 11-- Mfwr . f Q ,,,W 7 3 .Q l li 1 K fd I, x it .,z 1 D f FROM the shoulders of Aristotle the guides of youth survey the wide circle of the sciences, and speak with the muses and the gods. In their teachings are the treasures of his wisdom preserved- patined with the homage of indebted ages, their pristine lustre enhanced under the light of Christian minds. FACULTY THE REVEREND IOHN M. Fox, S.I REV. REV. REV REV REV REV REV REV REV Administration IOHN M. Fox, SJ., Prcsidcfzz FRANCIS I. DOLAN, SJ., Dean of Studies IOHN I. RhED, SJ., Dean of Dzkciplzbzc IOHN D. WHEELER, SJ., Treafmfer LOUIS R. LOGUE, SJ., z4d772i7ZZ'J'If?'6Zl0l' NEIL L. BULIVIAN, S.I., Dean of Sophomore.: IOHN F. Cox, S.I., Dean of Freslzmcrz MILES A. MCLOUGHLIN, SJ., Chaplain CHARLES L. KIMBALL, SJ., Faculty Librarian IRVING T. MCDONALD, A.B., Librarian REV 1-RRXNCISI DOLW SI Dean of Szudzcu Dean of DISCIPZIIZC' Fnculfy Llbmnavz REV. ICI-IN I. REED, SJ. REV. CI1AliLES L. IQIMBALL, SJ REV. IOIIN D. Wu1sE1.ER, SJ TI'C'll5llI'61' H, SJ. REV. Louis R. Loco 11 d l77I'l1I..YlI'!lf0I' REV. NEIL L. BULMAN, SJ. Dean of Soph 011'zol'e REV. IO!-IN F. Cox, SJ. Dean of Freshmcfn REV. IOSEPH F. SULLIVAN, SJ. Professor to Senior in Ethics REV Flmwlls TOOLIN, SI Pro emo: to QKIZIOI rn Ethzcf A1.ExANDEu G DUNCAN, Q .fI.m.xzn11z P10 emo: to Senzoz 111 Ezhzcf Rrv IOHN I1 WELCH, SI Plofegsol to Semoz nz Psychology Rav BERNARD V bum, SI Pio erm: to Samoa In Psychology Iznxvfxnn KEATINC, SI filsmtanl P10 65501 to Senior In Pgychology B mass mn mn .1 a a a ss a -5 :xx ma am E ss wx gsiiw ws mx gs ss a ss ss ss N ss a my N na E mm an gm' pu mfs mm ss sm W ss we ww ss ss ma 1,11 mu mm nw wx Q N F A -A f-v-sf: f-fraw -'my H2 A' ' xi1i'J mg xii? :Bm 131.5 WM N X 'I mass NEVER Bl' EQQBHN X' ' -4- HQBB 'VB- R H- M aw M I 'mmms Efzgfsw M W- W H mm gms.- ' ' B B W 4 :H M-XXMMM -XI If SEWER-ASQ' Q M H EMBEE KIRK .. - - I M SI I mm . . A .. . - - H MM N nw B W Nw . . . was M E - . . . , . . H Wx E K E t ' :saga -jx ,- N mv, is Wax 'AKHK-I ' ww-M :II IQ, - .3841 mi. ws U My W ,. N-M Q -1 H 5-M W an E. M in :E It aw N H -W :Q I .. f' N III ww I -Q -M -in-H E--:sf - - 'Wm -nf' pq,- , I m I W NEI, -A-.Isis . . N.. - Li-,vga-NIE? -2 . . . . . . . . . . -,U-5-3-I mf HI - - - an -N ww -1- , K my-gs --X I YH Q W-H-'., VE' , - ,f W I W - Nfigri. me HX Xi - B- 5 . HW.-1 Q -U gui zu- W,- gm if W . H.,4 5-as I W - Fm 532958 z gl W .TTEH ,U . 4 Qifiw Q., A. . . . . . WI, T ,I E SSWVLB' f ,- E. H'-wg-gfiaw -m- Kfgsigi.-. E W my H -. A Www- .A VF Q M.-- - nl at QIBI R4 - I, V If -. 1 B ' ss I mn: m W Q 1 1 E 3 ' B ,S K ' is - f N mania Q HB-F ' my I- ' -- gm -M 2 K ' EH milk . . . EW. M I . . .Ir . . I gahgnm ms Higgs-.L . mm!-M555 gg- :Wave-,.,gi,'5?gEgs IIQWWMIEQHQ I- ,.E,,,i-IIIESM... BET? -ss STE .-W 152 . E mm Tm xr gm-1 ,qs Q QW - gill ' ss X 5 I- Q 3- I . E 'S tr '- ft-f I 44 ,,-.,.-'.: P ' ,.,, Q W E E E use gg.. 1 EEE E A EN ME? ix E Em ,U EE cw-, , Jgicigi A QE Wu... gg QL., MQQEQEQQEH mgais W E sf EEE EE Q az E Us wa sun 4 W 5 . WT' - m K x 2 rm . EE? S338 E E E EE Es E ms E 'Hiuggm BE E E 5 EE was 2iEif?mf'H EEE SBEQKE 5558552 2? Q 5 in Hfgggss H E Q E N Q EEE Swgigg-E1 E :Ji -:E ESQEEMLEEMH NEEEH-w'i.:'mg'm . E Egan Ein E- DIES Q SSW siggg fm -E 32359-XE if WW5, ig,-'ftgnxxwc E EFX EE E EE ms nm EE E E. MESH E EEE .WEEE V 'WEEE NEST. mu EEE? H -,New M 2:5 E Bmw EE EE E E nl EE-ZH NEEW WB ENE ,E . 'Hfmfgwiii ' ,E if .EEE- ii B588 H. M E gm gn., E REV. PAT1uc14 I. HIGGINS, S.I. Professor to Senior in History and Pl1ilosophieal Latin REV. IOSEPH F. BUSAM, SJ. Professor to Senior in Biology REV. IOSEPI-I P. NIERRICK, SJ. Professor to Senior in Mathematics LAYVRENCE W. BROCK, SJ. Professor to Senior in Physics RAYIVIOND E. MCDONALD, MS. Professor lo Senior in Physics RFV CJEORFE F STnoHAvnR, SI P10 eww to Senza: 111 Clzemlvtly CECIL I Hfmcnurx, P1-1 D P10 efsol lo Senza: 171 Phyylml Chcmzstly T LFONARD KE1.Ls, A M REV ALOX sms B LANcc.UTH, bl I0 essoz to Senza: 171 Ozgamr Clzemnzry Omni M Bfxnu., M 5 Pio 65401 to Senza: in Olgmuc Chefrmzry Pl'ofessw'.to .g'Qn1'o1' in COIg0id.CZC'l?7l'5l1'jl REV. TIMOTHY I. PHELAN, SJ. Professor to Senior in Public Speaking REV. IOSEPH G. MEARS, S.I. Professor to'Senior in Comparative Literature IRVING T. MCDONALD, A.B. Librarian, Professor to Senior in Advanced English Composition IOSBPI-I V. O,DRAIN, A.B. Professor to Senior in Greek and Latin Literatures WILLIALII L. LUCEY, S.I. Professor to Senior in Constitutiomzl History I L1:o O GOIILIAN, A 'VI P10 amor Z0 5612101 111 EdZ1CLlZl077 RANCIS X Povvmzs, A M PIO 65501 Z0 -5t7'l10I 171 1360120777165 CORNELIUS S DoNoo11UE, A M PIO cum 10 Se11101 111 S0c1ol0g3 IXAHINIOND D IXILNNLDS Rc'g1Jz11z1 JOHN I SPILL'-.Nl:., A M Amstzfnr Dean of DIJCIIJIZHL ' . I 1, f' K. Af! ,- J I. N41 l 1? 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Q lJ,b5 fQ. f ' 4 ' N Y L bi' 'J 'I , 254- ,,.- --'BT-fl, ztmbf- W - H-' QF 9 av ff r- 7 iw! I I fm Q! 'fe LM' Ns N Wfu md rn school the good fel lOWSh1P CXISIIHU 'unong men hvmg together rlxke rn age and umterx rn Llsks pleasures md purpose h IS ever been proxerbl 11 It 1S 11115 sectron of the book whrch PICUISLIIC when the comping hws drsbnmded CLASSES I ' r 1 r 7 r J V Y V ' cd f ,K re 1 + , am V I r 'sf . - 'ff 1 f ' W if, AF!! iw ' IV XJ HJ ' -- I V 1-. , S ' ' f f ' ' I -, 'Y-- 3 ff ' ,. e.o.e . 'xv X V I T W X, l! X N ,ig HX UM lr M.,-x 'N A, o -1 15 x - if r fe 4 . . NB 'A V ' L1 L' 1 vu N ' .WM -P--M' 'e- A , 5 ' H -M S x , Y V , I C.. L - .r I K u - A Q Q l' . of A P' 1 A'- A N ' I a S S -7 Cx' l I C 1 7 . X will be reread with the greatest AI I- fy I f S ff K-qvgg-wx S-H -L LLB Fira!! ! Af . x xl lf ,4 A . X F R17 5 X L X W f ff Y y f f f J X A I X y K f ff is X f M Q ZX SILVER JUBILEE CLASS Some Statistics QDraw your own conclusionsj CLASS OF 1907 Considered the best class of its decade. Baseball the all-important sport. Basketball dropped because of lack of student interest. Football team loses to Dartmouth and Yale. Overwhelming defeat of Amherst on gridiron in Iunior year. Score-36 to 0. Shakespearels Henry IV pre- sented in Senior year. Cast com- posed mostly of Seniors. 1907 was a panic year. 1932, twenty-five years later, every man a success. 1 CLASS OF 1952 Considered the best class of its decade. - Baseball the all-important sport. Basketball dropped because of lack of student interest. Football team loses to Dartmouth and Y ale. Uvervvlielming defeat of Harvard on gridiron in Iunior year. Score-27 to O. Sliakespearels Henry IVH pre- sented in Senior year. Cast coma posed mostly of Seniors. 1932 is a panic year. 1957, twenty-five years later, ???? Class of 190 HE privilege of introducing to our readers this illustrious group of Holy Cross graduates is a task to be approached, not with llippant pen, but with respect and, we might almost say, awe. To a graduate of 32, inexperienced, lacking in worldly wisdom, and without any record of achievement other than scholastic, these gentlemen, with their wealth of wisdom and experience, with their reputation for great deeds done and great principles upheld, are indeed objects of reverence. Two facts have prompted our Editor to include in this volume a suitable recog- nition of their silver anniversary. The first is that they are regarded, by the less partisan and biased in our Alumni circles, as the most noteworthy class to graduate in recent years. The second fact has a sentimental appeal to us, and probably is the real reason for this ellortz they issued, in their graduation year, the first volume of the Puiuviaa PA'rci-Ilan, so that their 25th birthday is our 25th birthday, too. This twinship will, we hope, induce them to pardon any mistakes in fact or understate- ment of which this tribute is guilty. What we have to say about them, we fear, will necessarily be a bit meagre, about what these gentlemen are like today, we must depend on local hearsay, Mr. Strome of the Alumni Association, and Who's VVho g for what they were like in l907, We hnd more authoritative information in their PATCL-11311, Outside of these sources, there are no means of discovering a great deal about them, we know but one of their number personally, and him not very well. Among our own class, the most widely renowned of them is William F. O'Neil, of Akron. We wish we dared become familiar and call him Bill,', as his classmates did, and perhaps still do, for all we know. However Csordid worldlings that we arej, we can but stand afar and gaze in awe. Mr. O'Neil is the President of Gen- eral Tire Companyg he has been for 17 years, having brought that organization up practically.from its infancy, to its present enviable position among the big fourn tire makers. Much to the astonishment of the other three, his company has been making profits even in these very lean years, while they pile up huge deficits and play around with receiverships and reorganizations, Mr. O'Neil's healthy youngster keeps placidly in the black ink, While at Holy Cross, he managed the football team and started to learn the rubber business in a VVorcester concern. His pictures show a good-looking face, eyes with that dreamy, far-away look, and not any too much hair. Last year, his common-sense plan for unemployment insurance received a good deal of publicity, and much commendation from thoughtful industrialists and social workers. He is also married, and has a houseful of children. We almost forgot to mention that he is a National Councillor of the U. S. Chamber of Com- merce. N in clean Listed in Who's VVho, along with Mr. O'Neil, are two gentlemen who went to Georgetown Law, and later received higher degrees, h0Il0I'1'a' mum, from Holy Cross. William Leahy, the class president, is one, he is now a famous Washington lawyer. He has done a good deal of government work, having been appointed a special assistant to the Attorney General of the U. S. in 1925. He was editor of the first PATCHER, and is rumored to be responsible for most of the favorable publicity his class receives among the alumni. His nickname among his classmates fout of which we fail to gather any meaningj, was g'Monson Burner. Hon. William Flynn fit seems that Bill was a lucky name in 19071 is the other Holy Cross-George town product. Not long after graduation, he was elected to his first term in the Rhode Island State Legislature, and achieved the governorship of his state in 1923. Still young and able, one of the outstanding Democrats in Rhode Island, he has 11 fine future ahead of him, as well as a distinguished past. A good number of the class of '07 are teachers, or priests, or both. Robert Masterson, who in undergraduate days was editor of the Purple, President of the Dramatic Society, and a few dozen other things, is now principal of a school in the Boston area, and quite an influential figure in educational circles. Rev. Iohn E. Welch, S.I., well known to Holy Cross seniors as Professor of Psychology, also had the distinction of being graduated in this class. His encyclopedic knowledge of the matter was commented on thankfully in the First PNFCHER. Another educator is Richard T. Tobin, who is a superintendent of schools in Connecticut. Easily one third of the class are priests or teachers, with the majority of these favoring the clergy. Another third of the members are professional men. liesides the lawyers already mentioned, there are the outstanding examples of Ioseph F. Murray, brother of the newly appointed archbishop, who handled the B. I. F. in his Pakachoag days, and William S. Pendleton, who was the prize medal-copper of 1907. Mr. Pendle- ton, while at the Cross, was the only New Yorker in the class. Both he and Mr. Murray now have their lawyer's shingles hung out in lower Manhattan. The doctors have achieved a good deal of fame, too. Harry Cahill, who was New England amateur quarter-mile champion when, he entered the college, has since become an eye-ear specialist of country-wide renown, he was at one time on the faculty of Harvard Med. After his hrst year with the class of '07, ill health prevented him from continuing in sports the was a football star, too, at halfbackjg and the relay team lost its best man. His anchor leg in the one race he ran for Alma Mater, was to no avail, from the 1907 PATCI-IER we discover that O'Drain was out of condition, the pace was too fast for him, and he fell. Cahill, the last man, was so handicapped by this that it was useless to endeavor to make up the lost yards .... U His classmate, Dr. Peter F. Dulligan, has also attained fame in medi- cine, and has been very active in alumni activities. Not long ago he received a plaque from the Holy Cross Club of the metropolitan area in recognition of his out- standing alumni workg he is on the General Alumni Board, along with Rev. George S. L. Connor, who captained the football team in the class of '07's junior and senior years. Three or four other men in the class are physicians or surgeons, but 1 werzly the information we have been able to gather about them is rather scarce and unre- liable. Quite a number of the ,07 men fought in what has been named the Great War, the most famous of whom was a priest, Rev. William Davitt, who was the last American to be killed in the struggle. I-le was quite a character, even when on the Hill. W. H. L. Forestelle, who was never a star in Holy Cross Dramatics, later became a well-known actor on Broadway, taking leading roles in such productions as Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford, A Gentleman from Mississippif' and others. Looking at the old PATCI-usa gives us a feeling of brotherhood to the class of '07, There is the familiar, discreet, well-bred advertisement of the Harrigan Press fwhich prints the PATC1-rea stillj, the blurb for Fordham U., the quarter-page ad of Cox Sons St Vining, makers of our caps and gowns. There is the picture of the Glce Club, all dressed up in their Tuxes Qwhich haven't changed at all in 25 years, appar- entlyj, with a purple ribbon across the front of their still shirts. They took trips, too, and were suppoted to be rather worldly-wise. Their class, like ourselves, had a big hand in the production of Shakespeareis Henry IVUQ it was put on at the Worcester Theatre. And people complain that Holy Cross has no traditions. The tradition of our best sport being baseball was also in vogue then. Basket- ball had a good year in 1903, when the Purple cohorts, as the Tomnhmulc would have called them if it had been in existence, defeated Dartmouth 9 to 6 in the last game of the season, for the championship of New England. Student interest in the sport was slight, and it was discontinued after another season or two. The track team, lacking a coach and discipline, could hardly be expected to equal the records of Bart Sullivan's men in our day, in 1907 the track team consisted of four relay men and one shot putter. Football, too, suffered from small squads, the team in 1903 fthe year Harry Cahill playedj had one full eleven, with an extra quarterback fweighing 1295, a spare halfback, and a substitute end. VVe suppose that when one of the linemen was hurt, the coach went in. Perhaps, on the other hand, the line- men never got hurt. The gridiron heroes lost consistently to Dartmouth and Yale, but even in these encounters, the lowness of the scores was the envy of the more Hercely massacred small colleges. Outside of these two games, the football records show a great preponderance of victoriesg one which must have tasted very sweet was the 36-0 trouncing handed to Amherst, the week after the latter's 10-0 victory over great Harvard. But to return to baseball: in a normal season of 25 games, lcss than Five would be lost, two of those defeats usually being administered by Fordham. While their records for Helding compare unfavorably with those of present-day teams, they were widely renowned for their hitting power. The captain in the 1905 season, lohn A. Flynn fof the class of '07j, not only batted .-102 for the year, but accepted all except one of his 265 chances at lirst base for the splendid fielding record of .997. He turned professional, and later played in the big leagues Cwith Pittsburgh, if we are not mistakenj, and now coaches at Providence College, besides being a lawyer. Copies of Volume I of the PA'rc1-rea are very rare nowg which is best for the feelings of the men who appeared in it, and who have since attained some degree of Tzufzlly-mir dignity. Naturally, it dos not compare in size, or in beauty of format, with our own Volume XXV, this is to be expected, and is no occasion for a great deal of huzzah- ing on our part. Our class is larger, and we have more money to publish the book, more printing and editing experience behind us to guarantee its quality. In 1907, the editors were pioneers. They studied the same things, practically, as ourselves fbesides their Kant, Hume, Darwin 6: Spinoza course in Psychology, they also took a couple of hours per week in Physiological Psychjg their slang included terms as familiar to us as rush, plugging, Hunk, and the matter. Their favorite occupation was Hbattingf' and B.S. was a degree of honor conferred on those who were most adept in that activity. Sophistication is the quality in which the two books and, we may conclude, the two classes, differ most widely. We have done our best to avoid the collegiate touch which trips its blithe way through the pages of their PATCHER. We wear class rings, while they smoked class pipes. We are not altogether sure that this comparison is' in favor of ourselves, for most of us are honest enough to admit that we sometimes doubt the value of our own sophistication. At any rate, the difference between the men of ,07 and the men of '32 cannot be considered basic, for both Ucollegiatenessn and sophistication are attitudes, poses that wear thin and are dis- carded. As brothers, as younger brothers, we welcome back to the Hill our dis- tinguished predecessors. We congratulate them on the success they have attained, and hope we can do as well. And if any of them wants to hire a few bright young men . . . Tlufwl y- l!L'0 win ik QM x SQ f' N 3 XX K Xx:Q ck 0 . 4-LX NV51 'x S OR Tmerzly-Iom- Class Ode They raised a neuf Acropolis on high Whe1'e still the ancient Attic lyre trills, A Palatine 'neath a more hesperian slqy- The stateliest of Worcester's seven hills. And hearing that in distant Galilee The pale, ZL'6lZ1Q ufater-pot at Emmanuel's nod Became at once a lusty artery, They carried from the far Hellenic strands The noblest nectar that Olympian god Had ezfer drunlqj and this beneath His hands Gained in its second blush its true divinity. This is the great elixir which in truth Malqes mortals god-lilqej this is the phial of arts The steufards of Loyola gave to youth. And those that dranlq had lqindled in their hearts A flame more life-givin g, more strong, more chaste Than that Prometheus eau ght from Phoebus' ufheels The muse is in virginity recast To hear the wooing of the Christian boy Whose wholesome love so fires him head to heels, He seems a Bel uedere in rapturous joy Nota from his frigid, marble limbo freed at last. -WALTER L. GREENE. EDWIN ICSEPH ANDERSON 122 Lincoln Street, Bangor, Me. Maine Club l, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle -lg Intramural Baseball 3, 4, Sodality l, 2, 3, -ig Senior Ball Committee. Down from the land of snow and pine trees came Ed, to engrave his name on the rolls of the class of '32, In spite of the fact that there was no place on Pakachoag for his dog-sleds, he immediately proceeded to make himself at home. It wasn't diH-icult. Ed was so fond of sleeping that it was feared, at one time, that he had fallen victim to the dread disease of sleeping sickness. It was discovered that a sure cure for one of his spells was to place him on the handball court, Where he invariably came to life-very much to life. ' , Ed sang the praises of good old Bangor so well that we all wished we could have come from that little city. Among his other accomplishments was an ability to emit from his tremendous lungs, blood-curdling yells that so startled the placid air of Paka- choag that everyone thought the ancient tribe of Nipmucks had returned. He was also an unfailing source of information on any movie or dance orchestra that ever appeared in big or even middling big time. Mr. Anderson, as we so familiarly knew him, has the more serious reputation of being an excellent chef, having spent several summers in this work. We have little doubt that his ambition to become an important hotel executive is, if anything, too modest, and when it is realized, we'll be there with the good wishes. Tmmly-171'1' FRANKLYN GEORGE ASSELTA 167 Canton Street, Fitchburg, Mass. Fitchburg Club l, 2, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle 4. The curfew hour was long past, when out upon the Gold Coast of Top Loyola ventured forth the nemesis of all early retirers, Franklyn of Fitchburg. For the Hrst three years the class was spared these midnight journeys, but with the advent of Senior year, Frank decided that the daily trek from the base of Wachusett was too tiring for his leisure-loving nature. The result was that the Brother gained another boarder, the sys- ternu snatched another victim. Having been for three years free of the terrors that haunt boarders, Frank was able to H11 the need, in Senior, for that very agreeable sort of person, the optimist. Never the victim of pre-exam phobias or cursing Hts, his happy-go-lucky attitude toward study and the onerous difiiculties of Philosophy was an example of what real optimism can ac- complish. Allow us to remark, however, that his optimism was born of previous applica- tion, not from an aversion towards work. Though Hrm in the opinion that everything would turn out all right, he never missed the opportunity of giving things a little push in the right direction. This quality, plus the loyalty that marks his many associations, will be sure to carry him to those heights of success that he so often dreamed of, while lying comfortably in any one of the Top Loyola cots during his nightly search for, as he alleged, at least one soft bed. Tzuenry-six IOHN EDWARD BAIORUNOS 275 Ames Street, Brockton, Mass. Freshman Football: 'Varsity Football 2, 3, 'lg Freshman Trackg Intramural Athletics 2, 5. 45 Crusader Coun- Cil 2, 5. -lg Boston Club 4g Aquinas Circle -lg Economics Club -lg Sorlality l, 2, 3, -l. If you were to say Show me a man, not just a college student, and not just a football player, but a man, a real man, we would know the one you want. We call him Barry, His face in the above picture is that of an aflable fellow, a serious student, a pleasant companion. It is not the ferocious mien that lohn wears in a football gameg it gives no indication of the terrific slam of his tackling, the powerful drive of his blocking. Tre- mendously fast for a guard, he has for three years taught opposing quarterbacks to avoid plunging the center of the Hxoly Cross line, and to make fair catches of punts rather than attempt a runback. Electing the Arts course, he found no great dilliculty in its many and formidable subjects. Even the famous teams of Accounting-Marketing and Psych-Ethics were not powerful enough to disturb his mental stride. He managed them with ease, and found enough time on many a Sunday to follow the road to a certain Boston suburb, to enjoy for a day the most excellent of cuisine. Our general impression, after watching Iohn in and out of action, is this: he is the sort of fellow who, without any symptoms of excitement, finds out what he has to do, and then gets it done, regardless of obstacles. He is the type that is made for success. Tnfrzzly-rezfczz KARL PETER BALDWIN 707 So. State Street, Appleton, Wis. Western Club l, 2, 3, 4, Pres. 43 Aquinas Circle 4, Intramural Swimming 45 Orchestra -lg B. I. F. 4g l',i'r'cH1an Bus. 'lg Sodality l. 2, 3, 4: Crusader Council 3, 45 Senior Ball Committee. This energetic, unconventional he-man product of a virile, somewhat radical State has given the class good cause to remember him. For one thing, we are all glad to remember a good friend who often provided the necessary link-or links-from the Pakachoag terminus a quoi' to a much-desired terminus ad quemf' Moreover, he can-and does, at one o'clock on frosty mornings-yodel. He is renowned as a hostg furnishing entertainment as the occasion offered: music la radio, violin, harmonica or larynx, sometimes refreshments 21 la package-from-home. Coming from Wisconsin, they were fortunately big, hearty packages, too. The school is indebted to Karl for his efforts in arousing interest in intra-mural box- ing and swimming. ln fact, most of the success attained in these sports is due to his efforts. I-Ie excels in them himselfg his collection of medals and prizes fwhich is not on display, by the wayj is extensive, and worthily acquired. Finally, his unique method of driving will never be forgotten, it has brought him into contact with several gracious State Policemen, and one not so gracious Mack truck. Moreover, the number of demerits he has saved various classmates by driving back from Boston in 40 minutes is large enough to have half of us expelled. We hope that, on his exploring expeditions of the future, he will think of us as often and as kindly as we shall remember him. Tll'l'l7Ij l'ighf THOMAS IOSEPH BANNIN IR 578 Fourth Street, Brooklyn, N Y ropohtrn flub l 2 3 4 Soclrlrtx l J -l Ctrele -l P :mth Drum ttt Qot ty PKICIILR Bus 4 Semor Bull Committee 'lhomis I Banmn pr1de of Brool-.lyn, md premxer gentlemstn ot Iloly Cross No lathes and gentlemen, We are not elfnmmg too much For xx ho but our Honest Tom Us he wls known to h1s fellow ClC1'l1ZCl1b ol Plltachoafr eould rttsun hrs soeml equthbrtum ilter the clevastitlng d1scovery, it 'tn ultrl lormwl cl'1nce, thwt h1s vest wus mtssmgp Who hours, wlth loss of nelther ltfe nor l1mb Tom s resourcefulness under hre IS rlghtly famous But he ts not the sort ol 0 rson who needs extr1ord1n'1ry c1rcumst1nces to l7l'lI'lg out the best thqt lb 111 ll1ITl Thls lortun lt 9ECf1Cl1I1C9S h'1s, durtnw our P1'CV'lll1Dgly unexemng college tlrys, mwnlfested htm to be the gem he rs That IS 'tn old metflphor, but 1t 19 srngulqrly httmff to Tom he IS mule of unusual stufl, ind has many dlflerent sldes, e'1ch one pollshed md Hnely eut, so th at the whole shrnes brllhantly ID the llght or ln the clark Well, carry on, Cams, fulhll the brlght destmy thftt fqlls to men ol your noble stump ind wherex er hte s path mqy lead you, ex en tn your most crucml moment, remember those beloved words of wlsdom If thou would st plfxy Eslumo, wfut thou untxl the summer txmc fu ll IV III7 , . Met ' 1 1 , , ., 1 t z ' j , 2, ', g Aqui- nas f ' ' : hilcl 4 3: L 11 i' t 'ie ' 55 V' I g ' ' ' - . . . . , . , . . . , ' z t , ' ' . ' , , l ' L .I ' ' 'Y LK I1 but Tom could escape the onslaughts ol' seven, no less, villainous thugs in the wee small , . . . . E . , - . . I . ' '. ' . ' D : ' 1 f ' L ' ' ' ' . ' - 1 ' ' 1 - . ' .. ' ' , t V 3 ' A ! 1 . I . s ' - . U A ' - f' ' ' 1 ' 1. 1. A 5 ' ' '-J - 'II' LOUIS IAMES BARRY, IR. Boulevard Terrace, Newport, R. I. 4 Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3g Newport Club Treasurer 2. 3, Llg Aquinas Circle -lg Band 3, 43 Dramatic So- ciety 3g PA'1'CHiiR Lit. 4, Sodality l, 2, 5, 4. Reading the address of the Beau Brummel immediately brings to mind the picture of top-crust Society, the gay parties of the Four Hundred at their traditionally exclusive summer resort. But the striking feature of Lou Barry, the year-round habitue of this summer col-ony, is paradoxically enough his spirit of democracy. It is a virtue much prized on the Hill, and Lou, in acting as friend and adviser to everyone to whom his room has offered sanctuary fand their number is legionj, has shown that spirit. In his choice of roommates during the four years, even, he has shown the diversity that charac- terizes his activity. One of Lou's idiosyncrasies, that goes well with his outstanding savoir faire, and his ability to do all things well, is his passion for collecting pipes. We've always had an envious regard of pipe-collectors, and to see Lou poring over an already cleaned stem in an endeavor to find the minutest speck of dirt, was almost enough to make us despair of ever becoming anything like the men-of-the-world one reads about in novels. In the crystal in which one looks to see Louis' future, there is a figure-one thinks, ah, one is sure l-the white-robed Figure of an attractive nurse. Who? We can but reply with the stock answer of all '32 men, to any question: Ask Lou Barryg he knows! Thirly FREDERIC GREGORY BAXTER 44 Sagamore Road, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club l, 2, 3 .43 Aquinas Circle 45 Day Schol- ars' Soclulity I, 2, S, 4. Sometimes we are fortunate enough to meet a man who 1T0t only exhibits the super- ficial manifestations of a gentleman, but who is also in essence an exponent of chivalry and honor. Possessor of a serene poise that could not be ruffled by such transitory phenomena as studies, Fred impressed us as one of nature's noblemen. But please do not get the idea that Fred was a namby-pamby, roaming collegiate halls with an ethereal expression on his face. Far from it, as some people would say in a case like this. Fred is as virile as the Hollywood producer would like to convince us that the average juvenile is. Retaining a high level in scholastic arlairs, he still managed to get around to the Worcester altars dedicated to Terpsichore. Fred concentrated on Sociology in senior year, and we shouldn't be too much sur- prised to see him out remedying the slightly messy condition of these United States after graduation has broken the bonds confining him to a static academic existence. Whatever branch of progress he chooses to identify himself with, we are sure that Fred will lend his invaluable all without once losing his nonchalance. Thirly-om' l ROBERT ADDISON BELL 104 Otis Street, Bangor, Me. Freshman Track, 'Varsity Track 2, 3: Intramural Ath- letics 5, -lg Maine Club l, 2, 3. 45 Aquinas Circle -lg Purple Key -lg Crusader Council I, 2, 3, -lg So- dality 1, 2, 3, 4. NVith a head of red hair, a hearty laugh, and all that goes with a nature indisputably Celtic, Bob came down from Bangor, amid the rejoicing of all the town Lotharios. Being born with that quality designated as fatal, he was destined to wield his magic weapon Wherever feminine smiles are to be evoked and feminine hearts to be won. Even without half trying, he could succeed where others failed miserably. We can safely predict that, wherever Bob is, he will lind himself the center of a group of congenial spirits. At the College it certainly was so. When a judicious remark was needed to guide a bull-session through a trying episode, the remark was supplied: by Bob. If the discussion threatened to become boring, a story of his dispelled the threat, and the mere suggestion of a yawn evoked a torrent of entertaining tales of the first class. Even in the select winter colony of privileged spirits on top Fenwick Cwhich has since been abolishedj his Muse never grew weary or discouraged. Some day the red hair may vanish, but never, we hope, will the hearty laugh, the ready wit, and the flowing tales be checked, for they, as we remember, were you, Bob. Thirly-11110 EDWARD IOHN BERGEN 80 Porter Street, Somerville, Mass. Freshman Footballg 'Varsity Football 2, 3, 43 Freshman Bascballg Crusader Council 2, 3, 4g Sotlality 1, 2, 3, 4. The referee was slowly pulling the pile apart. One by one the players arose, to reveal to the astonished spectators a 200-pound back clutched in the arms of what the news-writers called The Mighty Mite. The picture of this terrifying triHe of the grid- iron you sce above, for the Mighty Mite is our own Eddie Bergen. Eddie is our gift from the class of '3lg and what a gift! At a loss for a capable center last fall, the coaches fearfully stuck this little fellow into the game. After he had played fifteen minutes, they forgot about the center position, and transferred their worries to such things as tackles and punters. Sixty minutes in the Dartmouth game, sixty minutes in the Fordham game, 150 pounds of muscle and determination playing roving center, making half of the tackles! That was Eddie. ln our paean about his football ability, we must not neglect his remarkable ability to get satisfactory results from phone calls, and the solid esteem in which he was held by his classmates. Neither of these qualities is easily attained, but must be supported by worth. Give this mighty mitei' just one chance that is big enough to be worth while, and he will rise to meet itg we cannot doubt that. Our hope is, that his 'Kbig chance is mighty big, and comes mighty soon. Thirty-fhrcc' STEPHEN PATRICK BERGIN 395 Willow Street, Waterbury, Conn. Assistant Manager Basketball 2, 35 Intramural Athletics 2, 3, Jlg Waterbury Club l, Z. 3, 4: Pres. 43 Aquinas Circle lg Pres. Economics Club 43 Crusader Council 1, 2, 3, -lg Dramatic Society 35 Tomahawk l, 2, 3, -lg Bus. Manager 45 Sodality l, 2, 3, 4: PATCHER Bus. 4g Chairman Favors, Senior Ball. Here we present the business magnate, the tycoon of the class. Ever since the first Economics hour in Iunior, his room has been full of business magazines, charts, balance sheets, and students in search of information. The last were never disappointed. Outside of consulting hours, he found time to manage with east the business affairs of the TOI77HhHll-'11, and won by a huge lead the title of best Tonuzhazulq manager. We never understood how he did it so imperturbablyg we imagined all business managers had nervous breakdowns periodically. Perhaps he thought the whole matter out while having one of those famous Bergin morning-cigarettes-in-bed. Lest you imagine him one-sided, we must cite his distinguished presence at every local aliiair of any great importance, and hint that those Waterbury week-ends were not entirely Without enjoyable moments of a social nature. He is equally well-known for his most un-alma-matric habit of rising early in the morning. This strange phenomenon caused a good deal of comment and in some instances criticism. But we can assure you his school spirit is just as strong as anyone else's. To round out his character and make him welcome everywhere, he has a sense of humor that is Will Rogerish--dry and witty, but containing a lot of good sound com- mon sense. As to his future, the odds are now about even that he will be president of a corporation before he's thirty, two to one, if you'll make it thirty-Five. Thirty-fam' 1 WALTER IAMES BLAKE 170 Wxlkxnson Avenue, Iersey Crty, N I New Iersex Club 1 2 3 4 Presxclent 4 AQU1HdS Cxrcle -l ELODUITTICS Club 4 Intramural Athletxcs 1 2 3 4 bodallty 1 2 3 4 Sanctuary Socrety 1 When the New Iersey Club looked among 1ts members for a man to carry lt through a d1Pdcult year, they selected the sturdy shoulders of th1s fum vo1ced d1sc1ple of the B1g St1Ck to bear the burden of thelr worrles md troubles As presldent of that undeservedly rnfamous group Walter dld well and managed to keep the .assets ot the club 1 shade larger than the lmb1l1t1es Any moment that Mr Hoover runs out of outstandmg bust ness men to work on hrs C0lTlfl11SSl0l'lS, he can appolnt Walter and stop worrymg about our perxod of deflatnon Whlle his polish proclalms lum a Worthy product ot hrs home town, certfunly larve and presumably cultured, or 'lt least ClV1l1JCd, he nevertheless has managed to retam for his 1rrepress1ble Splflt a cert'11n degree of II'1ClCPCDdCllCC from conventlon, alter the Cagney manner Any unwary Frosh who tools more than h1s share of the good Brothers prov ender w1ll testrfy to the we1ght of Walts wrath Yet a frlends dxstress srgnal would always be answered w1th the v1tal cxgarette or stamp Lest th1S seem a brased panegyrlc, we m1ght mentzon Walts most horrlble Haw hls own estlmate of h1s ab1l1ty at Contract Bndge IS not only purely loglcal, but 1S contrfldlcted by experrence and the common testlmony of mankmd When you arent busy at the Cavendlsh Club, Walt, we hope to see you now and then We l1ke the style, you know Thr ly fee .l s 7 y 3 ' 5 ' 3 .' 'A 9 W Y Y 1 S 1 r , 1 S - i . . ' 1. , r. .' c gt L K K u U L ' ' 1 cc ' - as - L 4. D I. t' '4 - t . r I , . . . , . , . . c . c , . 1 . L je .,f FRANK ANSTETT BLAUM 512 Church Street, Honesdale, Pa. Freshman Footballg 'Varsity Football 2g Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 4g Intramural Baseball 3, -lg Pennsylvania Club 1, 2, 5, -l: Presglg Aquinas Circle 45 Scicntilic Society 5, 43 Mendel Academy elg Soclality 1, 2, 3, 4. If you are in a mood to take off your hat to someone, allow us to introduce Frank Blaum. I-le's that sort of fellow. ln freshman and sophomore, he was a star in football and track, he won a 'varsity letter, even, in his sec-ond year. After that, because of his ambition to be a doctor, he laid aside his chance of having his name enrolled in the Hall of Fame of Crusader sports, and enslaved himself to the test-tubes, the scalpels, and the micrometers of the Pre-Med course. He handled them just as successfully as he had previously managed the pigskin and the discus, although his later efforts did not bring him so much into the public eye. If any further proof is needed of this big, husky coal-miner's serious ambitions, we proller the ambulance-driving he has done during the summer vacations as convincing evidence. After a few sweet Weeks of living off-campus in freshman, Frank stayed out after dark one night, and the unbeatable system soon had him in that structure of brol-ten Walls and sleepless nights called Regis. That he lived through it and still has the repu- tation, in spite of his hard Work and serious ambitions, of being both happy-go-lucky and sane, is a tribute to his character that needs no elaboration. Thiriy-six IOSEPH LEO BRACKEN, IR. 88-12 63rd Avenue, Rego Park, L. l., N. Y. Intramural Athletics l, 2, 5, 4: Metropolitan Club 1, Z, 3. -l: Freshman Baseball: Aquinas Circle 45 Econo- mics Club 45 President Rifle Club 3, -lg Philo- math ll: Sodality l, 2, 3, 45 PATCI-IER Lit. 4: Dramatic Society 3. -lg Freshman Debating Society. In this representative of, we shall say, the Metropolitan Area Cafter all, why be em- barassingly specificPj We have the true strong-silent type. Weigh those Words, stranger, they are golden nuggetsf' was the attitude of all who listened to Ioe. Silent and observ- ing, of retentive memory and bulldog tenacity: these were the characteristics that earned for Ioe, during sophomore and junior years, the unparalleled title of The Flatfootf' And what a metamorphosis from Bracken the Freshman, to Bracken the Seniorl Back in the tormenting days on the storm deck of Top Fenwick, he commenced his career by smoking cigarettes when-and if--he could grub one. Now, like all successful and self-possessed cosmopolitans, he enjoys the fragrance of K'Seegarsf' The great Walpole had his South Sea Bubble: and Ioe had his Rifle Team. This very man, sirs, was the unanimously-elected captain, coach, and inspiration of the now famous I-I. C. ,Varsity Rifle Team. Under his capable direction, the squad never suffered a defeat in any of its official matches. Hearing of this record, the Chinese Republic invited Speedy to come to Manchuria and replace its Armyg but Ioe, realizing that a whole sheepskin is more valuable than a punctured one, decided to remain on the giving end when it comes to shooting. Incidentally, and seriously, there's no doubt about that sheepskin, for Ioe, it's Hin the bagf, along with many another desirable criterion of success. Tf1il'Iv-.vczfrvz CHARLES EDWARD BRIDGES 123 lay Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Intramural Athletics 2, 3, 43 Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Secretary, Aquinas Circle -lg Soclulity 1, 2, 5, 4. Mayor Walker might do well to call out his welcoming committee when Bunny comes home from college. On the Hill he has been famous for four years for his grand good humor. If he failed the first time, he'd try again, and again, until he finally achieved the success of seeing his own pleasant smile mirrored on the countenances of his friends. Far more than a mere court jester, he was familiar with even the most obscure, pre- viously unexplored region of the textbooks, including the worst mountainous and desert stretches of Dolan and Sullivan.. His scholastic merit fno pun intended, so it's not our faulty was recognized by his classmates when they elected him unanimously to the ofhcc of secretary of the Aquinas Circle. His soccer game is famous, too. Although he trained mainly on French-frys and buttered toast, he was a stellar member of the intramural champs. Some cynics have accused him of grandstanding because of his exhibitions of dribbling the entire length of the Heldg those on the inside know he was only trying to jump over the ball. In parting, Bunny, we tender one small item of advice Ckeep away from them thar South Sea Islesj and several large items of good will and best wishes. Thlrly-eight IOHN ANDREW BURKE 410 West 58th Street, New York City, N. Y. Freshman Debating Society, Philomath 2, 3, 43 Secretary 2g Vice-President 33 President 45 'Varsity Debating Team -ig Sophomore Prize Debateg Oratorieal Con- test l, 2, 45 New England Oratorical Champion 23 National Finalist 23 Vice-President National Consti- tutional Club 3, -lg Prvrcnmt Assistant Editor-in-Chief -lg Winner Short Story Contest 3, 45 Greek Academy Sp Toastmaster Class Banquet 3, 43 Speaker 25 Dra- matic Society 1, 2. 3, 43 Secretary 2, 3g Vice-Presi- dent 4: Tonmhumk 1. 2, 3, alt Senior Council, Purple Key -l: l m'plr' el: Hand 4: Crusaders l, 2, 3. 41 Orchestra l, 2, 5, -lg Metropolitan Club l, 2, 5, -l: Aquinas Circle -l: Frosli Track: Intramural Ath- letics 1. 2, 5, -lg Sodality 1, 2, 3, -lg Senior Ball Com- mittee. Andy has already taken up so much space with the list of his activities, that unless we inveigle the editor into assigning two pages to the Burke saga, we canlt even begin to tell you about him. Even then we would be at somewhat of a disadvantage, for during his four highly active years he has done everything from crowning the Apostles to getting Fired three times in one day by the genial Brother Refectorian. Dramatics and oratory have been Andy's major preoccupations. His sock and buskin exploits have not been confined to the regular histrionic productions, but have embraced the various receptions where he lirmly established himself as a three-ring circus. No less noteworthy have been his oratorical accomplishments. I-le came out victor in the N. E. Intercollegiate Uratorical contest, and went West to show them how the effete East trod the rostrum. As sidelines, Andy contributed to the Tomufmwfq and Purple, and held up the bass fiddle in the Philharmonic and Crusader orchestras. This, then, is a brief survey of a glorious career in activities. But it is not for these that we will look forward to meetings with Andy after graduation. To us he will always be that genial, Witty, obliging friend we knew and liked back there on the Hill. Thiff y-711716 FREDERICK THOlN1AS CAI-HLL, IR. 2 Gibbon Avenue, Milford, Mass. Boston Club l, 2, 3, 45 Economics Club -l: Intramural Baseball 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 45 Band 2, 3, 43 Or- chestra 25 Crusader Council 2, 3. -lg Member- ship Committce 2g Scholarship Committee -l: Tomahawk 1, 25 Sodality l. 2, 3, 43 Freshman Debating Societyg Senior Ball Committee. To the epigrammatic gentleman who offered the world the principle that 'cgreat things come in small packages, we offer the supreme vindication and justification of that principle in the person of our genial Fred. We know little of the Milford Chamber of Commerce, but we compliment them on their choice of Fitter ll as an emissary. Fred has carved indelibly on our memories a record of good-fellowship second to none. Fredis First act as a student, after acquiring a little red book, which was in later years to become a register superb of romantic data, was to enlist in the band, receive a sailor cap, and launch himself into a musical career. For four years he followed our great teams disguised as a saxophone player. Gur Napoleon's achievements would challenge the abilities of a Statistician. I-le reached the hei rhts as a wrestlin romoter, an intre id hoto ra uher of the intimate side L g P P P g of Holy Cross, and as a Hnecessitiesl' vendor to the freshmen. But in conclusion, Fred, if anyone should ever demand from us a heartfelt estimation of you, it will run something like this: lust a grand fellow, this Cahill boy. In the course of four years we have faced many difficult tasks, but none more so than bidding you Au Revoir. F arly IOHN LEO CALLAHAN 27 Whitman Street, Malden, Mass. Varsity Football 2, 3, -l: Intramural Athletics 5, 4, Bos- ton Club 2, 5, 49 Ring Committee 53 Sotlality l, 2, 5. 45 Senior Ball Committee. After a temporary sojourn at Fordham, during which he was a regular end on the undefeated Freshman eleven, Smuck', decided to come to Holy Cross. When he arrived and was domiciled in the since-abolished domain of the since-exiled cohorts of Eddie Wilson, Regis Hall, it took a good deal of argument to convince him he had found the right institution. As soon as he joined the squad of the silent coach of boisterous endsf' however, he felt right at home. During his three seasons on the yvarsity, many an opposing team Cespecially any whose defense against forward passes was none too strongj came to regret Iohnny's presence on the Held. After class-work and athletics, the chief and favorite occupations of his were sleeping and reading. The First, for any college man, needs no explanation, although it might be interesting to add that Iohnny at times varies his Morpheic monotony with a little somnambulism. lt used to be a great thrill for Ted to wake up in the middle of the night to see Smuck climbing out the window. But his real distinction came in his reading, his appetite for stories was practically insatiable. Never a star upon whom the light of publicity shone, Iohnny's playing, like all of his activities, was carried through with a spirit of enthusiasm, a sense of fair play, and a support of courage that has won him respect and friendship, and which should bring success. F0l'f,V-0115 IOHN P. CANNON l05 North Main Street, Windsor Locks, Conn mics Club 4g Aquinas Circle -lg Hartford Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4g Senior Hall Committee L g C The name of Cannon has become a tradition at Holy Cross. Seven sons of this illustrious clan have been four-year Crusaders during the past three decades. And now it is with sincere regret that we bid farewell to the latest edition of this culturally-hungry tribe. But as lack can stand on his own, we shall omit any further reference to his dis- tinguished predecessors. Iack has a highly developed social nature, as probably everyone within a ten-mile radius of I-loly Cross already knows. He was never in such sorry straits that he had to Worry about something to take up his time on an out-permission night, and he did very little walking right through the four years. However, the fact that he was never reduced to cramming before examinations is pretty good evidence that he spent the remainder of his collegiate weeks in studious application. As a baseball pitcher, he had few equals among the intra-murals, and was known to his teammates as Lefty. We liked Bullo's grin, and we shall miss it greatly once graduation has torn us apart. We're sure that lack will saunter through life with that same effortless ease that conquered Holy Cross. I-'orly-two Freshman Baseballg Intramural Athletics 2, 5, 45 Econo- GERALD IOSEPI-I CARLIN 824 West 7th Street, Erie, Pa. Pennsylvania Club 1, 2, 3. 4g Aquinas Circle 4, Intra- mural Basketball 2, 3, 45 Mendel Academy: 4g P.x'rCi-wk Lit. 45 Freshman Debating Societyg Scientific Society 4lg Sorlality 1, 2, 3, 43 Sanctuary Society 1, 2, 3, 4g Senior Ball Committeeg VVhen this Young Loehinvar came out of the west-at least the proximate west-it was not for the rescue of a fair maiden Qin fact, the fair maiden was left mourning in Eriejg it was on a quest for knowledge. He promptly tackled the biggest amount of it he could f-ind in one piece-the Pre-Med courseg and his remarkable and consistent vic- tories have merited him a seat among the mighty ninety-or-over men. To the numbera less harrassed embryonic doctors who frequented his room, burdened with the worries of K.s.p. he was a genial host and competent adviser. A few minutes with the Doctor could make intelligible even those parts of the Psych text in which the meaning was most ably disguised, or straighten the kinks out of the most befuddled brain. To those who know him, it is almost useless to repeat that he ought to go far in Medicine. A logical mind, with a great ability for a Firm grasp of facts, farsightedness, an appreciation of future dangers and opportunitiesg poised and conscientious, Ierry is gong to be hard to keep down. There's only one thing that we are afraid of: so many people don't trust handsome doctors. We could suggest, of course, dark glasses or a false beard once you start to practice, Ierry, only we know that you will be able to handle this difiiculty by yourself. If in doubt, fall back on a distinction. The trophies of your career-the ftemporarilyj broken hearts, the scholastic rewards, the solid friendships-were fairly and squarely won. F arty-Ihree GEORGE LEO CARROLL 247 Park Avenue, Worcester, Mass. 'Worcester Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle 4g B. I. F. 25 Speaker Class Banquet 2g Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. We are pleased to introduce this gentleman, considered by those at Holy Cross best able to judge such capacities, as the born successor of Grover Whalen in the office of greeter to people who matter. If the government of the City of New York cares, we endorse him heartily for this position. Not that George is a mere gladhander. So consistently has he manifested a native ability at refuting the errors of Darwin, Lamarck, et al., that the class would feel safe if the entire treasure left behind by Aquinas, Suarez, and Bellarmine were placed in his charge, their defense would be assured. In the library, his protective ability, along with unimpeachable SIIUOIIY' faire, has made him the dean of the corps of student librarians. Even his place at the imposing big desk in the main reading room appeared to us to be far below what his dignity deserved. George's most widely envied quality was that of making friends: the athlete, the social lion, the grind, all liked him, all saw in him qualities they could appreciate. Our well-wishes for his future are sincere, for they are the fruit of the many friendships he has so deservedly Won. Forty-four Y THOMAS IAMES CARROLL, IR. 12 VVarner Street, Gloucester, Mass. Boston Club l, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 45 Glen Club 1, 2, 3, 43 PATCIIER Bus. 4g Sodality 1, 2, 3, 43 Senior Ball Committee. The Holy Cross Boys with the Fishing Fleet -it sounds like a book by Irving T., but it stands for the Carroll-and-Caulfield vacation last summer. This tall, gently hand- some, slow-moving Gloucesterman rambled up the slope of Pakachoag in the fall of '28 with a smile on his faceg and we doubt that the smile was ever replaced by a worried look in all of his four years. Tom is one of those people who donit get too excited over the various messes the human race, individually and collectively, gets itself into. His smile even persisted through some of the worst jokes ever related, which is indeed heroicg and he is the class's only nominee for the post of ubest joke listener-tof, Gloucester has given him fperhaps for the purpose of shouting Ship ahoylu or Hard aportln or Thar she blowslnj one of those rare bass voices that never leave you wondering about the last few notes of Asleep in the Deep. His powerful and peculiarly accurate singing was one of the reasons why the second bass section was allowed to travel with the Musical Clubs. We can heartily wish Tom a lifetime as serene and blessed with friendship as his career at Holy Cross. But we feel rather keenly our inability to picture him adequatelyg if you know him, you will forgive us. You know what he,s like. Goodnatured. Sincere. Worth knowing. Furry-fine IOSEPH CHARLES CASSIDY 10 Cottage Avenue, Holyoke, Mass. Holyoke Club l, 2, 3, 4, Dance Chairman 31 President 45 Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 4g PATCHER Lit. -lg Band 3, 43 B. I. F. 2, 33 So- dality 1, Z, 5, 43 Sanctuary Society 1, 2, 3, 4. There is something attractive in the combination of a drawl and a keen, biting sense of humor. The possession of these two may explain Ioe's popularity with his fellowsg yet it hardly seems adequate. There is something beyond that. However, it was this characteristic of Ioe's falong with prodigious gastronomical powersj that will be the basis for his remembrance by the class of '3Z: it was an integral part of him. Ioe was padishah of the Holyoke dance during junior year, and a Fine dance it was, too. His ability on this occasion proved that his frequent remarks on the powers-than be fusually in the' nature of humorous sarcasticommentj were founded on real knowledge. Here is no mere destructive critic! The proponent of a cheerfully pessimistic philosophy has endeared himself to us through four years of unfailing good nature. Even at its keenest, his wit was always appreciated as being based on a sympathy with his Eellowman. That weshall miss him is saying the obvious rather obviously, but we mean it. Forty-:ix THOMAS EDWARD CAULFIELD, IR. 14 Church Avenue, Wobtirn, Mass. Boston Club l, 2, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle 4: Glec Club l, 2, 3, 4g Quartet l. 2, 33 Trio 4g Mendel Academy 4g Pfvrcuen Lit. 45 Scientific Society 3, -lg Purple Key -lg Sodality l, 2, 3, ilg Sanctu- ary Society 3, 4: Senior Ball Committee. VVhen Tom gets his M.D., we're going to have him as our doc. Cheerful and friendly in his attitude, serious and dependable in his work: these are just the qualities we want in our pill-and-physic many and they are the qualities most in evidence in Tom. I-Ie had the distinction of becoming a member of the 'varsity quartet in freshman- he's that good a singer-and the association with '29's quasi-maniacal Glee Club members has affected him ever since. The Caulfield-Carroll combination has a lot coming from various individuals on the score of practical jokes. As for the stories about that summer fishing trip, the less said the better. Tomis sense of humor came in handy quite often, as he was pianist and basso of the Crusaders trio, and there were times . . . As for his work, Tom Cbeing a pre-medj always had a lot of it. I-le managed to evolve some sort of formula for studying, it appears, that worked marvelously wellg for without the usual feverish night-before cramming, he was able to manage the frequent examinations with ease. Showing that Tom is cheerful and friendly, serious and dependable in his work, will let you understand why we are going to choose him as our Doctorg but it can hardly pic- ture for you his personality. You'll have to see that in persong meet him, know him. You will Find out that it's very much worth while. F arty-:cum IAMES ANTHONY CAVALIERI 674 Saratoga Street, East Boston, Mass. Freshman Footballg 'Varsity Football 2, 3, 43 Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 35 Intramural Baseball 1, 2, 33 'Varsity Baseball 45 Soclality 1, 2, 5, 4. This, gentle reader, is Sunny lim, the first half of the famous Grand Opera Twins. It was he who wrote his name Qin indelible ink, in Footballis Book of Great Deeds by tucking that famous Harvard lateral of 1930 under his arm and loping for a touchdown. When Capt. McEwan lirst niet this prize pupil of Bunny Corcoran, he asked Cav if he sang opera. Cav didn'tg but the Way he and Tony reached for-and got-the tough ones made them known far and Wide as the Grand Opera stars of football. lim, with his dashing play and accurate diagnosis of the enemyls attack, was an inspiring Hgure in the field. CCH reports of the Holy Cross-Brown game, et al.j In A much quieter and less public manner, he fought just as clever and courageous a battle with the books: and he came out just as well. Iudging by the ease with which he knocked over the previous exams, that final oral is going to be thrown for a loss, when it's tackled by Cavalieri. Capable, daring, modest, and possessing a Wit that could match even that of his famous ally, Bart Sullivan, the first half of Cavalucci was a real star, the kind of man the class of ,32 can well be proud of. Forly-eight IOHN AUSTIN CLARK 25 Bramard Avenue, Great Barrlngton Mass Aquxms Cxrclc l ELOIIOITIILL Club 4 Intmmural Ath letlcs 3 4 Berkshm: Clubl 2 3 4 Sodalltyl 2 3 4 Qcmor Consultor Purple 2 3 Alumm Edxtor J The httle Berkshxre town that had already glven Holy Cross 1 lug man 1n the Blology Department declded that the class of 32 was worthy of the glft of 'mother of IIS br1ll1ar1t sons, and down was sent Iohn Aust1n, to take the school by storm lack, though '1 qulet sort of storm, IS none the less eFfect1ve H15 successiul assflults on the fortresses of W1SClO11l placed hun among the leadmg scholastlc figures of the class, and Vet left hllll enough free tune to 1cqu1re the ICPLIKHEIOH ot '1 beleaguer of hearts 1s well Even though It mnght requxre as desperate a means as 'ln 1cc1cler1tal meetmg on a tram, he managed to get 1UVlt21t1OI'1S to forelgn Proms often enough to keep dullness away durmg the dreary months F1n'1lly h1s chaxrmanshlp of the Sodahty Progrflm Comnnttee helped 1n large measure to brmg success to the novel act1v1t1es undertaken by that orgam zatxon thxs year We w1sh lack a contmuatnon of the success that has so far come C2S1ly to hxm And 1f any han' tonxc company wants to hlre a good tester Forty mne , . if ' 'a 1 - ' - 1 S 1 1 a a 1 9 a 1 L : 1 : - w 4 4 ' .. . . 1 , . . . , , L ' 4 ' ' ' . ' c c . ' c L K L L . 1 L L . 4 , L c f THOMAS EDWARD CLAYBORNE l Stanley Road, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club l, 2. 3, -lg Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, rl. The First thing that impressed us in freshman was the friendship of Doyle and Clay- borne, those two inseparable youths from the open lands of Worcester. The gentleman pictured above hasn't stopped making friends with the passing of the years, such is his innate magnetism and manly charm. His nature is not one that boldly parades itself, rather, it is one that is austere and dignihed, one that is powerful through silence. This dignity of personality does not detract from Tom's capabilities as a good fellow, ready and eager to play his part in the show, not always desirous of the spotlight. As a student, Tom was found in that lofty stratum, the intelligent, the intellectually awake. Never brilliantly outstanding, he was content with pursuing his studies with clock-like regularity, with Teutonic doggedness. The ease with which he set freshman and sophomore behind him was only surpassed by his easy subdual of the philosophy of his last two years. VVe found Tom to be the retiring scholar, the ideal academic type. Needless to say, Tom's activity at the college was not entirely centered around intel- lectual pursuits. Wherever masculine voices were being raised in some campus high- jinks, Tom was there. He was a regular and active member of the Worcester Under- graduate Club, and his name was invariably found on the committees which successfully conducted the club's social activities. Fifly CYRIL GERARD COLE 1143 Rockdale Avenue, New Bedford, Mass. Intramural Athletics l, Z, 3, 43 New Bedford Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle 4g Crusader Council 4-g So- dality 1, 2, 3, 4. Old King Cole was rz quiet old sou! A very Sphinx was beg W'h0, given his books and cz hockey stick, Disdamed fri.voZz'zy. This exactly epitomizes one of the most reticent, yet congenial, members of the class of '32. Cyn was the type that did not believe in advertising his knowledge or skill blatantly about the campus, but there is no doubt that, were he loquaciously inclined, no one would have a better right to indulge in self-advertisement. From the very beginning, he settled down to make the most of his college career, and as we view the diligence with which he pursued the various arts and sciences, we are forced to the conclusion that he has succeeded admirably. Intimate with very few, but a friend to all, Cyn has captivated by sheer merit. We suspect that he is slightly introspective by nature, but never has he become so self-centered as to forget social or organized duties. The entire class feels honored and privileged for having had Cyn for the past four years, and some day it will be glad and proud to boast of Old King Cole as one who by his steady perseverance has gradually ascended to a throne worthy of such a regal occu- pant. Long may he reign! Fifly-one CHARLES THOMAS COLLINS 45 Oak Grove Avenue, Springfield, Mass. Springfield Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Vice-President 3g Dance Chairman 45 Aquinas Circle -lg Economics Club 4, Tonzabmufg l, 2, 3, 43 Managing Editor 4, PA1'c1-nan Bus. 4, Toastmaster Class Ban- quet 23 Purple' 1, 2g Purple Key -lg So- clality 1, 2, 3, 43 Philomath 45 Assistant Manager Orchestra 1. Senior Ball Committee With his deeisiveness betrayed by a firmly set jaw, his good nature shining forth from steady blue eyes, Charlie seems to us to be destined to rise above the ranks of the con- tentedly mediocre. When first he came among us, he said little, like all wise men, he observed much. For two years he found pleasant a life of studious application, interrupted now and then by random errands for the business staff of the Purple, divers chores for the slightly breath- less reportorial department of the Tomahawk. This Collins lad must have done some precocious contemplation during those leisurely years, when junior year rolled around, Charlie's superiors discovered that he had already formed definite ideas on about every- thing, and was ready to cross metaphysical lances with anyone, including the Angelic Doctor and the oft-refuted Kant. I-Ie did a good job while managing editor of the Tomahawk. That sounds like ex- travagant praise, to anyone knowing how Charlie disported himself on Monday evenings in Lower Loyola, it seems understatement. As an ardent Philomath man, Charlie often worried the Chair of that assembly by haranguing to great length on the negative side of something or other. He seemed in- clined to sympathize more with the underdog, and it was not long before his virile deliv- ery and logical reasoning had Won adherents to what previously had been a lost cause. Fifty-two ANTHONY COLUCCI, IR. 1089 Main Street, Woburn, Mass. 'Varsity Football 2, 3, 49 Freshman Baseballg 'Varsity Baseball 3, 45 Boston Club l, 2, 3, -lg Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. The second half of the Grand Opera Duo greets you, this sombre countenance belong- ing to the latter portion of the Cavalucci corporation. Tony and his running mate were not, as history and many wet towels proved one day, lyric singers. They were real foot- ball players, though, to whom the largest, toughest, most ferocious tackles meant little more than something else to move out of the way for the Purple Express to ride over. Never the scintillating star who owed his brilliance to a spectacular play, Tony could always be relied upon to carry out the most diliicult assignment with an ease and facility that was amazing. To remark whimsically after a great game that they were ufairf' shows the attitude with which this roving end played his game. A real twin, Taciturn Tony was the equal of his buddy in all their joint endeavors, studies and Sunday visits to Boston not excepted. At this time it is fitting to wish the B. and A. the condolences of the class, for in its losing Tony's patronage we doubt whether the seven o'clock will return a profit. That success will be your lot, we have little doubt, Tony. The high peaks of pros- perity will be reached through the medium of friendliness that has made you the cham- pion of the less esteemed, while the dominance of your personality will be a bridge that can lead only to the ruddy-hued edens of universal respect. Fiffy-lhrrc I. FREDERICK CONNELLY 611 Mt. Zoar Street, Elmira, N. Y. Tonirzhuwk 1, 2, 3, 4, City Editor 44 History Academy 3, 4g Aquinas Circle 4g PATCHER Lit. 'lg Purple Key 45 Crusader Council 45 Sodality l, 2, 3, 43 Chairman Membership Committee 45 Senior Ball Committee. Elmira grudgingly gave up its marvel for a period of four years, and the class of '32 has been graced for the same period by that supreme personality-Fffweddie. Being of a stalwart and determined trend of character, I. Frederick reached the decision that his past life was past, although he continually regaled us with his exploits as a backswoods- man. Yet he acknowledged the defects of his environment and decided to chip his name onto the Honor Roll. His tool was the mighty pen, for Iackie didn't Wish to possess all God's gifts and he chose intellectual superiority to mere physique. Fred was such a live Wire on the Hill, that to make the college safe for the innocent city boys, they put him on the Tomahawk. In this sterile Held of endeavor, our hero proved the possibility of mira- cles and grabbed the city editor's desk, and in that eminent position earned the enviable title of Society Scoop. And how the cub reporters trembled when they came for their assignments to this rip-roaring, swearing, inebriated taskmaster. Fred's right to the title of The Social Manu is amply earned by his reputation on all the campuses of girls, col- leges in and about New England. Looking toward the morrow, our hero has set out to overtake and surpass Belloc. Yes, friends! he is a student of history. All the luck in the World, fella, you will Find out that you will need it. So, Iackie, whenever you see a lemon, give us poor chums a thought. Fifly-foul' IUHN EDWARD CONNOR, IR. 325 Glenwood Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. Western New York Club l, 2, 35 Intramural Baaltetlxatll 3g Mendel Academy 49 President W. N. Y. Club 33 Scientific Society 3, 4, Sodality 1, 2, 3, 45 Senior Ball Committee. Rochester has decreed and delegated two of her auspicious members to be a part of the class of '32, Here we have one of the members who, for recreation, rooms with no other personage than the effervescent Costich. Iohn's pastime has been spent trying to Hnd the best position in which to get the most value out of his cigarette, when he has not been trouping off to Worcester to take in some show, which was not too often, for Iohn's time was spent in those memorable labs of chemistry and biology. In our association with Iohn we have found him a generous, amiable, and good natured companion in the four years spent upon the Hill. Blessed with natural ability and aptitude to make friends, he has always been held in the highest esteem by his classmates. Iohn, as a student, was a real success, although he would attempt to lead you to the conclusion that he had great dilhculty-his modesty. He overcame the depths of philosophical reasoning with ease, passing through chemistry and biology, the stumbling block of many pre-meds, with a confidence that could only mean success. Iohn intends to be a physician, and if his work at Holy Cross was any criterion by which to judge, we are metaphysically certain of his ultimate success. Always a friend and companion, jovial, good natured, and a thorough good fellow will be our memory of him. Fifty-five KENNETH IOHN COSTICH 1633 Culver Road, Rochester, N. Y. Western New York Club I, 2, 3, 43 President 45 Aquinas Circle 45 PATCHER Bus. 49 Scientific Society 3, 4. - l yr . r , 1 5 I . k 4 I Herewith, ladies and gentlemen, we present another one of Rochester's illustrious contributions to Holy Cross. Ken and Iohn, the room-mates extraordinary, who delighted in hearing each other talk, are perhaps one of queerest, yet ideal, combinations that has resulted from the throwing together of all those elements that go to make up the class of '32. Yet Ken is absolutely individual. He is the man with that sang-froid attitude, but underlying all this is a character that is imbued with high purpose and determined resolve. He has concerned himself with the sciences up here on the hill, and has even gone so far as to postulate a few original philosophical theories. The mere fact that he was con- stantly involved in heated controversy is a mute tribute to his rhetorical and argumenta- tive powers. Ken has passed through four years in a lackadaisical and untroubled manner that has been the envy of many of his class-mates. He has that gift of the gods which endows a man with a clear conscience at all times. We predict great things for this lad, nor have we the slightest doubt that his natural ability, self-confidence, and self-reliance will carry him far in the chosen field of his endeavor. ' I-'iffy-:ix .a - .T .l' . RAYMOND THOMAS COUCHLIN 1006 Park Avenue Hoboken, N I New Iersey Llubl 2 3 4 Px1c11F1z Bus 4 Sodtlty 2 3 -I Sanctuary Suuctx 3 4 Glcc Llub 3 4 Cho11 3 4 Drfnmfmc Soc1ety2 3 4 Publxcxty Manager -I Chauman Dccorauons Scmor Ball Suave and debonfur, correctly dressed, Raymond W ts exer IH the wh1rl of the gay soc1al hte ot Worcester No exclus1ve fllIlCt1Ol1 was complete VVlIl'l0LlI hls bcammg Slllllt 'lncl boundmg gayety Nor was any campus undertaklng complete Wxthout h1m Hls forte was lCt1Hg As female lmpersomtor, ad lgl0 dlnccr, coclxney, or P'1r1s11n boule vard1er, he trod YV1Il'1 success the boards of Fenwlcls hndowed W1th rare stage presence, he had great talents Ill lT1lIT1lCl'y and 1mperson'1t1on, talents that were always '1pp1'CC1'ltCK.l by Holy Cross audlences No eutertunment was 1 success xvlthout hlm Varled wer h1s parts, but though they rlnged from l11ClOClI 1lUl to trlgcdy he 'always played the part to perfectlon Pre CITIIDCIIK as he was 111 theatrzcals and m thc socml sphere, he vrewcd the sterncr thmgs of lxfe Wltll equ'm1m1ty I-115 salme comments on 'IHHIFS of the clay savored ot the Cplgfillll, and h1s W1t cast forth aphor1sms that fastened ID the memory He pos sessed almost encyclopedlc 1nform1t1on about the Comment Europe, you s1llyl Text books gathered no moss 1n hrs room, they were dog eared and well worn E1ther 'ls a judge of ale or the teller of 1 tale poetry he '1lW'1ys excelled Well remember the occaslons when he successfully upheld the prmcrples of Scholastxcxsm lg'l1l1bK the r'1b1d attacks of our pseudo mtellectuals FIFIT1 III '1dvers1ty, and proud of heart, Doc s lofty character Wlll carry hlm a long way forward I iffy :ellen . , . . 1 ,N '. M., . . .', , , , , , , . . .. , .1 1 . '. - v --' , . 1.1 . 3 3 3 5' ' . 4 Y Q Y D ' 1 S 4 H 1 7 1 . gf 3 ' , 4 ' Z. ' 4 . . . . . 1 1 r. - : .x . . D . . f L 1 . . ' A ' . ' . , . ., . ' '. - - 1 . . . . 1 - . . . . D . , - . V A . . . . K. ' L L L L . .. 1 A . . .. 1 . . c ' .x 4 4- 1 n ,x - 1 1 . . . , . . H 1 . , K , , . ,, - 1. 1 - 4 K . 1. l Q A C. I .' H . . - . . 4 Q. '- . t .. s L n LQ ' 7 L 1 L , Q 1 . ' ' 1. . . C L L N n ' ' ' ' C5 377 , . 4 . . A , - 1 . . . CHARLES JOSEPH CROWLEY, IR. 462 Washington Street, Brighton, Mass. Boston Club l, 2. 3, -lg Aquinas Circle -lg Pixrcmaii Bus -lg Manager Freshman Baseball 4: Purple Key -lg Soclality 1, 2, 3, 43 Glcc Club lg Choir 3. Applause is in order, for here we have Good Time Charlie, without whom this book would be quite incomplete. Brighton is Charlie's home town, but as far as we have been able to discover after four years, he divides his time about equally between Worces- ter and Hull Beach. Both places are filled with his ffiends, and no biography of him- auto- or otherwise-would be complete unless they ligured prominently. Speedboats are his hobby. Rumor hath it that he is right at home at the helm of anything from a Chris-Craft to a cruiser. In fact, through his nautical inclinations he has made quite a name for himself, not to mention a few nicknames. His talents and aspirations tend toward the scientific, and he carries his superior fund of information on such topics without the least ostentation. His ideas are creative and constructive, but balanced by a practical trend of mind. With such a combination of qualities he should be a big asset in any calling he may choose to follow, but Charlie probably won't follow anything very long before he begins leading. Personality counts for ninety per cent in making a business success, and Weill give Charlie our whole-hearted recommendation without extra charge if he ever needs it to impress a prospective em- ployer. He can come around and demonstrate a few cabin cruisers to us after we've made our first corner on the Worcester stock exchange. Fifly-eighf LEO IOHN CULLEN 99 Oak Street, Naugatuclc, Conn. Intramural Athletics 2. 3. 4g Waterbury Club l, 2, 3, 49 Aquinas Circle -lg Economics Club 4: Sndality l, 2. 3, 'lg Senior Ball Committee. They call Naugatuck the Rubber City. Perhaps the quality of elasticity has been bestowed by the City Fathers upon the favorite sons, for Leo has bounced through his four years on the Hill, making friends right and left, and creating quite a reputation for himself as a bookman. But he denies any alifinity through his own choice toward the dusty tomes of which he is custodian. Rather he would have the fame of his name spread over this universe as a juggler of figures of the highest rank. His room has become the meeting place of those so unfortunate as to aspire to a C. P. A., and the infallibility of his answers has given rise to a new ultimate fundamental principle, namely. If Leo has it, it's right. Leo has always been active in duty or pastime, always dependable. Many are the times that The Gentleman from Lawrence has fallen a victim to the unfailing eye of our hero on the rugged tables of the school's Billiard Academy. And with magnanimity which is to be wondered at even by ourselves, we forgive him for selling us those ties and seeing his friends fleeced at will, but we feel that some practical business experience never did anyone harm, and we will profit by it. So with the ability and potentialities which we know you have, Leo, we feel sure that you will succeed when you strike the cruel and cold outside. Filly-Him' PAUL MARTIN CUMMINGS I2 Dewey Street, Worcester, Mass. Intramural Athletics 3, 4: YVorccster Club l, 2, 3, 'lg Aquinas Circle 4g Pixrcuuk Lit. 43 Senior Ball Committee .2- fx , W When one thinks of friendship, one naturally thinks of Paul. This well-poised gentleman's scintillating repartee has peppered symposiums in the most austere drawing rooms of Worcester, and has ensnared many willing victims to his fort of friendship. Paul was a spirit of the open road. His uncanny ability to get free transportation to and and from school aroused awesome admiration in the other local boys. All those loose dimes will some day buy a chair for the philosophy circle of Top Loyola. In freshman, he perfected the Cummings approach system of study and would have become an intel- lectual giant with a little more moral support. In junior and senior, he chose English and Latin for his electives and became so interested in both courses that he actually bought the text-books. Paulis hobby was tennis. I-Ie took it so seriously that it prevented him from Finding a job during the summer vacations. He was a punster of no mean ability, and played an adept hand at bridge as a merry diversion from the constant plugging in philosophy. We don't mean to be derogatory when We place Paul in the category of campus witsg we were doubly appreciative of his humor because it was humor without malice. He was cosy enough not to reveal what path in life he had chosen, but whatever it is, Paul, we say Good luck! Sixly FRANCIS RICHARD CURRY 465 West End Avenue, New York Crty, N H 1 reshman Football Varsrts Football 2 J Ireshnvrn 'lraclr V2YS1fVTflLlx2 9 Golf Teams -l Metropolr t'rn Llub l 7 3 -l Prcsrclent 4 Xqurnrs Crrclr. 4 llconomrcs Club -l PAICHLR Bus 4 Lrusrder Councrl 2 3 -l Purple ku -I Freshman Dt brunt Socrety Phrlomrth 2 3 fl icnror Louncrl Senror Llnrrman or lreshmen So arty l 2 3 4 SenrorB ll Lomnrrttce Although we are not grfted wrth the art of clarrvoyance, vve c'rn reaclrly percerve that Frank wrll clrmb swrftly and easrly to the tower of success That has been the keynote of hrs actrvrty among us, and we can do naught but prrde ourselves upon the acqursrtron of such a man to our roster Hrs varred actrvrtres and rnterests testrfy that he IS '1 full man Durrng the first part of hrs c'rreer on the Hrll Frank had asprratrons or becommg a football player, but most of them dled 1 happy death rn some of the more rmpromptu games on Top Fen wrck And then he turned to debatrng Wlrrle he drd not thunder 'rt the waves rn some lonely and secluded spot, he forced many an audrence to accept hrs undenrable logrc Wrth the advent of the party system rn the Phrlomath he exhrbrted hrs democrcrtrc lean mg rn the forceful manner whrch he reserved for hrs more serrous moments Hrs socr'1l nature was manrfest by hrs unbounded rnterest rn the preparatrons for the event nonparerl of our college lrfe, the Iunror Prom In senror, Frank had lrttle chorce rn hrs extracurrrcular work Hrs fellow New Yorkers, recognrzrng hrs leadershrp, rnstalled hrm as presrdent of the Metropolrtan Club By faculty chorce he became the acadernrc foster father of the rncomrnff freshmen Frank leaves us to conquer other Helds We know that hrs genmlrty and 'rbrlrty wrll carry hrm far And we know that he won't turn back Szxly one J ' I s , , - . I -1, 3. 4 4 1 : ' .V ' 1 a 1 1 v.l A 1-v G. - 1 '. 1 K J 1 4 9 3 5 J - 1 v-u u Z ' 21' 1- ' S 1- 'M .. .. . . . ' , - 1 , , - .. , .4 ' f. f., -. . s. 3 B ! 1 3 ' 2 f , 1 . , , . 1 . . 5 3 r d'l , , , , .1 W , . 3 L S. K I. - a c , ' 1. . K . , 1 Il 4 A C H 'ru r . . 7 ' ' 1 l C 1 -t D . . C 1 ROBERT WILLIAM DALEY 69 Minot Street, Dorchester, Mass. Greater Boston Cluh 1, 2, 3. 43 Aquinas Circle 43 Eco- nomics Club 4: Band 3, 45 Glee Club 2, 3, 49 Vice- -Presiclent Musical Clubs 35 Choir 1, 2, 3, 4g Student Director 3, 4g Sodality l, 2, 3, 43 Senior Ball Committee. This, folks, is the famous Rowdy Daley. Let not the nickname mislead you. Possessor of a tenor voice of rare quality and a highly attuned ear for harmony, Bob tenored many an impromptu rendition of G Mamie Rileyl' and other classic campus ballads, interrupting every now and then to go into ecstasies over some particularly blue note his top tenor produced. A rare gem indeed is 'iRowdy. On long Sunday after- noons when the cry went up, Get Daley, and let's have a little harmonyf' the Loyola pillow pounders forsook Morpheus to listen to the renditions of Daley's agony trio, quartet, quintet, or whatever they called themselves. To Bob goes the honor of having been the first student director of the choir. Many a night as we watched him perched on his favorite bit of balcony, leaning backward to urge the choristers to greater efforts, we marvelled at his defiance of the laws of gravity and equilibrium. His facial expressions as he gave vent to his disgust or pleasure with the performance of the evening, put Ioe E. Brown and the late Chaney utterly to shame. The musical clubs will miss you, Bob, as a musician of high calibre, The class will miss you in so many ways that we won't begin to enumerate them. When we see you in later years after you've made your mark, just approach us with that good-natured, friendly Hi, fellersln and vve'll know you as the same old Bob vve're proud to call classmate, and happier still to call friend. Sixly-two IOHN LAURENCE DALY, IR. 'Warehouse Point, Conn. Freshman Footballg Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3, 45 Hart- ford Club l, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 4: Crusader Council 1, 2, S, 'lg Sodality l, 2, 3, 4. In the virile countenance portrayed above, ladies and gentlemen, you see the perfect embodiment of the glittering attributes of an athlete and a gentleman. To prove our con- tention, there is no need of the trusty Scholastic syllogism or the refutation of Taine's quibble. Good old empirical observation and the testimony of human experience suthce. As an athlete, lack first came into prominence by his performance in the famous water battle of the century. It is reported that on that eventful night he made good old Regis and all its occupants, prefects, hunkies and cohorts alike, safe for Volstead and the Drys. However, it was not until Intrafmural Athletics assumed noteworthy proportions that Iack's true athletic ability was realized. He was one of the few to participate actively and notably in every sport on the program. He distinguished himself on the diamond and soccer Field especially. It was not until lack toed the mound for Bottom Beaven that he revealed the full power of his famous bucket arm and batting eye. As a soccer player he startled even that old maestro, McGuigan. His gentlemanly and courtly characteristics were never fully appreciated, we are told, save by those chosen few who were privileged to attend the mixed gatherings at the Castle, Feminine pulses rarely beat with ease in his presence. Since true worth can never be denied, as in the case of the man who invented the new mouse trap, we expect the world to beat a path to I:1ck's door. Kismet! Sixty-three DAVID CIRO D'ARGENIS 22 Gage Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Scientihc Society lg Day Scholars' Sodality 1, Z, 3, 4. When the class of ,32 enrolled at Mt. St. Iames, a spark of dynamite rolled along with them. They called him David-we called him Dodger. He rose to great heights in sophomore year by raising a luxuriant moustache, or what we call Hgoofer feathers. His great moments were spent in Room 84 in Top Loyola Where he excelled as an exponent of Mussolinfs principles. Dave has been knighted supreme exampessimist, but it is only his mood that has earned him this misnomer and spurs him on to better Work. Always Willing to mix :1 wise crack with a philosophy question, Dave became a master of philosophic wit in the classroom. Not a doubt exists in the minds of his classmates but that he will go places and do things after graduation. Here's luck, Dave! . Sixty-four CHARLES A DAVEY 320 Ergjhth Avenue, Brooklyn N Y Intramural Athlencs J 4 Metropolrtan Club 1 2 3 fl llcononucs Lluh -1 Aqumas Cncle 4 Pxacnrn Lxt 4 Sodahtx 1 2 .u 4 SCI'll0l'BlllC0l'11ll'lllfLC Charhe has the drstmctron of bemg one of the most even tempered men rn the class, no slrght honor when We recall that a freshman aesthetrc has referred to us generally as the I-Iolv Cross senlor or nervous wreck Lxen durmg those blue, wmtry days that preceded Easter vacatrons, he was one of the l'ew who remalned brtght and unrullied Never too CHUSIVC, we found htm to be a good ltstener who was not by any means devord of anecdotes of his own, but Who altrutstlcally published only the best of them H15 study ttme ranks wlth the skeleton of the 1111551110 hnk as L1 supreme conceal ment, but we know that he dmd study for h1s marks were always the enxy ot the rest of us Nevertheless, Charhe did not, as many do who End the work easy for them, let natural aptrtude decay from lack of use H15 readmg was extenswe both 1n quantrty and 1n sublect matter, and through four years he has accumulated a mlscellany of facts that wrll benefit hlm rn hrs chosen profess1on of law As wzth all QUICK men his regard for a yearbook wrlte up IS not one of terror he rests perfectly conladent that no one has anytlalng on hl1Tl But we do know this he wr1tes funny, and mcldentally very good, verse, plays a good game of contract, slngs as Mc Cormack does, wrth his vocal chords, but has a mce nose Otl1CI'XV1SC, and lxkes a grrl by the name of maybe you can make hrm tell Sixty five r , . . ' 1 . '. I 5 Q , Q 1 , ' r g. .. 'a g , ', 1 . . ' . 7 1 ' 1 ' s l 1 ,l Y y 9 1 4 ' ,, . ES '73 :Y ' I K li ' 1 A Q C A C C 1 D K ' 'I C C I 1 4. , L I o C 1 L 1 - 1 ' a I L L L 1 ' . . V . . . .7 . 1 4 r u l IOHN FALVEY DELANEY 113 Williams Street, Norwich, Conn. Aquinas Circle 4g Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3, 44 Band 453 Orchestra 2, 3, flg Sotlality 1, Z. 5, elg Parrznian Athletic Editor 4g Purplr Athletic Editor 5, 'lg Freshman Debating Societyg Philo- math 3. ll: Senior Ball Commit- tee. Mendel Acmlemy 4. To say that a man who has succeeded in running the Holy Cross scholastic gauntlet with only minor contusions possesses the ability to think, is tantamount to elaborating the obvious. But not all the men eulogized in these pages have the faculty of thinking con- cisely under stress, duress, and the onslaughts of fifteen hecklersg not all of them can think on their feet. Iack probably excelled all of us in that department. From sheer amicable perversity seven or Hfteen of his pious companions would line themselves up against Falvey in one of those highly futile arguments. Ten minutes later Iack's would be the only cool head in the room. It was maddening. Although he knew the niceties of sports as well as any man, he did not allow this knowledge to grow to obsessional proportions. We knew him to wax sardonic against those lads whose main preoccupation was memorizing sports pages, Whose role was ever that of satellite to one or another of the local athletic luminaries. It was during his regime as Sports editor of the chaste Purple that the Round Table was born, bringing with it a renascence of interest in the athletic department of that monthly. Honest, he would never let friendship prevent hirn from being honestly critical of his friend's various departures from rationality. Unhindered by self-consciousness, he could readily sympathize with our personal buffets by a dogging Fate. With as noble a wit as ever had its roots in Eire, lack was one of the high spots of the four years. Sixfy-six GERARD EDWARD DE MONTIGNY W 285 Main Street, Nashua, N. H. Intramural Athletics 3, elg Manchester Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle LiQ Soclality l. 2, 3, -lg Senior Ball Committee. Distinction,' is a word that is perhaps more easily understood in a particular appli- cation than in an abstract definition. We are sure that you will understand what we mean in saying that the noun has an apt application here, extending even to the name of the gentleman under consideration. Widely read, accurately informed on almost any subject, Ierry could and did make the dull hours Hy with his entertaining conversation. And when examinations were imminent, he could always be relied upon to predict the questions with uncanny accu- racy. Yet, mind you, he was no grind I-Ie always seemed to combine the minimum of effort with maximum of effect. We suspect, however, that his apparently easy success was the result of concentration of energy with no waste or misdirected effort. He was eminently successful in all his affairs, from tennis to tea-parties, and from guiding a cue-ball with deadly accuracy to concealing his super-heterodyne from the prurient gaze of electricians. And just in passing, if you ever hear that apparent contradiction in terms-a good pun-you may be sure it is ten to one Ierry had something to do with its origin. This rare spirit, who elected Education in junior and senior because he wants to teach, departs for graduate school accompanied by the warm good wishes of his class- mates who never knew a dull moment in his company. Sixtyrsrzfelz IAMES AUGUSTINE DEVLIN 25 Everett Street, Somerville, Mass. Lawrence Club 1, 2, 3g Easton Club 43 Aquinas Circle 43 Philomath 3, Sodality I, 2, 3, 45 PATCHER Lit 4. The longest bull-sessions and the most vigorous disputations of our times at Holy Cross were sponsored by lim Devlin, Who'd rather be known as Seamus to the world that waited each month for his sparkling pen-Work in The Purple. In Iunior, lim be- came interested in the deep and dark green work of a society known to us as the Gaelic Academy. There were constitutions drawn up in his room, letters written, plans made, and oratory provoked in the cause of Irish culture and freedom. The members of the academy pledged themselves to master the Gaelic tongue and Went at studying it with a vehemence for zi day or two. After that, we heard no more of ir, and Second Beaven sighed and assured itself that it would no longer be disturbed by the powerful voices of Holy Cross's future O'Conne1ls and Wolfe-Tones. ' In Seamus's room a bull session was never discouraged. There were cigarettes and an audience for everyone, And there gathered the connoisseurs of women, literature, and tobacco, with an occasional philosopher turning up in a bureau drawer. Iim is brilliant. His writings testify to that as well as the fact that he became fluent in Spanish in the first two weeks of freshman. fWe'll pass over Gaelic. Yeats gave it up, too.j Iim's hearty, even disposition and abounding enthusiasm were qualities that went far at Holy Cross. We hope he'll never lose them. Sixiy-eight ROBERT EDWARD DILLON 122 Chapin Street, Binghamton, N. Y. Southern New York Club l, 2, 3. 'lg Tormzfmmfq I, 2, 3, 'llg City Editor 35 Editor-in-Chief Llg Freshman De- bating Societyg Philoniath 2, 3, 45 Glee Club 3, 4g Dramatic Society 1, 2, 3, 43 Property Manager 43 Senior Councilg Purple Key 43 Pfvrcmzn Lit. 43 Speaker Class Banquet 43 Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4g Choir 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 43 Intramural Athletics 3. -l: Ticket Chairman, Senior Ball. Bob was editor of that much-maligned, but avidly read, publication, the T0177lI!Z6lZU,Q-. With Bob the formula was reversed: the sins of the children rested upon the father. In his position as editor, rumpus-silencer, copy-decipherer, and freshman-encourager, Dillon found himself being blamed for every misplaced comma and typographical error that crept into his rather lively weekly. That he didn't wind up his campus journalistic career a madman, is remarkable. The editing of a I-Ioly Cross publication is no roseate couch, the editing of the Tomahazulq, however, is like setting up one's tent on the outskirts of a disputed Manchurian village. He survived the ordeal, however, and managed to send back from the lower Loyola front as neat a series of Weekly pamphlets as Holy Cross publication history records. Anyone whose principle campus activity was as strenuous as Bob's, naturally would require some recreation which required little effort, which demanded but time and the inclination. Bob found music suitable, and managed to forget the Tomalzazulg pretty completely during those hours while airing that boyish tenor. After one has heard this, that, or the other man labelled Catholic gentleman, and the label bandied around to the point of nausea, one hesitates before labelling another that way. But Dillon really deserves such treatment, the words have some meaning when applied to him. His influence on us was really wholesome. . Sixty-nine ARTHUR THOMAS DOLAN 83 Boutelle Street, Leominster, Mass. Fitchburg Club l. 2. 5, 4g Chemists Club 43 Scientific ,Society l, 23 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 5. In the old days before modern chemistry was developed and when the elements were only four, the scientist felt a mystical sympathy with the stars, and in his search for the philosopher's stone which was to turn base metals into gold and act as a panacea for human woe, he revelled in the strange colors of his mysterious liquids and reverently called them by romantic names. In this day when the unusual rise of industry has caused science to become dull and prosaic, it is refreshing to find a man who brings to the dully odorous laboratory the cosmic imagination of the alchemist as well as the perseverance, advanced knowledge, and sound practical comm-on sense necessary in a scientist of the twentieth century. Arthur is a rare example of this fortunate admixture 'of utility and mysticism. With a calm, serious firmness of purpose, he applied himself diligently to his studies and he has probably wasted less time during his college career than any other man on the Hill. Naturally reticent, he was not known to a very great number, but those who were for- tunate enough to have been favored with his friendship will never tire of seeing his face. He has charmed them by his gentle, easy going nature and pleasing manners, and the in- tegrity and probity of his life have won their genuine admiration. we cannot even think of a single girl to kid him about. Failure can never dog the foot-steps of such an honest and generous fellow. Sc'l'!'l1fy IAMES PHILIP DONNELLY 266 No, Main Street, North Brookfield, Mass. Worcester Club I, 2, 3, -lg Intramural Athletics 3, 43 Day Scholars' Sodalitv l. 2, 5, lg Sub-Chairman Wor- cester Club Dance 4. Four years ago, on the winding road to Worcester, stood a tall, rather pleasant looking individual, known only to his North Brookfield constituents. On reaching his hilly des- tination, he lost no time in becoming one of the favorites of the class. Another home town boy made good. This popularity has not changed Iimmy for, just as in the beginning, he still stands on the winding road, still travels by the waiver route. Into his features Mother Nature carved a broad, pleasant smile, which refuses to depart, even after the Psychology returns. We all realize the value of a college education, but few of us would have been willing to make the sacrifice which lim has made to obtain it. Thus we understand why he never reached the apex of scholastic perfection, and we marvel at his ability to rise to a satisfactory level. We cannot lind words to express our admiration for so worthy a gentleman. For two years a great battle was waged behind that thinkefs brow. The opponents were Sociology and Education. The outcome of this bout was unknown until junior year when lim smilingly announced that Sociology had taken the count. lim thought much, but spoke little, putting his favorite dictum speak only when you have something to say into practice in all classes. .S'c'z'c'111y-0116 EDWARD IAMES DONOVAN 27 'Webster Street, Newport, R. I. Freshman Baseballg Freshman Baskctballg 'Varsity Basket- ball 2, 3g Independents 43 Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 45 Newport Club I, 2, 3, 4g Aquinas Circle sig Sodality 1, 2, 3, -l. 1, E A fast pass to a fast forward, the ball arching through the air swishes gracefully through the net, and two more points are chalked up for Eddie. When the unforgettable Iackie Donovan was called to the missionary life, the fates, looking kindly upon us, sent Eddie as an able substitute. Swiftness is his keynote, whether in basketball, classwork, or in the quest of a lass. Eddie was an outstanding performer on lack Reed's basket tossing quintet for two seasons, and this year he shone with the Independents. His activities, however, are not restricted to basketball, as he is a student above par, a bridge player of note, and one possessing marvelous technique in dealing with the female sex. The Donovan system is considered by many to be superior to the Culbertson method. However, it involves many difficulties, such as incurring the wrath of your opponent when attempting to signal your partner Qwhich happens to be the keynote of the Donovan systemj. Eddie was severely handicapped by the loss of his partner, Bill Stokes, and the consequent task of teaching the signals to his new cohortg but he managed to remain in the Winning column, and so far he has been uninjured physically. Good luck Eddie, and may your circle of friends be as great as it has been here on the Hill. .Sczfefzfy-Nun THOMAS LEONARD DONOVAN 1911 Commonwealth Ave., Auburndale, Mass. Boston Club l, 2, 3. -5: Economics Club 4, Aquinas Circle -lg Dramatic Society 1. 2, 3, f-lg Scientific So- ciety 35 Tonmhuwk I, 2, 3, 4. Usually freshmen in college are all on a par and start from scratch. For most of us this is a distinct advantage because We can be -our real selves and develop our personal characteristics. But Tom Donovan began freshman as Ierry's9' young brother and had to distinguish himself and assert his identity as Tom. Thirty-two was conscious of Tom's individuality from freshman through senior as the champion of the oppressed and sup- pressed opposition. Ingenious in debate, he was unyielding in the standards and ideals which he held firmly and defended staunchly. A voracious reader of modern literature, Tom is the best informed among us in regard to contemporary writers. As a candidate for the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy he was entirely out of sympathy with the study of Latin and Greek, preferring mathematics and English. So keenly interested in all kinds of mathematics was he that he pursued these studies eagerly and solved problems on his own initiative while the rest of us were racking our weary brains over cross-Word puzzles. Having a certain natural reserve, Tom had a select group of intimates who were his constant companions in work and play, mostly the latter. During the summers Tom passed his time in the Wall Street of Boston until the stock crash came, and thereafter did what all of us did. Tom stands out as one of the prominent Bachelors of Philosophy which is high tribute to his excellent qualities and talents. S6'L'!'7IIjf-fhl'l'6 I FRANCIS EDWARD 'DOWD 60 Maple Street, Chicopee Falls, Mass. Tennis Team 2, 3, 43 Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, :lj Springfield Club l, 2, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle ilg His- tory Academy 3, 43 B. I. F. 33 Freshman Debut- ing Societyg Sodality 1, 2, 3, 44 Sanctuary Society 3. 43 Senior Ball Committee. A In every class there are always a few who remain in the background of their own accord. Such is Frank. Thus it is no easy task to introduce him to the world in a fashion best calculated to reveal the real man that lurks under a veneer of aloofness. Please do not get the impression that the lad above is but another wearer of tall millinery. A gentle-:manly modesty and a desire to avoid prep-school rowdiness impelled Frank to seek the background and, Finding peace and quiet soothing to the soul, he never felt inclined to desert it for an ennervating limelight. But to those of us who were intimately acquainted with the Chicopean, he has always proved wide-awake, culturally alert, and a real friend. His stoic trustworthiness did much to balance the eccentricities found in other members of the class. His tran- quillity and reserve were qualities to be admired by those of us who were thrown into the jitters with every minor difficulty. An ability to assimilate the matter with ease, coupled with application, served him well whenever he thought he'd like to see his name on the honor roll. To close without mentioning Frank's chief extra-curricular interest, tennis, would be unpardonable. He was a varsity netman for three years, and went about his tennis as we're sure he'll go through life, quietly, but with the assurance of a master. Sezfemy-f0111' IOHN ARNOLD DOWD 3 Clive Street, Worcester, Mass. Purple Crusaders 3, 45 Glee Club Accompanist 1, 2, 3, -'lg Orchestra l, Z, 3, 4: Worcester Club 1, 2, 3, sig Aquinas Circle 4: B. I. F. 25 Day Scholars' So- dality l. 2, 3, 4: Senior Ball, Asst. Chairman. With this page we present one of the most honestly worthwhile offerings of the class of '32 to all affairs musical during the past four years. As pianist and accompanist of the Musical Clubs, Iohn has approached very near to our personal ideal of a genius with- out the disconcerting eccentricities popularly associated with the species. For besides being peculiarly adept at his art, lohn is a gentleman of the type that one is always glad to bring home to mother. He is modest in a way that only the truly great are, yet there is not a better or more loyal companion Within the ranks of the class of 32. Academically speaking, Iohn is intellectually fertile. He can discuss fand inventj educational theories with the facility of an old schoolmaster, and he can hold forth on a host of subjects with clarity and precision. There is no doubt that he will be welcomed into the ranks of learned pedagogues as a worthy and capable addition to the great teach- ing body. And when he is Hrmly ensconced in the rostrum, we shall miss him. We shall regret the loss of his cordial alifability, his plain and appealing sincerity, yet we are glad that we can share the expression of his talents with those he has chosen to identify himself with upon graduation. The class to a man is glad to have been honored with Iohn's company for four years, and no measure of the success that he will surely attain can fully equal the host of good wishes borne toward him by the class of '32, Sezfrnfy-fire HENRY A. DOYLE 84 Brandon Road, 'VVorcester, Mass. Golf Team 2, 5, 45 WVorcester Club l, Z, 3, 49 Aquinas Circle 4: H. I, F. 2: Day Scholars' Sodality l, 2, 3, 45 Senior Ball Committee. This little bundle of efliervesceut humanity is perhaps one of those contradictions of nature in which everything is big but stature. Scanning his long list of qualities and attributes we find that Henry possesses all that is desirable from a broad expansive smile to an overflowing heart. Endowed with an unassuming attitude and a genial philosophy of life, he entered Holy Cross in the autumn of 1928 to carve his name among the immortals. His success in the endeavor is amply attested to by the fact that, of all the Worcesterites that daily plod up the long hill, Henry is perhaps one of the best known and well liked members of the class of the year of depression. And Peanuts, fthis sobriquet he has borne with utter equanimity and good gracej has Filled his four years at Holy Cross with activity. The record of the golf team is a list of his athletic achievements, and the suc- cess of Worcester Club social activities is a tribute to his qualities of co-operaton and generalship. His inimitable personality and unvarying disposition have won to Henry a large coterie of fast friends, and it is impossible to imagine a contingency in which he would be without a vast number of rooters and supporters. Even the feminine element would be attracted, if not by his real charm, at least by his meticulousness of apparel and presenta- tion. S enemy-six CARROLL THOMAS DOZIER Hillcrest Avenue West, Richmond, Va. Southern Club l. 2, 3, elg President -lg Intramural Fool- ball l, 2, 3g Aquinas Circle llg Sodality I, 2, 3, 4g Consultor 4: Purple Key 4: Freshman Debating Societyg B. I. F. 3: Scientific Society 3: Senior Ball Committee. Few and far between are the brave sons of fair Dixie who throw on their great coats and hop the Northbound Limited to weather the wintry blasts of Mt. St. Iames. But a glance at the debonair gentleman pictured above will convince you that ol' Virginny endeavored to atone for her neglect with an overgenerous gesture,-and thereby the class of 1932 became the proud possessor of Carroll. Carroll is surrounded with an aura of atmosphere and glamor. We rather fancy those chivalrous and dashing tales of the Southland after having known such a charming bit of transplanted local color. His captivating personality and droll humor are as dis- tinctive as his Southern accent. He even carries his ideas on distinctiveness to the extent of thinking and threatening to vote Republican. But whatever may be said about him, it is certain that our Colonel has a marked aversion for the bourgeoisie. And in distinct contrast to those calumniating stories concerning the indolence of below-the-liners, Carroll went right out and chose one of the most difficult courses in the curriculum. His apparent unconcern and nonchalance regarding the matter would lead one to believe that he had elected nothing but Spelling and Writing. When not busy answering fan mail, Carroll indulges in informal forensic bouts. When so engaged, he can ride both horns of a dilemma with the utmost ease, and at the same time reduce his opposition to utter nonentity. Sezferzty-rezfeiz CHARLES E. DRISCOLL 9 High Street, Whitinsville, Mass. Worcester Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Day Students' Sodality 1, 2, 3, 45 Freshman Basketballg 'Varsity Basketball 2, 35 Independents 43 Senior Ball Committee. It might be possible to play our most famous indoor game with some measure of suc- cess against Luke, were it not for the fact that nature endowed him with the most perfect physical equipment for basketball, and then threw in a canny mind for the coordination of that gorgeous build. Luke was a poem on the court, and our greatest regret when the A. A. saw lit to discountenance basketball was that this lad would no longer go traipsing Eastern gymnasiums under the formal auspices of Holy Cross. We felt a shivery thrill chase up and down our spine each time we saw this tall, straight fellow elffectively muss up strategies of opponents and help add another to the great list of Holy Cross athletic conquests. i In Luke, Holy Cross had a brilliant student, a superlative athlete, and a fine fellow. Luke's engaging boyishness inevitably broke down the reserve of a classmate hitherto a stranger to him, and in that manner he gained for himself an enviable roster of friends. A gesture, a worcl, a mere facial expression of Luke's was often enough to ease the boredom of college life for us, and to give us the idea that if this man found life intriguing, why shouldn't we? Despite worldwide economic collapse, we are sure that somewhere there is bright success awaiting the good Driscoll. Sczferzty-eight IOHN MCMULLEN DUCEY 1028 Loyola Avenue, Chicago, Ill. VVcstcrn Club I, 2. 3, 49 Aquinas Circle el: Glec Club 1, 2, 5, 43 B. I. F. l, 2. 5, 43 Dramatic Society 35 Sorlality l, 2, 3, 43 Chairman Cath. Lit. Comm. -lg Purplr 2. 3, -lg Tomahawk 45 PATCHER Lit. Board 4g Senior Ball Committee. Any attempt adequately to portray the character and ability of the sorrel-topped representative of the clan of Ducey in such small space, would not only utterly fail of its purpose, but would be unnecessary. For the members of the class of '32 know from experience the substantial qualities and sturdy Fiber that constitute the make-up of the Little Philosopher. Iohn's aptitudes were of the Summa cum variety, and that his success was due in no way to the much-ridiculed practice of grinding is patently manifested by the scope of his extra-curricular activities. And in all that he turned his hand to, there was the label of success waiting to be stamped upon it when Iohn had Hnishecl. For example, in the literary Held-prescinding from his numerous contributions to the Purple and Toma- lmzulg-Iohn has already seen one of his articles published in a nationally known maga- zine, while a pamphlet from his facile pen will soon be on the market. And he was a leader not alone in the Held of theory and art. The Ducey Sales Cor- poration, purveyors of magazines of a high literary standard, was one of his brain chil- dren that set a high standard for elliciency and productiveness up here on the Hill. Then the Ducey Information Bureau, with its statistics and analytical charts is estimated to have done more to relieve the depression in our class than any other factor. Seventy-nine IOSEPH CHARLES DUGGAN 171 Merrimac Street, New Bedford, Mass. New Bedford Club 1, 2, 3, 45 President -lg Aquinas Circle 43 Philomath 23 Pirrci-uit: Lit. 45 Sodaliry I, 2, 3, 4g Crusader Council 43 Purple 2, 3, 43 Associate Editor 2, 33 Managing Editor 4. On this page the class of '32 presents one of the most unassuming and yet one of the busiest men on the campus. Ioe was by turn an outstanding class poet, Simon Legree of the Purple, a corridor spirit blithe, promoter extraordinary, organizer of New Bedford erprft de corps, and confidential adviser to the students of the Education class. When- ever the New Rochelle Q2-lt1l'fc?I'Zjl and other such magazines said nice words about the Purple, it was generally because of Ioeis graceful lyrics. Out at Canisius they termed him the pleasing antithesis of Carl Sandburg, but we knew him as a serious student of Educa- tion who used to dash OH a brilliant line or two of imaginative verse betwen classes, and who once persuaded an unsuspecting freshman bard to write an epic on the Holy Cross football team. As an aggressive managing editor, Ioe has helped materially in the production of a well-balanced magazine which ranks with the best. He is both a terror and nightmare to shirking editors and columnists, but as the sports editor will testify, he gets results. Academically speaking, Ioe always knew the matter on the eve of an examination. At such times it seemed as if he and Luke Smith were never so carefree. On one exam-eve, he spent a solid hour chanting McDonough, where's my shoe? in the atelier of astral interviews, until a committee was delegated to put him to bed. We never did Find out where the shoe went, and neither did McDonough. Eighty EDWIN PAUL DUNPHY, II l 31 Dryads Green, Northampton, Mass. Intramural Athletics 3, 43 Holyoke Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle -lg Economics Club ilg Freshman De- bating Socictyg Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. Brooklyn has its woodsg China has its Shug but Northampton flucky villagelj has Dunphy. But Holy Cross has had the loan of him for four years, and is rather loathe to give the playful sprite back. Oh, yes, the boy knows tricks-cute, playful tricks-with crumbs, tooth-paste, bed clothes, and anything else that can be imagined as matter for pranks. But the beauty of his humor is that it is two-sided, for Ed can take as well as give. Ed has been very well liked by all who have come in contact with him, and his affa- bility and infectious good humor augurs well for his future success in friend-making. As for studies, you would just have to drop into his room at any hour of the night and find a crowd there discussing philosophical questions of the day such as the intrinsic attribution of the analogous concept being. This fine analytical mind will some day be brought to bear upon the abstruse economical problems that beset our country, and the Romeo of the Choo-choos will come up smiling. Clark, Donovan, O,Donnell, et al., will testify to the depth of Dunphy's wisdom-if results of verbal battles have any argumenta- tive force. So it will seem that We must predict something for Ed, and perhaps the best thing that We can think of is success-success as can be tasted only by those who have the quali- ties that Ed has for enjoying it. Eighty-our EDVVARD RICHARD DURKIN, IR. 98 Berlin Street, Clinton, Mass. Of a modest and retiring nature, Ed has ever striven to remain in the background. Durk is quiet and seldom ventures information gratuitously, but once set in motion by some external stimulus demonstrates a fund of knowledge and a sense of hum-or that make his conversation at once instructive, entertaining and worthwhile. Ed's brilliance Was, however, not confined to the Day Ducker's room, and noontime periods in the Canteen. In class, under profess-orial interrogation, he displayed a famili- arity with the matter that caused his classmates to reckon him at once among 1932's intel- lectuals. During senior year studies inevitably increase daily in abstrusenessg the senior's ability to assimilate the matter becomes less and less as graduation approaches. While other men were dropping by the wayside, Ed was still in there, still near the top of the class. Reports drifted back to Pakachoag of other activities that Ed engaged in. These had merely an indirect connection with the Ratio SfZldl.0I'Ifl772 and I-Ioly Cross, and while Ed would not confirm, neither would he deny them. Time will tell. Tell what? Time will tell us how great will be the measure of Ed's success. Eighfy-two W'orcester Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Day Scholars' So. 1, 2, 3, 4. HERBERT EIDENBACH 1704 Grand Avenue, New York City, N. Y. Assistant Baseball Manager l. 2, 35 Manager 4, President Athletic Association llg Metropolitan Club l, 2, 3, 4g Aquinas Circle el: Economics Club -lg Freshman De- bating Societyg Philomath 2, 5, 45 Senior Council, PATCI-HER Lit. 43 Sotlality 1, 2, 3, 4g TUITZIIAIUUIQ 1, 2, 3, 4: Editorial Chairman -lg Purple Key -l. The turning of that page, brethren, gives us the opportunity we have been waiting for. It is indeed a pleasure to present Little Herbief, more familiarly known as Herk. His countless activities have puzzled us for four years, and we are still trying to Hgure out Where he found time for all of them. The most amazing aspect is that he always assumed his share of the work in his various positions, and still managed to make the honor r-oll with almost monotonous regularity. Never shirking, he was one of the few who dared to enter the business course, knowing all the time that the entrance warned all comers to abandon hope. But, lest we should give a false picture of I-Ierk, we beseech you not to imagine him as a grind. Of course some time had to be occupied in dodging the sunshine, but it would be hard to Hnd a more willing and capable fourth. From New York City to Westport and Worcester his social duties were as manifold and as readily accepted as his ollices. Ever cheerful, smiling, and alert, the business that is big enough to hold him will have to be big. He is Iack of all trades and master of most. No bull-session was ever complete without him. His repertoire of yarns was as varied and as credible as the occasion would permit. When the books of life are balanced, Herk, we expect to Find you on the credit side of the sheet. Eighly-Ihre: r WILLIAM S. ENDRES 45-47 Parsons Blvd., Flushing, L. I., N. Y. Assistant Manager Foothall 2, Manager Golf Team 4g Freshman Track, Metropolitan Club l, 2, 3, 43 Ath- letic Association 4, Freshman Debating Societyg Philomath -lg P.-1'I'CIIliR Bus. -lg Cheer Leacler 49 Sodality 1, 2, 3, rlg Puri le Key 43 Senior Ball Committee. Study intently, reader, the countenance that graces this page. Think whatever noble thoughts you may, but your best efforts will fall short of a true appraisal of the man. And in order to supply that which has failed of your notice, it is our present purpose and pleasure to introduce Bill-one of the highlights of the class of '32, He strode among us, fresh from the windswept fastnesses of Long Island, that section of New York which is a part of and still apart from the teeming metropolis. Bill is a strong link in the class chain, yet he is distinct from its fellows. He nonchalantly went his own way, following the impulses of his own desires, but Whichever way he turned, he took unto himself greater glory. Being an erratic southpaw with a penchant for form, he abandoned his connection with the giants of the gridiron, and took it upon himself to shape the clestinies of the mashie wielders. The old Scotch game was his love, and in addition he owned a type- writer, so the A. A. could not have made a more fortunate choice. The representative schedule that he drew up was entirely characteristic of his untiring efforts. Bill gave wholeheartedly of himself for the school. As a cheer-leader, he roamed the country from New York to Hanover and back in order that his moral support might be given to the team. Even in cheerleading he was unique, for he had no acrobatic inclinations. El.g'hfjl'f0lll' GREGORY LEO FAIRBEND 1 111-15 196th Street, Hollis, N. Y. Manager Tennis Team -lg Intramural Handball 3, 43 Metropolitan Club l, 2, 3, -lg Crusader Council 1, 2, 3. 43 Sodality l, 2, 3. 45 Sanctuary Society 3, 4g P.x1'cH12R Bus. 4, Purple Key 4. One who is dependable, just toward God and his fellow men, industrious and prudent, who has the power to be self-reliant and the fortitude to be humble, Senator Walsh has told us, can not but succeed. Consider your success assured, then, Greg, for these quali- ties are an ideal characterization of you. These are not hollow words or idle flattery. They come from the hearts of your classmates, who have played with you, studied with you and lived with you these four halcyon years. There is but one unfortunate incident in Greg's career at the Cross. It happened in freshman year and perhaps for that reason, if no other, is pardonable. At a critical moment in the Holy Cross-Harvard game, our exhausted warriors called time out. The eyes of Hfty thousand spectators were centered on the held, the excitement was intense. Greg, in his capacity ol: Assistant Manager, darted out from our bench with a pail of Water in his hand, intended for the thirsty Purple grid-men, but ere he reached them, Fate stepped in and tripped him. Some say to this day we might have won but for this unfortunate accident. Commencement, we are told, is just the beginning. Unfortunately it is also the end- the end of those many happy friendships such as yours, Greg, which We have enjoyed these four short years and shall cherish forever. Ezghty-line ROCCO JOHN FANELLI 89 Flatbush Avenue, Hartford, Conn. Hartford Club 1, 2, 3, 'lg President 43 Aquinas Circle 43 Intramural Athletics 3, 44 Dramatic Society 35 So- dality 1, 2, 3. . A Had this gentleman a little more of the eccentricity that makes his roommate so distinguished, he could tread the boards of any stage and give a perfect Qfor us, at leastj characterization of a medieval inn-keeper. And in so designating our worthy brother, we have in mind only the jolliest of connotations. For four years, Rock's room has been a haven of rest for the weary Worcesterites who found the atmosphere in the room in back of the post oliice a bit uncongenial. The thing that we remember most clearly is his equanimity under the exacting conditions of trying to study amidst a blur of conversation and cigarette smoke which was occasionally punctuated by the sound of a heavy object striking somewhere else than where the iras- cible Paolucci had aimed it. If such there be as purgatory on earth, we nominate Rock for a high place among the celestial stars. But there are a thousand other qualities which make us quite proud of the genial little archangel. A patient and untiring seeker after truth, an omnivorous devourer of knowledge, a generous dispenser of it after he had acquired it-as witness his noble and sacrihcing labors in the instruction of Worcester children in their Faith-a constant and reliable friend, an aesthete yet an athlete, a person of charm and tact, we are sure that Rocco faces the world of reality with all the characteristics which so aptly fit a man for the attainment of the success which he so worthily deserves. Eighty-:ix IOHN PATRICK FARNON 10-l Vernon Street, Worcester, Mass. Intramural Athletics 3, 45 VVorccster Club l, 2, 3, 4, Aquinas Circle 4g Economics Club 45 Glee Club I, 2. 3, 45 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4g Sen- ior Ball Committee. Who has not met the Eighth Vice-President of the Room 84 Associates, the senior partner of Smith and Co.? Football quarterbacks and bridge players have a definite plan of action for dubious moments, but when Iohn is in doubt he puns. A certain horticul- turist, very interested in young shrubbery, who is rather close to Iohn's heart Qin fact, he sits next to him in philosophyj will furnish ample evidence of his proclivity in that art. Iohn is a philosopher with such an admirable equanimity of mind that he is never perplexed. He has even been quoted as saying that philosophy in junior A was a snap course! In senior too he gracefully glided through the abstruseness of Theology and Psychology, so we can truthfully say that here at least is one man who wrestled success- fully with syllogisms. When voting for the best mixer of the class of '32, we were practically certain that Iohn would walk away with the honor, but unfortunately, pale dryl' won out by two votes. Perhaps his adeptness at the piano makes him so popular, and his singing voice, resonantly ringing in Room 84, will perhaps account for his peace of mind, though at times it rather definitely accounts for the opposite state of ours. To become more serious, we have met with many men in collegiate life and activity who are outstanding for some particular quality or achievement, but we predicate no particular one of John because he is a charming composite of them all. Eighzy-:wen THOMAS WILLIAM FARRELL 116 Barker Street, Hartford, Conn. Freshman Baseballg 'Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 45 Hartford Club 1, 2, 3, f-lg Secretary 1: Dance Chairman 45 Aquinas Circle '43 Ring Chairman 3g Sotlality 1, 2, 3, 43 Economics Club rl. To the friends of our subject we tender congratulations. To those now making his acquaintance we promise a treat and a revelation. For Dukker arrived at Holy Cross Without a brass band, but after he was here only a short while, we began to cast about for a culpable party to shoulder the blame for such a grievous oversight. As early as sopho- more year, he stepped into a gaping hole in the outfield of a championship ball club and convincingly proved his mettle. For the past three years, spectators have marvelled at his dexterous agility afield and his prodigious prowess at bat. In fact, after a certain game in New Haven, a scout whose opinion is highly respected, predicted great things for Dukker. But to round out the picture, we must predicate other characteristics as well. He is :i favorite, not alone with his famous coach, but he has won the love of the faculty as well. His faithful diligence in the matters of college routine established him securely in that quarter. And his classmates, too, admired him. A practical display of their regard was given when they chose him to select and distribute the class rings, and a very capable job he performed. Without regard to the team on which he may play in after life, we heartily agree with the comment of the above mentioned scout, that Dul4ker,' will be right in there, and will operate as fifty per cent of the ball club. Eighty-eighl WILLIAM FRANCIS FARRELL 10 South Ward Street, Worcester, Mass Worcester Club 1 2 3 4 Aqumas Crrcle 4 B I 7 4 Crusrdcr Councxl 1 7 3 4 PAFCHER Lrt 4 Freshman Dcbltrng, bocrety Day Scholrrs So dallty 1 bemor Ball Commrttee Here, ladres and gentlemen, we present the rncarnatlon of the questron mark B111 from the very Hrst dawn of freshman year, has been one of the most consrstent contro verslalrsts xt has ever been our pleasure to meet Not that he rndulges rn meanmgless argument or that he querles for the sake of consumrng tlme No Brlls mterrogatory 'lttrtude comes from a real desrre to get to the nub of ex ery problem, and hrs mqursmve ness IS born of a deep rooted love ot knowledge whether rt be speculatrve or practrcal Many a professor wrll never cease to rue the day he met Bull Many an uneasy day and mght they have spent rn mullmg over rn therr mrnds the lrttle pomts ot erudr tron that he rarsed rn the classroom Strange mdeed how the mere rarstng of the hand wnll cause strong men to pale' And Brll rs an artrst at repartee H15 qulck sall1es and retorts have always left one a brt astounded, but the amazement 15 always mlngled with admlratxon at the verbal powers of the m rn No argument was too SCFIOUS for hrm to refram from rnjectrng rnto It bnllrant flashes of genurne wrt and hrs sh1ns remarned unbrursed because lt was genurne We mrght have slumbered more peacefully durrng lectures had we not known Brll, but the loss rs neghglble compared to what we have gamed rn good lellowslup and pleasrng acquarntance Tfghly mnr . . ,,,, .--If -,Q ,-,,s ., 1 -1. 'An ..' r , K ' . 5' ' . . . , , . , t 1 I 1 L .. . . 1. c ' t L , e l ARTHUR I. FAUCHER 54 Kenwood Avenue, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Undergraduate Club I, 2, 3, -lg Day Scholars' Sotlality 1, 2, 4. Behold the man who has spent more time on the Hill than any other day student. Arthur, as evening major-cl-omo of the library, attended to the intellectual desires of stu- dents long after the shadows of night had blanketed the Hill. A certain night motor- man on the South Worcester line could tell what time it was by the mere fact that Arthur boarded his vehicle at precisely the same instant each night on his trek back to famous Lincoln Street district. Arthur is Tom Iudge's choice for All-American student librarian, and in that capacity, he came in contact with many famous visitors who lavished praise upon him for his courtesy and kindness. Wliat makes Arthur stand out, however, is his sincerity. This quality served as a magnet, and as a result it was no task at all for Arthur to gather to himself a host of friends. His earnestness was displayed in every activity in which he partook, and the thoroughness with which he completed every task augurs well for his perseverance in what- ever Helcl of life he chooses. Scholastically, he was a student who kept abreast of the matter with consistent regu- larity. I-Ie rarely experienced the pre-exam fear which gripped many of us, and his love of the studies and the Finer arts led him to elect philosophical Latin-a fact in itself which testifies to his deep-rooted culture and gentlemanly love of all that is scholarly. Ninety IOSEPH IAMES FAY 10 Ripley Terrace, Newton Center, Mass. Class President lg Golf Team 2, 3, -lg Captain 43 Boston Club 1, 2, 5, 45 Aquinas Circle -lg Crusader Council 1, 2, 3, -lg Senior Councilg Purple Key 43 PATCHER Bus. -lg Frosli Reception Chair- man 23 Sanctuary Society I, 2, 35 So- dality 1, 2, 3, 4g Senior Ball Committee. The man of the hour, the punster whose verbal quips have often endangered his right to further existence, the golfer par excellence-that, ladies and gentlemen, is our Tabby.U He very often stole the march on local newspapers in the dissemination of news. He can render a graphic account of every important item in print on the day, and embellish it for your edification with his own illuminating remarks. He is at the same time a divot digger who replays every hole he has lost, and one of the most genial hosts in the numerous H. C. night clubs that operate after lights', with the immemorial session as their chief forte. Verily, he is a great man. Indeed, he is a very imposing figure about the campus. ln freshman year we were attracted to this ruddy-complexioned lad who, we were told, was running for a class office. So much attracted were we, that when the Hnal votes were counted, f'Tabby was the man upon whose shoulders devolved the task of amalga- mating an amorphous mass of freshmen into a homogeneous class. Suhfice it to say that he accomplished the task with a grace and facility that was decidedly Fayish. Gifted with a personal charm that was graceful and compelling, j'oe's ability to make and keep friends was easily understandable. His auspicious career, begun as class presi- dent, ended in glory as captain of the golf team. May you always hit them straight down the fairway, Tabby! Ninety-one EDWARD LOUIS FINN, IR. 83 Bancroft Road, Northampton, Mass. Holyoke Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 4: Aquinas Circle 4g Sodality 1, Z, 3. 4. Every class has one member whom it will willingly offer as the answer to a maiden's prayer, so without further ado, allow us to present the dashing Beau Ideal of Northamp- ton, I-Ioly Cross, and sundry points between. Wherever Ted goes, he conquers hearts, minds, and souls. His ability to make and hold friends is easily explained when one becomes acquainted with his personable traits. Being an excellent basketball player, Ted became one of the outstanding stars in the intramural Hrmament, and in junior year he was chosen to represent the class on the team which journeyed to meet the Boston College class outfit. He was also one of the guardians of the cow pasture behind Beaven for the famous Top Beaven nine. His divers athletic activities did not prevent his energetic participation in the academics, and his remarkable powers of concentration and assimilation stood him in good stead throughout his entire college career. Ted's success seems to be a foregone conclusion if his ambition and perseverance are any indication of possible attainment. His store of anecdotes, and his witty presentation, made his cubicle a gathering place for all who delighted in the recitation of humorous tales, and there is no doubt that the story of the trained mice and the food from home will bear unending repetition. We are grateful to whatever fates sent Ted to Holy Cross, and in parting, we assure him that he will always be held high in our esteem as a true 'Cross 111311. Ninety-info X , IOHN FLEMING FITZGERALD 30 Hollywood Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club l, 2, 3, 45 PA'rcIuaa Lit. 45 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, -l. It is the habit of the vast majority of high school students to look forward to the days when they can depart from their boyhood surroundings and tal-ze up abode in some dis- tant and strange quarters where new acquaintances await them. But Red,,, with a characteristic Hair for chiastic order, inverted the process and, after spending his adolescent years at St. Iohn's Prep, came back to his native heath for college training. Possibly he discovered that the home town could not be improved upon as a winter- ing place, or what is more likely, he decided that the most worthy educational institution for his purpose was at the end of the car line. Whichever is the case, the FitzGerald scion is a laudable asset to any school, and one who serves as an elevating influence on his asso- ciates by his unpretentious yet tremendous portrayal of the virtues of good fellowship. Although, as stated, his actions are not of the spectacular type, they are characterized by a definiteness and solidity that serve to reHeet a unity of purpose and attainment thereof. Red works hard, studies hard, and plays hard, it is this whole-hearted abandonment to the affair of the moment that assures him of a reasonable degree of success in whatever he undertakes. And it goes without saying that when one becomes accustomed to success -and Red has felt it glow quite often-there is no doubt that he will continue to make it his permanent possession. Bon voyage, sorrel-top! Ninety-three LOUIS G. FITZSIMMONS 6116 McPherson Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. Western Club 1, 2, 3, 49 Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 5, 45 Aquinas Circle 45 Freshman Debating Socictyg B. I. F. 7, 3, 45 Freshman ,Prize Debate, Sanctuary Society, Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. Along about junior year the average college inmate begins to wonder whether extra- curricular activities are worth the energy expended on them, having, by that time, become a bit tired of it all. How far this incipient cynicism takes him, will not concern us here. Let it be said, though, that Fitzsimmons, while seeming conscientiously to avoid all entanglements in class politics, publication bureaucracy, and athletic managerships, missed none of the reputed benehts of such occupations. He did, however, lose out on the head- aches that seem so much a part of being active. Knowing the Middle West as the Bible Belt of Dr. Mencken, and its inhabitants as prototypes of Mr. Lewis' more or less famous characters, we were disillusioned on learning that Fitz was a child of that frontier. I-Iis various enthusiasms never failed to amuse those of us who required a report that the Senate had given the country back to the Indians before we should violate a com- fortable somnolence. Every now and again he would be in the throes of a consuming interest. Once we tried to rescue him from a strange desire to know everything about so trivial a thing as Insurance Banking. No good. He went and digested everything he could find on that highly exciting business. Such energy and ambition worked havoc in the restful programs of Fitzsimmons' intimates. Soon we found ourselves imitating a few of his dynamic didos. We might have done worse. Ninety-fam' WILLIAM IOSLPH FLANAGAN IR 7 School Street, South Barre, Mass Worcester Club l 2 J 4 DavSchol1rs Sodalxty Thls young man forsook the qulet envrrons ot Barre to whet hrs th1rst for knowledge on the Hrll of Pleasant Sprxngs When It xs sfud that he was eager to ga1n whatever knowledge was IH store for htm, no mlstake IS made, for Brll, 1n hlS qtuet way pursued the A B course w1th a deterrmnatlon that may have surprlsed even hunself On h1s trek to and from h1s home town, B111 s classy Ford was 1nd1spens1ble, and xr proved to be '1 means of transportation for many others who were none too eager to elunb the steep hrll by pedal locomotxon It cm be sand that Bxll never refused a rlde to anyone tor h1s motto Was, There IS always room for one more Even when h1s NCl11ClC was borrowed for a short txme 1n semor year, he bemoaned the fatt that he could not furmsh transportfntron for all h1S classmates No one could help llklng B1ll, and all who fell under the spell of h1s snule, wanted hmm as a frrend Hrs persomhty was not of the dynannc type but nevertheless lt had an attracuon and 1 charm that was powerful rn 1ts IHHLICHCC He was earnest 1n everythmg that he drd, and ID hrs s1ncer1ty he created a type that should be representatlve of every true college man Bxll elected Ilducauon, and we know that as a pedagogue he w1ll lmpart such know ledge and character to hrs pup1ls as wxll be worthy of that wh1ch he lumself possesses Nzncly fiue , . .. '1 . l 7 ' '. l - 1 1 4 r . ' 1, 2, 3, 4. c ' 1 WC C L tl ' J v Q I L Q ' 4 . . X . 1 4 V . E ' , . . H . ., . . . V - C W L 1 . . . . . . 1 . L ' ', e 1 . . -1 . . . . 1 t - IUSTIN CHARLES F LANNIGAN 14 Lathrop Avenue, Binghamton, N. Y. Binghamton Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Southern N. Y. Club 1, 2, 3, '-lg Aquinas Circle 4g Philomath 2g Dramatic So- ciety Z3 Tomnhawlq l, 2, 33 Senior Ball Committee Pictured above, ladies and gentlemen, we have the pride and joy of Binghamton, or at least half the pride and joy, in case Iimmie becomes insulted. If you think Culbert- son and Lenz are good, you should see our Iustin play a no-trump hand with one honor. Iustin is one of those quiet, unassuming lads who has the air of a dreamer, yet who is a decidedly practical and efficient person. As a member of the ever-together trio of Flannigan, McDevitt, and the heretic from Trenton, he has enjoyed his four years at Holy Cross in an apparently uneventful manner, but we can vouch that in so doing he has lived life to the utmost. His various escapades will bear no telling here, but suHice it to say that we can assure you that Iustin is, appearances notwithstanding, a live wire. As an advocate of the principle that college is preparation for life, Iustin was at all times a conscientious and diligent student. I-Ie has had his eye on the law profession for some time, and it really is too bad that he and Iimmie can't compromise between undertaking and law, because that beautiful casket plate that has adorned their door for the past years would certainly look nice on an office portal. But even the best of friends must eventually come to the parting of the ways, and as Ius and Iim'l part, the class feels that it, too, is parting from one whom it has learned to admire and respect. Best of all good luck to you, Iustin. Ninety-.fix IAMES IOSEPH FLATLEY 34 VIDC Street, Manchester, Miss Lwulf lcnnl 2 4 Ir1tr'1n1ur1l Xthlctns -l Boston Llub 1 2 -l Aqu1n.1s Cntlc -l 'in1lf1I1t5 l 2 -l Mlnchester bv the Sea on the North .Shore IS f'11DOLlS for two thmgs One of them 15 Smqmg Beach 'md the other IS Slllglll Flatley Brother Flqtley 15 one ol the few Hmshed products of ICSUIK educatxon 111 our U11dSt because is h l1llT1SCll so bllthcly puts 1t, Ive trled them all But even though Beiven d1d not resound to 'Would y'1 l1l1e t1 take a Walk? the return of loc. H1 semor yeir 'unply suH1eed lor the melody we h'1d been depr1ved ot SIDCC the conclus1on of sophomore Among h1s classmates, joe has been regarded as gelllill, contented ind den1ocr'1t1c There IS pC1'l1 lPS no greater Holy Cross rooter XVltl1lI1 60 mdes of Eoston th1n Ioe, and It lb lus dlsplay or sp1r1t h1s unswervlng devot1on, md h1S cewseless eFrer1 escente thqt 1n'1rl1s hmm as a true son of Alma Mwter Even though the efferxesccnte OCC lSlOH'llly bubbles over the run ot the full cup of h1s PC1'SOll'll1lIy, We 1an truly say tl'l lf he IS for 1 tlvlt, 'x man And Ioe his v1s1on and lIT1l7IUOll Very olten the clouds sccrns emblttled '1l50LlK h1s ruddy brow, but underneath their brow there runs 1 tram of thoughts tlmt IS destlned for '1 lugh 'ind noble stat1on It IS seldom th1t the dresuner 1nd pl IDIILI' 19 1rr1ved xt the goal ot a1nb1t1on, but for loc we predlct 1 I'1lCl1C on the corr1dor of l1le 11111 w1ll be worthy of h1s talent and an1b1t1on The rmds n1'1y be ClCVlOL1S, th wiy ITl'ly be l1'11'9l1, but 1t w1ll 1nev1t'1bly end 111 some nuoonhght drenched spot where success w1ll be met Nznelfx 1111 1 . -s 1. . . ' , , 1 1 1- , 1 1 : 1 as I 1 w - . . . 1 C - - -- - - - - c . .A . . . . . , 4 -4 . . H Y 1 . 1 e ,1 S 1 ' - ' 11: - as ' 1: -, . 1 1 1 1 1 7' ' - ' T . 1 1 1 , 1 1 ' ' , 1 ' 1 . 1 ' ' .' 1 ' ' . . , 1 1 . 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 . ' ' ' 1 1 1 - - . . 1 , 1 1 , L 1 1 1 1 . f ' 1 L 1 1' , L .t N. K , , 1 1 - . , A ' 1 ' , 1. 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . , K . .L A A f . 1 1 1 S 1 1 1 1 I , M 1 . s 1-f '1 THOMAS FRANCIS FOGARTY 8 Dawson Street, Providence, R. I. Assistant Manager Basketball 35 Manager 49 Rhode Isl- and Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Dance Chairman 'lg Scientific Society 3, 43 Tonmhrzwk 35 Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. All of us can remember, in spite of two years' philosophy, those wild days in fresh- man when incarceration in an all-too-well-ventilated dormitory was a threat that was held over our heads like the sword of Damocles. Yet here is a man who voluntarily chose exile in that Icelandic region rather than struggle through the drifts from Regis Hall to the portals of the chapel only to have the massive doors unrelentingly close before his very eyes. It was then too that Tom gained wide repute as the original minute-man, and anyone who has seen him at 8:59 on a late sleep morning fofficial or otherwisej knows that he is entirely deserving of the appellation. We can truthfully say that we never have seen, or never hope to see, his equal at dressing, washing, and eating on the run. After two years of acclimation, Tom settled down to real business as a pre-medical student. Forthwith he devoted himself to the discovery of the whys and wherefores of Brer Rabbit, and to the pursuit of the chromosome. However, he did not become lost in the catacomb of the laboratories to the extent of forsaking friendships and social activities. The success of the Christmas dance of the Rhody club will attest to ability to move grace- fully in social circles. As a friend, Torn is surpassed by none, he was never too busy to turn a sympathetic ear or to perform a favor. Moreover, he is blessed with an abundance of good humor that caused him to be sought out as a highly desirable companion. N1'11e1y-eight IANAES FRANCIS FOLEY 6 'I yler Street, Newport, R I Intnmur ul Athlttus J Newport Club l 2 J 4 Dwnce C ll'1llI11ll1 a llconoxmcs C lub 4 1-l1'CSl1lTlI1I'l Debatmg 'Society Plnlom nth 7, J P'XTC'HlR L1t -l Sodal rt' 7 5 el S1nctu1r3 Socmty 7 3 Precise punctuallty plus profuse prohclencyl Perhaps th1s statement more aptly char acterlzes the gentleman p1ctured above thwn anythmg else that we can thmk of after watchrnrf hrm tzrelessly scale the heights of WlSLlO1U durmg the four years It has been our came to Holy Cross to supplement a Chrlstnn Brother complcx with 1 Iesultrcal perplex, and the result was fxstoundmg L1t1n Greek, and French were 'ls chxld s play Rhetorxe only served to whet the appetrte, and Phxlosophy crowned the man' Then there IS the hbrary He can tell you to the tens the number of catalogued and uncatalogued books, and probably has read more of both than any four students or two faculty members you care to mentlon Add to the lnsatrablc cravmff for book larnm a name ab1l1ty to see, to know, to understand at s1ght, and you have the eprtome of out PCFSPICZICIOLIS classmate And to round out the gentleman, we have those amnble qualmes that crop out 1I'1 a branch whose tree IS solldly rooted 1n Gaelic sorl IIITI would, 1I'1 the ICl'U11HOlOgV of '1 dotlng mother, be called a Hne and bmw lid because llong wxth the scholarly accoutre ments with whrch he 15 mumhcentlv endowed, he 15 Ilso eqtupped wrth the soclal and personal graces that sire so necessary for movement rn thc world WV1fh xts present day standards Nzrzety nmc L , ., -, 1 '4- -3. 1 . - K 1 4 7 I I 3 3 ! 5' I' V - 1 1- 4 ' . 1- N 0 4 K 1 I , . . ,, , . , , . ' 1. t ' r we j V ' n 5 , L ': 1 - a - - -. - s 5 1: -x J I 5 H ' 1 ' - -v s 4' , . li C A L ' . L U n 5 1 . y I 4 I x. . pleasure to have his company. Harhng from the Newportlan realm of Llttle Rhody, Iml ' ' . 4 ' . 1 l , N t c A , . l ' , r - - - A - cc , - 1 ar . y . . U Y l ,, . 'D . -A C .L I ' C ' - cc 9 va I - ' . C , 1 1 1 - EDWARD AUSTIN FRIEL 28 Colton Street, Worcester, Mass. Freshman Baseballg Intramural Athletics 2, 3, -lg Wor- cester Club 1, Z, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 45 Day Schol- ars' Soclality 1, 2, 3, 4. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, Eddie is another one of that great big Friel family that has enjoyed such prominence at Holy Cross during the past several years. They say that it is harder to hold a bright place than to gain one. But that is a question for the casuists to decide, and will not be discussed here. It is enough to say that Ed has done both. He followed in the footsteps of his brothers-but he did more than follow. During his so- journ with the class of thirty-two, he made his own personal contribution to the history and atmosphere of the Hill. , Raised within the very shadows of old Fenwiclis spires, Ed must have been filled in earlier youth with an enthusiasm for the traditions and ideals of Alma Mater which few have had the fortune to possess. When most of us were shooting marbles on every pave- ment from Maine to Missouri, Ed was dusting bats for the finest ball clubs that raised the perennial pennant on the Fitton flagpole. Dugan, Ryan, Simendinger, Carroll all patted Eddie on the head for luck. And when he came of age, he did a little head-patting and willow-wielding in his own right as star third-baseman on lack Reid's freshman team. Weill remember Ed chiefly, however, as the life of the party at all Worcester Club functions, and as the cheerful possessor of an incorrigible auto and an inexhaustible line of stories about the old Hill. So long, Ed, and best wishes. One hmzdred f. FRANCIS IAMES FYNN 104 Wilson Avenue, Rumford, R. l. Intramural Athletics 1, 2. 3, 41 Rhode Island Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle -lg Soclality 1, 2, 5. -lg Senior Ball Committee. 'KRe'd,' claims that he hails from Rhode Island, but after years of trying we have never been able to pin him down to any definite township. Perhaps he shuns Providence, because it is a name not uncommong perhaps he halks at Rumford because he does not relish being labelled a rustic. But whatever his native habitat, we will always remember that he sojourned at Holy Cross. Frank made quite a name for himself on the soccer Held, but his chief claim to fame-as he himself asserts--was his power of invective when talking Buck Mahoney into a frenzy before the big boy went out to set the opponents back with an. allotment of only two hits. But let it not be thought that Frank shines only through the deeds of other men. Fundamentally individual, and possessing a cheery humor, he has unconsciously elevated himself in the esteem ofthe class, and it is with a feeling of sorrow that we part with him, realizing, of course, that our loss is the world's gain. Best of luck, Red,', and we'll be expecting to hear from you soon. ,Y 0110 AIIIIIIITII our FRANCIS A. GALLAGHER, III 57 Colonial Road, Providence, R. I. Intramural Athletics I, 2. 5, 45 Rhode Island Club l, 2, 3, 45 President 43 Aquinas Circlc -lg Economics Club elg History Academy 3, 45 Choir 3, 43 P.-vrci-nik Lit. 4g Tanlahuwk 3, 45 Freshman Debating Societyg Philomath 2, 4g Dramatic Society 3, -lg Sotlality 1, 2, 3, elg Sanctuary Society l. 2, 3, 43 Cru- sadcr Council lg Senior Ball Committee. lf you were ever hungry and needed sustenance, where was the place to f-ind it? Up in Gallaghefs room. He had so much food that surely only Providence could have sent him to us. We certainly felt sorry for Frank the day some cruel, calculating individual stole two pies from room 47 Loyola and spoiled a feed. But there is more to be told about this fellow. In junior year, as everyone knows, Frank decided to join the House of David, so he didn't shave for about two months Cfor proof see picture elsewhere in this bookj. How did he look? The reason he finally shaved was so that he could wax hilarious as it were, and take one fair maiden to the Iunior Prom. Don't worry, Frank, Ray could not play football either because they could not find pants big enough for him. You know, Frank is a great defender of the opera, but his roommate much prefers jazz. Flaming Freddy just lives on such things, and when the opera played, Freddy char- acteristically slept. Frank was rather frightened one time at the insane asylum when a certain person held to the policy that a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. Amen. Good luck in business, Frank, and when you are some day seated in a large office chair, don't forget about the time you worked days to account for the one cent on the balance sheet. Ona' hundred Iwo IAMES LAWRENCE GALLAGHER 23-l N Dithrldge Street, Plttsburvh P1 Pittsburgh Club 7 J 4 V1cc Prcsulent 4 Aquinas C11 Ylce President Suentxfn. bocictv -l Sodality l 7 3 4 Purple lxu -l Senior Ball fJOlTlITl1ttLC Now here s something Strike up the band boys VVh1lst we gather round to usher from our midst all too soon 1 Worthy son of Prttsburgh the man by the mme of Gal lagher, philosopher extraordinary nd lT121Il1C11T'lflC.1dI1 pal exccllcvzce One need not tax phy specimen, or to hear those 99 s droning out COI1S1SIL.11tly at the readlng ot the Physics marlts while the hoi polloi looked on lealously and pretended not to notice In tact it was none other than Iim who received the Physics med il last year for being practically perfect Now there s nothing better to relieve the day s montony he would say, than a Hne, good, gold medal One of lim s other specialties is his flat refusal to start the day in the refectory The number of mornings he and Bill Walsh this gentleman will be treated later were not seen scootmg over to Grangefs to have breaklast lor two, could be counted on your Hve Fingers It 1S hard to say yust what one thing in lim 1S most characteristic Perhaps it is that dry Wit ofh1s which has made mmy 1 day more enjoyable for his circle of friends, perhaps it is his very deliberateness Our best wishes follow lim to Carnegie Tech, Where he expects to learn even higher mathematics May the gods smile Our' hnnrll rd Ihree . . . , I . D , 2' ' W. K, 4 -5 'Q 'Q '-., V: ' '-. cle 45 - ' ' N 3 ' ' ' ' ' -I , I Q . ' .'- 1 A s ' . ' ' . ' s a - ' , - s , h . ,r . . . . L I h . . , 1 I - - . ' C . ' ' A ' . the memory unduly to recall junior year and see him knocking them dead in the philoso- . , . . . . . 7 . . . . I 2 . ' .t . . -s 1 ' - s I aa sa . V . . , L t T 3, IOSEPH P. F. GALLAGHER 279 West 78th Street, New York City Freshman Football: 'Varsity Football 2. 5, 43 Freshman Basketballg Intramural Athletics 2, 3, -lg Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle -lg Philnmath 2, 3, -Llp Freshman Debating Society: Sodality l, 2, 3, -lg Consultor el: Sanctuary Society 1, 2. 5, -lg Tom- ahawk l, Z, 5g Alumni Editor -lg Purple 2, 3, 44 Choir 3, el Back in the sadly misunderstood Victorian Age, Newman described a gentleman as one who never gives olfense. Too few young men in this day of skittish or pseudo- sophisticated collegians, are able to fulfill it. But Ioe, in his modest, self-effacing way, has iitted the definition so perfectly that one would think the tables were turned, and the Cardinafs formula had been made precisely to suit Ioe. Great of body as well as of soul, Ioe naturally had an inclination toward things athletic, and he generously gave his rich physical resources to the furtherance of the Purple's gridiron fame. After three years of heroic effort he was rewarded with the coveted insignia. But it was along intellectual lines that Ioe achieved his highest and most spectacular distinctions. The pages of the Purple shine with his magic lyrics-some are fragile, some staid and grandiose, but all are delightfully expressive of his rich and sensitive soul. Ioe was always eager for knowledge. He has a strong emotional vivacity, a healthy impressionability, and a laudable greed for new ideas. And these qualities, balanced by his sober clarity of judgment, infinite patience, and almost incredible perseverance, make him daily a Wiser man. Ioe is by no means a closet philosopher. He has drunk deep of the stream of lifeg he has learned of mankind by studying man. One hIl!IIIl'EIIf0Zl1' SALVADOR ANGEL GONZALEZ 5 Comeruo Street, M1ran1ar, Puerto RICO Intr1mur1l Athlttxcs 2 J 4 Aqumas L1rclc 4 Fresh Ili 111 Dtb.1t1nt, Soclttx Stxtntxht South l 2 Sod rl Senor Sal c1me and added a touch of warmth to thc cl iss, a brexth of the sun Flecked Carlbbean Gentle, Wltty, COHHOIISEHI dau emmes blonde: hc xery shortly became one ot the purple patches ol the class Hhs temperament was such that he craved and sought after the eXot1c, and It wls wh11e Ill pursult ot 1t that he hectme the cofzrzomcuf I-lls was the most complete Red Book on the campus Sal enloyed the d1st1nct1on of havmg the best decorated room 111 thc college The masterp1ece of adornment was the occupant of the other bed There was ex eryth1ng rn the room whxch one could want for settmg up l1ght l1OLl5ClxCCP1I1g It any sort of unplemcnt were wanted, any kmd of ITlCd1C1I'lC, any sports accessory, at was to be found 1n Sal s room The law of d1m1n1sh1ng returns, however, was 1n full force at the end of the year thc room st1ll retamed the garby 1n all IIS pr1st1ne beauty It was easy to make fnends wxth Sal, and 1t was propornonally d1Hicult not to enjoy the fnendshxp He showed us that the fr1endly qual1t1es ot Spanxards of wh1ch we read 1n books, were never exaggerated He had 111 l'11lT1 the tralts ot a true Old World gentle man One thlng IS certam we'll talk a lot about S11 afterwards and recall l'11IT1 as one ol the lumlnarles of the class I-115 remarks we shall enjoy repcatmg One hlllllllflf fit 1 1 , . A . . ,'-, 1 . ' . . . 4.-. . . Y . , , , .. . .L ., J- .. .t 53 1, 1tyl,2,3,4 , . , 1 , ' 1 . 4 ' ' Inc 2 ' ' . ' ' . - . ,, 3 . . . , 1 ' ' ' 4 . ' ' 4. f . . . t . 1. l I . V A A Y . . A 1 . . L l . . . .. . . , . . 3 1 ' C I l 1. . . , f 6 o C L ' . . - t . t . 5- L14 ' t . i 1 . . . . CYRIL A. GGYETTE 22 East Main Street, Mystic, Conn. leics 3, 45 New Haven Club l, 2, 5, 43 Aquinas Circlc -lg Philomath 33 Scientific Society 1, 2, 3, 43 President '-lg Sodality l, 2, 3, 4. Besides being in the science course, which limits the extra activities of those Working for a B.S. degree to just that, few if any of the members of our class have the unique distinction which Frenchy has in having Won his letter as a pole vaulter of no mean ability and in having donned on occasions the white flannels as ri cheer leader. Confidentially his room-mate told us that this Connecticut Yankee prefers Southern girls. However, we have often seen him preferred by New England lassies. Especially admriable, as we consider 4'Frenchy seriously, is his pleasant personality, which is magnetic in making his fellows real friends. When he sported a snappy yachting cap at a precarious angle We knew that he was studying, but he was not often seen thus attired. Mystic, Connecticut, is on the Sound, so having grown up in a salty atmosphere, he needed this nautical reminder of home up here in our Berkshires. Some even say that he was a sailor, having made a voyage to Bermuda during Easter time when we lived in Beaven. I-Ie described this trip to us very vividly, so vividly that it reminded us of a stearnship folder. However . . . From the decorative scheme of 41 Loyola which was mainly clippings of racy airplanes, Frenchy,' is evidently air-minded. D0n't be aston- ished when you read in future alumni notes of his aeronautical exploits. Whether or not we ever heard of Mystic before, it merits fame because it produced Frenchy. One hzmrlred six Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 5. 'lz Intramural Ath- WALTER LUKE GREENE 469 54th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Editor-in-Chief and Art Editor of the PURPLE PATCHER 49 Purple' 2, 3, 45 Under the Rose 2, 33 Class Odist 3, 45 Vice-President, Aquinas Circle 43 Metro- politan Club l, 2, 5, 41 Freshman Debating Societyg Philomath 2, 3, elg Purple Key -lg Senior Council: Speaker Class Banquet 3, 'lg Intramural Athleticsg Senior Ball Committee The one man in the class who rests assured that he will not be noted in this book as the best of anything bad, or the worst of anything good. But his position has one draw- back: this is the only Crusader biography that will not be edited by the Chief, and it will certainly suffer thereby. Walter is the Dean of Letters of 32. It was the good Doctor Greene who startled the Purple staff in Freshman when he began tossing off one classic poem after an-other. Maturity, poetic insight, and precocious command of language, were but a few of the things which intellectual seniors saw to envy in Waltls song, and it was then that the college began seeking out her new poet laureate and heaping praise on his slightly tired head. Such treatment would surely have spoiled another freshmang VValt weathered it all to emerge in senior as the most popular non-athlete in the college. But he was more than a superlative writer. An evening spent amidst the charming disorder of VValt's room, hours spent mulling over Life, Love, and Literature with the host's voice unhurriedly provoking thought in the minds of erstwhile non-thinkers, were experiences which made the discomforts of monastic college life eminently bearable. Walt was friend to all men, and all men will treasure his friendship like nothing else they knew while at Holy Cross. One hllIlIiI't'd seven LESLIE BAKER GRIFFIN 134 Belmont Street, Malden, Mass. Freshman Footballg 'Varsity Football 2, 3, 43 Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3, 45 Boston Club l, 2, 3, 4: Senior Ball Committee. The Stadium was packed with that transcendentally colorful Thanksgiving Day crowd, and the setting was Frank Merriwell in its entirety. The team was facing a tie in the last scheduled game of the season. Like the story-book hero, this handsome young man kicked the deciding point, and I-Ioly Cross was again the winner. Les Griffin, who had all the way through acted as the interfering back, holding himself in the background and making straight the path on which others were to shine, wound up the season and his hard-working football career of yeoman service as an indispensable silent partner in a gratifyingly spectacular fashion. He won the B. C. game. OH the gridiron, Griff has many sidelines-talking all his cohorts to sleep in bull- sessionsg reviewing all his acrobatic stunts to the detriment of Trainor's bed-spring before retiring every nightg scattering about the hockey rink bodies restrained from persevering in their state of uniform motion in a straight lineg forming the piece de resistance in any impromptu Sweet Adeline quartet, and challenging the world at Camelot. An avid seeker of knowledge, Griff always acquitted himself without difliculty in the classroom, and his familiar grin was always to be seen as he emerged from the line of hope at the dean's door. In the years to come, Les, it will be a pleasure to draw back the folds of time and review the career of the man who Wore that mud-spattered number 15, friend, student, conversationalist, but above all true blue. Om, f.'111nlrz'11 cfighl IOSEPH IOHN GRIGAITIS 37 l'TOL1iTl1tOl1 Street, Worcester, Mrss Wmrcestu Llub l Z 3 -l Dune Cl'll11'Kl1l1 rl Dry Scholars Sodalxtx 1 2 3 tl oe 15 the type that you rll know of, but not too much about There lre two reasons for that statement first, he was never present to cheer on the torcador, second hc d1d not cater to the fancres of h1s classmates, but always sourrht the end ol hrs own vrews Hrs efllclency and abrllty, coupled Wrth '1 cool, calculatrng apphcltron ol the same, marked hun as a man apart, a leader The recogruuon of these quahtms must have rntlu enced the WOFCCSECFIICS a great deal, for they bestowed upon hnn the honor ol chfurm ln slup of the Chrrstmas Dance By Way of Sl1OWlIlg that thrs trust was not mlsplaced, loc conducted the affaxr ln such '1 manner that lt mrght even have proxcd worthy of the Metropolltan Club The fact that he was entru ted wlth the chalrmanshrp oi the Worcester Llub s main annual event, renders any statement as to h1s popularxty wrth the day students supcrllu ous However, we would lxlxe to stress once agarn the qualrtres whrch made such 1 selectron lustlfiable Ioe IS not of a haughty, owerbearrng nature, but rs the posscssor of those glfIS and talents whrch lnvarxably accompany an unassunnng and pleas 1nt 'lttrtude Such a combmatron IS an asset to any mm, and, should you want prool rn the concrete, XVo oHer Ioe as our major, mlnor, and conclusion m7HShIHgtOH was Hrst 1n war and hrst rn peace, but only Ioe could be first rn the hearts ol the farr sex of Worcester Ont hunflz zz! 111110 - U ... r , , , , . ,. tl ,I. . .-.' .ll ' ' 1 339' I 2 . L' . 4 . A , c 'g 4 ' D . . . t . . ., ..: l . n ' ' . ' ' . :- . . - . . ., , ,, . . . . - N I . -. . : , , ,Q . . s . . . . 1 . . . A A 4 - . . , . S . . ' - . K ..z . . .V . 4 ' ' ' I: . . l RAYMOND IOSEPH GROTE 727 President Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Economics Club 4g Aquinas Circle 43 Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3g Sodality 1, Z, 3, 45 Freshman Debating Society. When a fellow needs a friend and an alibi that will withstand a skeptical scrutiny, he can't see an oracle these days. But he can pay a visit to Cosy Grot, and that will produce the same result. Having far too much foresight to be caught in the web of authority, Ray freely donated his talents to his less fortunate class-mates, and earned sincere gratitude for his benevolence on many occasions. Not that he was against the government but he was more charitable than sternly just, and so helped to avert catastrophe on more than one occasion. Needless to say, everyone liked him for that. They also took pleasure in his com- pany for other reasons. I-Ie stays smooth when other people get ruflledg he chuckles and chortles at the right places, and he knows what to do about the retarded condition of business. In fact, his financial ability is phenomenal. One of his roommates considered it miraculous. If Wall Street will allow him, he hopes to help out Hoover, being a staunch Democrat. To a man of such marked ability to stay out of trouble, the process of education was singularly painless. He was always wise enough to stay a couple of steps ahead of the little blue slips. That's one of the Fine arts in the pursuit of a Holy Cross degree, and Ray had it down to perfection. One hundred ten l l EDWARD AUSTIN HAMILTON 18 Prospect Street, Babylon, L I N Y Frcsllman Track Intramurll Athletlcs 3 4 Metropoh tam Club l 7 3 4 Aqumas Cxrcle -l Freshman Dcbaung Soclcty PArcH1:R L11 fl bodalxty l It 1S common knowledge that the flags of Babylon were at hwlt mast the day Ed left hrs cheerful hearth rn quest ot brgger and better things 1n the Held of learnrng That was 'ln 111 clay for Babylon, for ever srnce then the Wanderlust has Hlled, thrown, and tortured the soul of her fa1r son We do not pause to ITICDKIOD hrs ChI'O1'11C wanderrngs over any and every part of Greater New York although, mdeed, much nnght be sud on thrs toprc Here 19 a man who has sarled the Spfmlsh Mun wrth the best of old tars, 1 man to whom South Amerrcfr and the ports of the Cfrrrrbbcan are as f'll1llllJ.I' IS Boston IS to us Ed IS a real expert m hrs l1ne, and what a lrne rt lSl As a collector, manuf'1cturer, and wholesale and retail dispenser of anecdotes, he has no peer The exotlc stor1es of rhrs versatrle cosmopolxte are beyond the poss1b1l1ty of bemg forgotten But we shall remember lum even more for the cheerful, tolerant cvnrcxsm whrch cloaked hrs Hue nature, and for the loyalty and smncenty of hls frxendshzp Well KCFIUIY, we W1Sh you the best, and we are sure that when we meet 1n future years there vull be rn your case no doubt as to whether youre up or whether you re down Well be glad to shake a successful hand and we ll be p'1rt1cul1rly concerned about the stor1es you w1l1 have accumulated by then VVe may not behex e, but you can bet your last drme that we'll lxsten One hand: ed eleven V . ., . . , .-. . ' - '. ! 1 L S ! ,-, , s - 4 1 2, 3, 4. t t ll L . - F u . , L . Q . S l j. . . 1 . - '-1 1 1 . . 1 e 1 1 ' 1 - -C , C r N , . ' ' ll 3 Y V , D! 5 3 ' . , . . DAVID EDWARD HANLON, IR. 1300 Hyde Park Avenue, Hyde Park, Mass. Boston Club 1, Z, 3, el: Dance Chairman 43 Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 43 Freshman Debating Sucietyg Sodality l. 2, 5, elg Consultor 4g Pirrcuiia Bus. 43 Senior Ball Committee. VVe refrain from comparing Dave with Napoleon, because Dave has something which Nap didn't exhibit-a sunny disposition under all circumstances. This invariable good- fellowship which is characteristic of Dave, has made his room one of the most popular in our time together on the hill. In harmony with his musical nature which forever insisted on a song and dance interpretation for any occasion, Dave maintained a line array of choice victrola records in his cubicle, which varied from Cuban tangoes to eleven olclock at night. In his capacity as master of ceremonies, Dave has conducted many a symphonic arrangement and rhythmic chorus-all within the confines of four white walls. The strenuous hours employed in burning midnight oil, along with the nerve-racking noise of a crowded room, afforded Dave the opportune excuse for displaying his love of sleep. And perhaps we should mention here that there was one time when Dave did not smile, and that was when the alarm rang at seven in the morning. He never heard it. Dave was among the heaviest sleepers in the class. There was enough of boy in the man and enough of man in the boy to make Dave an eminently welcome character. He is sincereg he has displayed a Hne lively spirit when in the throes of exams, as well as when riding on the crest of a vacation. He was always comfortably secure scholastically, and whenever he was called upon, his executive elli- ciency was willingly given to insure the success of any undertaking. Une hunzfrcd twelve GEORGE VlNCENT HARLEY 139 No. Columbus Ave., Freeport, L. I., N. Y. Metropolitan Club 1. 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 45 Intra- mural Athletics 4g Freshman Debating Societyg Phil- omath -lg Crusader Council elg PATC1-nan Bus. 4g Tunmhruuk 1. 2, Sq Purple Key 43 Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. l ll is none other, ladies and gentlemen, than our own George Vincent. lt is best that we reveal his real name, even though it is only at the close of his collegiate career. No man has ever had greater misfortune with patronyms than he. ,His life was a con- tinuous series of mistaken identities, oftentimes to his sorrow. His name has been con- fused with those of greater fame, causing him no little embarassment, yet he always accepted it gracefully. At an early age he learned that a modicum of everything, neatly arranged in an attractive pattern, was the surest way to lead a happy life. To him life was just a pop- corn ball of many colors. A thing to be enjoyed but not destroyed. He sought to mingle all the traits of his personality and work them into a harmonious rhapsody of goodfellow- ship. So well did he execute his composition that we are all striving to learn the melody. Buzz, as he was once erroneously called, is a true cosmopolite. He wasted not his time on trifles, but devoted himself to the cultivation of one of life's most treasured pos- sessions, a broad education along well-read lines. He gravitated from the New Yorkern to Henry Iames without so much as a perplexed moment. He browsed over Byron and culled Milton with the same enjoyment. He leaped from them and manifested the facility and humor of his own pen. Adept and clever he turned many a phrase. One hlllllflfd Ihil'fl't'lL IOHN CORNELIUS HARRINGTON 365 President Avenue, Fall River, Mass. Fall River Club I, 2, 3, 4g Aquinas Circle 4g Intramural W Athletics 3, 43 Crusader Council 2, 3, 4g Sodality W 1, 2, 3, 4. ' o Four years have furnished us with adequate proof that Fall River cannot be as bad as Vaudevillians would have us believe. Little lack C. comes from there. Possessed of an unusual sense of humor and a leavening common sense, Iack came, saw, and conquered the ups and downs of college life without once ruffling his placid good nature. No deep philosophical intricacy or vital speculation about the time of his next cheque's arrival could quite obliterate the twinkle in his boyish eye. As far as his classmates are concerned, lack may command Whatever he wishes, for such is the reward of popularity like his. Behind his jocose and devil-may-care exterior is a ready intelligence, a deep analytical mind that refused to be thrown by the mounting impossibility of assimilating the psychology. Iack is also the mighty atom of the cham- pionship senior soccer team. Viewed all in all, we find it hard not to conclude that this lad came very near being our best all-round intramural man. As we write, we are in doubt as to where our next meal is coming from, so it is not altogether strange that we do not know what the cards of fate will deal you, Iack. We're hoping for a grand slam, though. One hll11I1l'6'd f0IIl'fft'.'1Z l IOHN ELDRED I-IARRINGTON 179 Spring Street, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Albany Club -'lg Aquinas Circle 43 Sodality 1, 2, 3, 43 Tormlfmwlq l, 25 Choir 45 Senior Ball Committee. From freshman History classes we date Iack's reputation as a man to be considered when enumerating Crusader illuminati. Like the thoroughbreds that graze around his native heath, he steadfastly refused to call back his early bid for fame. Thus, as senior year winds its way to a scholastic close, we still find jack rated as one of the starring prima donnas of that esteemed cult-the honor men. Though the paths 'of knowledge have led him to a Well-deserved pinnacle of success, do not, gentle reader, labor under the impression that Saratoga's favorite son was one of those loathsome collegiate personages, a grind. Rather, let us say that he was a connoisseur of the arts, a man who looked into the humanities for humanity's sake. The possessor of a lively Wit, a born satirist, and a storehouse of you should have seen anecdotes, lack never had to look very far for an enraptured audience. It is indeed a pity that he did not lend the facility of his pen to one of our publica- tions, instead of confining it to more esoteric circles. What will he do next year? We know not. Helll do it well, that's all that matters. Our hIllIlll'l'l1 fiflfffl RAYMOND IOSHPH HARRISON 66 Park Street, Taunton, Mass. Sodality 1, 2, 5, -lg Aquinas Circle: -lg Intramural Track elg Senior Ball Comnntlee. It was not until the Class of 1931 had been in possession of their lambhides for some months that we learned they had left us a real gift in the person of Ramon.,' He may have considered it a misfortune when an imperious medico forbade his return to school until a year after his recovery from an extended illness, but we consider it our good fortune. He was the ideal host who always-well, almost always-provided refreshments for his guests. Whetlmer they were his own supplies or dispensed with gay abandon from the stock of Long lawn, his roommate, was an irrelevant consideration. Maybe Shake- speare meant that wheeze about conscience making cowards of us all, but we don't believe he was hungry when he wrote it. V He had an inexhaustible stock of unique expressions which made us eager listeners, and his colloquial exposition of staid philosophic truths made many of us feel that perhaps the Ratio Studiorum wasnit so abstract after all. He merits our acclaim on the dual score of being the one who could make psychology understandable and a bridge game a source of terror to partner and opponents alike. We confess to having heard rumors of his attraction for the meeker sex and, thought we lack positive confirmation of them, his picture lends them a measure of support. Any- way, here's our sincere wish to Ray for the best of everything. One humlrcrl sixteen Worcester Club l, 2, 3, 43 Day Scholzirs' So. 1, 2, 3, 4. IOSEPH THOMAS HARRITY 70 Summit Street, Clinton, Mass. We do not doubt but that Ioe spent many enjoyable mornings on his jaunt from Clinton to the Castle on the Hill, and also many last minute summaries of examination matter. But whether the trip was spent in levity and mirth, or in brain-teasing perusal of Psychology, the consistent surmounting of that great barrier ol? distance, clay after day, week after week, testifies to the determination and will-power of the subject. And so it was that Ioe grasped the significance of college life, and applied himself accordingly. Never spectacular, never a seeker after glory, his attitude was always passive and reserved. But, considered in the light of accomplishment, the scale by which we are all, sooner or later, to be judged, Ioe played second fiddle in no manis orchestra. His work was always dispatched in a complete, quiet, business-like manner, and was not tainted with the ever convenient and usually prevalent artificiality. Precisely because he did not resort to the spectacular and artificial, the foundation which he has fashioned for himself is strong and lasting, and a series of great successes may be built upon it. . His sterling character can be challenged by none. And, loe, we extend to you our highest regards and best wishes for success. May the even tenor of your upward climb serve as an inspiration to others not so blessed as yourself. One hnmlrcfl .few-111r1'1: I. FRANCIS HARTMANN Victor, N. Y. VVestern New York Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle el' Freshman Debating Societyg Philomath 2. 3, 43 Cru- sader Council l, 2, 3, -lg Scientific Society 33 P.-x'l't:i-nik Lit. el, Purple Key 43 Soalality 1, 2, 3. 43 Sanctuary Society 1, 2, 3, -lg Senior Ball Committee. Writers of year-book biographies have in the main two lines of least resistance to follow. They Will tell you that so-and-so is of the serious sort, and that he achieves his success not so much by outstanding brilliance as by the good, solid, dependable formula of hard work, or, on the other hand, that he is so gifted and happy-go-lucky that toil or worry need never enter his life. It is the olcl primer story of the race between the hare and the tortoise, told over and over again, with the issue varying with the temperament of the subject under discussion. Well, here it must be narrated once more-but this time with a different ending. The hare and the tortoise have merged, and now it isn,t a contest at all. The resultant being laps the opposition with perfect ease, and never gets short of breath. Exceptional native ability and exceptional powers of application combine to form Frankis exceptional entity. He is a tip-top student, a tireless enthusiastic Worker, a master of words, a veritable gold-mine of musical, literary, and historical erudition, a favorite with the women, a prince among. men, and a wizard with any mechanical con- trivance from a radio to a vitaphone. You may arch your eyebrows and remark that a man who can be said to do every- thing superlatively well must be a very unusual fellow. Well, he is, and that's all there is to it. One hzmrlrcd figfztcm v WILLIAM S'1 UART I-IAYDEN 6 Sparrow Avenue, Peabody Mass lntrlmuml Brsehall 1 4 Aqumns Lrrcle -l Crusader unull 7 J 4 Sodahtyl 7 5 btewle IS the class man of mystery In vlrtue ot haung employed unusual Cl1SCI'CI1101l 1n selecting mtrmates, he IS httle known, except by reputatron, to the class at large But what a reputauonl I-Ie came here alter a Peabody chlldhood and one of those excellent St Iohns Prep educatxons I-Ie came, he saw and he conquered, as Clesmr, 1nd five mrlhon employers of doubtful 1f the good Franlslm would have so ably managed the greatest Prom 111 Holy Lross h1story were 1t not for the tlreless asszstance of btewlc I'r1cndsh1p to htm was no mere clev1ce for the borrowmg of 5l11I'IS If meant unselhsh respect and w1ll1ng sacrlhce for another whom you consrdered worthy ol such treatment SICYVICS colleglate success xs wrltten m the number of real frrcnds he made while wlth us Wrth the pubhcatron ot th1s book school ends, and the world 'twuts the new blood and fresh energles of another group of college traxned men Stewxe wrll prove agam to the Powers That Be that Holy Cross men are a superror breed, will prove that he IS by no means the lowhest among that select lot One 61117111611 mllclccl 1 , . 1 'L il ' T, I D -' V I U I I ' -1 Co , .., I, 5 - , -, , 4. ,, . . , . . V. . Y . . . w ' N , K - L - xi 5 I n . ' , . . 1 'L 1 A ' ' trite phrases have said. I-Iis greatest friend while on the Hill was Perry Millea, and it is ' ' I L K L Q Ik I Y , . .- n . .A n , .x it .n . . - Z I ,iv K - -L ' A A . s : - , -J. . - . n I. C 'A . I l 1 . . 2 ' I n . 1 - . u . . G , 1 C 1 . A . . NEIL BURGESS HAYES 562 S. Main Street, Adrian, Mich. Aquinas Circle 49 Economics Club 4g Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Adrian Club l, 2, 5, elg President 43 Senior Bull Committee. Our class has been tal-:ing philosophy only for the past two years, yet even as a freshman this fresh-faced youth was dispensing pearls of wisdom. He carried in any council, and his tales from the old coal stove kept many a freshman gathering going when there were no stoves. His stock of knowledge was well above average because he always kept his eyes open and gave them a chance for exercise. And those who accom- panied him on his long and short courses will recall that these were not all he exercised. His sense of humor was also well developed, and the memory of him chuckling away is the recollection of a moving spectacle. There is one extraordinary distinction he possesses. No collegiate extra-curricular activities for him. His independent originality could not Ht into any stereotyped pursuits, but he had the ingenuity to broaden himself along his own lines. While we are willing to wager a small sum that Neil will never become a professional accountant, we can easily foretell his success in business. People would buy stocks and bonds or razor-blade sharpeners from him just to keep him from coming around and making them forget the depression. ln fact there is little sense in wishing Neil luckg he doesn't need it. Further than that, he is one graduate who is not at a loose end now that his college days are over. We know you will never drift away from your belief in honesty in politics and the supremacy of cut plug. One LVIIIIIIVCII TMJFIIILV FRANCIS RAYMOND I-IICKEY 262 Burncoat Street, W 0rCC5tCr, Mass bol lc-'im 3 4 Worcester Club 1 2 3 4 Aquinm Luce 4 D15 Scholus Sotlahty l 2 3 -l First in studies, Hrst in love, and first in the hearts of his contemporary philosophers, Frank surely his contributed his share to the collegiate bowl of cherries Since that time in the past when he First trod the towering hill to his inferno of Latin compositionless classes, until the present when he astounds his pals with embellished and highly lluent and popular1ty to that Good old Gaelic mme of Hickey Whether it be on the green with a l'11lJl1Clx in his hand, upon the dance floor with 1 blushmg blonde in his arms, or in a philosophy seminar agarnst the att lcks of various Ivmts, Hickey proves that brawn, blond hair, and po1se have something beh1nd them As a representatlve of the Holy Cross golf team Frank swmgs '1 very ellective mashie And here may we pay trxbute to that extremely fascinating part of Franks many sided personality, his conversational ability The long weary hours between the morning and afternoon classes were charmed away for his fellow Vllorcesterites by the magic that lay 1n his speech Iocose or serious, light or profound by turns, hc almost llways had a throng of eager and respectful listeners about him But Fred Baxter was always the one who was most favored with his friendship These two were always inseparable in war and peace, that is to say, 1n study and recrea 'ion Um hlllllllfll nwnfy our l L V 7 .- wfmr ,z -,,,,s '111 ' ' l 3 1 ' ' ' 2 I ' ' , , , '. l . ' ' . ' i '. 1 ' '. ' ' r ' discourses on the intricacies of Philosophy, Frank has always succeeded in bringing glory D C I . 5 . ' It n C - . . L ' I A . ' 1. . 4. Y I G . L C . . 8 . 1 . . 1 V . . . N . . A C I L . . . C . 1 . . . V L- IOHN EDWIN HICKEY 85 Burncoat Street, Worcester, Mass. dents 4: Intramural Athletics S, -lg NVorcester Club I, 2, 3, -lg Day Scholars' Sozlality I, 2, 3. Ed entered the portals of Holy Cross with two important assets, natural ability and an inimitable personality, and, from beginning to end, employed both to the greatest advantage. His ambitions and achievements were not confined to the classroom alone, where he attained a scholastic standing worthy of any student, but also were realized on the ribbed court, where he starred at forward on lack Reed's basketball teams. For three years his willingness to co-operate in team-play was one of the chief reasons why the Holy Cross quintets were successful. His brilliance in the classroom as well as on the court made Eddie one of the most popular day students in the class. His attentiveness at lectures reached its peak in senior year in Mr. O,Gorman's Education class. That Ed is destined to be an eminent educator was clearly manifested, when day after day he took the arguments of the famous Mr. Watson, et al, and refuted their fallacies with the oratory of a Cicero. As an active member of the Worcester Club he played an important role in the suc- cess of its undergraduate dances. His energetic spirit and cheerful personality were mani- fested at every Holy Cross activity. On parting with a man like Ed, we need wish him no luck-he knows our very best- est is with him always. May success welcome you in, Ed, when you knock on her door. One hlfllflllfll fluvzlly-fzzfo Freshman Basketball, 'Varsity Basketball 2, 33 Indepen- IOHN IOSEPH HOLLAND, IR. 183 W. 179th Street, New York City Freslilnan Track: 'Varsity Track 2, 3, fi: 'Varsity Cross- Cnuntry 2. 3: Metropolitan Club l, 2, 5, 4g Aquinas Circle 45 Pliilomatli 2. 5, -lg Sotlality 1, 2, 3, 4. From the sidewalks of Gotham to the hills of Worcester is a long jaunt even for an aspiring track man, but it did not daunt Iohn. He had received his share of press notices in high school for his track ability, but he thoughtfully left the clippings at home, and determined to start from scratch. 'lluanu broke with the gun in freshman year and has been up with the leaders ever since. His most notable achievements have been on the track, outstanding of which was the place he won on the varsity relay in his sophomore year. He has run fast and far since then. He has also acquired a reputation as a terpsichorean master and all that the term con, notes. He bobs and weaves to the strains of good music. Like all masters of rhythm, he has a penchant for eloquence. He can talk as he runs. Swiftly and with a tenacity of purpose, wary lest he be trapped at a turn and ready to pass his adversary in the home stretch. Iohn is one of the most noted enthusiasts on the Hill. He even executes his daily dozen with such an intensity of effort that the casual observer is led to believe that he really enjoys it. Iohn, ever a natural master of grace, has acquired an appraising and critical eye. I-Iis keen observation of perfection, supplemented by his humorous interpre- tations, has marked him off as an able authority on sports. He can discuss performances at length, but rarely refers to his own feats. One hzmzlrrrl fwefzfy-Ihree RAYNIOND IOHN HOWE 2078 VVeigand Place, New York City Intramural Athletics 3, 43 Glee Club l, 2, 3. gh Quartet 2, 33 Trio Lil Soloist 3, el: Metropolitan Club I, 2. J. 4g Sub-Chairman Metropolitan Dance 43 Aquinas Circle 4g Freshman Debating Society: Philon'-ath 2, 3: Crusader Council 2, 3. 43 Dramatic Sn- ciety 1, 2, 3, 43 Soclality l, 2, 3, 4: Sanctuary Society l. 2: PATCHIER Bus. 43 Purple Key Secretary 4: Tonmhnwk 2. 3, -lg Circula- tion Manager 4: Senior Bull Committee, Beloved, it is Motu was the keynote of Ray's success in one Held and of his failure in another. Countless audiences have thrilled to Ray's rendition of the selection named above. If television were perfected, we might open to this page and spend an enjoyable evening listening to Ray's vibrant baritone, the tonal quality and volume of which can not be too highly extolled. For two years robust Ray has been baritone soloist of the Glee Club. And to those who have heard his voice, further words in its praise are unnec- essary. For those who have not, mere words of laudation are insufficient. No entertain- ment was complete without him, his mimicry, acting, vocalizing made any presentation a success. L As he is the biggest man in the class, Peachy's expansion into other fields of activity was only natural. Many an afternoon the substrata beneath the soccer field quaked as Ray came thundering toward the opponents' goal and with a well directed boot sent the ball through the uprights to chalk up another tally for the champions and Howe. And if Ray had had more time and the A. A. bigger football equipment, Captain McEwan would have had another invaluable lineman. A man really can't play football without pants. One hmzrlrni' lwczzfy-fnzfr IOHN FRANCIS HURLEY 158 Lincoln Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club 2, 3, 45 Intramural Athletics 3, 43 Aqui- nas Circle 45 Day Scholars' Sodality 2, 3, 4. I-Iere is another of those valiant gentlemen whose scientilic trend of mind guided him through the perils and helped him bear the heavy burdens of pre-med. Even more worthy of note is the fact that his membership in the test-tube and scalpel fraternity did not stifie in him an appreciation of the delights of Scholastic mental gymnastics: delights which drew him away from a comfortable home more than one winter evening to attend the sessions of the Aquinas Circle. Originally a member of last year's class, Iohn spent a year at St. Bonaventurelsg but the experiment failed to stamp out the old Pakachoag spirit, and his nostalgia was quieted only by his return to the Hill to finish his course among us. Unobtrusive, blessed with a buoyant good nature and the stern persistence of the scientist, Iohn appears well equipped to meet his future. He rarely complained fas many of us did, of the burden of studies that the system bestowed upon usg obstacles were to him objectives to be met, conquered, left behind. It is but natural that we should expect, and express our hope for, his success in medical research. M Om' h11r1rIrrzYm'r'l1fy-ffm' FRANCIS BENEDICT IEREMIA 104-43 115th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I., N. Y Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 43 Glee Club 3, 4g Dramatic Society 55 Purple 29 Sodzility l, 2, 3, 4, Intramural Tennis 3, 4. From out the tracliless wastes of Queens came Ierry to the Hill, and from that deso- late section of the universe Holy Cross has benefited, strange to report, by the presence of a man with I1 great capacity for study and the carefree attitude of the confident cosmo- polite. Inured to the rigorous methods of Iesuit education by prepping at Xavier, his self- possessi-on was not disturbed by the trying early weeks of Freshman yearg thus, early in our history, he earned the envy of the class. So indefatigable was his pursuit of classical knowledge in the First two years that he earned our respect and the title of Professor. His favorite study hour was midnight, and he was a duly initiated member of the Privy Council. In an intellectual gathering he was considered an authority on almost any topicg his dicta on thoroughbred horses, fancy-diving, rum-running, or cavalry tactics were held in high esteem, and he is still admired for his ingenious :solution of the mystery of the missing ferry-boats on the Sound. The Professors shower-room musical talent resulted in a conspiracy which succeeded in shifting the scene of his vocal practice to the Glee Club rehearsals, and right up until the last concert he leaped courageously at that high D Hat, and took his turn at guiding home and being guided home with the elite of that organization. Ierry's enviable background -of experience has given him a spirit of self-reliance that presages a successful future. fllll' h11l111'1'z'd lwcnly-.fix IOHN IGSEPH KAICHER 751 Bushwlclv Avenue, Brooklyn, N Y Intramural 'Ienms 3 Metropolmn Club 1 2 J 4 Aqua ms Crrcle -I Sucnnhe Souety 3 4 Sodalxty l 2 3 4 9 mor B1llC0lIIII11ElCC In almost any group of students, we End there are a few who overcome scholastic dlflicultres Wlth the utmost ease, a group who take studles almost carelessly md are yet so effectxve 1n then' lpplxcatron that they manage to 'rclueve the Hrst Cl1V1SlOI1 of therr class We 1dm1re, we envy them And rn our class, one or therr number IS Iohn Some of us lxved w1th textbooks ohn merely consulted them, and yet managed to come oiI credltably tn recltsltlons and exammatxons In hlS four years Wlfh the class, he has acquxred frrcnds rn practlcnlly every group through h1s act1v1t1es Who rs there who mn forget h1s Thespmn endeavors, hrs peerless characterlzltxonsp Kalcher, Percy Sc Co was one orgfmxzatxon ever ready to produce 1 skrt for any receptlon or enterrunment sponsored by the class In 1 very dlflerent Held he drd just as admlrable work Wlth much less publ1c1ty he was one ot that small group who dex oted much of thelr Sunday 'afternoons to teachlng the fLlf1d21lT1Ll1IIllS of C'1fCCl1lSITI to the young future c1t1zens of Worcester I-Iavlng breezed through our pre med under wraps, ohn proposes to attempt the more serlous objectlve of the med1cal school of N Y U He reahzes the dxfhcultles he faces, and IS not appalled We want hun to feel conlident, 'ts well, that hlS memory wxll last among h1s frlends, that hrs steady '1b1l1ty, hrs ready w1t vvxll not be qulclxly forgotten One hmzzllffl Iilffllly :cz en '. ' .. A- 4 avs: ' -fx' v I 4 ' Q ,I L 2 1'A . 1 C I Q I. I I - QI -1 I' K. C . 2 . . 4 LA . 4 . 1 ' I 1 1 1 ' 1 ' A2 e ' cc 19 I - - . Q C 1 6 'ra IOHN IOSEPH KAVANAUGH 132 Iune Street, Worcester, Mass. VVorccst1:r Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Aquinas Circle 45 Day Schol- ars' Sotlality 1, 2, 3, 4, Senior Ball Committee. A keen connoisseur ol literary treasures, a successful philosophy student, a skilled laborer in fields pedagogic, Iohn has been tested in the arena of academic endeavor, and has spilled the blood of that dreaded dragon, Flunk, upon the sands of time. His ready smile and equally ready desire to offer help to anyone, are representative aspects of a mental outlook on life that is truly Catholic and devoid of any cynical tendencies, myso- gynistic or otherwise. As if these attainments were not enough to win our admiration, Iohn proved that as a host, he is unsurpassable, by inviting the gang out to the sylvan quiet of his home, which fthe quiet, not the homey was shattered in short order by the strange combination of melody and discord so dear to the collegiate heart. Friendship with him has brought many an enjoyable hour which we shall never forget. As one of the august Presidents of the Room 84 Club, Cav contributed his brilliant but sane part to the highly informal and informative discussions. With him present, we breathed sighs of relief, for he was able to discourage any outbreaks of a disease known as punning, with which some members were chronically affected. Cav is one guy that will go a long way, whatever he plans to do. He is clean as a whip, and an absolutely true friendf' These are the words of one of his associates, words of honest admiration. We need say no more. One hmzrlrezi zwwzly-eight 1 4 ANTHONX' FRANCIS KEATING, II 5131 Pembroke Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. Pittsburgh Club I, 2, 5, -lg Aquinas Circle 4: Purple Key Chairman -l: Assistant Chairman Ring Com- mittee 33 PATCHER Bus. 43 B. 1. F. 25 Freshman Debating Socictyg Sotlality 1, 2, 3, 45 As- sistant Prefect 23 I-lead Consultor 45 Senior Council: Senior Ball Com- mittee.. The portrait of a college mind formed by our adolescent imaginations in high school days, was indeed an ideal creature. I-le was composed of a great number of superior characteristics blended into one flawless whole. This ideal suljrered a cruel shock when back in Freshman we first scrutinized each other, seeking to lind it materializedg but it lived again in the full glow of healthy reality, when we found Tony in our midst. Tony, We judged, was a real leaderg a suggester, not a knockerg a man whose 5511101-I' j'a1'1'e and easy aflability earned the liking of everyone, whose sincerity commanded our respect, whose sympathetic ear and sound counsel helped many a friend over a cliH'iculty. The roughest test that such an estimate can be put to, four years of close companionship, leaves us with the conviction that this early judgment was an accurate one. It would not be fair to him to create the impression that we consider Tony perfection itselfg but we do appreciate him as a man not without faults who knows how to conceal gracefully the few to which, being human, he is heir. To such a man, one does not say good-bye, we know his deeds will not allow us to forget him. No good-byes, then, Tony, just a simple Auf zu1'ea'e1'5ehen, and every good Wish to a real college man-from the crowd. One !IlllIlfl't'1l lwwzly-11111: IOSEPH PAUL KEATING 52 Maverick Street, Fitchburg, Mass. Fitchburgh Club 1, 2, 5, 45 President 43 Day Scholars Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. This, kind friends, is the illustrious thither end of that famous Fitchburg combina- tion, Asselta and Keating, who achieved the distinction of being the most able solvers of education problems in the College. Ioe's quietness under ordinary circumstances empha- sizes the acknowledged importance of his words when he considers it worthwhile to speak, his solution of dilhculties, philosophical or pedagogical, has earned him a reputa- tion among the ballled seniors. Possessed of an agreeable manner, a pleasant, radiant countenance, reflecting a bright and cheerful state of mind, Keats is a welcomed companion to every gathering, his record in activities, scholastic and otherwise, is a narrative of successful achievements. We might pause to mention that the duties imposed by his office of President in the Fitchburg Club, extended rather than diminished his otherwise activities. A versatile mind, apparently being specially fitted for solving knotty difhculties, should be of great value to the world, because he possesses such a mind, We predict a bright future for Ioe. One hundred thirty i IAMES LEO KELLY 135 HlllS1dC Avenue Waterbury, Conn Waterbury elubl 2 3 4 Aqumas Cxrclc 4 Econonncs Llub el Bmd 5 4 Drammc. Souety J tl Sodalxty 1 7 SmctuarvSoe1ety 3 4 Senmr Ball Lommxttce Capable, self rehant Leo w1ll get along IU hfe HIS ablhty to PFHCEICC the trombone rn Loyola Hall and stlll llVC IS proof that he IS more than an ordlnary m 111 for as Seniors our class was as deep-dyed a lot of trombonophobes as could be d1seovered anywhere Many a time has the muslc of h1s instrument set our hearts beatrnrf fa ter our blood pressure r1s1ng, and 1n SPIKE of It all we hked h1I1'1 Leo s most outstandxng tralt as far as Worcester soc1ety IS concerned, lb h1s ab1l1ty to bestovx upon 'ull h1s assoclates, regardless ot sex, the feehng that nowhere could one haxe a better t1me than 111 the company of hmm whose portra1t you see above Hls curly ha1r surrounded a good deal of well furrowed gray matter, too h1s endeavors lll the assortment of drummers, trumpeters and cape wearers known '1s the Band h1s 1b1l1ty 1n the more serlous roles ln Shakespe 1rean productlons, h1S cogent arvumentatwe power 1n the debatmg hall glVC further evxdence of h1s v'tr1ed 1nterests and capacmcs Knowmg that h1s manly qualltles w1ll 0LllIllVC h1s trombone pl'1y1ng, 1n l1fe 'ls well as ID our memory, we can see noth1ng but clear slues on the hor1zon for Leo We are eonh dent, moreover, that even xf dark clouds should gather for h1m, he IS tough enough to weather the storm wlthout callmg for an umbrella One hzrndleri thnry one , . '- ! 3 !'! 1 - , - - 1, - ., . ..- - , . . , I ' Y! K 9 3 1-35 . 1 S , . t c - . c '- 1 ' ' 4. . e ' O S , - , . 'Y 1 ., ' 4 ' I vi. . ' 5 ' L , n L' Z ' C c t L -C . c. l THOMAS EDWARD KING 61 Maywood Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club 1, Z, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle 4g Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Ring Committee 3, Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. In the words of the well-known advertising slogan, Such popularity must be deservedf' None can deny that Tom was one of the most popular of the day students, on and off the campus. I-Iis presence added zest and a spirit of friendliness to more than one gathering where profound questions of the hour were being discussed. In the special activities of the Worcester Club, he was practically a fixture for the head of some im- portant committee, such was the conhdence in his ability. And most important of all, Tom had a pleasant naturalness of bearing and democracy of attitude that never permit- ted him to offend intentionally his companions. In the intramural activities, he often turned his hand to sports, and being a former school-boy athlete, he usually found his hand quite expert. Many a time has I-Iodger pulled a game out of the life for at least put part of the fire outy for his less talented teammates. In our moments of reminiscing in the years to come, the personality of Tom will stand out in high relief for those of us who knew him well. He will realize, if he can read our hearts at all, that We mean more than a pleasant-sounding phrase when we wish him the very best of luck. One huzzdrczf Ihfrly-izuo STEPHEN IOSEPH KOWALSKI, IR. 109 Endicott Street, Worcester, Mass. Freshman Foothallg Intramural Athletics 3, 4: Intra- mural Sports Councilg VVorcester Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Day Scholars' Sodality l, 2, 3, 4. You will be confident, if you meet Steve, that your Hrst impression will be a correct one. It will be a very definite impression, a favorable one, and a correct one. You will see in him signs of unmistakable ability, of sound and sterling character, a closer acquaintance brings corroboration of your original estimate, and a friendship whose worth is not subject to estimation. In the scene of Worcester Club athletics, Chick's imposing frame occupies a rather large portion of the view, whether the game be football, baseball or basketball, he can always be found in the opening lineup. His claim to an outstanding position in the ranks of the club's athletes has been earned through his ability to produce wins for his team in all three of those sports. Graduation day will find the exuberance of many a heart restrained by the thought of parting with so valued a comrade as Steve. If everyone likes him as well as we have, great days lie ahead! Onr 1lIllI!1I'!'!l lhlilfjlelhffl' JOHN FRANCIS LAWLER 1168 Main Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club l, Z, 3, 4, Intramural Athletics 35 Day Scholars' Soclality 1, 2, 3, 4. insisting in the beginning that our description is not to be interpreted in any sense as derogatory, we admit that we are best able to describe Iohn by a negative concept. He is not a born politician. 'Take all of the notes of the old-school, hand-shaking, speech- making, baby-kissing, moon-promising politician, whom you would be paying a virtual compliment by calling him merely insincereg then imagine a man who is the direct antithesis of this, and you have a fairly accurate picture of Iohn. Iohn was unassumingg he believed that it was not necessary to be imposing, or be life-of-the-partyish, or to practice self-salesmanship in order to win friends, and he was right. I-Iis legion of them will assure you of that. John was not so well acquainted with the danger point so unimaginatively called a flat 60g he Worked enough to remove all cause for grave concern in that regard, and had plenty of time left over for recreationg and he knew how to spend that time well, too. In his diminutive frame there is an inexhaustible source of energy and of friendship, which foretells success not only in material lines, but also in the all-important matter of building lasting friendships. One h!ll1lll't'IaJ fhirly-fam' TINIOTHY JOHN LEARY 23 Pond Street, Vlforccster, Mass Llass Yf1LePres1tlLnt1 3 4 Freshman Basketball Var sltx Hasketball 7 3 Independents 4 Intrunural Base ball J Wolcester Clubl 2 3 4 Senior Coun ul Pucmsn Lxt el Dax Qcholars Sodahty 1 7 3 -l Stnmr B.1llCOI'l'lI'l1lltCC If you had earned 1 captamcy, and the powers that be took away your team before you had a chance to 1CLl'1CUOD, what would you do? If you were courageous and '1 good leader, you would multe up your own team Thats what FUD dld In sophomore and junlor Mr Leary so effectlvely demonstrated how baskteball should be played that his te lm mates elected hlm c lpllllll and then, for varxous reasons maxnly captfun, and he OI'1Y.ll11ILC.l the Holy C1 oss Indeper dents, and led them through a season successtul rn exery respect For '1 eulomsr, here IS good materlal Hls athletlc abxl ty led mdrrectly to other hclds ol fame he re ld so many sport page panegvrus of l1l1Tl'1Cll th nt he learned hon to xx rite them I-Iavmg convrnted 1 local edrtor of that fact, he spent hls spare t1me dolng reportol 1:11 blIS about student actlvrtles Poss1bly because of hls shfue ol the power of the press, hrs classmates elected hlm to some olhcml positron about as olten as he let them Dependable, able, modest, Ted was a friend to many lt IS the thought of partrng Wlth such 'ls he that makes 1 certa1n une day 1 110l1 too pleasant mrlestone Our hlllllilflf Ihlllj fir c' W.A e- ,,g . '.'g '- I L ' ' -, ts 'V ' 5 2 '- 'L . , . ' , , , , , , t ' 9 - 'Q ',' - ' ' ' r -s f l S ' V - ' I A I - ra sa . . 4 . V . . 2 r . .I . . . C ' I Y I ll A 1 ' A A n . , 'a-' ' 1 '-. ' ' ' .. f ' Hnancialj the games was discontinued as a varsity sport at the Cross. But Tim was stlll ' .' ' D- '22 3 . 1' . ' I I Y 3 n L 6 . R A 6 u 1 ' ' t : 1 t - . - Q - . n ' W ' A r U lt 1' t I .1 ' ' I , 3 Y u sa ' ' I' I- I FELIX RENE LI-LCLAIR 289 Walnut Street, Holyoke, Mass. I-Iolyoke Club l, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 4g B. I. F. 23 Sotlnlity l, 2, 3, 4. We always thought that the French were excitable, talkative, and innate poseurs: until we came to know Felix, who is calm, quiet, and contemptuous of all show and hum- bug. Since he has been in our midst, we have as well a higher opinion of the value of the French tongue, French art and literature, for his enthusiasm'and erudition in these fields stimulated inquiries. To those poor wights whose knowledge of French was weak, or whose pronunciation was atrocious, he was a real godsendg for the language was second nature to him, and its subtleties baffled him n-ot at all. Felix's most evident passion is for books, his wide reading is just another aspect of his good breeding that shows in his every act. The best of the French and English writers graced his desk, and gave evidence of frequent perusal. The Ratio Szudiorum held no terrors for him, but in senior, his n-one too robust health relaxed under the combined strain of Lent, March weather, and hard work. We were very much relieved to learn that he will be able to graduate with us, in spite of his forced vacation. We remember his quiet comradeship, his contagious spirit of enthusiasm at rallies, games, entertainments. VVC realize that he is a scholar, a ripe and good onegi' we like him, we wish there were more -of his kind around. Om' hnmlrc-:I fhirly-.fix EDWARD PAUL LILLY 39 Plaza Street, Brooklyn N Y l reshman 'lmck Metropohtln Clubl 2 J 4 PICS! dcntAqu1n1s Lirclc -l History Aculemy 3 4 PlkHl dent 3 lI1lI'll11Lll'll Ilantllnll 3 4 Lrusultr Council -I 1'A1rlrru In -l Purple key -l Ionzrzhuuk l Prize History Essry J iozlihtyl 2 3 4 Samtuary 90 Ll 2 3 Ed is one of those mre personages who honestly came to college to become as well educated as possible, and if we are 'my Judge h1s high purpose has been uttalned When he wants something, he usually gets lt To summarize our opinion ot him, the class standing mental 1b1l1ty, and beyond th'1t, 'I mln who IS exceptional ior qualities other th tn mental This office we bestowed on Ed This conscientious seeker 'after knowledge 1lso 'teh eyed campus flme by being half of the champlonship handball team, and added a clash of the romantic to his reputation by his mysterious disappearance after thc Harv 1rd game in 30 The wise men ot Pakachoag are still pondermg that clueless puzzle in vain Harhng from within the sphere ot influence of Manhattan, he has an irremediflble prejudice against New England but that does not prevent his liking md being liked by New Englandcrs Bostonmns as well 'ls Cfothamltes sought him out to settle their argu ments, time Ind again his roommate was kept awake far 1nto the night wh1le he appeased the pursuers ot knowledge CPD with the truth they sought This young man witha purpose is the kind of '1 fellow most of us wish we were, we hope the success he wins will be worthy of hum Om hnmlnzl fhniy Jl'l!'l' , b 5 n n . . . , , A- -- . '. --: a . . , g . - 1 . A- ' - . 3 ,- V -L - , Z - -J . f . 3 1 1 e' . , g .1 ' W ' . . -, A ' . f f . , , . . , . , , 1 . '- ' - 1 4 --, - I t r V ' A . --1 v - 1 , I , , 5 ' ' ' - - ' ety , , 4. l 1 h v 'z 4 I ' 4 I 4 . 7 , Q ' ' ' i . might point to this: the oflice of President of the Aquinas Circle requires a man of out- a '. ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' . ' 1 r ' . i ' ,z ' - I. . I L t M L I - ' Q - V . . L L. Q . . V. 2 K . . 7 I . , . . . - me C C 1 l 1 D ' 1 ' s 1 . ' L ' I ' ' FRANK LAWRENCE LUCEY 24 Monroe Avenue, Worcester, Mass. NVorccster Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Economics Club 4g Pxrcifrek Lit. 43 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2. Four autumns ago there strolled up the Hill a tall, indifferent lad with a leisurely pace and a similar philosophical outlook on life. During his four seasons on Pakachoag, the leisurely pace became somewhat accellerated, due to the embarrassing necessity of being at class by nine o'cl-ock, but Frank's mental attitude withstood all the trials and difficulties presented by the classics, philosophy, and the business course. The informal popularity he achieved among all groups can be attributed to his cheery disposition and ready smile even in the most troublesome predicaments, and to his axiom that unless you can say something good about a person, there's no use talking about him at all. ' Iunior year found Frank a real outdoor man. Free periods usually found him slam- ming the ball against the backboards or covering a few acres of outfield chasing fly balls. Wherever athletics were going on, you could usually find him. Nor were his endeavors for honors confined to the classroom and playing field: social activities in general, and in particular those with the Holy Cross flavor, found him an ardent supporter. Confident that he has learned, and practiced the principles that Holy Cross aims to instill, we are assured that his future is promising, and sincerely hope he gets the good luck he deserves. One hufzrlred flzirty-eight JOSEPH IOHN LUKASZEK 6 Rhodes Street, Mdlbury, Mass Woreesler Club l Y 3 4 Aqumas Crrclc el 1'I1bfOl5 Aeademy a 4 Dag Scholars Sochllty 1 2 3 4 If tacnturmty 1S any recommendatxon for the Presldency, then we of Holy Cross have the man the country needs Compared to oe, the bphmx and Coohdge are just two old lad1es swappmg gOSS1P over the back fence We brnng tlns traxt forward, not wrth the xntentlon of creatlng the l1T1P1'CSS10H that he was bashlul or standolhsh, but we Want to prove that there are some students 'nt Holy Cross who know when not to talk, who 1re clever 'and able enough to have somethmg to say, and who can st1l1 restrfun themselves from telhng It The lad from Mlllbury had a PCLLllIlI' trut of smxhng when he entered an ex'1m1n'1 txon 'md It seems to have brought good results Others of us, barely able to pass after an allmght SCSSIOD wlth the matter, trled to mutate hrs system, but somehow never seemed to be able to eradrcate the vs rxnl-:les of worry Ihgh marks and all, Ioe was never classlhed 'ls '1 grxnd, tor whenever he was around bull sesslons were gayer, conversatlon more frultful, studymg less '1 task When Ioe walks down the H111 as '1 student lor the last time, he Wlll not be the only one to regret h1s departure, we feel that he has taught us more than he has benefited from our company, that We owe hlm somethmg Ioe, you ll have to take out your payment xn good w1shes we'll certarnly gxve you lots of those One hllilfilfli thnfy mm . . ,Vx 1 , ' ' '. '. ., ,.. , , , 1 . . - 'Y I C 3 3 ! ' L L A . I . . r L ' 1. - F I L N V ' L . . . 1 1 X 1 . .- g. L . ' ' .. . . Q . . ,, ,, . . . . L I. ' ' L , 4 . y - -V - - . I 1 l K. I I L l K L 1 I 7 I. ' C - . , . DANIEL ALOYSIUS LYNCH 796 East 19th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. mural Athletics I, Z, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle -lg Tama:- hnwk l, 2, 3, 43 Sports Editor 45 Purple Key 3, 4g Sodality 1, 2, 3, ll: Dramatic Society 3. 45 Crusader Council 2, 3, 4: Dance Chairman 35 D. G. K. 4: Fresh- man Debating Society, What a serious mien on this lad! you say, but you do not know how it feels to have the worry of being six foot four and still growing. Dan, however, being practical Qeven to the alleged extent of wearing short trousers in order to preserve the creasej does not allow such worries to interfere with his interests in the journalistic field. Tall, darkish, slender, when he puts aside his student's clothes andiattires himself in a manner more beliting social functions, Darling Dan is remarkable for his ability to bowl over sus- ceptible females at first sight. The widespread opinion that Dangling Dan, publicity agent for the Lilly-Lynch combination, is going to become a politician is based partly on his election to various oliices, and partly on his idiosyncrasy of speaking with his mouth half-closed. Perhaps we should say half-openg it sounds more characteristic of a politician. We were afraid that he would never make a success, as he had an irritating habit of continually throwing his car into reverseg but he has now discovered the forward speeds, and overcome his only obstacle to popularity. Dan's personality is distinctive, as hard to describe as it is easy to get a mistaken impression of. His closer friends know him as a genial, jovial person possessed of modesty and an elusive quality olf likability that makes his presence ever a welcome one. Our AIIIIIIITII furry Metropolitan Club l, 2, 3, -l: Freshman Basketballg Intra- IOHN CHARLES LYNCH, IR. 305 Main Street, Milford, Mass. Manager lfreshman Football 4: Assistant Manager Var- sity Football 2, 53 Boston Club l, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle el: Sodality l, 2, 3, 43 Senior Ball Com- mittee. Order in the court, gentlemen: this is the Iudge. One day last fall, this cocky little Hgure mounted the bench, struck his gavel, and announced 'lLet's Go -and his listeners, the Freshman gridironers, went. Under the managerial eye of the Brute, the Purple Cubs swept opposition aside and enjoyed an enviable season. These giants of the greensward, however undaunted by the behemoth linesmen of the opposition, regarded the mite as a sort of superman. The orders barked out by his clarion voice were regarded as the commands of the mighty. The burdens of accounting missing Footballs and absent linesmen rarely slowed his rapid banter that made light the drudgery of practice, and he became mascot as well as manager of the club. Did not David laugh Goliath to scorn? Armed with the weapon ot repartee, the Iudge ITICE all opposition. Little did strength avail against this cool disciple of eloquence. Small in stature, large in conquests, he has laughed away all his handicaps and stands out as a real scratch man. 'Carefree and daring, he might have stepped out of some tale of adventure-or have stepped in, for that matter, as the jolly foil of the romantic hero. Well could he have reigned as king of Wit in some medieval court. lest always, lack, and make the burden lighter for everyone. We regret, your Honor, that the court must be adjourned. Om' lzzzmlrcd furry-unc ARTHUR IAMES MACDONNELL 536 Broadway, South Boston, Mass. Freshman Trackg Varsity Track 2, 3, 4g Boston Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Sodality 1, 2, 3, 43 Intramural Soccer 4. It would require too great a versatility of thought and expression to chronicle in the short space here allotted, the characteristics and accomplishments of the ever-popular Ickey. Renowned for his wit and humor, his infectious personality, he won a multitude of friends ere the views of Mt. St. Iames had become an accustomed sight to his class- mates. The succeeding years were but a repetition of the First, and his spontaniety, like- ableness and leadership in salubrious activities have made him known and liked by all. We can present Ickey in another aspect, the athlete. More properly, the track man and more specifically, the hurdler par excellence. Possessed of a powerful physique, Art developed into 'one of the most outstanding and unfortunate hurdlers in the country. Week after week, the winter months saw him push Monty Wells to the world's record, and sometimes be the victim of unfavorable decisions. Hard luck seemed to dodge his trail, and it was not until senior year that he came through with a New England cham- pionship in world's record time, only to be unjustly deprived of an intercollegiate cham- pionship a little later. Adversity marked his career and he received it as an athlete and a gentleman. However, the cinders have always seen him as one of the leading point scor- ers for the Purple, and this present year will see him the intercollegiate champion. Best of luck, Art. One l1w1flrm'f0r1y-two IOHN IAMES MACLAUGHLAN 28 Brrch btrect, Lowell, Mass 1rosh'Icnn1s Captam Vursxty 'Ttnms 2 3 4 Captam Intramural Athletxcs 1 3 4 Athlctrc Assotr mon 3 4 LowcllClub1 2 J 4 Presxdcnt -l Aquxnas Cuclz. -l Glee Llub l 7 3 -l Exccume Man 1 er Musical Clubs J 4 freshman Deblung., Suetx Phxlomnth 2 Qctlallty l 2 J 4 Purwle I x 4 Qcnxor lountxl Pncmr 'Senior Ball Lommrttcc lock, a hale and hearty descendant of the land of th burrr an th heatherrrrr, 1S not aflllcted wrth exther tac1turn1ty or spasmodlc paralysrs of the purse strrngs, whlch are sup posed to be the natronal vlces of the Scotch And fortunately for Holy Cross he has retamed enough of hrs Scotch blood to possess a great capaclty for the hard work, and an unfarlmg sense of humor As rf being l,l1'l1Tlpl0I1 glass beaver rn the Black Ilole of Fcnwrcls. Commodore C1v1l Servrce, and manager of the Musrcal Clubs was not enough to keep hun busy, ock captalned the tennls team tor two years and dld them 111 well In lwct someone once sarcl shortly before bcmg ejected through a window that locks hero must have been the Vlllage Blacltsmrth, because be had so many 1rons rn the fire Always ready to argue on anythmg, especrally tenn1s, qulck to CllSUl1gLllSl'l the state ments of hrs adversarres wxth l'l1l'lI'l0LlS results, h1s genml personalxty penetrated every cloud Lllte h1mself, h1s rdells 'Ire vlgorous, manly human, and touched wrth th It humor so essential to self '1pprec1at1on, to true success We could YV1Sl'l hun no better fortune, than that he ever be th same One hundred fmty Ihme 7 .' 'X '. , ' g . ' , , 5 3, 45 ' , ., 1 ' '2 n J 6 . -' 1 '. ' , , , , , y - , . ., . 12' ' ' . , : ' : ' 1 r fo jg ' 1 . 1 . Q ' , , ', g 1 iej : . ' Z ' 1 f ix Lit. 43 Tonmhmvlg 5. el: Choir 1. 2, 3. l , ss a 1 a as ' A. 4. L I . I , I. f l I. ' . - . ' . - ' ' ' r ', of L L ' i ' 4 Q Vt, . A. . . 5 Y, C- 3 K A I. V L E . . q . ' z . , . z . -C . . x I . . E . , Q .. . ARTHUR LEONARD MAHONEY, IR. 17 Church Street, Taunton, Mass. 'Varsity Baseball 2, 5, 4: Freshman Baseballg Intramural Soccer and Basketball: Boston Club l, 2. 5, elg So- dality 1, 2, 5, el. Taunton's two great claims to current fame are the beauty of the Green at Christmas, and Buck Mahoney. If you should visit the city fit ir a cityj, you will Find it difficult to avoid a discussion on his contemporary conquests on the mound, his fine record, his future prospects. Dan,s boyn is mighty well known, and deservedly so. Outwardly a genial, democratic and thoroughly likable person, Buck is inwardly an ambitious and sincere spirit whose aspirations to fame are bolstered with the necessary qualities of dogged perseverance and unshakable faith. To the illustrious achievements of his forbears, Dan's boy must live up, or forever hang his head in shame among the Mahoney clan. At home away from home, there lies the secret of his popularity, and if the auto- graphed pictures on the wall of his room are any indication, it is quite a long tale. Which reminds us that some of his taller stories have achieved quite a reputation, alsog no one can ever forget how he pitched those nine scoreless innings in the bull-penf' We consider, all of us, that Buck has shown himself an athlete par excellence, a worth- while student, a gentleman with determination, and a man whom in later years we shall be glad to refer to as a good friend of minef' One' flIHIll1'C'll forty-foul' LEO WILLIAM NIALBOEUF 388 Grafton Street, Worcester, Mass. Vlforcester Club l, 2, 5, 43 Intramural Athletics 2, 3, ig Day Scholars' Sotlality l, 2, 3, Leo comes, as often as possible, from Worcester. The town is known primarily, of course, as the stamping-ground of the family Malboeuf, and secondarily for being in close proximity to Holy Cross. Leo had a yearning towards the latter part of junior year to see how the other half lived, and he pitched his tent somewhere along lirst Beaven. Although the real Malboeuf had long been known to the Worcester boys, this was the first intimate contact the embattled and emaciated boarders had with the apple-cheeked lad half-toned above. Whatever the impulse that sent him to live among us, we thank the stars called lucky that it arose and brought another glorious collegiate friendship to us. With a dynamic personality that stamped him as a man of determination, Leo threw himself into his every project with such verve that the affair was predestined for success from the ,moment he identihecl himself with it. Stressing English in electives, Mal prob- ably intends to do a little writing after graduation. We have yet to see an ode from his Remington, or a novel in the process of being written out of his fertile imagination, but, as the Schoolmen would have us believe, such is not intrinsically impossible. Om' AIIIHIVIYI furly-171-'c' IAMES F. MANSFIELD, IR. 134 Newmarket Road, Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Tennis Team 3, 43 Intramural Tennis l, 2, 3, 43 Metro- politan Club l, 2. 3, -lg Freshman Tennisg Aquinas Circle 45 Economics Club 4: Crusader Council I, 2, 3, 4: P,x1'c1-mu Lit. 4, Purple Key 45 Sodality 1, Z, 5, 4g Senior Ball Committee. Here is lim-he of the blue eyes, the blond hair, the unimpeachably correct profile, the girlish waist. In many an activity he has won our admiration, perhaps even our envyg to become, in a Zoological manner, more precise, socially he was a lion, on the tennis courts a tiger, scholastically an owl freferring, of course, to a nocturnal predilection for crammingj. When Garden City closed up its shops and turned out cn 17261556 to see him off in ,28, he took it with a calm and debonair composure worthy of that other famous blonde, Lindbergh. In his four years among us, he isfstill the same unperturbed lad, with the exception of a new wrinkle or two indicative of a broadened knowledge fgenerously donated by various roommatesj of the stupendous mysteries of life. He has established one new record on the Hill: not missing a single issue of Liberty, C0lIie1 s, or the Sateve- post since Sept. 21, 1928. Seriously speaking, we are certain to miss Iim's ready smile and philosophic outlook on life. Many a weary hour with the mysteries of Kant or Puffendorf has been lightened by his ready humor, many an obscurity cleared up by his sensible clear-sightedness. One of the class' handsomest, a gentleman and a four-square sportsman on the tennis courts or off, lim has been universally admired and appreciated. One hmulred fm-1 y-six RALPH THOMAS MARCELLO 58 B1shop Street, New Haven, Conn NuvHa1tn Clubl 7 :1 -l Int1.1111u11l 'Xthlents I 2 3 4 Sodahty 1 Z 3 4 Club Dantcll1'ur111111 Here IS 21 F1110 product of the Elm Clty tl1c alert bus111ess111'1n, a11d all around sports man, Muzzxe On arrlvmg tour years ago, he announced th1t h1s motto was Columbus took 1 chance, and h1s motto It st1ll lb After those ll ver to be forfrotten days ID Regxs Arms, the only Holy Cross dorm to boast of a SXV1U1l'Dlllg pool and an 1l1Cl0OI' Slflflllg rlnlt, Ralph became a sen1or VVltllOLlt even settmg foot 111 Alumm or Heaven We lllse to remember h1111 for h1s 111terest111U expenenccs and unusual stones told 111 the u md swept As a sc1ent1st and phdosopher, he could ofler stout res1stance to the arguments of any and all opponents The New Haven Club owes much of lfS success to Ralph who, 'ls 1n lmportant cog 111 the executxve machmery, d1d much to advance tl1e orffan1z'1t1o11 111 several ways I-115 d1l1gCI'llf work as Head Cha1rman ot one of tl1e Easter Dances was rewarded wlth the judgment that 1t was among tl1e best ever cmoycd by the members Always cheerful, he found no trouble m dung fr1e11ds IIIS '1b1l1ty to be at home any place d1d not prevent l11111 from lllalxlllg many '1 week end soyourn 111 thc. Home Town, Well do We remember tl1ose trlps as does the good Doctor O Br1en, who tr1ed v'1l1'1ntly but 1n xa1n to uphold the honor ot New York State agfnnst the cream ot the Elm C1ty 1n a track meet Ralph should '1Cl'1lCNC bxg thmgs and wc confidently expect to see 111111 do so 011: hu 1271101 fwlv 11011 . Y Ax L . . . ,, . -. . , '. 3-'1 7 3 t A 7 3 a 1 ' v 'Q ws. N ' 1 . , , , , , , . . J. - ' ' : A ' ' ' 1 . -t - . . . . H . Q H Q . 1 t L 1 . . ft. ,, . . . . . . . - - - . ,s . E , , 1 1 C . t. U 1 , . . . L , ,E . L . 1 C, - . L-1 ' 7 ' ' l ll f h' d O'l' 121 S O t If XZIHC. .. . C I .. Q c 4 be 1. ' ' 5 ' Li L - Y -4 ' L L Y L A c 1. c ' ' ' ' A . A ' f r' V ', . -' ' ' . , . . 1 1 . N . ' '. y . . I , Q . L ,, ,, , I . . , . . . 1 1 1 - ,- 3 7 Y . . . . 1 1 1 1 , f- r v 4 V L Y K. A A4 Y u , H .. . 1-1, JOHN IOSEPH MARSHALL 28 Franconia Street, Dorchester, Mass. Captain Freshman Baseballg Varsity Baseball 2, 3, 45 Captain 45 Intramural Hockey 3, 45 Boston Club 1, 2, 3, 4g PA'rcH1::a Bus. 4: Senior Councilg Purple Key 43 Sotlality I, 2, 3, 4g Senior Ball Committee. The usual tale of success is the romance of an unknown, who leaped with a single bound to the pinnacle of fame, after a dazzling display of talent unsuspected by all save the hero and The One who had faith in him. But Iohn-I.'s days of obscurity are too remote to be ins uected' he came to Hol Cross with a re utation as a ball- la er that i ' , y .Y P P Y would have done credit to a second La ole. At I-lol Cross where no one lets b on ast . . 3. . Y '. . . .5 V P performances, however famous, hc maintained that reputation. Fitting into the second base position of a championship ball club in Sophomore year, he helped a lot in preserving the s lendid record of recedin seasons. And now heis leadin the arade as ca tain. P P 8 I , g P U P Hot grounders are not the only things Iohnny can handle. He threw wisecracks, and has batted out lon 1' stories for four ears. No matter how fast the com an , ackie was a . 3 . y . . P 1 y . . star in the conversational league. And to quiet any Carnegie Foundation investigators who may read this, know ye that no dean ever found it necessary to listen to a coach's pleadings on the athlete's behalf. Fighting all the way through, he Finished like a real battler with a whirlwind rall ' and if his work in Senior does not et him the student- , . ya . . g athlete s medal, someone will have to lose a lot of sleep beating him out. To sa so lon fn to ackie isnit too hard. We'll see his name in the s ort ua es soon, Y ' is . v P Il S Q and we know him well enough to be sure that further success wont change him. Here s to you, Iackie! Our hlmdrczl forty-eight IOHN HARTLFY MEANY 37 Ma111 Street, Hmsdale, N H Mmchester Club -I Crusulcr QUlll'1L.ll l 7 Mendel Atazlcmx 3 'l SLICFIIIFIL Souctw el Sijlllllfl l 4 9t11111r lS1ll Lo111m1ttet Here IS Z1 ch'1p whose qu1cL, UIIPYCICDYIOLIS sol1d1ty rc111111ds you ol the l11lls of New Ha111psh1re, whence he comes RC8lIZ1Hg that the study oi 111ed1c1ne requ1rc.s 11111nly hard work, and lots ot 1t, Iohn marrxed hxmself to tl1e Pre Med course 111 sophomore, and l11s perfect Hdehty has resulted 111 a most fCl1CltOUS 11111011 He IS 1 111111 wl1o C111 enloy workmg, and whose labors achxeve worthwh1le results Apart lrom drxwmg three color plates of the twenty four hour Cl1lClx md pr'1ct1c1ng h1s slxlll Qt Pl11lObOPl11C hole punchlnv on lxant s tl1cor1cs Iohn s ravorlte OCLLIPLIUOIIS were tellmg the l11story ot h1s nat1ve V1ll'lgC and the 1d10syner'1s1es ot 1ts c1t1Ler1s, and domg favors tor hlS frlends He has '1lW'1ys been qu1et 1nd llI'1OlUlfI'l1S1VC 1n th1s l1stment1o11ed act1v1ty, as well, and We h'1ve come to ttke h1s gc11eros1ty more or less to1 grfmtcd W r111ght make one exceptlon to that ClLl1ClI 'md u11obt1us1ve note he otten ended sleepy corr1dor111.1tes out of bed on mormngs when add1t1o111l slumber seemed especmlly 1nv1t mg, 1n th1s OCCLIp'lll0I'l, qu1etness, unobtrusncness would hqrdly produce results HIS ha d work and persevemnce w1ll l11'llxC hllll '1 doctor h1S ffencros1ty 'md gentle manly behawor w1ll lT1'll4C lum a successful o11e They are the rmsons, too, why we are glad to admlre hxm as a scholar, 'md value h1111 as '1 fnencl Om' 01111111111 folly 11111r 1 , . - 1 , , 1 1 , . ,. ,..,J.-l. Y ., , 1 '- 'Q' I .W 1. r 1 vi 1 A . . . - , 1 - . 12,31 1 1 - . 5 .3 . W .. 2 . Y . X . . . ' i . ' ' '- . 1 . 2 2 X- ' - ' L . ' . r, , E . . , , .1 , . . - . . - O ,, , K I , . . 1 . . A 1 ' 1 - . 2 ' ' ' ' . -. 1, . . U . U . ,, p - . '. . . . - 4. 1 K ' ' C - . t ,, ,. t .. r 1 .' . g U - ' . - C 1 . 41. K. I C K K Q . IOSEPH RICHARD MEEGAN 31 Linden Place, Brookline, Mass. Class Treasurer 2g Varsity Football 2, 3, 43 Freshman Football: Freshman Buseballg Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Boston Club l. 2, 5, -lg Sodzllity 1, 2. 33 'Varsity Hockey l, 23 Sanctuary Society 2, Senior Ball Committee. l We now present to you one of the most likeable chaps in the class, little Ioe Meegan, a Hne athlete, and a good student. Although Ioe was originally a member of the class of '31, it was our great good fortune when fate decreed that he should join our exclusive ranks. Although Yale's Booth gained much more newspaper lineage than did our Meegan, we who have watched him closely for four years have claimed that he could cope with Booth any day on even terms. Ioe's flashy, hair-raising dashes made the crowds sit up and take notice in his sophomore and junior years, especially in the Boston College games. Shorty's talents are by no means confined to the chalked Held. He is an excellent hockey, baseball, and basketball player, and has few peers in the arena of a Holy Cross bull-session. The Clark Gable of his class, Ioe spelt glamor to Worcester drawing-rooms. But he never left Brookline far behind, and many a week-end would see him setting out thenceward. Soon he will go east, never to return to Holy Cross as a student. We know that he will bring with him the best wishes of the entire class, and our united hopes that lie will taste success in his chosen line of endeavor. One fIIlIIIll'!'tl' Hfiy ROBERT IOSEPH MEIKLE 44 Morton Avenue, Newport, R. I. Intramural Athletics 3, 45 Newport Club l, 2, 3, fl: Aqui- nas Circle ily Sodulity l, 2, 3, -l. Equilibrium comesiin very handy at timesg nature strives for it in its every activity. To offset the loquacious and the verbose, we need quiet and unassuming chaps. In the person of Bob, we have one of those unobtrusive fellows who accomplish many things quietly, and reservedly. Scholastically, Bob ranks among the leaders, and makes no apologies for his tireless search for knowledge. As a reaction to deep philosophical contemplation, he chose the more strenuous branches of athletics, hockey, basketball, horseback riding, and lacrosse were his favorites. Bob is a charter member of the corridor court champions, and a star of last year's scintillating Prom hoopsters. As a host, Bob was second to none. When his famous roommate, Bucky Mahoney, was out scaring up food or singing Christmas carols, Bob would so thoroughly entertain the pitcher's friends that they'd feel annoyed when the tall boy returned. Bob impressed us as a great fellow, and our only regret is that more fellows didn't get to know him as we did. Our' hrnzzlravl fifly-our IOHN FRANCIS MERRILL 27 Ward Street, Worcester, Mass. XVorcestur Club l. 2, 3, -lg Economics Club -l: Day Schol- ars' Soclality 1, 2, 3. rl: Intramural Athletics rl. In Writing about such a man as Iohn, it is rather hard to refiiiin from using superla- tives. He counts his friends by the number of persons he has ever met. In four years at the Cross, Iohn has created a reputation for unfailing good nature which is enhanced by his humorous quips and healthy Wit. Even the ordeals and the unadulterated strain of the business course has failed to worry him out of that equanimity which has character- ized him and has been a source of wonderment to his less fortunate associates. Rain or sunshine, exams or holidays, you could always rely on Iohn to come through with some- thing to resuscitate our jaded spirits. ' Besides blazing the path through the wilderness of exams and other necessary evils of college, he demonstrated that for a college student there is no such thing as a depres- sion. In order to keep the wheels moving for the intellectuals of the College, he con- descended to become a member of the library staff. He also proved himself to be a very capable newspaper man. His pal, Bill Farrell, can tell you of the more or less melodious Way in which Iohn pursued his newspaper career, and also of his prowess at bridge which he developed on the company's time. Despite his many activities outside of school, including his social conquests at Vernon Hill, Iohn surely managed to hit that 'old scholastic pellet for more than a high average. 0111- hznzrlra-11 filly-11110 I. FRANKLIN MILLEA 33 Main Street, Peabody, Mass. Boston Club I, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 4g Crusader Coun- cil l. 2. 5, -ln Purple Key -l: junior Prom Chair- mang Sodality 2. 3, -lg Assistant Manager Glee Club lg Senior Ball Committee. Perhaps we should call Perry Millea the paradox of the class, for he managed to be quiet and unassuming Qwhere have we heard that before?j and yet hold one of the biggest positions on the campus. Perry's election as chairman of our junior prom is proof enough of his popularityg without going into superlatives, we will let the success of that allair stand as indicative of his ability. Iimmy or Frank or Perry-we never got around to ask- ing him which name he preferred-had the same experience that befalls every prom chairman: listening to campus predictions of the utter and abject failure that the prom would surely be. Yet the success of tlie Millea social outstripped all previous Worcester hoe-downs so all-inclusively that the gloomy soothsayers were vanquished without a struggle. The old saw that says a man has to make enemies if he makes friends hardly goes for Perry. We don't believe he knows how to make enemiesg like Cardinal Nevvman's gentle- man, he made friends without any apparent effort. What we liked most about him was that he was accepted and esteemed by all groups. He was equally at home with intellec- tuals and with dandelions, in spite ofthe fact that, in the First instance, he made no effort to impress with long and sonorous dictums, and that, in the second, he neither shouted from windows nor organized Washroom quartets to wake us early on late sleep mornings. Une 01111111111fifty-Mraz' FRED SAMUEL MIRLIANI 52 Monroe Street, New Britain, Conn. Hartford Club 1, 2, 3, '-lg Aquinas Circle 4: Freshman Basketball: Intramural Basketball 2, 3, 4g Frosh Re- ception Chairman 33 Purple Crusaders 2, 3, 43 Leader 45 Band 1, 2, 3, -lg Leader 3, 45 Orchestra Z, 3, 45 Concert Master 49 President Musical Clubs 43 Senior Councilg Sodality l, 2, 3, 45 Purple Key rl: Chairman Music, Senior Ball. A 1 What is a football game without a band? And what is a band without a leader? And what is . . . Will someone stop us, please? That's better. Now we'll tell you. Freddy was the leader of the Holy Cross band for two years, and what a leader! The joy of every radio announcer's heart- Folks, I wish you could all see this dynamic little leader of the Purple band, with his baton poised and his cape flying . . .U Remember those Yankee Network broadcasts? Freddy's valedictory performance in the Yale bowl, when he directed four massed bands with the ease and ability of a veteran, was alone enough to give him the All-Eastern title among student leaders. Besides that, Mirliani conducted the best edition of the Purple Crusaders we've seen yet. YVith a sparkling per- sonality and a love for his work, he was able to become the most successful and versatile musician on Pakachoag, as well as president of the Musical Clubs. A good student and a thorough gentleman, Fred won our friendship early in fresh- nan and has kept it ever since. We single him out for special praise as one who never took a bull-session seriously enough to become engaged in it-surely a welcome pheno- menon at Holy Cross. Good luck to y-ou, Fred, and may the critics as well as the gods smile upon your musical career. Our' hlll1IlI'l'!I Hfly-four IOSEPH RYAN MISSETT 5 Colony Road, New Haven, Conn Intramural Athlcuts 9, 4 New I-Iaxtn Llub I 3 4 AQUIIMIS Cxrtlt 4 I!'t.Nl'lITllI1 Dcbatzn Sotxtty P11 omath -l D1 lmltxe SOLILIQ -l q0LlllllV l 2 3 4 Purple Ixey 4 It appears to be common practxce to begxn laudatory wrrtmgs by enumeratmg thc prettler vlrtues and more smugly conventxonal 'lCC0lTlpl1Sl'llTlCDtS of your sublect But Ioe Mlssett was not the ordinary Holy Cross man, md he deserves extraordlnary treatment Whrle lt 15 ne1ther our mtentron, no. our busmess, to narrate rn hcrotc verse last October affaxr, we land lt drfhcult not to speculate here on whether oc s collegiate lmmortalxty w1ll rest on the madvertance of that afternoon, or on hrs stholastrc achrevements Four years ago New Haven loaned one of her future powers to Worcester and Holy Cross, and the two latter resorts have not been the same SIHCC Sons ot that Connectrcut clty seem to absorb a certaln amount of the culture of Mr Harkness untversxty, and Ioe was no excepuon I-Ie seemed to many of us the best dressed man on the campus rrght through the four years, and saved us the trouble of following the Brooks Brothers adver trsements But under all the glamorous accoutrements, Ioe was a Holy Cross man, 1 gentleman because of essentlal qualltles, he was not a mere soclal automaton deservxng that label because of an abllrty to eat grapetrult correctly What Holy Cross w1ll do wrthout another Mlssett to add color to her occaslons, we dread speculatmg 0110 hllllflrlfll fflj Ill' 1 f -'H' 's ' ' ' ,-, is 1 fg.-'-51+ t q 'z : .f - gt, Q , , , , 9 ' ' - Let us give you our Knight of the Rented Shieldg our custodian and protector of the horse. . . .Q . . . - N . L . I . ,S . . . , I 3, . . . . L I - n . . , . . . , , . . C , , ' r-fl. FRANCIS JOSEPH MOAKLEY 569 Whalley Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Assistant Manager. Track 1, 2, 3: Manager Cross-Coun- try 43 Intramural Athletics 3, -l: New I-laven Club l, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle rl: B I. F. -lg Senior Councilg Dramatic Society Z. 5, 'lg Business Manager 43 Snclality 2, 3, -lg Sanctuary Society l, 2, 5, 45 Frosh Track Manager -ll Senior Ball Committee. Frank was the dashing juvenile of our local masquers. The dramatic group on the Hill insisted on being purists and sticking to Shakespeareg they also insisted on Moak's coming out of the A. A. oHice long enough to learn a few lines in order that the Bard might be more expertly interpreted around these parts. He carried off the honors by his sterling performance as Brutus in Julius Caesar, and never quite recovered from it. He was stage-struck. This year he couldnlt resist the offer of the title role in Henry IV, and was equally successful. An active track heeler for' three years, he entered senior as manager of cross-country. This is a position where the limelight is notably missing, but that didn't seem to trouble Frank. It was all for Alma Mater, and he gave his best, as the sports scribes say. A New Havenite, he possessed that town's flair for big-time meth-ods, and brought to Holy Cross scenes an urbanity that was refreshing after our association with other sons of that state. That he has a mind and the will to get on is shown by the fact that he has rung the honor roll bell more than once. Send us two on the aisle when you play the Guild, Frank. Our XIIHIIIITI1 lffllv-six WII LIAM P MOFFITT IR D6 So Sherman Street, Wrlkes Barre, Pa l rtsl1man Tnotblll lI'lll.1Il1llI'.1l Athlctlcs 5 -l N I Pennsxlunu Club l 7 3 4 Dante Llmturman -l Aqu1n'1s Clrele 4 Selentahe Soeletx 1 2 .5 -l Clutlleaclcl 4 Pulple key 4 Glec Club hmr J Pl mmath 7 3 cltlm l 2 5 -l Sr.n1orB1ll om mxttu. We have never seen Bxll rn a had humor, whether he was tumblxng YVlll'1 hrs brother and all obstacles, B111 has always managed to aehrexe a smrle 'ms an ultlmatum to '1dvers1ty or as a welcome to success, 'md for th1s salutary procllvrty we owe lnm a debt of gmtltude In freshmln B111 was loath to throw l'1lIDSClf on the tender mercles ol the Cross Clomestlcs, so he was wlth us only durrng class hours We regret that We drd not ltnow lum better clurlng that tlme when praeucftl Jokes had not lost tl'1e1r savor, for we can 1m'1g1ne that h1s IIIVCHIIIXC genlus could have devlsed many ways to pass dull moments However, IH September, 1979 he beelme a boarder and joxned us as 1 trusty What an addxtlon to any corrxdorl He knew all the latest melts rn VVh1IC1I'0ll bed tumbllng, the rlght 'IHSWCTS to any and all scxentlhc questlons, 'md 1 good many cures for the blues Bull possesses '1 line lv Iss VOICE whlch has aceomp1nu d hrm on the justly famous Glec Club tours for the past two years He has been a welcome addlllon on these tnps, smce he has a keen sense of humor and a knowledve of the right tlme to produce a qulp, and above 111 because he 15 ever the gentleman and the good fellow We ire bind to h lve known Blll, and 'rs evxdence of our esteem wc hope he IS glad to have known us Om' hlznzffvzi fflv fczcn X , , . , . . - . . - '. . 4 : : ' ' J Q V3 - 5- 'it 2.5 'y 5 .. . ,' w a v s ' .,. x .. 9 . 7 3 - 3, -lg C ' 7, 45 milf . -, , '11 So- : ' 1' , , , 1 ' 1 C - cheerleaders, competing in sports, or wrestling manfully with the books. Despite any C . t . Y I L S . L ' . , 7 .7l' l K s C. , ' - , 2 . . . -. . . K Q L Y. . . N L 2 . x W L 2 . . Q K .E . - . L V J ' 7 L ' '. ' 1 ' L ' I ' .1 , . h G I . . ' ' . . . 1 ff . L WALTER EDWARD MONAGAN, IR. 84 Euclid Avenue, Waterbury, Conn. Waterbury Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Dance Chairman 45 Purple Crusaders 43 Band 1, 2, 3, 'lg Orchestra 2, 5, -lg Soclality l, 2, 3, 43 PATCIIER Bus. 45 Aquinas Circle el, Senior Ball Committee. Introducing the old maestro himself-the debonair Walter, musician, world-traveler, prom-trotter, humorist, and raconteur. From a lowly drummer in the football band of 28, Walt rose to the position of chief percussionist of the Musical Clubs in his senior year. But to those knowing Walt, he was more than a mere go-od musician. We knew him as a true seeker of culture, a man whose ruling passion was the perfection of himself in the things of the mind. One of the few seniors remembering anything tangible from his earlier association with the Classics, he convinced us that study of those subjects really enhanced a man,s personality, and armed him with rapie1's of erudition unsurpassed by that derived from other sources. Endowed with concentrative powers a bit out of the ordinary, and possessed of a fertile mind, Walt managed to place his name on the honor roll whenever he thought the extra effort worth-while. As a friend, to us he seemed unequalled. He was loyal, sym- pathetic, and generous. From the Cross, Walt goes to the study of Law, and his per- severance, his high ideals, and his general wide-awakeness should carry him far in that profession. Ona' fmmlrnf fifly-sigh! IOHN THOMAS MONAHAN 378 Park Avenue, Worcester, Mass Worcester Club l 2 3 4 Cl'l.lS'lLlCI' Countll 1 2 3 l Day Scholtrs Sotlthty 1 2 J 4 Sucnuhc Socxcty 3 -l Lhenusts Club 4 If we thought that outward appearance was a rclmble crrterlon of lnner mturc on lookxng at the suave, dlgnlhed gentleman prctured above off hand we should put lum down as a man about town Well, we d be rlght 1n 1 way, but that 15 only one fact of h1s manlfold personahty Beneath hrs Uenteel exteuor Iohn has a sohd substrttum of manly character that wlll renew ones talth rn manklnd The phantasm ot 1l1gl1fS of rntensrve study and, of long hours robbed from the larr day to be devoted to slow, patlent labor ol the stufly laborfttory has deterred many 1 hopeful student from electmg the BS course Btt It could not phase lack He rolled up hrs sleeves, tackled the job, and carrled It through to the Hnrsh And he rem'uned calm and cheerlul '1ll the way through pufhng away It hrs old brlar tlll xt hrt the temperature of an electrlc furnace Iaclt found more joy 1n hrs prpe and tn hrs old pal Sully, than the grand spotlight of Heetlng fame could pour on 'my man An observ Int, elhclent mmd, and a pronounced love for the sclences brought htm scholastlc promrnence Alter analyzlng your ch'1r'1cter1s tlcs, Iack, we can say that your heart was 'ls good 'ts gold, your smile vt as 'always frrenclly and nothing could be beyond possrbrlrty, once your IT1lI'1d was set on rt We need no mystxcal knowledge of the future to prophecy that a successful hfe Wrll be yours Your work 1n the past takes care of that 011: hIIIl!llC'!f H113 111110 . . .,. . . 1' V L- - ' 3 3 1 J K' ! l 3 3 v - 1 -' ' th '1 1 '-',1'-- ' -is . .. t . , , , , ,. s -, ! 5 ' l l '1 . C .t k . . 1 , A- . ' . . C . . . 1 ,I W . D C L t L . 1 . K , ,, . . . , . . . .. . I ' 1 W ' L . . ' . . , 1 ' ' ' 4 . , . ,. 4 1, . .l 4 , ' J. 1. . L . , L 1 I. L. 3' 1. l A' I C 1 W , V Cv . , I- ,, ' EDWIN SHANNON MORIARTY 15 Henry Street, Fitchburg, Mass. ' Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3, :lg Fitchburg Club 1, Z, 5, 43 Aquinas Circle 43 Sanctuary Society 1, 3, 43 So- clality 1, 2, 3, 4. In the history of Pakachoag, Fitchburg has sent a host of illustrious sons to the fair college which crowns that eminence. Ed, although while at college he has not coruscated, fits into an honorable place in the line of the scions of his native city who have been given the oliicial sanction of Alma Mater. Ed was one of the most ardent sports enthusiasts who ever struck the Hill-both as a spectator and as a participant. Not a branch of intra-mural athletics did he leave untouched. Basketball took up most of his time, but he could for an afternoon's diversion twirl a pretty game on the diamond. It was only lack of sufficient experience that pre- vented him from throwing them up for the varsity. But, great as was his love for sports, it is not primarily as an athlete that we shall remember Ed. That line sportsmanship, that spirit of clean fair play extended to all the other branches of Ed's full and varied life. By his inherent unselfishness, his charming afifability, his Willingness to aid a comrade in any sort of distress, in short his veritable harmony of all good qualities of head and heart, he has endeared himself to all his class- mates, and has engraved his name in relief upon their memory. Ed has been such a good mixer, so fortunate in making friends, and so successful in everything he has undertaken at the Cross, that there is hardly any need of wishing him good luck. But We do so with all our heart. One hzfndrerl sixly CHARLES GEORGE lN1ORONl:fY Dunne Avenue, Collinsville, Conn. Freshman Basketballg Intramural Athletics 2, 3, 43 Hart- ford Club 45 Aquinas Circle 4g Scientihc Society 3, 43 Sodality I, 23 Sanctuary Society 2, 3, 43 Men- del Academy 4, Senior Ball Committee. We do not know whether or not you are in the mood for punning, but this page brings us to the punster of the class of thirty-two. VVhenever we hear groans followed by heavy thuds, we realize that Charlie has coined another horrible distortion of word or sense and has received his just reward. ln this case, however, what is generally con- sidered an obnoxious habit, is indicative of a keen mind, for despite the devastating toll of the pre-med course, Charlie has consistently maintained an above 90 average, and easily scoops in the laurels for whatever scholarship exists in our admirable aggregation scholas- tic philosophers. And Charlie is an athlete. The strict requirements of his course forced him to forego a varsity berth, but his sparkling play in the intra'murals has enlivened many an otherwise dull contest. As an indoor sport, he ranks on a par with Mr. Percy as a wizard exponent ofthe Culbertson system. And when the game was worth playing and the laurels more precious to the winner, Charlie was usually that lucky individual. One generally finds Charlie bubbling over with good humor and in high spirits, and in our first two years, no practical joke or nocturnal upheaval was executed without his guiding and accomplishing genius. One AIIIIIIVEJ A'i.P.'IjV-Olld' IAMES IOSEPH MOYNIHAN 85 Eunice Avenue, WVorcester, Mass. Worccstcr Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball 2, 33 Day Scholars' Sorlality 1, 2, 3, 4. There is no man without good traits in him. But even before the time of the Caesars, the proper mixture of the elements had been recognized as the determinant in the making of a man. If every good quality in the calendar were united in one hypostasis, and on it every god were to set his seal, we should have but another Iimmie. His affa- bility, prodigious fund of humor, exquisite sense of delicate fun, and indefinable personal magnetism made him one of the most popular members of the Worcester contingent. In the words of the popular song, life Was just a bowl of cherries to Iimmie. But he has his graver moments, too. In the philosophy class he sought unswervingly after truth, and giving the devil his due, he championed the lost causes of Kant, Descartes and Spinoza, until the ultimate triumph of the Ratio was made manifest. In the spring, when the crack of bat on horsehide could be heard on the banks of the Blackstone, Iimmie was Working hard for lack Barry's pitching staff. And his conquests in the social line did not lag far behind those in sports. Well, Iim, therels an old saw to the eifect that you can't keep a good man down. Go to it, Iimmie, the world is wide. One hmzdrcd sixty-two LI-IARLES IOSEPH MURPHY 133 South Street, Danbury, Conn Irtsbman Football Waterbury Club 1 7 3 -l Intra mural Athletxcs 3 4 Aquinas Lnclc 4 Semor Ball C'h.urman Band 9 4 Glce Club Z J l Sotlal Z 3 4 PA1cmRBus rl Cholr 7 He sang, he laughed he dreamed, says the French poet epxtomrzrng the carefree CXISICHCC of a gay cavaher Charley but partly Hts ID wxth thxs, but 1t IS 1nd1cat1ve of hrs sprrlt As a xalued member of the Czlee Club hrs mellow XOILC has been heard often but always wlth mcreased enthuslasm Many an rnformal qu lrtet has been steached by hrs lTlClOCllOUS tones A 9lI1gCI' he rs but he also concretely CXCU1Pl1liCS and fulhlls the clehm txon ol the man about town lle lb not entlrely known tor has sartorral perfecnon, though the hmt of Bond Street md a London Lallor were notrceable 111 lns attrre, but also for hrs mtrmate knowledge of the purheus of VVorcester He has been everywhere and seen evervthrng 111 the Heart of the Commonwealth, from Vernon H111 to Bancroft Tower, from the aurora to the Arcadra Dance 1nd song are correlltrve, and so Charley, emrnent IH sonv, hkewxse was most prohuent rn the art of Terpsxchore Tea dance, ball or prom were ever graced by htm and always accompanrecl by a charmmg specrmen of femrnrmty Ever the gentleman, courteous and affable was he Peasant or peer, freshman or senlor, all were treated ahlxe by hun Out of the fullness of the heart, the mouth spealteth, and Charley showed hrs slncerrty by l1lS actions and words He could always tell a tale or laugh at a joke w1th equal gusto An attentrve lxstener and mterestrng speaker are drlhcult to comblnc, but such a tow de fame was but h1s nature assertlng 1tself One hlllllldlfll fury thier w 5 ., . . . . . S ' . . . y ' f 1 -Q 1 s 1 . , Q , ,' . . ' . . ' .. 1 s a 3 f p s v ' 1ty 1, , , g ': 5 5 -, 3, 4. Ls W sa - - ' 1 1 1 , , ' ' , ' ' . , '. .1 . 1 Q , , 1 . A Z 1 ' . . .', 1 .' ' ' .' 1 K ' . : H ,, R .Q . ' - . Q . . . . .1 1 ' ' 2. 1 'c 1. ' ' ' ' ' ' Q . 1 . ' . 5 , J . 1. 1 1 ' A 1 . 4 2 ' 2 ' 1 D . 4: C . ' . . 1 L . ' . , .A N 1 . 1 K V ,, . . . Q. . 1 1 ' 1 1 ' . 1 u C - ' 1 ' . . . , K ,. . , EDWARD LAURENCE MURPHY 127 Pilgrim Avenue, Worcester, Mass. Freshman Footballg Intramural Athletics 3, 45 Worcester Club l, 2, 3, 43 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, Z, 3, 4g Chairman Program, Senior Ball. Regretting only that the allotted space is so preposterously inadequate for the treat- ment of the subject, it is with the greatest of pleasure that We present Larry, one of our Finest classmates. Himself the possessor of a strong buoyant heart, always bubbling with the exuberant spirit of youth, he had no difficulty in carving his niche in the hearts of all his friends. The worries, tribulations and uncertain vicissitudes of these sallow jaundiced college years never had the slightest depressive effect upon Larry. Youth, generally speaking, is inclined to look at life through rose-colored spectacles, and Larry's outlook is as much brighter than the average youth's as youthls is brighter than that of age. Larry is the m-ost happy-go-lucky fellow in the class. A social lion, a witty companion, a magnetic personality, Larry attained a position of prominence and honor in the Worcester Club. It is only natural that such an optimist and lover of life should be prominent in social affairs. And Larry always was. Because of his manifold graces he was in demand with both sexes. His were the hottest feet that ever made the daily jaunt up Linden Lane. Larry never managed to swim in the pool in the recreation hall, but that is the only thing in which he ever failed at college. One' hflllllffll sixty-four FRANK T. MURPHY 310 East Main Street, North Adams, Mass. Berkshire Club 1, 2, 3, sig Aquinas Circle 4g Freshman Debating Socieryg B. I. F. 45 Philomath 2, 39 Scien- tific Society 3, 43 Sodality l, 2, 3, 4. Amid the harassing cares of the pre-medical course, throughout the long arduous hours in the laboratory, in the midst of the toil and worry of an exacting course, Frank was alive to the softer feelings, to friendship, to collegiate goodfellowship. Perhaps the mingled air of fun and Irish deviltry, combined with quiet sincerity and iirmness that is readily apparent in his countenance, is the key to his character. Always ready for a romp, but equally wide-awake in serious matters, Frank was among the foremost in Whatever line of endeavor he essayed while at Holy Cross. As a debater, he excelled, from the plat- form of Fenwick Hall went out his dulcet oratory, persuading judges, entertaining blase undergraduates. Yet his triumphs as an orator, his achievements in other branches of Hilltop activities never deterred him from being genial to all. Books were ever his friends, and we often caught him re-reading some of the classics most of us thought we were through with back in freshman and sophomore. The words of the Elizabethan dramatist perhaps more concretely express this man's character than any of ours might: He reads much, he is rx great observer, and he looks quite through the deeds of menf, One Al1l1l'f'I1 .rixly-fin FREDERICK IOSEPH MURPHY 95 Peck Street, Norwich, Conn. lntramural Athletics 23 New Haven Club l, 2, 3, 4 Aquinas Circle '-lg Freshman Debating Soeietyg So- dality I, 2, 3, 4. Of the ten million Cmore or lessj Murphys that have passed their winters on Mt. St. Iames, the curly haired Gael pictured above is perhaps one of the most representative members of that remarkable clan. Fred was one of the First students that we met as We cautiously looked around for acquaintances 'way back in freshman year. And the host of friendships that he so casually made then have increased and multiplied until at present every member of thirty-two and a large coterie of undergraduates constitute his army of admirers. Fred roomed in Regis during his freshman year, and as a consequence he had a good deal of time to devote to extracurricular activities of a social nature. Moreover, he has the unique distinction of being a charter member of the famous Bucket Brigadef, that genial band of wall-crashing, water-throwing pirates which terrorized South Worcester and its cozy environs. As a result of the capers of these carefree souls, the administration saw fit to close the sacred portals, or what was left of them, of dear old Regis. But in spite of his collegiate capers, Fred is an admirable gentleman. In fact, hc could not help being well versed in all gentlemanly arts and graces due to the social cir- cumstances in which he moved with the utmost nonchalance and charming rayon'-fa1'1'e. 01111 hzzmlred .vixly-:ix IEROME FRANCIS lXflURPHY, IR. 370 Worcester Street, VVellesley Hills, Mass. Boston Club I, 2, 3, 4: Aquinas Circle 4: Band l, 2, 3, 'glg Director of Recordings 55 Orchestra 4g Purple Key 4: P.-x'1'cHi5n Lit. 43 Senior Councilg Purple 2, 3, 43 Fcliror-in-Chief 4g Crusader Council 2, 3, 43 Tanz- afrnuffq 2. 3, 43 Fresliman Debating Societyg Philomath 2: Sotlality l, 2, 3, 4. The Greater Boston element at Holy Cross has ever been loath to allow the other poor souls to forget the fabled culture of that place. The above Greater Bostonian has done more for that cause than all the statistical arguments brought up in session. He ellected that by simply living among us for four years. A musician, a scholar in music, highly literate, and a facile Writer, when he entered senior year as editor of the Purple, no one seemed very much surprised. In freshman year -when most of us were in the ice-age of our intellectual development-he was turning out piece after piece for the literary monthly. Gargantuan energies in the first year are hardly strangeg when the law of diminishing returns does not begin to set in at the begin- ning of the second, they become remarkable. Nor did his literary efforts-we still insist on calling them that-so utterly consume his time that his campus history must be monotonous with references to schoolboy letters. For recreation he turned to music, and long discussions on ponderous trivialities. Every- one knows that it was he who 'engineered the Victor recording of the Band and Glee Club, thus preserving for posterity the noises of our somewhat expert musical clubs. 0110 hlH1ffl'f'If .flirty-xz'1'c11 MATTHEW EDWARD MURRAY lO31 Livingston Street, Carlyle, Ill. omath 2, 3, -lg Crusader Council 2, 5, 4: Dramatic Society 33 P.-wc:-mit Bus. -lg Freshman Tennisg Soclality l, 2, 3, -l. As you gaze into the depths of the serene and dignihed countenance which graces this page, little do you realize, if you are not one of his intimates, that lit is the likeness of our class oracle that looks benignly at you. As the ancients went to Apollo's temple at Delphi, so Went troubled seniors to the corner room on top Loyola. Therein sat Dr. Murray solving cliliiculties, and cleaning his fingernails. Having a naturally loud voice, he Won most of the arguments carried on Within the home grounds, and gathered a reputation for himself as Holy Cross' premier toreador. But lest We give you the impression that he shone only around his collegiate hearth- side, let us hastily add that less sleeping was done during Philomath meetings while he was haranguing the boys than at any other time. As a thespian he did well by Shakes- peare, but some of the lads-notably Holland-attribute most of his success in this line to the fact that he wore a dagger well. Ted possesses -one of the best philosophical minds in ,32, and whenever he spoke on philosophical subjects he commanded attention by the clearness and force of his exposition, as well as by his insistence on sticking to the point. This should stand him in good stead in his chosen profession, Law. We hope you will forgive us if We say that Ted stands a better chance of reaching his mundane goal than most of the rest of us. One h midred s1'.1'Iy-eight Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3, f-lg Aquinas Circle -l: Phil- BERNARD PATRICK MCCAFFERTY 25 Linden Avenue, Lansdowne, Pa. Freshman Track: 'Varsity Track 2. 3, 43 Captain 4g Penn- sylvania Club l, 2, 5, 4g Senior Councilg Purple Key elg Sutlality 1, 2, 3, -lg Prefcct 4. Herewith we present a Ht subject for the biographer, the annalist, and the epic poet. For in the possession of Bernie, the class of thirty-two may rightly and justly be said to have added to the traditions of Holy Cross. lt is now over three years Qfor he was known in the beginning as the Freshman Flierj, that this remarkable athlete has been a bulwark of our representative aggregations on the cinders and on the boards. He ran anchor on two record breaking mile quartets, won Five straight 500's, lost only two 440's,,' and only two out of eleven 600's. Above these accomplishments, Bernie is recognized wherever sportsmen meet as a plucky lighter, a loyal supporter, and a true-blue gentleman. His records stand for the future generations to emulate and for present mortals to admire in awe, but the qualities of the man as we know him would shine as resplendently were they heralded on all the sport pages to which he has been a constant contributor. One of the most important cogs in the machine that will pass into history as the class of nineteen thirty-two, Bernie con- stitutes what the college weeklies call a campus Figure. But it is the unsuccessful who require lengthy tabulations and paragraphs of achieve- ments. Bernie stands with his laurels, and when he passes down Linden Lane he leaves behind a well-hlled niche in the Hall of Fame where stand enshrined a galaxy of Holy Cross imrnortals. Om' hlllltlffll Ilixly-l7f71c' 1 DONALD HARTENSTEIN MCCANN 1115 N. Iames Street, Rome, N. Y. Central New York Club 1, 2, 3, -ig Aquinas Circle -ig Freshman Debating Societyg Philomath 2, 3, 4, Oratorical Contest 2, 33 Glcc Club 2, 3, 45 So- dality 1, 2, 3, 45 Dramatic Society 2. 3, -lg PATCHER Bus. 49 Sanctuary Society 5, 4. If, dear reader, you have met this young man, pray do not pay further attention to our efforts to depict our character, for we know they will be inadequate. A combination of Romeo, three of the Marx Brothers Qnot Harpo, he cloesn't talkj, and a Wild animal trainer is really too much for one to expect in an ordinary mortalg but Don could hardly be called ordinary. I-Iistear-compelling renditions of The Tell-Tale Heart are famous in every city in the itinerary of the Musical Clubsg his comic relief in Iulius Caesar was the hit of that productiong We shall make no mention of his innumerable amatory con- quests, as it embarrasses him to hear anyone Qother than himselfj describe them. Some time when he isn't around, possibly We'll tell you. His versatility has Won him many friends. Those serious-looking lines in his forehead are a sign of his philosophical attitude that Won him favor with the serious, the twinkle in his eye and his imminent smile made him welcome in all other society. The friends he makes are not the kind to forget quickly, either. One hmzzlrcd :enmity EUGENE PATRICK MCCUE 122 West 83rd Street, New York, N. Y. Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Metropolitan Club l, 2, 3, 45 Economics Club 41 Philomath 2. 53 Freshman De- bating Societyg Dramatic Society 33 Sodality 1, 2, 3, 43 P.fx1'cuE1i Lit. 43 Tonmlznwk 1, 2, 3, 43 Sanctuary Society l, 2, 3, 4. Looking back over the four years, it is not difficult to see that very few of us realized the intrinsic worth of a college education, and still fewer really took advantage of the cultural opportunities offered. We came to Holy Cross with prep school mentalities, and it took us altogether too long to buckle down to serious effort. Not so with Gene. College to him was not a prolonged vacation preparatory to being thrown out into a hardly recep- tive world. Mac will leave Holy Cross with four years of accomplishment behind him. Gene wrote many of those liery Tomahawk editorials that served to lift that sheet out of a complacent mediocrity. When he could find time, he liked to get some of the boys together to kick shins with him up on the soccer pasture. I-le was also a member of the championship senior team, and did much to tally up scores during those Hnal games of the series. Socially, he has no apologies t-0 make, his evening at the Statler in junior year is a classic. Gene tells us that he feels the need for more formal education, and next year will probably see him studying Law. The PATCI-11211 can see no reason Why the lad pictured above shou1dn't make that profession as much his own as he has Holy Cross. Om' hllllllffli semvzty-0110 IAMES GERALD MCDEVITT 88 Front Street, Binghamton, N. Y. Tennis Tournament 3, 45 Southern Tier Club 1, 2, 3, 45 President 45 Aquinas Circle 'lg Economics Club 45 Freshman Debating Societyg Tonuzfmwlq 1, 2, 3, 43 Intercollegiate Editor 45 Dramatic Society 1, 2, 3, 45 Technician -lg So- dality 1, 2, 3, 4. Deeds which men do live after themf, This quotation certainly applies to lim. Not only does this lad leave to Holy Cross a series of scholastic and literary aehievementsg he also goes down in Crusader history as an incorrigible prankster. Remember the neat little electrically-wired chair over in Iim's room in Alumni? Some of us are doing our best trying to forget it. And then there were other episodes. Perhaps We'd better leave those for alumni reunions. Dillon handed the tough assignment of Writing Intercollegiate Hourw to lim at the end of junior. Taking a column which had been previously only by freshmen and proof-readers, lim developed it into the Tonzezhazuku best feature. As his material left less latitude for 'originality than any other, it is truly remarkable that he succeeded in introducing a note of freshness into routine notices of silly activities at other colleges. WVC have no idea what lim intends to do after graduation. But whatever he hits 'upon, we're sure that he will be successful in his undertaking. After having known the man, we End it impossible not to come to such a conclusion. One hllllllfffl szwfnfy-Iwo ROBERT FRANCIS MCDONOUGH 90 Pleasrnt Street, Portland, Me Phrlomrth J 4 Marne Club 3 -I Dame Charrmrrr 4 Prrcmzrr Lrt 4 Tomuhazulq 3 4 Columnrst 4 So d xty 5 4 Thrs page, gentle readers, wrll contfun none of the ordrnary buncombe of the stand ard year book brography It would be most rnapproprrate to Bob, 'md he posrtrvely Wrll have none of rt Of course rf we were to cell vou that he was born readrrw Epretetus rn a bar ber s chfur rn Patagonra, or that he rs Dreparrng to go back to hrs castle rn Kfrmchatka rn order that he may prove hrs hypothesrs that the fugues of Bach would sound more soul ful on the vrolrn rf the ordrrrrry c1t gut were supplanted by fr strrng made from the duo denum of the lemur soaked over nrght rn a solutron ol rubrdrum chloroplatrnate that would he all rrght Robert wrll allow you even to lre about hrm, provrded you do rt prcturesquely Thrs passron for the exotrc rs hrs most outstandrug trart Ile rs 'r dreamer, an arrstocrat and a non conlormrst by temperament McDonough Wrll never frame hrs drploml, nor piss hrs mrddle twentres wrth '1 college charm on hrs watch Cham He rs not, heaven be thanked the typrcal actrve campus leader But he has hrs own peculmr drstrnctrons Bob rs the most wrdely read student on the Hrll, a wrrter of extraordrmry talent 'rnd promrse, fr good hand wrth a drawrng pen, a feverrsh, enthusrastrc, and rmmensely produetrve Worker, the wrttrest pessrmrst 'md the most generous man we have ever met Welll leave hr brography Just that way untrl another decade or two of development has blown the star dust of hrs Neo Parnassus rnto the Classrc for Whrch Amerrca has been wartrng One hundred :frenzy fhme 4 1 B . I r 7 1 I '1 -1 I 1 u K l 7 C 5 S K I f - 5 : 2 S ' al f , . . . . . . r L - - . . ' . zz ' . , . . . . . r . . . r . .. f . r 1 L' L W L V L 1 1 L V r A ' c ' ' . ' 4 ' A ' Q 1 - ' 1. . ' 2 1 . . - . Q ' - - . ,, . ,, . . W. . . , . L . 4 f I 1 4' . S - K 1 f ' I .. ' IUSEPI-I EDWARD MCGUIGAN 178 Primrose Street, Fall River, Mass. letic Association Treasurer 43 Fall River Club l, 2, 3, :lj Vice-President 33 President 45 Aquinas Circle 45 PA1'cruzn Lit. -lg Sanctuary Society l, 2g Sodalily 1, 2, 3, 43 Purple Key 4. loc has lived on Mt. St. Iames long enough to see several of his ambitions fulfilled. His labors on the track were crowned by his appointment as manager to Bart's boys, and he has proved himself worthy of this coveted position, and he assembled a soccer team that not only won the intra-mural championship twice, but also achieved victory for the Purple in 'varsity games. Ioe was also the star player, being adept at every fine point of the game from the far-famed hat trick to the penalty kick. However, not all Ioe's energies, and they are considerable, were expended on the athletic fieldg for he is of the temperament that enters whole-heartedly into ever enterprise, whether it be a game of contract or a stroll through sweet Auburn. He has a capacity for friendship and a straightforwardness that have made him many friends. He has been the outstanding member of the Fall River contingent on the Hill, and in the social spheres has been the overseer and leading light of many a Cross function in the Border City. His press notices out of that town would fill no mean sized volume, and the unstinting praise showered upon the favorite local son not only do him justice but meet with hearty accord from all who know him and count him among the great. Ioe goes out from the portals of Holy Cross with all the best wishes of the class whose members have been favored with his company for four years. We hope that the world will come to realize him as the truly great personality that we know him to be. Ona hmzrlrea' serferzty-four Manager 'Varsity Track 43 Intramural Soccer 3, 43 Alh- IOSEPH WALTER MCINTYRE 333 Church Street, Chnton, Mass 14llLl1lDll1'i, Club 1 7 Wmccstcr Club 3 4 Crus1dc1 Counull 2 3 I DayStl1olars Sodahtyl 2 3 4 Another one of the Cl1lllZOI1 delegatlon Although lt 1S more than tr1te to use that age old CXPYCSSIOH, qu1et and unassummg, Ioe enacts the role to perfecuon Such tr'11ts are generally found 1n those who are held IH the hlghest esteem, and Ioe 15 anythmg but an excepnon to the rule Always wllllng to help hlS knowledge of thc matter and other b1ts of useless erud1t1on proxed an ald, tlme and agam, 111 the Clmton boys overcomlng 5l1LllUlJllIlg blocks 1n the1r pursult of the Ratio As far as the worr1es of the books were concerned, oe was an ac'1dem1c oracle Whatever dCt1V1ty he partlcxpated ln found htm .1 d1l1gent worker and partner, 1nd although he was not mentloned so often as some of h1s confreres, the d'1y students appre Cl3tCd h1s ab1l1ty 1n the smcerest way they made hI1T1 a sort of father Confessor Ill thelr scholastlc dxfhcultles, as well as IH 'my SIILIHUOD that requlred mature thought Desplte havmg to commute from that httle town up IH the h1lls every clay, '1 task that would tax the endurance of most mortals, Ioe has never been known to COI111Jl'l1Il It IS hlS Qblllty to see the brlght s de of tl11I1gS, plus hlS generoslty and good common sense, that makes us feel sure of our pred1ct1on that Ioe w1ll not be many years Cl11UlJ1Ilg before he gets to the top rung One hundred :ez enly fi: c ot. 1 . .,., . . -Y 1 , .-. 1 1 , 1 1 s s s P 1 y 9 - 4. . 1 4 - . . . ,, . . ' . 4. 4 r . 'L - - ' ' Au as . , 4 1 v , . - V . .L . . V 1 . - t . 4 . .. . . 1 .. 'A . 1 4 ' K. . 4 4 ' c .. - K - L A- ' 1 . . c 4 - c . I 1 V ' V 1. Q ' - 1 -1 IOI-IN GERALD MCKEON 172 Delaware Avenue, Albany, N. Y. Albany Club l, 2, 3, -lg Treasurer 23 Secretary and Dance Chairman 53 President 45 Aquinas Circle -lg Freshman Debating Societyg Philomath 2, 3, 45 Crusader Coun- cil 2, 5, -lg Dramatic Society l, 2g Mendel Acad- emy 43 Scientific Society 43 Purple Key 4g P,i'rCHEn.Bus. 4: Sodality l, 2, 5, -lg Sane- luary Society 1, 2. 3. 4: Second Senior As- sistant -l. Gerry was first brought into the limelight through his association with Owen McGiv- ern, that silver-tongued master of oratory. Even in those early days of O,Kane, Gerry was an ardent disciple of Owen's diatribe and learned much at his knee. That is, perhaps, the reason why he has never stopped talking during his later years at Holy Cross. More- over, he soon gained such c-onhdence that he relied on oratory to overcome any chance difliculty that he might encounter. He came out on top in many a Contract game as a result of his forensic smoke-screen laying. Never in four years did he allow a rather formidable pre-med course to deter him from living for the moment, and getting the maximum out of his campus life. He chose unwisely, Mike Percy as a foil for his periodic outbursts of nonsense and wisdom, and they constituted a pair perfectly complemented into something calculated to make the lives of all their corridor mates pretty miserable. Despite his carefree attitude, Gerry had a great seriousness under his nonchalant exterior. He seriously pursued all studies which would bring him a little nearer to his goal, Medicine, and we can see no reason why he shouldn't get there with a bang. One hzmdrvd 5c'Ul'11f y-six XVILLIAM IOHN MCLOUGHLIN 19 Manchester Avenue, Paterson, N. I. New Icrsey Club -lg Aquinas Circle dh Sodality -lg Sanc- tuary Society 4. Here, Unseen but seeing, Unknown but knowing, is the gentleman known as Bill. He has been with us but a short time-you see, he did not decide to go to college until he had spent three years at Seton Hall-but in spite of that consideration, he has had no trouble making up for lost time, and no difliculty forming real friendships. Bill achieved the seemingly impossible by being immediately accepted by a class that had lived and suffered together for three years, a class already broken up into seemingly impregnable cliques. It has been said of newcomers to America that they are not among us for long before they are more American than the Cabots and the Saltonstalls. Thus it seemed to be with Bill and Holy Cross. He was rushing around the place with the same enthusiasm for the college that we felt back in freshman. He approved of Holy Cross, and I-Ioly Cross approved of him. A student, a lover of peace, a good fellow, he was adopted gladly by the class of '3Z. We know how to appreciate things like that. Bill, you leave Holy Cross Z1 true Crusader. One hilllllffd .fcumzly-sew-1 EDWARD LEO MCMONAGLE 159 Wythburn Road, South Portland, Me. Maine Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Vice-President 33 President 45 Aquinas Circle 45 B. I. F. 3, 43 Sanctuary Society 3, 4g Crusader Council 3, 43 Sodality 3, 4. i If it did not approximate a cliche, this would begin With, McMonagle has a genius for leadershipf' It's the truth, though. Leadership implies trust on the part of those to be ledg Ed has no dilliculty in inspiring such trust. I-n senior year he found himself at the head of as unmanageable, as unruly an organization as ever got together in October and elected officers. The Maine Club, we mean. Its members coming from every corner of a great, sprawling state, in other years they resisted eva ry effort at forming them into a body ready for concerted action. This year things were a bit differentg the frightened freshman from Caribou and the tired senior from Portland were behind the good McMo1iagle to the end. Some campus wit has said that all Holy Cross men may be divided into the educated and the educationalists. We are unable decisively to deny thatg but we should like to say that the lines of demarcation seem to be a bit blurry. Ed seems to Ht into both categories. It seems to be quite the common thing among juniors and seniors to interest themselves in everything but the subjects they elected. The Man from Maine is unconventional as far as this is eoncerncdg he buried himself in Education and its various poisonous ramifi- cations. To him pedagogy is not something to be worked at only until something better drops in onc's lapg it is a career, an exciting adventure. 0716 hlrlldrrd .cvlfrlily-righl IOSEPH LOUIS NICHOLSON 101 Stadrum Place, Syracuse, N Y l'1cshn1'm B1sl..etb1ll Vaxsm ll1slxCtb1ll2 3 Indepen dents 4 lllU'1lIlLlI'1lAIl'1lCt1CSl 2 3 4 Syracuse Club I 2 J -l Presulcnt 4 ILOIIOITIICQ Club VICL Prtsrdant -I Aqumas Cmle 4 Sodxllty I J The m1ld wsaged Syracusan Vlllfh the qulet manner, the uncanny eye lor the basket, and the faculty for lTl'lk11'lg frrends Wherever he went Baslxcth 111 V115 Ioe s forte HIS level hefxdedness 111 thc. pmches accounted 1n great part for hrs aet1ve membershrp ot three years m the most COl161StL1lfly spcctwculqr group or basketccrs th rt 1113 been seen on the h1ll Handlcapped by an rnqccessrble and 1nadequ'1te gymn 1s1um, Holy Cross basketball drew crowds nevertheless and was kept from the hmho of IIIHOCUOUS desuetucle througsh the vahant efforts of Mr Nrcholson and h1S collahor ltors On the campus we take our hat ofl to Ioc f0I sutccsslully repressrng tor tour yefus the sock and Shlff purlounng propensmes of hrs roommate If 15 rumored that Ioe wxll be the proud possessor ol 1 fob shortly after graduauon, and by thxs token, 1f none other, he makes '1 brd for '1 place 'rrnonfr the class 1IT1l1lOl'lI'llS W1th the bankrng busmess the vs ay lt IV ve would adwrse Io: s smrmnfr at the top or the ladder and lrymg 1 r1p1d rush dom nwlrds In tlmc he ought to hold 1 respettahlr. P051 t10n anyway he ll go somewhere no matter what he tr1cs no rash pred1et1ons for usj, for thc man Who has spent tour vc,'1rs 1l1'lPC1'X1OllS to tht llattcry ol the crowd, and 11 ho his srrnled and 811111611 through chapel ftsktslx , relcctorv, and PLIIUISSIODS or thc lack of them, and general nulsances, cannot hold OH success for very long Our hllllllllfl L z 1 my mm' 4. .- . s' .Av .., . Q . . .1 5 , B. 1 .. 1 . , ' , .,,, , 1 . ' Q . T. ' , ,,,, . ,. . 2, ,4. - ' 1 ' ' 1. ' '. l -I v -3 1 v 1 , a - ' K A. . x . 1. 4. ' L L' 4 t - - - ' ' A . - -. 1 ' t . C k 3 k 4 K' 1. L LQB1 3 Ll' L . D y . y ' ' 2 g ,' ' . . g K A I 1 - ll A ' ,m . 4 4 ' , 1 . L 1 .a. L , 1 ' 1 f- - - s -f . . 1-Q J- . 1 - WILLIAM IOHN NIXON, IR. 14 George Street, Naugatuck, Conn. Freshman Footballg Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 43 Waterbury Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 49 Eco- nomics Club 45 Sodaliry 1, 2, 5, 4. .4 5 l L . Here is a typical manis man. Bill, endowed with all those splendid physical qualities which accrue from athletics, has so tempered them with the Ratio Studiorum that a cul- tured gentleman has evolved. The intramural league found in Nick a capable and active performerg in fact it was due in a large measure to his efforts that '32 attained such suc- cess in interclass athletic competition. He was one of our first 'varsity soccer players, showed his versatility in football, basketball, and baseball. Bill has led an active life here on Pakachoag. He found time to polish OH easily and distinctively the none too simple business course, having the remarkable good judgment to see that ninety per cent of the coilegiate bull-sessions in which his dormitory neighbors engaged, were absolutely prohtless from every angle. Later on, when Bill takes his place in the business world of that up and coming little Connecticut city, we know he'll preserve the same sensible attitude. He was a true friend and a good sport, armed with a pleasing presence backed up by real worth. There was an unassumed modesty about Bill and about everything that he didg we liked him for it. The petty jealousies of campus cliques were entirely alien to him, because he fought with none, for none was worth his strifef' Good luck to you, Nick. One 11lIllI11l'L'!i eighiy IOHN JOSEPH NOLAN '74 Bellevue Street, Worcester, Mass YVnrccster Club I 2 J -l Intr1mur:1lAthletxcs 3 4 1-ll'Lhlll11lI1 lJ b rung., Socxely Dux Scholwrs Sotlxllty VVho IS there that l1'1s not experlenced a softenmfr ol sprrlts 'tt hrs presence? I-Ie IS rrch rn human symp'1tl1y, 'lnd lus 15 the well developed nund ot the true man In Iohn we found I1 rftre equ'1n1m1ty 'md nftturrll vvlt th lt 'IIC not to be duplrcated rn every rrlencl Iohn s entrance lnto our mrdst, luke everytlung thfxt he drd, vvets unpretentrous, but was the converse of envy and 1ll feelmg, and rnflnaged to bold S0l11Cfll11'1g more than mere tolemnce tor the successes of others Hrs ex er befammg countenance 'md rerrdy Wlt won hrm a happy crrcle of frrends at all tunes However, melt or the smrle there we-ts an rntellect keen enough to grasp qt scholfustxc rmpedlmentfr vxrth qulcltness Iohn never seemed to worry a great de'1l over hrs stud1es, but when the lll1I'lxS were lssued he was fllways well 'nbove the pen rlty hue Iohn has been an '1ct1ve member 111 class aflznrs, llthough the greflter pwrt of lus actlvrty his been centered ID the l'LIHClI1ODS ol the non reslclcnts Clmfuftcterrstlcftlly unassum mg and modest, Iohn has not made known hrs plflns for the luture, but we are certaln that those qualltles Wluch have Won h1IT1 success ID college and endeared hlm to full, w1ll Wm for lum ID future years the success whrch he so truly deserves One hllllllllll flghly 011 1 ' 1 s '-1- w 1 1 3 7 l 5 D 7 -. s- 2 L. if U ' ', fl 'fly - K L' 'Q ' l, 2, 3, -l. ' l , ' , ' -N . ' L L I ' s ' 1 . ' ' . . r ' 1 . 1 ' ' A , ' . his qualities soon made themselves evident and he was taken in as st regular lellow. He - ' - ' . - L . - - ' - g s C 3 , Q I - D 'V ' L . L L A I . . z ' A . . . K U- . . , n . A ' t 1 . l n . ' L 1 - . 2 ' . ' FREDERICK ROBERT O'BRIEN 86 Walnut Street, Norwood, Mass. Class Treasurer 3, 'lg 'Varsity Football 23 Freshman Foot- ballg Intramural Athletics l, 2, 3, -lg Boston Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Aquinas Circle -lg Economies Club -lg l'a'reHtaR Bus. -lg Sodality l, 2, 5, -l. The serious maturity of the face pictured above bespeaks in itself a virility which is an essential foundation of the character of a real man. And should you know Fred as well as we do, you would know that his character is one of the liew around the place that is reasonably well balancedg Fred has none of the intellectual's complexes, nor has he the man of action's impatience with things requiring brain rather than a heavy beard and a pair of shoulders. For four years Fred has held the olhce of treasurer to 1932, and although we never had a great deal of money to turn over to his responsible hands, he was ever ready to show us that our trust had not been misplaced. That the class insisted on O,Brien's holding the ofhce right through those hectic years, is but a measure of the man. Choosing a conglomerate Business-Science course to take up his last two years, Fred maintained that this was the perfect formula for getting ahead in the rather cold world. That may he. But there are some people who distrust all formulas, simplihcations, and short-cuts. We are inclined to disagree with that stand. lt's just that Fred saw a goal, applied reason to the attainment of that, saw the means, and speedily availed himself of them. lndustry needs far-sighted men, in Fred O'Brien it will find one. One !lllI1I17l't ll rig My-In'n WILLIAM IOSEPH O'BRIEN 22 Columbus Street, Granville, N. Y. Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 5: Intramural Ath- letics 5, -ln Aquinas Circle -lg Glue Club -lg Sodality l, 2, 3, 4. For three long year's Primo's corridor-mates insisted that he join the Glee Club and dissipate some of his gargantuan vocal energies therein, thus making late-sleep mornings more blissful, and shower-rooms more ht for contemplation. Bill Finally gave ing senior year saw him lending his Hne, strong baritone to the harmonies of our rather superlative meistersingers. In that way everyone was pleased, from the highly erratic director to Bill's tired roommate. Strength of vocal cords is generally taken as an index to inelfectuality of mental power. Bill reversed that. He may have spoken a bit louder than the rest of us but he always had something to carry on his rugged thought-vehicle. Possessing a physique distinctly out of the ordinary, it is hardly strange that he was strong in athletics, as well as formid- able in voice. In him we had an ideal mating of mind and body, a true collossus. His assistance at informal collegiate gatherings--bull-sessions to youl-always meant that other amateur comedians would retire for the evening, leaving Primo in command of the iloor. VVhat he'll do when he returns to Granville, few know, and we're not included in that number. But it goes Without saying that he'll do something, and do it well. Our hzrnflrcrl z'1'ghly-fhzu' IAMES P. O'CONNELL 85 Washington Street, Worcester, Mass. NVorcestei' Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Band 1, 2, 3, 43 Orchestra 2g Day Scholars' Sodality I, 2, 3. el. The name O'Connell has come to mean something in Holy Cross circles during the past three years. Not that the above lad is the storied Phillog not that he is any relation of our much-publicized Crusader captain. Iim's exploits were confined to arenas less vast than the Harvard stadium, less thronged than Fitton Field. Yet we Find no difliculty Hnd- ing words of praise for him, nor do we consider his collegiate career unnoteworthy because he provoked few headlines. lim was a man shining in affairs of the mindg he was a philosopher, a brilliant conversationalist. Iim's college career, and the schoolis extra-curricular activities, have both suffered from the fact that this stalwart gentleman lived away from the center of activity. But all day students labor under that lamentable disadvantgeg few are those who can make up for their free-time absence in the few short hours they are among us. lim was one of those exceptions. He came to be liked and admired by the entire class, and was a shining example of how the average Holy Cross man naturally takes to a man possessing the nobler qualities. After graduation Iim will go on. We're sure of that. One h1111rl1'rrIeighty-fozn' PAUL DANIEL O CONNELL 1097 Westfield Street, West Sprlngheld Mass Qprrngehelcl Club 1 '7 1 -l ll'lll'll11Lll'll Athletics 7 a -l 'Xt UIDIX Clrtlt l 1ILSlll11 in D batmf boeicty Dix o us Qoclilm I Good fl'l11lgS in small paclxaffes, 1f youll pardon the expression, Dr Bemis Because of h1s Napoleonic proportions, Paul has been the butt ot many 1 good mtured wrsecraclt however, he never found l1llUSClf at a loss lor an apt retort For some unknown reason, year He was duly 1I'11Il'lICCl into life on the clmpus when, during the Hrst semester of sophomore, he mhabrted the Fordham crazed and riotous halls of Alumni Those hectic few months satisfied all our hero s curiosity, and in February he Went back to town Generous llmost to a fault, Paul was always ready to come to the rescue of 1 pal always supplied wlth crgarcts and alwlys willing to hand them out they were the toasted variety but then beggars can t be choosers Although he never attended a military school, Le Pam' seems to hate gained enough knowledge of 'army service from the movies-enough anyway to pertorm satisfactorily the duties of Top Ixiclt in the EdLlC8UOIl course The fact that he performed those duties and ID spite of it ret'uned his many frlends, IS 1 tribute to his character personality, and 1f Some day, Paul, It you see us 111 a bre'1dl1n , you might come up and offer us one ot those very Fine cxgarets of yours One hllllllllll 015 My 17: c' I , ' Q I , t . ' , ' A 1 . . , . '- . ., k , . -. ,, . . . -, .. , .1 I.': 'Q4 .' u' Ag, 'g aj Sch li . 1 3 , 2, 5, 4. l . . U . . . A - ' . ' . . - . ' , rg A ' . Y Q L . ' ' ' ' 1 ' probably his innocent appearance, he was permitted to live in town during freshman . , . . . C e V K 4 6 K , 4 N , - Q , A a . - , - - , . A . - K ,. , . A . C I - L . . K . KK' 9, L V D u .m If 1 I l l PHILIP EDWARD O'CONNELL 33 I-Ioward Street, Brockton, Mass. Freshman Football: 'Varsity Football 2, 3, -lg Captain 43 Freshman Iiaseballg 'Varsity Baseball 2, 5, -ll Intra- mural Basketball 3. elg Sotlality 1, 2. 5, -lg Purple Key el. X Across the headlines of every paper in the East on November 15, 1930, there stood in bold relief that ever memorable score: Holy Cross 27-Harvard 0. A new grid hero was born. Almost single-handed Phantom Phil by his cleverly executed passes had caused one of the greatest football upsets in the history of the game. Proclaimed by his renowned coach as the greatest back lor his size in the country, Phil has scintillated with the most brilliant stars of the game from freshman year to his last scoring touchdown in senior. In junior, his mastery of passing, running, and quick-kicking made him the idol of the thou- sands who watched him play. Like a true Crusader, he led his band of warriors during his last year through one of the most severe schedules ever arranged for a Hloly Cross team, led them to outstanding success and came through unscathed. But football was not Phil's only sport. As a second baseman he saved many a base hit by his spectacular play. To him goes the palm of doing everything well. In his pass- ing on to join the ranks of former luminaries, we his classmates lose a friend,-a serious student, a great athlete, and a gentleman. Discounting the fact that he has probably done more for Holy Cross by his athletic ability than any other graduate in recent years, our admiration for Phil is well-founded in his modesty and sincerity, in the fact that he was quiet without being taciturn, in the fact that he was just such a Holy Cross man as we would all like to be. Om' flIIllIIl'l'II f'igf1ly-.fix PHILIP IOSEPH O CONNELL IR 6 berlnarn Street, Worcester, Mass Worcester Club l 7 u -l Aqllllllx Cnrclt -l lui, Schn lrs Snclzhry Contrary to the popular conceptxon ot .1 phllosopher Phll 15 no nusrnthrope, no 1dle burlder of gossamer mmarets, no passlonlcss 'xscetac He has behrnd hrs sw tcet ol honest lrrsh H sh 1 superxor, Cl1Cl'Q,'Ct1C mlnd '1 keen wrt and 1 dynfmuc personallty Phll is one of those verscltrlc chaps you lead about Whether lt was 'L boolt, '1 game, or a conversatroml tllt, Phll managed to comm. out on top And although he would be the Hrst to deny any such report, we know that certaln charmmg neccssrry evrls Hnd them most conclusuely demonstrated h1s superb mtelllgence by vtlmntly res1st1nU any allure ments, and 1'ClTldll1S fancy free bo rt anyone who did not have the prrwxlegc of lsnowmg Ph1l wonders why all hrs pals speak so highly of hmm, know that the fact that he was a real lntelhgcnt trlend won for hrm a place rn our IHCITIOFICS that wrll endure as long as constancy 'mtl the apprecmtlon ot the finer tlungs of hte ITICJI' anvthrng A l3I'lll1'lDlI scholar, '1 sparlthng compwnlon, and most of all a real man wlth what other words could we better descrrbe that stcrhng char Qcter, w1th what other cxpressxons could wx e better show the reasons why Phrl IS one of the most 'rdmxred membcrs of our class, Ind th lt wlth hrm goes the sxnccre l3lC9bl11gS ol an entrre class that has grown to respect hxs schollstlc '1b1l1ty, to 'ldmlrc hrs pCI'90l1 lllf1y, and to love hmm for the man he turned out to be Om- hIlI1I1lC'!1l'I'ghfV :cuff 1 , . ri l ' mf - ,-.f. g' 27 'z'- z a ' f l, 2. ' ., ' . C ' L V ' . , ' ', ', : '. e . ' K ' ' , . ' , . . . ' ' . ' . l U A f 'L I ' 4 ' ' ' 4. . ' ' U L n ' 4. ' l c . l 4 1. ' B' ' . c . ' . ' ' ' - A 'Q ' - selves wreathing dreams that involve our Tl10llIlSIlC Demosthenes. However, Phil has .V l .i . 'gl D C n V A ' . K. . L K L - 4. . A -L I C : . . U K 3 . ' . ' I ' . 1 1 ' 1 -. 5 . ' . . . , , J YVILLIAM FRANCIS O'CONNELL 4009 169th Street, Flushing, L. I., N. Y. Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 35 Cross-Country 2, 33 Intramural Track 43 Metropolitan Club l, 2, 3, 45 Dance Chairman 45 Aquinas Circle 4: Fresh- man Debating Socictyg Philomath 2, 3. 43 Prircinaix Lit. 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, Ml. When Hrst we knew him, Bill was the tall, dark, slim runner who led the freshman hartiers along the cross-country course and around the track in one and two-mile events. Next we glimpsed him in the scholastic honor lists, with his stride just as long and his victories even more frequent. As he appears to a stranger, so is Bill to his most intimate friends-always a gentleman, a scholar, and a sincere friend. He has successfully man- aged to exhibit his eliiciency in executive capacities without losing his affable manner and pleasant greeting for everyone: His willingness to help others is surpassed only by his own diligence, and when once Bill has attained any honor, every bit of praise may be deservedly given to him. One of Bill's most versatile accomplishments, and one which we often attempted to imitate but t-o no avail, is his feat of crooning while he busily shines his molars to gleam for the next smile. And he's not half bad at either job! An active force in the destruction of senior asceticism was Mr. O'Connell, through his founding of the Holy Cross Lace Sampler and Lamb Stew Club. What we'll probably associate with Bill the longest, was his rapid-fire wit. Some of our compatriots memorized their humor from the New Yorker, but Bill wasn't one of them. When he got off something good, it was a pretty sure bet that it hadn,t been heard before in South Worcester. Om' fum r1'rz'?17 cl'glzly-sigfll IOHN JOSEPH O CONNOR 86 Harlem Street, Worcester, Mass Worcester Club l 7 3 4 DIIIIIIIIC Soc1ct5 3 D15 bCl1Ol.1lb bodahtyl 2 3 rl uretness and modesty are the 3l'1TlZ111g ch1r1cte1'1st1cs of th1s personable ch1p from thc Heart of the Commonwealth Although we knew Iohn rlght through the lour years as a fellow prohclent 111 SfLlCl1CS, and deeply lnterested 111 Holy Cross 1I'1i.l all 1ts 1ct1v1t1es, although We were 111 hls presence for four and Hve hours 1 day through long penods ol months, yet We found lt rather chlhcult to figure h1I'1'l out I-11s personwhty xmpresscd us is mscrutable, and We spent long hours lfylllg to tlec1pher the man ennu1, that t1red February feehng, sprmv tever, or General desuetude Iohn would be as kxpper and pert '15 he was the llrst day he sat 111 fl collegmte Ll'1SSl'OO1T1 lt was e1ther that he was not human, or had super human powers ot concentr'1t1cn and sclt control We re mclmecl to agree w1th the latte1 But Iohn s talent 'md 'lblllfy was not conhnccl to the classroom, 1n jumor he came out lor dramahcs, 1nd cflrrled '1 mean spc'1r 111 one ol thc Shakespeare opens ohn has chosen the cdueauonal held as '1 hte work Perseveremce and 9fLIClIOL1S 'lppll c'1t1on takes one fear 111 that professlon We see Iohn, therefore, haung httle or no trouhlc gettmg to the summxt of hls hopes One hlllllllfli rlghiy 111110 5 . . . -. . ' -'A y - ' : 1 9 -- n eh 1 1 s '- ' V., ' D 5 7 I ' Q ' ' ' -' 1 . ' 1 1' ' ' ' ' ' A z ' ' . . Y 1 ' 1 1 . K V I ' . lf 1. . - . ' l While other men were dropping by the scholastic Wayside as a result ot pre-vacation . 1 - U A 1 - E , . Q S ' . C Q 1, a ' V K . 1 A . -, Y 3, . - A . 1 - . . C . 4 1 Q ' . . ' 'u l A PATRICK FRANCIS O'CONNOR VVise Street, Iamaica Plain, Mass. Intramural Athletics l, Z, 3, -lg Boston Club l, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 43 Economics Club -lg Philomath 3, 43 Sorlality l, 2, 3, 43 Sanctuzwy Society 2, 55 P.+x1'C1-1131: Lit. -l. The Hub of the Universe bestowed one of its richest gifts upon the Heart of the Commonwealth on the day that Patrick Francis CJ'Connor nervously packed his suitcase, turned down a I-Iarvard scholarship, and set out for Holy Cross. Doctor Lowell has said that all higher education is self-education. Then Pat is the most highly tutored man in the class. For four years he has read omnivorously in the world's best literature, and the formal studies which gave him his superlatively fine scholastic record have been a merc side-line. Pat and Will are not brothers, but their alphabetical proximity made them sit next to each other for four years, and each one has taken it upon himself to superintend the other's extra-curricular development. Neither one could ever hope to succeed in this, but the reciprocal experiment has had its good effects. It was very flattering to the denizens of 25 Beaven and later 54 Loyola to realize that this personification of Bostonian culture could find his delinite place in the Bohemian atmosphere of their cubicle, with its trunks piled high with old clothes, its Neo-Classic drawings, its semi-annually excavated desk tops, its interminable discussion of shift-keys and Schopenhauer, and its walls screaming with the songs of Ben Ionson, Anacreon, and Omar. Nothing human could be foreign to Pat, and he graciously acted as the strong, gentle, sobering inliuence. Ona' fmndrell ninety WILLIAM IOHN O,CONNOR Prospect Street, Bloomfield, Conn. Freshman Track: lntraimn'al Soccer 5. 45 l-Iartford Club l, 2. 3, 4: Aquinas Circle ig lUATCHliR Lit. -lg Philo- math 5, -lg Dramatic Society 33 Purple 3, 'lg So- tlality l, 2, 3, 4. As Photography Editor of the PURPLE Pfvreiiiiii, and roommate of the Editor-in-Chief, carefree Bill, or Will as he is at last resigned to being called, had occasion to live for a year amid the insupportable Woe which attended the long drawn out birth of the tome you are now reading. But he is too good-natured to remain glum for very long, and has weathered the ordeal Without acquiring a wrinkle. Will is a tlileitante extraordinary-a lover of books, but a reader of men-and words fail to tell what he is to women. He is a man of aHairs who has held the World but as the world, and a dreamer who has not made dreams his master. During his four years, Will has engaged in the most diverse activities. He has sporadically favored the Purple with excellent short stories and soulful verse, he has missed morning chapel with remarkable regularity, he has helped the class soccer team to two championships, learned to play chess and trimmed his teacher in the same evening, thrilled to the Lydian laughter of Sermio, and to the gay boulevards of Paris, speculated far into the night on the enigma of the cosmos, and raised the defamed practice of idle talking to its proper place among the Fine arts. VVhen we meet again in the years to come, Will will be sure to have a flock of birds in the bush. But he'll have one in his right hand too, and perhaps a half dozen others eating crumbs out of his left. Om' hllillllffl zlinely-rifle IOHN BERNARD O'DONNELL 2 Fort I-Iill Terrace, Northampton, Mass. Holyoke Club 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 43 Dramatic Society 53 Tomahawk 5, 43 Sodality 4. Every year a few gentlemen in other colleges read the Holy Cross Catalogue, think it over a while, and then Wonder how they ever made their mistake. john did that one day in his sophomore year at St. Anselm's, but instead of sitting back and bewailing his fate as many do, he decided to take steps. Better late than never, he figured, and when he knocked at our doors the next September he found that others felt the same Way, for he was cordially taken in. ' Some would find it difficult breaking in like that. but not Muggsy. In spite of his two-year handicap, he Was as much as home as any of us by Thanksgiving. After all, one doesnit live in Northampton all one's life without learning a lot about colleges. In him shrewd common sense strangely harmonizes with a fine instinct for humor so that his sallies or his advice are equally Welcome. His vocation will be business, We hope, for there he Will surely find success. That intensely practical nature of his is just the thing one needs in this time of depression, and We're backing him to have one of those three or four jobs the college will get after graduation. He has a romantic side too, but we promised .... To wish him good luck after seeing the cards he has held all year goes against our vengeful spirit, but we'll do it anyway. He may fail in love. If he does, all we can say is, some girls are lucky! Om' fIlll1lI1I'C'!f .'1i11c'Iy-two ELDON HURLEY O'NEILL 290 W'est Elm Street, Brockton, Mass. Intramural Tennis SQ Boston Club l, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 43 Sutlality l, 2, 3, 4g Councillor 2. Not content with contributing to Holy Cross the best athlete she has seen in many a day, Brockton became especially indulgent and sent us Bud, the suave debonair man of parts. There is an old economic law to the effect that the output is directly proportional to the input. If exceptions, as they say, prove the rule, then we may write our olicial Q. E. D. right now. For here is a man who for four years has knocked that venerable equation into the proverbial cocked hat. Bud is the 1T10St leisurely fellow who ever struck the Cross. You will not Hnd an ade- quate record of his achievements in the list of activities at the top of this page. In order properly to appreciate Bud, one must know him personally. But you can get some idea of his worth by asking any upperclassman what he thinks of Bud O'Neill. He will tell you that he is behind everything original on the Hill that is worth mentioning, and that he is one of our most popular and most able seniors. The utterly unsellish nature, subtle sense of humor, and pleasingly nonchalant front of this superior gentleman have endeared him to everyone. NVe understand that Bud's ambitions will take him to the study of law. lVell, all we can say is Beware, ye women jurorsll' A great many pages might be written about our hero on this tender topic, but space will not permit us. So we'll just say goodbye, Bud, and good luck with your quid- dities and quillets. Om' !I1lHI1l'fKI7 llfllcfy-lhrc'c' FRANCIS WILLIANI O,ROURKE 9 Stoneland Road, Worcester, Mass. Intramural Baseball 3, 43 Worcester Club l, 2, 3, 4g Day Scholars' Soclality l, 2, 5, -l. The best of the intramural pitchers, an ardent defender of scholastic philosophy, a quite personable young gentleman this Mr. O'Rourke. Frank, or Huck', if we must be pedantic, was the mainstay of the Worcester team in the intramural baseball league. He was a lover of sports to the extent that he could pitch an entire double-header under a broiling sun up on Paltachoag's crest, and during the Whole season in junior he never lost a game. Frank was also the champion philosopher of the day-hoppers' locker room. Even the hunkies used to listen to his sterling defenses of the Ratio, and as one of them remarked recently, That boy sure has the goods on this feller Hegelf' His ability in disputation combined happily with his pleasing personality and good looks, so that 'iHuck,' spent many an evening in some cozy parlor fthey still call them parlors in Worcester? punctur- ing the intelligence ol? some fortunate Woolworth girl with the philosophy of Neo-Scholas- ticism. He was equally at home in the darkest recesses of the Dinand bookstacks, where we feel sure that he saw more than the outside covers of books. Frank has been a diligent student, a valued member of the Worcester Club. What we have seen of him leads us to believe that he will not be listed for long in the ranks of the unemployed. One hlIl'IIfl'f'l! llillcly-four 1 ,W RICHARD BERNARD PALMER 19 UH1OIl Street, F1tchburg, Mass mbun, Clubl 7 J -I D11 S1.hol1rs So l 7 J D1ck IS of rh1t group hndmg rt more to the1r adxantafre to commute dillly to 1nd lrom school than to l1ve among the Lnwashed on the I-l1ll c,OITl1Ilg lrom F1tchb lrg to make '1 mne oclock IS no tr1v1'1' yxunt, espcclally when you hear 111 ll'11f1Cl that there IS many a SCIIIOI' who found the wall-t from Loyola to O Kane a h1t too sucnuous of 1 Wlllt r mornrng Yes, It must be admnted th rt th1s lalmer lfld was '1 h1t culture crazy when he declded four years lgO to take an eclucat1on by remote control A member or the B S course he majored 111 Physlcs Holy Cross oflers no v1eat1on1l eourses, but the other branches seem rather fresh a1r xx hen LOl11Pll'CCl to 1 B S w1th ml eulus and three or lour other h1ghl3 bormg forms or Y11'1l.l'1Cl11 lt1CS thrown 1I'1 Palmer managed to carry If OH ID great lorm, 1nd also g'lXC eyrdence that he cmclted a ph1losoph5 oook once 111 a wh1le Possessed of 1 hne spealunff XOICC he mwht have gr1eed more llllll one Holy Cross dcbatlng platform hld thmgs rranged thcmselxcs d1Ilerently We do not tlurlt D1Clx,S worr1es are due to be mult1pl1ed a hundretl fold Wlth the awardmg ol drplomas The world should hold no terrors for men of h1s cahbre On: b11l11Im11lz1lzrl1 H10 1 1. ,, V .. V, . . , V . ., . ,. 11tl My . ,-, , , ., .. .. ,.., ,-1. 1 ' tc 2 n .Y T. . , . : . ' .. . L C 61 II - . , . . . . ' . ' . e , ' .- . . ,. ' , ' J . ' . . , , . . .. . ... . V . . . , .. ' ' .' 1 ' 1 C n u n x' . Y 1 . . . . r ' . . 1 - , . . . . . . . . 1 , . . . . . . . . .- . . gl , D . . . .. A. ' 1 a . - .A . . r ' r ' - n I . 1 ,x'- 1 , 1 ' ' I -I. I DONATO MARIA VINCENZO ORLANDO PALOMBO PAOLUCCI 40 Union Street, Waterbury, Conn. Waterbury Club Z, 5, 43 Aquinas Circle fl: Orchestra -lg Scientific Society 4g Sodality 2, 5, 45 Sanctuary So- ciety 2, 3, 4. Donato Maria Vincenzo Orlando Palombo Paoluccil If Shakespeare had known of that moniker, he would never have asked Whatis in a name. And if he had known the incomparable Donato, the literature of the world would be much richer. Yes, Paolucci is so many-sided a man that only a Shakespeare could do him justice, so, right at the out- set, we despair of giving you anything like an adequate view of his versatile vitality in the short space which We have at our disposal. The mad genius, the Rubinolfi of top Loyola, the whispering minstrel, the reason for Brother McCarthy's continued presence in the refectory, co-president of the Room No. 84 Vicious Circle, the staunch advocate of the Holy Father, Machiavelli, Mussolini, Caruso, Gigli, and the Italian opera, the true and big heart of a sensitive and thoughtful Dante came in 1929 from St. Thomas' seminary in Hartford, after having perfected the Pytha- gorean theorem at Crosby High. To Freddie, Don is the good kit Butts, to Charlie Murphy, his second, to Cum- mings, the chess maestrof' to Rocco, his purgatory on earth, to Bill O'Connell Rubin- of:l7, to loe Reynolds, I Love You Trulyf' to Bro. Mac, the cause of his hospital sojourn, to Father Dowling, cream de mintf' to Father Toolfn and Section B, the sleeping apolo- gist, and finally, from the class-We wish you the best of success, and We'll always remem- ber Donato Maria Vincenzo Orlando Palornbo Paolucci QSLMU. Kal -rrlu-forays. Om' hlllllliffll Ilfllffj'-SIJZ' LESLIE MICHAEL PARENT 31 Crown Street, VVestHeld, Mass. Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 3. 4g Cross-Country 2, 3, -lg lntramural Athletics 2, 5, 4, Springfield Club 1, 2, 3, 'lg Treasurer 23 Aquinas Circle -lg Economics Club 4g Soclality l, Z, 3, 43 Sanctuary Society 2, 3, 4. They tell us that Les posed for the picture in the Krispy Krackles breakfast food ad, and that he really believes life is just a bowl of wooden nutmegs or something. Anyway, we've known him as a good mixer with an always cheerful disposition, a possessor of the philosopher's stone of popularity. As a manifestation of his door-die-for-dear-old-Holy-Cr-oss-spirit, Les was for four years a valuable asset to the hard-working cross-country team, and few were the days when he failed to show up in shirts and shorts for the four-mile jaunt. Not the best runner on the team, Les was consistently good. In studies he was always well up near the top, con- tradicting the belief that he who crams and does not grind will soon become an ex-man. He essayed and hurdled the struggle-for-existence business course without a falter, and could gloat justniably over his conquest of the Schoolmen and vanquisliing of Kant's all- opp-onent team. In the role of vivid raconteur, Les contributed to the enjoyment of many a bull-session. His other spare moments saw him metamorphosed into the houndest of bridge hounds, canvassing the corridors for a fourth. Les is going into business, having decided that the mechanic is a more valuable mem- ber of society than the farmer. Our AIIIIIIVFII zlizicly-.feuelz IOHN MICHAEL PERCY 205 East 78th Street, New York City, N. Y. Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Intramural Tennis 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 4g Economics Club -lg P,x'rCHER Bus. -lg Dramatic Society 3, 45 Philomath 4g Sodality 1, 2, 5, 4. 4 XfVe nominate Iohn Michael for the I-Iall of Fame: Because he improved on the law of proportional returns by getting a maximum return from a minimum of effort. Because he admits that the only Shakespearean role he cannot portray is Falstaff. Because he still plays about decks, although he has outgrown his fondness for boats. Because he is a conscientious student of voice culture. Because he regards Cab Calloway's as the best orchestra in the country. Because he disdains hot tips at the races. Because his voice flows on like a clear, swift stream. Because his aesthetic tastes have been his undoing, he appreciates Hgures but cannot tabulate them. Because he has proved his mettle under Hre, having faced a heavy barrage at several class receptions. Because he still shoots minature golf. Because he is regarded by Ely Culbertson as one of the future greats. Because he cleverly aliiects bcoming tweeds. Because he suc- cumbs to any attractive display of cigarets. Because he once Fired a gun and almost appeared in a coonskin coat. Because he subscribes to the spirit of true sportsmanship and loses now and then. Because he believes that No work and all play makes Iack a bright boy. Because he has earned the esteem and friendship of all by his thoughtfulness and goodfellowship. Because his native gift of eloquence will carry him a long way. Our hzznrlrczl nincly-nigh! l HAROLD FRANCIS RAFFERTY 5 Second Street, South Glens Falls, N. Y. Intramural Athletics 3. -1: Aquinas Circle 'lg B. I. F. flg Dramatic Society 3. -lg Sodality I, 2, 43 Consultor -lg l'.i'rci-ian Lit ig Sanctuary Society lg Secretary- Treasurcr Economics Club 4. Here, dear people, is the pride of South Glens Fallsg and We admit they have a good deal to be proud of in Rall. You may have heard his commanding voice urging the alleged dishwashers on to further endeavors, or reprimanding the mighty football men over at the trough, you may have seen him breezing through the examinations in the accounting course, or coming out of the dean's ofhce with a smile on his face and a 90 in Psychologyg you may have gone swimming with him at the Y or in Quinsigan'rond's icy depths, perhaps you remember listening to the thrilling tale of How Ye Childe Harold Did Vanquish Ye Sirens of Glens Fallsf, You probably remember him in one of these pictures, for I-Iarold was well-known Without being notorious. Your remembrance is a happy one, too, because a cheerful smile, a serene nature whose sharpest barb of satire is as gentle a weapon as the soft spring breeze, could not make any other impression. By the time this becomes public, the many talents of our Harold will have been secured by some forward-lool-:ing business Hrm at-We can predict with certainty-a com- pletely inadequate rate of remuneration. His worth cannot be estimated in dollars, or by any human scale of measurement, to those who have known him as we have for four years. Om' AIIIHIVEII lziflcffy-1J1.'ir' IOSEPH ALBAN REYNOLDS 189 Cherry Street, Naugatuck, Conn. Class President 2, 3, -lg Waterbury Club l, 2, 3, Clg Aqui- nas Circle il: Glcc Club l, 2, 5, -lg Quartet 2, 3: Trio 4: Soloist 2. 5, -lg Chairman Senior Council Hlg Freshnian Debating Societyg PATCIIER Lit. -lg Sci- entific Society -lg Mendel Academy 4: Sodality l, 7, 5, 4, Purple Key -lg Song Leader 4. To eulogize definitely a class president is one of the major hurdles of a college annual's staff. He deserves superlatives, and superlatives are considerably weakened after they have been used on all theother lads who managed to get by junior orals and senior philosophy Hnals. Ioe was for three years president of '32. That sentence implies more than all the ineffectual llowery phrases that we might concoct. Our class has been accused of about everything, but we should resent being called poor judges of men. An able liaison ofhcer between class and faculty, he was highly respected in both camps. A Sun-shy pre-med, he found time somewhere to engage extensively in social committee work right through the four years. From the beginning he was a mainstay in the musical clubs, and he wound up his breathless campus career as high man in the much-radioed 'Varsity Trio. Although he conscientiously avoided identification with any clique or sectional cabal, in argument he never hesitated in lining himself on the side ot what he considered truth. Ioe made fewer enemies while in residence with '32 than did any other man. That statement, we are sure, requires no qualification. Graduation, the great leveller, generally reduces class presidents to a status not higher than that of his quietest nemo contemporary. Ioe's going to be an exception, we predict. He will always lead men, and men will always find his leadership benign. Two hmlzlrrri' Intramural Athletics elg Aquinas Circle el: Band 3, 43 A VVILLIAM IAMES RILEY 8 School Street, VVarren, Mass. Suclalily l, 2, 3, el. l Here we have Bill Riley, the chap who put the little town of Warren on the map for us. A year's stay at St. Iohn's prepped him for the scholastic rigors of Holy Cross, as well as giving him that ease of manner that seems so much a part ol? that schoolls products. After two years olf living in, Bill decided to grace the Riley hearthside for a spell. Senior year found him back on the Hill, asking for more. He found the lilfe of a dormitory man invigorating physically aind intellectually, and he was willing to sacrifice a few social advantages to reap the greatest possible benefit out of his four years. Bill was one of the reasons why canny critics considered the Holy Cross Band the best on any gridiron in New England during the season of ,3l. No mere instrument- carrier, he got enough out of his cornet to make us think sometimes that there was .1 musician among them thar pretty uniforms. We heard indirectly a while back that Bill was an athlete distinctly above the medi- ocre before he came to Holy Cross. We can well believe it. But while in college he gave himself over to studious application with occasional time out for constitutional athletics. Socially inclined, he exercised this side of his personality both in congeniality among his corridor mates, and affability with the less rugged of the race. He tells us that he intends to try teaching. OHhand, we can think of no reason why he shouldn't succeed in that profession. Two dl1IlI1il't',IlI1IIi' RICHARD STANLEY RITZEL 163 West 1U2nd Street, New York City, N. Y. Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Aquinas Circle 4, Crusader Council 2, 5, -lg PATCHER Bus. elg K, C. Dance Chair- man 'lax Tfdllldhlillllf 5, -lg Sotlality l. 2, 3, 45 Freshman Debating Socictyg B. I. F. 25 In' tramural Athletics l, 2, 3. -l. To summarize adequately such a man as R. Stanley in the limited space allotted us would be rather diflicult. This left section of the Campbell twins demands, above all, space and more space. A Xavier product and a Manhattanite, it is perhaps not altogether startling that he got as far as he did while at Holy Cross. How much of his success is due to his early identification with Ray Howe, is a question we should hesitate to answer. But we do know that they complemented one another into making one grand pair of fellows, as well as subject matter for innumerable Tomuhzzwlg paragraphs. ' Philosophy, we fear, was lost on most of us. Looking back, we feel remorse that we didn't apply ourselves a little more conscientiously to making the Scholastic method a part of our essence. After hearing Dick engage in a discussion or two, one begins to realize the true worth of being armed intellectually. Dick was a student before he encountered Logic, but the heritage of Aquinas seemed to appeal to him more than did any other academic branch. He waded right through the uninteresting sections, studying for cul- tural reasons, not mainly to pass examinations. A social lion and a glib conversationalist, Dick made an ideal companion for a quiet evening spent far from the sound and fury of the campus. It is perhaps only natural that he was' well liked among his fellow members of the Knights. In seni-or year they entrusted him with the running of their annual dance. Two hlIl7f,I'l'lf 11110 KENNETH FRANCIS ROWE 41 Sew 111 Street, Lynn, Mass ston Llubl 7 l Aqurnls Ure -l lrust unerl I 7 J 4 Sinetu boenttx I HI been ux u Mrster of exe monns l All throufrh hte we encounter men whose rise h1s not been meteorre, 1nd whose deeds hue not been so spectqculur as to g'un for them the shouts ot the mob, the d1st1ne tton of notorrety, but who, by eonstqnt eflort 'md prudent lorethought, h'1ve rewehed th top and trsted sueeess Very otten sueh persons and the1r strrvlngs ire known only to us here at Holy Cross It IS not lxen s w1y to stftrtle, 1nd demngoguery wus never one of h1s enthuslasms He connected hrmsell wx 1th eert'un 1et1x1t1es, emd beeause of lum those thxngs prospered Mlny or the extra eurr1eul'1r pastrmes wrth whreh he qssocmted l'11lT1 sell brought llttle general reeogmtlon, 1nd pmetreally no th1nks Yet he knew 'th tl'l1S before he set out upon them He wws not lOOlx1l1g lor 1l'llll1CL.l1llfL weelmm, he sought 1 Hner and more l'lSUllg gratxtude And, we 'fre sure, there 'lre men rn 37 to tender lt to um These hwve been hrappy ye'1rs, lxen Thu w1ll be the H1111 judlrment when they are looked at rn tl1C1I' true perspective They mlght luxe been l qpprer, ol eourse But there were not enough Ken Rowes to go lround, the elass needed more men VV1ll111g to efhee themselves lor the eommon Wood, and men not blrndly fulhlhng thelr selfish mstmets Our only smeere regret, then, 15 thqt 111 actlutles dxd not know your sxneerlty 'llld true eo OpCI 'ltl0l'l I 110 hlllllll U11 fhlrc , . A 1 . Bu: ' , -, 3, 'z ' ' if 'le 3 Y .zeler Co , -, 3, -lg Slklllllty l. 2, '. 5 S. ' ary ' ,2,5. : -ug-31 e--- U I 1 ' ' '., L 1 ' l W e A u ' . A 1. e Q ' ' J ' ' ' v -. ' ' - Q . . . t .. L . : - , 1. , . . v Av 1 1. . U v L ,x r an inner circle: a chosen and hand-picked few. For Four years such rt man has been with .. . I , 1 1 ' e L ' c ' 4 ' N . L ' ' - ' . ' ' ' ' . . 1 ' - I ' , , . ' ' . ' . , . ' '. ' . .' ' i ' z A . ' 2 . . . . , . I. 1 L, .1 Y A L L- :- l' . c 1. 7 1 7 . c ' l ' ' c . U J J 'Z z ' ' ' A ' ' . - 'l L Q n N , . I VERNON BERNARD SANTEN 15 Fairfax Place, Utica, N. Y. Assistant Manager Football 2, 55 Manager lg Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Vice-President Athletic Association -lg Aquinas Circle 45 Economics Club -lg I. V. Debating Team Zg PATCHHR Lit. el: Frosh and Sophomore- Iunior Prize Debates I, 3: Il. I. F. 2, 5. -lg Presi- dent -lg President Frosh Debating Society, Purple Key -lg Senior Council, Speaker Class Banquet 55 Pmpfc' 2: Sodality l, 2, 3. -l: Sanctuary Society 1, 2, 3, -l. It is four years now since first We met this irrepressible gentleman, and for once We have had the satisfaction of seeing our First impressions confirmed, for Vernon, We have found, is as sincere as his vehement speech sounds and as keen and dependable as we all try to be, He has carried successfully the banner of the Cross on the hard-fought fields of debate and oratory, he was the able and industrious manager of one of Holy Cross, great teams, he wrote editorials and addressed fans over the radio, all with the same enthusiasm and geniality. Yet despite these varied activities he has found time to worry with us about exams- probably to make us feel better, since the scholastic bug-bear holds no terrors for him,- he has beaten us at Bridge and sat in on numerous 'glittle gamesf' and again, like the rest of us, has gone unshaven and unshorn in the periods when of necessity we all become Benedicts. If it be true that conversation can be a hobby, then that is Vernon's, for he will eagerly hold forth on any subject that you suggest, or even suggest one himself if you do not, and many are those who passed exams by being wise enough to listen to one of his discourses. It is the friendship with men like Vernon that makes us realize h-ow short four years on Pakachoag really are. Two hlflllllffj four w l IOHN IOSEPH SAVAGE 76 'I'unter Street, Worcester, Mlss Intr.1mur.1lAthlct1Ls J Worcester Llubl 7 9 -I Du bcholars Socl'lht5 5 -I AQLIIDIN Llrcl -l Meet the humorlst of the D1y Duclters Socrety, th'1t l1d who nude the hte of the Mount Sarnt Iames ch rmols 1 httle less colorless, who mfnde the d'1 ly chmb to culture 1 httle less to be dreaded As he 15 smother product ol Vlorcester s St Peter s High thwt school should be able to pornt to hrs career 'rt Iloly Cross wlth becomrng prxde but wrth httle surprrse Hrs Jblllf es 15 Z1 tftll story teller chnched hrs rmmortahty is a member ot 32 s Wrsescre Kssocmtron, 'mel l'l1S scholfrstlc attmnments will guwmntee hrs bemq remcm bered for some tlme by the Dem s ollice Hfur well smoothed, trousers alwmvs crestsed neck utr rdorncd wlth a tllLLl1llg crav'1t, hrs fellow diy students pfud l'l1U1 the supreme comphment ol ClTlL1l'1I1f!g hrs s1r tor1'1l splendor C'l1ss bells meint less to thls lld thin they drd to 'rny other min who was offlcmlly hstcd 1s 11 student 1t Holy Cross Phat he mm wed to fret to CX'l1T111'1 ltrons, was ex er 1 surprlse to hrs fellows, 'md wfrs probwbly '1 mmor phenomenon to hlmself But wrthal, we were ghd to hare htm Wrth us Collufe hte, contempor ry htemtur to the contrlry notvnthstindrng, ns 1 pretty drab mterx ll rn 1 young m rn s hfe WlfhOLlH Wrts xt would be dxsmaller than lf lb plecrsant to contemplate Iaclsle mwde our lour years '1 httle easler to bear, ind we are sure he wlll go on brrghtcnmg the pl'1ce where he IS 1 mo hzmrlrul fue , 1 . . ... 1. . t . 1, ,I s v ., ,, . . . s .-. 1 e f. ' . - , , .. e . r I ' t Q L ' 1 . 4 ' ' 1 ' ' Q. L . . . . , . , , . , . 4. ,1 . . . t . . , 1 1 ' 4 ' , . ' I G. 1 - ., 1 ' , , . . . . , . 1 Q . . . Y L 4' 1. x. A is L K. C A ' . ,Q lt 4 ' . ,-4 . A . 'Ar 1.1.x 1 a 'iff 1 . 4 . . ' 1 t , . C l I. x 1. 1 , L K. ' ' . - ' , . ,r t . ,L . t . e e 4 . . , . . U L L I 1 - A L can C - L n , .., . . - t , t 1 , t t - t , . s A , . K Q S ' rs N I. A . . . H . I , , . . e . . t 1 1. 1 . . an - s. .- 1 . . . A . 2 V Q L . . ., ',. LYLE CHARLES SCHOPFER 708 Iarnes Street, Syracuse, N. Y. , Varsity Track 53 Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Syracuse Club l, 2, 5, 4: President 'lg Aquinas Circle 43 Economics Club elg Purple Crusaders 2g Sodal- ilty 1, Z, 5, 4. Here we have the other half of what some people insisted on calling Nicholshop. Ever see him on a dance lloor? Ever hear the emanations from his piano? Ever engage him in a conversation? lf so, all this verbiage will be superfluous. He had an uncanny knack for doing things well, as his friends can readily attest. For this boy the system just did not exist. His ways were such that they never ran at cross purposes to authority, and yet he managed to enjoy himself thoroughly while subject to authority. So great was the literary capacity of a few of his Salt City friends that the arrival of a paltry three letters of a Monday morning would result in a hue and cry due to a suspicion of withheld mail. His friend of many a cheerful social evening, Weldon, was ever jealous of Lyle's drawing-room ease of manner, but wound up ineffectually imitating him. His friendship with Ioe Nicholson was one of the few that Weathered the storms of four years, being as strong at graduation as it was at matriculation. Those of us who couldn't get along without throwing a chair at a roommate every three hours, saw some- thing in their friendship which prevented us from becoming cynical of all mutual sym- pathy between men, from doubting that any two individuals ever came to an understand- ing of one another. His mildness and general good fellowship inspired such qualities in others, and that, we think, was his great contribution to our four years. Two lzrr11drcrI :fx Worcester Club I, 2. 5, -lg Day Scholars' Sudality I, IOHN IOSEPH SEXTON 59 Dorchester Street, Worcester, Mass. 2, 5: Intramural Baseball el. How many times have you heard it said by non-thinkers that it takes all kinds to make a world. True, but terribly trite. But it must be admitted that Holy Cross would be a pretty dismal place if everyone were an athlete, or even a litterateur. How depressing a cultural resort would the Hill he if all were Funny Fellows! or glum fatalistsl The middle plane is, after all, the best, and to Iohnny must be attributed such a pursuit of the mean that is called golden. While his humor hubblecl over at times, he was nevertheless known primarily as a dependable fellow, who 'could both see and take a joke. I-le came to us from old St. Iohn's with a big reputation, and the nickname Pep. Though we disliked the label, we respected the former relic and awaited its blossoming forth again within college walls. We were not disappointed. Concentrating on studies rather than on the less culturally remunerative extra-curricular activities, Iohn will leave Holy Cross with a reputation to be envied by not a few. A poet of no mean proportions in freshman, he soon deserted the pursuit of the muse for business and its attendant branches of study. As a survival from his earlier interest he retains the poetic viewpoint, a thing that never harmed a man, business or otherwise. Two hIllJIf'l'l'Ii ,vc'r'f'l: THOMAS HENRY SHEA 634 Southbridge Street, Vlforcester, Mass. XVorccstcr Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Day Scholars' Sodality 1. 2, Q 3g Aquinas Circle 4. Tom is the last of a long line of Holy Cross Sheas, and it is with sincere regret that the College bids farewell to this noble tribe. But we feel reasonably sure that this is not a strict breaking of bondsg the Sheas have always managed to go out from the shadow of our halls into careers reflecting glory on their Alma Mater, identifying themselves with her ideals in such a manner to advertise the College in every environment in which they move. Four years, it is generally admitted, suffice to acquaint thoroughly any man with another. It took less than that to convince us that Tom possessed traits which we might well imitate, presupposing we had his moral Hbre. Resourceful and calm, he met the intricacies of psychology and the labyrinths of a tough elective course with an assurance which his marks always justified. In his character there was no place for show and affectation, and he did his best to discourage such peccadillos in others. We are positive that the strong foundation of Tom's character will bear the weight of many future responsibilities and be the essential cause of many triumphs. Tivo AIIIIIIIYYI eight EDWARD IOSEPH SHEEHAN 55 Coolrdge Road, Worcester, Mass Worecster Clubl 2 3 4 Crusad r Councrl 1 2 3 4 Not many of us knew Ed but those who drd, valued hrs wfrrm frrendshrp even more, srnce rt was not thrown freely at every chwnce pisserby Perhaps more nrrture, and cer tarnly less collegrate thfrn most of us, he rs ophrstrcated wrthout berng superfrcrfrl, com panronable wrthout bernw chummy He seems to 'rpprecrnte the rel rtrve vllue of lrfe s varred actrvrtres by rnturtron, und he rs one of few who can take even phrlosophy philo- sophrcally In hrs Search for knowledge 1nd be luty he rs frr more assrduous thnn m'my, there rs a story rbout hrm to the effect thfrt, hearrng 'r trrend rn raptures wbout the novels of Hardy he promptly waded through Frve of them, wrthout enjoyment, seekrng the qualr tres hrs frrend had been eulogrzrng Storres such 'ls thrs .rre rnclrned to emphasme Ed s serrousness and rgnore h1s sense of humor, or better, hrs Comrc Sprrrt, for Ed laughs wrth Meredrth 'rt the 'rbsurd forbles, the pretentrous follres of vanrty rn hrs fellow men He rs fr capfrble crrtrc, but hrs crrtrcrsm, lrke hrs lsrughter, he keeps to hrmselt or grves rt gently to the world, rn 21 quret moment He h1s other .ldmrrnble qualrtres, too, and rt wrll be as unjust 'rs surprrsrng rf they do not brrng hrm worldly success Two hrmdr ed 1111 y y v Z - C , , 1 - , 1. A . E Ee- 1 2 5 ' L . 4 . ' 's ' . - . . . H. ,,, . I . I . , D . . u . . s , . . , - r . . ' . ' 4. 1 ' Z ' r L ' L .' L L 'fe . , V, - X - . - . ,V . . .rx , . . . 4 I .1 U . . . ,, -4 I . . ,C 1 ' ' . C L . C y K . . . . . C, ' 'ze KUO CHENG SHU Mukden, Manchuria Western Club 3, 45 Sodality 3, 49 Tonuzhawk 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 4. Coming back to Pakachoag for our junior year we found among us that debonair cosmopolite and representative of the Celestial Republic, lim Shu. lim was First noted for his smile, one of the most permanent and expansive things on the campus during our last two years. Laboring under a handicap-his too scant knowledge of English-he carried on a good many lively conversations by means of a variety of intonations, and an original sign language. However, English was soon mastered, and lim, we found, lived in a world of many, many, many interesting things. But he managed to retain his charm- ing pre-English bonhommie. He believed there was much virtue in a yes and lost no opportunities to use one with telling force. It was not long after his arrival that lim became a feature writer on the College weekly -the Tomrzlzazulg. At football games he consorted with the Press, and one Boston newspaper took to reprinting his Tomahawlq essays. In. senior Iim found himself in the enviable position of an oracle. The Sino-Iapanese dispute waged, and his became the last word, the be-all and end-all of all controversies on the question. His predictions as to the outcome of the affair were found to be true as the year and dispute went on. And thus, making friends with all, and wearing his smile on all occasions, lim went through his college career on the Hill. That smile and all that it engendered was his contribution-a significant one-to our college life. Two hundred fan CHARLES IOSEPH SKEI-LAN 747 Brunswmlx Avenue, Cmrdmer, Me 1-rcshman Track Intrlmural Athletics J 4 Menne Club 1 7 3 4 Aquinas Cxrclc 4 Lhumsts Club 4 L ent11c Socxety 2 3 4 Sodlllty 1 7 3 -l Mundane greatness mfly be a llttle matter, but lt requxres a great deal of lT1111d A Lhenustry b S course Ib no rosente colleglate couch, and mentexl xcumen 15 1 great help 1n widlng through 1t The 'tbove sc1ent1st survlved the rxgors of tour liboratory XVIIIICIS, 'lnd tubes of O Kane Charlle ewrned one of those coveted Cl1CI1l1Sffy Fellowshlps, 'ln honor that 15 not vrsxtcd on .1 nun untll he his convlnced the felculty of the best undergr lClLl'ltC deplrtment of Chemlstry III the country that he IS chemlcally mlnded Lharhe 15 1 State of M1lHCf, 21 son ot that rugged prne tree and Republxcan mfested paradlse for v'1c'1t1onxsts, whose lnhabltants V21LldCV1ll12lIlS are so keen on carxcaturlng To know Charhe was a revelatxon to those of us who had come no closer 1D contuct wzth Mzune than an OCCHS101l3.l Ben Ames Wlll13ll1S story Asxde from a few charmxng man l'lCI'1S1T1S of speech, Charhe mlght as Well h'1ve first seen hght 1n Chexy Chase or Perth Amboy Wlthout act1vely 9CCk111g frlends In the approved metropohmn mflnner, Chwrhe never thelcss gathered unto h1lT1SClf enough to satxsfy any man They sought h1n1 out, as the world wlll 1n the near future Two hlllldl cd clrzfczz l - .. . . . -, s - ': 1 I . : - . ,-, , sn, -. 1' sS'1- l ' ' ' , , S 1 , -, , - I - L I l . , 4 - I , . .1 H .Q l . I . . received in senior an invitation to remain for El while longer among the retorts and test , ' . . 1. ' ' . . 4 1 ' 4 ' ' ' V . . . S . . r s. I. Q C ' WALTER IAY SKOCYLOS 657 Lamberton Street, Trenton, N. I. New jersey Club l, 2, 5, 45 B. V. M. Sodality 1, 2, 3, 43 Intramural Athletics 3, 4. Presenting, ladies and gentlemen, the anomaly of the class of 1932. Here is a quiet, unassuming soul that utters profound and startling thoughts, yet, withal, the deep grain of true culture runs through it all. There is something about Scotchie,' that bespeaks the gentleman as well as the theoretical anarchist. Not that he is of a blatant, rebellious nature, but rather we see here embodied the typification of practical reason and moral conviction. But still waters run deep, and few there are who can presume to plumb the depths of a soul that serenely and confidently marches upon the road of destiny. Were there not the likes of Walt, the likes of us would Find this world a rather dreary place. 'Twas in Beaven's kalsomined cubicles that the Trenton socialist expounded his Utopian dreams, and even the rattling windows and swinging doors were ignored when one trod with him the paths and by-ways of fancy. He had the happy faculty of turning the cold and irrefutable logic of Scholasticism to his own support-and the skeptics were swept along with him. Ever thus shall be the magnetic force of the philospher and dreamer! Walt shall, no doubt, be thrust into a most practical world, but it shall Hnd him equal. There is a sub- stantial worth in him who, at the end of his rainbow, conceives a cherished goal. And so it is with our theorist. Two h11m1'rerZ twelve IOSEPH FRANCIS SLOAN 175 Maple Street, Springlield, Mass. Intramural Athletics 1. 2. 3, 4g Springfield Club l, 2, 3, 45 Secretary 2: President -l: Aquinas Circle 4, Fresh- man Debating Society: Plxilomath 2. 5: Mendel Academy 45 Sodality l, Z: Sanctuary So- ciety 1, 2, 3, -l. Few seniors took the subject Biology and made it so much their own as did our good friend Ice-Ioe. Pre-med is altogether too often considered a dry and jejune program of studies, a course is more or less what you make it. Having mastered the rudiments of his science majors early in the four years, Ioe was prepared to sail through the usually troublesome advanced matter. He probably got more out of the hours spent in the Beaven Tomb than did any other man of our year, and will leave Holy Cross as well prepared scientifically as any graduate of a non-technical school. ' The last paragraph would give a pers-on not intimate with the above gentleman an impression that he was altogether given over to pursuing erudition, that he did not strive to develop himself into a full man. Such was not the ease. Ioseplfs principal hobby was debating, both forensic and dormitorian. Many a lively discussion was held on Middle Loyola with Ioe as pivot man. Rational enthusiasm was one of his more admirable characteristics, and he manifested this by intense interest in Whatever he associated himself with. A world stunned by catas- trophe needs such men as our friend, and we don,t think that it will be long in finding him. Two hIlIllll'l'li fhirrcclz IOSEPH ANDREW SMITH, IR. 584 Cambridge Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club l, 2, 3, -lg Intramural Baseball 3, 4, Aquinas Circle 4: Day Scholars' Sodality I, Z, 3. Among those who entered with '32, there was one who was destined to brighten our hearts for four years. We mean Ioe Smith. Ioe had been reared in the shadow of Holy Cross, had been bathed for years in Crusader traditions, and consequently it did not take him long to acclimare himself to his new scholastic environment, and it was but a brief interval before he made his presence among us felt. Although studies have been his principal preoccupation for the past few years, I0e's chief claim to distinction lies in another Held. He has brought fame to himself and to the college by his many activities among Central Massachusetts Boy Scouts. In his freshman year he was chosen Worcester representative to the International Scout Iam- boree, which met in England. His activities along such lines were climaxed in his senior year when he was awarded the Carnegie medal for heroism for rescuing a drowning man from an underground sewerage basin. Yes, Ioe gets around quite a lot. Socially, the Worcester Undergraduate Club's functions were the scenes of his recent triumphs. His debonair manner, sophistication, and sport touring car won him many a friend on the Hill. We should like to wish him luck, but that would be a superfluity. A man of his calibre needs no luck. Ability suffices. Two hzmdred f0Ill'ff't'Il LUKE LAWRENCE SMITH 12-l Maxheld Street, New Bedford Mass New Redford Club l 2 3 4 Aqumas Cxrcle rl fresh man Debmns, Souttx P1'1c11111 L1t -r Dr.1m1t1e Souets 1 2 5 PurpleKt1 J 4 SOClll1lIy 1 Punclzlzo h'1s eut down more men Ill flIClI' stormmg of the c1tadels of cwmpus 'lccep tance than we hke to th1nk of A sense of decorum, 'ln uneeqsmg des1re to do the r1ght thmg at the correct juncture, in unswervxng good t1ste 111 manners and t'1ste d1dos such 'ls these can make, but more olten break, IH '1 man s college Luke possessed them, but they seemed so muth 1 part of hun, so unhke 1 clofnk donned for the stupefactlon of others, that even the most Lll1gl'lLCfLll forg ne all of the subhme '1rt1sts The avenge lTl'll1 Ends the iesthete cold and forb1dd111g, h1s con versat1on ar1d and ped1nt1c Th1t Sm1th mfmaged to wun unofhcml I'CCOgl11UOH is Holy Cross PI'C1'11lCI' I 1CODI6Lll', and st1ll retam h1s stmdmg 'ns 1 C'l.11'1PlfOllOXVCl of the lrts IS but one ot hlS IHIDOI' t:11npus sueeesses He was ever a sympfxthetu. hstener to the l'l'l'll'lll.'0ld woes of h1s 1Ilf1l'I'1'ltCS, cconom1c'1l 111 the dOl121E1Ol1 of gl ll.LllIO1.lS 1dv1ce, a hehever ID the futility of irgument '1 quxet chit YVIIII Luke h ld the soothmg qu1l1t1es of soft ITIUSIC, md cool moonhght A New Enfrlauder to the core, he uneonsuously reassured us ID our helltf that 1ndustr1'1l1z1t1o11 was not smothermg the tradmons ot the country of Emerson ind Thoreau, that there 15 still 'ln anstocracy 1n the North T110 hlllifll L 11 fifteeiz 'V . , . z'j ,':i '. 'g ' L ' . v s 1 -1 v w . , Q v r 1 Q - , s 1 1 - . . L 1 I . L l Q ' L 5 S ' I 7 ' 1 e V K i 1. I i. 1 l ' . ' . C ' Q . ' . C . ,il ' . S , I - , 1 , . , ' ' z ' z ' . We knew Luke as an aesthete, a dabbler in the livelier arts, I1 worshipper ut the feet . 1. . a K K 1 X S l D I . - ' I V K . 1 1 ' L l DC A I I ' K e , ' 1 4 . . I ' 4 ' 4 Q - 1 1 ' . C . . . - . . 7 2 . 2 . . .V D I D . , x 'l ' L ' , SAMUEL DANIEL SMITH 74 West Boylston Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club 1, 2, 3. elg Aquinas Circle -lg Band Z, 3, 45 Orchestra 4g Dramatic Society 2, 3, Llj Secretary 33 President 4g Senior Council, Day Scholars' Sodality 2, 3. Sam just could not resist the intellectual lure of Holy Cross, and at the start of the second semester in freshman we found this lad among our number. The first semester of his college career had been spent at the Emerson School of Oratory, which, in a great measure, accounts for Sam's well nigh perfect command of English, There has never been a popularity contest to decide the most popular day student, so our guess that Sam rates that title remains a guess. Being of an active nature, he entered dramatics, an art that truly fullfilled his temperament. All of us remember his perform- ance in The Merchant of Venicef' and numerous other productions of our rather expert masquers. His ability along dramatic lines, and his intense interest in the literature of the drama, led to his being selected by popular vote president of our dramatic association just before the close of junior year. He extended his operations in his third year into a little professional buskin wearing. He toured for a spell with the Frieberg Passion Players, gathering experience and pocket money. His Hlotspur in senior was a revelation to all those who still maintained that this lad still rated as an amateur, and reasurred his enthusiasts of other years. To say that he intends to follow the dramatic art subsequent to 1932's Iune, is superHuous. Two hlilldffli .rixieen ARTHUR IOSEPH SMYTH 8015 Shore Rofrd Brooklyn N Y Intramural Bfnstball 3 Varsity 'Iratk 3 Mc.tropnl1t.1n Club J -4 Aqum is Cirtlr. I Assistant MTHHLCY Mu sital Llubs 2 J Man.Jg,c1 4 Senior Council Tonmlmnk 7 J l PATCHLR Bus 4 So itx 2 3 Here we have Fordham s g1lt to tue cllss of l932 At the end of fi Bron't freshman year Art transferred to greener pastures, 'md mme to Holy Lross Realizing thwt he was drum toter in the band Virtue ol such proportions could not long go unrewarded H entered senior as manager ol the Musical Llubs, and generfll arrangement director of our far tourmg iootball bfmd And then there was his Weekly sports column in the Tomalzzzzulg That he seemed to be dashing oil thls extra campus athletic, commentary two hours prev1ous to press time exery weel-t, and that the column seemed to be the most 'lV1Clly resid thing in the pamphlet, IS somewhat indicfltive ol this man s potentmlitles He brought the Musical Clubs through their most tryinif seflson without the loss ot a violin or a Philornath president bass viol pliyer He made the days 'ind nights spent in the Loyola mausoleum a l1ttle more bearalnle, and he proxed to us that grindlng 1S not the only means oi mastering philosophy We dont regret knowing him, and We re in clined to feel a bit sorry for Fordham T11 0 hlllllil ed .sez efztcelf l. I , A l 1 W -, l ,. . , . r. ,, , . . . ' N . , ': ' ' ' 5 3 , ,f i H, ', - z I . . 5 . dal' j , , fl. . 7 , if ' , , , , a bit late in going out for activities, Art was undismayedg he applied for the position of ' . 5 ' . . N . I E . 1 . , Y . 3 . . 1 . I ' O : K- 0 ' ' 4. L I at i i . 1 . . . . . S . ' . D l K 4 I 1 -I . . Y 1 . . . : . . , . . , . ARTHUR IOHN SPRING 6 Derby Street, Worcester, Mass. cester Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Parcnan Lit. -lg Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4g B. I. F. 2g Philomath 4. Of all the horde of Worcester boys who have scaled the heights of Linden Lane since this group of buildings called Holy Cross were thrown together, none came more welcome than Art Spring. Immensely popular with the boarders, Art was at home with anyone, so pervasive was his social nature. For a day student to make so many contacts, is strange for Holy Cross, and is somewhat indicative of the manis ability to make friends, a measure of innate worth that is seldom faulty. Vice-president of the class in junior year, he carried off his duties unostentatiously, and fulfilled the trust placed in him by the men who insisted on his running for office. One of the few day student debaters, and 21 man who was willing to sacrifice Worcester social evenings to assist at madcap Philomath meetings, he emerges from college more arti- culate than the majority of us, and a man who will be able to hold his own at any Com- munion breakfast. What does he intend to do after he has received the sweat-earned diploma? He hasn't informed us. He certainly ought to gain prominence in Helds demanding person- ality, courteousness, and an ability for self expression. All of Which makes us think that he is qualified for any gentlemanly profession. Two AIIIIIIITIIY Elighfl'l'71 Class Vicc-President 3g Intramural Athletics 3. 43 Wor- ALOIS ALBTZ' OLLE 25 Park Circfi' VVE. - -... ,, N. Y.- Freshman Tcnnisg 'Varsity Tennis 43 Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, 'ig Aquinas Circle 4g Economics Club 43 Parcnisn Bus. 4g Sodality 1. 2, 3, 43 Sanctuary Society 3. Freshmen, here's an honorable man. Our superiors are continually telling us that the Hrst year men are ever looking to the senior class for models to emulate, for Galahads. Al went through four years without gathering unto himself a single demerit, and he didn't have a miserable time of it, either. I-le even has the Ollice of Discipline in debt to him. Back there earlier in the year when they were passing out merits to punctual pupils, Al annexed all there were to be annexed. To this distinction add the equally remarkable one of an almost perfect attendance at Brother McCarthy,s groaning board, and you have the measure of this n1an's virility. Yes sir, they come big from VVhite Plains, the county seat of VVestchester, the finest residential section in the World. Al was a member of the freshman tennis team, and has always been an ardent devotee of that sport. And all the ordinary person's energy which is dissipated by abhor- ing early arisings, Al spends on handball, a game which he plays with a silent fury. Teamed with his hair-mussing roommate, he helped strike terror into the intramural charm aspirants of the other classes. Hypocrisy is often a necessary social sin, but Al managed to substitute sincerity and get away with it. He said what he thought, acted as he thought, and gathered respect for so doing. Two hrznrlrerl 11i11ff:'r11 EDMUND BURKE SULLIVAN 6 Normal Street, Worcester, Mass. WVorcestcr Club 1, 2, 3 ,-lg Intramural Athletics 43 Sci entific Society 2, 5, 45 Chemists Club -lg Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. The Sullivan tribe has always been famous in the history of latter-day Pakachoag dwellers. The man above has enhanced that tradition. His ever present smile and reper- toire of funny anecdotes won him ci large circle of intimatesg however, back of the smile and raillery there was a keen mind which found no difficulty in tackling the most awe- inspiring Physical Chemistry assignment. Though taking the B.S. course, Ed never allowed studies to obsess him but when the Deanis periodic report was issued he was not among those rueing past cultural recalcitrance. We have a feeling that his happy smile and strong mind will make him a prominent alumnus and cause us to say, We went to school with him. He possessed an almost teutonic perseverance, and Chemistry and its ramifications held no terror for him. Whatever branch of that dynamic science he chooses to follow after graduation, we are sure he will not long remain in the ranks of the tyros. He seems to typify efliciency, and that, coupled with intellect, makes for meteoric climbs to fame in any branch of endeavor. His is the luck of the Irish, success cannot help but feel honored to call Ed its own. Two hlllllffffll Iwenfy GEORGE PAUL SULLIVAN 13 Hancock Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle 45 Pfvrcruzn Art. 45 Purple 45 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 5, 4g Freshman Debating Society. We are at a great handicap in writing a digest of George's achievements during his four years at Holy Cross. Principally because he is not a fellow to talk about himself, and because he chose collegiate pursuits that were hardly spectacular. But in senior year he brought his light out from under a bushel, and contributed a number of illustrations to the Purple, and to this annual. If we ourselves weren't modest, we'd ask you to turn to other pages of this book and admire our good taste in selecting George as one of our staff artists. Studies, the belle nofre of four out of live freshmen, presented no difficulties to George who faced them with a nonchalance and aplomb worthy of a Murad addict. While his less fortunate brethren entered the examination rooms with trepidation and other things, he relied on the rational nature of the famous psych book to pass with enviable ease. Very few are the fellows possessing such admirable traits as George. Whether he follows an artistic career or succumbs to the wiles of colloid culture, we feel as sure as our innate prudence will allow that he wonit taste failure. Two hrnzdrczzl fwenly-one IOHN ALOYSIUS SULLIVAN 46 Bentley Avenue, Iersey City, N. I. Freshman Track: Intramural Track 35 New Jersey Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Dance Chairman -lg B. I. F. 2g Scientific Society 2, 3, 45 Sodality 1, Z, 3, 49 Chemists Club 43 Mendel Academy 4. Think of a HS. man. Any BS. man. Whatever phantasm flashes across your mental screen, we're sure it won't bear much resemblance to lack Sullivan. We have come to expect Teutonic seriousness in an embryo scientist, and lack was not the average lad who decided in freshman year to sell all his afternoons down the river. The theory that urbanity and a desire to know the intimacies of the colloids cannot exist in an individual concomitantly, is just another schoolgirl illusion, we've discovered since coming in contact with lack. There are those in '32 who consider the last New Iersey Club dance the ace social event of their final year at the Cross. Whatever credit is due for that af'fair's success must go to the above gentleman. He chairmanned the dance, snared Bert Lown and his tune- sters, and signed for that gorgeous Astor ballroom. Iack's brand of humor was the least obnoxious Hltering into our ken during the entire four years. It was as the balm of Gilead to the tired ears of one living among 1,069 humorists in search of an audience. Having early discovered that there was romance in a scalpel, adventure in a stetho- scope, lack early began laying the foundation on which a Sir William Osler is built. He made many sacrifices when he went pre-med, and we take this as an index to an innate spirit which cletests drifting, which finds a goal and makes for it post-haste. Two hllfllifflf lwcllty-Iwo IOSEPH FRANCIS SULLIVAN 1028 Garden Street, Hoboken, N. I. Intramural Athletics 2, 3, -lg PATCHER Business Manager 4g New jersey Club l, 2, 3, 4g Vice-President 35 Aqui- nas Circle 4g Freshman Debating Society, Philoniath 2, 3, 4g Treasurer 45 Dramatic Society 1, 25 Senior Councilg Scientific Society 3, 43 Purple 2, 3, 4g Business manager 4g Tmmzfmwlg 1, 2, 3, elg News Editor 3: Mendel Academy 4g Sodal' ity l, 2, 3, 'lg Sanctuary Society l, 2, 3, 4. When the Iersey highlands decided to present something of worth to Holy Cross, a worthy gift indeed they selected! For the favorite son was indeed a gracious soul, well versed in the classics and their accruing arts. The quarterly publication of the Deans Honor Roll forcefully showed that Ioe has lost none of his scholarly acumen while going through the Mill on Mt. St. Iames-but he has grown to statuesque proportions al-ong other lines. Deeming that the classics had been long enough favored with his attention, he turned with a curious mind to the natural sciences-and the laboratories of O'Kane and Beaven can well testify to the profundity of his analytic mind. Withal, the deep interest in science did not have its usual narrowing influence. Ioe can easily lay claim to the title of Best 101,-man at Holy Crossf' Not that he is mer- cenary or grasping, but rather, an irresistible business executive who melts the cold reserve of advertisers. Witness, in this regard, the back section of the Holy Cross Purple, or of this very book. We have no doubt that the same adroitness that characterized Ioe's every activity on the I-Iill will, in greater measure, grace his climb up the ladder of life. So we return the blithe and genial Ioe to his beloved Iersey highlands, and send with him the sincere thanks and appreciation of a truly grateful class for having allowed us the privilege of knowing and associating with one who can truly be considered as well worth the knowing, and an eminently pleasing associate to boot. Two hzmrlrcrl nusnzy-Ihrrc WALTER FRANCIS SULLIVAN 137 Lincoln Street, Worcester, Mass. cester Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. If silence were truly golden in the material sense, Walt would need have no worry about bill collectors, budgets, or back payments. This may be attributed to his philoso- phical trend of mind, and his desire to know the wherefore of things. Observing, 'way back in his teething days, that man is endowed with two ears and only one mouth, Walt came to a natural conclusion: he listens twice as much as he speaks, he knows when to talk, and what to talk about. NVe are informed that Walt is to undertake the task of educating America's youth, after knocking off exceptional ratings in the pedagogy course. We doubt if the coming generation could be trusted to better hands than hisi He had a way with him. Many a time and oft, as the poets say, Walt demonstrated conclusively that he was fully qualified to represent Holy Cross in whatever Held of endeavor he chose to enter. However, edu- cation is his First love, and in that profession he will doubtless rank with the foremost. In our four years of association with Walter, we have come to know him as a man of ideals, ideals that claim his unswerving loyalty. Lastly, but greatest of all, Walt was a true and loyal friend-one hundred per cent regular. Two h zmrlrcd twenty-four Golf Teaxrl 4g Intramural Handball 1, 2, 3, 49 WVOI- LOUIS LEON SULYA North Monmouth M'11ne Mame Club l 7 J 4 Intr'1111u1alAtl1lct1ts 3 4 'itren C Souclx 7 J 4 lhemrsts Club 4 gtlisllllty 2 3 4 lIL5llI'l1lI1DClJ1IlI'1E, Socmty S1nttu.11y Soucty I You must p'1use here, gentle reader, rn your 1clle turmng ot pages, for here IS a man who reqtures and who w1ll reply carelul study Here 1S 1 sturdy sp1r1t, 1 rare 111d1v1du'1l lt tools. us EOUI years to Hnd out the true worth oi thrs ret1r111g, strong, sllent man, and 111 that tune most of us, perhaps, have only scrltched the sullace Wl1en Lou1e came down to Holy Cross from the State ol M'unc, everyone Lxpectel l11n1 to donate hrs prodrglous muscular enervres to the furtherance of the Purple s athletrc prestxge But th1s was not to be He drd go out and cavort the rntra mural dmmond once or tvvrce, 'md ended the season w1tl1 1 perfect battmg average of elght hrts out ot e1gl'1t tr1ps to the plate, but LlDfO1'IU1l'lICly he never kept up h1s athleucs The serlous 1ntent1on ol gomg places rn the world ot chennstry kept Lou1e lndoors most ot the tune The complrcated organlc equatrons spre 1d all over the page w1tl1 thelr lnnumerable C, s md O s jorned together Wrth those funny l1ttle gadgets, and the strfhng sulphurous odors ol the laboratory formed LOUICS mtellectu 11 bread and butter H15 heart was Ill l11s work But now and 'lgaln ol an evenlng he w1ll drop work lor a vvhrle to mull over profess onal baseball, tl1e depresslon, and brrght college years Iust now he IS dreannng rather romantrtally of Aff1C1 and South An1er1c1 But hrs roornmate says that he w1ll be back on that tooth paste IHXCDUOII ere long PHIILJC can t be unk1nd to Loure Two hllllflllfd lraenly 171 c' , 1 ' 3 . . 'w. - -'x 1-1 1 1 4 s al ' -7 1 , s , , ,' t1I1 ' -, , , , .. , , . . ' 1, 1 - 1 1 H .Y 1 3 C I - V 4 , K C e 2 L ' . 2 .J ' Q A 4. . c 2 ' . L N' ' ' 1 f t ' 'L D . Q -Q n L L L 1. , , . L 1. L 1. r . s . . . . . . . :U . ,,. . .4 . . , . ' . ' I 1 1 , . ,,. , . . . . Q . 1. 3 X . ., . . , t . . 1 , 1 .. v ' ' , . . C .. L Q L Z. 1 4 . , W. . H , . L 1. ' ,V n L I L ' I y . 1 IOHN IOSEPH A. SWEENEY 21 xV3Shb'JfH Street, Worcester, Mass. Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3: XVorcester Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle -lg Day Scholars' Soclality 1, 2, 3, el, Dramatic Society 3. While those who held the center of the stage in England were busy spilling each other's blood, Filling the Tower of London and beheading and restoring Kings, Izaak Walton sat quietly on the lip of a stream and lished. Iohn's career at Holy Cross has been very much the same way. Not that he has written a Compleat Angler,-we cl-onit know Whether he has ever caught a Hsh in his life. And if he has written a book he has never told us about it. That is the most noticeable thing about lohn-his reticence, his habit of shunning the limelight. But modest and uncommunicative though he was, it was impossible for such a character to hide his light under a bushel. His prominence as a student, particularly in the Field of psychology, excited the genuine admiration of his fellows in the Worcester Club, just as the charm of his gentle, reserved manners had won him their good-will. Studies were to Iohn like chicken croquettes to pushers-away of untasted breakfasts at McCartliy's groaning board. He was not the type to worry about anything, and he had less reason to do so for this reason than for any other. Throughout senior year the periodic epidemics of dementia praecox before the psych preliminaries never touched I. I. lohn's quiet, persevering nature, we are confident, will carry him, despite his retiring disposition, to the brilliancy of the heights of success. Two hmulrerl twenty-:ix IOHN IOSEPH MICHAEL SWEENEY 300 Harding Street, Worcester, Mass. Assistant Manager 'Varsity Basketball 2g Manager Inde- pendents -lg W'orcester Club l, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 45 Chairman Easter Dance 45 Day Schol- ars' Sodality l, 2, 3, 4g Intramural Base- ball 2. We called him Scoop. Perhaps it was because he was the one who used to bring news of Holy Cross back to civilization, and the subscribers of the Worcester Post. He managed to fill column after column of the local daily with news covering class ban- quets, sodality smokers, and dedicated sundials, and he managed to enjoy himself pretty thoroughly in the process. It is difficult for us to imagine anyone in Worcester County being interested in the wholesome intra-mural activities of Holy Cross, but evidently such a species exists. It was Iaja's job to serve it up to them. He did a good piece of work while he was at it, and more than once scooped the not altogether infallible Tomzzlzzzwlq. A decision of the Athletic Oflice in iunior year left Holy Cross without a basketball aggregation. The good Sweeney deplored such a state of aliiairs, and went about forming the Independents. His hoopsters-that's what Scoop would call them-Won a surpris- ingly high percentage of the games played, and, doubtless, much of the praise should go to the breathless manager. We have a feeling that journalism is going to get another candidate in Scoop. We hope for the best. Two hmzdred rwcrzfy-:ezfen HENRY IOHN SYSESKEY, Ill 7 Nevada Street, Worcester, Mass. VVorcester Club l, 2. 3. 4g Freshman Track: Intramural Athletics 2, 5, 43 Tonmhnwk lg Day Scholars' So- dality 1, 2, 3, Ll, Band lg Glen Club 2. OE late the Canteen has become a minor league Canfieldls, Day duckers have taken to congregating there noontimes to assimilate indigestible food to the accompaniment of gay laughter and Syas highly superior brand of Worcester humor. When Farrell and Sysesky-those inseparables!-would begin swapping puns, the rest of 'us would leave quietly for the rubdown room and a quiet chat with Charlie Scott. Sy was in the habit of acting as good Samaritan for his fellow day duckers who were a little tardy about getting up the hill to classes on time. If his Model T Ford had been as big as his generous heart, the damnable phrase, the daily trudge up Linden Lane, which recurs with such unreasonable regularity in the write-ups ot the Worcester boys, might have been eliminated. Syis prowess in philosophy was second only to Farrell's in our estimation, and had he that man's great powers of expression the identity of our local Aquinas might have been a bit diFferent. Socially, he seemed to be right in his element among the members of the Worcester Club, and more than one of their soirees owes its success to his almost dehnitive presence. Success, Henry, boy, was made for men like you! Two hrfizdrrrl mfcniylcigbt ROBERT ALBERT TANGNEY 3 Mayfair Street, Worcester, Mass. XVUFCCSICI' Club l, 2, 3, rl: Day Scholars' So. l, 2, 3, tl. Much raking of our memory is not necessary to think who it is that was nonchalant, a week or so before the usually devastating psych or ethics exams. VVhile most of us were by that time beginning to assume a much-worried look, Bob was one of the chosen few who could say with perfect ease that he had just reviewed the matter for the second time. Let it not be said, however, that Bob was just a student when there is before our eyes suchan example of versatility. His brilliance was not confined to the classroom alone. As a conversationalist, Bob rated par excellence. Neither obscurity of subject matter nor rarity of news could ever stille the art and style of any brilliant conversati-onalist. Has anyone ever seen Bob im- peded by a lack of knowledge or an inability to express his genius? Bob is the personifi- cation of what the well-read man should know. It is not at all surprising that a man of such widespread ability is a librarian of no mean rank. However, it is not merely on account of his natural aptitudes that Bob is so popular. His goodfellowship is infectious-we no sooner admire it in him than we feel it in our- selves. It is difficult to see how Bob will find many obstacles in life because of his inimit- able and almost inexorable way of surpassing apparent impediments with calm conhdence and facility. Two AIIIIIIITIIfM'l'I1fj'-llfllf' EDMUND FRANCIS TIERNEY 70 Florence Street, Worcester, Mass. Freshman Footballg 'Varsity Football 2, 3, -lg Intramural Athletics 3, -lg Worcester Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Crusader Council 43 Day Scholars' Sodality 1, 2. 3, 4. Someone once remarked very wisely that it is a good thing for the rest of us mortals that the Lord made big men good-natured. We confess that we do not know the physical or psychological connection between a big frame and a big heart. But here we shanit trouble ourselves with that. Abstract and bloodless universals are of little interest, espe- cially when we have a buoyant particular individual to discuss. Let it be suHicient to say that Ed bears the rule out. He is as massive in generosity of spirit as he is in muscular proportions. Holy Cross football squads have always been known for theirexceptionally good ends, and Ed is among the best of Bunny Corcoran's products in recent years. His venture in athletics, like all the rest of his college career, has been a triumph. He was ever modest about his athletic as well as his other attainments, and out of the moleskins he is the most charming and engaging of men. VVhenever the Worcester Club sought to do anything in the social line, Ed cheerfully gave his valued assistance with the most unobtrusive good grace. His own personal conquests in this line yield, they tell us, to none of his other achievements. But it was pre-eminently as a man's man that we knew him, and that is the impres- sion of him that will survive through the years. His was an easy-going nature. He was a square-shooter, an eminently loyal friend, and a good guy to have around. Two hundred zhirly WILLIAM A. TOYE 560 Andover Street, Lawrence, Mass. Intramural Baseball 3, -lg Aquinas Circlc 45 Economics Club 43 Freshman Debating Society: Crusader Coun- cil 1, 2, 3, -Ig Sodality 1, 2, 4. We got our Hrst glimpse of Bill in the barracks of top O'Kane. The Toye from Lawrence, having withstood the rigors -of an O'Kane winter, became a member of that stout-hearted corps Who, clad in topcoats and overshoes, studied long and earnestly while the snow and wind howled through the storm-tight window frames of our winter- gardensn of freshman year. Even in those early days, Bill was a devotee of the theatre, and brought us the first reports on the latest nshowu in town, which we attended on his recommendation and in which we were seldom if ever disappointed. The ability to make and maintain staunch friends is one of Bill's chief characteristics. Gifted also with a facile tongue, he livened many a bull-session with his humorous asides. The rec hall saw him frequently in the capacity of a pool shark, as also a keen fourth at bridge, that branch of the great indoor sport which is by oHicial decree banned to the patrons ot Iudge's Night Club. Space will not allow us to say all the nice things we should wish, but suffice it to say that we who have known you are sorry to part company with you. When you make that first million don't forget to come around and see us-and, million or not, we will always be glad to see you, Bill. Two h1ll111'1'f'1fIbirly-om' THOMAS FRANCIS TRAINOR 103 Belmont Street, Cambridge, Mass. Class Secretary 1, 2, 3, -lg Freshman Football: Intramural Athletics Z, 3, -l: Intramural Sports Council 3, 43 President 45 Greater Boston Club l, 2, 3, -lg President -lg Aquinas Circle -lg Band 2. 3, Llg Senior Councilg Sodality 1, 2, 3, rlg Sanctuary Society l, Zg Purple Key 'l. Here we have the last of a famous line, and the last is more famous than the first. There probably never was at Holy Cross a man with such a perverse genius for being perpetually in some sort of trouble or other, and with such a happy faculty of melting into oblivion not only his own swiftly evanescent gloom, but, the more serious depressive parataxes of his less resilient fellows. He was too wise to be unduly serious, too cheerful to be phased by the darkest hour, and too ready and dependable not to reap the full benefit of the dawn. Besides having the happiest college career of any man in the class, Tom had one of the most successful. When the intramural athletic league was founded last year Tom suddenly discovered that he had an important part to play in our collegiate life. VVords can never express so eloquently as results the success with which he handled these activities. And Tom was not only an organizerg he was an athlete of parts himself. He could play any sport superlatively well, but it was as the star end on '32's championship football teams that he was particularly brilliant. The final parting after four years of pleasant companionship is never easy. It will be especially hard in the case of Old Trainorf' But we'll have to give him up. The phlegmatic world of today has need of this incurable optimist, tireless worker, and most engaging gentleman. Two hII71l1l'!'ll thiriy-Iwo WVILLIAM DANIEL TROY 295 Atlantic Street, Stamford, Conn. Intramural Basketball 5: Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle -lg Gldc Club I, 2, 3, 45 Crusader Council 2, 3. -lg Mendel Academy 4, Freshman Debating Socictyg ll I. F. 2g Scientific So- ciety flg Sodality l, Z, 3, 4. Bill was a charter member of the august and ancient fraternity known as the Royal Bengal Bicycle Club. This Stamford lad made good immediately upon his arrival on the Hill. He sang a mighty bass, so he was immediately summoned to appear in the inner sanctum of the Musical Clubs, there to mingle with the lesser lights, falsettos, and piccolo players. The rough and narrow path of struggle was soon turned into a broad highway strewn with roses. At mid-year holidays the combined clubs went on a tour, and among them was none other than Williaiii D. Oh, to think of the swath that he cut through the hearts of the fair damsels in the cities he visited! Ah, gentle reader, ask us not to repeat itl Having firmly established himself as one of our leading choristers, Bill sought other ways to forge to the front. He revelled in the mysteries of acids and bases, to the utter ruin of several pairs of trousers, not to mention other pieces of wearing apparel. Here again he fared well, and next he undertook the intricacies taught by Lenz and Culbertson. But here he met his Waterloo. He came out on the short end of the marathon contract tournament. We could continue about this illustrious youth until several massive tomes had been Hlled, but space will not permit such procedure. Two hzmrlrcrl fhiriy-lhrrc FRANK GERARD VARELA 58 Bliss Avenue, Tenafly, N. I. Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 3, -lg Cross-Country 2g Freshman Football, Intramural Athletics 3, -lg New Iersey Club 1, 2, 3, -lg Aquinas Circle -lg Scientific Society 1, 2, 3, 4g I-lead Cheerleader 45 Choir 4g Senior Councilg Freshman Reception Chairman 4g Tomahawk 3, -lg Purple Key -lg Glce Club 3, -lg Sodality l, 2, 3, -l. Here is one who has led hoiahs for all the teams, coaches, waterboys and even Bro, McCarty. Now it's our turn to lead a cheer for him. Not that Frank has not been cheered before. Recall that rainy day in May of our junior year when he won his letter, pole-vaulting, in the track meet with Boston College on Fitton Field. Seldom do We Find a scientist who is also an artist, but Frank, aside from being a B.S. student, is a talented artist. I-Iis drawings on the walls of his room in Loyola might Well have graced the halls of a museum of painting,-da-da, da-da-da! Most of his subjects were fair maidens and, take our word for it, he knows how to pick fair maidens. We've seen 'em. In the summer time Prank usually took to the trees. Don't get us wrong. We mean that he is a tree surgeon, not that he has any characteristics in common with Tarzan of the Apes. The Davey Tree Surgeons will have to go back to Med school when Frank and his brothers get going. The Glee Club will surely miss Frank for more than his sing- ing ability. By the way, did you know that Frank lived in Mexico part of his pre-college days which accounts we suppose for his superb crooning which he learned practising on dark eyed senoritas. If any of us can be picked as most likely to succeed, we nominate Frankg student, athlete, artist, cheerleader, singer, add to this a winning personality and you have Frank. Two hznzdreff Ibirty-fam' IOHN A. WALKER 144 Hanks Street, Lowell, Mass. Freshman Trackg 'Varsity Track 2, 3, 43 Aquinas Circle 45 Mendel Academy -l: Scientific Society 4, Sodaliiy 1, 2, 3, -1. Any man who in the course of an afternoon can break laboratory glassware to the tune of twenty dollars and still wear a smile at the end of the lab period deserves more credit than these words will ever give him. Our happiest and yet most fearful hours in Iohn's company we spent in the organic chemistry lab where we dutifully performed our own experiment, keeping one eye on the ingenious Doctor Wallter, who considered the afternoon a failure if he could not produce at least two explosions, and break two or three dollars' worth of apparatus in the course of the day's work. In his quieter moods, Iohnnie was always good company, naturally quiet in manner and speech. He frequently sent the occupants of a room into paroxysms of mirth while he assumed a serious expression which soon gave way to one of the famous VValker grins. Then studies were forgotten While Iohn recounted his hair-raising escapes of the after- noon. They were hair-singeing as well, and we daily expected to find Iohnny with a toupee after some of his encounters with high explosives. Beneath that oft-imperilled crowning glory Iohn found enough gray matter to send him through the pre-med course with flying colors. And that is a tribute to any manis intellect. Four years with you were hardly enough, and we do not like to say good-bye to you, Iohn. Let's make it au reuofr, good luck, and we'll be seeing you. Two hmzzfrezf fhirfy-five WILLIAM ANTHONY WALSH S05 Bluli' Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Pittsburgh Club l, 2, 3, 4g Vice-President 3g President -f- Aquinus Circle 4: Economics Club 4g Vice-Chairman Purple Key 'lg Dramatic Society lg Intramural Athletics 5, rl: Sodality l, 2. 3, 4. The man who wrote, When Irish Eyes Are Smilingf, was thinking of Bill Walsh. There is no doubt about it. Those who have not heard his ufoine Oirish tenori' raised in melody at sundry gatherings of himself and his friends, surely missed something. Take a look at that face, now. Those eyes are looking for a joke anytime, that mouth is ready to break into laughter with them. A County Roscommon product is Bill. Watch out, girls, he'll steal your heart away this minute. Strange to say, although he comes from Pittsburgh, the color of his skin was recog- nized the first day of registration back in 1928. So there goes another allusion. A more enthusiastic supporter of his native city would be hard to rind. In fact, the Pittsburgers are more unified in their backing of the home town than any others. The Pittsburgh Club, consisting of four members is, believe it or not, an organizationg and the sensational Walsh-Gallagher Corporation, after a thousand bickerings, boasts of the joint-presidency, depending on which one gets in the Hrst word. Bill's multitude of friends at I-Ioly Cross is a tribute to his popularity. Next year he will continue on to a legal degree at the University of Pittsburgh. And if you ever have occasion ten years hence to wrestle with the limb of the law out there, it may be Iudge Walsh on the bench who dismisses the case, as cheerful, well-liked, and as full of person- ality as he was during his four years at Holy Cross. Two hmm'rf'rl 151.11 y-six 1 MAUR IOSEPH WELDON 811 Winchester Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Freshman Track: 'Varsity Track 25 Cross-Country 2, 55 Intramural Athletics 5, 44 New I-laven Club 1, 2, 3, 4g President el: Scientific Society 1, 2, 5, 45 So- ilality 1, 2, 5, 43 Pfvrrziuzn Bus. 4g Aquinas Circle -l. And now the announcement you have been waiting for. It is with the greatest of pleasure that we present the distinguished scientist, philosopher, and metallurgist, M. I-oseph Weldon-dish-cracker extraordinary, champion of the cause of Albertus Magnus, advocate of the new Gandhi running shorts, and the last of the New Haven Weldons. Gus merits the distinction of being the solitary graduate this year in the B.S. Metallurgy course, but it is not upon this fact alone that he is classified as a distinctive man. It was the scholarly manner in which Gus mastered this most ditiicult course that attracted our attention and caused us to admire him. But Gus always found time for recreation, whether it was in track or tennis, in prov- ing that man has a social nature, or in adding to the discomfort of his classmates by his midnight prowlings. In track, the metallurgy sectionv covered himself with glory. Gus could take as well as give. I-Ie could be the butt of a joke as well as the perpe- trator. In victory he was modest. In defeat he was hopeful, and set about making new plans that would in the future insure success, With these great traits, Gus, you are off to a fiying start in the race of life. May all success be yours! And now as the hand of time beckons and we must part, one thought we, who respect and admire you, would leave: Though all the happy hours here on the I-Iill fade softly away, the remembrance of your friendship will never grow dim in our memory. Two hlllIlil'0ll Il1l'1'ly-.fcucll STANISLAUS G. WONDOLOWSKI 30 Washburn Street, Worcester, Mass. Worcester Club l, 2, 3, 45 Glce Club 3, 4g Day Scholars' Sodality 3, 4. That is not Aclolphe Menjou pictured above, but just our Stan, Wondo, Stach, or what have you. However, it must be admitted that Stanislaus looks more like a count than most counts do. If it is true that one's face is his fortune, Stanislaus ought to go far in this complicated universe. And thus far he has given us every reason to believe that the promise will be ful- lilled. In the well ordered life of this gentleman there is a place for everything, and every- thing is in its place. Studious by nature, he naturally found his chief concern in the hooks, and he brought to his quest for higher education a verve and an enthusiasm which few could touch, which most of us could only envy. But he had his other sides too. His rich voice was enlisted to enhance the harmony and the prestige of the Glee Club, and the same vigor with which he grasped the eel of learning by the tail showed itself on all the trips which the music makers made. S-o great was his love for music that he could not wait for the regular concerts, but always carried an accordion in the bus, and never tired of playing it for his fellow artists. His moustache and his unusually suave manners distinguished him from the usual run of day students who trudged up the lane every day. Yes, he is a count. He is not the type to start a student rebellion, but when the bigger enterprises of the world come along, he'll be ready. Two hmzzlrea' lhirty-eight DONALD HENRY WOODS 46 Rutland Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Intramural Athletics 1, 2, 3, 43 Cliecrleadcr 4g PATCHER 1 Bus. 43 Metropolitan Club 1, 2, 3, 43 Crusader Coun- cil 1, 2, 5, -lg Advocate 3, 4g Purple Key 45 Su- dality 1, 2, 3, 4. If you should read in the papers about a prominent New Yorker who walked clown Fifth Avenue in a ten-gallon hat and a full-dress suit, or if you should hear how a lawyer made himself a reputation by tweaking a judge's ear-never mind looking for the name. Itlll be Don Woods, the original Down-With-Conventioni' man. When Fenwick Hall started to burn two years ago, he was the fellow who asked the firemen why they threw water on it. During his four years at H.oly Cross, Don has come to be known as an authority on everything collegiate and some things not collegiate. He is Hendishly good at cross-word puzzles, in fact sneaks about just before class, clipping them out of other people's papers, so great is the passion. He reads much, and looks quite through the deeds of men. His tongue is known for its flashing wit from Fenwick to Loyola, and he can, with pen as weapon, carve a mean essay into a piece of paper. And that, to use a current expression, ain't all. Don YVoods is probably best known to the football fans as one of the four tumbling cheer-leaders of Holy Cross. Their giving of all in death-defying feats for Alma Mater gave several radio announcers the surprise of their lives. Aside from that, to the graduating class he has a name for sound judg- ment and for being a trusted friend. Two hundred thirty-m'nc' IOHN XVILLIAM WYNNE 17 Lincoln Street, Manchester, Mass. Boston Club 1, 2, S, 4, Intramural Athletics 1, 3, 45 Economics Club 4: Aquinas Circle -lg SOfl2lllT.! 1, 2, 3, 45 Freshman Debating Societyg B. I. F. 3g Sanctuary Society 3. And now, gentle reader, raise this book over your head and look up at the picture if you wish to view the gentleman above in his true perspective. Bring it down into read- ing distance again though, because we have a lot to tell you about him. He is the exception that proves the rule about short, fat people being the best natured. For Iohn is a person to look up to, and while he isnat what one might call thin, nevertheless he has never had to reduce. But his good nature is what we emphasize. In all his happy-go-lucky college days we can't recall seeing him with a frown on his face for more than live minutes at a time. Marks could come out, the mail could be late, the showers could be cold, and the lunior Prom could come on a rainy night, he would remain unchanged. Iohn was a business student among other things. One of th-ose fellows who can read graphs the way you and I read detective stories. Besides that, he plays an extraordinarily good game of tennis and has a comeback in every form of repartee. We forgive him for the latter, but in regard to the former, warn him to keep up on his game, for some day we really will come to Manchester and with years of practice behind us too. We have some lost prestige to regain. Until then we say goodbye, Iolm, and hope that your sales Will be as successful as your service. Two hIII1tll'l'lZ lorf y l CASIMER IOHN YAKAVONIS 446 Morame Street, Brockton, Mass Frcshmln Track Vzusxtx 'Irucl 2 J 4 Varsrty Cross Country 2 9 4 Intrnnurll Soccer 3 Aquxnas Crrclc 4 1-'l'CSl1l11lI'1 Debatmc Socuztx Sodalrty 1 In treshman, when we Hrst grew famxlrar wxth hxs name, always up among th le'1ders ln the reports of cross country races, most ot us wondered what the possessor of tlus mus1cal monrclter was like In the lTlIC1VCI11I1g years we hive come to know hrm as a hird and perseverlng, 1f not br1ll1'mt, worker, 21 fine appearxng mem, 1nd ln 'lssoclate whose CO1l1p'lIl1OI'lSl11P was hxghly valued C15 has achreved the pos1t1on of coPres1dent wrth Les C1r1fHn of the I-Ierprcxde Club, hrs ,rchxevement IS all the more worthy mn consldemtnon thfxt Les stqrted our w1th a brg lmndlcap on hlm Not that h1s deforestatxon IS self mcurred, or even looked upon wrth favor, he has our sympathy, who realxz., that we slnll be subject to the sfxme nusfor tune before long Though Yak IS one of the quieter sort ot IIoly Cross students, there are those who w1ll long remember the nrghts he m'1de short wlth t'1les of the old country and lus songs, of whlch the favorlte was Go Down, McC1uskey And some wlll try to forget the terrlble beatings they have taken from hmm 1n checkers As a steady, rehable fr1end and an admlmble type of Holy Cross man, we shall be proud to gr'1du'1te ln the same class with hum, to shake hls h1nd 'und YV18h hmm heartily the best of luck Two hlI7IIflC'lf foliy 07 e . 1 ' - ' V ' , , 1 . ' ' Y . , 1 ' . , X 1 s : , ' . . . 1. . ' 1' y - 1 4 t : . . . - ,. . , ' . Q' . 1 : .., 3, 4. P c ' V 1 , . 4 . L , 1. ' L ' - 1 Z Z 4. . ' 1 4 . H ,, . . . . . , . . . K - ' ' e r . 1. . e . ' - - ' . Q L Y , C , as as - , - ' - - ' ' W u , . as - , Q 1 ' ' ' u as - 1 Q c 1 .' c c ' , Zin illlvmnriam ... ' sms i, B 1 xx 4 nz it-xg simgg,-it emma- wi Paul Sherry Reilly IERSEY CITY, N. I. DIED JULY 5, 1929 The summer vacati-on of freshman year had scarcely begun when the class of '32 was startled by the report of the sudden death of Paul Reilly. In his brief career on the I-Iill, Paul had attained an excellent position as a student and had Won the admiration and respect of his classmates with his sincere, gentlemanly character, cheerful disposition, and remarkable personality. It was hard-it still is hard-for us to realize that he has passed on. The brevity of our companionship makes his loss all the more keen. The memory of his friendship will remain forever in our hearts and serveas an inspiration to the attainment of those glorious achievements which might have been his, had he not passed on to a more glorious future in the Great Beyond. Requiescat in Pace. Two hmzdred fol'ty-two Ein Mrmnriam ohn Anthony Shea WORCESTER MASS Thr: Ianuary the class recelved rts second s1d blow when If was learned that Iohn Shea had left us tor a better land I'IlS vlvaclous presence had been nursed arncc the begrnnlng of senlor year when We were drsappomted to End that he had not returned to college presum ably because of 1ll health But no one suspected the serlous outcome Holy Cross hut there lb sol 1ce 111 the realrzanon that the heavenly altars have been adorned w1th another fresh bud and that the tears that Hlled the n1 hts of hm iamrly and frrends have rlsen W1th thelr prayers to he the dew drops of h1s eternal mormng Requzcscat m Pace Two hundred forty lluee , . . . . . , .V 1. 3 Y. . . K 3 D . . b L -. I , 1 . h V . , and the sad intelligence in Ianuary came as a terriflic shock to all at - , 2 A .Q f . . . A . L . I- 4. .N , I . a g e 1' ' 2 , A - N . , D Adams, Iohn F. Alex, Iohn Anketell, Theodore F. Bakewell, Claude I. Bakewell, Ioseph F. CR.I.P.I Bakewell, Patil Barousse, Carlos Baxter, Gordon A. Bellew, Arthur P. Bouchard, Louis P. Braun, Theodore F. Burke, Iames F. Burke, Iames H. Burns, Gerard I. Cafierty, Francis I. Carpenter, Elmer F.. Carroll, Iames I. Cerasuolo, Anthony W. Ciesielski, Casimir P. Cleary, WVilliam Cliliord, Christopher I. Coggey, Iohn V., Ir. Collins, Ioseph M., Ir. Conlon, Charles F., Ir. Corbett, Walter Cowan, Francis A. Crowley, Robert E. Darche, George R. Davis, Martin E. Delaney, X'Villiam E. Dclehanty, Philip W. Derby, George F. Dillon, Thomas F. Dion, George E. Doherty, Charles H. Donnelly, Iames F. Dorey, Norman E. Downey, Richard I. Dwyer, Thomas H. Two hundred forty-fam' Eddy, Thomas W. Engels, Walter D. Farnsworth, Alvin C. Favulli, Michael I. Fitzpatrick, Cornelius W Flanagan, Henry C. Fox, Iaines A., Ir. Fox, I. Raymond Galkowski, Ioseph S. Gibb-ons, Guilhert A. Ginter, Charles D. Golart, David W. Granelli, Bryan F. Griffin, Thomas A. Hackett, Thomas A. I-Ialloran, Thomas F. Halligan, Iohn P. Hally, Iames T. Hanley, Paul F. Hart, Philip I. Hennebry, Iames C. Henry, VValter E. Henry, Walter F. Iarvis, Lloyd A. Kane, Iohn A. Kane, William E. Katsuranis, Ioseph I. Keating, Iohn G. Kelleher, Charles C. Kelleher, Iohn E. Kerrigan, Iohn I., Ir. Kilcoyne, George R. Klarman, Walter I. Landis, Iohn C. Lillieh, Ioseph D. Loftus, Raymond I. Logan, Francis D. Long, Robert L. Maginnis, Charles D., I rs W F ,N .. .gm , -1 'a'? f R PS5 ' v as in ,W-x , ma wk i , f 'YQ ,.---fy, ,. N -Y I 5 , fs - 2 x ' SY, ian , Q , f f - - ' . 5 , .f,:.-153' it ai Y rr'-Q -nf 1 . -:, ' ' . - ' . - fj:E'5fT 7 r'.- .1- if yn 12 M ',-1-'Ea ,441:f5 Jn e ' . n 5333 N I 33' 6, , 1 -I - .gr 5 I, . W ., ,I 'swqv'-x 353 , ,- ,, gb -N. - 4 111 lr. f' '- N , xl u - L f- All Lgifial : N V V 1 ' I' ,' ' - f X ,I . - 'Q . - 7 9 A ,1 , : - Y 11 ' I he 'I I H 'ff 'N f I ' E' -4. '. t',31'-fi 'fn' , N 3 Q X Q T- '3.1'f',L1,f4,-,'f1f12: . - xx -, y 1- ' L-pq - -A y - sg Y ,f Qg-f-Fi:,'-MLM 2.72 33 . 1 A rr .fggfv L-:Ag oy-m5 :-A , ' l j Q f 2, W ggm. 52555- ?G .GQ H ' Asfxkf. -4 ' N--, ' R . UE M J, f - 'yu 1 1+-'1 3 f Swing- 'F w H , 'ii-'f 'l' Q, , Y '1 M Wi Y x W? 'Ij,r'l'fJ'l1'i?.i-X517 1 ..- K JK. 4 , . , Q ,Ki xg 'K ' 7, -5 3 ii 'in-.,. 4 . , . E . w -, -3 . -f,-,Siu N g , 4 H V- ., ,,55 .L-'- 1 I -ff w lg. ' , - A - Y ' I - . , ' .Qt . . - - '- L 5 b -55 ' it 'N l If ', . 1 - H- f ,',.N,,.v 'N 8-,km ,A 4 , .Y .i' LA ' J ,. V ,Z Yt4',.' -'V' . uk ' LQ v HJ V , - A H sig I ' 1 ,a A ff ' ,fix FQ ' WL .,,:EL..v,, N EX-MEN , WM RQ Masciantonio, Albert I. Mayer, Fred W. Miller, Aloysius Morgan, Hugh Mullen, Alfred A. Murphy, Thomas F. Murray, Richard A. McGinn, Robert I-I. McGrath, William Mclienney, Miles McMillen, Iohn E. Neagle, George E. Nokely, Thomas R Nolan, VVilliam O'Connell, Iohn B. I. G. O'Connor, Ieremiah F. O'Connor, Ioseph F. O'Connor, Thomas O'Neil, Everett A. O'Neill, Robert S. I. Pekalski, Edward F. Pekulski, Stanley Iames Petrossi, Iohn I. Philbin, Walter I. Pottemburg, Ioseph C. Powers, Iames V. Powers, Iohn F. Reavey, Edwin I. Two humirerl forty-:ix Young, Edmund I., Ir Rickard, Norman E. Ridikevieh, George I. Rfohrer, Frederic C. Rooney, Edward D. Sayers, Iohn F. Scales, Peter E. Shea, Arthur D. Smith, Francis M. Spain, Iohn H. Stokes, VVilliam I. Sullivan, Iames D. Sullivan, Ioseph W. Sullivan, Raymond F. Talbot, Felix F. Taylor, Christopher I. Tobin, Robert T. Tranfuglia, Henry L. Vegliante, Francis E. Vigeant, Roland H. Vitliano, Thomas Rocco Wallace, Thomas P. Welch, Dominic Welsh, Richard I. Williams, Thomas I. VVilson, Edward F. Wlodyka, Edward I. VVolanin, Alphonse S. Wood, Iohn B. Ek MEN o - --Slain' T .-g l,' 4 Xmvfcwssi ? N 095556 , I A W A' w i W f I ' 5 :W 'IN I W U Q X , , Llp nj? x ' ,Z- WEEE w' x A ' Qs . ' - -ik. ip x,,,1 K NME JUNIORS W -I' iY'if. .'f '- -1, 1-- - -fl, Y f V N CLASS OF 1933 umor Class HISEOIY That long ant1c1pated em1grat1on from poor old Alumm to Beaten tl1e hom1est spot on the H111 was accomphshed not w1thout some warhng on the part of those who could not Ht 1nto the l1ttle house next to the l1brary There were enough jumors left over to const1tute a FOFCIBH Legmn outpost of twenty one members 1n topmost A1umn1 and to estabhsh a s1zeable colony IH lowest Loyola The pr1v1lege ot dmmg 1n the upper Refec tory and occas1onal Sunday nwht out perm1ss1ons were two other great boons acqu1recl by becom1ng lLl1l1OI'b Fathers I-lardmg Dowlmg Walsh Sloane and Hutchmson began the1r year of hard labor 111 conductmg personal tours through such dangerous gorges swamps and jungles as Loglc Eptstemology Ontology and Cosmology And the1r success has been measured by the SIZE ol the quarterly honor rolls and 1n the bulgmg cranlums ot the1r students At the very outset of the ye tr Al N1CH11CC took tune out from baseball to snatch the fall tenn1s tournament and Wlll a PCIIHISSIOI1 lor tl1e class An early season myury kept M1ke Favulh oil the football team but the class was ably represented 111 every game by the star performances of Marty Murray Don Ixelly Ima Ryan Ima Zyntell Inn Flanagan and Tony ROV1I1Sl-.1 At the season 5 close 11m Ryan was elected eaptam of the 1933 vars1ty eleven ohn Sulhvan was made vars1ty manager and Ima Nolan freshman manager Although mterclass lootball was leg1slated out ot CXISKCHCC last year an ms1d1ous torm of the sport was nurtured by the class ol 1933 1n those bloody contests among the Gobby Boys the Dastards and the Loyola LlllCS On these occas1ons such m1nor consld cratrons as long fr1cndsh1ps ood clothes and the health of the communrty were tossed asxde 1n Charhe Horgan s mad rushes Ade Clsey s Vll1ll11SlLZ1l play dead B111 Keatlng s man1ac beh 1x lor Harry Furay s bravery 111 the Face ol Odds Dan Murdock s bru1s1ngs bone crush1ng by Inn Collms and Wally Scolhn and quc.e1 tact1cs by Lotus Lynch and ack Ward Blalse Scavullo 1t w1ll be remembered always played a safe and sane game at the Palace or the Caprtol It was all so dehghttully feroc1ous lust good clean sport W1th a rush buslness followmg at drug stores the Inflrm ary and St Vrncent s I-losp1tal And speaklng of hosp1tals Edche I-hdalgo Harry Furay Tom OConnell and Tom Eddy were at home to xa t recepuons 1n the1r l1ttle rooms ID St V1ncent s durmg var1ous txmes of the school year In an October elcct10n Wally Clxllforcl was chosen to fake care of the class rnngs Rnngs are those thmgs whlch you buy to look at for a wh11e show to the folks and then exchange WV1lIl1 someone not a near relatxon In anuary B111 7eller and Frank MOIIIS were elected to pubhsh the 1933 P11111 1.15 PATCHER after a br1ef and rather excmng campalgn The ret1r1ng Tonmhrzuk staff named Lcldle Hldalgo ed1tor lack Ioy rnanaglng ed1tor and Lharhe Callahan busmess manager Tony Woods was later g1ven the Pufple ts h1s spec1al charge and Lou Wheelock became its managmg ed1tor Then IH the early part of May the class once agam selected Ceorge Moran to be 1ts presldent thus IPPFOVIIIL h1s constant and successful elforts to represent the class on ex ery occas1on Two hmzdled iffy one . 1 . -L 1 , , 1. F L 1 . . . . . I V ' r r- - , I. L 1 1 ' 1. L b ' N C Q- 'f a a f s 9 1 - ' r ' r 1' , A t , . , . 1 . ' ' ' 7 1. ., -- 2 , , t L . - 1. , L 1 1 1 - X ,A . . . YV 1 9 9 s 7 4 . ,. , . V i . . . 1 ,I 1 1 4 r . - I r -L V n L , ' L l 1 1 6 , . . . . W .t s ' ' H l I 'A' ' 0' ' , A , .O . . 1 - - 4 1 , 1, - -5 11 sw - - rx 1 . , c 7 - , . 1 I. -4 , . 4 1 V r, . . T '- 3 K 1 9 1. 1 I ' a s C - . .Y . . i 1 1 T , . . . 4 . , . c , 1 - . 1 . . . . . , . , . . .V I 1. . , , H . . . . . . . . 11 V S ' N I a y V 1 . , s V I I -L - Q ,.. ' 7 ' ,.' 4 1 1 7 b 2 I 1 ' , C ' y 1- 4 -6 , . s 1 - . . . 4 1 1 . 1 ' L ' ' ' 1 I 7 . . . . r , 1 , I 1 , 2 T V . What is Iunior year without the Iunior Prom? Giving the depression the considera- tion it sorely deserved, Paul Shannon sold cut-rate tickets to the alfairg he engaged the Bancroft ballroom, presented attractive favors and programs and had Lew Conrad's orchestra play from I guess the first dance at least is mineln until I guess it's 2111 over! Goodnight, sweetheart, 'til we meet tomorrow and back to South Worcester in one mad dash. The reaction to the Prom was the organization of a mustache-growing club in which brave but lonesome bristles took part during the weary months of February and March. This quaint sport was succeeded soon after Easter by the annual outbreak of shaven skulls and mangling haircuts when whole corridors in Beaven vied with each other in displaying the most shapeless squashes. In the spring sports, the juniors were most active. Al Niemiec, Frankie Cammarano, Marty Murray, Paul Schoenrock, Larry Quinn, Marty Leach and Doc Corrigan featured on the diamond. lim Nicholson, lack Cahill and Iack Keenan represented the class on the varsity tennis team, while jim Collins and Ade Casey were among the leading golfers. In track Gordon Winslow, Matty Blake, Bob Tierney and Tom McNally upheld the class's reputation. lntra-murally speaking, the juniors had few equals. Third Beaven won the basketball championship, its swimmers splashed mightily, its handball artists worked very hard and at baseball few teams could equal the record of the junior corridors. In the only varsity debate -of the year, Ed Hanify and Ed Hidalgo met and defeated the University of Florida team during a pleasant afternoon in Fenwick I-Iall. The Ora- torical Contest found several juniors competing actively for the prizes. But this listing of assets for '33 might go on for pages if space allowed. It speaks well for the past, it foreshadows a great year when the juni-ors are all reunited in Loyola in the very near future. I i Two hundred fiflyrtwo T , , , ..., -Q .f,.-. if-I-,-,.--. f rf e- -r -6.1, is . IUNIOR A C,harles P Ahern Matthew 1' Blake ohn I' Boyle Eclvrard V Callahan Prank P Cammarano Charles R Carroll Adnan V Casey Vrncent Cas lllrro Trmothy I Collms r Cyeorge W Corrrban ohn Cutroneo rI ll1C1b L Dacey Iee l Dante Thomas Defjnan Phxlrp W Delehanty Ceorgoe I Derby Robert P Donoxan Iohn B Dore Stephen I Drottlr Eduard I Duff Iohn T Dwlght Mrrtm I Earls Robert V Fay Irmes E Flanagan Ph1l1pI Hart ladward I Hldalgo Wrllram G Hlney Paul I Hrntelmann Wrll am E Kane Robert L Long, DOl111DlCli R Matteo Prancrs I Moynrhan C eorge C, MLIYFI5 Mart1nB Murray Thomas W McCarthy Iames E N1Cl1OlbOl1 I Leo OC orman Ir lawrence I Ournn E Iustrn Rcnz Patrlclx I Roche Prank L Rooney Ianaes I Ryan Ierem1al1 I bl'lCCl1lIl LdwardI Smnh unror Class Ioseph P Smlth George A Qullrx an Iohn P Sullrx rn VV1ll1am I Wlllter Paul C Welch Anthony S Woods Umou B Ioseph C Ambrose Matthew I Ashe Ldward Bennett 'Thomas Brack Iohn R C,ah1ll r Wtllram I Cfnrnrcellr Ldnard la Cassell Iohn O Clarlte Walter I1 Cl1fTord IIIDCS la Collms Lau renee W Conneen mfllllilll S Conway Stephen I Costello Frlncls P L Cxomn Kenneth I Cuneo Edward P Curry I.-xClXV111 P Doolan Peter A Dum as Carl C Ernst Wlchacl I F'U.Llll1 Bernard H Fee Ir Srmon A Flynn Ir Leo R Ford C ardmer 5 C lbson Martln O C rlmes IohnI llapeerty R1Cl11fCl I Halloran Lclxx trd B Handy Wrllram V lllndlc Iames T lgjoc Ioseph I' ansa Thom IS P Kearns Ir ames F lxelly C, Iustm LaSalle 'Vlartrn D Leaeh I R1cl1ard Lenehan Francns I Lovelock YV1ll1am I Luby Lawrence I Malley Dona C Maynard Damel L Mooney Damel R W Murdock Iohn 1' McDonough Iames 'I Phrlbrn IIHCS I Ralergzh NVll1amII Regan r Herbert W Rellly Pe er E Scales D1DlLl I bheehan 'lhomas M Tnomey Peter S Zareckl Ir IUNIOR C IamesI Brltt Ceorpe E Bruso Charles R Callahan Trederlclt M Callahan Lavx renee I Carroll Praners I Csostlban Lotus I' Depro M Thomas Donohue Walter I Doyle Raymond I Fltzpatrrclt Peter I Pllnafaan Edward B Cyarxey Charles S Horgan W1ll1a1nI Keatm Francls D lxelly Thomas A Kennedy Albert I Lepore Austin P Mlle Maurrce B Martin George B Martm L Edward I Ioseph D Moran Moran Morrarty Murphy Iohn T McCarthy Donald E McDermott Bernard H McGarry Crerald R MeC1ratty IamesI Nolan Edward I O Brren Two hzfndzed fifly three . W 4 . . . . -V N , ' . L 'Q ' ' . 1. q 1 ' ' 1 1 I . '. L J. t I e I 4. 1 . . . . . I an . ., . 1. ' 1 1 - . f . 2 . z 4 . c c 1 ' ' . . , . . , - . I I2 - . . Y , , x . T. , I . I. A '2 . 1. - - . . 7 1 . 1 . ,I . . . L 4 t 5 - . Y. 4 It .3 . , , . . af 1 4 1 I - ' 9 I ' s ' , . . , . . . , . .A in K. s K, I- 'D . s - f . If . . , Ir. 1 , n 1 C 1 T 4. K. 4. I 4 C u . ' , ',, 4 . I 7 . 3 w xr 1 L 'I - I K s 1 L K. . 1 . . , I. a ' - . . . I ' I . . ' . . 'f 41 . . ' 4' . I 'Y . - . - . 4 , Iames L. Flaherty Alexander I. Dalbec Edward L. Doyle, Ir. . 4 1 ,l 4 . . C 1 .. . . . . . . . az t Y ' . 1 . at .. . . f . . . . , . . . . f , Ir. rt . . . . 4 , . .V . g . T A . I L ' . 73 . Z If. . 1 ' L . I . . . ,. ' L . . L t . 1 . I I. 1' ..-. TTA 1 .' . 1 y .' . ' ' ' ' fl . . ' ' f '. t L n I L 1 - I Q ,C . . ' 1 ' , . L. T ' C . t .1 ' . . L . a.I. .. . . . 1 ' z . '. ', . . - ' . 5 , .7 .. , : N ' , . l - N A NN . 1 . . Q. . - . , . . . 1 . . . . . 4. 1 .n 41 .Q , 2 1 , , Hugh F. O'Flynn William W. Peters, Ir. George S. Quinn Francis I. Quine Iohn F . Regan Raymond C. Richer Ioseph A. Russell Constantine C. Sableski Thomas I. Saunders Ioseph W. Scannell Thomas P. Scannell Blaise F. Scavullo Michael Seith Edward S. Sheehan Iohn I. Sullivan William I. Sullivan Anthony S. Tamason Ralph L. Thompson Ioseph R. Tivnan Iohn F. W'ard, Ir. IUNIOR D William R. Brady Iames N. Casey Francis I. Ciarleglio Thomas I. Dailey Thomas W. Eddy Francis P. Edgerton H. Charles Flanagan VVilliam P. Gain Denis F. Gorman Iohn M. Ioy Thomas F. Kane, Ir. Iohn G. Keating Robert I. Kennedy William E. Langlois Louis E. Lynch, Ir. Francis X. Mahoney I. Frank Morris Iohn F. Mulhern Francis X. Murphy William I. McGrath Two hmzf1'rcfi' fifty-four Alfred I. Niemiec Thomas I. O'Connell Thomas I. O'Keefe Robert S. O'Neill Iohn E. Pitts Christopher I. Reynolds William S. Rigney Anthony C. Rovinski Paul F. Schoenrock, Ir. VValter I. Scollin Ieremiah I. Sheehan Shawn G. Sheehan Maurice D. Spottswood Frederick I. Sullivan Raymond F. Tutty Bernard D. Ward Gordon W. Winslow IUNIOR E Edward D. Bergin Nathaniel F. Chandley William T. Coakley I. Albert Currier Ioseph I. Donahue Ioseph V. Dunn Merton I. Foley Harry B. Furay Thomas B. Harold Ioseph I. Hastings Norman L. Henault Walter E. Henry Thomas W. Holly VVilliam F. Iones, Ir. Iohn A. Kearns Iohn E. Keenan Ioseph P. Kelly Thomas F. Kenny, Ir. Raymond G. Leddy Dominick I. Lepore George F. Lynch William E. Mahoney Ioseph F. X. Mandry Thomas F. Murphy Myles R. McAleer Iohn D. McAuliffe Richard I. McCarthy Thomas I. McCarthy Edward T. McClure Harold I. McDonough Thomas F. McKeon Thomas F. McNally Thomas I. O'Connor Ioseph I. O'Reilly, Ir. Ioseph C. Payton Emile V. Pilon Edward R. Reardon Edward Revane Thomas F. Riley Daniel I. Riopel Philip E. Ryan Paul F. Shannon Colbert W. Smith Frank B. Smith ' Francis A. Sullivan Robert H. Tierney Ioseph A. Walsh Lewis M. Wheelock Iohn F. Williamson William C. Zeller IUNIOR B.S. Charles B. Beierschmitt Iames E. Brennan Matthew I. Caldbeck George D. Davet Iohn E. Goett George M. Haulman, Ir Richard I. Healey Ioseph E. Keating Howard F. Molteni Charles I. McGoey C. Spencer Sharples Iames B. Walsh Ignatius I. Zyntell XX Y 'G 33 fy' f Q 7 N7 1 Xb XBLQSIQA- ORE W N1 IK N 65 Un' Uf CLASS OF 1934 Sophomore Class Hrstory The Sophomore Class, now rn the twrlrght of rts lrfe as such, looks back on the many phases of rts one year ol exrstence and complacently finds them good It recalls, rn rts retrospectrvc mood the slrght treprdatrorr wrtlr whrch rt marched up Lrndcn Lane, some two hundred and fifty strong, rn those last dlys of September to recerve rts new appella tron of Sophomore, connotrng added responsrbrlrtres and a further and greater test of capabrlrtres It remembers, wrth no small amount of satrsfactron, how soon those prom rses ot scholastrc and athletrc abrlrtv, whrch had been made durrng rts mrtral year, were fulfilled Football was Ixrng rn those first few months and sophomores proudly pornted to Rress Grrfhn Murphy Iarvrs and Drescher, letter men all, not to rnentron Hanus, Far relly llorgan, LoGrudrce Flynn Lyons, riowen a rd Fcrra7zano, less fortunate rn recerv mg awards but all rn hrgh favor wrth Hrs Crrdrron Majesty It was no wonder that wrth such a representatron as thrs, the sprrrt of thc sophomore class burned brrghtly and reached the hervht of conllagrltron rn the never to be lorgotten Brown Rally when, wrth a hun dred per cent attendance, the Class of Thrrty lour marched through the streets of Vlforres ter wrth banners flyrng and lusty vorces loudly srngrng paeans of antrcrpated vrctory Nor was that fiery sprrrt of momentary brrllrance for rt flamed up agarn rnd agarn, at the Har vard game, at Fordham, at Dartmouth, and at Yale In the sport of the crndered and boarded tracks the sophomores found other reasons for prrde Al Morrn, capably frllrng the sprked shoes of hrs brother George, gladdened the heart of Bart Sullrvan wrth hrs consrstent, speedy performances on the crack relay learn The drmrnutrve, auburn harred Ray McManus, trme after trme showrng a clean part of heels to the prck of New England hrll and dalers, further rarsed the prestrge of the class, wlule Mrke Cooney s legs flashed over the hrgh bar and hurdles to grve rt added drstrnctron Nor can we omrt the names of Curtrn, Clancy, Mulready Dobson, Burke Hassett and O Brrcu whose steadrly rncre lsrng form presages a brrllrant future And last, but by no me ans lerst, credrt rs due to hurlers ol the hammer and shot, Rress, Hanus, and Drescher At the trme of wrrtrnfr baseball rs apperrrng above the athletrc horrzon and rs an unknown quantrty but speak to a sophomore of prospects and he wrll tell you of a wealth of materral amongst hrs classmates, mentronrng Horgan, Trerney Mullrgan, Lee, Grrlfin, Farrelly Keller, Farrell and Campbell 111 of whom performed credrbly as frosh lnterwoven wrth sophomore athletrc laurcls are the bay leaves of forcnsrc and lrterary pursurts The Phrlomathrc and B F debating socretres have on therr rosters such prom rnent or ltors as Bradley Morrarty, Molrne, Grlvary Kennedy Mackrn, and urrk sopho mores who brd larr to wrn therr forcnsrc spurs on the varsrty team rn the near future As for the publrcatrons, the Tomrzhaw and Purple, sophomores have not neglected the lrterary muse The Tomzzhazu carrres on rts staff twelve second year men, occupyrng posrtrons as assrstant news edrtors, sport wrrters, columnrsts and busrness eaecutrves The sophomores boast of but two members, Ed Wrllrarns and Tom Shea, on the Purple st rff but the rncreasrng number of sophomore contrrbutors argues to an augrnentrng of thrs pun l1catron's personnel shortly Nor has there been a dearth of musrcal abrlrty, for the numerous sophomores partrcr patrng rn the concerts of the Band and Glee Club have borne adequate testrmony to the talents of the class rn thrs branch of actrvrty lt 15, then, wrth pardonable prrde that the Class of Thrrty four revrews thrs past year and looks forward to the next wrth keen antrcrpatron and hrgh hope of future trrumph Two hIIl7d7t'I11 jfffy ,rn ff: Q . .. -. . 7 Y L l n F - L u . 7 L ' ' ' 't 2 ' . H ,, Q . p N . .. . V C x . , K . , . 2. . , I . 1 K. . A 1 s- 9 1 - ' ' . . , p , rx x Q . . , . ,, , . J . 4 ' . . .Y A . . , . . . . , 1 . .x. L ss - .' D t 1 S- - '-' ' e . - . ' I ' 7 L - C ' .-' . - s . , 1 1. . L . 1 4 ' ' u l C A 1 '16 97 ' ' ' 'Q ' I 4. L , . . . - fr sr . . . . ' C L ' ' 1 4' ' ' Q - rn ' as at N ' W H ' - . .. . , . , , .X Q . . . . I Q . . ' 1 . L ' 1. ' ., ' 1 a 4 2 L L N C t 1 , c -4, 1 .V . ' , c ,c ,. . 1 K .. 1 . . . - 1 1- 1 1 9 s '- Q s ' AK Q 1. . 1 k . . L Qs.. Q. 4 1 C V a C 9 . . - . . . , I x L 1 .Q A , 4 I I I A l r f ' . I SOP1'-IOINIORE A Walter I. Byrnes Thomas I. Carlin William D. Cronin Ioseph P. Donelan Cornelius I. Dwyer Michael I. Hearn Thomas F. Hogg Edwa1'd Holland Iames H. Iones Ioseph F. Kenny Ioseph C. Leary Edwin G. Moline Paul T. Moore Iohn F. McElligott Robert E. McMahon George B. O'Connor Thomas W. O'Connor Matthew V. O'Malley Iohn L. Reynolds Frederick I. Sheehan Francis D. Shine Som-romoruz B Edmund I. Cahill William F. Connor Iohn I. Curry Iames I. Dorsey, Ir. Francis I. Finneran Christopher I. Fischer Iames I. Harrahy Thomas X. Hayes Iohn H. Herbert Austin F. Hogan Edward A. Kennedy, Ir. Peter I. Kennedy Iohn A. Matthews, Ir. Frederick L. Moriarty Philip D. Moriarty Iohn P. McCabe Iames L. McGovern Raymond F. McManus Edward I. O'Connell Henry G. Smith Arthur I. Wallace Robert I. Woods Two hundred jifty-eight Sophomore Class Sovuomorus C Iames G. Carroll Thomas F. Costello Arthur M. Earls Iohn V. Earls Iames I. Foley Carl I. Graf Iohn I. Griffin Edward F. Hellwig Iohn D. Lane Richard I. McCormick Paul I. McElligott Arthur F. McGinness VVilliam M. O'Neil Ioseph L. Power Iohn R. Quine Alvin G. Seelman Edward L. Skelley Ralph L. Smith Som-Iomorua D I. Philip Audibert Raymond Blais Raymond I. Byron Thomas B. Campbell, Ir. Edward I. Carroll George P. Cheney ' Iohn F. Connole Daniel I. Curtin Charles C. Dailey Iohn A. Dillon William I. Dozois Edward I. Farrell Vlfilliam I. Forhan Lawrence F. Gilleran Henry I. Gorman Edward I. Halton Francis YV. Hickey Iohn G. Kelleher Iohn R. Linehan Iohn N. Moossa Harold M. Moroney Iohn E. McKenny Francis H. C,Brien Albert I. O'Connor Ierome T. Quinn Lawrence E. Reidy Francis X. Romaniello Iames I. Sponzo Peter F. Sullivan Thomas A. Tracy Iohn I. Vogel, Ir. Harry I. Walsh, Ir. Edward L. Williams SOPHOMORE E Iames M. Ball Lewis D. Blackmer Iohn I. Cahill, Ir. William A. Carroll Paul E. Conway Robert I. Curley Henry P. Dinan Arthur D. Dobson Charles L. DuBois, Ir. Edward M. Duggan Paul E. Fleming Frank P. Gilligan Raymond I. Harbeck Edward C. Harold Richard T. Harrity Iames I. Hassett, Ir. Rowland K. Hazard Martin I. Healy Bernard I. Houston Thomas I. Kelly Henry F. Leary Philip C. Macken William H. Monagan Ioseph I. Mulligan Iohn F. Mulvey Iohn VV. McCormick VVilliam F. G'Grady Iohn P. Pierce VVilliam P. Quinn Charles P. Read Charles M. Reidy George A. Rice Iohn I. Ruddy Iohn F. Scott Iames I. Sullivan, Ir. Iohn W. Teahan Vincent T. Tracy Alfred I. Zarnbarano boP11oMo111 II L Donnelly Betox1sl1 Robert I-I Bones Llwrence 5 Bresn'1n Ceorge T C lSCy Thomqs I Daley Ir Anthony Ix IDCFTIHLO Innes R P1rrell Iol1n E FlflgLI llC.l R1v111o11d I Fl ll1l1l.I'y Iol111 I C lynn C11 1rles L Iloye -Il1OIDHSI Ixemnys llflyden W lxeller Innes M lxenned C eoreye F Lee Tl101111's L Mlel Ill Cornehuel Mfrhcr I-II l1llx D M1y C eorbc N MlbCl1ILF P1111 L MOIIII A1tl'111r NI MeLwoy VV1ll1 1111 R CJ BFICI1 Innes C O bheq Iohn A Omen Robert NI P011 er Iohn T Qulrl Ir Iohn I-I Sl1JLl5jl'lIlC5Sy Ldvmrd A Shechy Ir C eorbe F bUll1X'H1 Iohn V TIVIIQII Xnthony I VIIILI SoP11o1y1okL C Iolm F Ahelrn XAIIIIKIITI lx Bennett Thomfns M CTIIYLY 'Nhcholas A Cumano Arthur A C1rrell'1s P1111 A C'1ssell ol1nI Cllnccv r C,or11cl1us I Crowley IXIHLIIICC I Daly ldv '1rdI Farrell Iohn I' Fqrrell WIIIIQIIX I Flndlwn C corge I F1tzGer:1ld IJ'lD1Cl P Cnllifjher Paul D I C 1l11ry Ioseph N C r11l1oy1 bl 1 Ioaeph L I'IH11lT1011d C eorge I Hoyt Herbert I Ixerr l COl1'l1'El I L1115111 Ioseph P IX41l'l'l'll1C Innes I IX'IlIl11lb Tl1on1'1S I Mon llllll W1ll11l11 T Morrmey Iol1n I Murphy Albert W MeC,1rtl1y AIlLI1lCl I MeDon1ld lfd11 .1rd I O l3r1en XACZIIILI' NV CJIl11re I Iuflllelb O Nl1I 1 Iolm A bl1e1 Paul B Sl1c1 Iohn II Sl1eel1 111 S'1lv'1tore 9 SplCl'lLClD0 XVlll1'llTl I T1crney SOI 11o111o111: I ll I1mes P Br'1dley Thomis I hurl e Charles M C1ll1l1.111 VIHCCIIL S C,'1rberry X'V1lI1'lI11 II C l 1pp T1motl1y C C ormler Iohn I CJUINIDIIILS Iohn A CUITIII Fredencl DresCl1e1 Id11 11d I' Dr1seoll I'r1ne1s lx DLIIIIL I-Iernmn Dum IS Fl1e5te1 9 1Jf1e1elC o5epl1 T P1rrellV C 1br1el P 1err111 1110 Vvllllilil I llynn C Cflld I Crr EH11 Bf1rthol0n1ev1 I Hinua R1ch'1rd C Hlfflgill Dayrcl E Hwrtman Iames C I-Icnnelnry P1111 H I-Iolmberb Iohn I Hor an Cl11rlcsI arms 9t'mleyI IXOCICVI oscph I LoC IUCIILC Cllcn Ilul L111 wmes F Lyons Iqmes I RI'lllCI' Xllucrt P Minn Allred C NIOYIU Ioseph P Mulrmdy ohn I C3 D1y Iolm L O Toole Ceor e Ix Pender Cxlmrles lx1es5 'Ihomas A SDLT VI 111111111 R bheelmn P1111 P Tlerney Iohn P Tmyers Q01 114111101112 lj S om l l3.1l er oaepli In nom Cluenee l l3o111l11rel Clmrles L C1ll1l11n AIlCl1'lLl P Cooney Fmnly. I Dono1 Ill Clnrles A Petsehcr lxo ex ClltI'1I'lL r 1'd11 1rd P I'IlI'Cll1TID ITXVILHCL C I'le1ly Inu renee A I-lurstell VV Edu 1rd lxecgan IIIIOIITISI luely C'lblI11Cl'I lxoLf1r1e1vslC1 Predcr el D Lmlver er Iumes I' loughran Vv1ll11111 P l yons Iohn P L M'1dden FCIXVIFKI I M'1llet1 C eorgbe A Me I'Ll1Ll1l1I1 W1l1e1I Moody Cyr1lI IXILNILIFIFIC VV1ll1'1m I-I OBr1en Iohn F Plrncll Constant T Paululxorus Russell P Sqndiord Ir Iohn R bLlll1N 1n Parncl I Tly,,l1C W1ll11111 I W'1lsl1 T110 01111111 cd fijly llll c' . I 4 A N- Y P , L . . T L C c . 4 L . . I X ' . T I 1 'Ji - I Q '- . z ' g 4 1 ' . IJ w , I f . I. ' 4. . 1 ' . . - A f , , . J 7 . A ' I I I I ,- K' x YJ 1 n K rs 4 . K .4 L ' ' ' . z . ' ' I. 1, I A., . . 1 A ' K . - 4 w 1 - 4 A I K - 1 . . ' . A w Iris . . , 1 ' . 1 . f . 1 mv 1 - X - .1 2.7 - - T .I ,. 1',.. , ' . 1 .1 e ' Z 4. ' I v -4 I w , , , lf ' 1 . 1 1 . . . ez . 1 r in Y' , .I 7. . , -N LI ' 1 ,-.' .4 'A , A, . . . . 3 1- H . K . . . 'Ie . 1. . fra H, , I . . I V 1 J R J' g 1 .sq I L . ' . . A . ' . 1 w , ,- x . 1. 1 C. 1 L I I .1 , ., 1 ,. I - , I . , , x J. x ' . 1. . ' I ,I mm ' L 1 71 D C . . 1,1 1.1. ,ze 1. ' 1 , . ' '. ' , , 3, 3 1 . . 2 L 1. ,- 1, , - N N .1 R1cl1z1rd E. Bowen C,,l1Zll'lCS P. Cullen . , , . ,, 3 f 7 e . e 4 . 1 - . C . ' 0 . . . f D 1 f 1 1 T . I ' : .. 1. . 3 1 ., 11: '. 1 . Ie . , . ' D Yi N 3 ,. ' ' . 1 ,z . A 'I ' ,. '. . ' ' N ' , C -, W l 1 I. 1 41' Q . W ' ,7 A. , n ' -' . 1 . Il ' eff. s 1 L 1 I 4, 1 . Q I. .' - 4. '. 2 ' ' ' ' 1 w r - . I 1 71 . 4 A 'rc . g . -1 ' . ' . L ' . ' 1. . Ar ' ' ' V V '. . . . I ' A 1 I. 2 . L. ,I . ' . . . ' VVEV1- A e . L ' 1 C. , , . . . . 1 . 1 I ' . 41 e o 1 . 1 . . , . 1, ' J N T... ,, '. '. , JL L fn I 1 1 J.. I . 15 C . ' ' I . .. 1 , . . ,. . . . . I . 1 -4, I. 1 C . . ,. f , . 3 X Q .. , . 1 l ,K I I 1 1. L 1 ' . ' e 1. 1 e . Z ' 32 1. . . . ' . ' ' -4. L 1 I C -qc L : u I , . . . 1 . ' . ff 4 ,. 1 D .I ' I W f ' N N x ,xy x, N IK N , X R J 4 S Q 'XX ,J LJ ff Jf x ' .,,-L-ij! I ' , :f 4 wer ' I, L1 E -.V g W -S 5 TLS? J ,- , if ff - ,E-gtg' V 6' L, ' sw'.?2'.rN-IV X 1 X X fy XY... 'I - 'xx 1 9, 4 4-X fifj X ef' - nr . E Q VLSQQM ,flu ,Mfr SST wg iq xX ' .UH x, N, x Xt f 'Q 5: Fl 3' w S A A , A 1:-Q-'51 ' x I I 9 Nvw I e L N X FRE I-IME Vx I N .I , N J ,H MH -I , 5 ,II ,.-.H ' v .gl ,v 1 'w .n w W AM R ' . , A f- . - -- - -if 1 I 1 ,M M H w 1 5 xl ll Y f CLASS OF 1935 W CSuch members of the Freshman Class, as braved the cold and snow to be photographrsdj Freshman Class Histor Having looked into Fenwick and O'Kane, and watched a week's round of routine go by, the Class -of '35 decided to hang up its hats and remain. Not to be content with merely remaining, a whisper of its donations to the athletic teams, the speaking and writ- ing organizations, and the honor rolls swelled into a roar from the housetops, often, to be sure, ending in a curtailment of Out Permissions. Father Cox accepted this new parish in the Diocese of Pakachoagn and assumed its management, while Frank Curry, appointed as Acting President from the senior class, kindly guided our first footsteps in the Hill manner, rather than in the Moosup, Ionesport and Hohokus fashion. When the newest additions to the Cross had acquired their UH. C. -legs, they warned the upperclassmen to look to their laurels. The football team tried to take on the Varsity single-handed, and their measure of moral success promised a good season, which it promptly actualized, by winning all but one of its games, Worcester Academy, Brown, Boston College, and other elevens failing to do the trick that St. Iohn's of Dan- vers narrowly succeeded in turning. Britt, the O'Connors, Harvey, Moran, Marandos, McCann, Avery, Riccardi, Blanchheld, Brogan, Kelly, Hefernan, Graham, Callan, and Inglis were somewhere around when all this happened. ' The frosh hockey team went the footballers exactly one better, that is, a perfect season was turned in by the sextet fwhich by quantity of talent numbered nearly as many as the original Floradoraj, composed of a few of the gridders plus the new blood of Cannon, Burns, McDonald, Moylan, Costello Qof a puckster, familyj, and Beaudreau. Nine games were played and won ere the ice succumbed to the frnicky weather, among the victories being Worcester Academy, B. C. High, Nichols Iunior College, and on one occasion, the Varsity. Mr. Brock coached and Ray Martin managed. Some of the writers scraped the dry high school ink from their pen-nibs and dipped into the well for The Purple and The Tormrhnwfq. The debaters, having elected lim Desmond president, were often seen lurking about with mouths stretched to capacity with Worcester pebbles. The scattered area represented by the new students als-o served to increase the yardage of the Worcester and Metropolitan Club pictures, and lend bulk to all of the other clubsg not that bulk was the only gift of the latest sons from home. As spring falteringly mounts the Hill, the track team, which was much confined during the indoor season, not only to armories but in the number of meets, scrapes its spikes meaningly and looks ahead toward the tape. The relay team of O,Toole, Webber, Nowlin, and Kenney shape up toward a good season, while Goglia in the hurdles and Burke in the half are expected to noise their way among contenders. At press time, frosh baseball has got off to a highly successful start. Freshman elections went smoothly, and resulted in the selections of Iames Tumulty, of Xavier High and New Iersey, as president. The olhces of vice-president, secretary, and treasurer were filled by Benedict McGrath, Robert Devoy, and Archie Iefferson. On the heels of this, the Freshman Banquet anticipated Lent by one day, and the Puritanical ones were treated with their last relaxation before the Long Fast. Thomas Grant, toastmaster, capably performed in this capacity, and Mr. Drumm and the Reverend Father Rector addressed the freshmen on behalf of the Faculty, who tendered the banquet. The musical talent, fostered by Mr. Bouvier, showed the wonderful result of its year-long training together. And now the sun is taking on that cordial, golden look that goes with May and Iune. And the doors of the College will soon dry up in its heat, until September peoples the Hill with new arrivals to whom we shall surrender the name Freshmen, and strive for new approval under a new nom de classe. Two hznlrlred rixty-!hl'er FRESHINIAN A George E. Bergin Wilfred B. Coady, Ir. Andrew H. Creen Charles A. Curtis Iohn E. Dunn, Ir. Philip F. Fahey Charles F. Fity Thomas Gilligan Thomas F. Grogan Francis V. Hanify Francis L. Harrington Francis X. Hennigan Daniel M. Higgins Ioseph A. King Ierome I. Linehan Herbert C. Markey Iames P. Moran Edward I. A. Murphy G.lbert I. Murtha Thomas F. McDermott, Robert F. O'Brien Charles M. Plumer Cornelius K. Roche XVilliam Sexton Iames T. Tumulty Thomas F. Walsh Fnizsx-IMAN B Antonio F. Albiani Iohn D. Bennett George I. Brennan Thomas I. Callan Bernard I. Conlin, Ir. Robert F. Devoy NVilliam E. Fenton XfVilliam P. Flanagan Richard H. Grogan Iames H. Gurley, Ir. Philip E. Hayes I-lenry A. Hayward Francis I. Keaney Iames H. Kennedy Iohn F-. Kennedy Ioseph T. King Paul E. Kirby Raymond T. Martin Iohn C. McCann I-oseph A. McDonald Two lmndrea' .vixly-four I Freshman Peter C. Parolis George C. Picardi Lawrence S. Riley Linus A. Sheehan Gerard F. Treanor Thomas A. Webber F RESHMAN C William E. Blanchheld Richard P. Callanan Francis I. Carberry Iames W. Carney, Ir. Ioseph M. Cunningham Maurice F. Dower Iohn H. Driscoll Charles P. Garrity Richard P. Keefe, Ir. Michael D. Meehan Valere A. Michaud Dayton H. Mudd Francis P. McGuigan Russell G. Olsen Iohn M. Shortill Raoul E. Vezina FRESHIVIAN D Albert F. Barber Alphonsus I. Beauregard George F. Boire, Ir. Walter A. Browning Iohn R. W. Cahill Robert L. Clare, Ir. Iohn H. Costello Charles F. Donnelly, Ir. Neil T. Doyle Arthur I. Garvey VValter L. Harkins Philip L. Helfernan Iohn F. Hennessy Iohn P. B. Hunt Iames I. Keleher Thomas F. Kelley Bernard Lochern Francis I. Logan Edward I. Lucey Everett V. Mack Thomas H. Maguire Edwin I. Maley Ioseph A. Morgan Iames F. McCooey Class Edward I. P. McCormack Iames W. McCourt Andrew T. McGuire Iohn R. Nyhoff Iames V. O'Gara Iohn F. O'Hara Iames F. Preston Paul E. Russell Iames F. Ryan Iohn A. Tracy Robert T. Weniger FRESHIWAN E Rudolph H. Bacher Edward E. Bellavance Philip R. Byrne Roger P. Carroll, Ir. Fredric R. Clark, Ir. George R. Couillard Robert K. Daw Iames R. Desmond Thomas V. Gannon Ernest A. Goglia George R. Gorman Paul B. Holly Iohn I. Kelly Arthur I. Lebreck Wilfred L. Maillet Iohn M. Marchak VVilliam I. Michels Ierome F. Murphy Eugene I. McCarthy Francis G. McGrath Bartholomew B. McNerney Thomas A. O'Keefe, Ir. George G. Reischmann Alphonse R. Renaud Paul V. Shannon Thomas I. Shea Robert V. Stapleton David I. Sullivan Daniel F. Teehan Thomas Tetreau, Ir. FRESHINIAN F Arthur I. Beauchemin Alfred M. Beaudoin Robert H. Beaudreau Francis K. Buckley William I. Burke, Ir. Daniel VV. Butler Leo M. Cannon Frank P. Ciani Charles H. Connor Patrick F. Deane George S. DePrizio WVilliam F. Donoghue, Robert F. Downey Iames W. Earley Donald I. Fossa Francis B. Garvey Iames F. Henebry Iohn F. Horton Paul I. Ioyce Lawrence M. Kearns William D. Leahon Francis I. Macosky Daniel C. Meenan Iames M. Murphy, Ir. Benedict V. McGrath Iohn P. Nelligan Iohn W. O'Connor David L. O'Toolc William I. Read Iames Scanlan, Ir. Edward F. Scanlon Philip L. Sisk Edward S. Sugrue Daniel F. Sullivan George I. Sullivan Iohn R. Wilbraham FRESI-IINIAN G Ioseph P. Bossidy Donald T. Burns Henry F. Campbell Iohn I. Caulfield Ioseph I. Collins Robert E. Courtney, Ir. Ioseph M. Curley Francis I. Doyle Gerald P. Drohan Robert M. Durkin Iames E. Dyer lohn H. Fallon Iohn I. Galvin Iames F. Graham Thomas W. Grant Thomas F. Halloran Stephen W. Hamilton David I. Hawthorne Iohn R. Hayes George B. Inglis Ioseph G. Keefe I Philip W. Kelleher Robert L. Martin Fdward I. Moriarty Paul E. Murphy Hugh A. McGettigan Denis R. O,Brien Iohn D. O'Connell Iames A. O'Toole Kenneth C. Petri Peter I. Pianowski Andrew A. Riccardi Timothy E. Ring Lawrence H. Scanlon Edmund M. Sciullo Gerald I. St. Iames Iohn I. Sweeney, Ir. Ioseph M. Wojdylak F1u5suM.xN Pi--LB. Manoog Alexandrian Leonard V. Avery Iohn F. Bowler Edward I. Britt Paul F. Brogan Richard P. Burke Iohn S. Burns Hugh Connor Arthur I. Crowley Iohn I. Delaney, Ir. VVilliam H. Donnelly, NValver M. Downes Edward T. Duggan Iohn F. Dulligan Iohn I. Gibbons Iames L. Gralton NVilliam D. Halloran Charles VV. Harvey Iohn I. Hayes Daniel Herlihy WVilliam I. Hughes Archie G. Iellerson Iohn I. Iohnston, Ir. Thomas E. Kearns, Ir. Edward W. Kenney Thomas M. Macksey Anthony C. Marandos Iustin D. Murphy Iohn I. McCormack Melvin H. MeSheehy Charles F. Nowlin Thomas F. OlConnor Iohn I. Ostrowski Iohn A. Roche, Ir. Walter C. Rocheleau, I Ir. r. Bernard P. Rogers Iohn I. Scanlon Daniel A. Shea, Ir. Anthony C. Sienkiewicz VVilliam F. Sline, Ir. Gabriel S. Smith Edward F. Walsh FRESHMAN B.S. Charles S. Bailey-Gates Ambrose G. Barry Iohn I. Barry Norbert Benotti Francis A. Bonzagni Richard Brown Frank E. Buickrood Richard VV. Canavan Louis T. Casazza Anthony I. Chenis Walter A. Cbeslak George Y. Collins Charles A. Cuneo Daniel F. Deedy Edward B. Eustace Iohn M. Falker Furio P. Goduti Ierome F. Grattan Iolm I. Hill, Ir. George F. Keenan, Ir. Ierome M. Kennedy Iames I. Kerrigan Iohn I. Kilker Ioseph E. Kirby Eugene A. Lavergne Fred Loveless Charles E. Martel Steven Oleehnowieh Ioshua P. Petrillo Paul H. 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Q rv 'f'1,f7f 1-l'a1'T?'w5?y a'wQT5,w,' .. ' ' ' .. f ,' ' 1 .5L , 41?-V!Q4'lLg'f' .Fi1 ' .. , ' ,Jg -J12gi51::i wg ,N . I' V7 'L ' 1 3..i'1f-1'..Q,ig- 5 '1QUL?'?i5?I:1 k5 1-1 ' NJA' '. ' - Y ' '!'ffa4g'f:5' '-' 1' P if-,.', -H .i1gff:7j2,X!,', .E, .'f, - ..QQ'f.g,ff .?-3, ,R -, QS I it t , - 47 1 ,fy -P ANNA: Y 3.551-Tat, :l y-.hx .V V r Y ,. V, , U, , :U Q-,:j t:zi3uA.HW lm L Ut. T., 3- I-.. .:,.:r:-.,i.-. 46.3, P. Y J L14 3 . U -I V3.1 1 ' fill E f'fg,2:L4N.i!1.jQigQff hwy. ,.f:1,1jfE45j?j ,j:f . l,I' ,rffw .,, mb'Q::3f: ,f':1s.3.. 4 Q.,ggL.L L, . ., . 1 . : 12- 'ig' , 'f'1 l:iq15.ml:Lif4'fg.Q'1.1.4. lg. ff .H'w .1,1 :.-Fg,Q.'15fffj3' - A Ng' 1545- 2 - xl, w .mgiz-.::1..:': .. u+ --- - A ' ma:..g.'.5 , ' vi ' J..pig.,5,r-2-:.5'11l ' , ,..q.Lw,:uf:z,f.,a'- M. , 'Q,l '1. .'J:-a,'pj'A',g, 25 ' 14.-w 1' . Q ip? -1' j- ...M fi, .Q ' ' L 'Q .wfwi . 'i:M' v 4a7.t..,f,'.. ' J, ,rg J .if 4 - 4 . --, ug A N ' ' .1 A W ., K., L. .71 4 1 iff LL M- . 5122 1'lvT12.ZEQ'.'1'y, j'..'1ff -'Wi'--2':-.-f'f'5'riH. ...Qc V+ -' Nh ' - ' 7'-5' lbw -'fl'-' , 1' F-f.:?3w+ -1.. if :uh wawff' ML., mia iz. Fw I -L ' - 1s .w .e -nr,-1, ':. ..h , -', HI, Qjf m . ..., f' QC Miwafgwfr D041-f If , . I ea wi l l lie? 'fl ,X N ' ' .1 I 55435 ll le I W 5 L 34' , The wid? 'C-'f,,wgH 1-mb 'flxixwf X J' Q l if I To tune the lyre inthe hand and in the breast, to gain the applause of listening senates, the knowledge of the wonders of the world, and sympathy with all things human -to these ends are the muses a courted in the several activities, which open the pathways to the stars. ACTIVITIES -l 1. KEN' I Q - K x f- ' X X k Q X fe xX 1 X I I - if f X x S' I K :iff -- I I I XXX XF , fix Q I XI A -' X -,I 11 0 EU L,i 8 zlf XT 'NN 'AM --- X. -M. A Z- I I Q jj , 3. S N If Qi STUDENT ACTIVITIES 15? -WL LITERARY BOARD BUSINESS BOARD ill hmmm? ill vhs I7 I.,-.1 WJ' WAL1 ER L GRLLN1: EdllOl 111 Clue zz 71 d IAM ld 101 OSEPII I' SULLIVAN Bmzneu Manage: ROBERT F MCDONOLGII Mzmngzng Fdll0l IosLP11 L Bnxckm. IR IOHN M DUCLX .flasocmle Edztols ILROME F MURPIJX, IR GLKJIIGE P SULLIVAN WILLIAM I OCONNOR osnm-I C Dooom IoHx I' Dnuxnx WILLIXM F FARRELL IOI-IIN ANDRENV BLRRE Louls I Bar rv oicph Q Caxsldx 'lhonvas I1 C xulHLlcl I FICClCl'lLlx Connelly C hfnlcs A Duq Iamu A Du lm Robcrt L Dnllon Louis Cy FIILSIIHIHOHS Karl P Bllclwm Thom 18 I Banmn Stephen P BLr5,1n C'1.orLL I Carroll Tlmmls I C lrroll I IXLI'1DLll1 Cost1Lh Cl11rlcnI Cmwlcx Ir Tranue R Currx IILrbcxt I Ilnlenbwch J sz Azz Fdnof Phofogmphy Edzfol Spam' Edzzoz A54 11 Spam' Edziol fls.s1.xfr117t Ednfol .s LI I ERARY BOARD Innes F Foley Frmus A G.1ll.1Ll1 1 Edward A Hnmllon I Frank I-Iartman I1clw1rd P Lxlly 'Ixmothy I Leng Tmnl L LULLI Lugcnc P MLCUC BUSINESS BOARD XV1lll'1YY'l S I-l1lllCS Imeph I Fay Ij'lXlCl E Hmlon Ir Poor c V Hunley Rlxlnoncl I IIOWL Anthony ld Ixcltmg, 7nd Thon as E Ixmq Iolm I M1LL1UL,l1l3H Iol1nI Marslnll WxL1 LR L GRL1 NE Ioscph E MLGux an Pmmlx I4 O Connor Harold T R1lIcrty IoLLpl1 A Reynolds Rlcharcl S R1tlLl Vernon Ii Slnten Luke I.. Smith Mols A SLollc Ilmcs I' Mans.HclLl I XVHIILI I M0l11L,1l1 Ir Mnttluw E Murmy Don xlcl Il MLK ann olm C Mdxcon I'1LdL11c R OBr1cn ArthurI Smyth Mflur I Weldon Donald II Woods Two hlllllilfd :mty mn . ., ul ilxx - 4 I I I I I f-2.l Ll: A 1 'T' F, - 5'?2 2, Q ,, ... '-x.u um In .. .l': .-'. - Q .J I .QV A 1 I I ,,l! 'I' 13,1 l . I . s f 'f . . ' . ' .., . ' 1 .' ' I - , 4 .' . ,. 1 v u o I 1.4 I I . 1 - ' . - . . . I5 4 ' , , . . . . . , A' 4. ' :L ' . . . . 'I ' I ' : ' . '. 2 ug - H T 4 l ? 7 . . . . . , , H: . :5 . Gerald I. Carlin Gregory L. Fuirbcnd VVIllIl1l1'I F. O'Connell I.. I. 1' 1 . ' 'L' S' 1 . .M '-- 7 . . . 1 .. ' . -. IU: . e ' ' 1 . I . 'Z' . .5 .. 11' .'2., .32 ' 7. ' - . 4 . 'ff ' .C ' . L ' 1 ..1'. 2 ' .r. 1: . ', Ir. ' . ' i. .n , ' . ' Y' I V . a , . ' ' '. .' 1' j' .. 1 1 g . 'Q' ' 2 -. 'I' '25 . Zz , r. ,z-f' . i ' I 1. f. . I. -. , .' mi' ,, H A.. . ' ' . ' . -j, . .1 . , . 1 .I. 1 'I . xv t AY I . ' . 'l 1 . Q '. w fit g.- , X 1 a x , PURPLE STAFF iqltipiv-.ali .L D 9 HI ' ., 'llll ll lil 'UH' 'l 'l'lll f li am t 'lI '1lllI ll tw I - Am IJ IZ .ll'Mi.,.i1lYhf '1 Edirol'-z'1z-Chief . . IEROME F. MUllP1'IX', IR., '32 f Mlll1Hgl'12g Editor . . IOSEPH C. DUGGAN, '32 BOARD OF EDITORS Iohn A. Burke, '32 ' Iohn M. Ducey, '32 Ioseph F. Gallagher, '32 YValter L. Greene, '32 Robert F. McDonough, '32 William I. O'Connor, '32 Francis P. L. Cronin, '33 Iohn T. Dwight, '33 W'illiam I. Keating, '33 Richard I. McCarthy, '33 Christopher I. Reynolds, '33 Lewis M. Wheelock, '33 Anthony S. VVoods, '33 William C. Zeller, '33 Thomas A. Shea, '34 Edward L. Williams, '34 Iohn H. Driscoll, '35 Benedict V. McGrath, '35 Russell G. Olsen, '35 Irarioixna F. TVIURPI-IY, In. I. Albert Currier, '33-Exchanges BUSINESS STAFF IosEPH F. SULLIVAN, '32, Manager Ralph L. Thompson, '33 William I. Dozois, '3-l William Lyons, '34 Hugh A. McGettigan, '35 With other college monthlies falling into oblivion on all sides, the Pmplc continues to go forward. A progressive management, headed by Ierome Murphy, directed the maga- zine through its thirty-eighth year with great increase in reader interest and in revenue. New talent was plentiful: Bob McDonough came into the vineyard at the eleventh hour to write some altogether entertaining short stories, the sophomores were Finally per- suaded to put '34 on the masthead with Ed Williams and Tom Shea, McGrath, Olsen, and Driscoll, freshmen, were consistently good. Senior and junior veterans continued to adorn the masthead, attend staff lunches, and earn their keep. The new policy of featur- ing famous contributors from time to time brought to the pages of thc Pmjllt' the last pub- lished work of Iohn Philip Sousa, written for the Purple a few weeks before his death. Rev. Ioseph G. Mears, S.I., former member of the Purple stall was a most capable, kindly, versatile moderator whose friendly guidance never became domineering. Two hllllliffll' xcucnly-one TOMAHAWK STAFF I' 'ill N54 'Ill B74 - mnnhnmk -ff-lm dl W 1 f ROBILRT E DILLON 37 Edltor 17167116 CHARLES T COLLIINS 37 Managmg Ifdfzof DANIEL A LuNc11 3 Spo1tsEd1zo1 IAMES G MCDLVITT 32 Irzzefcollegmte Edltol FREDERICK CONNELIY 37 City Fdlzoz 105111211 P GALLAGHLR 37 Alumni Edrroa IOHN M Duczax 37 In the News RoB1.R'r F MCDONOUCII 32 Watchtozuef EDXVARD I I-IIDAIGO 33 Hmm B 1-KLRAX 33 News Fd'm'J Anruuz SMYrn 32 Sport: Columnist IOHN M ov 33 I7ZZlLlI7'lIflI6Il.x Ronrm E DILLONI EDITORIAL BOARD I-IERBERTI EIDLINBXCII 37 ChfIIl771Ll71 'Vernon B S'1nten 37 Ierome F Murphy Ir 37 Thomas L Donov'1n 32 Eugene P McCue 37 Edwqrd B Hamfy 33 IohuA Burke 37 Ioseph I7 Sullrvan 37 BUSINI Sb BOARD STEP1uaN P Brsrccnx 32 Busmes: Manage: RAXIXIOND A HOME 37 Circulation Executive CHAnLEs R CALLA1-IAN 33 Adz1ef1f1.r1ngManage1 In rts e1ghth year of exrstence the Tomahazulq wrth Bob D11lon as ltr, guxdmg hght attempted wlth the usual success to vorce Student opmron as Well 'ls to Cl'1I'O111ClC college news McDev1tt as rmnouncer for Intercollegmte Hour conducted probably the most prarseworthy column ot the yeflr and 'mt le'1st equwlled the SI'1lld'l1'd of preceding, years And Bergrn 'as BLISIDCSS Mqnagcr kept the sheet from gomg on the rocls under the worst buslness yeftr on record To the jun ors now P159 the power of the prebs the mrght of the pen and the strength of th prmted word Be 1t fl1C1I'S to hold on hrghl Two hllllfllfll cz efzty thief -7 v- : , f 4 7 'll . 9 - v. I 1 ': . ... as ' .iz ' , N 1111, ' 5 ' an ' F'-, 'E .,.- 'flu -. : ---fa. .-,. ,-, .--..u---If f 7 .4.'.,-1.9'lM zpmlfi . Elgin. Il, rt lil.. llllyll 5 'E ' 1 , , .. . .fi ln 1 -E' V. . , ... . . . ' ' 7 , . 4 7 I . . ., ... . 1 , v CT . ' . . , - .... , Q . . ' I 4 I 1 , n . . t . , , .. . . . 3 , . , I ,. 4 n ' 4 3 A4 n n ' ' 7 y . , - ..... I Y . 7 ' . J , . . . . , '4 1 ' ' 5 .- . . . - . 1 1 7 1 , 1 . , , . . , , - I 1 . .. . . , ...... , . , . . , I Y A, . , 7' . , . .., ' 3 I 3 . . , .. . , ., .. 3 A 3 3 . . . , . , - ' ' 3 77 . . , . , - -4 ' , . , .. - . 4 3 , . , V ' ' 1 1 ' ' , y 7 .',. .' ' , , ,,, , , . 7 . ' ' . ' 5 3 Y 1 I 2 . . C ' ll ' 52 I 1 I. ' ' C L 1 C C K T Y. ' V ' V Y. , ' , , , . . . I . . . ' 1 . z . ' '. 9 ,' ' r ' e . - . . 5 , - . SENIOR COUNCIL IOSFPH A REYRQLUS IIROMEI' MUIil,lIX I IOxEPH F SULLIVAN Wx1.TER L GRUNI ROBERT E DIILCJN STEPHEN P BERc IN If-IILIP E OCIJIXNELL IQIIN MARQHALL BERNARD P MLCA11ElKT3 IOEEPH FM TIINIOTI-IX I LEXRX VERNON B SANTLN HERBERT I EIDENBACU FRANCIS I NIOAKLFH ITHOIKTAS F FFRAINOR ANFIIONY F IQEAFINL, SAIWUEL D SIXIITI-I ARTHUR I b1X1YTll Iomx ANDPEWV HURRE FRANR G VARELA I-IRXNCIS R LLRRX Semor Counul P1 eszzlczzt of the Class Edztol 111 Chzef 0 the Ptnplc Busmess Manager ze Pufple BLlwl7lLs.x Aldllllgfl 16 PATCHER 1:a'1to1 za Chlcf of the PATCHER Edztol 111 Chzcf of the Tomahazu Business Mzzfzzzgcz 0 tht Tomahatu Captam of Football Caplan: of Baseball Captanz 0 Trac Captam of Golf Pleszdent 0 Wolcestel Club Plcszclent of B F P1 eslduzt 0 flthlctzc Assoclatlon Busnzcts Managez 0 Dzamatzc Society Chazzman 0 Intlamzual Athletics Chzmmarz 0 Pulple Kay P1 esldent 0 thc Dlamatlc Soczety Mmzagca 0 the Mmzcal Clubs PIENIZIKIYZ 0 the Phllomath Head Cheel Leadel Senlol Chanman 0fF10sh Two hmzrlled sc: enty fu c 2 - f. - ', R. .......' - ' f ' ' ,, , . I 'of tl - ' 'i . . ....... l .Of tl 4 . - ....... ' - v 15' . -Q ...... 1-I 11 J . , ' ' ....... . . ' l - I. . .........., I ' - . - f ...... . . . F f ' Q IOHN I. MACLAUGHLAN ......... Captain of Tennis ' I. f ............ , ' , . ' . , ' ........' f -- I' . : .......... -1' , 1, , E . - ...... V- -' ,R f I ' - -' ' .- ' .' ...... 1- - f Q ' ' . ....... 1 f 'R - ' -I . ' -.......,, '- . f -- 2 I . V .......- -' I f 1 - ' ' . 1 ........ 1- f 4' f ,- ' -... . . . f ' PURPLE KEY Above: Negligie-Below: Full Dress The Purple Key ANTHoNv F. IQEATING, II . . Chairmmz WILLIAM A. WALSI-I Vice-Chni1'nm11 Ru rv-1oNn I. Hows . . . . Secretary ANTI-IONY F. ICEATING, II MEMBERS Robert A. Bell Iohn A. Burke I. Frederick Connelly Thomas E. Caulfield Francis R. Curry Charles T. Collins Charles I. Crowley Robert E. Dillon Carroll T. Dozier William S. Endres Herbert Eidenbach Ioseph I. Fay Gregory L. Fairbend Walter L. Greene Iames L. Gallagher George V. Harley I. Francis Hartmann Edward P. Lilly Daniel A. Lynch Fred S. Mirliani Ioseph R. Missett Iohn G. MeKeon I. Franklin Millea Iames F. Mansfield Ierome F. Murphy, Ir VVilliam P. Mofhtt Iohn I. McLaughlin Philip E. G'Connell Ioseph A. Reynolds Richard S. Ritzel Vernon B. Santen Luke L. Smith Thomas F. Trainor Frank G. Varela Donald H. Woods The Key this year increased in membership, and widened somewhat the scope of its activities. Under the chairmanship of Tony Keating, the hallowed organization got off to an early start with a noisy rally on the eve of the St. Bonaventure's game. The usual pre- game pep meetings were carried through with the Key's usual enthusiasm, notable among which was the City Hall Plaza rally on the afternoon before that memorable squelching of Brown. The members were outfitted with flannel hats which bore the Purple Key insignia, and this event caused no end of talk on the Hill. The regalia served its purpose, however, and the organization and its aims were brought to the attention of the under- classmen who happened to be as yet ignorant of such a thing as school spirit. Two hurulred .reuenty-:c'z'e11 Sodality Last September, the Sodality of the Blessed Virgin was given as its moderator, Rev. Leo Fair, SJ., who has most ably guided its destinies, and under whom it is now closing an extremely successful year. Meeting every Monday evening, the Sodality, with an exceptionally large member- ship, alternated between its usual program of prayers and the open forum, a comparatively new form of Sodality meeting which had not been held often at I-Ioly Cross until this year. The forum proved most beneficial and very popular. A great variety of subjects were brought up, and points of much interest were debated by competent speakers. Father Fair was assisted throughout the year by the officers of the Sodality: Bernard P. McCaEerty, Prefectg Walter F. Clifford, Assistant Prefectg John F. Lally, Second as- sistant Prefect, and Ioseph Benotti, Secretary. The officers for the coming year will be elected before the reception to the incoming members near the end of the school year. During May, which is the month dedicated to Mary, their patroness, the Sodality has arranged for a series of May talks to be given by a number of senior members of the So- dality. The speakers are I. Frederick Connelly, Thomas E. Caulfield, Ir., Charles T. Collins, Iohn M. Ducey, Ioseph C. Duggan, Iames F. Foley, Ioseph P. F. Gallagher, Iohn E. Harrington, Anthony F. Keating, II, Edward P. Lilly, Iohn I. Maclaaughlan, Daniel A. Lynch, Donald I-I. McCann, Edward L. McMonagle, Ioseph R. Missett, Frank T. Murphy, Ioseph A. Reynolds, Richard S. Ritzel, Vernon B. Santen. Tum h11111l:'e11 srue17Iy-sigh! Sanctuary Societ The St. Iohn Berchman Sanctuary Society, really one of the most important, and by far the most active of student activities, closes another year. Having as its moderator, Mr. Edward I. Keating, SJ., the society initiated a system of quarterly meetings at which the members, besides being instructed in the purpose of their society and the duties which its membership entailed, could olier suggestions and constructive criticism. Each meeting was greatly aided by a short discourse given by a member of the faculty, or by the mod- erator, who discussed subjects of timely interest. One of the marked advances made during the year was the adoption of a plan whereby the servers in Community Chapel, having fewer appointments, arrived at six-thirty in the morning, thereby insuring eliicient and complete assistance at Mass. The Altar Society this year was governed by Anthony F. Keating, II, '32, President, Kenneth F. Rowe, 32, Master of Ceremonies, John G. Mclieon, ,32, Second Senior Assist- ant, Iohn T. Dwight, '33, First Iunior Assistant, Charles S. I-Iorgan, 3.3, Second Iunior Assistant, and Iames I. Sullivan, ,34, Secretary. The two Iunior Assistants have charge of the Community Chapel, while the Master of Ceremonies makes all the appointments, and directs all activities in Memorial Chapel. It is to be sincerely hoped that the society will continue under the guidance of so interested a moderator, that its appeal to the students will be more widespread, and that the honor of being enrolled as a member will be better recognized. Two hzuzdrcd sezffrzfy-ziirzc .....-we . .,. . ' The Economics Club OFFICERS STEPHEN P. BERGIN, '32 . . . . . Pratident IOSEPI-I L. NICHOLSON, '32 . . Vl'C6-P1'65id6Ul HAROLD F. IRAFFERTY, '32 . . . . . Secretary PROFESSOR FRANCIS X. POYVERS ..... ' . Modenzzar PROGRAM n Nov. 4 The Dropping of the Gold Standard. Nov. 18 The Place of the Department Store in Modern Business. Dec. 2 Russia's Five-Year Plan. Dec. 16 ls the Farmer Responsible for the Farm Situation? Ian. 6 Railroad Rates and Revision. Ian. 20 Five-Day Week Plan. Feb. 3 Are Combinations a Menace to Competitions? Feb. 17 The Results of Unemployment Insurance. Mar. 1 The Federal Reserve System With Regard to the Credit Situation. Mar. 15 Vocations. This organization was instituted in conjunction with the Economics Department of Holy Cross as a new activity. Founded with the purpose of providing students in the business course with the opportunity for discussion of matters of economic interest, the club presented a very interesting program of talks on current business problems. Student members participated in this series of discussions, which embraced the outstanding issues of the day with particular emphasis upon their various business aspects. Two h1l1ldl'El! eighty Aqumas Cncle The Holy Cross man Ill senlor and yumor years always spends a certaln amount of hxs free tlme drscussmg Seholastu, subjects, and rt was only natural that he should feel a desrre to do thls formally m true semlnar lashlon But every movement demands a leader, the Aqulnas Clrcle found the1r 0I'U2lH1lCI' III lxev Iohn E Welch, SI, senxor psychology professor Under hls dlrectlon the Llrclc drew up a constltutlon and enjoyed a highly successful Hrst ye'1r The stholastlc year 1931 37 was a Scholastxc year to the senxors belongmg to thrs so clety whose purpose IS the dlscussxon of phllosophrcal toplcs wh1ch trme forblds bemg treated fully durlng class hours Students who lectured at one tlme or 'mother durmg the Santen and Fdward P Lllly Meetmgs were held twice '1 month, and each gltherlng Would see the faces of new scmors 111 the audlence, men who were drawn to the AqLl1I12S Cnrcle by the prospect of learning S0l'l1Ctl'llI1g new through processes old 'IS reason EDWVARD P LILLX P1 esldcnl Wxuhn L GRLFNE Vice P1f5lde7Zf CHARLES E BRIDGES Scczctary Two hznzflwzf ezghly an .x 1 . 4' . 4' u '1 I . .. D ,... . year: George L. Carroll, Gerald Carlin, Robert E. Dillon, Francis Moaliley, Vernon B. The Philomathic Debating Society Beginning the year under the sparkling direction of I. Andrew Burke, the Philomath proceeded to enliven its meetings with discussions of political and economic questions of the day. So intense was the interest in the practical politics of our time that its member- ship divided itsellf into three parties, the Democrats, the Republicans, and the Radicals. The Democrats, led by Edward I. Hidalgo, '33, Fired many hot volleys at the Republican policies, and these were always met with equally heated replies from Raymond G. Leddy, '33, the Republican chief. Donald McCann, '32, and Walter L. Greene, ,32, were the most insistent Radical voices in the assembly. Among the high lights of the year was a discussion on ethical problems of modern life by the Rev. Ioseph Sullivan, S.I. A capacity audience was on hand for this discourse. Only the joint debate between the Philomath and the B. I. F. was able to attract so much attention. In this contest the B. I. F. was represented by Iames Bradley, '34, and Frank Murphy, '32, while the Philomathic speakers were Edward B. Hanify, '33, and Raymond G. Leddy, '33. From the success which met this dispute on international relations the officials of both organizations judged it wise to plan future programs along the same lines. Mr. Callahan, S.I., served as moderator during the year 1931-32, and his benign, but Hrm direction saved more than one meeting from turning into a fiasco. The ofhcers follow: I. Andrew Burl-ie, '32, President, Edward B. I-Ianify, 333, Vice-President, Ioseph F. Sulli- van, ,32, Treasurer, and Raymond G. Leddy, '33, Secretary. Two lmnzlrczi righfy-Iwo f 7' 25 B J F Debaung Faced wxth 1 gradually wanmg 1nterest rn debatmg, the B I F set out thls year to rnaugurate 1 ser1es of debates that would not follow the stereotyped drscussslons ot other years, but whlch would mclude vrtal questrons treated rn such a manner 1s to 'trouse en thusrasm everywhere on the campus Thus xt was that many ethxcal and practrcal subjects were chosen lor the perrodrcal deb1tes, and the lorensrc art was safe at IIoly Cross for 'mother ye1r Members were looklng forward to meetings, and the soc1ety had very l1ttle d1I'Hculty finding audlences The usual open forums were run off at the begmnmg of the se1son, and the moderator, Mr Callahan, SI, was forced to remark on the unprovement of spxrlt thls year The lmportant question or repar1t1ons lnterested the socrety for 1 spell, centralrzed control of mdustry was also thought debatable, and a merry evenrng was had when OBr1en, 33 and kennedy 34 upheld the aH'lrm1t1ve on that questlon agatnst Kelly 32, and Santen, 32 The Oregon system of debating was trled successfully rn d1scussmg the proposed Federal Educauon Blll As 1 supreme gesture tow1rd rntroducmg novelty 1nto the pro ceedmgs, the SOC1Cty later presented 1 mock tr11l rn wh1ch a pseudo court of lnternatxonal justlce found IKS Way 1nto the Leonard Debatrng Chamber Though handlcapped by pressure of studles and numerous other act1v1t1es, the officers who so successfully managed the 1931 37 season deserve much commendatlon for thelr many SHCFIHCSS that th1s mrght be a great B I F year The officers follows Vernon B Santen, '32, Presxdent, Matthew Ashe, '33, V1CCPfCS1ClCDf, and Rlchard McCarthy, ,33, Secretary Two hzzmlzrzl clghiy fhwre I X . , I x , - , . ' 5 7 , 'A' -Q I H way,-1' 3 lu' :, wh.. ev ,rf ' BE, A Q ,' -J --. .3 -vs ' '.,f'::,: a. ' ' . ef , ' ' 'fu li' ,F . iz' ' f -f Vi a f , u e u Y E .,g. U nl - a 'ai X , ,uv .af I a q a - r . . . K - .V . . I K. K. '- . , . . . . 1 . 1. 4 ' ' c 1 1. ' ' ' ' ' K L 1 7 I l C , . C . L . . . C L . . . , . , , '- s r a - ' ' s ' 3 f 9 , . . . . . , . . . . . 1 I. L l ' , , A . L , - Knights of Columbus OFFICERS REV. JOHN D. XAII-IEELER, S.I. .... Chaplain IOHN SPILLANE ...... Grand Knight DANIEL A. LYNCH . . . Deputy Grand Knight HERBERT W. REILLY . .... Chancellor PAUL W. SHANNON . .... Recorder FRANCIS L. MILLER . . Fizzarzcitll Secretary FRANK GALLAGHER . . . . Treasurer RALPH L. THOMPSON . . Lecturer DONALD H. Woons . Adzfoeate WILLIAM V. HINDLE . . . . Warden SHAYVN G. SHEEHAN . . . . Inside Guard M. 'Ill-IOIVIAS DONAHUE . . . Outside Guard REV. MICHAEL EARLS, S.I. . . . . Trustee I. LEO O'GoRMAN . . . Trustee WAYNE L. BESSELMAN . . . Trustee DANIIQI. A. LYNCH The completion of its third year of successful activity Hnds Crusader Council still under the leadership of Grand Knight Iohn I. Spillane, '22, the originator of the Council and its uncontested director since its inception. With Daniel A. Lynch wielding the gavel at most of the meetings during the past year, the Council has carried forward a progressive program, continuing to increase its membership, and earning on both counts the approval of the Supreme Council. The rising importance of Crusader Council is witnessed by the fact that its first formal installation of officers, on November 10, 1931, was attended by State Deputy Ioseph Kirby and eleven District Deputies. The Anniversary Celebration on March 19th was a most successful commemoration of the origin of the Council, and the members were again honored by an inspiring address by the State Deputy. On April 22nd, under the chairmanship of Richard S. Ritzel, '32, the Animal Spring Dance provided one of the most colorful social events of the school year. The class of thirty-two sends forth a number of men well trained in the spirit of Columbianism, and prepared to qualify for positions of leadership in their home Councils, in the furtherance of the religious, fraternal, and charitable aims of the Knights of Columbus. Two hundred eighty-four The Musical Clubs Holy Cross has always been famous for its singing at athletic contests, alumni like to think back on the impromptu corridor quartets that so benignly interrupted study. Thus it can hardly be held surprising that a select group from this music-mad college would turn out to be a highly expert Glee Club. This year our fame in this department was spread over a wide expanse of the eastern United States. From New Hamp- shire to New Iersey, from Boston to Albany, Holy Cross is synonomous with good college music. The ordinary Glee Club program is somewhat stereotyped, one or two highly classical numbers, then a large group of popular selections. Holy Cross tried to get away from that. We pre- sented a program designed to appeal to intelli- gent audiences, and intelligent audiences every' FRED S. MIRLIANI where responded heartily to our consideration for them. The selections were tastefully diversilied: the unusual Echo Songu of Di Lasso, Ott in the Stilly Night,', by Drdla-Merwin, Route Marching, a collaboration of Kipling and Rasbach, and others of equal calibre. Then there were the usual college songs that are so pleasing to non-collegiate audiences. Among those who will be far away when the next tour begins: Tom Carroll, Coughlin, Daley, Bob Dillon, Howe, Jeremiah, McCann, Mofhtt, McLaughlin, Murphy, O'Brien, Reynolds, Troy, Varela and Wondolowski. These men will surely be missed. Holy Cross has the unique distinction of being the only college in the East presenting a Philharmonic Orchestra as a featured attraction of its Musical Clubs' concerts. Few insti- tutions have the number of capable musicians required to fulfill score obligations, few have the courage to set out on such an ambitious orchestral program as full symphonies. Holy Cross has managed to whip together a very creditable group of musicians in its Philharmonic, and perhaps critics were not far from right when they were heaping praise on its slightly tired members. Two huurircrl eighly-five PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA The highlight in the orchestrals program was the Surprise Symphony of Haydn. This was the First time that this difficult score was rendered by any college group. Percy Graingerls S'Spoon Riverf' Alter's impressionistic Manhattan Serenade, and Selections from the Band Wagonl' were other program numbers which were received everywhere enthusiastically. To the director, Mr. Bouvier, is clue the lionfs share of credit for the excellence of this eflicient organization. The concert-master, versatile Fred Mirliani, also deserves mention in this praise-where-praise-is-due paragraph. Baldwin, Burke, Delaney, Monagan, Paolucci and Smith will not be setting up their instruments with the other lads when next seasonls Hrst concert is about to be presented. For past performances, Holy Cross thanks these men. And we hope that their future musical appearances will meet with the same acclaim as they knew while units in our Philharmonic Orchestra. The outstanding features of every concert were the baritone solos, .of Raymond I. Howe, '32. Ray's Hue, full, deep voice was encored again and again. His Three for a lack, Because, and the aria '4Celeste Aidan were skilfully rendered, and give promise of a glorious musical career ahead of him. T100 hlllI!Il't'fl eighty-six GLEE CLUB That always popular instrument, the Xylophone, found a capable exponent in the per- son of George I. Brennan, '35. His Bolero always found enthusiastic applause awaiting its finale. The vocal trio, composed of Thomas E. Caulfield, Ir., '32, Joseph A. Reynolds, 132, and Raymond Howe, 32, presented the modern aspect of the concert by their harmonious presentations of the better class of popular songs. To Mr. Caulfield belongs the credit ot arranging and accompanying the Trio in their olferings. As all these men graduate this year, some one will have it enter his head to remark very originally that they have sung their last song and heard their last acclaim for Alma Mater. But it was the finest musical unit of its type that has been on the Hill in many a long day. Versatility was the middle name of the Purple Crusaders, the peppy dance band. The vigor of this aggregation was derived principally from the dynamic personality of its leader, Fred Mirliani, who, once his duties as concert-master were Finished, cast ol? all restraint and played modern music as it should be played. Prominent at all Holy Cross functions, the band continually rose in popularity. Their original orchestrations were Written up by the boys in a professional manner, and executed much the same Way. Next year the Crusaders will miss, besides Freddie Mirliani, Dowd, Burke and Monagan. These Two hllllliffd eighty-.vcrclr veterans have dispensed their musical wares for the last time to the dancing throngs in these parts, but their smart music will not soon be forgotten. The managerial duties fell into the capable hands- of Iohn I. McLaughlan, executive manager, who conducted a voluminous pre-concert correspondence, satisfied everybody on housings, kept track of where everybody was at all times, and answered any and all types of questions. Of equal importance were the duties of Arthur I. Smyth, '32, instrumental manager, upon whose shoulders rested the vital business of setting up the stage, shipping the instruments, and managing the Purple Crusaders. The experience gained by Mr. Smyth as manager of the Band stood him in stead, and he overcame many trying situations through ingenuity and knowledge of the ropes. The assistant managers: Edward L. Doyle, Ir., 33, Frank A. Sullivan, ,33, and Wil- liam H. Moliagan, 334, were invaluable in their assistance to their superiors, and give promise of efficiency in the years to come. The librarians, Robert W. Daley, '32, for the Glee Club, and Edward Keegan, '34, for the orchestra, were indispensable, and were never found lacking in cooperation. VARSITY TRIO Two hundred eighty-eight H1SfOI1CHl Soc1ety Durmg the year 1931 37 the Hrstorrcal SOCICKY establrshed 1tself as one of the truly vrtal actrvrtles of the college Thrs soc1ety was organrzed rn the Spflllg of 1931 to H11 a long standrng need of the college fl body of students so truly rnterested rn hrstory as to grve some of thelr free trme to the pursurt oi the more esoterrc branches of th1s broad subject gathered 1n FCHWlClx, elected officers, and launched another fine Holy Cross organ Mr Burke SI, and rt trled 1ts best to tollow rn that great Holy Cross hrstorran s lead Under temporflrv olhcers, the academy gradually dexeloped '1 constltutron 'and a method of procedure And xt was tlurrng thls youthful perrod th'1t 1t establrshed a reputation fo scholarly research and true hrstorrcal curros ty By a unfrnrmrty among the members Harry lxrrwm, 33 was elected Presrdent, Iohn Dwrght 33 V1ce Presrdent, and Anthony S Woods, 33, was chosen as Secretary Upon I'CfLlI'l'llI1g to school rn September, the SOCICIY was greatly grreved to learn that therr Chief would be unable to be with them The V1ce Presxdent vxas thereupon called to Hll the frbsent ones ample shoes, and the year began Weekly meetrngs, wrth well prepared papers, were the soc1eLy,s mam actrvrtres Such toprcs as evolutron, rnternatronal problems and Early Amerrca held thc attention of the embryo hrstorrans Much credrt for the precocrous success ot thrs, the youngest ot Holy Crosss serrous socrct es, must go to 1IS earnest and benlgn moderator, Rev Patrrck I H1ggll1S, SI Two hmzrlzczl ughiy 711116 5 T' ' 'E ' :ll l :: , , hir 5 - fl 1' ,rg 'A , . . . . . V 1 1 U . . . . . g Q . t 5 . A ' ' ' ' ' r ization. The society had before it as a glorious precedent the select conferences held by , n I 'L 3 I 1 I I . L . L . ' ' 1 ' i . 4 ' ' . 3 ' , ,. . , . . , . . C , , ' C . t , , . . . . . A H S . I . H . , . C . Q . n . V v ' : C C A- L v - . , . ., . Dramatic Society SAIVIUEL D. SMITH, '32 . IOHN A. BURKE, 32 . . WILLIAM C. ZELLER, '33 . EDWARD I. HIDALGO, '33 . FRANCIS I. MOAKLEY, '32 . RAYINIOND T. COUOHLIN, '32 RALPH THOMPSON, '33 . . IAIXIES NOLAN, '33 . . . SAIKIUEL D. SIIIITH OFFICERS . . President . Vice-President . . Secretary . . Treasurer Business Manager Publicity Manager . Szage Manager Costume Manager ROBERT E. DILLON, '32 . Properties Manager Contrary to the precedent of previous years, the society produced only one play this year. This was due to the pressure of other extra-curricular Work, and did by no means dim the glory of the organizationg all the time at the disposal of the members was given over to the perfection of Henry IV. Many long hours in Fenwick were resolutely spent in an effort to make the production a worth-while entertainment. It was hard and tedious work, but the triumph on the night of presentation amply rewarded the society's labor. The many stumbling blocks encountered were smoothed out by the very able and hard- working moderator, Rev. 'William E. Murphy, S.I. The cast follows: HENRY IV IQING I-IENRI' . HENRY, PRINCE OF PRINCE IOIIN . . WoncI3s'rER . . NoII'rIiuMBEnLAND DOUGLAS . . I'IO'I'SPUR . . Wr:sTMouEI.AND . Sm RICHARD VERNON SIR XVALTER BLUNT SIR IOIIN FALSTAFF POINS . . . PETO . BARDOLPII . GADSI-IILL . FRANCIS . DAME QUICKLW' . SHEIIIFE . RAIIY . Two hmzrlrezl ninety XIVALIES . . . . . Francis I. Moakley, '32 Donald H. McCann, '32 . Anthony F. Keating.II,32 ' '32 . . I. Leo Ixelley, . Harold F. Rz1IIcrty.'32 . Iosepli R. Missctt,'32 . Samuel D. Smith, '32 . Thomas F. Daley, '34 Francis A. Gallagher, '32 . Ioscph L. Bracken,'32 . Raymond I. Howe, '32 . Raymond T. COughlin,'32 . . Rocco Fanelli, '32 . Francis P. L. Cronin, '33 . Ioseph I. O'Rcilly,'33 . . Albert Curricr,'33 Iohn Haley Driscoll, '35 . Donato M. Paolucei, '32 . Iohn M. Percy, '32 Senror Recepnon to the Freshmen PRANL. G VARELIX FRED S NIIRLINNI ROBLRT E DILLON RICHARD S RITZEL Lotus Cr FITZSINIMONS DONALD I-I Woons WILLIALI P Morrrrr, IR CXRIL A Gow ETTE C han 112011 M mic Pl og: nm Stage Mczzmgef Deco: utzofzr Enzu ZtIl77771C lZl Re zesh 77267113 Rerc'jJt1011 Prawn G XIARELA On the lllglif or Febru Iry I8 Tenxvxclc Ilrll was '1 rendczvous for jovmlrty, food throwrng, and freshmen lt wrs the hrst opportunrty thlt the senror tlrss had found to recognrze ofHc1ally the arrlval of 1 group or freshmen on what lour gcnemtlons of Holy Cross wrrters have called the I-llll Fred Mlrlranr and hrs orchestm opened the program 111 the approved lhlllflllllll manner, 'md thrs Intectlous org1nI1at1on was not lar from the lrmelrght Llllflllg the entlre coursc oi the CNC1111'1g But the re Il honors of the affarr must go to those two runny rellows, I Andy Burke and Ray Howe Burke got most of hrs laughs NVlfhOLlt half trymff, but thxs wls no SUFPIISC to those of us who had seen hrs past performances The tr1o or Howe, Caulfield 'Ind Reynolds Lame back for encore after encore The skrts were or the usufrl receptron cahbre, and whatever credrt accrues to them must go to the entrepreneur, Frfrnk Varelr Frank also doubled IH brass, grvrng hrs Invalu able stage presence to many of the hIl'1r1ous but wholesome Holy Cross versrons of the Broadway blackout The freshmen were unusually well behaved, and all In all lt was 1 great nrght for 35 '37, and Holy Cross Two hundred nmefy O7 c . . , . , . . ., , , ,. , . I,' n ' . 4 I r -. . ,r - ' ' ' . L ,. 1 C 1 - . 2. ' . 2 ' 2 4 S ' L Q I u - g Y ' L 1 . 'L ' , - , - . - 7 . C ' ' ' , ' I , 2: ' . - t 1 , . , . Q ' ' ' ' 4 f 4 . . -4 7 ' .. ' ' ' ' 1 c .. 1 ll I. 1 . . . , . e L , -e . . -2 Junior Prom I. FRANKLIN MILLEA . . Chairman EDMUND F. TIERNEY IOHN P. CANNON Executive Committee Ioserrr A. REYNOLDSJ ' CARROLL T. DOZIER . . . Favors ANTHONY F. KEATING,ll . . .Patrons WILLIAM A. WALsI-I . . Decorcztiofzs FRANCIS R. CURRY . . . . . Music BERNARD P. MCCIXFFERTY , . Ticlqet: WILLIAINI F. O,CONNELL . . Program TIMOTHY I. LEARY . . , Publifizy I. FRANKLIN MILLEA On the thirteenth of February, 1931, another Iunior Prom Went into Holy Cross his- tory, and our class likes to think that this was by far the most splendid social event ever to be run Linder Crusader auspices. The magnificent Elks' Ballroom was the scene of the affair, and Bert Lown and his smart Biltmore musicians of radio and recording fame never seemed more expert, more danceable than they did on that brisk mid-winter even- ing, night, and morning. Iunior Proms are not in the habit of just happening. Work and more work, not to mention Worry, must go into their preparation, the Chairman leads a mighty miserable existence for the month or so previous to the occasion. We elected Perry Millea to the helm of our ultra-ultra social event, and then we sat back waiting for him to present an affair that would mightily impress visitors from Manhartanville and Miss Wheelock's. Well, the suave gentleman from up yonder didn't disappoint us. It was a grand affair. The Iunior Proms of other years make pretty dead topics for discussi-ong this one of ours, however, forbids forgetting, seems ever bright and glamorous to us. The fiasco of our senior year only serves to convince us more fully that ours was the Iunior Prom. They tell us that alumni like to sit around in carpet slippers and smoke and dream. Perhaps We shall someday reach that unhealthy stage, and perhaps we shall then again remember that bright night when Millea played host. Two hIll7lfl'l'f, lzillcly-Info CIIARLI:s I ML'RPlIX Chan man osisvn A REXNOLDS WILLIAM A WILSH IxMEs G NICDEKVITT FICCZIZIUE Comnrztfee FRANI-. G VARELA WILLIAM RILIIX WILLIKNI I1 O CONNYLL STEPHEN P BERGIN BERNARD P MCCAFTFRTS ROBERT 11 DILLON PHILIP E O C ONNELL FRED S MIRLIANI RAXIXIOND I COUGHLIN Pan ons Favor .x Publlczty Tzclqczs Receptzon M uszc Decaf axiom C1IIIxLLs I MURI HX This Senior Ball thing makes the lour years seem ruilly worth while, wlumni tell us Well, we shall see Charlie Murphy and his various committees hare done the pI'Cl11T1111Hl'y Work well 111 th'1t remuns IS efzch seniors own pfirticulfir reaction to the I'l1'l0'lC of the song writer s Iune nrght the Terpsxehorewn response to Casa Lomrl musre, 'md the sweet young thmgs verdict on ones pious companions of bright college ye'1rs Events of past Commencement Bills have been hrinded down from year to year much like tridition. Iuclging from 32 s past perfornnnces, we cannot help coming to the con- clusion that this year's crlpers at the Bqncroft will be retold in song Ind story 'Is long 'Is Holy Cross men hwe the energy sufficient to eng1ge in murus semin'Irs. Two humlrcd 111'11ely-16116 Semor Ball I - ' I I. If I I . Y 1 ..... ' 3 N ' LAXVIXENCE I. MURPPIX' ..... Program . , . Q .Q Q , .Q K I C K K J ' . ,Q . ,Q . . . Q Q 9 1 1. X ' AAA ig Q Q xf?.'f,Q MQ xfuw' 'ln W ' WN, P9 N 12 6 3?-ae x x x,' xi UNDERGRADUATE C LUBS ALBANY CLUB BERKSHIRE CLUB BOS'1 ON CLUB BFNGAL BICYCLE CLUB FOREIGN MISSION CLUB HARTFORD CLUB LANCING CLUB IAIOLYOKE CLUB MAINE CLUB MANCHESTER CLUB MLTROPOLITAN CLUB NEW IERSEY CLUB , w 1 1 ,1 w, , H T ...un genus-- .357-:..: NEXV HAVEN CLUB NEW BEDFORD CLUB NEWPORT CLUB OHIO CLUB PENNSYLVANIA CLUB RHODE ISLAND CLUB SOUTHERN CLUB SPRINGFIELD CLUB VVATERBURY CLUB WESTERN CLUB if 91' 4 tg: 33 s 1:- SOUTHERN TIER CLUB XVESTERN NEW YORK CLUB E E gxggw.-.mn 5 m ' fm f B , nm gs H . mama E an E ,M Q H mi W wigs s mmadxxk ss mm H 5- Q1-an H ss xxx Bm: mqugp , . W an msg B 1:-- ' mmHQf5u'x E Q ss 'xmmiiisy R W A HE . m asf E K E W. W W E N 1 M B Em H ,H we Tfunuwa ss my wX,,,figQ,m Sm mm XX E ss W-ma H 'J ,, B nl . wang m mga w E ss na-E W mn sim wx, W A Z, - Baa E ami, m Wm Km-wngavwiggmy mm n Hman B B H W W .-.vim nm a n n . ax K Q an mmm mm sm Wm? W awww an wx ggi? ms ,mn ss um , WORCESTER CLUB Albany Berkslure Boston Fwll Rlver Fltchburg Hirtford Holyoke Lowell Mfune Metropohmn New Iersey New Haven Newport PCI1I'1bylVZ11l1'l Rhode Islmd Southern Southern Trer Spun field Wwterbury Western Wester1I New Worcester York Club PresIdents IOHN G MCKFON FRANK T MURPHY 'IHONIAS F TRAINOR IOSFPH E MCGUICAN IOSLIH P KLAIING Rocco FANELLI IosLI H L, CASSIDY IoHN I MACLAUGPILAN EDWARD L MCMONAGLF FRANCIS R CURRY WALTERI BLAKF MAUR I WELDON IOUIS BARRY FRANR A BLAUM FRANCIS A GALLAGHER CARROLL T DOIIFR IAMF9 G MCDEVITT IOSPPH A SLOAN STFPI-IEN P BPRGIN NEIL B HAYES IOSEPH L NICHOLQON TIMOTHY I LEARY Tl!!! ' .... 19 . ' ' n u l 0 1 a n Q -D 'xc New Bedford ....... IosIsPH C. DUGGAN J F lc nnnunvn , n . ' g ........ 1 . I I HTF IllI1II'!'I I Agf a Q' , A V If ff L?f'iL jT4. ' ff 'A' P L l'! ' Q U'- E? H i? - ' sf L' 635 2 al: . 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IP F O CONNELL C apmzfz VERNON B SANTI' N M an cz ge? W1 fl W . , J . V7 .-xiL-l. ! 1:4 VARSITY FOOTBALL SQUAD I Football The r1se of Holy Cross as a power 1n football contlnued durrng the second season of the McEwan reg1me It had begun on that memorable ra1ny afternoon 1n November 1930 when Hank Garrrty w1th the All Amermcan Trcknor a step behrnd h1m ran 1nto the end zone rn the Harvard Stad1 um leaped a trlfle from the soggy turf and pulled 1n O Con nells needle threadmg pass for the touchdown that gave Holy Cross her frrst lead over the Crrmson rn four years When Caval1er1 rntercepted a Harvard lateral for the second score and when Baker surrounded by a net of four red yer seys lumped hrgh rn the a1r to outreach them all and squrrmed through them for the thrrd the Purple cheermg sectron went wrld And when Don Kelly smashed the Har vard l1ne for the last they reahzed that the long l1ved JIHX M pa N of major game defeats was thoroughly blasted that the Cru S'IClClS were on the crest of the wave of thexr greatest football amb1t1on that Holy Cross had admrnrstered to 1tS favorrte rrval the most crush mg defeat that e1ther school had handed the other IH eleven sol1d years of postwar play That was the begrnnlng Two weeks later Boston College brtterly acknowledged the supremacy of the Purple rn a hard 7 0 game The eagle was transfrxed on the Crusader s lance for the frrst t1me 1n s1X years And for the Hrst t1me 111 hrstory Holy Cross had defeated Harvard and Boston College 1n the same se lson Th1s year the success of the team was much the same The Crusaders lost narrowly to the best aggregatron to represent Harvard srnce the days of Edd1e Mahan but another old rrval Brown took a shellacklng even worse than that Wll1Cl'1 was QIVCH to Harvard the year before Holy Cross had never prev1ously beaten Brown And the b1g Bears came up to F1tton Freld wrth an unblem rshed record of five strarght vrctorres and 1 McLaughry end run The end run worked once around Cavallerr once around Coluccl and then was through for the day The steam rolhng power of the Cross team used up what rema1ned of the afternoon and of the wamng strength of the Bears Murray Kelly O Connell Iarv1s and Coakley each chalked up a touchdown and Brun onra s Brg Brown Team somehow found enough energy to exhume ltself from under the 33 O avalanche and was wheeled back to Provrdence Boston College agarn bowed to McEwan rn one of the sweetest and ce1 tarnlv the most breath takrng vrctory of our career For almost three perrods the Purple tr'uled Wrth no more than three m1nutes left O Connell rrpped off hrs br1ll1ant run to change the scoreboard s gloomy legend It looked much better at SIX to sr! unt1l Les Grlffin s place krck made 1t seven Tl Ind dlh feel - . . . A 9 t a e LJ. L - - . ' H' - - 9 W VI, -'I v A I , -E, A , . ' o C 7 9 ' 7 O 2 7 C ' C, 'A. gg a ' C - D - , I - - I O ' U C 1 , . . . , . 2 . 1 s 9 K ' . . ' L b A. C C u ' ' 3 2 ' D ' n J J , 1 ' ' 9 Q 9 ' . , . , . ' o ' l. L , . 5 . . .- C t 7 . ' ' 9 ' ' . , . , . , 1 . L , . . . , C . . . . . , . . 1 1 . :ree Ill rc ir 1 l l Captain O'Conncll snares a pass in season's opener. ST. BONAVENTURE With the successes of the 1930 campaign still vivid as a happy memory, one of the largest first game turnouts in recent years braved drizzling weather to greet Capt. McEwan's second Holy Cross football machine in the inaugural game. And the crowd had a fine opportunity to pass judgment on practically the entire squad, for the black-hatted West Pointer, in order to confirm his own pre-season convictions, used practically the entire squad with the exception of the trainer and the assistant managers. Result: 32 points for Holy Cross and none for the Bonnies. Capt. O'Connell appeared to be in fine shape, interspers- ing the plunging of lVLr. Grillin: a fine display of backfield runs were reeled off for the benefit of the fans. The Purple line, almost entirely new, showed their inexperience on sev- eral occasions, but gave promise for the future. The Cru- sader coach experimented at the tackle positions, weak spots for the Bonnie backs. Gildea, St. Eonaventure left-halfback, was outstanding. His soaring 50- and 60-yard punts were reminiscent of the famous Red Baker, and by contrast, the Crusaders seemed deficient in this department of football. Luttrell and Sulli- van, giant guards, proved formidable obstacles to many at- tempts of the Purple backs to plunge through the line. While the opposition was not exactly of All-American calibre, the Crusaders showed enough potential power to warrant faith in the team. O'CoNN12LL Three hmzdred fourteen Murrax brcals away rn typrcal Holy Cross oil Lrcklc play PROVIDENCE An unseasonable heat and a valrant Provrdence College eleven combrned to make the second Saturday of the season a rather drflicult one for the Cru saders The Purple could not get the aerral attack functronrng, whrle the ground game, wrth a few brrllrant exceptrons, was anythrnfr but formrdable But Holy Cross had power and reserve strength whrch was too much for the drscomfrted Frrars, and the score was 76 to 6 rn favor of the Purple outfrt The Dornrnrcans handed the spectators a bw surprrse very early rn the Hrst perrod when they advanced the ball 65 yards on five successrve plays for therr lone score of the swelterrnv afternoon Thrs seemed to rouse the Cru saders somewhat from therr lethargy, and a few rnmutes later Ryan blocked a krck whrch Cavalrerl converted rnto a touchdown The early part of the game was closely con tested but the heat and the Purple man power soon started to take 1tS toll, and Provrdence succumbed Xt' Most of the Frrar yardage came as a re sult of a precrse passrng attack rnterspersed wrth deceptrve reverse play Foster and Brady were the brg factors 1n the Domrnrcan assault, whrle Donovan and Clrfford d1d the greater part of the ground garnrng for Holy Cross In the hne, Zyntell proved to he a Grbraltar stoppxng the Fr1ar backs BAIOTUNOS Three hundred yifzeen J, Q K . ' , ' . - I- .L . . fl I 1 C .O . . . L ... . . f D C, L . - . c c ' ,,5hv,, K C ,l a a 1 u l 'L .vii ' r- 5 'v A . . ' v. ei It L 3, ' . -, ., . , T -r .fgr 'hfa,f - 1- rf- -4'-Y' Y, 3 .X , f-,g y M l ' , - r Ll. N . 5. Y: . ' n . ' ' 4 1' .- 1' F. . . . P .sr 1 N . , . if , ' ' . ' 'al - - v A - uf -Fflviff ' - n I . . . rggsar' ' I Crusaders drop Morton after Ll substantial gain. DARTMOUTH In the most important game of the day in New England and in their first real test, the Crusaders journeyed to Hanover to meet the big Green Indian in his home tepee. Although they came out on the short end of a 14 to 7 score, Coach McEwan's charges acquitted themselves nobly. McCall's sensational 85-yard run down the sidelines on the opening kick-off eventually proved to be the Green's margin of victory. After the Dartmouth lead had been estab- lished, the game developed into a nip and tuck battle, especially in the second half when both teams went scoreless. After McCall's wild dash, each team scored one touchdown. Capt. O'Connell led a passing attack almost the length of the Held for the Purple's only tally, and Morton followed suit soon after giving the Green the lead. Rovinski gave the Indians a scare, lugging the ball to the one-yard line, but was stopped there by the foe. Morton and McCall were out- standing for the victors along with Barber, tackle, and Capt. Yudicky, who was called into the fray to halt Rovinski. Little Eddie Bergin played 60 minutes of hard football against a heavier opponent. Zyntell and Cavalieri were the other Purple RYAN luminaries in the fray. Three hzmdred sixteen Clptams OConnell and Murphy talk nt oxen FORDHAM Major Cavanaugh has always been notor1ously favored by whatever sprltes pull football Games out of the Hre, and as proof of th1s, we offer Fordhams last mrnute scorlng spree whlch netted 1t a 6 to 6 t1e wlth the Crusaders W1tl1 wluch Fordham had cast upon 1t Marty Murray s great scor1ng dash 1n the second quarter had put the Purple 1n the lead But Fate rn the person of McDermott, Ram sub quarterback, rntervened, and two long passes were com pleted for the equahzmg score Both teams fumbled away many golden scormg oppor IUHIIICS, but the deadlocked score falrly sums up therr rela t1ve ments The fact that the Maroon clad warr1ors were successful 1n stavmfr off defeat was a bltter p1ll to Holy Cross followers, but as the Fordham coach phrased 1t, I suppose Holy Cross thrnks It should have won, and of course Fordham does, too Murray s spectacular dash, O Connell s Hne k1ck1n0' and the l1ne play of Berg1n and Zyntell gave the Purple rooters somethmg to shout about, whlle for Fordham, Murphy, Iams, and the fortune favored McDermott produced the thr1lls ZXNIELL Thaw hundred rcuenn-e1z u D svun 1 - I I little more than a minute to play, the Purple seemed certain to break the jinx . . . - -Tx . . D . . ' if 77 Y Y Y ' ' . . F bl Rovinski rips the Scarlet line for another long gain. RUTGERS Against Rutgers and her mighty Grossman, Capt. McEwan deemed it judicious to try out a few of his substitutes. His judgment, as in most cases, was good, and the second stringers were not hard pressed to carry off a 27 to O victory. Rovinski, who had enjoyed a field day at New Brunswick the year before, repeated his gridiron antics and ran Wild through the Scarlet team. The boys from the banks of the old Raritan looked quite menacing in the opening minutes of the game and swept to the Purple three-yard marker before they were halted. Here Holy Cross took possession of the ball, and on the first play Rovinski drove his Way for the first score. Again in the next period, the sub-quarterback reeled off a spectacular run after snatching a fumble out of the air and raced seventy yards for the score. Grossman was the Whole Rutgers of- fense, and after his injury at the close of the first half, the game lacked interest. In the first stanza the Scarlet presented a real front, but this was battered down. Thereafter Holy Cross scores piled up rapidly. Holy Cross was favored with the breaks, but manifested its superiority to all. Bnncm Three lumdred eighteen l l Phil O'Connell breaks loose for third Purple touchdown. BROWN The Brown Bear came out of its lair with an unbeaten record and a highly-touted end sweep. The Crusaders, however, failed to be awed by either, and even went so far as to establish a precedent-namely, a 33 to 0 victory over Brown. We dare not, in this limited space, try to describe the game Murray took the heart out of the visitors almost at the start of the game by stealing a pass and scampering for a touchdown. From then on, the color of the after- noon was Purple. Even the substitutes, in the closing stanza, took a shot at the Bear and succeeded in chalking up a pair of touchdowns. Iarvis, with a duplicate of Mur- ray's earlier feat, and Rovinski, with a long 45- yard scoring toss to Coakley, provided the thrills. Looked at from the Holy Cross viewpoint it was nothing less than a monumental game, and it is difficult to single out any one man for praise. Perhaps the greatest credit should go to the Purple wingmen, Cavalieri and. Colucci, who repeatedly broke up Brown's greatest threat. We can truthfully say that on that memorable October afternoon the whole team worked as a unit and that the Holy Cross team was, as the Bear found out to his chagrin, unbeatable. GMFHN Three hmzdred nineteen It took the whole Duquesne team to stop Walt Cliliord. DUQUESNE The Saturday before the Harvard-H. C. game found the Crusader substi- tutes crossing blades with Elmer Layden's Duquesne outfit. But the lads from the Smoky City were far from being ignorant of the fine points of the great American folly, and presenteda strong aerial attack which made them a con- stant menace throughout the game. In fact, the vainglorious desire of the visitors to come out on the long end of the score was so great that it required the insertion of the regular linesmen to remove such ideas from their heads. The former Notre Dame star had his charges well tutored, and the Purple A followers spent many an anxious moment as ' the Night Riders gradually emptied their bag of tricks. Sullivan, midget quarterback, was ' f tt T si especially outstanding with his accurate passing and line generalship. Owing to the ever- .X ,.,. I t changing combinations caused by the continual T -l ' ' -T ' - inHux of new men, the Crusader reserves were V ii' for the most part a disorganized club, content i fc to play defensive football. The game as a whole V- was rather loosely played and not too interest- ing, owing doubtlessly to the absence of Capt. O'Connell and Coach McEwan. Score: Holy Cross 12--Duquesne 0. . N N , rig. 11- ,' as -D . ss .5 ,J H V I - ,i 'Zi'-' '-li'-,fla-..g ' i'..f'j.'., , 1T.E2l'aijffI'.?x',f'-t-1,-' - COLUCCI Three hUlll17I'C'd twenty lack Crickarcl felled by Bcrgin and Bzuorunos. HARVARD With memories of a Purple Z7 to 0 victory still fresh, 58,000 football fans filled the Harvard Stadium to Witness another classic. And to the final Whistle it was a breath-taking struggle that fully justified the refusal of the betting gen- try to give odds on either team. The Crimson presented a Herculean wall that turned back the ever-pressing McEwan men. The solitary score of the game came mid-vvay in the opening session as a lateral pass, Crickard to Wood, brought the ball to the Purple four-yard line. Crickard took the ball over and Wood drop-kicked the seventh point. Three times the Purple was within the five-yard line, but failed to capitalize. The Holy Cross passing attack started off well enough, completing two for long gains. Thereafter Casey's pupils prevented all aerial manoeuvers. In the final period the Crusaders almost tied the score as O'Connell raced forty yards before he was knocked off bal- ance by Mays. It was the Harvard line which actually beat the Purple. Wood, Crickard and Schereschewsky gained the spotlight, but it is to Hardy, Myerson and the other linesmen that the glory should go. For Holy Cross, O,Connell was clearly the star. His quick kicks kept the victors at their own end of the Held for most part, and he himself, turned in the longest run of the day. It was merely the case of a good team losing to a slightly better team by the score of 7 to 0. KELLY Three hundred twenty-one i Murray plunges through Loyola for a First down. LOYOLA Each year Loyola seems to bring a better team to Worcester, and the 1931 edition of the Southerners was no exception. The Crusaders were pre-game favorites, as the Baltimore team was considered as a warm-up for the all im- portant game with Boston College. Instead the Purple was met by inspired opponents, and a game jammed with thrills and uncertainties was exhibited before the startled fans. The final result was 16 to 14 in favor of Holy Cross. The Purple, through the efforts of Bobbie Donovan, got off to a good start and chalked up a touchdown in the initial stanza. In the next two periods Loyola held the McEwan men scoreless as they marked up a pair of tallies. The result - was that the Crusaders went into the final . quarter on the short end of a 14 to 7 score. ,V ,, With defeat staring them in the face, they , f ., if X a aroused, and then roduced a touchdown . -- -iXX , . p . wi, 'id .X and a safety, and by sheer driving power ' X' f P- A. . staved off defeat. .fs ::f .,.- . . . ., , g J The visitors presented as nice a backheld g P combination as appeared at Holy Cross dur- T lk ' in the season. Dallaire assed and drove V g P A his way through the Purple line for several 5 y ' ,f r Hrst downs and was ably assisted by Egan z and Carlin. Capt. O'Connell, Murray and 1- p , M L, Drescher, who secured the margin of victory by blocking Dallaire's kick, were outstand- CAVAUERI ing for the Purple. Three hundred twenty-tufo Lc C' rfhn I ck x mmng po nt 'aft r OC n lls t uchd Wn BOSTON COLLEGE Ph1l O Connell justly accla1med one of the greatest tr1ple threat backs 1n the Fast brought the Purples Ol:l:lC13l 1931 gr1d schedule to a successful and 0'lO1'1OLlS close 1n the final m1nutes of the H C B C joust W1fl'1 an 18 yard slam off left tackle for the touchdown that t1ed the score Then Les Gr1Hin stepped up executed an accurate k1Ck from placement, and the Purple once more topped the Maroon and Gold on the football mast Result H C 7 B C 6 A few more plays the referee s wh1stle and another page had been wr1tten 1n football h1story Rated as tl1e underdogs the Eagles l1t terally soared and outplayed the Crusaders 1n the greater part of the game B C was pushed about 1n the first ses s1on but 1n the next perxod Ezmunt broke through to block a punt after O Connell had turned over the klckxng to Iarv1s Devenutr recoved and ran for the score The Eagles held th1s lead unt1l late 1n the game when OConnell broke through for hrs great run To both teams must bc g1ven great credrt for sparkhng play The Hghtlllg plflf of the Crusaders Hnally carrled the day and lt was flttlng that the downfall of the Maroon and Gold should be effected by O Connell and GIIHHD as the1r farewell ges tures on the gr1d11 on For the Eagles Capt Kell f Ches nulex 1ch and Downes were the lum1nar1es MU LAY Thzeeh ndfedt cnty th: e Q l -s 11 ' ii 's v' ' l . e ' o nc ' o o . . , . . . . 3 - , . . -1 9 o O l J- I I - , c . I . . T . . . , . . . 9 s ' cv an ' L ' L . D Q. I 1 n Q ' - f 5 ' ' ' , fri W '1 X, 9 -. D QQ - L ,af 1 . Ea .Y.- V .Q - 'gyfr r .l ' .3 . . . , an D I A. A Y , , J , . . ' o ' v ' lr ' ., ,vi ,Mag-Q. 'N 1 . i 5 . Bw, RI ' Il ' ku - 'c' l l Griflin COl'l1p.lClCCS on Yale's 10-yard line. So near and yet so far. YALE Holy Cross did her bit for the unemployed when she accepted, along with Dartmouth, Yale, and Brown, an invitation to play in a round-robin in the Yale Bowl after the conclusion of the regular schedule. The Crusaders stacked up against Yale in the opening game, and were eliminated by a 6 to O score. Later the Bulldogs met Brown in the final contest, and eked out a verdict over the Bruins who had previously gained a decision over Dartmouth. Yale's score, incidentally the only one made in the entire tournament, came after the Eli backs, Crowley and Lassiter, had pushed the Purple back for more than Hfty yards. Capt. O'Connell, Cav- alieri and Colucci, playing their last game for the Purple, Were outstanding. The H. C. captain did the finest and most precise passing of the after- noon, the December cold hindering the receivers. All attempts of the big Blue backs to circle the ends were futile. The famed Morton-McCall combination failed to click in the second fray, and the Bruins Were justly awarded the privilege of meeting Yale in the Final tilt. They acquitted themselves in ster- ling fashion only to fall short of enough first downs to receive the verdict. The passing of Chase, and the stellar play of Gilmartin and Mackesey in the line Were the high lights. Rnzss Three hundred twenty-four L L il L 'Lf fs Lf 5 'Lib 'L .4 -WQHYIQLQQVYQS 'f Zig, .42 ..1f.fss:'ga:s. gggam .i 3 V' 1 . Saturday Saturday Saturday Saturday Saturday Saturday Saturday Saturday Saturday Saturday Sept Oct Oct Oct ct ct Nov Nov Nov Nov 1932 Football Schedule New Rrver at Worcester PI'OV1ClC11CC College at Worcester Un1vers1ty of Marne at Worcester Un1vers1ty of Detro1t at Worcester Rutgers at New B1LlIlSW1Ck N I Cathohc Un1vers1ty at Worcester Brown UH1VCfS1fY at Prov1dence R I Harvard Unlversxty at Carnbr1d e Mass Manhattan Colle e at New X ork C1ty Boston College at Worcester T1 1 rl ly , . 24 ...... ' . t , . l ...... ' V , . 8 ...... ' ' r ' C 1, . 15 ...... ' ' ' ,O . 22 . .- .... ' ' , . . I, O . 29 ...... ' ' ' , . 5 ...... ' ' ' , . . , . 12 ...... ' ' t ' g , , . 19 ...... g ' ' , . 26 ...... A fm- ,fm ,-N1 mlm, .fm Tuesday, Saturday, Saturday, Wednesday Saturday, Thursday, Saturday, Wednesday Saturday, Wednesday Saturday, Monday, Wednesday, Saturday, Monday, Wediiesclay Saturday, Tuesday 7 1932 Baseball Schedule April April April May May May May May May May May May Iune Iune Iune Iune Iune Iune Three hnndrrrl llllfllly 19 23 30 4 7 12 14 18 21 25 28 30 1 4 6 8 11 14 Brown at Worcester Brown at Providence N. Y. U. at Worcester Harvard Grads at Worcester Mt. St. Mary's at Worcester Colgate at Worcester Georgetown at Worcester Seton Hall at Worcester Harvard at Worcester St. Micliaelis at Worcester Yale at New Haven Boston College at Worcester Providence at Providence Harvard at Cambridge Boston College at Boston Syracuse at Worcester Providence at Worcester Boston College at Worcester H.C. Opp 3 1 6 Z 0 Z 4 2 2 C2 inn.j O 5 3 9 3 6 0 5 4 Q A R 'Q 1 Q23 U I Y 2 AY rx V' W . l 'lem Sm?-vx RTX i JOHN I. MARSHALL Captain HERBERT I. EIDENBACH Manager VARSITY BASEBALL SQUAD Baseball A long delayed sprnnv kept the Purple ball tossers confined in the cage for almost two months before they were able to transfer the1r act1v1t1es to Fitton Fleld Dispensing with the southern trip, Coach Barry xt as forced to VVl'11p h1s charges 1nto shape under leaden New England skies and when the date of the first frame rolled around he placed a fam1l1ar team upon the diamond The PEISSIIIU of Frlederlcks Srms and Garrlty wrouvht no change 1n the permanent l1ne up, but the Graduation of the first two mentioned left the coach with a d1li'icult battery prob lem The rest of thc team, however, was 11ataCt, and under JMX Emu the field Cl11'CCf1OI1 of Captam Iohnnie Marshall, the Holy C ross ffmff' horsehrde chasers were ready for another campawn Plulhc 0 Connell was back in h1s old pos1t1on as m1ddle man between Frank Cammarano on the 1n1t1al sack and Capt Marshall at short The hot corner was again in the charue of the capable Al N1em1ec, while the veterans Coluccr, Farrell and Murray were ready for serv1ce in the outer Gardens Maynard has thus far borne the brunt of the burden on the receiving end of the batteries Coach Inn Caval1e11, Larry Qurnn, Ioe Mulhvan and Marty Leach The annual exhibition with the Boston Braves was rarned out, so the first test of the Crusaders was provided by the Sprmfrfield Rrfles of the Eastern League, who hammered Mahoney and Quinn for fourteen hits and an easy v1ctory On Patriots Dry Frtton Field was the scene of the official opener of the season w1th Brown prov1d1ng the opposrtion Buck Mahoney held the Prov1 dence outht 111 check whrle the Crusaders scored three runs to w1n bv a two run advantage On the followinv Saturday Mahoney afram turned back the Brown Bear as l'11b teammates outhrt the Bruins to w1n 6 to 2 The followmg week found Bob McNamara and his N Y U teammates too strong for the Purple outfit, and the Manhattanites made it two straivht over the Crusaders A team of former Harvard dlamond lum1nar1es, uniformed as the Har vard graduates, journeyed to Worcester only to be stopped by the Big Tram from Weymouth, Ioe Mulligan The rook1e battery of Mulligan and Horgan Th: ce hlllllllfd lwenfg mne - ' . za V I C t . ' C . - . 9 D. , C D 7 D - D , 1 . . J 1 s L ' 4 D q J N x C 4. . - . . . X D . s D - q Barry chose his pitching staff to comprise Buck', Mahoney, a seasoned veteran, L 1 - ' O ' ' W . ' ' CC ' 97 ' o an C i ' . . , . a 1' U C a D C lns' . C, , ' if ' ' 77 C - C .e,.ej,--- I - ' X' . v 5, J ly f 'V f I .5-41 .'jl l i p y 1 l l l i I ll ' Ui il l X X , il iii in iw ll ll ll l l Captain Marshall safe at third in Il cloud of dust lli N made their debut in this game and showed up Well. The Colgate game Was W ll given to Larry Quinn as an assignment and, although he wavered slightly at Ili l ii times, the victory was the Purple's by the score of 5 to 3. li V ll Buck Mahoney tamed the mighty Georgetown three days later. The bat- Ql ting eye which had so long been lacking, very fortunately returned, and the llll i Holy Cross lads slugged the offerings of three Blue and Gray twirlers for a ll l l total of thirteen hits and nine runs. l p Q The next Wednesday, Seton Hall, who had eked out two victories over the Cross last season, returned to Fitton Field iii to be fooled by the elusive curves of Ioe Mulligan, the giant L ii p sophomore. The home team continued its good batting, and l the 6-0 score did not quite indicate their true superiority. It 'i ll was the first shutout victory for Holy Cross since Norrnie g g , Sims Whitewashed Fordham 9-0 last season. Al Niemiec l My 5 fiw l i rl starred at bat and in the field with a long home-run into the p , Blackstone and two virtually impossible defensive plays at the p l hot corner. 52 E On May 21, Harvard and big Charley Devens came to l p l Worcester, and the three thousand fans who braved the slight Wil' ,I drizzle which was falling in the first few innings, were ' ' treated to the most thrilling game of the season. Harvard, rl FARRELL leading 4-0, felt the sting of a last minute Purple rally. It Three hzzrzdred thirty a 1 'ii iiijgi, e 4 .-1-, V ri-lwefff-5 1?+i .l Q--:Li . lea- it hi..-'ifigai-Avis. l'e!.L3r-.'q.Qg-fiiwaif 'haafas at .a4J...5f..:i'g.v:3:.,Q5 IQ' 'T .4:'.l.i -nh' .sir - 2. ,li Q Pony Anas ol' the N Y U comes lnto tlurd standln up renunded one of the 011d1ron class1c of 26 when the Cnmson, ahead by four teen pornts 1n the tlurd quarter, fell before the final Holy Cross dr1ve to lose 19 14 And the oldtnners hkened rt to the great baseball game of ten years ago, when the nnrnortal Owen Carroll let Harx ard down wrth two h1ts rn Hfteen rnnmgs, and after tra1l1n0 1 0 for most of the Game, personally batted ln the tymv run 1n the 1'11I'1fl1, and won hrs own ball game by steahnv home IH the fifteenth The Mahoney Devens p1teh1ng duel was a hum drnver, and unt1l the fatal nmth the Crunson twrrler had the ed e Unt1l the seventh O Connell s lonfr smgle was the only safe blow he ylelded For erght solxd 1nn1n0s the q U 3 Holy Cross team, not lllftlflg hard, but playmfr 1DfCll1 lqx gently, tuned the swrft OHCIIHUS of Devens In the n1nth to chalk up the three runs that spelled vrctory In the Hnal analy s1s Mahoney had g1ven to Harvard s1x h1ts and four passes, and had fanned seven The Crusaders reached Devens for ewht bmvles and s1x passes, W.ll1lC ten of them returned to the bench wrth tl1C11' bats on the1r shoulders Devens, bes1des breezrng along comfortably on the mound for the greater part of the game, Wlth Purple batsmen sw1ng1ng when the ball was 1n the catchers M,H0NEY Thi ee AIIIYIIIEII fbllfy one . t. . . , . 1 4 u wb 0 , r . . . I n . p u . C - u D o I 23 D 0 D A -. s 9 ' 1 g ' - D 'F' A ' ' ' ' ' ', I .Iw' ,' D ' I Q - I n O I . u A l , 4 A l they adjusted therr tlllllllg to h1s, and bunched four h1ts 1 Q : . . W. L - no D ' 1 '1- 'sf glove, also shone brilliantly with the stick. In the second frame he put Har- vard in the lead by coming to the plate with the bases full and clouting a screeching triple to centerfield. He reached home himself on a sacrifice bunt, and Holy Cross returned to the dugout trailing 4-0. They scored an unearned run in the second, when Devens grew temporarily wild and walked Mahoney with the bases loaded. They further decreased the Harvard lead by batting in another in the seventh, and in the ninth they landed on Devens with the final punch that decided the issue. Phil O'Connell started the rally with a hard single to center. Maynard smashed a hit to third base, and O3Connell stopped at second. Buck Mahoney advanced them each a base with a well placed bunt, and Niemiec scored O'Connell with 'a scratch blow, Maynard taking third. Niemiec stole second. Iohnny Marshall sent Maynard home with the tying run by laying down another sacrifice, and when Devens failed to field the bunt cleanly, the Purple captain reached first safely himself. It was the only error of the game, and it came at a bad time for Mr. Devens, but he settled down long enough to fan Cammarano for the second out. Niemiec had reached third on Marshall's bunt, and Marty Murray, coming to bat, let one go by, missed another, and slammed the third. Barry Wood made a valiant, but impossible try to spear the drive, and it landed in left field for a clean single, while Niemiec scampered across the plate with the winning tally. It was a great game. Mahoney turned in a Hne exhibition. It was in change of pace that he bested Devens. Except for the unfortunate second when the Crimson ace cleared the sacks with his timely three-bagger, Buck was never weak, rarely Wild, and only once in trouble. It was the Barry strategy and morale, and the fine Holy Cross defensive work that won the game. Murray deserves the credit for breaking it up ultimately, and Niemiec, besides scoring the deciding run, was the only man besides O'Connell to hit safely twice, and turned in the fielding feature with a wonderful stop and throw that robbed Lupien of a hit. With seven wins in eight starts, the Crusaders seem to be on their way to another great season, and it will surprise us if the intercollegiate pennant does not wave for another year from the Hag-pole at Fitton Field. Three hundred thirty-Iwo ,, 'fain'-.1 gm! W 'ji U I.. - N g.- V - 73,1 7 HQ W 114 1 J g ag 55.39 Senvxarx BERNARD P. MCCAFFER1'Y C apmifz IOSEPH MCGUIGAN M czmzger gig W 1 - - w VARSITY TRACK SQUAD Track With the New Year came the indoor track season, and as usual Bart Sullivan put a fine array of speedsters on the boards. OE course, the usual mishaps and quirks of fate played the usual havoc with the fliers, but all in all a success- ful season was enjoyed, and we have reason to believe that ii K the Holy Cross tracksters lived up to the glorious standard established by their predecessors on the boards. Faced with the double loss of McCafferty and Coakley, the relay team did marvelously well to defeat Harvard in the Prout games. Holland, Tierney, Morin and Winslow regis- tered 3:26 2-5 for that mile, and no one was more surprised . tt., i-. . , 'HY .le 'e-X. f if-if . ll ' nfa'j3.f' :fb ly,-i 55512 'f', -7 gi. 'Yin-i gr 1 Q. X5 55 1. . J if-Ta il. ffm il C'l'a'1' Cliff- , : ' V ' 13' L, ig: if li :if N , je' - g iii ra' ', than Harvard. Art MacDonnell had his usual trouble in the ' - ' same meet, an over-developed case of Monty Wellsitis, but he BART SULLIVAN forced the former Dartmouth star to equal his own worldls record to take the laurels. Bernie McCafferty came into his own in the Casey 600 at New York when for the third successive time he won the event and retired the beautiful Cardinal Hayes trophy from competition. Bernie's time was l:l2 2-5 with the fighting Arnold Adams of Bates pressing him all the way. In his four years of running at Holy Cross, one year as the Freshman Flier and three years as the 'varsity sensation, Bernie ran anchor on two record-breaking mile quartets, won five straight 500's , lost only two 44O's and only two out of eleven 600,s.'l After twice suffering defeat at the hands of an unexpectedly fast Manhat- tan relay team, the Holy Cross relay team burst into glory at the B. A. A. games at the expense of Boston College. Monty 'Wells again took the measure of i'Ikki MacDonnell, and Don Maynard and Gordon Winslovif came second in their respective sprints. At the New England lntercollegiates, MacDonnell finally came into his own and proved his mettle by equalling the world's record in the 45-yard hurdles. In the same meet, the relay lost a comparatively slow mile to Harvard in 3:27 3-5. Three hxmflred thirty-fue RELAY TEAM With the advent of something resembling spring weather on Mt. St. Iames, the Purple tracksters moved to the broad sward of Fitton Field and began preparations for the outdoor season. One meet had been run off as we go to press, and the Crusaders came out on the short end of an 842-412 tabulation at West Point. Bart Sullivan's loose-limbed brigade upset the dopesters by travelling to Chestnut Hill and trouncing the favored Boston College squad in the annual dual meet by a score of 772 to 572. This was the Purple's fifth consecutive triumph over their Maroon and Gold rivals. Art MacDonnell established a new meet record for the 220- yard low hurdles, breasting the tape in Z4 3-5 seconds. High scoring honors for the meet were shared by MacDonnell and Al Morin, who each garnered eleven points. Riess and Me- Nally were double winners in the field events, while McCaf- ferty established a new course record for the 440, finishing in 49.4 seconds. In the annual New England Intercollegiate track meet, the Cross finished fifth in a field of seventeen. McNally, the only Holy Cross man to gain a first place, won the broad jump with a leap of Z3 feet IZ-, inches. Al Morin placed third in the same event. Bernie McCaHerty lost out to Arnold Adams of HOLLAND Bates in a fast 440,M while Iohnny Holland finished fourth. Three hmzdred thirty-:ix CROSS-COUNTRY TEAM Prospects for the Olympic try-Outs are more than fair, and in addition a rising group of stars will come up from the freshman ranks to insure the able representation of Holy Cross in track and Held next year. A squad of less than twenty men reported to Coach Bart Sullivan for CIOSS-Country, including the veterans Capt. Cuneo and Blake. McManus, a sophomore, showed up very well in the daily grinds over the Auburn roads, and relying upon these three men Coach Sullivan launched into an abbreviated schedule which included meets with Harvard, M. I. T., and Brown. Considered on the basis of wins and losses, the season all-,Pf could be termed a success. After losing the early season meet X9 I Q to Harvard, the Purple hill-and-dalers came right back and 1 took a close Z8-30 decision from M. I. T. McManus led the if ' inlnin pack by a wide margin, followed closely by Blake and Cuneo. The Crusader plodders then closed the season with a victory over Brown and were unfortunately prevented from partici- pating in the New Englands due to the illness of members of the squad. The Frosh showed up well in their grinds with other yearling outfits, and a fine nucleus is left for the venerable track mentor to develop a good squad for next season. 2 MACDONNELL Three hzmdred tlzirty-:even Eff wttnrm as 'W sus Sun-xvxrx TENNIS TEAM Under the capable managerial hand of Greg Fairbend, the ,varsity tennis team is driving its Way through one of the most strenuous schedules that has ever faced a group of Purple netmen. Thus far they have been hampered to some extent by ill luck, but a reversal of ill fortune, together with a continuance of the excellent form thus far displayed, should Hll the season with more than moderate success. To date the racquet wielders have scored three clean-cut victories and have twice been defeated by one point. The playing of Iim Nicholson and Capt. lack MacLaughlan has been outstanding. The schedule: H. C. Opp. April 27 Assumption at home 7 l May 18 Harvard, at Cambridge April 30 St. Iosephls, at home 4 5 May 21 Brown at Providence May 4 W. P. I., at home 4 5 May 23 M. l. T., at home May 11 Middlebury, at home 8 1 May 25 Tufts, at home May 13 B. U., at Boston Rain May 28 Trinity, at home May 17 Clark, at home 8 1 May 30 Boston College at home Three 1l!l11dl'f,'!i Ihirty-eight E5 'MM BOB Searxvm GOLF TEAM As this editionof the PATCHER goes to press, we are not qualihed to speak of golf on the basis of the 'Varsity's record in 1932 play. The schedule, one of the hardest devised in the history of the sport on the Hill, numbers among our opponents the leading colleges in the East and offers the Crusaders prospects of stiff tests and keen competition. Having lost by graduation two of last year's mainstays, Earls and Baldwin, the major responsibility for success or failure will fall upon Capt. Fay and Henry Doyle. With the return of Ioe F latley and Dick Hartigan's eligibility, our lineup should display added strength. Casey, Hickey, Collins, and Curry should fulfill expectations. With well-founded confidence do we anticipate the coming campaign. April 27 Worcester Tech May 7 Pennsylvania May I4 Princeton April 30 Harvard May 10 M. I. T. May 20 Williams May 4 Colgate May 12 Amherst May Z1 Yale May 7 Dartmouth May 13 Georgetown - Boston College Three hznzrired Ihirfy-nine I INT! llillvlflllllllille HTIHIL llilf INTRAMURAL SPORTS COUNCIL The extensive program of intramural athletics which was begun last year when Father Dullea took charge, was this year continued and enlarged upon. Before the forming of the intramural league, several sporadic and short-lived attempts had been made to furnish all the students with the incentives and resources for active participation in athletics, but no great strides were made in the direction of giving the games back to the boys until the present moder- ator assumed command. To him, and to Thomas F. Trainor, '32, student man- ager, and Charles Callahan, '33, and Iames Sullivan, '34, assistants, belongs the credit for having engineered the project with such great success. The seniors retained their championship of last year by repeating in soccer, and also carried off the fall track meet. The freshmen vvon the second track meet. Third Beaven took the honors in basketball from the other school cor- ridors. The juniors led their league all season. The Dormitory Club, Winners in League B, bowed in the little World series by a 21-20 score to Third Beaven. Al Niemiec, star 'varsity third baseman, carried OH the tennis championship. Handball and swimming are rapidly gaining in popularity. Three hzmrlred forty 'Q . . was I IINU Sill MM LET UCI T FRLSI IM XN FOOTBALL TEAM FOOTBALL Wlfll Capt McEwan at the helm Holy Cross football 15 fast com1nv to the fore 'ls a factor to he reckoned W1th but 1 coach s system cannot be rnstalled m a day or even a season The East 15 presently lookmg forward to Holy Cross s ClCV2lI1Oll mto the football Greats and the lmmedrate East 19 observ1n0 Crusader In pracflce SCSSIOHS they showed up Well but If was only after 35 had trounced Dean, 6 to 0 that We knew that lf mwht be Well worth Whlle vvatchmv An unfortunate Saturday meant gomg down to defeat at the hands of St Iohn s r rep but our Frosh came back to defeat St Anselm s on the followrnv Saturday 12 0 and sent the lads of Nrchols Iumor College back home after beatmg them 46 O Heffermfln Butt Morandos Moran Harvey and Kelly were the out standrng players and should add to the v1rs1ty strength 1n the fall Th ec blind dfwty one l kr -qmnL.lfl4. . - , 4 . . u L , 3 N ' U J . , . . 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' '1' W w hiff- -'2.,q:A .,,AA H',:3!U A- A., A Ax A A fi' ,. new ' gn, N35-.., .' -4- -' v ' - wifi:-Fi' 55' .. A ,553 ,FQ XHXG . A - '. . ...LL ' ,. 'rg - A- 1-Sm-,gs1,, A--'- lip 'A . , iw- . wi ----- .Q ., - 1' Al, .,A,AAAMA!'Lzg,,. AQJAAQQEQ LMMQELA, 'nf?g:,:1'U5rA Ii i !-WJ:-A AI ' -' 1TgAAQ gA5g. gl' ' .., ' A g AAA '-i fx- N' Uiik . 3 giffqgtg u 1 1' '-L? L . 'W V5 ,wsiwaf H 1 . ,,,-,' Y' g 1 MIZJVYLW gl l I - ' - ' 1 ff QP' Y X Wi xl i l 'P is .X i fi xbd, X xrlxx xxxx Q .,.. ,.,,. A J .1 fL , 1 li i l l ' 'wif -- ' ff l fi' . Wm- l if fe W l -X' f-- JN J 'Z , ,,..? ' k 1... -JL'-A ' THE cat will mew, the dog will have his day, but only the paragon of animals is of sufficient dignity to crave the absurd-to he pleased with it, to grow sick from the lack of it, to use it for the pres- ervation of his heart's Warmth and his mincl's light. MGR I L-I xii. -fgiigtxg Greene Pastures Bright college years! Old Holy Cross! HU!- Old associations! The last march down the old lane! There is a tear in our voice and a choking in our throats. Halcyon hours of youth! Ne'er more save in A reverie! Snill, sniff! Dow is the time for us to becub bathetic! - CRO55 Ah, but it is sad to be leaving the old Hill. How my eyes water for our fu- turistic refectory, and for the Louis XIV plumbing of old Alumni. And dear old Southbridge Street! It took us until X junior year to discover the true value of Southbridge Street. It is not so bright as Broadway, not so wealthy as Wall Street, not so up-to-the-minute as le Rue N wnu de la Paixs not 50 long as Watling Street, fl fairly gow! lim' 111111 our szwll Imclg. not so embattled as Unter den Linden, not so svvanky as Park, Fifth, or Commonwealth Avenues, not so famed in song or story as the Main Streets of Ioyce Kilmer or Sinclair Lewis-but ah, of what profound philosophical value! How could Fichte, Schelling and Hegel look at Southbridge Street and still maintain their theory of the self- created phantasmagoria without being self-condemned? How we shall miss dear old Marshalls lt was a veritable education to lose oneself in that continental atmosphere. And .how unusually fortunate We were. The classical spirit extended even to the ballroom. In every college town a scholar cannot close his Euripides and, going to a dance, find his partner using in her most trivial conversation the genuine Hellenic double negative. Ah, there is classicism for you, true blue classicism, not of the dry, stilted variety, but of the kind to make a man whose blood is warm within Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster, but a living classicism, in harmony with romanticism and compatible with the vigor of youth. Bear with me, my heart is in the coffin there with my freshman illusions, and this prose becomes too leaden-:footed for my myriads of noble emotions. We must take to the nviewless wings of poesy when we speak of Three hznzrlrezffo1'fy-revel: ,l X. Mid V ks af' 3, E hz Ja. 'Q 1 THE ROMANTIC CLASSICIST I-le scanned the bustling street without The misty window-pane, Our hero wished to he about E0'7TgfJfL MEI' 'Yap EV. One nights enough for you gay birds, His father 'twas spoke so, And to these harsh and winged words The youth -Qp.et',Be-ro: UAW, Pa, when you,were young like ine You lil-:ed your Rah-dee-duh, You liked to step, to make whoopee-ee And dance ml -rd ,Xoivi-fi. At sister's chirp he glowed with rage, Come on now, take the air! And at the hudding youthful sage , f , eyekacre -rra'r'r1p. He cruvcd to win a tender smile From brown-eye or from blue-eye Instead of studying the while His Miw, Mists, Mict. Paternal sanction once bestowed I-Ie left his Attic dross, And while his face with gladness glowed He phoned, '25 7-mi Auief' Thru' h1n1d1'c'dfo1'ly-111116 , U, ff L, Y uw ' V , ,. W, 'fn 1 ,1,,5,J:3 X 1 Auf Before the eorner phfrrmacy He d meet his pretty brown eye So shufllrng from hls door wx 1th glee exrevflev EQEAILUIEL bhe was not there, 1nd troubled so HC spoke VVhat can thls be? Ah' She can t h nc t'uletl me, Surelv no No, never, ,ul 'row Aw. But soon hrs youthful hopes were clrow ned She 5 wrth mother boy, bhe s left me flat, ql1s, l m downed By one of ot 1roAAm Now must he su lllow his chflgrln And 'llT1lJlL home to cldddy Wltll fmef as deep .ns Prnam s Olulpov IALILSL Back home to httle slster now As to 1 ttgress den No that could not be done nohovv, evravga. ellen ev O Socmtes, Eurlprcles, Woulclnt lf mike you cry Were ever Seen such thmgs 1s these on ruopes IXHUILOL, TAIFE hlllldlfd ffzy one , . . v -i - ' 9 l , .. . , , - t 1 ,I I ,h , Q . y b t I sa - , . , X q v '.w L 1' . ' ' t 1 , X X I U 3 uw ai - l C N , , , . . C , e fu 'I f L 3 I A . . . , . ' 111 an K I 3 I V Y 4 h -, . t . , , , ,f ' . ,, .. L f ' , J - . . Or! x . . . 7' If ' I Bl , . 1 , - W L ,. u as iii: .gg , My Q WW nsunun-nn.-s 3W'?i'iQ'l3h,,EwSm2 F .,.-H ,M ., ' .NQLM Don't cry, old man, it's only a little poem. But ali, what tragedy! But you didn't think for a moment that that was our main trouble in Worcester. If it had been, We should feel not tragically in- jured, but outrageously insulted. In the spring a young manls fancy is supposed to turn in that direction, but in Worces- ter one finds that when it comes to fall- ing in love, if he is going gracefully or at all convincingly, his WHfZZU6fWd7Zde schazflefz must undergo a rather radical shaking up. Passingly good looks, at home considered an entrance require- ment, constitute a magna cum laude up here. This does not mean that college makes a man blind to the beauties of the soul. We realize that all that glitters is not gold, but, after all, when there is so SNS T Haw cxoss L1 Z b scum Ponumq 01 - -' pain -mam Q I W 1: 1 I 9. fl v'4'i X ' 0 SW? 0 WN? ,N fa f 'W 4 1 fi 1 qE,vu-miuu. X ' A 1 I1 e .3 M N -r , Q fr . gfx ig XJXQJ ws. ' K x I i f J. X .f-1in'r it swell to fume iz bunch like lfmt 1'E17l't?.fC'lIli1l' ur. much scrap-iron around, it is more or less refreshing to find something artisti- cally meretricious. In the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love, said the good Victorian poet. Poet suggests verse, and Victorian suggests the gay nineties, whereupon We lapse into a fragile dramatic lyric concerning a dandy of that era plighting his troth AFTER THE BALL The reel and the waltzes were ended, The lass and her blue-blooded brave Up into the hansom ascended And down the broad avenue drave. Then he twirled his moustache with his fingers, And he spake as her pretty eyes glistened, In my bosom a burning word lingers. Listen! he cried. And she listened. By the stars that are shining above you, And his head o'er her bosom he tilted- I love you, be mine, dear, I love you! Wilt thou?,' he cried. And she Wilted. Three hlllllfvffff fifty-three 00 THE PATCHER THE PATCI-IER ALUMNUS ALUMNUS Over the Hill l I Around With Alumni if for tetris-me Rauf ob CHARLES BOWMAN MCDONOUGIi, '32 Editor Mrsmnran or 'ring hVORCliS'I'lill ll.-KREN'l ,lll:ACl'1lEllS' Assocnvriow Tuissrmy, 1932 For opinions which appear in this column no one is responsible, and least ol all Mr. McDonough. Holy Cross and the Alumni Office WI-IOEVER is cleaning up the Alumni oliice these days is do- ing a mighty poor job of it. Why, the other afternoon when we came to work there was an inch of dust on the portable victrolal Something has got to be done to rectify this condition. No one would like to sit and read the New Yorlq Times all afternoon in a dirty old dusty old ollice. The top drawer of our desk is a mess, too. But that is no onels fault but our own. A month or so ago we started copying the names and addresses out of the Sioux City telephone directory. Might come in handy sometime, we told a quizzical Library employee. But as happens with everything else we start out to do, we soon got tired of the name and address copying thing and threw the thirty-five sheets of theme paper into the top drawer. That would have been all right, thirty-five sheets of theme paper never messed up a drawer very much. But it seems that we had spent the entire month previ- ous figuring out the batting aver- ages of all the third basemen named Coolidge in the Central Texas League, and there were seventeen pages of theme paper given over to those calculations reposing on top of all the 1926 issues of flmcvicrz that we thought worth saving, and a half-finished violin concerto. Starting next month this magazine will be published from the organ pump room, The Purple Funnyboners, a new organization composed of repre- sentative senior thinkers, held its lirst annual meeting in Thompson's on Tuesday, and Bobs McDonough felt depressed all afternoon because he wasn't invited. Nlr. Iohn fFunny Fellow, Delaney, the presi- dent, got off some pretty fast ones in the course of the afternoon, ac- cording to Mr. Iohn CFunny Fel- lowj Burke, the club's vice-presi- dent. The Holy Cross Squash team did not get into action very much this year, much to the disgust of its moderator, Mr. Dusseldorf Folkeep. Mr. Folkeep, onetime bed Elllre- fJI'l.'l7L'lH' of Middle Loyola, became so peeved when he heard that the club's president, Mr. Burgess Haze, 532, was spending all his time writ- ing letters home that he walked out of the school one fine day and never returned. Anyone who linds Mr. Folkeep may have him. -is -is as as The Crusader Council -of the Rab- bit Banding Club of Central Mass- achusetts will hold no meetings this year. Internal squabbles and one thing and another has brought about this welcome state of affairs. Mr. Iohn fBoston and Maine R. RJ Meany, '52, treasurer of the club, was so disgruntled when our rep- resentative questioned him that he left the room in a tattered sheep- skin. as -xc -it s- The Economic Club's committee on admissions is in hot water again. First they were letting freshmen Ph.B. into the organization, and now they are all for throwing the president out. -ir sr- -if 4- The Royal Bengal Bicycle Club, a mutual protective organization for college men needing mutual protec- tion, has at last reached Holy Cross the Mutual Wheel years. Mr. Walter has been talking after travelling for three long Bemis Greene about this outht since freshman year. Lake Quinsigamond ALUMNI of Lake Quinsigamond -or, as we should say, Alumni of Holy Cross-it's about time you were sending in those dues! The lirst annual banquet of this branch of our society was held in the canoe house, on Bastille Day, 1893. Since then we have not heard a word from that quarter. Some men have it that there was a little polluted lobster dished out before the ad- dresses, others would have us be- lieve that the boys are on a zuruzder- juhr in the Straits Settlements. The lirst possibility is unbelievable: even if there was a bit of diseased sea food served, no Holy Cross man should have allowed such an utter triviality to taint his breath. 16 Sk if if Charles River Valley The Children's Auxiliary held a clambake and sociable in the Bos- ton Carden, on March 10th, and it was a dismal failure. Speakers were the Dean of Studies from Miss XVheelock's, a certain Mr. Wheero who convinced all that laughing gas should be returned to the den- tist's office, and several others whom we refuse to mention. Dr. Ioseph L. Plipkirk, l00, who was to be the toastmaster, had a row with his daughter, Rosina, two hours before the gathering and refused to attend. Even with such an auspicious be- ginning the thing refused to get going properly, it ended up with everyone throwing things in an ef- fort to break the ice. 48 rl? fl? :lk The Cicero Chapter has been re- sponding nobly to our tactful re- quests for funds lately, and it seems as if this group is weathering the depression far better than any of the others. Mr. Rocko Spumanti is the president of the Circeronians, and a hae fellow he isl Mr. Spumanti, it will be remembered, founded the Rifle Club during his stay on the Hill. THE PATCI-IER ALUMNUS Those Lovely Tradmons AM rn laxor ol Holy Cross I loxe the trad1t1ons ot Holy Cross, and 1t I had my college days to lue oxer agaln I would spend them once more upon Mt St Innes I am In advocate ot I-Ioly Cross not merely because she has allorded me the op portunlty tor a liberal edue mon, but llso beeause l am SIITIPI5 cruy about her many, m my tI 1dlflOl1b Ever smce graduatron wlth those founders ol 06 I have remamed CuA1zL1:s Bow IXIANI McDoNoUon th lt loyous perlod dur1ng YVIIILII the fellows stop Sfilllg YIICII' sweethearts ln the plpe smoke eurlmg to the cell nw, lay 1s1de the Rubalyat, and turn out lor the repavmg ol Llnden Lane Thls, as you know IS called Burn Beax en Week Trldltlons, as such, are perfectly hue, but eollege songs are xery won derlul I once knew a man who one summer tr lveled through the South or an ablhty to ffrow a moustache I thlnk that I can safely say that all Iloly Cross men cm he chxlded unto two cllsses those who hate ll ways lntended wrltlng reollege song and those who hate vt rxtten 1 couple The tormer hue blnded together lnto 1 mutual proteetne orvranma tnon ealled the 'I own Baseball Team of IIy1nn1s They won two games last season Ind read 1 lot rn the1r spare tlme at home thlnkmg about trtdrtrons Rxght now I know more than any man about that Iascmatmg tlllllg, the tradrtlon Unfortunately college tradxtrons dld not Oflglllilt at Holy Cross To quote from Count Where s Mem fi -sul mat 'Xt Fardale 1t was the custom tor all sophomores to subserxbe to the M azzclzcstez Gum dzzzn thrs was called dom the Hgwort I was the only senxor that dld not smoke Somewhere else 111 thls rather asrnxne tome the Count has some thlng to say about the t1rst gxrl he ever loved She was the Hrst grrl I ever loved, the Count says 1n elev sq uu- up-1 5- .nv -Q-ff 3:1 In-I '51 9- inf' ' -5' N-urn lsr-g ,nn- N Insane- Cuuu I s Bowm tw MLDCJNOUGII 1' R 5 G1 Thlngs 1re very terrrble when a mln 15 bemg ehs eour wed from re mnnrng home evenmgs and Wflf mv college songs Wrth the M tchlne Age Ind the eman Clplfl0l1 of ch1l dren college ttadt lI1Ollb hate lallen on evil days Only IVIClI1OI'1lIID'1yI n 1+-ng Sai, - -s-max 45. 'N who h ld llved Ill a Parts garret Ior three months 1n a lutlle attempt to lorget 1 lew tradx IIOFIC Srmply can t lorget them, he slghed They haunt me I1IxC no body s busmess Cone are the days xx hen the Amerle lil eollege was a rur1l 1nst1 tutlon set up rn C OKIIIC, a place where a man could let hrs beard grow and muse over 'lhomas B11 .f -4 -11 en Pau-lt Bqslxer ltllow 0 lfzc Ixoyul .Saczrly of food fcllorux zuouyzng ufwonl fu: clay Q Ifgllllzl ley Aldr1ch for V1 3 Sh011l3 rrftm lb: plume wav mkrn ll: l1zD01mzr5h went funk to Loyola fm I1 :mp Bv what after all rs a college remembered lf xt rs not by 1ts trad1t1ons9 Prlneeton to many of us IS a dean ot treshmen evhortmg Clorster members to stop pummel hng their steward on Less Pummel Img, Gentlemen' D13 I-Iarv 1rd lb Color Bhndness Week and Clth ohc Unlverslty xs gay laughter I-Ioly Cross, of course, rs hest known to rts alumnx and former employees for rmgrng doorbells and telhng house wxves th If he was workrng his way through Sweetbrlar by composnw college songs I-Ie later turned up rn Syrlcuse XVIIII three damp rabblt embryos concealed 111 1 hammock Wrth such dopey persons COITIPOSIHQ, the Nlnons college songs, 1ts no wonder that haung fifteen ot them memormed no longer takes the place weeks on end It was hrgh sport at 80 s to balt Econ omxes rnstruetors md to lileet 1 drml Tod ly they tell me, a Dart mouth man IS never seen wrthout a pxpe, und to make the Creen Key IS second only to vettlnv a charge ac eount at Lwgett s Yes, the College Man rs maturmg maybe someday The Cross wlll produce .1 Ruth Chat terton md we, too, w1ll be lamous Dlrtmouth ID the . . - -T It , , . . I ' ' ' N s . . . - . . v ' -1 . - , . I , . , . E . L . Y 3 A ' w . -Y ' h xl. . 1 . V - t v I f I . C . . f' - ' - ' Q 2 ' r ' , 1 sk . ' , ,' ' ' , ..,.. , , . '- 2: c L 1. 1. A. Q L L ' ' , s.. , T A ,' 3 ' . ' I A , A s s . . . . . . , . . . I I W x .4 - y ' Si 1 v I x 1 C C I e C , 1. I L' I I K 1 ' A - J 1 v ,, - I x , v 4 - 1 1 ' ' ' . ' e c 4 'L L' ' 1 I ' ' ' D. ' - ' ' ' f T - 3 1 ' 1 'G 1 . t 1 4 7 4 ' ' - ' 4 ' 1. 1 , '- . , 1 , , ,e . AH , . . . . . . t I I . . -' r ' ' 'L .. . .. 1 .' L me 111 js D . 7 ' '- v . - ' , Y , . I 7 Y Y TT A ' e L , .. L . , , . Z , , an . . I Y 2 A . . . 0 T . D ' . i i X- A A Q 1 ' L U. - :,- ,x v - - Y, A , an o L . , l Y' wk ' - , . . 6 ' . - . .. . - g , ' I I T 1 Y - c ' , ' L - - ', - , H 3 - . yt.. . . 1 u I 1 Y l ,N X .I K I. L olrs of H D1plO- , spoke wrth a man Y! Ci ' v . 4 1. 1 1 N , Q . ' N I C ' I xx In k 7 ' , X l . . ' 1 ' I I - I . ' - ' LS W' I s. I c - 9 1 j x ,, L . 7 Q - 5' u , .-5 ' ' C , ,I , ' , .l I II y, . :mn ' Q,-in-Q s Q . as I -' N V' 7 . . .. l A I , .2 . . 1 '- - ' L Z . . ., . N , I' L 3 ii A a . M' , L . , 1 L 77 L . L - , ,. ffl' ' f .. .-. ' C. L1 1' F, 7 ' .', . .. ' ' , - C -f . I 1 ' V. if - 4, . -H . , . 'X '. . A , A ..1,. T , , , . r - 1 - c ' ' 6 . I. ' 4 '. ' e ' L t ' 't , ' 1 2 ' 1 ' s ' ' s s ' k ' , ' .' 4 1 4 e U 1 V, L , J I - ' A v - A . v V ' A 1 - 4 . . L ' s - - , .. 3 in . I . . . 1 N , I- - ' 5 I. m ' . ,, . . I 3 . af. I z ' ' . A . '. , as L - C - H ' , . . ' ' , ' ' D s L ' 1 . A . i ' ' . .' '. T , ' ' . ' R ' 'JL ' ' ' 1 c 'Q 1 Ie , . ,' . ' - - 1 . , . 5 , . 2 1 . rf- fy' Nlhfif 15 '- ' A X, ,o :zzz .:,. ., . Z..- a' I ' . . up ul . usxsxi usa. no .., . - rr U -fn -55 ixx,-, I .Da , u . A . 1, -., - . '-'aa v, 1 ll D: :fr-I .s u' av 6 A I x Q H. . ' ' uffggsg: .- u- ' :.,-,'.. w ' 0 52: X 'Zh .sl 'Q' .ff ,,. V e -Q U' ..' 1 0 Q , , 3--zff-.',:-.. I I: I I ,,,,2,.f:,.,:i-3 :-1' Q !g?' ' auxin.-1iH'5' , y . o 2 ' '. 'll Q 5 n '.'1l'1'.-'Q Q U. h ' l.l ' .'n 4 1 12 -1 .Au 4, 'u - '.:-fo 5' . ,' Q . u J, L: '., -.2-.-.g. ..,,.,, , Denying the mzzjor. vain PROPOSITION ADVERSARIES PROOF OF PART PROOF OF PART THESIS I Wnlle the new refectory has no lnternal actual reallty stlll lt 15 not absolutely nothlng Contractors archltects THE HOLY CROSS ALUMNUS clean help and of course Kant ONE CThe new refectory has no lnternal actual realltyl lf the new refectory had any lnternal actual nobody would have anythlng to do wlth one reallty the old Atq The the old Autocrat of the Breakfast Table takes one serlously Ergo The reallty new refectory has no lnternal actual wlll choose the lesser Ad mlnorem Do lltt7G thlngs well There a1n t no more bread You are pald to wash dlshes not to break them You would not do that there lf you was out wlth them Agne tlans Only one man runs thls refectory TWO CThe new refectory lS not absolutely HOthlDg, If the new refectory were absolutely nothlng llfe at Holy Cross would be Ha mockery a foollsh footless thlngn Atq The consequent lS repugnant to the tradl tlons of Alma Mater fHeaven help the poor old ladyj Ergo The antecedent cannot be admltted Ad malorem Evldent from the general consent of an expectant student body : 7 . 5 S 3 3 3 F ' ' 7 --1 . Ad maiorem: Evident. Of two evils men .T , 9 7 , . 1 Vx K At? Rf ix N iflIIl5ill1llllMNYNXx f x .3 ' ,,V. ,,.,fmmvfffafawwmf 3:6 ,, 5 Em 1, an il 1 fi 5 QSOIUIIIII' fllllbllllllllffi, DIFFICULTIES: RESPONSE: SCHOLION Ad minorem: Evident. The new refectory like the gymnasium is a futur ible. But the gymnasium consists merely in the privation of a being, i.e. in the cutting down of the old pines. Analogously the same can be said of the new refeotory. But the privation of a being does not constitute entity. There- fore the refeetory is absolutely nothing. Distinguo. As regards the Hesse realeu-ooncedo. As regards the Hesse idealeu- subdistinguo. Enti- tatively- ooncedo. Representatively- subdistinguo Speoificatively- oonoedo. Reduplioatively- subdis tinguo. With the ball on the five yard line- con- cedo. On the ten yard line- nego. Cn the fifteen yard line- neeoo. On the twenty-five yard line- transmitto. With the ball on the eight yard line, third down, six to go for first down and eight to go for a touchdown- We'll see that in Dogmatio Theology. Some one has said that if there were no refeetory, we should have to build one. HOOP - LAH! THE MISS WHEELOCK'S GIRLS WITH THE U. S. GEODETIC SURVEY 1. TURGENEV MCDoNoUGH CEditor,s DCIS: Mr. McDonough thinks that he too has failed to write the great American College Novel. Mr. McDonough, as usual, is quite rightj CHAPTER I ELSIE Ti-muenr So It was the beginning of the last quarter of the first interclass game of the last football season before the Spanish-American War, and the sophomores were no- where to be seen, Where in time are those old sophomores? queried Elsie, testily. ,.. O 5 O I Under the piano, I retorted, losing my place in the breviary. Before she could thoroughly laugh at this sally of mine, the sophomore eleven drove up in a Stanley Steamer, which was an expensive low-bodied road- ster, apparently of foreign manufacture. Three cheerleaders rushed out on the Held, and the president of the senior class went back to Beaven to cram some Greek verbs. A rickety-axe was called for:- I-IOOP-LAI-I! HOOP-LAI-I! HOOP-LAI-II CHU-CHU RAH-RAHI CH U-CHU RAI-I-RAI-I! BENZIGER BROTHERS RAI-I! The Benziger Brothers were beadles to freshman sections A and Lg they were very well 1 5 QL G liked, too. They later collab- .T f Z orated on I-Iarvardianaf' a - it ' . : ' ' 3 vc, song which for some reason TR or other was never accepted KT W A - by the school authorities. df Elsie Carroll was the center u--f , in 'X' ' of attraction in the refectory -,, T I l that night. X fi? h 'KI intend to tal-ze her to the i' ipvhn- ,, . . . ' - Prom, I said, explaining her Y A r,.4l R presence to a quizzical dean 'rr ' if of discipline. Of course, he said, as if . notnnff a a ene . ts l' g h d h pp cl CHAPTER II Feilwuy PCIFIQ ho! Of carzrxe' cz'r'1'yo11e know: Ihut in IQIO lhc Boston College game was played 071 Freshman Fielzl, hui Elrie Carroll think.-' that she know: heftrr. I was lL'l'I'lbIy sore when I found our, Ulm' fold Elsie nczfcr I0 xpculq I0 me rrgtun. CIHEIXIISTRY DEPT.-RAHl Fenwick Hall was hung heavily with banners, flags, and hunting. The gas-lights threw a merry glow over the assembled throng, two-thirds of which later explained their presence at the rally hy the fact that they had slept over from a Psychology lecture that morning. Elsie Carroll's evening might have heen one of per- fect jollity had not the cheerleaders insisted on inter- rupting every speech by shouting, 'KMr. McDonough! Mr. McDonough! Mr. McDonough is wanted at the office of the Alumni Association. Looking hack I realize that that was perhaps the hest rally that I ever failed to attend. That was the week-end that my prefect and I went down to Boston to found Em- manuel College. CHAPTER III Music HAT1-r CHARMS I roomed with Colonel Harrison that year, a chap who preferred to he known as Harry I-Iallowayn to my parents. He won the game for Loyola-Battle Creek in freshman year and was known as an awful paini' to fifteen seniors. While he was personally charming and an all-round good egg, I detested the fellow and told him so. The Colonel was musical and had obtained permission from the Prefect of Dis- cipline to sing in the showers. Perhaps that was why I joined the Y. M. C. A. and subsequently came to meet Elsie. T O ix 3 E' ' I Ln x M. r k kv s x , - I L7 I The IVIIIIN' CIIVIIIUIII in '13 wax n fimzncial fr11'1111'c', bn! Ihr!! Incl zlizl nal prr1'f'l1l P. loc Droop 111111 Alzfhony I . Ilrrxell-Biddle 111, IQOIA KI-'15, from having one wonrlrrful lime Iwforc flu' :hc-riff lIl'l'fl'l'Cf on the scent. The ubovc' prinl shows A1l'I.C'I'.s'. O'Dr0op mul Di'e.t'r-ll-Biffrlle pirolmlrflzg very prefiily for fhe IJUIIEJHZ of z'i.ffIil1g Ilzrlians. On that fatal Tuesday I entered our quarters just as if it were not an open secret that the Colonel and I had not spoken to each other since the retreat holi- day. The Colonel was busily engaged writing a post- card to his guardian. Not wishing to disturb him, I cleared my throat and said, Let's all go out to Auburn for breakfast! Little did I realize then' that with the first week of December came winter which dressed Mt. St. Iames in a mantle of white, and taste in out-door sports changed at once. Of course, he said, as if nothing had happened, and asked me for my A, I-Ie said that he felt in the mood for singing the seldom-sung second verse of O I-Iear Thy Sons in Happy Song, I-Ioly Cross, Old Holy Cross. Please excuse me, I said, excusing myself, and left the room. That was the last I ever saw of the Colonel. I-Ie joined the army that afternoon, and later adopted fifteen children. CHAPTER IV INTRODUCING MCDONOUGI-I Holy Cross-10 Northeastern-11 And when the final whistle blew and celebrating humanity bore Elsie Carroll, protesting but happy, on eager shoulders at the head of a prodigious snake- dance, I gave a Fenway Park official three dollars to stop all the post-game nonsense so I could look for that chap to whom I had loaned my watch early in the first quarter. He said that he would be waiting for me on the twenty-yard line after the Hnal whistle. But he was nowhere to be seen. Thinking that it must have slipped his mind, I thought of other things. Elsie, meanwhile, was autographing the left Held bleachers for a group of vociferous Bowdoin Square athletes. Perceiving me about to be swooped upon by a bevy of adulating Pinkerton detectives, she rushed to my side and whispered, Take me home, Riot O,When, you freckle-faced, fun-loving Irishman you! After finishing the gum-drops, Elsie and I hopped a hansom and went over to the Public Library to see those murals. CHAPTER V LAYING THE GHosT When the freshmen met the soph'mores, Comin' through the rye, And the soph'mores beat the freshmen, Freshmen didn't cry. When I had Hnished singing, my friends coughed self-consciously. Though known as a lover of the metaphysical, I had never so boldly manifested my sympathies for the dirty old freshmen. They had found me out. There was a moment of tense silence as the eight anemic sophomores glared at me, a traitor, fearless and defiant to the bitter end. This silence was broken only by a scuiiie of heels as I got up and left the room. I had formed the habit of taking a brief airing before going to bed, and it being eight- thirty I decided that a little saunter out down the walk past Beaven I-Iall to the end of Linden Avenue was better than being cooped up in a stuffy room with three ignorant sophomores talking about girls all the t1me. Ever after this episode I was known as Hap, CHAPTER VI COLUMBUS DAY CONFIDENCE Hymn composing from morning till night soon makes lack a dull boy, so I stopped composing hymns early in October. For a while I considered the choir but ended up a fool for hockey. Columbus Day never was Columbus Day to Pep Pomeroy if he didn't wake me up at Hve-thirty to tell me that he thought that I was 'Kyellowf' If he thought that I'd think such a prank was smart that morning in sophomore, he picked a wrong number. I had spent the night dreaming about the Iohnstown Flood and the Sherman Anti-Trust Law and was very impatient with my friend as he threw me on the Hoor. Well, I'l1 be switchedln I said, Where on earth did you come from?', Now It Can Be Told' U11 wad the power the G1 lm glc ut To sec 01:1 mls as Done Most lor Holy Cross Done Most for the Lllss Best 'Ill round man Best Athlete Best student est speaker Best ear bender est Wrlter Best man xbout tovx n Best lnlxer Best XUUSILIZIH Best rmtured Best sense of humor Most l7l'1lll1Dt Nlost eecentrnc Most !.lC.bOll llI' Most v1r1le Most llltely to succeed Most popul'1r Most energenc Vlost SCI'1OLlS 'Vlost opt1m1st1c Ilftndsomest VV1tt1est Drc.1m1est Fu orlte Ffworlte Fw orxte Fu or1te Fax orlte leavorlte Favonte Fax orlte Fen OTIYC Fax orrte Fflvorlte Fax orlte Ffu orrte F1vor1te F IN orxte Fay OFIIC Fax or1tc underclassrnan ststgc actor stave ictress screen rctor screen ietress orehestrl womfm s college colleffe other thxn H C 'author ft lqssxc ruthor C,ontemporf1ry nox el P 'W poet magwme ewmrette drmlt pro Fqxorrte g1rls mme Fworlte type fur Most popular sryrng zfhcn :cc ml Ph1l1p E OConnell Ioseph A Reynolds Riymond I Howe R1ch'1rd S R1t7el Ph1l1p E O Connell Lhrrles C Moroney ohn X lpurlte Ioseph L Br1eken,Ir Edwtrd A I-Immrlton Whlter L Greene KlV1llIZlITl A Whlsh Cnnffer Ale lred 6 lvllfllllll c.,l1lI'lC5 L lmrldg Iohn F Delfmey Wfllter L Greene Iohn M Percy Anthony F lXClt11'l2,,l ArthurI 'Vl1eDonnell NV1 nm I OBr1en Iostph Ie Sulhvwn Ioseph A Reynolds Clmrles I Murphy Iohn II Meflny oseph l Bmclten r I F1 1I1lll1l M1lle'1 XV'lllCI' L Crreene Clrroll T Dofrer Ldw'1rd B llllllly 33 George Arhss Katherme Cornell Lloncl B'1rrymore 'Xnn Ilftrdlng Guy Lombqrdo Mount bt Vmcent Hqrmrd Goethe W1ll1 futher C 1' IIC LfIl0 LX LIC U0 er neqz 0 De 1th Lomes to the Arehblshop Barrett-3 ol VV1mpole Street Kefxts Tlme Cfzmels Rye Lno Lflerx eseent Sqlts Fwther Gmhfnm SI H W M0 'Vlr Drumm II Betty brunette I-laow re yew, suhp Fhuc hnzuluzl ulv Ihr 1 2 . - ,, -- . -N , A x,.. . - ..... f ', 1, ' ,, A -. ,N . ...... C I, B' ..... . I 1, ' ' - ...... 4 I ' K . ' B ' ...... . . I A fz '- f . . . . . .' . ,i Q In ....... 1 b 1 D' . ' ..... . 4 . z ' . . . . . . . It . IF es : ...... . '- , 11. -' - ' . ..... .. ' 1 Q ...... '. ' 1' f I ' ' I' ...... 'A 2. 1 .. Y, . . , . ll. 1. ' I V ' e 1 n - 1 c In u L 1 1 unul 0 3 1 B I V.. v.n-p u g ,l 1 -' ..... . -, , 1 I I r ..... . I- ,. . N ,I. Most pCSS1l1l1StlC ..... Robert F. McDonough .l .1 . ...... , A, X N . -4 1 ' ' 1 . U . . . . . M' A 2 . .... ' e . -4 Y U - ax - 1 V - ' B ' W 1 . . . . - . -4 ' ' - ' ' v. . .... . A ' ' D 1 . . . . -1 'L 4 f 7: C' . I . . '. 1 . . , . 1 ' 1. , ..... 1 , ' ' I M A gr -I 1 ..-. u L is I 14. . - n - n ' 1' ' ct ...., . +1 f ' ' r ,. I 4' y - 1 'A 1. ...... '1 kk 1 --2 , 1 . I ll.. . I Q' L n..n . u ' b'l ..... ' ,, ' 44 9 Q as . ..... . fire Farewell Gdc The palm is almost won, Let us rejoice! Strike up the song! But tarry. Soft. Look how Sweet two and twenty of the poet's choice Forgetting all its glory, pauses now, And dreaming like an old re,h'ective sage, Calls for a toast unto these happy years Which we have lately lived and soon must quit, N o more to see them, save through half-shed tears And misty pipe-smoke which in middle age Shall curl about our temples gray and knit. A toast! The gracious liquid fills the cup, And to the surface with a magic hum Its fair round headlets rising quickly up Grow large, and twinkling dreamily, become As mystic, sparkling crystals wherein we May see our blissful fleeting college days At their true worth.-H ere are they softly limned Beneath this wondrous talismanic haze, Filled with youth's joy and petty tragedy, Youth's faith and grand enthusiasm undimmed. The valued friendships permanently sealed- The company of fellows good and gay- The hooks- The flying turf of Fitton Field- The thrill of victory- The Purple's day- The festive ev'nin gs, glorious to the last- Forgotten vows sworn under tumid moons- The harsh, flat winter with its dull gray sleet- The hleak white rooms on tedious afternoons- The swollen stories told to make the past Bright hours more grand, the present hours more fleet d six! y- f om' The campus in its full, rich vernal grace- The library which tells with Christian pride Its fair, high purpose on its classic face- Ancl sheltered Beaven nestlin g at its side- The chapel and the shrine at vesper hour- Amid the holy graves the Aves told When the weary sun its evening chore fulhlls And pays its last grand ofierin g of gold Before it sinks into its quiet hower, And 5716215 its couch behind the Leicester hills The mystic vision ends, for now, alas, The crystals shrink-then hrealq and disappear While we with shalqin g fingers hold our glass, More quickly even than the days so dear At which they let us glimpse-Those days so plain So cheap, so deathless in our youthful eyes, Which now at partin g, jealousl y we treasure, I J As we shall hence, when we shall, grown more wise, Smile at the thought of those which gave us pain, Weep in our dreams of those which gave us pleasure. WAL1'ER L. GREENE, '32. Three hundred sixty-ft Acknowledgments We wish to express our gratitude to all those who have helped us in the production of our book of memories. We are especially indebted: . To Rev. Francis I. Dolan, SJ., who very kindly reviewed these pages. To Mr. Iohn I. Spillane, faculty advisor to the PURPLE PATCHER, who ex- pended much time and energy in our behalf. To Mr. Leo Shea, S.I. and Rev. Ioseph G. Mears, SJ., who aided us with invaluable advice and encouragement. To Rev. Iohn D. Wheeler, S.I., Mr. Frank Miller, and the oHicials of the College Treasury. To the White Studios, particularly Miss Bessie Ellinson. To Messrs. Iames S. Motherway and O. S. Barrett of the Pontiac Engraving Company, whose expert advice, cooperation, and service proved indispensable and most eflective in overcoming our dilliculties. To the Harrigan Press, particularly Mr. Gurley. To all our advertisers, without whose support this venture would not have been possible. 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Q. , :.,,,. ,-wr :gi - L' If ., I, J Y' 3 l :www M f 4 I X -1 ul tn... 5 la! '7 n , . 4 A gn, Q ,Q V ,IN +1 ? L:D 'Q '7'J1 'i M' X ' F' ' ' m b : lil' u i ' nh nl 1 1 W. md yuh.-L A g 1 IN af LI in H. 'Ji' I A ' M- Y 5 A I 4. .1 1 ! 7 1 Am Al 1 lj 4 I x 4 1, J wh 41. I .wus ig L R ,SLA 13 Ai Mx 4 '5 77 ! '-file Ml W W lun 5124 'X K 'T' Wig! f xr-UM '53.1T'i-ififvrfl7,.fl1,,- , - diff I ww'-'gQf'1'.L.n?L' ,H3L, If ,A 4' . V ..- f :M 2 H -. dy ' frm . w.,:4':fwi. c .,.:f4e'-'-- 'L' 1 - .if-z.1 A' T f5 'a-r. - f - .. Y W - ms?-'i?11i3 ' i T 15,g'p, ,,T, if 1- :ji Y,., ,,,, g, , ,4 ,1 ' Ziiia, Q ,V -1 .Wal l-I ' ,LiZ3f,13Q ' ' ' IQ' Mame t H '- ???f+'flf':Cf!33fs1g. 'f':'5f577w? -..4, , ar Q: mi J' 5n:5LliE'Sii'3Q?2T??2'ff1xI'f'Ei3T.'-. .1lfi'ig,g'f ff2 D znsmn' r k-sew!! , H. ,i V , PM ,L . mm. , 3q2f!M',- :-5. rmv.. gum X-. Es 56:5-:Fil 11 psf N' i ' H Hr!- I fi. wiIf5?.J 2'i':i?-' ' 'Till Yg2.E?E5V5:EEEi.5f idl 1 it 1 ffl I f ' 'f- ' ' QQ - f 1 i .. . i V 1 - , rxggtni,-gs 1: 5 V QP: 1 , 'F i -V fgg:'ii'yge' 1 X 3,1 4. ff- ,l+ 1g'-Wiki ' ' 'f 'f- J ' ., v Ewfsifi-ifsgfifi? 1 ' THE festivals of Dionysus Filled the stadia with thousands who came to see life steadily and see it wholef' drawing their material resources from the agora of Athens and the l commerce of the Mediterra- nean. This also, our own poor artistic attempt, acknowledges in the following pages its debt ' to trade. ADVERTISIN HoLY caoss CGLLEGE Worcester, Massachusetts A.B., PI-LB. and B.S. COURSES Pre-professional departments in Medicine, Law, Iournalism, Education, Business, Fine Arts, Chemistry, Physics, Biology, Engineering Entrafzce Examirzatiozz C67Z1f6'l'5 in all large cities Applicanzfs for admission should apply before March jfrst For Catalogue address the Registrar I Etb1hd1888 A rtetrter Cehtttry o College Photogretlohy f Z 220 West 42nd Street New York Completely equlpped to render the Hlghest Quahty Craftsmaushlp and Expedlent SCFVICC on both Personal Portralture and Photodraphy for College Annuals Ojlezal Photographer to the 1932 Pttrjtle Pettther Q f 'P WEAR A HAT ! On the campus, in the hometown this summer or Out in the worldn on the new job after graduation. WEAR A HAT when the Time, Place and Occasion calls for one. STRAW, SOFT FELT or DERBY each one has its use. When you buy a hat ask for A HAT BUILT BY LEE You will like everything than makes Lee hats popular. The 1932 price, the 1932 Styles, the Quality. These go hand-in-hand and lead to hat satisfacton. The Frank H. Lee Company Factories: Danbury, Conn. Salesrooms: New York - Boston - Chicago Compliments of New York Giants Holy Cross' New York Headquarters 44th-45th Sts., 8th Ave. NEW YORK CITY 1.4 - .12 r mimi -P Fifi 7 ri 1 4 I Nunn : DH iii!!! !!!Il '22 I H!! li IIE!! ! !!!!!! D! il! 'Til 1 S 1 X 'TW NIUE gg!! gl!! PREP U!!! U!!! !!!! E!!! ll!!! F1FTTTfT?l.IJ.2IlFTw I BI uul fl 'QA we Il .I mir ll 5 Silt? F na ',:s3Ei'e Miiigsaag ,iiughggl 9 an Ui g 5 ll 5 S H BJLRJ! WU 32 E ml I Miqlfutitiriuu-71 qi!! -It 5,0 .. Rox' MoULToN, Manager HOME in New Yorkn where you'll always find a cheer- ful welcome . . . an attractive, comfortable room, with its private bath tub or showerj, radio, etc .... 1400 Rooms - 30 Stories of Sunshine Iust a step from Broadway, convenient to all theatres, shops, etc. a Single: 33.00 - 53.50 - 54.00 D Double: 34.00 - 555.00 - 956.00 . if fr?:2e':?. 'jail gem. ,V ii: ,SQ ,j'51i1i e-12 .251-FF 1:iE2ill.'F' '.., fi'ii1gf?:e:a'2L':-f. - ---. 1.11-11:1--A gif'- iz. w -.-pr --1, ag-5'--a.:1'.-4'-hgmpw '- f ' 5t:fh.wL+.z Q iff21r!23b3s.'gig fi f L1-1420 -z sg ig. , , . ,5,4I!j'-':i'.- Zfi ' ' Q 3 g l i2f es f'l 'A-f4l?'lIlQYEf'1f. inLwrf fg,,. f n -' P ig .n : !55 f ' . e..i2fm g lniziig-FE-' U i uf I: H n',n,g.'- it U Ei g a l ' flank . ii if.???21 5 i1Fi F17 F If ' 4 'D ifi j ii U l 'f' i lt ::,25:1. :s v p'n'wrn. Qi . . . in E m u-- 1 i it I -' gn HIF I ? pn 9 ll E -' x . 1 vgi if 'H H 1' a an U D U 9 Q: W alkin' 1-T li l!! ,Aggigig g l 5 :E - R. I S N .. N I '11, Ig :: P22 W H H 5 -w ill ff iii! so ,.e2 ' n was . iss si Pa . . . IE- S, S g l wg. fwww i Eiiai v z, 'll ' 22 -Hz H u i. 1 1: H 31S4' . . -122 5 2 i gr W H H H -1 w g. vile si ' N 1 1' l iiit' Z.. . . . 9 9 ll. L fGiQi i F? .3 .: .. - ,Q-5 ' : 5:1122 ' 11 2113 -'f F- n' Li! 2-if rg ,--'Q' E G. Q png: it ch 5, -man. . ,fy --3 l 'T ' ffl? -+'7',..... ...... .-- ...I-.2 ... , :,. '::.5Lf.i r :ff-.'-:ie-11511 e 1 .eau 1. ,mel Fiziiaf' 5:-fe, . 1552- - fv-ff.: L-..e:.- . egmgei? Compliments of The junior Class GEORGE MORAN, President PATRICK ROCHE, Vice-President 'I1IIvIOTl-IY COLLINS, Secretary MARTIN MURRAY, Tzfczsurer Compliments of WORCESTER TELEGRAM THE EVENING GAZETTE SUNDAY TELEGRAM Radio Station WTAG GROGAN COMPANY Jewelers and Silversmiths Wood Street corner Sixth Avenue PITTSBURGH, PA. sk Those two old salts,', Carroll and Caul- Held, bringing home 500,000 pounds of special culled codlish for . . . Gorton's Sea Food Family G0rt0n's Codfislz, Salad Fish, Ready-zo-Fry Cozljish Cakes. I-Iaddoclq and Clam Clzowder in cans Gorton Pew Fisheries Co. Limited Gloucester, Mass. C0l7Zf7ll-77161115 of College Square Custom Tailor Qualify and Service at Reasonable Prices S. SOLOMON, Prop. Shine Parlor Hats Renovated MARTOCCI'S We do SHOE REPAIRING Not COBBLING N otc the distinction 4 PLEASANT ST. WORCESTER, MASS. Holy Cross Men meet at Thornby's Restaurant Main St., opposite Palace Theatre Tasty meals that please Schiller's Pharmacy 811 Aiken Ave., at Walnut St. Pittsburgh, Pa. Mayflower 5900 Free Mail Dc'l1'1Jer5 DONOHUE COAL CO. ' The Best Fuel Always Anthracite - COAL - Bituminous ll Canterbury St., Worcester, Mass. Dial 2-7595 Dial 3-3287 DENHOLM'S Famous for QUALITY and FASHION, Never knowingly undersold. Denholm 8: McKay Co. Worcesfer's Great Store I Complzments of The Sophomore Class JOSEPH DONELAN Plesident HARRY WALSH Sccietmy IOSEPH MULLIGAN, T1 emu: ez I Q . IAMES BRADLEY, Vice'-Presidenl . j . . When in New J ersey, it's the ROBERT TREAT HOTEL NEWARK, N. J. Official Hotel Holy Cross Athletic Teams I. W. Wvcrcorr, Manager Madnnes Co. Fashion - - either for your own personal use, or for the home, at the moment it's new. And, of course, the price is as low as is consistent With the quality. PRATT COAL COMPANY Free Burning Anthracite King Philip Bituminous SoZz1e.v the Burning Question 35 PLEASANT STREET WORCESTER, MASS. PHONE 4-1751 T and T Sea Grill Best Foods J. S. Wesby 85 Sons fo, ,he Bookbinders A Least Money 'S 44 Portland Street Tel. 2-1983 542 Main St. Franklin Sq. Compliments of A Friend Conzplinzenty The Metropolitan Uncle WILLIAM F. O,CONNELL Dance Chairman WF rgraduate Club FRANCIS R. President CURRY Thomas Page Sons . . . Grocers . . . 733 SOUTH AIKEN AVENUE PITTSBURGH, PA. Service to Four Generations of Pittsburgh? Elite Mayflower 4800 - 4801 - 4802 ,55t.fs:L. we 'M THE covsiz on :his book IS the product of an organization of specialists whose sole work is the creation of unusual covers for School Annuals, Set Boolcsklistories, Catalogues, Sales Manuals and other Commercial Publications THE DAVID I. MOLLOY CO sly Nmh 'alum' Annu cmmoo CGX SONS 84 Caps and f ' Gowns 5 rr f VINING Hoods for All Degrees Makers for Seniors at ff g ffii 131-133 East 23d Street Holy Cross New York Complzmerztx of The Freshman Class IAMES TUMULTY P1 cuzzient ROBERT DEvoY Sen em: y ARCIJIE IEFFERSON Tzeaxuzef I A -- BENEDICT MCGRATH, Vice-President , . . , . . . Tasty specialties between classes at . . . THE CANTEEN W'he1'e undergraduates meet to eat GEORGE GRANGER, Proprietor C ompliments of :ff 2 ONCE you have felt the difference of roll- rf ing along safely and with luxurious com- fort on 10 to 15 pounds less air, l you will never go back to the higher pressures of other tires. Wofgesfefs Leading and G E N E R L Most Up-to-Date Hotel T I R E DSITRIBUTED BY BOWKER-HAMBLIN TIRE CO. ROY L- BROWN' Ma'1Hg4 ' 72 Mechanic St. DON'T FORGET THE - - - y THE SENIOR BALL THE BANCROFT Music by Casa Loma Orchestra Charles I. Murphy, Chairman The HARRIGAN PRESS WORCESTER, MASS. Pwmm mm' Pzzblislrm PRINTERS OF THE 1930-31-32 Purple Patchcr Qzmlizgf Printing fir Schoolf and Collegey


Suggestions in the College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) collection:

College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

College of the Holy Cross - Purple Patcher Yearbook (Worcester, MA) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935


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