Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT)
- Class of 1952
Page 1 of 248
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 248 of the 1952 volume:
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I 1 H, ' -IN . .W V' . . 5-' jr ' 4 4 ,li . lair... 1'b,7'g .Q , -'f-'H .if E-fm' v xx ' ' . 'Pk .:4., h 1.9 A-'rf J' J 0 .G af? LFIAL: I 4 . H? 531. 4 , 4 f - ' 0 4 1' -- , 470' ' V- 'nk 'Q 9 , M I It u . r 14 Q . - .' O1 - '1 .ul 1' ' ALJ. 0 0 , o tw . l , 'Jq Q I , I' , L 't41.A'1 . , V591 . I h I1 A, 'Av' ,' X . Q O 1 vf,u n ' T noi .U I 11.6 .15 .. 4 .1 yr' 1, ! F-.. .Q J 1 115 ..-r preaenta M A N W F U X REV. LALIRENCIE C. IJXNGGUTH, Dun: ehitatinn f I 1 I uint, 'U' 'E '.f79'h-R'-' E' ' I w -w- HAT FAIRFIELD is the college it is today, only five years after A l its beginning, must be attributed to the labors of the original , devoted group of men who founded it. Foremost among the original edu- cators, in diligent and strenuous effort, is our present Dean, Rev. Laurence C. Langguth, Sf. VVe the students, naturally unconcerned with the complexities besetting the government of a small college, and a newly founded one as well, are inclined to accept the Dean as a high authority and nothing more. But in the shadow of great secular schools, in the cloudiness of modernistic thought, our Dean, while attending to the frequent onerous details demanded of an administrator, has found time to assert uncom- promisingly our college's belief in first principles and in Christianity. He has exerted himself for the further recognition of our young university among older, established halls of ivy. While holding fast to the scholastic tradition of education, he has not hesitated to adopt new ideas, when worthy, to our Fairfield system. At the same time -- and this is our reason for accolade - he has always remained human and close to the students, making it his personal duty to evaluate personally the tal- ents of each one. In later years, when the history of our college is written, the name of Father Langguth will take its deserved place, high on the roll of distinctive service. KT of I ' 'm o l l r . r 1 I 1 Cilnlplls BERCHMANS HALL BERCHMANS HALL BELLARMINE TERRACE w . .4-5. SMH H -V ..., 4, s s .!4q.vat 'Q 'Q 'x SP -.. --nun:-P -A1 if 1' 1 ' M ,-fx .L I ' ffsf- 1 1 MM, ., . M- wx ly., ,V Q Ar Q 'w1 A A A -N. - W gf gum W4 ' 5, - vlfzfg.. ' 2- I , . .iii-I F A ' I 'R 1 1, -L' ' C 3 , I :,,, f ' - L W . ya ff? , I f T351 v..: f Q AI V J ' . y Ill L ,,-1, ' y K' x , . f hm-s--f' ' . , 1 , , , , . ,-'-- 4 gf' if 1 L . A 4 f ,. 5, K '- 5- Q N ,. 4 V5 x 1 i ,Cl ,hx . ,go SSW? Q53 51, , 2 , 1 ' -. 2 ,. . , -fry 5 ' - . v -..,... , as 5 -52 ,fv . -. , . J . V-.v:.kw-, N ,J , I V' Cllnnsriy -A-.-,-,pu-M .. 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'Q f , O G nf? x y L. ss s X m -XX Q N' f 'vm-In MCAULIFFE HALL lot IK: f 1 I 4 ' s' .,,. y , .. ,-.f . 17. ' ' 'fi f- ,, 9 , , .Q f r ,, 1 mm- x A ff 0. ,uf ' ' 1 i , RGSE G RDE x F' - .-... . ., .-...w-W A -f - no w 'sa V 4 'YA' 1 ' - wx' 2-Q , , .....- V- - ,........ 'jj-' ' gf' ,A ... Y Tw 5'5 f 4 M' Ap. 'V' .,...... ---- an v W, 1, --f-fwz..-it-H : ' .. ,f 'W ' ' 4 ,,,,, . Ag- WV ,, 1 ,A , W . ........7.......,..A -3-fu , .mano--.au--f M X..--.. X - f .- 1 A- ., - , , - - ' f, - 1 ,A A...-. -fr--.Y A 1' ,, v .... . ,. . , ...V - , , .., , , - x --1 w , n QW,-Aw, W... - ' ' My 'Ng' SAW W Q-,,, , 4 V W ,W- A ,Q ' W V -W M-'N , , U ...Uv , M.,-.f,, .XP PM .,..-X..mv-w,M,,,i H M A- m -Q ,N fl ,.-,...-- ' ., , W ,M ,, . I .wr X - ' .... i T-1...... ,A ..'.,,', ,, ,..,,.....-..- , , ...A A ml ,, ... J ,Q - ' - A .51 1 Q V, .,.:u.......':..m1r--....,, ,w i J , ,,-.,. -- - n .3-png-v - :A M 3,407--V , --Q-.- f - ' 'W' ' --'H' - at V ,. .. ?' -N1 ....,.,,.. X 4 , 4 ,, M ,, -. -- UW 2.-M . f A ' . ' ' - ' Af- rg - f-1 , A - N- - Q ff-J!! WI TER THESIS .li .l, P- N' 5 ,u . 1- ,.- .Q l . - 1 , - b I .5 . , We 4: H nf -' -u x 1 1 ' .L .91 . 'ifo an '.' 77 E H .Mtg A in-M' tr 'Y ' SQ as Q , ' ' ff 4 'qu-'I' ,ai ,9' 'Z rr ',!f,.. - 'lr A ' . -95-'-. - L. ' 'fqig 1'- ' '. ' ' .4-I 1 0 1 , sq' a . , ' 'I 5 ' Q sl ..l'g' f ,f est.. w '..r.4t .lvzud . D 'Q A ' 0 qi aa. n 'Q - ff 4' 33211 V ' .' ' og bfr ,AP ,. 'J' vt, vt tr .'5 QW, Q 0 2' I ...Q . L eq. . , lx' 1 ' 'ix- ,K a ' ' . , -' Q 3 1 I 0 , L , M . , :tg . x o , DOGWOOD S CX? HYPERDULIA , su W ' -4 145923 -., 'X BELLARMINE HALL .,. 1 Nh. Q Y- ,f .-M - 4. rf.. -va, ---X jjlT'r X N x,.g X ,',,,-'M AL- Ig X bQ- -JTC-Q -' N. lffi Q wiv X5 5' ff.'A ci- fp 7 ' 41 R v , Q A - mr sq J, , m'E .wr 7 BELLARMINE CHAPEL ,,,,,,,. -i. .. . , , --.Y-,,, , T i MCAULIFFE CHAPEL BERCHMANS CHAPEL be , 5 .A -,Rf f I N -i W6 SP . . vw ' ve w 2 A xg N, m,,.Qi,v,rm l f A 'AQ - 'E . hx mwif,,..M M 5 GATE AY TO K OWLEDGE Aww THE BARN Administration and faculty ill .f fi VERY RILYEREND IOSEPH U. FITZGERALD, 5.1 PI'CSI'cfC7lf REV. LAURENCE C. LANGGLITI-I, 5.1. Dean Av! Aiwa' REV. GEORGE S. MAI-IAN, SI Assistant Dean fl 3 5-.L ' - REV, GEORGE H. MfC1ARRUN,5.1. .Atlfllillibf mlur' Wg mf Q REV. THOMAS F. LYONS. 5.1 Dram of .Mon 5 f sLfA l --26-- REV. HARRY L. HUSS, 5.1. Treasurer N, l MR. RICHARD E. BARRQWS, A.B Lilvrarian run' MR. EUGENE M. GALLIGAN, MA. Dirvrtof' of Pnlrlic Rclatiorls MR. ROBERT F. PITT, M.S Registrar 1 Six JOHN A. BARONE, Ph.D. Chemistry REV. IOHN L. CLANCY, S.I. Philosophy - Religion .H-.,.V,,,., . rv- - -1., l I-fkvcxf? ' ' ?' nw E x, i fi ,' ' , . wi, ' ' F l5L'i ,. '. - ,A Y hx' ,yi W N.. Lawn!-,ling I . - ' . -- bg ..,5 . ' 'I , 'l,-in ' -I.. '31 - -'94 X JJLQ uf- ' , . if f' , .W ! ,' 1, , . gi ,, f,.-,ffm zfkffz 5525555 1 555-55 1 mia-1 .?f-.ff:mQ.2M:f+sf MR. IOI-IN F. CGDY Accounting REV. IQHN D. CRQWLEY, 5.1. Philosophy - Religion 'greg I . 5 1-Li MR. CARMEN F. DONNARUMMA History MR. THOMAS FITZPATRICK Auuo11r1tir1g - Econornics REV. GEORGE R. PUIR, S.I Philosophy MR. MARIO F. GUARCELLO Italian and Spanish K REY. VVILLIAM GUINDGN. 5.1. REV Physics EDMUND I. HOGAN. 5.1. Religion TAY ff Q! Sr '4 . x E -f 5,- REV. GERALD E HLITGHINSON. ST. REX' C:.C,...-3... GERALD A. RINSELLA. 5.1 Hff:cr1.- ti M Rn- Q-' -A 5' X30 'Q- REV. QERARD M. LANDREY, 5.1. REV- C,,C,,,,my ROBERT B. MAC DQNNELL, 5.1 Matlzerrlatics - Physics REV. MR. IAMES F. LIEBKE ARTHUR A. MAC GILLIVRAY, Anmzzntiny - Bzzmwss - Euononm EI1g1iS11 S, r S is , Ng? - 3 2-- REV. IGSEPI-I M, MANNING, SI. German - Greek - Latin - Religion MR, MATTHEW MC CARTHY Government - History Wi' A 'f r E V. F V-.V.. . REV. T, EVERETT MC PEAKE, 5.1 Education MR. IOI-IN A. MEANEY English - Latin REV. LAURENCE S. MULLIN, SI. MR' STEPHEN QBRIEN Philosophy - Rcligion REV. 1oHN P. MURRAY Sl M .watlwnzatics .. i ww I .V 'Y,f 5' R. K Business Law VVILLIAM E. PERRAULT fwatlzcnmtics y , ll .tr . S ff..-' MR. ARTHUR R. RIEL, IR. MR. DQNALD ROSS English - French Biology MAURICE E. RQGALIN, Ph.D REV. GABRIEL G. RYAN, 5.1 Education Economics - Sociology .nh-F' ..-35-- 'FN X REV. FRANCIS B. SARIEANT, SI Philosophy - Religion REV. IOSEPH S. SLIANNELI.. Sl. lfnlqlisli - Rcligion REV. FRANCIS A. SMALL, Sl History - Government MR. CHESTER I. STUART Education - Gcrman i bk C:- MR. IAMES P. VAIL Sociology REV. IAMES A. WALSH. French - Religion iii--i .V af. - 15 REV. FRANCIS X. WILKIE, SI Biology -If x'X,ff Z ,ff fe -1 .y ! H? , Q ,f N. .. LN 51 xx T' QA 'x. Yr ww- ' ' ' ' N7 1 M-v-e...,,,,,,MNv F fx ?-YXvi5K.i.'-X lx Seniors IOSEPH A. MC ENANY, President G IUSEPH D. CUONIQ, VicC-Prcsidcrll - 44 , Luv!! 'Q ROBERT I-I. WAKIN, T SMQQEQ IANTES DUI-IENY, Secretary S. , 7i?335 Q, ., A Q . ,gy-'-.Q 'T QQQQ.-2fi4.llf1'i-V.' ,,'..Qf' www ' 1 ,, - ' ' vs, am- ,1,??fZj' will Q .. ',1:f,,-ggngvq 13321-5:4 .X V' L., .x .g,.,,, Q3 .AA-4 . - fy ,gui gh , : ' ' .bl - x1:.:f ' it - .. - -45 J' FC3SUfCf I Q I I H HAROLD F. MULLEN, IR., Student Council President swam? DOMINIC A. ALITUORI. Sodality lircfcut --q5A- FRANCIS E. WOODS, Editor-in-Chief, MANOR 5536636 CHARLES E. BLACK, Editor-in-Chief. STAU fAIRFlELD UNIVERSITY FAIRFIELD. Conn. M4 7m 204 43 llonor Society All' Ea,-iid? X1 fi? , r' df DOMINIC A. AUTLIORI CHARLES E. BLACK .2 IAMES H. ASPINWALI., III lv. f x ROBERT T. CONROY IAMES D. EPLETT .. ffv F 4 my ROBERT I. DRONGOSKI G. GLENN HAWMAN 1oHN P. FRAY, JR. HAROLD F. MULLEN, IR DANIEL R. MULLINS IOHN 1. RELIHAN, JR. ELLIOT L. PIERSON MARTIN I. TRACY GEORGE B. THOMAS IOHN 1. WALSH FRANCIS E. WOODS RAYMOND B. YUSKAUSKAS VINCENT ALBAN Bachelor of Social Science Education SALVATORE ALLEVI Bachelor of Social Science Sociology Maw' GERARD N. ALTIERI Bachelor of Business Administration Business IOSEPH P. ALTIERI Bachelor of Social Science Sociology DUMINIC A. AUTUORI Bachelor of Social Science Government FRANK M. BALDINO Bachelor of Science Biology PETER S. AMENTA Bachelor of Science Biology B' 1 N IAMES H. ASPINWALL, Ill 5 f 7 Bachelor of Arts ,IS- History STEPHEN BARANYAR Bachelor of Business Administration Economics DAVID P. BARRY, IR. Bachelor of Business Administration Business f E BERNARD P, BEGLANE Bachelor o Social Science Education WILLIAM F. BENNETT Bachelor of Business Administration Accounting fi I CHARLES E. BLACK Bachelor of Social Science Education ROBERT S. BOHMAN Bachelor of .Science Mathematics HARRY T. BERGIN, IR Bachelor of Social Science Government IOHN I. BIERGEL Bachelor of Arts Sociology wi' RICHARD BOLAND Bachelor of Business Administration Business RAYMOND P. BOUCHARD Bachelor of Science Mathematics 'fwwfg 4. ' LAWRENCE D. BOURDEAU Bachelor of Science Matheirzatics IOHN BQYLE Bachelor of Social Science Sociology DONALD F. BROWN Bachelor of Business Administration Business ALBERT W. BRUDER Bachelor of Business Administration Business HORACE M. BRIDGEWATER Bachelor of Arts English IOHN I. BRODERICK, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Economics N. 5. get 5385.4 WILLIAM F. BUCHTMANN Bachelor of Social Science Government CASPER H. BURKE Bachelor of Science Biology as 3 THOMAS P. BYRNE Bachelor of Business Administration Accounting IAMES CANNQN, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Sociology WILLIAM I. CLIFFORD Bachelor of Social Science Economics IOHN LIONNELL Bazclrcloz' of Social Science Economics EDWARD CAPASSE Bachelor of Social Science Government IOSEPH F. CARUSO Bachelor of Science Biology A 1' RQBERT T. CONROY Bachelor of Social Science Sociology IAMES M. CQNVERY Bachelor of Social Science Education ans lewd i K. DONALD COYLE Bachelor of Social Science Economics IOSEPH D. CUOMO Bachelor of Social Science Sociology si., ROBERT D. DELANEY Bachelor of Business Administration Accounting ROBERT DEL VECCHIO Bachclor of Scicncc Biology IAMES C. DEAKIN Bachelor of Business Administration Economics WILLIAM M. DE GIOIA Bachelor of Business Administration Business 6 x THOMAS G. DESY Bachelor of Business Administration Economics THQMAS DEVINE Bachelor of Business Administration Business 0' I' -.rf mmf' DANIEL DINAN Bachelor of Social Science Governrnent IAMES DINNAN Bachelor of Social Science Education if EDWARD D. DOWLING, III Bachelor of Social Science History RAYMOND DOYLE Bachelor of Social Science Government S IAMES I. DOHENY, IR. Bachelor of Science Biology THEODORE A. DONAHUE Bachelor of Social Science Education ROBERT DRONGOSKI Bachelor of Science Physics HENRY E. DUBRET Bachelor of Social Science Economics ICI-IN DUHON Bachelor of Science Physics IAMES D. EPLETT Bachelor of Science Biology 'YW QT- ff V an f 4, ' one Q IOHN R. EVANKO Bachelor of Social Science EDWARD F. FENTON Bachelor of Business Aclminisfration Business MAllRlQilf FHNTUN limelwclol' of Aria lW.'1tl1ern.'1tics Sociology G IOHN W. FEDORS if f Bacl1eQ3l' of Science ini' zology xr 7O - Q CORNELIUS I. FITZPATRICK, IR. Bachelor of Arts English IOSEPI-I D. FORTE Bachelor of Business Administration Business qs- an-wg DAVID R. FORTLINA Bachelor of Science Biology EDWIN M. FOSTER Bachelor of Business Administration Business I all 1-ui, v IOSEPH D. GABRIEL Bachelor of Business Administration Business EDVVARU GALLA Bachelor of Science Biology my ,vi rs - x ' Sf' .1 , Y- ' -1, ,qs -.72,- IOHN P. PRAY, IR. Bachelor of Arts Government FERNANDO V. FRILLICI Bachelor of Science Biology IAMES D. GARRITY Bachelor of Science Biology WILLIAM GEGRGE Bachelor of Science Biology M .4 his l x Q 'S uf? 'M BERNARD A. GILHULY, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Sociology JAMES V. GRANITTO, IR. Bachelor of Business Administration Business lx'x LAWRENCE F. HALMECK Bachelor of Social Science Economics G. GLENN HAWMAN Bachelor of Arts History GWEN I. GROARK, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Economics FREDERICK W. I-IAFFNER, IR. 5 ' Bachelor of Business Administration f ,74- Business 1 ROBERT T. HAYDEN Bachelor of Science Biology EDWARD W. HERBERT Bachelor of Social Science Economics ROBERT HERLIHY Bachelof of Social Science Economics IOI-IN M. I-IICKSON Bachelor of Business Administration Business ai a f X -x - DONALD E. HOEFLER -4 Bachelor of Social Science .55 . 'i RONALD M. HUNTS Baclzeloi' of Business Ailministration Accounting It DSHPH N. IAQ IUC ENE lifulzeloi' of Scicn A lazrlicilmii V5 Sociology RICHARD HOGAN Bachelor of Social Science Education io' str? Q-I I xv WALTER S. IWANICKI Baclieloi' of Social Science Sociology KENNETH D. IAKABCIN Bachelor of Science Biology QV' JOSEPH V. KEHOE, IR Bachelor of Social Science Sociology EDWARD KELLEY Bachelor of Social Science Education 'T 151 IOHN L. KIBBE Bachelor of Social Science Sociology EIJMLINIJ F. KIELY Bachelor of Science Plzysics GEORGE P. KELLY Bachelor of Social Science Education WILLIS C. KELLY Bachelor of Science Biology ALFRED C. KINGSTON Bachelor of Social Science Education ROBERT D. KRANYIK Bachelor of Social Science Sociology wiv EDMUND 1. KuLow1EC Bachelor of Science lwathernatics ARTHUR B. LANDRY, IR. Bachelor of .Science Biology if V mf jf 4 ,L v: r 5 RICHARD LINDSTRQM Bachelor of Arts Education IAMES LINEHAN, IR. Bachelor of Business Administration Business RICHARD P. LANDY Bachelor of Social Science Sociology IOSEPH I. LESKO Bachelor of Social Science Government ANTHONY LCMAZZO Bachelor of Science Physics DOMINICK M. LONARDO Bachelor of Social Science Education F .3 I A A IAMES M. LONG Bachelor of Social Science wnw-M4' . ' Sociology THQMAS LQRICCO Bachelor of Business Aclininistration Accounting -,81-... i ,X , IRS ' ' 2 ' I Mai, is. Q, 'f , QV Q, c -4 4 - 4.3 .-. A1 . ' ' JV. - . . 1' -.' ' .. ' I '-, 'L3 ,Q .. IX. A ,, '- 'M --1 S. ' fs.. - .f -hqw, .sw Y. 'qt' -2 aw. ' ' . jiri., Ax. -7.3 ju. IOHN D. IVIAHANEY Bachelor of Social Science Government FRANK A. MAHONEY, IR. Bachelor of Social Sciencc l5dllI'illlOl'I ,fm .X :xiii X. 1 Z: .Qs .,, X. - ld. vc: I .. 82..- WILLIAM LLIDDY Bachelor of Business Administration Accounting WILLIAM T. IVIAHAN Bachelor of Social Science Government 1 6 . ' 1, WILLIAM T. MARRON Bachelor of Social Science Education VICTOR L. MARTIN Bachelor of Business Administration Business 3, iiii gif 1101? 4 , 1 I , M L G- WILLIAM F. MARTIN Bachelor of Social Science Economics RALPH P. MASTRANGELO Bachelor of Science M' athenzatics 1 if if X CHARLES H. MAYONE, IR Bachelor of Social Science Sociology ROBERT H. Mc'COY. IR. Bachelor of Arts Pre-Medical ARLE5 IJ, MQCLIILOUCH lfflclrclcu' Ol Arfx pri' lVlc'clic'al Q RICHARD A. MCCORMICK . Bachelor of Social Science ,-Arg. Education . ,'..A .,, I r Lf arf' -3-1. IOSEPH A. IVICENANY Bachelor of Social Science Education FRANCIS I. MCGGULDRICK, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Government ff 'Ui' , ':' :' .11 1.3! 2 ' - mga- 1-ff v:g:E5: ,if? ' , .-1-:-:fa 9--156' ,52- ,5:3.g.?A6' ::::3.g:.: ,mg ,cfkkwf 45. Av' WILLIAM I. EDWARD MCGRATH Bachelor of Business Administration Economics WILLIAM EUGENE MCGRATI-I, IR Bachelor of Business Administration Business fi Ii FRANK A. Mi:LAUGHLlN Bachclor of Social Science History ROBERT D. MiiLEAN Bachelor of Social Science lfconomics is if IAMES F. MCGUIRE Bachelor of Social Science Government ICHN H. MCHUGH, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Government WILLIAM MCNAMARA Bachelor of Social Science Education EDWARD W. MCPADDEN, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Government BRENDON R. MERMANN Bachelor of Social Science Education 101-IN M. MESTER Bachelor of Business Administration V Business VINCENT I. MINGRONE Bachelor of Science Biology IUHN A. IVIIOLENE Bachelor of Social Science liclucation IOSEPH MILEWSKI Bachelor of Social Science Government WILLIAM F. MILLER, II Bachelor of Social Science Education CHARLES W. MIZAK Bachelor of Social Science Government IGHN MOFFETT Bachelor of Social Science Government 'WW MS? ,. --M fun. e 'T1 ,ff GERARD A. MQHYDE Bachelor of Science Matlierizatics THOMAS F. MOLAN PHY Bachelor of Arts English - f' S 1 1oHN 1. MULLANEY, IR. Bachelor of Business Administration Business HAROLD F. MULLEN, IR. Bachelor of Science Biology IOSEPH M. MONACO Bachelor of Social Science Economics THOMAS E. MULDOON Bachelor of Social Science Government DANIEL R. MULLINS Bachelor of Business Administration Business IOI-IN I-I. MLIRREN Bachelor of Arts English ual' Q, L91- 939 44 IAIVIES I. MUSANTE Bachelor of Social Science Economics EUGENE F. NAVETSKI Bachelor of Business Administration Economics IOSEPH P. NUCERA Bachelor of Social Science History RICHARD D. OCONNELL' Bachelor of Social Science Sociology ROBERT I. NEVERTON Bachelor of Arts Pre-Medical IAMES D. NOLAN Bachelor of Arts Pre-Medical FRANK D. OCONNOR Bachelor of Science Mathematics IOHN R. OCONNOR Bachelor of Social Science History EDWARD O'I-IARA, IR Bachelor of Science lwathematics EUGENE F. OHARA Bachelor of Science Matheziiatics 1 z ,Ei Q GEORGE E, PIEGER, JR. Bachelor of Science ' Biology , ELLIOT L. PIERSON Bachelor of Scicncc lwathcmatics BERNARD M. O'MEARA Bachelor of Social Science History FRANCIS G. PHILBIN Bachelor of Arts Pre-Medical Q Q- X 'Y x ,Zi ov '91 tal :- 7.11 AQ' -'xfg RAYMOND I. PLOUFFE Bachelor of Social Science Sociology ROBERT E. POELTL Bachelor of Science Physics IOHN QUINN Bachelor of Science Biology THOMAS F. REILLY Bachelor of Business Administration Economics IOHN P. ROGOWSKI Bachelor of Science Biology NICHOLAS A. ROSA Bachelor of Social Science Government IOHN RELIHAN, IR. Bachelor of Arts History FREDERICK I. ROBACK Bachelor of Social Science Economics THOMAS V. ROSE Bachelor of Social Science Education GENNARO A. RUSSO Bachelor of Business Administration Economics ,. AX, . Qs: DONALD H. SALTUS Bachelor of Social Scicncc Education IUHN SAPITQWICZ, IR Baclzcloz' of Scicncc Physics vs' t 2,- 'Ss WILLIAM F. SCHLENK Bachelor of Science lVIathematics IOHN F. SHEEHY, IR. Bachclor of Social Science Education IOHN H. SAUNTRY Bachelor of Science Biology CASPER A. SCALZI Bachelor of Science Mathematics ff. CHARLES R. SHIMKUS Bachelor of Science Matherizatics EVANGELOS SILQS Bachelor of Business Adzninistration Business ICSEPH SILVA Bachelor of Social Science Government CHARLES E. SOMERS Bachelor of Social Science Economics EDWIN SPERRY. IR. Bachelor of Social Science CONRAD STERNLQHAK Bachelor of Social Science Gorernrnerit WlI.l.lAM A. 5'l'Ul7l,ANl Bachelor of Science Biology Education f Q A ROBERT H. STEELE Y . Bachelor of Business Administration '1 Business 't A :M ,I L Q' V E' .gh TX. 3 alOO' iii WILLIAM B. SULLIVAN Bachelor of Social Science Government FREDERICK TADDEO Bachelor of Social Science Economics 'V 417 Nur I FRED W. TARTARO Bachelor of Social Science Education RQBERT B. TAYLOR Bachelor of Science Biology IAMES F. Tl-IURSTON, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Education IOHN TOLNAY Bachelor of Social Scicncc Sociology ROBERT F. TERIFAY Bachelor of Science Mathematics GEORGE B. THOMAS Bachelor of Arts Education MARTIN TRACY Bachelor of Arts History STANLEY E. TURSKI Bachelor of Science Biology 3 'S l ,fl ICHN TWOMEY, IR. Bachelor of Social Science Sociology THOMAS A. VISCQUNT Bachelor of Social Scicncc Economics aff. Q' xi WILLIAM WALKO Bachelor of Arts Pre-Medical IOHN WALSH Bachelor of Busincss Administration Business THOMAS VITELLI Bachelor of Arts Education ROBERT H. WAKIN Bachelor of Science Biology 'f ROBERT R. WALSH Bachelor of Business Administration Business RCBERT C. WELCH Bachelor of Social Science Economics 1' .f p wi' ROBERT L. WHITE Bachelor of Social Science History IOSEPH G. WIHBEY Bachelor of Science Biology RAYMOND B. YUSKALISKAS Bachelor of Social Science Education FRANCIS E. WOODS Bachelor of Social Science Education Zzavunea elafu Wfemdeu ALAIMO, BENJAMIN HENRY ALBERGHINI, RICHARD RAYMOND AMAND, PIERRE ALBERT ANTONIK, JOSEPH PAUL AULEBACH, RICHARD HERMAN AUGUR, WALTER JOSEPH BERNSTEIN, LOUIS ROBERT BOURNE, PETER HUMPHRIES BOBKO, RAYMOND CHARLES BOYLE, JOSEPH MATTHEW BRIGGS, ALFRED C., JR. BRYAN, DONALD JOSEPH BUDRAITIS, TADAS BURNS, PHILIP MICHAEL, JR. CAMARDA, JOHN FREDERICK CANFIELD, EDWARD BERNARD CARBONE, FRANK CELONE, JAMES ANTHONY CERVO, NATHAN ANTHONY CIERI, DOMINICK JOSEPH, JR. CLARK, JOHN RICHARD, JR. COCOLIS, JAMES JOHN CONNOLLY, KEVIN KEARNS CONNORS, TERRENCE, J., JR. CONWAY, WILLIAM JAMES COONEY, EDWARD MANSFIELD CREGAN, JAMES DANIEL D'ATTELO, EDMUND ANTHONY DAVIS, 'THOMAS JOSEPH DELANO, JOSEPH FRANK DELVY, FRANK KAVIER DELVY, HENRY A., JR. DIETER, JOHN JOSEPH DONAHUE, THEODORE PETER DONINO, LAURENCE FRANCIS DUBIN, WILLIAM MARTIN DUFFY, JAMES PATRICK FITZPATRICK, WESLEY FENTON, JR. FRAY, JAMES GILFRED FUTIE, BENJAMIN JOHN GALLUP, DONALD TRUMAN GAVLICK, RICHARD E. GESUALDI, VITO LOUIS GILES, CHARLES MONROE GRIFFIN, ROBERT EDWARD GUZZI, JAMES DAVID HEAPHY, JOSEPH EDWARD HOOD, GEORGE JOSEPH, JR. HOYT, JOHN LEROY HURLEY, PHILIP DONALD CNUKD JAGOE, DONALD HOWARD JOHNSON, ROBERT WILLIAM KEEHAN, LEO FRANCIS KEELER, RUSSELL THOMAS KOTERBAY, JOHN STEPHEN, JR. KOVALENKO, VLADIMIR KRUKOWSKI, JOHN SEBASTIAN LAMBERT, RICHARD GREGORY LANE, FRANCIS FIELY LANNON, JOHN ALAN LEIGH, LESLIE J. LIPNICKAS, JOSEPH VINCENT, JR MALONEY, DONALD WILLIAM MASSARIA, MICHAEL JOSEPH MASTROIANNI, PAUL CHARLES MCCARTHY, JOHN ROBERT MQMAHON, JAMES TERRENCE MOSCARDINI, ALEXANDER MOZZICATO, FRANK RUSSELL MURPHY, JAMES FRANCIS MURPHY, JOHN KENDALL NICHOLSON, JOHN JOSEPH NOLAN, ROBERT LAURENCE O'BRIEN, WILLIAM JAY O'CALLAGHAN, EUGENE FRANCIS JR O'CONNELL, LAURENCE HOEY O'CONNELL, STEPHEN JOSEPH POLOWY, JOHN PROVENZANO, ALBERT M, REMLIN, JOHN WILLIAM ROGERS, WILLIAM STEPHEN SCHULTZ, ROBERT THOMAS M. SERAFIN, PETER MITCHEL SHARP, JOHN KEEN SHEEHAN, MARK THOMAS, JR. SINCLAIR, ALBERT FRANCIS SIROTNAK, ROBERT SISK, RALPH EDWARD SMITH, RICHARD JOSEPH SQUILLANTE, EMILIO STEVENS, JOHN HAROLD TADDEO, DANIEL A. TUTTLE, JOSEPH TYLER, GRANT HOBSON VERNALE, CHARLES ANGELO VERRILLI, EUGENE RALPH VISOKAY, RICHARD WILLIAM VLASTARIS, JAMES GEORGE WALKER, BERNARD F. WEBER, GEORGE HENRY -107- WH T WE REMEMBER F5 ln late September of 1948, we wouldn't want to be pressed for details, the historians remind us that as freshmen we registered. paid fees, bought our books, and attended the opening Mass of the Holy Ghost. Cloud-wrapped as we were, we wouldnt recall ex- actly how we felt or who was who. but there are some details that remain. Qur Dean, Father Langguth. we do recall. addressed us with a welcoming speech to Fairfield, emphasizing the need for tradi- tions in college life and reminding us that we must help in estab- lishing them. That gave us an introductory sense of responsibility. And then Father Rector. according to a tradition which we had no hand in and which, shall we say, we generally approved, pro- claimed a Schola Brevisf' a term that even those who knew little Latin seemed to understand. Let the psychologists tell us why we remember what we do. but that is another problem than ours. Here is the hwhatf' There were the first few days of classes made more fascinating than they were intended to be by a shortage of blackboards and the necessi- ty of walking to Berchmans for lunch. Some preferred the more apt adjective, 'fdrollf' The time that it took to become familiar with the unique system of room numbers -- lOl for a first floor room and 202 for a second - seemed endless for the less mathe- matically inclined. but this was a minor difficulty soon forgotten in the maelstrom of assignments. Outside of classes what happened? The mimeographed F111- criim appeared on the table in the first corridor. Sodality meetings began, and at the end of October we had a Harvesting Dance in llerchmans. A DeSante trio performed for our young and holy group somewhat appositely, we thought while ferry Nlohyde. lim l,inehan, Bob VValsh, and lack Ullonnor were responsible for committee arrangements. Our track team defeated Providence, and a basketball rally in December, prior to the Pratt game. was what they call a resound- ing success because of the acoustics arrangements in the Berch- mans auditorium. That fifth period rally. by the way, seemed abnormally late in the afternoon for those who were accustomed -f 103 - to disappearances after the third hour, but now with machinations of the devil called the seventh hour we realize there was nothing to complain about. A fight song, written by Coach Dunn, became our Men in Red and the colleges signature on radio and Cvlee Club programs. Cheerleaders Bill McGrath, Dave Barry, and loc Forte were as hoarse as Citation. Well, the mid-term exams came and went k as is their wont - and then we had the consolation of a retreat with Father Hogan to take razor-and-gun thoughts from our minds. A'What doth it profit a man . . . ? was a familiar Xaverian quotation we all re- membered. We weren't gaining the whole world, we insist, when we danced at the mid-winter carnival to Al Gentiles music shortly afterwards, thinking without compunction that St. Francis would not have minded our few hours of pleasant relaxation. Then there were new cafeteria arrangements, a bazaar for the building fund, and a new student council constitution that took up our interests. Rhetoric and its inherent diplomacy were helpful to the Public Affairs Club when it went to Hartford for the Connecti- cut lntercollegiate Student Legislature. Between classes and a cornucopia of work we managed to take interest in the formation of the Waterbury Club, the first of such regional seances, the performance of the Microphone Players in a thing called The China Cat --A AFur-raising' said Variety -- and the Glee Club's appcarance at New Haven over WNHC as well as at St. Andrew's Home . . . wherever that might be. We had no doubts, however, that they were sensayshunal. An outsider might think, and you can't blame him, that all we were interested in was dances and sports. The Knights of Xavier came up with an April affair with Ioey Sal's orchestra, and the spring prom - a Ronnie Rommel routine - was arranged by Iohn O'Connor, Bob Walsh, Kendall Murphy, and Iohn Reilly at the Glorieta Manor. The baseballers tied the score in a game with Bridgeport. and our track and basketball teams conducted them- selves like gentlemen as well as sports. Of course, our primary interests were academic. President Harold Mullen, Vice-President Ioe Kehoe. Treasurer Fred Tar- taro, and Secretary Charlie Vernale became our elected ollicers: Father Wilkie formed a Biology Club. and exams again had a way of looming at us. Fortified with the reassurance that previous freshmen had gone through it all, we began our resorting of the semesters notes, somehow completed the two interrogatory weeks. and submitted to the sweating-out period known as the pre-mark jittersf' n...,,1f.. -5-h Mg ...x A ,jigs-. - g at jx, ' 1... . N' f3'r'f'?..?f'2 5?-T4 . sf. -' fffgfhnlir ww-u. we , , W 5 lil it L -l09- Ei For some there was a summer of vacation, and for others a recapitulatory period spent by the sound near beautiful Fairfield University, in the foothills of the Berkshires. But for all. on our return. there was a new Dean, the Reverend William F.. FitzGerald, with Father Lang- guth as his assistant. Father Edmond Walsh, however, was still our Dean of Men, and the rules of appropriate apparel on the campus were still in effect Y sometimes effected. shall we say. bv Fr. Wzilsh's strong arm on a weak shoulder. We had, it must be admitted. a sense of the tradition we were called upon to perpetuate. The Sophomore year was broken open by a welcome dance in Berchmans. with Charles Black. Harold Mullen, john Dieter, Fred Tartaro, Cass Burke, Conrad Sternchak, Ioe Ke- hoe, and Fernando Frillici as committeemen. A lack Ross and his band, with freshmen Nlark Lolatte and Iohn Bigley entertaining during the intermission. made things pleasant. The Fulcrum died and replacing the mimeographed sheet was The Stag, our well-read local college newspiece. How we were growing! A new basketball coach. Bob Noonan. came along. a pep rally popped -0 with Bernie Beglane conducting - and another basketball sea- son began. Woiild wonders never cease? The Glee Club had a Christmas concert appearance with the Connecticut Symphony: Rev. Arthur lVlcGratty, author and ex-Marine chaplain with a Brooklyn accent and stories to go with it l l've got a million of 'em l, gave an inspiring re- treat: and, as usual, the mid-winter carnival dance followed. This was the first of the famous Ice Carvings affairs that attracted wide publicity. and there was Al l..ombardy's music to dance to. Our Rector, Father Iames H. Dolan, went off to Boston at this time to be Vice-Pro- vincial of New England. and Father FitzGerald took over rectorial duties along with his dean- ship position. lt seemed like Iesuit propaganda when our next big news item featured Father Iohn C. Ford as the guest speaker on the Knights of Xavier program. He thought that we ,PNE A should be better acquainted with problems about alcoholism, and those who were lucky enough to attend listened and all of us learned. Toward the end of the year a number of affairs jumped up: the Radio Club went on the air with the Passion series called The Living Godnr a Glee Club concert and dance brought Fairfield together with Albertus Magnus College: and the college politicos went to Hartford for the CISL. jack O'Connell chairmaned the Sophomore Prom, with the assistance of john Kush, joe lVlcEnany, Charles Black, john Broderick, Conrad Sternchak, Richard Landy, Bob Steele, Harold Mullen, and Paul McCarthy. This was at the Ritz Ballroom where Mal t0ld Reliablel Hallett and his boys attended to the musical chores. There was no melody, how- ever, that we could sing during the final examinations that a brief time before had loomed. especially during the three-hour Rhetoric stint that we struggled through. juniors? That we were when our Acting Rector, Fr. FitzGerald, opened the year with the traditional Mass of the Holy Ghost, followed by a Reception Day during which the college clubs dared to entice new members into their roster. The cafeteria was decorated festively, and a punch-doughnuts-coffee combination eased the conversation. A junior-Senior Varsity Drag twhatever that meansj was the occasion of a Hugh Golden orchestra appearance in Berch- mans, while the Radio Clubs 'Fairfield University lnterprets the News -a organized by Mr. Meaney - began its weekly series over WICC. White lines had appeared in the parking lot in an effort to bring order out of chaos, and the town of Fairfield selectmen diplomatically suggested to us that they were not in favor of renaming North Benson Road by the more euphonious Indianapolis Speedway. Cvala was the word for our junior Logic Specimen with the faculty members starring as Kefauver questioners. There was a general feeling that the kind of people who never win a lot- tery ticket would thoroughly enjoy this performance which, by the way, ended when the mem- orable ten-tailed cat -V formulated by one sadist e was syllogized. It was only this catastro- phe that was objected to by admirers, like Fr. lVlacCiillivray, of the Felidac who offered the --iii- Ml. 1 N R ff ra 1 ft' h3W'XTN:,- i 1 f'L Ts, , A., N N. . , qu '3- ..., 5 cat's point of view: 'AThis was the kind of speculative falderal on which humanity is forever wasting its time. Cats' viewpoints. however. were shunted when some refreshing soul reminded us that here, in roto, was but a rehearsal for the Iunior Oral at the end of the year. ln October of that 1950 year Fr. Dolan came back to us as Rector while our Fr. FitzGerald went on to Boston as Provincial of the New England lesuits. Big things happened and they loomed too. Graduation loomed when the jeweler came to fit tis for our rings, designed by Connie Sternehak. And our Glee Club joined with St. Ioseph's College for a performance, as well as with the Connecticut Symphony in their second Christmas program. There were more exams, a retreat with Father Richard Hegarty l Play the manl and There are no bargains in this worldul. and an- other mid-winter ice-carnival with Gene Willianis' music. Fr. Lyons arrived, replacing Fr. Saunders in the Dean of Mens job, and a new stock of fancier neckties went on display in his ofllce. When we returned for the 1951 semester, we wondered why the Xavier halls were not as crowded as before. and then we heard that Mr, lames P. l You're out of uniform, boylul Vail had gone toboganning down his front steps and was convalescing with three fractured vertebrae at Bridgeport Hospital. Things dehnitely were not the same until the building swayed with the news that the Red Stags had beaten the Cinderella Team of Bridgeport in basket- ball and had won an invitation to the NAIB tourney in Medford. Signs the like of which had never been seen before appeared in the cafeteria lnow Markoxfic Halll and the team was nominated for honorary membership in the Hall of Fame. Coach lim Hanrahan was the man of the hour, and the school closed in order that stu- dents might go to Medford -ef with the warning, however, that Boston's South Station was not to be brought back as a souvenir. Iunior Week was memorable, s thanks to coininitteemen Ed Kelley and loc Cuomo for the Communion Breakfast talk by Knights of Columbus director Williziiii Mulligan: to Bernie Beg- lane for the Smoker and boxing show by the Bridgeport Police Athletic League and a talk by Burt Shurtlell. ex-wrestler and ami- able card: to lim Long, Connie Sternchak. loc VVihbey, Will Kelly. Charlie Vernale, Tom l,oRicco, Gerry Russo, lohn Fray. and Bob Conroy for the lunior Prom at Actors Colony lnn in Derby. For our Senior ollices we placed loc lVlcEnany as President. Ioe Cuomo Vice-President. lim Doheny Secretary, and Bob Wak- 112W- in Treasurer, but before they could act in their capacity as fourth year men there were some little things called exams that they and we had to suffer. 'AWho's on your oral board?' was a popular question we had never asked before. Retreat began our Senior year with Rev. George McCabe Qwith his one-way ticket and Hphfffftnj, followed by the solemn Mass celebrated by Father Dolan, and Freshman Day with its colorful booths and recruiting club officers. A Harvest Hop opened the social activities when Hugh Golden's boys played in the corn husk-and- pumpkin atmosphere of well-patronized Berchmans. A group of Iuniors joined our Seniors fF,d Mcpadden, lim Aspin wall, Connie - the Voice 1 Sternchak, Bob Wakin, and Ralph Mastrangeloj to form the entertainment committee Only a few weeks had passed when our new Rector, Rev Ioseph D. FitzGerald, succeeded Father Dolan. A magazine drive spurred on by music from the Dixieland Club, admonitions from The Stag, and much leg work by team captains and team members resulted in a S1500 profit for our depleted class treasury. And then HAn Evening at the lVlanor affair, to raise money for the year book - a charitable enterprise 4 netted a few cents over ten dol lars. But The Manor with its firm devotion to Saint ude didn't mind. Court jester Ioe Forte with a Brink's facial scared the ladies while Frank Woods, lack Walsh, and Bill Miller as serfs in bur lap sacks serfed refreshments. The Bridgeport Club dance was remembered for, among other things, its decorations: but whoever collected that much tinfoil should, we say, cut down on his smoking. The Metropolitan boys' card party attempted to replace the now verboten card games once kibitzed in the cafeteria. And lest we repeat ourselves, the Water- bury and New Haven and Valley Clubs did things too, and they are faithfully recorded in another section. The mid-year's exams went by and we recuperated with the music of Ted Herbert, with committeemen Bill McGrath and com- pany doing yeomanlike work. Mr. Simon Harak returned, after a serious illness, to guide the Glee Club that had been ably batoned by George Thomas in a difficult substitute role, Sports enthusiasts honored Ioe Kehoe when he scored his thousandth point and the politicos went to Hartford again, with lim Aspinwall, Iohn Boyle, Marshall Bridgewater, Bill Buchtmann, lim Dinnan, Iohn Fray, and Iohn Relihan making the trip. The Business Club made head- -113- N lines li.e. of The Stagl when its guest speaker Governor Iohn Lodge made his appearance at a dinner. The illiianor finally appeared too as although the members ol the stall' hatl their worriecl moments: Father Leo O'Keefe had giv- en the senior retreat hefore the Easter vacation: what were really final exams Came anrl went. That is the llfty-two story as we see it. Anal now that we loolt hack upon it all, it was one of the shortest stories ever loltl. Z ...Allin Cf!-xr-X XX QD ll-E fn., f gl ff- . Q xi ,B TLA 1' .W ,Mw- ,, Lfffiffgi ' 4-g A :Ski vu 1 , , :, b -V -fe . fr SEL I W 'if' G X X '51 L .I 47 f 1 f nl Q M42 if F! ,f:QlJgg,,?. . zfbf U .1 3 uw...,- G ' N ,I5 1 ,W 18- J. In 4 - x li ' ur 'F' bf-f 31: -it Lx Y Rx 112,-- H - N -'-,,,,... .fi ' A 22 vi' .ff f ,of T N-N, Z 1 5 --l23- p I . 12+W- K,-f' ww? Underclassmen ki t I 01644 of 1953 E 1 R .. A A .. 128- 4 v ' Rf X H3 , q N ' fd' .,,.i V am, :sr div' 'f 1 N. XA A Y' J ff 5' s M Q5 7 ,ff 1 X' -Q,-me , , .'2,f.L f.' . .,, .' Q. 1' 'Nw L f I N, ' 'Q 51 I gf , L. H.-K sm... W J 7 ,Q -v.., 7 N? '- Q E Q, 4 if f 1 Sw! W. - F 945 I E vm K 'S R , 7 uw Q fr Q ' We 5 ii , iw - : Vg' ,..,:ggj,ff 5 M l I -.L N Y e ,ffl ZZ - k, .. 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N., 1 :fl-1... .. r . ff . Mfg' fi 5 . 9 - ,Q s I1 ,E 1 5 52143 I f ., 5, -fm 1 , V ' f 1 ,.,.x-33. 1, 5 4 5 nb Mp I .1 X3 fgfg ' --'22 ' ' ., .wwfiv .: -my 1359: K f. ,- W , A 3 li! 1 .1 -umm' Rv' x A 7 .adv 1 5 im' fi 'v . r, ,. 55' 4 :Q f K Q f , f 251' ,, 1 if ,:?, ' fe f 3 X x x. , . ' - if , , 1 1 ,, V 'sl ,.-mfg? ' 1' : - ' , dat. V A' W fi' ' !s,gxz.:i,Qi, ,A W , .gyn- F?fa hmmm div' z 4-is 5225 IA ,ff Activities G L E E L LI B iam-. john P. ixitii-my llllease, pleasef Now watch ine. And with these words. fotto Voce, another concert begins. VX'li.it the audiences see and hear is somewhat ol a shattow of a Toscanini performance. we admit, hut it is a complimentary shadow, For lVlr. Harali has taken the niemhers through their paces so - sedulously that, though one might suspect a tired i-,N and perlunctory rendition, what frequently results is a freshness and a hright air. 'l'he medium of radio has offered an opportunity to hring music out of the school auditoriums and concert halls into televisionless homes throughout the area, And a further range was eXtended hy last seasons recordings that represented a gainul ol prograins ranging from Bach to Rodgers. The quality of the recordings and performance ioined to make it a worthwhile addition to any inusie lilwr.irv. Simon llarala - l-12 Through the assistance ol the Area Clubs on caiiipiis the choristers have made themselves known lo com inunities throughout the state. And aside from the cul tural aspects that might be considered in these hanilets they have proved Hnancial successes as well. They havt been seen and heard in Vtfaterbury, New llaven, An sonia, Hartford, Nliddletown, and in ljaridgeports Klein Memorial. The high point of the season - in previous years at the Waldorf-Astoria ballroom -aa was at the College of New Rochelle, where Mr. Harald, assisted by Faculty Moderator Rev. lohn P. Mtir- ray, offered his best talents. The tireless work of the rehearsal hall becomes elec- tric reality when the lads look up as they hear the familiar words, Please, please! Now watch me. And the con- cert has begun. - -f -mfr'-N-..--... -..f-12... W.. . .-.,.-f-N.,,,......,,f--N-w- -1434 40 'I-I4 - ...xr .J 1 'w ' . i --l45- PUBLIC AFF IRS CLUB Enliglitening and infornuitive were tlie talks ol invited speakers like our own Father Snriennt. former rector of Baghdad College. speaking on the Zionist movement in Palestine, as well as Rev. Iolm Knott. the director of the Cana movement in the Hartford diocese, who was concerned with particular influences affecting the family of today. A A Rev. Gabriel G. Ryan, Sl. Representing Fairfield at the spring convention of the New England Catholic Student Peace Federation at the College of Qur Lady of the Elms was the president Iohn Relihan who was also the secretary of the Peace Federation for the current year, The mock sessions of the Connecticut Intercollegiate Stu- dent Legislature, however, are the climax of the year's activities. This year the Fairfield men, conscious of the reputation made by previous groups, made their presence felt by the introduction of three bills on labor. This years undergraduates were not unaware of their being to1norrow's legislators. -147- at the annual NFCC5 convention. The family? This group worries about il. ll liar, set up nf ing less than a commission to study and report on the mtonoi and sociology of the family, to make surveys, and it has gonc In Boston to participate in a workshop on current family problt uf file t if t fa.-if-mg ff ,,,Q g, 1 aff- Tfze manor T .ti P, r lg 6 , f . , Z H 5 ' ammo Ng: ,YAY f' if' .95 jif ,.4.fQ:-'T E!,'!- FRANCIS WOODS 'W' Editor-in-Chief v ,952 Tai ' W- - lAMEs DOHDNY ' ' 4 Rev. Associate Editor Arthur A. MacGillivray. BUSINESS STAFF LITERARY STAFF IKUHN WALSH, Business Manager EIJVVARD Ki1i,I.i1x', Editor Robert Walsh Iames Musante Bernard Beglane William Eugene McGrath loseph Forte Harry Bergin Williain Edward McGrath Iohn Mullaney Glenn Hawman Ronald Hunts Iames Deakin lohn Fray Owen Groark William Mahan Harold Mullen Gennaro Russo Don Hoefler loseph Nucera David Barry Richard Quick Thomas Desy Thomas Reilly Ioseph Silva Ioseph Monaco Iohn Boyle Iames Dinnan Cornelius Fitzpatrick Martin Tracy Nlarshall Bridgewater lohn Relihan Casper Burke PHOTOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT LAYOUT DEPARTMENT lames Thurston EDWIN SPERRY, Editor Robert Dmngoski Iames Dirman Richard McCormick Ioseph Forte Dominick Lonardo Alfred Kingston RAYMOND Yilskixiiskxxs, Editor George Thomas Raymond Bouchard Stephen Baranyar Edward Capasse Eugene Navetski CONRAD STliRNcHAK. Artist -1' K' 5. F, Woods if ff X A ,, S K rf E. Kelley l- Walsh annie Vi E. Sperry R. Yuskauskas Qi' F5 0 rw 150-- xxx' i V : --r fi ii. gigs K . i.. '-1 X A . 'im-1 fffw 'manor GNMFD The same old story about the publishing of a year- book? You won't get it here. Of course there were the usual long hours, editors' meetings, schedules for photo- graphs, soliciting for advertising, trips here and trips there, and of course the grasping for a thought, a line, or even the nebulous word. THE Maison wont please all its readers, but our efforts were directed toward that goal. Nor is it expected that this years book will be awarded any Pulitzer Prize. Cn the other hand we don't expect any special award from Harvards Iampoon. 'THE lVlANOR is not to be considered a mirror in which the individual will see a perfect reflection of his own little life. Rather we hope that THE MANOI2 can be looked upon as a true and accurate account in words and pictures of general student life as it was known and lived by the meni- lwers of Fairfield University's Class of 1952. We do hope that in some picture, some story, or in a name, every member of the Class of 1952 will find some- thing that will allow him to say, This is our story, this is my story. -l51v ,-'tg J 5 A 1 . AAL..-APs-A-f!4g 'f SCD LITY UR L DY Ifxt'1'y Itwtttt t'ollt't1t'. no n1.1ttt'1' whcrt' It ts, l1.1w May and Octohcr, w1th tht' xxrckly 1'ct'1t.1t1on o11 1 xotI.1htv, .tntl tht' morc .1t't1x't' tht' soththty ts, thc twcry NIo11dz1y morning t1nttt'1' the ttttsptccs of Ont' wt' Itwtnt tx tht' t'ollt'gt'. 'ootlzthtx ', to Utility poo- l..1dy's Scction. Tht' Qlttholtt' Truth Scctton ths- plt: llltly ht' tl n..1l.1p1'op1s1n lor Akoltdtty '.4' nntl they trthutcs I'CtldtI1g n1.1ttt't', whtlt' tht' Mtsston Scctton ntlti not ht' xt'1'x' wrotnq, For Nut-h 1't'.1dt't's tt nnght collccts COINS vsccklv for tht' ht'nt'ht of lcstnt 1111s- ht nt'tt'w.tt'y In I't'tN'tlt xx I1.1t t'vt'1'y Clfttholtt' t'ollt'gt' :t1on.11'1t's tn I.1m.1it'.1 .tnd H.1gl1tl.1tl. xttttlvnt L11oxw, th.1t tht' Nothtlttv vxtsts to honor ftttt' l.ot'tl thtotttth M.11'x', Ht' h'1otltt'r, t'spt't'1.1llv tn Inst Yk'tll' tl scrtvs of hittlttl Kfonft't't'tttt':- xxqtf .1t'- ttthntg ttk I1lt'IIIlN'I'N to t'tlI'l'Y ox't'1' tttltt thttrnttl ltv- 1'.1ngt'tl tn conjttnctton wtth Alhtwttts hhtgttus Qfol- 'Wt tlw' t 't't'h lt'-tl4I1t'tl tn tht' .tt'tltlt'l11lt' tttr- lt't1t'. .t Ft'id.1v Hvtgtl for Pt'.1t't ' took pl.1t't' in tht' WUI thttpvl of t'st't't'h1n.1tts Hall, .tntt. .ts tl t'on1plt'n1t'nt to tht' vtgtl, tl Nlnx' Dax' l:tt'ltt hhtss xrtth tht' lu -ttott 7 XN't'Il, ttt-111 tht' ht't111111t11t1, tht' sotl.1l1tx' stttdvnts of tht' p1't'p.11'.1to1'v school p.1t'ttt'1p.1t1nt1 h 1-- 't11111-1-1t'tt tl.11lx 1t't1t.1t1t111 of tht' l'4tStlI'X' ttttrtntt xx.1s t't'h'hr.1tt'tt hy Fttthct' Rvctot' for tht' tntcntton 112 of peace through the conversion of Russia. lt was intended that this become an annual custom at Fairfield until lVlary's promise at Fatima may be realized. This year, under the continued guidance of Rev. Edmund Hogan, the sodality's prefect - Dominic Autuori -- has extended the work of the group to include religious instruction of the young people in the area. In accord with this work as well as with other efforts of the sodalists' activities. various rep- resentatives have attended conventions in Hartford and other New England cities where the problems pertinent to apostolic efforts have been discussed under the National Federation of Catholic College Students. Assisting Mr. Autuori were Assistant Prefect Philip Backus, Secretary Charles McCullough, and Treasurer Edward Mcpadden. ' V7 i'1'3TTS12D' . r fr F51 EN: S 0 FAll!fy 5 31,4 . time be Stag If you dnnit lmmx' what Tiiii S'i1M1 is. thcn von n iv umkitlcr vniiiwclf at clizirtcr nicnilwcr of the nCw- 0 t Xtudvnt zictixitv. Tlic Hcrniitc Lltih. 'You zirv ilvvnt hiAxx'c0lily7 Nloxx' tlizit is iinfortiinzitc, lwcziiisc . . th.it ix .ilw the piihlixhinq schcdulc for rl Ill: bi.-Xu. llndvr tht- Rt-d Shiga .intlvrs wc find ticxrs, fcn- tiirtw, Qpurts plwtos, tnrimitis, find ads lvringing its t- l:.iirfit'ld Sltirki Wfht-n Ilia' first stiidcnt piilwlicti- tion xxxik diktrilwnicd .ilwiit livc vuirs ago, it was l itlmr l..Ill'.ll1l1lll R xxixh .it that tiinv. that it ni.i'. tltntl-'lv .ind i.iqrii'riitxlx' tirtw, to full I1k'XK'SPilPK'I' nizi- tiiritx' ' 'l'li.it 'lllll 55 if. ix un tix xuiv, iindvr tht' dtivtritwti uf litrlw--i' Iwi-pli N.innt'll, wt' .ill lxtiuxxi W 1 - r 774iT 1 lil 4--can To some of thi: nicnilwcrs of thc Class of 1052 wc Cain ziltrihutc part of thc rcsponsihility for this growth of Tllfi S'i'.-Xu, Among those in this yCair's group dcscrving of such Commendation arc Allhticliu lllzick, Frank Wtwtwds, Connie Stcrnchzili, Paoli Stcclc. Dick lX'lcCoi'niick, Prod Tzirtztro, Bcrnic Bcglzinc. lim Miisaintc, Frtinli Philhin, Dom l,onrirdo. loc lziciimtc. llulw Drmigoslti, Ed Sperry aind Ray 'Yus- lnitislmst Did thc Urcclw liiiu' .1 word for tivxx'spnpci's? 'l'hvy li.id il fcxx' wut-tlsr Tlicx' mid, MTU gin' mc iiifcwiiigitioii is thy ollit't'. 'lqllli Siiml fills this oflics .ind dnt-S w in .in cxcnipl.iry nittnncr. 1 'A 4 Y f : 4 5 ffl :I ? ' l ,.. ' U . - , c: -v 'J .., 'rf MA .Z if . . 'B r, f 4 -155- QI ii :IA K-J , 7 IQ 5,4 BELLARMI E DEBATING SOCIETY Continuing the long and laudable tradition of oratory fostered in Iesuit schools. the Bellarmine Debating Society continued not only to improve their own speaking ability and to develop their poise on a platform but to win several debates as well. They had to. With previous years' victories over Providence, Bridgeport, lona, and Holy Cross. the llellarminers had a reputation to defend and uphold. :Sli That they did, with early season decisions over lona, Hofstra, and St. Peters College in lersey City. The climax of each debating season is the annual prize debate to determine Fairfields best debater and outstanding team. Directed by Rev. lohn L. Clancy, this Senior-lunior society has for its ofiicers President lohn Fray, '52, Ioseph Fran- chi, '53, as Vice President, and Thomas Desy, '52, as Secretary-Treasurer. -ahh... A,N, -157- air! X Sociabilities Ci-D Social tradition in many universities centers about the sort of mellow activities that bring joyous lumps - no cream, please - into the throats of old grads given to musing, and, incidentally, the throats of the undergraduates were not unamused. Though we may have lacked any neatly packaged social schedule that swelled our extracurricular life to any sizeable bulk, still it was never routine. Memories of our first dance in '48's November return. The Pioneers of '47-'51 fWhat's in a name?l opened the doors of Berchmans Hall to our wondering class. and then we were soon danc- ing quietly among them, storing up in our minds their example of college social demeanor for future reference. It was evident that night that we hadn't acquired the familiarity with our classmates that they displayed among their group, so it wasn't un- usual for us to gaze greenly at their relaxed inti- macy. Somehow we had a way of learning. ln Sopho- more year, when we entertained the incoming Frosh with a Welcome Dance, we harvested many of the available corn-stalks and pumpkins on the Fairfield hills, bought too much cider, and warmly felt that we had shown the lads a well-planned welcome. This was our introduction to the oft-recurring and clumsy phrase, Successful socially but woeful fin- ancially, but we cavalierly dismissed it as an en- joyable way to incur a class dehcit. Mixed metaphor fans will smile when we say that though these Fall dances launched Fairheld socially. it was the Mid-Winter Carnival that pro- pelled us past the doldrums of lanuary examina- tions. llt's the navy and the air force that's on our mindsll Even the perpetual bachelors in the class found energy to take money out of their pockets for this tux-affair. No orchestra sounded so invit- ing nor table talk so comfortable. Although each felt that his date was unpardonably overlooked in the selection, there was indeed something to be said for the young lady chosen for the one-year reign as Queen of the Fairfield Mid-Winter Carnival. Those evenings, somehow, we danced away too quickly, with the reflective ice stags that watched us leave becoming sentinels to some of the happiest times we've had in college. -I5 The Spring Proms at Glorieta Manor and the Actors Colony Inn provided the velvet touch for second semester. They had an air of spontaneous comenjoynient that their small quarters could not stifle. Why did we always seem to select the off- the-highway places for these affairs? And why was there always some wanderer of the night who could be counted on to arrive five minutes before the dance was over, with Well, you see, it was like this ? Nor was dancing our only fun. There were card parties in Xavier Hall when the toothpaste prizes seemed to be as judiciously appropriate as a case of Listerine. Then, during the yearly Smoker, there were boxing bouts, skits that have a habit of revolv- ing - this time around something called Operatic sequitur esse - and the ineffectual efforts of three of the class's strongmen to floor the visiting wrestler. The Bensonians were always on hand with their popular barbershop harmonies - a unique quartet that blamed their limited repertoire on their una- bashed desire to study! The Barber of Palermo and Two Italian- Ameriean Barbers in Paris highlighted our operatic season during Iunior and Senior years, when the seductive wiles of the male Maria and the com- poser's unexpected shower of bananas into the au- dience could be considered only as inspired show- manship. Nor will the Pasta Fazoolau rendering by all the cast be soon forgotten. On Pioneer Night -A that name againl - during lunior year we roared at a shave and a haircut and a bit of Aquinas, 51.25 and the antics of the Ratio Studiorum So- ciety. The city of Boston received its accustomed accolades, the faculty never winced too painfully at our broad satire, and the waiters served roast beef sandwiches that seemed an eternity in the making. Those nights when we toasted a classmate's bride, the philosophical sessions in some boarder's room, and the excursions following the basketball team - all stand like punctuation marks in the story of our four years at Fairfield. It is one that arose out of our own spontaneity. one that will be retold. but never entirely recaptured, whenever we meet again. Adil 'Yi -, nfl, M. Q -'ee gi, ' CW W k if if ' A , ji pf z ,277 ,ff -af, 52 7 e w HV if .,., ' fl ,X 3 x sg f M , f 1 A Q sw NN mf! 'K iv J af ,- I 16 AMERICA VYliat7 Reel Road flooded again? Theres a hur- ricane heading our way from Havana. All hands to- gctlieri lellox-:si we will help anvone that needs hclpf This is the sort of spirit that formed the college chapter ol the ARC, an arc built by Christian charif tv and American generosity. Severe storms, indus- trial accidents, enemy attack in the event of war e these .ire the freaks of nature and of man that con- cern the local disaster unit. RED CROSS W'itli Mr. lames Vail as faculty director, the college group of the Red Cross has been active in cleiiching their lists and letting the white-gowned nurses puncture their arms for the valuable blood that can be reclianneled into the veins of wounded men in Korea and American hospitals. Peter l.aChance as President. George Poilloii as Vice President, Richard Bepko as Secretary, Eu- gene Oblleara as Treasurer, and Emanuel Macchia as Public Relations Director are the oflicers. vvl 'vv L7 fi V lo! - fhi 415.2 I 4.1 -' ' .L -4. Wig?-. ,X ,' , 'iii ' .qu , H. -- A ' ' ASVPXQQ5-xi . - TW ,,-rr 1 , ,l ! 1'- 'vw' ' . -ff. . ,i ghfgfyz V :. 1 ...:':',,-M' .-, pg' MQW- ' vv-vw . . .. --.x.,,., 37,-rn-:Qa4,' ,a 4 nu ' - 3-smr,:.',1 ' The rr---' 2 ' '.4J..,3:.- '. HSE, W ,- ' :riff -NY' -fi? 'V-:ifQf3r: '54? -w.'A,' 1 I. LQ 1 4 - 5-r' c' K 3 fi '- '- 23 54 K Q, R D ' , 'T , , 1 5 1 ti 14 A .4 . 'lf LY I2 Y I nu ' mfg-zgxrJgf54,i5 4 '4 ' 7 fbi- ' ,ser X i .,.i-X A 5' ' xk '-f 4 t 'Vt' v yu .f ... 1 P L .if an RQ.. ly' A ' 'L iv 9 I ff .- G fs . -1' .L P N01 ef, , u ' J , Sr x, L .41 A R. xg. -163- GRM- xff f' X sms RADIO CLUB 'l'lie good-memory boys may recall how the men behind the mike began in their freshman year a venture affectionately called 'ithe private-eye peri- od, with its two radio presentations of such guar- anteed hair-raisers as The Case of the China Cat and The Thirty-Minute Alibi. But the guarantee has now elapsed. and Richard Diamond is no long- er jealous. Putting aside the eerie sound effects, the mike- men looked seriously thoughtful as they partici- pated in an entirely different sort of program, Fair- field University lnterprets the News, and for many Monday evenings from 8-8:15 they listened to Mr. Iohn Meaney. their director. introduce the faculty speaker of the evening. They took turns, as it were, in commenting on and asking questions about what they thought the people should know. This year the news interpretation feature con- tinued to serve the public with its up-to-the-minute commentary on current problems on Sunday eve- ning from 7:30-7:45. What was discussed? Moral myopia in college education, labor and management as partners in production. foreign policy for Ameri- ca, God and man in universities, Literature and Science. Church and State and the appointment of an ambassador to the Vatican, alcoholism. and uni- versal military training -- these were some of the topics. Nor were the radioers idle in their meetings when they considered techniques of sports broadcasting. ad lib earryings-on, abilities for directing, staff an- nouncers' qualifications, remote radio broadcasts. and radio reading. No one knows what lozenges they prefer. 5 ,iI AMATEUR R DIO SCCIETY CQ, CQ, CQ, This is VVITHX, Fairfield Uni- versity in Connecticut, U.S.A. These words go out over the ether to all points of the world as mem- bers of the Fairfield University Amateur Radio Society operate their ham station on the cam- pus. Qrganized in December of 1950 through the im- petus of Nicholas Rosa, '52, and its first moderator, Mr. Iohn A. Dillon of the Physics department, the society strives to train operators for its 75-watt transmitter and foster an interest in the echnology of radio. Lectures and experiments in electronics aid in imparting a knowledge of the mysteries of the vacuum tube on the 'Aradio bugs in the school. During the l05l-52 season, under the guidance of its new moderator, Rev. Vvilliam Quindon. a new 150-watt transmitter was set up high in the tower of lVlcAulille Hall and many members re- ceived operators' licenses. Not content with mere radio construction and operation, these enthusiasts also conducted joint experiments with the biology department involving the effects of microwaves on growing tissue. Thus in varied ways the Amateur Radio Society has cultivated an interest in radio and electronics. Pl65-- 9 XXX w 1'YnH'YM5mNNM.m:wf:xamQ?mm,m. I Iirggfh -S -'MWGION D Q. - - AM.K'l'l'1l'l! RADIO LICENSE N E 111m num, ...MJ .1 - -0 fm- 1 M .I-ww -1 ...H-.-. 1.4.1 I I 5 Dprcl im- :f- V -, D ' . - , . f q .1 . X . ' - - 'E 5 me Nous ,un f. ,Q 1 I1 SI .XX I V' . Lxcon ee c:. :I NICHOLAS A. ROSA, TRUSTEE 3 THE FAIRFIELD unnvcnsnrv AMATEUR 3 RADIO SOCIETY U Fzlv-I Inn:-rv:v'1 ' ' 0 h :H - 'w l'1C1u .1,r1.f1 L FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY FAIRFIELD, CONN. +551 ' Kpwuf DQ I-If QQU 166 ff THE BELLARMINE LECTURES -H I95I-I952 5, , . f X, ip QT: . .5.g15f A if at 1. Rev. Iohn C. Ford, S. I. Alcoholism As A Social Prob1em 2. Francis X. Fahy and Maurice A. Walsh, Ir. An Anti Communist Forum 3. Dr. Ross Hoffman Burke and the Catholic Tradition 4. Mr. Paul Van K. Thompson The Search For Unity 5. Rev. Francis B. Saneant, SJ. Palestine and the Christian World Moderator Rev George R Fulr. 5 f, . , , MW f , Vylvvl-vgwV M1 67-.. VVliile some Fairlielders discuss methods for the defense of the Gerinan Rhineland, and others de- lvate ahout the cost of hetel nuts in Thailand. still others listen to the music ol, you guessed it, Dixie- land. A liking for that music which can he truly called Americas own brought this group together, Meet- ings. or more precisely. sessions, are held in a base- ment room in Xavier Hall. The club is called upon l DI IELAN LUB to provide the 'Ajunip off for many school func- tions. Ticket sales for dances, sports events, and other activities get Hdixieland music for their launchings and promotion schemes. Although the bell for first period means that Physics formulae and the chemists atomic weights and valences will soon fill the air, it is quite diflicult to get Waiig Wang Blues, That Da Da Strain. and Snag lt, out of that area ol Xavier. -1 l I, los W 3 g . fl ff' ff' u 'j-7 V' ' 1 ' T QJQJ . -. K , 4 ,,. ,rv I f ' Q1 f A ,jf f ,r Jr gg HK ,Carib ,. . ff' Q ' 11 . 5 ww nr -f-W EDUCATION cius M451 f ,::'..... Q., if lf v, gf M 9 CEA, superintendents, PTA, pay scales, NEA, and in-service training. What are these? Are they left-overs from the New Deal alphabet or are they clarifying statements from a government bulletin, issued to clarify another bulletin that had to be clarified? Actually these abbreviations and phrases are very meaningful to a certain group of Fair- fielders, for they will be a part of the professional life of those students who have chosen a career in teaching, The Education Club ol Fairfield University was organized Hto promote the professional, cultural, and social interests of its members. A varied pro- gram has been carried on by these potential targets ol the timeworn 'Ano more pencils, no more books rhyme. The club has had field trips, guest speakers on campus, and a dinner to climax this years pro- gram. Visitors to Danbury State Teachers College and to Teachers College of Connecticut heard panel discussions on A'The Connecticut Education Asso- l'. mg f ciation and the Future Teacher' and VVhat a Superintendent l.ool4s For ln a Prospective Teach- er. Miss Dorthea M. l.ennon and Nlr. Robbins Barstow of the Connecticut Education Association spoke on HThe Teaclier's Professional Qrganiza- tions when they visited the campus. The years activities were concluded with a dinner at the Hitch- ing Post lnn where the club honored Dr. Henry VME i Herge, a member of the Connecticut State Depart- ment of Education and also a member of the facul- ty of the University Graduate School. The first oflicers elected by the club were Presi- dent, Edwin Sperry: Vice President, lames Din- nan: Corresponding Secretary, Brendon Mermann: Recording Secretary, Richard McCormick: and Treasurer. Edward Kelley. i o x 170 A ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIO Behind the props of basketball, baseball. track, cross country, golf, and intramural sports stand the members of the Athletic Association, ready to do their bit. like their illustrious A.A. brothers, in guid- ing and forcing gently their confreres to what is known as capital V. Organized formally in 1949. the group has expanded steadily each year, both in members and in the calibre of services rendered. Throughout the year, the A.A. has stimulated student support by means of pep rallies, sport nights, and dances. But, more modestly, the brunt of their work concerns the minor details of hosting visiting teams, judging, timing, and recording events, sponsoring and oiliciating at intramural sports, conducting an annual ping-pong tourna- ment, and selling tickets and supervising attend- ance lor the home basketball games. The prop men behind the prop men were Presi- dent Bernard Beglane, Vice President Robert Walsli, Secretary Iohn 0'Connor, Treasurer Iohn Welcli, with Rev. Thomas F. Lyons as faculty moderator. ,az -171-A 2 L K fl 3:9i'i'i'7 Ig I 3 I ii, Q. . i. , f I 3,4 fa., -il. , 4 gf A :,-as ',, i 'Y no ' ,X R i -.Az ... l L 3 BUSINESS CLUB One of the more specialized groups of the col- lege, the Business Club, is to the future account- ants, salesmen and executives what the Mendel Club is to future biologists and doctors. It allows many students of similar practical interests the op- portunity to meet and discuss, somewhat informal- ly, topics of interest to all. And more, it aims to bring together the theoretical business matters taught in the green-boarded classrooms and the practical problems of the prosaic ollice - as well as to help the members to become better acquainted with the employment programs in their specialized work. School publications were increased by one when 'ATIIE ADVISOR, an editorial bulletin published by the Business Club. made its appearance on the cafe- teria newsstand this year. The Hearst-while journalists of the club are directed by Ronald Hunts and Iames Hannan, the Co-Editors, and Daniel Mullins, the Assistant Editor. The ADVISOR is 'Ade- signed for the information and interest of men en- gaged in the study of business and the practice of it in the world of commerce. Meetings at the college and dinner affairs in Bridgeport comprise the clubs functions. The pro- gram this year included dinner-talks by Mr. Gilbert L. King, member of the New York Stock Exchange: Mr. Herman Steinkraus, President of the Bridge- port Brass Company and Past President of the Chamber of Commerce: lames V. loy, President of the West End Bank of Bridgeport: Manuel Rodri- guez, Purchasing Agent of Remington Rand, ln- corporated: Paul Boynton, Director of Industrial Relations of Socony-Vacuum Company of New lersey: and lohn Davis Lodge, Governor of the State of Connecticut. Under the direction of Mr. Thomas Fitzpatrick and Mr. lames Liebke. faculty moderators, this year's ofhcers are Chairman lohn Mester, Vice- President Daniel Mullins, Treasurer Ronald Hunts. Recording Secretary Vincent Vogel. Correspond- ing Secretary lohn Broderick, and Publicity Direc- tor Robert Mclsean. ---1 73- ! hi lt xx as Burke xx ho said Cood order is the found ition of all good things. Here at Fiirheld the bodv politic that gives order to our good things is the Stu- dent L ouncil The L ouncil iw ith thanks to one A Lincolnl gives government of the students ind for the students C0 ,Lf Tune T couNclL .Illia CTCSSTM H - b . Q By coordinating the various student activities and by acting as the liaison between the student body and the University administration the Council sup- plies government of the students. A Fairfield bas- ketball game, a Glee Club concert, a MANOR dance. and a Metropolitan Club hay ride would offer an entertaining evening, but to have them all taking place on the same evening would present a difficul- ty. The alert philosopher will see the difficulty im- mediatelv. To cope with such a crowded evening the Council introduced a Social Calendar that serves as a clearing house for activities planned by student organizations. This year also saw the Council act on a request from the student body to the administration. If the Christmas vacation could be started earlier than it had been planned, then the pay envelopes for holi- day work would be fuller. Our solons prepared the request, submitted it to the University officers. and then presented their decision to the student body. The decision was a negative one, with academic wisdom winning over economic hopefulness. During the past year in giving us government for the students the Council acted on a number of important measures. Fairfield became a member of the National Federation of Catholic College Stu- dents when the Council voted to accept the invita- tion extended to us to join that group. ln addition. the Council continued to assist some student activi- ties in meeting their financial obligations. With most of the student organizations not having funds of their own for their projects, the Council subsi- dizes club programs. This practice by the Council brought about a financial crisis for the Council it- self. This was met by an assessment which was placed on the entire student body to refill the Coun- cil's coffers. Social legislation? Socially the Coun- cil, as it does each year, :sponsored the Mid-Winter Carnival. The motion that ended this year's activity by the Student Council concluded a full and successful year for the Red Stags wardens. This was made possible by the efforts of each member of the Coun- cil, the resulting legislation, and the very capable assistance and direction of the Councils moderator, Father Robert MacDonnell. 1 L4 344m ME DEL LUB Dissatisfied with the drudgery of examining the research work of others, this group has put on its bifocals and got down to the more interesting work of its own 4 research projects in Physiology, Gene- tics. and Cytology. Organized three years ago by Rev. Francis Wil- kie, its present moderator, the Mendel Club has continued the work of its past presidents, Ciro Veneruso and Frank Bepko: and Robert DelVec- chio, this year's leader, has arranged lectures by the students on such topics as congestive heart failure and cerebral palsy. Demonstrations, dis- cussions, films have all dealt with problems of hered- ity as well as medical ethics. Cwuest lectures enhanced the clubs program -- Dr. Miolene on diabetics, and Dr. Pageant on neu- rological surgery. Let the Mayo Clinic look to its laurelsl -175- ,A 4 1 -'A , -ra - A ..- 1. .4 , I , vt mf. . 4415, u,,,. , 1- 9 . i fa -1- ,. If-1 X I ,x - V .J v .yr nf.- aw- 1. f, .1 H- LANGUAGE CLUB So you think that tha dxntrw in youi toxxn h ixc 1 nionopf v on fcndcr uushinq7 Thcv cxcn surpim Nux Xoik s tixi drivers? Well, fricnd, cyitlcntly you know nothing ahout thc 'ycrs in ziris. Than signin. you may think that thc Dodgcw tyc ye :in C ' ' cc 1 s, and yt may hc right wi' you consiclci' thc DodgCr Sym-phony' But you should know f somcthing ahout thc Ccrxnzni ski cnthuxinst if you want to xrcct s nconc dcyotcd to il sport. If you claim that tic wcarcrs 4 k1'I, thc grccn outdo cycryonc with then' Mm-ch 17th ypcctnclc. thcn you know nothing of ltily! cccwmtion o Cast days likc .1 . ' Q, oscphs or St. Roccos. , Q - 1 uv Y 170-- The Language Clubs presuppose that their mem- bers have mastered the fundamentals of the lang- uage in which they are interested, and so they are concerned with the people and thc customs of the Members who have lived in Germany, France, and Italy - whether as natives in their youth or as tourists tin their old age?J - have spoken to these clubs. Iohn Grabon, a native German, and Philip Bourdeau, a native of France, had their impressions to give, while Art Sapienza and lim Farnham spoke to the Italian and French clubs about their experiences as Holy Year tourists. The Italian Club observes Saint Ioseph's feast day each year with a Mass offered for world peace, and has shown movies of the observance of that day in Italy. Thomas Vitelli is President, Iohn Vitale Vice President, and George Thomas is both Treasurer and Secretary. country whose tongue interests them The drivers of Paris, German skiers, and Italys colorful ob servance of feast days all tell something convev ,.,,.., O Qin a meaning to the language club members A3 Q EJ. ,. F' ' Q Q t Q A5 Afs , QQ, -177- Na i A 'ller Hirsch is the newspaper published by tyou guessed itl the German Club. with Lawrence Schaefer and Emanuel Ondeek as co-editors and lohn Grabon and lamcs Langanke as proof read- ers and rewrite men, Ondecli is also President of the club. while the other ollicers are lerome Nlayer as Vice llresident. l.awrence Schaefer Secretary. .ind lohn Howard Treasurer. llerlitz has some competition in the French Club which uses records to acquire the precise pronun- ciation lor conversational purposes. Films on French architecture have been shown, and. shall we add. both the French and German clubs conduct a letter- writing project with foreign students. loseph Bor- deri presides as ranking oflicer of the French group. while Anthony Pagliaro is Vice President. lohn Halloran SeeretaryTreasurer, and lasper laser Pub- licity Chairman. Y-,,-H -L 1- . ,-V --.fr-v - .. QW ' G6 worth as many men as you know languages. Need we say liy virtue ol these activities the Lan ua e Clubs could. and . 9 9 would. double their membership. You recall, of course. Charles V of Spain, connoisseur of men as soldiers, who said, You are more? - l 78 AREA CLUB WATERBURY eLuB New Harbrivalburitan? You haven't heard of it? Well, you may not have seen it in one place at one time, but the parts that go to make it up are found right here in the student body. New Haven, Hartford, Bridgeport, 'lValley, Waterbtiry, and HlVlet- ropolitann New York -- there they are, all in a piece. What does it do? They are social clubs, primarily, of Course, but several of them like to spend whatever money they make by setting up scholarship funds for the college. Rev. lohn Dennis Crowley acts as overseer for the groups and works in- wards as well. That he has mueh to be eoneerned with is unde- niable. Take New Haven, for example. --179-M ' sms R mc- ' WATERBURY :QA I jx rx rf-'E U 3 lk '90 i , 3155? 1 5.3 f ' 1 5,31 ' slug lk ll ,Ll lin .gr-Q lvl, 5 G . KX Rr. VALLEY CLUB Thu-c tlmc Elm Strvcr lads CilI'I'lCkl on il pmgrmn of clmarlta- Iwlc :mul social nctivitivs, wlth Thoxnns Vitclli lwzldlng thc Clulis c:l1I'lSIl1l2lS party for the aged pcoplc at St. Amlrcxfs Home. mul with zmotlwcr Tom ll,oRiccol Clwznrmaning thc New XyC'ilI'.S clancc at The Cialstlc xvhcrc lvlorris XVQIISICIII mmlc il rctnrn KIPDCZIIYIITCC nltcr thc lnnior Pronm Jllllillli Iolwn Hoxx'nrd mnclc plans for tlw Glcc Qflnln concCrl lUL'I1L'lllll1g thc scl1ola11'sl1ip fund. wlnlc in qcncrnl Prcsiclcnl Gcorgc rl'l'lOl1lilS, Vicc Prcsidcnl loscph Qlnmno, Sl'L'l'Clill'Y lolm Pmylc, Trvusurcr lolmn lVlcDon- gall, and lixvultivc Dircctors llnnicl Dinan and Rolwcrt Nlcifoy v.'cl'c nn clmrgc, Anal so lt gow xvnlm llw otlmcrs, ll.1rIl01'al had nts tlnrnl .ln- nu.al cum'm'rl for il sclmlglwlmip lnnd nt thc llnslmncll MCl11C1Flill. .1 Chrnstnms nlalmv, .1 Sprung alnncv. lwmx'ling party. and lmrlwc- ISO 1 ' x we A n A QQ METROPOLITAN NEW YGRK CLUB V Q 'A'4'Ff'f M cue outing. Gennaro Russo as President, Lawrence Fagan as l N Treasurer, and Frederick Roback as becretary combined to do , 5 the work of the or anization. 5 llll Q W i1 ,i The Valley Club too had its Coniniunion Breakfast, a ll Thanksgiving social, its third annual Glee Club concert in An- ' f' 'eta sonia, a spring social, and two interested parish priests e Rev. 1 .,.' Y f l Gerald Corrigan and Rev. lanies Noonan of the Ansonian As- : fl fm I iam 5 sum tion arish -e- as outl in overseers. ose h lacuone, Wil- P P YQ iv ,.,,iG. liain Clifford, Francis Buisinato, and Alfred Kin ston formed ,, .. 9 the line reading from left to right aa President, Vice President, , ,,,,,,g.,,.,,,M,,m,.,,Mh, ,,.,,,,,,,,,M,,Z, V , Treasurer, and Secretary. -18l- :nk X A N W AV N CLUB VVatCrhury, first of thc' arca clubs, also had its third annual Ulm: Cfluh concert, with Harry Bc-rgin as chairman. The annual Cfhristnias clancc, thc dinncr honoring this ycaifs graduates. and thc clamhakv were also Cnjoyccl hv thc Brass City boys. Rcvvrsing thc rulc of Mothcr and Dad in thc give-and-takc of wllt-gc lifv. tht' cluh gavc a clinncr for their parcnts in Nlay, and sumv of thc' faculty wcrc gucsts as well. This ycar's slate ol nfliu-rs was: llwsiclcxit, Francis Vvcioclsz Trcasurcr, Donald llrmvnz Rt-mi-ding Scci'ctarv, Inhn Mahancyz autl iforrcspoml- ing Sm'i't't.1rv, lost-ph Cfarhn. 'lwhc l5i'iclgt'poi't group wont formal when it ratiliccl its con- stitution this yvar, with Nlri ljcrrvaull as thc faculty cousullor. sl82- X. flir t t NEW mlvsn K, gf ,h .4 9 1 i 'i t H ,., s ' ' 'flag x X-Quilt..-.,4:':'t' ' HARTFORD CLUB and -- as oflicers -'A Fred Tartaro. President: Bronislaw Qi'- lowski, Vice President: William Eugene McGrath, Corres- ponding Secretary: Maurice Fenton, Recording Secretary: and Gerard Mohyde, Treasurer. They had a Communion Breakfast in Nlarch, a dance in April, organized a basketball league at the Middle Street Boys' Club lwith all games replayed at Sullivansl, went swimming at the Orcutt Boys' Club, showed films supplied by the Arctic Sports Shop. and masterfully helped out with the program for the Glce Club concert at the Klein Memorial. A hick trick was found to click when the Nletropolitan Club went on a hay ride. Some of the Metro boys, never lost for a quip, called the ride 'Athe Long Island RR. without tracks. What cards! On the more practical side, the club's scholarship fund was aided by a card party. Brendon Nlermann as Presi- -183- lal. ., HAR FORD coN N STATE CAPITOL 9 , l f 1. 5 25, Ei tl fl' A, 7-if 'gn - '3x ' 53 .41-x 5 l - l .. L BRIDGEPORT IFA 'N E 4 PF I BRIDGEPORT CLUB dcnt. Rohcrt Hcrlihy Vice Prcsidcnt. lziiucs Lutz. Recording Secretary, loscph McNally Corresponding Sccrctziry. and Rich- zird Nltillowntw. Ti'Cnsui'ci'. And so it gocs with thc :iron cluhs and tht-ir functions. They had their good timcs .ind wished you wcrv thcrc. Thcrc wcrc songs of fcllowship and ziftCrw41i'ds the words of good- night coming through thc dzirkncss as fingcrs fuinhlcd for czii' locks and ignition switchcs. And whcrcvci' thcy wcrc. they hclongcd to Fairfield and Fairfield was part of lhcm. J I G 1 i I i 11 I P. Y . g n VA..- i Q i , ' IS-i t X -- ra Q e A - Will ' t w A N 1 - Ers- . ,' X QA ,Am THE BIRD WATCHER While others troop off to the smoke-filled rath- skellers, noisy gymnasiums and the like, this robust group of avid ornithologists can be found happily thrashing about the flora and fauna of southern New England, in their energetic scouting for new species of our songster friends, the birds. Theirs is truly a carefree but rewarding pastime. Our local Audubons are a fairly new group here at Fairfield. Early in the year, a handful of students. who long had been fascinated by the habits of the Wiiiged, decided to organize. The movement was a tremendous success and soon their ranks swelled to an impressive number. The warmth with which this new activity was greeted was another indica- tion of that strong desire to develop the whole man With a thirst for their work, the society under- took a series of field trips. Most of these excursions had their terminus ad quem at the local sanctuary - Elanagans Grove, a favorite meeting place for brilliantly hued birds of all sorts. Some of the crea- tures reported there are most curious indeed, sev- eral of them never having been catalogued. The Bird-Watchers have extended their operations on occasion over a wide area. ln Ianuary. for example, a sizeable portion of the group journeyed to Uncle Charleys Health Farm in Waterbtiry. the mecca for bird lovers of lower New England. Early dawn - Aurora kissing wings and bill - oflers greater opportunities for bird watching, and if one should happen by Elanagans Grove in the wee hours. the chances are one might spy this glow- ng group with their field glasses raised - eloquent testimony of Faithfulness to their motto, We're all for the birds. -185- X1 Athletics 5-Q 71-8 A YUHN L L lhe closing game of the season against the Uni- xersity of Bridgeport may not be styled what is popularly known as a stunning upset, but it will have to sullice until something better comes along as a contest that Fairfielders enioyed. It came some- what as a climax to a summary recording of ten games won against nine games lost. l.est that last word ring rather forlornly in the memory, it might be said that there were several thrills. naturally enough. that marked the 19-game schedule that opened at Brooklyn late in November with the Polytechnic Institute of that redoubtable city. This 95-81 victory was the beginning of the bashed records of the year. with Bob lVlarkovic's 31 points and 11 foul goals, Ioe Kehoe's 13 field Could we lose a game once in a while? Rider College had already answered that question, and a triad of other colleges joined them: St. Francis I' X iQ 62-52. Clearly we were not yet ready for public 'XJ' W acclaim in any NCAA meet nor any National ln- Xx 1 vitation Tourney. ian 1 There was a slight improvement. however. in the next two contests when Fairfield bettered New .is top scorer with 28. ton College. unsafe until the final ten minutes fl.oretto. Pa.1. 74-52: Bridgeport, 85-66: and lona. llaven State Teachers in a 61-54 game Fred l.ane starring and Arnold. 89-66. with Gerwien lixtra-Clonnccticut colleges did not regard us highly. There was Providence who. in the last few minutes, decided that they would win, 64-58: Bos- goals the entire team's high mark of 95 points along with its 23 foul shots. It augured well. Then the home season opened with an 83-61 score over VVil1imantic State Teachers, with Iimmie Homa as top scoring man with 17 points and Stan Suchenski with 16. Rider College. more accurate at the free-throw line. followed next with our first loss, 53-47. But after this setback came one of the more satisfying scores of the season. a 48-45 over- time decision over more highly esteemed St. Peters College. Lacking eight points with three minutes remaining, the Fairfield team, enspirited by Bob Gerwien and Paul Frauenhofer, went on to steal away the ball to tie the score, and Suehenski along with Nlarkovic established the margin of superiority. 3 NJ what disasterl smiled weakly. 75-55: and spunky X St. Anselnrs took a 70-77 triple overtime to impress '-. N I H' us tli.it we could make mistakes 188 -- 1'1ere, the Greeks would have it, was the peripe- teia. Something must be done. Would we act? A little louder, please. Was that a yes ? And yes' it was, for with seven games remaining we won - no, this is no 1V1erriwell team - a good five. And somehow, the Red Stags didnt feel outclassed. For instance, there was the New Britain State Teachers game that we liked, 51-49: the St. Francis tBrooklynl game that we didn't like, 66-49: and a trio of colleges we vastly admired. But just for a few seconds, we want to recall that St. Francis game when Kehoe scored his 1000th point in his four years - the first Fairfield basketballer to do this - and for his achievement he gained a trophv and the basketball that did it. Qur three victories -- if you are following us - included two old favorites, New Haven Teachers with a 65-51 score, and Arnold, by 104-69. And here the records were definitely bashed when we had 24 foul shots along with 40 field goals. After that game we wanted to play La Salle. But Coach lim Hanrahan - our lim - said no, not right now. Then the team wondered whether they were right when, for the first time in eight games, they won over Providence. If you are really interested in the score, then call the A.A. - they'll know. We didn't care, All we remember is that lackie O'Connell had 18, Gerwien 17, Lane 12, and Markovic 11. Why 2.11, Are you ready for a breather? Then, you have expected that we will conclude with all the jargon. cliches, and accumulated corn that all sports writers pop with the traditional final game of the season, with the Yales and the Harvards, the Blue and the Grays and such. lt was the second encounter of the season with the ARC1-lrivals, Bridgeport, envisioned just as the sportscasters would have it: did this game have to be away? There was another loss, sure, to the New York Athletic Club, but the score didn't make too much difference. We were still thinking of the Providence game, though we didn't want to subtract any of the plucky glory from Kehoe and Lane. -189- ' '11111' 1110.11 s1-.1N1111 1.11110 111 Il 1111151 1111-.1s.1111 1111.110 11111 1110 11111111111.1l110 111111111111 11101 1110 131111110 11SI1115, P151-711. 111 .111111111111 111 11-v01111g 1110 5011511 HN N1xlI'I1llS111'N 111.1 11.11110 .11111-1'1-, 1111- 11111 .11s11 11110 Iflll' 111111 111-1' 11131 111.110 110 111111 1111 1x'0.11'01s 111 1110 1 V 1 1111111 1111 11111 IS1'111K1fIU111'1 111111 1111'00 1Ul11l'I'Cl VOIY ICC 111-1111011 1111111-11 111 111' 1 x'1-111.11111 11111111 111 1111 1 11111- 111 1i1'1Q1klK,'l5111,1 .11 111- K'11111111.Q1 11111 111111 1111 71 1l11I1'S 1Wll1 .11111 11.11-1-11 1111- K111113 1111 1111111 11.1111s. 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The won-and-lost count may not be impressive, but Coach Perrault found that his lads, like Housmans played heart and soul. Steady Eddie Dowling contributed a new school record in the -HO-yard run in the New Haven meet. Ed's time was 53:7 seconds. Then laspei' Results of the 1951 Season TRACK laser set another new school record with a discus toss of 10 feet 4 inches. Along with these were George Boser, lim Bacik, and Danny D'Elia's con- tributions which could be counted on whether the track and field men were in the won or in the lost column. Ed Tamasunas, the new track coach. guided the squad through the following schedule this year. 1952 Track Schedule Fairfield 74 White Plains 39 Fairfield 66 New Haven State Teachers 47 Fairheld 78 Brooklyn Polytechnic 35 Fairfield 59 Bryant 72 Fairfield 901 5 Bridgeport 2232 Fairlleld 45 Arnold 68 Fairfield 5015 Saint Peter's 62112 April 23 Hofstra Hempstead April 26 Brooklyn Polytechnic Brooklyn April 29 White Plains White Plains May I Bridgeport Home May 3 Bryant Home May l0 New Haven State Teachers Home May 15 Arnold Home May I7 Conn. Small Colleges New Britain r if - sioza , ,1 V. 'Bs , , V. ,,,. ,., , .Q M K X gsm Q., - ,uv 3 .mhnmisf Qoach loe Yabrowsky ln lact, his sniile grew broader when he saw the familiar laces of VValt McVety, Bill Smith. Elliott Pierson, and lim Doheny in the infield, as well as two of the pasture boys. Rudy GifiH1d0l?1 Fifld DiCk Landy. returning with the others. Newcomer lack lVluri'en. a good stick man. completed the outfield. BASEBALL Gai-f Coach loe Yabrowsky, lor the second year of varsity base- ball at Fairfield. was willing to better the first seasons total of seven successes against five losses. What gave him encourage- ment was the previous help of pitchers Norb Fahey and lack Doheny along with their very capable receiver, lim Roach. Reserve strength was made strong by the addi- tion of Max O'lVleara, Harry Marmion. Ben Cio- la, Sonnie Scrimenti, and big lack Kulowiec. Also available were reservists Owen Flynn, Skip Vegli- ante. and Iohn McLean. Vkfith this combination. the Stags look to a favorable season. -l94-- - This April April April April May May May May Iune 1 New York A. C. w Hartford Home Home Home Home Home New Britain Milford New York 92v'5wvsl w I TRAMURALS Anyone who went in our out for intramural sports had fun, whether the sport was touch lootball, class bowling, or just plain ping-pong. During the Ufoot- ball' season, eight teams competed for top honors with the lowbrow Filosophers eventually yelling. We did it. Bill Rice. player-coach, with lack Doheny. Larry Fagan, Norb Fahey, lim Grasso. and lohn Bigley ran and tossed with distinction. Those who were there remember the accurate pass- ing of Doheny that enabled his team to score a I2-6 victory over the Schafters, winners of last years league. Bowling was conducted on a class basis, with a 6-team league with Bill George directing a fifteen- week schedule. A non-Bostonian team called the Red Sox with Dave Fortuna. loc Milewski, Bernie Beglane. and Bill George - - Finished two games ahead of another team called the Dodgers. with a final record of 32 victories and I3 losses. lndividual honors went to lim Long and Bill Ben- nett with a 103 mark, while Tom Molanphy had a high individual game total of 143. And to make this complete. Bill Bennett. with a 369 total, came out best in the individual series. Ping-pong? It was Bob Steele again, winning his second title in four years. But he had to do it the hard way against a Held of over fifty players and the linalist Charlie McGould, a freshman. in the best of seven games. Rev. loseph Manning. the intramural moderator. had as much fun as the lads. It was all in the game. .Z Z' v , , K 'M N w w N ,N lx N, K E, -497-A R x Senior A ALBAN, VINCENT I.. I74 Eastwood Rd.. Torrington. Con.n XYaterbury Club 4. ALLEVI. SALVATORE 39 Cottage St.. New Haven, Conn. Camera Club I, 2. 3: New Haven Club I, 2. 3, 4. ALTIERI, CERARD N.. 24 Melrose Ave.. Bridgeport, Conn. Baseball I, 2: Track I. 2: Barbell Club 3, 4: Business Club 4. ALTIERI. IOSEPH P., South Britain, Conn. Cllee Club I. 2. -I: Track I. AMENTA. Pli'l'liR S.. Olson Ave.. Cromwell. Conn. VVesleyan University I: Sodality 2. 3, 4: Cvlee Club 2. 3, 4 lTreas.l: Cross Country 2. 4: KX 2. 3: Hartford Club 2. 3, 4: Mendel Club. Biology 3. 4. ASPINVVALL, IAMES H.. Ill. 335 Woodstock Ave.. Strat- ford. Conn. Student Council I: Public Affairs 3 IVice Pres.I. 4 ISec.I: Stag 3, 4. AUTUORI, DOMINIC A.. I25l Noble Ave.. Bridgeport, Conn. Spanish Club I. 2 lPres.l: Sodality I, 2, 3. 4 IPres.I. B BALDINO. FRANK M.. 2485 E. Main St.. Bridgeport. Conn. AA 2: Chemistry Club 2: Biology Club 3. 4: Barbell Club 4. BARANYAR. STEPHEN 7I Melrose Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn. Glee Club 2. 3. 4: Business Club 4: Camera Club 4: Manor 4. BARRY. DAVID P., IR., I5 Pine Ridge Dr.. Summit. N. KX I: Camera Club I: Triangle Club 2, 3: Business Club 3. 4. BliCil.ANE. BERNARD P.. 50-52 45th St., VVoodside, N. Y. Spanish Club I: Fulcrum I: Stag 2. 3. 4: AA 2. 3. 4 iPres.I: Basketball 4 iMgr.l: Education Club 4. BIERCEL, IOHN I.. 876 Northwest St.. Feeding Hills, Mass. Camera Club 4. BLACK. CHARLES E.. I7 Carmel St.. New Haven. Conn. Fulcrum I: Stag 2. 3. 4 IEditorl: Student Council 2. Cllee Club 3: New Haven Club 4: Education Club 4. BOLAND. RICHARD 4I4 Brewster St.. Bridgeport, Conn Track I. 2: Cross Country I: Spanish Club 2: Business Club 3. 4: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. BOIICHARD. RAYMOND P., 20 First St.. Fairfield, Conn. Glee Club 3. 4: KX 3: Amateur Radio Society 3: Stag 4: Manor 4: Camera Club 4: Bridgeport Club 4. BUIIRDEAII. LAVVRENCE D.. I488 Pembroke St., Bridge- port. Conn. KX I, 2: Cross Country I. 2: Bridgeport Club 3, 4: Bar- bell Club 4: Chemistry Club 4. irector ' BOYLE. IOHN I.. I36 Ward St.. New I-laven. Conn. New Haven Club I. 2. 3 4Sec.l. 4 Sec.I: Foyer Work- shop 2: French Club I: Public Affairs 4: Camera Club 4: Manor 4. BRIDGEWATER, HORACE M.. 382 Ferry Blvd.. Stratford. Conn. Microphone Players I: Manor 4: Public Affairs 4. BRODERICK, IOHN I.. 726 Omar Rd.. W. Palm Beach. Fla. Business Club 3. 4 ICorres. Sec.I BROVVN. DONALD F.. 226 Sylvan Ave.. Waterbury. Conn. Sodality I. 2: Waterbury Club l. 2. 3, 4 ITreas.I: Business Club 3. 4. BRUDER, ALBERT VV.. 45 Colony St.. Stratford. Conn. Cvlee Club 2. 3, 4 tSec.l: Bridgeport Club 3. 4: Business Club 3, 4: Camera Club 4. BUCHTMANN. WILLIAM F., 4I8 Old Dock Rd.. Closter. N. I. Sodality 3. 4: Public Affairs 4: Radio Club 4. BURKE. CASPER H.. 36 Argyle Ave.. W. Hartford, Conn. Biology Club 2. 3. 4 IRec. Sec.l: Chemistry Club 2, 3. 4 lSec.l: Manor 4: Hartford Club 2. 3, 4: Radio Club 4. BYRNE, THOMAS B., I39 Edgemere Ave., W. Hartford. Conn. Hartford Club 2, 3. 4: Business Club 4. C CANNON. IAMES IR.. Mile Hill Rd.. Newton. Conn. CAPASSE. EDWARD VVest Parish Rd.. Westport. Conn. KX I, 2: Italian Club 2. 3: Triangle Club 2. 3: Manor 4. CARUSO. IOSEPH F. X.. I39 Sage St.. Bridgeport. Conn. German Club I. 2: Italian Club 4: Chemistry Club 3. 4: Biology Club 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 3, 4: Track 2. CLIFFORD, VVILLIAM I.. 43 Meadow St.. Ansonia. Conn. Valley Club 2. 3, 4 IVice Pres.l: Business Club 3, 4: Spanish Club 4. CONNELL, IOHN IO24 Success Ave.. Stratford. Conn. Baseball I: Student Council 2: Prom Chairman 2: Busi- ness Club 3, 4. CONROY, ROBERT T.. H97 Iranistan Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn. Spanish Club I, 2: Sodality 2, 3, 4: AA 2. 3. 4: Student Council 2. 3. 4: Dixieland Club 3. CONVERY. IAMES M., I7 Ivy St.. Stamford. Conn. Education Club 4. COYLli. DONALD 694 Second Ave., New Haven. Conn. New Haven Club I. 2. 3, 4: Business Club 3. 4: Sodali- ty 4: AA 4. CUOMO. IOSEPH D., 7 Clifton St.. New Haven. Conn. New Haven Club I, 2. 3. 4 iVice Pres.I: Glee Club I: Cross Country 2 lMgr.l: Class Vice President 4: AA 4: Italian Club 4. 198-- SENIOR DIRECTORY fContinuedl D DEAKIN, IAMES C.. 136 Triangle St.. Danbury, Conn. KX 2: Business Club 3. 4: Manor 4. DEGIOIA. WILLIAM M.. 231 Blohm St., W. Haven, Conn. Sodality 1, 2, 3. 4: New Haven Club 2, 3. 4. DELANEY. ROBERT D.. 50 Parkway Dr., Trumbull, Conn. KX 3: Business Club 4. DELVECCHIO, ROBERT 135 N. Bishop Ave., Bridgeport. Conn. Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Fulcrum 1: Stag 2: Biology Club 2. 3. 4 fPres.l: Bridgeport Club 3, 4: Chemistry Club 4: Barbell Club 4. DESY, THOMAS G., 168 Park Lane Villas, Stamford, Conn. Debating 2, 3. 4 fSec. Treas.J: Manor 4. DEVINE. THOMAS 57 Lincoln St., Hartford. Conn. Glee Club 1, 2: Hartford Club 1, 2, 3. 4: Business Club 3. 4: Stag 4. DINAN, DANIEL I.. 45 Smith St., W. Haven, Conn. Public Affairs 3, 4: Glee Club 1: Track 1. DINNAN, IAMES 589 Whalley Ave., New Haven, Conn. New Haven Club 1. 2, 3. 4: German Club 1: KX 2: Stag 3. 4: Manor 4: Sodality 4: Education Club 4 lVicc Pres.1: Public Affairs 4. DOHENY, IAMES I., 80 Edwards St.. New Haven. Conn. New Haven Club 1. 2, 3: Chemistry Club 1, 2: Biology Club 2, 3, 4: Stag 3: Class Secretary 4: Manor 4. DONAHUE, THEODORE A.. 88 Lounsbury Ave., Water- bury. Conn. Waterbury' Club 2. 3. 4: KX 2: Education Club 4. DOWLING. EDWARD D., III. 113-21 Delevan St.. Queens Village. L. I.. N. Y. Cross Country 1, 2, 3. 4: Track 1, 2, 3. 4. DOYLE, RAYMOND 885 Connecticut Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn. Bridgeport Club 3, 4: KX 2. DRONGOSKI. ROBERT I.. 85 Louvain St.. Fairfield. Conn. Sodality 1. 2. 3 4: Cross Country 1, 2. 3. 4: Track 1, 2. 3, 4: AA 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 3: Camera Club 4: Stag 4: Manor 4. DUBRET, HENRY E., 219 Brewster St., Bridgeport, Conn. DUHON. JOHN 210 Weber St., Bridgeport, Conn. Fordham U. 1: Sodality 2, 3, 4. E EPLETT, IAMES D.. 165 Charlton Ave.. Stratford, Conn. U. S. Naval Academy 1: Debating 2, 3. 4: Biology Club 2, 3, 4: Chemistry Club 2: Radio Club 3, 4: Track 3. EVANKO, IOHN R.. Birchwood Drive, Ansonia, Conn. Valley Club 1. 2, 3, 4: Basketball 1: French Club 1. 2: AA 2, 3, 4. F FEDORS. IOHN W., 68 Howard Ave.. Ansonia. Conn. German Club 1. 2: Camera Club 1: Valley Club 1. 2. 3. 4: Biology Club 2, 3, 4: Chemistry Club 3, 4. FENTON, EDWARD lf.. 381 Connecticut Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Spanish Club 1, 2 4Treas.l: KX 1, 2: FILO 1, 2: Bust. ness Club 3, 4. FENTON, MAURICE 198 Ridgefield Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn. Sodality 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 1 tRec. Sec.1. 2 1Rec Sec.l. FITZPATRICK, CORNELIUS 382 Central Ave.. New Haven, Conn. New Haven Club 1, 2, 3. 4: Foyer Writeslitvp 1, 2: First Prize Michael Collins Essay Contest 3: Manor 4. FORTE. IOSEPH D.. 369 Fern Street, Hartford. Conn. Italian Club 1: Hartford Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club 2. 3. 4: Camera Club 4. FORTUNA, DAVID R., Ermine St.. Fairfield. Conn. Biology Club 2, 3. 4: Chemistry Club 2, 3, 4: Barbell Club 3, 4. FOSTER. EDWARD M., 18 Toms Rd.. Glenbrook. Conn. Spanish Club 1, 2: Triangle Club 2. 3: Business Club 3. 4. PRAY, IOHN P., 162 Colony St., Fairfield. Conn. German Club 1. 2: Cross Country 2: Debating 2. 3 1Sec.l, 4 tPres.l: Public Affairs 3. 4: Manor 4. FRILLICI, FERNANDO V., 462 Grand Ct., Bridgeport, Conn. Sodality 1: Biology Club 2, 3. 4 fCorres. Sec.l: KX 2. G GABRIEL, IOSEPH D., 101 Elizabeth St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Italian Club 2, 3. 4: Business Club 3, 4. GALLA, EDWARD 59 Ford Place. Bridgeport, Conn. Biology Club 3. 4: Chemistry Club 2: KX 2. GARRITY, IAMES D.. 172 Sycamore Lane. Fairfield. Conn. Chemistry Club 2. 3: Biology Club 3. 4: Triangle Club 2. GEORGE, VVILLIAM 178 Washington St., Gloucester. Mass. Biology Club 2, 3, 4: Chemistry Club 1: Sodality 1: KX 1: Metropolitan Club 4. GILHULY. BERNARD A., 150 Wakeman Rd., Fairfield, Conn. KX 2, 3: Triangle Club 2. 3. GRANITTO, IAMES V.. 1181 New Haven Ave., Wood- mont, Conn. Track l. 3, 4: Business Club 3. 4: New Haven Club 4: AA 4. GROARK. OWEN 99 Barlow Rd., Fairfield. Conn. Triangle Club 2. 3: Business Club 3, 4: Dixieland Club 3: Manor 4. -199- SENIOR DIRECTORY IContinued3 H HAFFNER. FRED W.. I3l Clifford St., Bridgeport. Conn. KX I. 2: German Club I. 2: Business Club 3. 4: Bridge- port Club 4. HALMECK. LAVVRENCE F.. l22I Stratford Ave.. Bridge- port. Conn. HAXVMAN, G. GLENN, 96 NNaldorI Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn. Biology Club I: Debating 3. 4: Public Affairs 3. 4: Foyer VVritesbop 3: Stag 4: Manor 4: Sodality 4: AA 4. HAYDEN. ROBERT T.. I7 Morning St.. Portland. Maine Sodality I. 2. 3. 4: Chemistry Club 2. 3. 4 IPres.l: Bio- logy Club 2. 3. 4: Radio Club 2. 3, 4 lPres.l. HERBERT. EDVVARD VV.. 44 Rye St.. Waterbury. Conn. Vklaterbury Club 3. 4. HERLIHY. ROBERT. 925 Church Hill Rd.. Fairfield. Conn. Glee Club 2. 3, 4: Metropolitan Club 2 IRec. Sec.l. 3 IRec. Sec.l. 4 1Vice Pres.l. HICKSON. IOHN M.. 68 Noroton Ave.. Noroton Heights. Conn. Triangle Club 2: Camera Club 2: Business Club 4. HOEFLER. DONALD E.. 94 Hobart St.. New Haven. Conn. New Haven Club I. 2. 3. 4: Spanish Club I: Debating I: Manor 4. HOGAN. RICHARD I.. 84 Fenway Drive. Hamden. Conn. HUNTS. RONALD M.. 60 Windsor Rd.. Stamford. Conn. Business Club 3. 4 tTreas.l: Manor 4. I IACUONE. IOSEPH N.. 40 Gilbert St., Derby. Conn. Valley Club 2, 3, 4 IPres.l: Stag 3. 4: Sodality 4. IWANICKI. WALTER S.. 377 Kent Avenue. Bridgeport. Conn. KX 2: Spanish Club 2: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. I IAKABCIN. KENNETH D.. 560 N. Ridgefield Ave., Bridge- port. Conn. Camera Club I: Chemistry Club 2. 3. 4: Biology Club 3. 4: Barbell Club 4: Bridgeport Club 4. K KEHOE. IOSEPH V.. 326 E. 240th St.. New York. N. Y. Class Vice-President I: Basketball I. 2. 3. 4: Metropoli- lim Club I. 2, 3. 4: Track 2. 3. 4: Class Vice-President 2. KIiI.I.EY. EIJVVARD 639 Washington Ave.. Waterbury. Conn. Waterlwiiry' Club l. 2. 3. 4: AA 2. 3: Radio Club 2 lRec. Sec.I. 3 lPres.l: Stag 3. 4: Manor 4: Education Club 4 ITreas.l. KIiI,I.Y. GEORGE P.. 7l Bassick Ct.. Stratford. Conn. Debating I: Stag 2: Manor 4. KELLY. WILLIS C.. 35 Clinton Pl.. New Rochelle. N. Y. Sodality I. 2. 3. 4: Track I: Glee Club I. 2. 3 ITreas.l. 4: German Club I: Biology Club 2, 3. 4. KIBBE. IOHN, 23 Wallingford Rd.. Cheshire. Conn. Debating I: Track l. 2: Radio Club 3. KIELY. EDMOND F.. ISI Easle St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Sodality I: Baseball 3. 4. KINGSTON. ALFRED C.. 3 Remer St.. Ansonia. Conn. Valley Club 2. 3. 4 ISec.l: Sodality 4: French Club 4: Education Club 4: Manor 4. KRAYNIK, ROBERT D.. 338 Greenfield St.. Fairfield. Conn. KULOWIEC. EDWARD I., 70 Dyke La.. Stamford. Conn. Chemistry Club 4. L LANDRY. ARTHUR B.. I28 Collins St.. Hartford. Conn. Glee Club I. 2, 3. 4 lPres.l: KX I: Hartford Club I. 2 lTreas.l: Biology Club I. 2. 3. 4. LANDY. RICHARD P.. 282 Churchill Rd.. Bridgeport. Conn. Sodality I. 2. 3. 4: Baseball 2. 3. 4: Debating 3. 4: AA 4: Bridgeport Club 4. LESKO. IOSEPH I.. II8 Marcroft St.. Stratford, Conn. Sodality I: Public Affairs 2: Radio Club 4. LINDSTROM. RICHARD I.. 429 Sherwood Pl.. Stratford. Conn. Stag 2. 3. 4: Barbell Club 3. 4. LINEHAN. IAMES l.. 200 Orchard St.. Bridgeport. Conn. German Club I. 2: KX I. 2. 3: AA I. 2. 3. 4: Basketball I IMgr.l. 2 lMgr.l: Business Club 3. 4: Bridgeport Club 4. LOMAZZO. ANTHONY I.. 48 Saugatuck Ave.. Westport. Conn. Radio Amateur Society 3 lTreas. fi Vice Pres.l. 4. LONARDO. DOMINICK M.. 9 Ninth St.. Derby. Conn. German Club I: Valley Club 2. 3. 4: Stag 3. 4: Manor 4: Sodality 4: Education Club 4. LONG. IAMES M.. I9 Beach St.. Hartford. Conn. Trinitv College I: Track 2. 3. 4: Hartford Club 2. 3 lTreas.l. 4: Sodality 3. 4: lunior Prom Chairman: Stu- dent Council 4. LO RICCO. THOMAS. 630 Townsend Ave.. New Haven. Conn. Radio Club I. 2. 3. 4: Spanish Club I. 2 tVice Pres.l: Track l. 2. 3. 4: Business Club 3. LUDDY. WILLIAM 35I Fairview Ave.. Fairfield. Conn. Business Club 3. 4: Bridgeport Club 4. M MAGEE, WILLIAM. 5 Wilson St.. East Haven. Conn. MAHAN. WILLIAM T.. 299 Norton St.. New Haven. Conn. Spanish Club I: New Haven Club I. 2. 3. 4: Debating l IVice Pres.l: Barbell Club 3: Radio Club 4. 200 -- SENIOR DIRECTORY iContinuedl MAHANEY. IOHN D., 1309 Bank St., Waterbury. Conn. Waterbury Club 1. 2, 3. 4: Radio Club 2: Class Presi- dent 3: Student Council 3, 4. MARRON, WILLIAM T., 15 Spring Hill. Norwalk, Conn. Triangle Club 2, 3, 4: Education Club 4. MARTIN, VICTOR L., 120 Coleman St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Sodality 1. MARTIN, WILLIAM F., 27 Whalburn Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. MASTRANGELO, RALPH P., 51 Bond St., Hartford, Conn. Glee Club 1, 2, 3. 4: KX 1, 2: Hartford Club 2, 3, 4: Stag 3. MAYONE, CHARLES H., 5 Wakeman Pl., Larchmont. N. Y. Metropolitan Club 4. MCCORMICK, RICHARD A., 17 Miller St., Fairfield. Conn. Radio Club 2: Spanish Club 2: Hartford Club 2, 3, 4: Track 3: Education Club 4 tRec. Sec.l: Manor 4. MCCOY, ROBERT H. IR., 439 Washington Ave., New Haven, Conn. Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: New Haven Club I, 2, 3. 4: KX 1: Biology Club 3. 4. MCCULLOUGH. CHARLES D., 53 Paul Pl., Fairfield. Conn. German Club 2: Sodality 3. 4: Radio Club 3, 4: Biology Club 3. 4: Manor 4. MCENANY. IOSEPH A.. 76 Bassick Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn. Student Council 3. 4: Class Vice President 3: AA 3, 4: Manor 4: Class President 4. MCGOULDRICK. FRANCIS 1. IR., 453 Edgewood Ave.. New Haven, Conn. New Haven Club 1, 2, 3. 4: Fulcrum 1: KX 1: Camera Club 1, 2: Sodality 1, 2. 3: Stag 2. 3: Manor 4. MCGRATH, WILLIAM EDVVARD. 20 Fairmont Pl., Shel- ton, Conn. Valley Club 2, 3. 4: Dixieland Club 2. 3, 4: Business Club 3, 4: Manor 4: AA 4: Chairman Winter Carnival 4. MCGRATH. WILLIAM I. EUGENE. 1555 Central Ave., Bridgeport. Conn. KX 1: Stag 2. 3, 4: Business Club 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 3 1Corres. Sec.l, 4 tCorres. Sec.l: Manor 4: Chairman Senior Ball 4. MCGLIIRE, IAMES F., 37 Robert St.. Hamden, Conn. St. Bonaventure Univ. 1, 2: Georgetown Univ. 3: Busi- ness Club 4: New Haven Club 4. MCHUGH, IOHN H., 1211 N. Main St., Waterbury, Conn. Waterbury Club 2, 3, 4. MCLAUGHLIN. FRANK A., 69 Lincoln Ave. Ext.. So. Nor- walk, Conn. Glee Club 1, 2: KX 1, 2: Triangle Club 3. 4. MCLEAN, ROBERT D., 251 Sturges Rd., Fairfield, Conn. Business Club 3, 4. MCNAMARA. WILLIAM I.. 85 Eaton St., Bridgeport, Conn. Education Club 4. MLPADDEN. EDVVARD VV., IR., 246 lVl.irglierit.i l..ivvn Stratford, Conn. Glee Club 2. 3, 4 lVice Pi'es.l: Sodality 2, 3, 4 1'l're.is,i: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. MERMANN, BRENDON R., 10 Gerard Ct., Oceanside. N. Y. Metropolitan Club 2 l'l'i'eas.l, 3 iTre.is.l. 4 lPres.l: Stag 4: Education Club 4 1Corres. Secl. MESTER, IOHN M., 109 Prospect St.. Shelton, Conn. Vallev Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Business Club 3, 4. MILEWSKI, IOSEPH 119 Mill Hill Ave.. Bridgeport, Conn. KX I, 2: Bridgeport Club 3, 4: Biology Club 4. MILLER, WILLIAM F., II, 18 Parker Pl., New Haven. Conn. Spanish Club 1, 2: New Haven Club 1, 2, 3. 4: Basket- ball 3, 4 lMgr.l: Sodality 3, 4: Education Club 4. MINGRONE. VINCENT 58 Emmett Ave., Derby, Conn. Biology Club 2, 3, 4: Valley Club 2, 3 lTreas.l. 4. MIOLENE. IOHN A., 306 Columbus Ave.. New Haven, Conn. Sodality 1, 2, 3. 4: New Haven Club 1, 2, 3. 4: Baseball 3 lAss't. Mgr.l, 4 lAss't. Mgr.l: Italian Club 4: Biolo- gy Club 4: Education Club. MIZAK, CHARLES VV., 96 Bennett St., Bridgeport. Conn. Debating 1: Microphone Players 1: Radio Club 2 lPres.l. 3, 4: Metropolitan Club 2: Bridgeport Club 3. 4. MOFFETT, IOHN 264 Preston St.. Hartford, Conn. Basketball 1. 2: Hartford Club 1, 2, 3. 4: French Club 1. MOHYDE, GERARD A., 1375 Kossuth St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Stag 2: Bridgeport Club 3, 4: Sodality 4: Education Club 4. MOLANPHY. THOIVIAS F.. 243 New York Ave., New York: N. Y. Radio Club 1: Sodality 1: Baseball 1: Glee Club 2, 3, 4: Metropolitan Club 2. 3. 4. MONACO, IOSEPH M., 270 Garfield Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Debating 1 lSec.l: Italian Club 1 lTreas.l: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. MULDOON, THOMAS E.. 27 Orange St.. Bridgeport, Conn. Spanish Club 1. 2: Debating 1: Track 2, 3: Dixieland Club 2, 3. 4: Triangle Club 2. 3: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. MULLANEY, IOHN IR., 20 High St., Bethel. Conn. Sodality 1. 2, 3, 4: KX I. 2, 3: Business Club 3, 4: Manor 4. MULLEN, HAROLD F.. 92 Rowsley St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Basketball 1. 2, 3 iMgr.l: Class President 2: Student Council 2, 3 lRec. Sec.l. 4 lPres.l: Sodality 3: Manor 4. MULLINS, DANIEL R.. 388 Mill Hill Ave.. Bridgeport, Conn. Sodality 1 2.: Business Club 3 tCorres. Sec.l. 4 lVice- Chair.l. MLIRREN, IOHN H., 176 Brookmere Dr., Fairfield, Conn. MUSANTE, IAMES 29 Deforest Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Italian Club 2. 3, 4: Business Club 3. 4: Stag 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 3. 4: Manor 4. M201- SAPITOWICZ. IOHN I. IR., 279 Plains Rd., Milford. Conn. SENIOR DIRECTORY tContinuedl N NAVETSKI. EUGENE F.. 286 N. Main St.. Ansoma. Conn. Valley Club 1. 2. 3. 4: Business Club 3. 4: Sodality 4: Manor 4. NEVERTON. ROBERT 7 Halley Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn. KX 1. 2: Biology Club 3. 4: Chemistry Club 4. NOLAN. IAMES D., 45 Lockwood La.. Norwalk. Conn. NUCERA. IOSEPH P.. 2116 Huntington Tpke.. Nichols. Conn. Public Affairs 4. O OCONNELL, RICHARD D.. 254 Marion St.. Bridgeport. Conn. AA 1. 2. 3, 4: Baseball 3. 4. O'CONNOR. FRANK D.. 1238 Post Rd.. Fairfield. Conn. Bridgeport Club 4. OCONNOR. IOHN R., 132 Brooklawn Terr.. Fairfield. Conn. Sodality 1. 2. 3. 4: AA 1. 2. 3. 4: Student Council 2. 3 tTrcas.l. 4: Chairman Freshman-Sophomore Prom. O'HARA. EDWARD I.. 175 Wayne St.. Bridgeport. Conn. New Haven Club 1. 2. 3, 4: Camera Club 1, 2. 4: Glee Club l. 3: Amateur Radio Society 3. 4. O'MEARA. BERNARD M., 17 Riggs Ave.. W. Hartford. Conn. Sodality 2. 3. 4: Hartford Club 2. 3. 4: AA 4. P PHILBIN. FRANCIS G.. 57 Willow St., Milford, Conn. New Haven Club 3, 4: Stag 3. 4: Biology Club 3. 4. PIEGER. GEORGE E.. 215 6th St.. Bridgeport, Conn. Track 1: Cross Country 1: Glee Club 1. 2, 3. 4: Biology Club l. 2, 3, 4: Barbell Club .3. 4 lPres.l: Bridgeport Club 4. PIERSON. ELLIOT L., 289 lranistan Ave., Bridgeport. Conn. Basketball 1. 2. 3, 4 lMgr.l: Dixieland Club 1. 2: KX 2, 3: Baseball 3. 4: Bridgeport Club 3. 4. PLOUFFE. RAYMOND 95 Wordin Ave., Bridgeport. Conn. French Club 1. 2: Glee Club 3: Sodality 4: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. POELTL. ROBERT li.. 10 Elm St.. Derby. Conn. Valley Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Amateur Radio Society 3, 4. Q QUINN. IOHN 1 Ursula Pl.. Phoenicia. N. Y. Chemistry Club 1: Metropolitan Club 2: Biology Club 4. R REILLY. THOMAS F.. 35 Thurston St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Business Club 3. 4. RELIHAN, IOHN I.. IR.. 765 Myrtle Ave.. Bridgeport. Conn, German Club 1. 2: Microphone Players 1: Oratorical Contest tFirst Prizel 2: Stag 3: Public Affairs 3, 4 iPres.l: Manor 4. ROBACK, FREDERICK I.. 70 Madison Ave.. Hartford. Conn. Basketball 1: Hartford Club 1. 2. 3. 4: AA 3, 4: Stu- dent Council 4. ROGOWSKI, IOHN P., 2307 Post Rd.. Fairfield. Conn. Sodality 1: Biology Club 2. 3. 4 tVice Pres.l: Chemi- stry Club 2. 3. ROSA. NICHOLAS A.. 5 Hundley Ct.. Stamford. Conn. Radio Club 2. 3: Stag 2. 3: Foyer Writeshop 3: Amateur Radio Society 3, 4 1Pres.l: Sodality 4: Public Affairs 4. ROSE, THOMAS V.. 350 Willow' St.. Bridgeport. Conn. Glee Club 1. 2. 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 4: Education Club 4. RUSSO. GENNARO A., 1649 Asylum Ave.. W. Hartford. Conn. llartford Club 2. 3 lVice Pres.l. 4 lPres.l: Business Club 3, 4: Public Affairs 4: Italian Club 3: Glee Club 3. 4. S SALTUS, DONALD H., 1417 E. Main St.. Waterbury. Conn. Waterbury Club 1. 2, 3. 4: Chemistry Club 3. Sodality 3. 4: Amateur Radio Society 3. 4. SAUNTRY, IOHN H.. 1608 Thelin Ct.. Evanston. Ill. Metropolitan Club 2: Track 2: Biology Club 4. SCALZ1. CASPER A.. 747 Hallett St.. Bridgeport. Conn. KX 1. 2: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. SCHLENK. WILLIAM F.. 411 Palmer Dr.. Dallas. Tex. Fulcrum 1: Stag 2: KX 2: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. SHEEHY, IOHN F.. 115 Monroe Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Track 1, 2 lMgr.l: Waterbury Club 1. 2. 3, 4: Barbell Club 3: Education Club 4. SHIMKUS. CHARLES R.. 402 Knowlton St., Bridgeport, Conn. Bridgeport Club 3, 4: Sodality 4: Radio Club 4: Educa- tion Club 4. SILOS, EVANCELOS H.. 6 Patton Pl.. Fairfield, Conn. Stag 3: Business Club 4. SILVA. IOSEPH I., 63 Livingston Pl., Bridgeport, Conn. Sodality 3. 4: Stag 3. 4: Manor 4: Bridgeport Club 4. SOMERS. CHARLES E., 651 State St.. Bridgeport, Conn. 5202-- SENIOR DIRECTORY fContinuedD SPERRY, EDWIN IR.. 96 Tyler St., E. Haven. Conn. Sodality 1. 2, 3: New Haven Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Stag 3, 4: Manor 4: Education Club 4 1Pres.J. STEELE, ROBERT H., 1516 Barnum Ave., Stratford, Conn. Stag 2, 3: Business Club 4. STERNCHAK, CONRAD 373 Stillman St., Bridgeport, Conn. Track l, 2. 3, 4: Glee Club 2, 3, 4: KX 2: Stag 2, 3, 4: Cross Country 3: AA 3, 4: Barbell Club 3, 4: Bridge- port Club 3. 4: Manor 4. STOPPAN1, WILLIAM A., 20 Elm St., Hoosick Falls, N. Y. Waterbury Club 1, 2, 3, 4: KX 1, 2. SULLIVAN. WILLIAM B., 1479 Albany Ave., Hartford. Conn. Track 1 fMgr.l: Hartford Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Debating 4. T TADDEO, FREDERICK, Brook St., New Canaan, Conn. Sodality 1, 2: Italian Club 1. 2. 3. 4: Red Cross 3. TARTARO, FRED W.. 111 Pembroke St.. Bridgeport, Conn. Glee Club 1, 2 lSec.l, 3, 4: Class Treasurer 2: Stag 3. 4: Bridgeport Club 4 lPres.l: Education Club 4. TAYLOR, ROBERT B., 515 Marina Village, Bridgeport, Conn. Basketball 1. 2: German Club 1: Biology Club 2. 3. 4: Chemistry Club 3: Barbell Club 4: Bridgeport Club 4. TERIFAY, ROBERT F., 1690 North Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. KX 2: German Club 2: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. THOMAS, GEORGE B., 728 Pine Rock Ave.. Hamden, Conn. St. Thomas Seminary 1: Glee Club 1, 2. 3, 4: Italian Club 2, 3. 4 lSec.1: New Haven Club 2, 3, 4 1Pres.l: Baseball 2, 3, 4 tMgr.l: AA 3, 4: Red Cross 4: Educa- tion Club 4. THLIRSTON, IAMES F., 669 High St., Naugatuck, Conn. Manor 4: Education Club 4. TOLNAY, IOHN I., N. Dixie Highway. St. Augustine, Fla. Track 1: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: German Club 1, 2: Debat- ing 4. TRACY, MARTIN I., 353 79th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Track 1 fMgr.j, 2 1Mgr.l: KX 1: AA 1, 2: Metro- politan Club 2 tSec.l, 3, 4: Manor 4, TLIRSKI. STANLEY E., 107 Colony St., Bridgeport, Conn, Track 1. 2: KX 1. 2: Chemistry Club 2, 3, 4: Radio Club 3, 4: Biology Club 3, 4: Stag 3, 4: Barbell Club 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 4. TWOMEY, IOHN IR., 187 5th St,, New Rochelle. N. Y. Sodality 1, 2: Metropolitan Club 2, 3: Red Cross 3. V VISCOLINT, THOMAS A., 123 Monroe St.. Milford. Conn. VITELLI, THOMAS 92 Kensington St., New Haven. Conn, New Haven Club 1, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 2. 3. 4: Italian Club 2, 3. 4 lPres.l: Spanish Club 4: Public Affairs 4: Education Club 4. W WAKIN, ROBERT H., 695 W. Taft Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Sodality 2. 3 lSec.l. 4: Chemistry Club 2, 4: Biology Club 3. 4: Class Treasurer 4. WALKO, WILLIAM 25 Velvet St.. Bridgeport. Conn. KX l. 2: Barbell Club 3, 4: Bridgeport Club 3, 4. WALSH, IOHN 98 Sims St., Bridgeport, Conn. Glee Club 2, 3 lSec.:, 4: Business Club 3, 4: Manor 4. WALSH, ROBERT R., 806 Boston Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. Sodality 1. 2, 3, 4: Student Council l. 2, 3, 4: Dixieland Club 1, 2, 3, 4: AA 2. 3. 4: Business Club 3, 4: Manor 4. WELCH, ROBERT C., 138 Middle St., Fairfield, Conn. AA 2, 3, 4: Sodality 3, 4: Dixieland Club 3, 4: Triangle Club 3: Business Club 3. 4: Bridgeport Club 4. WHITE, ROBERT L., 15 Hedge Ave., Norwich, Conn. Spanish Club 3: Amateur Radio Society 4: Education Club 4: Michael Collins Essay Contest, 2nd Prize, 3. WIHBEY, IOSEPH G., 671 Meriden Rd., Waterbury. Conn. Glee Club 1: Track 1: Waterbury Club 1. 2, 3. 4: Chemi- stry Club 2. 3, 4: Biology Club 3, 4. XVOODS, FRANCIS E., 97 Cherry St., Waterbury, Conn. Waterbury Club l, 2, 3. 4 1Pres.j: Glee Club 2, 3. 4: Stag 2, 3: Manor 4 lEditor-in-Chiefl: Education Club 4. Y YLISKAUSKAS, RAYMOND B., 36 Charter Oak Ave.. E. Haven, Conn. Italian Club 7 lPres.l: Stag 3, 4: Manor, 4: Education Club 4: New Haven Club 1, 2, 3, 4. AQ -203-- Rev Rev. Rev Rev Rev. Jlonaaecl Pahona Michael Carnicke. St. Iohn Nepomucene Church, Bridgeport, Conn Robert L. Christopher, Church of the Assumption, Fairfield, Conn Andrew Farkas, Holy Cross Church, Bridgeport. Conn. Adelard A. Ialbert. St. Anthony's Church, Bridgeport, Conn. Ioseph V. Kazlauskas, St. George's Church, Bridgeport, Conn. Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F. Kearney, Sacred Heart Church, Bridgeport, Conn St. Mary's Church, Bridgeport, Conn. Rev. Rev. Rev. Rev. Rev. Rev. Rev. Rev. Rev. Thomas P. Mooney, St. Ambrose Church, Bridgeport, Conn. Vincent O'Connor, Church of the Assumption, Fairfield, Conn. Iohn F. X. Walsh. Our Lady of Peace Church. Lordship, Conn. Felix Scoglio, St. Lucy's Parish, Waterbury, Conn. Daniel I. Barry. Blessed Sacrament Church, Hamden. Conn. Timothy A. Byrne. St. Paul's Church, West Haven, Conn. Ugo Cavicchi, P.S.S.C., St. Michael's Church, New Haven, Conn. Raymond I. Clabby, St. Ioseph's Church, New Haven, Conn. Iames E. Dargan, Sacred Heart Church, New Haven. Conn. Dominican Fathers, St. Mary's Church. New Haven, Conn. Rev Rev Rev Rev Rev. Rev. Rev. Rev Rev Rev Rev Iames F. Donaher, St. Barnabas' Church, North Haven, Conn. William A. Downey, St. Rita's Church, Hamden. Conn. William A. Krause, St. Iohn's Church, New Haven, Conn. Iohn I. McCarthy, St. Augustine's Church, North Branford, Conn. Vincent A. McDonough, St. Francis' Church, New Haven, Conn. Iohn I. McLaughlin, St. Brendan's Church, New Haven, Conn. Iohn F. O'Donnell, St. Claire's Church, East Haven, Conn. Iohn W. Walsh, Our Lady of Victory Church, West Haven, Conn M. Ernest Wilson, St. Aedan's Church, New Haven, Conn. William I. Wirkus, St. Boniface Church, New Haven, Conn. Iames F. Woods. St. Patrick's Church, New Haven, Conn. e204e Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. .Janaaecf f9a19mn4 David P. Barry Claudius F. Black Thomas I. Byrne Iames I. Cannon. Sr. Edward Capasse Louis C. Carbone Timothy I. Cronin Everett W. Delaney G. G. Desy Timothy A. Donahue Edward D. Dowling Mrs. Peggy Doyle Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Eplett Edwin D. Foster Iohn I. Galla Walter W. Garrity Bernard A. Gilhuly Iohn F. Gillespie Iohn Thomas Gorman Owen I. Groark Daniel I. Hayden Iohn Herlihy Stephen Iwanicki Ioseph V. Kehoe GWMVD Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Iohn C. Kramer Mark A. Lolatte Michael Lonardo Robert H. McCoy Iudge and Mrs. Edward W. McPadden Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Rose M. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Mester D. F. Mingrone Francis Molanphy D. Edward Mullins Otto Poeltl Charles A. Quinn Rosa Thomas T. Rose Anthony G. Russo Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sangiorgio Mr. I. P. Sanislo Mr. Iohn I. Sapitowicz Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Shiembob Mrs. Mary St. Iohn Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Capt. CU.S.N Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs George T. Thomas Ioseph M. Tracy Ret.l 5. Mrs. I. I. Twomey William C. Welch Ioseph Woods N205- Nlr. Mr Mr Mr. Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr -PATRGNS- Rudolf C. Abele and and and and and and and and and and and Mrs Mrs. Mrs. Mrs Mrs. Mrs. Mrs Mrs. Mrs Mrs. Mrs. I. Agnello Angelo M. Antignani Walter L. Auger Patrick Beglane Ludwig Bohman Sylvester Borderi Iohn Boyle William C. Brennan Bernhard Bruder Ray Buccino lohn R. Burke Mrs. Dolores Corsaro Mrs. Lillian Cotignola Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Cowles Miss Muriel Coyle Mr. and Mr. and Mr. and Mr. and Mr. and Mr and Mr and Mr and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs Mrs. Lawrence Cuomo Iohn Deakin Matthew E. Dinan Iames A. Dinnan Ioseph Drongoski Francis Duchelle Iames F. Farnum Iohn Fenton Salvatore Fichera GSOVD Miss Margaret Fisher Mr. and Mrs. William Forte Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose I.Frauenhofer Mrs. Iohn Philip Fray Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. Gawitt. Sr. Mr. and Mrs. joseph U. George Mr. and Mrs. lames V. Granitto Mr. Richard D. Halloran Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hauck Mrs. james F. Heenan Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hunts Rev. Emilio Iasiello Mr. and Mrs. Iohn lennings Mr. and Mrs. S. I. Katson Harold Keegan Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Kelley Mr. and Mrs. E. Kiely Mr. and Mrs. Iohn Kulowiec Mr. and Mrs. D. Lane, Sr. Mrs. Anne Lavery Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Limoncelli Dr. and Mrs. Iames C. W. Lutz Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mahaney Mr. and Mrs. William Martin, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mermann -4206- - PATRONS CContinuedI - GNMVD Mr and Mrs. Iohn Miolene Mr and Mrs. Iohn Mullaney Mr and Mrs. William D. Mullowney Mr and Mrs. I. I. Murphy Mr and Mrs. Albert Musante Mr and Mrs. P. I. Nevcrton Mr Arthur E. O'C onne ll Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. O'Hara Mr and Mrs. Eugene P. O'Meara Dr. Mr Mr and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. William F. O'Meara I. F. 0'Neil -George E. Pieger, Sr. Mr and Mrs. Lewis Pierce Mr and Mrs. Iohn B. Rogowski Mr and Mrs. Charles E. Rose Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur C. Rowe, Sr Mr. and Mrs. Aniello L. Salerno Mr. and Mrs. Donald Saltus Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Santclla Mr. and Mrs. Frank Scarpulla Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Schlenk Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Schofield Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shimkus, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sperry, Sr. Rev. Paul Spodnick Mr. Frank Taddeo Mr. and Mrs. Carmen Vegliante Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wakin Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. William D. Whelan - ALUMNI- GNWVD George D. Birge Frederick D. Foster Ianies M. Keating, Ir. Michael Levinsky Richard Marshall Ralph Money, Ir. Edward I. Montoni Stephen Sedensky, Ir. Walter Smoloski, Ir. Thomas E. Tierney Edward E. Wall, Ir. -207- 14 cknowfecfqemenld QR? That the 1952 MANOR is a reality can be attributed to the many individuals who have given so lavishly of their time and talents. Space does not permit an adequate listing of their names nor of their fine con- tributions. But let it be said here that their accomplishments did not go unnoticed. They have the thanks of the entire student body. The editor does feel that among the contributors to this endeavor certain individuals do deserve special consideration and therefore spe- cial thanks. They have done everything in their power to make the work of the editor easier and to produce a better book. Among the students, those deserving of a special bouquet for their unselfish efforts are Ed Kelley, Ray Yuskauskas, Iohn Walsh, Connie Sternchak. and Ed Sperry. On behalf of the entire staff I take this opportunity of expressing our gratitude to Fred Reynolds of the Rundbaken Engraving Company for his many long hours of consultation and direction in our behalf: to Frederick Frankes of The Iohn I. Corbett Press for his general helpful- ness and patience: to Frank O'Neill of the Chidnoff Studios for his per- sonal attention to the smallest detail: to Walter Rugg of Fairfield for his wonderful sketches and helpful suggestions: and finally to Father Mac- Gillivray for being such an understanding Moderator. -FRANCIS WOODS. Editor-in-Chief. V 208 On behalf of the Student Body The Student Council Extends Best Wishes to the 1952 MANOR A-e0,,Wf,,zazi0n4ff Za THE CLASS OF I952 ham THE AREA CLUBS OF FAIRFIELD UNIV THE WATERBURY CLUB THE NEW HAVEN CLUB THE BRIDGEPORT CLUB THE HARTFORD CLUB THE METROPOLITAN CLUB PHONE 8-2171 PHONE 8-2171 Compliments of O'MEARA MOTORS, Inc. 653 CONNECTICUT BOULEVARD EAST HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT FORD CARS FORD TRUCKS FORD SERVICE FORD PARIS NEW ENGLAND'S LARGEST SELECTION OF USED CARS You Can Always Do Business At O'MEARA'S Zllw THE JOHN I. CCRBETT PRESS PRINTERS OF THIS YEARBOCDK AND MANY OTHERS C 8005 and eammeaciaf C 273 STATE STREET NEW HAVEN. CONN T 1 ph LO t20291 212 We wvcelknce. . . in design cra llsmansluap and quality . RINGS Pms Menus cHAnMs cups PLAQues rnormes .IEWELERS FOR YOUR CLASS RINGS n s DMI 1: fwifi I aosron v 17 IUHN STREET. NEW YORK 8 N.Y. - rnovlofuce --.2 1 3- D. THURSTON'S SONS RUBBER AVENUE N AUGATUCK CONNECTICUT RANGE 6. FUEL 0llS POWER BURNERS PETROLEUM CARRIERS Ph 52 4 52 5 4aiem!4 of qaifzfieff Zfniuefzdilly ..-A,- l. W. SKINNER. INC. Post Road F airfield, Conn. -iv- COLONY RESTAURANT 2895 Fairfield Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. --pf.. RONALD 1. HENRY Post Road Fairfield, Conn. R Cl w Cfongratulates a The Class of '52 IT MEANS A LOT TO BE A COLLEGE MAN Your college degree is the cornerstone of your chosen career. It symbolizes the sum total of advanced learning and discipline plus your own hard work and ability. IT MEANS A LOT TO BE A WELL DRESSED MAN Clothes don't make the man but first impress- ions are important. In REI-LD'S Men's Shop and Men's Furnishings Department, you will find cor- rectly tailored clothes and haberdashery for all occasions. Our expert staff is trained to advise you in making your selection. IT MEANS A LOT TO PLAN YOUR EXPENSES EEEICIENTLY Your REI-LD'S Charge Account or P.B.A., per- manent budget account, provide an orderly bud- get-wise way to buy and build your credit. READ'S P.B.A. is the sensible way to match ex- penditures to your level of income . . . you buy what you need, have it to use right away, pay an agreed-on sum each month and charge more, as you pay! Inquire about easy-pay P.B.A. at our Credit Office on the fifth floor. -215- , , I, vfffwyfx L, ni ff 1' Qt .1 ill f , lc 'w f' -'V w 1:1 fel' . J rf At Q .A A ..,. if Q 1 ' X ..,, . '- Q V N T N lx A Q Q55 X V Q W 5 M. .Az A 0 X , .. .,-.,.,...,,..t-:gg-1-:,. Q.:-.33 ic... ,X .X X x ' f is Q is x W 53? fl' X 'Q-ft. J 4 .Av W M N-:si 'xr-'1'g.gg.: .' .+ X, .y ,I-4, ' A, XX Q' M . 3 is Q9 Q 4,1 - K I . . U -. ...- ' ,. , . . 'im -' we EMO .4 I , . , , Z,,..,.----. Q U Q2 'A N ': -4 f? 'ci . ,.' ,X W A Viv N 4 .G: : it .xg W' NX X Xlwxix T N fo X rm, , 1- et-K XYXAN , W ww V. A5 3? V.. X XX K 'X' Mg iq p lyk,-... .. NX X HR ...f -QM A R -N Nl : h I' MM J.. 1. X . X X A X. X ,. w .di ' -' l x . l A X NNN Y! X L Q X ti? A M ss T: I -2.Q.i'17E.fr j Q.. Y. .. Q XX .-Q. ! A , Q' was, Q A QXSVNX M 3 Q i ww 3 A 1 lim! V MORTGAGE LOANS TO FIT YOUR NEEDS F.H.A. INSURED LOANS MONTHLY PAYMENT LOANS REGULAR SEMI-ANNUAL PAYMENT LOANS G. I. CVETERAND LOANS 2Vz'X, Interest paid on Savings Accounts Open 9 to 3 - Monday through Thursday Fridays 9 - 5:30 F N ,555 H A A g A 74a A echanics 8: armers ' FQYARNQSQL Mtfvlyd 5 2 Q 5 5 . 5 is coz. mm Ano sam: smfrs Q zuuncrronr 1, conufcncur . rn. 5-4157 - 13 95! All IIEPUSITS GUARANTEED IN Fllll BY TIIE SAVINGS BANKS' IJEPUSII GUARANTY FUND UF DUNN., INC Congratulations . . . Your Big Day is here! It's yours, because you have worked for and achieved something you can well be proud of. It's big . . . because though it is the end of your college years, it is also the beginning of something wonderful - your future! FQ. 253 it u fl What's Next? H 'F Whether you are going on to school, or entering the business or professional world, HOWLAND'S extends to ik' you its very best wishes for success in every venture. You can measure the success of a man by the wardrobe he chooses. For everything in men's clothing and furnishings, HOWLAND'S has what the well-dressed man prefers. 7l1:f7Wlu,77u' B1g1ger..Br2dler lib 1 Q - 216,- J- Bffcnmour DAIRY INCORPORATED 0 COMPLIMENTS OF BRIDGEPORT'S LARGEST HOME-OWNED DAIRY ALBERT I. BROTHERS - ' -- BRIDGEPORT, CONN. Telephone 4-2118 THE E. 81 F. CONSTRUCTION COMPANY BUILDERS OF FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY -Qt BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT -217- COMPLIIVIEN TS OF BRIDGEPORT SWITCH CO 209 CENTER STREET BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT LEVERTY 8: HURLEY CO. 260 BOSTVVICK AVENUE BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT 218 BRIDGEPORT BRASS CCMPANY THE VALLEY CLUB oi Fairfield University Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kehoe and Family CGNVERY 8: HANLEY ruuflm sfnvlcf FUEL OILS RANGE OIL HOFFMAN FUEL COAL COKE HOFFMAN Domestic Oil Burners RAY Industrial Oil Burners Expert Burner Service Telephone 6-1161 MICHAEl HOFFMAN FUEl CO. 156 E. Washington Avenue Bridgeport 1, Connecticut Authorized G. E. Distributor OIL FURNACES COMPLIMENTS OF BERNARD 1. DOlAN 1. OERAID PHEIAN THE RUNDBAKEN ENORAVINO COMPANY, INC. -4,-. Retouching and Designing Wood Engravings Halitones and Zinc Etchings Electrotypes gy,- ll Orange Street New Haven, Connecticut Telephone 8-3136 COMPLIMEN TS OF HERMAN ISACS. INC. 555 Wordin Avenue BRIDGEPORT. CONN. XVITH BEST WISHES H0lY ROSARY CHURCH t Free D BRIDCZEPC BRT. CONN. W'ith Best Hfishes LOUIS RICHARDS G SON 499 VVashington Avenue Bridgeport. Connectc t I. D. F. CLEANERS .. 4, - 775 VVood Avenue Bridgeport. Connect cut NOT PORGETUNG THE WIVES OF '52 Specializing in Scalp Treatment By Appointment COMMODORE BARBER SHOP -175 East Main Street Brndgeport, Connect lt ANTONIO'S MARKET Meats - Groceries 9-t North Avenue Brlcigeport. Connect t 2 elivery Call 4 9050 Telephone 3-H95 lf made of wood, we make it, ' General Repairing Body and Fender Repairing Collision Work 24 Hour Road Service and Towing 3617 Black Rock Turnpike Fairfield. Conn. near Merritt Parkway Phones: Garage 9-9090 1-1 Night 9-8079. 3-3635 GIAQUINTO'S SERVICE STATION Washing - Polishing - Gas - Oils - Tires Tubes - Batteries - Accessories Corner: Madison and Capitol Avenues Bridgeport, Connecticut Phone 68-9919 SKYDEL'S, INC. East Bridgeport's Modern Department Store 1058 East Main Street Bridgeport, Connecticut Telephone 6-2531 Phone 9-1367 F. W. CARROLL Plumbing - Heating - Sheet Metal Work Electrical Appliances 1989 Post Road Fairfield, Connecticut Fine Iewelry, Watches, and Silverware HENRY C. REID and SON Certified Gemologist and Registered Iewelers American Gem Society Broad Street. near Fairfield Avenue VAGHI WOODWORK CO. M5llIlfHC'ft1F0f.i of Store Fronts - Parquet Floors Bars and Fixtures - Interior Trimming New and Reprodiictions of Antique Furniture All Kinds of Finishing South Street Bethel. Connecticut NYDEN'S 904 Madison Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Phone 5-7328 - ,qv - Open Every Day Until 9 P.M. STRATFIELD PHARMACY - 4, .. 1244 Stratfield Road Fairfield, Connecticut Compliments of LUIGI'S 1-gf.. Yon ke rs, New York Courtesy of BUCKLEY BROS. -- if - Bridgeport. Connecticut -223- Cuniplinierits of MICKEY'S BARBER SHOP - 4, .- 2176 Black Rock Turnpike Fair-field. Connecticut SAMP MORTAR PACKAGE STORE 2-180 Black Roek Turnpike Fairfield. Connecticut Bridgeport 5-1613 - ,Q .. -- We Deliver -- BRONSON'S, INC. 2670 Post Road. Fairfield. Connecticut Appliam'e.x for the Home G. E. - Philco - Maytag - Kitchenaid Victor of Geneva Air ffonditi a1r11 ' nq ls Our Specialty Telephone 9--4578 or see Ed or Bob Henry Rawlings Athletic Equipment Finest in the Fie1d. ' THE ARCTIC SPORT SHOP Hfairfeld IIS Team Oiitfitttersn 605 Artuc Street Bridgeport. Connecticut Team Equipment Baseball - Football - Basketball - Tennis - Golf - Fishing Phone 4-2813 Piaiuzx' Piiorri WOOD AVE. PHARMACY Prescriptions Filled -g.. 6O VVood Avenue Bridgeport. Connecticut Telephone 3- 3921 VILLAGE PHARMACY 1460 Post Road Fairfield. Connecticut Telephone 9-5919 --A-- FRANCES VV. Buims, Reg. Ph., Mgr. losiimi F. MACH, Lic. Phar. Dial 9- I 1 30 R. I. BRUNDAGE Ieweler and Optician hi.. 1551 Post Road Fairfield. Connecticut Phone 5-9120 Established 58 Years WHITEMAN'S CARPET SERVICE Carpet Cleaning - Repairing - Dyeing and Installation Linoleum - Tile - Carpet Stillson Road Fairfield. Connecticut E. VV. xA7lllTl'IlN1AN. SR. GREEN COMET DINER FRANK'S SERVICENTER Top's in Town 2172 Black Rock Turnpike f it f Y Fairfield. Connecticut 911 Kings liiqlixniy Cut-Off Esso Gas lifiirtield. Cuiiiietticiit lllmiii- 1159171 Phone 3-9555 Telephone 3-9511 2 GEORGE GARDELLA CO. O 36 Main Street Ansonia. Connecticut Phone -1-1619 DAVIS 6 HAWLEY Ieiveiers for over a century Diamonds - Iewelry Silver - Leather 966 Main Street at Iohn Telephone 5-8119 Bridgeport, Connecticut THE FORMAL SHOP 6. Tailors New Tuxedos - Complete Outlits Full Dress Suits and Cutaways For Hire N. DEMATTEIS Telephone 8-7928 944 Chapel Street New Haven. Connecticut Over Hasselbacirs LITTLE FOLKS' SHOP An exclusive shop for Infants and Children O 1222 Park Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut Telephone 3-0458 MARX' B. HAYES, Proprietor RITZ BALLROOM Bridgeport. Connecticut O'BRIEN CLOTHES CO. Style Specialists 0 15 Cannon Street Bridgeport. Connecticut VV ALTER F. BENNETT Insurance - Real Estate 9 945 Main Street Bridgeport. Connecticut Plone 4 0493 KORNER MARKET Home of Quality Meats 6. Vegetables 2141 Black Rock Turnpike at Stillson Road ANDREW' CnANAm' - Cims, KOYACS T. A. D. IONES :S COMPANY, INC. Anthracite C O A L Bituminous Heating Oils 670 Wordin Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut CUNHA MOTOR SALES, INC. 148 South Street Danbury. 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